After The Storm: Neighbors Help Neighbors in Storm's Aftermath
After The Storm: Neighbors Help Neighbors in Storm's Aftermath
After The Storm: Neighbors Help Neighbors in Storm's Aftermath
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014 3A
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May 1 at
BY ADRIAN SAINZ
AND JEFF AMY
The Associated Press
LOUISVILLE Ruth
Bennett died clutching
the last child left at her
day care center as a tor-
nado wiped the building
off its foundation. A re-
ghter who came upon
the body gently pulled the
toddler from her arms.
It makes you just
take a breath now, said
next-door neighbor Ken-
neth Billingsley, who
witnessed the scene at
what was left of Ruths
Child Care Center in this
logging town of 6,600. It
makes you pay attention
to life.
Bennett, 53, was among
at least 35 people killed
in a two-day outbreak of
twisters and other violent
weather that pulverized
homes from the Midwest
to the Deep South. The
child, whose name was
not released, was alive
when she was pulled from
Bennetts arms and was
taken to a hospital. Her
condition was not known.
As crews in Mississippi
and Alabama turned from
search-and-rescue efforts
to cleanup, forecasters
began to downplay their
initially dire predictions
of a third round of deadly
twisters Tuesday. Mete-
orologists said the storm
system had weakened
substantially by evening,
although some tornado
watches and warnings
were still in effect for iso-
lated areas.
In North Carolina, the
National Weather Service
reported tornado touch-
downs in ve counties
Tuesday, but the twist-
ers caused only moder-
ate structural damage to
homes and toppled some
trees. Two cities in the
state reported extensive
ooding from the storm
system. No injuries were
reported.
One of the hardest-hit
areas in Monday eve-
nings barrage of twisters
was Tupelo, where a gas
station looked as if it had
been stepped on by a gi-
ant.
Francis Gonzalez, who
also owns a convenience
store and Mexican restau-
rant attached to the ser-
vice station, took cover
with her three children
and two employees in
the stores cooler as the
roof over the gas pumps
was reduced to aluminum
shards.
My Lord, how can all
this happen in just one
second? she said in Span-
ish.
On Tuesday, the growl
of chain saws cut through
the otherwise still, hazy
morning in Tupelo. Mas-
sive oak trees, knocked
over like toys, blocked
roads. Neighbors helped
one another cut away
limbs.
This does not even
look like a place that Im
familiar with right now,
said Pam Montgomery,
walking her dog in her
neighborhood. You look
down some of the streets,
and it doesnt even look
like there is a street.
By the governments
preliminary count, 11
tornadoes including
one that killed 15 people
in Arkansas struck
the nations midsection
on Sunday, and at least
25 ravaged the South on
Monday, the National
Weather Service Storm
Prediction Center said.
Among those killed
was 21-year-old University
of Alabama swimmer and
deans list student John
Servati, who was taking
shelter in the basement of
a Tuscaloosa home when
a retaining wall collapsed
on him.
His death and that
of at least two others in
Alabama came the day
after the third anniversa-
ry of an outbreak of more
than 60 tornadoes that
killed more than 250 peo-
ple across the state.
In Kimberly, Ala.,
north of Birmingham, the
rehouse was among the
buildings heavily dam-
aged.
Four reghters suf-
fered little more than
cuts and scrapes, but the
bays over the re trucks
were destroyed, and the
vehicles were covered
with red bricks, concrete
blocks and pieces of the
roof.
The trucks were es-
sentially trapped, so the
town had to rely on near-
by communities for emer-
gency help.
Forecasters downplay 3rd-day dire predictions
It makes you pay attention to life
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JACKSON A former
police chief in Mississip-
pi has been sentenced to
ve years in federal pris-
on for conspiring to de-
mand money and property
from people in exchange
for dropping criminal
charges.
Former Mendenhall Po-
lice Chief Donald Bruce
Barlow pleaded guilty in to
one count in federal court
in January. Barlow, 50,
had been charged with 17
counts, including witness
intimidation.
He also was sentenced
Tuesday to three years
supervised release. Pros-
ecutors say restitution will
be determined at a July 10
hearing.
Prosecu-
tors say Bar-
low some-
times made
people sign
over their
vehicles in
e x c ha nge
for him
dropping charges and also
demanded cash payments,
in one case $4,500.
Prosecutors say Barlow
tried to cover up his deal-
ings when he learned of
the federal investigation.
Former Mississippi police chief sentenced
Five year sentence for 17 counts,
including witness intimidation
Barlow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JACKSON The
Southern Companies says
the expected startup date
of its coal gas-red power
plant in Kemper County is
being pushed back to the
rst half of 2015.
In a regulatory ling
Tuesday with the Securi-
ties and Exchange Com-
mission, the company also
says the plants cost is ex-
pected to rise by $196 mil-
lion to a total of about $5.4
billion.
The Atlanta-based com-
pany says it will take a pre-
tax charge of $380 million
$235 million after taxes
against its income for
the rst quarter of 2014.
A spokesman for South-
ern-afliate Mississippi
Power Company says the
utility will not seek to re-
cover the increased costs
from ratepayers.
Earlier this month the
company blamed poor
weather, unexpected turn-
over of construction em-
ployees and installation
inefciencies for contrib-
uting to extra costs.
Kemper power plant will cost more
Start-up delayed until 2015 also
BY SETH BORENSTEIN
AP Science Writer
W A S H -
I N G T O N
Weather
from nearly
all parts of
the country
combined to
brew this weeks killer tor-
nadoes.
To get tornadoes
especially the big deadly
kind everything has to
come together in just the
right way and it hadnt
been doing that lately,
said meteorologist Greg
Carbin at the Storm Pre-
diction Center in Norman,
Okla.
Until the weekend,
there had been relatively
few signicant twisters
this year across the Unit-
ed States just 20 and no
deaths.
But the conditions were
right on Sunday in the cen-
tral U.S.
Dry, cool air swooped
off Californias Sierra
Madre and southern
Rocky mountains. That
sat on top warm, moist air
from the Gulf of Mexico,
creating thunderstorms.
And the jet stream brought
in wind shear, which helps
provide rotation.
Cook that all with day-
time heating and it makes
a tornado outbreak, mete-
orologists say.
What makes this out-
break unusual is that it is
essentially stalled, Carbin
said. The slow-moving jet
stream plunging from the
Northwest is keeping a
large, high-pressure sys-
tem off the East Coast.
And thats preventing the
tornado-prone weather
from moving east and
weakening.
That could mean more
storms in across the South,
maybe into Wednesday.
In the past few decades,
the U.S. has averaged
about 1,250 tornadoes a
year. Last year, which also
had a slow start, ended
with 908 tornadoes that
killed 55 people.
You expect to see one
or two outbreaks like this
each spring and certainly
we were due, said Jeff
Masters, meteorology
director of the private
Weather Underground.
Right mix of conditions brewed tornado outbreak
Weather from nearly all parts of
the country combined to create this
weeks killer tornadoes
ONLINE:
Storm
Prediction
Center: spc.
noaa.gov/
Mary Alice Weeks/Dispatch Staff
Damaged vehicles are seen near the remains of East Main Automotive on Main Street in Louisville on Tuesday
morning after an EF-4 tornado tore through Winston County on Monday night.
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com 4A WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
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WEST ALABAMA NEWS
BY DAVID MILLER
Special to The Dispatch
LAMAR COUNTY, Ala. One
home was damaged and 12 roads
are currently impassable after
heavy rain and strong winds pound-
ed Lamar County Monday and
Tuesday nights.
A tree was uprooted and fell
onto a house, but the owner was
not home, Johnny Bigham, direc-
tor of emergency management for
the county, said. Close to 70 trees
or large branches were blocking
roads as of Monday might, partic-
ularly on County Road 49, north of
Crossville, and along Highway 96,
where most of the heavy rains and
wind occurred, Bigham said. And
though many have been cleared, 12
roads, mostly little-used dirt roads
will take another two or three days
to clear, Bigham said.
We dont have any major thor-
oughfares or bus routes (among
the roads currently impassable),
Bigham added. Right now, we have
six west of Vernon that are closed
and the rest around Millport.
Volunteer re reghters from
across the county were on standby
Tuesday night.
Bigham said he was concerned
about ooding after the storm sys-
tem of April 27, 2011, washed out
culverts in the county, but as of
Tuesday evening he didnt think
ooding would be a problem.
Storm damage limited in Lamar Co.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BIRMINGHAM
The Alabama Emergency
Management Agency re-
ported three deaths from
strong storms and possi-
ble tornadoes that swept
through the state Monday
night and early Tuesday.
Limestone County
Coroner Mike West says
60-year-old Dorthy Jean
Hollis and her 33-year-
old son, Carlton Earl
Hollis, were killed about
5:15 p.m. Monday when
their mobile home was
destroyed in the Coxey
community 10 miles west
of Athens on U.S. 72.
Neighbors told report-
ers that the two were en-
couraged to go to a shelter
at the Billy Barbs mobile
home park, but declined.
A spokeswoman at
Athens-Limestone Hos-
pital said 17 people were
treated at the hospital for
storm injuries and two
were admitted.
Tuscaloosa ofcials
said University of Ala-
bama swimmer John Ser-
vati, 21, of Tupelo, Miss.,
was taking shelter in the
basement of a home when
a retaining wall collapsed
about 10:30 p.m. Monday.
He was pronounced dead
at DCH Regional Medical
Center.
3 killed in Alabama storms, many without power
University of Alabama swimmer dies
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MONTGOMERY
An Auburn man accused
of organizing high-stakes
dog ghts in Alabama is
scheduled in federal court
to enter a guilty plea.
Donnie Anderson led
paperwork saying he
wants to plead guilty. A
federal judge has sched-
uled a hearing this after-
noon in Montgomery.
Anderson was indicted
last year on charges ac-
cusing him of organizing
ghts in Macon and Lee
counties where people bet
thousands per dog. Fed-
eral investigators seized
126 dogs from his prop-
erty.
Another man charged
in the case, Ricky Van Le
of Biloxi, has also led pa-
perwork saying he wants
to enter a guilty plea
Wednesday. Hes accused
of participating in a dog
ght in Alabama.
Their pleas would
bring the number of
guilty pleas in the case to
nine.
2 more to plead guilty to dog ghting in Ala.
Auburn organizers plea brings
number of guilty pleas to nine
Senate ready to sink effort to boost minimum wage
BY ALAN FRAM
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Hemmed in by solid Repub-
lican opposition, the Senate
seems ready to hand a fresh
defeat to President Barack
Obama by blocking an elec-
tion-year bill increasing the
federal minimum wage.
Democrats, aware that
the measure faces all but
certain rejection today in
the chamber they control,
plan to use the vote to but-
tress their campaign theme
that the GOP is unwilling
to protect nancially strug-
gling families.
Americans understand
fairness, and they know its
unfair for minimum-wage
workers to put in a full days
work, a full months work, a
full years work, and still live
in poverty, the measures
sponsor, Sen. Tom Harkin,
D-Iowa, said Tuesday.
Harkins bill, an Obama
priority, would gradually
raise the $7.25 hourly min-
imum to $10.10 over 30
months and then provide
automatic annual increas-
es to account for ination.
Democrats argue that if
fully phased in by 2016,
it would push a family of
three above the federal
poverty line a level such
earners have not surpassed
since 1979.
They also say the mini-
mum wages buying power
has fallen. It reached its
peak value in 1968, when
it was $1.60 hourly but was
worth $10.86 in todays dol-
lars.
Republicans say the
Democratic proposal
would be too expensive for
employers and cost jobs.
As ammunition, they cite
a February study by the
nonpartisan Congressional
Budget Ofce that estimat-
ed the increase to $10.10
could cost about 500,000
jobs but also envisioned
higher income for 16.5 mil-
lion low-earning people.
Citing those job loss
gures, Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell,
R-Ky., said Tuesday, When
it comes to so many of their
proposals, Washington
Democrats appear to pri-
oritize the desires of the far
left over the needs of the
middle class.
Democrats needed 60
votes today to begin Sen-
ate debate. To prevail, they
would need support from
at least six Republicans,
which seemed beyond
reach.
I cant give you a num-
ber, but Im condent
Democrats wont suc-
ceed, Sen. John Cornyn,
R-Texas, his partys
vote-counter, said after
GOP senators met Tues-
day.
Sen. Susan Collins of
Maine, one of the few Re-
publicans considered po-
tentially willing to let de-
bate begin, said Tuesday
she expected to oppose
the legislation, saying it
would hurt companies.
Bill would gradually raise the $7.25 hourly minimum
to $10.10 over 30 months and then provide automatic
annual increases to account for ination
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014 5A
Columbus
2430 5th St. N.
662.327.4432
Starkville
302 Hospital Road
662.323.8984
Walter N. Cosby, M.D.
Justin M. Garner, M.D.
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GHA082LES
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insurance solution
Dental
Health
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Supplemental
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Final expense
Benjamin Baker
662-597-4177
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday
bbaker5@humana.com
GHA082LES
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Health
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Benjamin Baker
662-597-4177
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday
bbaker5@humana.com
GHA082LES
Your local
insurance solution
Dental
Health
Life
Supplemental
Vision
Final expense
Benjamin Baker
662-597-4177
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday
bbaker5@humana.com
GHA082LES
Your local
insurance solution
Dental
Health
Life
Supplemental
Vision
Final expense
Benjamin Baker
662-597-4177
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday
bbaker5@humana.com
GHA082LES
Your local
insurance solution
Dental
Health
Life
Supplemental
Vision
Final expense
Benjamin Baker
662-597-4177
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday
bbaker5@humana.com
Benjamin Baker
662-364-3952
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday
bbaker5@humana.com
Dora Fromm
Services:
Monday, May 5 10 AM
Memorial Gardens Cemetery
gunterandpeel.com
Lori Kesler
Visitation:
Saturday, May 3 5-7 PM
Gunter and Peel Funeral Home
Services:
Sunday, May 4 2 PM
Episcopal Church of the Good
Shepherd
Graveside Services:
Sunday, May 4 4 PM
Haughton Memorial Park
gunterandpeel.com
Compliments of
Lowndes Funeral Home
www.lowndesfuneralhome.net
Irene Pounders
Eunice Irene Pounders, 91, of Caledonia,
MS passed away Tuesday, April 29, 2014 at her
residence.
Visitation will be Thursday, May 1, 2014
from 11:00 am 1:00 pm at Lowndes Funeral
Home, Columbus, MS. A funeral service will
follow at 1:00 pm in the Chapel with Bro.
Byron Harris, Bro. Jerry Pounders, Jr. and
Bro. Don Hardin ofciating. Interment will be
at McDufe Cemetery in Hamilton, AL with
Lowndes Funeral Home directing.
Mrs. Pounders was born on July 4, 1922
in Fayette, Alabama to the late William
Monroe and Jessie Mae Belk Shepherd. She
was a member of Zion Assembly Church
of God and worked as an Inspector at both
Caledonia and Coy Manufacturing for over
37 years. Mrs. Pounders was a good mother
and grandmother. She loved owers, loved to
pick butterbeans and loved to go to church.
In addition to her parents she is preceded in
death by her husband-Quinton QR Pounders
and sons-Norman Doyle Moochie Pounders
and Roger Lee Pounders.
Mrs. Pounders is survived by daughters-
Elaine (Dewitt) Ray, Steens, MS, Helen
(Jerry) Brackin, Brenda (Bill) Farley, Anna
Mae Tofsrud all of Caledonia, MS; sons-
Bobby (Cathy) Pounders, Kenneth (Diane)
Pounders, Junior (Sue) Pounders, Cecil
(Donna) Pounders, Jerry (Judy) Pounders,
Warren Pounders all of Caledonia, MS and
Harold (Debbie) Pounders, Columbus, MS;
44 grandchildren; 66 great-grandchildren; 9
great-great-grandchildren and a brother-Clay
Shepherd.
Pallbearers will be Lance Brackin,
Johnny Farley, Ashley Pounders, Calvin
Ray, Sam Pounders, Brian Pounders, Jacob
Pounders, Cody Pounders, Jason Pounders,
Josh Pounders, Gunner Wilson and Derrick
McBride.
Honorary Pallbearers will be Ladies of
Walt Willis Plaza, Walt Willis, Doc Perkins,
Tommy Clegg, Dr. Woodard, Dr. Stennet, Staff
of Camilla Hospice and Staff of Mississippi
Home Health.
Memorials may be made to Eunice Irene
Pounders Memorial Fund, c/o Lowndes
Funeral Home, 1131 N. Lehmberg Rd.,
Columbus, MS 39702.
AREA OBITUARIES
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service times, are provided
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may wish to include, are
available for a fee. Obituaries
must be submitted through
funeral homes unless the
deceaseds body has been
donated to science. If the de-
ceaseds body was donated
to science, the family must
provide ofcial proof of death.
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tion. For more information,
call 662-328-2471.
Patricia Smith
COLUMBUS Pa-
tricia Ann Smith, 62,
died April 29, 2014, at
Baptist Memorial Hos-
pital-Golden Triangle.
Carters Funeral
Services of Columbus
is entrusted with the
arrangements.
Mrs. Smith was
born May 19, 1951, in
Columbus to the late
Mary Alice Edwards.
She was formerly
employed as a logistics
ofcer for the Depart-
ment of Defense.
In addition to her
mother, she was pre-
ceded in death by her
siblings, Annie Lorene
Edwards and Jesse
Edwards.
She is survived by
her son, John Smith
III of Orlando, Fla.;
siblings, Valarie Rich-
ardson, Carol Lyne
Edwards and James
Edwards, all of Colum-
bus, Fred Edwards
of St. Louis; and two
grandchildren.
Willie Gibson
STARKVILLE
Willie D. Son Dee
Gibson, 77, died April
24, 2014.
Services are Thurs-
day at noon at West
Memorial Funeral
Home Chapel in
Starkville with the
Rev. Dr. Charlie F.
Barnes Sr. ofciating.
Burial will follow at
Mt. Peiler Cemetery in
Starkville. Visitation is
today from 1- 6 p.m. at
the funeral home.
He is survived by
his sisters, Callie M.
Gibson and Louise
Page; brothers, Archie
L. Gibson and Jim
Gibson.
Benji Livingston
COLUMBUS
Benjiman Benji Alan
Livingston, 37, died
April 26, 2014, at UAB
Hospital in Birming-
ham.
Services are Thurs-
day at 2 p.m. at Chan-
dler Funeral Home
with Tony Lawrence
ofciating. Burial
will follow in Bethel
Church Cemetery in
Vernon, Ala. Visitation
is today from 5-8 p.m.
at the funeral home.
Mr. Livingston was
born Oct. 11, 1976,
in Homewood, Ala.,
to Patsy Buster and
Ricky Livingston. He
was formerly employed
as an ofce manager
and foreman for Nick-
oles Electrical.
He was preceded in
death by his brother,
Alan Warren Living-
ston.
In addition to his
parents, he is survived
by his wife, Brenda
Livingston; and sister,
Stacy Turk of Tuscalo-
osa, Ala.
Pallbearers are
Mike Nichols, Chris
Chain, Charlie Grego-
ry, Bill Tomason, Neal
Johnson and Jeremy
Gullett.
Hazel Dahlem
ABERDEEN Ha-
zel Atkins Dahlem, 81,
died April 29, 2014, at
Pioneer Community
Hospital in Aberdeen.
Services are Thurs-
day at 11 a.m. at Tis-
dale-Lann Memorial
Funeral Home Chapel
in Aberdeen with
Robert Earl Fowlkes
ofciating. Burial will
follow at Lebanon
Cemetery. Visitation
is Wednesday from
4-7 p.m. at the funeral
home in Aberdeen.
Ms. Dahlem was
born Aug. 21, 1932,
in Monroe County to
the late William Lloyd
Atkins and Madge
Byrd Atkins. She was
a graduate of Green-
wood Springs School
and was formerly the
owner of Dahlem Sales
and Services.
In addition to her
parents, she was pre-
ceded in death by sis-
ters, Christine Randle
and Betty Jane Jones;
brothers, Gayle, John,
James, Sam Grady and
Bobby Lloyd Atkins.
She is survived by
her daughter, Judy
Cox of Aberdeen; sons,
Mike Dahlem of Tupe-
lo, Donald Dahlem of
Aberdeen and Ronald
Dahlem of Tupelo;
sister, Lucille West
of Aberdeen; three
grandchildren and one
great-grandchild.
Beatrice White
WEST POINT
Beatrice Brown White,
78, died April 28, 2014,
at Darlington Oaks in
Verona.
Graveside services
are today at 11 a.m. at
Hebron Cemetery with
the Rev. Mike Smith
ofciating. Robinson
Funeral Home in West
Point is in charge of
arrangements.
Ms. White was born
June 4, 1935, in Phe-
ba and was formerly
employed as a child
caregiver. She was
a member of Trinity
Baptist Church and the
VFW Ladies Auxiliary.
She is survived by
her sons, Bob Brown
and John Brown, both
of West Point; daugh-
ters, Connie Murray of
Montpelier and Jo Ha-
zlewood of West Point;
sisters, Arnell Smith of
Becker and Lena Mae
Naron of Houston; nine
grandchildren and
nine great-grandchil-
dren.
Pallbearers are
Mike Murray, Josh
Hazelwood, Jon Luke
Hazelwood, Robbie
Brown, Allen Brown
and Tyler Brown.
Memorials may be
made to Darlington
Oaks, 107 Skeet Drive,
Verona, MS 38879.
Alyssa Harris
CALEDONIA
Alyssa Marie Macken-
zie Harris, died away
Wednesday, April 23,
2014, at her residence.
Arrangements are
incomplete and will be
announced by Lown-
des Funeral Home.
Bobby Brumfield
LAUREL Bobby
Ray Brumeld, 75,
died April 18, 2014, in
Dallas.
Services are Mon-
day at 2:00 p.m. at the
Mississippi Veterans
Memorial Cemetery in
Newton. New Haven
Memorial Funeral
Home entrusted with
arrangements.
L.J. Little
COLUMBUS L.J.
Little, 54, died April
29, 2014, at Baptist Me-
morial Hospital-Gold-
en Triangle.
Arrangements are
incomplete and will be
announced by Carters
Funeral Services.
Kelly Robinson
VERNON, Ala.
Kelly Ray Robinson,
65, died April 28, 2014,
at UAB Hospital in
Birmingham, Ala.
Services are today
at 3 p.m. at Full Gos-
pel Worship Center
in Vernon with James
Godsey ofciating. Vis-
itation is today from
1 p.m. until service
time at the church.
Otts Funeral Home is
in charge of arrange-
ments.
Mr. Robinson was
born June 28, 1948, in
Lamar County, Ala.,
to the late May and
Avis Leora Merchant
Robinson. He attended
Sulligent High School
and was formerly em-
ployed as a truck driv-
er. He was a member
of Full Gospel Worship
Center.
In addition to his
parents, he was pre-
ceded in death by his
wife, Brenda Murphy
Robinson; daughter,
Jessica Irvin; and son,
Donnie Robinson; and
stepdaughter, Angela
Rena Kelly.
He is survived by
his wife, Rena Robin-
son of Vernon; daugh-
ters, Jenny Turner of
Sulligent, Ala., Sonya
Turner and Amanda
Johnson, both of Ver-
non; stepdaughters,
Michele Grifn of
Caledonia and Morgan
Hartley of Vernon;
stepson, Scott Kelly of
Millport, Ala.; broth-
er, Odie Robinson
of Sulligent; sisters,
Lessie Holliday, Viola
Lowe, Dean Rhudy
and Billie Joyce Clif-
ton, all of Sulligent; 20
grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren.
Send in your church event!
email editorialassistant@cdispatch.com
Subject: Religious brief
6A WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
Opinion
BIRNEY IMES SR. Editor/Publisher 1922-1947
BIRNEY IMES JR. Editor/Publisher 1947-2003
BIRNEY IMES III Editor/Publisher
PETER IMES General Manager
SLIM SMITH Managing Editor
BETH PROFFITT Advertising Director
MICHAEL FLOYD Circulation/Production Manager
DISPATCH
THE
PARTIAL TO HOME
By 10 oclock Tuesday morn-
ing Bobby Ray had almost
nished picking up storm debris
in his yard on Tabernacle Road
when neighbor Ricky Ward
showed up. The two are old
friends, their friendship rooted
in their shared passion for dirt-
track racing.
Ward, a master mechanic,
helps his next-door neighbor,
race promoter Johnny Stokes,
put on races and Ray works pit
crew and serves as head cheer-
leader for his son, Lee, who is a
dirt-track driver.
Naturally, the topic of the
day was Monday nights storm.
Ray and his wife Martha were
among 11 who took refuge in
their above-ground storm shel-
ter behind their house, a space
about the size of a spacious
broom closet.
Four of them were small children, Ray explained.
Ward, for his part, took cover at the home of his neigh-
bor, Stokes. Johnny and Barbara Stokes brick ranch-
style house is built into the side of a hill.
The men said two funnels passed through the area
about 20 minutes apart.
It sounded like thunder that never stopped, Ward
said.
When Ward commented on the sound at the time, his
friend Stokes said, That aint thunder, thats it!
Wards wife Tamie refused to leave their trailer. When
the straight-line winds devastated the county in February
of 2001, Tamie got in a closet with a Bible and the familys
dachshund. There she rode out the storm reading aloud.
The Lords blessed this house, she told Ward when
time came to take cover, and I aint leaving.
I couldnt make her leave, Ward said. So I got Max
(the dachshund) and went to Johnnys.
When I came back to the trailer, she said, I told
you.
When conversation waned, Ward headed up to Rays
shop, where he spends a lot of his spare time tinkering
with cars. Ray, who had been cruising his property in
a Kawasaki Mule picking up storm debris in the com-
pany of his constant companion, Molly, a small, light-
haired dog of indeterminate linage, took a visitor to his
backyard to meet his wife Martha and tour their storm
shelter.
It was all right, Martha said of the experience.
As the storm was threatening, a neighbor with three
children stopped by and asked if they could get in the
Rays shelter, thus the crowd.
The Rays have lived at this bend in the road since
1965. They share their large well-cared-for lot with the
home of their son, his wife Christi and their granddaugh-
ter Rylee. The Rays were lucky, other than limbs in their
yard and one out-of-the-way tree snapped in two, their
compound received little damage. The buckeyes growing
in their backyard still had their red blooms.
The storm upended huge trees many of them old
oaks all along Tabernacle and Lee Stokes roads, how-
ever. A forester told Ray the already waterlogged ground
made the trees more susceptible to blowing over.
By mid-day Tuesday, families men, women and
children could be seen all along those thoroughfares,
cutting trees, dragging limbs and stacking wood. There
will be no rewood shortage in these parts this winter.
People appeared to be in good spirits, buoyed by the
novelty of the situation, the shared sense of purpose and
the simple fact there had been no injury or loss of life.
As I passed a house with its roof caved in at the inter-
section of Lee-Stokes and Lacy roads, four young boys
had just retrieved from a pile of debris four shing rods
and reels that looked to be in perfect condition. The boys,
all grins, waved the rods in the air like swords.
Birney Imes is the publisher of The Dispatch. Email him
at birney@cdispatch.com.
SLIMANTICS
A couple of miles
down Lee-Stokes
Road, where Pleasant
Hill Baptist Church
sits on a hill above
a cluster of modest
brick homes where
Lacy Road runs into
Pleasant Hill Road,
church pastor Bill
Hurt wearily tended
his ock, scattered but
unharmed after a pair
of Monday tornadoes
plowed through East
Columbus.
The ock is safe, the shepherd is tired,
Hurt said Tuesday afternoon, as he slumped
wearily into the seat of an ATV parked in the
debris-riddled yard of the churchs minister of
music. It was 2 in the afternoon, and Hurt had
been helped the folks in the little neighborhood
most of whom are his congregants clean
up.
He was hardly a gang of one, though. Men,
women and children of all ages swarmed
around the handful of houses that had received
the most damage. A crew dispatched by the
Mississippi Baptist Convention Disaster Relief
team, operating from a mobile trailer near the
road in front of the church, passed out equip-
ment. The crew came at Hurts request. Other-
wise, it was neighbor helping neighbor.
The good thing about life in a rural area
such as this is that almost everybody has the
kind of stuff you need in this situations
chainsaws, ATVs, generators.
But not everybody has a massive excavator,
which is what made Jerry Nickoles, who lives
nearby, a most prominent person among the
little swarm of do-gooders.
Nickoles, who owns Jerry Nickoles Dirt Con-
struction, was giving directions on the ground
as one of his employers operated the enormous
machinery. By 1:30 p.m., the excavator was
making quick work of a massive oak that had
fallen in the storm, snapping off a large pine
tree before descending with a sickening crash
onto the southwest corner of Lonny Nickoles
house.
The two Nickoles are distantly related, if
related at all. Disasters seem to make close
relations of even strangers, though, and Lonny
Nickoles watched appreciatively as the excava-
tor pulled the oaks car-sized root-ball from the
earth, dumped it on the pile of debris near the
road, then pushed the rich brown earth over
the cavernous hole and smoothed it over with
the tracks of the excavator.
Man, Lonny said, smiling. When I got
here this morning, I was thinking, how in the
world am I gonna x this? I got my chainsaw,
climbed up on the roof and started cutting the
smaller limbs on the house. Then, people start-
ed showing up.
James Blair... Nickoles said, choking
up and pausing for a couple of seconds as he
fought to keep his composure. James Blair, he
was the rst to come. We are old friends, used
to work together. He was the rst one to show
up. It was just me and him, then....Well, just
look.
A handful of people, some he didnt know,
were busy turning the debris from the big oak
and pine tree into rewood.
Its something, huh? Nickoles said.
Next door, Sybil Prather was trying to hold
down a blue tarp as her husband and other fam-
ily members tried to secure it a portion of the
house missing a roof, some of which dangled
high above them in the limbs of a big oak that
marks the boundary between her house on
Lonny Nickoles house.
The damage was not done by a falling tree,
however.
The wind just came and picked up it,
Prather said. We were all in the bathroom, six
of us, when it hit. After a little while, my son
peeked out and said, mom, the roof is gone.
The storm jerked out the utility box from
the homes exterior. It also swept an old storage
building behind the house onto Nickoles prop-
erty, replacing it with Nickoles trampoline.
Im not sure who got the best of the deal,
Prather said. We were going to replace the
building anyway, my son said, but I said, yeah,
but this isnt what we had in mind.
By 2 oclock, the excavator had left Nickoles
house and moved across the street to the min-
ister of musics house, where another large oak
had smashed the roof on the back half of the
house and punched through a big bay window.
The family, along with Pastor Hurt and sev-
eral other volunteers, had been cutting limbs
and dragging debris to a big pile near the road
for hours. The excavator would do in an hour
what all those folks could not do in a week.
Normally, Jerry Nickoles charges $125 per
hour for this kind of work.
He wasnt making any money Tuesday,
though.
Im a deacon at the church. I go to church
with most of these people and know pretty
much everybody else, Jerry Nickoles said.
This is what you do. Im happy I can help.
The scene in this little corner of east Colum-
bus is both remarkable and typical remark-
able in the sense that a small army of people
simply turned out to help each other, typical
in the sense that this scene played out every-
where along the tornados path.
The tornado hit early in the evening Mon-
day, but neither Lonny Nickoles or Sybil Prath-
er said they got much sleep Monday night. It
may have been a moments terror, but it was
a long, sleepless night of worrying how they
would manage to recover.
You almost feel like giving up, Lonny
Nickoles said.
You feel helpless, Prather admitted.
By Tuesday morning, though, the helpless-
ness have given way to a determination and
there is something empowering about it. Little
by little, tree limb by tree limb, Tuesday was a
day of recovery. Mondays despair was losing
the ght against Tuesdays grim resolve.
The storm was overwhelming, Pastor
Hurt said, watching a couple of little giggling
girls tugging at a tree limb, dragging into the
growing pile of debris. The response is more
overwhelming.
Slim Smith is the managing editor of The
Dispatch. His email address is ssmith@cdispatch.
com.
A community comes together
The morning
after, talk turns
to the night before
Birney Imes/Dispatch Staff
From left, Chad Creely, Joseph Savage and Canyon Boykin pause midday Tuesday during a clean-up
of Mondays storm debris around the house Creely rents on Tabernacle Road.
Slim Smith
Birney Imes
Birney Imes/Dispatch Staff
Bobby Ray picks up storm debris in the front yard of his
Tabernacle Road home Tuesday morning. Accompanying Ray
on his rounds is the family dog, Molly.
Naturally,
the topic
of the day
was Monday
nights storm
EDITOR/PUBLISHER
Birney Imes
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THE STAFF OF THE DISPATCH
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014 7A
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NOLAND
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601 18th Avenue N
Columbus, MS
662-327-9140
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NEWS ABOUT TOWN
CLUBS
nAARP MEETING
AARP will meet May 7 at 10 a.m. in the
Community Room of Regions bank on
Main St. Members will vote on dining lo-
cation for the next meeting. Call Margaret
for information at 662-889-9496.
n FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS
The Friends and Neighbors Club meets
second Wednesdays through May at 10
a.m. at Lion Hills Golf Club, Columbus (and
fourth Wednesdays June-August at various
restaurants). Contact Rhena Friloux, 662-
549-8800 or Twyla Summerford, 662-328-
3381.
n SENIOR CRAFTS
Senior Crafts meet at the Starkville
Sportsplex Tuesdays, 10-11:30 a.m. Crafts
are provided by the parks department. For
information, call Lisa Cox at 662-323-2294.
n TOPS
Take Off Pounds Sensibly No. 288 meets
every Monday at Community Baptist
Church, Yorkville Road East. Weigh-in
begins at 5:30 p.m. Contact Pat Harris,
662-386-0249.
n TOPS
Take Off Pounds Sensibly No. 266 meets
every Monday at the Episcopal Church
of the Good Shepherd, 321 Forrest Blvd.
Weigh-in begins at 5:15 p.m. Contact Mar-
garet Sprayberry, 662-328-8627.
n TOPS
Take Off Pounds Sensibly No. 270 meets
every Tuesday at the Church of Christ
Fellowship Hall, 900 Main St. in Caledo-
nia. Weigh-in begins at 5:15 p.m. Contact
Lorene Hawkins, 662-356-4838.
n QUILTING CLUB
Quilting Club meets in the activities room
adjacent to the multi-purpose facility at the
Starkville Sportsplex on Thursdays 10 a.m.-
noon. Bring your own project to work on. For
information, call Lisa Cox, 662-323-2294.
n GOLDEN TRIANGLE AA
Golden Triangle AA meets daily for support.
If you want to drink, that is your business. If
you want to stop drinking, that is our busi-
ness. For information, call 662-327-8941.
n AL-ANON MEETING
The Columbus Al-Anon Family Groups
meets Mondays and Thursdays at 5:30
p.m. When you dont know where to turn
because someone drinks too much, we can
help. For information, call 888-425-2666 or
go to msafg.org.
HEALTH NOTES
n DIABETES SUPPORT
Diabetes Support Group classes (day and
evening classes available) are held each
month at Baptist Memorial Hospital-Golden
Triangle. For information, call 662-244-
1596 or email info.goldentriangle@bmhcc.
org
n NUTRITION EDUCATION
Nutrition Education Classes for conges-
tive heart failure meet the third Friday of
every month at 3 p.m., Baptist Memorial
Hospital-Golden Triangle Classroom 5 For
information, call 662-244-1597 or email
info.goldentriangle@bmhcc.org.
n PROSTATE SCREENING
Baptist Center for Cancer Care offers free
prostate PSA screenings the last Friday of
every month from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Locations
rotate between Columbus and Starkville.
For appointments, call 662-244-4673.
n NUTRITION EDUCATION
Nutrition Education Classes for diabetes
meet the fourth Wednesday of every month
at 8:30 a.m., Baptist Memorial Hospi-
tal-Golden Triangle Outpatient Pavilion.
Physician referral required. For information,
call 662-244-1597 or email info.goldentri-
angle@bmhcc.org.
n ABUSE RECOVERY GROUP
Domestic Abuse Recovery Groups meet
every Thursday at 6 p.m., through Safe Ha-
ven Inc. Group counseling for rape recovery
is available. For information, call 662-327-
6118 or 662-889-2067.
n CHILDBIRTH CLASSES
Baptist Golden Triangle offers child-
birth classes on Tuesday nights at 6 p.m.
To register, call the Education Department
at 662-244-2498 or email info.goldentrian-
gle@bmhcc.org.
n CPR CLASSES
CPR Classes are offered at Baptist Gold-
en Triangle twice monthly, at 6 p.m. in the
Patient Tower. Preregistration is required.
Contact the Education Department at
662-244-2498 or email info.goldentrian-
gle@bmhcc.org.
n ALZHEIMERS SUPPORT
The Alzheimers Columbus Chapter Care-
giver Support Group meets every fourth
Thursday, 6 p.m., at ComforCare, 118 S.
McCrary Road. For information, contact
Columbus Jones, 662-244-7226.
n MS SUPPORT
Multiple Sclerosis Support Group meets
the rst Tuesday of every month at the
North Mississippi Medical Center, 835
Medical Center Drive in West Point.
nLOOK GOOD, FEEL BETTER
Baptist Cancer Center hosts class for
women actively undergoing chemother-
apy or radiation for cancer on May 12
at 9 a.m., room 4 PT. Volunteer beauty
professionals conduct the workshop. Call
662-244-2923 for information.
nALZHEIMERS SUPPORT
Local Alzheimers support group will meet
May 15 at 6:30 at the henry Clay Retire-
ment Center Parlor, 133 Commerce St.
For information, contact Brenda Johnson
at 662-495-2339 or 1-800-843-3375.
nCHILDBIRTH CLASS
North Mississippi Medical Center in West
Point offers prepared childbirth class for
expectant parents from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
throughout the month of May. To register,
contact 662-495-2292 or 1-800-843-
3375.
OTHER EVENTS
nBLOOD DRIVE
Baptist Memorial Hospital-Golden Triangle
hosts a blood drive May 2, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
at the Conference Center in the Outpa-
tient Pavilion. Register online at bloodhe-
ro.com, sponsor code: baptistgt.
nEMCC THEATER
East Mississippi Community Colleges
theater department will perform Agatha
Christies The Mousetrap May 2-3 at
7:30 p.m. and May 4 at 2:30 p.m. at the
Lyceum on the Mayhew Campus. Call
662-476-8417 for information.
nTORCH RUN
Special Olympics MS hosts Law Enforce-
ment Torch Run May 6, 9:30 a.m. Raise
awareness and funds for Special Olympics
by purchasing a T-shirt and participating in
the run. Call 662-352-6795 for informa-
tion.
nSTAMP OUT HUNGER
USPS seeks help from community in food
drive. To help, leave non-perishable foods
next to your mailbox prior to regular deliv-
ery on Saturday, May 10.
n OCH SUMMER CAMP
Day camp for kids 8-13 years old to be
held 8 a.m.-noon June 23-26 and July 14-
17. Space is limited; call early, 662-323-
9355 to register or for information.
n SAFE SITTER
OCH hosts Safe Sitter Certication class
to train to teens in babysitting, To sign up,
contact Mary Kathryn Knight, 662-615-
3067 or mknight@och.org
n GRANT APPLICATION
Starkville Oktibbeha Achieving Results, a
non-prot community charitable organi-
zation, is receiving grant applications for
other non-prot organizations. Contact Jan
Eastman at jeastma1@bellsouth.net for
information.
nSENIOR GAMES
The Senior Center meets weekly at Propst
Park, Columbus, Tuesdays from noon-
4 p.m. for crafts, puzzles, quilting and
caning chairs. Seniors meet Wednesday
and Thursday for cards and games. For
information, call 662-364-6085.
nYOUNG AT HEART DANCE
Starkville Parks and Recreation hosts a
young-at-heart dance every second and
fourth Friday, 7-10 p.m. at the Sportsplex
Activities building. No alcohol, no smok-
ing. For information, call 662-312-9108.
Jeans and Jewels
Luisa Porter/Dispatch Staff
Dr. Paul Mack and his wife, Tommie, admire art on auction at the Jeans and Jewels 30th Annual Columbus Arts
Council & Gala on Saturday. The event was held in West Point at the Town Creek Pavilion.
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com 8A WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
www.columbus-ymca.com
FOR YOUTH DEVELOPMENT
FOR HEALTHY LIVING
FOR SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
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The YMCA is the starting point for many youth to
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developing healthy habits they will carry with them
throughout their lives. The benefits are far greater
than just physical health. When kids attend camp
or learn to swim, they can build confidence,
discover their personal best, and have fun.
Explore our program possibilities:
Summer Day Camp, Caledonia
Summer Day Camp,
Camp Henry Pratt
Swimming Lessons
Art Camps
Dance Camps
Karate Classes
Teen Campfire Week
Basketball Clinic
Campin With Dad
328-7696 for more information
BY CARL SMITH
csmith@cdispatch.com
LOUISVILLE As
a last-second pivot posi-
tioned Winston Medical
Center directly in the path
of an EF-4 tornado Mon-
day, long-time emergency
room physician Mike Hen-
ry began running through
his unit and warning pa-
tients to immediately hun-
ker down and take cover.
Henry barely had time
to notify patients of the
storms sudden shift. He
received notice moments
earlier, Henry said, when a
man ran through the ERs
outside doors, screaming,
Its here!
WMC, a small, rural
health care facility in Lou-
isville, suffered extensive
damage Monday after-
noon after the tornado
ran a south-to-north path
through the town, demol-
ishing homes, leveling in-
dustrial areas, destroying
infrastructure and uproot-
ing trees.
Portions of the hospi-
tals walls collapsed, while
the tornado also caused
a gas leak and extensive
roof damage to the facility
and other nearby medical
buildings.
Search and rescue
operations continued in
Louisville through Tues-
day afternoon. Ofcials
reported nine fatalities
from Mondays storm,
while search and rescue
operations for missing
people continued through
the next day.
Henry, who has worked
at the hospital for about 20
years, was nishing a day
shift Monday afternoon
when storm cells strength-
ened and approached Win-
ston County. The emer-
gency and waiting rooms
neared capacity as the
weather bore down on the
facility. Hospital ofcials
moved patients to the hall-
way as a precaution, he
said.
We kept getting re-
ports and updates on the
storm, but we thought we
had a really good idea that
it would miss us. All of a
sudden, this thing turned,
pivoted and came right at
us, Henry said.
The ERs back wall was
blown out when the tor-
nado hit, Henry said, and
winds began whipping
through the facility. With-
in moments, the storm be-
gan pulling a handcuffed
female inmates hospital
gurney through the hall-
way and toward the hole.
Henry and another person
grabbed her and pulled
her out of the vacuum to
safety.
People always say
that tornadoes sound like
trains, and theyre right
It sounds like a train mov-
ing right through you,
he said. It hit and shook
everything with an incred-
ible, powerful force; then,
it was done.
Henry said the damage
was almost catastrophic:
small objects littered the
ER, the roof leaked wa-
ter and steel beams were
twisted with what seemed
to be minimal effort. Out-
side of the facility, power
lines were downed, while
cars in its parking lot were
hurled through the air like
toys to a nearby path of
grass.
Nearby neighborhoods
were leveled, and many
homes were severely dam-
aged by falling trees.
Doctors and nurses
began assessing in-house
patients immediately af-
ter the storm. No injuries
were reported from those
already at the facility.
Injured Louisville and
Winston County residents
then began trickling into
the hospital.
WMC ofcials setup a
makeshift triage unit to
deal with those injuries.
Henry said many arrived
with trauma-based inju-
ries, such as open frac-
tures, collapsed lungs
from rib fractures and
cuts and scrapes. Sever-
al of the severely injured
patients were stabilized
locally and evacuated to
area hospitals.
Jacksons University
of Mississippi Medical
Center immediately dis-
patched a team of emer-
gency physicians and
medical supplies to sup-
port WMC, Henry said.
OCH Regional Medical
Center in Starkville and
Baptist Memorial Hospi-
tal-Golden Triangle also
prepared their facilities
for an inux of patients.
Hospitals from across the
state sent numerous am-
bulances to Louisville to
handle evacuations.
How much help we got
was absolutely incredible,
Henry said.
Henry worked through
his shift and treated pa-
tients through the early
morning hours Tuesday.
Volunteers kept pour-
ing in; everybody really
stepped up to the plate,
he said. I never want to
experience anything like
that again.
Louisville doctor clings to patient in terrifying tug-of-war
Physician recounts harrowing ordeal
Winston Med-
ical Center
sustained
signicant
damage after
an EF-4 tornado
tore through
Winston County
on Monday
afternoon.
Search continues for missing Louisville boy
BY SARAH FOWLER
sfowler@cdispatch.com
LOUISVILLE A bright,
cloudless sky Tuesday morning
provided a stark contrast to the
debris-littered streets of Louis-
ville.
The sounds of chainsaws and
the smell of fresh-cut pine trees
dominated the senses. Neigh-
bors spoke to each other softly
as emergency medical workers
searched for the missing.
Winston County Coroner
Scott Gregory conrmed that
nine people were killed after an
EF-4 tornado ripped from one
end of the county to another
Monday. The tornado wreaked
havoc on everything from
churches to daycare centers.
Volunteers said the names of the
deceased and of the missing in
prayer as rescue efforts contin-
ued Tuesday morning.
Tuesday evening Gregory
said rescue efforts focused on
nding 7-year-old Tyler Tucker.
The bodies of the boys moth-
er, Terri Tucker, and stepfather,
Sean Fowler, were discovered
in the area near the familys de-
stroyed home off of Highway
379.
Before their bodies were dis-
covered, Fowlers best friend,
Jaime Ainsworth, was standing
along the roadside watching.
Ainsworth lives a half-mile from
the Fowler residence. He said he
spoke with his friend less than
ve minutes before the torna-
do hit. Fowler told Ainsworth
he was standing on his porch,
looking at a cemetery across the
street.
He said, I dont see anything
but Im gonna keep eyes on it,
Ainsworth said. And thats the
last I heard of him.
Fowlers wood-frame home
is gone. Only a paved concrete
driveway remains. Rescue work-
ers used the driveway as a rest-
ing place for family photographs
they found.
The couples vehicles laid
against a tree less than 500 feet
from the house. By 8 a.m. Tues-
day, Ainsworth had lost hope
that his friend was alive. Fowl-
ers body was found hours later.
We came over here last night
looking for him and theres noth-
ing here anymore, Ainsworth
said. I think all we found last
night was a dead dog of theirs
and then a live dog of theirs. Vir-
tually nothing else.
While rescue workers
searched for the missing fami-
ly, neighbors a street over were
thanking God for their safety.
Steven and Clara Hampton
have lived on Jefferson Street for
30 years. Clara Hamptons elder-
ly mother lives across the street.
Steven Hampton is a minister.
He said he feels Gods grace is
what kept his family safe.
I know there wasnt nobody
but God who kept us, he said.
Because just me, myself per-
sonally, the human side of me, at
one point I felt like we was gone.
I really did. I just thank God that
He looked beyond our faults and
His grace and mercy kept us.
During the storm, the Hamp-
tons hid under a mattress. Their
home is demolished.
Next door, Ariel Thomas was
walking around in her front yard
in her pajamas Tuesday. Her
house is a pile of twisted beams.
Thomas was at the home with
her parents and her 3-year-old
child. The family gathered in a
closet once they heard the whis-
tle sound, Thomas said.
All four of us smushed in that
closet and held a mattress over
us, she said. Didnt no debris
hit us or nothing. Glass is broken
and we heard things throwing
around but Im so happy weve
got our life. Those are material
things. Im so happy that it didnt
suck us up.
Across from Jefferson Street
is Memorial Park Cemetery.
Tombstones laid toppled over
and pine trees were on their
sides.
What remains of Eiland Ave-
nue is at the foot of the hill.
Linda Love and her husband,
Shirley Lee, were trapped after
their home collapsed around
them. Lee is wheelchair-bound.
Before the tornado hit, Love was
outside tending to her chickens.
She said she rushed inside when
she saw the tornado approach-
ing.
I pushed (Lee) into the hall-
way, just before I could get from
my door to the hallway and that
was it, Love said. It hit my
house, throwed my husband out
his wheelchair and then throwed
me into him and then he was on
top of me. Next thing I remem-
ber they were pulling me out.
Love said Lee is in the hospi-
tal being treated for his injuries.
The couples son, who is also
named Shirley Lee, was stand-
ing several feet from what re-
mained of his parents house. He
and several friends were loading
chickens into a truck. They
stopped to take a break and
began complaining about what
they felt was lack of help from
fellow community members and
emergency services.
People was coming over
here to be nosey instead of help-
ing these people out, he said.
You see people with bones
sticking out, chunks of meat
missing on them, wood sticking
through them and they aint do-
ing nothing to help? Man, weve
been helping these people all
night.
The group said they had each
dug through rubble to nd peo-
ple. Taking a deep drag from his
cigarette, the younger Lee esti-
mated he and his friends pulled
half a dozen people from a de-
molished apartment complex.
The Revival, formerly known
as Eiland Plaza, housed ap-
proximately 20 adults and nu-
merous children, the men said.
Moments earlier, another body
had been discovered among the
buildings rubble.
Those who had been dis-
placed were being directed to
First Baptist Church and First
Methodist Church.
In addition to the demolition
in the south side of Louisville,
the Winston Medical Center on
the north side of town sustained
substantial damage. A daycare
there was demolished. The own-
er, Ruth Bennett, is among the
dead.
Reached this morning, Greg-
ory said the search for Tyler
Tucker continues.
Gregory said once the miss-
ing have been found, Louisville
will heal and rebuild.
Were going to be all right,
he said. Well rise up from this
and were going to be good.
Parts of Winston County demolished
by EF-4 tornado Monday
Mary Alice Weeks/Dispatch Staff
Mary Alice Weeks/Dispatch Staff
A sign of gratefulness is displayed outside a home on Main Street in Louisville on
Tuesday morning after an EF-4 tornado tore through Winston County on Monday night.
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014 9A
Childrens
Health Center
114 N. Lehmberg Rd. | Columbus | 662-329-2955
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Elementary | 623 Willowbrook Road | Columbus, MS | 662-327-1556
Dr. Greg Carlyle, Headmaster Mrs. Cindy Wamble, Elementary Principal
Heritage Academy does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, ethnic origin or sex.
Qualied applicants of all races and creeds are welcome.
www.HeritagePatriots.com
Congratulations!
Columbus Lowndes Chamber of Commerce
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HA 7th & 8th grade English Teacher
Chamber Member L. L. Gates (left) recognizes Mrs. Toni Wise
at the Annual Education Luncheon held recently.
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participating retail locations. Must present
coupon at time of purchase to receive
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offer. Only one coupon per person per
visit. Offer not valid on catalog or online
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offer. May not be combined with any other
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visit. Offer not valid on catalog or online
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Alabama
No. 12 baseball team will play
Samford
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Coming off
a Southeastern Conference series loss
at South Carolina, the No. 12 Alabama
baseball team (29-15) will take on Sam-
ford (26-18) at 6 tonight at Joe Lee Griffin
Field on the Samford campus.
The Tide is slated to start freshman
right-hander Geoffrey Bramblett (3-1,
3.77 ERA). Bramblett will make his third
start and 13th appearance of the season.
Samford will also start a freshman, as
right-hander Cody Pugh (3-3, 5.24 ERA)
will make his second start against the
Tide this season. Pugh has made 10 ap-
pearances with seven starts this season.
For the fifth straight week, Alabama
is ranked in all five national polls, but after
a 1-3 week, the Tide dropped slightly
in every national ranking. This week,
the Tide is ranked No. 12 by Baseball
America, No. 14 by Perfect Game USA,
No. 16 by Collegiate Baseball and No.
20 by the NBCWA and in the USA Today
Coaches Poll.
n Womens tennis team No.
2 Seed in NCAA tournament; Will
play host to first, second rounds:
At Tuscaloosa, Ala., the womens
tennis team raised yet another bar in this
historic season, earning the No. 2 seed
in the NCAA Championship, which was
announced Tuesday. Alabama will play
host to Arizona State, Jackson State, and
Princeton in the first and second rounds
May 9-10.
Alabama, hosting for the third-
straight year and third overall, will take on
Jackson State in its first-round matchup
at 4 p.m. Friday, May 9. Arizona State will
play Princeton at 1 p.m. Friday, May 9.
The winners will then meet in the second
round at 1 p.m. Saturday, May 10.
n Softball team jumps to fifth and
sixth in week 12 polls: At Tuscaloosa,
Ala., the softball team secured its fifth
SEC Championship last weekend with
two victories against Georgia, which
helped propel the Crimson Tide to No. 5
in the ESPN.com/USA Softball poll and
No. 6 in the USA Today/NFCA poll.
Alabama jumped two spots in the
ESPN.com/USA Softball poll, moving
to No. 5 this week from No. 7 last week.
Oregon and UCLA remain in the top two
spots, while Arizona State and Florida
State sit at third and fourth, respectively,
as Michigan and Florida dropped out
of the top five with a pair of losses last
weekend.
Alabama moved up one spot in the
USA Today/NFCA poll No. 6 this week.
Oregon is the unanimous No. 1 pick for
the third-straight week with UCLA in the
No. 2 spot. Florida dropped two spots
to No. 5 after losing the weekend series
over Missouri and Michigan dropped
down to No. 7 after upset losses to
Purdue and Illinois. Arizona State and
Florida State took advantage of the va-
cancy, sliding into the No. 3 and 4 spots,
respectively.
Nine SEC teams are ranked in the
top 25, the most of any conference:
Alabama (5/6), Florida (7/5), Tennessee
(9/8), Kentucky (11/10), Missouri (15/13),
Georgia (18/16), Auburn (20/20), LSU
(23/25), and Texas A&M (25/24). Missis-
sippi State is receiving votes in both polls.
n Mens track and field team
ranked No. 8: At Tuscaloosa, Ala., the
mens track & field team is ranked No. 8
in the latest edition of the U.S. Track &
Field and Cross Country Coaches Asso-
ciation (USTFCCCA) Division I National
Team Computer Rankings released
Tuesday. The Crimson Tide remains third
in the mens rankings for the NCAA South
Region while the women maintained their
No. 5 rank in the regional rankings.
The national team rankings are
compiled by mathematical formula based
on national descending order lists and
data taken from previous seasons. The
purpose and methodology of the rankings
is to create an index that showcases
the teams that have the best potential of
achieving the top spots in the national
team race. Rankings points do not equate
with NCAA Championships team points.
n Womens golf team seeded
third at NCAA Central Regional: At
Tuscaloosa, Ala., the womens golf team
was awarded the No. 3 seed at the NCAA
Central Regional Championship at Okla-
homa States Karsten Creek Golf Club in
Stillwater, Okla., the NCAA announced
Monday evening.
The NCAA Central Regional will be
May 8-10 on the par-72 Karsten Creek
layout that measures 6,200 yards for the
women and has hosted the 2003 and
2011 NCAA Mens Golf Championships.
It is the ninth straight invitation to post-
season competition for the Crimson Tide,
which captured the programs first NCAA
Championship in 2012 at the Legends
Club in Franklin, Tenn.
The top-eight finishers at the NCAA
Central Regional will advance to the
NCAA Championships at Tulsa Country
Club on May 20-23 in Tulsa, Okla., and
join the teams that have advanced from
the NCAA East and West Regionals.
Alabama finished tied for fourth at the
Fall Preview in Tulsa in September, with a
16-over total of 856.
Since Potters arrival at the Capstone
prior to the 2005-06 season, the Crimson
Tide has qualified for the NCAA Region-
als each season and advanced to the
NCAA Championships eight consecutive
years. The 2014 selection is the 16th
NCAA appearance in school history.
For Potter, the regional berth marks
the 21st-consecutive appearance by
a team under his direction. The Hall of
Fame coach has now led a team to a
regional bid in each season since the for-
mat came into existence in 1993. Joining
Alabama in the NCAA Central Regional
is No. 1-seed UCLA, No. 2 Arkansas,
No. 4-seed Arizona, No. 5 LSU and No. 6
seed and host Oklahoma State.
Along with the Crimson Tide,
Razorbacks and LSU Tigers, the 24-team
NCAA Central Regional boasts two other
SEC foes, including Florida (No. 6 seed
and Mississippi State (No. 11 seed). The
remainder of the region includes No. 8
North Carolina, No. 9 Ohio State, No. 10
Miami (Fla.), No. 12 California, No. 13
Kent State, No. 14 Kansas, No. 15 Texas,
No. 16 UNLV, No. 17 Colorado, No. 18
SMU, No. 19 Minnesota, No. 20 Harvard,
No. 21 Lamar, No. 22 Wichita State, No.
23 LIU-Brooklyn and No. 24 Siena.
Last season Alabama won the NCAA
East Regional Championship before
posting a two-shot win over Southern
California at the NCAA Championships.
From Special Reports
Marlins
Continued from Page 1B
which had its third-highest run output of the season in a
game that took 2 hours, 7 minutes. It was the fastest one
in the majors this season, according to STATS.
Miami second baseman Ed Lucas had three hits in
his season debut after recovering from a broken left
hand, and Marcell Ozuna hit a two-run single for the
Marlins.
Fernandez (4-1) was dominant against the NL East
leaders for the second time in a week, lowering his ERA
to 1.59. He struck out eight and walked two, and hasnt
allowed an earned run in 23 innings over his last three
starts.
The right-handers numbers are eye-popping going
back to early in his rookie season. Fernandez is 14-4
with a 1.52 ERA in 24 starts since June 1, with 190 strike-
outs against 45 walks in 160 innings.
Same as last time hes good every time, Atlantas
Freddie Freeman said.
Braves starter Alex Wood (2-4) allowed seven runs
and 10 hits, leaving after facing four batters without
getting an out in the sixth. Wood and Fernandez had a
memorable duel last week, combining for 25 strikeouts
and no walks in what became a 1-0 Miami win that lasted
2 hours, 8 minutes.
This time, Fernandez who got booed by some in
the crowd after not running out a sharp grounder to
shortstop leading off the third needed only one run
again. Miami just happened to give him eight more for
good measure. The runs came in bunches during the
rematch, with Miami scoring three in the third and ve
more in the sixth to blow it open.
We have to gure out how to beat Fernandez,
Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said. Not everybody
is Cy Young, and you still have to beat Cy Young every
once in a while.
Stanton went the opposite way for a two-run homer to
right in the third inning, and Ozunas single in the sixth
was enough to chase Wood. Fernandez even added a
run-scoring single later in the sixth, and Saltalamacchia
connected off Braves reliever Anthony Varvaro in the
seventh.
The Braves had only three right-handed batters in
the starting lineup against Fernandez, looking for any
way to break through against him.
It was evident early that little was going to work. Fer-
nandez needed 17 pitches to get his rst seven outs, and
ended two innings with a pair of knee-buckling 83 mph
off-speed offerings.
Fernandez was even solid in the eld, keeping the
game scoreless with a nifty play to end the third. He
came hard off the mound to eld Ramiro Penas chopper
that stopped halfway up the third base line, then faked
a throw to rst which baited the Braves Tyler Pastor-
nicky into taking off from third base.
Fernandez simply ipped the ball to Saltalamacchia,
who put the tag on a sliding Pastornicky and kept the
game scoreless. By the time Fernandez returned to the
mound, he had a 3-0 lead and was rolling.
Fernandez said he and Saltalamacchia had a quick
pregame meeting to go over strategy and came up with
the following plan: Whatever Miamis catcher called,
Fernandez would throw.
Redmond said he considered letting Fernandez n-
ish the game, but with a nine-run lead the manager
didnt want to take any risks in the ninth.
MSU baseball
Continued from Page 1B
hits, he knows the answer is going to
sound like an excuse.
Our kids know whats at stake at
this point in the season, Cohen said
Tuesday in a phone interview. Were
tracking their at-bats in practice and in
games and, for the most part, theyre
not getting rewarded for hitting balls
hard.
Leadoff hitter Seth Heck is Cohens
primary example. Heck, a junior col-
lege transfer from Tacoma, Wash., is
hitting .278 with six doubles in 37 hits.
Those arent the eye-popping numbers
you would expect from someone hitting
at the top of a Southeastern Conference
lineup. However, thats where the short-
stop will be at 6:30 tonight when MSU
(28-17) plays host to Jacksonville State
(23-19) at Dudy Noble Field. Cohen
feels Hecks average should be 30-40
points higher based on the contact he is
making. Heck has reached base safely
in a season-high 12-straight games. He
has scored seven runs, seven RBIs, and
ve walks in that span. Heck has mul-
tiple hits in seven of his last 11 games.
I wish somebody, or anybody for that
matter, could sit in the lm room with
us and watch Seth Heck repeatedly line
out to an outelder on an absolute bul-
let right to the defender, Cohen said.
Maybe then would they know how I feel
about our offense. Ive never felt worse
in a long time than I feel for that young
man. His numbers should be better, and
hes doing everything we ask.
Cohen is talking about Hecks bat-
ting average on balls in play (BABIP), a
sabermetric statistic that tracks the fre-
quency at which a batter reaches base
after putting in play. A signicant dif-
ference in the average means the hitter
is striking out too much, which isnt the
case for Heck , who has 16 strikeouts,
or is unlucky for a long stretch of time.
Based off what hes produced at the
plate, he should be among the league
leaders in doubles and should be scor-
ing more runs because hes opening in-
nings in scoring position, Cohen said.
Hes just not getting rewarded, and
thats got to be frustrating for a player.
Heck is one reason why MSU is
failing to drive in runners on base and
ranks 10th in slugging percentage and
runs scored, 13th in doubles and home
runs, and 12th in total bases.
The extra-base hit is something we
struggle with, especially at our ballpark
where nding the power alleys are just dif-
cult, Cohen said. You look around our
league and I dont know how many schools
are pleased with their offensive numbers,
but I know our ballpark can have a depres-
Southeastern Conference
Eastern Division
Team SEC Pct. Overall Pct.
Florida 15-6 .714 30-15 .667
S. Carolina 12-9 .571 34-11 .756
Vanderbilt 11-10 .524 33-12 .733
Kentucky 9-12 .429 27-17 .614
Tennessee 8-13 .381 26-16 .619
Georgia 7-13-1 .350 21-22-1 .488
Missouri 6-15 .286 20-24 .455
Western Division
Team SEC Pct. Overall Pct.
Ole Miss 13-8 .619 33-12 .733
Alabama 13-8 .619 29-15 .669
LSU 12-8-1 .600 34-11-1 .756
Mississippi St. 11-10 .524 28-17 .622
Arkansas 10-11 .476 29-18 .617
Texas A&M 10-11 .476 28-18 .609
Auburn 9-12 .429 25-20 .556
Tuesdays Games
Texas A&M 9, Texas State 2
LSU 9, Alcorn State 7
Missouri 6, Southeast Missouri State 5
Arkansas 4, Missouri State 1
Todays Games
Alabama at Samford, 6:05 p.m.
Jacksonville State at Mississippi State, 6:30 p.m.
Southern Miss at Ole Miss, 6:30 p.m.
Thursdays Game
Kentucky at Tennessee, 6:30 p.m. (ESPNU)
sive feel to a hitter over time.
Frustration isnt an emotion Cohen
sees from his team despite a stretch in
which it has lost three of its past four
SEC weekend series.
I know I say this too often, but Im
being honest when I say (Tuesdays)
practice was the best practice Ive ever
seen at Mississippi State, Cohen said.
You talk about focus throughout and
getting stuff accomplished this late in
the year, both happened and at high lev-
els of competitiveness.
The Bulldogs have won eight-
straight midweek games and are 19-1 in
regular-season midweek games since
the beginning of last season. MSU is
11-0 against Jacksonville State dating
back to 1996.
After Tuesdays practice, most of
Cohens players turned their attention
to serving their community. MSU fth-
year senior Ben Bracewell led a large
contingent of players that set up porta-
ble tents around the Palmeiro Center
for emergency personnel assisting tor-
nado victims in the area.
They all got together and decided
to make a difference, Cohen said. We
get credit as coaches when our kids do
things like this, but the credit goes to
their parents for bringing them to us
like this. Im really proud. Ive said this
before, but its not magic of ours our
players are great people. They have
wonderful parents.
Follow Matt Stevens on Twitter
@matthewcstevens.
Food THE DISPATCH n CDISPATCH.COM n WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
LIFESTYLES EDITOR
Jan Swoope: 328-2471
BY SARA MOULTON
The Associated Press
A
s the weather gets
warmer, I cook
lighter. And in The
Husbands taxonomy of
food, crabcakes are rela-
tively light. So I thought
Id employ of couple of
seasonal stars peas
and radishes to put a
spring spin on them.
I blithely went shop-
ping for fresh crabmeat
at my local market, but
found to my horror that
its almost unafford-
ably pricey and that
pasteurized refrigerated
crabmeat isnt much
cheaper. In search of an
ingredient with which
to stretch the crab (I
thought of it as Crab
Helper), I settled on
boiled shrimp, which are
readily available, but not
astronomically expensive.
Happily, the crab and the
shrimp played very nicely
together.
As this also is the
season for fresh peas, I
added some of them to
the crab/shrimp mix.
Their natural sweetness
chimes in well with the
shellsh, and they add a
little crunchy pop to the
texture of the cakes.
Flavor and texture
aside, I used to discount
the nutritional value of
peas, until I nally scruti-
nized the data and discov-
ered that the little fellers
are packed with protein,
ber and micronutrients.
If you nd fresh peas at
the farmers market, by
all means scoop them up.
But keep in mind that the
sugar in fresh peas starts
turning to starch the
minute theyre harvested,
so be sure to bring them
A springtime take on the classic crabcake
AP Photo/Matthew Mead
This Mar.
31 photo
shows
spring crab
and shrimp
cakes with
double
radish
sauce in
Concord,
N.H.
See CRABCAKE, 6B
St. Pauls May luncheon generation to generation
Luisa Porter/Dispatch Staff
Three generations of the same family from left, Bethea Smith, her 16-year-old daughter Kirby Smith, and her mother, Beth Jones decorate cakes and cookies Mon-
day in preparation for the annual St. Pauls Episcopal Church Womens May Luncheon set for Thursday, May 8.
Rite
of spring
BY JAN SWOOPE
jswoope@cdispatch.com
I
f you ask longtime Columbians to list
some local rites of spring, chances are
youll hear mention of the St. Pauls
Episcopal Church May Luncheon. The
event, after all, has its roots in the 1800s.
Except for a brief period during World
War II when supplies were scarce, church
members have faithfully served a chicken
salad (and now barbecue, too) feast for
the community each and every May.
The Episcopal Church Women fund-
raiser takes place this year on Thursday,
May 8, at St. Pauls Parish Hall, located
at 318 College St. in downtown Colum-
bus. The dine-in luncheon is 11:30 a.m.
until 1:30 p.m. Takeout orders may be
picked up from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
An accompanying bake sale is 10:30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m.
For many congregation members,
the longstanding tradition previously
known as the Eight O May luncheon
is a family ritual.
Beth Jones married in February 1961
and, as a young bride in the congrega-
tion, was quickly recruited by St. Pauls
luncheon organizers into the ranks of
volunteers who cook hens, chop cel-
ery, boil eggs, cook salad dressing, set
tables, plate meals and any number of
other tasks involved in making the day a
success.
In the 53 years since, she has served
in practically every capacity. This year
she will create oral arrangements,
among other things.
Its all part of a legacy, one might say,
handed down from generation to genera-
tion. For Jones, that means the pleasure
of watching her own daughter, Bethea
Smith, and now her granddaughter, Kir-
by Smith, taking part as well.
Coming of age
I guess my earliest memories of
the luncheon are of being at the church
watching my mother working, said Bet-
hea Smith. When she was old enough,
Bethea was assigned to the takeout team,
and the rest is history. Like her mother,
she has since helped in many capacities.
As president today of Quality Products
school supply company, Smith has a
demanding job but will still prepare 15
See ST. PAULS, 6B
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com 6B WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
For complete details contact Main Street Columbus at
662-328-6305 or visit www.marketstreetfestival.com
hands on market
Saturday, May 3rd, 9 am until 5 pm
5th Street North
Yarn Buddies/Dolls Kids will make their own yard dolls
Origami
Inspiration Wall A project involving writing on large sticky
notes and putting them on the Columbus Arts Council window.
If I could not fail I would... (You complete.)
No Coolers or Pets Please
Watch for the festival guide in the
Friday, May 2nd edition of The Dispatch
19th Annual
May 2 & 3, 2014
Another great production of
Crabcake
Continued from Page 5B
home, shell them and boil
them right away.
And if your only option
is frozen peas, dont
despair. Those guys
are picked at the height
of their ripeness and
blanched immediately in
water, which sets their
avor and texture.
We bind up the cakes
with eggs, mayonnaise
and panko breadcrumbs,
then season them with
tarragon, which always
teams up nicely with both
shellsh and peas. If
youre not a fan of tarra-
gon, which is unpleasant-
ly reminiscent of licorice
to some folks, substitute
some dill, chives or
parsley. The panko does
double duty, thickening
the interior of the cakes
and adding crunch to
their crust. And as long
as you brown the cakes
in a nonstick or stick-re-
sistant skillet, you wont
have to use much oil.
The cakes are topped
off with a peppery cream
avored by both horse-
radish and red radishes.
Kissing cousins from the
same family Brassica-
ceae the radishes add
a little kick to the other-
wise bland shellsh. The
sour cream is a moist and
tangy complement to the
panko crust. The Hus-
band was very happy with
my springtime rendition
of one of his faves!
SPRING CRAB AND
SHRIMP CAKES WITH
DOUBLE RADISH SAUCE
Start to nish: 30 minutes
Makes 4 servings
1/2 pound peeled and dev-
eined cooked shrimp
1 large egg, plus 1 egg yolk
1 cup cooked English peas or
thawed frozen peas
1/2 cup nely chopped scal-
lions
1 2/3 cups panko bread-
crumbs, divided
1/4 cup light mayonnaise
1 to 2 tablespoons chopped
fresh tarragon, or to taste
Kosher salt and ground black
pepper
1/2 pound lump crabmeat,
picked over for any shells
2 tablespoons vegetable oil,
divided
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons
light sour cream
1 cup coarsely shredded red
radishes
1 tablespoon bottled horserad-
ish (do not drain)
n Heat the oven to 300 F.
n In a food processor, pulse
the shrimp until very nely
chopped, but not reduced to
a paste. Transfer the chopped
shrimp to a medium bowl and
add the egg and egg yolk,
peas, scallions, 2/3 cup of
the panko, the mayonnaise,
tarragon, 1/2 teaspoon of salt
and 1/4 teaspoon of pepper.
Stir well, then gently fold in the
crabmeat. Divide the mixture
into 8 portions, shaping each
into a patty. Coat the patties
with the remaining panko.
n In a large, nonstick skillet
over medium-high, heat 1
tablespoon of the oil. Reduce
the heat to medium, then add
4 of the patties and cook until
golden, about 4 minutes per
side. Transfer the patties to
a rimmed baking sheet and
place them in the oven to
keep warm. Repeat with the
remaining patties, using the
remaining 1 tablespoon of oil
in the skillet.
n Meanwhile, in a small bowl
whisk together the sour cream,
radishes and horseradish.
Season with salt and pepper.
n To serve, arrange 2 patties
per plate and top with the
radish sauce.
Nutrition information per
serving: 450 calories; 170
calories from fat (38 percent
of total calories); 19 g fat (4 g
saturated; 0 g trans fats); 250
mg cholesterol; 38 g carbohy-
drate; 2 g ber; 5 g sugar; 32
g protein; 900 mg sodium.
Luisa Porter/Dispatch Staff
Beth Jones takes a batch of cookies from the oven to contribute to the May Lun-
cheon bake sale.
St. Pauls
Continued from Page 5B
cups of cooked and chopped chicken for
the made-from-scratch chicken salad.
Everyone at St. Pauls pitches in for this
annual red letter day.
Even though you work, youre going
to get something to do, said Jones.
They try to include everybody wom-
en, men and teenagers.
One of those teens is 16-year-old
Kirby, who helps make cakes and other
treats for the bake sale. Its a popular
feature of the luncheon, a source of
sweets and savories that tend to disap-
pear quickly. Kirby, a junior at Heritage
Academy, also bakes cookies for the
Loaves and Fishes Soup Kitchen.
She knows shes following in the
footsteps, said Smith. Its fun that the
three of us get to share the experience
exciting that my mother, my daugh-
ter and I are helping with it.
The luncheon is much more than a
delicious occasion and fellowship. It
allows the Episcopal Church Women
to help Loaves and Fishes, Habitat for
Humanity and HEARTS After School
Tutoring in the community. In the
diocese, it helps support State ECW,
Honduras Medical Mission, Congrega-
tions for Children and Prison Ministry,
as well as the world Episcopal Relief
and Development mission.
Remember when
Karen Frye is St. Pauls current
ECW president and has her own lun-
cheon memories.
I learned early on that apparently I
never learned the proper way to clean
and chop celery, Frye began. After a
luncheon one year, we were all sitting
down to eat and someone asked how
long does it take to cut seven bunches
of celery. Beth Jones and I answered at
the same time. My answer was two to
three hours; Beths was seven hours.
Needless to say, I was not doing some-
thing right!
Last year, the kitchen crew inexpli-
cably ran low on deviled eggs. Frye
remembers the ensuing panic. The pre-
liminary egg math had been done, and
no one could fathom how the supply of
prepared eggs dwindled so fast.
Within ve minutes of the lun-
cheon starting, the worry sets in that
we will not have enough food anyway,
said Frye. As the event was winding
down, someone went looking in the
refrigerator for something and, lo and
behold, there were six pizza boxes full
of deviled eggs. If Jesus can feed 5,000
with ve loaves of bread and two sh,
he can make deviled eggs appear, too,
Frye said.
With so many church families, so
many volunteers, taking part in the
traditional luncheon for well more than
a century, there are enough stories
to ll more than a few books. They
will continue to accumulate, because
thanks to those who make it a rite of
spring to attend the gracious dine-in
luncheon or support it by calling in
takeout orders the event sees no end
in sight.
Luncheon details
Chicken salad plates include chick-
en salad, deviled eggs, potato chips,
crackers, sweet pickles and dessert.
Barbecue plates include smoked pork
barbecue (thanks to Tom Wolford and
his crew of skilled cooks), potato salad,
deviled eggs, potato chips, roll, dill
pickles and dessert.
The dine-in luncheon is $10, at the
door.
To place takeout orders, at a cost of
$8 each, email orders by 9:30 a.m. May
8 to secretarybb@stpaulscolumbus.
com. Include name, time of pickup,
number and type (chicken salad or
barbecue) plates desired, and a contact
phone number.
To place takeout orders by phone,
call 662-240-0187 or 662-328-6673 May
6 or 7, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., or May 8 from 8-10
a.m. Takeout orders may be picked up
from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
99.336%
of our customers
receive their paper on time.
(Believe us. We track these things.)
If you are unhappy with your delivery
please let us know. Our goal is 100%
customer satisfaction.
Call customer support at:
662-328-2424
THE DISPATCH
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014 7B
Comics & Puzzles
Dear Abby
DILBERT
ZITS
GARFIELD
CANDORVILLE
BABY BLUES
BEETLE BAILEY
MALLARD FILMORE
FOR SOLUTION SEE THE
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
IN CLASSIFIEDS
FAMILY CIRCUS
D
EAR ABBY:
My boy-
friend and I
have been dating
for two years. We
live together, and
his child from an-
other woman lives
with us. I love
my boyfriend and
his child, but one
thing prevents me
from imagining
us being married:
He has his childs
mothers name
tattooed on his
body.
The tattoo
bothers me for many reasons,
and Id like him to have it cov-
ered up if we ever do marry. He
says he doesnt want to get rid
of it. When the topic comes up,
we argue.
Am I unreasonable for
wanting him to get rid of the
tattoo? If that woman really is
in his past, why does he need a
constant reminder of her on his
body? IN A STINK OVER INK
DEAR IN A STINK: Youre
asking the wrong person. Only
your boyfriend can answer that.
He may not want to go to the
expense, or to ex-
perience the pain
of having more
artwork done. Or
he may not like
the idea that you
are telling him
what to do.
However, if he
has been living
with you for two
years, I doubt its
because hes still
carrying a torch
for someone
else. If you love
him and the two
of you want to
get married, my
advice is to accept him warts,
artwork and all, because re-
gardless of any romance in his
past, YOU have habeas corpus.
(Thats Latin for you have the
body.)
DEAR ABBY: I consider
myself a social person and
enjoy talking to friends on the
phone. My problem is, when
I talk to one of them, she will
never let me get off the phone.
Sometimes well talk for sever-
al hours, but eventually I have
other obligations and have to
go. When I tell her that, she
often ignores me and keeps
right on talking.
I dont want to be rude, but
sometimes I have to say good-
bye four and ve times before
she nally acknowledges that
I must end the call. It irritates
me. I like talking to her, but I
cant go on and on forever. How
can I make her let me off the
phone without hanging up on
her or upsetting her? MR.
NICE GUY
DEAR MR. NICE GUY: The
person youre describing obvi-
ously has less going on in her
life than you do. She may also
be a compulsive talker.
The next time you talk to
her, make the conversation
face-to-face and tell her that
as much as you like her, you
dont have the amount of time
to spend on the phone that
she does. Explain that when
you tell her you must end the
conversation, if she doesnt
stop talking within ve minutes,
you will have to hang up. And
then do it.
Will she like it? No. But the
alternative is that she will con-
tinue to take advantage of you
which she has been doing
because you have allowed it.
Horoscopes
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (April
30). You feel free to experi-
ment this year and will have fun
trying on different behaviors
and styles of communicating.
Youll acquire a cherished
possession in May, which will
play into a new social direction.
June brings family additions.
Business dominates in July
and August, and youll come up
with a winning strategy. Libra
and Leo people adore you. Your
lucky numbers are: 30, 1, 14,
26 and 15.
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
Consider that the same walls
you erect to keep yourself safe
will keep you isolated. Dont
let your defenses separate you
from those to whom you most
need to be close.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20).
The attitude for tearing down
is very different from the frame
of mind needed to repair and
restore. It may be challenging
to shift gears, but thats what
needs to happen to handle the
challenges of the day.
GEMINI (May 21-June
21). You have wanted certain
things from a relationship that
didnt and wont happen. These
expectations or demands were
simply ill placed. You can still
get what you need elsewhere.
CANCER (June 22-July
22). New faces will breathe
excitement into your scene.
Youre not worried that a new
star will come in and steal the
show, though others wont be
as welcoming as you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22).
When warnings are issued, you
do not stand back and ponder
whether the threat is idle. You
go on the alert, acting to se-
cure your position. Your quick
response will bring good luck.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Paths converge. From your
point of view, its your road.
From the other persons point
of view, its his. Letting each
other pass peaceably will be
better than putting up a ght.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
Reliability isnt a ashy virtue,
and yet there will be an attrac-
tive aura of goodness around
the reliable person in your life
today. (You strive to ll this
role, and its entirely possible
that you are the most reliable
person you know.)
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
21). Everyone you deal with
is unique, and yet some will
stand out as more unique than
others. The right combination
of words will help you build rap-
port with this odd character.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21). Mistakes can build
bonds. Consider that a smooth
operator may make mistakes
on purpose in order to give the
other person a more authori-
tative (and involved) stance in
the interaction.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Conict is necessary.
Tension can be the best thing
that happens to a relationship,
producing a far better result
than the lackluster product of
constant agreement.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18). Games can be fun, but
theres a point at which playing
roles and executing moves
gets exhausting. Anyway, today
theres no time to waste in
wondering who a person wants
you to be.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20). That posturing person will
stop bothering you once you
appease his or her overblown
need for attention. Youd like
to withhold your attention, but
thats silly. Giving will take up
so little of your time.
BY ALISON LADMAN
For The Associated Press
M
any cream-based
chowders suffer
from the same
problem its hard to taste
anything but the cream.
Admittedly, all that fat
is mighty delicious. But if
youre going to go to the
trouble of making a chow-
der, wouldnt it be nice to
taste some of the other
ingredients? So we set about
making a simple clam
chowder that draws on fresh
herbs to marry the various
avors.
Fresh tarragon and the
lightly herbaceous avor
of fresh fennel were the
right choice. Both play so
well with the avors of the
cream, potatoes and clams.
The result is that this dish
has no one avor star, and
thats as it should be. The
ingredients are perfectly
harmonious together.
TARRAGON-FENNEL CLAM
CHOWDER
Start to nish: 45 minutes
Makes 8 servings
6 strips thick-cut bacon, diced
1 large yellow onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 large or 2 small fennel bulbs,
bulb only, diced
2 tablespoons all-purpose our
2 medium yellow potatoes,
peeled and diced
8-ounce bottle clam juice
12 ounces canned or frozen
clams, chopped
2 cups half-and-half
1 cup heavy cream
n Kosher salt and ground black
pepper
n 3 tablespoons chopped fresh
tarragon
n In a large heavy-bottomed
saucepan over medium-high heat,
cook the bacon until crisp and
it has rendered all its fat. Use
a slotted spoon to transfer the
bacon to a plate and set aside.
n Return the saucepan of bacon
fat to medium-high heat and add
the onion, garlic and fennel. Cook
for 6 to 8 minutes, or until the on-
ion is very tender. Stir in the our,
coating the vegetables all over.
Add the potatoes, clam juice,
clams, half-and-half and cream,
then bring to a bare simmer.
n Cover and cook for 15 minutes,
or until the potatoes are tender.
Season with salt and pepper,
then stir in the tarragon. Serve
topped with the crispy bacon.
Nutrition information per serving:
350 calories; 240 calories from
fat (69 percent of total calories);
26 g fat (14 g saturated; 0.5 g
trans fats); 90 mg cholesterol;
19 g carbohydrate; 3 g ber; 1
g sugar; 12 g protein; 410 mg
sodium.
Fennel and tarragon blend in a rich clam chowder
AP Photo/Matthew Mead
This March 24 photo shows tarragon fennel clam chowder in Concord, N.H.
Dear Abby
CALL
328-2424
to place an ad in the
How else are you
going to sell that
stuff in your
garage?
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com 8B WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
ADOPT: A loving, estab-
lished couple with close
family dream of a home
filled with the sounds of
a child. Please contact
at 855-884-6080;
jennandjonadopt@gmail.
com; or www.jennandjon
adopt.info. Expenses
paid
Special
Notices 240
REWARD: LOST male
black dog with brown
around feet, Babe, from
Gaylane Dr. Looks like a
lab. Did have on green
collar. He may not go to
strangers. Fence
knocked down from
storm. Call 435-1132 or
497-2900
LET US HELP find your
lost pet. Email, fax, mail
or bring your information
by the office and we will
run your lost & found ad
in the Pet Finder for 6
days FREE!
Lost & Found 230
General Help
Wanted 320
~Fully Insured ~Big
trees ~Small trees
~Trees over house
~Storm cleanup ~
~Brush clearing~ FREE
QUOTES. Call today.
662-801-7511
J.R. BOURLAND
Tree & Stump
Removal. Trimming
w/bucket truck
Licensed & Bonded
Firewood 4 sale LWB
$100. 662-574-1621
J&A TREE REMOVAL
Work from a bucket
truck. Insured/bonded.
Call Jimmy for a
free estimate
662-386-6286
A&T TREE SERVICE.
Senior citizen & previ-
ous customer discounts
available for the month
of April. You tell us your
budget & we will work
with you. No job too big
or too small. Call Alvin
242-0324/241-4447
We'll go out on a limb
for you!
Tree Service 186
EXPERIENCED
CAREGIVER
seeks client. Reliable
with references.
8 years experience.
Call 662-630-5001
Sitting With
Elderly/Sick 178
PAINTING INC. Int/ext
painting, sheet rock re-
pair & pressure wash-
ing. Special prices on
wall paper removal. Free
est. Call Derek 662-
364-0048. Honest-Reli-
able-Insured
SULLIVAN'S PAINT
SERVICE
Certified in lead removal
Offering special prices
on interior & exterior
painting, pressure
washing & sheet rock
repairs. Free Estimates
Call 435-6528
Painting &
Papering 162
General Help
Wanted 320
SAM'S LAWN Service.
No lawn too large or too
small. Call 243-1694
LAWN CARE
Mow, trim, edge & blow
off hard surfaces. Free
est. 662-574-1225
JAYNES LAWN
MAINTENANCE
Free estimates
Call 662-364-6651
J&R LAWN SERVICE
Mowing & weed eating
reasonable rates & ex-
cellent service. Spring
cleanup. Call 662-574-
0786 for free estimate
BRYAN LAWN CARE
Complete Lawncare ser-
vice. Free estimates. Ex-
cellent work. 662-231-
5899
AVERAGE SIZE yard
mowed/trimmed $40.
Sewer drains cleaned
out $80/hr. Plumbing
fixtures installed $50
ea. AAA Sewer Service
574-7189
JESSE & BEVERLY'S
LAWN SERVICE. Fall
clean up, firewood, land-
scaping, tree cutting, &
clean-up. 356-6525
AAA TWINS Lawn Care.
Yard work, lawn mowing,
weed eating, mulching,
flower beds, limb re-
moval, you name it.
Call Will or Bryant 242-
2220 or 242-1968.
Free estimates
Lawn Care
Landscaping 147
A cut above the rest.
Cutting, edging, blowing,
weedeating, fertilizer ap-
plications. Will match or
beat all other prices.
251-0009
Lawn Care
Landscaping 147
TIRED OF cleaning your
house? Let me do it for
you. Reasonable rates.
References avail. Call
295-8758
Housecleaning 138
Piano Tuning & Repair
Featuring the Rayburn
Cyber -Tune Program.
Call for information
Bill Davis
662-323-1075
Reasonable Rates
SOUTHERN PRIDE
Painting & Home Re-
pairs, specializing in
residential painting,
faux painting, murals by
Betty Andel, your home
town artist, & for
plumbing, electrical &
all your handyman ser-
vices call Tim The
Handyman. Kudzu.com.
Handyman of year 2
years running, satisfac-
tion guaranteed & free
est. Tim, 404-328-8994
or Betty. 662-312-6775
SCRAPPER'S
Scrap Metal Removal.
Caledonia/Columbus
area. Tired of seeing
that old junk in your
yard? Call us. We will
come remove scrap
metal from your yard.
Examples:
Appliances, tin, water
heaters, lawnmowers
662-549-4541.
Brian & Justin
MR. PIANO. Best piano
& organ service. Sales,
rentals, moving, tuning
& service. Call 465-
8895 or 418-4097
RETAINER WALL, drive-
way, foundation, con-
crete/riff raft drainage
work, remodeling, base-
ment foundation, re-
pairs, small dump truck
hauling (5-6 yd) load &
demolition/lot cleaning.
Burr Masonry 242-0259
HILL'S PRESSURE
WASHING. Commercial/
residential. House, con-
crete, sidewalks & mo-
bile washing. Free est.
Call 662-386-8925
DO ALL SERVICE
Home roof, paint,
repair, p. wash, lawn
care, dirt, bushhog.
Any size job.
References.
Call for free est.
662-570-3877
C & P PRINTING
The one stop place for
all of your printing
needs. No job too large
or too small. Call today.
662-327-9742
General
Services 136
TOM HATCHER, LLC
Custom Construction,
Restoration, Remodel-
ing, Repair, Insurance
claims. 662-364-1769.
Licensed & Bonded
TODD PARKS
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction, Re-
modeling, Repairs, Con-
crete. Free est. Call or
email 662-889-8662 or
toddparks.construction
@gmail.com
Building &
Remodeling 112
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE
that any objecting parties are re-
quired to attend the hearing and
that failure to appear may result
in relief being granted upon de-
fault.
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO
ACCESS THE SETTLEMENT
AGREEMENT AND RELATED
DOCUMENTS, please call (from
the U.S. and Canada) (877)
709-4747, or call (for remaining
international callers) (424) 236-
7228 or visit http://www.kccl
lc.net/TronoxKerrMcGeeSettle
ment.
[1]Provided, however, that as it
relates to Kerr-McGee Stored
Power Company LLC, subpart
(vii) is applicable only to the ex-
tent that such liability, if any, re-
lates to or arises from the
stored power or battery busi-
ness." It corresponds to "Power
Company LLC" in the final bold-
ed paragraph of the notice (first
line of the last page of the no-
tice PDF).
Publish: 4/20 5/5/2014
Legal Notices 001
Settlement Proceeds to be allo-
cated and distributed to the Liti-
gation Trust Beneficiaries con-
sistent with the LTA. The Litiga-
tion Trust succeeded to, as of
and after the Plan Effective
Date, any and all claims against
the Anadarko Released Parties
related to the claims, issues
and subject matter of the Adver-
sary Proceeding which were
held, owned and/or controlled
by one or more Debtors before
the Plan Effective Date. Since
the Plan Effective Date, the Liti-
gation Trust has not sold, as-
signed, transferred, encum-
bered, hypothecated, aban-
doned, conveyed or otherwise
disposed of any claims received
by the Litigation Trust from
Debtors pursuant to the Plan.
Proposed Permanent Injunction:
The movants have requested
that the following permanent in-
junction be issued by the District
Court: Pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
1367 & 1651, 105(a) of the
Bankruptcy Code and Bankrupt-
cy Rules 7001 and 7065, (i) any
Debtor(s), (ii) any creditor of any
Debtor who filed or could have
filed a claim in the Chapter 11
Cases, (iii) any other Person
whose claim (A) in any way aris-
es from or is related to the Ad-
versary Proceeding, (B) is a
Trust Derivative Claim, or (C) is
duplicative of a Trust Derivative
Claim, and (iv) any Person acting
or purporting to act as an attor-
ney for any of the preceding is
hereby permanently enjoined
from asserting against any
Anadarko Released Party (I) any
Trust Derivative Claims or (II)
any claims that are duplicative
of Trust Derivative Claims,
whether or not held or controlled
by the Litigation Trust, or
whether or not the Litigation
Trust could have asserted such
claims against any Anadarko Re-
leased Party. The injunction
herein shall not apply to or bar
the following: (i) any criminal lia-
bility; (ii) any liability arising un-
der Title 26 of the United States
Code (Internal Revenue Code) or
state tax laws; (iii) any liability
arising under federal or state se-
curities laws; (iv) any action to
enforce a covenant not to sue,
release, or agreement not to
seek reimbursement contained
in the Settlement Agreement; (v)
any liability that an Anadarko Re-
leased Party might have that
does not arise from or through a
liability of a Debtor; (vi) any lia-
bility of an Anadarko Released
Party due to its status or acts or
omissions since November 28,
2005 as a/an (A) owner, (B) op-
erator, (C) discharger, (D)
lessee, (E) permittee, (F) li-
censee, (G) person in charge,
(H) holder of a right of use and
easement, (I) arranger for dis-
posal or treatment, (J) trans-
porter, or (K) person who gener-
ates, handles, transports,
treats, stores or disposes of sol-
id or hazardous waste; (vii) any
liability relating to the E&P Busi-
ness or the stored power or bat-
tery business (including, but not
limited to, as owned or operated
by U.S. Avestor LLC and Kerr-
McGee Stored Power Company
LLC ); and (viii) any liability that
any Anadarko Released Party re-
tained, received or assumed pur-
suant to the Assignment Agree-
ment or Assignment, Assump-
tion, and Indemnity Agreement.
For the avoidance of doubt, to
the extent that a liability of an
Anadarko Released Party exclud-
ed from the injunction herein by
the preceding sentence would
be a liability for which such
Anadarko Released Party would
be jointly and severally liable
with others, including but not
limited to one or more Debtors
or Reorganized Debtors, under
applicable law, nothing in this in-
junction is intended to alter any
such applicable principles of
joint and several liability where
otherwise provided by law. The
injunction herein does not apply
to the Litigation Trust and the
United States, which are provid-
ing releases and covenants not
to sue in the Settlement Agree-
ment.
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE
that objections to the Motion, if
any, shall be in writing, shall
conform to the Federal Rules of
Bankruptcy Procedure and the
Local Rules of the Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of
New York, shall set forth the
name of the objecting party, the
basis for the objection and the
specific grounds thereof, shall
be filed with the Bankruptcy
Court electronically in accor-
dance with General Order M-242
(which can be found at www.nys-
b.uscourts.gov) by registered
users of the Bankruptcy Court's
case filing system and by all oth-
er parties in interest, and shall
be served upon: Jeffrey J.
Zeiger, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, 300
N. LaSalle, Chicago, IL 60654;
John C. Hueston, Litigation
Trustee, Irell & Manella LLP,
1800 Avenue of the Stars, Suite
900, Los Angeles, CA 90067;
Thomas Lotterman, Bingham
McCutchen LLP, 2020 K Street
NW, Washington, DC 20006-
1806; Kenneth Klee, Klee,
Tuchin, Bogdanoff & Stern LLP,
1999 Avenue of the Stars, 39th
Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90067;
and Robert Yalen, AUSA, U.S.
Attorney's Office - SDNY, 86
Chambers St., 3rd Floor, New
York, NY 10028, so as to be so
filed and received by no later
than May 15, 2014 at 4:00
p.m. (Prevailing Eastern Time).
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE
that only those responses or ob-
jections that are timely filed,
served and received will be con-
sidered.
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE
that the Honorable Allan L. Grop-
per of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Southern District of New
York has scheduled a hearing to
address this matter on MAY 28,
2014, AT 11:00 A.M., ONE
BOWLING GREEN, NEW YORK,
NY, 10004-1408.
continued next column
Legal Notices 001
UNITED STATES
BANKRUPTCY COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
NEW YORK
In re: Chapter 11 TRONOX
INCORPORATED, et al., Jointly
Administered Reorganized
Debtors.
Case No. 09-10156 (ALG)
NOTICE OF MAY 15, 2014
DEADLINE FOR FILING OBJEC-
TIONS TO TRONOX/KERR-
MCGEE SETTLEMENT AGREE-
MENT
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that, on
April 9, 2014, the Anadarko Liti-
gation Trust (the Litigation
Trust), as successor to Debtors
Tronox Incorporated, Tronox
Worldwide LLC, and Tronox LLC
in the above-captioned adversary
proceeding, and Anadarko
Petroleum Corporation, Kerr-
McGee Corporation, Kerr-McGee
Oil & Gas Corporation (n/k/a
Anadarko US Offshore Corpora-
tion), Kerr-McGee Worldwide Cor-
poration, KM Investment Corpo-
ration (improperly named as
Kerr-McGee Investment Corpora-
tion), Kerr-McGee Credit LLC,
Kerr-McGee Shared Services
Company LLC and Kerr-McGee
Stored Power Company LLC (col-
lectively, Anadarko), filed a
motion with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of
New York (the Bankruptcy
Court) seeking a report and rec-
ommendation (A) recommending
approval of the Settlement
Agreement between and among
the Anadarko Litigation Trust,
the United States of America,
and Anadarko resolving the
above-captioned adversary pro-
ceeding, and (B) recommending
issuance of an injunction enjoin-
ing certain persons from assert-
ing against any Anadarko Re-
leased Party (i) any Trust Deriva-
tive Claims, or (ii) any claims
which are duplicative of Trust
Derivative Claims (all capitalized
terms not otherwise defined
herein shall have the meaning
as defined in the Settlement
Agreement).
PURSUANT TO THE MOTION
FILED WITH THE COURT:
THE DEADLINE TO FILE OBJEC-
TIONS TO THE TRONOX SETTLE-
MENT AGREEMENT IS MAY 15,
2014, AT 4:00 P.M. EASTERN
A HEARING ON THE MOTION
(AND ANY OBJECTIONS TIMELY
FILED) HAS BEEN SCHEDULED
FOR MAY 28, 2014 AT 11:00
A.M. EASTERN AT THE U.S.
BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW
YORK (SEE ADDRESS BELOW)
Brief Recitation of Facts: On Jan-
uary 12, 2009, Tronox Incorpo-
rated and certain of its affiliates
(collectively, the Debtors) com-
menced chapter 11 cases (the
Chapter 11 Cases) in the
Bankruptcy Court. On November
30, 2010, the Bankruptcy Court
confirmed the Debtors' Plan. On
February 14, 2011, the Plan be-
came effective. In the Chapter
11 Cases, the United States,
other governmental entities, and
other Persons filed Proofs of
Claim against the Debtors on ac-
count of, among other things, al-
leged environmental claims, obli-
gations, and/or liabilities at cer-
tain of the Covered Sites. Vari-
ous tort claimants filed Proofs of
Claim against the Debtors on ac-
count of alleged tort liabilities,
including for personal injury and
property damage. Those claims
were or will be resolved pursuant
to the Plan, related tort and envi-
ronmental agreements, the Liti-
gation Trust Agreement (LTA),
and other prior proceedings of
the Bankruptcy Court.
There are two complaints
against Anadarko currently being
jointly litigated in Tronox Inc., et
al. v. Kerr-McGee Corporation, et
al. (In re Tronox Inc.), Adv. Proc.
No. 09-01198 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.):
1. the Second Amended Adver-
sary Complaint [which is filed at
Case No. 09-01198 (ALG), Dkt.
No. 233]; and
2. the Complaint-in-Intervention
filed by the United States [which
is filed at Case No. 09-01198
(ALG), Dkt. No. 5-2]. The Plan,
LTA, and Environmental Settle-
ment Agreement assigned, as
provided in the Confirmation Or-
der and the LTA, all of the
Debtors' respective rights and
interests in the Adversary Pro-
ceeding (excluding the Com-
plaint-in-Intervention), which in-
cludes any claims or causes of
action of the Debtors related to
the Adversary Proceeding,
whether or not asserted in the
Adversary Proceeding, to the Liti-
gation Trust for the benefit of
the entities listed in Section 1(d)
of the LTA, which include the
Tort Claims Trust, the Cimarron
Environmental Response Trust,
the Multistate Environmental Re-
sponse Trust, the Nevada Envi-
ronmental Response Trust, the
Savannah Environmental Re-
sponse Trust (collectively, along
with the West Chicago Environ-
mental Response Trust, the En-
vironmental and Tort Trusts),
and certain governmental enti-
ties that had asserted Bankrupt-
cy Environmental Claims against
the Debtors (collectively, Litiga-
tion Trust Beneficiaries).
Pursuant to the Plan, LTA, Envi-
ronmental Settlement Agree-
ment, and Environmental and
Tort Trust Agreements (other
than the West Chicago Environ-
mental Response Trust Agree-
ment), the Litigation Trust Bene-
ficiaries and beneficiaries of the
Environmental and Tort Trusts
(together with the Litigation
Trust Beneficiaries, the Benefi-
ciaries) are entitled to have
paid, on account of their
Bankruptcy Environmental
Claims and Bankruptcy Tort
Claims, specified allocations of
a share of the net proceeds of
any recovery from the Adversary
Proceeding.
On December 12, 2013, the
Bankruptcy Court issued its
Memorandum Opinion, After Tri-
al, finding the Anadarko Trial De-
fendants liable under the Sec-
ond Amended Adversary Com-
plaint for actual and constructive
fraudulent conveyances, but not
liable for breach of fiduciary du-
ty. The Decision is not a final
judgment and the Bankruptcy
Court did not enter final judg-
ment.
On April 3, 2014, the Parties en-
tered into the Settlement Agree-
ment that resolves the Adver-
sary Proceeding and provides for
releases, covenants not to sue,
and the issuance of an injunc-
tion by a U.S. District Court en-
joining certain persons from as-
serting Trust Derivative Claims
and any claims that are duplica-
tive of such Trust Derivative
Claims (as defined in the Settle-
ment Agreement).
On April 3, 2014, the United
States lodged the Settlement
Agreement with the Bankruptcy
Court. On approximately April
14, 2014 the United States will
publish a notice for public com-
ment thereon in the Federal Reg-
ister. On April 9, 2014, the Liti-
gation Trust and Anadarko filed
a motion (the 9019 Recom-
mendation Motion) with the
Bankruptcy Court, seeking the
Report and Recommendation.
The Settlement Agreement set-
tles, compromises, resolves and
closes the Adversary Proceeding
and settles, compromises, re-
solves, and extinguishes the
Trust Derivative Claims, any
claims that were asserted or
that could have been asserted in
the Second Amended Adversary
Complaint, and the claims as-
serted in the Complaint-in-Inter-
vention and the claims that
could have been asserted in the
Complaint-in-Intervention relating
to the subject matter of the Ad-
versary Proceeding, together and
on a global basis to the extent
provided in the Settlement
Agreement. Pursuant to the Set-
tlement Agreement, within two
Business Days after the Effec-
tive Date, Anadarko shall cause
to be paid to the Litigation Trust
$5.15 billion plus Interest. The
Litigation Trust shall cause the
continued next column
Legal Notices 001
RFP TO FURNISH FOOD SERVICE
FOR THE MS SUMMER FOOD
SERVICE PROGRAM
The Initiative CDC in collabora-
tion with the MDE is taking bids
for our 2014 Summer Food Ser-
vice Program. The Program will
operate from June 2, 2014 to
August 8, 2014 from 8am to
2pm. The Program address is
Charity Village, 806 Tarlton Rd.,
Crawford, MS 39743. We are
expecting 300 youths to be
served breakfast and lunch dai-
ly. Vendors are expected to pre-
pare the meals in bulk, serve on
plates, provide utensils, and pro-
vide milk with each meal. To see
a copy of the meal pattern re-
quired by the Mississippi Office
of Child Nutrition, go to
www.initv.org. Interested ven-
dors please submit your bids to
Charity Village, P.O. Box 174,
Crawford, MS 39743, Attention:
Robert Howze, no later than
12:00pm on April 30, 2014.
Publish: 4/17 5/2/2014
prior Staples deeds in Deed
Book 195 at page 115 and
page 125 in said land records)
to a point at the Southeast cor-
ner of said Owen property and
also being on the West line of
the former Burnette/Ayers et al.,
property (Deed Book 303 at
page 622 in said land records);
thence South along said West
line a distance of 66.0 feet
more or less, to a point on the
former Propst/Mitchell North
property line (Deed Book 250 at
page 421 in said land records);
thence West along said North
line a distance of 180.0 feet,
more or less, (165.0 feet in said
prior deeds) to a point at the
Southeast corner of said former
Waters property; thence North
along said Waters East line a
distance of 66.0 feet, more or
less, to the initial point of this
description.
It is the intent to describe and
convey all of that certain proper-
ty described in the above men-
tioned Staples deeds, including
any additional lands claimed
therein as shown on the county
tax map, Parcel No.
60W050005900, whether cor-
rectly described or not.
Legal Description:
Map/Parcel No. 60W05-00-
06000
A tract or parcel of land located
in the Southeast Quarter of the
Northeast Quarter of Section
17, Township 18 South, Range
18 West, Lowndes County, Mis-
sissippi, and being more particu-
larly described as follows, to wit:
Beginning at the Northwest cor-
ner of said quarter-quarter sec-
tion; thence South a distance of
20.0 feet to an iron pin on the
South right-of-way line of Ply-
mouth Road; thence East along
said South right-of-way line a dis-
tance of 557.0 feet; thence
South parallel with the West line
of said quarter-quarter section a
distance of 391.4 feet to an iron
pin on the Southern right-of-way
line of U.S. Highway 82 (Federal
Aid Project No. F-002-4(10), and
the INITIAL POINT of the property
herein described; thence South-
westerly along said Southern
right-of-way line (an existing
fence line) a distance of 181.9
feet to an iron pin; thence East
parallel to said South right-of-
way line of Plymouth Road a dis-
tance of 142.9 feet to an iron
pin; thence North parallel with
the West line of said quarter-
quarter section a distance of
112.6 feet, more or less, to the
initial point of this description,
containing 0.19 acre, more or
less.
Legal Description:
Map/Parcel No. 60W05-00-
06100
A tract or parcel of land located
in the Southeast Quarter of the
Northeast Quarter of Section
17, Township 18 South, Range
18 West Lowndes County, Mis-
sissippi, and being more particu-
larly described as follows, to-wit:
Beginning at the Northwest Cor-
ner of said quarter-quarter sec-
tion; thence South a distance of
20.0 feet to an iron pin on the
South right-of-way line of Ply-
mouth Road; thence East along
said South right-of-way line a dis-
tance of 557.0 feet; thence
South parallel with the West line
of said quarter-quarter section a
distance of 391.4 feet to an iron
pin on the Southern right-of-way
line of U.S. Highway 82 (Federal
Aid Project No. F-002-4(10), be-
ing the Northeast corner of the
Waters property (Deed Book
942 at page 542 in the land
records of said county) and the
INITIAL POINT of the property
herein described; thence South
along the East line of said Wa-
ters Property a distance of 46.6
feet, more or less, to the North
line of the Staples property
(Deed Book 195 at page 125 in
said land records); thence East
along said Staples North line a
distance of 180.0 feet to the
Northeast corner of said Staples
property; thence North a dis-
tance of 205.0 feet, more or
less, to said Southern right-of-
way line; thence Southwesterly
along said Southern right-of-way
line (an existing fence line) a dis- tance of 240.0 feet, more or
less, to the initial point of this
description. It is the intent to
convey all that certain property
described in the deed to Ben
Owen recorded in Deed Book
330 at page 294 in said land
records, less said right-of-way,
and any part of the above de-
scribed property lying South of
said right-of-way but outside the
boundary lines of said Owen
tract, as deeded, is hereby con-
veyed without warranty.
Legal Description:
Map/Parcel No. 60W05-00-
06300
That part of the East Half (E )
of the Northeast Quarter (NE
1/4 ) of Section 17, Township
18, Range 18 West in Lowndes
County, Mississippi, more partic-
ularly described as follows, to-
wit:
Beginning at the Northeast cor-
ner of said Section 17, Town-
ship 18, Range 18 West in said
county; thence run South along
the East section line a distance
of 1,322 feet to the centerline
of the Plymouth public road;
thence continuing South along
said East section line 20 feet to
the South side of said public
road and the initial point of this
description; thence run South
(South 06 degrees 15 minutes
East - magnetic) along said East
section line (being the West side
of the Old Aberdeen Road) a dis-
tance of 759 feet; thence run
South 83 degrees 00minutes
West (magnetic) along a fence
572 feet; thence run North 06
degrees West (magnetic) along
a fence 248 feet; thence run
North 04 degrees 20 minutes
West (magnetic) along a fence
(being the East side of a lane)
512 feet to the South side of
said Plymouth public road;
thence North 82 degrees 20
minutes East (magnetic) along
the South side of said road 562
feet to the initial point of this de-
scription
Publish: 4/30/2014
Legal Notices 001
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
A PETITION HAS BEEN FILED
BY Lowndes County, Mississippi
Board of Supervisors TO
AMEND THE OFFICIAL ZONING
MAP OF THE CITY OF COLUM-
BUS, MISSISSIPPI;
IN PARTICULAR, MAP / PARCEL
NOS. 60W05-00-05900; 60-
WO5-00-06000; 60W05-00-
06100; AND, 60W05-00-
06300, at Highway 82 Bypass,
Lowndes County, Mississippi.
(Legal descriptions attached.)
(Each) From:
A-1 (General Agricultural) Zone
District To C-3 (Highway Com-
mercial) Zone District
A PUBLIC HEARING IN RELATION
TO THE ABOVE-DESCRIBED PETI-
TION WILL BE HELD ON June 9,
2014 BEFORE THE COLUMBUS
PLANNING COMMISSION, AT
CITY HALL, 523 MAIN STREET,
SECOND FLOOR, (OLD COURT
ROOM), AT 5:30 P.M. AT
WHICH HEARING ALL PARTIES
IN INTEREST SHALL HAVE AN
OPPORTUNITY TO BE HEARD.
A SUBSEQUENT HEARING OF
THE ABOVE PETITION WILL BE
HELD BEFORE THE MAYOR
AND CITY COUNCIL ON June 17,
2014 at The Municipal Complex
(Court Room), 1501 MAIN
STREET, COLUMBUS, MISSSIS-
SIPPI. THE COUNCIL MEETING
WILL BEGIN AT 5:00 P.M., AND,
AT WHICH HEARING ALL PAR-
TIES IN INTEREST SHALL HAVE
AN OPPORTUNITY TO BE HEARD.
WITNESS THE EXECUTION HERE-
OF AND OFFICIAL SEAL OF SAID
CITY THIS 23rd day of April,
2014.
THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF COLUMBUS,
MS.
/s/ Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Robert E. Smith, Sr., Mayor
(SEAL)
ATTEST:
/s/ Milton E. Rawle, Jr.
CFO / Secretary-Treasurer
Legal Description:
Map/Parcel No. 60W05-00-
05900
A tract or parcel of land located
in the Southeast Quarter of the
Northeast Quarter of Section
17, Township 18 South, Range
18 West, Lowndes County, Mis-
sissippi, and being more particu-
larly described as follows, to-
wit:
Beginning at the Northwest cor-
ner of said quarter-quarter sec-
tion; thence South a distance of
20.0 feet to an iron pin on the
South right-of-way line of Ply-
mouth Road; thence East along
said South right-of-way line a dis-
tance of 557.0 feet; thence
South parallel with the West line
of said quarter-quarter section a
distance of 391.4 feet to an iron
pin on the Southern right-of-way
line of U.S. Highway 82 (Federal
Aid Project No. F-002-4(10), be-
ing the Northeast corner of the
former Waters property (Deed
Book 942 at page 542 in the
land records of said county);
thence South along the East line
of said Waters property, and the
West line of the former Owen
property (Deed Book 2008 at
page 1763 in said land records)
a distance of 46.6 feet, more or
less, to a point at the Southwest
corner of said Owen property,
and the INITIAL POINT of the
property herein described;
thence East along said Owen
South line a distance of 180.0
feet, more or less, (165 feet in
continued next column
MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
OFFICE OF GEOLOGY
Mining and Reclamation Division
P. O. Box 2279
Jackson, MS 39225
(601) 961-5527
P U B L I C N O T I C E
Public Notice No. 1892
Date: April 11, 2014
Application No. A1892
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
The Office of Geology has re-
ceived an Application for a Sur-
face Mining Permit pursuant to
Sections 53-7-27 and 53-7-29 of
the Mississippi Surface Mining
and Reclamation Act of 1977,
as described below:
APPLICANT: Curtis Brothers LLC,
Curtis Mine
PO Box 9099
Columbus, Mississippi 39705
LOCATION: Southeast of the
Southeast of Section 9,
Township 17 South, Range 17
West, Lowndes County.
DESCRIPTION: The operator pro-
poses to open pit mine 12.85
acres to a total depth of 25 feet
for clay gravel. Sediment and
erosion will be controlled by
drainage ditches. Reclamation
will consist of 3 to 1 slopes,
grass cover, and pine trees.
This public notice is being dis-
tributed to interested persons
and agencies to assist in devel-
oping facts on which a decision
by the Office of Geology can be
based. You are requested to
communicate the information
contained in this notice to any
other parties whom you deem
likely to have interest in the mat-
ter. All agencies and persons
shall have until April 27, 2014,
to submit comments, recom-
mendations, or evaluations to
the Office of Geology. Com-
ments by an agency shall in-
clude an enumeration of permits
or licenses required under the
agency's jurisdiction.
If further information is needed,
an agency may be furnished a
copy of the notice of intent or
permit application. Any person
may inspect the permit applica-
tion as specified in Section 104
of the Rules and Regulations.
In the event comments are not
received by April 27, 2014 the
Office of Geology will consider
that the agency has no com-
ments, recommendations
and/or evaluations that the
agency deems necessary and
proper based upon the effect of
the proposed operation on mat-
ters within the agency's jurisdic-
tion.
Publish: 4/23 & 4/30/2014
on May 14, 2014 offer for sale
at public outcry and sell within
legal hours (being between the
hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00
p.m.), at the Southeast Door of
the County Courthouse of Lown-
des County, located at Colum-
bus, Mississippi, to the highest
and best bidder for cash the fol-
lowing described property situat-
ed in Lowndes County, State of
Mississippi, to-wit: Lot Six (6)
of East Emerald Estates, Part
One, a subdivision in and to the
City of Columbus, Lowndes
County, Mississippi, as shown
by map or plat thereof of record
in Subdivision Plat Book 2 at
Page 99 in the office of the
Chancery Clerk of Lowndes
County, Mississippi; subject,
however, to restrictive
covenants and conditions as
shown by instrument dated
March 22, 1966, and recorded
in Book 371, Pages 533- 535,
land records of Lowndes County,
MS.
I WILL CONVEY only such title as
vested in me as Substituted
Trustee.
WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on
this 16th day of April, 2014.
Shapiro & Massey, LLC
SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE
Shapiro & Massey, LLC
1080 River Oaks Drive
Suite B-202
Flowood, MS 39232
(601)981-9299
2103 Shannon Avenue
Columbus, MS 39702
14-008787BE
Publication Dates: April 23, 30
and May 7, 2014
Legal Notices 001
SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S
NOTICE OF SALE
WHEREAS, on June 10, 2005,
Laketia Underwood, single, exe-
cuted a certain deed of trust to
Kirk Smith, Trustee for the bene-
fit of Mortgage Electronic Regis-
tration Systems, Inc., as nomi-
nee for SouthStar Funding, LLC,
a Limited Liability Company
which deed of trust is of record
in the office of the Chancery
Clerk of Lowndes County, State
of Mississippi in Book 2005 at
Page 16630 and re-recorded in
Book 2005 at Page 25214;
and
WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust
was subsequently assigned to
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company, as Trustee Under the
Pooling and Servicing agreement
dated as of November 1, 2005,
GSAMP Trust 2005-HE5 by in-
strument dated January 7, 2009
and recorded in Book 2009 at
Page 702 of the aforesaid
Chancery Clerk's office; and
WHEREAS, Deutsche Bank Na-
tional Trust Company, as
Trustee for GSAMP Trust 2005-
HE5 has heretofore substituted
Shapiro & Massey, LLC as
Trustee by instrument dated
March 7, 2014 and recorded in
the aforesaid Chancery Clerk's
Office in Book 2014 at Page
5776; and
WHEREAS, default having been
made in the terms and condi-
tions of said deed of trust and
the entire debt secured thereby
having been declared to be due
and payable in accordance with
the terms of said deed of trust,
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company, as Trustee for GSAMP
Trust 2005-HE5, being on and
the same as Deutsche Bank Na-
tional Trust Company, as
Trustee Under the Pooling and
Servicing, the legal holder of
said indebtedness, having re-
quested the undersigned Substi-
tuted Trustee to execute the
trust and sell said land and
property in accordance with the
terms of said deed of trust and
for the purpose of raising the
sums due thereunder, together
with attorney's fees, trustee's
fees and expense of sale.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Shapiro &
Massey, LLC, Substituted
Trustee in said deed of trust, will
continued next column
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTED
TRUSTEE'S SALE
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
COUNTY OF LOWNDES
WHEREAS, on March 2, 2010,
ERNEST E SMITH and FLO-
RENCE E SMITH executed a
promissory note payable to the
order of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. ;
and
WHEREAS, the aforesaid promis-
sory note was secured by a
Deed of Trust dated March 2,
2010, executed by ERNEST E
SMITH and FLORENCE E SMITH
and being recorded in Book
2010, at Page 5039 of the
records of the Chancery Clerk of
Lowndes County, Mississippi;
and which aforesaid Instrument
conveys to Jeffrey Wagner,
Trustee and to Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., as Beneficiary, the
hereinafter described property;
and
WHEREAS, Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A. , having executed a Substi-
tution of Trustee to substitute
Floyd Healy as trustee in the
place and stead of Jeffrey Wagn-
er, the same having been
recorded in Book 2014, at Page
7072 of the records of the
Chancery Clerk of Lowndes
County, Mississippi; and
WHEREAS, default having oc-
curred under the terms and con-
ditions of said promissory note
and Deed of Trust and the hold-
er having declared the entire bal-
ance due and payable; and
WHEREAS, Floyd Healy, Substi-
tuted Trustee in said Deed of
Trust will on May 22, 2014, be-
tween the hours of 11:00 a.m.
and 4:00 p.m., offer for sale
and will sell at public outcry to
the highest bidder for cash at
the Southeast front door at the
Chancery Clerk`s Office, located
at 505 2nd Avenue, Columbus,
Mississippi, the following de-
scribed property located and sit-
uated in Lowndes County, Mis-
sissippi, to wit: The land re-
ferred to in this policy is situated
in the State of Mississippi,
County of Lowndes, and de-
scribed as follows: Property lo-
cated in Lowndes County, Mis-
sissippi described as follows:
Lot 26, Eastlane Subdivision, a
subdivision according to the
map or plat thereof on file and
of record in the office of the
Chancery Clerk of Lowndes
County, Mississippi, in Plat Book
2 at page 47; reference to which
is hereby made in and of and as
a part of this description.
APN#62W140403100 Being
the same property conveyed to
Ernest Smith, tenancy not stat-
ed by deed from Robert Roy Car-
rier and wife, Delores J. Carrier,
dated 02/12/93, filed
02/25/93 and recorded in Deed
in Book 982, Page 506 in Lown-
des County Records.
Indexing Instructions: Lot 26,
Eastlane Subdivision, Lowndes
County, MS. More commonly
known as: 421 WYNHURST CT,
COLUMBUS, MS 39702-6445
Subject to the rights of way and
easement for public roads and
public utilities, and to any prior
conveyance or reservation of
mineral of every kind and char-
acter, including but not limited
to oil, gas, sand and gravel in or
under subject property.
As the undersigned Substituted
Trustee, I will convey only such
title as is vested in me under
said Deed of Trust.
This 25th day of April 2014.
Prepared by:
/s/Floyd Healy Floyd Healy
Substituted Trustee 1405 N.
Pierce, Suite 306
Little Rock, Arkansas 72207
Publish: April 30, 2014; May 7,
2014; May 14, 2014; and May
21, 2014
* Thence run South 82 degrees
15 minutes 32 seconds West
for a distance of 172.93 feet to
the Point of Beginning.
The above described parcel of
land contains 0.02 acres (1057
square feet), more or less, and
is situated in, and is a part of
Block 6 of Fractional Section
30, Township 19 North, Range
18, East Lowndes County, Mis-
sissippi.
I will only convey such title as is
vested in me as Substitute
Trustee.
WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this
25th day of April, 2014.
Michael Jedynak
Substitute Trustee
855 S Pear Orchard Rd., Ste.
404, Bldg. 400
Ridgeland, MS 39157
(318) 330-9020
lel/F14-0069
PUBLISH: 4.30.14/ 5.7.14/
5.14.14
Legal Notices 001
Substitute Trustee's
Notice of Sale
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
COUNTY OF Lowndes
WHEREAS, on the 3rd day of De-
cember, 2004, and acknowl-
edged on the 3rd day of Decem-
ber, 2004, Echols Griffin, Jr. and
Bessie O. Griffin, husband and
wife, executed and delivered a
certain Deed of Trust unto
Lenders First Choice, Trustee for
Mortgage Electronic Registration
Systems, Inc. as nominee for
Home Loan Center, Inc., Benefi-
ciary, to secure an indebtedness
therein described, which Deed of
Trust is recorded in the office of
the Chancery Clerk of Lowndes
County, Mississippi, in Mortgage
Book 2005 at Page 6950; and
WHEREAS, on the 10th day of
February, 2014, Mortgage Elec-
tronic Registration Systems, Inc.
as nominee for Home Loan Cen-
ter, Inc., assigned said Deed of
Trust unto E*Trade Bank, by in-
strument recorded in the office
of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk
in Mort Book 2014 at Page
7280; and
WHEREAS, on the 30th day of
January, 2009, a Partial Release
of Deed of Trust was filed, by in-
strument recorded in the office
of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk
in Mortgage Book 2009 at Page
1697
WHEREAS, on the 4th day of
March, 2014, the Holder of said
Deed of Trust substituted and
appointed Michael Jedynak by in-
strument recorded in the office
of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk
in Mort Book 2014 at Page
7281; and
WHEREAS, default having been
made in the payments of the in-
debtedness secured by the said
Deed of Trust, and the holder of
said Deed of Trust, having re-
quested the undersigned so to
do, on the 21st day of May,
2014, I will during the lawful
hours of between 11:00 a.m.
and 4:00 p.m., at public outcry,
offer for sale and will sell, at the
south east front door of Lown-
des County Courthouse, 505
2nd Ave. North at Columbus,
Mississippi, for cash to the high-
est bidder, the following de-
scribed land and property situat-
ed in Lowndes County, Missis-
sippi, to-wit:
The following described property
Lowndes County, Mississippi, to-
wit:
South Lot - 1.0 acres, more or
less, lying in the Southwest 1/4
of Section 30, Township 19,
Range 18 East, Lowndes Coun-
ty, Mississippi, being described
as follows: commencing on the
North right of way of the Gulf,
Mobile and Ohio Railroad at a
point 3705.6 feet Southwest
from the intersection of said
North right of way and the East
line of aforementioned Section
30, said point being the South-
west corner of the Jimmie Davis
property, run thence Southwest-
erly along said North right of way
for 1277.4 feet to the South-
west corner of the John Jordan
property; thence North for 1501
feet; thence North 03 degrees
40 minutes West for 230 feet to
the Point of Beginning; thence
continue North 03 degrees 40
minutes West along a fence for
210 feet to the Northwest cor-
ner of the 4.0 acres deeded to
Echols Griffin and wife, Bulah
Mae Griffin, recorded in Deed
Book 299 at page 1-2 in the
land records of said County;
thence North 82 degrees 27
minutes East along the North
line of said Griffin tract for 210
feet to the Northeast corner
thereof; thence South 03 de-
grees 40 minutes East along a
fence for 210 feet; thence
South 82 degrees 27 minutes
West for 210 feet to the Point of
Beginning. Subject to a 20-foot-
wide access easement for
ingress and egress over the en-
tire West 20 feet of said Lot.
North Lot - 1.0 acre, more or
less, lying in the Southwest 1/4
of Section 30, Township 19
North, Range 18 East, Lowndes
County, Mississippi, being de-
scribed as follows; commencing
on the North right of way of the
Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad
at a point 3705.6 feet South-
west from the intersection of
said North right of way and the
East line of aforementioned Sec-
tion 30, said point being the
Southwest corner of the Jimmie
Davis property, run thence
Southwesterly along said North
right of way for 1277.4 feet to
the Southwest corner of the
John Jordan property; thence
North for 1501 feet; thence
North 03 degrees 40 minutes
West 440 feet to the Point of
Beginning, said point being the
Southwest corner of the 1.0
acre deeded to Echols Griffin
and wife, Bulah Mae Griffin,
recorded in Deed Book 240 at
Page 45 in the land records of
said County; thence North along
the West line of said Griffin tract
for 210 feet to the Northwest
corner thereof, being on the
South right of way of Mississippi
Highway 182 West; thence
North 82 degrees 27 minutes
East along said South right of
way (50 feet from centerline)
and along the North line of said
Griffin tract for 210 feet to an
existing fence corner at the
Northeast corner thereof; thence
South along a fence on the East
line of said Griffin tract and
along the North line of the 4.0
acres deeded to said Echols and
Bulah Mae Griffin, recorded in
Deed Book 299 at Pages 1-2 in
the land records of said County,
for 210 feet to the Southeast
corner thereof; thence South 82
degrees 27 minutes West along
the South line of said Griffin
Tract for 210 feet to the Point of
Beginning. Subject to a 20-foot
wide access easement for
ingress and egress over the en-
tire West 20 feet of said Lot.
Source of title: Book 2003 Page
1563 (Recorded 02-13-2003)
Less and Except:
Commence at a number four
(1/2 inch diameter) rebar rod
marking the Southeast corner of
Fractional Section 30, Township
19 North, Range 18 East, Lown-
des County, Mississippi, and run
North 60 degrees 01 minutes
03 seconds West a distance of
5,491.18 feet to the present
Southern right-of-way line of Mis-
sissippi Highway No. 182 and
the Point of Beginning, said
point being located 50.00 feet
Southerly of, as measured per-
pendicularly from, the centerline
of State Project No.
(105220/201000) at station
1087+97.09 as shown on the
right-of-way acquisition maps for
said project.
* From said Point of Beginning
run along said present Southern
right-of-way line and along the
arc of a curve to the right, said
curve having a radius of
5,685.34 feet, an arc length of
174.11 feet and a long-chord
bearing North 78 degrees 31
minutes 45 seconds East for a
distance of 174.10 feet to the
East Boundary line of grantors
property;
* Thence run South 03 degrees
40 minutes 00 seconds East,
along said East property line, a
distance of 11.35 feet;
continued next column
Legal Notices 001
CITY PLANNER
THE CITY OF STARKVILLE, MS
The City of Starkville, MS is accepting applications
for the position of City Planner. The City Planner
reports to the Community Development Director and
manages, coordinates and directs the Citys major
planning efforts, from current planning to long range
projects; assists the Director in organizing, integrating
and administering the departments planning related
operations; consults with and advises professional
and technical departmental staff on planning related
activities; and performs related activities; and
performs related work as assigned.
Essential job functions include,
but are not limited to:
The City of Starkville, Mississippi, is an equal opportunity employer
and does not discriminate upon the basis of race, color, religion,
national origin, sex, age, disability, or veteran status.
The City of Starkville is a smoke-free working environment.
Required Qualications:
0radaatlca |rca a |car-,ear ccllege cr aalerslt, wlth
major course work in planning, public administration, law,
or a closely related eld or graduation from a PAB approved
program.
\t least he (5) ,ears c| prcgresslel, respcaslble
experience in municipal planning/community development,
including signicant project management experience or an
equivalent combination of training and experience.
\i0| 0ertlhcatlca ls deslred. i| act \i0| certlhed, thea
prepare, ccaalt tc, aad lapleaeat a stractared, sel|-dlrected
program of continuing professional education that leads to
certlhcatlca b, the \aerlcaa iastltate c| 0ertlhed |laaaers,
fulll other professional education obligations as the Director
aa, reqalre, sabscrlbe tc the \i0| 0cde c| lthlcs.
\a adaaced degree la plaaalag ls deslrable.
\alld :tate Drler`s Llcease cr ablllt, tc cbtala cae.
The above duties and qualications are representative and are
not all inclusive. For a more detailed job description, please
visit the City of Starkville website at www.cityofstarkville.org
The salary for this position is $55,000.
Qualied persons are invited to apply for the job
acaac,. \ppllcatlcas wlll be accepted thrcagh Ma, 5,
!01+. \ca aa, appl, ca-llae at www.clt,c|starkllle.
org or submit applications along with resume
and cover letter to:
Randy Boyd, Personnel Ofcer
City of Starkville
101 Laapkla :treet, :tarkllle, M: 3959
|hcae. (oo!) 3!3-!5!5, ext. 1!+
laall. r.bc,dCclt,c|starkllle.crg
|er|cras adaaced leel
professional planning work
relating to comprehensive
planning activities including
formulating
land use plans, development
policies and special planning
studies; identification
of goals and objectives;
formulation of
policy, plan and program
alternatives; evaluation of
alternatives; coordination
with related agencies,
departments and other
stakeholders; and
implementation of policies,
plans and programs,
including development
controls.
0ca|ers wlth aad prcldes
information to property
owners, contractors, design
professionals, and the public
regarding
conformance to standards,
plans
specifications and
codes; explains codes,
requirements and
procedures and evaluates
alternatives.
0cadacts ccaplex
planning research
projects, evaluating
alternatives, making sound
recommendations and
preparing effective technical
staff reports.
0cadacts zcalag stadles
and interprets City zoning
laws, regulations and codes.
|repares |cr aad aaaages
input for Design Review
Committee, Planning and
Zoning Commission, Board
of Adjustments and Appeals,
Historic Preservation
Commission, and Board of
Aldermen meetings.
Dra|ts aad prccesses
various municipal code
amendments.
Jhrcagh da,-tc-da, wcrk
performance displays a
thorough understanding
and application of
comprehensive planning
actlltles (lacladlag
|cra-based ccdes) aad
keeps informed of current
trends in the planning field,
including legislation,
court rulings, annexation
laws, and professional
practices and techniques;
evaluates their impact
on City operations; and
recommends any needed
policy and procedural
improvements.
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i
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t
i
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e
a
d
s
.
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/
M
S
/
LEGAL NOTICES
published in
this newspaper
and other
Mississippi
newspapers are
on the
INTERNET
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662-328-1123
robinsonrealestate.com
Real Estate Robinson
APARTMENTS & TOWNHOUSES
HOUSES (OVER 200 MANAGED)
DOWNTOWN LOFTS
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
Houses for Rent!
THE DISPATCH cdispatch.com WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014 9B
2 & 3 BR. No HUD ac-
cepted. Call 662-617-
1538 for more info
NEWLY REMODELED
3BR/2BA. Central h/a,
stove, d/washer, dbl.
garage. Exc. location.
Conv. to shopping.
$725/mo. $500 dep.
No HUD. 662-352-4776
HOUSE/APT. House:
2BR/3BA, c h/a, lg.
family rm. w/f. pl, DR,
LR, d/washer, fridge,
freezer, icemaker,
bkfast rm, lndry rm, sc.
porch, o/side storage,
fenced patio. Connected
Apt: kitch, BR/BA,
dinette. 323 13
th
St N.
Ref/app. req. No pets.
No HUD. 386-7506
COLONIAL TOWNHOUS-
ES. 2 or 3 bedroom w/
2-3 bath townhouses.
$575/$700. 662-549-
9555. Ask for Glenn or
leave message
5BR/3BA, 2 living
room. Large fully wired
shop. Available June 15.
$1000/month. Call for
sale price. 662-364-
6532
3BR/1BA. Enclosed
garage, big yard, nice
neighborhood. 3 min.
from airbase. 1058 S.
Perkins Rd. Near inter-
section of Ridge Rd. &
Perkins Rd. $675/mo.
Call 504-813-1200
2BR/2BA. Private loca-
tion convenient to CAFB.
$750/month. 1
St
& last
month payment. $500
dep. Ref. req. 574-1621
2BR/1BA. Central heat
& air. Call 228-234-
6848
2BR & 3BR/2BA. Red.
Nice neighborhood, cen-
tral h&a. No inside pets.
No HUD. $800/mo &
$600/mo. 662-328-
4719 or 329-3377
Houses For Rent:
Northside 711
EAST COLUMBUS.
30'X60' glass front
building. Formerly bar-
ber/dress/beauty shop.
Could be church or day-
care center. Good park-
ing lot. 301 North Mc-
Crary. Call 425-6505
Commercial
Property For Rent
710
OFFICE OR retail proper-
ty available in East
Columbus. Call 386-
7694 or 364-1030
Commercial
Property For Rent
710
Rivergate
Apartments
Quiet Country Living
Studio,
1&2 Bedrooms
Executive Units
Water
Furnished
Monday - Friday
8a-5p
327-6333
300 Holly Hills Rd.
Columbus
Commercial Dispatch
Chateaux
Holly Hills
Apartments
102 Newbell Rd
Columbus
Mon-Fri 8-5
328-8254
Central Heat & Air
Conditioning
Close to CAFB
Onsite Laundry Facility
All Electric/Fully Equipped
Kitchen
Lighted Tennis Court
Swimming Pool
Where Coming
Home is the
Best Part of
the Day
UPTOWN HISTORIC
Columbus. Large 1BR
apt. Secure, quiet & pri-
vate. No pets. Ref req.
$320 mo + $100 dep.
Call 662-386-6671 be-
fore 7pm
1, 2 & 3 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS &
TOWNHOUSES.
1BR/1BA Apt. $300
2BR/1BA Apt. $350-
$400. 2BR/2BA 3BR /
2BA Townhouses $550-
$800. No HUD allowed.
Lease, deposit, credit
check required. Cole-
man Realty. 329-2323
Apartments For
Rent: Other 708
SPRING SPECIAL. No
deposit req. 2BR/1BA.
North & Southside loca-
tions. Call 662-798-
4194
1 & 2BR apts. in North
& East. CH&A, all elec,
water & sewer furn, con-
venient to shopping.
$350/mo. Call 352-
4776
Apartments For
Rent: Other 708
NORTHSTAR PROPER-
TIES. 500 Louisville St.
1, 2 & 3BR avail. 662-
323-8610. 8-5pm, M-F.
northstarstarkville.com.
Basic cable included
Apartments For
Rent: Starkville
707
2BR/2BA Apts for rent.
Stove, fridge & dish-
washer. $750/mo. 356-
4700 or 386-4180
Apartments For
Rent: Caledonia
706
VIP
Rentals
Apartments
& Houses
1 Bedrooms
2 Bedrooms
3 Bedrooms
Unfurnished
1, 2 & 3 Baths
Lease, Deposi t
& Credit Check
viceinvestments.com
327-8555
307 Hospital Drive
Furnished &
Apartments For
Rent: West 705
Apartments For
Rent: Northside
701
2BR/1BA, newly remod-
eled, credit check, back-
ground check & rental
history required.
$750/mo. Call 662-
341-5664
Apartments For
Rent: South 704
1, 2, 3 BEDROOMS &
townhouses. Call for
more info. 662-549-
1953
Apartments For
Rent: East 702
NORTHWOOD TOWN-
HOUSES 2BR, 1.5BA,
CH/A, stove, fridge,
DW, WD hookups, &
private patios. Call
Robinson Real Estate
328-1123
***$99 1st Month***
Feels like home to me.
Clean 1-4BR remodeled
apts. Stove, fridge, w/d
hookups, mini-blinds.
HUD accepted. Call Mar-
lene. 662-630-2506
Apartments For
Rent: Northside
701
NICE RESTAURANT in
Bartahatchie Community
w/4 ac. of land &
ponds. Call 662-369-
0231 for more info
Business
For Sale 635
OWN YOUR OWN busi-
ness whether a busi-
ness or franchise oppor-
tunity...when it comes to
earnings or locations,
there are no guaran-
tees. A public service
message from The Dis-
patch and the Federal
Trade Commission
Business
Opportunity 605
FEMALE RABBIT. Black
& white . $20. Call 662-
386-5472
Pets 515
7 WEEK old kittens. Sol-
id gray & 2 charcoal
stripped. Adorable. 245-
1048
Free Pets 510
27 FT. above ground
pool. Pump, ladder,
chemicals & vacuum in-
cl. Needs new liner.
$500. Call 386-3036
12 X 20 METAL storage
shed, insulated, wired
for elec, ceiling fan, win-
dow unit, plywood
floors/walls & built in
tables. $2500 obo.
662-574-3027
General
Merchandise 460
662.329.2544 1/2 OFF ONE MONTHS RENT
& YOUR CHOICE OF MONTH!!!
625 31st Avenue North
(Behind K-Mart Off Hwy. 45 North)
329-2544
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Move-In Special Going
On Now!!!
NEW HOPE
GARDEN APARTMENTS
58 Old Yorkville Road 327-8372
Monday & Wednesday 3pm-6pm
1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments
Next to New Hope Schools
Stove, Refrigerator, Central Heat & Air
Onsite Laundry Facility
Lots of household
items, clothes, toys,
baby bed & stroller, pic-
nic table w/umbrella/
chairs & much more!
Sat.-May 3rd. 6-9am.
1200 Pleasant Hill Rd
476 DONNA Ln. Friday
9am - 6pm. Saturday
6am - noon
135 VALLEYBROOK Dr.
Sat. May 3, 7-11am
Furniture, small appl,
toys, clothes & more
Garage Sales:
New Hope 453
ESTATE SALE:
Starkville, MS. Mrs. Kay
Hardy. Fairfield Com-
mons. 100 Fairfield Dr.
Original art work, vin-
tage furnishings, unique
items from military trav-
els, 2 tv cabinets, nice
screen, Ducan Phyfe ta-
ble, 6 chrs, 2 brk. tbls &
chrs, patio set, tea ser-
vices, sets of china, BR
furnishings, electronics,
hhold items, acces-
sories & smalls. 5/2 &
5/2 8am-5pm, 5/4
1pm -5pm. Antiques &
Collectibles 570-5686.
View at:estatesales.net
ESTATE SALE. 548 Hwy
45 N. Frontage Rd.25%
off Tue.-Sat. 10a-6p.
Sun. 1-4pm. Rest.
equip, art work, elec,
tools & furn. 352-4460
Estate Sales 449
GORDO INDOOR Flea
Market. Something for
everyone. Over 20 ven-
dors. Antiq. furn, jugs,
churns, glassware, vinyl,
knives, antiq. washing
machine, appliances,
bird houses. You name
it, we got it. Every Fri.
7a-4p & every Sat. 7a-
12p. 205-712-0465
Flea Markets 446
SPRAY LIQUID FERTIL-
IZER. STARTING @ $35
/AC. CHICKEN LITTER
$45/AC/ WAY MORE
EFFICIENT THAN GRAN-
ULAR FERTILIZER.
WORKS ALL SEASON
LONG. 662-386-9122
4230 JOHN Deere trac-
tor w/a 1210A grain
buggy. Gattman, MS.
Call 662-256-0951
Farm Equipment &
Supplies 442
LEGACY VINTAGE
HEART PINE
Buy a piece of MSU his-
tory. Heart pine flooring
& ceiling joint salvaged
from original mess hall.
Bulk orders only.
662-435-2305
Building
Materials 424
VIBRATOR MORFAM
Jeanie Rub single speed
like chiropractors use.
99. OBO. 574-9749
TONY LITTLE Gazelle
$75. Baby boy clothes
9-12 mo. $25 for all.
Call 327-8774
BOYS SHIRTS size 7/8,
8/10 & 10/12. 35
shirts all types. $25.
Call 662-549-3884
Bargain
Column 418
WE SELL used appli-
ances & haul off your
old ones. CALL 662-
549-5860 or 662-364-
7779
Appliances 409
Schneider
National Carriers
Needs Driver
Trainees Now!
Local CDL Training
No Experience Needed
Be trained &
based locally!
Call Today
1-888-540-7364
Truck Driving 370
ARCHITECTURAL
DRAFTER needed at
Shafer & Associates for
Starkville office. Req:
AutoCAD-2007 or later,
drafting Construction
Documents, 3-5 yrs exp.
in an architect's office.
Email cover letter & re-
sume to gshafer@
shafer-architecture.com
ACCOUNTANT
ASSISTANT
to CFO needed for grow-
ing construction comp.
Job offers potential to
become CFO. Job re-
quirements: Bachelors
degree in Accounting (4
year) from an accredited
university-required.
Experience in A/R, A/P,
payroll & financial state-
ments-required Profi-
cient in Excel, Word &
Outlook-required. Profi-
cient in QuickBooks Pro-
required. Job costing,
bank reconciliations &
journal entries-required
Construction experience
(5 years)-desired. Work-
ers comp insurance
knowledge-desired.
Benefits include health
insurance & retirement
plan. Salary DOE. Send
resumes with salary re-
quirements to fax-662-
329-7008 or e-mail
ralphw@lbconstllc.com
Professional 350
RN SUPERVISOR. Wind-
sor Place has a full time
position available for a
RN to work night shift
Monday through Friday
& 7P - 7A on weekends.
Apply at Windsor Place
81 Windsor Blvd Colum-
bus 39702. 662-241-
5518
Medical &
Dental 330
NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY:
LPN or RN for a medical
office position. Email
resume to jbwobg@
crawdat.com or mail to
PO Box 9458
Columbus, MS 39705
MEDICARE NURSE
CASE MANAGER. Req:
RN w/at least 2-3 yrs.
clinical exp, in acute
care, skilled or LTC set-
ting, MDS 3.0 exp. Pri-
or Medicare/Medicaid
exp. a +. Send resume
to: 505 Jackson St, Ab-
erdeen, MS 39730.
Attn: Abra Richardson,
RN DON. EOE
MEDICAL TECHNICIAN
needed for busy clinic.
Fax resume to 328-
9918
DENTAL OFFICE looking
for dental assistant.
Prefer experience & cur-
rent radiology permit.
Please submit resume
to Box 522 c/o The
Commercial Dispatch,
PO Box 511, Columbus,
MS 39703
Medical &
Dental 330
SHEET METAL Installer
needed in the Colum-
bus, MS trade area.-
Must have at least 2 yrs
exp. Salary commensu-
rate with experience. A
drug test will be admin-
istered. Send resume &
references to: Box 521
c/o The Commercial
Dispatch, PO Box 511,
Columbus, MS 39703
General Help
Wanted 320
COLUMBUS MUNICI-
PAL School District has
the following openings:
Elementary Teachers;
Secondary Teachers all
subjects; Spanish
Teacher; Speech Pathol-
ogists; Librarians; Assis-
tant Band Director; Cur-
riculum Coordinator;
Music Teacher; District
Literacy, Writing & Data
Coach; Food Service
Workers & Managers.
Please go to our web
site @ www.columbus
cityschools.org & com-
plete our online applica-
tion. For more informa-
tion, contact: Columbus
Municipal Schools, Per-
sonnel Office, 2630
McArthur Drive, P.O. Box
1308, Columbus MS
39703-1308 or call
662-241-7409. Any va-
cancies that occur as a
result of filling these po-
sitions may be filled
from this advertise-
ment. The district re-
serves the right to fill
these positions from the
applicant pool for previ-
ous openings. CMSD
does not discriminate
on the basis of race,
color, national origin,
disability, genetics, sex,
religion, or age in the
admission to & provi-
sion of educational pro-
grams, activities & ser-
vices, or employment
opportunities & benefits
General Help
Wanted 320
REFRIGERATION TECH
needed. 5 yrs. exp. or 2
yrs. trade school & EPA
cert. req. Salary based
on exp. Benefits: 401k,
health/dental/vision &
pd. time off. Must pass
drug test. Send
resume/ref. To Box 521
c/o Commercial Dis-
patch, PO Box 511,
Columbus, MS 39703
05 TEMP. workers.
Start date 07/01/2014
ends 10/15/2014.
$9.87 P/H. 7:00 am to
1:00 pm. 35 HRS. P/W.
Walk & hand plant sug-
arcane apply fertilizer &
pesticides transplant
weed by hand repair
fences remove debris
mow grass irrigate use
hand tools. Load & Un-
load trucks. Field &
shed sanitation duties.
Minor maint. & opera-
tion of farm equip. Must
be able to lift up 50 lbs
walk stoop bend reach
or kneel repetitively for
long periods of time.
Work is done in all kinds
of weather. Once hired
worker may be required
to take a random drug
test at no cost to work-
er. Shared housing is
avail. if outside the com-
muting area (at no cost
to worker). Tools, sup-
plies & equip. will be
provided at no cost to
worker. Transp. & sub-
sist. expenses to the
work site will be provid-
ed or paid upon comple-
tion of 50% of work con-
tract or earlier, if appro-
priate & guarantee
specified in USDOL Reg.
20 CFR 655.122(i) JOB
contract. Contact local
MS Job Center REF: Job
order #486502 Job of-
fered by Olivia Planta-
tion, Inc., Plaquemine,
LA 70764
03 TEMP. farm workers.
Job Start date
07/01/2014 ends
12/15/2014. $9.87
P/H. 7:00 am to 1:00
pm. 35 HRS. P/W. M- F
some weekends. Job
Duties: Cultivate, maint.
water/irrigate dig ditch-
es remove trash trees
bush cut grass repair
fence form rows fertilize
& weed by hand.
Plant/Harvest: wheat
hay cotton soybeans
corn. Repair fence form
rows using hand tools.
Walk behind bailer trac-
tor throwing bails by
hand & unload by hand.
Minor Maint. & opera-
tion farm equip. sanita-
tion duties. Load & un-
load trucks. Able to lift
up to 50lbs walk stoop
bend reach to ground
level or kneel repetitive-
ly. Work is done in all
kinds of weather. Once
hired worker may be re-
quired to take a random
drug test at no cost to
the worker. Shared
housing is avail. IF out-
side the commuting
area at no cost to work-
er. Tools, supplies &
equip. will be provided
at no cost to worker.
Transp. & subsist. ex-
penses to the work site
will be provided or paid
upon completion of 50%
of work contract or earli-
er, if appropriate &
guarantee specified in
USDOL Reg. 20 CFR
655.122(i) JOB con-
tract. Contact Local MS
Job Center. REF: Job or-
der # 486537 Job of-
fered by Glaser Farms
Partnership work-sites
located Oscar, LA
70762, Fordouche, LA
70732 & Maringouin,
LA 70757
General Help
Wanted 320
ACCOUNTING
ASSISTANT
needed for growing con-
struction company. Job
requirements: Asso-
ciates degree from an
accredited college & 2
years experience in con-
struction industry, or 5
years experience in con-
struction industry in an
accounting environment-
required. A/P, job cost-
ing & payroll-required
Proficient in Excel, Word
& Outlook-required.
Assistance with project
management-desired
Benefits include health
insurance & retirement
plan. Hourly pay. DOE
Send resumes with
salary requirements to
fax-662-329-7008 or
e-mail ralphw@lbconstl
lc.com
Clerical &
Office 305
A local company has an immediate opening for a Safety Coordinator at
our site in Hamilton, MS. This individual will need to be self-motivated
and able to demonstrate tact and diplomacy in dealing with other
management personnel, as well as hourly employees.
Responsibilities will include:
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Sudoku
YESTERDAYS ANSWER
Sudoku is a number-
placing puzzle based on
a 9x9 grid with several
given numbers. The object
is to place the numbers
1 to 9 in the empty spaces
so that each row, each
column and each 3x3 box
contains the same number
only once. The difIcul|y
level increases from
Monday to Sunday.
Easy money
WHATZIT ANSWER
ACROSS
1 Gaiters
6 Morning time
10 Humidor item
11 Tenor Lanza
12 Guinness and
Baldwin
13 Squashed circles
14 Take a breather
15 Clef type
16 Cool
cucumber
17 Small rug
18 Utter
19 Prison, in slang
22 Sentence
subject, usually
23 Taj Mahal city
26 Wacko
29 Unrened
32 Singer Tillis
33 Blend
34 Tooth coating
36 Lisa
37 Peripheral
device
38 Column type
39 Coat of arms
40 Calendar entry
41 Final, for one
42 Greek sorceress
DOWN
1 Egyptian emblem
2 Enters en masse
3 Way back
4 Diplomatic skill
5 Fourth-yr.
students
6 Humorist Barry
7 Saudi natives
8 Writer Cather
9 Like a snoop
11 Canadian-born
comic
15 Letter after
sigma
17 Commemorative
statue
20 Center
21 Sense of self
24 Unconrmed
25 Foolish
27 Salon stuff
28 Track bet
29 Gasp, say
30 Tennis star
Agassi
31 Walks in water
35 Largest amount
36 Chess turn
38 Rep.s rival
What do you need to plant the seeds
for a successful business ofce space, equipment,
transportation, employees, CUSTOMERS?
You can nd it all in The Dispatch Classieds!
Call to place your ad today.
from the ground up!
Grow
your business
662-328-2424 cdispatch.com/classieds
Five Questions
1 The
Queens
2 Tiananmen
Square
3 Six
4 Tears
5 15
REUSE
THE NEWS
Recycle
this
NEWSPAPER
THE DISPATCH www.cdispatch.com 10B WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2014
2009 ROCKWOOD Sig-
nature Series Ultra
Light. 2 slide-outs (BR &
kitchen), 29 ft.
$14,000. Call 356-
6149 or 574-1280
2006 HONDA 1300
(Harley style) 38,974
mi. Black & Silver,
w/lots of chrome, 2
sets of saddle bags.
$5,000 Call 328-4355.
Motorcycles &
ATV's 940
Autos For Sale 915
RV CAMPER & mobile
home lots. Full hookup
w/sewer. 2 locations
W&N from $75/wk -
$260/mo. 662-251-
1149 or 601-940-1397
2013 WINDJAMMER
34 ft. camper. 3 slides,
electric fireplace.
$26,500. Exc. cond.
Call 242-0126 after
6pm
Campers &
RV's 930
2003 FORREST River
Sierra. 30 ft, 5
th
wheel,
sup. slide, new tires,
awning, blinds. Price re-
duced. Ex. Cond.
$12,500. 364-1575 (c)
Campers &
RV's 930
1999 FORD Mustang
GT. Some body damage.
Good drive train.
$2000. Call 662-570-
3493
Autos For Sale 915
QUIET COUNTRY living.
1792 sq. ft. 3BR/2BA
mobile home on 20
acres in New Hope.
Needs repairs. As is.
$45,000. All offers con-
sidered. Call or text
662-574-8421
NICE 28X48 3BR/2BA
Southern Double wide .
Painted & new carpet
t/o. Must see! Delivered
& set up for $25,900.
Call 662-760-2120
I PAY top dollar for
used mobile homes.
Call 662-296-5923
3BR/2BA. 2002 40x32
Clayton mobile home.
For sale by owner. Must
be moved! Wood floors
& appliances included.
Call 662-574-3027
28X80 DOUBLEWIDE.
5BR/3BA. Home needs
few repairs, but tons of
space & ready to sell.
Home has fireplace, big
kitchen, & rooms every-
where. $23,500 for
home as is. Call 662-
397-9339
28X80 5BR/3BA vinyl
siding/shingle roof, new
cabinets, f.p. Home
needs a little TLC.
$21,500. Must be
moved. Call 662-296-
5923
Mobile Homes
For Sale 865
RIVERFRONT
PROPERTY
Camp Pratt
Call 574-3056
Ray McIntyre
Blythewood Realty
LOCATED IN desirable
Caledonia School Dis-
trict. 27.5 ac. +/-. Beau-
tiful land w/stream,
hardwoods, agriculture
& pasture land. Lg. barn
on property in good
cond. Ideal hunting
property or home-place.
Priced to sell.
$119,900. 662-574-
9190. Serious inq. only
SPRING SPECIAL. 2
acre lots. Good/bad
credit. $995 down.
$197/mo. Eaton Land.
662-726-9648
SPRING SPECIAL. 2
acre lots. Good/bad
credit. $995 down.
$197/mo. Eaton Land.
662-726-9648
BANK
APPROVED SALE
Smith Lake, AL. Deep
Water Dockable Year
Round! Very Gentle
Slope $69,900. Buy
pennies on the dollar,
open & wooded parcel
at the end of a cul de
sac. Surrounded by a
Natural Forest. Call
866-221-3747
68.5 ACRES close to
city limits. Timber, red
dirt, road frontage.
$550,000. Realtor
owned. 662-312-5184
Lots &
Acreage 860
39.5 AC. Mature pines.
Great hunting land. 5
min. East of MS line in
Pickens Co. AL. $88k.
Call 327-1402
35 ACRES in N.H. w/24
yr. old pines. $3500/
ac. Will divide into 10
ac. plots. 915 6
th
St. S.
$3500. 2.7 ac. on
Tiffany Ln. $13k. Owner
fin. avail. 386-6619
35 ACRES for sale
in Caledonia. Priced at
$110,000. Call Kimber-
ly Reed with Crye-Leike
662-364-1423 or 662-
328-1150
1.5 & 2.5 ACRES on
Ponderosa. Reasonably
priced. Call 662-328-
2207
Lots &
Acreage 860
WANTED TO BUY. All
types of real estate. In-
vestors pay CASH. Sell-
ers pay no fee. Call
Long & Long 662-328-
0770
BUILDING THAT can be
used for office or studio
apart. Fenced in back
yard. $39,000. On Jess
Lyons Rd. across from
golf course. 549-7495
BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM
3 story power plus
home in West Point.
Priced reduced on this
5BR/3BA on 5.7 ac. lot.
3700 sf, wrap around
porch, dbl car garage,
hardwood floors, family
room, DR, great room,
lots of storage & energy
efficient. 18 min. from
Severstal. Call Kimberly
@ Crye-Leike 364-1423
3BR/2BA. LR, formal
DR, kitchen, breakfast
rm, lg. den, fireplace, lg.
Sun room, 1 yr. old cen-
tral unit, new fridge,
beautiful hw floors,
basement, new roof,
completely remodeled.
2540 sf. 331 5
th
St NW
Vernon, AL. $159k. Call
662-574-2820
3-4BR/3.5BA, 2900 sf.
plus full basement, nice
wooded lot. $164k.
Neg. Vernon, AL. Call
205-695-5070
Houses For Sale:
Other 850
ALL AREAS. 3BR/2BA.
Low down pmt. WAC.
Call Randy 1-855-847-
6808
Houses For Sale:
Starkville 846
3BR/3.5BA. 3000 sq.
ft, 13 yrs. old. 2 mi.
from N.H. School on 2
ac. w/wired shop.
$234,900. Call for view-
ing appt. 662-386-7682
Houses For Sale:
New Hope 825
2BR HOUSE for sale
w/mother-in-law suite.
Vacant for several
years. $28,500. Call
251-3352
Houses For Sale:
East 820
LOVELY UPPER side
home. Very cozy & nice
older home in Bunker
Hills. Sits on 1.5 private
acres & close to shop-
ping, restaurants,
schools & entertain-
ment. 3BR/2BA, 2 living
areas, breakfast area &
dining room. Large
shop/storage building
w/drop shed. Lots of
storage. Owner is an
agent with Crye-Leike
Properties Unlimited
BUYING
OR
SELLING
For all your real estate
needs, call DJ Williams,
Century 21 Doris Hardy
& Assoc.,LLC. 662-386-
3132 or 662-327-8596
2 HOUSES off Military
Rd. @ reduced prices.
3BR/2BA/2200 sq ft. &
3BR/1BA/1400 sq ft. &
1.5 acres. Call Dean
662-328-8679
Houses For Sale:
Northside 815
OFFICE BUILDING for
rent. Great loc. on Blue-
cutt Rd. Lg. front recept.
area, 3 off. & conf. rm,
w/ ample parking. 662-
242-7547 for more info
Commercial
Property 805
1100 SF, corner of
Bluecutt Rd. & Chubby
Dr. Call 662-327-2020
1100 SF, corner of
Bluecutt Rd. & Chubby
Dr. Call 662-327-2020
Office Spaces 730
Houses For Sale:
Other 850
RENT A fully equipped
camper w/utilities & ca-
ble from $135/wk -
$495/month. 3 Colum-
bus locations. Call 601-
940-1397
MOBILE HOMES. By the
wk/mo. 2BR start @
$100/wk or $325/mo.
$99 move in special for
monthly rentals! Call
Shawnie 662-315-8595
3BR/2 BA, Double-
wide, wall air condition-
ing, natural gas heat;
Refrigerator, stove &
dishwasher provided.
Front porch & added
back storage room. Lo-
cated on one acre of
land on Wolf Rd. CMSD.
662-364-2799
2BR/1BA, 3BR/2BA
Bill Walker Dr. 3BR/
2BA Jess Lyons Rd.
2BR/1BA Gunshoot Rd.
$350-$500/mo. Lease
& Dep. No Pets. Open 8-
5 Mon-Fri. Weathers
Rentals 662-327-5133
Mobile Homes
For Rent 725
2BR/1BA. Front porch,
walking distance to
Caledonia schools.
$300/mo. plus dep. &
lease. Call 352-4776
Mobile Homes
For Rent 725
3BR. SEC. 8 accepted.
Ref. req. Call 662-425-
4491 or 327-6802 after
4pm
Houses For Rent:
Other 718
1/2BR. IDEAL for 2
people. Lg LR, dining
room carport, & kit/util.
rm w/ washer/dryer
hookup. Call 662-352-
1261
Houses For Rent
West: 715
Houses For Sale:
Other 850
EAST EMERALD Es-
tates. 3BR/2BA, double
carport, outside
storage, fenced back
yard. RENOVATED.
$850 mo. Lease, de-
posit, references. Avail-
able June 1. Call Long &
Long, 328-0770. NO
HUD
Houses For Rent:
East 712
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