Corinth E-edition

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Saturday Jan. 21,

2012

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 116, No. 18

T-storms Today

Tonight

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43

• Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

November sales, tourism tax see gains Grand Illumination made positive impact BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Tax collections returned to Corinth at mid-January saw gains in results for both sales tax and the tourism tax. The results reflect sales ac-

tivity made during the month of November, and tourism can point to the Grand Illumination event as a possible factor in the positive numbers. The period also included the Black Friday shopping frenzy.

After a negative result in the prior month, the 2 percent tourism tax on prepared food and lodging yielded $81,735.74, a gain of 7 percent from the same month a year earlier. Four months into the fiscal year, the tax has generated $339,264.45, a 4 percent gain in year-to-year comparisons. Continuing its growth trend, the tax, which is split between tourism promotion efforts and the Crossroads Arena debt payments, for the first time has

generated at least $80,000 for each of the first four months of the fiscal year. Sales tax continues on a nearly flat trajectory, evenly split between gains and losses for the fiscal year. The latest month yielded $453,700.53, up almost 4 percent from a year earlier. The fiscal year-to-date tally of $1.73 million is down half of a percentage point from the same point in the prior fiscal year. Those numbers are on par

with expectations for 2012. The year’s budget was prepared with no anticipated bump in sales tax revenue. Municipalities receive 18.5 percent of sales tax proceeds collected within their boundaries. That money accounts for about 60 percent of Corinth’s operating revenue. The Mississippi Department of Revenue as of Friday had not yet released statewide sales tax results for funds distributed in January.

Farm show continues today at arena BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

The Crossroads Arena has planted the seed for farmers. The agriculture equipment needed to harvest the crop is also on hand. Individuals were busy browsing the numerous pieces of equipment on display during the second day of the Alcorn Farm & Machinery Show. The show continues through Peterson today, starting at 8 a.m. “About every piece of farm equipment you can think of is here,” said Arena Board Chairman Bill Strickland. Show goers converged on the Arena Thursday to see what the numerous machinery dealers and vendors had to offer. “We had equipment coming in for two weeks from everywhere from Wisconsin to Missouri and Arkansas,” said the Arena’s Cindy Davis. “There are vendors of every type on the floor.”

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Please see ARENA | 2

Kelvin Mullins (left) and his father Andy, both of Walnut, were part of a steady crowd at the Alcorn Farm & Machinery Show on Friday at the Crossroads Arena.

Seminar teaches Rat packs powerful message marketing plan for businesses BY STEVE BEAVERS

sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

business. Drewry said the program The Alliance is partnering will be appropriate for any with the University of Missis- small business owner, but will sippi’s Small Business Devel- be especially targeted to peoopment Center to help small ple who are planning to start businesses get a leg up on a new business or who are just starting out. She said there is marketing. The organization will host so much more to marketing a seminar on Creating a Mar- than just advertising and she hopes to give keting Plan those attendfor Small ing a look at Businesses on Wednesday, the big picture and how Feb. 1 from 1 all aspects of p.m. to 2 p.m. marketing at Northeast work together at Corinth on to present the Harper Road. business to The propotential cusgram will be tomers. led by KaThe countie Drewry, Katie Drewry selor said a business Business counselor, Small Business Development she will walk counselor Center the group with the Small through the Business Development Center, who will process of creating a marketlead participants through an ing plan from the ground up overview of the marketing including targeting marketprocess and help them under- ing, branding, creating a logo stand how best to use a wide and signage, choosing where variety of avenues to get their message out and boost their Please see SEMINAR | 2 BY BRANT SAPPINGTON

bsappington@dailycorinthian.com

“Our main objective is to just plant an understanding of the process and help them see the big picture.”

Famous entertainers Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis were not on site. Terrance was the leader of this Rat Pack. The animated rat and his eight-member pack had an important message this week for students at Alcorn Central Elementary. Their advice was to reject all tobacco! “They have a really good message,” said ACES Principal Tonya Farris. RAT or Reject All Tobacco is the only tobacco-free campaign in the country created especially for children in grades K-3. RAT is geared toward giving them all the facts about big bad tobacco. RAT also aims to change children’s attitudes about tobacco before they reach the age of experimenting with cigarettes and chewing tobacco. The objective of the Rat Pack, comprised of students in grades 6-12, is to reduce the number of children in the state who try tobacco by teaching them about the dangers involved. There are five teams of Rat Packers — a live band of singing, dancing kids led by the animated Terrance — which do 80 shows per year. Audiences get to rap along with Terrance and his crew as they learn about all the harm tobacco can do. In Mississippi, smoking has caused 4,700 deaths with 280 children dying nationally from breathing secondhand smoke.

Index Stocks........7 Classified......14 Comics...... 13 Wisdom...... 12

Weather........5 Obituaries........ 3 Opinion........4 Sports...... 10

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Rat Packer Sarah Beth Childers helps Alcorn Central fourth grader Kaylee Wigginton dance during a Rat Pack skit at the school. Around 50,000 die nationally each year from the exposure of secondhand smoke. According to the Rat Pack, tobacco kills more people each year than suicides, murders, AIDS, alcohol, drugs and fires combined. “Tobacco is addictive. Once you start, it is very hard to stop,” said Terrance to the group of

students. “Young smokers suffer from shortness of breath almost three times as much as those who don’t smoke and is also at greater risk to have lung cancer later in life.” The rat also shared that smokers lose an average of 12 years of life due to their addiction of nicotine — the addictive drug in cigarettes.

On this day in history 150 years ago The Federal reconnaissance of about 5,000 men from General Grant’s command in Cairo, Illinois, returns after a feint against Columbus, Kentucky, on the Mississippi River. There was no fighting, but reveals a threat to the Confederate stronghold.


Local

2 • Daily Corinthian

Saturday, January 21, 2012

For ‘working man,’ Estes seeks U.S. House seat BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Fifteen years ago, a nearly broke Robert Estes got a ride to Corinth and bought a wrecked car from a local salvage yard. “I had $510 to my name,” recalled Estes, a Republican candidate for the first district U.S. House seat now held by Alan Nunelee. “I went to Orville Brown’s junk yard and bought a totaled out 1982 Datsun for $500. They drug it out to the parking lot. Of course, it didn’t run. They gave me an extra hood, fender and two bumpers. I borrowed some screwdrivers and pliers and wrenches and

whatnot, and I got that little car running.” He spent most of his last $10 on gasoline and a soda as he headed out of town. From there, he started saving money with the goal of starting his own business. Now owner of Estes Grading & Trucking in Southaven, he is counting on his political outsider status to appeal to voters. “I’m not a public speaker,” said Estes, whose family roots are in Ripley and Falkner. “I’m not a politician. I’m for the working man. I’m a business owner. I know how to create a job, and I know what destroys jobs.”

“I’m not a public speaker. I’m not a politician. I’m for the working man. I’m a business owner. I know how to create a job, and I know what destroys jobs.” Robert Estes Candidate, First District U.S. House Estes About a year ago he created a website, wheresamericasjobs.com, to bring attention to the top issue in his platform. “It tells about our jobs going overseas,” he said. “The reasons why our jobs are going overseas is regulations, rules and taxes.” He said every day brings

new regulations on business. “In my business, I have a regulation book that I have to go by,” said Estes. “It’s 600 pages long and it’s updated every quarter just to run a big truck up and down the road. That’s the kind of thing they’re going to have to back up

on.” Another issue that concerns him is foreign aid. “In 2012, they’re going to give $53 billion in foreign aid,” he said. “I want to cut foreign aid 10 percent. That’s $5.3 billion. It doesn’t sound like a lot, but if you divide that into 50 states, that would be

$106 million per state that we could reinvest back into America into the infrastructure.” He also seeks change in government spending. “We shouldn’t continue to raise the debt ceiling,” he said. “We have to live within our means.” Estes and Henry Ross are challenging Nunnelee for the Republican nomination. A Democrat, Brad Morris, is also in the race. Estes believes his 13 years in business gives him a solid foundation to serve. “I feel that’s plenty qualified because what we have up there is not working on either side,” he said.

Corinth High School 3rd Six Weeks Honor Roll

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

The Alcorn Farm & Machinery Show continues today at the Crossroads Arena. Countless pieces of equipment and vendors will be on hand today until 7 p.m.

ARENA: Show will auction around $5 million worth of inventory CONTINUED FROM 1

Billed as the largest agricultural-based trade show in Northeast Mississippi, the show offers farmers along with other equipment buyers the chance to see and buy the latest products offered. Today will be a busy day for the farm show. Supertalk Mississippi radio’s Garden Mama Nellie Neal will be broadcasting her weekend gardening show live from 8 to 10 a.m. “She will also be available to greet people and sign autographs,” said Davis. The much anticipated used machinery auction by DeWitt Auctions of Sikeston, Mo., begins at 9 a.m. and runs until. The auction is set for the front parking lot and will have an array of farm machinery items from around the region. “There is about a $5 million inventory out

All Stadium Seating Birthday Parties Online Tickets Saturday, January 21, 2012

EXTREMELY LOUD & INCREDIBLY CLOSE (PG-13) 4:15 (PG13) 7:15 10:00TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON (non1:103-D) 12:00, 12:50, (PG-13) 3:20, 4:10, 10:05 RED TAILS 1:006:50, 4:05 7:30, 7:05 9:45 THE GREEN LANTERN(NON (non 3D) UNDERWORLD: AWAKENING 3-D)(PG13) (R) 1:20- 10:00 4:25 7:25 9:30 BAD HAYWIRE TEACHER (R) 1:20,4:35 4:20, (R)-1:30 7:357:35, 9:509:40 MR.JOYFUL POPPER’S PENGUINS 2:40,9:40 4:55 NOISE (PG-13)(PG)1:10- 12:20, 4:20 7:05 HORRIBLE BOSSES (R) 1:25,4:40 4:30, CONTRABAND (R) -1:25 7:207:25, 9:509:45 LARRYTHE CROWNE 7:20, 9:40 DEVIL(PG13) INSIDE- 12:10, (R) 1:202:30, 4:35 4:50, 7:25 9:35 SUPER(PG-13) 8 (PG13)12:50 - 7:20,3:559:50 WAR HORSE 7:00 10:05 ZOOKEEPER (PG)A- ZOO 1:10, (PG) 4:15,1:05 7:00,4:10 9:20 WE BOUGHT SHERLOCK HOLMES: GAME1:00, OF SHADOWS (PG-13) CARS 2 (non 3-D) (G)A- 12:15, 3:00, 4:00, 6:45, 7:20,7:159:1510:00 ALVIN & THEMONTE CHIPMUNKS: CHIPWRECKED (G) 7:05, 12:40 2:45 CARLO (PG) - 1:05, 4:05, 9:304:55 7:10 9:20

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Crossroads Arena board member Sam Tull looks over the vast number of used farm equipment that will be auctioned today. there,” added Strickland. Greg Peterson of Machinery Pete’s television show is scheduled to feature today’s auction on an upcoming episode on RFD.tv Peterson, who puts out a Kelley Blue Book of farming equipment, has been coming to shows for the past 22 years. “I have been very impressed,” said Machinery Pete of the Alcorn event. “It’s quite a challenge to start a regional farm show ... there is a lot of machinery here.” Peterson says people are curious to see the latest wrinkles. “They want to be educated and see how it helps them,” he said.

With over 17 percent of the jobs in the state being in the agriculture field, the event provides a great opportunity for farmers according to Alcorn County Extension Director Patrick Poindexter. “The long-term thing is that it helps farmers and promotes agriculture,” said the director. “The Arena is a great venue to do that.” People will be available to check out around 50 vendor booths on the Arena floor from 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. “This is something we are going to try and build on,” said Arena board member Tom Rogers. “People need to just come out and walk around to

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All A’s: Logan Barrier, Amanda Blair, Jessica Campbell, Mara Campbell, John Edwards, Kathryn Knippers, Heather Kocurek, Hayden Malone, Kendall Patterson, Ashley Robertson, Avery Shappley, Reid Thompson A’s & B’s: Madison Bickert, James Burns, Catherine Hutchens, Monique McDonald, Bennett Mills, Kate Mitchell, Clayton Nichols, Devani Ocana, Alyssa Park, Brady Pratt, Ariel Sax, Orma Smith, Kaley Thompson, John Treadway, Matthew Wigginton, Rebekah Williams

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All A’s: Frances Bullard, Logan Gates, Bradley Hastings, James Howell, Katie Jones, Zachary Marlar, Mallory McClurg, Brandon Nhek, Destiny Ortiz, Hannah Shea, Madeline Smith, Savannah Smith, Tetra Tyes, Elizabeth Whitehurst, Matthew Windham A’s & B’s: Hunter Barkes, Shawana Burrell, Bryant Carlton, Mckenzie Carson, Tamia Clark, Jose Contreas, Janessa Gibbs, Monica Hutchens, Caleb Isbell, James Jourdan, Benjamin Malone, Stearman McCalister, Shelby McClain, John McFall, Erin Overholt, Hayden Park, Sarina Patel, Chylencia Phelan, Kelsey Tweddle

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see what is being offered.” The show has already been a success over the first two days. “People from three states away have already called wanting reservations for next year,” said operations manager Greg Moss. Walnut’s Andy Mullins and his son, Kelvin, were part of a steady flow attending the show on Friday. “If you can’t find it here, you don’t need it,” said A. Mullins. (The free show — sponsored by the Crossroads Arena, TriGreen Equipment, DeWitt Auction Co. and the Tourism Office — continues through today.)

9th Grade

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


Local

Saturday, January 21, 2012

3 • Daily Corinthian

Letter declares Gov. Stone honest man (Tishomingo County’s own John Marshall Stone served longer as governor of Mississippi than anyone else, from 1876 to 1882 and again from 1890 to 1896. This item was printed in The Iuka Reporter on April 4, 1895. It was transcribed by RaNae Vaughn for the Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society (TCHGS), Dec. 22, 2011. The ClarionLedger was published in Jackson.)

Governor Stone’s Candidacy The State press has not been slow to recognize Gov. Stone as the most suitable man to fill the shoes of Senator George. None fail to speak in the highest terms of his character and fitness for the place. Free silver advocates have come to his support as well as those who believe in the sound money doctrine. The fact that the money ques-

tion will have been settled by the year 1899, when the Governor, RaNae if elected, Vaughn will take his seat, Historically lays Speaking aside any objection the free silver advocated may have to him on that ground. The following letter to The Clarion-Ledger is a deserved tribute to his exalted worth: Editor, The ClarionLedger: I do not wish to discuss the coinage question further than to repeat that I am opposed to the views (of) Governor Stone on the subject. And yet, in reading his address before the Democratic caucus, I can but admire the earnestness, the honesty and courage of conviction it displays from start to finish. Weight the address ad you may, Mr. Editor,

it has one unquestioned merit. It shows in bold relief the character and virtues of its author. Between its lines no hidden meaning is to be found. Its language is plain and unambiguous. There is in it no duplicity. It manifests no attempt at artful dodging. It evidences no time-serving; no straddling; no shirking from duty or evasion of responsibility. Free from demagoguism, it is neither truculent nor truckling in spirit. On the contrary, its sentiments are those of an honorable self-respecting man in whom there is no guile. Every thought is clothed in words of truth—words born of the unfailing courage and patriotic purpose to which no one to whom a high sense of duty is not always present can ever feel. They proclaim the true nobility of the speaker, and will make him friends, or ought to, have the effect of making people say,

“those are the utterances of an honest manly man.” And they will win followers to him. It cannot be otherwise. For Mississippians love truth, courage and honor as they despise duplicity, cowardice and meanness. And seeing his fearless advocacy of what he deems right, they will support Stone for the Senate not on account of his silver views but in spite of those views. This, too, they will be the more inclined to do when they bear in mind that if they elect Stone to the Senate, he cannot take his seat until 1899, and before that time the silver question will, if not forever, (be) settled one way or the other. Democrat. ■■■

RaNae Vaughn is board member and in charge of marketing and publications for the Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 203, Iuka, MS 38852.

Deaths Wilton “Buddy” Calley

FLORENCE, Ala. — Wilton “Buddy” Calley died Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, at Glenwood Nursing Home. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Cutshall Funeral Home.

Vanessa L. Gaines

SELMER, Tenn. — Vanessa L. Gaines, 49, died Thursday, Jan. 19, 2012, at Regional Hospital in Jackson, Tn. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Patterson Memorial Chapel.

Leo Nichols

IUKA — Leo Nichols, 93, died Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, at Carrington House. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Cutshall Funeral Home.

Things to do Today Bluegrass show The Clay Wagoner Memorial Bluegrass Show is being held tonight beginning at 6 p.m. at The Marty (community center) in Adamsville, Tenn. Featured bands will include Crossroads Bluegrass, Flatwoods Bluegrass and Good Times Grass. Donations accepted for show expenses. Concessions available.

Farm & machinery show

Grabbing those ZZZZZZ’s . . . in cozy January Guess what I have in common with Napoleon Bonaparte and Thomas Edison? With Winston Churchill and Ronald Reagan? With Salvador Dali and John F. Kennedy? Uh huh, I love my naps, and January is the perfect time to cozy down. Hubby G-Man says I won’t have any regrets when I depart this world ’cause then I’ll be able to nap forever. He’s joking ... but he’s probably correct. I do enjoy putting a little slack in my day. Hispanic folks have it right; the afternoon siesta is all-important. And now researchers are touting evidence that not only is an afternoon nap a blessed luxury but human beings are meant to nap. Got that? Meant to. “This biological readiness to fall asleep in the mid-afternoon coincides with a slight drop in body temperature and occurs regardless of whether we eat lunch. It is present even in good sleepers who are well rested,” says Dr. Roger Broughton, professor of neurology at the University of Ottawa. I knew it. A quick, 20-minute nap leaves me with increased alertness, raring to go. But I won’t gloat with that “told-youso” attitude now that GMan himself likes a short snooze in his recliner after lunch. (I’m not sure exactly when he capitulated, but he’s a devoted bunkie now.) And guess what? According to Dr. Broughton, “Studies have shown that people who spend 30 minutes each day napping have one-third less heart disease than those who don’t nap.” Neuroscientists think this brief respite from our stressful world also positively affects not just memory and energy but the very physical make-up of our brains. “Napping may protect brain circuits from overuse until those neurons can consolidate what’s been learned during periods of intense activity,” says Dr. Robert Stickgold of Harvard Medical School. NASA researchers say ditto, as do the doctors at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. “Brain activity stays high throughout the day with a nap,” explains Dr. Sara Mednick of the Salk Institute, “and without a nap, brain activity declines as the day wears on. Napping in general benefits heart functioning, hormonal maintenance and cell repair.” So, wake up, folks; nappers are not lazy. We

may be in la-la-land for 20-30 minutes every day, but our little cells Beth are workJacks ing away, reviving Snippets and regenerating. An old Irish proverb advises: “A hearty laugh and a good sleep are the best cures in the doctor’s book.” I didn’t make that up. That’s right; all of us (even employers who want 60 minutes of hard work from employees every single hour) are beginning to realize what the Irish know. I cut an article from the newspaper last week about a boss in Bangkok, Thailand, who turns out the lights in an office “nap

room” after lunch and encourages his employees to take an afternoon snooze. “The nap room features soft music, sweet smelling flowers and strict rules barring cell phones and talking,” says the AP news release. Not surprisingly, the nap room is a big hit with the workers; however, I have a couple of questions: What do they do about snorers? And who gets the top bunks? But hold on. Not only am I advocating naps for rejuvenating reasons, I have another grand idea stolen from Anonymous at one of the online sites for witty quotations. The wise somebody declares: “Set aside half an hour every day to do all your worrying; then take a nap during this period.” Excellent advice . . . also, don’t forget still to

sleep eight to nine hours every night and do not feel guilty about your napping! Dr. Broughton advises us “a good nap is one of life’s great pleasures, and the ability to nap is the sign of a well-balanced life. When we nap we snatch back control of our day from a mechanized, clock-driven society. We set aside the urgency imposed on us by the external world and get in touch with an internal rhythm that is millions of years old.” As writer Carrie Snow insists, “No day is so bad it can’t be fixed with a nap.” Amen, sister.

The Alcorn Farm & Machinery show is being held today at the Crossroads Arena, South Harper Rd. in Corinth. The free event is for farmers, gardeners and tractor lovers who will have access to farm and machinery vendors as well as exhibitors representing the many elements of the farming industry. Dewitt Auctions Company will hold a multi-million dollar equipment auction at 9 a.m. For questions about the event, call 877-987-8687.

Culinary Food Month Alcorn County Welcome Center, 2028 South Tate Street, Corinth is observing Culinary Food Month for January. Visitors to the center can go by and pick up recipe cards, sweet potato recipe brochures, valuable restaurant coupons (while supplies last), menus, the new “eat.drink.Mississippi” magazine with lots of wonderful recipes and other information. The Welcome Center will also be doing random giveaways throughout the month to out of state and/ or local travelers who come in and sign in on their daily visitor register on numbered lines.

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www.dailycorinthian.com

Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Saturday, January 21, 2012

Corinth, Miss.

Perry may run again in 2016 BY ROGER SIMON NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — To know Rick Perry was to ignore him. The more he campaigned for the Republican nomination for president, the lower his poll numbers dropped. As he traveled the country, gripping and grinning with voters, laying out his personality, plans and proposals, his surge began to sag like a leaky zeppelin. Though Perry is an experienced politician and the longest-serving governor in Texas history, though people say he is warm and personable -- unless you are a condemned murderer, that is -- the more people around the country saw him, the less they seemed to like him. And Thursday, in a suburban hotel meeting room stuffed with reporters but without supporters, Perry suspended his campaign in an 11-minute speech that he read from notes and then left the room without taking questions. There were two notable moments, however: First, he endorsed Newt Gingrich -- but in the worst possible way. He began well. “I believe Newt is a conservative visionary who can transform our country,” Perry said. At which point, he should have stopped. Instead, he plunged onward. “Newt is not perfect,” Perry said, showing a certain flair for the obvious, “but who among us is?” The public had been reminded of Newt’s imperfection Thursday morning, when ABC broadcast portions of an interview with Newt’s second wife, who alleged that Newt came to her seeking an “open” marriage and that he had sexual relations with his girlfriend in the same bed he shared with his wife. (Though not at the same time, thank goodness.) Gingrich’s infidelities over the years have been well documented, but the public was now seeing a wronged women taking about the sordidness, crassness and untrustworthiness of a man who just happens to be running for president of the United States and faces a critical primary in South Carolina today. So why was Perry bringing up Gingrich’s character in what was supposed to be an endorsement? Well, maybe because Perry wants some goody points from Gingrich for endorsing him while it still counts, but also wants to distance himself a little just in case Gingrich flames out for being a philanderer. The second interesting part of Perry’s withdrawal was how upbeat it was about Perry’s own future. Nothing in his presidential campaign had gone well. Mitt Romney attacked Perry for signing into law a bill that lets the children of illegal aliens qualify for in-state tuition at Texas colleges and universities. Michele Bachmann attacked Perry for his executive order mandating a vaccine for young girls to fight cervical cancer. And then there was Perry’s “brain freeze” during a debate, an understandable human moment that nonetheless became the equivalent of Howard Dean’s scream in 2004, an event that seemed to disqualify him from the highest office in the land. Perry spent more than $6 million in Iowa in this campaign, came in fifth and announced he was going home to “reassess” his future. Instead, he decided to push onward into South Carolina, where he spent another chunk of the $17.2 million he says he has raised. But he gets to keep any money left over for the future, and the future seemed very much on Perry’s mind Thursday. Calling his withdrawal only a “strategic retreat,” Perry said, “And this I know: I am not done fighting for the cause of conservatism. In fact, I have only begun to fight.” What does that mean? Well, it could mean Perry will run for reelection as governor of Texas, Ray Sullivan, his spokesman, told reporters after Perry had disappeared from the room. And then there is always 2016. Perry may be “doing this again in four years, if the president wins,” Sullivan said. “Republican voters tend to like the experienced candidates that they’ve seen for a long time. So I would not rule it out.” Perry appears to have been bitten by the presidential bug. And for some campaigners, it’s not over even when it’s over. (Roger Simon is chief political columnist of politico.com, an award-winning journalist and a New York Times best selling author.)

Prayer for today O God, help us to serve others in your name. Amen.

A verse to share It was your own eyes that saw all these great things the Lord has done. — Deuteronomy 11:7 (NIV)

Reece Terry publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com

Education without skills can be trouble thrown around in the One of the ways media, showing that of trying to reduce people with college the vast disparities degrees earn higher in economic success, average salaries than which are common people without them. in countries around But such statistics the world, is by makBill lump together apples ing higher education O’Reilly and oranges -- and more widely availlemons. able, even for people The O’Reilly A decade after without the money Factor graduation, people to pay for it. whose degrees were This can be both a generous investment and a in a hard field like engineerwise investment for a soci- ing earned twice as much as ety to make. But, depending people whose degrees were on how it is done, it can also in the ultimate soft field, be a foolish and even dan- education. Nor is a degree gerous investment, as many from a prestigious institusocieties around the world tion a guarantee of a big pay-off, especially not for have learned the hard way. When institutions of those who failed to specialhigher learning turn out ize in subjects that would highly qualified doctors, give them skills valued in scientists, engineers and the real world. But that is not even half others with skills that can raise the standard of living the story. In countries of a whole society and make around the world, people possible a better and longer with credentials but no life, the benefits are obvi- marketable skills have been a major source of political ous. What is not so obvious, turmoil, social polarization but is painfully true none- and ideologically driven vitheless, is that colleges and olence, sometimes escalatuniversities can also turn ing into civil war. People with degrees in out vast numbers of people with credentials, but with soft subjects, which impart no marketable skills with neither skills nor a realistic which to fulfill their expec- understanding of the world, have been the driving forctations. There is nothing magic es behind many extremist about simply being in ivy- movements with disastrous covered buildings for four consequences. These include what a years. Statistics are often noted historian called the

“well-educated but underemployed” Czech young men who promoted ethnic identity politics in the 19th century, which led ultimately to historic tragedies for both Czechs and Germans in 20th century Czechoslovakia. It was much the same story of soft-subject “educated” but unsuccessful young men who promoted pro-fascist and anti-Semitic movements in Romania in the 1930s. The targets have been different in different countries but the basic story has been much the same. Those who cannot compete in the marketplace, despite their degrees, not only resent those who have succeeded where they have failed, but push demands for preferential treatment, in order to negate the “unfair” advantages that others have. Similar attempts to substitute political favoritism for developing one’s own skills and achievements have been common as well in India, Nigeria, Malaysia, Fiji, Sri Lanka and throughout Central Europe and Eastern Europe between the two World Wars. Such political movements cannot promote their agendas without demonizing others, thereby polarizing whole societies. Time and again, their targets have been those who have the

skills and achievements that they lack. When they achieve their ultimate success, forcing such people out of the country, as in Uganda in the 1970s or Zimbabwe more recently, the whole economy can collapse. Against this international background, the current class warfare rhetoric in American politics and ethnic grievance ideology in our schools and colleges, can be seen as the dangerous things they are. Those who are pushing such things may be seeking nothing more than votes for themselves or some unearned group benefits at other people’s expense. But they are playing with dynamite. The semi-literate sloganizing of our own Occupy Wall Street mobs recalls the distinction that Milton Friedman often made between those who are educated and those who have simply been in schools. Generating more such people, in the name of expanding education, may serve the interests of the Obama administration but hardly the interests of America. (Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www. tsowell.com.)

Singing the 1 percent blues for prospering about five miles Growing up in Levitaway. town out on Long IsToday, I am a rich land, I remember my father buying pants guy, a 1 percenter. I can buy all the pants through the mail. I want. My late faThis seemed strange ther could not even to me. There was a Thomas fathom how much Robert Hall clothing Sowell money I make. I store nearby, and it have trouble prohad pants all over the Columnist cessing it, as well. place. But my dad said But I never he could buy two pair for the price of one from worked for cash. I always some guy in South Dakota. wanted to do something One problem: The pants interesting and actually walked away from a highnever fit. My father didn’t much paying TV job back in the care. He saved some money, 1990s to attend Harvard, which he put in the bank, where I secured a master’s affording me an opportu- degree in public adminisnity to go to private schools. tration. There were tons of rich My parents never wanted to be rich and did not resent folks at Harvard. I did not those who were, although resent them. Today, the Occupy Wall my dad did not like Joseph Kennedy. He called JFK’s Street crew and many profather a bootlegger. The gressive Americans believe truth is, we O’Reillys did not that I am a greed head, even though they have no idea even know any rich people. They lived in Garden City, what I do with my money.

Beth Cossitt

Mark Boehler

business manager bcossitt@dailycorinthian.com

editor editor@dailycorinthian.com

Willie Walker

L.W. Hodges

circulation manager circdirector@dailycorinthian.com

press foreman

Just the fact that I have it gives them license to brand me a dreadful “1 percenter.” The reason that I have prospered monetarily is that I put freedom to good use. I worked hard, got a great education, paid my dues in journalism and, finally, hit it big. America gave me the freedom to do all those things. In the past, my achievements might have been celebrated. Not today. Now, more than a few folks say I am not paying my fair share to ensure the security of my fellow citizens. According to the IRS, the 1.4 million households that comprise the 1 percent (that is taking in about $350,000 a year) pay 37 percent of the nation’s income tax. That’s a big number, is it not? And The New York Times reports that the 1 percenters contributed about 30 percent of all charitable dona-

World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com To Sound Off: E-mail: email: news@dailycorinthian.com news@dailycorinthian.com advertising@dailycorinthian. Circulation 287-6111 com Classified Adv. 287-6147 Classad@dailycorinthian.com

tions in 2007. Another big number. So I’ve decided that those demanding more of my money for “social justice” are really attacking freedom. In this country, it is not wrong to prosper. You should not be demeaned for “having.” President Obama will be doing the nation a huge disservice if he bases his upcoming campaign on class warfare, because that’s really an assault on individual freedom. Yes, we are all Americans, and we should all be in it together. But that doesn’t mean the government can guarantee individual outcomes. In a free society, it can’t. (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, January 21, 2012 • 5

State ‘Informal’ advice threatens Barbour’s pardons BY HOLBROOK MOHR AND EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS Associated Press

JACKSON — Some of those pardoned by former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour might not have complied with rules requiring adequate public notice because they received vague instructions from the state Parole Board and local newspapers. Attorney General Jim Hood is challenging dozens of pardons and a hearing is set for Monday in Hinds County Circuit Court. Hood wants to return those who were freed by Barbour, including convicted killers, to the prison system. The vast majority of people who could be stripped of their pardons wouldn’t be sent back to prison because they were out before Barbour’s action. Parole Board chairwoman Shannon Warnock told The Associated Press on Friday that she “informally” told people to publish notices of their pardons “for a month” in newspapers in the areas where they were convicted, as constitutionally required. But Warnock said some weekly newspapers told applicants they could publish once a week for four weeks. Warnock was responding to questions about people who told the AP they were afraid of losing their pardons even though they followed the board’s advice. “I can confirm that. I informally said to pub-

lish for a month and you need to publish in the county in which you were convicted. A lot of people then followed the advice and counsel of the weekly newspapers (in their towns), which was to publish once a week for four weeks,” Warnock said. She had no further comment. Hood contends once-aweek publication for four weeks doesn’t meet the Constitution’s requirement of publication for 30 days. Section 124 of the Mississippi Constitution says that in felony cases no pardon “shall be granted until the applicant therefor shall have published for thirty days, in some newspaper in the county where the crime was committed, and in the case there be no newspaper published in said county, then in an adjoining county ...” “The law clearly says 30 days. Four weeks is only 28 days,” Hood said. The Mississippi law does not mention weekly newspapers. It’s not clear how many people may have gotten the ambiguous advice. Hood’s office said Friday that only 22 out of nearly 200 people pardoned met the notification requirements. Barbour, a Republican who ended his second term Jan. 10, created a political backlash because some of the people he pardoned had been convicted of violent crimes. Five of them had been serving life sentences — four for murder and one for robbery.

They had worked as prison trusties at the Governor’s Mansion. Hood, the lone Democrat in statewide office, challenged those pardons in court Jan. 11. He filed an amended complaint this week seeking to block dozens of other pardons. Many of those people were convicted decades ago of comparatively minor crimes, like marijuana possession or burglary, and had lived lawful productive lives since them. Barbour issued about 200 “full, complete and unconditional” pardons during his two terms, with 198 of them in his final days in office. They included 17 convicted of murder, 10 convicted of manslaughter, eight convicted of aggravated assault and five convicted of drunken-driving incidents that caused deaths. He granted some sort of reprieve to 26 inmates who were in custody — 10 full pardons; 13 medical releases; one sus-

pension of sentence; one conditional, indefinite suspension of sentence; and one conditional clemency. Barbour stressed last week that 189 of the people who received clemency were already out of prison and some had been for years. The former governor has said his pardons are legal and accused Hood of partisan politics. Whatever the case, changes already are being made. Gov. Phil Bryant said Thursday through a spokesman that he has phased out the trusty program at the Governor’s Mansion. He has also said he has no intentions to grant pardons. Bryant and his wife, Deborah, plan to move into the mansion in about two months, after renovations are finished. Trusties traditionally have done odd jobs around the mansion, including cooking, cleaning and serving food. They’re

chosen by the state Department of Corrections and are typically pardoned or given other relief, such as a suspended sentence, when a governor leaves office. Bryant, a former deputy sheriff, said last week that he’d stop the practice of using violent offenders as mansion trusties and that trusties would no longer spend the night on mansion grounds. He took that a step further Thursday by ending the mansion trusty program. P.S. Ruckman Jr., a political science professor at Rock Valley College in Rockford, Ill., has studied presidential and gubernatorial pardons. He said Barbour issued an unusually high number. Ruckman said one way to improve Mississippi’s gubernatorial pardon system would be to eliminate the practice of having some inmates work as mansion trusties. “It gives them access to

the governor and a chance to know him personally,” Ruckman said. “Let’s just pretend it does give the governor some type of superhuman insight into whether they’ve changed. That’s still unfair to the other prisoners who are similarly situated but don’t have access to the governor.” State Sen. Deborah Dawkins, D-Pass Christian, said Friday that Barbour pardoned too many people, including violent offenders, “with very negative consequences.” But she said Bryant is overreacting by saying he plans to issue no pardons. “It seems like overkill to me, which is not uncommon with Gov. Bryant,” said Dawkins. She said Bryant, who campaigned on controlling state spending, will probably increase Governor’s Mansion expenses because he’ll need paid staff to replace the free labor that trusties have provided.

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:L?9;Å<EHÅOEKHÅH;J?H;C;DJ If you’re not at your old job, your 401K shouldn’t be either. Chuck Counce of BancorpSouth Investment Services, Inc., specializes in retirement plan rollovers. Call him for a free consultation on rollover options and other investment products and services. Contact Chuck at 662-396-6016. Investment Services, Inc. Not FDIC No bank guarantee. insured. May lose value.

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6 • Saturday, January 21, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

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Goat missing from Nativity found safe Associated Press

FERGUS FALLS, Minn. — A goat that escaped a Minnesota Nativity scene is safe after 25 days on the loose. Curly was found Wednesday afternoon on a farm southwest of Fergus Falls. Tony Loomer came out to feed the horses and goats

on his farm and noticed the extra goat. KBRF-AM reports Curly appeared hungry, wet and cold and had lost weight. Curly’s owner, Jim Aakre (AWK’-ree), came to make sure the goat was his. Aakre thought about going home to get a horse trailer, but Curly was already cold, so

he and his wife, Karen, gave Curly her first car ride. The 3-year-old Angora goat was supposed to be part of a live Nativity scene but escaped while she was being unloaded for a Christmas Eve service at Bethlehem Lutheran Church.

Obama to press Congress to revisit $1.2 trillion in cuts BY ANDREW TAYLOR Associated Press

WASHINGTON — In its budget proposal next month, the Obama administration will urge lawmakers to revisit the failed attempt by a congressional supercommittee to cut the deficit by at least $1.2 trillion, the White House says. The proposal runs counter to the common wisdom in Washington that any major deficit reduction effort is unlikely in a presidential election year. Instead, lawmakers are focusing on a one-year extension of a payroll tax cut and supplemental jobless benefits sought by the president as part of last fall’s jobs agenda. But also looming are sweeping across-the-board spending cuts required next year because of the supercommittee deadlock. Senior lawmakers like House Armed Services Committee Chairman Howard “Buck” McKeon, R-Calif., are focusing on a less ambitious one-year plan to give the Pentagon

a reprieve from cuts that both the administration and Republicans say would cripple the military. The White House plan, likely to reprise new taxes and fee proposals that are nonstarters with Capitol Hill Republicans, would turn off the entire nineyear, $1.2 trillion acrossthe-board spending cuts, referred to as a “sequester.” “We have a sequester coming less than a year from now unless Congress acts,” said a senior administration official. “We’re going to ask Congress to do now what we think Congress should have done in December, which is enact more than $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction, turn off the sequester and maintain the (spending caps).” The official required anonymity as a condition to speak to a reporter on the plan. That plan of budget cuts would be imposed under last summer’s budget and debt pact between Obama and Congress that im-

posed $900 billion in savings from accounts appropriated by Congress each year and promised at least $1.2 trillion more from the work on the deficit supercommittee, or, failing that, across-the-board cuts to a sweeping set of defense and domestic programs. The threat of the acrossthe-board cuts was supposed to prod the panel, but it never got on track and collapsed just before Thanksgiving over intractable differences on tax increases and cuts to popular programs like Medicare. The failure of the panel capped a long, difficult budget year in which the warring sides were only able to agree when facing either a shutdown of the government or an unthinkable default on U.S. obligations. Policymakers face the prospect of more gridlock this year as election-year politics promise to even further cripple the already limited ability of Obama and Capitol Hill Republicans to work together.

High court throws out electoral maps BY MARK SHERMAN Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday threw out electoral maps drawn by federal judges in Texas that favored minorities. The decision ultimately could affect control of the U.S. House of Representatives and leaves the fate of Texas’ April primaries unclear. The justices ordered the three-judge court in San Antonio to come up with new plans that pay more attention to maps created by Texas’ Republicandominated state Legislature. All four of the state’s new congressional seats

could swing based on the outcome. But the Supreme Court did not compel the use of the state’s maps in this year’s elections, as Texas wanted. Only Justice Clarence Thomas said he would have gone that far. The court’s unsigned opinion thus did not blaze any new trails in election law or signal retreat from a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, as some supporters of the law feared would result from this case. Still, the outcome appeared to favor Republicans by instructing the judges to stick more closely to what the Legislature did,

said election law expert Richard Hasen, a professor at the University of California, Irvine, law school. Controversy over the maps arose from redrawing political boundaries based on results of the 2010 census that found that Texas had added more than 4 million new residents, mostly Latinos and African-Americans, since 2000. The minority groups complained they were denied sufficient voting power by Republican lawmakers who sought to maximize GOP electoral gains in violation of the landmark Voting Rights Act.


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Chg

A-B-C-D ACE Ltd AES Corp AFLAC AK Steel ASML Hld AT&T Inc AbtLab AberFitc Accenture Achillion ActivsBliz AdobeSy AMD Agilent AkamaiT AlcatelLuc Alcoa Allstate AlphaNRs AlteraCp lf Altria Amazon AMovilL s ACapAgy AEagleOut AEP AmExp AmIntlGrp AmTower Amgen Anadarko AnalogDev Annaly A123 Sys Apache Apple Inc ApldMatl ArcelorMit ArchCoal ArchDan AresCap ArubaNet AsiaInfoL AsscdBanc Atmel Avon BB&T Cp BP PLC Baidu BakrHu BcoBrades BcoSantSA BcoSBrasil BkofAm BkNYMel Barclay Bar iPVix BarrickG Baxter BerkH B BestBuy BiogenIdc BioSante BdwlkPpl Boeing BostonSci BrMySq Broadcom BrcdeCm BrkfldOfPr CA Inc CBRE Grp CBS B CMS Eng CSX s CVS Care CblvsNY s CabotO&G Calpine Cameco g CampSp CapOne CapitlSrce CareFusion Carlisle Carnival Caterpillar Celgene CellTher rsh Cemex CenterPnt CntryLink CheniereEn ChesEng Chevron Chimera CienaCorp Cisco Citigrp rs Clearwire CocaCola CocaCE CogentC ColgPal Comcast Comerica ConAgra ConocPhil ConsolEngy Corning Covidien CSVS2xVxS CSVelIVSt s CredSuiss Cree Inc Ctrip.com Cummins DCT Indl DDR Corp DR Horton DeanFds Dell Inc DeltaAir DenburyR Dndreon DirecTV A DxFnBull rs DrSCBr rs DirFnBr rs DirxSCBull Discover Disney DomRescs DonlleyRR DEmmett DowChm DryShips DuPont DukeEngy DukeRlty

14 20 10 ... ... 16 19 17 16 ... 19 18 5 14 32 ... 15 44 46 15 17 ... 11 4 15 11 12 ... 89 17 ... 14 8 ... 9 15 9 16 12 9 10 39 11 26 9 11 15 7 48 13 ... ... ... ... 10 ... ... 10 14 17 9 25 ... 24 15 17 16 21 56 4 14 22 16 14 14 17 12 52 ... ... 13 7 37 19 18 13 16 31 ... ... 14 17 ... 6 8 6 ... 17 8 ... 13 13 ... 18 18 14 16 9 12 7 13 ... ... ... 49 24 12 ... ... 60 ... 9 13 14 ... 13 ... ... ... ... 7 16 17 8 ... 14 ... 13 17 ...

72.67 13.06 47.91 9.27 43.20 30.51 55.76 44.51 55.81 9.47 12.22 30.50 6.42 41.00 32.04 2.00 10.17 29.83 19.91 40.35 28.70 190.93 23.34 29.00 13.81 41.01 50.04 25.65 61.51 69.57 79.02 39.78 16.54 2.29 96.80 420.30 12.47 21.08 13.87 30.04 15.75 22.51 11.78 12.96 10.15 18.58 27.49 44.02 122.80 49.28 18.45 7.75 9.32 7.07 21.28 13.95 28.42 45.83 52.68 79.91 25.00 118.14 .68 27.50 75.52 5.98 32.65 35.00 5.60 17.32 22.65 17.86 28.04 21.48 22.82 42.77 14.58 61.12 14.95 22.99 31.75 46.03 6.99 23.51 48.43 31.56 105.64 73.84 1.31 6.43 18.81 37.95 10.93 20.96 106.89 2.91 15.27 19.92 29.64 1.85 68.09 26.59 15.30 89.00 26.07 29.58 27.06 71.20 33.02 14.42 48.04 20.20 8.06 26.04 27.19 27.56 104.78 5.56 13.79 13.82 10.70 16.67 9.41 17.70 13.37 43.03 80.40 22.08 29.61 53.18 27.39 39.31 50.57 12.20 20.28 33.39 2.36 49.42 21.30 13.50

+1.74 +.14 +.78 -.13 +.79 +.09 +.33 -2.57 +1.01 -1.15 -.12 +.26 +.20 -.85 -.65 +.01 -.01 +.34 +.27 -.53 +.09 -3.52 -.36 +.34 +.14 -.09 -.91 +.10 -.69 +.43 -.77 +.11 +.09 +.03 -.36 -7.45 +.16 -.11 -.14 +.62 -.34 +.72 +1.86 +.52 +.31 +.36 +.37 -.69 -.82 +.51 +.07 +.08 +.07 +.11 +.37 +.42 -.89 -.63 +.06 +.32 -.10 +1.36 +.04 -1.01 -.04 +.11 -.06 +.01 -.06 +.31 +.37 +.25 -.79 +.03 -.23 -.11 +.34 -1.97 -.22 +.03 -.51 -2.74 +.17 +.21 -.22 -.35 -.11 +1.63 +.17 -.01 +.38 +.48 +.23 +.28 -.04 +.12 +.03 +.13 +.31 +.64 -.15 -3.51 -.39 +.20 +.90 -.12 -.07 -.71 -.03 -.01 -1.30 +.23 +.41 +1.34 +.66 -.73 +.05 +.12 -.23 -.20 +.10 +.08 +.03 -.39 +.31 +1.33 -.06 -.50 +.13 +.26 -.13 +.27 +.26 -.04 +.41 +.01 +.02 +.06 +.22

E-F-G-H E-CDang E-Trade eBay EMC Cp EQT Corp Eaton s ElPasoCp Elan ElectArts EmersonEl EmpDist EnCana g EngyCnv h EricsnTel ExcoRes Exelixis Exelon Expedia s ExpScripts ExxonMbl FairchldS FedExCp FelCor FifthThird FstHorizon FstNiagara FstSolar

... 40 13 23 23 13 ... 13 ... 15 16 31 ... ... 87 ... 10 9 20 11 12 17 ... 11 38 14 6

7.54 +.30 9.66 +.04 31.93 +.42 23.25 +.09 46.30 -1.34 48.38 -1.65 26.87 -.14 13.17 -.19 17.93 +.39 49.33 -.47 20.04 -.04 17.49 +.05 1.03 +.04 10.22 +.04 7.86 -.03 5.00 +.04 39.36 -.14 31.04 -.29 51.90 +.94 87.49 +.46 14.35 +.31 91.57 -1.47 3.62 +.52 13.17 -.39 9.04 +.27 9.63 +.17 38.45 -.25

Flextrn FocusMda FordM ForestOil s FMCG s FrontierCm GATX Gafisa SA Gap GaylrdEnt GenDynam GenElec GenGrPrp GenMills GenMotors GenOn En Genworth Gerdau GileadSci GoldFLtd Goldcrp g GoldmanS Goodyear Google GreenMtC HCP Inc Hallibrtn HartfdFn HltMgmt Heckmann HeclaM Heinz HercOffsh Hertz Hess HewlettP HomeDp HonwllIntl HopFedBc HostHotls HudsCity HumGen HuntBnk Huntsmn Hyperdyn

9 16 8 12 9 32 20 ... 11 ... 10 16 ... 17 5 ... ... ... 14 2 18 24 30 20 39 26 13 8 8 ... 12 17 ... 15 11 8 19 15 ... ... ... ... 12 8 ...

6.72 20.02 12.59 12.91 43.10 4.87 42.75 4.89 18.63 28.54 72.47 19.15 15.61 40.67 25.00 2.08 8.24 9.52 47.44 15.57 44.98 108.74 13.65 585.99 50.90 40.85 36.20 18.53 6.26 5.68 4.78 51.95 4.52 12.90 61.27 28.13 44.51 57.38 6.80 16.23 7.10 8.93 5.92 11.47 3.40

-1.20 -.02 -.33 -1.27 -.53 +.03 -.74 +.12 +.26 +.52 -.28 +.18 -.03 +.07 +.01 +.23 +.16 +.57 +1.06 -.11 -53.58 -1.27 -.53 -.05 +.19 +.13 -.04 +.05 -1.51 +.16 -.13 +.08 +.98 -.90 -1.12 +.37 +.28 -.12 +.13 +.14 +.17

I-J-K-L ICICI Bk ING iShGold iShBraz iSh HK iShJapn iSTaiwn iShSilver iShChina25 iShEMkts iShB20 T iS Eafe iShR2K iShREst IdenixPh ITW IngrmM Inhibitex Insmed rs Intel IBM IntlGame IntPap Interpublic Invesco ItauUnibH IvanhM g JA Solar JDS Uniph JPMorgCh Jabil JamesRiv Jefferies JetBlue JohnJn JohnsnCtl JnprNtwk KB Home KLA Tnc Keycorp Kimco Kinross g KodiakO g Kohls Kraft Kroger LSI Corp LamResrch LVSands LennarA LibtyIntA LifeTech LillyEli LincNat LloydBkg LockhdM Lowes LyonBas A

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 13 12 ... ... 11 14 18 11 12 12 ... ... 4 48 8 13 12 12 24 16 13 24 ... 11 8 82 14 44 11 21 12 13 9 27 46 16 24 9 7 ... 10 19 7

34.11 9.08 16.24 65.05 16.80 9.45 12.46 31.22 38.67 41.38 116.98 51.93 78.25 59.01 14.09 51.47 19.29 24.42 5.01 26.38 188.52 16.72 32.46 10.52 22.44 21.10 19.10 1.76 13.45 37.36 23.00 6.47 16.00 5.44 65.27 31.50 22.99 9.31 51.50 8.30 18.12 10.21 9.29 47.37 38.67 23.91 7.06 42.23 46.46 22.06 16.86 45.37 39.81 22.50 1.98 82.78 26.53 39.90

+1.26 -.11 +.08 +.25 +.19 +.12 -.05 +1.48 +.07 -.03 -1.34 +.27 +.05 +.28 -.73 +.25 +.45 -.17 +1.21 +.75 +8.00 -.24 +.03 -.15 +.27 +.11 -.27 -.04 +.52 +.43 -.15 -.31 -.02 -.10 +.08 -.96 -.89 -.30 +.47 +.44 +.11 -.46 -1.10 -.03 -.15 +.07 -.09 -.39 -.59 -.30 -1.53 -.36 +.22 -.93 -.80 -.10

M-N-O-P MEMC MFA Fncl MGIC MGM Rsts Macys MagHRes Manitowoc Manulife g MarathnO s MarathP n MktVGold MktVRus MarIntA MartMM MarvellT Masco Mattel McDnlds McKesson MedcoHlth Medtrnic MelcoCrwn Merck MetLife MicronT Microsoft Monsanto MorgStan Mosaic Mylan NRG Egy Nabors NOilVarco NetApp Netflix NY CmtyB NewmtM NewsCpA NiSource NobleCorp NokiaCp NorthropG NovaGld g Novartis Novlus NuanceCm Nvidia OCharleys OcciPet OfficeDpt OldRepub Omncre OnSmcnd Oracle PG&E Cp PNC PPG PPL Corp ParkerHan PatriotCoal PattUTI PeabdyE Penney PeopUtdF PepsiCo

... 7 ... ... 13 ... ... ... 7 ... ... ... 68 45 13 ... 14 20 16 18 13 52 14 10 ... 11 25 16 10 16 14 12 17 22 23 11 14 17 21 26 ... 9 ... 11 14 ... 14 ... 13 ... ... 22 25 16 16 11 13 10 12 ... 10 11 22 21 17

4.62 6.96 4.22 12.64 35.38 5.61 12.20 12.48 32.04 37.17 52.18 28.93 34.84 80.90 15.53 12.41 28.53 101.74 76.51 62.34 39.94 11.18 39.20 36.35 7.76 29.71 80.05 18.39 55.01 21.56 16.15 17.01 74.80 36.85 100.24 13.13 59.27 19.19 22.84 34.69 5.61 61.39 9.23 55.11 46.63 29.08 14.22 6.03 100.37 2.60 9.46 32.70 8.92 28.71 40.36 59.63 88.92 27.50 81.52 7.51 18.70 37.85 35.09 12.90 66.28

-.04 +.01 +.03 -.16 -.44 -.31 +.27 +.31 +.07 +1.32 +.03 -.24 +.18 +.25 +.07 -.44 -.14 +.48 +.62 +.34 +.80 +.01 -.06 +.53 -.12 +1.59 -.30 +.11 +1.16 -.31 -.27 +.13 -1.00 -.66 -3.22 +.12 -.33 -.54 +.02 +.08 -.15 +.08 +.22 -3.22 -.12 +.12 -.13 -.12 +.51 +.04 +.27 -1.44 -.02 +.15 -.84 +.23 +1.16 -.30 -3.45 -.16 +.28 +.11 -.44 -.49 +.37

The Week Ahead

Apple’s earnings Apple reports its earnings for its fiscal first quarter on Tuesday, and investors are looking for a big rise. One reason: A later-than-anticipated release of Apple’s latest iPhone model meant revenue and profit in the fourth quarter was weaker than expected. So, the latest quarter’s results are likely to show a big jump due to the iPhone 4S and soaring sales of the iPad. But will it be big enough for investors?

$450

PetrbrsA Petrobras Pfizer PhilipMor PiperJaf PitnyBw Polycom s Popular Potash s PwShs QQQ ProLogis PrUShS&P ProUltSP ProUShL20 ProUSSP500 ProUSSlv rs ProUltSlv s ProUShEuro ProctGam ProgsvCp ProvEn g Prudentl PSEG PulteGrp

... ... 14 16 21 8 27 ... 14 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 17 13 ... 7 11 ...

27.65 +.12 29.82 -.14 21.90 +.06 74.52 +.74 25.02 +.44 19.39 -.10 17.74 -.33 1.59 +.01 44.75 -.79 59.77 -.09 31.78 +.48 17.55 -.04 50.83 +.07 19.28 +.41 11.40 -.03 11.46 -1.30 55.52 +4.93 20.29 +.10 66.23 +.15 20.83 +.07 11.17 -.16 57.36 +.42 30.20 -.05 7.76 -.32

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

Q-R-S-T QEP Res Qualcom QksilvRes RF MicD RadianGrp RegionsFn Renren n RschMotn RiteAid RiverbedT SAIC SLM Cp SpdrDJIA SpdrGold S&P500ETF SpdrHome SpdrLehHY SpdrS&P RB SpdrRetl SpdrOGEx Safeway StJude SanDisk SandRdge Sanofi SaraLee Schlmbrg Schwab SeagateT SearsHldgs Sequenom SvArts rsh SiderurNac SilvWhtn g Sina SiriusXM SkywksSol SouthnCo SwstAirl SwstnEngy SpiritAir n SprintNex SprottSilv SP Matls SP HlthC SP CnSt SP Consum SP Engy SPDR Fncl SP Inds SP Tech SP Util Staples Starbucks StateStr Stryker Suncor gs Suntech SunTrst Supvalu SwiftTrans Symantec Synovus Sysco TD Ameritr TaiwSemi Talbots TalismE g Target TenetHlth Teradyn Terex TevaPhrm TexInst Textron 3M Co TibcoSft TimeWarn TollBros Total SA Transocn Travelers TrinaSolar TriQuint Tyson

19 23 2 18 ... 29 ... 3 ... 82 17 12 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 13 13 11 11 ... 14 20 18 53 ... ... ... ... 21 ... 53 18 19 36 16 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 12 30 11 16 11 29 21 ... ... 20 ... 15 15 ... ... ... 12 12 12 ... 13 14 20 15 40 14 95 ... ... 17 4 12 10

27.45 57.73 5.34 5.11 3.09 4.91 4.29 17.00 1.38 28.63 13.00 14.62 126.96 162.07 131.54 18.68 38.96 26.46 54.77 53.79 21.85 38.56 52.49 7.61 36.07 19.24 73.80 12.81 20.02 49.00 4.36 .42 10.24 31.50 64.96 2.10 21.39 45.30 9.40 29.43 15.54 2.27 13.90 36.58 35.85 32.40 41.16 71.38 14.14 36.16 26.80 34.61 16.00 48.15 41.50 53.14 33.35 3.24 21.29 6.88 10.03 16.79 1.65 30.22 17.05 13.97 3.19 11.90 50.17 5.10 16.14 18.56 45.83 33.64 21.50 85.65 25.97 37.60 22.89 51.86 44.72 61.59 8.10 6.06 19.20

-.27 +.02 +.16 +.01 -.03 +.07 -.57 +.01 -.78 -.26 +.07 +.96 +.85 +.08 -.49 +.06 +.28 -.32 -.33 +.02

UBS AG US Airwy US Gold USG UltraPt g UnionPac UtdContl UPS B US Bancrp US NGs rs US OilFd USSteel UtdTech UtdhlthGp Vale SA Vale SA pf ValeroE VangEmg VerizonCm ViacomB VirgnMda h Visa Vodafone VulcanM WPX En n WalMart Walgrn WalterEn WatsnPh WeathfIntl WellPoint WellsFargo Wendys Co WDigital WstnUnion Weyerh WhitingPt s WmsCos WmsSon Windstrm XL Grp XcelEngy Xerox Xilinx Yahoo Yamana g YingliGrn YumBrnds Ziopharm Zynga n

... 11 ... ... 11 17 13 18 12 ... ... ... 14 11 ... ... 8 ... 16 13 ... 20 ... ... ... 14 11 11 40 64 9 11 ... 11 13 24 11 18 16 23 30 15 15 18 19 16 4 23 ... ...

13.70 6.37 4.98 13.34 23.53 112.84 19.33 75.42 28.74 5.09 37.78 27.82 76.69 52.27 24.21 23.23 23.51 41.70 38.97 47.63 23.75 100.58 27.76 42.72 14.75 61.01 33.48 66.39 58.14 16.54 71.78 30.54 5.25 34.65 19.05 20.65 48.33 28.84 34.97 12.33 20.39 26.60 8.76 35.77 15.96 15.34 4.39 62.48 5.11 9.09

AAPL

Crepe hangers? Although the stock market has started 2012 with a big gain, many strategists still expect this to be a difficult year. Some of the bigger pessimists see Europe’s troubles dragging down the U.S. economy and hurting stocks. A look at three of the darker scenarios, and forecasts for the S&P 500, which closed Friday at 1,315.38. DARK Barring major disasters, the S&P 500 could gain 8 percent in 2012, according to strategists at Bank of America. That’s in line with the market’s historical average. But BofA sees a four in 10 chance of a disaster. Ethan Harris, the bank’s chief U.S. economist, says there’s a high risk that Greece will default on its debt. European countries may decide to abandon the euro, a move that would spread panic through global financial markets. That’s what BofA calls the ugly scenario. The not-as-bad version says cuts to federal spending mean U.S. economic growth will remain sluggish. If the euro manages to survive, BofA estimates the U.S. economy will grow 2.1 percent. The S&P 500 will hit 1,350.

-.19 -.36 -.11 -.16 +.94 +.35 +.18 +5.65 -.25 +.08 +.38 +.83 +2.95 -.06 +2.16 +.32 +.10 +.37 +.87 -.07 +.50 -.16

DARKER To Goldman Sachs, the top threats to the economy also are the U.S. government and Europe. Goldman’s economists say cuts in the federal budget will eventually offset the progress the job market has made the last few months. Europe looks headed for a recession. That would hurt bank lending in the U.S., says Jan Hatzius, Goldman’s chief economist. Credit is likely to dry up as banks protect themselves from losses. Goldman expects the Federal Reserve

+.01 -.34 +.01 +.09 -.21 +.03 +.05 +.05 +.13 +.44 +.34 -.21 +.04 +1.05 -.27 -.55 +.20 +.22 +.27 -.29 +.50 +.02 -.73 -.06 +.02 -.19 +.04 -.18 -.14 -.15 +.93 -.13 -.01 -.30 -.32 +1.29 -.18 +.23 -.30

U-V-W-X-Y-Z +.21 +.11 +.35 -.90 -.21 +.66 +.18 +.11 +.18 +.06 -.91 -.46 -.50 -.05 -.32 -.16 +.51 +.05 -.03 -.95 -.35 -1.79 +.57 +1.08 -.08 +.40 -.02 +3.78 -2.12 +.16 -.15 +.39 -.10 +.70 -.10 -.36 -2.39 +.10 -.08 +.09 +.48 +.01 +.05 +.13 -.16 +.03 -.06 +.01 -.21 +.56

High

Low

12,876.00 5,627.85 467.64 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

52-wk %Chg

12,720.48 5,280.75 448.54 7,829.34 2,299.45 2,786.70 1,315.38 13,834.14 784.62

+96.50 -21.12 +1.30 +9.97 +28.40 -1.63 +.88 +5.39 +2.25

+.76 -.40 +.29 +.13 +1.25 -.06 +.07 +.04 +.29

+4.12 +5.20 -3.47 +4.71 +.93 +6.97 +4.59 +4.88 +5.90

+7.15 +4.66 +8.52 -3.41 +8.16 +3.61 +2.50 +1.99 +1.48

Name

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

Dow Jones industrials

12,760

Close: 12,720.48 Change: 96.50 (0.8%)

12,520 12,280

13,000

10 DAYS

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

J

A

S

O

N

D

J

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 1.76f 2.32 1.80f 1.88f .52f 1.38f .64a 1.68 .04 1.84 3.24f 1.88 .45 1.00 1.64 ... .20 1.26 ... .20 .20 .30

PE 10 16 16 15 11 16 14 15 7 26 16 8 13 18 15 13 9 12 14 16 8 18 15

Last 47.91 30.51 90.65 43.08 41.01 40.09 32.56 27.49 44.02 11.67 105.64 106.89 68.09 26.07 53.41 87.04 16.67 46.21 59.33 35.51 12.59 14.76 27.22

Chg +.78 +.09 -1.19 +.47 -.09 +.69 +.41 +.37 -.69 +.27 -.11 -.04 +.64 +.20 +.15 +.10 +.10 -.49 -1.52 -.17 -.02 +.08 +.90

YTD %Chg +10.7 +.9 +6.4 -2.3 -.7 +7.8 -2.4 +9.2 +3.0 +5.9 +16.6 +.5 -2.7 +10.0 +6.0 +12.5 +13.9 +3.0 +2.2 +7.7 +17.0 +1.2 +17.8

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 ... .68f 1.16 ... 1.49f .84 .32f 2.80 .46 .56 2.80f 1.00 .28 .80 2.00 2.06 ... .50f .04 ... .33t 1.46 ...

PE Last Chg ... 5.46 -.01 16 19.15 ... 26 124.29 +.11 30 13.65 -.11 15 57.38 -1.12 11 26.38 +.75 13 23.00 -.15 18 73.83 -.33 12 23.91 -.15 19 26.53 -.80 20 101.74 +.48 17 31.61 -.29 19 12.44 +.29 22 35.09 -.44 8 17.68 +.23 17 66.28 +.37 ... 5.76 -.09 7 10.24 -.27 29 4.91 -.03 6 1890.00 -16.45 ... 49.00 +5.65 20 95.59 -1.68 53 2.10 -.06

YTD %Chg +2.6 +6.9 +.5 -3.7 +5.6 +8.8 +17.0 +.4 -1.3 +4.5 +1.4 +5.5 +6.8 -.2 +6.4 -.1 ... +5.5 +14.2 -7.2 +54.2 +7.1 +15.4

MARKET SUMMARY NYSE

AMEX

NASDAQ

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

Vol (00)

BkofAm 2294168 S&P500ETF1074266 SPDR Fncl 903216 GenElec 875555 Citigrp rs 550515

Last

Chg

Name

7.07 131.54 14.14 19.15 29.64

+.11 +.08 +.09 ... +.31

CheniereEn NovaGld g NA Pall g NwGold g GrtBasG g

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

Chg %Chg

Talbots 3.19 +.50 +18.6 FelCor 3.62 +.52 +16.8 CS VS3xSlv 42.02 +5.63 +15.5 TorchEngy 2.60 +.30 +13.0 NoahHldgs 6.52 +.69 +11.8

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

CSVS3xInSlv VOC ETr n ProUSSlv rs CapOne wt SemGrp wt

37.04 21.55 11.46 16.39 6.00

Chg %Chg -6.11 -2.85 -1.30 -1.84 -.66

-14.2 -11.7 -10.2 -10.1 -9.9

Vol (00)

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

’11

est.

$6.43 $10.04 1Q ’12 15

based on past 12 months’ results Source: FactSet

1,747 1,255 123 3,125 125 14 3,850,829,309

Last

50035 10.93 43396 9.23 25762 2.34 24237 9.96 23762 1.07

Chg

Name

Vol (00)

+.23 +.22 -.05 -.04 +.03

Microsoft Intel SiriusXM Cisco MicronT

1548839 29.71 +1.59 934123 26.38 +.75 562587 2.10 -.06 411418 19.92 +.13 374465 7.76 -.12

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

Crexendo AdeonaPh MAG Slv g ChinNEPet eMagin

4.38 2.18 7.81 2.57 4.44

Chg %Chg +.72 +19.7 +.20 +10.1 +.66 +9.2 +.20 +8.4 +.27 +6.5

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

Chg %Chg

NewConcEn 2.41 -.24 Augusta g 3.21 -.26 SaratogaRs 6.44 -.52 NthnO&G 25.04 -1.54 Aerosonic 3.00 -.17

DIARY

350

Price-to-earnings ratio:

Matthew Craft, J.Paschke • AP

INDEXES

$338.84

1Q ’11

DARKEST David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff, likes to say he isn’t bearish by nature. But he’s happy to be a bear when conditions call for it. In Rosenberg’s telling, 2012 looks especially scary. Americans are still dealing with the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis — high unemployment and debt, lower home prices and shrunken retirement accounts. Every job opening has six people competing for it. Rosenberg says the economy is healing. But it’s still too early to call it healthy. Rosenberg refuses to make calls on the S&P 500. But he expects stock analysts to start cutting earnings estimates as the year progresses. Consider recent results from big tech companies. Microsoft and IBM reported stronger earnings but fell short of their sales targets. Google also missed forecasts. If analysts cut 2012 estimates from the current $107 to $95 a share for all the companies in the S&P 500, it would imply a plunge in the index to 1,140.

52-Week

$420.30

300

to try to cushion the blows by buying bonds again. The economy will grow just 2.1 percent this year. Goldman’s bet: The S&P 500 ends the year at 1,250, seven points under where it started.

SOURCE:FactSet

400

Operating EPS

Saturday, January 21, 2012

-9.1 -7.5 -7.5 -5.8 -5.4

Chg

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

Insmed rs SpanBd rsh IBC Cap pf HorizPh n SchoolSp

Chg %Chg

5.01 +1.21 +31.8 4.38 +.79 +22.0 14.46 +2.59 +21.8 3.98 +.69 +21.0 2.93 +.49 +20.1

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last

NCI Inc EuroTch rs CogentC GlobTcAd h Phazar

DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

Last

7.80 4.35 15.30 4.51 2.52

Chg %Chg -3.66 -1.03 -3.51 -1.01 -.53

-31.9 -19.1 -18.7 -18.3 -17.4

DIARY 258 197 36 491 16 ... 74,728,360

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

1,511 990 114 2,615 55 12 1,909,718,313

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn American Cent EqIncInv 7.48 +0.01 +2.9 GrowthInv 25.86 -0.09 +5.3 UltraInv 24.04 -0.22 +4.9 ValueInv 5.89 +0.02 +4.2 American Funds AMCAPA m 19.88 -0.02 +5.6 BalA m 18.85 -0.02 +3.5 BondA m 12.56 -0.02 +0.2 CapIncBuA m49.54 +0.7 CapWldBdA m20.69 -0.01 +1.1 CpWldGrIA m33.51 -0.02 +4.3 EurPacGrA m37.05 +0.05 +5.4 FnInvA m 37.18 -0.10 +5.1 GrthAmA m 30.36 -0.08 +5.7 HiIncA m 10.84 +0.01 +2.2 IncAmerA m 17.04 -0.01 +1.7 IntBdAmA m 13.63 -0.01 +0.1 InvCoAmA m28.37 +0.05 +4.7 MutualA m 26.64 +0.03 +3.0 NewEconA m25.29 +6.3 NewPerspA m27.50 -0.06 +5.1 NwWrldA m 48.82 +0.08 +5.9 SmCpWldA m35.48 +0.07 +6.9 TaxEBdAmA m12.70 -0.05 +1.6 USGovSecA m14.36 -0.02 -0.3 WAMutInvA m29.33 -0.05 +3.3 Aquila ChTxFKYA m10.94 -0.03 +1.0 Artisan Intl d 20.87 +0.06 +5.2 MdCpVal 20.61 -0.01 +4.6 MidCap 35.66 -0.34 +8.3 Baron Growth b 53.21 -0.09 +4.3 Bernstein DiversMui 14.86 -0.03 +0.6 IntDur 13.82 -0.03 -0.1 BlackRock Engy&ResA m32.52 -0.09 +0.8 EqDivA m 18.73 +0.06 +3.2 EqDivI 18.76 +0.06 +3.1 GlobAlcA m 18.88 +0.02 +4.0 GlobAlcC m 17.59 +0.02 +3.9 GlobAlcI 18.96 +0.02 +3.9 Calamos GrowA m 49.08 -0.54 +5.8 Cohen & Steers Realty 62.79 +0.43 +3.2 Columbia AcornIntZ 36.35 +0.05 +5.9 AcornZ 29.50 -0.06 +7.0 DivBondA m 5.05 -0.01 +0.2 StLgCpGrZ 12.73 -0.11 +5.9 TaxEA m 13.87 -0.04 +1.8 ValRestrZ 47.27 -0.06 +6.3 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.32 +0.2 2YrGlbFII 10.09 +0.1 5YrGlbFII 10.94 +0.3 EmMkCrEqI 18.83 +0.06 +9.2 EmMktValI 28.70 +0.10+10.6 IntSmCapI 14.67 +0.09 +8.0 USCorEq1I 11.34 +0.01 +5.4 USCorEq2I 11.20 +5.8 USLgCo 10.36 +0.01 +4.6 USLgValI 20.32 -0.01 +6.2 USSmValI 24.75 +0.12 +6.9 USSmallI 21.76 +0.08 +6.0 DWS-Scudder GrIncS 17.00 +5.8 Davis NYVentA m 34.29 -0.10 +5.5 NYVentY 34.65 -0.10 +5.6 Delaware Invest DiverIncA m 9.14 -0.02 Dimensional Investme IntCorEqI 9.82 +0.04 +6.0 IntlSCoI 14.75 +0.08 +6.6 IntlValuI 15.60 +0.10 +5.8 Dodge & Cox Bal 71.16 +0.12 +5.5 Income 13.42 -0.01 +0.9 IntlStk 31.04 +0.07 +6.2 Stock 108.62 +0.23 +6.9 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 11.09 +0.6 Dreyfus Apprecia 41.55 +0.01 +2.5 Eaton Vance LrgCpValA m 17.86 +0.04 +4.3 FMI LgCap 16.10 +0.05 +5.6 FPA Cres d 27.59 +3.0 NewInc m 10.66 +0.1 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 26.21 +0.44+13.2 Federated StrValI 4.79 -1.4 ToRetIs 11.29 -0.01 +0.3 Fidelity AstMgr20 12.89 -0.01 +1.3 AstMgr50 15.46 -0.01 +2.9 Bal 18.74 -0.03 +3.0 BlChGrow 44.70 -0.30 +5.3 CapApr 26.10 -0.04 +6.0 CapInc d 8.88 +0.02 +2.7 Contra 69.86 -0.52 +3.6 DiscEq 22.66 +0.06 +5.3 DivGrow 27.72 +0.01 +7.2 DivrIntl d 26.90 +0.06 +5.4 EqInc 43.06 +0.11 +4.2 EqInc II 18.06 +0.09 +3.8 FF2015 11.22 +2.7 FF2035 10.99 +0.01 +4.2 FF2040 7.66 +4.1 Fidelity 32.47 -0.03 +4.2 FltRtHiIn d 9.73 +0.01 +1.1 Free2010 13.43 -0.01 +2.5 Free2020 13.52 +3.0 Free2025 11.19 +3.5 Free2030 13.31 +3.7 GNMA 11.82 -0.02 GovtInc 10.72 -0.02 -0.4 GrowCo 86.30 -0.48 +6.7 GrowInc 19.05 +4.4 HiInc d 8.80 +2.2 IntBond 10.88 -0.01 +0.1 IntMuniInc d 10.52 -0.02 +0.8 IntlDisc d 28.77 +0.04 +4.2 InvGrdBd 7.71 -0.02 LatinAm d 53.31 -0.07 +9.0 LowPriStk d 37.68 +0.09 +5.5 Magellan 66.48 -0.20 +5.6 MidCap d 28.11 -0.08 +5.4 MuniInc d 13.19 -0.04 +1.4 NewMktIn d 15.93 +0.04 +0.9 OTC 57.54 -0.63 +5.2 Puritan 18.27 -0.02 +3.3 Series100Idx 9.22 +0.02 +4.5 ShTmBond 8.51 +0.3 StratInc 10.88 +0.9 Tel&Util 16.83 +0.06 -2.9 TotalBd 10.93 -0.01 +0.3 USBdIdxInv 11.75 -0.02 -0.1 Value 67.51 +0.12 +6.4 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 20.41 -0.15 +3.5 NewInsI 20.65 -0.16 +3.5 StratIncA m 12.16 +0.01 +0.9 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 46.58 +0.03 +4.7 500IdxInstl 46.59 +0.04 +4.7 500IdxInv 46.58 +0.03 +4.7 IntlIdxIn d 31.16 +0.11 +4.7 TotMktIdAg d 37.92 +0.02 +5.0 TotMktIdI d 37.92 +0.02 +5.0 First Eagle GlbA m 46.80 +0.18 +3.7 OverseasA m21.05 +0.13 +3.4

Forum AbStratI 11.04 +0.01 -0.1 FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.37 -0.04 +1.8 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.26 -0.02 +2.1 HY TF A m 10.49 -0.04 +2.3 Income A m 2.12 -0.01 +1.5 Income C m 2.14 +1.5 IncomeAdv 2.11 +2.0 NY TF A m 11.97 -0.04 +1.4 RisDv A m 35.84 +0.07 +3.0 US Gov A m 6.91 -0.01 -0.1 FrankTemp-Mutual Discov A m 27.99 +0.02 +3.1 Discov Z 28.33 +0.02 +3.1 Shares A m 20.45 +0.03 +3.2 Shares Z 20.60 +0.03 +3.3 FrankTemp-Templeton GlBond A m 12.84 +0.02 +3.9 GlBond C m 12.87 +0.03 +3.9 GlBondAdv 12.80 +0.02 +3.9 Growth A m 17.24 +0.07 +5.8 World A m 14.60 +0.07 +6.3 Franklin Templeton FndAllA m 10.24 +0.02 +3.6 GE S&SUSEq 40.96 -0.05 +5.7 GMO EmgMktsVI 11.17 +0.02 +8.3 IntItVlIV 19.46 +0.04 +2.9 QuIII 22.48 +0.04 +2.0 QuVI 22.49 +0.04 +2.0 Goldman Sachs HiYieldIs d 6.98 +1.9 MidCpVaIs 35.41 -0.05 +5.5 Harbor Bond 12.30 -0.01 +0.9 CapApInst 38.92 -0.30 +5.5 IntlInstl d 56.23 -0.01 +7.2 Hartford CapAprA m 31.15 +0.01 +8.1 CpApHLSIA 40.01 -0.01 +7.6 DvGrHLSIA 20.22 +0.08 +4.6 TRBdHLSIA 11.64 -0.02 +0.1 Hussman StratGrth d 12.13 -0.04 -2.4 INVESCO CharterA m 16.92 +0.01 +5.4 ComstockA m16.12 +0.06 +6.0 EqIncomeA m 8.61 +0.02 +3.5 GrowIncA m 19.39 +0.10 +4.4 Ivy AssetStrA m 23.92 -0.01 +7.5 AssetStrC m 23.24 -0.01 +7.4 JPMorgan CoreBondA m11.85 -0.01 CoreBondSelect11.84 -0.01 +0.1 HighYldSel 7.76 +0.01 +1.8 ShDurBndSel 10.98 +0.01 +0.3 USLCpCrPS 21.02 -0.01 +6.5 Janus GlbLfScT d 26.44 -0.20 +6.2 PerkinsMCVT21.15 +0.02 +4.8 John Hancock LifBa1 b 12.64 -0.01 +3.5 LifGr1 b 12.46 -0.01 +4.6 Lazard EmgMkEqtI d18.35 +0.12 +9.2 Legg Mason/Western CrPlBdIns 11.14 -0.01 +0.4 Longleaf Partners LongPart 27.86 +0.12 +4.5 Loomis Sayles BondI 14.29 +0.02 +2.6 BondR b 14.23 +0.02 +2.5 Lord Abbett AffiliatA m 11.19 +6.2 BondDebA m 7.77 +2.1 ShDurIncA m 4.57 +0.01 +0.9 ShDurIncC m 4.59 +0.6 MFS TotRetA m 14.40 +0.01 +2.7 ValueA m 23.39 +0.05 +4.5 ValueI 23.49 +0.05 +4.5 Manning & Napier WrldOppA 7.07 +0.01 +6.6 Matthews Asian China d 22.93 +6.6 India d 15.46 +13.8 Merger Merger m 15.58 -0.1 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.40 -0.01 +0.5 TotRtBd b 10.40 -0.02 +0.5 Morgan Stanley Instl MdCpGrI 34.67 -0.18 +5.3 Natixis InvBndY 12.13 +1.6 StratIncA m 14.75 +0.02 +2.6 StratIncC m 14.83 +0.03 +2.6 Neuberger Berman GenesisIs 48.14 -0.14 +3.7 Northern HYFixInc d 7.13 +1.7 Oakmark EqIncI 27.73 -0.08 +2.5 Intl I d 17.77 +0.14 +7.4 Oakmark I 44.19 -0.04 +6.0 Oberweis ChinaOpp m 9.20 -0.03 +5.7 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCp 14.15 -0.01 +5.0 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 31.27 -0.05 +6.7 DevMktY 30.91 -0.04 +6.7 GlobA m 56.66 -0.09 +4.8 IntlBondA m 6.29 +0.01 +1.6 IntlBondY 6.28 +0.01 +1.6 MainStrA m 33.52 -0.01 +4.2 RocMuniA m 16.41 -0.05 +3.1 RochNtlMu m 7.06 -0.02 +3.3 StrIncA m 4.13 +1.8 PIMCO AllAssetI 11.83 +2.5 AllAuthIn 10.32 +2.9 ComRlRStI 6.61 -0.03 +1.1 DivIncInst 11.40 +1.4 EMktCurI 10.20 +3.0 HiYldIs 9.12 +0.01 +1.9 InvGrdIns 10.43 -0.01 +1.0 LowDrIs 10.34 -0.01 +0.6 RERRStgC m 4.46 +0.01 +3.5 RealRet 11.83 -0.04 +0.4 RealRtnA m 11.83 -0.04 +0.4 ShtTermIs 9.73 +0.6 TotRetA m 10.95 -0.02 +0.9 TotRetAdm b 10.95 -0.02 +0.9 TotRetC m 10.95 -0.02 +0.8 TotRetIs 10.95 -0.02 +0.9 TotRetrnD b 10.95 -0.02 +0.9 TotlRetnP 10.95 -0.02 +0.9 Permanent Portfolio 47.89 +0.09 +3.9 Pioneer PioneerA m 40.68 +0.03 +5.3 Putnam GrowIncA m 13.49 +6.6 NewOpp 54.06 +6.8 Royce PAMutInv d 11.50 +0.01 +6.9 PremierInv d 19.79 -0.02 +6.9 Schwab 1000Inv d 37.09 +0.02 +4.9 S&P500Sel d20.49 +0.02 +4.7 Scout Interntl d 29.74 +0.07 +6.3 Sequoia Sequoia 150.97 -0.69 +3.8 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 40.61 -0.41 +5.1 CapApprec 21.33 -0.06 +3.4 EmMktStk d 30.94 +0.07 +8.5 EqIndex d 35.46 +0.02 +4.7 EqtyInc 24.25 +0.01 +5.2

GrowStk

33.50 -0.34 +5.2

HiYield d

6.60 +0.01 +2.1

IntlBnd d

9.81

IntlGrInc d

+0.8

12.04 +0.05 +4.5

IntlStk d

13.09 +0.03 +6.5

LatinAm d

43.67 +0.11+12.5

MidCapVa

22.34 +0.02 +4.4

MidCpGr

55.48 -0.28 +5.2

NewEra

44.18 -0.27 +5.1

NewHoriz

33.03 -0.10 +6.4

NewIncome OrseaStk d R2015

9.66 -0.02 7.68 +0.04 +4.9 12.00 -0.01 +3.6

R2025

12.11 -0.01 +4.6

R2035

12.26 -0.02 +5.1

Rtmt2010

15.49

Rtmt2020

16.57 -0.01 +4.1

Rtmt2030

17.36 -0.02 +5.0

Rtmt2040

17.45 -0.02 +5.3

ShTmBond SmCpStk

4.82

+3.1

+0.3

33.12 +0.02 +6.0

SmCpVal d 36.53 +0.11 +5.9 SpecInc

12.46

+1.4

Value 23.95 +0.04 +6.3 Templeton InFEqSeS 17.74 +0.05 +4.1 Thornburg IntlValA m

25.32 +0.09 +5.2

IntlValI d 25.88 +0.09 +5.3 Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d Vanguard

22.29

+2.0

500Adml

121.23 +0.08 +4.7

500Inv

121.23 +0.09 +4.7

BalIdxAdm

22.42 -0.01 +2.9

BalIdxIns

22.42 -0.01 +2.9

CAITAdml

11.53 -0.04 +1.6

CapOpAdml d72.40 -0.29 +6.2 DivGr

15.94 +0.06 +3.4

EmMktIAdm d34.51 +0.05 +9.0 EnergyAdm d116.52 -0.34 +3.5 EnergyInv d 62.06 -0.19 +3.5 Explr

75.63 -0.25 +5.9

ExtdIdAdm

41.82 +0.01 +6.3

ExtdIdIst

41.81

GNMA

11.06

+0.1

GNMAAdml 11.06

+0.1

+6.3

GrthIdAdm

33.39 -0.08 +5.0

GrthIstId

33.39 -0.08 +5.0

HYCor d

5.76 +0.01 +1.6

HYCorAdml d 5.76 +0.01 +1.6 HltCrAdml d 55.67 -0.12 +2.5 HlthCare d 131.94 -0.30 +2.5 ITBondAdm 11.73 -0.03 -0.2 ITGradeAd

10.02 -0.01 +0.5

ITIGrade

10.02 -0.01 +0.5

ITrsyAdml

11.65 -0.03 -0.4

InfPrtAdm

27.75 -0.09 +0.1

InfPrtI

11.30 -0.04 +0.1

InflaPro

14.13 -0.05 +0.1

InstIdxI

120.44 +0.08 +4.7

InstPlus

120.45 +0.08 +4.7

InstTStPl

29.74 +0.02 +5.0

IntlGr d

17.53 +0.01 +7.2

IntlGrAdm d 55.74 +0.04 +7.2 IntlStkIdxAdm d23.15+0.07 +6.0 IntlStkIdxI d 92.56 +0.27 +6.0 IntlStkIdxIPls d92.57 +0.26 +6.0 IntlVal d

28.25 +0.15 +6.1

LTGradeAd 10.17 -0.08 -0.9 LTInvGr

10.17 -0.08 -0.9

LifeCon

16.55

LifeGro

21.99 +0.02 +4.2

LifeMod

19.76

MidCp

20.75 -0.06 +5.6

+2.0 +3.1

MidCpAdml 94.16 -0.25 +5.6 MidCpIst

20.80 -0.05 +5.6

Morg

18.56 -0.07 +6.2

MuHYAdml 10.88 -0.04 +1.7 MuInt

14.19 -0.04 +1.3

MuIntAdml

14.19 -0.04 +1.3

MuLTAdml

11.50 -0.04 +1.7

MuLtdAdml 11.18 -0.01 +0.3 MuShtAdml 15.94

+0.2

PrecMtls d 21.37 +0.12+10.2 Prmcp d

65.18 -0.28 +5.6

PrmcpAdml d67.62 -0.29 +5.6 PrmcpCorI d 14.11 -0.06 +4.6 REITIdxAd d 84.99 +0.63 +3.5 STBond

10.62

+0.2

STBondAdm 10.62

+0.2

STBondSgl 10.62

+0.2

STCor

10.68

+0.5

STGradeAd 10.68

+0.5

STsryAdml

10.79

SelValu d

19.41 -0.09 +4.4

SmCapIdx

35.36 +0.06 +5.9

SmCpIdAdm 35.38 +0.07 +6.0 SmCpIdIst

35.37 +0.06 +5.9

Star

19.41 -0.02 +3.6

TgtRe2010

22.96 -0.01 +2.4

TgtRe2015

12.66

+2.9

TgtRe2020

22.42

+3.4

TgtRe2030

21.80 +0.02 +4.2

TgtRe2035

13.08 +0.01 +4.6

TgtRe2040

21.47 +0.02 +4.7

TgtRe2045

13.48 +0.01 +4.7

TgtRetInc

11.71 -0.01 +1.6

Tgtet2025

12.73

TotBdAdml

10.97 -0.02 -0.1

TotBdInst

10.97 -0.02 -0.1

+3.7

TotBdMkInv 10.97 -0.02 -0.1 TotBdMkSig 10.97 -0.02 -0.1 TotIntl d

13.84 +0.04 +6.0

TotStIAdm

32.87 +0.02 +5.0

TotStIIns

32.87 +0.02 +5.0

TotStISig

31.72 +0.02 +5.0

TotStIdx

32.86 +0.02 +5.0

WellsI

23.18 -0.02 +1.1

WellsIAdm

56.16 -0.05 +1.1

Welltn

32.41 +0.07 +3.4

WelltnAdm

55.98 +0.13 +3.4

WndsIIAdm 47.72 +0.21 +4.3 Wndsr

13.65 +0.02 +6.9

WndsrAdml 46.04 +0.07 +6.9 WndsrII 26.89 +0.12 +4.3 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m

7.69 -0.05 +4.6

SciTechA m 9.43 -0.02 +5.8 Yacktman Focused d 19.54 +0.09 +4.0 Yacktman d 18.26 +0.07 +4.3

The Fed weighs in

A bump in GDP?

The Federal Reserve holds a regularly scheduled meeting on the economy on Tuesday and Wednesday. Its statement announcing its plans for interest rates and its assessment of the economy will be released Wednesday afternoon. The Fed has said it will leave short-term rates near zero until at least mid-2013 unless the economy improves. Economic reports have been encouraging, but many analysts say it’s too early to expect the Fed to change its plans.

Annual rate, change from Did the U.S. economy pick up momentum the last three months previous quarter est. of 2011? We find out Friday 3.0 when the Commerce Department releases the gross domes2.3% tic product, which reflects the 1.8 economy’s output of goods and 1.3 services. Recent reports on retail sales, factory output and home 0.4 construction have been good. So economists are anticipating that ’10 ’11 GDP grew at an annual rate of 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q about 3 percent in the OctoberSource: FactSet December period.

Gross domestic product


8 • Saturday, January 21, 2012 • 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. First Baptist Church of Counce, Counce, TN. Dr. Bill Darnell. S.S. Ridgecrest Baptist Church, Farmington Rd., S.S.; Pastor: Floyd Lamb 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed.Prayer Serv. 6pm. 9am; Worship 10:15am & 6pm; Prayer Meeting Wed. 6:30pm. Friendship Baptist Church, CR 614, Corinth; Craig Wilbanks, Pastor; Early Rienzi Baptist Church, 10 School St, Rienzi, MS; Pastor Titus Tyer S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 6:30pm 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, 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. John Pams, Jr. ; S.S. 9am; Worship 10:30am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pm 9:45am;Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Discipleship Training 5:30pm; Choir Practice: St. Mark Baptist Church, 1105 White St. Kim Ratliff, Pastor, 662-287-6718, church phone 662-286-6260. S.S. 10am; Worship Service 11am; Wed. Prayer Sunday, Children & Youth 5pm, Adults: 7:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Service & Bible Study 6:30pm. Study 7pm. Hinkle Baptist Church, Internim Pastor Paul Stacey. Min. of Music Beverly Shady Grove Baptist Church, 19 CR 417, Bro. Jimmy Vanderford, Pastor, Bro. Tim Edwards, Youth Minister;. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Sun. Night Service Castile, S.S. 9am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm. 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 7pm. Holly Baptist Church, Holly Church Rd. Pastor John Boler. 8:45 am- Early Shiloh Baptist Church, U.S. 72 West. Rev. Phillip Caples, pastor S.S. 10am; Morning Worship, 10:00 am S.S., 11:00 am Late Worship, 6:00 pm Evening Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Worship, Wed. Service 6:30 pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study, South Corinth Baptist Church, 300 Miller Rd., Charles Stephenson, Pastor Children & Youth Activities, www.hollybaptist.org SS 10am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Prayer & Bible Study 6 pm Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church, 464 Hwy 356, Rienzi. Gabe Jolly, III, St. Rest M.B. Church, Guys TN Rev. O. J. Salters, pastor. Sun.Worship 11am; Pastor; S.S. 9am; Children’s Church: 10am; Worship 10am; Bible Study: S.S. 9:45am; Wed. Bible study 6:00pm. Wed. 6:30pm; Life Center: Tues. & Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm. Synagogue M.B. Church, 182 Hwy. 45, Rieniz, 462-3867 Steven W. Roberson, Jacinto Baptist Church, Ken White, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & pastor. S.S. 10 am, Morning Worship & Praise 11 am, Community Bible Study 6:30pm; Wed. service 6:30pm. (Tues.) 11 am, Evening Bible Study (Wed.) 7 p.m. Kemps Chapel Baptist Church, Pastor: Tim Dillingham; Rt. 1, Rienzi. S.S. Tate Baptist Church, 1201 N. Harper Rd. 286-2935; Mickey Trammel, pastor 10am; Worship 11am & 6:15pm; Church Trng. 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Sun.: SS 9:30am; Morn. Worship, Preschool Church; Children’s Worship Study. 7 pm. (grades 1-4) 10:45am; Discipleship Classes 4:30pm; RA’s, GA’s, & Mission Kendrick Baptist Church, Bro. Craig Wilbanks, pastor. S.S. 9:30 am; Friends 5:30pm; Worship 6pm; Mon.: A.C.T.S. Outreach 6pm; Tues., A.C.T.S. Worship 10:30am, & 6:30pm; Church Trng. 5:30pm, Wed. 7pm. Kossuth First Baptist Church, 893 Hwy #2; Bro Zack Howell, Interim Pastor, Outreach 2pm; Wed., Fellowship Meal 5pm, AWANA & SS Lesson Preview 5:30pm, Adult Bible Study/Prayer, Student 24-7, Choir/Drama 6pm; Adult SS 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm, D.T. 5pm; Wed Awana (During school year) Choir Rehearsal, Student 24-7 7pm. 6:30pm; Bible Study 7pm. 287-4112 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. COPPER • BRASS ALUMINUM • STAINLESS STEEL Little Flock Primitive Baptist Church, 4 mi. so. of Burnsville off Tuscumbia Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church 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 2760 Harper St • 662-665-0069 Training 5pm. Evening Worship 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 6:30pm. Traylor; Sunday School - 9am; Worship 10:15 am - Communion - 1st 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., Bro. Seth Kirkland, Pastor; Bro Lawrence Morris, pastor. S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; BTU 5pm; Wed. Jackie Ward, Assist. Pastor; Jonathan Marsh, Youth Director; Andy Reeves, 903 Hwy 72 • Corinth, MS • 286-3539 Prayer & Bible Stdy. 7pm; Youth mtg. 5:30pm; Sunshine Band Sat. noon. Music Director; Prayer Mondays 6pm; S.S. 10:00am. Worship 9:00am & 6pm; Mattie Beavers • Wanda Isbell Mason St. Luke Baptist Church, Mason St. Luke Rd. 287-1656. Rev. Wayne Bible Study Wed. 6:45pm. Wooden, pastor; S.S. 9:45 am Worship 11am.; Wed. 6:30pm. Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, Kara Blackard, pastor. S.S. 9am. Worship McCalip Baptist Chapel, Rt.1 Pocahontas,TN Pastor, Rev. Johnny Sparks Service10am & 6:30pm; Wed. prayer mtg. & classes 6:30pm. Services Sunday 11am & 6p.m. Michie Primitive Baptist Church, Michie Tenn. Pastor Elder Ricky Taylor. CATHOLIC CHURCH Worship Service 1st & 3rd Sun., 3 pm, 2nd & 4th Sun., 10:30 am. St. James Catholic Church, 3189 Harper Rd., 287-1051 - Office; 284-9300 Everyone is cordially invited. - Linda Gunther. Sun. Mass: 9am in English and 1pm in Spanish Mills Commuity Baptist Church, 397 CR 550 Rienzi, MS. Bro. Donny Davis, pastor. S. S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am & Sun. Night 5pm; Wed. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Bible Stdy. 6:30pm Charity Christian Church, Jacinto. Minister, Bro. James Marks S.S. New Covenant Baptist Church, 1402 E. 4th St., Pastor David Harris, 10am;Worship 11am; Bible Study 5pm; Wed. 7pm. pastor, Sunday School 9:45am; Worship 11:00am, Bible Study Wednesdays Guys Christian Church, Guys, Tenn. 38339. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am. 6:30 pm, 8:00 am Service Every 1st Sunday Harper Road Christian Church, 4175 N.Harper Road. Gerald Hadley, Sr. New Lebanon Free Will Baptist Church, 1195 Hwy. 364, Cairo Evangelist. Sun: 9:45am, 10:45am & 6pm; Wed: 7pm. 287-1367 Community; Jack Whitley, Jr, pastor; 462-8069 or 462-7591; 10am S.S. Oak Hill Christian Church, Kendrick Rd. At Tn. Line, Frank Williams, for all ages; Worship, 11am Children’s Church, 5pm; Choir Practice, 6pm; Evangelist, Bible School 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm (Winter); 6pm Evening Worship, Wed. 7 pm Midweek Bible Study & Prayer Meeting, (Summer) 7pm;Young People Bible Classes. Salem Christian Church, 1030 CR 400, Dennis Smith, minister. SS 9 am, North Corinth Baptist Church,Rev. Bill Wages,pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship Morning Worship 10am, Evening Service 5pm (Standard time) 6pm (Daylight 11am & 7pm; ChurchTraining 6:00pm; Wed. 7pm Saving time). Need a ride? - Bro. Smith at 662-396-4051 Oakland Baptist Church, 1101 S. Harper Rd., Dr. Randy Bostick, Pastor. Waldron Street Christian Church, Ted Avant, Minister. S.S. 9:30am; SS all ages 9am; Worship Serv. 10:15am & 6:20pm; Sun. Orchestra Reh. Worship10:45am & 6pm; Youth Mtgs. 6 pm; Wed. 7pm. 4pm; Student Choir & Handbells 5pm; Children’s Choir (age 4-Grade 6) 5:15pm; Wed. AWANA clubs (during school year) 6pm; Prayer & Praise CHURCH OF CHRIST 6:30pm; Student “XTREME Life” Worship Service 6:45pm; “Life Institute” Acton Church of Christ, 3 miles north of Corinth city limits on Hwy. 22. Small Group Classes 7pm; Sanctuary choir reh. 8:05pm 662-287-6200 Joe Story, Minister; Daniel Fowler, Youth Min. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:50am & Olive Hill West, Guys, TN S.S. 10am; Worship 11 am & 6pm; Training 5:30; 5 p.m; Wed. Bible Study 7:00pm. Wed. 7pm Berea Church of Christ, Guys, TN. Minister Will Luster. Sun. School 10am, Pinecrest Baptist Church, 313 Pinecrest Rd., Corinth, Bro. Jeff Haney, Worship Service 11am. pastor. S.S.9:30am; Worship 10:30am; Sun. Serv. 5:00pm; Central Church of Christ, 306 CR 318, Corinth, MS, Don Bassett, Minister Wed. Worship Serv. 6:30pm Bible Study 9:30am; Preaching 10:30am & 6p.m., Wed. Bible Study 7p.m. Pleasant Grove Baptist Church,Inc., Dennistown; 287-8845, Pastor Clear Creek Church of Christ, Waukomis Lake Rd. Duane Ellis, Minister. Allen Watson. Church School - Sun., 9:45am Worship Serv. - Sun 11am; Worship 9am & 5pm; Bible School 10am; Wed. 6:30pm. BTU-Sun. 3pm; Wed. Bible Study/Prayer 7pm; Wed. Choir Pract. 6pm; Danville Church of Christ, Charles W. Leonard, Minister, 287-6530. Sunday (Need a ride to Church - Don Wallace 286-6588) Bible Study 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. Ramer Baptist Church, 3899 Hwy 57 W, Ramer, TN; Pastor: Rev. James East Corinth Church of Christ, 1801 Cruise Ronald Choate, Minister. S.S. Young; Church office: 731-645-5681; SS 9:45am, Morn. Worship 11am; 9:45 a.m. Worship 10:30am & 5pm;Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Discipleship Training 6pm, Evening Worship 7pm; Wed. Family Supper Foote Street Church of Christ, Blake Nicholas, Minister., Terry Smith, Youth Minister; S.S. 9am; Worship 10am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. 5:30pm, Mid-Week Prayer Service 6:30pm


Daily Corinthian • Saturday, January 21, 2012 • 9

Burnsville United Methodist Church, 118 Front St., Burnsville. 423-1758. Walnut United Pentecostal Church, Hwy. 72 W. S.S. 10 am; Wayne Napier, Pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 9 a.m. Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm. Rev. James Sims. Danville CME Methodist Church, Rev. James Agnew, Pastor, Sun. S.S. West Corinth U.P.C., 5th & Nelson St., Rev. Merl Dixon, Minister, 10 am, Worship Service 11 am, Bible classes Wed. night 6:30 to 7:30. S.S. 10 am. Worship 11 am.; Prayer meeting 5:30 pm., Evang. Serv. Christ United Methodist Church, 3161 Shiloh Rd. Pastor: Dr. Danny 6 pm., Wed. 7 pm. Rowland; 286-3298. S.S. 9:45 am (all ages); Fellowship 10:45am; Worship Soul’s Harbor Apostolic Church, Walnut, Worship Sun. Services 11am (nursery provided). Mons: Boy Scouts 5pm; Witness/Evangelism 10 a.m. & 6, Wed. 7:30 p.m., Rev. Jesse Cuter, pastor, Prayer work 6pm; Tues: Cub Scouts 5:30pm; Weds: Gather & Worship 5:30pm 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 Kossuth United Methodist Church, Kenny McGill, pastor, Sunday Morning Worship 10:45 am. School 10:00 a.m., Worship Service 11am & 6pm. Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA), 1108 Proper St; Sun. Morn. ST Cruiser Mt. Carmel Methodist Church, Henry Storey, Minister, Worship 9:30 a.m. • Worship 9:30 am, Sunday school, 10:45 am, Wed. Bible study, SPECIAL 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. • Stryker Mt. Moriah United Methodist Church, Meigg St., S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship low-rate 10:30 a.m. Wed. night bible study 6 p.m. Children & Youth for Christ Sat. •SATURDAY SABBATH Financing Apache 9:30 a.m. Sapada Thomas Pastor. for408 Hungry Hearts Ministries Church of Corinth, 48 mHwy onth72s W Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church, Rev. Larry Finger, pastor. S.S. 10am 662-287-0277; Sat. Service 3pm Worship Service 11am Oak Grove C.M.E. Church, Alcorn County Road 514, West of Biggersville, SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST MS, Rev. Ida Price, Pastor Sunday School 9:30am, Worship services Seventh-day Adventist Church, 2150 Hwy.72 E., Kurt Threlkeld, Fraley’s Chapel Church of Christ, Minister, Ferrill Hester. Bible Study 10:45am, Bible Study Wed. Night 7pm Minister. Sat. Services: Bible Study 9:30am, Worship 10:45am; 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm. Wed. Bible Study7pm. Pleasant Hill United Methodist Church, Kenny McGill, pastor, Sun Prayer Meeting: Tuesday 6:00pm; (256) 381-6712 Jerusalem Church of Christ, Farmington Rd. Ben Horton, Minister. S.S. Services, Worship 9:15am, Sunday School 10:30am, Evening 5pm. 10am; Church 10:45am; Sun. Bible Study & Worship, 5pm. Saulter’s Chapel CME Church, Rev.Terry Alexander, pastor. S.S. SOUTHERN BAPTIST Kossuth Church of Christ, Jerry Childs, Minister, 287-8930. S.S. 10am; 10 a.m. Service 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Crossroads Church, 1020 CR 400 Salem Rd; Warren Jones, Worship 11am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Shady Grove United Methodist Church, Dwain Whitehurst, pastor, S.S. Pastor; Sun. -Bible Study 9 a.m., Worship/Preaching 10 a.m. Buy ow Kendrick Rd Church of Christ, S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. At Church, Last 9 CR 256., Alan Parker, Pastor. S.S. 9am; VictoryNBaptist Wed. Bible Study 7pm.. New Hope Methodist Church, New Hope & Sticine Rd., Guys/Michie, TN; YeWorship ars Pric10am. Church Training 5:30pm; Worship 6:30pm; Wed. es W hile Apache 4 x 4 - 64 volt Meeks St. Church of Christ, 1201 Meeks St; Evg: Chuck Richardson, Pastor Danny Adkisson; Services: Sun. Worship 10 am, S.S. 11 am, Wed. 6:30pm Supplies Last Up to 45 miles before recharging! 287-2187 or 286-9660; S.S. 9am; Wed. 7pm. Bible Study 6:30 pm. Meigg Street Church of Christ, 914 Meigg St. Will Luster, Jr., Minister. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship Service 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. MORMON New Hope Church of Christ, Glen, MS, Minister, Roy Cox .S.S. 9:30am; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Corinth Ward. Hwy. 2 Setting the Standard for Electric Utility Vehicles Old Worsham Bros. Building Sun, 10 am-1pm, Wed. 6:30 pm. 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, 204 George E. Allen UTILITY • HUNTING • FARM Dr. Booneville, MS. Services: Booneville Ward 9-12 am Wed 6:30 pm Minister, Wade Davis, Sun. 10am, & 6pm., Wed. 7:00pm Street legal units available Northside Church of Christ, Harper Rd., Lennis Nowell, Minister. S.S. Tax credit available on select models NON-DENOMINATIONAL 9:45am; Worship 10:35am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. www.stealth4x4.com Agape World Overcoming Christian Center, 1311 Lyons St. Pastor Doris Pleasant Grove Church of Christ, 123 CR 304, Doskie, MS, Craig Day. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Corporate Worship 11:30 a.m., Tues. Night Prayer/Bible Chandler, Minister-287-1001; S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am. South Parkway Church of Christ, 501 S. Parkway St., Bro. Dan Eubanks, Study 7pm Another Chance Ministries, 2066 Tate St, Corinth, MS 662-284-0801 or Minister, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. 662-284-0802. Prayer Serv. 8am, Praise & Worship 9am, Mid-Week Bible Strickland Church of Christ, Central Sch. Rd. at Hwy. 72 E., Brad study 7pm. Bishop Perry (Dimple) Carroll, Overseers - A Christ Centered, CALL THE Dillingham, Minister, S.S. 10am;Worship 10:45am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. 2293PROFESSIONALS Highway 25 South Spirit Filled, New Creation Church WITH OVER 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Theo Church of Christ, Tim Hester, minister. Hwy. 72 W. Bible P.O. Box 966 - Iuka, Mississippi 38852 Bethel Church, CR 654-A, Walnut (72W to Durhams Gro, left at store, Study 9am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study pm. 662-287-3521 Wenasoga Church of Christ, G.W. Childs, Pastor. Worship Service 9am & follow signs), Sun. Morn 10am; Sun. Worship 5pm; Thurs. Service 6pm. Borrowed Time Ministries, Wheeler Grove Rd, Sun. 2pm; Wed. 6:30 pm 5pm; Bible Class 10am; Wed. 7pm. Burnsville Tabernacle Church, Pastor Travis Shea, Sun. School 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. 10a.m. Wor. Service 11 a.m., Eve. Worship 5p.m., Wed Service 7 p.m. Church of the Crossroads, Hwy 72 E., Nelson Hight, pastor, 286-6838, 1st Morn. Worship 8:30, S.S.10am, 2nd Morn. Worship 11am & Life Groups EPISCOPAL “The Little Critter Gitter!” 5pm; Wed. 6:30 pm Life Groups & Childrens Services; St. Paul’s Episcopal, Hwy. 2 at N. Shiloh Rd. Rev. Ann B. Fraser, Priest; Cicero AME Church, 420 Martin Luther King Dr., Corinth, MS 286-2310 S.S. CALL THE PROFESSIONALS 8:30 Holy Eucharist; 9:30 SS & Welcome Coffee; 10:30 Holy Eucharist 9:30 am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm WITH OVER 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE. (w/music) Nursery open 8:15-11:45. City of Refuge, 300 Emmons Rd. & Hwy 64, Selmer, TN. 731-645-7053 or 731-610-1883. Pastor C. A. Jackson. Sun. Morn. 10am, Sun. Evening 6pm, 662-287-3521 CHURCH OF GOD Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Church of God of Prophecy, Bell School Rd. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship Christ Gospel Church, Junction 367 & 356, 1 1/2 miles east of Jacinto. Rev. services 11 a.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Pastor James Gray. Bobby Lytal, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun 6:30 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. Fri Night 7 p.m. Hilltop Church of God, 46 Hwy 356 - 603-4567, Pastor, Donald McCoy Church On Fire Dream Center, Intersection of Holt Ave. & Hwy 365 SS 10am, Sun. Worship 10:45am, Sun. Even. 5pm, Wed. 7pm. North, Burnsville. Michael Roberts, pastor, Sun. Morn. Worship 10am, New Mission Church of God in Christ, 608 Wick St. Pastor Elder Yarbro. 662-415-4890(cell) S.S. 10 a.m. Sunday Worship 11 a.m., & 7 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7pm. Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 145 South. Services: Sun. 10am “TheS. Little Critter 1801 Harper RdGitter!” Suite 7 New Life Church of God in Christ, 305 West View Dr., Pastor Elder Youth and Home Meetings, Wednesday Night. Billy Joe Young, pastor. Corinth, MS • 286-2300 Willie Hoyle, 286-5301. Sun. Prayer 9:45 am, S.S. 10 am, Worship FaithPointe Church, Rob Yanok, pastor. Hwy. 64 E. Adamsville, TN. 11:30 am, Thurs. Worship 7:30 pm, Wed. night worship services 7 pm, www.crossroadshealthclinic.com Sun. 9am-Prayer, 10am-Realife Ed., 11am Morn. Worship; Wed. Bible Study YPWW 1st & 3rd Sunday 6 pm. 7 p.m. St. James Church of God in Christ, 1101 Gloster St. S.S. 10 a.m. First United Christian Church, CR 755, Theo Community, Rev. Casey Worship Services 11:30 a.m.; Youth/Adult Bible Study Thurs. 7pm Rutherford, pastor, Sun. 10:30 am & 6 pm; Thurs. 7 p.m. 662-396-1967 Pastor Elder Anthony Fox. Full Gospel House of Prayer, 2 miles S. of Hightown. Ancel Hancock, St. James Church of God in Christ-Ripley, 719 Ashland Rd, Ripley, MS, Minister, Jane Dillingham, Assoc., Serv every Mon. night 7pm 662-837-9509; Sun. Worship Morning Glory 8am; SS 9am; Worship 11am; Foundation of Truth Christian Fellowship, 718 S. Tate St., Corinth, MS, Thurday is Holy Ghost night 7pm; Superintendent Bernell Hoyle, Pastor. Frederick C. Patterson Sr, pastor, S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 11 p.m. Church of God of Union Assembly, 347 Hwy 2, (4 miles from Hwy 45 Phone: Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. bypass going East to 350), North Gospel Preaching and singing. Services God’s Church, 565 Hwy 45 S, Biggersville; Pastor David Mills, Asso. Pastor 662-286-2300 Wed. 6:30 pm , Sun.Evening Service 6:30 pm, Sun. morning 10:30 am. Larry Lovett; SS 10am; Sun Worship 11am; Wed. Night 7pm Everyone invited to come and worship with us. Pastor Brother David Fax: Kossuth Worship Center, Hwy. 2, Kossuth. Pastor Bro. Larry Murphy. S.S. Bledsoe; 286-2909 or 287-3769 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. Services 6:00 p.m. 287-5686 662-286-7010 Debbie McFalls, FNP The Church of God , Hwy 57, West of four-way in Michie, TN. Life in the Word Fellowship Church, Pastor Merle Spearman. 706 School Paster Joe McLemore, 731-926-5674. St, Worship Sun. 10:30 am & 6:00 pm; Wed. 7:00 pm. WWW.CROSSROADSHEALTHCLINIC.COM Wings of Mercy Church, 1703 Levee St. (Just off 45 S. at Harper Exit). Miracle Tabernacle, 4 1/2 miles south of Glen on Jacinto Road. Pastor, Bro. John W. Lentz. S.S. 10am. Worship Service 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7pm. Church: 287-4900; Pastor: James Tipton, Sunday Morn. 10:30am, Sunday Mt. Zion Church, Highway 365 N. of Burnsville. Pastor Billy Powers. Evening 5:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm Worship Service 2 pm; Wed. Serv 7 pm. Mt. Carmel Non-Denominational Church, Wenasoga Rd. FREE WILL BAPTIST Calvary Free Will Baptist Mission, Old Jacinto Supply Building, Jacinto. Pastor Bro. Jason Abbatoy. Sunday Morning Service 11:00 am Real Life Church, 2040 Shiloh Rd (corner of Harper & Shiloh Rd); 662 S.S. 10 am Worship 11 am & 5 p.m. Wed. Service 7 pm. 709-RLCC; Pastor Harvern Davis, Sun. Morn. Prayer 10am, Worship Community Free Will Baptist Church, 377 CR 218, Corinth, MS, 10:30am; Prayer Mon. 7pm; Wed Night 7pm Adult Bible Study, Real Teen 462-8353, S.S. 10am, Worship Serv 11am & 6 pm. Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Survival, Xtreme Kids, www.rlcc4me.com Macedonia Freewill Baptist Church, 9 miles S. of Corinth on River of Life, Cruise & Cass St. Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 a.m., CR 400. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Pastor: Russell Clouse; Sun Worship Pastor Heath Lovelace 11 a.m& 6 pm; Adult & Youth Teaching Service Sunday 5 p.m. Still Hope Ministries, Main St, Rienzi; Pastor: Bro. Chris Franks, 662-603 3596. Services: Sun 2pm; Fri. 7pm. HOLINESS The Anchor Holds Church, Hwy 348 of Blue Springs, MS. 662-869-5314, By Faith Holiness Church, 137 CR 430, Ritenzi, MS, 662-554-9897/462 Pastor Mike Sanders, Sun. School 9:30 a.m; Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 7287; Pastor: Eddie Huggins; Sun 10am& 6pm; Thurs. 7pm Full Gospel Jesus Name Church, Located 3 miles on CR 400, (Salem Rd) am; Sun. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m; Wed. Service 7:00 p.m; Nursery Provided For Ages 0-3; Children Church For Ages 4-10; Youth Program For Old Jehvohah Witness Church. Pastor: Larry Jackson; Sunday Evening Ages 11-21; Anointed Choir and Worship Team 2pm. 662-728-8612. Glen Jesus Name Holiness Church, Glen, Bro. Jimmy Jones, Pastor; Sun. Triumph Church, Corner of Dunlap & King St. S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 11:30 a.m. Tuesday night worship 7:00 p.m. Service 10 am, Sun. Evening 6 pm; Thurs. night 7 pm; 287-6993 Triumphs To The Church and Kingdom of God in Christ, Rev. Billy T., Theo Holiness Church, Hwy. 72 West, Corinth. Pastor: Rev. Ronald Kirk, pastor S.S. of Wisdom 10 a.m. Regular Services 11:30 a.m. Tuesday & Wilbanks, Phone:662-223-5330; Senior Pastor: Rev. Rufus Barnes; SS Thursday 7:30p.m. 10am, Worship Service 11am, and 6:30 pm, Wed. Prayer Meeting 7 pm True Holiness Church, 1223 Tate St, 287-5659 or 808-0347, Pastor: Willie Word Outreach Ministries, Hwy. 45 North, MS-TN State Line. Pastor Elworth Mabry. Sun. Bible Study 10am, Worship 11am, Wed. 6:30pm. Saffore; S.S. 10 am, Sun. Worship 11:30 am, Tues/Fri Prayer Service 9am; Prayer & Bible Band Wed. 7pm. PENTECOSTAL Calvary Apostolic Church, Larry W. McDonald, Pastor, 1622 Bunch St. INDEPENDENT BAPTIST Services Sun 10am & 6pm, Tues 7:30 pm For info. 287-3591. Brigman Hill Baptist Church, 7 mi. E. on Farmington Rd. Pastor Chris Central Pentecostal Church, Central School Road. Sunday Worship Estep, S.S. 10am; Sun Worship 11 am & 6 pm.; Wed. Bible Study 7p.m. 10 am; Evangelistic Service 5 pm; Wed. Bible Study Grace Bible Baptist Church, Hwy. 145 No. Donald Sculley, pastor. 7 pm; Terry Harmon II, Pastor. 286-5760, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m., Children’s Apostolic Life Tabernacle, Hwy. 45 S. Sunday Worship & S.S. 10 am & Bible Club 7 p.m. 6 p.m. Thurs. Prayer Meeting 7:15pm Mike Brown, pastor. 287-4983. Juliette Independent Missionary Baptist Church, Interim Pastor, Biggersville Pentecostal Church, U.S. 45 N., Biggersville. Rev. T.G, Ramsy, Harold Talley, S.S.10 a.m. Preaching 11 a.m. Evening Service 5 p.m. pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Youth Services, Sunday 5 p.m. Evangelistic Maranatha Baptist Church, CR 106, Bro. Scotty Wood, Pastor. S.S.10 Service 6 p.m. Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m. a.m. Sun Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m. Burnsville United Pentecostal Church, Highway 72 West of Burnsville. L. Jones Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun. Worship Rich, pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11 am and 6:30 pm; Youth Services 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Service 5:30 pm; Wed Prayer and Bible Study 7:15 pm. Strickland Baptist Church, 514 Strickland Rd., Glen MS 38846, Pastor Community Pentecostal Church, Rev. Randle Flake, pastor. Sun. Worship Harold Burcham; Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday Services 11 a.m& 6 pm; 10am & 5:30pm; Wed. Acts Class 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pm Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Counce, Tenn. First Pentecostal Church, State Route 57, Rev. G.R. Miller, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Evening Worship 6 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. INDEPENDENT FULL GOSPEL Eastview United Pentecostal Church, Rev. Wayne Isbell, pastor. Harvest Church, 349 Hwy 45 S., Guys, TN. Pastor Roger Reece; 287-8277 (pastor), (662) 645-9751 (church) S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 731-239-2621. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship & Children’s Church 11am; 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m. Evening Service 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m. Gospel Tabernacle, Glover Drive. Rev. Josh Hodum, pastor. S.S. 10 am Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7 p.m. INDEPENDENT METHODIST Greater Life United Pentecostal Church, 750 Hwy. 45 S. Rev. Don Clenney, Pastor; SS 10am, Sun. Morn. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. Worship Clausel Hill Independent Methodist Church, 8 miles S. of Burnsville, 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pm just off 365 in Cairo Community. Pastor, Gary Redd. S.S. 10 a.m. Morning Life Tabernacle Apostolic Pentecostal, 286-5317, Mathis Subd. Worship 11:15 a.m. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer Sunday Worship 10am&6:30pm;Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Meeting 6:45 p.m. Pleasant Hill Pentecostal Church, C.D. Kirk, pastor, Hwy. 2, Chapel Hill Methodist Church, , 2 1/2 mi. W. of Burnsville. CR 944. S.S. 10am, Adult Worship 10am, Sun. Night Explosion 6pm & Scotty McCay, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Sunday Worship, 11 am. & 5 pm. Wed. night 7:30pm Rockhill Apostolic, 156 CR 157, 662-287-1089, Pastor Steve LUTHERAN Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. 4203 Shiloh Rd. 287 Findley SS. 10am, Sun. Morn. 11am, Sun. Night 6pm, Wed night 7:15pm 1037, Divine Worship 10:00 a.m. Holy Communion celebrated on the first, 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.” third and fifth Sunday. Christian Ed. 9 a.m.

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METHODIST Bethel United Methodist, Jerry Kelly, pastor. Worship 10 am S.S. 11 am Biggersville United Methodist Church, Jimmy Glover, Pastor. 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 100 (Intersection of Kendrick & Box Chapel Road) S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 11 am, Evening Worship 5 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m.

The Full Gospel Tabernacle of Jesus Christ, 37 CR 2350, Pastor Jesse Hisaw, 462-3541. Sun, 10am & 5pm; Wed. 7:30 pm. Tobes Chapel Pentecostal Church, CR 400, Pastor: Bro. Tony Basden, SS. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. 5:30am, Wed. Bible Study 7pm, 462-8183. United Pentecostal Church, Selmer, Tenn., S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & 7 pm.


10 • Daily Corinthian

Local Schedule Today Basketball Walnut @ Biggersville, 6 McNairy @ Adamsville, 6 Tish Co. Shootout (B) Central-Middleton, 5 (WXRZ) (B) Corinth-Belmont, 6:30 (WXRZ) Middle School ACT @ Kossuth (7G) Championship, 10 a.m. (7B) Championship, 11 a.m. (8G) Championship, Noon (8B) Championship, 1 p.m. Soccer Corinth @ New Albany, 11/1

Monday, Jan. 23 Basketball Walnut @ Falkner, 6

Sports

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Quiet offseason part of Braves’ plan The Associated Press

ATLANTA — There has been no flashy free agent signing, no blockbuster trade this offseason for the Atlanta Braves. General manager Frank Wren says there also has been no panic. Wren says the quiet winter is proof of his confidence in the Braves’ talent, even after the team blew an 8 1/2-game wild-card lead in September. With one month remaining before pitchers and catchers conduct their first spring training workout on Feb.

20, the roster is mostly unchanged. The notable exceptions are the departures of right-hander Derek Lowe, who was dealt to Cleveland for a minor league pitcher, and shortstop Alex Gonzalez, who signed with Milwaukee. Despite rumors that righthander Jair Jurrjens or outfielder Martin Prado might be on the market, Wren said he never pursued a deal. “Like we’ve said all winter long, we’re not looking to trade anyone,” Wren said this week. “We like our team and

if people come calling we’ll at least look around and see if there’s a way that we can get better. But short of that, we like the guys we have and what they bring.” Wren said the Braves will be better by having last year’s big trade-deadline addition, Michael Bourn, hitting leadoff for a full season. He’s also expecting better production from Prado, right fielder Jason Heyward and second baseman Dan Uggla. “We think we have a chance to be better just with guys

bouncing back and doing what they’ve normally done,” Wren said. “There were a number of guys that weren’t quite on their game last year and we still managed to have a good season, albeit with a tough last month.” The September swoon was devastating for the Braves and their fans. After holding at least a share of the wild-card lead since June 9, the Braves fell one game behind St. Louis in Please see BRAVES | 11

BHS sweeps 1-1A twinbill

Tuesday, Jan. 24 Basketball Kossuth @ Central, 6 (WXRZ)

Shorts

BY H. LEE SMITH II

BHS Fundraiser

lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

The Biggersville High School Athletic Department is generating funds to renovate the weight room and offset costs of the new practice field. To help do so, it is asking for help from all alumni and supporters by making a $100 contribution to the program. Half of the proceeds will be raffled to those contributors at the final home basketball game on Jan. 30. For more information, contact any of the BHS coaches or call the school at 286-3542.

BIGGERSVILLE — The Lady Lions used a 21-3 advantage in the second quarter to pull past Wheeler 57-34 in Division 1-1A action on Friday. Cassie Farris’ club got back to the breakeven mark through 20 games and improved to 7-2 in league play. Tyler Shelley tossed in a game-high 23 points for BHS, which trailed 15-11 after one. Eight of the 10 Lady Lions scored in the season sweep of the Lady Eagles. In the nightcap, the Lions placed six players in double figures and remained unbeaten in league play with a 95-71 decision. The Lions (17-6, 9-0) have hung 197 points so far through a three-game homestand which ends tonight with Senior Night against Walnut. Dexter Stafford and Blake Anderson led a balanced attack with 12 points each. All sixteen Lions played, with 15 getting in on the scoring act. Biggersville drained eight threepointers and pulled down 38 rebounds, 21 on the offensive end. ■ At Walnut, Trae Bain canned a game-high 22 points and 11 Bears scored in a 88-38 win over the host Wildcats. Central climbed back over the .500 mark with its second straight blowout win. ■ At Booneville, Kossuth found itself on the losing end in a pair of Division 1-3A contests. The Lady Devils got a game-high 29 points from Jasmine Allen in a 56-50 win. Kossuth (11-7, 0-3) used a 15-2 advantage in the third quarter to tie the contest at 36. Baylee Turner led the Lady Aggies with 13 and Annaleigh Coleman added 12. The defending Class 3A champions ended the Aggies’ four-game winning streak with a 73-33 decision in the nightcap. Keldrick Lesley led the way with 16 points. Stegan Smith paced Kossuth (612, 2-1) with 10 markers.

Winter Tennis Academy Shiloh Ridge will begin its Winter After School Tennis Academy Jan. 23, open to ages 6-12 and beginner and intermediate players. Participants will learn sound tennis fundamentals while learning to compete in a family friendly environment. The Academy will be held on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 4-5 p.m. Cost is $10 per day per child. Nonmember cost is $15 per day. For more information call Shiloh Ridge at 286-8000 or Willy LaFerney at 662603-7453.

1st Pitch Banquet The New Site Royals Baseball team is pleased to announce Ole Miss Rebel Head Baseball Coach Mike Bianco will be the featured speaker for its Third Annual 1st Pitch Banquet and Silent Auction, which is being held on Jan. 26 at 6:30 p.m. on the campus of New Site HS. Seating is limited to the first 150 tickets sold, and must be purchased in advance. Cost is $15.00, which includes the meal, access to the silent auction, and seating for the speaker’s presentation. For more info or to purchase a ticket, call 662-322-7389 or 662728-5205.

Adult Softball The Corinth/Alcorn Co. Parks and Recreation Department will be conducting team registration for Adult Softball Leagues from Feb. 21 until March 9. Leagues forming are Women’s, Industrial, Open, Church and Seniors. A date and time for the mandatory mangers meeting will be given upon registration. Leagues will begin play the week of March 26. League registration is $350 for teams sponsored by an Alcorn County sponsor and $400 for teams sponsored outside of Alcorn County. All teams will be required to wear matching jerseys. To complete a registration form come by the park office; for information call 286-3067. Office hours are 8 a.m. till 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and on February 25 from 10 a.m. till 2 p.m.

Youth Softball/Baseball The Corinth/Alcorn Co. Parks and Recreation Department will be conducting youth baseball and youth girls softball registration from Feb. 21 until March 2. Age groups for girls are (3-4 Coed T-Ball), (6U Coach Pitch), (8U Coach Pitch), (10U Fast Pitch), (12U Fast Pitch) and (14U Fast Pitch). A girls age of December 31, 2011 determines the age in which the girl is eligible to play in 2012. Age groups for the boys are (4-5 Coed T-Ball), (6 yr. old Coach Pitch), (7-8-Coach Pitch), (9-10), (11-12) and (13-15). The birth date cutoff for boys is May 1. All players without a birth certificate on file must show one before registering. All teams will be redrafted every year. The season will begin April 2 for some age groups. The cost is $35/one child, $70/two children and $100/three children or more. To register come by the park office; for information call 286-3067. Office hours are 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and on Feb. 25 from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.

Staff Photo by H. Lee Smith II

Biggersville’s Dexter Stafford slams one home during the annual Alcorn County Tournament.

Please see BHS | 11

Berry high on young Golden Eagles The Associated Press

HATTIESBURG — Gone are Todd McInnis, Collin Cargill and B.A. Vollmuth, the names most closely associated to the most successful four years in Southern Miss baseball history. Less than a month before the Feb. 17 season opener, USM coach Scott Berry is still evaluating his 2012 squad with most of the players lost from a group that carried the team to a College World Series in 2009, a Conference USA tournament title in 2010 and a share of the C-USA regular

season championship in 2011. Berry and his staff took full advantage of the program’s recent success and parlayed that into the third-best recruiting class in the nation for 2012 according to Baseball America. Berry hopes the marquee names of McInnis and Vollmuth will soon be replaced with true freshmen like infielder Connor Barron and outfielder/pitcher Mason Robbins. “I think the young guys will play big into our team this year,” Berry said. “They have

to. We lost right at 326 innings on the mound from last year and don’t have returning (starting pitchers) back. We lost our closer, so we’ve got great challenges ahead of us here. “We’re trying to see how people react in those roles, but more importantly, we’re trying to figure out who’s going to play those roles. There’s been a few years where you know who it’s going to be from one year to the next with who your starters are going to be. I think we’re in one of those years where we don’t know.”

Barron and Robbins are the two freshmen most likely to see playing time right away with Berry still trying to determine the best position on the infield for Barron, a product of nearby Sumrall. “Connor’s bat is going to play in that lineup,” Berry said. “Where he’s going to play as a position, that’ll probably float a little bit. He’ll certainly be on the infield. “Starting out, he may be our designated hitter. He’s got to be in there because he brings Please see BERRY | 11

Packers’ Philbin accepts Dolphins’ job The Associated Press

MIAMI — A month of wrenching emotion for Green Bay Packers offensive coordinator Joe Philbin took another turn Friday when he landed the Miami Dolphins’ head coaching job. The deal was sealed less than two weeks after Philbin’s 21-year-old son drowned in an icy Wisconsin river. The Dolphins confirmed the hiring in a news release and plan a news conference Saturday. Philbin, who has never been a head coach, first interviewed with Miami on Jan. 7. The body of son Michael, one

of Philbin’s six children, was recovered the next day in Oshkosh. After spending a week away from the Packers, Philbin rejoined the team last Sunday for its divisional playoff loss to the New York Giants. Philbin has been with Green Bay since 2003, serving as offensive coordinator since 2007. Coach Mike McCarthy called the plays, but Philbin put together the game plan for one of the NFL’s most prolific offenses. The Dolphins’ top choice, Jeff Fisher, turned them down a week ago to become

coach of the St. Louis Rams. Miami owner Stephen Ross and general manager Jeff Ireland then conducted a second round of interviews this week with Philbin, Denver Broncos offensive coordinator Mike McCoy and Todd Bowles, the Dolphins’ interim coach at the end of the season. “Joe has all the attributes that we were looking for when we started this process,” Ross said in a statement. “Jeff Ireland and I felt Joe was the right choice to bring the Dolphins back to the success we enjoyed in the past.” The Dolphins are coming

off a third consecutive losing season, their longest such stretch since the 1960s. Even so, Philbin called them “one of the premier franchises in professional sports.” “The Dolphins have a strong nucleus to build around,” he said in a statement. “And working with everyone in the organization, I know that together we will return the team to its winning tradition.” Ross fired Tony Sparano last month with three games to go in his fourth year as the Dolphins’ coach. When the Please see PHILBIN | 11


Saturday, January 21, 2012

Scoreboard

BRAVES: Offseason plan

THE FINE PRINT

CONTINUED FROM 10

the wild-card race on the final day of the season with a 13-inning loss to Philadelphia. Atlanta lost 18 of 27 games in September. Wren said he’s confident players have moved past the meltdown. “Having conversations with them over the course of the winter, it was really tough early in the winter for everyone,” he said. “I think their mood, their mindset is to move past it and show everyone you can talk all you want but you’ve got to do it on the field. We’ve got to go out and show people that September was not what this team was made of.” The Braves finished 13th in the NL in batting (.243) and 10th in runs. Greg Walker was hired to replace Larry Parrish as the hitting coach. Wren said Walker has started his work with Heyward, who hit .277 with 18 homers and 82 RBIs as a rookie in 2010 before slumping to hit only .227 with 14 homers and 42 RBIs last year. Prado, a 2010 All-Star, was out more than a month with a staph infection in his right knee. After hitting over .300 three straight seasons, he finished at .260 with 13 homers and 57 RBIs. Uggla hit only .185 before the All-Star break before a dramatic turnaround. He hit .296 with 21 homers after the break. He finished with the power numbers the team expected — 36 homers and 82 RBIs — but hit only .233. Wren said 22-year-old rookie Tyler Pastornicky will have the chance to win the starting job at shortstop. He hit .299 at Double-A Mississippi and .365 in 27 games at Triple-A Gwinnett last year. Jack Wilson was re-signed as a veteran safety net at the position.

BHS: Scores & standings CONTINUED FROM 10

(G) Biggersville 57, Wheeler 34 Wheeler 15 3 5 11 — 34 Biggersville 11 21 12 13 — 57 WHEELER (34): Samantha Bryant 13, Alyiah Miller 10. BIGGERSVILLE (57): Tyler Shelley 23, Dana Thompson 9, Savannah Davis 8, Chloe Henson 7, Jada Tubbs 3, Malaika Stovall 3, LaIndia Sorrell 2, Audrey Crump 2. 3-pointers: (W) Bryant. (B) Shelley 2, Davis, Stovall. Record: Biggersville 10-10, 7-2 Division 1-1A.

(B) Biggersville 95, Wheeler 71 Wheeler 14 15 26 16 — 71 Biggersville 27 16 34 18 — 95 WHEELER (71): Hunter Brown 16, Ryan Woods 14, Logan McBrayer 13, Carter Swinney 12. BIGGERSVILLE (95): Dexter Stafford 12, Blake Anderson 12, Daniel Simmons 11, Tevin Watson 10, Darrien Williams 10, Jaylon Gaines 10, Terrell Harvell 8, Martonious Watson 6, Blake Stacy 5, Tyran Davis 4, Darian Barnett 2, Shaun Watson 2, Chris Bishop 1, Marquis Watson 1, Slater Huggins 1. 3-pointers: (W) Woods 2. (B) T. Watson 2, Williams 2, Anderson 2, Gaines 2. Record: Biggersville 17-6, 9-0 Division 1-1A

(B) Central 88, Walnut 38 Central 23 30 24 11 — 88 Walnut 5 8 11 14 — 38 CENTRAL (88): Trae Bain 22, Trevor Smith 14, Jordan Wyke 12, Forrest Crumby 8, Preston Cline 8, Jonathan Lancaster 5, Justin Sparks 5, Jay Moore 5, John Wiley Works 3, Jeremy Powers 2, Luke Maddox 2. WALNUT (38): Domonic Steele 9, Cody Havens 6, Romeo Cornelius 5, Armani Linton 5, Dillon Barnes 3, Javen Norton 3, Ty Huffman 3, Devonte Bell 2, Alex Zuniga 2. 3-Pointers: (A) Bain 2, Wyke 2, Sparks, Moore. (W) Barnes, Huffman Linton. Record: Central 11-10

(G) Booneville 56, Kossuth 50 Kossuth 15 6 15 14 — 50 Booneville 22 12 2 20 — 56 KOSSUTH: Baylee Turner 13, Annaleigh Coleman 12. BOONEVILLE: Jasmine Allen 29, Kadeesha Young 10. Record: Kossuth 11-7, 0-3; Booneville 2-1 Division

(B) Booneville 73, Kossuth 33 Kossuth 6 6 9 12 — 33 Booneville 15 23 18 17 — 73 KOSSUTH: Stegan Smith 10. BOONEVILLE: Keldrick Lesley 16, Jake Hall 10 Records: Kossuth 6-12, 2-1; Booneville 18-3, 3-0

Milwaukee 100, New York 86 Orlando 92, L.A. Lakers 80 Sacramento at San Antonio, (n) Indiana at Golden State, (n) Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, (n) Today’s games Cleveland at Atlanta, 6 p.m. Portland at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Denver at New York, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Chicago, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Houston, 7 p.m. Dallas at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Memphis, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at New Jersey, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Utah, 8 p.m. Sunday’s Games Boston at Washington, Noon Toronto at L.A. Clippers, 2:30 p.m. Charlotte at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Miami, 5 p.m. Indiana at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m.

PRO FOOTBALL NFL playoffs schedule Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 7 Houston 31, Cincinnati 10 New Orleans 45, Detroit 28 Sunday, Jan. 8 New York Giants 24, Atlanta 2 Denver 29, Pittsburgh 23, OT Divisional Playoffs Saturday San Francisco 36, New Orleans 32 New England 45, Denver 10 Sunday Baltimore 20, Houston 13 N.Y. Giants 37, Green Bay 20 Conference Championships Sunday Baltimore at New England, 2 p.m. N.Y. Giants at San Francisco, 5:30 p.m. Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 29 At Honolulu NFC vs. AFC, 6 p.m. Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 5 At Indianapolis NFC vs. AFC, 5:20 p.m.

NBA standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Philadelphia 11 4 .733 New York 6 9 .400 Boston 5 9 .357 New Jersey 4 11 .267 Toronto 4 12 .250 Southeast Division W L Pct Orlando 11 4 .733 Miami 10 4 .714 Atlanta 11 5 .688 Charlotte 3 12 .200 Washington 2 13 .133 Central Division W L Pct Chicago 14 3 .824 Indiana 9 4 .692 Cleveland 6 8 .429 Milwaukee 5 9 .357 Detroit 3 13 .188 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 10 5 .667 Memphis 8 6 .571 Dallas 9 7 .563 Houston 8 7 .533 New Orleans 3 12 .200 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 12 3 .800 Denver 11 5 .688 Utah 9 5 .643 Portland 9 6 .600 Minnesota 6 8 .429 Pacific Division W L Pct L.A. Clippers 8 4 .667 L.A. Lakers 10 7 .588 Phoenix 6 9 .400 Golden State 5 9 .357 Sacramento 5 10 .333 ––– Thursday’s Games Houston 90, New Orleans 88, OT Miami 98, L.A. Lakers 87 Dallas 94, Utah 91 Friday’s Games Portland 94, Toronto 84 Denver 108, Washington 104 Philadelphia 90, Atlanta 76 Phoenix 79, Boston 71 Chicago 114, Cleveland 75 Memphis 98, Detroit 81

GB — 5 5½ 7 7½ GB — ½ ½ 8 9 GB — 3 6½ 7½ 10½ GB — 1½ 1½ 2 7 GB — 1½ 2½ 3 5½ GB — ½ 3½ 4 4½

MISC. Transactions

COLLEGE BASKETBALL Friday’s men’s scores EAST Hobart 72, Vassar 40 Ithaca 75, Elmira 70 Rochester 86, Case Reserve 68 Susquehanna 77, Scranton 63 York (NY) 74, Lehman 70 SOUTH Florida Gulf Coast 92, Stetson 85 Georgia College 56, Francis Marion 54 Va. Lynchburg 70, S. Virginia 67 MIDWEST Cleveland St. 78, Green Bay 68 Youngstown St. 68, Milwaukee 66

NHL standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Rangers 45 29 12 4 62 126 94 Philadelphia 45 27 14 4 58 150 133 Pittsburgh 47 26 17 4 56 145 122 New Jersey 46 26 18 2 54 127 130 N.Y. Islanders 45 18 21 6 42 110 135 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Boston 44 30 13 1 61 160 89 Ottawa 49 27 16 6 60 153 151 Toronto 46 23 18 5 51 143 141 Buffalo 47 19 23 5 43 115 144 Montreal 47 17 21 9 43 120 131 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 45 21 14 10 52 115 127 Washington 46 25 19 2 52 128 130 Winnipeg 47 22 20 5 49 120 134 Carolina 49 17 24 8 42 127 156 Tampa Bay 45 18 23 4 40 126 159 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Detroit 47 31 15 1 63 152 107 St. Louis 46 28 12 6 62 117 94 Chicago 47 28 13 6 62 156 135 Nashville 47 27 16 4 58 128 123 Columbus 46 13 28 5 31 110 152 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 47 28 15 4 60 151 117 Colorado 48 25 21 2 52 124 137 Minnesota 47 22 18 7 51 107 122 Calgary 48 22 20 6 50 114 134 Edmonton 46 17 25 4 38 116 132 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 44 26 13 5 57 126 104 Los Angeles 48 23 15 10 56 106 107 Dallas 45 24 19 2 50 122 129 Phoenix 48 21 19 8 50 124 128 Anaheim 45 16 22 7 39 119 140 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday’s Games Detroit 3, Phoenix 2, SO Calgary 2, Los Angeles 1, SO Toronto 4, Minnesota 1 Boston 4, New Jersey 1 Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 N.Y. Islanders 4, Philadelphia 1 Nashville 3, Columbus 0 St. Louis 1, Edmonton 0 Winnipeg 4, Buffalo 1 Ottawa 4, San Jose 1 Friday’s Games Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 4, SO Carolina 3, Washington 0 Florida at Chicago, (n) Tampa Bay at Dallas, (n) Today’s Games N.Y. Rangers at Boston, Nppn Philadelphia at New Jersey, Noon San Jose at Vancouver, 3 p.m. Ottawa at Anaheim, 3 p.m. Montreal at Toronto, 6 p.m. Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Columbus at Detroit, 6 p.m.

Jelena Jankovic (13), Serbia, def. Christina McHale, United States, 6-2, 6-0. Kim Clijsters (11), Belgium, def. Daniela Hantuchova (20), Slovakia, 6-3, 6-2. Li Na (5), China, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues (26), Spain, 3-0, 30-0, retired.

Florida at Winnipeg, 6 p.m. Buffalo at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Chicago at Nashville, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Calgary at Edmonton, 9 p.m. Colorado at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Washington at Pittsburgh, 11:30 a.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 2 p.m. Colorado at Anaheim, 7 p.m.

HOCKEY

PRO BASKETBALL

Women’s scores EAST Brown 60, Yale 55 Fairfield 68, Siena 49 Iona 71, St. Peter’s 54 Ithaca 59, Elmira 45 Marist 70, Loyola (Md.) 62 Scranton 91, Susquehanna 57 William Smith 70, Vassar 68, OT SOUTH Midway 73, Alice Lloyd 68 Rhodes 64, Hendrix 52 Roanoke 66, Hollins 51 Trinity (Texas) 87, Sewanee 74 MIDWEST Augustana (SD) 97, Upper Iowa 65 Creighton 64, Indiana St. 62 Minn. Duluth 58, SW Minnesota St. 54 Minn. St. (Moorhead) 77, Concordia (St.P) 65 Northland 52, Northwestern (Minn.) 40 S. Dakota St. 88, N. Dakota St. 52 St. Cloud St. 75, Minn.-Crookston 67 Wayne (Neb.) 70, Winona St. 64, OT

TENNIS Australian Open Thursday at Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia. Purse: $26.83 million (Grand Slam). Surface: Hard-Outdoor MEN’S SINGLES Third Round Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, def. Lukas Lacko, Slovakia, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2. Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, 7-6 (6), 7-5, 6-3. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 (3). Tomas Berdych (7), Czech Republic, def. Kevin Anderson (30), South Africa, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (1), 6-1. Feliciano Lopez (18), Spain, def. John Isner (16), United States, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 6-7 (0), 6-1. Nicolas Almagro (10), Spain, def. Stanislas Wawrinka (21), Switzerland, 7-6 (2), 6-2, 6-4. Juan Martin del Potro (11), Argentina, def. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, 6-2, 6-3, 6-0. Bernard Tomic, Australia, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (13), Ukraine, 4-6, 7-6 (0), 7-6 (6), 2-6, 6-3. WOMEN’S SINGLES Third Round Iveta Benesova, Czech Republic, def. Nina Bratchikova, Russia, 6-1, 6-3. Victoria Azarenka (3), Belarus, def. Mona Barthel, Germany, 6-2, 6-4. Agnieszka Radwanska (8), Poland, def. Galina Voskoboeva, Kazakhstan, 6-2, 6-2. Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark, def. Monica Niculescu (31), Romania, 6-2, 6-2. Julia Goerges (22), Germany, def. Romina Oprandi, Italy, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1.

BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES–Named Brady Anderson special assistant to the executive vice president of baseball operations, Rick Peterson director of pitching development, Mike Boulanger minor league hitting coordinator, Sarah Gelles baseball analytics coordinator and Ben Werthan advance scouting coordinator. Promoted John Stockstill to director of player personnel, Tripp Norton to director of baseball administration, Ned Rice to assistant director of major league operations and Mike Snyder assistant director of scouting and player development. BOSTON RED SOX–Named Rick Jameyson athletic trainer, Mike Reinold physical therapist, Brad Pearson assistant athletic trainer, Pat Sandora strength and conditioning coach, Dan Dyrek clinical consultant, Mike Boyle strength and conditioning consultant and Tom Hagan chiropractor consultant. Promoted Peter Asnis to team orthopedist. CLEVELAND INDIANS–Agreed to terms with RHP Jeremy Accardo and OF Fred Lewis on minor league contracts. NEW YORK YANKEES–Named Dave Miley manager, Scott Aldred pitching coach and Butch Wynegar hitting coach for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL); Tony Franklin manager, Tom Phelps pitching coach, and Tom Slater hitting coach for Trenton (EL); Luis Sojo manager, Jeff Ware pitching coach, and Justin Turner hitting coach for Tampa (FSL); Carlos Mendoza manager, Danny Borrell pitching coach and Greg Colbrunn hitting coach for Charleston (SALLY); Justin Pope manager, Carlos Chantre pitching and Ty Hawkins hitting coach for Staten Island (NYP) and Tom Nieto manager, Jose Rosado pitching coach and Edwar Gonzalez hitting coach for Yankees (GCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS–Agreed to terms with OF Jesus Feliciano, INF Will Rhymes, RHP Romulo Sanchez and RHP Matt Torra on minor league contracts. National League HOUSTON ASTROS–Announced the resignation of president of business operations Pam Gardner to become a special advisor to owner and chairman Jim Crane. Designated Catcher Craig Tatum for assignment. American Association AMARILLO SOX–Acquired RHP Geivy Garcia from Wichita to complete an earlier trade. Traded Garcia to El Paso Diablos for C Alberto Espinosa. LAREDO LEMURS–Signed RHP Manny Ayala. Acquired OF Joe Agreste from Gateway (Frontier) for a player to be named. Traded INF Mike Provencher to Wichita for INF Jorge Delgado. LINCOLN SALTDOGS–Sold the contract of RHP PJ Zocchi to Los Angeles (NL). SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS–Released OF Alex Cowart. WINNIPEG GOLDEYES–Signed RHP Matt Rusch. Can-Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS–Signed RHP Jake Hale. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER–Signed G Russell Westbrook to a multiyear contract extension. FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS–Promoted Dan Evans to vice president of information technology, Andy Major vice president of event operations and guest experience, and Gregg Pastore senior director of digital media. GREEN BAY PACKERS–Signed WR Diondre Borel, WR Tori Gurley, T Chris Campbell, C Sampson Genus, FB Jon Hoese, DL Johnny Jones, S Anthony Levine and CB Brandian Ross. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS–Will not retain the service of coaching assistant Devin Fitzsimmons, offensive line coach Pete Metzelaars, special assistant to the defense Rod Perry, wide receivers coach Frank Reich, defensive assistant Bill Teerlinck, defensive line Coach John Teerlinck, strength and conditioning coach Jon Torine and quarterbacks coach Ron Turner. Announced the retirement of defensive coordinator Mike Murphy. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS–Named Tony Oden secondary coach and Greg Olson quarterbacks coach. MINNESOTA VIKINGS–Named Alan Williams defensive coordinator. Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS–Named Jim Bell vice president and chief operating officer. Signed RB Chad Simpson.

BERRY: ‘Mason is going to see action in the field as well as on the mound.’ CONTINUED FROM 10

about a presence in the top of the order for us in that leadoff spot. He’s got speed and can handle the bad. “Mason is going to see action in the field as well as on the mound. I was equally impressed with him on the mound as I was in the outfield.” Shortstop Ashley Graeter, left fielder Kameron Brunty and second baseman Isaac Rodriguez are the returning position players who have the most starts under their belt

while Jared Bales and Chase Fowler return as the duo at catcher. Tyler Koelling, Adam Doleac, Marc Bourgeois and Vollmuth comprised the core of the USM batting order last year, but they have all moved on. Berry is hoping a more athletic lineup will make up for the lost power. “Last year, we had physical guys that could get the extra base hit for you,” Berry said. “We could put up a three spot or a crooked number in any given inning. I know we don’t

have that like we did last year. But we are more athletic in the fact that our speed will show up a little better. We’ll pressure defenses a little bit more.” There’s some proven talent in the field so Berry’s main concern is working on his pitching staff. With the team’s first practice scheduled for Jan. 27, he feels comfortable naming only a couple of hurlers who have a shot at pitching in weekend roles this season — Chase Horn and Jake Drehoff. The right-handed Horn had

a 2-0 record, a 4.21 ERA and three saves last year out of the bullpen. “Horn covered a lot of innings for us last year in the middle,” Berry said. “His arm didn’t recover that well in that role. He had some tired arm issues. He certainly has the repertoire as far as pitches go to be a starter. He’s a pretty good athlete on the mound, and more important, he’ll get that rest between starts.” Drehoff is a 6-foot-4 lefthander who received a redshirt last year out of Alpharetta, Ga.

PHILBIN: ‘No one deserves it more than this guy. The Pack will miss him!’ CONTINUED FROM 10

search for a new coach began, Ross said he would like to give the franchise much-needed stability by hiring “a young Don Shula.” Instead he chose the 50-year-old Philbin, who has 28 years of coaching experience, including 19 years in college. With Philbin’s help, the Packers have ranked in the top 10 in the NFL in yardage each of the past five seasons, including third in 2011. A year ago they won the Super Bowl. “A huge congratulations to Joe Philbin,” Green Bay tight

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end Jermichael Finley tweeted. “No one deserves it more than this guy. The Pack will miss him!” The hiring might give the Dolphins an edge if they decide to pursue Packers backup quarterback Matt Flynn, who becomes a free agent this offseason. Flynn set Packers records with 480 yards passing and six touchdowns in their regular-season finale. Philbin played a major role in the development of Flynn and Pro Bowl quarterback Aaron Rodgers. “Worked five years with Joe Philbin,” former Packers executive Andrew Brandt tweet-

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ed. “Calm, cerebral, humble and a skilled offensive mind. His style will resonate with players.” Assistants becoming firsttime NFL head coaches have had mixed results in recent years. The group includes the Ravens’ John Harbaugh, the Saints’ Sean Peyton and the Steelers’ Mike Tomlin, but also three coaches recently fired — Jim Caldwell by the Colts, Todd Haley by the Chiefs and Steve Spagnuolo by the Rams. Before joining the Packers, Philbin was Iowa’s offensive line coach for four years. The former small-college tight end

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Daily Corinthian • 11

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has been an offensive coordinator at Harvard, Northeastern and Allegheny College. Philbin becomes the seventh coach in the past eight years for the Dolphins, who went 6-10 this season and missed the playoffs for the ninth time in the past decade. It has been 19 years since they reached the AFC championship game, 27 years since they reached the Super Bowl and 38 years since they won an NFL title. Perhaps mindful of the drought, former Miami coach Jimmy Johnson offered this tweet: “Joe Philbin new Dolphin coach..good luck!”

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Wisdom

12 • Daily Corinthian

Today in History 1077 German King Heinrich IV petitions Pope Gregory VII for forgiveness 1189 Philip II, Henry II & Richard Lion hearted initiate 3rd Crusade 1276 Pierre de Tarantaise elected Pope Innocence V 1324 Zen Buddhist religious debate between Tendai & Shingon 1522 Head inquisitor Adrian Florisz Boeyens elected pope 1542 Parliament passes bill of attainder against Queen Katherine Howard 1604 Tsar Ivan IV defeats False Dmitri, who claims to be the true tsar 1677 1st medical publication in America (pamphlet on smallpox), Boston 1732 Russia & Persia sign Treaty of Riascha 1789 1st American novel, WH Brown’s “Power of Sympathy,� is published 1793 Prussia & Russia sign partition treaty (Poland divided) 1799 Edward Jenner’s smallpox vaccination is introduced 1813 Pineapple introduced to Hawaii 1818 Keats writes his poem “On a Lock of Milton’s Hair� 1821 Paramaribo Suriname catches fire, 4 die 1824 Ashantees defeat British at Accra, West Africa 1827 Freedom Journal, 1st Black paper, begins publishing 1830 Portsmouth (Ohio) blacks forcibly deported 1846 1st edition of Charles Dickens’ “Daily News� 1853 Envelope-folding machine patented by Russell Hawes, Worcester, Mass 1861 Jefferson Davis of Mississippi & 4 other southern senators resign 1863 City of Dublin leases part of Cattle Market for 100,000 years 1874 Franz Grillparzer’s “Libussa,� premieres in Vienna 1879 Henrik Ibsen’s “Et Dukkehjem,� premieres in Copenhagen 1880 1st US sewage disposal system separate from storm drains,

Memphis 1887 Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) forms 1890 1st issue of Propria Cures, Amsterdam student-weekly newspaper 1894 Oscar Fredriksen skates world record 500m in 47.8 sec 1901 Clyde Fitch’s “Climbers,� premieres in NYC 1903 “Wizard of Oz,� premieres in NYC 1903 Harry Houdini escapes police station Halvemaansteeg in Amsterdam 1903 International Theater (Majestic, Park) opens at 5 Columbus Circle NYC 1904 Leos Janacek’s opera “Jenufa,� premieres in Brno 1907 Kenora Thistles sweep Mont Wanderers in 2 for Stanley Cup 1908 August Strindberg’s “Spoksonaten,� premieres in Stockholm 1908 NYC regulation makes it illegal for a woman to smoke in public 1910 British-Russian military intervention in Persia 1913 Aristide Briand forms French govt 1915 Kiwanis International founded in Detroit 1919 Sinn Fein proclaims parliament of Free Ireland 1925 Albanian parliament announces itself a republic; Ahmed Zogoe pres 1926 Belgian parliament accepts Locarno treaties 1927 1st national opera broadcast from a US opera house (Faust, Chicago) 1929 Robert Sherriff’s “Journey’s End,� premieres in London 1932 USSR & Finland stop non-attack treaty 1935 12.0� (30.5 cm) of rain falls, Quinault RS, Wash (state record) 1935 WFI-AM in Philadelphia Penn merges with WLIT as WFIL (now WEAZ) 1935 Wilderness Society forms 1938 Dutch govt starts obligatory unemployment insurance 1939 George Kaufman & Moss Hart’s “American Way,� premieres in NYC

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Vess graduates from Excelsior College Special to the Daily Corinthian

ALBANY, NY — Windy Sheree Vess, a resident of Iuka, has earned an associate in applied science in nursing from Excelsior College.

Excelsior College is an accredited, private, nonprofit institution that focuses on the needs of working adults. Founded in 1971 and located in Albany, N.Y., it is

accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education. Excelsior’s degree programs in nursing are accredited by the National League for Nursing Ac-

crediting Commission (NLNAC). The School of Nursing has been designated a Center of Excellence in Nursing Education by the National League for Nursing.

Walls make poor conductors for conversation Tell your boyDEAR ABBY: friend that if he What do you think has something about people who he wants to say attempt to converse to you, he should with you from ancome and say it. other room? Point out that My boyfriend does it fairly often. Abigail you give him that He may be on the Van Buren respect. And if he “forgets,� stay put computer while I’m Dear Abby and don’t answer reading or watchfrom the other ing TV, and he’ll yell out a question or tell me room. DEAR ABBY: I have something. Most of the time I an- a friend with whom I swer him, but then he’ll exchange birthday and continue the conversa- Christmas gifts. I make a great deal tion — all from the other of effort to find things I room. I find it rude, and to be know she would like, and quite honest, disrespect- I have been quite successful. ful. My friend, however, I also think it makes no sense because with the buys me things I suspect TV on it’s difficult to hear she would like for herself. Example: I’m always him. If I want to speak to someone in another hot while she’s always room, I get off my “kees- chilly. She bought me ter� and go directly to him heavy pajamas and a or her. That’s common warm robe for Christmas. I don’t like spicy sense. My former roommate food — she does. She gave used to do the same thing. me two large containers Do you think this is a “guy of seasoning containing thing?� — CAN’T HEAR chili pepper. I love to read fiction while she prefers IN NEW YORK DEAR CAN’T HEAR: nonfiction. For my birthNope. It’s just lazy. And it day I received a book continues because you al- about history. This kind of exchange low it.

has been going on for years, and I don’t remember receiving one gift I could really use. What can I say to her? — PEEVED IN PITTSBURGH DEAR PEEVED: To say something would be rude. I do have a suggestion, however. On the next gift-giving occasion, give your friend some things you would like. Example: A pretty fan to accessorize a summer dress, a jar of your favorite jam, a novel or two you would enjoy reading — and then you can agree on a gift exchange. Problem solved. DEAR ABBY: I have a 2-year-old son, “Seth.� His father, “Ray,� and I went our separate ways during my pregnancy. He came to see Seth a few times when he was a couple of months old and promised he’d continue, but he didn’t follow through. Ray has married since then, and hasn’t called to ask about his son. I don’t call him either. He didn’t show up for court and the DNA test, so the judge ordered him

to pay child support by default, which he has been doing. I don’t believe in forcing a man to be a father, and I would never make my son visit him. It is obvious Ray has no interest in his child. I contacted the grandparents and they are just as cold. What do I tell Seth when he asks about his father? — SOLE PARENT IN ALABAMA DEAR SOLE PARENT: Tell him the truth. Explain that when he was born, Ray wasn’t ready to accept the responsibilities that go along with being a dad — and that as time has passed, Ray has been unwilling to step forward. As sad as that may be, it would be worse to give your son false information or false hope that his biological father will ever be willing to give him more than the court ordered him to. (Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Horoscopes by Holiday BY HOLIDAY MATHIS The moon in Capricorn reminds us of the ambitions we’ve been chasing for the last four weeks, even after the sun has moved on from the realm of the goat. The Aquarius sun urges us to look at how our efforts fit into the big picture. Going to the next level with our goals will depend on how well our efforts serve the greater good. ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll be frugal without thinking too much about it or trying too hard to save. You’ll naturally gravitate toward choices that put more money in your pocket because they just make sense. TAURUS (April 20May 20). You’ll use your originality in an environment where almost everyone is doing the same thing. You’ll stand out in a good way. People will notice you and, in a sense, feel more awake. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). People will ask you difficult questions. You’ll have an inkling about

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this, and you’ll be wise to anticipate, prepare for and rehearse ahead of time. Try out different answers to see what feels right. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Monitor your nervous system. Tension levels will rise and fall. You can manage your stress through exercise and other coping strategies. Talk to a friend. Cut events out of your schedule. Slow things down. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ll feel a strong drive to be first. Is it your ego pushing you forward or are you merely acting on the impulse of destiny? Stay aware of the others around you. If you are meant to be No. 1, no one else will be hurt in the process. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). It will be an all around good day. You’ll be in high spirits and quite productive. Spontaneous activities will delight you. The events you plan will be equally special. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Travel, teaching and study are avenues for increasing the money flow to your realm, and that’s not the only positive result for your efforts. You love to learn and have fun with it. SCORPIO (Oct. 24Nov. 21). You’ll be in the mood to stir things up. You’ll add some sparkle and perhaps a pinch of mischief, to another person’s life. Your creations and suggestions will in-

vigorate the action. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). More research is needed before you’re really ready to go for a goal. Read and make arrangements to interview those who are in the know. You’ll clarify your goals over the course of next week. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). It seems like you’re always the one expected to be the grown up of the group. Sometimes you wish you didn’t have to have such a high level of responsibility. Take a breather. You’ll feel better after you de-stress. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 18). When your mood is lighthearted, the beauty inside you radiates out. Your upbeat social energy will help you attract people who give you even more reason to laugh and smile. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Keep trying new approaches to a problem. It will be easier to experiment when you truly believe that there’s a magic combination that will work. There really is a winning solution; you just have to find it. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Jan. 21). You will move outside your normal avenues of thought. Newfound knowledge will add depth to your life. Endeavors come to completion in February. A new relationship becomes strong through spring. Your focus on work, service, education and travel

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will lead to achievement in the fall. Libra and Scorpio adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 40, 2, 12, 18 and 50. CANCER YEAR AT A GLANCE 2012 JANUARY: You’ll actively and continuously build a relationship throughout the entire year. FEBRUARY: The full moon on the 7th will show you the truth of someone’s heart. MARCH: Mercury’s retrograde favors putting your feelings into art. You could discover a talent you didn’t know you had. APRIL: You’ll expect the best of others, state those expectations, and watch as they rise to the occasion. MAY: The reason for a professional boost will be part luck and part sweat. JUNE: The sun in your sign after the 21st will help you play to your strengths. JULY: You’ll be maintaining personal treasures and adding to your material wealth. AUGUST: Venus moves into your sign to energize friendships and love relationships alike. SEPTEMBER: The mystery you weave around yourself is part of your appeal. OCTOBER: You’ll trade places with someone in an act of mercy. You really are willing to be inconvenienced to spare a loved one. NOVEMBER: The spirit of adventure will be alive in you. DECEMBER: Make a wish on the full moon in your sign on the 28th. CELEBRITY PROFILES: Academy awardwinning actress, philanthropist and Mensa genius society member Geena Davis is a fine example of the Aquarian mix of heart and intellect that makes this sign so effective at bringing people together. Davis was born when the sun and Mercury were in Aquarius and lucky Jupiter was in entertaining Leo. (If you would like to write to Holiday Mathis, please go to www.creators.com and click on “Write the Author� on the Holiday Mathis page.)


Variety

13 • Daily Corinthian

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Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

By Brad Wilber and Doug Peterson (c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

01/21/12

Saturday, January 21, 2012


14 • Saturday, January 21, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE Daily Corinthian And The Reporter RUN YOUR AD In The $ FOR ONLY 200 A MONTH ON THIS PAGE (Daily Corinthian Only 165) $

CHIROPRACTOR

BAYNE BROTHERS, LLC

JIMCO ROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BID ALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

Looking for somewhere to call HOME?

Dr. Jonathan R. Cooksey

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

Loans $20-$20,000

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

40 Years

HOME FOR SALE

LAND FOR SALE AC 2 5 4 1.79 3.42 6 4.58 5.50 6.47

OFF CENTRAL SCHOOL RD.

3 BR brick, move-in condition, 1/2 acre lot, concrete drive, concrete patio, low utilities, carport, C/H/A, nice neighborhood. Shown by appt. only!

662-286-2255

BUCK HOLLOW SUBD. $8,000 $20,000 $16,000 $7,160 13,680 $24,000 $18,240 $13,750 $16,175

Down $500 $1,000 $1,000 $500 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000

Fin. Payments $7,500 36 $19,000 120 $15,000 120 $6,660 48 $12,660 60 $23,000 120 $17,240 60 $12,750 60 $15,175 60

Monthly $233 $210 $166 $159 $249 $256 $339 $250 $298

State maintained Roads 6” water line, Pickwick Electric 3 miles northwest Corinth city limits. 287-2924 Financing Available

$78,500 Call 662-284-8142

401 902 FARM EQUIP. AUTOMOBILES

FOR SALE

20 FT. TRAILER 2-7 K. AXLES

REDUCED $

2500

GREG SMITH

286-6702 520 BOATS & MARINE

1979 FORD LTD II SPORT LANDAU

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

$7500 731-934-4434

1999 DODGE NEON

902 AUTOMOBILES

PERFECT PICKWICK GET-A-WAY!

Minutes from J.P. Coleman State Park. Fully furnished 2 BR, kitchen/DR/LR combo, screened-in porch, 3 yrs. old, over 2 acres

’09 Hyundai Accent

$

1,900

662-665-6000 902 AUTOMOBILES

1996 GOLD CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC

could use paint, alum. rims, all leather, all power, LT-1 mtr. but not cop car. Keyless remote & digital dash

$3250 OBO

235,000 miles & runs great! Serious calls only. 662-808-1185 REDUCED

2004 CADILLAC SEVILLE 71K, FULLY LOADED

$

7500

$

14,500

286-3654 or cell 284-7424

'03 CHEVY SILVERADO,

731-610-7241

662-415-9007.

2002 INTERNATIONAL, Cat. engine

$15,000 287-3448

$4000. 662-665-1143.

FOR SALE: 1961 STUDEBAKER PICKUP $2850 OBO 731-422-4655

1996 Ford F-150 170,000 mi., reg. cab, red & white (2-tone).

$2500 obo

662-423-8702

FOR SALE

662-286-1732

2000 FORD E-350

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

$10,850

662-213-2014

1993 CHEVY S-10 6 cyl, 93,000 miles, sharp, exc. condition.

$2,995

662-286-5402

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

2001 AZTEK HATCHBACK AWD

V8, Loaded

$10,000

$

$7,000 662-415-8553 731-239-4428

2,500

662-594-4110

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

$11,500

$16,900

662-808-1978 or

908 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

REDUCED

117,000 miles, leather, sunroof, 3rd row seat, am/fm/ cd player, power windows & seats, automatic, 662-664-3940 or 662-287-6626

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

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

‘03 HARLEY DAVIDSON HERITAGE SOFTTAIL (ANNIVERSARY MODEL)

exc. cond., dealership maintained.

$9,995

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

REDUCED

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.

662-415-7063 662-415-8549

2004 KAWASAKI MULE

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

731-212-9659 731-212-9661.

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

REDUCED

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

$3000 662-603-4786

2007 HONDA REBEL,

2005 HONDA ATV TRX 250 “New” Condition

$2500/OBO 215-666-1374 662-665-0209

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

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

$1,975

662-664-3940

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

2009 YAMAHA 250YZF all original, almost new.

$2,800

MTR., GOOD TIRES,

$6500 OR TRADE

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

REDUCED

2000 Custom Harley Davidson

96k miles

AIR, AT, GOOD TIRES

2005 HUMMER,

910 910 910 MOTORCYCLES/ MOTORCYCLES/ MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S ATV’S ATV’S

910 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S

2003 Chevy Silverado SWB

1961 CHEV.

2006 NISSAN MAXIMA

908 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

REDUCED

$14,900

$7250

REDUCED

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

906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

$13,000 OBO.

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

Days only, 662-665-1802 662-415-3408.

‘06 VOLKSWAGON NEW BEETLE

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!

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

2003 NISSAN MAXIMA GLE, loaded, leather, sun roof, silver w/gray int., new tires 662-213-2014.

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

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

Red In Color Runs & Looks Great

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

JONES GM

662-315-9235

2nd owner, 4 cyl., under 30,000 mi., 36 mpg, looking for payoff. 906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

662-665-1133 662-286-8257

For free estimates call 662-654-7417 or 888-519-5072

See LynnParvin Parvin Lynn General Sales Manager

$62,000

906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

Working with water suppliers to keep your drinking water safe. Backflow testing, repair & installation.

• 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

AUTO SALES ALES

PICKWICK

GUARANTEED Auto Sales

RESIDENTIAL - COMMERCIAL Testing & Installation & Inspections Repair

$1,000,000 LIABILITY INSURANCE

Mtr. & Trans., New Tires, Must See

$10,500 $12,000

662-415-8623 or 287-8894

1998 SOFTAIL,

39,000 MILES,

$8500

662-415-0084

REDUCED

1995 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER 1200 Screaming Eagle exhaust, only 7K miles, like new,

$5,000

662-415-8135

2005 Kawasaki 4-wheeler 4 wheel drive, Brute force, v-twin, 650 cc, 260 hrs., $3550. 662-603-9014

RAZOR 08 POLARIS

30” ITP Mud Lights, sound bars, 2600 miles.

$8000

662-808-2900

’04 HONDA SHADOW 750 $

3900

662-603-4407


CLASSIFIEDS Daily Corinthian • Saturday, January 21, 2012 • 15

DAILY CORINTHIAN

HOLDER ACCOUNTING FIRM • Electronic Filing • Refund Anticipation Loans • Audit Representation • Authorized IRS E-File Provider

Open all Year 1407 Harper Rd. 662-286-9946 ANNOUNCEMENTS

0107 Special Notice

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!

0135 Personals

TAX GUIDE 2012

Free Electronic Filing with paid preparation. Fully computerized tax preparation. Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-8pm Sat. 9am-5pm Sun. By appt. only

2003 Hwy. 72 E., Corinth 286-1040 (Old Junkers Parlar) 508 W. Chambers St., Booneville • 728-1080 1411-A City Ave., N. Ripley • 662-512-5829 1407 Battleground Dr., luka • 662-423-3864

Garage/Estate 0151 Sales YARD SALE inside: Furniture, ladies clothing, whatnots. 8am-until. 72 CR 157, Sat.

EMPLOYMENT Medical/ 0220 Dental RN - Chemotherapy (PRN) - Corinth, MS Position available for a PRN Registered Nurse in Chemotherapy in our Corinth, MS, office. Requires one year of nursing experience preferably in oncology and with a knowledge of chemotherapy assessment & IV skills. Extensive patient contact involving administering chemotherapy, patient education and overall plan of care. May be required train in Memphis, TN. Must be flexible to work as needed to cover vacations and unscheduled absences at the Corinth Office. Fax resume with salary requirements to 901-322-2978, Attention: Human Resources. You may email your resume with salary requirements to careers@westclinic.com. E/O/E

AARONS AUTO 1303 hwy 72 E (662-284-4555) will sell for cost of tow, labor & storage on January 22nd at 06:00 am. 89 CADI 1G6CD5150K4302525 97 BUIC 0232 General Help 1G4HP52K8VH425948 88 BUIC CAN YOU speak English 1G4CW51C4J1655173 and Spanish? Need a job 03 CHV or extra money? Call 2G1WW12E539235231 Betty Ann at Tax Pro or come by and apply. 2007 0142 Lost Hwy 72 E. Corinth MALE BRITTANY Spaniel 662-284-0800.

white w/ red markings. Answers to Freckles. Last seen on Willow Road. Call 662-808-5060.

YARD SALE SPECIAL

5 LINES (Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10 (Does not include commercial business sales) ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID We accept credit or debit cards Call Classified at (662) 287-6147

0244 Trucking

0533 Furniture

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

ANTIQUE ROLL-TOP desk hard rock maple, medium fruitwood finish very good condition. $350 OBO. After 7pm 731-239-5206

PETS

0320 Cats/Dogs/Pets

0240 Skilled Trade FIELD MECHANIC needed for heavy construction equipment and heavy duty trucks in Counce, TN. Must have own tools and a good driving record, CDL a plus. We offer good pay, life, health, dental, disability, 401k, holiday pay and vacation. Company paid life and disability insurance. Call 731-689-0181 or email jobapps4u@gmail.com. Reed is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualified minorities and females are encouraged to apply.

Thank You! The wife & family of Van Belk would like to extend their gratitude to all the friends, neighbors, & extended family for all the prayers, food, flowers, cards & visits provided during the sickness & loss of their beloved husband, father & grandfather. Sincerest thanks to each & every one. God bless. The Belk Family

CLASSIC STYLE solid oak light finish armoire TV cabinet 6' High x 3 1/2' Wide. Excellent condition. $475 OBO. After 7pm 731-239-5206. NEW DOOR w/jamb. Full glass - 32" wide x 8 ft tall. $275. 662-415-8984. NEW STORM door. 32" white. $95. 662-415-8984.

BOXER PUPPIES. AKC 0539 Reg. Born Dec 18. $400. OAK FIREWOOD. 85% 731-610-8887. split, $85 cord, $100 delivered & stacked 662-603-9057.

FARM

0450 Livestock 5 YR old registered Angus Bull. 1800 lbs. $2,000. 662-416-7991 AMHA MINIATURE horses for sale. Call after 5pm. 662-286-8529.

MERCHANDISE

Household 0509 Goods 3-STACK NATURAL gas heater, 3 yrs. old, been serviced, $100. 662-665-1488. BLUE FLAMES, natural gas heater w/blower, gas line incl., used 1 winter, $150. 662-665-1488.

PROPANE GAS FP log insert, 2 yrs. old, $1000 CAUTION! ADVERTISE- new, asking $500. MENTS in this classifica- 662-665-1488.

tion usually offer informational service of products designed to GARAGE /ESTATE SALES help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is Garage/Estate your responsibility to 0151 Sales verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true�, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better BusiANY 3 CONSECUTIVE ness Bureau at DAYS Ad must run prior to or 1-800-987-8280. day of sale! (Deadline is 3 p.m. day before ad is to run!) (Exception Sun. 3 pm Fri.)

IDBA>CHDC Advertise Your Advertise Your 688DJCI>C< ™ 6ji]dg^oZY >GH":ĂƒaZ Egdk^YZg ™ Tax Service Here Tax Service Here ™ :aZXigdc^X ;^a^c\ ™ 8dbejiZg egZeVgZY iVm gZijgch for for >cY^k^YjVa! 8dgedgViZ $90 A Month. $90 EVgicZgh]^e A Month. =djgh/ -"+ B"; HVi# -"&' CallDeZc nZVg"gdjcY 287-6147 for Call 287-6147 for &+%) H =VgeZg GY ™ 8dg^ci]! BH more details. ++'"'-,"&..* more details.

Firewood

10' X 10' X 6' chain link kennel for sale, $200. No calls after 8 p.m., 662-462-5058, leave msg.

Cost $1200. Sale $600. 662-750-0264. MCSPADDEN MOUNTAIN Dulcimer. New w/ case $225. 662-750-0264.

Sporting 0527 Goods MOSSBURG 12 gauge pump shotgun. Shoots 3.5" shells. $200. Marlin 22 semi-automatic rifle. $100. 410 Single-shot shotgun. New condition. $125.

Homes for 0620 Rent

Homes for 0710 Sale

Homes for 0710 Sale

DOUBLE SINK for sale 72 7/8 in long with 36 1/2 between sinks. $100 662-462-5554

304 MONTGOMERY, 3BR, 2BA, CHA. $550 mth/$550 deposit. 662-415-3870

4BR/1BA ON 1 Ac in Chewalla Tn. 1 1/2 mi. from State Line. Reduced to $25,000. 662-287-1213

1315 W. CLOVER LANE, CORINTH. VERY SPACIOUS TWO BEDROOM, 1 1/2 BATH WITH LARGE DINING ROOM AND OPEN KITCHEN LIVING AREA. LARGE FENCED IN BACK YARD. GREAT OVERSIZED LOT! $84,500. CALL VICKI MULLINS @ 808-6011 - MID-SOUTH REAL ESTATE SALES & AUCTIONS.

BMB HORSE blanket & GREAT LOCATION! Furn. hood, never used, size 2 BR, 2 BA, 1516 Jackson. large, $75 for both obo. 286-2244. 662-415-3422. LAKE FRONT HOUSE, 2 FOR SALE: All new CreaBR, appl. furn., dep. tive Memories Supplies req'd., $300 mo.; LG. for Scrapbook. To many home in county, 3 lg. items to list. $50. BR's, full front porch, 662-603-1382 3-car garage, $400 mo. ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, 287-3567. Jazzy Select 6, 1 yr. old, SMALL 2 BR, C/H/A, $400 like new, charged up & mo., Rockhill. ready to use. Includes 662-212-4102. second chair free for spare parts. $500. Business 662-415-1626. 0670

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Unfurnished 0610 Apartments

2 BR, 1 BA, stove & re8X10 METAL building frig. furn., $385 mo, $385 with hard wood floor, dep. 284-0910, lv. mess. must be moved. $300 2 BR, stove/refrig. furn., 662-276-1087 W&D hookup, CHA. FOR SALE: A Katana soft- 287-3257. ball bat 34in 27oz $40 2BR/1BA, STOVE/REFRID. obo. 662-603-1382 furnished. $325 mo/$300 dep. FOR SALE: Brand new 731-926-6341 T-Rex HDMI Cable 6ft CANE CREEK Apts., Hwy long. $10. 662-603-1382 72W & CR 735, 2 BR, 1 BA, stove & refrig., W&D FOR SALE: Creative hookup, Kossuth & City Memories Carrying Bag. Sch. Dist. $400 mo. $15 662-603-1382. 287-0105.

PROPANE G A S GE FREE ADVERTISING. Adclothes dryer, $100 obo. vertise any item valued 662-415-8844. at $500 or less for free. The ads must be for priSTAINLESS STEEL Mem- vate party or personal bers Mark propane gas merchandise and will smoker (came from exclude pets & pet supSams). Cost $1000, exc. plies, livestock (incl. cond., must see. $300 chickens, ducks, cattle, goats, etc), garage obo. 662-415-3422. sales, hay, firewood, & automobiles . To take WHIRLPOOL STOVE top advantage of this prooven, white, works gram, readers should great, $ 1 7 5 . simply email their ad 662-808-0621. to: freeads@dailycorinthian.com or mail the ad to Free Ads, P.O. Box Musical 0512 Merchandise 1800, Corinth, MS 38835. Please include your adALVAREZ dress for our records. ACOUSTIC/ELECTRIC gui- Each ad may include tar, model 5 0 8 6 , only one item, the item stereo-biphonic must be priced in the bass-treble controls, ad and the price must $500. 662-415-8189. be $500 or less. Ads may be up to approximately GIOBANNI & Rossalinni 20 words including the 3/4 standup bass w/ phone number and will case. Excellent cond. run for five days.

Advertise Your Tax Service Here for $90 A Month. Call 287-6147 for more details.

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

FOR SALE: 2011 Topps Football Cards has a Cam Newton RC and Refactor and about 120 reg. cards. To many Star and Rookie cards to list. SEASONED FIREWOOD, $15. 662-603-1382 $85 cord. Free local deMOSSBERG SHOTGUN, 20 livery 10 mi. 286-1717 gauge, regular and slug barrel, model 500-C, has Wanted to 0554 Rent/Buy/Trade scope, extra nice, $300. 665-5472 M&M. CASH for junk cars RUGER 10-22 rifle, cus& trucks. We pick up. tomized, all stainless, 662-415-5435 o r thumb thru stock, over 731-239-4114. $700 in extras, sell for $430. 665-5472

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

Advertise Your Tax Service Here for $90 A Month. Call 287-6147 for more details.

MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR, stove, refrig., water. $365. 286-2256. WEAVER APTS 504 N. Cass 1 br, scr.porch. w/d $375+util, 286-2255

Homes for 0620 Rent 3 BR, 1 1/2 BA, nice neighborhood, Central Place Subd., $650 mo., $500 dep. 662-643-9574. 3 BR, 2 BA, ideal for couple, in county. 662-415-1221. 3/4BR, 2BA, 2000+ sq. ft., mini. 1 yr lease. $800 mo/dep. Ref. req. 662-808-2292 3BR/2BA, SHADY Gr. area behind King Kars. $475 mo/ $475 dep 808-0702

Places/Offices

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE Space Available. Fully equipped. Downtown Corinth. Inquiries call 731-632-4266.

Mobile Homes 0675 for Rent 3 BR & 2BR trailers; 2BR house. Strickland area. 286-2099 or 808-2474. TAKING APPLICATIONS: 2 & 3 BR's. Oakdale Mobile Home Park. 286-9185.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Homes for 0710 Sale 11 CR 329-B, Corinth. Great split bedroom floor plan situated on 1.9 acres +/-. Home has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, open kitchen, dining, living room with built-ins and laundry. Open carport and fenced area for dog. $128,000. Call Vicki Mullins @ 808-6011, Mid-South Real Estate Sales & Auction 1903 ROSEDALE, CORINTH. CUTE AS CAN BE AND READY FOR NEW OWNERS! SPACIOUS DEN WITH GAS LOG FP, RECENTLY REPLACED WINDOWS, CHA, WATER HEATER AND METAL ROOF. A GREAT BUY IN A GREAT NEIGHBORHOOD. FENCED BACK YARD & STORAGE BLDG. $79,900. CALL VICKI MULLINS @ 808-6011 - MID-SOUTH REAL ESTATE SALES & AUCTION. 21 CR 327-A - Country living at it's best! This home has a very spacious open floor plan. Stained concrete floors with master bedroom and bath down, 2 bedrooms, bath and bonus room up, plus tons of attic storage and a back porch to sit and just watch the world go by! REDUCED TO $149,500. Call Vicki Mullins @ 808-6011, Mid-South Real Estate Sales & Auctions.

FOR RENT: 3BR/2BA house, 2030 Hwy 72 E, Corinth, MS, City school district. $650 mo/$600 65 CR 107. LARGE FAMILY HOME WITH TONS OF dep. 662-279-9024. LIVING SPACE! 5 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHROOMS, GAME ROOM, SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM WITH WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE, 18X36 POOL WITH BARN AND METAL SHOP. CALL VICKI MULLINS @ 808-6011 - MID-SOUTH REAL ESTATE.

REWARD

for lost male Brittany Spaniel, white w/red markings, answers to Freckles. Last seen on Willow Road. Call 662-808-5060.

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, 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.

1609 JACKSON ST. ADORABLE HOME WITH LOTS OF LIGHT! LAUNDRY, BATH, BEDROOM, KITCHEN, BREAKFAST ROOM, DINING ROOM, LIVING ROOM W/GAS LOG FP AND DEN ALL DOWNSTAIRS. DEN COULD BE USED AS A 4TH BEDROOM. 2 BEDROOMS AND BATH UPSTAIRS. O/S STORAGE IN CARPORT. AMAZING HOME. MUST SEE! CALL VICKI MULLINS @ 808-6011 MID-SOUTH REAL ESTATE SALES & AUCTIONS.

Lake/River/ 0728 Resort

LOT, PICKWICK, River Cliff, great lake view, marina slip w/lift. 731-926-0006.

1

Happy st

Birthday Ian Alexander McCain Parents are William & Cindy McCain of Rienzi Grandparents are Belinda & Gerald Vaughn of Rienzi & Reva Bowen of Eupora,MS.

1/21/88 - 4/6/04 Happy Birthday in Heaven, Bubby! We love and miss you! Mom, Dad & Sissy

Correction King Cars 1-20-12 Ad The following should be the correct prices. Sorry for any inconvience.

2008 Volvo S60

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CD Changer, Wheels, All Power, Must 17142 See!, Carfax 1-Owner

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WWW.KINGKARS.NET

662-287-8773 916 Hwy. 45 South • Corinth, MS


16 • Saturday, January 21, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Tract 2:

0734 Lots & Acreage 0868 Cars for Sale 65+ AC timber/open, deer & turkey, Hardin Co., TN. Southside Comm. Water, elec., 2000' paved rd. frontage. 731-926-0006.

Mobile Homes 0741 for Sale BRAND NEW Clayton! 575 credit score qualifies you for a brand new double wide. 662-297-4532

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

FINANCIAL LEGALS

0955 Legals

INVITATION FOR BIDS NEW 2 BR Homes Del. & setup $25,950.00 Sealed Bids will be reClayton Homes ceived by the City of Corinth, Supercenter of Corinth, Mississippi at the office of the 1/4 mile past hospital City Clerk located in the Muon 72 West. nicipal Building at 300 Childs NEW 3 BR, 1 BA HOMES Street, Corinth, Mississippi 38834 until 2:00 p.m., on Del. & setup January 30, 2012 on the fol$29,950.00 Clayton Homes lowing described property: Supercenter of Corinth 1/4 mile past hospital Tract 1: 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

Manufactured

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

Business 0760 Properties BUSINESS FOR sale or trade. Fuel Meister Bio diesel complete system. For more info call 731-645-4928.

TRANSPORTATION

0804 Boats for Sale

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Situated in the City of Corinth, County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi to-wit: Commencing at the Northwest Corner of the intersection of Lyons Street and John Street in the City of Corinth, Mississippi and run Lyons Street for a distance of 404.11 feet for a point of beginning; thence West 00 degrees 00 minutes along the North right-of-way line of Lyons Street 100.0 feet to the West property line of the Property formerly owned by L. A. Gilstrap; thence North 00 degrees 00 minutes along the said West property line 20.0 feet to an iron pin on the North right-of-way line of Droke Road; thence South 88 degrees 54 minutes East along the right-of-way line 25.0 feet perpendicular to and parallel with the centerline of Droke Road for a distance of 100.01 feet to an iron pin on the East property line of the property formerly owned by L. A. Gilstrap; thence South 00 degrees 00 minutes along the said East property line l8.07 feet to the point of beginning.

BASS T R A C K E R 17' Pro-Crappie 175 2008 Lying and being situated in Model. 50 hrs Mercury Motorguide Trolling Block 672 of Anderson’s AdMotor. 2 Live Bait wells, dition of the City of Corinth, 2 Live Fish wells. Kept in Alcorn County, Mississippi. inclosed building. $8,900. 662-396-1698 Said property being the same property conveyed by 0860 Vans for Sale Clara Gilstrap, et al. to Corinth Urban Renewal Agency '10 WHITE 15-pass. van, 3 by Warranty Deed dated to choose f r o m . January 25, 1982 and re1-800-898-0290 o r corded in the Office of the 728-5381. Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi in Deed Trucks for Book 208 at pages 385-386. 0864

ary 8, 2012 at which time all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud.

Situated in the City CorLegals 0955County 0955 Legals may be seen at inth, of Alcorn, State Equipment 3602 Tinin Drive and 104 of Mississippi, to-wit: Horton Circle, Corinth and The West Half (W the vehicles may be seen at ½ ) of Lot 9 of Block 1101 Cruise Street, Corinth. 672 of Anderson’s Addition You may call 662-287-1489 to the City of Corinth in the ext.106 between 8:00 a.m. Alcorn County, Mississippi in and 3:00 p.m. Monday thru Thursday to set up a time to Deed Book 204 at page 217 view the equipment and/or Said property shall be con- vehicles. veyed by Special Warranty Deed. The City of Corinth Bidders may bid on any or all shall retain all mineral rights items and will be responsible that it owns, if any, together for purchasing all items for with the right of ingress and which they are the highest egress to remove same from bidder. The Housing Authorthe above described property. ity reserves the right to reject Conveyance shall be subject any or all bids, but if awarded, to any and all covenants, if bids will be given to the highany, applicable to the prop- est bidder for each individual item. No bid may be witherty drawn for a period of 60 days Any person desiring to following the bid opening date submit a bid to purchase said without the consent of the real property shall submit a Housing Authority. sealed bid, which said bid shall state the cash price that the Done this 18th day of January purchaser is willing to pay for 2012. the subject property. Which bid shall be signed by the bid- The Housing Authority of the der and placed in a sealed en- City of Corinth velope, on the outside of By: Donald Morgan, CEO which shall be stated “sealed bid for purchase of real estate January 21, 2012 from the City of Corinth.” January 22, 2012 Said sealed bid shall be deliv- January 25, 2012 ered to the City Clerk of the 13545 City of Corinth at 300 Childs Street, Corinth, Mississippi HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY 38834 so as to be received by the City Clerk on or before 2:00 p.m. on the 30th day of Home Improvement January 2012. & Repair The sale of the subject property shall be awarded to the highest and best bidder for cash, which shall be payable within five days of award, though the city of Corinth reserves the right to reject any and all bids and reserves the right to waive any and all forms and formalities. Done by the order of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Corinth on the 1st day of February, 2011. January 7, 2012 January 14, 2012 January 21, 2012 January 28, 2012 13530 INVITATION FOR BIDS ON USED EQUIPMENT

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.

HANDY-MAN REPAIR Spec. Lic. & Bonded, plumbing, electrical, floors, woodrot, carpentry, sheetrock. Res./com. Remodeling & repairs. 662-286-5978. I'M A CARPENTER! We do small jobs around the house no one else has time to do! Free est. 664-3350/424-3189.

The Housing Authority of the City of Corinth is now accepting sealed bids for used equipment and vehicles. Bids should be submitted on a Storage, Indoor/ form furnished by the HousOutdoor ing Authority in a sealed enAMERICAN velope plainly marked “Bid for MINI STORAGE Used Equipment”. Bids may 2058 S. Tate be turned in at 1101 Cruise Across from Street, or mailed to P.O. Box World Color Sale 1003, Corinth, MS 38835. AND ALSO THE FOL- Bids will be accepted until 287-1024 '05 GMC Crew Cab LTR, D E S C R I B E D 10:00 am Wednesday, Febru38k, #1419. $16,900. L O W I N G MORRIS CRUM Mini-Stor. ary 8, 2012 at which time all 1-800-898-0290 o r PROPERTY; bids will be publicly opened 72 W. 3 diff. locations, 728-5381. unloading docks, rental and read aloud. Tract 2: truck avail, 286-3826. '08 DODGE RAM 1500, Situated in the City Cor- Equipment may be seen at 4x4, crew cab, red, PROFESSIONAL $23,400. 1-800-898-0290 inth, County of Alcorn, State 3602 Tinin Drive and 104 SERVICE DIRECTORY Horton Circle, Corinth and of Mississippi, to-wit: or 728-5381. the vehicles may be seen at The West Half (W 1101 Cruise Street, Corinth. ½ ) of Lot 9 of Block You may call 662-287-1489 672 of Anderson’s Addition ext.106 between 8:00 a.m. to the City of Corinth in the and 3:00 p.m. Monday thru Alcorn County, Mississippi in Thursday to set up a time to view the equipment and/or Deed Book 204 at page 217 vehicles. Said property shall be conveyed by Special Warranty Bidders may bid on any or all Deed. The City of Corinth items and will be responsible shall retain all mineral rights for purchasing all items for that it owns, if any, together which they are the highest with the right of ingress and bidder. The Housing Authoregress to remove same from ity reserves the right to reject the above described property. any or all bids, but if awarded, Conveyance shall be subject bids will be given to the highto any and all covenants, if est bidder for each individual any, applicable to the prop- item. No bid may be withdrawn for a period of 60 days erty following the bid opening date Any person desiring to without the consent of the submit a bid to purchase said Housing Authority. real property shall submit a sealed bid, which said bid shall Done this 18th day of January state the cash price that the 2012. purchaser is willing to pay for the subject property. Which The Housing Authority of the bid shall be signed by the bid- City of Corinth der and placed in a sealed en- By: Donald Morgan, CEO velope, on the outside of which shall be stated “sealed January 21, 2012 bid for purchase of real estate January 22, 2012 from the City of Corinth.” January 25, 2012 Said sealed bid shall be deliv- 13545 ered to the City Clerk of the City of Corinth at 300 Childs Street, Corinth, Mississippi 38834 so as to be received by the City Clerk on or before 2:00 p.m. on the 30th day of January 2012.

GOT NE WS? e pages th in s er h ot h it w t en ev r u yo e ar h S ... er ap sp ew n n ia th in or C ly ai D e of Th

Occurrences al su nu U & e ar R / es on st ile M al Person ents Business & Industry Accomplishm vents E h rc hu C / s er is ra nd Fu / es iti iv Civic Act shots ap Sn al su nu U or e ut C / s ew N b Clu d Deeds Community Get-Togethers / Goo roads Area ss ro C e th in s pe ca ds an L of s ph Beautiful Photogra ake us cry m ch hi w s ng hi T & h ug la us e ak Things which m The sale of the subject property shall be awarded to the highest and best bidder for cash, which shall be payable within five days of award, though the city of Corinth reserves the right to reject any and all bids and reserves the right to waive any and all forms and formalities.

Done by the order of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Corinth on the 1st day of February, 2011.

spaper. ew n R U O Y n ia th in or C ly ai D e Make th January 7, 2012 January 14, 2012 January 21, 2012 January 28, 2012 13530

n o ti ta n se re p , e g a r e v o c e th Committed to s. w e n L A C O L n o s si a h p m e & Daily Corinthianth, MS

1607 N. Harper Road • Corin thian.com 662-287-6111 • news@dailycorin when submitting information online or in person. tion rma info tact con ude incl to sure Be . files jpeg be ld shou Photos


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