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Local students to participate in Kick Butts Day

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Local students will unite against tobacco Wednesday as they join thousands of young people nationwide to mark Kick Butts Day, an annual day of youth activism sponsored by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. More than 1,000 events are planned across the United States (see below for a list of local events).

This year, kids are focused on kicking Juul, the e-cigarette that has become enormously popular among youth across the country.

While cigarette smoking among high school students nationwide has fallen to 8.1 percent, e-cigarette use among high schoolers rose by an alarming 78 percent in 2018 alone – to 20.8 percent of the student population. In 2018, more than 3.6 million middle and high school students used e-cigarettes. U.S. public health leaders have called youth e-cigarette use an “epidemic” that is addicting a new generation of kids.

In Mississippi, 10.3 percent of high school students use e-cigarettes, while 9.4 percent smoke cigarettes. Tobacco use claims 5,400 lives in Mississippi and costs the state $1.2 billion in health care bills each year.

On Kick Butts Day, youth and health advocates are calling for strong action to reverse the youth e-cigarette epidemic. In particular, they are calling on the Food and Drug Administration, states and cities to ban all flavored tobacco products, including e-cigarettes in flavors like cotton candy, gummy bear and mango that tempt kids. Other effective strategies to reduce youth tobacco use include laws raising the tobacco sale age to 21, significant tobacco tax increases, comprehensive smoke-free laws and well-funded tobacco prevention programs.

In Mississippi, youth advocates are urging state lawmakers to raise the cigarette tax by $1.50 per pack.

“This year on Kick Butts Day, we’re challenging policy makers at every level to do their part to reverse the youth e-cigarette epidemic and continue driving down youth tobacco use,” said Matthew L. Myers, President of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “We cannot allow e-cigarettes, especially Juul, to addict another generation and reverse the enormous progress we’ve made in reducing youth tobacco use.”

Key facts about e-cigarettes include:

  • The main cause of the youth e-cigarette epidemic is Juul, which looks like a computer flash drive, is small and easy to hide, delivers a powerful dose of nicotine, and comes in kid-friendly flavors like mango, fruit and mint. According to the manufacturer, each Juul “pod” (cartridge) delivers as much nicotine as a pack of 20 cigarettes.
  • E-cigarettes pose serious health risks for kids. The U.S. Surgeon General has found that youth use of nicotine in any form – including e-cigarettes – is unsafe, causes addiction and can harm the developing adolescent brain, affecting learning, memory and attention. Studies also show that young people who use e-cigarettes are more likely to become cigarette smokers.

On Kick Butts Day, youth join in creative events including signing pledges to be tobacco-free, learning about the harmful chemicals in tobacco products and organizing rallies at state capitols.

In Carthage, the GenFree Team and Leake County Youth Advocates, the Leake County Career and Technology Center in Carthage will host a day of jeopardy games and prizes to raise awareness about the harmful effects of smoking. Events will be held beginning at 8:00 am,

Community members from Holmes County Consolidated School District in Lexington will participate in a “Give the Boot to Butts” anti-smoking rally, hosted by the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Mississippi Delta Lexington Unit, to promote a smoke-free community. Participants and attendees are invited to wear their boots of choice while saying no to tobacco. The event will begin at 4:00 PM.

 

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Crash on College Sends One to Hospital (Video)

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At 6:10 pm Kosciusko Police, MedStat EMS along with City Fire and Rescue responded to a report of a two vehicle MVA. The caller said it was located on College Street near East Street.

According Emergency personnel MedStat transported one patient to Baptist-Attala complaining of head pain.

Kosciusko Water and Light was called to the scene to check a pole that was struck in the crash to determine if repairs were needed.

There has been no word on the cause of the accident. The Kosciusko Police Department will be in charge of the investigation.

Emergency personnel cleared the scene at 7:13 pm.

 

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Today in history: March 20

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Today is Wednesday, March 20, the 79th day of 2019. There are 286 days left in the year. Spring arrives at 5:58 p.m. Eastern time.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On March 20, 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people were killed, more than 5,500 others sickened when packages containing the deadly chemical sarin were leaked on five separate subway trains by Aum Shinrikyo (ohm shin-ree-kyoh) cult members.

On this date:

In 1413, England’s King Henry IV died; he was succeeded by Henry V.

In 1760, a 10-hour fire erupted in Boston, destroying 349 buildings and burning 10 ships, but claiming no lives.

In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte returned to Paris after escaping his exile on Elba, beginning his “Hundred Days” rule.

In 1854, the Republican Party of the United States was founded by slavery opponents at a schoolhouse in Ripon (RIH’-puhn), Wisconsin.

In 1942, U.S. Army Gen. Douglas MacArthur, having evacuated the Philippines at the order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, told reporters in Terowie, Australia: “I came out of Bataan, and I shall return.”

In 1952, the U.S. Senate ratified, 66-10, a Security Treaty with Japan.

In 1969, John Lennon married Yoko Ono in Gibraltar.

In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was convicted of armed robbery for her part in a San Francisco bank holdup carried out by the Symbionese Liberation Army. (Hearst was sentenced to seven years in prison; she was released after serving 22 months, and was pardoned in 2001 by President Bill Clinton.)

In 1977, voters in Paris chose former French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac to be the French capital’s first mayor in more than a century.

In 1985, Libby Riddles of Teller, Alaska, became the first woman to win the Iditarod Trail Dog Sled Race.

In 1990, singer Gloria Estefan suffered a broken back when a truck rear-ended her tour bus on a snow-covered highway in Pennsylvania. (Surgeons implanted titanium rods to stabilize her spine, and Estefan was able to make a comeback after months of intensive physical therapy.)

In 2004, Hundreds of thousands of people worldwide rallied against the U.S.-led war in Iraq on the first anniversary of the start of the conflict. The U.S. military charged six soldiers with abusing inmates at the Abu Ghraib prison.

Ten years ago: President Barack Obama reached out to the Iranian people in a video with Farsi subtitles, saying the U.S. was prepared to end years of strained relations if Tehran toned down its bellicose rhetoric; Iranian officials dismissed the overture, saying they wanted concrete change from Washington before they were ready to enter a dialogue. Pope Benedict XVI, visiting Angola, condemned sexual violence against women in Africa and chided those countries on the continent that approved abortion.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama ordered economic sanctions against nearly two dozen members of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle and a major bank that provided them support, raising the stakes in an East-West showdown over Ukraine. Four gunmen opened fire in a crowded restaurant frequented by foreigners at the Serena Hotel in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing nine people.

One year ago: Investigators pursuing a suspected serial bombing in Austin, Texas, shifted attention to a FedEx shipping center near San Antonio, where a package had exploded. In a phone call to Vladimir Putin, President Donald Trump offered congratulations on Putin’s re-election victory; a senior official said Trump had been warned in briefing materials that he should not congratulate Putin.

Today’s Birthdays: Singer Dame Vera Lynn is 102. Producer-director-comedian Carl Reiner is 97. Actor Hal Linden is 88. Former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney (muhl-ROO’-nee) is 80. Country singer Don Edwards is 80. Basketball Hall of Fame coach Pat Riley is 74. Country singer-musician Ranger Doug (Riders in the Sky) is 73. Hockey Hall of Famer Bobby Orr is 71. Blues singer-musician Marcia Ball is 70. Actor William Hurt is 69. Rock musician Carl Palmer (Emerson, Lake and Palmer) is 69. Rock musician Jimmie Vaughan is 68. Country musician Jimmy Seales (Shenandoah) is 65. Actress Amy Aquino (ah-KEE’-noh) is 62. Movie director Spike Lee is 62. Actress Theresa Russell is 62. Actress Vanessa Bell Calloway is 62. Actress Holly Hunter is 61. Rock musician Slim Jim Phantom (The Stray Cats) is 58. Actress-model-designer Kathy Ireland is 56. Actor David Thewlis is 56. Rock musician Adrian Oxaal (James) is 54. Actress Jessica Lundy is 53. Actress Liza Snyder is 51. Actor Michael Rapaport is 49. Actor Alexander Chaplin is 48. Actor Cedric Yarbrough is 46. Actress Paula Garces is 45. Actor Michael Genadry is 41. Actress Bianca Lawson is 40. Comedian-actor Mikey Day is 39. Actor Nick Blood (TV: “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.”) is 37. Rock musician Nick Wheeler (The All-American Rejects) is 37. Actor Michael Cassidy is 36. Actress-singer Christy Carlson Romano is 35. Actress Ruby Rose is 33. Actress Barrett Doss is 30.

Thought for Today: “Every spring is the only spring, a perpetual astonishment.” — Ellis Peters (Edith Pargeter), British author (1913-1995)

The Associated Press.

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Two teens arrested for possessing handguns

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Kosciusko Chief of Police Herbert Dew says his officers have arrested two teenagers in one month’s timing for possessing handguns.

According to Dew, the first incident happened Friday, Feb. 22 on Aponaug Rd. in Kosciusko.

Officers received a call of a teenager walking down the road with a handgun. When an officer arrived, he asked the suspect if he had a gun. At that point, the teenager pulled out the weapon, in a non-threatening manner, to show the officer. The 16-year-old suspect was taken into custody without incident.

Dew said the next arrest came on Friday, March 15 at Aponaug Park on W Jefferson St. in Kosciusko. Officers were called there due to a large gathering of cars and teenagers for a reported fight.

Dew and other officers stopped several cars from leaving and were able to find the two suspects involved in the altercation. When the teens were asked to remove their hands from their pockets, officers spotted the gun in the front pocket of a hoodie. Officers then took one 14-year-old into custody.

Also on March 15, Dew said his office received reported of a 13-year-old being shot in the eye with a BB gun.

After the suspects were arrested, the cases were passed to Youth Court.

Dew went on to say that these incidents seem to be happening more often and encouraged parents to take action.

“Know what your kids are doing and know where they are at,” said Dew. “If you have weapons, make sure they are not accessible to children or teenagers. There are certain situations where a juvenile can possess a weapon, such as hunting, but it’s not okay on the city streets and parks of Kosciusko, Mississippi.”

With several recent high profile cases across the United States of officers shooting citizens due to mistaking BB guns or toys guns as real firearms, Dew said it’s more important than ever to speak to kids and teenagers about gun safety.

“This is a trend that we hope doesn’t continue. Both of these incidents turned out okay, but it could have been really bad.”

Visit kidshealth.org/gun-safety for information on how to speak with children and teenagers on gun safety.

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Three cars set on fire in Winston County

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The Winston County Sheriff’s Department is looking for answers after three cars on one property were burned.

The sheriff’s department was dispatched to a fire at a home on Sylvester Hudson Road Mar. 13. When they arrived, they found three cars burned.

Sheriff Jason Pugh says investigators are now looking for who is responsible.

“The residence is at the end of the road, in a fairly isolated location and we feel like somebody was definitely there for that particular reason, to do harm to that resident,” says Sheriff Pugh.

Pugh says the owner of the cars was not home at the time, but returned as the cars were still burning.

“We actually don’t know too much at this time. The owner of the vehicles does not know of any reason anyone would want to harm his property like that,” says Pugh.

Pugh says deputies are following a few leads, but encourages anyone who might have seen something suspicious to speak up.

“This is a community that is fairly quiet. We don’t really have any problems there so we are concerned that somebody would want to do damage to this individual’s property,” says Pugh.

All three cars were destroyed in the fire.

Crimestoppers is offering a reward for any information that leads to an arrest and conviction in the investigation.

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Minute with the Mayor: March 20 (audio)

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This week on Minute with the Mayor….

Kosciusko Mayor Jimmy Cockroft stopped by the Breezy 101 studio Wednesday morning for Minute with the Mayor.

This week the mayor gives an update on funding for the S Huntington Street project and improvements at the airport.

Minute with the Mayor airs on Breezy 101 during “Good Morning Kosciusko” the day following each meeting of the Kosciusko Board of Aldermen.

The segment is also available here at Breezynews.com and the Boswell Media YouTube channel Wednesdays following “Good Morning Kosciusko.”

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drugs, DUI and other arrests in Leake County

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To view mugshots of arrests click here.

  • Charles L Blair, 42, 10161 Road 3405, Philadelphia, driving under the influence (DUI) other substance, following too closely, MHP
  • Angela R Cumberland, 51, 533 Blount Street, Philadelphia, capias – possession of marijuana, capias – possession of oxycodone, capias – possession of meth, capias – possession of acetaminophen, capias – possession of amphetamine, capias – possession of diazepam, Leake Co. Sherriff’s Dept
  • Johnny Felton, 50, 401 Hayes Street, Carthage, felony fleeing, no insurance, no drivers license, failure to yield to blue lights, reckless driving, improper turn, disregard for a traffic device, Carthage PD
  • Kimberly Hart, 37, 400 MLK, Carthage, capias – felony driving under the influence (DUI) 3rd offense, Leake Co. Sheriff’s Dept.
  • Pat A Jones, 62, 440 Collier Ave, Jackson, driving with a suspended license, speeding, Carthage PD
  • Jose Mojica, 32, 4900 Plaza Drive, Montgomery, AL, driving under the influence (DUI) 1st offense, no drivers license, Attala Co. Sheriff’s Dept.
  • JJ L Riser, 47, 599 Dan Boone Road, Carthage, capias burglary of a dwelling, capias – auto burglary, Leake Co. Sheriff’s Dept.
  • Carrie M Strickland, 39, 3798 Standing Pine Road, Carthage, capias – possession of meth, capias – possession of marijuana, Leake Co. Sheriff’s Dept.
  • Lee Woodall, 50, 215 Spruce Street, Walnut Grove, discharging/displaying a firearm, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, Walnut Grove PD
  • Chylan L Williams, 18, 2078 Attala Road 4132, Sallis, simple assault, leaving the scene, no drivers license, contempt of court, Kosciusko PD

All suspects are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The mugshots and arrest records published are not an indication of guilt, or evidence that an actual crime has been committed. Arrests made by the Leake County Sheriff’s Department, Carthage PD, Walnut Grove PD, Attala County Sheriff’s Department, Kosciusko PD. (Leake County Correctional Facility images)

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Breezy101 Church Bulletin

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  • Mt Pilgrim M.B. Church of McCool is holding its annual Spring Revival. Services will be March 18-22 at 7:00 pm nightly. Speakers for week will be Monday & Tuesday: Pastor Nelson Forrest of Dumas Chapel U.M.Church, Winona, MS. Wednesday: Evangelist Ethel Primer, New Jerusaelm M.B.Church, Carthage, MS.under the leadership of Pastor Vorneal Lipsey.  Thursay & Friday: Pastor Willie Macon of Little Calvary M.B. Church, Louisville, MS. Your prayers and support are truly appreciated.
  • Bethlehem Church of Sallis will have Youth Revival April 1st-3rd at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome, you may come any night of your choice. Thanking You in advance Pastor Darrell Brooks and the Bethlehem Church Family.
  • Potter’s House of Prayer Church in Weir, MS is sponsoring, CHOCTAW COUNTY Igniting the Fire Gospel Tent Revival.  The dates will be April 11th – 14th beginning at 7 pm nightly.  Location will be 2039 MS HWY 12 in Weir, MS, just across from Henson Mini Mart. Inspirational Speakers include:  Pastor Burkey Thompson, of Macedonia MBC of Sallis,  Apostle Steve Lockley of DeKalb Christ Assemble of DeKalb, Pastor Danya Turner of Mt. Sinai MBC of Louisville, and Dr. Anthony McIntosh, Pastor of Mt. Bell MBC of Louisville. The Evangelist for the week will be Minister Luther Martin of Luther Martin Evangelistic Association of Flowood. For further information contact Lillie Anderson @ 662-420-4462.

 If you have a church announcement that you would like to be published in this bulletin, please click here.

 

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MS Songwriter of the Year 2019 applications available now (video)

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Applications for the Boswell Media Mississippi Songwriter of the year 2019 are available now on Breezynews.com and Kicks96news.com.

This year’s event is set for Saturday, June 29 at the Skylight Grill in downtown Kosciusko.

The top 15 finalists will perform their chosen song that night for a chance to win a weekend in Muscle Shoals, AL.

The winning song will be professionally recorded and produced at Wishbone Studio and then played on air across the Boswell Media family of stations.

The 2019 Boswell Media MS Songwriter of the Year competition is presented by Prairie Farms and The Mississippi Arts and Entertainment Experience.

Applications can be found here.

The deadline to enter is Monday, May 17.

For more information, call 662-289-1050.

Vide0: 2018 Boswell Media MS Songwriter of the Year speaks with Breezy 101’s Breck Riley about his time in Muscle Shoals, his award winning song “Raised by the Radio,” and the competition as a whole

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Jury awards $250,000 to Choctaw County woman jailed without seeing a judge

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A Mississippi jury awarded $250,000 in damages Tuesday to a woman jailed 96 days without seeing a judge, a case spotlighting how Mississippi still struggles to provide access to lawyers or bail to people jailed before trial.

The verdict included $200,000 in damages against Choctaw County Sheriff Cloyd Halford and $50,000 against the county. It was handed down Tuesday after a two-day trial in federal court in Aberdeen. The jury was only determining how much Jauch was owed, after U.S. District Court Judge Sharion Aycock earlier ruled that the county and Halford were liable.

Jessica Jauch was originally arrested on traffic charges in 2012 and held in Choctaw County after being served with a drug indictment. While in jail, she was forced to temporarily sign over her daughter’s custody rights to her mother. After finally seeing a judge, she was appointed a public defender and quickly made bail. Eventually, she was cleared of the drug charge after undercover video didn’t show her committing any crime.

Daniel Griffith, a lawyer who represented Choctaw County in the trial, said Jauch testified that other women who were arrested would bond out quickly. Jauch’s own lawyer, Israel Fleitas, declined comment. Griffith said Halford and Jauch shook hands while jurors were deliberating Tuesday.

“I can tell you the sheriff is a good man,” Griffith said.

Griffith said the county government’s damages will be paid by insurance. He wasn’t sure if Halford is insured or if he will have to pay his share of the money personally. Jurors awarded the $250,000 as compensatory damages, rejecting additional money for punitive damages.

Halford had argued that he didn’t have to take Jauch before a judge until court met because she’d already been indicted on a felony drug charge, thus establishing probable cause for her detention. The problem was that in Choctaw County, like many rural Mississippi counties, circuit court only meets twice a year, and the next meeting was months away.

The county and Halford also argued the illegal detention was the fault of failures by state court judges. It’s unlikely Jauch would have ever collected money from judges because they’re generally immune from lawsuits.

Aycock originally agreed with the county, dismissing Jauch’s case in 2016. But the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was sharply critical of Aycock’s ruling, reinstating Jauch’s case in 2017 and calling her detention “unjust and unfair” and “alien to our law.” The full 5th Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear further appeals by the county.

Mississippi has continuing issues with people being arrested before trial and held for months or years with little access to a lawyer or bail. Since Jauch was arrested, the state Supreme Court has enacted new rules of criminal procedure last year that are showing some progress in keeping poor people from being stuck in jail without a lawyer or bail. Those rules say that, among other things, those arrested before being indicted are supposed to appear before a judge within two business days, and anyone arrested after indictment must be arraigned within 30 days.

Griffith, who represents a number of local governments, said those rules are making a difference, along with the publicity surrounding Jauch’s case and others in which governments have been sued for jailing people.

“Nobody wants to be sitting where the sheriff was sitting,” Griffith said.

He said Choctaw County jailers are now sending a list of inmates who need a court appearance to a judge every day. Ultimately, though, Griffith said Mississippi needs a statewide system of public defenders, instead of the part-time defenders who are assigned in most counties. Lawmakers failed to act this year on such a proposal put forward by a task force. (AP)

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Servpro Coaches Show: March 20 (audio)

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Before the Whippets take the baseball diamond, you can hear a preview of the week’s games during the Servpro Coaches Show.

This week Whippet Head Coach Jonathan Jones recaps the team’s wins over Scott Central and Calhoun City and discusses the new alumni-student lounge built in the off season beside the home dugout.

The Servpro Coaches Show airs on Breezy 101 Thursdays at 7:35 am and 3:35 pm.

The show is also available here Breezynews.com and the Boswell Media YouTube channel Thursdays following “Good Morning Kosciusko.”

 

 

 

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Steve Azar to headline 2nd annual New Narrative Festival at MSU

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Country music star and Mississippi’s Cultural Ambassador Steve Azar will headline the second annual New Narrative Festival and Conference at The Mill at MSU in Starkville this weekend.

Mississippi State is well-known for being a welcoming place where students, faculty, staff, alumni and visitors can enjoy year-round programming that is both educational and entertaining.

John E. Forde, professor and head of MSU’s communication department, said storytelling is at the heart of the many ways the human experience is documented and conveyed, from social media and visual arts to literature and music. Building on the success of last April’s inaugural festival, this year’s event features speakers and performers who will focus on the changing nature of communication.

“The Mississippi State New Narrative Festival and Conference is a time to explore and celebrate the contributions of business leaders, musicians, authors, entrepreneurs, educators, sports figures and historians who have impacted and continue to shape the way we show, tell and share stories,” Forde said. “Mississippi always has influenced these changes in a major fashion through shaping multiple narratives in traditional and emerging platforms, and the event highlights many of those contributions.

“We also will have a Mississippi State and Starkville flavor with fun, food, music and old-fashioned Southern hospitality. We hope our attendees will return to this event for years to come,” Forde added.

Steve Soltis, former senior director of corporate executive and employee communication for Coca-Cola, principal of MAS Leadership Communication, and MSU communication department advisory board member, is credited with the conception of MSU’s New Narrative Festival and Conference. He also serves on the event’s planning committee.

“As we look at the transformative power of the New Narrative – the technologies, entrepreneurs, channels and creatives that are dramatically changing the way we show, tell and share stories – I think we have an opportunity to position Mississippi State University as a proponent for responsible, truthful and ethical communication,” Soltis said.  “It’s up to leaders like those who are coming to our conference, and to universities like MSU, to be the conveners and champions of a New Narrative that is transforming lives, getting to the truth, and advancing humanity.”

Registration is $185 for both days or $95 per day for adults. The MSU student rate is $45 for the entire two-day event or $25 per day, including non-MSU students at any level. Along with admission to speaker sessions and musical entertainment, the cost includes lunches, receptions with food and drink both days, a T-shirt and tote bag. For more registration information, visit www.newnarrativefestival.msstate.edu/registration.

In addition to the College of Arts and Sciences’ communication department, the New Narrative Festival and Conference is supported by the Office of the President, Department of English, MSU Libraries and its Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library, the College of Arts and Sciences, Information Technology Services, and the Mississippi Alliance for Women in Computing.

Festival highlights include:

—“Global Food Security and the New Agricultural Narrative” session on “Mississippi State’s Research and International Impact” by MSU President Mark E. Keenum. Chef Robert St. John, an author and founder of the Hattiesburg nonprofit Extra Table, also will present “Purpose, Values and Vision: Communication Lessons from the Farm to Table Movement.”

—“Putting Community Back into Communication: A Millennial’s Perspective” session, presented by Denise Horn, director of corporate communication for Turner Broadcasting System in New York.

—“Bringing Mississippi’s Message to Washington, D.C.” lunch session, presented by former U.S. Rep. Gregg Harper of Pearl. Starkville Mayor Lynn Spruill will give a welcome.

— “Communicating ‘The Big Bang’ of a New Industry” session, presented by Dana Bolden, Atlanta, Georgia-based senior vice president and chief sustainability officer of Corteva Agriscience – The Agriculture Division of DowDuPont.

—“The Golf Clubs of Mississippi” session, presented by businessman George W. Bryan Sr., founder of Old Waverly Golf Club and co-founder of Mossy Oak Golf Club in West Point. He also is former CEO of Sara Lee Foods.

—“Leading Mississippi’s Future by Studying the Past” session, presented by John Spann, curator of education for the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, overseen by the Mississippi Department of Archives and History in Jackson. Emily Havens, executive director of Grammy Museum Mississippi in Cleveland, also will highlight the museum’s impact in the state and internationally.

—“Pitch Slam,” where students and others have the chance to give a 90-second pitch to one of four established publishing representatives. Free to all, online registration through the event website is requested. Joe Lee, editor-in-chief of Brandon-based Dogwood Press and an MSU communication department advisory board member, will lead the event.

—“An Evening of Music and Storytelling from Mississippi’s Cultural Ambassador Steve Azar” featuring an introduction from Glenn McCullough, executive director of Mississippi Development Authority in Jackson.

—“A New Perspective on Communication – Pioneering Unmanned Aerial Systems Research in Starkville, Mississippi” lunch session, presented by MSU Vice President for Research and Economic Development David Shaw.

For complete details on the New Narrative Festival and Conference, visit www.newnarrativefestival.msstate.edu, email newnarrative@comm.msstate.edu, and follow on Twitter and Facebook @MSNNF and Instagram @newnarrativefestival. Forde can be contacted at 662-312-5031 or jforde@comm.msstate.edu.

Complete details on the College of Arts and Sciences can be found at www.cas.msstate.edu and the Department of Communication at www.comm.msstate.edu.

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Emergency Dispatches: March 21, 2019

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At 1:02 pm Kosciusko Police were called to Veteran’s Memorial Drive for a report of a hit and run. The accident took place in the parking lot at Wal-Mart. The vehicle, a black PT Cruiser, was last seen heading south on highway 35. Attala Deputies were notified to be on the look out for the vehicle.

At 1:42 pm Kosciusko Police along with City Fire were dispatched to Veteran’s Memorial Drive by the Post Office for a report of a minor auto accident. Cars were moved from the roadway for a report. No injuries were reported.

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County Firefighters Respond to Woods Fire

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At 5:02 pm Attala Deputies along with Attala Fire responded to a report of a vehicle fire. The caller said it was located ion a yard on highway 440. When emergency personnel arrived on scene and notified responding units that it was in fact a woods fire that had set a car on fire in the woods.

According to Authorities, the fire started as a trash fire that got out of hand. The owners told emergency personnel they attempted to light the fire and didn’t think it had started. When the area was left unattended the fire rekindled.

No injuries were reported.

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Today in history: March 22

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Today is Friday, March 22, the 81st day of 2019. There are 284 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in History:

On March 22, 1765, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act to raise money from the American colonies, which fiercely resisted the tax. (The Stamp Act was repealed a year later.)

On this date:

In 1882, President Chester Alan Arthur signed a measure outlawing polygamy.

In 1894, hockey’s first Stanley Cup championship game was played; home team Montreal defeated Ottawa, 3-1.

In 1933, during Prohibition, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2 percent alcohol legal.

In 1941, the Grand Coulee hydroelectric dam in Washington state officially went into operation.

In 1963, The Beatles’ debut album, “Please Please Me,” was released in the United Kingdom by Parlophone.

In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced that Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the commander of American forces in Vietnam, would leave that post to become the U.S. Army’s new Chief of Staff. Students at the University of Nanterre in suburban Paris occupied the school’s administration building in a prelude to massive protests in France that began the following May. The first Red Lobster restaurant opened in Lakeland, Florida.

In 1978, Karl Wallenda, the 73-year-old patriarch of “The Flying Wallendas” high-wire act, fell to his death while attempting to walk a cable strung between two hotel towers in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

In 1988, both houses of Congress overrode President Ronald Reagan’s veto of the Civil Rights Restoration Act.

In 1990, a jury in Anchorage, Alaska, found former tanker captain Joseph Hazelwood not guilty of three major charges in connection with the Exxon Valdez oil spill, but convicted him of a minor charge of negligent discharge of oil.

In 1991, high school instructor Pamela Smart, accused of recruiting her teenage lover and his friends to kill her husband, Gregory, was convicted in Exeter, New Hampshire, of murder-conspiracy and being an accomplice to murder and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

In 1997, Tara Lipinski, at age 14 years and ten months, became the youngest ladies’ world figure skating champion in Lausanne, Switzerland.

In 2004, Hamas spiritual leader Sheik Ahmed Yassin (shayk AKH’-mehd yah-SEEN’) was killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, enraging Palestinians. Terry Nichols went on trial for his life in the Oklahoma City bombing. (Nichols, already serving a life sentence for his conviction on federal charges, was found guilty of 161 state murder charges, but was again spared the death penalty when the jury couldn’t agree on his sentence.)

Ten years ago: A single-engine turboprop plane headed to a Montana ski resort nose-dived into a cemetery short of a runway in Butte, killing all 14 aboard, including seven children. The Mount Redoubt volcano in Alaska began erupting (it took about six months to settle down). Friends and family gathered in a small Hudson Valley, N.Y., town to say a final farewell to Tony Award-winning actress Natasha Richardson, 45, who had died in a skiing accident.

Five years ago: A massive mudslide in Oso, Washington, killed 43 people and destroyed or damaged four dozen homes. A barge and cargo ship collision in the Houston Ship Channel dumped nearly 170,000 gallons of heavy fuel oil. Pope Francis named the first members of a commission to advise him on sex abuse policy. The Los Angeles Dodgers opened the Major League Baseball season with a 3-1 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks at Sydney Cricket Ground in MLB’s first regular-season game in Australia.

One year ago: President Donald Trump announced that he would replace national security adviser H.R. McMaster with former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton; McMaster became the sixth close Trump adviser or aide to depart in a turbulent six weeks. Trump set in motion tariffs on as much as $60 billion in Chinese imports, and China threatened retaliation; the heightening trade tensions brought a selloff on Wall Street, where the Dow industrials plunged more than 700 points. H. Wayne Huizenga, a college dropout who built a business empire that included Blockbuster Entertainment and three professional sports franchises, died at his Florida home at the age of 80.

Today’s Birthdays: Composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim is 89. Evangelist broadcaster Pat Robertson is 89. Actor William Shatner is 88. Former Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is 85. Actor M. Emmet Walsh is 84. Actor-singer Jeremy Clyde is 78. Singer-guitarist George Benson is 76. Writer James Patterson is 72. CNN newscaster Wolf Blitzer is 71. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber is 71. Actress Fanny Ardant is 70. Sportscaster Bob Costas is 67. Country singer James House is 64. Actress Lena Olin is 64. Singer-actress Stephanie Mills is 62. Actor Matthew Modine is 60. Country musician Tim Beeler is 51. Actor-comedian Keegan-Michael Key is 48. Actor Will Yun Lee is 48. Olympic silver medal figure skater Elvis Stojko is 47. Actor Guillermo Diaz is 44. Actress Anne Dudek is 44. Actor Cole Hauser is 44. Actress Kellie Williams is 43. Actress Reese Witherspoon is 43. Rock musician John Otto (Limp Bizkit) is 42. Actress Tiffany Dupont is 38. Rapper Mims is 38. Actress Constance Wu is 37. Actor James Wolk is 34. Rock musician Lincoln Parish (Cage the Elephant) is 29.

Thought for Today: “Better to be alone than with a bad companion.” — Spanish expression.

The Associated Press.

The post Today in history: March 22 appeared first on BreezyNews.com - Kosciusko News 24/7.


Long Creek Elementary announces honor roll students

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Long Creek Elementary school has announced honor roll students for the first semester of the school year…

Superintendent’s Honor Roll

First Grade: Rana Hariri, Taylor Mayers, Eli Perteet, Amiyah Wash

Second Grade: Alisseya Ball, Marcos Ball, Savannah Bell, Rafik Hariri, Alanna Smith, Latoya Teague, Terrah Wade, Quenterrius Webb, Azarie Winters

Third Grade: Kimaria Lewis, Christian Seawood

Fourth Grade: Caden Smith

Fifth Grade: Taliah Gadson, Jaeden Harmon, Chrishanna Roundtree

Principal’s Honor Roll

Kindergarten: G’Niereya Alston, Macari Bullock, Hailey Ellis, Kriston Gilliam, Austin Harmon, Keland Harmon, Trinti James- Malone, Kendalyn Lockett, Heavenlei Riddley, Arzani Rimmer, Brooklyn Roby, Khali Teague, Sha’Rhyah Teague

First Grade: Kasia Brewer, Kaleeyha Brown, Taleeyha Brown, Taylin Ellis, Makayla Greer, Christina Horton, Aubree Ickom, Kailey Kilbert, Kaevon Martin, Ca’marion Moore, Camnrod Nelson, Tayshawn Parham, Ne’veah Teague

Second Grade: Caden Black, Kelis Dickens, Ja’marion Graham, Kylie Johnson, Ethan Loving, Briana Macdonald, Dylan Singleton, Kalea Unger, Skylar Winters

Third Grade: Jayden King, Alonzo Teague, Jeremiah Triplett

Fourth Grade: Tamara Bolden, Derrell Canada, Jamya Gibson, Ja’Niah Greer, Ra’kesha Greer, Aniya Unger, Fredrick Wilder

Fifth Grade: Jashun Brown, Aleeciaya Covington, Nathan Donaldson, Paris Fleming, David Harmon, Allison Knight, Elysia Rimmer, Shawnkia Teague, Jerniya Unger, Tamila Wise

Sixth Grade:  Jakeriyah Baldwin, Cameron Black, Zantavia Clark, Kenady Cross, Sha’Marian Greer, Amber Harmon, Lynia Jenkins, Jamaya Johnson, Uniyhia Johnson, Marquavious Jones, Jayveon Phillips, Kendle Sample, Keilan Sanders, Jamar Teague, Dakerrion Williams, Tayshaun Williams

 

The post Long Creek Elementary announces honor roll students appeared first on BreezyNews.com - Kosciusko News 24/7.

DUI and other recent arrests

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On 3-19-2019, Lonnie G. Patrick, a 43 year old b/m from Kosciusko, was arrested for DUI (1st offense), no proof of insurance, suspended driver’s license and domestic violence (2nd offense) on College Street by Officer Wilbert Nelson.

On 3-19-2019, Teressio Haymon, a 25 year old b/m from Goodman, was arrested for no driver’s license, no proof of insurance and speeding on Highway 12 West by Officer Michael Jones.

On 3-19-2019, Kenneth Henderson, a 42 year old b/m from Kosciusko, was arrested for contempt of court on West Adams Street by Officer Devante Lewis.

On 3-19-2019, Dewayne L. Davis, a 39 year old b/m from Kosciusko, was arrested for suspended driver’s license on Highway 12 East by Lt. Josh Pinkard.

On 03-18-2019, Kenneth L. Jones, a 48 year old b/m from Kosciusko, was arrested for no driver’s license on East Jefferson Street by Officer Devante Lewis.

On 03-18-2019, Shatae T. Martin, a 24 year old b/f from Kosciusko, was arrested for contempt of court on West Adams Street by Officer Robert Overby.

On 3-18-2019, Shameka R. Melton, a 29 year old b/f from Sallis, was arrested for domestic violence-simple assault on East Adams Street by Officer Jerry Erving.

On 3-18-2019, Calvin Skinner, a 30 year old b/m from Kosciusko, was arrested for contempt of court on East Adams Street by Officer Toweeka Ferguson.

On 3-14-2019, Jamie R. McKee, a 39 year old w/m from Kosciusko, was arrested for contempt of court on West Adams Street by Lt. Josh Pinkard.

On 3-14-2019, Latisha Webster, a 34 year old b/f from Kosciusko, was arrested for contempt of court and Uttering Forgery on West Adams Street by Officer Devante Lewis.

On 3-14-2019, Judie Anderson, a 59 year old b/f from Sallis, was arrested for no driver’s license and mo proof of insurance on Highway 12 West by Lt. Josh Pinkard.

On 3-13-2019, Samuel H. Miller, a 32 year old w/m from Sallis, was arrested for contempt of court on West Adams Street by Officer Devante Lewis.

All suspects are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The arrest records published are not an indication of guilt or evidence that an actual crime has been committed. Arrests made Kosciusko PD.

The post DUI and other recent arrests appeared first on BreezyNews.com - Kosciusko News 24/7.

Reminder: Big Red Band Color Run fundraiser set for this Saturday

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The Kosciusko Big Red Band is hosting its second annual Color the Hills 5K.

The run will be held Saturday, March 23 in downtown Kosciusko.

Participants can register up until the morning of the race, but may not be guaranteed a run t-shirt.

Registration is $30.

Online registration can be found here.

For entry forms or more information, contact any member of the Big Red Band Boosters.

The post Reminder: Big Red Band Color Run fundraiser set for this Saturday appeared first on BreezyNews.com - Kosciusko News 24/7.

Audio: Darren Milner talks fireworks show and hot air balloons coming to this year’s Natchez Trace Festival

Attala deputies arrest one on a warrant from US Marshals Task Force

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The US Marshals Task Force and the Attala County Sheriff’s Office worked together this week to make an arrest.

Sheriff Tim Nail said deputies arrested 29-year-old Sunshine Barnes on Aponaug Rd. in Kosciusko Wednesday March 20,2019 on warrants from Lee County for assaulting a police officer and possession of meth with intent to sell.

Sheriff Tim Nail, Chief Deputy Zelie Shaw, Investigator Jimmy Nunn, and K9 Sergeant Scott Walters all assisted in the arrest

Barnes was taken to the Leake County Jail.

No bond was set.

The post Attala deputies arrest one on a warrant from US Marshals Task Force appeared first on BreezyNews.com - Kosciusko News 24/7.

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