daily corinthian e-edition 012713

22
Index On this day in history 150 years ago In a blatant violation of the 1st Amendment of the Constitu- tion, Philadelphia newspaperman A. D. Boileau is arrested for publishing anti-Union and anti-war columns in his paper, the Philadelphia Journal. Stocks...... 7A Classified...... 7B Comics Inside Wisdom...... 3B Weather...... 5A Obituaries...... 3A Opinion...... 4A Sports...... 8A Vol. 117, No. 24 Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages Two sections www.dailycorinthian.com Jan. 27, 2013 $1.50 Today 58 Mostly cloudy Tonight 52 Sunday Sunday Inside today: More than $150 in coupon savings 20% chance rain (Editor's Note: Due to the sensitivity and nature of this story, the Daily Corinthian has chosen not to reveal the true identity of a woman staying at the Hope Dream Center. The woman will be referred to as Jane throughout the story.) Life isn't always kind. During those difcult times, people need some kind of hope that things will be alright. For a 34-year-old mother, the Hope Dream Center is giving her a second chance when no one else would. “Life happened and circum- stances I couldn't help brought me here,” said Jane. “Corinth is very judgmental … I had no where else to turn because of my past.” The woman has been hit hard by life. She lost her job and home, forcing her to stay “here and there” to avoid the streets. The loss of income kept her from being able to afford the medicines she needs to combat lupus. “The center was the only place that said it would help,” said Jane. “Thanks to them, I can now start over.” A fresh start is what the Hope Dream Center was designed to provide. Clients eligible would be able to stay at the center — located in the old Tate Baptist Church at 1223 Tate St. — for 28 days. During those 28 days, a client receives meals, a warm bed Center provides woman hope BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Facility gives young mother a second change on life Beautiful Babies of 2012 — pages 3B - 5B Staff photo by Steve Beavers The Hope Dream Center’s Suzanne Kiddy (left) and Annie Saffore counsel a young woman staying at the facility. Please see HOPE | 3A Photo courtesy of Lisa Weeden An American bald eagle and her young eaglet have tak- en up residence near a pond in Corinth. Tourists often nd Corinth a great place to visit. Even those who soar through the air. A pair of American bald eagles have been feeding at a pond in the Steeplechase sub- division. Lisa Weeden, who owns the subdivision along with her husband, Dr. Mike Weeden, said the eagles have been in the area since last year. “My son (Blake) said he saw an eagle around Christmas last year, but we didn't really think much about it,” said Lisa. “Then in November., my par- ents and sister-in-law both saw it.” An apparent mother and her young eaglet, discovered Sun- day, have been coming and go- ing, according to Lisa Weeden. “They don't seem to be scared,” said Weeden, who has photos of the mother. “We have seen eagles in areas like out West, but never this close to home.” Although no nest has been located, the birds have taken up residence and seem to be feed- ing well. “The sh they have been able to catch are huge,” said Weeden. Since the birds were discov- ered, the Weedens also noticed all the ducks in their pond have disappeared. The best time to catch a glimpse of the eagles is around noon and after school from 3-4 p.m. “Sometimes we won't see them all day, but lately they have been here,” said Mrs. Weeden. Weeden said she has re- ceived a ton of comments on Facebook and encourages any- one who would like to catch a glimpse of the eagles to do so. Bald eagles make Corinth their home BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Please see EAGLES | 2A They may not have the glam- our of double-oh-seven, but Te- resa Burns’ name has become interchangeable with three other important digits: 911. “Through the years, I kind of lost my identity and became Te- resa Burns 911,” said the retiring director. Friends, family and associates joined Burns at the communica- tions center on Thursday for a reception celebrating her years with the county and the 911 of- ce, where she served as director for 15 years. A 1982 Alcorn Central gradu- ate, Burns found herself laid off from ITT and back in the job market at the age of 21. It was a big disappointment to her when she didn’t get a job at another local industry where many of her friends from ITT had found work. But factory work was not to be her path. A call came from the sheriff’s department, wanting to know if she could type, a requirement for an open dispatcher’s job. Burns took the job and soon found that she liked how it gave her a role in helping other peo- ple. “I had no idea what an impor- tant decision that would be for 911 director Burns takes her last call BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Staff photo by Jebb Johnston At her retirement reception Thursday, Teresa Burns (right) enjoys catching up with friends such as Virginia K. Jones, who served as secretary for Sheriff Bill Gant when Burns was dispatching at Please see 911 | 2A A new report released by the American Cancer Society is a re- minder of the reason to Relay. Since 1991 America has seen a 20 percent decline in cancer mortality, according to the re- port. “That’s more than 400 more birthdays celebrated each and every day,” said ACS Community Representative Kristin Chittom. The society’s annual “Cancer Statistics” report highlights the results of comprehensive efforts by the society and researchers around the world in the ght against cancer. Chittom said the report pro- vides hope that the society’s mis- sion to save more than 1,000 Annual Relay for Life begins local efforts BY BRANT SAPPINGTON [email protected] Please see RELAY | 2A Daily Corinthian 662.286.6006 *PRICE & PAYMENT PLUS TAX, TITLE, INSPECTION STICKER, DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE. DEALER DISCOUNTS & MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PRUCHASE PRICE. REBATES MAY HAVE RESIDENCY RESTRICTIONS, OTHER QUALIFICATIONS, & MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN YOUR STATE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY. NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. 75 MO, 5.5 APR, W.A.C.&T. STK#1070D,1074DDEAL# 49894 INCLUDES AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION BUY IT NOW ZERO DOWN *$269 PER MO SPECIAL *$16,900 2013 DODGE AVENGER SE BRAND NEW!

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Page 1: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Index On this day in history 150 years agoIn a blatant violation of the 1st Amendment of the Constitu-

tion, Philadelphia newspaperman A. D. Boileau is arrested for publishing anti-Union and anti-war columns in his paper, the Philadelphia Journal.

Stocks......7A Classified......7B Comics Inside Wisdom......3B

Weather......5A Obituaries......3A Opinion......4A Sports......8A

Vol. 117, No. 24 • Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages • Two sections

www.dailycorinthian.com

Jan. 27, 2013

$1.50

Today58

Mostly cloudyTonight

52

SundaySunday

Inside today: More than $150 in coupon savings

20% chance rain

(Editor's Note: Due to the sensitivity and nature of this story, the Daily Corinthian has chosen not to reveal the true identity of a woman staying at the Hope Dream Center. The woman will be referred to as Jane throughout the story.)

Life isn't always kind.During those diffi cult times,

people need some kind of hope that things will be alright.

For a 34-year-old mother, the Hope Dream Center is giving her a second chance when no one else would.

“Life happened and circum-stances I couldn't help brought me here,” said Jane. “Corinth is very judgmental … I had no where else to turn because of my past.”

The woman has been hit hard by life. She lost her job and home, forcing her to stay “here and there” to avoid the streets. The loss of income kept her from being able to afford the medicines she needs to combat lupus.

“The center was the only place that said it would help,” said Jane. “Thanks to them, I

can now start over.”A fresh start is what the Hope

Dream Center was designed to provide.

Clients eligible would be able to stay at the center — located in the old Tate Baptist Church at 1223 Tate St. — for 28 days.

During those 28 days, a client receives meals, a warm bed

Center provides woman hope

BY STEVE [email protected]

Facility gives young mother a second change on life

Beautiful Babies of 2012 — pages 3B - 5B

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

The Hope Dream Center’s Suzanne Kiddy (left) and Annie Saffore counsel a young woman staying at the facility.

Please see HOPE | 3A

Photo courtesy of Lisa Weeden

An American bald eagle and her young eaglet have tak-en up residence near a pond in Corinth.

Tourists often fi nd Corinth a great place to visit.

Even those who soar through the air.

A pair of American bald eagles have been feeding at a pond in the Steeplechase sub-division. Lisa Weeden, who owns the subdivision along with her husband, Dr. Mike Weeden, said the eagles have been in the area since last year.

“My son (Blake) said he saw an eagle around Christmas last year, but we didn't really think much about it,” said Lisa. “Then in November., my par-ents and sister-in-law both saw it.”

An apparent mother and her young eaglet, discovered Sun-day, have been coming and go-ing, according to Lisa Weeden.

“They don't seem to be scared,” said Weeden, who has photos of the mother. “We have seen eagles in areas like out West, but never this close to home.”

Although no nest has been located, the birds have taken up residence and seem to be feed-ing well.

“The fi sh they have been able to catch are huge,” said Weeden.

Since the birds were discov-ered, the Weedens also noticed all the ducks in their pond have disappeared.

The best time to catch a glimpse of the eagles is around noon and after school from 3-4 p.m.

“Sometimes we won't see them all day, but lately they have been here,” said Mrs. Weeden.

Weeden said she has re-ceived a ton of comments on Facebook and encourages any-one who would like to catch a glimpse of the eagles to do so.

Bald eagles make Corinth their home

BY STEVE [email protected]

Please see EAGLES | 2A

They may not have the glam-our of double-oh-seven, but Te-resa Burns’ name has become interchangeable with three other important digits: 911.

“Through the years, I kind of lost my identity and became Te-resa Burns 911,” said the retiring director.

Friends, family and associates joined Burns at the communica-tions center on Thursday for a reception celebrating her years with the county and the 911 of-fi ce, where she served as director for 15 years.

A 1982 Alcorn Central gradu-ate, Burns found herself laid off from ITT and back in the job market at the age of 21. It was a big disappointment to her when she didn’t get a job at another local industry where many of her friends from ITT had found work.

But factory work was not to be her path.

A call came from the sheriff’s department, wanting to know if she could type, a requirement

for an open dispatcher’s job.Burns took the job and soon

found that she liked how it gave

her a role in helping other peo-ple.

“I had no idea what an impor-

tant decision that would be for

911 director Burns takes her last callBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

At her retirement reception Thursday, Teresa Burns (right) enjoys catching up with friends such as Virginia K. Jones, who served as secretary for Sheriff Bill Gant when Burns was dispatching at

Please see 911 | 2A

A new report released by the American Cancer Society is a re-minder of the reason to Relay.

Since 1991 America has seen

a 20 percent decline in cancer mortality, according to the re-port.

“That’s more than 400 more birthdays celebrated each and every day,” said ACS Community

Representative Kristin Chittom.The society’s annual “Cancer

Statistics” report highlights the results of comprehensive efforts by the society and researchers around the world in the fi ght

against cancer.Chittom said the report pro-

vides hope that the society’s mis-sion to save more than 1,000

Annual Relay for Life begins local effortsBY BRANT SAPPINGTON

[email protected]

Please see RELAY | 2A

Daily Corinthian

662.286.6006

*PRICE & PAYMENT PLUS TAX, TITLE, INSPECTION STICKER, DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE. DEALER DISCOUNTS & MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PRUCHASE PRICE. REBATES MAY HAVE RESIDENCY RESTRICTIONS, OTHER QUALIFICATIONS, & MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN YOUR STATE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY. NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. 75 MO, 5.5 APR, W.A.C.&T.

STK#1070D,1074DDEAL# 49894INCLUDES AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION

BUY IT NOWZERO DOWN

*$269 PER MO

SPECIAL*$16,900

2013 DODGE AVENGER SE

BRAND NEW!

Page 2: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

lives from cancer each day is succeeding and there is new hope daily in the fi ght against cancer.

In Alcorn County, the b e s t way to c o n -tribute to that battle is to join in the annual R e l a y for Life, s a i d C h i t -tom.

A kick-off event was recently held to mark the start of Relay season with the annual event set for May 31 from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. at Corinth High School.

This year’s theme is “Toon Out Cancer” and teams are invited to pick their favorite cartoon characters to join them in the fi ght.

Chittom said they had a great kic-koff w i t h m a n y n e w t e a m s joining the ef-fort this y e a r a n d they’re hoping for one

of the biggest years ever.For more information

on Relay for Life in Alcorn County, call Chittom at 662-844-5544 or e-mail her at [email protected].

“People who want to drive out, can during the day,” she said.

The pond where the eagles have been feeding is located off of Gaines Road in the subdivision owned by the Weedens.

Another pair of two oth-er bald eagles have made their home at Shiloh Na-tional Military Park since

2007. Hiram and Julia began nesting in the park and have raised two eaglets each year with the excep-tion of 2010.

Last year, two eggs were laid, but neither survived. The pair have returned to the park this year, moved their nest and have been seen mating the past sever-al weeks. The nest isn't far from where the two have been making their home.

my future career path,” said Burns.

About six weeks after beginning work for Sheriff Bill Gant, a job offer came from Wurlitzer. It was too

late — she was already hooked on dispatching.

After 6 1⁄2 years with the sheriff’s offi ce, she moved to the new 911 offi ce at the courthouse and took the fi rst call to 911 on Nov. 21, 1991. What would be-

come a cramped offi ce was sparse at the time with a couple of 911 phones and one computer on a table and a map on the wall.

In addition to taking emergency calls, the 911 offi ce began doing all dis-

patch for the Corinth Fire Department. It was slow going in the beginning, however, and Burns re-members many long, lone-ly night shifts in the base-ment of the courthouse.

“We didn’t have that

many calls coming in, and the ones we did have were mostly curious citizens wondering if this 911 sys-tem worked,” she said.

In the early days, she estimates as much as 75 percent of calls coming in were non-emergency. A public relations campaign began to educate people about when to call 911.

After becoming direc-tor in 1998, she had the 911 team begin work on getting directions to ev-ery address into the com-puter system. It took nine months to complete.

She also teamed with the post offi ce soon after be-coming director to convert route and box addresses to road and house num-bers. Because of a growth spurt in Alcorn County at the time, the offi ce spent a year resurveying the entire county.

After years of taking calls, the dispatchers have heard just about every-thing. But there are still occasional surprises.

“It never ceases to amaze us that we get a new and unique call every week,” said Burns.

The job can be dramatic.“I remember the fi rst

time one of my dispatchers helped someone deliver a baby,” she said.

During Hurricane Ka-

trina, a desperate call from the disaster somehow found its way to Alcorn 911.

“We got a call from a family in Moss Point that was on top of their roof,” said Burns.

She helped with the census efforts in 2000 and 2010 and was elected president of the Associa-tion of Public Communi-cations Offi cials in 2010.

Now, she looks forward to slowing down a bit.

“I plan to take some time off and just enjoy my family,” she said. “I hope to assist my husband and son with our Burns Rental Properties.”

She is grateful for the opportunity she had to serve Alcorn County.

“A lot of people don’t really think of a career as being a dispatcher or tele-communicator, but it has been one of the best deci-sions that I ever made,” said Burns. “Anybody that truly knows me knows that I have a big heart for helping people. I feel so blessed to have survived the politics of my job all these years and to be able to say that for 28 years I have done something that I absolutely love and I have never dreaded a day that I have to get up and go to work.”

Local2A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, January 27, 2013

Submitted photo

Retiring 911 Director Teresa Burns gets a high-five from Travis Drewery, a former county supervisor.

911

CONTINUED FROM 2A

EAGLES

CONTINUED FROM 1A

RELAY

CONTINUED FROM 1A

2 0 1 32 0 1 3

This event will feature various seminars important to women’s health, including high blood pressure, peripheral vascular disease, preventative maintenance measures and more. Over 25 healthcare vendors will be on hand with the latest medical products and information.

THERE WILL ALSO BE A COMPLIMENTARY BREAKFAST, DOOR PRIZES, GIVEAWAYS AND INFORMATION TO IMPROVE YOUR LIFE. This event is provided to you at no charge by Magnolia Regional Health Center, but reservations are required.

Febru a ry 15 , 2013CROSSROADS ARENA 8:00 a .m.—12 :00 p .m.

YOU’RE INVITED TO THE 10TH ANNUAL WOMEN’S HEALTH CONFERENCE!

SEATING IS LIMITED. TO REGISTER, CALL 662.293.1200, OR REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.MRHC.ORG.

Page 3: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

and lodging with clean bathrooms. Counseling is also available to deter-mine their needs as well as how to avoid repeat-ing their circumstances.

“It's so sad this hap-pens,” said Center Pres-ident Annie Saffore. “Jane never thought she would be in this situa-tion.”

Jane's intentions were to be involved in help-ing others at the 36,000 square-foot facility.

“I had talked with Miss Annie about com-ing to work here when it opened,” said Jane. “My calling is to help, but then it happened to me … I couldn't get ahead without being knocked back down.”

According to the wom-an, there are more wom-en out there who need the same help.

“They are afraid to come forward,” said Jane. “No one should be put through what I have gone through and or watch other women go through to keep a roof over your head and food in your stomach.”

More community awareness is needed in the fi ght to help the homeless, according to Jane.

“This is the only cen-ter for women from all walks of life,” she said. “Women need to know

there is help out there.”The Hope Dream Cen-

ter faced many obstacles before it could open.

Over $25,000 had to be raised to meet the city building code requiring a sprinkler system. Now volunteers are needed to renovate more rooms.

“People can give back to the community by helping the center,” said Jane. “Without the help of others, this isn't going to work.”

Her stay is enabling Jane to reconnect with the Lord. Once the facili-ty is up and running, she plans to complete the six months remaining to earn her college degree.

Jane is also looking for a job to get back on her feet and pay for needed medication.

“I wouldn't be alive today without the Hope Dream Center,” said the young woman, while try-ing to hold back tears. “All of us deserve a sec-ond chance … you can turn your life around. Sometimes you just need a little help getting back up.”

(Those interested in helping the Hope Dream Center can call the facili-ty's new telephone num-ber at 287-7411. Individ-uals can also call Annie Saffore at 287-5659 or 808-1824, Willie Saffore at 808-0347 or Suzanne Kiddy at 286-6864.)

Deaths

Local3A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, January 27, 2013

Daphne JohnsonFuneral services for

Daphne L. Burns John-son, 71, of Corinth, are set for 1 p.m. Monday at Gravel Hill Baptist Church with burial at Gravel Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Johnson died Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, in Booneville. Born Aug. 27, 1941, in Guys, Tenn., she was a quality control inspector for Corinthian Inc. She was a mem-ber of Kendrick Baptist Church and a former member of Gravel Hill Baptist Church.

She was preceded in death by her parents, J.L. and Johnnie Callins Burns; a daughter, Tra-

cy Leigh Burcham; and a brother, Lester Burns.

Survivors include her husband, Danny Oneal Johnson of Corinth; a daughter, Tina Louise Yancey of Marksville, La.; a son, John David Wiley of Alexandria, La.; a brother, Jimmy Dan Burns of Ramer, Tenn.; seven grandchil-dren; and one great-granddaughter.

Bro. George Kyle will offi ciate.

Visitation is today from 5:30 to 9 p.m. at Shackelford Funeral Directors of Selmer and Monday from noon un-til service time at Gravel Hill Baptist Church.

HOPE

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Lisa Lambert’s blend of country and folk styles of music is all about tra-ditions. This week she will combine her love of traditional music with another kind of tradi-tion — eating at Mar-tha’s Menu in downtown Corinth.

The release party for Lambert’s new album, “Come on Home: Songs and Stories from Tisho-mingo County,” begins at 5 p.m. Thursday at Mar-tha’s Menu.

The choice of venue was easy to make, said Scott Nunley, Lambert’s songwriting partner, manager and husband.

“One of the things we’ve done over the years when we’re playing at the courthouse is go by Mar-tha’s Menu to eat. We like the home cooking,” said Nunley. “Then we started playing when we were there. It’s become a tradition.”

At the release party, Nunley and Nolan Wells will join Lambert for some acoustic perfor-mances of songs from the new album. Then,

after dinner, the musi-cians will relocate to East Corinth High School to join the Courthouse Pick-ers and other bluegrass enthusiasts at Pickin’ on the Square, Corinth’s weekly bluegrass hoe-down.

Lambert’s new album tells the stories she heard and lived growing up in Alcorn’s neighbor county to the east.

“It’s stories of growing up in Iuka and Tishomin-go County,” said Nunley. “Lisa had a lot of family

in Corinth and she grew up around here.”

Each of the songs comes from a life ex-perience, Nunley said, and while the album is “straight electric coun-try” on the whole, it also includes the gospel-fl a-vored title track. “Come on Home” has already been picked up by local gospel radio stations.

The album features 11 original tracks recorded professionally in Nash-ville, Tenn., last October. “My Fisherman and Me”

reaches back to Lam-bert’s childhood, when her family befriended a Gulf Coast fi sherman on their yearly vacations to the coast.

“She lost him in Hurri-cane Camille,” said Nunley. “She begged and begged him to come up here, but he stayed down there.”

The song “Freedom” is another from Lambert’s youth — the story about her fi rst impressions of downtown Iuka on the Fourth of July.

“It’s about a little girl, Lisa, going to the Fourth of July parade in down-town Iuka and seeing the soldiers and fi guring out what it’s all about,” Nun-ley explained.

The Corinth appear-ance kicks off a busy weekend for Lambert. On Friday she will play a “session in the round” at the famous Bluebird Cafe in Nashville, the regular haunt of hit-makers on the prowl for good songs and talented writers. The following Thursday she will play live on Channel 3 out of Memphis.

(For more informa-tion, visit www.lisalam-bertmusic.com.)

Lisa Lambert releases new CDBY BOBBY J. SMITH

[email protected]

In February Shiloh National Military Park will take kids on a trip through history to learn about the origins of Val-entine’s Day — including a chance for kids to make their own old-style Valen-tine cards.

“We are excited to pres-ent this fun-fi lled, yet educational, opportunity to area children,” said Superintendent John Bundy. “This unique hour-long program will introduce young children to how Valentine’s Day was celebrated 151 years ago in our nation.”

This new program will give children insight into the history of Valentine’s Day, Valentine cards and how soldiers celebrated the holiday during the Civil War.

In the early 1800s, most Valentine cards were handmade and had become the most popular way to express feelings of love, explained Park

Ranger Heather Smed-ley. During the Civil War, companies commercially produced Valentine cards combining sentiments of patriotism, love, duty and

loss.“The cards appealed

to the soldiers who were far away from their loved ones, and were cherished when received in camp,”

Smedley pointed out.During the program,

each child will construct a Civil War-era Valentine card to take home and give to someone special.

The Valentine’s Day program was conceived as a follow-up to the greatly successful Shiloh Christmas program for kids, Smedley explained. Almost 40 area youths participated in the Christ-mas program.

“We want to start offer-ing more projects for area children,” she said. “Most of our projects are geared toward older youths and adults, and we wanted to do something for chil-dren in which they can learn about how they holiday developed and do something hands-on.”

The Shiloh Valentine’s Day program for kids is free of charge. It begins at 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9, at the Visitor Center.

Register children for the program by calling Smedley at 731-689-5696.

Shiloh park offers Valentine’s Day programBY BOBBY J. SMITH

[email protected]

A Civil War-era Valentine’s Day card

Walk-ins & Appointments Styles, Cuts, Color, Perms,

Waxes & More Valerie LangstonStylist

662-603-4177

Ashley RainesOwner/Stylist662-808-6033

SALON

GORGEOUSBy ASH1501 Hwy 72 - Corinth, MS

(between O’Reilly Auto Parts & Dixie Coin)

OPEN MONDAY - SATURDAY

WHY YOU SHOULD GET A FLU SHOT NOW

• It takes at least two weeks to start to work• We may begin to see cases of the fl u as early

as this month• It's FREE if you have Medicare and only $25

for others• You can be done in 10 or 15 minutes and that

could save you a week or more of sickness• It's easy ... you can get your vaccination at

James Bennett Apothecary from 9:00am-5:00pm Monday through Friday

Serving Corinth’s health needs for 34 years!Come by and meet our pharmacists...

Ted Hight

Bennett Apothecary2049 Shiloh Rd. Corinth MS

Phone: 662-286-6914

Taking better care of you!

36Amanda Wilburn

5831 Hwy 57 E., Michie, TN 38357 • 731-632-3287

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Tuesday – Thursday ONLY

Riverboat

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Tuesday – Thursday ONLYTuesday – Thursday ONLY

RiverboatRiverboat Open: Tues-Fri @ 4:30, Sat @ 4:00, Open: Tues-Fri @ 4:30, Sat @ 4:00, Sun 12:00 - 8:30; Closed MondaysSun 12:00 - 8:30; Closed Mondays

www.topoftheriverrestaurant.comwww.topoftheriverrestaurant.com

Design Dept. Florist

801 Foote St. (inside Corinth Dry Cleaners)662-415-7225 or 287-7759

(Formerly of Browders & Trees-N-Trends)

Wedding Consultant & DecoratorWedding Consultant & DecoratorFlowers for all occasionsFlowers for all occasions

Pam Lewis - OwnerNOW OPEN 11am–8pmCarry Out

Limited Delivery Area

$1499Large 14” With Up To 8 Toppings

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P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

Home Delivery1 year - - - - - - - $139.856 months - - - - - - $73.853 months - - - - - - $38.85

Mail Rates1 year - - - - - - - -$198.906 months - - - - - - $101.603 months - - - - - - $53.45

To start your home delivered subscription:Call 287-6111 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday.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 142-560The 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

Page 4: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Sunday, January 27, 2013www.dailycorinthian.com

How to reach us -- extensions:Newsroom.....................317Circulation....................301Advertising...................339Classifieds....................302Bookkeeping.................333

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

Willie Walkercirculation manager

[email protected]

World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com Editorials represent the voice of the Daily Corinthian. Editorial columns, letters to the editor and other articles that appear on this page represent the opinions of the writers and the Daily Corinthian may or may not agree.

E-mail:[email protected]

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To Sound Off:email :

[email protected] 287-6111

Classified Adv. 287-6147

Mark Boehlereditor

[email protected]

Mark Boehler, editor

Guest View

Momentum in the Mississippi legislature picked up substantially during the third week.

This past week marked the deadline for fi ling bills that members wish to have con-sidered during the 2013 session. Ultimately, there will be several thousand bills fi led, but only a few hundred will make it all the way through the process and become law.

Like the previous week, the most talked about issue in Jackson was charter schools. The previous week the Senate passed their charter bill, SB2189, last week was the House’s turn.

On Wednesday, Chairman John Moore brought forward House Bill 369 the “Mis-sissippi Public Charter Schools Act of 2013.” Debate on the bill began around 2:30 p.m. Wednesday and after hours of questions, considering 18 proposed amendments and an out loud reading of the entire 251-page bill, a vote fi nally came early Thursday. Around 1 a.m. the bill passed with bi-partisan support, 64-55.

Thursday’s vote was a major milestone for charter school supporters. It was the fi rst time the House had been able to pass a bill on the issue after several failed attempts in 2012. While a bill has now been passed in the House and Senate, the two versions are quite different, and in order for anything to be-come law, the two sides must agree on com-promise language.

The issue that is likely to cause the most discussion in the compromise process is over which school districts get veto authority in deciding whether or not a charter school is allowed within its boundaries.

The House version gives veto authority to districts with an A, B or C accreditation under the state’s new scoring system, while the Sen-ate version only gives this power to A and B districts. Based on current rankings under ei-ther scenario, both the Alcorn School District (B ranking) and the Corinth School District (no ranking because of non-standard cur-riculum) would have veto authority.

Gov. Phil Bryant delivered his second State of the State speech to a joint session of the legislature on Tuesday evening. Gov. Bryant was able to address his priorities for the 2013 legislative session ranging from education and health care improvements to responsible budgeting.

Gov. Bryant, like his predecessor, devoted substantial time in his remarks to job growth and economic development. He recognized two local industries, Caterpillar and Kim-berly Clark, for their recent expansions. Gov. Bryant emphasized his continued focus on economic development, saying “Mississippi will not take a back seat to anyone when it comes to attracting jobs.”

The House and Senate will reconvene Monday afternoon beginning a week known as “committee week” in the legislature. For any of the thousands of bills fi led to survive past Feb. 5, it must be approved by the com-mittee in which it has been assigned.

Committee meetings will begin in earnest this week and by week’s end, it will start to become a lot clearer which bills will live and which ones will die.

(Clayton Stanley lives in Corinth and is a lobbyist in Mississippi and Tennessee for Capitol Resources, LLC. He can be reached at [email protected].)

Momentum picks upin state legislature

Prayer for today

A verse to share

Rarely have second terms lived up to the hopes and expectations of presidents or their electorates.

FDR’s began with an at-tempt to pack the Supreme Court by adding new jus-tices and a second Depres-sion of 1937. He was rescued only by the war in Europe in 1939 and the GOP’s nomi-nation of “the barefoot boy from Wall Street,” Wendell Willkie.

What can be called Harry Truman’s second term was a disaster.

In 1949, the Soviets ex-ploded an atom bomb and China fell to Mao. In 1950, the Rosenbergs were con-victed as atomic spies for Stalin and North Korea in-vaded the South, igniting a three-year war Truman could not win or end.

He lost the New Hamp-shire primary in 1952 to Sen. Estes Kefauver, dropped out and saw would-be suc-cessor Adlai Stevenson crushed by Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, as Republicans captured Congress. Truman left with the lowest approval rating of a president before or since.

In his second term, Ike did better, but suffered a GOP defeat in 1958, saw Fidel Castro seize Cuba in January 1959, and had the U-2 shot down by Russia in May 1960 and his Paris summit blown up by Nikita Khrushchev, who berated Ike to his face. His vice pres-

ident, Rich-ard Nixon, then lost the White House.

The Ken-nedy-John-son second term began s p e c t a c u -larly, with passage of

all the Great Society legis-lation. But, in 1966, LBJ’s party suffered huge losses. In 1968, that year of assas-sinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Ken-nedy, of race riots in a hun-dred cities, and of campus anarchy, antiwar protests and an endless war in Viet-nam, LBJ was challenged in the primaries, quit the race, and saw Nixon succeed him.

After his own 49-state re-election victory, Nixon did not survive his second term. Jimmy Carter did not get a second term.

Ronald Reagan comes close to being the exception.

While he lost 10 Senate seats in 1986, he cut income tax rates from 50 to 28 per-cent, and his summiteering with Mikhail Gorbachev is seen as a historic success, leading to America’s victory in the Cold War.

The Iran-Contra scandal almost broke his presiden-cy. But by the time Reagan left in 1989, his popularity had been restored, the Cold War was ending, and his vice president was taking

the oath of offi ce to succeed him.

George H.W. Bush was denied a second term. And the main event of Bill Clin-ton’s was his impeachment and Senate trial for the Monica Lewinsky affair.

In his second term, George W. Bush lost his battle for Social Security re-form and lost both houses of Congress in 2006, ending his presidency with Ameri-ca mired in two unwinnable wars and plunging into a near-depression.

By January 2009, Bush’s approval rating was ap-proaching the Truman low, and his party had lost the White House.

About Obama’s second term it is hard to be san-guine. The hopeful news is that, after four years, the U.S. economy appears to be recovering. Progress is slow, but we seem to be out of intensive care and walk-ing the hospital halls.

The perils, however, are visibly present. With its massive creation of money, the Federal Reserve is tak-ing an immense risk that as recovery takes root, infl a-tion may explode. And the hostility between President Obama and House Repub-licans likely means no big deal to constrain future def-icits. Obama added $5 tril-lion to America’s debt bomb in his fi rst term, and his sec-ond promises the same.

Iraq is drifting toward

sectarian-civil-ethnic war. Few are optimistic about the fate of Syria when Bashar Assad falls. Even fewer are optimistic about Afghanistan after U.S. troops depart. The Taliban of Afghanistan’s past may be her future.

Islamism and Islamist terrorism seem to be growth stocks in the Sahel region of Africa, the Maghreb, and the Middle and Near East, all the way to nuclear-armed Pakistan.

The most immediate crisis may come this year, when a re-elected Bibi Ne-tanyahu and his neocon and War Party allies demand of the president an ultimatum to Tehran, followed by U.S. air strikes on its nuclear fa-cilities if Iran does not ca-pitulate.

Obama may be dreaming of amnesty for illegal aliens and a Federal Gun Registry, but most of us would settle for no more wars and no double-dip recession.

Remarkable how the ex-pectations of Americans seem so modest compared to what they were when we were young.

Today, the minimalist slogan, “General Motors is alive, and Osama bin Laden is dead!” is enough to get you re-elected president.

(Daily Corinthian colum-nist Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of “Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?”)

Persistent problems cloud Obama’s second term

The gun control contro-versy is only the latest of many issues to be debated almost solely in terms of fi xed preconceptions, with little or no examination of hard facts.

Media discussions of gun control are dominated by two factors: the National Ri-fl e Association and the Sec-ond Amendment. But the over-riding factual question is whether gun control laws actually reduce gun crimes in general or murder rates in particular.

If, as gun control advo-cates claim, gun control laws really do control guns and save lives, there is noth-ing to prevent repealing the Second Amendment, any more than there was any-thing to prevent repealing the Eighteenth Amendment that created Prohibition.

But, if the hard facts show that gun control laws do not actually control guns, but instead lead to more armed robberies and higher mur-der rates after law-abiding citizens are disarmed, then gun control laws would be a bad idea, even if there were no Second Amendment and no National Rifl e Associa-

tion.The cen-

tral issue boils down to this: What are the facts? Yet there are many who seem ut-terly uncon-cerned about facts.

There are people who have never fi red a shot in their life who do not hesi-tate to declare how many bullets should be the limit to put into a fi rearm’s clip or magazine.

Virtually all gun control advocates say that 30 bul-lets in a magazine is far too many for self-defense or hunting — even if they have never gone hunting and never had to defend them-selves with a gun.

Anyone who faces three home invaders, jeopardiz-ing himself or his family, might fi nd 30 bullets barely adequate. After all, not ev-ery bullet hits, even at close range, and not every hit incapacitates. You can get killed by a wounded man.

These plain life-and-death realities have been

ignored for years by people who go ballistic when they hear about how many shots were fi red by the police in some encounter with a criminal. As someone who once taught pistol shooting in the Marine Corps, I am not the least bit surprised by the number of shots fi red. I have seen people miss a sta-tionary target at close range, even in the safety and calm of a pistol range.

We cannot expect every-body to know that. But we can expect them to know that they don’t know -- and to stop spouting off about life-and-death issues when they don’t have the facts.

The central question as to whether gun control laws save lives or cost lives has generated many factual studies over the years. But these studies have been like the proverbial tree that falls in an empty forest, and has been heard by no one — certainly not by zealots who have made up their minds and don’t want to be con-fused by the facts.

Most factual studies show no reduction in gun crimes, including murder, under gun control laws. A sig-

nifi cant number of studies show higher rates of mur-der and other gun crimes under gun control laws.

How can this be? It seems obvious to some gun control zealots that, if no one had guns, there would be fewer armed robberies and fewer people shot to death.

But nothing is easier than to disarm peaceful, law-abiding people. And noth-ing is harder than to disarm people who are neither.

One can cherry-pick the factual studies, or cite some studies that have been dis-credited, but the great bulk of the studies show that gun control laws do not in fact control guns. On net bal-ance, they do not save lives but cost lives.

Gun control laws allow some people to vent their emotions, politicians to grandstand and self-righ-teous people to “make a statement” — but all at the cost of other people’s lives.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stan-ford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com. )

Do gun control laws do anything to control guns?

Effective immediately, the Daily Corin-thian Sound Off policy will be the same as its Letter to the Editor Policy.

Sounds Offs need to be submitted with a name, address, contact phone number and if possible, e-mail address, for author verifi cation.

The author’s name and city of residence will be published with the Sound Off.

Sound Offs will only accepted from those who wish to have their names published with their opinion. All other Letter to the Editor rules apply for Sound Offs.

Sound Off Policy

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

Thomas Sowell

Columnist

Dear heavenly Father, help us to know that wherever we are and whatever we do, you care more for us than we can care for our-selves. Amen.

Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifi ces, holy and pleasing to God -- this is your spiritual act of worship.

— Romans 12:1

BY CLAYTON STANLEYColumnist

Page 5: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • 5A

State Briefs

Man gets prison for home repair fraud

GULFPORT — A former Wiggins businessman has been sentenced to serve 12 years in prison for defrauding south Mis-sissippi homeowners who had hired him to fix their properties after Hurricane Katrina struck in 2005.

Harrison County Cir-cuit Judge John Gargiulo sentenced 53-year-old Charles Lynn Reeder last week to a total of 15 years in prison, but suspended three of those years. Reeder pleaded guilty to charges that in-cluded home repair fraud.

The Sun Herald reports that Reeder’s victims included two elderly resi-dents. He allegedly lied to the property owners about his qualifications and the work he performed through his company, ABC House Leveling and Home Maintenance.

 Parkway seeks input on Chickasaw museum

TUPELO — The National Park Service and the Chick-asaw Nation will hold public meetings in Mississippi and Oklahoma on plans for a proposed Chickasaw Mu-seum and Cultural Center.

The Chickasaw Nation has an interpretive center in Sulphur, Okla. Natchez Trace Parkway officials plan to use the Oklahoma center as a model of what could be built on a smaller scale in Tupelo.

The first meeting is Jan. 30 at 4 p.m. in the Natchez Trace Parkway Visitor Cen-ter in Tupelo. The second meeting is Feb. 5 at 4 p.m. in the Chickasaw Nation headquarters in Ada, Okla.

The Parkway has al-located $1.1 million for the planning, design and

environmental phase of the project.

The Parkway and tribe envision a center with repli-cas of historical Chickasaw living quarters and other interpretive exhibits.

 Woman gets lifein prison for murder

GULFPORT — A Gulf-port woman has been sentenced to life in prison for stabbing her boyfriend to death.

Harrison County Circuit Judge Lisa Dodson sen-tenced 41-year-old Bertha Mae Wilson after a jury convicted her of murder in the Aug. 14, 2011, death of 36-year-old Marcus Spencer, of Meridian.

The Sun Herald reports that Spencer was naked and lying on his back in Wilson’s bedroom when

she stabbed him in the neck, kicked him and stomped on his face.

Wilson testified that Spencer had pushed her during an argument over her suspicions that he was having an affair.

But a forensic patholo-gist testified that Spencer didn’t have any defensive wounds, suggesting it was a surprise attack.

Jurors deliberated for about 30 minutes before convicting Wilson.

 Sheriff’s deputyshot on duty

BROOKHAVEN — A Lin-coln County sheriff’s depu-ty was taken to a Jackson hospital after he was shot while on duty.

Sheriff Steve Rushing told The Daily Leader that the deputy, Byron Catch-

ings, was driving down a street in Brookhaven on Fri-day night when he was ap-parently shot once through the driver’s side door.

Catchings kept driving and radioed for help before he was taken to the Univer-sity of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. His con-dition wasn’t immediately available, but Rushing said he didn’t lose conscious-ness before he was taken to the hospital.

Rushing said investiga-tors were questioning a “person of interest” in the shooting but didn’t elabo-rate.

 Jackson County sets open house for shelter

VANCLEAVE — The Jackson County Board of Supervisors will hold an

open house on Feb. 7 at the new Vancleave hurri-cane shelter.

Supervisor John McKay tells the Mississippi Press that the open house marks the completion of three identical shelters that have been under si-multaneous construction by the county since 2011.

Each of the shelters is 10,000 square feet and will be able to withstand 200 mph winds. They have self-supporting utilities and will be able to house hundreds of people.

Each shelter cost $3 million dollars with a vast majority of the funding coming from the state and federal emergency management agencies.

The other shelters are in Hurley and the St.

Martin. 

Tonnage, revenue jump at Vicksburg port

VICKSBURG — The Port of Vicksburg saw increases in tonnage and revenue in 2012 — due to both a monthlong closure in 2011 during the record-breaking Mis-sissippi River flood and a deal with DuPont to ship raw steel-making compo-nents.

Port director Wayne Mansfield tells the Vicks-burg Post that for 2012, shipments reached 332,453 tons, up 56 percent from 2011’s flood-lowered figures.

Mansfield says reve-nue for the year hit $2.5 million for the first time in more than a decade,

Associated Press

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Page 6: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

6A • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

CUMMING, Iowa — U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin said Saturday he will not seek a sixth term in 2014, a decision that eases some of the burden the national Republican Party faces in retaking the Senate.

Harkin, chairman of an infl uential Senate com-mittee, announced his decision during an inter-view with The Associated Press, and said the move could surprise some.

But the 73-year-old cited his age — he would be 81 at the end of a sixth term — as a factor in the decision, saying it was time to pass the torch he has held for nearly 30 years, freeing a new gen-eration of Iowa Demo-crats to seek higher offi ce.

“I just think it’s time for me to step aside,” Harkin told the AP.

Harkin, fi rst elected in 1984, ranks 7th in se-niority, and 4th among majority Democrats. He is chairman of the health, education, labor and pen-sions committee, and chairman of the largest appropriations subcom-mittee.

Harkin has long aligned with the Senate’s more liberal members, and his signature legislative ac-complishment is the 1990 Americans with Disabili-ties Act. He also served as a key salesman of Presi-

dent Barack Obama’s 2010 health care bill to the wary left.

“I’m not saying that giving this up and walk-ing away is easy. It’s very tough,” Harkin said at his rural Iowa home south of Des Moines. “But I’m not quitting today. I’m not passing the torch sitting down.”

Harkin’s news defi ed outward signals. Besides being beloved in his party, Harkin has $2.7 million in his campaign war chest, second most among members nearing the end of their terms, and was planning a gala fundraiser in Washing-ton, D.C., next month featuring pop star Lady Gaga.

Although members of his family have been diag-nosed with cancer, Har-kin said his health is good — and reported a recent positive colonoscopy. But he said “you never know,” and that he wanted to travel and spend his re-tirement with his wife Ruth “before it’s too late.”

He also nodded to his political longevity: “The effect of that cascades down and it opens a lot of doors of opportunity” for future candidates, he said.

But by opening a door in Iowa, Harkin has cre-ated a potential headache for his party nationally.

Democrats likely would

have had the edge in 2014 with the seat, consider-ing Harkin’s fundraising prowess and healthy ap-proval. A poll by the Des Moines Register taken last fall showed a major-ity of Iowans approved of his job performance.

Democrats hold a 55-45 advantage in the Senate, requiring Republicans to gain six seats to win back the chamber. But Demo-crats have more seats to defend in 2014 — 20 compared to only 13 for Republicans. Historically, the president’s party loses seats in the midterm elec-tions after his re-election.

In GOP-leaning West Virginia, fi ve-term Demo-cratic Sen. Jay Rockefell-er recently announced he would not seek re-elec-tion. And on Friday, Geor-gia Sen. Saxby Chambliss, a Republican, announced that he wouldn’t seek a third term.

Democratic incum-bents also face tough re-election races in Arkan-sas, Louisiana, Montana, North Carolina and Alas-ka — all states carried by Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in November’s presidential election.

Harkin’s move opens a rare open Senate seat in Iowa. Harkin, Iowa’s ju-nior senator, is outranked by Sen. Charles Grassley, who has held the state’s other seat since 1980.

Senator Harkin won’t seek 6th Senate termBY THOMAS BEAUMONT

Associated Press

Nation Briefs

Ryan says GOP needs to pick its fights

WASHINGTON — Rep. Paul Ryan said Saturday that Republicans need to stick together and pick their fights during Presi-dent Barack Obama’s second term, rejecting some White House pro-posals outright and try-ing to infuse others with conservative principles.

In a speech to conser-vatives, the GOP’s 2012 vice presidential nomi-nee said Obama would attempt to divide Repub-licans but urged them to avoid internal squabbles after a second straight presidential loss.

“We can’t get rattled.

We won’t play the villain in his morality plays. We have to stay united,” Ryan said at the National Review Institute’s week-end conference on the future of conservatism. “We have to show that if given the chance, we can govern. We have better ideas.”

The Wisconsin con-gressman outlined a pragmatic approach for a party dealing with last November’s election defeats and trying to determine whether to op-pose Obama’s agenda at every turn or shape his proposals with conserva-tive principles.

How the party moves forward was a major theme of the three-day meeting of conservative

activists who also heard from Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas. Govs. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Bob McDonnell of Virginia were scheduled to address the confer-ence on Sunday.

The theme also domi-nated the Republican Na-tional Committee’s win-ter meeting, which ended Friday in Charlotte, N.C.

With a surging minority population altering the electorate, Republican leaders have discussed the need to attract more women and Hispanics while at the same time standing firm on the values that unite con-servatives. Republicans said despite the losses, the party could return to power by projecting opti-mism and attracting new voters with a message of economic opportunity.

Walker, a star among conservatives after sur-viving a union-led cam-paign to recall him from office, said government needed “brown-bag com-mon sense,” a reference to his frugal practice of packing his own lunch of ham-and-cheese sandwiches every day. Qualities like optimism, staying relevant to vot-ers and showing courage in tackling big problems would be rewarded at the voting booth, he said.

“We’ve got to learn to be more optimistic. We’ve got to learn to give a viable alternative to the voters,” Walker said.

Cruz said Republicans needed to use upcoming fights over the budget and the deficit as “lever-age points” to tame long-term spending and debt. Projecting an upbeat outlook for the party, he said Obama’s policies would drive many voters to Republicans just as many Americans turned to Ronald Reagan after the economic turmoil of the late 1970s.

 Thousands march for gun control

WASHINGTON — Thousands of people, many holding signs with

names of gun violence victims and messages such as “Ban Assault Weapons Now,” joined a rally for gun control on Saturday, marching from the Capitol to the Wash-ington Monument.

Leading the crowd were marchers with “We Are Sandy Hook” signs, paying tribute to victims of the December school shooting in Newtown, Conn. Washington Mayor Vincent Gray and other city officials marched alongside them. The crowd stretched for at least two blocks along Constitution Avenue.

Participants held signs reading “Gun Control Now,” “Stop NRA” and “What Would Jesus Pack?” among other messages. Other signs were simple and white, with the names of vic-tims of gun violence.

About 100 residents from Newtown, where a gunman killed 20 first-graders and six teach-ers, traveled to Washing-ton together, organizers said.

Participant Kara Baekey from nearby Nor-walk, Conn., said that when she heard about the Newtown shooting, she immediately thought of her two young chil-dren. She said she de-cided she must take ac-tion, and that’s why she traveled to Washington for the march.

“I wanted to make sure this never happens at my kids’ school or any other school,” Baekey said. “It just can’t hap-pen again.”

Once the crowd ar-rived at the monument, speakers called for a ban on military-style as-sault weapons and high-capacity ammunition and for universal background checks on gun sales.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the crowd it’s not about taking away Second Amendment gun rights, but about gun safety and saving lives. He said he and President Barack Obama would do every-thing they could to enact gun control policies.

“This is about trying to create a climate in which our children can grow up free of fear,” Duncan said. “This march is a

starting point; it is not an ending point ... We must act, we must act, we must act.”

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.’s non-voting representative in Con-gress, said the gun lob-by can be stopped, and the crowd chanted back, “Yes, we can.”

 Health answers sought about war garbage

WASHINGTON — J.D. Williams didn’t think much about the smoke cloud that often shroud-ed his air base in Iraq. Not when it covered ev-erything he owned with black soot or when his wheezing and coughing made it difficult to sleep at night.

“We just went about our business because there was a war going on,” said Williams, a retired chief warrant offi-cer who was responsible for maintaining some 250 aircraft for the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division.

He returned home from that second stint in Iraq in 2006 and subse-quently was diagnosed with an irreversible lung disease that his doctor suspects could be re-lated to smoke from one of the hundreds of burn pits that dotted Iraq and Afghanistan during the course of the two wars. The pits were used to burn off the garbage that accumulates at military bases, everything from Styrofoam and metal to paints, solvents, hu-man waste and medical waste.

A new Department of Veterans Affairs registry, mandated by Congress, will be used to try to determine if there is a link between the burn pits and long-term health problems.

Military personnel who were stationed near an open burn pit can sign up. Researchers will use the database to monitor health trends in participants, and the VA will alert them to major problems detected.

Over the long term, the findings could make it easier for veterans who served near burn pits to obtain disability payments.

Associated Press

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NICK ; C See Dad Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Nanny Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends

DISC < DMonster Squid: The Giant Is Real (N) Amish Mafia Monster Squid: The Giant Is Real

A&E > Storage Wars

Storage Wars

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Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

FSSO ? 4World Poker Tour: Season 10

The Best of Pride (N) World Poker Tour: Season 10

World Poker Tour: Season 10

Women’s College Bas-ketball

BET @ F (6:30) } ›› Madea’s Family Reunion The UNCF: An Evening of Stars (N) Popoff Inspir.

H&G C HExtreme Homes Property Brothers House Hunters Reno-

vationHouse Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Property Brothers

E! D Chasing Chasing Kourtney-Kim Chasing Kourtney-Kim Chasing Chelsea Soup

HIST E BAx Men Gabe faces a crew mutiny.

Ax Men “Shelby’s New Toy” (N)

Bamazon “Judgment Day” (N)

Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:01) Ax Men “Rock Slide”

ESPN2 F @ (6:30) 2013 Australian Open Tennis: Men’s Final. From Melbourne, Australia. Poker

TLC G Here Comes Honey Boo Boo

Here Comes Honey Boo Boo (N)

Plastic Wives (N) Here Comes Honey Boo Boo

Plastic Wives

FOOD H Sugar Dome “Cops and Robbers” (N)

Rachael vs. Guy Celeb-rity Cook-Off

Bobby’s Dinner Battle Iron Chef America “Sy-mon vs. Tio” (N)

Rachael vs. Guy Celeb-rity Cook-Off

INSP I } ›› Hometown Legend (02, Drama) Welcome to Paradise Crystal Bernard. } Hometown Lgd

LIFE J =Abducted: The Carlina White Story

Steel Magnolias (12) Six Louisiana women gather at a beauty salon.

(:02) Abducted: The Carlina White Story (12) Aunjanue Ellis, Keke Palmer.

TBN M Osteen Kerry Believer Creflo D. In the Beginning...

AMC N 0} ›› A Knight’s Tale (01, Adventure) Heath Ledger, Mark Addy. A peasant poses as a knight for a shot at jousting glory.

} ›› A Knight’s Tale (01, Adventure) Heath Ledger, Mark Addy.

FAM O <700 Club Special Programming Joel

OsteenKerry Shook

TCM P } ›››› The 39 Steps (35, Sus-pense) Robert Donat.

} ›››› The Lady Vanishes Marga-ret Lockwood.

(:15) } ››› Sabotage (36) Sylvia Sidney, Oscar Homolka.

} The Penalty

TNT Q A19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (N) (Live)

19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards Dallas John Ross resents his father.

TBS R *19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (N) (Live)

} ›› Sex and the City 2 (10) Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall. Carrie Bradshaw and the gals visit Abu Dhabi.

GAME S Are You Smarter Are You Smarter Newly Newly Newly Newly FamFeud FamFeud TOON T Incred Looney Oblongs King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Metal TVLD U K Rose. Rose. Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King SPEED Z SEMA Las Vegas Auto Racing Classic Car Craz. British Touring Car Road Champ.

FX Æ ;} ›› The Twilight Saga: Eclipse Kristen Stewart. Bella must choose between Edward and Jacob.

} ›› The Twilight Saga: Eclipse Kristen Stewart. Bella must choose between Edward and Jacob.

OUT Ø Hal & Wild Realtree Hunting NRA Bone Spring Exped. Hal & Realtree NBCS ∞ Hockey NHL Live Poker After Dark Poker After Dark NFL Turning Point NFL Turning Point OWN ± Oprah’s Next Oprah’s Next Oprah’s Next Oprah’s Next Oprah’s Next FOXN ≤ Huckabee (N) Fox News Sunday Geraldo at Large Huckabee Stossel APL ≥ Wild West Alaska Gator Boys (N) Finding Bigfoot (N) Gator Boys Finding Bigfoot

HALL ∂ G(6:00) } The Good Witch’s Family (11)

} ›› The Good Witch’s Charm (12, Drama) Catherine Bell, Chris Potter.

Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier

DISN “ LDog With a Blog

Austin & Ally (N)

Shake It Up! (N)

Jessie Shake It Up!

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A.N.T. Farm A.N.T. Farm Wizards-Place

Wizards-Place

SYFY E} ›› Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (09, Hor-ror) Michael Sheen, Bill Nighy.

Dragon Wasps (12) Soldiers battle gigantic, flying insects that shoot fire.

Continuum “Fast Times”

Page 7: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Business & FarmDaily Corinthian • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • 7A

AGRICULTURE FUTURES

MUTUAL FUNDS

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

CORN

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 13 734.75 714.50 720.75 -6.75

May 13 736 716.50 721.50 -7.75

Jul 13 727.75 709.75 712.75 -8.75

Sep 13 618 605.50 607.25 -6.25

Dec 13 594.50 582.75 584.25 -6.25

Mar 14 603.50 593 594.25 -6.25

May 14 610 601.25 601.25 -6.25

SOYBEANS

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 13 1460.75 1415 1441 +11.75

May 13 1446.75 1404.50 1426 +9.25

Jul 13 1438.75 1398.25 1417.75 +7.75

Aug 13 1411.75 1378.25 1391 +6

Sep 13 1360.25 1332.50 1342.50 +6.50

Nov 13 1318.25 1290.25 1303 +10.75

Jan 14 1320.50 1297 1306.25 +8

WHEAT

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 13 799.75 763 776.50 -14.75

May 13 808.50 771.50 784.75 -15

Jul 13 813.25 776.75 788.50 -16

Sep 13 821.75 787.50 797.25 -16.25

Dec 13 834.50 801.50 811 -15.75

Mar 14 845 816 823 -15.25

May 14 840 820.75 824.50 -15.50

CATTLE

40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Feb 13 127.00 125.05 126.30 +1.35

Apr 13 131.42 129.37 130.75 +.93

Jun 13 127.57 125.60 126.52 +.27

Aug 13 128.45 126.67 127.25 +.73

Oct 13 132.40 130.85 131.52 +.70

Dec 13 134.15 132.80 133.27 +.60

Feb 14 135.17 134.00 134.20 +.60

HOGS-Lean

40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Feb 13 87.40 85.10 86.82 +1.47

Apr 13 90.15 87.02 88.92 +.85

May 13 96.65 94.55 96.35 +1.65

Jun 13 98.05 96.02 97.07 +.22

Jul 13 97.55 95.85 97.07 +.42

Aug 13 96.75 95.30 96.15 +.10

Oct 13 87.02 85.40 86.47 +.45

COTTON 2

50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Mar 13 84.00 78.22 80.52 +1.97

May 13 82.95 78.50 80.48 +1.81

Jul 13 81.70 78.82 80.40 +1.40

Sep 13 ... ... 79.70 +.52

Oct 13 79.79 79.50 79.72 +.73

Dec 13 80.08 79.00 79.70 +.52

Mar 14 80.89 80.69 80.50 +.29

WEEKLY DOW JONES

WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg

THE WEEK IN REVIEW

PIMCO TotRetIs CI 175,136 11.21 0.0 +8.7/A +7.7/A NL 1,000,000Vanguard TotStIdx LB 78,935 37.71 +5.9 +16.0/B +5.4/A NL 3,000Vanguard InstIdxI LB 68,055 137.67 +5.5 +15.9/B +4.8/B NL 5,000,000Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 59,771 37.72 +5.9 +16.1/B +5.5/A NL 10,000Vanguard 500Adml LB 59,749 138.57 +5.5 +15.9/B +4.8/B NL 10,000Fidelity Contra LG 58,819 80.90 +4.4 +15.3/B +5.3/B NL 2,500American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 58,078 54.14 +2.7 +13.4/A +3.1/C 5.75 250American Funds IncAmerA m MA 57,661 18.70 +3.7 +13.6/A +5.3/B 5.75 250American Funds GrthAmA m LG 55,970 36.21 +5.6 +18.5/A +3.9/D 5.75 250Vanguard InstPlus LB 49,286 137.68 +5.5 +15.9/B +4.8/B NL200,000,000American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 46,651 38.84 +4.9 +18.1/B +2.0/C 5.75 250American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 44,501 31.70 +5.2 +15.4/C +3.5/C 5.75 250FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m CA 42,510 2.31 +3.6 +15.0/A +6.0/A 4.25 1,000Dodge & Cox IntlStk FB 40,556 36.37 +6.0 +18.6/A +1.3/A NL 2,500Dodge & Cox Stock LV 39,841 130.11 +6.9 +21.9/A +3.1/C NL 2,500American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 39,823 32.73 +4.7 +14.0/D +4.4/B 5.75 250

Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min InitName Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt

CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -ForeignLargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value,MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV - Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, TotalReturn: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

RschMotn 3270202 17.54 +1.70Microsoft 2882697 27.88 +.63Intel 2443041 20.96 -.29Facebook n 1977417 31.54 +1.88SiriusXM 1787138 3.15 -.01Dell Inc 1537426 13.16 +.32Cisco 1453867 21.15 +.14PwShs QQQ 1416993 67.00 -.07Apple Inc 1358026439.88-60.12MicronT 954462 7.87 -.01

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

JksvlBFl h 2.91 +1.56 +115.6Netflix 169.56+70.39 +71.0GenFin un 8.85 +3.35 +60.8MAP Phm 24.75 +9.17 +58.9HMN Fn 5.31 +1.91 +56.2AtlCstFin 3.67 +1.05 +40.4Cimatron 7.78 +2.23 +40.2US Enr 2.50 +.71 +39.7OCZ Tech 2.39 +.51 +27.1Torm rs 3.99 +.81 +25.5

Name Last Chg %Chg

TrovaGn wt 2.45 -.87 -26.2ChiAutL rs 2.92 -.76 -20.7Ctrip.com 19.64 -4.85 -19.8ModusLink 2.38 -.51 -17.6MEI Ph rs 5.73 -1.14 -16.6SelCmfrt 23.16 -4.61 -16.6AmpioPhm 4.09 -.80 -16.4OakRidgeF 4.16 -.74 -15.1OSI Sys 59.88-10.14 -14.5TigerLogic 2.01 -.34 -14.5

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

NA Pall g 133796 1.70 +.05CheniereEn 132642 20.93 +.52NwGold g 123008 9.41 -1.52GranTrra g 87294 5.18 -.19Vringo 76981 3.29 +.11GoldStr g 69371 1.63 -.14NovaGld g 68395 4.27 -.43GldFld 55399 3.15 +.09AlldNevG 52007 23.42 -1.97Rentech 48569 2.98 -.02

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

TravelCtrs 7.29 +1.50 +25.9ContMatls 17.18 +3.18 +22.7OrionEngy 2.01 +.30 +17.5ComndSec 2.32 +.33 +16.6SagaCm s 50.40 +6.46 +14.7Bellatrix g 4.91 +.61 +14.2SaratogaRs 3.36 +.41 +13.9Tucows g 2.05 +.23 +12.6VirnetX 35.05 +3.00 +9.4Ballanty 3.61 +.29 +8.7

Name Last Chg %Chg

ASpecRlty 2.89 -.61 -17.4Nevsun g 4.00 -.68 -14.5TanzRy g 3.28 -.55 -14.4GoldenMin 3.61 -.59 -14.0NwGold g 9.41 -1.52 -13.9IntTower g 2.06 -.33 -13.8Timmins g 2.65 -.36 -12.0Banro g 2.53 -.31 -10.9SparkNet 7.00 -.72 -9.3Sandst g rs 11.91 -1.20 -9.2

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 4751491 11.62 +.48S&P500ETF 4034148150.25 +1.92NokiaCp 3546921 4.20 -.23GenElec 1901511 22.29 +.25FordM 1878150 13.68 -.43SPDR Fncl 1874995 17.47 +.32AMD 1691472 2.85 +.39iShEMkts 1623563 44.16 -.62iShJapn 1541834 9.87 +.01Pfizer 1515434 27.00 +.46

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

SwiftTrans 13.36 +2.99 +28.8DaqoNE rs 13.16 +2.92 +28.5OwensC wtB 2.39 +.50 +26.5DirDGldBr 40.88 +7.39 +22.1OshkoshCp 41.08 +7.34 +21.8Accuride 3.77 +.64 +20.4InvenSense 15.10 +2.49 +19.7RadioShk 2.64 +.41 +18.4XuedaEd 3.06 +.44 +16.8TempurP 40.79 +5.80 +16.6

Name Last Chg %Chg

STR Hldgs 2.24 -.78 -25.8IAMGld g 8.39 -2.61 -23.7DirDGldBll 7.99 -2.03 -20.3EllieMae 22.21 -5.18 -18.9BiP GCrb 5.54 -1.18 -17.6Coach 51.21-10.59 -17.1IFM Inv rs 3.07 -.55 -15.2CSVS2xVxM 7.43 -1.13 -13.2FortunaSlv 3.96 -.60 -13.2Oi SA s 3.84 -.58 -13.1

WEEKLY STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock splitof at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by atleast 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi =When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d= Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = notavailable. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution dur-ing the week.Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worthat least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

Wk Wk YTDName Ex Div Last Chg %Chg%Chg

Wk Wk YTDName Ex Div Last Chg %Chg%Chg

AFLAC NY 1.40 53.48 +2.01 +3.9 +.7

AT&T Inc NY 1.80 34.02 +.58 +1.7 +.9

AMD NY ... 2.85 +.39 +15.9 +18.8

AlliantTch NY 1.04 66.35 +.65 +1.0 +7.1

AmIntlGrp NY ... 36.70 +1.61 +4.6 +4.0

Aon plc NY .63 57.62 +.51 +0.9 +3.6

Apple Inc Nasd10.60 439.88-60.12 -12.0 -17.3

BP PLC NY 1.92 43.93 -.11 -0.2 +5.5

BcpSouth NY .04 14.34 -.75 -5.0 -1.4

BkofAm NY .04 11.62 +.48 +4.3 +.1

BariPVix rs NY ... 22.95 -1.03 -4.3 -27.9

Bemis NY 1.00 35.76 -.14 -0.4 +6.9

BostonSci NY ... 6.86 +.16 +2.4 +19.7

Caterpillar NY 2.08 95.58 -2.04 -2.1 +6.7

Checkpnt NY ... 11.82 +.34 +3.0 +10.1

ChesEng NY .35 19.36 +1.54 +8.6 +16.5

Chevron NY 3.60 116.20 +.96 +0.8 +7.5

Cisco Nasd .56 21.15 +.14 +0.6 +7.6

Citigroup NY .04 42.91 +1.25 +3.0 +8.5

CocaCola s NY 1.02 37.05 -.65 -1.7 +2.2

Comcast Nasd .65 39.76 -.51 -1.3 +6.4

Deere NY 1.84 93.47 +2.51 +2.8 +8.2

Dell Inc Nasd .32 13.16 +.32 +2.5 +29.8

Dover NY 1.40 66.78 -1.25 -1.8 +1.6

DowChm NY 1.28 34.58 +.78 +2.3 +7.0

EMC Cp NY ... 25.26 +.93 +3.8 -.2

EnPro NY ... 44.79 +1.21 +2.8 +9.5

ExxonMbl NY 2.28 91.73 +.93 +1.0 +6.0

Facebook n Nasd ... 31.54 +1.88 +6.3 +18.5

FstHorizon NY .20 10.13 +.16 +1.6 +2.2

FordM NY .40 13.68 -.43 -3.0 +5.6

FrkUnv NY .46 7.45 +.06 +0.8 +5.5

FredsInc Nasd .24 13.01 +.57 +4.6 -2.3

GenElec NY .76 22.29 +.25 +1.1 +6.2

HewlettP NY .53 16.99 -.12 -0.7 +19.2

iShJapn NY .19 9.87 +.01 +0.1 +1.2

iShEMkts NY .74 44.16 -.62 -1.4 -.4

iShR2K NY 1.69 89.94 +1.37 +1.5 +6.7

Intel Nasd .90 20.96 -.29 -1.4 +1.6

IBM NY 3.40 204.97+10.50 +5.4 +7.0

JPMorgCh NY 1.20 47.16 +.70 +1.5 +8.0

Keycorp NY .20 9.29 +.01 +0.1 +10.3

KimbClk NY 2.96 86.26 -.56 -0.6 +2.2

Kroger NY .60 27.84 +.76 +2.8 +7.0

Lowes NY .64 38.58 +1.59 +4.3 +8.6

MktVGold NY .46 41.92 -3.19 -7.1 -9.6

McDnlds NY 3.08 93.72 +1.46 +1.6 +6.2

MeadWvco NY 1.00 33.05 +.56 +1.7 +3.7

MicronT Nasd ... 7.87 -.01 -0.2 +24.1

Microsoft Nasd .92 27.88 +.63 +2.3 +4.4

Molycorp NY ... 8.00 -.86 -9.7 -15.3

MorgStan NY .20 22.70 +.32 +1.4 +18.7

NY Times NY ... 9.06 +.46 +5.3 +6.2

NewsCpA Nasd .17 27.21 -.05 -0.2 +6.7

NiSource NY .96 26.66 +.42 +1.6 +7.1

NokiaCp NY ... 4.20 -.23 -5.2 +6.3

NorthropG NY 2.20 67.74 +.25 +0.4 +.2

Oracle Nasd .24 35.38 +.27 +0.8 +6.2

Penney NY ... 19.35 +.48 +2.5 -1.8

PepsiCo NY 2.15 72.49 +.01 ... +5.9

Pfizer NY .96 27.00 +.46 +1.7 +7.7

PwShs QQQ Nasd .81 67.00 -.07 -0.1 +2.9

ProctGam NY 2.25 73.25 +3.31 +4.7 +7.9

RadioShk NY ... 2.64 +.41 +18.4 +24.5

RegionsFn NY .04 7.69 +.26 +3.5 +7.9

RschMotn Nasd ... 17.54 +1.70 +10.7 +47.8

S&P500ETF NY 3.10 150.25 +1.92 +1.3 +5.5

SearsHldgs Nasd ... 45.12 -1.54 -3.3 +9.1

Sherwin NY 1.56 165.51 +1.49 +0.9 +7.6

SiriusXM Nasd .05 3.15 -.01 -0.3 +9.0

SouthnCo NY 1.96 44.45 +.96 +2.2 +3.8

SprintNex NY ... 5.64 -.01 -0.2 -.5

SPDR Fncl NY .26 17.47 +.32 +1.9 +6.6

Staples Nasd .44 12.97 -.03 -0.2 +13.8

Synovus NY .04 2.54 -.17 -6.3 +3.7

TecumsehB Nasd ... 7.30 +1.39 +23.5 +58.7

TecumsehA Nasd ... 7.16 +1.25 +21.2 +55.0

Torchmark NY .60 55.98 +2.22 +4.1 +8.7

VerizonCm NY 2.06 42.67 +.13 +0.3 -1.4

WalMart NY 1.59 69.00 -.20 -0.3 +1.1

WellsFargo NY 1.00 35.14 +.21 +0.6 +2.8

Wendys Co Nasd .16 5.17 +.07 +1.4 +10.0

Weyerhsr NY .68 30.95 +.32 +1.0 +11.3

Xerox NY .17 7.93 +.29 +3.8 +16.3

Tables show seven most current contracts for each future. Grains traded on Chicago Board of Trade;livestock on Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on New York Cotton Exchange.

NYSE NYSE MKT NASDAQ

12,500

13,000

13,500

14,000

J JA S O N D

CLOSED

MON

62.51

TUES

67.12

WED

46.00

THUR

70.65

FRI

Close: 13,895.981-week change: 246.28 (1.8%)

Dow Jones industrials

FSA will continue to accept SURE applica-tions for 2011 crop losses through June 7.

The Supplemental Rev-enue Assistance Program (SURE) provides pay-ments to producers when crop revenues are below the crop guarantee. The SURE payment is equal to 60 percent of the dif-

ference between the crop guarantee and revenue. All crops on all farms of a producer are included in the calculation to deter-mine the guarantee and revenue under SURE.

SURE payments are limited to $100,000.

To be eligible for the 2011 SURE program, a producer must have must have at least one crop

with a 10 percent produc-tion loss. In addition, the producer must have crop insurance on all insurable crops. For crops not cov-ered by crop insurance, such as pumpkins and cucumbers, the producer must have purchased cov-erage under FSA’s Non Insured Crop Disaster As-sistance Program (NAP).

The requirement for

crop insurance or NAP coverage is waived for crops that are not eco-nomically signifi cant to the farming operation.

(For more information concerning 2011 SURE, contact the Alcorn/Tisho-mingo County FSA offi ce at 662-287-7223 or visit the FSA website at www.fsa.usda.gov under Disas-ter Assistance Programs.)

FSA accepting crop loss applicationsFor the Daily Corinthian

STARKVILLE — A one-day Mississippi Market Ready Training at Mis-sissippi State University can help business owners capitalize on the “buy lo-cal” movement.

On Feb. 13, MSU Ex-tension Service experts will discuss current food policy legislation, build-ing relationships with restaurant managers and chefs, proper packaging and labeling, marketing strategies, pricing struc-tures and regulatory con-

cerns.This workshop will be

at the Bost Conference Center from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Doors will open at 8:30 a.m. for coffee and socializing with speakers and colleagues.

“This is an ideal train-ing for fruit and vegetable growers; producers who have meat, seafood, dairy or poultry products; and makers of value-added or processed foods, such as sauces, wine, jams and jellies, desserts or breads — any food product our Mississippi producers want to sell to a restau-

rant directly,” said Kim Morgan, assistant Exten-sion professor in the De-partment of Agricultural Economics. “This is an intermediate-level train-ing for entrepreneurs with existing products who want to establish accounts with local busi-nesses.”

There is no cost to at-tend, but pre-registration is required. The workshop, which includes refresh-ments, lunch, training workbooks and reference materials, is funded by the U.S. Department of Agri-culture’s Southern Region

Extension Risk Manage-ment Education Grants Program. Those interested can register at https://www.agecon.msstate.edu/training/marketready/de-tail.php or call Morgan at (662) 325-0413.

The event is supported by the Mississippi Depart-ment of Agriculture and Commerce, the Missis-sippi Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association, the Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Experiment Station, the Mississippi Hospitality and Restau-rant Association, and Al-corn State University.

Market Ready training planned for producersBY KERI COLLINS

LEWISMSU Communications

G O O D L E T T S V I L L E , Tenn. — Dollar General, the Goodlettsville-based chain of discount re-tail stores, announced it would open 635 new stores this year and add 6,000 jobs.

Dollar General also

announced Wednesday in a news release that it would relocate 550 stores in 2013.

The company said it plans to open the chain’s 11,000th store before the year’s end and the com-pany’s 75th anniversary in 2014.

Chairman and CEO Rick Dreiling said in a statement that the com-pany’s continued growth refl ects customer satis-faction.

The company also said as part of the expan-sion, it is participating in a statewide initiative

called Paychecks for Patriots that helps un-employed veterans fi nd jobs.

The retail store has much presence in the Crossroads area, includ-ing stores in Farming-ton, Kossuth and three in Corinth.

Dollar General to open 635 stores, add 6,000 jobsAssociated Press

www.edwardjones.com�

������������ ���������������������

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

1500 Harper Road Suite 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

AND ALL EXCAVATORS

Pursuant to the Pipeline Safety Regula�ons of the U. S. Depart-ment of Transporta�on, the City of Corinth Gas & Water De-partment is required by FEDERAL REGULATIONS, TITLE 49 CFR, SECTION 192.164 to maintain a damage preven�on program. The purpose of this program is to prevent damage to under-ground gas lines and accidents caused from such damage. Mississippi law requires that you call Mississippi One-Call Cen-ter’s 811 number or toll free number at 1-800-227-6477 and give two working days no�ce (48 business hours) before you dig. Our department will be no�fied and a representa�ve will make an on-site inspec�on of the area and mark with paint or flag all pipeline loca�ons as a free service. Our office hours are from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Monday through Friday. Emer-gency services available 24 hours a day by calling 286-2263.

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Page 8: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Sports8 • Daily Corinthian Sunday, January 27, 2013

Local Schedule

Tuesday, Jan. 29BasketballBooneville @ Kossuth, 6Biggersville @ Thrasher, 6Corinth @ Shannon, 6Potts Camp @ Walnut, 6 

Friday, Feb. 1

BasketballFalkner @ Biggersville, 6Corinth @ Baldwyn, 6Central @ Potts Camp, 6Kossuth @ Holly Springs, 6Pine Grove @ Walnut, 6 

Saturday, Feb. 2

BasketballWest Union @ Kossuth, 6 

Tuesday, Feb. 5

BasketballBiggersville @ Corinth, 6 (WXRZ)Walnut @ Central, 6Kossuth @ North Pontotoc, 6 

Thursday, Feb. 7

BasketballCentral @ Thrasher, 5 

Friday, Feb. 8

BasketballTupelo @ Corinth, 6 (WXRZ)New Site @ Kossuth, 6Jumpertown @ Biggersville, 6Central @ Belmont, 6Falkner @ Walnut, 6

Shorts

Tennis Camp

Tupelo Park and Recreation and the Tupelo Tennis Association will host a 2013 Spring Camp at Rob Leake City Park from March 18-April 22. The six weeks of lessons will be held for pee wee, youth, and adult groups. Lessons for Pee Wee and adult age groups will be held Mondays, Pee Wee from 5-5:45 and adults from 7-8 p.m. Youth lessons will be held Mon-days or Tuesdays from 6-7 p.m. Cost is $65 per person, and classes are limited to 14 people. To sign up, or for more information, contact Dennis Otono at (662) 891-7589 or Curtis Brown at (662) 231-2797.

 New Site Banquet

Former Mississippi State Head Baseball Coach Ron Polk will be the featured speaker for the New Site Royals Fourth Annual 1st Pitch Ban-quet and Silent Auction on Monday, February 4 at 7 p.m. on the campus of New Site HS. Seating is limited to the first 150 tickets sold and must be purchased in advance. Tickets are $15 and include meal, access to si-lent auction, and seating for speaker presentation. For more information or to purchase a ticket, please call 322-7389 or 728-5205.

OXFORD, Miss. — Mississippi has agreed to pay former coach Houston Nutt a lump sum of $4.35 million to complete his contract buyout.

Nutt was fi red after the 2011 season with about $6 million remaining on his contract. Ole Miss athletic direc-tor Ross Bjork said on Saturday in a statement that the school’s agreement with Nutt happened last month, and the one-time payment would save the athletic department about $550,000.

Bjork said the agreement was a “win-win for everyone and both of us can now move ahead.” He said the money came from the school’s private athletic foundation.

Nutt coached for four seasons at Ole Miss, leading the program to back-to-back Cotton Bowl wins in 2008 and 2009 before slumping to a 2-10 record in his fi nal season.

Mississippi pays $4.35 million lump sum to Nutt

Associated PressNEW ALBANY — The Ag-

gies extended their winning streak to a pair, taking a two point win over West Union in the Hot Bed Classic on Satur-day.

The 57-55 game was domi-nated by West Union in the fi rst quarter, the Aggies fall-ing into a 10 point defi cit in spite of the opening 3-pointer by Justin Mills.

Kossuth gained 20 points of their own in the second pe-

riod, Mills pushing through for 7 of his 13 points to put the Aggies within four points at the half.

Rick Hodum, a fi rst time leading scorer for Kossuth with 14-points, led the charge in the second half.

Hodum racked up 10 points in the third period, as Josh Whitaker grabbed 5 to push the Aggies into a 47-44 lead heading into the fi nal period.

Brandon Grayson provided the winning edge, nailing four consecutive free-throws to

close out the game and earn the win.

The Aggies see action again three times next week when they will host Booneville on January 29, and Holly Springs on February 1 in Divi-sion 1-3A contests.

Kossuth will close out the week on February 2 in a re-match with West Union, which will also serve as Senior Night for the Aggies.

Tip off for all three games is set for 6 p.m.

(B) Kossuth 57,

West Union 55 

WUHS 22 14 7 12 -- 55KHS 12 20 15 10 -- 57

 WEST UNION (55): RJ Coleman 23,

Tyler Wooley 11, Chase Taylor 8, Hunt-er Jennings 7, Drew Westen 3, Chase Dogue 2, Chase Cooper 1.

KOSSUTH (57): Rick Hodum 14, Justin Mills 13, Josh Whitaker 10, Brandon Grayson 8, Matt Stewart 5, Weston Bobo 3, Emmitt Burke 3, Eli-jah Potts 1.

3-POINTERS: (WU) Tyler Wooley 3, (K) Rick Hodum 2, Justin Mills 2.

Kossuth wins again in tourney BY DONICA PHIFER

[email protected] 

AUBURN, Ala. — Missis-sippi had an awful night at the free throw line until it mat-tered most.

Marshall Henderson scored 15 points and made the game-winning foul shots with 7 sec-onds remaining to lift the No. 23 Rebels over Auburn 63-61 on Saturday night.

Ole Miss was an embarrass-ing 2 for 15 at the line before Henderson came through.

“We weren’t very effi cient from the foul line,” coach Andy Kennedy said. “We were close to 50 percent from the 3, but when you go 4 for 17 from the foul line and you can still fi nd a way to grind out a road SEC win, I think it speaks to the character of this group and their will to win.”

Henderson went to the free

throw stripe with the score tied after an off-the-ball foul was called on Shaq Johnson as Ole Miss (17-2, 6-0 South-eastern Conference) was inbounding under its own basket. Frankie Sullivan’s last-second heave for Auburn was off the mark, and the Rebels escaped.

LaDarius White led Ole Miss with 17 points and Jarvis Summers added 14.

Chris Denson had 18 points for Auburn (8-11, 2-4).

Auburn led 33-31 at half-time and by as many as nine before Ole Miss came charg-ing back in the second half.

The Tigers jumped out to a 9-0 lead and were still up by nine after Noel Johnson’s 3-pointer with 5:21 to play in the fi rst half.

From there, Ole Miss went

on an 11-4 run to cut the defi -cit to two at halftime. White scored on a layup a minute into the second half to tie the game.

“Obviously it hurt,” Auburn coach Tony Barbee said about Ole Miss’ run to close the fi rst half. “When you are up (nine) with 3 minutes to go you are supposed to fi nish that half out. I had to go to the bench a little bit during that time and when you go to the bench, you have guys contribute, not just offensively but defensively as well.”

Auburn trailed 61-56 with 3:30 to go before a quick 5-0 spurt tied the score with a minute to play. With less than 20 seconds left, Murphy Holloway blocked Denson’s layup attempt and got the ball to the Rebels’ Reginald

Buckner in transition. But Shaq Johnson tracked down Buckner and blocked the ball out of bounds to set up the game’s fi nal sequence.

Shaq Johnson knocked Henderson to the fl oor as he rotated on the inbounds set and was whistled for a foul. Henderson hit both free throws to give Ole Miss a victory in a hostile environ-ment.

“To me, the greatest com-pliment, I think, this pro-gram has been given is when other people are paying to see you play,” Kennedy said. “Auburn is 8-10 and they’ve lost three in row. Having a sellout tonight, that was be-cause Ole Miss had a rank in front of their name.

“I’m glad our guys re-sponded.”

Henderson’s FTs lift No. 23 Ole Miss over AuburnAssociated Press

STARKVILLE, Miss. — Florida has one of the most experienced, talent-ed and deep teams in the country.

Mississippi State’s ros-ter lacks any of those attri-butes. But that’s not why fi rst-year Bulldogs’ coach

Rick Ray is frustrated.Instead, Ray bemoaned

a long string of bad de-cisions and selfi sh bas-ketball that led to No. 8 Florida’s easy 82-47 vic-tory over the Bulldogs on Saturday night.

Kenny Boynton and Erik Murphy both scored 18 points and the 8th-

ranked Gators poured in a season-high 14 3-pointers in an easy 82-47 victory over Mississippi State on Saturday night.

“They have the best players in the SEC and the most talented play-ers in the SEC, but their willingness to share the basketball is by far their

best attribute,” Ray said. “Our team needs to learn from that ... Right now, we’re just a selfi sh basket-ball team. Then on top of that, we’re not defending the way we need to defend because we’re so wrapped up in our offense.”

Boynton said the reason for Florida’s shooting suc-

cess wasn’t because of a fancy scheme. Instead, it was simply good decision-making.

“We took open shots,” Boynton said. “Patric Young did a great job fi nd-ing us when they doubled him on the post. He found shooters and we did a good job knocking them

down.”Scottie Wilbekin and

Young both added 13 points. The Gators (16-2, 6-0 Southeastern Confer-ence) have now won eight straight and were never challenged in this one, bolt-ing out to a 20-6 lead in less

Mississippi State falls to No. 8 Florida Gators 82-47, Ray frustratedBY DAVID BRANDT

Associated Press

Please see STATE | 9

BY STEVE MEGARGEEAssociated Press

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Jarnell Stokes kept waiting to hear the whistle.

When it never came, the Tennessee forward

fi nally breathed a sigh of relief.

Stokes’ defense on Alabama guard Trevor Lacey in the fi nal sec-onds Saturday pre-served Tennessee’s 54-53 victory over Ala-

bama. The Volunteers (10-8, 2-4 SEC) rallied from a 10-point defi cit and pulled ahead for good in the fi nal min-ute, but their victory wasn’t secure until the fi nal horn.

Alabama (12-7, 4-2) had a chance to win af-ter Trae Golden missed the front end of a one-and-one opportunity with 15.4 seconds left. After a scramble for the rebound, the ball went

out of bounds off Ten-nessee with 11.8 sec-onds remaining.

The Crimson Tide worked the ball to Lac-ey, who left his feet and appeared to draw con-tact from Stokes.

Photo by Donica Phifer

Rick Hodum moves the ball down the court during a January 18 game against Belmont. The Aggies won two in a row fol-lowing a 57-55 win over West Union at the Hot Bed Classic Tournament in New Albany. 

Stokes, Tennessee pull out 54-53 win over Alabama

Page 9: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Scoreboard Daily Corinthian • 9Sunday, January 27, 2013

Pro basketball

NBA standings, scheduleEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division W L Pct GBNew York 26 15 .634 —Brooklyn 26 18 .591 11⁄2Boston 20 23 .465 7Philadelphia 18 25 .419 9Toronto 16 28 .364 111⁄2

Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 28 12 .700 —Atlanta 25 18 .581 41⁄2Orlando 14 28 .333 15Washington 11 31 .262 18Charlotte 11 32 .256 181⁄2

Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 26 17 .605 —Chicago 26 17 .605 —Milwaukee 23 19 .548 21⁄2Detroit 16 27 .372 10Cleveland 13 32 .289 14

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 36 11 .766 —Memphis 28 14 .667 51⁄2Houston 24 22 .522 111⁄2Dallas 18 25 .419 16New Orleans 14 29 .326 20

Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 34 10 .773 —Denver 27 18 .600 71⁄2Utah 23 20 .535 101⁄2Portland 21 21 .500 12Minnesota 17 24 .415 151⁄2

Pacific Division W L Pct GBL.A. Clippers 32 12 .727 —Golden State 26 17 .605 51⁄2L.A. Lakers 18 25 .419 131⁄2Sacramento 16 29 .356 161⁄2Phoenix 15 29 .341 17

———Friday’s Late Games

Oklahoma City 105, Sacramento 95L.A. Lakers 102, Utah 84

Saturday’s GamesPhiladelphia 97, New York 80Cleveland 99, Toronto 98Washington 86, Chicago 73Charlotte 102, Minnesota 101Houston 119, Brooklyn 106San Antonio 108, Phoenix 99Milwaukee 109, Golden State 102Denver 121, Sacramento 93Indiana at Utah, (n)L.A. Clippers at Portland, (n)

Today’s GamesMiami at Boston, NoonOklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, 2:30

p.m.New Orleans at Memphis, 5 p.m.Detroit at Orlando, 5 p.m.Atlanta at New York, 5:30 p.m.Phoenix at Dallas, 6:30 p.m.Portland at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.

Monday’s GamesMemphis at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.Golden State at Toronto, 6 p.m.Sacramento at Washington, 6 p.m.Orlando at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m.Charlotte at Chicago, 7 p.m.Indiana at Denver, 8 p.m.Houston at Utah, 8 p.m.

College basketball

Saturday men’s scoresEAST

Army 77, American U. 64Boston U. 81, UMBC 75Bucknell 65, Holy Cross 58Catholic 54, Merchant Marine 42Colgate 70, Navy 56Cornell 66, Columbia 63Delaware Valley 57, Wilkes 54Dickinson 82, Ursinus 63Dominican (NY) 94, Chestnut Hill 86Drexel 68, Georgia St. 57

E. Nazarene 76, Wentworth Tech 71Edinboro 62, Slippery Rock 59Fordham 66, Rhode Island 63George Washington 82, Charlotte 54Georgetown 53, Louisville 51Gettysburg 77, Swarthmore 69Harvard 82, Dartmouth 77, OTHobart 76, Vassar 59Maine-Farmington 102, Castleton St. 94McDaniel 95, Washington (Md.) 87, 3OTMillersville 74, Kutztown 68, 2OTNew Hampshire 63, Binghamton 45New Haven 50, Bentley 48Nichols 100, W. New England 92Ohio St. 65, Penn St. 51Philadelphia 84, Caldwell 61Pittsburgh 93, DePaul 55Quinnipiac 58, Fairleigh Dickinson 56Regis 58, Mitchell 54Robert Morris 76, Mount St. Mary’s 68Rowan 74, William Paterson 64Sacred Heart 82, Monmouth (NJ) 68Saint Joseph’s 59, Xavier 49Saint Louis 67, St. Bonaventure 57Sciences (Pa.) 85, Felician 73Scranton 81, Juniata 60Stony Brook 79, Maine 69Susquehanna 74, Drew 66Thiel 67, Washington & Jefferson 58UNC Wilmington 57, Hofstra 51Vermont 50, Albany (NY) 43Villanova 75, Syracuse 71, OTWagner 81, St. Francis (Pa.) 56West Chester 88, Bloomsburg 82, OTYale 76, Brown 64, OT

SOUTHAlcorn St. 61, Southern U. 57Ark.-Pine Bluff 79, Grambling St. 67Barton 76, Erskine 68Belmont 85, E. Kentucky 74Bethel (Tenn.) 70, Blue Mountain 45Brescia 75, Alice Lloyd 65Carson-Newman 76, Catawba 65Charleston Southern 79, Liberty 75Coastal Carolina 73, Campbell 59Coker 79, King (Tenn.) 70Coll. of Charleston 79, Wofford 50Cumberland (Tenn.) 88, Virginia-Wise 66Cumberlands 73, Pikeville 71Davidson 79, Appalachian St. 56Delaware St. 68, Bethune-Cookman 52Duke 84, Maryland 64ETSU 89, North Florida 75Elizabeth City St. 88, Virginia St. 68Elon 70, The Citadel 66Emory & Henry 70, Bridgewater (Va.) 65Faulkner 75, Spring Hill 72Florida 82, Mississippi St. 47Florida A&M 55, Md.-Eastern Shore 54Gardner-Webb 63, VMI 49Georgia Southern 72, W. Carolina 66Georgia Tech 82, Wake Forest 62Hampden-Sydney 74, Guilford 52Jacksonville St. 65, Murray St. 64James Madison 56, Old Dominion 46Kentucky 75, LSU 70Kentucky St. 66, Miles 57La Salle 69, VCU 61Lane 71, LeMoyne-Owen 68Lenoir-Rhyne 80, Mars Hill 67Lincoln Memorial 60, Wingate 58Loyola NO 88, Belhaven 75Lynchburg 74, E. Mennonite 67Martin Methodist 69, Life 53Memphis 73, Marshall 72Mercer 71, Lipscomb 65Mid Continent 78, Freed-Hardeman 73Middle Tennessee 72, W. Kentucky 53Mississippi 63, Auburn 61Morehead St. 78, Tennessee St. 69Morgan St. 55, NC A&T 52Mount Olive 99, Limestone 78N. Kentucky 64, Kennesaw St. 53NC Central 84, Coppin St. 75

NC State 91, North Carolina 83New Orleans 94, Champion Baptist 54Nicholls St. 70, Sam Houston St. 67, OTNorfolk St. 74, Hampton 67Northwestern St 61, Stephen F Austin 57Notre Dame 73, South Florida 65Philander Smith 114, Fisk 108, 2OTPresbyterian 82, Longwood 71Radford 58, Winthrop 57Randolph 65, Shenandoah 50Randolph-Macon 75, Roanoke 62SC-Upstate 79, Jacksonville 64SE Louisiana 67, Texas A&M-CC 53Savannah St. 64, SC State 49South Carolina 75, Arkansas 54St. Augustine’s 75, Shaw 63Tenn. Wesleyan 97, Union (Ky.) 78Tennessee 54, Alabama 53Tennessee Tech 70, Austin Peay 52Thomas More 78, Waynesburg 68Troy 71, Louisiana-Monroe 64, OTTulane 73, Rice 66UCF 74, SMU 65UNC Asheville 69, High Point 58UTEP 68, East Carolina 67Union (Tenn.) 79, West Georgia 55Virginia 65, Boston College 51WVU Tech 95, Campbellsville 84William & Mary 63, Towson 56Winston-Salem 86, Fayetteville St. 65Xavier (NO) 54, Dillard 34

MIDWESTAkron 68, Buffalo 64Ashland 67, Tiffin 64Augustana (SD) 82, Minn St.-Mankato 79Aurora 85, Milwaukee Engineering 60Baker 62, Missouri Valley 56Ball St. 82, Miami (Ohio) 62Bethany Lutheran 72, Minn.-Morris 64Bethel (Minn.) 74, Carleton 73Butler 83, Temple 71Calvin 50, Adrian 47Cardinal Stritch 62, Ind.-South Bend 45Carthage 71, Millikin 47Chicago St. 62, Utah Valley 54Concordia (Moor.) 88, Augsburg 68Concordia (St.P.) 74, Wayne (Neb.) 65Crown (Minn.) 89, Martin Luther 72Culver-Stockton 76, Avila 71Dakota Weslyn 87, Doane 83Davenport 64, Cornerstone 56Dayton 72, Duquesne 56Detroit 75, Loyola of Chicago 63E. Illinois 78, SE Missouri 72, OTE. Michigan 42, N. Illinois 25Edgewood 75, Dominican (Ill.) 63Ferris St. 50, Saginaw Valley St. 47Findlay 74, Malone 62Hope 92, Alma 74IPFW 80, IUPUI 79, OTIll.-Chicago 55, Wright St. 49Illinois St. 67, Evansville 62Indiana St. 59, N. Iowa 58Indiana-East 93, Berea 80Iowa St. 73, Kansas St. 67Kansas 67, Oklahoma 54Lake Erie 69, Ohio Dominican 50Marquette 81, Providence 71Marygrove 64, Madonna 57Minot St. 62, Minn. Duluth 58Missouri 81, Vanderbilt 59Nebraska 64, Northwestern 49Nebraska-Omaha 67, UMKC 59Northern St. (SD) 58, Bemidji St. 55Northwestern (Minn.) 102, Northland 60Northwood (Mich.) 81, N. Michigan 48Oakland 67, W. Illinois 60Ohio 69, Kent St. 68Park 89, Benedictine Springfield 71Rockford 88, Maranatha Baptist 78, OTS. Dakota St. 69, N. Dakota St. 53Spring Arbor 57, Marian, Ind. 53St. Cloud St. 68, Mary 51St. John Fisher 71, Houghton 49

St. John’s (Minn.) 59, Gustavus 57St. Olaf 95, Macalester 73St. Thomas (Minn.) 81, Hamline 46Toledo 75, Bowling Green 62Trine 63, Kalamazoo 51UT-Martin 65, SIU-Edwardsville 62Upper Iowa 82, Sioux Falls 74Viterbo 74, Iowa Wesleyan 70W. Michigan 76, Cent. Michigan 59Walsh 75, Hillsdale 73Wayne (Mich.) 65, Grand Valley St. 56Wichita St. 73, Bradley 39Winona St. 75, SW Minnesota St. 60Wis. Lutheran 68, Lakeland 64Wis.-La Crosse 80, Wis.-Oshkosh 59Wis.-Parkside 60, Kentucky Wesleyan 59Wis.-Platteville 84, Wis.-River Falls 71Wis.-Stevens Pt. 82, Wis.-Superior 55Wis.-Stout 60, Ashford 35Wis.-Whitewater 72, Wis.-Eau Claire 63Wisconsin 45, Minnesota 44Youngstown St. 73, Cleveland St. 59

SOUTHWESTArkansas St. 63, FAU 38Baylor 82, TCU 56Cent. Arkansas 88, Lamar 59Georgia 59, Texas A&M 52Houston 66, UAB 61Houston Baptist 94, Ecclesia 40Oklahoma St. 80, West Virginia 66Oral Roberts 75, McNeese St. 54Prairie View 74, Alabama St. 72Southern Miss. 62, Tulsa 59Texas 73, Texas Tech 57Texas Southern 89, Alabama A&M 56UALR 62, North Texas 57

FAR WESTArizona 74, Southern Cal 50Arizona St. 78, UCLA 60Gonzaga 66, San Francisco 52Hawaii 78, UC Santa Barbara 73Long Beach St. 81, UC Irvine 59Louisiana Tech 51, Utah St. 48Montana 76, Weber St. 74Montana St. 61, Idaho St. 59, OTNevada 75, Boise St. 59North Dakota 81, N. Arizona 79Oregon 81, Washington 76S. Utah 69, E. Washington 55Saint Mary’s (Cal) 84, Pepperdine 72San Diego St. 55, New Mexico 34Santa Clara 64, San Diego 50Washington St. 71, Oregon St. 68

Pro hockey

NHL standings, scheduleEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division W L OT Pts GF GANew Jersey 3 0 0 6 8 3N.Y. Islanders 2 2 0 4 14 13N.Y. Rangers 2 3 0 4 14 16Philadelphia 2 3 0 4 12 13Pittsburgh 2 2 0 4 13 13

Northeast Division W L OT Pts GF GABoston 3 0 1 7 12 8Ottawa 3 1 0 6 15 8Buffalo 2 2 0 4 11 12Montreal 2 1 0 4 9 4Toronto 2 3 0 4 14 17

Southeast Division W L OT Pts GF GATampa Bay 3 1 0 6 19 12Winnipeg 2 1 1 5 10 10Carolina 2 2 0 4 11 13Florida 1 4 0 2 8 19Washington 0 3 1 1 8 17

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 5 0 0 10 20 12St. Louis 4 1 0 8 19 9Detroit 2 2 0 4 10 14Nashville 1 1 2 4 8 11Columbus 1 3 1 3 9 18

Northwest Division

W L OT Pts GF GAVancouver 2 1 1 5 13 12Colorado 2 2 0 4 9 9Edmonton 2 1 0 4 8 9Minnesota 2 2 0 4 9 10Calgary 0 2 1 1 7 12

Pacific Division W L OT Pts GF GASan Jose 4 0 0 8 19 7Dallas 2 2 1 5 11 12Anaheim 2 1 0 4 12 12Los Angeles 1 2 1 3 8 12Phoenix 1 4 0 2 17 20

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.

Friday’s Late GameVancouver 5, Anaheim 0

Saturday’s GamesSan Jose 4, Colorado 0N.Y. Rangers 5, Toronto 2Chicago 3, Columbus 2Philadelphia 7, Florida 1St. Louis 4, Dallas 3Los Angeles 4, Phoenix 2Edmonton at Calgary, (n)Nashville at Anaheim, (n)

Sunday’s GamesBuffalo at Washington, 2 p.m.Pittsburgh at Ottawa, 4 p.m.New Jersey at Montreal, 5 p.m.Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.Detroit at Chicago, 6 p.m.Minnesota at St. Louis, 7 p.m.N.Y. Islanders at Winnipeg, 7 p.m.Vancouver at San Jose, 7 p.m.

Monday’s GamesBoston at Carolina, 5 p.m.Dallas at Columbus, 5 p.m.Nashville at Phoenix, 8 p.m.Colorado at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m.Vancouver at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.

Misc.

TransactionsBASEBALL

American LeagueBALTIMORE ORIOLES—Named Jose

Hernandez field coach for Norfolk (IL); Einar Diaz, hitting coach for Bowie (EL); Ryan Minor manager, Kennie Steenstra pitching coach and Torre Tyson hitting coach for Frederick (Carolina); Luis Pujols manager, Butch Davis hitting coach and Greg Svarczkopf strength and conditioning coach for Delmarva (SAL); Matt Merullo manager for Aber-deen (NYP); and Orlando Gomez man-ager and Wilson Alvarez pitching coach of the GCL Orioles.

TAMPA BAY RAYS—Named Paul Hoover catching coordinator; Brady Williams manager and Bill Moloney pitching coach of Charlotte (FSL); Jared Sandberg manager and Kyle Snyder pitching coach of Bowling Green (MWL); Michael Johns manager and Steve Watson pitching coach of Hudson Valley (NYP); Danny Sheaffer manager of Princeton (Appalachian) and Jim Morrison manager of the GCL Rays.

TEXAS RANGERS—Agreed to terms with INF/OF Jeff Baker and LHP Nate Robertson on minor league contracts.

National LeagueCHICAGO CUBS—Agreed to terms

with RHP Carlos Villanueva on a two-year contract. Designated RHP Lendy Castillo for assignment.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

DALLAS STARS—Recalled F Colton Sceviour from Texas (AHL).

NEW YORK RANGERS—Recalled F Benn Ferriero from Connecticut (AHL).

ECHLECHL—Suspended Wheeling’s Zack

Torquato one game and fined him an undisclosed amount for his actions in a Jan. 25 game against Bakersfield. Fined Trenton’s Paul Lee an undis-closed amount for his actions in a Jan. 25 game against Las Vegas.

than eight minutes and a 41-19 advantage by half-time.

Boynton and Murphy led the Gators with four 3-pointers each. Boyn-ton finished 7 of 11 from the field and 4 of 8 from 3-point range.

The Gators are already known as an elite defensive team, giving up about 51

points per game. But their offense was just as efficient against the Bulldogs, as Florida made 31 of 56 shots (55.4 percent) from the field and 14 of 31 (45.2 per-cent) from 3-point range.

Murphy shot 6 of 8 from the field — including 4 of 6 from 3-point range — while Young was 6 of 6 from the floor and grabbed four of-fensive rebounds. Florida had 23 assists on 31 field

goals.“I thought we were re-

ally unselfish,” Florida coach Billy Donovan said. We moved and passed the basketball and really got good looks throughout the course of the game.”

Fred Thomas led Missis-sippi State (7-11, 2-4) with 19 points. Colin Borchert and Gavin Ware both add-ed 10. The Bulldogs have lost four straight.

STATECONTINUED FROM 8

MOBILE, Ala. — EJ Manuel’s January couldn’t have gone much better on the field. More importantly, he’s hoping for a similarly happy February for his family.

The Florida State quarter-back passed for a touchdown and rushed for another on the South’s first two drives in a 21-16 victory over the North in the Senior Bowl on Saturday, and was named Most Outstanding Player.

Now, he can try to be the MOS — Most Outstanding Son. His mother, Jackie Manuel, who was diagnosed with breast cancer before the season, has been recovering from her final round of chemotherapy, and Manuel said she’s scheduled to have surgery on Feb. 1.

“That’s kind of been my mo-tivation,” Manuel said. “I call my mom every single day and tell her I love her. I never miss a day.

“They’ll be sending that award home to her. I won that award for her. I went out there and played well for her. I’m happy I was able to do it.”

And even happier to return to her side in Virginia for a few days, instead of just squeezing in Skype and Facetime ses-sions.

It was a great finish for Man-uel to a month that began with a 291-yard performance in an Orange Bowl victory over Northern Illinois.

Manuel and running backs Stepfan Taylor and Mike James combined to put the game for senior NFL prospects away on the South’s final drive. Stanford’s Taylor carried five times for 32 yards and caught a 6-yard pass from Manuel.

Manuel converted a fourth-and-1 play on a sneak to set up a 5-yard touchdown run for Miami’s James with 2:41 left.

FSU’s Manuel leads South to Senior Bowl win

BY JOHN ZENORAssociated Press

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Page 10: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

10A • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

JACKSON — Charter schools, though they have dominated the fi rst three weeks of the Mississippi Legislature, are only the beginning.

House and Senate law-makers are considering numerous other measures to change K-12 educa-tion, many of which have never been debated be-fore. Some proposals are being pushed by Republi-can Gov. Phil Bryant, who spent months calling for 2013’s Legislature to focus on education.

“We have brought for-

ward or plan to bring for-ward an array of ideas designed to improve educa-tion in Mississippi,” House Speaker Philip Gunn, R-Clinton, said Friday.

Ideas are circulating to pay for more 4-year-olds to attend preschool, give tax breaks for people who donate money for chil-dren to attend private schools, require children to read on grade level be-fore passing third grade, and tinker with the public school funding formula.

Thursday, a Senate committee passed a bill to require county school districts that now elect

superintendents to ap-point them, except where voters opt out.

House Education Com-mittee Chairman John Moore, R-Brandon, said his committee is likely to take up a similar mea-sure, among 15 or 20 bills he expects the panel to approve.

Moore also wants to change state law to make all school board mem-bers elected. Now, board members are all elected in some districts, but can be all-appointed or a mix of appointed and elected in other districts.

It appears likely that

both the House and the Senate will give consider-ation to a plan to increase state subsidies for 4-year-old preschool. Sen. Brice Wiggins, R-Pascagoula and Rep. Toby Barker, R-Hattiesburg, are carry-ing bills that would cre-ate local early learning consortiums. The state would give them money or tax-credit subsidies that the locals would have to match to pay for more children to attend pre-school. The slots could be in private or public op-erations, Barker said. He estimates his bill would create 1,375 slots in the

fi rst year.Those bills could com-

pete with or complement Bryant’s request to start providing state money to Mississippi Building Blocks. That program has instructed children, trained preschool teach-ers and provided materi-als in private child care centers over the last four years, using private mon-ey.

Some ideas seem to have little opposition, as least in concept, such as requiring improved read-ing instruction in earlier grades and not allowing students to progress if

they’re not reading well. But questions remain about the details.

For example, The Par-ents’ Campaign Executive Director Nancy Loome says that following Flor-ida’s model on reading could require Mississippi to make the same large investments in reading instruction that the Sun-shine State did. Others have asked about where Mississippi will set the bar for moving on to fourth grade. Bryant has said repeatedly he wants to set it at “profi cient,” the second highest of Missis-sippi’s four levels.

Lawmakers eye more K-12 education changesBY JEFF AMYAssociated Press

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Page 11: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • 11A

MASON, Ohio — She raises her hands to her snow-white hair in a gesture of frustrated be-wilderment, then slowly lowers them to cover eyes fi lling with tears. The woman, in her 70s, is try-ing to explain how she wound up in a shelter that could well be where she spends the rest of her life.

While the woman was living with a close family member, offi cials at the Shalom Center say, her money was being drained away by people over-charging for her grocery shopping, while her body and spirit were sapped by physical neglect and emo-tional torment. She says she was usually ordered to “go to bed,” where she lay in a dark room, upset, unable to sleep.

“She just yelled at me all the time. Screamed at me, cussed me out,” the woman says of a family member. “I don’t know what happened. She just got tired of me, I guess.”

The Shalom Center of-fers shelter, along with medical, psychological and legal help, to elder-ly abuse victims in this northern Cincinnati sub-urb. It is among a handful in the country that pro-vide sanctuary from such treatment, a problem ex-perts say is growing along with the age of the na-tion’s population.

The number of Ameri-cans 65 and over is pro-jected to nearly double by 2030 because of the 74 million baby boomers born in 1946-64, and the number of people 85 and over is increasing even faster rate. The number of seniors being abused, ex-ploited or neglected every year is often estimated at about 2 million, judg-ing by available statistics and surveys, but experts say the number could be much higher. Some re-search indicates that 1 in 10 seniors have suffered some form of abuse at

least once.“That’s a big number,”

said Sharon Merriman-Nai, project director of the Clearinghouse on Abuse and Neglect of the Elderly, based at the Uni-versity of Delaware. “It’s a huge issue, and it’s just going to get bigger.”

Recognition of and mechanisms for dealing with elder abuse are many years behind strides that have been made in child abuse awareness and pro-tection, experts say.

Getting comprehensive numbers of the abused is complicated, experts say, because the vast major-ity of cases go unreported out of embarrassment, fear of being cut off from family — most abuse is at the hands of relatives — or confusion about what has happened.

Abuse sometimes comes to light only by chance. County-level adult protective servic-es caseworkers can get anonymous tips. In one recent Ohio case, a hair stylist noticed her elderly client was wincing in pain and got her to acknowl-edge she had been hit in the ribs by a relative. Another Shalom Center patient was referred by sheriff’s detectives who said his son beat him.

“Are these older people going to be allowed to live their lives the way they deserve to?” said Carol Silver Elliott, CEO of the Cedar Village retirement community, of which the Shalom Center is a part. “We really are not ad-dressing it as a society the way we should.”

The Obama adminis-tration has said it has in-creased its focus on pro-tecting American seniors by establishing a national resource center and a consumer protection of-fi ce, among other steps. But needs are growing at a time when government spending on social ser-vices is being cut on many levels or not keeping up with demand.

In Ohio, slowly recov-ering from the reces-sion, budgets have been slashed in such areas as staffs that investigate el-derly abuse cases.

Staff at the Jobs and Family Services agency in Hamilton County in Cincinnati is about half the size it was in 2009, spokesman Brian Gregg said. Even as national statistics indicate elder abuse is increasing, the number of elder abuse cases the agency can probe is lower, down from 574 cases in 2009 to 477 last year, he said.

There are no longer enough adult protective services investigators to routinely check on older adults unless there is a specifi c report of abuse or neglect.

“We do the best we can down here,” Gregg said, noting that the agency has a hotline to take anony-

mous reports and that it is seeing more fi nancial scams targeting elderly people.

The price for not get-ting ahead of the problem and preventing abuse of people who would oth-erwise be healthy and fi nancially stable will be high, warned Joy Solo-mon, a former Manhat-tan assistant prosecutor who helped pioneer el-der abuse shelters with the Weinberg Center for Elder Abuse Prevention, which opened in 2005 at the Hebrew Home com-munity in New York City.

“My argument always is, if all you do is come in when the crisis has oc-curred, it is much more costly than preventa-tive care,” said Solomon, director of the shelter, which takes in about 15 people a year. “We’re go-ing to have to pay for it anyway.”

She and others in the fi eld say the fi rst steps are to raise public awareness and train police, lawyers, criminal justice offi cials and others to recognize and respond to signs of abuse.

Prosecutors often have been reluctant to purse elder abuse cases, which can be complex because of medical and fi nancial complications, the wit-ness’ ability to testify or reluctance to testify against relatives, accord-ing to research for the Na-tional Institute of Justice.

In suburban Los Ange-les, Orange County start-ed an Elder Abuse Foren-sic Center nearly 10 years ago; it helps police, geri-atrics specialists, lawyers and social services work-ers coordinate efforts to identify, investigate and prosecute abuse cases.

New York City started its Elder Abuse Center

to 2009 to bring a multi-organization approach to the problem, saying near-ly 100,000 older people are abused in their homes in the city alone. While he was Ohio’s attorney general, Richard Cordray, now director of the fed-eral Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, initi-ated in 2009 the state El-der Abuse Commission, something current Attor-ney General Mike DeW-ine has continued.

The commission has focused on training and education and hopes to launch a public aware-ness campaign this year, said Ursel McElroy, the longtime adult protection services investigator who leads it. The commission also has been pushing for legislation to improve le-gal protection and abuse prevention, expand train-ing, and improve statisti-cal data.

Aging America: Elder abuse, use of shelters risingBY DAN SEWELL

Associated Press

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Page 12: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

12A • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Community events

Easom Outreach semi-formal affair

An Easom Outreach “Lady in Red-Men in Black” semi-formal affair is being presented Satur-day, Feb. 9, 8 p.m. until, at the Easom Outreach banquet hall, 700 S. Cra-ter St., Corinth. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door. Tickets available at Darlene's House of Design and the Easom Outreach Founda-tion. Proceeds will ben-efit the foundation's Hot Meals program.

Valentine's Day

Shiloh National Military Park is inviting children to participate in a Civil War Valentine's Day pro-gram on Saturday, Feb. 9 at 2 p.m. The unique hour-long program will introduce young people to how Valentine's Day was celebrated 151 years ago. Each child will contract a Civil War Valentine card to give to someone special.

If interested in the program, register child by contacting Heather Smedley at 731-689-5696.

Band Boosters

The Kossuth High School Band Boosters will meet at 6 p.m. in the band hall on Monday, Feb. 4. This will be a fundraising meeting.

Habitat meets 

The Habitat Annual Meeting is being held Monday, Jan. 28 at the Corinth Library at 6:30 p.m.

Democrats breakfast

The 7th District Democrats are hosting a breakfast Saturday, Feb. 2 at 8 a.m. at the Michie

Civic Center.

4-H events

■ A 4-H Horse Program Planning Meeting will be held Monday, Jan. 28 6 p.m. This meeting is for the Showdeo 4-H Horse Club volunteers and parents. County horse shows, awards criteria, and club activities for 2013 will be discussed. New volunteers and par-ents are encouraged to attend.

Call the Extension of-fice at 286-7756 for more information about the 4-H Horse program.

■ The 4-H's annual Soup Luncheon is being held Friday, Feb. 8 at the Alcorn County Extension Center, behind the Cross-roads Arena. Cost is $5 for soup or chili and in-cludes crackers, drink and dessert.

Blood drives

United Blood Services is having the following local blood drives: Mon-day, Jan. 28 — 9 a.m. - 1:30 p.m., Biggersville School Library; Thursday, Jan. 31 — 2:15 - 7 p.m., Alcorn Central Elemen-tary, Bloodmobile; and Tuesday, Feb. 5 -- 2:30-6 p.m., Walnut Elementary School, Bloodmobile.

'Cabaret Sunday'

 Corinth Theatre-Arts is hosting “Cabaret Sun-day,” a night of themed performances, tonight at the Crossroads Play-house beginning at 7:30 p.m. This will be an eve-ning of performing arts with actors, artists and patrons. The event fea-tures a combination of musical revue, open mic poetry, stand-up comedy and more. The theme of the first Cabaret Sunday is “Titanic!”

A $5 donation will be taken at the door.

‘Outstanding Citizen’

 The Junior Auxiliary of Corinth has mailed let-ters to local civic organi-zations seeking nomina-tions for its 51st annual Outstanding Citizen. The winner will be honored at the yearly charity event slated for Saturday, Feb. 23 at the Crossroads Arena. Selection is made from nominations by civic groups, church groups and individuals. As in the past, the Junior Auxiliary requests that nominations be made on a Junior Auxiliary Out-standing Citizen Applica-tion, which can be picked up at the Corinth Library, the Alliance or the Daily Corinthian.

All nominations and supporting data must be submitted by Friday, Feb. 1, to Candace Marlar at PO Box 2476, Corinth, MS 38835.

Master Gardener

There will be a Master Gardener training class offered over the video-conferencing system in the Extension offices located in Alcorn, Pren-tiss and Tishomingo Counties. The training dates are Tuesday, Feb. 12 through Thursday, March 21 every Tuesday and Thursday from 1-5 p.m. The cost to attend is $85.

Trainings will be split among Alcorn, Prentiss and Tishomingo Counties with Tishomingo County hosting the first four trainings followed by Al-corn County hosting the next four and Prentiss County hosting the final four.

The deadline to let agents know if you are going to participate is Fri-day, Feb. 1. If interested in participating or for more information, con-tact the following: Pren-tiss County — Shelaine

Wise, 662-728-5631; Alcorn County -- Patrick Poindexter, 662-286-7755; and Tishomingo County -- Danny Owen, 662-423-7016.

  ACARES meets

 The Alcorn County Amateur Radio Emergency Services (ACARES) club will have its normal club meeting, Saturday, Feb. 2 at 9 a.m. with a free test session to follow. Every-body in the community is invited to attend. The meeting will be held at the Roscoe Turner airport. For more information, call 662-415-1577, Bruce or 662-808-7495, Billy.

Guild exhibit

Jeremiah Briggs' artistic works are the featured January exhibit at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery.

The gallery is also fea-turing a collection of Jes-se Ables' snow scenes during the month.

Regular gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday. View-ings by appointment are also available. Contact the gallery located at 507 Cruise St. in Corinth, at 662-665-0520.

Culinary Month

 Alcorn Welcome Cen-ter will be observing Culinary Month during the month of January. There will be a display featuring restaurants and culinary events in the state. Also there will be free recipes and eat.drink.Ms magazines for the traveling public. The Welcome Center will also be having random draw-ings during the month for an apron with the “Find Your True South” logo.

Prayer breakfast

 The American Legion Post 6 is hosting a prayer

breakfast every Wednes-day at 7 a.m. Sausage, biscuits and coffee will be served. A devotional will be given by a different speaker each Wednesday. The prayer breakfasts are being held at the Ameri-can Legion Building on Tate St. in Corinth. You don’t have to be a post member to attend.

 For more information, call 462-5815.

‘Just Plain Country’

 Just Plain Country per-forms at the Tishomingo County Fairgrounds in Iuka every Saturday from 7-10 p.m. Good family entertainment.

'Phenomenal Woman' award

The Boys & Girls Club is looking for phenomenal women, and the input of the community is needed. Individuals can nominate a deserving female commu-nity leader of their choice for the “Phenomenal Wom-an of the Year” award who inspires, educates and empowers other women and young girls to go be-yond mediocrity and create excellence in their lives. The award celebrates women who have made outstanding contributions to the community.

Nominees should be described in 500 words or less. The description should be double-spaced with a minimum of 12 point font. The name, ad-dress and phone number of the nominee should be submitted with how the nominee has impacted the community on a separate sheet of paper.

Forms needed to nominate someone can be picked up at the Boys & Girls Club. Deadline to enter is Feb. 8.

Tree give-away

The Alcorn County Ex-

tension Service, Forestry Commission and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service will be handing out seed-lings free of charge on Friday, Feb. 8. This is an effort to distribute trees as part of Arbor Day. The tree giveaway is set for 8:30 a.m. at the extension office, located behind the Crossroads Arena.

Dinner theater

 Arts in McNairy is presenting a dinner theater production of Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None,” Feb. 15-17. In this excit-ing murder mystery 10 strangers are trapped on an island with no sign of the mysterious host who invited them for the weekend.

The audience is invited to try to guess which guest is the murderer, as the visitors drop dead one by one.

Tickets can be pur-chased for dinner and performance by ac-cessing an order on the home page at www.art-sinmcnairy.com. Tickets for the dinner theater are $25 per person and will be sold until Sunday, Feb. 10.

Tickets for the regular seating performances of the play scheduled for Feb. 16 and 17 can be purchased online as well. Dinner theater tickets will also be sold at Shackelford Funeral Home, Selmer Chiroprac-tic and Ramer Station Restaurant. Tickets for the Feb. 16 7:30 p.m. performance and the Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. on Feb. 17 will also be sold at the door.

 AiM has its perma-nent home in the Latta Visitor's and Cultural Center, 205 West Court Ave. in downtown Sel-mer, Tenn.

Th ursday, January 24, 2013Tours will be provided from 8:00 am until 12:00 noon

OpenHOUSEMagnolia Regional Health Center invites our community to join us in celebrating the opening of our New Main Entrance, Emergency Department, Radiology Department, Central Scheduling Area, Women’s Center and Cardiology Area located on the south side of the main patient tower.

…Expanding to provide the best healthcare for our customers, One Patient at a Time.

Page 13: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

History1B • Daily Corinthian Sunday, January 27, 2013

Despite my warning, some people were sur-prised by the darkness of my previous article on Henry Robinett.

Sorry, but like I said, when the subject is war, it’s not always easy to paint a pretty picture. The darkness will always rear its ugly head. My co-worker, Hannah, suggest-ed I lighten things up a bit this week and write about “unicorns, rainbows and a friendly T-rex.”

I hit the books and tried to fi nd a credible account of Civil War unicorns in Corinth. But surprisingly, I drew a blank. So I did the next best thing. I fi gured if I couldn’t write about magical horses, I could at least tell you about some of the famous horses that visited Corinth during the war years.

Perhaps the most cele-brated steed to come from this area was a coal black Morgan named Rienzi. And no, the town was not named for the horse, but the other way around. In June of 1862, Rienzi was minding his own busi-ness, eating a little grass, when the 2nd Michigan Cavalry rode by his pas-ture. The commanding offi cer of the regiment, Colonel Philip Sheridan, had been bumped up to brigade commander and young Captain Archibald Campbell had taken over the helm of the 2nd Cav-alry.

The story is that Camp-bell saw the horse as a convenient way to stay on Sheridan’s good side, so

he gave the animal to his boss as a present. Where the story gets a little murky is “how” Campbell acquired the horse.

One story is he just put a rope around its neck and led it out of the fi eld. Another tale says Camp-bell traded two mules for Rienzi, and yet a third insists he hauled out his wallet and paid a tidy sum for the charger. I’m in-clined to believe the fi rst account.

At any rate, Sheridan accepted the black horse, which stood an impres-sive 17 hands high at the withers. Sheridan said he was, “an animal of great intelligence and immense strength and endurance. He always held his head high, and by the quick-ness of his movements, gave many persons the idea he was exceedingly impetuous.

This was not so, for I could at any time control him by a fi rm hand and a few words, and he was as cool and quiet under fi re as any one of my sol-diers.”

When Sheridan was transferred out of Missis-sippi, he took Rienzi with him. The big war horse was in several battles and was actually wounded four times, but it was at the Battle of Cedar Creek, Virginia, he gained his greatest fame.

The battle broke out at dawn on Oct. 19, 1864, and for the fi rst few hours all the fi ghting fa-vored Gen. Jubal Early’s Confederates. What was Sheridan doing early in the battle?

Nothing. He wasn’t even there.

He was 20 miles away in Winchester on a return trip from a meeting in Washington, D.C. When he learned of the battle, he jumped on Rienzi and rode the 20 miles at a gal-lop, rallying his demor-alized troops along the way. Their presence, man and horse, galvanized the Union soldiers, who returned to the fi ght and turned a defeat into a vic-tory.

Rienzi was a hero!Thomas Buchanan

Read wrote a poem about the duo that was widely printed and soon every-one knew about the fa-mous horse. Here are a few lines:

Hurrah! hurrah for Sheridan!

Hurrah! hurrah for horse and man!

And when their statues are placed on high

Under the dome of the Union sky,

The American soldier’s Temple of Fame,

There, with the glori-ous general’s name,

Be it said, in letters both bold and bright:

“Here is the steed that saved the day

By carrying Sheridan into the fi ght,

From Winchester -- twenty miles away!”

I won’t say that fame went to his head, but the horse was thereafter known as “Winchester.”

Rienzi (as I prefer to call him) never did return to his Mississippi roots. He stayed with Phil Sheri-dan, who rose to General in Chief of the U.S. Army,

and died in a comfortable stall in Chicago in 1878. That was Rienzi that died in the stall, not Sheridan.

By the way, you can vis-it Rienzi/Winchester next time you are in Washing-ton, D.C. He was stuffed and is on display at the Smithsonian.

Another famous steed to trot down the streets of Corinth was Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston’s horse Fire-Eater. The name “fi re eater” was used to describe the outspoken Southern nationalists who led the call for seces-sion.

I’m not sure of the horse’s politics, but I do know he was a magnifi -cent Thoroughbred bay, every bit as impressive as his famous master.

Just before the Battle of Shiloh, Gen. Johnston confi dently declared, “To-night, we will water our horses in the Tennessee River.”

Sadly, Fire-Eater never was able to get his drink. Gen. Johnston was mor-tally wounded in the leg and Fire-Eater was struck by at least three bullets.

After the battle, the horse passed to John-ston’s son, William, who sent the animal off to Arkansas to recuperate. Once he recovered, John-ston kept him and rode him through the rest of the war.

As luck would have it, William Johnston and Fire-eater were with President Jefferson Davis near Irwinville, Ga., on the morning of May 10, 1865, when Davis and his party were captured by

the 4th Michigan Cavalry. (What is it with Michigan Cavalry capturing these famous horses?) Fire-Eater became a P.O.W.

Fire Eater’s ultimate fate is a mystery. What we do know is the horse was immortalized in bronze. There is a statue of Gen. Johnston and Fire-Eater atop a tomb at the Me-tairie Cemetery near New Orleans. The general was briefl y buried there dur-ing the war, but in 1867, his body was moved to Austin, Texas.

Fire-Eater’s where-abouts are unknown.

Johnston’s opponent at the Battle of Shiloh, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, was an accomplished eques-trian. At West Point, he excelled in riding and his good friend (and future Confederate general) James Longstreet said, “In horsemanship, he was noted as the most profi -cient in the Academy. In fact, rider and horse held together like the fabled centaur.”

Grant rode a horse called Fox during the bat-tle, a horse that had actu-ally slipped and fallen on the future president a few days before, badly sprain-ing his ankle. The gener-al’s ankle, not the horse’s. Gen. Grant rode through the Battle of Shiloh with a crutch strapped to his saddle.

After the battle, a Union offi cer (my guess is a Michigan cavalryman) found an abandoned Confederate horse on the fi eld. He was a “rawboned horse, very ugly and ap-parently good for noth-

ing.” As a joke, he sent it to Colonel C.B. Lagow, a member of Grant’s staff, who was pretty well-to-do and was known for his excellent choice in horses. Lagow was getting ribbed by the other offi cers when Grant came by and told him the horse was actual-ly a Thoroughbred and a very valuable one at that. Lagow didn’t want any-thing to do with the hor-rid looking beast and was grateful when the general offered to take him off his hands.

Lagow should have kept him.

All through the Siege of Corinth, Grant nursed the horse back to health. Be-cause it really was pretty ugly, Grant named the an-imal Kangaroo. Eventual-ly, it recovered its health and beauty and became one of Grant’s favorites. Kangaroo was a stalwart companion and carried the general through the Vicksburg campaign.

So what can we learn from this story?

First, don’t trust your horse around cavalry from Michigan. Second, there were indeed some celebrated horses that passed through Corinth during the war.

I’m sorry, Hannah, but as famous as these ani-mals were, none of them had a magical horn grow-ing out of its forehead. I’ll see what I can do in another article about the friendly T-rex.

(Tom Parson is a Na-tional Park Service ranger at the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center.)

Three famous horses passed through Corinth

General Grant stands with one of his favorite horses, Cincinnati.

Johnston and Fire-eater in Metairie, La.The statue of Rienzi (Winchester) and General Sheri-dan is on Embassy Row in Washington, D.C.

BY TOM PARSONNPS Ranger

The Golden Sawmill had a powerful and long-lasting impact on north-ern Mississippi.

Not only did the mill d e c i -mate vast stands of virgin tim-ber, but hordes of l a b o r e r s p o u r e d into the area to work in the mill. T h i s brought a

much-needed economic surge to a poor area. Even today, there are many people in the northwest Alabama and northeast Mississippi area whose families fl ocked to the area with the advent of the Golden Sawmill.

Thousands of acres of virgin timber were cut by the mill.

The history of the Gold-en Sawmill is somewhat sketchy. The formation of the sawmill began in 1919, but land purchases were formulated in 1920. At that time, the company started its operation. It seems that a man by the name of H.M. Young was in the grave business in Corinth in the early 1900s.

He began to purchase large tracts of land from Dee Luther of Minnesota and Franklin Webber of Boston. They put together a large number of acres in northeast Itawamba County and surround-ing areas in Tishomingo County, Prentiss County and Franklin County, Ala.

These men had deal-ings in the stave busi-ness, according to some older people. In the early 1900s, staves were a big business in this part of the country.

On April 1, 1919, Web-ber sold a large sum of land to the amount of 10,146 acres for a little more than half a million dollars. On Sept. 9, 1920, a bill of sale for lumber was recorded in the court-house in Iuka. This bill of sale is for yellow pine shipped to Chicago Lum-ber and Coal Company for 860,187 board feet.

It seems that the Gold-en Sawmill was buying lumber from a number of peckerwood mills located in and around Golden. The names of some are L. R. and A. T. Davis at Bay Springs, S. J. Davis at Dennis, and Parker Saw-mill. In this bill of sale, the Golden Sawmill is known as the Young Curtis Com-

pany and the partnership of Hubert F. Young, W.D. Henry, and Louis Werner Sawmill Company at St. Louis.

In 1921 the Golden Saw-mill Company purchased a Type B Shay-geared lo-comotive rated to weigh 42 tons in working order, with the original builder number of 2062. The pur-chase price for the loco-motive was $7,000 and was bought from the Bir-mingham Rail Locomo-tive Company. There is a statement of the fact “this locomotive will be used for logging operations in Golden, Mississippi, and not to be moved. “

On April 25, 1924, James Copeland, as spe-cial commissioner for the Copeland Estate on be-half of Mrs. Gertrude Cle-ments, sold to Herbert F. Young all the lands except the Copeland home place on the Ridge Road. Mrs. Clements purchased the home place for $15,000. Mr. Herbert F. Young purchased the remaining property for $409,750.

During the sawmill’s heyday, Hassell Leathers tells about lying across a stump in the Chubby Creek bottom when he was a child with his feet hooked on one side of

the stump and his fi ngers hooked over the other side. According to him, this stump was at least 5-½ feet across and was only one of many such all across north Missis-sippi. Hazel Cromeans tells about a picture of her father, Gus Woods, who logged for the Golden Sawmill, taken by the side of one being hauled to the mill. The log was so big only one could be hauled on the wagon, and that log tested the strength of the oxen pulling the wag-on.

Evidence of the rail lines used to haul the massive logs to the mill in Golden still exists. Rail-road spurs were built over North Mississippi and into the Freedom Hills.

The late F. J. Horn, who worked as a logger for sev-eral years, began working in the woods for the saw-mill when he was about 15. He said the main line in Itawamba County ran from Golden to south of Burnt Mills and to the edge of Mud Creek.

This line ran paral-lel with Highway 25 and stretches of the roadbed are still visible and fi lled in places and even cuts in the hills where the stan-dard gauge railway was

built.The main line was built

with a steam-powered drag line mounted on rail cars. The rail line was built and fi nished in 20-foot sections. According to Coot Horn, the trees were laid top to butt along the ground and covered with dirt to form a raised road bed. From the main line, spurs were built to give access to big timber stands.

Sawmill camps pro-vided housing for the loggers and woodcutters. The camps, made of one- and two-room shot-gun houses, were located near the timber stands. Fami-lies moved into northern Mississippi and located in these little sawmill camps. There was one near the Salem Church and anoth-er set up by Aussie Wal-lace in the woods west of Fairview Church.

The men working at the mill usually lived near Golden. E.R. Warren, who talked to Jerry Mar-tin, when he was writing his book on Belmont re-called doing a man’s work at the age of 15.

He earned $2.25 per day feeding the fl ooring machine. The men doing common labor were paid $2 per day. At the peak

of production, the mill sawed 60,000 board feet per day and worked two crews, a day crew and a night crew. About 350 men were required at the mill and in the woods. At one time, when hands were needed, the com-pany advertised for saw-millers for $3.50 for a 10-hour day.

The mill was located in Golden where the E.R. Warren home later stood. The company store was located in the edge of the present Golden to Red Bay highway. On Feb. 5, 1920, the Golden Sawmill Company purchased the mill site from W.H. Pat-ters. The land lay around the Illinois Central Rail-road. On this acreage, the company set up the saw-mill building, planer mill, edger, dry-kill, storage area for equipment, and dwelling houses for the employees as well as the company store.

Unfortunately, the De-pression began to take its toll. The Golden Saw-mill shut down in 1933 and completely closed in 1934. The mill was then sold at auction. Parts were purchased from different places, and some went to

Golden Sawmill brought many families to northern Mississippi

RaNae VaughnHistorically

Speaking

Please see SAWMILL | 2B

Page 14: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Outdoors2B • Daily Corinthian Sunday, January 27, 2013

Tennessee and Alabama.After the Depression,

the Golden Sawmill lands

were sold. The land sold for $200 to $500 per acre.

Dr. D.D. Johnson of Belmont purchased a

large number of acres from the failed company.

The sawmill’s closure caused serious blows to the economy of northeast

Mississippi. The 1930 census showed the popu-lation of Golden was 569, but by 1940, the popula-tion had dropped to 340

people.(Daily Corinthian col-

umnist RaNae Vaughn is board member and in charge of marketing

and publications for the Tishomingo County His-torical & Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 203, Iuka, MS 38852.)

Letting the big one get away is something that sticks with you for a long, long time. “ Should-a, could-a, would-a” thoughts are replayed over and over again as you think back to what could have been done dif-ferently so the outcome might have turned out better.

Yeah, it’s pretty sicken-ing all right. But, in one instance, it can be far worse.

The worst case scenario is when a deer hunter takes a shot at a trophy buck, makes the hit, blood trails it until the blood runs out and comes away empty handed, not know-ing the fate of the animal. And more than likely, the hunter has put in lots of time and effort for this one opportunity only to bungle it to the max.

Sportsmen try to make clean and humane kills

while hunting, but if you hunt deer long enough, a misplaced shot causing the animal not to be re-

covered is bound to happen. It h a p p e n s to the best of us. If it hasn’t, it prob-ably will at some time or anoth-er.

I know it’s a little late in the game to be talking about shot placement considering there are only a few days are left in the season, but I wouldn’t want a similar occurrence to haunt you like it has another hunter I’ve spoken with recently. Maybe, by mentioning it, you’ll be better prepared if a down-to-the-wire last chance opportunity pres-ents itself in the waning

days of the season.Not meaning to throw

salt on his wounds, but the shot this hunter took is one that should never be taken as far as I’m concerned. I’ve heard too many stories of bucks being shot square in the brisket and never found. The shot is simply too risky because there’s too much bone to shoot through in the middle of the breast plate.

A frontal shot, however, would have been okay if he had taken aim toward one side on what could be called the armpit area. The bullet would have got-ten through to the “broiler room” and caused signifi -cant damage to the heart and lungs. A lot of times, a buck will fold up right there in his tracks when a shot is placed in this area.

What happened was this particular hunter got in a rush. The buck came

in straight toward him fast under low light con-ditions and he panicked. Thinking the deer had made him and was about to bolt, he took the fi rst available shot, fi guring this would be his one and only opportunity.

The key word here is “panic.” Things can some-times get hairy quick in the deer woods. You’ve got to keep your compo-sure with your head on straight when the mo-ment of truth is unfold-ing in front of your eyes. Panic causes ill- advised shots, and ill- advised shots lead to lost deer.

A broadside shot direct-ly into the “wheel-house” is what we all wish to take. But, you know as well as I the terrain around here is nothing close to the wide open spaces of South Texas, where it seems hunters have an eternity to study the deer before

taking the shot. So, we have to make shot deci-sions based on we’ve got to work with. That means being able to shoot with pinpoint accuracy to hit other smaller vital areas if the need arises.

Well-placed head and neck shots are always le-thal, but you have little room for error. Missing just a little on a head shot can mess up the antlers or, worse, severely wound the animal.

A deer can be dropped like a ton of bricks when shot directly beneath where the tail connects. Again, there’s little room for error, and the shot is more than a bit risky if your marksmanship is not up to par.

The best shot to take other than a broadside shot, especially if you’re hunting in tight quarters from an elevated stand, is right down between the

shoulder blades. There will be no blood trailing with this shot.

No one likes injuring and losing a deer. The discouragement lasts for a long, long time.

Know your abili-ties, keep your head on straight and don’t panic in the heat of the moment so it will be less likely to happen to you.

If you’re not confi dent in taking the shot, don’t take it. Most likely, the deer will still be around to hunt next year.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist and Alcorn Coun-ty resident David Green is an avid hunter and fi sherman in the Cross-roads area. For anyone wishing to share his own unique outdoor story or have any news to re-port pertaining to the outdoors, David can be contacted at [email protected].)

Better shot decisions help prevent discouragement

David GreenOutdoors

Whether you are a pho-tographer, a hunter or just like viewing wildlife on a sunny afternoon, anyone who has spent time over-looking a food plot will have a deep appreciation for wildlife plantings.

Food plots are very at-tractive to wildlife enthu-siasts because they can supplement daily nutri-tional needs at a low cost. These plots can be de-signed to serve as a source of food and cover. Well-managed food plots have the potential to not only

increase the wildlife pop-ulation and their quality of health, but can also in-crease our opportunities for wildlife viewing.

To aid landowners who would like to plant wild-life food plots, Wildlife Mississippi is continu-ing its popular Wildlife Habitat Seed Program. Through this program, Wildlife Mississippi will make seed available at a minimal cost.

The Wildlife Habitat Seed Program is designed to provide an incentive for landowners to establish and maintain food plots

that will yield a variety of benefi ts to the landowner as well as to the wildlife he or she is managing.

Corn, soybean and grain sorghum will be available through Wildlife Missis-sippi’s Spring 2013 Wild-life Habitat Seed Program. All seed has been treated and has good germination rates. Wildlife Mississippi will also be taking pre-or-ders for winter wheat, to be distributed in the fall.

If planted properly, the various types of seed will be utilized by a variety of species of wildlife. White-tailed deer, turkeys, bob-

white quail, mourning doves, waterfowl and many species of song-birds will benefi t from the plantings of the seed that is offered.

The guidelines regard-ing this program are sim-ple and easy to follow.

Anyone interested in obtaining seed should send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Wildlife Mississippi with a request for an order form and planting recom-mendations for the seed. Wildlife Mississippi will be taking orders until March 8. This will allow

Wildlife Mississippi to place the orders in a time-ly manner to ensure that they will be fi lled in time for the planting season.

Shipping and handling charges incurred by Wild-life Mississippi are in-cluded in the price of the seed. The costs will be $18 per 50 lb. bag for corn, $12 per 50 lb. bag for sor-ghum, $12 per 50 lb. bag for soybeans and $9 per 50 lb. bag of winter wheat. Pick up locations will be Tupelo, Greenville, Hat-tiesburg and Madison.

For an order form and planting recommenda-

tions for this benefi cial program, send a self-ad-dressed stamped enve-lope to Wildlife Mississip-pi, PO Box 10, Stoneville, Miss. 38776. If you wish to place your order online, please visit our website at www.wildlifemiss.org.

(James L. Cummins is executive director of Wildlife Mississippi, a non-profi t, conservation organization founded to conserve, restore and en-hance fi sh, wildlife and plant resources through-out Mississippi. Their website is www.wild-lifemiss.org.)

Seed for food plots now available through Wildlife MississippiBY JAMES L. CUMMINS

Conservation Corner

SAWMILL

CONTINUED FROM 1B

Assistance

Iuka NA meetingA Narcotics Anony-

mous meeting is held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. at the Johnson-Ford-Mitchrell Commu-nity Center, 707 Spring Street in Iuka. Call 662-279-6435 for directions.

Food ministryBread of Life Ministries

is an outreach of the Alcorn Baptist Associa-tion Food Pantry -- every Thursday from 10-10:30 a.m. at Tate Baptist Church on Harper Road.

Announcements and devotionals by various pastors and others are followed by personal at-tention as well as food distribution. Food dona-tions and volunteers are welcome. For more information, call 731-645-2806.

Call for HelpA service of United

Way of Corinth and Al-corn County, First Call for Help is a telephone ser-vice that connects call-ers with programs in the community available to help those in need. This information and refer-ral program is available to the public, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Knowing what services are available and how to access them is the first step to getting help. For further information, call 286-6500.

Living WillThe Magnolia Regional

Health Center’s Patient Advocate’s Office offers free forms and assis-tance for those wishing to express their medical

wishes through a living will or advanced direc-tive. Anyone interested in learning more should call 293-1117.

Senior activitiesThe First Presbyterian

Senior Adult Ministry has two fitness classes avail-able to senior adults. Judy Smelzer leads a stretching/toning class on Mondays at 9 a.m. in the fellowship hall. There is no charge.

FPC is also hosting a Wii sports class for senior adults on Tues-days at 9 a.m. There is no cost to participate. Call the church office at 286-6638 to register or Kimberly Grantham at 284-7498.

Red CrossThe Northeast Mis-

sissippi Chapter of the Red Cross offers a wide variety of assistance and services, including disas-ter relief.

The Northeast Missis-sippi Chapter includes 16 counties. It is head-quartered in Tupelo, with offices in Tishomingo, New Albany, Starkville and Columbus. Although Red Cross no longer has a Corinth office, the orga-nization wants to stress it continues to offer ser-vices in Alcorn County.

People seeking disas-ter assistance in North-east Mississippi can call the Tupelo headquarters during office hours at 662-842-6101. The toll-free after hours phone line is 1-855-891-7325.

The Red Cross’ service line for the armed forces is 877-272-7337. They also offer health and

safety training, including first aid, baby-sitting and CPR, as well as disaster training for businesses.

To learn more about the Red Cross health and safety training call 1-800-733-2767.

Friendship classThe Friendship Class

meets weekly on Thurs-day at 6:30 p.m. in the fellowship hall of the First Presbyterian Church on Shiloh Road. This group of mentally chal-lenged adults and men-tors enjoy sharing time together, games, crafts, singing and refresh-ments. For more infor-mation, call the church office at 286-6638.

Story HourPre-school Story Hour

is held each Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Corinth Library. Year-round art exhibits are also on display and educational non-profit groups meet in the auditorium monthly.

The Corinth Friends of the Library hold their ongoing book sale inside the library. Hardback, paperback and audio books, and VHS and DVD donations to the library are always appreciated.

For more information, call 287-2441.

Marines helping Marines

“The Few and the Proud — Marines Help-ing Marines” — a United States Marine Corps League is a visitation program for senior inac-tive Marines. When a senior inactive Marine is housebound or in a nurs-

ing home or hospice, the Corinth detachment will visit fellow Marines — because once a Marine always a Marine.

For more information, call 662-287-3233.

Volunteers neededMagnolia Regional Hos-

pice is currently seeking individuals or groups to be trained as volunteers. Hospice is a program of caring for individuals who are terminally ill and choose to remain at home with family or a caregiver. Some of the ministry opportunities for volunteers are sitting with the patient in their homes to allow the caregiver a break, grocery shopping, reading to a patient, craft opportunities, bereave-ment/grief support and in-office work.

For more information, contact Lila Wade, vol-unteer coordinator at 662-293-1405 or 1-800-843-7553.

Program expandedThe Northeast Mis-

sissippi Planning and Development District/ Elderly and Disabled Medicaid Waiver Pro-gram has expanded into Alcorn, Prentiss, Tippah and Tishomingo Coun-ties. This home and com-munity based program is an alternative to nursing home placement and can offer services such as homemakers, expanded home health services, home delivered meals, adult day services, es-corted transportation, in-home respite and case management.

For more information, call 1-800-745-6961.

Flu vaccine availableSeasonal flu shots

are now available at all Mississippi State Department of Health (MSDH) county clinics. The seasonal flu vaccine is recommended for any-one age six months and older. Those particularly at risk for influenza com-plications include young children, adults 50 and older, pregnant women, and those with chronic illnesses.

Seasonal flu vaccina-tions for adults are $25. Those 18 and under can receive seasonal flu vaccinations for $10 through the Vaccines for Children program. High-dosage vaccinations for those 65 and older are available for $50. The pneumonia vaccine is also available for $72. Medicare and Medicaid recipients are asked to bring their cards with them to the clinic.

For more information, contact the Alcorn Coun-ty Health Clinic at 662-287-6121 or visit the MSDH website at www.HealthyMS.com.

Genealogy societyThe Alcorn County Ge-

nealogical Society is now located at the southeast corner of the Alcorn County Courthouse base-ment in the old veterans’ services office. It is open Tuesday-Friday from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.

Support groups■ The Crossroads

Group of Narcotics Anon-ymous meets Monday, Wednesday and Friday at noon, and at 7 p.m., seven days a week, at

506 Cruise Street in Corinth. All meetings are non-smoking.

The Northeast Missis-sippi area of Narcotics Anonymous Hotline is 662-841-9998.

■ The Corinth Down-town Group AA meets Sundays and Tuesdays at 8 p.m. at the First Baptist Church, 501 N. Main Street, Corinth.

For more information for all area AA groups, please call 662-212-2235.

■ An Alcoholics Anony-mous meeting is held in Iuka at the old Chevy dealership building off old Hwy. 25 each Wednesday at 7 p.m. and Friday at 7:30 p.m.

Alcoholics Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women whose com-mon welfare is to stay sober and help others achieve sobriety. The Iuka meeting is an open meeting, anyone who has a problem with alco-hol or other substances is welcome to attend.

For more information, call 662-660-3150.

■ The Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group in Corinth is partnered with the Alzheimer’s As-sociation Mississippi Chapter. Keri Roaten is the facilitator. The group meets every first Thurs-day of each month at the Corinth Public Library, from 6-7 p.m.

The group discusses the hardships of those caring for people effect-ed by the disease and offer several different resources as well. For more information, con-tact [email protected] or 662-594-5526.

Page 15: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Wisdom

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Godparents-to-be discover another couple in the wings

Daily Corinthian • 3BSunday, January 27, 2013

DEAR ABBY: My fi -ance’s friend “Art” and his wife, “Julie,” just had a baby. While Julie was pregnant she asked my fi ance and me to be god-parents.

Although we could not attend her baby shower due to a previous com-mitment, we contributed several gifts as well as a quilt I had made.

A few weeks later, Julie posted on her social net-working site that she was thankful for her baby’s godparents and named an entirely different couple – not us.

I am offended. If she had discussed her rea-son for the change with me, I would have under-stood. But there was no dialogue, and to this day I have never received so

much as a thank-you for our s h o w e r presents.

I would like to dis-tance my-self from Julie, but w i t h o u t damaging

the relationship between Art and my fi ance, who thinks I am overreacting and should let it go. What are your thoughts? – NOT A GODMOTHER

DEAR NOT A GOD-MOTHER: Julie may have been upset that you and your fi ance didn’t at-tend the baby shower, or she may have spoken too quickly when she asked you to be godparents and didn’t have the courage to

say so.Whether you can let this

go only you can decide, but I do think that before you make up your mind, you should have a chat with her and clear the air – if only because your fi -ance and her husband are such good friends.

DEAR ABBY: My husband’s younger sis-ter, “Cindy,” is mentally ill. She has caused tre-mendous problems in the family. She has been ar-rested too many times to remember and is now on fi ve years’ probation for injury to a child. My in-laws continue making ex-cuses for her and are the worst enablers I have ever known.

My husband once urged his dad to put Cindy into a group home or program

that will take care of her because his parents are getting up in years.

They refuse because it would mean they’d have to have Cindy offi cially committed, and they think there is still some magic doctor out there who will fi x her.

Can my husband do anything as a last effort before something hap-pens to one of his parents, or she winds up in jail? –SAD IN TEXAS

DEAR SAD: Your hus-band should try to con-vince his parents to get some family counseling. It might help them accept that their daughter needs more help than they are equipped to give her. An outside, objective person should weigh in so that Cindy can get the profes-

sional help she so obvi-ously needs.

If she is physically, psy-chologically or emotion-ally abusing her parents, Adult Protective Services can step in to be sure they are protected.

When your in-laws pass away, if your sister-in-law becomes a danger to her-self or those around her, a family member can re-quest a commitment and psychological evaluation.

DEAR ABBY: A num-ber of years ago, when two of my sons got mar-ried, I paid for two lovely rehearsal dinners among other wedding costs. Both marriages ended in di-vorce.

Now they are both en-gaged again and planning weddings for next sum-mer. My question is, how

many rehearsal dinners do I have to pay for? And how many other wedding expenses am I expected to pay for the second time around? – MOTHER OF GROOMS IN VIR-GINIA

DEAR MOTHER OF GROOMS: From now on, you do not have to pay for anything. The ex-penses should be paid for by your sons and their brides-to-be, especially if their fi ancees have also been married previously.

(Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was found-ed by her mother, Pau-line Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.Dear-Abby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Today is Sunday, Jan. 27, the 27th day of 2013. There are 338 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight: On Jan. 27, 1973,

the Vietnam peace ac-cords were signed in Paris.

On this date: In 1756, composer

Wolfgang Amadeus Mo-zart was born in Salz-burg, Austria.

 In 1880, Thomas Edi-son received a patent for his electric incan-descent lamp.

 In 1888, the National Geographic Society was incorporated in Wash-ington, D.C.

 In 1901, opera com-poser Giuseppe Verdi died in Milan, Italy, at age 87.

 In 1913, the musi-cal play “The Isle O’ Dreams” opened in New

York; it featured the song “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling” by Ernest R. Ball, Chauncey Olcott and George Graff Jr.

In 1943, some 50 bombers struck Wil-helmshaven in the first all-American air raid against Germany during World War II.

In 1944, the Soviet Union announced the complete end of the deadly German siege of Leningrad, which had lasted for more than two years.

In 1945, Soviet troops liberated the Nazi concentration camps Auschwitz and Birkenau in Poland.

In 1951, an era of atomic testing in the Nevada desert began as an Air Force plane dropped a one-kiloton bomb on Frenchman Flat.

In 1967, astronauts

Virgil I. “Gus” Grissom, Edward H. White and Roger B. Chaffee died in a flash fire during a test aboard their Apollo spacecraft. More than 60 nations signed a treaty banning the orbit-ing of nuclear weapons.

In 1977, the Vatican issued a declaration reaffirming the Roman Catholic Church’s ban on female priests.

In 1984, singer Mi-chael Jackson suffered serious burns to his scalp when pyrotech-nics set his hair on fire during the filming of a Pepsi-Cola TV commer-cial at the Shrine Audi-torium in Los Angeles.

 Ten years ago: The Bush administra-

tion dismissed Iraq’s response to U.N. disar-mament demands as inadequate. Meanwhile, chief U.N. inspector

Hans Blix charged that Iraq had never genuinely accepted U.N. resolu-tions demanding its dis-armament and warned that “cooperation on substance” was neces-sary for a peaceful solu-tion.

Five years ago: Former Indonesian

president Suharto, whose regime killed hundreds of thousands of left-wing political opponents, died in Jakarta at age 86. Gor-don B. Hinckley, the 15th president of The Church

of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, died in Salt Lake City, Utah, at age 97. Novak Djokovic fended off unseeded Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 (2) in the Austra-lian Open final, earning his first Grand Slam title.

Today In History

Please Check for Ad Instructions in the Copy Tab

Edward Wyatt Paul CrumBorn March 21, 2012

Parents: Mariellen Crum & Danny L. CrumGrandparents: Dorothy Smith, Tommy Killough, Karl Moore, Harm Paul Crum,

Harold & Sheree BurlesonGreat-Grandparents: Sue Stewart,

Maxine Killough, Bobby Edward Smith & Easter Smith

Parents: Matthew Boothe and Valerie Bray

Grandparents: Becky Bray,

Lester & Pat BrayDonna & John Waldon and Jeff Boothe

Brayden Boothe

Born Feb. 22,

2012

Parents: Keisha & John WernerGrandparents: Jody & Teresa Suggs

Great Grandparents: Ed & Jeannie Watson

McKenna Emberlynn

Born January 28, 2012

The Daily Corinthian Attorney General

Jim Hood, Secretary of State Delbert Hose-mann, Shred-it, Presi-dent/CEO John O’Hara of the Better Business Bureau, BancorpSouth, CredAbility (formerly The Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Jackson), and Missis-sippi State University Extension Service an-nounce Mississippi’s

seventh “Community Shred Day.”

The purpose is to pro-mote consumer protec-tion and awareness of identity theft, one of the fastest-growing crimes in the country and the state.

On “Community Shred Day,” partici-pants are invited to bring up to fi ve bags of sensitive documents to be shredded for free.

This is for individual participants only and not businesses.

“Community Shred Day” locations are being held all around the state on Friday, March 8 and Saturday, March 9.

On Friday, March 8 from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., anyone can take their documents to be shred-ded to the Wal-Mart Su-percenter, 3929 N. Glo-ster St. in Tupelo.

‘Community Shred Day’ scheduled

Page 16: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

4B • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Ada

mS

hawn

Fiel

ding

Born September 14, 2012Parents:

Corey & Kim FieldingGrandparents:

Kathy & Harold Dixon, Lynn & Cliff Fielding

AAJJ BB

ubreeubree o lair o lairBorn April 12, 2012Born April 12, 2012

Parents:Parents:

Amber Scott & Josh BlairAmber Scott & Josh BlairGrandparents: Martha Litle, Gregory Scott,Grandparents: Martha Litle, Gregory Scott, Cindy Blair Cindy Blair

Great Grandparents: Greg & Helen Scott, Great Grandparents: Greg & Helen Scott, Joe & Brenda Powell, Melvis & Carolyn CalveryJoe & Brenda Powell, Melvis & Carolyn Calvery

Dana Leigh Hammock

Parents: Josh & Lori HammockGrandparents: Ronnie & Brenda

Hammock, Cathy Moore

Born June 6, 2012

John Reeder CookseyBorn March 8, 2012

Parents: Dr.Jonathan and Katie Cooksey

Grandparents: Jackie & Annette Cooksey, Tom & Sharon Oaks

Great Grandparents: Betty Oaks, Jane Crum, Earline Sewell & Homer

Cooksey.

Karlee Mallory RussellKarlee Mallory RussellBorn March 1, 2012

Parents: Micky (Bubba) & Aleshia Russell of Walnut

Emmett Jace HardinBorn July 25, 2012

Parents: Michael Hardin and Tiffany HarrellSister: Mackenzie Hardin

Grandparents: Danny & Patricia Hardin.

Born Dec. 28, 2012

Parents: Cynthia & Jose Garcia of

Atlanta, GAGrandparents:

Tony Garcia & Aurelia

Mia Jaqueline Garcia

Avery Ward AndersonBorn August 9, 2012

Parents: John & Ashley AndersonGrandparents:

Tazel & Sherry ChoateJames H. & Linda Anderson

Jacob VanderfordBorn May 25, 2012

Parents: Brent & Susan VanderfordSister: Baleigh

Grandparents: Charles & Barbara Vanderford, Shirley Burcham & the late Bobby Burcham

Great Grandmother: Sammie Clydean Wamsley

Parents:Eddie & Anna Willis

Grandparents: Jamie & Ellen Hendrix, Edward & Brenda Willis

AddieElizabeth

WillisBorn:

Dec. 3, 2012Hadley Lynn Huddleston

Born Sept. 24, 2012Parents:

Jon & Andrea HuddlestonBrother: LandonGrandparents:

Darron & Debora Morelock, Stanley & Judy Huddleston

Great Grandparents: Willie Joe & Martha Jackson,

Barrion & Mary Morelock

Damian Mykel YoungbloodBorn: June 21, 2012Parents: Tony & Amanda YoungbloodSister: Savanah YoungbloodGrandparents: Carl & Holly YoungbloodAddress: ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

Happy 1st Birthday, McKenna

EmberlynnBorn Jan. 28th,

2012

Love, Mommy, Daddy, & Mirabella

Nanny & DadaTyler, Chelsea & Aslyn

Mamaw & Papaw

We love you!

Page 17: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • 5B

Keyada Laquay Gunn

Born: June 6, 2012Parents: Celia Luster

& Shonkoo GunnGrandparents: Onitha Gunn,

Steve Gunn, Celia Price, John Neal

Parents: James & Brooke WinchesterGrandparents: Ricky & the late Teresa

Stewart & Jill Stewart, Marie BryanGreat Grandparents: Monk & Dade Stewart, Mildred Riggs, Johnny &

Martha Bryan

Madalyn Grace

WinchesterBorn

May 24, 2012

Memphis “Gage” BurressBorn August 17, 2012

Parents:Parents: Josh & Hannah BurressGrandparents:Grandparents: Keith & Kelly Davis,

Andy & Sadonnah Burress, Robert & Michelle Loyd

Great Grandparents:Great Grandparents: Kerry & Joye Burcham, Allen & Christine Davis,

Junior & Kathryn Chapman

Dawson Alexander QuinnBorn Oct. 14, 2012

Parents: Benjamin & Ashley Quinn of North Carolina

Siblings: Sister - Emma Claire Quinn, Brother - Camp Quinn

Grandparents: Billy & Rhonda English, Mike & Gayra Quinn

Great Grandparents: Rev. Roy & Helen Bostick,

Dexter & Ruth Sample

Rexlee MichaelBorn Feb. 8, 2012

Parents: Rodney & JacElynn Michael

Grandparents: Tammy Thomas & Ronnie Taylor,

and Robbie Michael

Rebekah Adora DildyBorn September 18, 2012

Parents: Jeremy Wayne & Deeana Joy DildyGrandparents: Deene & Diane Rogers and Tony & Helen Dildy

Bentley Ryder GrayBorn Aug. 17, 2012

Parents: Whitney Braddock & Billy GraySiblings: Trayton, Jade & TaylornGrandparents: Nancy Braddock, Willie Braddock, Greg & Kathey (Hicks) GrahamGreat Grandparents: Janie Braddock, David & Annie HIcks, J. W. & Martha Braddock, L. B. Dixon

Ella SwindleBorn July 9, 2012

Parents: Derek & Lauren SwindleBrother: Preston Swindle

Grandparents: Laura Holloway, Rodney & Carolyn Swindle, Danny Holloway

Great Grandparents: Ginger Swindle, Linda Harris, Ray Gene & Betty Holloway

& Peggy Bizwell

Stanton Riley SandersBorn December 14, 2012

Parents: Blakely Sanders & Lindsey VuncannonGrandparents: Dale Vuncannon, Jeff Vuncannon, Jimmy & Linda Sanders, David & Chrissy Larson

Great Grandparents: Reeder Vuncannon & Charles Tennison, James & Reba Gray

Delilah Faith PannellBorn June 14, 2012

Parents: Heath & Libby PannellGrandparents: William & Tammy Pannell

Shane & Becky SpencerGodfather: Will Downs

Godmother: Heather Luna

Charlie Grace CarterCharlie Grace CarterBorn June 26, 2012Born June 26, 2012

Parents: Jamie Carter & Kristan BerrymanParents: Jamie Carter & Kristan BerrymanGrandparents: Donna & Eddie Berryman, Grandparents: Donna & Eddie Berryman,

Linda & Freddie RogersLinda & Freddie RogersGreat Grandparents: Blanche & Charles Great Grandparents: Blanche & Charles

Mullins, Betty & Taylor Smith, Mullins, Betty & Taylor Smith, Howard & Naomi BerrymanHoward & Naomi Berryman

Ki SeagoKi SeagoBorn Nov. 26, 2012Born Nov. 26, 2012

Parents: Mike & Whitney SeagoGrandparents: Sheila Tsagarakis, Jimmy Tsagarakis, Kathryn & Robert Graeber,

Larry & Nita SeagoGreat Grandparent: Hurley Essary

Andie Mae LambertBorn Oct. 29, 2012

Parents: Jonathan & Jolona LambertGrandparents: Ricky & Jo

Ann McDonald, Lisa Lambert, Greg & Ann Roberts & the late

Alonzo Cummings

Page 18: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

6B • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Sunday, January 27, 2013

BY HOLIDAY MATHISCreators Syndicate

The astral infl uences that come with this Leo moon might dampen its spirits a bit. So if you feel like an un-satisfi ed child even though you have a friend and a room full of toys to ex-plore, consider this: Happiness is not a place. You can’t get there. You can only decide that you are there.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Can your joy run out, or is it an infi nitely renewable resource? You could ask the same question of love. The an-swer: When you subtract all resis-tance, the feelings will fl ow endlessly.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It won’t be enough for you to be better than average at what you do. Excel-ling beyond your peers also brings limited rewards. You’ll be happiest when you do what it takes to advance toward mastery.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). In some aspects of relationships, you are still a beginner. You’ll learn through prac-tice. Each new interaction has some-thing to teach you as long as you don’t assume you already know everything.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). In spite of what self-help gurus pro-fess, there is much valuable knowl-edge and inspiration to be gained by watching television, as long as you do it mindfully. With the remote in hand, keep your inner critic awake.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Your cu-riosity will be stimulated by areas of interest just outside of your current realm. It only takes one phone call or introduction to break into an ad-jacent circle and make new friends there.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Shyness is a mask for fear of public opinion. One way to get around it is to agree internally to be disliked. Better to be disliked for expressing what’s really on your mind than to be liked for be-ing someone you’re not.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ve built your life with certain people, but you’re not exactly like them. It’s a day to celebrate your differences. It’s wonderful to be part of a tribe and still be accepted as an individual.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). While it’s temporarily wonderful to avoid criticism and impress others with your abilities, it has nothing to do with long-term satisfaction. Concern yourself instead with what feels com-fortable and right.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). A project gets much simpler once you abandon the pretense of being per-fect. It’s unnecessary, not to mention impossible. You’ll be doing yourself a huge favor by simply forgetting about perfection and going for fun.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Maybe you want things the way they were, but no matter how hard you try, there’s really no going back. You’re smarter now. You’ll use the past to build in a new direction.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). As the darling of the planets these days, you’ll often enjoy the vibrant feeling of your mind, body and spirit synch-ing perfectly to help you reach new heights of accomplishment.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll have a strong sense of what really matters. It may seem as though this is no big deal, but indeed, it’s a rare and fi ne quality, as there are many around with trifl ing concerns.

Horoscopes

Cryptoquip

NEW YORK — J.R. Ew-ing wouldn’t hesitate to cheat his fellow man. He also famously cheated death.

In the second-season fi nale of “Dallas” back in 1980, he was shot by an unknown assailant in his offi ce and left for dead. But he recovered nicely, and the cliffhanger ques-tion that gripped the na-tion (Who shot J.R.?) was answered that November in an episode seen by 80 million viewers.

This time, J.R. won’t get off so easy. The sec-ond season of TNT’s re-booted “Dallas” poses an even more dramatic ques-tion: Who killed J.R.?

Meanwhile, viewers will have to reckon with the loss of arguably TV’s greatest villain, and bid farewell to the actor who portrayed him so indeli-bly and also cheated death for years. Larry Hagman, who died of cancer at 81

the day after Thanksgiv-ing, was diagnosed in 1992 with cirrhosis of the liver from a life of heavy drinking and, three years later, when a malignant tumor was discovered on his liver, successfully un-derwent a transplant.

This double loss would be a burden for any show to bear. “Dallas,” return-ing at 8 p.m. Monday, comes fully loaded.

“I think viewers want closure,” said Linda Gray, who plays J.R.’s long-suf-fering ex-wife, Sue Ellen. “They want to mourn Lar-ry Hagman and J.R. Ew-ing. They want to know they can grieve the fact he won’t be around.”

But all that comes later. With its two-hour season premiere, “Dallas” carries on in familiar fashion, with the expected two-timing, squabbles, a kid-napping revealed, a sto-len identity and assorted other mischief.

And never fear: J.R., though visibly frail, con-

tinues his reign as a scheming oilman and ras-cally Ewing patriarch.

“I came over to deliver some muffi ns to the pret-ty little secretaries,” he announces on making an unannounced visit to Ew-ing Energies headquar-ters before he laments, “Who could have guessed so many would turn out to be MEN? Where’s the sport in THAT?”

In another scene, J.R. shares sly counsel with his son, John Ross, on double-crossing other members of the family: “Love, hate, jealousy: Mix ‘em up and they make a mean martini. And when we take over Ewing En-ergies, you’ll slake your thirst — with a twist!”

The new “Dallas,” which debuted last June, is stocked with a troupe of young regulars (includ-ing Josh Henderson, who plays John Ross), as well as veterans of the origi-nal CBS series, notably Gray and Patrick Duffy

as J.R.’s ever-upright brother, Bobby. J.R. will appear in a minimum of fi ve or as many as seven of the season’s episodes. (It remains to be seen how footage of Hagman might be adapted to depict J.R.’s murder.)

After that, can “Dallas” survive the dual deaths of its central character and legendary star?

“Larry being gone doesn’t eliminate the in-fl uence of the character of J.R.,” Duffy pointed out. Who knows what land mines J.R. will have left behind? “We can fi nd business deals he did or schemes he started that now are coming home to roost, and they can turn up for years to come.”

“Whatever will happen on the show, we will be talking about J.R. Ew-ing and he will have done things that have a ripple effect,” Gray agreed. “He will always be there.”

“There’s a lot of driving forces on the show — not

just J.R.,” added “Dallas” executive producer Cyn-thia Cidre, who, inter-viewed by phone a couple of weeks ago, was parked outside a posh Dallas so-cial club where the wake for J.R. was about to be fi lmed.

She said this season she tried to use Hagman spar-ingly.

“He was the most de-lightful man and a total professional,” she said, “but he wasn’t well and we didn’t want to overtax him.”

“We didn’t have a Plan B, on purpose,” said Ci-dre. “We just knew that we had Larry, so let’s use him, let’s enjoy him, and if something happens, we’ll scramble and fi x it. I had great faith in the writ-ers’ room. We knew the day might come and what we would do then: Figure it out.”

That day came in late November when she got a call from Duffy. “He told me, ‘Larry’s in the hospi-

tal and it isn’t good. He’s saying goodbye.’ In 24 hours we had fi xed one of the scripts. We had two more scripts that had to be adjusted, and then this episode we’re shooting now, the Goodbye Epi-sode.”

Roughly 85 percent of the season’s story line remains intact, she said, supplemented by the death of J.R. and the “Who Killed J.R.?” mys-tery surrounding it.

The mystery, she said, will continue through epi-sode 15, “with a giant, de-lightful, delicious climax in the season fi nale.”

To get there, shoot-ing continues until April on the Dallas set, where, even two months after Hagman’s passing, “I’m lonely because my best friend isn’t there to play with,” Duffy said. “I was with him from 1978 un-til his fi nal hours in the hospital. But I have no re-grets. Every day I think of him and smile.”

Who killed J.R.? ‘Dallas’ makes its returnBY FRAZIER MOORE

AP Television Writer

NEW YORK — In Net-fl ix’s bid for a fl agship original drama of its own — a “Sopranos” to its HBO — the subscription streaming service is pre-senting a high-class adap-tation of a British political thriller offered up all at once, with its fi rst season immediately ready for TV-viewing gluttony.

The show, “House of Cards,” is a bold attempt to remake the television landscape with the kind of prestige project cable channels like HBO, AMC and Showtime have used to defi ne themselves. But

“House of Cards,” pro-duced by David Fincher and starring Kevin Spac-ey, won’t be on the dial of that refuge of quality dra-mas — cable television — but streamed online.

“It’s sort of like we’re the new television series that isn’t on television,” says Spacey.

On Feb. 1, all 13 hours of “House of Cards” will premiere on Netfl ix, a po-tentially landmark event that could herald the tran-sition of television away from pricey cable bundles and toward the Internet — a process well under way at YouTube, Hulu, Yahoo and others, but not

yet tested to the degree of “House of Cards.”

The show is no low-budget Web series, but an HBO-style production for which Netfl ix reportedly paid in the neighborhood of $100 million for two seasons.

“When we got into original programming, I wanted it to be loud and deliberate,” says Ted Sa-randos, head of content at Netfl ix, who only will say the cost was in the “high end” for a TV show. “I wanted consumers to know that we were do-ing it and I wanted the industry to know that we were doing it so we could

attract more interesting projects. Doing it in some half way, some small thing, it wasn’t going to get us there.”

The revered British original aired in three seasons from 1990 to 1996 and was adapted from the books by Mi-chael Dobbs, a notable politician and adviser to Margaret Thatcher.

It starred Ian Richard-son as a scheming, ma-nipulating politician who shared his power-hungry strategies directly into the camera. With a darkly comic antihero as protag-onist, it was a forerunner to characters like Walter

White of “Breaking Bad” and Dexter Morgan of “Dexter.”

Independent stu-dio Media Rights Capi-tal, a producer of fi lms like “Ted” and “Babel,” purchased the rights to “House of Cards” and paired Fincher with the project, along with Beau Willimon, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter of another political dra-ma, “The Ides of March.”

When MRC approached different networks (HBO, Showtime and others), it reached out to Netfl ix about adding the show to its digital library fol-lowing a run on TV. But

Netfl ix wanted “House of Cards” as a statement show to launch a crop of original programming.

A general spirit of rookie experimenta-tion pervades “House of Cards,” the fi rst TV show for Fincher, the director of “Fight Club” and “The Social Network.”

“I walk into this as a total neophyte. I don’t watch much TV,” says Fincher, who directed the fi rst two hours and has overseen the whole series. “What was interesting to me was the notion of hav-ing a relationship with an audience that was longer than two hours.”

Netflix shuffles the TV deck with exclusive ‘House of Cards’BY JAKE COYLE

AP Entertainment Writer

Page 19: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • 7B

Valentine’s Day2060

VALENTINE LOVE GRAMSDo You Have Someone Special You

Would Like to Tell Them How Much You Love Them This Valentine’s Day?

Send a message in our Special Page on Thursday, February 14, 2013.

Deadline to submit is Friday, February 8, 2013 by 5 p.m.

ONLY $10.00 FOR 5 LINES (up to 5 words per line)

Additional lines are $1.00 each. $5.00 per photo!!

Signature: __________________________Address/Phone Number: __________________________________________ ____________Love Gram Info: _______________________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ____________

MUST BE PREPAID BY CASH, CHECK, CREDIT OR DEBIT CARDEmail info & picture to [email protected] or bring by offi ce

at 1607 S. Harper Rd., Corinth M-F 8:00-5:00 no later thanFriday, February 8, 2013 by 5 p.m.

CarD of thanks0121

Card of ThanksThe family of Bobby Caldwell would like to express our deep

appreciation to family & friends for the fl owers, food, kind words, deeds & prayers

during the loss of our loved one.

Special thanks to Magnolia Funeral Home, Legacy

Hospice, Rev. Kenny McGill, singers & musicians. Also to

his Church Family at Pleasant Hill United Methodist Church.

Wife, children & grandchildren

CarD of thanks0121

Card of Thanks

The family of Charlene Frances Jaggars would like to thank everyone for your loving kindness, prayers, visits, calls,

cards & food during her illness & death. A special thank you to all her doctors, nurses & other care givers, Magnolia

Cancer Center, Magnolia Home Health, Cornerstone Rehabilitation Center, Magnolia ICU. Also to Shackelford Funeral Directors for your excellent

service, to Bro. Farrell Hester for your comforting message, & to the ladies at

Fraleys Chapel Church for the wonderful meal you provided for the family &

friends following the service.

Kenny & Shelia JaggarsFarris Jaggars

Sammy & Mary Anna Briley

CarD of thanks0121

CARD OF THANKS We would like to thank everyone for their calls, visits, & prayers during our

loving mother’s illness and death. Thanks to Bro. Trent Spencer, Bro.

Jackie Spencer & Bro. Trent Nethery for their help with the service & to James Box & Bethlehem choir for the music.

Thanks to all who prepared and/or served food, to the ones who sent fl owers & to

those who donated Bibles in her memory. Every act of kindness is greatly

appreciated so very much.

The family of Retha Spencer Austin

happy aDs0114

Charles Preston Swindle

celebrates his

3rd birthday on January 28th.

He is the son of Derek & Lauren Swindle from Corinth. He is the “big” brother of Ella Swindle.Grandparents are Laura Holloway, Rodney & Carolyn Swindle, Danny Holloway. Great-Grandparents are Ginger Swindle, Linda Harris, Peggy Bizwell, Ray Gene & Betty Holloway

ManufaCtureD hoMes for sale0747

CREDIT A little LOW?With a qualified income

we CAN get youAPPROVED

on a new home with ascore

as low as 575 and only10% down!

AND that is with a fixedinterest rate!

Windham HomesCorinth, MS

1-888-287-6996

DEAL OF THE MONTH,2003 28x64 Fleetwood3+2, home is in greatshape, lg. stone frontfireplace, total electric,lg. island bar in kitchen,lots of cabinets, masterbath has lg. tub w/sep-arate shower, home hasnew paint thru out.$3000 down & under$350 per month. 662-296-5923 or 662-401-1093.

I PAY TOP dollar forused homes. Call 662-286-5923 or 601-916-9796.

NEW YEARS Specia l ,2006 16x80, 3 BR, 2 BA,new appliances, AC,skirting, delivery & setup. Payments as low as$400 month. 662-419-3381.

NOT YOUR AVERAGE$28,000 home, 28x60 3BR, 2 BA, 2000 Redman.Home has built in enter-tainment center, kit-chen with dark beauti-ful cabinets and island,brand new furnace &a/c unti. Delivery & setup on your property in-c l u d e d w i t h p r i c eabove. Call now, 662-397-9339.

hoMes for sale0710

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

Mobile hoMes for sale0741

SALE - SALE - SALEModel Displays Must Go!

New Spacious 4 BR, 2BA homes starting at

$43,500Single Sections start at

$29,500Clayton HomesHwy 72 West,Corinth, MS

1/4 mile past MagnoliaHospital

ManufaCtureD hoMes for sale0747

BANK REPO. Has got togo! 16x80 3 BR, 2 fullBA's, needs good clean-ing & little TLC. Homehas deluxe cabinets, up-grade kitchen. Only$10,000. 662-401-1093 or662-296-5923.

CLEAN AS NEW, 16x80Metal on Metal 2001 3BR, 2 BA, includes dish-washer, stove, like newa/c, open f loorplanfrom kitchen to livingarea, larger masterbath, bed, & closet.Must be moved. $16,000.Won't find a better buy.Move in ready. 662-401-1093.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

hoMes for sale0710

8 CR 522, Corinth -Fantastic home forgrowing family. 2 liv-ing areas, breakfastnook, formal diningroom, office or 5thbedroom, basementwith gaming area, largelaundry, situated on 2acres with 5 additionalacres that can be pur-chased as well! Largedeck, shop, pond andlots of room to roam!Priced reduced! By ap-pointment, 662-284-5379.

CR 107, Corinth - Gor-geous 5 BR, 3 BA homewith partial basement,game room, screenedback porch, ingroundpool, shop, barn & roomto roam on over 4acres! Call Vicki Mullinswith Mid-South Real Es-tate Sales & Auctions,662-808-6011.

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

MisC. iteMs for sale0563

FREE ADVERTISINGAdvertise one item val-ued at $500 or less forfree. Price must be inad & will run for 5 daysin Daily Corinthian, 1day in Reporter & 1 dayin Banner Independent.

Ads may be up to ap-prox. 20 words includ-ing phone number. Theads must be for privateparty or personal mdse.& cannot include pets &supplies, livestock (incl.chickens, ducks, cattle,goats, etc) & supplies,garage sales, hay, fire-wood, & automobiles.

NO BUSINESS OR COMMERCIALADS ALLOWED!

Email ad to: freeads

@dailycorinthian.com

Or mail ad to Free Ads,P.O. Box 1800, Corinth,MS 38835, fax ad to 662-287-3525 or bring ad to1607 S. Harper Rd., Cor-inth.

* N O P H O N E C A L L SPLEASE. INCLUDE NAME& ADDRESS FOR OUR RE-CORDS.

(1) DECK, $25. 662-665-1587.

(3) MIRRORS, all sizes,$20. 662-665-1587.

(45) PURSES, $3 each. Allnew. 662-665-1587.

30 BASKETS, all sizes, $1to $2. 662-665-1587.

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

unfurnisheD apartMents0610

2 BR, w/d, stv/ref, sattv, CHA, $475 mo. 462-8221 or 415-1065.

MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR,stove, refrig., water.$365. 286-2256.

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375+util, 286-2255.

furnisheD apartMents0615

1BR/1BA, util inc, nopet/smoking. $500/500.Farm. 286-2843.

hoMes for rent0620

2 BR, 1 BA, 2032 Hwy 72.City school. Available2/1/13. $400 mo., $400dep. 662-279-9024.

3 BR, 1 1/2 BA, 2 CR 316.Available 2/1/13. $650mo., $500 dep. 662-279-9024.

3 BR, 1 BA, $450 mo.,$450 dep. Avail. 2/1/13.State Line area. 662-808-2827.

business plaCes/offiCes0670

AWESOME DOWNTOWNoffice. 510 Waldron St.New everything. NeedsTenate to keep it warm.Reasonable rent offerneeded. 662-643-9575.

Mobile hoMes for rent0675

householD GooDs0509

(4) LAMPS , $5.00 TO$20.00. 662-665-1587.

OLD WHITE rotary sew-i n g m a c h i n e , 1 9 3 0 ,made in USA, sews, hasinstruction books, but-ton hole attachment &other attachments .Nice. $80. 662-415-4063.

MusiCal MerChanDise0512

PEAVEY COMMERCIALS E R I E S p o w e r A M Pw/PEAVEY pre-amp,used 3 times. $350/OBO.662-462-7719 after 4 PM

SET OF BASS SPEAKERS,15" CTS FOLDED HORNENCLOSURES. $250/OBO662-808-2282

eleCtroniCs0518(3) COLOR TV'S, $20 to$60. 662-665-1587.

sportinG GooDs0527

EXER. MACHINE: Nordic-Track, exercise arms &legs $75. 662-665-1587.

REMINGTON AUTOMATIC742 30-06 deluxe w/3x9red field scope, $450w i t h s c o p e , $ 3 2 5without. 731-646-0984or 731-632-4604.

furniture0533(2) COUCHES (1 is Chaselounge couch). $100. 662-665-1587.

(2) COUCHES, like new,$70. 662-665-1587.

COLONIAL STYLE ROUNDTABLE w/2 leaves & 4chairs. $125. 662-415-7185

FAIRFIELD SETTEE, BRICKUMBER COLOR, L IKENEW. Perfect for office.$300 662-415-7185

KITCHEN TABLE, $40. 662-665-1587.

LOVE SEAT, $75. 662-665-1487.

PIEDMONT SIDE TABLES(2), LIKE NEW, $125.662-415-7185

SANIBEL/ASHLEY kg BRsu, frost Oak fin, sq psthd/ft brd, drsr, mrr,chst, ns, plwtop mat/bxspgs, $1250. 284-7388.

TV ENTERTAINMENT cen-ter, $35. 662-665-1587.

WanteD to rent/buy/traDe0554

M&M. CASH for junk cars& trucks. We pick up.6 6 2 - 4 1 5 - 5 4 3 5 o r731-239-4114.

MisC. iteMs for sale0563

FREE ADVERTISINGAdvertise one item val-ued at $500 or less forfree. Price must be inad & will run for 5 daysin Daily Corinthian, 1day in Reporter & 1 dayin Banner Independent.

Ads may be up to ap-prox. 20 words includ-ing phone number. Theads must be for privateparty or personal mdse.& cannot include pets &supplies, livestock (incl.chickens, ducks, cattle,goats, etc) & supplies,garage sales, hay, fire-wood, & automobiles.

NO BUSINESS OR COMMERCIALADS ALLOWED!

Email ad to: freeads

@dailycorinthian.com

Or mail ad to Free Ads,P.O. Box 1800, Corinth,MS 38835, fax ad to 662-287-3525 or bring ad to1607 S. Harper Rd., Cor-inth.

* N O P H O N E C A L L SPLEASE. INCLUDE NAME& ADDRESS FOR OUR RE-CORDS.

skilleD traDe0240THE INTERNATIONALBrotherhood of Electri-cal Workers, Local Union852 and the Corinth/Tu-pelo, MS Joint Appren-ticeship and TrainingCommittee are accept-ing applications for theElectrical Apprentice-ship. Applicants mustbe at least 18 years old,must have 1 year Alge-bra, and must bringcopy of High School di-ploma or G.E.D., HighSchool transcripts andbirth certificate. No dis-crimination because ofrace, color, religion, na-tional origin, sex or age.Applicants will be ac-cepted anytime Mondaythrough Friday, 9-12 at105 North MadisonStreet, Corinth, MS.662-286-2897.

truCkinG0244ATTENTION

DRIVER TraineesNeeded Now!No Experience

Necessary.Covenant Transport

needsentry-level semi drivers.

Premium equipment& benefits.Call Today!

1-888-540-7364

TEAM DRIVERS - OliveBranch, Miss iss ippi .Good Miles/Pay/Super:Benefits/Equip./TouchFree Freight, QuarterlyBonus, Pet Friendly!CDL-A, 2 yrs. OTR exp.,Clean Criminal Back-ground. Call HR 800-789-8 4 5 1 ,www.longist ics .com

restaurant0260JIMMY JOHN'S currentlyaccepting applicationsfor sandwich makers &delivery drivers. Greatpay, flex. hrs. Please ap-ply in person M-F, 12-4at 1310 Hwy 72 E. oremail [email protected]

businesses for sale0280

146 HWY 1-72, Iuka -former Italian Restaur-ant - The Esparanza.Business is currentlyc losed. Gazebo hasbeen enclosed for ex-tra dining space (20x22).Brick BBQ grilling areai n b a c k . C a l l V i c k iMullins with Mid-SouthReal Estate Sales & Auc-tions, 662-808-6011.

WEAVER'S BOUTIQUE &MERLE NORMAN - Busi-ness and all inventoryfor sale. Lines includingYankee Candle, WoodW i c k c a n d l e s , A r o -matique, Willow Treeand many others. RE-DUCED to $160,000. CallVicki Mullins with Mid-South Real Estate Sales& Auctions, 662-808-6011.

PETS

Cats/DoGs/pets0320BLUE TICK HOUNDS, m/f,8 wks. old, $100. 662-415-1100.

FARM

MERCHANDISE

instruCtion0180MEDICAL CAREERS be-gin here - Train ONLINEfor Allied Health andMedical Management.Job placement assist-ance. Computer avail-able. Financial Aid ifqualified. SCHEV author-ized. Call 877-206-5185.www.CenturaOnline.com

WORK ON JET ENGINES -Train for hands on Avia-tion Career. FAA ap-proved program. Finan-cial aid if qualified - Jobplacement assistance.CALL Aviation Instituteo f M a i n t e n a n c e .866-455-4317.

EMPLOYMENT

sales0208

BRANCH SALESREPRESENTATIVE

This job involves directsales, home inspec-tions, and proposal de-velopment; and identi-fies homeowner needs.Highly motivated indi-viduals with strongproblem-solving andcommunication skillspreferred. Six to twelvemonths of sales experi-ence preferred. As aTermin ix assoc iate ,you'll enjoy excellentcompensation and be-nefits as well as the op-portunity for the pro-fessional growth andrespect that comesfrom working for an in-dustry leader. Qualifiedcandidates must have ahigh school diploma orgeneral education de-gree (GED), good driv-ing record and success-fully pass a backgroundcheck and drug screen-ing. For consideration,contact Dusty Hutchinsa [email protected] or go on l ine atj o b s . t e r m i n i x . c o m(Counce, TN location).EOE/AA M/F/D/V

CIRCULATION SALESPOSITION

(Outside Marketing forNewspaper

Subscriptions)

•Some phoneSolicitation

•Some In-storeMarketing

"Experience a plus butwill train"

Applications can bepicked up at

The Daily CorinthianNewspaper office1607 S. Harper Rd.

Corinth, MS.Between the hours of

8:00-5:00Monday-Friday

General help0232CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.

personals0135*ADOPT:* A doting dad,

stayhome mom (&puppies) excited to

give your baby LOVE,laughter opportunity

*Bob & Maria*1-800-989-6766Expenses paid

ADOPT: LOVING, profes-sional couple eager tostart family. Our warm,nurturing home is wait-ing to welcome yourbaby. Expenses paid.Please call Anne andColin, 1-877-246-6780(toll-free).

ADOPTION:BIRTHMOTHER

- We'll hear your con-cerns as you get toknow us...creative, en-ergetic couple hopingto adopt. ExpensesPaid. Please call/textAlyse and David, 862-432-7753.

founD0149FOUND: BASSET Houndnear the old concreteplace in Corinth. Wherethe Rayco copy & theMDOC Office is. Pleasecontact me with anydetails at 662-279-0276o r a [email protected]

F O U N D : S M A L LSchnauzer dog on CR180 (Farmington area).Cal l 662-664-0434 toidentify.

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GaraGe/estate sales0151

OR

OR

ASK ABOUT THESE &OTHER

ATTENTION GETTINGGRAPHICS!

HUGE SALE!!

MOVING SALE!

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

(Deadline is 3 p.m. daybefore ad is to run!)

(Exception-Sun. dead-line is 3 pm Fri.)

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

Giving Savings Bonds

can make a difference in someone’s

future.

WATCHTHE

PAPERFOR

GREATVALENTINESPECIALS

ANDIDEAS

Page 20: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

8B • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

serViCes

JIMCOROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BIDALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

$1,000,000 LIABILITY

INSURANCE• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975• LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY

(NO SECONDS)• METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE,

SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST

WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS& DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community ProfilesFOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(Daily Corinthian Only $165)

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDERUN YOUR ADON THIS PAGE

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

Licensed & Bonded

• Bucket Truck Service • Backhoe

662-396-1023JASON ROACH-OWNER

1159 B CR 400Corinth, MS 38834

R

Large full size -6x12 tall x 6’9” concreteSOUTHERN HOME

SAFETY, INC.TOLL FREE

888-544-9074or 662-315-1695www.southernhomesafety.com

TORNADO SHELTERS

RUN YOUR AD IN THE

DAILY CORINTHIAN &

COMMUNITY PROFILES

ON THIS PAGE FOR

ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIAN

ONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147

FOR DETAILS.

FACTORY DIRECT PRICING

All types of Counter Tops. Formica and

Granite.We have them in stock and we can do all of the

preparations for you. Smith Cabinet Shop1505 South Fulton Dr.,

Corinth, MS662-287-2151

LET US SHOW YOU... Before

you buykitchen cabinets, let us show you what good quality should cost.

Excellent prices. And we have been serving this area

for many years. Smith Cabinet Shop1505 South Fulton Dr.,

Corinth, MS662-287-2151

BEAUTIFY YOUR KITCHEN

FOR2013

It’s very easy and affordable at...

Smith Cabinet ShopCorinth Industrial Park1505 South Fulton Dr.,

Corinth, MS662-287-2151

NEED NEW CABINETS? Very affordable at our modern cabinet mfg. plant. All wood

construction. Numerous styles. Prefi nished and ready

for fast installation.Buy Factory Direct!

Smith Cabinet Shop1505 South Fulton Dr.

Corinth (Industrial Park)662-287-2151

Smith Discount Home Center

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

Don’t Waste Your Money... Shop With Us!

8’X12’ Utility Building ...$99500

(w/5’ Double Door)

Air Compressors ................$11295

Huge Selection of Area Rugs (8’ x 11’) .............................. Starting at

$129 4 x 8 Masonite 8” oc ...

$1895st.

5/8-T1-11 siding ...................$1595

Foil Back Foamboard 1/2” ......$595

Foil Back Faomboard 3/4” ....$695

Foil Back Foamboard 1” .......$895

3/4 Birch Plywood ..............$2495

Exterior Astro Turf ...........$100

sq. yd.

Vinyl Floor Remnants .............$100

CROSSTIES ............................................$695

1 x 6 x 10 yellow pine ............$225

1 x 6 x 12 yellow pine ..........$270

1 x 6 x 14 yellow pine ..........$315

25 Year 3 Tab Shingle ....$5495

35 Year ArchitecturalShingle ..............................................

$6295

Laminate Floor From .39¢-$109

Pad for Laminate Floor ........$500-$1000

Handicap Commodes .............$6995

Round Commodes .....................$4995

12 x 12 Celotex Ceiling (40Sq Ft)

............................................................$3995

box

Located on Hwy 45 at the TN/MS line, 5500 s.f. with paved parking. Currently leased until 2014. Would

make good manufacturing fac., retail business,

warehouse/storage or investment prop.

Owner willing to consider partial trade.

Call Brooke @ Action Realty. Cell: 731-610-4197

or offi ce: 731-645-7101.

HOME REPAIRS

• Carports • Vinyl Siding• Room Additions• Shingles & Metal Roofi ng• Concrete Drives• Interior & Exterior Painting

FREE ESTIMATES30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

FULLY INSURED731-689-4319

JIMMY NEWTON

RUN YOUR AD IN THE

DAILY CORINTHIAN &

COMMUNITY PROFILES

ON THIS PAGE FOR

ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIAN

ONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147

FOR DETAILS.

RUN YOUR AD IN THE

DAILY CORINTHIAN &

COMMUNITY PROFILES

ON THIS PAGE FOR

ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIAN

ONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147

FOR DETAILS.

RUN YOUR AD IN THE

DAILY CORINTHIAN &

COMMUNITY PROFILES

ON THIS PAGE FOR

ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIAN

ONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147

FOR DETAILS.

RUN YOUR AD IN THE

DAILY CORINTHIAN &

COMMUNITY PROFILES

ON THIS PAGE FOR

ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIAN

ONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147

FOR DETAILS.

professional0212

Resumes are now being taken for

Executive Director of Corinth Area CVB. Preferred candidates

should have a Bachelor’s degree and/or experience in marketing and

tourism.

Submit to CACVB

215 N. Filmore St., Corinth, MS 38834

or [email protected]

leGals0955

LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FOR PUBLICATIONOF ORIGINAL

PERMITAPPLICATION

I, Rajendra (Ray) Pa-tel , an off icer ofTwisted Spirits, Inc.intend to make ap-plication for a Pack-age Retailer Permitas provided for bythe Local Option Al-cohol ic BeverageControl Laws, Sec-tion 67-1-1, et seq.,of the MississippiCode of 1972, An-notated. If grantedsuch permit, I, pro-pose to operate acorporation underthe trade name ofTwisted Spirits loc-ated at 1100-B Hwy72 W., Corinth, Mis-sissippi of AlcornCounty.

The name(s), title(s),and address(es) ofthe owner(s)/part-ners/corporate of-ficer(s) and/or ma-j o r i t ystockholder(s)/mem-ber(s)/trustee of theabove named busi-ness are: Rajendra(Ray) Patel , 1103Hwy 72 W., Cor-inth, MS 38834.

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the first datethis notice was pub-lished. Requests shallbe sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP. O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225Date of First Publication: 1/26/13

This the 25th day ofJanuary, 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314078

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

hanDyMan

HANDYMAN'S H o m ecare, anything. 662-643-6892.

hoMe iMproVeMent & repair

BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-tion, floor leveling,bricks cracking, rottenwood, basements,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. Free est.7 3 1 - 2 3 9 - 8 9 4 5 o r662-284-6146.

serViCes

D I V O R C E W I T H o rwithout children $125.Includes name changeand property settle-ment agreement. SAVEhundreds. Fast andeasy. Cal l 1-888-733-7165. 24/7.

storaGe, inDoor/outDoorAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

professional serViCe DireCtory

leGals0955

LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FOR PUBLICATIONOF ORIGINAL

PERMITAPPLICATION

I, Rajendra (Ray) Pa-tel , an off icer ofTwisted Spirits, Inc.intend to make ap-plication for a Pack-age Retailer Permitas provided for bythe Local Option Al-cohol ic BeverageControl Laws, Sec-tion 67-1-1, et seq.,of the MississippiCode of 1972, An-notated. If grantedsuch permit, I, pro-pose to operate acorporation underthe trade name ofTwisted Spirits loc-ated at 1100-B Hwy72 W., Corinth, Mis-sissippi of AlcornCounty.

The name(s), title(s),and address(es) ofthe owner(s)/part-ners/corporate of-ficer(s) and/or ma-j o r i t ystockholder(s)/mem-ber(s)/trustee of theabove named busi-ness are: Rajendra(Ray) Patel , 1103Hwy 72 W., Cor-inth, MS 38834.

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the first datethis notice was pub-lished. Requests shallbe sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP. O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225Date of First Publication: 1/26/13

This the 25th day ofJanuary, 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314078

leGals0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

JOANNE PEZEWSKI,PLAINTIFF

VS.

RICHARD HENDERSON,DEFENDANT

CAUSE NO. 2013-0045-02-L

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: Richard Henderson

You have been made aDefendant in the suit filed inthis Court by Plaintiff, JoannePezewski, seeking to PartiteReal Property.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thePetition filed against you inthis action at 9:30 A.M. onthe 9th day of April, 2013 inthe courtroom of the AlcornCounty Chancery Building atCorinth, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will beentered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the Complaint.

You are not required tofile and answer or otherpleading, but you may do so ifyou desire.

Issued under my hand andseal of said Court, this the 24day of January, 2013.

CHANCERY CLERK BY: Karen Burns, D.C.

4t 1/27, 2/3, 2/10, 2/17/1314073

LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FOR PUBLICATIONOF ORIGINAL

PERMITAPPLICATION

I, Rajendra (Ray) Pa-tel , an off icer ofTwisted Spirits, Inc.intend to make ap-plication for a Pack-age Retailer Permitas provided for bythe Local Option Al-cohol ic BeverageControl Laws, Sec-tion 67-1-1, et seq.,of the MississippiCode of 1972, An-notated. If grantedsuch permit, I, pro-pose to operate acorporation underthe trade name ofTwisted Spirits loc-ated at 1100-B Hwy72 W., Corinth, Mis-sissippi of AlcornCounty.

The name(s), title(s),and address(es) ofthe owner(s)/part-ners/corporate of-ficer(s) and/or ma-j o r i t ystockholder(s)/mem-ber(s)/trustee of theabove named busi-ness are: Rajendra(Ray) Patel , 1103Hwy 72 W., Cor-inth, MS 38834.

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the first datethis notice was pub-lished. Requests shallbe sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP. O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225Date of First Publication: 1/26/13

This the 25th day ofJanuary, 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314078

leGals0955

LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FORPUBLICATION OF ORIGINAL

PERMIT APPLICATION

I, the sole sharehold-er and off icer ofRich’s Discount To-bacco, Inc., intend tomake application fora Package RetailerPermit as providedfor by the Local Op-t i o n A l c o h o l i cBeverage ControlLaws, Section 67-1-1, et seq., of the Mis-s i ss ipp i Code of1972, Annotated. Ifgranted such permit,I propose to oper-ate as a corporationunder the t radename of One StopCorner Package, loc-ated at 606 Highway72 West, Corinth,Mississippi of AlcornCounty.

The names, titles andaddresses of theowners/members ofthe above namedbusiness are:

Richard L. Smith,President/Director,27 CR 449, Rienzi,MS;

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the first datethis notice was pub-l ished. Requestsshal l be sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP.O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225

Date of FirstP u b l i c a t i o n :1 / 2 6 / 2 0 1 3

This the 25th day ofJanuary 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314074

leGals0955

LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FOR

PUBLICATION OFORIGINAL PERMIT

APPLICATION

I, Charles E. Hudsonintends to make ap-plication for an On-Premise Reta i lerpermit as providedfor by the Local Op-t i o n A l c o h o l i cBeverage ControlLaws, Section 67-1-1, et seq., of the Mis-s i ss ipp i Code of1972, Annotated. Ifgranted such permit,I propose to oper-ate as a sole ownerunder the t radename of Lil Chicago'slocated at 100 S.Parkway, Corinth,M S o f A l c o r nC o u n t y .

The name(s), title(s)and address(es) ofthe owner(s)/part-ners/corporate of-ficer(s) and/or ma-j o r i t ystockholder(s)/mem-ber(s)/trustee of theabove named busi-ness are:Char les Hudson ,Owner10 CR 777, Corinth,MS 38834

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the date thisnot i ce was pub-lished. Requests shallbe sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP. O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225Date of First Publication: 1/26/13

This the 24th day ofJanuary, 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314072

LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FORPUBLICATION OF ORIGINAL

PERMIT APPLICATION

I, the sole sharehold-er and off icer ofRich’s Discount To-bacco, Inc., intend tomake application fora Package RetailerPermit as providedfor by the Local Op-t i o n A l c o h o l i cBeverage ControlLaws, Section 67-1-1, et seq., of the Mis-s i ss ipp i Code of1972, Annotated. Ifgranted such permit,I propose to oper-ate as a corporationunder the t radename of One StopCorner Package, loc-ated at 606 Highway72 West, Corinth,Mississippi of AlcornCounty.

The names, titles andaddresses of theowners/members ofthe above namedbusiness are:

Richard L. Smith,President/Director,27 CR 449, Rienzi,MS;

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the first datethis notice was pub-l ished. Requestsshal l be sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP.O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225

Date of FirstP u b l i c a t i o n :1 / 2 6 / 2 0 1 3

This the 25th day ofJanuary 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314074

TRANSPORTATION

CaMpers/trailers0820

TRUCK SLEEPER camper,$80. 662-665-1587.

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

leGals0955LEGAL NOTICEFORMAT FOR

PUBLICATION OFORIGINAL PERMIT

APPLICATION

I, Charles E. Hudsonintends to make ap-plication for an On-Premise Reta i lerpermit as providedfor by the Local Op-t i o n A l c o h o l i cBeverage ControlLaws, Section 67-1-1, et seq., of the Mis-s i ss ipp i Code of1972, Annotated. Ifgranted such permit,I propose to oper-ate as a sole ownerunder the t radename of Lil Chicago'slocated at 100 S.Parkway, Corinth,M S o f A l c o r nC o u n t y .

The name(s), title(s)and address(es) ofthe owner(s)/part-ners/corporate of-ficer(s) and/or ma-j o r i t ystockholder(s)/mem-ber(s)/trustee of theabove named busi-ness are:Char les Hudson ,Owner10 CR 777, Corinth,MS 38834

If any person wishesto request a hearingto object to the issu-ance of this permit arequest for a hear-ing must be made inwriting and receivedby the Departmentof Revenue within(15) f i f teen daysfrom the date thisnot i ce was pub-lished. Requests shallbe sent to:

Chief Counsel, LegalDivisionDepartment of RevenueP. O. Box 22828Jackson, MS 39225Date of First Publication: 1/26/13

This the 24th day ofJanuary, 2013.

2t 1/26, 1/27/1314072

ManufaCtureD hoMes for sale0747

MY LOSS, YOUR GAIN,but it has got to go.2000 28x48 3 BR, 2 BA,vinyl siding, shingleroof, fireplace, totalelectric, master BA haslg. tub, home needsgood cleaning & will beready to move in. $8995.662-296-5923 or 602-916-9796.

MisC. real estate0780

LAND OWNERS - 2013 Es-tate Taxes changescould have financialconsequences for Mis-sissippi property own-ers and farmers. Pro-tect your Estate fromTaxes and Probate. ForFREE information pack-et call 1-877-266-0500,24/7.

ManufaCtureD hoMes for sale0747

AS THE Turtle Man says"Live Action! Ye Ye Ye".You won't believe thisone. 28x80 4 BR, 2 fullBA's, needs TLC. The 1st$13,000 will get it. Only 1home like this. Call 662-296-5923 or 601-916-9796.

TAX RETURN SPECIAL:2013 16x80 3 BR, 2 BA

Vinyl siding/shingled roof,

thermal windows,2"x6" walls

glamour bath, blackappliances,

and much more.All for only $287.00

per month plus escrow.Windham Homes

Corinth, MS1-888-287-6996

Page 21: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • 9B

sales0208

CIRCULATION SALESPOSITION

(Outside Marketing forNewspaper Subscriptions)

Some phone solicitation Some In-Store Marketing

Experience a plus but will train

Applications can be picked up at:

The Daily CorinthianNewspaper Offi ce1607 S. Harper Rd.

Corinth, MSBetween the hours of

8:00-5:00, Monday-Friday

GOT NEWS?GOT NEWS?Share your event with others in the pages

of The Daily Corinthian newspaper...

Personal Milestones / Rare & Unusual Occurrences

Business & Industry Accomplishments

Civic Activities / Fundraisers / Church Events

Club News / Cute or Unusual Snapshots

Community Get-Togethers / Good Deeds

Beautiful Photographs of Landscapes in the Crossroads Area

Things which make us laugh & Things which make us cry

Make the Daily Corinthian YOUR newspaper.

Committed to the coverage, presentation

& emphasis on LOCAL news.

Daily Corinthian1607 N. Harper Road • Corinth, MS

662-287-6111 • [email protected]

Photos should be jpeg files. Be sure to include contact information when submitting information online or in person.

unfurnisheD apartMents0610

CORINTHIAN ARBORSA United Church Homes Community

Friendly! Clean! Comfortable! Providing apartments for persons age 62 years or older; accessible units available.

CoMputer0515

Tomlinson Computers, Inc.1604 S. Harper Rd., Corinth, MS 38834

662-287-5158

iPad2 16GB White $399

While supplies last.

XBOX 360 GamesFIFA2013 $40

• Laptop Computers $399• HP all-in-one PC $519• LCD Monitors• Desktop PC starting at $499

Used PC with new LCD monitorstarting at $250

662-287-5158 ph.662-287-6187 fax

Store hoursMonday-Friday 8-5

iPad2

inCoMe tax

TAX GUIDE 2013Holder Accounting Firm

1407-A Harper RoadCorinth, Mississippi 38834

Kellie Holder, OwnerTh ere are several changes to

our taxes for 2012. Our staff is ready to help you.

Open year-round.Thank you for your business and loyalty.

Telephone: 662-286-9946Fax: 662-286-2713

Free Electronic Filing with paid preparation.

Fully computerized tax preparation. Offi ce hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-8pm Sat. 9am-5pm • Sun. By appt. only

2003 Hwy 72 E, Corinth, 662-286-1040(Old Junkers Parlor)

508 W. Chambers St., Booneville, 662-728-1080

1210 City Ave., Ripley, 662-512-5829

Advertise Your Tax Service

Here for$95 A MonthCall 287-6147

for more details

Advertise Your Tax Service

Here for$95 A MonthCall 287-6147

for more details

Advertise Your Tax Service

Here for$95 A MonthCall 287-6147

for more details

TOMLINSONACCOUNTING

• Authorized IRS-Efi le Provider• Individual, Corporate & Partnership

• More Th an 25 Years Tax Service• Open year-round

Hours: 8-6 M-F Sat. 8-121604 S Harper Road- Corinth

662-287-1995

Want to Create a BuzzAbout Your Business?

The right advertising strategy can take your business to the nextlevel. As a senior account representative with over 10 years ofexperience helping retailers advertise effectively, I have the

marketing expertise and resources to help your business succeed.From print and online advertising to special events, couponcampaigns, inserts and direct mail, find out which marketingtools can maximize your exposure to your target audience.

MatthewEmersonSenior AccountRepresentative

BUZZ

Call me today, and let’s get started!

[email protected] | 000.000.0000

ADVERTISING IS THE WAY TO GO!

LET EVERYONE KNOW!

LET’S GET STARTED!

1607 South Harper RoadCorinth MS 38834

662-287-6111

Daily Corinthian

Page 22: Daily Corinthian E-edition 012713

10B • Sunday, January 27, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

auto serViCes0840

Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price.

PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. Auto Sales

470FARM/LAWN/

GARDEN EQUIP.

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

2006 Wildcat 30 ft. 5th wheel camper, 2 slides, fi berglass ext., awning, holding tanks, full sofa

sleeper, refrig., mi-cro., glass shower, recliner, sleeps 6,

$18,500662-223-0056.

’04 HONDA SHADOW

750$3900

662-603-4407

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

1995 DODGE RAM 15004x4, Pwr. DL & Windows, Exc.

Cond., Too Many Extras To List

$4500 OBO.731-239-5770 OR

662-808-8033

GUARANTEED

2008 NISSAN ROGUE S

Black, 42K miles, new tires, excel.

cond.$12,900

662-287-6613leave message

or text

2005 HONDA ATV TRX 250 EX

“New” Condition$1995

215-666-1374662-665-0209

2006 GMC YUKONExc. cond. inside & out,

106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front

& rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded

$13,995662-286-1732

REDUCED

804BOATS

2000 DODGE

CARAVAN, $1500.

731-645-0157 AFTER 4 P.M.

868AUTOMOBILES

ALUMA CRAFT 14’ BOAT, 40 H.P.

JOHNSON, TROLLING MTR., GOOD COND., INCLUDES TRAILER,

$1200 OBO OR WILL TRADE. 731-610-8901 OR EMAIL FOR

PICS TO

[email protected]

804BOATS

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER,

RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP,

24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW

BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER

LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$7,900. 662-808-0113.

1959 Ford diesel

tractor

$4000662-750-0607

3000 series, new rear tires

& tubes

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc. drive train, 215k miles, exc. mechanically w/body defects.

$7800. 662-664-3538.

BUSH HOG 61” ZERO TURN, COM-MERCIAL, 28 HP KOE-HLER, 45 HOURS, NEW

$6900662-728-3193

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

1967 CHEVYNeeds paint &

body work$4000.

504-952-1230

1996 LINCOLN TOWN CARExc. cond.,

1-family owned, 141,000 miles.

$2900.662-415-8682

Luxury V-8 Lone Star Dodge P/U, 19.5 mpg w/low

miles, 52k, 2x4 2005 Model Quad Cab, SLT w/PS, PL, AC, CD. A great Buy @

$12,980. Call 731-239-9226.

2003 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC

looks & rides real good!

$3000662-603-4786

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

4-dr., 41,000 miles, dark blue ext. & gray int., 4 cyl. auto., CD/

XM radio, 36 mpg. payoff is

$11,054731-610-7241

1996 FORD F150 4X4

stick, camoufl age,

186,200 miles (mostly interstate

driving), runs good.

$3000 obo. 662-607-9401

16’ Aqua bass boat 70 HP Mercury, 4 seats, trolling

motor,

$4,000662-287-5413. 662-287-5413or cell 284-8678

$3,500

$10,500

2000 Custom Harley

Davidson Mtr. & Trans.,

New Tires, Must See

$12,000 662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

$9,500

AWESOME DEAL!

2007 Franklin camper, W&D,fully loaded,

$11,500 w/new carpet & vinyl.

$10,000 as is!MUST SEE!

662-643-3565662-415-8549

REDUCEDREDUCED

1992 FORDF-250

rebuilt trans., tool box, wired for elect.

brake trailer$1,950

662-462-8391

‘96 Challenger Radical One Pro Bass Boat,

130 HP Johnson, 24v motorguide trol mtr., on-board charger for all 3

batteries, Hummingbird Fish fi nder, good trailer w/new tires, looks good

for ‘96 model & runs good. $4500 obo.

662-286-6972or 415-1383.

1985 1/2 TON SILVERADO

305 ENG., AUTO., PS, PB, AC, NEEDS PAINT, READY TO RESTORE,

DRIVEN DAILY. REDUCED

$3,000287-1213 AFTER

4 P.M.

1991 Ford Econoline

Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one

owner, serious interest. $6500

287-5206.

2000 Dodge Ram 1500 Van, too many

extras to list, good travel or work van, will trade or sell.

Reduced to$2,300

662-287-1834.

2002 Chevrolet Z-71,4-dr.,

4W.D., Am.Fm cass./CD, pewter in color, $6200.

662-643-5908 or662-643-5020

1976 Corvettewith original window sticker, bright

blue metallic, t-tops, L48-350, 90,400 miles, Sr. Citizen 2nd

owner since 1986, 4-spd. manual, new tires, positraction, upgraded

4 wheel disc brakes, anti theft alarm, factory air (not working) &

tinted glass.

$7,500 286-3014.

2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER

fi berglass, 18 ft. bunkhouse launch, wt.

2,750 lbs, 26 gallon freshwater tank, cargo carrying capacity-895 lbs, gray & black water

tanks, cable ready.

$11,000662-396-1390.

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2004 DODGE RAM 1500V-8, QUAD CAB, GREAT COND.

$9000CONTACT

662-603-1407.

‘65 FORD GALAXIE 500, 4dr sedan, 390 Eng., 4 bbl. carb, no broken

glass, good paint, good tires, cast alum.

wheels, new brake sys., everything works exc.

clock, fuel gauge & inst. lights,

$2500 731-439-1968.

REDUCED!

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $3250 obo.

340-626-5904.

2007 HORNET CAMPER

27 ft., bought new, 5200 lbs., bunk

beds in back, full sized bed in front.

Kept in shed.$9200.

662-808-0653

2004 Ford F350 work truck, V10, underbed tool boxes, towing package, DVD.

$8600 obo. Truck is in daily use. Please call for appt. to see,

340-626-5904.

1984 CHRYSLER LEBARON

convertible, antique tag,

39,000 actual miles.

$5000286-2261

99 CADILLAC DEVILLE

New Toyo tires, good cond., black w/leather interior.Asking $3250 obo.662-415-3976

2000 Chevy Venture

91,000 miles, V-6, auto., CD player, new Goodyear

tires, rear heat & air, very nice van,.

$3250662-665-1995

Cruisemaster Motorhome by

Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000

miles with white Oak interior. $19,500.

$14,999 662-808-7777 or

662-415-9020

REDUCED

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CORINTHIAN

CALL FOR DETAILS

662-287-61477

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