012215 daily corinthian e edition

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 119, No. 19

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

City weighs truck traffic ordinance BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

RV manufacturer to bring in 75 jobs BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

A tractor trailer wedged under the Shiloh Road railroad underpass on Tuesday again underscored for Corinth officials the need for tighter regulations on truck traffic in the city. Street Commissioner Philip Verdung presented a proposed ordinance to the Board of Mayor and Aldermen Tuesday evening. “We just put up seven brand new locations of signs that clearly state what the restriction is, and that truck still came through today,” he said.

“The problem is, he comes off Highway 45 where there is no signage and has nowhere to go but into town. The thought is we get the signage with the help of MDOT on Highway 45 and we can keep them from ever getting off that exit ramp to begin with.” The ordinance will be a necessary step to being able to have signage on Highway 45 and Highway 72. “The intent of the ordinance is to establish truck routes throughout the city,” said Verdung. “It is not intended to restrict access to any local business. I do think many of the

problems we face with truck traffic, many of the mistakes that the drivers make, the solution starts right here.” It should also help get the information into GPS systems because the GPS companies employ contractors who review local ordinances, he said. The board will review the proposed ordinance and consider it in a future meeting. The truck that got stuck on Tuesday was heading east to Kimberly Clark, and the underpass area was blocked for much of the day. The air had Please see TRUCKS | 2

BURNSVILLE — Tishomingo County will soon become home to a new up and coming fifth wheel camper manufacturer. Vanleigh RV recently selected a 88,000 square foot building in the Tri-State Commerce Park off US Highway 72 in Burnsville. The manufacturer expects to begin production in March and will initially create 75 new jobs. The company is also setting up a supplier network in the area with the lease of a second industrial park building for one of its suppliers to manufacture RV cabinetry. “Vanleigh RV offers promise

to be a significant employer in Northeast Mississippi as the company sets up an assembly and supplier network,” said Tishomingo County Development Foundation Executive Director Gary Matthews. Vanleigh RV is owned by members of the Tiffin family of nearby Tiffin Motor Homes in Red Bay, Alabama. “The Tiffin family is well known for manufacturing the highest quality recreational vehicles,” added Matthews. “We feel that their new RV units will have great success in the marketplace.” Job applications are now available at the WIN Job Center in Iuka.

District takes literal approach to literacy BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Everyone is a teacher of literacy. That was the Corinth School District’s message to the community on Wednesday as educators detailed the ways they are making sure all children can not just read but read well enough to succeed. While efforts to reach children even before they begin school is a big focus, the district is also refining its approaches to deal with the problem of inadequate adolescent literacy. “If they say they hate reading in the seventh grade, then our job from seventh grade to twelfth grade is to get them somehow to enjoy reading,” said Dana Bullard, one of the presenters. “I can tell you as a literature teacher it is not making them read ‘Jane Eyre,’ Shakespeare, ‘The Heart of Darkness’ — any of those things that all of us English teachers love ... They have got to be interested in it.” The district unveiled plans for its “One District, One Please see LITERACY | 2

Donations pass $19,800 The spirit of giving this New Year is alive and well in the Alcorn County area. Donations continue to come in for the 19th Annual Corinth Rotary Club / Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund. A $25,000 fund raising goal was set so 1,000 food baskets could be given to local families on Saturday, Dec. 6. Baskets were given away based upon faith the goal will be reached. So far, $19,854 has been raised. Recent donations include $25 from David and Brenda Flatt in Please see DONATIONS | 2

Staff Photo by Jebb Johnston

Dana Bullard explains some of the Corinth School District’s strategies to get students engaged in reading during one of several sessions of Wednesday’s literacy summit at Corinth Elementary School.

Bain introduces license plate for animal shelter BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

The Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter’s new specialty license plate is one step closer to becoming a reality. District 2 Rep. Nick Bain (DAlcorn) will introduce the new plate to the Legislative this month with hopes the tag to the support the shelter is passed. Once passed at least 300 preorders of the tag must be submitted before production of the plate begins. “It’s no secret I’m an animal lover. I grew up on a farm and know how important all animals are to our way of life,” said Bain. “I’m honored to be able to introduce this tag and hope it will raise much needed money for the shelter.” The car tag will feature the

shelter’s new motto, “for the love of the animals,” and a shelter new logo designed by 20-year-old college student and Michie, Tennessee native Kristen Whitley. “We have pre-sold 48 tags so far and are a long way from the 300 needed,” said Charlotte Doehner, volunteer shelter director. “We feel like sales have been slow because of the Christmas holidays, but we have plans to ramp up promotion of the pre-order in the coming weeks.” Doehner said a tag purchase is perfect for those shelter supporters who would like to do something that can benefit the shelter each year. The cost of the tag is $31, with $6 going back to the state and Please see PLATE | 2

Submitted Photo

Raising awareness, the BelkGives on the Go Mobile Mammography Center will offer free, convenient mammogram screenings to women age 40 and over.

Retailer offering mobile mammograms BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com

A 39-foot-long, state of the art screening center on wheels will roll into the Southgate

Plaza as Belk of Corinth shows their passion for pink during the week of Feb. 1. The BelkGives on the Go Mobile Mammography Center will

offer free, convenient mammogram screenings to women age 40 and over from 9:30 a.m. to Please see SCREENINGS | 2

Index Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather...... 10 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12

On this day in history 150 years ago The steamer “Ajax” departs Dublin for Nassau where it will be fitted for guns to join the Confederate Navy. However, the American minister to Britain, Charles F. Adams, persuades the British government not to send weapons to arm the raider.

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2 • Daily Corinthian

Local/State DONATIONS CONTINUED FROM 1

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Bryant speech outlines goals BY EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS Associated Press

JACKSON — Job creation, schools, tax cuts and tourism are among the issues Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant was to have discussed Wednesday during his annual State of the State address as he outlines his electionyear legislative agenda. The speech was set to be before a joint session of the House and Senate at the state Capitol. It was carried live on Mississippi Public Broadcasting radio and television. “We’ll be talking about economic development. We’ll be talking about education. We’ll be talking about proposals that I will have for this year’s session — tax cuts, for example, increasing funding for tourism,” Republican Bryant said last week when asked for a preview of the speech. “As always, we will talk about the things that have happened in the past and the things that I will ask the Legislature to consider in the future,” he said. Bryant is seeking a second term this year, and has not attracted a big-name opponent so far. The qualifying deadline for candidates is Feb. 27. The Democratic leader of the Mississippi House, Rep. Bobby Moak of Bogue Chitto, said in a news release Tuesday that

“We’ll be talking about proposals that I will have for this year’s session — tax cuts, for example, increasing funding for tourism.” Phil Bryant Governor he has low expectations for the governor’s speech. “It will be more empty promises to fund education, some tripe about silver shovel awards in hard-to-find magazines, a little hot air about inflated job numbers and made-up business rankings,” Moak said. “All this while he whistles past the graveyard on a broken education system, record unemployment rates, and hospitals closing around the state.” Mississippi Republican Party chairman Joe Nosef said Moak’s comments show that Democrats have disintegrated into irrelevance. “While, unfortunately, it is typical to see empty rhetoric from the minority Democrat

party whining and attacking our governor, it is quite humorous to see them criticize a speech that is 24 hours away from being made,” Nosef said in a statement Tuesday. Bryant has said he hopes to gain bipartisan support for his proposed tax break for people with low to moderate incomes. Under his plan, a family of four with a household income of $52,000 would receive a $921 a year tax credit, and a single person with an income of $14,590 would receive a credit of $75, he said. The tax breaks would be available only in years when state revenue grows by at least 3 percent. “If you don’t owe taxes, you don’t get that money in return,” Bryant said during an interview in late December. “You have to actually have an income owed to the state to get the credit back.” Bryant also said he is willing to listen to other proposals for tax cuts. “I am certainly willing and eager to work with the Legislature to hear other ideas, if they have a better idea,” he said. “I think you’ll hear Republicans and Democrats talking about some type of tax cut. Traditionally, Democrats would talk about sales tax reductions, Republicans have talked about income.”

memory of Michael Burcham, Jr.; $50 from Jenny Biggers in memory of Preston and Jimmy Lee Biggers; and an anonymous $100 donation in honor of all Christmas Basket workers. Contributions to the Christmas Basket Fund can be made

“in honor of” or “in memory of” a special person or persons. The tribute will be published in the Daily Corinthian. Donations can be brought by the newspaper office 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or mailed to: Daily Corinthian, Attn.: Christmas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835.

PLATE CONTINUED FROM 1

$1 going to Alcorn County. The remaining $24 will go back to the shelter. If the shelter can pre-sale 300 tags, it would generate a $7,200 shelter donation each year. “After the first year, if the vehicle owner decides to keep the specialty tag, they will be responsible for $31 plus the taxes based on where they live,” said Doehner. The shelter is also putting the finishing touches on their successful calendar fundraiser. “We have sold more than $2,000 worth of calendars this year,” she said. “We do have a lot left for anyone still needing a nice 2015 calendar.”

The shelter is planning a special Meet and Greet for Saturday. Doehner said staff will be promoting sponsorship adoptions. “Everyone who sponsors an animal on Saturday will receive a free calendar,” she added. “We’ll also be signing folks up for the new specialty plate.” (To pre-order, a specialty license plate application must be completed and $31 must be paid to the shelter. Application forms can be picked up at the shelter at 3825 Proper Street or at the tax collectors office inside the Alcorn County Courthouse. The form can also be downloaded at alcornpets.com For more information, contact the shelter at 662-284-5800.)

LITERACY CONTINUED FROM 1

Book” initiative, which will give a copy of Grace Lin’s “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon” to each family with a child in grades two through six. Based on Chinese folklore, the book received a Newbery Honor in 2010. “We are calling it a community-wide reading,” said Tanya Nelson, director of early childhood education and literacy. “Our hope is that we’ll have family read-alouds. We are also asking com-

munity members to read the book along with us.” The story involves a young girl who leaves home to try to bring prosperity to her family. “She goes through a series of adventures and meets lots of different characters that help her along her journey, and she learns a valuable lesson in the end,” said Nelson. The district’s intensive focus on literacy comes at a time when school districts across the state are preparing for the “ThirdGrade Reading Gate,”

which requires thirdgraders to pass a literacy exam in order to be promoted. “This is serious,” said Superintendent Lee Childress. “We are going to have third-graders in Corinth, in Alcorn County and in Mississippi this year that might have passing grades in reading, and the conversation is going to have to be held that says, ‘I’m sorry. Your child cannot move to fourth grade.’” Research finds few Mississippi parents spend

enough time reading to and developing literacy skills in young children. “We don’t have a lot of family reading going on,” said Childress. “We don’t have a lot of family conversation going on. That has a very negative impact on a child’s ability to learn to read. They don’t learn vocabulary. They don’t learn sentence structure.” Keynote speaker Carl Swartz of MetaMetrics praised the district’s community-based approach to foster better literacy in pre-kindergarten chil-

dren. “Kids come to school with not enough words to hang what teachers are talking about onto,” he said. In addition to the things the Innovative Approaches to Literacy Grant will bring to the community, the district is moving towards a standards-based report card, providing a literacy report card, developing an intensive remediation and enrichment model and exploring ways to minimize the loss of knowledge during the

summer months, which is particularly a problem in the early grades. Childress hopes the community will answer the call to be involved. “It can’t be left to the school alone,” he said. “We’re going to carry a lot of the water, but we need some other folks to help us carry water to get children where they need to get. If we can do that, they’re going to succeed. It will make economic development here in Corinth and Alcorn County far easier.”

TRUCKS

You are cordially invited to the

CONTINUED FROM 1

GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION of

Farmers & Merchants Bank FESTIVITIES BEGIN

to be let out of the tires to get the truck out. The trailer’s supporting beams had broken, and there was difficulty getting it hooked to the wrecker without the bottom collapsing. The bridge clearance is posted as 12 feet 3 inches, but Verdung said that may need to be reduced

a few inches because of the way the bridge sits in a valley. The truck driver told officials that GPS sent him down Shiloh Road, where the underpass is a frequent problem for trucks. There was no apparent damage to the bridge, Verdung said, but Norfolk-Southern was notified that they needed to

make an inspection. In other street matters, the traffic signals at the intersection of Shiloh and North Parkway are expected to be out through Friday awaiting replacement parts. Also, preparation work has begun at the intersection of Shiloh and Harper for the installation of new traffic signals and sensors.

SCREENINGS CONTINUED FROM 1

Wednesday, January 21 - Friday, January 23, 2015

At our Corinth Branches 515 Fillmore Street & 2222 South Harper Road CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI Lobby treats will be served and door prizes awarded daily. Join us at the Fillmore Branch for the Ribbon Cutting Ceremony on Wednesday morning, January 21, 2015 at 10 O’Clock.

7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 3 and Wednesday, Feb. 4. Those eligible for the screenings are women with no breast concerns, who have not had a mammogram in the last 12 months and have a primary care physician. Performed by Charlotte Radiology’s licensed, female mammographycertified technologists, all screenings will be interpreted by a boardcertified radiologist who specializes in breast imaging. All results are confidential and will be sent to each patient, as well as,

her primary care physician. “After receiving their mammograms, we welcome shoppers to visit our Intimate Apparel section where they will receive complimentary bra fittings,” said Belk Store Manager Tracy Bodie. The nation’s largest privately owned department store, the Charlotte, N.C.-based Belk corporation partnered with Charlotte Radiology to launch the BelkGives on the Go Mobile Mammography in 2013. Bringing convenient, digital screening and awareness to all Belk markets through Jan. 2016, the mammog-

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raphy center will visit 80 stores throughout Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia. In its two years on the road, the mobile unit has performed more than 7, 400 mammograms throughout the Southeast, resulting in 30 cancer diagnoses. A $6 million dollar investment, the program reflects the retailer’s deep commitment and dedication to women’s health and breast cancer education. The single largest charitable donation to date, Belk is the only retailer of its kind to form a partnership alongside community and health organizations by extending breast cancer screening and increasing breast cancer awareness through its own operation. “Early detection saves lives,” said Bodie. “It is our hope that those eligible will be proactive and take advantage of this free wellness opportunity”. (For more information or to schedule a screening, call 855-655-BMMC (2662) or visit www.belk. com/pink.)


Thursday, January 22, 2015

Local/Region sion of the Blue Mountain College Math and Science Tournament. Amanda was voted as the National Honor Society Sweetheart during CHS Homecoming 2014. She is a 2013 Junior Leadership Alcorn Graduate, and she was chosen as a Girls State Delegate in the summer of 2014. Amanda has been a member of the Corinth Lady Warrior soccer team for four years and the tennis team for three years. She has also been a part of the Corinth Video Production Team since her junior year. She was a cast member of the 2012 school musical ‘Grease’, and she will be taking part in the upcoming musical ‘Legally Blonde’. Active in many organizations, Amanda is a member of National Honor Society, Mu Alpha Theta, Key Club, Historical Society, Foreign Language Club, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Pep Club, and Interact Club. Amanda has participated in various community service activities. She earned 20 hours of service with Junior Leadership Alcorn by implementing a donation drive for the Safehouse Shelter. She has been a volunteer at

Daily Corinthian • 3

Today in History Today is Thursday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 2015. There are 343 days left in the year.

Blair named Rotary student of month Amanda Blair, daughter of Dr. Stephen and Cindy Blair, has been selected as the Corinth Rotary Student of the Month for January for the Corinth School District. Amanda is ranked third in her class. She has a GPA of 4.29, and she scored 31 on the ACT. Amanda is an inductee of the Corinth High School Hall of Fame for 2015 and is working to obtain an Advanced International Certificate of Education Diploma through Cambridge. She has earned 6 hours of college credit from Northeast MS Community Colthe A.M.E.N. Food Pantry, Kiwanis Club Pancake Breakfast, the Rotary Run 5K, and Sharing Hearts Ministry. She also assisted with Freshman Orientation at Corinth High School. In July 2014, she traveled to Haiti on a mission trip with First Baptist Church. A member of First Presbyterian, she has volunteered in several ministries including the Senior Valentine Banquet and Operation Love Our Neighbor. Upon graduation, Amanda plans to attend the University of Mississippi and major in speech pathology.

Today’s Highlight in History: On Jan. 22, 1901, Britain’s Queen Victoria died at age 81 after a reign of 63 years; she was succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII.

Blair lege by taking AICE Pure Math I and II. A member of the CHS academic team for four years, she currently serves as cocaptain. Her team placed third in the Algebra divi-

On this date: In 1498, during his third voyage to the Western Hemisphere, Christopher Columbus arrived at the present-day Caribbean island of St. Vincent. In 1908, Katie Mulcahey became the first — and only — woman to run afoul of New York City’s just-passed ban on women smoking in public establishments. (Declaring, “No man shall dictate to me,” Mulcahey served a night in jail after refusing to pay a $5 fine; the law, which did not specify any fines, ended up being vetoed by Mayor George B. McClellan Jr.) In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson pleaded for an end to war in Europe, calling for “peace without victory.” (By April, however, America also was at war.) In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces began landing at Anzio, Italy. In 1957, suspected “Mad Bomber” George P. Metesky was arrested in Waterbury, Connecticut. (He was later found mentally ill and committed until 1973; he died in 1994.) In 1970, the first regularly scheduled commercial flight of the Boeing 747 began in New York and ended in London some 6 1/2 hours later. In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court, in its Roe v. Wade decision, legalized abortions using a trimester approach. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson died at his Texas ranch at age 64. In 1984, the Los Angeles Raiders defeated the Washington Redskins 38-9 to win Super Bowl XVIII (18) at Tampa Stadium in Florida.

NEMCC names President’s List Alcorn Central Middle honor roll announced One hundred and ninetytwo Northeast Mississippi Community College students who achieved a grade point average of 4.0 for the 2014 fall semester and were recently named to the distinguished President’s List. Local students include: Evan Dale Akers of Booneville, Mariam Hassan Ali of Booneville, Bridget Leighann Beasley of Booneville, Dantez Tevaun Brock of Booneville, William Joseph Caver of Booneville, Jeremy Richard Childress of Booneville, Marianna Elizabeth Coats of Booneville, Angelica Ranay Copeland of Booneville, Kelsey Breanna Fugitt of Booneville, Alexandria Michelle Hamm of Booneville, Katherine Elizabeth Hancock of Booneville, Joshua Earl Hawkins of Booneville, Jade Alexzondria Jones of Booneville, Andrew Donald Lambert of Booneville, Jennie Carol Maddox of Booneville, Kaila Paige Mason of Booneville, Justin Wayne McFarland of Booneville, Justin Wayne McFarland of Booneville, James Cleveland Nanney of Booneville, Letha Dawn Nelson of Booneville, Jasmine Desarae Robinson of Booneville, Larry Randal Scruggs of Booneville, Malachi Rummeko Shinault of Booneville, Dalton Ross Smith of Booneville, Evan Kyle Smith of Booneville, Katherine Victoria Smith of Booneville, Jackson Lee South of Booneville, Brittany Gayla Stephenson of Booneville, Carter Slade Swinney of Booneville, Marlee Erin Taylor of Booneville, Stacy Denise Tuttle of Booneville, Terrance Wesley Tye of Booneville, Courtney Paige Walden of Booneville, Erica Ashley Whitten of Booneville, Mary Elizabeth Willcoxon of Booneville, Abigail Taylor Williford of Booneville, Devin Dray Woodruff of Booneville, Forrest Allan Wright of Booneville, Jacob Livingston Wright of Booneville, Brittany Lynn Barnes of Burnsville, Kayla Sue Stricklin of Burnsville, Aaron Slater Austin of Corinth, Connor William Briggs of Corinth, Alison Katlyn Burns of Corinth, Stephani Lauren Byrd of Corinth, Daniel Hal Cooper of Corinth, Destiny Roxane Dabbs of Corinth, Kaleb Lee Digby of Corinth, Dakota Scott Dooley of Corinth, Christopher Scott Fowler of Corinth, Logan Ryan Gates of Corinth, Jonathan Kirk Gibson of Corinth, Destany Hope Gray of Corinth, Audrianna Shanequa Green of Corinth, Lauryn Mikaela Hancock of Corinth, Jeff Alan Hilliard of Corinth, Joshua Matthew Johnson of Corinth, Lindsey Gayle Ligon of Corinth, Michael O. Mann of Corinth, Zackery William Marcinek of Corinth, Lakin Maranda McDowell of Corinth, Darnell Sherrod McGee of Corinth, Gregory Andrew Mitchell of Corinth, Amber Lynn Parker of Corinth, Benjamin Craig Ricketts of Corinth, Alex Christopher Sellers of Corinth, Jessica DeAnn Stephens of Corinth, Doris McClelland Thompson of Corinth, Benjamin Hunter Thornton of Corinth, Juan Vargas of Corinth, Laura Marie Wilbanks of Corinth, Hannah Lou Byrom of Glen, Taylor Jacob Harben of Glen, Benjamin Mark Kennedy of Glen, Jordan Mackenzie Blunt of Iuka, Jacey Shaye Borden of Iuka, Stephanie Michelle Deaton of Iuka, Stephanie Teren Giles of Iuka, Channing Neal Holland of Iuka, James Braxton Phelps of Iuka, Todd Michael Smith of Iuka, Stephanie LeAnn Thrasher of Iuka, Nayra Olmos Villazoin Whitaker of Iuka, Aaron Nicholas Thomas of Marietta, Susan Renaa Pounds of New Site, Dustyn Anthony Michael Crowe of Rienzi, Logan Bruce Dodds of Rienzi, Madison Taylor Leggett of Rienzi, Katelyn Elizabeth Morton of Rienzi, Holley Marie Trimble of Rienzi, Roy Tywaune White of Rienzi, Hannah Carol Day of Tishomingo, Kayla Marie Upton of Tishomingo, Tommy Andrew Bell of Walnut, Sarah Elizabeth Brown of Walnut, Erica Leann Clifton of Walnut, Kelsey Nicole English of Walnut, Grant Thompson Gaar of Walnut, Dana Nicole Glissen of Walnut, Laura Elizabeth Miller of Walnut, Crystal Elizabeth Peters of Walnut, Cheyenne Nicole Phillips of Walnut, Baylie Anne McAfee of Guys, Tenn., Marquez Jaron Chappell of Michie, Tenn., Marquez Jaron Chappell of Michie, Tenn., Megan Alexandra Boyd of Savannah, Tenn., Allison Paige Dillon of Selmer, Tenn., and Makinley Kelton Steward of Selmer, Tenn. Alcorn Central Middle School Second Nine Weeks Honor Roll Fifth Grade: All A’s: Ryan Dunn, Warner Michael, Emily Ross, Brady Talley, Torry Thrasher; A’s and B’s: Robert Canten, Emma Davis, David Evans, Christian Fields, Briley Gann, Randall Harville, Elizabeth Hindman, Allie Huddleston, Noah Knight, Joshua Malone, Mollee Manahan, Chloe Richardson, Maggie Rushing, Makayla Scarantino, Marlee Seals, Michael White, Levi Williams; All B’s: Brayden Ballard Sixth Grade: All A’s: Laynie Boren, Jacob Pearson, John Ross; A’s and B’s: Ruben Diaz, Blake Doran, Gabriella Duncan, Bryson Franks, Sydney Grisham, Maya Gunther, Evan Hodum, Aidan Holt, Alyssa Johnson, Madyson Mclemore, Jaycee Murray, Julianne Parker, Taylor Poindexter, Taylar Spencer, Anderson Wall, Maycie Warren, Benjamin Williams; All B’s: Lana Blackburn, Nicholas Chambers, Sara Ellsworth, Cayden Evans, Georgia Holder, Grace Holder, Michaela Holt, Caitlyn Jones, Krystal Laster, Bryson Letson, Ty Shchyschuk, Madison White Seventh Grade: A’s and B’s: Joleen Awwad, Alyssa Cornelius, Cassidy Ekiss, Eli Ferrell, Janna Hammock, Autumn Hindmon, Jordan Huff, Noah Johnson, Tess Lancaster, Caleb Mclain, CJ Mclemore, Kaitland Moore, Edye Ross, Baleigh Vanderford, Hunter Walker, John Rilee Williams, Lauren Young; All B’s: Brady Pellizzer Eighth Grade: All A’s: John Mask; A’s and B’s: Baley Burcham, Cassie Burcham, Lauren Canten, Lindsey Dunn, Rebekah Fields, Autumn Lassiter, Emilee Manahan, Lydia Marshall, Alex Moody, Lillian Nelms, Baylee Parmely, Anna Reed, Taylor Rickett, Chasity Rorie, Chase Shaw, Kristen Stivers, Madelyn Warren, Alex Williams.

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Reece Terry, publisher

Opinion

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Thursday, January 22, 2015

Corinth, Miss.

This ole house FISHTRAP HOLLOW — When I was little, Stuart Hamblen’s song “This Ole House” always made me unutterably sad. Despite the lively melody and cheerful beat, the homeowner was giving up, leaving his faithful hound dog to fend for itself. No longer was the master of This Ole House inclined to fix the doors or oil the shingles or mend the window panes. He Rheta was, he said, “getting ready to Johnson meet the saints.” Even as a tot, I somehow Columnist knew that meant he was dying. The best clue was the angel “peeking through the broken window pane.” Most all the songs we heard as children were maudlin, same as our fairy tales were grim. Your ship sank, your dog ran away and dying cowboys wrapped in white linen littered the streets. Your grandfather’s clock stopped short, and the old man died. There was nothing you could do about it except sing along loudly. But the old house song is one I think of often, mostly when I stray too long from the hollow. My old farmhouse in this cold, dark place seems to know when I’ve been cheating with a newer model or a better climate. It calls me back. This time, while I was enjoying the balmy 20-degree weather on the coast, my old house sat lonely and accusing in the singledigit cold. It punished me with a frozen pipe that burst – into tears – when it thawed. And so here I am, paying the plumber and the piper, making amends to this old house. With a fire in the stove, gas back in the propane tank, three electric heaters running up the power bill, this old house is tolerably warm. If you sit in the kitchen by the wood fire, it’s downright cozy. With the frozen pipe plugged, that only leaves the leaking faucet in the kitchen sink, the toilet’s shaky stance, the sagging ceiling in the bedroom and a floor as thin as onion skin. There’s always something to fix, paint, replace or ignore. It’s enough to make you sing a sad song. But unlike Hamblen’s fleeing narrator, I’m not ready to meet any saints – or other sinners for that matter. I hope to be around to fix the doors and oil the shingles for a long time yet. My friend Robert Clay, in fact, recently mended the broken window pane next to my desk, the one that funneled cold air into the room while I tried to write. Singing cowboy Hamblen claimed he was hunting with a companion when he found a dead prospector and an emaciated hound in a remote cabin in the woods. He said he wrote this song as an elegy. The moral here, if there is one, may be that behind every sad story is a sad story. One account I read said Hamblen’s hunting companion that fateful day was John Wayne. Hamblen ran in impressive circles. Billy Graham once said Hamblen’s conversion sparked the phenomenal interest in the Billy Graham Crusades. I guess if you convert a well-known singing cowboy prone to drinking, the rest is gravy. You can’t buy that kind of advertising. If Hamblen and the Duke really did find a dead man and a starving dog while hunting, it was manna from heaven. Everyone still sings that song. (To find out more about Daily Corinthian columnist Rheta Grimsley Johnson and her books, visit www.rhetagrimsleyjohnsonbooks.com.)

President Obama sings same old song Here’s a suggestion for Joni Ernst, the new Republican senator from Iowa, who will deliver the GOP response to the State of the Union address Tuesday night. Get a chorus together and open with this old Sammy Cahn-Jule Styne number: “It seems to me I’ve heard that song before; it’s from an old familiar score, I know it well, that melody.” Advance leaks of the president’s address indicate he will call for higher taxes on the wealthy and successful in order to pay for programs for the poor and middle class. This is boilerplate Democratic wealth redistribution we’ve heard since New Deal days, which appeals more to emotions than it does to principles with a long history of success. Since the advent of modern “anti-poverty” programs 50 years ago, according to an analysis by The Heritage Foundation, “U.S. taxpayers have spent over $22 trillion on anti-poverty programs.” And yet the poverty rate remains essentially unchanged. If the goal is more successful people who can take care of themselves, incentives must be put in place to encourage people to make right decisions. First on any anti-povCal erty help-theThomas middle-class list must be a Columnist stable family life. A twoparent home where adults love and are committed to each other and in which their children feel loved creates a climate in which moral and economic values like hard work, self-control, personal responsibility and accountability flourish. To help achieve this, parents must be educated and they must have jobs. Government can make this easier by reforming the tax code to remove the “marriage penalty,” which in too many instances charges higher taxes to married couples than to singles, and increasing the exemption deductible for children, which might make it possible for one parent to stay home with young children; allow college tuition to be deductible to incentivize more people to obtain a college education and ease their debt upon graduation. Better yet, scrap the tax code entirely and replace it with a flat tax or consumption tax that allows people to save, invest and spend more of the money they earn. Economically, there must be a change in attitude from working to pay bills, to working to build wealth. Bills, like the poor, we will always have with us, but in building wealth one moves toward independence and personal satisfaction that pays dividends in liberty and personal choice. Government should also make it easier for people to move in pursuit of new opportunities. My late grandfather worked for the B and O Railroad for 50 years. He retired with a pension, a goldplated watch and a lifetime train pass. Those days are long gone. People need to be ready to move to places in pursuit of opportunities that can bring economic and career growth. Earning more produces more in taxable income and more income means more tax money for federal and state treasuries. Here’s another suggestion for Sen. Ernst and the new Republican Congress. Let the Democrats focus on misery, poverty and failure. You promote hope, opportunity and achievement. Begin featuring people with stories to tell of how they overcame difficult circumstances — from poverty, welfare, addiction, single motherhood, and so on — and are now independent, strong and if not prosperous, then at least free of their addiction to government. Leaders should inspire others to follow examples of people who have succeeded in life. Instead, the Democrats’ mantra has been that the poor and middle class can’t succeed without government help. If that were true, the money spent on programs aimed at the poor and middle class would have succeeded by now. It’s long past time for a new direction and for a new “song” with different words. In the month we observe the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr., how about “We HAVE overcome”? (Cal Thomas’ latest book is “What Works: Common Sense Solutions for a Stronger America” is available in bookstores now. Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribune.com.)

Government created housing bubble What caused the financial crisis? How can we prevent another one from happening again? The answers you most often hear to those questions are (1) greed and deregulation and (2) the Dodd-Frank law. But they’re patently inadequate. Greed — or the desire for monetary gain — has always been with us and always will be. And no one has convincingly linked financial deregulation to the crisis. Dodd-Frank, enacted to increase regulation, confers too-big-to-fail status on very large financial institutions, which incentivizes unduly risky behavior and penalizes smaller competitors. The real problem was housing finance, argues my American Enterprise Institute colleague Peter Wallison in his new book “Hidden in Plain Sight: What Really Caused the World’s Worst Financial Crisis and Why It Could Happen Again.” Without changes in housing finance policy, he says, there would have been no financial crisis in 2008. Government policies encouraged the granting of mortgages to non-creditworthy homebuyers, and government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac funneled securities laced with highrisk mortgages into major financial institutions. When house prices suddenly and unexpectedly dropped in 2007, these mortgagebacked securities became unsellable and the financial crisis quickly followed. Wallison traces the policy mistake back to 1992, when Congress passed a law Michael r e q u i r i n g Barone the GSE’s to purchase a Columnist certain percentage of its mortgages granted to low- and moderate-income homebuyers-30 percent originally, later adjusted up to 56 percent by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Previously the GSE’s bought only mortgages in which the buyer made 10 to 20 percent down payments. That was revised downward to 3 percent and even zero. This was in line with the policy priorities of the Clinton and Bush administrations. They hailed the increase of homeownership from the 64 percent that prevailed from the mid-1960s up eventually, and temporarily, to 69 percent. They emphasized the importance of increasing homeownership by blacks and Hispanics who did not qualify as creditworthy under traditional credit standards, which were treated as superstitions. The result was a house price bubble of unprecedented magnitude. Lowdown payment mortgages inflated housing prices because buyers could afford a larger house with the same down payment. Above-average households, though not the intended beneficiaries of lowered mortgage standards, took advantage of them by converting inflated housing values into cash by refinancing their mortgages. The problem metastasized into large financial institutions because of imperfect information and perverse government regulations. Fannie and Freddie classified as subprime only those mortgages they bought through traditional subprime lenders – an action for which their officers were later sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The three rating agencies licensed by the SEC paid by the sellers, rather than the buyers, of securities – a classic case of misaligned incentives – gave mortgagebacked securities AAA ratings, which encouraged big banks to buy them. Similarly, the Basel II international banking standards rated mortgage-backed securities as ultra-safe investments. When housing prices fell, the market in mortgagebacked securities tanked: No one would pay anything for them. Financial institutions that borrowed to buy them had to raise equity to account for the losses. Wallison argues that the government response made things worse: By rescuing Bear Stearns in March 2008, regulators led other firms to believe they would be rescued too — but Lehman Brothers was allowed to fail six months later, and panic followed. That panic would not have occurred, Wallison argues, had not the government sparked the creation of defective securities and had not government regulations masked their defects. Private firms, after all, do not buy assets that they believe will become worthless. Could it happen again? Wallison points out that government regulators are once again reducing the credit standards for mortgage seekers. The argument, as in the 1990s and 2000s, is that traditional standards are misleading and unduly prevent low-income and minority households from buying homes. Fannie and Freddie are now purchasing the large majority of mortgages and announced last month they would buy mortgages with only 3 percent down payments. The qualified mortgage standards laid down by HUD and other regulators in October allowed for mortgages with zero down payments. That sounds like a recipe for another housing bubble — and for mass foreclosures, which hurt the policies’ intended beneficiaries – and perhaps for another financial crisis as well. (Daily Corinthian columnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics.) Editorials represent the voice of the Daily Corinthian. Editorial columns, letters to the editor and other articles that appear on this page represent the opinions of the writers and the Daily Corinthian may or may not agree.

Letters Policy The Opinion page should be a voice of the people and reflect views from a broad range in the community. Citizens can express their opinion in letters to the editor. Only a few simple rules need to be followed. Letters should be of public interest and not of the ‘thank you’ type. Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verification. All letters are subject to editing before publication, especially those beyond 300 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthian.com. Email is the preferred method.

Prayer for today Almighty God, I would have thy counsel as I read the words and follow the deeds of helpful lives, that I may be inspired to nobler activities. Give me the desire to know more of thy holy word, that I may have a better knowledge of life. Amen.

A verse to share “For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life.” — Romans 5:10

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Thursday, January 22, 2015

State/Nation fast response by police and hospital staff, who they said had been trained to respond to an “active shooter� situation.  Associated Press

Daily Corinthian • 5

Across the Nation Associated Press

Across the State Four-year-old’s death called a homicide COLUMBUS -- Lowndes County authorities have arrested a man in the fatal shooting of a 4-yearold child. Sheriff’s Department Capt. Ryan Rickert says the body of 4-year-old Brayden Barksdale was found at his mother’s home in south Lowndes County on Monday. County Coroner Larry Merchant says an autopsy determined the boy’s death was a homicide and not an accident. Merchant says the boy was shot in the head. Rickert says 27-yearold Patrick Chambers has been charged with murder and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Rickert says Chambers lived at the home with the child and the child’s mother. Rickert says the investigation is continuing. An initial court appearance is pending for Chambers. It was not known if he has an attorney.  9 a.m. and the officer was pronounced dead at the scene. Godfrey earlier said incident occurred during a training exercise. Godfrey says the investigation is ongoing. The officer’s name has not been released. Commission enforcement officers monitor casinos to ensure they are following state laws. The Gaming Commission has district offices in Tunica, Vicksburg and Biloxi. The headquarters is in Jackson.  mended mechanical treatment facility for the local wastewater lagoons. A study from 2011, which studied ammonia removal, projected a $170 million project cost, engineer Nathan Husman of Neel-Schaffer, told council members Tuesday. However, Husman said, due to strict guidelines by the Mississippi Department on Environmental Quality to treat and remove more than just ammonia, the cost could be even higher. “We are now looking at additional treatment that’s required to meet these new MDEQ permit limits, and that will be in addition to some of those budgetary costs,� Husman said. “We are doing everything we can to get those costs down.� Council member Mary Dryden said the project is more costly that the $142 million contract with Groundworx, LLC for a land application system that was approved by the council before the members terminated the contract. Neel-Schaffer considered 17 applications before making a “short list� of four processes and companies, all of which are mechanical treatment facilities, Husman said. Husman said construction cost estimates, as well as operating costs, would be decided in the next 30-45 days to bring back before the council for their approval of one process to base the design upon. Mayor Johnny DuPree said the city will wait to see what more specific recommendations would yield.

Microsoft shows off Windows 10 system REDMOND, Wash. -- Microsoft has taken the wraps off a new version of Windows — and a new wearable 3D gadget it calls the HoloLens. The HoloLens is worn over the eyes like virtual reality headsets. While it’s unclear when it might be available for sale, a Microsoft engineer showed how it could be used to view and edit threedimensional renderings of people, machines or other objects. The new gadget runs on the newest version of Microsoft’s flagship operating system, Windows 10, which the company says is designed to provide a more familiar experience as users shift back and forth between personal computers to tablets, smartphones and other devices, including gaming consoles. Microsoft says Windows 10 will come with a new web browser and bring its voice-activated digital assistant, Cortana, to personal computers. Â

hot Tootsie Roll.â€? He boasted that Tootsie Rolls were almost indestructible. “Nothing can happen to a Tootsie Roll. We have some that were made in 1938 that we still eat,â€? Gordon told the AP in 1996. “If you can’t bite it when it’s that old, you certainly can lick it.â€? Tootsie Rolls were invented in 1896 by New York City candy maker Leo Hirshfield, who named it for his 5-yearold daughter, Clara, his little Tootsie. Tootsie Pops, which are lollipops with Tootsie Roll centers, have been around for more than 80 years. Â

OSU athlete death will be ruled suicide COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A coroner says the death of an Ohio State athlete found dead with a gunshot wound to the head will be ruled a suicide. The final autopsy report for 22-year-old wrestler and football scout team member Kosta Karageorge isn’t quite finished. The county coroner said Wednesday she is awaiting neuropathology reports about Karageorge’s brain. Dr. Anahi Ortiz says her determination that it was a suicide won’t change. Karageorge was missing for days before he was found in a Columbus trash bin Nov. 30. Police records of texts from Karageorge’s phone indicate he had just gone through a breakup and sent suicidal messages to his ex-girlfriend. Texts to his mother said concussions were affecting his mind. She told police he’d had several concussions and spells of confusion. Â

Aldermen rescind equality resolution STARKVILLE -- Aldermen in Starkville have overridden a mayor’s veto of their decision to rescind a resolution passed in 2014 that made it clear that the city is intolerant of discrimination against anyone and in any form. The Starkville Daily News reports that Tuesday’s vote to override was 5-2 — the same as the vote to rescind the polcy on Jan. 6. Mayor Parker Wiseman, who previously supported the resolution, vetoed the vote. The override required five votes. Starkville became the first Mississippi city to denounce discrimination based upon sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression when the board unanimously passed an updated non-discrimination policy in January 2014. Â

Doctor fatally shot while in hospital BOSTON -- A man shot and fatally wounded a doctor inside a leading Boston hospital Tuesday before killing himself. Authorities said Stephen Pasceri, 55, entered Brigham and Women’s Hospital sometime before 11 a.m. and specifically requested the doctor. Pasceri, of Millbury, shot the doctor twice just outside an examination room on the second floor of the Carl J. and Ruth Shapiro Cardiovascular Center; he then turned the gun on himself, police said. Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said officers conducting a room-by-room search found the gunman dead in an exam room with the weapon. Hospital officials late Tuesday identified the physician as Dr. Michael J. Davidson, director of Endovascular Cardiac Surgery. “Dr. Davidson was a wonderful and inspiring cardiac surgeon who devoted his career to saving lives and improving the quality of life of every patient he cared for,� said a statement issued by the hospital, which is affiliated with Harvard Medical School. “It is truly devastating that his own life was taken in this horrible manner.� Police said Pasceri wasn’t a patient of the doctor’s and they didn’t specify a motive for the shootings. Police and hospital officials commended the

Superintendent has contract extended TUPELO -- The Tupelo School Board has extended Superintendent Gearl Loden’s contract by a year. The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reports the move keeps a fourth year on the contract, which is the longest term allowed by state law. The deal now runs through June 30, 2019. The extension was approved Tuesday. Financial terms of the contract remain unchanged. In May, the board amended the deal to give Loden an automatic 3 percent cost of living increase annually. That will raise next year’s salary to $202,737. Â

Chief executive for Tootsie Roll dies CHICAGO -- Melvin Gordon, who led Tootsie Roll Industries Inc. for more than five decades, has died at age 95. Gordon, the company’s chairman and CEO, died Tuesday in Boston after a brief illness, said Brooke Vane, a spokeswoman for the company’s public relations firm. Gordon ran the Chicago-based confectioner for 53 years, overseeing the manufacture of 64 million Tootsie Rolls a day and other favorites including Junior Mints, Charleston Chews and Tootsie Pops. Gordon worked a full schedule until last month, the company said. He celebrated the Tootsie Roll’s 100th anniversary in 1996 by touring the Chicago factory with an Associated Press reporter. He scooped up one of the warm, gooey candies from the assembly line and tasted it, saying: “There’s nothing like a

2-point conversion generated quake SEATTLE -- Earthquake experts with the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network have analyzed the CenturyLink Field shaking during the Seahawks’ win over the Packers in Sunday’s NFC title game. The experts say the biggest event was caused by all the jumping and dancing that followed the touchdown and 2-point conversion as Seattle rallied at the end of regulation time. The University of Washington’s Steve Malone calls it a “dance quake� generated by bouncing fans. Malone says that dance quake was the biggest seismic signal associated with a Seahawks game — even bigger than the 2011 “beast quake� that followed a Marshawn Lynch touchdown run and originally drew the attention of earthquake trackers.

Treatment upgrades carry hefty price tag HATTIESBURG -- Some Hattiesburg City Council members are questioning the cost of a recom-

Gaming officer dies in training exercise TUNICA -- An enforcement officer for the Mississippi Gaming Commission has died in an accidental shooting Wednesday at the agency’s office in Tunica County, according to the agency’s director. Allen Godfrey, the commission’s executive director in Jackson, says there was an accidental discharge of a gun about

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6 • Thursday, January 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths CHEWALLA, Tenn. — Funeral services for Bobby Ray Beavers, 75, are set for 11 a.m. Friday at Memorial Funeral Home with burial in Indian Creek Cemetery. Mr. Beavers died Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2015, at his home. Born June 11, 1939, he retired from Norfolk Southern Railway in 1993. He was a commercial ďŹ sherman and member of Chewalla Baptist Church. Bobby was known by lots of people. Some called him Daddy, Papaw and the Fishman. He was Secretary/Treasurer of Norfolk Southern Railway Union #2838 for many years. Beavers He enjoyed meeting with friends at Ramer Quick Stop and sharing stories. He loved hunting, ďŹ shing and watching his garden grow. He enjoyed the time with his children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and most of all his wife. Survivors include his wife, Eloise Beavers of Chewalla; two daughters, Lisa Parvin and husband Lynn of Corinth and Angie Dalton and husband Terry of Corinth; a son, Steve Beavers and wife Lisa of Selmer, Tenn.; three granddaughters, Mandy Cornelius and husband Marc of Corinth, Amber Whitehead and husband Hank of Belmont and Ashley Mead and husband Chris of Columbus, Ga.; two step-grandsons, Eli Holcombe and Reece Holcombe of Selmer, Tenn.; seven great-grandchildren, Karson Moody, Sarah Moody, Madison Cornelius, Marlee Cornelius, Mason Thompson, Dean Davis and Blakely Mead; and a brother, Jerry Beavers and wife Debbie of Walnut. He was preceded in death by his parents, Robert Calvin “Bobâ€? Beavers and Genniev Beavers; and an infant brother, Robert Lee Beavers. Bro. Richard Doyle will ofďŹ ciate. Visitation is from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.

Speech draws harsh GOP reviews The Associated Press

Bobby Beavers

Herbert Aultman, 82, died Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015, at Baptist Memorial Hospital in Booneville. Arrangements are pending with Magnolia Funeral Home. Dorothy Cooper of Walnut died Wednesday, Jan, 21, 2015, at her residence. Arrangements are pending with Memorial Funeral Home. Eugene Justice of Corinth died Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015, at his residence. Arrangements are pending with Magnolia Funeral Home.

Herbert Aultman

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address drew unsparing morning-after reviews Wednesday from majority Republicans in Congress, including a rebuke on nuclear talks with Iran and a lament from Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell that a high-proďŹ le speech can be about “more than veto threats of strident partisanship.â€? McConnell, R-Ky., said the Democratic president “may not be wild about the people’s choice of a Congress. But he owes it to the American people to ďŹ nd a serious way to work with the representatives they elected.â€? Obama’s ďŹ rst State of the Union address with Congress under Republican control was studded with veto threats. He deďŹ antly unfurled an agenda on taxes, spending, social programs, energy and foreign policy notably at odds with Republican priorities. He did end with a plea for the two parties to “debate without demonizing one anotherâ€? and ďŹ nd compromise where possible. The quick challenge on Iran came courtesy of House Speaker John Boehner, who announced he had invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to address a

joint meeting of Congress on Feb. 11. Assuming the Israeli leader accepts, he would stand at the same podium in the House of Representatives where the president spoke Tuesday night — with a notably different message. Netanyahu has been an outspoken opponent of the direction of negotiations with Tehran that the Obama administration is involved in. Administration ofďŹ cials say the hope is to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. The Israeli leader says he fears the United States and other countries will give away too much in the talks, and the existence of his country will be at risk. The U.S. and other Western countries believe that Iran is intent on trying to develop nuclear weapons. Tehran claims its nuclear program is peaceful and exists only to produce energy for civilian use. The invitation to Netanyahu wasn’t the only Republican rebuttal on the horizon at the dawn of a new Congress under GOP control. The Senate is debating legislation to authorize construction of the Keystone XL pipeline despite a veto threat, and the House has votes scheduled this week on two

other bills the president has signaled he will reject. One would ban abortions for women more than 20 weeks pregnant; the other would give the government one year to act on construction requests for natural gas pipelines. Republicans unleashed their counterattack as Obama headed to promote his proposals in Idaho and Kansas, two of the most Republican states. The speech itself was memorable for a splitscreen sort of response, in which Democrats on one side of the House chamber repeatedly rose to their feet and applauded the president, while Republicans who intend to vote down his proposals sat silently. When Obama promised to send Congress a budget â€œďŹ lled with ideas that are practical, not partisan,â€? a disbelieving snicker swept through the rows of Republicans. “We’re not going to raise taxes. He knows we’re not going to raise taxes. So I’m kind of surprised he paid lip service to that,â€? Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, the chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said afterward. The centerpiece of Obama’s economic proposals was an increase in the capital gains rate on couples making more than $500,000 annually,

to 28 percent, coupled with higher taxes on some estates and a fee on the roughly 100 U.S. ďŹ nancial ďŹ rms with assets of more than $50 billion. Much of the $320 billion that would be raised would be ticketed for the middle class, in the form of a $500 tax credit for some families with two working spouses, expansion of the child care tax credit and a $60 billion program to make community college free. For that, Obama drew condemnation from the most junior Senate Republicans, and from the most senior. “Calling for expanding the death tax and raising the rates on capital gains, like the president did tonight, makes clear this White House is more about redistribution and populist class warfare than about actual bipartisan tax reform,â€? said GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah. As chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, he will have an inuential role in negotiations on any tax overhaul legislation in the next two years. Sen. Tom Cotton, who defeated a Democratic incumbent last fall to win his seat in Arkansas, said, “The policies and ideas he put forth are from the same tax and spend playbook he’s been using for the last six years.â€?

Dorothy Cooper

Boehner defies Obama on Iran sanctions The Associated Press

Eugene Justice

Obituary Policy The Daily Corinthian include the following information in obituaries: The name, age, city of residence of the deceased; when, where and manner of death of the deceased; time and location of funeral service; name of officiant; time and location of visitation; time and location of memorial services; biographical information can include date of birth, education, place of employment/occupation, military service and church membership; survivors can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), and grandchildren, great-grandchildren can be listed by number only; preceded in death can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), grandchildren; great-grandchildren can be listed by number only. No other information will be included in the obituary. All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituaries will only be accepted from funeral homes. All obituaries must contain a signature of the family member making the funeral arrangements.

“WHAT IT MEANS TO BE LOST� The Lord revealed that most of the world will be lost. “Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat’ (Matt 7: 13). Since this is true, do we know what it means to be “lost’’? The “lost’’ are separated from God because of their sins. “But your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear� (lsa 59:2). Paul described the Ephesians before they became Christians as being dead in trespasses and sins. “And you hath be quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins� (Eph 2:1 ). They were also described as being without God and Christ and without hope. “That at that time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the world� (Eph 2: 12). The “lost� may not want to admit it, but they are serving Satan. It is not possible to serve the Lord and Satan at the same time. “He that is not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad� (Matt 12:30). Paul revealed that we are servants of those to whom we obey. “Know ye not, that to whom yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness� (Rom 6: 16)? All who friendship the world become the enemies of God. “Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not that the :friendship of the world is enmity with God? whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God� (James 4:4). The “lost� do not enjoy any spiritual blessings because all spiritual blessings are in Christ.“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath bl~ us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ� (Eph 1 :3). The saved enjoy redemption that is located only in Christ. “In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace� (Eph 1 :7). The “lost� will never enjoy eternal life that is in Christ. “And this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son� (1 John 5:11) .. Do we want to be among the “lost�? If not, we must obey the Lord. and live for him (Matt 7:21 ).

WASHINGTON — Defying President Barack Obama, House Speaker John Boehner announced on Wednesday that he’s invited Israel’s prime minister to stand before Congress and push for new sanctions against its archenemy Iran. Boehner’s decision to bring Benjamin Netanyahu before a joint meeting of Congress on Feb. 11 seemed to catch the White House by surprise. And it added fuel to a drive by lawmakers from both parties to pass legislation calling for fresh penalties if there is no deal soon to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran. Barely sworn in, the new Republican-controlled Congress is already on a collision course with Obama over a major foreign policy issue. Obama has threatened to veto any new sanctions legislation, saying it could scuttle ongoing nuclear talks with Iran and heighten the risk of a military showdown. Secretary of State John Kerry on Wednesday quoted an unidentiďŹ ed Israeli intelligence ofďŹ cial as saying that adding

sanctions now “would be like throwing a grenade into the process.� But Boehner is not backing down. He told a private meeting of GOP lawmakers that Congress would proceed on further penalties against Iran despite Obama’s warning. “He expects us to stand idly by and do nothing while he cuts a bad deal with Iran,� Boehner said. “Two words: ‘Hell no!’ ... We’re going to do no such thing.� The Democrats’ House leader, Nancy Pelosi of California, strongly disagreed. She said Obama has had diplomatic success in bringing countries together for the current economic sanctions aimed at stopping Iran’s nuclear program. And she said it would be “irresponsible� for Congress to impose new penalties that “could undermine the negotiations and undermine the diplomatic coalition that is there — the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany.� The White House said Boehner’s invitation also was a breach of diplomatic protocol. Traditionally, no administration would

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learn about a foreign leader’s plan to visit the United States from the speaker of the House, said State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki. Said Boehner: “I don’t believe I am poking anyone in the eye.â€? The invitation was a coordinated effort involving Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell with staff discussions beginning last year, according to a senior Republican aide, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to publicly discuss the private talks. Boehner contacted the Israeli ambassador on Jan. 8 to assess Netanyahu’s interest and received a positive response. Netanyahu stands to gain politically at home from the U.S. visit. He is in a tough ďŹ ght to win re-election in Israel’s upcoming March vote. Netanyahu’s Likud Party is running behind the main opposition group headed by Yitzhak Herzog’s Labor Party, which has been highlighting rancor in the country’s critical relationship with the United States. The image of Netanyahu addressing Congress — an infrequent honor for a world leader — could undercut his opposition’s message. At the same time, he risks aggravating the tense relationship he currently has with the Obama administration. Time could be running out to reach a deal with Iran, which says its nuclear program is peaceful and exists only to produce energy for civilian use. Talks have been extended until July, with the goal of reaching a framework for a deal by the end of March. Just after Boehner announced that Netanyahu had been invited, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a threehour hearing on the Ira-

nian nuclear talks and the role of Congress. Republicans and some Democrats on the committee argued that Iran is playing for time and that the U.S. and its international partners are inching closer to Iran’s negotiating position. But other lawmakers agreed with the administration that it’s best to let the negotiations play out. Committee chairman Sen. Bob Corker, RTenn., is pressing for legislation that would allow Congress to vote on any deal the U.S. and its international partners might reach with Tehran. “I want these negotiations to be successful ... but just stiff-arming (Congress) . and saying, ‘No, we really don’t want you to play a role, we want you to just trust us,’ is totally unacceptable from my standpoint,� Corker said. Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, the ranking Democrat on the committee, and Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., are pushing legislation that would impose heavier sanctions that would take effect if there’s no deal. That bill would not impose any new sanctions during the remaining timeline for negotiations. But if there’s no deal, the sanctions that have been eased during the talks would be reinstated and Iran would face new punitive measures. “Iran is clearly taking steps that can only be interpreted as provocative, yet the administration appears willing to excuse away any connection between these developments and signs of Iran’s bad faith in negotiations,� Menendez said. Antony Blinken, deputy secretary of state, said new sanctions legislation would not help and could provoke “Iran to walk away from the negotiating table.�

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Video shows man shot by police raising his hands The Associated Press

BRIDGETON, N.J. — Another police killing is stirring anger in another town, this time in New Jersey, where a tense traffic stop captured on video ended with a passenger shot to death as he stepped out of a car with his hands raised at shoulder height. The newly released footage from a police dashboard camera shows Bridgeton officers Braheme Days and Roger Worley in a Dec. 30 stop that escalates quickly after Days warns his partner about seeing a gun in the glove compartment of the Jaguar. Days screams over and over at the passen-

ger, Jerame Reid, “Show me your hands!” and “If you reach for something, you’re going to be f----- dead!” The officer appears to reach into the car and remove the gun. But the brief standoff ends with Reid disregarding Days’ order to not move, stepping out and getting shot. The shooting has touched off protests in Bridgeton, a struggling city of about 25,000 people — two-thirds of them black or Hispanic — 35 miles from Philadelphia. The case came after months of turbulent demonstrations and violence over the killings of unarmed black men by white police officers in

New York and Ferguson, Missouri. Days is black, his partner white. The passenger was black, as was the driver. Both officers have been placed on leave while the Cumberland County prosecutor’s office investigates. Activists are calling on the prosecutor to transfer the case to the state attorney general. County Prosecutor Jennifer WebbMcCrae has disqualified herself from the case because she knows Days. First Assistant Prosecutor Harold Shapiro would not comment on the investigation Wednesday. “The video speaks for itself that at no point was

Jerame Reid a threat and he possessed no weapon on his person,” said Walter Hudson, chair and founder of the civil rights group the National Awareness Alliance. “He complied with the officer and the officer shot him.” Reid, 36, had spent about 13 years in prison for shooting at New Jersey State Police troopers when he was a teenager. He was also arrested last year on charges including drug possession and obstruction; Days was one of the arresting officers then. The video was released through open records requests from the South Jersey Times and the Press of Atlantic City.

The officers had pulled over the Jaguar for rolling through a stop sign, and the encounter starts friendly. But Days suddenly steps back, pulls his gun and tells the men, “Show me your hands.” Days tells his partner there is a gun in the glove compartment and then appears to reach in and remove a handgun. The driver, Leroy Tutt, is seen showing his hands atop the open window on his side of the car. It’s not clear what Reid is doing, though Days repeatedly warns him not to move during the standoff of less than two minutes. “I’m going to shoot you!” Days shouts, referring to Reid at one point

by his first name. “You’re going to be ... dead! If you reach for something, you’re going to be ... dead!” “I ain’t got no reason to reach for nothing, bro. I ain’t got no reason to reach for nothing,” Reid says as Days continues to yell to his partner that Reid is reaching for something. Someone then says, “I’m getting out and getting on the ground,” but Days yells at Reid not to move. The passenger door pops open and Reid emerges. His hands are at about shoulder height and appear to be empty. As he steps out, the officers fire at least six shots.

Senators grapple with student testing volume Bill would remove The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Not another test! The lament of many schoolchildren was echoed across a congressional hearing room as senators began working on a long overdue update to the No Child Left Behind education law. The law, signed by President George W. Bush, dictates that states test students in reading and math in grades three to eight every year and again in high school. The results are used to judge whether schools are showing growth, and if not, they face consequences. Many educators and parents have complained that the law led to teaching to the test and too much test preparation, but supporters of the mandate such as civil rights and business groups said it’s a critical way to ensure that historically underserved groups of students are learning before it’s too late to help them. Complicating the issue, districts and states have required additional tests — some to chart how students are doing to prepare for the federally mandated ones. Sen. Lamar Alexander, chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, maintains he’s open to discussion on

the issue as he seeks to get a bill to the Senate floor by late February. He said he hears from governors and school superintendents who say if the government did not dictate policy, it would be difficult for them to do, but he’s also concerned about the federal government getting in the way. “Are there too many tests? Are they the right tests? Are the stakes for failing them too high? What should Washington, D.C. have to do with all this?” Alexander said. Alexander has released a proposal with two options. One would keep the testing mandate as it is. The other would allow states to decide what to do on testing. Both approaches would require annual reporting of student achievement broken down by smaller groups. Other senators on the panel such as Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., Pat Roberts, R-Kan., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, also expressed concern with the federal mandate, suggesting they are grappling with the issue. Collins noted that a commission in Maine a decade ago recommended allowing states to do the standardized testing just once each in elementary, middle and high school, and she says that approach “intrigues me.” Since 2012, President Barack Obama has al-

lowed states to get a waiver from some of the more stringent requirements of No Child Left Behind. The administration, however, has steadfastly supported the annual testing requirement — as does Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the committee’s ranking Democrat. “While we carefully consider changes to assessments and accountability to give states and districts the flexibility they need, we can’t forget our obligations to the kids who too often fall through the cracks,” Murray said. Another committee member, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said the federal government gives billions to states for education, and it only makes sense that it would demand accountability for the money. On the other side of the debate, Jia Lee, a special education teacher at Earth School in New York, testified that schools have become “increasingly data driven as opposed to student driven” with valuable time taken away from subjects such as social studies and physical education. Stephen Lazar, a high school teacher at Harvest Collegiate High School in New York, testified that “the federal incentives in education are wrong,” and he’s in years past sac-

rificed at least a month of classroom time moving away from discussions to teaching his students to write formulaic essays and conducting “mindless repetition of facts” to prepare them for standardized-test taking. He suggested that Congress consider other options such as testing just a sample of students, rolling back the number of federally mandated tests or changing the accountability for schools connected to the results. Those weren’t options Wade Henderson, president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and the Leadership Conference Education Fund, seemed willing to consider. He testified that districts and states have failed many historically underserved groups of students and “the federal government must continue to hold states and school districts accountable.” In the absence of a strong federal role, he said he fears efforts will be rolled back. But even supporters of the federal mandate, such as Murray, expressed concern about the amount of testing in schools. Murray said Congress “can and should encourage states and districts to reduce redundant and low-quality tests.”

Lee from MLK Day The Associated Press

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — An Arkansas legislator said Wednesday it is inappropriate to honor Martin Luther King Jr. and the leader of the Confederate Army on the same day and has proposed ending the state’s decadesold tradition of honoring Robert E. Lee. Arkansas is one of just three states to jointly celebrate King, the black civilrights leader, and Lee, the white Confederate general, on the third Monday of January. Some have labeled the practice incongruous, and most public celebrations center on King. Rep. Nate Bell, R-Mena, said that while he has “absolute and total respect” for Lee, and that his own daughter attended Washington & Lee University in Virginia, honoring both men together highlights racial divides. “There are people who profit from racial division,” he said. “It needs to be off the table.” A photo of a sign noting the King and Lee holiday was circulated on Twitter on Monday, drawing comments from across the country. Bell’s bill would not create a separate holiday for Lee, as in the general’s home state of Virginia. Bell said creating a new

state holiday would cost too much. Arkansas has recognized Lee’s birthday since the 1940s. State lawmakers voted to recognize King’s birthday as a state holiday in 1983, and combined the celebrations two years later. Alabama and Mississippi also recognize both men together. No bills have been filed in those states this year to change the holiday. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Monday attended a day of service honoring King and called the civil-rights leader someone who inspired others to make tough, but correct choices. He did not mention Lee or attend any event in the general’s honor. Hutchinson said Wednesday that he hadn’t decided whether to support Bell’s proposal. “I haven’t thought about it, so I’d have to give it some more thought,” Hutchinson said. “History is important to me and we’ve just got to balance those, obviously.” Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley spoke about King in his inaugural speech Monday, but did not mention Lee. The state Sons of Confederate Veterans hold their annual Lee celebration on his actual birthday, January 19, not the observed holiday.

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Thursday, January 22, 2015

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Chg ExcoRes 32 1.94 Exelon 16 37.99 ExpScripts 33 83.54 12 91.87 +.17 ExxonMbl 14 39.78 +.11 FMC Tech 15 2.33 +.05 FXCM 73 76.74 -.14 Facebook 35 75.55 -.16 FamilyDlr 23 178.69 -.75 FedExCp ... 12.36 -2.59 FiatChry n 11 17.53 +.05 FifthThird dd 34.22 +6.76 FireEye -.12 FstHorizon 14 12.48 6.41 +.21 FMajSilv g 53 7.65 -3.39 FstNiagara dd +2.76 FTEnhSh rs q 60.01 13 10.86 -.80 Flextrn 10 7.57 +.23 Fortress 9 19.85 -.47 FrptMcM 6.79 -.03 FrontierCm 32 dd 2.97 +.37 Frontline dd 1.12 +3.25 FuelCellE 13 54.19 -.05 GATX -.08 GameStop 11 36.84 15 41.20 -8.89 Gap -.06 GenDynam 21 138.89 cc 30.37 +.30 GenGrPrp 20 54.08 -.26 GenMills +.44 GenMotors 22 33.89 dd 7.11 +7.81 Genworth ... 3.56 +.09 Gerdau dd 3.27 +.14 GeronCp 18 103.58 +.92 GileadSci ... 44.71 +.25 GlaxoSKln ... 5.72 +.41 GoldFLtd dd 24.44 +.18 Goldcrp g .36 +.28 GoldStr g dd -.22 GoldmanS 10 177.15 ... 50.29 +1.58 GoPro n 6 2.41 +2.97 GranTrra g dd 7.16 -.14 Groupon 16 69.27 +.06 HCA Hldg 21 47.48 +2.55 HCP Inc 1.22 +2.16 HalconRes dd 10 40.69 +.83 Hallibrtn HarmonyG ... 3.12 +.69 12 39.70 +.10 HartfdFn cc 82.43 +.04 HltCrREIT dd 3.35 +.50 HeclaM .85 -.58 HercOffsh dd ... 21.85 -.29 Hertz HewlettP 15 38.57 -.03 7.74 +.08 HimaxTch 37 11 32.00 -.10 HollyFront 24 103.53 +.06 HomeDp -.11 HmeLnSvc 5 15.09 +.86 HopFedBc 22 13.15 16 23.61 +7.92 HostHotls 2 3.32 +1.07 HovnanE 27 8.98 +.08 HudsCity 9.76 +.41 HuntBncsh 14 15 21.97 -.02 Huntsmn +.15 I-J-K-L +.31 dd 3.18 +.20 IAMGld g ... 12.31 +.17 ICICI Bk s ING ... 13.16 -1.67 iShGold q 12.52 +.21 iSAstla q 22.23 +.56 iShBrazil q 37.31 -.45 iShEMU q 36.72 -1.45 iShGerm q 27.85 +.06 iShItaly q 13.81 -.10 iShJapan q 11.45 +.75 iShMexico q 58.88 -.67 iSTaiwn q 15.45 +1.19 iShSilver q 17.37 +.76 iShChinaLC q 43.09 +.06 iSCorSP500 q 204.50 +.31 iShEMkts q 40.30 -.50 iSh ACWI q 58.44 +.27 iSh20 yrT q 133.40 -.06 iS Eafe q 61.48 -1.73 iShiBxHYB q 89.89 -.31 iShR2K q 115.84 +.72 iShREst q 80.92 +.16 iShHmCnst q 24.71 +1.13 IngrmM 16 25.49 +.20 IntgDv 54 18.42 -.01 IBM 13 152.09 +.38 Interpublic 24 20.23 +.71 Invesco 14 36.31 +.75 Isis dd 69.72 +.04 ItauUnibH ... 13.36 -.02 JD.com n ... 24.48 +.39 JPMorgCh 11 55.89 +.25 JanusCap 21 16.28 -1.03 JetBlue 14 15.28 +.60 JohnJn 18 101.90 -.10 JohnsnCtl 25 45.85 +.05 JnprNtwk 18 21.84 +.26 KB Home 13 11.94 +.34 KBR Inc 27 16.61 -.11 Kellogg 14 69.03 +.79 KeryxBio dd 12.87 +.01 Keycorp 12 12.33 +.30 Kimco 45 27.30 +.42 KindMorg 34 42.00 -.23 KindrM wt ... 4.02 +.48 Kinross g dd 3.54 +.61 Kohls 15 58.66 +1.54 KraftFGp 17 66.57 +.46 LaredoPet 11 9.87 -.15 LVSands 16 53.30 -.33 LendingC n ... 20.17 -.25 LennarA 15 43.27 +.11 Level3 45 49.52 -.03 LibGlobC s ... 45.36 +1.35 LillyEli 29 72.24 +.96 LinearTch 23 46.33 +3.22 LinnEngy dd 9.32 +.14 LockhdM 20 195.50 -.93 LyonBas A 10 81.38 -.50 M-N-O-P +.23 +.13 MGIC Inv 14 8.63 +1.27 MGM Rsts 64 19.24 -.30 Macys 15 64.20 +1.54 MagHRes dd 1.85 -.65 MarathnO 8 26.59 +2.33 MarathPet 10 80.95 +.14 MVJrGold q 29.65 +.15 MktVGold q 22.54 +.10 MV OilSvc q 34.00 -.58 MV Semi q 54.86 +.46 MktVRus q 15.42 +.90 MartMM 36 110.35 +.29 MarvellT 18 15.76 +.40 Masco 11 24.10 +1.16 MasterCd s 29 83.72 +.01 Mattel 13 28.04 +.29 McDrmInt 2 2.22 +.50 Medtrnic 25 73.06 +.06 MelcoCrwn 17 21.99 +1.96 MemRsD n ... 18.16 -1.76 Merck 34 62.16 -.36 MetLife 10 49.27 -1.02 MKors 18 68.50 -.10 MicronT 10 30.49 +.14 Microsoft 18 45.92 +.27 MizuhoFn ... 3.34 ... 8.52 +1.48 MobileTele dd .46 +.66 Molycorp 19 37.15 -.81 Mondelez 12 34.73 +2.98 MorgStan 24 48.17 -.03 Mosaic cc 45.59 +.21 NPS Phm dd 25.47 -.57 NRG Egy ... 79.30 -.13 NXP Semi 9 10.86 +.56 Nabors ... 1.63 +.90 NBGreece 10 59.73 +.61 NOilVarco ... 19.96 +.12 Navient n 95 409.28 +.08 Netflix dd 4.71 -.18 NwGold g 15 19.56 +.99 NewOriEd +.77 NewfldExp 15 28.09 NewmtM 18 24.32 NewsCpA 33 14.95 -.48 NextEraEn 24 109.89 -.30 NielsenNV 46 43.86 -.03 NikeB 28 93.51 +1.21 NobleCorp 6 17.18 +1.02 NobleEngy 18 46.93 -1.57 NokiaCp ... 7.71 +.26 NordicAm dd 10.55 +.50 NorTrst 20 66.32 +.05 NorthropG 17 154.24 +.37 NStarRlt dd 18.75 +.07 Novartis 24 98.75 +.25 Novavax dd 7.11 +1.65 Nucor 22 44.01 -.08 Nvidia 20 20.30 +1.47 OasisPet 4 13.86 -.16 OcciPet 11 79.24

Financial Solutions with a Smile and a Handshake (ULF 0 5XWOHGJH &)3Š $$06Š

YOUR FUNDS Name NAV AMG YacktmanSvc d24.73 YkmFcsSvc d 25.63 AQR MaFtStrI 10.90 American Beacon LgCpVlIs 28.53 American Century EqIncInv 8.79 InvGrInv 28.50 UltraInv 34.56 ValueInv 8.50 American Funds AMCAPA m 27.83 AmBalA m 24.66 BondA m 12.95 CapIncBuA m 60.32 CapWldBdA m19.94 CpWldGrIA m 46.52 EurPacGrA m 47.95 FnInvA m 51.44 GrthAmA m 42.33 HiIncA m 10.65 IncAmerA m 21.73 IntBdAmA m 13.61 IntlGrInA m 32.05 InvCoAmA m 36.99 MutualA m 37.01 NewEconA m 36.94 NewPerspA m 36.41 NwWrldA m 54.12 SmCpWldA m 44.92 TaxEBdAmA m13.23 WAMutInvA m 40.58 Artisan Intl d 30.51 IntlVal d 34.29 MdCpVal 24.33 MidCap 44.79 MidCapI 47.23 BBH CoreSelN d 22.36 Bernstein DiversMui 14.68 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 23.22 EqDivA m 24.41 EqDivI 24.47 GlLSCrI 10.39 GlobAlcA m 19.86 GlobAlcC m 18.25 GlobAlcI 19.96 HiYldBdIs 7.83 StrIncIns 10.15 Causeway IntlVlIns d 14.94 Cohen & Steers Realty 81.82 Columbia AcornIntZ 42.07 AcornZ 31.23 DivIncZ 18.90 Credit Suisse ComStrInstl 5.90 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.32 2YrGlbFII 9.92 5YrGlbFII 11.04 EmMkCrEqI 19.32 EmMktValI 26.06 EmMtSmCpI 20.30 IntCorEqI 11.67 IntSmCapI 18.39 IntlSCoI 16.82 IntlValuI 17.61 RelEstScI 35.42 TAUSCrE2I 13.91 USCorEq1I 17.58 USCorEq2I 17.09 USLgCo 16.02 USLgValI 33.05 USMicroI 18.53 USSmValI 33.23 USSmallI 29.92 USTgtValInst 21.20 Davis NYVentA m 35.95 NYVentY 36.47 Dodge & Cox Bal 100.87 GlbStock 11.78 Income 13.86 IntlStk 42.47 Stock 176.12 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 11.07 Dreyfus AppreciaInv 53.53 Eaton Vance FltgRtI 8.90 FMI LgCap 20.97 FPA Cres d 33.40 NewInc d 10.15 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 32.03 Federated StrValI 6.08 ToRetIs 11.13 Fidelity AstMgr20 13.28 AstMgr50 17.04 Bal 22.61 Bal K 22.61 BlChGrow 67.84 BlChGrowK 67.90 CapApr 35.90 CapInc d 9.67 Contra 96.98 ContraK 96.91 DivGrow 32.90 DivrIntl d 34.69 DivrIntlK d 34.62 EqInc 58.35 EqInc II 26.39 FF2015 12.61 FF2035 13.18 FF2040 9.29 Fidelity 42.26 FltRtHiIn d 9.62 FrdmK2015 13.60 FrdmK2020 14.23 FrdmK2025 14.82 FrdmK2030 15.09 FrdmK2035 15.52 FrdmK2040 15.56 FrdmK2045 15.97 Free2010 15.41 Free2020 15.35 Free2025 13.11 Free2030 16.05 GNMA 11.66 GrowCo 130.97 GrowInc 29.42 GrthCmpK 130.81 HiInc d 8.86 IntlDisc d 38.27 InvGrdBd 7.98 LatinAm d 23.69 LowPrStkK d 49.18 LowPriStk d 49.23 Magellan 90.74 MidCap d 37.88 MuniInc d 13.72 OTC 78.71 Puritan 21.37 PuritanK 21.36 RealInv d 43.78 SASEqF 13.95 SEMF 17.12 SInvGrBdF 11.57 STMIdxF d 59.07 SersEmgMkts 17.08 SesAl-SctrEqt 13.96 SesInmGrdBd 11.57 ShTmBond 8.61 SmCapDisc d 28.71 StratInc 10.68 Tel&Util 24.60 TotalBd 10.78 USBdIdx 11.86 USBdIdxInv 11.86 Value 110.96 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 26.27 NewInsI 26.74 Fidelity Select Biotech d 231.65 HealtCar d 223.45 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 71.97 500IdxAdvtgInst71.97 500IdxInstl 71.97 71.96 +0.35 -1.2 YTD 500IdxInv Chg %Rtn ExtMktIdAg d 54.14 +0.15 -1.9 IntlIdxAdg d 37.54 +0.27 +0.9 +0.07 -1.6 TotMktIdAg d 59.06 +0.26 -1.4 +0.09 -1.0 FidelityÆ SerBlueChipGrF11.99 +0.07 -0.8 -0.06 +2.5 SeriesGrowthCoF11.92+0.03 -0.5 First Eagle 52.92 +0.19 +0.9 +0.21 -2.0 GlbA m FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.70 -0.01 +1.5 +0.05 +0.5 +0.09 -0.9 FrankTemp-Franklin 7.65 -0.02 +1.7 +0.19 -0.7 CA TF A m +0.07 -1.3 GrowthA m 74.23 +0.25 -0.6 HY TF A m 10.77 -0.02 +1.6 +0.25 -0.6 Income C m 2.42 +0.01 2.39 +0.01 +0.06 -0.4 IncomeA m 2.37 +0.01 -0.03 +1.2 IncomeAdv 51.28 +0.28 -1.5 +0.28 +1.2 RisDvA m 9.99 ... -0.1 ... +0.5 StrIncA m FrankTemp-Mutual +0.39 +0.9 33.24 +0.24 -0.2 +0.36 +1.7 Discov Z +0.30 -1.2 DiscovA m 32.72 +0.23 -0.3 Shares Z 29.27 +0.15 -0.8 +0.31 -0.8 ... -0.6 SharesA m 29.04 +0.15 -0.9 FrankTemp-Templeton +0.06 +0.7 -0.02 +0.8 GlBond C m 12.45 -0.02 -0.1 +0.30 +0.7 GlBondA m 12.42 -0.02 -0.1 +0.24 -0.2 GlBondAdv 12.37 -0.03 -0.1 +0.15 -0.4 GrowthA m 23.73 +0.23 -0.3 17.07 +0.17 -0.8 +0.18 +0.4 WorldA m +0.22 +0.4 Franklin Templeton I GlTlRtAdv 12.49 -0.02 -0.1 +0.43 +1.2 +0.18 -0.9 GE S&SUSEq 53.16 +0.27 -2.1 -0.02 +1.1 +0.17 -0.9 GMO AABdIV 25.71 ... +2.4 22.14 +0.21 +0.8 +0.29 +1.8 IntItVlIV QuIII 22.34 +0.05 -0.2 +0.23 +0.2 +0.22 -1.3 USEqAllcVI 15.92 +0.07 -1.2 Goldman Sachs +0.25 -1.4 6.72 ... -0.1 +0.26 -1.4 HiYieldIs d MidCpVaIs 40.76 +0.24 -2.0 SmCpValIs 53.54 +0.10 -3.8 +0.07 -1.5 Harbor 58.00 +0.41 -0.9 -0.01 +1.2 CapApInst IntlInstl 65.08 +0.46 +0.5 IntlInv b 64.46 +0.45 +0.5 +0.54 -5.1 +0.10 -2.0 Hartford +0.11 -1.9 CapAprA m 36.62 +0.27 -1.3 ... +0.2 CpApHLSIA 54.07 +0.39 -1.2 +0.06 +0.5 INVESCO +0.06 +0.4 ComstockA m 24.81 +0.14 -2.8 +0.06 +0.5 EqIncomeA m 10.19 +0.04 -1.6 +0.01 -0.4 GrowIncA m 25.79 +0.16 -2.8 ... +0.5 HiYldMuA m 10.14 -0.02 +1.8 IVA +0.14 +1.0 WorldwideI d 17.49 +0.04 +0.1 Ivy -0.10 +6.5 AssetStrA m 25.34 +0.21 -0.6 AssetStrC m 24.39 +0.20 -0.7 25.58 +0.20 -0.6 +0.23 +0.8 AsstStrgI +0.07 -2.3 JPMorgan 11.91 -0.02 +1.3 +0.06 -0.3 CoreBdUlt CoreBondA m 11.90 -0.02 +1.2 CoreBondSelect11.89 -0.03 +1.2 +0.06 -1.8 HighYldSel 7.59 ... ... +0.2 LgCapGrA m 34.35 +0.21 -0.5 LgCapGrSelect34.42 +0.21 -0.5 ... +0.2 36.69 +0.23 -1.2 -0.02 +1.0 MidCpValI ... +0.4 +0.27 +2.1 ShDurBndSel 10.90 14.35 +0.09 -1.4 +0.34 +1.2 USEquityI +0.20 +2.1 USLCpCrPS 28.89 +0.17 -1.7 +0.06 -0.3 Janus 30.47 +0.12 -0.4 +0.07 -1.1 BalT 54.58 -0.28 +3.9 +0.04 -0.9 GlbLfScT +0.12 -0.2 John Hancock -0.03 +7.1 DisValMdCpI 19.81 +0.08 -0.8 18.45 +0.04 -2.7 +0.07 -2.5 DiscValI 15.39 +0.06 -0.5 +0.08 -1.9 LifBa1 b LifGr1 b 16.16 +0.08 -0.7 +0.09 -2.3 +0.07 -1.2 Lazard +0.26 -2.8 EmgMkEqInst d17.61 +0.39 +2.4 -0.08 -4.3 Legg Mason +0.03 -5.0 CBAggressGrthA m202.03+2.10 -0.8 -0.02 -3.9 CBAggressGrthI219.05+2.28 -0.8 +0.07 -4.3 WACorePlusBdI11.76 -0.02 +1.2 Longleaf Partners 30.89 +0.26 -1.1 +0.34 -2.4 LongPart +0.35 -2.4 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.78 -0.02 -0.3 14.71 -0.02 -0.3 +0.22 -1.6 BdR b +0.11 -0.4 Lord Abbett 16.13 +0.07 -0.9 -0.02 +0.6 AffiliatA m ... +0.2 +0.42 +0.9 ShDurIncA m 4.46 ... +0.2 +0.70 -2.7 ShDurIncC m 4.49 ShDurIncF b 4.45 -0.01 +0.2 ... +0.9 MFS IntlValA m 33.72 +0.13 +2.0 21.18 +0.14 +1.3 +0.20 -0.7 IsIntlEq TotRetA m 18.12 +0.04 -0.4 ValueA m 34.40 +0.14 -1.5 ... +0.1 ValueI 34.57 +0.14 -1.5 +0.13 -1.2 MainStay Mktfield 15.95 +0.08 -1.8 +0.09 -1.0 Manning & Napier 7.41 +0.09 +1.1 ... +0.3 WrldOppA Matthews Asian China d 22.31 +0.45 +4.0 +0.19 -8.7 India d 28.37 +0.02 +7.2 +0.04 +2.9 Metropolitan West 11.01 -0.02 +1.1 -0.02 +1.0 TotRetBdI TotRtBd b 11.01 -0.02 +1.0 ... +0.3 Natixis LSInvBdY 11.86 -0.03 -0.1 +0.04 +0.08 -0.7 LSStratIncC m16.35 -0.02 -0.3 +0.09 -0.7 Neuberger Berman +0.39 -0.8 GenesisInstl 54.93 -0.04 -3.0 +0.39 -0.8 Northern 7.02 -0.01 -0.6 +0.09 -0.4 HYFixInc d 24.97 +0.12 -1.2 +0.02 +0.1 StkIdx +0.45 -1.0 Nuveen 17.47 -0.02 +1.5 +0.45 -1.0 HiYldMunI +0.14 -1.6 Oakmark 31.46 +0.19 -1.4 +0.20 +0.7 EqIncI 23.15 +0.21 -0.8 +0.20 +0.7 Intl I Oakmark I 64.47 +0.46 -2.9 +0.30 -1.7 39.30 +0.32 -3.7 +0.11 -1.1 Select I Oberweis +0.04 +0.06 -0.6 ChinaOpp m 13.95 +0.15 +1.2 +0.05 -0.5 Old Westbury 7.61 +0.03 +0.3 +0.21 -1.4 GlbOppo ... +0.2 GlbSmMdCp 16.05 +0.04 -1.0 LgCpStr 12.92 +0.09 +0.1 +0.04 +0.04 -0.1 Oppenheimer +0.05 -0.3 DevMktA m 35.87 +0.59 +1.0 35.41 +0.58 +1.0 +0.07 -0.5 DevMktY 76.51 +0.53 +0.6 +0.08 -0.6 GlobA m IntlGrY 35.15 +0.15 +0.2 +0.08 -0.6 +0.08 -0.6 IntlGrowA m 35.35 +0.15 +0.2 +0.04 +0.1 MainStrA m 47.04 +0.35 -1.8 ... +0.05 -0.1 SrFltRatA m 8.09 4.07 ... +0.8 +0.05 -0.2 StrIncA m +0.07 -0.5 Oppenheimer Rocheste ... +0.1 FdMuniA m 15.53 -0.04 +1.6 +0.22 -0.5 Osterweis 11.42 +0.01 +0.3 +0.18 -2.6 OsterStrInc +0.22 -0.5 PIMCO 11.64 ... +0.3 ... -0.2 AllAssetI 9.15 ... +0.2 +0.29 +0.7 AllAuthIn 4.37 ... -2.5 -0.02 +0.9 ComRlRStI 9.20 ... -0.5 +0.43 -0.4 EMktCurI 8.38 ... +1.0 +0.27 -2.0 EmgLclBdI 10.93 ... +1.6 +0.28 -2.0 ForBdInstl 9.13 ... +0.2 +0.51 -1.9 HiYldIs 12.30 ... +0.22 -1.3 Income P ... -0.01 +1.6 IncomeA m 12.30 ... +0.27 -1.1 IncomeC m 12.30 ... +0.06 -0.6 IncomeD b 12.30 12.30 ... +0.06 -0.6 IncomeInl 12.47 ... +4.1 -0.01 +7.2 LgDrTRtnI 10.05 ... +0.2 +0.07 -1.3 LowDrIs ... +9.4 +0.25 +2.6 RERRStgC m 3.50 11.08 -0.03 +1.5 -0.03 +1.2 RealRet 9.72 ... -0.3 +0.26 -1.4 ShtTermIs 10.86 ... +1.9 +0.25 +2.5 TotRetA m ... +1.9 +0.07 -1.3 TotRetAdm b 10.86 ... +1.9 -0.02 +1.2 TotRetC m 10.86 10.86 ... +1.9 ... +0.4 TotRetIs ... +1.9 -0.02 -4.6 TotRetrnD b 10.86 10.86 ... +1.9 -0.01 +0.1 TotlRetnP ... -0.1 +0.20 +1.9 UnconstrBdIns 11.16 -0.02 +1.0 PRIMECAP Odyssey 32.09 +0.06 -2.6 -0.03 +1.2 AggGr 25.67 +0.05 -1.5 -0.03 +1.2 Growth +0.68 -2.0 Parnassus CoreEqInv 40.43 +0.13 -0.6 +0.10 -1.5 Permanent 41.35 +0.18 +4.5 +0.10 -1.5 Portfolio Pioneer -4.27 +4.7 PioneerA m 36.18 +0.18 -1.3 -0.34 +2.6 Principal DivIntI 11.40 +0.05 +0.3 12.27 +0.09 -1.4 +0.35 -1.2 LCGrIInst +0.35 -1.2 Prudential Investmen +0.35 -1.2 JenMidCapGrZ 39.29 +0.29 -1.8 Putnam CpSpctrmY 38.18 +0.43 GrowIncA m 21.12 ... NewOpp 79.41 +0.48 Schwab 1000Inv d 51.85 +0.26 FUSLgCInl d 15.08 +0.08 S&P500Sel d 31.76 +0.15 Scout Interntl 32.49 +0.23 Sequoia Sequoia 235.82 +0.36 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 66.97 +0.60 CapApprec 26.06 +0.11 EmMktStk d 33.54 +0.63 EqIndex d 54.79 +0.27 EqtyInc 32.16 +0.22 GrowStk 51.59 +0.53 HealthSci 70.65 -0.19 HiYield d 6.75 ... InsLgCpGr 27.22 +0.29 IntlBnd d 8.90 +0.02 IntlGrInc d 13.79 +0.09 IntlStk d 15.84 +0.14 LatinAm d 22.04 +0.50 MidCapE 42.57 +0.13 MidCapVa 28.45 +0.18 MidCpGr 74.50 +0.22 NewHoriz 42.83 -0.07 NewIncome 9.67 -0.02 OrseaStk d 9.52 +0.06 R2015 14.47 +0.04 R2025 15.70 +0.08 R2035 16.63 +0.11 Real d 28.50 +0.03 Rtmt2010 17.75 +0.04 Rtmt2020 20.71 +0.09 Rtmt2030 22.98 +0.13 Rtmt2040 23.86 +0.17 Rtmt2045 15.96 +0.11 ShTmBond 4.76 ... SmCpStk 43.00 -0.11 SmCpVal d 45.07 +0.06 SpecInc 12.70 ... Value 34.12 +0.28 TCW TotRetBdI 10.40 ... TIAA-CREF BdIdxInst 11.04 -0.02 EqIx 15.30 +0.06 IntlE d 17.63 +0.12 Templeton InFEqSeS 20.22 +0.23 Thornburg IncBldA m 21.07 +0.15 IncBldC m 21.06 +0.15 IntlI 28.14 +0.29 LtdTMul 14.67 ... Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 25.94 +0.06 VALIC Co I StockIdx 36.98 +0.18 Vanguard 500Adml 187.58 +0.91 500Inv 187.56 +0.90 BalIdxAdm 29.60 +0.05 BalIdxIns 29.60 +0.05 BdMktInstPls 11.00 -0.03 CAITAdml 11.94 -0.01 CapOpAdml 121.16 +0.20 DevMktIdxAdm 12.31 +0.08 DevMktIdxInstl 12.32 +0.08 DivGr 23.10 +0.10 EmMktIAdm 34.13 +0.62 EnergyAdm 98.59 +2.15 EqInc 31.05 +0.14 EqIncAdml 65.07 +0.27 ExplAdml 83.93 +0.15 Explr 90.27 +0.16 ExtdIdAdm 65.34 +0.18 ExtdIdIst 65.33 +0.17 ExtdMktIdxIP 161.23 +0.44 GNMA 10.83 ... GNMAAdml 10.83 ... GrthIdAdm 53.18 +0.29 GrthIstId 53.18 +0.29 HYCorAdml 5.96 +0.01 HltCrAdml 92.55 +0.17 HlthCare 219.39 +0.38 ITBondAdm 11.66 -0.04 ITGradeAd 9.96 -0.02 InfPrtAdm 26.19 -0.12 InfPrtI 10.67 -0.05 InflaPro 13.34 -0.06 InstIdxI 186.37 +0.90 InstPlus 186.39 +0.90 InstTStPl 46.17 +0.21 IntlGr 21.82 +0.23 IntlGrAdm 69.36 +0.73 IntlStkIdxAdm 26.20 +0.20 IntlStkIdxI 104.78 +0.82 IntlStkIdxIPls 104.80 +0.82 IntlVal 34.10 +0.19 LTGradeAd 11.05 -0.10 LifeCon 18.53 +0.01 LifeGro 28.72 +0.11 LifeMod 24.11 +0.06 MidCapIdxIP 164.75 +1.16 MidCp 33.33 +0.24 MidCpAdml 151.22 +1.06 MidCpIst 33.40 +0.23 Morg 25.23 +0.13 MorgAdml 78.15 +0.41 MuHYAdml 11.42 -0.02 MuInt 14.41 -0.02 MuIntAdml 14.41 -0.02 MuLTAdml 11.88 -0.02 MuLtdAdml 11.11 ... MuShtAdml 15.86 ... PrecMtls 9.98 -0.13 Prmcp 102.74 +0.22 PrmcpAdml 106.45 +0.24 PrmcpCorI 21.48 +0.08 REITIdxAd 122.71 -0.12 REITIdxInst 18.99 -0.02 STBondAdm 10.55 ... STCor 10.70 -0.01 STGradeAd 10.70 -0.01 STIGradeI 10.70 -0.01 STsryAdml 10.73 ... SelValu 27.65 +0.13 ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.26 -0.01 SmCapIdx 54.60 +0.12 SmCapIdxIP 157.66 +0.36 SmCpGrIdxAdm43.67 +0.04 SmCpIdAdm 54.62 +0.12 SmCpIdIst 54.62 +0.12 SmCpValIdxAdm44.05 +0.16 Star 24.62 +0.06 StratgcEq 31.79 +0.17 TgtRe2010 26.43 +0.02 TgtRe2015 15.32 +0.02 TgtRe2020 28.48 +0.06 TgtRe2030 28.98 +0.10 TgtRe2035 17.77 +0.07 TgtRe2040 29.61 +0.14 TgtRe2045 18.56 +0.09 TgtRe2050 29.47 +0.14 TgtRetInc 12.98 ... Tgtet2025 16.52 +0.05 TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.46 -0.05 TlIntlBdIdxInst 32.21 -0.06 TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.73 -0.02 TotBdAdml 11.00 -0.03 TotBdInst 11.00 -0.03 TotBdMkInv 11.00 -0.03 TotIntl 15.67 +0.13 TotStIAdm 50.91 +0.23 TotStIIns 50.91 +0.22 TotStIdx 50.89 +0.23 TxMCapAdm 102.52 +0.54 ValIdxAdm 32.51 +0.16 ValIdxIns 32.51 +0.16 WellsI 25.79 -0.02 WellsIAdm 62.48 -0.04 Welltn 39.17 +0.08 WelltnAdm 67.64 +0.14 WndsIIAdm 64.97 +0.42 Wndsr 20.97 +0.17 WndsrAdml 70.73 +0.59 WndsrII 36.61 +0.23 Virtus EmgMktsIs 10.26 +0.13 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 10.30 +0.04 SciTechA m 14.75 +0.05 -1.6 -2.4 -1.4 -1.2 -1.4 -1.2 -0.3 +0.3 -0.4 -0.3 +3.6 -1.2 -2.0 -0.7 +3.9 -0.1 -0.9 -0.3 +0.1 +1.5 +0.5 -1.3 -1.3 -1.2 -2.2 +1.1 +1.1 -0.1 -0.2 +6.1 +0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.3 +0.3 -3.0 -3.7 +0.2 -1.5 +0.9 +1.3 -1.4 +1.1 +0.8 +1.2 +1.2 +2.7 +0.9 -0.4 -1.3 -1.2 -1.2 -0.3 -0.3 +1.3 +1.3 -0.5 +1.2 +1.1 +2.6 -2.1 -0.5 -0.5 -2.9 -2.9 -1.9 -1.9 -1.9 +0.2 +0.2 -1.0 -1.0 +0.1 +3.6 +3.6 +1.9 +1.5 +1.2 +1.2 +1.2 -1.2 -1.2 -1.3 +1.3 +1.3 +0.8 +0.8 +0.8 +0.4 +3.0 +0.5 -0.3 +0.1 -1.1 -1.2 -1.1 -1.2 -0.4 -0.5 +1.4 +1.1 +1.1 +1.4 +0.7 +0.2 +9.0 -0.1 -0.1 -0.7 +6.9 +6.9 +0.7 +0.5 +0.5 +0.5 +0.4 -2.6 +0.3 -2.3 -2.2 -1.3 -2.2 -2.2 -3.0 -1.2 +0.4 +0.2 +0.1 -0.2 -0.4 -0.5 -0.5 -0.5 +0.5 -0.1 +1.1 +1.2 +1.1 +1.3 +1.3 +1.3 +0.8 -1.3 -1.3 -1.3 -1.3 -1.3 -1.3 +0.9 +0.9 +0.1 -1.9 -2.3 -2.3 -1.9 +3.7 -2.2 -1.6

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Double-edged barrel The tumbling price of crude oil is a boon for the airline industry, but it’s not a complete victory. Airline profits are facing some constraints because of prior deals the carriers made to shield themselves from the exact opposite of what’s happening now. It’s common for carriers to “hedge� their fuel costs, essentially buying insurance to protect against future cost spikes. Hedging was a successful tactic in the past, as the cost of oil surged. But now that oil has lost more than half its value since the summer, the strategy is eating into earnings. Delta Air Lines took a $1.2 billion charge last quarter related to its fuel hedges, for example, and it’s not alone. Analysts highlight Southwest Airlines in particular. It is partially hedged through 2017, while Delta, United Continental and others have hedging contracts in place only for this year. Southwest reports its fourth-quarter results Thursday. American Airlines, meanwhile, doesn’t have any hedges in place. That’s an advantage if oil remains low, as fuel can make up a third of an airline’s total operating costs. To be sure, the positive effect of falling oil outweighs any headaches tied to hedging. Delta, for example, says that it expects more than $2 billion in fuel savings this year, and many analysts expect cheap fuel to lead to further gains for airline stocks. Their ascent just may not be as big as it could have been.

Q-R-S-T QEP Res Qualcom QuantaSvc RexEnergy RiteAid RiverbedT RoyDShllA RymanHP SLM Cp SpdrDJIA SpdrGold SpdrEuro50 S&P500ETF SpdrHome SpdrLehHY SpdrS&P RB SpdrOGEx Salesforce SanchezEn SanDisk SandRdge Schlmbrg Schwab ScorpioTk SeadrillLtd ServiceM n SibanyeG SiderurNac SilvStd g SilvWhtn g SinoCoking SiriusXM SkywksSol SonyCp SouFun s SwstAirl SwstnEngy SpectraEn SpiritRltC Sprint Sprouts SP Matls SP HlthC SP CnSt SP Consum SP Engy SP Inds SP Tech SP Util StdPac Staples Starbucks StateStr Statoil ASA StlDynam Stryker SumitMitsu Suncor g SunEdison SunTrst SuperMicro SupEnrgy Supvalu SwftEng Symantec SynergyRs Sysco T-MobileUS TD Ameritr TJX TaiwSemi TalismE g Target TeckRes g Terex TeslaMot Tesoro TevaPhrm TexInst 3D Sys 3M Co TimeWarn TorDBk gs Transocn 21stCFoxA 21stCFoxB Twitter Tyson 12 15 15 19 22 cc 13 38 6 q q q q q q q q dd 53 17 25 20 28 ... 1 ... ... ... dd 27 dd 51 33 ... 11 25 11 22 dd dd 54 q q q q q q q q 13 27 30 16 ... 15 48 ... 9 dd 12 20 dd 14 dd 18 22 25 cc 23 22 ... 21 31 ... 8 dd 13 18 24 cc 22 17 10 dd 19 18 dd 14 20.17 71.59 27.17 2.82 7.32 20.63 65.62 55.05 9.69 175.35 124.23 37.07 203.08 33.42 38.78 36.65 45.41 57.71 10.06 80.44 1.23 82.21 26.70 9.53 10.38 27.64 11.11 2.02 6.99 23.41 2.60 3.57 77.30 21.91 6.90 41.83 25.53 33.62 12.57 4.39 35.42 48.40 70.51 49.71 69.72 76.85 55.57 40.79 49.21 6.76 16.49 81.29 74.74 17.86 17.30 92.11 6.95 29.49 18.70 38.46 34.11 20.06 9.70 2.10 25.62 11.93 40.29 30.08 33.28 66.01 23.21 7.49 73.95 12.86 22.58 196.57 74.08 58.49 54.28 30.46 162.54 80.73 41.30 16.06 33.91 32.65 37.83 40.71 +.78 -.89 +.79 +.32 +.06 +1.03 -1.25 +.06 +.45 +.03 +.36 +1.03 +.33 +.15 -.16 +1.68 +.42 +.68 +1.64 +.05 +1.73 -.05 +.08 +.04 -.02 +.11 +.12 +.03 -.37 +.04 +.08 +1.74 +1.09 +.23 +1.04 +1.03 +.40 +.23 +1.28 +.47 +.14 +.24 +.45 +1.53 +.45 +.07 +.47 +.06 +.10 +.07 +1.54 +.77 +.17 +.44 +.02 +.67 +.14 +.55 -3.63 +1.16 +.05 -.15 -.06 -.91 +.73 +.54 +.16 -.21 +.12 -.03 +.28 +.78 +.01 +4.64 +1.93 +.05 +.48 +1.14 +.60 +.38 -.34 +.68 -.21 -.13 +.26 +.40

Clipped hedges The price of oil is tumbling, but not all airlines are benefiting equally, because of their hedging strategies and other factors. $120

100

A $1 move in 25 cents: United Continental oil means an 15 cents: American Airlines estimated 6 cents: Delta Air Lines annual swing in earnings per 3 cents: JetBlue Airways share of about 3 cents: Southwest Airlines Sources: FactSet; Credit Suisse

80 60

Brent crude oil price per barrel

2014 40

J F M A M J J A S O N D J Stan Choe; Jenni Sohn • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 18,103.45 15,340.69 9,310.22 7,009.98 645.74 491.27 11,108.39 9,732.47 4,814.95 3,946.03 2,093.55 1,737.92 1,478.22 1,264.57 22,004.68 18,575.20 1,221.44 1,040.47 Name Dow Industrials Dow Transportation Dow Utilities NYSE Composite Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 S&P MidCap Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000 Last 17,554.28 8,888.64 649.12 10,720.40 4,667.42 2,032.12 1,435.72 21,352.67 1,166.25 17,960 17,600 17,240 10 DAYS

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg +39.05 +.22 -1.51 +7.21 +40.09 +.45 -2.75 +17.75 +5.95 +.93 +5.02 +30.42 +61.78 +.58 -1.10 +3.39 +12.57 +.27 -1.45 +10.00 +9.57 +.47 -1.30 +10.15 +8.70 +.61 -1.15 +5.61 +94.53 +.44 -1.46 +8.08 -4.00 -.34 -3.19 -1.27

Dow Jones industrials Close: 17,554.28 Change: 39.05 (0.2%) 18,500 18,000 17,500 17,000 16,500 16,000 J A S

O

N

D

J

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name AFLAC AT&T Inc AirProd AlliantEgy AEP AmeriBrgn ATMOS BB&T Cp BP PLC BcpSouth Caterpillar Chevron CocaCola Comcast CrackerB Deere Dillards Dover EnPro FordM FredsInc FullerHB GenCorp GenElec Goodyear HonwllIntl Intel Jabil KimbClk Kroger Lowes McDnlds Div 1.56f 1.88f 3.08 2.20f 2.12f 1.16f 1.56f .96 2.40f .30 2.80 4.28 1.22 .90 4.00 2.40 .24 1.60 .80 .60f .24 .48 ... .92f .24 2.07f .96f .32 3.36 .74 .92 3.40f PE 9 10 31 20 17 80 19 13 6 17 14 10 23 18 23 10 16 15 53 10 ... 21 ... 17 13 19 16 21 21 21 27 18 Last 58.10 34.00 143.10 70.07 64.14 92.78 58.61 35.64 38.82 20.21 85.37 108.16 43.36 55.77 131.43 87.63 114.70 71.70 61.10 14.97 17.20 39.70 17.17 24.04 25.57 99.25 36.48 20.59 117.59 67.00 67.32 90.34 YTD Chg %Chg Name Div +.09 -4.9 MeadWvco 1.00a +.05 +1.2 OldNBcp .44 +1.72 -.8 Penney ... +.50 +5.5 2.44 +.61 +5.6 PennyMac +.34 +2.9 PepsiCo 2.62 +.39 +5.1 PilgrimsP 5.77e -.12 -8.4 ... +1.13 +1.8 RadioShk ... -10.2 RegionsFn .20 +1.40 -6.7 SbdCp 3.00 +1.69 -3.6 ... +.20 +2.7 SearsHldgs 2.20 -.04 -3.9 Sherwin -1.29 -6.6 SiriusXM ... +.50 -.9 SouthnCo 2.10 +.92 -8.4 .40e +1.57 ... SPDR Fncl -1.07 -2.6 Torchmrk s .51 -.04 -3.4 Total SA 3.22e -.20 -1.2 .98 -.21 -10.8 US Bancrp 1.92 -.05 -6.2 WalMart +.19 -4.9 WellsFargo 1.40 +.66 -10.5 Wendys Co .22f +.27 -.7 .66 +.39 +.5 WestlkCh s -.05 -5.7 Weyerhsr 1.16 +.06 +1.8 Xerox .25 +.60 +4.3 ... +.80 -2.2 YRC Wwde -.46 -3.6 Yahoo ... PE 9 14 ... 8 22 13 ... 11 ... Last 44.91 13.50 7.25 22.44 97.40 35.01 .27 8.71 33.71 YTD Chg %Chg +.10 +1.2 -.14 +.01 +.05 -.11 -.70 +.02 -.03 +.11 -9.3 +11.9 +6.4 +3.0 +6.8 -27.0 -17.5 -7.6 +2.2

14 3877.00 -73.00

U-V-W-X-Y-Z

31 273.22 +.71 +3.9 US Silica 14 26.59 -.23 UnilevNV ... 40.76 +.25 51 3.57 +.08 +2.0 UnionPac s 21 114.40 +.45 20 52.01 +.35 +5.9 UtdContl 20 69.21 +1.18 UPS B 23 111.68 +.37 ... 23.45 +.06 -5.2 UtdRentals 18 87.56 +3.09 13 51.43 +.07 -5.1 US NGas q 15.02 +.33 ... 51.64 +1.37 +.9 US OilFd q 17.77 +.29 USSteel dd 22.06 +.48 14 42.20 +.99 -6.1 UtdTech 18 119.03 +1.50 18 86.64 -.05 +.9 UtdhlthGp 19 109.32 +3.70 VF Corp 24 71.68 -.19 13 52.10 +.10 -5.0 Vale SA ... 8.60 +.23 30 10.23 ... +13.3 Vale SA pf ... 7.55 +.14 ValeroE 7 47.19 +.68 13 58.62 +1.94 -4.0 VangTSM q 104.64 +.47 27 35.67 -.24 -.6 VangREIT q 86.59 -.06 VangAllW q 47.31 +.46 14 13.58 +.08 -2.0 VangEmg q 41.15 +.90 ... 17.20 -.34 -23.5 VangEur q 52.96 +.43 VangFTSE q 38.32 +.28 6 48.18 +.55 -4.6 Ventas 48 78.34 -.47 VerizonCm 10 48.25 +.07 ViacomB 12 67.48 +1.12 Vipshop s cc 22.17 +.06 Vodafone ... 36.03 +1.01 VulcanM 49 67.98 +.99 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) WPX Engy dd 11.52 +.24 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg WalterEn dd 1.04 -.10 Name WeathfIntl dd 10.64 +.27 S&P500ETF 1119720 203.08 +1.03 FXCM 2.33 +.73 +45.6 Advaxis wt 4.11 -3.16 -43.5 WstnUnion 12 17.16 +.15 BkofAm 994333 15.41 +.15 Nxt-ID 3.41 +.66 +24.0 Advaxis 8.37 -3.39 -28.8 WetSeal h dd .04 +.00 FXCM 925178 2.33 +.73 MidConEn 5.70 +1.05 +22.7 EldorGld g 6.21 -1.57 -20.2 WhitingPet 6 28.05 +1.57 iShEMkts 715111 40.30 +.87 RhinoRes 2.29 +.42 +22.5 AcaciaTc 13.39 -2.59 -16.2 WhitingTr 1 .52 -1.29 MktVGold 2.97 -.57 -16.1 568242 22.54 -.40 Oi SA C wi 2.68 +.45 +20.2 Frontline WholeFood 34 52.73 +1.42 B iPVixST 535942 33.45 -1.67 Trnsgno rs 2.12 +.34 +19.1 InglesMk h 40.10 -7.45 -15.7 WmsCos 59 42.77 +.68 Oi SA s 2.44 +.38 +18.4 MFC Indl 4.37 -.80 -15.5 Apple Inc s 474268 109.55 +.83 Windstrm 29 8.34 +.02 409.28 +60.48 +17.3 Bellicum n 22.92 -3.51 -13.3 462524 2.45 +.21 Netflix WT EurHdg q 58.63 +.25 AMD -.63 -12.9 WTJpHedg q 49.29 -.22 SPDR Fncl 385065 23.45 +.06 Altisrce n 24.71 +3.45 +16.2 ProDvrsty 4.22 2.17 +.30 +16.0 AvalaBio n 41.61 -6.03 -12.7 376204 3.07 -.30 ChinaNet WT India q 24.01 +.29 CSVixSht Xilinx 17 41.51 +.45 Yamana g cc 4.32 -.20 YSE IARY ASDA IARY Yandex ... 16.51 +.11 1,996 Total issues 3,239 Advanced 1,146 Total issues 2,856 Yelp cc 53.41 +2.00 Advanced 1,131 New Highs 145 Declined 1,581 New Highs 46 YumBrnds 22 71.50 +.35 Declined 112 New Lows 60 Unchanged 129 New Lows 103 Ziopharm dd 6.86 -.76 Unchanged Volume 3,631,966,890 Volume 1,789,333,355 Zynga dd 2.59 -.04

MARKET SUMMARY G L

N

D

N

D

Spotlight on Southwest Wall Street anticipates that Southwest Airlines’ latest earnings improved from a year earlier. The company, due to report fourth-quarter financial results today, has benefited from lower fuel costs in recent months as oil prices have declined. Southwest also has enjoyed growth in bookings, leading to fuller planes and higher fares. Investors will be listening for an update on bookings and prices.

Dialing up growth Increased demand for high-speed Internet services has helped lift earnings for Verizon Communications. The largest U.S. cellphone carrier’s wireless business has also been growing. The company notched a 44 percent gain in retail wireless connections in the July-September quarter, but analysts project lower EPS in the last three months of 2014. Find out what happened today, when Verizon reports fourth-quarter financial results. $55 50 45 40

VZ $47.70

$48.25

Tastier results? Starbucks reports fiscal first-quarter financial results today. Financial analysts expect that the company will deliver higher earnings and revenue for the quarter. Starbucks’ latest quarterly report card could provide an update on the company’s efforts to build customer loyalty. One way the company hopes to win over more customers is through a new delivery option on its mobile app aimed at getting customers in and out of stores quicker.

’14

Today

Operating EPS

est.

$0.89 3Q ’14

$0.71 4Q ’14 10

Price-earnings ratio:

based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $2.20 Div. Yield: 4.6% Source: FactSet

AP


9 • Daily Corinthian

Variety ACROSS 1 Modern “Keep in touch!” 7 Ann’s sister 11 Extras may comprise one 14 Tennis star Gibson 15 The real thing, so to speak 17 Riddles 18 Regretting a wild night, maybe 19 *Beginning 21 Field of study 24 “We __ Family”: 1979 hit 25 Tamper 26 *They carry remainders 31 Org. where weight matters 32 Without __: riskily 33 On a streak 36 Capp and Capone 37 Syr. neighbor 38 Jueves, por ejemplo 39 Natural resource 40 Tease 42 Vibrater in a wind 43 Like Gen. Powell 44 *Bike safety device 47 __ Men: “Who Let the Dogs Out” band 49 Edible Asian shoot 50 Greek mount 51 *The rest 56 Burns poem that starts, “Wee, sleekit, cow’rin, tim’rous beastie” 57 Time of your life 61 Marching band instrument 62 Mill around 63 Passing stat. 64 Egyptian symbols of royalty 65 Both words in each answer to a starred clue begin and end with the same one DOWN 1 Keep time, in a way 2 Symphonic rock gp. 3 Cadillac sedan 4 Store to “fall into,” in old ads 5 Scant 6 First word of the chorus of “The Sidewalks of New York” 7 Parched 8 Dark-haired guy 9 Cask stopper 10 Safecracker 11 Some Cannes films 12 They have hoods and racks 13 Cold-water hazards 16 Was impending 20 Perp subduer 21 Egyptian dam 22 100 kopecks 23 Parts opposite points 27 First name in women’s boxing 28 Racing family name 29 Bay window 30 Aptly named novelist

Thursday, January 22, 2015

BEETLE BAILEY

Crossword Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis 34 Easily crumbled cookies 35 Betta tankmate 38 “Colonel Jack” novelist 41 “Oh, my!” 42 Uses, as credit card rewards 45 Amasses 46 Work on together, in a way 47 LPGA great Rawls 48 Stay clear of 52 “The boy you trained, gone he is” speaker 53 Sharing word 54 Relax 55 Blackthorn fruit 58 QB’s stat 59 Turn right 60 Go wrong

BLONDIE

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

HI & LOIS

xwordeditor@aol.com

01/22/15

BC

By Don Gagliardo (c)2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

01/22/15

WIZARD OF ID

Reader asks how to make peace within family he gives me always Dear Annie: My father Annie’s gifts make me want to cry. died a year ago. Since Last Christmas, I got a bug then, I have ignored my suction machine. The year extended family, but I’m Mailbox before, it was an organizer close to my children and grandchildren. Christmas passed and I never phoned my sick mother, even though I live 15 minutes away. I want to make it right, but can’t just waltz into their lives and say, “Here I am.” My younger sister has been taking care of Mom without a break. I can’t stand to be around my older sister, who handles Mom’s finances. She is hateful and judgmental, and frankly, she scares me. And then there’s my mother. We have a strained relationship. When I was a little girl, my parents would argue and she’d tell my father to leave and take me with him. Only me. My mom always treats my siblings and their children with kid gloves, but my sweet, intelligent kids she treats like lepers. I want my family to be together like we used to be. If you could print this, maybe my mother and sisters would see it and know that I beg their forgiveness. -- Lost in Louisville, Ky. Dear Louisville: Here’s what we see: You resent your mother for the favorable treatment she has always shown your siblings and their children. You dislike your older sister for her overbearing attitude. You feel guilty about your younger sister, who took on the burden of caring for Mom. And you miss Dad, who was the buffer. Start with your younger sister. Tell her you went into a tailspin when Dad died and you deeply regret abandoning her. Ask what you can do now. Then go see your mother. Phone or email your older sister. You will have to put up with their anger and disappointment, but that will be temporary while you work on forgiveness. You might also consider counseling to work through some of your family issues. Dear Annie: My husband and I have been married more than 30 years, and every year he buys me gifts that don’t require much thought. He gets lovely things for our daughter, son-in-law and even co-workers, and I know he puts a lot of time into the selection. But the

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

for my spice cabinet. In all fairness, he also gives me a generous gift card to one of my favorite stores, but he knows that I don’t get there often and the cards sit in my drawer for months. Plus, it’s not really special to get a gift card from my husband, but I am grateful nonetheless. I dread opening gifts, and my feelings are hurt no matter how much I tell myself it doesn’t matter. To me, it’s not the size of the gifts; it’s whether he was truly thinking of me. So how can I tell him nicely that he’d be doing me a favor by not getting me any more gifts? -- Midwest Dear Midwest: Be sure that’s what you want, because if you tell him not to buy you anything, he will stop completely. And has it occurred to you that perhaps his assistant buys the other gifts, but considers yours too personal and leaves it for Mr. Clueless? Talk to your husband about this. Teach him how to be more thoughtful. Explain what you mean. Give him concrete suggestions. But that bug suction machine made our day.

PICKLES


10 • Thursday January 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

THURSDAY EVENING C A WATN ^ ^ WREG # # QVC $ . WCBI WMC $ % %

JANUARY 22, 2015 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

7 PM

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How to Get Away With Local 24 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightMurder News Live (N) line Big Bang (:31) Mom Two and McCarthys Elementary A threat to News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Late Late Theory (N) Half Men Kitty emerges. Letterman orYANY Handbags Shoe Shopping Gotta Have It! 28th Annual California Gold Rush Sale Big Bang (:31) Mom Two and McCarthys Elementary A threat to News Late Show With David Late Late Theory (N) Half Men Kitty emerges. Letterman The Biggest Loser “End Bad Judge A to Z (N) Parenthood (N) News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth MeyZone” (N) ers The Vampire Diaries (N) Reign Mary tries to help CW30 News at 9 (N) There Yet? There Yet? Two and Modern Condé. (N) Half Men Family The Taste “The Finale” (N) How to Get Away With News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightMurder 10pm Live (N) line The Biggest Loser “End Bad Judge A to Z (N) Parenthood (N) News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth MeyZone” (N) ers Crossroads Yr Family Southern Sports The Spark Conversa- Waiting for Manor Born Tavis Newsline Pet Accents Files tion God Smiley America’s Funniest How I Met How I Met Wrestling Wrestling Wrestling Wrestling EngageEngageHome Videos Death Death Death Death ment ment Miss. Miss. Out- Doc Martin “AromaFather Brown Tavis Charlie Rose (N) World Roads doors therapy” Smiley News American Idol “Auditions Backstrom “Dragon Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 TMZ (N) Dish Nation Access No. 6” (N) Slayer” (N) News (N) Hollyw’d Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods The Vampire Diaries (N) Reign Mary tries to help PIX11 News PIX11 Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends Condé. (N) Sports Co-Ed } ›› The Mexican (01, Comedy-Drama) Brad Pitt, (:05) } ›››› Blade Runner (82) Harrison Ford, Co-Ed Julia Roberts. Rutger Hauer. Shameless “I’m the Penn & House of Episodes Web } ›› Four Brothers Siblings seek revenge for Liver” Teller Lies Therapy their adoptive mother’s murder. Real Sex Girls } › Blended (14) Two single-parent families are Together- Looking } About ness stuck together at a resort. Mary Ridic. Ridic. Fantasy Fantasy Fantasy Ridic. Ridic. Fantasy Ridic. Ridic. College Basketball Winter X Games: Aspen. From Aspen, Colo. (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (Live) } ›› The Man With the Iron Fists RZA. A blacksmith in feudal } ›› Ninja Assassin (09) Rain, Naomie Harris. A rogue assasChina defends his fellow villagers. sin saves the life of a Europol agent. Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special Modern Modern Modern Modern Victims Unit Victims Unit Victims Unit Family Family Family Family Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Love-Raymond Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Frontier Frontier Frontier Frontier Frontier The First 48 “Dead The First 48 (N) Nightwatch “Retalia(:02) Nightwatch “Re(:01) The First 48 “Dead Wrong” tion” (N) taliation” Wrong” College Basketball College Basketball: Texas-El Paso at Western The New College Foot- College Basketball Kentucky. (N) (Live) ball Show Mann’s Nellyville Game Hus Hus Hus Hus Wendy Williams Rehab Ad- Rehab Ad- Rehab Ad- Rehab Ad- House Hunters House Hunters Rehab Ad- Rehab Addict dict dict dict Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l dict dict Christina Milian Take the Hamptons Take the Hamptons E! News (N) Sex-City Sex-City Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawnogra- Pawnogra- Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (N) (N) phy (N) phy (N) College Basketball College Basketball: Arizona at Stanford. 2015 Australian Open Tennis 48 Hours: Hard Evi48 Hours: Hard Evi48 Hours: Hard Evi48 Hours: Hard Evi48 Hours: Hard Evidence (N) dence (N) dence (N) dence dence Chopped “Money Saver” Chopped Canada “Holler Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Diners, Diners, Chopped Canada “Holler for Challah” for Challah” Drive Drive The Waltons JAG “Dog Robber” Walker, Ranger Matlock Medicine Woman Project Runway All Project Runway All (:02) Little Women: LA (:02) Big Women: Big (:02) Project Runway Stars Stars (N) Love All Stars Trinity Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord Holy Bless } ››› Braveheart (95, Historical Drama) Mel Gibson, Sophie Marceau. A Scottish rebel rallies his } ››› Tombstone countrymen against England. Kurt Russell. Boy } Bruce } ››› Pretty Woman Richard Gere. A corporate raider hires a The 700 Club Miraculous Boy healings. Meets... Meets... Almighty hooker to act as a business escort. } ›››› Singin’ in the Rain (52) Gene Kelly, } ››› The Catered Affair (56) (:45) } ›› The Mating Game (59) Debbie Reynolds. Bette Davis. Debbie Reynolds. NBA Basketball: San Antonio Spurs at Chicago Bulls. From the NBA Basketball: Brooklyn Nets at Los Angeles Clippers. From United Center in Chicago. (N) (Live) Staples Center in Los Angeles. (N) (Live) Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) The Office Conan Theory Theory Theory Theory Baggage Baggage FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Pickles FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond King King King King Friends Friends College Basketball Hoops College Basketball FOX Sports Live (N) Sports Archer (6:30) } ››› 21 Jump Street (12, Comedy) Jo- Archer (N) Archer } ››› 21 Jump Street (12) Jonah nah Hill, Channing Tatum. Hill, Channing Tatum. MLF Selects FOXPRO Teco Bow RMEF Outdoors Sas Crush Bone College Basketball NFL Turning Point Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN (N) Undercover Boss 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Fool’s Fool’s Wild West Alaska Alaska: Battle Wild West Alaska Alaska: Battle The Waltons “The The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Outsider” Girls Girls Girls Girls Girl Meets (:05) Jessie Liv & Mad- Dog With a A.N.T. Farm K.C. Under- Good} ›› Hop (11, Comedy) Voices of die Blog cover Charlie James Marsden. WWE SmackDown! (N) } ›› Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (08) Indy and a deadly Soviet agent vie for a powerful artifact.

The Taste “The Finale” (N)

Readers share many reasons for choosing to be cremated D E A R ABBY: I just finished the letter from “Plotting and Planning in Arizona” (Oct. 5), reAbigail garding why Van Buren cremation is so popular. There are Dear Abby also other reasons. My father, a WWII veteran, had planned to be buried in a national veterans’ cemetery. After his death we were informed that the only option currently available was interment in the veterans’ wall of honor columbarium, because the cemetery had run out of space for traditional burials. -- PROUD DAUGHTER OF WWII VET DEAR PROUD DAUGHTER: “Plotting and Planning” guessed one reason was cost, while another might be that we live in a more mobile society. Readers agreed, but offered additional input: DEAR ABBY: Several people I know prefer cremation because they are claustrophobic. Even the thought of being shut up in a casket gives them the heebie-jeebies. -- DAVID IN EAST MOLINE, ILL. DEAR ABBY: Rather than be buried in a cemetery ($$$) or be cremated (my kids objected), I’m donating my body to medical science. I have degenerative arthritis, asthma and other minor conditions. Perhaps by doing this, I can help one of my own or someone else, contribute to medical science and prolong a few lives. -- CAROL IN LONG BEACH, CALIF. DEAR ABBY: A few reasons why I have requested cremation: First, due to modern technology, it is now possible to take a portion of one’s cremains and turn them into diamondlike gems, one of which I’d like to leave to my dear mother-in-law to be. Second, because of the proliferation of fine mini-urns -which may be used as jewelry -- I intend to have a portion of my ashes distributed to a few of the women who have touched my life in various ways over the years. I feel it is not only my right but also my duty to avoid saddling others with the exorbitant costs of today’s funeral extravaganzas. -- KIFFIN, THE PRAGMATIST DEAR ABBY: Cremation has a lot going for it. “Green burials” are becoming more popular. You can be wrapped in a shroud and buried in the ground. No chemicals, everything is biodegradable -- ashes to ashes, dust to dust. -- KEEP IT NATURAL DEAR ABBY: Being an avid scuba diver, I have instructed my family that I wish to be cremated and my ashes turned into part of the memorial reef by the Neptune Society. This will help to create an underwater reef system not only for fish, but for divers to enjoy. That way, I’ll be able to return to nature, give divers a place to enjoy and forever be back in the water that I have always loved. -- SCUBA SHELL DEAR ABBY: I’m opting for cremation when my time comes. I don’t want to be dug up in the future for someone’s science project, grave robbers or archaeologists. I have “urned” my rest. -- RALPHEE IN ALABAMA Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). Even people you know very well have a way of surprising you, if only because you can’t quite read what they are thinking now. Maybe it’s better not to know. Anyway, it’s worth it to get comfortable not knowing. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Falling stars can’t fall forever. Eventually, they burn out. Something in your life feels like a falling star right now, and it’s as exhilarating as it is frightening. Take as much pleasure in it as you can while it lasts. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’re so nice that it sometimes shocks you to realize that being nice isn’t the default for many people. Don’t let that bother you today. Keep doing what you do, because you’re setting a bar. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You admire people who can let go, and you have compassion for the ones who let go a little too far. Being able to navigate the level is a talent. You can help others with this now. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You make it rather easy to keep up with you, which is why so many people will. Your detailed instructions help, as do your enticements. This is not premeditated; you naturally gravitate to telling people the benefits they will experience. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You don’t like to show off, but people need to know what skills you have, or else they won’t know to call on you when those skills are needed. If you think you’re not quite ready, pretend that you are ready and go for it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Pay attention to the bottom line. Seek the data. Someone is doing a dance of distraction in front of you -- a sure sign that you need to look deeper into what’s really going on. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Stop thinking you have to do better to have a valid contribution. You’ve done your homework, and you know what you’re talking about. Your best is good enough. The more you believe it the more other people will. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). The question is: Do your activities mesh with your goals and values? Lately, not so much, but all of that can change. Don’t worry; you can still have the same friends. Just temper the relationships with more personal time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You wouldn’t have thought that the inner workings of your lifestyle would be of so much interest to others, but they are. The real question becomes: How much about your life do you want to share? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You cannot underestimate the power of acknowledgment, especially the way you do it. You have a gift for making people feel important, probably because you really know that they are. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You are happy doing many things alone, but there are certain solitary activities that trigger a profound feeling of loneliness in you. You have people to talk to. Reach out to them.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian The Daily Corinthian’s family of quality magazines continues with an all new product coming out on Saturday, Jan. 31. Watch for Crossroads Magazine -- Healthy Living.


11 • Thursday, January 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

WWW.ATHLONSPORTS.COM

INSIDECOLLEGE BASKETBALL A WEEKLY SPIN AROUND THE WORLD OF COLLEGE HOOPS 1. DUKE’S SWITCH TO ZONE ENDS SLUMP Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski wouldn’t be on the verge of 1,000 wins if KH ZHUHQœW ZLOOLQJ WR DGMXVW RQ WKH À\ +H DOUHDG\ KDV D OLQHXS OHG E\ WKUHH IUHVKPHQ DQG QRZ KHœV SOD\LQJ D ]RQH GHIHQVH ,I D 'XNH WHDP SOD\LQJ ]RQH VHHPV OLNH GHVSHUDWLRQ LW ZDV %XW LW ZDV DOVR QHFHVVDU\ $IWHU JLYLQJ XS SRLQWV 1& 6WDWH DQG SRLQWV 0LDPL WR WZR WHDPV ZLWK DWWDFNLQJ JXDUGV Duke abandoned its trademark man-to-man defense for a zone — at least for RQH JDPH 7KH VZLWFK QHXWUDOL]HG /RXLVYLOOHœV SHQHWUDWLQJ JXDUGV &KULV -RQHV DQG 7HUU\ 5R]LHU DQG IRUFHG WKH &DUGLQDOV WR WDNH D EXQFK RI MXPSHUV WKHLU ELJJHVW ZHDNQHVV /RXLVYLOOH VKRW RI IURP ORQJ UDQJH LQ D JDPH WKDW ZDV UDUHO\ LQ GRXEW DQG 'XNH FUXLVHG WR D ¹ ZLQ 2QO\ 3UHVE\WHULDQ SRLQWV VFRUHG IHZHU DJDLQVW 'XNH WKLV VHDVRQ

Âť DUKE BACK ON TRACK Âť FLORIDA FLIRTING WITH NIT Âť LSU UNDERACHIEVING Âť GEORGIA SNEAKS INTO TOP 25

2. ARIZONA ISN’T STEPPING ASIDE IN THE PAC-12 YET

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3. IOWA STATE’S OFFENSE IS MIGHTY SCARY

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Quinn Cook and the Blue Devils ended a two-game losing streak in impressive fashion, beating Louisville by double digits on the road.

4. VIRGINIA CAN SURVIVE AN OFF GAME

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ATHLON SPORTS TOP 25 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. Kentucky (17-0) Virginia (17-0) Gonzaga (18-1) Villanova (17-1) Duke (15-2) Wisconsin (16-2) Arizona (16-2) Iowa State (13-3) Kansas (14-3) Notre Dame (17-2) Utah (14-3) Louisville (15-3) Maryland (17-2) North Carolina (14-4) VCU (15-3) Oklahoma (12-5) Texas (13-4) Wichita State (16-2) West Virginia (15-3) Baylor (13-4) Northern Iowa (16-2) Georgia (11-5) Seton Hall (13-4) Iowa (13-5) Dayton (15-2)

8. LSU IS UNDERACHIEVING ... AGAIN

5. KENTUCKY IS FINE

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9. MARYLAND ISN’T GOING ANYWHERE

6. TEXAS DISCOVERS ITS EDGE AGAIN

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10. PAINFUL LOSS AT MICHIGAN

PLAYER OF THE YEAR WATCH 1. Jahlil Okafor, Duke The big man came up big in the Devils’ dominating win at Louisville, scoring 18 points and grabbing seven rebounds. Okafor is averaging 18.9 points and 9.3 boards. 2. Frank Kaminsky, Wisconsin After missing Wisconsin’s loss at Rutgers due to a concussion, Kaminsky returned to action on Saturday and scored 22 points in the Badgers’ win vs. Nebraska. 3. Jerian Grant, Notre Dame Grant has been masterful as a senior, averaging 16.7 points (while shooting 51.2 percent from the ďŹ eld) and 6.4 assists for the Fighting Irish. 4. Willie Cauley-Stein, Kentucky WCS has been terriďŹ c on both ends of the court for the top-ranked Cats. He is averaging 9.5 points, 6.9 rebounds and 1.9 blocks in only 25.1 minutes per game. 5. Montrezl Harrell, Louisville Harrell’s team lost at home to Duke, but the junior forward recorded his seventh double-double of the season, scoring 10 points and grabbing 14 boards. Cook, Harrison: Harrison McClary; Hollins: Andy Blenkush/CSM/Landov

7. FLORIDA IS FLIRTING WITH THE NIT

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PRIME TIME PLAYERS Surprising Oregon State improved to 3–2 in the Pac-12 with a 62–47 win at Washington State. The Beavers were led by guards Langston Morris-Walker and Gary Payton II, both of whom posted double-doubles. Morris Walker scored 22 points and grabbed 11 rebounds while Payton II chipped in with 13 and 13. ‌ Buddy Hield was perfect from the ďŹ eld, hitting all 10 ďŹ eld goal attempts (including four from 3-point range) en route to a game-high 27 points to lead Oklahoma to a dominating 82–65 win over rival Oklahoma State. ‌ Notre Dame guard Jerian Grant scored 23 points and had eight assists to help the Irish rally to beat Miami 75–70 in overtime at the Joyce Center in South Bend. ‌ Surging Maryland completed a season sweep over Michigan State with a

75–59 win over the Spartans in College Park. Freshman guard Melo Trimble (24 points) and junior swingman Jake Layman (23 points, 12 rebounds) led the way for Mark Turgeon’s club. ‌ K.T. Harrell, the second-leading scorer in the SEC (16.9 ppg), scored 24 points (hitting 4-of-5 from 3 and 8-of-8 from the line) as Auburn rallied to beat South Carolina 71–68. ‌ Point guard Kris Dunn continues to shine for Providence. He scored 21 points and had eight rebounds and seven assists on Saturday in the Friars’ 74–65 win at Creighton. ‌ Indiana’s Troy Williams and James Blackmon Jr. combined for 42 points and 16 rebounds as the Hoosiers posted a big win at Illinois. ‌ Stanford’s Chasson Randle had a productive week; the senior guard averaged 24 points in the Cardinal’s wins over California (on the road) and UConn (at home).

Andre Hollins, Minnesota Minnesota ďŹ nally broke through with its ďŹ rst Big Ten win of the season, thanks in large part to a careerhigh 31 points from Hollins. The senior from Memphis converted 11-of-18 from the ďŹ eld, including 7-of-10 from 3-point range, as the Golden Gophers topped Rutgers 89–80 at Williams Arena in Minneapolis. Minnesota went 11–2 in non-conference play but opened its Big Ten slate with ďŹ ve straight losses, with all but one coming by ďŹ ve points or less.

Tennessee survives South Carolina’s late rally The Associated Press

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Josh Richardson and Kevin Punter had 13 points each and Derek Reese hit a foul shot with 13.8 seconds left that sealed Tennessee’s 15th straight victory over South Carolina in a 66-62 win Tuesday night. The Vols (12-5, 4-1 Southeastern Conference) led 56-39 with 8:40 remaining when the Gamecocks used a 23-8 run to get within a basket on Michael Carrera’s putback with 32.9 seconds left. South Carolina had a

chance to tie, trailing 6562, but Justin McKie’s 3-pointer rolled around the rim and out with 14 seconds left. Reese followed with his free throw to close out the victory. Tennessee won its thirdstraight SEC road game to start a season for the ďŹ rst time since 2009. Sindarius Thornwell had 17 points for South Carolina, which has not beaten Tennessee since 2007. The Vols hit 10 3-pointers, ďŹ nishing with a season’s best shooting percentage of 57.5 (23 of 40). Punter and Richardson

combined to go 9 of 11 from the ďŹ eld with each hitting two 3-pointers. It almost didn’t matter with South Carolina’s late rally, which took ight when McKie and Thornwell hit consecutive 3-pointers to shrink the double-digit lead to 62-55. Thornwell was fouled on a 3 and made all the foul shots to draw closer before Carrera made two foul shots and then his basket. Tennessee had won its past two SEC road games with victories at Mississippi State and at Missouri and was primed for a third

at South Carolina. And the Vols came out shooting strongly, opening up a 2012 lead off 3-pointers by Richardson, Devon Baulkman and Detrick Mostella. The Gamecocks answered with a 10-2 run, fueled by freshman Marcus Stroman, that tied the game at 22. Stroman started the run with a 3, then had a nifty inside pass to Demetrius Henry for a basket. When Thornwell made a free throw and drove the lane for the tying basket, the Gamecocks had rallied all the way back.

But Tennessee wasn’t done. Richardson hit a twisting oater in the lane and Punter followed with a nothing-but-net 3-pointer to push the Vols back in front. South Carolina’s leading scorer, Duane Notice, struggled in the opening half as he made just one of his seven shots for two points. Notice ďŹ nished with ďŹ ve points on 2 of 8 shooting. Tip ins: Tennessee: When the Vols beat Missouri 59-51, it was the Tigers lowestever point total in the 10-year history of Mizzou

Arena. South Carolina: Gamecocks junior center Laimonas Chatkevicius had his ďŹ rst-ever doubledouble in an SEC game with 15 points and 11 rebounds in a loss at Auburn last Saturday. Chatkevicius, South Carolina’s tallest player at 6-foot-11, had zero points and one rebound against the Vols. Up next Tennessee returns home to play Texas A&M on Saturday. South Carolina hosts No. 1 Kentucky on Saturday.


12 • Daily Corinthian

Sports The Associated Press

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Local Schedule Friday Basketball Central @ Pine Grove, 6 Biggersville @ Jumpertown, 6 (WXRZ) Kossuth @ North Pontotoc, 6 Walnut @ Hatley, 6

Southern Miss self-imposes ban HATTIESBURG — Southern Mississippi has self-imposed a postseason ban for the current basketball season because of an ongoing NCAA inquiry into the program. The university said in a statement Tuesday that the program will not play in the Conference USA postseason tournament or make itself eligible for NCAA tournament consideration. The statement said the ban is a “result of an ongoing university and NCAA inquiry of the basketball program related to the 2012-13 and 2013-14 academic years.” Donnie Tyndall was the coach at Southern Miss the past two seasons, but left to take over at Tennessee. Southern Miss acknowledged in November that the NCAA was investigating potential violations in the program. “All I can say is I’ve cooperated 100 percent and if I need to, I will continue to do that,” Tyndall said after Tennessee’s 66-62 win at South Carolina on Tuesday night. “That’s all I can say on that matter.” Southern Miss (5-11, 0-5 C-USA), which is currently led by Doc Sadler, is in the midst of an eight-game losing streak. The program’s coaches and players were informed of the decision on Tuesday. Sadler said during his regular Tuesday radio show that the team did not practice after the discussion “because of injuries,” but did watch film in preparation for Thursday’s game against Rice. “Are we disappointed? I think everyone is. There’s no question about it,” Sadler said. “I know our administration is disappointed, along with the coaches, the fans and the players. “But we’re going to deal with this, meet it head on and we’re going to be better because of it.”

Saturday Basketball North Pontotoc Classic (G) Corinth

Tuesday, Jan. 27 Basketball Itawamba @ Corinth, 6 (WXRZ) Booneville @ Kossuth, 6 North Pontotoc @ Central, 6 Walnut @ East Union, 6

Sherman still expects to play in Super Bowl The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. — All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman still expects to play in the Super Bowl despite injuring his left elbow in the NFC championship game. “That’s my story and I’m sticking to it,” Sherman said Wednesday. Sherman said his elbow is “better than it was” during the fourth quarter of Seattle’s 28-22 overtime win over Green Bay. Sherman was injured on the first play of the fourth quarter when he appeared to hyperextend his elbow while getting sandwiched between Green Bay’s James Starks and teammate Kam Chancellor. Sherman played the rest of the game with his left arm pinned against his chest. Asked about his range of motion with his arm, Sherman joked that if he had to “slap my brother, I would be able to do it.”

ESPN sues Notre Dame over records The Associated Press

Headed to Coahoma

Photo by Michael H. Miller/NEMCC

Itawamba Community College’s Kaelin Kneeland (23) and Northeast Mississippi Community College’s Jasmine Allen (35) of Booneville collide while going for a loose ball during first half-action last week. Both NEMCC squads play tonight at Coahoma Community College.

Some things to know about NFL footballs The Associated Press

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — ESPN has filed a lawsuit against University of Notre Dame, alleging the school is violating Indiana’s public record laws by withholding police incident reports about possible campus crimes involving certain student-athletes. The lawsuit filed January 15 on behalf of ESPN and its reporter Paula Lavigne says state Public Access Counselor Luke Britt has twice issued advisory opinions stating the university is subject to Indiana’s public records law. The lawsuit and opinions don’t specify what incident reports ESPN is seeking or which athletes may have been involved. In his first opinion on October 31, Britt said that while the university is private, Notre Dame Security Police Department is a public law enforcement agency subject to public records laws. He acknowledged that his view may be inconsistent with past opinions from other public access counselors, but that it wasn’t inconsistent with Indiana’s public records law. And earlier this month, he wrote that Notre Dame and other that private universities in Indiana that have professional police forces should follow the state’s public records laws despite being private institutions. He also noted that his October opinion “is not compulsory.” Notre Dame has argued that it believes it is complying with state law, saying that three previous advisory opinions had agreed with the university that its police department and those of other private colleges and universities in Indiana are not public agencies. Notre Dame spokesman Dennis Brown said Wednesday the university believes its practices are in “full accord with the Access to Public Records Act and consistent with multiple advisory opinions that have addressed this matter over the past 12 years.” “We are confident that our position will be affirmed in court,” he said. The lawsuit, filed in St. Joseph County Superior Court, states Notre Dame told ESPN it does not have documents “responsive” to its request. The lawsuit contends ESPN is entitled to an unspecified civil penalty, attorney’s fees, court costs and other expenses.

The NFL is very precise about its game and equipment — including the number of footballs prepared for games, how much each must weigh, and who monitors them until kickoff. One rule is very clear: Don’t tamper with a football once it has been inspected for use in a game. The NFL is investigating a report that the New England Patriots used underinflated footballs in the AFC championship game while beating the Indianapolis Colts 45-7. ESPN cited anonymous sources Tuesday night in re-

porting the league found that 11 of 12 balls were underinflated by 2 pounds per square inch of air. Here are some things to know about the issue: Chain of custody: Footballs are delivered to the officials’ dressing room 2 hours, 15 minutes before kickoff. The referee inspects each one, with a pump provided by the home team to adjust air pressure as needed. Footballs are required to have at least 12.5 psi and no more than 13.5 psi. Releasing air can make the football easier to grip, especially when wet. Some quarterbacks prefer a softer ball to

control the spin more, while others like more air. A drop in temperature — from the officials’ dressing room to an outdoor field — also can cause a football to lose pressure. The ref rules: The referee is the sole judge of whether a ball is fit for play and marks each one approved for the game. The rule says the footballs “shall remain under the supervision of the Referee until they are delivered to the ball attendant just prior to the start of the game.” The referee for the game was Walt Anderson. A key question in the investigation is whether the balls improperly passed

inspection or were either switched or tampered with after Anderson’s inspection. As the home team, the Patriots were responsible for having someone handle the footballs on each sideline. Ball control: Footballs are sent directly to teams. Equipment managers can brush them and even use a damp towel to rub off the oil used to preserve the leather to the preferences of each quarterback. The quarterbacks can even practice with the footballs during a game week as long as the footballs remain Please see FOOTBALLS | 13

Boston 2024 makes Olympic bid info public The Associated Press

BOSTON — Sailing in Boston Harbor. Baseball at Fenway Park. Beach volleyball on Boston Common, the oldest public park in the United States. The organizers of Boston’s Olympic bid unveiled their plans for the 2024 Summer Games on Wednesday. Those plans include a pedestrian boulevard along a channel running to a tem-

porary Olympic stadium that would serve as the event’s “front yard,” and existing or upgraded public transportation to shuttle fans between the university and waterfront venues. It was an encore performance of the presentation that won over the USOC. Afterward, Boston 2024 released most of the bid book, which included a detailed

look at the sites and the necessary finances to make it possible. The 3-inch thick binder included plans for venues, transportation, finances and security, and hints at the political and public armtwisting needed to make it happen. David Manfredi, an architect who is the co-chair of the Boston 2024 planning committee, said the goal is

to leave a legacy not just for the athletes, but for the city as a whole. “It’s really about envisioning what the future is, what 2030 is, and then translating that into a games plan for 2024,” he said. “We believe Boston is the right size city for the Olympics. It’s a great historic city, a beautiful city and a really walkable Please see OLYMPICS | 13

Florida football plans $15 million indoor practice facility The Associated Press

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida announced plans for a $15 million indoor practice facility for football on Wednesday, becoming one of the last Southeastern Conference teams to build one. Vanderbilt unveiled its full-size facility in November 2013. South Carolina is building one that is expected to open later this year. Georgia has a 30-yard in-

door field that’s used for warmups and some drills, but far from ideal for full practices. Last September, the Bulldogs approved $400,000 for initial research into the construction of a full-size indoor facility. The Florida project is expected to be completed in early September. It’s one of the first steps in getting the football program back on par with some of the league’s —

and nation’s — elite. Although athletic director Jeremy Foley downplayed the need to upgrade facilities when he started looking for a new coach in November, official documents related to the indoor project listed “compete with peers to recruit quality student athletes” as one of the main reasons for it. “The facility’s lack of space for indoor training has set the University’s program behind

the majority of their peers within the SEC conference and the NCAA,” the school wrote. “This, in turn, puts the football program at a disadvantage in recruiting top student athletes.” New coach Jim McElwain seemed to notice the same thing after he was hired in December. McElwain has since started tweaking the Please see FACILITY | 13


13 • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard Basketball NBA standings, schedule

Thursday, January 22, 2015 fied a five-year labor agreement with the World Umpires Association. American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Named Tommy Esmay manager of Kannapolis (SAL), Tim Esmay manager of Winston-Salem (Carolina) and Cole Armstrong manager of Great Falls (Pioneer). HOUSTON ASTROS — Traded C Carlos Corporan to Texas for RHP Akeem Bostick. TEXAS RANGERS — Designated RHP Gonzalez Germen for assignment. National League SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Designated 2B Marco Scutaro for assignment. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Max Scherzer on a sevenyear contract. American Association GRAND PRAIRIE AIR HOGS — Signed INF Jon Dziomba and INF Victor Lebron. SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Signed INF Vickash Ramjit and LHP Josh Ferrell. Traded OF Brandon Jones to York for cash. WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Signed LHP Gabe Aguilar and LHP Taylor Bratton. Can-Am League OTTAWA CHAMPIONS — Acquired RHP Alan DeRatt and 1B Chris Duffy from Sioux Falls (AA) in exchange for cash. QUEBEC CAPITALES — Signed RHP Javier Avendano. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NEW YORK KNICKS — Signed F Lance Thomas to a second 10-day contract. FOOTBALL National Football League JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Named Greg Olson offensive coordinator. Canadian Football League EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Released PK/P Hugh O’Neill. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES— Recalled G Mike McKenna from Portland (AHL). Assigned D Brandon Gormley and Philip Samuelsson, F Lucas Lessio and G Mike Lee to Portland. DALLAS STARS — Reassigned D Jamie Oleksiak and Jyrki Jokipakka to Texas (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Assigned LW Teemu Pulkkinen to Grand Rapids (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS — Assigned F Christian Thomas to Hamilton (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Reassigned G Marek Mazanec to Milwaukee (AHL). American Hockey League AHL — Suspended Rockford RW Ryan Hartman one game. SOCCER Major League Soccer FC DALLAS — Acquired MF Kyle Bekker from Toronto FC for allocation money. Agreed to terms with MF Atiba Harris. NEW YORK RED BULLS — Announced they will place a team in USL PRO based in Hanover, N.J. COLLEGE ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION — Suspended Army F Tyler Pham one game for his slew footing major penalty during a Jan. 17 game against Air Force. GEORGIA SOUTHERN — Announced the resignation of director of football player development Vic Cabral to take a coaching position at Samford. MONTANA STATE — Named J.J. Riley women’s volleyball coach. Promoted Kane Ioane to co-defensive coordinator. NEBRASKA — Named Keith Williams wide receivers coach.

FOOTBALLS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

in good enough condition to pass the referee’s inspection as a new ball. Each team brings at least 12 balls each, so Tom Brady threw footballs provided by the Patriots while Andrew Luck handled footballs brought by the Colts. Potential for punishment: If the NFL finds anyone with the Patriots underinflated the footballs, Commissioner Roger Goodell has wide latitude for punishment. This includes a fine that can be as low as $25,000 for anyone deemed responsible for tampering with a football, even if it’s the head coach. Goodell could strip the team of draft picks, suspend people for “unfair acts,” and reverse a game’s result or reschedule a game. Previous Offense: Goodell fined New England coach Bill Belichick $500,000 and the Patri-

ots $250,000 along with stripping the team of a first-round draft pick in 2007 for having an assistant spy on the New York Jets’ defensive signals by using a sideline camera. Further review: Steelers president Art Rooney II said Wednesday he expects the competition committee to study whether the rule should change, but he thinks everyone should use the same balls. “It would seem to be simpler to have one set of balls, which was the case for many years,” Rooney said. “The officials brought the balls out and everybody used the same ball, and it seems like that would be an easy answer to this.” Odds for punishment: One bookmaker — Bovada.lv — posted odds of 3-2 that Belichick could be suspended at least one game, and 15-2 that he could be suspended for the Super Bowl.

OLYMPICS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

city.” Boston now goes up against potential bids from Rome, Paris, Germany and South Africa. The IOC is scheduled to make its decision in 2017. The presentation featured glossy photos of the city at its current best and renderings of what could be: Fireworks going off over a new — but temporary — Olympic stadium, tall ships in the harbor and fountains spraying from Fort Point channel as international visitors stroll along its promenade. Co-presenter Cheri Blauwet, an Iowa native and two-time winner of the Boston Marathon’s wheelchair division, pictured the Olympics as a catalyst for urban development that would have benefits throughout the region. “We call Boston home by choice because we understand that no city can offer the same power for personal and professional empowerment,” said Blauwet, a doctor and two-time Paralympian. “So this is a story of transformation.” Here are some other things to know about Boston’s Olympic bid:

Although the bid promises not to rely “on a single tax dollar,” it is dependent on more than $5.2 billion in public transportation and infrastructure projects already planned or underway in the Boston area. And the federal government would be expected to chip in on security.

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 27 14 .659 — Brooklyn 17 24 .415 10 Boston 13 26 .333 13 Philadelphia 8 33 .195 19 New York 6 36 .143 21½ Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 34 8 .810 — Washington 29 13 .690 5 Miami 18 23 .439 15½ Charlotte 17 25 .405 17 Orlando 15 29 .341 20 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 27 16 .628 — Cleveland 22 20 .524 4½ Milwaukee 21 20 .512 5 Detroit 16 26 .381 10½ Indiana 15 28 .349 12 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB Memphis 29 12 .707 — Dallas 29 13 .690 ½ Houston 29 13 .690 ½ San Antonio 26 16 .619 3½ New Orleans 20 21 .488 9 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Portland 31 11 .738 — Oklahoma City 21 20 .512 9½ Denver 18 23 .439 12½ Utah 14 27 .341 16½ Minnesota 7 33 .175 23 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 33 6 .846 — L.A. Clippers 28 14 .667 6½ Phoenix 25 18 .581 10 Sacramento 16 25 .390 18 L.A. Lakers 12 30 .286 22½ Tuesday’s Games Oklahoma City 94, Miami 86 San Antonio 109, Denver 99 Wednesday’s Games New York at Philadelphia (n) Miami at Charlotte (n) Utah at Cleveland (n) Indiana at Atlanta (n) Orlando at Detroit (n) L.A. Lakers at New Orleans (n) Toronto at Memphis (n) Dallas at Minnesota (n) Oklahoma City at Washington (n) Portland at Phoenix (n) Brooklyn at Sacramento (n) Houston at Golden State (n) Today’s Games San Antonio at Chicago, 7 p.m. Utah at Milwaukee, 7 p.m. Boston at Portland, 9 p.m. Brooklyn at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Friday’s Games Toronto at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Charlotte at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m. Orlando at New York, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 8 p.m. New Orleans at Minnesota, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. Houston at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Boston at Denver, 9 p.m. Sacramento at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

Team Irvin vs. Team Carter, 7 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 1 At Glendale, Ariz. New England vs. Seattle, 5:30 p.m. (NBC)

Hockey NHL standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 48 30 14 4 64 156 127 Detroit 47 27 11 9 63 139 119 Montreal 45 29 13 3 61 123 106 Boston 47 25 16 6 56 124 118 Florida 44 20 14 10 50 107 122 Toronto 47 22 22 3 47 139 146 Ottawa 45 18 18 9 45 122 125 Buffalo 47 14 30 3 31 89 167 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 46 31 14 1 63 151 129 Pittsburgh 45 26 12 7 59 136 114 N.Y. Rangers 44 27 13 4 58 134 106 Washington 46 24 13 9 57 137 120 Philadelphia 48 19 22 7 45 130 146 Columbus 44 20 21 3 43 113 138 New Jersey 47 17 22 8 42 107 134 Carolina 46 16 25 5 37 98 120 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 45 30 10 5 65 137 104 St. Louis 46 29 13 4 62 148 111 Chicago 46 29 15 2 60 145 106 Winnipeg 47 25 14 8 58 131 117 Dallas 46 21 18 7 49 144 151 Colorado 47 19 18 10 48 122 135 Minnesota 46 20 20 6 46 128 137 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 46 30 10 6 66 133 121 Vancouver 45 26 16 3 55 124 114 San Jose 47 24 17 6 54 127 130 Calgary 46 25 18 3 53 133 119 Los Angeles 46 20 14 12 52 127 122 Arizona 46 16 25 5 37 105 156 Edmonton 47 12 26 9 33 109 158 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Monday’s Games N.Y. Islanders 7, Philadelphia 4 Carolina 4, Toronto 1 Vancouver 2, Florida 1 St. Louis 3, Colorado 1 Columbus 3, Minnesota 1 Calgary 2, Los Angeles 1, OT New Jersey 5, San Jose 2 Tuesday’s Games Edmonton 5, Washington 4, SO Detroit 5, Minnesota 4, SO N.Y. Rangers 3, Ottawa 2, OT Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT Montreal 2, Nashville 1, OT Tampa Bay 4, Vancouver 1 Chicago 6, Arizona 1 Boston 3, Dallas 1 Wednesday’s Games Toronto at Ottawa (n) Chicago at Pittsburgh (n) Columbus at Winnipeg (n) Boston at Colorado (n) Calgary at Anaheim (n) Los Angeles at San Jose (n) Today’s Games No games scheduled]

NBA scoring leaders THROUGH JAN. 19 G FG FT PTS AVG Harden, HOU 42 347 331 1137 27.1 James, CLE 33 302 196 858 26.0 Davis, NOR 37 348 198 894 24.2 Anthony, NYK 32 284 152 766 23.9 Cousins, SAC 29 244 204 693 23.9 Aldridge, POR 38 351 158 881 23.2 Curry, GOL 39 320 146 904 23.2 Griffin, LAC 42 372 214 966 23.0 Bryant, LAL 34 260 195 768 22.6 Wade, MIA 30 255 139 664 22.1 Lillard, POR 42 314 185 927 22.1 Thompson, GOL 38 295 121 826 21.7 Bosh, MIA 32 250 142 691 21.6 Irving, CLE 39 297 161 822 21.1 Gay, SAC 38 277 186 781 20.6 Butler, CHI 40 265 250 822 20.6 Ellis, DAL 42 332 138 853 20.3 Lowry, TOR 41 282 171 810 19.8 Gasol, MEM 41 290 204 786 19.2 Walker, CHA 40 271 161 766 19.2

Tennis Australian Open Results Wednesday At Melbourne Park Melbourne, Australia Purse: $32.9 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round Tomas Berdych (7), Czech Republic, def. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 7-6 (0), 6-2, 6-2. Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, def. David Goffin (20), Belgium, 6-1, 6-4, 4-6, 6-0. Viktor Troicki, Serbia, def. Leonardo Mayer (26), Argentina, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4, 6-0. Richard Gasquet (24), France, def. James Duckworth, Australia, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5. Andy Murray (6), Britain, def. Marinko Matosevic, Australia, 6-1, 6-3, 6-2. Kevin Anderson (14), South Africa, def. Ricardas Berankis, Lithuania, 6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (3). Joao Sousa, Portugal, def. Martin Klizan (32), Slovakia, 4-6, 7-4 (4), 6-4, 1-0, retired. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def. Simone Bolelli, Italy, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. Grigor Dimitrov (10), Bulgaria, def. Lukas Lacko, Slovakia, 6-3, 6-7 (10), 6-3, 6-3. Sam Groth, Australia, def. Thanasi Kokkinakis, Australia, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 3-6, 6-1. Andreas Seppi, Italy, def. Jeremy Chardy (29), France, 7-5, 3-6, 6-2, 6-1. Nick Kyrgios, Australia, def. Ivo Karlovic (23), Croatia, 7-6 (4), 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. Dudi Sela, Israel, def. Lukas Rosol (28), Czech Republic, 7-6 (2), 5-7, 7-5, 6-3. Malek Jaziri, Tunisia, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Rafael Nadal (3), Spain, def. Tim Smyczek, United States, 6-2, 3-6, 6-7 (2), 6-3, 7-5. Bernard Tomic, Australia, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (22), Germany, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (5). Women Second Round Ekaterina Makarova (10), Russia, def. Roberta Vinci, Italy, 6-2, 6-4. Peng Shuai (21), China, def. Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-1, 6-1. Carina Witthoeft, Germany, def. Christina McHale,

Getting around Boston would be the most compact games in modern times, Manfredi said. Twenty-eight of 33 proposed venues would be within 6.2 miles of the athletes’ village, which is planned for the waterfront campus of UMassBoston. “We can plan a walkable games, we can plan a transit-oriented games,” he said. “It supports the idea that Boston, the city of Boston, is the Olympic Park.”

Football NFL postseason Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 3 Carolina 27, Arizona 16 Baltimore 30, Pittsburgh 17 Sunday, Jan. 4 Indianapolis 26, Cincinnati 10 Dallas 24, Detroit 20 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 10 New England 35, Baltimore 31 Seattle 31, Carolina 17 Sunday, Jan. 11 Green Bay 26, Dallas 21 Indianapolis 24, Denver 13 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 18 Seattle 28, Green Bay 22, OT New England 45, Indianapolis 7 Pro Bowl Sunday At Glendale, Ariz.

If you can’t say something nice Boston Mayor Marty Walsh denied a report on Wednesday that he was trying to keep city employees from speaking out against the Olympics. Documents obtained by The Boston Globe include a promise that the city and its employees would refrain from making statements that “reflect unfavorably upon, denigrate or disparage, or are detrimental to the reputation” of the IOC, USOC or the Olympics. “Mayor Walsh is not looking to limit the free speech of his employees,” said spokeswoman Laura Oggeri, adding that the agreement included “standard boilerplate language” that all applicant cities have historically signed.

United States, 6-3, 6-0. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, def. Monica Puig Puerto Rico, 6-2, 7-6 (6). Julia Goerges, Germany, def. Klara Koukalova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, def. Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-4. Karolina Pliskova (22), Czech Republic, def. Oceane Dodin, France, 7-5, 5-7, 6-4. Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic, def. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. Alexandra Panova, Russia, 6-1, 4-6, 7-5. Sara Errani (14), Italy, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Caroline Garcia, France, def. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 6-3, 6-4. Zarina Diyas (31), Kazakhstan, def. Anna Schmiedlova, Slovakia, 3-6, 6-2, 8-6. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, def. Lara Arruabarrena, Spain, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (6). Eugenie Bouchard (7), Canada, def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 6-0, 6-3. Simona Halep (3), Romania, def. Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia, 6-2, 6-2. Doubles Men First Round Pablo Carreno Busta and Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, def. Frantisek Cermak and Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-2. Dominic Inglot, Britain, and Florin Mergea (14), Romania, def. Matthew Ebden and Matt Reid, Australia, 6-2, 6-2. Omar Jasika and John-Patrick Smith, Australia, def. Rameez Junaid, Australia, and Adrian Mannarino, France, 6-2, 2-6, 6-3. Raven Klaasen, South Africa, and Leander Paes (10), India, def. Scott Lipsky and Rajeev Ram, United States, 6-4, 7-6 (6). Alex Bolt and Andrew Whittington, Australia, def. Marin Draganja, Croatia, and Henri Kontinen (15), Finland, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4). Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers (16), Australia, def. Maximo Gonzalez and Juan Monaco, Argentina, 6-1, 6-7 (4), 6-4. Austin Krajicek and Donald Young, United States, def. Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez (3), Spain, 7-6 (6), 2-6, 7-5. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (4), Brazil, def. Andre Begemann, Germany, and Robin Haase, Netherlands, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. John Millman and Benjamin Mitchell, Australia, 6-3, 7-5. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, and David Marrero, Spain, def. Jonathan Marray, Britain, and Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-4, 7-6 (6). Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, and Nenad Zimonjic (8), Serbia, def. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, and Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, 6-7 (7), 6-4, 6-3. Chris Guccione and Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, def. Federico Delbonis, Argentina, and Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, 6-3, 6-3. Jonathan Erlich, Israel, and Treat Huey, Philippines, def. Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, and Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 6-3. Benjamin Becker, Germany, and Artem Sitak, New Zealand, def. Gilles Muller, Luxembourg, and Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-3, 6-4. Julian Knowle, Austria, and Vasek Pospisil (13), Canada, def. Jan-Lennard Struff, Germany, and Dominic Thiem, Austria, 7-6 (3), 3-6, 7-6 (4). Women First Round Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, and Sania Mirza (2), India, def. Maria Irigoyen, Argentina, and Romina Oprandi, Switzerland, 6-2, 6-0. Gabriela Dabrowski, Canada, and Alicja Rosolska, Poland, def. Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Zheng Saisai, China, 6-1, 6-4. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, and Sam Stosur, Australia, def. Chan Hao-ching, Taiwan, and Kveta Peschke (8), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-2. Mona Barthel, Germany, and Mandy Minella, Luxembourg, def. Oksana Kalashnikova, Georgia, and Kurumi Nara, Japan, 6-3, 7-5. Klaudia Jans-Ignacik, Poland, and Andreja Klepac, Slovenia, def. Jelena Jankovic, Serbia, and Arantxa Parra Santonja, Spain, 7-6 (5), 5-7, 7-6 (2). Monique Adamczak and Olivia Rogowska, Australia, def. Daria Gavrilova and Storm Sanders, Australia, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, and Yaroslava Shvedova (11), Kazakhstan, def. Irina Falconi, United States, and Petra Martic, Croatia, 6-3, 6-3. Kimiko Date-Krumm, Japan, and Casey Dellacqua (15), Australia, def. Peng Shuai and Xu Yi-Fan, China, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6 (5). Shelby Rogers, United States, and Donna Vekic, Croatia, def. Alize Cornet and Pauline Parmentier, France, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4. Alla Kudryavtseva and Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (12), Russia, def. Shuko Aoyama, Japan, and Renata Voracova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 7-6 (5). Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Flavia Pennetta (4), Italy, def. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, and Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic, 7-6 (3), 6-2. Garbine Muguruza and Carla Suarez Navarro (6), Spain, def. Varvara Lepchenko and Anna Tatishvili, United States, 6-3, 6-2. Vitalia Diatchenko, Russia, and Monica Niculescu, Romania, def. Lauren Davis and Christina McHale, United States, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3. Michaella Krajicek, Netherlands, and Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (13), Czech Republic, def. Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, and Monica Puig Puerto Rico, 6-7 (9), 7-6 (6), 6-3. Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina (3), Russia, def. Madison Keys and Alison Riske, United States, 7-5, 6-1. Anastasia and Arina Rodionova, Australia, def. Naiktha Bains and Sara Tomic, Australia, 6-2, 6-2.

Television Today’s Lineup EXTREME SPORTS 9 p.m.— ESPN X Games, at Aspen, Colo. GOLF 6 a.m.— TGC European PGA Tour, Qatar Masters, second round, part II, at Doha 3 p.m.— TGC PGA Tour, Humana Challenge, first round, at La Quinta, Calif. 4:30 a.m.— TGC European PGA Tour, Qatar Masters, third round, at Doha MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m.— ESPNEWS San Francisco at Temple 7 p.m.— ESPN Ohio St. at Northwestern ESPN2 — Alabama at Arkansas ESPNU — Coastal Carolina at UNC Asheville FSN — Xavier at Providence FS1 — DePaul at Seton Hall NBCSN — George Washington at Fordham 9 p.m.— ESPN2 Arizona at Stanford ESPNU — Maryland at Indiana FSN — UTEP at W. Kentucky 9:30 p.m.— FS1 Washington at Colorado 11 p.m.— ESPNU Saint Mary’s (Calif.) at Gonzaga NBA 8 p.m.— TNT San Antonio at Chicago 10:30 p.m.— TNT Brooklyn at L.A. Clippers TENNIS 11 p.m.— ESPN2 Australian Open, third round, at Melbourne 3 a.m.— ESPN2 Australian Open, third round, at Melbourne

Transactions Wednesday’s Deals BASEBALL MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL — Rati-

Paying for it The operating budget for the games would be $4.7 billion, money that would come from broadcast revenues, sponsorships and ticket sales. The bid itself includes $3.4 billion to get the city ready, much of it to build the athletes’ village at UMass-Boston, a media headquarters near the South Boston waterfront and a temporary Olympic stadium just south of downtown.

Jordan gets emotional after winning award The Associated Press

FACILITY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

football program’s infrastructure. “It takes time and those are the things we’re building right now,” McElwain said this month. “The total evolution might not be done until next fall because there are a lot of those pieces that great organizations (have). ... You’re going to see a lot of things integrated as we move forward.” The new facility will be built on the current practice field and will contain a full, 120-yard turf field. It also will have additional space for drills, training room fa-

cilities, equipment storage and restrooms. “This is something we have talked about internally for some time,” Foley said. The Gators estimate that 30 practices were affected by inclement weather in 2014. Previously, the team would move into the nearby O’Connell Center for drills, but an upcoming renovation will render the facility unusable for most of 2015. The $15 million will be funded through private gifts and capital financing. The facility also will be available throughout the year for other Florida sports.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A humbled and emotional Michael Jordan fought back tears, feeling vindicated after years of criticism, after being named the Charlotte Business Journal’s Business Person of the Year. The Charlotte Hornets owner said during a nineminute acceptance speech Tuesday night posted on Sports Business Daily website, that while he’s received many awards as a player, this one was different. “I’ve been criticized in a lot of different areas from a business standpoint, but I take pride in the ideas and concepts and views that come out of this organization to build the type of basketball program... that the city of Charlotte can be proud of,” Jordan said as he began tearing up. Jordan won six NBA titles as a player, but his front-office leadership abilities had been questioned — including his decision to take Kwame Brown with the No. 1 pick while an executive with the Washington Wizards. But Jordan has repeat-

edly said he is committed to turning the Hornets around and members of his team echoed his sentiments on Wednesday. Charlotte president and COO Fred Whitfield said Wednesday that Jordan was “genuinely honored and humbled by the award.” Whitfield said Jordan has listened to fans, including changing the team’s name back to the Hornets upon their request. The franchise had been known as the Bobcats. “He is so proud to be building something in his home state,” Whitfield said. “So to be recognized with such a prestigious award for his business accomplishments was really, really special to him.” Jordan’s long-time business manager Estee Portnoy was in attendance at the ceremony, and called the speech “genuine and beautiful” in an email to The Associated Press on Wednesday. Jordan, a 14-time NBA All-Star who took over as the Hornets majority owner in 2010, said he plans on winning multiple

championships with the franchise. “For all of the people that think that I’m in this for the short term, you better pull your socks up and just hang around — because my promise to this organization and this community is to bring a winner,” Jordan said. Jordan said when he joined the Hornets as a minority owner he never anticipated taking over as majority owner, but rather was interested in helping bring a winning franchise back to his home state. But he said when Bob Johnson decided to sell the franchise, it felt like “karma” that allowed him the opportunity own a team in North Carolina. “I left home. I came back home. And I plan on staying home,” Jordan said. Jordan, who grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina, talked at length how much of his family still lives in the state. And he said he’s still driven to win. “Me personally I could ride off into the sunset and never worry about a thing,” Jordan said. “But my pride brought me

back to North Carolina for whatever reason.” Jordan, who won six NBA titles with the Chicago Bulls, went on to say “a lot of my credits from a basketball standpoint are going to be attributed to Chicago. But I’m from North Carolina.” Jordan also thanked his employees and his family for their input on his business decisions. “I take input from all sources of this community be it from my family or be it from business leaders, be it from people walking in the streets,” Jordan said. “And that gives me a sense of my pride in my connection to the community. I don’t take that for granted. I take it with a lot of pride and a lot of respect.” The Hornets made the playoffs last year but were swept in the postseason by the Miami Heat. They are currently ninth in the Eastern Conference standings this season. “We still have a long ways to go as an organization,” Jordan said. “We are just scratching the surface.”


14 • Thursday, January 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

s e l a S GUARANTEED Auto 0107 SPECIAL NOTICE SPECIAL NOTICE

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE SPECIAL NOTICE

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES ESTATE SALE - Saturday, 225 CR 209 Burnsville (Leedy). Tools, building material, garden tools, puzzles, & More! SATURDAY 7 -12, Just Moved, too much stuff! Furniture and More! 27 Bynum Dr. (off N. Shiloh near Turtle Creek)

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES YARD SALES FRI/ SAT - 9-4: Reasonable Prices, ALL MUST GO- 162 CR 346 Glen- 2 Miles on Right past Little Creek Ranch

EDUCATION/ 0216 TEACHING AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here - Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial Aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information. 888-2423193.

ADOPTION- LOVING PROBUTLER, DOUG: Founda- F E S S I O N A L F a m i l y D I V O R C E W I T H O R t i o n , f l o o r l e v e l i n g , wishes to adopt 1st W I T H O U T C H I L D R E N Uncondi- $125. Includes name bricks cracking, rotten baby. Warmth, Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for w o o d , b a s e m e n t s , tional LOVE. Interna- change and property tional Education. Finan$39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO shower floor. Over 35 settlement agreement. yrs. exp. FREE ESTIM- cial Security. Expenses SAVE HUNDREDS. Fast DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. paid. 1-917-863-4044ATES. 731-239-8945 or and Easy. Call 1-888-733662-284-6146. Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147Emma to place your ad. 7165 24/7

868 AUTOMOBILES

868 AUTOMOBILES

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

COMMERCIAL

470 TRACTORS/ FARM EQUIP.

804 BOATS ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE 16FT./5FT. 115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR TRAILER NEWLY REWIRED ALL TIRES NEW NEW WINCH

804 BOATS

2002 Saturn 4Cyl, Automatic Transmission 32 MPG All New Electrical System White 2006 Wrangler X

$1500.00 662-423-8449

Mint Condition! Straight 6- automatic- with 44,100 miles. Trail Certified, but never been off-road. Mickey Thompson wheels with BF Goodrich Tires (35’s)- less than 15K miles on them. Black Hard top currently on it & Bikini top comes with it. Tan Leather Interior, Stereo Sound Bar, Custom Jeep Cover, and Custom Bumpers. Serviced regularly. 4\” lift with 2\” body lift. Title in Hand- $22,000. Cashier’s Check or Cash only, extra pictures available. Serious Buyers Only, located in Corinth, MS. Call Randy: 662-415-5462

CED U D E R 2013 Nissan 2x4 4 door, Silver 1350 Miles

1996 VW Cabrio Convertible 178,000 Approx. Miles $3000. 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee 283,000 Approx. Miles $3000.

Frontier Desert Runner

662-415-8881

$22,000 $26,000

662-396-1182

Hyster Forklift Narrow Aisle 24 Volt Battery 3650.00 287-1464

KUBOTA TRACTOR TRACTOR KUBOTA L4630 L4630 46 HP, 4wd, 295 Hours 46 HP, 4wd, 6’ LMC Bush Hog 295Cutter Hours 5’King Tiller All $17,500.00 $13,750

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P. Imagine owning a likenew, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a High Five stainless prop,

662-415-2340 Call: 662-415-2340

Will Separate

ASKING $7500.00 CALL 662-427-9591 MADE IN LOUISIANA. THIS IS WHAT SWAMP PEOPLE USE.

Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in Counce, TN for details.

for only $7995. 731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

ED C U D RE New Tires 100K Miles Never BeeWrecked

2006 Jeep LibertyD

$8200 OBO 662-664-0357

CE REDU500 $6,

2011 Nissan Sentra SL Super Black, beige interior, 80,000 miles, Super Clean, Sunroof, loaded, navigation system, blue tooth

2000 GMC Jimmy

$12,900 662-401-2474

662-319-7145

4x4 • 150K leather, sunroof, 4.3 vortec good tires $1,600.00 OBO

2007 White Toyota Tundra double cab, 5.7 V8 SR5, Aluminum wheels, 64,135 miles, lots of extras, $19,000. Call 662-603-9304

Clark Forklift 8,000 lbs, outside tires Good Condition $15,000

2013 KUBOTA 3800 SERIES TRACTOR BUSH HOG, BACKHOE, FRONT LOADER AND BOX BLADE

D REDUCE

2003 FORD VAN 15 Passenger 41,000 Miles Excellent Condition $8500.00

1989 FOXCRAFT 18’ long, 120 HP Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot control.

662-287-1464

662-643-3565

WILL TRADE

$23,500

662-286-6662

662-596-5053 816 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

$6500.

2006 FORD F-250 4x4 4 Door, 1 Owner New tires Kept in A-1 shape $14,500 662-419-1587

2010 Chevy Equinox LS 2008 Nissan Altima 2 door coupe 103K Miles, power seats, automatic trans, sunroof, new tires, miles are hwy. Car is in great shape.

SOLD

$10,000 $10,500 662-415-8343 or 415-7205

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

$9200.00 OBO 415-6310

2005 Chevy 1997 Van New Holland 15 Passenger 3930 Tractor 71,000 Miles Excellent 1400 Hours Big Boy Forklift Condition $ 1250 $8500.00 Great for a small $11,500 warehouse 662-286-6662 662-287-1464 731-926-0006

14’ flat bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor and all. Call or

Loweline Boat

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

662-415-9461 662-554-5503

gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/ im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-flat screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.

ED C U D $85,000 E R 662-415-0590

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

2007 Dodge Ram

2006 Wilderness Camper 5th Wheel 29.5ft w/ large one side slide out non-smoking owner fully equip. IUKA 662-423-1727

$

73,000 Miles, V-6, Auto, CD Player, New Tires and Battery, Excellent Truck!

662-665-1995

8000

00

Antique 1986 FORD F350 XL- Dualley, 7.3 Diesel, new tires, Paint, Lots of Extras, 164,803 Miles, Motor runs well, 2nd Owner, $4000.00 662-287-8894

2001 Nissan Xterra FOR SALE Needs a little work. Good Bargain! Call: 662-643-3084

1993 John Deere 5300 Tractor w/ John Deere loader. 2900 Hours

Toyota Forklift 5,000 lbs Good Condition

$10,500

662-287-1464

731-926-0006

PRICE IS NEGOTIABLE CALL 662-660-3433

19’6” LONG FIBERGLASS INCLUDES TRAILER THIS BOAT IS KEPT INSIDE AND IS IN EXCELLENT CONDITION NEW 4 CYL MOTOR

1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC

REDUCED

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT 30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

832 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S

Tractor For Sale! John Deere 16-30 New injectors & Fuel Pump Good Tires Handicap Van w/ Extra Heavy Duty Wheelchair Lift 101,538 Miles

2000 Chevy Express RV

SOLD

TRACTOR FOR SALE JOHN DEERE 40-20 NEW PUMPS, GOOD TIRES RETIRED FROM FARMING $14,000 662-419-1587

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

$6500.00 662-419-1587

OBO $8,000 $ ,000 OBO 662-287-7403

$4995. CALL: 662-808-5005 53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES $12,000/OBO 731-453-5031 1989 Mercedes Benz 300 CE 145K miles, Rear bucket seats, Champagne color, Excellent Condition. Diligently maintained. $5000.00 662-415-2657

48,000 ONE OWNER MILES POWER EVERYTHING

SOLD 5,000 lbs, Good Condition

TOYOTA FORKLIFT

662-287-1464

$6500.00

662-660-3433 804 BOATS

1985 30’ long motor home, new tires, Price negotiable.

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy

Bass Boat 2005 Nitro 882 18’+ w/ 150 HP Mercury upgraded electronics, low hours Nice condition $14,000 OBO 665-0958 Leave a message

ED C U D RE Loaded with Chrome, 32,000 Miles, factory cover with extras

2005 Yamaha V-star 1100 Silverado $2,700.00

662-396-1098

1999 Dodge Ram 1500 V-8 Extended Cab Long Wheel Base Auto Transmission Runs Good

2012 Jeep Wrangler 4WD 9,600 Miles, Red Garage Kept, it has been babied. All maintenance records available. Call or Text:

662-287-7161 662-427-9022

$ 00.00

662-594-5830

VERY SHARP TORCH RED C-4 CORVETTE 1984 MODEL W/ TARGA TOP DAILY DRIVER GOOD TIRES. $7500. 662-462-8391 OR 662-279-1568

1984 DODGE RAM CLASSIC CUSTOMIZED CALL FOR DETAILS 731-239-8803

SOLD

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat 25 HP Motor $2700.00 Ask for Brad: 284-4826

2012 Lowe Pontoon 90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer Still under warranty. Includes HUGE tube $19,300 662-427-9063

1500 Goldwing Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.

662-284-9487

$4500

1997 Mustang GT 2006 Kawasaki Vulcan 1600 Black Like new on the inside and out. Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles

2010 Black Nissan Titan Pro4x

2001 Volvo S40

2004 F & F 17.5 ft.

13,500 Miles, Serviced in November, New Back Tire, Cobra Pipes, Slingshot Windshield

$

$4295 OBO 662-212-2451

5,900.00

Off Road 5.6 V-8 4 Door 93,000 Miles

$25,000 662-415-8869 or 662-415-8868

662-664-0357

103,000 miles,brilliant red with black leather, 4cylinder, automatic power sunroof,cd player, runs and drives great and gets about 30mpg. 3850.00

D L O S 662-665-1995

1996 CROWNLINE CUDY Custom Built Crappie Boat w/ 50hp Honda Motor, Tilt & Trim, completely loaded. $

ED C U D RE

8500.00 FIRM

23’ on trailer & cover 5.7 liter engine runs & works great. $10,000 $6,000.00

ED EDUC R 2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bike w/removable (three bolts) trike kit. 6400 miles, excellent condition. $

662-287-2703 or 662-415-3133

2007 Avalanche LTZ 4WD, Loaded 60K Miles

SOLD $20,000

731-610-3793

Great Hunting Truck or Work Truck 1997 Dodge Ram Pickup Extended Cab, 4x4, 2yr transmission 175k Miles Used as a work truck at Pickwick past 10 years. Runs Good $3000 731-438-2304

SOLD

Burgundy, V-6, 4.2 liter 5 Speed, Manual door locks and windows Regular cab, 115K miles

99 Ford F-150

SOLD 3500.00 662-665-1781 $

1994 Ford F-150 302 Auto 163K Miles $3200 OBO 662-750-0199 2009 TT45A New Holland Tractor 335 Hours 8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner deceased, Kossuth Area. $12,500- 662-424-3701

2012 Banshee Bighorn Side-by-Side 4 X 4 w/ Wench AM/FM w/ CD

UCED RED1996

731-607-3172

662-808-9662 or 662-808-2020

7500.00

$7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

Honda 4 wheeler 2005 Mazda Red, Good Tribute 137K Miles Condition $4500 $2200.00 662-415-8731 415-2769


Corner of the Sherman B. Commencing at the Southw- Wilson ans [sic] Linda Wilson est Corner of the Northwest 20.41 acre tract as referQuarter fo [sic] Section 24, enced by deed recorded in Township 1 South, Range 7 the Office of the Chancery East, also being the Southeast Clerk of Alcorn County, MisDaily Corinthian • Thursday, January 22, 2015 • 15 Corner of the Northeast sissippi in Deed Book 266, at WHEREAS, BancorpSouth Quarter of Section 23, Town- pages 154-155, and the Point MISC. ITEMS FOR MISC. ITEMS FOR MISC. ITEMS FOR LEGALS LEGALS LEGALSthence run Mississippi has ship 1 South, Range 7 East, of 0244 TRUCKING 0955Tupelo, 0955 0955 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE Bank, Beginning; 0563 SALE 0563 SALE 0563 SALE heretofore substituted Reed Alcorn County, Mississippi; North 29 degrees 29 minutes AAA SEPTIC , LLC, part Hillen as Trustee in place and thence run West 507.1 feet; 49 seconds West 794.10 feet; time, 30 hrs., less or (2) VANGUARD Heaters, N E W B A M A p u r s e - OLD WOOD Sewing Main lieu of J. Patrick Caldwell thence run North 110 feet to thence run South 28 degrees propane$40.00 each$ 2 5 . 0 0 6 0 3 1 3 8 2 chine. New Home Brand more. May turn in to HOMES FOR by instrument dated Decem- a concrete right of way mark- 45 minutes 14 seconds West 662-427-8425 working model-$125, 0710 full time. CDL required. ber 1, 2014, and of record in er at the intersection of the 1007.82 feet to a point on the NEW BLACK casserole 603-1382 SALE 286-6100. said Chancery Clerk's office North right of way line of a East line of the Ruth CatherB E H R I N G E R E U E O - dish holder, keeps 3BR/1BA For Sale- Cora s I n s t r u m e n t N o . paved public road (County ine Petty property as referP O W E R 1 8 0 - w a t t , 5 things hot and cold- R C A W H I T E E l e c t r i c inth School District 870D R I V E R T R A I N E E S channel powered mixer $10- 603-1382 201405951; and Road No. 723 or Henson enced by deed recorded in Stove- $100.00- 662-415- 636-4110 NEEDED NOW! Learn to with FBQ feedback deRoad) with the West right of the Office of the Chancery 0021 drive for Werner Enter- tection system, with in- NEW HOME Sewing MaWHEREAS, default having way line of the paved public Clerk of Alcorn County, Misprises. Earn $800 per puts and outputs, like chine- Several Automat- SUN-QUEST PRO 24- 220, MANUFACTURED been made in the terms and access road along the West sissippi in Deed Book 312, at week! No experience new. $140.00- 287-0350 ic settings, in cabinet- T a n n i n g B e d , W o r k s 0747 HOMES FOR SALE conditions of said Deed of right of way line of U.S. High- pages 587-588; also being the needed! CDL & job $75.00- 287-0258 good!- $500.00- 603-2971 Trust and the entire debt se- way No. 45; thence run along Northwest Corner of the ready in 15 days! APPLY BLACK AND Wicker Rock2012 DOUBLE Wide- 4 + cured thereby having been said West right of way line as Sherman B. Wilson and Linda er and Stool, good con- NEW IRON Bakers rack USED RIGHT hand Cleve- 2, fireplace, appliances, TODAY. 1-800-350-7364 w/ corner rack.. black. land driver 10 degree- central heat & air, fin- declared to be due and pay- follows: North 42 degrees 19 Wilson 20.41 acre tract as dition-$40- 286-5216 able in accordance with the minutes 53 seconds East referenced by deed recorded $150- 603-1382 $15, 603-1382 ished drywall thru out. terms of said Deed of Trust, 83.72 feet; North 35 degrees BLACK CONVERSE All PETS in the Office of the Chancery MUST SELLcall 662-401BancorpSouth Bank, Tupelo, 26 minutes 00 seconds East Clerk of Alcorn County, MisStar High Tops, Size 13, N E W M I S S S t a t e c a r VOICE BOX harmony ma1093 Mississippi, the legal holder of 93.93 feet along a segment of sissippi in Deed Book 266 at like new! $30- 286-5216 tags- $5.00- 603-1382 chine with vocal pedal, said indebtedness, having re- a curve having centerline pages 154-155; thence run 0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS B R A N D N E W E a s t o n NEW MISS State jigsaw New. Plug in guitar, quested the undersigned Sub- curve characteristics of: Delta South 86 degrees 19 minutes hockey style catchers puzzle, 500pc, $5.00 603- mic, etc and you are TRANSPORTATION stituted Trustee to execute equals 50 degrees 00 minutes 41 seconds East along the FREE KITTENS ! 1 Solid ready to perform! $1251382 mask-$60- 603-1382 the trust and sell said land and 00 seconds, Degree of curve North line of said property Black and 2 Calico- 8 287-0350 property in accordance with equals 57 degrees 17 minutes 708.29 feet to the centerline weeks old- 415-6954 D E L U X E B O X W O O D NEW NYLON tow Strap, the terms of said Deed of 45 seconds, Tangent equals of a ditch, thence continue WALKER- $10 and a W o o d H e a t e r f o r 20ft, $15.00- 603-1382 FINANCIAL Trust and for the purpose of 46.63 feet, Length equals along the North line of said Bathtub Seat-$20.00$300.00- Call Ronnie 662NEW OLE Miss Car tagsFARM raising the sums due thereun- 87.27 feet; thence continue p r o p e r t y a n d a l o n g t h e 427-8425 594-1788 $5.00, 603-1382 der, together with attorneys' along said West right of way centerline of said ditch North FISHER 1236X2 Metal Defees, trustee's fees and ex- line North 48 degrees 10 35 degrees 24 minutes 12 NEW OLE MIss Fleece REAL ESTATE FOR RENT LEGALS tector- Excellent Condipenses of sale. minutes 00 seconds East seconds East 291.67 feet to MERCHANDISE Blanket 64x86-$20.00tion- $210.00- 665-5472 294.36 feet to a concrete the Northeast Corner there603-1382 NOW, THEREFORE, I, Reed right of way marker; North of and the Point of Beginning. FLOOR MODEL TV, Nice UNFURNISHED Hillen, Substituted Trustee in 51 degrees 44 minutes 41 cabinet- $20.00- 287- N E W P E R C Y f r o m 0610 0955 LEGALS 0539 FIREWOOD APARTMENTS Thomas the Train, 11" said Deed of Trust, will on seconds East 306.39 feet to a 0258 pillow Pet- $10, 603-1382 2 BR/1BA, near town, W the 29th day of January, 2015, concrete right of way marker; SUBSTITUTED DRY FIRE Wood for Sale: KITCHEN LIGHT w/ 5 offer for sale at public outcry, North 62 degrees 34 minutes Together with a perpetual TRUSTEE'S NOTICE & D Hookup, $375 rent & 731-239-4428 (leave NEW PORTER Cable 20pc lights and a fan- $25.00sell within legal hours (being 35 seconds East 103.24 feet non-exclusive easement and OF SALE message) fastening set-$5.00, 603- $ 3 7 5 d e p . 6 6 2 - 2 8 6 287-0258 between the hours of 11:00 to a concrete right of way right of way for the following 8948/662-415-2451 1382 o'clock a.m. and 4:00 o'clock marker; North 59 degrees 07 purposes; namely, the right to MISC. ITEMS FOR LARGE "GREEN EGG"p.m.) at theSouth front door minutes 25 seconds East enter upon the hereinafter 0563 SALE $1300 NEW, will sale for NEW PORTER Cable 40pc 3 1 0 B S h i l o h R o a d $750.00- Appx 1 year drill/driver utility set- 2BR/1BA- $450 + Depos- WHEREAS, on September of the Alcorn County Court- 63.56 feet; thence leaving said described land and to do any it- 662-287-5557 3 PC . Bedroom Suite, old- some accessories- $10.00, 662-603-1382 19, 2006, James G. Norman, house, State of Mississippi, at road right of way line run and all work necessary to $100.00- 662-427-8425 287-3821 Jr. and Joseph S. Norman ex- Corinth, Mississippi, to the North 38 degrees 52 minutes build, maintain and repair a NEW PRO V 1 golf balls 616 A - Linden Streetecuted a certain Real Estate highest and best bidder for 39 seconds West 211.52 feet road, together with the right 1BR- Deposit, Rent 60 ROLLS of Hay- 662- MISS STATE Purse-$5.00- (refurb)$10- 603-1382 Deed of Trust to J. Patrick cash, the following described to a point on a fence line; to use said easement for the $250.00- 662-287-5557 750-1053 603-1382 Caldwell, Trustee for the be- property situated in Alcorn thence run North 15 degrees purpose of ingress and egress NEW UNIVERSAL lockCounty, Mississippi, to wit: 08 minutes 04 seconds West and for public utilities all over, ANTIQUE PIANO- $100.00- NEW 1 /2 H Series pipe out tool kit-$10, 603- WEAVER APTS. 504 N. nefit of BancorpSouth Bank, 506.64 feet to the centerline upon and across the followCass, 1 BR, scr.porch, Tupelo, Mississippi, which clamp without the pipe- 1382 427-8425 of a ditch at the Northeast ing described land: w/d. $375/ $400 sec. de- Deed of Trust is of record in $10, 603-1382 NEW VAUGHN HammerCorner of the Sherman B. the office of the Chancery ATT MOTOROLA TUNDRA posit + util, 603-5767. Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- Commencing at the Southw- Wilson ans [sic] Linda Wilson FLIP PHONE. GOOD CON- NEW BAMA countdown 19oz, $10, 603-1382 Corner of the Northwest 20.41 acre tract as referDITION. HINGES GOOD. to touchdown with Big OLD BABY Cradle on a MOBILE HOMES sissippi, in Instrument No. est Al-$5.00, 603-1382 200606350, said Deed of Quarter fo [sic] Section 24, enced by deed recorded in A strip of land being 20 feet in $30. 662-416-0229 stand that swings, great 0675 FOR RENT Trust being re-recorded as In- Township 1 South, Range 7 the Office of the Chancery width and being West of and NEW BAMA Fault book- to put your dolls in3BR/2BA Double Wide, strument No. 200606641; and East, also being the Southeast Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- North of the following deAUDIO-TECHNICA ProfesGood condition- $40.00$10- 603-1382 Corner of the Northeast sissippi in Deed Book 266, at scribed line: LR, KIT, Utility Room, sional Wireless Lavalier 287-0350 $550mo, $450dep.- 662- WHEREAS, BancorpSouth Quarter of Section 23, Town- pages 154-155, and the Point microphone, Still In box, NEW BAMA Mason jar Never Used- $125.00- tumbler cups- $6.00 or OLD DRESSER, 3 drawer, 287-5729 or 662-286- Bank, Tupelo, Mississippi has ship 1 South, Range 7 East, of Beginning; thence run two for $10- 603-1382 3 mirror-$175-660-2392 1083 287-0350 heretofore substituted Reed Alcorn County, Mississippi; North 29 degrees 29 minutes Hillen as Trustee in place and thence run West 507.1 feet; 49 seconds West 794.10 feet; Commencing at the Southwin lieu of J. Patrick Caldwell thence run North 110 feet to thence run South 28 degrees est Corner of the Northwest by instrument dated Decem- a concrete right of way mark- 45 minutes 14 seconds West Quarter of Section 24, Townber 1, 2014, and of record in er at the intersection of the 1007.82 feet to a point on the ship 1 South, Range 7 East, said Chancery Clerk's office North right of way line of a East line of the Ruth Cather- Alcorn County, Mississippi, a s I n s t r u m e n t N o . paved public road (County ine Petty property as refer- also being the Southeast Road No. 723 or Henson enced by deed recorded in Corner of the Northeast 201405951; and Road) with the West right of the Office of the Chancery Quarter of Section 23, TownPositions Available Now! WHEREAS, default having way line of the paved public Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- ship 1 South, Range 7 East, 2nd Shift (4:00 - Midnight) been made in the terms and access road along the West sissippi in Deed Book 312, at Alcorn County, Mississippi, conditions of said Deed of right of way line of U.S. High- pages 587-588; also being the thence run West 507.1 feet; Line Operators and Warehouse Workers Trust and the entire debt se- way No. 45; thence run along Northwest Corner of the thence tun [sic] North 110 • $9.00-$10.50/hour West right of way line as Sherman B. Wilson and Linda feet to a concrete right of cured thereby having been said'XH WR LQFUHDVH LQ EXVLQHVV ZH¡UH ORRNLQJ IRU • Benefits Available (Medical, Holiday Pay, etc.) declared to be due and pay- follows: North 42 degrees 19 Wilson 20.41 acre tract as way marker at the intersecable in accordance with the minutes 53 seconds East referenced by deed recorded tion of the North right of way Please call: terms of said Deed of Trust, 83.72 feet; North 35 degrees in the Office of the Chancery line of a paved public road Express Employment Professionals BancorpSouth Bank, Tupelo, 26 minutes 00 seconds East Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- (County Road No. 723 or 810 Garfield Street Mississippi, the legal holder of 93.93 feet along a segment of sissippi in Deed Book 266 at Henson Road) with the West said indebtedness, having re- a curve having centerline pages 154-155; thence run right of way line paved public Tupelo, MS 38801 SEND RESUME TO: quested the undersigned Sub- curve characteristics of: Delta South 86 degrees 19 minutes road along the West right of stituted Trustee to execute equals 50 degrees 00 minutes 41 seconds East along the way access line of U.S. HighBox 1040 (662) 842-5500 the trust and sell said land and 00 seconds, Degree of curve North line of said property way No. 45; thence run along property in accordance with equals 57 degrees 17 minutes 708.29 feet to the centerline said West right of way line as The Daily Corinthian the terms of said Deed of 45 seconds, Tangent equals of a ditch, thence continue follows: North 42 degrees 19 jobs@tupeloms.com P.O. Box 1800 Trust and for the purpose of 46.63 feet, Length equals along the North line of said minutes 53 seconds East raising the sums due thereun- 87.27 feet; thence continue p r o p e r t y a n d a l o n g t h e 83.72 feet; North 35 degrees Corinth, MS 38835 der, together with attorneys' along said West right of way centerline of said ditch North 26 minutes 00 seconds East fees, trustee's fees and ex- line North 48 degrees 10 35 degrees 24 minutes 12 93.93 feet along a segment of minutes 00 seconds East seconds East 291.67 feet to a curve having centerline penses of sale. 294.36 feet to a concrete the Northeast Corner there- curve characteristics of: Delta NOW, THEREFORE, I, Reed right of way marker; North of and the Point of Beginning. equals 50 degrees 00 minutes COMPANY DESCRIPTION Hillen, Substituted Trustee in 51 degrees 44 minutes 41 00 seconds, Degree of curve Established wholesale distributor with headquarters in said Deed of Trust, will on seconds East 306.39 feet to a equals 57 degrees 17 minutes Northeast Mississippi and interests in West Tennessee. the 29th day of January, 2015, concrete right of way marker; 45 seconds, Tangent equals offer for sale at public outcry, North 62 degrees 34 minutes Together with a perpetual 46.63 feet, Length equals H.M. Richard’s, one of the largest furniture JOB DESCRIPTION sell within legal hours (being 35 seconds East 103.24 feet non-exclusive easement and 87.27 feet; thence continue manufacturers in Northeast Mississippi, is now To assist the Controller and Accounting Manager with all between the hours of 11:00 to a concrete right of way right of way for the following along said West right of way o'clock a.m. and 4:00 o'clock marker; North 59 degrees 07 purposes; namely, the right to line North 48 degrees 10 Accounting Department functions, to include: Accounts searching for sewing machine operators and p.m.) at theSouth front door minutes 25 seconds East enter upon the hereinafter minutes 00 seconds East Payable, Accounts Receivable, General Accounting, Fixed upholsterers at our Guntown, Mississippi of the location. Alcorn County Court- 63.56 feet; thence leaving said described land and to do any 294.36 feet to a concrete Assets, account reconciliation and analysis. To ensure that house, State of Mississippi, at road right of way line run and all work necessary to right of way marker; North proper financial procedures and guidelines are properly Corinth, Mississippi, to the North 38 degrees 52 minutes build, maintain and repair a 51 degrees 44 minutes 41 followed, that financial/statistical information is recorded Excellent pay and benefits including health and highest and best bidder for 39 seconds West 211.52 feet road, together with the right seconds East 306.39 feet to a timely and accurately, and that company assets are cash, the following described to a point on a fence line; to use said easement for the concrete right of way marker; dental insurance, vision insurance, cancer insurance, properly protected. Other duties as required. property situated in Alcorn thence run North 15 degrees purpose of ingress and egress North 62 degrees 34 minutes 401(k), company paid life insurance, short -term and County, Mississippi, to wit: 08 minutes 04 seconds West and for public utilities all over, 35 seconds East 103.24 feet 506.64 feet to the centerline upon and across the follow- to a concrete right of way long -term disability, monthly safety and attendance REQUIREMENTS of a ditch at the Northeast ing described land: marker; North 51 degrees 07 bonuses, and paid vacations. If you are looking for Education: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent education in Corner of the Sherman B. minutes 25 seconds East Accounting. an excellent work environment, with excellent Commencing pay at theand Southw- Wilson ans [sic] Linda Wilson 63.56 feet; thence leaving said acre tract as referroad right of way line run benefits, please apply in person at: est Corner of the Northwest 20.41 Quarter fo [sic] Section 24, enced by deed recorded in A strip of land being 20 feet in North 38 degrees 52 minutes Experience/ Certifications: Township 1 South, Range 7 the Office of the Chancery width and being West of and 39 seconds West 211.52 feet - Minimum of three years accounting experience. of Alcorn County, Mis- North of the following de- to a point on a fence line; H.M. Richard’s East, also being the Southeast Clerk - Excellent analytical, organizational, and problem solving Corner of the Northeast sissippi in Deed Book 266, at scribed line: thence run North 15 degrees skills 414 Road 2790 Quarter of Section 23, Town- pages 154-155, and the Point 08 minutes 04 seconds West - Excellent typing and ten-key calculator skills and ship 1 South, Range 7 East, of Beginning; thence run 506.64 feet to the centerline Guntown, MS 38849 knowledge of word processing, spreadsheets, and Alcorn County, Mississippi; North 29 degrees 29 minutes of a ditch at the Northeast personal computers. thence run West 507.1 feet; 49 seconds West 794.10 feet; Commencing at the Southw- Corner of the Sherman B. thence run North 110 feet to thence run South 28 degrees est Corner of the Northwest Wilson and Linda Wilson EOE Submit resume, including references and a concrete right of way mark- 45 minutes 14 seconds West Quarter of Section 24, Town- 20.41 acre tract as refersalary requirements to: er at the intersection of the 1007.82 feet to a point on the ship 1 South, Range 7 East, enced by deed recorded in Staff Accountant C/O Controller No phone calls please North right of way line of a East line of the Ruth Cather- Alcorn County, Mississippi, the Office of the Chancery Box 239 - Corinth, MS 38835 paved public road (County ine Petty property as refer- also being the Southeast Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis$ Road No. 723 or Henson enced by deed recorded in Corner of the Northeast sissippi in Deed Book 266 at Road) with the West right of the Office of the Chancery Quarter of Section 23, Town- pages 154-155; thence run SERVICES way line of the paved public Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- ship 1 South, Range 7 East, North 29 degrees 29 minutes access road along the West sissippi in Deed Book 312, at Alcorn County, Mississippi, 49 seconds West 794.10 feet right of way line of U.S. High- pages 587-588; also being the thence run West 507.1 feet; to the Point of Beginning; Corner of the thence tun [sic] North 110 thence run North 29 degrees ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ way No. 45; thence run along Northwest GRISHAM said West right of way line as Sherman B. Wilson and Linda feet to a concrete right of 29 minutes 49 seconds West INSURANCE follows: North 42 degrees 19 Wilson 20.41 acre tract as way marker at the intersec- 129.60 feet; thence run North minutes 53 seconds East referenced by deed recorded tion of the North right of way 71 degrees 43 minutes 17 83.72 feet; North 35 degrees in the Office of the Chancery line of a paved public road seconds East 302.65 feet; 26 minutes 00 seconds East Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- (County Road No. 723 or thence run South 88 degrees the West 53 minutes Package 93.93 feet along a segment of sissippi in Deed Book 266 at Henson Road) with Complete 20 seconds East a curve having centerline pages 154-155; thence run right of way line paved public 1651.59 feet to the West $295.00 curve characteristics of: Delta South 86 degrees 19 minutes road along the West right of right of way line of Spring Val1. Clean off Entire Roof High- ley equals 50 degrees 00 minutes 41 seconds East along the way access line of U.S. Subdivision access road runThorough along (Alcorn North line of said property way No. 45; thence 2. Inspection StructureDegree demolition & Removal 00 seconds, of curve County Road No. line as and 708.29 feet to the centerline said West right of way (roof Crushed Lime 17 Stone (any size) equals 57 degrees minutes fascias) 722) and the end of said ease19 ment. 45 seconds, Tangent equals of a ditch, thence continue follows: North 42 degrees Iuka Road Gravel 3. Replace any missing East 46.63 feet,Washed Lengthgravel equals along the North line of said minutes 53 secondsshingles Loans $20-$20,000 Grooming along t h e 83.72 feet; North 35 degrees 87.27 feet; thence continue p r o p e r t y a n dFull Pea gravel 4. Seal 26 minutes 00 seconds East around pipes, ditch North along said West right of way centerline of said Shop on Wheels Fill sand chimneys, and sky Big or Small, line North 48 degrees 10 35 degrees 24 minutes 12 93.93 feet along a segment of SUBJECT TO the Protective Masonry sand lightsCovenants and Provisions apwe top them all! a curve having centerline seconds East 291.67 feet to Too Busy to get minutes 00 seconds East CHRIS GRISHAM Black mulch the Northeast Corner there- curve characteristics5. and Stop of:Locate Delta plicable 294.36 feet to Magic a concrete to theLeaks above deyour dog to Final Fin Fi al l Expense Expense Licensed and Insured Natural brownNorth mulch of and the Point of Beginning. equals 50 degrees 00 minutes 6. Cleanscribed out gutters right of way marker; Life Insurance property which have the groomer? Free Estimates Long Term Care 00 seconds, Degree of curve been recorded In the Office soil 41 51 degrees 44Top minutes We can also install H.D. leafMedicare Supplements 40 Years Experience 57 degrees 17 minutes I will comeequals to you. seconds East 306.39 feet to a the Chancery Clerk guards.of JIMCO is your full of AlPart D Prescription Plan 45 seconds, Tangent equalsroofi “Let us help with your projectâ€? All Work Guaranteed concrete right of way marker; corn County, Mississippi service ng company with in Leave the mess to me! Are you paying too much for equals “Large or years experience 1 247North 62 degrees 34Smallâ€? minutes Together with a perpetual 46.63 feet, Length 38 Deed Book 193 and at pages your Medicare Supplement? Office ce:662-284-4360 662-287-4360 liability insurance. continue in 35Bill seconds East284-6061 103.24 feet non-exclusive easement and 87.27 feet; thence Million 250, as amended in the DeJr., “ I will always try to help youâ€? 40 Years to aG.E. concrete right of way right of way for the following along said West right of way cree of the Chancery Court Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834 Cell: 662-415-5247 284-9209 namely, the right to line North 48 degrees 10 of Alcorn County, Mississippi, ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ marker; North 59 degrees 07 purposes; minutes 25 seconds East enter upon the hereinafter minutes 00 seconds East dated April 5, 1996, in Cause 63.56 feet; thence leaving said described land and to do any 294.36 feet to a concrete No. 26, 014 (02). road right of way line run and all work necessary to right of way marker; North North 38 degrees 52 minutes build, maintain and repair a 51 degrees 44 minutes 41 39 seconds West 211.52 feet road, together with the right seconds East 306.39 feet to a to a point on a fence line; to use said easement for the concrete right of way marker; thence run North 15 degrees purpose of ingress and egress North 62 degrees 34 minutes 08 minutes 04 seconds West and for public utilities all over, 35 seconds East 103.24 feet I will convey only such title 506.64 feet to the centerline upon and across the follow- to a concrete right of way as is vested in me as Substimarker; North 51 degrees 07 tuted Trustee. of a ditch at the Northeast ing described land: minutes 25 seconds East Corner of the Sherman B. 63.56 feet; thence leaving said WITNESS my signature, this, Wilson ans [sic] Linda Wilson road right of way line run the 29 th day of December, 20.41 acre tract as referenced by deed recorded in A strip of land being 20 feet in North 38 degrees 52 minutes 2014. the Office of the Chancery width and being West of and 39 seconds West 211.52 feet Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- North of the following de- to a point on a fence line; thence run North 15 degrees sissippi in Deed Book 266, at scribed line: 08 minutes 04 seconds West REED HILLEN pages 154-155, and the Point 506.64 feet to the centerline SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE of Beginning; thence run of a ditch at the Northeast North 29 degrees 29 minutes 49 seconds West 794.10 feet; Commencing at the Southw- Corner of the Sherman B. thence run South 28 degrees est Corner of the Northwest Wilson and Linda Wilson 4tc: 01/08, 01/15, 01/22, & 45 minutes 14 seconds West Quarter of Section 24, Town- 20.41 acre tract as refer- 01/29/2015 1007.82 feet to a point on the ship 1 South, Range 7 East, enced by deed recorded in 14685 East line of the Ruth Cather- Alcorn County, Mississippi, the Office of the Chancery ine Petty property as refer- also being the Southeast Clerk of Alcorn County, Misenced by deed recorded in Corner of the Northeast sissippi in Deed Book 266 at the Office of the Chancery Quarter of Section 23, Town- pages 154-155; thence run Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- ship 1 South, Range 7 East, North 29 degrees 29 minutes sissippi in Deed Book 312, at Alcorn County, Mississippi, 49 seconds West 794.10 feet pages 587-588; also being the thence run West 507.1 feet; to the Point of Beginning; Northwest Corner of the thence tun [sic] North 110 thence run North 29 degrees Sherman B. Wilson and Linda feet to a concrete right of 29 minutes 49 seconds West Wilson 20.41 acre tract as way marker at the intersec- 129.60 feet; thence run North referenced by deed recorded tion of the North right of way 71 degrees 43 minutes 17 in the Office of the Chancery line of a paved public road seconds East 302.65 feet;

the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Instrument No. 200606350, said Deed of Trust being re-recorded as Instrument No. 200606641; and

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road right of way line run North 38 degrees 52 minutes 39 seconds West 211.52 feet A strip of land being 20 feet in to a point on a fence line; width and being West of and thence run North 15 degrees minutes 04 seconds West North the following de- 08 22, 16 • of Thursday, January 2015 • Daily Corinthian 506.64 feet to the centerline scribed line: of a ditch at the Northeast Corner of the Sherman B. 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS Wilson and Linda Wilson Commencing at the Southw- 20.41 acre tract as referSUBSTITUTE est Corner of the Northwest enced by deed recorded in TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Quarter of Section 24, Town- the Office of the Chancery OF SALE ship 1 South, Range 7 East, Clerk of Alcorn County, MisAlcorn County, Mississippi, sissippi in Deed Book 266 at also being the Southeast pages 154-155; thence run Corner of the Northeast North 29 degrees 29 minutes WHEREAS, on the 28th day Quarter of Section 23, Town- 49 seconds West 794.10 feet of March, 2007, Southern ship 1 South, Range 7 East, to the Point of Beginning; Motel, Inc., executed a Deed Alcorn County, Mississippi, thence run North 29 degrees of Trust to Donald Ray thence run West 507.1 feet; 29 minutes 49 seconds West Downs, Trustee for the use thence tun [sic] North 110 129.60 feet; thence run North and benefit of Interbay Fundfeet to a concrete right of 71 degrees 43 minutes 17 ing, LLC, a Delaware Limited way marker at the intersec- seconds East 302.65 feet; Liability Company, which tion of the North right of way thence run South 88 degrees Deed of Trust is on file and of line of a paved public road 53 minutes 20 seconds East record in the office of the (County Road No. 723 or 1651.59 feet to the West Chancery Clerk of Alcorn Henson Road) with the West right of way line of Spring Val- County, Mississippi, in Deed right of way line paved public ley Subdivision access road of Trust Book as Instrument road along the West right of (Alcorn County Road No. Number 200701916 thereof; way access line of U.S. High- 722) and the end of said ease- and way No. 45; thence run along ment. said West right of way line as follows: North 42 degrees 19 minutes 53 seconds East WHEREAS, said Deed of 83.72 feet; North 35 degrees SUBJECT TO the Protective T r u s t w a s a s s i g n e d t o 26 minutes 00 seconds East Covenants and Provisions ap- Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC 93.93 feet along a segment of plicable to the above de- by assignment on file and of a curve having centerline scribed property which have record in the office of the curve characteristics of: Delta been recorded In the Office Chancery Clerk of Alcorn equals 50 degrees 00 minutes of the Chancery Clerk of Al- County, Mississippi, as Instru00 seconds, Degree of curve corn County, Mississippi in ment Number 200707604 equals 57 degrees 17 minutes Deed Book 193 at pages 247- thereof; and 45 seconds, Tangent equals 250, as amended in the De46.63 feet, Length equals cree of the Chancery Court 87.27 feet; thence continue of Alcorn County, Mississippi, along said West right of way dated April 5, 1996, in Cause WHEREAS, the legal holder line North 48 degrees 10 No. 26, 014 (02). of the said Deed of Trust and minutes 00 seconds East the note secured thereby, 294.36 feet to a concrete substituted Adams & Edens, right of way marker; North P.A., as Trustee therein, as 51 degrees 44 minutes 41 authorized by the terms seconds East 306.39 feet to a thereof, by instrument recorconcrete right of way marker; I will convey only such title ded in the office of the aforeNorth 62 degrees 34 minutes as is vested in me as Substi- said Chancery Clerk in Book 35 seconds East 103.24 feet tuted Trustee. as Instrument Number to a concrete right of way 201405820 thereof; and marker; North 51 degrees 07 WITNESS my signature, this, minutes 25 seconds East the 29 th day of December, 63.56 feet; thence leaving said 2014. road right of way line run WHEREAS, default having North 38 degrees 52 minutes been made in the perform39 seconds West 211.52 feet ance of the conditions and REED HILLEN stipulations as set forth by to a point on a fence line; SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE said Deed of Trust, and havthence run North 15 degrees 08 minutes 04 seconds West ing been requested by the leg506.64 feet to the centerline al holder of the indebtedness of a ditch at the Northeast 4tc: 01/08, 01/15, 01/22, & secured and described by said Corner of the Sherman B. 01/29/2015 Deed of Trust so to do, noWilson and Linda Wilson 14685 tice is hereby given that 20.41 acre tract as referAdams & Edens, P.A., Substienced by deed recorded in tute Trustee, by virtue of the the Office of the Chancery authority conferred upon me Clerk of Alcorn County, Misin said Deed of Trust, will ofsissippi in Deed Book 266 at fer for sale and will sell at pages 154-155; thence run public sale and outcry to the List your name and office under North 29 degrees 29 minutes highest and best bidder for the West political listing for only 49 seconds 794.10 feet cash, during the legal hours to the Point of Beginning; (between the hours of 11 $190.00. Runs every publishing thence run North 29 degrees o'clock a.m. and 4 o'clock day 49 until final 29 minutes seconds West election. Come p.m.) at the South front door 129.60 feet; thence run North by the Daily Coriathian office at of the County Courthouse of 71 degrees 43 minutes 17 Alcorn County, at Corinth, 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 287seconds East 302.65 feet; Mississippi, on the 29th day of 8147 for more info. Must be paid thence run South 88 degrees January, 2015, the following 53 minutes 20 seconds East described land and property in advance. 1651.59 feet to the West being the same land and propright of way line of Spring Valerty described in said Deed of ley Subdivision access road Trust, situated in Alcorn (Alcorn County Road No. County, State of Mississippi, 722) and the end of said easeto-wit: ment.

OF SALE WHEREAS, on March 31, 2005, Charlie W. McDaniel executed and delivered a Deed of Trust to J. Patrick Caldwell as Trustee, and BANCORPSOUTH BANK, 0955 LEGALS Beneficiary, which Deed of Trust was recorded on April 1, 2005 in book 678 page 351 thru 355 in the land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, on December 15, 2014, BancorpSouth Bank substituted Jimmy B. Fisher in the place and stead of J. Patrick Caldwell as Trustee in the above referenced Deed of Trust which Substitution of Trustee was recorded in the land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi, on December 30, 2014, as Instrument number 201406278 reference to which is hereby made; and WHEREAS, on July 15, 2008, Charlie McDaniel executed and delivered a Deed of Trust to J. Patrick Caldwell as Trustee, and BANCORPSOUTH BANK, Beneficiary, which Deed of Trust was recorded on July 21, 2008 as Instrument 200804099 in the land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, on December 15, 2014, BancorpSouth Bank substituted Jimmy B. Fisher in the place and stead of J. Patrick Caldwell as Trustee in the above referenced Deed of Trust which Substitution of Trustee was recorded in the land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi, on December 30, 2014, as Instrument number 201406277 reference to which is hereby made; and WHEREAS, default has been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured by said aforementioned Deeds of Trust, and the said BancorpSouth Bank, being the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured thereby, having requested the undersigned Substitute Trustee so to do, I will on January 30, 2015, offer for sale and will sell, during legal hours (11:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.) at the South door of the Courthouse in Alcorn County, Corinth, Mississippi, to the highest bidder for cash at public outcry, the following described property: Situated in the Northwest quarter of Section 19, Township 1 South, Range 8 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, to-wit: Commencing at the Southwest corner of the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 19, Township 1 South, Range 8 East, said Corner being at the intersection of the centerline of Mississippi Highway 2 and the centerline of Harper Road; thence run along the centerline of Highway 2, North 89 degrees 43 minutes 34 seconds East 417.98 feet; thence run North 73.42 feet to a 1/2 inch steel pin set on the North right-of-way of Highway 2 for and as the point of beginning; thence run North 02 degrees 33 minutes 23 seconds West 248.83 feet; thence run West 173.93 feet; thence run South 16 degrees 08 minutes 58 seconds West 207.50 feet to a concrete right-of-way marker on the North right-of-way of Highway 2; thence run along said right-of-way South 69 degrees 27 minutes 55 seconds East 142.90 to a concrete right-of-way marker; thence continue along said right-ofway North 89 degrees 33 minutes 14 seconds East 108.93 feet to the point of beginning, containing 1.15 acres, more or less.

You are summons to appear and defend against said Petition to determine heirs at law of CLEDA VIRGINIA SHIPMAN BRIGGS at 9:00 o’ clock A.M. on the 16th day of April, 2015, at the Alcorn County Chancery Building, 0955 LEGALS Corinth, Mississippi and in case of your failure to appear and defend a judgment will be entered against you for the things demanded in said Complaint or Petition.

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI TO: ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF MARY LOUISE MARSH, DECEASED NOTICE TO THE LINDSEY HARDIN Commencing at the Northwest corner of said East Half of ADMINISTRATOR said Quarter Section and running East with North Boundary of said tract 920 feet to a point in the center of a public road, thence with center of LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 said road as follows: South 13 W . J E T T W I L S O N , 1/2 degrees West 500 feet, MSB#7316 thence South 134 feet, and ATTORNEY FOR ADMINIS- thence East 21 feet for the TRATORS Point of Beginning; thence 505 E. WALDRON STREET South 19 degrees East with POST OFFICE BOX 1257 the East right of way said CORINTH, MS 38835 road 300 feet; thence East (662) 286-3366 210 feet; thence North 19 degrees West 300 feet; thence 3tc:1/8, 1/15, 1/22/2015 West 210 feet to the Point of 14699 Beginning. This said tract being all together on the East IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN side of the said public road, COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI and containing 1 and 1/2 acres, more or less.

LEGALS 0955 DEFENDANTS

ATTN: CANDIDATES

You have been made a Defendant in the Petition filed in this Court by JEANNIE ARNOLD, Administratrix of the Estate of MARY LOUISE You are not required to file MARSH and you must take and answer or other pleading, immediate action to protect but you may do so if you de- your rights. sire. You are summons to appear Issued under my hand and the and defend against said Petiseal of said court, this the 6 tion to determine heirs at law of MARY LOUISE MARSH at day of January, 2015. 9:00 o’c lock A.M. on the 16th day of April , 2015, at ALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS- the Alcorn County Chancery Building, Corinth, Mississippi SIPPI and in case of your failure to appear and defend a judgRE: THE LAST WILL AND ment will be entered against TESTAMENT OF WILLIAM you for the things demanded LARRY HARDIN, Deceased BOBBY MAROLT in said Complaint or Petition. CHANCERY CLERK You are not required to file CAUSE NO. 2014-0648-02 BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C. and answer or other pleading, but you may do so if you desire. 3tc: 1/8, 1/15, & 1/22/2015 14694 NOTICE TO Issued under my hand and CREDITORS IN THE CHANCERY the seal of said court, this the COURT OF ALCORN 6 day of January , 2015. COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI NOTICE IS GIVEN that Letters Testamentary were on ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISthe 6th day of January , SIPPI 2015 granted the underRE: ADMINISTRATION OF signed Administrators of the THE ESTATE OF CLEDA Estate of WILLIAM LARRY VIRGINIA SHIPMAN HARDIN, Deceased, by the BRIGGS, DECEASED Chancery Court of Alcorn BOBBY MAROLT, County, Mississippi; and all CAUSE NO. 2015-0002-02 CHANCERY CLERK persons having claims against said Estate are required to BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C. have the same probated and NOTICE TO registered by the Clerk of CREDITORS 3tc: 1/8, 1/15, & 1/22/2015 said Court within ninety (90) 14697 days after the date of the first NOTICE IS GIVEN that LetIN THE CHANCERY publication of this Notice, ters of Administration were 8th day of on the 6th day of January , COURT OF ALCORN which is the , 2015 or the 2015, granted the under- COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI January same shall be forever barred. signed Joint Administrators of the Estate of CLEDA VIRGINIA SHIPMAN BRIGGS, RE: ADMINISTRATION OF WITNESS OUR SIGNAday Deceased, by the Chancery THE ESTATE OF CON- TURE(S), this the 6th , 2015. Court of Alcorn County, Mis- STANCE R. HARDIN, DE- of January sissippi; and all persons hav- CEASED ing claims against said Estate CAUSE NO. 2014-0647-02 are required to have the same /s/ Stephen Hardin probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court withSUMMONS STEPHEN HARDIN in ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of EXECUTOR this Notice, which is the 8th day of January , 2015, or THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI the same shall be forever TO: ALL UNKNOWN barred. HEIRS AT LAW OF CON/s/ Lindsey Hardin WITNESS OUR SIGNA- STANCE R. HARDIN, DELINDSEY HARDIN day CEASED TURES, this the 6th of January , 2015. EXECUTOR /s/ James L. Shipman NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANTS

Title to the above described property is believed to be good, but I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Special Commissioner.

WITNESS my signature, on this the 31st day of December, 2014. ADAMS & EDENS, P.A. SPECIAL COMMISSIONER

PREPARED BY: ADAMS & EDENS POST OFFICE BOX 320909 FLOWOOD, MISSISSIPPI 39232 (601) 825-9508 A&E File #13-00236 3tc: 01/22/2015, 01/29/2015; 02/05/2015 14704 IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF MARTHA BALDWIN GLASS, DECEASED NO. 2013-0612-02 SUMMONS THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI TO: ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS-AT-LAW OF MARTHA BALDWIN GLASS, DECEASED

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT

This is a paid political advertisement which is intended as a public service for the voters. SUBJECT TO the Protective It has been apsubmitted to and Covenants and Provisions plicable to the above deapproved and submitted by each scribed property which have political listed below been recorded In candidate the Office of the Clerk of AlorChancery by the candidate’s campaign corn County, Mississippi in manager or 247assistant manager. Deed Book 193 at pages 250,This as amended in the is De- not intended to listing cree of the Chancery Court suggest or imply that these are of Alcorn County, Mississippi, the for these dated April only 5, 1996, candidates in Cause No. offi 26, 014 (02). ces.

JAMES L. SHIPMAN, You have been made a DeADMINISTRATOR fendant in the Petition filed in this Court by STEPHEN /s/ Charles Shipman H A R D I N a n d L I N D S E Y HARDIN, Administrators of CHARLES SHIPMAN, the Estate of CONSTANCE ADMINISTRATOR R. HARDIN and you must take immediate action to pro/s/ Geneva Shipman Putt tect your rights. GENEVA SHIPMAN PUTT, You are summons to appear ADMINISTRATOR and defend against said Petition to determine heirs at law of CONSTANCE R. HARDIN at 9:00 o’clock A.M. on W . J E T T W I L S O N , the 16th day of April , 2015, at the Alcorn County ChanMSB#7316 ATTORNEY FOR ADMINIS- cery Building, Corinth, Mississippi and in case of your failTRATORS ure to appear and defend a 505 E. WALDRON STREET judgment will be entered POST OFFICE BOX 1257 against you for the things deCORINTH, MS 38835 manded in said Complaint or (662) 286-3366 Petition. 3tc: 1/8, 1/15, 1/22/2015 You are not required to file 14695 and answer or other pleading, IN THE CHANCERY but you may do so if you deCOURT OF ALCORN sire. COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI Issued under my hand and the seal of said court, this the 6 day of January , 2015. RE: ADMINISTRATION OF THE ESTATE OF MARY LOUISE MARSH, DECEASED ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI CAUSE NO. 2014-0637-02 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS GIVEN that Letters of Administration were on the 6th day of January, 2015, granted the undersigned Administratrix of the Estate of MARY LOUISE MARSH, Deceased, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and all persons having claims against said Estate are required to have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court within ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of this Notice, which is the 8th day of January , 2015, or the same shall be forever barred. BOBBY MAROLT, CHANCERY CLERK BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C. 3tc: 1/8, 1/15, 1/22/2015 14698

as is vested in me as Substituted Trustee.

4th District Election Commissioner I will convey only such title

Sandy Coleman Mitchell Constable Post 1 Landon Tucker Constable Post 2 Wayne Duncan Coroner Jay Jones Justice Court Post 1 Luke Doehner Chris Grisham Steve Little Sheriff David Derrick David Nunley Mike LaRue Roger Voyles

WITNESS my signature, this, the 29 th day of December, 2014.

REED HILLEN SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE 4tc: 01/08, 01/15, 01/22, & 01/29/2015 14685

Commencing at the Intersection of the South line of the right-of-way of U.S. Highway 72 with the East line of the Northwest Quarter of Section 11, Township 2, Range 7 in Alcorn County, Mississippi, and run westerly along said south right-of-way line of said Highway 72 a distance of approximately 415 feet to a stone marker for a true beginning point; run thence south at right angles to said right-ofway line and along the West line of the Standard Oil Company Service Station property 100 feet; thence continue southerly in the same line an additional 131 feet with the fence to where said fence corners with a fence running in a westerly direction; run thence westerly with fence 348 feet, more or less, to where said fence intersects or joins another fence running in a northerly direction; run thence in a northerly direction with said last mentioned fence 256 feet, more or less, to the south right-of-way line I will convey only such of said Highway 72; run thence in a South of easterly title as is vested in me as Subdirection with said right-of- stitute Trustee. way of said Highway 72 a disSIGNED AND POSTED tance of 390 feet, more or less, to the true beginning this 8th of January, 2015. point, said parcel of land lying and being in the Northwest Quarter of Section 11, Township 2, Range 7 in Alcorn County, Mississippi, and on JIMMY B. FISHER, which is located the SouthSUBern Motel. STITUTE TRUSTEE

You have been made a Defendant in the Complaint filed in this Court by Jerry Wayne Baldwn, individually and as administrator cum W . J E T T W I L S O N , testamento annexo of the estate of Martha MSB#7316 ATTORNEY FOR EXECUT- B a l d w i n G l a s s , D e ceased, and you must ORS take immediate action 505 E. WALDRON STREET to protect your rights. POST OFFICE BOX 1257 CORINTH, MS 38835 Respondents other (662) 286-3366 than you in this action are: Phil Stanley Bald3tc: 1/8, 115, 1/22/2015 win, Royce Kemp, JR., 14700 Austin Keith Tucker, Brandon Jade Tucker, SPECIAL and Collin Lee Tucker. COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE OF SALE You are summoned to appear and defend against said Complaint WHEREAS, on the 25th day to establish and deof August, 2010, Dorothy termine heirs-at-law of Burcham, executed a Deed of Martha Baldwin Glass Trust to Michael Lyon, Trust- and to close estate at ee for the use and benefit of 9:00 o'clock a.m. on the One Reverse Mortgage, LLC, 16th day of March, 2015, which Deed of Trust is on file at the Alcorn County and of record in the office of Chancery Building, Corthe Chancery Clerk of Al- inth, Mississippi, and in corn County, Mississippi, as case of your failure to Instrument No. 201004569 appear and defend a judgment will be thereof; and entered against you for the things demanded in said Complaint. WHEREAS, said Deed of You are not required Trust was ultimately assigned to Nationstar Mortgage Com- to file an answer or othpany LLC d/b/a Champion er pleading, but may do Mortgage, LLC, by assign- so if you desire. ment on file and of record in ISSUED under my the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- hand and seal of said sissippi, as Instrument No. Court this the 13 day of January, 2015. 201401047 thereof; and BOBBY MAROLT CHANCERY COURT CLERK BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C. 4tc: 1/15, 1/22, 1/29, 2/5/2015 14705

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN WHEREAS, by Default JudgCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI ment Champion Mortgage Company was deemed to hold a good and valid lien on RE: ADMINISTRATION OF the property and Adams & THE ESTATE OF CON- Edens, P.A., was appointed STANCE R. HARDIN, DE- Special Commissioner by DeCEASED fault Judgment recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk as Intrument CAUSE NO. 2014-0647-02 No. 201406049 thereof; and

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

Title to the above described property is believed to be good, but Adams & Edens, P.A., will convey only such title as is vested in Adams & Edens, P.A., as Substitute Trustee.

4tc: January 8, 15, 22 and 29, 2014 14689

HANDYMAN WHEREAS, default having been made in the performance of the conditions and stipulations as set forth by said Deed of Trust, and having been requested by the legal holder of the indebtedness secured and described by said Deed of Trust so to do, notice is hereby given that we, Adams & Edens, Special Commissioner, by virtue of the authority conferred upon me in said Deed of Trust, will offer for sale and will sell at public sale and outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, during the legal hours (between the hours of 11 o'clock a.m. and 4 o'clock p.m.) at the South front door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, at Corinth, Mississippi, on the 5th day of February, 2015, the following described land and property being the same land and property described in said Deed of Trust, situated in Alcorn County, State of Mississippi, to-wit: CHRISTIAN HANDYMAN No job too big or smallHeath Harris- 662-4162027

IN THE CHANCERY COURT WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, OF ALCORN COUNTY, this the 6th day of January MISSISSIPPI , 2015. RE:ADMINISTRATION OF THE ESTATE OF CLEDA VIRGINIA SHIPMAN BRIGGS, DECEASED

NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS GIVEN that Letters of Administration were on the 6th day of January , 2015, granted the undersigned Administrators of the Estate of CONSTANCE R. HARDIN, Deceased, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and all persons having claims against said Estate are required to have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court within ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of this Notice, which is the 8 day of January , 2015, or the same shall be forever barred. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 6th day of January , 2015.

HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR ALL-PRO Home Maintenance and Repair- 662415-6646

/s/Jeannie Arnold JEANNIE ARNOLD ADMINISTRATRIX

WITNESS my signature, on this the 24th day of December, 2014.

CAUSE NO. 2015-0002-02 SUMMONS

Supervisor District 1 Jerry Miller Lowell Hinton Supervisor District 2 Rufus “Jaybird” Duncan, JR. Scotty Little James Voyles Supervisor District 4 Keith “Dude” Conaway (Rep.) Steve Glidewell Gary Ross

ADAMS & EDENS, P.A., THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI BY: BRADLEY P. JONES TO: ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF CLEDA VIRGINIA SHIPMAN BRIGGS, DECEASED PREPARED BY: ADAMS & EDENS POST OFFICE BOX 400 FLOWOOD, MISSISSIPPI NOTICE TO THE 39232 DEFENDANTS (601) 825-9508 A&E File #14-01076 You have been made a Defendant in the Petition filed in 3tc: 01/08/2015, 01/15/2015, this Court by JAMES L. SHIPMAN, CHARLES SHIPMAN 01/22/2015 AND GENEVA SHIPMAN 14686 PUTT, Administrators of the Estate of CLEDA VIRGINIA SHIPMAN BRIGGS and you LEGALS must take immediate action SUBSTITUTE to protect your rights. TRUSTEE'S NOTICE You are summons to appear OF SALE and defend against said PetiWHEREAS, on March 31, tion to determine heirs at law 2005, Charlie W. McDaniel of CLEDA VIRGINIA SHIPclock executed and delivered a MAN BRIGGS at 9:00 o’ Deed of Trust to J. Patrick A.M. on the 16th day of Caldwell as Trustee, and April, 2015, at the Alcorn BANCORPSOUTH BANK, County Chancery Building, Beneficiary, which Deed of Corinth, Mississippi and in Trust was recorded on April case of your failure to appear 1, 2005 in book 678 page 351 and defend a judgment will be thru 355 in the land records entered against you for the of Alcorn County, Mississippi; things demanded in said Complaint or Petition. and

W. JETT WILSON, MSB#7316 ATTORNEY FOR ADMINISTRATRIX 505 E. WALDRON STREET POST OFFICE BOX 1257 CORINTH, MS 38835 (662) 286-3366 3tc:1/8, 1/15, & 1/22/2015 14696 IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI RE: ADMINISTRATION OF THE ESTATE OF MARY LOUISE MARSH, DECEASED CAUSE NO. 2014-0637-02 SUMMONS THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI TO: ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF MARY LOUISE MARSH, DECEASED NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANTS You have been made a Defendant in the Petition filed in this Court by JEANNIE ARNOLD, Administratrix of

STORAGE, INDOOR/ OUTDOOR AMERICAN MINI STORAGE 2058 S. Tate Across From World Color 287-1024

AMERICAN MINI STORAGE 2058 S. Tate Across From World Color 287-1024

/s/ Stephen Hardin STEPHEN HARDIN

MORRIS CRUM MINI-STORAGE 286-3826. MORRIS CRUM MINI-STORAGE 286-3826.

Part of the East Half of the ADMINISTRATOR Northeast Quarter of Section 30, Township 3, Range 8 East, described as follows: /s/ Lindsey Hardin

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY FIREWOOD 3 CORDS of Firewood for $180.00- Call Ronnie at 662-594-1788 FIREWOOD $10 .00 per load. J & N Company CR 611- 662-837-5093

LINDSEY HARDIN Commencing at the Northwest corner of said East Half of ADMINISTRATOR said Quarter Section and running East with North Boundary of said tract 920 feet to a point in the center of a public road, thence with center of said road as follows: South 13 W . J E T T W I L S O N , 1/2 degrees West 500 feet, MSB#7316 thence South 134 feet, and ATTORNEY FOR ADMINIS- thence East 21 feet for the TRATORS Point of Beginning; thence 505 E. WALDRON STREET South 19 degrees East with


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