daily corinthian e-edition 111112

30
Index On this day in history 150 years ago Chaplain John Eaton Jr. is ordered by Gen. Grant to gather up all the stray blacks in the vicinity of Corinth. “Shelter, feed, and clothe them, and put them to work for the benefit of the government.” It is the birth of the Corinth Contraband Camp. Stocks...... 7A Classified...... 5B Comics Inside Wisdom...... 3B Weather...... 5A Obituaries...... 3A Opinion...... 4A Sports...... 8A Vol. 116, No. 272 Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages Two sections www.dailycorinthian.com Nov. 11, 2012 $1.50 Today 72 Partly Sunny Tonight 52 Sunday Sunday Inside today: More than $70 in coupon savings 80% chance p.m. rain Veterans Day Tribute Tribute section inside Corinth aldermen recently act- ed on six board and commission appointments. Half are new appointments, including two on the board of di- rectors of the Corinth Area Con- vention and Visitors Bureau. For a city appointee slot on the board, aldermen appointed Pauline Sor- rell, replacing Jason Grisham. For a restaurateur slot on the board, aldermen appointed Phil Little, replacing Melissa Carson. For a hotelier slot on the board, aldermen voted to reappoint Luke Doehner. The appoint- ments of Doehner and Sorrell will also require action by the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors. The appointments are for four years. The board appointed Lee Thurner to the planning com- mission/board of adjustment, replacing Jeff Treadway, who was ready to step down from the board. Aldermen also reappointed Kim Ratliff to the board of di- rectors of the Corinth Housing Authority and Myrna McNair to the board of trustees of Magnolia Regional Health Center. McNair is a joint appointment that was approved by the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors on Monday for another ve-year term. In other business: Public hearings on property cleanup resulted in continuances to Nov. 20 for the Bonds property City moves on 6 board appointments BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Veterans Day Stew Staff photo by Steve Beavers American Legion Post 6 member Mike Hurst takes his turn stirring Brunswick stew being made by the local post over the weekend. Around 550 gallons of the stew will be served on Monday in celebration of Veterans Day. The public is invited to eat with legion members at the Tate Street lo- cation free of charge following the Veterans Day Parade. Carry-out orders of the stew will be also available for $5 a quart. Please see BOARD | 2A Glen resident Willie Joe Weaver will be 91 in March. Since feeling and realizing “the call” in 1957, Weaver served as a minister for many churches for many years, from South Corinth Baptist Church to the First Baptist Church of Walnut Springs, Texas. But before Weaver’s days serving his congregations, he served his nation in the U.S. Army during World War II. Today being Veterans Day, Weaver represents the “Great- est Generation” who answered the call of service during the Great War. He agreed to share his story and his life, including the period when he was General Douglas MacArthur’s driver in Australia. Early years Weaver was born to Robert Jesse Weaver and Martha Alice Robertson Weaver on March World War II veteran Weaver once drove for General MacArthur BY BOBBY J. SMITH [email protected] Please see WEAVER | 2A A proposed design is in hand for a vegetable shed at the Farmers Market #2 on Fulton Drive. Cook Coggin Engineers re- cently submitted the design to the Board of Supervisors, and bids are being taken through Nov. 19. “Once we get the quotes, we will decide whether we want to proceed,” said Board President Lowell Hinton. The design is for a 40-by- 100-foot pole barn that would go on the city-owned property where the recycling bin is located across from the Corinth Theatre-Arts' Crossroads Playhouse. The structure’s open-air design will allow water to ow through in the event of ooding. This type of design was re- quired because of the prop- erty’s ood status. The city has also had input on the plans. The contract, if awarded, will call for construction of the shed within 30 calendar days. Farmers market support- ers believe the shed will be a plus by getting growers and customers out of the direct County acts on Farmer’s Market shed idea BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Design calls for a 40-by-100-foot pole barn located on Fulton Drive Please see MARKET | 3A With few new residential and commercial starts, re- modeling projects dominated the last quarter of building activity in the city. Corinth issued permits for construction jobs total- ing $2,016,760 from July through September, down 35 percent from the third quarter of 2011, but right on par with 2010’s third quarter total of $2.013 million. Last year’s gure included a large permit for a hospital project. Housing starts continued at a slow pace, with one new construction permit in Sep- tember and none in July and August. The third quarter of 2011 also saw just one new home start. The commercial sector saw a restaurant, Jimmy John’s, begin construction on High- way 72 East. The Corinth School District had the big- gest project value of the quar- ter with roof work at Corinth Middle School. The quarter’s permits in- clude the following: September 1506 Fulton Drive — Re- model by Geartek; CIG Con- tractors; $319,000 1000 S. Cass — Roof work at Southgate Shopping Cen- ter; Village Roong; $80,000 3100 Wildwood Drive — Residential remodel; Preston Knight; $75,000 1999 Hwy. 72 E. — Com- mercial sign; Roger Dilleng- Remodeling jobs stress permit activity BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Please see PERMITS | 2A Daily Corinthian Call Donna or Brandi for complete details and rates! 286.6006 BROSE HWY 72 E • Corinth MS www.broseautoplex.com Now Renting 2012 Nissans!

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Daily Corinthian E-Edition 111112

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Index On this day in history 150 years agoChaplain John Eaton Jr. is ordered by Gen. Grant to gather

up all the stray blacks in the vicinity of Corinth. “Shelter, feed, and clothe them, and put them to work for the benefi t of the government.” It is the birth of the Corinth Contraband Camp.

Stocks......7A Classified......5B Comics Inside Wisdom......3B

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

Vol. 116, No. 272 • Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages • Two sections

www.dailycorinthian.com

Nov. 11, 2012

$1.50

Today72

Partly SunnyTonight

52

SundaySunday

Inside today: More than $70 in coupon savings

80% chance p.m. rain

Veterans Day TributeTribute section inside

Corinth aldermen recently act-ed on six board and commission appointments.

Half are new appointments, including two on the board of di-rectors of the Corinth Area Con-vention and Visitors Bureau. For

a city appointee slot on the board, aldermen appointed Pauline Sor-rell, replacing Jason Grisham. For a restaurateur slot on the board, aldermen appointed Phil Little, replacing Melissa Carson.

For a hotelier slot on the board, aldermen voted to reappoint Luke Doehner. The appoint-

ments of Doehner and Sorrell will also require action by the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors.

The appointments are for four years.

The board appointed Lee Thurner to the planning com-mission/board of adjustment, replacing Jeff Treadway, who

was ready to step down from the board.

Aldermen also reappointed Kim Ratliff to the board of di-rectors of the Corinth Housing Authority and Myrna McNair to the board of trustees of Magnolia Regional Health Center. McNair is a joint appointment that was

approved by the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors on Monday for another fi ve-year term.

In other business:■ Public hearings on property

cleanup resulted in continuances to Nov. 20 for the Bonds property

City moves on 6 board appointmentsBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Veterans Day Stew

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

American Legion Post 6 member Mike Hurst takes his turn stirring Brunswick stew being made by the local post over the weekend. Around 550 gallons of the stew will be served on Monday in celebration of Veterans Day. The public is invited to eat with legion members at the Tate Street lo-cation free of charge following the Veterans Day Parade. Carry-out orders of the stew will be also available for $5 a quart.

Please see BOARD | 2A

Glen resident Willie Joe Weaver will be 91 in March. Since feeling and realizing “the call” in 1957, Weaver served as

a minister for many churches for many years, from South Corinth Baptist Church to the First Baptist Church of Walnut Springs, Texas.

But before Weaver’s days

serving his congregations, he served his nation in the U.S. Army during World War II.

Today being Veterans Day, Weaver represents the “Great-est Generation” who answered

the call of service during the Great War. He agreed to share his story and his life, including the period when he was General Douglas MacArthur’s driver in Australia.

Early yearsWeaver was born to Robert

Jesse Weaver and Martha Alice Robertson Weaver on March

World War II veteran Weaver once drove for General MacArthurBY BOBBY J. SMITH

[email protected]

Please see WEAVER | 2A

A proposed design is in hand for a vegetable shed at the Farmers Market #2 on Fulton Drive.

Cook Coggin Engineers re-cently submitted the design to the Board of Supervisors, and bids are being taken through Nov. 19.

“Once we get the quotes, we will decide whether we want to proceed,” said Board President Lowell Hinton.

The design is for a 40-by-100-foot pole barn that would go on the city-owned property where the recycling bin is located across from the Corinth Theatre-Arts' Crossroads Playhouse.

The structure’s open-air design will allow water to fl ow through in the event of fl ooding.

This type of design was re-quired because of the prop-erty’s fl ood status.

The city has also had input on the plans.

The contract, if awarded, will call for construction of the shed within 30 calendar days.

Farmers market support-ers believe the shed will be a plus by getting growers and customers out of the direct

County acts on Farmer’s Market shed idea

BY JEBB [email protected]

Design calls for a 40-by-100-foot pole barn located on Fulton Drive

Please see MARKET | 3A

With few new residential and commercial starts, re-modeling projects dominated the last quarter of building activity in the city.

Corinth issued permits for construction jobs total-ing $2,016,760 from July through September, down 35 percent from the third quarter of 2011, but right on par with 2010’s third quarter total of $2.013 million. Last year’s fi gure included a large permit for a hospital project.

Housing starts continued at a slow pace, with one new construction permit in Sep-tember and none in July and August. The third quarter of 2011 also saw just one new home start.

The commercial sector saw a restaurant, Jimmy John’s, begin construction on High-way 72 East. The Corinth School District had the big-gest project value of the quar-ter with roof work at Corinth Middle School.

The quarter’s permits in-clude the following:

September

■ 1506 Fulton Drive — Re-model by Geartek; CIG Con-tractors; $319,000

■ 1000 S. Cass — Roof work at Southgate Shopping Cen-ter; Village Roofi ng; $80,000

■ 3100 Wildwood Drive — Residential remodel; Preston Knight; $75,000

■ 1999 Hwy. 72 E. — Com-mercial sign; Roger Dilleng-

Remodeling jobs stress permit activity

BY JEBB [email protected]

Please see PERMITS | 2A

Daily Corinthian

Call Donna or Brandi for complete details and rates!

286.6006BROSE HWY 72 E • Corinth MS

www.broseautoplex.com

Now Renting 2012 Nissans!

er; $900■ 1921 Daniel Drive

— Residential remodel; Don Frame; $30,000

■ 1308 Webster — Res-idential remodel; James McGee; $10,000

■ 1310 Highway 72 E. — New construc-tion for Jimmy John’s; Welch Restaurant LLC;$350,000

■ 3200 Polk — New residential; Jimbo Bryant Construction; $290,000

■ 2300 S. Harper — Commercial remodel at C Spire; Young Construc-tion LLC; $126,780

■ 1616 Jackson — Resi-dential remodel; Jerry Cray; $1,500

■ 2121 Chestnut — Res-idential remodel; Sammy Allred, $2,500

■ 501 Wick — Resi-dential remodel; Rick Hileman; $9,000

■ 1414 Pine Road — Residential remodel; Danny Cook; $20,000

■ 2803 Virginia Lane — Commercial sign; Nickels Sign Co.; $9,000

■ 2803 Virginia Lane — Commercial remodel; William Gray; $9,580

■ 601 N. Parkway — Residential remodel; Larry Boggs; $28,000

■ 604 S. Parkway — Residential remodel; Tommy Yeater; $5,000

■ 1308 Bitner — Resi-dential remodel; Dorsie Hilliard; $20,000

■ 1416 Jackson — Resi-dential remodel; John Boyer; $3,500

August

■ 3403 Mathis Road — Residential remodel; Clara Davis; $2,400

■ 603 Fillmore — Com-mercial demolition; Rus-sell Smith

■ 1000 E. 5th — Corinth Middle School HVAC; Taylor’s Heating and Air; $136,000

■ 1000 E. 5th — Corinth Middle School roofi ng; Copper Top Sheet Metal; $365,000

■ 2015 Hwy. 72 E. — Commercial sign; Jack Hora; $4,700

■ 1215 W. Clover Lane — Residential remodel; Shawn and Natalie Kel-ley; $10,900

■ 5401 N. Harper — Residential remodel; Jed Baker; $25,000

■ 6547 N. Shiloh —

Local2A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, November 11, 2012

on Box Chapel Road and the Napier property at 230 Franklin Street and to Dec. 4 for the King property at 300 North Polk Street. Ac-tion was dismissed on 1301

East Waldron. The board adjudicated the cost plus a $500 penalty for cleanup at 714 Dale Street.

■ The board approved a zoning variance regarding storage buildings at the old Corinth Machinery prop-

erty.■ The board adopted the

state holiday schedule for the city — Nov. 22 and 23 for Thanksgiving, Dec. 24 and 25 for Christmas, and Dec. 31 and Jan. 1 for New Year’s.

BOARD

CONTINUED FROM 1A

30, 1922, in rural Mc-Nairy County, Tenn., at a site not far from the Har-deman County line near the Davis Bridge battle-fi eld. When he was a year old, his parents bought a small farm with a log cab-in in Alcorn County, on a rural route of Pocahontas, Tenn., where they lived until Weaver was about three years old. The fam-ily then moved to Mid-dleton, Tenn., where his parents operated a gen-eral merchandise store, a restaurant and a rooming house.

Weaver’s memories of growing up in Middle-ton are still vivid over 80 years later.

“I remember that on Saturday we got a big tub of ice cream packed in ice, which usually sold out by

nighttime,” Weaver re-called. “The next morning Dad and I would go down and scoop up that little bit of melted ice cream. Oh, how good!”

Weaver’s school years began in Middleton. He was a bright kid with impressive math and spelling skills before he started school and was skipped ahead from the fi rst to third grades. His fi rst “little sweetheart” in those early school years was the daughter of the small town’s mayor.

In the dark, pre-dawn hours of Dec. 4, 1928, when Weaver was six years old, the entire block where the store, restau-rant and rooming house were located was de-stroyed by fi re.

“I can remember look-ing at the upstairs of our building and seeing my

mother throwing furnish-ings on the banisters,” he said. “What was left of the stores was moved into an older building on the north side of the rail-road.”

His family moved into a blue framed house and remained about three months before moving back to the farm where Weaver lived in his earli-est childhood.

As he grew up, Weaver began doing more work on the farm — cutting fi rewood after school, discing and plowing fi elds behind a team of mules in the summer, planting cot-ton, gathering hay while waiting for the cotton crop to mature, harvest-ing corn by hand and car-rying a six-foot pick sack when it came time to pick the cotton.

Now in high school,

Weaver transferred to Alcorn Agricultural High School in Kossuth. He had to walk a mile ev-ery morning to catch the “school truck” that would take him to class. Weaver still enjoyed school, es-pecially his bookkeeping and typing classes. He was able to type 60 words a minute and earn two credits in one year.

But during his 11th grade year, Weaver missed a great deal of time due to sickness. He dropped out, started back the next year, but had trouble catching up. His high school education ended after an incident in second year algebra class.

Weaver pointed out an error in an algebra prob-lem his teacher was copy-ing to the chalkboard. He knew it was incorrect be-cause he had already seen his classmate’s paper that the teacher was copying. The teacher didn’t take the correction well.

“I was sitting on the front of the class,” said Weaver. “He turned around and struck me on the head with his pointer. I jumped up and doubled my fi st. I was just about as big as he was. He ordered me out of the classroom and to go to the princi-pal.”

The young Weaver went to the principal’s of-fi ce, and the principal met with the algebra teacher, but Weaver never knew what was said between them — because he never

came back to school after that day.

“Anyway, this ended my school days. I simply quit school,” said Weaver. “It damaged my future because — not bragging — I was good in math and believe I had a great fu-ture.”

Even today, remember-ing the algebra teacher’s name brings bad thoughts to Weaver about what might have been.

World War II: Training

After quitting school, Weaver started work, cut-ting timber and hauling logs and later hauling tim-ber from the sawmill. It was hard work, but Weav-er saved until he was able to buy an old truck. In his last teenage years leading up to his military service, Weaver said he hauled pretty much everything, working constantly. He remembered one time when he and a boy he hired as a helper worked for three days straight without stopping day or night.

This continued un-til Weaver entered the military, right after her turned 20.

In the following section, Willie Joe Weaver will tell his own story:

“The military brought a great change in my life. I had never been away from home, and only to Mem-phis a couple of times. After fi ling my draft regis-tration, I was called before

the draft board in Corinth and told I would be a 1A. That meant I would go at any time, but they said if I would take some train-ing I might not have to go into the military. They ar-ranged for me to go to an aircraft training course in Corinth, an eight-week course to prepare to help build airplanes.

“I was delighted. I re-ceived some pay for rent and board. I loved it. I built a couple of parts for the airplane and graduat-ed. They had assured me of work in a factory.

“Now to report to the draft board for further assignment. When I got there, it seemed like there were different people — so they ignored my training and assigned me to go to Camp Shelby for examination.

“After the examina-tion, I was given seven days back home to round up my business, they said, then back to Camp Shelby. After arrival at the camp and some more conferences, I was as-signed as a truck driver, along with several other Mississippi guys, to Camp Crowder, Missouri.

“It was a very rough training that had been condensed from the usual eight weeks to four weeks. I remember climb-ing a wall by rope ladder, seeming to be about 16 feet high, and going over the top, landing on the

Please see WEAVER | 10A

WEAVER

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Prepping potatoesJ.C. Parker gets potatoes ready for the Brunswick stew being made at the Ameri-can Legion Post 6 on Tate Street in Corinth. Carry-out orders of the stew will be sold Monday for $5 a quart. The American Legion Post 207 Hut on South Johns Street will also be serving Brunswick stew Monday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

PERMITS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Please see PERMITS | 3A

Christmas has arrived at All Seasons MarketWe now have:

Unique Arrangements & Wreaths

Christmas Jellybean Rugs

Poinsettias in Several Colors & Sizes

3857 Proper StCorinth,MS

662-286-5670

Jericho Sports Ministry atJericho Sports Ministry atTate Baptist Church

announces open sign ups for the upcoming basketball season. Cost is $35 for each player (includes jersey). Ages are from 4 years to 15 years old. Practices will begin on December 10. Season starts January 5, 2013 lasting 8 weeks. Mandatory player evaluations will be on December 3-4 from 6-8 pm at Tate Baptist Church

Call Tate Baptist Church at 286-2935 orCall Tate Baptist Church at 286-2935 orDr. Mike Weeden’s offi ce at 286-8860Dr. Mike Weeden’s offi ce at 286-8860

for sign-up or more information.

Sign-Up deadline is November 30.

Local3A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, November 11, 2012

Residential remodel; Preston Knight; $17,000

■ 601 Bradley Road — New commercial; David Shipman; $2,000

■ 1407 Bell School Road — Residential remodel; C. Hopkins; $4,000

■ 5 Rollingwood Circle

— Residential remodel; Ozzy Hendrix; $10,000

July

■ 2113 Chestnut — Resi-dential remodel; Ronnie Essary; $20,000

■ 905 Creekwood — Residential remodel; Ryan Follin; $4,000

■ 1681 Virginia Lane — Commercial remodel; Trivista Rehab; $2,000

■ 12 Gardner Road — Residential remodel; Ta-zel Choate; $3,000

■ 3700 Old Ashbrook — Residential remodel; Leigh Ann Montgomery; $10,000

■ 502 Fillmore — Resi-

dential demolition; Bob Moore

■ 206 E. Linden — Resi-dential remodel; Sarah R. Tynan; $4,000

■ 815 E. 4th — Residen-tial remodel; Tony Walls; $7,000

Items listed as “remod-el” indicate either repair, remodel or an addition.

PERMITS

CONTINUED FROM 2A

sunlight during the hot summer months. Cus-tomers will be able to walk through the middle with growers stationed on either side.

The recycling bins will continue to be located

on the same property.Previous plans to put a

covered farmers market on an unused portion of the Ayrshire parking lot were scrapped.

Between the newer Fulton Drive location and original location on Shiloh Road owned

by First Presbyterian Church, the Corinth farmers market attracts about 65 producers per

year, with each selling an average of two days per week.

MARKET

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Deaths

Wayne BrumleyBURNSVILLE — Funer-

al services for Euel Wayne Brumley, 74, are set for 1 p.m. Monday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with military honors and burial at Har-mony Hill Cemetery.

Mr. Brumley died Fri-day, Nov. 9, 2012, at Mag-nolia Regional Health Center. Born Nov. 19, 1937, he was retired from the Mississippi Highway Department with 24 years of service. He was a U.S. Army veteran of the Viet-nam War and was of the Christian faith.

Survivors include his wife of 33 years, Nell Brumley of Burnsville; a stepson, Harold E. “Ed-die” White of Burnsville; a stepdaughter, Phyllis Melanie White Lowery

(Walter) of Newnan, Ga.; a grandson, Matthew Keene (Misty) of Marietta, Ga.; four step-grandchil-dren, David Alan White of Ramer, Tenn., Justin W. Lowery of Newnan, Ga., Brannon J. Lowery (Arielle) of Newnan, Ga., and David Keith Smith (Bonnebelle) of Pensaco-la, Fla.; one great-grand-child; and four step-great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Ol-lie Brumley and Herbert Brumley; a daughter, Kim Keene; a brother, Jerry Brumley; and a sister, Avis Brie.

Bro. Trent Childers will offi ciate the service.

Visitation is today from 5 until 8 p.m. and Monday from 11 a.m. until service time.

Grace GardnerSTARKVILLE — Grace Cox Gardner 91, passed

away on Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at her residence.Visitation for Grace will be held at Welch Funeral

Home in Starkville on Monday from 5 to 7 p.m. A funeral service will be held on Tuesday at 10 a.m. at First Baptist Church of Starkville conducted by the Rev. Eli Gardner. Burial will follow in Saulsbury Cemetery in Saulsbury, Tenn.

Mrs. Gardner is survived by her son, Danny Gard-ner (Becky Rae) of Starkville; a daughter-in-law, Norma Gardner (Skip); fi ve grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

Grace Gardner was fondly and lovingly called Mama Grace by all who knew her.

Besides loving all her children (those related or not), Mama Grace loved reading, studying, teach-ing, sharing, fellowshipping, praying, and worship-ping Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. She led hundreds if not thousands of girls and women in searching out God’s mysteries, ways, and perfect will. She was always surrounded by “her girls,” usually around the kitchen table.

Through the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s, Mama Grace was a primary caregiver for those in need in her fam-ily. She nursed her father and mother until they died. She nursed her mother-in-law until she died. She nursed her husband through eight years of Al-zheimer’s Disease, her daughter through several years of cancer, and numerous other friends and family through countless heartaches. She buried her husband (Milburn “Bo” Gardner Jr.) and two beloved children (Skip and Beth) way too soon.

Though she led so many to faith in Christ and into spiritual maturity, Mama Grace never consid-ered herself a leader. She was always a fellow trav-eler seeking all those things that “work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.”

Her goal in life was “more of Him and less of me.” She truly sought God’s will in everything. She was a good and faithful servant in every way. She was the epitome of Proverbs 31:10 – 31.

In all her ways she acknowledged God, and God surely directed her in His way.

Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of choice.

For on-line condolences: welchfuneralhomes.com

Although city offices are closed Monday in observance of Veterans

Day, the Monday city garbage route will run as normal.

Garbage Route

A smoker has decided to kick the habit. Moral support and expert help can make the difference between success and fail-ure.

Every year on the third Thursday of November, the Mississippi Tobacco Quitline recognizes the Great American Smoke-out as a day for smokers across the United States to kick the smoking habit for 24 hours in the hope they will consider quit-ting for good.

November 15 is the day when Mississippi smok-ers are encouraged to quit using tobacco as part of the American Can-cer Society 2012 Great

American Smokeout. Over the years, the Great American Smokeout has encouraged millions of Mississippians - and Americans - to put down their packs and cartons for one brief, breathable day.

“It is very important to get help when attempting to stop smoking,” said Roy Hart, Director of the Mississippi State Depart-ment of Health (MSDH) Offi ce of Tobacco Con-trol. “Getting expert help can double your chances of success.”

Tobacco use remains the single largest pre-ventable cause of disease and premature death in the United States.

Each year in Mississippi, smoking accounts for an estimated 4,700 prema-ture deaths. Sixty-nine thousand Mississippi children now under 18 will ultimately die pre-maturely from smoking, according to the Cam-paign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

“There is plenty of help available for Mississip-pians who want to stop smoking permanently,” said Emily J. McGrath, director of the Missis-sippi Tobacco-Free Co-alition of Alcorn and Tippah Counties. “If you want to quit using to-bacco, contact the Mis-sissippi Tobacco Quitline at 1-800-QUIT-NOW to

receive free counseling and medications, such as nicotine patches or gum.”

“Make the decision to quit, and designate the Great American Smoke-out on November 15 as your quit day,” said Mc-Grath. “Let your friends, family and coworkers know that you plan to quit, and ask for their support and understand-ing. Nicotine withdrawal can cause feelings of stress and anxiety, and having a support network around you can help.”

(For more informa-tion, visit www.quit-linems.com, or call the Mississippi Tobacco Quitline at 1-800-QUIT-NOW.)

Group urges smokers to quitFor the Daily Corinthian

This year’s theme at The Memphis Potters’ Guild - Annual Holiday Show & Sale, Nov. 16-18 is really eat-ing local. The show offers everything for setting the holiday table with locally produced wares to serve that free range turkey and those artisan raised side-dishes.

The Memphis Potters’ Guild Annual Holiday Show & Sale is being held Nov. 16-18 at the Mem-phis Botanic Garden’s Goldsmith Civic Cen-ter, 750 Cherry Road, in Audubon Park.

The Memphis Potters’ Guild Annual Holiday

Show & Sale features the work of the best clay art-ists in the Mid-South. Hand-thrown and hand-modeled ceramic works include sculpture, jew-elry, objets d’ art, as well as functional pottery for the home. Participants can meet artists working in porcelain, stoneware,

earthenware, raku and other amazing ceramic techniques. They will also fi nd unique handcrafted works representing the highest standards of the ceramicists’ art: perfect for gifts, collecting and setting a holiday table.

An opening reception is being held Friday, Nov.

16 from 5- 8 p.m.; after-wards the event is sched-uled for Saturday, Nov. 17, 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.; and Sunday, Nov. 18, 11 a.m. -5 p.m. Admission is free.

(For more informa-tion: Memphis Botanic Garden, 901-576-4100 or www.thememphis-pottersguild.com.)

Everything for setting holiday tableFor the Daily Corinthian

Middleton Nursery Babies

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1501 Hwy 72 - Corinth, MS(between O’Reilly Auto Parts & Dixie Coin)

✹✹Open: Open: Mon-Sat Mon-Sat

9am-Until9am-Until

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

6 Farris Lane (N.Polk/Old 45)6 Farris Lane (N.Polk/Old 45)Corinth, MS • 662-665-4925Corinth, MS • 662-665-4925

Monday-Friday 10:30 am - 5:30 pmSaturday: 10:30 am - 4:00 pm

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4A • Sunday, November 11, 2012www.dailycorinthian.com

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

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Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the let-ter for verifi cation. All letters are subject to editing before publication, especially those beyond 300 words in length. Send to: Let-ters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily co-rinthian.com. Email is the preferred meth-od.

Personal, guest and commentary col-umns on the Opinion page are the views of the writer. “Other views” are editorials reprinted from other newspapers. None of these refl ect the views of this newspaper.

Our View

Registration has begun for the annual Lighthouse Foundation Toy Store. Every year it seems the need just gets bigger and bigger for this very worthy local cause.

Donations are needed from the community to help the organization provide for those in need.

Lighthouse Foundation Executive Director Gary Caveness recently told the newspaper they’re expecting an even bigger need this year as families continue to struggle in the tough economic climate.

Registration sessions are now under way for those hoping to receive help from the program. Sessions will be held throughout the month of November each Monday, Tuesday and Thurs-day from 9 a.m. to noon at the foundation’s headquarters on Johns Street. There will also be an evening session set on Thursday, Nov. 29, from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. for those unable to register during the day. No sessions will be held the week of Thanksgiving.

Those registering for help should bring a photo ID; proof of residency in Alcorn County -- such as a utility bill, rent or mortgage statement or other offi cial paperwork showing where they live -- and a social security card and birth certifi -cate for each child they are registering.

Now is the time for the entire community to step forward to help make this year’s toy store a success.

Donations are very much needed from the community to support the program. Donations may be mailed to The Lighthouse Foundation, P.O. Box 2121, Corinth, Miss. 38835.

Any donation is appreciated and no contribu-tion is too small.

The greatest gift during the holiday season is the gift of giving -- especially to a local child.

Daily Corinthian

(Anyone interested in getting involved in the Lighthouse Foundation Toy Store program by donating or working as a volunteer should call the Lighthouse Foundation at 662-286-0091.)

The greatest giftremains the gift

of giving — to kids

Letters Policy

Prayer for today

A verse to share

Among the objections to ObamaCare, one that has not gotten as much at-tention as it should is the president's power to waive the law for any company, union or other enterprise he chooses.

The 14th A m e n d -ment to the Constitution provides for “equal pro-tection of the laws” for all Americans. To have a law that can cost an organiza-tion millions of dollars a year either apply or not apply, depending on the whim or political inter-est of the president of the United States, is to make a mockery of the rule of law.

How secure is any free-dom when there is this kind of arbitrary power in the hands of one man?

What does your right of freedom of speech mean if saying something that ir-ritates the Obama admin-istration means that you or your business has to pay huge amounts of money and get hit with all sorts of red tape under ObamaCare that your competitor is ex-empted from, because your competitor either kept quiet or praised the Obama ad-ministration or donated to its reelection campaign?

Arbitrary ObamaCare

waivers are bad enough by themselves. They are truly ominous as part of a more general practice of this ad-ministration to create ar-bitrary powers that permit them to walk roughshod over the basic rights of the American people.

The checks and balances of the Constitution have been evaded time and time again by the Obama ad-ministration, undermin-ing the fundamental right of the people to determine the laws that govern them, through their elected repre-sentatives.

You do not have a self-governing people when huge laws are passed too fast for the public to even know what is in them.

You do not have a self-governing people when “czars” are created by Ex-ecutive Orders, so that individuals wielding vast powers equal to, or greater than, the powers of Cabinet members do not have to be vetted and confi rmed by the people's elected representa-tives in the Senate, as Cabi-net members must be.

You do not have a self-governing people when decisions to take military action are referred to the United Nations and the Arab League, but not to the Congress of the United States, elected by the Amer-ican people, whose blood and treasure are squan-dered.

You do not have a self-governing people when a so-called “consumer protec-tion” agency is created to be fi nanced by the unelected offi cials of the Federal Re-serve System, which can create its own money out of thin air, instead of being fi nanced by appropriations voted by elected members of Congress who have to justify their priorities and trade-offs to the taxpaying public.

You do not have a self-governing people when laws passed by the Con-gress, signed by previous presidents, and approved by the federal courts, can have the current president waive whatever sections he does not like, and refuse to enforce those sections, de-spite his oath to see that the laws are faithfully executed.

Barack Obama, for ex-ample, has refused to carry out sections of the immigra-tion laws that he does not like, unilaterally creating de facto amnesty for those illegal immigrants he has chosen to be exempt from the law. The issue is not -- repeat, not -- the wisdom or justice of this president's immigration policy, but the seizing of arbitrary powers not granted to any presi-dent by the Constitution of the United States.

You do not have a self-governing people if Presi-dent Obama succeeds in having international trea-

ties under United Nations auspices govern the way Americans live their lives, whether with gun control laws or other laws.

Obama's “citizen of the world” mindset was re-vealed back in 2008, when he said “We can't drive our SUVs and eat as much as we want and keep our homes on 72 degrees at all times ... and then just expect that ev-ery other country is going to say okay.”

The desire to circumvent the will of the American people was revealed even more ominously when Barack Obama said to Rus-sian President Medvedev — when he thought the mi-crophone was off — that, af-ter he is reelected and need never face the voters again, he can be more “fl exible” with the Russians about missile defense.

There are other signs of Obama's contempt for American Constitutional democracy, but these should be more than enough. Dare we risk how far he will go when he never has to face the voters again, and can appoint Supreme Court jus-tices who can rubber stamp his power grabs? Will this still be America in 2016?

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

Obama’s re-election is waiving freedom

While I was wrong in predicting a Mitt Romney win, I was, unfortunately, correct in saying that Presi-dent Obama would move to sign a U.N. Arms Con-trol Treaty right after the election whether he won or lost. On the very day af-ter the election, the Obama administration voted to re-open talks on the treaty at a special meeting on March 18-28.

The U.S. will undoubtedly “compromise” and sign the treaty, all the time reassur-ing us that it is protecting our constitutional right to bear arms.

But don't be fooled!This treaty is U.N. gun

control pure and simple.The giveaway is that it is

designed to solve a problem that almost doesn't exist: The private exportation of small arms. Ninety percent of all small arms exports come from governments, primarily the United States, Israel, Russia and China. If the U.N. really wanted to

stop the sales of weapons to drug gangs, guerilla groups and extremists, it would only have to stop arms sales from these governments.

Instead, the U.N. is set-ting up an elaborate mecha-nism to stop, by treaty, sales and exports of guns and grenades by private compa-nies and individuals around the world. This regimen will necessitate a U.N. oversight governing body with broad enforcement powers and is a backdoor way to enact global gun controls. Since the U.S. accounts of 40 per-cent of all small arms ex-ports, it is squarely aimed at us.

This U.N. governing body will have the power to re-quire registration of all guns as a preliminary “inventory” of weapons to stop their ex-portation. Then, limitations on sales and even confi sca-tions could follow. The trea-ty amounts to a backdoor way of achieving, through international action, gun controls that would never pass the U.S. Congress. And, politically, it is a way to cut the Republican House

of Representatives out of the equation and empower on the Democratic Senate to approve the gun controls since they are being done by treaty. The House has no role in treaty ratifi cation.

This U.N. governing body will have the power to re-quire registration of all guns as a preliminary inventory of weapons to stop their ex-portation. Then, limitations on sales and even confi sca-tions could follow. But ... it does require a 2/3 vote of the Senate to ratify the trea-ty. And there are still 45 Re-publicans in the new Sen-ate. If we hold 34 of them, we can kill the treaty.

Most have already indi-cated their opposition to the treaty, but don't rely on that. When the U.S. “achieves” some sooth-ing language protecting the Second Amendment -- words that do nothing to mitigate the enforcement power conferred on the U.N. governing body in the treaty itself -- they will fl ake away, leaving only the seri-ous opponents of gun con-trol to vote no.

We need to mobilize as never before. This treaty is the most serious threat to our Second Amendment rights we have ever faced.

Please go to dickmor-ris.com to sign a petition against UN gun control. Circulate it among your friends, family, and fellow sportspeople! We need a broad, broad net of trea-ty opponents to stop this thing.

Please include your hard address so we can send your signature to your Senators to change their minds or stiffen their hearts!

And read our new book “Here Come The Black He-licopters.” This U.N. treaty is only the opening shot in a broad effort to compromise our sovereignty and turn it over to the U.N. Read about it all in our book.

(Daly Corinthian colum-nist Dick Morris, former advisor to the Clinton ad-ministration, is a commen-tator and writer. He is also a columnist for the New York Post and The Hill. His wife, Eileen McGann is an attorney and consultant.)

US must stop UN gun control treaty nowEffective 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.

Sound Off Policy

Thomas Sowell

Columnist

BY DICK MORRIS AND EILEEN MCGANN

Columnists

Most loving Lord, give us at childlike love of Thee, which may cast out all fear. Amen.

Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.

— Joshua 1:9

Worth quoting

Courage is being scared to death... and sad-dling up anyway.

— John Wayne

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 5A

JACKSON — Neal San-difer was athletic with a passion for the outdoors and hunting.

Today, the once vibrant Sandifer, 34, lives in a nursing home in Colum-bia, unable to care for him-self after a 2008 fall from a deer stand left him perma-nently brain damaged.

“He shouldn’t be in a nursing home,” said Lee Jenkins, executive direc-tor of the Brain Injury As-sociation of Mississippi.

Jenkins said most nursing homes aren’t equipped to handle the anger and outbursts often associated with a patient’s severe brain injury and the rehab that is needed.

The problem is that some severely brain-injured pa-

tients can be a danger to themselves and others un-less they are in a controlled environment and receiving needed treatment.

Jenkins said there is no long-term, inpatient care facility in Mississippi for those with severe brain injury.

Sandifer’s family had a diffi cult time fi nding a nursing home for him, and now the nursing home has told Sandifer’s family he will have to be removed by the end of this month. Neal San-difer’s father, Richard “Part” Sandifer, said he may be forced to bring his son home — although he and his family can’t really care for him.

Neal’s mother, Sara, suf-fered a brain hemorrhage several years ago and now

uses a wheelchair.“There isn’t one place

I can fi nd for him in the state,” the elder Sandifer said, choking back emo-tions. “I want some help for my son.”

A place in Covington, La., is willing to take his son, but the cost is $600 a day, and Richard Sandifer says he can’t afford it.

“I’m retired; we had some money saved, but I’m going broke fast try-ing to care for my son,” Sandifer said.

Jenkins, who advocates the need for an inpatient, long-term care facility for people with traumatic brain injuries, said, “It’s a bad situation; some pa-tients with brain injuries can’t go home because no one can take care of them.”

Lamar County Judge

Billy Andrews said it’s a shame no state group or agency will step in to help Neal Sandifer.

He said an effort was made to try to get San-difer into a mental health facility but no place will accept him.

In Mississippi, Method-ist Rehabilitation Center is the post-acute, short-term facility that most brain injury patients got to, but after that, there is no public or private long-term, inpatient facility.

Dr. Richard Katz, a Jackson brain injury spe-cialist, said there is a need for a long-term, inpatient center but said he doubts one will be established because of cost and the diffi culty of obtaining a certifi cate of need to op-erate a facility in the state.

After his son was dis-charged from Methodist Rehabilitation Center af-ter eight weeks, Richard Sandifer said he couldn’t fi nd anywhere for him to go in Mississippi.

Sandifer said he even-tually found a place in Arkansas that would take his son.

Neal stayed in the fa-cility there for more than two years, but when the insurance coverage ran out, he was no longer able to keep his son there. The elder Sandifer said they brought their son home for a while, but there was no way he and his dis-abled wife could physi-cally care for him.

Neal Sandifer was mar-ried at the time of the acci-dent, but his wife couldn’t handle the situation and

divorced him and moved back to her native Geor-gia, according to the elder Sandifer.

Mike Barnes, the Mount Olive man who languished in a hospital bed for nearly two years with a traumatic brain injury, improved after un-dergoing treatment at the NeuroRestorative Timber Ridge in Benton, Ark., the same place Sandifer was.

Richard Sandifer said his son was making prog-ress at the facility until he had to be removed.

Barnes, 50, was trans-ferred in November of last year from the Univer-sity of Mississippi Medi-cal Center in Jackson to the Arkansas brain-injury facility after a long battle with bureaucracy and lack of in-state services.

State ranks high for traumatic brain injuriesBY JIMMIE D. GATES

Associated Press

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6A • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — President Barack Obama was declared the winner of Florida’s 29 electoral votes Saturday, ending a four-day count with a razor-thin margin that narrowly avoided an automatic recount that would have brought back memories of 2000.

No matter the out-come, Obama had already clinched re-election and now has 332 electoral votes to Romney’s 206.

The Florida Secretary of State’s Offi ce said that with almost 100 per-cent of the vote counted, Obama led Republican challenger Mitt Rom-ney 50 percent to 49.1 percent, a difference of about 74,000 votes. That was over the half-percent margin where a com-puter recount would have been automatically or-dered unless Romney had waived it.

There is a Nov. 16 dead-line for overseas and military ballots, but un-der Florida law, recounts are based on Saturday’s results. Only a handful of overseas and military ballots are believed to re-main outstanding.

It’s normal for election supervisors in Florida and other states to spend days

after any election count-ing absentee, provisional, military and overseas bal-lots. Usually, though, the election has already been called on election night or soon after because the winner’s margin is be-yond reach.

“Florida has spoken loudly in support of moving our nation for-ward,” Ashley Walker, the Obama campaign’s direc-tor for Florida, said in a news release. She added that the win was a testa-ment to the campaign’s volunteers and staff.

When reached by phone Saturday, Mitt Romney’s communications director Gail Gitcho said the cam-paign had no comment.

Obama’s win came in part from heavy support from black, Hispanic and younger voters. Exit polls conducted for The Associ-ated Press showed Obama was favored by more than 9 of 10 black voters and 3 of 5 Hispanic voters in Florida. The president also was the choice of two-thirds of voters un-der age 30.

Republican challenger Mitt Romney led among both white and older vot-ers.

In the end, the facts of who voted for which can-didate in Florida faded into memory as voting

issues emerged election night.

On election night this year, it was diffi cult for offi cials — and the media — to call the presidential race here, in part because the margin was so close and the voting stretched into the evening.

In Miami-Dade, for in-stance, so many people were in line at 7 p.m. in certain precincts that some people didn’t vote until after midnight.

The hours-long wait at the polls in some areas, a lengthy ballot and the fact that Gov. Rick Scott re-fused to extend early vot-ing hours has led some to criticize Florida’s voting process. Some offi cials have vowed to investigate why there were problems at the polls and how that led to a lengthy vote count.

If there had been a re-count, it would not be as diffi cult as the lengthy one in 2000. The state no longer uses punch-card ballots, which became known for their hanging chads. All 67 counties now use optical scan bal-lots where voters mark their selections manually.

Republican George W. Bush won the 2000 con-test after the Supreme Court declared him the winner over Democrat Al Gore by a scant 537 votes.

Obama wins Florida, gets state’s 29 votes

BY TAMARA LUSHAssociated Press

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Ac-tress Ashley Judd isn’t rul-ing out a run for U.S. Senate in Kentucky.

The former Kentuckian is an active supporter of Ten-nessee Democrats. She said in a statement Friday that she’s honored to be men-

tioned as a potential can-didate, but she sidestepped the question of whether she would get into the race.

“I cherish Kentucky, heart and soul, and while I’m very honored by the consideration, we have just fi nished an election, so let’s focus on coming together

to keep moving America’s families, and especially our kids, forward,” she said.

Judd lives in Tennessee and would have to re-estab-lish a residence in Kentucky before she could challenge Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell in his 2014 re-election bid.

Judd doesn’t rule out Senate runAssociated Press

BILLINGS, Mont. — A man napping in a Mon-tana cornfi eld was startled out of his snooze when he was run over by a large harvesting machine — and Yellowstone County depu-ties say he’s lucky to be alive.

Sheriff’s Lt. Kent O’Donnell says the

57-year-old man had been traveling the country by bus and decided to take a rest three rows deep in a fi eld on the outskirts of Billings, the state’s largest city.

A farmer harvesting this week felt his combine hit something. When he turned the machine off, he heard screaming.

Emergency responders found the man’s clothing had been sucked into the cutter, ensnaring him in the blades.

O’Donnell says the man, whose name was not re-leased, suffered cuts re-quiring stitches and may need skin grafts, but given the circumstances is “in-credibly lucky.”

Napping man run over by combineAssociated Press

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BusinessDaily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 7A

AGRICULTURE FUTURES

MUTUAL FUNDS

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

CORN

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelDec 12 755 733 738.75 -.75

Mar 13 757 735.50 742 -.50

May 13 752.50 732.75 738.75 -.75

Jul 13 742 724 729 -1.75

Sep 13 662.75 649.25 651.75 -5.75

Dec 13 644 627.75 629.75 -6.75

Mar 14 650 636 637.50 -5.75

SOYBEANS

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelNov 12 1525.75 1451 1452 -75

Jan 13 1524.25 1450 1451.25 -75.50

Mar 13 1503.25 1435.50 1436.50 -67.25

May 13 1474 1418.50 1419.25 -52

Jul 13 1457 1406 1408 -46

Aug 13 1422.50 1379.50 1380.25 -39

Sep 13 1382.25 1344.50 1344.50 -29

WHEAT

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelDec 12 916.50 863.50 886.50 +22

Mar 13 929.75 876.75 901.50 +23

May 13 933.50 883.50 908 +22.50

Jul 13 900 870.25 888.50 +13.50

Sep 13 905.75 878.75 897.50 +14.50

Dec 13 913 886 902.75 +13

Mar 14 912.25 891.25 905.25 +11.50

CATTLE

40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Dec 12 126.12 124.55 125.75 +.33

Feb 13 129.75 128.15 129.35 +.18

Apr 13 133.52 132.27 133.27 -.10

Jun 13 129.92 128.75 129.40 -.30

Aug 13 129.85 128.85 129.60 -.15

Oct 13 133.30 132.42 133.15 -.25

Dec 13 135.00 134.00 135.00 +.80

HOGS-Lean

40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Dec 12 80.95 76.65 80.75 +3.00

Feb 13 86.55 82.57 86.32 +2.42

Apr 13 91.00 87.70 91.00 +1.53

May 13 97.80 95.30 97.50 +.30

Jun 13 100.17 97.55 100.02 +.25

Jul 13 100.30 97.67 100.25 +.55

Aug 13 99.90 97.25 99.85 +.70

COTTON 2

50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Dec 12 71.10 69.03 69.58 -.77

Mar 13 72.34 69.79 70.44 -1.00

May 13 73.35 71.09 71.72 -.98

Jul 13 74.30 72.15 72.81 -.98

Sep 13 ... ... 74.84 -1.13

Oct 13 ... ... 74.52 -.85

Dec 13 76.31 74.35 74.84 -1.13

WEEKLY DOW JONES

WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg

THE WEEK IN REVIEW

PIMCO TotRetIs CI 171,541 11.61 +0.5 +10.5/A +8.6/A NL 1,000,000Vanguard TotStIdx LB 74,938 34.47 -3.8 +14.4/B +1.6/A NL 3,000Vanguard InstIdxI LB 67,885 126.69 -4.1 +14.8/A +1.2/B NL 5,000,000Vanguard 500Adml LB 58,926 127.53 -4.1 +14.8/A +1.2/B NL 10,000Fidelity Contra LG 58,699 75.21 -5.0 +11.0/C +1.5/B NL 2,500Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 58,251 34.48 -3.8 +14.6/B +1.7/A NL 10,000American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 58,027 52.03 -2.0 +11.6/A +0.5/C 5.75 250American Funds IncAmerA m MA 57,416 17.77 -1.6 +13.1/A +2.7/B 5.75 250American Funds GrthAmA m LG 55,406 32.92 -2.5 +14.7/A 0.0/D 5.75 250Vanguard InstPlus LB 46,918 126.70 -4.1 +14.8/A +1.2/B NL200,000,000American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 46,012 35.56 -1.6 +13.8/A -1.6/C 5.75 250American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 44,920 29.84 -2.8 +14.1/B +0.3/C 5.75 250FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m CA 41,736 2.18 -1.7 +11.9/A +3.8/C 4.25 1,000American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 40,202 30.48 -3.4 +13.5/C +1.1/B 5.75 250Dodge & Cox Stock LV 39,914 116.40 -1.9 +19.5/A -1.1/D NL 2,500Dodge & Cox IntlStk FB 38,794 32.46 -0.1 +10.3/B -3.5/B NL 2,500

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

SiriusXM 3386624 2.75 -.15Intel 2392105 20.80 -1.26Microsoft 2293965 28.83 -.67PwShs QQQ 2227924 63.43 -1.74Cisco 2042646 16.82 -.53Groupon 1972924 2.76 -1.07Facebook n 1672263 19.21 -1.97MicronT 1586893 5.62 -.09Apple Inc 1283262547.06-27.09Yahoo 1261539 17.26 +.15

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

Novogen rs 4.57 +3.06 +202.6ICAD rs 2.93 +.78 +36.3DUSA 7.96 +1.81 +29.4BioMarin 48.09+10.68 +28.5DigitAlly rs 5.75 +1.22 +26.9LakesEnt 2.83 +.58 +25.8Iridium un 9.50 +1.60 +20.3InterMune 9.42 +1.57 +20.0ProvidSvc 12.02 +1.98 +19.7Tekmira g 5.00 +.77 +18.2

Name Last Chg %Chg

SvcSource 4.79 -3.98 -45.4Sypris 3.66 -3.00 -45.0JamesRiv 2.70 -1.77 -39.6QltyDistr 5.77 -2.71 -32.0DTS Inc 14.80 -6.50 -30.5Zillow 25.20-11.08 -30.5ApricusBio 2.16 -.84 -28.0Groupon 2.76 -1.07 -27.9Kingtne rs 2.17 -.83 -27.7Responsys 6.63 -2.42 -26.7

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Vringo 781372 3.39 +.62CheniereEn 254037 14.68 -1.50Rentech 140921 2.74 ...NwGold g 134874 10.70 -.08VirnetX 128487 35.43 +6.83NovaGld g 116367 4.67 -.05GoldStr g 84549 1.87 -.03NA Pall g 67346 1.49 -.04AlldNevG 65809 35.60 +1.79GranTrra g 64525 5.57 +.52

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

HallwdGp 9.46 +3.31 +53.8ImpacMtg 17.33 +3.48 +25.1VirnetX 35.43 +6.83 +23.9Vringo 3.39 +.62 +22.4Ellomay 6.00 +.75 +14.3KeeganR g 4.34 +.45 +11.6Timmins g 3.36 +.35 +11.6NDynMn g 3.96 +.41 +11.5GpoSimec 12.56 +1.18 +10.4GranTrra g 5.57 +.52 +10.3

Name Last Chg %Chg

MeetMe 2.90 -1.41 -32.7eMagin 3.63 -.83 -18.6Acquity n 8.37 -1.51 -15.3Crexendo 2.00 -.36 -15.3BakerM 19.19 -3.23 -14.4MGTCap rs 6.00 -.99 -14.2SaratogaRs 4.34 -.58 -11.8Aurizon g 4.01 -.53 -11.7WalterInv 40.72 -5.41 -11.7BioTime 3.34 -.36 -9.7

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 8659209 9.43 -.42S&P500ETF 7465967138.16 -3.40SPDR Fncl 3464866 15.50 -.50iShEMkts 2696377 41.00 -.60FordM 2288755 10.93 -.24Citigroup 2023058 35.93 -1.67SprintNex 1937801 5.55 -.15GenElec 1875849 21.00 -.31BariPVix rs 1826689 37.18 +2.25Pfizer 1650240 24.17 -.16

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

NamTai 14.29 +3.58 +33.4GMX Rs pfB 14.61 +3.11 +27.0Fabrinet 11.97 +2.48 +26.1Startek 3.52 +.63 +21.6WtWatch 57.26 +9.43 +19.7SemiMfg 2.30 +.36 +18.6BitautoH 6.92 +1.06 +18.1CSVInvCpr 57.71 +8.71 +17.8BarcShtC 21.07 +3.09 +17.2PikeElec 10.57 +1.54 +17.1

Name Last Chg %Chg

PitnB pr 207.37-124.23-37.5Trulia n 15.15 -6.54 -30.2OxfordRes 5.74 -2.42 -29.7Roundys n 4.19 -1.47 -26.0iPSEEmM 81.61-28.22 -25.7GoodrPet 9.22 -2.93 -24.1Molycorp 7.50 -2.33 -23.7ParagSh rs 2.90 -.90 -23.7AmRepro 3.02 -.84 -21.8Coeur 24.76 -6.38 -20.5

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 49.62 -.66 -1.3 +14.7

AT&T Inc NY 1.80 33.54 -1.39 -4.0 +10.9

AMD NY ... 2.03 -.07 -3.3 -62.4

AlcatelLuc NY ... 1.11 +.11 +11.0 -28.8

Alcoa NY .12 8.43 -.22 -2.5 -2.5

AlliantTch NY 1.04 59.93 +1.41 +2.4 +4.8

AlphaNRs NY ... 8.00 -1.06 -11.7 -60.8

AmIntlGrp NY ... 32.17 -.51 -1.6 +38.7

Annaly NY 2.17 14.98 -.95 -6.0 -6.1

Aon plc NY .63 55.63 +.75 +1.4 +18.9

Apple Inc Nasd10.60 547.06-27.09 -4.7 +35.1

BP PLC NY 1.92 40.84 -1.16 -2.8 -4.4

BcpSouth NY .04 13.33 -.71 -5.1 +21.0

BkofAm NY .04 9.43 -.42 -4.3 +69.6

BariPVix rs NY ... 37.18 +2.25 +6.5 -73.8

Bemis NY 1.00 33.01 -.45 -1.3 +9.7

Caterpillar NY 2.08 84.95 -.84 -1.0 -6.2

Checkpnt NY ... 8.23 -.02 -0.2 -24.8

Chevron NY 3.60 105.84 -2.53 -2.3 -.5

Cisco Nasd .56 16.82 -.53 -3.1 -6.7

Citigroup NY .04 35.93 -1.67 -4.4 +36.6

CocaCola s NY 1.02 36.29 -.79 -2.1 +3.7

Comcast Nasd .65 36.12 -1.49 -4.0 +52.3

Deere NY 1.84 84.29 -1.31 -1.5 +9.0

Dell Inc Nasd .32 9.41 +.26 +2.8 -35.7

DirSCBear NY ... 16.96 +1.02 +6.4 -36.0

Dover NY 1.40 60.46 +1.88 +3.2 +4.2

DowChm NY 1.28 29.36 -.39 -1.3 +2.1

EnPro NY ... 38.70 -.68 -1.7 +17.3

ExxonMbl NY 2.28 87.21 -2.49 -2.8 +2.9

Facebook n Nasd ... 19.21 -1.97 -9.3 -49.8

FstHorizon NY .04 9.04 -.24 -2.6 +13.0

FordM NY .20 10.93 -.24 -2.1 +1.6

FrkUnv NY .46 7.23 -.15 -2.0 +8.1

FredsInc Nasd .24 13.04 -.85 -6.1 -10.6

GenElec NY .68 21.00 -.31 -1.5 +17.3

Groupon Nasd ... 2.76 -1.07 -27.9 -86.6

HewlettP NY .53 13.61 -.15 -1.1 -47.2

iShChina25 NY .93 36.46 -1.00 -2.7 +4.6

iShEMkts NY .82 41.00 -.60 -1.4 +8.1

iShR2K NY 1.32 79.38 -1.81 -2.2 +7.6

Intel Nasd .90 20.80 -1.26 -5.7 -14.2

IBM NY 3.40 189.64 -2.94 -1.5 +3.1

JPMorgCh NY 1.20 40.62 -1.80 -4.2 +22.2

KimbClk NY 2.96 83.13 -.21 -0.3 +13.0

Kroger NY .60 24.70 -.23 -0.9 +2.0

Lowes NY .64 31.47 -1.68 -5.1 +24.0

McDnlds NY 3.08 84.74 -2.12 -2.4 -15.5

MeadWvco NY 1.00 29.52 -.40 -1.3 +10.7

MicronT Nasd ... 5.62 -.09 -1.6 -10.7

Microsoft Nasd .92 28.83 -.67 -2.3 +11.1

Mondelez Nasd .52 26.02 -.26 -1.0 +6.4

MorgStan NY .20 16.61 -1.17 -6.6 +9.8

NY Times NY ... 8.41 -.37 -4.2 +8.8

NewsCpA Nasd .17 24.42 +.53 +2.2 +36.9

NiSource NY .96 24.30 -.92 -3.6 +2.1

NokiaCp NY .26 2.65 -.15 -5.4 -45.0

NorthropG NY 2.20 65.60 -3.38 -4.9 +12.2

Penney NY ... 20.64 -3.06 -12.9 -41.3

PepsiCo NY 2.15 68.85 -.20 -0.3 +3.8

Pfizer NY .88 24.17 -.16 -0.7 +11.7

PwShs QQQ Nasd .61 63.43 -1.74 -2.7 +13.6

ProctGam NY 2.25 67.01 -2.18 -3.2 +.4

RadioShk NY ... 2.11 -.18 -7.9 -78.3

RegionsFn NY .04 6.45 -.21 -3.2 +50.0

RschMotn Nasd ... 8.54 -.17 -2.0 -41.1

S&P500ETF NY 2.85 138.16 -3.40 -2.4 +10.1

SandRdge NY ... 5.51 -.60 -9.8 -32.5

SearsHldgs Nasd .33 62.51 -1.43 -2.2 +96.7

Sherwin NY 1.56 140.84 -1.16 -0.8 +57.8

SiriusXM Nasd ... 2.75 -.15 -5.2 +51.1

SouthnCo NY 1.96 43.03 -2.74 -6.0 -7.0

SprintNex NY ... 5.55 -.15 -2.6 +137.2

SPDR Fncl NY .25 15.50 -.50 -3.1 +19.2

TecumsehB Nasd ... 4.93 -.24 -4.6 +10.8

TecumsehA Nasd ... 4.83 -.23 -4.5 +2.8

Torchmark NY .60 50.22 -.34 -0.7 +15.7

VangEmg NY 1.44 41.31 -.53 -1.3 +8.1

WalMart NY 1.59 72.31 -.46 -0.6 +21.0

WellsFargo NY .88 32.35 -1.17 -3.5 +17.4

Wendys Co Nasd .16 4.45 +.14 +3.2 -17.0

Weyerhsr NY .68 26.31 -1.25 -4.5 +40.9

Xerox NY .17 6.34 -.13 -2.0 -20.4

Yahoo Nasd ... 17.26 +.15 +0.9 +7.0

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

12,000

12,500

13,000

13,500

14,000

M NJ J A S O

19.28

MON

133.24

TUES

-312.95

WED

-121.41

THUR

4.07

FRI

Close: 12,815.391-week change: -277.77 (-2.1%)

Dow Jones industrials

Spotlight on Business

Name: Casey Evans, Trin-ity Rickman

Title: OwnersBusiness: Sweet On You

Gourmet CupcakesLocation: 1113B High-

way 72 East in CorinthPhone: 662-603-1141,

731-646-0667; sweetony-

[email protected]: Tuesday - Friday,

11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Satur-day, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Closed Sunday and Mon-day

Products and Services: 12 original cupcake flavors, including Cherry Bomb,

Very Strawberry, Red Vel-vet, Chocolate Almond Supreme, Double Stuffed (Chocolate cake with Oreo madness), Lemonberry, Sa-moa and Sweet Southern Vanilla; Will make cakes for parties and events; Cupcakes made to order;

Choose your favorite cup-cake size -- jumbo, regular, mini; E-mail or call-in or-ders; Menu changes with the season

Upcoming special events: Check out our spe-cial holiday flavors! Let us do your holiday baking!

NEW YORK — FedEx expects to ship 280 mil-lion packages between Thanksgiving and Christ-mas, up 13 percent from a year ago, thanks to con-sumers’ growing fond-ness for shopping online.

FedEx moves a bulk of its cheaper, lighter weight shipments from online and catalog retail-ers through its SmartPost service, a partnership with the U.S. Postal Ser-vice.

The recent holiday business forecast comes against a background of lackluster growth in the global economy.

The Memphis, Tenn.,

based business expects Dec. 10 to be its busi-est day with 19 million shipments, up 10 percent from 2011. FedEx Corp. said holiday shipments will be driven by sales of personal electronics, ap-parel, luxury goods and items from large inter-net retailers. FedEx has a customer shipping outlet based in Corinth.

Larger rival UPS, which is based in Atlanta, hasn’t yet released its holiday forecast.

The National Retail Federation expects holi-day sales to increase 4.1 percent. That would be the smallest increase since 2009 when sales were up just 0.3 percent. But the forecast still is

higher than the 3.5 per-cent average over the last 10 years. Research fi rm eMarketer forecasts online holiday sales will grow 16.8 percent, ex-cluding travel purchases.

FedEx and UPS Inc. can get double the benefi t when consumers choose to shop online: They ship the gift to the receiver, and they also ship the un-wanted presents that are later returned.

FedEx SmartPost has been a huge driver of growth for the company since it was formed. Av-erage daily package vol-ume grew 18 percent in the fi scal fi rst quarter ended in August, more than three times the growth rate of FedEx’s

overall ground shipments in the U.S. The ground segment, which moves mostly non-priority ship-ments by truck, has held up despite slower growth around the globe as con-sumers and businesses opt for slower methods of shipping to save money.

FedEx plans to hire 20,000 seasonal workers to help handle the surge — the same as last year.

Overall, FedEx has warned that the global economy is stalling and expects conditions to get worse next year. It’s mak-ing big cuts in the seg-ments that have been the hardest hit, including its Express unit that moves top-priority shipments by air.

FedEx: Online shopping powers holiday recordBY SAMANTHA

BOMKAMPAssociated Press

MERIDIAN — Rick Murphy, Elizabeth Smith and Barbara Artis of Vital Care of Corinth attended the Vital Care Home In-fusion Training program held recently in Meridian.

This program is pro-vided once a quarter to employees of Vital Care franchises. It consists of four and one-half days of training in types of thera-pies, patient care services, quality assurance and fi nancial services. The program also contains a comprehensive session

on pharmacy standards and a session designed to help marketing repre-sentatives with their sales calls.

For additional informa-tion on Vital Care visit www.vitalcareinc.com.

Vital Care Inc. is a franchise-based network of home infusion phar-macies headquartered in Meridian. Founded 1986, it is one of the largest providers of infusion ser-vices, operating dozens of locations throughout 18 states.

Vital Care employees attend training session

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Sports8 • Daily Corinthian Sunday, November 11, 2012

Local Schedule

Monday

BasketballBelmont @ Tish Co., 6

Tuesday

BasketballBooneville @ Biggersville, 6Potts Camp @ Central, 6Jumpertown @ Kossuth, 6Walnut @ Thrasher, 6Tish Co. @ Mooreville, 6SoccerTish Co. @ CentralOxford @ Corinth

Thursday

BasketballBooneville @ Corinth, 6 (WXRZ)Biggersville @ Walnut, 6Central @ Saltillo, 6Pine Grove TournamentKossuthSoccerSenatobia @ Corinth

Friday

BasketballBaldwyn @ Biggersville, 6Blue Mountain @ Walnut, 6Pine Grove TournamentKossuthSoccerLafayette @Tish Co.

Saturday

BasketballPine Grove TournamentKossuth

The Kossuth boys cross country team remains a powerhouse.

Unfortunately they’ve been running into a few along the way.

Kossuth turned in its eighth straight Top 3 showing at the Class 3A State Cross Country Meet on Saturday, fi n-ishing behind Saint Andrew’s and Saint Patrick

The two “Saints” swapped places in the girls’ event.

In claiming the boys’ title, Andrew’s was just six points shy of a perfect score with 21 points. Patrick was a dis-tant second with 73, keeping Kossuth out of a second-straight runner-up fi n-ish by a mere eight points.

Kossuth won two titles in 2007 and 2009. In addition the Aggies -- with 11 straight Top 5 fi nishes -- own four run-ner-up slots (2005, 06, 08, 11) and a

BATON ROUGE, La. — Zach Metten-berger looked sharp a second straight week, and this time his performance produced a victory for ninth-ranked LSU.

Mettenberger passed for 273 yards and two touchdowns, and LSU kept alive faint hope of a Southeastern Con-ference title with a 37-17 victory over No. 23 Mississippi State on Saturday night.

One week after passing for a career-high 298 yards in a narrow loss to No. 1 Alabama, Mettenberger completed 19 of 30 passes without an intercep-tion against the Bulldogs. His top tar-get was Jarvis Landry, who had nine catches for 109 yards — both career highs — including a 19-yard touch-down to help the Tigers (8-2, 4-2 SEC) beat the Bulldogs (7-3, 3-3) for the 13th straight time.

Mettenberger’s other scoring pass went to Spencer Ware. Fullback J.C. Copeland scored on a 1-yard plunge and safety Craig Loston returned an interception 100 yards for a score.

Tyler Russell completed a career-high 26 passes on 38 attempts for a ca-reer-high 295 yards and a touchdown that got the Bulldogs as close as fi eld goal early in the third quarter before they faded in their third straight loss, all against ranked teams.

LSU’s defense shut out Missis-sippi State during the last 27:52, dur-ing which Tigers defensive ends Sam Montgomery and Barkevious Mingo each sacked Russell and Loston made

Aggies claimTop 3 finish

No. 9 LSUtops Bulldogs

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

BY BRETT MARTELAssociated Press

Yvette Evans and Emma Knight fi nished second and third, respectively, at the Class 4A State Cross County Meet, but Pontotoc’s consis-tency earned them another team title.

Pontotoc placed three run-ners in the Top 10 and all fi ve of their scoring entrants were among the fi rst 16 to cross the line as the other Lady War-riors secured their fourth straight championship.

Teams are awarded points for the order of fi nish on their fi rst fi ve runners to cross the fi nish line, thus the lowest score wins. Schools can en-ter as many as seven runners with those fi nishes used in team tie-breakers.

Pontotoc fi nished with 49

points, with Corinth earning a runner-up fi nish with 69 digits.

It was clearly a battle of the native teams, with Lafayette County fi nishing 30 points back of Corinth in third place.

Evans, an eighth-grader, fi nished second in the 4K event at Mississippi Col-lege in 15:29.7. She was just one second back of Lafayette County’s Peyton Hamann for the individual title.

Emma Knight was 13 sec-onds behind her teammate in third place. The freshman fi nished 18 clicks ahead of the fourth-place fi nisher.

Corinth placed three in the Top 15 and another in the Top 25.

■ All of Saint Stanislaus’ runners placed in the Top 10 as they knocked of three-time

champion Pontotoc. Saint Stanislaus tallied 26 points — just 11 above a perfect score — to more than double Pon-totoc, which fi nished with 54 points.

■ Corinth fi nished third with 67 points. With two run-ners in the Top 10 and two more among the fi rst 15, the Warriors trailed 38-34 before the fi nal scoring runner for each school crossed the line.

A nine-place difference in-creased the fi nal margin for the runner-up spot to 13.

■ Clayton Allred fi n-ished fourth in 17:29 to top Corinth’s efforts. Will Crigger fi nished 10th in 17:58.

Girls-Team

(1) Pontotoc 49, (2) Corinth 69, (3) Lafayette Co. 96, (4) Vancleave 149, (5) West Lauder-dale 164, (6) Lewisburg 182, (7) Itawamba AHS 215, (8) Germantown 217, (9) Caledonia 265, (10) Newton County 265, (11) New Al-

bany 269, (12) Florence 286, (13) North Pon-totoc 333, (14) NE Lauderdale 353, (15) North Pike 369, (16) Senatobia 373, (17) Houston 437, (18) Leake Central 540, (19) Lawrence County 542, (20) Cleveland 562

Girls Individual

CORINTH (69): 2. Yvette Evans, 15:29; 3. Emma Knight, 15:42; 14. Holley Marshall, 16:48; 22. Anna Ruth Price, 17:52; 28. Katie Jones, 18:14.

Others: 29. Mary Wayne, 18:15; 52. Laura Avant, 19:14

Boys-Team

(1) Saint Stanislaus 26, (2) Pontotoc 54, (3) Corinth 67, (4) Lafayette Co. 167, (5) West Lauderdale 192, (6) Germantown 208, (7) Senatobia 238, (8) Newton Co. 241, (9) Itawamba AHS 292, (10) North Pike 346, (11) Lewisburg 382, (12) Vancleave 406, (13) Houtston 407, (14) NE Lauderdale 417, (15) MSMS 427, (16) Caledonia 454, (17) Poplar-ville 463, (18) Lawrence Co. 466, (19) Amory 471, (20) Kosciusko 484, (21) Tishomingo Co, 502, (22) Cleveland 518, (23) North Pontotoc 527

Boys Individual

CORINTH (67): 4. Clayton Allred, 17:29; 10. Will Crigger, 17:58; 12. Jordan Mills, 18:02; 15. Dennis Dilworth, 18:06; 32(29). Austin Powell, 18:48.

Others: 35. Reed Pearce, 18:53; 37. Austin Martin, 18:56

Corinth teams earn Top 3 finishes in 4ABY H. LEE SMITH II

[email protected]

OXFORD — Jordan Rodg-ers hit Chris Boyd for a 26-yard touchdown pass with 52 seconds remaining and Vanderbilt rallied for a 27-26 victory over Mississippi on Saturday night.

The Commodores (6-4, 3-3 Southeastern Conference) are now bowl eligible for the second straight season for the fi rst time in school history.

Vanderbilt trailed 23-6 early in the third quarter, but

Rodgers found Jordan Mat-thews for a 52-yard touch-down minutes later to start the Commodores’ rally.

Rodgers completed 20 of 35 passes for 267 yards and two touchdowns. Matthews caught nine passes for 153 yards and a touchdown.

Ole Miss (5-5, 2-4) must beat either LSU or Mississippi State over the fi nal two weeks to become bowl eligible for the fi rst time since 2009.

Vanderbilt has won six out

of eight games against Ole Miss.

Ole Miss wasted a terrifi c performance from Bo Wal-lace, who completed 31 of 49 passes for 403 yards and a touchdown. It’s only the fi fth time in school history a quar-terback has thrown for more than 400 yards. Ja-Mes Lo-gan caught eight passes for 160 yards.

The Rebels looked like they might hang on for the win after Bryson Rose kicked a 27-yard

fi eld goal to push them ahead 26-20 with 2:43 remaining.

But Vanderbilt drove the fi eld in less than two minutes on nine plays, showing a mox-ie rarely seen from the Com-modores before the arrival of coach James Franklin two years ago.

Boyd was wide open down the sideline on the game-winning play, catching Rodg-ers’ perfectly-thrown ball and jogging into the end zone un-touched.

Vandylized: Commodores rally past ReblesAssociated Press

KNOXVILLE, Tenn.— Mis-souri quarterback James Franklin couldn’t do much of anything for much of Satur-day’s game against Tennes-see. By the end of the day, he couldn’t be stopped.

Andrew Baggett kicked a 35-yard fi eld goal in the fourth overtime period as Missouri rallied from a two-touchdown halftime defi cit to beat Ten-nessee 51-48 at Neyland Stadi-um. Missouri forced overtime when Franklin threw a 25-

yard touchdown pass to Dorial Green-Beckham on a fourth-and-12 play with 47 seconds remaining.

Each team scored touch-downs on its fi rst two overtime possessions, including a 5-yard run by Tennessee holder Tyler Drummer on a fake fi eld-goal attempt. Each team reached the end zone again in the third overtime but failed to make its ensuing two-point conversion attempt.

Missouri’s defense fi nally came through in the fourth

overtime when safety Ian Si-mon broke up a fourth-and-3 pass to Zach Rogers from the Missouri 18.

Franklin was 2-of-8 for 18 yards and an interception in the fi rst half, but he ended up throwing for 226 yards and four touchdowns while also rushing for 43 yards. All of his touchdown passes came in the fi nal minute of regulation or overtime.

Kendial Lawrence added two touchdown runs and 153 rush-ing yards for Missouri (5-5, 2-5

SEC). Tyler Bray threw for 404 yards and four touchdowns for Tennessee (4-6, 0-6). Missouri and Tennessee had entered the day tied for the NCAA lead with 10 all-time overtime victories each.

Tennessee has now lost 13 of its last 14 SEC games, cast-ing further doubt of Volunteers coach Derek Dooley.

Tennessee entered the day having allowed the most points (35.4) and yards (483.1) per game of any team in the South-eastern Conference.

Missouri rallies for 4-overtime win over TennesseeAssociated Press

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Johnny Football and the SEC newbies from Texas A&M took down the biggest bully in their new neighborhood and left No. 1 Alabama with badly bruised national champion-ship hopes.

Johnny Manziel, bet-ter known around Texas as Johnny Football, staked the 15th-ranked Aggies to a three-

touchdown lead in the fi rst quarter, and Texas A&M held on to beat the Crimson Tide 29-24 on Saturday.

The Aggies (8-2, 5-2), play-ing in the Southeastern Con-ference for the fi rst season after ditching the Big 12, also might have ended the league’s run of BCS titles at six years.

The defending national champion Crimson Tide (9-1, 6-1), who have been No. 1 al-

most all season and had won 13 straight, didn’t go quietly.

AJ McCarron nearly pulled off a second straight scintil-lating comeback.

He threw one touchdown pass and motored the ball downfi eld before Deshazor Everett stepped in front of his fourth-down pass at the goal line with 1:36 left.

Manziel passed for 253 yards and rushed for 92, con-

founding the Tide defense with his ability to keep plays alive as the Aggies scored the game’s fi rst 20 points.

“No moment is too big for him,” coach Kevin Sumlin said of his remarkable red-shirt freshman.

And no defense or venue too tough, apparently.

“If you’re around him every day, I don’t think it bothers him that much,” Sumlin said.

Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M stun No. 1 Alabama Associated Press

Associated Press

Ole Miss defensive end Jason Jones (38) rushes Vanderbilt quarterback Jordan Rodgers (11) into throwing an incomplete pass during second-quarter action Saturday in Oxford.

Please see LSU | 9

Please see AGGIES | 9

Scoreboard Daily Corinthian • 9Sunday, November 11, 2012

Basketball

Saturday’s college scores

EASTBridgeport 76, Adelphi 66Cornell 63, W. Michigan 55Dartmouth 67, Maine 54Dominican (NY) 63, Bentley 58Franklin Pierce 78, Wilmington (Del.) 60La Salle 73, Delaware 66Merrimack 75, Caldwell 63New Hampshire 91, Suffolk 51Pace 60, Bloomfi eld 59Princeton 57, Buffalo 53Providence 64, NJIT 63Quinnipiac 65, Hartford 61S. Connecticut 94, Goldey Beacom 77S. New Hampshire 60, LIU Post 57Sacred Heart 85, Yale 82, OTSt. Anselm 101, Concordia (N.Y.) 84St. Rose 69, Mercy 53Stonehill 78, Chestnut Hill 59Youngstown St. 80, George Washington 73

SOUTHBarton 77, Shaw 67Berea 77, Bryan 67Christian Brothers 72, Rhodes 65Columbia 68, Furman 47Delaware St. 74, Gwynedd-Mercy 56East Carolina 72, Washington & Lee 50Freed-Hardeman 73, Concordia-Selma 64Gardner-Webb 77, Covenant 39Georgetown (Ky.) 85, Indiana-Southeast 67Jarvis Christian 94, Spring Hill 87King (Tenn.) 71, Virginia Union 69Lenoir-Rhyne 53, Queens (NC) 50Lincoln (Pa.) 68, Howard 62Livingstone 75, Catawba 51Mercer 65, Sewanee 36North Florida 79, Edward Waters 65Old Dominion 72, Morgan St. 61Pikeville 101, Alice Lloyd 58St. Catharine 81, Grace (Ind.) 73, OTTrevecca Nazarene 61, Point Loma 51UCF 74, South Florida 56UTSA 60, Holy Cross 56

Union (Tenn.) 86, Central Baptist 70Va. Intermont 82, St. Augustine’s 75Vanderbilt 80, Nicholls St. 65Virginia Tech 80, ETSU 62Winthrop 80, St. Andrews 48Xavier (NO) 78, Tuskegee 70

MIDWESTAquinas 75, Spring Arbor 61Benedictine (Kan.) 75, Park 62Butler 74, Elon 59Cornerstone 69, Indiana Wesleyan 65Dayton 74, Arkansas St. 61Drake 96, William Jewell 66Green Bay 72, Chicago St. 67Malone 101, Cincinnati-Clermont 44Michigan-Dearborn 65, Taylor 63Minn. St.-Mankato 100, Bethany Lutheran 42Missouri 83, SIU-Edwardsville 69N. Iowa 103, Wartburg 50Notre Dame 58, Evansville 49Ohio 81, Portland 52St. Francis (Ind.) 73, Siena Heights 58St. Xavier 90, Olivet Nazarene 79Wichita St. 71, NC Central 57

SOUTHWESTSt. Thomas (Texas) 72, Rice 59Texas A&M-CC 60, Texas Lutheran 49Wiley 104, Dillard 75

FAR WESTArizona St. 79, Cent. Arkansas 64Long Beach St. 75, North Alabama 65N. Colorado 127, Southwest 81Oregon 83, N. Arizona 73Washington St. 88, E. Washington 69

TOURNAMENTAll-Military Classic

First RoundAir Force 76, Army 65The Citadel 84, VMI 76

NBA standings, schedule

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L Pct GBNew York 4 0 1.000 —Philadelphia 4 2 .667 1Brooklyn 2 2 .500 2Boston 3 3 .500 2

Toronto 1 5 .167 4Southeast Division

W L Pct GBMiami 5 1 .833 —Atlanta 2 2 .500 2Charlotte 2 3 .400 2½Orlando 2 3 .400 2½Washington 0 5 .000 4½

Central Division W L Pct GBChicago 4 2 .667 —Milwaukee 3 2 .600 ½Indiana 3 4 .429 1½Cleveland 2 4 .333 2Detroit 0 7 .000 4½

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 5 1 .833 —Memphis 4 1 .800 ½New Orleans 3 2 .600 1½Dallas 4 3 .571 1½Houston 3 3 .500 2

Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 4 2 .667 —Minnesota 4 2 .667 —Denver 3 3 .500 1Portland 2 3 .400 1½Utah 2 4 .333 2

Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBL.A. Clippers 4 2 .667 —Golden State 3 3 .500 1Phoenix 3 3 .500 1Sacramento 2 4 .333 2L.A. Lakers 2 4 .333 2

–––Friday’s Games

Brooklyn 107, Orlando 68Milwaukee 101, Washington 91Philadelphia 106, Boston 100Miami 95, Atlanta 89New York 104, Dallas 94Minnesota 96, Indiana 94Memphis 93, Houston 85New Orleans 107, Charlotte 99Oklahoma City 105, Detroit 94Phoenix 107, Cleveland 105San Antonio 97, Sacramento 86L.A. Lakers 101, Golden State 77Denver 104, Utah 84

Saturday’s GamesPhiladelphia 93, Toronto 83Indiana 89, Washington 85Charlotte 101, Dallas 97, OT

Chicago 87, Minnesota 80Houston 96, Detroit 82Boston 96, Milwaukee 92Phoenix at Utah, (n)San Antonio at Portland, (n)Denver at Golden State, (n)

Sunday’s GamesOrlando at Brooklyn, 2 p.m.Atlanta at L.A. Clippers, 2:30 p.m.Miami at Memphis, 5 p.m.Cleveland at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m.Sacramento at L.A. Lakers, 8:30

p.m.Monday’s Games

Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.Utah at Toronto, 6 p.m.Oklahoma City at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.Boston at Chicago, 7 p.m.Miami at Houston, 7 p.m.Minnesota at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.Denver at Phoenix, 8 p.m.Atlanta at Portland, 9 p.m.

Football

NFL standingsAMERICAN CONFERENCE

East W L T Pct PF PANew England 5 3 0 .625 262 170Miami 4 4 0 .500 170 149N.Y. Jets 3 5 0 .375 168 200Buffalo 3 5 0 .375 180 248

South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 7 1 0 .875 237 137Indianapolis 6 3 0 .667 186 201Tennessee 3 6 0 .333 182 308Jacksonville 1 8 0 .111 127 246

North W L T Pct PF PABaltimore 6 2 0 .750 199 176Pittsburgh 5 3 0 .625 191 164Cincinnati 3 5 0 .375 189 218Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 169 211

West W L T Pct PF PADenver 5 3 0 .625 235 175San Diego 4 4 0 .500 185 157Oakland 3 5 0 .375 171 229Kansas City 1 7 0 .125 133 240

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAN.Y. Giants 6 3 0 .667 254 185Philadelphia 3 5 0 .375 133 183Dallas 3 5 0 .375 150 181Washington 3 6 0 .333 226 248

South W L T Pct PF PAAtlanta 8 0 0 1.000 220 143Tampa Bay 4 4 0 .500 226 185New Orleans 3 5 0 .375 218 229Carolina 2 6 0 .250 149 180

North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 7 1 0 .875 236 120Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 239 187Minnesota 5 4 0 .556 204 197Detroit 4 4 0 .500 192 188

West W L T Pct PF PASan Francisco 6 2 0 .750 189 103Seattle 5 4 0 .556 170 154Arizona 4 5 0 .444 144 173St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 137 186

Thursday, Nov. 8Indianapolis 27, Jacksonville 10

Sunday, Nov. 11Atlanta at New Orleans, NoonDetroit at Minnesota, NoonDenver at Carolina, NoonSan Diego at Tampa Bay, NoonTennessee at Miami, NoonBuffalo at New England, NoonOakland at Baltimore, NoonN.Y. Giants at Cincinnati, NoonN.Y. Jets at Seattle, 3:05 p.m.St. Louis at San Francisco, 3:25 p.m.Dallas at Philadelphia, 3:25 p.m.Houston at Chicago, 7:20 p.m.Open: Arizona, Cleveland, Green Bay,

WashingtonMonday, Nov. 12

Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 15

Miami at Buffalo, 7:20 p.m.Sunday, Nov. 18

Cleveland at Dallas, NoonN.Y. Jets at St. Louis, NoonJacksonville at Houston, NoonCincinnati at Kansas City, NoonPhiladelphia at Washington, NoonGreen Bay at Detroit, NoonArizona at Atlanta, NoonTampa Bay at Carolina, NoonNew Orleans at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.San Diego at Denver, 3:25 p.m.Indianapolis at New England, 3:25 p.m.

pair of thirds (2010, 12) the past eight meets.

Riley McCalla topped the ef-fort with a ninth-place fi nish in 18:35. Levi Burcham (11th, 18:40) and Nathan Ginn (13, 18:42) also cracked the Top 15.

The Alcorn Central boys’ fi n-ished sixth with 154 points. The Bears were just six points back of Choctaw Central for a Top 5 fi nish.

Samuel Holley topped the young Bears with a 15th-place fi nish in 19:07.

■ Saint Patrick and Saint An-drews went 1-2 in the girls event, with the former taking a 38-64 win.

■ The Lady Aggies fi nished seventh as a team with 183 points. Alania Feazell’s Top 25 showing -- 21st in 17:50 -- topped Kossuth.

■ Alcorn Central didn’t have enough entrants to run as a team. Kaitlynn Mynatt fi nished the 4K course in 21:36.

Girls-Team

(1) Saint Patrick 38, (2) Saint Andrew’s 64, (3) Choctaw Central 98, (4) Pass Christian 116, (5) Mooreville 122, (6) South Pontotoc 126, (7) Kos-suth 183, (8) Our Lady Academy 193, (9) Ripley 228, (10) McLaurin 299

 Individual

KOSSUTH (183): 21(20). Alania Feazell, 17:50; 35(33). Hannah Gann, 18:46; 37(35). Grace Stan-ford, 19:06; 47(44). Kaylee Bonds, 19:41; 57(51). Cheyenne Bennett, 20:24

Others: 58. Tiffany Blackard, 20:25; 72. Olivia Cooley 21:24

CENTRAL (NS): 75. Kaitlynn Mynatt, 21:36; 80. Lauren Walker, 22:38

 Boys-Team

(1) Saint Andrews 21, (2) Saint Patrick 73, (3) Kossuth 81, (4) South Pontotoc 117, (5) Choctaw Central 148, (6) Alcorn Central 154, (7) Booneville 204, (8) Belmont 254, (9) Forest 287, (10) Sumrall 288, (11) SE Lauderdale 290, (12) Pass Christian 294, (13) Winona 335, (14) Leland 401

Individual

KOSSUTH (183): 9. Riley McCalla, 18:35; 11. Levi Burcham, 18:40; 13. Nathan Ginn, 18:42; 23(21). Chase Peterson, 19:38; 29(27). Zack Shawl, 19:57

Others: 30. Justin Mills, 19:59; 37. Avery Parks, 20:07

CENTRAL (154): 15. Samuel Holley, 19:07; 27(25). Trevor Godwin, 19:44; 38(36). Luke Holley, 20:22; 41(39). Jakob Carter, 20:28; 42(40). Jeff Edge, 20:38

Others: 51. Blake Burnett, 21:05; 66. Brandon Turner, 22:21

his interception.Bulldogs leading rusher LaDar-

ius Perkins was held out of the game. Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen said Perkins strained his quad on Wednesday but still warmed up in hopes of playing before coaches decided against playing him.

One of the loudest cheers of the night came when Alabama’s loss to Texas A&M was announced during the fi rst quarter.

AGGIES

LSU

CONTINUED FROM 8

CONTINUED FROM 8

OXFORD — Marshall Henderson scored 22 points as Mississippi placed four players in double fi gures Friday night to defeat Missis-sippi Valley State 93-57 in the season opener for both teams.

Murphy Holloway scored 15 points with a game-high 11 rebounds while Reginald Buckner added 10 for the Rebels (1-0), who improved to 36-0 all-time against

Southwestern Confer-ence Athletic teams.

Mississippi Valley State (0-1) was led by Davon Usher with 19 points and six assists. The Delta Devils strug-gled from the fi eld, man-aging only 32.2 percent (19 of 59), including 10 consecutive misses from three-point range in the fi rst half.

Ole Miss shot 39.7 percent (31 of 79) from the fi eld, but had a deci-sive edge from the free

throw line, hitting 64 percent (25 of 39). The Rebels outrebounded Mississippi Valley State 53-44 and forced 23 turnovers.

Mississippi Valley State led early 5-1 and was within 18-14 mid-way through the fi rst half. The Delta Devils managed only two fi eld goals in the fi nal nine minutes of the half.

The Rebels pulled away, building a 44-21 halftime lead, as

Henderson capped a 13-point fi rst half with a long range 3-point shot at the buzzer. The Rebels converted 13 of 16 fi rst half free throws and forced 13 turn-overs.

Ole Miss was never threatened in the sec-ond half, consistently managing a 30-point lead. Henderson had a stretch of three consec-utive three-point shots within 75 seconds to highlight the blowout.

Mississippi Valley State, despite shooting 42 percent in the sec-ond half, 13 of 31, never pulled closer than 25 points in the fi nal 15 minutes. Matt Smith had a team-high 11 rebounds for the Delta Devils.

Ole Miss has won nine consecutive sea-son openers, including 16 of the past 17 home openers. The Rebels improved to 5-0 in the season series with Mis-sissippi Valley State.

Ole Miss routs Mississippi Valley in openerAssociated Press

TROY, Ala.— Troy hopes the impact of its arena-opening win Fri-day night over a major-conference team boosts its profi le.

The Trojans’ 56-53 vic-tory over Mississippi State marked the fi rst game in

their $40 million Trojan Arena and came before an announced crowd of 5,120, the largest home crowd in the program’s history.

“It was an exciting night for so many people on so many levels,” 31st-year Troy coach Don Maestri

said. “So many people left here happy and will be talking about that game.”

The Trojans, who took the lead on a jumper by Emil Jones with 1.6 seconds remaining, cel-ebrated like it was March rather than their season opener. Friday marked

the fi rst time a Southeast-ern Conference team had played at Troy.

“You see stuff like that on TV all the time at the big colleges,” said Jones, a senior guard. “To have it at home was real big.”

Jones’ 16-foot jumper snapped a 53-53 tie. Af-

ter a Mississippi State turnover on the inbounds play, Troy’s R.J. Scott hit a free throw with seven-tenths of a second re-maining.

Mississippi State, with seven newcomers on its roster, was making its de-but with coach Rick Ray.

Troy opens arena, beats Mississippi State before 5,120Associated Press

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ground with some other fellows. It apparently knocked the breath out of me. When I came, I was in the back of a hospital truck.

“After a few minutes, I was continuing my basic training.

“We were given a rifl e, a long, heavy piece of equipment. The day was a rough one. It was snowing very hard and we could hardly see the target. We fi red several rounds. but it seems that everyone was missing the target. They waved a red fl ag — called ‘Maggie’s draw-ers‘ — meaning we missed the target. About noon-time our leaders gave in to the weather and said, ‘Let’s go back to the bar-racks.’

“We spent the evening taking apart the rifl es and putting them back togeth-er. At any rate, I received an Expert Rifl eman pin.

“The camp was in the process of being built at this time. After returning from our fi eld training and supper I would fi nd my bed torn up — a sign it was not properly made. I would have to do extra duty after supper to help in complet-ing the camp construction.

“I ask why it seemed to be me and some other south-ern fellows whose beds were torn up. The corporal said it was because the yan-kees would not work and southerners would.

“While taking the Ba-sic Training I was inter-viewed. We talked about what I liked and did not like, The person doing the interview said he was as-signing me to Cryptology

School. I’d never heard that word before. Didn’t want it. I knew how to drive a truck and thought that would be better than being a food soldier. But he said, ‘No.’ After Basic Training I attended the Cryptology School, loved it and did marvelous at it. It was another great blessing I got while trying to dodge it.

“Upon completion of the school, some eight weeks later, I was assigned to a Communication unit which was comprised of 19 enlisted men and a commissioned offi cer. The mission was to support an army battalion.

“Within about 30 days, I was given a staff ser-geant’s rank and named Chief Cryptology Clerk. For the fi rst time in my military life, I was able to tell someone else what to do — yet I still had others to answer to.

“We fi nally were loaded onto a troop train along with 14 units like ours, and somewhere along the way it was discovered we were going to California. We were placed in a bar-racks with other soldiers. We had nothing to do, so our unit offi cer decided to keep us busy, and we started taking hikes. The fi rst day was to be a half-mile and half-mile back, growing by a half-mile each day. We didn’t look forward to this.

“Fortunately, we loaded on a ship the next day and was on a voyage to God-only-knows-where.

“In our unit, we had a fellow that was highly ner-vous. Just call his name and he would do a big jump. Soon thereafter we

found ourselves boarding a big vessel, the SS Hol-brook, a former passenger and freight ship. One day after boarding the ship, going under the Golden Gate Bridge and moving out over the waters, he and I were standing at the rail of the ship. He proudly wore a good looking gold-looking wrist watch. Some guy walked up behind us and called his name real loud. He jumped and slung his arms real hard. That beautiful watch went sailing out across the wa-ter, of course, never to be seen again.

“Once as we traveled along, a giant whale came alongside the ship. Every-one was called to see it. Its back looked like a two-lane country road. We were told not to throw anything at it, as if it became angry it could toss the ship over. It stayed alongside the ship for about an hour and disappeared.

“One time when the usual daily practice alarms sounded, it was the real thing. A German sub was in the area. Depth charges were released. We were able to notice the difference in the ship’s ac-tion immediately. They had been changing its di-rection every seven min-utes. Now it seemed to be heading straight ahead at full speed. We were told we might outrun it, but to be alert, as there might be others in the area. The German sub surfaced way back on the horizon, and we could see the German symbol on it.

“Since there was no way for us to tell anyone, they told us we were headed for Brisbane, Australia. One day we traveled through

some waters with a lot of white material fl oating on the water. They told us it was the remains of a hos-pital ship that had been sunk by a Japanese sub.

“We fi nally docked in Brisbane early in 1943.

Australia and MacArthur

“After docking, we un-loaded into a processing place. Later my team was transferred to General MacArthur’s headquarters to work in communica-tions. At fi rst, some of us were given a Jeep, a little later doing anything that needed to be done — from delivering messages by Jeep or on motorcycle, to doing work in the offi ce. A little later I was made Communications Center Chief and had a straight daytime job, except when extra duties would call, and they were quite a few. Sometimes we had to work late in the night. We handled all the headquar-ters communications, and they were exceptionally heavy late in the evening.

“I even drove General MacArthur on a few oc-casions. He had a regular driver attached to the com-munications center, but he was given a day off now and then. Some of us in the center would have to drive the general’s car. I had that privilege several times.

“It was usually to his house to pick up his wife, and then to the offi cer’s club for dinner, and then back home a couple of hours later. The general did not talk much, but when he spoke, he meant it. One night while driving for him, he asked where was my “Mable.” The girlfriends were all called “Mables” by the G.I.s. His regular driver was on duty 24-7, except an occasional day off. I found out later that the regular driver had his girlfriend with him some of the time, and this seemed to be permissible.

“I remember on one oc-casion the general came in our section of the of-fi ce and, as was the stan-dard procedure, someone would call attention. We had a new offi cer on duty, and he was sitting behind his desk with his feet upon the desk reading a maga-zine and did not move. The general reached over and jerked the magazine out of his hand.

“When he got up, the general requested an entry to a highly classifi ed area of our offi ce. We in the offi ce knew how to enter without the password, but this was illegal. The door had a little peephole with a little door which could be opened from the inside to see that the person desiring entry was okay to be let in. Those of us working in the outer section knew the trick of popping the little door open and then reading our arm in through it to unlock the door. But we wouldn’t have dreamed of letting the general know this or done it in his presence.

“The offi cer jumped up and ran to the door. He used our little secret to let the general in. There were some words I did not hear, but after that night, we never saw the offi cer again, and someone was there to take his place. I never knew why we had to have a commissioned offi -cer there, anyway. Guess it was just the army’s way of doing things.

“During this, MacAr-thur was preparing to lead his army back to the Philippines as he said he would. The Japanese had conquered most of the is-lands north of the north-ern tip of Australia and had tried to land troops on the tip near Darwin. When the drive began, the general was always backing up his forces and staying in close contact with them. We began to see less of him. However, he returned regularly to see that all communica-

tions were going through as they should. (Our offi ce handled all the communi-cations to all of the world.) I think he returned be-cause his wife stayed there until much later.

“I was relieved of all my responsibilities in Decem-ber 1945 to return home. My return was on a small vessel, a wartime troop landing type with a fl at front bottom. As we trav-eled near the Hawaiian Islands, we hit a big storm that created high waves. Sometimes it would ap-pear that our little ship would have to go through the wave, but as we ap-proached, it would seem-ingly turn sideways and rise over it. Riding near the front of the ship would give you a thrill.

Postwar

On Jan. 13, 1946, Weav-er was relieved of active duty and transferred to the Army Reserve. The years that followed were just as full as the ones in his past. On March 15, 1947, he was married Marie Wells in Corinth. After a period working in accounting and several other jobs, he was forced to leave his new family — and 18 month old son — when he was called back to the military during the Korean War. But after several months of training, Weaver was once again able to wear his civilian clothes.

Now he is retired after many years serving as a minister and approaching his 91st birthday. Weaver’s source of support and inspi-ration comes from his wife, Marie, and his children, Bob, Cindy and Laura.

“Bob was the little 18 month old boy we had to leave with his grandmoth-er as I entered the Korean War tour,” said Weaver. “The Lord has blessed us with fi ve grandchildren and seven grandchildren.”

Weaver lives in the Glen community.

10A • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

WEAVER

CONTINUED FROM 2A

The AllianceWelcome these new members:

A & A Signs and Supply

AAA Septic LLC

ALFA Insurance - David Payne

Allen Pools

All-Stars Auto Glass Service, Inc.

Amerispec Home Inspections

Big Boy's Pawn, Gold & Guns

Borroum's Drug Store

Cash Cow Advance

CC Consultants

Chop House Shiloh Ridge

Corinth Exhaust Center

Corinth Fence Company

Crabb's Heating & Air Conditioning

Crossroads Auto Service, Inc.

Crossroads Center for Emotional Care

Crossroads Health Clinic

Derryberry Heating & Air

Dilworth's Tamales

DIMCO, Inc.

Diva Nail & Spa

Elam Appraisals

Fashion Flare

Frank Meador & Sons Mechanical Contractors, Inc.

Gary Lacom, DDS

Geisha Japanese Restaurant

Hamilton Siding & Windows

Hammond Wrecker Service, Inc.

Hardwick and Company

Hinkle Creek Pottery

Holder Accounting Firm

Honeysuckle Blu

Hoochie's

Hopkins Truck Sales

Imaging Associates of North Mississippi

Jimco Roofi ng

Johnson Dozer Service

Jr & Son Auto Sales

Kentucky Fried Chicken

King Kars

Kiwanis

Larry King Body Shop

Layne Properties

Magnolia Flower Basket

Mass Mutual Financial Group

Maximum Mobility Rehab & Fitness, Inc.

Mid South Real Estate Sales and Auction

Morgan Cardiovascular

NESCO Electrical Distributors

Nickels Signs & Graphics

Ole Monterey Café

P & M Motors

Ronnie Brand Body Shop

Scott's Machining

Seago Surveying

Shadburn's Transmission Service

Shiloh Market

Shinault Enterprises, Inc., DBA

Soiree Events Floral & Design

Southeast Financial Credit Union

Southern Aesthetics

State Farm Insurance - JB Darnell

Studio A Salon

Suntronics LED Message Center

TASH Sign Service

The Cancer Center at Magnolia

The Handyman

The Party Store

The Purple Daisy Boutique

Tony's Auto Service

TriGreen Equipment

Tupelo Samples

Vicki's Flooring

Victory Contracting

Village Outlet

Wallace Law Firm

Weight Watchers

West Corinth Baptist Church

Welcomes these new members:

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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 11A

Community EventsGarbage pick-up

The Corinth Street Department will have its normal garbage route schedule on Monday.

Art preview

A wide variety of cre-ative expressions from lo-cal and regional artist will be on the auction block as part of the Corinth Home & Garden Tour benefiting the Verandah-Curlee House. The Corinth Artist Guild, 507 Cruise St., Corinth, is hosting a preview of the art featured in the auction from 2-4 p.m. today. The art will remain at the gallery until Saturday, Nov. 17.

Sponsored by the Friends of theVerandah-Curlee House, the annual tour benefits the restora-tion of the historic resi-dence. The tour is set for 10 .am. to 4 p.m. on Fri-day, Nov. 30 and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 1. The tour includes the home of Bailey and Gloria Williams at 1302 Taylor St. and the Fillmore Street Chapel.

In addition to the silent art auction, the event will include the sale of holiday items, floral demonstra-tions, a gift wrapping workshop, holiday music and a tea. Bidding will end at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 1.

Pickin’ on the Square

On Thursday, at 7 p.m., special guest at Pickin’ on the Square will be the Smokehouse Boys. Pickin' on the Square is being held at the old East Corinth Elementary School during the winter months.

Reeder benefit

Unity Baptist Church is hosting a fundraiser on Saturday, Nov. 17 from 3-7 p.m. to help pay hospi-tal bills incurred by Bobby Reeder. There will be a si-lent and live auction along with singing, barbecue and hot dog plates.

Any items that can be donated for the auctions will be appreciated.

Mission Mississippi

A Mission Mississippi Corinth Gathering is being held at Martha’s Menu, 702 Cruise St., Corinth, on Thursday, at 11:30 a.m. The mission of Mis-sion Mississippi is to en-courage and demonstrate unity in the Body of Christ across racial and denomi-national lines. For more information, contact the Rev. Ann Fraser at 662-286-2922 or Neddie at 601-665-5900.

Veteran’s Day

The annual Veterans Day parade and tribute to living war veterans is being held Monday. The parade is scheduled for 10 a.m. The 13th annual parade will give special recognition to the National Guard. The parade will follow the usual parade route beginning at First Baptist Church in Corinth. For more information, contact Bill Huff at 284-5082.

The annual American Legion stew fundraiser is also a part of the day’s activities. The ladies auxil-iary is having a bake sale and poppies.

The James A. Long Post 207 (Hut) American Legion on South Johns St., Corinth, is honoring Veterans Day serving Bru-inswick Stew on Monday, Nov. 12. The event will from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Everyone welcome. For more information, contact Robert Turner, 603-5861 or Bernita Barnett, 286-3281.

Wreath program

American Legion Post 6 is kicking off the Wreaths Across America project. A ceremony to lay wreaths at the Corinth National

Cemetery to honor vet-erans who have passed away is set for Dec. 15 at 11 a.m. The Legion wants to get sponsors to lay as many wreaths as pos-sible at the national cem-etery. Their goal is 7,500 wreaths to cover all the graves in the cemetery. Cost is $15 per wreath and tax deductible. Spe-cific grave orders can also be placed and are not limited to the Corinth Na-tional Cemetery.

Deadline to sponsor a wreath is Thursday, Nov. 15. Members of American Legion Post 6, the ladies auxiliary, the Sons of Ameri-can Legion and Legion Riders are all taking orders. For more information, contact Carlean Parker at 662-462-3443 or [email protected].

The Blitz

The 5th Annual Blitz football, band and cheer competition is being held today at the Crossroads Arena. The Blitz will fea-ture Basement speakers and artists including Bird & Crunk, KP & B-Flat and The “U” After Party. The Basement is one of the largest youth ministry groups in the nation.

Anyone who purchases at T-shirt before the show can get in at 5 p.m. for the pre-Blitz party and will have a chance to win an iPad HD. T-shirts will be available outside the arena entrance until the doors open at 5:30 p.m. The event starts at 6 p.m. Seating is on a first come, first serve basis, and or-ganizers recommend an early arrival. This is a free event. For more informa-tion, visit www.thablitz.com).

Fees waived

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is waiving day-use fees for veterans, active and reserve component ser-vice members and their families at the more than 2,400 USACE-operated recreation areas nation-wide on Veterans Day, today.

The day-use fee waiver requires only verbal con-firmation of service. This waiver covers fees for boat launch ramps and swimming beaches. The waiver does not apply to camping and camping-related services, or fees for specialized facilities such as group picnic shelters. USACE does not charge an entrance fee to access its parks. Other agencies that manage rec-reation areas on USACE lands are encouraged, but not required, to offer the Veterans Day waiver of fees in the areas that they manage.

To discover the recre-ation site nearest you, visit http://corpslakes.usace.army.mil/visitors.cfm.

Bake/craft sale

The Holiday Bake and Craft Sale, the major fund-raiser for the Alcorn Coun-ty Homemaker Volunteers, is being held Friday, from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. down-stairs at Martha’s Menu in Corinth. There will be homemade baked goods, arts & crafts and plants for sale. For more informa-tion, call 287-2702.

Mended Hearts

“Angina: Taking Control and Living Better “ is the topic for the Mended Hearts meeting on Mon-day, at 10 a.m. Mended Hearts meets the second Monday of every month at the Magnolia Community Service Complex in the Cardiac Rehab Confer-ence Room, 1001 South Harper Road in Corinth.

Mended Hearts is a support group open to all heart patients, their fami-lies and others impacted by heart disease. Its pur-pose is to inspire hope in heart disease patients and their families through

visits and sharing experi-ences of recovery and returning to an active life. Healthcare professionals join the mission by provid-ing expertise and support. All heart patients and their family are welcome.

Genealogy society meets

The Alcorn County Ge-nealogy Society will meet Tuesday, at 6:30 p.m. at office in the Alcorn County Courthouse.! Member Marcia Glisson will be sharing information con-cerning the United Daugh-ters of the Confederacy.! All members are encour-aged to attend and the public is invited. For more information, contact ACGS at 286-0075.

4-H events

The monthly Alcorn County 4-H Volunteer Lead-er meeting is being held Monday, at 5 p.m. !The annual 4-H Christmas gathering for 4-H members and annual awards pro-gram will be discussed. For more information on 4-H programs, call the Alcorn County Extension Service at 286-7756.

The Alcorn County 4-H Shooting Sports Club is hosting an open house, Monday, Nov. 12, from 6-8 p.m. !An introduction to the shooting sports program will be conducted, as well as hands on activities and refreshments. !The 4-H shooting sports program is open to youth ages 8-18. !Enrollment informa-tion will be on hand and certified instructors will be available to talk to during the open house. !For more information, contact the Alcorn County Extension Service at 286-7756.

Activity center

The Bishop Activity Cen-ter is having the following activities for the week of

Nov. 12 - Nov. 16:Monday -- Elsa Bullard,

program for the National Federation for the Blind; Tuesday -- Sportsplex, arm chair exercise with Mike Stewart and table games; Wednesday -- jigsaw puzzles, quilting, table games, Rolo Golf and washer game; Thursday -- pet therapy with Corinth Animal Shelter, Bingo, quilting and table games; and Friday -- grocery shop-ping trip to Rogers’ super-market.

Senior citizens age 60 and above are welcome and encouraged to attend. Daily activities include crafts, jigsaw puzzles, quilting, table games, washer games and Rolo Golf.

‘The Hobbit’

Arts in McNairy is kick-ing off it’s theater season with “The Hobbit,” a youth production directed by Jared Walters. Many peo-ple are familiar with the Hobbit legend because of the popular “Lord of the Rings” movie trilogy and books by J.R.R. Tolkien. !!!

“The Hobbit” is being presented today at the Latta Visitor’s and Cul-tural Center.

A detailed list of this event and the rest of the season can be found on the AiM website www.art-sinmcnairy.com.

!‘Just Plain Country’

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

!Toy Store

The Lighthouse Foun-dation’s 17th Annual Toy Store Christmas toy program is registering par-ticipants in the program each Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to

noon at the foundation’s headquarters on Johns Street in Corinth each week during November. There is also an evening session set for Thursday, Nov. 29, from 6-7 p.m. for those un-able to register during the day. No sessions will be held the week of Thanksgiv-ing.

The program serves children in Alcorn County each year, helping families provide Christmas gifts for their children. Those registering for help should bring a photo ID; proof of residency in Alcorn County (utility bill, rent or mortgage statement, etc.) and a So-cial Security card and birth certificate for each child they are registering.

For more information on the program, call the Lighthouse Foundation at 662-286-0091 or email: [email protected]. Donations may also be mailed to The Lighthouse Foundation, 1101 S. Johns Street, Corinth, MS 38834.

!Green Market

The Green Market in the CARE garden at the Corinth Depot offers an opportunity for local farmers, garden-ers, artisans, craftsman, etc. to sell their wares in an open-air, grassroots setting. The popular RED Green Market will be held from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 17. Applica-tions are now available at the tourism office.

!Food drive

Kroger, 104 U.S. Hwy. 72 West, Corinth, is hav-ing a canned food drive for the Amen Food Pantry. Canned goods will be ap-preciated to help families in the area. Bring dona-tions before Thanksgiving.

!Exhibits on display

Seventeen black and white pieces by profes-sional photographer Bill

Piacesi are on display at the Northeast Regional Library in Corinth. The theme for the photo-graphs, “Forgotten Faces of Memphis,” is Pacesi’s effort to bring more awareness to the homeless plight. The art exhibit will continue through Nov. 30.

Photographer Lowry Wilson is exhibiting his work in the Anderson Hall Art Gallery at North-east Mississippi Commu-nity College in Booneville through Nov 28. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Contact Terry Anderson for more information at [email protected] or 662-720-7336.

The Crossroads Museum at the Historic Depot at 221 North Fill-more Street (across from Joe’s Shoes) in down-town Corinth has a spe-cial Civil War Archives exhibit to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Corinth, Battle of Shiloh and the Civil War. The exhibit features authentic and some never-before-seen rare Civil War relics and information from the vast Crossroads Mu-seum archives. The tem-porary exhibit will be on display until Dec. 31.

Along with the Civil War exhibit, the museum also houses fossils, American Indian arti-facts, depot and railroad industry history displays and aviation memorabil-ia. Special items inside the museum include the original Dilworth’s Hot Tamale cart, Don Blas-ingame items and over 1,000 pieces of authen-tic Coca-Cola memora-bilia.

The museum is open Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. and Sunday, 1-4 p.m. Admission is adults, $5; over 50, $3; and children under 16, free.

CHHome& GardenTour

November 3010:00 PM - 4:00 PM

December 110:00 AM - 2:00 PM

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1302 Taylor Street

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Fine Arts AuctionsHoliday Concerts

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12A • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Flight, R, ****1/2,Denzel Washing-ton, Don Cheadle, John Goodman, Brian Ger-aghty, Bruce Greenwood, Nadine Velazquez; Para-mount Picture; Director Robbert Zemeckis; length -- 138 minutes

I’ve been in planes dur-ing stormy weather where air pockets caused the plane to drop several hun-dred feet without warning. It was pretty scary. High winds can move a plane in every direction, therefore, the pilots and crew must have a clear mind. The movie, “Flight” simulates this horror with accuracy, fear and sadness.

I n “ F l i g h t , ” the audi-ence meets Whip (Den-zel Wash-ington), a pilot in Mi-ami, Fla. It is early in the morn-ing as he is

about to fl y back to Atlanta on the last leg of his fl ight.

Though he is an excel-lent pilot, he has a prob-lem. Washington portrays his character with a subtle, but strong performance. He totally becomes Whip, including his cockiness, arrogance and denial.

Two major stories de-velop as the fi lm progress-es. Following these stories along with some very col-orful characters gives this fi lm substance and real-ism.

It was obvious from the movie’s trailer the plane crashes but I will not re-veal all of the details. I will say the moments be-fore the plane crashes are nerve shattering.

Some of us have been in planes during stormy weather. Believe me, it is not fun. The scene will keep the audience on the edge of their seats.

As the plane is attempt-ing a landing, Whip re-

ceives some injuries and is unconscious. He is taken to the hospital. There he meets Nicole (Kelly Reilly) who is a drug addict. Im-mediately, they are at-tracted to each other.

John Goodman plays Harling, a drug supplier, and has some absolutely hilarious lines. His fast-talking style along with his arrogance brings some laughter to a tragic situa-tion.

After leaving the hos-pital, Whip travels to his farm to avoid the press. He realizes Nicole is with-out a job or money so he tries to help her.

He takes her to his

farm, and she soon fi nds a job. She is determined to break her habit and begin a new life. Whip also has an ex-wife and young boy. He does not have a good relationship with either of them, but the movie’s headline gives some clues as to why.

“Flight” is an engaging, intelligent story about fail-ures, tragedy and hope-fully, redemption.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Terry Burns is technology coordinator for the McNairy County School System. A life-long movie buff, he can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Terry’s movie grading scale: fi ve-plus stars -- as good as it gets; fi ve stars -- don’t miss; four stars -- excellent; three stars -- good; two stars -- fair; one star -- poor; no stars -- don’t bother.)

Pilot experiences tragedy, rediscovery in ‘Flight’

NEW YORK — Some of society’s most vulnerable people — the elderly, the disabled and the chroni-cally ill — have been pushed to the brink in the powerless, fl ood-ravaged neighborhoods struggling to recover from Super-storm Sandy.

The storm didn’t just knock out electricity and destroy property when it came ashore in places like the Far Rockaway section of Queens. It disrupted the fragile support net-works that allowed the neighborhood’s frailest residents to get by.

Here, the catastrophe has closed pharmacies, kept home care aids from getting to elderly clients and made getting around in a wheelchair impos-sible. The city has re-corded at least two deaths of older men in darkened buildings.

For some living in the disaster zone, it has all

been too much.When a team of medics

and national guardsmen turned up at Sheila Gold-berg’s apartment tower in Far Rockaway on Friday to check on the well-being of residents, fl oor by fl oor, the 75-year-old burst into tears and begged for help caring for her 85-year-old husband.

“This is a blessing. I’m at my wit’s end,” she sobbed.

Her husband, Irwin, has a pacemaker, wears a colostomy bag, and needs her help to do almost ev-erything. When the power was on, Goldberg said, “I could take care of him by myself and survive.” But for days, the building had no heat or electric-ity. There were no open stores to buy food. Until the end of the week, there was no water or elevators either, meaning residents like the Goldbergs, on the 25th fl oor, had to cart water up the steps them-

selves just to fl ush the toi-let. A bad stench perme-ates much of the building.

“I’m running out of my blood pressure medi-cation. We’re both go-ing to drop dead in this apartment,” Sheila said. The medical team said it would make arrange-ments to transfer Irwin to a medical facility, at least temporarily.

City and federal offi -cials, and a growing army of volunteers, are trying hard to make sure families like that don’t fall into de-spair. Their efforts come alongside relief workers, donations, volunteers and demolition crews who fl ocked to New York and New Jersey in recent days to assist in the mas-sive cleanup. The region took a few more steps to move past the storm Sat-urday, when power was restored for many more and gas rationing eased some of the clogged lines at stations in New York.

Sick, frail struggle most in Superstorm Sandy’s aftermath

Associated Press

Terry Burns’ movie ratings:

■ Chasing Mavericks, PG, ****1⁄2■ Alex Cross, PG-13, ***■ Argo, R, *****plus■ Taken 2, PG-13, ***■ Looper, R, ****

Terry Burns

Movie Critic

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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 13A

All I wanted was my hand back.

The old man behind the counter in the coun-try store way out in Louisiana farm country clasped it with eagle tal-on strength, squeezing tighter and tighter, his pained, bloodshot eyes locked with mine.

Panicking, wishing I had not stopped for a cold drink, disregarding the $20 bill I plopped down to pay for it, I struggled to free my hand from his and es-cape.

“They’ve hit us! They’ve hit us!” he half-shrieked, half-sobbed. “Me and my brother … we fought in the Pacific. My brother, he never come back. I seen war’s horror and destruction, but it was over yonder. Now I’m seeing it all

over again, right here in the country I fought for … the country my broth-er died for!”

It was Sept. 11, 2001.“Mister, what in God’s

name are you talking about?” I asked, mas-saging the hand he final-ly released as he turned away, weeping openly.

He motioned me back into the tiny living quar-ters that had provided his only comfort over countless lonely years, eking out a living selling snacks, cold drinks and sundry items to a trickle of customers in this ru-ral area.

What I saw on his television simply would not register.

One minute it seemed to be two giant sand castles — perhaps built by laughing, happy chil-dren — crumbling before an unseen wave; anoth-er minute, it appeared to be a scene of massive destruction from a King Kong movie.

But in the minute I will never forget — the minute no American will ever forget — it was two commercial jets arc-ing across a blue New York sky, streaking into the World Trade Center,

leaving thousands of in-nocent people injured, dead, or unaccounted for.

Before that minute, the part of me that had been typically American — glad to be one, but not always mindful of, nor thankful enough, for the opportunities and free-doms I too often had taken for granted — be-came as American as the stars and stripes sewn by Betsy Ross.

In that minute, I grasped the true mean-ing of E Pluribus Unum: from many, one.

In that minute, I be-

came every American who ever was, is, or yet to be.

I became the first Pil-grim stepping on Plym-outh Rock.

I became Neil Arm-strong stepping on the moon.

I became Generals Lee and Grant, saluting each other at Appomattox. I became Alvin York of World War I.

I became Audie Mur-phy of World War II. I became Ira Hayes, hoisting Old Glory at Iwo Jima.

I became Roy Rogers, John Wayne, Spencer

Tracy, Ronald Reagan. I became Kate Smith, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Arm-strong, Willie Nelson, Elvis Presley.

I became Jesse Ow-ens, Knute Rockne, Chris Evert, Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, John El-way, Dale Earnhardt.

I became Orville and Wilbur Wright, Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Ear-hart, Chuck Yeager.

I became Billy Gra-ham, Jonas Salk, Wil-liam Faulkner.

I became you, my fel-low American, and you became me. We became one … one nation under God … in a New York minute.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist and Oxford resi-dent Jimmy Reed, [email protected]; 662-832-8031, is a newspaper colum-nist, author and college teacher.)

The ‘New York Minute’ will never be forgottenBY JIMMY REED

Columnist

JACKSON — It’s back to the road for judges of the Mississippi Court of Appeals.

A three-judge panel will hear arguments in two cases on Tuesday at Mis-sissippi State University.

The “Court on the Road” program made several stops earlier this year, including Jones County Community Col-lege, Mississippi Valley State University and the University of Mississippi.

The cases are among dozens the court will take up during its November-December term.

The Appeals Court pe-riodically schedules oral arguments on college

campuses — and occa-sionally at other locations — as a teaching tool for students.

The panel will hold ar-guments at Mississippi State’s Hunter Henry Center in Starkville.

The fi rst case before the panel is Christopher Smith’s appeal of his 2010 conviction for ag-gravated assault.

Smith was convicted in Neshoba County in con-nection with the shoot-ing of Nellie Woodward of Philadelphia while she stood in the carport of her home on Feb. 16, 2010.

Smith was also found guilty of possession of a fi rearm by a convicted felon.

Court of Appeals to hear cases at Mississippi State

Associated Press

Before that minute, the part of me that had been typically American — glad to be one, but not always mindful of, nor thankful enough,

for the opportunities and freedoms I too often had taken for granted — became as American as the stars and stripes sewn by Betsy Ross. In that minute, I grasped the true meaning of E

Pluribus Unum: from many, one.

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14A • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

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History1B • Daily Corinthian Sunday, November 11, 2012

Have you ever been to the Corinth National Cemetery?

It’s a beautiful spot, shady and green grass and row upon row of white marble headstones. It’s an active cemetery so there are plenty of recent burials, but the majority of the graves date back to the Civil War era.

The cemetery was es-tablished in 1866, the year after the war ended, and all of the Union soldiers in the area were rein-terred from their war-time graves. These guys were the dead from the Battle of Corinth as well as any number of other smaller fi ghts like those at Brice’s Crossroads, Tupelo and Parker’s Crossroads.

There are the 45 graves of the Northern soldiers killed at Davis Bridge, Tennessee, on the 5th of October, 1862. They were buried the day af-ter the battle on the east bank of the Hatchie Riv-er and, like the others, were moved to the cem-etery after the war. One is missing, however. There should have been 46.

The fi ght at Davis Bridge was a brutal one. In the morning all the work was done on the west bank of the river and it all favored the Union. Around noon the Confed-erates retreated across the Davis Bridge and made a stand on the high ground on the opposite bank. The afternoon was a different story and the Southerners had the upper hand.

There’s a dog leg turn in the Hatchie River as it meanders towards the site of the old bridge crossing. The Federals didn’t know about it and through a series of bad or-ders and bad luck, about 2,000 men got trapped in a position too small for a quarter of that number. For the Confederates on the heights, it was like shooting fi sh in a barrel.

One of the fi sh was 2nd Lieutenant Willie Price of the 53rd Illinois Infantry.

William Delano Price was all of 18 years old when he enlisted in the army. When he was 16, he had applied to West Point. But without a poli-tician for a friend, he nev-er stood a chance of se-curing a spot. But Private Willie Price was a quick study and soon he was Sergeant Willie Price and eventually a Lieutenant.

His regiment left Il-

linois and arrived at the Battle of Shiloh shortly after the last shot was fi red. Their baptism of fi re would be during the

Siege of Corinth, in May of ’62, and later they were sent to serve as part of the garrison force at Mem-phis and then Bolivar.

Early on the morning of October 4, the 53rd Illinois set out with a Union column marching out of Bolivar to relieve

the embattled Federals at Corinth. At the Hatchie River, they ran into the retreating Confederate army under General Van Dorn and the Battle of Davis Bridge was begun.

When the 53rd Illinois ran across the bridge and into the death-trap on the eastern bank, Willie was the lowest ranking of three offi cers in Company A. But his captain could not be found (he was ru-mored to be drunk) and the 1st Lieutenant was away with the Colonel. Willie found himself com-manding the company in a no-win scenario.

There was a very slight embankment on the fi eld, the old riverbank from the days before the Hatchie had changed its course. Willie got his men to hun-ker down behind the scant cover, no more than three feet high, and undoubt-edly he saved many a life. With his sword in his hand he called out, “There they are boys – give it to them!” They were Willie’s last words.

“I saw him as the mo-ment the bullet struck him,” recalled Sergeant Sam Baldwin, “taking ef-fect in his right side and coming out under the left arm. He fell and died without a struggle.”

The fi ght went on for a few more hours and even-tually the Confederates pulled away and crossed the Hatchie a few miles

upstream at Crum’s Mill.There were over a 1,000

men killed, wounded and captured during the day-long fi ght. The Union dead were buried by their comrades on the east bank of the river, just under the heights that proved so deadly to them.

Willie was buried in his uniform with his hat over his face and was doubled over in a fetal position. He was wrapped in a blan-ket and set into the grave which was lined, top and bottom, with rails from a nearby fence. Vines were placed over the rails to prevent dirt from reaching the body. Next to him lay the other nine men of his regiment killed that day.

Upon the return to Bolivar, Captain Wright telegraphed the sad news to the Price family in Ot-towa, Illinois. 1st Sergeant Patrick Ryan presumed the family would want to recover Willie’s body and sent Mr. Price a detailed letter on how to fi nd the battlefi eld and his son’s burial site.

“At the north side of the grave lays a large fallen tree running parallel with the grave. You will fi nd at the foot of the grave on the butt of an old stump the leters W.D.P., if the headboard should be de-stroyed, you cannot fail to fi nd him.”

Mr. William Price ar-rived in West Tennessee a week later with a wagon and found the body of his son. He placed Willie in a metallic coffi n and made the journey to Bo-livar where he loaded the remains of his son onto a train. On October 16, all of Company A, along with Brigadier General Jacob Lauman, came to the de-pot to bid a fi nal good bye to the young lieutenant.

It was well that William Price made the effort. Four years later, when the remaining nine men of the 53rd Illinois were moved to Corinth, only three could be identifi ed. The wooden headboards had deteriorated and there was no way to tell who was who.

Those soldiers are rest-ing in the Corinth Nation-al Cemetery in “unknown” graves with just a small marble stone and a num-ber to remember them.

Young men, like Willie Price, who gave there all for their country.

(Tom Parson is a Na-tional Park Service rang-er with the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center.)

The death and burial of 2nd Lt. Willie PriceBY TOM PARSON

NPS Ranger

This map was used by Lt. Willie Price’s father to locate his son’s grave after the Battle of Davis Bridge.

Lt. Willie Price, 53rd Illinois Infantry

(Transcribed from His-tory of Old Tishomingo County 1832-1940, com-piled by S.M. Nabors.)

Belmont High School

The earliest school situated within the pres-

ent cor-p o r a t i o n limits of the town of Bel-mont was known as the Gum S p r i n g s S c h o o l . E x i s t -ing from a b o u t 1872 to

1899, it took its name from an adjacent spring which furnished the wa-ter supply, and was fi rst housed in an eighteen-by-twenty-four log building (later replaced by a frame structure) with the typi-cal chimney and the usual rough fi xtures of the pe-riod.

It was fi rst organized as a one-teacher school, and continued so until 1896, having as its teach-

ers such men as L.R. Da-vis, W.T. Clark, Joe Kay, J.T. Vaughn, W.T. Shook, P.A. Gates, R.M. Perry and R.L. Shook. With R.L. Shook and wife as principal and assistant, it became a two-teacher school in 1896 and con-tinued so until 1899. The curriculum, ungraded, consisted of spelling, writing, reading, arith-metic, and geography. Teachers’ salaries ranged from $20.00 to $35.00 per month.

In 1899, R.L. Shook, W.L. Cranford, J.C.Hallmark, G.A. Clark, C.S. Shook and oth-ers chartered what was known as the Belmont High School, which con-tinued to function un-til 1908, using the Gum Springs quarters, a sec-ond one-room building having been erected in 1899.

Among the instructors who taught the school during this period were T.A. Clark, W.I. Elledge, J.P. Matthews, and Jeff Busby. The courses of study were extended to include the approximate range of the present ele-

mentary school, with per-haps a subject or two on the high school level.

In 1908, with C.C. Shook as Mayor, W.W. Shook, clerk, Dr. R.L. Montgomery, Sam Beaty, and Dr. K.F. McRae, al-derman, the town of Belmont established the Belmont Separate School District, using a 2-story frame structure of three classrooms and an audi-torium.

The faculty was now increased to three or four teachers, C.W. Davis be-ing the fi rst principal. Other prominent educa-tors serving as princi-pal during this period were D.R. Shelton and E. Strickland. The curricu-lum was approximately equivalent of the present three-year high school, ancient with modern his-tory, two courses in Latin,

two courses in algebra, English and American lit-erature, physical geogra-phy, geometry, and phys-ics being offered.

In the spring of 1920 the frame building burned, and for the two follow-ing sessions public build-ings and churches of the towns were used to house the school. In 1921, the Belmont Separate Dis-trict voted a bond issue of $25,000.00 to erect the present buildings, a brick structure of one story, containing a large auditorium and thirteen classrooms.

In 1922-23, Supt. J.D. Langston, Miss Edith McRae, Mrs. J.C. Patter-son, Mrs. B.L. Johnson, Mrs. Bill Davis, and Mrs. A.G.W. Byran composed the fi rst faculty in the new building. Twelve units of standard high school

work were offered, this being increased the fol-lowing year to sixteen.

L.D. McCoy and J.D. Finch also served as su-perintendents, and under the latter’s superinten-dence, in 1927, and under his leadership that ses-sion, the separate school district was abolished and a consolidated dis-trict formed by the union of the Belmont territory and the Pittsburg school district.

The following year the Fifth District Special Con-solidated School District was organized by merg-ing the consolidated dis-tricts of Belmont, Valley, and Cotton Springs. By this time the faculty had grown to 20, and the high school curriculum had in-creased to nineteen units.

In 1931, H.L. Shook be-came superintendent. In 1933, a teacher’s home was purchased, a voca-tional building erected, and the institution be-came a Smith-Hughes school, with W.G. Jack teaching agriculture and Miss Susie Parker home economics. This same year a commercial de-

partment was added. East Prentiss became a part of the consolidation in 1933 and remained so until 1937.

A brick veneer gym-nasium was constructed (1934-36) with CWA and WPA assistance. The Al-len Line Consolidated School was added to the District in 1934.

At present the school district contains approxi-mately sixty-fi ve square miles of territory, has an assessed valuation of $314,000.00, enrolls ac-cording to the 1937-38 annual report 812 pupils, of whom 159 are in high school; has a faculty of twenty-two members, and offers 24 high school units distributed as fol-lows: 4 in English, 5 in social science, 5 in voca-tional subjects, 3 in com-merce, 4 in mathematics, and 3 in science.

(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.)

Belmont school traces beginnings to late 19th century

RaNae VaughnHistorically

Speaking

In 1908 ... the town of Belmont established the Belmont

Separate School District, using a 2-story frame structure of three classrooms and an auditorium.

Outdoors2B • Daily Corinthian Sunday, November 11, 2012

Area hunters will be hitting the woods with a vengeance next weekend, as Mississippi and Ten-nessee will both be open-ing their regular gun sea-son for deer on Saturday, Nov. 17.

Normally, the Missis-sippi season goes through Dec. 1. This year, how-ever, the season closes at the end of the day on Nov. 30 and gives way to the primitive weapons season running from Dec. 1-14, before resuming with the second gun season on Dec. 15.

The Tennessee gun season goes non-stop from Nov. 17 all the way through to Jan. 6.

Harvest numbers in Tennessee were better than they’ve been in a half a decade last year, and Mississippi had one of its best seasons ever in the number of trophy bucks harvested. Considering how this year and last

year mir-ror each o t h e r , there’s no reason to think sim-ilar results won’t hap-pen again this time around.

E a c h year right

before the opening of gun season, I like to do a little prognosticating of my own about what hunters can expect for the upcom-ing season. Anticipation of opening day is already running high without me throwing my two cents worth in, but I still like giving my viewpoint since deer hunting is my spe-cialty, and my forecasts are usually pretty accu-rate.

How will the numbers add up this year? The last two years virtually image each other, but there’s

striking differences that should make this deer season even better.

I’ll explain.Many area hunters had

a hard time seeing deer last season because of two main reasons. We had one of the warmest winters on record and there was an over abundance of food sources in the wild. Deer really had no reason to move during the daylight hours, which helped keep harvest numbers down in this area.

Now, we’ve got a deer herd that has expanded even more competing for the same food sources. The acorn mast crop is good again, but not quite as heavy as last year, which should help in deer sightings. Also, according to recent weather pat-terns, odds are good we’ll have normal winter-like weather that should spur daytime deer movement.

It wouldn’t surprise me

at all to see an unusual high number of monster bucks taken on Mississip-pi lands this season. The psyche of the sportsman has changed along with the antler criteria used in determining a legal buck for harvest. Hunters let many more bucks walk these days, which allows many of them to reach maturity. There are still some hunters with the “If it’s brown, it’s down” men-tality. All in all though, plentiful food supplies over the last few years and more bucks allowed to reach their maximum potential should equate to more huge bucks with im-pressive headgear roam-ing the landscape.

With anticipation building for opening day, I want to leave you with a few things to think about before the big day arrives.

You’ve probably already got a few places in mind about where to set up on

opening morning. Those places can be narrowed down to one precise spot with a little thought. In the area you’ll be hunt-ing, think about setting up where other hunters are likely to push deer in your direction, where two or three types of terrain con-verge together, or a funnel-like area between feeding and bedding locations. The edge of anything different has promise.

Sighting the ole gun in is usually one of the last rituals performed in get-ting prepared. Most fi re a few rounds and then stick it back into the case till the day of the hunt.

That’s fi ne, except for one thing. The gun is sighted in, but you haven’t really got a good feel for the gun. Routinely pick it up and practice aiming to get a comfortable feeling. It should get to where it feels like an extension of your own body.

I’ve made miraculous shots with pinpoint accu-racy, but I’ve also missed broadside targets at no more than bow range.

I’m sure the close-in shots were missed be-cause I didn’t renew the old feeling for the gun prior to season.

Be prepared so you won’t be lying awake at night wondering how in the world you missed that big buck at point blank range. It’s not a good memory to recreate, espe-cially if it happened on an opening day hunt.

(Daily Corinthian columnist and Alcorn County resident David Green is an avid hunter and fi sherman in the Crossroads area. Anyone wishing to share their own unique outdoor sto-ry or have any news to report pertaining to the outdoors, David can be contacted at [email protected].)

Gun season for deer opens next Saturday

David GreenOutdoors

Will Phillips of Alcorn County har-vested this five-point buck weigh-ing 140 pounds while hunting with his dad on opening day of the youth hunt in Mississsppi. He used his dad’s 300 Winchester Magnum at Will’s request and he downed the deer from 360 yards. Will is the son of Terry and Kim Phil-lips.

Opening Day SuccessMonsterNine-point

BuckWes Phillips of Alcorn

County harvested this mon-ster nine-point buck weigh-

ing 161 pounds with his .243 from 170 yards while

hunting with his dad dur-ing the recent juvenile hunt

in Mississippi. Wes is the 9-year-old son of Terry and

Kim Phillips.

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Celebrations/Wisdom3B • Daily Corinthian Sunday, November 11, 2012

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Tara Cochran and Wil-liam Grall were married at 4 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 11, 2011 at Spring Valley Presbyterian Church in Roselle, Ill. Pastor Wayne Botkin offi ciated and Pas-tor Rick Ligthart present-ed the wedding sermon. The wedding sermon was based upon Hebrews 12:1-3, the verses the groom used in his proposal to his bride.

The bride is the daugh-ter of Roger and Kaye Cochran of Knoxville, Ill. The bridegroom is the son of LaVerne Grall of Hanover Park, Ill.

The bride was escorted by her father and wore a Maggie Sottero strap-less A-line wedding gown made of Bordeaux Tafetta and a veil designed by her sister and maid of honor. She carried a bouquet of ivory roses. The bride and groom wrote their own vows, and the groom sang to his bride, “Listen to Our Hearts.”

The maid of honor was the bride’s sister, Leah Cochran of Peoria, Ill. The bridesmaids were the bride’s sister-in-laws: Robin Modrzejewski of Bartlett, Ill.; Tammy Mo-drzejewski of Byron, Ill.; and Lynda Lange of Show Low, Ariz. Honorary bridesmaid was Emma Cochran of Knoxville, Ill.

The best man was also the offi ciant, Wayne Bot-kin of Springboro, Ohio. The groomsmen were the groom’s brothers: Michael Modrzejewski of Bartlett, Ill.; Todd Modrzejewski of Byron, Ill.; and David Modrzejewski of Ha-nover Park, Ill. Honorary groomsmen were Ryan Co-chran of Knoxville, Ill. and Rily Cochran of Peoria, Ill., the bride’s brothers.

The fl ower girls were Ava Cochran of Knoxville, Ill., the bride’s niece and Rachel Modrzejewski of Palatine, Ill. and Lena

Hurt of Stillman Valley, Ill., the groom’s great nieces.

The ring bearers were Joe Modrzejewski of Schaumburg, Ill., the groom’s nephew; Blake Cochran of Knoxville, Ill., the bride’s nephew; and Josiah Modrzejewski of Palatine, Ill., the groom’s great nephew.

A cocktail hour and a reception with dinner and dancing followed at Makray’s Memorial Golf Club in Barrington, Ill.

The bride is a gradu-ate of Bethany Christian Academy, Galesburg, Ill.; Eugene Bible College, Eu-gene, Oregon; and Regent University School of Psy-chology and Counseling, Virginia Beach, Va. The bride holds her master’s in human services coun-seling and is a licensed professional counselor. She currently works as a children’s therapist for The Larkin Center, El-gin, Ill. The bride’s future goals include becoming a licensed clinical profes-sional counselor and a registered play therapist.

The groom is a graduate of Glenbard North High School, Carol Stream, Ill.; Moody Bible Institute, Chicago, Ill.; and Cov-enant Theological Semi-nary, St. Louis, Mo. The groom holds his master’s in divinity and master’s in counseling and is a li-censed professional coun-selor. He is currently em-ployed as an inside sales representative for Fisher Scientifi c, Hanover Park, Ill. The groom’s future goals include becoming a licensed and ordained pastor in the Presbyterian Churches in America.

The couple honey-mooned in Puerto Rico and followed with a seven-day cruise in the Southern Caribbean. They make their home in Schaumburg, Ill.

Wedding

Mr. and Mrs. William Grall

Cochran — Grall

DEAR ABBY: A friend’s daughter was married several years ago. I at-tended the shower and her wedding, and gave gifts for both.

Two months after the wedding, I received a thank-you note in which a form letter was en-closed that read, “By the way, we are now separat-ed and getting a divorce”! I was shocked not only by the news, but even more that my gifts were not re-turned with the divorce announcement.

This young lady is now being married again to a different man. If I attend the shower/wedding, am I obligated to give her another set of gifts? Or should I skip the shower and go to the wedding without giving another gift? What is proper in this case? — CONFUSED IN MASSACHUSETTS

DEAR CONFUSED: The rule of etiquette re-garding disposition of wedding gifts when a couple divorces after a short time is that any un-used items (preferably in

their orig-inal pack-aging) go back to the giv-ers. How-ever, to r e t u r n c o o k -w a r e , l i n e n s , c h i n a ,

glassware, etc., that have been used is impractical, so please don’t hold a grudge.

If you decide to attend the shower and/or wed-ding for your friend’s daughter, it is customary to give a gift.

DEAR ABBY: I recent-ly began a new job, and although I love what I do, I have only one problem. My boss, “Harold,” does not like eating lunch by himself. Every day, he asks me what I’m do-ing for lunch. If I say I brought my lunch, he wants me to eat it in his offi ce with him. If I tell him I’m going out, he wants us to go out to-gether.

I don’t think he’s at-

tracted to me; I just think he hates being alone. He’s entirely too clingy, and I feel my lunch break is supposed to be a time to do whatever I want to do.

I don’t believe the last lady who worked for him had a problem with this, but I do. How do I tell him “no” without of-fending him or hurting his feelings? — LUNCH BUDDY IN SOUTH CAROLINA

DEAR LUNCH BUD-DY: Tell your boss po-litely but fi rmly that you need your lunch hour to perform personal tasks -- go shopping, make per-sonal phone calls or catch up on some reading. You are entitled to that break time, and that is what it should be used for.

DEAR ABBY: A fam-ily member has six cats and wants to have the Thanksgiving meal at her house. Every time I eat there, I fi nd cat hair on the table, on the plates and in the food. I don’t want to cause hard feel-ings, but how do I handle

this? I’m allergic to cats. -- HOLD THE FUR IN AMARILLO, TEXAS

DEAR HOLD THE FUR: Your health must come fi rst. Arrange to celebrate Thanksgiving elsewhere and curtail your visit. If the relative attempts to “guilt” you into changing plans, ex-plain that you cannot be-cause you have become allergic to cat hair and dander and your doc-tor has instructed you to avoid exposure.

DEAR READERS: To-day is Veterans Day, and I would like to take this opportunity to thank not only our veterans, but also those men and wom-en who are still on active duty for their service to our country. -- ABBY

(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.)

Divorce, thanks come together

Today is Sunday, Nov. 11, the 316th day of 2012. There are 50 days left in the year. This is Veterans Day in the U.S., Remembrance Day in Canada.

Today’s Highlight in History

On Nov. 11, 1918, fighting in World War I came to an end with the signing of an armistice between the Allies and Germany.

On this dateIn 1620, 41 Pilgrims

aboard the Mayflower, anchored off Massachu-setts, signed a compact calling for a “body poli-tick.”

In 1831, former slave Nat Turner, who’d led a violent insurrection, was executed in Jerusalem, Va.

In 1889, Washington became the 42nd state.

In 1909, President William Howard Taft ac-cepted the recommen-dation of a joint Army-Navy board that Pearl Harbor in the Hawaiian Islands be made the principal U.S. naval sta-tion in the Pacific.

In 1921, the remains of an unidentified Ameri-can service member were interred in a Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in a ceremony presided over by Presi-dent Warren G. Harding.

In 1932, a new tomb to house the remains of the Unknown Sol-dier was dedicated at

Arlington National Cem-etery.

In 1942, during World War II, Germany com-pleted its occupation of France.

In 1960, South Viet-namese President Ngo Dinh Diem survived a coup attempt by army rebels. (However, he was overthrown and killed in 1963.)

In 1966, Gemini 12 blasted off from Cape Kennedy with astro-nauts James A. Lovell and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin Jr. aboard.

In 1972, the U.S. Army turned over its base at Long Binh to the South Vietnamese, symbolizing the end of direct U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War.

In 1987, following the failure of two Supreme Court nominations, Pres-ident Ronald Reagan announced his choice of Judge Anthony M. Ken-nedy, who went on to win confirmation.

In 1992, the Church of England voted to ordain women as priests.

Ten years agoIraqi lawmakers de-

nounced a tough, new U.N. resolution on weap-ons inspections as dis-honest, provocative and worthy of rejection. But the Iraqi parliament said it ultimately would trust whatever President Sad-dam Hussein decided.

Five years agoPresident Gen. Pervez

Musharraf said Paki-stan would stick to its January schedule for parliamentary elections, but set no time limit on emergency rule. Marking his fifth Veterans Day since the invasion of Iraq, President George W. Bush honored U.S. troops past and present at a tearful ceremony in Texas.

One year agoHeralding the end of

one war and the draw-down of another, Presi-dent Barack Obama ob-served Veterans Day at Arlington National Ceme-tery by urging Americans to hire the thousands of servicemen and women coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan. In the evening, President Obama and his wife, Michelle, watched from midcourt as No. 1 North Carolina beat Michigan State 67-55 in the Car-rier Classic on the flight deck of the USS Carl Vinson, anchored off the coast of San Diego. A gunman armed with an assault rifle fired a series of shots at the White House from long range; suspect Oscar Ramiro Ortega-Hernandez is charged with the attempted as-sassination of President Obama.

Today’s BirthdaysDancer-choreographer

Nicholas Royce is 87. Comedian Jonathan Winters is 87. Jazz

singer-musician Mose Allison is 85. Actress Bibi Andersson is 77. Country singer Narvel Felts is 74. Sen. Barba-ra Boxer, D-Calif., is 72. Americana roots singer/songwriter Chris Smither is 68. Rock singer-mu-sician Vince Martell (Va-nilla Fudge) is 67. The president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, is 67. Golfer Fuzzy Zoeller is 61. Pop singer-musician Paul Cowsill (The Cow-sills) is 61. Rock singer-musician Andy Partridge (XTC) is 59. Singer Mar-shall Crenshaw is 59. Rock singer Dave Alvin is 57. Rock musician Ian Craig Marsh (Human League; Heaven 17) is 56. Actor Stanley Tucci is 52. Actress Demi Moore is 50. Actress Calista Flockhart is 48. Actor Philip McKeon is 48. Rock musician Scott Mercado is 48. Actor Frank John Hughes is 45. TV personality Car-son Kressley is 43. Ac-tor David DeLuise is 41. Actor Adam Beach is 40. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio is 38. NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez is 26.

Thought for Today“Old myths, old gods,

old heroes have never died. They are only sleeping at the bottom of our mind, waiting for our call. We have need for them. They repre-sent the wisdom of our race.” — Stanley Kunitz, American poet laureate (1905-2006).

Today in history

LOS ANGELES — Trav-eling with a pet isn’t easy, since there are more rules than destinations. Kelly E. Carter, president of thejetsetpets.com and AOL’s resident pet travel expert, and Sheron Long, frequent international traveler and author of “Dog Trots Globe — To Paris and Provence,” share their tips:

■ Research before you go and make reserva-tions early. Airlines of-fer a limited number of cabin spots for pets, and they are fi rst-come, fi rst-served.

■ Know the weight, age and kennel size and clo-sure restrictions for the airline you’re fl ying.

■ Fees vary for pets, so have your checkbook or credit card ready at the airport.

■ Know how much room you will have under the seat for your pet and your legs.

Seatguru.com lists the dimensions on any seat on any aircraft.

■ Ask for a window seat to avoid your pet getting kicked if fellow passen-gers want to leave their seats.

■ Find out about fre-quent fl ier miles, since those policies differ with each airline.

■ To prevent accidents, don’t give your pet food or water on the fl ight. Ask for ice cubes and let the animal lick them as she needs them.

■ Carry a portfolio that includes your pet’s proof of rabies, vaccination re-cords, a photo, your vet’s name and number, a list of medicines and refer-ences from managers of

hotels where you have stayed.

■ Try to fl y nonstop.■ For international

travelers, every country has its own regulations, paperwork and quaran-tine periods. Be prepared and patient.

■ Don’t give your pet a sedative, since most air-lines won’t take a sedated animal.

■ Food is not allowed in pet carriers but tape it to the outside in case the fl ight is delayed or if it lasts longer than 12 hours.

■ If your pet is fl ying in cargo, ask how it will be transported from the ter-minal to the plane. Some airlines have air-condi-tioned or heated vans.

■ Pack your pet with a toy or a piece of your clothing to reassure your pet while you are sepa-rated.

Tips for traveling with pets during holidaysSpecial to the Daily Corinthian

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4B • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

LOS ANGELES — Roger Deakins is the rare person I was actually nervous to interview because I’m such a huge fan of his work. When I talked to the veteran cinematogra-pher in early 2008, after he’d received Academy Award nominations for both “No Country for Old Men” and “The Assassi-nation of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford,” I found him to be lovely and humble, with a dry and self-effacing British wit — which naturally made me admire him even more.

Now he’s shot the most gorgeous James Bond fi lm yet: this week’s “Sky-fall,” which marks his third collaboration with director Sam Mendes. But he’s probably best known

as the Coen brothers’ usual director of photog-raphy, having shot 11 of their fi lms. He’s a nine-time Oscar nominee but, in a travesty of justice, he’s never won. Maybe “Skyfall” will change that.

So we’re going to get a little nerdy this week and discuss fi ve of the most excellent examples of Deakins’ work:

■ “The Man Who Wasn’t There” (2001): One of my favorite fi lms from Joel and Ethan Coen, and one that’s un-derappreciated compared to the better-known “Far-go” or “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” Deakins pho-tographed this darkly comic homage to fi lm noir in lushly beautiful, striking black and white. He’s said this is his favor-ite fi lm he’s made with the Coens; a longtime still

photographer, Deakins lights for light and shade anyway rather than col-or. The scene in which a hotshot lawyer played by Tony Shalhoub explains Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle while walking back and forth beneath rigidly structured beams of light is just breathtak-ing.

■ “No Country for Old Men” (2007): This is the Coens’ masterpiece, and it allowed Deakins to bring the harshly beau-tiful, seemingly endless expanse of scrub-brushed West Texas vividly to life. Much of this tale of crime and carnage along the Rio Grande, which won the best-picture Oscar and three others, is marked by a parched, bleak open-ness. But it’s also fi lled with many memorable, intimate images: a sil-

houetted refl ection on a turned-off television screen, the shadow of a pair of boots in the crack of a hotel doorway, or a set of headlights shin-ing into a crime scene at night.

■ “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Cow-ard Robert Ford” (2007): Andrew Dominik’s fi lm is set during the late 1800s in Missouri, as Jesse James (Brad Pitt) nears the end of his storied criminal career and is shot to death by a mem-ber of his gang.

Deakins bathes every-thing with a soft, warm sense of nostalgia and melancholy, which may seem like an unusual choice given the violent subject matter. But the result is disarming and inspired.

A nighttime train rob-

bery, for example, be-comes an almost roman-tic ballet of light and shadow.

■ “Jarhead” (2005): I did not love this movie as a whole but Deakins created some powerfully dramatic visuals here. This was his fi rst col-laboration with Mendes (they’d also work together on 2008’s “Revolution-ary Road”), based on the true story of Marines who fought in Opera-tion Desert Storm, with Jake Gyllenhaal serving as our guide. As the fi lm descends into its darkest period, Deakins’ depic-tion of a burning oil fi eld is stunning — a bold swirl of orange and black, like some beautiful version of hell. And his shots of the desert, usually through an eye-level, hand-held cam-era, make the dry vast-

ness and shimmering sun feel palpable.

■ “A Serious Man” (2009): Not exactly the Coens’ best-known mov-ie (although it earned Oscar nominations for best picture and original screenplay) and not even the showiest example of what Deakins can do. That would probably be “The Big Lebowski.” But the look of this fi lm is so lovely and dreamlike, it draws you in. It’s inspired by the brothers’ youth in a predominantly Jewish suburb of Minneapolis in 1967, so it’s very specifi c in terms of costumes, mu-sic and production design. But Deakins’ often surreal cinematography adds to the off-kilter mood as we trudge along with the put-upon Michael Stuhlbarg. See it for the “goy’s teeth” scene alone.

Horoscopes

Cryptoquip

 Sunday, November 11, 2012

BY HOLIDAY MATHISCreator’s Syndicate

Yesterday, Neptune, the planet of dreams, ended a fi ve-month retro-grade stint through Pisces. Since Pi-sces is ruled by Neptune, this part of the sky is particularly charged with psychic energy now.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll be jolted from a mental routine. When a thought pattern is interrupt-ed, the incompleteness of the cycle will help you realize for the fi rst time the automatic loop your mind has been following.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You expect much more from yourself than you would ever demand of oth-ers. You deserve your own compas-sion. Ease up. Allow yourself to be comfortable at the least, and perhaps even happy or indulged.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Don’t make the mistake of thinking the only reason people like you is that you contribute to making their lives better. Yes, you’re generous. But you have other inherently loveable quali-ties. Believe in yourself.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). If you’ve been trying to lose a bad habit and it’s not working, try replacing the habit instead. Respond to the same cues, but put a new action in place of the old one, preferably something with a similar reward.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The social vibes are strong today. As long as you’re making new friends, you may as well go for people who will enrich your life in some way. Think about what you want. Make a list and keep it in mind.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You like to stay in control of your time, but this is not always possible. Children and those who act like them have a very different perception of time than you do, and this could be an issue.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). There’s an iceberg situation going on in your social life. Under the surface of a cordial exchange there is a massive implication. Stay aware of the true meaning of interactions.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’ll see the signs and read them in your own way. Others will have a different interpretation. Your way is still the best for you. Act on what you know, and you’ll be ready for the future.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Some of your friendships grow natu-rally, and others require constant care. You don’t mind the high-main-tenance connections now because they are also highly rewarding.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’ll prove through your actions that you have your priorities straight. Read the best books fi rst. Also, give your attention to the tasks that are most important to you, and to the dearly beloved people in your life.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). The work you do gives people ideas. They’ll associate you with industri-ousness and give you more work. If you relax as expertly as you labor, you’ll get more opportunities for lei-sure.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Ev-ery accomplishment is comprised of several smaller accomplishments. You’ll feel unsure as to what is in-volved, and that’s natural. It’s the kind of thing you just have to fi gure out as you go.

Five examples of cinematographer’s best workBY CHRISTY LEMIRE

AP Movie Critic

NEW YORK — If you just looked at the cast and crew of “Skyfall,” you could easily confuse the assembled talent for a prestige costume drama. Director Sam Mendes, actors Judi Dench, Javier Bardem and Ralf Fiennes, and cinematographer Roger Deakins might just as easily be mounting a Shakespeare adaptation.

But “Skyfall” is, of course, a James Bond fi lm, and not only that, it’s the 23rd installment in a blockbuster franchise marking its 50th anniver-sary with only slightly less fanfare than the Queen’s Jubilee. “Skyfall” is a touch more high-minded than those previous 22 fi lms, but it’s also argu-

ably the best crafted mov-ie in Bond history.

Those involved in the 007 empire overwhelm-ingly credit the higher trajectory for Bond to one man: Daniel Craig.

“Daniel was like, ‘Ev-eryone said yes! Look at this incredible cast!”’ says Mendes. “I’m like, ‘Mate, it’s because of you.”’

Now in his third fi lm as 007, “Skyfall” is Craig’s most emphatic statement yet on how he’ll defi ne his stewardship of the be-loved British spy. What’s clearest on “Skyfall” is that Craig has taken full ownership of Bond, not only fi lling out a tux, but molding the entire pro-duction.

The result is the best-reviewed Bond fi lm yet, one that’s already made

a whopping $287 million in its fi rst 10 days of in-ternational release. “Sky-fall” is the culmination of The Daniel Craig Years, a chapter in Bond history that’s proving a resound-ing success.

Craig’s fi rst Bond fi lm, 2006’s “Casino Royale,” was a visceral introduc-tion to his version of 007. Less successful was 2008’s “Quantum of Sol-ace,” which was marred by script problems partly caused by the writer’s strike. The fi lm’s heavy somberness disappointed many and fueled the cor-rection in tone on “Sky-fall.”

After the postmodern deconstruction of “Quan-tum,” “Skyfall” puts Bond back together, restoring many familiar elements,

albeit with certain twists. Ben Whishaw inherits the role of Q, Naomie Harris settles in as Moneypen-ny and Fiennes comes aboard as the new head of MI6. Bardem plays a fl amboyant, effete former MI6 agent whose cyber destruction is motivated by a past with M, the role Judi Dench has inhabited for seven fi lms.

Overall, “Skyfall” is set in a more realistic world where MI6’s activities are answerable to gov-ernment and where the threat of terrorism has fi rmly displaced Cold War fears as the dominant concern.

It was Craig who, on a sudden instinct over con-versation at a party, asked Mendes — better known for his stage direction and

dramas like “American Beauty” and “Revolution-ary Road” than action movies — if he wanted to direct. The two had previ-ously worked together on 2002’s “Road to Perdi-tion,” before Craig’s star-dom swelled.

“It mattered that it came from him,” says Mendes. “I don’t think I would have done it with-out Dan. It’s much easier going to Javier or Ralph knowing they’re already into the franchise because of Daniel. He’s made it cool in a different way.”

Craig also approached Bardem, a selective ac-tor whose performance in “Skyfall” is already be-ing considered among the best Bond villains.

Producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G.

Wilson, who years ago inherited control of the franchise from their fa-ther Albert “Cubby” Broc-coli, have been quite con-tent with Craig’s initiative. The 44-year-old actor is signed for two more Bond fi lms, but Broccoli would have it be longer.

“We’re not going to let him get away,” says Broc-coli. “We want him to keep making these fi lms as long as he’s willing.”

“Daniel gives you more opportunities,” Wilson adds. “He is defi nitely the main reason people want to be in these fi lms.”

Mendes credits anoth-er inspiration: Christo-pher Nolan, whose “Dark Knight” trilogy of Bat-man fi lms, Mendes says, “made B movies into A fi lms.”

With ‘Skyfall,’ Craig puts definitive stamp on Bond seriesBY JAKE COYLE

AP Entertainment Writer

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 5B

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6B • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Once again we are looking for Drivers at Ashley Distribution Services in Ecru, MS. We deliver to retail furniture stores in TX, AR, LA, AL, GA, FL, SC, NC, TN and surrounding states. Must have a CDL A, at least 1 year OTR experience, good work history and clean MVR/PSP Reports. We pay actual miles driven with stop pay. Home weekly with well - maintained equipment. Paid Safety Bonus and paid vacations with a great benefi t package. Make this career change your last one-join the best!

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Doug & Vicki Mullins

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Christmas Angels

A page featuring your special Angel will be published Sunday, December 23rd,

2012 in The Daily Corinthian

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All photos must be in our offi ce by 5 p.m.Friday, Dec. 14th, 2012

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UnfUrniSHed aPartMentS0610

1 BR, 1 BA, all appl. in-cluded, downtown Cor-inth. $600 mo. 287-1903.

2 BR, stove/refrig. furn.,W&D hookup, CHA.287-3257.

MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR,stove, refrig., water.$365. 286-2256.

DOWNTOWN APT., loft, 1BR, $650 mo. 287-5557.

NICE APT. on PickwickLake w/lake view. 662-423-9938.

HoMeS for rent0620

1011-B Douglas, 2 BR, 1BA, $250 mo. 662-808-0909 or 415-1320.

1206 CLOVER LN., 3 BR, 2BA, $700 mo. 287-5557.

3BR, 2BA brick, CHA,fenced yard, S. of Cor-inth. $550 mo, $450 dep.Ref's. req. 731-439-2900.

Mobile HoMeS for rent0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HoMeS for Sale0710

102 SIXTH ST Booneville-N e w L i s t i n g i nBooneville City SchoolDistrict! Home could bea 3 or 4 br if needed andhas 2 full ba. Also hasd a y l i g h t b a s e m e n tw/plenty of room forstorage. The originalhardwood flooring is ingood shape and thebaths have been up-dated with ceramic tile.Call Michael at 416-1912for an appointment!$65,000.00

112 E MELODY LANE Cor-inth,-Well maintainedhome in city of Corinth!Features fenced back-yard, metal outbuilding,& detached 2-car gar-age. C/H/A is approx. 5yrs. old! Don't miss thisone! Pre-Approved Buy-ers Only! Call MichaelMcCreary for more in-formation! 662.286.2828o r 6 6 2 . 4 1 6 . 1 9 1 2 .$ 7 4 , 5 0 0 . 0 0

1304 PINE LAKE DRIVECorinth.-RARE FIND ON1.5 ACRES! Super interi-or des ign features ,granite kitchen countertops, tile back splash,stainless steel appli-ances, private masterbedroom, spacious backyard and too manyamenities to list. CallTruman today to view!6 6 2 . 2 8 6 . 2 8 2 8 o r662.284.6357. $255,000.00

1902 OAK LANE, 3 BR, 2full BA w/lg. open liv-i n g / d i n i n g r o o mw/built-ins, gorgeoussun room & beautifulback yard. Owner wantsoffers. Call Vicki Mullinsw/Mid-South Real Es-tate Sales & Auctions,662-808-6011.

2004 N. PARKWAY Cor-inth-Great price forcozy cottage on N.P a r k w a y ! C o u l d b emade a 3 br!! New archi-tectural shingle roof,k i t c h e n c a b i n e t s ,ceramic tile & laminatewood flooring, plus up-dated colors inside!Fenced backyard, stor-age shed, cement patiotoo! CHA appx. 10 yearsold! APPLIANCES INCL!Be sure to check thisone out! Call Michael at4 1 6 - 1 9 1 2 t o d a y !$ 6 5 , 0 0 0 . 0 0

2511 N. MELODY LANEC o r i n t h - W o n d e r f u lhome w/lots of room &storage, big lot, stor-age house & fencedyard incl. One of the lar-ger homes in MelodyPark Subd. Cal l AnnHardin today for moreinfo! 662.286.2828 or662.664.0759. $89,900.00

26 COUNTY ROAD 776Corinth-This cozy cabinsurrounded by woods isperfect for someonewanting privacy yet justshort drive from cityamenit ies! FeaturesCyprus siding, 2 br, and1 ba. Front & back deckis great for visitingw/family & friends orgrilling out! Appx. 1.4acre tree shaded lotw/outbui ld ing too!Newer shingles & A/Ccompressor! Call Mi-chael at 416-1912 toview!! $56,000.00

fUrnitUre0533

ELECTRIC CHAIR, $300.662-665-1831 after 5p.m.

WHITE DRESSER for sale,$75. 662-665-1831 after 5p.m.

MacHinery & toolS0545

MEN'S TOOLS, 430-$40.286-8436.

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.

W A N T E D T O B U YPECANS. 662-286-9766 or901-299-0702.

MiSc. iteMS for Sale0563

CHRISTMAS CERAMICW h i m s i c a l T e a l i g h thouses, set of 4, $25.662-396-1143.

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.

Email ad to: freeads

@dailycorinthian.comor

[email protected]

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.

electronicS0518HP 1300 all-in-one print-er, inc. ref. guide & soft-ware, works fine, justneeds ink cartridges.$50. 662-603-1776.

laWn & Garden eqUiPMent0521

TROYBUILT WEEDEATERw/tiller & brush cutterattachments, $200. 731-645-0049.

SPortinG GoodS0527

7-SHOT Russian Nagant32 caliber side load,made in 1931, goodcond., $250. 662-415-3770.

BENNELI TACTICAL Su-per Nova shotgun, $300.731-645-0049.

HOMEMADE GUN rack tohang on wall, holds fourguns, no bottom draw-ers, $17. 662-415-3770.

L A R G E W H I T E T A I Lhunters kn i fe withleather case, new inbox, $12.00. 662-415-3770.

MCKEE'S GUN SHOPBuy, sell, trade, repair

Hand gun safety classesavailable for Tn.

residents.731-239-5635

RG 22 CALIBER L.R. oldwestern pistol, sideload, $175. 662-415-3770.

T H O M P S O N C E N T E ROmega, 50 cal. blacksynthetic stock, stain-less steel barrel, exc.cond., orig. owner. $339w/scope mount. 662-542-7650.

fUrnitUre05334 P A R S O N ' S c h a i r s ,beautiful upholstery,$75 each. 286-9909.

BEAUTIFUL SOLID blackwood pedestal base ta-ble with 42" glass top,$485. 286-9909.

BLUE METAL Toddlerbed with mattress, $30.662-665-1831 after 5p.m.

bUSineSSeS for Sale0280

146 HWY 172, 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 & all inventory forsale. 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 $150,000. CallVicki Mullins with Mid-South Real Estate Sales& Auctions, 662-808-6011.

PETS

catS/doGS/PetS0320FREE PUPPIES to a goodhome, 6 black, part Lab.287-1867.

FARM

liveStock0450FOR SALE or trade: 250lb. boar hog, $200. 662-603-2462.

MERCHANDISE

HoUSeHold GoodS0509

3-PC . bathroom set( c o m m o d e , 2lavatories), light blue,$80 obo. 286-8436.

STAINLESS STEEL doublesink, $25. 286-8436.

MUSical MercHandiSe0512

WASHBURN MAHOGANYD100M guitar, gold pak,Grover tuners , notchinese, tweed hard-shell case, $250 firm. 287-3206.

trUckinG0244

DRIVERS:DEDICATED OPERATION-$1,050/week avg-Hometime duringweek &every other weekend-Insurance benefits-Class A CDL required800-605-1563LinkAmerica Dedicatedwww.drivewithlink.com

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 800-789-8451. www.longistics.com

office HelP0248LOCAL COMPANY seeksperson to fill positionin Customer Service,Invoicing and GeneralOffice duties. Shouldhave computer experi-ence. Should be avail-able for work 9am 'til 7pm, 40+ hours perweek. Send resume to:Box 334, c/o Daily Cor-inthian, P.O. Box 1800,Corinth, MS 38835.

retail HelP0252NOW HIRING Local StoreManager. Retail man-agement experience re-quired. Send resume to:[email protected].

reStaUrant0260BAR MAID needed. Ap-ply at Long Branch, 104Taylor Street, ask forRobert. 662-808-4441.

General HelP0232

NOW HIRING! Small loanco. has full time posi-tions available in Cor-inth, Ms. Job duties in-clude but not limited tomarketing, collections,& customer service.Customer service ex-p e r i e n c e r e q u i r e d .Email resume to [email protected] orfax to 931-241-6032.

trUckinG0244DRIVER NEEDED. Musthave CDL. W.C. Morton,Southeast Ag. 287-3448.

DRIVER TRAINEESNEEDED NOW!

Become a driver forWerner Enterprises!Earn $800+ per week!

No Experience Needed!Local CDL Training

1-888-540-7364

DRIVER$2,500 Sign-On Bonus!

SUPERSERVICE

-Hiring Solo and TeamDrivers

-Great Benefits Package-Excellent Home Time

-CDL-A Required-Students with CDL-A

Welcome

888-441-9358www.superservicellc.

com

SaleS0208WANT A schedule thatworks for you? Becomea Silpada Representat-ive, earn 30% commis-sion & sell gorgeoussterling silver jewelry.Being a representativeis a fun way to earn ex-tra income! Call Jan at901-483-7064.

Medical/dental0220

IMMEDIATE OPENING fora full-time and part-time Phlebotomist inSavannah, TN. Full-timeposition is M-Th, 8am-5pm and part-time posi-t i o n i s M - F , 8 a m -12noon. Email resumeto [email protected] fax to 615-234-2502.

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.

inStrUction0180MEDICAL CAREERS beginhere - Train ONLINE forAllied Health and Medi-cal Management. Jobplacement assistance.Computer available. Fi-nancial Aid if qualified.SCHEV certified. Call877-206-5185. www.Cen-turaOnline.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

adMiniStrative0204MANAGING DIRECTORneeded for busy Cor-inth non-profit com-munity theatre. De-sired qualifications: 1)Computer skills, includ-ing experience with Mi-crosoft Office, Win-dows, desktop publish-ing; ability to designand manage databasesand optimize socialmedia; 2) Record keep-ing experience; 3) Mar-keting and publicity ex-perience; 4) Excellentcustomer service skills,including strong writ-ten and oral commu-nication. Ideal candid-ate has a bachelor's de-gree in a related field.Salary based on 20-30hour work week withavailability to work pro-duction nights andweekends. Please sub-mit cover letter and re-s u m e t [email protected]. Acceptingapplications throughNovember 30, 2012.

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 7B

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

1998 Chevy S-10 LS,

extended cab, 3rd door, low rider,

5-spd., 2.2 ltr., 4 cyl., runs great,

$1000 obo662-415-6262.

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.

‘10 Nissan Pathfi nder

very low mi-29,140, 3rd row seat, black

w/gray int, very nice & below Kelly Blue

Book value. $17,950. Call Gina Brown at

731-439-2363 Tow. pkg. incl, great gas mi. for lg. SUV.

’04 HONDA SHADOW

750$3900

662-603-4407

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2004 KAWASAKIMULE

3010 Model #KAF650E, 1854 hrs., bench seat,

tilt bed, 4 WD & windshield, well

maintained. Great for farm or hunting. $6500.

731-212-9659731-212-9661.

1991 Ford Econoline

Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one

owner, serious interest. $6500

287-5206.

2001 HONDA REBEL 250 WITH EXTRAS,

BLUE, LESS THAN 1500 MILES,

$1850662-287-2659

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.$13,500

662-287-6613leave message

or text

‘98 FAT BOY,New factory EVOE engine w/warranty, 80 cu. in., 1300 mi. new wheels/tires,

pipes & paint. Divorce Sale. Over $13,000

invested.

$8000 obo662-665-1781

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.

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.

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.

16’ Aqua bass boat 70 HP Mercury, 4 seats, trolling

motor,

$4,000662-287-5413.

1959 Ford diesel

tractor

$4000662-750-0607

3000 series, new rear tires

& tubes

2002 Chevrolet Z-71,4-dr.,

4W.D., Am.Fm cass./CD, pewter in color, $6200.

662-643-5908 or662-643-5020

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

2000 Custom Harley

Davidson Mtr. & Trans.,

New Tires, Must See

$12,000 662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

$10,500

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

Cruisemaster Motorhome by

Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000

miles with white Oak interior. $19,500. 662-808-7777 or

662-415-9020

1967 CHEVYNeeds paint &

body work$4000.

504-952-1230

1996 LINCOLN TOWN CARExc. cond.,

1-family owned, 141,000 miles.

$3400.662-415-8682

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 Kawasaki Mule 3010

Bench Seat, Tilt Bed, Well Maintained, 4 Wd, Good For Hunting & Farm.

$5500731-376-8535

2003 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC

looks & rides real good!

$3000662-603-4786

2004 32 ft

Forest River Camper,

C/H/A, sleeps 5, full bedroom,

full bath, new carpet,

& hardwood, fridg, stove, microwave.

$3500.00662-665-6000

“NEW”Yamaha 250 Star V-twin

Motorcycle Black &

Chrome, Less Than 100 Miles

$3200662-415-6928

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1979 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3736.

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

662-287-5413or cell 284-8678

$3,500 $9,500

2007 Franklin pull camper, 36’, 20’

awning, 2 slide outs, full kitchen, W&D, tub/shower, 32” Sony TV, fully air-conditioned & lots

more! $11,500. 662-643-3565 or 415-8549

REDUCEDREDUCED

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.

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.

2000 Saab,

9-3 Convertible.123,000mi.

GREAT FUN CAR.

$2850 OBO.662-396-1333

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.

2006Yamaha Bruin 4 WD, automatic,

like new,$2800

662-279-1568OR 287-5598.

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

‘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,

$2750 731-439-1968. See car at 306 McMahan,

Eastview.

2001 Harley Wide Glide,11,000 MILES, IMMACULATE CONDITION,

$7500662-415-5137 OR

662-286-9432.

2004 DODGE RAM 1500V-8, QUAD CAB, GREAT COND.

$9000CONTACT

662-603-1407.

2005 FORD ESCAPE

Black, 153,000 miles, leather,

sunroof.

$5600.662-664-3538

REDUCED!

SPortinG GoodS0527

GUNS – AMMO – ACCESSORIESBUY-SELL-TRADE

J & H GUNSInside Crossroads Outdoor

2022Hwy 72 East Annex Corinth, MS 38834

(662) 287-1234

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.

Paint/Wallcover

FRESHEN UP PAINTINGspecial for holidays.20%discount. A & E PAINT-ING. 662-603-2339

ServiceS

D I V O R C E W I T H o rwithout children $99.Includes name changeand property settle-ment agreement. SAVEhundreds. Fast andeasy. Cal l 1-888-733-7165. 24/7.

MONOGRAM ANDEMBROIDERY

Now taking orders forthe Holidays! Stock-ings, towels, shirts, justabout anything! LauraHolloway, Sew MuchFun!! 284-5379.

StoraGe, indoor/oUtdoorAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

ProfeSSional Service directory

aUto/trUck PartS & acceSSorieS

0848

4 WHEELS, American Ra-c i n g P e r f o r m a n c e ,american.com. $300. 287-2509 or 808-3908.

6 FT. Topper bed cover,black, fits 2001 F-150ext. cab, $300. 287-7670.

claSSic/SPortS/collector carS0872

AUCTIONSATURDAY, November17 at 10 AM. Krage Mo-torsports Jeep, 18570Hwy 69 South, Savan-nah, TN. 4 Willys/Jeeps,all mechanic and bodyshop tools, 1000's usedand new parts, 10%buyers premium. Herit-age Auction and RealEstate, Inc. FL #4556.731-925-3534. Tony NeillFL #1468. Call 731-926-3 1 3 3 . V i s i twww.tonyneill.com forpictures and inventorylist.

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

HandyMan

HANDYMAN'S H o m ecare, anything. 662-643-6892.

JT'S Handyman. Pres-sure wash ing , car -pentry, painting. I do itall! 284-6848.

Mobile HoMeS for Sale0741

1999 16X80, 3+2, C/H/A,$11,500; 1982 14x70, 2+1,$6,500. 731-926-0741.

16X80, 3 BR, 2 BA, nice &clean. Del. & set upprice $9800. 731-925-4150.

ManUfactUred HoMeS for Sale0747

FALL SPECIAL!New 3 Bedroom

2 BathEnergy Star Home

Vinyl Siding/Shingle Roof,

2"x6" Wall StudsThermo pane windowsHeat Pump, Appliances

Underpinning,Delivered & Setup

Only $28,995WINDHAM HOMES

287-6991

coMMercial/office0754

COMMERCIAL BUILDING &Land w/living quarters,TN State Line on OldHwy 45 S., Guys, TN.Equipped with someappliances, vinyl, partialcarpet, central cooling& 1 w i n d o w u n i t .$65,000. Lyle Murphy,United Country-RiverCity Realty, Corinth, MSOffice: 662-287-7707.

TRANSPORTATION

MotorcycleS08322004 POLARIS Ranger2x4 ATV, 425cc, 113 hrs.,bench seat, tilt bed,windshield, $3800 firm.287-6804.

HoMeS for Sale0710

918 TAYLOR STREET Cor-inth.-Historic down-town Corinth homebuilt in the 1900's. 5br/3 ba, tall 11' & 12'cei l ings downstairs.Master BR on mainlevel. Spacious kit. & DR.LR has fireplace. Hard-wood flr in DR, tile incommon areas. Reallyn ice home with somuch to offer. Call Tru-man today to view!6 6 2 . 2 8 6 . 2 8 2 8 o r662.284.6357. $129,000.00

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

lotS & acreaGe073420 ACRES FREE! Buy 40-Get 60 Acres $0-Down,$168/month. MoneyBack Guarantee. NOCREDIT CHECKS! Beauti-ful Views, Roads Sur-veyed, Near El Paso,Texas. 1-800-843-7537.www.sunsetranches.com

Mobile HoMeS for Sale0741

VOTED BEST OF SHOWSpacious 4 BR, 2 BA,$44,500.00.All homes delivered &set up on your prop-erty. Limited time onthis home

CLAYTON HOMESSUPERCENTEROF CORINTH

HWY 72 WEST1/4 mile west of hospital

HoMeS for Sale0710

CR 107, Corinth - Gor-geous 5 BR, 3 BA homew/partial basement,game room, screenedback porch, ingroundpool, shop, barn androom to roam on over 4acres! Call Vicki Mullinswith Mid-South Real Es-tate Sales & Auctions,662-808-6011.

FOR SALE BY OWNER. Tri-Level Home w/base-ment & shop. 4/5 BR, 3BA on 2 acres. Greatfamily home. 8 CR 522(Biggersville/Kossuth).Shown by appointment,284-5379.

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.

HoMeS for Sale0710

197 A COUNTY ROAD 213Corinth. SOLD AS ISWHERE IS!! Manufac-tured home in AlcornCo. School District! Fea-tures 3 br, 2 ba, kitchen,LR , & ut i l i ty room.C/H/A. Also cementpatio behind home forg r i l l i n g o u t ! N i c e ,private, wooded coun-try setting! Call Michaelat 416-1912 for appoint-ment! $41,900.00

72 MAIN STREET Rienzi.-Must see spacious 3 br 21 / 2 b a h o m e n e a rDowntown Rienzi! Hasbarn & small pasture forhorse, on 1 1/2 acres ofland. Call Ann Hardintoday for more info!6 6 2 . 2 8 6 . 2 8 2 8 o r662.664.0759. $87,500

HoMeS for Sale0710

68 COUNTY ROAD 1401,Booneville-APPLIANCESINCLUDED!! Well main-tained 3 br brick homein the country!! Fea-t u r e s 2 c a rgarage/workshop &covered cement patioexiting from LR. Archi-tectural shingle roofwas put on in 2005 & in-terior was completelyrepainted in 2006. Ap-prox. 1 acre lot is justthe right size. See thev i s u a l t o u r a twww.jumperrealty.com! Call Michael for detailsat 416-1912!! $67,000.00

HoMeS for Sale0710

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8B • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

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Special Supplement to the Daily Corinthian

Veterans Day TributeVeterans Day Tribute

We Are Proud To Serve Our Veterans Who

Once Proudly Served

MS CARE CENTER OF ALCORN COUNTY

3701 Joanne Drive662-287-8071Corinth, MS

Bro. Warren JonesArmy

Sam GipsonArmy

James HannonNavy

Horace NewcombAir Force/Army

Kelly WilkersonArmy

Robert GospadareckAir Force

Ellis StacyArmy

Wilburn PurvisArmy

Joe HintonUS Marines

Charles ByramNavy & Air Force

Clarence WaldropNavy

Alford FlanaganArmy

Sam HaynesAir Force

John MosleyNavy

Norris KellyAir Force

Charles SmithArmy

Vance StarkNavy

Carroll LittleAir Force

Ray JonesArmy

William ParkerArmy

Willis McCoyNavy

Hubert JonesNational Guard

Floyd CannonArmy

Roy RobinsonArmy

James PriceArmy

Our Nation

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 3

Frederick L. AlexanderU.S. Army

2010 - present

Roy Clinton “R.C.” AllenU.S. Army

1943-1945

John E. AndersonU.S. Navy

1954-1982

Bobby AustinU.S. Army

1953-1973

Gerry AustinU.S. Army

1969-1982

Larry BarrU.S. Marines1957-1961

Hurshel L. Bates

U. S. Army1943-1946

Harold BlackwoodU.S. Army

1951-1953

Houston BrownU. S. Army1968-1970

Jimmie R. Barnes

U.S. Army1966-1968

Johnny Ray BurkhalterU.S. Army

1964-1967

Harold BurlesonU.S. Army

1969-1971

Acie L. CarmanU.S. Air Force2007 - Present

Wayne ColnU.S. Air Force1954-1960

Rickey D. CraneU.S. Air Force

1969-1973/1991-

1995

Bill DobbinsU.S. Army

1953-1961

Larry ElamU.S. Air Force1963-1967

Enoch D. Eubanks

U.S. Air Force1954-1975

Edward Jacob Fett

U.S. Air Force1985-2011

William George (Billy) FettU.S. Army

1951-1953

Joe Vance Gurley, Jr.

U.S. Air Force1965-1969

Joe Vance Gurley, Sr.U.S. Army

1940-1945

James A. Hale, Sr.

U.S. Army1966-1968

John F. Harrison

U.S. Army1940-

1945/1950-1954

4 • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

James F. Leatherwood

U.S. Army1963-1965

John H. LentzU.S. Marine

Corps1980-2000

Johnnie A. Lindsey

U.S. Army1967-1969

Charles W. Leonard

U.S. Air Force1948-1952

Grady Wilburn Markle

U.S. Army1941-1945

Raymond MassengillU.S. Army

1941-1945

Kimble MathisU.S. Air Force1964-1968

Buddy HintonU.S. Army1957-1959

Charles HoltU.S. Army

1953-1954

Richard HortonU.S. Army

1969-1970

Wilford Brant “Bud” Johnson

U.S. Army1942-1945

Rodney KingU.S. Army

1992-1995

Larry W. Knight

U.S. Army1967-1973

Benjamin Harvey HillU.S. Army

1942-1945

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 5

Raymond T. Mattox

U.S. Army Air Corps

1942-1946

Harold PalmerU.S. Army1967-1969

James “Bud” Odle

U.S. Army1958-1961

Jeff “Joe Coffee” Morris

U.S. Army1980-1981

Dewitt E. McKee

U.S. Army 

David E. McKee

U.S. Air Force

Harold Wayne McCoy

U.S. Army1964-1972

William “Bill” McCain

U.S. Army1980-2009

Cindy Childers McCain

U.S. Army1991-2012

J. C. ParkerU.S. Army

1963-1969

James Harold Peters

U.S. Army1966-1968

James PrinceU.S. Air Force1966-1970

Richard ReedU.S. Army

1966-1968

Nelson RickmanU.S. Army

1953-1955

Reggie N. RickmanUS Army

1968-1970

Charles D. Robinson

U.S. Air Force1950-1954

Charles R. Rorie

U.S. Army1961-1963

Robert D. Sagely

U.S. Marine Corp.

2006-current

Danny SandersU.S. Army1967-1969

Bobby L. SettlemiresU.S. Army1967-1969

Magnolia Funeral HomeHome Owned and Operated

2024 Hwy 72 East Annex • Corinth, Mississippi(662) 286-9500 or 286-9545 • www.magnoliafuneralhome.net

We thank our Veterans, both past and present for your faithful service to our country. We thank

God for the sacrifi ce you made to make our country free.

1101 Levee Rd. • Corinth, MS • 662-286-7021 Locally Owned and Operated • [email protected]

Ken Teeter ARMY

Arthur BorenNAVY

Charles McCarter MARINES

RobertMcKeown

NAVY

James Bryant

NAVY

Doyle Petty ARMY

Clyde Barron

NAVYDoyle PettyArmy

Boyd OwingsMarine

KenTeeterArmy

DeweyBroadway

Army

Ralph StachellAir Force

Bill Parnell

Air ForceAir ForceThank

You All!

6 • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Guy E. YoungU.S. Army

1953-1956

Clarence Wroten

U.S. Army1942-1943

Lawrence WoodruffU.S. Navy

1945

Tommy Williams

U.S. Army1968-1979

Joe WellsU.S. Air Force1950-1954

Tommie WhittemoreU.S. Army1967-1969

Robert WigintonU.S. Army

1953-1957

Jimmy Neal WilbanksU.S. Army

1969-1972

James Harry Taylor

U.S. Navy1941-1945

James UtleyU.S. Army

1944-1945

Bobby J. VoylesU.S. Army

1960-1963

Robert WeirU.S. Navy

1947-1952

Bobby Joe VanderfordU.S. Army1967-1969

Jimmy TaylorU.S. Air Force1972-1976

Clayton Y. Turner

U.S. Army1942-1945

Chief Jimmy Tutor

U.S. Navy1962-1987

James Landon Tucker

U.S. Army Na-tional Guard

1999-Present

L.C. TerryU. S. Army

1940 - 1945

Harris Neal Strickland

U.S. Army Corp of Engineers1967-1969

Roy Allen StricklandU.S. Army

1968-1969

Thomas Ray SettlemiresU.S. Army1967-1969

Samuel D. Smith

U.S. Army1967-1970

Corey StevensU.S. Army

2009 - Present

Billy W. Stewart

U.S. Army1957-1958

Debbie McFalls, FNP1801 S. Harper Rd. Suite 7

Corinth, MS 38834(662) 286-2300

Fax (662) 286-7010Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Wednesday 8 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • 7

NEW ORLEANS — A violin made from bed slats, a bomber jacket, and journals fi lled with humor, nostalgia, sorrow and boredom help to tell the stories of the 92,820 Allied soldiers held in nearly 100 Nazi prisoner of war camps.

“Guests of the Third Reich,” an exhibit opening on Veterans Day at the National World War II Museum is about those “Kriegies,” as they called themselves — short for “Kriegsgefangener,” German for “prisoner of war.”

Items on display through July 7 are among those to be shown in the Libera-tion Pavilion planned for completion in 2016. That pavilion will also have a sec-tion about POWs held in Japanese POW camps where more than 40 percent of the 27,465 Americans captured in the Pacifi c died. But of 93,941 who surren-dered to Germany, 92,820 survived.

Japan had not ratifi ed the Geneva

Conventions for humane treatment of POWs. Germany had, and generally fol-lowed its requirements.

Not always. One part of the exhibit is about POWs who were sent to con-centration camps or executed. Those in the concentration camps included 350 Americans sent from Stalag IXB to the slave labor camp in Berga because they were or “looked” Jewish, and 168 Allied airmen sent to nearby Buchenwald. Another 362 American POWS and more than 100 Belgians were killed in groups, including 84 shot in the “Malmedy Mas-sacre.”

The exhibit is divided in fi ve sections: Capture, Camp Life, Liberation, Global Confl ict — which includes the “War Crimes” area — and After the Camps.

Camp Life includes seven “wartime logs” — diaries provided by the YMCA to be sent in Red Cross packages for POWs. Their contents have been scanned and put on iPads so visitors can

page through them.“There’s probably about 700 pages in

all if you read all of them,” said curator Kimberly Guise. Some of the diaries’ contents also are on the website set up for the exhibit.

Early American POWs were airmen, who hit the ground at a rate of about 400 a month in 1943. Then came the Battle of the Bulge, when nearly 23,000 Americans, most of them infantry, were captured in December 1944.

Most of the logs include drawings of burning aircraft or memorials to dead crewmen, Guise said.

The men also described lighter mo-ments.

“There are a number of ways we spend our spare time. As I sit here writing this, there are two across from me studying French, some are playing cards, others are reading books, the rest have the two guitars, anything to keep your mind occupied and not think of home,” wrote

Bruce L. Worrell, captured in Italy in May 1994 during service with the 85th Infantry Division’s 359th Infantry Regi-ment and held at Stalag IIB.

Guise said, “There were whole col-leges that were set up. They called them barbed-wire universities.”

The diaries, each printed with the title “A Wartime Log,” also include home addresses of men in the camp, cartoons, drawings of other POWs, maps, photo-graphs from home, and lovingly detailed drawings of U.S. bombers and of pinup girls, sometimes together.

There are song parodies and also verses clipped from magazines and newspapers.

The fl ight jacket was worn by Paul Hayslip, the only crewman on the B-26 bomber “Ramblin’ Wreck” who was able to parachute to safety before it crashed. A photograph shows him and his crew at Louisiana’s Barksdale Field, now Barks-dale Air Force Base.

Museum exhibit describes POWs held by NazisBY JANET MCCONNAUGHEY

Associated Press

MRHC Salutes our VETERANS Thank You for Your Service

8 • Sunday, November 11, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

WE SALUTE YOUHAPPY VETERAN’S DAY

To American Servicemen and Women Past and Present,

Thank You for Your Courage & Sacrifices in the Name of Freedom.