061216 daily corinthian e edition
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061216 daily corinthian e editionTRANSCRIPT
25 years ago 10 years agoMargie Franks celebrates 45 years of service at SouthBank with
no plans to retire.
Vol. 120, No. 142 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections
www.dailycorinthian.com
June 12, 2016
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Corinth receives a $14,697 grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to be used toward renovations of a home donated as an emergency shelter for those in crisis.
Supervisors may reviseright-of-way rules
Page 3A
Board awards annualcollege scholarship
Page 3A
Churches host summer feeding program
Page 3A
Prentiss County Tishomingo County Tippah County
People of the CrossroadsPhoto by Opal Lovelace
Iuka native Anita Mitchell has turned her dreams into a reality. After working several jobs, including 23 years at Walmart and Iuka Aluminum Plan, Mitchell decided to pursue her dream of being a police officer. She joined the force in 1994. Now a Iuka Police Department captain, she’s the only African Ameri-can and female officer on the force. “My grandfather and mother always encouraged me to follow my dreams and go into law enforcement. African Americans are so often on the negative side of law enforce-ment,” she said. “For that rea-son, we need more minorities in law enforcement – African American, Hispanics and other – to balance out the way the others see the minority com-munity.”
Anita Mitchell, Iuka
Tishomingo County should get ready to fl ash its best smile.
The county will be high-lighted during the 8th An-nual Mobile Learning Confer-ence of Northeast Mississippi Community College on Mon-day through Wednesday.
A variety of lectures will be available to participants on the history of the area, ac-cording to conference found-er and Northeast Technology Specialist Jeff rey Powell.
“This year I wanted to take people to my hometown and what better way to do that
than to visit Tishomingo State Park,” Powell said. “What sets Mobile Learning apart from any other conference is a unique hands-on experience, such as visiting the Corinth Contraband Camp and Tisho-mingo State Park.”
In the past two years, Northeast’s Mobile Learning Conference has given par-ticipants a chance to have a hands-on experience in Corinth with a photo safari in downtown Corinth and one at the Corinth Contraband Camp as well.
On Tuesday, Dr. Larry An-
BY STEVE [email protected]
College hosting mobilelearning conference
SELMER, Tenn. — Two peo-ple were killed Saturday when an elderly driver ran through barricades and into the crowd at the Rockabilly Highway Revival Festival in downtown Selmer.
The driver that ran through the barricades was airlifted from the accident scene. His passenger was injured as well.
The names of the two pe-destrians killed, a man and a woman, had not been released at press time pending notifi ca-tion of families.
The Tennessee Highway Pa-trol’s Critical Instant Response Team responded to the scene of the accident to assist the Selmer Police Department in the investigation. The THP’s CIRT planned to hold a news conference after press time. The Selmer Police Department scheduled a press conference
for 1 p.m. Sunday to release more information.
A communitywide prayer meeting was held Saturday night at Selmer’s First Baptist Church to pray for the victims, the injured, and the community.
The Selmer Rockabilly High-way Festival was a week-long event with various events hap-pening since last Sunday and was canceled after the accident. The event was concluding Sat-urday with a car show and mu-sic throughout the day.
This tragedy was a sad re-minder of the tragic Cars for Kids accident that saw six people killed and 20 injured when a dragster lost control and ran into a crowd. That acci-dent happened on Father’s Day weekend in 2007.
Saturday’s tragedy was also the fi rst major accident to occur since McNairy Regional Hospi-tal closed in May.
BY JEFF YORKFor the Daily Corinthian
Two killed as car plows into festival crowd
Photo courtesy the Independent Appeal
Rescuers assist the injured driver and passenger of this car that crashed into a crowd at Selmer’s Rockabilly Highway Revival Festival Saturday, killing two people.
The almost 60-year-old For-rest Memorial Park is making a comeback.
New owners Tom Fowlkes and Glenn Coleman are cur-rently investing more than $100,000 in improvements to
the grounds and working to re-store the community’s faith.
“It didn’t get in this shape in a short time, and it’s not going to be rehabilitated in a short time,” said Fowlkes, a medical doctor and partner with Cole-man in funeral homes in Ox-ford and Olive Branch.
Part of the eff ort to rebuild trust is the hiring of Josh Hod-um as cemetery manager. Pas-tor at Gospel Tabernacle and a deputy coroner, he is the point of contact for people to confi rm
BY JEBB [email protected]
Owners invest in futureof Forrest Memorial Park
Staff photo by Jebb Johnston
Tom Fowlkes, one of the new co-owners of Forrest Memorial Park, looks over a new sign waiting to be installed at the cemetery entrance on U.S. Highway 45.
A 18-year-old was arrested again re-cently by Corinth police.
Zerek Hurd found himself back behind bars after police identifi ed him follow-ing a June 1 stolen vehicle chase through Corinth.
“Offi cers had responded to a stolen vehicle call in the downtown area,” said Capt. Dell Green. “Later police spotted the vehicle and a short pursuit ensued.”
When the vehicle stopped, three sus-
BY ZACK [email protected]
Man who broughtgun to high schoolarrested again
Please see HURD | 5A Please see FORREST | 5A
Please see SAFARI | 5A
*ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. HOLIDAY BONUS CASH APPLIED, IF APPLICABLE PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY. NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372, 38375, OR (&) 38852 WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIGNATED MARKET AREA ALIGNMENT WHICH MAY AFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 75MO, 5.5APR, TIER 1 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALES PERSON FOR DETAILS. #. INCLUDES THE NMAC FINANCE REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOW. T: PAYMENT FIGURED @ SPEICAL APR FINANCING THRU NMAC IN LIEU OF STANDARD REBATES. CERTAIN TERMS & CONDITIONS MAY APPLY. TIER 1,2,3 RATING REQUIRED. ^^ACTUAL MPG MAY VARY. SEE FUEL ECONOMY.GOV FOR DETAILS. && TOTAL SAVINGS INCLUDE BOSE DISCOUNTS, NISSAN REBATES, & PACKAGE DISCOUNT SAVINGS IF PURCHASED SEPARATELY. DEALS GOOD THRU 1.18.16
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2A • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
Staff photos by Zack Steen
Alcorn County Relay For LifeLocal Relay For Life teams gave cancer the boot on Friday night. More than 12 teams participated in the event including Magnolia Regional Health Center. The hospital’s Kasey Derrick adds an in memory of note for Marla Shettles to MRHC’s Wanted Dead Breast Cancer board.
Vicky McLemore and Zoe Trollinger prepare a batch of hamburgers in the Leg-acy Hospice tent at the Alcorn County Relay For life event held at Corinth High School. Relay night included a Survivor Dinner at Tate Baptist Church and the Survivor Walk before the event.
Staff photo by Reece Terry
Motorcycle crashTwo people were injured in a motorcycle crash Sat-urday afternoon on U.S. Highway 72 near the Tisho-mingo County line. One individual was transported to Magnolia Regional Health Center and the other vic-tim was airlifted to North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo. A full report on the crash was not available at press time.
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If you are looking for quiet country living, this 3 bedroom home sits in the middle of 5
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780 CR 500 $155,000
This home off ers quiet country living, while conveniently living 3 miles from the city. The house off ers a large
master suite, along with two more bedrooms, and another large bathroom. Also, there is a comfortable sitting area separate from the living room that is now being used as a computer room. The front yard has newly laid sod, and
there is a new kitchen back splash being installed!
15 CR 103 $129,000
This is a nice 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath home sitting on a little over ½ Acre lot. Has 2325 sq ft., with a brand
new roof with architectural shingles. New roof comes with a 30 yr transferable warranty. Has
a wood burning Fireplace. All appliances ( with double-oven ) stay. Has walk-in closets. Large jetted
tub in the newest bathroom. Home is priced to sell!!!!
1 CR 251 $114,500
Beautiful custom built brick home in Farmington. This 3 bedroom 2.5 bath home features custom cabinets with granite counter tops, central vacuum and an irrigation system. This home has a formal dining room, sunroom and a 16X24 storage building that could be used as a
man cave or a she-shed! This home is a must see!
2 CR 185A $215,000
Fresh and new meets character and charm in this adorable, updated 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home located in
Downtown Corinth. This split bedroom fl oor plan home has new wood fl oors, fresh paint & trim throughout,
updated kitchen, updated bathrooms, Nursery/Offi ce, Formal Dining Room, Living Room w/an ornate Fireplace, screened breezeway between the home and 2 car garage
with shop area and fenced in yard.
This home has a great layout with an open dining and kitchen area. The kitchen has new granite counter
tops, and appliances. The freshly painted three bedroom, two bath home has spacious closets, as well
as new carpet in the bedrooms. This home won’t be on the market long!
5 CR 327A $110,000
Located in Woodall Lake Estates, this 3 bedroom, 2 bath Brick home, featuring a split bedroom plan, would make a wonderful family home. Oversized living room. Kitchen
with dining area. Large master suite with laundry room access. Master bath has large tub and separate shower.
Huge walk-in closet. Garage has utility room. Brick & vinyl exterior. Very nice lot on dead end street.
9 CR 474 $129,900
Historic Home in Downtown Corinth! This treasure can be your’s if you act now! Lovely three bedroom three bath home within
walking distance of everything downtown. There’s lots of charm in this home from the beautiful hardwood fl oors to the high ceilings and lazy susan built ins. The original blueprints from
1934 are also available! Appliances included with your purchase!
1305 Taylor St. $234,500
3 Bedroom 2 Bath home for sale in the City of Booneville! Great location just seconds from the hospital and downtown! This home was built in 1974 and features approximately a 1/2
acre lot and 3 year old roof. Some updating will be needed but there’s tons of potential here! The backyard is fenced and
provides plenty of space for a family with kids to enjoy! See the pics at www.jumperrealty.com.
107 9th St $79,500
If quiet country living is what you want, this place is for you. The property includes 5 acres;
3 fenced in ready for livestock. The home consists of 3 bed, 2 full bathrooms, a den with
stamped concrete fl oors, and a living room with a rock fi replace. The kitchen includes a
pantry and new appliances.
94 CR 708 $154,900
Located convenient to town, this 3 bedroom; 1 & 1/2 bath home is very spacious. Large family room with rock gas fi replace. Large utility room with washer and dryer
hookup. New dishwasher, oven and stove top. Large carport with outside utility room.
8 Franklin St $115,000
BRAND NEW Craftsman inspired home in Corinth’s hottest new subdivision - The Stones at Northtowne! Appx. 2800 sq.ft, 4 BR, 2.5
baths, TONS of granite, over/under cabinet lighting, stainless appliances INCLUDED, vaulted living room ceiling, sitting area in MB room,
hardwood fl oors, electric fi replace w/ beautiful Spanish cedar mantel & stacked stone; BEST NEW CONSTRUCTION DEAL IN TOWN! OWNER AGENT.
3 Northtowne $265,000
Adorable Split Bdrm with 3 Bdrms, 2 Full Baths,Liv. Room, Sep. Dining Room, Kitchen w/pantry and SS
Appl., FP in Master w/access to Private Screened front Patio, Huge Walk in Closet, Updated Master Bath w/tile fl oors, tub, His & Her vanities and separate shower. Roof replaced in 2014. The back yard is
fenced for children or your fur babies!
This very spacious,’’Move In Ready’’, well maintained 35YR old tri-level home features- Approximately 3500sq ft, upper level has 3 large BDs,2 1/2 BA, Den, Sun-RM, Gas Fireplace,,
lower level has large living area, 1 BD, 1 BA with private entrance.Lots of storage throughout,large elevated deck, New interior painting,New energy effi cient windows,2 yr
old roof, new landscaping, water softening system
3901 Worsham Drive $182,500
This beautful home boasts over 2300 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms and an open
fl oor plan. It has a big fenced in back yard that’s perfect for children or pets and a front
porch perfect for relaxing at the end of a long day. Don’t miss out!
1997 Alcorn Dr. $209,000
Craftsman inspired home in Corinth’s hottest new subdivision - The Stones at Northtowne! Appx. 3100 sq.ft, 4 BR + bonus that could be 5th, 3.5 baths, TONS of granite - HUGE kitchen, Spanish cedar beams, over/under cabinet lighting, stainless appliances
INCLUDED, hardwood fl oors, electric fi replace w/ beautiful Spanish cedar mantel & stacked stone. OWNER AGENT.
1 Northtowne $279,500
Well maintained 3/2 in downtown Corinth! This home features a big front porch that’s perfect for sitting around
with family and friends! There are hardwood fl oors in the home and a walkout basement! The driveway is
paved and there is a 1 car garage with an electric door. Central heat/air throughout. NEW ARCHITECTURAL
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1507 E Waldron St $79,900
MUST SEE!!! Beautiful traditional home with 4 bedrooms and 3 baths on 5.4 acres!! If you value peace and quiet with a front porch view, then this is the home for you! The roof was replaced in 2011 with architectural shingles. Stainless
microwave, oven, and refrigerator stay! 2 car attached garage and detached storage building too! Be sure to see
photos online at www.jumperrealty.com!
20 CR 424 $152,000
Well kept spacious home on 8.25 acres. Main fl oor has lots of windows, formal living and dining,
kitchen, den, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. 2nd story has offi ce, bedroom, bath and living/game room. Full basement with garage, living quarters and shop.
Close to everything but lots of privacy. Call me for an appointment. Marea Wilson 662.643.7298.
700 Bradley Rd $219,000
Located just 1.8 miles west of Corinth is the home of your dreams! Sitting on 28.73 acres, this 4 bedroom/2.5 bath colonial style home is a must see! The
kitchen includes stainless steel appliances, granite counter tops,and custom built cabinets. Throughout the house are tons of closets,a generous laundry room, and
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1318 Hwy 2 $399,000
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Local/RegionDaily Corinthian • 3ASunday, June 12, 2016
Today inHistory
Today is Sunday, June 12, the 164th day of 2016. There are 202 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On June 12, 1776, Virginia’s colonial legisla-ture adopted a Declara-tion of Rights.
On this date:
In 1920, the Republi-can national convention, meeting in Chicago, nominated Warren G. Harding for president on the tenth ballot; Calvin Coolidge was nominated for vice president.
In 1924, President Calvin Coolidge was nominated for a term of office in his own right at the Republican national convention in Cleveland. (Coolidge had become president in 1923 upon the sudden death of War-ren G. Harding.)
In 1939, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was dedi-cated in Cooperstown, New York.
In 1942, Anne Frank, a German-born Jewish girl living in Amsterdam, received a diary for her 13th birthday, less than a month before she and her family went into hid-ing from the Nazis.
In 1963, civil rights leader Medgar Evers, 37, was shot and killed outside his home in Jackson, Mississippi. (In 1994, Byron De La Beck-with was convicted of murdering Evers and sen-tenced to life in prison; he died in 2001.)
In 1965, the British government announced that The Beatles would each be made an MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace later in the year.
In 1967, the Supreme Court, in Loving v. Vir-ginia, struck down state laws prohibiting interra-cial marriages.
In 1975, an Indian court found Prime Minis-ter Indira Gandhi guilty of electoral corruption and barred her from holding office for six years; Gan-dhi rejected calls for her to resign.
In 1987, President Ronald Reagan, during a visit to the divided German city of Berlin, publicly challenged So-viet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev to “tear down this wall.”
In 1991, Russians went to the polls to elect Boris N. Yeltsin president of their republic.
In 1994, Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were slashed to death outside her Los Angeles home. (O.J. Simpson was later ac-quitted of the killings in a criminal trial, but was eventually held liable in a civil action.)
P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835
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Across the Region
Guys
Correction – June 15
GUYS, Tenn. — A Bible study program for adults and a youth program will be offered at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, June 15 at Olive Hill Baptist Church in Guys, Tenn.
Corinth
Homeschool group to hold mom’s night
The Eagle Homeschool Association is having a special Moms’ Night of Encouragement at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 21 in the Grand Hall of First Baptist Church in Corinth.
Those who are cur-rently homeschooling or just curious about home-schooling are invited to join them.
Tickets are $10 at the door, but must be reserved by noon on Tuesday, June 14.
There will be a sit-down dinner, mini work-shop, question and answer time with some experienced homeschool moms and more.
(For more information contact Bevin Wilder at 662-643-3560 or [email protected] by noon on Tuesday, June 14, to reserve tickets or ask questions.)
Tupelo
TCT sets auditions for season opening
TUPELO — Auditions for Tupelo Community Theatre’s season open-ing production of Peter and the Starcatcher by Rick Elice with music by Wayne Barker will be Monday, June 20 and Tuesday, June 21 at 6:30 p.m. on the stage of the Lyric Theatre.
The Tony-winning production upends the century-old story of how a miserable orphan comes to be The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up (a.k.a. Peter Pan).
The wildly theatrical adaptation of Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson’s best-selling novels includes marauding pirates, jungle tyrants, unwilling comrades and unlikely heroes.
Peter and the Starcatcher playfully explores the depths of greed and despair, and the bonds of friendship, duty, and love.
The cast includes men and women 16 years of age and older. The production is a play with music, so everyone should be prepared to sing. No advanced prep-aration is needed, but a copy of the script is available upon request.
Danielle Adams will direct, and production dates are August 25-27.
(For more information email the director at [email protected] or call the TCT office.)
Booneville
Supervisors mull right-of-way rules
BOONEVILLE — Pren-tiss County supervisors may consider revised rules for allowing util-ity companies to place lines on county right-of-ways in light of new state law.
Board Attorney Tommy Cadle told the board Senate Bill 2755, re-cently signed into law by the governor, sets a new system of penalties for damage to underground utilities and establishes a board overseeing the issue.
Cadle said under the new law supervi-sors could be person-ally fined if they or an employee damages a utility cable or line while conducting excavation operations more than 12-inches below the surface.
“It’s pretty well stacked against boards of supervisors and mu-nicipalities,” said Cadle.
Third District Supervi-sor Mike Kesler said based on the new law he would like to con-sider either not allowing utilities to install lines on the rights-of-way or creating stronger rules and regulations for when such installations will be allowed.
Kent Geno with Cook-Coggin Engineers said some counties have ad-opted ordinances requir-ing engineering studies and other documenta-tion before utility lines are installed.
Ripley
Tippah County hosts summer food service
RIPLEY — St. James COGIC is one of many places in Tippah County who are hosting the Summer Food Service Program.
The program provides free meals to any local child twice a day, in ad-dition to some fun activi-ties.
Last Thursday, par-ticipants at St. James COGIC enjoyed a variety of summer activities to beat the heat. They played in a splash pool and slid down a water slide. There were wa-ter balloons and water guns. There was an inflatable bounce house and children were play-ing basketball.
The program is open to any child from birth to 18 years old. There is no need to pre-register and there are no income guidelines. Children may simply show up and enjoy a meal and fel-lowship. The meals are provided without charge and are the same for all children regardless of race, color, national ori-gin, sex, age or disabil-ity. There will be no dis-crimination in the course
of the meal service. The meals are provided on a first come, first serve basis.
The program will con-tinue until Friday, July 29.
In Falkner, the pro-gram is available at Bethlehem Baptist Church. The church is located at 80 County Road 268. Breakfast is served from 8 until 10 a.m. and lunch is served from noon until 2 p.m.
In Ripley, St. James COGIC, at 719 Ashland Road, is serving break-fast and lunch. Break-fast is served from 8 until 10 a.m. and lunch is served from noon until 2 p.m. Terry St. Church of Christ, located at 422 Terry Street #A, is serving lunch and an afternoon snack. Lunch is served from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. and snack is served from 3 until 5 p.m.
Iuka
Tishomingo officials award scholarship
IUKA — Tishomingo County High School graduate Madison Brooke Borden was recently awarded a $500 scholarship from the Tishomingo County Board of Supervisors.
Borden is the Tisho-mingo County recipient of the Mississippi As-sociation of Supervisors County Employee Schol-arship.
Borden is the grand-daughter of retired county employee Donnie Williams.
Booneville
Booneville weighing tennis court options
BOONEVILLE — Boon-eville leaders are looking at options for repair or replacement of the city’s tennis courts.
Ward 4 Alderman David Bolen raised the issue again at Tuesday’s regular board meeting. He noted the courts are currently unusable due to numerous cracks in the surface.
“For two years we haven’t had usable courts in the city and that’s unacceptable,” he said.
Mayor Derrick Blythe agreed the courts need attention and said several options are on the table. He said the city is awaiting word on approval of a pos-sible grant through the Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of Missis-sippi in partnership with Northeast Mississippi Community College that could bring funds for improvements to the park including construc-tion of new courts. They expect to learn if they are approved by the end of July.
Blythe said it’s clear the existing courts have severe foundation is-
sues and if they are to be repaired in the current location it will require an engineer to assess the issues below the ground and deter-mine how best to shore up the foundation before any resurfacing is done.
Tupelo
Historic Spain House gets new columns
TUPELO — A decora-tive pair of central col-umns are now in place at the historic Spain House on Church Street in Tupelo, replacements for the original columns that crumbled when the large, three-story struc-ture was moved from its original home several blocks away, according to The Northeast Missis-sippi Daily Journal.
Each of the front columns that flank the main entry steps is made from two pieces that were glued together on site.
The column pieces are made from a lightweight concrete, said Bryan, of Lynn Bryan Construc-tion.
The columns are only decorative in function and provide no structur-al support. The column pieces were situated in place around steel poles that will shoulder all the load bearing work.
Previously, the front columns were con-structed from brick and a cement plaster. These columns crumbled when the house was moved and their reconstruction was not feasible, she said.
The Spain House dates to the early 20th century and has been called one of the oldest structures still standing in Tupelo.
In 2012, after lengthy negotiations to pre-serve the house from demolition for a church parking lot, the three-story house was relo-cated from the corner of Madison and West Main streets to its current lo-cation on Church Street, within the Mill Village Historic District.
Florence
Native American museum to open
FLORENCE, Ala. — Construction on the new Indian Mound museum is progressing, and what was once a muddy space with a concrete platform a few months ago has taken shape as a stone structure with Native American motifs.
The Times-Daily re-ports the museum is expected to be com-pleted by late July. An exhibit expert will design displays, and museum officials will select which artifacts will be on view. The museum should open sometime in Oc-tober.
A meeting and media room with a small stage will allow community educational events, said Calvin Durham, the Florence architect who designed the museum. Exhibits will trace the history of Native Ameri-cans in the area. The museum has approxi-mately 3,600 square feet, which is double the size of the previous building, he said.
The City Council set aside more than $1.72 million from a $19 mil-lion capital projects bond for the museum. It replaces a rickety struc-ture that was more than 50 years old and prone to flooding from the nearby Tennessee River.
Starkville
Police accuse man in attack with board
STARKVILLE — In Starkville, authorities have charged a Maben man for beating a man with a board reports WTVA.
Charles Douglas, 53, is charged with aggra-vated assault.
It happened outside the Cook Out restau-rant on highway 12 in Starkville.
Police say Douglas took a two-by-four and hit a man in the head.
Investigators would not say why.
For now Douglas will remain behind bars awaiting an initial court appearance.
Tupelo
New neighborhood gets council’s OK
TUPELO — A new neighborhood associa-tion has garnered offi-cial recognition from the city council, as well as approval for a $3,000 grant, according to The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal.
The Villages subdivi-sion, located off Coley Road near the Tupelo airport, aims to use its grant money to help increase the neighbor-hood’s visibility.
According to the asso-ciation’s grant proposal, an eight-foot high sign will be located on Lake Village Drive near its intersection with Coley Road.
The sign will be lighted and double-sided to ensure visibility to both north- and southbound traffic.
Writing on the sign will call the Villages “A Proud Tupelo Community.”
The main entrance into the Villages subdivi-sion is located further down Lake Village Drive and is not visible to passing traffic on Coley Road.
Neighborhood associa-tion members believe the sign will help guests locate the area and raise the profile of the subdivision.
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(Previously in old Moses Building)is now located at:
201 S. Gaylean Rd. behind Crossroads Automotive.
662-396-2290
Tommy and the gang look forward to seeing you!
OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.
4A • Sunday, June 12, 2016www.dailycorinthian.com
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Classified Adv. 287-6147
Mark Boehlereditor
Mark Boehler, editor
What a shame.It was a sad day for more than just Tishom-
ingo County when news hit of the closure of the Old Courthouse Museum in Iuka.
It’s a sad day for all of the Crossroads area.Due to lack of stable funding, the volun-
teer-staff ed museum shut its doors on June 1. There are also no current plans of reopen-ing the historical structure.
The old courthouse will be open by ap-pointment and during special events. Other-wise, a “Sorry, We’re Closed” sign will hang on its doors.
Tishomingo County Historical & Genealog-ical Society President Bill Gurley explained the closure in a recent letter to media outlets.
The Tishomingo County Board of Supervi-sors were told of the closure at its Monday meeting.
“We appreciate the fi ne work of the volun-teer staff to date and all they have achieved. The establishment is very much a tourist at-traction in addition to being an archive of our history,” said Gurley. “The board is actively exploring means to provide stable funding for the museum and leverage collaboration with Mississippi tourism organizations and the Mississippi Department of Archives and History to exploit its potential.”
The museum has been run by a volunteer staff for the past 13 years.
“Some of the key staff have worked full-time jobs while devoting their off -time to managing the courthouse business. Person-nel to keep the facility open during weekdays were paid part-time minimal wages,” said the president. “This is no longer a workable plan as those key personnel are now faced with caring for aging parents, health issues and other personal priorities that are demanding signifi cantly more of their time in addition to their normal ‘paying-job’ workload. We can no longer fulfi ll our mission to the public without stable staffi ng brought about by suf-fi cient and stable funding.”
The museum, housed inside the 1870 Tishomingo County courthouse, had more than 3,200 visitors in 2015. Visitors were from 33 states and several countries.
In addition to the museum, also inside the courthouse includes a historical genealogical database and the John M. Stone Research Li-brary and county historical archives, both of which remain open to the public by appoint-ment only.
“All of these components of the museum require professional management by trained and qualifi ed individuals,” said Gurley. “Vol-unteers would be welcome and might fi ll po-sitions for docents or temporary absences, but even they must be trained and mentored by qualifi ed staff to meet the public and tell our story while caring for the security, au-thenticity and integrity of the county’s pre-cious historical artifacts and documentation assets.”
The problem is two-fold, according to the president.
“First of all, we have been unable to secure suffi cient volunteers to work the problem, and secondly, we do not receive suffi cient stable funding to hire full-time employees. While we greatly appreciate public donations and have worked hard and been successful in getting grant funding, these are only partial stop-gap measures and are by no means sta-ble or suffi cient enough to meet our needs,” he said.
The old courthouse is county-owned, so its future is in the hands of county supervisors.
We are hopeful the entire Tishomingo County community will rally around this great, historical building.
We implore organizations, groups, profes-sionals, businesses, individuals and county government give this building its due. Not many communities can say they are home to a courthouse which has been around for 146 years.
To not allow public daily access would be a shame.
We appreciate the Tishomingo County His-torical & Genealogical Society and all of their volunteers for the thankless work they do.
(Daily Corinthian)
Historic courthouseneeds to stay open
Prayer for today
A verse to share
STARKVILLE — In my student days at Missis-sippi State University in the 1970s, I lived for a time in an off -campus duplex apart-ment at 101 Camp Avenue in Starkville.
The left side of the duplex was for several years occu-pied by a changing group of students from Neshoba County, including Steve Breland, Mike Tinsley, John McNeil, Bill Bates and me. We had a lot of fun together there and some of my best college memories and long-standing friendships were a result of those days
Our neighbor, and our landlord, was the wonderful lady in the right side of the duplex. Mrs. Kitty McKee, the widow of MSU Professor Jewel Chester McKee Sr., a 1917 graduate of then-Mis-sissippi A&M who went on to become a professor and head of the MSU Botany De-partment.
“Miss Kitty” was a won-derful, patient woman who was extremely tolerant of the noise and the antics of a group of country boys enjoy-ing college life. She doted on us, and we felt an obligation to take care of her as well.
But that relationship was a natural one to her, for Kitty
McKee has spent most of her life on or near a college cam-pus – as did her son, Dr. J. Chester McKee Jr., the former MSU electri-
cal engineering department head, graduate school dean and vice president for re-search who retired in 1979. McKee wrote the book on the fi rst 100 years of what would become the present MSU Bagley College of En-gineering.
Dr. McKee died June 7 in Louisville, Colorado, of nat-ural causes after a long and productive life.
But it should be noted that the junior Professor McKee had a role in changing both Mississippi’s history and the trajectory of federal disaster response in the U.S.
After Hurricane Camille made landfall in Waveland early on August 18, 1969, Gov. John Bell Williams is-sued an executive order es-tablishing the Governor’s Emergency Council, a blue-ribbon panel intended to oversee cleanup, reconstruc-tion, and redevelopment
operations after Hurricane Camille. Property damage from the storm was $1.5 billion, some $11 billion in today’s dollars. The storm killed 172 Mississippians.
Before Hurricane Katrina, only the Great Flood of 1927 rivaled Camille in terms of human misery and eco-nomic loss in the annuls of the state’s history. The work of the GEC, led by executive director Dr. Chester McKee Jr., authorized a 324-page study of the Gulf Coast that later infl uenced the 1973 de-cision by the Nixon admin-istration to combine federal disaster relief and recovery.
The Federal Disaster As-sistance Administration was created as an organizational unit within the department. This agency would oversee disasters until its incorpora-tion into the Federal Emer-gency Management Agency or FEMA, created by Presi-dential Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1978.
More importantly, con-cerns over President Nixon’s and Gov. Williams’ handling of issues regarding racial and geographic representa-tion on the GEC and federal distribution of hurricane re-lief funds led to congressio-nal hearings that would ulti-
mately produce the passage of the 1970 Disaster Relief Act, which made permanent the expansion of a number of federal disaster assistance programs that had been pio-neered in limited form in the late 1960s.
According to the Journal of Policy History in an arti-cle titled “Hurricane Camille and the New Politics of Fed-eral Disaster Relief 1965-1970” by Andrew Morris: “Most signifi cant, it consid-erably widened the scope of federal assistance to individ-ual disaster victims, moving beyond the long-standing federal role in reconstruc-tion of public facilities. The 1970 legislation, along with amendments in 1974 and 1978, solidifi ed a federal disaster safety net that had been widening in the post-war era.”
McKee brought an engi-neer’s sense of order and purpose to a Herculean task made diffi cult by politics and the sheer scope of Ca-mille’s destruction. McKee’s service in that eff ort – and the changes that followed - deserves to remembered and appreciated.
(Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him [email protected].)
McKee helped change process
The bidding laws in Mis-sissippi are a mess.
Contractors are allowed to donate to political cam-paigns to get government contracts. Service contracts don’t have to be bid out and governments are free to choose the high bidder.
In Jackson, minority set-asides, a product of state law, have been a disaster, allowing politically con-nected operators to interject themselves into the public procurement process, dras-tically raising the cost of city government.
It is the Jackson taxpay-ers who are hurt. Eighty percent of the Jackson tax-payers are African Ameri-cans. Raising their cost of government hurts, not helps, them. Unless you are one of the chosen few.
Take the case of Marcus Wallace, mayor of Edwards, and founder of MAC Con-struction Company in 1996.
Wallace is not an engi-neer. In fact, he has a mar-keting degree from South-ern University A&M College in Baton Rouge. He started out as a sports agent, then became an entertainment promoter. At some point, he became a contractor for the city of Jackson.
The MAC Construction website lists its partners as United Water, Hemp-hill Construction, Siemens,
CDM, Petal Valve, Neel-S c h a f f e r , Terra Re-newal. Every one of them is connected with the city of Jackson.
You have to wonder about a con-
struction company, started by an entertainment pro-moter, whose business is almost exclusively govern-ment contracts.
Thelman Boyd is vice president of MAC Construc-tion. Boyd is a former public works director for the city of Jackson.
MAC Construction was involved in the Savannah Street waste treatment plant (now taken over by the EPA), Farish Street (fi ned by the federal HUD for non-performance), the Capitol Street two-way project (which took for-ever), the Westin Hotel (funded by Hinds County), and the Siemens water me-ter disaster.
MAC was the main mi-nority contractor on Sie-mens’ $90 million contract to replace Jackson’s wa-ter meters. MAC’s cut was $17.8 million on that gig. Last week, Wallace held a press conference announc-ing he is suing Siemens to
get $37 million more.Very few construction
companies hold press con-ferences when they have a contractual dispute requir-ing litigation.
Most states require public contracts to go to the “low-est responsive bidder.” The Mississippi Legislature has charted a diff erent course. Down home, it’s “lowest and best,” meaning cities and counties, lacking any oversight, can award lucra-tive contracts to anybody they want.
It is our state Legislature, as well, that passed a law allowing for “minority set-asides,” thus creating an entire layer of political op-eratives driving up govern-ment costs 30-40 percent. As usual, it is the clueless taxpayers who get screwed.
It would be easy for the state Legislature to end this mess in Jackson. But to do so would end a $20-billion-a-year party that goes far beyond the confi nes of the Bold New City.
Wallace donated $15,000 to Jackson Mayor Tony Yar-ber’s campaign. Pay to play. As one contractor said, it’s the way business is done in Mississippi. Everybody does it.
Siemens didn’t need MAC Construction to install new water meters. The German company employs 362,000
people. Siemens needed MAC Construction to get the contract. The extra $17.8 million to MAC was just a cost of doing business.
Is it any wonder Jackson is broke?
Just look at the recent winning proposal to man-age Jackson’s one percent infrastructure tax.
The IMS proposal states: “Our team will assure that more than 85 percent of the program’s work to be per-formed by qualifi ed MBE (minority business enter-prises) based here in Jack-son.”
Jackson’s new one per-cent infrastructure com-mission hasn’t fi gured out how to pave any streets, but it has fi gured out how to hire 54 new profession-als, including three “stake-holder managers,” a “multi-media specialist,” a “green infrastructure strategist,” a “regulatory compliance manager,” a “consultants program administrator,” two “workforce trainers,” a “risk assessment specialist,” and a “client services man-ager.”
After all the engineers are paid and the minority fi rms get their cut, there’s no money left over to actu-ally pave any roads. So citi-zens get to spend thousands a year rebuilding the front ends of our cars.
State’s bidding laws are a mess
Our View
“When thou hast eaten and art full, then thou shalt bless the LORD thy God for the good land which he hath given thee.” –Deu-teronomy 8:10
My Father, I pray for the love of work, and the desire to cultivate life. Stir me, that I may be ambitious. May I not stare at life in an ev-eryday way and forget that others are watch-ing for the surprises. Help me to be consider-ate and kind in all that I do. Amen.
Sid SalterColumnist
Wyatt Emmerich
Columnist
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • 5A
their information if they own a plot, need to locate grave spaces or have been unsure how to get grave markers.
“It’s exciting to me to see this place become a pride and joy of the com-munity again instead of something people dread to mention,” said Hodum.
Starting from records gathered by the Secretary of State’s Offi ce, the new owners are working to ensure the have accurate records of everyone who bought a plot. The cem-etery is honoring all plot purchases so that people who bought plots from the previous owners will retain their rights.
Although the court ruled that contracts are not enforceable for those who paid the former own-ers for things like vaults, memorial markers and grave opening and clos-ing, the new owners are off ering substantial dis-counts for families who lost money.
After talking with visi-tors to the cemetery, Fowlkes is well aware of the feelings many have about the recent history.
“They start out by tell-ing you how frustrated they are and what bad shape it’s been in and how the Hights did them wrong,” he said. “Once you actually talk to people and show them what’s go-ing on, that Josh is out here, people are much more receptive.”
Much is happening on the grounds. New side-walks are being placed; the entrance is being re-vamped; and the roads will see improvements. In the veterans’ area, an old fountain that no longer worked has been removed and a new statue is being installed.
The cemetery is also getting a columbarium to house cremated remains. It will be the fi rst at any cemetery in the county, said Fowlkes.
He fi rst visited the cem-etery after reading about the secretary of state’s attempts to sell it and be-came interested.
“I thought it was a good fi t for us and that we could rehab it and make it last for the long term,” he said.
The prior owner’s le-gal troubles came from spending the cemetery’s perpetual care money.
“One of the reasons we are trying to get the word out is, obviously, we need to build that back up,” said Fowlkes. “It should have hundreds of thou-sands of dollars in it right now, and it had a grand total of $1,800 that the secretary of state gave me that they built back up. That’s the bad news. The good news is we have plenty of space where we can rebuild that and make it where it can be cared for in perpetuity.”
He said the cemetery just south of Corinth is the county’s busiest, with about 100 to 125 burials
per year.They are putting 20
percent, rather than the minimum required 15 percent, from the sale of burial plots into the per-petual care fund, along with some proceeds from the cemetery’s new fl ower program.
In addition to the cemetery, Fowlkes and Coleman also acquired the closed funeral home building and an addition-al 5 acres of undeveloped property that could be used for future expansion of the cemetery.
“I don’t have plans to open a funeral home here,” said Fowlkes. “I think Corinth has enough funeral homes.”
They are making need-ed repairs to the building
in order to use the front portion as a cemetery of-fi ce and possibly make part of it available as a chapel and event space. Fowlkes is not sure what will be done with the rest of the very large building.
The new owners brought back longtime groundskeeper John Pence, a neighbor of the cemetery. Jeff Rencher will continue to provide
grave opening and clos-ing. Dale Castleberry is serving as a park ambas-sador, collecting informa-tion from visitors to con-fi rm records.
The cemetery is getting some new rules to prevent clutter around graves and will have cleanup periods three times each year. The next one will be July 15-31.
Fowlkes is pleased peo-
ple are showing apprecia-tion for the attention the cemetery is getting.
“The fi rst thing I want people to know is we care about it, we’re putting money into it and we’re here for the long-term,” he said.
To confi rm burial plot information, contact Josh Hodum at (662) 872-9999.
Staff photo by Jebb Johnston
New walkways are among a number of improvements being made to the grounds of Forrest Memorial Park.
FORREST
CONTINUED FROM 1A
derson and Northeast Public Infor-mation Specialist Michael H. Miller will lead a photo safari through Tishomingo State Park.
“Northeast Mississippi is known for some of the most beautiful land-scapes and best history in the Mag-nolia State,” said Miller. “It is only natural we return to our roots and not only use this as a learning op-portunity for educators throughout the state, but to promote the positive aspects of northeast Mississippi and Tishomingo County.”
The photo safari is slated for 10 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. Participants will leave Northeast at Corinth at 9 a.m. The four sessions will last just over an hour.
“In the ever-changing role of pho-tography, mobile photography is now the ‘in’ item for many people, espe-cially educators,” said Miller. “Being
able to produce their own content for their classrooms as well as interac-tive multi-touch books, educators are learning how to increase the amount of information to their students in the face of ever-shrinking budgets.”
During the safari, environmental portraits and many other photo tech-niques will be discussed as well as hands-on explanation of classic pho-to techniques, according to Miller.
“Mobile photography not only means being able to produce a high-quality photo, but one that tells a story as well,” added Miller. “It also means being able to produce photos from just about anywhere.”
To register for the 8th Annual Mo-bile Learning Conference of North-east Mississippi Community College, visit http://mobilelearning.nemcc.edu/ Cost is $150 for the three-day Mobile Learning Conference and participants are eligible to receive 2.1 CEUs.
pects fl ed on foot.It was at that time offi cers identi-fi ed one of the suspects as Hurd.
“Mr. Hurd was the young man who brought a gun to school last month,” added the captain.
Hurd was charged by Corinth po-lice in May with felony possession of a weapon by a student and carrying a concealed weapon.
Corinth High School was placed on lockdown after Hurd brought a .32
caliber handgun onto campus. The high school senior allegedly brought the weapon to school because he had reason to fear for his life.
Hurd remains in custody on the ve-hicle theft charge.
His bond is set at $20,000.According to Green, police con-
tinue to search for the two other suspects from the stolen vehicle pursuit.
(Staff writer Steve Beavers con-tributed to this story.)
SAFARI
CONTINUED FROM 1A
HURD
CONTINUED FROM 1A
When they were kids, I took my three daughters and their friends to the creek bordering my father’s Mississippi Delta farm and let them shoot aerosol cans with a small caliber rifl e. In time, they became expert markswomen.
I’d position them on the bridge’s downstream side with the rifl e at ready, and toss a can on the upstream side. When it passed under the bridge, they’d begin their fusillade.
The mortally wounded cans skittered wildly across the surface, propelled by the release of their contents. The girls kept score for initial hits and for more diffi cult killing shots when the cans were farther downstream.
One cold afternoon, when the can killers were indulging in this diversion, the creek was near fl ood stage following heavy rains. As always, I threw a can upstream … but instead of shots, I heard the whole passel of shootists howling.
“There’s a cat down there!” they caterwauled in unison. Leaning over the railing, I saw the cause of their distress. A soaked, shivering kitten was cling-ing to a bridge piling. Leav-ing without rescuing the cat
was not an option.My fi rst idea fl opped.
Having torn a bed sheet into strips, I weighted one end and lowered it to the chilled creature. Perceiv-ing the dangling sheet as a threat, the cat hissed at its salvation.
“Listen, y’all, that cat will get hungry soon and swim to the bank,” I assured them, to no avail.
But mentioning hunger led to Plan B. We tied an open can of sardines to the sheet and lowered it to the frightened feline. Again, no results … only more hissing.
“Dad, you’re a man and must do what a man must do,” one daughter remon-strated. “You must swim out and rescue the poor thing.” I dreaded the chilly dip, but my ego being what it is, I saw an opportunity to be a hero.
At the water’s edge, I re-moved my boots and shirt, gauged the swift current, moved upstream to a dis-tance that would allow me to intersect the piling, got a running start, and hit the water at full stroke. In-stantly, my wan whiteness became gelid grayness.
Fortunately, the triangu-lation landed me on target. Grabbing the piling with one arm, I coaxed, “Here, kitty, kitty, kitty,” extend-
ing a hand.Glaring into my eyes,
the cat leaped straight at me and sank its claws into my face. Downstream we writhed, the cat fi ghting to repel a perceived predator, and the preyed-upon man trying to swim and de-cat himself simultaneously.
Finally, having rede-signed my face with its claws, the cat released its grip, swam to the bank, scurried away, and was never seen again.
Kids can be so insensi-tive. Instead of lauding my heroics, they whined be-cause I didn’t hold on to the cat and deliver it to them so that they could give it warmth, food, lots of love, and keep it!
Such incidents make for endless risible conversa-tions in small communi-ties, and for years after-ward, I was known as the cat-scratched hero.
(Editor’s Note: Oxford resident, Ole Miss alum-nus, Army veteran, and retired Mississippi Delta cotton farmer Jimmy Reed ([email protected]) is a newspaper col-umnist, author, and col-lege teacher. His latest collection of short stories is available via squarebooks.com (662-236-2262).
BY JIMMY C. REEDColumnist
A cat-scratched hero is still a hero
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611 Alcorn Dr. Suite 100 • Corinth, MS • 662-286-6369
PUBLIC NOTICEDr. Bruce S. Senter M.D.
Dr. Bruce Senter will be leaving Magnolia Orthopaedics on June 30th. We are saddened to see him go and wish
him the best in his future endeavors. Dr. Senter will no longer be accepting new patients and will be available for those patients with already scheduled appointments.
If you wish to obtain a copy of your medical records please call 662-286-6369. We will be happy to send another provider of your choice your medical records with a written authorization from you, before this date.
Please join us in wishing Dr. Senter all the best!
Magnolia Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine
611
Ma&
6A • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
Deaths
William ‘Bert’ Sewell
Funeral services for William Bertrand “Bert” Sewell, 89, of Corinth are set for 2 p.m. Monday at Mc-Peters Inc. Funeral Directors Chapel with Bro. Dennis Smith of-fi ciating. Burial will be in the Union Baptist Church Cemetery.
Mr. Sewell died May 10, 2016, at MS Care Center. He was born December 4, 1926, in Independence, Iowa to the late William and Sevilla Sewell. He was a retired after 53 years in the Engineering busi-ness, land survey and pipeline industry. He served in the US Navy and the Iowa National Guard. He was a mem-ber of First Baptist Church and the Ameri-can Legion. He enjoyed fi shing and boating.
He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Kath-ryn Sewell; his son, Joel Sewell of Huntington Beach, Ca.; daughter, Kelly (Steve) Sowmick of Mt Pleasant, Mich.; sister, Betty Lou LuJan of Iowa; and grand-children, Elsie Calvillo, Kristofer Miller and Tristan Sowmick.
The family will re-ceive friends from noon until service time Mon-day.
Condolences can be left at www.mcpeters-funeraldirectors.com.
ORLANDO, Fla. — A gunman who shot and killed a singer who rose to fame after appearing on “The Voice” traveled to Orlando from another Florida city spe-cifi cally to attack her and then fatally shot himself, authorities said Saturday.
Orlando Police Chief John Mina said at a news conference that the suspect, identifi ed as 27-year-old Kevin Loibl of St. Petersburg, Florida, didn’t ap-pear to know Christina Grimmie personally. Grimmie was shot to death after giving a concert in Orlando on Friday night. She died early Saturday.
“She was doing a meet-and-greet, just signing autographs and selling merchandise. This white male approached her and opened fi re, striking her,” Mina said. “We believe he came here to commit this crime.”
The 22-year-old singer from New Jersey fi nished third during season six of NBC’s “The Voice” in 2014, competing on the team of Maroon 5 star Adam Levine. She began amassing a follow-ing on YouTube as a teenager, gripping online viewers with her powerful renditions of hit songs. Her videos on YouTube have garnered millions of views.
In an earlier statement, police said Grimmie had performed with the band Before You Exit at The Plaza Live in Orlando. The concert ended around 10 p.m., and Grimmie was shot as she signed autographs for fans at a merchandise table in The Plaza
Live concert venue.Grimmie’s brother, Marcus,
immediately tackled the gun-man, who then shot and killed himself during the struggle, po-lice said. They credited the sing-er’s brother with preventing the gunman from hurting others. Around 120 others were in The Plaza Live at the time.
“Very heroic actions by Mar-cus Grimmie to jump in and it defi nitely could have prevented further loss of life,” Mina said.
After the concert, 17-year-old Kaitlin Martin was standing with a group of other fans out-side The Plaza Live, waiting for members of Before You Exit to come out, when she heard sev-eral loud “pops.”
“We thought at fi rst they were balloons ... but then secu-rity started running all over the place yelling at people to get out because someone has a gun and someone is shooting. Everyone is just running all over the place,” said Martin, who traveled to see to the concert from Brunswick, Georgia. “It was chaos.”
Martin said she was unset-
tled knowing the suspect had watched the concert in the same audience she was in.
“This person was in the crowd with us, and while we were sing-ing, having a great time, he was there with diff erent intentions,” she said.
Detectives were searching Loibl’s cellphone and social me-dia accounts looking for clues as to a motive, Mina said, but they weren’t aware of any history of stalking of Grimmie by the sus-pect.
At Loibl’s home, in St. Peters-burg, someone had left a note on the front door, expressing the “deepest sorrow” for the loss “to the family, friends & fans of the very talented, loving Christina Grimmie.” The note said there would be no other comment. No one answered the door to the one-story house that had a rusted, metal animal trap in the yard.
Loibl had on him two hand-guns, two loaded magazines and a hunting knife, Mina said.
There were unarmed security guards at The Plaza Live and
they checked bags and purses for contraband, but there were no metal detectors or pat-downs of people as they entered The Plaza Live, he said.
A spokeswoman said all events at The Plaza Live had been sus-pended until further notice.
Loibl had made travel ar-rangements to come to Orlando alone, as well as travel arrange-ments to go back home, but he didn’t have a car, Mina said. The police chief wouldn’t elaborate further.
Grimmie had posted a video of herself shortly before the con-cert was scheduled to begin, en-couraging fans to come see her perform.
Levine posted a photo of him-self with Grimmie on Insta-gram, commenting before her death was confi rmed: “I’m sad, shocked and confused. We love you so much Grimmie. We are all praying hard that you can pull through this ... this just isn’t fair.”
“The Voice” paid tribute to Grimmie on its offi cial Twit-ter page: “There are no words. We lost a beautiful soul with an amazing voice.”
The Philadelphia Inquirer re-ported in 2014 that Grimmie moved to Los Angeles in 2012 after joining Selena Gomez on tour to focus on her singing ca-reer.
“I’m done being surprised by cool things she does. She’s very talented and she’s worked in-credibly hard — it’s a dangerous combination,” her brother told the newspaper at the time.
BY MIKE SCHNEIDERAssociated Press
‘The Voice’ singer dies after shooting“She was doing a meet-and-greet, just signing autographs and selling
merchandise. This white male approached her and opened fire, striking her. We believe he came
here to commit this crime.”
John MinaOrlando police chief
RALEIGH, N.C. — When John Couch is certain a storm will hit Hatteras Is-land, he goes into action, moving merchandise in his auto parts store from bottom shelves to top ones and hauling away the most valuable items.
But at 64 years old, Couch is less and less enamored of spend-ing eight hours packing up his property. So his ears perked up when he learned about a new fore-casting model from the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Asso-ciation that’s intended to give a better idea of how much ocean water will overrun an area.
“Any and all informa-tion is always helpful,” says Couch, who owns the Lighthouse Service Cen-ter and Lighthouse Auto Parts along North Caro-lina’s Outer Banks. “You don’t want to put up stuff unless you really have to.”
The USGS is running its coastal change forecast model to predict how far a storm’s waves will push water up the beach — whether it will go just to the dunes, over the dunes, or even farther onto roads and property. Oceanog-raphers are in the pilot stages of a new imple-mentation of the model that would predict beach changes in all weather conditions.
As part of the pilot pro-gram, hour-by-hour fore-casts of potential beach-front changes caused by wave conditions are un-derway in some areas of North Carolina, Massa-chusetts and Florida, said USGS research ocean-ographer Hilary Stock-don. The pilot program runs all the time for all sorts of weather, not just big storms such as hur-ricanes and nor’easters. Eventually, the forecasts — which give details for the coming days — will be available for all Gulf and Atlantic states up to 102 hours before storms.
BY MARTHA WAGGONER
Associated Press
New forecast model tries to predicthigh waves
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One doctor delivered test re-sults to Prince’s home. Another sent his son, who wasn’t a phy-sician, on a cross-country fl ight to bring medication to the music star.
It’s not clear if any doctor could have averted the fentanyl overdose that killed the singer in April. But his death may of-fer evidence for how the special treatment often aff orded the rich and famous can result in worse health care than ordinary Americans receive. It’s a pattern identifi ed in medical literature as early as 1964 and it has a name: “VIP Syndrome.”
Experts agree that doctors treating Michael Jackson and Joan Rivers lost their bearings and made fatal mistakes in the glare of their patients’ fame. Elea-nor Roosevelt is another example.
“There are a number of red
fl ags that go up,” said Dr. Robert Klitzman, who directs Columbia University’s bioethics master’s program. “Prince was one of the wealthiest musicians alive. Did he get appropriate care? VIP Syn-drome may have been involved.”
First described by Dr. Walter Weintraub of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in a 1964 paper, VIP Syndrome is shorthand for how the infl uence of wealth and the allure of fame can cause doctors to veer into risky territory when they cater to the demands of a star or his entourage.
Stars may reject medical ad-vice or demand ineff ective or harmful treatments. Star-struck doctors may order unnecessary tests or not enough tests. Hospi-tal administrators may meddle in decisions if the patient is a potential fi nancial donor.
Jackson’s personal doctor, Conrad Murray, spent two years
in prison after his involuntary manslaughter conviction in the King of Pop’s 2009 death. Jack-son had requested a surgical an-esthetic, propofol, to help him sleep, calling it his “milk,” ac-cording to trial testimony. Pros-ecutors said Murray supplied the drug and didn’t notice when Jackson stopped breathing.
Eagerness to please apparent-ly pushed Murray far beyond the boundaries of reasonable treat-ment, said Dr. Stephen Dinwid-die of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
Another doctor took a cell-phone photo of Joan Rivers on the operating table, according to a recently settled malpractice law-suit. That’s a clear sign of clouded judgment, Dinwiddie said.
The comedian’s family ac-cepted an undisclosed amount to settle the complaint in her 2014 death following a routine endoscopy. The family alleged
doctors performed an unau-thorized medical procedure and failed to act as Rivers’ vital signs deteriorated.
Eleanor Roosevelt may have been misdiagnosed because of VIP Syndrome, said New York University School of Medicine’s Dr. Barron Lerner, who pub-lished a paper based on his re-view of her medical record.
The fi rst lady died in 1962 of tuberculosis, which could have been caught earlier if she’d had a bone marrow biopsy in time, Le-rner said. Instead, she was mis-diagnosed with aplastic anemia and treated with steroids, which may have reduced her body’s ability to fi ght infection.
“Lots of doctors were involved, and no one was specifi cally in charge,” Lerner said, citing one hallmark of VIP Syndrome. “She was an opinionated patient, and that made it more challenging to take care of her.”
BY CARLA K. JOHNSONAP Medical Writer
When stars seek care, risk of ‘VIP Syndrome’ looms
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2nd body of missing workers recovered
CRYSTAL SPRINGS — Rescuers on Saturday recovered the body of a second man who disap-peared in a landslide at a gravel pit in southern Mississippi earlier this month.
The second body was found around 9:50 p.m. Friday and removed Saturday morning, said Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman Ray Cole-man. The man’s body was taken to the Copiah County coroner’s office for an autopsy.
The worker was found trapped in the slurry near equipment he had been operating when he and the other man were bur-ied in 10 feet to 12 feet of mud, slush and sluice on June 3.
The body of the first worker was recovered Thursday morning inside a piece of equipment.
MEMA director Lee Smithson has identified the two missing men in a Facebook message as Emmitt Shorter and James “Dee” Hemphill and offered condolences to their families.
The two men had been operating heavy equip-ment for Green Brothers Gravel Company at a pit in Crystal Springs, ac-cording to officials from the Mine Safety and Health Administration.
The federal agency will begin investigating the possible causes of the incident now that recov-ery efforts are over.
“The first priority was to get the two men out,” MSHA spokeswoman Amy Louviere said Sat-urday. “It’s too early to speculate about what the cause might have been.”
Court rejects fresh try to punish judge
JACKSON — The state Supreme Court has rejected an attempt to impose heavier penalties on a south Mississippi chancery judge.
After the high court in April rejected a call by the Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance to remove Chancery Judge David Shoemake, the commission asked justices to order Shoe-make to pay a fine to the person whose estate he was overseeing. The court voted 6-2 Thursday to reject that call.
“We hold that Judge Shoemake improperly signed ex parte orders and contributed to the mismanagement of a ward’s estate. However, the Commission did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that Shoemake gave testimony that he knew or should have known would be misleading,” the court wrote.
The court suspended Shoemake for 30 days without pay, ordering him to pay a $2,500 fine and $5,900 for investigation costs. Justices also or-dered Shoemake publicly reprimanded.
The commission had asked justices to re-consider, saying it had proved by clear and convincing evidence that Shoemake gave “decep-tive” answers.
“There was no testi-mony that he was unsure about the signatures. He was absolutely unwaver-ing in his testimony re-garding the orders,” the commission said in its request for a rehearing.
Shoemake said the commission ambushed him without proper no-tice and didn’t share documents he needed.
Private prison closes as inmates dwindle
JACKSON — Missis-sippi officials plan to close a privately-run prison in Leake County in September, another sign of Mississippi’s falling prison population after lawmakers cut prison sentences.
The Mississippi De-partment of Corrections announced Friday that it would close the Wal-nut Grove Correctional Facility, which is run by Utah-based Manage-ment and Training Corp. Commissioner Marshall Fisher says he made the decision because of low-er-than-requested state funding in the budget year beginning July 1, as well as the decreasing number of inmates.
The department says it will transfer 900 prison-ers at Walnut Grove to state-run facilities. MTC runs three other private prisons for Mississippi in Lauderdale, Marshall and Wilkinson counties.
Walnut Grove has been under federal court over-sight since 2012, after a judge found abusive conditions for juveniles. Juveniles were removed, but problems persisted.
Arraignment slated in death of waitress
BILOX — An arraign-ment is set for Monday for a former Biloxi fire-fighter accused in the shooting death of a Waf-fle House waitress.
A grand jury indicted Johnny Max Mount, 45, on a charge of first-degree murder in the Nov. 27 killing of Julie Brightwell.
Mount’s attorney, Jim Davis, tells The Sun Her-ald he will not waive the arraignment.
The arraignment will be before Circuit Judge Lisa Dodson.
“(Mount) will enter a not guilty plea at this time,” Davis said Thurs-day.
According to court re-cords, Mount was seated at a counter when Bright-well told him he couldn’t smoke his e-cigarette inside the Biloxi restau-rant.
He became angry, court records say, and pulled a 9 mm handgun from his waist.
When Brightwell saw the gun, records say, she ducked behind a coun-ter but Mount got up, leaned over the counter and shot her once in the head. She died a short time later at Merit Health Biloxi.
Groups seek equity in school discipline
HERNANDO — A co-alition of racial justice groups, including one involved in a civil-rights complaint against DeSoto County schools, is calling for “decisive ac-tion” to end what it calls persistent racial dispari-ties in student discipline.
The Commercial Ap-peal reports the groups issued the call this week following the release of new data by the Depart-ment of Education’s Of-fice of Civil Rights. The data finds that African-American students are nearly four times as likely to be suspended as white students.
Education Secretary John King said the find-ings, released Tuesday, show a “systemic failure” to provide equal educa-tion to all students.
The school system, Mississippi’s largest with more than 33,000 students, denies the charges. It says its policy is designed to provide student safety and is ap-plied equally.
Associated Press
Globe-circling flight arrives in New York
NEW YORK — The pi-lots of a solar-powered airplane on a globe-cir-cling voyage that began more than a year ago said their flight over the Statue of Liberty before landing in New York inspired them on their mission to promote a world free from reliance on fossil fuels.
“Today, liberty is about finding and promoting renewable sources of power,” said Bertrand Piccard, the initiator and one of the pilots of the Swiss-made Solar Impulse 2. “Our mission is to dem-onstrate that just the energy of the sun can give us enough power to fly day and night.”
Piccard and Andre Borschberg, who flew the plane to New York’s John F. Kennedy Inter-national Airport, arrived Saturday from Pennsyl-vania at 4 a.m. after a 4 hour-41-minute flight.
“It was really gor-geous,” Borschberg said of the aerial view of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. “I felt like I was a young child in front of a Christ-mas tree.”
Their trip across the U.S. mainland began April 24, when Solar Impulse landed in Mountain View, Califor-nia, after flying over the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco on its way from Hawaii.
Speaker loses post after ethics verdict
OPELIKA, Ala. — Ala-bama House Speaker Mike Hubbard’s convic-tion on ethics charges automatically removes him from office and could mean years in prison for the powerful Republican.
Friday night, a jury found the one-time GOP star guilty of 12 counts of public corruption for using the influence and prestige of his political stature to benefit his companies and clients. He faces up to 20 years in prison for each count.
The jury, which reached the verdict af-ter nearly seven hours of deliberation, acquit-ted Hubbard on 11 other counts.
The conviction comes amid a season of scan-dal that has engulfed
Republicans at the helm of Alabama’s legislative, judicial and executive branches of govern-ment. Chief Justice Roy Moore faces possible ouster from office over accusations that he vio-lated canons of judicial ethics during the fight over same-sex mar-riage. And Gov. Robert Bentley has faced calls for his impeachment af-ter a sex-tinged scandal involving a former top aide.
“We hope this verdict tonight restores some of the confidence in the people of the state of Alabama that public of-ficials at all levels in the state of Alabama will be held accountable for their actions, especially those that would betray the public trust,” said W. Van Davis, the acting attorney general in the case.
City battles auto burglary epidemic
SAN FRANCISCO — The city of San Fran-cisco is enduring an epidemic of auto bur-glaries.
Police took a record 26,500 reports of ve-hicle break-ins last year. That’s the most in the country on a per capita basis.
Police and prosecu-tors blame each other for the surge.
Police say a new state law helped written by the San Francisco district attorney that reduced felony crimes to misdemeanors is at fault. The district at-torney’s office say the police haven’t made enough arrests, solving just 2 percent of the re-ported cases.
Regardless of blame, residents like Lauren Smith of Pacific Heights are frustrated. The side window of her Lexus has been broken twice in the last six months. She and other San Francisco residents and tourists say they want the burglaries curtailed and the culprits caught.
Muslims see bias in landmark decision
YONKERS, N.Y. — Af-ter months of searching to find a home for their mosque, a Muslim group settled on a century-old, three-story Tudor in a leafy neighborhood of a New York suburb, a fixer-upper they say would
be perfect with the right renovations.
But not long after the sale went through last year, neighbors thought it was perfect just the way it was. A neighbor-hood group filed an application to have the building designated a city landmark and won final approval last month, meaning any exterior renovations will now have to go through a time-consuming per-mission process.
While city officials insisted the landmark status wouldn’t prevent the home being used as a mosque, the Muslim organization saw some-thing more sinister.
“We feel that we are being targeted,” said Arshad Shariff, chair-man of the Islamic Community Center of Mid-Westchester. “And unnecessary obstacles and hindrances are be-ing placed because we are Muslim.”
Fish return to NY tributary to spawn
TROY, N.Y. — A few days after a long-aban-doned industrial dam was removed from the mouth of a Hudson Riv-er tributary this spring, hundreds of river her-ring swarmed up into the shallow waters to spawn for the first time in 85 years.
The removal of the rusted steel dam on the Wynants Kill near Alba-ny was the first of what ecologists hope will be many barriers removed in Hudson tributaries to restore spawning habitat for herring and other ocean-going spe-cies that have been devastated by habitat loss, pollution and over-fishing.
The project is part of a larger movement that has dismantled almost 250 dams across the country since 2012, according to the conser-vation group American Rivers.
“There are more than 1,500 dams in the Hud-son estuary watershed, most of them no longer in use,” said Frances Dunwell, coordinator of the state Department of Environmental Conser-vation’s Hudson River Estuary Program. “One of the key items on our to-do list by 2020 is to remove as many of these barriers as pos-sible.”
Associated Press
State/NationDaily Corinthian • 7ASunday, June 12, 2016
Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide
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AGRICULTURE FUTURES
MUTUAL FUNDS
CORN5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 16 439.25 419.25 423 +4.75Sep 16 442 420.25 427.50 +7.75Dec 16 444 421 430.75 +11Mar 17 449 426 435.75 +9.75May 17 451.50 429 438.75 +9.50Jul 17 454 432 440.50 +8.25Sep 17 422.25 411.50 413.75 -1.75
SOYBEANS5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 16 1208.50 1129 1178.25 +46.25Aug 16 1205 1126.25 1177.75 +55.75Sep 16 1192 1110.25 1168.50 +67.25Nov 16 1184.50 1093.25 1162.75 +77.50Jan 17 1177.50 1089.50 1158.75 +76.25Mar 17 1132.25 1057 1118.25 +62.75May 17 1115 1044 1098.50 +52.50
WHEAT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 16 524 494.25 495 -2.25Sep 16 533.75 505.50 506.50 -.25Dec 16 551.50 521.50 524.75 +1.75Mar 17 569 540.25 542.25 +2.25May 17 580 551.75 554.25 +3Jul 17 586.50 559 563 +3.75Sep 17 590 564 568.75 +3.25
CATTLE40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jun 16 123.75 119.25 122.45 +.45Aug 16 119.42 115.15 117.35 -.45Oct 16 118.75 114.42 116.80 -.55Dec 16 118.77 115.20 116.85 -.75Feb 17 118.25 114.90 116.30 -.72Apr 17 117.55 114.17 115.70 -.60Jun 17 110.15 107.32 108.82 -.80
HOGS-Lean40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jun 16 82.95 81.60 82.27 -.03Jul 16 87.75 85.45 85.70 -.27Aug 16 87.95 85.77 86.62 +.75Oct 16 72.97 70.55 72.80 +2.23Dec 16 67.10 64.95 66.95 +1.90Feb 17 69.92 68.05 69.90 +1.78Apr 17 72.50 70.95 72.45 +1.45
COTTON 250,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jul 16 66.50 63.81 64.75 +.83Oct 16 67.43 64.11 64.55 +.24Dec 16 66.45 63.81 65.07 +1.16Mar 17 66.75 64.40 65.68 +1.39May 17 66.90 64.74 65.92 +1.31Jul 17 67.19 64.98 66.32 +1.41Oct 17 ... ... 65.79 +.76
WEEKLY DOW JONES
WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg
THE WEEK IN REVIEW
Vanguard 500Adml LB 162,119 194.17 +0.8 +1.8/A +12.9/A NL 10,000Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 134,864 52.32 +1.1 +0.1/B +12.5/A NL 10,000Vanguard InstIdxI LB 110,189 192.26 +0.8 +1.8/A +12.9/A NL 5,000,000Vanguard TotStIdx LB 99,141 52.30 +1.1 0.0/B +12.4/B NL 3,000Vanguard InstPlus LB 94,344 192.27 +0.8 +1.8/A +12.9/A NL200,000,000Vanguard TotIntl FB 81,878 14.49 -0.2 -10.9/C +1.2/D NL 3,000Fidelity Contra LG 76,886 97.92 0.0 +0.2/A +12.6/B NL 2,500American Funds GrthAmA m LG 73,403 41.66 +1.4 -0.5/B +12.2/B 5.75 250American Funds IncAmerA m AL 72,772 21.10 +0.7 +2.0/A +8.5/A 5.75 250American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 70,868 58.34 +0.3 +0.3/A +6.8/A 5.75 250Vanguard WelltnAdm MA 70,388 65.97 +0.8 +2.8/A +9.4/A NL 50,000Vanguard TotBdAdml CI 67,107 11.01 +0.8 +5.9/A +3.4/C NL 10,000Vanguard TotStIIns LB 65,772 52.33 +1.1 +0.1/B +12.5/A NL 5,000,000Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls FB 59,080 96.98 -0.2 -10.8/B +1.3/D NL100,000,000PIMCO TotRetIs CI 58,211 10.26 +0.7 +4.4/C +3.5/C NL 1,000,000American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 56,851 35.33 +1.0 +1.5/A +12.0/B 5.75 250Dodge & Cox Stock LV 55,614 162.02 +1.9 -5.9/D +11.6/A NL 2,500Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg LB 55,064 73.99 +0.8 +1.8/A +12.9/A NL 10,000Dodge & Cox IntlStk FB 54,313 35.46 +0.8 -19.5/E +2.1/C NL 2,500American Funds AmBalA m MA 52,342 24.76 +0.8 +4.6/A +10.2/A 5.75 250American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 52,128 43.80 +0.3 -5.6/C +6.8/C 5.75 250American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 50,823 40.12 +1.3 +3.3/A +12.3/A 5.75 250Metropolitan West TotRetBdI CI 48,435 10.92 +0.6 +4.5/C +4.7/A NL 3,000,000American Funds FnInvA m LB 45,863 52.55 +1.1 +2.4/A +11.6/C 5.75 250Vanguard MuIntAdml MI 45,848 14.51 +0.4 +6.7/B +4.6/B NL 50,000Dodge & Cox Income CI 44,918 13.74 +0.7 +3.9/D +3.8/B NL 2,500FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m CA 44,436 2.17 +1.9 -3.6/E +5.3/B 4.25 1,000Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm FB 40,945 24.25 -0.2 -10.9/B +1.2/D NL 10,000Vanguard InstTStPl LB 39,400 47.34 +1.1 +0.3/B +12.6/A NL200,000,000Vanguard PrmcpAdml LG 38,499 102.28 +1.2 -1.5/B +13.6/A NL 50,000Vanguard HltCrAdml SH 37,644 87.02 +1.9 -5.2/A +17.8/B NL 50,000T Rowe Price GrowStk LG 37,262 51.36 +0.3 -2.5/C +13.6/A NL 2,500Harbor IntlInstl FB 36,711 59.23 -1.5 -14.0/E +1.7/D NL 50,000American Funds NewPerspA m WS 36,386 35.60 +0.3 -3.4/B +8.5/A 5.75 250Vanguard STGradeAd CS 35,813 10.74 +0.3 +3.1/A +2.3/A NL 50,000Vanguard TotBdInst CI 32,867 11.01 +0.8 +5.9/A +3.4/C NL 5,000,000Vanguard WellsIAdm CA 32,392 62.78 +1.1 +7.6/A +8.1/A NL 50,000Vanguard WndsIIAdm LV 31,315 61.61 +1.1 -2.8/C +11.2/B NL 50,000Fidelity ContraK LG 30,953 97.89 0.0 +0.3/A +12.7/A NL 0Vanguard TgtRe2025 TG 30,439 16.12 +0.6 -0.7/C +7.4/A NL 1,000
Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min InitName Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IH -World Allocation, LB-Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MI -MuniNational Intermediate, TG -Target Date 2021-2025, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with divi-dends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listingstandards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergonea reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specifiedprice. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy orreceivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b =Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f =front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net assetvalue. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week. Source: TheAssociated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Wk Wk YTDName Ex Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg
Wk Wk YTDName Ex Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg
AFLAC NY 1.64 68.95 -.17 -0.2 +15.1AT&T Inc NY 1.92 40.33+1.12 +2.9 +17.2AMD Nasd ... 4.32 +.16 +3.8 +50.5Aon plc NY 1.20 109.37 +.65 +0.6 +18.6Apple Inc Nasd 2.28 98.83 +.91 +0.9 -6.1BP PLC NY 2.40 32.22 +.34 +1.1 +3.1BcpSouth NY .40 22.90 -.55 -2.3 -4.5BkofAm NY .20 13.83 -.59 -4.1 -17.8B iPVixST NY ... 14.39+1.37 +10.5 -28.4BarrickG NY .08 19.61 +.43 +2.2+165.7Bemis NY 1.16 50.81 +.53 +1.1 +13.7Caterpillar NY 3.08 76.03 +.99 +1.3 +11.9ChesEng NY ... 4.42 +.33 +8.1 -1.8Chevron NY 4.28 101.98+1.32 +1.3 +13.4Cisco Nasd 1.04 29.03 -.10 -0.3 +7.7CliffsNRs NY ... 5.16 +.51 +11.0+226.6CocaCola NY 1.40 45.99 +.95 +2.1 +7.1Comcast Nasd 1.10 62.80 -.76 -1.2 +11.8CSVelIVST Nasd ... 29.59 -3.41 -10.3 +14.7CSVixSh rs Nasd ... 2.70 +.46 +20.5 -56.9Deere NY 2.40 85.67 +.10 +0.1 +12.3DirDGlBr rs NY ... 10.08 -.94 -8.5 ...Dover NY 1.68 70.67+3.91 +5.9 +15.3DowChm NY 1.84 53.38 +.22 +0.4 +3.7EnPro NY .84 48.74 -1.17 -2.3 +11.2ExxonMbl NY 3.00 89.98+1.61 +1.8 +15.4FstHorizon NY .28 13.92 -.34 -2.4 -4.1FordM NY .60 13.10 +.06 +0.5 -7.0FrkUnv NY .47 6.82 +.18 +2.7 +19.0FredsInc Nasd .24 15.19 +.07 +0.5 -7.2FrptMcM NY ... 10.36 -.75 -6.8 +53.0GenElec NY .92 30.04 +.10 +0.3 -3.6Gevo h Nasd ... .44 +.09 +27.6 -29.8Globalstar Amex ... 1.20 +.26 +27.1 -16.7iShBrazil NY 1.03 27.21 -.05 -0.2 +31.6iShJapan NY .13 11.65 -.08 -0.7 -3.9iShChinaLC NY .76 33.61 -.16 -0.5 -4.8iShEMkts NY .84 33.53 -.35 -1.0 +4.2iS Eafe NY 1.70 57.15 -1.56 -2.7 -2.7iShR2K NY 1.73 116.07 +.10 +0.1 +3.1Intel Nasd 1.04 32.04 +.42 +1.3 -7.0IBM NY 5.60 152.37 -.52 -0.3 +10.7
JD.com Nasd ... 21.06 -1.92 -8.4 -34.7KimbClk NY 3.68 130.98+1.82 +1.4 +2.9Kroger s NY .42 36.81 +.56 +1.5 -12.0LendingClb NY ... 4.26 -.36 -7.8 -61.4Lowes NY 1.40 78.31 -1.70 -2.1 +3.0MarathnO NY .20 13.42 +.10 +0.8 +6.6McDnlds NY 3.56 122.36+1.01 +0.8 +3.6MicronT Nasd ... 12.14 -.72 -5.6 -14.3Microsoft Nasd 1.44 51.48 -.31 -0.6 -7.2NY Times NY .16 11.85 -.18 -1.5 -11.7NiSource s NY .66 24.90 +.44 +1.8 +27.6NorthropG NY 3.60 217.36+2.18 +1.0 +15.1OrbitATK NY 1.20 89.36 +.36 +0.4 ...Penney NY ... 8.20 -.25 -3.0 +23.1PepsiCo NY 3.01 103.31 +.78 +0.8 +3.4Petrobras NY ... 6.47 +.38 +6.2 +50.5Pfizer NY 1.20 35.29 +.60 +1.7 +9.3PwShs QQQNasd 1.52 108.94 -1.12 -1.0 -2.6PUVixST rs NY ... 12.09+2.10 +21.0 -57.4ProctGam NY 2.68 83.20 +.73 +0.9 +4.8RegionsFn NY .26 9.52 -.14 -1.4 -.8RiteAid NY ... 7.83 +.11 +1.4 -.1S&P500ETF NY 4.13 210.07 -.21 -0.1 +3.0SearsHldgs Nasd ... 12.50 -.52 -4.0 -39.2Sherwin NY 3.36 292.05+1.05 +0.4 +12.5SiriusXM Nasd ... 3.92 -.08 -2.0 -3.7SouthnCo NY 2.24 51.11 +.93 +1.9 +9.2SPDR Fncl NY .46 23.16 -.35 -1.5 -2.8Torchmark NY .56 60.18 -.27 -0.4 +5.5US OilFd NY ... 11.87 +.05 +0.4 +7.9Vale SA NY .29 4.41 -.20 -4.3 +34.0ValeantPh NY ... 24.14 -4.73 -16.4 -76.3VanEGold NY .12 25.96 +.63 +2.5 +89.2WPX Engy NY ... 10.01 -.15 -1.5 +74.4WalMart NY 2.00 71.14 +.27 +0.4 +16.1WeathfIntl NY ... 6.58 +.46 +7.5 -21.6WellsFargo NY 1.52 48.34 -1.85 -3.7 -11.1Wendys Co Nasd .24 10.25 +.16 +1.6 -4.8WestRck NY ... 39.00 -.74 -1.9 +2.9Weyerhsr NY 1.24 30.59 -.22 -0.7 +2.0WhitingPet NY ... 11.91 -.70 -5.6 +26.2Xerox NY .31 9.93 -.13 -1.3 -6.6
Tables show seven most current contracts for each future. Grains traded on Chicago Board ofTrade; livestock on Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on Intercontinental Exchange.
15,000
16,000
17,000
18,000
19,000
D JJ F M A M
113.27
MON
17.95
TUES
66.77
WED
-19.86
THUR
-119.85
FRI
Close: 17,865.341-week change: 58.28 (0.3%)
Dow Jones industrials
WEEKLY STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS
NYSE 10,446.09 -41.85 4,894.55 -47.97
S&P 500 2,096.07 -3.06dd dd dd
MARKET SUMMARY: NYSE AND NASDAQ
HeliMAn h 9.29 +8.18 +735.4NewConcEn 2.64 +1.79 +211.1BiostrPh rs 3.86 +2.56 +196.9EmergeES 10.40 +4.62 +79.9ChinAutLog 2.02 +.86 +74.1NoAtlDrl rs 6.00 +2.45 +69.0LDR Hldg 36.98 +14.94 +67.8Cyclacel pf 6.97 +2.52 +56.6Shiloh 8.20 +2.96 +56.5Onconva rs 6.28 +2.16 +52.4JaguarAH n 2.01 +.69 +51.7
AdamisPh 3.41 -5.45 -61.5MiratiTher 8.09 -10.26 -55.9OcularTher 6.29 -5.56 -46.9HlthInsInn 4.55 -2.92 -39.1Catabasis n 4.52 -2.30 -33.7Imunmd 3.05 -1.47 -32.5FuelCell rs 5.90 -2.32 -28.2VeriFone 19.66 -7.48 -27.6GigPeak 2.16 -.70 -24.5TrilliumTh 9.69 -2.84 -22.7RestorHdw 26.56 -7.47 -22.0
BkofAm 3685418 13.83 -.59ValeantPh 2250112 24.14 -4.73ChesEng 2227344 4.42 +.33FrptMcM 1977050 10.36 -.75Vale SA 1753535 4.41 -.20WeathfIntl 1574679 6.58 +.46Petrobras 1557693 6.47 +.38GenElec 1287152 30.04 +.10RiteAid 1263330 7.83 +.11SiriusXM 1253448 3.92 -.08Apple Inc 1233060 98.83 +.91
Name Vol (00) Last Chg
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg
NASDAQ
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Local fast-casual burg-er restaurant Back Yard Burgers held activities all May long in honor of Na-tional Burger Month.
BYB has teamed up with No Kid Hungry and is committed to raising $100,000 location-wide for the cause this year, with a goal of $50,000 for
the end of May.To get fans in the Burg-
er Month spirit, the burg-er experts also launched a petition to change the name of the month of May to Burger. Yes that’s right, Burger! One lucky fan who signs the peti-tion will even win free Back Yard Burgers for a
year.Back Yard Burgers also
held two burger mak-ing events in Franklin, Tenn. and Southaven on Monday, May 23 to help celebrate burger month. The contests featured community leaders bat-tling it out to make the ultimate gourmet burger
using unique ingredients in order to become the “Flame-Grilled Master Chef.” Participants were awarded with free burger coupons for being a part of this awesome event. Donations could be made on-site to No Kid Hungry to vote for the best burger chef.
BYB celebrates Burger Month
SAN FRANCISCO — A California public water district that earned a rare federal penalty over what it described as “a little En-ron accounting” loaned one of its executives $1.4 million to buy a riverfront home, and the loan re-mains unpaid nine years later although the offi cial has left the agency, ac-cording to records and interviews.
Westlands Water Dis-trict says its 2007 loan to deputy general manager Jason Peltier — now at $1.57 million with a 0.84 percent annual interest rate — is allowed under agency rules on salary.
But experts in gover-nance say the deal raises red fl ags, not just over the unpaid loan and its gener-ous terms but over wheth-er Peltier and Westlands complied with laws man-dating disclosure of the use of public funds.
“Show me the statute that allows this,” said Pe-ter Detwiler, long the top consultant, now retired, to the California Senate on local government fi -nance.
“Where else could you borrow $1.6 million dol-lars for 0.84 percent?” Detwiler asked. “Who wouldn’t want a real-es-tate deal like that? Sweet.”
Westlands, which sells water to big farmers and other landowners in the country’s largest public irrigation district, came under scrutiny in March, when federal regulators levied a $125,000 pen-alty against it over book-keeping that a Westlands’ general manager had de-scribed as “a little Enron accounting.”
The Securities and Ex-change Commission had concluded Westlands misled bond investors
about its fi nancial condi-tion.
A heavyweight in Cali-fornia water politics, Westlands currently is negotiating two multi-billion-dollar deals with local, state and federal agencies that would re-shape water distribution in California, the coun-try’s agriculture leader.
Peltier described the loan from Westland’s re-serve funds as a good deal for the water agency and for him.
“It was what was attrac-tive to me, and I guess it worked for them relative to where their reserves were,” said Peltier, who has since bought an ad-ditional house at the Cali-fornia golf-resort town of Pebble Beach while his loan to Westlands for his home on “Mil-lionaires Row” along the Sacramento River has re-mained unpaid.
Governance experts say public agencies some-times provide home loans to help recruit execu-tives, but say Peltier’s ap-pears unusual because it was extended for years at a fraction of the inter-est rates of commercial mortgages, the district’s various actions on the loan were not disclosed publicly although Peltier is a public offi cial, and the loan will continue for years after he stopped working at Westlands.
“Each of the individual features is a bit unusual. Taken together these fea-tures are very unusual,” Fred Whittlesey, a con-sultant on employee com-pensation based in Wash-ington state, said of the circumstances of the loan.
“Free money is usually a great deal,” Whittlesey said. “But it may not be appropriate in an em-ployment arrangement.”
The story on the loan is this, according to Peltier and records from West-lands and the U.S. Inte-rior Department, where he worked before West-lands:
In March 2007, Peltier, whose Interior job includ-ed overseeing California water issues, notifi ed the department he was look-ing for a job elsewhere. Two months later, he signed a $1.4 million pur-chase agreement for his home with a new, “state of the art” $115,000 boat dock and a $100,000 swimming pool.
Peltier said he had already signed the pa-perwork before getting the Westlands job off er. Westlands hired Peltier June 25, 2007, as chief deputy general manager, and a short time later loaned him the full $1.4 million home price, agen-cy records show.
Terms initially required Peltier to repay the mon-ey within a year, when he sold his old house in a Vir-ginia suburb of Washing-ton, D.C. But Peltier said the home didn’t move after the 2007 housing crash, and records show he signed repeated one-year loan extensions.
In 2012, he and West-lands revamped their agreement giving him un-til 2021 to pay off the loan, with a fi nal payment of more than $1 million, ac-cording to district records. Peltier made monthly payments of about $5,000 from January 2013 to Feb-ruary 2015.
Peltier, whose salary was about $200,000 ac-cording to state records, fi nally sold the house back East in February 2014, and left Westlands for a job at an affi liated water agency in summer 2015, with the Westlands
loan still unpaid.Current Westlands
Deputy General Manager Johnny Amaral defended the transaction.
“Unfortunately, Mr. Peltier, like millions of other Americans, was un-able to sell his property in Virginia because of the collapse of the housing market and the bridge loan was converted to a long-term loan,” Amaral said in an email.
Westlands offi cials de-clined interviews.
The Associated Press had asked Westlands un-der open records laws to provide all documents on the loan, including any showing whether the district disclosed the deal publicly.
In response to written questions, Chief Oper-ating Offi cer Dan Pope said the home loan was allowed under a district rule that gives offi cials the authority to set salaries. There was no public re-cord of the district board’s loan decision, Pope wrote, because it was made in a closed session.
The AP could fi nd public mention of the loan only on the website of a fed-eral agency that oversees municipal bonds. Posted there were Westlands’ an-nual audits, which from 2010 on reported a $1.4 million loan to an uniden-tifi ed management-level employee.
Peter Scheer, head of the California-based non-profi t First Amendment Coalition, said Westlands as a public agency should have disclosed all of its actions on Peltier’s loan, noting that the public has a right to know those de-tails. Scheer’s group has been supported by dona-tions from some news or-ganizations, including the AP.
Associated Press
Water giant loaned official $1.4 million
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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • 9A
SUNDAY EVENING JUNE 12, 2016 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^
America’s Funniest Home Videos
Celebrity Family Feud Celebrity Family Feud Local 24 News
Doc Hol-liday
(:05) Scandal “Run”
WREG # #The 70th Annual Tony Awards (N) (L) Golf (:37) Elementary “Lesser
Evils” Person-Interest
QVC $ . Marie Osmond Shark Solutions Susan Graver Style Shark Solutions Denim & Co.
WCBI $The 70th Annual Tony Awards (N) (L) News (:35) Paid
Program(:05) Paid Program
Jane Sey-mour
WMC % %2016 Stanley Cup Final: Pittsburgh Penguins at San Jose Sharks. (N) (L) News Action
News 5Flip My Food
Fix It & Fin-ish It
WLMT & >} ›› Swordfish An ex-con computer hacker is pulled into a high-tech heist.
CW30 News at 9 (N) House of Payne
Meet the Browns
There Yet? Modern Family
WBBJ _ _America’s Funniest Home Videos
Celebrity Family Feud Celebrity Family Feud News at 10pm
(:35) Castle “The Final Nail”
Person-Interest
WTVA ) )2016 Stanley Cup Final: Pittsburgh Penguins at San Jose Sharks. (N) (L) News (N) (:34) The Good Wife (:34) Paid
Program
WKNO * Mannheim Steamroller 30/40 Live
Great Performances “Andrea Bocelli: Cinema” Songs from the movies.
Rhythm and Blues 40: A Soul Spectacular
WGN-A + (Blue Bloods A mob law-yer is shot.
Blue Bloods “Bad Blood” Elementary Elementary Detective Bell is attacked.
Elementary “Possibil-ity Two”
WMAE , ,This Land Is Your Land (My Music)
A Tribute to Downton Abbey
On the Psychiatrist’s Couch With Daniel Amen, MD
Smart Fats to Out-Smart Aging
WHBQ ` `Simpsons Brooklyn
NineFamily Guy Last Man Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13
News(:35) TMZ (N) Ac. Hol-
lywood WPXX / } Quantum-Sol. } ››› Skyfall (12, Action) Daniel Craig, Judi Dench. } Die Another Day
WPIX :Masters-Illusion
Masters-Illusion
Penn & Teller: Fool Us PIX11 News Sports Desk
Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends
MAX 0 3} Seventh Son
(:20) } ›› The Visit (15) Olivia De-Jonge, Ed Oxenbould.
} ›› The Pyramid (14, Horror) Ash-ley Hinshaw.
} ›› Batman Returns (92) Michael Keaton, Danny DeVito.
SHOW 2 Penny Dreadful House of
Lies (N)House of Lies
(:05) Penny Dreadful “Ebb Tide” (N)
Penny Dreadful “Ebb Tide”
House of Lies
Penny Dreadful
HBO 4 1(5:50) } ››› Ever-est (15)
Game of Thrones (N) Silicon Valley
Veep (N) Last Week Game of Thrones Veep
MTV 5 2 Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV } ››› Zombieland Woody Harrelson. (:05) } Project X
ESPN 7 ?Baseball Tonight
MLB Baseball: Los Angeles Dodgers at San Francisco Giants. From AT&T Park in San Francisco. (N) (Live)
SportsCenter (N) (Live)
SPIKE 8 5Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Loose Lips
Loose Tips”Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Vulgar
Vixens” Bar Rescue
USA : 8(6:35) } ›› The Fast and the Furious (01, Ac-tion) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker.
Motive “The Amateurs” (N)
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
NICK ; C Nicky School Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends
DISC < DNaked and Afraid Naked and Afraid: Un-
censored (N) Naked and Afraid “Bares All” (N)
(:03) Naked and Afraid (:03) Naked and Afraid “Bares All”
A&E > } ›››› Saving Private Ryan (98, War) Tom Hanks, Edward Burns. U.S. troops look for a missing comrade during World War II.
(:03) } Saving Private Ryan (98, War)
FSSO ? 4World Poker Tour UFC Main Event World Poker Tour World Poker Tour MLB Baseball: Cubs at
Braves BET @ F (5:05) } Soul Men To Be Announced P. Popoff Paid
H&G C HLakefront Lakefront Caribbean
LifeCaribbean Life
Island Life Island Life House Hunters
Hunters Int’l
Caribbean Life
Caribbean Life
E! D The Kardashians The Kardashians Rich Kids of The Kardashians Rich Kids of
HIST E BAmerican Pickers “Pam’s Labyrinth”
American Pickers Mountain Men “No Man Is an Island”
(:03) American Pickers (:03) American Pickers
ESPN2 F @ College Baseball College Baseball: NCAA Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) Studio ESPN FC
TLC G Sister Wives “Episode 20” The Browns prepare for Hawaii. (N)
(:01) Single Dad Seek-ing... (N)
(:03) Sister Wives “Episode 20” The Browns pre-pare for Hawaii.
FOOD H Guy’s Grocery Games (N)
Food Network Star (N) Celebrity Food
Celebrity Food
Chopped “Sitcom Moms” Food Network Star
INSP I Walker, Ranger Walker, Ranger } ››› The Unforgiven (60, Western) } Angel-Badman
LIFE J =(6:00) Killing Mommy (16)
The Night Stalker (16) An attorney seeks a confes-sion from killer Richard Ramirez.
(:02) Killing Mommy (16, Suspense) Yvonne Zima, Claire Rankin.
TBN M Osteen K. Shook Cope Creflo D. Joyce } ›› The Scarlet and the Black Gregory Peck.
AMC N 0(6:55) Preacher “See” Preacher “The Possibili-
ties” (N)Ride With Norman Ree-dus (N)
Preacher “The Pos-sibilities”
Ride With Norman Reedus
FREE O <} Cast Away
(:45) } ››› The Hunger Games (12) Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson. In a dystopian society, teens fight to the death on live TV.
Joel Osteen
Dr. David Jeremiah
TCM P } ››› The Glass Key (42) Brian Donlevy, Alan Ladd.
(:45) } ››› The Blue Dahlia (46) Alan Ladd. A Navy pilot’s wife is found shot with his gun.
Gribiche (26, Drama) Jean Forest.
TNT Q A} Hobbit: Desolation The Last Ship “The Scott
Effect” (N)The Last Ship “Rising Sun” (N)
(:10) The Last Ship “The Scott Effect”
(:10) The Last Ship “Ris-ing Sun”
TBS R *(6:00) } ››› The LEGO Movie
(:15) } ››› The LEGO Movie Animated. An ordinary LEGO figurine must help stop a tyrant’s plan.
Angie Tribeca
Angie Tribeca
} Shrek 2 (04)
GAME S FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Winsan Winsan TOON T King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Mike Ty. Aqua China, IL TVLD U K Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King FS1 Z Pregame 2016 Copa America Centenario: Brazil vs. Peru. (N) UFC Greatest Ultimate Fighter
FX Æ ;(6:00) } ››› The Wolf of Wall Street (13) Leonardo DiCaprio. A stockbroker develops habits of excess and corruption.
} ››› The Wolf of Wall Street (13) Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill.
OUT Ø Hunt Adv Wild Realtree Hunting Gregg Bone RMEF Drop Archer’s Journey NBCS ∞ Formula One Racing: Canadian Grand Prix. (N) F1 Extra NHL Overtime (N) Wrestling OWN ± Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss FOXN ≤ Legends & Lies Stossel Greg Gutfeld Fox Reporting FOX Report APL ≥ North Woods Law North Woods Law (:02) Lone Star Law North Woods Law North Woods Law
HALL ∂ G(6:00) Valentine Ever After (16)
Good Witch “A Perfect Match” (N)
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
DISN “ L(6:50) } ›› High School Musical 2 (07) Zac Efron.
(:45) } ›› High School Musical 3: Senior Year (08) Zac Efron.
Mickey Mouse
Ready to Run (00) Krissy Perez.
SYFY E} Friday the 13th Part VII
} › Friday the 13th (09) A hockey-masked killer slaughters young revelers.
} › Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Man-hattan (89) Jensen Daggett.
Horoscopes
Don’t miss a special editionof the Daily Corinthian coming Tuesday
with three sections and over 30 pages of news and features from the Crossroads Area.
Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian
ARIES (March 21-April 19). What’s the objective? Call it out, and then direct your power there at least three times today and for 50 minutes at a time. This will be a magic quick-start recipe for you, especially if done before sunset.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Helping those in need isn’t optional to you, as there is something inside that simply must commit to the task. Fur-thermore, as far as your family is concerned you’re a regular superhero.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). For modern humans, the pains of life are emotional and ex-istential as often as they are physical. For you there will be a wonderful mix -- just enough stimuli to spur you to a roman-tic, brilliant, existential idea.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). It is usually experience, and not genetics, that makes a person ruthless. A kindhearted person makes the ruthless nervous, as they will fi nd the kindness beau-
tiful and therefore threatening.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Your
idea is still hovering between the realms of here and not here. You can sense it on the other side of a membrane, wondering about you as much as you are wondering about it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Is your dream improbable? So what? So are you. That this it-eration of you came to be at all was against the odds, beyond your comprehension. Consider-ing how very lucky you’ve been, you might want to push that a little further.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Do you know the depth of what you have loved? Few can claim that knowledge, but if you strive for it even a little this day, you’ll be richer for the reach.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There’s an impulsiveness to the day. You have many friends, and you should call on one who is particularly knowledgeable before you make the move you are contemplating.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You want to help: Carry the groceries; hear out the problem; connect the people who should know one another. Whatever the deal, you want to contribute. You’re versatile. You’ll fi nd a way.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your fortune will follow this dictum: Stacks and stacks of near misses and then suddenly a hit. How wonderful it will feel, this victory you have so diligent-ly earned!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You know what you have to do if you’re going to walk your talk: Wean yourself off the dis-traction that’s been taking so much of your attention and giv-ing so little back to you.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The dramas on television are exciting and rapid-fi re repre-sentations of lives that no one lives. Contrastingly, real life has minimal plot and extraordinary beauty, which you’ll enjoy to-day.
D E A R ABBY: My younger sis-ter lives at home with our parents. She suffers from a learn-ing disabil-ity as well as some seri-ous mental health issues that are un-
der control. She is a bright, sweet person
who -- with some help -- could become semi-independent. However, my parents have made no serious attempts to en-courage this.
She graduated from high school 10 years ago and has sought no further education or employment opportunities. She spends most of her time in her room playing video games.
I have tried to offer sugges-tions like volunteering or joining an organization.
While this is met with polite positivity, it has inspired no ac-tion.
Our parents are getting older, and if my sister isn’t able to live independently, the burden of supporting her will fall on me. I am not permitted to express how frustrating this situation is or how sad it makes me.
I am shut out of the conversa-tion, even though my future and
the future of my own family is in-volved. I live far away, but keep in touch regularly. What can I say or do to encourage change? -- THE BAD SISTER
DEAR “BAD” SISTER: Your parents are doing your sister no favors by keeping her iso-lated and dependent. This is a conversation that needs to take place with them in person, rather than from a distance.
You and your husband should meet with them face to face. It’s important that you understand what fi nancial provisions they have made for your sister in the event of their deaths, and you should know exactly what your responsibilities will entail.
Years ago, one of my assis-tants was in a situation just like yours.
His younger brother was men-tally disabled and lived with their parents until their deaths. At that point, responsibility for the younger brother was left to the older brother.
The parents had assumed that the same kind of living arrange-ment would continue.
However, the gentleman who worked with me understood that it would not be healthy for ei-ther of them, so he arranged for his brother to move to a group home.
There he was able to partici-pate in activities and, for the fi rst time in his life, to make friends. If your sister doesn’t have the
skills to live independently, this may be the solution for her, too.
DEAR ABBY: I’m retired and living full time in my RV. During the summer months, more folks travel as I do, many of them with children.
While I think this is a wonder-ful experience for families, some parents appear to forget that there are others in the camp-ground and allow their children, regardless of age, to roam around unsupervised.
This can be dangerous be-cause large vehicles many not see small children dart into their path.
Also, while they might know their neighbors at home, you have no idea who might be parked nearby at a campground.
This means that unless invit-ed, children (and adults) should not cut through occupied sites.
Just like at home, common sense and courtesy will make camping a safe and enjoyable experience for everyone. -- MARGARET IN SIOUX FALLS
DEAR MARGARET: Amen! Thank you for the reminder to your fellow travelers.
Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Concern for disabled sister is magnified by her cloudy future
Abigail Van Buren
Dear Abby
Sports10A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, June 12, 2016
Shorts
Ladies Invitational
The 43rd Hillandale Ladies Invi-tational will be held Thursday, June 23. This is a 2-lady scramble with a 9 a.m. shotgun start. Cost is $130 per team with cart or $120 without. Contact Sandra Epperson (286-6771), Paula Gunn (286-7793) or William Cole at the Pro Shop at 665-2115.
Elite Warrior Camp
The Corinth Touchdown Club is holding an Elite Warrior Football Camp at Warrior Stadium II on June 27-29 from 10 a.m. to noon. Cost is $50 through June 26 and $55 on the day of the camp. Space is limited. See the Corinth Touchdown Club on Facebook or @CHSWarriorFB on Twitter for more details and/or to register.
Baseball Record Book
The annual Mississippi Baseball Record Book has been published and is available for sale. The book con-tains records of public high schools and four-year colleges in Mississippi. The author of the book is John Smil-lie. Cost of the book is $10. You can obtain a copy by sending the money to Mississippi Baseball Record Book, Diamonds by Smillie 3159 Kendrick Road, Corinth, MS 38834.
STARKVILLE — Bobby Dalbec pitched a season-high 8 2/3 scoreless innings, Cameron Ming got the fi nal out with two on and Arizona beat Mississippi State 1-0 on Friday night in the Starkville Su-per Regional.
Dalbec (10-4), drafted in the fourth round by the Boston Red Sox on Friday, threw 129 pitches in his fi fth start of the season. He allowed just fi ve hits and struck out nine for Arizona (43-21).
Ryan Gridley and John Holland singled to left fi eld with two outs in the ninth to chase Dalbec. Ming struck out Jake Mangum for his second save of the season.
Mississippi State (44-17-1) left 10 men on base.
Arizona designated hitter JJ Matijevic sliced a double to left fi eld to score Ryan Aguilar from fi rst in the sixth inning. In the bottom half, Dalbec struck out the side for his second straight 1-2-3 inning.
Dalbec needed just fi ve pitches to re-tire the side in the seventh and he fi n-ished the eighth after a power outage caused a 37-minute delay.
Game 2 of the best-of-three series was underway at press time Saturday. The series winner will advance to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.
Arizona beats Miss St in Game 1
Associated Press
BLUE MOUNTAIN — Blue Mountain College Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Lavon Driskell recently announced the hiring of Creighton Nelms to lead the BMC Bowling teams.
A Kossuth native, Nelms has been handed the reins to the inaugural program at BMC.
Nelms has taught math at Kossuth High School for four years while coaching bowling for three.
At KHS, Nelms has led the women’s program to a 2014 state runner-up fi nish, a 2015 state championship and a 2016 third-place fi nish in the state, giving the program a record of 22-9 in that span.
On the men’s side, Nelms has guided his team to a 2015 and 2016 state runner-up fi n-ish. During three years, the men have compiled a record of 31-6.
Nelms was rewarded for his accomplishments in 2016,
being named the Mississippi High School Bowling Coach of the Year.
“I’m excited to have the opportunity to continue my coaching career at Blue Moun-tain College,” Nelms said. “This is a great school and great com-munity. Bowling is certainly on the rise in Mississippi.”
Nelms’ wife, Chassey, leads the Blue Mountain College Cheerleading team as head coach. The couple have one son, Cooper.
Nelms to coach BMC bowling
SCOOBA — For the sec-ond straight year, East Mis-sissippi Community College will be represented by three student-athletes at the Col-lege National Finals Rodeo in Casper, Wyoming.
With national collegiate rodeo competition set to be-gin on Sunday and running through the following Sat-urday at the Casper Events Center, EMCC will be rep-resented at the week-long CNFR by all-around regional champions Marcus Theriot and Katelyn Nicholson as well as Kody Rinehart.
Coach Morgan Goodrich’s East Mississippi rodeo team has now had student-ath-letes qualify for the College National Finals Rodeo every year since the program’s in-
ception prior to the 2010-11 rodeo season. This week, EMCC’s Theriot, Nicholson and Rinehart will each have three rounds of competition in their respective events while aiming to qualify for Saturday’s championship round.
Expected to lead the way for EMCC’s trio of competi-tors in Wyoming, Theriot enters the CNFR as the na-tion’s second-ranked col-legiate cowboy with 2,060 total points after claiming fi ve all-around Ozark Region event titles during the 2015-16 regular season. As the all-around men’s regional cham-pion, the Poplarville product will compete individually in the tie-down roping and steer wrestling events while partnering with UT Martin’s
Lane Mitchell in the team roping competition. The 2014 National High School Finals Rodeo all-around cowboy and reigning Missis-sippi High School Rodeo As-sociation’s boys’ all-around champion, Theriot currently ranks fourth among National Intercollegiate Rodeo Asso-ciation cowboys in tie-down roping, eighth in team rop-ing (header) and 18th in steer wrestling.
On the women’s side, Nich-olson likewise captured all-around honors to complete the EMCC sweep within the Ozark Region’s respective all-around individual stand-ings. Tied for 21st nation-ally among the NIRA’s lead-ing all-around cowgirls with 1,175 total points, Nicholson will participate in her spe-
cialty event as the regional barrel racing champion. The Lawrence native will also compete in goat tying during the upcoming CNFR.
Rinehart is making a re-turn trip to the College Na-tional Finals Rodeo after competing independently for Blue Mountain College last year. The Kossuth High School product placed third in saddle bronc riding com-petition during this year’s Ozark Region schedule.
At last year’s CNFR, bull rider Winston Cheek earned 125 points by advancing to the championship round to give the EMCC men’s team a program-best, 25th-place national fi nish. The 2014-15 East Mississippi squad was
KHS product among EMCC rodeo trioSchool reports
Please see RODEO | 11A
BROOKLYN, Mich. — Daniel Suarez became the fi rst Mexican-born driver to win a NASCAR national race, passing Kyle Busch and holding off one of the sport’s big stars at the Xfi nity Series race at Michigan.
“To be able to be an example to bring more people is great,” said Suarez, who moved to the U.S. fi ve years ago.
Busch led 88 of the 125 laps in
the Menards 250 race Saturday, but couldn’t stay ahead of Suarez for the fi nal two laps.
“I didn’t know Suarez was coming like that,” Busch said. “He had some speed.”
The 24-year-old Suarez is the fi rst non-American to lead any of NASCAR’s three national series in points. He became the fi rst Mexican to win the Xfi nity Series rookie of the year award last year.
Winning, for the fi rst time,
adds quite a feat to his list of ac-complishments.
“This is monumental,” said David Wilson, president of Toy-ota Racing Development
Busch, Paul Menard, Erik Jones and Elliott Sadler fi nished in the top fi ve.
“It couldn’t have been scripted better because he had to beat some heavy hitters,” Wilson said. “He didn’t do it at a stand-alone event.”
Jones raced with “Dave,” in-stead of his name painted above the driver side window. His fa-ther, Dave Jones, died this week at 53 after a short bout with can-cer.
“Erik made a point to be in that race car,” Wilson said. “He did it to honor his father.”
Gordie Howe was mentioned during the invocation before the race about 70 miles west of Detroit, where he played much
of his career for the Red Wings. Howe died Friday at 88.
Suarez won for the fi rst time in 48 starts in NASCAR’s national series, getting rewarded for a climb through the sport’s devel-opment programs. He became a part of NASCAR in 2011 and was involved in its Drive for Diversity and Next programs.
“Without all the support, may-be I wouldn’t be here right now,” he acknowledged.
Suarez becomes 1st Mexican to win NASCAR national race with Xfinity victoryAssociated Press
Often lost in the euphoria of confetti blizzards and cham-pagne showers of an NBA Fi-nals triumph is the crushing despair just down the hall.
Just last June, an exhausted LeBron James sat behind the microphone not long after his fourth career loss in the fi nals. He had done everything he could have possibly done for the short-handed Cavaliers He had been trying to end Cleveland’s 51-year champi-onship drought, and it wasn’t enough.
In a moment of unbridled honesty, James wondered if it
was all worth it.“I’m almost starting to be
like I’d rather not even make the playoff s than to lose in the fi nals,” James said after the Cavs lost to the Warriors in six games. “It would hurt a lot easier if I just didn’t make the playoff s and I didn’t have a shot at it.”
James has won two cham-pionships, but a year later his Cavaliers are on the brink of heartbreak again. Now the Cavs head back to the Bay Area trailing Golden State 3-1, with the Warriors eyeing a second straight title in a year in which they won a record 73 regular-season games.
Whether the Warriors fi n-ish the Cavs off again in Game 5 on Monday night or James orchestrates one of the great comebacks in sports history, somebody will be left in an-guish.
Falling just short after com-ing so far can be gut-wrench-ing, an experience that can haunt a player long after his days on the court are over.
“It’s just like here’s a store window, OK? And when you’re little, there’s candy be-hind that window,” said Lak-ers legend Jerry West, who went 1-8 in the fi nals in his Hall of Fame career. “And you can almost touch it but you
can’t get there.“I’ve often said there’s more
great stories in losing locker rooms than winning locker rooms. Great stories. And no one cares to go there because this country relishes, as every-one does, they relish winners. But there’s devastated people in that other locker room. Devastated. Unfortunately that’s been the case for me many years.”
West last played an NBA game in 1974, but when he is asked about his fi nals record, his eyes turn as cold as they were when he was staring
In the NBA Finals, the losses linger more than the winsAssociated Press
Please see LINGER | 11A
For Daily Corinthian
Nelms
Photo submitted
Scheduled to compete for head coach Morgan Goodrich’s EMCC rodeo team during the weeklong College National Finals Rodeo are (from left) Kody Rinehart (Kossuth HS), Katelyn Nicholson (Lawrence) and Marcus Theriot (Poplarville).
NEW YORK — Creator closed with a rush and caught Destin at the wire to win the $1.5 million Belmont Stakes on Saturday, with Preakness winner Exag-gerator fi nishing well back in the fi eld.
The 3-year-old gray colt trained by Steve Asmussen came fl ying down the stretch as Destin tried to hang on to the lead. But it was Creator, who fi n-ished 13th in the Derby and skipped the Preakness, who won by a nose. It was the fourth time the Belmont was decided by a nose — the closest possible margin of victory.
Preakness winner Exaggerator was sent off as the 7-5 favorite in the fi eld of 13. He wound up 11th.
The winning time for 1 1/2 miles was 2:28.51.
Associated Press
Creator pulls an upset at Belmont Stakes
ScoreboardAuto Racing
NASCAR-Sprint Cup-FireKeepers Casino 400 LineupAfter Friday qualifying; Race Sunday at
Michigan International Speedway, Brook-lyn, Mich. Lap length: 2 miles
(Car number in parentheses)1. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 199.557
mph. 2. (78) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 199.016. 3. (14) Tony Stewart, Chev-rolet, 198.950. 4. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 198.774. 5. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 198.588. 6. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 198.369. 7. (42) Kyle Lar-son, Chevrolet, 198.194. 8. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 198.014. 9. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 197.819. 10. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 197.352. 11. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 196.549. 12. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 195.111. 13. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 197.873. 14. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 197.753. 15. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 197.569. 16. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 197.498. 17. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevro-let, 197.179. 18. (16) Greg Biffl e, Ford, 196.856. 19. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyo-ta, 196.533. 20. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 196.490. 21. (95) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 196.207. 22. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford, 196.137. 23. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 196.127. 24. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 195.759. 25. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 196.185. 26. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 196.132. 27. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chevrolet, 196.078. 28. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford, 195.961. 29. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chev-rolet, 195.934. 30. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 195.785. 31. (83) Matt DiBene-detto, Toyota, 195.408. 32. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 194.805. 33. (7) Re-gan Smith, Chevrolet, 193.668. 34. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 192.725. 35. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 192.704. 36. (55) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 191.225. 37. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 189.823. 38. (32) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford, 189.120. 39. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 187.705. 40. (98) Reed Sorenson, Chevro-let, 185.620.
BaseballAmerican League
East Division W L Pct GBBaltimore 36 25 .590 —Boston 36 25 .590 —Toronto 34 30 .531 3½New York 31 30 .508 5
Tampa Bay 28 31 .475 7Central Division
W L Pct GBCleveland 34 26 .567 —Kansas City 31 30 .508 3½Chicago 31 31 .500 4Detroit 30 30 .500 4Minnesota 18 43 .295 16½
West Division W L Pct GBTexas 37 24 .607 —Seattle 34 27 .557 3Houston 29 34 .460 9Los Angeles 26 35 .426 11Oakland 25 35 .417 11½
Friday’s GamesN.Y. Yankees 4, Detroit 0Toronto 4, Baltimore 3, 10 inningsCincinnati 2, Oakland 1 Boston 8, Minnesota 1Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 5 Cleveland 6, L.A. Angels 2Seattle 7, Texas 5
Saturday’s GamesToronto 11, Baltimore 6Kansas City 4, Chicago White Sox 1Boston 15, Minnesota 4Houston at Tampa Bay Oakland at Cincinnati Detroit at N.Y. Yankees Cleveland at L.A. Angels (n)Texas at Seattle (n)
Today’s GamesBaltimore (Jimenez 3-6) at Toronto
(Sanchez 5-1), 12:07 p.m.Houston (Keuchel 3-8) at Tampa Bay
(Moore 2-4), 12:10 p.m.Oakland (Graveman 2-6) at Cincinnati
(Lamb 1-3), 12:10 p.m.Detroit (Fulmer 6-1) at N.Y. Yankees
(Pineda 3-6), 1:05 p.m.Boston (Porcello 7-2) at Minnesota
(Dean 1-2), 1:10 p.m.Kansas City (Ventura 4-4) at Chicago
White Sox (Rodon 2-5), 1:10 p.m.Cleveland (Salazar 6-3) at L.A. Angels
(Huff 0-1), 2:35 p.m.Texas (Hamels 5-1) at Seattle (Miley
6-2), 3:10 p.m.Monday’s Games
Philadelphia at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 7:10
p.m.Cleveland at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m.Minnesota at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.Texas at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
National LeagueEast Division
W L Pct GBWashington 37 24 .607 —
New York 33 26 .559 3Miami 31 29 .517 5½Philadelphia 29 32 .475 8Atlanta 18 42 .300 18½
Central Division W L Pct GBChicago 41 18 .695 —St. Louis 33 28 .541 9Pittsburgh 32 29 .525 10Milwaukee 28 32 .467 13½Cincinnati 23 38 .377 19
West Division W L Pct GBSan Francisco 36 25 .590 —Los Angeles 32 29 .525 4Colorado 28 33 .459 8Arizona 26 36 .419 10½San Diego 26 36 .419 10½
Friday’s GamesSt. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 3, 12 inningsWashington 9, Philadelphia 6Cincinnati 2, Oakland 1Atlanta 5, Chicago Cubs 1N.Y. Mets 2, Milwaukee 1, 11 inningsSan Diego 7, Colorado 5Miami 8, Arizona 6L.A. Dodgers 3, San Francisco 2
Saturday’s GamesWashington 8, Philadelphia 0Chicago Cubs at Atlanta Cincinnati 2, Oakland 1Colorado 5, San Diego 3N.Y. Mets at Milwaukee L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco St. Louis at Pittsburgh Miami at Arizona
Today’s GamesOakland (Graveman 2-6) at Cincinnati
(Lamb 1-3), 12:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Lester 7-3) at Atlanta
(Gant 0-0), 12:35 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Matz 7-2) at Milwaukee (Da-
vies 4-3), 1:10 p.m.Philadelphia (Morgan 1-5) at Washing-
ton (Ross 5-4), 3:05 p.m.Miami (Conley 3-3) at Arizona (Ray
2-5), 3:10 p.m.San Diego (Friedrich 3-1) at Colorado
(Butler 2-3), 3:10 p.m.St. Louis (Leake 4-4) at Pittsburgh
(Niese 6-2), 4:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Urias 0-1) at San Fran-
cisco (Peavy 2-6), 7:30 p.m.Monday’s Games
Chicago Cubs at Washington, 6:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.Cincinnati at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.Miami at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.Milwaukee at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.
BasketballFINALS
Golden State 3, Cleveland 1(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Thursday, June 2: Golden State 104, Cleveland 89
Sunday, June 5: Golden State 110, Cleveland 77
Wednesday, June 8: Cleveland 120, Golden State 90
Friday, June 10: Golden State 108, Cleveland 97
Monday, June 13: Cleveland at Golden State, 9 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 9 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 19: Cleveland at Gold-en State, 8 p.m.
Golf FedEx St. Jude Classic
Saturday at TPC Southwind, Memphis, Tenn. Purse: $6.2 million. Yardage: 7,224; Par: 70.
Third RoundDaniel Berger 67-64-69—200 -10D.A. Points 71-68-64—203 -7Steve Stricker 66-71-66—203 -7Phil Mickelson 70-65-68—203 -7Seung-Yul Noh 65-72-67—204 -6Colt Knost 66-71-67—204 -6Brooks Koepka 70-65-69—204 -6Boo Weekley 70-69-66—205 -5John Merrick 68-70-67—205 -5Harris English 69-69-67—205 -5Brett Stegmaier 67-69-69—205 -5Alex Prugh 70-70-66—206 -4Brian Gay 66-70-70—206 -4Ken Duke 70-66-70—206 -4Russell Henley 68-68-70—206 -4David Toms 70-69-68—207 -3Ben Crane 68-70-69—207 -3Jon Curran 70-70-68—208 -2Johnson Wagner 74-66-68—208 -2Abraham Ancer 71-68-69—208 -2Michael Kim 69-70-69—208 -2Matt Jones 70-69-69—208 -2Freddie Jacobson 72-66-70—208 -2Tyrone Van Aswegen 70-68-70—208 -2Francesco Molinari 68-70-70—208 -2Rob Oppenheim 72-65-71—208 -2Vaughn Taylor 68-70-70—208 -2Retief Goosen 67-70-71—208 -2Hudson Swafford 70-66-72—208 -2Dustin Johnson 66-69-73—208 -2Tom Hoge 65-69-74—208 -2Charles Howell III 72-69-68—209 -1Whee Kim 69-72-68—209 -1Steve Wheatcroft 71-69-69—209 -1
Harold Varner III 71-69-69—209 -1Jamie Donaldson 66-74-69—209 -1Luke Guthrie 68-72-69—209 -1Bronson Burgoon 72-66-71—209 -1Sam Saunders 69-68-72—209 -1Will MacKenzie 70-66-73—209 -1Shawn Stefani 65-71-73—209 -1John Rollins 72-69-69—210 EZac Blair 70-71-69—210 EJustin Leonard 67-72-71—210 EWes Roach 67-70-73—210 EMichael Bradley 73-68-70—211 +1Troy Merritt 72-69-70—211 +1Andrew Landry 70-71-70—211 +1Arjun Atwal 72-68-71—211 +1Billy Hurley III 69-71-71—211 +1David Hearn 71-69-71—211 +1Stuart Appleby 68-71-72—211 +1Scott Stallings 67-72-72—211 +1Camilo Villegas 73-66-72—211 +1Charlie Wi 70-68-73—211 +1Chad Campbell 68-69-74—211 +1Eric Axley 69-68-74—211 +1Cameron Percy 69-67-75—211 +1Luke List 70-71-71—212 +2Ryan Palmer 71-68-73—212 +2Chad Collins 72-66-74—212 +2Lucas Lee 74-67-73—214 +4Erik Compton 71-70-73—214 +4Stewart Cink 75-66-73—214 +4Carl Pettersson 71-67-76—214 +4Wesley Bryan 70-66-78—214 +4Brian Stuard 67-73-75—215 +5Robert Garrigus 70-69-76—215 +5Miguel Angel Carballo 66-75-75—216 +6Steven Bowditch 70-70-76—216 +6Henrik Norlander 67-74-76—217 +7Wes Homan 72-68-77—217 +7Justin Hicks 69-71-78—218 +8
Hockey STANLEY CUP FINALS
Pittsburgh 3, San Jose 2(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Monday, May 30: Pittsburgh 3, San Jose 2
Wednesday, June 1: Pittsburgh 2, San Jose 1, OT
Saturday, June 4: San Jose 3, Pitts-burgh 2, OT
Monday, June 6: Pittsburgh 3, San Jose 1
Thursday, June 9: San Jose 4, Pitts-burgh 2
Today, June 12: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 7 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 15: San Jose at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
TransactionsSaturday’s Deals
BASEBALLAmerican League
KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned LHP Scott Alexander to Omaha (PCL). Recalled RHP Dillon Gee from Omaha.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Assigned LHP Chris Jones and RHP Javy Guerra outright to Salt Lake (PCL). Traded C Erik Kratz to Pittsburgh for cash.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Sent RHP Liam Hendriks to Nashville (PCL) for a re-hab assignment. Selected the contract of RHP Daniel Mengden from Nashville. Transferred INF/OF Mark Canha to the 60-day DL.
TAMPA BAY RAYS — Optioned INF Nick Franklin to Durham (IL). Reinstated 2B Logan Forsythe from the 15-day DL.
National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Re-
called OF Peter O’Brien from Reno (PCL). Optioned LHP Edwin Escobar to Reno.
ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent RHP Shae Simmons to Mississippi (SL) for a rehab assignment.
COLORADO ROCKIES — Sent C Tony Wolters to Albuquerque (PCL) for a rehab assignment. Recalled LHP Tyler Ander-son from Albuquerque (PCL). Placed LHP Jake McGee on the 15-day DL.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Placed OF Domingo Santana on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Wednesday. Recalled OF Keon Broxton from Colorado Springs (PCL).
PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Placed C Francisco Cervelli on the 15-day DL. Designated RHP Trey Haley for assign-ment.
SAN DIEGO PADRES — Placed RHP Andrew Cashner on the 15-day DL. Re-called RHP Erik Johnson from Lake El-sinore (Cal).
MISSOURI — Announced the resigna-tion of baseball coach Tim Jamieson.
TelevisionToday’s Lineup
AUTO RACING1 p.m. — (FS1) NASCAR, Sprint Cup
Series, FireKeepers Casino 400, at Brooklyn, Mich.
COLLEGE BASEBALL6 p.m. — (ESPNU) NCAA Division
I, Super Regionals, Game 3, Arizona vs. Mississippi St. (if necessary), at Starkville, Miss.
11A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, June 12, 2016
also represented in Wyo-ming by fellow bull rider Justin Reeves and all-around regional reserve champion cowgirl Kelsey Kennemer, who com-peted in team roping and barrel racing.
Two years ago at na-tionals, EMCC’s team roping tandem of Colt Fisher and Justin Pruitt advanced to the fi nals in leading the Lions to a 28th-place national team fi nish. East Missis-sippi previously earned consecutive 35th-place men’s team showings during CNFR events held in 2012 and 2013.
The College National Finals Rodeo is where the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association an-nually crowns individual event champions in sad-dle bronc riding, bare-back riding, tie-down roping, steer wrestling, bull riding, team roping, barrel racing, breakaway roping and goat tying.
The top three in each event and the top two men’s and women’s teams from each of the NIRA’s 11 regions annu-ally qualify for the CNFR. With more than 400 cow-boys and cowgirls from over 100 universities and colleges expected to com-pete this coming week in Casper, national team championships will also be awarded in the men’s and women’s divisions.
Online results from this year’s CNFR will be updated daily and avail-able on the NIRA’s web-site, www.collegerodeo.com.
In addition, the best action from the 2016 College National Finals Rodeo will be featured on ESPNU during two televised hours of recap coverage beginning at 6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 18.
Additional airings of the pair of one-hour re-cap shows are also slated to be shown on ESPNU throughout the remain-der of August.
down Bill Russell and the Boston Celtics all those years ago.
“To me, about three (of his losses) I didn’t want to play anymore,” said West, now an executive board member and consultant with the Golden State Warriors. “I just didn’t want to do it. It took so much out of you.”
James has spoken with West over the years about managing the pain that comes with losses on the biggest stage. The victo-ries may be remembered, but the defeats are never forgotten.
Former Pistons guard Chauncey Billups has never completely shaken the loss to San Antonio in the 2005 fi nals. Billups, who earned the nickname “Mr. Big Shot” for his clutch play throughout a 16-year NBA career, lik-ened the pain to mourn-ing.
After winning the title in 2004, Detroit was on the verge of a second crown when Spurs for-ward Robert Horry in-terrupted any plans for a parade by making a 3-pointer to win Game 5.
“That was one of the darkest days in my career, man,” Billups said before Game 4 in Cleveland, re-calling Horry’s shot as if it had just happened. “That was rough and tough for me. That loss hurt me
more than losing Game 7. We thought we had the game won, it was over.”
The Pistons would drop the series in seven games, losing on the Spurs’ home fl oor when the NBA used a 2-3-2 format.
“Man, Game 7 was tough,” said Billups, a fi ve-time All-Star. “That was a tough, tough ride home. You got all your family there. It’s emo-tional and you never, ever forget about that day — when and how it hap-pened, who spoke in the locker room. You never forget about any of that. You remember that stuff much more than what happened after you win it. It’s so tough.”
Billups said his recov-ery was slow.
“It takes awhile,” he said. “But what happens is you end up having to. It’s like losing someone, man. You grieve. You spend the proper amount of time on it and you move forward. It takes time, though, it’s real tough.”
For some players, like West, the bitter taste nev-er leaves.
“Even today it bothers me,” West said. “No fun to get there that many times and not to get the results you want, regard-less of how you played.
“In the playoff s, the best players are supposed to play better. I did. It made no diff erence. We weren’t good enough, obviously.”
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Features1B • Daily Corinthian Sunday, June 12, 2016
“Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War” by Mary Roach
c.2016, W.W. Norton $26.95 / $34.95 Canada 285 pages
Thank you for your ser-
vice.You’ve said that many
times recently, and meant every word to every sol-dier. Thank you for keep-ing us protected. Thank you for your bravery. Thank you for your sacri-fi ce. And once you’ve read “Grunt: The Curious Sci-ence of Humans at War” by Mary Roach, you’ll also thank those who serve our servicemen and women.
Chickens are not ducks.Nevertheless, chicken
carcasses are what the U.S. military uses to test its equipment to ensure that it’s safe from “bird-strike,” which describes those instances when fl ying bird (duck, goose, even starling) meets fl ying machine. Birdstrike kills more than just birds, so the military needs to know its equipment can handle feathered foes - therefore, it uses a “chicken gun” to shoot pullets, not bullets.
And that, says Roach, “is most of what I have to say about guns.” Instead of focusing on artillery and battles in “Grunt,” she focuses on the fi ght to keep our troops comfort-able, hydrated, healthy, and alive.
While it might seem easy, for instance, to out-
fi t many thousand people in identical clothing, what our troops wear is a kind of weapon. The U.S. gov-ernment hires fashion designers to develop uni-forms that are weather-appropriate, as fi reproof as possible, and that can repel chemicals. Even the buttons are tested exten-sively: “specifi cations,” says Roach, “run to twen-ty-two pages.”
As for the vehicles troops use for transport, Roach says that engineers must constantly modify them for the safety of our
soldiers. That often means that Strykers carry up to 5 tons of extra protection on their frames, much of it tested on the cadavers of people who serve “with-out actually enlisting.”
Military scientists know how to protect the sol-diers’ hearing, and other um, equipment farther below on the body; says Roach, “thanks… to the transgender community,” they know how to fi x inju-ries there.
Others strive to teach medics to think in the midst of chaos. They study
diarrhea, sweat, bugs, stinky smells, and sharks. And they know that sleep is one of a military’s great-est defenses.
Camoufl age is a familiar sight these days, and it’s usually worn by someone you thank for their ser-vice.
For diff erent reasons, the creators of camoufl age deserve appreciation, too,
as do others who keep soldiers safe. “Grunt” ex-plains further.
Now, mind you, there are no vivid recreations of battles in this book, but Roach tells readers about the aftermath of battle. You won’t get specs on equipment, but she’ll tell you about how science has improved on the gear sol-diers use. What you will
get, however, is a curious-minded tour through the science of war and real, sometimes gruesome but always fascinating peeks far beyond the barracks. And Roach does it with a delightfully lighthearted-yet-serious approach. Sa-lute!
Supporting our troops is more than a verbal “thank you.” The surprise is that it also comes from laboratories, volunteers, manufacturers, and ex-haustive research, and this book tells you how. If you love – or were! – a soldier you’ll want it, because missing “Grunt” would be a disservice.
BY TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER
The Bookworm Sez
Book offers look at science of every warAnd once you’ve read “Grunt:
The Curious Science of Humans at War” by Mary Roach, you’ll
also thank those who serve our servicemen and women.
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2B • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
Miss Valerie Jean Blair and Mr. Alexander John Antonio will exchange vows at six o’clock in the evening on July 9, 2016, at First Presbyterian Church in Corinth.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Blair, III of Corinth. She is the granddaughter of Mrs. Jean Purser and the late Dr. S. Dewey Purser of Vicksburg, and the late Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Blair, Jr. of Hattiesburg.
The prospective groom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. John K. Anto-nio of Norman, Okla. He is the grandson of Mrs. Sarah Jo Antonio and the late Mr. Alexander G. Antonio of Fort Worth, Texas; Ms. Wanza June Treybig of Petronila, Texas and the late Mr. Benjamin J. Lednicky,
Jr. and the late Mr. Billy J. Rogers.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Corinth High School. She re-ceived her Bachelors of Science in Nursing from the University of Missis-sippi Medical Center in 2011.
She is presently em-ployed at Texas Chil-dren’s Hospital in Hous-ton, Texas.
The prospective groom is a graduate of Norman North High School and a 2012 graduate of Uni-versity of Oklahoma in Norman, Okla., where he earned a Bachelors of Science in mechanical engineering. He is pres-ently employed at FMC Technologies in Hous-ton, Texas.
After the wedding they will reside in Fort Worth, Texas.
Blair—AntonioValerie Jean Blair & Alexander John Antonio
EngagementEngagementEngagement
Miss Trinity Danielle Faulkner and Mr. An-drew Madison Warford will exchange vows at six o’clock in the evening on Saturday, June 18, 2016, at First Baptist Church in Corinth.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Ms. Velva Miller Faulkner of Corinth. She is the granddaughter of Alma Wilbanks Miller of Corinth.
The prospective groom is the son of Ms. Rob-in Messer Warford of Myrtle and Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Madison Warford of Moore, Okla. He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs Alfred Wesley Messer of Myrtle and Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Eugene Warford, Bronson, Mich.
The bride-elect is a
2012 graduate of Corinth High School. She is working to receive her B.S. in Elementary Edu-cation from Blue Moun-tain College in 2017.
The prospective groom is a 2013 gradu-ate of West Union At-tendance Center and a student of Blue Moun-tain College where he is working to earn a B.S. in Worship Leadership. He is presently employed at Pleasant Ridge Baptist Church, New Albany, as Minister of Music.
All friends and rela-tives of the couple are invited to attend the ceremony and the recep-tion which follows. The reception will be held at The Franklin Courtyard located at 201 Franklin Street in Corinth.
Faulkner—Warford
Trinity Danielle Faulkner & Andrew MadisonWarford
Ms. Elizabeth Michael Wamsley and Mr. John G. White III will wed on Sat-urday, June 18, 2016.
Ms. Wamsley, daughter of Mike and Janice Wams-ley of Corinth, is an Alcorn County native and is cur-rently serving as an edu-cator in the Alcorn School System. Mr. White, son of John & Carolyn White of Shelbyville, Ky., grew up in Southern California
before relocating to the Southeast where he is a 20 plus year employee with Crown Lift Trucks.
Following the ceremo-ny, Mr. and Mrs. White and their family will reside in the Corinth area.
All friends of the couple are invited to attend the wedding celebration at 2 o’clock in the afternoon at Glendale Baptist Church in Glen.
Wamsley–WhiteElizabeth Michael Wamsley and John G. White III
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Grady Irby and Mr. Ronald Dale Jackson announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Courtney Ann Jackson, to Drew McKay Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ferrall Hall of Clinton.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Edward McFalls of Corinth, Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Jack-son, Jr. of Aberdeen, the late Mr. Harvey Ecleston Hardwick, Jr. of Corinth, and the late Mrs. Mary Ballard Jackson of Aber-deen.
Miss Jackson is a 2006 honors graduate and Hall of Fame re-cipient of Corinth High School Academic and Performing Arts Center. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in jour-nalism from the Uni-versity of Mississippi in 2010 where she was also a Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors Col-lege graduate. She was a member of the Delta Gamma sorority, Alpha Psi chapter.
While at the univer-sity, she was a News-Watch anchor and member of Kappa Tau Alpha National Honor Society, Chancellor’s Leadership Class, Gam-
ma Beta Phi Honors Society and National Society of Collegiate Scholars. Miss Jackson, Associated Press award winning journalist, is a statewide reporter em-ployed by WLBT and FOX 40 television in Jackson, Mississippi.
The prospective bride-groom is the grandson of Mrs. Billie Jean Eu-banks of Byram, Mr. and Mrs. John Berry Hall of Raleigh, and the late Mr. Charles Edward Eu-banks of Jackson.
Mr. Hall is a 2004 graduate of Clinton High School. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in communication from Mississippi State Uni-versity in 2008.
He was a member of Lambda Pi Eta hon-ors society. Mr. Hall is a photojournalist em-ployed by WJTV News Channel 12 in Jackson, Mississippi.
The couple will ex-change vows at 6 p.m. on Saturday, June 25, 2016, at First Bap-tist Church of Corinth. All friends and family of the couple are invited to attend the ceremony and the reception imme-diately to follow at The Franklin Courtyard in Corinth.
Jackson–Hall
Engagement
Courtney Ann Jackson
In a fi nancial climate where most people are pinching pennies, it comes as no surprise that many engaged cou-ples seek ways to cut costs with regard to their weddings. Some couples are undecided whether certain components of their wedding are neces-sary.
The decision to hire a videographer is one such area couples fret over. After all, with a photog-rapher snapping hun-dreds of pictures, having a video may seem like an unnecessary luxury. However, people often fi nd that having a wed-ding video to cherish long after the day has passed is well worth the price.
There are several ad-vantages to hiring a pro-fessional videographer to capture the day. A professionally produced wedding video is not the same as Uncle Fred car-rying around his archaic camcorder and catch-ing a few embarrassing dance moves during the reception. A profession-al video will showcase all moments of the wedding from perspectives not easily captured by pho-tography. In addition to showcasing the im-ages of the wedding, the video will also share the sounds and emotions of the day. Here are some things to think about.
• Choose a videogra-pher who will work in conjunction with the wedding mood and pa-rameters. You probably don’t want a videogra-pher who uses bright lights that can be dis-tracting. Nor do you want a videographer who pushes the camera in guests’ faces for a less-than-candid interview.
Today’s professionals are inconspicuous and simply record the events as they unfold.
• The videographer often works in tandem with the photographer. Some photographers have a videographer on staff . But it is fi ne to bring in your own if you like the quality of the photographer’s photos but not the videogra-pher’s work.
• A videographer will capture the things you may have missed during the busy day. He or she can serve as the eyes and ears for the things you’re not seeing and hearing.
• Although ours is an increasingly digital world where people cap-ture photos and videos on their smartphones and other devices on a regular basis, a wedding video can serve as a fam-ily memento. What oth-er time, apart from the holidays, do you have all of your friends and loved ones together in one place?
• Although no one wants to think of a friend or relative pass-ing away while planning their wedding, the fact remains that after a few years some of the people who attended your wed-ding may no longer be around. Having a wed-ding video may be the only last moving image and sound of a special person who is no longer in your life.
• Sound is a portion of the wedding that photos simply cannot capture. To relive the music and the words of the day, a videographer is a ne-cessity. Professionals who use wireless mi-crophones will produce a video with the best sound quality.
Wood 50th AnniversaryThe children of Mickey and Ann (Brown) Wood invite all friends and relatives to join them in celebration of their parents’ 50th wedding anniversary. The event will take place at 7 p.m. on Saturday, June 18 at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, located at 404 West George E. Allen Drive in Booneville. The dress will be casual.
Wedding videos create tons of memories for all
Few things set the tone for a wedding ceremony and reception better than music. Music establishes ambience and serves to transition guests through the various components of the day.
Music is played in vari-ous ways throughout a wedding. For example, the wedding ceremony may be accompanied by a pianist or violinist, while music during the recep-tion is usually provided by a band or deejay.
The decision of wheth-er to hire a band or dee-jay often comes down to personal preference and budget. The following are some things couples should consider as they make their decision to go with a band or deejay.
Band
Live musicians spend years honing their crafts, and watching a band play at a wedding reception can be akin to attending a concert.
A live band can bring with it a sense of sophis-tication. Performers can tone the music to the crowd and improvise if necessary to meet the needs of the room. A good bandleader also will serve as a master of ceremonies at the reception.
Many wedding bands can competently play songs from various genres of music, while some are especially skilled at recre-ating the sound of a par-ticular group.
Bands tend to be more expensive than deejays,
and that’s something cou-ples must factor into their budgets if they prefer a band to a deejay.
Deejay
The deejay is one of the fi rst vendors people think of when they envision a wedding reception. Per-haps because they are less expensive, deejays tend to be more popular than bands among today’s cou-ples.
Deejays are advanta-geous for various reasons. Thanks to the accessibil-ity of digital music, dee-jays can often procure just about any song a cou-ple desires for the recep-tion. That’s a signifi cant benefi t for couples who want to hear the original versions of their favorite songs, and not a band’s take on those songs.
Deejays also can read the crowd and make ad-justments to the music at any time. If a particular genre is not working, dee-jays can easily transition to another type of music to get guests back on their feet. That’s not always possible for bands whose repertoire is exclusive to a particular genre.
Many deejays also blend songs seamlessly and may incorporate lights and other eff ects into their performances, which can encourage guests to loosen up and hit the dance fl oor.
Deejays also tend to travel with less equip-ment than bands, so they will take up less space in a party room.
Make the right choice for wedding music
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • 3B
(Editor’s Note: We recommend Community Events be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event. Commu-nity Events publish on Wednesday, Sunday and when space allows on Friday.)
B i shop Ac t i v i t y Center
The Bishop Activity Center will hold the fol-lowing activities: Mon-day, June 13 – MSU Ex-tension Service Program by Mary Linda Moore; Tuesday, June 14 – Field Trip to Goodwill and Doc-tor Day; Wednesday, June 15 – Bible Study with Jackie Calvart from Oakland Baptist Church; Thursday, June 16 – Bingo; and Friday, June 17 – Grocery shopping at Roger’s Supermarket. Daily activities include quilting, jigsaw puzzles, table games, Rolo golf and washer games. Se-nior citizens age 60 and above are welcome and
encouraged to attend.
CT-A
Corinth Theatre-Arts will present its first movie titled “No Escape” during an exclusive red carpet premiere at 7 to-night at the Crossroads Playhouse. The movie will give viewers a rare look not only at the cha-os that ensues before, during and after a school shooting, but also how and why it happened to begin with.
The cost to attend the premiere and see the short 30-minute film be-fore it is sent off to Los Angeles, Ca. is $5 per person. A short meet-and-greet will be held following the premiere. Beverages and light refreshments will be provided. Formal attire is requested. The movie
• Corinth Theatre-Arts will present “Oliver Twist” at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, June 16–Saturday, June 18. A
2 p.m. matinee will be presented on Sunday, June 19. Tickets are $12 for adults and $6 for students. They may be purchased in advance by calling the theatre or at the box office once hour prior to show-time, if any remain.
For more information and to reserve tickets, contact Corinth Theatre-Arts at 662-287-2995. The theatre is located at 303 Fulton Drive in Corinth.
VFW Post 3962
The VFW will now open at noon Tuesday – Sat-urday and will be closed on Monday. The VFW is open to veteran’s as well as the community. Guests can enjoy shuf-fleboard, a bowling ma-chine, pool, horseshoes, darts, dancing and much more. Happy hour is from 4 to 6 p.m. daily. VFW Post is located at 1 Purdy School Road in Corinth. For more infor-
mation, contact the VFW at 662-287-6106 and ask for Mike or Yogi.
Free Medical Clinic
The Living Healthy Free Medical Clinic, where residents with no way to pay can get free medi-cal treatment, welcomes adults and children age 12 and up with no income and no health insurance.
The clinic, now located at 2668 South Harper Road Suite 3 next to Phy-sicians Urgent Care in the former Oasis Medical Center, is open 1-5 p.m., on the second Wednes-day and fourth Saturday of each month.
The clinic is always looking for both medi-cal and non-medical volunteers. Medical and non-medical volun-teers should contact Ann White at [email protected] or 662-415-9446.
Flag Retirement Ceremony
In honor of Flag Day, VFW Post 3962 will con-duct a Flag Retirement Ceremony at noon on today. A ceremonial flag burning is a very special event to pay respect to a U.S. flag that is torn or weathered. Those who have flag which need to be retired may drop them off at the Post, lo-cated at 1 Purdy School Road. Barbecue plates will be available after the ceremony for $6 per person. Beverages will be sold separately. Chil-dren under 12 will eat for free. For more infor-mation or for questions, contact Mike or Yogi at 662-287-6106.
Pond Management Workshop
The Mississippi De-partment of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks (MDWFP) Fisheries Bureau and the Missis-sippi State University Extension Service are hosting a pond manage-ment workshop in Alcorn County. The workshop will be held at the Al-corn County extension office, located at 2200 Levee Road in Corinth at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 14. An hour-long presentation will include topics on pond design, fish stocking, harvest, vegetation control, lim-ing, and fertilization. A question-and-answer period will follow. Those interested in attending the workshop are asked to register by calling the Alcorn County Extension office at 662-286-7755.
Legacy Hospice
Legacy Hospice is looking for caring and compassionate volun-teers to spend time with patients and families in the surrounding area to provide companionship, friendship, and support to patients and families. Volunteers are also need in our office to place phone calls, file, make gifts for our patients and participate in community event. volunteering is a great way to enhance resumes and gain com-munity service hours. For more information and to volunteer, contact Sherry Dalton, Volunteer Coordinator, at 662-286-5333 or [email protected].
ACHS Class of 1966 50th Class Reunion
The Alcorn Central Class of 1966 will kick off its 50th class re-union on Thursday, June 16 with a tour of the fa-cilities at ACHS at 2 p.m. and will then head to O’Neal and Barbara Hut-son’s home for refresh-ments, entertainment and fellowship. The class will also meet for visita-tion at 6 p.m. on Satur-
day, June 18 at Pickwick Inn Restaurant. A buffet meal will be served be-ginning at 7 p.m.
Parent SurveyThe Alcorn School Dis-
trict will be offering par-ents the opportunity to complete an anonymous online survey. Parents who have not completed the survey as part of their end-of-year meeting may stop by the Special Education Office. located in the Alcorn School District Administrative Offices at 31 CR 410 between now and Friday, June 17. Office hours are Monday–Thursday from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The survey will contain 10 questions to answer. For questions contact Stephanie Clau-sel at 662-286-7734 or by email at [email protected].
5K Rooster Run/ Fun Walk
The 3rd Annual 5k Rooster Run/ Fun Walk will be held on Saturday, June 18 beginning at 9 a.m. at 189 CR 753 in Corinth. A backyard chicken grilling contest will also be held with all proceeds going to ben-efit the Boys and Girls Club of Corinth and the Alcorn County Humane Society. The cost is $25 to run or grill. Donations can be made to Trust-mark National Bank, the Human Society, the Boys and Girls Club or Sandy Childs via PayPal at 662-415-0354 or by email at [email protected]. BBQ tickets are $10 a piece and are available through Sandy Childs or the Boys and Girls Club. A form to register for the Rooster Run 5K is available at Racesonline.com.
Carter Reunion
The Carter family will hold their annual reunion on Saturday, June 18 at the Eastview Civic Center, located at the intersection of Hwy 45 North and Hwy 57 West in Eastview Tenn. The doors will open at 9 a.m. Attendees are invited to come early and stay as long as they like. A pot luck lunch will be served. All are asked to bring their children, pictures and any information they might have to share with the family. Pictures will be displayed all around the civic center for guests to see and get copies of if they wish. For more information call 731-610-6725.
Art Camp
The Corinth Artist Guild is offering chil-dren the opportunity to explore their creative side in an art camp with retired educators Teresa Smilie and Vicki Avery. Two different camp dates are offered — June 20-23 and June 27-30 with classes from 10 a.m. to noon for children who have completed first grade up to age nine and 2 to 4 p.m. for ages 10 to 13. Cost is $50 and materials are supplied. Sign-up deadline is June 8. Contact the gallery at 665-0520 for more infor-mation.
Class of 1960 56th Class Reunion
The Alcorn Agricultural High School, a.ka. Kos-suth High School will cel-ebrate its 56th class re-union on Saturday, June 25 at Chaprman’s res-taurant, located at Hwy 72 West and Bethlehem Church Road. A meet-and-greet will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the private dining room. Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. Attendees may order off the menu or eat off the buffet. For more informa-tion contact Larry Rick-
man at 662-284-9285 or Junior Morgan at 662-808-1956.
BHS Alumni Banquet
The Biggersville Alumni Association will hold a banquet for everyone who graduated from 1937 to present from 5:30 p.m. until on Sat-urday, June 25 in the Biggersville High School cafeteria. Following the meal, a business meet-ing will be held and dour scholarships will be awarded to seniors. Invitations have been sent. Anyone who has not received an invitation is asked to call Danny Morton at 643-5845 or Evelyn Settle Farrior at 662-284-0677.
Field Day
The ACARES (Alcorn County Amateur Radio Emergency Service) will hold its yearly field day on Saturday, June 25 and Sunday, June 26 on the grounds of the visi-tors center on Hwy 45 South. The yearly event is to encourage emer-gency communications preparedness among amateur radio operators (ham). It is typically the largest single emergency preparedness exercise in the county in the county with over 30,000 opera-tors participating each year. Radio operators will be on air with several stations constantly con-tacting other operators world wide for a non-stop 24-hour period, begin-ning at noon on Saturday and ending at noon on Sunday. The public is en-couraged to stop by the visitor’s center and visit the operators as they demonstrate how the amateur radio organiza-tion would be operating by providing communica-tions for any emergency that might happen.
A Great Gatsby
Evening
The Easom Foundation will host “A Great Gatsby Evening” from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Saturday, July 2 at the Easom Com-munity Center. Music will be performed by Michael Spears. Guests are asked to wear a touch of sparkle. Tickets are $10 in advance or $12 at the door. Soft drinks and food will be available for purchase. Cash prizes will be awarded to the best dressed couple in Gatsby attire. For more information call 404-386-3359.
Picnic in the Park
The sixth annual “Pic-nic in the Park” will be held behind the Ramer Civic Center at 6 p.m. on Sunday, July 3. The free event is sponsored by Chewalla Baptist Church.There will be food, mu-sic, and the event will be wrapped up with a large fireworks show. This event has drawn large crowds every year since it began in 2011. For more information, check the church’s Facebook page.
School Registration
North Corinth Chris-tian Academy is accept-ing registration for the 2016-17 school year for grades K-12. North Corinth strives to part-ner with families and churches to educate children with a Christian perspective to serve in their local communities for the glory of God. Our mission is to produce Christian servant-leaders honoring Christ physical-ly, mentally, socially, and spiritually. Registration is now opened and will be conducted throughout the summer on Tuesdays through Thursdays. For additional information, call 662-287-1984.
Crossword
Cryptoquip
Community Events
4B • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
& Business– Run Your Ad On This Page For $165 Mo. –
Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834
GRISHAM INSURANCE662-286-9835662-415-2363
Final Expense Life Insurance
Long Term Care Medicare Supplements
Part D Prescription Plan
Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?
“ I will always try to help you”
FiFin lal EExpense
CHRIS GRISHAMCHRIS GRISHAM
BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE
40 Years
Loans $20-$20,000
TORNADO SHELTERS
Bill PhillipsSand & Gravel1299 Hwy 2 West
(Marshtown)Structure demolition & RemovalCrushed Lime Stone (any size)
Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel
Pea gravelFill sand
Masonry and sandBlack Magic mulch
Natural Brown mulchTop Soil
“Let us help with your project”“Large or Small”
Bill Jr., 284-6061G.E. 284-9209
Hat Lady
Mary CoatsThank you for
16 YEARS!!Call me with your
vehicle needs, new, certified,
and pre-owned.Come by, text or
call today!!!
Long Lewis Ford Lincoln of Corinth
(662)664-0229 Cell / (662)287-3184 [email protected]
References AvailableLicensed & Insured.
No Job too large or too small.
Chad Cornelius - Owner662-665-1849FREE ESTIMATE
EL I TEPressure Washing
Residential & Commercial
We Clean Roofs!
Professional Professional Pressure Washing Pressure Washing
& Soft Wash& Soft WashRoof CleaningRoof Cleaning
High-grade mold inhibitor
chemicals & Soft wash system
used to clean roofs
21 CR 519•Corinth21 CR 519•Corinth
287-2864 287-2864
The Lawn Rangers TooAccept NO Substitutes
Blake Weeden Jacob Northcutt
Free Estimates
662-664-0322731-610-0101Quality, Affordable, Lawn Care
Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand• Lime Rock• Iuka Gravel• Masonry Sand • Top Soil• Rip-Rap• Washed Gravel• Pea Gravel
662-286-9158or 662-287-2296
We also do:• Dozer• Back-Hoe• Track-hoe• Demolition• Dig Ponds and Lakes
We Haul:We Haul:
TRU-SEALQUALITY
PAVEMENT REPAIR
•Rubberized Asphalt Seal Coating
•Asphalt Rejuvenation- Liquid Road
•Hot Pour Crack Filling•Pot Hole Repair
•All Types of Gravel Hauling & Spreading
10% discount for senior citizens, churches, & military
with ID.
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Serving MS, TN, & AL662.802.9211662.279.5121
FREE ESTIMATES
HOME FOR RENTShiloh Falls
Pickwick
3BR/ 3BA, Loft,
Fireplace
Deck, 2 car
garage,
gated community
$1200.00 per
month
Minimum 12 month Lease
References required
662-279-0935
DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDeeeeeeeeeeeecccccccccckkkkkkkkkkkkk, 22222222 cccar
ggaraaaaggggeeeeee,,,,,
gggggggggggggggaaaaaaaaaaaaaattttttttttttttteeeeeeeeeeeeeeddddddddddddddd ccccccccccooooooommmmmmmmm iRENTED
FOR RENT OR SELL
MARSH TOWN3BR, 2 BATH ON
DOUBLE LOT
COMPLETELY REMODELED &
NEW ROOF
2.5 CAR GARAGE AT BACK OF LOT THAT
WOULD MAKE A GREAT WORK SHOP.
RENT $800 MONTH WITH $200 DEPOSIT.
SELL $145,000.
662-720-6766
Property DirectoryProperty Directory
KOSSUTH AREA5 Bedroom Home
on 4 Acres2 Baths
Pond, Pool3 Level Deck
$160,000Call or Text
662-316-0826
MOODDDDDEEEEEELLLLLLLLEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDD &&&&&&&&&&&&&& NNNNNNNNNNNEEEEEEEEEEWWWWWWWW RRRROOOOOOOF
2222.5 CAAR GAAAARRRRRAAAAAAAGGGGGEEEEEEE AAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTTTTT BBBBBBBBBBAAAAAAAAAAAACCCCCCCCCCCCCKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK OOOOOOOOOOOOOOFFFFFFFFFFFF LLLLLLLLLLLOOOOOOOOOTTTTTTT TTTTTHHHHAARENTED
2 HOUSES 13 ACRES2050 CR 7002 MILES WEST OF
WENASOGA
SHOWN BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY
$130,000287-3618
30x60 building sitting on 1/2 Acre paved lot in downtown Corinth at 102 south Fillmore. Spacious offi ce area
with kitchenette and 1 1/2 bath. Also a private
offi ce. Two garage bays. One bay has
built in drain. Asking $165,000. OBO Call
662-808-5560. Hurry it won’t last long in this
prime location!!!
For Sale byOwner
$165,000Call 662-386-8569
for appt.
Pre-qualifi cation
loan approval letter
required for viewing
Beautiful 3/2 home has
1790 sf on .93ac with
a screened/glassed
porch, deck, double
carport plus detached
2 car garage and a
large handyman’s
workshop with rooms
to use for your favorite
hobbies! This is a
MUST SEE!!!
HOUSEFOR SALE
Call 662-415-5137$25,000.00
2 Bedroom,
1 Bath,
Car Shed,
Corner Lot
1708 East Foote Street
GENERAL HELP0232
TRUCKING0244
PETS
CATS/DOGS/PETS0320
FARM
FEED/FERTILIZER0430
MERCHANDISE
AUCTION SALES0503
MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563
6 LUG 20 wheels andtires $440.662-643-3565
TREADMILL $200.662-643-3565
REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00
EXTRACall 662-287-6111
for details.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SPECIAL NOTICE0107
GARAGE /ESTATE SALES
EMPLOYMENT
GENERAL HELP0232
CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.
EXPERIENCED SITEMANAGER NEEDED.
REED MAINTENANCESERVICES, INC.
is in need of a Site Man-ager for our residual ma-terial hauling and land ap-plication operations atSCA Tissue Plant in Bar-ton, Alabama. Applicantshould have 2-4 years ofexperience in supervisionof heavy equipment andhauling operations. Know-ledge of the agriculturalindustry is a plus. Man-ager will be responsiblefor managing location as-sets, supervising hourlypersonnel, budget ing,billing, and community re-lations with area farmers.We offer competitive pay,life, health, dental, disabil-ity, 401k, holiday pay, andvacation with companyvehicle furnished for thisposition. Company paidlife and disability insur-ance. For a confidentialinterview, please cal l(256) 886-7398 or sendr e s u m e t o :[email protected] Maintenance Ser-vices is an Equal Employ-ment Opportunity Employ-er. Qualified females andminorities are encour-aged to apply.
Follow us on Twitter @dailycorinthian
Like us on Facebookfacebook.com/
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Follow
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fi rst online.
“Search Daily Corinthian on
dailycorinthian.com
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • 5B
VEHICLE DIRECTORY
White
Almost new brakes
and tires
Road Ready
Runs Great
100,000 Miles
$7,500.00662-396-1529
2008 FORD FUSION
GUARANTEEDAuto Sales
1966FURY662-415-5071
832Motorcycles/ATV’S
1990 Harley Davidson
Custom Soft-Tail$9000
1949 Harley Davidson Panhead
$9000 OBO
662-808-2994
1987 FORD 250 DIESELUTILITY SERVICE TRUCK
$4000. IN GOOD CONDITION731-645-8339 OR
731-453-5239
HONDAGOLD WING
MOTORCYCLE1500 SERIESEXC. COND.
415-4387
2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster,
color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.
Call @662-664-0210
2002 Harley Fat Boy, color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO
Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.
Call @ 662-664-0210
2003 Mustang GTSVT Cobra CloneTuned 4.6 Engine
5 SpeedLowered
4:10 GearsAll Power & Air
$6500.662-415-0149
2010 Chevy Equinox LS
130K Miles, Fully Loaded
GREAT Condition!
$10,500662-415-8343 or 415-7205
2010 SilveradoGray
Crew Cab4.8 Engine
54,000 miles$19,500.00
662-415-5343Exc. Cond.
95’CHEVYASTRO
Cargo VanGood, Sound
Van
$2700872-3070
2006 YAMAHA 1700GREAT CONDITION!
APPROX. 26,000 MILES
$4350(NO TRADES)
662-665-0930662-284-8251
1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color:
blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles,
$7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for
the road. Call @ 662-664-0210
1976 F115428 Motor
Very Fast
$3,500.
662-808-9313662-415-5071
FALCON662-415-5071
1994 Nissan Quest New Lifters,Cam, Head,
Struts and Shocks.$2000.
Call 603-9446
1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER6 cyl., 5 speed
ConvertibleLeather Seats
All OriginalElectric Windows
& Seats88,000 miles
$10,000.00 OBO212-4882
For Sale or Trade1978 Mercedes
6.9 Motor 135,000 miles.Only made 450 that year.
$2,500. OBOSelling due to health
reasons.Harry Dixon
286-6359
2011 GMC CANYON-RED
REG. CAB, 2 WD
78,380 MILES
$11,900 OBO
662-462-7790
1989 Mercedes Benz300 CE
145K miles, Rear bucket seats,
Champagne color, Excellent Condition.
Diligently maintained. $5000.00
662-415-2657$4000.00
1946 Willys Jeep
Completely Restored
REDUCED$4000.
287-6993
Rogue S 2014one owner,
like new, have all service records. $16,900.00.
Call 256-577-1349.
2013 Arctic Cat
308 miles4 Seater w/seat beltsPhone charger outlet
Driven approx. 10 times
Excellent ConditionWench (front bumper)
(662)279-0801
2009 Pontiac G6
Super Nice, Really Clean,
Oil changed regularly, Good cold air and has
good tires. 160k
Asking $4800. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @
662-319-7145
2001 CADILLAC DEVILLE
ORIGINAL OWNER
117,000 Miles, (Mostly Hwy)
Diamond White$5400.
Call 9-5, M-F662-286-6558
2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4
4 WHEELER2nd Owner, Great
ConditionHas a Mossy Oak
Cover over the body put on when it was
bought new. Everything Works. Used for
hunting & around the house, Never for mud
riding. $1500 Firm.
If I don’t answer, text me and I will contact you. 662-415-7154
2012 Yamaha 230 Dirt Bike
Great Condition.
$2800.00Call
662.415.1173
REDUCEDREDUCED
1950 Buick 78,400 miles$4200.00 or
TradeAll Original
662-415-3408
1985 Mustang GT, HO, 5 Speed,
Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner
Last year of carburetor, All original.
$16,500
662-287-4848
2004 DODGE2WD Slt Loaded Out
5.7 Hemi, 1 Owner, New Tires, 1,000, Serviced every 3,000 mi.
104,000 MilesKKB say’s $7950. Take $6950.Super Clean, Non Smoker, Red,
Black Cloth
$6,950.00Steve 662-665-1781
HD 1200 SPORTSTER CUSTOM XL
LOTS OF EXTRASGREAT CONDITION
39K MILES$5,200.00
662-643-8382
$7,000.00
2012 BansheeBighorn
Side-by-Side4 X 4 w/ WenchAM/FM w/ CD
$7200.00 OBO
662-664-0357
$5900.00 OBO
1996 FORD MUSTANGGood Body,
Transmission & Tires
Needs Motor
MUST SELL
$500.00
Call 662-603-7459 after 5PM
2006 Harley Davidson Street Glide
103 Screaming Eagle Engine9700 Actual Miles-Showroom Condition-Fully Chromed and
Customized-RinehartTrue Dual Exhaust-Stage1
Breather Kit-10K Mile Full Factory Service Just Compled-
$14,000.00 Firm-662-212-0362
$8,90000
1970 MERCURYCOUGAR
Excel. Cond. Inside & OutAll Original
662-664-0357
1972 MERCURY COUGAR
$20,000.00662-415-5071
2001 Heritage Softail
LIKE NEW9K Miles
25,000 InvestedAsking 8K
Serviced by H/D Bumpas
731-645-3012
2000 Harley Davidson Road
King Classic
20,000 miles,One Owner,Garage kept.$8,500.00
662-287-2333Leave Message
1964 F100 SHORT BED
completely refurbished & recovered seat, new brakes, NOS starter,
new $125 battery. 6cyl, 3spd-
Walnut $1850.00,
750-8526
1998 Cadillac DeVilleTan Leather InteriorSunroof, green color
99,000 miles - needs motor
$1,100.00(662) 603-2635
212-2431
2001 LINCOLNTOWNCAR
GREAT CONDITION174,000 MILES
$6,000.00CALL 9AM-5PM M-F
662-415-3658
2012 Subaru Legacy$10,900
Excellent condition, One owner, Must sell!
Call662-284-8365
2002 Chevy Silverado Z712 Person Owner
Heat & Air, 4 Wheel Drive, Works Great
New Tires, 5.1 EngineClub Cab and Aluminum
Tool BoxAM/FM Radio, Cassette &
CD PlayerPewter in Color
Great Truck for $7000.00
662-287-8547662-664-3179
2005 Harley Davidson Trike
24,000 miles, Ultra Classic
Nice, $23,500.
662-415-7407662-808-4557
$6,400
SOLD SOLD
SOLD SOLD
SOLD SOLD
2014 Toyota Corolla S 1.8 LOW MILES!!
$15,999 (Corinth Ms)
Silver 2014 Toyota corolla
S 1.8: Back-up camera;
Xenon Headlights;
Automatic CVT gearbox;
Paddle Shift; 25k miles
LOW MILES !!!
Up to 37mpg; One owner!
Perfect condition!
(205-790-3939)
1999 DODGE VAN110K miles, 4
Captain Chairs, Folding Bed/
Rear Seat, TV no DVD, New heads on engine, Runs
Perfect. $4500.00 OBO
287-1097 or 808-1297
$7,90000
SOLD SOLD
2003 Kimco Scooter 150CC.
Very Good Condition. $1200.
662-664-6460
2005 Kimco Scooter
250CC. Very Good Condition.
$1500. 662-664-6460
2002 Dodge 3500
5.9 Diesel. 6 speed. 391,000 miles.$5,800
(901) 409-0427$5,000
SOLD SOLD
SOLD SOLD
SOLD SOLD
2003 FORD F150 Harley
DavidsonSeries
3,800 On New Motor, Tran.
and Tires662-315-2426
3800 On New Motor, Tran.
and Tires$7800
2009 SUZUKI GSXR 600New Tires
New Battery8,055 Miles
$7000.662-415-7628
$5500.
06 Chevy Trailblazer
Powereverything!Good heat
and Air$3,250 OBO
662-319-7145
YAMAHA V STAR 650
22,883 MILES$2,650.00
665-1288$2,550.00
1995 Jeep Wrangler4CY, 4 SpeedRuns GoodHas Rust
$2,500.00
287-6752
SOLD SOLD
MAKE AN OFFER
JUMPERTOWNAPARTMENTS
3 bedroom/ 2 bath$650 PER MONTH
partial utilities furnishedPlease call 662-840-4050
TVRHA acceptedNew Ownership and Managment
COMPLETELY REMODELED!READY FOR IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY!
VACANCIESWe’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse
Let our certifi ed technicians quickly restore your vehicle to pre-accident condition with a satisfaction guarantee.
State-of-the-Art Frame StraighteningDents, Dings & Scratches RemovedCustom Color Matching Service
We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance CompanyNo up-front payments.No hassle. No paperwork.
Free Estimates25 Years professional service experienceRental cars available
Corinth Collision Center810 S. Parkway
662.594.1023
HOMES FOR SALE0710REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610
HOMES FOR RENT0620
MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
6B • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
GUARANTEEDGUARANTEEDAuto SalesAuto SalesAdvertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO
DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad.
COMMERCIAL
804BOATS
816RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES
470TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.
1978 Dodge RVTRAVEL QUEEN
440 MotorRuns Great
$2,500.00287-6752
2015 Starcraft A R One
LIKE NEWREDUCED$9400.00
662-415-7786
1986 Chevy RVELDORADO454 MotorRuns Great$2,500.00
287-6752
2007 JAYCO
OCTANE TOY
HAULER
662-212-3883$9,000.00
‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’
gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-fl at screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.
$55,000662-415-0590
2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out
& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.
$75,000. 662-287-7734
REDUCED
Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,
new tires, Price negotiable.
662-660-3433
FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH
EQUIPMENTPOWER STEERING
GOOD PAINT
$5800.00
662-416-5191
1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR
$6000.00
662-286-6571662-286-3924
8N FORD TRACTOR
GOOD CONDITION
$2500.00 287-8456
Hyster ForkliftNarrow Aisle
24 Volt Battery3650.00287-1464
Clark Forklift8,000 lbs,
outside tiresGood Condition
$15,000
662-287-1464
Big Boy Big Boy ForkliftForklift$$12501250
Great for a small warehouse
662-287-1464
Toyota Forklift5,000 lbs
Good Condition662-287-1464
53' STEP DECK TRAILER
CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1
TON TRUCKS.
BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3' PULL OUTS @ FRONT
& REAR.
BOOMS, CHAINS & LOTS OF ACCESSORIES
$10,000/OBO
CALL 662-603-1547
2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.
Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never
launched, powerhouse out-board motor with a High Five
stainless prop,
for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in
Counce, TN for details.
731-689-4050or 901-605-6571
1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP
Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint,
new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot
control.
$6500.662-596-5053
15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat 25 HP Motor
$2700.00 Ask for Brad:
284-4826
2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer
Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube
$19,300662-427-9063
601 FORDWORKMASTER
EXCELLENT CONDITION
$3,500731-453-5239731-645-8339
ASKING $7500.00Or Make Me An Offer CALL 662-427-9591
Call (662)427-9591 orCell phone (662)212-4946
Built by Scully’s Aluminum Boats of Louisiana.
ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE16FT./5FT.
115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR
TRAILER NEWLY REWIREDALL TIRES NEW
NEW WINCH
2003 CHEROKEE 285SLEEPS 8
EXCELLENT CONDITIONEVERYTHING WORKS
5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER
CENTRAL HEAT & AIRALL NEW TIRES & NEW
ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER
$8995Call Richard 662-664-4927
1956 FORD 6005 SPEED
POWER STEERINGREMOTE HYDRAULICS
GOOD TIRESGOOD CONDITION
$4,200 662-287-4514
30' MOTOR HOME
1988 FORD
SLEEPS 6
51,000 MILES
$4300
662-415-5247
BAYLINER CLASSIC BOAT & TRAILER
13 YR OLDM14763BC BCMS
19.5 LONGBLUE & WHITE
REASONABLY PRICED662-660-3433
WINNEBAGO JOURNEYCLASS A , RV 2000
MODEL34.9 FT. LONG
50 AMP HOOKUPCUMMINS DIESEL
FREIGHTLINER CHASSISLARGE SLIDE OUT
ONAN QUIET GENERATOR
VERY WELL KEPT.,500.
662-728-2628
WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOME
198940'
Queen Size Bed1 Bath
Sleeps 6-7people comfortably
$8500662-808-9313
DECK BOAT1985 Hurricane-150
Johnson engine
Includes Custom Trailer Dual
Axel-ChromeRetractable Canopy
$4500.00
662-419-1587
Excellent ConditionBrand New RefrigeratorNew Tires & Hot Water
Heater. Sleeps Six7,900 ACTUAL MILES
$12,500. OBOMust See!!
Call 662-665-1420
1990 Allegro Motor Home
W & W HORSEOR CATTLE TRAILER
ALL ALUMINUMLIKE NEW
$7000.731-453-5239731-645-8339
SOLDSOLD SOLDSOLD 24 FT BONANZA TRAILER
GOOSE NECK
GOOD CONDITION
$2,000.00
662-287-8894
SOLDSOLD
21’ Sea Ray Boat4.3 Merc CruiserIncludes Trailer,
Anchor,Spare Prop; Skis and Full Curtains.SN serv 212111889
$3500.601-916-6411
Baker Propane Forklift
4000 LB Lift$2000.00
662-279-7011
2009 TT45ANew Holland Tractor
335 Hours8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner
deceased, Kossuth Area. $10,000- 662-424-3701
KUBOTA 20015700 HPGOOD
CONDITIONOWNER RETIRING
$10,000.00731-453-5521
FOR SALE
JOHN DEERE TRACTORS
SPRING SPECIAL
662-415-0399662-419-1587
SOLD
$7500CALL RICHARD 662-416-0604
REDUCED REDUCED $1,800.00
SOLDSOLD
SOLDSOLD
SOLDSOLD
SOLDSOLD
40 FT 3 Axle Trailer
$2000.BUY TRAILER get FREE HOUSEBOAT
662-286-1717
1992 24FT Pontoon
Boat2002 90HP
Evinrude Motor
Good Cond.$7500.
662-664-0357
SOLDSOLD
2015 StarcraftA R One
LIKE NEW$9400.00
662-415-7786
REDUCEDREDUCED
SOLDSOLD6x12, Wired, A/C,
Custom detailed/paint, inlayed equipment brackets,
windows/shades and awningDrop down loading door and
mounted Alum tool box. Custom Wheels like new!
Includes 2 twin electric air mattresses and port-a-potty.
No Calls after 6PM.
$5,500.00 662-284-4604
2008 NITRO 288 Sport
Fish/Ski150 HP Mercury MotorSHOW ROOM COND.Loaded with Options
Call for details662-287-3821
$20,000.00
AUTO REPAIR0844
We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse
Let our certifi ed technicians quickly restore your vehicle to pre-accident condition with a satisfaction guarantee.
State-of-the-Art Frame StraighteningDents, Dings & Scratches RemovedCustom Color Matching Service
We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance CompanyNo up-front payments.No hassle. No paperwork.
Free Estimates25 Years professional service experienceRental cars available
Corinth Collision Center810 S. Parkway
662.594.1023
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SHARE IT!
We LOVE to publish news about LOCAL people and what they’re doing.
If its important to YOU, it’s important to US!
SUBMIT your photos and information to
[email protected] sure to include contact information should we have a question.
www.dailycorinthian.com | 662.287.6111 1607 South Harper Rd., Corinth
HOMES FOR SALE0710
HUDPUBLISHER’S
NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • 7B
AUCTION SALES0503
731-645-5001 – 731-645-6357 – 731-610-3060 - TN Firm 4834 4872 Hwy 64 East, Selmer TN - www.kennedysauction.com
Terms & Conditions: 10% Buyer’s Premium. Cash or Approved Check. No Credit Cards. Bank Letter of Credit Required for Unknown Buyers. Other Terms Apply See Website. - Consignments accepted for future coin auctions.
1858-O $20 Gold Piece AU55 24 - Gold Coins
Patek Philippe 18k
15 - Gold Pocket Watches
Hundreds of Silver Dollars Hundreds of Proof Sets
Auction Preview - Wednesday, June 15 - 9:00 a.m.— 5:00 p.m.
RESTAURANT0260
WENDY’S IS HIRINGMANAGERS
for our location inCorinth, MS
Please email your resume to:Mark Chandler
Wendy’s Old FashionedHamburgers Is An EqualOpportunity Employer
AUCTION SALES0503
GENERAL HELP0232
DRIVER-CDL A TRAINING$500 - $1,000 INCENTIVE BONUS
NO OUT OF POCKET TUITION COST!
GET YOUR CDL IN 22 DAYSPAID TRAINING AFTER GRADUATION
ACCOMMODATIONS PROVIDED IF YOU LIVE 50+ MILES FROM
JACKSON
6 DAY REFRESHER COURSES AVAIL.
MINIMUM 21 YEARS OF AGE
888-449-3199 EOEWWW.KLLMDRIVINGACADEMY.COM
MEDICAL/DENTAL0220
MS CARE CENTER
is looking for
Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts
LPN Full-Time, PRNPlease apply in person.
3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30
E.O.E.GENERAL HELP
0232
The City of Corinth has an opening for the position of Street Commissioner. This position will manage the day to day activities of the street/solid waste departments. Interested individuals should submit a resume to:
City of CorinthCity ClerkP. O. Box 669Corinth, MS 38835
Phone: 662-286-6644 Fax: 662-287-7240Website: cityofcorinthms.comEmail: [email protected]
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8B • Sunday, June 12, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
Plunk’s ComputersPlunk’s Computers
1018 South Cass Street
Corinth, MS 38834
(662) 286-2216
Plunk’s ComputersPlunk’s Computers
Clearance Outlet
Plunk’s Computers
810 South Cass Street
Corinth, MS 38834
(662) 287-3165708 S. Cass Street in Corinth
Plunk’s Computers
606 Cass StreetCorinth, MS
662-665-0608Fax 662-665-0732
Plunk’s Computers
Shop here for your electrical items: blow dryers, curling irons,
flat irons, etc...Large Selection of Gift Cards
612 Cass St. • Southgate PlazaCorinth, MS • 286-8204
Hours: Mon-Sat 9am-7pmFri & Sun 1pm-6pm
Plunk’s Computers
902 S. Cass St.Corinth
Southgate Plaza662-287-4060
Plunk’s Computers
REAL GIRL STYLE.HOMETOWN VALUES.
Plunk’s Computers
Valid in-store only. Not valid on previous purchases, existing special orders, or on the purchase of gift cards or charity items. One coupon per transaction, per day. Not valid with other offers except when used with one of the following: maurices credit card application offers. Take Ten card or Grand Opening coupons. F12-Store Coupon/Promo Code 12.
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20%OFF
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Plunk’s Computers
Sizes 1-24 in select stores
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802 Cass St.Southgate Plaza Corinth, MS
662-286-2335Plunk’s Computers
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Start your Christmas Shopping at Southgate Shopping Center
Tel.: 662-872-3133
Fax: 662-872-3277
602 Cass StreetCorinth, MS 38834
OPEN HOURSMon. - Thurs.: 11:00 am - 9:30 pm
Fri. & Sat.: 11:00 am - 10:30 pmSunday: 11:00 am - 9:30 pm
Plunk’s ComputersPlunk’s Computers704 South Cass Street
Corinth ,MS 38834Phone: 662-287-5151
Hours:Monday- Friday 10am-5pmwww.plunkscomputers.com
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Plunk’s Computers
604 Cass StreetCorinth, MS662-287-0114
Plunk’s Computers
Corinth • 286-0058
Southgate Shopping Plaza
Mon.-Thurs. 10-8;
Fri. & Sat. 10-9; Sun. 1-6
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