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Daily Corinthian Vol. 117, No. 76

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 24 pages • Two sections

Murder defendant appears in court Family members sob as bond set at $350,000 in shooting BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

A distraught Demarlen Obryan Davis, 25, charged with murder, made his initial appearance in Corinth Municipal Court Thursday morning. The 25-year-old Dickey Street resident faces a total bond of $350,000, including $300,000 on a charge of murder and $50,000 on a charge of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Shortly after he was escorted

into the courtroom, as Municipal Judge John Ross Jr. asked Davis if he would like to fill out a form to have a court-appointed attorney, Davis began to sob. The court briefly recessed for Davis to exit the courtroom and get help completing the form. Ross appointed Clay Nails as counsel for Davis, who is charged in the Tuesday night fatal shooting of Karson DeAnn Stewart, 22, of Sawyer Road. Tears also flowed in the audience as a small group of family

members of both Davis and Stewart watched the brief court session at the Alcorn County Justice Center. A memorial service for Stewart, the daughter of Randy and Whitney Stewart, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at Memorial Funeral Home Chapel. Davis and Stewart had apparently been involved romantically but with a history of a troubled relationship, according to Corinth police. The department responded to

Stewart

a 911 call of a female shot on Martin Luther King Drive about 9:40 p.m. Tuesday, and officers arrived to find Davis standing beside a car with Stewart inside. She had been shot

body shot my girlfriend,� as officers approached. It happened in the yard of a vacant residence at 602 MLK Drive. Stewart was taken to MagDavis nolia Regional Health Center, where she was pronounced dead a short time later.

in the face. Davis said, “I didn’t do it. Some-

Brown found not guilty of battery mistrial in Alcorn County Circuit Court in November. In December 2010, a grand jury returned two separate indictments against Brown for alleged sexual battery that occurred between 2001 and 2005. He was tried on one of those indictments after pleading not

BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

An Alcorn County jury found a man accused of sexual battery not guilty. The trial of Marvin S. Brown began Monday in Alcorn County Circuit Court and concluded with the not guilty verdict Tuesday afternoon. It was his second trial on the charge, following a

Please see BROWN | 2A

Win free car? It’s a scam a checking account number and id like a driver’s license,� said the Alcorn County man who got bilked. “All I had to do was go to Walmart, buy a Green Dot card and put $299 on the card.� The local individual then was told he had to give the time and date the card was purchased along with the number on back of the card. “When I didn’t give him the number, I was told that I needed to talk to an Andy

BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Organizers Dana McLain and J.C. Hill, along with the Easter Bunny, show some of the prizes offered during Saturday’s Community Egg Hunt at Crossroads Regional Park. In case of rain, the event moves to the Boys & Girls Club.

Community egg hunt returns Thousands of eggs are set to be hidden at Crossroads Regional Park for Saturday’s annual hunt. Each year, hundreds of chil-

dren fan out across the grounds of the park, quickly filling their Easter baskets. The Community Egg Hunt is set to begin at noon.

Organizers are hoping for continued good luck in terms of Please see EGGS | 2A

An Alcorn County man is making the public aware of the latest scam to hit the area. In the scam, a call is made to individuals by a person who identifies himself as “Brian Brown.� The caller, who has a foreign accent, tells the individual he is delivering an 2013 Impala in 45 minutes to their home or the individual can receive $7.5 million from Bill Gates after paying $50,000 in taxes. “He wanted to know if I had

Please see SCAM | 2A

Cook Coggin, Alcorn County earn accolades BY BOBBY J. SMITH bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com

The American Council of Engineering Companies in Mississippi recently honored Alcorn County and Cook Coggin Engineers for work done on the Kimberly-Clark Access Road. Ronald Cassada, president of ACEC-MS, presented award plaques to Alcorn County Board of Supervisors President Lowell Hinton and Kent Geno of Cook Coggin Engineers during an awards dinner held last Thursday at the Old Capitol

Inn in Jackson. Other local and state officials who attended the awards dinner included Gary Chandler, executive director of The Alliance; Chris Dixon, from the Office of State Aid Road Construction; Chuck Mobley, from the Mississippi Development Authority, District 4 Sen. Rita Parks; District 2 Rep. Nick Bain; and District 1 Rep. Bubba Carpenter. The Kimberly-Clark Access Please see AWARD | 2A

Submitted photo

Alcorn County and Cook Coggin Engineers were presented awards recently in Jackson. On hand were (from left) Gary Chandler, executive director of The Alliance; Chris Dixon, Office of State Aid Road Construction; Lowell Hinton, president of Alcorn County Board of Supervisors; Chuck Mobley, Mississippi Development Authority; Johnny Crotts, Cook Coggin Engineers; Kent Geno, Cook Coggin Engineers; Sen. Rita Parks; Rep. Nick Bain, and Rep. Bubba Carpenter.

Index Stocks......8A Classified......5B Comics......9A State......5A

Weather....10A Obituaries......6A Opinion......4A Sports....12A

On this day in history 150 years ago Gen. Grant orders Gen. John McClernand to move his troops from Milliken’s Bend, La., to New Carthage on the west bank of the Mississippi River. Grant’s other troops will follow as he begins to position his men for the anticipated crossing of the river and the campaign against Vicksburg. 1(:

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Local/Region

2A • Daily Corinthian

Friday, March 29, 2013

Don’t give chicks, ducks for Easter BY JEFF YORK For the Daily Corinthian

NEMCC elects class favorites During recent campus-wide elections at Northeast Mississippi Community College, sophomores (first row l-r) Anna Claire Stokes of New Albany and Griffin Stroupe of Ripley were selected as Mr. and Miss Northeast Mississippi Community College for the 2012-13 academic year. Joining Stokes and Stroupe as class favorites for the 2012-13 year were (second row l-r) Bethany Grant of Ripley; Toedy Hood of Blue Mountain; Kate Caver of Booneville; Molly Koon of Booneville; Alyssa Moon of Tuscumbia, Ala.; Devin Tucker of Baldwyn; Anna Lauren Inman of Walnut (third row l-r) Bradley Strom of Corinth; Ryan Jobe of Corinth; Kody Rinehart of Kossuth; Rusty Landry of Thrasher; Lucas Ferguson of Bruce; Jimbo Waldrop of New Albany; Grant Vandiver of Booneville; Tre Welch of Booneville; (fourth row l-r) Megan Gray of Fulton; Anna Claire Ross of Blue Springs; Gracie Wilbanks of Corinth; Tara Michael of Iuka; Katelin Wallace of Tishomingo; Abigail Little of Corinth; Kristen Whitley of Corinth; (fifth row l-r) Michael Franks of Hamilton, Ala.; Stephen Burress of Booneville; Madison Twitty of Ramer, Tenn.; Tyler White of Booneville. Not pictured are Brittany Brackeen of Booneville; Wesley Brandon of Belmont; Cameron Dexter of Tishomingo, and Caleb Fowler of Booneville.

EGGS CONTINUED FROM 1A

weather, but the forecast doesn’t look promising. Organizer J.C. Hill said the event has managed to dodge rain in each of the previous eight years. However, with rain in the forecast, arrangements have been made to move the event inside the Boys & Girls Club building

behind the park in case of rain. Hosted by Fox Promotions and the CorinthAlcorn Parks and Recreation Department, the event welcomes children is four age divisions: 0-3, 4-6, 7-10 and special needs. Various merchants help to provide prizes. “It’s going to be big,� said Hill. “We’ve got a lot

of stuff to give out.� A number of prizes are available in each age group, along with a golden egg that nets a bigger prize. No child will walk away without a treat. “Everybody gets a prize whether they find an egg or not,� said Dana McLain, an organizer of the event. “I usually make

about 450 candy bags.� The number of egg hunters topped 400 last year, and some 3,000 eggs will be hidden this time. Pictures with the Easter Bunny are slated to begin at 11 a.m. Entertainment will be provided by Corinth Middle School talent show winner Hannah Cox.

of arrest. Information released by the Corinth Police Department after Brown was arrested indicated the alleged crimes happened in Corinth with two stepchildren, both less than 10 years old. The mother was

told of the alleged activity by one of the children after the family learned that Brown was possibly moving back to north Mississippi. Brown’s first trial ended as the result of statements made by the first state wit-

ness, who made reference to the other child in violation of the court’s prior ruling, according to the order declaring a mistrial. Brown was represented by Tom Fortner of Hattiesburg. Judge Jim Pounds presided.

BROWN CONTINUED FROM 1A

guilty. Brown was arrested by law enforcement in Vicksburg at his place of employment on Jan. 19, 2011, and transported to Corinth. He was 34 years old at the time

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Cuddly baby chicks and ducks are as much a part of the Easter holiday as colored eggs and the Easter bunny. But even though they are fun to look at and kids love them, you should not give them as gifts because of the health risks involved. Live poultry, especially baby poultry, commonly carry Salmonella germs. People can get Salmonella from contact with the birds or their environments. These germs can contaminate a bird’s body and anything in the area where they are displayed or housed, such as cages or coops. In recent years, many outbreaks have been linked to handling live poultry purchased from agricultural feed stores and mail-order hatcheries. In these outbreaks thousands of people became ill, hundreds were hospitalized, and several deaths occurred. “Even healthy-appearing chickens and ducks can carry germs that are potentially harmful to humans, especially children,� said Tennessee Department of Health Epidemiologist Tim Jones, M.D. “We recommend families enjoy the many means of celebrating this season, but leave handling of live poultry to people trained in their appropriate care.� Poultry, such as baby chicks, seem to arrive in

feed stores and co-ops just in time for Easter, but this is simply a coincidence as spring and summer is a typical breeding season for chickens. TDA and the Tennessee Department of Health are working together to distribute information to feed and farm stores by supplying posters with information on proper handling of poultry that can be displayed for their customers. “We’re working with farm and feed suppliers to ensure the protection of both the animals and people who may come in contact with them,� said State Veterinarian, Charles Hatcher. “We want to support poultry projects and production uses such as backyard flocks and FFA and 4-H projects while also informing the consumer.� Do not let children younger than five, elderly persons, or people with weak immune systems handle chicks, ducklings or other live poultry. If you do come into contact with live poultry, wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water immediately after, he said. It’s important to protect the welfare of the animal as well as the human. Caring for animals requires long term commitment. Many people who buy poultry as a gift sometimes forget this fact. And remember, it is illegal to dye a chick a different color, added Hatcher.

SCAM CONTINUED FROM 1A

Hood with the IRS,� said the individual. The local scam victim then called the IRS himself. “They told me there was no one with that name who worked for them and it was part of a scam,� he said. The man has was since received numerous calls from the same number. “The best thing to do is just hang up when someone with a foreign accent who you don’t know calls,� said the man. Alcorn County Sheriff’s Department investigator

Reggie Anderson said the office receives numerous reports of scams daily. “Our hands are kind of tied because the person is either calling from another state or country,� said Anderson. “By no means should a person send any money when contacted on something like this.� Anderson said individuals should not also give out any personal information such as Social Security number, credit card or banking info or driver’s license. “If it sounds too good to be true, it’s probably a scam,� said the investigator.

AWARDS CONTINUED FROM 1A

Road is almost five miles of newly constructed roadway designed to provide a better route from Highway 72 to the Kimberly-Clark Plant on Kendrick Road. The new route was developed in an effort to reduce commercial traffic on the busy streets and county roads necessitated by the 1,500 monthly shipments to and from the Kimberly-Clark Plant. According to Cook Coggin Engineers, the construction of the KC Access Road through a rural area brought with it a variety of unique, project specific challenges requiring innovative engineering, planning and design. Challenges included five

intersections (including one in the heart of Farmington), bridges over two railroad crossings, cattle crossings and relocations for water and gas lines for utilities affected by the project’s layout and construction. The new road brings the county an avenue of relief for congested streets and county roads as well as potential for economic and residential growth throughout the landscape encompassed by the route. The completed $12.9 million project is expected to eliminate commercial traffic on non-commercial routes and aid in economic and industrial growth for Farmington, Corinth and Alcorn County as a whole.

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3A • Daily Corinthian

Today in history Today is Good Friday, March 29, the 88th day of 2013. There are 277 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History: On March 29, 1973, the last United States combat troops left South Vietnam, ending America’s direct military involvement in the Vietnam War. In an address to the nation, President Richard Nixon declared, “For the first time in 12 years, no American military forces are in Vietnam.”

On this date: In 1613, King James I granted a charter officially designating the Irish city of Derry as “Londonderry.” In 1638, Swedish colonists settled in presentday Delaware. In 1790, the tenth president of the United States, John Tyler, was born in Charles City County, Va. In 1812, the first White House wedding took place as Lucy Payne Washington, the sister of First Lady Dolley Madison, married Supreme Court Justice Thomas Todd. In 1871, the Royal Albert Hall in London was opened by Queen Victoria. In 1882, the Knights of Columbus was chartered in Connecticut. In 1912, British explorer Robert Falcon Scott, his doomed expedition stranded in an Antarctic blizzard after failing to be the first to reach the South Pole, wrote the last words of his journal: “For Gods sake look after our people.” In 1943, World War II rationing of meat, fats and cheese began. In 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage. (They were executed in June 1953.) The Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The King and I” opened on Broadway. In 1962, Jack Paar hosted NBC’s “Tonight” show for the final time, although the network aired a repeat the following night. (Johnny Carson debuted as host the following October.) In 1971, Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was convicted of murdering 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai (mee ly) massacre. (Calley ended up serving three years under house arrest.) A jury in Los Angeles recommended the death penalty for Charles Manson and three female followers for the 1969 Tate-La Bianca murders. (The sentences were later commuted.) In 1993, “Unforgiven” won the Academy Award for best picture as well as best director for Clint Eastwood; Emma Thompson won best actress for “Howards End” and Al Pacino won best actor for “Scent of a Woman.”

Ten years ago: In Iraq, a bomber posing as a taxi driver blew up his vehicle, killing himself and four American soldiers. A Turkish man who’d hijacked a Turkish Airlines flight the day before was persuaded by Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, to release his 204 hostages after the plane landed in Athens, Greece.

P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835

Local/Region

Friday, March 29, 2013

Pastor seeks guidance on noise ordinance BY BRANT SAPPINGTON bsappington@dailycorinthian.com

Booneville aldermen have asked their attorney to research the city’s noise ordinance after a local pastor raised concerns about a possible conflict between a recently passed ordinance and one passed more than a decade ago. Bro. David Krech of New Covenant Family Worship Center on Outlet Road asked the board

recently to review the ordinance after a complaint was filed against his church under a regulation passed in 1999. The church was the subject of several complaints about excessive noise due to sound from its musical programs filed by a neighbor last year and at the time the board voted to implement a noise ordinance establishing a decibel limit to be measured at the property line of any

property that should not be exceeded. Krech told board members his church has taken extensive steps to comply with that rule including the installation of soundproofing materials and has met and exceeded those requirements. However, he said a recent complaint filed against them cited the ordinance passed by the board on July 20, 1999, which states that any sound should not be

“plainly audible on any adjacent or adjoining property”. If applied literally the wording of the 1999 ordinance could allow violations to be filed against almost any activity in the city including ball games, school musical performances as well as normal church services, said Krech. Board attorney Daniel Tucker said he had not seen the 1999 ordinance prior to Krech provid-

ing him with a copy and was not aware of its existence. He said only the current ordinance with the decibel limit appears in the city code book. He and the aldermen agreed that if the 1999 ordinance applies it could have a far reaching affect. Aldermen directed Tucker to research the issue and report back to them at their next meeting to determine how to proceed and if they need to consider a modified ordinance.

Woodmen of the World receives A+ rating from Best OMAHA, Neb. — A.M. Best, an independent financial rating agency, has once again affirmed Woodmen of the World’s A+ (superior) financial strength rating. Out of 15 possible ratings, “A+” is A.M. Best’s second highest rating, reflecting their independent opinion of Woodmen of the World’s financial strength and its

ability to meet ongoing insurance and contract obligations. A.M. Best’s rating is based on a comprehensive and qualitative evaluation of Woodmen’s balance sheet strength, operating performance, and business profile. “For more than 120 years, we’ve made a promise to our members to protect their families

and be good stewards of their money. An A+ rating from A.M. Best demonstrates that we are keeping our promises,” said Larry King, Woodmen of the World President and CEO. A.M. Best Company is a full-service credit rating organization dedicated to serving the financial services industries, including the banking and

insurance sectors. Policyholders and depositors refer to Best’s ratings and analysis as a means of assessing the financial strength and creditworthiness of riskbearing entities and investment vehicles. To learn more about A.M. Best, visit ambest.com. Woodmen of the World was founded in 1890 as a not-for-profit. We give

back to our membercustomers and the communities we live in. Today, Woodmen of the World offers insurance, annuities, mutual funds, and 529 College Savings Plans. More than 700,000 Woodmen of the World member-customers across the country share a commitment to family, community and country.

Biggersville Elementary 3rd Nine Weeks Honor Roll Biggersville Elementary has released its 3rd Nine Weeks Honor Roll. All A’s 1st Grade: Jalynn Hearn, Cailyn Johnson, Elijah Johnson, Eden Morton. 2nd Grade: Hunter Johnson, Amelia Lancaster, Drew Rowsey. 3rd Grade: Haley

Dooley, Mollie Michael, Dylan Rowsey. 4th Grade: John Eaton 5th Grade: Tess Lancaster 6th Grade: Adam Harris, Maggie Harris, Ali Settlemires. All A’s & B’s: 1st Grade: Avery McNair,

Luke Overstreet, Peyton Stallings. 2nd Grade: Hannah Auirre, Thailor Carpenter, Danielle Crum, William Goodwin, Sadey Killough, Chloe Parker, Brittany Rinehart, Jacquillia Sorrell, Elijah

Vicksburg mayor pleads not guilty to bribery BY HOLBROOK MOHR Associated Press

JACKSON — Vicksburg Mayor Paul Winfield pleaded not guilty Thursday to a federal bribery charge that accuses him of seeking $10,000 in cash in exchange for a city contract. Winfield, wearing a dark suit and red tie, said little during his arraignment in U.S. District Court in Jackson other than to give short answers to the judge’s questions. The last time he was in court, during an initial appearance on Feb. 21, he had spent the previous night in jail and was wearing an orange jumpsuit and shackles. Magistrate Judge Keith Ball set the trial for June 3. Winfield faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, if convicted. The judge allowed him to remain free on a $10,000 unsecured bond. Winfield and his attorney declined to comment after the brief hearing. Winfield, a 39-yearold Democrat, is completing his first term as mayor of the historic Mississippi River city and qualified to seek reelection. The FBI arrested Winfield on Feb. 20. A federal grand jury indicted him March 19. The criminal complaint says a confidential FBI informant called Winfield on July 17, 2012, to discuss “preevent disaster contracts” with the city. It says the two met at a Jackson restaurant the next day, and the informant asked Winfield what it would take to get the contract.

“Winfield responded ‘Ten’ and held up 10 fingers, signifying $10,000,” the complaint says. Winfield agreed to take half the money up front and the rest after the contract was awarded, according to the complaint. The complaint says the source paid Winfield $5,000 in hundred dollar bills that had been provided by the FBI. In August, Winfield called the informant and said he owed $4,300 in taxes and was “in a bind,” the complaint said.

H u nt E g g cia l pe for S u nt o D i sc a t S Fri & th & h 29 M a rc t h 30

White, Austin Wilbanks. 3rd Grade: Ania Ambrocia, Madison Holland, Taylor Mitchell, Hannah Seago. 4th Grade: Cole Baggett, Goldman Butler, Jack Eaton, Hailey Gahagan, Ward John-

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Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4A • Friday, March 29, 2013

Corinth, Miss.

Guest View

Google going ‘paperless?’ Google has started a big “Go Paperless in 2013” campaign. Paper, they say, is bad for the environment. It’s high time someone called bovine manure on this. Trees are organic. Trees are renewable. Tree farms reduce CO2. There are more forests in Mississippi than there were at the turn of the century. Sixty-five percent of our state is forested. According to the EPA, 80 Wyatt Emmerich percent of paper is recycled. What’s not recycled decays Columnist quickly with no harm to the environment — unlike plastic, metals, styrofoam and many other materials. Let’s compare that to the gargantuan electricity needs to run the Internet. Greenpeace recently released a report titled, “How Green is Your Cloud.” The report examines server farms built by the largest Internet companies — Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo. Each server farm consumes as much electricity as a small city. “When people around the world share their music or photos on the cloud, they want to know that the cloud is powered by clean, safe energy,” said Gary Cook, Greenpeace International senior policy analyst. “Yet highly innovative and profitable companies like Apple, Amazon and Microsoft are building data centers powered by coal.” When coal is mined and burned to power server farms, CO2 from under the earth is released into the atmosphere. In contrast, trees absorb CO2. Tree farms grown to supply wood and paper are far more “green” than the server farms that fuel the Internet. Google’s server farms are the size of five football fields and contain 900,000 servers. Keeping the servers cool requires a massive amount of electricity. CNN reports that the Internet uses more electricity in America than the auto industry uses to make cars and trucks. Greenpeace estimates that Google’s eight current and planned server farms could consume 476 megawatts of electricity if they were operating at full capacity. That’s enough to power all the homes in San Diego. Then consider the carbon footprint required to equip every man, woman and child with a laptop and a smartphone. These devices require enormous amounts of rare minerals and toxic parts. Unlike paper, these hightech devices are not biodegradable. Making matters worse is the rapid pace of technological change, requiring everyone to get new devices every few years. Billions and billions of smartphones, desktops and laptops are piling up in massive landfills. That’s not very green. Only 17 percent of computers are recycled. The ones that aren’t create about 600,000 tons of lead in America alone. Moreover, 80 percent of the small amount of electronic waste collected for recycling is shipped overseas and is often unsafely dismantled. Printing is the only medium with a one-time carbon footprint — all other media require energy every time they are viewed. Electronic devices, which Google produces, for example, require the mining and refining of dozens of minerals and metals, as well as the use of plastics, hydrocarbon solvents, and other nonrenewable resources. For Google to call for a paperless world is hypocritical to say the least. According to Wikipedia: All electronic scrap components, such as CRTs, may contain contaminants such as lead, cadmium, beryllium, or brominated flame retardants. Even in developed countries recycling and disposal of e-waste may involve significant risk to workers and communities and great care must be taken to avoid unsafe exposure in recycling operations and leaching of material such as heavy metals from landfills and incinerator ashes. Scrap industry and USA EPA officials agree that materials should be managed with caution. Let’s not forget that printing in all its many forms employs one million people in the United States. I love the great technological advances in computing. I use Google every day. They are a huge and powerful corporation that knows just about everything about everyone and is happy to sell that information. But the cynical attempt to portray themselves as “green” compared to paper is utter nonsense. (Wyatt Emmerich is president of Jacksonbased Emmerich Newspapers and a past president of the Mississippi Press Association.)

A verse to share “Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word;” — John 17:20

Can Cyprus’ bank takeover happen here? The decision of the government in Cyprus to simply take money out of people’s bank accounts there sent shock waves around the world. People far removed from that small island nation had to wonder: “Can this happen here?” The economic repercussions of having people feel that their money is not safe in banks can be catastrophic. Banks are not just warehouses where money can be stored. They are crucial institutions for gathering individually modest amounts of money from millions of people and transferring that money to strangers whom those people would not directly entrust it to. Multi-billion dollar corporations, whose economies of scale can bring down the prices of goods and services -- thereby raising our standard of living -- are seldom financed by a few billionaires. Far more often they are financed by millions of people, who have neither the specific knowledge nor the economic expertise to risk their savings by investing directly in those enterprises. Banks are crucial intermediaries, which provide the financial expertise without which these transfers of money are too risky. There are poor nations with rich natural resources, which are not developed

because they lack either the sophisticated financial institutions necessary to Thomas make these Sowell key transfers of money or Hoover Institution because their legal or political systems are too unreliable for people to put their money into these financial intermediaries. Whether in Cyprus or in other countries, politicians tend to think in short run terms, if only because elections are held in the short run. Therefore, there is always a temptation to do reckless and short-sighted things to get over some current problem, even if that creates far worse problems in the long run. Seizing money that people put in the bank would be a classic example of such short-sighted policies. After thousands of American banks failed during the Great Depression of the 1930s, there were people who would never put their money in a bank again, even after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was created, to have the federal government guarantee individual bank accounts when the bank itself failed. For years after the Great Depression, stories ap-

peared in the press from time to time about some older person who died and was found to have substantial sums of money stored under a mattress or in some other hiding place, because they never trusted banks again. After going back and forth, the government of Cyprus ultimately decided, under international pressure, to go ahead with its plan to raid people’s bank accounts. But could similar policies be imposed in other countries, including the United States? One of the big differences between the United States and Cyprus is that the U.S. government can simply print more money to get out of a financial crisis. But Cyprus cannot print more euros, which are controlled by international institutions. Does that mean that Americans’ money is safe in banks? Yes and no. The U.S. government is very unlikely to just seize money wholesale from people’s bank accounts, as is being done in Cyprus. But does that mean that your life savings are safe? No. There are more sophisticated ways for governments to take what you have put aside for yourself and use it for whatever the politicians feel like using it for. If they do it slowly but steadily, they can take a big chunk of what you have

sacrificed for years to save, before you are even aware, much less alarmed. That is in fact already happening. When officials of the Federal Reserve System speak in vague and lofty terms about “quantitative easing,” what they are talking about is creating more money out of thin air, as the Federal Reserve is authorized to do — and has been doing in recent years, to the tune of tens of billions of dollars a month. When the federal government spends far beyond the tax revenues it has, it gets the extra money by selling bonds. The Federal Reserve has become the biggest buyer of these bonds, since it costs them nothing to create more money. This new money buys just as much as the money you sacrificed to save for years. More money in circulation, without a corresponding increase in output, means rising prices. Although the numbers in your bank book may remain the same, part of the purchasing power of your money is transferred to the government. Is that really different from what Cyprus has done? (Daily Corinthian columnist Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.)

Obama’s transparent deception on special-interest money BY JIM HIGHTOWER Back in 2010, President Obama declared: “I don’t think American elections should be bankrolled by America’s most powerful interests.” That was so 2010. By 2013, the mist of corporate money has fogged over Team Obama’s commitment to such ethical niceties. For example, take a glance at all the special interests that paid $50 million for his January inaugu-

ral festivities. Except … you can’t. While the White House pledged that it would put the names of every donor online so people could see that there’s no conflict of interest, that’s all they disclosed. Just names of individuals. There’s no info on where they live, what corporation they represent, or how much they gave. Even the highly-skilled watchdogs of the Sunlight Foundation haven’t man-

Prayer for today Father we thank You for Jesus who endured suffering, humiliation, and the reproach of sinners that He came to save. Jesus became obedient to death, even death on the cross in fulfillment of Scripture so that we might inherit eternal life through the forgiveness of our sins. We thank You in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Reece Terry

Mark Boehler

publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com

editor editor@dailycorinthian.com

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circulation manager circdirector@dailycorinthian.com

press foreman

aged to identify 40 percent of the individuals. They’ve traced some donors back to such “powerful interests” as AT&T, FedEx and Microsoft. But they have no clue how much these special interests paid — i.e. how many presidential favors they purchased. And now, another layer of fog has descended over the White House. The Obamacans have set up a darkmoney haven called Organizing For Action (OFA), again making a show of transparency by pledging to issue quarterly lists of donors. But the listings again won’t include the donors’ corporate identities. And why only quarterly? Why not reveal the names online the moment the checks arrive? Plus, some checks

World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com To Sound Off: E-mail: email: news@dailycorinthian.com Circulation 287-6111 Classified Adv. 287-6147

from corporate executives will be bundled, but OFA won’t disclose the corporations delivering the bundles. OFA donors will have access to special White House briefings. But, as the Sunlight group asks, will someone who gives $50 be invited — or just those giving $50,000 and up? I think you can guess the answer. To help oppose this sad end run around real ethics, visit SunlightFoundation. com. (Daily Corinthian and OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer and public speaker. He’s also editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown. OtherWords.org)

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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.


State/Nation

5A • Daily Corinthian

Nation Briefs Associated Press

No party has finance student loan rate fix WASHINGTON — Incoming college freshmen could end up paying $5,000 more for the same student loans their older siblings have if Congress doesn’t stop interest rates from doubling. Sound familiar? The same warnings came last year. But now the presidential election is over and mandatory budget cuts are taking place, making a deal to avert a doubling of interest rates much more elusive before a July 1 deadline. “What is definitely clear, this time around, there doesn’t seem to be as much outcry,” said Justin Draeger, president of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators. “We’re advising our members to tell students that the interest rates are going to double on new student loans, to 6.8 percent.” That rate hike only hits students taking out new subsidized loans. Students with outstanding subsidized loans are not expected to see their loan rates increase unless they take out a new subsidized Stafford loan. Students’ non-subsidized loans are not expected to change, nor are loans taken from commercial lenders. The difference between 3.4 percent and 6.8 percent interest rates is a $6 billion tab for taxpayers — set against a backdrop of budget negotiations that have pitted the two parties in a standoff. President Barack Obama is expected to release his budget proposal in the coming weeks, adding another perspective to the debate. Last year, with the presidential and congressional elections looming, students got a one-year reprieve on the doubling of interest rates. That expires July 1. Neither party’s budget proposal in Congress

has money specifically set aside to keep student loans at their current rate. House Republicans’ budget would double the interest rates on newly issued subsidized loans to help balance the federal budget in a decade. Senate Democrats say they want to keep the interest rates at their current levels but the budget they passed last week does not set aside money to keep the rates low. In any event, neither side is likely to get what it wants. And that could lead to confusion for students as they receive their college admission letters and financial aid packages.

Obama: ‘Shame on us’ if Newtown is forgotten WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama urged lawmakers Thursday to remember the children gunned down in America and not “get squishy” in the face of powerful forces against gun control legislation, as supporters struggle to win over moderate Democrats before a Senate vote expected next month. Obama, flanked by grim-faced mothers who have lost their children to guns, said Washington must do something after the tragic mass shooting in Newtown, Conn., three months ago. He called out to the families of four children killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School sitting in his audience. “Shame on us if we’ve forgotten,” Obama said. “I haven’t forgotten those kids.” Obama’s event comes as gun control legislation faces an uncertain future, even though more than 80 percent of people say in polling they support expanded background checks. Backed by a $12 million TV advertising campaign financed by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, gun control groups scheduled rallies around the country Thursday aimed at pressuring sen-

Friday, March 29, 2013

State Briefs

ators to back the effort. Obama said the upcoming vote is the best chance in more than a decade to reduce gun violence. He encouraged Americans, especially gun owners, to press lawmakers home from a congressional spring break to “turn that heartbreak into something real.” “Don’t get squishy because time has passed and it’s not on the news every single day,” Obama said. Moderate Senate Democrats like Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota are shunning Bloomberg as a meddling outsider while stressing their allegiance to their own voters’ views and to gun rights. While saying they are keeping an open mind and that they support keeping guns from criminals and people with mental disorders, some moderates are avoiding specific commitments they might regret later. “I do not need someone from New York City to tell me how to handle crime in our state. I know that we can go after and prosecute criminals without the need to infringe upon the Second Amendment rights of lawabiding North Dakotans,” Heitkamp said this week, citing the constitutional right to bear arms. Heitkamp does not face re-election next year, but Pryor and five other Senate Democrats from Republican-leaning or closely divided states do. All six, from Southern and Western states, will face voters whose deep attachment to guns is unshakeable — not to mention opposition from the still-potent National Rifle Association, should they vote for restrictions the NRA opposes.

Inaction could return gay marriage to California SAN FRANCISCO — The U.S. Supreme Court seems reluctant to use the legal battle over Please see NATION | 6A

Associated Press

Man pleads guilty in prostitution case GULFPORT — A Korean man has pleaded guilty to transporting illegal immigrant women from New York to Mississippi for prostitution. Moonseop Kim has been in custody since his arrest Sept. 30. He faced counts including conspiracy and harboring of women for financial gain and immoral purposes. The U.S. attorney’s office says he pleaded guilty to transporting illegal immigrants for financial gain in connection with a sex trafficking operation. The plea change hearing took place in U.S. District Court in Gulfport on Wednesday. Kim will be sentenced June 26. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Authorities have said the investigation began after a Biloxi police detective found an online escort service ad for a “super-hot and sexy Korean girl.”

Bryant: Anti-abortion nominee qualified JACKSON — Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant says Thursday that anti-abortion activist Terri Herring should be confirmed to the state Board of Health because she has “committed her life to women’s health care and the right to life.” Republican Bryant nominated Herring to the 11-member board, but it’s unclear whether a majority of the 52 senators will support her nomination. Herring, of Ridgeland, has lobbied for stricter abortion laws in Mississippi since the mid1980s. Hers is one of several nominations awaiting consideration in Senate committees in the next week. If confirmed, Herring would serve a six-year term, starting

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July 1. State law says the 11-member Board of Health must be made up of five currently licensed physicians and six people with a background or interest in public health.

State to lose $110,000 in mineral payments

Lawmakers asked to kill gun bill JACKSON — Representatives of civil rights groups gathered on the steps of the Mississippi Department of Education building Thursday to protest a bill that would allow schools to arm employees. Senate Bill 2659 would provide funding for School Resource Officers to police around primary and secondary schools. The House inserted language into the bill to allow local school boards to develop safety policies to arm teachers and other school employees. Opponents of the bill include the American Civil Liberties Union and the Southern Poverty Law Center. They say the bill would put students and faculty at greater risk of gun violence. School Resource Officers send students to jail instead of detention, according to the groups. House and Senate versions of the bill are being reconciled by members of the two chambers.

JACKSON — The U.S. Department of Interior is cutting $110,102 in federal mineral payments to Mississippi over the next five months. The reduction is part of the $110 million in cuts to 35 states that receive the mineral payments as their share of revenue from energy and mineral production that occurred on federal land within the states and offshore. The Interior Department is making the reduction as part of the automatic federal spending cuts that started this month. Among surrounding states, according to the report, Alabama is losing $217,731; Louisiana, $347,677; and Arkansas, $98,739.

Halter Marine christens Navy ship MOSS POINT — VT Halter Marine has christened and launched the seventh in a series of new oceanographic vessels for the Navy. The ceremony was held Wednesday at VT Halter’s shipyard in Moss Point. The U.S. Naval Ship Maury, a T-AGS 66, is named for Cmdr. Please see STATE | 6A

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6A • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths Karson Stewart

Memorial services for Karson DeAnn Stewart, 22 of Corinth are set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Memorial Funeral Home Chapel with Bro. John Wilbanks officiating. Ms. Stewart died March 26, 2013 at Magnolia Regional Health Center. She attended Brand New Life Church and enjoyed spending time with her family and friends. Ms. Stewart was preceded in death by her grandparents, Bill and Helen Wortman and Stewart Wayne Stewart; and her uncles, Troy Wortman and Bobby Stewart. Survivors include her parents, Randy and Whitney Stewart; sister,

Jacob Wooley

Funeral services for Corporal Jacob Lee Wooley, 23, are set for 1 p.m. Monday at Church of the Crossroads. Corporal Wooley died Thursday, March 21, 2013 at Marine Corps Base Quantico in northern Virginia. Visitation is Sunday from 5-9 p.m. at Magnolia Funeral Home. All other arrangements are incomplete and will be handled by Magnolia Funeral Home.

Mack McNatt

SELMER, Tenn. — Funeral services for Everett “Mack” McNatt, 75, are set for 11 a.m. Saturday at Shackelford Funeral Directors in Selmer, Tenn. with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery in Selmer, Tenn. Mr. McNatt died Thursday, March 28,

Heather Stewart; grandparents, Mary Stewart and Barbara and Joe Perry, all of Corinth; aunts and uncles, Joyce and Danny McCreless, James and Terri Gurley, Anthony Surratt, Anita and Jackie Dildy, Stephanie Redwine, Colleen and Jimmy Robins, Kathy and Keith King, Drake Wortman and Kenneth and Karen Wortman; greataunts and uncles, Dorris McCoy and Billy and Faye Stewart; special cousin, Misty and Bill Pady; cousins, Shelly, Danny, Hunter, Sara, Brandy, Brittany, Andrew, Dillion, Amellia, Collin, Bridgette, Shasta, Countney, Katie, Tanner, Mary, Jaxson, Johnthan, Joshua, Tyler, Eric, Kylie, Mathew, Mark, Chrystal, Erin and Collin. Visitation will be Saturday from 12 p.m. until service time at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to the Karson Stewart Memorial Fund at Trustmark National Bank.

2013 at McNairy Regional Hospital in Selmer, Tenn. He was born Tuesday, April 20, 1937. He was owner of McNatt Auto Sales in Selmer, Tenn. He was preceded in death by his parents, Ross McNatt and Pauline Hearn Frank. He is survived by his wife, Cherryl Gooch McNatt of Selmer, Tenn.; his daughter, Melissa McNatt of Selmer, Tenn.; his son, Ross McNatt (Kristin) of Bethel Springs, Tenn.; and grandchild, Reed McNatt of Bethel Springs, Tenn. Dr. Ben Martin will officiate. Visitation is tonight from 5:30-8 p.m. at Shackelford Funeral Directors.

Stoney Yarbrough

BURNSVILLE — Funeral services for Gerald

Richard “Stoney” Yarbrough, 59, area set for 1 p.m. today at Cutshall Funeral Home Chapel in Iuka with burial at Oak Grove Cemetery. Mr. Yarbrough died March 27, 2013 at North Mississippi Medical Center in Iuka. He was in the auto electrical business for over 25 years. He was preceded in death by his father, Odell Yarbrough; his brother, Jim Yarbrough; and his sister, Clarissa Yarbrough. He is survived by his wife, Cindy Yarbrough of Burnsville; his son, Andrew McCameron of Burnsville; his daughter, Alicia McCameron of Burnsville; his mother, Marie Yarbrough of Iuka; and his brother, David Yarbrough (Carole) of Iuka. Greg Woodruff will officiate.

STATE CONTINUED FROM 5A

Matthew Fontaine Maury. Maury was an astronomer, historian, oceanographer and cartographer in the Navy. He is known as the “pathfinder of the seas” and the “father of modern oceanography,” according to Halter Marine. Maury died in 1873. The VT Halter ship is the sixth vessel to be named after him. The ship is expected to be delivered in January. VT Halter has built 6 of the original vessels, which the Navy uses for oceanographic sampling and data collection. The 253-foot-long, allsteel vessel carries a crew of 67.

Man pleads not guilty to library threat OXFORD — A 19-yearold New Site man has pleaded not guilty to charges he made threats over social media. Robert Scott Goodin is accused of making threats about the George E. Allen Library in Booneville. WTVA TV reports the criminal complaint says Goodin told a library worker about “thoughts of killing people in the library” while he was there. Court papers say he told federal investigators a demon inside him was encouraging him to commit the act. The federal agent says Goodin said he wouldn’t use a gun, but a sword

and knives in the attack. Goodin was arraigned Tuesday on a federal indictment for interstate communication of threats. A federal judge set a May 13 trial date. It was unclear whether Goodin has an attorney.

Court upholds sentence in false tax return case JACKSON — A federal appeals court panel has upheld the conviction of an Oxford tax return preparer for filing dozens of false returns. Thelbert Lamont Lesure was sentenced to three years in prison in 2012 for filing false tax returns. Lesure was indicted on 21 counts. He pleaded guilty one count of knowingly preparing and transmitting a fraudulent tax return to the IRS. A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday rejected Lesure’s challenge to his sentence as too harsh under federal guidelines.

Murders, suicide in Lee County deaths TUPELO — The Lee County coroner says a woman and her daughter found dead in Macedonia had been shot to death, while the woman’s boyfriend fatally shot himself. However, authorities have stopped short of saying 55-year-old Wiley Young is the one who shot 46-year-old Danica

McCord and her 13-yearold daughter Destiny McCord in the head. Coroner Carolyn Green says an autopsy shows Young died from a gunshot wound to his mouth. All three were found Tuesday in the home they shared on a county road in the Macedonia community. Sheriff Jim Johnson says investigators recovered a .45 caliber handgun at the scene. Johnson tells the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal that he’ll look at the autopsy report and see how it compares to crime scene evidence before closing the investigation.

Ex-teller sentenced for stealing from vault GULFPORT — A federal judge has sentenced Ashley Ann Keel to 18 months in prison and ordered her to make restitution of the $80,980 she stole when she was vault teller for a Hancock Bank branch in Biloxi. The Sun Herald reports U.S. District Judge Louis Guirola Jr. sentenced Keel on Wednesday. He also ordered drug treatment and three years of probation for her. The single mother admitted an oxycodone addiction clouded her judgment. The 29-year-old Pass Christian woman pleaded guilty in November to stealing the money over four months starting in April 2012.

NATION CONTINUED FROM 5A

California’s same-sex marriage ban to rule that all gay Americans have a constitutional right to wed, but that doesn’t mean gay marriage will not be returning to the state.

The high court’s forthcoming ruling is likely to allow same-sex marriages to resume in California more than four years after gays and lesbians first won the right to wed in the state courts and lost it a few months later at the ballot box, legal

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experts and lawyers involved in the case said. How that happens and how long it would take remain open to interpretation. There are a range of possibilities. Some experts say a court decision, expected in June, could mean that marriages resume statewide soon after, while others argue a ruling could be limited, and only affect the original two plaintiffs and residents of counties where they live. “I don’t think it’s at all a foregone conclusion that everyone gets to benefit,” said Tobias Wolff, a University of Pennsylvania law professor who has spent months puzzling over the various scenarios, adding that it’s going to take a lot more work before there is a final answer. Each scenario is likely to produce more legal and political wrangling while same-sex marriage backers organize to repeal the voter-enacted ban, known as Proposition 8, with the expectation that public opinion has shifted in their favor since it passed with 52 percent of the vote in November 2008. Prop 8 amended the state constitution to limit marriage to a man and a woman. From justices’ questions Tuesday during arguments over its constitutionality, legal experts assume a majority will not strike down that measure along with similar amendments adopted in 29 other states. Such a broad ruling was what lawyers who sued to overturn Prop 8 want from the high court. Instead, the court appeared headed for resolutions that would bypass any discussion of civil rights and, by default, allow one or both of the lower court decisions that struck down the ban to take effect. Legal scholars and lawyers involved in the case disagree about what is likely to occur from there.


Daily Corinthian • Friday, March 29, 2013 • 7A

Alcorn Central Middle School 3rd Nine Weeks Honor Roll 5th grade: All A’s: Eli Ferrell, Michael Weaver All A’s and B’s: Joleen Awwad, Raymond Carter, Alyssa Cornelius, Shae Downs, Cassidy Ekiss, Noah Essary, Alyssa Griffin, Autumn Hindmon, Jordan Huff, Carter Hughes, Megan Kennedy, Madison Kiddy, Caleb Mclain, CJ Mclemore,

Kaitland Moore, Lakelyn Parker, Matthew Poindexter, Abbey Price, Edye Ross, Shelby Smith, Noah Stutts, Baleigh Vanderford, Hunter Walker, Kaylee Wigginton, Jade Wiley, John Rilee Williams, Lauren Young All B’s: Kayaria Baswell, Cadee Essary, Morgan Harmon, Atalie Kate Logue, Kaylee Palm-

er, Kamron Rorie 6th grade: All A’sLindsey Dunn, Molly Mclain, Mikayla Smith, All A’s and B’s-Donny Bray, Cassie Burcham, Lauren Canten, Alexis Derossett, Jonathan Derrick, Rebekah Fields, Alexus Lainez, Autumn Lassiter, Colton Little, Emilee Manahan, Lydia Marshall,

John Mask, Sierra Meyer, Lillian Nelms, Madison Saint, Kristen Stivers, Madelyn Warren, Alex Willliams All B’s-Ireland Harrelson, Anna Grace Reed, Zachary Saine, Chase Shaw 7th grade: All A’sChristopher Miller All A’s and B’s-Riley Austin, Jaime Berry, Bradlee Bing-

ham, Elijah Brooks, Eva Bullard, Jonah Byrom, Caitl-Lynn Chambers, Alyssa Gray, Chloe Hatfield, Rhiannon Lambert, Kaylyn Lavender, Noah Mclain, Reece Morrical, Anna Kolby Mynatt, Will Poindexter, Nick Strachan, Lucas Turner, LiLi Wall, Mallie Katherine Williams 8th grade: All A’s and

B’s-Courtney Chaffin, Cody Frady, Austin Hammock, Dylan Hammock, Carson Hancock, Cody Hubanks, Trinity Lassiter, Chloe Malone, Tate Perriman All B’s-Matt Clement, Josh Cole, Brooklyn Gann, Benjamin Marshall, Katelyn Mathis, Mason Morgan, CaLee Moss, Luke Price

Crossroads dealership goes to bat for Corinth based travel team For the Daily Corinthian

Crossroads Chevrolet Buick GMC is partnering with the Corinth based youth baseball travel team, Mississippi Marlins. Crossroads Chevrolet Buick GMC has joined forces with the national Chevrolet Youth Baseball program to provide new equipment, a monetary contribution, invitations to free instructional clinics, and an opportunity for community members to enter the Free Chevrolet vehicle sweepstakes.

“Youth baseball provides positive and productive life lessons for young people across America, and the Chevrolet Youth Baseball program is an extension of Chevrolet’s commitment to baseball, community and families. Crossroads Chevrolet Buick GMC is bringing that same dedication to youth baseball,” said Jeff Smith, owner of Crossroads Chevrolet Buick GMC in Corinth. “There is nothing more American than Chevrolet and baseball and Cross-

roads Chevrolet Buick GMC wants to combine America’s favorite brand and favorite pastime together for our families in Memphis to enjoy,” added Smith. 2013 marks Chevrolet’s Youth Baseball program’s eighth year, and since its introduction has helped aid local teams, affecting more than 3 million young people in communities where Chevrolet’s customers live, work and play. In 2012, about 1,600 Chevrolet dealers participated

across the country. Crossroads Chevrolet Buick GMC will present the Mississippi Marlins with equipment kits with items including things like equipment bags, baseball buckets, practice hitting nets, umpire ball bags, batting tees and Chevrolet Youth Baseball T-shirts. The sponsorship also includes youth clinics featuring current and former MLB/MiLB players and coaches and instructors from Ripken Baseball.

In addition, Crossroads Chevrolet Buick GMC will present a check representing a one-time monetary contribution to Mississippi Marlins. Sponsored leagues across the country will each receive 2,000 Free Sweepstakes Entry forms to distribute within the community. At the end of the entry period, five winners – one from each region – will win their choice between a 2013 Chevrolet Malibu or Chevrolet Traverse. Each participating market will

award a secondary prize. In addition to its commitment to youth baseball, Chevrolet also is the Official Vehicle of Major League Baseball. “Chevrolet vehicles are designed and built for families, so we hope young people and their parents will consider a Chevrolet as an official vehicle of their household,” said Smith. (For more information about Chevrolet Youth Baseball, please visit www.youthsportswired. com.)

Landowners add value with nature activities 3 accused of smoking BY MARINA D’ABREAU DENNY MSU College of Forest Resources

STARKVILLE — Mississippi State University’s Natural Resources Enterprise Program can help the state’s landowners diversify their income by capitalizing on the popularity of wildlife watching and nature photography. “Mississippi landowners with scenic views, butterfly gardens, wildlife viewing areas, or important or rare bird species can market these wildlife-viewing opportunities in order to charge a fee for access to their land,” said Daryl Jones, associate Extension professor in wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture at MSU’s Forest and Wildlife Research Center. Jones said residents and visitors spend about $175 million annually on equipment, travel and related expenses to watch and photograph

wildlife in Mississippi. “The diversity of wildlife in the state provides opportunities for landowners to develop an outdoor enterprise,” Jones said. “Much of the state is in the Mississippi Flyway, a route used by neotropical birds and waterfowl for migration. This means that at certain times of the year many colorful birds make a stop here.” Landowners interested in pursuing an outdoor enterprise should take an inventory of the wildlife and habitats on their properties that visitors might expect to see at different times of the year. “To improve the chances of your visitors viewing wildlife, set up wildlife viewing blinds in good locations,” Jones said. “Consider providing guides to lead visitors on tours of your property.” Holding group events may reduce costs per effort. Wildlife photog-

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raphyworkshops led by a professional photographer can offer visitors an enjoyable outdoor learning experience and introduce them to the property. “Workshops, such as a wildlife photography workshop, can build interest in your property,” Jones said. A wildlife photography workshop held by the Mississippi Wildlife Federation usually attracts around 50 amateur photographers of varying ages. “We have offered a photography workshop once or twice a year for the last 10 years,” said Melanie Starnes, events director for the Mississippi Wildlife Federation. “Our workshops are generally one to two days, and the format changes each year, depending on who is leading the class and the skill level we are targeting.” As with any business activity, adequate plan-

ning, rules and safety measures are important. “Landowners who charge a fee for access to their land should obtain liability insurance and take precautions to ensure the safety of their customers,” Jones said. “In addition, providing amenities such as lodging, guides, food and other activities can allow you to charge a higher fee.” The Natural Resource Enterprises program at Mississippi State University can assist landowners with starting and managing an outdoor recreation business. The program is a joint effort of the MSU Extension Service, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, and Forest and Wildlife Research Center. (For more information about the Natural Resource Enterprises program, visit http:// www.naturalresources. msstate.edu.)

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one shot, which supposedly so terrified the bandits that they fled. No humans were harmed, activists now point out, signifying the handgun was obviously a force for good. The head of the St. Gabriel Possenti Society has noted that, however farfetched the “lizard incident” may be, it was rarely questioned until U.S. anti-gun activists gained strength in the 1980s.

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na. The three men were charged with drug possession. Police say they were waiting for another man who was inside the station picking up paperwork for an impounded car. He was also charged with drug possession. Authorities say for some reason, the men didn’t expect to see a trooper in the parking lot of the state police barracks.

Associated Press

TOTOWA, N.J. —State troopers in northern New Jersey didn’t have to go far to make a pot bust. They didn’t even have to get in their cruisers. Police say they caught three men lighting up in a car in the parking lot of the barracks in Totowa. What gave the men away? Police say a trooper setting out for night patrol caught a whiff of marijua-

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8A • Daily Corinthian

YOUR STOCKS Name

P/E Last

A-B-C-D ADT Cp n ... AES Corp dd AK Steel dd AbtLab s 9 AbbVie n 12 Accenture 20 ActivsBliz 15 AdobeSy 31 AMD dd Affymax dd AlcatelLuc ... Alcoa 47 Alexion 73 AlldNevG 32 Allstate 11 AlphaNRs dd AlpAlerMLP q AlteraCp lf 21 Altria 17 AmBev ... Amarin ... Amazon dd AMovilL 21 ACapAgy 11 AmCapLtd 5 AEagleOut 16 AmExp 17 AmIntlGrp 26 ARltCapPr dd Amgen 19 Anadarko 18 Annaly 9 Apache 16 ApolloGrp 6 Apple Inc 10 ApldMatl cc ArcelorMit dd ArchCoal dd ArchDan 15 ArenaPhm dd ArmourRsd 8 ArubaNet cc AstexPhm 56 AstraZen 8 Athersys dd Atmel 99 AuRico g 25 Avon dd BHP BillLt ... Baidu 18 BakrHu 16 BcoBrad pf ... BcoSantSA ... BcoSBrasil ... BkofAm 47 BkNYMel 13 Barclay ... BariPVix rs q BarrickG 8 Baxter 17 BedBath 15 BerkH B 17 BestBuy dd BiogenIdc 33 BioMedR dd Blackstone 49 BlockHR 26 Boeing 17 BostonSci dd BrMySq 35 Broadcom 28 BrkfldAs g 19 CA Inc 13 CBRE Grp 22 CBS B 20 CMS Eng 20 CSX 14 CVS Care 18 Calpine 48 CampusCC 87 CdnNRs gs ... CapOne 9 CpstnTrb h dd CardnlHlth 13 Carlisle 16 Carnival 18 Celgene 35 CellTher rs dd Cemex ... Cemig pf s ... CenterPnt 25 CntryLink 28 ChkPoint 16 ChelseaTh dd CheniereEn dd ChesEng dd ChicB&I 22 Chicos 16 Chimera 9 CinciBell cc Cisco 12 Citigroup 14 Clearwire dd CliffsNRs dd Coach 14 CocaCE 16 CognizTech 22 CmclMtls 12 CmwREIT 40 ConAgra 23 ConocPhil s 10 ConsolEngy 20 Corning 12 CSVelIVSt q CSVS2xVx rs q CrwnCstle cc Ctrip.com 29 CypSemi dd DCT Indl dd DDR Corp dd DR Horton 9 Danaher 19 DeckrsOut 16 Delcath dd DeltaAir 14 DenburyR 14 Dndreon dd DevonE dd DiamRk dd DianaShip 12 DigitalRlt 46 DirecTV 12 DirSCBear q DirFnBear q DirSPBear q DirDGldBll q DirxSCBull q Discover 10 Disney 18 DollarGen 18 DollarTr s 18 DomRescs 51 DonlleyRR 8 DowChm 45 DryShips dd DuPont 17 DukeEn rs 20 DukeRlty dd Dynavax dd

The Week Ahead

E-Trade eBay EMC Cp Eaton EdisonInt Elan EldorGld g ElectArts EmersonEl EmpDist EnCana g ExcelM ExcoRes Exelon Expedia ExpdIntl ExpScripts ExxonMbl FLIR Sys Facebook n FedExCp FibriaCelu FifthThird FstHorizon FstNiagara FstSolar FirstEngy FiveBelw n Flextrn FootLockr

Chg ForestOil Fortress FMCG +.35 FrontierCm +.03 GATX -.07 GT AdvTc +.71 GameStop +.63 Gap +1.09 GenDynam +.09 GenGrPrp +.86 GenMills GenMotors +.14 Genworth +.03 Gerdau +.03 GileadSci s -1.78 GlaxoSKln -.59 GluMobile +.40 GolLinhas -.19 GoldFLtd +.10 Goldcrp g +.74 GldFld -.02 GoldmanS +.48 Google +.18 GramrcyC +1.19 GraphPkg -.24 GreenMtC +.27 Groupon +.01 HCA Hldg +.23 HCP Inc +.31 HalconRes +.57 Hallibrtn +.13 HartfdFn +2.36 Heckmann -1.31 HeclaM +.23 Heinz +1.23 Herbalife HercOffsh -9.42 Hertz +.07 Hess -.10 HewlettP -.21 HimaxTch +.76 HollyFront -.10 HomeDp +.09 HopFedBc -.69 HospPT +.20 HostHotls +.76 HovnanE +.18 HudsCity +.18 HudsonTc -.09 Humana +.20 HuntBncsh -1.15 Huntsmn -.43 -.05 +.37 IAMGld g +.04 ICICI Bk +.09 ING -.05 iShGold +.09 iSAstla +.27 iShBraz -.09 iShEMU +.03 iShGer +.76 iSh HK -.82 iShItaly +1.04 iShJapn iSTaiwn +9.94 iShSilver iShChina25 -.10 iSCorSP500 -.27 iShCorTBd +.26 iShEMkts -.35 iShB20 T +.16 iS Eafe +.41 iShR2K +.04 iShUSPfd +.62 iShREst +.17 IngerRd +.14 IngrmM +.53 InovioPhm +.49 IBM +.28 IntlGame IntPap +.24 Interpublic -.11 Invesco -.01 InvMtgCap +.13 ItauUnibH -.03 JDS Uniph -.09 JPMorgCh +.62 JetBlue +.67 JohnJn +2.67 JohnsnCtl +.11 JnprNtwk +.08 KB Home +.24 KBR Inc +.29 KeyEngy +.01 Keycorp -.25 Kimco +.04 KindMorg +.77 KindrM wt -.12 Kinross g +3.09 KodiakO g -.02 Kohls -.05 KraftFGp n +.08 L Brands +.07 LSI Corp -.22 LamResrch -.01 LVSands +.55 LennarA +.38 LexRltyTr -.17 LibGlobA +2.41 LibGlobC -.41 LibtyIntA +.25 LillyEli +.22 LloydBkg -.28 LockhdM -.79 Lorillard s +.18 LyonBas A +.08

48.94 12.57 3.31 35.32 40.78 75.97 14.57 43.52 2.55 1.38 1.33 8.52 92.14 16.46 49.07 8.21 17.72 35.46 34.39 42.33 7.41 266.49 20.96 32.78 14.60 18.70 67.46 38.82 14.67 102.51 87.45 15.89 77.16 17.38 442.66 13.48 13.03 5.43 33.73 8.21 6.53 24.74 4.47 49.98 1.68 6.96 6.29 20.73 68.43 87.70 46.41 17.02 6.81 7.26 12.18 27.99 17.76 20.25 29.40 72.64 64.42 104.20 22.15 192.62 21.60 19.78 29.42 85.85 7.81 41.19 34.68 36.49 25.18 25.25 46.69 27.94 24.63 54.99 20.60 13.90 32.13 54.95 .90 41.62 67.79 34.30 115.91 1.15 12.21 11.85 23.96 35.13 46.99 2.04 28.00 20.41 62.10 16.80 3.19 3.26 20.90 44.24 3.24 19.01 49.99 36.92 76.62 15.85 22.44 35.81 60.10 33.65 13.33 23.31 3.51 69.64 -1.02 MBIA 21.38 -.77 MEMC 11.03 -.10 MFA Fncl 7.40 +.01 MGIC 17.42 -.17 MGM Rsts 24.30 -.09 Macys 62.15 +.31 MannKd 55.69 +3.17 MarathnO 1.80 +.12 MarathPet 16.51 -.08 MktVGold 18.65 -.34 MktVRus 4.74 -.03 MarIntA 56.42 -.72 MartMM 9.31 +.17 MarvellT 10.66 -.05 Masco 66.91 -.10 Mattel 56.59 -.65 MaximIntg 9.22 -.02 McGrwH 10.49 -.07 Mechel 12.32 -.08 MedProp 5.62 -.06 Medtrnic 88.96 -.18 MelcoCrwn 44.84 -.14 Merck 56.80 +.33 MetLife 50.58 -.37 MetroPCS 48.43 +.57 MKors 58.18 +.65 MicronT 12.05 +.07 Microsoft 31.84 +.06 MitsuUFJ 2.04 -.05 Molycorp 49.16 +.27 Mondelez 72.59 +.87 Monsanto 16.98 -.08 MorgStan 2.22 +.04 Mosaic Mylan E-F-G-H NII Hldg dd 10.71 +.06 NRG Egy 27 54.22 +2.15 NV Energy 19 23.89 +.06 Nabors 16 61.25 +.51 NBGreece dd 50.32 -.07 NOilVarco 15 11.80 +.08 NetApp 21 9.53 -.11 Netflix dd 17.70 -.09 NY CmtyB 20 55.87 +.51 Newcastle 17 22.40 +.41 NewellRub 14 19.46 +.13 NewmtM dd 1.16 +.06 NewsCpA dd 7.13 -.06 NewsCpB 24 34.48 +.45 NiSource 28 60.02 -.89 NikeB s 23 35.73 NobleCorp 31 57.62 -.44 NokiaCp 9 90.11 -.47 NorthropG 18 26.01 +.27 NStarRlt cc 25.58 -.51 NovaGld g 17 98.20 +.55 NuanceCm ... 12.07 +.36 Nucor 10 16.31 -.06 Nvidia dd 10.68 -.11 OcciPet 42 8.86 +.03 OfficeDpt dd 26.96 -.47 Oi SA s 18 42.20 +.55 Omnicom ... 37.89 -1.27 OnSmcnd 10 6.76 -.03 Oracle 13 34.24 +.12 Orexigen

23 44.53 13 5.26 -.09 PG&E Cp dd 6.40 -.12 PPG 17 133.94 10 33.10 -.26 PPL Corp 12 31.31 31 3.99 +.17 PVH Corp 18 106.81 21 51.97 +.83 PacEthan h dd .34 dd 3.30 +.30 Panasonic ... 7.33 dd 27.97 +1.52 Pandora dd 14.16 15 35.40 +.13 PattUTI 12 23.84 dd 70.51 +.25 Paychex 22 35.06 dd 19.88 -.06 PeabdyE 46 21.15 18 49.31 +.52 PeopUtdF 19 13.42 10 27.82 -.24 PetrbrsA ... 18.15 11 10.00 -.19 Petrobras ... 16.57 ... 7.71 -.05 Pfizer 15 28.86 30 48.94 +1.22 PhilipMor 18 92.71 ... 46.91 +.53 Phillips66 n 11 69.97 dd 3.00 -.04 PinnaclF n ... 22.21 ... 5.95 -.06 PiperJaf 17 34.30 ... 7.75 -.03 PitnyBw 7 14.86 18 33.63 -.09 PlainsEx 20 47.47 8 3.69 -.76 Potash 16 39.25 13 147.15 -.69 PS SrLoan ... 25.10 23 794.19 -8.47 PShEMSov ... 29.78 dd 5.21 +.39 PwShs QQQ q 68.97 24 7.49 +.09 ProShtS&P q 30.69 24 56.76 +.88 PrUShQQQ q 25.90 dd 6.12 -.09 ProUltSP q 72.98 12 40.63 +.20 PrUPQQQ s q 60.96 27 49.86 +.45 PrUVxST rs q 7.69 dd 7.79 ProctGam 20 77.06 14 40.41 -.25 PrUShSP rs q 43.94 12 25.80 -.15 PrUShL20 rs q 65.71 dd 4.29 -.07 PUSSP500 rs q 27.57 79 3.95 -.10 ProspctCap ... 10.91 24 72.27 +.17 PSEG 14 34.34 10 37.45 -.33 PulteGrp 38 20.24 dd 7.42 -.05 Q-R-S-T 41 22.26 +.15 11 71.61 -.42 QEP Res 26 31.84 dd 23.84 +.26 Qualcom 18 66.94 23 5.43 +.84 QksilvRes dd 2.25 6 51.45 -.10 RAIT Fin dd 7.97 23 69.78 +.13 RDA Micro ... 9.25 28 10.74 -.01 RF MicD dd 5.32 33 27.44 +.11 RLJ LodgT 58 22.76 cc 17.49 +.20 RadianGrp dd 10.71 dd 5.77 -.10 RltyInco 53 45.35 17 8.64 +.02 RedHat 66 50.56 8 4.05 -.91 Rentech dd 2.35 9 69.11 +.39 ReprosTh dd 16.10 10 7.37 -.04 RschMotn 28 14.45 12 18.59 +.42 RevolutnL dd 2.10 RioTinto ... 47.08 I-J-K-L dd 1.90 9 7.20 -.06 RiteAid 45 14.92 ... 42.90 +1.74 RiverbedT RossStrs 17 60.62 ... 7.21 -.02 17 33.22 q 15.52 -.08 RylCarb 8 65.16 q 27.04 -.06 RoyDShllA RymanHP dd 45.75 q 54.48 +.25 9 13.55 q 32.65 +.23 SAIC 11 20.50 q 24.47 +.17 SLM Cp SpdrDJIA q 145.32 q 19.84 +.07 q 154.47 q 11.80 +.08 SpdrGold q 10.80 -.02 S&P500ETF q 156.67 q 30.06 q 13.34 -.01 SpdrHome q 41.11 q 27.43 -.30 SpdrLehHY q 70.39 q 36.93 -.42 SpdrRetl q 60.49 q 157.36 +.46 SpdrOGEx SpdrMetM q 40.39 q 110.73 11 26.35 q 42.77 +.09 Safeway 13 40.44 q 117.76 -.60 StJude 33 54.96 q 58.98 +.28 SanDisk 5.27 q 94.43 +.12 SandRdge dd ... 51.08 q 40.52 +.13 Sanofi Schlmbrg 18 74.89 q 69.48 +.32 26 17.69 17 55.01 +.65 Schwab dd 8.92 10 19.68 +.01 ScorpioTk SeagateT 5 36.56 dd .60 +.01 dd 24.11 15 213.30 +2.41 SealAir SiderurNac ... 4.48 18 16.50 24 46.58 +1.01 SignetJwlrs 17 67.00 ... 20.70 16 13.03 -.01 SilvBRT n 17 28.96 +.31 SilvWhtn g 19 31.35 9 9.00 8 21.39 -.08 SmithWes 17 26.48 ... 17.80 +.21 SmithfF dd 13.37 -.19 SthnCopper 16 37.57 24 13.48 9 47.46 -.31 SwstAirl SwstnEngy dd 37.26 17 6.90 21 81.53 +.26 SpectraEn 22 30.75 ... 19.00 15 35.07 -.02 SpiritRC n q 39.18 52 18.54 -.13 SP Matls q 46.01 dd 21.77 -.33 SP HlthC 33 32.08 +.07 SP CnSt q 39.77 12 8.08 -.07 SP Consum q 53.00 11 9.96 -.08 SP Engy q 79.31 62 22.40 +.19 SP Inds q 41.76 57 38.68 +.31 SP Tech q 30.27 ... 5.14 +.22 SP Util q 39.10 dd 7.93 -.04 StanBlkDk 15 80.97 19 9.09 -.17 Staples dd 13.42 11 46.13 -.47 Starbucks 31 56.95 19 51.53 +.16 StarwdHtl 22 63.73 18 44.66 +.54 Starz A ... 22.15 32 6.78 +.05 StateStr 14 59.09 73 41.46 +.57 Statoil ASA ... 24.62 30 56.35 +.03 Stryker 19 65.24 13 41.48 -.31 Suncor gs 9 30.01 dd 11.80 +.06 Suntech dd .39 61 73.38 +1.03 SunTrst 8 28.81 ... 68.63 +1.31 Supvalu dd 5.04 25 21.37 -.10 Symantec 16 24.68 16 56.79 +.42 Synovus dd 2.77 ... 3.00 +.07 Sysco 19 35.17 12 96.52 +2.05 TD Ameritr 19 20.62 14 40.35 -.09 TJX 18 46.75 13 63.29 -.08 TaiwSemi ... 17.19 TalismE g ... 12.25 M-N-O-P Target 15 68.45 2 10.27 -.11 TataMotors ... 24.41 dd 4.40 +.08 TelefEsp ... 13.51 11 9.32 TevaPhrm 16 39.68 dd 4.95 +.35 TexInst 23 35.48 dd 13.15 +.19 3D Sys s 60 32.24 13 41.84 +.11 3M Co 17 106.31 dd 3.39 +.02 TibcoSft 31 20.22 15 33.72 -.29 TimeWarn 19 57.62 9 89.60 -.07 TollBros 12 34.24 q 37.85 -.15 37 20.94 q 27.75 +.26 TumiHld n TwoHrbInv 12 12.61 25 42.23 +.61 28 32.00 44 102.02 +.06 TycoIntl s 15 24.82 18 10.58 +.07 Tyson

+.45 +.52 +.54 -5.98 -.01 -.19 +.14 -.19 +.30 -.11 +.01 -.16 -.18 +.22 +.71 +1.70

How will you pay for retirement? Let’s talk. Brian S Langley Eric M Rutledge, AAMSŽ, CFPŽ Financial Advisor Financial Advisor 605 Foote Street 1500 Harper Road Suite 1 Corinth, MS 38834 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471 662-287-1409

+.02 -.07 -.10 +.03 +.05 +.17 -.05 -.13 +.34 +.35 -.05 -.33 +.58 -.29 -.03 +.65 -.08 +.19 +.26 -.04 -.17 -.20 -.01 +.30 +.28 +.35 +.59 +.01 +6.97 -.12 -.02 -.48 +.01 +.57 +.71 +.03 +.36 +.23 +.22 +.36 -.89 +.48 -.07 +.06 +.23 -.24 -.40 +.15 -.02 -.10 +.93 -.21 +.19 +.17 -.13 -.12 -.04 +3.73 +1.04 -.31 -.09 +.24 +.67 +.29 -.36 +.52 +.22 +.15 +.46 +.16 +.19 -.23 +.30 +.06 +.47 +1.23 +.06 +.04 +1.24 +.34 -.32 +.22 +.37 +.12 -.02 +.27 -.03 +.15 -.02 +.16 +.19 -.14 +.02 +.11 -.60 -.79 +.07 +.18 +.40 +1.62 +1.02 -.09 +.99 -.50 -.87 +.65 +.82 +.64

Brian S Langley Eric M Rutledge, AAMSÂŽ, CFPÂŽ Financial Advisor Financial Advisor 605 Foote Street 1500 Harper Road Suite 1 Corinth, MS 38834 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471 662-287-1409

www.edwardjones.com

Breaking through The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor’s 500 top their 2007 highs to regain all of their losses suffered during the Great Recession.

Change March YTD S&P 500

3.6%

10.0%

Dow

3.7

11.3

Nasdaq

3.4

8.2

S&P at all-time high

7

Oct 9, 2007 1,565.15

1,100 March 28 1,569.19

’12

’08

March milestones The Standard & Poor’s 500 index closed the first quarter at a record high of 1,569. The index has now recovered all of its losses from the recession and the financial crisis of 2008. It follows in the wake of the Dow Jones industrial average, which closed at a record high on March 5 and has been climbing ever since.

16

Dell buyout

Activist investor Carl Icahn emerges as the first of two bidders who could scuttle a $24.4 billion deal — by CEO Michael Dell and other investors — to take the computer company private.

19

Twinkies return?

Hostess Brands receives court approval for the sale of Twinkies and other brands to a pair of investment firms for $410 million.

Stressed The Federal Reserve’s stress test reveals that Ally Financial has a much lower buffer against losses to endure a severe recession than 17 other large banks.

14

Crisis in Cyprus

Banks close to prevent a drain on accounts as politicians scramble to qualify for 10 billion euros ($12.9 billion) in international bailout loans. Banks reopen on March 28.

Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer and Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer, Sheryl Sandberg, open up debates about telecommuting and the advancement of women.

1,600

600

Workplace issues

6

Snapshot

Oh my! Lululemon pulls its black yoga pants off store shelves after discovering that the fabric used was too revealing. The company later says the recall will hurt first-quarter earnings by 11 cents to 12 cents per share.

Smartphone wars

Samsung rolls out its Galaxy S4; the following week Research in Motion launches its redesigned BlackBerry Z10 in the U.S.

Source: FactSet

Trevor Delaney; J. Paschke • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 14,563.75 12,035.09 6,291.65 4,795.28 503.04 435.57 9,128.89 7,222.88 2,509.57 2,164.87 3,263.63 2,726.68 1,564.91 1,266.74 16,552.56 13,248.92 954.00 729.75

Name Dow Industrials Dow Transportation Dow Utilities NYSE Composite NYSE MKT Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Last 14,578.54 6,255.33 508.40 9,107.04 2,406.18 3,267.52 1,569.19 16,598.26 951.54

Dow Jones industrials

14,640

Close: 14,578.54 Change: 52.38 (0.4%)

14,500 14,360

15,000

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg +52.38 +.36 +11.25 +10.90 +62.06 +1.00 +17.87 +19.01 +5.78 +1.15 +12.21 +11.48 +36.60 +.40 +7.86 +11.52 +5.05 +.21 +2.14 +.07 +11.00 +.34 +8.21 +5.56 +6.34 +.41 +10.03 +11.82 +67.26 +.41 +10.69 +12.45 +1.30 +.14 +12.03 +14.34

10 DAYS

14,500 14,000 13,500 13,000 12,500

O

N

D

J

F

M

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name AFLAC AT&T Inc AirProd AlliantEgy AEP AmeriBrgn ATMOS BB&T Cp BP PLC BcpSouth Caterpillar Chevron CocaCola s Comcast CrackerB Deere Dell Inc Dillards Dover EnPro FordM FredsInc FullerHB GenCorp GenElec Goodyear HonwllIntl Intel Jabil KimbClk Kroger Lowes

Div 1.40 1.80f 2.84f 1.88f 1.88 .84 1.40 .92f 2.16f .04 2.08 3.60 1.12f .78f 2.00 2.04f .32 .20a 1.40 ... .40f .24a .34 ... .76 ... 1.64 .90 .32 3.24f .60 .64

YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 19 99.69 +.79 +13.0 31 36.30 +.11 +13.9 14 13.75 +.01 +15.8 ... 15.11 +.22 -23.3 8 25.89 +.26 +2.4 20 79.11 +.82 +15.6 26 9.19 +.22 +26.9 ... 3.36 ... +58.5 11 8.19 -.03 +14.9 12 2799.99 -81.95 +10.7 ... 49.97 -.70 +20.8 26 168.89 -.39 +9.8 6 3.08 ... +6.6 18 46.92 +.56 +9.6 ... 6.21 +.17 +9.5 ... 18.21 +.05 +11.1 ... 8.35 -.06 +81.5 4 8.72 +.35 +88.7 12 59.80 +.46 +16.1 ... 47.98 -.21 -7.7 ... .37 ... -30.2 12 33.93 +.17 +6.2 15 74.83 +.05 +9.7 11 36.99 +.01 +8.2 ... 5.68 -.11 +20.7 16 93.50 -.15 +17.9 44 31.38 +.37 +12.8 9 8.60 +.06 +26.1 ... 7.55 -.18 +11.9 7 23.53 -.06 +18.2

YTD PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div 3.08 9 52.02 +.11 -2.1 McDnlds 29 36.69 +.07 +8.8 MeadWvco 1.00 19 87.12 +.84 +3.7 OldNBcp .40f 17 50.18 +.84 +14.3 Penney ... 19 48.63 +.48 +13.9 PennyMac 2.28 18 51.45 +.74 +19.2 PepsiCo 2.15 17 42.69 +.60 +21.6 PilgrimsP ... 12 31.39 +.11 +8.6 RadioShk ... 6 42.35 +.09 +1.7 RegionsFn .04 18 16.30 -.04 +12.1 3.00 10 86.97 +.07 -2.9 SbdCp ... 9 118.82 -1.37 +9.9 SearsHldgs 2.00f 21 40.44 +.22 +11.6 Sherwin .05e 18 41.98 +.23 +12.4 SiriusXM 1.96 17 80.85 +.06 +25.8 SouthnCo ... 11 85.98 -1.47 -.5 SprintNex 11 14.33 -.01 +41.3 SPDR Fncl .27e 11 78.55 -.39 -6.2 TecumsehB ... 16 72.88 +.54 +10.9 TecumsehA ... 23 51.17 +.79 +25.1 Torchmark .68f 10 13.15 -.07 +1.5 Total SA 3.03e 15 13.68 -.42 +2.8 USEC ... 29 39.08 -.29 +12.2 US Bancrp .78 ... 13.30 -.06 +45.4 WalMart 1.88f 18 23.12 +.02 +10.1 WellsFargo 1.00f 17 12.61 -.17 -8.7 .16 20 75.35 +.18 +18.7 Wendys Co 10 21.84 +.01 +5.9 WestlkChm .75a .68 10 18.48 +.11 -4.2 Weyerhsr .23f 22 97.98 +1.07 +16.0 Xerox ... 13 33.14 +.04 +27.4 YRC Wwde 22 37.92 -.26 +6.8 Yahoo ...

dd 20.25 -.25 U-V-W-X-Y-Z 20 43.77 +.42 US Airwy 5 16.97 +.32 26 32.64 +.49 UTiWrldwd 28 14.48 -.28 32 52.08 +1.62 UltraPt g dd 20.10 -.20 ... 5.06 -.06 UtdContl dd 32.01 -.32 24 16.04 +.09 UtdMicro ... 1.80 -.01 13 46.96 +.44 UPS B 62 85.90 +.47 44 23.35 +.19 US NGas q 21.88 -.36 20 44.20 +.10 US OilFd q 34.75 +.20 34 38.02 -.14 USSteel dd 19.50 -.32 11 10.90 +.37 16 93.43 +.82 ... 56.79 +.38 UtdTech 11 57.21 +.59 dd 9.98 +.01 UtdhlthGp UnumGrp 9 28.25 +.18 16 28.61 +.24 UrbanOut 24 38.74 -.40 ... 6.00 +.04 ... 17.29 -.11 dd 5.20 -.25 Vale SA Vale SA pf ... 16.53 -.07 36 30.62 +.26 ValeroE 12 45.49 +.54 25 105.63 +.51 q 70.53 +.24 cc 21.98 -.31 VangREIT q 42.90 +.01 14 59.61 +.93 VangEmg VangEur q 49.13 +.45 17 28.96 +.22 q 36.43 +.13 dd 4.33 +.01 VangEAFE dd 1.99 +.11 12 26.49 +.25 Velti 24 47.27 +.15 15 20.03 +.01 Verisign VerizonCm cc 49.15 +.21 cc 16.22 +.07 70 54.97 +.14 ... .89 -.00 VertxPh ViacomB 14 61.48 +.12 12 70.75 +.06 25 34.16 +.46 VirgnMda h ... 48.97 +.50 49 169.84 +1.18 cc 189.28 -.96 Visa ... 28.40 +.16 13 14.35 +.03 Vodafone Vringo dd 3.17 +.42 4 11.17 +.05 dd 51.70 +.61 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) 19 26.10 +.43 VulcanM AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) -.22 12 41.89 +.15 WPX Engy dd 16.02 Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Walgrn 21 47.68 +.44 18 30.51 +.28 9 13.55 +.01 RschMotn 909333 14.45 -.12 ReprosTh 16.10 +6.97 +76.3 NautMar h 5.60 -1.62 -22.4 18 30.76 +.28 WarnerCh 21 39.21 +.59 BkofAm 21 29.34 +.57 WsteMInc 879809 12.18 -.05 Repros wtB 13.63 +5.63 +70.4 USAgriFd 19.09 -5.27 -21.6 dd 12.14 +.01 S&P500ETF 877647 156.67 +.48 Repros wtA 15.46 +4.17 +36.9 SthcrssE n 20.25 -5.50 -21.4 24 59.01 +.56 WeathfIntl 8 66.23 +.62 SprintNex 19 38.15 +.22 WellPoint 525738 6.21 +.17 LiveDeal 3.67 +.96 +35.4 GlobTcAdv 8.67 -2.29 -20.9 6 50.29 +.15 BostonSci 487671 7.81 +.16 BirnrDntl 23.03 +5.03 +27.9 HudsonTc 4.05 ... 3.28 -.06 WDigital -.91 -18.3 9 15.04 +.16 9 70.15 +.25 WstnUnion 3.69 -.76 -17.1 Microsoft 484994 28.61 +.24 MecoxLn rs 2.66 +.50 +23.1 GldFld 27 37.46 +.47 dd 9.48 -.02 WmsCos ParametSd 20.05 +3.17 +18.8 AccelrDiag 7.27 -1.25 -14.7 SiriusXM 459807 3.08 26 7.93 -.06 40 3.63 -.21 Windstrm 5.90 -.74 -11.1 378072 42.77 +.09 HimaxTch 5.43 +.84 +18.3 BeasleyB q 43.19 -.36 iShEMkts 15 20.18 +.07 WTJpHedg 7.13 +1.03 +16.9 GMX Rs rs 2.19 -.26 -10.6 362185 3.28 -.06 BiP GCrb q 17.97 +.12 NokiaCp 28 46.15 +.14 WT India 37.00 -3.88 -9.5 MGIC 352249 4.95 +.35 GlobusMar 2.49 +.34 +15.8 Synnex cc 30.30 14 12.83 +.18 XL Grp 16 29.70 +.42 14 78.37 +.24 XcelEngy 21 38.17 +.22 dd 3.93 +.04 Xilinx YSE IARY ASDA IARY 17 15.35 +.02 ... 3.04 +.04 Yamana g 1,896 Total issues 3,160 Advanced 1,367 Total issues 2,578 21 71.94 +.62 Advanced 17 58.90 +.26 YumBrnds 1,138 New Highs 398 Declined 1,076 New Highs 219 1.83 +.11 Declined dd 8.28 +.01 Ziopharm dd 126 New Lows 12 Unchanged 135 New Lows 20 ... 33.40 +.66 Unchanged 15 32.33 +.38 Zoetis n Volume 3,183,201,063 Volume 1,536,905,837 dd 3.36 +.01 dd 6.26 +.37 Zynga

MARKET SUMMARY G

N

L

D

Auto sales

Jobs report

Americans haven’t let rising gas prices or higher Social Security payroll taxes keep them from buying new wheels. U.S. auto sales rose 4 percent in February to an annualized rate of 15.4 million cars and trucks, even as prices at the pump ticked upward and their take-home pay shrank beginning in January. A more robust job market and cheap financing have helped drive sales higher. Investors find out Tuesday whether the trend continued in March.

A burst of hiring in February helped push down the nation’s unemployment rate to its lowest level in four years. Job growth has averaged more than 200,000 a month since November, reflecting stronger confidence in the economy, improving home sales and stepped up home construction. Economists anticipate the unemployment rate held steady in March at 7.7 percent. The latest figure is due out on Friday.

N

D

8.0 est.

7.7% 7.5

7.0

O

N

D

J

F

YOUR FUNDS YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AllianzGI NFJAllCpValIns13.84 +0.05 +9.8 American Beacon LgCpVlIs 24.11 +0.11 +11.4 American Cent EqIncInv 8.47 +0.03 +8.8 GrowthInv 29.03 +0.13 +8.0 UltraInv 27.85 +0.06 +7.0 ValueInv 7.11 +0.02 +11.8 American Funds AMCAPA m 23.94 +0.15 +10.4 BalA m 21.70 +0.07 +6.8 BondA m 12.88 -0.01 CapIncBuA m 55.13 +0.28 +5.4 CapWldBdA m20.74 +0.03 -1.7 CpWldGrIA m 39.42 +0.21 +6.4 EurPacGrA m 42.38 +0.17 +2.8 FnInvA m 44.20 +0.20 +8.7 GrthAmA m 37.29 +0.18 +8.6 HiIncA m 11.46 -0.03 +2.4 IncAmerA m 19.09 +0.08 +6.6 IntBdAmA m 13.71 ... IntlGrInA m 32.36 +0.14 +2.6 InvCoAmA m 32.82 +0.16 +9.3 MutualA m 31.20 +0.22 +10.6 NewEconA m 31.49 +0.11 +10.8 NewPerspA m 33.20 +0.17 +6.2 NwWrldA m 55.27 +0.10 +1.4 SmCpWldA m 43.53 +0.14 +9.1 TaxEBdAmA m13.14 ... +0.6 USGovSecA m14.14 ... -0.3 WAMutInvA m 34.03 +0.13 +9.6 Aquila ChTxFKYA m 10.97 ... -0.2 Artisan Intl d 25.85 ... +5.1 IntlVal d 32.33 ... +6.4 MdCpVal 24.03 ... +15.6 MidCap 40.54 ... +8.0 BBH TaxEffEq d 19.20 +0.09 +10.7 Baron Growth b 60.84 +0.36 +13.4 Bernstein DiversMui 14.77 ... +0.3 IntDur 13.99 ... -0.1 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 29.95 -0.12 +3.5 EqDivA m 21.55 +0.08 +8.3 EqDivI 21.61 +0.08 +8.4 GlobAlcA m 20.58 +0.04 +4.3 GlobAlcC m 19.13 +0.04 +4.1 GlobAlcI 20.68 +0.03 +4.3 HiYldBdIs 8.23 ... +3.2 HiYldInvA m 8.23 ... +3.1 Cohen & Steers Realty x 69.14 -0.14 +7.6 Columbia AcornIntZ 43.71 +0.19 +7.0 AcornZ 33.45 +0.18 +9.9 DivIncZ 16.35 +0.08 +11.4 StLgCpGrZ 15.43 +0.09 +11.3 TaxExmptA m 14.22 -0.01 +0.5 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.33 ... +0.1 2YrGlbFII 10.06 ... +0.2 5YrGlbFII 11.19 ... +0.4 EmMkCrEqI 20.21 +0.05 -0.9 EmMktValI 29.54 +0.02 -1.0 EmMtSmCpI 21.66 +0.07 +2.4 IntSmCapI 17.24 +0.09 +7.9 RelEstScI 28.28 +0.11 +7.6 USCorEq1I 13.77 +0.05 +11.8 USCorEq2I 13.63 +0.05 +12.2 USLgCo 12.37 +0.05 +10.6 USLgValI 25.91 +0.10 +13.5 USMicroI 16.36 +0.03 +12.1 USSmValI 29.81 -0.02 +13.8 USSmallI 25.50 +0.04 +12.5 DWS-Scudder GrIncS 20.62 +0.12 +13.1 Davis NYVentA m 38.63 +0.09 +11.1 NYVentY 39.06 +0.09 +11.1 Delaware Invest DiverIncA m 9.30 ... +0.3 Dimensional Investme IntCorEqI 11.12 +0.05 +4.4 IntlSCoI 16.92 +0.07 +6.2 IntlValuI 16.87 +0.03 +1.8 Dodge & Cox Bal 84.52 +0.40 +8.8 Income 13.83 ... +0.5 IntlStk 35.90 +0.07 +3.6 Stock 135.64 +0.89 +11.7 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 11.38 ... +1.2 Dreyfus Apprecia x 47.01 -0.07 +7.5 FMI LgCap 19.05 +0.12 +11.4 FPA Cres d 30.18 +0.09 +7.2 NewInc m 10.63 ... +0.6 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 34.08 +0.15 +8.4 Federated StrValI 5.41 +0.04 +9.4 ToRetIs 11.36 -0.01 +0.1 Fidelity AstMgr20 13.35 +0.02 +1.8 AstMgr50 17.12 +0.03 +4.1 Bal 21.37 +0.04 +5.9 BlChGrow 53.49 +0.22 +9.1 CapApr 32.42 +0.19 +10.3 CapInc d 9.72 +0.01 +3.6 Contra 83.92 +0.42 +9.2 DivGrow 32.70 +0.13 +9.4 DivrIntl d 31.26 +0.26 +4.4 EqInc 52.15 +0.19 +10.8 EqInc II 21.68 +0.09 +11.3 FF2015 12.28 +0.01 +4.0 FF2035 12.57 +0.02 +6.3 FF2040 8.78 +0.02 +6.3 Fidelity 39.28 +0.19 +9.7 FltRtHiIn d 9.99 ... +1.5 Free2010 14.67 +0.02 +3.9 Free2020 14.94 +0.02 +4.4 Free2025 12.58 +0.02 +5.3 Free2030 15.02 +0.02 +5.6 GNMA 11.71 ... +0.2 GovtInc 10.54 ... -0.1 GrowCo 101.14 +0.44 +8.5 GrowInc 23.51 +0.06 +10.6 HiInc d 9.48 +0.01 +2.8 IntBond 11.12 -0.01 +0.3 IntMuniInc d 10.62 +0.01 +0.4 IntlDisc d 34.80 +0.18 +5.2 InvGrdBd 7.96 ... LatinAm d 45.50 +0.12 -1.7 LevCoSt d 36.20 +0.13 +12.4 LowPriStk d 43.60 +0.21 +10.4 Magellan 79.95 +0.32 +9.1 MidCap d 33.24 +0.23 +13.1 MuniInc d 13.49 ... +0.2 NewMktIn d 17.18 ... -1.8 OTC 64.91 +0.10 +7.1 Puritan 20.53 +0.04 +5.8 RealInv d 34.48 +0.13 +7.5 ShIntMu d 10.84 ... +0.3 ShTmBond 8.60 ... +0.2 SmCapDisc d 27.87 +0.08 +15.8 StratInc 11.30 ... +0.3 Tel&Util 20.50 +0.17 +10.0 TotalBd 10.91 -0.01 +0.3 USBdIdx 11.82 ... -0.1 USBdIdxInv 11.82 ... -0.1 Value 86.55 +0.45 +13.4 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 24.81 +0.13 +9.1 NewInsI 25.12 +0.12 +9.1 StratIncA m 12.62 +0.01 +0.3 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 55.84 +0.23 +10.6 500IdxInstl 55.84 +0.22 +10.6 500IdxInv 55.83 +0.23 +10.6 ExtMktIdAg d 45.15 +0.19 +13.1 IntlIdxAdg d 35.75 +0.14 +4.3 TotMktIdAg d 45.79 +0.19 +11.1 First Eagle GlbA m 51.05 +0.09 +5.1 OverseasA m 22.84 +0.02 +3.7 Forum AbStratI 11.24 +0.01 +1.4 FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.66 ... FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.50 ... +0.5 Growth A m 54.38 ... +7.4 HY TF A m 10.86 ... +0.2 HighIncA m 2.11 ... +2.7 Income A m 2.32 ... +5.1 Income C m 2.35 ... +5.4

Borrow and spend

Unemployment rate

M

Source: FactSet

Friday, March 29, 2013

IncomeAdv 2.31 ... NY TF A m 12.06 ... RisDv A m 41.78 ... StrInc A m 10.78 ... US Gov A m 6.75 ... FrankTemp-Mutual Discov A m 30.52 ... Discov Z 30.94 ... QuestZ 17.87 ... Shares A m 24.46 ... Shares Z 24.66 ... FrankTemp-Templeton Fgn A m 6.94 ... GlBond A m 13.46 ... GlBond C m 13.48 ... GlBondAdv 13.41 ... Growth A m 20.48 ... World A m 16.58 ... Franklin Templeton FndAllA m 11.88 ... GE S&SUSEq 49.36 +0.16 GMO EmgMktsVI 11.41 +0.02 IntItVlIV 21.38 +0.06 QuIII 24.67 +0.11 QuVI 24.68 +0.11 Goldman Sachs HiYieldIs d 7.42 ... MidCpVaIs 44.32 +0.23 ShDuTFIs 10.68 ... Harbor Bond x 12.50 -0.07 CapApInst 45.46 +0.20 IntlInstl d 63.42 +0.40 IntlInv m 62.78 +0.40 Hartford CapAprA m 38.54 +0.12 CpApHLSIA 48.16 +0.17 DvGrHLSIA 23.80 +0.08 INVESCO CharterA m 19.84 +0.10 ComstockA m 19.82 +0.08 EqIncomeA m 10.01 +0.04 GrowIncA m 23.48 +0.11 HiYldMuA m 10.11 ... Ivy AssetStrA m 27.04 -0.16 AssetStrC m 26.33 -0.15 JPMorgan CoreBdUlt 12.01 -0.03 CoreBondA m 12.01 -0.03 CoreBondSelect12.00 -0.03 HighYldSel x 8.25 -0.03 IntmdTFSl x 11.27 -0.02 LgCapGrSelect25.47 +0.16 MidCpValI 31.52 +0.18 ShDurBndSel x10.98 -0.01 ShtDurBdU x 10.98 -0.01 USEquit x 12.38 +0.04 USLCpCrPS 24.56 +0.10 Janus BalT x 27.84 -0.02 GlbLfScT 34.33 +0.29 PerkinsMCVT 23.72 +0.13 John Hancock LifBa1 x 14.18 ... LifGr1 b 14.34 +0.04 Lazard EmgMkEqtI d 19.32 +0.07 Legg Mason/Western CrPlBdIns 11.65 -0.01 Longleaf Partners LongPart 29.46 +0.05 SmCap 32.37 -0.10 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 15.29 ... BdR b 15.23 +0.01 Lord Abbett AffiliatA x 13.28 -0.02 BondDebA m 8.28 ... ShDurIncA m 4.64 ... ShDurIncC m 4.67 ... MFS IsIntlEq 19.85 +0.11 TotRetA m 16.22 +0.02 ValueA m 28.30 +0.17 ValueI 28.43 +0.17 MainStay HiYldCorA x 6.16 -0.03 Manning & Napier WrldOppA 8.14 +0.04 Matthews Asian China d 22.76 -0.20 India d 17.12 +0.19 Merger Merger b 15.87 +0.01 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.92 ... TotRtBd b 10.93 ... Morgan Stanley Instl IntlEqI d 15.17 +0.07 MdCpGrI 37.94 +0.45 Natixis LSInvBdY 12.67 +0.01 LSStratIncA m 15.81 +0.02 LSStratIncC m15.90 +0.01 Neuberger Berman GenesisInstl 54.25 +0.18 Northern HYFixInc d 7.67 ... StkIdx 19.39 ... Nuveen HiYldMunI 17.25 ... Oakmark EqIncI 30.26 +0.11 Intl I 22.05 +0.03 Oakmark I 53.18 +0.14 Oberweis ChinaOpp m 12.35 -0.14 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCp 15.90 +0.08 LgCpStr 10.66 +0.05 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 35.33 +0.03 DevMktY 34.94 +0.03 GlobA m 69.07 +0.62 IntlBondA m 6.51 +0.01 IntlBondY 6.50 ... IntlGrY 32.57 +0.33 LmtTmMunA m15.08 ... LtdTmNY m 3.38 ... MainStrA m 40.18 +0.20 RocMuniA m 17.02 ... RochNtlMu m 7.65 ... StrIncA m 4.36 ... PIMCO AAstAAutP 10.94 ... AllAssetI 12.57 ... AllAuthA m 10.94 ... AllAuthC m 10.95 ... AllAuthIn 10.94 ... ComRlRStI 6.67 ... DivIncInst 12.17 ... EMktCurI 10.55 ... EmMktsIns 12.21 ... FloatIncI 8.95 ... ForBdInstl 10.90 ... ForBondI 10.39 ... HiYldIs 9.71 ... InvGrdIns 11.14 ... LowDrA m 10.50 ... LowDrIs 10.50 ... RERRStgC m 4.54 ... RealRet 12.25 ... RealRtnA m 12.25 ... ShtTermIs 9.90 ... ToRtIIIIs 9.89 ... TotRetA m 11.24 -0.01 TotRetAdm b 11.24 -0.01 TotRetC m 11.24 -0.01 TotRetIs 11.24 -0.01 TotRetrnD b 11.24 -0.01 TotlRetnP 11.24 -0.01 Parnassus EqIncInv x 32.81 +0.12 Permanent Portfolio 48.91 -0.03 Pioneer PioneerA m 36.08 +0.20 Principal L/T2020I 13.27 ... L/T2030I 13.22 ... LCGrIInst 10.72 ... Prudential Investmen JenMidCapGrZ 35.17 +0.19 Putnam GrowIncA m 16.51 +0.03 NewOpp 63.88 +0.20 Royce PAMutInv d 12.67 +0.03 PremierInv d 20.44 +0.08 Russell StratBdS 11.29 ...

+5.2 +0.3 +10.5 +1.6 -0.2 +8.0 +8.0 +8.0 +9.6 +9.7 +1.0 +1.5 +1.3 +1.5 +5.4 +5.3 +6.6 +11.1 -2.8 +2.2 +10.4 +10.5 +3.1 +12.8 +0.7 +0.7 +6.9 +2.1 +2.0 +12.0 +11.0 +10.9 +10.5 +11.7 +9.4 +12.5 +1.2 +4.5 +4.3 +0.2 +0.1 +0.2 +2.9 +0.1 +6.3 +12.6 +0.2 +0.2 +10.7 +11.0 +6.5 +14.7 +11.2 +4.9 +6.5 -1.1 +0.5 +11.6 +12.1 +2.3 +2.2 +10.9 +3.1 +0.7 +0.5 +3.1 +6.9 +12.1 +12.1 +2.6 +5.0 -3.0 -2.2 +0.3 +1.0 +1.0 +5.7 +9.2 +1.1 +3.2 +3.0 +11.4 +3.1 +10.1 +2.1 +6.2 +5.4 +9.6 +11.1 +8.2 +6.4 +0.1 +0.2 +7.1 -0.2 -0.3 +6.1 +0.7 +0.6 +8.4 +1.4 +1.9 +1.3 -0.5 +0.8 -0.6 -0.7 -0.5 +0.9 +0.5 +0.5 -1.2 +1.0 +1.5 -4.1 +2.2 +1.1 +0.3 +0.4 +6.2 +0.1 +0.5 +0.5 +0.6 +0.6 +0.4 +0.7 +0.6 +0.6 +12.7 +0.6 +11.5 +5.2 +5.8 +8.6 +8.5 +11.3 +9.1 +10.2 +6.7 +0.3

Schwab 1000Inv d 42.60 +0.18 S&P500Sel d 24.54 +0.10 Scout Interntl d 34.39 +0.14 Sequoia Sequoia 186.43 +1.15 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 49.35 +0.22 CapApprec 23.95 +0.08 EmMktBd d 13.84 ... EmMktStk d 33.28 +0.08 EqIndex d 42.27 +0.17 EqtyInc 29.28 +0.13 GrowStk 40.70 +0.19 HealthSci 47.45 +0.39 HiYield d 7.13 ... InsLgCpGr 20.46 +0.07 IntlBnd d 9.71 +0.02 IntlGrInc d 13.52 +0.06 IntlStk d 14.76 +0.06 LatinAm d 37.96 +0.09 MidCapVa 26.94 +0.14 MidCpGr 63.19 +0.40 NewAsia d 16.76 -0.06 NewEra 44.68 +0.03 NewHoriz 37.62 +0.12 NewIncome 9.79 -0.01 OrseaStk d 8.80 +0.04 R2015 13.50 +0.03 R2025 13.91 +0.04 R2035 14.30 +0.05 Rtmt2010 17.14 +0.03 Rtmt2020 18.86 +0.06 Rtmt2030 20.16 +0.07 Rtmt2040 20.45 +0.08 ShTmBond 4.84 ... SmCpStk 38.29 +0.11 SmCpVal d 43.45 +0.05 SpecInc 13.10 +0.01 Value 29.80 +0.14 TCW EmgIncI 9.21 -0.04 TotRetBdI 10.28 -0.04 TIAA-CREF EqIx 11.99 +0.04 Templeton InFEqSeS 19.74 ... Thornburg IncBldA m 20.08 +0.05 IncBldC m 20.08 +0.05 IntlValA m 28.10 +0.05 IntlValI d 28.69 +0.05 Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 25.11 +0.06 VALIC Co I StockIdx 28.84 +0.11 Vanguard 500Adml 144.61 +0.59 500Inv 144.61 +0.58 BalIdxAdm 25.20 +0.06 BalIdxIns 25.20 +0.06 CAITAdml 11.72 ... CapOpAdml 90.22 +1.11 DevMktsIdxIP 105.33 +0.48 DivGr 18.47 +0.11 EmMktIAdm 35.76 +0.06 EnergyAdm 117.24 -0.43 EnergyInv 62.45 -0.23 EqInc 26.70 +0.11 EqIncAdml 55.96 +0.23 ExplAdml 83.24 +0.38 Explr 89.47 +0.41 ExtdIdAdm 51.78 +0.21 ExtdIdIst 51.78 +0.22 ExtdMktIdxIP 127.79 +0.54 FAWeUSIns 91.20 +0.36 GNMA x 10.85 ... GNMAAdml x 10.85 ... GlbEq 20.22 +0.11 GrthIdAdm 39.93 +0.18 GrthIstId 39.93 +0.18 GrthIstSg 36.97 +0.16 HYCor 6.13 ... HYCorAdml 6.13 ... HltCrAdml 67.50 +0.56 HlthCare 159.99 +1.32 ITBondAdm x 11.87 -0.05 ITGradeAd x 10.19 -0.09 ITIGrade x 10.19 -0.09 ITrsyAdml x 11.68 -0.01 InfPrtAdm 28.34 -0.02 InfPrtI 11.55 ... InflaPro 14.43 ... InstIdxI 143.69 +0.59 InstPlus 143.69 +0.58 InstTStPl 35.69 +0.14 IntlGr 19.86 +0.12 IntlGrAdm 63.19 +0.38 IntlStkIdxAdm 25.73 +0.10 IntlStkIdxI 102.90 +0.41 IntlStkIdxIPls 102.92 +0.41 IntlStkIdxISgn 30.87 +0.13 IntlVal 31.91 +0.09 LTGradeAd x 10.62 -0.06 LTInvGr x 10.62 -0.06 LifeCon 17.47 +0.03 LifeGro 24.88 +0.07 LifeMod 21.60 +0.05 MidCapIdxIP 125.38 +0.93 MidCp 25.36 +0.19 MidCpAdml 115.08 +0.84 MidCpIst 25.42 +0.19 MidCpSgl 36.31 +0.26 Morg 21.69 +0.12 MorgAdml 67.25 +0.38 MuHYAdml 11.26 ... MuInt 14.33 ... MuIntAdml 14.33 ... MuLTAdml 11.74 ... MuLtdAdml 11.15 ... MuShtAdml 15.91 ... PrecMtls 13.48 -0.06 Prmcp 79.33 +0.80 PrmcpAdml 82.30 +0.83 PrmcpCorI 16.90 +0.15 REITIdxAd 99.99 +0.43 STBondAdm x 10.61 -0.01 STBondSgl x 10.61 -0.01 STCor x 10.81 -0.02 STFedAdml x 10.79 -0.01 STGradeAd x 10.81 -0.02 STIGradeI x 10.81 -0.02 STsryAdml 10.74 ... SelValu 23.61 +0.14 SmCapIdx 43.70 +0.15 SmCpIdAdm 43.73 +0.15 SmCpIdIst 43.73 +0.15 SmCpIndxSgnl 39.40 +0.14 Star 21.90 +0.08 StratgcEq 24.40 +0.13 TgtRe2010 24.98 +0.04 TgtRe2015 14.00 +0.03 TgtRe2020 25.11 +0.07 TgtRe2030 24.94 +0.08 TgtRe2035 15.12 +0.05 TgtRe2040 24.96 +0.09 TgtRe2045 15.67 +0.06 TgtRe2050 24.86 +0.09 TgtRetInc 12.46 +0.02 Tgtet2025 14.41 +0.04 TotBdAdml x 11.00 -0.02 TotBdInst x 11.00 -0.02 TotBdMkInv x 11.00 -0.02 TotBdMkSig x 11.00 -0.02 TotIntl 15.39 +0.07 TotStIAdm 39.40 +0.15 TotStIIns 39.41 +0.16 TotStISig 38.03 +0.15 TotStIdx 39.39 +0.15 TxMCapAdm 78.87 +0.33 ValIdxAdm 25.58 +0.10 ValIdxIns 25.58 +0.10 WellsI 24.90 +0.05 WellsIAdm 60.31 +0.10 Welltn 36.01 +0.09 WelltnAdm 62.19 +0.15 WndsIIAdm 57.52 +0.30 Wndsr 16.89 +0.08 WndsrAdml 56.98 +0.25 WndsrII 32.41 +0.17 Virtus EmgMktsIs 10.47 +0.08 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 8.92 +0.04 SciTechA m 12.61 +0.04 Wells Fargo UlSTMInI 4.83 ... Western Asset MgdMuniA m 17.16 ... Yacktman Focused d 23.00 +0.11 Yacktman d 21.41 +0.10

Consumer credit

Seasonally adjusted monthly The Federal Reserve issues a est. report Friday on how much credit change in billion $16b Americans took on in February. The report, which excludes $15 mortgages and other loans secured with real estate, is expected to show a small decline 10 in credit use from January. Consumers dusted off their credit 5 cards in November as they geared up for holiday shopping. Credit use tapered off in 0 December but rose again in O N D J F M Source: FactSet January.

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Variety

9A • Daily Corinthian

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Zits

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DOWN 1 “Shark Tank� airer 2 Corp. leader 3 __4: Toyota SUV 4 Like some imaginations 5 MP’s concern 6 Pickup opener 7 Ho’s instrument 8 Cause of a big slice 9 Mardi Gras torch 10 Focal points 11 Cartoonists, at times 12 Offer to one who’s been recently blessed? 17 “Goodbye, Columbus� author 18 Fireside shelf 21 Common base 22 Points a finger at 23 Sounds of disdain 24 Difficult spot 25 Potbellied 28 Clothes lines 29 Brit. recording heavyweight 31 Peace rally slogan

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

xwordeditor@aol.com

03/29/13

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

By Jack McInturff (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

03/29/13

Friday, March 29, 2013


10A • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

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(6:40) } ›› Hall Pass (11) Owen } › Chernobyl Diaries (12, Horror) The Jump Emmanuelle Through Time: Rod Off Steele 0014 Wilson, Jason Sudeikis. Ingrid Bols Berdal. } ››› Chicago (02) Rival entertainers vie for the } ››› My Week With Marilyn (11) House of (:15) Shameless “Civil Lies Wrongs” spotlight from behind bars. Michelle Williams. Real Time With Bill Real Time With Bill Road to } ›› American Reunion (12, Comedy) Jason } Tower Maher Maher Rios Biggs, Alyson Hannigan. Heist (11) The Real World Ridic. Ridic. } › The Hot Chick (02) Rob Schneider. } The Hot Chick NFL Live Boxing: Friday Night Fights. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Bellator MMA Live } ››› Batman Begins (05, Action) Christian Bale, Michael Caine. Bruce } Lucky Wayne becomes Gotham City’s Dark Knight. Slevin } › G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (09) Channing } › Gone in Sixty Seconds Nicolas Cage. A retired thief must } Gone in Tatum, Dennis Quaid. steal 50 cars to save his brother. 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A philosopher dismisses (:15) } ››› Blaise Pascal (72) The story of the 17th-century } Les materialism as a way of life. mathematician and philosopher. Cara Dallas “Guilt & InnoMonday Mornings } ›› Watchmen (09, Action) Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman. A masked vigicence” lante probes the murder of a fellow superhero. (6:30) 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament: Re2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament: Regional Semifinal: Teams Inside Madgional Semifinal: Teams TBA. TBA. (N) (Live) ness Baggage Baggage Baggage Baggage Minute to Win It FamFeud FamFeud Baggage Baggage Cartoon Planet King/Hill King/Hill American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Golden Golden Raymond Raymond Cleve Cleve King King King of Queens Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out (6:00) } ›› The A-Team Former Special Forces } ››› Iron Man (08, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Terrence Howard. A billionsoldiers form a rogue unit. aire dons an armored suit to fight criminals. Fishing Zona’s Arrow Grateful Defense Elite Tactical Unit Stories Shooting Gallery Poker Red Bull Crashed Ice From Quebec City. Cros Pro Talk NHL } The Natural (84) Police- Dallas Police- Dallas Police- Dallas Police- Dallas Police- Dallas The O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity Tanked: Unfiltered Tanked (N) Tanked Tanked Tanked Flicka 2 Patrick Warburton. A teen develops a spe- Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Golden Golden cial bond with a wild mustang. Girls Girls Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Dog With a GoodA.N.T. Farm GoodAustin & Jessie Falls Falls Falls Falls Blog Charlie Charlie Ally WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Robot Combat League Being Human Robot Combat League

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian The FAITH ministry at Crosswind helps families get back on their feet with housing assistance, but more help is needed to fill the need. See Staff Writer/Photographer Steve Beavers’ story coming Sunday.

Pressure to have sex causes girl to feel relationship angst DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend and I have been dating for several months. He’s fun and caring, and we spend a lot of time together. He’s different from other boys I have dated. We can talk to each other about anything. My only concern is our relationship physically. He makes it very clear that he wants to go all the way with me. He isn’t rude or pushy about it. I don’t want to rush into anything. We are both virgins (he Abigail does have Van Buren more experience), and Dear Abby while I have known him for a long time, I don’t know him as well as I’d like. I want to wait until we have dated for at least six months. He says he respects my decision and says he doesn’t want to pressure me. I still feel a little rushed. All of our friends have had sex, but I don’t want it to be about our hormones in the heat of the moment. I hate saying no to him. I know he won’t leave me, but I feel bad for leaving him frustrated. Would it be wrong to agree to having sex with him -- something we both want — even if I don’t know if we’re ready for the next step? — UNSURE IN CANADA DEAR UNSURE: Yes, it would

be wrong. The first time you have sex it should be because you are 100 percent sure you are ready, and he is the right person. If that’s not the case, you will be cheating yourself. And as for feeling guilty because you are leaving him frustrated — I have a solution. Socialize with him in group settings and spend less time alone together. That way there will be less frustration for him and less temptation for both of you. DEAR ABBY: I am a single mother raising a 15-year-old son. For most of his life it has just been the two of us. I now regret that I put him in bed with me when he was a baby. As he grew older, I encouraged him to sleep in his own bed, but it would last only a few nights, and then he would sneak back into my room. I was married for three years when he was around 11, and he’d sneak into my husband’s and my bedroom after we were asleep and sleep on a couch in there. His problem is he is terrified of the dark and believes in ghosts, monsters, etc. He says he has a phobia and I believe him. I tried getting a dog for him to sleep with and night-lights, but nothing worked. If I lock him out, he lays awake all night, scared to death. I kept thinking he would grow out of this, but he hasn’t. Please help. I can’t really afford therapy, but if you think he needs it, I will try. — TROUBLED IN ARIZONA DEAR TROUBLED: Some

sessions with a psychologist who specializes in phobias would be the quickest way to help your son overcome his problem. And when you consult with one, I am sure the therapist will recommend that your son stay away from violent video games, and movies or television shows that feature ghosts, monsters or anything else that goes “bump” in the dark because they could only increase his fears. DEAR ABBY: I’m different from other girls. I don’t wear girly clothes. I prefer dark clothes and makeup. My mom thinks I’m strange because I dress differently. Do you think I look like a freak for not conforming, or is there nothing wrong with being different? — DIFFERENT IN WASHINGTON DEAR DIFFERENT: I would never call you a “freak” because of your attire. It is common for young people to express their individuality by their dress, hairstyle and makeup. There is, however, a point when a person’s style choices can be limiting. My question for you would be, “Are you getting the kind of attention you want from presenting yourself this way?” The answer should determine how you choose to dress. (Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). If you were on a top-secret mission, would you tell anyone? Could you keep it from even your nearest and dearest? Today your discretion will be tested and trusted. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Some have commented -- in wondrous, complimentary tones -that they don’t know how anyone can do what you do. And yet, you still aspire to so much more. You’ll find their support motivating. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Relationships have just the right amount of tension to make them exciting -- maybe even electrifying. Bonus: A lull in your work scene allows you to focus on your personal life. CANCER (June 22-July 22). This is no time to let the committee decide what you or anyone else will do next. An individual with experience, ideas and a defined style will lead the way to success. It’s likely that leader is you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Proper attention to detail makes your work remarkable, your friendships fun and your love connections tight. However, focusing too small has the opposite effect. Ride the middle ground. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). If you continue to take on work that is below your abilities, you’ll stagnate. But right now, the easy work will suit your life just fine. It gives you a chance to focus on other things. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). One way to never be disappointed again is to stop expecting things. Unfortunately, that’s also a way to make sure the people you know behave according to the lowest belief of their abilities. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Arrive early. It’s amazing what a 15-minute head start will do for your confidence. You’ll feel like you’re on the inside -- up to speed and ready for whatever develops. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). You’re ready to step up your game, and the opportunity comes this afternoon. Your reputation for excellence exists in part because you show enthusiasm for what you do. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Passion is self-serving by nature. But the outcroppings of passion often help many people. By yielding to desire, you put energy and excitement into an otherwise dull scene. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Working alone will put you in a down position. You will struggle to keep up with those who share ideas. By inviting more minds to collaborate on your work, you’ll quickly refine, simplify and improve it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’re up for a search, and you have a talent for this. You’ll have to sift through a lot of muck in order to get to the good stuff, and this makes the treasure you find even more valuable.


Daily Corinthian • Friday, March 29, 2013 • 11A

Bank sets $500 million loan fund for state firms BY JEFF AMY Associated Press

RIDGELAND — BancorpSouth is setting aside a $500 million loan fund aimed at Mississippi businesses, saying it will work with state officials to find qualified borrowers. Gov. Phil Bryant appeared with BancorpSouth executives to laud the move Thursday. The officials spoke at the headquarters of C Spire Wireless, citing the eight-story office building as an example of a project made possible by cooperation between BancorpSouth and a state program. “Ensuring that businesses have access to capital is a critical element in positioning Mis-

sissippi as the top spot for economic development,” Bryant said. “I applaud BancorpSouth for taking a leadership role in this new effort.” The fund underscores bank efforts to step up lending as coffers swell with deposits. Because the main profit engine of banks is lending out money at interest, the low level of loans compared to deposits is keeping bank profitability from a full return to pre-recession levels. “There's been some perception on a national basis about banks not making loans,” Tommy Darnell, BancorpSouth's executive vice president of corporate banking, said Wednesday in a telephone interview. “I

can't think of any time in my career where we have been more eager in making loans.” The move echoes a $1 billion pool Regions Financial Corp. announced for Alabama businesses in February. Like BancorpSouth in Mississippi, Regions pledged to work with state officials to find projects that needed loans. Banks clamped down on lending during the recession, especially for real estate development, as the institutions lost billions on bad loans. Surveys showed that it got substantially harder to get a loan in 2008 and 2009. But since then, terms have gotten easier. For example, a monthly National Federation of

Independent Businesses survey reports a steady improvement in loan availability since bottoming out in early 2009. The share of businesses that said they can't borrow all they want has fallen, but respondents say credit still remains tight compared to most of the past 20 years. Many businesses, scared of running up debt as sales fell, stopped borrowing during the economic downturn. The same NFIB survey suggests that loan demand hasn't rebounded, even as short-term interest rates have fallen. About 30 percent of survey respondents are borrowing regularly, down from about 35 percent at the beginning of the recession.

Cash has flooded into banks even as the amount of money on loan has fallen. Among Mississippi commercial banks, the ratio of loans to deposits fell to 75.5 percent at Dec. 31, the lowest level in more than a decade, according to FDIC figures. The ratio of loans to deposits is even lower at BancorpSouth, with its $8.5 billion in loans equal to only 63 percent of deposits. At the end of 2007, as the real estate boom imploded, BancorpSouth had $9 billion in loans outstanding, equal to 90 percent of deposits. BancorpSouth says it will work with the Mississippi Development Authority and the Mississippi Business Finance

Corp., as well as with the U.S. Small Business Administration. The SBA ranked Regions as No. 10 and BancorpSouth as No. 11 among large banks nationwide making small business loans under $1 million in 2010-2011, the most recent reported year. BancorpSouth's small lending was heavily concentrated in loans between $100,000 and $1 million. With bad commercial real-estate loans leaving a sour taste, banks have fought heavily to lend to businesses for other purposes, such as equipment leases. “I think this is an attempt by BancorpSouth to compete for any good Mississippi loan we can uncover,” Darnell said.

Panera Bread trying new pay-what-you-want experiment BY JIM SALTER Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Order a bowl of turkey chili at a St. Louis-area Panera Bread cafe and it'll cost you a penny. Or $5. Or $100. In other words, whatever you decide. Three years after launching the first of five pay-what-you-want cafes, the suburban St. Louis-based chain on Wednesday quietly began its latest charitable venture that takes the concept on a trial run to all 48 cafes in the St. Louis region. The new idea experiments with a single menu item, Turkey Chili in a Bread Bowl, available at each St. Louisarea store for whatever the customer chooses to pay. The new chili uses all-natural, antibioticfree turkey mixed with vegetables and beans in a sourdough bread bowl. The suggested $5.89 price (tax included) is only a guideline. All other menu items are sold for the posted price. Panera calls it the Meal of Shared Responsibility, and says the potential benefit is twofold: Above-the-cost proceeds go to cover meals for

customers who cannot pay the full amount and to St. Louis-area hunger initiatives; and for those in need, the 850-calorie meal provides nearly a day's worth of nutrition at whatever price they can afford. “We hope the suggested donations offset those who say they only have three bucks in their pocket or leave nothing,” said Ron Shaich, founder, chairman and co-CEO of the chain and president of its charitable arm, Panera Bread Foundation. If the experiment works in St. Louis, it could be expanded to some or all of the chain's 1,600 bakerycafes across the country, though Shaich said there is no guarantee and no timetable for a decision. Panera has long been involved in anti-hunger efforts, starting with its Operation Dough-Nation program that has donated tens of millions of dollars in unsold baked goods. The first pay-whatyou-want Panera Cares cafe opened in the St. Louis suburb of Clayton

in 2010. Others followed in Dearborn, Mich., Portland, Ore., Chicago and Boston. At those nonprofit cafes, every menu item is paid for by donations. Kate Antonacci of Panera Bread Foundation said roughly 60 percent of customers pay the suggested retail price. The rest are about evenly split between those who pay more and those who pay less. The Panera Cares cafes generally bring in 70 to 80 percent of what the traditional format stores do, Antonacci said. That's still enough for a profit, and Panera uses proceeds for a job training program run through the cafes. The new idea is fairly low-profile. Shaich said Panera is relying on media reports and word of mouth — no direct marketing, no advertising. Signs in the St. Louis cafes will tout the idea, and hosts and hostesses will explain it to customers. “We don't want this to be self-serving,” Shaich said. “We want to make this an intellectually honest program of integ-

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rity.” Panera isn't alone. A restaurant known as One World Everybody Eats in Salt Lake City adopted the pay-what-you-want idea a decade ago. Cafe Gratitude, a small vegan cafe chain in California, offers a single paymentby-donation menu item each day. Software known as freeware is frequently distributed under this model. The rock band Radiohead released an album, “In Rainbows,” in 2007 and let online buyers decide how much to pay. Humble Bundle releases video games as pay-what-you-want downloads, with a percentage of money going to charity. It doesn't always work. Yogaview, which operates three yoga studios in Chicago, tried a donations-only format at its Wicker Park studio for

nearly two years before turning to a traditional payment method. Coowner Tom Quinn said that while many customers were generous, too many others were not. “You'd get a class with six people and there would be 12 bucks in donations,” Quinn said. “It got frustrating to see how some people weren't owning up to it.” A study published in Science magazine in 2010 found pay-whatyou-want customers will pay substantially more if they know a portion goes to charity. But that same study, led by Leif Nelson of the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business, found that inclusion of a charitable component made people less likely to buy — possibly, Nelson said, because they stressed over the appropriate amount of gener-

osity. “There is some concern that turkey chili will simply become a little less popular,” Nelson said of the Panera experiment. “On the other hand, I think that those who choose to buy it will be reluctant to pay low prices.” Shaich is optimistic based on what he's seen firsthand. He worked at the opening of the Clayton store, making food and waiting on customers. He saw well-to-do frat boys leaving without paying a dime, but more often, he saw people being generous. Even those clearly in need dug into their pockets. “A lot of cynics think Americans are just gaming the system,” Shaich said. “Our experience is very different. People do the right thing and are willing to take care of each other.”


12A • Daily Corinthian

Central topped by 4A Houston BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

A shorthanded Alcorn Central club took it on the chin Thursday, falling to Class 4A Houston 5-2 at Crossroads Regional Park. Central, who had three players out for various reasons, managed to beat the Hilltoppers in girls’ singles and boys’ No. 1 doubles. Anna Bowling rolled to a 6-0, 6-0 win in remaining unbeaten on the season. Central’s other win game in three sets as Reid Price and Jacob Price took a 10-7 decision in the tiebreaker. Alcorn Central will take part in the Tishomingo County Tournament which gets under way this morning. Belmont, Shannon and the host club are also in the field.

Houston 5, Central 2 Boys Singles: (H) Chase Eldridge def. (C) David Hollowell 6-3, 6-3 Girls Singles: (C) Anna Bowling def. (H) Holly Powell 6-0, 6-0 Boys No. 1 Doubles: (C) Reid Price/Jacob Price def. (H) Emmit Dendy/Walt Harrington 6-4, 5-7, 10-7 Boys No. 2 Doubles: (H) Lane Brandon/Ezra Blissard def. (C) Dustin Parker/Tayton Smith 6-3, 6-0 Girls No. 1 Doubles: (H) Paige Griffin/Hannah Welch def.(C) Allie Hughes/Abbey Hollowell 6-2, 6-1 Girls No. 2 Doubles: (H) Cameron Byrne/Brennan Byrne def. (C) Brooke McCoy/Meagan Richardson 6-0, 6-0 Mixed Doubles: (H) MaKayla Pullen/Chapman Boyer def. (C)Katelyn Miller/Brendan Jobe 6-1, 4-6, 11-9

Sports

Friday, March 29, 2013

Lady Warriors top Tish County BY DONICA PHIFER dphifer@dailycorinthian.com

Locked scoreless after four innings, Rebekah Williams put the Lady Warriors on the board with a double hit and set Corinth up for a 2-1 win over the Tishomingo County Lady Braves. The win places the Warriors at 5-0 in Division 1-4A play, and moves their overall record to 11-3 for the season. Stennett Smith recorded seven strikeouts during the game, while Tishomingo County’s Kaitlyn McDuffy earned five. Corinth looked to be in scoring position in the fourth inning, Smith reaching second base on her own hit and running for third off a single by Anna Kayte Webb. A catch at center field caught Smith between bases, and ultimately tagged out back at second base before Portia Patterson and Bailee Kramer each gained the final two outs. Williams doubled signaled hits by Kate Vandiver and Jamia Kirk - Williams advancing to home for the first run on a bad throw towards first base. Vandiver scored on the next play, an error in right field, as Smith was intentionally walked by the Lady Braves.

Photo by Donica Phifer

Corinth pitcher Stennett Smith and first baseman Katie Vandiver combine to catch a batter at first base during the Warriors’ game against Tishomingo County. Corinth came out on top 2-1, to continue their undefeated streak in Division 1-4A with a 5-0 record. TCHS got hits of their own in the sixth inning, Brooke Williams leading off and reaching first base on an error at third. Breeze Knupp’s bunt placed

Williams at second. Miranda McKay and Knupp both found themselves tagged out on a double play by Kramer and Vandiver as Mary Lambert stepped up to deliver

a single towards third base for Williams to place the Braves on the board. The Warriors sat down in Please see WARRIORS | 13A

Lions explode CHS evens mark; Lady Aggies win across the border for division win BY H. LEE SMITH II

lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Biggersville made the most of a change in location. The Lions were down 1-0 before putting up 13 unanswered runs in their five at-bats in run-ruling Jumpertown on Tuesday. Tuesday’s Division 1-1A contest was supposed to be played at Jumpertown, but moved to Alcorn County due to an unplayable field. The April 16 return match -- the league plays a double round-robin, home-and-home schedule -- will now be played at Jumpertown. Matt Hamlin picked up the win allowing just one run and five hits over five innings. Emmanuel Simmons led the Lions’ eight-hit attack with a bunt single and a game-ending home run in the fifth. The next game on the Lions’ schedule is a road trip to Wheeler on Monday. Please see LIONS | 13A

Kossuth move to 3-0 in division play BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Kossuth threw up goose eggs before hiding Easter ones. Carleigh Mills allowed just one run over seven innings as the Lady Aggies downed Booneville 5-1 in a Division 1-3A make-up contest on Wednesday. The team made its final appearance of the week on Thursday when it held its annual Easter Egg hunt. Mills (6-0) struck out 11 as Kossuth moved to 10-3 overall and 3-0 in Division 1-3A play. Kossuth will complete the first half of the double-round robin league schedule with a trip to Belmont on Tuesday. Booneville (4-7, 1-2) got its run in the top of the first. Kossuth took the lead for good with two runs in the second before adding a three-spot in the fourth. Both clubs tallied seven hits. Madison Hales paced Kossuth’s attack with a pair of singles. Madison Davis and Caroline Goodwin led Booneville with two eachs each. Kossuth will play five other games next week. The Lady Aggies travel to Ripley on Thursday before playing four games over the weekend at the Morris Hunter Tournament in Southaven. Please see SOFTBALL | 13A

Shorts BHS celebration Biggersville High School will have a community celebration to honor its 2013 state championship boys’ basketball team on Thursday, April 4th beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the BHS gymnasium. All fans are invited to be Please see SHORTS | 13A

Corinth is now par for the course in its truncated season. The Warriors, who didn’t begin their current golf campaign until after spring break, evened their mark at 2-2 in match play with a four-stroke win at Pontotoc Country Club on Thursday. The Warriors fired a 171, beating out Oxford and Pontotoc in a three-team match. Collin Burns paced CHS and took home medalist honors with a 37. Pontotoc’s Denver Russell carded a 38, but the next lowest score on the host club was 20 shots down the line at 58. • Kossuth trekked across the border to Red Bay, Ala., and returned with one win and a runner-up finish.

The Lady Aggies knocked off the host club by four strokes Thursday at Redmont Country Club. Shebi Barnes paced the winner’s effort with a 53. Ann Seahorn of Red Bay claimed medalist honors with a 57, Belmont and Tishomingo County also played in the event, but didn’t have enough participants to score as a team. Three players are needed in girls’ matches in Alabama. The Aggies finished second in the four-team event, taking the runner-up slot by four strokes over the host school. Belmont claimed the team title with a 192. Devin Sowell led Kossuth (213) with a 49. Red Bay’s Isaiah Jackson was the medalist with a 39, but a pair of 60s at the back end of the four-man

team curbed their chances at winning the match.

At Pontotoc CC

Corinth 171, Oxford 175, Pontotoc 223 CORINTH (171): Collin Burns 37, Chase Little 43, Curtis Dillinger 45, Noah McQueen 46, Bryant Carlton 46. OXFORD (175): Ward Toler 39, Ben Hubbard 42, Turner Arnold 46, Ethan Holmes 48, Beau Ryals 49. PONTOTOC (223): Denver Russell 38, Kaleb Cooper 58, Blake Moody 63, Guy Logan Grubbs 64. Medalist: Burns, Corinth

At Redmont CC, Red Bay, Ala.

(G) Kossuth 169, Red Bay 173 KOSSUTH (169): Shelbi Barnes 53, Alyssa Trulove 55, Shelby Phillips 61. RED BAY (173): Anna Seahorn 47,

Allie Kennedy 62, Kelly Miller 64. TISH COUNTY (n/s): Ally Barnett 59, Zane Riddle 59. BELMONT (n/s): Madison Pearson 70 Medalist: Seahorn, Red Bady

(B) Belmont 192, Kossuth 213, Red Bay 217, Tish County 225 BELMONT (192): Chase Shumaker 45, Hunter McKee 48, Colten McKinney 49, Collin Harris 50, Ken Waddell 55. KOSSUTH (213): Devin Sowell 49, Weston Bobo 53, Luke Lyles 54, Ty Dickson 57, Jacob Meeks 58, Nick Crump 52, Will Phillips 56, Hunter Murphy 56, Blake Shipman 61. RED BAY (217): Isaiah Jackson 39, Tra Elliott 43, Drent Robbins 67, Bryant Nabors 68 TISH COUNTY (225): Johnathan Murphy 50, Dillon Whitlock 52, Tyler Smith 58, Dalton Meador 65, Wesley Brown 66. Medalist: Jackson, Red Bay

Lady Lions win behind Nash’s pitch-perfect game BY DONICA PHIFER dphifer@dailycorinthian.com

BIGGERSVILLE — Taylor Beth Nash pitched a perfect game - sitting down 12 batters in turn during a four-inning 12-0 shutout of Thrasher by the Biggersville Lions. The Rebels kept the game scoreless during the first inning, only Megan Mitchell stepping onto a base from a walk. Rebecca Lee also walked to first, during the second inning, and Elly Nash knocked a single into center field to drive Lee to third base. An error at first advanced Lee to home, putting the Lions up 1-0. Nash struck out two of three batters in the third, before Avery Crump stepped to

the plate for a left field line drive. Crump advanced to second from a missed catch at home, and Jada Tubbs batted Crump in for a 2-0 advantage to close the third inning. Two more batters went out swinging from pitches by Nash, and the Lions moved to put in a 10 run fourth inning. Lucy Lawson started the run with a single, and two walks of Elly and Lee loaded the bases. Lawson garnered a steal of home plate as Bascomb stepped up for a single into left field. Bascomb’s hit prompted a run in from Lee, and an advance towards second base from an error at first.

Another walk by Thrasher, this time to Crump, set up Mitchell with a line drive for Elly to place the Lions 5-0. Taylor Beth grounded out as the next batter, with a run home from Bascomb off a missed throw and a second sprint down the base line by Crump. Up 7-0, Jada Tubbs, Ansley Burns and Elly rounded in additional runs while Lawson punched in a double for a fourth run. Lee provided the final hit, scoring on an error at first base to wrap up the game at four innings. Biggersville will take the weekend off, seeing action again in a road contest with the Wheeler Eagles at 5 p.m. Monday.

Biggersville 12, Thrasher 0 Thrasher 000 0 — 0 0 4 Biggersvillee 011 (10) — 12 10 0

WP: Taylor Beth Nash (5-6). LP: Assad; Multiple Hits: (T) None. (B) Jada Tubbs 2, Lucy Lawson 2, Elly Nash 2. Record: Biggersville 7-4, 2-2 Division 1-1A.

Smithville 5, Kossuth 4 S’ville Kossuth

000 002 3 — 5 000 021 1 — 4

4 1 6 2

WP: Michah McCain. S: Brady Thompson. Multiple Hits: (S) Tyler Hood 2, Cole Williams 2. (K) Matthew Woodruff 2. 2B: (S) Hood. (K) Woodruff 2, Josh Whitaker. 3B: (K) Blake Cain. Record: Kossuth 8-7

Pontotoc 5, Corinth 3 Note: No other information available at presstime.

Marquette victorious over Miami in NCAA tournament Associated Press

WASHINGTON — After sweating through a pair of edge-of-your-seat comebacks, Marquette’s first Sweet 16 victory in a decade was as straight and smooth as the 15-foot step-back jumper that Vander Blue nailed at the end of the first half. It helped that the Golden Eagles ran into an out-ofsorts Miami team that, in an echo of its bus ride to the Verizon Center, was able to make as much headway as a frustrated commuter in rush-hour traffic. Marquette is in the Elite Eight for the first time since 2003, getting there with an emphatic 71-61 win over Mi-

ami on Thursday night. The Golden Eagles were never threatened after taking a double-digit lead in the first half, quite the contrast from their rallies that beat Davidson by one and Butler by two earlier in the NCAA tournament. “It’s fantastic. It feels good not to have to worry about, are you going to lose on a last-second shot or are you going to win on a last-second shot?” said Jamil Wilson, who had 16 points and eight rebounds. “To have a cushion like that, these guys played with tremendous heart, and we did it all game.” Blue, who made the shot that beat Davidson and led the comeback against But-

ler, finished with 14 points. He wasn’t Marquette’s leading scorer, but his offensive and defensive energy pushed the Golden Eagles to a big lead early. It’s a good thing he got his buzzer-beater before halftime — for a change, Marquette didn’t need one at the end of the game. “We’re so used to people not giving us credit. ... That fuels our fire,” Blue said. The third-seeded Golden Eagles (26-8) will face either top-seeded Indiana or No. 4 seed Syracuse in the East Regional final on Saturday, aiming for a spot in the Final Foul for the first time since the 2003 team lead by current Miami Heat star Dwyane Wade. Marquette was

knocked out in the round of 16 the past two years. “after 3 tries in the sweet 16 we finally figured it out. Congrts,” Wade tweeted after the game. This one wasn’t hard to decipher. Marquette could shoot; Miami couldn’t. The Hurricanes (29-7) had sentiment on their side, returning to the arena where coach Jim Larranaga led mid-major George Mason to the Final Four seven years ago, but they made only 35 percent of their field goals and missed 18 of 26 3-pointers. Shane Larkin scored 14 points to lead the No. 2 seed Hurricanes, whose NCAA Please see NCAA | 13A


Scoreboard

Friday, March 29, 2013

LIONS

Pro baseball

At Rupp Arena, Lexington, Ky. Marquette 74, Butler 72 At HP Pavilion, San Jose, Calif. Syracuse 66, California 60 Sunday, March 24 At UD Arena, Dayton, Ohio Indiana 58, Temple 52 At The Frank Erwin Center Austin, Texas Miami 63, Illinois 59 REGIONAL SEMIFINALS Thursday, March 28 Marquette 71, Miami 61 Indiana (29-6) vs. Syracuse (28-9), (n) REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP Saturday, March 30 Marquette (26-8) vs. Indiana-Syracuse winner, TBA

Spring Training glance AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct 24 7 .774 18 9 .667 21 11 .656 18 14 .563 15 12 .556 16 15 .516 16 15 .516 16 16 .500 13 13 .500 15 16 .484 15 17 .469 14 16 .467 14 17 .452 13 18 .419 9 18 .333 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct Atlanta 20 15 .571 San Francisco 15 13 .536 Colorado 16 14 .533 St. Louis 16 14 .533 Arizona 16 15 .516 Philadelphia 16 15 .516 New York 14 14 .500 Chicago 16 18 .471 San Diego 16 18 .471 Washington 14 17 .452 Miami 13 16 .448 Pittsburgh 13 18 .419 Milwaukee 12 17 .414 Cincinnati 11 19 .367 Los Angeles 11 19 .367 NOTE: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against non-major league teams do not. —

CONTINUED FROM 12A

Kansas City Baltimore Seattle Detroit Oakland Cleveland Minnesota Boston Chicago Tampa Bay Texas Houston Toronto New York Los Angeles

Biggersville 13, Jumpertown 1 J’town 100 00 — 1 5 7 BHS 132 43 — 13 8 1  WP: Matt Hamlin. LP: David Phillips. Multiple Hits: (J) Phillips 2, Tyler Moore 2. (B) Emmanuel Simmons 2. 2B: (J) Moore. (B) Jordan Davis, Brooks Bishop. 3B: (B) Tanner Holloway. HR: (B) Simmons

SOFTBALL CONTINUED FROM 12A

Kossuth 5, Booneville 1 Wednesday @ KHS BHS 100 000 0 — 1 7 4 KHS 020 300 x — 5 7 0  WP: Carleigh Mills (6-0). LP: Madison Davis (33). Multiple Hits: (B) Caroline Goodwin 2, Davis 2. (K) Madison Hales 2. 2B: (B) Bre Agnew, Goodwin. Records: Booneville 4-7, 1-2; Kossuth 10-3, 3-0

SOUTH REGIONAL SECOND ROUND Thursday, March 21 At The Palace of Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Mich. Michigan 71, South Dakota State 56 VCU 88, Akron 42 Friday, March 22 At Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia Florida Gulf Coast 78, Georgetown 68 San Diego State 70, Oklahoma 55 At The Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. North Carolina 78, Villanova 71 Kansas 64, Western Kentucky 57 At The Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas Florida 79, Northwestern State 47 Minnesota 83, UCLA 63 THIRD ROUND Saturday, March 23 At The Palace of Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Mich. Michigan 78, VCU 53 Sunday, March 24 At Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia Florida Gulf Coast 81, San Diego State 71 At The Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. Kansas 70, North Carolina 58 At The Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas Florida 78, Minnesota 64 REGIONAL SEMIFINALS Friday, March 29 At Cowboys Stadium, Arlington, Texas Kansas (31-5) vs. Michigan (28-7), (n) Florida Gulf Coast (26-10) vs. Florida (28-7) (n) REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday, March 31 Semifinal winners, TBA

Wednesday’s Games Washington (ss) 11, Atlanta 2 Minnesota 7, Pittsburgh 4 Philadelphia 4, Detroit 1 Toronto 6, Tampa Bay 1 St. Louis 10, Washington (ss) 1 Miami 5, Boston 1 Chicago White Sox 5, Cleveland 4 L.A. Angels 6, Texas 3 Oakland 6, Colorado 5 Milwaukee 9, Kansas City (ss) 1 Cincinnati 7, San Diego 3 Seattle 10, L.A. Dodgers 7 San Francisco 8, Arizona 6 N.Y. Mets 6, Houston 2 N.Y. Yankees 11, Baltimore 8 Kansas City (ss) 9, Chicago Cubs 9, tie, 10 innings Thursday’s Games Atlanta 2, Houston (ss) 0 Houston (ss) 11, Detroit 4 Philadelphia 7, Toronto 2 St. Louis 1, Miami 0 Pittsburgh 2, N.Y. Yankees 1 Washington 5, N.Y. Mets 1 Seattle 6, Chicago Cubs 4 San Diego 6, Cleveland 4 Arizona 9, Texas 3 Kansas City 8, Cincinnati 3 Milwaukee 6, Colorado 2 Baltimore 4, Tampa Bay 4, tie, 10 innings Boston 6, Minnesota 1 L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. Oakland at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m. Today’s Games St. Louis vs. N.Y. Mets at Port St. Lucie, Fla., 11:10 a.m. Tampa Bay vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Boston vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Washington, 1:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz., 2:05 p.m. Toronto at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Houston, 7:05 p.m. San Diego vs. Texas at San Antonio, Texas, 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz., 8:40 p.m. L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. Oakland at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games N.Y. Mets vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 11:05 a.m. Toronto at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m. Detroit at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m. Minnesota vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:35 p.m. San Diego vs. Texas at San Antonio, Texas, 1:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Houston, 1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati (ss) vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz., 2:00 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 2:00 p.m. Seattle vs. Colorado at Salt Lake City, Utah, 2:05 p.m. San Francisco at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Cincinnati (ss) vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz., 3:10 p.m.

WARRIORS CONTINUED FROM 12A

turn with their chance in the batters box, while Tishomingo County looked to tie the game in the seventh inning. Kalee Nash, McDuffy and Josie Hinds all grounded out balls to close the game. The Lady Warriors will take the weekend off before traveling to Booneville for a non-division game on Monday. First pitch is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. â– Alcorn Central defeated Ripley in a 7-0 shutout. The Lady Bears improve to 3-1 in Division 1-3A. Chelsea Buntin earned the win with a no-hitter while the Bears scored all seven runs off Ripley’s closing pitcher. Additional stats were not available at deadline. Â

Corinth 2, Tish County 1 TCHS 000 001 0 — 1 3 1 Corinth 000 020 x — 2 5 2 WP: Stennett Smith (8-3). LP: Kaitlin McDuffy Multiple Hits: (TC) None. (C) None. 2B: (C) Rebekah Williams. Record: Corinth 11-3, 5-0

NCAA CONTINUED FROM 12A

run to the round of 16 matched the best in school history. “I think what we did this year was lay a foundation of what the program could be like,� Larranaga said. “We’re not anywhere near where I would like to be.� Marquette, meanwhile, shot 54 percent, a stark turnaround from its 38 percent rate from the first two games in the tournament. Davante Gardner added 14 points, with 12 coming in the second half when the Golden Eagles were comfortably ahead. Comfortable being a relative term. Coach Buzz Williams, who relishes the Golden Eagles’ underdog status, hardly seemed to know how to take such an easy win. He didn’t look or sound like a winning coach afterward.

MIDWEST REGIONAL SECOND ROUND Thursday, March 21 At Rupp Arena, Lexington, Ky. Louisville 79, N.C. A&T 48 Colorado State 84, Missouri 72 At The Palace of Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Mich. Michigan State 65, Valparaiso 54 Memphis 54, Saint Mary’s (Cal) 52 At HP Pavilion, San Jose, Calif. Saint Louis 64, New Mexico State 44 Oregon 68, Oklahoma State 55 Friday, March 22 At Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia Duke 73, Albany (N.Y.) 61 Creighton 67, Cincinnati 63 THIRD ROUND Saturday, March 23 At Rupp Arena, Lexington, Ky. Louisville 82, Colorado State 56 At The Palace of Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Mich. Michigan State 70, Memphis 48 At HP Pavilion, San Jose, Calif. Oregon 74, Saint Louis 57 Sunday, March 24 At Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia Duke 66, Creighton 50 REGIONAL SEMIFINALS Friday, March 29 At Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis Louisville (31-5) vs. Oregon (28-8), (n) Duke (29-5) vs. Michigan State (27-8), (n) REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday, March 31 Semifinal winners, TBA

WEST REGIONAL SECOND ROUND Thursday, March 21 At EnergySolutions Arena, Salt Lake City Wichita State 73, Pittsburgh 55 Gonzaga 64, Southern 58 Arizona 81, Belmont 64 Harvard 68, New Mexico 62 Friday, March 22 At UD Arena, Dayton, Ohio Ohio State 95, Iona 70 Iowa State 76, Notre Dame 58 At The Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. Mississippi 57, Wisconsin 46 La Salle 63, Kansas State 61 THIRD ROUND Saturday, March 23 At EnergySolutions Arena, Salt Lake City Arizona 74, Harvard 51 Wichita State 76, Gonzaga 70 Sunday, March 24 At UD Arena, Dayton, Ohio Ohio State 78, Iowa State 75 At The Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. La Salle 76, Mississippi 74 REGIONAL SEMIFINALS Thursday, March 28 At The Staples Center, Los Angeles Ohio State 73, Arizona 70 Ohio State (29-7) vs. Wichita St.-La Salle winner, TBA REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP Saturday, March 30 Semifinal winners, TBA

College basketball NCAA tournament glance FIRST ROUND At UD Arena, Dayton, Ohio Tuesday, March 19 N.C. A&T 73, Liberty 72 Saint Mary’s (Cal) 67, Middle Tennessee 54 Wednesday, March 20 James Madison 68, LIU Brooklyn 55 La Salle 80, Boise State 71

EAST REGIONAL SECOND ROUND Thursday, March 21 At Rupp Arena, Lexington, Ky. Butler 68, Bucknell 56 Marquette 59, Davidson 58 At HP Pavilion, San Jose, Calif. California 64, UNLV 61 Syracuse 81, Montana 34 Friday, March 22 At UD Arena, Dayton, Ohio Temple 76, N.C. State 72 Indiana 83, James Madison 62 At The Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas Miami 78, Pacific 49 Illinois 57, Colorado 49 THIRD ROUND Saturday, March 23

FINAL FOUR At The Georgia Dome, Atlanta National Semifinals Saturday, April 6 Midwest champion vs. West champion, 5 or 7:30 p.m. South champion vs. East champion, 5 or 7:30 p.m. National Championship Monday, April 8 Semifinal winners, 8 p.m.

Pro basketball

Daily Corinthian • 13A

NBA standings, schedule EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct x-New York 44 26 .629 x-Brooklyn 42 29 .592 Boston 37 34 .521 Philadelphia 28 43 .394 Toronto 26 45 .366 y-Miami 56 15 .789 x-Atlanta 40 32 .556 Washington 26 45 .366 Orlando 18 54 .250 Charlotte 17 54 .239 x-Indiana 45 27 .625 x-Chicago 39 31 .557 Milwaukee 35 36 .493 Detroit 24 48 .333 Cleveland 22 48 .314 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct x-San Antonio 54 17 .761 x-Memphis 47 24 .662 Houston 39 32 .549 Dallas 35 36 .493 New Orleans 25 47 .347 x-Oklahoma City 53 19 .736 x-Denver 49 24 .671 Utah 36 36 .500 Portland 33 38 .465 Minnesota 25 45 .357 x-L.A. Clippers 49 23 .681 Golden State 41 32 .562 L.A. Lakers 37 36 .507 Sacramento 26 46 .361 Phoenix 23 49 .319 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division ___

Detroit at San Jose, (n) Today’s Games New Jersey at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Anaheim at Chicago, 7:30 p.m. Columbus at Calgary, 8 p.m. Saturday’s Games Boston at Philadelphia, Noon N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, Noon Nashville at Colorado, 2 p.m. Carolina at Winnipeg, 2 p.m. Toronto at Ottawa, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, 6 p.m. Washington at Buffalo, 6 p.m. New Jersey at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Vancouver at Edmonton, 9 p.m. Phoenix at San Jose, 9:30 p.m.

GB — 2½ 7½ 16½ 18½ — 16½ 30 38½ 39 — 5 9½ 21 22

Transactions

GB — 7 15 19 29½ — 4½ 17 19½ 27 — 8½ 12½ 23 26

Thursday’s deals BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES_Placed RHP Chris Tillman on the 15-day DL. Agreed to terms with 2B Tucker Nathans on a minor league contract. Reassigned OF Trayvon Robinson to their minor league camp. BOSTON RED SOX_Placed SS Stephen Drew on the 7-day DL, retroactive to March 27. Optioned RHP Daniel Bard to Portland (EL) and 1B Mauro Gomez and INF Brock Holt to Pawtucket (IL). DETROIT TIGERS_Optioned RHP Bruce Rondon and RHP Luis Marte to Toledo (IL). HOUSTON ASTROS_Assigned RHP Edgar Gonzalez to Oklahoma City (PCL). KANSAS CITY ROYALS_Agreed to terms with RHP Cesar Arreaza and 3B Freddy Sandoval on minor league contracts. Optioned RHP Louis Colemans to Omaha (PCL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS_Assigned RHP Bobby Cassevah outright to Salt Lake (PCL). NEW YORK YANKEES_Agreed to terms with RHP Chris Bootcheck on a minor league contract. Released OF Juan Rivera. TEXAS RANGERS_Assigned LHP Brad Mills outright to Round Rock (PCL). National League CINCINNATI REDS_Released C Miguel Olivo from his minor league contract. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS_Agreed to terms with RHP Adam Wainwright on a five-year contract for 2014-18. SAN DIEGO PADRES_Placed RHP Joe Wieland on the 60-day DL, retroactive to Feb. 26. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS_Signed general manager Brian Sabean and manager Bruce Bochy to three-year contracts. Agreed to terms with RHP Ramon Ramirez on a minor league contract and assigned him to Fresno (PCL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS_Agreed to terms with OF Israel Mota on a minor league contract. Assigned 1B/OF Micah Owings and INF/ OF Carlos Rivero to their minor league camp. American Association WINNIPEG GOLDEYES_Released RHP Andrew E. Walker. Can-Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS_Signed LHP Corey Young. ROCKLAND BOULDERS_Signed RHP Brennan Flick and INF Stephen Cardullo. Frontier League EVANSVILLE OTTERS_Signed 1B Nick Schwaner to a contract extension. GATEWAY GRIZZLIES_Signed LHP Logan Mahon. FLORENCE FREEDOM_Signed RHP Matt Kline to a contract extension. FRONTIER GREYS_Signed LHP Matt Costello. JOLIET SLAMMERS_Traded RHP Jim Schult to the Rockland Boulders of the Can-Am League for a player to be named later. NORMAL CORNBELTERS_Signed RHP Kyle DiMartino to a contract extension. Signed LHP Kyle Demmin. WASHINGTON WILD THINGS_Announced the resignation of Chris Bando as field manager. Named Bart Zeller field manager. WINDY CITY THUNDERBOLTS_Signed RHP Tyler Claburn. Released RHP Andrew Chilcoat. Traded RHP Dustin Williams to the Lincoln Saltdogs of the American Association for a player to be named later. FOOTBALL National Football League BALTIMORE RAVENS_Signed DT Arthur Jones and DE Albert McClellan. CHICAGO BEARS_Signed RB Armando Allen, T Jonathan Scott, LB James Anderson and DB Kelvin Hayden. CLEVELAND BROWNS_Signed QB Jason Campbell and P Jake Schum. HOUSTON TEXANS_Signed RB Greg Jones. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS_Traded DE Clifton Geathers to Philadelphia for FB Stanley Havili. Re-signed OT Jeff Linkenbach. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS_Signed LB Chad Kilgore. Named Brad Childress spread game analyst. MIAMI DOLPHINS_Agreed to terms with DL Vaughn Martin. MINNESOTA VIKINGS_Signed LB Marvin Mitchell. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS_Signed WR Michael Jenkins. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS_Agreed to terms with LB Victor Butler on a two-year contract. WASHINGTON REDSKINS_Signed LB Darryl Tapp. HOCKEY National Hockey League CALGARY FLAMES_Traded F Jarome Iginla to Pittsburgh for the rights to LW Kenneth Agostino, F Ben Hanowski and a 2013 first-round draft pick. COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS_Activated D James Wisniewski from injured reserve. MINNESOTA WILD_Recalled G Matt Hackett from Houston (AHL). Assigned F Jake Dowell to Houston. ST. LOUIS BLUES_Assigned G Brian Elliott to Peoria (AHL) for conditioning. WASHINGTON CAPITALS_Re-signed F Casey Wellman to a two-year, two-way contract. American Hockey League SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGE_Signed F Wade Megan to an amateur tryout contract. COLLEGE ARKANSAS_Announced G BJ Young will enter the NBA draft. BUCKNELL_Signed men’s basketball coach Dave Paulsen to a fiveyear contract extension through the 2017-18 season. CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT_Named Todd Brooks director of athletics. DRAKE_Named Ray Giacoletti men’s basketball coach. IOWA STATE_Announced men’s basketball coach Fred Hoiberg has agreed to a new 10-year contract. MISSISSIPPI_Named Matt Insell women’s basketball coach. N.C. STATE_Announced junior G Lorenzo Brown will enter the NBA draft. PITTSBURGH_Announced RB Rushel Shell is taking a leave of absence from the football team. TEXAS_Announced men’s basketball G Sheldon McClellan will transfer. WAKE FOREST_Announced men’s basketball G Chase Fischer will transfer. WILLIAM PATERSON_Promoted assistant football coach Shaun Williams to defensive coordinator.

Wednesday’s Games Boston 93, Cleveland 92 Charlotte 114, Orlando 108 Philadelphia 100, Milwaukee 92 Atlanta 107, Toronto 88 New York 108, Memphis 101 Chicago 101, Miami 97 Indiana 100, Houston 91 L.A. Lakers 120, Minnesota 117 L.A. Clippers 105, New Orleans 91 Oklahoma City 103, Washington 80 San Antonio 100, Denver 99 Utah 103, Phoenix 88 Sacramento 105, Golden State 98 Brooklyn 111, Portland 93 Thursday’s Games Milwaukee 113, L.A. Lakers 103 Indiana at Dallas, (n) Sacramento at Phoenix, (n) Friday’s Games Washington at Orlando, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at New York, 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Houston at Memphis, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Miami at New Orleans, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Denver, 8 p.m. Utah at Portland, 9 p.m. Saturday’s Games Chicago at Dallas, 1 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta, 6 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Houston, 7 p.m. Memphis at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Charlotte at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Utah, 8 p.m. Indiana at Phoenix, 9 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 9 p.m. Portland at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.

Pro hockey NHL standings, schedule Pittsburgh New Jersey N.Y. Rangers N.Y. Islanders Philadelphia Montreal Boston Ottawa Toronto Buffalo Winnipeg Carolina Washington Tampa Bay Florida Chicago Detroit St. Louis Nashville Columbus Minnesota Vancouver Edmonton Calgary Colorado Anaheim Los Angeles San Jose Dallas Phoenix

EASTERN CONFERENCE GP W L OT Pts GF 35 27 8 0 54 121 33 15 11 7 37 82 32 16 13 3 35 78 34 16 15 3 35 100 33 13 17 3 29 87 33 21 7 5 47 104 32 21 7 4 46 94 33 18 9 6 42 86 35 19 12 4 42 108 33 13 16 4 30 87 35 18 15 2 38 88 32 15 15 2 32 89 33 15 17 1 31 94 33 14 18 1 29 105 34 9 19 6 24 80 WESTERN CONFERENCE GP W L OT Pts GF 32 25 4 3 53 108 33 17 11 5 39 90 32 17 13 2 36 92 33 14 13 6 34 83 33 13 13 7 33 75 32 20 10 2 42 90 33 18 9 6 42 88 32 12 13 7 31 77 32 13 15 4 30 89 32 11 17 4 26 82 33 22 7 4 48 104 32 18 12 2 38 93 32 15 11 6 36 80 32 15 14 3 33 87 33 13 15 5 31 85

GA 84 89 78 110 103 83 72 72 100 102 103 96 93 99 119 GA 71 83 89 88 86 78 85 91 108 104 87 80 82 97 94

Wednesday’s Games Montreal 6, Boston 5, SO Minnesota 4, Phoenix 3, OT Calgary 4, Colorado 3 San Jose 4, Anaheim 0 Thursday’s Games N.Y. Islanders 4, Philadelphia 3, SO Toronto 6, Carolina 3 Pittsburgh 4, Winnipeg 0 Buffalo at Florida, (n) N.Y. Rangers at Ottawa, (n) Phoenix at Nashville, (n). Los Angeles at St. Louis, (n) Columbus at Edmonton, (n) Colorado at Vancouver, (n)

SHORTS CONTINUED FROM 12A

there to take part in the celebration. Â

Tennis tournament The Adamsville High School tennis team is sponsoring a non-sanctioned event open to everyone on April 19-21 at Buford Pusser Memorial Park. Deadline for entry in April 17. For more information or entry forms call Michael Harvill at 731-632-3273 (MondayFriday, Noon-1) or 731239-2434 (after 6 p.m.).

shotgun start will begin at 8:30 a.m. Registration will be from 7:30 -8:30 a.m. with an entry fee of $240 per team. The fee includes cart rental, lunch, door prize drawings and a goodie bag. The tournament is limited to 40 teams. Prizes include $400 for first place and $300 for

second place. To register before the tournament send entry fee (check or money order) to Sundoll Golf Tournament, P.O. Box 6, Chewalla, TN, 38393. â– Habitat for Humanity will host its 2nd annual tournament on April 27 at Shiloh Falls Golf Course. The four-person

Rebel road trip The TriState Rebel Club will host Ole Miss Head Football Coach Hugh Freeze and Athletic Director Ross Bjork on April 26 as part of the 2013 Rebel Road Trip. The event will be

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14A • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

German migrant program offers cautions for US BY ROBERT H. REID Associated Press

BERLIN — In gritty backstreets of Berlin and other major German cities, housewives wearing head scarves shop for lamb and grape leaves. Old men pass the time in cafes sipping coffee, chatting in Turkish and reading Turkish newspapers. More than 3 million people of Turkish origin live in Germany — the legacy of West Germany’s Cold War-era program to recruit temporary foreign labor during the boom years of the 1950s and 1960s when the country rebuilt after World War II. What started as a temporary program has changed the fabric of German urban life — from mosques on street corners to countless shops selling widely popular Doener kebab fast food sandwiches. Germany’s experience with “guest workers� offers lessons for the U.S. as it debates immigration reform, including whether to provide a path to citizenship for unskilled foreign laborers, or whether there should be additional temporary-only visas for such workers. President Barack Obama has urged Congress to begin debate in April af-

ter lawmakers return from a two-week recess. Decades after Germany’s formal guest worker program ended in the early 1970s, the country is still wrestling with ways to integrate Turks — the second biggest group among the estimated 15 millionstrong immigrant community after ethnic Germans who moved from the former Soviet Union and for Soviet bloc countries — into German society. “When you bring people to work, it’s quite hard to tell them to go back one day,� said Goecken Demiragli, a social worker whose grandmother came to Berlin from Turkey in 1968. “That was the biggest mistake: to think that if you don’t need them, they will go.� Initially, the Germans felt they didn’t need an integration path. They foresaw a temporary program of rotating labor, where workers from Turkey, the Balkans and southern Europe would spend a couple of years on an assembly line and then go home to be replaced by others if industry still needed them. But factory managers grew tired of retraining new workers every couple of years and convinced

authorities to allow contract extensions. Many immigrants, especially young Turkish men who faced grinding unemployment at home, opted to stay in Germany, bringing their families and building lives here despite discrimination in education, housing and employment. Although immigrants could stay legally with government-issued residence permits, they could not apply for citizenship for 15 years, although the period has been shortened in recent years. Without fluent German, and state-supported language programs, many were unable to pursue good educations and wellpaying jobs. As a result, the Turkish community remains the least integrated immigrant group in Germany, according to the private Berlin Institute for Population and Development. Immigration critics blame the Turks for refusing to abandon traditions of rural Turkey, failing to learn German and take advantage of educational opportunities. Critics note that more than 90 percent of marriages by ethnic Turks are to other Turks — in part because of cultural restrictions

against marrying outside the Muslim faith. Over the years, the existence of a parallel society of marginalized people speaking a different language and following different religious and social customs has triggered a backlash in a country which only recently has considered itself a nation that welcomes immigrants. Neo-Nazis have focused on the Turks in their campaign against immigration. Next month, the surviving member of a small neo-Nazi cell goes on trial in Munich for allegedly killing 10 people — eight of them Turkish immigrants — over seven years. The cell allegedly got away with the killings for years because police assumed they were the work of Turkish immigrant gangs. Thilo Sarrazin, once a top official of Germany’s central bank, wrote in a 2010 best-seller that immigrants were dumbing down German society and that Turkish and Arab immigrants were reluctant to integrate. The firestorm that followed forced Sarrazin out of his bank post, but his book sold over 1.5 million copies. Others fault successive German governments for

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being slow to recognize the immigration problem and moving only in recent years to put in place programs to combat discrimination, provide German language training and offer a speedier path to full citizenship. “The West German government should have devised comprehensive integration measures as part of family reunification policies but did not,� a 2009 study for the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute. “Consequently, integration problems began to take root in West Germany.� In the meantime, an entire generation grew up feeling estranged, living in urban ghettoes apart from the mainstream and unable to take part in political life. Even welleducated Turks who have assimilated believe that stigma remains alive today. “There’s this categorization ... that you are not the same as the others,� said Demiragli, the social worker, who was born in Germany but did not get citizenship until she was 16. “That is a feeling that grows in you if you do not have strong parents who can support you and give you the feeling that you are still special.� Overt discrimination has abated since the 1970s and 1980s when real estate ads in German newspapers contained phrases like “Only for Germans� or “No Foreigners.� But Turkish residents say subtle barriers remain. “Now it’s more hidden,� said Bekir Yilmaz, head of a Turkish community organization in Berlin. “You look for housing, you make a telephone call, you can speak German well but when you stand in front of the landlord, they say, ‘Oh, the apart-

ment is taken.’� Yilmaz believes the problem has worsened since the 9/11 attacks in the U.S. and the war on terror smeared the image of Muslims. “The West had its enemy in communism but communism is gone. Now it’s the Muslims,� Yilmaz said. “The Turks here are no enemy. They have lived here for years, and their children born here. This has nothing to do with reality.� German attitudes toward immigration and citizenship also proved an obstacle to full and rapid integration. Although attitudes are changing, Germany never perceived itself as an immigrant society like the United States. German society values conformity. Unlike the United States, Germany does not automatically grant citizenship to anyone born on German soil. Even though the naturalization process has been shortened, it still takes years and requires knowledge of the German language and history. In 2000, a new law granted German citizenship to German-born children of longtime legal residents. By age 23, those children must decide whether to keep German citizenship or their parents’ nationality. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government has refused calls from Turkish and other immigrant communities to allow dual citizenship. Many immigrants are reluctant to apply for German citizenship because they want to hold on to their original nationality. “I think we should have a dual citizenship here in Germany,� said Ayvaz Harra, a German citizen of Turkish origin who sells bread in a Berlin market.

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Religion

2B • Daily Corinthian

Friday, March 29, 2013

Worship Call Friends/Family Tour On Thursday April 11 in Savannah, Tenn. at the Hardin County High School auditorium beginning at 7 p.m., JAF Promotions presents, “Friends and Family Tour.” The event will feature the McKameys from Clinton, Tenn. and the Inspirations from Bryson City, N.C. Also appearing will be husband/wife duo, Josh and Ashley Franks. For more information, visit www.joshandashleyfranks.com or call 731-607-1948. Doors will open one hour before concert.

Pastor anniversary Grace Apostolic Church, (located on CR 473, 2-1⁄2 miles south of Biggersville off of Hwy. 45S across from Benjamin’s Grocery), is having its 12th year Pastoral Anniversary service, Friday, April 5 at 7 p.m. The special service will honor pastor, Bro. Charles Cooper and first lady, Sis. Drailee Cooper. Evangelist Bro. Joe Brown will be the visiting minister. Revival services continue through Sunday, April 7.

Easter celebrations ■ In observance of Holy Week, Pickwick United Methodist Church is planning a special event. Tonight, Good Friday will be celebrated in the sanctuary with a Service of Tenebrae or “darkness” or “shadows,” based on a 12thcentury late night/early morning service that commemorates the passion of Christ. The event begins at 6 p.m. Pickwick United Methodist Church is located just south of Pickwick Landing State Park on Hwy. 57. For more information,

The McKameys will be featured Thursday, April 11 at the Hardin County High School auditorium at 7 p.m. as part of the”Friends and Family Tour.” call 731-689-5358. ■ Passion Week services will continue tonight at 7 p.m. at Pleasant Grove-Dennistown Church with the Rev. Blake Scales. The Pleasant Grove-Dennistown church choir will render selections. The theme is “For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness, but unto us which are saved it is the power of God,” 1 Corinthians 1:18. ■ St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 250 Hwy. 2, Corinth has the following Easter schedule: Today, Good Friday -- services at 12 noon and 6:30 p.m. and children’s program at 4 p.m.; and Easter Sunday, March 31 -- Holy Eucharist at 9:30 a.m. with a children’s Easter egg hunt following the service. ■ Rutherford Chapel, CR 755, (eight miles west of Corinth), is having an Easter Egg Hunt, Sunday, March 31. Church services begin at 10:30 a.m. For more information, contact the Rev. Casey Rutherford, pastor at 662-396-1967. ■ Gaines Chapel Meth-

odist Church. 1803 U,S. Hwy. 72 W, is having a Sunrise Service on Easter Sunday, March 31 at 6 a.m. The Rev. Bud Gordon will be the speaker and there will also be special music featured. A light breakfast will follow. The attire is casual. The service will be held in the breezeway. ■ The East Corinth Baptist Church, 4303 Shiloh Rd. in Corinth, is having an Easter Sunrise Worship, Easter Sunday, March 31 at 6:45 a.m. The Rev. Larry Hamlin will bring the Easter Comments. The service will be conducted on the back lawn facing the sunrise.

Men Conference “Joshua’s Men of Integrity and Valor” -- men coming together praising God and making a difference in the church, the home, the city and the community -- will be held Saturday, April 6 at City Road Temple Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, 420 Martin Luther King Dr., Corinth. Registration starts at 8 a.m. and service starts

at 10 a.m. Host pastor is the Rev. Robert D. Fields; Jonthan Bass, pastor of Mt. Nebo C.M.E. with male choir will bring devotion; Lynn Bess, dean of MBSSC will deliver message on Men of Integrity; Wayne Miles, pastor of Mt. Olive M.B. Church with male choir will bring message; and Gabe Jolly, pastor of Hopewell MB. with male choir will deliver commissioning prayer. A seminar will also be presented on blood pressure. For more information, contact the Rev. Fields at 662-871-4970 or any of the Methodist men.

Revival held Kossuth Baptist and Union Baptist Churches will be in revival, April 7-10. Services will be held at 6 p.m., Sunday, April 7 and at 7 p.m., Monday-Thursday. Sunday and Tuesday services will be held at Kossuth Baptist Church; and Monday and Wednesday will be held at Union Baptist Church. Visiting pastor will be Bro. Ed Kennedy from New Liberty Baptist Church in

Grace Apostolic Church is honoring pastor Bro. Charles Cooper and first lady Sis. Drailee Cooper during its 12th year Pastoral Anniversary service Friday, April 5 at 7 p.m. Tishomingo County.

Katenia Fitzgerald.

Gospel meeting

Church reunion

Meigg Street Church of Christ is hosting a Gospel Meeting, SundayTuesday, April 7-9, starting with a fellowship luncheon after morning service on Sunday, April 7. Afternoon service on Sunday will start at 2:30 p.m. with night service Monday and Tuesday starting at 7 p.m. The guest minister is Bro. Larry Ivery from Henderson, Tenn.

The late Bro. R. W. Moore Ministries/Nixon Pentecostal Church 3rd Annual Reunion is being held Saturday. May 4 from 11:05 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. Everyone is asked to bring a covered dish. The reunion will be held at East End Drive SportsPlex in Savannah, Tenn. (Near Wal-Mart). For more information, call 731-2399226, Bro. Pat Chessor.

Singing New ministry Ekklesia Ministries, located at 2066 Tate Street in Corinth will have worship services on Sunday with Development Hour at 9 a.m. and Worship Experience at 11 a.m.; and Insight Bible Study at 7 p.m. on Tuesday. The senior leaders are Dr. Kobee S. And Pastor

The Rev. Howard Wilks and the original voices of Nashville, Tenn. will sing at Adams Chapel Church at 2:30 p.m. on April 8. This is a family group featuring father, daughter and son along with other members. For additional information contact any church member or call 731-6454946 or 731-610-1850.

Story worth telling over again ‘Richest Man in Town’ “In your Easter bonnet, with all the frills upon it…You’ll be the grandest lady in the Easter parade…” The words came to mind this week while I was thinking about all the pretty dresses in the stores these days -- dresses styled especially for little girls and Easter. Funny thing Lora Ann is when I sang Huff the song in my mind, the words Back Porch and tune carried me back to the days of the 1950s, not to Easter but to the memories of our annual spring 4-H Club rallies in downtown Corinth. I don’t remember how many times I attended, maybe just two, but I distinctly recall our Farmington Elementary 4-Hers dressing up in our crisp green and white striped outfits and gathering for a parade down the streets of Corinth. One year we marched to the historic Coliseum Theater where the program consisted of speeches, awards and a talent show where young people performed their best-known talent numbers. The one song that stands out in my mind is “Easter Parade,” done by a few girls with strong voices followed by our local Ronnie Wallace singing songs made famous by Elvis and other male voices of the day.

Afterwards we were treated to a movie to finish out the day. One has to remember kids of that day didn’t participate in as many sports and clubs at school as they do today, so a 4-H rally was a really big deal to us. … And of course, the spring event did add to the excitement of the Easter season with all the frilly dresses and hats, bunnies and candy eggs. I never felt I had to have a brand new dress each Easter, I just wanted to be sure whatever I wore looked like spring and was a celebration that winter was finally over and warm weather was on the way. By the time I was 11 years old, however, the biggest thrill of Easter for me was the excitement of going to church on Sunday morning, smelling the fresh flowers, and hearing the grand story of Christ’s resurrection. I remember pastors whose words painted the picture so well I could see the empty tomb, feel the excitement of the women who found it empty, and experience the chill up my spine at the thought of a Risen Lord walking up and speaking Mary’s name when she didn’t recognize Him through her tears. Now that’s a story worth reading, worth telling, and worth hearing over and over again. It never gets old. The History Channel will complete its series of “The Bible” this Sunday night in which the crucifixion and resurrection

will be depicted. I admit I don’t look forward to the portrayal of the crucifixion -- none of us like to think of the ordeal -- but I never grow tired of seeing any version of the triumphant resurrection. Without that event in history, our lives on earth would be an empty shell of existence with no future to look forward to. With Christ’s resurrection we know there is hope and there is a reason for living -- now and forevermore. If we accept Him and His plan for living, we are never alone regardless of how many darts the enemy throws as us. We win in the end! …As the gospel song says, “Hallelujah! What a Savior!” So while we celebrate spring with all the Easter frills, many memories will fill our minds and hearts, but I hope the greatest joy will come from celebrating a risen Lord who prepared the way for us to have eternal life with Him. Hope you have a happy and very blessed Easter weekend! (Columnist’s note: This is for those of you who have asked before about the date for Mule Day in Columbia, Tenn. -- next week is the big week with the Mule Day Parade being on Saturday, April 6, at 11 a.m. in downtown Columbia. Daily Corinthian columnist Lora Ann Huff is a Wenasoga resident. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)

Pilgrims visit New Mexico shrine under new pope BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS Associated Press

CHIMAYO, N.M. — Tens of thousands of pilgrims are expected during Easter weekend to visit El Santuario de Chimayo, one of the most popular Catholic shrines in the Americas. And this year, pilgrims are coming to this adobe chapel in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains under historic circumstances — the “Lourdes of America” is

now under the first pope from the Western Hemisphere. Just two weeks after Pope Francis was elected, around 50,000 are expected to visit the popular northern New Mexico Catholic shrine, and officials say even more may come because of Argentine-born pontiff. Some pilgrims will make the 90-mile, three-day walk from Albuquerque to the shrine that houses “el pocito,” a small pit

of holy adobe-colored soil that some believe has curing powers. Santa Fe County Sheriff Robert Garcia said patrols have increased Thursday to Sunday for safety as thousands of pilgrims walk along heavily used roads,. For two centuries, Hispanic and Native American pilgrims have made spiritual journeys to El Santuario de Chimayo and often carry along photos of sick relatives and requests for miracles.

possessed rich values

and say “Thank you for Have you ever met shopping with us.” someone that imNot only did he pacted you so much shake their hand he that you literally went looked them in the eye through a change of atand was very sincere in titude and outlook on listening to what the life? Gary customer had to say to There are many people in the world Andrews him. He became so populike this. However, we Devotionals lar among the customare so busy looking at ers that many of them the ones that are successful and that are very vocal would wait in line at his regabout their accomplishments, ister when other lines were we tend to look in the wrong empty. The customers wanted that personal touch and gentle places. Marty, the central char- spirit that Marty handed out. Marty was a Christian and acter in the book “The Richest Man in Town,” written by loved the Lord. What he posV.J. Smith, was such a person. sessed and passed on to others Born before and being raised were the fruits of the Spirit that during the depression gave the Apostle Paul talks about in Marty a wealth of knowledge Galatians 5:22-23, “But the and compassion for his fellow fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, man. Having to leave school dur- goodness, faithfulness, gentleing his ninth grade year to ness and self-control. Against help support his family, Marty such things there is no law.” All of us can learn from the worked for a traveling carnival show and was drafted into the values Marty possessed. All Army when he turned of age. of us that know Jesus Christ He became, as Tom Brokaw as our Lord and Savior have would say, a member of the the Holy Spirit living within greatest generation and served us and these same fruits are his country in the Philippines available for us to use in our daily lives. It doesn’t matter and Japan. Marty didn’t have a lot of how much money we have, material things but had the how strong we are, or how well blessings of a loving wife and we are known in the commufour children. After WWII he nity; all we need are the fruits worked in newspaper shops of the Spirit and no one can for the better part of 42 years. ever take that away. Prayer: Lord God, thank you When he retired he wanted to stay active and went to work for your love and for sending at Wal-Mart as a greeter. He the Holy Spirit to live within became so popular that Wal- me. Amen. (Daily Corinthian columMart moved him into a canist and Corinth native Gary shier’s position. Marty never got in a hurry Andrews is retired after 35 to get customers out of his line years in the newspaper and and after every sale he would magazine business. He may walk around the counter and be contacted at gary@gadeshake the customer’s hand votionals.com.) Suggested daily Bible readings: Sunday -- John 15:12-14; Monday -- 1 John 3:16-20; Tuesday -- Romans 8:28-30; Wednesday -- Colossians 3:1214; Thursday -- Habakkuk 3:18; Friday -- Proverbs 15:9; Saturday -- Philippians 4:4-7


Daily Corinthian • Friday, March 29, 2013 • 3B

Community Events Easter egg hunt An Easter egg hunt & brunch will be held on Saturday, March 30 beginning at 9:30 a.m. at Chewalla Baptist Church. Children need to bring 12 plastic candyfilled eggs with them for the hunt. There will be a scavenger hunt for the older children.

Breakfast with bunny ■ The Alcorn County 4-H Mod Squad is sponsoring a Breakfast with the Easter Bunny on Saturday, March 30 from 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. at the Alcorn County Extension Center Building (behind the Crossroads Arena). Breakfast tickets will be available at the door and are $6. There will be food, games and fun Easter crafts for the kids to make and take. The Easter bunny will be at the event and available for anyone who wants a picture, so bring a camera. He will also have lots of treats for everyone. ■ Breakfast with the Easter Bunny is being offered at the Walnut Community Center from 7:30-10:30 a.m. on Saturday, March 30. Adult breakfast is $6 and includes pancakes, sausages and drink; and child’s breakfast is $3 and includes pancake, sausage and drink. Bring a camera to take pictures with the Easter Bunny. All proceeds go to Relay for Life.

Activity center Bishop Activity Center, Corinth is having the following activities for the week of April 1-5: Monday – Alliance Hospice for Bingo and Penny Auction; jigsaw puzzles, quilting, table gams, Rolo Golf and open discussion; Tuesday – outing to Tate Baptist

Church to exercise, table games, quilting, puzzles and open discussion; Wednesday -- bible study with Trey Wayne from Oakland Baptist Church, Rolo Golf, table games and open discussion; Thursday – pet therapy from the animal shelter, Bingo, arm chair exercises, games and open discussion; and Friday – grocery shopping at Roger’s grocery store, crafts, puzzles, games and open discussion. Senior citizens, age 60 and above, are welcome and encouraged to attend. A variety of activities for everyone is offered.

Drama presented Corinth Theatre-Arts’ upcoming production “Whose Life Is It Anyway?” is a drama that examines health care and end-of-life decisions when a sculptor is paralyzed in a car wreck and doesn’t want medical technology to stay alive. Performances are 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, April 12-13, and 2 p.m. Sunday, April 14, at the Crossroads Playhouse, 303 Fulton Drive, Corinth. Tickets – $6 for students and $12 for adults – are on sale at the Playhouse during business hours, 1-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, by calling 662-287-2995 and at the door as available. This play has earned CT-A’s Second Stage designation. It is rated “restricted” for mild language and mild adult content and is not recommended for children. For more information, call CT-A at 662-2872995 or visit the CT-A website at corinththeatrearts.com.

Photo contest The 2013 AiM Photo Contest Kickoff Sympo-

sium - Featuring Shiloh Eagle Photographers is April 6 from 12-3 p.m. at the Latta Theater at McNairy Co. Visitor’s and Cultural Center. The symposium is open to any photographers who would like to share their work and photography methods at this come and go event. During the event, there also will be an opportunity to travel with a group of photographers to the Shiloh National Military Park to photograph the eagles and their nesting site. AiM is requesting any photographer who would like to share their images of local nature, especially from McNairy County and the Shiloh National Park area, to submit “full-quality” images to be shown at via PowerPoint at the event by March 31 to info@artsinmcnairy.com. The 2013 AiM Photography Contest is also underway. Contest is open to entrants of all ages who have a connection to McNairy County, TN; those who have resided or whose family have resided in McNairy County or surrounding counties at some point. The Visual Arts Committee will have entry forms and answer questions at the April 6 event. For more information, call Paige Holmes at 731-4392891. The contest will culminate with a gallery reception and awards ceremony on Saturday, July 13 from 2-4 p.m. at the McNairy County Visitors and Cultural Center. Photo entries will be accepted until May 10 by mail at P.O. Box 66, Selmer, TN 38375. Drop entries excepted only on May 11-15 (excluding Sunday, May 12) at the McNairy County Visitor’s and Cultural Center from 8:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.

ATTENTION all Old and New

Live Bunny Photos Bunny Day will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery. As part of her Capstone Project for the Montgomery Leadership Program at Mississippi State University, Laura Newberry will have her bunny “Lucy” at the gallery for pictures. For a donation to the gallery, families can have their children’s photos made with “Lucy.” People need to bring cameras and a Spring backdrop will be available.

Easter park fun The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department is hosting a Community Egg Hunt at noon on Saturday, March 30 at Crossroads Regional Park. There will be 3,000 Easter eggs hidden, plus candy, prizes, live entertainment, prayer and a visit by the Easter Bunny. Children can have their photos taken with the Easter Bunny, courtesy of Walgreens in Corinth. Age groups are 0-3, 4-6, 7-10 and special needs. Parents may assist the 0-3 age group. For additional information, contact J.C. Hill at 662293-0290.

Art exhibit A joint showing by three northeast Mississippi artists is feature at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery, 507 Cruise St., Corinth, through March 30. “The Three Painters” exhibit includes works by former Northeast Mississippi Community College art instructor Judy Tucci, Mooreville resident Rhonda Grammar and Tupelo resident Bruce Bigelow. All three artists’ works include northeast Mississippi landscapes and showcase three mediums -- pastel, oil and

watercolor. The gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and by appointment. Call 665-0520 for more information.

Welcome Center Alcorn County Welcome Center is observing Arts and Literature Month during March. There will be displays and handouts on different art galleries and art museums throughout the state. There will also be a display of artwork on loan from the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery and information on their downtown location. There is a display featuring books by Mississippi authors such as John Grisham, Eudora Welty and Shelby Foote.

Big Bass Classic The $15,000 Fifth Annual Pickwick Big Bass Classic to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital will be held Saturday, March 30 at J.P. Coleman State Park. Pick your partner and registration is $190 per boat. The Big Fish Tournament will have hourly weigh-ins and $1,950 paid out every two hours. Big fish of the day catch gets $5,000 and big smallmouth bass catch for the day gets $1,200. Signup on online at www.pickwickbigbassclassic.blogspot.com or contact Chris Morlok at 901-604-6274.

Nominations The Corinth High School Alumni Association are now seeking nominations for two of its annual awards. Each year the CHS Alumni Association selects one living (current or past) faculty member and one deceased faculty member to honor. This will be

the sixth year the Alumni Association has given scholarships to graduating CHS seniors. Nomination forms must be in by March 31 by mail or email. The group has also launched a new website at corinthhighalumni.net. For more information contact Callie Emmons at 415-2206 or by email at calumni@yahoo.com.

‘Chronic conditions’ UT Extension and McNairy County Health Department are partnering to offer a program to help improve health – one step at a time. “Living Well with Chronic Conditions” is a fun, skill-building program designed for people with chronic disease or their family members (e.g. asthma, COPD, arthritis, depression, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, obesity and fibromyalgia). This six week class is being offered every Wednesday at McNairy County Health Department at 10 a.m. This program is free and begins April 3 and concludes May 8. For more information and to register, contact Kristie Teague at 731645-3474, ext.122.

Prayer breakfast The American Legion Post 6 is hosting a prayer breakfast every Wednesday at 7 a.m. Sausage, biscuits and coffee will be served. A devotional will be given by a different speaker each Wednesday. The prayer breakfasts are being held at the American Legion Building on Tate St. in Corinth. You don’t have to be a post member to attend. For more information, call 462-5815. Please see EVENTS | 4B

WE NEED Community Sparkplugs to Make an Investment in Your Town! The Appalachian Regional Commission - in partnership with the Mississippi Development Authority – invites you to participate in the Appalachian Community Learning Project. We are looking for individuals and volunteer organizations that are ready to make improvements in their community that result in immediate gains for residents and businesses.

Community Sparkplugs: • Want to help the community • Are volunteers • Have the energy and enthusiasm to put an idea into practice • Are ready to make a change • Interested in achieving results • Know people who share your passion and can help with your project • Need a little support and seed money to get things started YOU may be eligible for a small grant up to $3,000 that can make a big difference in your community: • No extensive application process • Training and support to create an action plan to implement your idea • Ongoing technical assistance • Short project duration of 6 months delivers results fast • Opportunity to share your knowledge and experience with other communities • Build community capacity to do more

es r Pri z o o of D n *Lots t Auctio n e l *Si od e Fo *Fre

Tuesday April 30th 6 pm-8 pm Crossroads Arena $10.00 per person For more information or to reserve your spot call Denise Mitchell at 662-287-6111 A money raised goes to Relay for Life All sponsored by:

& M&M Girls

INFORMATION SESSIONS TO BE HELD IN April 2013 Join us for one of the Information Sessions to learn more about how you can obtain a grant to implement your idea and make the improvements you want to see in your community. April 16, 2013 – 6:00 p.m. East Mississippi Community College CMTE Building 8731 S. Frontage Road, Mayhew, MS

April 17, 2013 – 10:00 a.m. Itawamba Community College Belden Center 3200 Adams Farm Road, Room 509 Belden, MS 38826

To register, email kburleson@mississippi.org or call 662-844-1184 for more information. Registration deadline is April 8, 2013, and space is limited to 30 participants in each session.


4B • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Community Events Registrations held Kindergarten registration for Alcorn Central Elementary School is being held Thursday, April 4 from 1-5 p.m. and Kindergarten registration for Kossuth Elementary School is being held Thursday, April 4 from 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. On this day, a basics skills test will be given, so child must accompany parent to registration. The following is needed to register child at both schools: birth certificate, Social Security card, Mississippi shot record (121 form) that is marked complete for school, two proofs of address (i.e. light bill, water bill, rent or house payment receipt, car registration, phone bill) -- 911 form or driver’s license not eligible and any court documents pertaining to child’s custody. â– The Alcorn School District Title I PreKindergarten Academy registration for the 2013-2014 school year is being held at the two campuses where the program is currently offered, Glendale Elementary and Rienzi Elementary. If you did not attend registration, â–

please contact the school office. Registration is open until May 15, 2013. To participate in the program, students must be 4 years old on or before Aug. 31. Students must be potty trained (no pull-ups permitted) and parents/guardians must be able to provide transportation. Required documents for enrollment: original up-to-date MS Immunization Certificate (Form-121), certified birth certificate, Social Security card, two proofs of residency with the Alcorn School District. Registration applications and information are available online at www.alcorn.k12.ms.us. For more information, contact Glendale Elementary School at 662-286-2734, Rienzi Elementary School at 662-462-5214 or Denise Webb-Harrell at 662-286-3202.

Karaoke/dance VFW Post No. 3962 hosts a Karaoke Night every Friday at the post on Purdy School Rd. in Corinth. Karaoke begins at 8 p.m. with music by D.J. Lanny Cox. Lanny Cox also provides music at the VFW on Saturday

Dance Night which begins at 8 p.m.

and share their goods.

Bluegrass festival ‘Just Plain Country’  Just Plain Country performs at the Tishomingo County Fairgrounds in Iuka every Saturday from 7-10 p.m. Good family entertainment.

Chili Cook-off The Crossroads Museum opens the 5th annual season of Green Market at the Corinth Depot on Saturday, April 6 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the C.A.R.E. Garden green space, 221 N. Fillmore St., Corinth. Opening day coincides with the Crossroads Chili Cook-off, Mississippi’s state championship for the International Chili Society. Competitors will have samples of their chili recipes available for tasting for a $5 charge with all proceeds benefiting the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter. The Green Market at the Corinth Depot is an opportunity for local artisans, farmers, gardeners and craftsmen to sell their wares in an open-air, grassroots setting. The market encourages buying locally and is a place for residents and visitors to gather

’

A.T.

rille 2052 East Shiloh Rd • Corinth, MS 662.284.0668 Breakfast ~ Lunch Monday - Saturday 5:30 am to 2:00 pm

Daily & Nightly Specials Thursday, Thur sday, Friday & Saturday 4:00 pm ~ 9:30 pm

Steak • Fish • Shrimp • Chicken Call In Orders Welcome Convenient Drive-thru Window

The 7th Annual Alcorn County Bluegrass Festival is being held Saturday, April 6 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the American Legion Building on Tate St. in Corinth. Admission at the door is $5. Band line-up includes the Courthouse Pickers, the Hatchie Bottom Boys, Savannah Grass, Shady Valley, Smokehouse Band and Goodtime Grass. Concessions available. Proceeds to the Alcorn County Relay for Life. For more information, contact Lanell Coln at 662-212-2303 or lanellcoln@hotmail.com.

Jacinto Cemetery The Jacinto Cemetery Committee will have its regular Spring annual meeting at 9 a.m. on Saturday, April 6 at the Jacinto Volunteer Fire Department. For more information contact committee president Robert Chase at 4627374.

‘The Right Bite’ UT Extension and Selmer Senior Center will hold a free class for diabetics and their fam-

ily members. The class will include a cooking demonstrations and educational information by a registered dietitian. Participants will learn recipes on how to prepare healthy meals without cutting taste and have the opportunity to taste a variety of dishes. The class will be on Tuesday, April 9 at 5:30 p.m. at the Selmer Senior Center. To register or for more information, contact UT Extension at 731-6453598.

Museum contest The Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society is looking for the best shots of Tishomingo County for the TCHGS Photo Contest fundraiser. All money made in the contest will go to the Old Courthouse Museum. Photos can be mailed or submitted at the Old Courthouse Museum on

Quitman Street in Iuka through April 30. There are 12 categories in all: people; animals (pets, wildlife, etc.); architecture (houses, sheds, barns, churches, etc.); Native American; Civil War; boating/fishing; nature/ landscape; foliage/flowers; sunrise/sunset; snow; historical landmarks; and cars, motorcycles, etc. The overall winner will receive $250. All 12 categories will have 1st, 2nd and 3rd place certificates and ribbons. Photos don’t have to be recent, but they must be taken in Tishomingo County. Entry fee is $5 per Entry forms are available at www.tishomingohistory.com. For more information contact Opal Lovelace at 850-624-0776 or the Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society at 662-4233500.

Make Daily Corinthian YOUR newspaper. Comitted to the coverage, presentation and emphasis on LOCAL news.

662-287-6111

news@dailycorinthian.com

EXPRESS DVD NOW

THE WAREHOUSE

24 Hour Curb Service $1.20 per day

(Next to Subway)

New Releases 3-26-13 LINCOLN KILLING THEM SOFTLY PARENTAL GUIDANCE

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New and Almost New Furniture You Won’t Believe Our Prices 12 Months Same as Cash

*TYPE THE WORD “FREE� IN THE PROMOTION CODE BOX AT THE BOTTOM OF THE SCREEN AND RECEIVE 1 NIGHT’S RENTAL FREE ON 1 MOVIE. LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER VALID THROUGH MARCH 31, 2013

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Legal Scene Your Crossroads Area Guide to Law Professionals ) ($ ) *

/ )

$

Odom and Allred, P.A. Attorneys at Law

) - - ( ' "

# )( !* () *& !

/

* *

/ #

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( ! & % Serving Northeast Mississippi’s legal needs...

" ! $ $ ! # v (Payment Plans available) ! " ! % ! ' $ & % " $ "! ! " ! v # " ( # " ! $ v " "! $ " !

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John O. Windsor A T T O R N E Y

Bankruptcy * Criminal Defense * Personal Injury

401 E. Waldron St. Corinth, MS

Call for an appointment:

662-872-0121

Contact Laura Holloway at 662-287-6111 ext. 308 to advertise your Law Firm on this page.

404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS _________________________________________ ' 3

- 1 / 2 1 * ' 0 / 1 . 2 & & 2

662-286-9311 William W. Odom, Jr. Rhonda N. Allred Attorney at Law Attorney at Law bodom43@bellsouth.net rallred@bellsouth.net ___________________________________________ &'& # $ ) #(& , ! "' #" & # $ ' # & "#' " ' ", ' ' #" # +$ ' & ' "

* ' " , * $ $ #$ # (" ' " ($' , # #(" " # ! ' #" ) ($#" %( &'

Contact Laura Holloway at 662-287-6111 ext. 308 to advertise your Law Firm on this page.


Daily Corinthian • Friday, March 29, 2013 • 5B

From Everyone at the

Income Tax From TAX GUIDE 2013

Everyone Holder Accounting Firm

1407-A Harper Road Corinth, Mississippi 38834 Kellie Holder, Owner There are several changes to our taxes for 2012. Our staff is ready to help you. Open year-round. Thank you for your business and loyalty. Telephone: 662-286-9946 Fax: 662-286-2713

at the TOMLINSON

Advertise Your Tax Service Here for $95 A Month Call 287-6147 for more details

Free Electronic Filing with paid preparation. Fully computerized tax preparation. • Authorized IRS-Efile Provider Office hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-8pm • Individual, Corporate & Partnership Sat. 9am-5pm • Sun. By appt. only • More Than 25 Years Tax Service 2003 Hwy 72 E, Corinth, 662-286-1040 • Open year-round (Old Junkers Parlor) Hours: 8-6 M-F Sat. 8-12 508 W. Chambers St., Booneville, 1604 S Harper Road- Corinth 662-728-1080 662-287-1995 1210 City Ave., Ripley, 662-512-5829

ACCOUNTING

Advertise Your Tax Service Here for $95 A Month Call 287-6147 for more details

Advertise Your Tax Service Here for $95 A Month Call 287-6147 for more details

Services

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE RUN YOUR AD FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH ON THIS PAGE (Daily Corinthian Only 165)

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community Profiles $

CHIROPRACTOR

Lee’s

L aw n

Service

SOUTHERN HOME SAFETY, INC. TOLL FREE 888-544-9074 or 662-315-1695

www.southernhomesafety.com

Dr. Jonathan R. Cooksey Neck Pain • Back Pain Disc Problems Spinal Decompression Therapy Most Insurance Accepted Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5 3334 N. Polk Street Corinth, MS 38834 (662) 286-9950

Loans $20-$20,000

Lee Hinton 662-665-2010 FREE ESTIMATES 40 Years

Remodeling or New Construction

KITCHEN & BATH CABINETS Produced daily at our modern plant in Corinth Industrial Park

We have the BEST Values for your Kitchen and Bathroom Cabinets Just bring your measurements and we will help you with the rest!

Raised Panel Oak Flat Panel Oak MDF white or black (Prefinished or Unfinished)

One of the state’s largest dealers in kitchen counter tops Formica or Granite

SMITH CABINET SHOP 1505 South Fulton Dr. • Corinth, MS

662-287-2151

w

n d n e ra d, b u t a b ett e r! go o

is e Lif ven b

e c an m a k e it ol p o

Pools " Spas " Patios " Decks " Waterfalls

! Fountains CO. THOMPSON TODD 901/277-8633

Metro Racing Pigeon Club

HOUSE FOR SALE

COME RACE WITH US! Gary Gasaway, President 662-424-0918 Steve Mitchell, Race Sec. 731-394-8838 Charlie Moore, Sec./Treas. 662-286-8475 Martin Bedolla, V.P. 662-567-7609 (EspaĂąol)

“Let us help with your project� “Large or Small� Bill Jr., 284-6061 G.E. 284-9209

Smith Discount Home Center

• Carports • Vinyl Siding • Room Additions • Shingles & Metal Roofing • Concrete Drives • Interior & Exterior Painting FREE ESTIMATES 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE FULLY INSURED 731-689-4319 JIMMY NEWTON

HOME REPAIRS & ADDITIONS

Auto Inspection Station

★ ★ ★ALL-STARS ★

Auto Glass Service, Inc. • Metal roofs • Shingle roofs, • Flooring • Electrical • Sheet Rock All other other aspects of home repair & renovation Mike, 662-212-3287 Roy, 770-355-3945

“45 years combined experience�

Specializing in Repairs and Replacements Insurance Approved

Jack Jones or Matt Jones

Mobile Service Available P. O. Box 1046 203 Hwy. 72 West Corinth, MS 38834-1046 (662)665-0050 Fax (662) 286-8985 1-888-270-9128

“White & Black Bookcases Available Now!�

112

Hinkle community. 807 CR 518, Rienzi MS 38865. 5 BR, 3 BA, 3 acres. $155,000 Farmers & Merchants Bank 662-720-4580

RUN YOUR AD IN THE COMMUNITY PROFILES

We will have 6 Old Bird Races Prizes will be sponsored by: ROY’S FEEDS LOWE’S BROSE AUTOPLEX CROSSROADS AUTOMOTIVE

Structure demolition & Removal Crushed Lime Stone (any size) Iuka Road Gravel Washed gravel Pea gravel Fill sand Masonry sand Black Magic mulch Natural brown mulch Top soil

ON THIS PAGE FOR

$ 95 Air Compressors ...... Huge Selection of Area Rugs $ (8’ x 11’) .........................Starting at $ 95 4 x 8 Masonite 8� oc .. st. $ 95 5/8-T1-11 siding ................ $ 95 Foil Back Foamboard 1/2�...

129 18 15 5 $ 95 Foil Back Faomboard 3/4� 6 $ 95 Foil Back Foamboard 1� 8 $ 1x6 & 1x8 White Pine Pattern 50000 Board ...

.....

...

1,000 Board Ft.

100 $ 00 Vinyl Floor Remnants 1 $ 95 CROSSTIES 6 $ 95 25 Year 3 Tab Shingle 54 Exterior Astro Turf

....

$

sq. yd.

.....

......................................

...

35 Year Architectural

6295 ¢-$ 09 Laminate Floor From 39 1 $ 00-$ Pad for Laminate Floor 5 1000 $ Handicap Commodes 6995 $ Round Commodes 4995 Shingle .............................................

$

ONLY $200 A MONTH (DAILY CORINTHIAN ONLY $165.00). CALL 662-287-6147 FOR DETAILS.

.......

...........

12 x 12 Celotex Ceiling (40Sq Ft) ............................................................

3995

$

box

Don’t Waste Your Money... Shop With Us!

$1,000,000 LIABILITY INSURANCE

• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975 • LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY (NO SECONDS) • METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE, SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS & DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133 662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

RUN YOUR AD IN THE DAILY CORINTHIAN & COMMUNITY PROFILES ON THIS PAGE FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH (DAILY CORINTHIAN ONLY $165.00). CALL 662-287-6147 FOR DETAILS. OPEN HOUSES

Saturday, March 30 • 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.

3701 Thornwood Trail

44 CR 117 39 CR 119

SMITH CABINET SHOP

For more info call Bailey Williams Realty at 662-286-2255 or visit www.corinthhomes.com

1505 South Fulton Dr. • Corinth, MS

662-287-2151 RUN YOUR AD IN THE Allen Pools 79 State Line Rd. DAILY CORINTHIAN & Michie, TN 38357 COMMUNITY PROFILES 731-239-5500

...

...

JIMCO ROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BID ALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

TORNADO SHELTERS Large full size 6x12 tall x 6’9� concrete

1299 Hwy 2 West (Marshtown)

412 Pinecrest Road 287-2221 • 287-4419

DAILY CORINTHIAN &

CLUB MEMBERSHIP DRIVE

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

HOME REPAIRS

23 yrs. of Local Service Let us help you with your pool problems or if you are planning a new pool, in ground & above ground.

Thanks

Randy Cell 662-286-1622 Andy 662-643-4389 Shop 731-239-5500

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

ON THIS PAGE FOR

ONLY $200 A MONTH (DAILY CORINTHIAN ONLY $165.00). CALL 662-287-6147 FOR DETAILS.

Licensed & Bonded

• Bucket Truck Service • Backhoe

662-396-1023 JASON ROACH-OWNER R 1159 B CR 400 Corinth, MS 38834


6B • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

0515 Computer

0868 Cars for Sale

2013 HONDA ODYSSEY EX

Are youÂ? Â? having Â? Â?  ­ computer problems? Â? €  We can help. Is your Â? Â? important data ‚  secure? We offer Â? an ƒƒ off-site backup for you. ƒƒ­ € „Â? ƒ Call for details and Â? Â? ƒ pricing.

2013 HONDA CRV LX, 2WD

39 $361

or

month

60 months

0 $ 0 $ 0 $ 0 $

vs

$299

0.9%

or

Security deposit Due at lease signing

or

month

2013 HONDA PILOT EX

$379

1 1 1.9% 0.9% 60 months

ADMINISTRATIVE PROFESSIONALS OR SECRETARY’S DAY IS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 2013

Give your Secretary a Special Salute to His/Her Special Day! Ad Will Be In Color You may put up to 5 lines (approx. 25 words) for $35.00 (with or without picture)

1.9% 60 months

Deadline is Friday, April 19, 2013 by 12 Noon You may •Call 662-287-6147 •Email to classad@dailycorinthian.com •Mail to Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835 •Bring to 1607 S. Harper Rd., Corinth

2013 HONDA ACCORD LX or

1604 S. Harper Rd., Corinth, MS 38834

4 door, Automatic

$239

0.9% 60 months

month

$278 month

www.houseofhondatupelo.com

or

 Â? Â

Â

Â?

2013 HONDA CIVIC LX

First month’s payment

 ­­Â€ Â? Â?  ­­Â€ Â?‚ƒ Â?  Â€ ƒ „ …‚ Â?  ­Â€Â€

Â

www.tomlinsoncomputers.com

month

Down payment

1.9% 60 months

628 South Gloster Tupelo, MS 842-4162 1-888-892-4162

DOSSETT BIG 4 House of Honda

WAC thru american honda finance. all payments plus tax. title, inspection. Excludes tax, title, license & dealer fees (for well-qualified customers)

0840 Auto Services

GUARANTEED Auto Sales

Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad.

864 470 868 868 868 TRUCKS/VANS FARM/LAWN/ AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES SUV’S GARDEN EQUIP.

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

2005 Nissan Altima, 2.5 S, black, 4-dr. sedan,

$8850.

662-808-3863 or 287-7424.

2006 Chrysler 300 LX, V-6, 4-dr., 72k miles. $10,000 obo. 662-594-1441.

4-dr., 41,000 miles, dark blue ext. & gray int., 4 cyl. auto., CD/ XM radio, 36 mpg. payoff is

$11,054

731-610-7241

2007 GMC 3500 2 WD, 175k miles, 6-spd., auto., $18,000; 2013 PJ 40’ Gooseneck trailer.

$12,000. 662-415-1804

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

2004 MERCURY MONTEREY

fully loaded, Prem Pkg. Minivan, customized w/electric scooter, lift/ hoist, auto. doors, locks, windows, A/C, clean w/new tires., 80,578 mi.

$10,000 OBO Call or text 956-334-0937

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

1967 CHEVY Needs paint & body work $4000. 504-952-1230

816 816 RECREATIONAL RECREATIONAL VEHICLES VEHICLES

2006 Wildcat 30 ft. 5th wheel

camper, 2 slides, fiberglass ext., awning, holding tanks, full sofa sleeper, refrig., micro., glass shower, recliner, sleeps 6,

$18,500

662-223-0056. REDUCED

2001 Mitsubishi Mirage Silver, cold air, 4-dr., 180k miles,

804 BOATS

$2500 obo. 662-415-3098

1998 Lincoln Mark VIII Champagne color, 98,500 miles, dealer installs suspension upgrade, CD changer in trunk.

Imagine owning a likenew, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a High Five stainless prop, $

for only 7995.

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER, RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP, 24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$7,900.

662-808-0113.

ALUMA CRAFT 14’ BOAT, 40 H.P. JOHNSON, TROLLING MTR., GOOD COND., INCLUDES TRAILER,

$1200 OBO OR WILL TRADE. 731-6108901 OR EMAIL FOR PICS TO

AYLASISCO@GMAIL.COM

1984 CORVETTE 383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum. heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt w/new paint job (silver fleck paint).

$9777.77 Call Keith 662-415-0017.

120K Miles, V-6, Auto., Cd, Leather, Power Sunroof, Loaded.

$7250

662-665-1995

$4000 obo. 662-415-6650

REDUCED!

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

2006 BUICK LACROSSE

‘65 FORD GALAXIE 500,

4dr sedan, 390 Eng., 4 bbl. carb, no broken glass, good paint, good tires, cast alum. wheels, new brake sys., everything works exc. clock, fuel gauge & inst. lights,

$2200

731-439-1968.

2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA 19,800 miles, garage kept w/all service records, 38 mpg, tinted windows & XM radio. Asking $17,500. 662-594-5830.

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

maroon, sunroof, approx. 160k miles.

2010 HONDA CIVIC 55,000 miles, 4 cyl., auto. CD, power windows, great gas mileage.

$3250 662-415-6008

$9950. 662-665-1995

1984 CHRYSLER LEBARON convertible, antique tag, 39,000 actual miles.

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new leather seat covers, after market stereo, $3250 obo.

$5000

286-2261

REDUCED

2006 GMC YUKON Exc. cond. inside & out, 106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front & rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded

$13,995

662-286-1732

1999 CHEV. TAHOE 4 W.D., leather seats, cold air, hitch on back.

$6250 OBO.

287-7403

340-626-5904.

2007 Ford F-150

extended cab, new tires, all power, towing pkg.

$7300

662-415-8553

1985 1/2 TON SILVERADO

305 ENG., AUTO., PS, PB, AC, NEEDS PAINT, READY TO RESTORE, DRIVEN DAILY. REDUCED

$3,000

287-1213 AFTER 4 P.M.

stick, camouflage, 186,200 miles (mostly interstate driving), runs good. $3000 obo.

662-607-9401

2000 Ford F-350 super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc. drive train, 215k miles, exc. mechanically w/body defects.

$7800.

662-664-3538.

2005 Ram “Lone Star� Edition 1500 P/U, 4-dr., all power,

$9,995 1 other SUV for $6,700.

Call 731-239-9226 Today.

2004 Ford F350 work truck, V10, underbed tool boxes, towing package, DVD. $8600 obo. Truck is in daily use. Please call for appt. to see,

340-626-5904.

2008 Jeep Wrangler Sahara

V-6, auto., power windows, hard top, Sirius radio w/ nav cd, dvd, very clean & well maintained. 46k mi.

$21,900.

662-396-1705 or 284-8209

Cruisemaster Motorhome by Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000 miles with white Oak interior. $19,500. $14,999 662-808-7777 or 662-415-9020

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

662-660-3433

832 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S REDUCED

2000 Custom Harley Davidson Mtr. & Trans., New Tires, Must See

$10,500 $9,500 $12,000

662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

1996 FORD F150 4X4

REDUCED

2000 CHEVY MONTE CARLO,

1991 Ford Econoline Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one owner, serious interest. $6500 287-5206.

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy

2002 Chevrolet Z-71,4-dr., 4W.D., Am.Fm cass./CD, pewter in color, $6200. 662-643-5908 or 662-643-5020 816 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER Fiberglass 18’ bunk house, gray & black water tanks, cable ready w/TV. Will consider trade for small tractor w/mower

$10,500

662-396-1390

REDUCED

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

’04 HONDA SHADOW 750

3900

$

662-603-4407

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

$4500

662-284-9487


Daily Corinthian • Friday, March 29, 2013 • 7B

0180 Instruction

WANT TO make certain your ad gets attention? Ask about attention getting graphics.

0135 Personals ADOPT: HAPPILY married, childless couple have love, security and guidance to offer your newborn. Respectful and understanding of your difficult decision. Please call Neil and Caprice at 888/483-7157.

MEDICAL CAREERS begin here - Train ONLINE for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 877-206-5185. www.CenturaOnline. com

WORK ON JET ENGINES Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. ADOPT: ACTIVE, creative, CALL Aviation Institute married couple wishes of Maintenance. 866-455 to create a relationship -4317. with a birthmother for baby's bright future. Expenses Paid. Call/text EMPLOYMENT Steve & Shannon, 347243-6139.

0149 Found

0232 General Help

F OU ND: ( 2) B EA G LE S , CAUTION! ADVERTISEGlen area. 662-284-7274. MENTS in this classification usually offer inGARAGE /ESTATE SALES formational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Garage/Estate Before you send money 0151 Sales to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to BIG YARD SALE, 1015 verify the validity of the Nelson, Thurs-Sat, 8-5, offer. Remember: If an Home Interior, h/hold ad appears to sound items, men/womens “too good to be trueâ€?, clths, MUCH MORE then it may be! InquirGOING OUT OF BUSINESS ies can be made by conSALE. All shirts/pants $1. tacting the Better BusiCoats, dresses, etc. 1/2 ness Bureau at 1-800off. Glass 1/2 off. Other 987-8280. h/h items 25% off. Thurs 9-12, Fri 9-4, Sat 9KITCHEN CREWS NEEDED 12. Fillmore & Childs. OFFSHORE in the Oil and MONA LISA'S Thrift Close Gas Industry. Entry level -out Sale! 99¢-all clths positions start at $710thru Sat. Coats/purses $810 per week. Sign up 50% off. 1007 Hwy 72 E. now for training today. across from Pizza Hut. CALL 850-243-8966.

0142

Lost

$100

REWARD

0232 General Help WANTED INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS (Newspaper Carrier)

SELMER/RAMER, TN. AREAS Excellent Earnings Potential Requirements: •Driver's License •Dependable Transporation •Light Bookwork Ability (will train) •Liability Insurance Please come by the Daily Corinthian and fill out a questionaire. DAILY CORINTHIAN 1607 S. Harper Rd. Corinth, MS

0240 Skilled Trade WANTED LOCAL Roofers Experienced Standing Seam Metal Roofers & Roof laborers. (662) 401-5966

0244 Trucking DRIVER TRAINEES Needed Now! At Stevens Transport New drivers earn $750/wk. No CDL? No Problem! CDL & Job-Ready In 15 days! Call Today 1-888-540-7364

Auto/Truck Parts 0848 & Accessories

0506 Antiques/Art

PETS

Lawn & Garden

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

0533 Furniture

0521 Equipment

ANTIQUE BED & CHEST OF DRAWERS. (bottom AGRI-FAB Leaf Vacuum 5 HP Motor $475 0320 Cats/Dogs/Pets drawer has cedar draw662-287-0243 er within) MUST SEE. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD $150. 662-287-2935 CRAFTSMAN 15 1/2 HP puppy, female, 9 wks. mower w/B&S mtr., 42" CARNIVAL BOWL old, $300. 662-415-6650. NORTHWOOD FLUTE $15 cut, $225. 662-287-1225. 662-284-4604 MURRAY LAWNMOWER TWO SMALL Yorkie CARNIVAL CANDLEHOLD42" CUT $500 Poms, CKC reg., S&W, 7 ER NORTHWOOD $15. 662-286-2655 wks., parents on site. 662-284-4604 $275 cash. 662-665-1364. MURRAY LAWNMOWER MCCOY CANNISTER SET 46" CUT, $450 $50. 662-284-4604 662-286-2655 FARM MCCOY MILK JAR POULAN LAWNMOWER $20 38" CUT $450 662-284-4604 662-286-2655 0410 Farm Market MOON & STARS TROYBILT 42" cut BABY DUCKS by 4/3, $5 CANNISTER SET $50. 662-284-4604 mower, 17 1/2 HP. $225. ea; Duck hatching eggs, 287-1225. $8 doz; Grown ducks, Household $35 pr; Incubator repair. 0509 TROYBILT Goods 462-3976, 415-0146. LAWNMOWER 42" CUT DELONGHI PORTABLE $475. 662-286-2655 INSULATED INCUBATOR, A/C, 12,000 BTU, Never Used, $150. 662-284-4604 new, 4-drawers, holds 2 5 0 l g . e g g s , g r e a t DOUBLE SINK, metal, hatches, $495. 462-3976 fairly new faucets, has or 415-0146. garbage disposal, good cond., $70. 662-396-1790.

0430 Feed/Fertilizer

GE DRYER, $75. 662-6439864.

VAUGHN HYBRID Bermuda hay, fertilized, horse quality, lg. sq. bales, $4.50 ea. 731-6093730 or 731-376-0102.

KENMORE, ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYER, XL CAPACITY, WHITE, $55. 662-287-2935 MICROWAVE, $25. 662643-3565.

0450 Livestock

OLD MODEL SINGER sewBUNNIES FOR SALE. $10 ing machine in small each. 287-6490. wood cabinet, $50. 2876520.

MERCHANDISE

REGAL BREAD MAKER $10. 662-284-4604 WOULD LIKE TO TRADE a like new Kirby vacuum cleaner for a good Rainbow vacuum cleaner. Call 287-6984 or 6651127.

0503 Auction Sales CARNIVAL BOWL IMPERIAL ROSE $25. 662-284-4604

ANTIQUE SAUSAGE BABY/DAY BED grinder, $25.662-396w/mattress, 3 lg. draw- 1 7 9 0 . ers, like new, $130 OBO, 662-287-1735 ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, new, $400. 287-6520. CHAIR, LIKE new, swivel, leanback, front leather w/rollers, $25 obo. 662- FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS $10. EACH, 396-1854. 662-284-4604 CHINA CABINET/TABLE, FREE ADVERTISING $450. 662-643-9864. Advertise one item valC H O I C E O F 2 d i n i n g ued at $500 or less for tables with chairs. (1 free. Price must be in Oak, 1 Pine) $50 each. ad & will run for 5 days 662-643-3565. in Daily Corinthian, 1 day in Reporter & 1 day GRANITE TOP kitchen tain Banner Independent. ble w/4 chairs. 36X60. Ads may be up to ap$195. 662-287-2935 prox. 20 words including phone number. HEADBOARD & NITE STANDS (2) Black, $75. 662-284-4604 The ads must be for private party or perO A K T A B L E / C H A I R S , sonal mdse. & does not $ 2 5 0 . 6 6 2 - 6 4 3 - 9 8 6 4 . include pets, livestock (chickens, ducks, cattle, Sporting 0527 Goods goats, fish, hogs, etc), Machinery & 0545 Tools garage sales, hay, fireLEFT HANDED BOW, wood, & automobiles. $ 3 0 0 . 6 6 2 - 6 4 3 - 9 8 6 4 . JET WOOD TURN LATHE 12 X 36, includes tools NO BUSINESS OR WESTERN MODEL 44 $275. 662-287-0243 meg with western holCOMMERCIAL ster & two boxes of WOOD JOINER ADS ALLOWED! shells, $550. Call 662-287 -9479 or 603-5811. Only GRISLEY 6" $350. 662-287-0243 Email ad to: interested callers freeads please. WOOD PLANER @dailycorinthian.com GRISLEY 15" $450 or Swimming 662-287-0243 classad@dailycorinthian. 0530 Pools com 18 FT. pool, $100. 662- 0551 Store/Office Equipment 643-9864. Or mail ad to Free Ads, WOOD DESK, $75. 662- P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835, fax ad to 662643-9864. 0533 Furniture 287-3525 or bring ad to 1607 S. Harper Rd., Cor2 BLUE recliners, $40 Wanted to 0554 inth. each. 662-643-3565.

Rent/Buy/Trade

ANTIQUE TABLE w/6 legs, bottom tray. 29" T, 19"x31" top width. $125. 662-396-1790.

Lost from State Line Rd. near Afton Subd. on March 21st, male dog, white w/tan ears & back, mixed breed. Answers to Toby.

M&M. Cash for junk cars & trucks. We pick up. 662-415-5435 or 731-2394114.

*NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. INCLUDE NAME & ADDRESS FOR OUR RECORDS.

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0670 Business Places/Offices

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BROSECHRYSLER.COM • HWY 72 EAST • CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

0840 Auto Services

King’s Rental

We Rent Only Late Models Vehicles! 7 & 15 Passenger Vans Available

287-8773 916 Hwy 45 South

0232 General Help

WANTED INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

67. 1 02'(/ 9,1 '($/

Selmer/Ramer, TN Areas

Requirements: • Driver’s License • Dependable Transportation • Light Bookwork Ability (will train) • Liability Insurance Please come by the Daily Corinthian and ďŹ ll out a questionaire.

DAILY CORINTHIAN 1607 S. Harper Rd. Corinth, MS

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ZZZ EURVHQLVVDQ FRP HWY 72 EAST • CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

LOCAL: 662-286-6006 • TOLL FREE: 1-888-286-6006


8B • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

KING KARS

March Madness

Sale

Rates as low as 1.49%

Guaranteed Credit Approval

STK 17456

STK 17615

STK 17618

2009 CHEVY SILVERADO

2011 BUICK LACROSSE CX

2012 TOYOTA CAMRY SE;

$23,988

$20,888

$19,888

CREW CAB•LTZ•Z71•4x4•LTR SUNROOF•NAVIGATION•CARFAX•1-OWNER

STK 17538

GOOD MILES•PEARL WHITE•TAN LEATHER•SHARP

STK 17616

2005 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER

2009 NISSAN MURANO SL AWD

$8,988

$24,888

LS•4X2•ALLOYS•TOW PKG.•MUST SEE & DRIVE

STK 17663

2012 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING LEATHER•DVD•LOADED•CARFAX•1-OWNER

LEATHER•SUNROOF•CARFAX•1-OWNER

STK 17532

2005 FORD EXPEDITION

$22,888

CARFAX 1 OWNER•LOADED-PRICED TO SELL

STK 17661

STK 17543

2012 NISSAN ALTIMA SL

LEATHER/SUNROOF/CARFAX 1 OWNER

$20,995

STK 17647

2007 GMC YUKON SLT 4WD

LOCAL TRADE•LEATHER•REARBUCKET SEATS 3rd ROW•LOADED

$8,888

STK 17676

INFINITY G37X

CARFAX 1 OWNER•ALLOY WHEELS•REDUCED

40K • CARFAX 1 OWNER • LTR • ROOF • AWD

$21,900

STK 17450

STK 17679

2010 HONDA CRV EX-L

2010 NISSAN ROGUE 360

LEATHER•SUNROOF•ALLOYS•CARFAX•1-OWNER

$22,888

AWD • CARFAX 1 OWNER • REAR BACKUP CAM SHARP! 2 TO CHOOSE FROM

$17,900

STK 17496

STK 17437

2008 FORD F150 SUPERCREW FX4

2011 FORD TAURUS SEL

4WD•LEATHER• CAR FAX• 1 OWNER • RUNNING BOARDS

ALLOYS•CARFAX•1-OWNER•SHARP!!

$21,888

$17,888

STK 17642

STK 17667

LEATHER•ALLOYS•CARFAX•1-OWNER

2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT

2008 GMC ACADIA SLT

CARFAX 1 OWNER•ALLOY WHEELS•D CHANGER

$17,888

$21,888

STK 17595

STK17599

2011 CHEVY HHR LS

2005 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LSE

$9,988

2010 HONDA ACCORD EXL

SUNROOF•LEATHER•CARFAX 1 OWNER

$21,888

$19,888

2011 TOYOTA COROLLA LE

STK 17646

CARFAX 1 OWNER•FUEL SAVER•MUST SEE

$14,888

JUST IN•PRICED TO SELL

CARFAX 1 OWNER•REDUCED

$13,888 STK 17527

2012 CHEVY CAMARO

STK 17664

2009 FORD F-150 SUPERCAB XLT 4 X 4

CUSTOM STRIPES•CARFAX 1 OWNER POWER SUNROOF•POWER SEATS XM SAT. RADIO•PEDAL SHIFTS•SHARP

CARFAX 1 OWNER•RUNNING BOARDS Alloy Wheels

$19,888

662-287-8773 916 Hwy. 45 South Corinth, MS 38834

$24,900

Ricky King

Tony Bonds

Peanut Thorn

Mike Doran

662-842-5277 966 S. Gloster Tupelo, MS 38804

WWW.KINGKARS.NET


Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

Homes for 0710 Sale

LADIES' BLOUSES, large to size 2, $1.00 ea. 2844604.

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

MAGNOLIA FRAMED, 45X30, $15. 662-284-4604 MOON IRIS bulbs, rebloomer, 3 for $5. 662287-6520. SEA SALT pump for swimming pool, $300+ pump, asking $140. 662643-3565. UPRIGHT 25 GAL AIR COMPRESSOR. $75. 662-287-2935

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Unfurnished 0610 Apartments 2 BR, 1 BA, Glen area, W&D incl. $375 mo., $200 dep. 662-415-1397. NOW ACCEPTING applications for 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments and townhouses. Immediate occupancy to qualified applicants. Rent based on income. Call Savannah Apartments at (731) 925-4464.

LEGALS

TAX RETURN SPECIAL: 2013 16x80 3 BR, 2 BA Vinyl siding/ shingled roof, thermal windows, 2"x6" walls glamour bath, black appliances, and much more. All for only $287.00 per month plus escrow. Windham Homes Corinth, MS 1-888-287-6996

0955 Legals NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S SALE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN WHEREAS, on August 24, 2005, Chris R. Brown executed a promissory note payable to the order of AMERITRUST Mortgage Company; and

Campers/ 0820 Trailers

'81 RV Allegro mtr hm, WHEREAS, the aforesaid 70k mi, 2 roof airs, great tires, new batt, sleeps promissory note was secured 10, great cnd. $4250. 662 by a Deed of Trust dated August 24, 2005, executed by -415-0087, 287-5739.

Auto/Truck 0848 Parts & Accessories

(4) CADILLAC WHEELS, 17", $160. 662-643-3565. (4) TIRES, 225/75/15, $80. 662-643-3565.

RV CAMPER 100 amp WANT TO make certain pole ready to hookup, your ad gets attention? $250. 662-643-3565. Ask about attention getting graphics.

0868 Cars for Sale

Homes for 0620 Rent

0734 Lots & Acreage

SMALL 2 BR house, good loc., Jackson & Shiloh Rd. $350 mo., $300 dep. 662-808-3041.

Mobile Homes 0675 for Rent MOBILE HOMES for rent. Baxter's Mobile Home Park. 662-643-8660.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Mobile Homes 0741 for Sale

FSBO 1500 SQ. FT. 2 BR, 2 SALE - SALE - SALE Ba,Picwick Pines Resort, Model Displays Must Go! Custom decor, HW New Spacious 4 BR, 2 f l o o r s t h r u o u t , s u n BA homes starting at room, storm shelter & $43,500 storage, New HVCA, f. p, Single Sections start at 1 owner, furnished or $29,500 unfurnished. $125,000 Clayton Homes Unf. 662-424-0231 or 662 Hwy 72 West, -279-1174 Corinth, MS 1/4 mile past Magnolia HOUSE FOR SALE Hospital 8 CR 522, Corinth Fantastic home for growing family. 2 living areas, breakfast nook, formal dining room, office or 5th bedroom, basement with gaming area, large laundry, situated on 2 acres with 5 additional acres that can be purchased as well! Large deck, shop, pond and lots of room to roam! Priced reduced! By appointment, 662-2845379.

Chris R. Brown and Andrea M. Brown and being recorded as Instrument No: 200506922 of the records of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and which aforesaid Instrument conveys to John J. Owens, Trustee and to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for AMERITRUST Mortgage Company, as Beneficiary, the hereinafter described property; and

WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was assigned to US Bank National Association, as Trustee for Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Home Equity Asset Trust 2006-4, Home Equity Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-4 by an Assignment filed of record on January 23, 2012 and record e d a s I n s tParts r u m e n& t No. Auto/Truck 201200354 in the office of the Clerk of the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and

1999 HONDA Accord, V6, white w/tan leather AMERICA'S BEST BUY! 20 int., 190k mi., loaded acres-Only $99/month. w/amenities, exc. cond., $ 0 D o w n , N o C r e d i t $4000. 662-660-4061. Checks. MONEY BACK GUARANTEE. Owner Fina n c i n g . W e s t T e x a s . 0876 Bicycles Beautiful Mountain Views! Free Color Bro- GIRLS 16" pink bike, tires chure. 1-800-343-9444. need air, $10. 662-3961854.

2007 CAVALIER mobile home, 16x80, must be moved. Near Booneville. Well taken care. 618-457 -4223.

Homes for 0710 Sale

0542

Manufactured

0747 Homes for Sale

Manufactured

0747 Homes for Sale CREDIT A little LOW? With a qualified income we CAN get you APPROVED on a new home with a score as low as 575 and only 10% down! AND that is with a fixed interest rate! Windham Homes Corinth, MS 1-888-287-6996

Building Materials

Smith Discount Home Center 412 Pinecrest Road 287-2221 • 287-4419

46

$ 95 Air Compressors.Starting at Huge Selection of Area Rugs $ (8’ x 11’) .........................Starting at

129

Croft Windows ...................................................... $ 95 Foil Back Foamboard 1/2”...

5 $ 95 Foil Back Faomboard 3/4” 6 $ 95 Foil Back Foamboard 1” 8 ...

.....

1x6 & 1x8 White Pine $ Pattern Board .......................

50000

1,000 Board Ft.

100 $ 00 Vinyl Floor Remnants 1 $ 95 CROSSTIES 6 $ 95 25 Year 3 Tab Shingle 54 Exterior Astro Turf

....

$

sq. yd.

.....

......................................

...

35 Year Architectural

6295 ¢-$ 09 Laminate Floor From 39 1 $ 00-$ 00 Pad for Laminate Floor 5 10 $ Handicap Commodes 6995 $ Round Commodes 4995 Shingle .............................................

$

...

...

.......

...........

12 x 12 Celotex Ceiling (40Sq Ft) ............................................................

3995

$

box

Don’t Waste Your Money... Shop With Us!

0848

WHEREAS, US Bank National Association, as Trustee for Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Home Equity Asset Trust 2006-4, Home Equity Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-4, having executed a Substitution of Trustee to substitute Floyd Healy as trustee in the place and stead of John J. Owens, the same having been recorded as Instrument No. 201201360of the records of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, default having occurred under the terms and conditions of said promissory note and Deed of Trust and the holder having declared the entire balance due and payable; and

set Trust 2006-4, Home Equity Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-4 by an Assignment filed of record on 0955 Legals January 23, 2012 and recorded as Instrument No. 201200354 in the office of the Clerk of the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, US Bank National Association, as Trustee for Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Home Equity Asset Trust 2006-4, Home Equity Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-4, having executed a Substitution of Trustee to substitute Floyd Healy as trustee in the place and stead of John J. Owens, the same having been recorded as Instrument No. 201201360of the records of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, default having occurred under the terms and conditions of said promissory note and Deed of Trust and the holder having declared the entire balance due and payable; and

WHEREAS, Floyd Healy, Substituted Trustee in said Deed of Trust will on the 1st day of April, 2013, between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., offer for sale and will sell at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash at the front steps of the Alcorn County Courthouse, located at 600 E. Waldron Street in Corinth, Mississippi, the following described property located and situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to Prepared by: wit: Floyd Healy Begin at a point 100 feet 1405 N. Pierce, Suite 306 Nort h of t h e sou t h e ast Little Rock, Arkansas 72207 Corner of Bell Young and Mc- Insertion Dates: Cord Addition to the City of March 8, 2013; March 15, Corinth, same being the 2013; March 22, 2013; March Southeast Corner of Block 16 29, 2013 of Bell, Young McCord Addi- 14141 tion to the City of Corinth; thence North 74 degrees 04 minutes West 76 feet to an iron stake; thence South 13 degrees 11 minutes West 113 feet to a stake and North edge of sidewalk; thence South 72 degrees 46 minutes East with the North edge of sidewalk 102.3 feet; thence North 115 feet to the point of beginning, said property being in Block 16 of Bell Young and McCord Survey to the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi. Indexing Instructions: Part of Block 16, Bell Young Accord Addition, Alcorn County, Mississippi More commonly known as: 1407 Proper Street, Corinth, Mississippi 38834 Subject to the rights of way and easement for public roads and public utilities, and to any prior conveyance or reservation of mineral of every kind and character, including but not limited to oil, gas, sand and gravel in or under subject property.

As the undersigned Substituted Trustee, I will convey WHEREAS, Floyd Healy, only such title as is vested in Substituted Trustee in said me under said Deed of Trust.

Deed of Trust will on the 1st day of April, 2013, between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., offer for sale and will sell at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash at the front steps of the Alcorn County Courthouse, located at 600 E. Waldron Street in Corinth, Mississippi, the following described property located and situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to wit:

Begin at a point 100 feet North of the southeast Corner of Bell Young and McCord Addition to the City of Corinth, same being the Southeast Corner of Block 16 of Bell, Young McCord Addition to the City of Corinth; thence North 74 degrees 04 minutes West 76 feet to an iron stake; thence South 13 degrees 11 minutes West 113 feet to a stake and North edge of sidewalk; thence South 72 degrees 46 minutes East with the North edge of sidewalk 102.3 feet; thence North 115 feet to the point of beginning, said property being in Block 16 of Bell Young and McCord Survey to the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi. Indexing Instructions: Part of Block 16, Bell Young Accord Addition, Alcorn County, Mississippi More commonly known as: 1407 Proper Street, Corinth, Mississippi 38834 Subject to the rights of way and easement for public roads and public utilities, and to any prior conveyance or reservation of mineral of every kind and character, including but not limited to oil, gas, sand and gravel in or under subject property. As the undersigned Substituted Trustee, I will convey only such title as is vested in me under said Deed of Trust. This 4th day of March, 2013. Floyd Healty Substituted Trustee Prepared by: Floyd Healy 1405 N. Pierce, Suite 306 Little Rock, Arkansas 72207 Insertion Dates: March 8, 2013; March 15, 2013; March 22, 2013; March 29, 2013 14141

Corner of Bell Young and McDaily Corinthian • Friday, March 29, 2013 • 9B Cord Addition to the City of Corinth, same being the Southeast Corner of Block 16 0955 Legals 0955 Legals Hauling of Bell, Young McCord Addition to the City of Corinth; BIG D'S Hauling, LLC. thence North 74 degrees 04 I N T H E C H A N C E R Y Owner, Dale Brock. 648 minutes West 76 feet to an C O U R T O F A L C O R N C R 6 0 0 , W a l n u t , M S iron stake; thence South 13 C O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I 38683. If you need it degrees 11 minutes West 113 hauled, give us a call! 1 feet to a stake and North RE: THE LAST WILL AND 901-734-7660. edge of sidewalk; thence TESTAMENT OF MARIE South 72 degrees 46 minutes HOLLEY ANDERSON, Home Improvement East with the North edge of DECEASED & Repair sidewalk 102.3 feet; thence North 115 feet to the point CAUSE NO. 2013-0172-02 BUTLER, DOUG: Foundaof beginning, said property tion, floor leveling, being in Block 16 of Bell NOTICE TO CREDITORS bricks cracking, rotten Young and McCord Survey to wood, basements, the City of Corinth, Alcorn NOTICE IS GIVEN that Let- shower floor. Over 35 County, Mississippi. ters Testamentary were on yrs. exp. Free est. 731 the 20th day of March, 2013 2 3 9 - 8 9 4 5 o r 6 6 2 - 2 8 4 Indexing Instructions: Part of granted the undersigned Ex- 6 1 4 6 . Block 16, Bell Young Accord ecutor of the Estate of MARAddition, Alcorn County, Mis- IE HOLLEY ANDERSON, sissippi Deceased, by the Chancery Services More commonly known as: Court of Alcorn County, Mis1407 Proper Street, Corinth, sissippi; and all persons hav- D I V O R C E W I T H o r Mississippi 38834 ing claims against said Estate without children $125. are required to have the same Includes name change Subject to the rights of way probated and registered by and property settleand easement for public roads the Clerk of said Court with- ment agreement. SAVE and public utilities, and to any in ninety (90) days after the h u n d r e d s . F a s t a n d prior conveyance or reserva- date of the first publication of e a s y . C a l l 1 - 8 8 8 - 7 3 3 tion of mineral of every kind this Notice, which is the 22 7 1 6 5 . 2 4 / 7 . and character, including but day of March, 2013 or the not limited to oil, gas, sand same shall be forever barred. Storage, Indoor/ and gravel in or under subOutdoor ject property. WITNESS OUR SIGNAAMERICAN TURE(S), this the 20th day of As the undersigned Substi- March, 2013. MINI STORAGE tuted Trustee, I will convey 2058 S. Tate only such title as is vested in Across from /s/ Stephen Russell Holley, me under said Deed of Trust. STEPHEN RUSSELL HOLLEY, World Color EXECUTOR 287-1024 This 4th day of March, 2013. 3t 3/22, 3/29, 4/5/13 MORRIS CRUM 14168 MINI-STORAGE Floyd Healty 286-3826. Substituted Trustee HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

This 4th day of March, 2013. Floyd Healty Substituted Trustee Prepared by: Floyd Healy 1405 N. Pierce, Suite 306 Little Rock, Arkansas 72207 Insertion Dates: March 8, 2013; March 15, 2013; March 22, 2013; March 29, 2013 14141

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY Handyman Alterations

H A N D Y M A N ' S H o m e I DO alterations. Reas. care, anything. 662-643- rates. I fix most any6892. thing. 662-706-4494.

Accessories


10B • Friday, March 29, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

New 2013 Ford Edge SEL New 2012 Ford Fusion SE New 2013 Ford Escape SE Tuxedo Black, Chrome Wheels, Leather. White.

New 2013 Ford F150

Crewcab, XLT, Chrome Pkg., V-6, Ecoboost System stk#7093

0% Financing Availble

0% Financing Available

29,890

Reduced

0% Financing Available

0% Financing Available

35,320

$

stk#8561

stk#7432

$

41,225

$

Reduced

stk#4271

26,390

$

24,065

$

28,480

$

18,990

$

Reduced

Reduced

21,590

$

PROGRAM VEHICLES 2013 Ford Edge Limited

2012 Ford Focus SE

Red, Chrome Wheels, stk#4840

31,800

$

27,800

$

$

OR

199 MONTH

$

14,890

29,500

$

Leather stk#0952

REDUCED!

28,580

$

2013 Ford Explorer Limited

Leather, Black, stk#8645

Leather, Loaded. Silfer, Only 10k MIles stk#3300

4 door, White stk#3300

NOW!

2011 Ford Taurus SEL

2011 Jeep Wrangler Sahara

REDUCED!

21,750

$

22,980

$

36,500

$

NOW!

32,500

$

PRE-OWNED VEHICLES 2011 Nissan Sentra

2011 Ford Fusion SE

#8018

13,980

$

187 Month

$

OR

14,685

$

OR

2011 Ford Escape XLT

17,980

$

OR

249

$

2011 Toyota Corolla

4 door.. #2977

196 Month

$

14,695

$

OR

OR

Month

2008 Ford Fusion SE

218

$

18,490

$

Month

OR

2012 Nissan Altima

4 door, Silver. #8705

15,980

14,980

$

198 Month

$

2012 Chrysler 200

$

2007 Toyota Avalon

4 door. #0346

OR

11,680

17,980

$

179 Month

$

OR

OR

249 Month

$

17,980

$

OR

14,980 OR

$

203 Month

$

16,980

$

OR

234

$

19,950

$

252 Month

$

OR

17,280

$

OR

Loaded #4844

248 Month

$

2011 Hyundai Sonata

Month

2011 Dodge Charger

Silver #5167

17,890 OR

Black, 4door.. #1026

257 Month

White #3756

$

2012 Ford Fusion

White, #6085

2012 Nissan Altima

$

#3369

$

201 Month

$

Loaded #35747

2011 Toyota Camry SE

2011 Chrysler Town & Country Ed.

2011 Impala LT

White. #40080

White. #4485

239 Month

$

2009 Nissan Maxima SV

Leather,MR. #8086

White. #7122

20,900

$

279 Month

$

OR

295 Month

$

TRUCKS•TRUCKS•TRUCKS 2006 Chevy Silverado LT

2009 Chevy Silverado Club Cab LT

2005 Ford Explorer

Crew Cab, 4x4, Chrome Wheels, New Tires stk.#1113

Sport Trac, XLT, Red stk.#9029

19,875

$

WAS 11,200 $

REDUCED!

9,980

$

Blue. stk#9455

WAS $24,200

REDUCED!

21,800

$

2006 GMC Sierra Club Cab, 4x4. stk.#8029

ONLY $

9,895

2009 Chevy Silverado Crewcab Champagne, 4x4, LT. stk.#7990

WAS $26,800

REDUCED!

23,680

$

2011 Ford F150 Crew

2006 Ford F150 Supercab FX2 WAS $14,990

REDUCED!

12,990

$

2012 Chevy Colorado

Lariat, 4x4, Pearl White, One Owner. stk.#3484

New Tire, Like New!

WAS $34,980

REDUCED!

32,980

$

Black. stk.#3802

WAS $22,000

REDUCED!

19,780

$

SUV’S•SUV’S•SUV’S•SUV’S 2013 Chrysler Town & Country

2009 Chevy Tahoe LT

Loaded. stk5923

WAS $26,900 NOW

389 mo.

$

2010 Honda CRV EX Black. #1063

WAS $24,500 NOW $21,975

BUY HERE! PAY HERE!

White, Leather, 3rd Seat #2758

WAS 23,500 $

20,450

NOW $

2009 Chevy Tahoe LT Gold, Leather, 3rd Seat #5882

WAS$385 mo. NOW

345 mo.

$

2006 Nissan Murano SL #7804

WAS $15,980 NOW $13,980

2009 Nissan Murano SL #4093

WAS$358 mo. NOW

296 mo.

$

2006 Jeep Liberty Limited Black. stk#7388

WAS $11,800

9,750

$

2008 Ford Expedition EL Limited Pearl #0410

WAS $27,800 NOW $25,800

3,400 1998 Dodge Dakota Club Cab, Red, stk#6280............................... $ 3,450 2000 Mercur y Mount. 3rd Row, stk5827..................................... $ 4,875 2002 Chrysler Sebring Conv.... stk#6823......................................... $ 5,980 2003 Mercur y Grand Marquis ....stk1274........................... $ 7,450 2003 Mercury Mountaineer..White, 4 door, stk5195........................ $ 7,480 2002 Ford Explorer .........stk4172...3rd Row Seat........................ $ 6,488 2002 Chevy Trailblazer ..3rd Row Seat .................................. $ 7,490 2001 Ford Windstar Van.................local trade ..........................................$3,950 2000 GMC Jimmy. 4

Door, 4x4......................................................

$

2007 GMC Yukon SLT

2007 BMW X3

Leather,White.. #8028

Leather. #5060

WAS $18,990 NOW

16,980

$

2007 Ford Explorer XLT Low Miles, 3rd Row. stk#4187

WAS $15,980 NOW

WAS 23,980 NOW $21,480 $

2009 Ford Edge stk#81469

218 mo.

$

WAS $20,990 NOW

296 mo.

$

5,475 7,200 2006 Toyota Sienna Van. Leather, White, stk#4475.................. $ 8,750 2000 Ford Crown Vic ..Extra Clean, 13,601k miles, stk#25259...... $ 5,890 2000 Pontiac Grand Prix Se.........................................stk#61410 ........$3,990 2000 VW Beetle.. Leather Roof, Auto, Nice Car, Low Miles, stk#41335.... $ 5,840 2006 Ford Fusion. Red, V6, SE, stk#98361..................................... $ 5,990 1999 Chevy Cavalier. auto, air, 2 door coupe, red, stk#72472...... $ 3,490 1998 Dodge Dakota.. 4x4,

Club Cab, stk#1496............................

2004 Mazda MPV Wagon. 97K

Mi, Silver,............................

• Honest Deals • Fair Prices • Huge Inventory To Choose From.

$

$

All Credit Applications Accepted. Over 100 Vehicles To Choose From!

Highway 145 in Booneville • 1-800-898-0290 • 662-728-5381

w w w. c a r t w r i g h t f o r d . c o m 3.9% rate, $2,000 cash on trade down.W.A.C. on 72 months. Payment and prices are plus t&t. See dealer for details on new prices.

@JPC 13


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