012216 daily corinthian e edition

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Body of missing 2-year-old Pinson boy found in woods, 6A McNairy County Chamber cancels annual banquet

Prentiss County Library friends host book sale

Tishomingo County School threat linked to others

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Friday Jan. 22,

2016

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Daily Corinthian

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Vol. 120, No. 19

• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two Sections

3 suffer fatal injuries in head-on crash Officials say Booneville mother and daughter Jo Deana Smith, 49, and Betty Smith, 74, were traveling south on Highway 371 when they were struck head-on by a vehicle driven by Jordan

BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

PRENTISS COUNTY — Drugs may have played a role in the deaths of three Prentiss County residents from a head-on collision Wednesday night.

Jones, 26, of Baldwyn. The wreck happened around 5:30 p.m. in rainy conditions, according to Mississippi Highway Patrol Master Sergeant Ray Hall. “We believe drugs may have

contributed to Jones crossing the center line and colliding head-on with Smith’s vehicle,” said Hall, who added evidence of drugs were recovered at the scene. The mother and daughter

were pronounced dead on the scene. Jones was taken to North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo, where he later died. Hall said an investigation will continue.

Crossroads Arena hosts Prison contract first ever Black Rodeo under new review BY STEVE BEAVERS

BY JEBB JOHNSTON

sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Billy Ray Thunder has been an Army Ranger and Hospital Corpsman with the Navy. The 62-year-old also played a little semipro football. None of those compare to life on the rodeo circuit. “It’s the ultimate sport,” said Thunder. “It’s a challenge of man versus nature.” Thunder, who began his rodeo career after military service, is part of the Southeastern Rodeo Association. SERA is set to bring the first Black Rodeo to the Crossroads Arena on March 19 at 7:30 p.m. “A lot of people don’t believe the black cowboy and cowgirl exist,” said Southeastern Rodeo Association CEO Walter Hull. “This event will showcase the African-American cowboy and cowgirl.” Participants will compete for $6,500 in prize money. Events slated for the one-day event at the arena include bull riding, steer wrestling, bare back riding, calf roping, team roping and barrel racing. “It’s going to be an awesome show with cowboys and cowgirls coming from across the country to compete,” said Thunder. “The black rodeos

The Mississippi Department of Corrections is taking another look at its contract with Alcorn County before returning state prisoners to the regional correctional facility. Sheriff Ben Caldwell said inmates had been scheduled to begin arriving on Tuesday following a site visit by MDOC officials last week, but he was then told the contract regarding the housing of inmates is under review. “I don’t know what they’re wanting to change in the contract,” Caldwell told the Board of Supervisors this week. “However, they did indicate to us that

we have met all the obligations we can at the jail as far as staffing and training to start receiving our inmates back.” He was waiting to receive proposed contract changes. During last week’s visit, the MDOC deputy commissioner toured the facility and received the facility’s action plan for operating the prison. The deputy commissioner indicated MDOC will make reimbursement payments to the county for 240 prisoners for the months of October, November and December, even though the regional prison was without state prisoners for the last two months of Please see CONTRACT | 6A

Tourism tax sets new mark BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Billy Ray Thunder will be part of the first Black Rodeo at the Crossroads Arena.

Please see RODEO | 6A

MBS to hold local blood drive BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com

“Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, what are you doing for others?” – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Collecting vital supplies, Mississippi Blood Services (MBS) will hold a community blood drive on Friday, Jan. 29, at CarMart in Corinth. Stationed in the parking lot from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., the MBS Donor Coach will hand award a complimentary t-shirt to each person who gives blood. “‘Giving the gift of life is easier than ever’ – It’s more than just

a catch-phrase with Mississippi Blood Services, it’s how we mean to tackle the coming year and how we want our donors to tackle the coming year, as well,” said Public Relations Specialist Susan Ates. “Start the year by helping to save a life—you could even help save three lives. Donate blood at Car-Mart and be someone’s hero.” Providing a safe, simple way to help others in need, MBS donors can now check their overall cholesterol levels on their MBSConnect account. Please see BLOOD | 6A

The tourism tax continued to sprint ahead in the latest reported month while Corinth’s share of sales tax funds fell just shy of the year-ago figure. The 2 percent tourism tax collected on restaurants and lodging in the city generated $109,471.79, rising almost 6 percent from a year ago and setting a new high mark for the

month. As the tax revenue rises for a ninth consecutive month, the cumulative total for the tax in fiscal 2015-2016 goes to $436,197.63, an increase of 9.1 percent from the prior fiscal year. The mid-January deposit of funds from the tourism tax and sales tax reflect sales activity that occurred during the month Please see TAX | 6A

Grant will replace Polk Street bridge BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

City of Corinth officials hope a new grant will help replace the aging Polk Street bridge. Community Development Director Dave Huwe asked the mayor and Board of Alderman this week to sign a memorandum of understanding with the Federal Highway Administration for a EFLAP Grant. He said the grant will replace the Polk Street bridge and make other improvements along Polk Street and

Shiloh Road. “The total cost of the project should be around $4 million,” said Huwe. “This is a first for Mississippi in turns of this kind of project.” According to Mayor Tommy Irwin, the bridge will cost around $1.7 million alone to repair. The grant includes a match amount of $790,000. However, the city could end up paying more. In other board business: ■ Street Commissioner Philip Verdung told the board he had recently learned of

new sink hole problems on the arch pipe between Cass Street and Crater Street. “This is a section of the pipe that was not replaced in our FEMA project a few years ago,” he said. “There is about a 300-foot section of old, original pipe and most of the bottom of the pipe is gone and rusted out.” Verdung said he believed a garden planted at Easom Foundation on the former South Corinth school property may have allowed the Please see BRIDGE | 6A

25 years ago

10 years ago

Dirt work begins on Harper Road for construction of the new Corinth High School Academic and Performing Arts Center. Superintendent Dr. O. Wayne Gann and school board members Bill McKinney, Sherry Shipp, Danny Patterson, Dr. Elbert White and

The Corinth Boys and Girls Club gets a boost from the Lowe’s Heroes program. Volunteers including Daffney Cummings, Jessica Garth and others put new paint and flooring in the club.

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2A • Friday, January 22, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

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Friday, January 22, 2016

Today is Friday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 2016. There are 344 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in History: On Jan. 22, 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court, in its Roe v. Wade decision, legalized abortions using a trimester approach. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson died at his Texas ranch at age 64.

On this date: In 1498, during his third voyage to the Western Hemisphere, Christopher Columbus arrived at the present-day Caribbean island of St. Vincent. In 1901, Britain’s Queen Victoria died at age 81 after a reign of 63 years; she was succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII. In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson pleaded for an end to war in Europe, calling for “peace without victory.” (By April, however, America also was at war.) In 1922, Pope Benedict XV died; he was succeeded by Pius XI. In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces began landing at Anzio, Italy. In 1953, the Arthur Miller drama “The Crucible” opened on Broadway. In 1968, “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In” premiered on NBC-TV. In 1970, the first regularly scheduled commercial flight of the Boeing 747 began in New York and ended in London some 61⁄2 hours later. In 1984, the Los Angeles Raiders defeated the Washington Redskins 38-9 to win Super Bowl XVIII at Tampa Stadium in Florida; the CBS-TV broadcast featured Apple Computer’s famous “1984” commercial introducing the Macintosh computer. In 1995, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy died at the Kennedy compound at Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, at age 104. In 2008, actor Heath Ledger was found dead of an accidental prescription overdose in New York City; he was 28.

Daily Corinthian • 3A

Across the Region School threat linked have been brought forth and canceling the event to 25 other reports IUKA — School officials say Tuesday’s safety threat which forced the closure of all Tishomingo County schools is linked to threats made to more than 25 schools in New Jersey the same day. According to Tishomingo School District Superintendent Christie Holly, she received information late Wednesday that the phone number used to call in a threat to the district Tuesday is the same number used in threats in New Jersey. Bomb threats were received by several schools in states across the county including New Jersey, Delaware, Iowa and Florida. Investigators in several states are working to help identify the person responsible for the calls. Before students arrived for school Wednesday morning, officials again searched each building as a safety precaution.

Friends of library holding book sale BOONEVILLE — The Friends of the George E. Allen Library will offer all remaining book sale inventory at a huge discount now through Saturday, Jan. 30. Paperbacks will be available for 10 cents. Hardbacks will be available for $25.

Chamber’s annual banquet canceled SELMER, Tenn. — The annual McNairy County Chamber of Commerce Banquet has been canceled for this year based on a recent announcement by the new chief executive officer of the McNairy County Economic Development Commission. This year’s banquet had been scheduled for Jan. 30. “As we understand many of you plan for and look forward to the Annual Banquet, at this time the Board of Directors and my office has decided to cancel the event for this year,” said Eddie Crittendon. “Although we regret having to make this decision, many factors and issues

ANNIVERSARY MONTH SPECIALS!

is the final decision and outcome.” Crittendon has been in the office for only a short time and he said the MCED/CC will plan other events in the coming year. “As you have already heard and seen we are making changes within the Chamber of Commerce and it is our goal to make this organization represent a proud and supportive McNairy County,” said Crittendon. “The board of directors has done a great job keeping things going without a director for nearly six months. To all of them, the volunteers, and members that have diligently remained dedicated to the county, I want to publicly thank you all.” The chamber is now planning on the election of a new board of directors this spring. A chamber member can nominate someone for a spot on the board. The board of directors will begin a new term in office in July.

Woman charged with FEMA fraud OXFORD — A Winston County woman has pleaded guilty to charges she filed a false report with the Federal Emergency Management Agency following the April 2014 tornado. Kourtnee Triplett, 34, entered the guilty plea during a hearing in U. S. District Court in Aberdeen Tuesday. She is accused of asking FEMA for federal assistance for an apartment along Beal Avenue in Lousiville that she claimed was her primary residence that was destroyed in the storm. Court documents show after an investigation, FEMA says the residence was not her primary residence and did not qualify for assistance. Triplett remains free on a $5,000 bond and will be sentenced at a later date.

MSU’s depression research featured STARKVILLE — Re-

search conducted by a faculty member and graduate student in Mississippi State’s Department of Psychology may provide a better understanding of how depression works and ultimately lead to new treatment innovations. Assistant professor E. Samuel “Sam” Winer said the article co-authored with clinical psychology doctoral student Taban Salem was based on a statistical review of the dot-probe paradigm—one of the most common tasks used to assess how people come to understand emotional information. Their findings are published in the January 2016 issue of Psychological Bulletin, one of the leading journals in the field of psychology. The dot-probe task allows researchers to examine attentional biases by measuring the speed with which participants respond to a dot following emotional (positive or negative) or neutral information. “In this task, we know that individuals with depressed symptoms value or approach negative words, but what we’re now learning is that they are also avoiding positive words,” Winer said. “This means that individuals suffering from depression may not only not value reward in the way that nondepressed individuals do, but that they may in fact devalue reward. That is, they may be less likely to approach rewarding information (such as something hopeful) than anything else.” “The subtle but very important idea that depressed individuals avoid positivity is not routinely addressed in current treatments, so the hope is that this new way of conceptualizing depression could ultimately be used to affect clinical change,” he emphasized. Winer holds doctoral and master’s degrees in psychology and also earned a bachelor’s in English with Highest Distinction from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Salem is a graduate of MSU’s clini-

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cal psychology master’s program and holds a bachelor’s in journalism from the University of Missouri-Columbia. (Visit www.psychology. msstate.edu to discover more about MSU’s psychology department.)

UM group receives prestigious honor OXFORD — Joining a luminous cadre of past recipients, the University of Mississippi chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has been awarded the national organization’s 2016 Chairman’s Award. The prestigious honor recognizes special achievement and distinguished public service of individuals and organizations whose groundbreaking work increases public understanding and awareness of racial and social justice issues. Past recipients of the Chairman’s Award include Al Gore and Wangari Mathaii, Attorney General Eric Holder, U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, actor Forest Whitaker, U.S. Navy Admiral Michelle J. Howard, the late actress-activist Ruby Dee, singer-humanitarian Bono and then-Sen. Barack Obama. The 47th NAACP Image Awards will be presented Feb. 5 from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium. Representatives from the UM chapter will receive the accolade during the live two-hour broadcast on TV One. The ceremony airs at 6 p.m. UM administrators commended the group’s efforts and successes, which led to the Chairman’s Award. “This is a welldeserved award that confirms our students’ voices were heard well beyond our campus and it confirms that their advocacy is appreciated well beyond our campus,” said Donald Cole, assistant provost and assistant to the chancellor for multicultural affairs. “As we recently re-

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Today in History

Local/Region

flected upon the MLK Day of Service, an educational institution can transition the lives of its students, teach them how to agree and how to disagree with other individuals, the proper way to protest to get their messages heard, how to be a part of the larger community while serving the local community and how to be persistent, dedicated leaders.” “I am so happy for our students, their chapter leadership and for the recognition they are receiving from the NAACP,” Provost Morris Stocks said. “I am also very proud of the manner in which our students engaged in important civil discourse related to relevant and difficult social issues.” Established in 1967 at the height of the civil rights movement, the NAACP Image Awards is the nation’s premier multicultural event celebrating the outstanding achievements and performances of people of color in the arts, as well as those individuals or groups who promote social justice through their creative endeavors.

Couple faces false pretense charges TUPELO — A Saltillo couple are currently in jail on false pretense charges filed by the Lee County Sheriff’s Office and Tupelo Police. Sheriff Jim Johnson says Jesse Alexander, 44, is accused of selling a home he was renting. He says Alexander created a fake deed and collected a $40,000 downpayment from the buyer. Alexander and his wife, Lisa Rene Alexander, owned a restaurant in Saltillo that had recently closed. Tupelo police investigators say Mrs. Alexander had knowingly passed checks on bad bank accounts in the city and filed the charge against her. Sheriff deputies brought the two back to Tupelo Tueday night.

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To start your home delivered subscription: Call 287-6111 Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For your convenience try our office pay plans.

Miss your paper? To report a problem or delivery change call the circulation department at 287-6111. Late, wet or missing newspaper complaints should be made before 10 a.m. to ensure redelivery to immediate Corinth area. All other areas will be delivered the next day.

USPS 142-560 The Daily Corinthian is published daily Tuesday through Sunday by PMG, LLC. at 1607 South Harper Road, Corinth, Miss. Periodicals postage paid at Corinth, MS 38834

Postmaster: Send address changes to: P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835


www.dailycorinthian.com

Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4A • Friday, January 22, 2016

Corinth, Miss.

Hillary’s shabby health-care offensive The children of political candidates are useful adornments in campaign literature and ads, and when they are older, as character witnesses on the campaign trail. Rarely are they used as atRich tack dogs, let alone armed Lowry with shameless talking points to try to dampen the rise of an National inspirational political rival. Review But nothing is beneath Bill and Hillary Clinton. So they trotted out their daughter, Chelsea, to warn about the dastardly designs that Bernie Sanders has for ending Medicare as we know it. It’s part of a hammer-and-tongs assault that should feel familiar to Republicans. It turns out that becoming the target of Medicare demagoguery isn’t just for Newt Gingrich or Paul Ryan anymore. No one has released an ad of Bernie Sanders pushing a senior citizen over a cliff yet, but if the Vermont senator continues his rise, just give it a couple of more weeks. Chelsea Clinton charged that Sanders “wants to dismantle Obamacare, dismantle the [Children’s Health Insurance Program], dismantle Medicare and dismantle private insurance.” For those keeping score at home, that’s a lot of dismantling. Chelsea said she worried – the chain of reasoning was left fuzzy – that Sanders would somehow give Republicans “permission” to go back to the pre-Obamacare era and “strip millions and millions and millions of people of their health insurance.” Frightened yet? What Sanders is proposing is so-called Medicare for all, a universal, single-payer health-care program that has been the goal of progressives for decades. For this, he is being savaged by a Hillary Clinton who in the early 1990s famously immolated herself in a doomed fight for her version of universal coverage. The gravamen of her case against Sanders is that he is a socialist – and an enemy of the welfare state. He is advocating a further step in the Democratic crusade to expand the social safety net – and is a dangerous radical because of it. He is a threat to all that has been achieved by the left – because he wants to achieve more. None of this makes much sense, especially on progressive terms. The dynamic of progressivism is never to rest, and always to ask for more. Hillary Clinton’s implicit contention is that after a century of progressive agitation for the steady expansion of government, the ultimate has been achieved via Obamacare and now only needs some tinkering. Obamacare is a massive government intrusion into American health care, but it’s not the universal coverage that the likes of Teddy Kennedy made a generational cause. At enormous cost and disruption, it pushed the portion of the population with insurance coverage up from roughly 85 percent to about 90. As Sanders points out, that still leaves 30 million people uninsured. This is not to say that the Sanders approach isn’t vulnerable to attack. It would be enormously expensive. By the sunny estimate provided by the Sanders campaign, it would cost $14 trillion over 10 years. It would require far-reaching tax increases, including – as even Sanders admits – on the middle class. To achieve cost savings, it would inevitably rely on price controls and rationing. Sanders makes his plan sound like a costfree exercise that would be a boon to American families. Sanders insists that they would save $3,800 to $5,100 annually on health care, seeing and raising Barack Obama’s (since discredited) promise that Obamacare would save families $2,500. Hillary wants to portray Bernie Sanders as some kind of wrecking ball, when he is firmly in the progressive tradition of fervency in the cause of the endless aggrandizement of the state. (Daily Corinthian columnist Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.)

Prayer for today Almighty God, I would have thy counsel as I read the words and follow the deeds of helpful lives, that I may be inspired to nobler activities. Give me the desire to know more of thy holy word, that I may have a better knowledge of life. Amen.

A verse to share “Behold, I will create new heavens and a new earth. The former things will not be remembered, nor will they come to mind. Isaiah 65:17

GOP needs its own Bernie Sanders As the political landscape started to crystallize at the onset of the 2012 election, I wrote a column making a comparison to the election of 1860, when Abraham Lincoln was elected. My point then was that the common ground of these two elections was the fracturing of Americans’ most basic sense of what the nation is about. The 1850s saw the collapse of the Whig Party and the birth of the Republican Party. The Democratic Party fractured into two and ran two separate candidates. The Republican Lincoln was elected with just 39 percent of the popular vote. The core question tearing the country apart then was slavery. What place would that institution – intolerable and abhorrent to some, and central to nature’s moral order to others – find in our nation? Two years prior, in 1858, Lincoln gave his famous “house divided” speech where he put his finger on the root of the battle for America’s soul. “A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe

this government cannot endure, permanently, half slave and half free. I do Star not expect Parker the Union to be disColumnist solved – I do not expect the house to fall – but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or all the other.” Now, in 2016, we see a continuation of this same process: the fracturing of Americans’ sense of what we’re about; and our movement even further to the polar extremes. The decisive question today is where God and government stand in our lives. The movement over the years has been steadily in the direction of less God and more government. Secularism and government is so pervasive now that we are on the cusp of changing forever what America is about. Some sense that it has already happened and it is too late to change course. American voters are looking for honesty today.

“Stop playing games with us,” voters are telling politicians. “Tell us who you are; give us the facts, and let us choose. Don’t tell us how much you love freedom and then deliver more government.” For this reason, Bernie Sanders is having surprising success challenging the Clinton machine. Sanders is a socialist, and he’s not afraid to say it. The advantage that Sanders has is he is going with the flow. He is pointing in the direction in which the country is already moving. He is not looking to unwind or turn back against anything. He wants to do more of what we are already doing and is up front about defining ourselves as socialists. Republicans need to be as clear with the country as Sanders with an alternative. With the same clarity as Lincoln, Republicans need to level with Americans that we need to decide who we are and that we can’t go on pretending that we don’t have to make hard choices. Our making no decision is a victory for secularism and socialism.

The job for Republicans who want to lead America toward freedom is much harder because it means real change from the status quo. It means telling the truth about abortion and the central importance of sanctity of life; and real reform in Social Security and Medicare, our tax system and our school systems. Throwing hand grenades at the “establishment” doesn’t do this. We need substance. We need real ideas and proposals to change our fiscal and social realities. We need a Republican Bernie Sanders to give Americans a real and explicit alternative to the secular and socialist path we’re already on. This is the kind of candidate that Republicans need to nominate in 2016. American voters need a clear choice for their future in this election. Are we going to be secular and socialist or a God-fearing free people? (Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education. Contact her at www.urbancure.org.)

Big problems with little candidates in 2016 “We live at a time of great events and little men.” No, this was not said after the last Republican presidential debate. It was said more than two centuries ago by Honore Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau, a leader in the early days of the French Revolution. The quotation appears in Hilary Mantel’s historical novel, “A Place of Greater Safety,” which means we are not 100 percent sure it was said, but it certainly should have been. It doesn’t take any great leap of imagination to look upon our current presidential campaign and say Mirabeau was correct. Great events swirl around us, and yet what little people we have to lead us. People are being barrelbombed and forced from their homes by the millions in Syria. North Korea, which is led by an absolute dictator of questionable sanity, brags it has just developed a hydrogen bomb. The United States faces an economic outlook this year that runs the gamut from bleak to catastrophic. And what do I see at the very moment I type these words? I see Donald Trump standing in front of a mannequin of John Wayne in Winterset, Iowa, where Wayne was born and spent the first seven years of his life. Tuesday, the Wayne family endorsed Trump for the

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presidency. This is live cable network news. A reporter asks Trump the imporRoger tance of this Simon e n d o r s e ment. Columnist “I think endorsements are, depending who makes them, valuable,” Trump says. “Some don’t make a difference. But I think having a John Wayne and John Wayne family endorsement means a lot.” But wait. There was a far more important endorsement at hand aside from that of an actor who has been dead for 36 years. Because Sarah Palin endorsed Trump later this day. Before bidding farewell to The Duke, The Donald is asked about the toxic tap water in Flint, Michigan. The Michigan attorney general has said: “The situation in Flint is a human tragedy.” Hillary Clinton has said: “I think every single American should be outraged.” Bernie Sanders has demanded the resignation of Michigan’s governor for acting too slowly. “A man who acts that irresponsibly should not stay in power,” Sanders says. And Trump? “I shouldn’t be commenting on Flint,” Trump said. OK, forget Trump for a

second. After all, the Republicans have other candidates to handle the “great events” of today. As Charles Krauthammer said on Fox News in July 2015: “This is the strongest field of Republican candidates in 35 years. You could pick a dozen of them at random and have the strongest cabinet America has had in our lifetime.” As Fred Barnes said in The Weekly Standard in April of last year: “Here are three propositions about the 2016 presidential race. ... One, the Republican field of candidates (and potential candidates) is far superior to the field of Republican candidates four years ago. The Republican candidates, themselves, put it a little more simplistically. As Jeb Bush said at a forum in December 2015: “Who has the right stuff? We need a person with a brain, a person with a heart and a person with a backbone.” How about a pair of ruby slippers, too? After listening to him, I really wonder whether Jeb realizes that “The Wizard of Oz” was a movie and not an instructional campaign video. And if he is waiting for a house to land on Donald Trump’s head, Jeb may be disappointed. But how about Mike Huckabee, who came in first in the Iowa caucus and sec-

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ond in the delegate count in 2008? Last October, while watching a Democratic debate, Huckabee tweeted: “I trust (Bernie Sanders) with my tax dollars like I trust a North Korean chef with my labrador!” Some people objected to what they saw as the racism or at least the cultural insensitivity of this remark. The Huckabee campaign sneered. “Poor liberals, no sense of humor and no sense of reality,” the campaign said in an email. “Facts: North Koreans eat dog and Bernie Sanders wants to spend 18 trillion dollars of your money. What’s so hard to understand?” In times past, candidates said running for president was meaningful, win or lose. That’s because they got to meet real Americans up close and experience their lives and hear about their hopes and dreams. Not anymore. Last month, in a gymnasium at the Pennichuck Middle School in Nashua, New Hampshire, Trump said, “Honestly, unless I win, it doesn’t mean a damn thing to me.” Big problems and little candidates. They seem to go hand in hand. (Roger Simon is chief political columnist of politico. com, an award-winning journalist and a New York Times best selling author.)

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Daily Corinthian • Friday, January 22, 2016 • 5A

Youth club cares, shares with needy families BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com

Reaching out to others, Modern Woodmen of America Youth Service Club members in Corinth recently donated toiletry items to provide assistance to those in need. Arranged as part of the organization’s Care and Share program, the Corinth chapter crafted gift bags with the aid of local Modern Woodmen Youth Service Clubs to be given to impoverished families. A nation-wide program, Care and Share offers Modern Woodmen chapters an opportunity to provide up to $250 of basic life necessities to individuals and families in their communities. Each year, members from more than 800 chapters purchase and donate thousands of dollars worth of food, clothing and other items to be distributed.

Corinth Modern Woodmen of America Youth Service Club members make toiletry gift bags for needy families. “When a family needs household items after a natural disaster or other crisis, or a shelter or food pantry needs more supplies to help families, Modern Woodmen members try and address the needs through this an-

“Instructors become the students and they experience how they can change the way learning is done by creating things such as virtual field trips.” Jeffrey Powell Mobile Learning Conference founder

nual project,” said Jonathan Marsh, local Modern Woodmen chapter activities coordinator. Coordinated by local Modern Woodmen members, chapters provide

numerous opportunities to take part in social activities and community service projects throughout the year. As a tax-exempt fraternal benefit society,

V G D R U V &URV

Mississippi You Must See Before You Die,’ in 2015 and it is only natural that we return to our roots and not only use this as a learning opportunity for educators throughout the state but to promote the positive aspects of northeast Mississippi and Tishomingo County.” Participants will learn about the park and its location in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, how the Civilian Conservation Corps built it in the 1930s and many of the activities included in the park such as rock climbing, fishing, hiking and canoeing. History continues with the group and the park when participants learn that the park was named after an early leader of the Chickasaw Nation – Chief Tishomingo. “I think this year’s conference is going to be a unique experience for not only the participate but also the presenters at the conference,” Powell said. “When I told my guest speakers on my plan to incorporate nature & technology into the presentations, they were like, ‘that’s neat and challenging because I have never done something like this.’ “I’m excited to see what they bring to the table in June.” Headed by Northeast’s Apple Distinguished Educator and founder Jeffrey Powell of Tishomingo, the Mobile Learning Conference not only helps educators embrace technology but offers a fun, engaging learning experience where participants learn from top educational technology experts on how to enhance their classrooms and make learning a more engaging and interactive experience. Cost of the three-day workshop is $150 and participants qualify for 2.1 Continuing Education Units (CEU) after attending all three days. For more information, contact Powell at jdpowell@nemcc.edu or call 662-720-7585 or contact the Northeast Office of Continuing Education at 662-720-7296 or email continuinged@nemcc. edu to register for one of the South’s top technology conferences.

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(For more information or to get involved, contact Jonathan Marsh at 662-665-7904.)

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Northeast Mobile Learning Conference heading outdoors Northeast Mississippi is known for its vibrant landscapes and is home to the highest natural point in Mississippi. That is why Northeast Mississippi Community College’s Mobile Learning Conference will pay homage to northeast Mississippi and especially Tishomingo County during its eighth annual conference June 13-15. “What makes Mobile Learning stand out from other conferences is the unique experiences the attendees are exposed to during the course of three days,” said Northeast Technology Specialist Jeffrey Powell, who founded the Mobile Learning Conference. “Instructors become the students and they experience how they can change the way learning is done by creating things such as virtual field trips. “It’s also the only conference in the nation where Apple Distinguished Educators organize, plan and participate.” After spending its first five years in Booneville, the Mobile Learning Conference branched out from the college’s main campus in 2014 and continues to make strides toward becoming one of the top technology conferences in the South. During the three-day event, participants will spend the second day at Tishomingo State Park in southern Tishomingo County learning how to “Ed Tech Meets Nature,” through a variety of lectures on not only the history of the area but how it relates to topics that educators will be teaching to willing pupils. Science and history lessons will all be available to participants as well as a photo safari that will lead members of the group through some of the most beautiful landscapes in the Magnolia State. “Northeast Mississippi is known for some of the most beautiful landscapes and best history in the Magnolia State,” said Northeast Public Information Specialist Michael H. Miller, who will help lead the photo safari in the park. “Tishomingo State Park was named as one of the ’17 Places in

Modern Woodmen sells life insurance, annuity and investment products to improve quality of life for members, their families and their communities. This is accomplished

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6A • Friday, January 22, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

Body of missing boy found Associatd Press

HENDERSON, Tenn. — The body of a 2-year-old boy missing since Jan. 14 was has been found in a clearing in the woods surrounding his home in the Pinson community. WMC-TV reports Chester County Sheriff

Blair Weaver announced the discovery during a late afternoon news conference on Thursday. Speaking through tears, Weaver called the boy’s death a tragic accident. Noah went missing during a walk in the woods with his grand-

mother and 4-year-old sister. The days-long search included hundreds of volunteers. Weaver said finding Noah’s body was “not the outcome we wanted, but we felt like we got some peace by bringing him home.”

Washington in bull’s eye of storm Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The forecast for a historic blizzard has been there for days, looming over the nation’s capital like the UFO from “Independence Day.” Projected snowfall totals have ticked steadily upward, to the point where the National Weather Service — known for its conservative predictions

— says more than 2 feet of snow could land on Washington. Residents and elected officials throughout the Eastern United States are heeding the warning. States of emergency have been declared in five states and the District of Columbia. Schools and government offices are being closed preemptively. Thousands

BLOOD

of flights have been canceled. Food and supplies are disappearing from grocery and hardware stores. College basketball games and concerts will have to wait. “It’s going to be dangerous out there ...,” said Tonya Woods, 42, a Washington Metro station manager who lives in suburban Clinton, Maryland.

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In order to give, donors must be at least 17 years old or 16 with a signed parental consent form, weigh at least 110 pounds and have a valid ID. Additional information and forms can be obtained by visiting the website at www.msblood.com. Founded in 1979, MBS is the only non-for-profit blood center headquartered in Mississippi. It supplies a safe and adequate supply of blood and blood products to Mississippi hospitals from the Tennessee line to the Mississippi Gulf Coast and is Mississippi’s blood service.

sink hole problem to worsen. He plans to ask Easom to move the garden to prevent future problems. “We have came up with a temporary solution, but ultimately we are going to have to replace that section of pipe,” said Verdung. An estimate of $500,000 was given to replace the pipe. Verdung said he is also addressing a new drainage issue at the intersection of Cemetery Street and Main Street. Plans are to tie the cemetery drainage into the city’s main drainage system in hopes of stopping the flooding in that intersection. He said work is also slowly moving along on Meigg Street where a sidewalk and lighting

(To learn more call 888-902-BLOOD (9025663), like their Facebook page at www.facebook. com/give2live or follow MSbloodservices on twitter at #Give1Save3.)

CONTRACT

project is underway. He expects the bidding process to begin in early spring. ■ The board voted to renew their two Corinth Tourism board member appointments. Russell Smith is a joint city-county appointment, while Laura Albright is a city only appointment. Both were renewed for another year. On the recommendation of new Corinth Librarian Cody Daniel, the board voted to replace the late Jim Johnson with Sam Kemp as the city’s appointment on the Northeast Regional Library board. ■ Three properties were dismissed for adjudication, including the Howell Home Center, 415 Martin Luther King Drive and 1807 Maple Street.

TAX

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the year. Caldwell said the correctional officers are staying busy with further training as they await the return of inmates, and they began working their shift rotations on Thursday. With MDOC making the monthly payments, he said the correctional facility is not losing money by having the staff on duty. He remains optimistic that inmates will return soon. In staffing for the sheriff’s department, the board approved Larry Duncan as a part-time deputy effective Jan. 4. He will be the instructor for the D.A.R.E. drug education program in the county schools. “Larry is the longest-serving D.A.R.E. instructor in the state of Mississippi,” said Caldwell. The board also approved the swap of a vehicle and K9 dog with Tishomingo County for a 2009 Ford Crown Victoria. The board also accepted Corinth PD’s donation of three Ford Crown Victorias and a Ford Explorer that are being retired from the city’s fleet. Supervisors also approved changes to authorized signatures on a number of sheriff’s accounts.

of November. Corinth’s sales tax diversion totaled $515,002.74, a decrease of 0.3 percent, or about $1,700, from a year ago, after posting increases for the prior five months. Ten of 12 municipalities in the region posted increases for the month, but the statewide total decreased by 0.9 percent. Other sales tax results from the region (percentages rounded except those less than 1 percent): • Booneville - $155,385.66 (+1%) • Burnsville - $13,442.40 (+18%) • Farmington - $3,091.14 (-27%) • Glen - $1,717.63 (+3%) • Iuka - $65,609.91 (+2%) • Kossuth - $3,333.75 (+16%) • Rienzi - $4,653.95 (+8%) • Ripley - $105,007.63 (+0.3%) • Tishomingo - $9,400.38 (+4%) • Tupelo - $1,609,593.30 (+4%) • Walnut - $27,062.75 (+47%)

Deaths John Kennedy

Funeral services for Billy Farris “John” Kennedy, 68, are set for 11 a.m. today at Memorial Funeral Home Chapel with burial at Forrest Memorial Park. Visitation is from 10 a.m. until the service. Mr. Kennedy died Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2016, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. Born in Booneville on Sept. 3, 1947, he was a member of Wheeler Grove Baptist Church. Kennedy He was preceded in death by his parents, William Wesley and Bertha Kennedy; brothers Jack, Harold and Charles Kennedy; and a sister, Quay Hillis. Survivors include his sisters, Carolyn (Marvin Derrick) Hall, Magdalene Roseberry and Angelene Cornelius, all of Corinth; a brother, Stanley Kennedy of Illinois; a special niece, Dale K. White of Memphis, Tenn.; a special friend, Paula Landrum; and a host of other family and friends. Bro. Nelson Hight will officiate the service.

Nick LeBlanc

IUKA — Nick LeBlanc, 97, died Thursday, Jan. 21, 2016, at St. Francis Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. Cutshall Funeral Home of Iuka will have the arrangements.

Gerald Hodge

IUKA — Funeral services for Gerald Hodge, 85, are set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Cutshall Funeral Home Chapel in Iuka with burial at New Prospect Cemetery. Visitation is today from 4 until 8 p.m. Mr. Hodge died Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2016, at his home. He owned and operated Hodge Lift Truck Service. He was a deacon of New Prospect Baptist Church, a U.S. Navy veteran of the Korean War and a member of the VFW and American Legion. Survivors include his wife of 54 years, Sybil Turner Hodge of Iuka; a son, Steven Hodge of Iuka; a daughter, Sharon Lynn Hodge Kinder (Stewart) of Houston, Texas; a brother, Bobby Hodge (Wilma) of Iuka; a sister, Joanne Ardinger of Iuka; and three grandchildren, Luke Kinder, Sam Kinder and Hannah Kinder. He was preceded in death by his parents, Fred and Amy Hodge, and three brothers, Hoyt, Harold and Fred Hodge Jr. Memorial contributions may be made to the New Prospect Baptist Church Fund.

Barry Joe McNutt

TISHOMINGO — Funeral services for Barry Joe McNutt, 57, are set for 11 a.m. today at Ludlam Funeral Home Chapel in Iuka with burial in South Crossroads

Online guestbook: memorialcorinth. com

Josh Manus

CUMMING, Ga. — Funeral services for Josh Manus, 44, are set for 1 p.m. Saturday at McDonald and Son Funeral Home Chapel in Cumming, Ga. Visitation is today from 2 until 8 p.m. Mr. Manus parted from this world to be with his Lord and Savior on Monday, January 18, 2016. He resided in Cumming, Ga., where he was the owner and operator of Manus Upholstery. While he will be missed here, he is playing the coolest drum set for Jesus. He was the best daddy, husband, brother, son and friend. He was preceded in death by his stepfather, Buddy Hampson. Survivors include his wife of nearly 20 years, Angel; his nine-year-old son, Jackson; his mother, Betty Hampson; his father, Ernest Manus; his brothers and their wives, Tim and Pam Zuber, Rusty and Lynn Manus, and Ernie and Janie Manus; and a multitude of nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews. Memorial contributions may be made to Angel Manus, c/o Freedom Tabernacle, 2160 Freedom Parkway, Cumming, GA 30041. Online guestbook: mcdonaldandson. com Cemetery at Tishomingo. Mr. McNutt died Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016. Survivors include his mother, Juanita McNutt of Tishomingo; a brother, Gary McNutt (Beth) of Tishomingo; and two sisters, Jan Casabella (James) and Phyllis Brickman (Alan), both of California. He was preceded in death by his father, Orville McNutt. Bro. Hal Holt will officiate the service.

Joey Wilkinson

FLORENCE, Ala. — Funeral services for Joseph “Joey” Edward Wilkinson, 35, are set for 1 p.m. Saturday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories. Visitation is today from 6 until 9 p.m. and Saturday from 12 noon until the service. Mr. Wilkinson died Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2016, at UAB Hospital in Birmingham, Ala. Born April 25, 1980, he was a selfemployed laborer. Survivors include his parents, Sam and Wilkinson Freida Wilkinson of Columbia; a brother, Sam Wilkinson of Florence, Ala.; two sisters, Shanda Puckett of Florence, Ala., and Mistie Hauser of Hattiesburg; and his maternal grandmother, Sue Doles Graves (B.J.) of Corinth. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Sam and Hazel Wilkinson, and his maternal grandfather, Junior Doles. Bro. Nelson Hight will officiate the service.

RODEO CONTINUED FROM 1A

are something new for Southeastern and it will be something people will talk about.” Thunder began his rodeo career in 1988 as a bull rider before making the switch to bare back riding. “I’m too old to keep riding bulls,” he said with a laugh. The cowboy grew up around the rodeo as his brother and friends competed on the circuit. “I decided it was what I wanted to get into after seeing my first live event,” said Thunder.

Thunder credits clean living and staying in shape for being able to do 50-60 events a year. “I don’t smoke or drink,” he said. “I stay in shape and go to church … if you take care of the temple, the temple will take care of you.” Thunder also praises Hull for the opportunity he has given black athletes. “He has opened the door for a lot of young people,” said Thunder of Hull. “Walter cares about the cowboys and cowgirls and because of him a lot of them are getting into rodeo and fulfilling their

dreams.” Hull, who drew 5,250 at last year’s event in Tupelo, hopes to sell out the Crossroads Arena. “Our mission is to provide affordable family entertainment,” said the owner of the Montgomery, Ala. business. “Not just any kind of entertainment, but high-quality entertainment.” Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at the arena box office Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. or online at www.crossroadsarena. com. Doors open at 6 p.m. the night of the rodeo.

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Friday, January 22, 2016

State/Nation

Across the Nation Associated Press

Suspect ID’ed after locking keys in car FAIRBANKS, Alaska — A man suspected of burglarizing two businesses in a community outside Fairbanks, Alaska, was identified after locking his keys in his car. North Pole Police Chief Steve Dutra says surveillance footage recorded the 27-yearold man loading stolen items Jan. 6 into the trunk of his car. He is suspected of taking $6,000 in items from a laundry and a fitness business. The surveillance footage shows the man maneuvering his car closer for easier loading. Later video shows a cab pulling up to help unlock the car. Police obtained the man’s cellphone number and name from the cab company. Prosecutors on Wednesday filed criminal charges of burglary, felony theft and misdemeanor mischief charges. A warrant has been issued for the man’s arrest.

Man faces charges after 23 car wrecks SALT LAKE CITY — Utah officials say a man accused of getting himself into almost two dozen car crashes to collect insurance money has been charged with fraud. Navid Monjazeb was arrested this week and charged with 12 counts of insurance fraud. Authorities say he collected over $55,000 from insurance carriers over five years. Armand Glick with the Utah Insurance Department’s fraud division says those charges came in cases where investigators could show the car was damaged before the crash. Monjazeb was also charged with pattern of unlawful activity, two counts of forgery and seven counts of reckless endangerment. Glick says his department opened a six-month investigation after an insurance company recognized similar claims with the same vehicle.

Former officer gets 263 years for rapes

People who have traveled to Iran since July 14, 2015, or Iraq for “legitimate businessrelated purposes” can also apply to come to the United States under the visa waiver program. The Homeland Security Department said waivers for some applicants to the Electronic System for Travel Authorization, or ESTA, will be granted on a “case-bycase” basis. Those travelers who are denied visa-free travel can still apply for visa through a U.S. embassy in their home country.

Husband accused in doctor’s slaying

WASHINGTON — It took an act of Congress, but the children of Washington are finally welcome to sled down on Capitol Hill. With a major blizzard bearing down on Washington, the U.S. Capitol Police on Thursday said they won’t be enforcing — as in years past — a longstanding sledding ban. Existing law officially forbids sledding in order to protect the Capitol grounds. But in legislation that cleared Congress last month, lawmakers instructed the cops to chill out. In prior years, sheepish Capitol police officers reluctantly enforced the ban. Last year, however, revelers orchestrated a “sled-in” — with the full support of Washington’s nonvoting delegate, Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton, and a complement of local media covering the story. The police stood aside, avoiding the embarrassment and bad media coverage that would have come from breaking up the fun.

U.S. reveals plan for new visa rules WASHINGTON — The Obama administration tightened restrictions on European and other travelers who have visited Iran, Iraq, Syria or Sudan in the last five years, even as it said the new rules may not apply to those in certain occupations who have traveled for business. The move quickly angered Republican lawmakers who accused the administration of circumventing the will of Congress. The administration said Thursday that people who traveled to those countries as journalists, for work with humanitarian agencies or on behalf of international organizations, regional organizations and provincial or local governments may still be eligible to visit the United States without first obtaining a visa.

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OKLAHOMA CITY — A former police officer convicted of raping and sexually victimizing women while on his beat in a low-income Oklahoma City neighborhood was ordered Thursday to spend the rest of his life in prison. Jurors had recommended that Daniel Holtzclaw be sentenced to 263 years in prison for preying on women in 2013 and 2014. District Judge Timothy Henderson agreed, said Holtzclaw will serve the terms consecutively and denied his request for an appeal bond. Holtzclaw waived his

Across the State

right to remain in custody in the county jail for 10 days, instead opting to be taken directly to prison. Defense attorney Scott Adams said Holtzclaw will appeal. “It is what it is,” Adams said. “It wasn’t a surprise.” Oklahoma County District Attorney David Prater had strong words for Holtzclaw, who was convicted last month on 18 counts, including four first-degree rape counts as well as forcible oral sodomy, sexual battery, procuring lewd exhibition and seconddegree rape. Holtzclaw was acquitted on 18 other counts.

SCARSDALE, N.Y. — The husband of a pediatrician at a New York City children’s hospital was charged with murder after she was found stabbed in a shower at their multimillion-dollar suburban home, authorities said Thursday. Jules Reich, a tax specialist at a New York City firm, was arraigned Wednesday night in Scarsdale village court on a second-degree murder charge, according to the Westchester County district attorney’s office. His 58-year-old wife, Dr. Robin Goldman, was found dead on Wednesday. Police responded after receiving a 911 call of a woman seriously injured at the five-bedroom, four-bath property, which sits on 1.29 acres. An autopsy was planned, but she suffered multiple stab wounds, the prosecutor’s office said. Public records show that Reich had petitioned for divorce in August. Goldman was a pediatrician affiliated with the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx and a faculty member at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

Daily Corinthian • 7A

Lawmakers: Allow Capitol Hill sledding

Plunging oil prices may boost economy WASHINGTON — Sinking oil prices have cratered the stock market. But a silver lining could appear eventually. Cheaper gasoline and heating oil are giving consumers worldwide more money that they can use to step up spending later — and perhaps energize economies in the United States, Europe and much of Asia. The question is, will they — and when? “It’s definitely a plus for consumers,” Sara Johnson, an economist at forecasting firm IHS Global Insight, said of the deep savings being accumulated from sharply lower energy prices. “We should see a pickup in spending in the first quarter.” The price of oil reached a 12-year low of $28.15 a barrel by the end of trading Wednesday before poking above $29 on Thursday. As recently as June, the price was about $60. Retail gasoline prices have sunk to a national average of $1.86 a gallon, the lowest since 2009, according to AAA.

Associated Press

Death row inmate may appeal again JACKSON — The Mississippi Supreme Court says a death row inmate convicted of killing his roommate can file more appeals because jurors might have been improperly influenced by bailiffs in the trial court. Bobby Batiste, a former Mississippi State University student, was sentenced to death in 2009 in Oktibbeha County. A jury convicted him of capital murder in the 2008 slaying of Andreas Galanis. Prosecutors say Galanis died from a blow to the head after he and Batiste fought at their off-campus apartment when Galanis discovered money missing from his checking account. Court records show Batiste told police that Galanis attacked him first. The state Supreme Court said Thursday that a juror filed an affidavit saying a bailiff told her the jury was all-white because black jurors wouldn’t consider the death penalty.

Coast casinos see best year since ’08 D’IBERVILLE, Miss. — The Dec. 9 opening of Scarlet Pearl Casino in D’Iberville helped push the Mississippi coast casinos to $1.14 billion in gross casino revenue for the year, squeaking revenue past the 2009 total of $1.11 billion. It was a 6 percent annual improvement over the $1.08 billion won in 2014. That’s according to a report Wednesday from the state Department of Revenue. The Sun Herald reports the river casinos had their worst year since 1994, when the first casinos opened in that area. For the second year, revenues slipped below $1 billion to $954.0 million. That is 3.5 percent below 2014. The Coast’s strong performance helped raise Mississippi’s total casino revenue to $2.07 billion, or 1.4 percent above 2014 levels.

Balloons to fly over Greenwood in event GREENWOOD — In June, hot air balloons will once again fly over the City of Greenwood as a couple of entrepreneurs bring back a popular event. The Greenwood Commonwealth reports businessmen James Gammill and David Elmore conceived the idea to reintroduce the Greenwood Balloon & Music Festival, which is scheduled for June 16-18 in Whittington Park. The last BalloonFest was held in 2003. “It’s a threeday event, if done properly, that will fill up all the hotels and fill up the restaurants,” Gammill told the Greenwood City Council this week. “It used to fill up hotels in the surrounding cities within 30 to 45 miles. I believe we can bring that back again.” Including the traditional balloon glow in the park, the event will have food vendors, arts and crafts sellers and motorcycle and car enthusiasts. Children 10 and under will be admitted free, he said.

Cruise eyes docking overnight in Natchez NATCHEZ — Visitors traveling on the American Queen steamboat cruise are saying they want more time in Natchez, but making that happen might be a logistical problem. Natchez Convention and Visitors Bureau Director Kevin Kirby tells the Natchez Democrat he’s working with the American Queen to lengthen the amount of time the steamboat stays docked in Natchez, possibly even making the city an overnight stop instead of just a day stop. Currently, Kirby says no riverboat stays overnight in Natchez. He says this isn’t enough time to take advantage of all Natchez has to offer. Kirby says Steamboats are “strapped for time,” with most stopping in Memphis and New Orleans in addition to Natchez.

USM sees increase in research funding OCEAN SPRINGS — The University of Southern Mississippi saw an increase in research funding last year. The Sun Herald reports the university received nearly $73 million in external funding for research during fiscal year 2015 — a 24.1 percent increase over the previous year. A large part of that money will go toward research on the Gulf Coast. The money will be used at Stennis Space Center for oceanographers to research water circulation in the ocean, geology and chemistry. It will also be used at the university’s Gulf Coast Research Lab in Ocean Springs where it will fund studies for marine resources, wetlands and oyster culturing.

City council decides to remove state flag GREENVILLE — The Greenville City Council has voted to remove the Mississippi state flag from all city properties and buildings. The Delta DemocratTimes reports council members voted 4-2 Tuesday in favor of removing the flag. Mississippi law does not compel cities to fly

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the state flag, which may be displayed from all public buildings. Council members voted after hearing from the Rev. Roosevelt Johnson. He says that by petitioning to remove the flag, his group wasn’t trying to infringe on anyone’s belief or opinion, but instead trying to eliminate a divide it created among black and white residents. Voting against the removal of the state flag were council members Carolyn Weathers and Ann Hollowell. They said they believed it was a matter best left up to the state.

L a n g l e y We a l t h M a n a g e m e n t 6 0 5 Fo o t e S t r e e t Corinth, MS 38834

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9.11 34.54 39.48 58.36 98.29 34.56 88.00 2.09 32.09 7.09 70.72 33.69 8.29 58.15 15.77 9.11 57.45 575.02 3.88 39.79 16.03 14.63 57.64 62.64 55.31 152.78 47.78 33.55 50.53 8.05 8.69 138.78 37.24 96.30 16.81 3.55 31.92 7.56 .07 30.69 7.97 6.46 124.53 2.62 31.78 21.00 29.46 4.02 4.12 13.36 34.31 4.57 10.62 27.29 8.33 40.69 27.28 23.77 6.88 24.16 123.40 2.56 29.23 17.56 63.13 54.14 1.74 45.77 30.27 81.99 22.36 94.48 18.65 1.21 5.66 14.54 17.38 78.26 45.78 49.57 22.04 59.69 105.46 4.25 17.43 22.62 29.13 3.55 81.05 109.43 22.90 40.15 21.33 1.64 32.47 3.11 41.39 59.06 63.65 54.32 33.30 39.25 36.91 6.04 67.69 18.61 16.93 1.84 1.79 14.86 18.02 11.02 42.92 8.22 5.72 26.65 46.52 1.26 18.58 24.60 24.18 36.93 21.70 64.73 2.95 19.60 19.77 8.91 18.59 42.58 62.84 15.84 48.42 94.02 68.49 42.00 .11 53.56 71.09 38.41 10.58

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PetrbrsA Petrobras Pfizer PhilipMor Phillips66 PioNtrl PiperJaf PlainsAAP PlainsGP PlatfmSpc Potash PwShs QQQ ProShtS&P ProUltSP s ProUShD30 PrUltPQQQ PUltSP500 s PUVixST rs PrUCrude rs ProVixSTF ProShtVix ProctGam ProgsvCp ProgWaste ProUShSP PUShtQQQ PShtQQQ PUShtSPX ProspctCap PulteGrp

Eric M Rutledge, CFP®, AAMS® Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suit 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409

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10.03 47.05 17.66 10.29 26.03 7.83 9.63 23.87 7.71 12.18 85.48 38.16 38.19 44.32 6.02 12.32 158.60 105.49 31.17 228.62 186.69 53.73 29.48 28.37 24.81 32.44 35.29 39.67 25.42 69.51 2.47 66.23 61.45 24.82 24.38 1.98 27.56 3.66 63.29 31.77 5.80 46.81 39.50 8.80 25.67 44.46 9.27 2.50 37.83 66.79 48.46 72.05 53.38 20.90 48.22 39.29 43.03 8.97 59.03 11.87 15.86 2.16 91.89 20.84 2.56 36.06 9.05 4.28 18.98 27.73 6.29 39.40 27.97 57.32 21.33 68.64 3.75 5.46 9.85 19.78 24.81 61.99 49.83 137.76 69.48 41.01 9.72 74.35 5.69 25.52 25.62 17.83 51.01

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413 Cruise Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471

401 E. Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-7885

www.edwardjones.com +.74 +1.12 +.02 -.77 +4.04 -.07 +1.06 +1.17 +.13 +.67 +3.04 +1.20 +1.32 +.54 +.61 +2.54 +.99 +.12 +.32 +.35 +1.04 -1.41 +.40 -.52 +.13 +.15 -.52 +.38 +1.67 -.82 +.18 -2.44 +.39 +.18 -.89 +.11 -1.66 +.06 +1.67 -2.05 -.17 -.35 +.20 +1.42 +1.64 +2.46 +.17 +.05 +.33 -.20 +.19 +.91 +1.61 -.09 +.21 +.22 -.04 +.14 +2.11 +.49 -.02 +.23 +.89 +1.23 +.22 -.49 -.05 +.16 +.11 +.41 -.26 -.34 +1.02 +.24 +1.05 +.12 +.54 +.17 +.41 +.12 +.11 +.82 +.80 +.58 +.80 +.64 +7.03 +2.34 -.12 -.13 +.45 +1.05

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Steven D Hefner, CFP® Financial Advisor

Chris Marshall Financial Advisor

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Member SIPC

If U.S. sales of new cars and trucks slow down as expected this year, automakers will likely spend more on incentives to protect their market share. That’s great news for consumers, but could lead to trouble for car companies. Kelley Blue Book predicts automakers will spend a record $3,100 per vehicle on incentives this year, up $150 per vehicle – or 5 percent – from 2015. KBB says incentives are now growing faster than overall car prices. The average price a buyer pays for a car is expected to grow 1.5 percent to $33,900 this year. Nearly every automaker uses cash-back offers, zero-percent financing and other incentives to attract buyers and unload excess inventory. Low gas prices hurt sales of small, fuel-efficient cars, for example, so Toyota is currently offering $2,000

Hard bargains for carmakers cash back on a 2015 Prius hybrid. But incentives can be dangerous for the industry. They lower a car’s resale value, which pulls down used-car prices. That forces manufacturers to lower prices on new cars to compete for buyers. Brands can be damaged if there’s too much focus on the bargain. And incentives hurt automakers’ profits and their ability to invest in future vehicles. Ideally, automakers shouldn’t spend more than 10 percent of a vehicle’s average sale price on incentives over a sustained period, analysts say. KBB says the ratio of incentive spending to average price has risen from 8 percent in 2012 to 9 percent last year, but many brands are already spending well over 10 percent.

Wheels and Deals Automakers are increasing incentives to lure car buyers.

Buick Chrysler Volkswagen Lincoln Infiniti Nissan Kia Mitsubishi Cadillac Dodge Ram Chevrolet Hyundai BMW Average Jaguar Ford Mercedes-Benz Jeep GMC Mazda Lexus Mini Honda Toyota Volvo Acura Audi Subaru Porsche Land Rover

16.8

8.9%

Ratio of incentive spending to average price paid per vehicle, 2015 0.7

Source: Kelley Blue Book

Dee-Ann Durbin; Jenni Sohn • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 18,351.36 15,370.33 9,214.77 6,403.31 657.17 539.96 11,254.87 8,937.99 5,231.94 4,292.14 2,134.72 1,812.29 1,551.28 1,215.14 22,537.15 18,550.48 1,296.00 958.48

Net YTD 52-wk Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg 15,882.68 +115.94 +.74 -8.85 -10.84 6,689.97 +64.44 +.97 -10.90 -26.83 578.66 -.37 -.06 +.15 -10.40 9,226.58 +69.74 +.76 -9.04 -15.04 4,472.06 +.37 +.01 -10.69 -5.86 1,868.99 +9.66 +.52 -8.56 -9.41 1,256.84 +1.91 +.15 -10.13 -14.05 19,172.60 +94.91 +.50 -9.43 -11.59 997.34 -1.97 -.20 -12.20 -16.22

Name Dow Industrials Dow Transportation Dow Utilities NYSE Composite Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 S&P MidCap Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Dow Jones industrials

16,920

Close: 15,882.68 Change: 115.94 (0.7%)

16,180 15,440

18,000

10 DAYS

17,500 17,000 16,500 16,000 15,500

J

A

S

O

N

D

J

Last 11.55

YTD Chg %Chg -.21 -14.8

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name AFLAC AT&T Inc AerojetR AirProd AlliantEgy AEP AmeriBrgn ATMOS BB&T Cp BP PLC BcpSouth Caterpillar Chevron CocaCola Comcast CrackerB Deere Dillards Dover EnPro FordM FredsInc FullerHB GenElec Goodyear HonwllIntl Intel Jabil KimbClk Kroger s Lowes McDnlds

Div 1.64f 1.92f ... 3.24 2.35f 2.24f 1.36f 1.68f 1.08 2.40 .40f 3.08 4.28 1.32 1.00 4.40a 2.40 .28f 1.68 .80 .60a .24 .52 .92 .28 2.38f .96 .32 3.52 .42f 1.12 3.56f

PE 10 38 ... 19 17 16 ... 20 12 ... 14 12 18 27 17 17 13 9 12 ... 10 ... 19 ... 3 17 13 10 66 18 22 25

Last 55.82 34.54 15.18 117.17 61.57 57.64 90.57 62.38 31.78 29.46 20.10 59.69 81.05 41.39 54.32 121.65 73.03 67.19 52.85 40.34 12.01 14.74 33.97 28.59 27.92 96.58 29.66 18.60 124.95 37.15 69.32 117.84

YTD Chg %Chg Name Div .48 +.27 -6.8 OldNBcp +.64 +.4 Penney ... -.16 -3.1 PennyMac 1.88 -.39 -9.9 -.19 -1.4 PepsiCo 2.81 -.28 -1.1 PilgrimsP 5.77e -.33 -12.7 .24 -.01 -1.0 RegionsFn -1.08 -15.9 SbdCp 3.00 +1.00 -5.8 SearsHldgs ... -.44 -16.2 2.68 +.88 -12.2 Sherwin +2.07 -9.9 SiriusXM ... +.01 -3.7 SouthnCo 2.17 +.71 -3.3 .46e -1.53 -4.1 SPDR Fncl +1.03 -4.2 Torchmark .54 +2.12 +2.3 Total SA 2.71e +.20 -13.8 1.02 +.59 -8.0 US Bancrp +.11 -14.8 WalMart 1.96 -.16 -10.0 WellsFargo 1.50 -.51 -6.9 .24f +.59 -8.2 Wendys Co -.01 -14.5 WestlkChm .73f +.34 -6.7 WestRock n 1.50 +.07 -13.9 1.24 -.03 -20.1 Weyerhsr +1.26 -1.8 Xerox .28 -.70 -11.2 ... +1.25 -8.8 YRC Wwde ... +2.06 -.3 Yahoo

PE 11 ...

6.56

+.25

-1.5

10

13.00

+.02

-14.8

28

94.47

+.70

-5.5

7

21.09

-.22

-4.5

12

7.83

-.07

-18.4

18 2799.95 +58.09 ...

-3.3

17.02

+.23

24 245.97

+.60

-5.3

37

3.66

+.06

-10.1

18

46.81

-.35

...

...

20.90

-.09

-12.3

12

51.80

+.14

-9.2

...

41.01

+.80

-8.8

12

38.52

-.35

-9.7

-17.2

13

61.88 +1.04

12

48.01

+.14

9.77

+.30

-9.3

43.40 +1.24

-20.1

31 8

+.9 -11.7

...

36.41

+.36

-20.2

24

25.00

+.40

-16.6

31

9.04

+.28

-15.0

11

9.68

+.65

-31.7

...

29.31

+.53

-11.9

MARKET SUMMARY MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name

Vol (00)

Last Chg Name

Last

Chg

BkofAm KindMorg FrptMcM GenElec MicronT Apple Inc SiriusXM FordM Alcoa Cisco

1854298 689921 608599 550711 509430 496050 481070 480463 463971 445649

13.36 13.88 4.33 28.59 10.85 96.30 3.66 12.01 7.09 22.90

3.50 5.69 2.50 2.04 3.45 4.69 6.25 3.27 3.46 12.32

+2.43 +227.1 Engility 15.10 -13.85 +2.34 +69.9 Alkermes 33.69 -26.73 +.70 +38.9 CathGn wt 6.99 -3.88 +.56 +37.8 TxCapB wt 19.36 -5.19 +.78 +29.2 Cerecor n 3.23 -.68 +1.05 +28.8 AlonBlue rs 4.21 -.87 +1.38 +28.3 MirnaTh n 4.27 -.79 +.69 +26.7 GWG Hldgs 4.60 -.79 +.72 +26.3 ContraFect 3.67 -.61 +2.54 +26.0 CPI Card n 7.70 -1.18

-.33 +1.87 +.26 +.59 +.80 -.49 +.06 +.11 +.35

TrovaGn wt Trovagne Connecture UltraPt g VanNR pfC MedleyMgt VanNR pfA LegcyR pfB VanNR pfB SM Energy

%Chg Name

NYSE DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged

2,029 Total issues 1,094 New Highs 77 New Lows Volume

4,992,930,543

Last

Chg

1,500 Total issues 1,285 New Highs 165 New Lows Volume

2,380,525,516

In transition

Just a glitch?

Capital’s assets.

Economists project that sales of previously occupied homes rebounded in December from a month earlier. The pace of U.S. home sales slowed sharply in November, a setback that followed solid gains for much of 2015. The introduction of a new disclosure form in October likely prevented many homebuyers from closing on sales in November. The National Association of Realtors is expected to report today that sales climbed to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of about 5.2 million last month.

GE $28.59 General Electric reports its $35 $23.85 fourth-quarter earnings today. Financial analysts anticipate that the 30 industrial conglomerate’s latest results 25 declined from a year earlier. GE has ’15 20 been focusing on its industrial businesses, which involve making est. Operating $0.56 $0.49 large, complicated equipment, while EPS also shrinking its businesses that 4Q ’14 4Q ’15 focus on finance. Investors will be Price-earnings ratio: 859 listening for an update on where GE based on past 12-month results stands in its transition, a big part of Dividend: $0.92 Div yield: 3.2% which involves selling most of GE Source: FactSet

%Chg -47.8 -44.2 -35.7 -21.1 -17.4 -17.1 -15.6 -14.7 -14.3 -13.3

NASDAQ DIARY 3,200 Advanced 5 Declined 100 Unchanged

Friday, January 22, 2016

2,950 4 119

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AMG YacktmanSvc d19.65 +0.07 -5.8 AQR MaFtStrI 10.66 -0.10 +4.7 Advisors’ Inner Crcl EGrthIns 19.73 -0.05 -9.9 American Beacon LgCpVlIs 21.95 +0.20 -10.3 American Century EqIncInv 7.53 +0.03 -5.4 InvGrInv 25.57 +0.13 -8.9 UltraInv 31.97 +0.14 -8.7 ValueInv 6.90 +0.05 -9.1 American Funds AMCAPA m 23.67 +0.06 -8.8 AmBalA m 22.66 +0.09 -4.9 BondA m 12.64 ... +0.5 CapIncBuA m 52.73 +0.36 -5.6 CapWldBdA m18.90 -0.01 -0.1 CpWldGrIA m 39.51 +0.12 -8.9 EurPacGrA m 40.67 +0.03 -10.4 FnInvA m 46.27 +0.34 -8.8 GlbBalA m 26.65 +0.07 -5.5 GrthAmA m 37.16 +0.19 -10.0 HiIncA m 8.95 +0.06 NA IncAmerA m 19.03 +0.11 -5.9 IntBdAmA m 13.48 -0.01 +0.4 IntlGrInA m 25.56 +0.09 -9.8 InvCoAmA m 30.83 +0.28 -7.6 MutualA m 31.66 +0.27 -6.5 NewEconA m 32.12 -0.14 -10.7 NewPerspA m 32.41 +0.14 -10.0 NwWrldA m 44.86 -0.07 -10.3 SmCpWldA m 38.27 -0.08 -12.3 TaxEBdAmA m13.18 ... +0.9 WAMutInvA m 35.31 +0.32 -8.1 Artisan Intl d 25.88 +0.12 -9.8 IntlI d 26.03 +0.11 -9.8 IntlVal d 28.92 +0.11 -8.8 MidCapI 37.77 -0.23 -11.4 Baird 10.70 -0.01 +0.8 AggrInst CrPlBInst 10.91 -0.01 +0.6 Bernstein DiversMui 14.65 -0.01 +1.0 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 12.96 +0.62 -14.0 EqDivA m 19.15 +0.08 -8.6 EqDivI 19.20 +0.09 -8.6 GlLSCrI 9.67 ... -1.0 GlobAlcA m 16.76 +0.04 -6.1 GlobAlcC m 15.27 +0.03 -6.1 GlobAlcI 16.85 +0.03 -6.0 HiYldBdIs 6.89 +0.04 -3.1 StIncInvA m 9.68 ... -0.8 StrIncIns 9.68 ... -0.8 Causeway IntlVlIns d 12.60 +0.09 -10.5 Cohen & Steers Realty 65.67 +0.35 -6.9 Columbia AcornIntZ 35.16 -0.06 -10.1 AcornZ 17.13 +0.03 -11.4 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.30 ... +0.2 2YrGlbFII 9.96 ... +0.3 5YrGlbFII 10.99 -0.01 +0.8 EmMkCrEqI 13.96 -0.06 -11.4 EmMktValI 17.81 -0.04 -12.7 EmMtSmCpI 15.61 -0.09 -11.2 IntCorEqI 10.13 +0.03 -11.1 IntSmCapI 16.51 +0.01 -11.6 IntlSCoI 15.28 ... -11.2 IntlValuI 14.05 +0.10 -12.4 RelEstScI 30.97 +0.22 -6.6 TAUSCrE2I 12.33 +0.04 -9.8 USCorEq1I 15.54 +0.06 -9.5 USCorEq2I 14.73 +0.06 -9.9 USLgCo 14.63 +0.08 -8.4 27.65 +0.17 -10.3 USLgValI USMicroI 15.65 -0.03 -10.6 USSmValI 26.86 +0.04 -11.9 USSmallI 25.37 -0.05 -10.5 USTgtValInst 17.44 +0.05 -11.7 Davis NYVentA m 27.33 +0.19 -11.5 Delaware Invest ValueI 16.06 +0.14 -8.7 Dodge & Cox Bal 87.47 +0.16 -7.4 GlbStock 9.22 +0.03 -11.9 Income 13.21 -0.02 -0.6 IntlStk 31.66 +0.08 -13.2 Stock 145.16 +0.43 -10.8 DoubleLine CrFxdIncI 10.72 ... +0.5 TotRetBdN b 10.89 ... +1.0 Eaton Vance FltgRtI 8.30 -0.02 -1.1 FMI LgCap 17.23 +0.03 -7.4 FPA Cres d 28.82 +0.10 -7.2 NewInc d 9.94 +0.01 -0.1 Federated InstHiYIn d 8.75 +0.05 -3.4 StrValI 5.50 +0.06 -2.5 ToRetIs 10.61 -0.01 -0.2 Fidelity AstMgr20 12.44 +0.01 -2.0 AstMgr50 15.24 +0.04 -5.0 Bal 19.84 +0.07 -6.5 Bal K 19.83 +0.06 -6.6 BlChGrow 61.76 +0.13 -10.5 BlChGrowK 61.85 +0.13 -10.5 CapApr 29.10 -0.01 -10.2 CapInc d 8.69 +0.04 -4.8 Contra 90.25 +0.25 -8.8 ContraK 90.19 +0.25 -8.8 DivGrow 27.76 +0.14 -8.4 DivrIntl d 31.40 +0.08 -10.4 DivrIntlK d 31.34 +0.08 -10.4 EqInc 46.43 +0.42 -9.1 EqInc II 22.44 +0.17 -8.7 FF2015 11.23 +0.01 -5.8 FF2035 11.32 +0.03 -9.5 FF2040 7.96 +0.03 -9.4 FltRtHiIn d 9.00 -0.01 -1.2 FrdmK2015 12.06 +0.02 -5.8 FrdmK2020 12.65 +0.02 -6.4 FrdmK2025 13.09 +0.02 -7.2 FrdmK2030 13.10 +0.03 -8.6 FrdmK2035 13.36 +0.03 -9.5 FrdmK2040 13.39 +0.03 -9.5 FrdmK2045 13.77 +0.03 -9.5 FrdmK2050 13.88 +0.04 -9.5 Free2010 13.86 +0.02 -4.9 Free2020 13.60 +0.03 -6.4 Free2025 11.55 +0.03 -7.2 Free2030 13.90 +0.04 -8.6 GNMA 11.58 ... +0.6 GrowCo 120.51 -0.79 -11.7 GrowInc 25.88 +0.18 -10.5 GrthCmpK 120.38 -0.79 -11.7 IntMuniInc d 10.58 -0.01 +0.8 IntlDisc d 35.11 ... -10.9 InvGrdBd 7.57 ... LatinAm d 14.05 -0.14 -14.0 LowPrStkK d 43.46 +0.01 -8.9 LowPriStk d 43.50 +0.01 -8.9 Magellan 81.05 +0.23 -9.4 MidCap d 29.54 +0.15 -9.7 MuniInc d 13.54 -0.02 +0.9 OTC 71.52 -0.27 -14.3 Puritan 19.07 +0.05 -6.2 PuritanK 19.06 +0.05 -6.2 RealInv d 37.74 +0.24 -7.0 SASEqF 11.56 +0.07 -9.5 SEMF 12.63 ... -12.2 SInvGrBdF 11.04 -0.01 +0.2 STMIdxF d 53.30 +0.22 -9.2 SersEmgMkts 12.60 ... -12.3 SesAl-SctrEqt 11.57 +0.07 -9.5 SesInmGrdBd 11.04 -0.01 +0.2 ShTmBond 8.57 ... +0.3 SmCapDisc d 23.77 -0.06 -10.0 StkSelec 30.24 +0.19 -9.8 StratInc 9.93 +0.02 -2.1 Tel&Util 21.04 +0.18 -3.8 TotalBd 10.22 ... -0.2 USBdIdx 11.58 -0.01 +0.9 USBdIdxInv 11.58 -0.01 +0.9 Value 85.49 +0.48 -10.7 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 23.71 +0.11 -9.3 NewInsI 24.16 +0.12 -9.3 Fidelity Select Biotech d 182.77 -4.78 -22.5 HealtCar d 187.78 -0.49 -9.8 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 65.72 +0.34 -8.5 500IdxAdvtgInst65.72 +0.34 -8.5 500IdxInstl 65.72 +0.34 -8.5

Economic barometer

500IdxInv 65.71 +0.34 -8.5 ExtMktIdAg d 44.12 ... -12.1 IntlIdxAdg d 32.21 +0.12 -10.4 TotMktIdAg d 53.30 +0.22 -9.2 Fidelity® SeriesGrowthCo11.40 -0.07 -11.6 SeriesGrowthCoF11.40 -0.07 -11.6 First Eagle GlbA m 47.61 -0.02 -7.3 FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.45 -0.01 +0.9 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.58 ... +1.1 GrowthA m 67.20 +0.16 -8.4 HY TF A m 10.60 -0.01 +1.1 Income C m 1.97 +0.01 -6.7 IncomeA m 1.95 +0.02 -6.7 IncomeAdv 1.93 +0.01 -6.7 RisDvA m 44.21 +0.25 -7.4 StrIncA m 8.94 +0.01 -2.3 FrankTemp-Mutual Discov Z 26.77 +0.21 -8.8 DiscovA m 26.32 +0.21 -8.8 Shares Z 23.98 +0.15 -7.8 SharesA m 23.78 +0.15 -7.8 FrankTemp-Templeton GlBond C m 11.06 ... -4.4 GlBondA m 11.04 ... -4.4 GlBondAdv 11.00 ... -4.3 GrowthA m 19.43 +0.21 -11.3 WorldA m 13.26 +0.15 -11.7 GE S&SUSEq 43.02 +0.15 -9.6 GMO IntItVlIV 18.03 +0.05 -10.2 Goldman Sachs MidCpVaIs 29.41 +0.26 -11.4 SmCpValIs 44.30 +0.03 -11.2 Harbor CapApInst 54.40 +0.20 -10.5 IntlInstl 53.66 +0.30 -9.7 Harding Loevner IntlEq d 15.33 ... -10.4 Hartford CapAprA m 30.44 +0.13 -11.3 CpApHLSIA 39.45 +0.17 -11.2 INVESCO ComstockA m 19.21 +0.17 -11.4 DivDivA m 16.49 +0.07 -6.2 EqIncomeA m 8.87 +0.02 -7.8 GrowIncA m 20.97 +0.12 -11.0 HiYldMuA m 10.15 -0.02 +0.7 IVA WorldwideI d 15.52 ... -5.0 Ivy AssetStrC m 20.01 +0.06 -4.6 AsstStrgI 21.16 +0.06 -4.6 JPMorgan CoreBdUlt 11.68 -0.01 +1.0 CoreBondSelect11.66 -0.02 +1.0 DiscEqUlt 19.78 +0.04 -9.6 EqIncSelect 12.49 +0.03 -8.0 HighYldSel 6.60 +0.03 NA LgCapGrA m 31.60 +0.06 -10.9 LgCapGrSelect31.71 +0.05 -10.9 MidCpValI 30.93 +0.16 -8.9 ShDurBndSel 10.84 ... +0.3 USEquityI 12.45 +0.03 -9.8 USLCpCrPS 23.95 ... -10.7 ValAdvI 25.28 +0.11 -9.5 Janus 27.47 +0.09 -5.1 BalT GlbLfScT 46.08 -0.29 -11.5 John Hancock DisValMdCpI 17.02 -0.01 -11.1 DiscValI 15.46 +0.09 -10.1 GAbRSI 10.15 ... -2.4 LifBa1 b 13.29 +0.03 -6.6 LifGr1 b 13.55 +0.03 -8.6 Lazard EmgMkEqInst d11.97 -0.01 -10.9 IntlStEqInst d 11.94 -0.03 -10.4 Legg Mason CBAggressGrthA m166.31-0.24 -11.1 CBAggressGrthI181.45 -0.26 -11.1 WACorePlusBdI11.38 ... -0.3 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 12.39 +0.05 -3.8 BdR b 12.32 +0.04 -3.9 Lord Abbett AffiliatA m 12.92 +0.09 -8.4 ShDurIncA m 4.29 +0.01 -0.3 ShDurIncC m 4.31 ... -0.5 ShDurIncF b 4.28 ... -0.5 MFS GrowA m 64.65 +0.12 -8.1 IntlValA m 31.28 +0.09 -8.4 IsIntlEq 18.58 +0.09 -9.6 TotRetA m 16.35 +0.01 -4.8 ValueA m 30.07 +0.07 -8.3 ValueI 30.23 +0.07 -8.3 Matthews Asian China 15.04 -0.33 -18.3 India 23.91 ... -9.5 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.70 ... +0.8 TotRtBd b 10.70 ... +0.8 TtlRtnBdPl 10.08 ... +0.9 Natixis LSInvBdY 10.62 +0.03 -2.1 Northern HYFixInc d 6.21 +0.01 -3.9 StkIdx 22.67 +0.11 -8.5 Nuveen HiYldMunI 17.25 -0.02 +0.9 Oakmark EqIncI 26.57 +0.06 -7.0 Intl I 18.73 +0.07 -12.3 56.20 +0.39 -10.6 Oakmark I Select I 34.48 +0.35 -12.1 Oberweis ChinaOpp m 10.43 -0.17 -14.2 Old Westbury GlbOppo 6.75 ... -6.9 GlbSmMdCp 13.37 ... -10.1 LgCpStr 11.31 ... -9.3 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 26.91 ... -11.5 DevMktY 26.55 ... -11.5 GlobA m 66.17 +0.35 -11.9 IntlGrY 32.74 +0.26 -8.8 IntlGrowA m 32.91 +0.25 -8.8 MainStrA m 39.39 +0.16 -9.3 Oppenheimer Rocheste FdMuniA m 14.66 -0.03 +0.3 Osterweis OsterStrInc 10.34 ... NA PIMCO AllAssetI 9.64 ... -5.5 AllAuthIn 7.25 ... -5.2 EmgLclBdI 6.32 ... -4.6 ForBdInstl 9.91 ... HiYldIs 7.97 +0.05 -3.2 Income P 11.60 ... -0.8 IncomeA m 11.60 ... -0.8 IncomeC m 11.60 ... -0.9 IncomeD b 11.60 ... -0.8 IncomeInl 11.60 ... -0.8 LowDrIs 9.81 ... -0.5 RERRStgC m 5.53 ... -8.3 RealRet 10.48 ... -0.2 ShtTermIs 9.66 ... -0.6 TotRetA m 10.05 ... -0.1 TotRetAdm b 10.05 ... -0.1 TotRetIs 10.05 ... -0.1 TotRetrnD b 10.05 ... -0.1 TotlRetnP 10.05 ... -0.1 PRIMECAP Odyssey AggGr 28.70 +0.10 -11.4 Growth 24.41 +0.01 -10.7 Stock 21.46 +0.08 -9.1 Parnassus CoreEqInv 33.92 +0.17 -8.2 Pioneer PioneerA m 29.35 +0.05 -8.1 Principal DivIntI 10.09 +0.06 -9.6 L/T2030I 12.01 +0.03 -7.2 LCGrIInst 10.71 +0.03 -10.5 Prudential Investmen JenMidCapGrZ 32.34 +0.15 -10.0 TotRetBdZ 14.02 -0.01 +0.6 Putnam GrowIncA m 17.62 +0.14 -10.6 NewOpp 64.54 +0.19 -10.1 Schwab 1000Inv d 45.29 +0.21 -8.9 FUSLgCInl d 12.87 +0.10 -8.3 S&P500Sel d 28.89 +0.15 -8.5 TotStkMSl d 32.82 +0.14 -9.1 Sequoia Sequoia 190.86 +1.17 -7.9 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 64.95 +0.18 -10.3 CapApprec 23.71 +0.03 -5.3 DivGrow 31.74 +0.12 -7.6 EmMktBd d 11.03 +0.03 -3.1

EmMktStk d 25.06 -0.06 EqIndex d 50.29 +0.26 EqtyInc 25.75 +0.21 GrowStk 47.87 +0.16 HealthSci 60.84 -0.75 HiYield d 5.96 +0.01 InsLgCpGr 25.70 +0.09 IntlBnd d 8.29 -0.01 IntlDisc d 48.38 -0.13 IntlGrInc d 11.79 +0.04 IntlStk d 13.65 +0.05 LatinAm d 13.36 -0.11 MidCapE 38.64 -0.19 MidCapVa 22.82 +0.11 MidCpGr 65.44 -0.32 NewHoriz 37.82 -0.14 NewIncome 9.39 -0.01 OrseaStk d 8.06 +0.03 R2015 12.95 +0.02 R2025 13.88 +0.03 R2035 14.45 +0.04 ReaAsset d 8.17 +0.09 Real d 25.59 +0.15 Ret2050 11.58 +0.04 Rtmt2010 16.14 +0.02 Rtmt2020 18.44 +0.03 Rtmt2030 20.10 +0.06 Rtmt2040 20.54 +0.06 Rtmt2045 13.79 +0.05 ShTmBond 4.71 ... SmCpStk 34.43 -0.19 SmCpVal d 32.61 -0.10 SpecInc 11.66 +0.01 Value 28.33 +0.16 TCW TotRetBdI 10.25 ... TIAA-CREF BdIdxInst 10.80 -0.01 EqIx 13.70 +0.06 IntlE 15.08 +0.03 Templeton InFEqSeS 16.86 +0.17 Thornburg IncBldA m 17.50 +0.16 IncBldC m 17.49 +0.16 IntlI 21.98 ... LtdTMul 14.64 ... Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 22.60 +0.19 Vanguard 500Adml 172.51 +0.89 500Inv 172.50 +0.89 BalIdxAdm 27.72 +0.05 BalIdxIns 27.72 +0.05 BdMktInstPls 10.73 -0.01 CAITAdml 11.96 ... CapOpAdml 106.52 +0.02 DevMktIdxAdm 10.58 +0.03 DevMktIdxInstl 10.60 +0.04 DivGr 20.95 +0.08 EmMktIAdm 23.72 -0.16 EnergyAdm 68.45 +2.30 EqInc 27.28 +0.16 EqIncAdml 57.18 +0.34 ExplAdml 66.05 -0.05 55.86 ... ExtdIdAdm ExtdIdIst 55.86 ... ExtdMktIdxIP 137.85 -0.01 FAWeUSIns 76.31 +0.24 GNMA 10.73 -0.01 GNMAAdml 10.73 -0.01 GlbEq 21.27 +0.06 GrthIdAdm 49.97 +0.24 GrthIstId 49.97 +0.24 HYCorAdml 5.35 +0.02 HltCrAdml 84.71 -0.65 200.83 -1.55 HlthCare ITBondAdm 11.38 -0.02 ITGradeAd 9.68 -0.02 ITrsyAdml 11.44 -0.01 InfPrtAdm 25.23 -0.09 InfPrtI 10.28 -0.03 InflaPro 12.86 -0.04 InstIdxI 170.81 +0.88 InstPlus 170.82 +0.88 InstTStPl 41.77 +0.18 IntlGr 18.71 +0.11 IntlGrAdm 59.46 +0.34 IntlStkIdxAdm 21.59 +0.06 IntlStkIdxI 86.35 +0.26 IntlStkIdxIPls 86.36 +0.25 IntlVal 27.68 +0.08 LTGradeAd 9.95 -0.06 LifeCon 17.23 +0.02 LifeGro 25.16 +0.07 LifeMod 21.76 +0.03 MidCapGr 19.88 +0.04 MidCapIdxIP 144.83 +0.64 MidCpAdml 132.93 +0.58 MidCpIst 29.37 +0.13 Morg 22.63 +0.05 MorgAdml 70.10 +0.16 MuHYAdml 11.40 -0.01 MuInt 14.39 -0.01 MuIntAdml 14.39 -0.01 MuLTAdml 11.85 -0.01 MuLtdAdml 11.07 ... MuShtAdml 15.83 ... PrecMtls 5.68 +0.11 Prmcp 90.61 +0.20 PrmcpAdml 93.86 +0.21 PrmcpCorI 19.04 +0.04 REITIdxAd 105.39 +0.67 REITIdxInst 16.31 +0.10 S/TBdIdxInstl 10.49 -0.01 STBondAdm 10.49 -0.01 STCor 10.58 -0.01 STFedAdml 10.76 ... STGradeAd 10.58 -0.01 STIGradeI 10.58 -0.01 STsryAdml 10.71 ... SelValu 22.91 +0.20 ShTmInfPtScIxIn24.21 -0.01 ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.16 -0.01 SmCapIdxIP 135.63 +0.09 SmCpGrIdxAdm37.61 +0.03 SmCpIdAdm 46.99 +0.03 SmCpIdIst 46.99 +0.03 SmCpValIdxAdm37.82 +0.03 Star 21.83 +0.04 StratgcEq 25.11 -0.01 TgtRe2010 24.16 +0.01 TgtRe2015 13.61 +0.02 TgtRe2020 25.67 +0.04 TgtRe2025 14.64 +0.03 TgtRe2030 25.76 +0.07 TgtRe2035 15.51 +0.04 TgtRe2040 25.99 +0.08 TgtRe2045 16.22 +0.05 TgtRe2050 25.99 +0.09 TgtRetInc 12.14 ... TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.27 +0.02 TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.91 +0.02 TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.63 ... TotBdAdml 10.73 -0.01 TotBdInst 10.73 -0.01 TotBdMkInv 10.73 -0.01 TotIntl 12.91 +0.04 TotStIAdm 46.16 +0.20 TotStIIns 46.17 +0.20 TotStIdx 46.14 +0.20 TxMCapAdm 94.40 +0.32 ValIdxAdm 29.05 +0.14 ValIdxIns 29.05 +0.14 VdHiDivIx 24.53 +0.17 WellsI 23.96 +0.03 WellsIAdm 58.03 +0.05 Welltn 34.79 +0.08 WelltnAdm 60.08 +0.13 WndsIIAdm 53.94 +0.33 Wndsr 16.87 +0.11 WndsrAdml 56.88 +0.36 WndsrII 30.40 +0.19 Virtus EmgMktsIs 8.20 -0.05 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 8.57 +0.04 SciTechA m 11.86 +0.07

Leading indicators A measure of the U.S. economy’s seasonally adjusted percent change future health is expected to have 0.6% declined last month. Economists predict the Confer- 0.5 ence Board will report today that its 0.4 index of leading indicators slipped 0.3 0.1 percent in December after 0.2 posting a gain of 0.4 percent a 0.1 month earlier. The index, derived flat est. flat 0 from data that for the most part have already been reported -0.1 J A S O N D individually, is designed to 2015 anticipate economic conditions Source: FactSet three to six months out.

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Daily Corinthian • Friday, January 22, 2016 • 9A

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(:37) Nightline Hawaii Five-0 “Umia Blue Bloods (N) James Ka Hanu” Corden Oil Cosmetics Isaac Mizrahi Live! Friday Night Beauty Dyson Cleaning Undercover Boss (N) Hawaii Five-0 “Umia Blue Bloods (N) News Late Show-Colbert James Ka Hanu” Corden Undateable Superstore Dateline NBC News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers Reign “Bruises That Penn & Teller: Fool Us CW30 News at 9 (N) House of Meet the There Yet? Modern Lie” (N) Payne Browns Family Last Man (:31) Dr. Shark Tank (:01) 20/20 News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightStanding Ken 10pm Live line Undateable Superstore Dateline NBC News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers Behind The Spark TV to Remember “Loretta Young” Theater Dalziel and Pascoe Dalziel and Pascoe Headln Talk “Glory Days” “Glory Days” Person of Interest “Risk” Person of Interest “Baby Person of Interest “Iden- Parks/Rec- Parks/Rec- Parks/Rec- Parks/RecBlue” tity Crisis” reat reat reat reat Washing- At Issue Great Performances at the Met “Il Trovatore” Verdi’s “Il Trovatore.” (N) Amped & Sun Studio ton Wired MasterChef (N) Hell’s Kitchen “17 Chefs Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 TMZ Dish Nation Ac. HolCompete” (N) News (N) lywood Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Saving Hope Saving Hope Reign “Bruises That Penn & Teller: Fool Us PIX11 News PIX11 Seinfeld Two and Two and Friends Lie” (N) Sports Half Men Half Men (:10) } ›› The Village Strange creatures menace } › The Marine (06) Thugs kidnap (:35) Life on Top Sophie faces a career decision. a 19th-century community. the wife of a soldier. Billions An attorney gets } Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: (:35) Boxing: Rob Brant vs. Decarlo Perez. (N) (L) an inside tip. National Lampoon Real Time With Bill Ma- Real Time With Bill } ››› Mad Max: Fury Road (15, Action) Tom } ›› The Pyramid (14, her (N) (L) Maher Horror) Hardy, Charlize Theron. Ridic. Ridic. } ›› Beautiful Creatures (13, Fantasy) Alden Ehrenreich. Story Story NBA Basketball: Miami Heat at Toronto Raptors. From Air NBA Basketball: Indiana Pacers at Golden State Warriors. From Canada Centre in Toronto. (N) (Live) Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif. (N) Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Jail Modern Modern Modern Modern Family Family Family Family Harvey Pig Goat Full H’se Full H’se Gold Rush: Pay Dirt Gold Rush “Million Dollar “Goldzilla Gold” (N) Mountain” Criminal Minds “The (:01) Unforgettable Pact” “Game On” (N) College Basketball: Arizona State at California. Martin Martin Love It or List It

Martin Martin Love It or List It

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Local 24 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel News Live News Ch. 3 Late Show-Colbert

Modern Modern Modern Modern Family Family Family Family Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends (:01) Killing Fields: Un- (:04) Gold Rush loaded (N) (:01) Unforgettable (:02) Criminal Minds “About Face” (N) “No. 6” College Basketball: Utah at Washington State.

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Friends Friends (:05) Killing Fields: Unloaded (:01) Criminal Minds “The Pact” NHL Hockey: Rangers at Hurricanes Wendy Williams Love It or List It

Martin Martin Lip Sync Daily House Hunters Dream House Hunters Int’l Home Hunters } ››› The Bling Ring (13) The Royals E! News (N) Pawn Stars Pawn Stars } ››› Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Story Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars of the National Lampoon (15) College Basketball 2016 Australian Open Tennis: Third Round. From Melbourne, Australia. (N) (Live) Say Yes: Say Yes: Say Yes: Say Yes: Love; Lust First Swipe Say Yes: Say Yes: Love; Lust First Swipe ATL ATL ATL ATL ATL ATL Diners, American Diners, Diners, Diners, Brew & Diners, Diners, Diners, Diners, Drive Diner Drive Drive Drive ’Que Drive Drive Drive Drive Bonanza JAG Walker, Ranger Walker, Ranger Medicine Woman Bring It! “Fan Chat: Hell Bring It! “Homecoming (:02) The Rap Game (N) (:02) The Rap Game (:02) Bring It! “Fan Chat: Hell Week” Week” (N) Hell” (N) Trinity Lindsey End/ P. Stone Praise the Lord The Bi Price Fontaine } ›› Armageddon (98, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton. A hero tries to } ››› Live Free or Die Hard (07, save Earth from an asteroid. Action) Bruce Willis. Shadowhunters The 700 Club (6:20) } ››› Back to the Future Part II (89) } ›› The Lizzie McMichael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd. Guire Movie (03) } ››› Much Ado About Nothing (93) Kenneth } ››› Sense and Sensibility (95) Two sisters forage for ro} ImBranagh, Emma Thompson. mance in 19th-century England. promptu } ›› Sherlock Holmes (09) Jude Law The detective and his } ›› Red 2 (13) Bruce Willis, John Malkovich. Retired operaastute partner face a strange enemy. tives return to retrieve a lethal device. 2 Broke 2 Broke 2 Broke 2 Broke Cougar } ›› Horrible Bosses (11, Comedy) Jason Bate- Cougar Girls Girls Girls Girls Town Town man, Charlie Day. Chain Chain FamFeud FamFeud The Chase Chain Chain FamFeud FamFeud King/Hill Burgers Burgers Cleve Fam Guy Fam Guy Childrens Neon Eric Aqua } ››› Little Shop of Horrors (86) Rick Moranis. King King King King Chris Women’s College Basketball UFC Tonight FOX Sports Live (N) Sports Best} ›› Man of Steel (13, Action) Henry Cavill, Amy Adams. Young Clark Kent must protect } ›› Man of Steel (13, Action) those he loves from a dire threat. Henry Cavill, Amy Adams. W.A.R. NRA Movie Movie NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Mecum Auto Auctions “Kissimmee” (N) Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor The Haves, Nots Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Alaska Alaska Treehouse Treehouse Masters Alaska Alaska Treehouse Masters Home Im- Home Im- The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden prove. prove. Girls Girls Girls Girls Bunk’d (N) Girl Meets Austin & Austin & Gravity Star vs. Bunk’d Girl Meets Jessie Jessie Ally Ally Falls Forces (5:30) } ››› Galaxy } ››› Twister (96) Helen Hunt. Storm chasers race to test a } ››› The Fifth Element (97) Quest (99) new tornado-monitoring device. Bruce Willis.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Watch for the Daily Corinthian’s “Bride-To-Be” special bridal edition coming out on Sunday, Jan. 31. If you are planning a wedding this year, let this be your guide!

Travelers want to be greeted by best friend at trip’s end D E A R ABBY: We recently lost our dog, a 13-year-old springer spaniel, to old age. His Abigail passing has a huge Van Buren left hole in our hearts and Dear Abby lives. We miss his companionship, his personality and the structure that caring for him brought to our lives. We’re 51 and 60, own our home and are financially secure. Some of our friends are discouraging us from adopting another dog. They say we travel too much. Last year we spent 12 weeks away from home. When we travel, we hire a trusted pet sitter to move into the house and attend to all our dog’s needs. Our pet always seemed happy and healthy when we returned. I anticipate that we will continue to travel a similar amount in the future, but I’m not sure we will enjoy coming home to a house that has no dog to welcome us back. Abby, should a retired couple who travels adopt a dog? -- PET LOVER IN MEXICO DEAR PET LOVER: At ages

51 and 60, if you and your husband are in good health, I see no reason why you shouldn’t adopt another dog if you wish. Consider adopting one that is no longer a puppy. Shelters and rescue organizations are good places to adopt an older dog that needs a loving home. DEAR ABBY: My neighbor complains of cars honking at 8 in the morning. I have done this only three times when I have taken my son to school. I wait in the car for him, but if he’s late by a couple of minutes, I’ll honk. The neighbors think it’s rude because they have a 3-year-old who’s asleep at that time. Do I confront them? What do you suggest? -- ON A SCHEDULE IN CALIFORNIA DEAR ON A SCHEDULE: Knowing it will awaken your neighbor’s child, refrain from honking the horn. If you need your son to hurry up, use your cellphone and call the house. Or, turn your engine off, lock the car and go inside and get him. DEAR ABBY: My friend of 25 years, “Violet,” moved back to town a few months ago after living far away for the last 10 years. Whereas we’ve always called and confided in each other often, now that she’s here, I rarely see her, never talk with

her and receive polite but curt refusals to do anything together. I know the move was stressful for her, and I suspect the problem is more about her than me. But I am really hurt, and I miss her. My last request to get together and talk was met with, “I’m only doing what I feel I can enjoy and manage.” It seems like that doesn’t include our friendship. Should I simply leave my old friend alone, or is there something you can suggest? -- JUST PLAIN SAD DEAR SAD: Write Violet a short, sweet note. Tell her that you care about her, have always treasured her friendship and hope it will continue. Let her know that when she feels like talking, you will be there for her. It’s really all you can do at this point. After that, the ball will be in her court and you should NOT sit by the phone waiting for a call. Go on with your life and your other friendships as before. If she responds, terrific. If not, it will be her loss. Do not make it yours. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). Don’t ask for what you want. Get in there and politely inform the gatekeeper that you already have what you want, and that you’re available and ready for more of it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). There are undeniable benefits to being on-trend, depending on whose trend it happens to be. Something to keep in mind: If you create the culture, you don’t have to worry about staying ahead of it. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ve been an idealist; you’ve been a cynic. And today you’ll float around the vast middle ground between the two extremes. That’s where you meet friends who think at your level. Such a treasure! CANCER (June 22-July 22). When you were small you had to be in a familiar place to feel completely safe. Now you’ve grown into your “crab” essence. You’re safe because of who you are, not because of where you are. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The

moon favors your every move; this is your day, your night, your extended-play dance in the spotlight. Savor the creative outlet. When your turn is over, the creativity will still be inside you, waiting for the next showcase. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Unless you’re very aware of your surroundings and how others are feeling, you may not realize what’s at stake in a situation. Challenge yourself to be more observant. What you’ll note is that everyday life takes courage. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Education is expensive, especially the unstructured, informal education you get from hanging out with people in glamorous settings. Be frugal now so that you’ll be able to weather the storm that is coming later. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Laughter is one of your favorite love notes. It means that someone is sharing in your joy of life, as well as your intellect, point of view and general experience. You’ll connect in giggles and

love. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). It’s a day to pay the piper, and he’s not offering a layaway plan or installment options, either. Regardless of how you choose to handle it, by the end of the day you’ll be square. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Of course there are no winners in conversation. However, if there were winners, the prize would go to the one who chooses the best topic. You’ve a knack for knowing which one will bring the most interest and fun. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You thrill to the unpredictable turns of this rollercoaster day. The anticipation will be sweet -- maybe even sweeter than the fast plunge that comes afterward. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Indulge your whims, or they will turn against you, pouting and dragging your mood through the mud. Your instinct to play needs expression. With no specific agenda, activities take you where you need to be.


10 • Daily Corinthian

Editor’s Note Due to an early deadline brought on by the threat of inclement weather, some sports stories that may have broken later on Thursday are not included in this edition.

JUCO Basketball Wednesday’s Game (M) Northeast 88, Martin Methodist JV 67 Halftime: Northeast, 49-30. Leading scorers: (MM) Ted Parker, Jr. 20, Josh Maher 13; (NE) Kendarius Smith 15, Dashiell Franklin 13, Kendall Stafford 10. Records: Martin Methodist JV 1-7, Northeast 11-4.

Sports

Friday, January 22, 2016

A&M rolling toward NCAA tourney The Associated Press

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Texas A&M’s return to prominence has been several years in the making. You will have to excuse coach Billy Kennedy if he gets a little choked up when asked about the rise of the Aggies in his fifth year in College Station. “I’m just -- I’m thankful,” he said, fighting back tears. “That’s all I can say. So many people have been supportive of me and I’m just thankful.” The 10th-ranked Aggies have reeled off nine straight wins and their 6-0 start in

the Southeastern Conference is their best in league play since they won seven straight to open the 1993-94 season in the Southwest Conference. They’re in the top 10 for the first time since 2008 and are the only team that hasn’t lost in SEC play. With a 16-2 record, this team seems destined for its first NCAA Tournament berth since the Aggies capped a streak of six straight trips in 2011. While Kennedy is certainly happy with his team’s progress, he knows it is way too early to get caught up in things like that.

“We’ve got a lot of games left so ... I can’t get too emotional right now,” he said shaking his head. “We’ve got a lot of games left, but we’re doing the right things.” The Aggies went 14-18 in his first season, 18-15 in 201213 and 18-16 in his third year before improving to 21-12 last season and getting an invitation to the NIT. Now that he has had time to recruit the players he wants and instill his culture in the program, he expects to get back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since he went 31-5 at Murray State and made it to the sec-

ond round of the tournament. “It’s about the team,” he said. “We’ve said that from last year on ... and these freshmen came in here and bought into it and the culture of winning and sharing the ball and playing hard defensively. It’s taken shape.” The Aggies have three senior leaders, with SMU transfer Jalen Jones (17.4 points, 6.9 rebounds per game) and Danuel House (15.2, 5.1) leading the team in scoring. The undisputed heart of the roster is senior guard Alex Caruso, Please see ROLLING | 11

Local Schedule Today Basketball Central @ Kossuth, 6 (WXRZ) Biggersville @ Pine Grove, 6

Saturday Basketball Corinth @ Muscle Shoals, Ala., 6 Mid-Miss. Challenge @ Ackerman (G) Biggersville-Leake Central, 6 (B) Biggersville-Choctaw Co., 7:30 Soccer Corinth @ Tishomingo Co., 11 a.m.

Tuesday, Jan. 26 Basketball New Site @ Central, 6 (WXRZ) Kossuth @ Booneville, 6 Corinth @ Itawamba AHS, 6 Biggersville @ Wheeler, 6 Chester Co. @ McNairy, 6

Wednesday, Jan. 27 Bowling West Union @ Corinth, 3:45

Friday, Jan. 29 Basketball Thrasher @ Biggersville, 6 Corinth @ Booneville, 6 (WXRZ) Kossuth @ New Site, 6 Bolivar @ McNairy, 6

Tuesday, Feb. 2 Basketball Shannon @ Corinth, 6 Pine Grove @ Biggersville, 6 Kossuth @ Ripley, 6 McNairy @ Lexington, 6

Wednesday, Feb. 3 Bowling Alcorn Central @ Corinth, 4

Friday, Feb. 5 Basketball Middleton, Tn. @ Corinth, 6 Hickory Flat @ Central, 6 Wheeler @ Biggersville, 6 Kossuth @ Walnut, 6 Fayette-Ware @ McNairy, 6

Shorts Youth Soccer The Corinth Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department is hosting registration for boys and girls soccer ages 3-19 until Jan. 29. Play will run from Feb. 22 to April 1. Cost is $45 for U6 and U8 and $60 for U10, U12, U14, U16 and U19. Fees for each will increase $10 after Jan. 29. A soccer referee’s clinic will be conducted on Saturday, Jan. 30 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. There will be a meeting of volunteer coaches on Thursday, Feb. 4 at 6 p.m. Player observations and drafts will be held Saturday, Feb. 6 at 10 a.m. For more information, call the park office at 286-3067.

Customized Bricks Ramer Dixie Youth is selling customized bricks to help build a brick backstop on Majors Field. The backstop will enhance the field’s appearance and allow a chance to create a lasting tribute. Cost is either $75 or $100 with text only. You can add a logo for an extra $25. For information, call (731) 6101660 or email RamerDixieYouth@ yahoo.com.

Photo by Michael H. Miller/NEMCC

Tiger Tales Northeast Mississippi Community College’s Kendall Stafford (right) heads down court during his career-high 22-point performance against East Central earlier this season. The Corinth product scored 10 points Wednesday in the Tigers’ 88-67 win over the Martin Methodist JV squad.

NL may be more receptive to DH The Associated Press

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred says National League teams may be more receptive to the designated hitter than in the past, even though owners ended two days of meetings without any serious discussion about expanding use of the DH. A decline in offense and injuries to pitchers while hitting have stirred speculation the NL might be ready to embrace the designated hitter, which has been used in the American League since 1973. Last week, St. Louis Cardi-

nals general manager John Mozeliak said there was more momentum lately for the DH in the NL. But owners weren’t inclined to consider a change when they met this week. “It hasn’t even been talked about,” said Joe Torre, MLB’s chief baseball officer, as the meetings broke Thursday and owners raced for the airport. “There really hasn’t been any conversation.” That doesn’t mean there won’t be. Baseball is in the final year of its collective bargaining agreement between owners and players, and the union has favored expansion

of the DH because it would more mean high-paying roster spots. Any change to the DH is a mandatory topic of bargaining. “Twenty years ago, when you talked to National League owners about the DH, you’d think you were talking some sort of heretical comment,” Manfred said. “But we have a newer group. There has been turnover, and I think our owners in general have demonstrated a willingness to change the game in ways that we think would be good for the fans, always respecting

the history and traditions of the sport.” But among National League owners, there’s still resistance. “We would like to remain real baseball,” said Philadelphia Phillies chairman Dave Montgomery, who has been with the team for more than 30 years. The closest the NL has come to adopting the DH was way back in 1980, but sagging offense could prompt the league to revisit the idea. Big leaguers batted .254 last year and .251 in 2014, the lowest average Please see NL | 11

Clemson facing another overhaul on defense The Associated Press

CLEMSON, S.C. — Another year, another major round of changes for Clemson’s defense. The team that used a strong front four and tight secondary to reach the national title game is taking hits in both areas this offseason. The again, it’s not the first time Clemson coach Dabo Swinney has had to reload on defense.

A year ago, the Tigers lost eight of 11 starters from a defense ranked No. 1 nationally in yards allowed, yet rebounded to end 10th in the country this time. “I expect us to have another strong defense next year,” Swinney said. That’s a tough challenge, especially with who the Tigers are losing. All-American defensive end

Shaq Lawson and fellow defensive end Kevin Dodd both are giving up additional college seasons for the NFL draft. The two combined for 24.5 sacks and were 1-2 nationally in tackles for loss. Cornerback Mackensie Alexander and safeties Jayron Kearse and T.J. Green are also leaving. They comprised three quarters of Clemson’s stellar secondary, which helped the

Tigers rank 17th nationally in passing yards allowed. Linebackers B.J. Goodson, the team’s top tackler, and Travis Blanks also won’t be back. In all, Clemson will have turned over every defensive spot in the past two years. Cornerback Cordrea Tankersly and returning injured linePlease see CLEMSON | 11

Stewart at ease heading into final season The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C.— Tony Stewart is a man at peace as he heads into the final season of his NASCAR career. He is satisfied with what he has accomplished and has no regrets about the three glaring holes on his resume. Stewart is also adamant that his struggles the last two years, on and off the track, have nothing to do with his decision to retire at the end of this season. The three-time NASCAR

champion reiterated Thursday he will race in other series after this year — but not the Indianapolis 500, he insisted — and his decision to leave the Sprint Cup Series is simply about giving himself more free time to pursue everything that has been on hold the last three decades. “I’m still going to race, I just don’t know how much yet,” Stewart said. “The nice thing is I’ll have some flexibility to go do some other things I want to

do.” First up on the bucket list: He wants to attend the Formula One race in Monaco with co-owner Gene Haas, who will field an F1 team beginning this season. But that will have to wait until 2017 because Stewart has a final farewell tour ahead of him for the next 11 months. He doesn’t want the same sendoff given to Jeff Gordon, who was feted and presented with gifts at nearly every stop on the 36-

race schedule last year. Stewart wouldn’t mind, though, having the kind of year Gordon did on the track. Gordon closed his final season by dramatically winning at Martinsville Speedway in November to clinch a berth in the final four of NASCAR’s championship race. Although Gordon didn’t win the title, he was in the running and climbed from his car for Please see STEWART | 11


Sports

11 • Daily Corinthian

STEWART CONTINUED FROM 10

the final time at the top of his game. “That was 99 percent of a perfect season and I don’t have any grand illusions that I’m going to have that kind of year this year,� Stewart said. “I would love to, but what we’ve done the last two years, it may or may not be in our cards. We’re going to give 100 percent.� Stewart has been a shell of himself the last two years. He was struggling through the 2013 season when he broke his leg in a sprint car accident and missed the final third of the NASCAR season. His return in 2014 was a struggle, too. Aside from his failure to perform on the track, his car struck and killed a sprint car driver at a New York dirt track. Stewart wasn’t criminally charged, but the emotional toll weighed on him for months and he is still facing a lawsuit from Kevin Ward Jr.’s family. Although 2015 was fairly drama-free, Stewart had career lows in nearly every category. He has not won a race since 2013 and

Film shows Gleason’s life with ALS he split with crew chief Chad Johnston at the end of last season. Stewart will be paired this year with first-year crew chief Michael Bugarewicz, who was race engineer the last two seasons on Kevin Harvick’s team. Stewart is not sure how long it will take the duo to click, but he is eager to find out. “It’s two people trying to learn each other’s language,� Stewart said. “I really like what I see in him so far, I like his drive and determination, and those are things that you can’t teach somebody.� Stewart’s mood was good as he noted it was the final time on the preseason media tour. “The reason I am retiring is not performance based, but when you go into your last season, you hope you go out on top,� he said. “We’re done. If it’s a terrible year, I am not going to sit there and think that defined my career. The stats will show what we did over 18 years. No matter how the season goes, I think I’m going to be able to say I had a successful run in the Sprint Cup Series.�

CLEMSON CONTINUED FROM 10

backer Korrin Wiggins are the only players who started games in 2014 will be in the lineup in 2016. “People didn’t think we could do what we did,� Dodd said in the locker room following Clemson’s 45-40 national champion loss to Alabama on Jan. 11. “They’ll see what our young guys can do next year.� Dodd was evidence of that. The 6-foot-5, 275-pound junior had played sparingly in 2014 behind starters Corey Crawford and NFL firstround draft pick Vic Beasley and was considered a question mark for the Tigers before the season began. But he finished with 12 sacks and 23.5 tackles behind the line of scrimmage to play himself into a likely first-round selection in this year’s NFL draft. Swinney and defensive coordinator Brent Venables have used a deep rotation of players to keep the Tigers fresh. Lawson and Dodd got invaluable experience, Venables said, in 2014 that

prepared them to move forward this season. “I think our guys next year will benefit from that, too,� he said. Backup Austin Bryant has shown flashes of what he can do already. As a freshman, he stepped in for an injured Lawson early in the Orange Bowl and played well. The secondary should be Clemson’s biggest area of concern entering next season with only Tankersley back. Of course, any defensive issues will likely be covered up by Clemson’s explosive offense. Quarterback Deshaun Watson, third in last year’s Heisman Trophy voting, is back for another season to lead an attack that put up more than 500 yards a game over its final 11 contests. It gained 550 yards against the Crimson Tide, the most they had allowed in a game all season. Swinney is not looking for a defensive dropoff, saying: “We have built this program for the long term and I am confident in the talent of the young players we have.�

NL CONTINUED FROM 10

since .244 in 1972 — a year of such feeble offense that the AL started using the DH the following season to juice scoring. Injuries to pitchers might also be a factor in weakening resistance to the designated hitter. Early last season, Cardinals ace Adam Wainwright tore his Achilles while batting, which prompted Nationals right-hander Max Scherzer to call for the NL to adopt the DH. In September, Yankees pitcher Masahiro Tanaka strained his hamstring running to first on a bunt, which reignited the discussion. In 2008, Yankees ace Chien-Ming Wang hurt his foot running the bases during an interleague game and was never the same. In interleague games, the DH is used only in AL ballparks. Manfred, who is beginning his second year on the job, can argue both sides of the debate. He said there’s “a certain purity� to every-

Friday, January 22, 2016

one playing by the same rules. On the other hand: “The biggest remnant of league identity is the difference between DH and no DH. ... It is a significant issue on the other side of the scale.�

The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — Former New Orleans Saints player Steve Gleason was never going to turn a film documenting his life with Lou Gehrig’s disease into a sanitized, feel-good story of triumph in the face of tragedy. Arguably more famous now for how he lives with ALS than he ever was for football, Gleason is more nuanced and genuine than that. And so is the documentary, “GLEASON,� which premieres Saturday at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Viewers might find themselves outside of their comfort zones seeing Gleason’s physical decline in graphic detail, and the profound sadness it causes loved ones who can’t help but wish none of this had ever happened — proud as they are of the way Gleason has confronted his mortality with grace, humor and drive. “I am not sure I will ever be completely comfortable with some of these intimate and raw moments being public,� Gleason told The Associated Press in an interview this week as his New Orleans home. “At the same time, I believe that our greatest strength as humans is to share our weakness and vulnerability with each other.� Gleason’s wife, Michel, said the film offers “a good picture of how brutal the disease is and how difficult it is for the person who has the disease and also the people all around. “At the same time, there’s lots of beauty in

Basketball Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia 96, Orlando 87 Washington 106, Miami 87 Toronto 115, Boston 109 Cleveland 91, Brooklyn 78 New York 118, Utah 111, OT Golden State 125, Chicago 94 Detroit 123, Houston 114 Oklahoma City 109, Charlotte 95 Dallas 106, Minnesota 94, OT Sacramento 112, L.A. Lakers 93 Atlanta 104, Portland 98 Thursday’s Games Detroit at New Orleans, (n) L.A. Clippers at Cleveland, (n) Memphis at Denver, (n) Atlanta at Sacramento, (n) San Antonio at Phoenix, (n) Today’s Games Charlotte at Orlando, 6 p.m. Utah at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at Boston, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at New York, 6:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Houston, 7 p.m. Miami at Toronto, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Indiana at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.

it and lots of friendship, family, love, laughter, happiness,� she added. A magnetic figure with a seemingly boundless zest for life and the charisma to connect with the masses, Gleason has galvanized politicians, athletes, rock stars, actors and others to mobilize against the disease, which attacks motor neurons, the cells that control muscles. He’s tackled ambitious projects to improve the lives of fellow ALS patients and their families. Yet Gleason does not view ALS, which stands for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, as something that enabled him to achieve extraordinary things with a profound sense of purpose after his NFL playing days were over. Using eye-tracking technology to type words spoken by a computer that sounds similar to the way he did when he could talk, he said: “I don’t think this has made me better. My response is my way to cope.� Indeed, the film was a natural outgrowth of one of the first ideas Steve had when he learned he might not be around to help raise his only child, his son, Rivers, who is now 4 and was conceived shortly after his diagnosis. While he was still able to speak, Gleason began making 5-minute home videos in which he’d talk about his various life experiences and offer related advice. Michel helped with many of them, which they called, “300 seconds.� “That’s where this all started,� Michel Gleason

said, adding that making the videos was therapeutic when the shock of the diagnosis was still fresh. “We needed a project at that time. ... So Rivers is going to have 5 minutes with his dad — I don’t know how many — tons. To me, that’s the best part.� Excerpts of those videos, which director Clay Tweel and producer Seth Gordon found to be poignant and relatable, appear in the film. “The home movies were really key at getting this really personal, intimate and vulnerable look at Steve and Michel and their family,� Tweel said. In all, directors worked with 1,300 hours of footage to create a 1 hour, 45 minute film, which also revisits Gleason’s fearless presence on the football field. Gleason played college football at Washington State and was with the Saints from 2000-07, wearing No. 37. He was a special teams’ standout who blocked four punts, none more memorable than on Sept. 25, 2006, the night the Superdome reopened after Hurricane Katrina. The play resulted in the first touchdown in a victory over Atlanta and became a symbol of a devastated community’s will to carry on. Nearly a decade later, Gleason uses a motorized wheelchair, can barely crack a smile and relies on a system of surgically attached tubes to eat and breathe. Yet, since starting the ALS-focused Team Gleason foundation, he’s traveled across continents,

ascended mountains, addressed the United Nations, spearheaded changes to federal health care laws, promoted developing technologies and built an assisted-living center in New Orleans designed for people with ALS or multiple sclerosis. The film features footage both of Gleason’s travels and the often unglamorous, exhausting struggle of daily life, shot by a crew of cameramen trailing Gleason on a regular basis for about four years. Michel Gleason jokes that she should have changed her outfit more. Her importance to the film grew as Tweel and Gordon came to appreciate the emotional strength and physical endurance she had to maintain to simultaneously care for a physically enfeebled husband and infant son. Tweel was particularly moved by a shot of Michel feeding both at the same time. Michel has mastered many of the difficult routines that became necessary after her husband’s diagnosis. She has been gratified by all her husband has accomplished even as his once formidable motor skills vanished. Yet she’s unsure if her emotional pain will ever subside. “Steve is the definition of: ‘Through adversity, we find our heroes.’ And I think he has taken more adversity than I think anyone has to go through and become an advocate,� she said. “He’s become an inspiration. He’s become someone that people can look up to.�

San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Utah at Washington, 5:30 p.m. Milwaukee at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. New York at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Memphis at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Chicago at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m. Atlanta at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Detroit at Denver, 8:30 p.m. Indiana at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Portland, 9:30 p.m.

NFC Arizona at Carolina, 5:40 p.m. (FOX) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 6 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. TBD, 5:30 p.m. (CBS)

NFL postseason

Thursday’s deals

DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS Saturday New England 27, Kansas City 20 Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT Sunday Carolina 31, Seattle 24 Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC New England at Denver, 2:05 p.m. (CBS)

BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Signed INF Chris Davis to a seven-year contract. Designated INF-OF Joey Terdoslavich for assignment. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms with RHP Matt Albers on a oneyear contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed C

Ryan Hollins to a 10-day contract. FOOTBALL National Football League KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Promoted Brad Childress and Matt Nagy as cooffensive coordinators. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed WR Eric Rogers to a two-year contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Traded RW Ryan Garbutt to Anaheim for LW Jiri Sekac. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Activated F Jacob Josefson from injured reserve. NEW YORK RANGERS — Signed F Daniel Paille. SOCCER Major League Soccer NEW YORK CITY FC — Acquired D-MF Ronald Matarrita from L.D. Alajuelense (Costa Rica) for targeted allocation money. SEATTLE SOUNDERS — Signed F Jordan Morris. COLLEGE MISSOURI — Suspended sophomore DT Terry Beckner Jr. indefinitely after a marijuana possession arrest.

“Coach Kennedy’s the man,� he said. “He’s a father-figure, he’s got the kindest heart out of anyone I’ve ever met and he’s a great leader. He’s always talking to us. He’s not just a coach. He’s a friend, too, someone we know that we can come to. Someone you can trust.� The rapport Kennedy has developed with his players makes them go out of their way to play well for him. “It just makes it easy when you’re in that huddle listening to him or when

you’re in practice listening to him to never put off what he says,� Davis said. “It just makes it a lot easier with the person he is.� Texas A&M’s streak is its longest since the team won 13 in a row from Nov. 26, 2010, to Jan. 15, 2011. The Aggies host Missouri on Saturday with a chance to climb closer to that mark, but the team isn’t worried about streaks. “We don’t get caught up in the hype, the rankings, just focus on doing your job and the rest will take care of itself,� he said.

Football

Transactions

ROLLING CONTINUED FROM 10

who grew up in College Station. Caruso does a little bit of everything for the Aggies. He averages 7.7 points, 5.1 assists and 3.4 rebounds a game, and he is the school’s career leader in steals. His 240 steals rank first among active Division I players. Kennedy credits Caruso for helping the team stay grounded despite its success this season. “We try to keep an even keel,� Kennedy said. “We

stress that in how we approach every day and then we’ve got a guy like Alex Caruso who’s done it for four years.� It isn’t just the old guys that have the Aggies back on track. Six-foot-10, 270-pound freshman center Tyler Davis has started 16 of the team’s 18 games and has developed into a major presence, averaging more than 11 points and almost six rebounds. He believes his coach should get all the credit for the team’s improvement this season.

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12A • Friday, January 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Rationale for school closure boils down to safety Many people seemed to have their opinions about winter weather in the South, and of late I have witnessed those opinions expressed across my Facebook news feed. One friend with whom I graduated and who lives in Arkansas is critical of schools closing due to winter weather. I take the side of school directors and boards who decide to close school on days when winter weather is fairly imminent. I am a teacher who loves her job, although as an anti-morning person, I do like to stay home and sleep late on “snow days.� On the other hand, I also consider more than simply my own personal desires when taking a stance on the issue. I reminded my friend that small children have to wait outside for indeterminate lengths of time on school buses, particularly in rural McNairy County, where I teach, and at one of our elementary schools, students have to go outside from one building to another. It’s a bit worrisome to have small children, especially those as young

Stacy Jones The Dowtowner

It’s a bit worrisome to have small children, especially those as young as four and five-year-olds—some of whom may not have adequate winter clothing — trying to navigate ice-covered sidewalks.

as four and five-year-olds— some of whom may not have adequate winter clothing — trying to navigate ice-covered sidewalks. Her response was that kids need to “toughen up,� and at least one other person responded to back her up. I’m sure she would agree with an opinion/ editorial that I read in the Chicago Tribune, the headline for which read “Toughen up kids: Cold is a lousy excuse to close schools.� It’s not difficult to guess the content of that piece of commentary. However, we are not Chicagoans down here; we are Southerners, unaccustomed to brutally cold weather and wintry precipitation.

I also reminded my friend and fellow Facebook respondents that we live in a much more litigious society than when she and I were children attending school. Therefore, the decision to close schools is based, at least in part, on consideration for the children, but I’m sure that the decision is also partially intended to protect school systems. A school bus having an accident on ice- or snow-covered roads in a remote rural area, for instance, and trapping or injuring children could cause a potential problem. When our school district was closed this past Wednesday, our director of schools made the county-wide automated phone call regarding the clos-

ing. Even before I received the call, I saw people posting on Facebook that school was going to be closed. One of the local papers announced that schools had been closed “due to the threat of winter weather.� Immediately, some Facebookers found humor in the semantics, especially the use of the word “threat.� One person said (and for some reason, I hear this comment expressed in a deep Darth Vader tone), “You have been threatened by the winter weather.� Another person, by contrast, wrote, “Thank you, school directors, for not taking chances with my child’s safety.� One soon-to-be former Northerner responded: “I apologize in advance for laughing ‘til I cry! We’re moving to McNairy County soon, but we currently live in Wisconsin. Last year we got snowed in with about five feet of snow over the course of two days. I welcome one to three inches a few times a year!� One respondent didn’t find the situation quite as funny, and she summarized the situation rather efficiently: “I would

not like to have to hear that a bus full of kids had a wreck because our administrators didn’t do what they thought necessary — even if it was only a ‘threat.’ They are looking out for kids’ safety‌ A lot of kids, like my own, live on back roads that are known to ice over [during] the simplest of cold weather‌So instead of the possibility of keeping school going [and] have numerous wrecks in the county, the administration thought it best to call off school, and I, for one, am thankful.â€? Nevertheless, it’s important to consider many aspects of the situation before making a decision, and the best decisions are made by those well-versed in the situation, as any director of schools should be. Otherwise, it’s very easy to criticize. (Daily Corinthian columnist Stacy Jones teaches English at McNairy Central High School and UT Martin and has served on the board of directors at Corinth Theatre-Arts. She enjoys being a downtown Corinth resident.)

Chef cooks up food inside gas station $1.6 million in claim BY LAREECA RUCKER For The Associated Press

OXFORD — In Mississippi, you can sometimes find gourmet at a gas station. That’s how Tim Woodard, 41, thinks of his kitchen inside Littlejohn’s store off Highway 30 in Lafayette County. The Oakland native, who has lived in Oxford the past 20 years, said the food he serves at Little Easy Express Lunches is “kind of like Square food off the Square with free parking.� “We just don’t put up with horrible food around here, I think,� said Woodard, explaining why you can often find good food in the most unlikely places, like gas stations. “You’re not going to be open long around here if your food is terrible. “People come from other states, and they’re like, ‘Are you serious? Why would I go eat at a gas station?’ A lady was telling me that when she

had traveled in Europe, it was expected that little travel lodges would have really good food there. So there is a culture of having really good food in places like this in other countries, and I think it’s that way in the South. “I think everyone prides themselves on serving like a really good lunch — not just opening up a can and heating it up.� Woodard said “Little Easy,� instead of the “Big Easy� has been a nickname for Oxford. This January marks the fourth year he has operated the kitchen inside Littlejohn’s. “We make Southern comfort food,� he said. “We make it readily accessible and quick for lunch breaks.� Woodard said he began cooking at age 7. “That’s been my favorite thing to do,� he said. “It was just a hobby before, because I worked at Ole Miss in administration with international students for 11 years.�

His first cooking memory was an attempt to cook cornbread. “I probably made a big mess,� he said. “I got into the cabinets, and I got all the things that a child would think about to make cornbread. “I got cornmeal, and I thought it needed a little color to it, so I put Pepto-Bismol in it. So it was something inedible, and I probably got in trouble.� Woodard said he was known for cooking, so people began asking him to cater events when he was around 20. “It was kind of like a hobby then,� he said. “Around 1999, I went and started working for Oxford Catering. I was kind of the front of the house manager.� He worked there two years before beginning work at the University of Mississippi. “I got sucked back into it,� he said. “That’s what I do on weekends. It’s kind of like a stress re-

liever. I’ll just start cooking. It’s kind of therapeutic to me.� Woodard describes the Little Easy as a quick place for area people to eat. “But we have customers who live out of state that, when they travel here to Oxford for work, they make sure they come here and have lunch,� he said. “It’s kind of been a big word-of-mouth business. They don’t really know the name of the business, but they’re like, ‘You know that Littlejohn’s store. They have really good plate lunches there.’� Woodard said plate lunches are their niche, but they also do full service catering. “We are known for our boneless fried pork loins,� he said. “Before, it was pork chops, and we’ve been written up in several magazines about that, including The Local Palate magazine from Charleston, South Carolina.

Program relocates 40,000 sacks of oysters Associated Press

BILOXI — The first phase of the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources’ emergency oyster recovery program has ended with 40,000 sacks of oysters successfully relo-

cated within three days. DMR Executive Director Jamie Miller said in a news release weather conditions and the availability of oysters were factors in making the decision to transplant them

to waters that wouldn’t be affected by freshwater intrusion from the opening of the Bonnet Carre spillway after Mississippi River flooding. Early Wednesday, DMR officials initially

estimated only 12,000 to 15,000 sacks of oysters were relocated. Late Wednesday evening, spokeswoman Melissa Scallan said a count of trip tickets increased the figure to 40,000 sacks.

funds to be returned Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — A federal court has ordered repayment of more than $1.6 million in claim money paid to an Alabama couple’s business after BP’s 2010 Gulf Oil Spill. U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier’s order says the payment to Vision Design Management “was nearly entirely based on fraud.� The ruling issued this week identifies Barbara J. Stokes and Scott B. Stokes as the owners of the corporation. Barbier’s order grants a March 2015 motion for return of the money filed by the oil spill claims administrator, Patrick Juneau, and a court appointed master overseeing the claim process, Louis Freeh. Barbara Stokes declined immediate comment when reached by telephone Thursday. In a letter to the court last year, she denied wrongdoing and said she and her husband don’t have money for restitution. According to court records, the claims center that was established after the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion in the Gulf of Mexico awarded more than $2.1 million to Vision Design Management, a consulting business. The figure was based largely on the company’s submitting of

financial documents indicating it had brought in $821,462.98 in revenue in 2009, the year before the spill. But the Deepwater Horizon Economic Claims Center later found that checks totaling more than $773,000 came from a construction loan taken out by another Stokesowned company, Summerplace LLC. The claims center said the money wasn’t revenue for Vision Design but a “pass through� of payments for expenses for a Summerplace construction project. An attorney for Vision Design Management received more than $500,000 of the claim award. The court records show that the attorney returned the money and no longer works for the Stokeses. The claims center, Barbier wrote, showed “clearly and convincingly� that the award “was nearly entirely based on fraud.� “Given that at least 92% of Vision Design’s claimed revenue was a fiction, the Court finds it is proper to order Vision Design to pay restitution of the entire settlement amount (less the amount returned by Vision Design’s former counsel),� Barbier wrote. In last year’s letter, Barbara Stokes said the claim was legitimate.

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2B • Friday, January 22, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

Community Events Bishop Activity Center Bishop Activity Center will hold the following activities: Today: Grocery shopping at Rogers Supermarket. Daily activities include quilting, jigsaw puzzles, table games, rolo golf and washer games. Senior citizens age 60 and above are welcome and encouraged to attend.

Lupus Program The Essence Ladies Club will hold their Annual Lupus Program at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016, at Synagogue M.B. Church in Rienzi. They will honor Bro. Blake Barnett, the 24-year-old son of Terry and Trellis Barnett who has been battling the illness for a while. Those who need assistance prior to the program as well as those dealing with the illness and requiring immediate attention may contact any member of the Essence Ladies Club.

Art Exhibit The unique pottery of Helene Fielder and oil paintings by the late Ray Fielder will be on display at the Northeast Mississippi Community College campus Jan. 25 – Feb. 11. Gallery hours are Monday – Thursday from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the Art Gallery of Anderson Hall. For more information contact Terry Anderson at 662-720-7336 or tfanderson@nemcc.edu.

Cancer Support Group A meeting of the Corinth/ Alcorn County Cancer Support Group will be held at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 26 at the Corinth Library. All encouraged to bring a friend. For more information call 662-212-2303.

Corinth Artist Guild • The Corinth Artist Guild’s annual meeting and election of officers for the board of directors is set for Thursday, Jan. 28. The meeting will be held at 6 p.m. at the gallery, located at 609 North Fillmore. Guild members and anyone interested in supporting the local artist community and the gallery’s educational efforts are encouraged to attend. The guild will review activities of the past year and plan events for the year ahead. The guild is mailing fundraising letters and membership reminders. Membership levels are student, $4; general, $16; bronze, $25; silver, $50; gold, $75; platinum, $100; diamond, $250; benefactor, $500; and foundation, $1,000 or more. • The Corinth Artist Guild Gallery is hosting an exhibit of oil paintings by former Corinthian Gayle Carlin Forsythe. She began painting at 82 and focuses mainly on landscapes. The exhibit runs through Feb. 5 at 609 North Fillmore. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

Personal Financial Principles Conference A Personal Financial Principles Conference led by CFP Greg Cooley will be held at Acton Church of Christ at 6 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 29 and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 30. The topics covered include: debt management, budgeting, family planning, and insurance analysis. For more details and to reserve seating, contact the church office at 731-239-9691. Acton church of Christ is located at 9389 Hwy 22 South in Michie, Tenn.

Habitat for Humanity The local chapter of Habitat for Humanity will hold its annual meeting at the Corinth

Library at 6 p.m on Tuesday, Feb. 2. This meeting is normally used to set the years agenda as well as the election of officers. The public is invited and encouraged to attend. For more information call 662808-8808.

Black History Program The Alcorn County Branch NAACP will celebrate Black History Month with a program on Saturday, Feb. 6. The program will be at The Lighthouse on South Johns Street at 6 p.m. and will consist of Gospel Spirituals, portrayals of prominent individuals in Black History and Praise Team Dance. The Cox Sisters from Ripley, Ripley Terry Street Church of Christ and the Divine Spiritual will be the special guests.

Pre-Super Bowl Meal Community Fellowship Dinners will resume at the Easom Community Center on Superbowl Sunday, Feb. 7 from noon until 2:30 p.m. The menu will feature Ben Betts famous chicken and dressing, fried or baked chicken, meatloaf, green beans, cabbage, creamed potatoes, yeast rolls, chess squares, peach cobbler, tea and water. The advance ticket price is $10 for adults, and $5 for children under nine who dinein. All carry out meals are $10. For ticket information contact Ernestine Hollins at 662-6438024, or Samuel Crayton at 404-386-3359. There are also representatives in many local churches selling tickets.

meet-and-greet reception and first 6 rows. The meet-andgreet will be held inside at the Convention Center from 6:30p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and will include refreshments and light hors d’oeuvres. For more information visit www.crossroadsarena.com or call 662-287-7779.

Hee-Haw Show The McNairy County HeeHaw show will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 3 thru Saturday, March 5. Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for ages 7–12 and free for children 6 and under. All proceeds will go to the American Cancer Society.

2016 Gospel Fest The Easom Community Center, located at 700 Crater Street in Corinth will hold their 2016 Gospel Fest from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, March 13. Confirmed performers include: Rightfully His, First Baptist Church of Corinth, Lee & Gloria Carswell, Community Believers Baptist Church of Olive Branch, Celestial Nightingales, Moses United Methodist Church of Ripley, Hopewell Male Chorus of Rienzi, Oak Grove Male Chorus of Rienzi, Mount Olive Male Chorus of Baldwyn, Spiritual Traveler, Moses United Methodist Church of Booneville, Cody Killey & Quartet and Antioch Baptist Church of Pisgah. Admission is $10 in advance or $12 at the door. For more information contact Landolph Walker-Lee at 314-406-3918.

SOAR Extension Office • Gourd Painting will be offered from 1 to 4 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 11 at the Extension Office. The cost is $10 and is limited to 20 students. Participants should register by calling the Extension Office at 662-286-7755. • An Art Class is open to the public at no cost and meets every Monday from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Extension Office. Participants will need to bring their own supplies and should call 662-286-7755 to register and get more information. The class is limited to 15 students. • A Batik Workshop will be conducted every Thursday night for six weeks from 6 to 8 p.m. The cost is $10. Participants should register by calling 662-286-7755. • A Beginning Quilt Class will begin on March 15 and will meet at 5 p.m. every Tuesday thereafter. Six sewing machines will be available for individuals who do not own one.

The Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees “SOAR” will have regular monthly meetings every second Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Union Hall. These are retirees of Intex-MS Polymer Plastic’s Plant.

Free Medical Clinic The Living Healthy Free Medical Clinic, where residents with no way to pay can get free medical treatment, welcomes adults and children age 12 and up with no income and no health insurance. The clinic, now located at 2668 South Harper Road Suite 3 next to Physicians Urgent Care in the former Oasis Medical Center, is open 1-5 p.m., on the second Wednesday and fourth Saturday of each month. The clinic is always looking for both medical and nonmedical volunteers. Medical and non-medical volunteers should contact Ann White at eaw3@comcast.net or 662415-9446.

Comedy Show

Pickin on the Square

Patrons are invited to celebrate Black History Month by attending the North Mississippi All Celebrity All Star Comedy Show in Corinth at the Crossroads Arena at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 20. Comedian Rodney Perry will bring his act. Perry who resides in Atlanta was the co-host for the Oscar Academy Winner, Mo’Nique and her show, and the cocreator of BounceTV. He also starred alongside Tyler Perry in the hit movie “Madea’s Big Happy Family” in 2013. The show will also feature Comedienne Barbara Carlyle, from Showtime Apollo, Comedy Central and Comic view, along with Comedian Marvin Hunter from the Rickey Smiley Tour. It will be hosted by BET Six-time All Star Comedian Shawn Harris. Tickets go on sale Tuesday, Dec. 1 starting at $23 (for all riser seating) and $33 for reserved floor seating. A limited quantity of 200 tickets will be available at $43 for the VIP

Pickin on the Square will be held April through October at 7 p.m. each Thursday. During the winter months, the entertainment will be moved indoors. For more information contact Patricia Nachbar at 662-287-1388.

Iuka Bluegrass A free Bluegrass concert will be held at the Iuka American Legion from 7 to 9 p.m. on the first and third Friday night of each month.

Fish on Friday From 4 to 6 p.m. every Friday, the Easom Foundation will sell eat-in or carry-out farm-fed catfish dinners for $6 to support its hot meals program. The meal includes coleslaw or salad, French fries or roasted potatoes, a dessert, juice and catfish. Dinners are also available from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday at the same price. Side items on the menu for the day may also be purchased. Stop by

the Easom Community Center and pick up a monthly menu or contact Chef Ben Betts at 662-415-4003 or Ernestine Hollins at 662-643-8024. The menu can also be faxed each month to those who provide a fax number.

Alliance Hospice Alliance Hospice is looking for volunteers ages 16 to 85, who would love to interact with local senior citizens. For more information, contact Angel Bradley at Alliance Hospice at 662-286-9833 or by email at angel@alliancehopice.net.

‘Just Plain Country’ Just Plain Country performs at the Tishomingo County Fairgrounds in Iuka every Saturday from 7-10 p.m. there is dancing and good family-friendly fun and entertainment.

Country Singing A karaoke featuring traditional country music will be held at 6:30 p.m. each Saturday in the Corinth RV Park, located at 308 CR 604 just 1.2 miles off Hwy 72 at Suitor’s Crossing. All ages are welcome.

American Legion Post 6 American Legion Post 6, located on South Tate St. will have Bingo every Friday. Doors will open at 4 p.m. with sales starting at 5:30 p.m. Games will begin at 6:30 p.m. A full concession stand will be available. Senior Bingo will be held at 10 a.m. every Monday for $5. Lunch is provided. American Legion Post 6 will hold their monthly meeting at 6 p.m. with a potluck meal on the 2nd Thursday of each month.

Musicians Needed A volunteer opportunity is available for a guitar or banjo musician to play with a band as part of a nursing home ministry during special programs held at 2 p.m. twice a month at Cornerstone and Mississippi Care Center. For more information call 662-287-3560.

Cross City Piecemakers Quilt Guild The Cross City Piecemakers Quilt Guild will meet at 1 p.m. on the 3rd Thursday of each month at the Extension Center (next to the Crossroads Arena). All are welcome. For more information, contact Gail at 662-287-7136.

Child Find The Alcorn and Corinth School Districts are participating in an ongoing statewide effort to identify, locate and evaluate children, birth through the age of 21, who have a physical, mental, communicative and/or emotional disability. The Child Find person works with the local head start, human services, health and mental agencies as well as local education agencies, physicians and other individuals to identify and locate children out of school and in school who may be in need of special education services. The information will be used to help determine present and future program needs in the hopes of providing a free appropriate public education to all children with a disability. Contact Stephanie Clausel, Alcorn School District or Christy Welch, Corinth School District if you know of any children who may have a disability by calling or writing to the following telephone number and address: Alcorn School District, Special Services, 31 CR 401, Corinth, Ms. 38834, 662-2867734; or Corinth School District, Special Services, 1204 North Harper Road, Corinth, MS 38834, 662-287-2425.

Retired Railroaders There will be a meeting for retired railroaders at 8 a.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at Martha’s Menu Restaurant in downtown Corinth. Active railroaders are welcome.

Legacy Hospice Legacy Hospice is looking for volunteers from the age of 17 and up. Legacy Hospice offers three types of volunteers: Direct patient volunteers do things directly with the patient and caregiver. Indirect volunteers help with clerical work in the office. Bereavement volunteers help families and loved ones on their journey through the grieving process. For more information contact Sherry Dalton at 662-286-5333 or by email at sherry.dalton@legacyhospice.net.

Food Pantry/ Clothes Closet Antioch Baptist Church food pantry and clothes closet is open every 3rd Wednesday of the month from 6 to 6:30 p.m.

VFW Post 3962 • VFW Post No. 3962 hosts a Karaoke Night every Friday at the post on Purdy School Road 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. • VFW Post No. 3962 will hold its monthly meetings on the third Thursday of each month with brunch at 6 p.m. VFW ladies and men’s Auxiliary will have a joint meeting at 7 p.m. • The VFW Post 3962 will hold a Single’s/50s Dance from 8 p.m. until midnight every Thursday. Admission is $5.

Checkers Players Checkers players are needed, especially Intex retirees, to play from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Mondays at the American Steel Builders Union building across from Ability Works. For more information, call 662728-5498.

Lions Club The Corinth Lions Club meets for breakfast on the second and fourth Monday of each month at 7 a.m. at Martha’s Menu.

Senior Bingo American Legion Post 6 has Senior Bingo every Monday at 10 a.m. Cost is $5 for bingo and lunch with everyone welcome.

Friday night music There is music every Friday night with the band, The Renegade, from 7-10 p.m. at the Guntown Community Center. This is a family-friendly event.

Civil War exhibit Corinth Civil War enthusiast Larry Mangus is sharing some of the items from his collection of artifacts related to the Battle of Corinth at the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center. His collection includes pieces of currency, autographs of Union and Confederate generals, war bonds, guns and canteens – many of which have been identified and connected to a specific soldier during the war. The exhibits will be switched out every six weeks and will continue for the foreseeable future. Located at 501 W. Linden Street, the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center is open every day except Christmas Day from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more info about the Interpretive Center call 662-287-9273.

Assistance T.O.P.S The Corinth Chapter 0359 of T.O.P.S (Take off Pounds Sensibly) will hold chapter meetings at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesdays at Waldron Street Christian Church. The local chapter was founded on Jan. 18, 2012. A non-profit weight loss support group, T.O.P.S has helped millions of people take off weight for over 60 years. Participants will arrive between 10 and 10:30 a.m. for a confidential weigh in by appointed weight recorders. At 10:30 a.m. roll-call will be

held. The first meeting is free.

Free Yoga Weekly chair yoga classes taught by Certified Yoga Instructor Karen Beth Martin are held every Thursday at 10 a.m., in the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church fellowship hall. Each class is 40-45 minutes in length and are tailored to the abilities and limitations of those attending with the goal of improving strength, flexibility and balance. The class, geared toward seniors, is open to the public. Class is dona-

tion-based. For questions, contact the church office at 662-286-2922.

Retiree breakfast The Caterpillar Retiree Breakfast is held the first Monday of each month at 7:30 a.m. at Martha’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 today’s “at risk” youth. Both males and females, 16-18 years old, can apply. Applicants can earn their GEDs. Tuition is free. For more information, call 1-800507-6253 or visit www.msyouthchallenge.org.

Volunteers needed • 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 662-2790435. The website is hospiceadvantage.com.


Religion

3B • Daily Corinthian

Friday, January 22, 2016

Worship Call Bible Study Bible Study/ Transitions to Truth will be held by the Tuesday Night Truth Seekers at Spirit and Truth ministries, located at 408 Hwy 72 West in Corinth across from Gateway Tire will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. each Tuesday. For more information call 662-6032764.

Community-wide service New Covenant Baptist Church, located at 1402 East Fifth Street in Corinth will hold its 4th Sunday CommunityWide Service at 6 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 24. Pastor Leroy Harris of Pleasant Grove Baptist Church in Rienzi will be the guest speaker. He will be accompanied by his church family. David L. Harris is pastor.

A’cappella Choir features a broad repertoire of classical, semi-classical, spirituals, opera contemporary and traditional gospels songs. This is a free event and is open to the public. The Rev. Gabe Jolly is pastor.

Annual Men and Women’s Day The Saulter’s Chapel C.M.E. Church of Michie, Tenn., will hold their Annual Men and Women’s Day celebration at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 24. Elder Q. H. Whitlock, Jr. and the Newell Chapel CME Church choir and church family of Victoria will be the special guest. The Rev. James Agnew is the host pastor.

Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church in Rienzi will present a concert performance by the Rust College A’cappella Choir of Holly Springs at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 24. The choir, under the direction of Mr. Vernon Jones, is one of America’s most renowned choirs having performing all over the United States as well as in Europe and Africa. Organized in 1936, the

Hatchie Chapel preaching Bro. Wallace Frazier will be preaching at Hatchie Chapel Church on Jan. 29-30. Service begins at 6 p.m. both nights. The church is located at 17 County Road 609 between Corinth and Walnut.

Grace Bible Baptist Church will hold a revival meeting Jan. 24-29. Bro. Dwight Smith will be the guest preacher for the week and Bro. Doyle Robertson will be leading the music. Since 1997, Dwight and his family have traveled around preaching the Word of God, singing the songs of Jesus, winning folks to Christ, and calling God’s people back to old-fashioned revival. he was saved and called to preach at a very early age and for many

Mississippi Baptists. For more information visit www.dlum@mbcb.org.

396-1512.

Prayer Breakfast The American Legion Post 6 is hosting a prayer breakfast every Wednesday at 7 a.m. The menu and speakers will change weekly. The prayer breakfasts are being held at the American Legion Building on Tate St. in Corinth. Post membership is not required to attend. Donations for breakfast will be accepted. For more information, call 662-4625815.

Annual Usher Day Central Grove MB Church will have its Annual Usher Day Program at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 7. The guest speaker will be The Rev. Rickey Griggs, pastor of Mason St. Luke MB Church in Corinth. The Rev, Griggs will be accompanied by his choir and other church members. The Rev. Kelvin Cummings is pastor. Sis. Mettie Walker is Usher President.

Bible Study Black History Program

Sunday Morning Singing Revival meeting

Special Concert

years has been involved in Christian work. His education was received from Ambassador Baptist College in Lattimore, North Carolina. The Lord has allowed him and his family to travel and preach in 46 different states and twenty-two foreign countries. The Smiths make their home in Shelby, N.C. Grace Bible Baptist Church is located at 2109 N. Polk Street in Corinth.

Antioch Free Will Baptist, located North of Burnsville will hold a Sunday Morning singing on Jan. 31. Mike Upright, Southern Gospel singer/songwriter will be provide the music during worship hour.

Evangelism Conference Wheeler Grove Baptist Church will host the Mississippi Baptist Evangelism Conference on at 6 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 31. and at 9 a.m. on Monday, Feb. 1. The event is sponsored by

City Road Temple will hold a Bible study each Wednesday at 6 p.m.

Mason Saint Luke Baptist Church will hold a Black History Program at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 28. The guest speaker will be Pastor Jeffery Daniels of the Whitehill M.B. Church of Tupelo, along with his choir. The theme is: Philippines 3:14 “I’m Pressing My Way”.

Living Free Ministries Living Free Ministries will meet at 6 p.m. on Monday nights in small groups. There will be a ‘Celebration Night’ at 6 p.m. on Thursday nights. There will also be a Mens’ Bible Study Group meeting at 7 a.m. on Saturday mornings. There is no cost to attend and all meetings are open to everyone. Living Free Ministries is located behind Magnolia Funeral Home in the 2 metal buildings at the rear of the parking lot. For more information call Living Free Ministries at 662-287-2733.

Precept Bible Studies Precept Bible Studies – a new study from Kay Arthur covering the Gospel of Luke – Bible studies are currently being held in the First Baptist Church Chapel. Classes will be from 9-11:30 a.m. The cost for two workbooks is $40.50. To register call Dorothy Taylor at

Use today to enjoy what’s most important Several years ago I was talking with my oldest daughter about the loss of one of her friends. She was sad and upset and called her mother and me to tell us of this sad situation. Her friend, a 32-yearold mother of one, had passed away due to the unforgiving, uncaring disease of cancer. It broke my heart to hear of someone so young being taken from her family. Many things we do not understand and one of the strongest points I receive from this situation is that life is not fair. However, we must remember one vital and important thing: God did not promise us a tomorrow. I am reminded of something I read recently about putting off something you desire until a special occasion. I firmly believe that each day is a gift and we need to take hold of every

moment. A paraphrase of this story is that a man went to Gary his wife’s Andrews closet and brought Devotionals out a small gift box, then unwrapped it very carefully. He said, “Well, I guess this is it.” His wife had bought this item nine years ago and was saving this clothing for a special occasion. He took the clothing and laid it on the bed next to her dress. These were the clothes he was taking to the funeral home because his wife had just died. The man said, “Never save something for a special occasion. Everyday in your life is a special occasion.” These words should

touch us enough that we would take time to read more and clean less. We should sit on the porch without worrying about anything. Spending more time with family and less time at work should be our priority. We should use our good china every day and wear our new clothes anytime we feel like it. The words “Someday…” and “One day…” should start fading away from our dictionary. If it’s worth seeing, listening or doing, then see, listen or do it now. We especially shouldn’t delay, postpone or keep anything that could bring laughter and joy into our lives. Each day, each hour, each minute should be special to us and we should say this to ourselves every morning. If any of us knew the time we would leave this earth, what would we do before that time? We

Religion Briefs Associated Press

Members of Michigan diocese angered at priest’s arrival BATTLE CREEK, Mich. — Some parishioners in a Michigan Catholic diocese are concerned that a former Minnesota archbishop who left amid a clergy sex abuse scandal is helping a Battle Creek church. The Kalamazoo Gazette reports that former Archbishop John Nienstedt is celebrating masses at St. Philip while its pastor recovers from an illness. Nienstedt resigned from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in June after charges were filed claiming the church failed to protect children. Nienstedt has not been charged, and Kalamazoo diocese spokeswoman Victoria Cessna says the church has no knowledge of pending allegations against Nienstedt. St. Philip parent Samantha Pearl says “the church is demonstrating that it is willing protect those who have hurt children.”

Russians celebrate Epiphany by diving into freezing waters MOSCOW — Thousands of Russians have taken a dip in icy waters to cel-

ebrate Epiphany, marking the baptism of Jesus in Orthodox Christianity. Water blessed by a priest on Epiphany week in Orthodox tradition is considered holy and pure, and bathing in it is believed by some to have healing powers. In Moscow, authorities set up 60 official bathing sites for believers, from open air pools to holes cut in ponds. Temperatures in Moscow were 14 degrees Fahrenheit overnight.

Manufacturer stands by policy on Muslim prayer breaks MILWAUKEE — The Council for America-Islamic Relations is asking a Wisconsin manufacturer to back away from a policy that doesn’t allow an extra break for prayer for its Muslim employees. The Ariens Company, however, has told CAIR that it can handle the matter internally. The friction comes after 53 workers left their jobs in protest after the company limited them to two 10-minute breaks per work shift. CEO Dan Ariens said adding a third prayer break had disrupted production. The company says it has had longstanding religious accommodations for Muslim workers, including a prayer room.

Suggested daily Bible readings Sunday – Psalm 46:1-3; Monday – Philippians 4:19; Tuesday – Jeremiah 17:8; Wednesday - Luke 10:41-42; Thursday – Romans 8:28; Friday – Isaiah 32:17; Saturday – Hebrews 11:1.) might call relatives and closest friends. We could call old friends to make peace over past quarrels. Maybe we would go out and have our favorite dinner. We may regret and feel sad because we didn’t say to our brothers, sisters, and children, not times enough at least, how much we love them. My daughter’s friend did have the opportunity for a final goodbye to her child and husband. She was one of the fortunate ones, and then, I think to myself, how can someone say a final goodbye to their 3-year old child? We have become so

busy in a hurry up world that many of us forget what is really important. We let worry and other vices deprive us of our days being special. Each day we need to be prepared to go and be with the Lord and all of our earthly experiences will be gone. Will you leave this earth with promises unfulfilled, disagreements unsettled, letters unwritten, sayings to loved ones unsaid, fun things we wanted to do undone, or unused special items still sitting on a shelf because our someday never came? We need to let go of all the earthly strive that holds us back and re-

member what we are told in Philippians 4: 6-7; “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving present your request to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” Prayer: Thank you Lord for each day of life that you allow me to have. I pray that I will make it a special day and if I have unsettled issues in my life, that you will lead me in making corrective measures for these items. Amen. (Daily Corinthian columnist Gary Andrews is a native of Alcorn County. His the author of Encouraging Words: 30-days in God’s Word. To obtain a copy go to his website www.gadevotionals.com.)

We have become a very selfish people Lora Ann Huff Back Porch

With the political arena in the state it’s in today, my husband and I have asked each other, “What do you think so-andso would have to say about all this? Wouldn’t you like to hear his opinion of the latest

propaganda?” The so-and-so’s are friends who are deceased but once loved to talk politics, our parents who lived through the Great Depression and knew what it took for the country to come out of that awful time, and former government leaders who seemed to have a level head. My soapbox has been begging to come to the forefront but I don’t want to get very deep into the mess I see and hear. Besides, too many people have differing opinions and I don’t like to offend anyone. …But my mother-in-law saved newspaper and magazine clippings she found especially interesting, and the other day I found something she saved that made me really stop and think. The article titled “History Repeats Itself” was printed in 1965 and goes something like this: “What is past is prologue. History repeats itself as time marches on. A study of history shows that the great civilizations of the world have averaged about 200 years. “The peoples of the world have followed this timetable. The peo-

We’ve become a selfish people who profess to be spiritual and courageous but then feel helpless when it comes to making things better. ple go: from slavery to spiritual faith; from spiritual faith to courage; from courage to liberty; from liberty to abundance; from abundance to selfishness; from selfishness to apathy; from apathy to dependency; from dependency back to slavery.” The ending asked what stage we were in at the time and how long would it be before we returned to slavery. I don’t like to think about that, but somehow I see our country as being a mixture of all of the above. We’ve become a selfish people who profess to be spiritual and courageous but then feel helpless when it comes to making things better – so we have become numb and apathetic. So now I’m seeing a politician come along who acts mad and tough and powerful. I’m scared when I see Americans roar in approval when this man acts like a spoiled brat and lashes out with cursing and ugly words toward everyone who disagrees with him. In my opinion, it’s a sad day when a politician and his “star

power” endorsement uses language our parents would have taken us to the woodshed for using and then ends a rally with a thumbs-up and the words, “We’re gonna give ’em h___!” That’s what I’m afraid of! History shows us that’s definitely what Hitler gave the world. Ask any World War II vet, any holocaust survivor, or any ordinary citizen who lived through the hard times or lost loved ones in the process. For a long time our educators have stressed math and science so our kids will be researchers, inventors, and explorers, but we must never let history fall by the wayside. Not long ago I heard a young person moaning about having to study history, and I wanted to explain that if we don’t know what happened in the past and why, we might repeat the mistakes and end up in a worse situation. …So my husband and I can’t sit and talk with our mentors from the past, but we can be sure they would tell us to be very careful about who we listen to and follow. They would tell us to practice love and compassion and teach our young ones to study the past so they can have a wise, discerning spirit as they move into the future. As Charles Dickens’ Tiny Tim said, “God bless us everyone.” (Lora Ann Huff is a Wenasoga resident and special columnist for the Daily Corinthian. Her column appears Friday. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)


4B • Daily Corinthian

Variety

Friday, January 22, 2016

Crossword

BEETLE BAILEY

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Cotton fabric 5 The Cavaliers of the ACC 8 Parkinson’s drug 13 “What’s Going __ Your World”: George Strait hit 14 “Delta of Venus” author 15 “Lincoln,” for one 16 “That’s terrible!” 17 Internet __ 18 Internet lesson plan company 19 Cleaned meticulously 22 Weather forecast abbr. 23 Heated feeling 24 Like a good-sized farm 28 Disdainful literary review comment 31 2013 animated fantasy film 32 Wear (away) 33 Fan mail encl. 34 Ironclad 39 Voice of Barney on “The Flintstones” 41 Like MacDonald 42 Fertility goddess 44 Malice, in law 49 To such an extent 50 __ Riddle, Lord Voldemort’s birth name 51 Málaga title: Abbr. 53 Classic Stones song ... and a hint to what’s hidden at the ends of 19-, 28-, 34- and 44Across 56 Take for granted 59 Debt-laden fin. deal 60 Skyrocket 61 Arboreal marsupials 62 Plan 63 “Lonely Boy” singer 64 Not relaxed at all 65 Pindaric __ 66 Hardy soul?

DOWN 1 Cries of contempt 2 Rashly 3 Home city of the WNBA’s Lynx 4 “And giving __, up the chimney ... ” 5 Yet to arrive 6 Spectrum color 7 Standing against 8 Department store section 9 “Camptown Races” refrain syllables 10 Decide to be involved (in) 11 Entrée follower, perhaps 12 Coolers, briefly 15 Commands 20 Put (together) 21 Lieu 25 Definite 26 Early ’N Sync label 27 Scratch (out) 29 Rim 30 Top-ranked tennis star for much of the ’80s

35 Stars’ opposites 36 Chili rating unit 37 “Stand” opposite 38 Exploit 39 Bygone telecom co. 40 Coastal flier 43 Barely runs? 45 Ski bumps 46 “Allow me” 47 Discouraging words from an auto mechanic

48 More than discouraging words 52 Rich tapestry 54 Muppet who always turns 3 1/2 on February 3 55 Future atty.’s ordeal 56 Blotter letters 57 Prince George, to Prince William 58 Didn’t start

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Alan DerKazarian (c)2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

01/22/16

01/22/16

Aches, pain of spouse may be serious WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: Please help me before I pull my hair out. I am 40 and have been married for the last eight years to a man I love more than I thought possible. We have a good relationship. We are open and talk often. My dilemma is that he complains all the time about aches and pains. Not a day goes by that there isn’t some ailment bothering him. I have tried to think back to earlier in our relationship, and I don’t recall whether he’s always done this and I had blinders on, or if his complaints have become more frequent. Granted, he has had his share of minor health problems, but so have I and many other people. I don’t want to overlook anything serious, nor do I think he is a hypochondriac, but I have found myself becoming more and more callus and dismissive of his complaints and have even caught myself rolling my eyes. This is not in my nature and I don’t like responding this way. How should I handle this situation? If I tell him how I feel about it, I know it will hurt his feelings. On the other hand, if I do nothing, I am eventually going to snap and bark at him. Any suggestions? — Married to a Kvetch Dear Married: The

Annie’s Mailbox first thing you need to do is make sure his constant aches and pains are not, in fact, masking something worse. So the next time he grumbles, insist that he make an appointment with his doctor and go with him. If he says it’s “nothing to worry about,” tell him, “No. You’ve been complaining about this for a long time, and I want to be sure there is nothing seriously wrong.” If the doctor’s examination shows nothing beyond normal wearand-tear, encourage your husband to get a massage, see a chiropractor or acupuncturist, or change his workout, which could be aggravating something. (If he’s not working out, suggest that he start, as it could help build up his strength.) If you do this with sincerity and concern every time he complains, he will become more aware of it and less likely to continue. Dear Annie: I need to

address your response to “Wary Wife,” whose husband used to go to strip clubs and she doesn’t trust that he’s not looking to meet strippers. This woman works two jobs and they have three children. Telling her to be more attentive to her husband is shocking. Why isn’t her husband there for her and for their kids? Why has he money to go out while his wife has to work? I think there are serious questions that need to be answered here. Please reconsider your response. — A. Dear A.: We appreciate that the wife is working hard, but she says in her letter, “I will admit that I haven’t been the most attentive wife,” so we think she needs to work on that, too. It cannot all be about the husband’s peccadilloes, even though he certainly is undermining his wife’s trust and needs to stop. But you cannot neglect your spouse, regardless of the reason, and expect things to be just fine. It doesn’t matter which one of them is more to blame. The point is to repair the damage and make the marriage stronger, and that will take effort from both of them.


Daily Corinthian • Friday, January 22, 2016 • 5B

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Experienced Accountant/ Tax Preparer

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Certified CNA’s for all shifts Dietary, PRN Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30 E.O.E.

412 Pinecrest Road 287-2221 • 287-4419

“Serving the Needs of the Community, One Patient at a Time�

HIRING AN

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ADMISSIONS DIRECTOR

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Winter Savings

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Laura E. Weaver HAPPY 55TH BIRTHDAY

7a-7p, 7p-7a Weekend RN Supervisor

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6B • Friday, January 22, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

HOMES FOR 0620 RENT

0955 LEGALS have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court within ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of this notice or the same shall be forever barred. The first day of the publication of this notice is the 8th day of January, 2016.

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THE CITY OF CORINTH NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held at 5:00 p.m. in the Board Room of the City of Corinth Municipal Building at 300 Childs Street, Corinth, Mississippi on February 10, 2016, in connection with the application of Ken Lancaster for variance from the zoning/building codes of the 0734 LOTS & ACREAGE City of Corinth. This hearing follows the application of Ken $FUH ORW MXVW RII Lancaster for a reduction of +Z\ ( DERXW PLOH the side yards setback reIURP :DOJUHHQV 5RDG quirement to 5 feet and a re :LOO ILQ duction of the rear yard setDQFH IRU GRZQ back to 15 feet at 1217 N. +LOOV %LJ 2DN 7UHHV ,Q Fillmore Street to enable an &RXQW\ addition to the dwelling at that address and to permit construction of a carport and TRANSPORTATION portion of a driveway.

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$18,999

^^RATED 38 MPG HIGHWAY! • INC. POWER DRIVER SEAT!

MODEL#13115 • DEAL#54815 • STK#2934N, 2983N, 2986N, 3006N, 3007N, 3008N, 3009N

2

#INCLUDES $750 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED. / t PAYMENT FIGURED @ 72 MO. 0% APR IN LIEU OF STANDARD REBATE.

*#t$

278

00PER MONTH

AT THIS

NISSAN REBATES... -*$400 TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRPP -$1,428

PRICE!

SALES PRICE.... *$15,297

MODEL#11215 • DEAL#44976 • STK# 2938N, 2942N

*$

242

*$

15,297

BRAND NEW 2015

BRAND NEW 2015

Sentra SV

Rogue Select S

00

PER MONTH

CITY OF CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

2009 HONDA RUBICON Rode 90 hours ONE OWNER 662-554-2363 $3,800.00

BY: Jerry Finger, Chairman Board of Adjustments Mitchell, McNutt & Sams P.O. Box 1200 Corinth, MS 38835 662-286-9931 1/22/2016

FINANCIAL

8

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES -*#$1,750 TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRPP -$2,996 SALES PRICE...

*#$

16,499

*#&

$16,499

^^RATED 39 MPG HIGHWAY!

MODEL#12115 • DEAL#57409 • STK#2902N, 2925N, 2940N, 2946N, 2947N, 2967N, 2978N, 2979N #INCLUDES $250 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED. / t PAYMENT FIGURED @ 72 MO. 0% APR IN LIEU OF STANDARD REBATE.

*#t$

240

00PER MONTH

2

AT THIS

NISSAN REBATES -*$1,500 TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRPP -$3,116

PRICE!

SALES PRICE..... *$18,999

*$

18,999

^RECENT COLLEGE GRADS SAVE ANOTHER $600. / #INCLUDES 1000 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

^^RATED 28 MPG HIGHWAY! • INC. CONVENIENCE PKG!

BRAND NEW 2015

BRAND NEW 2015

Rogue S

PathďŹ nder S

LEGALS

MODEL#29115 • DEAL#57467 • STK#2549NT, 2565NT

*$

301

00

15172

PER MONTH

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

0955 LEGALS

ROOFING

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF REGINA SUZETTE FORD, DECEASED NO. 2016-0012-02

10 AT THIS

NISSAN REBATES -*#$1,500 TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRPP -$3,296

PRICE!

SALES PRICE.... *#$20,999

*#$

20,999

^^RATED 39 MPG HIGHWAY!

MODEL#22715 • DEAL#57678 • STK#2630NT, 2634NT, 2638NT, 2647NT, 2649NT, 2650NT, 2652NT, 2654NT, 2655NT, 2692NT

#INCLUDES $250 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

*#t$

334

00PER MONTH

2

AT THIS

NISSAN REBATES -*#$2,000 TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRPP -$4,908

PRICE!

SALES PRICE... *#$26,477

*$

26,477

^^RATED 27 MPG HIGHWAY!

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

MODEL#21115 • DEAL#57742 • STK#2709NT, 2727NT #INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

*#$

419

00 PER MONTH

*: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE PRICE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. HOLIDAY BONUS CASH APPLIED, IF APPLICABLE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY; NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372, 38375, OR (&) 38852 WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIGNATED MARKET AREA ALIGNMENT WHICH MAY AFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 75MO, 5.5APR, TIER 1 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. #: INCLUDES THE NMAC FINANCE REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN. t: PAYMENT FIGURED @ SPECIAL APR FINANCING THRU NMAC IN LIEU OF STANDARD REBATES. CERTAIN TERMS & CONDITIONS MAY APPLY. TIER 1,2,3 RATING REQUIRED. ^^ACTUAL MPG MAY VARY. SEE FUELECONOMY.GOV FOR DETAILS. && TOTAL SAVINGS INCLUDES BROSE DISCOUNTS, NISSAN REBATES, & PACKAGE DISCOUNT SAVINGS IF PURCHASED SEPERATLY. DEALS GOOD THRU 1.31.16.

+:< ($67

&25,17+ 06

/2&$/ 72// )5((

NEW 2015 Honda

% 26 %526(

CIVIC LX

NOTICE is hereby given that Letters Testamentary have been on this day granted to the undersigned, Jimmy Scott Ford, on the estate of Regina Suzette Ford by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, and all persons having claims against said estate are required to

NEW 2016 Honda ACCORD

LX

4 Door, Bluetooth, Rear Camera

249 mo

$

Automatic, Bluetooth, Back-Up Camera, and MORE!

OR

Stk# 815431

0.9% 60mo.

NEW 2016 Honda CRV

SE

2WD, Alloy Wheels, Automatic

309 mo NEW 2016 Honda ODYSSEY SE $ 359 mo $

%

OR LEASE FOR

$ 1.9 OR 195 mo . 72mo. 60mo. %

0.9

PLUS TAX / WITH APPROVED CREDIT / 39 MONTH LEASE

www.houseofhondatupelo.com

628 SOUTH GLOSTER | TUPELO | 842-4162 OR 1-888-892-4162

with DVD

OR

$

0

0.9% 60mo.

DOWN PAYMENT SECURITY DEPOSIT DUE AT LEASE SIGNING FIRST MONTH’S PAYMENT

DISCLAIMERS: Payments are plus tax & title. $0 Down Offer is for qualified lessees, with approved credit. 0.9% and 1.9% APR is through American Honda Finance, with approved credit. Lease is 12,000 miles per year through American Honda Finance. All leases are for 39 months. All offers with approved credit. Offers end 1/31/16.


$

14,995

or. ..........................

per month

$

218 00

$

18,995

or. ..........................

$

per month

280 00

Daily Corinthian • Friday, January 22, 2016 • 7B

ed technicians Cartwright We’ll Put Collision Letquicklyour certifi restore your vehicle condition Damage in Reverse towithpre-accident a satisfaction guarantee.

Hwy. 145 in Booneville 662-728-5381 www.cartwrightford.com

State-of-the-Art Frame Straightening Dents, Dings & Scratches Removed Custom Color Matching Service

King Rental Small & Mid Size Car 7 & 15 Passenger Vans

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance Company No up-front payments. No hassle. No paperwork.

Rental Department 8:00AM To 5:00PM Your Keys to Adventure

s e l a S o GUARANTEED Corinth Collision CenterAu t Free Estimates 25 Years professional service experience Rental cars available

Welcome to our Team!

916 HWY 45 SOUTH | CORINTH, MS 38834 PHONE 662-287-8773 | FAX 662-287-7373

Call Hollis “Car-Man� Southern for your best deal! 662.424.1271

810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

He would like to invite all his friends, family, and customers to come by and visit! VEHICLE DIRECTORY

CED REDU 2009 Pontiac G6

Super Nice, Really Clean, Oil changed regularly, Good cold air and has good tires. 160k

Asking $5400. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @ 662-319-7145

2004 Hummer H2 134,514 miles

$13,900 OBO

Just serviced and ready for the road. Call @

662-664-0210

Automobile for sale

2011 TOYOTA AVALON Blizzard White, Tan Leather Interior, Fully Loaded, 66K miles,

$19,500

Excellent Condition Call:731-610-6153

2006 Jeep Liberty New Tires 100K Miles Never BeeWrecked

$7500.00 OBO $8200 OBO 662-664-0357

1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER 6 cyl., 5 speed Convertible Leather Seat Covers All Original Electric Windows & Seats 88,000 miles

$15,000. OBO 664-6484

2004 Cadillac Seville SLS Loaded, leather, sunroof, chrome wheels.

89,000 Miles $5500. $5,000 Call 662-603-1290

1973 Jeep 1989 Mercedes Benz 300 CE Commando 2012 Jeep Wrangler 4WD 00 Miles, Red Garage Kept, it has been babied. All maintenance records available. Call or Text:

662-594-5830

New tires, paint, seats, and window & door seals. Engine like new, 3 speed, 4x4, roll-bar, wench. Great Shape!

$

10,000

731-607-3172

145K miles, Rear bucket seats, Champagne color, Excellent Condition. Diligently maintained. $4000.00 $5000.00 662-415-2657

02 LINCOLN LS

2003 White PT Cruiser Limited Edition Chrome Wheels, Tan Leather interior with heated seats. Sunroof, 2.4 Engine. 140,000 miles Clean car, Non smoker $3,000.00 firm. Call 662-286-6427 or 662-415-0846

171,000 MILES EXTRA NICE 2003 FORD TAURUS 142100 MILES $2800.00 662-665-5720

$3950.00 664-6062 664-2380

1985 Mustang GT, 2004 F-150 Supercrew Lariat 4x4, 5.4 V-8, Burgandy, Fully-loaded, new-cooper tires, new xm/ stereo/cd, tan leather interior, great a/c - heat, must sell.

HO, 5 Speed, Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner Last year of carburetor, All original. $16,500

662-665-1368

662-287-4848

D L SO

1950 Buick 78,400 miles $4200.00 or Trade All Original

662-415-3408

1998 Cadillac DeVille Tan Leather Interior Sunroof, green color 99,000 miles - needs motor $1,100.00 (662) 603-2635 212-2431

864 TRUCKS/VANS/ SUV’S

1997 Mustang GT

Black Like new on the inside and out. Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles

$

4,000.00 $3,900.00 662-664-0357 2003 Mustang GT SVT Cobra Clone Tuned 4.6 Engine 5 Speed Lowered 4:10 Gears All Power & Air $6500. 662-415-0149

2012 Subaru Legacy $10,900 Excellent condition, One owner, Must sell!

Call 662-284-8365

For Sale or Trade 1978 Mercedes 6.9 Motor 135,000 miles. Only made 450 that year. $2,500. OBO Selling due to health reasons. Harry Dixon 286-6359

2010 Chevy Equinox LS 1996 Dodge Dakota

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

$10,000 $10,500 662-415-8343 or 415-7205

One Owner, Bought New in Booneville, MS. 139,000 miles, Xtra Cab, Leer Bed liner with cover, Back seat has storage under the seat. 318 Magnum Engine.

$ , 00.00 662-672-0222 662-750-1949

2011 GMC CANYON-RED REG. CAB, 2 WD 2006 Express 2500 6.6 Diesel Runs 78,380 MILES and drives great. 172,000 miles. A/C and new tires Well serviced! $7500.00 $8500.00 662-594-1860

1976 F115 428 Motor Very Fast

$11,900 OBO

$3,500.

662-462-7790

662-808-9313 662-415-5071

95’ 2001 Nissan Xterra CHEVY FOR SALE ASTRO Needs a little work. Cargo Van Good Bargain! Good, Sound Van Call: $2700 662-643-3084 872-3070

HONDA VAN 2005 TOURING PACKAGE White with tan leather DVD, Loaded 180K miles, $8000 OBO 662-284-5600

2012 Toyota Highlander Limited Black, 1 Owner, 70,000 Miles, New Tires, Leather, $25,900.00 662-287-1464

06 Chevy Trailblazer 1987 Power FORD 250 DIESEL 1994 Nissan Quest everything! New Lifters, UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK Good heat Cam, Head, $4000. and Air Struts and Shocks. IN GOOD CONDITION $2000. $3,250 OBO 731-645-8339 OR Call 603-9446 662-319-7145 731-453-5239 832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

1999 Ford Ranger Extended Cab 150,000 miles 4.0 Liter Engine $2,900.00 662-396-1326

2009 HONDA RUBICON Rode 90 hours ONE OWNER 662-554-2363 $3,800.00

1500 Goldwing Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500

662-284-9487

1964 F100 SHORT BED

D L SO

2014 Jeep Wrangler

Approx 15000 miles BOUGHT NEW, Complete History, Loaded, 4x4, All power, Phone, CD, DVD, Satellite, Auto, Removable Tops, Step Bars, Dark Tint, Red - Black, (LIKE NEW) IUKA

256-577-1349 $28,500.00

2012 Banshee Bighorn Side-by-Side 4 X 4 w/ Wench AM/FM w/ CD

$5900.00 OBO $7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

1998 CHEVY CUSTOM VAN 136,200 mi. Well Maintained Looks & Runs Great

$6,500.00

662-415-9062

2001 Heritage Softail

LIKE NEW 9K Miles 25,000 Invested Asking 8K Serviced by H/D Bumpas

731-645-3012

$8,500.00 662-287-2333 Leave Message

750-8526

2008 Harley Davidson Electra Glide Classic Black w/lots of Chrome 21,600 miles $12,500 662-286-6750

D L SO

2010 GMC Ext-Cab P.U. New tires, Tool Box, Towing Pkg., Bed Liner, Running Boards, Fog Lights, P. Windows, P. Door Locks, Tilt

$14,900.

Call 662-255-3511

2006 YAMAHA 1700 GREAT CONDITION! APPROX. 26,000 MILES $4350 (NO TRADES) 662-665-0930 662-284-8251

D OLD L S SO

1995 K2500 4X4 Good Condition Runs Great, New Tires 176K miles $3500.

662-287-7415 662-415-5163

1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color: blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles, $7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER

2000 Harley Davidson Road King Classic 20,000 miles, One Owner, Garage kept.

completely refurbished & recovered seat, new brakes, NOS starter, new $125 battery. 6cyl, 3spdWalnut $1850.00,

2003 CHEVY 2500 HDLT CREW CAB 4X4

YAMAHA V STAR 650 22,883 MILES $2,650.00 665-1288

2nd Owner, Great Condition Has a Mossy Oak Cover over the body put on when it was bought new. Everything Works. Used for hunting & around the house, Never for mud riding. $1500 Firm. If I don’t answer, text me and I will contact you. 662-415-7154

2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster, color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

2006 Harley Davidson Street Glide 103 Screaming Eagle Engine 9700 Actual Miles-Showroom Condition-Fully Chromed and Customized-Rinehart True Dual Exhaust-Stage1 Breather Kit-10K Mile Full Factory Service Just Compled$14,000.00 Firm-

662-212-0362

VORTEC 8100 V8 ALLISON TRANSMISSION EXCEL. COND. 32K MILES

$18,500.00

662-284-8200

2002 Harley Fat Boy, color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

2013 Arctic Cat

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO

308 miles 4 Seater w/seat belts Phone charger outlet Driven approx. 10 times Excellent Condition Wench (front bumper)

662-808-2994

(662)279-0801


8B • Friday, January 22, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

TAX GUIDE 2016 Holder Accounting Firm 1407-A Harper Road Corinth, MS 38834 Kellie Holder, Owner Our staff is ready to help you. Open year-round. Thank you for your business and loyalty. Telephone: 662-286-9946 Fax: 662-286-2713

ADVERTISE YOUR TAX SERVICE HERE FOR $95 A MONTH CALL 287-6111 FOR MORE DETAILS

ADVERTISE YOUR TAX SERVICE HERE FOR $95 A MONTH CALL 287-6111 FOR MORE DETAILS

$50,000. OBO Call 662-750-0370 Mike 662-279-6547 Jo

Leave Message

Booneville 662-728-1080 508 W Chambers Drive Old highway 4 Ripley 662-512-5829 1906B City Avenue N

House For Rent

Valentine Love Lines

0255,6 &580 0,1, 6725$*(

Send a special message to someone you love this Valentine’s Day.

5 lines $10

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

Deadline: Feburary 10th at 12:00pm

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

HOME FOR RENT

Pickwick Pines Resort 1 bedroom 1.5 baths $550/month, utilities included

Shiloh Falls Pickwick 3BR/ 3BA, Loft, Fireplace Deck, 2 car garage, gated community $1200.00 per month Minimum 12 month Lease

Call

References required

R

D E T EN

901-496-0561

AFTON SUBDIVISION

2 Beautiful Wooded Lots

Corinth 662-286-1040 2003 Hwy 72 E

6 7DWH $FURVV )URP :RUOG &RORU

Property Directory

Burnsville Area Mobile Home 16 x 90 3 BR, 2 Bath 7 Acres Small Storm House

Jackson Hewitt Income Tax WE ARE NOT AFFILIATED WITH ANY OF THE WALMART JACKSON HEWITT’S

STORAGE, INDOOR/ OUTDOOR $0(5,&$1 0,1, 6725$*(

FOR LEASE 412 FILLMORE STREET $500.00

662-279-0935

BURNSVILLE 40 ACRES OF WOODED LAND

LD O S $80,000

CALL 662-808-9313 OR 415-5071

For Rent 3600 Square Feet Church Building at Biggersvile (Beside Kenny’s Bar B Q), $650.00 per month. Includes Piano, Organ and is completely set up for a congregation of 90

s e l a S o t GUARANTEEDAu Each Adj. Lot .7 Acres – 1.4 Total Acres

612 CRUISE STREET $500.00

$39,500 Each

662-603-9906 ROOFING

ROOFING

662-287-9620 ROOFING

ROOFING

First Month in advance and you pay your own Utilities 662-293-0039

ROOFING

REDUCED Sportsman Camper Queen Bed, Couch sleeps 2, lots of cabinets, pulled 6 times, non-smoker, clean as new on the inside.

$9,500.00 $8500.00 287-3461 or 396-1678

$6500.00

662-284-4604

ROOFING

VEHICLE DIRECTORY

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

Pace Utility Tandem Trailer. (Enclosed) 6x12, Wired, A/C, Custom detailed/paint, inlayed equipment brackets, windows/shades and awning Drop down loading door and mounted Alum tool box. Custom Wheels like new! Perfect for camping. Includes 2 twin electric air mattresses and port-a-potty. Serious inquiries only. No Calls after 6PM. Corinth.

ROOFING

SOLD 2011 AR-ONE Star Craft, 14ft. Fridge/AC, Stove, Microwave, Full bath, immaculate condition. ReďŹ nance or payoff (prox. $5300) @ Trustmark, payments $198. Excellent starter for small family. 284-0138

1992 SWINGER CLASS A MOTOR HOME 32 FT., LOW MILES, NEW TIRES, VG COND. $6500.00 OBO 660-0242 OR 656-0750

REDUCED 2006 WILDERNESS CAMPER 29 FT.

SOLD

5TH WHEEL LARGE SLIDE OUT FULLY EQUIPPED NON-SMOKING OWNER IUKA

gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-flat screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.

CED REDU $65,000 662-415-0590

CALL 662-423-1727

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home, new tires, Price negotiable.

30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

662-660-3433

$75,000. 662-287-7734 470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1990 Allegro Motor Home

SOLD

Excellent Condition Brand New Refrigerator New Tires & Hot Water Heater. Sleeps Six 7,900 ACTUAL MILES $12,500. OBO Must See!! Call 662-665-1420

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD 2003 CHEROKEE 285 SLEEPS 8 EXCELLENT CONDITION EVERYTHING WORKS 5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER CENTRAL HEAT & AIR ALL NEW TIRES & NEW ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER

$8995 Call Richard 662-664-4927

LD SOMILES 51,000 SLEEPS 6

$4300 662-415-5247

WINNEBAGO JOURNEY CLASS A , RV 2000 MODEL 34.9 FT. LONG 50 AMP HOOKUP CUMMINS DIESEL FREIGHTLINER CHASSIS LARGE SLIDE OUT ONAN QUIET GENERATOR VERY WELL KEPT. ,500. 662-728-2628

24 FT BONANZA TRAILER GOOSE NECK GOOD CONDITION

WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOME 1989 40' Queen Size Bed 1 Bath Sleeps 6-7 people comfortably

$2,000.00

$8500

662-287-8894

662-808-9313

JOHN DEERE 3020 DIESEL Looks and runs GOOD. Same owner past 20 yrs. $4,500.00 CALL 731-610-3172

SOLD

Older Model Ford Tractor with

2 Row

Equipment. $6000.00 662-286-6571 662-286-3924

COMMERCIAL

8N FORD TRACTOR GOOD CONDITION $2500.00 287-8456

FOR SALE

KUBOTA 2001

JOHN DEERE TRACTORS

5700 HP GOOD CONDITION OWNER RETIRING $10,000.00 731-453-5521

SPRING SPECIAL 662-415-0399 662-419-1587

2009 TT45A New Holland Tractor 335 Hours 8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner deceased, Kossuth Area. $10,000- 662-424-3701

601 FORD WORKMASTER

SOLD EXCELLENT CONDITION

$3,500 731-453-5239 731-645-8339

W & W HORSE OR CATTLE TRAILER ALL ALUMINUM LIKE NEW $7000. 731-453-5239 731-645-8339

1956 FORD 600

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

Hyster Forklift Narrow Aisle 24 Volt Battery 3650.00 287-1464

$4,200 662-287-4514

804 BOATS

53' STEP DECK TRAILER

Baker Propane Forklift 4000 LB Lift $2000.00 662-279-7011

CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1 TON TRUCKS.

662-287-1464 Loweline Boat

14’ flat bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor and all. Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503

BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3' PULL OUTS @ FRONT & REAR.

Clark Forklift 8,000 lbs, outside tires Good Condition $15,000

ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE 16FT./5FT. 115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR TRAILER NEWLY REWIRED ALL TIRES NEW NEW WINCH

Big Boy Forklift $

1250

Toyota Forklift

BOOMS, CHAINS & LOTS OF ACCESSORIES

Great for a small warehouse

5,000 lbs Good Condition

$10,000/OBO

662-287-1464

662-287-1464

CALL 662-603-1547

ASKING $7500.00 Or Make Me An Offer CALL 662-427-9591 Call (662)427-9591 or Cell phone (662)212-4946 Built by Scully’s Aluminum Boats of Louisiana.

$6500. 662-596-5053

Imagine owning a likenew, 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

16 1/2 FT. 2000 POLAR KRAFT ALUMINUM BOAT with a 40 HP Nissan P.L.U.S. Motor • • • • • • • •

Camouage seats Front and rear lights Trolling motor Live well Tackle box Eagle depth ďŹ nder 10 gallon fuel tank AM/FM Radio Asking $4,100.00

662-284-5901

DECK BOAT BAYLINER CLASSIC

1989 FOXCRAFT

18’ long, 120 HP Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot control.

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat 25 HP Motor $2700.00 Ask for Brad: 284-4826

1985 Hurricane-150 Johnson engine

1995 15’ Aluminum Boat, Outboard Motor, Trolling Mtr., New Rod Holder, New Electric Anchor $2550.00 462-3373

2012 Lowe Pontoon 90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer Still under warranty. Includes HUGE tube $19,300 662-427-9063

14 Ft. Aluminum Boat & Trailer, 25 HP Johnson Motor. New Battery $2000. REDUCED Call for More Info: 662-286-8455

Includes Custom Trailer Dual Axel-Chrome Retractable Canopy $4500.00

662-419-1587

BOAT & TRAILER 13 YR OLD M14763BC BCMS 19.5 LONG BLUE & WHITE REASONABLY PRICED 662-660-3433


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