052916 daily corinthian e edition

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25 years ago 10 years ago Alcorn Central High School graduate Alton H. Farris completes U.S. Army Ocer Candidate School and is commissioned as a second lieutenant. Vol. 120, No. 130 Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages Two sections www.dailycorinthian.com May 29, 2016 $1.50 Today 89 Warm Tonight 67 Sunday Sunday Inside today: More than $117 in coupon savings Daily Corinthian 20% chance of rain Shiloh National Military Park Superintendent Woody Harrell leads the annual Memorial Day commemoration, noting it is the 125th year since the rst time the holiday was commemorated. Corinth man charged with malicious mischief Page 3A Residents face drug conspiracy charges Page 3A Students earn awards in regional science fair Page 2B Prentiss County Tennessee Education Staff photo by Angela Storey Jumpertown fifth- and sixth- grade math teacher Karen Roberts is retiring May 31. A Jumpertown graduate herself, she has worked at Jump- ertown School in Prentiss County for 31 years. She and her husband, Sandy, reside in the Pisgah community. They have three children and four grandchildren. She attends An- tioch Baptist Church. “I’ve got so many things I want to do I don’t know what I’ll do first,” she says about retirement. “When I think back, I’ve been at Jumpertown School so long ... I can’t imagine not being there.” She hopes to volunteer with various school activities in the future. Roberts was hon- ored with a retirement celebra- tion at Moore’s Restaurant in Jumpertown. Karen Roberts, Jumpertown People of the Crossroads A local congregation is put- ting their words into action to help its pastor. Grace Community Church preacher and Bread of Life Food Ministry Director Tim Alvis is scheduled to have a heart procedure next month at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. Those who attend the Corinth church are having a benet to raise money for Alvis to take care of traveling expenses during the trip. A spaghetti dinner and silent auction ben- et are slated for June 4 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Bread of Life. Bread of Life is located in the old fellowship hall of Tate Baptist Church. “I have been pray- ing a lot for him since we found out he re- ally needed to go to the Mayo Clinic,” said benet coordinator Sue Terry. “God laid a burden on my heart and my mind just started clicking on ways we could help.” Terry nally came up with the fundraiser idea. BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Church congregation unites to help pastor Staff photo by Steve Beavers Commencement excitement Corinth High School senior Madison Woodruff shares her excitement with classmates before the 2016 commencement on Friday at the Crossroads Arena. More photos from the graduation will appear in Wednesday’s print edition of the Daily Corinthian. Corinth police reported sev- eral recent drug arrests. Angela McGaha, 31, of County Road 750, Corinth, was arrested May 20 and charged with possession of methamphetamine and pos- session of a controlled sub- stance. She was released after posting $20,000 bond. The arrest followed a trac stop at a business on Highway 72 on May 20, said Capt. Dell Green. A search uncovered 20 grams of methamphetamine and 94 grams of marijuana. The alleged drugs found in Mc- Gaha’s purse led to her arrest. The driver of the vehicle had misdemeanor charges. Another trac stop on Highway 72 on May 20 led to the arrest of Audrey Peoples, 22, of Iuka. She was charged with pos- session of methamphetamine, and bond was set at $10,000. An ocer who stopped Peo- ples for failure to dim lights de- tected the odor of marijuana, and a search revealed 2 grams of methamphetamine and par- aphernalia, said Green. Timothy Huebbe, 51, of Morris Chapel, Tenn., was arrested May 18 and charged BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Police make drug arrests Keith Fowler started the cam- paign to take the strip back. Several others have jumped onboard because of their love of a once popular drive-in. A love of Fraley’s Drive In has created the Fraley’s Drive In Cruise 2016. The car show will be held on June 11 from 5-8 p.m. at Joe’s Diner. “It just blew up on Facebook,” said Fowler. “Fraley’s was part of everyone’s childhood in the 50s, 60s and 70s.” Fowler is using the throw- back event to benet a trio of organizations. Money made from T-shirts to promote the event is being used to purchase items for West Clinic patients. The AMEN Food Pantry and Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter are also beneciaries of the car show. Individuals will be able to vote for Best of Show and Fan Favorite through non-per- BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Cruise will benefit charities The Corinth School District will keep the lunch lady work- ing this summer. Corinth’s elementary and middle schools, along with several other sites, are par- ticipating in the Summer Food Service Program, keep- ing youngsters fed through the summer months with the likes of ham and cheese sandwiches. It begins June 6 at most sites. The meals are free to any- one 18 and younger. Partici- pants do not have to be stu- dents of the city schools. “The need for good, nutri- tious meals continues through the summer vacation period,” said Margaret Simpson, food service director. “Each site will oer a lunch consisting of a hot or cold sandwich, fruit or vegetable, juice and milk.” In addition to the school campuses, other feeding sites are Farmington Arms Apt. 38, Project Attention, The Light- BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Corinth schools offering summer feeding program Please see ARRESTS | 5A Please see FEEDING | 5A Please see CRUISE | 5A Alvis Please see ALVIS | 2A 286 286.6006 .6006 HWY 72 E • Corinth MS www.brosenissan.com BRAND NEW 2016 FRONTIER SV CREWCAB PER MONTH *o$ *o$ 360 360 00 00 *$ *$ 24,999 24,999 6 6 AT THIS AT THIS PRICE! PRICE! *: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE PRICE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. HOLIDAY BONUS CASH APPLIED, IF APPLICABLE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY; NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372, 38375, OR (&) 38852 WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIG- NATED MARKET AREA ALIGNMENT WHICH MAY AFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 75MO, 5.5APR, TIER 1 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. #: INCLUDES THE NMAC FINANCE REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN. T: PAYMENT FIGURED @ SPECIAL APR FINANCING THRU NMAC IN LIEU OF STANDARD REBATES. CERTAIN TERMS & CONDITIONS MAY APPLY. TIER 1,2,3 RATING REQUIRED. ^INCLUDES VALUE TRUCK PACKAGE SAVINGS, IF ITEMS PURCHASED SEPERATELY. ^^ACTUAL MPG MAY VARY. SEE FUELECONOMY.GOV FOR DETAILS. ADDITIONAL $500 CASH BACK ALREADY APPLIED TO PRICES SHOWN. °84 MO, 5.5 APR. DEALS GOOD THRU 5.28.16. NISSAN REBATES - *# $750 TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRP -$2,851 SALES PRICE *# $24,999 MODEL#32316 • DEAL#52652 • STK#2758NT, 2773NT, 2787NT, 2790NT, 2796NT, 2797NT 16

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052916 daily corinthian e edition

Transcript of 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Page 1: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

25 years ago 10 years agoAlcorn Central High School graduate Alton H. Farris completes

U.S. Army Offi cer Candidate School and is commissioned as a second lieutenant.

Vol. 120, No. 130 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

www.dailycorinthian.com

May 29, 2016

$1.50

Today89

WarmTonight

67

SundaySunday

Inside today: More than $117 in coupon savings

Daily Corinthian20% chance of rain

Shiloh National Military Park Superintendent Woody Harrell leads the annual Memorial Day commemoration, noting it is the 125th year since the fi rst time the holiday was commemorated.

Corinth man chargedwith malicious mischief

Page 3A

Residents face drugconspiracy charges

Page 3A

Students earn awardsin regional science fair

Page 2B

Prentiss County Tennessee Education

Staff photo by Angela Storey

Jumpertown fifth- and sixth-grade math teacher Karen Roberts is retiring May 31. A Jumpertown graduate herself, she has worked at Jump-ertown School in Prentiss County for 31 years. She and her husband, Sandy, reside in the Pisgah community. They have three children and four grandchildren. She attends An-tioch Baptist Church. “I’ve got so many things I want to do I don’t know what I’ll do first,” she says about retirement. “When I think back, I’ve been at Jumpertown School so long ... I can’t imagine not being there.” She hopes to volunteer with various school activities in the future. Roberts was hon-ored with a retirement celebra-tion at Moore’s Restaurant in Jumpertown.

Karen Roberts, Jumpertown

People of the Crossroads

A local congregation is put-ting their words into action to help its pastor.

Grace Community Church preacher and Bread of Life Food Ministry Director Tim Alvis is scheduled to have a heart procedure next month at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Those who attend the Corinth church are having a benefi t to raise money for Alvis to take care of traveling expenses during the trip. A spaghetti dinner and silent auction ben-

efi t are slated for June 4 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Bread of Life.

Bread of Life is located in the old fellowship hall of Tate

Baptist Church.“I have been pray-

ing a lot for him since we found out he re-ally needed to go to the Mayo Clinic,” said benefi t coordinator Sue Terry. “God laid a burden on my heart and my mind just started clicking on ways we could help.”

Terry fi nally came up with the fundraiser idea.

BY STEVE [email protected]

Church congregationunites to help pastor

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Commencement excitementCorinth High School senior Madison Woodruff shares her excitement with classmates before the 2016 commencement on Friday at the Crossroads Arena. More photos from the graduation will appear in Wednesday’s print edition of the Daily Corinthian.

Corinth police reported sev-eral recent drug arrests.

• Angela McGaha, 31, of County Road 750, Corinth, was arrested May 20 and charged with possession of methamphetamine and pos-session of a controlled sub-stance. She was released after posting $20,000 bond.

The arrest followed a traffi c stop at a business on Highway 72 on May 20, said Capt. Dell Green. A search uncovered 20 grams of methamphetamine and 94 grams of marijuana. The alleged drugs found in Mc-Gaha’s purse led to her arrest.

The driver of the vehicle had misdemeanor charges.

• Another traffi c stop on Highway 72 on May 20 led to the arrest of Audrey Peoples, 22, of Iuka.

She was charged with pos-session of methamphetamine, and bond was set at $10,000.

An offi cer who stopped Peo-ples for failure to dim lights de-tected the odor of marijuana, and a search revealed 2 grams of methamphetamine and par-aphernalia, said Green.

• Timothy Huebbe, 51, of Morris Chapel, Tenn., was arrested May 18 and charged

BY JEBB [email protected]

Police makedrug arrests

Keith Fowler started the cam-paign to take the strip back.

Several others have jumped onboard because of their love of a once popular drive-in.

A love of Fraley’s Drive In has created the Fraley’s Drive In Cruise 2016. The car show

will be held on June 11 from 5-8 p.m. at Joe’s Diner.

“It just blew up on Facebook,” said Fowler. “Fraley’s was part of everyone’s childhood in the 50s, 60s and 70s.”

Fowler is using the throw-back event to benefi t a trio of organizations. Money made from T-shirts to promote the

event is being used to purchase items for West Clinic patients.

The AMEN Food Pantry and Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter are also benefi ciaries of the car show. Individuals will be able to vote for Best of Show and Fan Favorite through non-per-

BY STEVE [email protected]

Cruise will benefit charities The Corinth School District will keep the lunch lady work-ing this summer.

Corinth’s elementary and middle schools, along with several other sites, are par-ticipating in the Summer Food Service Program, keep-ing youngsters fed through the summer months with the likes of ham and cheese sandwiches. It begins June 6 at most sites.

The meals are free to any-one 18 and younger. Partici-

pants do not have to be stu-dents of the city schools.

“The need for good, nutri-tious meals continues through the summer vacation period,” said Margaret Simpson, food service director. “Each site will off er a lunch consisting of a hot or cold sandwich, fruit or vegetable, juice and milk.”

In addition to the school campuses, other feeding sites are Farmington Arms Apt. 38, Project Attention, The Light-

BY JEBB [email protected]

Corinth schools offering summer feeding program

Please see ARRESTS | 5A

Please see FEEDING | 5APlease see CRUISE | 5A

Alvis

Please see ALVIS | 2A

286286.6006.6006HWY 72 E • Corinth MSwww.brosenissan.com

BRAND NEW 2016FRONTIER SV CREWCAB

PER MONTH

*o$*o$3603600000*$*$24,99924,999

66AT THISAT THIS

PRICE!PRICE!

*: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE PRICE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. HOLIDAY BONUS CASH APPLIED, IF APPLICABLE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY; NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372, 38375, OR (&) 38852 WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIG-

NATED MARKET AREA ALIGNMENT WHICH MAY AFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 75MO, 5.5APR, TIER 1 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. #: INCLUDES THE NMAC FINANCE REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN. T: PAYMENT FIGURED @ SPECIAL APR FINANCING THRU NMAC IN LIEU OF STANDARD REBATES. CERTAIN TERMS & CONDITIONS MAY APPLY. TIER 1,2,3 RATING REQUIRED. ^INCLUDES VALUE TRUCK PACKAGE SAVINGS, IF ITEMS PURCHASED SEPERATELY. ^^ACTUAL MPG MAY VARY. SEE FUELECONOMY.GOV FOR DETAILS. ADDITIONAL $500 CASH BACK ALREADY APPLIED TO PRICES SHOWN. °84 MO, 5.5 APR. DEALS GOOD THRU 5.28.16.

NISSAN REBATES - *#$750TOTAL SAVINGS OFF MSRP -$2,851SALES PRICE *#$24,999 MODEL#32316 • DEAL#52652 • STK#2758NT,

2773NT, 2787NT, 2790NT, 2796NT, 2797NT

16

Page 2: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

2A • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Jahadius Walker, 11, places a flag at one of the cemetery’s many grave markers.

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Zachary Flora, 8, of Troop 123 puts a flag at one of the 7,600 grave sites in Corinth Na-tional Ceme-tery Saturday morning. He was one of numerous scouts who helped with the annual task of set-ting out flags in prepara-tion for the Sunday ser-vice on Me-morial Day weekend. His six-year-old brother, Jacob, also participated.

Placing flags

“I cried for three days because I didn’t know what to do,” she said. “We all know money doesn’t grow on trees.”

Dinner tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for chil-dren under the age of 10. The dinner will include spaghetti, green beans, bread, dessert and sweet tea.

The silent auction por-

tion of the benefi t will end at 3 p.m. and donations are being accepted for the event.

“God is going to make this successful because He is so amazing,” added Terry.

Alvis will check in the clinic on June 13. He will have a surgery to stop his mitral valve from leaking on June 15.

“I have been dealing with heart issues for 30

years,” said Alvis.Alvis has had three

open heart surgeries in the past and a fourth is scheduled in the future.

“I’m not worried,” said Alvis. “God is going to take care of everything and I plan to be back here on June 17.”

(For more information about the event contact Sue Terry at 731-610-7400.)

ALVISCONTINUED FROM 1A

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Sue Terry (left) and Shelonda Barnett work

on fundraising plans to benefit

Grace Community Church pastor Tim

Alvis.

Alexis RuddMarea Wilson Roger Clark Audrey McNairJohn Hayes2782 S Harper Rdwww.jumperrealty.comCarl Jones

If you are looking for quiet country living, this 3 bedroom home sits in the middle of 5

acres with a 30X40 shop and a pond. This well kept and peaceful home also features a full

basement.

780 CR 500 $155,000

This home off ers quiet country living, while conveniently living 3 miles from the city. The house off ers a large

master suite, along with two more bedrooms, and another large bathroom. Also, there is a comfortable sitting area separate from the living room that is now being used as a computer room. The front yard has newly laid sod, and

there is a new kitchen back splash being installed!

15 CR 103 $129,000

This is a nice 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath home sitting on a little over ½ Acre lot. Has 2325 sq ft., with a brand

new roof with architectural shingles. New roof comes with a 30 yr transferable warranty. Has

a wood burning Fireplace. All appliances ( with double-oven ) stay. Has walk-in closets. Large jetted

tub in the newest bathroom. Home is priced to sell!!!!

1 CR 251 $119,900

Beautiful custom built brick home in Farmington. This 3 bedroom 2.5 bath home features custom cabinets with granite counter tops, central vacuum and an irrigation system. This home has a formal dining room, sunroom and a 16X24 storage building that could be used as a

man cave or a she-shed! This home is a must see!

2 CR 185A $215,000

Fresh and new meets character and charm in this adorable, updated 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home located in

Downtown Corinth. This split bedroom fl oor plan home has new wood fl oors, fresh paint & trim throughout,

updated kitchen, updated bathrooms, Nursery/Offi ce, Formal Dining Room, Living Room w/an ornate Fireplace, screened breezeway between the home and 2 car garage

with shop area and fenced in yard.

This quaint 3 bedroom, 2 bath home sits on 2.5 acres with a pasture on one side and a Brand New salt water

pool and privacy fence on the other. Great kitchen with gas stove and windows over looking pasture

and back door opening on to the deck. Kitchen and bathrooms have ceramic tile. There is a storm shelter

and gutters have just been added.

206 CR 220 $99,000

Located in Woodall Lake Estates, this 3 bedroom, 2 bath Brick home, featuring a split bedroom plan, would make a wonderful family home. Oversized living room. Kitchen

with dining area. Large master suite with laundry room access. Master bath has large tub and separate shower.

Huge walk-in closet. Garage has utility room. Brick & vinyl exterior. Very nice lot on dead end street.

9 CR 474 $129,900

Historic Home in Downtown Corinth! This treasure can be your’s if you act now! Lovely three bedroom three bath home within

walking distance of everything downtown. There’s lots of charm in this home from the beautiful hardwood fl oors to the high ceilings and lazy susan built ins. The original blueprints from

1934 are also available! Appliances included with your purchase!

1305 Taylor St. $234,500

What a listing! This 44.12 acre residence consists of 4 bedrooms and 3.5 bath. The huge unfi nished upstairs area

would be a great rec area, or even a second family dwelling. Outside there are 2 patio areas and a porch to enjoy the

spacious, well manicured yard. Also, there is an outside shop that is insulated, and could be transformed into an apartment.

Maturing hardwood and pines are available on the acreage. What an investment!! Don’t forget about the pond!!!

46 CR 218 $475,000

If quiet country living is what you want, this place is for you. The property includes 5 acres;

3 fenced in ready for livestock. The home consists of 3 bed, 2 full bathrooms, a den with

stamped concrete fl oors, and a living room with a rock fi replace. The kitchen includes a

pantry and new appliances.

94 CR 708 $159,900

Located convenient to town, this 3 bedroom; 1 & 1/2 bath home is very spacious. Large family room with rock gas fi replace. Large utility room with washer and dryer

hookup. New dishwasher, oven and stove top. Large carport with outside utility room.

8 Franklin St $115,000

BRAND NEW Craftsman inspired home in Corinth’s hottest new subdivision - The Stones at Northtowne! Appx. 2800 sq.ft, 4 BR, 2.5

baths, TONS of granite, over/under cabinet lighting, stainless appliances INCLUDED, vaulted living room ceiling, sitting area in MB room,

hardwood fl oors, electric fi replace w/ beautiful Spanish cedar mantel & stacked stone; BEST NEW CONSTRUCTION DEAL IN TOWN! OWNER AGENT.

3 Northtowne $265,000

Adorable Split Bdrm with 3 Bdrms, 2 Full Baths,Liv. Room, Sep. Dining Room, Kitchen w/pantry and SS

Appl., FP in Master w/access to Private Screened front Patio, Huge Walk in Closet, Updated Master Bath w/tile fl oors, tub, His & Her vanities and separate shower. Roof replaced in 2014. The back yard is

fenced for children or your fur babies!

This very spacious,’’Move In Ready’’, well maintained 35YR old tri-level home features- Approximately 3500sq ft, upper level has 3 large BDs,2 1/2 BA, Den, Sun-RM, Gas Fireplace,,

lower level has large living area, 1 BD, 1 BA with private entrance.Lots of storage throughout,large elevated deck, New interior painting,New energy effi cient windows,2 yr

old roof, new landscaping, water softening system

3901 Worsham Drive $182,500

This beautful home boasts over 2300 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms and an open

fl oor plan. It has a big fenced in back yard that’s perfect for children or pets and a front

porch perfect for relaxing at the end of a long day. Don’t miss out!

1997 Alcorn Dr. $209,000

Craftsman inspired home in Corinth’s hottest new subdivision - The Stones at Northtowne! Appx. 3100 sq.ft, 4 BR + bonus that could be 5th, 3.5 baths, TONS of granite - HUGE kitchen, Spanish cedar beams, over/under cabinet lighting, stainless appliances

INCLUDED, hardwood fl oors, electric fi replace w/ beautiful Spanish cedar mantel & stacked stone. OWNER AGENT.

1 Northtowne $279,500

PRICED TO SALE !!! If you are looking for a meticulously maintained, one owner home that off ers 2 potentially

separate Living Qtrs you need to see this 2500 sq ft , 3 BD, 2 BA home today! Minutes from Pickwick Lake. Plenty of room to park your boat. 2 master suites, great for teens

or in-laws. 1 up & 1 down. Both with laundry and kitchen. You must see it!

20 Ode Moore Road $139,900

MUST SEE!!! Beautiful traditional home with 4 bedrooms and 3 baths on 5.4 acres!! If you value peace and quiet with a front porch view, then this is the home for you! The roof was replaced in 2011 with architectural shingles. Stainless

microwave, oven, and refrigerator stay! 2 car attached garage and detached storage building too! Be sure to see

photos online at www.jumperrealty.com!

20 CR 424 $155,000

Well kept spacious home on 8.25 acres. Main fl oor has lots of windows, formal living and dining,

kitchen, den, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. 2nd story has offi ce, bedroom, bath and living/game room. Full basement with garage, living quarters and shop.

Close to everything but lots of privacy. Call me for an appointment. Marea Wilson 662.643.7298.

700 Bradley Rd $219,000

Located just 1.8 miles west of Corinth is the home of your dreams! Sitting on 28.73 acres, this 4 bedroom/2.5 bath colonial style home is a must see! The

kitchen includes stainless steel appliances, granite counter tops,and custom built cabinets. Throughout the house are tons of closets,a generous laundry room, and

an amazing master suite. Also, there is a patio perfect for entertaining guests.Don’t forget the hardwood fl oors, large sun room, and the pond, which you can

see from the patio!

1318 Hwy 2 $399,000

Doug Jumper Michael McCrearyAnn Hardin Rick Jones Neil Paul

925 E 6th ST $115,000 1803 E. Borroum Circle $94,500

Page 3: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Local/RegionDaily Corinthian • 3ASunday, May 29, 2016

Today inHistory

Today is Sunday, May 29, the 150th day of 2016. There are 216 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On May 29, 1953, Mount Everest was con-quered as Edmund Hill-ary of New Zealand and Tensing Norgay of Nepal became the first climb-ers to reach the summit.

On this date:

In 1765, Patrick Henry denounced the Stamp Act before Virginia’s House of Burgesses.

In 1790, Rhode Island became the 13th original colony to ratify the Unit-ed States Constitution.

In 1848, Wisconsin be-came the 30th state of the union.

In 1912, the bal-let “L’Apres-midi d’un Faune” (The Afternoon of a Faun), with music by Claude Debussy, pre-miered in Paris with Vas-lav Nijinsky dancing the title role.

In 1913, the D.H. Law-rence novel “Sons and Lovers” was first pub-lished by Duckworth & Co. of London, albeit in an expurgated version.

In 1917, the 35th president of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was born in Brookline, Massachusetts.

In 1932, World War I veterans began arriving in Washington to de-mand cash bonuses they weren’t scheduled to receive until 1945.

In 1943, Norman Rockwell’s portrait of “Rosie the Riveter” ap-peared on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post. (The model for Rockwell’s Rosie, Mary Doyle Keefe, died in April 2015 at age 92.)

In 1961, a couple in Paynesville, West Virgin-ia, became the first re-cipients of food stamps under a pilot program created by President John F. Kennedy.

In 1973, Tom Bradley was elected the first black mayor of Los Ange-les, defeating incumbent Sam Yorty.

In 1985, 39 people were killed at the Europe-an Cup Final in Brussels, Belgium, when rioting broke out and a wall sep-arating British and Italian soccer fans collapsed.

In 1999, Discovery became the first space shuttle to dock with the International Space Sta-tion.

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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To start your home delivered subscription:Call 287-6111 Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.For your convenience try our office pay plans.

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

All other areas will be delivered the next day.

USPS 142-560The Daily Corinthian is published daily Tuesday through Sunday by PMG, LLC.

at 1607 South Harper Road, Corinth, Miss.Periodicals postage paid at Corinth, MS 38834

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

Across the Region

Booneville

Corinth man charged with felony mischief

BOONEVILLE — A Corinth man faces a felony charge after alleg-edly damaging vending machines in Booneville.

Booneville Police Chief Michael Ramey said Matthew Wayne Antle, 27, of 33 County Road 224, Corinth, has been charged with felony mali-cious mischief. Bond was set at $2,000.

Antle is accused of damaging drink ma-chines at businesses on East Church Street and South Second Street.

More arrests are pending in the case.

Iuka

Iuka class prepares young babysitters

IUKA — North Mis-sissippi Medical Center will offer Safe Sitter, a program to teach safe babysitting techniques, in Iuka this summer.

Safe Sitter will be offered from 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. July 19-20 at the NMMC-Iuka Educa-tion Rooms. This series will instruct adolescents 11 years and older how to react to emergencies when caring for young children.

Because space is limited, call (662) 377-7252 or 1-800-THE DESK (1-800-843-3375) by June 18 to register. The $45 course fee includes lunch, snacks and all course materi-als.

During the course, instructors will give stu-

dents hands-on practice in life-saving techniques so they are prepared to act in the event of a crisis. Instructors also provide tips to make sitters more confident caregivers. They teach safety and security precautions, such as what to do if a stranger comes to the door, when and who to call for help, give information on child development and sug-gestions for age-appro-priate activities. Parents are invited to attend the graduation ceremony at 3 p.m. the final day.

Savannah

Tennessee residents nabbed in drug case

SAVANNAH, Tenn. — A pair of Savannah resi-dents were part of 10 West Tennessee individ-uals indicted this week for conspiring to distrib-ute large quantities of pure methamphetamine throughout West Tennes-see. Edward L. Stanton III, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Ten-nessee, announced the indictment Friday.

A press release states nine of the defendants were taken into custody on Thursday, May 26, 2016 while one defen-dant remains on the run.

Federal, state and law enforcement agen-cies participated in the arrests, according to of-ficials.

Nancy Hubanks, 65, and James Walker Car-roll, 35, were the two Savannah residents that were indicted Friday. The others charged are Da-vid Burruss, 72, of Boli-

var; Rodney Richardson, 48, of Grand Junction; Deon Brown, Sr., 48, of Grand Junction; David Bryan, 29, of Jackson; Thomas Rodgers, 38, of Lexington; Matthew Ludoff, 33, of Jackson; Jason Stanfill, 37, of Jackson, and Mary Van-diver, 42, of Jackson.

The release states the defendants have been indicted on conspiracy to distribute and pos-sess with the intent to distribute more than 500 grams of meth, among other charges:

According to the indict-ment, the defendants conspired with each other to distribute and possess with the intent to distribute large quan-tities of “ice”, which is meth with a purity level greater than 80 percent.

During the course of a nearly two year inves-tigation, officials seized more than 3,500 grams of ice, over 800 grams of meth, three firearms, two vehicles and about $64,000 in drug pro-ceeds from the defen-dants, according to the release.

The defendants have been charged with one count of conspiring to distribute 50 grams or more of ice and one count of aiding and abetting each other to distribute, attempt to distribute, possess with the intent to distribute and attempt to possess with the intent to distrib-ute 50 grams or more of ice, according to a press release.

They have also been charged with conspiring to distribute and pos-sess with the intent to

distribute 500 grams or more of meth, among other charges, according to officials.

Officials say the 10 defendants face manda-tory minimum sentences of 10 years imprison-ment if convicted of con-spiracy and/or abetting charges as well as a fine of up to $10 million.

The additional charges carry mandatory sen-tences of between five and 20 years in prison and fines of up to $10 million.

The case is being in-vestigated by the DEA, TBI, Jackson-Madison County Metro Narcot-ics Unit, 24th Judicial District Drug Task Force, Hardin County Sheriff’s Department and the United States Postal In-spector Service.

The charges and alle-gations in the indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent un-less and until proven guilty.

The defendants are currently being held in federal detention cen-ters in various locations.

Tupelo

NTSB: No specific cause in fatal crash

TUPELO — A pre-liminary report by the National Transportation Safety Board into a plane crash that killed four people does not point to a specific cause for the crash and says the pilot reported smoke in the cockpit shortly af-ter taking off.

The Northeast Mis-sissippi Daily Journal

reported on Friday that NTSB’s preliminary report on the May 16 crash did not say if an exhaust pipe that fell off the plane contributed to the crash.

The report says in-vestigators found an exhaust pipe missing “from the exhaust side of the turbocharger.” The report say however an examination of the engine “did not reveal any other preexisting mechanical anomalies” with the plane.

All four people on-board were killed when the Beechcraft Bonanza A36TC went down in a wooded area about a half-mile north of the Tupelo Regional Airport runway.

The victims were pilot Henry Jackson, 75; his wife Gwynn Groggel, 70; Charles Torti, 69; and Carrie Torti, 59. The two couples were all from Kerrville, Texas.

The report said the plane was headed to Williamsburg-Whitley County Airport in Wil-liamsburg, Kentucky.

The NTSB report says the pilot reported smoke in the cockpit shortly after taking off, and told the air traf-fic control tower they needed to return to the airport.

Witnesses said the plane made a left turn back toward the airport and also reported see-ing smoke and flames coming from the plane before it crashed in a wooded area a half-mile from the airport.

The exhaust pipe was found by airport workers on the runway.

Furthering their edu-cation to help fi ght fi res, two local fi reman recent-ly graduated from the state fi re academy.

Firefi ghters Gregory D. Barrett and Darrell L. Hill of the Corinth Fire Department completed their 1001 Firefi ghter I–II course on Thursday, May 26 at the Mississippi State Fire Academy in Jackson.

The newly acquired skills and knowledge of graduating fi refi ght-

ers will be an asset to the fi re departments they represent in imple-menting fi re protection and prevention for their community,” said Com-missioner Mike Chaney and Academy Executive Director Reggie Bell in a joint statement.

An intense seven week course, 1001 Firefi ght-er I–III included both classroom and hands-on instruction in the areas of fi re behavior, fi re sup-

pression, rescue, inci-dent command, hazard-ous materials and other fi re related topics.

It meets and exceeds the National Fire Pro-tection Association for Firefi ghter Qualifi cations and the uniform mini-mum training standards as stated in Mississippi Code section 45-11-7.

The Mississippi State Fire Academy is a divi-sion of the Mississippi Insurance Department.

Corinth firefighters complete academy

Gregory D. Barrett and Darrell L. Hill recently gradu-ated from the National Fire Protection Association.

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Page 4: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Sunday, May 29, 2016www.dailycorinthian.com

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

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[email protected]

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foreman

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[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.

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Mark Boehlereditor

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Mark Boehler, editor

Our View

The Alcorn School District student recog-nition program is a wonderful idea.

Thanks to the eff orts of P16/Parent Advi-sory Council Chairperson Jodi Fiveash, stu-dent recognition will now be a part of future Alcorn County school board meetings.

The changes began earlier this month when three students were honored before the school board.

“One of the many goals of the P16 is to im-prove the achievements and recognition of our students,” Fiveash recently told board members. “One way of doing this is to allow teachers to nominate students for special rec-ognition at future board meetings.”

Prior to the unanimous vote by board members to make the student recognition a permanent part of future board meetings, three students were recognized by the school board.

We think this is a wonderful idea. Acorn School District Superintendent Larry B. Mitchell has asked the Daily Corinthian to print more positive stories about the Alcorn School District. This is one way for this to happen.

Sometimes the board meetings are contro-versial and negative in nature, so we welcome the opportunity to put local students in the spotlight.

Future recognized students will be selected by teachers. Teacher selection will be com-plete by the P16 council via a random draw-ing.

Prior to each board meeting, an elementary student will be chosen to lead the pledge, a high school student will recite the prayer and a middle school student will be chosen for recognition.

There is no criteria for student selection, but can include students who may never be recognized for academic or athletic achieve-ment.

This is a great concept to help students feel better about themselves.

Daily Corinthian

Recognition program puts

students in spotlight

Letters Policy

Prayer for today

A verse to share

Donald Trump’s philoso-phy is never to use a scalpel when a meat ax is available, and so it is with his attack on the Clinton scandals of the 1990s.

And yet, in slamming Hillary as Bill’s “enabler” and daring to invoke the allegation of rape against Clinton, Trump is again demonstrating his unsur-passed ability to needle his opponents and expose their vulnerabilities.

Hillary Clinton’s self-im-age as a feminist champion has always been at odds with her political partner-ship with a serial woman-izer.

Hillary tends to get a pass, because the 1990s were long ago, the media often scold anyone who brings up the scandals, and most politicians hesitate to talk about someone else’s marriage. Unconstrained by these boundaries, Trump is hitting her with his char-acteristic abandon.

Hillary’s defenders say this is tantamount to blam-ing her for Bill’s infi delities. Of course, she’s not respon-sible for his philandering. But as a fully vested mem-ber of Bill’s political opera-tion, Hillary had as much interest in forcefully rebut-ting allegations of sexual misconduct as he did.

The Clin-ton cam-paign in 1992 report-edly spent $100,000 on private-de-tective work related to women. The a p p r o a c h , when rumors fi rst surfaced,

was to get affi davits from women denying aff airs – the refl ex of most women is to avoid exposure – and, failing that, to use any dis-crediting tool at hand.

Hillary was fully on board. When a rock groupie alleged that a state trooper approached her on Gov. Clinton’s behalf, Hillary said, “We have to destroy her story.”

When the Star tabloid subsequently reported that Clinton had aff airs with fi ve Arkansas women, including Gennifer Flowers, the Clin-ton campaign waved affi da-vits signed by all them deny-ing it. (This is what Clinton had advised Flowers to do in a taped conversation.) Then Flowers admitted to a 12-year aff air.

Hillary did the famous “60 Minutes” interview with Bill as he delivered a lawyerly denial of the 12-year allega-tion (he later admitted hav-

ing sex with Flowers once). Hillary joined strategy ses-sions over what verbiage to use in the interview.

After Bill’s election, state troopers told of how they had procured women for him, and one of the pro-cured was Paula Jones. When she came forward, she was abused as trailer-park trash, even though her story of a gross come-on by Clinton in a hotel room was completely credible.

Hillary apparently didn’t spare a moment’s thought on why her husband the governor would have want-ed a private meeting with a 24-year-old state employee. She interviewed superlaw-yer Bob Bennett to handle the Jones sexual-harass-ment suit and insisted on a hard-line defense. Bennett spread rumors of nude pic-tures of Jones and had an-other lawyer subpoena men to try to fi nd evidence of Jones’ alleged promiscuity.

Hillary was even more in-strumental to the defense in the Monica Lewinsky case, setting the tone of the White House response in her “vast right-wing conspiracy” ap-pearance on “Today.”

The allegation the Clin-tons have never truly grap-pled with is Juanita Broad-drick’s charge of rape. Her story has been consistent

over the years; she told peo-ple about the alleged assault at the time; and her account includes details that accord with what other woman have said about encounters with Bill.

Perhaps you think Hillary had to stand by her man, or she correctly calculated that the broader political proj-ect – both of the Clintons and of liberalism – justifi ed waging political war against a few inconvenient women. Even so, there is no doubt that Hillary compromised herself, by the standards of feminism 20 years ago, and even more by the standards of today.

Is there anyone more “privileged” than a white male who is a governor and president? Even if you don’t believe the worst, Bill didn’t live up to contemporary norms of consent, to put it mildly. If consistency mat-tered, feminists would de-mand safe spaces whenever Bill Clinton approached a college campus.

Hillary’s answer to Trump’s off ensive is telling – nothing. Sometimes there’s just not a good answer.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: [email protected].)

Yes, Hillary was an enabler

“Something startling is happening to middle-aged white Americans. Unlike every other age group, un-like every other racial and ethnic group ... death rates in this group have been ris-ing, not falling.”

The big new killers of middle-aged white folks? Alcoholic liver disease, overdoses of heroin and opioids, and suicides. So wrote Gina Kolata in The New York Times of a stun-ning study by the husband-wife team of Nobel laureate Angus Deaton and Anne Case.

Deaton could cite but one parallel to this social disas-ter: “Only H.I.V./AIDS in contemporary times has done anything like this.”

Middle-aged whites are four times as likely as middle-aged blacks to kill themselves. Their fi tness levels are falling as they suf-fer rising levels of physical pain, emotional stress and mental depression, which helps explain the alcohol and drug addiction.

But what explains the so-cial disaster of white Middle America?

First, an economy where, though at or near full em-ployment, a huge slice of the labor force has dropped out. Second, the real wages of working Americans have been nearly stagnant for de-cades.

Two major contributors to the economic decline of the white working-class:

Scores of millions of third-world immigrants, here legally and illegally, who depress U.S. wages, and tens of thousands of factories and millions of

jobs shipped abroad under the label of “globalization.”

In the popular culture of the ’40s and ’50s, white men were role models. They were the detectives and cops who ran down gang-sters and the heroes who won World War II on the battlefi elds of Europe and in the islands of the Pacifi c.

They were doctors, jour-nalists, lawyers, architects and clergy. White males were our skilled workers and craftsmen – carpen-ters, painters, plumbers, bricklayers, machinists, mechanics.

They were the Founding Fathers, Washington, Ad-ams, Jeff erson and Ham-ilton, and the statesmen, Webster, Clay and Calhoun.

Lincoln and every presi-dent had been a white male. Middle-class white males were the great inventors: Eli Whitney and Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell and the Wright Broth-ers.

They were the great capi-talists: Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, Henry Ford and J. P. Mor-

gan. All the great captains of America’s wars were white males: Andrew Jackson and Sam Houston, Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee, U.S. Grant and John J. Per-shing, Douglas MacArthur and George Patton.

What has changed in our culture? Everything.

The world has been turned upside-down for white children. In our schools the history books have been rewritten and old heroes blotted out, as their statues are taken down and their fl ags are put away.

Children are being taught that America was “discov-ered” by genocidal white racists, who murdered the native peoples of color, en-slaved Africans to do the la-bor they refused to do, then went out and brutalized and colonized indigenous peo-ples all over the world.

In Hollywood fi lms and TV shows, working-class white males are regularly portrayed as what was once disparaged as “white trash.”

Republicans are instruct-ed that demography is des-tiny, that white America is dying, and that they must court Hispanics, Asians and blacks, or go the way of the Whigs.

Since affi rmative action for black Americans began in the 1960s, it has been broadened to encompass women, Hispanics, Na-tive Americans the handi-capped, indeed, almost 70 percent of the nation.

White males, now down to 31 percent of the population, have become the only Amer-icans against whom it is not only permissible, but com-mendable, to discriminate.

When our cultural and political elites celebrate “diversity” and clamor for more, what are they de-manding, if not fewer white males in the work force and in the freshman classes at Annapolis and Harvard?

What is the moral argu-ment for an affi rmative ac-tion that justifi es unending race discrimination against a declining white working class, who have become the expendables of our multi-cultural regime?

“Angry white male” is now an acceptable slur in culture and politics. So it is that people of that derided ethnicity, race, and gen-der see in Donald Trump someone who unapolo-getically berates and mocks the elites who have dispos-sessed them, and who de-spise them.

Is it any surprise that militant anti-government groups attract white males? Is it so surprising that the Donald today, like Jess Wil-lard a century ago, is seen by millions as “The Great White Hope”?

(Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of the new book “The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat to Create the New Majority.”)

‘The great white hope’

Rich LowryNational

Review

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

Keeping in touch

State:Sen. Rita Potts ParksAlcorn, Tishomingo, Tippah counties662-287-6323 (H)662-415-4793 (cell)[email protected] Rep. Nick BainAlcorn County662-287-1620 (H)601-953-2994 (Capitol)[email protected] Rep. Lester “Bubba” CarpenterAlcorn, Tishomingo counties601-359-3374 (Capitol)662-427-8281 (H)[email protected] Rep. William Tracy ArnoldAlcorn (Rienzi area), Prentiss counties662-728-9951 (H)[email protected] state legislators can be reached via mail: c/o Capitol P.O. Box 1018Jackson, Miss. 39215

Lord God, teach me how secret actions make or destroy my life. Show me the deep lines made by sorrow and discontent that cannot be eff aced. May I look toward the cor-rections of life and not on my imperfections, that my life may be a helpful infl uence. Amen.

Jesus answered, “Very truly I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless they are born of water and the Spirit.

— John 3:5

Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verifi cation. All letters are subject to ed-iting before publication, especially those be-yond 600 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthian.com. Email is the preferred method.

Page 5: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • 5A

ishable food items for the local food pantry or pet food for the shelter.

“The trophies are so popular, a couple of peo-ple asked to buy one,” said Fowler.

Fowler received per-mission from the city and business owners to have the event on Shiloh Road.

“They all thought it was funny that a bunch of old people wanted to cruise the strip,” said the 58-year-old with a smile.

Fraley’s Drive In, owned and operated by

Leck and Bernice Fraley on the corner of what is now Noyes Clinic, was a popular hangout for teen-agers in the 60s and 70s.

“Fraley’s was a local landmark,” said Fowler. “It was the only thing to do when I was growing up.”

Magnolia Antique Car Club is helping with the car show, and once the winners have been an-nounced, cars will be al-lowed to cruise the strip one more time.

There is no cost to en-ter a car for the show, but entrants are asked to bring a cardboard box as

an entry fee.“I never expected it

would turn into what it has,” said Fowler of the cruise. “The good thing in all of this – is we are going to help a lot of people.”

Those interested in pur-chasing a $15 T-shirt to commemorate the event can do so at Nickels Signs and Graphics. Sizes range from S to XXXXL.

“There has been a lot of people who have donated things,” said Fowler. “It has been a history lesson for me and I can’t wait to donate all the items to West Clinic.”

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Keith Fowler’s campaign to take back the strip has exploded with several jump-ing onboard for the Fraley’s Drive In Cruise 2016 on June 11.

CRUISE

CONTINUED FROM 1A

house, Easom Commu-nity Center and the Boys & Girls Club. Lunch begins at noon at all sites except CES, which starts at 11:15 a.m. Breakfast is served at CES and CMS beginning at 7:30 a.m. and Project At-tention beginning at 8 a.m.

Simpson said it’s a good opportunity for children

to get meals during the summer and participate in some fun, supervised activities.

School districts are re-imbursed by the federal government for meals served. More than 2.28 million children partici-pated at almost 39,000 sites in the summer of 2012, the last year for which statistics are given.

The USDA expects more than 200 million meals to be served this summer in the program, which is intended to help fi ll the summertime gap for stu-dents who receive free or reduced-price lunches during the school year, although there are no in-come requirements for children to participate in the summer program.

FEEDING

CONTINUED FROM 1A

with possession of meth-amphetamine and mis-demeanor charges.

Huebbe was stopped in the area of Highway

72 and Norman Road for a careless driving of-fense.

An offi cer observed an open container, and a search uncovered mari-juana, drug parapher-

nalia and 28 grams of methamphetamine, said Green. The police de-partment seized the ve-hicle.

Huebbe was released on $15,000 bond.

ARRESTS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

OXFORD — The Ox-ford Film Festival will show eight of Matthew Graves’ fi lms on June 4 including “‘til death,” “Barry,” “The Embalm-ing,” “Oh, Christmas Triage,” “Ole Miss Mon-sters” “Bury the Show,” “The Show Must Go On” and “Trick or Treat.”

Oxford fi lmmaker Mat-thew Graves’ fi lms have been made known all over the country. Graves has won several awards as a fi lmmaker due to his successes in writing, producing and directing. Outside of his cinema work, Graves teaches at

the University of Mis-sissippi as an adjunct professor in the theatre department. Further-more, Graves has also produced commercial work and documentaries. He received his Master’s degree from the Univer-sity of Mississippi after receiving his Bachelor’s degree from Hardin-Sim-mons University.

Graves is pleased to be a part of Oxford Film Festival. “It’s been such an honor to work with the Oxford Film Festival and to be a part of the Oxford fi lm community for the past decade. ... ”

The Oxford Film Festi-val was founded in 2003 to bring exciting, new and unusual fi lms (and the people who create them) to North Missis-sippi. The annual four-day festival screens short and feature-length fi lms in both showcase and competition settings, including narrative and documentary features and shorts; Mississippi narratives, documenta-ries and music videos, and narrative, documen-tary, animated and ex-perimental shorts. The festival is a 501c3 not-for-profi t organization.

Oxford Film Festival planning tribute night

STARKV ILLE— For the third consecutive year, Mississippi State University Libraries are sponsoring the E. O. Templeton Jr. History and Genealogy Fair.

Open to all, the popu-lar event takes place 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. June 4 at Mitchell Memorial Li-brary, the 138-year-old land-grant institution’s primary academic and research repository.

Advance registration soon will open at www.lib.msstate.edu/geneal-ogy/index.php.

This year’s featured speakers include:

• Shirley Hanshaw, an MSU associate professor of English;

• Hellen Polk, a re-tired Starkville educator representing the Missis-sippi Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolu-tion; and

• Chuck Yarborough of Columbus, a social sciences faculty member at the Mississippi School for Mathematics and Sci-ence and director of the city’s annual Friendship Cemetery “Tales from the Crypt” program.

Also scheduled are two hands-on workshops led by MSU manuscript

specialists. Senior as-sociate DeeDee Baldwin will provide a beginner-level guide for online research, while coordi-nator Jennifer McGillan and special guest Betty Templeton of Starkville teach an advanced class on decoding family sto-ries.

(For more on the early June event, contact co-ordinator Neil Guilbeau of University Archives and Mississippiana at 662-325-3935 or [email protected]; or McGillan at 662-325-3071 or [email protected].)

MSU sets history, genealogy program

Honoring and remembering Honoring and remembering the Brave

I, Jane (Lokey) August am offering a tribute

to many of my family members who served in

various areas of the Military. They all served

with bravery and courage so that we as civilians

may have the privilege to enjoy the life and

peace of Freedom it offers.

They are:

1. Ben (BW) Lokey, brother who turned 101 on May 8th. He served in WW2 Army

2. and his 4 sons Benny Joe, Ray, Wade and Jack who also served in the Army.

3. JV Lokey, brother (deceased). He served in the Army as a career person

4. Douglas Briggs, nephew. He served in the Air Force

5. Larry Neil Gurley, nephew (deceased). He served in the Air Force

6. Bobby Wayne Cross, nephew (deceased). He served in the Navy

7. Kerry Dunn. Brother-in-law (deceased). He served in the Marines as a career Person

8. Orlando Latch, nephew. He served in the Air Force

9. Billy H. Curtis, companion and best friend (deceased) served in the Air Force on the state side; keeping the air planes safe for the fl yers.

Also, an acknowledgement goes out to many of my friends and

others that served, with Valor in the many different branches of

our military. Many Thanks to each of you!

BW

Lokey

then

and

now

Family OutletDiscount Hardware

(Previously in old Moses Building)is now located at:

201 S. Gaylean Rd. behind Crossroads Automotive.

662-396-2290

Tommy and the gang look forward to seeing you!

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June 2 11:00 Am-1:00pmFamily Fun in the Sun!

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Page 6: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

6A • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Obituary Policy

All obituaries (com-plete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituar-ies will only be accepted from funeral homes.

All obituaries must contain a signature of the family member mak-ing the funeral arrange-ments.

J.B. GwynJ.B. Gwyn, 88, of

Corinth, died Friday, May 27, 2016, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. Patterson Memorial Cha-pel will have the arrange-ments.

Harold BoltonServices for Harold

Dean Bolton, 72, are set for 2 p.m. Tuesday grave-side at Sardis Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery in Rienzi.

Mr. Bolton died Thurs-day, May 26, 2016, at Methodist Hospital in Germantown, Tenn. He was a retired microbiolo-gist with St. Jude Chil-dren’s Research Hospital and Eurofi ns in Memphis, Tenn.

Survivors include his wife, Joyce Bolton; a daughter, Michelle Bolton Terry; a sister, Charlotte Dozier; and a brother, Kenneth Bolton.

McPeters Funeral Di-rectors is in charge of ar-rangements.

BY JEFF AMYAssociated Press

JACKSON — State lawmakers have made it illegal for school districts to spend any public money on the Mississippi As-sociation of School Superinten-dents, saying leaders of local school districts personally at-tacked state offi cials while they were seeking votes for a school funding initiative last year.

“When they attack people like that, they’re biting the hand that feeds them, and maybe the next time they need to think about that,” House Appropriations Committee Chairman Herb Fri-erson, R-Poplarville, said Friday.

The move creates an uncertain future for what has traditionally been Mississippi’s most powerful school lobbying group. The long-term power of the association was already in question after law-makers voted this year to make all superintendents appointive. Traditionally, the elected mem-bers of the association, especially those in the state’s largest school districts, have wielded the most political power.

Initiative 42 would have amended the state Constitu-tion to require the state to pro-vide “an adequate and effi cient system of free public schools.” Supporters said it would have blocked lawmakers from be-ing able to spend less than the amount required by Mississip-pi’s school funding formula, and would have allowed people to sue the state to seek additional money for schools.

Gov. Phil Bryant and leg-islative leaders opposed the measure because it could have

limited legislative power and transferred some power to judges. They warned that it could have led to budget cuts to other state agencies. Lawmak-ers placed an alternative mea-sure on the ballot, which made it harder to pass the measure. Voters ultimately rejected any change by a 52 percent to 48 percent margin.

Supporters of the campaign accused Frierson and others of engaging in scare tactics over potential budget cuts, but Fri-erson said superintendents’ criticism of lawmakers was too much.

“They crossed the line in the 42 campaign when they called members of the leadership liars and attacked their integrity,” Frierson said of superinten-dents. “There’s very little trust between the leadership and school administrators and most of it goes back to the 42 cam-paign.”

The association had already altered its approach, announc-ing in January a legislative agenda that omitted direct men-tion of the funding formula, called the Mississippi Adequate Education Program. Instead su-perintendents said increasing student achievement was their

top legislative goal. Also, Execu-tive Director Sam Bounds was less visible in the Capitol than in previous years.

Frierson, who plans to resign his seat at the end of June to be-come revenue commissioner, is himself a former public school teacher. He also pushed an un-successful bill this year that would have frozen superinten-dents’ salaries for three years.

House Bill 1643 had originally banned spending state educa-tion aid on the superintendents association, but that ban would have accomplished little be-cause districts could have spent local or federal money. After a House-Senate conference re-port was adopted on April 18, Frierson and Senate Appro-priations Committee Chairman Buck Clarke, R-Hollandale, won unanimous consent from mem-bers of their chambers to make additional changes. Among those changes was an additional clause in Section 44 of the bill stating a school district would forfeit all state aid by paying any public money to the superinten-dents’ group.

Monroe County School Su-perintendent Scott Cantrell, the association’s president, said of-fi cials didn’t learn of the overall

ban until mid-May. No one told them directly why lawmakers took action. When told Friday of Frierson’s reason, Cantrell said “Wow.”

Clinton Superintendent Phil Burchfi eld, the association’s treasurer, said he didn’t think superintendents went too far in the Initiative 42 campaign.

“I think any superintendent would have to lobby for kids in their district and I think that’s what everybody did,” Burchfi eld said. “We asked them to be in-formed about what Initiative 42 did.”

Now, association leaders face the loss of a majority of its rev-enue. Of $1.1 million collected in 2014, an IRS fi ling shows $650,000 came from dues and conference fees.

The association charges $1,250 a year dues per district and charges people to attend its conferences, including a $350-per-person registration for its July meeting at Biloxi’s Beau Rivage Casino and Resort. Many school administrators use the group’s two yearly confer-ences to earn continuing edu-cation credits needed to renew state teaching licenses.

Cantrell said association leaders are concerned about conference turnout, saying the group contracted to pay certain amounts to the hotel.

“All of a sudden, there’s this big question,” he said. “Can any-body come? Can we survive? Are there any options?”

For his part, Frierson said he’s not concerned if the public fund-ing ban kills the association: “If it does, it does.”

Cash banned for school chiefs’ group“When they attack people like that,

they’re biting the hand that feeds them, and maybe the next time they need to

think about that”

Herb Frierson, R-PoplarvilleHouse Appropriations Committee chairman

Associated PressNEW YORK — Air show

pilots performed an aerial salute Saturday to their comrade who died af-ter his World War II-era plane crashed in the Hud-son River between New York and New Jersey a day earlier.

The P-47 Thunderbolt crashed Friday night dur-ing a promotional fl ight for the American Air-power Museum on Long Island, which is celebrat-ing the 75th anniversary of the P-47 this weekend.

The plane’s pilot, Wil-liam Gordon, 56, of Key West, Florida, was a vet-eran air show pilot with more than 25 years of ex-perience. New York City police scuba divers recov-

ered his body from the wreckage of the downed aircraft Friday night, about three hours after the crash.

As bagpipes played in the background on Sat-urday, pilots fl ew over the museum in an aerial salute known as a “miss-ing man formation” in a tribute honoring Gordon.

Scott Clyman, fl ight operations pilot for the American Airpower Mu-seum, called Gordon an extraordinary pilot.

The single-seat P-47 crashed on a part of the river near where a US Air-ways commercial jet car-rying 155 people splash-landed safely in 2009 in what became known as the Miracle on the Hudson.

Pilots honor comrade

Associated PressLOS ANGELES — Me-

morials to veterans in a Los Angeles neighbor-hood and a town in Ken-tucky, as well as a Civil War veterans cemetery in Virginia, were damaged as the nation prepares to mark Memorial Day, of-fi cials said.

A Vietnam War memo-rial in the Venice area of Los Angeles has been extensively defaced by graffi ti. The vandalism occurred sometime dur-ing the past week, KCAL/KCBS-TV reported. The homespun memorial painted on a block-long wall on Pacifi c Avenue

lists the names of Ameri-can service members missing in action or oth-erwise unaccounted for in Southeast Asia.

News of the vandalism came as another veterans-related memorial was re-ported damaged in Hen-derson, Kentucky. Police say a Memorial Day cross display there that honors the names of 5,000 vet-erans of confl icts dating back to the Revolutionary War has been damaged by a driver who plowed through the crosses early Saturday.

In Virginia, the Peters-burg National Battlefi eld has apparently has been

looted, the National Park Service said. Numerous excavations were found at the Civil War battlefi eld last week, Jeff rey Olson, and agency spokesman, said in a news release Fri-day. Petersburg National Battlefi eld is a 2,700-acre park marks where more than 1,000 Union and Confederate soldiers died fi ghting during the Siege of Petersburg 151 years ago.

In Los Angeles’ Venice neighborhood, the wall for missing veterans has been tagged previously, but the latest vandalism covers the bottom half of the memorial for much of its length.

Veterans sites in 3 states damagedAssociated Press

FLINT, Mich. — Re-placing water pipes due to the lead-tainted crisis in Flint could be at least twice the price of previ-ous estimates, according to a report obtained by a newspaper.

Engineering company Rowe Professional Ser-vices told the state the average cost for replac-ing a service water line through a completed pi-lot project was $7,500. The Michigan Depart-ment of Environmen-tal Quality previously estimated it would cost $4,000, the Detroit Free Press reported Saturday.

The company’s report said costs could be high-er if average permit fees of $2,400 per site are factored in. The largest share of that is $2,200, which includes replacing the pavement.

Representatives for Flint Mayor Karen Weaver did not imme-diately respond to The Associated Press’ re-quest for comment. Gov. Rick Snyder’s spokes-man Ari Adler said Flint is charging “very large fees,” while Weaver has said Flint needs more money from the state for replacing pipes.The report notes other con-

cerns arising during the pilot project, including lead-contaminated soil that needs to be properly handled and disposed.

The city already re-ceived $2 million from the state to replace about 500 lines.

The state has autho-rized roughly $70 mil-lion in funds for the emergency, and Snyder is seeking $165 million more through the bud-get process.

Still, higher costs could hamper negotia-tions among lawmakers as they deal with lower-than-expected tax rev-enue.

Flint pipe replacement cost soars

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Page 7: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Across the Nation Across the State

Pass Christian picks new superintendent

PASS CHRISTIAN — The Pass Christian School Board has se-lected Carla Evers as the new superintendent.

WLOX-TV reports the board offered her a one-year contract with an op-tion to extend it for three years after that.

Evers is currently the director of instructional programs for the Gulf-port School District. She was one of six finalists interviewed for the job.

Evers will oversee a top-ranked school dis-trict in Mississippi.

She replaces Beth John, who is retiring.

Year’s 1st U.S. West Nile case confirmed

JACKSON — Missis-sippi is reporting its first human case of West Nile virus for 2016, and the state Department of Health says it is the first in the nation this year.

The department said Friday that the case of the mosquito-borne virus is in Lamar County, and the Centers for Disease Control confirms it is the first in the U.S. this year.

In 2015, Mississippi had 38 West Nile virus cases, and one of those people died. The Health Department only re-leases statistics about laboratory-confirmed cases.

A Health Department news release says symp-toms of infection are of-ten mild and may include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, a rash, muscle weakness or swollen lymph nodes. In a small number of cases, infec-tion can result in en-cephalitis or meningitis, which can lead to paraly-sis, coma and possibly death.

Vicksburg mayor will run for another term

VICKSBURG — Vicks-burg Mayor George Flaggs Jr. says he’s running for a second term in 2017.

The Vicksburg Post reports that Flaggs says he’s announcing early because he was “hearing footsteps” from potential challengers. The 63-year-old Democrat says he fasted and prayed before making his decision.

Flaggs served 25 years in the Mississippi House before stepping down in July 2012.

In the 2013 mayoral race, he won a six-per-son Democratic primary before defeating an inde-pendent candidate in the general election.

Hospital gets FEMA grant for $2 million

GULFPORT — Memo-rial Hospital in Gulfport is getting more than $2 million to expand its electrical generator ca-pacity ahead of hurricane season.

U.S. Sen. Thad Co-chran said in a news re-lease Thursday the FEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant will be help pay for the installation of two 2,250 kilowatt bi-fuel system generators to help pro-vide the facility with a more reliable electricity supply.

The FEMA grant will cover 75 percent of the $3.1 million cost of the project.

Hinds County cracks down on illegal tags

JACKSON — Hinds County has hired an ad-ditional tag investigator to catch residents op-erating with illegal auto tags, including those with tags from another county or out-of-state.

The Clarion-Ledger reports Hinds County Tax Collector Eddie Fair already had one tag in-vestigation and asked the Board of Supervisors to approve the hiring of two additional tag inves-tigators. The supervisors amended the request and approved the hiring of one additional tag investigator. The county also is providing a used vehicle for the new tag investigator.

Supervisor Robert Gra-ham said the tag investi-gators are a value to the county because they will bring extra tax dollars to the county.

Hattiesburg doctor faces drug charges

HATTIESBURG — Two Hattiesburg men — one a trauma surgeon at For-rest General Hospital — have been arrested drug-related charges.

Authorities say 63-year-old Dr. George McGee and 42-year-old Russell Golemon were arrested Thursday by the 12th Judicial Circuit Court Narcotics Enforce-ment unit.

Forrest County Sher-iff’s Department inves-

tigator Nick Calico tells The Hattiesburg Ameri-can the task force was called to assist the Drug Enforcement Administra-tion in serving a search warrant.

DEA agent Terry Da-vis said a gun also was found in the home.

Calico said McGee and Golemon were charged with sale of a controlled substance-ecstasy and possession of a controlled substance-methamphetamine while in possession of a fire-arm and misdemeanor possession of marijuana charges.

Marine patrol officer faces online threats

PASCAGOULA — Mis-sissippi authorities are looking for a man they say used social media to threaten a state Marine Patrol officer on Face-book.

The Sun Herald reports Joey Jason Holliman is wanted on a cyberstalk-ing charge.

Marine Patrol Chief Keith Davis of the state Department of Marine Resources says officer Michael Strickland had stopped Holliman for traf-fic violations Wednesday on a Jackson County road.

Strickland wrote Holli-man misdemeanor cita-tions for careless driving and no proof of insur-ance.

Soon afterward, Da-vis said Holliman found Strickland on Facebook and posted a violent threat on his timeline.

McComb to rename pavilion for Diddley

MCCOMB — A popular venue for music concerts and other entertainment in downtown McComb is getting a new name.

The Depot Pavilion will be rechristened “The Bo Diddley Pavilion” in honor of the late rock ‘n’ roll legend.

The Enterprise-Journal reports the McComb Cre-ative Economy Partner-ship, which produced the recent McComb Blues & Heritage Festival, has secured permission from the Diddley estate to use his name.

Diddley, a McComb na-tive, died in 2008.

The partnership’s president, Vickie Webb, appeared before the McComb city board last week to update it on her group’s efforts to re-name the pavilion.

Associated Press

African cloth blocks teen from ceremony

SACRAMENTO, Ca-lif. — A black teenager says he was escorted out of his high school graduation ceremony in Sacramento by three deputies for refusing to remove his kente cloth, a traditional Ghanaian silk and cotton fabric.

Nyree Holmes said Saturday he wore the decorative cloth atop his graduation robes to have something that represented his culture during the ceremony at Sacramento’s Sleep Train Arena on Tuesday.

The 18-year-old stu-dent from Cosumnes Oaks High School in Elk Grove, California, says the school’s student ac-tivities director told him he was violating gradu-ation dress require-ments. He says he tried to have a dialogue with him, but he wouldn’t and instead tried to prevent him from walk-ing onstage and called authorities.

Senate choice may be two Democrats

LOS ANGELES — At-torney General Kamala Harris would love to deliver an election-day surprise by ousting her strongest rival, Con-gresswoman Loretta Sanchez, from the race for California’s open U.S. Senate seat.

But with time running short before the June 7 primary, the most likely outcome appears to be a November rematch between the two Demo-crats.

It would be another reminder of the waning influence of Republi-cans in the nation’s most populous state.

Nonpartisan polling shows that Republicans in the contest remain unknown to most vot-ers, while Harris and Sanchez are positioned for a 1-2 finish that would propel the rivals to a one-party runoff in November. In California, candidates appear on a single primary ballot.

Parks weigh visitor caps, expect crowd

HELENA, Mont. — As the National Park Ser-vice kicks off a centen-nial summer expected to draw record crowds, the agency is seriously

considering caps on how many people pass through some of the country’s most iconic landscapes and histori-cal sites each day.

Park managers have begun looking at wheth-er, when and how best to manage the impact of more people on the parks, their features and the visitors’ experi-ence.

Denali and Yellow-stone plan to survey visitors about their ex-periences this summer, hoping the responses will provide insight on what limitations visitors might accept.

Taxpayers foot bill for sheriff’s profiling

PHOENIX — Taxpay-ers already on the hook for $54 million in a racial profiling case against the longtime sheriff of metro Phoenix are about to get wal-loped with another wor-risome cost.

Hundreds of Latinos will be able to seek money from the govern-ment for being illegally detained when Sheriff Joe Arpaio disobeyed a judge’s order to stop his immigration patrols.

A judge concluded two weeks ago that Ar-paio knowingly ignored the 2011 order because he believed continuing his immigration efforts would help his 2012 re-election campaign.

The judge says hun-dreds of Latinos were harmed by the sheriff’s defiance.

Campaign: Leave wild animals alone

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — A new social media campaign in South Da-kota wants to people to leave baby wild animals alone.

With the backdrop of the bison calf in Yel-lowstone that had to be euthanized earlier this month after tourists put it in their car, Thea Miller Ryan is taking to social media to teach people to let nature take its course.

Miller directs the state’s outdoor learning center in Sioux Falls. Her office receives hun-dreds of calls every year about potential rescues of baby wild animals.

Now, for every call her office answers, she posts on Facebook and Twitter an image of a

sparrow that has a sug-ar skull for a head. She also mentions the crea-ture that the call was about and the phrase, “If you care, leave it there.”

Schools preparing for active shooters

CARMEL, Ind. — More than two-thirds of the nation’s elementary and public schools are con-ducting drills to ensure that students, teachers and staff know how to react if there’s an active shooter on campus.

That’s the finding of a recent report by the Government Account-ability Office.

School psychologists warn that there has to be a balance between preparedness and incit-ing fear in students.

At Forest Dale El-ementary School in Carmel, Indiana, teach-ers and students are told right off that the exercise is a drill. In a recent one, principal Deanna Pitman played the role of intruder.

Active shooter drills are becoming more rou-tine in schools after a rash of school shootings.

Bills expand use of driverless cars

LANSING, Mich. — Auto-centric Michigan is preparing for the advent of self-driving cars by pushing legislation to al-low for public sales and operation — not just testing only.

While the widespread use of driverless cars may be years away, lawmakers and trans-portation leaders say the technology is pro-gressing so rapidly that Michigan must stay ahead of the curve or risk losing automotive research and develop-ment to other states.

Michigan is among seven states with laws related to autonomous cars, while Arizona’s governor has issued an executive order. Nevada was the first state to authorize self-driving vehicles in 2011.

Michigan’s Depart-ment of Transportation worked with legislators to develop the bills, which also have support from the state’s eco-nomic development of-ficials. Gov. Rick Snyder is “very supportive” of the concept, a spokes-man says.

Associated Press

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Page 8: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

8A • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

Business

AGRICULTURE FUTURES

MUTUAL FUNDS

CORN5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 16 413.50 391 412.75 +18.25Sep 16 414.75 393 414.25 +17.50Dec 16 414 396 413.50 +13.75Mar 17 420.50 403 420 +13.50May 17 423.75 407 423.75 +13.50Jul 17 427 410.50 427 +13.25Sep 17 415 406 414.75 +8

SOYBEANS5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 16 1098 1043.50 1086.50 +12.25Aug 16 1093 1041.75 1083 +9.50Sep 16 1076.50 1029 1067.50 +7.25Nov 16 1065 1018.75 1056.25 +6.75Jan 17 1059.25 1016 1054 +6.50Mar 17 1034.25 1001.75 1030.50 +3May 17 1030 997.75 1026.50 +3.75

WHEAT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 16 484.75 457.75 481.50 +13.75Sep 16 495 468.75 491.75 +13Dec 16 511.25 487.50 508.25 +11.75Mar 17 526 504.75 523.50 +10May 17 535 514.50 533.75 +11.25Jul 17 541 520 540.25 +13Sep 17 546.50 529.25 546.50 +12.50

CATTLE40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jun 16 120.07 119.12 119.70 -1.35Aug 16 116.65 115.50 116.42 -1.03Oct 16 116.12 114.87 115.82 -1.28Dec 16 116.17 115.20 116.00 -1.37Feb 17 115.40 114.67 115.32 -1.28Apr 17 114.47 113.62 114.30 -1.10Jun 17 107.90 107.35 107.85 -.67

HOGS-Lean40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jun 16 80.57 79.95 80.52 +.67Jul 16 81.25 80.40 81.07 +.82Aug 16 80.85 80.02 80.72 +.97Oct 16 68.65 67.95 68.52 +.10Dec 16 63.72 63.10 63.65 -.17Feb 17 66.82 66.40 66.77 -.20Apr 17 69.87 69.65 69.87 -.03

COTTON 250,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jul 16 64.59 61.10 64.28 +2.61Oct 16 64.63 61.60 64.37 +2.26Dec 16 63.98 60.85 63.85 +2.52Mar 17 64.24 61.17 64.13 +2.53May 17 64.55 61.69 64.38 +2.37Jul 17 64.80 62.96 64.57 +2.19Oct 17 ... ... 65.26 +1.71

WEEKLY DOW JONES

WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg

THE WEEK IN REVIEW

Vanguard 500Adml LB 158,540 194.31 +0.4 +1.0/A +11.9/A NL 10,000Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 131,914 52.28 +0.3 -0.5/B +11.4/B NL 10,000Vanguard InstIdxI LB 108,178 192.40 +0.4 +1.1/A +11.9/A NL 5,000,000Vanguard TotStIdx LB 97,313 52.26 +0.3 -0.6/B +11.2/B NL 3,000Vanguard InstPlus LB 92,404 192.42 +0.4 +1.1/A +11.9/A NL200,000,000Vanguard TotIntl FB 81,272 14.63 -1.8 -11.6/C +0.8/D NL 3,000Fidelity Contra LG 75,984 98.62 +1.0 +0.5/A +11.7/A NL 2,500American Funds IncAmerA m AL 72,509 21.01 +0.1 +0.2/A +7.9/A 5.75 250American Funds GrthAmA m LG 72,281 41.73 +1.0 -0.6/B +11.2/B 5.75 250American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 70,737 58.36 +0.2 -1.4/A +6.3/A 5.75 250Vanguard WelltnAdm MA 69,785 65.85 0.0 +1.7/A +8.8/A NL 50,000Vanguard TotBdAdml CI 66,292 10.88 +0.1 +2.9/A +3.2/C NL 10,000Vanguard TotStIIns LB 64,852 52.29 +0.3 -0.5/B +11.4/B NL 5,000,000Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls FB 58,702 97.90 -1.8 -11.5/C +0.9/D NL100,000,000PIMCO TotRetIs CI 58,024 10.20 +0.4 +2.0/C +3.4/C NL 1,000,000American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 56,748 35.23 -0.5 +0.3/B +11.0/B 5.75 250Dodge & Cox IntlStk FB 55,225 36.04 -2.6 -19.1/E +1.7/C NL 2,500Dodge & Cox Stock LV 54,581 164.02 0.0 -4.6/D +10.7/A NL 2,500Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg LB 53,642 74.04 +0.4 +1.0/A +11.9/A NL 10,000American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 52,285 44.11 -0.5 -5.8/C +6.2/C 5.75 250American Funds AmBalA m MA 51,809 24.60 +0.1 +2.7/A +9.5/A 5.75 250American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 50,716 39.88 0.0 +2.1/A +11.3/A 5.75 250Metropolitan West TotRetBdI CI 47,833 10.84 +0.3 +2.3/C +4.5/A NL 3,000,000American Funds FnInvA m LB 45,313 52.44 +0.5 +1.5/A +10.6/C 5.75 250Vanguard MuIntAdml MI 45,142 14.43 +0.3 +5.6/B +4.5/B NL 50,000Dodge & Cox Income CI 44,854 13.61 0.0 +1.7/D +3.6/B NL 2,500FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m CA 44,611 2.17 -0.5 -5.2/E +4.9/B 4.25 1,000Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm FB 40,782 24.47 -1.8 -11.6/C +0.9/D NL 10,000Vanguard InstTStPl LB 38,669 47.30 +0.3 -0.4/B +11.5/A NL200,000,000Vanguard PrmcpAdml LG 37,496 103.73 +0.7 -1.0/B +12.7/A NL 50,000Harbor IntlInstl FB 37,164 60.73 -1.3 -12.6/D +1.6/C NL 50,000Vanguard HltCrAdml SH 36,845 86.90 +0.9 -5.2/A +17.4/B NL 50,000T Rowe Price GrowStk LG 36,652 51.64 +1.3 -2.4/C +12.5/A NL 2,500American Funds NewPerspA m WS 36,252 35.78 -0.1 -3.8/B +7.9/A 5.75 250Vanguard STGradeAd CS 35,024 10.69 +0.1 +2.0/A +2.2/A NL 50,000Vanguard TotBdInst CI 32,078 10.88 +0.1 +2.9/A +3.2/C NL 5,000,000Vanguard WellsIAdm CA 31,729 62.14 +0.4 +4.8/A +7.6/A NL 50,000Vanguard WndsIIAdm LV 31,069 61.92 -0.6 -2.5/C +10.3/B NL 50,000Fidelity ContraK LG 30,539 98.58 +1.0 +0.6/A +11.8/A NL 0Vanguard TgtRe2025 TG 30,326 16.10 -0.2 -2.0/B +6.8/A NL 1,000

Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min InitName Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt

CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IH -World Allocation, LB-Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MI -MuniNational Intermediate, TG -Target Date 2021-2025, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with divi-dends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.

Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listingstandards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergonea reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specifiedprice. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy orreceivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b =Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f =front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net assetvalue. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week. Source: TheAssociated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

Wk Wk YTDName Ex Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg

Wk Wk YTDName Ex Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg

AFLAC NY 1.64 69.56 +.83 +1.2 +16.1AT&T Inc NY 1.92 38.99 +.54 +1.4 +13.3AMD Nasd ... 4.60 +.73 +18.9 +60.3Alcoa NY .12 9.35 +.24 +2.6 -5.3Alibaba NY ... 80.97+2.18 +2.8 -.4Ambev NY .19 5.35 +.13 +2.5 +20.0Aon plc NY 1.20 108.63+3.24 +3.1 +17.8Apple Inc Nasd 2.28 100.35+5.13 +5.4 -4.7ApldMatl Nasd .40 24.44+1.88 +8.3 +30.9BP PLC NY 2.40 32.36 +.43 +1.3 +3.5BcpSouth NY .40 23.95 +.59 +2.5 -.2BkofAm NY .20 14.88 +.36 +2.5 -11.6B iPVixST NY ... 13.59 -1.52 -10.0 -32.4BarrickG NY .08 16.62 -1.56 -8.6+125.2Baxalta n NY .28 45.53+1.10 +2.5 +16.7Bemis NY 1.16 50.28+1.71 +3.5 +12.5Caterpillar NY 3.08 71.96+2.09 +3.0 +5.9ChesEng NY ... 4.16 +.44 +11.8 -7.6Chevron NY 4.28 102.02+2.23 +2.2 +13.4Cisco Nasd 1.04 28.92 +.95 +3.4 +7.3Citigroup NY .20 46.58+1.68 +3.7 -10.0CocaCola NY 1.40 44.78 +.83 +1.9 +4.2Comcast Nasd 1.10 62.88+1.12 +1.8 +11.9CSVelIVST Nasd ... 31.69+3.06 +10.7 +22.8CSVixSh rs Nasd ... 2.44 -.58 -19.2 -61.0Deere NY 2.40 80.50+2.76 +3.6 +5.5DirDGlBr rs NY ... 17.68+3.20 +22.1 ...Dover NY 1.68 66.74+2.51 +3.9 +8.9DowChm NY 1.84 52.18 +.82 +1.6 +1.4EnCana g NY .06 7.64 +.22 +3.0 +50.1EgyTrEq s NY 1.14 11.64 -1.14 -8.9 -15.3EnPro NY .84 50.24+2.33 +4.9 +14.6ExxonMbl NY 3.00 90.01 +.27 +0.3 +15.5Facebook Nasd ... 119.38+2.03 +1.7 +14.1FstHorizon NY .28 14.57 +.35 +2.5 +.3FordM NY .60 13.45 +.26 +2.0 -4.5FrkUnv NY .47 6.63 +.25 +3.9 +15.7FredsInc Nasd .24 14.65+1.35 +10.2 -10.5FrptMcM NY ... 11.14 +.06 +0.5 +64.5GenElec NY .92 30.12 +.56 +1.9 -3.3HP Ent n NY .22 18.26+2.39 +15.1 +20.1iShJapan NY .13 11.70 +.08 +0.6 -3.5

iShChinaLC NY .76 32.84+1.20 +3.8 -6.9iShEMkts NY .84 33.08 +.87 +2.7 +2.8iS Eafe NY 1.70 58.66+1.35 +2.4 -.1iShR2K NY 1.73 114.60+3.81 +3.4 +1.8IBM NY 5.60 152.84+5.59 +3.8 +11.1KimbClk NY 3.68 128.45+2.39 +1.9 +.9Kroger s NY .42 35.71+1.09 +3.1 -14.6LendingClb NY ... 4.81 +.82 +20.6 -56.5Lowes NY 1.40 80.35 +.53 +0.7 +5.7McDnlds NY 3.56 123.25 +.69 +0.6 +4.3MicronT Nasd ... 12.31+1.51 +14.0 -13.1Microsoft Nasd 1.44 52.32+1.70 +3.4 -5.7NY Times NY .16 11.94 -.15 -1.2 -11.0NiSource s NY .66 24.12 +.30 +1.3 +23.6NorthropG NY 3.60 214.42+1.70 +0.8 +13.6OrbitATK NY 1.20 88.44+1.39 +1.6 -1.0Penney NY ... 7.86 +.12 +1.6 +18.0PepsiCo NY 3.01 101.96+1.86 +1.9 +2.0Petrobras NY ... 5.84 -.61 -9.5 +35.8Pfizer NY 1.20 34.61 +.87 +2.6 +7.2PwShs QQQNasd 1.52 110.13+3.66 +3.4 -1.5PUVixST rs NY ... 10.85 -2.65 -19.6 -61.7ProctGam NY 2.68 81.43+1.41 +1.8 +2.5RegionsFn NY .26 9.87 +.36 +3.8 +2.8S&P500ETF NY 4.13 210.24+4.75 +2.3 +3.1SearsHldgs Nasd ... 13.30+1.31 +10.9 -35.3Sherwin NY 3.36 291.79+2.18 +0.8 +12.4SiriusXM Nasd ... 3.96 +.02 +0.5 -2.7SouthnCo NY 2.24 49.16 +.51 +1.0 +5.1SPDR Fncl NY .46 23.81 +.60 +2.6 -.1Torchmark NY .56 60.94+1.32 +2.2 +6.9Twitter NY ... 15.10 +.67 +4.6 -34.7Vale SA NY .29 3.98 ... ... +21.0ValeantPh NY ... 28.42 +.95 +3.5 -72.0VanEGold NY .12 22.28 -1.77 -7.4 +62.4WalMart NY 2.00 70.75 +.89 +1.3 +15.4Wendys Co Nasd .24 10.29 +.18 +1.8 -4.5WestRck NY ... 39.78+1.88 +5.0 +5.0Weyerhsr NY 1.24 31.48+1.06 +3.5 +5.0WhitingPet NY ... 12.02 +.76 +6.7 +27.3xG Tech rs Nasd ... .16 +.05 +39.1 -28.6Xerox NY .31 9.83 +.69 +7.5 -7.5

Tables show seven most current contracts for each future. Grains traded on Chicago Board ofTrade; livestock on Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on Intercontinental Exchange.

15,000

16,000

17,000

18,000

19,000

MD J F M A

-8.01

MON

213.12

TUES

145.46

WED

-23.22

THUR

44.93

FRI

Close: 17,873.221-week change: 372.28 (2.1%)

Dow Jones industrials

WEEKLY STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

NYSE 10,469.52+219.03 4,933.50+163.94

S&P 500 2,099.06 +46.74uu uu uu

MARKET SUMMARY: NYSE AND NASDAQ

MinervaN 11.32 +6.45 +132.4HovnEn pf A 4.43 +1.78 +67.2XenoPort 7.04 +2.64 +60.0RescAm 9.64 +3.18 +49.2VivintSolar 3.74 +1.22 +48.4FlexionTh 15.53 +5.04 +48.0Proteos n 15.89 +5.08 +47.0Innocoll 10.78 +3.29 +43.9OpexaTh rs 3.07 +.93 +43.5Ampliphi rs 2.25 +.68 +43.3PeakRsts 4.50 +1.35 +42.9

IonisPhm 22.01 -11.59 -34.5Tidwtr 4.24 -2.01 -32.2DrGMBll rs 99.12 -44.81 -31.1ChinaDEd 10.31 -3.48 -25.2GulfMrkA 3.24 -1.06 -24.7ChiRecy rs 2.00 -.60 -23.1Cerecor n 2.49 -.72 -22.4AxsomeT n 8.02 -2.28 -22.1TribunePub 11.26 -2.97 -20.9DxGBull rs 70.87 -18.63 -20.8ParaSh 21 h 4.09 -1.07 -20.7

BkofAm 4111386 14.88 +.36Apple Inc 2016112100.35 +5.13ChesEng 1870153 4.16 +.44FrptMcM 1838475 11.14 +.06Petrobras 1650638 5.84 -.61AMD 1509487 4.60 +.73SiriusXM 1422863 3.96 +.02MicronT 1360514 12.31 +1.51Vale SA 1283209 3.98 ...Microsoft 1259055 52.32 +1.70Alibaba 1228358 80.97 +2.18

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

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

NASDAQ

ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)

Hamilton-Ryker hon-ors Brittany Burcham with a 2015 Eagle Award at their annual meeting held in Memphis, Ten-nessee on April 9, 2016.

Burcham, Area Manag-er for Booneville, Corinth and Iuka, as well as Cov-ington, Tenn., has worked for the company since 2005. The Eagle Award is a sales award given for achievement in new cus-tomer generation. Bur-cham also won this award in 2012 and 2014.

Married to Russell Burcham, they have a son, Easton, and reside in Corinth, MS. Brittany is very involved in her community currently serving on the Commu-nity Development Coun-cil of the Alliance, The Board of Directors for

Main Street Corinth, as well as current Secre-tary/Administrator for Crossroads Human Re-source Association and LoveFirst DreamTeam at Church of The Cross-roads. She has previously served on multiple Alli-ance and Chamber com-mittees and projects.

“I’m honored to win the Eagle Award again this year,” said Burcham. “I really love my com-munity and enjoy being able to serve and support others by off ering fl exible options for their human resource needs. Ham-ilton-Ryker allows me the opportunity to serve alongside our customers and partners in the com-munity in order to cre-ate a successful relation-ship for all involved. The Corinth team is second to none in customer service and excellence and I am proud to lead the group’s eff orts in sales and busi-ness development. I’m thankful for the opportu-nity and look forward to helping my team grow, as well as continuing to off er solutions in the commu-

nities we serve!”Burcham added, “The

success of my eff orts would not be possible without the unwaver-ing dedication and hard work of the recruiting team in the Corinth loca-tion. Mary Beth Ander-son, Kim Mask and Casey Corbin have contributed greatly to this success.”

Founded in 1971, Ham-ilton-Ryker is a total workforce solution and industry leader for the provision of industrial, administrative, and infor-mation technology staff -ing, as well as, recruiting, management consulting, and information technol-ogy solutions.

Headquartered in Ten-nessee, Hamilton-Ryker is located in thirty-fi ve lo-cations across the U.S.

Hamilton-Ryker honors Burcham

JACKSON  — Institute for Organization Manage-ment, the professional development program of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Founda-tion, has appointed Scott Waller, IOM, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Offi cer of the Mississippi Economic

Council, to the National Board of Trustees.

As a member of the trustees, Waller will help set the strategic direction of Institute and will take an active role in advanc-ing Institute’s standard operating and curriculum policies.

Institute’s 24-member

National Board of Trust-ees serves in an advi-sory capacity to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and has policy-recom-mending responsibilities. Each trustee is nominated by their peers.

In 2013, Waller was named to the Board of Regents of Southeast In-stitute, which is held at the University of Georgia in Athens. He is a 2011 graduate of Southeast In-stitute.

Waller joined MEC in 2006 as Senior Vice President-Public Aff airs and was named Executive Vice President and COO in January 2014. MEC, the state chamber of com-merce, has been the voice of business in Mississippi since 1949.

Institute for Organi-zation Management is the professional devel-opment program of the U.S. Chamber of Com-merce Foundation. It is the premier nonprofi t professional development

program for association and chamber profession-als, fostering individual growth through interac-tive learning and net-working opportunities.

Since it began in 1921, the Institute program has educated tens of thousands of association, chamber, and other non-profi t leaders on how to build stronger organiza-tions, better serve their members, and become strong business advo-cates.

MEC leader named to national board

Burcham

Waller

Daily CorinthianCheck out theclassifi eds daily

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Steven D Hefner, CFP®Financial Advisor 413 Cruise StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Eric M Rutledge, CFP®,AAMS®Financial Advisor1500 Harper Road Suit 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

Chris MarshallFinancial Advisor 401 E. Waldron StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-7885

Page 9: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • 9A

SUNDAY EVENING MAY 29, 2016 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

} ››› Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (02, Fantasy) A malevo-lent force threatens the students at Hogwarts.

Local 24 News

(:35) Paid Program

(:05) Scandal “An Inno-cent Man”

WREG # #Undercover Boss “Ad-vantaClean” (N)

The Good Wife Elementary “The Past Is Parent”

Channel 3 Sunday

(:37) Elementary “Pilot” Person-Interest

QVC $ . Carolyn Pollack Susan Graver Style WEN by Chaz Dean Beauty products. Outdoor Living

WCBI $Undercover Boss “Ad-vantaClean” (N)

The Good Wife Elementary “The Past Is Parent”

News (:35) Paid Program

(:05) Paid Program

Look Sexy

WMC % %Carmichael Carmichael American Ninja Warrior “All Stars” Teams selected

by Matt and Akbar battle.News Action

News 5Flip My Food

Fix It & Fin-ish It

WLMT & >Movie CW30 News at 9 (N) House of

PayneMeet the Browns

There Yet? Modern Family

WBBJ _ _} ››› Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (02, Fantasy) A malevo-lent force threatens the students at Hogwarts.

News at 10pm

(:35) Castle “Knockdown” Person-Interest

WTVA ) )Carmichael Carmichael American Ninja Warrior “All Stars” Teams selected

by Matt and Akbar battle.News (N) (:34) The Good Wife (:34) Paid

Program

WKNO * National Memorial Day Concert (N) (L)

National Memorial Day Concert Escape From Firebase Kate (15)

Behind the Pearl Ear-rings: The Story

WGN-A + ((6:30) } ›› National Treasure: Book of Secrets (07) Nicolas Cage, Jon Voight.

} ›› Maid in Manhattan (02) Jennifer Lopez, Ralph Fiennes.

} ›› The Guardian (90, Horror)

WMAE , ,National Memorial Day Concert (N) (L)

National Memorial Day Concert Debt of Honor: Disabled Veterans

POV California’s Three Strikes law.

WHBQ ` `(5:00) NASCAR Racing: Sprint Cup Series: Coca-Cola 600. (N) (L)

News Fox 13 News

(:35) TMZ (N) Ac. Hol-lywood

WPXX / Leverage Leverage Leverage Flashpoint Flashpoint

WPIX :Elementary “Pilot” Elementary A man is

shot and killed.PIX11 News Sports

DeskSeinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

MAX 0 3(6:45) Ban-shee

(:40) Banshee (:35) Banshee (:25) Ban-shee

(:15) Banshee “Requiem” (:15) } ››› The Great Santini (79)

SHOW 2 Penny Dreadful “A Blade of Grass”

House of Lies (N)

House of Lies

Penny Dreadful (N) Penny Dreadful House of Lies

Penny Dreadful

HBO 4 1(5:55) } ›› The Intern (15, Comedy)

Game of Thrones (N) Silicon Valley

Veep (N) Last Week Game of Thrones (:25) Veep

MTV 5 2 } › Rush Hour 3 (07) Jackie Chan. } › How High (01) Method Man. } Longest Yard

ESPN 7 ?NBA NBA Basketball: Toronto Raptors at Cleveland Cavaliers. (N)

(Live)SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCen-

ter

SPIKE 8 5Bar Rescue “A Dash of Bitters”

Bar Rescue “Boss Lady Blues”

Bar Rescue “El Mo-ronte!!”

Bar Rescue Bar Rescue

USA : 8Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

Motive “Best Enemies” (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

NICK ; C Lost in the West Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends

DISC < DNaked and Afraid “Fro-zen in Fear”

Naked and Afraid: Un-censored (N)

Naked and Afraid “Strength in Pain”

(:03) Naked and Afraid (:03) Naked and Afraid

A&E > The First 48 “Bad Love” (7:58) The First 48 “Stray

Shot” (8:56) The First 48 “Last Shift”

The First 48 “Murder in Treme”

(:01) The First 48 “Bad Love”

FSSO ? 4World Poker Tour Bull Riding: Champi-

onship.World Poker Tour World Poker Tour Bull Riding: Champi-

onship. BET @ F (5:30) } ››› Bad Boys } ›› Life (99) Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence. P. Popoff Paid

H&G C HLakefront Lakefront Caribbean

LifeCaribbean Life

Island Life Island Life House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Caribbean Life

Caribbean Life

E! D Kardas The Kardashians Kardas Rich Kids of Rich Kids of The Kardashians

HIST E BAmerican Pickers “The More You No”

American Pickers “Frank’s Birthday”

American Pickers (:03) American Pickers (:03) American Pickers

ESPN2 F @ MLB Baseball: Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Mets. (N) World of X Games ESPN FC (N)

TLC G Sister Wives “Unforgiven” (N) (:01) Single Dad Seek-

ing... (N) (:04) Sister Wives “Unforgiven”

FOOD H Guy’s Grocery Games (N)

Food Network Star (N) Celebrity Food

Celebrity Food

Chopped “Reality TV Stars”

Food Network Star

INSP I Walker, Ranger Walker, Ranger } ›› Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge } Angel-Badman

LIFE J =(6:00) With This Ring (15) Jill Scott.

} › Tyler Perry’s Temptation (13) Jurnee Smol-lett-Bell, Lance Gross.

(:02) With This Ring Three best friends each vow to get married within a year.

TBN M Osteen K. Shook Cope Creflo D. Heart of a Hero (11) Corbin Bernsen. Last Ounce

AMC N 0(6:00) } ››› Hell-boy (04)

Preacher “Pilot” A strange entity ar-rives on Earth.

Talking Preacher (N) (:31) Preacher “Pilot” A strange entity arrives on Earth.

FREE O <} Harry Potter

(:45) } ››› Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (11) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. Harry may have to make the ultimate sacrifice.

Joel Osteen

Dr. David Jeremiah

TCM P } ›››› Glory (89, Historical Drama) Matthew Broderick, Denzel Washington.

(:15) } ›››› The Best Years of Our Lives (46) Fredric March, Myrna Loy. Three World War II veterans come home.

TNT Q A} ›› Red 2 Bruce Willis. Retired operatives return to retrieve a lethal device.

(:15) } ›› Red (10, Action) Bruce Willis. The CIA targets a team of former agents for assassination.

} Inglouri-ous

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

} ›› 50 First Dates A man falls for a woman who has short-term memory loss.

GAME S FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Baggage Baggage Baggage Baggage TOON T King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Chicken Pickles China, IL TVLD U K Reba Reba Raymond Raymond George George King King King King FS1 Z UFC Prelims UFC Fight Night: Almeida vs. Garbrandt (N) (Live) UFC Post UFC

FX Æ ;} ››› X-Men: First Class (11, Action) James McAvoy. The early years of Charles Xavier and Erik Lehnsherr.

} ››› X-Men: First Class (11) James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender.

OUT Ø Hunt Adv Wild Realtree Hunting Gregg Bone RMEF Drop Archer’s Journey NBCS ∞ Motorcycle Racing Motorcycle Racing Formula One Racing OWN ± Undercover Boss Extreme Weight Loss “Jonathan” Undercover Boss Weight Loss FOXN ≤ Fox Reporting Stossel Greg Gutfeld Fox Reporting FOX Report APL ≥ Megalodon: Ext. Yeti or Not (N) (:05) Yeti or Not

HALL ∂ G(6:00) All Things Valen-tine (15)

Good Witch (N) Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ L} ›› Teen Beach 2 (15, Musical Comedy) Ross Lynch, Maia Mitchell.

(8:55) Bad Hair Day (15) Laura Ma-rano, Leigh-Allyn Baker.

(:40) How to Build a Better Boy (14) China Anne McClain.

SYFY E(5:30) } G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra

} ›› G.I. Joe: Retaliation (13, Action) Threats from within the government jeopardize the G.I. Joes.

} ››› Starship Troopers (97) Casper Van Dien.

Horoscopes

The Crossroads area honors those who gave all this Memorial Day.

Don’t miss coverage from area commemorations coming next week

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

DEAR ABBY: I am a 65-year-old widow and recently started dating a 66-year-old man. I re-

ally like him and enjoy his company.

However, one thing about him drives me up a wall.

He has long fi nger-nails on both hands.

He is neat and tidy and o t h e r w i s e

well groomed. I am quite sure he is not a

coke user (which some have suggested could be the reason).

He has told me his hobby is guitar playing, but for that I’d think he would only need a few long nails.

I feel I don’t know him well enough to ask why he keeps them so long or tell him how much this creeps me out.

How would you suggest I bring this up to him? -- DIANNE IN WISCONSIN

DEAR DIANNE: The gentle-man’s hobby may be guitar playing, but in order for him to form the chords he strums, his nails on one hand would have to be short.

I can’t think of a nice way to tell someone his nails “creep you out.”

However, I don’t think it would be out of line to ask why he wears his nails as long as he does, and let him explain it to you.

DEAR ABBY: Ever since my bratty stepsister came into the picture, I feel like I get less at-tention than her.

Just because her parents are not together doesn’t mean she’s so much more special than me that it’s OK for her to be mean to me without getting in trouble.

When I yell at her and tell her to stop, she hisses at me like a cat and throws a fi t and says she wants to go home.

I’m not a psychologist, but I don’t think this is normal.

What do you think I should do? -- STEPSISTER IN MICHI-GAN

DEAR STEPSISTER: For a moment, put yourself in her shoes.

Her parents’ marriage broke apart, and one of them left and has made a new life with a new family. It’s possible that she’s afraid you have “replaced her” in that parent’s affections.

That’s a pretty painful thought, and she may blame you even though it is not your fault.

Talk privately to your parents about this.

Ask them if they can reassure her so she won’t take her hurt feelings out on you.

And one more thing: Stop yell-

ing! Yelling only escalates the situation; it doesn’t solve any-thing.

DEAR ABBY: Millions of dol-lars (and tons of food) are wast-ed when restaurants serve poor quality food or it hasn’t been properly prepared.

What is the protocol if you are unhappy with your order?

Should you leave it sitting and hope they will ask for a com-ment?

Say nothing and take it home as expensive dog food?

Speak up and hope for im-provement for the next person?

Pay, but don’t return again? Now you’ve wasted your

money, they’ve thrown away the uneaten food, and you’re still hungry.

Is there a solution for this problem? -- JOYCE IN THE SOUTH

DEAR JOYCE: If you are un-happy with how the food you ordered tastes, call the server over, explain what you think is wrong with it and send it back.

A smart restaurant manager will replace it. If it’s not the policy at that restaurant, do not return.

Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was found-ed by her mother, Pauline Phil-lips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Man’s long fingernails are touchy subject for girlfriend

ARIES (March 21-April 19). The boundaries might not be clearly marked, but that doesn’t mean they don’t clearly exist. You’ll know the lines when you see people’s reactions as they are crossed. Stop and observe.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Your attraction to the exotic will lead you to observe a sliver of the world known by very few. The mystique will draw you in, and there will also be practical reasons to stay engaged.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Do not be tempted by glittering novelty in all things. Shoes and smiles are at their best when shiny and fresh, but encourage-ment and inspiration are best sought from a source that is timeless and inexhaustible.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Wonder why you’re so popular today? Well, your diplomatic in-stincts and a generally support-ive attitude are part of it. There’s also a light in you that people witness and are warmed by.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Your

manner of handling the drama is to give it just the right amount of focus to make it sink into the background, adding an interest-ing texture to the day without commanding it completely.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). There’s a huge difference be-tween having a joyful awareness of the best in you and having an addiction to selfi es. Mostly the difference will have to do with who benefi ts from the gift of your presence today.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The basics of food and sleep will make the biggest difference in this day. There will be so many ways to play it. To seize oppor-tunity, one must be fl exible of mind.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Each sign is different when it comes to stress. What one sign considers taxing another fi nds exciting. Mostly, you will fi nd the rubs of the day stimulating to your intellect, body and imagina-tion.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). As for the more unnerving aspects of life, well, you’ll handle it. You will. You’ll do what’s nec-essary, possible and prudent. There’s not a challenge out there that you won’t manage with aplomb.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Good relationships depend on good communication. Certain conversations will get stress-ful, but it’s worth your while to pursue the line of questioning anyway.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You will be too busy to attend to the people who bother you on the regular with tasks that are, by now, not calling on your higher instincts -- or theirs, for that matter. Haven’t you served enough?

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). People who are “hard to get” don’t have to play at it. Your availability is limited because you’re there for so many for what they vitally need. You’re doing a fi ne job of it -- and making some-one crave you all the while.

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Page 10: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Sports10A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, May 29, 2016

Shorts

BHS Weightlifting

Biggersville High School athletes will be lifting weights between 7 a.m. and noon on Tuesday at the fieldhouse. Male athletes in seventh- through 12th-grades are encouraged to attend.

 

AC Boosters

The Alcorn Central Football Boost-ers will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the field house for all seventh- through 12th-grade parents to discuss sever-al events coming up this summer and the upcoming football season.

 

Basketball Camp

Biggersville High School will host a pair of basketball camps June 7-10 for boys and girls entering first- through sixth-grades. Cost is $40. Boys camp will run from 8 a.m. to noon, with the girls camp slated for 1-5 p.m.

For more information, contact Lady Lion and Lion head coach Cliff Little at 665-1486.

 

Baseball Record Book

The annual Mississippi Baseball Record Book has been published and is available for sale. The book con-tains records of public high schools and four-year colleges in Mississippi.

The author of the book is John Smillie. Cost of the book is $10.

You can obtain a copy by sending the money to Mississippi Baseball Record Book, Diamonds by Smillie, 3159 Kendrick Road Corinth, MS 38834.

NEW YORK — The Mets have found help at fi rst base following Lucas Duda’s injury, acquiring veteran James Loney from the San Diego Padres for cash.

Loney has spent this season in the mi-nors, playing well for Triple-A El Paso.

He was batting .342 with two home runs and 28 RBIs over 43 games in the Pacifi c Coast League.

Always a fi ne fi elder, the 32-year-old Loney hit .280 with four homers, 16 doubles and 32 RBIs in 104 games with Tampa Bay last year. The Rays released him April 3 and he signed with the Pa-dres on April 8.

Duda was put on the disabled list Monday with a stress fracture in his lower back that is expected to sideline him at least four to six weeks, probably longer.

Until Duda returns, Mets manager Terry Collins says Loney, a left-handed hitter, will mostly face right-handed pitching in a fi rst-base platoon with Wilmer Flores and Eric Campbell. Flores is close to returning from a strained hamstring.

The trade was made Saturday. Gen-eral manager Sandy Alderson says Loney might not be added to the active major league roster until Tuesday, the next time the Mets are scheduled to face a right-handed starter.

Loney lacks Duda’s power but is a .285 career hitter in the majors with 99 home runs, 251 doubles and a .338 on-base percentage with the Dodgers, Rays and Red Sox.

Mets find helpat first base intrade for Loney

The Associated Press

HOOVER, Ala. — Pinch-hitter Walker Pennington hit a three-run, go-ahead homer in the eighth inning and Texas A&M beat Mis-sissippi 12-8 on Saturday to advance to the Southeastern Conference Tournament championship game.

The Aggies (44-14) are seeking their fi rst SEC Tournament title. They’ll face Florida (47-12) in to-day’s championship game.

Texas A&M scored fi ve runs in the eighth and two

in the ninth to erase an 8-5 defi cit. Pennington hit his fourth home run of the sea-son to left fi eld off closer Wyatt Short.

Errol Robinson had four hits and four RBIs for the Rebels.

Texas A&M closer Mark Ecker worked two scoreless innings for his sixth save, leaving two runners on in the ninth.

Short, who had allowed only seven earned runs this season, gave up six in two-thirds of an inning.

Florida 1, LSU 0

Scott Moss pitched six scoreless innings and Flor-ida advanced to the South-eastern Conference tourna-ment championship game.

The defending SEC cham-pion Gators (47-12) face Texas A&M Sunday for the title. The only run came in the sixth when Dalton Guth-rie reached on an infi eld sin-gle and scored on Jonathan India’s two-out double.

It’s only the second time LSU (42-18) has been shut

out in an SEC tournament game. The fi rst was a 1-0 loss to Georgia in 2004.

Moss (3-0) allowed just three hits against LSU, which had won 14 of 15 games and prevailed in a fi ve-hour, 14-inning mara-thon with the Gators on Wednesday night.

LSU’s Kramer Robertson opened the ninth with a single and made it to third on a wild pitch and ground-er. Closer Shaun Anderson then got Beau Jordan to fl y out for his 12th save.

Texas A&M rallies past Ole MissThe Associated Press

PARIS — Top-ranked tennis player Novak Djokovic says canceling the Olympics “is unthinkable” and, “for the moment,” he is still planning to compete at the Rio de Janiero Games, despite worries about the Zika virus.

Speaking at the French Open on Saturday, Djokovic added that peo-ple should not only be concerned about those who are going to Rio for the Olympics, but also the Brazilians themselves — “not talking about them too much.”

Earlier Saturday, the World Health Organization rejected a call from 150 health experts to consider postponing or moving the Aug. 5-21 Olympics.

Says Djokovic: “Honestly, I don’t know what to think anymore.”

The No. 1 women’s tennis player, Serena Williams, says Zika has “been on my mind” and she will have to head to Rio “super-protected, maybe.”

Djokovic plans to compete at Rio Olympics

One of the most outstanding wom-en’s basketball players to ever put on a Northeast Mississippi Community College uniform has taken her right-ful place among the greatest athletes in the Magnolia State.

Phyllis Staff ord Dilworth was elected to enter the Mississippi Association of Community and Junior Colleges (MACJC) Sports Hall of Fame. The in-duction ceremony for the class of 2016 was held last month at Hinds Commu-nity College’s Clyde Muse Center.

“Phyllis is so deserving of this,” said Northeast president Ricky Ford. “I had the honor of coaching Phyllis and she represented Northeast as a great ath-lete and student at the highest level. I’m pleased that she is getting this rec-ognition for her eff orts and talents.”

Dilworth became the fourth rep-resentative of the Lady Tigers in the MACJC Sports Hall of Fame. She joined current Northeast coaches and former student-athletes Brenda Mayes and Kunshinge Sorrell-Howard plus her mentor in Ford.

“It puts me up there with special people,” Dilworth said. “It shows that someone has trained you to do well like Coach Ford pushing us to be excellent women on and off the court.”

Dilworth was an integral part of the most successful two-year period in pro-gram history. The Lady Tigers amassed a 65-1 overall record during her tenure with their only loss in the 1986 national championship game.

Northeast entered the postseason during her freshman campaign with a 20-0 record and kept its unblemished streak intact by capturing the second of six consecutive MACJC state champi-onships.

The Lady Tigers extended their phe-nomenal year with convincing wins over MACJC North Division rivals Itawamba Community College, East Mississippi Community College and Northwest Mississippi Community College to win the regional title.

BY BLAKE D. LONGNEMCC Sports Information

Dilworth elected to MACJC Hall of Fame

Photo by Michael H. Miller/NEMCC

Then-athletic director and current school president Ricky Ford (right) presents Phyllis Stafford Dilworth a plaque during the 2010 Northeast Mississippi Com-munity College Sports Hall of Fame banquet. Dilworth was recently inducted into the  Mississippi Association of Community and Junior Colleges (MACJC) Sports Hall of Fame.Please see DILWORTH | 12A

Blue Mountain College of-fi cials recently announced that construction of their Baseball/Softball Sportsplex facility is now under way.

Engineers, heavy equip-ment operators and truck drivers from Xcavators, Inc. are now on site at the North Mississippi Christian college, preparing the foundation of the collegiate complex.

The 34-acre complex lo-

cated one-half mile from campus, was donated to BMC by Tippah County neighbor, Profi le Products in exchange for the mineral rights to 37 acres across from the site of the new fi elds.

Profi le Products, located approximately two miles from the BMC campus, is known for its industry’s best-selling inorganic soil amendments for sports fi elds, golf courses and landscapes which are used in Major League Base-

ball and the National Football League.

BMC originally broke ground at the facility in De-cember of 2012, but the proj-ect was later put on hiatus.

With weather permitting and ideal conditions, the complex is expected to be complete and ready for prac-tice by the Fall of 2016.

The Blue Mountain College baseball and softball teams have used the facilities at BNA Bank Park in New Alba-

ny, Miss. the last several years as their home playing fi elds.

Blue Mountain College Athletics Director Lavon Driskell said, “To see the work continue on our base-ball and softball sportsplex is very thrilling because this was a dream and a plan for BMC, and to see it come to fruition is exciting.”

Work at the site will contin-ue through the summer with the offi cial opening coming at a date to be announced.

BY JEFF YORK For Daily Corinthian

Construction begins on BMC facilityThe Associated Press

Photo Courtesy Blue Mountain College

The 34-acre complex, located one-half mile from campus, was donated to BMC by Tippah County neighbor Profile Prod-ucts in exchange for the mineral rights to 37 acres across from the site of the new fields.

Page 11: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Sports11A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, May 29, 2016

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Little’s Jewelers

DALLAS — New Or-leans Pelicans guard Bryce Dejean-Jones was fatally shot after breaking down the door to a Dal-las apartment, authorities said Saturday.

A man living at the apartment was sleeping when he heard his front door kicked open, Dal-las Police Senior Cpl. De-Marquis Black said in a statement. When Dejean-Jones began kicking at the bedroom door, the man retrieved a handgun and fi red.

Offi cers who responded found Dejean-Jones col-lapsed in an outdoor pas-sageway, and he later died at a hospital. He was 23.

“We are devastated at the loss of this young man’s life,” the Pelicans said in a statement.

It is legal in Texas for someone to use deadly force in order to protect themselves from intrud-ers.

“I just lost my best friend/cousin last night enjoy life because you never know if tomorrow is guaranteed,” Shabazz Muhammad of the Min-nesota Timberwolves wrote on Twitter.

Julie Keel, a spokes-woman for Camden Prop-erty Trust, the real estate company that owns the apartment complex in Dallas, confi rmed that the complex’s apartment manager had sent out an email to residents saying that the person who had been shot had been trying to break into “the apart-ment of an estranged ac-quaintance” and that this person had “inadvertent-ly” broken into the wrong apartment.

Black said he could not confi rm that Dejean-Jones was trying to access an acquaintance’s apart-ment.

In Dejean-Jones’ only NBA season, which ended in February because of a broken right wrist, the 6-foot-6 guard started

11 of 14 games and aver-aged 5.6 points and 3.4 rebounds.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver called it a “tragic loss.”

“Bryce inspired count-less people with his hard work and perseverance on his journey to the NBA, and he had a bright future in our league,” Silver said in a statement issued Sat-urday.

Dejean-Jones was part of the 2014-15 Iowa State team that went 25-9, captured a Big 12 title and made a fourth consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament. He was fourth on the team in scoring, averaging 10.5 points in 33 games. He shot a career-best 47.6 percent in his lone season as a Cyclone. He also played at Southern California and UNLV.

Dejean-Jones was sus-pended late in the 2013-14 season from UNLV for conduct detrimental to the team, and announced that he was leaving USC midway through the 2010-11 season.

“This is a very, very sad and tragic day for every-one that’s a part of the Cy-clone basketball family,” Iowa State coach Steve Prohm said.

Former Cyclones coach Fred Hoiberg, now the coach of the NBA’s Chica-go Bulls, added in a state-ment that Dejean-Jones was a “passionate and talented player that lived out his dream of playing in the NBA through hard work and perseverance.”

Besides Muhammad, several NBA players re-acted on Twitter on Sat-urday.

“Crazy how life is man,” wrote Brooklyn Nets guard Shane Larkin. “Prayers out to Bryce De-jean Jones and his fam-ily.”

Added Quincy Pondex-ter, one of Dejean-Jones’ teammates with the Peli-cans: “This Can’t be real life... Rest easy lil bro.”

Associated Press

New Orleans’ Dejean-Jones fatally shot

ATLANTA — Gordon Beckham hit a three-run homer, Nick Markakis drove in two runs and the Atlanta Braves beat the Miami Marlins 7-2 on Saturday to secure their fi rst home series win of the season.

The Braves improved to a still-dismal 4-20 at Turner Field by winning the fi rst two games of the three-game series. Atlan-ta rallied from a 2-0 defi -cit for the second straight day.

The Braves are 5-0 against the Marlins and 9-34 against all other teams. Atlanta swept a three-game series at Mi-ami on April 15-17.

Atlanta took the lead by scoring three runs in the sixth off Jose Urena (1-1). Beckham hit his homer

off Edwin Jackson after Jackson walked two bat-ters in the seventh.

Atlanta, which began the day tied with Min-nesota for the worst re-cord in the majors, is 5-6 under interim manager Brian Snitker.

The Marlins committed three errors, including two by center fi elder Mar-cell Ozuna.

Eric O’Flaherty (1-3) recorded two outs af-ter rookie Aaron Blair, recalled from Triple-A Gwinnett before the game, allowed two runs in 5 2/3 innings.

Miami led 2-1 in the sixth when, with two run-ners on base, Markakis hit a single off Urena that bounced past Ozuna for an error. Markakis raced to third, and Freddie Freeman and Tyler Flow-

ers scored. Jeff Francoeur doubled in Markakis for a 4-2 lead.

Miami left-hander Wei-Yin Chen allowed one run on two hits and one walk in fi ve innings.

Ozuna singled off Chris Withrow with two outs in the ninth to extend his hitting streak to 10 games.

Trainer’s Room

Marlins: OF Christian Yelich (back spasms) missed his eighth straight start. He struck out as a pinch-hitter in the sixth, his second straight game being used as a pinch-hit-ter. ... OF Giancarlo Stan-ton (right side soreness) missed his fourth straight game.

Braves: SS Erick Aybar was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a bruised right foot. He was

hurt when hit by a pitch from Miami’s Adam Con-ley in Friday night’s game. X-rays were negative. Ay-bar said his foot stiff ened and became swollen over-night.

Up Next

Marlins: RHP Tom Koehler (2-5, 4.79), who has a 5.00 ERA in fi ve May starts, will try for his fi rst win of the month when he faces the Braves in Sunday’s fi nal game of the weekend series. He is 2-5 with a 3.82 ERA in 15 career appearances against Atlanta, including 11 starts.

Braves: RHP Julio Te-heran, only 1-4 despite a 2.57 ERA, will try for his second win on Sun-day. He is 1-1 with a 2.59 ERA in four career starts against Miami.

Associated Press

Braves lock up first home series win

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Brett Eibner capped Kan-sas City’s seven-run ninth inning with a game-ending RBI single, lifting the Roy-als to a stunning 8-7 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Saturday.

Jarrod Dyson was walked intentionally before Eibner drove a full-count pitch from Tommy Kahn-le (0-1) off fi rst baseman Jose Abreu and into right fi eld. Drew Butera, who replaced Salvador Perez af-ter the All-Star catcher got hurt in a collision, scam-pered home as Eibner was mobbed by his jubilant teammates near fi rst.

Chien-Ming Wang (3-0) pitched two scoreless in-nings for the win. White Sox closer David Robert-son began the ninth in-ning, but was pulled with two outs and charged with six runs and four hits.

Perez was injured in the ninth when third baseman Cheslor Cuthbert slid with a forearm and elbow into the left thigh of the All-Star catcher. Perez immedi-ately raised his right arm, signaling for assistance. Two minutes later, Perez hobbled off the fi eld with his arms draped over the shoulders of manager Ned Yost and an athletic trainer.

Dodgers 9, Mets 1

NEW YORK — Chase Ut-

ley hit a grand slam and a solo homer after Noah Syn-dergaard threw a 99 mph fastball behind his back, and Los Angeles went deep a season-high fi ve times in routing New York.

In a scene that seemed inevitable since October, Syndergaard was immedi-ately ejected following the third-inning pitch — al-most certainly his shot at retaliation against Utley for the late takeout slide that broke the right leg of then-Mets shortstop Ruben Te-jada in last year’s playoff s.

Plate umpire Adam Hamari tossed Synder-gaard, sending Mets man-ager Terry Collins into a rage and his own ejection, but no trouble ensued be-tween the teams.

Kenta Maeda (4-3) shook off an early line drive that appeared to hit him in the pitching hand and threw fi ve shutout innings for the win.

Logan Verrett (3-2) re-lieved Syndergaard and gave up two runs in 3 2/3 in-nings for the loss.

Cardinals 9, Nationals 4

WASHINGTON — Adam Wainwright pitched seven gritty innings and made an ample contribution at the plate, hitting a two-run double to help St. Louis de-

Associated Press

Royals score 7 in 9th to beat White Sox

Please see SCORE | 12A

Page 12: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Auto RacingCoca-Cola 600

Thursday qualifying; race Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord, North Carolina. Race distance: 600 miles, 400 laps.1. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 192.328 mph.2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 192.007.3. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 191.428.4. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 191.388.5. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 190.968.6. (16) Greg Biffl e, Ford, 190.503.7. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 190.282.8. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 190.268.9. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 189.853.10. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 189.587.11. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 189.162.12. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 187.963.13. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 190.114.14. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 189.927.15. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 189.853.16. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 189.820.17. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 189.820.18. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 189.807.19. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 189.527.20. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 189.274.21. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 189.188.22. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford, 188.673.23. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 188.508.24. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 187.931.25. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 188.851.26. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 188.659.27. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 188.534.28. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 188.515.29. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 188.376.30. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 188.016.31. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 187.480.32. (95) M.McDowell, Chevrolet, 187.266.33. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford, 187.201.34. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 186.955.35. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 186.780.36. (98) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 185.586.37. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 183.181.38. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 183.088.39. (32) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford, 180.717.40. (55) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 179.432.

NASCAR XFINITY-Hisense

300 ResultsSaturday at Charlotte Motor Speed-

way, Concord, N.C. Lap length: 1.5 miles.

(Start position in parentheses)1. (3) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 206.2. (4) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 206.3. (7) Joey Logano, Ford, 206.4. (11) Cole Custer, Chevrolet, 206.5. (8) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 206.6. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 206.7. (12) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 206.8. (10) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 206.

9. (14) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 206.10. (17) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 206.11. (27) Jeb Burton, Ford, 206.12. (2) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 206.13. (19) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 206.14. (18) Blake Koch, Chevrolet, 206.15. (31) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 206.16. (13) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 205.17. (16) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 205.18. (20) Drew Herring, Toyota, 205.19. (15) Ryan Reed, Ford, 204.20. (21) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 204.21. (23) Dakoda Armstrong, Toyota, 204.22. (26) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 203.23. (25) JJ Yeley, Toyota, 203.24. (40) Harrison Rhodes, Chevrolet, 203.25. (30) BJ McLeod, Ford, 202.26. (35) Martin Roy, Chevrolet, 202.27. (9) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 201.28. (6) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 200.29. (22) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, 200.30. (34) Carl Long, Toyota, 200.31. (1) Erik Jones, Toyota, Accident, 197.32. (37) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 183.33. (36) T.Hill, Chevrolet, Suspension, 130.34. (29) Jeff Green, Toyota, Fuel Pump, 127.35. (38) Mike Harmon, Dodge, Accident, 91.36. (33) J.Gase, Chevrolet, Transmission, 84.37. (32) Ray Black Jr., Chevrolet, Oil Line, 27.38. (39) Cody Ware, Ford, Accident, 12.39. (28) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, Rear Gear, 5.40. (24) M.DiBenedetto, Toyota, Vibration, 3.

BaseballAmerican League

East Division W L Pct GBBoston 29 20 .592 —Baltimore 27 20 .574 1Toronto 26 25 .510 4New York 23 25 .479 5½Tampa Bay 22 25 .468 6

Central Division W L Pct GBCleveland 26 21 .553 —Kansas City 26 22 .542 ½Chicago 27 23 .540 ½Detroit 24 24 .500 2½Minnesota 13 34 .277 13

West Division W L Pct GBSeattle 28 19 .596 —Texas 28 21 .571 1Los Angeles 22 26 .458 6½Oakland 21 29 .420 8½Houston 20 29 .408 9

Friday’s GamesToronto 7, Boston 5Baltimore 6, Cleveland 4N.Y. Yankees 4, Tampa Bay 1Pittsburgh 9, Texas 1

Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 5Detroit 4, Oakland 1L.A. Angels 7, Houston 2Minnesota 7, Seattle 2

Saturday’s GamesToronto 10, Boston 9Kansas City 8, Chicago White Sox 7Oakland 12, Detroit 3Cleveland 11, Baltimore 4Tampa Bay 9, N.Y. Yankees 5Texas 5, Pittsburgh 2Houston at L.A. Angels (n)Minnesota at Seattle (n)

Today’s GamesBoston (Price 7-1) at Toronto (Dickey

2-6), 12:07 p.m.Baltimore (Tillman 6-1) at Cleveland

(Clevinger 0-1), 12:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 5-2) at Tampa

Bay (Odorizzi 2-2), 12:10 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Sale 9-1) at Kan-

sas City (Volquez 5-4), 1:15 p.m.Pittsburgh (Liriano 4-3) at Texas (Per-

ez 2-4), 2:05 p.m.Houston (Fister 4-3) at L.A. Angels

(Tropeano 3-2), 2:35 p.m.Detroit (Pelfrey 0-4) at Oakland (Hill

7-3), 3:05 p.m.Minnesota (Nolasco 1-3) at Seattle

(Walker 2-4), 3:10 p.m.Monday’s Games

Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m.

Boston at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m.Minnesota at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.Houston at Arizona, 3:10 p.m.San Diego at Seattle, 3:10 p.m.Texas at Cleveland, 5:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m.Detroit at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m.

National LeagueEast Division

W L Pct GBNew York 28 20 .583 —Washington 29 21 .580 —Philadelphia 26 23 .531 2½Miami 25 24 .510 3½Atlanta 14 34 .292 14

Central Division W L Pct GBChicago 33 14 .702 —Pittsburgh 28 20 .583 5½St. Louis 26 24 .520 8½Milwaukee 22 27 .449 12Cincinnati 16 33 .327 18

West Division W L Pct GBSan Francisco 31 20 .608 —Los Angeles 26 24 .520 4½Colorado 23 25 .479 6½

Arizona 21 29 .420 9½San Diego 20 29 .408 10

Friday’s GamesChicago Cubs 6, Philadelphia 2St. Louis 6, Washington 2N.Y. Mets 6, L.A. Dodgers 5Atlanta 4, Miami 2Pittsburgh 9, Texas 1Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 5Colorado 5, San Francisco 2San Diego 10, Arizona 3

Saturday’s GamesChicago Cubs 4, Philadelphia 1Atlanta 7, Miami 2Cincinnati 7, Milwaukee 6San Francisco 10, Colorado 5L.A. Dodgers 9, N.Y. Mets 1St. Louis 9, Washington 4Texas 5, Pittsburgh 2San Diego at Arizona (n)

Today’s GamesSt. Louis (Wacha 2-5) at Washington

(Strasburg 8-0), 12:35 p.m.Cincinnati (Finnegan 1-3) at Milwau-

kee (Nelson 4-3), 1:10 p.m.Philadelphia (Velasquez 5-1) at Chi-

cago Cubs (Lackey 4-2), 1:20 p.m.Pittsburgh (Liriano 4-3) at Texas (Per-

ez 2-4), 2:05 p.m.San Diego (Pomeranz 4-4) at Arizona

(Bradley 1-0), 3:10 p.m.San Francisco (Cueto 7-1) at Colo-

rado (Rusin 1-2), 3:10 p.m.Miami (Koehler 2-5) at Atlanta (Tehe-

ran 1-4), 4:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 7-1) at N.Y.

Mets (Colon 4-3), 7:00 p.m.Monday’s Games

Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.San Francisco at Atlanta, 1:10 p.m.St. Louis at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.Cincinnati at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.Houston at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.San Diego at Seattle, 4:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.Pittsburgh at Miami, 7:10 p.m.

BasketballCONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)EASTERN CONFERENCECleveland 4, Toronto 2

Friday, May 27: Cleveland 113, To-ronto 87, Cleveland wins series

WESTERN CONFERENCEOklahoma City 3, Golden State 2

Saturday, May 28: Golden State at Oklahoma City (n)

x-Monday, May 30: Oklahoma City at Golden State, 8 p.m.

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Scoreboard12A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, May 29, 2016

Dilworth was one of three Northeast stand-outs on the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) All-Region 23 Tournament team after claiming the crown over the host Lady Rangers.

Northeast returned to Howard Coliseum in Sen-atobia for the NJCAA Na-tional Tournament and moved into the champi-onship contest against Odessa (Texas) Junior College. The Lady Tigers fi nished just shy of per-fection with an 80-69 loss to the Lady Wranglers.

Dilworth and her Northeast teammates never faltered during the 1986-87 campaign. The Lady Tigers started the year as the top ranked squad in the entire coun-try held that position throughout the duration of the season.

Northeast, which had fi ve eventual NCAA Di-vision I signees in its starting lineup including Dilworth, compiled an undefeated mark of 34-0 and captured the school’s only national title in any sport.

Dilworth was the dif-ference during the Lady Tigers’ second straight NJCAA Region 23 cham-pionship matchup. She had a double-double with 31 points and 14 rebounds against Utica Junior Col-lege in the title tilt at A.E. Wood Coliseum on the campus of Mississippi College.

Northeast beat Casper (Wyo.) College, Kilgo-re (Texas) College and Moberly Area (Mo.) Col-lege before capturing the crown with a 68-64 deci-sion over St. Gregory’s (Okla.) College.

The Biggersville High School graduate became Northeast’s second fi rst-team NJCAA All-Ameri-can following that season. Dilworth was also a two-time MACJC All-State and NJCAA All-Region 23 selection during her stellar tenure with the Lady Tigers.

“It’s very rewarding to me after so many years for someone to honor the things that I was able to accomplish,” said Dil-worth. “It’s going to be a tremendous blessing. I’m ecstatic and excited.”

Dilworth completed her career at the Univer-sity of Mississippi (Ole Miss) under the watch of legendary headman Van Chancellor. She was part of a pair of NCAA Tourna-ment squads during her time with the Lady Rebels from 1987-89.

Ole Miss hosted second round games in the NCAA Tournament during both of her years. Dilworth’s jumper with 1:13 remain-ing in the game lifted the Lady Rebels to a 74-68 victory versus the Univer-sity of Houston (Texas) in her inaugural playoff game.

Louisiana Tech Univer-sity eliminated Ole Miss in the NCAA Sweet Six-teen at Austin, Texas, to complete the junior cam-paign for Dilworth, who wore jersey No. 10 for the Lady Rebels.

She led Ole Miss farther into the NCAA Tourna-ment as a senior and was rewarded by the South-eastern Conference’s dis-tinguished coaches with All-SEC second-team ac-colades.

Dilworth and the Lady Rebels reached the NCAA Elite Eight for the third time ever with triumphs over Old Dominion (Va.) University in Oxford and North Carolina State Uni-versity at Auburn, Ala.

Ole Miss was consis-tently ranked in the top 10 nationally during Dil-worth’s two years. The Lady Rebels fi nished at No. 12 in the Associated Press (AP) poll following both of their postseason runs from 1988-89.

Dilworth had the high-est fi eld goal percent-age on the squad for two consecutive seasons. She made 137 shot attempts for a 54.8 percent ledger during the 1987-88 cam-paign and then tallied a solid 52.2 percent mark one year later.

DILWORTH

CONTINUED FROM 10A

feat Washington.Matt Holliday homered

for the Cardinals, who took control with a four-run second inning high-lighted by Wainwright’s fi fth extra-base hit of the season.

With two on, two outs and a run in, Wainwright lined the fi rst pitch from Gio Gonzalez (3-3) into the left-center gap. Matt Carpenter, activated from the paternity list before the game, followed with an RBI double for a 4-0 lead. That started Wain-wright (5-3) on a path to his fi fth straight win. The right-hander allowed four runs and six hits — including a career-record tying three home runs. He struck out fi ve and walked none.Rangers 5, Pirates 2

ARLINGTON, Texas — Yu Darvish struck out seven in fi ve strong in-nings in his fi rst start in the majors in almost 22 months, and Texas beat Pittsburgh.

The Japanese right-hander allowed three singles with a walk in his return from last year’s Tommy John surgery, ending Pittsburgh’s fi ve-game winning streak.

Adrian Beltre had a two-run homer in the fi rst inning off Juan Nica-sio (3-3) to become the fourth third baseman with at least 1,500 RBIs, fi nishing with 1,501.

Mitch Moreland snapped a 1-for-27 skid with a solo home run in the fourth.

The “Yuuu” calls from a

sellout crowd started ear-ly for Darvish, who last pitched in the big leagues on Aug. 9, 2014.

Giants 10, Rockies 5

DENVER — Buster Posey hit a pair of three-run homers, including a tiebreaking drive as part of a six-run eighth inning, and San Francisco rallied for the win.

The Rockies were lim-ited to one run over six innings by Madison Bumgarner, but broke out in the seventh against fi ve relievers for a 5-4 lead.

San Francisco re-sponded with six runs in the eighth. Posey led the charge with a towering homer to right-center off Carlos Estevez (1-2).

Cory Gearrin (1-0) threw 1 1/3 scoreless in-nings to earn his fi rst win since May 28, 2013.

Cubs 4, Phillies 1

CHICAGO — Kyle Hen-dricks pitched a fi ve-hit-ter for his second career complete game, leading the Cubs to their fourth straight win.

Hendricks (3-4) struck out seven and walked none. He was in line for his second career shutout before giving up a run in the ninth.

Dexter Fowler sparked a two-run fi rst against Jerad Eickhoff (2-7) with his sixth home run.

Jason Heyward had two doubles for Chicago. Ben Zobrist had two hits, includ-ing an RBI double, to ex-tend his streak to 14 games.

The Phillies lost for the sixth time in eight games.

SCORE

CONTINUED FROM 11A

Page 13: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • 1B

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Page 14: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

2B • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

BOONEVILLE — North-east Mississippi Commu-nity College recently held the Upper Division of the Mississippi Region IV Science and Engineering Fair in the Bonner Ar-nold Coliseum on the col-lege’s Booneville campus.

Northeast’s role as host of the Region IV Science and Engineering Fair has led it to become one of the state’s largest re-gional science and engi-neering competitions in the Magnolia State and the science and engineer-ing fair not only serves as a way for students in elementary, middle and high schools through-out the area to showcase their talents but allows those students a platform to feature their indepen-dent research projects in ten diff erent categories.

Students are also in the running for special awards and cash priz-es from various clubs and organizations that support science, re-search and engineering throughout the continen-tal United States.

During the 2016 Upper Division of the Missis-sippi Region IV Science and Engineering Fair saw over 340 projects on the fl oor of the Bonner Ar-nold Coliseum and nearly 400 participants through the seventh to twelfth grades exhibit their re-search projects.

Winners from local school competitions go on to participate in So-ciety of Science & the Public (SSP)-affi liated regional (such as North-east’s Region IV Science and Engineering Fair) and the Mississippi Sci-ence and Engineering Fair, where participants have the chance to qual-ify for the Intel Interna-tional Science and Engi-neering Fair.

As in years’ past, Northeast Mississippi Community College, the host of the Mississippi Region IV Science and Engineering Fair, has partnered with corpora-tions, academic institu-tions, government and science-focused sponsors to off er support for the science fair and special awards to the partici-pants.

Overall school awards were given to schools, based on the number of students who placed in the top three in each di-vision.

In Class 3, Guntown Middle School took top honors with seven stu-dents in the top three of the 10 diff erent catego-ries while Kossuth Mid-dle School had six stu-dents in the top three and Tupelo Middle School was third in the category with fi ve students.

In Class 4, Kossuth High School took top honors with a total of 10 students in the top three of the 10 diff erent catego-ries in Class 4.

Biggersville High School and Tishomingo County High School fi n-ished in a tie for second in the category with fi ve students a piece while three schools shared third place in the class – Thrasher Attendance Center, Mantachie High School and Ingomar At-tendance Center.

In Class 5, Mantachie High School took home the top award and edged out Tishomingo County High School for fi rst place in Class 5. Man-tachie had 12 diff erent students place in the top three of the 10 dif-ferent categories while Tishomingo County had 11 students. Ingomar Attendance Center and Kossuth High School fi n-ished in a tie for third in class.

Class 3 participants represented students in the seventh and eighth grades and were honored as such.

First place in the Class 3 Behavioral & Social Sciences category went to Lorne Turner, An-nalee Turner and Chesne Joyner of Kossuth Mid-dle School, second place went to Isabella Thomp-son of Kossuth Middle School while third place went to Riley Hogue of Ripley Middle School.

First place in the Class 3 Biochemistry category went to Kaylee McKinney of Wheeler High School, second place went to Chance Williams and Garrett Beyer of Dorsey Attendance Center while third place went to Au-tumn McHenry of Gun-town Middle School.

First place in the Class 3 Botany category went to Brenna Smith of Gun-town Middle School, sec-ond place went to Ethan Toews of Guntown Mid-dle School while third place went to Bo Hanna Shackelford of Guntown Middle School.

First place in the Class 3 Chemistry category went to Pecos Wilhite and Joseph Morgan of Kos-suth Middle School, sec-ond place went to Coltin Milner of Tupelo Middle School while third place went to Scott Puckett of Iuka Middle School.

First place in the Class 3 Earth, Space, & Envi-ronmental Sciences cat-egory went to Luke Davis Losordo of Tupelo Mid-dle School, second place went to Kylee Boley of Guntown Middle School while third place went to Cole Baggett of Biggers-ville High School.

First place in the Class 3 Engineering, Comput-ers, & Math category went to Arleigh John-son of Kossuth Middle School, second place went to Stone Bradley of Kossuth Middle School while third place went to Amber Galloway of Ingo-mar Attendance Center.

First place in the Class 3 Medicine & Health

category went to Haley Dean of Guntown Mid-dle School, second place went to Alex Rangel of Ripley Middle School while third place went to Grace Holder of Alcorn Central Middle School.

First place in the Class 3 Microbiology category went to Ayden James Gassett of Ripley Middle School, second place went to Laura June McK-ee of Kossuth Middle School while third place went to Lynleigh Crabb of Biggersville High School.

First place in the Class 3 Physics category went to Isaiah Parker of Bald-wyn Middle School, second place went to Hayes Hammond of Tu-pelo Middle School while third place went to Ash-ley Booker of Iuka Mid-dle School.

First place in the Class 3 Zoology category went to Caroline Hudson of Tupelo Middle School, second place went to Maddie West of Tupelo Middle School while third place went to Au-drey Patterson of Gun-town Middle School.

Class 4 participants consisted of students in the ninth and tenth grades.

First place in the Class 4 Behavioral & Social Sciences category went to Annabelle Brantley and Mariah Wooten of Kossuth High School, second place went to Ab-bey Rickard of Tishom-ingo County High School while third place went to Stormy Moore of Man-tachie High School.

First place in the Class 4 Biochemistry category went to Brittany Law-rence of Thrasher At-tendance Center, second place went to Blain Suit-or and Avery Holt of Kos-suth High School.

First place in the Class 4 Botany category went to Alea Feathers of Kos-suth High School, second place went to Ashley Mc-Daniel, Allison McDaniel and Andrew Ketchum of Kossuth High School while third place went to Amarri Harris of Biggers-ville High School.

First place in the Class 4 Chemistry category went to Madison Saint of Biggersville High School, second place went to Baylee Parmely of Big-gersville High School while third place went to Tanner Childs of Kossuth High School.

First place in the Class 4 Earth, Space, & Envi-ronmental Sciences cat-egory went to Jackson

Mills of Alcorn Central High School, second place went to Anisten Harvell of Kossuth High School while third place went to Rachel Choate of Biggersville High School.

First place in the Class 4 Engineering, Comput-ers, & Math category went to Brylee Kate Duncan of Kossuth High School, second place went to Vic-tor Milev of Tupelo High School while third place went to Jace Malone of Kossuth High School.

First place in the Class 4 Medicine & Health cat-egory went to Breanna Brose of Tishomingo County High School, sec-ond place went to Mad-elyn Griffi n of Tishom-ingo County High School while third place went to Ashlyn Saxon and Abbie Williams of Ingomar At-tendance Center.

First place in the Class 4 Microbiology catego-ry went to Kelton Hall, Easton Williams and Zach High of Ingomar Attendance Center, sec-ond place went to Rea-gan Watson of Mantachie High School while third place went to Madison Basden of Biggersville High School.

First place in the Class 4 Physics category went to Davis Powell of Tisho-mingo County High School, second place went to Jake Bobjak and Brady Anglin of Tishom-ingo County High School while third place went to Gabbie Hall of Thrasher Attendance Center.

First place in the Class 4 Zoology category went to Krista Wessler and Sarah Trimble of Kos-suth High School, sec-ond place went to Sarah Mitchell of Kossuth High School.

Class 5 participants are junior and seniors in high school.

First place in the Class 5 Behavioral & Social Sci-ences category went to Bethany Buse of Man-tachie High School, second place went to Tyler James of Tishom-ingo County High School while third place went to Madison Nichols of Man-tachie High School.

First place in the Class 5 Botany category went to Victoria Pollock of Mantachie High School, second place went to Abby Funderburk of Mantachie High School while third place went to Alli Claire Smith of Tishomingo County High School.

First place in the Class 5 Chemistry category went to Jade Miller of

Mantachie High School, second place went to Courtney Lamb of Man-tachie High School while third place went to Jesse Morris of Tishomingo County High School.

First place in the Class 5 Earth, Space, & Envi-ronmental Sciences cat-egory went to Matthew Lambert of Kossuth High School, second place went to Chasity Gar-rett and Brandi Smith of Tishomingo County High School while third place went to Lauryn Wimbish of Tishomingo County High School.

First place in the Class 5 Engineering, Comput-ers, & Math category went to Joseph Cohn of Tishomingo County High School, second place went to Laken Franks of Mantachie High School while third place went to John McRae of Tishom-ingo County High School.

First place in the Class 5 Medicine & Health category went to Caleb Smith of Tishomingo County High School, second place went to Molly Pardue of Tishom-ingo County High School while third place went to Rebekah McCreary of Mantachie High School.

First place in the Class 5 Microbiology category went to Lauren Coltharp and Samantha Campbell of Ingomar Attendance Center, second place went to Anna Dulaney of Mantachie High School while third place went to Emily Stephens of Man-tachie High School.

First place in the Class 5 Physics category went to Dawson Young of Mantachie High School, second place went to Al-lie DuBose of Mantachie High School while third place went to Stephanie Parsons of Tishomingo County High School.

First place in the Class 5 Zoology category went to Brett Vaughn of Tisho-mingo County High School.

Special awards at the Mississippi Region IV Science and Engineer-ing Fair in the Bonner Arnold Coliseum on the Northeast Booneville campus included awards for NASA Space Grant, American Meteorological Society, Association for Women Geoscientists, American Psychological Association, ASM Educa-tional Foundation, Intel Excellence in Computer Science, Intel Science Talent Search, Mu Al-pha Theta, NASA Earth System Science, National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration, Offi ce of Naval Research, RICOH Sustainable Develop-ment, Stockholm Junior Water Prize, Society for In Vitro Biology, U.S. Air Force, U. S. Metric As-sociation, Yale Science & Engineering Association and Broadcom Masters, which recognized the top ten percent of science fair participants.

Three awards for the NASA Space Grant were given to one member of each of the classes with Ethan Young of Burns-ville Middle School earn-ing the Class 3 NASA Space Grant, Brylee Kate Duncan of Kossuth High School earning the Class 4 award and Keliee Cor-nelius of Tishomingo County High School be-ing honored with the Class 5 award.

Two awards from the American Meteorological Society went to partici-pants in Classes 4 and 5. Anisten Harrell of Kos-suth High School cap-tured the Class 4 award while the team of Chas-ity Garrett and Brandi Smith of Tishomingo County High School were honored as the Class 5 re-cipient.

Erin Claire Dunn of Guntown Middle School took home the Associa-tion of Women Geoscien-tists award and Kossuth High School’s Annabelle Brantley was honored with the American Psy-chological Association’s special award.

Kossuth High School’s Brylee Kate Duncan was also honored with the ASM Educational Foun-dation award, the Intel Excellence in Computer Science award and the RICOH Sustainable De-velopment Award.

Mu Alpha Theta’s award whent to Tisho-mingo County High School’s John McRae while the Intel Science Talent Search hon-ored Mantachie High School’s Victoria Pollak, Jade Miller and Dawson Young, Kossuth High School’s Matthew Lam-bert and Tishomingo County High School’s Joseph Cohn and Brett Vaughn.

NASA’s Earth System Science award went to Baldwyn Middle School’s Steven Smith while the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis-tration award was cap-tured by Tupelo Middle School’s Luke Davis Los-ordo.

Stockholm Junior Wa-ter Prize went to Tisho-mingo County High School’s Jesse Morris while the Offi ce of Na-val Research honored three participants – Kos-suth High School’s Alea Feathers and Tishomin-go County High School’s Caleb Smith and Davis Powell.

Society for In Vitro Biology honored Man-tachie High School’s Em-ily Stephens while the U.S. Metric Association’s award went to Tupelo Middle School’s Maggie Gunnells.

Four students were honored by the United States Air Force – Gun-town Middle School’s Au-tumn McHenry, Burns-ville Middle School’s Ethan Young, Mantachie High School’s Bethany Buse and Tishomingo County High School’s Keliee Cornelius, while the Yale Science and En-gineering Association honored Mantachie High School’s Dawson Young.

Three advisors from the Mississippi Region IV Science and Engineering Fair area were awarded with free admittance to the Northeast Missis-sippi Community College Mobile Learning Confer-ence in June and those included Ginger Lan-caster of Alcorn Central High School, Tia Green of Tupelo Middle School and Jettie Ware of Shiv-ers Middle School.

Local students place in upper division of science fairDuring the 2016 Upper Division

of the Mississippi Region IV Science and Engineering Fair saw over 340 projects on the floor of the Bonner Arnold Coliseum and nearly 400 participants through the seventh to twelfth grades exhibit their research projects.

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Page 15: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • 3B

Crossword

Cryptoquip

Engagement

Miss Allie Elizabeth Rhodes and Mr. Noah Thomas Evans will ex-change vows at 7 p.m. on June 4, 2016, at The Cha-teau at Shiloh in Shiloh, Tenn.

The bride-elect is the daughter of Todd and Rhonda Rhodes of East-view, Tenn. She is the granddaughter of Ron-nie and Melba Rhodes of Corinth and Ronnie and Margie Tidwell of East-view, Tenn.

The prospective groom is the son of Tom and Nita Evans of Adamsville, Tenn. He is the grand-son of the late Edwin and Melba Evans of Selmer, Tenn., and the late Joe and Juanita Richardson of Adamsville, Tenn.

The bride-elect is a 2011 graduate of Adams-ville High School. She re-ceived her Associates of

Arts degree from Jackson State Community College in 2013. She is the owner of Downtown Allie in Ad-amsville, Tenn.

The prospective groom is a 2005 graduate of Adamsville High School and a 2010 graduate of The University of Ten-nessee at Martin where he earned a degree in University Studies. He is presently employed at Adamsville High School as a history teach-er. He is also a member of the coaching staff for the Adamsville High School football program.

All friends and relatives of the couple are invited to attend the ceremony and the reception which follows.

After the honeymoon in Nassau, Bahamas, they will reside in Eastview, Tenn.

Allie Elizabeth Rhodes & Noah Thomas Evans

Rhodes—Evans

A 50th Wedding Anniversary Celebration for Ron and Joyce Rossi of Corinth will be held on Sunday, June 5 at the Church of the Crossroads, located at Hwy 72 East in Corinth – in the Mildred Bennett hall from 2 to 4 p.m.  The Rossis were married on May 26, 1966, in Knoxville, Ill.  They are the parents of Keith Rossi (Gerri) of Corinth, Warren Rossi (Beth) of Corinth and the late Wayne Rossi.

Rossi Golden Anniversary

BOSTON — Super-model Gisele Bundchen says her spirit animal is a sea turtle, and she’s throwing her celeb-rity behind a United Nations eff ort to save those and other crea-tures.

Bundchen announced her participation this week in “Wild for Life,” a new U.N. campaign trying to end the illegal trade in endangered or threatened species.

Her face is featured in a promotional graphic that says: “I am Gisele Bundchen. I am a sea turtle.”

Bundchen also tweet-ed: “Much of the world’s wildlife is facing ex-tinction. To overcome this, we need a radical change in people*s at-titude.”

As part of the cam-paign, the U.N. is in-viting people around the globe to take a quiz supposedly designed to determine their kin-dred animals.

Bundchen is married to New England Patri-ots quarterback Tom Brady.

Associated Press

Model adds weight to U.N. wildlife efforts

HELSINKI — A Norwe-gian consumers’ group took inspiration from “slow television” to pro-duce a marathon webcast of a team of readers going through the fi ne print of terms and conditions of downloadable apps.

Finn Myrstad from the Norwegian Consumer Council says the idea was to point out the “absur-

dity” and even illegality of some of the conditions. The Runkeeper apolo-gized to its 45 million users after the council revealed that it was track-ing and sending user in-formation to a third party even when not in use.

Myrstad said the team decided to read and ana-lyze the small print of some 20 apps over six months, discovering that

many of them broke the law.

“We got the idea from slow TV, and we wanted to expose the absurdity of the terms and conditions of when you download an app,” he told the AP. “You usually don’t read them because either too long or complicated, and many of them breach consumer law and data protection laws.”

The show began on Tuesday morning, with the team reading through the terms of around 30 popular apps. It ended 32 hours later. The council later tweeted a 12-second recap of the broadcast.

Norway has popular-ized “slow television,” put-ting fi ve hours of knitting, a fi re burning itself out and minute-by-minute salmon fi shing live on TV.

Associated Press

Norway subjects viewers to stream of terms of use

As part of the campaign, the U.N. is inviting people around the globe to take a quiz supposedly designed to determine

their kindred animals.

Community Events

(Editor’s Note: We recommend Community Events be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event. Commu-nity Events publish on Wednesday, Sunday and when space allows on Friday.)

Bishop Activity Center

The Bishop Activity Center will hold the fol-lowing activities: Mon-day, May 30 – Memorial Day – Center closed; Tuesday, May 31 – ex-ercise at Tate Baptist Church; Wednesday, June 1: Bible Study with Jackie Calvart from Oakland Baptist Church; Thursday, June 2 – Bingo in house; and Friday, June 3 – Grocery shop-ping at Rogers Super-market. Daily activities include quilting, jigsaw puzzles, table games, Rolo golf and washer games. Senior citizens age 60 and above are welcome and encour-aged to attend.

VFW Post 3962• VFW Post 3962 will

host a Memorial Day fish fry at noon on Monday, May 30. Plates are $7.50 each which includes fish, coleslaw, beans and hush puppies. All veterans with ID will eat for free. For more infor-mation call Mike or Yogi at 662-287-6106. VFW Post 3962 is located at

1 Purdy School Road in Corinth.

• The VFW will now open at noon Tuesday – Saturday and will be closed on Monday. The VFW is open to veterans as well as the commu-nity. Guests can enjoy shuffleboard, a bowling machine, pool, horse-shoes, darts, dancing and much more. Happy hour is from 4 to 6 p.m. daily. VFW Post is located at 1 Purdy School Road in Corinth.

For more information, contact the VFW at 662-287-6106 and ask for Mike or Yogi.

Free Medical ClinicThe Living Healthy Free

Medical Clinic, where residents with no way to pay can get free medi-cal treatment, welcomes adults and children age 12 and up with no income and no health insurance.

The clinic, now located at 2668 South Harper Road Suite 3 next to Phy-sicians Urgent Care in the former Oasis Medical Center, is open 1-5 p.m., on the second Wednes-day and fourth Saturday of each month.

The clinic is always looking for both medi-cal and non-medical volunteers. Medical and non-medical volunteers should contact Ann White at [email protected] or 662-415-9446.

Fish Fry FundraiserA fish fry fundraiser

will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, June 4 to raise money to benefit the charity, Help-For-Haitian-Kids. Plates will be sold for $7 which includes two fish fillets, sides, dessert and soda or water. The Fish Fry will be held at the Johnson-Ford-Mitchell Communi-ty Center, located at 707 Spring Street in Iuka.

Donations can be made to Help-For-Hai-tian-Kids c/o Elizabeth May 910 Westwood Circle Iuka, MS 38852. For more information call 662-424-9537 or 662-279-6435.

Community Fellowship Dinner

The Easom Community Center, located at 700 South Crater Street in Corinth, will hold their monthly Community Fellowship Dinner from noon until 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, June 5. Items on the menu include fried chicken, dressing, barbe-cue chicken, hamburger steak, cabbage, broccoli/cheese, fried okra, peach cobbler, chess squares and rolls. The cost is $10 for adults and $5 for chil-dren under 9 who dine in. All carry-outs are $10. For tickets and more informa-tion contact Ernestine Hollins at 662-643-8024 or Samuel Crayton at 404-386-3359.

Page 16: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

4B • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

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call today!!!Long Lewis Ford

Lincoln of Corinth(662)664-0229 Cell / (662)287-3184 Offi [email protected]

References AvailableLicensed & Insured.

No Job too large or too small.

Chad Cornelius - Owner662-665-1849FREE ESTIMATE

E L I T EPressure Washing

Residential & Commercial

We Clean Roofs!

Professional Professional Pressure Washing Pressure Washing

& Soft Wash& Soft WashRoof CleaningRoof Cleaning

High-grade mold inhibitor

chemicals & Soft wash system

used to clean roofs

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand• Lime Rock• Iuka Gravel• Masonry Sand • Top Soil• Rip-Rap• Washed Gravel• Pea Gravel

662-286-9158or 662-287-2296

We also do:• Dozer• Back-Hoe• Track-hoe• Demolition• Dig Ponds and Lakes

We Haul:We Haul:

TRU-SEALQUALITY

PAVEMENT REPAIR

•Rubberized Asphalt Seal Coating

•Asphalt Rejuvenation- Liquid Road

•Hot Pour Crack Filling•Pot Hole Repair

•All Types of Gravel Hauling & Spreading

10% discount for senior citizens, churches, & military

with ID.

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL

Serving MS, TN, & AL662.802.9211662.279.5121

FREE ESTIMATES

“Cash For College”

LAWN KINGS LAWN CARELAWN KINGS LAWN CAREAARON 662-665-1518AARON 662-665-1518

I am starting a lawn care business to help pay for my college. We offer a full service mowing package with no contract. Lawn Kings is family owned and operated; we don't sub out our jobs to other lawn care businesses or other workers. It will always be the same 2 family members in your yard giving you the best looking lawn in the neighborhood because your yard is our reputation.

INSURED

Full Service Mowing Package:

• Mowing • Trimming • Blowing

• Debris/ Trash Pickup

Ask about referral discount.

In Print.Online.On the Go.

Subscribe online or at 662.287.6111

www.dailycorinthian.com

Staying connected is now easier than ever…LOCAL NEWSREGIONAL NEWSSTATE NEWSDININGENTERTAINMENTLOCAL BUSINESS NEWSLOCAL SPORTSHEALTHLOCAL EDUCATION NEWSPROPERTY DIRECTORYCLASSIFIEDSand so much more

Your News. Your Way.

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.

TRUCKING0244

PETS

FARM

FEED/FERTILIZER0430

MERCHANDISE

FURNITURE0533

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6111

for details.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL HELP0232

DRIVERS WANTEDMid-South

Farmers Coop

Selmer Location

Class A CDL License

Call Brian Ross Cell (731) 307-8912

Page 17: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • 5B

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HOME FOR RENTShiloh Falls Pickwick

3BR/ 3BA, Loft, Fireplace

Deck, 2 car garage,

gated community$1200.00 per

monthMinimum

12 month Lease

References required

662-279-0935

DDDDDDDDDDDDDDeeeeeeeeeeecccccccccckkkkkkkkkkkk, 22222222 cccarggaraaaaggggeeeeee,,,,,

ggggggggggggggaaaaaaaaaaaaatttttttttttttteeeeeeeeeeeedddddddddddddd ccccccccooooommmmmmm iRENTED

FOR RENT OR SELL

MARSH TOWN3BR, 2 BATH ON

DOUBLE LOT

COMPLETELY REMODELED &

NEW ROOF

2.5 CAR GARAGE AT BACK OF LOT THAT

WOULD MAKE A GREAT WORK SHOP.

RENT $800 MONTH WITH $200 DEPOSIT.

SELL $145,000.

662-720-6766

Property DirectoryProperty Directory

KOSSUTH AREA5 Bedroom Home

on 4 Acres2 Baths

Pond, Pool3 Level Deck

$160,000Call or Text

662-316-0826

BURNSVILLE

40 ACRESOF

WOODED LAND

$80,000

CALL662-808-9313

OR415-5071

MOODDDDEEEEEELLLLLLLEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDD &&&&&&&&&&&&& NNNNNNNNNNNEEEEEEEEEEWWWWWWWW RRRROOOOOOOOOF

2222.5 CAAR GAAAARRRRRAAAAAAAGGGGGGEEEEEEE AAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTTTT BBBBBBBBBBBAAAAAAAAAAAACCCCCCCCCCCCCKKKKKKKKKKKKKK OOOOOOOOOOOOOFFFFFFFFFFF LLLLLLLLLLOOOOOOOTTTTTT TTTTHHHAARENTED

2 HOUSES 13 ACRES2050 CR 7002 MILES WEST OF

WENASOGASHOWN BY

APPOINTMENT ONLY

$130,000287-3618

30x60 building sitting on 1/2 Acre paved lot in downtown Corinth at 102 south Fillmore. Spacious offi ce area

with kitchenette and 1 1/2 bath. Also a private

offi ce. Two garage bays. One bay has

built in drain. Asking $165,000. OBO Call

662-808-5560. Hurry it won’t last long in this

prime location!!!

FURNISHED APARTMENTS0615

JUMPERTOWNAPARTMENTS

3 bedroom/ 2 bath$650 PER MONTH

partial utilities furnishedPlease call 662-840-4050

TVRHA acceptedNew Ownership and Managment

COMPLETELY REMODELED!READY FOR IMMEDIATE

OCCUPANCY!

GENERAL HELP0232

SMC RECYCLING, INC

NOW HIRING

CDL – CLASS A TRUCK

DRIVERS

MUST HAVE CLEAN

MVR

*Home every night

*401K

*Paid Vacation

If interested, please

call Zach Daniel

662-415-8578

GENERAL HELP0232

CDL A TRAINING$500 - $1,000 INCENTIVE BONUS

NO OUT OF POCKET TUITION COST!

GET YOUR CDL IN 22 DAYSPAID TRAINING AFTER GRADUATION

ACCOMMODATIONS PROVIDEDIF YOU LIVE 50+ MILES FROM

JACKSON

6 DAY REFRESHER COURSES AVAIL.MINIMUM 21 YEARS OF AGE

888-449-3199 EOEWWW.KLLMDRIVINGACADEMY.COM

GENERAL HELP0232

WWW.HAMILTON-RYKER.COM

JOB FAIR

Thursday, June 2nd 2:30 - 5:00pm

at Caterpillar Logistics Facility 2732 South Harper Road, Corinth, MS

Forklift Operators Warehouse Workers

Pay Rate $8.50 - $10.00per hour depending on shift

ALL SHIFTS AVAILABLE in Corinth/Booneville! Training is available. Must be 18 years old

and pass drug screen.

College Students Welcome to Apply for Summer Jobs! May be able to work around your school schedule when

you return for fall semester.

GENERAL HELP0232

HELP WANTED

Wheeler Grove Learning Center

21 CR 519 • Corinth

Pickup Applications at Wheeler Grove church offi ce.

No Phone Calls Please.

• Cooks• Teacher• Care-Giver

MEDICAL/DENTAL0220

MS CARE CENTER

is looking for

Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts

LPN Full-Time, PRNPlease apply in person.

3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30

E.O.E.

LEGALS0955you for the money or otherthings demanded in the com-plaint or petition.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing but you may do so if youdesire.

Issued under my handand seal of said Court, thisthe 12th day of May, 2016.

GREG YOUNGER, Clerk

By : KAREN DUNCAN,DEPUTY CLERK

JOHN P. ROBBINS (MSB:103630)P.O. Box 392TUPELO, MS 38802(662) 269-3509 (phone)(662) 269-3514 (fax)Attorney for Plaintiff

Publish May 15, May 22, May29/2016

15347

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS

LEGALS0955In the Chancery Court

of Alcorn County,Mississippi

THADDEUS GILLARDPLAINTIFF

Vs. 2016-273-02-M

CRYSTAL CLARK GIL-LARD DEFENDANT

SUMMONS

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: CRYSTAL CLARKGILLARDLAST KNOWN AD-DRESS:1510 SHILOH ROADCORINTH, MS 38834

You have been made aDefendant in the suit filed inthis Court by Thaddeus Gil-lard, Petitioner, seeking cus-tody of B.C. a minor childborn in 2015 to you andThaddeus Gillard.There areno defendants in this actionother than you.

You are summoned toappear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 o’clock A.M. on the 15thday of June, 2016 at the Pren-tiss County Government An-nex in Booneville, Mississippiand in case of your failure toappear and defend a judg-ment will be entered againstyou for the money or other

HOMES FOR SALE0710

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.

TRANSPORTATION

TRUCKS FOR SALE0864

FINANCIAL

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

HOMES FOR RENT0620

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

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-

Page 18: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

6B • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

GUARANTEEDGUARANTEEDAuto SalesAuto SalesAdvertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO

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

COMMERCIAL

804BOATS

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

470TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

Sportsman CamperQueen Bed, Couch

sleeps 2, lots of cabinets, pulled 6 times,

non-smoker, clean as new on the inside.

$9,500.00 287-3461 or

396-1678

2015 Starcraft A R One

LIKE NEWREDUCED$9400.00

662-415-7786

2006 Outback Kargoroo

by Keystone28 KRS

Front Toy Hauler, Sleeps 6 to 8, 2 Slides, Stored for 7 yrs., Very Clean, Extras, Selling

Due to Illness.$8,900731-610-9642 [email protected]

1987 Eonoline 350 Minnie Winnie

27ft RV, sleeps 6 in the comfort of home.

Onan Generator, Full Kitchen, Bath Shower,

Retractable Awning, Newly replaced hardwood fl oors, big block 460 Engine, c-6Auto Trans., Good Cond.

MUST SEE$8000.

662-223-4934

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-fl at screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.

$55,000662-415-0590

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH

EQUIPMENTPOWER STEERING

GOOD PAINT

$5800.00

662-416-5191

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

$6000.00

662-286-6571662-286-3924

8N FORD TRACTOR

GOOD CONDITION

$2500.00 287-8456

Hyster ForkliftNarrow Aisle

24 Volt Battery3650.00287-1464

Clark Forklift8,000 lbs,

outside tiresGood Condition

$15,000

662-287-1464

Big Boy Big Boy ForkliftForklift$$12501250

Great for a small warehouse

662-287-1464

Toyota Forklift5,000 lbs

Good Condition662-287-1464

53' STEP DECK TRAILER

CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1

TON TRUCKS.

BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3' PULL OUTS @ FRONT

& REAR.

BOOMS, CHAINS & LOTS OF ACCESSORIES

$10,000/OBO

CALL 662-603-1547

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never

launched, powerhouse out-board motor with a High Five

stainless prop,

for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in

Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint,

new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat 25 HP Motor

$2700.00 Ask for Brad:

284-4826

2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer

Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube

$19,300662-427-9063

601 FORDWORKMASTER

EXCELLENT CONDITION

$3,500731-453-5239731-645-8339

ASKING $7500.00Or Make Me An Offer CALL 662-427-9591

Call (662)427-9591 orCell phone (662)212-4946

Built by Scully’s Aluminum Boats of Louisiana.

ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE16FT./5FT.

115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR

TRAILER NEWLY REWIREDALL TIRES NEW

NEW WINCH

2003 CHEROKEE 285SLEEPS 8

EXCELLENT CONDITIONEVERYTHING WORKS

5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER

CENTRAL HEAT & AIRALL NEW TIRES & NEW

ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER

$8995Call Richard 662-664-4927

1956 FORD 6005 SPEED

POWER STEERINGREMOTE HYDRAULICS

GOOD TIRESGOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

30' MOTOR HOME

1988 FORD

SLEEPS 6

51,000 MILES

$4300

662-415-5247

BAYLINER CLASSIC BOAT & TRAILER

13 YR OLDM14763BC BCMS

19.5 LONGBLUE & WHITE

REASONABLY PRICED662-660-3433

WINNEBAGO JOURNEYCLASS A , RV 2000

MODEL34.9 FT. LONG

50 AMP HOOKUPCUMMINS DIESEL

FREIGHTLINER CHASSISLARGE SLIDE OUT

ONAN QUIET GENERATOR

VERY WELL KEPT.,500.

662-728-2628

WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOME

198940'

Queen Size Bed1 Bath

Sleeps 6-7people comfortably

$8500662-808-9313

DECK BOAT1985 Hurricane-150

Johnson engine

Includes Custom Trailer Dual

Axel-ChromeRetractable Canopy

$4500.00

662-419-1587

REDUCED

$7000.00

Excellent ConditionBrand New RefrigeratorNew Tires & Hot Water

Heater. Sleeps Six7,900 ACTUAL MILES

$12,500. OBOMust See!!

Call 662-665-1420

1990 Allegro Motor Home

W & W HORSEOR CATTLE TRAILER

ALL ALUMINUMLIKE NEW

$7000.731-453-5239731-645-8339

SOLDSOLD SOLDSOLD 24 FT BONANZA TRAILER

GOOSE NECK

GOOD CONDITION

$2,000.00

662-287-8894

SOLDSOLD

21’ Sea Ray Boat4.3 Merc CruiserIncludes Trailer,

Anchor,Spare Prop; Skis and Full Curtains.SN serv 212111889

$3500.601-916-6411

Baker Propane Forklift

4000 LB Lift$2000.00

662-279-7011

2009 TT45ANew Holland Tractor

335 Hours8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner

deceased, Kossuth Area. $10,000- 662-424-3701

KUBOTA 20015700 HPGOOD

CONDITIONOWNER RETIRING

$10,000.00731-453-5521

FOR SALE

JOHN DEERE TRACTORS

SPRING SPECIAL

662-415-0399662-419-1587

SOLD

$7500CALL RICHARD 662-416-0604

$1,800.00

REDUCED

REDUCED

16' SKI BOAT1988 Winner Escape

Sport 17504.3 liter mer Cruiser Alpha One EngineRuns but needs

some workIncludes Trailer, Winch, Depth Finder and Side

Sonar Fish FinderAppraised for $2,200.

Make an offer.662-415-3752

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

40 FT 3 Axle Trailer

$2000.BUY TRAILER get FREE HOUSEBOAT

662-286-1717

1992 24FT Pontoon

Boat2002 90HP

Evinrude Motor

Good Cond.$7500.

662-664-0357

SOLDSOLD

2015 StarcraftA R One

LIKE NEW$9400.00

662-415-7786

REDUCEDREDUCED

SOLDSOLDSOLDSOLD6x12, Wired, A/C,

Custom detailed/paint, inlayed equipment brackets,

windows/shades and awningDrop down loading door and

mounted Alum tool box. Custom Wheels like new!

Includes 2 twin electric air mattresses and port-a-potty.

No Calls after 6PM.

$5,500.00 662-284-4604

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

Page 19: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • 7B

868AUTOMOBILES

GUARANTEEDGUARANTEEDAuto SalesAuto SalesAdvertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO

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

2005 LINCOLN LS

Good ConditionLeather Interior

Sun Roof106,000 miles

$4,800662-415-7031

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

REDUCEDREDUCED

$4900.00 OBO

1966FURY662-415-5071

832Motorcycles/ATV’S

1990 Harley Davidson

Custom Soft-Tail$9000

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead

$9000 OBO

662-808-2994

1987 FORD 250 DIESELUTILITY SERVICE TRUCK

$4000. IN GOOD CONDITION731-645-8339 OR

731-453-5239

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster,

color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.

Call @662-664-0210

2002 Harley Fat Boy, color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO

Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.

Call @ 662-664-0210

2003 Mustang GTSVT Cobra CloneTuned 4.6 Engine

5 SpeedLowered

4:10 GearsAll Power & Air

$6500.662-415-0149

2010 Chevy Equinox LS

130K Miles, Fully Loaded

GREAT Condition!

$10,500662-415-8343 or 415-7205

2005 White Silverado

TruckExtended Cab with Bed Cover

New Michelin Tires

Excellent Condition

462-7421808-9114

95’CHEVYASTRO

Cargo VanGood, Sound

Van

$2700872-3070

2006 YAMAHA 1700GREAT CONDITION!

APPROX. 26,000 MILES

$4350(NO TRADES)

662-665-0930662-284-8251

1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color:

blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles,

$7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for

the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

1976 F115428 Motor

Very Fast

$3,500.

662-808-9313662-415-5071

FALCON662-415-5071

1994 Nissan Quest New Lifters,Cam, Head,

Struts and Shocks.$2000.

Call 603-9446

1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER6 cyl., 5 speed

ConvertibleLeather Seats

All OriginalElectric Windows

& Seats88,000 miles

$10,000.00 OBO212-4882

For Sale or Trade1978 Mercedes

6.9 Motor 135,000 miles.Only made 450 that year.

$2,500. OBOSelling due to health

reasons.Harry Dixon

286-6359

2011 GMC CANYON-RED

REG. CAB, 2 WD

78,380 MILES

$11,900 OBO

662-462-7790

1989 Mercedes Benz300 CE

145K miles, Rear bucket seats,

Champagne color, Excellent Condition.

Diligently maintained. $5000.00

662-415-2657$4000.00

1946 Willys Jeep

Completely Restored

$5000.

287-6993

Rogue S 2014one owner,

like new, have all service records. $16,900.00.

Call 256-577-1349.

2013 Arctic Cat

308 miles4 Seater w/seat beltsPhone charger outlet

Driven approx. 10 times

Excellent ConditionWench (front bumper)

(662)279-0801

2009 Pontiac G6

Super Nice, Really Clean,

Oil changed regularly, Good cold air and has

good tires. 160k

Asking $4800. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @

662-319-7145

2003 BUICK

6 CYL, Clean

75,000 Miles

$3,200.00662-287-4861

cell 662-603-1475

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4

4 WHEELER2nd Owner, Great

ConditionHas a Mossy Oak

Cover over the body put on when it was

bought new. Everything Works. Used for

hunting & around the house, Never for mud

riding. $1500 Firm.

If I don’t answer, text me and I will contact you. 662-415-7154

2012 Yamaha 230 Dirt Bike

Great Condition.

$2800.00Call

662.415.1173

REDUCEDREDUCED

1950 Buick 78,400 miles$4200.00 or

TradeAll Original

662-415-3408

1985 Mustang GT, HO, 5 Speed,

Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner

Last year of carburetor, All original.

$16,500

662-287-4848

2004 DODGE2WD Slt Loaded Out

5.7 Hemi, 1 Owner, New Tires, 1,000, Serviced every 3,000 mi.

104,000 MilesKKB say’s $7950. Take $6950.Super Clean, Non Smoker, Red,

Black Cloth

$6,950.00Steve 662-665-1781

HD 1200 SPORTSTER CUSTOM XL

LOTS OF EXTRASGREAT CONDITION

39K MILES$5,200.00

662-643-8382

2012 BansheeBighorn

Side-by-Side4 X 4 w/ WenchAM/FM w/ CD

$7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

$5900.00 OBO

1996 FORD MUSTANGGood Body,

Transmission & Tires

Needs Motor

MUST SELL

$500.00

Call 662-603-7459 after 5PM

2006 Harley Davidson Street Glide

103 Screaming Eagle Engine9700 Actual Miles-Showroom Condition-Fully Chromed and

Customized-RinehartTrue Dual Exhaust-Stage1

Breather Kit-10K Mile Full Factory Service Just Compled-

$14,000.00 Firm-662-212-0362

$8,90000

1970 MERCURYCOUGAR

Excel. Cond. Inside & OutAll Original

662-664-0357

1972 MERCURY COUGAR

$20,000.00662-415-5071

2001 Heritage Softail

LIKE NEW9K Miles

25,000 InvestedAsking 8K

Serviced by H/D Bumpas

731-645-3012

2000 Harley Davidson Road

King Classic

20,000 miles,One Owner,Garage kept.$8,500.00

662-287-2333Leave Message

1964 F100 SHORT BED

completely refurbished & recovered seat, new brakes, NOS starter,

new $125 battery. 6cyl, 3spd-

Walnut $1850.00,

750-8526

1998 Cadillac DeVilleTan Leather InteriorSunroof, green color

99,000 miles - needs motor

$1,100.00(662) 603-2635

212-2431

2001 LINCOLNTOWNCAR

GREAT CONDITION174,000 MILES

$6,000.00CALL 9AM-5PM M-F

662-415-3658

2012 Subaru Legacy$10,900

Excellent condition, One owner, Must sell!

Call662-284-8365

2002 Chevy Silverado Z712 Person Owner

Heat & Air, 4 Wheel Drive, Works Great

New Tires, 5.1 EngineClub Cab and Aluminum

Tool BoxAM/FM Radio, Cassette &

CD PlayerPewter in Color

Great Truck for $7000.00

662-287-8547662-664-3179

2005 Harley Davidson Trike

24,000 miles, Ultra Classic

Nice, $23,500.

662-415-7407662-808-4557

$6,400

SOLD SOLD

SOLD SOLD

SOLD SOLD

2014 Toyota Corolla S 1.8 LOW MILES!!

$15,999 (Corinth Ms)

Silver 2014 Toyota corolla

S 1.8: Back-up camera;

Xenon Headlights;

Automatic CVT gearbox;

Paddle Shift; 25k miles

LOW MILES !!!

Up to 37mpg; One owner!

Perfect condition!

(205-790-3939)

SOLD SOLD

SOLD SOLD

1999 DODGE VAN110K miles, 4

Captain Chairs, Folding Bed/

Rear Seat, TV no DVD, New heads on engine, Runs

Perfect. $4500.00 OBO

287-1097 or 808-1297

$7,90000

2003 Kimco Scooter 150CC.

Very Good Condition. $1200.

662-664-6460

2005 Kimco Scooter

250CC. Very Good Condition.

$1500. 662-664-6460

2002 Dodge 3500

5.9 Diesel. 6 speed. 391,000 miles.$5,800

(901) 409-0427$5,000

SOLD SOLD

SOLD SOLD

SOLD SOLD

SOLD SOLD

2003 FORD F150 Harley

DavidsonSeries

3,800 On New Motor, Tran.

and Tires662-315-2426

3800 On New Motor, Tran.

and Tires$7800

2009 SUZUKI GSXR 600New Tires

New Battery8,055 Miles

$7000.662-415-7628

$5500.

06 Chevy Trailblazer

Powereverything!Good heat

and Air$3,250 OBO

662-319-7145

YAMAHA V STAR 650

22,883 MILES$2,650.00

665-1288$2,550.00

SOLD SOLD

1995 FORD RANGER4 New Tires

131,000 Miles

$2400.00662-415-0811

SOLD SOLD

Page 20: 052916 daily corinthian e edition

8B • Sunday, May 29, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

ONE WEEK ONLY! May 30th to June 3rd

Great Deals on Beltone Hearing Aids! Customized, state-of-the-art

digital technology Hearing aids for every

budget & lifestyle

Financing available - payments as low as $40 per month

During this special once-a-year event, Beltone is also offering: FREE video ear inspections Demonstrations of the newest technology FREE hearing screenings and consultations

Don’t delay - Go with the best!:sdiA gniraeH enotleB

Are virtually invisible Automatically adjust to your surroundings Provide superior sound clarity Are lightweight and comfortable

She’s

wearing

Beltone

Legend!

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0034-784-502 LA ,dleifniW C .etS .rD yawdiM 701

$ 899 *diA gniraeH latigiD decnavdA %001

$ 8991 6102 ,3 enuJ seripxE

gniraeH ssoL

tseT-fleS trohs siht ekaT fi ees ot tset-fles

evah thgim uoy .ssol gniraeh

melborp a evah uoy oD ?enohp eht no gniraeh

elbuort evah uoy oD snoitasrevnoc gniwollof

?dworc a ni taht nialpmoc elpoep oD

oidar ro VT eht nrut uoy ?hgih oot pu emulov

gniraeh elggurts uoy oD ekil ,secalp ysion ni

?stnaruatser

ot niarts ot evah uoy oD ?noitasrevnoc dnatsrednu

flesruoy dnif uoy oD taeper ot elpoep gniksa

?sevlesmeht dnatsrednusim uoy oD gniyas era srehto tahw ?yltcerrocni dnopser dna

teg ,eseht fo yna dekcehc uoy fI yam uoY .dekcehc gniraeh ruoy

.ssol gniraeh a evah

FREE HEARING SCREENING plus Incredible Savings.

Call today! 662-269-41283301 Tinin Dr. Corinth, MS

C t i

LOWEST

PRICES THIS

SUMMER!

e g t

FREE In-Offi ce Trial

of our Latest Technologyexp: June 3,2016

$1000 OFF a pair of

Beltone Legend™

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*Discount off MSRP and the $998 coupon applies to a single beltone origin 2 product.

Declare your indepenence from hearing loss with a new set of hearing aids at Beltone Memorial Day Savings Event!

500