Corinth E-edition

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Saturday Dec. 3,

2011

50 cents

Daily Corinthian Vol. 115, No. 288

Sun & Clouds Today

Tonight

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

Golf cart catches fire Federal grand jury indicts Iuka man for killing eagle BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

A federal grand jury has indicted an Iuka man on charges of shooting a bald eagle earlier this year in the Burnsville area, and a trial date is set for January. Court records show the grand jury returned a two-count indictment against William “Bill” Branum, 78 — one count of use of a bald and golden eagle for scientific purposes and one count of taking, killing or possessing migratory birds. The

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

All four Corinth Fire Department Stations were dispatched to Hillandale Country Club when a cart started a fire at the course off Oakland School Road.

Four units respond to blaze at Hillandale BY STEVE BEAVERS Hillandale Country Club has seen numerous great golfers set the historic course on fire. On Friday morning, a cart was responsible for a blaze at the Oakland School Road site. “I had just backed my cart out and was getting ready to play when I started talking to someone,” said longtime Hillandale golfer Clyde King. “There was nothing I could do.” “He got off the cart and it blew up,” said course superintendent Jim Walker. “Most likely, it was a flame from the battery and it blew into the stall.” King, who has been teeing

off at Hillandale since 1951, wasn’t injured in the accident. All that was left of his destroyed cart was a charred frame. All four Corinth Fire Department Stations responded to the fire which started around 10:30 a.m. and blocked traffic on both sides of Oakland School Road. “It could have went quick,” said Corinth Fire Department Captain Lucky Briggs. Corinth firemen contained the fire to one cart shed and a shop area as several golf members arrived to check on the conditions of their carts. “We didn’t need this to happen for sure,” said HCC Please see FIRE | 2A

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

A fireman battles the morning fire at Hillandale Country Club.

Please see EAGLE | 2A

After early snow, what lies ahead for winter? BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

charges are misdemeanors. Count one carries a potential penalty of one year imprisonment; a fine of $100,000; and one year supervised release. Count two has a potential penalty of six months imprisonment; $100,000 fine; and one year of supervised release. A jury trial in the case is set for Jan. 9 in Aberdeen before U.S. District Judge Sharion Aycock. Any plea agreement is due by Dec. 26.

After a surprisingly early snowfall, many people are wondering what lies ahead for the late fall and winter. The answers from various prognosticators vary. “From what I’m hearing, that early snow has kind of negated a lot of earlier comments,” said Patrick Poindexter, county director with the Mississippi State Extension Service. “People were expecting a more normal winter.” The roughly three-quarter inch snow of Monday night and Tuesday morning was the earliest accumulating snow in 20 years for most of the region. AccuWeather, which revised its winter outlook this week, predicts a cold December for the interior Southeast with

some “exceptionally chilly” nights. However, the forecasters predict moderation following in January and February. A weak to moderate La Niña pattern will influence the winter weather. “La Niña, a phenomenon that occurs when sea surface temperatures across the equatorial central and eastern Pacific are below normal, is what made last year’s winter so awful for the Midwest and Northeast,” said AccuWeather Meteorologist Heather Buchman. That typically leads to a mild and dry winter in the South, but AccuWeather warns of above normal precipitation in the Lower Mississippi Valley. In February, severe weather could emerge in the region. Please see WINTER | 2A

Corinth High School City Hall undergoes change freshman releases CD BY JEBB JOHNSTON

jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

BY ANGELA STOREY astorey@dailycorinthian.com

Crosswinds Ministries in downtown Corinth will be the scene tonight for a CD release party for Maty Noyes, a 14-year-old Corinthian who writes and sings her original music. The free concert and party will get underway around 6 p.m. tonight, immediately after the Corinth Christmas Parade which starts at 5. Another local singer, Shelby Pratt, will open the event. Tenyear-old Addie Paige Pratt will also sing, then Noyes and her band will perform music from the new CD titled “Worth It.” Noyes, a freshman at Corinth High School, is the daughter of Drs. Tim and Erica Noyes. The CD was put together over the last six months and was released last week. Maty’s music is described as her own independent style of acoustic pop. She began writing songs in the eighth grade and has since written over 20 songs. “My songs are about life, personal experiences and friends ... very meaningful,” Noyes said. “I started writing about a year ago. I just really picked it up and got into it a lot. I kind of always knew that music was the thing I wanted to do.” The concert Saturday night is “basically to celebrate the release finally,” she said. “I give all the honor to God.” In August Maty was the youngest of 12 women selected

Maty Noyes from across the nation to perform at the Christian Women in Ministry Association Songwriters Showcase. Accompanied by Mason Dowd, she performed in front of award winning singer Nicole C. Mullins and several Nashville producers and promoters. After that she was asked to sing at the Hard Rock Cafe in Nashville in September at the Purple Ball, a cancer fundraiser. Please see ALBUM | 2A

With the departure of city court, the police department and jail, Corinth City Hall is seeing some cleaning, construction and planned shuffling of offices. Uses have already been determined for some of the space made available by the relocation of city court and law enforcement to the Alcorn County Justice Center on South Harper. The board room for meetings of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen will move upstairs to the courtroom, where the judge’s podium has been removed and a new platform for the board is being constructed. It is expected to be ready for use early next year. Projects Coordinator Kim Ratliff said the city needs more space for its board meetings and other activities. The old courtroom will offer a larger seating capacity. “One of the problems we see is when classes come from schools for a presentation from the mayor and department heads about different aspects of city government, the board room is never large enough,” he said. “In the old courtroom, it will be feasible to take a large group up there.” Once the board room moves upstairs, the current board room will be reconfigured to accommodate the office of the mayor, a secretary and meeting space. The jail space is expected to be used for storage. The fire department may use the old

Index Stocks...... 7A Classified......5B Comics....11A Wisdom....10A

Weather......5A Obituaries......3A Opinion......4A Sports......1B

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Building Inspector Philip Verdung (from left), Doug Jaymes and Ronald Mueller work on the new platform for the Board of Mayor and Aldermen in the old city courtroom, which will become the board meeting room at City Hall. police department offices, but plans are not finalized, said Ratliff. The old police department space will get a thorough cleaning. “We are going to be looking at some painting and rehabilitation of floors and improving the general aesthetic of the building,” said Ratliff. “There could potentially be some paying renters coming into City Hall, but that has not come to fruition yet. We’re hoping that will generate some revenue.” The city is relying on inmates with the Mississippi

Department of Corrections for labor. “The captain has found us some workers who have experience in the building trades, and their contribution is going to be a significant cost savings to the city,” said Ratliff. Some other offices may shift to different locations within the municipal building, as well. “The main floors of City Hall, we hope to have all of that completed by the end of January,” said Building Inspector Philip Verdung, who is overseeing the work.

On this day in history 150 years ago Dec. 3, 1861 — In a message to the 37th Congress, President Abraham Lincoln suggests that runaway slaves be allowed to emigrate “at some place or places in a climate congenial to them.”


Local

2A • Daily Corinthian

Saturday, December 3, 2011

ALBUM: CD

WINTER: No

release party includes show, raffle, snacks

change in postNovember snow expectancy

CONTINUED FROM 1A

CONTINUED FROM 1A

The CD producer is Brian Spradlin, the guitarist for country music singer Easton Corbin. He liked her sound and helped her put this live acoustic CD together featuring eight of her original songs with her music, vocals and her guitar. Her friends, Mason Dowd, a 2011 graduate of Alcorn Central, does vocals and guitar, while Andrew Horton, a graduate of Eagle Home School, plays violin on the CD. During the CD release party, Dowd will be playing lead guitar Saturday night along with Kossuth High School senior Jake Haley on drums and Corinth High School senior Jesse Sutton on bass guitar. Maty takes part in many school and community activities. She is CHS freshman class president, is in the art program, a member of the pom/ dance squad and plays tennis. A member of First Baptist Church in Corinth, she is also active in theatre and music productions locally. She participated in the Corinth Community Christmas concert Tuesday night to benefit the Coliseum restoration. She also recently performed at The Blitz, a Christian concert held at the Arena. Maty began singing at KCs Espresso open mic night and then got a job this summer singing with Mason Dowd at Pickwick Pizza and Cactus Jacks in Pickwick. Snacks and hot cocoa from KCs Espresso will be available during the CD release party Saturday night. The event is free and open to everyone. There will be a “meet and greet” with Maty afterwards. The CD release party is sponsored by Dr. Erica Noyes Aesthetic Center and Medi-Spa. There will be a drawing after the concert for free products such as botox, medical grade microderms, acne laser treatment, latisse, obaji skin care products, aveda salon products and more. The recipient must be present to win. Maty Noyes music is available on CDs ($10 at the event) or check it out/download on facebook, iTunes or cdbaby.com. Updated music may be viewed on YouTube. Maty can be hired to perform, and can be contacted at matynoyesmusic@hotmail.com. Her managers are Erica Noyes and Heather Moore. Crosswinds Ministries is located at 703 Tate Street in downtown Corinth.

AccuWeather’s seasonal outlook sounds rather different than that of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which sums up the outlook for the Gulf Coast states as “warmer and drier than average.” Locally, Poindexter is not changing his expectations after the late-November snowfall. “I personally think we will have more of a normal winter with a few snows,” he said. “But it seems like the seasons really vary from year to year. I’ve seen times in December when we were in short sleeves and then it would be very cold in January and February.” Last winter brought an increase in snow events and the biggest snow since 1988, and that does have its benefits. “It helped put moisture back in the ground and prepare the soil for springtime, and it helped kill some of the fungal organisms and molds,” said Poindexter. It also curtails the insect population.

Pile of kittens Need an idea for a good Christmas gift? Look no further than this pile of kittens at the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter. They are seven weeks old and the shelter has 10 to choose from. They are long-hair and short-hair, male and female. They love to play and all need a good home this holiday season. Come see the pile of kittens Monday through Friday 9 a.m. -- 5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. -- 4 p.m. at the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter or Facebook at Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter or visit the shelter Web site at www.alcornpets.com.

EAGLE: Bird treated at MSU vet for fractured wing, dehydration CONTINUED FROM 1A

The prosecution seeks forfeiture of any property involved in the offense, including the firearm. The shooting of a young bald eagle generated much attention earlier this year after officials identified the bird and wildlife agencies offered reward money for

information leading to the arrest and conviction of the responsible party. The shooting happened on or about March 31 near Tishomingo County Road 306, leaving the bird with a bullet in its left wing and unable to fly. The person who found the injured bird brought it to the attention of wildlife officials in

Alcorn County. It was treated at the Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Medicine, where it was determined the bird had a fractured wing and was dehydrated, starving and in shock. The eagle was then taken to the Jackson Zoo for rehabilitation. The male eagle had a 5- to 6-foot wingspan.

Bald eagles are protected by the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, both federal and wildlife statutes. The court appointed Kevin J. Payne as counsel for Branum. Robert J. Mims is prosecuting the case for the U.S. attorney’s office.

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Around 30 cart stalls and a maintenance shop were damaged by the fire.

FIRE: Full extent of damage to stalls, shop has not been determined, Walker says CONTINUED FROM 1A

General Manager David Odle. “It’s unfortunate, but we will fight back and

come through this.” Damage has yet to be determined, according to Walker. “Until we start open-

ing doors, we won’t know for sure how much damage was done,” said the superintendent. “There is some damage to the

course equipment, but it doesn’t look like we lost anything.” At first glance, 30 cart stalls, the maintenance

shop and some equipment were determined to have been damaged. The golf course stores 75 carts on site.

All Stadium Seating Birthday Parties Online Tickets Saturday, December 3

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P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

A cart explosion was responsible for starting a fire Friday morning at Hillandale Country Club.

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Staff photo by Steve Beavers

A set of golf clubs was charred in the blaze. To start your home delivered subscription: Call 287-6111 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. For your convenience try our office pay plans.

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

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

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


Local

3A • Daily Corinthian

Shakespeare no match for corn BY JIMMY REED Special Columnist

My British Literature students’ indifference toward Shakespeare’s poetry was frustrating, and when I said that my interest in his work grows every time I teach it, a student remarked, “For seniors like you, that is understandable, but his work is out of date for our generation.” “Not so,” I rebutted. “Famed English poet Ben Jonson’s remark is indisputable. Of Shakespeare, he said, ‘He was not of an age, but for all time.’” “If you define his poetry as being among the best, how do you define bad poetry?” Someone asked. “Doggerel,” I said. “It is poorly written and is nothing more than rude verse.” “Give us an example,” a student requested. “All right. I’m certain y’all will agree that it is awful.” With that, I read them the following: Susie Lee done fell in love, She planned to marry Joe. She was so happy ‘bout it all, She told her pappy so. Pappy told her, “Susie gal, You’ll have to find another. I’d just as soon yo’ ma don’t know, But Joe is yo’ half

brother.” So Susie put aside her Joe And planned to marry Will. But after telling Pappy this, He said, “There’s trouble still.” You can’t marry Will, my gal, And please don’t tell yo’ mother, But Will and Joe, and several mo’ I know is yo’ half brother.” But Mama knew and said, “My child, Just do what makes you happy. Marry Will or marry Joe — You ain’t no kin to Pappy.” To my utter astonishment, the students hooted and howled so loudly that I had to make them hush. They loved it — much more than Shakespeare’s “My Mistress’ Eyes Are Nothing Like The Sun.” “Gee whiz, kids — only a bunch of Philistines could appreciate that garbage. It’s worse than a terribly corny joke.” I shouldn’t have said that. A student quipped that recently he had heard the corniest of all corny jokes, and instantly the other students began yelling, “Tell it, tell it.” Groaning, I gave in to their request. Here is what he said:

“Dining in a fancy restaurant, a man noticed a gorgeous woman at a nearby table, but lacked the nerve to speak to her. “Suddenly she sneezed, and her glass eye flew out of its socket. As it whizzed by, the man grabbed it and handed it back to her. “’Oh, thank you,’ the woman said as she popped her eye back in place. ‘Let me show my gratitude by buying your meal.’ “Afterward, they had an intimate conversation. She shared her deepest dreams, and he shared his. When they parted, she mentioned that she was a gourmet cook and invited him to her place the next evening. The food was divine. “’You are the perfect woman,” he said. ‘Do you treat every guy you meet this way?’ “’No,’ she replied. ‘You just happened to catch my eye.’” Again, the students howled in laughter. I groaned, shook my head, and dismissed the class. That day, Shakespeare was no match for corn. (Oxford resident Jimmy Reed, jimmycecilreedjr@gmail.com, is a newspaper columnist, author and college teacher. His latest collection of short stories is available at Square Books, 662236-2262.)

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Corinth High School honor roll 9th Grade All A’s: Logan Todd Barrier, Amanda Elise Blair, Jessica Blair Campbell, Mara Jane Campbell, John Calvin Edwards, Erin Nichole Joyce, Kathryn Monique Knippers, Heather Lindsey Kocurek, Hayden Abigail Malone, Alyssa Gregory Park, Brady Pratt, Ashley N Robertson, Ariel Jean Sax, Avery Victoria Shappley, Austin Reid Thompson, Kaley Nicole Thompson A’s & B’s: Teosha Monea Boyd, Jake Michael Curtis, Braddock Ellis Hight, Holley Galbraith Marshall, Quanitia Carlacheya Jazzmon McClean, Monique Cierra McDonald, Shelby Elizabeth McElwain, Kate Elizabeth Mitchell, Clayton Thomas Nichols, Madeline Noyes, Devani Pena Ocana, Kendall Joseph Patterson, Luke Andrew Redwine, Brianna Lynn Scobey, Orma Rinehart Smith, Anna Katherine Tomlinson, John Easton Treadway, Jazsmin Berna Walker, Tiersten Deontae Washington, Joshua Trevon Williams

10th Grade All A’s: Jose M. Contreras, Logan Ryan Gates, Katie Elizabeth Jones, Shelby Renee McClain, Mallory Lauren McClurg, Brandon Vuthana Nhek, Hannah Catherine Shea,

Savannah Grace Smith, Tetra Monique Tyes, Elizabeth Whitehurst, Grace Ann Wilbanks A’s & B’s: Hunter Lee Patrick Barkes, Frances Wells Bullard, Mckenzie Rayne Carson, Bradley Nathaniel Hastings, James W. Howell IV, James Lafayette Jourdan, Kenneth Neal Lancaster, Carven Oneal Lewis, Graves Brawner Marshall, Stearman B McCalister, John Michael McFall, Destiny Marie Ortiz, Hayden Wesley Park, Madeline Lisa Smith, Kelsey Jane Tweddle, James Kyle Webb

11th Grade All A’s: Clayton Houston Allred, Aaron Slater Austin, Lydia Marie Beard, Chelsea Elizabeth Caveness, Hunter Fowler, Lauryn Mikaela Hancock, Colby Niles Horner, Bailee Ruth Kramer, Abigail Jane Null, Lexus Null, Austin Jared Powell, Courtney Ann Vanderford, Destiny Nicole Washburn, Mary Wayne A’s & B’s: Charles Robert Blackard, David Brown, Alison Katlyn Burns, Kaleb Scott Byrd, Infiniti Desiree’ Copeland, Vyvyan Tayler Haney, Annalee Hunter Hendrick, Randy Perez Hill, Holly Lee Howell, Carol “Tennison” Humphreys, Christopher Chase Little, Alyssa

Danielle Lopez, Austin Robert Martin, Gary Tyler McCalla, Elizabeth Anne McPheters, Nancy Stennett Smith, Kathryn Gatewood Timmons, Morgan C. Wigginton

12th Grade All A’s: Hanna T Harbour, James Daniel Haworth, Aisha LeeAnn Knight, John Thomas Mathis, Haley Elizabeth McFall, Abbigaile Lynn Noyes, Shannon Wayne Overholt, Joseph Brooks Pratt, Olivia Kate Suitor, Olivia Trammel, Molly Grace Williams A’s & B’s: Jaylend Donyl Adams, Hannah Brittani Avent, Travis Michael Bradshaw, Lake Terrichristen Bundy, Catherine Lane Coleman, Yssis Tarran Copeland, Nathaniel O’neil Dickerson, Kaleb Lee Digby, Daniel Dubose Dixon, Erin Nicole Frazier, Mckenzie Lee Gates, Lewis Tulon Johnson, Kaitlyn Elizabeth Knight, Jacob L McDuffy, Steven Austin McElwain, Merrell Paige McQueen, Danielle Allora Mock, Blake Montario Patterson, Kelsey Briana Quinn, Benjamin Craig Ricketts, Courtney Marie Rodgers, Ryan Benjamin Scott, Cythe K Stone, Eric Jordan Timms, Victoria Hayes Treadway, Sarah Kate Vanderford, Meredith Brooke Wilbanks

Deaths Clifford Dodds

Funeral services for Clifford Dodds, 74, of Corinth, were held Friday at Corinthian Funeral Chapel with burial at Fraleys Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Dodds died Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. Born March 18, 1937, he was a retired construction worker. He was preceded in death by his parents, Lonnie and Pearl Ruth O’Kelly Dodds; a brother, James Dodds; and five sisters, Sally Wilbanks, Peggy Reeves, Juanita Carmack, Captola Jossearand and Mary Jewell Baldwyn. Survivors include one brother, Harry Lee Dodds of Corinth; one sister, Janeva Harvell of Iuka; his special and dear friends, Charles and Lillie Flanagan of Corinth; and a host of nieces and nephews.

Opal Rogers Cook Bumps RUTHERFORDTON, N.C. — Opal Rogers Cook Bumps, 86, died Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, at Hospice House of Rutherford County. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Magnolia Funeral Home.

Ruby Garner

BOONEVILLE — Ruby Garner, 70, died Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, at Baptist Memorial Hospital in Booneville. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Patterson Memorial Chapel.

Harold “Limey” Price

IUKA — Funeral services for Harold “Limey” Price, 64, are set for 2 p.m. today at Cutshall Funeral Home Chapel in Iuka with burial at Patrick Cemetery. Mr. Price died Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, at North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo. He was preceded in death by his parents, Mel-

vin and Bernice Price; and a brother, Wayne Price. Survivors include one daughter, Shana Hollon and husband Brad of Iuka; one brother, Dale Price and wife Shelia of Iuka; one sister, Shelaine Hardwick of Iuka; and three grandchildren, Cooper Price, Norah Grace Hollon and Katie Hollon. Bro. Ron Norvell will officiate.

Patricia Nell Lipford

MICHIE, Tenn. — Funeral services for Patricia Nell Lipford, 64, are set for 11 a.m. today at Shackelford Funeral Directors of Selmer, Tenn., with burial at Lebanon Cemetery in Michie, Tenn. Mrs. Lipford died Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, at Jackson Madison County General Hospital in Jackson, Tenn. Born Aug. 24, 1947, in Hanson, Ky., she was a hospitality assistant. She was a member of West Shiloh Baptist Church. She was preceded in death by her husband, Jimmy Eugene Lipford; a son, Randal Wayne Lip-

WHY YOU

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Dennis Skinner

Funeral services for Dennis Wayne Skinner, 44, of Corinth, are set for 2 p.m. Sunday at Memorial Funeral Home Chapel with Bro. Taft Nethery and Bro. Jetta Forsythe. Burial will be in Indian Creek Cemetery. Mr. Skinner died November 29, 2011, at his residence. He was born March 9, 1967, in Corinth. He has been employed with WalMart for about the past 10 years, having worked in Corinth and Skinner most recently Booneville, MS. He was a member of Olive Hill Bapford; her parents, Bernice Noah Denny and Mary Agnes (Carlton) Denny; her stepfather, Wally Ostrowski; and three brothers, Robert Thomas Denny, Bernice Ray Denny and Curtis Lynn Denny. Survivors include a daughter, Angelia Lipford of Selmer, Tenn.; a son, Jimmy Lee Lipford of Memphis, Tenn.; a brother, Jimmy Neal Carlton of Las Vegas, Nev.; two grandchildren, Cecily Ann Lipford of Jackson, Tenn., and Jonathan “Walker” Lipford of Selmer, Tenn.; and one great grandchild. Bro. Earl Day will officiate.

Helen Tucker Glidewell Owen

Funeral services for Helen Tucker Glidewell Owen, 75, of Corinth, are set for 1 p.m. Monday at Corinthian Funeral Home with burial at Forrest Memorial Park. Mrs. Owen died Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, at Jackson Madison County General Hospital. Born June 21, 1936, she was a retired factory worker. She was a

member of Corinth Church of God. She was preceded in death by her husband of 30 years, Mr. Charles Owen; her parents, Newton Ely Glidewell and Laura Mabel Nash Tucker Glidewell; a sister, Opal Burcham; and a brother, Harold Tucker. Survivors include two daughters, Linda Harris (Roy Harold) of Kennesaw, Ga., and Kimberly Rainey; three sons, Durell Glidewell of Saulsbury, Tenn., David Glidewell (Pat) of Corinth, and Tim Glidewell of Childers Hill, Tenn.; eight grandchildren, Dana Glissen of Saulsbury, Tenn., Derrick Glidewell of Saulsbury, Tenn., Chris Harris (Kim) of Actworth, Ga., Jeremy Glidewell (Carrey) of Corinth, Corey Glidewell (Britni) of Corinth, Jessica Glidewell of Childers Hill, Tenn., and Stacy Glidewell of Florence, Ala. Bro. Jason Jones will officiate. Visitation Sunday from 5 until 8 p.m. and Monday from 11 a.m. until service time at Corinthian Funeral

Huge Shipment Has Arrived

tist Church. He was preceded in death by his grandparents, Henry and Martha Skinner, and Cletus and Alice Ramer. Survivors include his parents, Robert and Gladys Skinner of Corinth; his brothers, Mike (Diane) Skinner of Southaven, Tommy Skinner, Shawn Skinner; a sister, Brenda Skinner all of Corinth; his nephews, Dewayne (Julie) Skinner, Cole Skinner; a great niece, Anna Kate Skinner; and a host of other family and friends Visitation is Saturday from 3 until 8 p.m. and Sunday noon to service time. Memorial Funeral Home is in charge. Condolence can be left at www.memorialcorinth. com

Janette Wilkins

Home.

Jimmy Dale Swindle

Funeral services for Jimmy Dale Swindle, 64, of Corinth, were held Friday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Campground Methodist Church Cemetery in Walnut. Mr. Swindle died Wednesday, November 30, 2011, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. Born Jan. 1, 1947, he was a farmer and a truck driver for many years. He was as member of Shady Grove Baptist Church. He was preceded in death by his parents, Hubert and Omega “Tootsie” Swindle. Survivors include two sons, Brad Swindle and his wife Marsha of Corinth, and Christopher Scott “Chris” Swindle of Corinth; two grandchildren, Jennifer and Blake Swindle; and other relatives and a host of friends. Leroy Brown, Charlie Browning and Bro. Tim Edwards officiated the service.

Funeral services for Janette Wilkins, 74, of Corinth, are set for 1 p.m. Monday at McPeters Chapel with burial at Brigman Hill Church Cemetery. Ms. Wilkins died Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, at her residence. She was a former associate of the Wurlitzer Co. She was a member of Brigman Hill Baptist Church. She was preceded in death by her parents, James (Jim) Wilkins and Willie Hudson Wilkins; three sisters, Joyce Wilkins, Clair Grissom and Rosalou Wilkins; and one brother, J.P. Wilkins. Survivors include five brothers, Milton Wilkins (Martha), Jerome Wilkins, William Wilkins, all of Corinth, J.B. Wilkins of Glen, and Eugene Wilkins (Mary) of Booneville; and one sister, Linda Farley (Willie Lee) of Corinth. Bro. Mike Evans, Bro. Shane Evetts and Dr. Leonard Pratt will officiate. Visitation is Sunday from 2 until 5 p.m.

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Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

www.dailycorinthian.com

Mark Boehler, editor

4A • Saturday, December 3, 2011

Corinth, Miss.

Guest Views

Entitlement — not tax cuts — widens the wealth gap BY MICHAEL BARONE Columnist

What should be done about income inequality? That basic question underlies the arguments hashed out in the supercommittee and promises to be a central issue in the presidential campaign. Supercommittee Democrats argue that income inequality has been increasing and can be at least partially reversed by higher tax rates on high earners. They refused to agree on any deal that didn’t include such tax increases. Supercommittee Republicans offered a plan to eliminate tax preferences and reduce tax rates, as in the 1986 bipartisan tax reform. They argued that high tax rates would squelch economic growth. They didn’t make the case that their proposals would also address income inequality. But House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, in a 17-page paper based largely on a Congressional Budget Office analysis of income trends between 1979 and 2007, has done so. Ryan, a Republican from Wisconsin, makes the point that the government redistributes income not only through taxes but also through transfer payments, including Social Security, Medicare, food stamps and unemployment benefits. The CBO study helpfully measures income, adjusted for inflation, after taxes and after such transfer payments. Many may find the results of the CBO study surprising. It turns out, Ryan reports, that federal income taxes (including the refundable Earned Income Tax Credit) actually decreased income inequality slightly between 1979 and 2007, while the federal payroll taxes that supposedly fund Social Security and Medicare slightly increased income inequality. That’s despite the fact that income tax rates are lower than in 1979 and payroll taxes higher. Perhaps even more surprising, federal transfer payments have done much more to increase income inequality than federal taxes. That’s because, in Ryan’s words, “the distribution of government transfers has moved away from households in the lower part of the income scale. For instance, in 1979, households in the lowest income quintile received 54 percent of all transfer payments. In 2007, those households received just 36 percent of transfers.” In effect, Social Security and Medicare have been transferring money from low-earning young people (who don’t pay income but are hit by the payroll tax) to increasingly affluent old people. The Democrats, perhaps following the polls and focus groups, have been protecting these entitlement programs that have done more to increase income inequality than the Reagan and Bush tax cuts put together. Ryan makes three more points that may strike many as counterintuitive. First, reductions in some transfer payments haven’t hurt the living standards of most low-earners. The prime example is the welfare reform act of 1996, which reduced transfers to single mothers but induced many of them to find jobs that left them better off economically and, probably, psychologically. Second, Americans aren’t trapped in one segment of the income distribution. A Tax Journal analysis of individual income tax returns found that 58 percent of those in the lowest income quintile in 1996 had moved to a higher income segment by 2005. This comports with common experience. We move up and down the income scale in the course of a lifetime. Finally, the inflation adjustment used in the CBO analysis was the Consumer Price Index. But that tends to overstate inflation (as any indexes tends to do, since it measures the cost of a static market basket of goods and services). A study by Chicago economist Christian Broda found that prices for goods purchased by low-earners have been rapidly decreasing, while prices for goods of high-earners have increased. Kids’ school clothes may be cheaper at Walmart than they were years ago, while prices at Neiman Marcus keep increasing. So if the question is how to compensate for increasing income inequality, higher tax rates on high-earners won’t do much — and could be counterproductive if they diminish economic growth. A better way is suggested by the supercommittee Republicans: Limit future increases in transfer payments to affluent households, and cap deductions for home mortgage interest and state and local taxes, which are hugely lucrative for highearners and worthless for low-earners who don’t pay income tax. These proposals won’t reduce income inequality altogether. Much of the increased inequality comes from the huge increases for those in the top 1 percent of earners. But we wouldn’t be better off if Steve Jobs had never existed. Keeping entitlements as they are and raising tax rates on high-earners is a recipe for Europe-style stagnation. Ryan and the supercommittee Republicans point toward a better way. (Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.)

Prayer for today Dear Lord, please help us always to find new ways to praise you. In Jenus’ name we pray. Amen

A verse to share “And she shall bring forth a son; and thou shalt call his name Jesus; for it is he that shall save his people from their sins.” Matthew 1:21

Reece Terry publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com

A December to remember

Seventy years ago this month, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and brought America into a war that had begun in Europe in 1939. In his masterful new book “December 1941: 31 Days That Changed America and Saved the World,” Craig Shirley takes readers back to a very different America. Through hundreds of stories and advertisements culled from newspapers, Shirley not only transports us back to that tumultuous time, but reminds this generation that denial about an enemy’s intentions can have grave consequences. Each chapter in the book deals with a single day of December 1941. We go to the movies with Clark Gable and Betty Grable, view the “cafe society” of New York, and listen to radio stars like Jack Benny and Walter Winchell, the acerbic columnist and powerful radio gossip. The major players are all here: President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Winston Churchill and countless generals and admirals, as well as other military and political figures familiar to any student of history. But, depending on your age, the real stars were our parents, grandparents and greatgrandparents. After the Dec. 7 attack, Americans rallied around a single patriotic cause -- the defeat of fascism and the salvation of Western democracy, an effort similar to the national unity displayed following the terrorists attacks of Sept. 11. The unity of 70 years ago, however, lasted a lot longer. Record numbers enlisted in the military. Many isolationists became interventionists. Even some conscientious objectors announced, in

light of the Japanese sneak attack, that they could no longer remain apart from what was rightly cast as a fight for AmeriCal ca’s very survival. Thomas Though they refused to kill, many Columnist served vital roles in the war effort as noncombatants. Amid the deeply human and moving stories of family loss are some funny accounts of government stupidity. Shirley writes that government polltakers in the 1940 census asked American men and women how many individual articles of clothing they owned and how many they purchased each year. The Los Angeles Times reported, “Census Bureau officials declare they have found the explanation for cluttered clothing closets in the American home; people just buy more than they need.” Intrusive government is not a modern phenomenon. Concerning Russia, the American left in 1941 was oblivious to the intentions of our supposed “ally.” Shirley writes, “...many on the American left were quite naive about the real nature of the Soviet state. Many liberals and intellectuals, who should have known better, perceived it as a worker’s paradise; it was only after the war that the true horrors of Stalin’s repressive regime truly came to light. The muck-raking journalist, Lincoln Steffens, famously asserted, after visiting communist Russia: ‘I have seen the future, and it works’ ... Even FDR viewed Stalin as an avuncular fellow with whom he could do business, referring to (him) as ‘Uncle Joe.’ The ugly realities of the gulag would eventu-

ally emerge for the entire world to see.” To those for whom this is familiar territory, it is worth revisiting. For people younger than 70, it is worth discovering. This “greatest generation” was not necessarily braver than other generations; its men and women were simply imbued with a profound sense of duty. That call to duty is evident in a letter from a young man to his father, which was typical, says Shirley, of the sentiment in December 1941: “Dear Dad, There is a war on and I am now in it, but that must not be a cause for you to worry. Of course there is danger and there will be more danger to come but if I am to die a soldier’s death, so be it. ... You must think of me as doing my duty to God and country. Be brave and show outward pride, that the mite of humanity you helped bring into the world is now a soldier doing his part of defending our great and wonderful country. ... You must pray, not only for me and others in the Army, but for the innocent women and children who will have to endure untold suffering from this fight for freedom of religion, speech and democracy. I am not afraid to die for this. ... Until then I remain and always, Your Loving Son.” December 7, 1941, may be a day that “will live in infamy,” but that month, those years, that war revealed an American character still on display in our military today, though it’s somewhat lacking in our civilian population. (Direct all MAIL for Cal Thomas to: Tribune Media Services, 2225 Kenmore Ave., Suite 114, Buffalo, N.Y. 14207. Readers may also e-mail Cal Thomas at tmseditors@tribune.com.)

Is it over for Lady Gaga? A few months ago in this space, I wrote a column about the cultural phenom Lady Gaga that ended with my politely telling her to save her money. That’s because the treacherous world of popular culture is not usually a long-term proposition. Entertainment idols often pass through the fame obstacle course very quickly. In show biz, “jumping the shark” is a term used to describe a project in decline. It is derived from the hit sitcom “Happy Days,” which, sorely lacking for material after years on the air, featured a show whereby The Fonz went waterskiing in a leather jacket and encountered a shark. You guessed it: The Fonz jumped over the shark on his skis. After that, the days were not so happy on that program. Now we have Lady Gaga, the ultimate edgy, anti-establishment pop star, swimming in dubious waters. Recently, she fronted a Thanksgiving special. The New York Times described it this way: “Lady Gaga performs before family and friends and offers a glimpse of her personal

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life in an interview with Katie Couric... She also whips up a feast of deep-fried turkey and waffles with the chef Art Bill Smith.” O’Reilly Somewhere Janis Joplin is weepO’Reilly ing. By the way, Factor Gaga’s special was trounced in the ratings by the 237th airing of “A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving.” And that’s not all. The Associated Press reports that “Gaga’s Workshop” is now open at the Barneys clothing store in Manhattan. Apparently, Gaga designed a special holiday shop featuring “a gigantic cartoon statue of the superstar herself in a pinup pose surrounded by jagged mirrors and sitting atop thousands of back plastic discs.” Forget the Rockefeller Center tree, the Gaga shop represents the true holiday spirit, does it not? Some of you may think I am making this up, but it’s all true. What I can’t figure out is why

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Gaga’s (Stefani Germanotta) management team seems to know nothing about history. Elvis Presley, the biggest pop icon ever, sabotaged his own career by starring in a series of movies like “Kissin’ Cousins” and “Clambake.” I mean, there was the once culturally dangerous Elvis doing a dance called the “Clam” on a beach wearing black shoes and white pants. It took the King years to get back on track after those dopey flicks. Last year, Gaga made $90 million from her songs and shows. Does she really need the Thanksgiving special? Or the Barneys exposure? Really? The answer, of course, is no. Gaga has now gone middle-class mainstream and, at this rate, will be co-hosting with Kelly Ripa any day now. The lady may be trying not to be a tramp, but she certainly has met the shark — and jumped it. (Veteran TV news anchor Bill O’Reilly is host of the Fox News show “The O’Reilly Factor” and author of the book “Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand in the Age of Obama.”)

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Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • 5A

State Suicide ruled in soldier’s death BY HOLBROOK MOHR Associated Press

JACKSON — The military has determined suicide was the cause of death of a Kentucky National Guard soldier whose body was found on a Mississippi military base in 2008, 10 months after he disappeared and just before a scheduled deployment to Iraq. Spc. Ryan Longnecker’s father is not convinced the 19-year-old soldier took his own life, and said a 610-page report on the investigation raises more questions than answers. “It just stinks. Something’s wrong with the whole thing,” said Brian Longnecker, a retired Marine who lives in Richmond, Ind. “I don’t think it was suicide. I think somebody killed him.” Ryan Longnecker was training at Camp Shelby, a sprawling 136,000-acre base near Hattiesburg, Miss., when he disappeared on Aug. 6, 2007. The military initially classified Longnecker as absent without leave, saying he took off with his military-issued 9-mm pistol and M4 assault rifle. Longnecker, of Glasgow, Ky., had been scheduled to deploy with the Kentucky National Guard’s Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 138th Field Artillery unit. About 160 members of his unit and hundreds

“Something’s wrong with the whole thing. I don’t think it was suicide. I think somebody killed him.” Brian Longnecker Retired Marine of troops from other areas were training at Camp Shelby at the time. Longnecker’s father said the military believes his son died of a gunshot wound to the chest, but a bullet was not recovered. Camp Shelby has been a major training center for soldiers headed to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, with soldiers coming for training from as far away as Alaska. Carved from the pine forests and rolling hills of south-central Mississippi, Camp Shelby has firing ranges for big guns, a celebrated war museum and mock cities designed to mimic the scenes soldiers will face in the Middle East. It’s just south of Hattiesburg, a college town that’s home to the University of Southern Mississippi, an easy place for a young man like Longnecker to blend in. The Army developed few leads on his disappearance and turned the case over to the U.S. Marshals Service. The trail was cold. Longnecker’s unit had long since gone to Iraq without him. Ru-

mors and speculation abounded. Then on a sweltering summer day, Longnecker’s skeletal remains were found in the woods on the base on June 3, 2008. His guns were found near his body, as were several cigarette butts and a spent shell casing, his father said. Brian Longnecker said his son’s knife was missing and at least one bone in his face was broken. The remains were found between two roads and “probably a few hundred yards from a building in a secluded area,” Forrest County Coroner Butch Benedict said at the time. Again, there was speculation and innuendo. Was Longnecker killed by other soldiers? His grandmother said he wasn’t getting along with some members of his unit. Or did he wonder off drunk and get bit by a snake? Maybe it was an overdose, or he got hit by a military vehicle during a night training exercise, people figured. The military performed an autopsy before releasing the

remains for burial a month after the body was found, but the autopsy didn’t provide the concrete evidence investigators had hoped. The investigation continued for nearly three years. The investigation was closed on March 30 after it was determined he committed suicide, said Chris Grey, the chief of public affairs for the Army’s Criminal Investigation Command based in Quantico, Va. The questions remain for Longnecker’s family. His father readily admits his son had a problem with alcohol, and sometimes lost his temper. He was small, but he knew karate and sometimes used those skills in street fights. He had tried to change units, and even sought orders to deploy sooner, Brian Longnecker said. “It just doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t seem like a clear cut case of suicide to me,” the father lamented during a recent telephone interview. The Army’s report, which was several inches thick, was blacked out in many places and only raised more questions for the family. Brian Longnecker said he’s consulting with an attorney, who is reviewing the report and is likely to ask for a copy without redactions. “It looks awful fishy to me,” Brian Longnecker said.

Lawsuit spawned federal investigation Associated Press

JACKSON — The head of the Delta Health Alliance is reportedly under scrutiny for alleged misuse of funds, but her attorney says other investigations have shown no wrongdoing. The Mississippi Business Journal reports that the allegations came in a wrongful termination lawsuit filed by James Hahn, a former vice president of programs at Stoneville, Miss.-based DHA. The DHA provides funding for health care programs to the poor in the Mississippi Delta. The Business Journal said the lawsuit caught the attention of federal prosecutors in north Mississippi. Hahn claims in his lawsuit that he was fired in May 2010 after he raised concerns to the board of directors about possible misuse of funds by DHA’s CEO Dr. Karen Fox. Hahn said in his lawsuit that a “sham investigation” by the board found no wrongdoing by Fox. Hahn said he was fired when he refused to sign a release promising not to report any of his concerns to federal agencies. Hahn sued DHA in July 2010 in Lafayette County Circuit Court. Roy Campbell III, a Jackson attorney who represents DHA, said an investigation into Hahn’s claims initiated

before Hahn’s lawsuit was filed, found that Fox was authorized to pay for each of the expenses cited by Hahn with DHA money. “I am entirely, completely comfortable with the investigation, which continued over the course of the lawsuit,” Campbell said. “Nothing was uncovered that indicated any wrongdoing on the part of Dr. Fox.” Mike Watts, an Oxford attorney who represents Fox, said he has been given no indication from the U.S. Attorney’s Office as to how long the investigation would last. “I think the government would probably do it as expeditiously as they can, but they have not told me when it might end,” he said. Watts said aside from DHA’s internal investigation into the matter, routine audits performed by the federal Health Resources and Services Administration have turned up nothing illegal. “All these audits, as far as I know, show that everything has been spent appropriately. We believe in the end when the investigation is concluded that it will show that Dr. Fox didn’t do anything improper,” he said. Campbell said DHA has voluntarily turned over about six years’ worth of audits to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.


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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Obama, Clinton together again pitching efficiency BY JIM KUHNHENN Associated Press

WASHINGTON — In a potent political pairing, President Barack Obama and former President Bill Clinton evoked a more prosperous time in America Friday as they jointly pushed a green jobs program that Obama said harkens back to the Clinton administration when “we were firing on all cylinders.” “We can be that nation again,” Obama said. “We will be that nation again.” In the spare setting of a downtown Washington construction site, Obama offered a restrained assessment of the current U.S. economy even in the face of Friday’s sharp drop in unemployment, from 9 percent to 8.6 percent in November. Noting that the U.S. has seen 21 straight months of private sector job growth, Obama said, “We need to keep that growth going.” And he prodded Congress once again to extend and expand a current Social Security payroll tax cut. Recalling better economic times, Obama seemed almost nostalgic. Embarking on a re-election campaign, he drew not-so-subtle attention to the successes of the last two-term Democrat to serve in the White House. “When Bill Clinton was president, we didn’t shortchange investment. We didn’t say we’re going to

cut back on the things that we know are going to help us grow in the future,” he said. “We didn’t make decisions that put the burden on the middle class or the poor. We lived within our means. We invested in our future. We asked everyone to pay their fair share. “And you know what happened? The private sector thrived. Jobs were created. The middle class grew, its income grew. Millions rose out of poverty. We ran a surplus. We were actually on track to be able to pay off all of our debt. We were firing on all cylinders.” The unusual pairing of Obama and the popular former president was designed to draw outsize attention to a $4 billion administration energy efficiency initiative that Obama and Clinton teamed up to announce. It aims to achieve achieving fuel savings in government and private sector buildings and more employment at no increased cost to taxpayers. Obama said the program was a cheap way to help create jobs, save money and cut down on pollution. “It is a trifecta,” he said. The program’s appeal is that the cost to renovate government and private sector buildings is paid off over time by the energy savings. What’s more, the contractors who perform the work guarantee that

lower energy costs will materialize. “It is the nearest thing we’ve got to a free lunch in a tough economy,” Clinton said. The announcement is yet another in a string of White House initiatives designed to address the current weak economy without having to seek congressional approval. But the program itself was overshadowed by the television-ready image of the incumbent president and the last two-term Democrat to serve in the White House appearing together. The appearance was reminiscent of, though not comparable to, Obama’s and Clinton’s joint appearance a year ago when Obama gave the former president the stage to endorse a tax deal between Obama and Congress. Alluding to ads by a Republican-leaning political group that feature Clinton comments about tax increases, Obama said: “I’ve noticed that some folks on the other side have been quoting President Clinton about it’s a bad idea to raise taxes during tough economic times. “That’s precisely why I sought to extend the payroll tax this year and next year. It doesn’t mean we lock in tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans. I don’t think President Clinton has been on board for that for perpetuity.”

Unemployment rate drops to lowest since 2009 BY CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON — The unemployment rate, which has refused to budge from the 9 percent neighborhood for two and a half frustrating years, fell sharply in November, driven in part by small businesses that finally see reason to hope and hire. Economists say there is a long way to go, but they liked what they saw. The rate fell to 8.6 percent, the lowest since March 2009, two months after President Barack Obama took office. Unemployment passed 9 percent that spring and had stayed there or higher for all but two months since then. The country added 120,000 jobs in November, the Labor Department said Friday. Private employers added 140,000 jobs, while governments cut 20,000. The economy has generated 100,000 or more jobs five months in a row — the first time that

has happened since April 2006, well before the Great Recession. “Something good is stirring in the U.S. economy,” Ian Shepherdson, an economist at High Frequency Economics, said in a note to clients. The stock market rallied at the opening bell, after the report came out, but finished flat for the day. It was still up 787 points for the week. The only bigger point gain in a week was in October 2008, when stocks lurched higher and lower during the financial crisis. The report showed that September and October were stronger months for the job market than first estimated. For four months in a row, the government has revised job growth figures higher for previous months. September was revised up by 52,000 jobs, for a gain of 210,000. October was revised up by 20,000, for a gain of 100,000. Unemployment peaked at 10.1 percent in October 2009, four months

after the Great Recession ended. It dipped to 8.9 percent last February and 8.8 percent last March but otherwise was at or above 9 percent. The rate fell not just because people found jobs. About 300,000 people simply gave up looking for work, and were no longer counted as unemployed. People routinely enter and leave the work force, though 300,000 is more than usual. Obama, who faces a reelection vote in less than a year and a presidential campaign that will turn on the economy, seized on the decline to argue for expanding a cut in the tax that workers pay toward Social Security. The tax cut affects 160 million Americans. It lowers a worker’s Social Security tax by up to $2,136 a year. Someone earning $50,000 a year saves $1,000 with the tax cut. It will expire Dec. 31 unless Congress acts. Republicans and Democrats have supported an extension but differ

on how to pay for it. The Senate on Thursday defeated plans from both parties. Republicans had proposed paying for the cut by freezing the pay of federal workers through 2015. Democrats wanted to raise taxes on people making $1 million or more a year. “Now is not the time to slam the brakes on the recovery. Right now it’s time to step on the gas,” Obama said Friday. Inside the unemployment report, one of the most closely watched indicators of the economy’s health, were signs of improvement for small businesses, which employ 500 or fewer people and account for half the jobs in the private sector. The government uses a survey of mostly large companies and government agencies to determine how many jobs were added or lost each month. It uses a separate survey of households to determine the unemployment rate. The household survey

picks up hiring by companies of all sizes, including small businesses and companies just getting off the ground. It also includes farm workers and the self-employed, who aren’t included in the survey of companies. The household survey has shown an average of 321,000 jobs created per month since July, compared with an average of 13,000 the first seven months of the year. When the economy is either improving or slipping into recession, many economists say, the household survey does the better job of picking up the shift because it detects small business hiring. “We might finally be seeing new business creation expand again, which is critical to the sustainability of the recovery,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial, a financial services company. The National Federation of Independent Business, a small business

group, said Friday that its own survey of small companies in November found that more of them are planning to add workers than at any time since September 2008, when the financial crisis struck. LogicBoost, a Washington, D.C., software consulting firm with 19 employees, has hired a sales worker and a marketing worker in the past three months and planned to post an opening for a software engineer Friday. “Business is going gangbusters,” CEO Jonathan Cogley said. “It would be great if the economy were stronger. I think we’d be growing even faster.” Outside Detroit, Grace Dersa opened the Frank Street Bakery this week with her husband. They took the $60,000 gamble after seeing signs that the local economy is improving. They, too, plan to add a worker soon. “When we go to a restaurant here, there’s a 30-minute to two-hour wait. Homes are selling in this area,” Dersa said.

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11.94 43.71 8.22 .39 40.66 28.96 4.93 54.15 35.60 12.27 27.11 5.65 41.01 36.76 29.00 1.67 9.91 26.68 24.11 37.15 28.41 196.03 32.47 23.89 28.38 14.17 48.23 23.18 58.10 80.48 35.26 16.23 96.47 389.70 10.83 19.01 16.20 29.99 11.90 27.85 9.06 31.16 12.18 16.67 23.40 75.30 43.29 134.09 53.62 17.15 7.57 8.06 5.64 19.29 11.86 40.79 51.02 51.46 2.42 77.44 27.60 36.28 .77 14.77 15.03 71.30 5.50 32.77 29.99 5.35 15.01 21.03 25.56 21.65 38.29 19.05 52.87 .16 45.34 6.50 41.44 43.74 33.43 96.29 61.21 4.78 5.01 35.48 4.56 25.44 101.69 10.22 2.63 11.95 18.55 28.17 2.14 68.34 66.38 23.36 23.19 25.21 13.99 25.29 72.55 13.22 45.33 43.41 5.85 11.58 11.89 47.50 77.69 15.70 8.41 16.63 40.00 65.39 1.63 46.82 62.82 28.44 40.62 11.58 44.33 48.40 24.21 26.21 36.61 50.56 27.75 2.42 47.02 20.62

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38 22 23 ... 25 ... ... 16 17 ... 36 ... 11 17 18 10 17 ... 10 23 32 13 8 ... 16 15 5 15 7 37 21 ... 6

9.07 +.17 29.60 -.08 23.26 +.09 1.02 -.04 55.84 +.22 25.29 +.25 23.00 -.33 51.36 -.48 20.89 -.36 30.65 -1.34 20.24 +.22 10.21 -.23 43.33 -.72 28.10 +.07 46.61 +.11 79.79 82.14 +.11 .15 -.07 12.12 +.17 16.48 +.36 7.56 +.02 8.89 +.22 5.93 +.02 9.62 +.63 19.93 +.22 24.59 +.71 10.90 +.31 16.38 +.80 39.30 +.02 5.55 -.09 40.62 -.40 6.19 -.12 11.91 +.65

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18.70 23.06 65.72 16.09 13.92 39.96 21.28 2.66 6.47 7.75 16.99 39.40 3.75 16.52 51.39 97.25 14.12 620.36 56.32 18.95 22.45 36.58 17.91 7.47 5.97 4.09 11.83 27.68 24.47 39.94 54.13 6.21 27.64 14.31 5.84 7.57 5.21

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I-J-K-L ING iShGold iSAstla iShBraz iSh HK iShJapn iSTaiwn iShSilver iShChina25 iSSP500 iShEMkts iShB20 T iS Eafe iShR2K iShREst ITW IngerRd IngrmM Inhibitex Intel IBM IntlGame IntPap Interpublic Invesco ItauUnibH IvanhM g JA Solar JDS Uniph JPMorgCh Jabil JanusCap Jefferies JetBlue JohnJn JohnsnCtl JnprNtwk KB Home KLA Tnc KT Corp Keycorp Kimco KindMor n Kinross g KodiakO g Kohls Kraft Kroger LSI Corp LVSands LennarA LibtIntA h LillyEli Limited LincNat LloydBkg LockhdM LaPac Lowes lululemn gs LyonBas A

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 11 ... 11 ... 11 15 18 10 11 11 ... ... 1 39 7 12 7 9 19 15 14 24 ... 10 ... 7 71 ... 19 43 12 20 12 11 27 38 15 8 15 6 ... 9 ... 17 44 ...

7.96 17.03 23.31 60.01 15.79 9.33 12.34 31.65 36.40 125.34 39.77 118.64 50.79 73.50 54.67 45.95 33.23 17.98 15.51 24.64 189.66 16.99 28.77 9.54 20.28 18.55 20.18 1.75 10.91 32.33 20.71 6.56 12.40 4.44 63.47 31.73 22.60 7.94 46.95 16.14 7.20 15.59 31.00 13.75 8.97 50.51 36.50 23.36 5.77 46.02 18.41 15.87 37.37 42.61 20.06 1.52 77.82 7.87 24.31 49.69 32.80

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Growing services

The Week Ahead

11 ... 9 13 ... 15 5 ... ... ... 8 11 ... 2 21 15 31 20 43 ... ... 13 7 10 15 ... 14 6 5 17 14 ... 9 ... ... ... 10

... ... 7 ... ... 12 ... ... 6 ... ... ... ... 61 42 11 ... 14 14 19 11 57 13 9 39 9 13 33 24 32 9 10 ... 14 18 18 16 30 22 15 ... 10 15 15 ... 26 ... 8 20 15 ... 14 ... ... ... 5 22 18 19 9 13 11 18 ... ... 11 11 20 23 16

10.62 4.28 6.79 3.06 10.19 32.54 7.16 10.99 27.77 33.31 .16 58.25 30.29 30.92 75.64 13.79 9.32 28.45 11.69 95.70 34.61 10.03 35.48 31.76 5.80 25.22 16.00 32.51 70.42 7.34 15.52 51.21 38.78 19.50 14.99 17.52 71.05 25.38 36.54 66.37 10.63 11.91 67.03 17.60 15.77 34.65 5.62 56.99 40.32 15.72 6.03 95.92 2.36 123.75 8.98 11.63 8.04 31.20 5.43 53.97 84.87 29.68 72.78 1.49 10.04 21.35 38.22 32.98 12.49 64.28

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

PetrbrsA ... Petrobras ... Pfizer 13 PhilipMor 16 Pier 1 14 PiperJaf 17 PlainsEx 59 Popular ... Potash s 13 PS USDBull ... PwShs QQQ ... PrinFncl 8 ProShtS&P ... PrUShS&P ... PrUShQQQ rs ... ProUltSP ... ProUShL20 ... ProUSSP500 ... PrUltSP500 s ... ProUSSlv rs ... ProctGam 16 ProgsvCp 11 ProUSR2K rs ... Prudentl 7 PulteGrp ...

Take stock in your business. Advertise in the Daily Corinthian. To advertise here, phone 662-287-6111

25.24 +.14 27.54 +.24 19.89 -.14 75.47 -.22 13.15 -.09 20.30 -.32 35.68 +.57 1.54 +.05 42.29 -1.22 22.12 +.07 56.62 -.16 24.30 +.06 41.03 +.02 19.94 +.04 44.59 +.24 45.49 -.06 19.18 -.57 13.86 +.02 58.62 -.09 12.32 +.16 64.66 +.58 18.60 +.01 40.15 -.24 50.40 +.44 6.16 +.08

Q-R-S-T Qualcom QksilvRes RF MicD RadianGrp Raytheon RegionsFn RepubSvc RschMotn RioTinto RiteAid Rubicon g SK Tlcm SLM Cp SpdrDJIA SpdrGold S&P500ETF SpdrHome SpdrLehHY SpdrRetl SpdrOGEx SpdrMetM Safeway StJude SanDisk SandRdge SaraLee Schlmbrg Schwab SeagateT SemiHTr SiderurNac SilvWhtn g Sina SiriusXM SkywksSol Sonus SouthnCo SwstAirl SwstnEngy SpectraEn SprintNex SP Matls SP HlthC SP CnSt SP Consum SP Engy SPDR Fncl SP Inds SP Tech SP Util Staples Starbucks StarwdHtl StateStr StlDynam StillwtrM Stryker Suncor gs SunTrst Supvalu Symantec Synovus Sysco TD Ameritr TE Connect TJX TaiwSemi TalismE g Target TeckRes g TenetHlth Teradyn Terex Tesoro TevaPhrm TexInst Textron 3M Co TW Cable TimeWarn TollBros Total SA Transocn Travelers TrinaSolar TriQuint TycoIntl Tyson

22 4 22 ... 8 25 15 3 ... ... ... ... 13 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 12 12 10 11 13 22 17 15 ... ... 22 ... 47 14 ... 18 38 21 16 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 10 27 15 13 12 9 15 10 18 61 19 ... 15 14 11 18 ... ... 12 ... 10 9 ... 5 12 12 18 14 15 13 44 ... ... 15 2 9 15 9

54.34 7.88 6.31 2.24 45.35 4.22 26.78 16.77 52.20 1.20 3.96 14.56 12.64 120.06 169.82 124.86 16.79 37.91 52.56 55.32 53.50 20.21 35.83 50.32 7.52 18.92 75.01 11.67 16.17 30.60 8.33 33.01 68.52 1.86 16.35 2.53 43.76 8.28 37.69 29.77 2.60 34.00 33.51 31.74 39.07 70.42 12.91 33.71 25.74 34.75 14.33 43.91 48.43 39.98 13.43 11.02 47.62 30.22 18.57 7.29 16.10 1.48 29.13 16.00 31.42 62.24 13.12 13.49 52.88 37.22 4.18 13.16 16.25 24.50 39.70 29.97 19.05 79.76 63.80 34.41 20.23 51.42 42.76 54.24 8.11 4.72 47.48 20.16

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... 14 9 ... 13 17 11 ... ... ... 14 11 8 ... ... 8 ... 15 ... 12 9 19 ... ... 13 11 15 58 9 10 ... 10 7 12 20 20 22 ... 27 14 15 20 17 3 14 27

12.24 28.50 4.84 3.84 19.26 71.07 25.72 7.91 39.03 27.81 76.54 48.23 22.06 23.50 22.20 22.56 40.64 37.85 29.25 42.63 11.54 97.20 26.80 32.66 58.09 33.12 31.23 15.08 68.91 26.07 5.07 31.44 13.42 17.55 16.77 32.37 11.76 17.94 20.75 8.22 33.11 16.05 16.14 4.47 48.92 28.99

Dividend investors should take a look at Verizon Wireless, s, the at largest cellphone company in the U.S. What's unusual is that there are a couple of ways to buy in. The obvious one is to buy shares of Verizon Communications (VZ), which owns the majority of Verizon Wireless. But analysts suggest it's a better idea to use a “back door,” buying shares of Vodafone Group (VOD) instead. This British cellphone company has vast international holdings, including 45 percent ownership of Verizon Wireless. Based on Verizon Wireless' cash flow, that stake is worth about $90 billion, according to Barclays Capital. Yet Vodafone itself is only valued at $134 billion, implying a value of just $44 billion for the rest of its holdings--which include leading phone companies in Spain, Germany, India, South Africa and a dozen other countries. Vodafone’s share price seems to be undervaluing Verizon Wireless because, for years, Vodafone didn't get any cash from the company. There weren't any payouts because Verizon Communications decided that the money generated by the highly profitable business was better spent on paying down debt -- a strategy seen as a way to pressure Vodafone into selling its stake. But in July, Verizon Communications said Verizon Wireless will pay a $10 billion dividend in January. Vodafone plans to use most of its share, $4.5 billion, to pay a special dividend. Next year shareholders will pocket a dividend yield of nearly 8 percent, compared to 5.5 percent at Verizon. Analysts believe that the special dividend payments will continue, because Verizon Wireless's investment needs are limited. “The relative valuation of the two companies suggests a nsignificant undervaluation of Vodafone,” writes Sanford Bernstein analyst Robin Bienenstock. She believes Vodafone is worth about $37 a share, or 40 percent more than today's price.

+.15 -1.26 -.10 -.12 +.14 -.06 +.02 -.11 +.42 +.56 -.04 -.29 -.13 +.34 +.39 +.44 -.10 +.08 -.14 -.49 -.28 -.56 -.40 +.38 -.52 -.76 -.01 +.12 -1.17 +.43 -.01 +2.19 +.69 +.12 +.02 -.04 +.07 +.37 +.22 +.03 +.05 -.18 -.67 -.06 -1.94 +5.62

close $26.80

$30 29 28 27 26 25

J F M A M J J A S O ND

Ownership share of Verizon Wireless

55% 45%

Peter Svensson, Kristen Girard • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High

Low

12,876.00 5,627.85 459.94 8,718.25 2,490.51 2,887.75 1,370.58 14,562.01 868.57

10,404.49 3,950.66 381.99 6,414.89 1,941.99 2,298.89 1,074.77 11,208.42 601.71

Last

Net Chg

%Chg

YTD %Chg

12,019.42 4,946.67 443.63 7,453.55 2,252.37 2,626.93 1,244.28 13,080.04 735.02

-.61 +37.57 -4.44 +3.12 -13.16 +.73 -.30 +8.17 +4.27

-.01 +.77 -.99 +.04 -.58 +.03 -.02 +.06 +.58

+3.82 +5.60 -3.13 -2.41 +9.54 +11.18 -6.41 -3.84 +1.99 +6.99 -.98 +1.37 -1.06 +1.60 -2.10 +.60 -6.21 -2.83

Name

Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

52-wk %Chg

12,160

Close: 12,019.42 Change: -0.61 (flat)

1.166E+4 11,160

13,000

10 DAYS

12,500 12,000 11,500 11,000 10,500

J

J

A

S

O

N

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name AFLAC AT&T Inc AirProd AlliantEgy AEP AmeriBrgn ATMOS BB&T Cp BP PLC BcpSouth Caterpillar Chevron CocaCola Comcast CrackerB Deere Dell Inc Dillards Dover EnPro FordM FredsInc FullerHB

Div 1.32f 1.72 2.32 1.70 1.88f .52f 1.38f .64a 1.68 .04 1.84 3.12 1.88 .45 1.00f 1.64 ... .20 1.26 ... ... .20 .30

PE 9 15 14 15 10 15 14 15 16 21 15 8 12 16 13 12 8 13 14 16 5 17 13

Last 43.71 28.96 81.96 41.60 39.25 37.01 32.52 23.40 43.29 9.88 96.29 101.69 66.38 23.36 48.70 77.69 15.70 47.39 55.88 34.77 10.90 13.69 22.37

Chg +.67 +.12 -.68 -.60 -.37 -.23 -1.62 +.34 +.54 +.19 -.53 -.14 -.45 +.79 +1.14 -1.04 -.10 +1.15 +1.12 +1.54 +.31 +.22 -.19

YTD %Chg -22.5 -1.4 -9.9 +13.1 +9.1 +8.5 +4.2 -11.0 -2.0 -38.1 +2.8 +11.4 +.9 +6.8 -11.1 -6.5 +15.9 +24.9 -4.4 -16.3 -35.1 -.5 +9.0

Name GenCorp GenElec Goodrich Goodyear HonwllIntl Intel Jabil KimbClk Kroger Lowes McDnlds MeadWvco OldNBcp Penney PennyMac PepsiCo PilgrimsP RadioShk RegionsFn SbdCp SearsHldgs Sherwin SiriusXM

Div ... .60 1.16 ... 1.49f .84 .32f 2.80 .46f .56 2.80f 1.00 .28 .80 2.00 2.06 ... .50f .04 3.00a ... 1.46 ...

PE Last Chg ... 5.42 -.01 13 16.09 +.18 26 122.41 -.29 31 14.12 +.20 14 54.13 -.04 11 24.64 -.28 12 20.71 +.31 17 70.73 -.57 12 23.36 -.01 17 24.31 +.44 19 95.70 +.20 16 29.84 +.13 17 11.34 +.23 20 32.98 +.76 8 16.60 +.45 16 64.28 +.19 ... 5.75 +.11 8 11.58 -.03 25 4.22 +.10 6 1963.96 +13.96 ... 58.56 +1.08 18 85.87 -.13 47 1.86 -.02

YTD %Chg +4.8 -12.0 +39.0 +19.2 +1.8 +17.2 +3.1 +12.2 +4.5 -3.1 +24.7 +14.1 -4.6 +2.1 -8.5 -1.6 -18.9 -37.4 -39.7 -1.4 -20.6 +2.5 +14.1

MARKET SUMMARY NYSE

AMEX

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name

Vol (00)

Last

BkofAm 2714718 S&P500ETF1865891 SPDR Fncl 1246204 JPMorgCh 890738 GenElec 676621

Chg

5.64 +.11 124.86 -.11 12.91 +.17 32.33 +1.87 16.09 +.18

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

Chg %Chg

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

WirlssHT iP SXR1K TenetHlth DirDGldBll GCSaba

Name

Vol (00)

Rubicon g NwGold g NovaGld g AntaresP CheniereEn

Chg %Chg

51003 3.96 35319 10.63 26817 10.76 23880 2.74 22268 9.83

Last

Aerosonic VirnetX Arrhythm Rubicon g Augusta g

est. 53.4

Name

+.31 -.44 -.37 +.15 +.01

RschMotn Microsoft Cisco Intel SiriusXM

Chg %Chg

3.39 +.51 +17.7 22.16 +2.62 +13.4 3.66 +.31 +9.3 3.96 +.31 +8.5 3.48 +.27 +8.4

Last

Chg %Chg

ASpecRlty 7.80 -.90 -10.3 GranTrra g 5.73 -.50 -8.0 QuestRM g 2.85 -.22 -7.2 AvalRare n 3.05 -.19 -5.9 WisP pf 100.00 -6.00 -5.7

DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

Chg

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

29.40 -10.67 -26.6 37.98 -7.13 -15.8 4.18 -.50 -10.7 30.26 -3.32 -9.9 7.31 -.78 -9.6

Last

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

AlexBld 44.39 +6.33 +16.6 AmrRlty 2.25 +.30 +15.4 Navios 3.90 +.50 +14.7 PSKBWCap 30.05 +3.24 +12.1 OldRepub 8.98 +.91 +11.3

ISM services index

Economists expect a Monday report 54 to show that the services industry grew at a slightly faster rate in November. It would be the latest encouraging economic sign. Last week, reports showed that the unem52 ployment rate fell, consumer confidence improved and the manufacturing industry expanded. The Institute for Supply Management’s services index measures activity in retail, real estate, finance and other industries 50 outside of manufacturing. A reading J above 50 indicates expansion.

Analysts say investors undervalue Vodafone Group’s stake in highly-profitable Verizon Wireless

SOURCE: FactSet

Dow Jones industrials -.14 -.03 +.40 -.11 +.14 -.32 -.09 -.24 +.73 +.01 -.50 -.21 -.04 +.26 -.04 -.24 -.34 -.54 +2.88 +.20 -.03 -.31 -.95 -.80 +.21 +.14 +.07 -.17

U-V-W-X-Y-Z UBS AG UGI Corp US Airwy US Gold UtdContl UPS B US Bancrp US NGs rs US OilFd USSteel UtdTech UtdhlthGp UnumGrp Vale SA Vale SA pf ValeroE VangEmg VerizonCm VertxPh ViacomB VimpelCm Visa Vodafone VulcanM WalMart Walgrn WsteMInc WeathfIntl WellPoint WellsFargo Wendys Co WDigital WstnRefin WstnUnion Weyerh WmsCos Windstrm WT India XL Grp Xerox Xilinx Yahoo Yamana g YingliGrn Zimmer Zumiez

Dialing for dividends

Vol (00) 543468 510517 455301 393245 353612

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

16.77 -1.81 25.22 -.06 18.55 -.03 24.64 -.28 1.86 -.02

Name

Last

FstSecur rs Amertns pf YRC rs MitelNet g Zumiez

Chg %Chg

2.15 6.27 12.78 3.53 28.99

+1.02 +2.27 +3.18 +.79 +5.62

Last

Crumb un h FstBcMiss Schmitt Magal Wstmlnd pf

Chg %Chg

2.52 -1.58 -38.5 7.60 -1.29 -14.5 3.31 -.44 -11.7 4.56 -.52 -10.2 23.50 -2.68 -10.2

DIARY 261 201 32 494 10 6 81,823,169

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

1,514 994 153 2,661 41 41 1,611,389,810

FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 11.98 +0.03+10.2 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.00 +0.02 +9.2 HY TF A m 10.14 +0.02+10.4 Income A m 2.06 +0.01 +0.9 Income C m 2.08 +0.01 +0.3 IncomeAdv 2.04 +0.5 NY TF A m 11.67 +0.02 +8.4 RisDv A m 34.16 +5.2 US Gov A m 6.90 +0.01 +6.2 FrankTemp-Mutual Discov A m 27.24 -4.3 Discov Z 27.64 -4.1 Shares A m 19.73 -3.5 Shares Z 19.93 -3.3 FrankTemp-Templeton Fgn A m 6.32 +0.04 -9.5 GlBond A m 12.85 +0.04 -1.5 GlBond C m 12.87 +0.04 -2.0 GlBondAdv 12.81 +0.04 -1.4 Growth A m 16.78 -5.7 World A m 14.13 -4.8 Franklin Templeton FndAllA m 10.00 -3.0 GMO EmgMktsVI 11.76 -0.02 -13.1 IntItVlIV 19.40 +0.03 -9.4 QuIII 21.74 -0.08 +9.8 QuVI 21.74 -0.09 +9.8 Goldman Sachs HiYieldIs d 6.86 +0.04 +0.8 MidCpVaIs 33.91 -0.09 -6.2 Harbor Bond 12.13 +0.04 +2.2 CapApInst 37.82 -0.01 +3.0 IntlInstl d 54.77 +0.08 -9.5 Hartford CapAprA m 29.67 +0.20 -14.3 CpApHLSIA 37.89 +0.13 -10.6 DvGrHLSIA 19.25 +0.01 -1.2 Hussman StratGrth d 12.74 -0.06 +3.7 INVESCO CharterA m 16.20 -0.05 +0.2 ComstockA m15.05 +0.09 -3.3 EqIncomeA m 8.20 +0.02 -3.2 GrowIncA m 18.20 +0.04 -4.5 Ivy AssetStrA m 23.75 +0.07 -2.7 AssetStrC m 22.93 +0.07 -3.4 JPMorgan CoreBondA m11.83 +0.04 +6.5 CoreBondSelect11.82+0.04 +6.7 HighYldSel 7.70 +0.03 +1.0 ShDurBndSel 10.98 +0.01 +1.6 USLCpCrPS 20.02 +0.01 -3.1 Janus GlbLfScT d 24.51 -0.21 +5.5 OverseasT d 37.15 +0.41 -26.6 PerkinsMCVT21.94 -0.05 -2.8 John Hancock LifBa1 b 12.46 +0.01 -2.2 LifGr1 b 12.26 -4.5 Lazard EmgMkEqtI d18.64 -0.04 -14.1 Legg Mason/Western CrPlBdIns 11.04 +0.05 +5.8 Longleaf Partners LongPart 26.67 +0.02 -3.2 Loomis Sayles BondI 14.00 +0.02 +3.0 BondR b 13.95 +0.03 +2.7 Lord Abbett AffiliatA m 10.46 +0.05 -8.9 BondDebA m 7.57 +0.03 +2.6 ShDurIncA m 4.53 +2.6 ShDurIncC m 4.56 +0.01 +1.9 MFS TotRetA m 13.94 +0.02 +1.0 ValueA m 22.25 -0.02 -1.4 ValueI 22.36 -0.01 -1.1 Manning & Napier WrldOppA 7.43 -0.02 -13.2 Matthews Asian China d 24.81 -0.15 -15.5 India d 15.37 +0.23 -28.5 Merger Merger m 16.00 +0.01 +1.4 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.41 +0.04 +4.7 TotRtBd b 10.41 +0.04 +4.4 Morgan Stanley Instl MdCpGrI 36.00 -0.21 -3.6 Natixis InvBndY 12.08 +0.04 +4.3 StratIncA m 14.44 +0.02 +2.6 StratIncC m 14.52 +0.02 +1.9 Neuberger Berman GenesisIs 48.74 +0.02 +6.0 Northern HYFixInc d 6.93 +1.5 Oakmark EqIncI 27.86 -0.08 +0.4 Intl I d 16.94 +0.15 -12.7 Oakmark I 41.71 +1.0 Oberweis ChinaOpp m 11.12 -0.02 -33.1 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCp 14.12 +0.01 -7.0 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 31.02 +0.03 -14.9 DevMktY 30.77 +0.03 -14.7 GlobA m 55.85 -0.07 -7.5 IntlBondA m 6.31 -0.4 IntlBondY 6.31 -0.2 MainStrA m 31.84 +0.09 -1.7 RocMuniA m 15.65 +0.03 +8.8 StrIncA m 4.05 -0.1 PIMCO AllAssetI 11.95 +2.1 AllAuthIn 10.53 +2.5 ComRlRStI 7.81 -3.8 DivIncInst 11.23 +0.05 +3.2 EMktCurI 10.12 -3.1 HiYldIs 8.89 +0.04 +2.2 InvGrdIns 10.57 +0.06 +5.7 LowDrIs 10.31 +0.01 +1.2 RERRStgC m 4.46 +0.04+17.8 RealRet 12.24 +0.06 +11.6 RealRtnA m 12.24 +0.06 +11.1 ShtTermIs 9.76 +0.2 TotRetA m 10.82 +0.03 +2.4 TotRetAdm b 10.82 +0.03 +2.6 TotRetC m 10.82 +0.03 +1.7 TotRetIs 10.82 +0.03 +2.8 TotRetrnD b 10.82 +0.03 +2.5 TotlRetnP 10.82 +0.03 +2.7 Permanent Portfolio 48.17 +0.09 +5.2 Pioneer PioneerA m 38.69 -0.05 -4.8 Putnam GrowIncA m 12.65 +0.05 -5.8 NewOpp 51.23 -0.05 -3.1 Royce PAMutInv d 11.20 +0.04 -3.9 PremierInv d 20.42 +0.03 +0.3 Schwab 1000Inv d 37.26 +0.2 S&P500Sel d19.73 -0.01 +0.8 Scout Interntl d 28.74 +0.01 -10.8 Sequoia Sequoia 144.04 -0.21+12.1 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 39.13 -0.09 +2.6 CapApprec 20.76 +0.03 +2.2 EmMktStk d 30.12 -0.07 -14.6 EqIndex d 33.65 +0.7 EqtyInc 22.74 +0.07 -2.7 GrowStk 32.24 -0.05 +0.3 HiYield d 6.41 +0.03 +1.3 IntlBnd d 9.96 -0.03 +2.5 IntlGrInc d 12.03 +0.01 -9.6

Trade deficit

Consumer credit

Both imports and exports are softening because of the slow global economy. But economists expect a report on Friday to show that exports slowed even more than imports in October. That likely caused the trade deficit to widen to $44.2 billion from $43.1 billion.

Economists expect a Wednesday report to show that consumers borrowed more in October. Credit Suisse economists say there may be a slight rise in credit card balances, but the biggest gains will come from auto and education loans. Households are trimming their use of credit cards, but at a slower rate since credit has become a little easier to get since the 2008 crisis.

$50 est. 44.2

45 40 Source: FactSet

+90.4 +56.8 +33.1 +28.8 +24.0

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

U.S. trade deficit, In billion

J A S O N

Chg

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

1,854 1,188 96 3,138 106 13 4,039,433,814

Last

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn American Cent EqIncInv 7.13 +0.7 GrowthInv 25.82 -0.04 -0.1 UltraInv 23.28 -0.06 +2.8 ValueInv 5.52 -2.4 American Funds AMCAPA m 18.82 -0.04 +0.3 BalA m 18.19 +0.03 +3.1 BondA m 12.50 +0.04 +5.7 CapIncBuA m49.07 -0.05 +1.1 CapWldBdA m20.60 +0.03 +3.5 CpWldGrIA m32.45 -7.3 EurPacGrA m36.55 +0.03 -11.7 FnInvA m 35.52 -0.02 -2.2 GrthAmA m 29.29 -0.03 -3.8 HiIncA m 10.62 +0.04 +0.8 IncAmerA m 16.56 +0.02 +3.1 IntBdAmA m 13.59 +0.02 +3.3 InvCoAmA m27.05 +0.03 -2.6 MutualA m 25.53 +0.03 +2.7 NewEconA m24.21 -4.4 NewPerspA m26.82 -0.05 -6.3 NwWrldA m 48.01 +0.04 -12.1 SmCpWldA m33.88 +0.11 -12.8 TaxEBdAmA m12.33+0.02 +8.2 USGovSecA m14.64+0.04 +7.1 WAMutInvA m28.03 -0.02 +4.8 Aquila ChTxFKYA m10.70 +0.02 +7.9 Artisan Intl d 20.26 -0.12 -6.6 MdCpVal 21.25 -0.01 +5.8 MidCap 34.49 -0.02 +2.6 Baron Growth b 51.23 -0.02 +1.7 Bernstein DiversMui 14.64 +0.02 +5.6 IntDur 14.11 +0.05 +6.1 TxMIntl 13.10 +0.04 -16.7 BlackRock Engy&ResA m35.74 +0.21 -9.1 EqDivA m 17.86 -0.01 +3.3 EqDivI 17.90 -0.01 +3.5 GlobAlcA m 18.81 -0.02 -2.4 GlobAlcC m 17.51 -0.01 -3.0 GlobAlcI d 18.92 -0.01 -2.1 Calamos GrowA m 50.41 -0.15 -5.6 Columbia AcornIntZ 35.14 -0.04 -12.0 AcornZ 28.75 +0.13 -3.6 StLgCpGrZ 12.56 +0.03 +1.1 ValRestrZ 45.58 -0.07 -9.0 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.34 +0.01 +0.6 2YrGlbFII 10.22 +0.8 5YrGlbFII 11.18 +0.03 +3.9 EmMkCrEqI 18.12 -0.03 -17.2 EmMktValI 27.97 +0.01 -21.7 IntSmCapI 14.24 +0.02 -16.0 USCorEq1I 10.74 +0.02 -1.5 USCorEq2I 10.55 +0.03 -3.0 USLgCo 9.85 -0.01 +0.8 USLgValI 19.15 +0.10 -3.8 USSmValI 23.29 +0.18 -8.7 USSmallI 20.43 +0.13 -3.9 DWS-Scudder GrIncS 16.23 +0.2 Davis NYVentA m 32.54 -5.2 NYVentY 32.96 -5.0 Delaware Invest DiverIncA m 9.30 +0.03 +5.0 Dimensional Investme IntCorEqI 9.52 +0.01 -13.5 IntlSCoI 14.58 +0.01 -13.7 IntlValuI 15.25 +0.06 -14.8 Dodge & Cox Bal 67.04 +0.06 -2.9 Income 13.30 +0.05 +3.7 IntlStk 30.60 -0.01 -14.3 Stock 100.66 +0.02 -5.4 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 11.06 +8.7 Dreyfus Apprecia 40.31 -0.03 +5.5 Eaton Vance LrgCpValA m 16.91 +0.02 -6.3 FMI LgCap 15.23 -0.02 +0.5 FPA Cres d 27.20 -0.04 +2.4 NewInc m 10.74 +2.1 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 25.19 +0.18 -29.2 Federated ToRetIs 11.32 +0.03 +5.4 Fidelity AstMgr20 12.89 +0.04 +2.3 AstMgr50 15.11 +0.04 -0.6 Bal 18.19 +0.02 +1.1 BlChGrow 43.41 +0.14 -0.6 CapApr x 24.79 +0.05 -2.0 CapInc d 8.70 +0.03 -2.9 Contra 68.32 -0.08 +1.0 DiscEq x 21.38 -0.30 -3.7 DivGrow 26.03 +0.09 -8.2 DivrIntl x 26.17 -0.43 -11.6 EqInc 40.69 +0.10 -6.7 EqInc II 16.97 +0.01 -5.8 FF2015 11.27 +0.03 -0.2 FF2035 10.93 +0.02 -4.3 FF2040 7.63 +0.02 -4.4 Fidelity 31.33 -2.3 FltRtHiIn d 9.64 +0.01 +1.1 Free2010 13.50 +0.03 -0.3 Free2020 13.56 +0.03 -1.3 Free2025 11.19 +0.02 -2.5 Free2030 13.30 +0.03 -3.0 GNMA 11.88 +0.02 +7.4 GovtInc 10.85 +0.03 +7.3 GrowCo 85.38 -0.02 +2.7 GrowInc 17.98 +0.07 -0.6 HiInc d 8.57 +0.03 +1.4 IntBond 10.83 +0.03 +5.5 IntMuniInc d 10.33 +0.01 +6.5 IntlDisc x 28.19 -0.31 -13.5 InvGrdBd 7.67 +0.03 +6.9 LatinAm x 49.58 -0.63 -14.6 LowPriStk d 35.80 +0.02 -0.3 Magellan x 63.34 -0.15 -11.1 MidCap d 26.96 +0.05 -1.7 MuniInc d 12.86 +0.02 +8.9 NewMktIn d 15.92 +0.03 +6.9 OTC 56.61 +0.30 +3.1 Puritan 17.74 +0.06 +0.4 Series100Idx 8.84 +0.01 +1.1 ShTmBond 8.49 +1.6 StratInc 11.02 +0.02 +3.7 Tel&Util x 16.67 -0.23 +7.6 TotalBd 10.91 +0.03 +6.4 USBdIdxInv 11.73 +0.04 +6.9 Value x 63.09 -0.47 -7.3 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 19.96 -0.03 +0.2 NewInsI 20.20 -0.03 +0.5 StratIncA m 12.32 +0.02 +3.5 Fidelity Select Gold d 48.55 -1.17 -5.0 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 44.21 -0.01 +0.8 500IdxInstl 44.21 -0.01 NA 500IdxInv 44.21 -0.01 +0.8 ExtMktIdI d 36.21 +0.13 -3.9 IntlIdxIn d 31.38 +0.13 -10.5 TotMktIdAg d 36.33 +0.02 TotMktIdI d 36.32 +0.02 First Eagle GlbA m 46.57 +0.05 +0.5 OverseasA m21.87 +0.02 -3.5

M

J

J

A

S

O

Source: FactSet

IntlStk d

12.89 -0.01 -9.4

LatinAm d

44.57 +0.11 -21.4

MidCapVa

22.39

MidCpGr

58.18 -0.06 -0.6

NewAsia d 17.43 -0.05 -9.1 NewEra

46.17 -0.14 -11.5

NewHoriz

35.87 +0.11 +7.1

NewIncome OrseaStk d

9.67 +0.03 +5.2 7.63 +0.01 -8.5

R2015

11.85 +0.01 -0.3

R2025

11.83 +0.01 -1.7

R2035

11.89

Rtmt2010

15.41 +0.02 +0.5

Rtmt2020

16.27 +0.02 -1.0

Rtmt2030

16.88 +0.01 -2.3

Rtmt2040

16.90

-3.0

ShTmBond

4.81

+1.3

SmCpStk SpecInc

34.25 +0.15 -0.5 12.26 +0.03 +3.0

Value 22.54 +0.05 -3.4 Templeton InFEqSeS 18.19 Thornburg IntlValA m

-9.0

24.71 +0.06 -11.0

IntlValI d 25.27 +0.07 -10.7 Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d Vanguard

22.46 +0.01 -5.7

500Adml

115.07 -0.02 +0.8

500Inv

115.04 -0.03 +0.7

AssetA

23.97 +0.04 -1.4

BalIdxAdm

21.71 +0.03 +3.3

BalIdxIns

21.71 +0.03 +3.3

CAITAdml

11.20 +0.02 +8.3

CapOpAdml d71.74 -0.61 -6.6 DivGr

15.20 -0.05 +6.8

EmMktIAdm d33.81 -0.08 -15.2 EnergyAdm d122.01 -0.16 +0.9 EnergyInv d 64.95 -0.08 +0.8 Explr

71.83 +0.11 -1.5

ExtdIdAdm

39.77 +0.16 -3.6

ExtdIdIst

39.77 +0.16 -3.6

FAWeUSIns d82.48 +0.01 -12.1 GNMA

11.16 +0.01 +7.1

GNMAAdml 11.16 +0.01 +7.2 GrthIdAdm

32.08 -0.04 +2.4

GrthIstId

32.08 -0.04 +2.4

HYCor d

5.61 +0.03 +5.1

HYCorAdml d 5.61 +0.03 +5.2 HltCrAdml d 55.36 -0.52 +8.0 HlthCare d 131.15 -1.22 +8.0 ITBondAdm 11.79 +0.05 +9.3 ITGradeAd

10.02 +0.05 +6.2

ITIGrade

10.02 +0.05 +6.1

ITrsyAdml

12.11 +0.03 +9.1

InfPrtAdm

28.22 +0.12+13.5

InfPrtI

11.50 +0.05+13.6

InflaPro

14.37 +0.06+13.5

InstIdxI

114.31 -0.02 +0.9

InstPlus

114.32 -0.02 +0.9

InstTStPl

28.20 +0.02 +0.1

IntlGr d

17.21

-11.0

IntlGrAdm d 54.82 -0.01 -10.9 IntlStkIdxAdm d23.06+0.01 -12.5 IntlStkIdxI d 92.27 +0.01 -12.5 IntlStkIdxIPls d92.29 +0.01 -12.5 IntlVal d

28.21 +0.02 -12.3

LTGradeAd 10.15 +0.12+14.3 LTInvGr

10.15 +0.12+14.2

LifeCon

16.32 +0.03 +1.2

LifeGro

21.38 +0.02 -2.5

LifeMod

19.39 +0.02 -0.1

MidCp

19.93 +0.01 -1.9

MidCpAdml 90.57 +0.04 -1.7 MidCpIst

20.01 +0.01 -1.7

Morg

17.90

-0.7

MuHYAdml 10.56 +0.01 +9.0 MuInt

13.83 +0.03 +7.8

MuIntAdml

13.83 +0.03 +7.9

MuLTAdml

11.17 +0.02 +8.9

MuLtdAdml

11.11 +0.01 +3.1

MuShtAdml 15.91 +0.01 +1.5 PrecMtls d 23.83 Prmcp d

-10.7

64.37 -0.57 -2.2

PrmcpAdml d66.84 -0.59 -2.1 PrmcpCorI d 13.57 -0.08 -1.5 REITIdxAd d 78.60 +0.20 +2.8 STBond

10.65 +0.01 +2.7

STBondAdm 10.65 +0.01 +2.8 STBondSgl 10.65 +0.01 +2.8 STCor

10.63 +0.01 +1.6

STGradeAd 10.63 +0.01 +1.7 STsryAdml

10.84 +0.01 +2.2

SelValu d

18.70 -0.02 -0.3

SmCapIdx

33.56 +0.12 -3.4

SmCpIdAdm 33.63 +0.12 -3.3 SmCpIdIst

33.63 +0.12 -3.3

Star

19.04 +0.03 +0.7

TgtRe2010

22.99 +0.04 +3.0

TgtRe2015

12.59 +0.02 +1.4

TgtRe2020

22.16 +0.02 +0.3

TgtRe2030

21.36 +0.02 -1.5

TgtRe2035

12.78 +0.01 -2.4

TgtRe2040

20.93 +0.01 -2.7

TgtRe2045

13.15 +0.01 -2.6

TgtRetInc

11.63 +0.03 +4.9

Tgtet2025

12.54 +0.01 -0.6

TotBdAdml

10.99 +0.04 +6.8

TotBdInst

10.99 +0.04 +6.9

TotBdMkInv 10.99 +0.04 +6.7 TotBdMkSig 10.99 +0.04 +6.8 TotIntl d

13.78

TotStIAdm

31.16 +0.02 +0.1

-12.6

TotStIIns

31.16 +0.01 +0.1

TotStISig

30.07 +0.01

TotStIdx

31.15 +0.02

WellsI

22.66 +0.08 +7.3

WellsIAdm

54.89 +0.19 +7.4

Welltn

31.05 +0.07 +2.0

WelltnAdm

53.64 +0.13 +2.1

WndsIIAdm 45.49 +0.02 +0.9 Wndsr

12.74 +0.01 -5.1

WndsrAdml 43.01 +0.05 -5.0 WndsrII 25.62 +0.01 +0.8 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m

7.45 +0.01 -0.5

SciTechA m 9.80 -0.03 -5.7 Yacktman Focused d 18.59 -0.05 +5.1 Yacktman d 17.39 -0.05 +5.1

$10

est. 5.3

5 0 -5

J

-2.8

SmCpVal d 35.53 +0.18 -1.7

Consumer credit Month-over-month change In billion

M

-5.6

J

-9.7 A S O Source: FactSet


8A • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • Daily Corinthian

APOSTOLIC Jesus Christ Church of the Second Chance, 1206 Wood St., Corinth. Bishop Willie Davis. S.S 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. worship 7 pm. “We care and are in the neighborhood to be a service.” Christ Temple Church, Hwy. 72 W. in Walnut, MS. Rev. J.C. Hall, ; Clay Hall, Asst. Pastor. Services Sun. 10am & 6pm; Wed. 7:30pm Community Tabernacle, 18 CR 647, Kossuth, MS. Pastor; Dan Roseberry (662) 284-4602 Services Sun. 10am & 6 pm, Thurs. 7:00 pm Grace Apostolic Church, CR 473 on left off Hwy 45 S. approx 2 1/2 mi. S. of Biggersville, Bro. Charles Cooper, Pastor; Sun. Service 10am, Sun. Evening 6 pm; Thurs. night 7 pm; 462-5374. Holy Assembly Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ, 201 Martin Luther King Dr., Booneville, MS; Pastor: Bishop Jimmy Gunn, Sr.; 1st Sun.: SS 10am, Worship 11:45am; 2nd Sun: Pastoral Day 11:45am; 3rd Sun: Missionary Serv. 11:45am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm

Corinth Coca-Cola Bottling Co. 601 Washington St • Corinth, MS

Judd & Robin Chapman & Staff

PO Box 1891 Corinth, MS 662-286-3127 Fax 662-286-8111

P.O. Box 2104 • Corinth, MS 662-287-4995 • Fax: 662-287-4903 corinthcharters@bellsouth.net www.corinthcharters.com

JONES NISSAN

1260 Wayne Road Savannah, TN 38372 www.myjonesnissan.com

731-925-0367 866-874-0906

2106 Hwy 72 W Corinth, MS 662-287-1407 Fax 662-287-7409

holidayi@tsixroads.com www.hiexpress.com/corinthms

Fax 662-665-9314

1506 Fulton Dr Corinth, MS

Cornerstone Health & Rehab of Corinth, LLC “Where Life Is Worth Living” 302 Alcron Dr • 662-286-2286

ASSEMBLY OF GOD Canaan Assembly of God, 2306 E. Chambers Dr. 728-3363, Pastor Ricky & Sarah Peebles, Deaf Ministry: Michael Woods 728-0396. S.S. 9:30 am; Children’s Church 10:30 am; Worship 10:30 am & 6 pm; Wed. 7 pm. Christian Assembly of God, Hwy 2, Rev. Leon Barton pastor. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm. Wed. Bible Study & Youth 7pm First Assembly of God, Jason Pellizzer, pastor, 310 Second St., S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. BAPTIST Alcorn Baptist Church, CR 355 Kossuth, MS; Rev. Larry Gillard, Pastor, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6pm. Antioch Baptist Church, Galda Stricklen, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm. Antioch Baptist Church No. 2, County Rd. 518. Greg Warren, pastor. S.S. 9:45am,Worship 11:00am, D.T. 5:00pm-6:00pm Wed. Prayer Mtg.7:00pm. Bethlehem Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am, DT 5:30pm, Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm; WMU 1st Sun. monthly 4pm; Brotherhood 1st Sun. monthly 7am; Youth Night Every 4th Wed. Biggersville First Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm. Training Union 6pm, Wed. 7pm. Brush Creek Baptist Church, Off Hwy. 72 West. Bro. Carroll Talley, pastor. S.S. 10am; Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Service 6:30pm. Butler’s Chapel Baptist Church, Tommy Leatherwood, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Service 7pm. Calvary Baptist Church, 501 Norman Rd. (Behind Buck’s 66 Station). Bro. Scott Brady, pastor. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6:45pm; Sun. Discipleship Training 6pm; Wed Bible Study, Children & Youth Missions 7pm. Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, Burnsville. Bobby Elliott, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Prayer Meeting 7pm; Ladies’ Auxiliary 2nd & 4th Tuesday 6pm. Center Hill Baptist Church, Keith Driskell, pastor. S.S. 10am. Worship 10:55am & 6:30pm Church Training 6pm Prayer Mtg 7pm. Central Grove Baptist Church, County Road 614, Kossuth, MS, 287-4085. S.S. 10:15 am; Worship Service 11:00 am; Wednesday Night 6:30 pm, Bible Class and Usher Board Meeting immediately following Central Missionary Baptist Church, Central School Rd, Bro. Frank Wilson, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pm Chewalla Baptistt Church, Chewalla, TN. Richard Doyle, pastor, 239-9802. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6:15pm; AWANA 5pm; Discipleship Training 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Study-Youth-Children’s Choir 7pm County Line Baptist Church, 8 CR 600, Walnut, MS, Pastor Mike Johnson Sunday School 9am, Worship Service 10am Covenant Baptist Church, 6515 Hwy 57 E, Miche, TN; Pastor K. Brian Rainey Sun Worship 10am and 6pm, Wed. Night 7pm Crossroads Baptist Church, Salem Rd (CR 400), Warren Jones, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pm Danville Baptist Church, Danville Rd., Pastor: Dale Chism; Ministry Assoc: Rev. Charlie Cooper. S.S.10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm. East Fifth Street Missionary Baptist Church, Rev. Richard Wade, pastor S.S. 9:30am. Worship 10:45am; Wed. bible study & prayer meeting 6pm. Choir Rehearsal Saturday 11am. East Corinth Baptist Church, 4303 Shiloh Road. 286-2094. Pastor Ralph Culp, S.S. 9:30am; Service 10:45am & 6:30pm. Wed.Service 6:30pm. Eastview Baptist Church, Ramer, TN. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.; all youth organizations Wed. 7pm. Farmington Baptist Church, Timothy Nall, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. AWANA (for ages 3 & up) 6:30-8pm Men’s Brotherhood & Ladies WMA 6:30pm; Bible Study 7pm. Fellowship Baptist Church, 1308 High School Rd., Selmer, TN. Pastor, Bro. J.D. Matlock. S.S. 10am; Serv. 11am & 6pm.; Wed. 7pm. First Baptist Church, Corinth, 501 Main. Rev. Dennis Smith, Pastor. Sun. Worship Service 8:20am;Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:45am & 7pm Youth Choir Rehearsal 4:45pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 6:30pm; Adult choir rhrsl. 7:30pm. First Baptist Church, Burnsville. S.S. 10-10:50am. Worship 11am & 6pm; DT 5:30pm; Wed.Bible Study 7pm. First Baptist Church, Michie, Tn. Pastor: James Hardin; S.S. 10am; Sun. Morn. Worship 11am; Sun. Evening Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Night Discipleship Training 7pm. Ridgecrest Baptist Church, Farmington Rd., S.S.; Pastor: Floyd Lamb First Baptist Church of Counce, Counce, TN. Dr. Bill Darnell. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed.Prayer Serv. 6pm. Rienzi Baptist Church, 10 School St, Rienzi, MS; Pastor Titus Tyer 9am; Worship 10:15am & 6pm; Prayer Meeting Wed. 6:30pm. S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 6:30pm Friendship Baptist Church, CR 614, Corinth; Craig Wilbanks, Pastor; Early Morn Service 9:30am; S.S. 10:00 am; Worship 11:00am; Wed. night 6:30pm. Saint Luke Missionary Baptist Church, 140 Rd 418., Pastor, John Pams, Jr. ; S.S. 9am; Worship 10:30am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pm Glendale Baptist Church, US 72 East, Glen. Pastor: Bro. Brandon Powell, Minister of Music: Bro. Mike Brown; Awana Program: Sunday Nights 5:30; S.S. St. Mark Baptist Church, 1105 White St. Kim Ratliff, Pastor, 662-287-6718, 9:45am;Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Discipleship Training 5:30pm; Choir Practice: church phone 662-286-6260. S.S. 10am; Worship Service 11am; Wed. Prayer Service & Bible Study 6:30pm. Sunday, Children & Youth 5pm, Adults: 7:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Shady Grove Baptist Church, 19 CR 417, Bro. Jimmy Vanderford, Pastor, Bro. Study 7pm. Tim Edwards, Youth Minister;. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Sun. Night Service Hinkle Baptist Church, Internim Pastor Paul Stacey. Min. of Music Beverly 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 7pm. Castile, S.S. 9am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Shiloh Baptist Church, U.S. 72 West. Rev. Phillip Caples, pastor S.S. 10am; Holly Baptist Church, Holly Church Rd. Pastor John Boler. 8:45 am- Early Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Morning Worship, 10:00 am S.S., 11:00 am Late Worship, 6:00 pm Evening South Corinth Baptist Church, 300 Miller Rd., Charles Stephenson, Pastor Worship, Wed. Service 6:30 pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study, SS 10am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Prayer & Bible Study 6 pm Children & Youth Activities, www.hollybaptist.org St. Rest M.B. Church, Guys TN Rev. O. J. Salters, pastor. Sun.Worship 11am; Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church, 464 Hwy 356, Rienzi. Gabe Jolly, III, S.S. 9:45am; Wed. Bible study 6:00pm. Pastor; S.S. 9am; Children’s Church: 10am; Worship 10am; Bible Study: Synagogue M.B. Church, 182 Hwy. 45, Rieniz, 462-3867 Steven W. Roberson, Wed. 6:30pm; Life Center: Tues. & Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm. pastor. S.S. 10 am, Morning Worship & Praise 11 am, Community Bible Study Jacinto Baptist Church, Ken White, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & (Tues.) 11 am, Evening Bible Study (Wed.) 7 p.m. 6:30pm; Wed. service 6:30pm. Tate Baptist Church, 1201 N. Harper Rd. 286-2935; Mickey Trammel, pastor Kemps Chapel Baptist Church, Pastor: Tim Dillingham; Rt. 1, Rienzi. S.S. Sun.: SS 9:30am; Morn. Worship, Preschool Church; Children’s Worship 10am; Worship 11am & 6:15pm; Church Trng. 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible (grades 1-4) 10:45am; Discipleship Classes 4:30pm; RA’s, GA’s, & Mission Study. 7 pm. Friends 5:30pm; Worship 6pm; Mon.: A.C.T.S. Outreach 6pm; Tues., A.C.T.S. Kendrick Baptist Church, Bro. Craig Wilbanks, pastor. S.S. 9:30 am; Outreach 2pm; Wed., Fellowship Meal 5pm, AWANA & SS Lesson Preview Worship 10:30am, & 6:30pm; Church Trng. 5:30pm, Wed. 7pm. 5:30pm, Adult Bible Study/Prayer, Student 24-7, Choir/Drama 6pm; Adult Kossuth First Baptist Church, Bro. Harris Counce, minister. 287-4112. S.S. Choir Rehearsal, Student 24-7 7pm. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; D.T. 6p.m; Wed. 7pm. Tishomingo Chapel Baptist Church, 136 CR 634, Pastor: Bro. Bruce Ingram: Lakeview Missionary Baptist Church, Charles Martin, pastor. S.S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Discipleship Training 5pm, Worship 6pm, 4th 5402 Shiloh Rd. 287-2177 S.S. 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm; Sunday Worship at 5pm, Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm Wed. Adult Bible Study, Youth Min. 7pm. Trinity Baptist Church, Michie, Tenn., 901-239-2133, Interim Pastor: Liberty Hill Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship Bengy Massey; S. S.10am; Sun. Worship 11am & 6:30pm; 11am & 5:00pm; Wed. 7:00 pm. Prayer Service Wed. 6:30pm. Little Flock Primitive Baptist Church, 4 mi. so. of Burnsville off Tuscumbia Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church COPPER • BRASS ALUMINUM • STAINLESS STEEL Hwy. 365. Turn west at sign. Pastor: Elder Bob Ward. Sun. Bible Study Training 6pm; Prayer Service Wed. pm. 9:45 am; Worship 10:30am. Little Zion Missionary Baptist Church, 3395 N Polk St, Pastor - Christopher Union Baptist Church, Rayborn Richardson, pastor. S.S. 10 am. Church Training 5pm. Evening Worship 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 6:30pm. Traylor; Sunday School - 9am; Worship 10:15 am - Communion - 1st 2760 Harper St • 662-665-0069 Unity Baptist Church, 5 CR 408, Hwy. 45 South Biggersville. Excail Burleson, Sunday at 11am; Bible Study - Wednesday Night at 6:00 pm Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm. Lone Oak Baptist Church, Charles Mills, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Unity Baptist Church, 825 Unity Church Rd, Ramer, TN, Dr. Ronald Meeks, Prayer Service 5:30pm; Wed. 7pm. Pastor; Bro. Andrew Williams, Music Director; Jason Webb, Youth Minister; Love Joy Baptist Church, on the Glen-Jacinto Road, Hwy 367. Janice Lawson, Pianist; Sunday: Men’s Prayer 9:45am; SS 10am, Morning Pastor, Bro. David Robbins, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6 pm. Worship 11am, Evening Worship 6pm; Wed. AWANA-Prayer Meeting 6:30pm. Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church, 715 Martin Luther King Dr. Rev. West Corinth Baptist Church, 308 School St., Jacky Ward, Assoc. Pastor; Lawrence Morris, pastor. S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; BTU 5pm; Wed. S.S. 10:00am. Worship 9:00am & 6pm; Church Training 5pm. Wed. 6:45pm. Prayer & Bible Stdy. 7pm; Youth mtg. 5:30pm; Sunshine Band Sat. noon. Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, Kara Blackard, pastor. S.S. 9am. Worship 903 Hwy 72 • Corinth, MS • 286-3539 Mason St. Luke Baptist Church, Mason St. Luke Rd. 287-1656. Rev. Wayne Service10am & 6:30pm; Wed. prayer mtg. & classes 6:30pm. Mattie Beavers • Wanda Isbell Wooden, pastor; S.S. 9:45 am Worship 11am.; Wed. 6:30pm. McCalip Baptist Chapel, Rt.1 Pocahontas,TN Pastor, Rev. Johnny Sparks CATHOLIC CHURCH Services Sunday 11am & 6p.m. St. James Catholic Church, 3189 Harper Rd., 287-1051 - Office; 284-9300 Michie Primitive Baptist Church, Michie Tenn. Pastor Elder Ricky Taylor. - Linda Gunther. Sun. Mass: 9am in English and 1pm in Spanish Worship Service 1st & 3rd Sun., 3 pm, 2nd & 4th Sun., 10:30 am. Everyone is cordially invited. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Mills Commuity Baptist Church, 397 CR 550 Rienzi, MS. Bro. Donny Charity Christian Church, Jacinto. Minister, Bro. James Marks S.S. Davis, pastor. S. S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am & Sun. Night 5pm; Wed. 10am;Worship 11am; Bible Study 5pm; Wed. 7pm. Bible Stdy. 6:30pm Guys Christian Church, Guys, Tenn. 38339. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am. New Covenant Baptist Church, 1402 E. 4th St., Rev. Vincent M. Ross, Harper Road Christian Church, 4175 N.Harper Road. Gerald Hadley, Sr. pastor, Sunday School 9:45am; Worship 11:00am, Bible Study Wednesdays Evangelist. Sun: 9:45am, 10:45am & 6pm; Wed: 7pm. 287-1367 6:30 pm, 8:00 am Service Every 1st Sunday Oak Hill Christian Church, Kendrick Rd. At Tn. Line, Frank Williams, New Lebanon Free Will Baptist Church, 1195 Hwy. 364, Cairo Evangelist, Bible School 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm (Winter); 6pm Community; Jack Whitley, Jr, pastor; 462-8069 or 462-7591; 10am S.S. (Summer) for all ages; Worship, 11am Children’s Church, 5pm; Choir Practice, 6pm; Salem Christian Church, 1030 CR 400, Dennis Smith, minister. SS 9 am, Evening Worship, Wed. 7 pm Midweek Bible Study & Prayer Meeting, Morning Worship 10am, Evening Service 5pm (Standard time) 6pm (Daylight 7pm;Young People Bible Classes. Saving time). Need a ride? - Bro. Smith at 662-396-4051 North Corinth Baptist Church,Rev. Bill Wages,pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship Waldron Street Christian Church, Ted Avant, Minister. S.S. 9:30am; 11am & 7pm; ChurchTraining 6:00pm; Wed. 7pm Worship10:45am & 6pm; Youth Mtgs. 6 pm; Wed. 7pm. Oakland Baptist Church, 1101 S. Harper Rd., Dr. Randy Bostick, Pastor. SS all ages 9am; Worship Serv. 10:15am & 6:20pm; Sun. Orchestra Reh. CHURCH OF CHRIST 4pm; Student Choir & Handbells 5pm; Children’s Choir (age 4-Grade 6) Acton Church of Christ, 3 miles north of Corinth city limits on Hwy. 22. 5:15pm; Wed. AWANA clubs (during school year) 6pm; Prayer & Praise Joe Story, Minister; Daniel Fowler, Youth Min. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:50am & 6:30pm; Student “XTREME Life” Worship Service 6:45pm; “Life Institute” 5 p.m; Wed. Bible Study 7:00pm. Small Group Classes 7pm; Sanctuary choir reh. 8:05pm 662-287-6200 Berea Church of Christ, Guys, TN. Minister Will Luster. Sun. School 10am, Olive Hill West, Guys, TN S.S. 10am; Worship 11 am & 6pm; Training 5:30; Worship Service 11am. Wed. 7pm Central Church of Christ, 306 CR 318, Corinth, MS, Don Bassett, Minister Pinecrest Baptist Church, 313 Pinecrest Rd., Corinth, Bro. Jeff Haney, Bible Study 9:30am; Preaching 10:30am & 6p.m., Wed. Bible Study 7p.m. pastor. S.S.9:30am; Worship 10:30am; Sun. Serv. 5:00pm; Clear Creek Church of Christ, Waukomis Lake Rd. Duane Ellis, Minister. Wed. Worship Serv. 6:30pm Worship 9am & 5pm; Bible School 10am; Wed. 6:30pm. Pleasant Grove Baptist Church,Inc., Dennistown; 287-8845, Pastor Danville Church of Christ, Charles W. Leonard, Minister, 287-6530. Sunday Allen Watson. Church School - Sun., 9:45am Worship Serv. - Sun 11am; Bible Study 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. BTU-Sun. 3pm; Wed. Bible Study/Prayer 7pm; Wed. Choir Pract. 6pm; East Corinth Church of Christ, 1801 Cruise Ronald Choate, Minister. S.S. (Need a ride to Church - Don Wallace 286-6588) 9:45 a.m. Worship 10:30am & 5pm;Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Ramer Baptist Church, 3899 Hwy 57 W, Ramer, TN; Pastor: Rev. James Donuts • Breakfast • Tacos • Kolachies Foote Street Church of Christ, Blake Nicholas, Minister., Terry Smith, Youth Donuts • Breakfast • Kolachies Young; Church office: 731-645-5681; SS 9:45am, Morn. Worship 11am; Minister; S.S. 9am; Worship 10am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Open 7 days a week • 5am-8pm Discipleship Training 6pm, Evening Worship 7pm; Wed. Family Supper Call First for big Orders 5:30pm, Mid-Week Prayer Service 6:30pm 2022 Hwy 72 E • Corinth, MS • 286-6602

Donald’s Donuts

Open 7 days a Week


Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • 9A

Burnsville United Methodist Church, 118 Front St., Burnsville. 423-1758. United Pentecostal Church, Selmer, Tenn., S.S. 10 am; Worship Wayne Napier, Pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 9 a.m. 11am & 7 pm. Danville CME Methodist Church, Rev. James Agnew, Pastor, Sun. S.S. Walnut United Pentecostal Church, Hwy. 72 W. S.S. 10 am; 10 am, Worship Service 11 am, Bible classes Wed. night 6:30 to 7:30. Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm. Rev. James Sims. Christ United Methodist Church, 3161 Shiloh Rd. Pastor: Dr. Danny West Corinth U.P.C., 5th & Nelson St., Rev. Merl Dixon, Minister, Rowland; 286-3298. S.S. 9:45 am (all ages); Fellowship 10:45am; Worship S.S. 10 am. Worship 11 am.; Prayer meeting 5:30 pm., Evang. Serv. 11am (nursery provided) & 6pm Jr. & Sr. High Youth; Mon.-Boy Scout 6 pm., Wed. 7 pm. Troop 123 Meet; Tues.-Cub Scout Pack 123 Meet; Wed.-6pm Fellowship Soul’s Harbor Apostolic Church, Walnut, Worship Sun. Services Supper (all ages), Kids Gathering, Youth Fellowship, Young Adult Bible 10 a.m. & 6, Wed. 7:30 p.m., Rev. Jesse Cuter, pastor, Prayer Study, Adult Bible Study, Choir Practice, Adult Fellowship & Visitation. Request, call 223-4003. City Road Temple (C.M.E.) Church, Martin Luther King Dr., Rev. Robert Zion Pentecostal Church In Christ., 145 N. on Little Zion Rd. Field, S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 11:00 am; Wed. Youth Meeting 5 pm. Bld 31, Rev. Allen Milam, Pastor, S.S. 10am. Worship 11am.; First United Methodist Church, Dr. Prentiss Gordon, Jr, Pastor; Ken Evang. Service 6pm, Wed. 7pm. Lancaster, Music Dir.; S.S. 9am, Worship 10 am; Wed. Family Supper 5pm, Bible Study 6pm; Choir Practice 7pm (Televised Cablevision Channel 16) PRESBYTERIAN Wed. Worship Service; John Windham, Youth Director; Jenny Hawkins, Covenant Presbyterian Church, Tennessee St. at North Parkway; Children’s & Family Ministry Director S.S.10 am; Worship 11 am. 286-8379 or 287-2195. Gaines Chapel United Methodist Church, 1802 Hwy 72 W, Rev. Tony First Presbyterian Church, EPC, 919 Shiloh Rd., Dr. Donald A. Pounders, Pastor, S.S. 9:45 am. Worship 10:45am & 6:30pm; Children’s Elliot, Min. Gregg Parker, Director of Youth & Fellowship. Activities 5pm, Youth 6:30pm & Wed. Night Children/Youth Activities and S.S. 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:45; Fellowship 5 & 6 pm. Adult Bible Study 6:15pm Shiloh Cumberland Presbyterian Church, off U.S. 72 W. Rev. Hopewell United Methodist Church, S.S. 9:15 a.m. Worship 10 a.m. Brenda Laurence. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 6 p.m. Indian Springs United Methodist Church, Youth Service 8:45 a.m., The New Hope Presbyterian Church, Biggersville. Nicholas 9 a.m. Regular Worship. Sunday School Will Follow. Wedn Night 7pm B. Phillips, Temporary Supply; Sunday School for all ages 9:45 am ST Cruiser Kossuth United Methodist Church, Rev,. Trey Lambert, pastor, Sunday • Morning Worship 10:45 am. SPSt;ECSun. School 10:00 a.m., Worship Service 11am & 6pm. Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA), 1108 Proper IAMorn. L • Stryker Mt. Carmel Methodist Church, Henry Storey, Minister, Worship 9:30 a.m. Worship 9:30 am, Sunday school, 10:45 am, Wed. Bible low-rastudy, te S.S. 10:30 a.m. Bible Study 1st & 3rd Tues. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m., Fri. men’s prayer, 6:30 am; http://www.tpccorinth.org. Fin ancing • Apache Mt. Moriah United Methodist Church, Meigg St., S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship for 48 months 10:30 a.m. Wed. night bible study 6 p.m. Children & Youth for Christ Sat. SATURDAY SABBATH 9:30 a.m. Sapada Thomas Pastor. Hungry Hearts Ministries Church of Corinth, 408 Hwy 72 W Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church, Rev. Larry Dollar, pastor. S.S. 10am 662-287-0277; Sat. Service 3pm Worship Service 11am Fraley’s Chapel Church of Christ, Minister, Ferrill Hester. Bible Study Oak Grove C.M.E. Church, Alcorn County Road 514, West of Biggersville, SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm. Wed. Bible Study7pm. MS, Rev. Ida Price, Pastor Sunday School 9:30am, Worship services Seventh-day Adventist Church, 2150 Hwy.72 E., Kurt Threlkeld, Jerusalem Church of Christ, Farmington Rd. Ben Horton, Minister. S.S. 10:45am, Bible Study Wed. Night 7pm Minister. Sat. Services: Bible Study 9:30am, Worship 10:45am; 10am; Church 10:45am; Sun. Bible Study & Worship, 5pm. Pleasant Hill United Methodist Church, Rev. Trey Lambert, pastor, Sun Prayer Meeting: Tuesday 6:00pm; (256) 381-6712 Kossuth Church of Christ, Jerry Childs, Minister, 287-8930. S.S. 10am; Services, Worship 9:15am, Sunday School 10:30am, Evening 5pm. Worship 11am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Saulter’s Chapel CME Church, Rev.Terry Alexander, pastor. S.S. SOUTHERN BAPTIST Buy Now Church, Kendrick Rd Church of Christ, S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; 10 a.m. Service 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. At Last 1020 CR 400 Salem Rd; Warren Jones, Crossroads Wed. Bible Study 7pm.. Shady Grove United Methodist Church, Dwain Whitehurst, pastor, S.S. YePastor; ars PrSun. Worship/Preaching 10 a.m. ices-Bible - WhiStudy le 99CRa.m., Apache 4 x 4 Pastor. - 64 volt Meeks St. Church of Christ, 1201 Meeks St; Evg: Chuck Richardson, 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Victory Church, 256., Alan Parker, S.S.- 9am; SuppBaptist lie10am. Up to 45 milesWorship before6:30pm; recharging! s LaChurch 287-2187 or 286-9660; S.S. 9am; Wed. 7pm. New Hope Methodist Church, New Hope & Sticine Rd., Guys/Michie, TN; Worship st Training 5:30pm; Wed. Meigg Street Church of Christ, 914 Meigg St. Will Luster, Jr., Pastor Danny Adkisson; Services: Sun. Worship 10 am, S.S. 11 am, Wed. 6:30pm Minister. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship Service 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Bible Study 6:30 pm. New Hope Church of Christ, Glen, MS, Minister, Roy Cox .S.S. 9:30am; Setting the Standard for Electric Utility Vehicles MORMON Worship Service 10:30am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. American Made North Rienzi Church of Christ, Located in Rienzi by Shell Station on 356 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Corinth Ward. Hwy. 2 UTILITY • HUNTING • FARM Old Worsham Bros. Building Sun, 10 am-1pm, Wed. 6:30 pm. Minister, Wade Davis, Sun. 10am, & 6pm., Wed. 7:00pm Street legal units available The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 204 George E. Allen Northside Church of Christ, Harper Rd., Lennis Nowell, Minister. S.S. Tax credit available on select models Dr. Booneville, MS. Services: Booneville Ward 9-12 am Wed 6:30 pm 9:45am; Worship 10:35am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. www.stealth4x4.com Pleasant Grove Church of Christ, 123 CR 304, Doskie, MS, Craig NON-DENOMINATIONAL Chandler, Minister-287-1001; S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am. South Parkway Church of Christ, 501 S. Parkway St., Bro. Dan Eubanks, Agape World Overcoming Christian Center, 1311 Lyons St. Pastor Doris Day. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Corporate Worship 11:30 a.m., Tues. Night Prayer/Bible Minister, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Study 7pm Strickland Church of Christ, Central Sch. Rd. at Hwy. 72 E., Brad Another Chance Ministries, 2066 Tate St, Corinth, MS 662-284-0801 or CALL THE Dillingham, Minister, S.S. 10am;Worship 10:45am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. 2293PROFESSIONALS Highway 25 South 662-284-0802. Prayer Serv. 8am, Praise & Worship 9am, Mid-Week Bible WITH OVER 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Theo Church of Christ, Tim Hester, minister. Hwy. 72 W. Bible P.O. Box 966 - Iuka, Mississippi 38852 study 7pm. Bishop Perry (Dimple) Carroll, Overseers - A Christ Centered, Study 9am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study pm. 662-287-3521 Wenasoga Church of Christ, G.W. Childs, Pastor. Worship Service 9am & Spirit Filled, New Creation Church Bethel Church, CR 654-A, Walnut (72W to Durhams Gro, left at store, 5pm; Bible Class 10am; Wed. 7pm. follow signs), Sun. Morn 10am; Sun. Worship 5pm; Thurs. Service 6pm. West Corinth Church of Christ, Hwy 45 No. at Henson Rd. James Vansandt, Pastor S.S. 9:45am; Worship service 10:40am & 6pm; Wed 7pm. Borrowed Time Ministries, Wheeler Grove Rd, Sun. 2pm; Wed. 6:30 pm Burnsville Tabernacle Church, Pastor Travis Shea, Sun. School 10a.m. Wor. Service 11 a.m., Eve. Worship 5p.m., Wed Service 7 p.m. EPISCOPAL “The Little Critter Gitter!” Church of the Crossroads, Hwy 72 E., Nelson Hight, pastor, 286-6838, 1st St. Paul’s Episcopal, Hwy. 2 at N. Shiloh Rd. Rev. Ann B. Fraser, Priest; Morn. Worship 8:30, S.S.10am, 2nd Morn. Worship 11am & Life Groups CALL THE PROFESSIONALS 8:30 Holy Eucharist; 9:30 SS & Welcome Coffee; 10:30 Holy Eucharist 5pm; Wed. 6:30 pm Life Groups & Childrens Services; WITH OVER 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE. (w/music) Nursery open 8:15-11:45. Cicero AME Church, 420 Martin Luther King Dr., Corinth, MS 286-2310 S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm 662-287-3521 CHURCH OF GOD City of Refuge, 300 Emmons Rd. & Hwy 64, Selmer, TN. 731-645-7053 or Church of God of Prophecy, Bell School Rd. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 731-610-1883. Pastor C. A. Jackson. Sun. Morn. 10am, Sun. Evening 6pm, services 11 a.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Pastor James Gray. Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Hilltop Church of God, 46 Hwy 356 - 603-4567, Pastor, Donald McCoy Christ Gospel Church, Junction 367 & 356, 1 1/2 miles east of Jacinto. Rev. SS 10am, Sun. Worship 10:45am, Sun. Even. 5pm, Wed. 7pm. Bobby Lytal, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun 6:30 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. Fri Night 7 p.m. New Mission Church of God in Christ, 608 Wick St. Pastor Elder Yarbro. Church On Fire Dream Center, Intersection of Holt Ave. & Hwy 365 S.S. 10 a.m. Sunday Worship 11 a.m., & 7 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7pm. North, Burnsville. Michael Roberts, pastor, Sun. Morn. Worship 10am, “TheS. Little Critter 1801 Harper RdGitter!” Suite 7 New Life Church of God in Christ, 305 West View Dr., Pastor Elder 662-415-4890(cell) Corinth, MS • 286-2300 Willie Hoyle, 286-5301. Sun. Prayer 9:45 am, S.S. 10 am, Worship Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 145 South. Services: Sun. 10am 11:30 am, Thurs. Worship 7:30 pm, Wed. night worship services 7 pm, www.crossroadshealthclinic.com Youth and Home Meetings, Wednesday Night. Billy Joe Young, pastor. YPWW 1st & 3rd Sunday 6 pm. FaithPointe Church, Rob Yanok, pastor. Hwy. 64 E. Adamsville, TN. St. James Church of God in Christ, 1101 Gloster St. S.S. 10 a.m. Sun. 9am-Prayer, 10am-Realife Ed., 11am Morn. Worship; Wed. Bible Study Worship Services 11:30 a.m.; Youth/Adult Bible Study Thurs. 7pm 7 p.m. Pastor Elder Anthony Fox. First United Christian Church, CR 755, Theo Community, Rev. Casey St. James Church of God in Christ-Ripley, 719 Ashland Rd, Ripley, MS, Rutherford, pastor, Sun. 10:30 am & 6 pm; Thurs. 7 p.m. 662-396-1967 662-837-9509; Sun. Worship Morning Glory 8am; SS 9am; Worship 11am; Full Gospel House of Prayer, 2 miles S. of Hightown. Ancel Hancock, Thurday is Holy Ghost night 7pm; Superintendent Bernell Hoyle, Pastor. Minister, Jane Dillingham, Assoc., Serv every Mon. night 7pm Church of God of Union Assembly, 347 Hwy 2, (4 miles from Hwy 45 Phone: Foundation of Truth Christian Fellowship, 718 S. Tate St., Corinth, MS, bypass going East to 350), North Gospel Preaching and singing. Services Frederick C. Patterson Sr, pastor, S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 11 p.m. 662-286-2300 Wed. 6:30 pm , Sun.Evening Service 6:30 pm, Sun. morning 10:30 am. Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Everyone invited to come and worship with us. Pastor Brother David Fax: God’s Church, 565 Hwy 45 S, Biggersville; Pastor David Mills, Asso. Pastor Bledsoe; 286-2909 or 287-3769 Larry Lovett; SS 10am; Sun Worship 11am; Wed. Night 7pm 662-286-7010 Debbie McFalls, FNP The Church of God , Hwy 57, West of four-way in Michie, TN. Kossuth Worship Center, Hwy. 2, Kossuth. Pastor Bro. Larry Murphy. S.S. Paster Joe McLemore, 731-926-5674. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. Services 6:00 p.m. 287-5686 WWW.CROSSROADSHEALTHCLINIC.COM Wings of Mercy Church, 1703 Levee St. (Just off 45 S. at Harper Exit). Life in the Word Fellowship Church, Pastor Merle Spearman. 706 School St, Worship Sun. 10:30 am & 6:00 pm; Wed. 7:00 pm. Church: 287-4900; Pastor: James Tipton, Sunday Morn. 10:30am, Sunday Miracle Tabernacle, 4 1/2 miles south of Glen on Jacinto Road. Pastor, Bro. Evening 5:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm John W. Lentz. S.S. 10am. Worship Service 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7pm. Mt. Zion Church, Highway 365 N. of Burnsville. Pastor Billy Powers. FREE WILL BAPTIST Calvary Free Will Baptist Mission, Old Jacinto Supply Building, Jacinto. Worship Service 2 pm; Wed. Serv 7 pm. Mt. Carmel Non-Denominational Church, Wenasoga Rd. S.S. 10 am Worship 11 am & 5 p.m. Wed. Service 7 pm. Pastor Bro. Jason Abbatoy. Sunday Morning Service 11:00 am Community Free Will Baptist Church, 377 CR 218, Corinth, MS, 462-8353, S.S. 10am, Worship Serv 11am & 6 pm. Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Real Life Church, 2040 Shiloh Rd (corner of Harper & Shiloh Rd); 662 709-RLCC; Pastor Harvern Davis, Sun. Morn. Prayer 10am, Worship Macedonia Freewill Baptist Church, 9 miles S. of Corinth on 10:30am; Prayer Mon. 7pm; Wed Night 7pm Adult Bible Study, Real Teen CR 400. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Pastor: Russell Clouse; Sun Worship Survival, Xtreme Kids, www.rlcc4me.com 11 a.m& 6 pm; Adult & Youth Teaching Service Sunday 5 p.m. River of Life, Cruise & Cass St. Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 a.m., Pastor Heath Lovelace HOLINESS Still Hope Ministries, Main St, Rienzi; Pastor: Bro. Chris Franks, 662-603 By Faith Holiness Church, 137 CR 430, Ritenzi, MS, 662-554-9897/462 3596. Services: Sun 2pm; Fri. 7pm. 7287; Pastor: Eddie Huggins; Sun 10am& 6pm; Thurs. 7pm Full Gospel Jesus Name Church, Located 3 miles on CR 400, (Salem Rd) The Anchor Holds Church, Hwy 348 of Blue Springs, MS. 662-869-5314, Pastor Mike Sanders, Sun. School 9:30 a.m; Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 Old Jehvohah Witness Church. Pastor: Larry Jackson; Sunday Evening am; Sun. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m; Wed. Service 7:00 p.m; Nursery 2pm. 662-728-8612. Glen Jesus Name Holiness Church, Glen, Bro. Jimmy Jones, Pastor; Sun. Provided For Ages 0-3; Children Church For Ages 4-10; Youth Program For Ages 11-21; Anointed Choir and Worship Team Service 10 am, Sun. Evening 6 pm; Thurs. night 7 pm; 287-6993 Triumph Church, Corner of Dunlap & King St. S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship Theo Holiness Church, Hwy. 72 West, Corinth. Pastor: Rev. Ronald 11:30 a.m. Tuesday night worship 7:00 p.m. Wilbanks, Phone:662-223-5330; Senior Pastor: Rev. Rufus Barnes; SS Triumphs To The Church and Kingdom of God in Christ, Rev. Billy T., 10am, Worship Service 11am, and 6:30 pm, Wed. Prayer Meeting 7 pm Kirk, pastor S.S. of Wisdom 10 a.m. Regular Services 11:30 a.m. Tuesday & True Holiness Church, 1223 Tate St, 287-5659 or 808-0347, Pastor: Willie Thursday 7:30p.m. Saffore; S.S. 10 am, Sun. Worship 11:30 am, Tues/Fri Prayer Service 9am; Word Outreach Ministries, Hwy. 45 North, MS-TN State Line. Pastor Prayer & Bible Band Wed. 7pm. Elworth Mabry. Sun. Bible Study 10am, Worship 11am, Wed. 6:30pm.

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INDEPENDENT BAPTIST Brigman Hill Baptist Church, 7 mi. E. on Farmington Rd. Pastor Chris Estep, S.S. 10am; Sun Worship 11 am & 6 pm.; Wed. Bible Study 7p.m. Grace Bible Baptist Church, Hwy. 145 No. Donald Sculley, pastor. 286-5760, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m., Children’s Bible Club 7 p.m. Juliette Independent Missionary Baptist Church, Interim Pastor, Harold Talley, S.S.10 a.m. Preaching 11 a.m. Evening Service 5 p.m. Maranatha Baptist Church, CR 106, Bro. Scotty Wood, Pastor. S.S.10 a.m. Sun Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m. Jones Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun. Worship Services 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Strickland Baptist Church, 514 Strickland Rd., Glen MS 38846, Pastor Harold Burcham; Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday Services 11 a.m& 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m.

PENTECOSTAL Calvary Apostolic Church, Larry W. McDonald, Pastor, 1622 Bunch St. Services Sun 10am & 6pm, Tues 7:30 pm For info. 287-3591. Central Pentecostal Church, Central School Road. Sunday Worship 10 am; Evangelistic Service 5 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm; Terry Harmon II, Pastor. Apostolic Life Tabernacle, Hwy. 45 S. Sunday Worship & S.S. 10 am & 6 p.m. Thurs. Prayer Meeting 7:15pm Mike Brown, pastor. 287-4983. Biggersville Pentecostal Church, U.S. 45 N., Biggersville. Rev. T.G, Ramsy, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Youth Services, Sunday 5 p.m. Evangelistic Service 6 p.m. Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m. Burnsville United Pentecostal Church, Highway 72 West of Burnsville. L. Rich, pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11 am and 6:30 pm; Youth Service 5:30 pm; Wed Prayer and Bible Study 7:15 pm. Community Pentecostal Church, Rev. Randle Flake, pastor. Sun. Worship 10am & 5:30pm; Wed. Acts Class 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pm INDEPENDENT FULL GOSPEL Counce, Tenn. First Pentecostal Church, State Route 57, Rev. G.R. Harvest Church, 349 Hwy 45 S., Guys, TN. Pastor Roger Reece; Miller, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Evening Worship 6 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. 731-239-2621. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship & Children’s Church 11am; Eastview United Pentecostal Church, Rev. Wayne Isbell, pastor. Evening Service 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m. 287-8277 (pastor), (662) 645-9751 (church) S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m. INDEPENDENT METHODIST Gospel Tabernacle, Glover Drive. Rev. Josh Hodum, pastor. S.S. 10 am Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7 p.m. Clausel Hill Independent Methodist Church, 8 miles S. of Burnsville, just off 365 in Cairo Community. Pastor, Gary Redd. S.S. 10 a.m. Morning Greater Life United Pentecostal Church, 750 Hwy. 45 S. Rev. Don Clenney, Pastor; SS 10am, Sun. Morn. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. Worship Worship 11:15 a.m. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pm Meeting 6:45 p.m. Life Tabernacle Apostolic Pentecostal, 286-5317, Mathis Subd. Chapel Hill Methodist Church, , 2 1/2 mi. W. of Burnsville. CR 944. Sunday Worship 10am&6:30pm;Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Scotty McCay, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Sunday Worship, 11 am. & 5 pm. Pleasant Hill Pentecostal Church, C.D. Kirk, pastor, Hwy. 2, S.S. 10am, Adult Worship 10am, Sun. Night Explosion 6pm & LUTHERAN Wed. night 7:30pm Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. 4203 Shiloh Rd. 287 1037, Divine Worship 10:00 a.m. Holy Communion celebrated on the first, Rockhill Apostolic, 156 CR 157, 662-287-1089, Pastor Steve Findley SS. 10am, Sun. Morn. 11am, Sun. Night 6pm, Wed night 7:15pm third and fifth Sunday. Christian Ed. 9 a.m. Sanctuary of Hope 1108 Proper St,, Sun. Worship 10 a.m. & 6pm; Thursday worship 7:30 p.m. “Where there’s breath, there’s hope.” METHODIST Bethel United Methodist, Jerry Kelly, pastor. Worship 10 am S.S. 11 am The Full Gospel Tabernacle of Jesus Christ, 37 CR 2350, Biggersville United Methodist Church, Jimmy Glover, Pastor. Pastor Jesse Hisaw, 462-3541. Sun, 10am & 5pm; Wed. 7:30 pm. S.S. 9:15 a.m., Church Service 10:00 am Sunday Worship 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Bible Study Thurs 7 p.m. Box Chapel United Methodist Church, Howard Tucker, Pastor 3310 CR Tobes Chapel Pentecostal Church, CR 400, Pastor: Bro. Tony Basden, 100 (Intersection of Kendrick & Box Chapel Road) S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship SS. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. 5:30am, Wed. Bible Study 7pm, 462-8183. 11 am, Evening Worship 5 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m.


Wisdom

10A • Daily Corinthian

Today in History

Girl upset by mom’s lack of gratitude DEAR ABBY: I’m a 12-year-old girl who has a problem with my mom. Once a week we clean the house, which is fairly large. Even when I do a good job on every room my mom never says, “Nice job,” “Good work,” or even a simple “Thanks.” It hurts my feelings because I thank her for all the things she does for me. Am I wrong to want or expect compliments in return? — NEVER THANKED IN OREGON DEAR NEVER THANKED: No, you’re not wrong. I don’t know anyone of any age who doesn’t crave positive reinforcement. Have you mentioned to your mother how this makes you feel? Because if you haven’t, you’re expressing your disappointment to the wrong person.

1468 Lorenzo the Magnificent and his brother Giuliano succeed their father, Piero de Medici, as rulers of Florence, Italy. 1762 France cedes to Spain all lands west of the Mississippi–the territory known as Upper Louisiana. 1818 Illinois admitted into the Union as the 21st state. 1847 Frederick Douglass and Martin R. Delaney establish the North Star, and anti-slavery paper. 1862 Confederate raiders attack a Federal forage train on the Hardin Pike near Nashville, Tenn. 1863 Confederate General James Longstreet moves his army east and north toward Greeneville. This withdrawal marks the end of the Fall Campaign in Tennessee. 1864 Major General William Tecumseh Sherman meets with slight resistance from Confederate troops at Thomas Station on his march to the sea. 1906 The U.S. Supreme Court orders Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) leaders extradited to Idaho for trial in the Steunenberg murder case. 1915 The United States expels German attaches on spy charges. 1916 French commander Joseph Joffre is dismissed after his failure at the Somme. General Robert Nivelle is the new French commander in chief. 1918 The Allied Conference ends in London where they decide that Germany must pay for the war. 1925 The League of Nations orders Greece to pay an indemnity for the October invasion of Bulgaria. 1926 British reports claim that German soldiers are being trained in the Soviet Union. 1950 The Chinese close in on Pyongyang, Korea, and UN forces withdraw southward. 1965 The National Council of Churches asks the United States to halt the massive bombings in North Vietnam. 1977 The State Department proposes the admission of 10,000 more Vietnamese refugees to the United States. 1979 Eleven are dead and eight injured in a mad rush to see a rock band (The Who) at a concert in Cincinnati, Ohio. 1984 Toxic gas leaks from a Union Carbide plant and results in the deaths of thousands in Bhopal, India.

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DEAR ABBY: I’m 15

BY HOLIDAY MATHIS Usually, Sagittarius energy opens minds to cultural, generational and gender differences, but right now it might not feel like this is true. Mercury retrograde forms a hostile angle to Mars, and people will voice their concerns and fears in less than accepting tones. It might be hard not to take this personally as Mercury aligns with the sun. ARIES (March 21-April 19). If only you could process information like a robot, without attaching emotional meaning to everything. But it turns out all those feelings, as inefficient as they may be, are what make you irresistible to a certain someone. TAURUS (April 20May 20). You can’t be upset and have hope and optimism at the same time. Let yourself feel the upset and move through it -- it won’t last long. Then you can reclaim your hope and optimism. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll come to a juncture you’ve seen before. You’ll make a choice that’s better for you this time. It won’t be easier, but it will make everything lighter and brighter in the end. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Peer pressure isn’t just for schoolchildren. You’ll feel a subtle strain of it among adults. It will appear that many around you share the same beliefs and attitudes -- or do they? Some are merely succumbing to sugges-

We have the cash for your Christmas needs! See or call Deborah or Lynn

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DEAR ABBY: Every year we send a holiday letter along with our greeting

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19). There are some behaviors you repeat that just don’t make sense. But you’re about to get to the bottom of this, and you’ll soon exercise greater control over the matter. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 18). Aquarius musician and composer Snuffy Walden said, “Music is the answer. Does the question really matter?” Today you’ll use music to get into the optimum mood and solve your problem. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You need attention, and you’ll get it. Realizing that you need it (instead of denying this fact because you think you shouldn’t) will help you work in positive and constructive ways for the right kind of attention. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Dec. 3). There will be a fantastic addition to your home life. You’ll take your time getting to know people, and much success springs from this approach. In January, you’ll shoot for a particular aim, and it will feel so right. Someone falls in love with your winning ways this coming spring. You’ll love how your work is presented in May. Aries and Cancer people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 3, 25, 1, 29 and 19. ASTROLOGICAL QUESTIONS: “Help, Holiday! I’m a Pisces who wants to fall in love -- I really do. This guy I’m seeing, an Aries, says

tion. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Sometimes it’s OK to stop striving to live up to your potential. What if you simply stayed put? You won’t be able to relax for too long, but whatever comfort you can manage will give you much needed perspective. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll be given a lot of raw ingredients and not too much instruction as to how they should all go together. This is good news. You’re free to create. It will be what you make it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You respect your elders; you always have. You may not always have had the proper manners, attention and awareness to express your respect like you do now, though. So in some way, you’ll feel like you’re making up for that. SCORPIO (Oct. 24Nov. 21). You’re a giver. But you also know that if you give too much up front, no one will be interested. And people would rather pay something than get it for free. So you’ll make people work a little for your offerings, and everyone benefits. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’ll follow through with a thankless job. You know that no one will give you money, a trophy or even a cookie for this. But you don’t care. You’re doing it for personal reasons, and the reward will be significant, if only to you.

cards. The letter usually highlights events of immediate family members from the past year. This year there is a problem. Our 22-year-old son, “Dexter,” is in jail on burglary charges related to a drug problem. Many of our friends and relatives already know about this, but others are not aware. Our son’s siblings are doing well and we like to report on their activities. However, we are confused concerning Dexter. We really cannot send the holiday letter and leave him out, but neither can we fabricate a story concerning his status. Telling the truth would be informational but also awkward. We would appreciate your advice. — HOLIDAY LETTER WRITER DEAR LETTER WRITER: Write the letter as you usually would, and when you get to your

incarcerated son, say: “Dexter has taken some time to rethink his future. He sends you all his love.” You do not have to go into any more detail or belabor the point.

that I make it too hard for him to get to know me and that I obviously have a really tough time opening up. I don’t want to lose him, but maybe he’s right. Why can’t I let down my guard?” Because you don’t feel like it. You will when you feel like it. Pisces are so sensitive! If you let yourself, you could be a sponge, allowing others to fill you with their own emotions and agenda. That’s why you’re so reserved. You’ve done this in the past and felt the unique pain that comes from losing yourself. To some extent, we all live behind emotional safety walls of our own construction. The height of the wall is determined by how we perceive the threat on the other side. If you really think you’re

going to be hurt, your wall will be thick, high and bulletproof. That’s only natural and wise. I would be wary of anyone who wants you to open up faster than you really feel comfortable doing. For psychic Pisces, falling in love is a natural process and cannot be forced. CELEBRITY PROFILES: Sagittarius star Amanda Seyfried began her career as a model at age 11 and is now an A-list talent carrying films such as “Red Riding Hood” and “In Time.” Five Sagittarian luminaries promise that Seyfried has the intensity and energy level for a long and bright career in front of the spotlight. Born under a Leo moon, she likely feels the most at home and creative as the center of attention.

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(Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.) ■■■

Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send a business-size, self-addressed envelope, plus check or money order for $12 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby — Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included in price.)

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lings were not asked for input about your mother having another Abigail child may Van Buren be that the baby was Dear Abby as much a surprise to your parents as it is to all of you. Your complaining won’t improve the situation, which may be why you’ve been told you need an attitude adjustment. You say you grew up extremely fast. Well, it’s time to accelerate the process even more. This isn’t a competition for your parents’ love. I’m sure they love all of you and they’d show it if you stopped being self-centered. Please give it some thought.

and my parents have decided they want to have another kid. Shouldn’t parents talk to their other children about this? None of us were asked for our opinion — we were just informed. Mom has had health problems almost my entire life, so I had to grow up extremely fast. I watched her have a seizure while we were out shopping, and she was often in the hospital. I don’t want another child to go through this, too. When I say something I’m told I’m being selfish and rude. This new baby is already loved more because my dad hopes she will be better than me. Am I wrong to feel this is unfair? — UNHAPPY TEEN IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA DEAR UNHAPPY TEEN: Fairness may not enter into it at all. The reason you and your sib-

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Variety

11A • Daily Corinthian

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

xwordeditor@aol.com

12/03/11

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

By Brad Wilber (c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

12/03/11

Saturday, December 3, 2011


12A • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • Daily Corinthian

State ranks 15th in protecting kids from tobacco For the Daily Corinthian

WASHINGTON — Mississippi ranks 15th in the nation in funding programs to prevent kids from smoking and help smokers quit, according to a national report released today by a coalition of public health organizations. Mississippi currently spends $9.9 million a year on tobacco prevention and cessation programs, which is 25.3 percent of the $39.2 million recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Other key findings for Mississippi include: ■Mississippi this year will collect $265 million in revenue from the 1998 tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes, but will spend just 3.7 percent of it on tobacco prevention programs. This means Mississippi is spending less than 4 cents of every dollar in tobacco revenue to fight tobacco use. ■The tobacco companies spend $161.9 million a year to market their products in Mississippi. This is 16 times what the state spends on tobacco prevention.

“Mississippi has made a modest investment in programs to protect kids from tobacco, but falls far short of what the CDC recommends. To continue reducing tobacco use, Mississippi should increase funding for tobacco prevention and pass a strong, statewide smokefree law. Even in these difficult budget times, tobacco prevention is a smart investment that saves lives and saves money by reducing tobacco-related health care costs.� Matthew L. Myers President of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids The annual report on states’ funding of tobacco prevention programs, titled “A Broken Promise to Our Children: The 1998 State Tobacco Settlement 13 Years Later,� was released by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, American Heart Association, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Lung Association, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Americans for Nonsmokers’ Rights. From 1999 to 2006, Mississippi was a national leader in protecting kids from tobacco and was one of the few states that funded a tobacco prevention program at CDC-recommended levels. Despite the program’s success, Gover-

nor Haley Barbour in 2006 successfully sued to overturn a 2000 court order that set aside settlement money for the program. Mississippi has yet to fully restore funding for tobacco prevention. Mississippi is also falling short in implementing other proven measures to reduce tobacco use. Mississippi lacks a statewide smoke-free law that applies to all workplaces, restaurants and bars. Health advocates are urging Governor-Elect Bryant and the Legislature to pass such a law in the upcoming legislative session. “Mississippi has made a modest investment in programs to protect kids from tobacco, but falls far

short of what the CDC recommends,� said Matthew L. Myers, President of the Campaign for TobaccoFree Kids. “To continue reducing tobacco use, Mississippi should increase funding for tobacco prevention and pass a strong, statewide smoke-free law. Even in these difficult budget times, tobacco prevention is a smart investment that saves lives and saves money by reducing tobacco-related health care costs.� In Mississippi, 19.6 percent of high school students smoke, and 3,900 more kids become regular smokers each year. Tobacco annually claims 4,700 lives and costs the state $719 million in health care

bills. Nationally, the report finds that most states are failing to adequately fund tobacco prevention and cessation programs. Altogether, the states have cut funding for these programs to the lowest level since 1999, when they first started receiving tobacco settlement payments. Key national findings of the report include: â– The states this year will collect $25.6 billion from the tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes, but will spend just 1.8 percent of it - $456.7 million - on tobacco prevention programs. This means the states are spending less than two cents of every dollar in tobacco revenue to fight to-

bacco use. ■States have cut funding for tobacco prevention programs by 12 percent ($61.2 million) in the past year and by 36 percent ($260.5 million) in the past four years. ■Only two states - Alaska and North Dakota - currently fund tobacco prevention programs at the CDC-recommended level. The report warns that the nation’s progress in reducing smoking is at risk unless states increase funding for programs to prevent kids from smoking and help smokers quit. The United States has significantly reduced smoking among both youth and adults, but 19.3 percent of adults and 19.5 percent of high school students still smoke. Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death in the U.S., killing more than 400,000 people and costing $96 billion in health care bills each year. More information, including the full report and state-specific information, can be obtained at www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/ settlements.

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1B • Daily Corinthian

Local Schedule

Sports

Warriors roll in home opener BY H. LEE SMITH II

Today Basketball Biggersville @ Central (WXRZ), 6 Wayne Co. @ McNairy, 6 Walnut Invitational (G) Ashland-Potts Camp, 3 (B) Ashland-Potts Camp, 4:30 (G) Walnut-Ripley, 6 (B) Walnut-Ripley, 7:30 North Pontotoc Tourney Kossuth Soccer Center Hill Tournament (B) Corinth-Horn Lake, 8:30 a.m. (G) Corinth-Horn Lake, 9:45 a.m. (B) Corinth-Center Hill, 12:15 (G) Corinth-Center Hill, 1:30 Tuesday, Dec. 6 Basketball Itawamba @ Corinth (WXRZ), 6 Central @ West Union, 6 Kossuth @ Ingomar, 6 East Union @ Walnut, 6 Adamsville @ McNairy, 6 Soccer Corinth @ Tish County, 4:30/6:30 Thursday, Dec. 8 Basketball Ripley Invitational Walnut Friday, Dec. 9 Basketball Pontotoc @ Corinth (WXRZ), 6 Pine Grove @ Biggersville, 6 Central @ Holly Springs, 6 McNairy @ Southside Ripley Invitational Walnut Soccer Saltillo @ Corinth, 5/7 Saturday, Dec. 10 Basketball McNairy @ Obion Ruritan Shootout @ Walnut (G) AC-Marshall Academy, Noon (B) AC-Marshall Academy, 1:30 (G) Walnut-Fayette Acad., 3 (B) Walnut-Fayette Acad., 4:30 (G) Corinth-DeSoto Central, 6 (B) DeSoto Central-Grissom, Ala., 7:30 Vandiver Classic @ Baldwyn Biggersville (B) Kossuth Soccer Amory @ Corinth, 2:30 Tuesday, Dec. 13 Basketball Central @ Kossuth (WXRZ), 6 Thrasher @ Biggersville, 6 Thursday, Dec. 15 Basketball Baldwyn Classic Walnut

Late Basketball

Saturday, December 3, 2011

lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

The Corinth Warriors got the bad taste out of their collective mouths. Playing at home for the first time since losing a heartbreaker to Booneville in the Class 3A North Half championship, Corinth used a 25-8 advantage in the third quarter to run past Adamsville, Tenn., 79-50 on Friday. Corinth (4-1) got 19 point each from Eric Richardson and Deione Weeks, including 10 and eight, respectively, in the quarter that included 16 straight points by the War-

riors. In the opener, the Lady Cardinals placed five players in double figures and the quintet combined for all but two points as Adamsville cruised to a 72-52 decision. The Lady Warriors (1-3) cut a 26-point deficit to 12 midway of the fourth before the Lady Cards scored the game’s final eight points. Corinth returns to Division 1-4A play on Tuesday when it plays host to Itawamba AHS. • The Warriors led 34-22 at recess despite shooting just 34 percent (12-35) from the floor over the first 16

minutes. Adamsville opened the third with four straight points, but Corinth got its transition game going and ended the frame on a 25-4 advantage, including 16 straight sandwiched between buckets by Tucker Campbell. CHS was 11-of-17 from the floor in the period, recording assists on all but four buckets in the 25-point outburst. Weeks and Richardson traded buckets twice in the run, with Weeks recorded his second dunk of the night. Richardson rebounded his own miss with 27 seconds

left bumping Corinth’s run to 16 unanswered. Campbell ended the run with 13 seconds left in the frame, but Jazz Garner punctuated the period with his third three-ball of the night at the buzzer. Kendall Stafford paced a 20-point fourth with six points on a pair of triples. Garner added 13 points to the effort and Kendrick Williams rounded out the double-figure scorers with 11. Weeks filled up the stat sheet in addition to sharing Please see WARRIORS | 2B

Staff Photo James McQuaid Murphy

Senior forward Olivia Suitor works her way past the North Pontotoc defense during last night’s doubleheader matchup. Suitor has contributed two goals and two assists to the 27-point season for the Lady Warriors, who are now 7-3 overall,

BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

WALNUT — The round-robin format has played out perfectly. Both Walnut and Ripley remained unbeaten through two rounds and will meet tonight for the championship of the Walnut Invitational. Walnut took a pair from Potts Camp and Ripley swept Ashland in Thursday’s round, which finished too late for Friday’s edition. Ripley clubbed Potts Camp in Monday’s first two games. Ashland forfeited the final two games with the host club after snow began to fall in Tippah County. Ashland and Potts Camp will open up today’s four-game slate in what amount’s to a pair of consolation contests. Play begins at 3, with the fourth and final game set for a 7:30 tip.

CHS kicks into 1-4A play with double win BY JAMES MCQUAID MURPHY jmurphy@dailycorinthian.com

Heading into their first Division 1-4A match-up, the Warrior soccer squadrons pulled an easy double victory over North Pontotoc last night, as the men’s unit closed the evening on a decisive 4-1 win after watching the Lady Warriors drop-kick the Viking gals 6-2. Coaches Gregg Parker and Brian Thomas agree: “It’s really good for our confidence

(B) Ripley 68, Ashland 63 Ashland 15 14 18 16 — 63 Ripley 13 20 18 17 — 68 ASHLAND (63): D. Dukes 31, D. Holcomb 11. RIPLEY (68): Maliak Pearson 26, Canaan Ratiff 13, Isaac Bails 11. Record: Ripley 5-2.

(G) Walnut 68, Potts Camp 60 Potts Camp 10 19 9 22 — 60 Walnut 22 19 12 15 — 68 POTTS CAMP (60): T. Woods 23, H. Davis 14. WALNUT (68): Morgan Burroughs 17, Becky Robinson 13, Riley Quinn 11, Presley Pulse 10. Record: Walnut 4-0.

(B) Walnut 61, Potts Camp 42 Potts Camp 13 8 12 9 — 42 Walnut 16 19 11 15 — 61 POTTS CAMP (42): Lajohn Curry 12, Xavioh Allen 10. WALNUT (61): Dominic Steele 22, Devonte Bell 15. Record: Walnut 2-2.

utes later to take the lead for Corinth. Opening the second, Olivia Suitor gained another upper hand at just under 10 minutes, followed shortly thereafter by the highlight of the game, courtesy of junior Stennett Smith. Smith caught a swift header from a well-placed corner kick by Frances Bullard to stack another one up over the Lady Vikings, while Bullard went on to close the match with a point-yielding

spot kick at five minutes out. As for the men’s unit, they didn’t waste as much time bringing it to the Vikings - subtract 1:41 from the initial 40 and in comes senior forward John Mathis with a driller to shatter Pontotoc’s confidence. Skip ahead to 15 minutes in, where Josh Trest lands a spot kick for the second point of the game, and from there the Vikings failed to Please see CHS | 2B

Basketball Roundup

(G) Ripley 72, Ashland 53 Ashland 8 18 8 19 — 53 Ripley 19 17 17 19 — 72 ASHLAND (53): A. Tucker 21, D. Anderson 10. RIPLEY (72): Jayla Chills 20, Becca Ruckes 19. Record: Ripley 6-1.

to open our first division games with a win.” Indeed. Opening the Warrior’s scoring for the night was freshman midfielder Brianna Scobey at just under 20 minutes in, to tie things up after a Pontotoc plus earlier in the half. The Lady Warriors young elite would own the first 40 minutes in fact, as next up, eighth-grader Sierra Maness follows suit with a crowdrouser two-and-a-half min-

(B) Biggersville 82, Wheeler 52 @ Wheeler Biggersville 17 16 22 27 — 82 Wheeler 12 12 19 9 — 52 BIGGERSVILLE (82): Dexter Stafford 24, Blake Anderson 11, Emmanual Simmons 9, Martonious Watson

8, Darrian Williams 6, Daniel Simmons 6, Darian Barnett 4, Marquis Watson 4, Mike Patterson 3, Shaun Watson 2, Blake Stacey 2, Tyran Davis 2, Tevin Watson 1. WHEELER (52): Brandon Erby 17, Carter Swinney 8, Logan McBrayer 7, Shaquille Rogers 6, Hunter Brown 6, Ryan Woods 4, Tyler Miller 3, Cameron McGava 1. 3-pointers: (B) Anderson 2, (W)

Miller, McBrayer. Records: Biggersville 5-1 (2-0 in Division 1-1A).

(G) Biggersville 53, Wheeler 38 Biggersville 13 15 8 17 — 53 Wheeler 9 11 7 11 — 38 BIGGERSVILLE (53): Jada Tubbs

17, Tyler Shelley 14, LaIndria Sorrell 10, Savannah Davis 6, Chloe Henson 4, Dana Thompson 2. WHEELER (38): Nyesha Lowry 14, Alyiah Miller 13, Emilie Grace 9, Kelsey Lowry 2. 3-pointers: (B) Shelley 2, Sorrell 2, Tubbs 2. Records: Biggersville 5-2 (2-0 in Division 1-1A).

Olive Branch rallies to beat Petal The Associated Press

JACKSON — Todd Mays rushed for a 1-yard touchdown and then the go-ahead 2-point conversion with 1:12 remaining in the fourth quarter as Olive Branch rallied to beat Petal 35-34 on Friday night and claim the Mississippi High School Athletics Association 6A state championship. It’s the first state title for

the Conquistadors (15-0), who nearly ended up losers to Petal (10-5) on the final play. Petal’s Austin Franklin missed a 38-yard field goal as time expired. Franklin made a 43-yard field goal on the previous snap, but an Olive Branch player was ruled offsides, which is a dead ball penalty in the MHSAA. Mays rushed for 84 yards

and four touchdowns for Olive Branch. Petal quarterback Anthony Alford rushed for 201 yards and three touchdowns. He was also 8-for-8 passing for 169 yards and two touchdowns. Class 2A

West Bolivar 26, East Marion 7

Jovious Wade rushed for 61 yards and a touchdown as West Bolivar beat East Marion 26-7 to claim the Class 2A state championship. It’s the fifth state title for West Bolivar and its first since 2007. The Eagles forced seven East Marion turnovers. Demario Brown sealed the Please see PETAL | 2B


Sports

Saturday, December 3, 2011

PETAL: Haynes had a rushing touchdown for West Bolivar CONTINUED FROM 1B

game for the Eagles on Friday with a 46-yard fumble return in the third quarter to give West Bolivar a 19-7 lead. Demarrion Haynes also had a rushing touchdown for West Bolivar (15-1), which finished with 243 total yards. Xavier Grindle scored East Marion’s only touchdown on a 78-yard pass from Deandrey Johnson in the first quarter. Grindle also rushed for a teamhigh 69 yards. East Marion finished with a 13-2 record. Class 1A

Noxapater 21 Shaw 10 Tray Baber rushed for 160 yards on 19 carries and scored a touchdown as Noxapater beat Shaw 21-10 to claim the Class 1A state championship. It’s the Tigers’ first state title. Quarterback Ethan Hamilton also had a rushing touchdown for Noxapater (12-3) and Barrett Carter sealed it with a 65-yard fumble return for a touchdown in the second quarter that made it 21-0. Corderius Shepherd scored Shaw’s only touchdown with a 5-yard run in the fourth quarter. The Hawks finish 12-3.

CHS: ‘The guys were a bit rusty’ CONTINUED FROM 1B

respond until six minutes short of the half. The second round was a bit stiff, as both Corinth and North Pontotoc worked some warmth back into their legs, which Coach Parker later attributed to the long lay-off due to Thanksgiving. “The guys were a bit rusty,� he said, “but they settled in the second half.� North Pontotoc improved its attack during the latter series and made several stabs at regaining an even keel, but the Viking longship was ultimately destined to sink. Midway through the final half, two more points for Corinth in under three minutes, the first one courtesy of a spot kick by Mathis, who took a foul on what appeared to be a misplaced Viking headbutt, while the second came by way of sophomore John Michael McFall, who sealed the deal for Corinth with a well-placed ground shot fired up the Vikings right gunwhale. It barely slipped past under tight pressure, but it certainly sweetened the deal for the Warriors.

(B) Corinth 4, N. Pontotoc 1 Goals: John Mathis 2, Josh Trest, John Michael McFall. Assists: Diego Alonzo, Mathis, Albert Stanley. Saves: Cullen Grantham 9. Shots Taken: 11. Â

(G) Corinth 6, N. Pontotoc 2 Â Goals: Brianna Scobey 2, Francis Bullard, Sierra Maness, Stennett Smith, Olivia Suitor. Assists: Bullard Maness, Sarah Shea, Suitor. Saves: Madison Bickert 5. Shots Taken: 19.

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Ohio falls to N. Illinois in MAC title game The Associated Press

DETROIT — All Ohio needed was one big play on offense — anything that could help the Bobcats hold off Northern Illinois and win their first MidAmerican Conference title in more than four decades. Matt Weller missed a field goal. Tyler Tettleton threw an interception. Finally, with the game tied, a miscue on a shotgun snap cost Ohio a dozen more yards. “We had plenty of chances, we just didn’t do enough with them in the second half,� coach Frank Solich said. “All three phases of the game had some kind of collapse in the second half. We didn’t do anything as well as we needed to

do.� In the end, the Bobcats were left helpless when Mathew Sims kicked a 33-yard field goal on the final play to give Northern Illinois a 23-20 victory Friday night in the MAC championship game. Ohio led 20-0 at halftime, but Chandler Harnish and the Huskies rallied when the Bobcats couldn’t put them away. Tettleton, the son of former major league catcher Mickey Tettleton, went 18 of 31 for 218 yards with three interceptions. He also ran for a touchdown in the second quarter. With the score 20-7 in the fourth, Weller missed a 36yard field goal, his first miss of the season from inside 40.

Still, Ohio wasn’t in too much trouble until Tettleton’s deep pass over the middle was picked off by Jimmie Ward at the Northern Illinois 37 with 8:49 to play. Harnish needed only four plays to cut into the lead. He threw a 32-yard touchdown pass to Martel Moore to make it 20-13. Sims missed the extra point, but when the Huskies got the ball back, they went 57 yards in six plays, tying it on Harnish’s 22-yard scoring pass to Nathan Palmer with 2:52 remaining. “We just didn’t get any breaks in the second half, and they kept making one great play after another,� said Ohio

linebacker Noah Keller, who had 13 tackles, an interception, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery and a half-sack. With the game suddenly tied, a botched snap cost Ohio 12 yards, and after the Bobcats punted, Northern Illinois took over on its own 36 with 1:18 to play. Perez Ashford leaped backward to make a terrific catch for a 27-yard gain, and Harnish found Moore for 15 yards to the Ohio 19. After that, it was just a question of lining up Sims for the winning kick. “I knew I wasn’t going to let my team down twice,� Sims said. “I just lost my focus on the extra point, but I was ready for that field goal.�

WARRIORS: Erin Frazier led Corinth with 14 points and 12 boards, Green tallied 9 CONTINUED FROM 1B

game scoring honors. The senior had five rebounds, four steals and four assists in just some 17 minutes on the floor. Ten Adamsville players got in on the scoring, but none in double figures. Campbell’s nine led the way for the visitors. Corinth finished 31-of-71 from the floor, including 6-of20 from the arc. The Warriors outrebounded the Cardinals 4433, and got 18 second-chance points off 18 offensive boards. ■The Lady Warriors had over two times as many turn-

overs (40) as field goals (18) in opening their home campaign on the short end. Adamsville’s Nikki White led all scorers with 19 as four of five starters scored in double figures. Ralanda Lloyd came off the bench for 10 markers before fouling out. Erin Frazier led Corinth with 14 points and 12 boards. Audrianna Green tallied nine of her 10 points in the fourth, helping CHS cut 18 points off of what was once a 30-point deficit by hitting 7-of8 from the line the first four minutes of the fourth. CHS was 18-of-49 from the

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floor. The Lady Warriors 40 turnovers were evenly split among the halves.

(G) Adamsville 72, Corinth 52 Adamsville 23 13 25 11 — 72 Corinth 14 13 8 17 — 52  ADAMSVILLE (72): Nikki White 19, Brianne Knight 18, Macayla Kiddy 12, Keantinez Lloyd 11, Ralanda Lloyd 10. Simone Wilson 2. CORINTH (52): Erin Frazier 14, Audrianna Green 10, Teosha Boyd 10, Aspen Stricklen 7, Alexis Jacobs 7, Kadejhi Long 4. 3-pointers: (A) White 5. (C) None. Record: Corinth 1-3.

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(B) Corinth 79, Adamsville 50 Adamsville 11 11 8 20 — 50 Corinth 22 12 25 20 — 79  ADAMSVILLE (50): Tucker Campbell 9, Josh Shoate 8, Lane Burcham 6, Tyler Hammock 5, Ross Burcham 4, Kasey Hurley 4, Jake Miller 4, Brandon White 4, Jake Baker 3, John Mark Pettit 3. CORINTH (79): Eric Richardson 19, Deione Weeks 19, Jazz Garner 13, Kendrick Williams 11, Kendall Stafford 6, Jose Contreras 4, Darius Herman 3, Justin Mills 2, Dondre Green 2. 3-pointers: (A) Hammock, Campbell, Pettit. (C) Garner 3, Stafford 2, Herman. Record: Corinth 4-1.

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Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • 3B

Thursday, Nov. 24

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32.

Chris Johnson

CHRIS JOHNSON, RB, TITANS During a sloppy game in cold, rainy conditions played on a newly sodded LP Field in Nashville, CJ proved to be a mudder. The much-maligned Johnson had 23 carries for a season-high 190 yards, his 27th career 100-yard performance and his best effort since Nov. 1, 2008 in a 23–17 victory over the Buccaneers. It was not a flawless effort by Johnson, who lost a fumble — one of nine combined turnovers on the day. BEANIE WELLS, RB, CARDINALS Ottis Anderson, Emmitt Smith, Edgerrin James and every other running back in Cardinals history now trail Wells, who set a new franchise standard with 27 carries for a team-record 228 yards and one TD in a 23–20 win at St. Louis — the Cardinals’ hometown from 1960-87 before the team moved to Phoenix in 1988. TOM BRADY, QB, PATRIOTS The three-time Super Bowl champion was in rare form, even by his own lofty standards, in a 38–20 victory on the road against the Eagles in a rematch of Super Bowl XXXIX. Brady picked apart Philly’s vaunted secondary, completing 24-of-34 passes for 361 yards, three TDs — two to Wes Welker and one to Rob Gronkowski — and zero INTs in the win. TIM TEBOW, QB, BRONCOS Superman continued his meteoric rise, improving to 5–1 as a starter this season following a 16–13 overtime win over the AFC West rival Chargers. Tebow completed 9-of-18 passes for 143 yards, one TD and zero INTs, while tucking the ball on 22 carries for 67 rushing yards. The polarizing lefty now has 11 total TDs and only two turnovers, while the Broncos remain alive in the division race despite their 1–4 start. DREW BREES, QB, SAINTS Eli Manning’s New Orleans homecoming was spoiled by the Big Easy’s favorite quarterback. Brees completed 24-of-38 passes for 363 yards, four TDs and zero INTs, while scrambling for another score on the ground — after which the 6'0" passer attempted to dunk the ball over the goal post, settling instead for a finger-roll — during a 49–24 rout on Monday night. TERRELL SUGGS, LB, RAVENS As expected, the Harbaugh Bowl — the NFL’s first head-coaching matchup between brothers, the 49ers’ Jim and Ravens’ John — was a defensive battle between two of the top stop-units in the game. Baltimore outlasted San Francisco on Thanksgiving night, thanks in large part to a dominant performance by Suggs, who had three sacks and a forced fumble in a 16–6 win.

■ Vikings running back ADRIAN PETERSON missed his first game of the season — and only the fourth game of his career — against the Falcons in Week 12 after suffering a high left-ankle sprain in the first quarter against the Raiders in Week 11. With the fantasy playoffs around the corner, running back depth will be tested for Peterson owners should the All-Pro continue to miss time.

Packers Ravens 49ers Patriots Steelers Saints Lions Falcons Cowboys Texans Giants Bears Bengals Titans Broncos Raiders Jets Bills Eagles Chargers Buccaneers Panthers Redskins Seahawks Cardinals Browns Dolphins Jaguars Chiefs Vikings Rams Colts

(11-0) (8-3) (9-2) (8-3) (8-3) (8-3) (7-4) (7-4) (7-4) (8-3) (6-5) (7-4) (7-4) (6-5) (6-5) (7-4) (6-5) (5-6) (4-7) (4-7) (4-7) (3-8) (4-7) (4-7) (4-7) (4-7) (3-8) (3-8) (4-7) (2-9) (2-9) (0-11)

Win 17th consecutive game by devouring rival Lions on Thanksgiving Day. Defense ties franchise record with nine sacks of San Francisco’s Alex Smith. Little brother Jim loses to older brother John in first-ever Harbaugh Bowl. Fall behind 10–0, before going on 38–10 run to clip Eagles’ wings in Philly. Big Ben plays through broken thumb; Troy Polamalu exits with head injury. Drew Brees accounts for five total TDs in Big Easy blowout of Giants on MNF. Matthew Stafford continues trend, throws three INTs in loss to Green Bay. Fail to finish strong for second straight week, allow Vikings to hang around. Jason Witten tackles cheerleader; Dallas takes over first place in NFC East. First Matt Schaub (Lisfranc), now Matt Leinart (collarbone) out for season. Have lost three straight heading into showdown with undefeated Packers. Caleb Hanie struggles, throws three INTs in first start in place of Jay Cutler. A.J. Green soars for 51-yard grab, sets up winning FG to defeat Cleveland. Chris Johnson has 333 rush yards in last three games, 366 in first eight. Underrated D allowing just 15 points per game in five wins by Tim Tebow. Sebastian Janikowski kicks franchise-record six FGs in win over Chicago. Mark Sanchez throws career-high four TDs in comeback win over Buffalo. Stevie Johnson mocks Plaxico Burress shooting, apologizes after loss to Jets. Lose for eighth time in last nine games at “The Linc;” fans chant “Fire Andy!” Bolts’ season has “just snowballed out of control,” according to Philip Rivers. Commit five turnovers against Titans, lose late lead in fifth consecutive loss. Snap 12-game road losing streak dating back to Dec. 1999 with win in Indy. Honor fourth anniversary of Sean Taylor’s death with upset win at Seattle. Must bounce back from defeat to Redskins for Thursday night vs. Eagles. Patrick Peterson ties NFL record with fourth punt return TD of the season. Swept by Cincy in Buckeye Bowl, have lost six of last seven to in-state rivals. Three-game winning streak ended by America’s Team on Thanksgiving Day. Jack Del Rio fired, defensive coordinator Mel Tucker named interim coach. Have not scored TD in 45 drives, dating back to third quarter vs. Broncos. Percy Harvin fails to score on 104-yard return, longest non-TD since 1991. League’s worst run defense lays out red carpet for Cardinals’ Beanie Wells. Curtis Painter benched, DC Larry Coyer fired, Titanic deck chairs rearranged.

Athlon Sports

Thanksgiving Turkey Ndamukong Suh stomps, labeled “dirty” player By NATHAN RUSH Athlon Sports Editor

The Detroit Lions have been playing on Thanksgiving since 1934 and there have been a few Turkey Day blowouts since then. But this year provided a new low for the Lions, as Ndamukong Suh was ejected from a nationally televised game against the undefeated, reigning Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers. With families gathered around the television across the country, the 6'4", 307-pound All-Pro defensive tackle stomped on the right arm of guard Evan Dietrich-Smith, following a third-down stop in the third quarter. Suh was not only thrown out of the game, but the “unsportsmanlike conduct” penalty gave the Packers a fresh set of downs. Rather than settling for a field goal — which, if successful, would have made the score 10–0 — Green Bay scored a touchdown on a one-yard run from John Kuhn to take a 14–0 lead it would not relinquish. The Lions, having lost momentum and arguably their best player, fell apart from that point on, ultimately losing 27–15 to the NFC North rivals. “You have to keep your composure,” said Packers cornerback and Heisman Trophy-winning Michigan man Charles Woodson. “In big games, you need your best players there. They broke and we took advantage of it.” Despite being caught on tape and already found guilty in the court of public opinion, Suh refused to accept responsibility for his actions during his postgame press conference, choosing instead to make excuses.

Athlon Board of Experts This Week’s Games & Experts’ Records Eagles at Seahawks (Thu.) Jets at Redskins Chiefs at Bears Titans at Bills Raiders at Dolphins Bengals at Steelers Falcons at Texans Broncos at Vikings Panthers at Buccaneers Colts at Patriots Ravens at Browns Packers at Giants Cowboys at Cardinals Rams at 49ers Lions at Saints Chargers at Jaguars (Mon.)

Athlon Sports

Since being selected No. 2 overall out of Nebraska in 2010, Ndamukong Suh has been fined a grand total of $42,500 for hits and suspended two games for stomping.

“I apologize to my teammates and my fans and my coaches for putting myself in a position to be misinterpreted and taken out of the game,” said Suh, showing no remorse. “What I did was remove myself from the situation the best way I felt. I was being held down. My intentions were not to kick anybody, as I did not. As you see, I was walking away from the situation.” This, however, was not an isolated incident for Suh, who — despite his outgoing public persona and national advertising deals off-the-field — has been labeled a “dirty” player for his play between the lines.

Mitchell Light 120-56

Rob Doster 115-61

Eagles by 1 Jets by 5 Bears by 7 Titans by 3 Dolphins by 3 Steelers by 7 Texans by 1 Broncos by 10 Buccaneers by 3 Patriots by 24 Ravens by 6 Packers by 10 Cowboys by 3 49ers by 14 Saints by 10 Jaguars by 7

Eagles by 4 Jets by 6 Bears by 1 Titans by 2 Raiders by 1 Steelers by 5 Falcons by 3 Broncos by 4 Buccaneers by 1 Patriots by 14 Ravens by 7 Packers by 6 Cowboys by 3 49ers by 9 Saints by 2 Chargers by 1

Nathan Rush 119-57 Eagles by 3 Jets by 8 Bears by 4 Titans by 6 Dolphins by 2 Steelers by 5 Falcons by 9 Broncos by 1 Panthers by 4 Patriots by 20 Ravens by 13 Packers by 6 Cowboys by 7 49ers by 20 Saints by 6 Chargers by 4

But since his public humiliation on Thanksgiving, Suh has changed his stance, admitting he was wrong. “I have had time to reflect and I want to sincerely apologize for letting my teammates down, the organization, and especially to my fans who look to me for positive inspiration,” Suh posted on his Facebook page. “I want to reiterate my commitment to working to become a better player, and professional — on and off the field. My reaction on Thursday was unacceptable. I made a mistake, and have learned from it. I hope to direct the focus back to the task at hand — by winning.”

Patrick Snow 124-52

Steven Lassan 119-57

Consensus

Eagles by 4 Jets by 3 Bears by 2 Titans by 6 Dolphins by 3 Steelers by 1 Falcons by 3 Broncos by 3 Buccaneers by 3 Patriots by 33 Ravens by 2 Packers by 8 Cowboys by 7 49ers by 9 Saints by 8 Jaguars by 3

Eagles by 4 Jets by 3 Bears by 9 Bills by 3 Raiders by 7 Steelers by 10 Falcons by 6 Broncos by 2 Buccaneers by 5 Patriots by 24 Ravens by 3 Packers by 7 Cowboys by 6 49ers by 17 Saints by 11 Chargers by 8

Eagles by 3 Jets by 5 Bears by 5 Titans by 3 Dolphins by 1 Steelers by 6 Falcons by 4 Broncos by 4 Buccaneers by 2 Patriots by 23 Ravens by 6 Packers by 7 Cowboys by 5 49ers by 14 Saints by 7 Chargers by 1

122-54

Green Bay Dallas Baltimore

27 20 16

Detroit Miami San Francisco

15 19 6

28 23 24 20 23 23 27 23 25 38 16 13

Buffalo Cleveland Minnesota Jacksonville St. Louis Tampa Bay Indianapolis Seattle Chicago Philadelphia San Diego Kansas City

49

N.Y. Giants

at

Seattle

8:20 p.m.

at at at at at at at at at at at at at at

Washington Chicago Buffalo Miami Pittsburgh Houston Minnesota Tampa Bay New England Cleveland N.Y. Giants Arizona San Francisco New Orleans

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 4:05 p.m. 4:15 p.m. 4:15 p.m. 4:15 p.m. 8:20 p.m.

at

Jacksonville

8:30 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 27 N.Y. Jets Cincinnati Atlanta Houston Arizona Tennessee Carolina Washington Oakland New England Denver Pittsburgh

24 20 14 13 20 17 19 17 20 20 (ot) 13 9

Monday, Nov. 28 New Orleans

24

Thursday, Dec. 1 Philadelphia

Sunday, Dec. 4 N.Y. Jets Kansas City Tennessee Oakland Cincinnati Atlanta Denver Carolina Indianapolis Baltimore Green Bay Dallas St. Louis Detroit

Monday, Dec. 5 San Diego

EAGLES (4-7) AT SEAHAWKS (4-7) When the schedule was released, no one would have predicted that Philadelphia and Seattle would enter this Thursday night bird fight with identical records. With a short week of rest, Michael Vick (ribs) may be forced to sit out, giving Vince Young his third straight start. JETS (6-5) AT REDSKINS (4-7) New York aims to win in back-to-back weeks for the first time since Weeks 6-7. CHIEFS (4-7) AT BEARS (7-4) These two teams made the playoffs last year and had hopes of returning to the postseason until losing their quarterbacks — Matt Cassel (hand) and Jay Cutler (thumb) — to injury. TITANS (6-5) AT BILLS (5-6) The last time these two teams met, Tennessee owner Bud Adams celebrated a 41–17 win by shooting the bird to rival Buffalo owner Ralph Wilson and any Bills fan in sight while dancing in his owner’s box. Now 88 years old, Adams has presumably matured since then and may or may not flip off the 93-year-old Wilson again. RAIDERS (7-4) AT DOLPHINS (3-8) Both squads are 3–1 over their last four games. But Oakland still has a playoff berth in reach. BENGALS (7-4) AT STEELERS (8-3) Cincinnati faces Pittsburgh for the second time in four games, after losing 24–17 in Week 10. In that game, the Steel Curtain forced Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton into rookie mistakes, including two fourth-quarter INTs. FALCONS (7-4) AT TEXANS (8-3) Houston has a problem — at quarterback. After losing Matt Schaub and Matt Leinart to season-ending injuries, the Texans have become desperate, turning to third-stringer T.J. Yates and working out washed-up has-beens like Jake Delhomme and Jeff Garcia. BRONCOS (6-5) AT VIKINGS (2-9) Tim Tebow attempts to improve his record as a starter to 6–1 this season. However, this will be his first career NFL start inside a dome. PANTHERS (3-8) AT BUCCANEERS (4-7) This is the first of many division games between giant young quarterbacks — Newton (6'5", 248) and Josh Freeman (6'6", 248). COLTS (0-11) AT PATRIOTS (8-3) What would have been a Peyton Manning vs. Tom Brady heavyweight fight on Sunday night has become a game so bad that it had to be flexed off of NBC’s schedule and Las Vegas is favoring the Patriots by 20 or more points. RAVENS (8-3) AT BROWNS (4-7) The relocated Jim Browns head back home to face the expansion Courtney Browns in the game Art Modell made possible when he moved the Browns to Baltimore in 1996. PACKERS (11-0) AT GIANTS (6-5) Big Blue is on a three-game slide, while the Cheesehead Nation hasn’t experienced a loss since Dec. 19, 2010. COWBOYS (7-4) AT CARDINALS (4-7) Emmitt Smith rushed for 17,162 yards for the Boys and 1,193 yards for the Cards. Hopefully the results of this game won’t be so lopsided. RAMS (2-9) AT 49ERS (9-2) St. Louis’ 32nd-ranked rush defense (159 ypg) and San Fran’s No. 1 rush defense (75.5 ypg) meet in a game between the worst and first of the NFC West division. LIONS (7-4) AT SAINTS (8-3) Both teams must avoid a hangover, albeit for decidedly different reasons. Detroit embarrassed itself on Thanksgiving; New Orleans was unstoppable on Monday night. CHARGERS (4-7) AT JAGUARS (3-8) Jacksonville just fired its head coach and is in the process of selling its franchise. Somehow, San Diego seems to be an even worse trainwreck. The Bolts are riding a six-game losing streak after entering their bye with a 4–1 mark.

Lynch carries Seahawks to 31-14 win over Eagles The Associated Press

SEATTLE— Marshawn Lynch loves the prime-time stage, even if he’s rarely given such a spotlight. Seattle’s hard-charging running back bulled through Philadelphia for 148 yards and a pair of first-half touchdowns, David Hawthorne returned the third of Vince Young’s four interceptions 77 yards for a score, and the Seahawks rolled to a 31-14 victory Thursday night that only added to the Eagles’ miserable season. Lynch ran into and escaped from a massive pileup for a 15yard TD run in the first quar-

ter, then made a quick cut and went back against the flow for a 40-yard scoring dash on the first play of the second quarter to give the Seahawks (5-7) a 14-0 lead. Golden Tate’s 11-yard, toetapping touchdown grab along the back edge of the end zone in the third quarter pushed Seattle’s cushion to 17 over the Eagles (4-8). But the Seahawks’ third victory in their last four games wasn’t secured until Hawthorne stepped in front of a swing pass intended for LeSean McCoy and raced untouched in the other direction

with 4:24 left. Making his third straight start in place of Michael Vick and his two broken ribs, Young couldn’t find the same magic he did in the 2006 Rose Bowl when he led Texas to an upset of Pete Carroll and USC. Young’s first pass of the night was an awful interception thrown right to Seattle safety Kam Chancellor and nowhere near an Eagles receiver. Young was intercepted in the third quarter as well when a perfect pass deflected off the hands of Riley Cooper and into the hands of cornerback Brandon Browner. Both

turnovers led to Seattle touchdowns. Then came a pass for McCoy when Young clearly didn’t see Hawthorne, ruining the Eagles’ last chance to rally. For good measure, Young added one more interception in the final moments, giving him a career-high four picks. Young finished 17 of 29 for 208 yards. McCoy got more chances than he did last Sunday against New England when he touched the ball just 14 times, a number that drew criticism from Eagles fans believing the leading rusher in the NFL deserved more op-

portunities. McCoy finished with 84 yards on 17 carries and added another four catches for 49 yards. But he was upstaged by Lynch. For the fourth time in five games, Lynch topped 100 yards — and the one time he didn’t, he finished with 88 yards in a victory over St. Louis. He had 90 yards by halftime on Thursday night, the most first-half yards rushing in his career. He averaged 6.7 yards per carry and almost immediately provided a spark the Seahawks needed on a short week.


4B • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • Daily Corinthian

Schnellenberger says goodbye to the sideline The Associated Press

BOCA RATON, Fla. — Howard Schnellenberger’s voice is distinctive, a rich, deep baritone that begs to be imitated. Say the word “pipe” to any football fan in South Florida, and he’ll almost certainly come to mind. In a region where football is king, he’s royalty. His legacy was complete long ago. And on Saturday, he completes his coaching life. Schnellenberger — the only person-in-charge of Florida Atlantic football since its founding in 1998 and first practice two years later — coaches his final game on Saturday, when the Owls (1-10) host Louisiana-Monroe (3-8) in the Sun Belt finale for both teams. The game will take place in perhaps the crown jewel of Schnellenberger’s time at FAU, the 2-month-old stadium that even the university president calls “The House that Howard Built.” “It’s going to be a lot of emotion,” FAU defensive back Marcus Bartels said. “Add in coach’s last game, the last game he’s ever going to coach, it’s a whole lot more than just another end-of-the-year. I just hope we can send

him out on a good note.” It’ll be the 312th college game for Schnellenberger as a head coach, and will cap the worst of his 27 seasons at the college level. FAU earned its first win of the season just last week. Next week, FAU plans to introduce Nebraska defensive coordinator Carl Pelini as the replacement for Schnellenberger; a person familiar with the hiring process said the sides are working toward finalizing an agreement this weekend. Pelini’s tenure will presumably start Monday. For now, FAU is all about Howard, one more time. And if Schnellenberger is particularly thankful for anything this week, it’s that his Owls aren’t still winless going into the finale. “To win the 11th game, to stop a 10-game losing streak, in your last year of coaching, after experiencing the joy of everybody associated with Florida Atlantic University and the opening of their new stadium ... all that coupled with stopping the bleeding gave a ranking of joy, but with an altogether different feeling,” Schnellenberger said. “There was relief. There was joy. There was positive. There

was a reprieve.” He can thank Alfred Morris for that reprieve. In short, Schnellenberger will surely remember his name now. Morris ran for a careerhigh four touchdowns last week, literally carrying FAU to a 38-35 win over Alabama-Birmingham. When asked about some of his favorite Schnellenberger stories this week, Morris had one from 2009, his third year on campus, that particularly stood out. Around FAU, it’s known as The Ralph Story. “He called me Ralph and got mad because I didn’t answer,” Morris said. “I was like, ‘I didn’t know. That’s not my name. How did you expect me to know you were talking to me?’ That’s always going to stick with me. It was definitely funny.” It’s just another story of Schnellenberger, who announced his retirement in August. He has coached with legends like Bear Bryant and Don Shula, and credits that duo, Blanton Collier, George Allen and Paulie Miller — his high school coach — for “passing the torch” to him, which is why he’s planning to write an autobiog-

raphy bearing that title. He recruited Joe Namath, was the offensive coordinator for three national championship teams at Alabama in the 1960s and ran the offense for Shula’s undefeated Miami Dolphins in 1972. “Don Shula’s perfect season,” Schnellenberger says, slyly, “was partially mine.” He resurrected a program at Louisville, flopped in his one year at Oklahoma, was an assistant once with the Los Angeles Rams and struggled in his time coaching the Baltimore Colts. What he’s likely best remembered for, however, is what he did with the Miami Hurricanes. “If Howard Schnellenberger had stayed for more time at the University of Miami,” former Florida State coach Bobby Bowden once said, “he would of had more championship rings than fingers to wear ‘em, know what I mean?” Schnellenberger took over the Hurricanes in 1979, armed with a pipe — he used to leave them behind on recruiting trips, a calling card of sorts — and bold proclamations, such as how Miami would win a national championship. Five years later, the

Hurricanes did exactly that, the first of five they claimed in a span of 19 years. “Howard Schnellenberger set the standard here,” Miami offensive line coach Art Kehoe said. Schnellenberger left Miami after that 1983 season for an opportunity in the USFL that never panned out, a decision that he’s regretted somewhat ever since. When FAU decided to start a program in 1998, the school asked Schnellenberger for help. Two years later, he was running the Owls’ first practice. The football office complex is now loaded with trophies and plaques, memories and accomplishments. FAU has been to the Division I-AA semifinals, won a Sun Belt title and prevailed in two bowl games under Schnellenberger. Many of the people from those games are expected to be there for Saturday’s finale. Not for a goodbye — but rather, a thank you. “Life is full of symbolisms and ceremony,” Schnellenberger said. “Sports is a great opportunity for those things to have real meaning. And it’ll have real meaning for me and (his wife) Beverlee and the family. And it will be

real meaning for those who come together who haven’t seen each other in time, whether it’ll be ‘Canes or Cardinals, whether it’ll be Dolphins or Colts. And there might even be a Roll Tide guy involved, maybe even a Ram.” He looks out the window of his office, overseeing the practice field, studying his team for one of the last times, talking about the stadium that some thought he could never deliver. Without him, none of it would be there. Soon, a new chapter begins. Pelini is expected to take over the football side of things. With that, Schnellenberger will transition into a new role at FAU, working with current and prospective donors and selling them on the vision of making the place even better. “When people are going to talk about him — ‘You remember that coach Howard Schnellenberger? He brought Miami up. He started all these programs.’ — I’m going to be like, ‘I played for that guy,”’ Bartels said. “I played for that legend. Just to be able to say something like that, it means a whole lot to me.”

Big Ten title game will wrap up complicated season The Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS — It has been nearly a year since the Big Ten sparked a debate by labeling its divisions Legends and Leaders. That controversy seems long buried given the twists and turns in the 11 months since. For a conference that managed to stay out of the latest round of conference realignment, the Big Ten has still been front and center -mostly for the wrong reasons. None of the league’s 12 teams is in the national championship picture, the winningest coach in Division I football has been fired and two of its signature football programs are trying to mend their reputations. Even ticket sales for Saturday’s inaugural Big Ten championship game

between No. 11 Michigan State and No. 15 Wisconsin were called into question this week. What a year. “I think it was a difficult season in part because of the Penn State situation. It was an unprecedented situation. It took everyone’s attention and was very hard on everybody,” Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany told The Associated Press, referring to the child sex-abuse allegations against former Nittany Lions coach Jerry Sandusky. “On the field, it’s been a good year, not a great year.” Perhaps that makes the title game matchup more appropriate. Had any of the dream title game matchups materialized -- Ohio StateMichigan, Ohio StateNebraska, maybe Penn

State-Nebraska -- this week’s questions would be peppered with references to scandals and missing coaches. Delany, of course, wants the focus to be on the game, an entertaining rematch of October’s incredible finish. The Spartans won 37-31 after Michigan State receiver Keith Nichol pulled in a last-second pass and lunged across the goal line. League officials are hoping Round 2 is every bit as exciting. It took local organizers only two hours to sell 20,000 tickets in late July, and an additional 2,000 tickets went on sale Tuesday at a cost of $80 to $175. The rest of the seats in 66,268-seat Lucas Oil Stadium have all been sold, Indiana Sports Corp. spokesman John Dedman said.

The game will showcase rough-and-tumble smashmouth football in a budding rivalry made for national television. The game features the league’s top two quarterbacks (Russell Wilson and Kirk Cousins), the league’s top rusher (Montee Ball) and its two best scoring defenses. “It’s really a classic Big Ten matchup,” Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio said. “It’s going to be one of those really physical games.” On the field this season, things went reasonably well. Ten of the 12 schools are bowl eligible, putting Delany in the pleasant predicament of trying to find a spot for all of those teams. The Big Ten has only eight bowl tie-ins. That’s the good part. The problems actually began just before Christ-

mas 2010 when the league announced that the new 12-team conference would be split into two six-team divisions, Leaders and Legends. A month later, Delany responded to a backlash from fans by saying those names would be used for at least one year, and it doesn’t appear there will be changes next year, either. “I think there’s a lot more understanding now of what we wanted to do,” Delany said. “Anybody can select East and West and that didn’t fit us. These are enduring characteristics that did.” That so-called controversy paled in comparison to what followed. ■ Two days before Christmas, five Ohio State players were suspended for the first five games of the season after the NCAA

determined they had sold championship rings, jerseys and awards and received improper benefits from a tattoo parlor and its owner. The investigation continues, coach Jim Tressel was forced out and quarterback Terrelle Pryor then left early for the NFL. ■ In early January, Michigan fired coach Rich Rodriguez after three subpar seasons and his own NCAA rules violations, which got the program three years of probation. ■ Three weeks ago, Penn State was rocked by an unthinkable scandal when Sandusky was accused of sexually abusing eight boys. He was charged with 40 criminal counts. Joe Paterno, the winningest coach in Division I history, and university President Graham Spanier were fired.

Magic Johnson joins group bidding to buy Dodgers The Associated Press

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Kasten and wealthy investor Mark Walter to join the auction for the Dodgers, who will be sold by Frank McCourt. Johnson sold his equity stake in the Lakers in October 2010. The former point guard became a successful businessman after his career ended, and was widely rumored to be looking for a larger ownership stake in another pro sports fran-

chise after parting amicably with the Lakers. Kasten is the former president of the Braves and the Washington Nationals, while Walter is the CEO of a global financial services firm. Their bidding organization will be called Guggenheim Baseball Management. The Los Angeles Times first reported Johnson’s interest in the Dodgers.

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CLASSIFIEDS Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • 5B

DAILY CORINTHIAN

U.S. Savings Bonds are gifts with a future.

Garage/Estate 0151 Sales

0232 General Help

Household 0509 Goods

SAT. ONLY. 1010 Gloster St. Winter coats, some toys, little girls clothes 7-10, furn., children's books. 662-396-1390.

MANUFACTURING COMPANY seeking qualified applicants for a leadership position in its Quality Assurance Department. Working knowledge of ISO and 6 Sigma a plus. At least five years of experience preferred. Apply to: Human Resource Dept., P.O. Box 322, Adamsville, TN 38310.

3-STACK NATURAL gas heater, 3 yrs. old, been serviced, $100. 662-665-1488.

SAT., 6 'til. Fireworks. Baby suits, shoes 6-12 mos., adult clths, coke coll., 2 comm. coffee pots, 2 freezers, toys. Old Hwy 45, Guys.

YARD SALE SPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS Ad must run prior to or day of sale! (Deadline is 3 p.m. day before ad is to run!) (Exception Sun. 3 pm Fri.) 5 LINES (Apprx. 20 Words)

ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID We accept credit or debit cards

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS When Placing Ads 1. Make sure your ad reads the way you want it! Make sure our Ad Consultants reads the ad back to you. 2. Make sure your ad is in the proper classification. 3. After our deadline at 3 p.m., the ad cannot be corrected, changed or stopped until the next day. 4. Check your ad the 1st day for errors. If error has been made, we will be happy to correct it, but you must call before deadline (3 p.m.) to get that done for the next day. Please call 662-287-6147 if you cannot find your ad or need to make changes!

0149 Found FOUND APPX. 1 month ago, female kitten, yellow, good w/children, litter box trained. Hwy 72 E. 287-3750.

FOUND: FEM. Aust. Shepherd type pup. dark & light brown w/black & white & blue collar, CR 400 (Salem comm.) 662-664-1199.

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

Garage/Estate 0151 Sales ESTATE TAG SALE Sat., 8-3, Sun., 1-3 1101 Kingsbury, Iuka Follow signs from Business 25 & Graham Selling the Estate of Helen Marguerite Nixon ---------------Mahogany: Two poster beds - chest - triple dresser-night stand, dining table & chairs, china cabinet buffet-ornate desk & chair, lamp tables. Oak: 5 leg table & pressed back chairs - wash stand-dresser, Pie safe, French: bedroom suite, china cabinet - buffet dining table & chairs, brass & iron bed, antique quilts-gold gilt mirrors, Grandfather clock, leather sofa, 50' dining table, maple desk (2), carnival glass, Cranberry Fenton, crystal, Noritake "Somerset" China, "Old Mirror" pattern glass punch set, Bradford Exchange Collectible Plates, Franciscan Desert Rose, Watt Apple, books, records, birds, new linens, upright freezer, fridge, jewelry. --------------www.estatesales. net for pictures Golden Oldies LLC 662-871-1284 GARAGE SALE. Fri. & Sat. 28 CR 709. Several fams. Antqs., girls & ladies' clothes, scooter bike, misc.

Wanted to

BATHROOM WALL cabi- 0554 Rent/Buy/Trade net by Allen+Roth, retail $108, selling for $30. M&M. CASH for junk cars 662-286-3917. & trucks. We pick up. or BLUE FLAMES, natural 6 6 2 - 4 1 5 - 5 4 3 5 gas heater w/blower, 731-239-4114.

gas line incl., used 1 $125. MEDICAL OFFICE Posi- w i n t e r , tion PT, Mon.-Fri. days. 662-665-1488. Fax resume ( 6 6 2 ) COMFORT GLOW natural 284-0756. gas 30,000 BTU room space heater, 5 bricks, YARD SALE. Inside at NOW HIRING: Companies $60. 286-8773. 3404 Mathis Rd. Fri. & desperately need emSat., 7-5. Christmas ployees to assemble GE BLACK flat top stove, products at home. No 8 mos. old, $400. decorations. 662-664-0381. selling, any hours. $500 weekly potential. Info. GE REFRIGERATOR, $100. 1-985-646-1700 DEPT. 662-665-9617. MS-3653. PORTABLE SINGER sew-

(Does not include commercial business sales)

0107 Special Notice

SPLIT OAK, $80 cord; Split Hickory BBQ wood, $100 cord. W. J. Tree Service, 662-279-0890 or BABYLOC SERGER, good 750-1996. cond., $200. 286-5116.

YARD SALE. Fri. & Sat., 8am-2pm. Lots of odds & ends. 72 W. next to Magnolia Flower Basket.

$19.10

ANNOUNCEMENTS

0539 Firewood

Call Classified at (662) 287-6147

EMPLOYMENT

0228 Accounting BOOKKEEPER/ DATA ENTRY Mail resume to: P.O. Box 730, Corinth, MS 38835.

0232 General Help

0244 Trucking NOW HIRING! Are you making less than $40,000 per year? TMC TRANSPORTATION Needs Driver Trainees Now! No Experience Required. Immediate Job Placement Assistance OTR & Regional Jobs CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION. 1-888-540-7364

PETS

0320 Cats/Dogs/Pets

ing machine, 286-5116.

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale 1999 AVON glass angel ornament, $10. Call 662-603-1382. ACETYLENE TORCH set, medium size, $85. 286-8773. ALUMINUM ARC ramp, $75. 662-665-4784.

COTTON BOLL quilt, queen size, nice Christ$75. mas present, $300. 286-5116.

ROPER DRYER, $100. CURT SCHILLING Bobblehead, 2003 Limited Edi662-665-9617. tion in original box, $15. WHIRLPOOL WASHING 662-286-3917. machine, 3 yrs. old, exc. cond., $ 2 2 5 . DOGGIE DOOR, fits all sliding glass patio 662-665-4784. doors, $40. 662-286-3917. Musical

0512

Merchandise FOR SALE: Potty chair 7-PC. BEGINNER drum or over the toilet com$25. set, $250. 662-286-9680. mode chair, 462-4229. UPRIGHT PIANO, $300. FOR SALE: $1 Silver cer662-665-4784. tificate circulated 1957B, $5. Call 0518 Electronics 662-603-1382. RCA BIG screen 52" TV, FOR SALE: 2 Christmas $250. 662-286-8138. dresses, size 6 and 6x, $15 each. Call 462-4229 Sporting b/f 9 pm. 0527 Goods

FOR SALE: 2 nylon TITLEIST PRO VI golf straps, 4in wide & 30ft balls, one dozen, new in long, $15 each or both box, retail $50, sell for $25. Call 662-603-1382. $25. 662-286-3917. FOR SALE: 2 Sunday WOMEN'S GOLF clubs, sweaters, size 5T and COCKER SPANIEL pups, 6 complete set with 6X, $5.00 each. Call wks. old, $100 each. graphite shafts, like 462-4229 b/f 9 pm. new, used once, $90. 287-6664. FOR SALE: 2011 Topps 662-286-3917. Football Cards, $30. FREE PUPS, 4m/1f. Mom 662-603-1382. Pt Lab. 731-239-8085 or 0533 Furniture FOR SALE: 9 pair girls 662-284-7223. ARMOIRE, $ 4 0 0 . leggings size 7/8 (black, 662-665-4784. denim, animal print and FREE PUPS, 7 wks. old, fuschia) $2.00 each. Call Eskimo Spitz/Heeler COVERED CHAIR w/roll- 462-4229 b/f 9pm. ers, $15. 287-2771. mixed, 286-2664. FOR SALE: A Katana SoftLANE SOFA & loveseat, ball bat 34 in, 27oz, $40. $450. 662-286-8138. FARM 662-603-1382. LARGE COMPUTER desk, FOR SALE: Brett Farve $35. 287-2771. Tuff Stuff price guide OAK BED (queen or full) 0430 Feed/Fertilizer Aug. 94, $5. Call w/box springs, mat- 662-603-1382. HAY FOR SALE. Sericea, tress & chest of drawFOR SALE: Danskin long stored in dry, $35 per ers, $350. 287-2648. sleeve leotard size 7/8, roll. 287-5910. $3.00. Call 462-4229 b/f 0539 Firewood 9pm. CKC WHITE Maltechon puppies, 1st S&W. Just in time for Christmas. $250. 662-286-3441 or 664-3430.

CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the MERCHANDISE offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true�, Household then it may be! Inquir- 0509 Goods ies can be made by contacting the Better Busi- 22,000 BTU Air-condiness Bureau a t tioner, no outer case, $25. 287-2771. 1-800-987-8280.

FIREWOOD, BEST on biggest cords in town! Kossuth area, cut to your length. Best deal, GUARANTEED! 603-7818.

FOR SALE: Easy Flo high back child's booster car seat. $25.00 obo. Call 462-4229 b/f 9pm.

FOR SALE: John Grisham OAK FIREWOOD. 85% hard back books, $3.00 split, $80 cord, Free de- each. Call 462-4229 b/f 9pm. livery. 662-603-9057.

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

Unfurnished 0610 Apartments

FOR SALE: Little boys 2T pants (khaki and blue) $2.00 ea. Call 462-4229 b/f 9pm.

FOR SALE: Sony Ericsson W518a AT&T cell phone, $25.00. 462-4229 b/f 9 pm.

FOR RENT: 1 BR, 616 Linden A, $250/mo. 662-287-6193.

FOR RENT: 1401 Douglas St., 2 BR, water incl, FOR SALE: Size 8 white FOR SALE: Mizuno Golf $425/mo. 662-287-6193. Woods 1, 3, 5, all for $40 flower girls dress. (Worn 1 time in wedOBO. Call 662-603-1382. Homes for ding). $45. 462-4229 b/f 0620 Rent FOR SALE: Motorola 9pm. 1 BR, 1 BA, W&D, Glen AT&T cell phone, $10.00. METAL CHANDELIER, 5 area, $350 mo., $200 Call 462-4229. lights, $25. 286-5116. dep. 662-415-1397. FOR SALE: New T-Rex M I N I P R I N C E S S 2 BR, 2 BA, great loc. in HDMI cable, 6 ft. long, 4-wheeler, charger incity, $500 mo., $500 dep. $10. Call 662-603-1382. cluded, ages 1-3 yr., exc. 415-2616 or 287-2131. cond., $30. 665-9369. FOR SALE: New trailer 3 BR, 1 BA, 614 Fulton St. hitch ball, $5. Call OLD KODAK camera, $450 mo., $200 dep. Schneider Kreuznach 284-8396. 662-603-1382. Reomar w/leather case, 3 BR, 2 BA brick house, FOR SALE: OtterBox for $125. 662-665-4784. C/H/A, Central Sch. HTC Desire, $15. Call TREADMILL, 2 yrs. old, Dist., $600 mo. $600 dep. 662-603-1382. hardly used, new cost 662-808-2995. now $100. FOR SALE: Roger Cle- $ 2 5 0 , 3BR, 2BA, 71 Stateline 662-665-4784. mens Beckett price Rd., totally refinished, guide, $5 ea. Call big hse, & yard. $650 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT mo., $650 dep. 287-7875. 662-603-1382. FREE ADVERTISING. Advertise any item valued at $500 or less for free. The ads must be for private party or personal merchandise and will exclude pets & pet supplies, livestock (incl. chickens, ducks, cattle, goats, etc), garage sales, hay, firewood, & automobiles . To take advantage of this program, readers should simply email their ad to: freeads@dailycorinthian.com or mail the ad to Free Ads, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835. Please include your address for our records. Each ad may include only one item, the item must be priced in the ad and the price must be $500 or less. Ads may be up to approximately 20 words including the phone number and will run for five days.

0515

4 BR, 3 BA, $650 mo., Central. Sch. Dist. (125 CR 325). 662-808-7368.

Unfurnished 0610 Apartments 1 BR apt, $350; 1 BR apt., $400. 287-4848.

Mobile Homes 0675 for Rent

2 BR apt., 105 Linden St. 1 BR & 3 BR trailers, 662-415-2077 & 415-1227. Strickland area. 808-2474 or 286-2099. 2 BR duplex, near Alcorn Central. $400 mo. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 662-212-4102. 2 BR, stove/refrig. furn., W&D hookup, CHA. 287-3257.

Homes for 0710 Sale

CANE CREEK Apts., Hwy HUD 72W & CR 735, 2 BR, 1 BA, PUBLISHER’S stove & refrig., W&D NOTICE hookup, Kossuth & City All real estate adverSch. Dist. $400 mo. tised herein is subject 287-0105. to the Federal Fair Housing Act which MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR, makes it illegal to adstove, refrig., water. vertise any preference, $365. 286-2256. limitation, or discrimiDOWNTOWN APART- nation based on race, MENT for rent. 2 BR, color, religion, sex, W&D. $475 m o . handicap, familial status 662-643-9575. or national origin, or intention to make any Computer such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to 6 +DUSHU 5G &RULQWK 06 those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any

advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All per&KHFN ZLWK XV IRU WKH EHVW GHDO sons are hereby informed that all dwell1HZ ings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. /DSWRSV VWDUWLQJ DW 'HVNWRSV VWDUWLQJ DW /&' PRQLWRUV VWDUWLQJ DW

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6B • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • Daily Corinthian

0840 Auto Services

GUARANTEED Auto Sales 401 902 FARM EQUIP. AUTOMOBILES

FOR SALE

20 FT. TRAILER 2-7 K. AXLES $

2900

GREG SMITH

286-6702

1979 FORD LTD II SPORT LANDAU

Exc. cond. inside & out. Mechanically sound cond. Leather seats, only 98,000 mi reg.

$7500 731-934-4434

902 AUTOMOBILES

’09 Hyundai Accent 2nd owner, 4 cyl., under 30,000 mi., 36 mpg, looking for payoff.

731-610-7241

906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

3.0 v-6, power sunroof, 7800 miles

2006 GMC YUKON Exc. cond. inside & out, 106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front & rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded

1991 Ford Econoline Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one owner, serious interest. $7000. 287-5206.

662-415-9772

662-286-1732

906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

2006 MERCURY MARINER PREMIER 4X4

$12,500

35TH EDITION

CONVERTIBLE, like new, asking

$8,000 OR WILL TRADE for Dodge reg. size nice pickup. 520 BOATS & MARINE

731-438-2001

‘92 DODGE SHADOW CONV.,

2003 NISSAN MAXIMA GLE, loaded, leather, sun roof, silver w/gray int., new tires

662-213-2014

2005 HUMMER,

black, CD player, A/C, gray int., 150,000 miles, loaded.

662-213-2014.

662-808-1978 or

662-664-3940 or 662-287-6626

FOR SALE

906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

1961 CHEV. 2 dr. hardtop (bubble top), sound body, runs.

$10,000

Days only, 662-415-3408.

$12,500

$17,900

'03 CHEVY SILVERADO,

2002 INTERNATIONAL, Cat. engine

$16,000

black, quadra steer (4-wheel steering), LT, 80k miles, loaded, leather, tow package, ext. cab.

$13,000 OBO. 662-415-9007.

287-3448

71K, FULLY LOADED

7500

$

662-665-1802

‘08 FORD FUSION

4 cyl., auto., 73,000 miles, black with black leather, super sharp!

9450

$

662-665-1995

3010 Model #KAF650E, 1854 hrs., bench seat, tilt bed, 4 WD & windshield, well maintained. Great for farm or hunting. $6500.

'97 HONDA GOLD WING, 1500 6 cylinder miles, 3003 Voyager kit. 662-287-8949

REDUCED

1980 HONDA 750-FRONT (TRI) 4-CYC. VOLKSWAGON

2009 YAMAHA 250YZF all original, almost new. 908 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

1998 F-150 XLT, ext. cab, Triton 5.4 V-8, exc .cond., 142,000 miles, white

$2,800

910 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S

‘03 HARLEY DAVIDSON HERITAGE SOFTTAIL (ANNIVERSARY MODEL)

exc. cond., dealership maintained.

$5200

$10,900

286-8877

662-462-7158 home or 731-607-6699 cell

1990 CHEVROLET SILVERADO, 4 W.D., $2100 FIRM 662-415-0858

2003 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC looks & rides real good!

MTR., GOOD TIRES,

$8500 OBO.

1979 CHEVY 1 TON DUMP TRUCK, $3500 J.C. HARRIS 700 TRENCHER,

$4000.

662-279-2123

Call 662-423-6872 or 662-660-3433

2006 YAMAHA FZI 3k miles, adult owned, corbin seat, selling due to health reasons, original owner.

2001 HONDA REBEL 250

$5200 286-6103

WITH EXTRAS, BLUE, LESS THAN 1500 MILES,

$1850

662-287-2659

1998 SOFTAIL,

39,000 MILES,

$8500

662-415-0084

$3000 662-603-4786

REDUCED

2004 CADILLAC SEVILLE

2004 KAWASAKI MULE

731-212-9659 731-212-9661.

REDUCED

117,000 miles, leather, sunroof, 3rd row seat, am/fm/ cd player, power windows & seats, automatic,

$7250

902 AUTOMOBILES

$10,850

286-6702

2006 NISSAN MAXIMA

2008 Jayco Eagle 5th Wheel 38’, 4 slides, exc. cond., $28,000 firm. Trailer located in Counce, TN. 425-503-5467

15-passenger van, for church or daycare use, fleet maintained

$1500

REDUCED

$14,900

908 910 910 RECREATIONAL MOTORCYCLES/ MOTORCYCLES/ VEHICLES ATV’S ATV’S

2000 FORD E-350

SERIES MUSTANG

Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Here’s How It Works: Your ad will be composed 1 column wide and 2 inches deep. The ad will run each day in the Daily Corinthian until your vehicle sells. Ad must include photo, description, and price. You provide the photo. Certain restrictions apply. 1. No dealers. 2. Non-commercial only 3. Must pay in advance. No exceptions. 4. Single item only. 5. Categories included are auto, motorcycle, tractor. boat, RV and ATV 6. After every 30 DAYS, advertised price of listing needs to be reduced. 7. NO REFUNDS for any reason 8. NON-TRANSFERABLE. Call 287-6147 to place your ad!

‘06 VOLKSWAGON NEW BEETLE 2.5 L 5 cyl., 6-spd., Tip Tronic auto. trans., lt. green w/beige int., heated seats, RW defrost, PW, outside rear view mirrors, PDL, AM/Fm radio w/CD, MP3, traction control, sun roof, looks brand new even under hood, 14,350 mi

$

14,500

286-3654 or cell 284-7424

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT

1999 CHEROKEE SPORT 4X4, 6 cyl., all works good except for A/C

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

$4000. 662-665-1143.

FOR SALE:

99 CADILLAC ESCALADE

only 47,000 miles, gray leather, 4x4, excellent cond., new tires,

$7650.

662-665-1995

1961 STUDEBAKER PICKUP $2850 OBO 731-422-4655

1996 Ford F-150

250cc, just serviced, new front tire, red in color, 7,724 miles,

$2500 obo

662-415-6259

662-423-8702

$

662-664-3940

2007 Franklin pull camper, 36’, lots of space, 2 A/C units, 2 slide outs, 2 doors, shower & tub, 20’ awning, full kitchen, W&D, $13,000.

2005 Kawasaki 4-wheeler 4 wheel drive, Brute force, v-twin, 650 cc, 260 hrs., $3800. 662-603-9014

662-415-7063 662-415-8549

REDUCED

$10,500

3900

662-603-4407

$2,100

170,000 mi., reg. cab, red & white (2-tone).

2001 F250 CREW CAB LARIAT 4X4 7.3 power stroke diesel, red w/ tan leather int., 190k miles,

$12,500

REDUCED

’04 HONDA SHADOW 750

2007 HONDA REBEL,


vertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, Homes for color, religion, sex, 0710 Sale handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Manufactured

0747 Homes for Sale CLEARANCE SALE on Display Homes Double & Singlewides available Large Selection WINDHAM HOMES 287-6991

Commercial/ 0754 Office

OPEN HOUSE Sunday 11/20/11 from 2-4 and Sunday 12/11/11 from 2-4. Come see 3 beautiful homes for sale: Turtle Creek 4 $197,000. 600 Madison St. $215,000. Corinth Realty, 662-287-7653.

UWS TRUCK tool box for stepside truck or smaller, $200 obo. 662-415-8969.

0860 Vans for Sale

Trucks for 0864 Sale '05 GMC Crew Cab LTR, 38k, #1419. $16,900. 1-800-898-0290 or 728-5381.

'08 DODGE RAM 1500, 4x4, crew cab, red, $23,400. 1-800-898-0290 or 728-5381.

0868 Cars for Sale

Take stock in America. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds.

0734 Lots & Acreage 0114 WHITMORE LEVEE RD., 30 AC, mostly open land inside city with public utilities. Lots of road frontage, great for development or farm land. Less than $4200 per acres. To view, call Sandra at Corinth Realty, 662-415-8551.

'08 CHEVY HHR LT, ltr, moon roof, 33k, $11,900. 1-800-898-0290 or 728-5381.

0876 Bicycles MW 26" ladies' bicycle, good shape, $65. 286-8773.

Happy Ads

NEW 3 BR, 1 BA HOMES Del. & setup $29,950.00 Clayton Homes Supercenter of Corinth 1/4 mile past hospital on 72 West. NEW 4 BR, 2 BA home Del. & setup $44,500 Clayton Homes Supercenter of Corinth, 1/4 mi. past hospital on 72 West 662-287-4600

0232

FINANCIAL

0955 Legals NOTICE OF INTENTION TO FORFEIT SEIZED PROPERTY

TO: Brian Lauderdale LAST KNOWN ADDRESS: 170 CR 8500, Booneville, MS If you desire to contest the 38829 forfeiture of this property, you must within thirty (30) You are hereby notified that days of receiving this notice, on January 18, 2011, in Al- file a request for judicial recorn County, Mississippi, the view. below-listed property was seized by the City of Corinth If you do not request judicial Police Department pursuant review within thirty (30) days to Section 41-29-153 of the of receiving this notice, the Mississippi Code of 1972, An- property described above will notated, as amended. Section be forfeited to the City of 41-29-176, of the Mississippi Corinth Police Department, Code of 1972, Annotated, as to be used, distributed, or amended, provides for the ad- disposed of in accordance ministrative forfeiture of with the provisions of Section property with a value not ex- 41-29-181, of the Mississippi ceeding $10,000.00, other Code of 1972, Annotated, as than a controlled substance, amended. raw material or paraphernalia, seized under the uniform INSTRUCTION FOR controlled substances law. FILING REQUEST FOR JUDICIAL DESCRIPTION ON REVIEW PROPERTY: 2000 Ford Ranger In order to file a request for VIN # 1FTYR10C2YTB46502 judicial review, you must file a petition to contest forfeiture APPROXIMATE VALUE: in the Circuit Court of Al$3,000.00 corn 0852County, Mississippi in order to claim an interest in Said property is subject to the property. forfeiture under the provisions of Section Dated: November 17, 2011 41-20-153(a)(5), 41-29-153(a)(7) and WILLIAM W. ODOM, JR. 41-29-153(a)(4), respectively, ATTORNEY of the Mississippi Code of AT LAW 1972, Annotated, as amended, as having been used, or in4t 11/19, 11/26, 12/3/11 tended for use or having been 13475 used, or intended for use to transport in violation of the Mississippi Uniform Controlled Substances Law and having been found in close proximity to forfeitable controlled substances.

50TH ANNIVERSARY

If you desire to contest the forfeiture of this property, you must within thirty (30) days of receiving this notice, file a request for judicial review.

Mobile Homes 0741 for Sale NEW 2 BR Homes Del. & setup $25,950.00 Clayton Homes Supercenter of Corinth, 1/4 mile past hospital on 72 West.

LEGALS

'10 WHITE 15-pass. van, 3 to choose from. or 1 BAY SHOP for rent 1 - 8 0 0 - 8 9 8 - 0 2 9 0 w/small apt. $400 mo., 728-5381. $400 dep. 287-6752.

C-2 ZONED, HOT location off Harper and near Walmart. Small structure potential for temporary space until perm construction complete. MOVE-IN CONDITION! 3 Asking $150,000. Call BR, 2 BA, conveniently Tammy, 662-284-7345, located. Roof 2 yrs. old, Corinth Realty. new patio, sunroom & kitchen remodeled. Beautifully refinished hardwood floors. To view, call Sandra at Corinth Realty, 662-415-8551. NEVER LATE to Kossuth School again! 116 CR 617. 3/2, new CHA/new ROOF! 3.24 acres. $65,000. Call Tammy, 662-284-7345, Corinth Realty.

Auto/Truck 0848 Parts & Accessories

Robert & Carolyn Waldon celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on November 23, 2011.

forfeiture under the provisions of Section 41-20-153(a)(5), 41-29-153(a)(7) and 0955 Legals respectively, 41-29-153(a)(4), of the Mississippi Code of 1972, Annotated, as amended, as having been used, or intended for use or having been used, or intended for use to transport in violation of the Mississippi Uniform Controlled Substances Law and having been found in close proximity to forfeitable controlled substances.

If you do not request judicial review within thirty (30) days of receiving this notice, the property described above will be forfeited to the City of Corinth Police Department, to be used, distributed, or disposed of in accordance with the provisions of Section 41-29-181, of the Mississippi Code of 1972, Annotated, as December 4th, 2011 amended.

The reception will be held on Sunday, from 2:00-4:00 p.m. at Tishomingo Chapel Baptist Church Fellowship Hall.

FOR JUDICIAL Daily Corinthian REVIEW In order to file a request for Legalsyou must file a 0955 review, judicial petition to contest forfeiture in the Circuit Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi in order to claim an interest in the property. Dated: November 17, 2011 WILLIAM W. ODOM, JR. ATTORNEY AT LAW

• Saturday, December 3, 2011 • 7B

Home Improvement & Repair A MCKEE CONSTRUCTION Floor leveling, water rot, termite damage, new joist, seals, beams, piers installed. 46 yrs. experience. Licensed. 662-415-5448.

Storage, Indoor/ Outdoor AMERICAN MINI STORAGE 2058 S. Tate Across from World Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUM Mini-Stor. 72 W. 3 diff. locations, unloading docks, rental truck avail, 286-3826.

4t 11/19, 11/26, 12/3/11 13475

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

Home Improvement & Repair

BUTLER, DOUG: Foundation, floor leveling, bricks cracking, rotten wood, basements, shower floor. Over 35 yrs. exp. Free est. 731-239-8945 or 662-284-6146. GENERAL HOUSE & Yard Maintenance: Carpentry, flooring, all types painting. Pressure washing driveways, patios, decks, viny siding. No job too small. Guar. quality work at the lowest price! Call for estimate, 662-284-6848.

Heavy Equipment

NOTICE

Equipment Dispersal

Tippah Electric Power Assn., will be offering the following items for bid

1998 Ford F-80 65ft Aerial Bucket w/ front winch 1994 Ford T8F w/front and rear winch 1993 Trail Boss Trailer 21ft w/ Pintle Hook (2) 2002 Chevy ½ Ton Pickups

Bidding will be done by sealed envelope only, bids can be turned in to Tim Smith at the Tippah Electric Office or by mail. Equipment can be viewed at TEPA warehouse by appointment. All equipment will have a minimum reserve. All equipment will be sold “as is”. All Bids will need to be received no later than December 8th 2011@ 5:00 pm.

INSTRUCTION FOR

Your friendship is a special gift & the family request other! FILINGno REQUEST

Tippah Electric Power Assoc. P O Box 206 • Ripley MS 38663

FOR JUDICIAL

Please join the children as they REVIEW honor their parents on this special day.

In order to file a request for

662-837-8139

judicial review,&you must file a Michael Waldon, TIna McKee, Sandra Rogers, Terry Waldon families.

General Help

petition to contest forfeiture in the Circuit Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi in order to claim an interest in the property. Dated: November 17, 2011 WILLIAM W. ODOM, JR. ATTORNEY AT LAW

4t 11/19, 11/26, 12/3/11 13475

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0114 Happy Ads


8B • Saturday, December 3, 2011 • Daily Corinthian

The Daily Corinthian Net Edition is now better than ever! Updated nightly with local news, sports and obituaries.

Services

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE In The Daily Corinthian And The Reporter

RUN YOUR AD FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH ON THIS PAGE (Daily Corinthian Only 165) $

ELECTRICAL ALL AMERICAN ELECTRICAL

CHIROPRACTOR

Jeff Shaw 731-610-0588 or 731-610-7234 jeff8833@att.net

Dr. Jonathan R. Cooksey

Serving North Mississippi Licensed, Bonded, Insured 24/7 Emergency Calls No jobs too big or small

Neck Pain • Back Pain Disc Problems Spinal Decompression Therapy Most Insurance Accepted Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5 3334 N. Polk Street Corinth, MS 38834 (662) 286-9950

HOUSE FOR SALE

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BID ALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

Looking for somewhere to call HOME?

Come check out our downtown location on Cass Street!!! One bedroom one bath apartments with furnished kitchens, private balconies and hardwood floors. Coin operated laundry on site. Its definitely an apartment that you will be able to call HOME!! To view our apartments and find out about great rental deals going on right now, call April at

662-286-2255

40 Years

POOL TABLES

ALL TYPE UPHOLSTERY

Starting at

119900

$

KRACKER BOX UPHOLSTERY FERRELL’S

Corinth’s First Mobile Upholstery Shop Small Jobs Done on sight

HOME & OUTDOOR

807 S. Parkway & Harper Road Corinth MS

662-284-9092

287-2165

“The Very Best Place To Buy”

PET GROOMING DONNA

IS

BACK! The Hair is Flying at Vet Med! Don’t Just Get Your Dog’s Hair Cut, Get Him Groomed to Perfection! Book Holiday Appointments Early!

662-396-4250 AUTO SALES ALES

See LynnParvin Parvin Lynn General Sales Manager

JONES GM 545 Florence Road, Savannah, TN 731-925-4923 or 1-877-492-8305 www.jonesmotorcompany.com

JIMCO ROOFING.

For This Father’s Day HOLIDAY SPECIAL Big Green Egg - The World’s Finest Outdoor Smoker & Grill! Package deal for December includes everything to start cooking. Large Big Green Egg - Nest (legs) - Mates (Shelves) - Plate setter - Baking Stone - Grill Cover - 10# natural lump charcoal

Let your Father have bragging rights with a

December Special Grill to Package makePrice the Sale 12 Months Same As Cash ultimate cookout! $1,099 With Approvedsummer Credit Lay-A-Way Now For Christmas!

FERRELL’S HOME & OUTDOOR, INC. 807 SOUTH PARKWAY • 287-2165 1609 HARPER ROAD • 287-1337 CORINTH, MS

1122 MLK Drive 3 BR, 1 BA, laundry room, all appliances included. Call 662-415-2511

GO-CARTS

Carter Go-Carts Starting at $999.00 LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS Ferrell’s Home & Outdoor 807 S. Parkway & Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 287-2165 “The Very Best Place to Buy”

$1,000,000 LIABILITY INSURANCE

• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975 • 30 YEAR UP TO LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/ TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY (NO SECONDS) • METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE, SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS & DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133 662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER


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