18
Vol. 117, No. 302 Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages 1 section Saturday Dec. 21, 2013 50 cents Today 74 Cloudy, warm Tonight 58 Index On this day in history 150 years ago Union cavalry left Corinth for Purdy, Tenn. A “rebel” dance in a nearby farmhouse was discovered and a detachment was sent to break it up. “On their approach the rebels reached out with a volley of musketry and saluted them, but were soon put to flight.” Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 15 Comics........ 7 State........ 5 Weather........ 9 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 90% chance of T-storms 2013 Christmas Basket Fund “A Community Tradition” The spirit of giving is alive and well in the Crossroads area as generous donations are arriving daily for the 18th Annual Corinth Rotary Club/Daily Corinthian 2013 Christmas Basket Fund. The civic club and newspaper have set a $25,000 commu- nity fundraising goal this year so 1,000 food baskets could be given away to local families on Dec. 7 at the Crossroads Arena. Baskets were given on faith and hope the goal will be reached. The total increased to $16,366 after the most recent donations arrived. They are $200 from the family of George Coleman Sr. in memory of George E. Cole- man Sr.; $100 from Bill Dalton; $100 from Mrs. and Mrs. Lester Strickland; $100 from William and Evelyn Farrior; and $200 from O.W. and W.J. Thornton. Donations can be the perfect time to make a holiday tribute to a special person. Contribu- tions can be made “in honor of” someone living or “in memory of” someone who has passed. They can be family or friends, co-workers, employees, bosses or even groups who have made an impact on a person’s life. All tributes will be published in the Daily Corinthian until Dec. 26. Donations can be brought to the newspaper ofce at 1607 Harper Road or mailed to the Daily Corinthian, Attn: Christ- mas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Basket fund tops $16,000 Corinth saw a taste of street paving with bond issue funds this week ahead of the bulk of the work coming in the spring. APAC was in town milling and laying asphalt on several streets, including Fourth Street from Fillmore to Madison and, in the area between Cass and Fillmore, the short streets of Davis, Grant and Reynolds. Those are among projects designated by Mayor Tommy Irwin with $100,000 out of the $1.6 million bond. Each of the ve aldermen also have $100,000 to spend. “We’re still in the planning process working out what ev- erybody wants to do and try- ing to prioritize,” said Street Commissioner Philip Verdung. “It’s hard sometimes to make a decision what gets it and what doesn’t. we’re trying to address the worst issues rst.” The Pine Lake area in ward 5 is also getting some repairs in areas that have had base fail- ures in the last couple of years. “We’re going in and xing some of those individual spots during this round of paving,” said Verdung. “We’ll have quite a bit more work to come there in the spring.” On the recent paving, “We went in prior to the work and did all of the repairs that we saw at the time that are neces- Several streets get new look BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Joe Reardon, former mayor of Kansas City, Kansas, has successfully stared down the challenge that Corinth leaders face now. As mayor, he helped rally citizens behind cutting-edge technology and made Kansas City the rst Google Fiber city. “And now a city like yours, excitingly enough, has a chance to have bandwidth that nearly no one has right now,” he told a group of Corinthians gath- ered at City Hall on Friday. Mayor Tommy Irwin, sev- eral aldermen and supporters of the effort to secure C Spire’s gigabit-per-second ber Inter- net service in the city met with Reardon and Jared Baumann, manager brand products - - ber for C Spire. The group also spent some time planning the next steps in its effort. With sign-ups in progress for the past few weeks, Corinth’s rates in the three “berhoods” currently are 4 percent in the north section, 2 percent in the central section and zero per- cent in the south section. They need to hit 45 percent, 35 per- cent and 35 percent, respec- tively. Reardon said grassroots ef- forts worked best in helping his city beat out 1,100 others. While some people quickly get excited about ultra-fast Internet speeds, he found that many need convincing. “There was a large chunk of citizens in our community that had heard about it but didn’t really know what its implica- tions were and why the city was involved,” he said. “So, I went out and had about 100 neighborhood and community meetings and talked about the public policy reasons for mov- ing forward with this project. What I realized was that the things that were important about this, you had to relate to citizens where they were.” The effort included signing up people at all kinds of com- munity events. “Think about what the impli- cations of the infrastructure is to the community — that was the message I felt was impor- tant for me to deliver,” he said. Now that it has been in place for a year, the community has seen property values increase, and consumers are beneting. “Not everybody is signing up for Google Fiber,” said Rear- don, “but I can tell you that if you’re on another provider, faster speeds are now available to you on their system. Lower prices are now available to you on their system. Competition is good.” The rst berhood to go green was one described as a Officials encourage fiber signups BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Staff photo by Jebb Johnston Alderman Michael McFall (left) and Main Street Corinth Director Andrea Rose listen as Joe Reardon, the former mayor of Kansas City, Kansas, makes a point about the campaign for giga- bit-per-second Internet service at Corinth City Hall. Please see FIBER | 2 Please see STREETS | 2 U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) has introduced leg- islation that would expand the boundary of Shiloh National Military Park to include three Civil War battleelds in Ten- nessee and designate Parker’s Crossroads as an afliated area of the National Park System. Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R- Brentwood) introduced similar legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this year. Area Civil War battleelds at Davis Bridge and Fallen Tim- bers were two of the places in the legislation that would in- crease the boundary of Shiloh National Military Park. Russell House (which is in Tennessee and Mississippi) would also be considered part of Shiloh Park. “As Americans, we have a special obligation to preserve and protect our heritage,” Al- exander said. “Including these Civil War battleelds in the Na- tional Park System will honor that commitment, while pro- viding an opportunity to attract more visitors to Tennessee and encourage the local economies.” “I am pleased to be working with Sen. Alexander in preserv- ing this important piece of our national history,” Blackburn said. “Tennessee played a vital role in the Civil War and it’s important we remember those Bill expands Shiloh park boundaries BY JEFF YORK For the Daily Corinthian Please see PARK | 2 Donating blood is a priceless Christmas gift. Blood donors in the Cross- roads area continued to show their support for such a worthy cause again this holiday sea- son. By supporting this years Sixth Annual “Battle of the Banks,” local residents are part of the reason lives were saved again this year. “Area residents supported their local banks, and in turn, answered the call to help sup- ply the blood bank for patients in our hospitals,” said Toni Gough, Donor Recruitment Representative for United Blood Services. “All the bank employees worked really hard this year and the competition was erce. Each bank wanted the trophy to be in their lobby for the next year. Most of all, each bank wanted to do good for their community.” Gough said all the banks gave a valiant effort, but this year’s bragging rights went to Renasant Bank. “Renasant recruited the most successful donors this time,” said Gough. “They will get to show off the ‘TRAVE- LIN’ Trophy in their lobby for the next year, and of course, have the bragging rights and the choice of where they want to park the bloodmobile for the next drive.” Participating banks in this years battle included Bancorp- South, CB&S, Commerce Na- tional, Regions, Renasant and Trustmark who all participated by recruiting their customers, friends and family to come and donate blood for their bank. “Even though this year’s bat- tle is over, I have already heard the battle is on for next year,” added Gough. “A fun, friendly competition never hurt any- one, and I know these other banks who joined in this year will work hard to get the tro- phy from Renasant at the next annual Battle of the Banks.” Gough said she appreciates everyone who participated in the event this year for all their hard work and dedication. “Those who helped in any capacity, from the ones re- cruiting the donors, to the em- ployers who allowed their do- nors time away from their job to come and donate, and espe- cially the actual donors them- selves, I say thank you. The do- nations at this drive has saved and/or touched the lives of 57 patients in our local hospitals.” (Anyone interested in host- ing a drive, or needing more information about blood do- nations, can contact Gough at 662-842-8871.) Crossroads blood donors showing support BY JOSEPH MILLER [email protected] Pam Gann (left) and Becky Faulkner of Renasant Bank and Toni Gough of United Blood Ser- vices are all smiles after Gough presents the Sixth Annual “Battle of the Banks” award trophy to the two bank representatives Thursday afternoon. Daily Corinthian

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Page 1: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 117, No. 302 • Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages • 1 section

SaturdayDec. 21, 2013

50 centsToday74

Cloudy, warmTonight

58

Index On this day in history 150 years agoUnion cavalry left Corinth for Purdy, Tenn. A “rebel” dance in

a nearby farmhouse was discovered and a detachment was sent to break it up. “On their approach the rebels reached out with a volley of musketry and saluted them, but were soon put to flight.”

Stocks........8 Classified......15 Comics........7 State........5

Weather........9 Obituaries........6 Opinion........4 Sports......12

90% chance of T-storms

2013Christmas

Basket Fund“A Community

Tradition”

The spirit of giving is alive and well in the Crossroads area as generous donations are arriving daily for the 18th Annual Corinth Rotary Club/Daily Corinthian 2013 Christmas Basket Fund.

The civic club and newspaper have set a $25,000 commu-nity fundraising goal this year so 1,000 food baskets could be given away to local families on Dec. 7 at the Crossroads Arena. Baskets were given on faith and hope the goal will be reached.

The total increased to $16,366 after the most recent donations arrived. They are $200 from the family of George Coleman Sr. in memory of George E. Cole-man Sr.; $100 from Bill Dalton; $100 from Mrs. and Mrs. Lester Strickland; $100 from William and Evelyn Farrior; and $200 from O.W. and W.J. Thornton.

Donations can be the perfect time to make a holiday tribute to a special person. Contribu-tions can be made “in honor of” someone living or “in memory of” someone who has passed. They can be family or friends, co-workers, employees, bosses or even groups who have made an impact on a person’s life.

All tributes will be published in the Daily Corinthian until Dec. 26.

Donations can be brought to the newspaper offi ce at 1607 Harper Road or mailed to the Daily Corinthian, Attn: Christ-mas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835.

Basket fundtops $16,000

Corinth saw a taste of street paving with bond issue funds this week ahead of the bulk of the work coming in the spring.

APAC was in town milling and laying asphalt on several streets, including Fourth Street from Fillmore to Madison and, in the area between Cass and

Fillmore, the short streets of Davis, Grant and Reynolds.

Those are among projects designated by Mayor Tommy Irwin with $100,000 out of the $1.6 million bond. Each of the fi ve aldermen also have $100,000 to spend.

“We’re still in the planning process working out what ev-erybody wants to do and try-

ing to prioritize,” said Street Commissioner Philip Verdung. “It’s hard sometimes to make a decision what gets it and what doesn’t. we’re trying to address the worst issues fi rst.”

The Pine Lake area in ward 5 is also getting some repairs in areas that have had base fail-ures in the last couple of years.

“We’re going in and fi xing

some of those individual spots during this round of paving,” said Verdung. “We’ll have quite a bit more work to come there in the spring.”

On the recent paving, “We went in prior to the work and did all of the repairs that we saw at the time that are neces-

Several streets get new lookBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Joe Reardon, former mayor of Kansas City, Kansas, has successfully stared down the challenge that Corinth leaders face now.

As mayor, he helped rally citizens behind cutting-edge technology and made Kansas City the fi rst Google Fiber city.

“And now a city like yours, excitingly enough, has a chance to have bandwidth that nearly no one has right now,” he told a group of Corinthians gath-ered at City Hall on Friday.

Mayor Tommy Irwin, sev-eral aldermen and supporters of the effort to secure C Spire’s gigabit-per-second fi ber Inter-net service in the city met with Reardon and Jared Baumann, manager brand products - fi -ber for C Spire. The group also spent some time planning the next steps in its effort.

With sign-ups in progress for the past few weeks, Corinth’s rates in the three “fi berhoods” currently are 4 percent in the north section, 2 percent in the central section and zero per-cent in the south section. They need to hit 45 percent, 35 per-cent and 35 percent, respec-tively.

Reardon said grassroots ef-forts worked best in helping

his city beat out 1,100 others.While some people quickly

get excited about ultra-fast Internet speeds, he found that many need convincing.

“There was a large chunk of citizens in our community that had heard about it but didn’t really know what its implica-tions were and why the city was involved,” he said. “So, I went out and had about 100 neighborhood and community meetings and talked about the public policy reasons for mov-

ing forward with this project. What I realized was that the things that were important about this, you had to relate to citizens where they were.”

The effort included signing up people at all kinds of com-munity events.

“Think about what the impli-cations of the infrastructure is to the community — that was the message I felt was impor-tant for me to deliver,” he said.

Now that it has been in place for a year, the community has

seen property values increase, and consumers are benefi ting.

“Not everybody is signing up for Google Fiber,” said Rear-don, “but I can tell you that if you’re on another provider, faster speeds are now available to you on their system. Lower prices are now available to you on their system. Competition is good.”

The fi rst fi berhood to go green was one described as a

Officials encourage fiber signupsBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Alderman Michael McFall (left) and Main Street Corinth Director Andrea Rose listen as Joe Reardon, the former mayor of Kansas City, Kansas, makes a point about the campaign for giga-bit-per-second Internet service at Corinth City Hall.

Please see FIBER | 2

Please see STREETS | 2

U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) has introduced leg-islation that would expand the boundary of Shiloh National Military Park to include three Civil War battlefi elds in Ten-nessee and designate Parker’s Crossroads as an affi liated area of the National Park System.

Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Brentwood) introduced similar legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this year.

Area Civil War battlefi elds at Davis Bridge and Fallen Tim-bers were two of the places in the legislation that would in-crease the boundary of Shiloh National Military Park. Russell House (which is in Tennessee and Mississippi) would also be considered part of Shiloh Park.

“As Americans, we have a special obligation to preserve and protect our heritage,” Al-exander said. “Including these Civil War battlefi elds in the Na-tional Park System will honor that commitment, while pro-viding an opportunity to attract more visitors to Tennessee and encourage the local economies.”

“I am pleased to be working with Sen. Alexander in preserv-ing this important piece of our national history,” Blackburn said. “Tennessee played a vital role in the Civil War and it’s important we remember those

Bill expands Shiloh parkboundaries

BY JEFF YORKFor the Daily Corinthian

Please see PARK | 2

Donating blood is a priceless Christmas gift.

Blood donors in the Cross-roads area continued to show their support for such a worthy cause again this holiday sea-son.

By supporting this years Sixth Annual “Battle of the Banks,” local residents are part of the reason lives were saved again this year.

“Area residents supported their local banks, and in turn, answered the call to help sup-ply the blood bank for patients in our hospitals,” said Toni Gough, Donor Recruitment Representative for United Blood Services. “All the bank employees worked really hard this year and the competition was fi erce. Each bank wanted the trophy to be in their lobby for the next year. Most of all, each bank wanted to do good for their community.”

Gough said all the banks gave a valiant effort, but this year’s bragging rights went to Renasant Bank.

“Renasant recruited the most successful donors this time,” said Gough. “They will get to show off the ‘TRAVE-LIN’ Trophy in their lobby for the next year, and of course, have the bragging rights and the choice of where they want to park the bloodmobile for the next drive.”

Participating banks in this years battle included Bancorp-South, CB&S, Commerce Na-tional, Regions, Renasant and Trustmark who all participated

by recruiting their customers, friends and family to come and donate blood for their bank.

“Even though this year’s bat-tle is over, I have already heard the battle is on for next year,” added Gough. “A fun, friendly competition never hurt any-one, and I know these other banks who joined in this year will work hard to get the tro-

phy from Renasant at the next annual Battle of the Banks.”

Gough said she appreciates everyone who participated in the event this year for all their hard work and dedication.

“Those who helped in any capacity, from the ones re-cruiting the donors, to the em-ployers who allowed their do-nors time away from their job

to come and donate, and espe-cially the actual donors them-selves, I say thank you. The do-nations at this drive has saved and/or touched the lives of 57 patients in our local hospitals.”

(Anyone interested in host-ing a drive, or needing more information about blood do-nations, can contact Gough at 662-842-8871.)

Crossroads blood donors showing supportBY JOSEPH MILLER

[email protected]

Pam Gann (left) and Becky Faulkner of Renasant Bank and Toni Gough of United Blood Ser-vices are all smiles after Gough presents the Sixth Annual “Battle of the Banks” award trophy to the two bank representatives Thursday afternoon.

Daily Corinthian

Page 2: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, December 21, 2013

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Supporters of the fiber campaign gathered at City Hall Friday morning with Joe Reardon, former mayor of Kansas City, Kansas, and Jared Baumann of C Spire.

stable community with older homes — not necessarily a growth spot.

Once fi ber lit up in the fi berhood, “Young people from the Kansas City metropolitan area and as far away as Boston and California and other places moved to that neigh-borhood to rent a house and start their tech business in that neigh-borhood,” he said. “They named

themselves the Kansas City Start-up Village. The city didn’t do any-thing to incent that whatsoever. All we did was encourage this infra-structure, and now we have small businesses being created.”

The local team is looking at ways to build momentum in the three Corinth fi berhoods.

Corinth School District Super-intendent Lee Childress believes it is time to light a spark under the

effort if any of Corinth’s three fi -berhoods are to reach the required numbers.

“If this doesn’t happen within, in my opinion, six months or less, it’s not going to happen,” he said. “If we don’t have a plan in place that will promote this effort, and is a plan that we’re going to work, then we will never get there. We’ve got ideas, but we don’t have a plan that is ready to go.”

FIBER

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

sary,” said the street com-missioner. “We hope to have all the concrete work up to par in the next week or so after the paving. All the curb and gutter that was in disrepair has been replaced.”

The paving projects will include milling wherever possible to get the road surface back down to gut-ter height.

Some of the upcoming work will be intended to enhance the development happening in downtown south of the railroad tracks.

“We feel like the next step is for the city to come in and improve the infra-structure in those areas to keep the growth moving down there,” said Verdung.

Mayor Tommy Irwin said making the area more attractive is a big step in selling investment in its development.

Apart from the bond is-sue work, projects on the agenda included resur-facing the spot on Bunch Street where repairs were recently done to the box culvert where Town Creek crosses and also a repair on Mason-Saint Luke Road.

who lost their lives on these hallowed grounds while fi ghting for what they believed in. This leg-islation will preserve our history for future genera-tions and encourage all to travel to West Tennessee to see it fi rsthand.”

The National Park Ser-vice has already deter-mined these battlefi elds are nationally signifi cant and

in need of preservation and protection, and the major-ity of the land included in this legislation is currently owned by the State of Ten-nessee or the Civil War Trust, which would speed the process of including these areas in the system.

Fallen Timbers is the third day of the Battle of Shiloh, while Davis Bridge at Pocahontas is the third day of the Battle of Corinth.

STREETS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

PARK

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

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Page 3: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, December 21, 2013

Today is Saturday, Dec. 21, the 355th day of 2013. There are 10 days left in the year. Winter arrives at 12:11 p.m. Eastern time. Today’s Highlight in History:

 On Dec. 21, 1913, what’s regarded as the first

newspaper crossword puzzle was published in the New York World. Created by journalist Arthur Wynne, it was billed as a “Word-Cross Puzzle.”

 On this date:

In 1620, Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower went ashore for the first time at Plymouth, Mass.

In 1861, President Abraham Lincoln signed a congressional act authorizing the Navy Medal of Honor.

In 1937, Walt Disney’s first feature-length animated cartoon, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” had its world premiere in Los Angeles.

In 1942, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Williams v. North Carolina, ruled 6-2 that all states had to recognize divorces granted in Nevada.

In 1945, Gen. George S. Patton died in Heidel-berg, Germany, of injuries from a car accident.

In 1958, Charles de Gaulle was elected to a seven-year term as the first president of the Fifth Republic of France.

In 1968, Apollo 8 was launched on a mission to orbit the moon.

In 1971, the U.N. Security Council chose Kurt Waldheim to succeed U Thant as Secretary-Gen-eral.

In 1976, the Liberian-registered tanker Argo Merchant broke apart near Nantucket Island, off Massachusetts, almost a week after running aground, spilling 7.5 million gallons of oil into the North Atlantic.

In 1988, 270 people were killed when a ter-rorist bomb exploded aboard a Pam Am Boeing 747 over Lockerbie, Scotland, sending wreckage crashing to the ground.

Ten years ago:

The government raised the national threat level to orange, indicating a high risk of terrorist attack (it was lowered back to yellow on Jan. 9, 2004). More than 150 people were killed in mudslides in the Philippines.

Today in history

Middle school age girls in Corinth are getting ready for the fi rst ever pom program to hit the Crossroads area.

Corinth’s All Star Pom squad was developed by a former University of Memphis Pom girl by the name of Lynda Boswell.

“I decided to develop a middle school age pom program here in Corinth when I realized there were no pom teams offered for

middle school age girls,” said Boswell. “I think it would be a great program and already have much interests.”

Boswell will be the owner and choreographer for the team. She was a former UDA instruc-tor and currently works with pom teams across the country. She is also a choreographer for the National Basketball As-sociation (NBA) and the National Football League (NFL) teams.

“Corinth houses sev-eral talented high school teams,” added Boswell. “I believe for that to contin-ue, the younger girls need good training before they try out in high school”.

The team is set for prac-tice at the Contemporary Arts Center in downtown Corinth.

Co-owners Trika Smith and Volante Jones-John-son said the All Star Pom squad will be very benefi -cial to the community.

“Such a program will

help prepare young ladies for our local high school dance teams by enhanc-ing the quality of dancers available,” Smith said.

The team is open to any interested girl in the fi fth through eighth grade.

A registration/meeting will be held today at the Contemporary Arts Cen-ter.

(For more information call coach Lynda Boswell at 901-541-5444 or email at [email protected].)

Woman begins pom squad for young girlsBY JOSEPH MILLER

[email protected]

JACKSON — Gov. Phil Bryant has issued an ex-ecutive order that says the state and not the federal government will set aca-demic standards for Mis-sissippi schools.

The Republican Bryant said this week that Mis-sissippi would not give up its right to set the curricu-lum and the standards for its public schools.

“We have made tre-mendous progress in en-acting improvements in our public education sys-tem, and we will continue pursuing what works for Mississippi children,” Bryant said in the order.

A spokesman for Bry-ant told the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal that the executive order does not block the enact-ment of Common Core.

In a news release, Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves and the two Republican chairmen of the Education commit-tees, Gray Tollison in the Senate and John Moore in the House, voiced sup-port for Bryant’s action.

It also got support from state Superintendent of Education Dr. Carey Wright.

“I am pleased that Gov. Bryant supports higher ac-ademic standards for Mis-sissippi’s students. Over the past three years, the Mississippi Department of Education has been providing professional de-velopment to educators across the state in prepara-tion for higher standards.

“School districts have developed the curriculum around Common Core State Standards and have implemented these more

rigorous learning goals in classrooms. The federal government hasn’t done any of that. Our teachers and school leaders across the state have done the hard work to make this happen,” Wright said in a statement.

Mississippi, 44 other states and the District of Columbia have adopted Common Core standards, which supporters say are designed to better pre-pare American students for college and careers.

Common Core propo-nents also say it establish-es uniform benchmarks that can put America on a level educational playing fi eld with other countries.

Opponents call it a federal takeover of edu-cation. They say parents were never consulted on the standards, which

were forced on teachers too abruptly.

Though there was little controversy over Missis-sippi’s initial adoption of Common Core, the stan-dards have been under increasing attack by a group of Republican state senators. Those sena-tors have held meetings across the state to rally opposition and have led supporters to local school board meetings to pres-sure those boards.

The issue is expected to be debated when the Leg-islature convenes Jan. 7 in Jackson.

The Clarion-Ledger re-ports House Education Committee Chairman John Moore, R-Brandon, in a statement Monday, said lawmakers would likely “further codify” the points in Bryant’s order.

Bryant: State will run its schoolsAssociated Press

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

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

Willie Walkercirculation manager

[email protected]

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

E-mail:[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

To Sound Off:email :

[email protected] 287-6111

Classified Adv. 287-6147

Mark Boehlereditor

[email protected]

Page 4: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Saturday, December 21, 2013www.dailycorinthian.com

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

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

Willie Walkercirculation manager

[email protected]

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

E-mail:[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

To Sound Off:email :

[email protected] 287-6111

Classified Adv. 287-6147

Mark Boehlereditor

[email protected]

Mark Boehler, editor

I received an e-mail this week from a col-league. It was titled “Why Santa is Evil.”

I was a bit shocked. I am kind of fond of the jolly old fellow myself. It made me aware for the fi rst time just how many people deeply re-sent the commercialization of Christmas.

Having been a lifelong supporter of Santa and since he is far too busy right now to re-spond personally, I feel it is my obligation to answer each allegation the best I can.

1. Santa places materialism above the true reason for the holiday. We live in a material world. God created this material world. He didn’t give us physical life to suffer. He gave us life so we could live it abundantly. The point is not to disavow the material world, but simply to keep it in its proper perspective and not to make idols of our material possessions.

2. Santa teaches that you don’t have to work to get things. Some jolly fat man will come in and give it to you. This would be called grace. When the successful rich man asked Jesus what he could do to earn his way into heaven, Jesus told him it was easier for a camel to walk through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to earn his way into heaven. You don’t “earn” your way into heaven. It is given to you by the grace of God. It is a gift, just like the gifts from Santa. We try to be good because we love San-ta and want to please him, but we inevitably fail. But Santa brings us toys anyway.

3. Santa teaches children they should be good for some reward rather than because it’s simply the correct thing to do. Every kid knows he’s been bad just as every man knows he is a sinner. Yet we are still rewarded with eternal blessings just because we believe. This teaches us the fundamental truth of Christi-anity – it is not earned through good works but given to us even though we don’t deserve it. This is why kids love Santa. He comes on Christmas anyway because they believe.

4. Santa teaches poor children that although they have been good all year they still get noth-ing, yet the child who has been a brat all year at school but who has parents of means gets all the toys in the world. Shows Santa, if real, is quite unfair and not up to the hype. As Paul said, not one of us is worthy. There is not one child out there who has been good all year long. As for rich kids getting more presents, that doesn’t bring them more joy. King Solo-mon, who had everything, lamented that none of it mattered. All glory went to God.

5. Teaches children, once they realize Santa is a hoax, that it is OK to lie – their parents lied to them for years about Santa. I am completely lost on this one. Santa a hoax? Who perpetu-ates such nonsense? I am 55 years old and I can guarantee you that Santa Claus is real. First of all, I have seen Santa on innumerable occasions with my own eyes. As a child, I sat in his lap many times and told him what I want-ed for Christmas. He pretty much delivered every time. I never got everything I wanted but I always got far more than I deserved.

When Jesus commanded his disciples to spread the good news, he told them to use salt and light. Paul also referenced salt, imploring Christians to season their words with salt.

Salt is a spice. It spices up food, making the food more enjoyable to eat. Light illuminates, making a dark world bright and full of color.

Santa adds salt and light to Christmas for our children. Santa makes this time of cel-ebrating the birth of Jesus more fun, more colorful. If there is one fundamental aspect to Santa Claus, it is that of unearned gifts. Is not that the essence of Christianity?

God tried making a list and checking it twice. That didn’t turn out too well. In his cre-ative glory, God came up with a new plan. He, through his son, became human and shed his own blood for the forgiveness of our sins. It was the ultimate gift from the ultimate bene-factor. We didn’t deserve it.

If anything, Santa is a proxy for Jesus, teach-ing children in a simple way the meaning of unearned grace. As they grow older, their fond memories of Christmas Day joy and presents under the tree can make them better relate to Christ’s promise of everlasting life. You just have to believe with all your might.

Santa teaches the simple meaning of unearned grace

Prayer for today

A verse to share

“Neo-isolationism is the direct product of foolish globalism. ... Compared to people who thought they could run the universe, or at least the globe, I am neo-isolationist and proud of it.”

Those are not the words of an old America Firster, but the declaration of that icon of the liberal establishment Walter Lippmann in 1967, a year before he endorsed Richard Nixon.

In 1968, it was Nixon urg-ing we stay the course in Vietnam, as Sens. Eugene McCarthy and Robert Ken-nedy were clamoring for re-treat and swift withdrawal.

In 1972, it was Democratic nominee George McGovern who would run on the neo-isolationist slogan “Come Home, America!” and win the endorsement of the New York Times and Washington Post.

Today, neo-isolationism, bred of that “foolish global-ism” of which Lippmann wrote, has made a come-back. For the fi rst time since polling began in 1964, it is the dominant sentiment of the nation.

According to a new Pew poll, 52 percent of Ameri-cans believe “the U.S. should mind its own business in-ternationally and let other countries get along the best they can on their own.” Only 38 percent disagree.

Asked if the United States

should think less in “in-ternational terms but concentrate more on our national problems,” A m e r i c a n s agree by 80-16, or a ratio of 5-to-1.

As Max Fisher of the Washington Post writes, this sentiment manifest itself de-cisively in the uprising last summer against U.S. inter-vention in Syria. Red line or no red line, the people told Obama, we want no part of Syria’s civil war. It is not our war. Obama belatedly agreed.

The roots of the new iso-lationism are not diffi cult to discern. There is, fi rst, the end of the Cold War, the liberation of the captive na-tions of Europe, the dissolu-tion of our great adversary, the Soviet Empire, and the breakup of the Soviet Union. The Cold War, our war, was over. Time to come home.

The Bushes and Bill Clin-ton said no.

So we let the New World Order crowd have its run in the yard. We invaded Pana-ma, intervened in Haiti and Mogadishu, launched Des-ert Storm to liberate Kuwait, bombed Serbia for 78 days to force it to surrender its cradle province of Kosovo.

Came then the blowback of 9/11, following which we had the Afghan war to over-throw the Taliban and create a new democracy in the Hin-du Kush, the invasion and occupation of Iraq to strip Saddam Hussein of weap-ons of mass destruction he did not have, and the air war on Libya.

Others may celebrate the fruits of these wars but con-sider the costs:

A decade of bleeding with 8,000 U.S. dead, 40,000 wounded, $2 trillion sunk, Iraq and Libya disintegrat-ing in tribal, civil and sectar-ian war, Afghanistan on the precipice, and al-Qaida no longer confi ned to Tora Bora but active in Pakistan, Libya, Iraq, Yemen and Syria.

While America was caught up in these wars, China swept past Britain, France, Germany and Japan to emerge as the second larg-est economy on earth. Us-ing her $250-$300 billion annual trade surpluses with the United States, she has been locking up resources across Africa, Latin Ameri-ca, Australia and Asia.

Now Beijing has declared its own Monroe Doctrine to encompass the East and South China seas and all islands therein and to chal-lenge the United States for hegemony over the Western Pacifi c.

Consider, now, what

America was up to this past week.

Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland was in Kiev, egging on protest-ers demanding the resigna-tion of the elected president, should he choose a Russia-led customs union over the EU.

Will someone explain ex-actly what business it is of the United States which eco-nomic union Ukraine choos-es to join, or not join?

Now, President and Mrs. Obama and Vice President Biden have, on the high moral ground that Russia has outlawed LBGT propa-ganda, declared they will not attend the Sochi winter Olympics.

Yet, are we not courting Iran? Did not Obama bow to the king of Saudi Arabia? When was the last time they had a gay pride parade in Riyadh, Tehran, Mecca or Qom?

How can a nation as polar-ized morally and paralyzed politically as ours lead the world? It cannot. The people sense what the elites cannot see.

The American Century is over. Time to restore the re-public.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Pat Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, au-thor, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcaster.)

Why neo-isolationism is soaring

Anyone offended by pub-lic displays of Christmas needs to see a psychiatrist. Are we clear on this? You are a loon if the sight of baby Jesus arouses anger or sadness in you. Get help.

This brings us to the gov-ernor of Rhode Island, Lin-coln Chafee. He recently told me on national televi-sion that the reason he will not use the word “Christ-mas” in describing the state Christmas tree is that the word might offend non-Christians. The governor calls the state-purchased symbol a “holiday tree.”

My reply to the governor was that by excluding the word “Christmas,” he might be offending the 73 percent of Americans who describe themselves as Christian, not to mention the 2.2 bil-lion Christians worldwide. Chafee chafed when he heard that but had no an-swer.

And then the governor did a very interesting thing: He announced the light-ing of the “holiday tree” in Providence a full 30 min-utes before the cord was plugged in. Very few Rhode

I s l a n d e r s even knew about the tree lighting be-cause it was done so sur-reptitiously. Chafee did that because he feared p r o t e s t o r s would do what they did

last year: sing Christmas carols at the lighting. And we can’t have that, now, can we?

Jon Stewart and his mer-ry band of elves will tell you that the so-called “War on Christmas” is a fi gment of the imagination, perhaps a result of indigestion after eating too much holiday pudding. Stewart’s posture is similar to what Ebene-zer Scrooge put forth when the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come told him he was bound for hell. I am chan-neling Charles Dickens to see whether the ghost can visit Stewart on Christmas Eve. I’ll let you know what happens.

There is something to the argument that there are

more important things to worry about than whether people like Christmas. But the assaults against the national holiday are an-noying, unnecessary and often disrespectful. I mean, here’s how bad it is in this country: A pastor in Arkan-sas canceled a play called “Merry Christmas, Charlie Brown” because some nutty atheist objected to pub-lic school kids seeing it on church grounds. So Char-lie, Snoopy and Linus were thrown under the bus by a Christian cleric. Good grief!

For all of you separation-of-church-and-state fans, here’s the deal: Jesus of Nazareth was a man. In fact, he was the most infl u-ential person ever born. A third of the world’s popu-lation has signed on to the Christian edicts: love God, and love your neighbor as yourself. That sounds like a good thing.

So, when President Grant honored Jesus by signing into law the national holi-day of Christmas in 1870, the nation certifi ed that a positive message of gener-osity and peace was worthy

of a day off. Pretty much ev-erybody was on board.

But not today. In our current state, the Thomas More Law Center has to litigate against attacks on Christmas every year. An-ti-religion zealots put up billboards in Times Square denouncing Christmas as a “myth.” Rabid secularists bridle at any mention of Jesus or his nice mom and dad.

To them I say: Peace on Earth and tough. You don’t like the federal holiday? Try to rescind it. Start with our pal Lincoln Chafee. See how far you get with that.

And by the way, Merry Christmas to all. Even you loons.

(Veteran TV news an-chor Bill O’Reilly is host of the Fox News show “The O’Reilly Factor” and author of the book “Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand in the Age of Obama.” To fi nd out more about Bill O’Reilly, and read features by other Creators Syndi-cate writers and cartoon-ists, visit the Creators Syn-dicate web page at www.creators.com.)

Merry Christmas to all, even you loons

BY WYATT EMMERICHGuest Columnist

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

Bill O’ReillyThe O’Reilly

Factor

Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known by God.

– Philippians 4:6

Almighty God, I pray that I may have the grace to penetrate the deep things of life and test their truth and greatness. May I have faith in thy power and train for the best which thou hast made possible for me to live. Help me to think and feel aright, that I may be thine to-day, and in the days of to-morrow may I still be thine, ever keeping bright mem-ories of past days. Amen.

Page 5: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, December 21, 2013

Nation Briefs State Briefs

Police chief resigns after DUI charge

JACKSON — Mississip-pi State University said Friday that its campus police chief has resigned, one day after she was charged with driving un-der the influence.

Georgia Lindley’s res-ignation is effective Dec. 31, and she will remain on paid leave until then, according to a news release from Bill Kibler, MSU’s vice president for student affairs. The news release did not mention the DUI.

Lindley had a blood al-cohol level of 0.13 when she was arrested on the DUI charge in Starkville just after 5 p.m. Thurs-day, according to a police report obtained by The Associated Press through a public records request. The legal limit for driving in Mississippi is 0.08.

Lindley didn’t immedi-ately respond to a mes-sage sent to an email address listed on the university’s website.

The police report said an officer was looking for Lindley’s Jeep Cherokee after getting a call about a possibly intoxicated driver and that he saw her Jeep drift onto the center line.

The report also said Lindley’s speech was “extremely slurred” when the officer stopped her and that she said “it is what it is” when told she was being taken to the police station for a sobri-ety test.

Lindley has worked on the university’s police force since 1979 and has been chief since July 2005, according to MSU’s website.

Musgrove to work as health scholar

JACKSON — Former Mississippi Gov. Ronnie Musgrove will work as a policy scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health in Balti-more.

The university says in a news release Thursday that Musgrove will help students and faculty

members understand how their work can be translated into public pol-icy on the national level and in the states.

Musgrove, a Demo-crat, was governor from January 2000 to January 2004, after serving one term as lieutenant gover-nor and two terms as a state senator from north Mississippi’s Panola County. He is an attorney in Ridgeland.

Associated Press

Obama may changerecords collection

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama suggested Friday that he may be ready to make some changes in the bulk col-lection of Americans’ phone records to allay the public’s concern about privacy.

Obama said he has not yet made any deci-sions about the Na-tional Security Agency’s collection programs. But among the dozens of recommendations he’s considering, he hinted that he may strip the NSA of its ability to store data in its own fa-cilities and instead shift that storage to the pri-vate phone companies.

“There may be anoth-er way of skinning the cat,” Obama said during a news conference.

His hint at conces-sions came the same week a federal judge de-clared the bulk collection program unconstitutional and a presidential advi-sory panel that included intelligence experts sug-gested reforms. Both the judge and the panel said there was little evidence any terror plot had been thwarted by the program, known as Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act.

“There are ways we can do it, potentially, that gives people greater as-surance that there are checks and balances — that there’s sufficient oversight and sufficient transparency,” Obama said. Programs like the bulk collection of phone records “could be rede-signed in ways that give you the same informa-tion when you need it without creating these potentials for abuse.”

The advisory panel offered 46 recommen-dations in the wake of public outrage over the government’s vast surveillance. The panel

recommended that the phone records be stored at the private phone companies, but it also called for the government to obtain permission from the Foreign Intelligence Sur-veillance Court in order to access them.

He did not address that option, which means the government could still have unfet-tered access to the data. He continued to defend the need for this program for national security. Obama can reject, accept or amend any of the recommen-dations, and he only spoke generally about the possible need for some changes, but not how much, if at all, the programs would change.

The federal judge who declared the NSA’s vast phone data collec-tion unconstitutional, Richard Leon, called the NSA’s operation “Orwellian” in scale and said there was little evi-dence that its gargan-tuan inventory of phone records from American users had prevented a terrorist attack. How-ever, he stopped his rul-ing Monday from taking effect, pending a likely government appeal.

Obama offered a broad defense of the surveillance programs revealed over the past six months after a former NSA systems analyst disclosed clas-sified materials. He insisted there has been no abuse of this infor-mation collected and stored on Americans. But he said he under-stands that the public is concerned about privacy.

 ‘I-55 Bandit’ pleads guilty to robbery

ST. LOUIS — The teenage serial bank robber dubbed by the FBI as the “I-55 Bandit”

for a series of crimes in five states pleaded guilty Friday in federal court.

Andrew Maberry, 19, of O’Fallon, Ill., entered the guilty plea to a bank robbery charge in U.S. District Court in St. Louis. A sentencing date was not set, but Maberry could face up to 20 years in prison.

Federal prosecutors say Maberry robbed 10 banks in five states dur-ing a spree that began in May and ended in Au-gust. Some of the early robberies in Missouri and Illinois were near In-terstate 55, prompting the nickname.

Maberry, who gradu-ated from high school in 2012 in suburban St. Louis, robbed banks in three Missouri towns, Arnold, Crystal City and Cape Girardeau. Four of the crimes occurred in Maryland, two in Bel Air and one each in Es-sex and Ocean City. He also robbed banks in Edwardsville, Ill., Hur-ricane, W.Va., and Jack-son, Tenn.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation noticed the trend and put out a news release on Sept. 10, seeking the public’s help in capturing the suspect. The FBI also used electronic bill-boards to post security camera photos of the crimes.

The outreach worked: Officials with the U.S. Attorney’s office in St. Louis said the FBI re-ceived numerous calls from people identifying Maberry as the sus-pect.

On the same day as the news release, Maberry called the FBI office in St. Louis and turned himself in.

The FBI said that in each of the crimes, the robber used a demand note and implied he was armed, though he didn’t show a weapon. No one was hurt.

Associated Press

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Page 6: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Obama: 2014 can be‘breakthrough year’

WASHINGTON — Citing strong progress on the economy, Presi-dent Barack Obama said at his annual year-end news conference Friday that 2014 “can be a break-through year for America” after a long season of recession and slow recovery.

Yet he suggested that given widespread criticism, he may alter the power of the National Security Agency to collect information on Americans.

And when it came to the univer-

sally panned roll out of his health care law, Obama conceded that “we screwed it up,” and said, “I’m going to be making appropriate adjustments once we get through this year.” It was unclear if he meant to signal high-level person-nel changes.

 Obama says 1 millionsigned up for health care

WASHINGTON — His health care plan facing a dicey transition, President Barack Obama said Friday that insurance sign-ups are surging now that the government’s website is working better for

consumers. But it was too soon to say the rollout has turned the corner.

More than 1 million people have enrolled since Oct. 1, Obama said at his end-of-the-year press conference. That’s more than two-and-a-half times the number on Nov. 30, when major fixes to the website were completed. At that point, only 365,000 had signed up through new federal and state markets offering subsidized pri-vate insurance.

“That is a big deal,” Obama said of getting coverage for uninsured people. “That’s why I ran for this office.”

Deaths

Jobs picture improves in November

JACKSON — Mississippi’s unemployment rate ticked down to 8.3 percent in November, as the state’s economy continued to progress slowly.

A separate survey shows state employer pay-rolls also rising.

Both sets of figures — adjusted to cancel out normal seasonal changes — were released Friday by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

It’s the lowest state jobless rate since January 2009, a point when the jobless rolls were surging.

Mississippi’s unemployment rate was 8.5 per-cent in October. The state jobless rate was 9 per-cent in November 2012.

The labor force fell by about 2,000 people.107,000 Mississippians were unemployed in

November, down from 109,000 in October and 120,000 in November 2012 State nonfarm pay-rolls rose by 2,000 people from October, and are about 20,000 above year-ago levels.

 Exhumed body is not ‘Jane Doe’

BAY ST. LOUIS — The state’s chief medical ex-aminer says the remains uncovered at a pauper’s grave site were not those of Jane Doe, an uniden-tified woman buried 15 years ago after she was struck by a vehicle in Hancock County.

The Sun Herald reports that Dr. Mark M. LeVaughn announced the findings in a letter filed in circuit court Friday. The letter says it is unlikely Jane Doe can be found without disturbing remains of others.

LeVaughn says the skeleton under Jane Doe’s headstone is that of a man who was about 6-feet-2 and had a full set of teeth.

Hancock County Coroner Jim Faulk believes Jane Doe is Nelda Louise Hardwick, a St. Charles, La., mother of four who was 34 when she disap-peared in 1993. Hardwick’s relatives have testi-fied they believe it’s her, too.

Faulk petitioned the court to have Jane Does body exhumed in an attempt to identify her.

“Since it was obvious that the remains were not of the person we anticipated, we immediately covered the grave and replaced the headstone,” LeVaughn said in his letter.

Jane Doe was buried in Rotten Bayou Cemetery, later renamed St. Joseph’s Cemetery. Through the years, someone apparently put a headstone over the supposed location of her grave, but it was not her plot.

The woman was found dead on Interstate 10 in Hancock County on May 8, 1998. No charges were filed related to the accident and she was never identified.

 Sentencing set in Social Security fraud

ABERDEEN — A federal judge has scheduled a Jan. 7 sentencing hearing for a woman charged with receiving more than $140,000 in Social Secu-rity benefits payments that she wasn’t entitled to.

The indictment in the case says Minnie Carr William received the money from 1982 to 2008 after concealing the death of Elizabeth Strong. The indictment doesn’t describe the relationship between the two women.

Williams pleaded guilty to one count.She will be sentenced in U.S. District Court in

Aberdeen.

Charles Rayford Wilbanks, Sr.KOSSUTH — Funeral services

Charles Rayford Wilbanks, Sr., 79, will be held on Monday, Dec. 23, 2013 at 2 p.m. at First Baptist Church in Corinth and burial will follow in Shiloh Cumberland Pres-

byterian Church Cemetery with Military Hon-ors.

He died in Jackson on Dec. 16, 2013.

He was born March 5, 1934, in Kossuth.

W i l b a n k s graduated from Alcorn County

Agriculture High School in Kos-suth, Mississippi and then attend-ed Mississippi College in Clinton and the University of Mississippi School of Law.

He served in the United States Army from 1956 – 1960. He was commissioned as Second Lieuten-ant and later promoted to First Lieutenant.

Wilbanks began practicing law in 1963, practicing both in Corinth and Kossuth. He was a member of the Mississippi Bar for 50 years. As an attorney he is remembered for working hard for his clients and often taking the diffi cult and un-popular stand. He also served as a municipal court judge for the town of Farmington.

Wilbanks taught at the Missis-sippi College of Law from 1977 to 1982 and in 1977 was named “Pro-fessor of the Year.”

He was inspired by the needs of his grandson, Christopher, he founded the National Leigh’s Dis-ease Foundation in 1988 to help sponsor medical research for this very rare disease, and to provide support for affected families. In

1996 the Foundation broadened its efforts merging with United Mitochondria Disease Foundation which now has more than 50 local chapters across the nation. Dur-ing his life he was always involved in and dictated to his church and served as deacon, Sunday school teacher and choir member.

Wilbanks is survived by his lov-ing wife of 56 years, Nancy Worley Wilbanks; four children, Angela Wilbanks Cossitt, Sandra Wil-banks Rives (Jay); Charles Ray-ford Wilbanks, Jr. (Alicia); and Jane Wilbanks Roberts (Mark); He was “Big Daddy” to nine ador-ing grandchildren, Justin Michael Rives (Cristie), Casey Cossitt Jones (Cliff); Molly Cossitt Clark (Todd); Allyce Wilbanks Majors (Adam); Ashley Cossitt Quick (Davis); Joey Roberts; Annaclaire Elizabeth Wil-banks; Abigail Louise Wilbanks, Jacob Lee Roberts; fi ve great-grandchildren, Mary Logan Clark; Jason Cade Rives; Henry Davis Quick; Rosey Kate Clark and Jor-dan Blake Rives.

Wilbanks was preceded in death by his parents, Sam Cleton Wilbanks and Annie Cleo Parish Wilbanks; his sister, Betty Wil-banks Campbell and two grand-sons, Christopher Blake Rives and Charles Rayford Wilbanks III (Chase).

Bro. Dennis Smith will be offi ci-ating.

Visitation will be Monday, Dec. 23, 2013 from 12:30 p.m. until ser-vice time at First Baptist Church.

Pallbearers will be Justin Rives, Todd Clark, Adam Majors, Davis Quick, Rob Tadlock and Cliff Jones.Honorary pallbearers will be Jerry Monroe, Jerry Jones, Bro. Carroll Talley, Taft Little, Larry James, Hoyt Alexander Glen Parker and Leiman Wilbanks.

In lieu of fl owers we ask that you consider a donation to “But

God Ministries” , which is a 501 (c) (3) non-profi t organization, that shares the love of Jesus Christ through building sustainable com-munities around the world. It is currently building a sustainable community near Ganthier, Haiti. The work in Haiti was a passion of Wilbanks.

You can send donations to 140 North State Street, Jackson, Mis-sissippi 39202.

Visit www.magnoliafuneral-home.net to send your condolenc-es.

Jerry LipfordFuneral services for Jerry Lip-

ford are set for 2 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 22, 2013 at McPeters Inc. Fu-neral Directors Chapel with burial at Henry cemetery.

Lipford died Dec. 20, 2013 at his residence.

He was born October 5, 1940 to the late Cecil and Ruby Lipford. He was a graduate of Corinth High School, owner of Northside Pack-age Store for almost 50 years.

He was a member of North Corinth Baptist Church, he enjoyed hunting, fi shing and NASCAR.

Survived by his wife of 50 years, Linda Rogers Lipford of Corinth; son Brent Lipford of Corinth; daughters Lisa (Charlie) Hobby of Belfast, Tenn.; Lori (Keith) Mc-Intyre of Corinth; grandchildren Hunter Hobby, Ben and Blake Mc-Intyre; mother-in-law Sarah Rog-ers; brothers in-laws and sister-in-laws Tom (Marianne) Rogers, Scotty (Jennifer) Rogers, sister-in-law and brother-in-law Kim (Da-vid) Bass.

Preceded in death by his parentsRev. Scotty Rogers will offi ciate.Family will receive friends Satur-day from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. until service time.

McPeters Funeral Home is in charge of her arrangements

Wilbanks

Susie ArnettIUKA — Susie Arnett, 76, died on

Friday, Dec. 20, 2013 at the Tisho-mingo Community Living Center in Iuka.

No services to be announced.She was survived by one brother,

Richard Brown (Carolyn) of Iuka; and sisters, Louise Kingen (Billy) of Cherokee, Ala., Clara Cook (John) of San Diego, Calif, Pauline Her-man (Tommy) of Iuka, Faye Cooper (Jackie) of Iuka, Linda Patterson (Danny) of Hattiesburg, and Judy Cassell of Petal.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Charlie and Ida Rowin

Brown; two brothers, O’Neal Brown and Jimmy Lee Brown; and sister, Mary Ann Arnold.

Tommie J. WatsonTISHOMINGO — Funeral services

for Tommie Jean Watson, 79, has been set for 11 a.m. on Monday, Dec. 23, 2013 at Cutshall Funeral Home with burial at Tishomingo Baptist Church.

Watson died on Friday, Dec. 20, 2013 at North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo.

Watson was formerly employed at McCune’s Restaurant, which was owned by her family.

She later worked for Boeing at Cape Canaveral and then in the banking industry where she was a loan offi cer and retired as a vice-president.

She is survived by her brother, Sam McCune (Fredda) of Tishom-ingo; two sisters, Mary McSwain of Center, Texas and Frances Church (Dean) of Rio Vista, Calif.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Thomas Ray and Allois Davis McCune.

Visitation is set for 10:30 a.m. until service time at the church on Monday, Dec. 23, 2013.

Bro. Robbie Crane will offi ciate.

State Briefs

Associated Press

Nation Briefs

Associated Press

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Check out our great selection of collegiate items!

Tues. - Sat. 10 AM - 5 PM662-287-9181 • 611 Cruise St., Corinth, MS 38834

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2301 Virginia Lane,Corinth, MS

287-6070Hours: Tues-Fri10:00am-5:30pm

Sat 10:00am-4:00pm

HOLIDAY SHOPPING GUIDE

ALL ARRANGEMENTS , WREATHS AND TEARDROPS ON SALE FOR YOUR LAST

MINUTE DECORATING

CLOSING DECEMBER 23RD AT 3:00

Monday-Saturday: 10:30am -5:00pmSunday: 1:00 pm-4:00 pm

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

Come and bring a friendRachel Huff, Owner/Designer

ALL ARRANGEMENTS WWWWREATHS AND

The Holiday HouseThe Holiday House

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Basic Manicure and Pedicure $45.00*Spa Manicure and Spa Pedicure $60.00*

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Ole Brick Salon1010 West Quitman • Iuka, MS (next to Shell Station)

662-423-5300 • Walk-ins Welcome

Page 7: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

First instinct is usually the right oneAsk Annie

ACROSS1 Raises one’s

spirits?7 Reasons for

seeing double?15 Rapt16 Easter activities17 Whistler, at times18 Paintball kin19 __ du Diable20 Loser’s word22 Surgical tube23 Point of Grant

Wood’s “AmericanGothic”?

25 Hulu offering28 Mythical archer29 Ahead31 Headache cause33 Marie Antoinette

and Louise deLorraine

35 “It is the __, andJuliet is the sun”

36 Org. thatemployed JuliaChild during WWII

39 The first oneappeared on thisdate in 1913

42 QVC rival43 Nitpick44 Deprive

fraudulently, inslang

45 Figure-hugging47 Milne mom48 “Just the __, ...”51 Host53 Sailor’s port54 West Indian

sorcery56 Didn’t recover

from a trip?58 Bit of a chuckle59 Bunk62 Buck’s Fizz

cousin64 “Hold your

horses!”65 Silvery food fish66 Pitched67 “A Writer’s Life”

author

DOWN1 Backyard party

decoration2 Routine fare?3 Care4 Tosspot

5 Cultivate6 “A rose is a rose

is a rose is arose” author

7 Finish a 39-Across without asingle mistake,e.g.

8 Market chainbased inChicago

9 OT enders, often10 Crops of the

pick?11 1519 Yucatán

arrival12 Doctor13 The plain in

Spain14 Certain NCOs21 French

possessive24 Ages26 Like much folk

mus.27 “Roman Holiday”

vehicle30 “Home Alone”

actor32 Unable to go

further34 What a scythe

may cut

36 MontrealProtocolconcern

37 Games withmany runs

38 Calm40 “For here __

go?”41 Fervor45 Big spreads46 34th POTUS48 First name in

skating

49 In theneighborhood of

50 Epitome ofbrightness

52 Title loc. in five’80s films

55 Cure57 Bean named for

a capital60 DOD arm61 Tester or Boxer:

Abbr.63 Tillis of country

By Marti DuGuay-Carpenter(c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 12/21/13

12/21/13

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Crossword

Variety7 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, December 21, 2013

Page 8: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, December 21, 2013

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

16,194.72 12,883.89 Dow Industrials 16,221.14 +42.06 +.26 +23.79 +22.977,304.49 5,187.17 Dow Transportation 7,282.26 +75.80 +1.05 +37.23 +36.35

537.86 443.69 Dow Utilities 488.34 +4.60 +.95 +7.78 +6.7110,229.57 8,298.36 NYSE Composite 10,196.07 +44.54 +.44 +20.76 +20.76

2,471.19 2,186.97 NYSE MKT 2,369.33 +3.08 +.13 +.58 +.734,081.78 2,951.04 Nasdaq Composite 4,104.74 +46.60 +1.15 +35.94 +35.871,813.55 1,398.11 S&P 500 1,818.32 +8.72 +.48 +27.49 +27.14

19,276.43 14,700.70 Wilshire 5000 19,370.19 +134.08 +.70 +29.18 +28.911,147.00 825.14 Russell 2000 1,145.95 +20.49 +1.82 +34.92 +35.15

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.48f 10 65.65 -.35 +23.6AT&T Inc 1.84f 25 34.30 -.15 +1.8AirProd 2.84 24 111.30 +.38 +32.5AlliantEgy 1.88 15 51.77 +.51 +17.9AEP 2.00f 19 46.72 +.34 +9.5AmeriBrgn .94f 38 69.82 +.19 +61.7ATMOS 1.48f 17 45.21 +.92 +28.7BB&T Cp .92 17 36.68 +.09 +26.9BP PLC 2.28f 11 46.86 +.25 +12.5BcpSouth .20 29 25.18 +.60 +73.2Caterpillar 2.40 18 88.93 +1.39 -.8Chevron 4.00 10 122.78 -.44 +13.5CocaCola 1.12 21 40.04 +.18 +10.5Comcast .78 21 50.94 +.16 +36.3CrackerB 3.00 21 108.63 +1.25 +69.0Deere 2.04 10 90.08 +.67 +4.2Dillards .24 12 95.58 +3.14 +14.1Dover 1.50 17 94.56 +1.39 +43.9EnPro ... 36 56.43 +.70 +38.0FordM .40 12 15.42 +.12 +19.1FredsInc .24 1 17.52 +.31 +31.6FullerHB .40 25 50.67 +1.19 +45.5GenCorp ... 9 17.83 +.19 +94.9GenElec .88f 20 27.36 +.04 +30.3Goodyear .20 16 22.93 +.15 +66.0HonwllIntl 1.80f 22 89.55 +.91 +41.1Intel .90 14 25.06 -.09 +21.5Jabil .32 9 16.12 -.14 -16.4KimbClk 3.24 22 105.18 +.80 +24.6Kroger .66f 13 39.70 +.03 +52.6Lowes .72 23 47.97 -.42 +35.1McDnlds 3.24f 17 96.51 +1.37 +9.4

MeadWvco 1.00 36 35.85 -.31 +12.5OldNBcp .40 16 15.37 +.16 +29.5Penney ... ... 8.32 +.36 -57.8PennyMac 2.28 8 22.68 +.33 -10.3PepsiCo 2.27 19 81.81 +.15 +19.6PilgrimsP ... 10 16.56 +.48 +128.7RadioShk ... ... 2.62 -.03 +23.6RegionsFn .12 12 9.63 +.04 +35.1SbdCp 3.00 16 2748.98 +25.98 +8.7SearsHldgs ... ... 45.94 +.45 +11.1Sherwin 2.00 25 182.15 +2.00 +18.4SiriusXM .05e 50 3.52 +.09 +21.8SouthnCo 2.03 18 41.06 +.27 -4.1SPDR Fncl .32e ... 21.61 +.13 +31.8TecumsehB ... ... 8.42 -.03 +83.0TecumsehA ... ... 8.69 +.10 +88.1Torchmark .68 14 77.85 +.85 +51.1Total SA 3.23e ... 59.54 +.57 +14.5USEC rs ... ... 4.47 +.43 -66.3US Bancrp .92 13 40.05 +.01 +25.4WalMart 1.88 15 77.43 +.19 +13.5WellsFargo 1.20 12 44.96 -.06 +31.5Wendys Co .20 87 8.68 +.22 +84.7WestlkChm .90 15 117.00 +1.87 +47.5Weyerhsr .88 28 31.40 +.13 +12.9Xerox .23 12 11.88 +.10 +74.2YRC Wwde ... ... 14.97 -.02 +121.8Yahoo ... 35 40.12 -.08 +101.6

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 16 14.32 +.20AK Steel dd 7.16 -.13AbtLab s 20 37.84 -.19AbbVie n 19 52.59 -.04AberFitc 18 32.91 +.71Accenture 16 80.55 +1.04Achillion dd 3.13ActivsBliz 17 17.87 +.21AdobeSy cc 59.26 +1.13AMD dd 3.69 +.04Agnico g 13 25.19 +.06AkamaiT 31 47.70 +1.10AlcatelLuc ... 4.37 -.17Alcoa 28 9.94 -.03Allergan 32 107.73 +3.97AlliData 29 250.50 -.50AlldNevG 9 3.21 +.02Allstate 15 53.77 +.52AlphaNRs dd 6.43 -.17AlpVident q 24.25 -.06AlteraCp lf 22 31.50 +.24Altria 19 38.57 +.35Amarin ... 2.00 +.41Amazon cc 402.20 +7.01Ambarella 35 27.94 +2.87Ambev n ... 7.12AMovilL 13 22.65 +.14AmAirl n ... 26.33 +.21ACapAgy 5 19.87 +.40AmCapLtd 10 15.21 +.62AEagleOut 15 14.38 +.22AmExp 21 87.57 +1.16AmIntlGrp 24 51.03 +.67ARltCapPr dd 12.60 +.02Amgen 18 114.03 +1.43Anadarko 23 78.77 -.25AnglogldA ... 11.24 -.11Annaly 3 10.10 +.23Anworth 7 4.17 -.03Apple Inc 14 549.02 +4.56ApldMatl 82 17.19 +.31ArcelorMit dd 16.84 +.06ArchCoal dd 4.30ArchDan 19 43.36 -.43ArenaPhm dd 5.57 -.03AriadP dd 6.43 +.91ArmHld ... 53.85 +1.56ArmourRsd 3 3.74 +.02Arris dd 23.48 +1.66Atmel dd 7.44 +.07AuRico g dd 3.42 +.01Autodesk 46 49.19 +1.15AvanirPhm dd 3.44 +.57B2gold g ... 2.08 +.06BakrHu 22 53.81 +.62BcoBrad pf ... 11.98 -.50BcoSantSA ... 8.74 +.05BkofAm 21 15.60 -.15BkNYMel 20 33.88 +.01B iPVix rs q 44.62 +.29BarrickG dd 16.58Baxter 17 68.39 +1.33BerkH B 16 115.60 -.76BestBuy dd 39.66 -1.69BlackBerry dd 7.22 +.97Blackstone 27 30.24 +.11Boeing 24 136.67 +1.50BostonSci 23 11.84 +.22BoydGm dd 11.34 +.33BrMySq 32 53.37 -.47Broadcom 32 28.57 -.17BrcdeCm 19 8.61 +.06BrkfldOfPr 9 19.13 -.21Brunswick 39 45.37 -.01Buenavent 8 10.64 -.34CA Inc 14 32.93 +.03CBS B 21 60.70 -.02CH Robins 16 56.54 +.06CSX 15 28.08 +.20CVS Care 19 70.06 -.08CYS Invest dd 7.47 +.20CblvsnNY 14 17.21 +.05CabotOG s 58 38.43 +.12Cadence 8 13.56 +.01Calpine 40 19.13 -.18Cameron 20 58.71 +.62CampSp 35 42.70 -.50CdnSolar dd 29.48 -1.64CapOne 11 74.73 +1.09Carlisle 29 78.40 +.91CarMax 23 48.08 -4.97Carnival 28 38.85 +.80CelldexTh dd 23.32 +.34Cemex ... 11.67 +.25Cemig pf ... 7.54 -.06CenterPnt 30 23.25 +.49CntryLink dd 31.04 -.32ChambSt n ... 7.85 +.20CheniereEn dd 43.04 +1.59ChesEng 21 27.11 -.10ChicB&I 29 81.69 +.71Chicos 19 18.66 +.14Chimera ... 3.19 +.07CienaCorp dd 22.69 +.47Cisco 11 21.13 +.06Citigroup 13 52.21 +.33CliffsNRs dd 24.21 -.66CobaltIEn dd 15.43 +.59CocaCE 19 43.14 +.75ColgPalm s 27 64.74 +.50ColumPT n cc 25.05 +.93ConAgra 18 33.54 +.07ConocoPhil 11 69.88 +.80ConEd 16 54.77 -.08Corning 14 17.43 +.01CovantaH 54 17.68 +.15Covidien 19 66.80 -.62CSVInvNG q 7.73 -.07CSVelIVST q 32.95 -.25CrstwdMid cc 23.95 +1.02CrwnCstle cc 71.98 -1.02CypSemi 74 10.33 +.24DCT Indl dd 7.17 +.06DDR Corp dd 15.35 +.20DR Horton 15 20.58 +.42Darden 19 51.09 +.07Darling 20 20.54 +.23DeltaAir 10 27.55 +.04DenburyR 14 16.18 -.24Dndreon dd 3.32 -.06Dentsply 19 48.43 +.10DevonE dd 60.94 +.19DirecTV 13 66.28 +.35DxGldBll rs q 24.75 +.10DxFinBr rs q 22.33 -.44DxSCBr rs q 17.96 -.86DxFnBull s q 87.21 +1.73DxSCBull s q 73.43 +3.22Discover 11 54.00 +.10DishNetw h 36 56.49 +.66Disney 21 72.40 -.57DollarTree 20 55.45 +.15DomRescs 36 64.55 +.05DonlleyRR 17 18.67 +.49DowChm 45 43.78 -.12DryShips dd 3.69 -.04DuPont 12 62.55 -.16DukeEngy 20 69.50 +.31Dynavax dd 1.82 +.03

E-F-G-HeBay 26 54.58 +1.18EMC Cp 20 24.54 +.52EastChem 12 75.93 +.92Eaton 20 75.72 +1.24EldorGld g 26 5.49 +.06ElectArts 33 23.54 +.12EmersonEl 20 69.34 +.68EmpDist 17 22.87 +.28EmpStR n ... 15.55 +.60EnCana g 15 17.89 -.16EndoPhrm dd 65.54 -.41ENSCO 10 54.98 -.53ExcoRes 5 5.14 +.15Exelon 15 27.26 +.04ExeterR gs ... .53 +.01ExpScripts 31 68.96 +1.08ExxonMbl 10 98.68 -.75Facebook cc 55.12 +.07Fastenal 30 45.62 -2.39FedExCp 28 142.71 +3.02FedInvst 18 28.21 -.07FidlNFin 14 31.40 +.02FifthThird 10 20.81 +.14FstHorizon cc 11.38 -.03FstNiagara 15 10.42 +.20FstSolar 12 55.87 -.89FirstEngy 18 32.61 +1.01Flextrn 23 7.53 +.15FootLockr 15 41.11 +1.43ForestOil 13 3.76 +.17

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

AriadP 1453596 6.43 +.91S&P500ETF 1439400 181.56 +1.05Facebook 1432454 55.12 +.07BlackBerry 1323345 7.22 +.97BkofAm 1194935 15.60 -.15SiriusXM 784123 3.52 +.09iShEMkts 764420 40.48 -.06GenElec 759936 27.36 +.04RiteAid 750097 4.99 -.18SPDR Fncl 641108 21.61 +.13

52-Week Net YTD 52-wkHigh Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 2,358Declined 763Unchanged 83

Total issues 3,204New Highs 285New Lows 41

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,903Declined 719Unchanged 105

Total issues 2,727New Highs 266New Lows 27

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

Oramed n 10.65 +3.50 +49.0TowerSemi 6.50 +2.01 +44.8Responsys 27.40 +7.88 +40.3CntlVyCm 12.69 +2.19 +20.9AvanirPhm 3.44 +.57 +19.7AriadP 6.43 +.91 +16.5HK Tv 6.62 +.94 +16.5Limoneira 27.21 +3.72 +15.8BlackBerry 7.22 +.97 +15.5Cyclacel pf 9.29 +1.19 +14.7

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

ChinaHGS 4.00 -.99 -19.8Pedevco rs 2.00 -.40 -16.7Ku6Media 2.59 -.46 -15.1CelatorPh 3.00 -.47 -13.5OceraTh rs 11.52 -1.73 -13.1ChiAutL rsh 3.34 -.43 -11.4EuroTech 5.19 -.61 -10.5InterDig 28.77 -3.23 -10.1TibcoSft 22.01 -2.47 -10.1DS Hlthcre 2.26 -.24 -9.6

AQRMaFtStrI 10.51 ... +7.5AllianzGINFJAllCpValIns15.67 +0.05 +26.7NFJSmCVIs 34.57 +0.38 +29.8American BeaconLgCpVlInv x 26.75 -0.22 +31.9LgCpVlIs x 28.21 -0.30 +32.4American CenturyEqIncInv 8.53 +0.03 +18.0InvGrInv 32.12 +0.21 +27.2UltraInv 33.59 +0.27 +34.6ValueInv 8.13 +0.04 +29.0American FundsAMCAPA x 26.95 -1.51 +35.0BalA m 24.14 +0.13 +20.3BondA m 12.46 +0.03 -1.6CapIncBuA m 57.62 +0.24 +13.1CapWldBdA m20.13 +0.03 -2.8CpWldGrIA m 44.49 +0.22 +22.6EurPacGrA m 48.50 +0.23 +17.7FnInvA m 51.11 +0.33 +29.3GrthAmA m 42.33 +0.31 +31.7HiIncA m 11.34 ... +6.1IncAmerA x 20.38 -0.09 +16.7IntBdAmA m 13.45 ... -1.0IntlGrInA x 34.24 -1.40 +15.5InvCoAmA m 38.79 +0.21 +30.2MutualA x 34.27 -0.74 +25.9NewEconA m 40.09 +0.19 +41.0NewPerspA m 38.92 +0.24 +24.5NwWrldA m 58.94 +0.05 +8.2SmCpWldA m 50.73 +0.39 +27.1TaxEBdAmA m12.38 ... -2.7WAMutInvA x 38.81 -0.90 +29.8AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.49 ... -2.3ArtisanIntl d 29.74 +0.08 +22.1IntlVal d 35.94 +0.19 +27.5MdCpVal 26.55 +0.17 +33.5MidCap 46.99 +0.68 +35.6BBHTaxEffEq d 21.07 +0.09 +24.6BaronGrowth b 71.47 +0.93 +36.6BernsteinDiversMui 14.29 ... -1.2IntDur 13.41 +0.03 -2.0BlackRockEngy&ResA m32.44 +0.21 +12.1EqDivA m 23.82 +0.08 +22.0EqDivI 23.87 +0.09 +22.3GlobAlcA m 21.05 +0.07 +12.9GlobAlcC m 19.51 +0.07 +12.1GlobAlcI 21.15 +0.08 +13.2HiYldBdIs x 8.20 -0.10 +8.9HiYldInvA x 8.20 -0.10 +8.6BuffaloSmallCap d 36.79 +0.81 +42.1CausewayIntlVlIns d 15.74 +0.09 +20.9Cohen & SteersRealty 62.76 +0.43 +3.0ColumbiaAcornIntZ 45.52 +0.26 +19.3AcornZ 36.71 +0.43 +28.8DivIncZ 18.04 +0.08 +26.6DivOppA m 10.00 +0.03 +23.7StLgCpGrZ 19.02 +0.29 +42.6DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.42YrGlbFII 10.01 ... +0.55YrGlbFII 10.88 ...EmMkCrEqI 19.13 ... -4.3EmMktValI 27.12 ... -5.5EmMtSmCpI 19.73 ... -3.2IntCorEqI 12.38 ... +19.3IntSmCapI 19.60 ... +27.5IntlSCoI 18.56 ... +23.1IntlValuI 19.16 ... +19.0RelEstScI 25.72 ... +0.6USCorEq1I 16.12 ... +33.1USCorEq2I 15.93 ... +34.1USLgCo 14.24 ... +29.4USLgValI 30.94 ... +37.3USMicroI 19.40 ... +39.9USSmValI 34.21 ... +37.6USSmallI 29.99 ... +37.6USTgtValInst 22.02 ... +38.3DWS-ScudderGrIncS 22.87 +0.20 +35.2DavisNYVentA m 40.58 +0.21 +31.9NYVentY 41.06 +0.21 +31.8Dodge & CoxBal 97.02 +0.32 +26.7Income 13.56 +0.03 +0.9IntlStk 42.07 +0.24 +23.5Stock 165.39 +0.66 +37.7DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.85 ... -0.1DreyfusAppreciaInv 51.62 +0.24 +19.1DriehausActiveInc 10.76 ... +2.9FMILgCap 20.41 -1.29 NAFPACres d 32.53 +0.10 +20.4NewInc d 10.27 ... +0.7Fairholme FundsFairhome d 42.32 +0.38 +34.6FederatedStrValI 5.78 +0.02 +20.2FidelityAstMgr20 13.28 +0.04 +4.8AstMgr50 17.38 +0.08 +12.9Bal 22.48 +0.11 +19.1BlChGrow 62.42 +0.53 +37.7CapApr 35.57 +0.33 +33.7CapInc d 9.81 +0.02 +9.0Contra 94.81 +0.62 +32.3DivGrow 34.82 +0.24 +29.5DivrIntl d 35.97 +0.19 +22.0EqInc 57.70 +0.26 +25.5EqInc II 24.18 +0.11 +26.7FF2015 12.98 +0.05 +10.8FF2035 13.70 +0.08 +18.6FF2040 9.65 +0.06 +19.0Fidelity 42.01 +0.32 +27.1FltRtHiIn d 9.96 ... +3.8Free2010 15.52 +0.06 +10.2Free2020 15.92 +0.07 +12.0Free2025 13.56 +0.07 +14.9Free2030 16.49 +0.09 +16.2GNMA 11.26 +0.03 -1.8GrowCo 118.15 +1.37 +35.6GrowInc 27.36 +0.14 +31.0HiInc d 9.36 ... +6.4IntMuniInc x 10.19 -0.02 -1.4IntlDisc d 39.40 +0.23 +21.5InvGrdBd 7.71 +0.01 -1.4LatinAm d 30.51 -0.17 -19.3LevCoSt d 42.40 +0.36 +32.5LowPriStk d 48.64 +0.31 +32.1Magellan 90.98 +0.55 +33.3MidCap d 38.82 +0.46 +36.5MuniInc x 12.68 -0.03 -3.0NewMktIn x 15.61 -0.21 -6.4OTC 76.12 +1.19 +44.1Puritan 21.00 +0.10 +19.0ShTmBond 8.58 -0.01 +0.5SmCapDisc d 30.82 +0.40 +36.3StratInc 10.87 +0.01 +0.5Tel&Util 21.68 +0.16 +18.7TotalBd 10.48 +0.02 -0.6USBdIdx 11.42 +0.03 -1.8USBdIdxInv 11.42 +0.03 -1.9Value 101.62 +0.89 +34.5Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 25.99 +0.23 +30.7NewInsI 26.43 +0.24 +31.1StratIncA x 12.12 -0.15 +0.1Fidelity SelectBiotech d 179.05 +3.79 +63.2HealtCar x 185.24 -14.01 +53.6Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 64.39 +0.31 +30.1500IdxInstl 64.39 +0.31 +30.1500IdxInv 64.38 +0.31 +30.0ExtMktIdAg d 52.48 +0.71 +35.8IntlIdxAdg d 39.60 +0.24 +18.6TotMktIdAg d 53.20 +0.35 +31.1First EagleGlbA m 52.72 +0.24 +13.6OverseasA m 22.74 +0.07 +9.8FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 11.74 ... -4.5FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 6.94 ... -3.8GrowthA m 64.21 +0.46 +27.5HY TF A m 9.78 ... -6.8

Name P/E Last Chg

4,836,198,725Volume 2,999,796,886Volume

14,400

14,800

15,200

15,600

16,000

16,400

J DJ A S O N

15,680

16,000

16,320Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,221.14Change: 42.06 (0.3%)

10 DAYS

Income C m 2.42 +0.01 +12.6IncomeA m 2.39 ... +12.8IncomeAdv 2.38 +0.01 +13.1NY TF A m 11.15 ... -4.6RisDvA m 47.86 +0.26 +27.7StrIncA m 10.57 ... +3.0USGovA m 6.48 ... -1.5FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z x 33.14 -1.89 +23.5DiscovA x 32.66 -1.80 +23.1QuestZ x 17.91 -2.08 NAShares Z x 27.88 -0.18 +26.0SharesA x 27.66 -0.11 +25.7FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A x 8.09 -0.37 +23.8GlBond C m 13.07 -0.02 +1.0GlBondA m 13.04 -0.02 +1.4GlBondAdv 12.99 -0.02 +1.6GrowthA m 24.43 +0.09 +27.3WorldA x 19.01 -0.91 +27.2Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 13.37 +0.06 +21.5GES&SUSEq 58.68 ... +32.9GMOEmgMktsVI d 10.88 -0.03 -7.2IntItVlIV 24.87 +0.12 +21.4QuIII 24.44 +0.07 +22.9QuVI 24.45 +0.08 +23.1Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.14 +0.01 +7.6MidCpVaIs 43.72 +0.41 +30.8HarborBond 11.97 -0.01 -1.3CapApInst 55.97 +0.54 +35.9IntlInstl 69.01 +0.29 +13.5IntlInv b 68.36 +0.30 +13.1HartfordCapAprA m 45.72 +0.24 +38.5CpApHLSIA x 58.35 -0.28 +36.0INVESCOCharterA m 21.51 +0.12 +26.3ComstockA m 23.38 +0.12 +33.0EqIncomeA m 10.55 +0.04 +23.7GrowIncA m 26.64 +0.14 +32.0HiYldMuA m 9.03 -0.01 -5.8IvyAssetStrA m 31.41 +0.03 +22.0AssetStrC m 30.56 +0.03 +21.1JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.53 ... -1.5CoreBondA m 11.53 ... -1.8CoreBondSelect11.52 ... -1.4HighYldSel 8.01 ... +6.8LgCapGrA m 31.13 ... +29.8LgCapGrSelect31.14 ... +31.1MidCpValI 34.63 ... +30.0ShDurBndSel 10.90 ... +0.1USLCpCrPS 27.21 ... +33.7JanusBalT 29.65 +0.07 +18.3GlbLfScT 42.35 +0.54 +53.4PerkinsMCVT 23.00 +0.16 +23.9John HancockLifAg1 b 15.99 +0.11 +24.0LifBa1 b 15.42 +0.06 +14.9LifGr1 b 16.24 +0.09 +20.6LazardEmgMkEqInst d19.19 +0.05 -1.8Legg Mason/WesternAggGrowA m178.31 +2.03 +42.2CrPlBdIns 11.24 +0.03 -0.7Longleaf PartnersLongPart 33.37 +0.09 +30.3SmCap 32.03 +0.25 +28.7Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.10 +0.04 +5.5BdR b 15.04 +0.04 +5.2Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 15.41 +0.08 +29.8BondDebA m 8.14 +0.01 +7.4ShDurIncA m 4.56 ... +1.8ShDurIncC m 4.59 ... +1.2MFSIntlValA m 33.04 +0.11 +24.6IsIntlEq 21.84 +0.11 +15.4TotRetA m 17.43 +0.04 +17.7ValueA m 32.58 +0.11 +33.0ValueI 32.73 +0.11 +33.3MainStayHiYldCorA m 6.04 +0.01 +5.9SelEqI 48.45 +0.11 +27.4Manning & NapierWrldOppA 8.81 +0.05 +15.6Matthews AsianChina d 22.32 -0.05 +4.4India d 15.92 +0.19 -8.0MergerMerger b 16.33 +0.02 +3.2Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.57 +0.02 +0.6TotRtBd b 10.57 +0.01 +0.3Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 44.24 +0.46 +35.1Munder FundsMdCpCrGrY 43.12 +0.48 +31.7NatixisLSInvBdY 11.89 +0.04 +1.3LSStratIncA m 16.25 +0.04 +10.1LSStratIncC m16.36 +0.04 +9.4Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 61.10 +0.77 +35.5NorthernHYFixInc d 7.49 +0.01 +7.5StkIdx 22.48 +0.11 +30.0OakmarkEqIncI 32.25 +0.17 +22.7Intl I 25.75 +0.20 +26.5Oakmark I 62.38 +0.29 +34.6Select I 39.25 +0.14 +33.8OberweisChinaOpp m 16.82 -0.13 +51.3Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 17.61 +0.10 +21.8LgCpStr 12.22 +0.05 +22.8OppenheimerDevMktA m 37.18 -0.04 +6.0DevMktY 36.73 -0.04 +6.3EqIncA m 30.99 +0.20 +29.5GlobA m 77.02 +0.56 +23.9IntlBondA m 6.08 ... -4.3IntlGrY 37.06 +0.21 +21.8IntlGrowA m 37.24 +0.21 +21.5MainStrA m 47.54 +0.31 +29.0SrFltRatA m 8.42 ... +6.1StrIncA m 4.13 ... -0.5Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 14.30 ... -10.9OsterweisOsterStrInc d 11.82 ... +6.4PIMCOAAstAAutP 10.21 ... -5.7AllAssetI 12.32 +0.02 +0.3AllAuthA m 10.20 ... -6.0AllAuthIn 10.21 ... -5.6ComRlRStI 5.58 +0.04 -13.4DivIncInst 11.50 ... -1.0EMktCurI 10.10 ... -2.8EmMktsIns 10.73 -0.01 -6.5ForBdInstl 10.52 -0.02 +0.8HiYldIs 9.61 +0.01 +5.6LowDrIs 10.34 -0.01 +0.2RERRStgC m 3.43 +0.04 -13.3RealRet 11.03 +0.03 -8.6ShtTermIs 9.86 ... +0.9TotRetA m 10.72 ... -2.1TotRetAdm b 10.72 ... -1.9TotRetC m 10.72 ... -2.8TotRetIs 10.72 ... -1.7TotRetrnD b 10.72 ... -2.0TotlRetnP 10.72 ... -1.8PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 29.31 +0.44 +53.0ParnassusEqIncInv 36.25 +0.32 +31.8PermanentPortfolio 47.34 +0.22 -2.7PioneerPioneerA x 38.55 +0.12 +30.9PrincipalDivIntI 11.79 ... +15.2L/T2020I 14.24 ... +14.6L/T2030I 14.43 ... +17.6LCGrIInst 12.41 ... +34.6Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 39.85 +0.38 +26.1PutnamGrowIncA m 19.53 +0.10 +33.1NewOpp 78.33 +0.79 +34.4RoycePAMutInv d 14.47 +0.22 +32.9PremierInv d 21.66 +0.23 +25.1RussellStratBdS 10.97 +0.01 -1.3

Schwab1000Inv d 47.85 +0.26 +30.4S&P500Sel d 28.36 +0.13 +30.0ScoutInterntl x 36.36 +0.02 +10.4SelectedAmerican D 49.26 +0.28 +31.0SequoiaSequoia 218.03 +0.19 +31.6T Rowe PriceBalanced 22.97 +0.12 +18.0BlChpGr 63.81 +0.54 +39.8CapApprec 25.40 +0.09 +21.2EmMktStk d 31.76 -0.14 -6.1EqIndex d 48.96 +0.24 +29.8EqtyInc 32.32 +0.11 +27.7GrowStk 51.86 +0.41 +37.3HealthSci 56.98 +0.69 +49.2HiYield d 7.15 +0.01 +8.9InsLgCpGr 26.91 +0.26 +42.6IntlBnd d 9.51 +0.02 -3.8IntlGrInc d 15.16 +0.10 +19.7IntlStk d 15.95 +0.05 +11.8LatinAm d 29.31 -0.35 -17.9MidCapE 40.08 +0.44 +35.9MidCapVa 29.63 +0.31 +29.7MidCpGr 71.74 +0.77 +34.9NewAsia d 15.77 +0.04 -2.0NewEra 43.54 +0.29 +13.4NewHoriz 45.56 +0.74 +46.8NewIncome 9.34 +0.02 -1.9OrseaStk d 9.91 +0.07 +18.9R2015 x 14.18 -0.44 +14.1R2025 x 15.18 -0.38 +19.2R2035 x 16.04 -0.32 +23.0Rtmt2010 x 17.67 -0.54 +11.0Rtmt2020 x 20.16 -0.61 +16.7Rtmt2030 x 22.29 -0.55 +21.4Rtmt2040 x 23.06 -0.47 +24.0Rtmt2045 x 15.37 -0.29 +24.0ShTmBond 4.79 ... +0.3SmCpStk 43.85 +0.73 +35.5SmCpVal d 49.79 +0.81 +31.2SpecGrow x 23.58 -0.79 +26.4SpecInc x 12.77 -0.15 +3.0Value 33.28 +0.20 +35.3TCWEmgIncI 8.43 +0.01 -4.8TotRetBdI 10.06 +0.01 +1.8TIAA-CREFEqIx 13.88 +0.09 +31.2IntlE d 18.70 +0.12 +18.7TempletonInFEqSeS 22.87 +0.11 +16.8ThornburgIncBldA m 20.58 +0.09 +14.6IncBldC m 20.57 +0.08 +13.8IntlValA m 30.58 +0.07 +12.4IntlValI 31.26 +0.08 +12.8Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.30 +0.11 +17.5VALIC Co IStockIdx 33.85 +0.16 +29.7Vanguard500Adml 168.42 +0.81 +30.1500Inv 168.38 +0.82 +30.0BalIdxAdm 27.43 +0.13 +17.1BalIdxIns 27.43 +0.13 +17.1CAITAdml 11.28 ... -0.8CapOpAdml 105.16 +0.84 +40.8DevMktsIdxIP 116.38 +0.75 +18.8DivGr 20.95 +0.06 +29.0EmMktIAdm 33.41 -0.07 -6.6EnergyAdm 123.93 +0.37 +15.9EnergyInv 66.04 +0.20 +15.9EqInc 29.25 +0.11 +27.8EqIncAdml 61.30 +0.22 +27.9ExplAdml 94.35 +1.42 +41.9Explr 101.47 +1.53 +41.7ExtdIdAdm 62.36 +0.84 +36.0ExtdIdIst 62.37 +0.85 +36.0ExtdMktIdxIP 153.93 +2.08 +36.1FAWeUSIns 97.02 +0.46 +11.7GNMA 10.47 +0.03 -1.8GNMAAdml 10.47 +0.03 -1.7GlbEq 23.30 +0.16 +24.8GrthIdAdm 47.18 +0.33 +30.0GrthIstId 47.18 +0.33 +30.0GrthIstSg 43.69 +0.31 +30.0HYCor 6.03 ... +4.3HYCorAdml 6.03 ... +4.4HltCrAdml 77.82 +0.55 +41.2HlthCare 184.49 +1.30 +41.1ITBondAdm 11.25 +0.02 -2.9ITGradeAd 9.72 +0.02 -0.9InfPrtAdm 25.84 +0.09 -8.3InfPrtI 10.53 +0.04 -8.2InflaPro 13.16 +0.04 -8.4InstIdxI 167.31 +0.80 +30.1InstPlus 167.33 +0.81 +30.1InstTStPl 41.82 +0.27 +31.4IntlGr 22.74 +0.12 +19.8IntlGrAdm 72.29 +0.37 +19.9IntlStkIdxAdm 27.32 +0.12 +12.3IntlStkIdxI 109.26 +0.51 +12.3IntlStkIdxIPls 109.27 +0.50 +12.3IntlStkIdxISgn 32.77 +0.15 +12.3IntlVal 37.17 +0.18 +19.2LTGradeAd 9.80 +0.11 -4.5LTInvGr 9.80 +0.11 -4.6LifeCon 18.15 +0.07 +8.5LifeGro 27.54 +0.14 +19.4LifeMod 23.17 +0.10 +13.9MidCapIdxIP 147.55 +1.23 +32.9MidCp 29.80 +0.24 +32.6MidCpAdml 135.41 +1.13 +32.8MidCpIst 29.91 +0.25 +32.8MidCpSgl 42.73 +0.36 +32.8Morg 25.19 +0.18 +32.6MorgAdml 78.03 +0.56 +32.7MuHYAdml 10.51 ... -3.2MuInt 13.73 ... -1.6MuIntAdml 13.73 ... -1.5MuLTAdml 11.01 ... -3.0MuLtdAdml 11.03 ... +0.6MuShtAdml 15.86 ... +0.6PrecMtls 9.91 +0.07 -37.8Prmcp 91.01 +0.71 +37.7PrmcpAdml 94.36 +0.73 +37.9PrmcpCorI 19.14 +0.09 +34.0REITIdxAd 92.92 +0.71 +2.3REITIdxInst 14.38 +0.11 +2.3STBondAdm 10.52 -0.01 +0.2STBondSgl 10.52 -0.01 +0.2STCor 10.71 ... +1.0STFedAdml 10.71 ... -0.2STGradeAd 10.71 ... +1.1STIGradeI 10.71 ... +1.1STsryAdml 10.69 ... +0.1SelValu 27.74 +0.21 +39.7SmCapIdx 52.41 +0.74 +35.3SmCapIdxIP 151.60 +2.14 +35.5SmCpIdAdm 52.51 +0.74 +35.5SmCpIdIst 52.51 +0.74 +35.5SmCpIndxSgnl 47.31 +0.67 +35.5SmCpValIdxAdm41.85 +0.53 +34.2Star 24.08 +0.15 +16.6StratgcEq 29.89 +0.30 +39.3TgtRe2010 26.16 +0.08 +8.4TgtRe2015 14.99 +0.06 +12.0TgtRe2020 27.31 +0.12 +14.6TgtRe2030 27.78 +0.15 +18.8TgtRe2035 17.04 +0.10 +20.9TgtRe2040 28.34 +0.16 +22.3TgtRe2045 17.79 +0.10 +22.3TgtRe2050 28.23 +0.17 +22.3TgtRetInc 12.70 +0.03 +5.4Tgtet2025 15.86 +0.08 +16.7TotBdAdml 10.62 +0.02 -1.8TotBdInst 10.62 +0.02 -1.7TotBdMkInv 10.62 +0.02 -1.9TotBdMkSig 10.62 +0.02 -1.8TotIntl 16.34 +0.08 +12.2TotStIAdm 45.90 +0.30 +31.3TotStIIns 45.90 +0.30 +31.2TotStISig 44.30 +0.29 +31.3TotStIdx 45.89 +0.31 +31.1TxMCapAdm 93.46 +0.51 +31.3ValIdxAdm 29.49 +0.10 +30.9ValIdxIns 29.49 +0.10 +30.9WellsI 24.76 +0.08 +8.8WellsIAdm 59.98 +0.20 +8.9Welltn 39.33 +0.14 +18.4WelltnAdm 67.93 +0.24 +18.5WndsIIAdm 63.94 +0.30 +28.2Wndsr 20.07 +0.11 +33.5WndsrAdml 67.73 +0.37 +33.6WndsrII 36.03 +0.17 +28.1VirtusEmgMktsIs x 9.40 -0.08 -7.8Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 10.74 +0.07 +31.5CoreInv A m 7.14 +0.03 +31.1SciTechA m 15.85 +0.25 +55.0YacktmanFocused d 25.68 +0.08 +25.1

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

Fortinet 58 18.43 +.55Fossil Grp 22 118.85 +.04FrankRes s 17 56.25 +.58FMCG 12 35.69 +.50FrontierCm 67 4.69 -.04FuelCellE dd 1.39 -.04GATX 17 51.14 +.22GT AdvTc dd 8.37 -.17GalenaBio dd 4.03 -.03Gannett 16 27.81 +.33Gap 14 38.57 +.28GenDynam dd 93.37 +.71GenGrPrp cc 20.40 +.23GenMills 18 49.30 -.06GenMotors 17 40.99 +.69Genworth 15 15.40 +.12Gerdau ... 7.84 -.38GeronCp dd 4.84 +.09GileadSci s 41 74.66 +1.23Gogo n ... 24.27 -1.27GoldFLtd ... 3.09 +.07Goldcrp g dd 20.92 +.08GoldStr g dd .39 -.04GoldmanS 13 175.16 +.39GoodrPet dd 17.82 +1.39GraphPkg 23 9.36 +.05GreenMtC 24 77.25 +1.00Groupon dd 11.68 +.03GpFnSnMx ... 14.29 +.04HCA Hldg 15 46.89 +1.23HCP Inc 18 36.08 +.28HalconRes 21 3.90 +.11Hallibrtn 17 50.54 +1.12HarmonyG ... 2.40 +.04HartfdFn 37 36.07 +.55HltCrREIT cc 53.11 +.53HeclaM dd 2.73 +.07Hertz 37 25.75 +.34Hess 7 80.17 -.37HewlettP 9 27.79 -.25HimaxTch 90 13.44 +.74HollyFront 9 48.39 +1.08Hologic dd 22.42 -.03HomeDp 22 80.04 +.09HopFedBc 25 11.23 +.03HostHotls 66 19.07 +.20HovnanE 42 5.85 +.21HudsCity 24 9.20 +.06HuntBncsh 13 9.56 +.01

I-J-K-LIAC Inter 24 67.15 -1.34IAMGld g 9 3.24 -.03iShGold q 11.65 +.11iShBrazil q 43.41 -.65iShJapan q 11.81 +.04iSTaiwn q 13.88 +.04iShSilver q 18.62 +.13iShChinaLC q 37.32 -.27iSCorSP500 q 183.53 +.97iShEMkts q 40.48 -.06iSh20 yrT q 104.25 +1.58iS Eafe q 65.07 +.37iShiBxHYB q 93.11 +.06iSR1KGr q 84.72 +.62iShR2K q 113.93 +1.89iShREst q 63.47 +.49iShHmCnst q 23.61 +.41Idacorp 16 52.71 -.11Illumina cc 104.92 +1.41ImmunoCll dd .81 +.08Incyte dd 51.34 +1.23Infinera dd 9.23 +.18IngrmM 12 23.12 +.09InovioPhm dd 2.15 +.02IBM 12 180.02 -.20IntlGame 17 17.44 +.19IntPap 18 48.35 -.50Interpublic 24 16.90 +.12Intuit 26 75.28 -.41Invesco 19 35.83 +.58ItauUnibH ... 13.13 -.44Ivanhoe rsh dd .59 +.07JDS Uniph 43 12.56 +.20JPMorgCh 13 57.70 +.47JetBlue 23 8.57 +.10JohnJn 20 92.09 +.11JohnsnCtl 29 50.31 +.15JonesGrp dd 14.87 +.74JnprNtwk 29 21.77 +.57KB Home 41 16.91 +.44KKR Fn 9 12.24 +.23KeryxBio dd 13.02 -.34Keycorp 15 13.32 +.05Kimco 43 20.21 -.01KindMorg 30 35.22 +.46Kinross g dd 4.28 -.13KiteRlty dd 6.60 +.24KodiakO g 24 11.35 +.32Kohls 13 54.95 +.33KraftFGp 17 54.00 +.82LSI Corp 84 10.94 +.01LVSands 28 76.57 -.52LennarA 17 37.38 +.34LexiPhrm dd 1.80 +.05LibtyIntA ... 28.15 -.07LillyEli 11 50.20 +.06LinnCo ... 29.62 +.61LionsGt g 21 31.11 +.90LockhdM 15 144.21 +1.22Lorillard s 15 49.90 +.12LaPac 11 17.97 +.12LyonBas A 14 78.60 +.64

M-N-O-PMFA Fncl 9 7.30 +.14MGIC dd 8.33 +.16MGM Rsts dd 22.72 +.11Macys 15 52.27 +.04MagHRes dd 7.26 +.55MannKd dd 5.01 +.08MarathnO 14 35.16 +.25MarathPet 13 87.26 +1.55MktVGold q 20.53 +.03MV OilSvc q 47.55 +.41MktVRus q 28.64 -.01MartMM 42 96.17 +.19Masco 57 21.69 +.02Mattel 19 45.52 +.45MaximIntg 19 28.32 +.39McDrmInt dd 8.31 +.07McGrwH 22 76.00 +2.18McEwenM dd 1.73 -.04Medtrnic 15 56.89 -.28MelcoCrwn 61 37.85 -.45Merck 30 49.32 +.53MetLife 19 53.12 +.85MKors 37 83.88 -.04Microchp 37 43.42 +.73MicronT 22 22.17 +.55Microsoft 14 36.80 +.55Mohawk 37 141.44 -2.06Molycorp dd 4.90 +.13Mondelez 23 34.67 +.24Monsanto 25 113.73 -.08MonstrWw dd 6.76 +.47MorgStan 17 30.93 +.07Mosaic 12 45.72 +1.04Mylan 28 42.51 -.02NII Hldg dd 2.57 +.08NRG Egy 16 28.40 -.02NXP Semi ... 43.52 +.42Nabors 38 16.26 +.11NBGrce rs ... 5.58 -.15Navistar dd 37.16 -2.30NetApp 25 40.49 -.15NwGold g 20 4.91 +.04NewResd n ... 6.94 +.15Newcastle ... 5.53 +.14NewellRub 20 31.64 -.46NewmtM dd 22.64 -.12NewsCpA n ... 17.75 +.39NextEraEn 19 84.82 +1.09NiSource 20 32.86 +1.36NielsenH 27 45.35 +.22NikeB s 26 77.34 -.92NobleCorp 16 36.32 -.18NokiaCp ... 7.81 +.08NordicAm dd 9.06 +.46NorTrst 20 60.81 +1.53NorthropG 13 112.26 +1.71NStarRlt dd 13.07 +.15NorwCrL n 41 34.52 +1.36Novavax dd 4.93 +.25NuanceCm dd 14.91 -.06Nvidia 20 15.69 +.31OCZ Tech dd .07 +.01OGE Egy s 18 33.78 +.41OcciPet 16 92.80 -.13OfficeDpt 41 5.35 +.07Oi SA ... 1.62 -.01OldDomFrt 24 52.67 +.93OldRepub 20 16.81 +.58OnSmcnd dd 7.85 +.06OpkoHlth dd 9.03 +.22

Oracle 15 36.37 -.23Orexigen dd 5.49 +.10Organovo dd 9.01 +.65PG&E Cp 25 40.56 +.34PPG 27 186.62 +1.32PPL Corp 12 29.68 +.35Pandora dd 28.00 -.20PattUTI 16 25.24 +.03Paychex 28 45.15 +.25PeabdyE dd 18.23 -.90PennVa dd 9.95 +.19PeopUtdF 20 14.64 +.09PetrbrsA ... 14.35 -.29Petrobras ... 13.34 -.23Pfizer 16 30.25 -.46PhilipMor 16 85.52 +.04Phillips66 13 74.03 +1.11PiperJaf 21 39.49 +1.41PitnyBw 28 22.40 +.34PlugPowr h dd 1.84 +.04Potash 14 31.80 +.43PS SrLoan ... 24.82 +.04PwShs QQQ q 86.50 +.87ProUltSP q 99.19 +.99ProShtR2K q 17.20 -.26PrUVxST rs q 18.48 +.28ProctGam 21 81.84 -.06ProUShSP q 30.68 -.38ProUShL20 q 76.24 -2.33PUSSP500 q 15.87 -.29ProspctCap ... 11.31 +.09PSEG 13 31.75 +.10PulteGrp 3 18.62 +.37

Q-R-S-TQEP Res 30 30.01 -.45Qualcom 19 72.91 +.48QuantaSvc 20 30.66 +.38QstDiag 11 53.52 +.73Questar 19 22.99 +.27QksilvRes dd 2.72 +.04RF MicD dd 4.95 +.08RadianGrp dd 13.93 -.04RltyInco 48 37.64 -.40RedHat 62 56.10 +7.10Regis Cp dd 14.81 +.75ReneSola dd 3.46 +.26Rentech dd 1.71 +.06Responsys cc 27.40 +7.88RetailProp dd 12.91 +.15RiteAid cc 4.99 -.18RymanHP 44 42.20 +.45SpdrDJIA q 162.01 +.52SpdrGold q 115.94 +1.12S&P500ETF q 181.56 +1.05SpdrHome q 32.14 +.40SpdrLehHY q 40.61 +.03SpdrRetl q 87.14 +.84SpdrOGEx q 67.73 +.95SpdrMetM q 39.40 -.35Safeway 18 33.08 +.26Salesforc s dd 53.72 +.65SanDisk 18 69.51 +.85SandRdge dd 5.79 +.14Sanofi rt ... .75 +.05Schlmbrg 17 87.27 +.80Schwab 39 25.61 +.03SeadrillLtd 17 39.19 +.65SeagateT 12 55.66 +3.17SiderurNac ... 5.89 -.16SilvStd g dd 6.57 -.07SilvWhtn g 15 19.74 -.01SiriusXM 50 3.52 +.09SolarCity ... 55.80 -1.10SthnCopper 13 27.45 +.42SwstAirl 22 18.86 +.24SpectraEn 22 34.16 +.27Sprint n ... 9.86 +.62SprottGold q 9.95 +.12SP Matls q 44.93 +.14SP HlthC q 54.91 +.28SP CnSt q 42.55 +.19SP Consum q 65.66 +.27SP Engy q 86.67 +.15SP Inds q 51.26 +.41SP Tech q 34.96 +.27SP Util q 37.83 +.37StdPac 6 8.43 +.23Staples 21 15.73 +.15Starbucks 34 77.66 +.51Stryker 27 74.72 +.87Suncor gs 12 34.08 -.12SunEdison dd 12.77 +.13SunstnHtl 43 13.31 +.10SunTrst 14 36.39 +.28Supvalu dd 7.02 +.15SusqBnc 14 12.80 +.29SwiftTrans 20 22.07 -1.49Symantec 20 22.51 -.48SynergyRs 58 9.25 -.25Synovus dd 3.52 +.07Sysco 22 36.45 +.19T-MoblUS n ... 31.00 +1.39TJX 21 62.49 -.06TaiwSemi ... 16.99 -.06TakeTwo dd 17.58 -.22TalismE g ... 11.47 -.18Target 17 62.49 +.34Teradata 20 44.78 +2.60Teradyn 24 16.73 +.16TeslaMot dd 143.24 +2.52Tesoro 17 56.16 -.23TevaPhrm 79 39.51 +.15TexInst 28 42.84 +.38Textron 22 37.29 +4.723D Sys s cc 86.42 +3.233M Co 21 136.72 +.31TibcoSft 43 22.01 -2.47TimeWarn 17 68.34 +.44TollBros 31 35.16 +.94TowerGp lf dd 2.65 +.10TowerSemi dd 6.50 +2.01TractSup s 34 74.92 +.85Transocn cc 47.00 -.15Travelers 12 89.18 +.39TriangPet 43 9.02 +.19TrinaSolar dd 13.46 -.41TripAdvis 55 83.13 +1.11TriQuint dd 7.99 +.0621stCFoxA ... 34.30 +.33Twitter n ... 60.01 +2.52TwoHrbInv 9 9.50 +.05TycoIntl dd 39.60 +.69Tyson 16 33.21 -.63

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUmpqua 20 18.94 +.34UtdContl dd 37.39 +.12UPS B 67 103.33 +.15US NGas q 21.79 +.04USSteel dd 27.95 -.69UtdTech 16 110.66 +1.16UtdhlthGp 14 73.35 +.96Vale SA ... 14.43 -.38Vale SA pf ... 13.28 -.40ValeroE 17 47.49 +.83VlyNBcp 15 9.99 +.17VangTSM q 94.33 +.62VangREIT q 65.52 +.40VangEmg q 39.95 -.08VangEur q 56.86 +.29Vantiv 38 31.76 +1.59Verisign 26 59.27 +1.14VerizonCm 68 48.08 -.35ViacomB 17 84.16 +.04Visa 29 215.97 -.11VMware 44 90.18 +2.83Vodafone ... 38.32 -.02VulcanM cc 57.34 +.18WPX Engy dd 20.14 +.54Walgrn 23 59.04 +2.10WalterEn dd 14.79 -.57WsteMInc 22 44.37 +.48WeathfIntl dd 15.17 +.26WellPoint 10 89.59 +.84WstAstMtg ... 16.98 +1.06WstnUnion 11 17.01 +.13WetSeal dd 2.64 +.10WholeFd s 40 59.27 +.52WmsCos 42 37.01 +.12Windstrm 31 8.24 +.09WiscEngy 18 41.56 +.33WisdomTr 57 17.25 +.59WTJpHedg q 50.00 +.08WT India q 17.11 +.54XOMA dd 6.70 +.40XcelEngy 15 28.21 +.06Yamana g 15 8.46 +.01YingliGrn dd 5.14 -.05Ziopharm dd 4.00 +.01Zoetis n ... 32.38 +.07Zogenix dd 3.09 -.06Zynga dd 4.00 -.06

The W

eek A

head

Consumer watch

The economy has been adding jobs at a faster clip. Has that made consumers more confident?

The latest University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey index should provide some insight. The November reading increased slightly from October. Analysts anticipate the final December reading, due out Monday, will be up from the previous month.

Home sales boost?

New home sales slowed this summer after mortgage rates started climbing in May.

Americans ramped up purchases of new homes in October by more than 25.4 percent, however, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 444,000. Did the trend extend into November? Find out on Tuesday, when the Commerce Department reports monthly data on sales of new homes.

Eye on unemployment

The Labor Department reports Thursday its weekly tally of the number of Americans seeking jobless benefits.

For the week ended Dec. 13, the number of people who applied for unemployment aid jumped 10,000 from the previous week to a seasonally adjusted 379,000, the highest since March. Most other recent job market data has been positive and economists generally expect unemployment benefits applications will soon fall back. Source: FactSet

Initial jobless claimsWeekly percent change, in thousands

est.

8 15 22 29 6 13Nov. Dec.

300

320

340

360

380

70

75

80

85

Source: FactSet

J J A S O N

est.84

Consumer Sentiment Index

Twitter may have garnered the most attention, but it was just one of 222 companies to make its initial public stock offering this year. That’s the most since 406 debuted in 2000.

It has been five years since the financial crisis dampened enthusiasm for IPOs. In 2008, only 31 companies began trading for the first time. Investor interest has since gained momentum as the major market indexes moved into record territory. The Dow

Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor’s 500 index both closed at an

all-time high on Friday.The IPO market was also less

volatile in 2013. In the past two years, IPO activity slowed as

concerns, such as the European debt crisis and Facebook’s troubled debut,

weighed on the market. IPO tracking firm Renaissance

Capital expects another strong year for IPOs in 2014.

’13’12’11’10’09’00

Number of IPOs

’13’00

Proceedsfrom IPOs

(billions)

Negative first day returns

Average first day return

Prosena (RNA)June 27 debut

Insys Therapeutics(INSY)

2013 debuts Best and worst performers since debut

Best in a decade The 2013 IPO market was the strongest in a decade, both in the number of companies that went public and the amount they raised. Here are some of the highlights from the year in IPOs.

17.3% 401.5%

26.6% -62.6%

May 2 debut

On the horizon Renaissance Capital

says these companies are potential

candidates to go public in 2014.

Checkers Drive-In hamburger chain

J. Crew apparel retailer

La Quinta hotel chain

Virgin America discount airline

Zoosk online dating website

406

125 128

222

63

$96.8

54.9

154

Trevor Delaney, J. Paschke • APSource: Renaissance Capital Data as of Dec. 18

IPOs growing again

Let’s schedule your year-end review.

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

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

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Member SIPC

Page 9: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

SATURDAY EVENING DECEMBER 21, 2013 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

I Want a Dog for Christmas

Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Castle “Murder, He Wrote”

Local 24 News

Big Bang Theory

Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

WREG # #One Smile at a Time Hawaii Five-0 “Kahu” 48 Hours (N) Channel

3 SatTitans All Access

(:06) Criminal Minds “Sex, Birth, Death”

QVC $ . Destination Gold Cmptrs-Tablets Sleep Number Cmptrs-Tablets Fine Italian Jewelry

WCBI $Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

Hawaii Five-0 “Kahu” 48 Hours (N) News (:35) Paid Program

(:05) White Collar “Bottlenecked”

WMC % %The Sing-Off Saturday Night Live News (:29) Saturday Night Live (N)

WLMT & >} › Wagons East! (94) Wagonmaster carries fed-up pioneers back home.

CW30 News at 9 (N) House of Payne

Meet the Browns

There Yet? Andy Griffith

WBBJ _ _I Want a Dog for Christmas

Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Castle “Murder, He Wrote”

News (:35) CSI: Miami “Shock” (:35) Lever-age

WTVA ) )The Sing-Off Saturday Night Live News (N) Saturday Night Live Jimmy Fallon;

Justin Timberlake. (N)

WKNO * Classic Gospel Lark Rise to Candleford Same gift. Cmas-Dan-

ubeMusic City Roots: Live From

Trans Siberian Orchesta

WGN-A + (NBA Basketball: Cleveland Cavaliers at Chicago Bulls. From the United Center in Chicago. (N) (Live)

News at Nine

How I Met Engage-ment

Engage-ment

Parks/Rec-reat

WMAE , ,The Lawrence Welk Show “Christmas”

As Time Goes By

The Café Secrets of Althorp -- The Spencers

Doctor Who “A Christ-mas Carol”

Austin City Limits “Tom Waits”

WHBQ ` `Almost Human “Skin” Bones “The Secret in

the Siege” Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Animation Domination

High-Def Burn Notice Michael must balance.

WPXX / Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI

WPIX :Engage-ment

Engage-ment

Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

PIX11 News at Ten With Kaity Tong (N)

Honey-mooners

Honey-mooners

The First Family

The First Family

MAX 0 3} ››› Magic Mike A male stripper takes a young upstart under his wing.

} ››› Argo A CIA agent poses as a producer to rescue Americans in Iran.

Girl’s Guide

Chemistry

SHOW 2 Rolling Stones: Sweet Summer Sun

} ››› Seven Psychopaths (12, Comedy) Colin Farrell, Christopher Walken.

Another Day, Another Time: Inside Llewyn Davis

Llewyn Davis

HBO 4 1} ›› Broken City An ex-cop goes to war against New York’s corrupt mayor.

24/7 Red Wings/Maple Leafs: Road

Fight Game } ›› Ted (12, Comedy) Mark Wahl-berg, Mila Kunis.

MTV 5 2 Ridic. Ridic. } ›› Jackass: The Movie (02) MTV Special

ESPN 7 ?College Football College Football: R&L Carriers New Orleans Bowl -- Louisiana-Lafayette vs. Tulane. From

New Orleans. (N) (Live)SportsCen-ter

SPIKE 8 5Cops (N) Cops GLORY 13: Tokyo (N) Cops Cops Cops Cops

USA : 8Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

} ›› Fast Five (11, Action) Vin Die-sel, Paul Walker.

NICK ; C Sam & Haunted Thunder Awe Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends (:12) Friends

DISC < DYukon Men “Season of Change”

Whale Wars The armada appoints four new captains.

Whale Wars The armada appoints four new captains.

A&E > Bonnie & Clyde Bonnie & Clyde (:01) Bonnie & Clyde

FSSO ? 4NHL Hockey: Montreal Canadiens at Nashville Predators.

Predators Live!

Driven (N) Game 365 World Poker Tour: Season 11

NHL Hockey: Hurricanes at Lightning

BET @ F Winnie The story of South African politician Winnie Mandela. } ››› Cadillac Records (08, Drama)

H&G C HLove It or List It “Di Palma Family”

Love It or List It, Too House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Love It or List It, Too

E! D } ››› My Best Friend’s Wedding } ›› The Break-Up Vince Vaughn. Kardashian

HIST E BPawn Stars “A Very Vegas Christmas”

Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:01) Pawn Stars

ESPN2 F @ College Basketball Women’s College Volleyball College Basketball

TLC G Here Comes Honey Boo Boo

Long Island Medium Island Me-dium

Cake Boss Here Comes Honey Boo Boo

Long Island Medium

FOOD H Chopped “Celebrity Holi-day Bash”

Chopped Chopped On the Rocks (N) Chopped

INSP I Secret of Giving (99) Reba McEntire. } ›› The Christmas Box (95, Drama) JAG

LIFE J =The Twelve Trees of Christmas (13, Drama) Mel B, Casper Van Dien.

Christmas on the Bayou (13) A man tries to re-kindle a romance with an executive.

(:02) The Twelve Trees of Christmas

TBN M In Touch Hour of Power Graham Classic Just Where I Belong GoingMy

AMC N 0} ›› Jack Frost (98) Michael Keaton. A deceased dad returns to life as a fun-loving snowman.

} ›› Jack Frost (98) Michael Keaton. A deceased dad returns to life as a fun-loving snowman.

FAM O <} ›› The Santa Clause 2 (02) Santa must get married in order to keep his job.

} › The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause (06) Tim Allen, Martin Short.

The Mistle-Tones (12) Tori Spelling.

TCM P } ››› Auntie Mame (58, Comedy) An orphan becomes the ward of his bohemian New York aunt.

} ›› Christmas Eve (47) George Raft, Ann Harding.

(:15) } ›› All Mine to Give (57)

TNT Q A(6:00) } ›››› The Wizard of Oz

(:15) } ›››› The Wizard of Oz (39, Fantasy) A tornado whisks a Kansas farm girl to a magic land.

} ›› Fred Claus (07) Vince Vaughn, Paul Giamatti.

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Ground Floor

Trust Me, I’m

Trust Me, I’m

} Land of Lost

GAME S The Chase The Chase 1 vs. 100 FamFeud FamFeud Newly Newly TOON T (6:00) } Shrek (01) Regular Adven King/Hill King/Hill Fam Guy Fam Guy Fullmetal Alchemist TVLD U K Brady Brady Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King of Queens FS1 Z Hoops College Basketball Sports FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live

FX Æ ;(5:00) } ››› X-Men: First Class

} ››› Thor (11, Action) Chris Hemsworth. Cast out of Asgard, the Norse god lands on Earth.

} ›› Green Lantern (11) Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively.

OUT Ø Wild Sky Steve’s Outdoors Hunting Trophy Wanted Heart Exped. Nugent Craig NBCS ∞ Boxing: Amir Mansour vs. Kelvin Price. Costas Tonight Premier League Match of the Day OWN ± Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss FOXN ≤ Huckabee (N) Justice Judge Geraldo at Large Red Eye Justice Judge APL ≥ Too Cute! Too Cute! (N) Too Cute! Too Cute! Too Cute!

HALL ∂ G} ››› The Christmas Blessing (05) Neil Patrick Harris, Rebecca Gayheart.

} ››› The Most Wonderful Time of the Year (08, Drama) Henry Winkler.

Christmas Magic (11) Lindy Booth.

DISN “ L} ››› Despicable Me (10) Voices of Steve Carell.

Phineas and Ferb

Lab Rats Mighty Med Jessie A.N.T. Farm Austin & Ally

Gravity Falls

SYFY E(6:00) } ›› The Fac-ulty (98, Horror)

} ›› Pitch Black (00) Radha Mitchell. Vicious creatures stalk the survivors of a spaceship crash.

} ››› 28 Days Later (02) Cillian Murphy, Noah Huntley.

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

A Web site names Corinth as one of the best places in Mississippi for young couples to call

home and rear their families. See the story coming Sunday.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • 9

ARIES (March 21-April 19). No, it’s not an accidental social mo-ment. The person talking loudly enough for you to overhear re-ally wants you to take notice and is actually hoping for a future friendship.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Environments have emotional weather, and you’re like an ex-pert meteorologist, observing people’s physical and subtle indi-cators to predict the next change in mood.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Grade-school children may not have the confi dence to fi nd out whether so-and-so likes them, but you’ve long passed that phase. Instead of the round-about way of getting information, you’ll go right to the source.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). If you behave as a mature adult, you shouldn’t have to put up with regularly occurring hissy fi ts and a pattern of passive-aggressive behavior from the other people your age with whom you choose to spend your time.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You are at your best when you aren’t wor-rying too much about whether or not you’re doing the right thing, the smart thing or the thing you’re passionate about. Do what occurs to you to do, and while you’re at it, try to have a little fun.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). As long as you’re progressing, don’t dwell on whether or not this is signifi cant progress. You’re in a different place from where you were, and that’s all that really matters now.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll be up for a job. That you can do this job is a given. So while oth-ers work at being perceived as credible and responsible, you’ll start with “likeable and fun” and go from there.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Are your hunches prophetic? You’ll never know unless you act on them. A particularly strong inkling either will pan out within the next three days or not at all.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Learning about a person by looking at outdated pictures posted on social media is about as effective as stalking a person with Google Earth. Be brave. Get close in real time.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’ll be rewarded for the efforts you make even though it feels like you’re merely inching along. Sometimes the difference between winning and losing the race boils down to inches and seconds.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). For this day to play out the way you want it to, you’re going to have to fi nd more common ground with the people you wish to infl uence. A nonintrusive attitude of curios-ity will help you get there.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You have something that many would love to claim. The trouble is that you earned it so long ago that you are now taking it for granted -- perhaps even com-plaining about it. You’ll be luckier after you’ve adjusted your per-spective.

DEAR ABBY: My younger sister “Lainie” is 14. She has had a smartphone for about a year. While I don’t belong to any social media sites, Lainie is a social media junkie. She never goes anywhere without her phone. Sometimes she’ll have her phone in one hand and her tablet in the other, taking turns when one or the other begins to bore her. It’s almost impossible to interact with her because her face is buried in the virtual world just about every hour of the day and night.

I miss the way things used to be before she got that smart-phone. I have talked about this with my parents. While they are equally concerned about Lainie’s withdrawn, sometimes secretive behavior, they never do anything about it. What are your thoughts on this topic? – GADGET GIRL’S

SISTER IN NEW MEXICO

DEAR SISTER: It’s common for teens to spend a lot of time on their phones and computers. But when they become withdrawn and secretive, it is time for a pa-rental intervention.

If your folks are equally con-cerned about your sister’s be-havior, they should step in, fi nd out what’s going on and do something about it, if neces-sary. If they don’t already, they

could start by scheduling family din-ners during which cell-phones are turned off or put away.

D E A R

ABBY: Christ-mas is nearly here, and I’m c o n c e r n e d about my

brother. I’m afraid he blames himself for his 28-year-old daughter’s suicide, which was by no means his fault. This will be his fi rst Christmas without her. I don’t know what to do for him. Any suggestions? – CHAL-

LENGED IN MICHIGAN

DEAR CHALLENGED: When a close family member commits suicide, it is common for sur-vivors to experience a range of emotions. Anger and guilt are two of them. If possible, encour-age your brother to spend Christ-mas with you or other relatives. You should also suggest he join a survivors support group.

The American Association of Suicidology provides referrals to local self-help groups for sur-vivors of suicide. Its website is www.suicidology.org. If he joins one, it will give him a place to

talk about his feelings with peo-ple who will understand because they have them, too.

DEAR ABBY: A long time ago, I was dating and living with a won-derful woman. I was arrested and went to jail for possession of cocaine. She then had an order of protection issued against me for one year.

That was 10 years ago. I have been clean from drugs ever since. She has a child with an-other man now, and I hope every-thing is great. My problem is, I can’t get her out of my mind. I miss her so much and just want the chance to be with her. Any advice? – HEARTBROKEN IN

NEW YORK

DEAR HEARTBROKEN: Your former girlfriend has gone on with her life, and your relation-ship is ancient history. If she had been willing to forgive you, she wouldn’t have taken out the re-straining order. If you want to be successful in moving forward in your life, stop looking backward. It’s time to focus on your future.

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

Sister immersed in virtual world blocks out the real

Page 10: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

10 • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Taylor Heating &Air Conditioning

402 W. Tate St(662) 286-5717

Taylor Heating &Air Conditioning

402 W. Tate St(662) 286-5717

Ridgecrest Baptist Church, Farmington Rd., Pastor: Floyd Lamb; SS: 9:30 am Worship 10:30am & 5pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed.Prayer Serv. 6pm.Rienzi Baptist Church, 10 School St, Rienzi, MS; Pastor Titus Tyer S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 6:30pmSaint Luke Missionary Baptist Church, 140 Rd 418., Pastor, John Pams, Jr. ; S.S. 9am; Worship 10:30am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pmSt. Mark Baptist Church, 1105 White St. Kim Ratliff, Pastor, 662-287-6718, church phone 662-286-6260. S.S. 10am; Worship Service 11am; Wed. Prayer Service & Bible Study 6:30pm.Shady Grove Baptist Church, 19 CR 417, Bro. Jimmy Lancaster, Pastor, Bro. Tim Edwards, Youth Minister;. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Sun. Night Service 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 7pm. Shiloh Baptist Church, U.S. 72 West. Rev. Phillip Caples, pastor S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm.South Corinth Baptist Church, 300 Miller Rd., Charles Stephenson, Pastor SS 10am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Prayer & Bible Study 6 pmSt. Rest M.B. Church, Guys TN Rev. O. J. Salters, pastor. Sun.Worship 11am; S.S. 9:45am; Wed. Bible study 6:00pm.Strickland Baptist Church, 554 CR 306 Corinth, MS., SS 10am, Worship Service 11am, Sunday Night 6pm, Wed Night 7pm.Synagogue M.B. Church, 182 Hwy. 45, Rieniz, 462-3867 Steven W. Roberson, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Morning Worship & Praise 11 am, Community Bible Study (Tues.) 11 am, Evening Bible Study (Wed.) 7 p.m.Tate Baptist Church, 1201 N. Harper Rd. 286-2935; Mickey Trammel, pastor Sun.: SS 9:30am; Morn. Worship, Preschool Church; Children’s Worship (grades 1-4) 10:45am; Worship 6pm; Wed., Fellowship Meal 4:45 pm, Nursery, Mission Friends, Tater Chips (grades 1-4), Big House (grades 5-8), Youth (grades 9-12), Adult Bible Study/ Prayer 6 PM; Adult Choir Rehearsal 7 PMTishomingo Chapel Baptist Church, 136 CR 634, Pastor: Bro. Bruce Ingram: S.S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Discipleship Training 5pm, Worship 6pm, 4th Sunday Worship at 5pm, Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pmTrinity Baptist Church, Michie, Tenn., 901-239-2133, Pastor: Bro. George Kyle; S. S.10am; Sun. Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Prayer Service Wed. 6:30pm.Tuscumbia Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Prayer Service Wed. pm.Union Baptist Church, Rayborn Richardson, pastor. S.S. 10 am. Church Training 5pm. Evening Worship 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 6:30pm. Unity Baptist Church, 5 CR 408, Hwy. 45 South Biggersville. Excail Burleson, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm.Unity Baptist Church, 825 Unity Church Rd, Ramer, TN, Dr. Ronald Meeks, Pastor; Bro. Andrew Williams, Music Director; Jason Webb, Youth Minister; Janice Lawson, Pianist; Sunday: Men’s Prayer 9:45am; SS 10am, Morning Worship 11am, Evening Worship 6pm; Wed. AWANA-Prayer Meeting 6:30pm. West Corinth Baptist Church, 308 School St., Bro. Seth Kirkland, Pastor; Bro Jackie Ward, Assist. Pastor; Jonathan Marsh, Youth Director; Andy Reeves, Music Director; Prayer Mondays 6pm; S.S. 10:00am. Worship 9:00am & 6pm; Bible Study Wed. 6:45pm.Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, Kara Blackard, pastor. S.S. 9am. Worship Service10am & 6:30pm; Wed. prayer mtg. & classes 6:30pm.

CATHOLIC CHURCHSt. James Catholic Church, 3189 Harper Rd., 287-1051 - Office; 284-9300 - Linda Gunther. Sun. Mass: 9am in English and 7pm Saturday in Spanish

CHRISTIAN CHURCH Charity Christian Church, Jacinto. Minister, Bro. Travis Smith S.S. 10am;Worship 11am; Bible Study 5pm; Wed. 7pm.Guys Christian Church, Guys, Tenn. 38339. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am. Oak Hill Christian Church, Kendrick Rd. At Tn. Line, Frank Williams, Evangelist, Bible School 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm (Winter); 6pm (Summer) Salem Christian Church, 1030 CR 400, Dennis Smith, minister. SS 9 am, Morning Worship 10am, Evening Service 5pm (Standard time) 6pm (Daylight Saving time). Need a ride? - Bro. Smith at 662-396-4051Waldron Street Christian Church, Ted Avant, Minister. S.S. 9:30am; Worship10:45am & 6pm; Youth Mtgs. 6 pm; Wed. 6pm.

CHURCH OF CHRIST Acton Church of Christ, 3 miles north of Corinth city limits on Hwy. 22. Shawn Weaver, Minister; Michael Harvill, Youth Min. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:50am & 5 p.m; Wed. Bible Study 7:00pm.Berea Church of Christ, Guys, TN. Minister Will Luster. Sun. School 10am, Worship Service 11am.Central Church of Christ, 306 CR 318, Corinth, MS, Don Bassett, Minister Bible Study 9:30am; Preaching 10:30am & 6p.m., Wed. Bible Study 7p.m.Clear Creek Church of Christ, Waukomis Lake Rd. Duane Ellis, Minister. Worship 9am & 5pm; Bible School 10am; Wed. 6:30pm. Danville Church of Christ, Mike Swims, Minister, 287-0312, 481 CR 409. Corinth; Sunday Bible Study 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. East Corinth Church of Christ, 1801 Cruise Ronald Choate, Minister. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Worship 10:30am & 5pm;Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Foote Street Church of Christ, Charles Curtis, Minister., Terry Smith, Youth Minister; S.S. 9am; Worship 10am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.

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

ASSEMBLY OF GODCanaan Assembly of God, 2306 E. Chambers Dr. 728-3363, Pastor Ricky & Sarah Peebles, Deaf Ministry: Michael Woods 728-0396. S.S. 9:30 am; Children’s Church 10:30 am; Worship 10:30 am & 6 pm; Wed. 7 pm.Christian Assembly of God, Hwy 2, Rev. Leon Barton pastor. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm. Wed. Bible Study & Youth 7pm First Assembly of God, Jason Pellizzer, pastor, 310 Second St., S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm.

BAPTISTAlcorn Baptist Church, CR 355 Kossuth, MS; Rev. Larry Gillard, Pastor, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6pm.Antioch Baptist Church, Galda Stricklen, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm. Antioch Baptist Church No. 2, County Rd. 518. Greg Warren, pastor. S.S. 9:45am,Worship 11:00am, D.T. 5:00pm-6:00pm Wed. Prayer Mtg.7:00pm.Bethlehem Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am, DT 5:30pm, Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm; WMU 1st Sun. monthly 4pm; Brotherhood 1st Sun. monthly 7am; Youth Night Every 4th Wed.Biggersville First Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm. Training Union 6pm, Wed. 7pm.Brush Creek Baptist Church, Off Hwy. 72 West. Bro. Carroll Talley, pastor. S.S. 10am; Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Service 6:30pm.Butler’s Chapel Baptist Church, Bro. Wayne McKee, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Service 7pm.Calvary Baptist Church, 501 Norman Rd. (Behind Buck’s 66 Station). Bro. Tim Bass, pastor. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6:45pm; Sun. Discipleship Training 6pm; Wed Bible Study, Children & Youth Missions 7pm.Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, Burnsville. Bro. John Cain, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Prayer Meeting 7pm; Ladies’ Auxiliary 2nd & 4th Tuesday 6pm.Center Hill Baptist Church, Keith Driskell, pastor. S.S. 10am. Worship 10:55am & 6:30pm Church Training 6pm Prayer Mtg 7pm.Central Grove Baptist Church, County Road 614, Kossuth, MS, 287-4085.S.S. 10:15 am; Worship Service 11:00 am; Wednesday Night 6:30 pm, Bible Class and Usher Board Meeting immediately followingCentral Missionary Baptist Church, Central School Rd, Bro. Frank Wilson, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pmChewalla Baptistt Church, Chewalla, TN. Richard Doyle, pastor, 239-9802. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6:15pm; AWANA 5pm; Discipleship Training 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Study-Youth-Children’s Choir 7pmCounty Line Baptist Church, 8 CR 600, Walnut, MS, Sunday School 9am, Morning Worship Service 10amCovenant Baptist Church, 6515 Hwy 57 E, Miche, TN; Pastor K. Brian Rainey Sun Worship 10am and 6pm, Wed. Night 7pmCrossroads Baptist Church, Salem Rd (CR 400), Warren Jones, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pmDanville Baptist Church, Danville Rd., Interim Pastor: Rev. Charlie Cooper. S.S.10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm.East Fifth Street Missionary Baptist Church, Rev. Richard Wade, pastor S.S. 9:30am. Worship 10:45am; Wed. bible study & prayer meeting 6pm. Choir Rehearsal Saturday 11am. East Corinth Baptist Church, 4303 Shiloh Road. 286-2094. Pastor Ralph Culp, S.S. 9:30am; Service 10:45am & 6:30pm. Wed.Service 6:30pm.Eastview Baptist Church, Ramer, TN. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.; all youth organizations Wed. 7pm.Farmington Baptist Church, Timothy Nall, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. AWANA (for ages 3 & up) 6:30-8pm Men’s Brotherhood & Ladies WMA 6:30pm; Bible Study 7pm.Fellowship Baptist Church, 1308 High School Rd., Selmer, TN. Pastor, Bro. J.D. Matlock. S.S. 10am; Serv. 11am & 6pm.; Wed. 7pm. First Baptist Church, Corinth, 501 Main. Rev. Dennis Smith, Pastor. Sun. Worship Service 8:20am;Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:45am & 7pm Youth Choir Rehearsal 4:45pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 6:30pm; Adult choir rhrsl. 7:30pm.First Baptist Church, Burnsville. S.S. 10-10:50am. Worship 11am & 6pm; DT 5:30pm; Wed.Bible Study 7pm.First Baptist Church, Michie, Tn. Pastor: James Hardin; S.S. 10am; Sun. Morn. Worship 11am; Sun. Evening Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Night Discipleship Training 7pm.First Baptist Church of Counce, Counce, TN. Dr. Bill Darnell. S.S. 9am; Worship 10:15am & 6pm; Prayer Meeting Wed. 6:30pm. Friendship Baptist Church, CR 614, Corinth; Craig Wilbanks, Pastor; Early Morn Service 9:30am; S.S. 10:00 am; Worship 11:00am; Wed. night 6:30pm.Glendale Baptist Church, US 72 East, Glen. Pastor: Bro. Brandon Powell, Minister of Music: Bro. Richard Yarber; Awana Program: Sunday Nights 5:30; S.S. 9:45am;Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Discipleship Training 5:30pm; Choir Practice: Sunday, Children & Youth 5pm, Adults: 7:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 7pm. Hinkle Baptist Church, Internim Pastor Paul Stacey. Min. of Music Beverly Castile, S.S. 9am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm.Holly Baptist Church, Holly Church Rd. Pastor John Boler. 8:45 am- Early Morning Worship, 10:00 am S.S., 11:00 am Late Worship, 6:00 pm Evening Worship, Wed. Service 6:30 pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study, Children & Youth Activities, www.hollybaptist.orgHopewell Missionary Baptist Church, 464 Hwy 356, Rienzi. Rev. Gabe Jolly III, Pastor; S.S. 9am; Children’s Church: 10am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Bible Study: Wed 5pm. Jacinto Baptist Church, Ken White, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. service 6:30pm.Kemps Chapel Baptist Church, Pastor: Tim Dillingham; Rt. 1, Rienzi. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6:15pm; Church Trng. 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Study. 7 pm.Kendrick Baptist Church, Bro. George Kyle, pastor. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 10:30am, & 6:30pm; Church Trng. 5:30pm, Wed. 7pm.Kossuth First Baptist Church, 893 Hwy #2; Bro David Bishop, Pastor, SS 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm; Wed Bible Study, 6:30pm; 287-4112Lakeview Missionary Baptist Church, Charles Martin, pastor. 5402 Shiloh Rd. 287-2177 S.S. 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm; Wed. Adult Bible Study, Youth Min. 7pm.Liberty Hill Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 5:00pm; Wed. 7:00 pm.Little Flock Primitive Baptist Church, 4 mi. so. of Burnsville off Hwy. 365. Turn west at sign. Pastor: Elder Bob Ward. Sun. Bible Study 9:45 am; Worship 10:30am.Little Zion Missionary Baptist Church, 3395 N Polk St, Pastor - Christopher Traylor; Sunday School - 9am; Worship 10:15 am - Communion - 1st Sunday at 11am; Bible Study - Wednesday Night at 6:00 pmLone Oak Baptist Church, Charles Mills, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Prayer Service 5:30pm; Wed. 7pm.Love Joy Baptist Church, on the Glen-Jacinto Road, Hwy 367. Pastor, Bro. David Robbins, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6 pm.Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church, 715 Martin Luther King Dr. Rev. Herschel Shamblins, pastor. S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; BTU 5pm; Wed. Prayer & Bible Stdy. 7pmMason St. Luke Baptist Church, Mason St. Luke Rd. 287-1656. Rev. Wayne Wooden, pastor; S.S. 9:45 am Worship 11am.; Wed. 6:30pm. McCalip Baptist Chapel, Rt.1 Pocahontas,TN Pastor, Rev. Johnny Sparks Services Sunday 11am & 6p.m. Michie Primitive Baptist Church, Michie Tenn. Pastor: Elder Ricky Taylor. Worship Service Sunday 10:30 am. Everyone is cordially invited. Mills Commuity Baptist Church, 397 CR 550 Rienzi, MS. Bro. Donny Davis, pastor. S. S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am & Sun. Night 5pm; Wed. Bible Stdy. 6:30pmNew Covenant Baptist Church, 1402 E. 4th St., Pastor David Harris, pastor, Sunday School 9:45am; Worship 11:00am, Bible Study Wednesdays 6:30 pm.New Lebanon Free Will Baptist Church, 1195 Hwy. 364, Cairo Community; Jack Whitley, Jr, pastor; 462-8069 or 462-7591; 10am S.S. for all ages; Worship, 11am Children’s Church, 5pm; Choir Practice, 6pm; Evening Worship, Wed. 7 pm Midweek Bible Study & Prayer Meeting, 7pm;Young People Bible Classes.North Corinth Baptist Church,Rev. Bill Wages,pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; ChurchTraining 6:00pm; Wed. 7pm Oakland Baptist Church, 1101 S. Harper Rd., Dr. Randy Bostick, Pastor. SS all ages 9am; Worship Serv. 10:15am & 6:20pm; Sun. Orchestra Reh. 4pm; Student Choir & Handbells 5pm; Children’s Choir (age 4-Grade 6) 5:15pm; Wed. AWANA clubs (during school year) 6pm; Prayer & Praise 6:30pm; Student “XTREME Life” Worship Service 6:45pm; “Life Institute” Small Group Classes 7pm; Sanctuary choir reh. 8:05pm 662-287-6200Olive Hill West, Guys, TN; Pastor, Robert Huton;S.S. 10am; Worship 11 am & 6pm; Training 5:30; Wed. 7pmPinecrest Baptist Church, 313 Pinecrest Rd., Corinth, Bro. Jeff Haney, pastor. S.S.9:30am; Worship 10:30am; Sun. Serv. 6:00pm; Wed. Worship Serv. 6:00pm Pleasant Grove Missionary Baptist Church,Inc., 1572 Wenasoga Rd, Corinth; Pastor Allen Watson. Sunday School - 9:45am; Worship Serv. - Sun 11am; Bible Class & Prayer Service-Wed 6pm; Every second Sunday 6PM (Need a ride to Church - Don Wallace 286-6588)Ramer Baptist Church, 3899 Hwy 57 W, Ramer, TN; Pastor: Rev. James Young; Church office: 731-645-5681; SS 9:45am, Morn. Worship 11am; Discipleship Training 6pm, Evening Worship 7pm; Wed. Family Supper 5:30pm, Mid-Week Prayer Service 6:30pm

P.O. Box 2104 • Corinth, MS662-287-4995 • Fax: 662-287-4903

[email protected]

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Page 11: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • 11

Box Chapel United Methodist Church, Anne Ferguson, Pastor 3310 CR 100 (Intersection of Kendrick & Box Chapel Road) S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 11 am, Evening Worship 5 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m.Burnsville United Methodist Church, 118 Front St., Burnsville. 423-1758. Wayne Napier, Pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 9 a.m. Danville CME Methodist Church, Rev. James Agnew, Pastor, Sun. S.S. 10 am, Worship Service 11 am, Bible classes Wed. night 6:30 to 7:30. Christ United Methodist Church, 3161 Shiloh Rd. Pastor: Dr. Danny Rowland; 286-3298. S.S. 9:45 am (all ages); Fellowship 10:45am; Worship 11am (nursery provided). Mons: Boy Scouts 5pm; Witness/Evangelism work 6pm; Tues: Cub Scouts 5:30pm; Weds: Gather & Worship 5:30pmCity Road Temple (C.M.E.) Church, Martin Luther King Dr., Rev. Robert Field, S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 11:00 am; Wed. Youth Meeting 5 pm.First United Methodist Church, Rev. Roger Shock, Pastor; Ken Lancaster, Music Dir.; S.S. 9am, Worship 10 am; Wed. Family Supper 5pm, Bible Study 6pm; Choir Practice 7pm (Televised Cablevision Channel 16) Wed. Worship Service; Chris Vandiver, Dir. of Youth Ministries and TV Ministry Gaines Chapel United Methodist Church, 1802 Hwy 72 W, Rev. Trey Lambert, Pastor, S.S. 9:45 am. Worship 10:45am & 6:30pm; Children’s Activities 5pm, Youth 6:30pm & Wed. Night Children/Youth Activities and Adult Bible Study 6:00pmHopewell United Methodist Church, 4572 CR 200; Jonathan Cagle, Pastor; SS 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.; Sun night & Wed night 5 p.m.Indian Springs United Methodist Church, Rev. Richard C Wells, Jr. Pastor; Sun: SS 9am, Worship 10am; Youth 5pm; Worship 6:30 pm; Wed: Youth 5pm, Bible Study 6:30pmKossuth United Methodist Church, Kenny McGill, pastor, Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Worship Service 11am & 6pm. Mt. Carmel Methodist Church, Henry Storey, Minister, Worship 9:30 a.m. S.S. 10:30 a.m. Bible Study 1st & 3rd Tues. 6:30 p.m.Mt. Moriah United Methodist Church, Meigg St., S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. Wed. night bible study 6 p.m. Children & Youth for Christ Sat. 9:30 a.m. Sapada Thomas Pastor.Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church, Rev. Ben Luttrell, pastor. S.S. 10:30am Worship Service 11am; Wed night bible study 6pm.Oak Grove C.M.E. Church, Alcorn County Road 514, West of Biggersville, MS, Rev. Ida Price, Pastor Sunday School 9:30am, Worship services 10:45am, Bible Study Wed. Night 7pmPickwick United Methodist Church, 10575 Hwy 57 So., Pickwick Dam, TN 731-689-5358, Worship Services: Sun 8 a.m. & 11 a.m., SS 10 a.m.Pleasant Hill United Methodist Church, Kenny McGill, pastor, Sun Services, Worship 9:15am, Sunday School 10:30am, Evening 5pm.Saulter’s Chapel CME Church, Acton, TN; Rev.James Agnew, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Service 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 p.m.Shady Grove United Methodist Church, D. R. Estes, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m.Stantonville United Methodist Church, 8351 Hwy 142, Stantonville, TN; David Harstin, pastor, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m.New Hope Methodist Church, New Hope & Sticine Rd., Guys/Michie, TN; Pastor David Harstin; Services: Sun. Worship 10 am, S.S. 11 am, Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm.MORMONThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Corinth Ward. Hwy. 2 Old Worsham Bros. Building Sun, 10 am-1pm, Wed. 6:30 pm. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 204 George E. Allen Dr. Booneville, MS. Services: Booneville Ward 9-12 am Wed 6:30 pmNON-DENOMINATIONALAgape World Overcoming Christian Center, 1311 Lyons St. Pastor Doris Day. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Corporate Worship 11:30 a.m., Tues. Night Prayer/Bible Study 7pmBrand New Life Church, 2079 Hwy 72 E, Corinth MS 38834 (in the old Marty’s Steak house) Pastors John & Sally Wilbanks; Sunday Service 10:30am.Another Chance Ministries, 2066 Tate St, Corinth, MS 662-284-0801 or 662-284-0802. Prayer Serv. 8am, Praise & Worship 9am, Mid-Week Bible study 7pm. Bishop Perry and Dimple Carroll (Pastors), Overseers - A Christ Centered, Spirit Filled, New Creation Church. New Sun morning service 8:00am. Come out and be blessed.Bethel Church, CR 654-A, Walnut (72W to Durhams Gro, left at store, follow signs), Sun. Morn 10am; Sun. Worship 5pm; Thurs. Service 6pm.Brush Creek House of Prayer, 478 CR 600 (just out of Kossuth) Walnut, MS. Pastor Bro. Jeff and Sister Lisa Wilbanks.Burnsville Tabernacle Church, Sun. School 10a.m. Wor. Service 11 a.m., Eve. Worship 5p.m., Wed Service 7 p.m.Church of the Crossroads, Hwy 72 E., Nelson Hight, pastor, 286-6838, 1st Morn. Worship 8:30, S.S.10am, 2nd Morn. Worship 11am & Life Groups 5pm; Wed. 6:30 pm Life Groups & Childrens Services; Cicero AME Church, 420 Martin Luther King Dr., Corinth, MS 286-2310 S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pmCity of Refuge, 300 Emmons Rd. & Hwy 64, Selmer, TN. 731-645-7053 or 731-610-1883. Pastor C. A. Jackson. Sun. Morn. 10am, Sun. Evening 6pm, Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Christ Gospel Church, Junction 367 & 356, 1 1/2 miles east of Jacinto. Rev. Bobby Lytal, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun 6:30 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. Fri Night 7 p.m.Church On Fire Dream Center, Intersection of Holt Ave. & Hwy 365 North, Burnsville. Michael Roberts, pastor, Sun. Morn. Worship 10am, 662-415-4890(cell)City of Refuge Church, 950 Hwy 72 E. (behind Rib Shack) Corinth, MS Pastor, Harvern Davis; Sun Prayer Service 10 am; Worship 10:30 am Wednesday Service, 7 pmCornerstone Christian Fellowship, 145 South. Services: Sun. 10am Youth and Home Meetings, Wednesday Night. Billy Joe Young, pastor.FaithPointe Church, Lead Pastor, Mike Sweeney. 440 Hwy. 64 E. Adamsville, TN. Sun. 9 am SS,10:30 am Morn. Worship; Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. (all ages) Website: faithpointechurch.comFull Gospel House of Prayer, 2 miles S. of Hightown. Ancel Hancock, Minister, Jane Dillingham, Assoc., Serv every Mon. night 7pmFoundation of Truth Christian Fellowship, 718 S. Tate St., Corinth, MS, Frederick C. Patterson Sr, pastor, S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 11 p.m. Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. God’s Church, 565 Hwy 45 S, Biggersville; Pastor David Mills, Asso. Pastor Larry Lovett; SS 10am; Sun Worship 11am; Wed. Night 7pmKossuth Worship Center, Hwy. 2, Kossuth. Pastor Bro. Larry Murphy. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. Services 6:00 p.m. 287-5686Life in the Word Fellowship Church, Pastor Merle Spearman. 706 School St, Worship Sun. 10:30 am & 6:00 pm; Wed. 7:00 pm.Mt. Zion Church, Highway 365 N. of Burnsville. Pastor Billy Powers. Worship Service 2 pm; Wed. Serv 7 pm.Mt. Carmel Non-Denominational Church, Wenasoga Rd. Pastor Bro. Jason Abbatoy. Sunday Morning Service 11:00 am River of Life, Cruise & Cass St. Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 a.m., Pastor Heath LovelaceRutherford Chapel, CR 755, Theo Community, Rev. Casey Rutherford, Pastor, Sun. 10:30 am Worship & 6 pm; Thurs. 7 p.m. 662-396-1967Still Hope Ministries, Main St, Rienzi; Pastor: Bro. Chris Franks, 662-603 3596. Services: Sun 2pm; Fri. 7pm.The Anchor Holds Church, Hwy 348 of Blue Springs, MS. 662-869-5314, Pastor Mike Sanders, Sun. School 9:30 a.m; Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 am; Sun. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m; Wed. Service 7:00 p.m; Nursery Provided For Ages 0-3; Children Church For Ages 4-10; Youth Program For Ages 11-21; Anointed Choir and Worship TeamTriumph Church, Corner of Dunlap & King St. S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 11:30 a.m. Tuesday night worship 7:00 p.m.Triumphs To The Church and Kingdom of God in Christ, Rev. Billy T., Kirk, pastor S.S. of Wisdom 10 a.m. Regular Services 11:30 a.m. Tuesday & Thursday 7:30p.m.Word Outreach Ministries, Hwy. 45 North, MS-TN State Line. Pastor Elworth Mabry. Sun. Bible Study 10am, Worship 11am, Wed. 6:30pm.

PENTECOSTALCalvary Apostolic Church, Larry W. McDonald, Pastor, 1622 Bunch St. Services Sun 10am & 6pm, Tues 7:30 pm For info. 287-3591.Central Pentecostal Church, Central School Road. Sunday Worship 10 am; Evangelistic Service 5 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm; Terry Harmon II, Pastor. Apostolic Life Tabernacle, Hwy. 45 S. Sunday Worship & S.S. 10 am & 6 p.m. Thurs. Prayer Meeting 7:15pm Mike Brown, pastor. 287-4983.Biggersville Pentecostal Church, U.S. 45 N., Biggersville. Rev. T.G, Ramsy, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Youth Services, Sunday 5 p.m. Evangelistic Service 6 p.m. Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m.Burnsville United Pentecostal Church, Highway 72 West of Burnsville. L. Rich, pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11 am and 6:30 pm; Youth Service 5:30 pm; Wed Prayer and Bible Study 7:15 pm.Community Pentecostal Church, Rev. Randle Flake, pastor. Sun. Worship 10am & 5:30pm; Wed. Acts Class 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pmCounce, Tenn. First Pentecostal Church, State Route 57, Rev. G.R. Miller, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Evening Worship 6 p.m. Wed 7 p.m.Eastview United Pentecostal Church, Rev. Wayne Isbell, pastor. 287-8277 (pastor), (662) 645-9751 (church) S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m.Gospel Tabernacle, Glover Drive. Rev. Josh Hodum, pastor. S.S. 10 am Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7 p.m.Greater Life United Pentecostal Church, 750 Hwy. 45 S. Rev. Don Clenney, Pastor; SS 10am, Sun. Morn. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. Worship 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pmLife Tabernacle Apostolic Pentecostal, 286-5317, Mathis Subd. Sunday Worship 10am&6:30pm;Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Pleasant Hill Pentecostal Church, C.D. Kirk, pastor, Hwy. 2, S.S. 10am, Adult Worship 10am, Sun. Night Explosion 6pm & Wed. night 7:30pmRockhill Apostolic, 156 CR 157, 662-287-1089, Pastor Steve Findley SS. 10am, Sun. Morn. 11am, Sun. Night 6pm, Wed night 7:15pmSanctuary of Hope 1108 Proper St,, Sun. Worship 10 a.m. & 6pm; Thursday worship 7:30 p.m. “Where there’s breath, there’s hope.”

Fraley’s Chapel Church of Christ, Minister, Ferrill Hester. Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 5pm. Wed. Bible Study7pm.Jacinto Church of Christ, 1290 Hwy 356, Rienzi, Jerry Childs, Minister, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pm.Jerusalem Church of Christ, Farmington Rd. Ben Horton, Minister. S.S. 10am; Church 10:45am; Sun. Bible Study & Worship, 5pm. Kossuth Church of Christ, Duane Estill, Minister, 287-8930. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Kendrick Rd Church of Christ, S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm..Meeks St. Church of Christ, 1201 Meeks St; Evg: Chuck Richardson, 287-2187 or 286-9660; S.S. 9am; Wed. 7pm.Meigg Street Church of Christ, 914 Meigg St. Will Luster, Jr., Minister. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship Service 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm.New Hope Church of Christ, Glen, MS, Minister, Roy Cox .S.S. 9:30am; Worship Service 10:30am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. North Rienzi Church of Christ, Located in Rienzi by Shell Station on 356 Minister, Wade Davis, Sun. 10am, & 6pm., Wed. 7:00pm Northside Church of Christ, Harper Rd., Lennis Nowell, Minister. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:35am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Pleasant Grove Church of Christ, 123 CR 304, Doskie, MS, Craig Chandler, Minister-287-1001; S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am.South Parkway Church of Christ, 501 S. Parkway St., Bro. Andrew Blackwell,Minister, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm.Strickland Church of Christ, Central Sch. Rd. at Hwy. 72 E., Brad Dillingham, Minister, S.S. 10am;Worship 10:45am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm.Theo Church of Christ, Ron Adams, minister. Hwy. 72 W. Bible Study 9am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study pm.Wenasoga Church of Christ, G.W. Childs, Pastor. Worship Service 9am & 5pm; Bible Class 10am; Wed. 7pm.West Corinth Church of Christ, Hwy 45 No. at Henson Rd. Blake Nicholas, Pastor S.S. 9:45am; Worship service 10:40am & 5 pm; Wed 7pm.

CHURCH OF GODChurch of God of Prophecy, Bell School Rd. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship services 11 a.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Pastor James Gray.Hilltop Church of God, 46 Hwy 356 - 603-4567, Pastor, Donald McCoy SS 10am, Sun. Worship 10:45am, Sun. Even. 5pm, Wed. 7pm. New Mission Church of God in Christ, 608 Wick St. Pastor Elder Yarbro. S.S. 10 a.m. Sunday Worship 11 a.m., & 7 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7pm.New Life Church of God in Christ, 305 West View Dr., Pastor Elder Willie Hoyle, 286-5301. Sun. Prayer 9:45 am, S.S. 10 am, Worship 11:30 am, Thurs. Worship 7:30 pm, Wed. night worship services 7 pm, YPWW 1st & 3rd Sunday 6 pm.St. James Church of God in Christ, 1101 Gloster St. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship Services 11:30 a.m.; Youth/Adult Bible Study Thurs. 7pm Pastor Elder Anthony Fox.St. James Church of God in Christ-Ripley, 719 Ashland Rd, Ripley, MS, 662-837-9509; Sun. Worship Morning Glory 8am; SS 9am; Worship 11am; Thurday is Holy Ghost night 7pm; Superintendent Bernell Hoyle, Pastor.Church of God of Union Assembly, 347 Hwy 2, (4 miles from Hwy 45 bypass going East to 350), North Gospel Preaching and singing. Services Wed. 6:30 pm , Sun.Evening Service 6:30 pm, Sun. morning 10:30 am. Everyone invited to come and worship with us. Pastor Brother David Bledsoe; 286-2909 or 287-3769The Church of God , Hwy 57, West of four-way in Michie, TN. Paster Joe McLemore, 731-926-5674.Wings of Mercy Church, 1703 Levee St. (Just off 45 S. at Harper Exit). Church: 287-4900; Pastor: James Tipton, Sunday Morn. 10:30am, Sunday Evening 5:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm

EPISCOPALSt. Paul’s Episcopal, Hwy. 2 at N. Shiloh Rd. Rev. Ann B. Fraser, Priest; 9:30am Holy Eucharist followed by Welcome & Coffee; 10:45am Sunday School. Nursery opens at 9:15am.

FREE WILL BAPTISTCalvary Free Will Baptist Mission, Old Jacinto Supply Building, Jacinto. S.S. 10 am Worship 11 am & 5 pm Wed. Service 7 pm.Life Gate Free Will Baptist Church, 377 CR 218, Corinth, MS, 462-8353, S.S. 10am, Worship Serv 10:45 am & 6 pm. Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Macedonia Freewill Baptist Church, 9 miles S. of Corinth on CR 400. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Pastor: Russell Clouse; Sun Worship 11 a.m& 6 pm; Adult & Youth Teaching Service Sunday 5 p.m.

HOLINESSBy Faith Holiness Church, 137 CR 430, Ritenzi, MS, 662-554-9897/462 7287; Pastor: Eddie Huggins; Sun 10am& 6pm; Thurs. 7pmFull Gospel Jesus Name Church, Located 3 miles on CR 400, (Salem Rd) Old Jehvohah Witness Church. Pastor: Larry Jackson; Sunday Evening 2pm. 662-728-8612. Glen Jesus Name Holiness Church, CR 248 Glen, Bro. Jimmy Jones, Pastor; Sun. Service 10 am, Evening 6 pm; Wed. night 7 pm; 287-6993Theo Holiness Church, Hwy. 72 West, Corinth. Pastor: Rev. Ronald Wilbanks, Phone:662-223-5330; Senior Pastor: Rev. Rufus Barnes; SS 10am, Worship Service 11am, and 6:30 pm, Wed. Prayer Meeting 7 pmTrue Holiness Church, 1223 Tate St, 287-5659 or 808-0347, Pastor: Willie Saffore; S.S. 10 am, Sun. Worship 11:30 am, Tues/Fri Prayer Service 9am; Prayer & Bible Band Wed. 7pm.

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

INDEPENDENT FULL GOSPELHarvest Church, 349 Hwy 45 S., Guys, TN. Pastor Roger Reece; 731-239-2621. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship & Children’s Church 11am; Evening Service 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m.

INDEPENDENT METHODISTClausel Hill Independent Methodist Church, 8 miles S. of Burnsville, just off 365 in Cairo Community. Pastor, Gary Redd. S.S. 10 a.m. Morning Worship 11:15 a.m. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer Meeting 6:45 p.m.Chapel Hill Methodist Church, , 2 1/2 mi. W. of Burnsville. CR 944. Scotty McCay, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Sunday Worship, 11 am. & 5 pm.

LUTHERANPrince of Peace Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. 4203 Shiloh Rd. 287 1037, Divine Worship 10:00 a.m. Holy Communion celebrated on the first, third and fifth Sunday. Christian Ed. 9 a.m.

METHODISTBethel United Methodist, Jerry Kelly, pastor. Worship 10 am S.S. 11 amBiggersville United Methodist Church, Jimmy Glover, Pastor. S.S. 9:15 a.m., Church Service 10:00 am Sunday Worship 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Bible Study Thurs 7 p.m.

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The Full Gospel Tabernacle of Jesus Christ, 37 CR 2350, Pastor Jesse Hisaw, 462-3541. Sun, 10am & 5pm; Wed. 7:30 pm.Tobes Chapel Pentecostal Church, 520 CR 400, Pastor: Rev. J.C. Killough, SS. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. 5:30am, Wed. Bible Study 7pm, 462-8183.United Pentecostal Church, Selmer, Tenn., S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & 7 pm.Walnut United Pentecostal Church, Hwy. 72 W. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm. Rev. James Sims.West Corinth U.P.C., 5th & Nelson St., Rev. Merl Dixon, Minister, S.S. 10 am. Worship 11 am.; Prayer meeting 5:30 pm., Evang. Serv. 6 pm., Wed. 7 pm.Soul’s Harbor Apostolic Church, Walnut, Worship Sun. Services 10 a.m. & 6, Wed. 7:30 p.m., Rev. Jesse Cuter, pastor, Prayer Request, call 223-4003.Zion Pentecostal Church In Christ., 145 N. on Little Zion Rd. Bld 31, Rev. Allen Milam, Pastor, S.S. 10am. Worship 11am.; Evang. Service 6pm, Wed. 7pm.

PRESBYTERIANCovenant Presbyterian Church, Tennessee St. at North Parkway; S.S.10 am; Worship 11 am. 594-5067 or 210-2991. First Presbyterian Church, EPC, 919 Shiloh Rd., Dr. Donald A. Elliot, Min. Gregg Parker, Director of Youth & Fellowship. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:45; Fellowship 5 & 6 pm. Shiloh Cumberland Presbyterian Church, off U.S. 72 W. Rev. Brenda Laurence. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 6 p.m.The New Hope Presbyterian Church, Biggersville. Nicholas B. Phillips, pastor; Sunday School for all ages 9:45 am Morning Worship 10:45 am.Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA), 4175 No Harper Rd; Sun. Morn. Worship 9:30 am; Sunday school, 11:00 am, Wed. Bible study, 5:30 p.m., http://www.tpccorinth.org.

SATURDAY SABBATHSpirit & Truth Ministries, 408 Hwy 72 W. (across from Gateway Tires) P.O. Box 245, Corinth, MS 38835-0245 662-603-2764 ; Sat. 10:30 am Service

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTSeventh-day Adventist Church, 2150 Hwy.72 E., Kurt Threlkeld, Minister. Sat. Services: Bible Study 9:30am, Worship 10:45am; Prayer Meeting: Tuesday 6:00pm; (256) 381-6712

SOUTHERN BAPTISTCrossroads Church, 1020 CR 400 Salem Rd; Warren Jones, Pastor; Sun. -Bible Study 9 a.m., Worship/Preaching 10 a.m.Victory Baptist Church, 9 CR 256., Alan Parker, Pastor. S.S. 9am; Worship 10am. Church Training 5:30pm; Worship 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm

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Page 12: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, December 21, 2013

Mississippi Bowl History

Associated PressRecord: 22-12Jan. 5, 2013 BBVA Compass

Bowl — Mississippi 38, Pittsburgh 17

Jan. 2, 2010 Cotton Bowl — Mis-sissippi 21, Oklahoma State 7

Jan. 2, 2009 Cotton Bowl — Mis-sissippi 47, Texas Tech 34

Jan. 2, 2004 Cotton Bowl — Mis-sissippi 31, Oklahoma State 28

Dec. 27, 2002 Independence Bowl — Mississippi 27, Nebraska 23

Dec. 28, 2000 Music City Bowl — West Virginia 49, Mississippi 38

Dec. 31, 1999 Independence Bowl — Mississippi 27, Oklahoma 25

Dec. 31, 1998 Independence Bowl — Mississippi 35, Texas Tech 18

Dec. 26, 1997 Motor City Bowl — Mississippi 34, Marshall 31

Dec. 31, 1992 Liberty Bowl — Mississippi 13, Air Force 0

Jan. 1, 1991 Gator Bowl — Mich-igan 35, Mississippi 3

Dec. 28, 1989 Liberty Bowl — Mississippi 42, Air Force 29

Dec. 20, 1986 Independence Bowl — Mississippi 20, Texas Tech 17

Dec. 10, 1983 Independence Bowl — Air Force 9, Mississippi 3

Dec. 30, 1971 Peach Bowl — Mississippi 41, Georgia Tech 18

Jan. 1, 1971 Gator Bowl — Au-burn 35, Mississippi 28

Jan. 1, 1970 Sugar Bowl — Mis-sissippi 27, Arkansas 22

Dec. 14, 1968 Liberty Bowl — Mississippi 34, Virginia Tech 17

Dec. 30, 1967 Sun Bowl — Tex-as-El Paso 14, Mississippi 7

Dec. 17, 1966 Bluebonnet Bowl — Texas 19, Mississippi 0

Dec. 18, 1965 Liberty Bowl — Mississippi 13, Auburn 7

Dec. 19, 1964 Bluebonnet Bowl — Tulsa 14, Mississippi 7

Jan. 1, 1964 Sugar Bowl — Ala-bama 12, Mississippi 7

Jan. 1, 1963 Sugar Bowl — Mis-sissippi 17, Arkansas 13

Jan. 1, 1962 Cotton Bowl — Texas 12, Mississippi 7

Jan. 2, 1961 Sugar Bowl — Mis-sissippi 14, Rice 6

Jan. 1, 1960 Sugar Bowl — Mis-sissippi 21, Louisiana St. 0

Dec. 27, 1958 Gator Bowl — Mississippi 7, Florida 3

Jan. 1, 1958 Sugar Bowl — Mis-sissippi 39, Texas 7

Jan. 2, 1956 Cotton Bowl — Mis-sissippi 14, Texas Christian 13

Jan. 1, 1955 Sugar Bowl — Navy 21, Mississippi 0

Jan. 1, 1953 Sugar Bowl — Georgia Tech 24, Mississippi 7

Jan. 1, 1948 Delta Bowl — Mis-sissippi 13, Texas Christian 9

Jan. 1, 1936 Orange Bowl — Catholic 20, Mississippi 19

Bowl history

BY STEVE MEGARGEEAP Sports Writer

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Even after racing to its fastest start since its last national title, Tennessee still has something to prove.

The third-ranked Lady Vols (10-0) are about to get that opportunity.

After playing just one ranked opponent in their fi rst 10 games, the Lady Vols will face their toughest test of the season thus far Saturday when they travel to No. 6 Stanford (9-1). Tennessee has lost its last two games in this series by double digits and hasn’t won at Stanford since 2005.

“It would be great to get a ‘W’ to break that drought, but also just to show the rest of the country that we mean business,” Tennessee forward Cierra Burdick said.

Tennessee hasn’t faced a Top 25 team since Nov. 11,

when it won 81-65 at No. 14 North Carolina, which was ranked 12th at the time. Stan-ford has won eight consecu-tive games since falling 76-57 at home to top-ranked Con-necticut last month.

The Lady Vols are 10-0 for the fi rst time since their 2007-08 national champion-ship season and have an av-erage victory margin of 24.8 points. Tennessee’s 2007-08 team also faced Stanford in its 11th game and lost 73-69 in overtime.

The Vols are outrebound-ing teams by 15.8 boards per game and boast a roster that features six players 6-foot-2 or taller.

“There are certain things, when you play Tennessee, you have to do year in and year out,” Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer said. “They are aggressive, they are ath-letic and it is a big team that is

active with their hands. They are also quick.”

Stanford’s had plenty of success against Tennessee recently. The Cardinal beat Tennessee 97-80 at home in 2011-12 and 73-60 in Knox-ville a year ago. Stanford’s won three of the last four meeting between these two teams. Tennessee still leads the overall series 22-8, but the Lady Vols have lost in each of their last three trips to Stanford.

Chiney Ogwumike had 21 points and 19 rebounds in Stanford’s victory over Tennessee last season. The 6-foot-4 senior forward is av-eraging 25.7 points and 10.6 rebounds per game this sea-son.

“She plays hard every pos-session,” Tennessee coach Holly Warlick said. “She does not take a possession off. She is hard to box out because

she is constantly moving. She knows the game, she plays it hard. She fi ghts for every-thing she gets. We have to match her intensity.”

Warlick criticized her team’s effort after last year’s loss to Stanford, and the Lady Vols bounced back to win a Southeastern Conference regular-season title and reach a regional fi nal.

Tennessee’s players say they’re a closer team this year. They’ve shown some re-silience by maintaining their perfect record despite being tied or behind at halftime in three games.

“The team camaraderie is different,” Tennessee guard Meighan Simmons said. “We’re more together, (so) when adversity hits we stick together. We communicate with each other in huddles. We’re holding each other ac-countable.”

Lady Vols facing big test at Stanford

Mississippi St. Bowl HistoryAssociated Press

Record: 9-7Jan. 1, 2013 Gator Bowl_North-

western 34, Mississippi St. 20Dec. 30, 2011 Music City Bowl_

Mississippi St. 23, Wake Forest 17

Jan. 1, 2011 Gator Bowl_Missis-sippi St. 52, Michigan 14

Dec. 29, 2007 Liberty Bowl_Mis-sissippi St. 10, Central Florida 3

Dec. 31, 2000 Independence Bowl_Mississippi St. 43, Texas A&M 41, OT

Dec. 30, 1999 Peach Bowl_Mis-

Please see HISTORY | 13

BY BRETT MARTELAP Sports Writer

NEW ORLEANS — Nick Montana has a chance to play his fi rst bowl game in the same stadium where his famous father, Joe, won a Super Bowl.

That is, if he’s healthy enough to take the fi eld for Tulane in Saturday night’s New Orleans Bowl.

If Montana can’t go, the Green Wave (7-5) won’t get any sympa-thy from Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4), which is in a similar predicament. Ragin’ Cajuns starting quarterback Terrance Broadway hasn’t played since breaking his right arm on Nov.

ULL aims to spoil Tulane’s return to postseason

Please see ULL | 13

BY TIM DAHLBERGAP Senior Sports Writer

By now the Miami Dol-phins’ season was supposed to be over, with little left to do but make sure quarterback Ryan Tannehill still had all his body parts and the NFL had an answer for what really went on in the locker room.

But something happened on the way to another losing record. Something clicked just when everything seemed to be falling apart after a 300-pound offensive line-man left the team saying he had been bullied.

Columnists, opponents and fans questioned the team’s leadership, saying the coach-es had ceded control to guard Richie Incognito and his bad-boy antics. But instead of im-ploding, the Dolphins came together. Instead of tanking, they found ways to win.

“Kind of a blessing in dis-guise,” tackle Bryant McKin-nie said.

Now the Dolphins are squarely in the playoff hunt, a surprise team peaking at just the right time. With two very winnable games left they control their own destiny in a season when they couldn’t even control the locker room.

Players say coach Joe Phil-bin’s calm response to the November crisis put them on the winning path.

“Adversity is either going to make your team strong because the leader is going

to rally and pull everyone together, or make you disin-tegrate because the leader is panicking,” said Patrick Len-cioni, who writes on leader-ship and team building in business. “Clearly he did not panic.”

The team was fl oundering even before Jonathan Martin walked out and Incognito was sent packing. The Dolphins had lost four straight games to fall to 3-4, and the uproar over bullying threatened to further fracture a fragile team.

Owner Stephen Ross ex-pressed his outrage.

“Changes need to be made,” he said.

But changes weren’t made, at least big ones. Replace-ments were brought in for Martin and Incognito and they proved capable. The coaching staff remained in-tact and general manager Jeff Ireland still has his job.

But as NFL investigators traveled to Miami to inter-view everyone about what In-cognito said or did to Martin, other things began to change.

Miami started to win. The line, with backups replacing Martin and Incognito, gave up fewer sacks and opened up more room to run.

And on Sunday, a fi ll-in safety playing his fi rst NFL game intercepted a pass in the end zone to seal an upset over New England and put the Dolphins in the driver’s

seat for their fi rst playoff ap-pearance in fi ve years.

“With all the distractions, everybody still wanted to win,” McKinnie said. “We found a way to remain fo-cused.”

No stranger to adversity, Philbin was still mourning the accidental death of his 21-year-old son days earlier when he was given his fi rst head coaching job in the NFL in January 2012.

His total focus became rebuilding the Dolphins. A four-game losing streak this season didn’t shake his plan, and neither did the scandal.

“He laid that plan out from the very fi rst day he was here, and he never wavered from it,” defensive coordinator Kevin Coyle said. “Amidst all of the peripheral things that have been going on here dur-ing the course of the season, he just stayed the course each and every day and provided the leadership to the players in the team meetings and to the staff in the staff meet-ings about, ‘Hey we are do-ing things the right way. We are going to continue to move forward and try to build the best organization in the NFL.’ Nothing has ever changed.”

In the process the stoic Philbin has gone from being on the chopping block to be-ing mentioned as a possible coach of the year candidate.

“I haven’t heard any of that,” Philbin said. “Again,

we are all concentrating as a team and an organization. This is important. We talked about the fourth quarter and playing well in December. These guys have been hard at it since July 21st. We need to fi nish this season strong.”

Lencioni, who wrote the book “Five Dysfunctions of a Team,” said it could be that the bullying and team leadership was not as bad as thought. That’s certainly the perception of Dolphins play-ers, who stuck up for Incog-nito.

“If the media is tough on them and they’re sticking together, that’s a unifying force,” Lencioni said. “But it requires credibility on the part of the coach. If the coach is a jerk with no credibility then the whole ‘Us against the world’ thing probably im-plodes.”

With four wins in the last fi ve games, the Dolphins have a chance to be remembered for more than having a bully in the locker room. It could be the rare team that becomes unifi ed in the face of contro-versy.

Instead of worrying about the loss of Martin and Incog-nito, players have embraced the personnel they have. That includes safety Michael Thomas, who was picked up off the San Francisco 49ers practice squad and made his

Dolphins on verge of playoffs despite scandal

Please see DOLPHINS |13

BY TERESA M. WALKERAP Sports Writer

NASHVILLE — Tennessee right tackle David Stewart has missed three straight practices with a sore shoul-der, and now the Titans have to decide whether it’s bet-ter to sit the veteran Sunday against Jacksonville and give him a little bit more rest.

Coach Mike Munchak said Friday that Stewart is questionable and they’ll de-cide Saturday if he will miss his third game this season. Munchak said Stewart has played without practicing but that it is hard.

With only the season fi nale remaining after Sunday’s game, the Titans (5-9) could shut down Stewart for the rest of the year. . Byron Stin-gily or Mike Otto would start if Stewart doesn’t play.

“He’s missed a couple games now for that reason,” Munchak said of Stewart not practicing. “We would defi -nitely consider that .. then really with the rest how he would feel next week.”

Stewart was a fourth-round pick out of Mississippi State in 2005, and he has started all 116 games he has played since moving into the

starting lineup in his second season in 2006. He didn’t miss a start until 2009 when he missed a start against San Francisco on Nov. 8 the sea-son Chris Johnson ran for 2,006 yards. Stewart missed one game in 2011 and the fi rst 12 in 2012 before break-ing his right leg Dec. 2 in a loss to Houston.

The ankle limited Stewart early this season and then he started dealing with a shoul-der injury. He missed a win at St. Louis on Nov. 3 and a loss to the Jaguars on Nov. 10. Stewart said he knows he’ll be talking with the team

doctor with some MRI ex-ams involved once the sea-son ends.

“It’s frustrating,” Stewart said. “Just play through the pain and see where it goes from there.”

Defensive tackle Mike Martin also is questionable after hurting an ankle in practice Thursday.

Chris Johnson, given a day of rest Wednesday, is probable with a sore knee. Defensive tackle Jurrell Casey (shoulder), center Brian Schwenke (ankle), cor-nerback Alterraun Verner (groin) are all probable.

Veteran right tackle misses 3rd straight practice

BY GREG BEACHAMAP Sports Writer

LAS VEGAS — Although Fresno State fell one win short of a BCS berth, the Bulldogs still got a high-stakes trip to Vegas for the fi nal game of quarterback Derek Carr’s ca-reer.

The 21st-ranked Bulldogs (11-1) landed in the Las Ve-gas Bowl against Southern California (9-4) on Saturday, kicking off bowl season with a compelling California match-up in the shadow of the Strip.

USC is on its third head coach of a tumultuous season, but the talent-rich Trojans are

still one of the nation’s high-est-profi le programs.

With a victory over USC to clinch the fi rst 12-win season in school history, the Bulldogs would stake a compelling claim as the best team ever to suit up in the Central Valley.

“The team is pretty fi red up about being here,” Fresno State receiver Davante Adams said. “They’ve got a great pro-gram, world-renowned, so it’s going to be a lot of fun going against these guys.”

Adams and Carr are excited about the challenge they’ll face when the Bulldogs have the ball at Sam Boyd Stadium.

While the nation’s best pass-ing offense decimated nearly every defense it faced, USC’s undermanned defense still put together an impressive season against the Pac-12’s high-scoring teams, ranking 14th in the nation in scoring defense.

“I don’t like to give any-body too much credit until we go out and face them,” said USC safety Dion Bailey, who might head to the NFL after the game. “They’ve got a talented offense, but I don’t think there’s any defense in the country that’s like ours.”

After every dip and peak in

a season that puts the New York-New York casino’s roller coaster to shame, the Trojans say they’re only focused on completing a 10-win season. Offensive coordinator Clay Helton is running the team af-ter Ed Orgeron resigned ear-lier this month, angry about losing the permanent job to Steve Sarkisian despite going 6-2 as Lane Kiffi n’s interim replacement.

The Trojans all seem to ad-mire Helton, who joined the program along with Kiffi n in early 2010, but several play-

No. 21 Fresno State faces USC in Las Vegas Bowl

Please see VEGAS | 13

Page 13: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

ers made their Vegas mo-tivations clear this week.

“Everybody in that locker room wants to win for Coach O,” USC cor-nerback Josh Shaw said. “Even Coach Helton has

talked about it. We still go through the same routines now that he isn’t here, and we’re going to do it again. The only thing different is Coach O won’t be the one talking to us.”

The Mountain West champions got to the

brink of a BCS break-through, but a defensive meltdown in a 62-52 loss to San Jose State ruined it. Fresno State is eager to embrace this chance to show off in front of a national audience, but the Bulldogs also realize

USC could cause similar problems for Fresno State coach Tim DeRuyter’s de-fense with the combined talents of receivers Marq-ise Lee and Nelson Aghol-or, quarterback Cody Kes-sler and tailback Javorius Allen.

ScoreboardSaturday, December 21, 2013 Daily Corinthian • 13

BasketballNBA standings, schedule

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L Pct GBBoston 12 15 .444 —Toronto 10 14 .417 1⁄2Brooklyn 9 17 .346 21⁄2New York 8 17 .320 3Philadelphia 8 19 .296 4

Southeast DivisionMiami 20 6 .769 —Atlanta 15 12 .556 51⁄2Charlotte 13 14 .481 71⁄2Washington 11 13 .458 8Orlando 8 18 .308 12

Central DivisionIndiana 21 5 .808 —Detroit 13 15 .464 9Cleveland 10 15 .400 101⁄2Chicago 9 16 .360 111⁄2Milwaukee 5 21 .192 16

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 21 5 .808 —Houston 17 10 .630 41⁄2Dallas 15 11 .577 6New Orleans 11 13 .458 9Memphis 10 15 .400 101⁄2

Northwest DivisionOklahoma City 21 4 .840 —Portland 22 5 .815 —Denver 14 10 .583 61⁄2Minnesota 13 13 .500 81⁄2Utah 7 22 .241 16

Pacifi c DivisionL.A. Clippers 18 9 .667 —Phoenix 14 10 .583 21⁄2Golden State 14 13 .519 4L.A. Lakers 12 13 .480 5Sacramento 7 18 .280 10

Thursday’s Late GameSan Antonio 104, Golden State 102

Friday’s GamesPhiladelphia 121, Brooklyn 120, OTCleveland 114, Milwaukee 111, OTMiami 122, Sacramento 103Atlanta 118, Utah 85Charlotte 116, Detroit 106Indiana 114, Houston 81Toronto 109, Dallas 108Phoenix at Denver, (n)Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, (n)

Today’s GamesMemphis at New York, 11 a.m.Washington at Boston, noonSacramento at Orlando, 6 p.m.Houston at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.Utah at Charlotte, 6:30 p.m.Cleveland at Chicago, 7 p.m.Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m.Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m.Dallas at Phoenix, 8 p.m.New Orleans at Portland, 9 p.m.L.A. Lakers at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.Denver at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.

Football

NFL standings, scheduleAMERICAN CONFERENCE

East W L T Pct PF PANew England 10 4 0 .714 369 311Miami 8 6 0 .571 310 296N.Y. Jets 6 8 0 .429 246 367Buffalo 5 9 0 .357 300 354

South W L T Pct PF PAy-Indianapolis 9 5 0 .643 338 319Tennessee 5 9 0 .357 326 355Jacksonville 4 10 0 .286 221 399Houston 2 12 0 .143 253 375

North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 9 5 0 .643 354 274Baltimore 8 6 0 .571 296 277Pittsburgh 6 8 0 .429 321 332Cleveland 4 10 0 .286 288 362

West W L T Pct PF PAx-Denver 11 3 0 .786 535 372x-Kansas City 11 3 0 .786 399 255San Diego 7 7 0 .500 343 311Oakland 4 10 0 .286 295 393

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAPhiladelphia 8 6 0 .571 364 349Dallas 7 7 0 .500 393 385N.Y. Giants 5 9 0 .357 251 357Washington 3 11 0 .214 305 434

South W L T Pct PF PANew Orleans 10 4 0 .714 359 270Carolina 10 4 0 .714 328 208Tampa Bay 4 10 0 .286 258 324Atlanta 4 10 0 .286 309 388

North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 8 6 0 .571 406 391Green Bay 7 6 1 .536 353 362Detroit 7 7 0 .500 362 339Minnesota 4 9 1 .321 363 425

West W L T Pct PF PAx-Seattle 12 2 0 .857 380 205San Francisco 10 4 0 .714 349 228Arizona 9 5 0 .643 342 291St. Louis 6 8 0 .429 316 324

MondayBaltimore 18, Detroit 16

SundayTampa Bay at St. Louis, NoonIndianapolis at Kansas City, NoonDenver at Houston, NoonMiami at Buffalo, NoonNew Orleans at Carolina, NoonDallas at Washington, NoonCleveland at N.Y. Jets, NoonMinnesota at Cincinnati, NoonTennessee at Jacksonville, NoonArizona at Seattle, 3:05 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Detroit, 3:05 p.m.Oakland at San Diego, 3:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m.New England at Baltimore, 3:25 p.m.Chicago at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.

MondayAtlanta at San Francisco, 7:40 p.m.

SundayGreen Bay at Chicago, NoonHouston at Tennessee, NoonPhiladelphia at Dallas, NoonDetroit at Minnesota, NoonTampa Bay at New Orleans, NoonCarolina at Atlanta, NoonCleveland at Pittsburgh, NoonWashington at N.Y. Giants, NoonBaltimore at Cincinnati, NoonJacksonville at Indianapolis, NoonN.Y. Jets at Miami, NoonBuffalo at New England, NoonDenver at Oakland, 3:25 p.m.Kansas City at San Diego, 3:25 p.m.St. Louis at Seattle, 3:25 p.m.San Francisco at Arizona, 3:25 p.m.

Bowl lineupTODAY

New Mexico BowlAt Albuquerque

Washington State (6-6) vs. Colorado State (7-6), 1 p.m. (ESPN)

Las Vegas BowlFresno State (11-1) vs. Southern Cal (9-4),

2:30 p.m. (ABC)Famous Idaho Potato Bowl

At Boise, IdahoBuffalo (8-4) vs. San Diego State (7-5), 4:30

p.m. (ESPN)New Orleans Bowl

Tulane (7-5) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4), 8 p.m. (ESPN)

MONDAYBeef ‘O’ Brady’s BowlAt St. Petersburg, Fla.

Ohio (7-5) vs. East Carolina (9-3), 1 p.m. (ESPN)

TUESDAYHawaii BowlAt Honolulu

Oregon State (6-6) vs. Boise State (8-4), 7 p.m. (ESPN)

THURSDAYLittle Caesars Pizza Bowl

At DetroitBowling Green (10-3) vs. Pittsburgh (6-6), 5

p.m. (ESPN)Poinsettia Bowl

At San DiegoNorthern Illinois (12-1) vs. Utah State (8-5),

8:30 p.m. (ESPN)FRIDAY

Military BowlAt Annapolis, Md.

Marshall (9-4) vs. Maryland (7-5), 1:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Texas BowlAt Houston

Minnesota (8-4) vs. Syracuse (6-6), 5 p.m. (ESPN)

Fight Hunger BowlAt San Francisco

BYU (8-4) vs. Washington (8-4), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN)

SATURDAY, DEC. 28Pinstripe Bowl

At New YorkNotre Dame (8-4) vs. Rutgers (6-6), 11 a.m.

(ESPN)Belk Bowl

At Charlotte, N.C.Cincinnati (9-3) vs. North Carolina (6-6),

2:20 p.m. (ESPN)Russell Athletic Bowl

At Orlando, Fla.Miami (9-3) vs. Louisville (11-1), 5:45 p.m.

(ESPN)Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl

At Tempe, Ariz.Kansas State (7-5) vs. Michigan (7-5), 9:15

p.m. (ESPN)MONDAY, DEC. 30Armed Forces BowlAt Fort Worth, Texas

Middle Tennessee (8-4) vs. Navy (7-4), 10:45 a.m. (ESPN)

Music City BowlAt Nashville, Tenn.

Mississippi (7-5) vs. Georgia Tech (7-5),

2:15 p.m. (ESPN)Alamo Bowl

At San AntonioOregon (10-2) vs. Texas (8-4), 5:45 p.m.

(ESPN)Holiday BowlAt San Diego

Arizona State (10-3) vs. Texas Tech (7-5), 9:15 p.m. (ESPN)

TUESDAY, DEC. 31AdvoCare V100 Bowl

At Shreveport, La.Arizona (7-5) vs. Boston College (7-5),

11:30 a.m. (ESPN)Sun Bowl

At El Paso, TexasVirginia Tech (8-4) vs. UCLA (9-3), 1 p.m.

(CBS)Liberty Bowl

At Memphis, Tenn.Rice (9-3) vs. Mississippi State (6-6), 3 p.m.

(ESPN)Chick-fi l-A Bowl

At AtlantaTexas A&M (8-4) vs. Duke (10-3), 6 p.m.

(ESPN)WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1Heart of Dallas Bowl

At DallasUNLV (7-5) vs. North Texas (8-4), 11 a.m.

(ESPNU)Gator Bowl

At Jacksonville, Fla.Nebraska (8-4) vs. Georgia (8-4), 11 a.m.

(ESPN2)Capital One BowlAt Orlando, Fla.

Wisconsin (9-3) vs. South Carolina (10-2), Noon (ABC)

Outback BowlAt Tampa, Fla.

Iowa (8-4) vs. LSU (9-3), Noon (ESPN)Rose Bowl

At Pasadena, Calif.Stanford (11-2) vs. Michigan State (12-1), 4

p.m. (ESPN)Fiesta Bowl

At Glendale, Ariz.Baylor (11-1) vs. UCF (11-1), 7:30 p.m.

(ESPN)THURSDAY, JAN. 2

Sugar BowlAt New Orleans

Alabama (11-1) vs. Oklahoma (10-2), 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday, Jan. 3Orange Bowl

At MiamiOhio State (12-1) vs. Clemson (10-2), 7

p.m. (ESPN)Cotton Bowl

At Arlington, TexasMissouri (11-2) vs. Oklahoma State (10-2),

6:30 p.m. (FOX)SATURDAY, JAN. 4

BBVA Compass BowlAt Birmingham, Ala.

Vanderbilt (8-4) vs. Houston (8-4), Noon (ESPN)

SUNDAY, JAN. 5GoDaddy.com Bowl

At Mobile, Ala.Arkansas State (7-5) vs. Ball State (10-2),

8 p.m. (ESPN)MONDAY, JAN. 6

BCS National ChampionshipAt Pasadena, Calif.

Florida State (13-0) vs. Auburn (12-1), 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

SATURDAY, JAN. 18East-West Shrine Classic

At St. Petersburg, Fla.East vs. West, 3 p.m. (NFLN)

SATURDAY, JAN. 25Senior Bowl

At Mobile, Ala.South vs. North, 3 p.m. (NFLN)

HockeyNHL standings, schedule

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L OT Pts GF GABoston 23 10 2 48 96 74Tampa Bay 21 11 3 45 97 84Montreal 21 13 3 45 92 81Detroit 16 12 9 41 94 101Toronto 18 16 3 39 101 106Ottawa 14 17 6 34 103 122Florida 14 18 5 33 87 117Buffalo 9 23 3 21 63 100

Metropolitan DivisionPittsburgh 26 10 1 53 117 80Washington 19 13 3 41 111 104Philadelphia 16 15 4 36 86 97Carolina 14 14 7 35 81 98New Jersey 14 15 7 35 85 90N.Y. Rangers 16 18 2 34 82 100Columbus 14 17 4 32 91 100N.Y. Islanders 10 19 7 27 90 124

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 25 7 6 56 140 105St. Louis 23 7 4 50 119 81Colorado 23 10 1 47 100 80

Minnesota 20 12 5 45 86 88Dallas 17 12 5 39 99 102Winnipeg 16 16 5 37 100 108Nashville 16 16 3 35 80 99

Pacifi c DivisionAnaheim 25 7 5 55 119 93Los Angeles 24 8 4 52 101 69San Jose 21 8 6 48 113 88Vancouver 21 11 6 48 104 92Phoenix 18 10 6 42 106 105Calgary 13 16 6 32 88 111Edmonton 11 23 3 25 95 127

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

Thursday’s Late GamesColorado 4, Edmonton 2Los Angeles 4, San Jose 1

Friday’s GamesAnaheim 3, New Jersey 2, OTN.Y. Islanders 5, N.Y. Rangers 3Washington 4, Carolina 2Vancouver 3, Chicago 2, SOWinnipeg 5, Florida 2

Today’s GamesCalgary at Pittsburgh, noonPhoenix at Ottawa, 1 p.m.Colorado at Los Angeles, 3 p.m.New Jersey at Washington, 6 p.m.Philadelphia at Columbus, 6 p.m.Montreal at Nashville, 6 p.m.Buffalo at Boston, 6 p.m.Detroit at Toronto, 6 p.m.Carolina at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m.Anaheim at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m.St. Louis at Edmonton, 9 p.m.Dallas at San Jose, 9:30 p.m.

Transactions

Friday’s dealsBASEBALL

MLB — Suspended Baltimore LHP Troy Pat-ton 25 games, without pay, after testing posi-tive for an amphetamine in violation of Major League Baseball’s Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.

American LeagueCLEVELAND INDIANS — Named Jim Rickon

hitting coach and Chad Wolfe athletic trainer for Columbus (IL); David Wallace manager, Rouglas Odorm hitting coach, Jeff Harris Pitch-ing coach and Jeremy Heller athletic trainer for Akron (EL); Scooter Tucker manager, Tony Man-solino hitting coach and Steve Karsay pitching coach for Carolina (Carolina); Mark Budzin-ski manager, Shaun Larkin hitting coach and Rigo Beltran pitching coach for Lake County (MWL); Phil Clark hitting coach and Greg Hib-bard pitching coach for Mahoning Valley (NYP); Mark Allen pitching coach for Arizona (GCL) and Jesus Sanchez pitching coach for Indians (DSL). Named Luis Ortiz minor league assis-tant fi eld coordinator and Edwin Rodriguez minor league special assistant.

NEW YORK YANKEES — Named Gary Tuck bullpen coach; Trey Hillman special assis-tant, major and minor league operations; Mike Quade roving outfi eld and baserunning instructor, and Matthew Krause strength and conditioning coordinator.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Claimed C Chris Gi-menez off waivers from the Tampa Bay. Agreed to terms with 1B Daric Barton on a one-year contract. Released LHP Pedro Figueroa.

National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Agreed to

terms with INF Eric Chavez on a one-year con-tract.

CHICAGO CUBS — Agreed to terms with LHPs Jonathan Sanchez, Tsuyoshi Wada and Tommy Hottovy and OF Mitch Maier on minor league contracts.

CINCINNATI REDS — Agreed to terms with RHPs Jose Diaz and Chien-Ming Wang, LHP Lee Hyde, Cs Corky Miller, Rossmel Perez and Max Ramirez, INFs Argenis Diaz, Reynaldo Navarro and Kristopher Negron, and OF Jason Bourgeois on minor league contracts.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Designated LHP Eric Surkamp for assignment. Added RHP Ryan Vogelsong to the 40-man roster.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Named Brian Daubach manager, Chris Michalak pitching coach and Mark Harris hitting coach for Har-risburg (EL); Tripp Keister manager, Franklin Bravo pitching coach and Brian Rupp hitting coach for Potomac (Carolina); Patrick Ander-son manager for Hagerstown (SAL); Billy Gard-ner Jr. manage, Paul Menhart pitching coach and Joe Dillon hitting coach for Syracuse (IL); Amaury Garcia hitting coach and Tim Redding pitching coach for Auburn (NYP); Michael Bar-rett manager and Jorge Mejia hitting coach for the Nationals (GCL). Named Tony Beasley and Jeff Garber co-fi eld coordinators; Troy Gingrich hitting coordinator and Jon Kotredes medical and rehab coordinator for their minor leagues.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

NFL — Fined Philadelphia QB Nick Foles $10,000 for an illegal peel-back block on Min-nesota LB Erin Henderson; Arizona LB Marcus Benard $15,750 for roughing the passer on a hit on Tennessee QB Ryan Fitzpatrick; Car-dinals LB Daryl Washington $5,000 for un-sportsmanlike conduct.

sissippi St. 17, Clemson 7

Jan. 1, 1999 Cotton Bowl_Texas 38, Missis-sippi St. 11

Jan. 1, 1995 Peach Bowl_N.C. State 28, Mis-sissippi St. 24

Jan. 2, 1993 Peach Bowl_North Carolina 21, Mississippi St. 14

Dec. 29, 1991 Liberty Bowl_Air Force 38, Mis-sissippi St. 15

Dec. 31, 1981 Hall of Fame Bowl_Mississippi St. 10, Kansas 0

Dec. 27, 1980 Sun Bowl_Nebraska 31, Mis-sissippi St. 17

Dec. 28, 1974 Sun Bowl_Mississippi St. 26,

North Carolina 24Dec. 21, 1963 Liberty

Bowl_Mississippi St. 16, N.C. State 12

Jan. 1, 1941 Orange Bowl_Mississippi St. 14, Georgetown 7

Jan. 1, 1937 Orange

Bowl_Duquesne 13, Mis-sissippi St. 12

HISTORY

CONTINUED FROM 12

VEGAS

CONTINUED FROM 12

DOLPHINS

CONTINUED FROM 12

NFL debut on Sunday against the Patriots.

Many of his new teammates said they didn’t even know who No. 31 was until he picked off Tom Brady with seconds remaining to seal a game that the Dolphins of old would have probably lost. That didn’t stop them from embracing Thomas in celebration.

“Teamwork really is a huge com-petitive advantage when you can actually make a team play like a team. They may have less talent on the fi eld now but they have a better team,” Lencioni said.

“And that may be the real story of the Miami Dolphins of 2013.”

ULL

CONTINUED FROM 12

30 in a loss to Louisiana-Monroe.Coach Mark Hudspeth doesn’t

sound optimistic that the right-hand-ed Broadway will be ready.

“He’s trying. He’s just a long way away,” Hudspeth said. “We’ll see when game time gets here who we decide to run on the fi eld. The ques-tion if we put him in, can he be effec-tive if he’s not 100 percent? ... You just wonder if he survives if he gets hit on that arm.”

Montana has been beaten up play-ing behind a young offensive line. His throwing shoulder has bothered him much of the season.

“He’s just not as healthy as we’d like him to be, but he’s going to fi ght and he’s going to play. He’s one of the toughest guys I’ve ever been around,” Tulane coach Curtis Johnson said. “How much he’s going to play is go-ing to depend on what we see.”

Redshirt freshman Devin Powell has backed up Montana this season, and Hudspeth said his defense was preparing for both Wave QBs.

“It won’t be a surprise to see either of them,” Hudspeth said. “I’m sure they’ll go with the one who ends up being the most effective.”

Redshirt freshman Brooks Haack took over for Broadway after his in-jury.

Even with all the quarterback un-certainty, Johnson doesn’t see too much mystery surrounding the ap-proach both offenses will take.

“It’ll probably be a quick game be-cause we’ll both run the ball,” John-son said.

The New Orleans Bowl is played in the Superdome, which has also served as Tulane’s home fi eld for nearly four decades. This was the fi -nal season for the Green Wave in the dome before moving into a new on-campus stadium.

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Page 14: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

14 • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

ST. LOUIS — A stew of foul weather, ranging from freezing rain and snow in the Midwest to thunderstorms and possible tornadoes in the South, is ar-riving just in time for one of the busiest travel weekends of the year.

Much of the nation was brac-ing for something, with freez-ing rain then snow likely in the northern Plains, downpours ex-pected from St. Louis through Appalachia, and even weekend tornadoes a possibility in Ar-kansas, Louisiana and Missis-sippi.

While much of the East awoke Friday to unusually warm weather for this time of year, the region was next in the storm front’s crosshairs, creat-ing pre-Christmas travel wor-ries from Chicago and Detroit to Boston and New York.

AAA projected that nearly 95 million Americans would travel 50 miles or more during the holiday period, which runs from Saturday through Jan. 1.

Temperatures that hovered in the 60s in some parts of the Midwest on Thursday plum-meted overnight, and freezing rain Friday morning snarled traffi c and forced some school closures in Michigan and Wis-consin.

The Wisconsin Department of Transportation said Inter-state 90/94 was ice-covered from Tomah and Mauston. The

state was bracing for signifi cant snow, sleet and ice.

Although few fl ights had been cancelled by midday Friday, the weather was taking a toll on air travel: FlightStats.com report-ed more than 1,300 U.S. de-lays, with the most at Chicago’s O’Hare, Denver International, and the three big New York-area airports.

The National Weather Ser-vice issued a fl ash fl ood watch from Arkansas northeastward through parts of Missouri, Illi-nois, Indiana and Ohio, with up to 4 inches of rain projected.

With falling temperatures, some of that could be freezing rain by Saturday night in the St. Louis area, weather service me-teorologist Jon Carney said.

“It’s defi nitely a concern that there could be fl ooding,” Car-ney said.

Forecasters said thunder-storms would likely develop in the South. The region most at peril is from central and north-

eastern Texas through Louisi-ana, Mississippi, Arkansas and southeast Missouri. Wind gusts could reach 80 mph, and fl ash fl ooding was possible.

By Sunday night, the storm systems will be hammering the East Coast. Some New England and mid-Atlantic states could see rare winter thunderstorms.

Tom Kines, an AccuWeather meteorologist, said the un-settled weather comes as a cold front in the northern U.S. clashes with unusually warm and humid air coming up from the South. He said that warm air will lead to record or near-record highs in many places over the next day or two. Nash-ville could reach into the 70s on Saturday. New York City could approach 70 degrees on Sun-day.

The warm air, though, will bring plenty of trouble to some areas.

“I think there’s a high likeli-hood there will be severe storms

with hail and damaging wind” in parts of the South, Kines said. “Whether or not there’s tornadoes, that’s tough to say, but I will say the conditions are right.”

Tornadoes are far more com-mon in the spring and summer, but not unheard of in the win-ter.

A tornado outbreak on Christ-mas Day 2012 reached from northeastern Texas through central Alabama — one twister hit Mobile, Ala. A tornado on Dec. 16, 2000, killed 11 people in Tuscaloosa, Ala.

Farther north, more tradi-tional winter weather was the biggest worry.

Kansas City, Mo., was bracing for freezing rain, then 6 inches of snow.

In New England, Nikki Beck-er of the National Weather Ser-vice said much of Maine and parts of New Hampshire could get up to a half-inch of ice Sat-urday night through Sunday

morning.The timing couldn’t be worse.

AAA is projecting record travel for this holiday period, and spokeswoman Heather Hunt-er said more than 90 percent of travelers will get there by car. She encouraged drivers to check the weather, not only at their destination but at points along the route, before heading out.

Motorists should also make sure their vehicles are road trip-ready, especially the tread and air pressure on the tires. They should also make sure there is plenty of windshield washer fl uid that won’t freeze.

The good news is that Christ-mas is mid-week.

“When a holiday falls on a Wednesday it gives travelers more fl exibility of either leaving the weekend before, or travel-ing right before the holiday and extending the trip through the following weekend,” Hunter said.

Foul weather threatens to snarl holiday travelBY JIM SALTERAssociated Press “I think there’s a high likelihood

there will be severe storms with hail and damaging wind” in parts

of the South. “Whether or not there’s tornadoes, that’s tough to say,

but I will say the conditions are right.”

Tom KinesAccuWeather meteorologist

“When a holiday falls on a Wednesday it gives travelers more flexibility

of either leaving the weekend before,or traveling right before the holiday

and extending the trip throughthe following weekend.”

Heather HunterAAA spokeswoman

Saturday Morning Breakfast7:00am - 11:00am

Classic Old Style Iron Skillet Cooking

602 Cass St. • Corinth, MS(beside Goody’s) 662-287-2323

• Hashbrowns • Pancakes • Bacon

• Eggs • H

omem

ade S

ausage • B

iscuit

• Tenderloin • Ham • Grits

• C

hocola

te G

ravy

• B

olo

gna

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

to Law Professionals

Odom and Allred, P.A.Attorneys at Law

404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS _________________________________________

662-286-9311William W. Odom, Jr. Rhonda N. AllredAttorney at Law Attorney at [email protected] [email protected]___________________________________________

(Payment Plans available)

Serving NortheastMississippi’s legal needs...

John O. WindsorA T T O R N E Y

Call for an appointment:Call for an appointment:

662-872-0121662-872-0121

401 E. Waldron St.401 E. Waldron St.Corinth, MSCorinth, MS

Bankruptcy * Criminal Defense * Personal Injury

ContactLaura Holloway

at662-287-6111ext. 308

to advertiseyour

Law Firmon this page.

ContactLaura Holloway

at662-287-6111ext. 308

to advertiseyour

Law Firmon this page.

Ashlee Clark Cook Paralegal

Tacey Clark Locke

Attorney at Law

Telephone: (662) 424-5000

Come see us at our new location:

311 W. Eastport Street, Iuka, MS 38852

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy; Contested and Uncontested Divorces;

Child Custody; Wills; Estates; Federal Court Litigation;

Adoption; Personal Injury; Wrongful Death; Social Security;

Deeds; Automobile Accidents and Insurance Disputes.

Tacey Clark LockeAttorney at Law

Telephone:(662) 424-5000

Come see us at our new location:

Ashlee Clark Cook Paralegal

BLAYLOCKLAW FIRM, PLLCMERRY CHRISTMAS

ANDHAPPY NEW YEAR

For unto you is born this day, in the City of

David, a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.

Luke 2:11

www.blaylocklawfi rm.com

Stop the Harassment & Keep your PropertyQUICK - EASY - LOW COST

Affordable fl exible payment plansZERO down payment gets you a fresh start with

106 West College Street, Booneville, MS

Tuesday - Saturday 9:30 - 5:30 • 662-287-3606 • 1808 Shiloh Road, Corinth, MS

Tis The Season To Dazzle

Page 15: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 21, 2013 •15

SERVICES

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community ProfilesFOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(Daily Corinthian Only $165)

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDERUN YOUR ADON THIS PAGE

REMODELING OR NEW BUILDING

You owe it to yourself to shop with us fi rst.

Examples:White Pine Boards

1X6 or 1X850¢ Board Ft.

Architectural Shingles“Will dress up any roof, just ask

your roofer.”$62.95 sq.

3 Tab Shingles$54.95 per sq.

Concrete Steps.$37.95 per tread.

Vinyl Floor CoveringBest Selection

Prices start @ $1.00 per yard.

All types of treated lumber in-stock.

“NO ONE BEATS OUR PRICES”

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000

Your ComfortIs Our Calling

(662) 212-4735Bill Crawford

•Maintenance Programs•HVAC Systems•HVAC Tune-ups & Inspections

We Service All Makes & Models

15% Senior Citizen & Vet Disc. Mention this ad & save 10%

CrossRoads Heating & Cooling

- Fast & Reliable -Heating & Cooling Help

SOUTHERN HOMESAFETY, INC.TOLL FREE

888-544-9074or 662-315-1695www.southernhomesafety.com

TORNADO SHELTERS

Large full size -6x12 tall x 6’9” concrete

JIMCOROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BIDALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

$1,000,000 LIABILITY

INSURANCE• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975• LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY

(NO SECONDS)• METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE,

SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST

WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS& DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

New Construction, Home Remodeling

& Repair. Licensed/Insured

Fair & Following Jesus “The Carpenter”

SHANE PRICE BUILDING, INC.

662-808-2380

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Rip Rap, Top Soil, Slag,

Culverts Land Crearing & House Lots

BUDDY AYERS

CONSTRUCTION

662-286-9158 OR

662-287-2296

YOU NAME IT!WE HAUL IT!

SMITH CABINET SHOP

CABINET BARGAINSLARGEST SALE IN OUR 30 YEAR HISTORY!

We have recently made changes in the materials and fi nishes used in some of our cabinet lines. Because of this, we have accumulated several loads of discontinued

merchandise. We are selling these cabinets at unbelievable discounts!We have unfi nished Cabinets in various styles and sizes that have been

picked up due to dealer closings.

30% OFF (These may be slightly discolored)

We are also replacing our showroom display sets!

We have unfi nished Cabinets in various styles and sizes that have beenfipicked up due to dealer closings.

30% OFF(These may be slightly discolored)

We have unfinished Cabinets in various styles and sizes that have been picked up due to dealer closings.

30% OFF(These may be slightly discolored)

Pre-FInished White Cabinets with Raised Panel DoorsPrefinished White Cabinets with Raised Panel Doors

Regularly Priced at $1,823.54

NOW $911.77

p y

60%OFF

g

1505 Fulton Drive • Corinth MS 38834 • 662-287-2151

Marked down an additional

10% with a total of 60% Savings!

PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS SPACE!

JUST BECAUSE IT’S COLD OUTSIDE,DON’T SIT

BACK AND NOT ADVERTISE!!!!

GRISHAM INSURANCE

(662)286-9835

Final Expense Life Insurance

Long Term Care Medicare Supplements

Part D Prescription Plan

Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?

Call me for a free quote.

“ I will always try to help you”1801 South Harper Road

Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

iFinal Expense

CHRIS GRISHAM

Got Gold?I Buy It!Franz Schnabl

Gold/Diamond BrokerSpecializing in

Loose DiamondsDiamonds @

Wholesale Prices662-415-2377

[email protected]

For more details:www.corinththeatrearts.com

DO YOU BELIEVE?Write your letter to

Santa andTell him what you

want forChristmas

and he will sendYou a personal letter

Addressed specifi cally to YOU!

Tidwell Roofi ng Co.Residential & Commercial

Big or SmallWe Top Them AllMetal-Shingles

Flat Roofs*All Work Guaranteed*

Free Estimates

Cell: 662-415-5247 Ofc: 662-287-436039 Years Experience

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.F U L L T I M E p e r s o nneeded @ small loancompany in Corinth.Hrly wage + monthlybonuses. Paid holidays,vacation & sick time. Re-quirements include ex-cellent customer ser-vice skills & a willing-ness to work. Cashhandling & basic com-puter skills a plus. Train-ing provided. Pleasesend all resumes to:[email protected] Call 662-664-0436

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-t ion, f loor level ing,bricks cracking, rottenw o o d , b a s e m e n t s ,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. FREE ESTIM-ATES. 731-239-8945 or662-284-6146.

LOST0142LOST!!!!BLK MALE LAB,MIXED, JUST HAD SUR-GERY. 662-706-4494

FOUND0149

FOUND MALE YELLOW LAB, NOCOLLAR. OFF KENDRICH& HARPER RD. CALL 662-212-2852

Can be found in the classifieds

Page 16: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

COMPUTER0515

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SKILLED TRADE0240

Saddle Creek is hiring an Inventory Control Coordinator. Previous

inventory experience highly desired Knowledge of Microsoft Word, Excel, Power Point, & Outlook

are preferred as well as working understanding of WMS and SAP. $15+ per hour base depending on experience. Benefi ts included. For complete details and to apply to to:

www.sclogistics.com/hourly

LOST0142

$500 REWARD!!!1.5 yrs. Old

Siberian HuskyChapman’s

Restaurant Area,CR 761

John Taylor @662-286-2835 or

212-2362

IN MEMORIAMRemembering loved ones we’ve lost....

in 2013Please send your

Memorial (Must be no more than 8 lines approx.

4 words per line)

with photo and payment of

$20 to:Daily Corinthian

Attn: Classifi edP.O. Box 1800

Corinth, MS 38835-1800or drop off at:

1607 S. Harper Rd.

You may also email to:[email protected]

IN MEMORIAM 2013 WILL BE PUBLISHED

ON WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29TH, 2013.

DEADLINE IS WEDNESDAY,

JANUARY 22ND, 2013 AT 5:00 P.M.

For any questions or more info. call

662-287-6147

Meet theBabies of 2013

Babies of 2013c/o Daily Corinthian

P. O. Box 1800Corinth MS 38835 or

drop off at 1607 S Harper Rd - Corinth MSYou may also email to:

[email protected]

Deadline is Monday, January 20, 2014. “Babies of 2013” will publish on Sunday,

January 26, 2014.

The Daily Corinthian will be featuring the “Babies of 2013” on January 26, 2014. If you or someone

you know would like to feature a baby on this special page,

Please send Baby’s Name, Date of Birth, Parents Name, Address & Phone # along with photo

& payment of $20 to:

Bring more shoppers to your door with locally focused advertising from the experts.

FURNITURE0533FULL SIZE SOLID OAKDESK IN EXCELLENTCONDITION. $50/OBO.CALL 662-665-1420 OR284-5913

QUEEN SIZE sleigh bedincl. headbd, footbd,frame, box springs,mat-tress. $50/OBO 662-665-1420 or 284-5913

FIREWOOD0539OAK, GREEN & seasoned.$100. a cord Tree Ser-vice Avail. 662-665-1594

WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE0554

M&M. CASH FOR JUNKCARS & TRUCKS. 662-415-

5435 or 731-239-4114.WE PICK UP!

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

" A R O M A " R O A S T E ROVEN. $50. CALL 662-643-356510K YELLOW gold heartshaped pendant with 1ct. diamonds. $300. 662-415-7791

1960'S STYLE SOFA &CHAIR, NEW UPHOL-STERY, GOLD, $250. CALL662-603-5187

2 CT. d iamond r ingw/rounds & baguettes.Set in 10K gold. Size 7.$500. Call 662-415-7791

2 CUSHION BLUE RE-CLINERS. $60 FOR BOTH.CALL 662-643-3565

26" LIKE NEW LADIESBIKE. 7 SPEED. $80. CALL662-286-6582

3 STACK PROPANE HEAT-ER. $60. 662-603-5187

32" FLAT SCREEN TELEVI-SION STILL IN BOX. $200.CALL 662-286-6582

ALUM CHECKER PlateTool Box for Small sizePickup. $90. Call 731-239-8668 or 731-453-4615

ANTIQUE SETTEE, decor-ative wood & party up-holstered (neutral col-or), casters, must see.$150. 662-287-2935

BEAUTIFUL NEW queenbdspread set, purple,bed skirt, pillow shams,3 throw pillows, cur-tains. $50. 662-415-7435

BENCH, SOLID oak frame,6' lg. w/3 separate fab-ric cushions. Can beused at ft of king bed orin foyer, restaurant,etc.Only $75. 662-287-2935

CAMERA TRIPOD, Man-frotto 724B DIGI. NeverUsed. $150, 662-287-8396. No calls beforenoon.

DESK CHAIR ON WHEELS.$15/OBO. CALL 662-603-5187

EARTHQUAKE 2-MANAuger Model 9800 3.8HP-Like New Condition.$250. 662-872-3109

ELECTRIC 2001 KenmoreEstate dryer, XL capa-c i t y . S m a l l r e p a i rneeded. $125. 662-643-7669

ESTATE SALE, Engage-ment/wedding ring. 14diamonds (2 rows) $300.Call 662-415-7435

FULL LENGTH faux minkcoat. Dk brn, Sz med,Looks like real thing.Never worn. $150. Call662-415-7791

HAND STRUNG Neck-laces w/natural stones.Great for Gifts! $35-$40.662-665-9765

KENMORE DRYER, white,Xlge cap. w/multiplesettings. About 1 yr old.Excellent. $350. MustSee. Call 662-287-2935

LAMPS, 2 lge. decorat-ive lampsw/scallopedshades. Neutral color.Both only $30. 662-287-2935

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320AKC BOXERS. Fawn, seal& flashy. 3fe, 3ma; Avail2/1/14. $600. ea. 662-415-2639 or 665-1764

LAB/SHEPHERD PUPS, 8wks old, 1 blk, 1 tan. $40each. Cute. 731-934-4077

FARM

FEED/FERTILIZER0430ROLL HAY. $25 EACH.CALL 662-396-1698

MERCHANDISE

ANTIQUES/ART0506ANTIQUE DINING TABLE,SOLID OAK, 1940'S VIN-TAGE, PERFECT CONDI-TION, SEATS UP TO 8.MUST SEE. $250. CALLJIM 284-6724

MUSICAL MERCHANDISE0512

YAMAHA KEYBOARD ,very nice, $75. 662-643-3729.

COMPUTER0515DELL INSPIRON, Win-dows 7 P. C. computer,23" Monitor. WindowsPrograms insta l led .$275 . 662-665-9765

ELECTRONICS05185 PC. Stereo set w/5CDplayer, record player,tape, radio. 2 largespeakers. $300. Call 662-415-7435

L INKSYS E900 C ISCOW I R E L E S S R O U T E R .GREAT CONDITION!! $25.CALL 662-645-7650

PROTRON 32" TV, FORSALE, WORKS GREAT.$75. CALL 662-872-3109

VINTAGE KODAK PLEAS-ER CAMERA IN ORIGINALBOX. $25. 662-643-7650

VINTAGE KODAK VR35CAMERA IN ORIGINALBOX. $15. CALL 662-643-7650

VINTAGE POLAROID IN-STANT CAMERA IN ORI-GINAL CASE. $50. CALL662-643-7650

SPORTING GOODS0527

"STAY HEALTHY" WESLOEXERCISE WALKER, CON-TROL SPEED & ELEVA-TION. $75. CALL 662-286-8773

NEW WESLO exercisebike w/speed, time &distance, $120. 662-643-3729. .

TRUCKING0244

LONGISTICS - Raliegh,NC/Memphis, TN Re-gions. Team OTR driverswanted. $1500 sign-onbonus!! CDL-A, 2 yearsOTR experience, cleancriminal, good MVR/CSAscore. Details and to ap-p l y o n l i n e :www.longist ics .com800-789-8451

DRIVER TRAINEESGET PAID CDL

TRAINING NOW!Learn to drive for

US XpressNew Drivers can earn$800/wk & Benefits!Carrier covers cost!

NO EXPERIENCENEEDED!

Be trained & basedlocally!

1-888-540-7364

PEOPLE SEEKING EMPLOYMENT0272

DO YOU need TLC for aloved one? I am avail.anytime. Refernces,Michelle @ 665-284-6651

GENERAL HELP0232

WANTEDINDEPENDENT

CONTRACTOR

GLEN AREAExcellent Earnings

Potential

Requirements:

•Driver's License•Dependable

Transporation•Light Bookwork Ability (will train)

•Liability Insurance

Please come by theDaily Corinthian and

fill out a questionaire.

DAILYCORINTHIAN

1607 S. Harper Rd.Corinth, MS

Page 17: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, December 21, 2013 •17

SERVICES

Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and

price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. Auto Sales

GUARANTEED

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2004 MERCURYMONTEREYfully loaded, DVD/

CD system, new tires, mileage 80,700, climate controlled air/heat, heat/

cool power seats.

$7,000 OBOCall or text

956-334-0937

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc.

drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical

condition”. $7400.

662-664-3538

REDUCED

2004 Nissan Murano,

black, 120k miles, loaded, adult driver, garage kept, Bose, leather,

exc. cond., $10,500.

662-284-6559.

804BOATS

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine own-ing a like-new,

water tested, never launched, power-house outboard

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

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS

AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO731-453-5031

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

2013 KUBOTA3800 SERIES

TRACTOR16’ TRAILER, DOUBLE

AXEL, BUSH HOG, BACKHOE,

FRONT LOADER$25,000

WILL TRADE662-643-3565

868AUTOMOBILES

1983NISSAN DATSUN280 ZX

Turbo, exc. cond.

$5000.662-415-1482

2009 Nissan Murano SL,

leather upholstery,

sunroof, rear camera, blue tooth, loaded

to the max! 76, 000 Miles$18,500/OBO662-808-9764

1984 CORVETTE383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum.

heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt

w/new paint job (silver fl eck paint). $9777.77

Call Keith662-415-0017.

REDUCED

2001 TOWN CARSignature Series,

Dark BlueGood Tires And

BatterySmooth Ride206,000 Miles

$3000 662-286-7939

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $3250 obo.

340-626-5904.

2000 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT

228k miles.$2500 obo.

662-643-6005

868AUTOMOBILES

1997 FORD ESCORT

30 MPGGOOD CAR

$1650CALL

662-808-5005

2000 TOYOTA COROLLA CE

4 cylinder, automatic

Extra Clean136,680 miles

$4200662-462-7634 or

662-664-0789Rienzi

2012 MALIBU LSLTZ PACKAGE

33 Mpg Highway, 1 Owner, Auto Lights, Sirius

Radio, Power Sweats, On Star, Remote Keyless Entry, Cocoa Cashmere Interior, 5 Year 100,000

Mile Power Train Warranty.

$14,900256-412-3257

868AUTOMOBILES

2011 HYUNDAI ACCENT

18,470 MILES4 CYL., 36 MPG

Remainder of 6/60 Warrant

$9,800

662-664-0956

1991 Mariah 20’ ski boat, 5.7 ltr.

engine, new tires, $6700.

662-287-5893, leave msg. & will

return call.

804BOATS

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER,

RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP,

24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW

BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER

LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$6,400. 662-808-0113.

1979 OLDSMOBILE

OMEGA6 CYLINDER

RUNS GREAT!38,000 ORIGINAL MILES

$5,000CALL PICO:

662-643-3565

2004 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE40TH EDITION

GARAGE KEPT, EXTRA CLEAN, MAROON,

98K MILES$4950

CALL 662-415-6888

2001 WHITE FORD RANGER XLT

3.0 V6, AutomaticExtended Cab

New Tires, Cold AirBed Liner

158,000 Miles$4500/OBO

662-212-2492

1989 FORD F350

DIESEL MOVING VAN

WITH TOMMY GATE

RUNS GOOD$3800

731-607-3173

2007 GMC YUKON70,000 MILESGARAGE KEPT$22,500

CALL FORADDITIONAL

INFORMATION662-284-8396

2004 Ford Expedition110,000 MILES

One OwnerNew Tires

$5,400

662-415-1043

2001 CAMERO CONVERTIBLE

NEW TOPV6

30+ MPGZ28 APPEARANCE

PACKAGEALL POWER

$6900662-415-9121

1995CHEVY VAN

TOW PACKAGE

83,000 ACTUAL MILES

$2995/OBO 662-415-8180

REDUCED

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2009 FORD F150

Gray, 76,000 Miles, Air, Cruise, Power Windows,

Great Stereo, Bedliner, Clean

$14,000.662-284-7293

2004 Ford F350 work truck, V10, underbed tool boxes, towing package, DVD.

$8600 obo. Truck is in daily use. Please call for appt. to see,

340-626-5904.

2005 GMC Envoy

DENALI XL2 OWNER

NEW TIRES, BRAKES & BELTS

112,000 MILES$9800/OBO

662-284-6767

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some

work.$1500

662-664-3958

2009 ROAD RUNNER7X7X21’ ENCLOSED

BOXED TRAILER,

WHITE, NEW TIRES$3500

662-594-8271

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S/TRAILERS

2006 Chrysler Town & Country

3.8v-6, Only 62,000 mi.Automatic Transmission CD player, power sliding doors & rear hatch, Stow & Go package. Seats will

fold fl at into fl oor.$7650.

662-665-1995

‘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.

$85,000662-415-0590

1988GMC PICK UP157,000 Miles

New Paint,Good TiresAutomatic,

4 Wheel Drive.$3900

662-287-5929

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

TRAILERS

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

1983HARLEY

DAVIDSONShovel HeadLeather Bags

662-643-3565REDUCED

$6500

SOLD

2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER

Fiberglass 18’ bunk house, gray &

black water tanks, cable ready w/TV.

$8,500662-396-1390

REDUCED

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

ADVERTISE YOUR AUTO, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR,

MOTORCYCLE, RV OR ATVLIST IN OURGUARANTEED AUTO SECTIONFOR AS LITTLE AS.................................(No Dealers - Non Commercial Only)

1607 South Harper Rd email: [email protected] Corinth MS 38834 662-287-6111

868AUTOMOBILES

1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC

19’6” LONGFIBERGLAS

INCLUDES TRAILERTHIS BOAT IS

KEPT INSIDE AND IS IN EXCELLENT

CONDITIONNEW 4 CYL MOTOR

PRICE IS NEGOTIABLECALL 662-660-3433

1999 RED GRAND PRIX GT

2005 3800 ENGINE WITH ONLY 95,000 MILES ON

ENGINE. CAR HAS 257,000 MILES. PAINT AND INTERIOR

IN GOOD CONDITION.Asking $1700.662-284-5733

LEAVE MSG

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LT

EXTENDED CAB4.8

One of a kind46,000 mi.

garage kept.$20,000

CALL662-643-3565

REDUCED

16’ ALUMINUM BASS BOATTrailer Included70 HP Mercury

Motor w/Power Trim2 LCR’s

Foot ControlledTrolling Motor

$2000.662-808-8033

2005 FORD TAURUSV6, New Automatic

Transmission CD Player, Power

Windows & Locks139,000 MilesVery Nice Car

$3950662-665-1995

SOLD

SOLD

SOLDSOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

WILL TRADE

UTILITY TRAILER

Heavy Duty5’x8’

Mesh Gate$685CALL

662-415-8180

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF MILDREDP. WOOD DECEASED

CAUSE NUMBER:2013-0668-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby giv-en that Letters Testa-mentary were duly is-sued on the 11 day ofDecember, 2013, by theChancery Court of Al-corn County, Missis-s i p p i , t o S u s a n P .Roberts as Executrix ofthe Estate of Mildred P.Wood, Deceased, late anadult resident citizen ofAlcorn County, Missis-sippi. All persons hav-ing a claim against thes a i d d e c e d e n t a r ehereby notified to pro-bate and register samewith the Clerk of thisCourt. A failure to soprobate and registersame within (90) daysfrom the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice will forever barsame.

This the 11 day ofDecember, 2013.

SUSAN P. ROBERTS,EXECUTRIX

ATTEST:BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERK

KAREN DUNCAN,D.C.

Permenter & Elliott, P.A.Attorneys at Law105 East Spring StreetRipley, Mississippi 38663(662)837-8175

BY:FRED C. PERMENTER,JR.,ATTORNEY FOR THE EX-ECUTRIX,SUSAN P. ROBERTS

3 x's12/14, 12/21/12/28/201314519

HANDYMAN

HANDYMAN'S HOMECARE, ANYTHING.

662-643-6892.

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOORAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF MILDREDP. WOOD DECEASED

CAUSE NUMBER:2013-0668-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby giv-en that Letters Testa-mentary were duly is-sued on the 11 day ofDecember, 2013, by theChancery Court of Al-corn County, Missis-s i p p i , t o S u s a n P .Roberts as Executrix ofthe Estate of Mildred P.Wood, Deceased, late anadult resident citizen ofAlcorn County, Missis-sippi. All persons hav-ing a claim against thes a i d d e c e d e n t a r ehereby notified to pro-bate and register samewith the Clerk of thisCourt. A failure to soprobate and registersame within (90) daysfrom the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice will forever barsame.

This the 11 day ofDecember, 2013.

SUSAN P. ROBERTS,EXECUTRIX

ATTEST:BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERK

KAREN DUNCAN,D.C.

Permenter & Elliott, P.A.Attorneys at Law105 East Spring StreetRipley, Mississippi 38663(662)837-8175

BY:FRED C. PERMENTER,JR.,ATTORNEY FOR THE EX-ECUTRIX,SUSAN P. ROBERTS

3 x's12/14, 12/21/12/28/201314519

LEGALS0955

I N T H E C H A N C E R YC O U R T O F A L C O R NC O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I

RE: IN THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF OPAL IS-BELL, DECEASED

NO. 2013-0651-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on the 3rd dayof December, 2013, in CauseNo. 2013-0651-02, issued tothe undersigned, Sue Tucker,on the Estate of Opal Isbell,deceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days from thefirst publication of this No-tice, and that failure to pro-bate and register their claimswith the Clerk within thattime will forever bar theclaim.WITNESS my signature onthis the 3rd day of December,2013.

/s/Sue TuckerSue Tucker,Administratrix of the Estateof Opal Isbell,Deceased

/s/John O. WindsorJohn O. Windsor ; MSB:102155John O. Windsor, Attorney atLawPost Office Drawer 1860Corinth, Mississippi 38835(662)872-0121

3x's12/5, 12/12,12/19/201314509

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

SALE - SALE - SALEModel Displays Must Go!

New Spacious 4 BR, 2Bath Homes Starting at

$43,500Come Check Out theSI PAD Designed by

SI ROBERTSON Himself.Clayton HomesHwy 72 West,Corinth, MS

1/4 mile past MagnoliaHospital

TRANSPORTATION

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES0816

CAR HAULER trailer likenew, metal floor, ExcCond, used 2x's, $2050.Call 662-415-6888

LEGALS

LEGALS0955

I N T H E C H A N C E R YC O U R T O F A L C O R NC O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I

RE: IN THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF OPAL IS-BELL, DECEASED

NO. 2013-0651-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on the 3rd dayof December, 2013, in CauseNo. 2013-0651-02, issued tothe undersigned, Sue Tucker,on the Estate of Opal Isbell,deceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days from thefirst publication of this No-tice, and that failure to pro-bate and register their claimswith the Clerk within thattime will forever bar theclaim.WITNESS my signature onthis the 3rd day of December,2013.

/s/Sue TuckerSue Tucker,Administratrix of the Estateof Opal Isbell,Deceased

/s/John O. WindsorJohn O. Windsor ; MSB:102155John O. Windsor, Attorney atLawPost Office Drawer 1860Corinth, Mississippi 38835(662)872-0121

3x's12/5, 12/12,12/19/201314509

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

HOMES FOR RENT0620

2 BR, 1 BA, 2032 Hwy 72.City school. $450 mo.,$450 dep. 662-279-9024.

2 B R , 1 B A , C R 3 1 6 ,$400month/$200 dep.603-3891 or 287-6141

3 BR, 2 Ba, M/H. Ksth.Sch. Lg yard. Avl Jan 1.$450m/$450d. 287-6752

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

TAKING APPLICATIONS:2 & 3 BRs. Oakdale Mo-bile Home Pk. 286-9185.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

8 CR 522Biggersville/Kossuth

Area3600 Sq. Ft. Heatedarea in this nice multi-level home. 4-5 BR, 3BA, finished basementw/game room, shop,pond. You will LoveThis Spacious Home.

Let's Talk Price!662-284-5379 for Appt.

& More Info

For Sale

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

SOFA TABLE w/3 draw-ers. Med. dark wood,beautiful finish, excel-lent condition. $60. 662-287-2935

STAFFORD LEA blazer.Men's Lge, Great Cond,sti l l has tags!! Gave$300. Will take $150! 662-643-7650

STEP BUMPER RECEIVER.$20. CALL 662-872-3109

T O D D L E R ' S F O A Mweight bench. L ikeDads! Great Cond, Greatfor Christmas! Gave$110, Take $70! 643-7650

VINTAGE AVON BOTTLES!TWO BOXES. $40. FORALL. 662-643-7650

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

WESLO EXERCISE Bikew/heart monitor & fan,Like New. $75. Call 731-239-8668 or 731-453-4615

WURLITZER ORGAN, 3keyboards, medium fin-ish, must see. Don'thave room for it. $350.662-287-2935

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

HEAVY DUTY RESTAUR-ANT GRADE STOCK POT(15" HIGH, 13" ROUND)$20. 662-872-3109

MICROWAVE-GENERALELECTRIC, 1100 WATT,WHITE, $45. CALL 662-287-2935

OCCASIONAL CHAIR, up-holstered seat, ladderback, maroon, excel-lent. $35. 662-287-2935

PIONEER AUDIO/VIDEOS T E R E O R E C E I V E R ,WORKS GREAT. $65. CALL662-872-3109

RECEIVER HITCH OFFFORD VAN (FULL FRAME)$20. CALL 662-872-3109

REFRIGERATOR, GOODCONDITION. 6 YRS OLD.OFF-WHITE. $150. CALL662-643-3565

REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.SILVER PLATE coffe serv-er and casserole dishwith lid. Top Quality.$100. 662-415-7435

SILVER PLATE, 3 trays, 2covered bowls, 2 smallbowls, $100. Call 662-415-7435

SOFA TABLE & Chairw/upholstered seat.Medium color wood.Both for $50. 662-287-2935

Page 18: 122113 daily corinthian e edition

18 • Saturday, December 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Street AddressCity, State Zip000-000-0000

Mon.-Fri. 7:00-7:00

Street AddressCity, State Zip000-000-0000

Mon.-Fri. 7:00-7:00

Corinth • 286-0058Southgate Shopping Plaza

Mon.-Th urs. 10-8;Fri. & Sat. 10-9; Sun. 1-6

Your taxes. Your way.You got people.

H&R Block Tax Professionalsare ready to help.With H&R Block, you have more than a company behind you. Youhave a one-on-one relationship with one of H&R Block’s 90,000 taxprofessionals working for you, in person, by phone, or via e-mail.

Stop into your nearby H&R Block location listed below.for other locations call 1-800-HRBLOCK or visit hrblock.com

1018 South Cass StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-2216

810 South Cass StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 287-31708 S. Cass Street in Corinth

GOODY’Syour town. your store.

Plunk’s ComputersPlunk’s Computers704 South Cass Street

Corinth ,MS 38834Phone: 662-287-5151

Hours:Monday- Friday 10am-5pmwww.plunkscomputers.com

606 Cass St.Corinth, MS662-665-0608

Fax 662-665-0732

602 South Cass Street, Corinth, MS 38834(662) 287-2323

A Dining Experience Like No Other

Classic Old Style Iron Classic Old Style Iron Skillet Cooking

Come See UsFor Th e Latest

Best Sellers!802 Cass St

Southgate Plaza Corinth, MS662-286-2335

check us out andSAVE20any single regular priced item

%OFF

mauricesWe’ve got fashion that is real freash and fun. Denim to dressy. Work week to weekend. Find the clothes that seak to you.

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