042514 daily corinthian e edition

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Friday April 25,

2014

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 118, No. 97

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • 2 sections

Bids opened for factory demolition BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Contractors entered a wide range of bids on the proposed demolition of the Wurlitzer building and land clearing. Bids were unsealed at City Hall Thursday morning and are expected to go to the Board of Mayor and Aldermen for consideration in a special meeting this morning or the next regular meeting on May 6. The apparent low bidder among the eight interested contractors is Century Construction of Tupelo at $58,500. Bids went as high as more than 10 times that amount. With the potential for contractors to recycle some of the materials from the site, the city wasn’t sure what to expect from bidders. “You don’t know what the value of the materials is inside the building,” said City Clerk Vickie Roach, who conducted the bid opening with David Huwe, director of community

Photos Courtesy of Randy J. Williams

Reenactors bring the Battle of Rienzi to life during last year’s event.

Rienzi blasts into spring with festival, reenactment BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com

History will be resurrected as reenactors, under the direction of the 3rd Tennessee Cavalry and 48th Tennessee Infantry, bring to life the Battle of Rienzi. The battle was fought between 1861 and 1865. After the South officially surrendered to the Union in Appomattox, Va., the Battle of Rienzi raged on for weeks before the troops were notified the war was over. The fourth annual battle, sponsored by the Rienzi Heritage Committee, will take place

May 2 through May 4. Beginning at 8 a.m. and lasting all day, each day, the threeday event will shed light on what it was like for the soldiers as they lived, fought and died during the Civil War. “Friday is a school day so we will have it open for the school kids to come. They will have the opportunity to see first-hand what it was like in the civil war days. How the soldiers cooked, where they lived and they survived,” said Rienzi Mayor Walter Williams. The Rienzi reenactment is an

open reenactment. All reenactors are welcome to take part in the battle which is sanctioned, ruled and regulated by the Cleburmes Division. There will be a $5 reenactment fee and a $10 fee for sutlers and vendors. A meal will be provided on Saturday evening. “Fighting will begin at 2 p.m. on Friday and will end Saturday after the fighting at 2 p.m. We will be feeding the volunteers at the fire station as we do every Please see RIENZI | 2A

development and planning. The contract will be for six months. Corinth entered an agreement in 1955 with Wurlitzer, the maker of organs and jukeboxes, to build a 100,000-square-foot manufacturing facility. Once the defunct industrial building is gone and the land cleared, the city wants to see it marketed as a prime location for industry. The other bids were: • Edge Construction of Tremont — $110,241 • Southern Recycling, Inc., of D’Iberville — $247,000 • Virginia Wrecking Co., Inc., of Daphine, Ala. — $286,399 • NCM Demolition & Remediation of Marietta, Ga. — $498,700 • National Salvage & Service Corporation of Bloomington, Ind. — $524,000 • Ayers Construction of Corinth — $575,382 • Rutledge Construction Co. of Tupelo — $686,626.94

Expert shares reality of drug addiction epidemic BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com

Who knew that heroin (chemical name diacetylmorphine) was introduced by the Bayer company in 1898 as a non-addictive alternative to morphine and a cough suppressant for children? Guests at Pizza Grocery learned this startling fact and more as Dr. Tom Fowlkes of The Oxford Centre gave an informative presentation on the growing prescription-drug epidemic, currently devastating the United States.

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, an estimated one in 40 Americans are abusing prescription drugs. The number of drug-overdose deaths is rising and has tripled in the last decade. Area mental health professionals acknowledged the problem and searched for answers as they attended the “lunch and learn” on Monday. Special guests at the event included representatives from Region IV Mental Health Services of the Mississippi Department of Mental Health.

“A lot of people have their heads stuck in the sand and it’s time to start the conversation,” said Corinth native Chad Clardy who serves as a Tupelo-based community relations representative for The Oxford Centre. In his presentation, the Oxford Centre’s chief medical officer focused on three classes of prescription drugs: Opiates, Benzodiazepines and Amphetamines. As a former ER physician, Fowlkes witnessed the rampant abuse of prescription drugs first-hand while providing

medical care at the Lafayette County jail and mental-health center. In the 1900s, Fowlkes said the patients he treated were more likely to choose cocaine as their drug of choice, but by the early 2000s, crystal meth had become more popular. “While getting off crystal meth often meant simply crashing for few days of sleep, the same was not true for those addicted to prescription painkillers, sedatives and stimulants,” Please see ADDICTION | 2A

Green flag set to wave on new racing season BY ZACK STEEN

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Dr. Tom Fowlkes gives an informative presentation on the growing prescription-drug epidemic.

Counselor receives state recognition

zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

GLEN — Buddy is back. After a 18 year absence, Buddy Ayers is returning to North Mississippi Motor Park Speedway. Drivers are set to fire their engines on a new season of racing at 7 p.m. Saturday night. Ayers, who originally built the speedway located off U.S. Highway 72 in 1993, has been leasing the high banked oval during his time away from the track. Now he is back at the helm as track promoter. “We’re excited to be getting back into the race track business,” said Ayers, who also owns a local construction business. “Everyone seems to think me coming back is a good thing and I’m glad. I’m ready to run this track like I used to run it back in the 90s. We had a

BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

Modified Street, Outlaw, 602 and Limited Late Model.

An Alcorn Career and Technology Center counselor has been named the state’s best. Jennifer Koon was awarded the 2015 Mississippi ACTE Career Guidance Award. Koon, a high school CTE counselor the past 13 years, represented Mississippi in the ACTE Excellence Awards program at Koon the ACTE Region IV Conference in New Orleans earlier this month. “I have always been fortunate to work with people who support and assist with guidance projects,” said Koon. “It was an honor to be chosen for the award and I appreciate the Al-

Please see RACING | 2A

Please see KOON | 2A

Photo compliments of Treassa Hohman Wilbanks

Ben Morrow, driver of the number 55M car, will race in the Limited Late Model division for the first time when the green flag waves on the new season of dirt track racing Saturday at North Mississippi Motor Park Speedway. real good thing going - happy fans and happy drivers and some of the best racing in the tri-states.”

The track will offer five divisions when the green flag waves this weekend. Those divisions are Street Stock,

Index Stocks......8A Classified......3B Comics......9A State......5A

On this day in history 150 years ago

Weather...... 7A Obituaries......6A Opinion......4A Sports....10A

Confederate troops under Gen. William Cabell capture a vital supply train and 1,700 prisoners at Mark’s Mill, Ark. The victory is marred when over 100 runaway slaves were captured and executed, the third such incident in April.

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2A • Daily Corinthian

Local/Region

Friday, April 25, 2014

RACING CONTINUED FROM 1A

“The Street Stock class is the entry level for folks just starting out,” said Ayers. “A guy can take a normal street legal car, put a roll cage in it and enter it in the Street Stock division.” The Limited Late Model division features the fastest running cars. “Most of the cars in the Limited Late Model class will reach over 100 mph down the straightaways,” Ayers added. The promoter hopes his return to the Glen track will help attract some old fans and drivers back to the dirt. “We always tried to treat all the racers fair. That helped keep the competition running smoothly and ensure the fans would get a great show,” said Ayers. “NASCAR is one of the biggest sports in the country and we know the love for NASCAR starts at small dirt tracks like ours, so we want to make sure we put on a family friendly event that makes drivers and spectators return week after week.” Ayers said he has already talked to some big

names in local dirt track racing. “Chris Ragan, Jerry Jackson, Johnny Potts, Howard Means, Danny Christian and Mark Fancher are all great race car drivers,” said Ayers. “I feel confident they will all be back this season to race.” Race fan Scotty McCalister is excited about the old promoter coming back to his racing roots. “I’m glad to hear Buddy is back,” he said. “I like the way Buddy runs the track. He stands by his word.” McCalister compares the Glen track to a dirt version of NASCAR’s Bristol Motor Speedway. “If the right driver is in the right car, they can go super fast on that track,” the fan said. “Fast straightaways and high banked turns make the track very desirable to race on. They put fresh clay down a few weeks ago, so that will make the track even quicker.” McCalister said he is a big fan of the number 55M car driven by Ben Morrow, who has had several successful seasons in the Modified

Street division. This year Morrow makes the jump to the Limited Late Model division. His first race behind the wheel of the more powerful car is set for this weekend at the Glen track. Races at the track are scheduled for every Saturday night through the fall with the main feature races normally starting around 8:30 p.m. Ayers plans to host several special Late Model division races later in the summer, along with the possibility of bike races, lawn mower races and chuck wagon races. “We have a race track, so I’m game at trying to race anything to please the crowd,” said Ayers. “We are also going to host a demolition derby in a few weeks.” Admission prices are $10 for adults, $5 for children 8 to ten years old and free for children 8 and under. Pit passes are $25. (Get the latest results, point standings and upcoming event information at facebook.com/ CorinthSpeedway)

Photos Courtesy of Randy J. Williams

Hundreds of reenactors converged on Rienzi last year to depict the town’s Civil War events. A similar crowd is expected this year for the annual reenactment.

RIENZI CONTINUED FROM 1A

year. This year, they’ve asked for an authentic camp-site meal to get into the spirit. We will be serving them pinto beans, boiled potatoes, turkey, cornbread and onion,” said Williams. “On Sunday, we will open camps at 10 a.m. for a worship service and the battle will resume at 2 p.m.” In conjunction with the battle, Rienzi will also be holding their third annual Spring Fest downtown. “It will give people something to do all day long,” said the Mayor.

“It’s Spring Ya’ll” will take place May 2 and 3 from 8 a.m. – until. Taking full advantage of the warm weather, there will be games, food, entertainment and buggy rides. “There will also be a band and flag girls,” added Williams. An afternoon auction will be held from 12 noon to 2 p.m. Craft and yard sales will also be set up. Booths are available for a $10 set-up fee. Sponsors for the events include: Corinth Area Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, Miller Insurance, Lesley’s Floor De-

signs, Walmart, Roger’s Supermarket, Gardner’s Supermarket, Kroger, Corinth Coca-Cola Bottling, Pepsi, Briggs Inc., Walden’s Supermarket and others. For more information about “It’s Spring Ya’ll contact Rienzi City Hall at 662-462-5315 or Mayor Williams at 662-808-0917.For more information about The Battle of Rienzi contact Mayor Williams, Capt. Bobby Ross at 662-5547671 or Capt. Berry Ayrs at 662-279-1189. All vendors/sutlers should contact Mayor Williams.

Staff photo by Brant Sappington

Four-car pileup Two people were transported to Magnolia Regional Health Center with non-lifethreatening injuries Thursday morning following a chain-reaction crash at the intersection of U.S. Highway 72 and Alcorn Drive. Corinth Assistant Police Chief Scotty Harville said three vehicles were stopped at the traffic light in the westbound lanes of the highway east of the intersection when the fourth vehicle rearended the vehicle at the back of the line and forced the other vehicles to slam into each other.

KOON CONTINUED FROM 1A

corn Career and Technology Center staff for supporting me in my efforts.” Koon, an educator in the state for 21 years, was nominated for the award by center director Richard Turner. “As soon as Ms. Koon joined the staff at the Alcorn Career and Technology Center, she initiated several new and beneficial programs to enhance the educational experience of our students and compliment the instruction of our teachers,” said Turner. “She has been recognized numerous times locally and statewide for her dedication to the educational process and her innovative ways of bringing collaboration between students, parents, educators, and business/industry.” Koon, who holds an Educational Specialist degree in counseling and is a National Board Certified School Counselor, has developed, edited, and distributed a CTE e-newsletter to keep various groups informed of strides being made in Career and Technical Education over the past 13 years. “It is great to work with

people who realize it takes us all working together to get the best results for our students,” said Koon. “I am thankful God has given me the privilege to work with teenagers for the past 21 years.” Currently, serving on committees with the Mississippi Department of Education to develop a CTE counselor’s handbook of resources and a tool to evaluate CTE counselors in Mississippi, she has assisted the Mississippi Department of Education in developing the Mississippi CTE Counselor’s Program of Work and the Blackboard module used to certify new CTE counselors in the state. A past president of the Northeast Region of the Mississippi Counseling Association, Koon has been honored as a recipient of the Mississippi Manufacturer’s Association Award for Excellence in Vocational Education, Mississippi’s Most Outstanding High School Sponsor Award and has been named a Red Rose Award recipient by Delta Kappa Gamma. The award recipient serves the community as a member of the Northeast Mississippi Commu-

nity College CTE Advisory Committee, 2013-2014 Mississippi Dropout Prevention Taskforce, Northeast Mississippi WIN Job Fair planning committee and National Technical Honor Society sponsor along with being an appointed Selective Service registrar. “I hope to be able to continue to work for many more years to come,” said the counselor. “It is a privilege to serve students from the Alcorn and Corinth School Districts who attend our center each day.” Association for Career and Technical Education (ACTE) is the nation’s largest not-for-profit education association dedicated to the advancement of education that prepares youth and adults for successful careers. It provides advocacy, public awareness and access to information, professional development and tools that enable members to be successful and effective leaders. Founded in 1926, ACTE has more than 25,000 members including teachers, counselors and administrators at the middle school, high school and postsecondary levels.

noticed those people were much sicker when they tried to stop,” said Fowlkes. Deciding he needed further education to better serve the addicts he treated, Fowlkes became certified by the American Board of Addiction Medicine and has dedicated his time and efforts preventing prescription-abuse and spreading awareness. As part of the Physician Summit series of Continuing Medical Education courses through the Mississippi Professionals Health Program and the Mississippi State Medical Association, he has addressed more than 1,000 Mississippi physicians on safe prescribing practices for benzodiazepine medications in the past year. Lortab was revealed to be the number one prescription written in American. It was also discovered that drug overdose has replaced car accidents as the leading cause of death

among young people today. Established in January 2012, The Oxford Centre, a private drugtreatment facility, boasts a dozen beds in a specially designed facility. After detox, patients typically spend a 30-day treatment stay at the 110-acre campus which is secluded in the hills between Oxford and New Albany. They are licensed through the Mississippi Department of Mental Health and the Bureau of Alcohol and Drug services. The center, dedicated to providing medical detoxification services, is accredited by CARF International and is a member of the National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers. The center is not Medicaid eligible but accepts most commercial insurances.

ADDICTION CONTINUED FROM 1A

he said. Detoxing an opiate addict can almost be more dangerous than not detoxing them, revealed Fowlkes as he talked about the seizures and other symptoms accompanying opiate withdrawal. “As I began to see more and more people addicted to prescription drugs, I

(For more information, call 662-281-9992 or visit theoxfordcentre.org.)

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Local/Region

3A • Daily Corinthian

Today in history

Across the Region Milledgeville Heritage Day scheduled Saturday

Today is Friday, April 25, the 115th day of 2014. There are 250 days left in the year. Â

MILLEDGEVILLE, Tenn. – Milledgeville, Tenn. Heritage Day in McNairy County will be held Saturday at the City Park. Proceeds will benefit the Milledgeville Community.Registration and activities will begin at 9 a.m. Admission is free and the event is open to all ages. The West Tenn. Old Iron Club will hold a tractor and equipment show throughout the day. It will include, hit and miss engines, pedal cars, a mini tractor pull at 1 p.m. and a car and motorcycle show. David Dodd will have a team of oxen. There is no entry fee or judging for cars and tractors. McNairy County EMS will conduct diabetes and blood pressure screenings. There will also be several children’s activities. Bring the family for lunch. Ham-

Today’s Highlight in History: On April 25, 1507, a world map produced by German cartographer Martin Waldseemueller contained the first recorded use of the term “America,â€? in honor of Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci. Â

On this date: In 1792, highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier became the first person under French law to be executed by the guillotine. In 1859, ground was broken for the Suez Canal. In 1862, during the Civil War, a Union fleet commanded by Flag Officer David G. Farragut captured the city of New Orleans. In 1898, the United States formally declared war on Spain. In 1901, New York Gov. Benjamin Barker Odell Jr. signed an automobile registration bill which imposed a 15 mph speed limit on highways. In 1915, during World War I, Allied soldiers invaded the Gallipoli Peninsula in an unsuccessful attempt to take the Ottoman Empire out of the war. In 1944, the United Negro College Fund was founded. In 1945, during World War II, U.S. and Soviet forces linked up on the Elbe River, a meeting that dramatized the collapse of Nazi Germany’s defenses. Delegates from some 50 countries met in San Francisco to organize the United Nations. In 1959, the St. Lawrence Seaway opened to shipping. In 1964, vandals sawed off the head of the “Little Mermaidâ€? statue in Copenhagen, Denmark. In 1974, the “Carnation Revolutionâ€? took place in Portugal as a bloodless military coup toppled the Estado Novo regime. In 1983, 10-year-old Samantha Smith of Manchester, Maine, received a reply from Soviet leader Yuri V. Andropov to a letter she’d written expressing concern about possible nuclear war; Andropov reassured Samantha that the Soviet Union did not want war, and he invited her to visit his country, a trip Samantha made in July. Â

burgers, hot dogs, bologna, sandwiches and whole hog barbecue will be avaiable. Venders are welcome. To reserve a space or for more information call 731-945-1396. Â

Fatal vision driving program presented to teenagers TISHOMINGO — The Tishomingo County Sheriff’s Department recently teamed up with The Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation to provide a Fatal Vision Teen Driving Program to schools in Tishomingo County. Special “Fatal Vision� goggles were used during the program. The goggles are one of the most vivid ways to teach the impairing effects of alcohol and drugs. In addition to allowing participants to simulate the effects of impaired driving using the goggles, teens were also given

Troubled teens teamed with dogs in program Associated Press

BILOXI — Troubled teens and unruly canines may sound like an unlikely duo, but at the Harrison County Youth Detention Center both are frequently better off together. A new program, called Beyond the Bark, puts teenagers to work helping train and socialize dogs so they can be adopted. Center director Rick Smith estimated that 90 percent of the youth that come through the center are from broken homes, many of which are abusive. “Interacting with the dogs is for some kids the first time they’ve experienced unconditional love,� he said. Smith gave an example of one teen who was having a hard time after going through withdrawal in a drug treatment facility. “We brought (the dog) Willis in and he just kind of calmed down,� he said. Tiffany Neely, officer of programs and events who oversees Beyond the Bark, said that as a Chihuaua owner, she had a fear of large dogs at first. “There was a time when I wouldn’t be in the same rec(reation) yard with Bella,� another dog, she said, but she’s grown more comfortable over time and looks forward to helping train the dogs. “I know if it’s helping me, it’s helping the kids,� she said. Started in August, the program has graduated its first three dogs — Harley, Vito, and Rocko — into new homes. The program coordinators choose “lonely hearts� dogs from the Humane Society of South Mississippi and return them

Ten years ago: Hundreds of thousands of abortion-rights supporters marched in Washington, D.C. to protest Bush administration policies.

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to be adopted after they can perform a set of commands on and off a leash. Willis, a goofy chocolate lab mix who couldn’t quite cut it as a police dog, and his “girlfriend� Bella, a spirited grey and white pit bull, are the current program trainees. Another pit bull named Jon was deemed too aggressive and the center will fill his spot when floor officer Ruth Watkins completes her dog handling certification. Smith said the program lost its original two handlers to the sheriff’s office after two untimely but natural K-9 officer deaths there. In addition to training, the youth also take care of health and cleanliness. “Not just the fun stuff,� said Smith. “We’re trying to teach them a little bit of responsibility as well.� The dog training program is taught to chosen center residents twice a week for four weeks. There are only two youth residents in the program now, but others can interact with the dogs. Smith said many times once a resident is chosen to participate they leave.

the opportunity to complete a course while driving a special golf cart. Teens had to drive while attempting to text and carry on a conversation.

UDC will host Confederate Memorial Day program IUKA – The John Marshall Stone #394 Iuka chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy will honor Confederate Memorial Day on Saturday during their monthly meeting. The group will place a wreath on the Confederate Monument at 11 a.m. at the Tishomingo County Archives and History Museum in Iuka. The program is free to the public.

Governor tours schools in Booneville BOONEVILLE — Gov. Phil

Associated Press

SYLVESTER, Ga. — A couple whose infant daughter was found dead at their home fled from Mississippi, driving with their 2-year-old daughter to Georgia, where they were held Thursday on felony drug warrants, officials in both states said. Alyssa Harris, 7 months old, was found dead early Wednesday at the Caledonia, Miss., home she shared with sister Maliah, 2, and parents Donald Boyd Harris, 34, and Allison Studdard, 31. Allison’s father, Roger Studdard, also lives at the home, and he told investigators he woke to loud noises and found the couple trying to help their unresponsive baby, said Ryan Rickert of the Lowndes County Sheriff’s Office. When Studdard called 911, the couple ran, Rickert said, and when deputies arrived, they found the baby in a basinet. Methamphetamine found at the scene, Rickert said, and war-

Do you want to live a longer, healthier, more productive life? Do you want to achieve each of these goals with no real investment of time or money? Sounds like an “overthe-rainbow� idea too good to be true, doesn’t it? However, in a study conducted at Ohio State University under the direction of Germany’s Dr. Arthur Zabo, it was reportedly discovered that husbands achieved all of these goals by performing one daily undemanding task--they kissed their wives each morning before leaving for work. In a comparative study of the kissers and non-kissers, it was found that the kissers has fewer accidents, missed less work because of sickness, maintained trimmer bodies, and earned (are you ready for this?) from 20 to 30 percent more in yearly income. The kissers, it was noted, started their work days with a more positive attitude, not to mention the wholesome affect it had on their wives. God urges us to love one another (John 13:35). It is a disciple’s primary identifying feature. Further, God created us, and knows better than we do what it takes to make us happy, productive, and healthy. Every directive he gives us is for our own good (Matthew 7:9-11; James 1:17). This being true, we all should realize that we don’t merely love others for others sake--we love for own sakes as well. It is good for us. The giver of love stands to gain more than the receiver (Acts 20:35). By the way, the statistics reported above held true even for those husbands who kissed their wives and didn’t really feel like it. They gradually began to enjoy it and look forward to it. Thank God for the power of positive thinking to change our actions, but also for the power of positive actions to change our thinking. (I recommend the reading of First Corinthians 13:4-7 as a benediction to this article).

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Bryant believes a technology program being piloted in the Booneville School District can serve as an example for the entire state to follow. Bryant toured the Booneville School District Tuesday to get a first hand look at the $1.2 million state-funded Digital Oneto-One initiative. The project has put Chromebook portable computers into the hands of second through 12th graders throughout the district in an effort to look at ways digital devices can be used to enhance education. The district, along with the Hattiesburg school district, is piloting the program and the results will be studied in the coming years to create a model program for the rest of the state. The district was recently notified of the renewal of the program for the next school year.

Parents of infant found dead held on drug charges

THE KISSERS AND NON-KISSERS

1209 Hwy 72 E Corinth, MS • 662-286-3539

P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835

Friday, April 25, 2014

rants were issued for the couple, though no charges are filed in Alyssa Harris’ death. An autopsy didn’t reveal a preliminary cause of death, and there were no signs of trauma, said Greg Merchant, coroner of Lowndes County. A toxicology report is pending. Harris has family ties in Georgia and an expired license there, according to the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation. The vehicle they were driving also had Georgia plates. Authorities thought the couple might travel there, and an Amber Alert was issued. Police stopped their vehicle on U.S. Highway 82 in Sylvester, and the 2-yearold was found unharmed at 12:09 a.m. Thursday, Sylvester police Chief Robert Jennings said. “That was the route that everybody thought they’d take, that would take them through Sylvester,� the chief said. “They happened to see the vehicle coming down

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minister: Duane Ellis mail: 2 Sunnywood, Corinth, MS 38834

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the road and stopped the vehicle. They surrendered without any problem.� Police were holding Harris and Allison Studdard on felony warrants for possession of methamphetamine in Mississippi. Drugs also were found in the car, with additional charges possible, Jennings said. Studdard, who was driving, also faces a charge that the 2-yearold girl was not properly restrained in safety belts. Harris was charged with not wearing his safety belt, Jennings said. The couple’s daughter was released into the care of the Georgia Department of Family and Children Services, Sylvester police said in a statement. Harris and Studdard were transported to the Worth County Jail and will be extradited to Mississippi, according to the statement. In Mississippi, Miley said deputies will likely be dispatched Friday to pick up the couple.

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www.dailycorinthian.com

Reece Terry, publisher

Opinion

4A • Friday, April 25, 2014

Mark Boehler, editor

Corinth, Miss.

Obamacare creates guinea pigs BY DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN Obamacare has signed up 8 million people. Democrats are breathing a sign of relief, but their trials have only just begun. Now a large swath of America will experience first hand the shortages of doctors, the limited access to hospitals, the high deductibles, the large copays, the significant coinsurance requirements, and the long delays in care that will accompany Obamacare’s implementation. They will see, first hand, what government-run medicine is like. And the rest of the electorate will have front row seat from which to watch the debacle. The fundamental problem facing Obamacare is the same as when the misbegotten program was launched -- you cannot expand the number of patients without expanding the number of doctors. If you try, as the Affordable Care Act does, you will have long waits to see doctors, big increases in cost, and unsatisfactory patient outcomes. The increases in cost, which we are now seeing in health care, come, of course, from an increase in demand with no commensurate rise in the supply. These price hikes will trigger the most deeply disturbing -- and controversial -- of Obamacare’s provisions, the Independent Payments Advisory Board. Appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, this 15-member board will be charged with requiring alterations in Medicare practice to hold down costs sufficiently to cut program spending by $500 billion over the next decade. The formulae they develop will, undoubtedly, be adopted by states seeking to contain Medicaid costs and by private insurance firms. Until now, IPAB has not come into existence because the rate of medical inflation did not require it. But now, with prices rising, it will become central. If the president doesn’t appoint the board or the Senate doesn’t confirm the nominees, the Secretary of HHS assumes these duties herself. Each January, IPAB will issue a cost-reduction plan. It will proscribe the use of certain high-cost medicines, limit access to diagnostic tests, and condition approval of surgery and treatments based on the number of quality-adjusted life years left to each patient, all to bring Medicare costs into line with the Obamacare cuts. Congress may override the IPAB recommendations by a 3/5 vote of each House. Otherwise they automatically take effect by August 15. Each year, Obama will face a bruising fight over the IPAB recommendations. Patients will protest and doctors will warn of bad outcomes. Sarah Palin’s “death panel” will begin its reign. At the local level, cancer patients will find that the nearest and the best hospitals won’t take them. Pharmacies won’t fill their prescriptions. Doctors will turn away patients. As the Obamacare bureaucracy struggles with the rising costs it caused, it will ration access to meds, hospitals, surgery and elective procedures for all in its reach. Meanwhile, all Americans under 65 who are not on Medicaid -- both those on Obamacare and covered by private plans -- will find huge premium increases throughout the remainder of 2014 and during 2015. Deductibles will skyrocket. Stories of the financial hardship of paying the new premiums will abound. And the cancelations will continue. Small employers will shut down their policies rather than accept the new higher premiums and their workers will have to fend for themselves in the high-cost Obamacare market. Those insured by large companies will see big increases in premiums and deductibles. And employees will continue to see a reduction in their weekly work hours as their bosses squirm and maneuver to limit Obamacare’s universal coverage mandate. Meanwhile, many of the 8 million enrollees will not pay up, eroding the program. And those who go without health insurance will hate every penny of the fines Obama will impose. Or, they just won’t pay them. For those who feel the political damage of Obamacare is behind them, you ain’t seen nothing yet!

Prayer for today Lord God, help me to realize the power of my life. I feel ashamed and alarmed when I think of the grievous wrongs I may have done for greed. May I have delight in the struggles I have made for the ways of righteousness. Make me careful to avoid the things that debase life. May I aspire for the highest and best. Amen.

A verse to share “That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” -- Philippians 2:10-11

P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835

Congressman’s death provides perspective STARKVILLE — Politics has always been – and will likely always be – a full-contact sport and in no venue is that more evident than in the South. Some of my earliest political memories are of listening to incendiary speeches under the Founder’s Square Pavilion at the Neshoba County Fair. In its current incarnation, politics has come to be dominated more by digital attacks than by those echoing off tin roofs during stump speeches. Door-todoor campaigning has for the most part been replaced by email blasts, social media campaigns and YouTube postings. Increasingly, the digital rhetoric is beginning to mirror the vitriol in the stump speeches of old. Facebook and Twitter posts increasingly question not simply the qualifications or the policy positions of the candidates, but their veracity, patriotism, work ethic, devotion to the rule of law, mental capacities and character. But a casual conversation last week with a close friend brought to mind a bit of perspective from my own career covering politics and politicians. The Mississippi’s elec-

torate long history of investing in seniority for members of the state’s congressioSid Salter nal delegation has kept Columnist the number of people who have represented Mississippi on Capitol Hill rather small since the 1940s. Only death or scandal interrupted what were usually two, three or four decadeslong careers representing the state in the U.S. House or Senate. Occasionally, congressional careers end for purely political reasons. The late Democrat Arthur Winstead of Philadelphia was swept out of office in 1964 after a 22-year career in the U.S. House when Mississippi voters abandoned Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson in favor of Republican Barry Goldwater – which swept Republican Prentiss Walker into office. Two years later, Walker – the first Mississippi Republican election to Congress since Reconstruction – because a one-termer when he was defeated in 1966 by Democrat G.V. “Sonny” Montgomery.

A misdemeanor morals charge for illegal behavior inside the U.S. Capitol Building ended the career of the late U.S. Rep. Jon Hinson of Tylertown in 1981. He would die some 14 years later of complications from AIDS after establishing himself as a gay rights advocate. On August 13, 1989, freshman Republican U.S. Rep. Larkin Smith of Gulfport - a career law enforcement officer – was seven months into his term in Congress. He and Montgomery, then a wily veteran and arguably the nation’s leading military veteran’s advocate, met to participate the formal opening of a Dixie Youth World Series baseball event in Hattiesburg. When it was over, Montgomery got in his car and drove back to Meridian. Smith got on a private plane bound for Gulfport. The plane would crash in a remote area in rural Perry County, killing Smith and pilot Chuck Vierling. Smith became the second U.S. congressman in a week’s time to die in a plane crash. The other was Texas Democratic U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland, whose plane went down six days earlier in Gambela, Ethiopia, during

a mission to Africa. Smith had defeated then Democratic state senator Gene Taylor of Bay St. Louis for the seat in Congress in the 1988 elections. Taylor won the special election to succeed Smith after the accident and held the seat until he was defeated by current 4th District Republican U.S. Rep. Steven Palazzo. Taylor is now challenging Palazzo in the 2014 GOP Primary. Contested campaigns always produce fiery rhetoric and passion. The 2014 campaign is no exception. The give and take between the candidates has been strident and their supporters continue to swap verbal punches in virtually every possible digital venue. But as was the case 25 years ago with a 45-yearold father and grandfather named Larkin Smith, life has a way of reminding us that politicians are just men and women with hopes and aspirations. In the end, they are as frail as those of us who vote for or against them. They are exceedingly mortal and they are – in every sense – as fragile as we all are. Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

The high cost of liberalism: Part III Income inequality has long been one of the liberals’ favorite issues. So there is nothing surprising about its being pushed hard this election year. If nothing else, it is a much-needed distraction from the disasters of ObamaCare and the various IRS, Benghazi and other Obama administration scandals. Like so many other favorite liberal issues, income inequality is seldom discussed in terms of the actual consequences of liberal policies. When you turn from eloquent rhetoric to hard facts, the hardest of those facts is that income inequality has actually increased during five years of Barack Obama’s leftist policies. This is not as surprising as some might think. When you make it unnecessary for many people to work, fewer people work. Unprecedented numbers of Americans are on the food stamp program. Unprecedented numbers are also living off “disability” payments. There is a sweeping array of other government subsidies, whether in money or in kind, which together allow many people to receive greater benefits than they could earn by working at

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low-skilled jobs. Is it surprising that the labor force participation rate is lower than it Thomas has been in Sowell decades? In short, Columnist when people don’t have to earn incomes, they are less likely to earn incomes -- or, at least, to earn incomes in legal and visible ways that could threaten their government benefits. Most of the households in the bottom 20 percent of income earners have nobody working. There are more heads of household working full-time and year-round in the top 5 percent than in the bottom 20 percent. What this means statistically is that liberals can throw around numbers on how many people are living in “poverty” -- defined in terms of income received, not in terms of goods and services provided by the government. Most Americans living in “poverty” have air conditioning, a motor vehicle and other amenities, including more living space than the average person in Europe

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-- not the average poor person in Europe, the average person. “Poverty” is in the eye of the statisticians. In terms of income statistics that produce liberal outcries about “disparities” and “inequities,” millions of people who don’t have to earn incomes typically don’t. The more people who are in a non-income-earning mode, the greater the disparities with the incomes of those of us who have to work for a living, and who have to earn more to offset high tax rates. Yet liberals often act as if this is an injustice to those who don’t work, rather than an injustice to those who do work, and whose taxes support those who don’t. Actually, the liberal welfare state is an injustice to both, though in different ways. Despite whatever good intentions some liberals may have had in creating the ever-growing welfare state, practical politicians know that more dependency means more votes for supporters of bigger government. There are no incentives for either politicians or the bureaucrats who run the

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welfare state agencies to get people off their dependency on government programs. Moreover, the eligibility rules create a very high cost to individuals who try to rise by getting a job and earning their own money. It is not uncommon for someone who is receiving multiple government-provided benefits -- housing subsidies, food subsidies, etc. -- to lose more in benefits than they gain in income, if they decide to take a legitimate and visible job. If increasing your income by $10,000 a year would cause you to lose $15,000 worth of government benefits, would you do it? That is more than the equivalent of a 100 percent tax rate on income. Even millionaires and billionaires don’t pay that high a tax rate. Liberals don’t talk -- or perhaps even think -- in terms of the actual consequences of their policies, when it is so much more pleasant to think in terms of wonderful goals and lofty rhetoric. Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.

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5A • Daily Corinthian

State/Nation

Across The Nation Associated Press

FDA proposes first e-cigarette rules WASHINGTON — The federal government wants to ban sales of electronic cigarettes to minors and require approval for new products and health warning labels under regulations being proposed by the Food and Drug Administration. While the proposal being issued Thursday won’t immediately mean changes for the popular devices, the move is aimed at eventually taming the fast-growing e-cigarette industry. The agency said the proposal sets a foundation for regulating the products but the rules don’t immediately ban the wide array of flavors of e-cigarettes, curb marketing on places like TV or set product standards. Any further rules “will have to be grounded in our growing body of knowledge and understanding about the use of e-cigarettes and their potential health risks or public health benefits,� Commissioner Dr. Margaret Hamburg said. Once finalized, the agency could propose more restrictions on e-cigarettes. Officials didn’t provide a timetable for that action.

GOP senators attack Obama review WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and 21 other Republican senators accused President Barack Obama Thursday of displaying

“an astonishing disregard for the Constitution, the rule of law and the rights of American citizens� by considering administrative changes to the nation’s deportations policy. In a letter to the president, the senators said that changes under consideration would amount to “near complete abandonment of basic immigration enforcement.� The Associated Press reported this week that Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who is conducting a review ordered by Obama on how to make the administration’s policy on deportations more humane, is weighing limiting removals of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally who don’t have serious criminal records. Other changes also are possible. With comprehensive immigration legislation stalled in the GOP-led House 10 months after Senate passage, Obama is under intense pressure from immigrant advocates to act on his own to curb deportations and allow some of the 11.5 million immigrants in the country illegally to stay here. The White House had no immediate response.

Rancher condemned for racist remarks LAS VEGAS — A Nevada rancher who has become a conservative folk hero for resisting the federal government’s attempts to round up his cattle faced sharp criticism

Friday, April 25, 2014

Across The State

Thursday for racist comments published in a New York Times article. Politicians from around the country who have rallied to Cliven Bundy’s defense in recent weeks denounced the comments and distanced themselves from the rancher. Bundy was quoted in a Times story referring to black people as “the Negro� and recalling a time when he drove past a public-housing project in North Las Vegas and saw black people who “didn’t have nothing to do.� The Bundy family issued a statement on its Facebook page saying Bundy is a “good man, he loves all people, he is not a racist man.�

Wyoming residents to return home OPAL, Wyo. — Residents were allowed to return home Thursday, nearly 22 hours after an explosion at a naturalgas processing plant forced the evacuation of their small southwestern Wyoming town. Lincoln County spokesman Stephen Malik said that the evacuation order was lifted shortly after 11:30 a.m. Thursday even though a fire was still burning at the plant. “At this time they don’t feel like there is really any credible threat of secondary explosions or anything like that,� Malik said. No injuries were reported in the explosion Wednesday in Opal, a town of about 95 people. All of Opal was evacuated.

Associated Press

Hearing delayed on utility costs JACKSON — Upcoming hearings on whether Mississippi Power Co. should be able to get customers to pay for its Kemper County power plant have been postponed. The Mississippi Public Service Commission Thursday delayed prudency hearings from May 19 until at least August. The Public Utilities Staff sought the delay. Staff Executive Director Virden Jones says he wants to discuss a settlement of whether the unit of Atlanta-based Southern Co. spent prudently and also of Mississippi Power’s sevenyear rate proposal to recover costs. Monitors say some spending was imprudent, which could lead regulators to charge costs to Mississippi Power. Jones says there wasn’t enough time to prepare for hearings, and delaying should allow the Mississippi Supreme Court to rule if it’s constitutional for Mississippi Power to recover costs before the plant is running.

King also will represent the state in the National Teacher of the Year competition in Washington, D.C. Gulfport High School Principal Michael Lindsey also was recognized on Wednesday as the Mississippi Administrator of the Year. Lindsey is in his eighth year of leading Gulfport High. Lindsey began his teaching career in Natchez, where he was also a baseball coach.

Fatal shooting probed in Rankin BRANDON — Authorities in Rankin County are investigating the fatal shooting of a Hinds County deputy and his wife. Sheriff Bryan Bailey says in a news release the victims were Chris Smith and his wife, Amber. He says an autopsy will be conducted Bailey says the bodies were found in a bedroom about 9 p.m. Wednesday by deputies responding to a 911 call of shots fired. He says deputies

were met at the door to the home by the couple’s two small children. Bailey says one child told deputies she heard the parents arguing and when they went into the bedroom they heard two shots. A pistol was found at the scene.

UMMC, rehab facility merge some duties JACKSON — The University of Mississippi Medical Center will merge some functions with a neighboring rehabilitation hospital. The College Board approved the agreement with Methodist Rehabilitation Center Thursday. UMMC will close its inpatient rehabilitation unit over the next two years and move it into Methodist’s building, hiring some of Methodist’s physicians and nurse practitioners as faculty members. Some UMMC employees may shift to Methodist, but no layoffs are expected.

Top administrator, teacher named JACKSON — New Albany High School English teacher Mary Margarett King has been selected as Mississippi’s Teacher of the Year by the state Department of Education and the Mississippi Teacher Center. King has spent her entire nine-year teaching career at her alma mater, where she teaches juniors and seniors.

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6A • Friday, April 25, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths Lorene Humphrey

Lorene Humphrey died Wednesday, April 23, 2014 at her residence. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Grayson Funeral Home.

Garlon Jones

Funeral services for Garlon Jones, 77, are set for 2 p.m. today at McPeters Funeral Home. Mr. Jones died Wednesday, April 23, 2014 at Cornerstone Health and Rehab. He was an avid hunter and fisherman. Visitation will be from noon until service time today.

Lee Callahan

Funeral services for Lee Edward Callahan, 53, are set for 11 a.m. Saturday at Magnolia Funeral Home. Mr. Callahan died Thursday, April 24, 2014 at North Mississippi Medical Center. Visitation is 5-8 p.m. tonight at Magnolia Funeral Home. All other arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Magnolia Funeral Home.

Junie Carter

Math winners Approximately 100 seventh- and eighth-graders from Northeast Mississippi Community College’s five-county district of Alcorn, Prentiss, Tippah, Tishomingo and Union counties competed for top honors at the college’s annual Mississippi Council of Teachers of Mathematics (MCTM) district junior high math competition on Friday, February 28. Corinth Middle School claimed the overall school award. During the one-day event, all participants were given a written test with winners selected via student scores from the test. To claim the overall school award, Corinth Middle School had the highest average score of its four participants. Representing Corinth Middle School at the awards ceremony were (from left) eighth grader Treven Knight, eighth grader Caleb Henson, sponsor Joan Roberts, seventh grader Nick Craven and seventh grader Grantly Grady.

4-H teaches horse safety, showmanship BY BRITTNIE BURTON MSU Ag Communications

CLEVELAND — Horse lovers may think of horses as family, but they should always handle the large animals with caution. Laura Giaccaglia, Bolivar County coordinator with the Mississippi State University Extension Service, said safety comes first in horse handling. “Horses are massive animals, and when you are around them, you have to keep your guard up at all times,� Giaccaglia said. “We teach our 4-H members that respect is the foundation for safety for the animal and the people around it.� Sandy Tidmore has worked with Bolivar County 4-H’ers for six years. She has coached the horse judging team, taught riding lessons, hosted horse clinics at her home and helped children groom their horses for shows. “As long as you respect your horse and pay attention to the basic safety guidelines, they can provide many years of won-

“I always remind students that their horse is an animal, and it can wake up in different moods just like we can. Anyone who comes in contact with a horse should speak to it and rub it, so the horse is aware of them and does not get startled� Sandy Tidmore derful memories for you and your family,� Tidmore said. Even the perfect children’s horse should be handled with care, Tidmore said. “I always remind students that their horse is an animal, and it can wake up in different moods just like we can,� Tidmore said. “Anyone who comes in contact with a horse should speak to it and rub it, so the horse is aware of them and does not get startled.� Tidmore makes sure her 4-H members take their horses into the show arena before a compe-

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tition to let the horses look around and become accustomed to their surroundings. A horse can be startled by something as small as a new sign or banner hanging in the arena. “I reinforce these safety measures by repetition,� Tidmore said. “If you remind kids when they are young to be safe every time they are in contact with a horse, it will become second nature to them.� Ryann Campbell, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station facilities supervisor, said those handling hors-

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SOUTHAVEN — Funeral services for Harold Adam Davis, 79, formerly of Iuka, are set for 3 p.m. today at Harmony United Methodist Church in Iuka with burial in Harmony Cemetery. Mr. Davis died Tuesday, April 22, 2014 at Baptist Memorial Hospital-East in Memphis. He was graduate of Northeast Mississippi Community College and Mississippi State. He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years. He was a member of Heartland Baptist Church in Southaven and was the former owner and operator of Davis Insulation. Survivors include his wife of 54 years, Mary Nell Dean Davis of Southaven; a son, Byron Harold Davis (Janet) of Southaven; a daughter, Judy Davis Malenky (Mike) of Southaven; a brother, Edward Davis of Burnsville; four grandchildren, Jen Pendergrast (John), Adams Michael Malenky, Julia Elaine Davis and Kaleigh Caroline Davis; and one greatgrandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, Harvey and Lilla Davis. Bro. Dan Compton will officiate. Visitation is from 1 p.m. to service time today at the church.

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es should always wear proper protective attire. “When horseback riding, you should wear a helmet, closed-toe shoes and long pants,� Campbell said. “A rider should always use caution when walking behind a horse, because the horse can become easily frightened.� Giaccaglia said 4-H gives young Mississippians an opportunity to learn more about horses even if they do not own one. “We have young people who participate in both riding and non-riding events. They show in halter, showmanship and various performance classes,� Giaccaglia said. “In non-riding events, our 4-H’ers participate in horse judging, horse art, horse photography and public speaking on horserelated topics.� No matter what type of competition the kids are involved in, Giaccaglia teaches them that safety comes first. For more information about 4-H, contact the county Extension office.

WALNUT — A memorial service for Junie Faye Null Carter, 72, is set for 2 p.m. Saturday at High Point Chapel in Memphis with burial in Memorial Gardens Cemetery. Ms. Carter died Thursday, April 17, 2014. Ms. Carter was a retired restaurant manager for Top’s BBQ in Memphis and enjoyed cooking. She is survived by her children, Rodney (Debra) Carter, Lori (Jim) Morgan and Tony (Tammy) Carter; 12 grandchildren; and three brothers and three sisters. She was preceded in death by her parents Onnie and Lorena Null; five brothers; and two sisters. Visitation is Saturday from 12-2 p.m. at High Point Chapel, 3788 Summer Avenue, Memphis.

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7A • Friday, April 25, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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Hawaii Five-0 “Pe’epe’e Blue Bloods “Custody Kainaka” Battle” (N) Lisa Robertson Hawaii Five-0 “Pe’epe’e Blue Bloods “Custody Ferguson Kainaka” Battle” (N) Grimm (N) (:01) Hannibal “ShiizaSeth Meykana” (N) ers Whose Line Whose Line Hart of Dixie “A Better CW30 News at 9 (N) The Arsenio Hall Show House of Meet the Man” (N) Payne Browns Last Man Last Man Shark Tank (N) (:01) 20/20 News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightStanding Standing 10pm Live line Dateline NBC (N) Grimm (N) (:01) Hannibal “Shiiza- News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meykana” (N) ers Behind Charlie } ›› Jamaica Inn (39, Adventure) Just Seen It } ›› The Vampire Bat (33) Lionel Just Seen It Headln Rose Charles Laughton. Atwill, Melvyn Douglas. How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Parks/Rec- Parks/Recreat reat Washing- Charlie Great Performances “Sleeping Beauty,” set to Tavis Charlie Rose (N) World ton Rose Tchaikovsky. (N) Smiley News Kitchen Nightmares Ramsay tries to save Mangia Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 TMZ (N) Dish Nation Access Mangia. (N) News (N) Hollyw’d Psych “Ghosts” Psych Psych “Daredevils!” Psych Psych (6:00) MLB Baseball: Miami Marlins at New York PIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld The Arsenio Hall Show Seinfeld Mets. (N) (L) Girls in Bed Hypnotika (13) Angie } ›› Gangster Squad (13) Cops try to bring mob- } › Getaway (13, Action) Ethan Savage. ster Mickey Cohen to justice. Hawke, Selena Gomez. Iceberg Slim: Portrait of a Pimp (12, } ›› Dark Skies (13) Keri Russell, Nurse Californica- (:10) } ››› 21 Grams Documentary) Jackie tion Josh Hamilton. Sean Penn. Game of Thrones Tyrion Game of Thrones Real Time With Bill VICE (N) Real Time With Bill VICE helps Jaime. Maher (N) (L) Maher Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. MTV Special } The Roommate NBA Basketball: Chicago Bulls at Washington Wizards. (N) (Live) NBA Basketball: Houston Rockets at Portland Trail Blazers. (N) (Live) Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Jail Modern Modern Modern Modern Family Family Family Family Wild Sponge. Full H’se Full H’se Sons of Guns: Locked Sons of Guns “The and Throwdown” (N) The First 48 “Pointless; The First 48 Set Up” Boxing: Golden Boy Live: Luis Ortiz vs. Monte Barrett. From Indio, Calif. (6:00) } ›› Why Did I Get Married? V. Ice V. Ice V. Ice V. Ice Amish Amish Amish Amish Giuliana & Bill Fashion Police (N) American Pickers American Pickers

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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Check out the latest health tips and trends in Crossroads Medical magazine. Coming Saturday in your Daily Corinthian.

Childhood abuse victim finds love in arms of another woman D E A R ABBY: I am a woman in a loving relationship with another woman. My family has Abigail been harsh in remarks Van Buren their to me, saying they would Dear Abby rather I was dead than doing this, or that I should move away if this is the way I am going to live. I have been married twice. Neither marriage worked out. During my childhood, I was molested by a family member. Since then, I have been scared of men and don’t want to be around them. I have had crushes on women in the past, but didn’t tell my family because I’m a 30-year-old adult and I felt it was none of their business. I keep asking myself if my attraction to my lover was a choice, but I don’t remember “choosing” this. All I remember is falling for her and not wanting to look back. Should I end this relationship and live alone forever? I never want to be with another man as long as I live. -- ACHING IN AMARILLO DEAR ACHING: Because your family is so unaccepting of your sexual orientation, it would be interesting to know how they view your molester. Did you tell

anyone what happened, and did you receive counseling about it? If the answer is you didn’t, then PLEASE consider getting some now to help you deal with any residual issues because you appear to have a few -- like your fear of and aversion to all men. What your family said was cruel and uncalled-for. It’s apparent they know nothing about homosexuality. There is a chapter of PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) about two hours away from your community, located in Lubbock. You can find it online at pflaglubbock.org. It can provide information to help you build bridges of understanding with your family. Assuming the feelings you have for this woman are reciprocated, the two of you might be happier moving to a community that is more welcoming. Texas is a big, diverse state and Dallas, Houston or Austin might be a better fit for you. DEAR ABBY: I’m a 13-year-old girl who has been told many times that I’m very mature for my age. Unfortunately, I’m TOO mature. What I want most in the world is sex appeal. I long for the perfect sex-crazed boyfriend. What can I do about this craving? -- BEYOND MY YEARS IN KENTUCKY DEAR BEYOND: The first thing you should do about this “craving” is learn all you can about birth control and self-control,

because the “perfect sex-crazed boyfriend” could get you -- and himself -- into a world of trouble. At 13, you should be focused on sports and getting into and out of high school with a diploma. Whoever told you you are mature for your age must have meant physically, because when a girl’s No. 1 desire in the world is sex appeal and a sex-crazed boyfriend, it is not a sign of EMOTIONAL maturity. DEAR ABBY: Last year I made a beautiful welcome wreath for my friend to hang on her front door. After all this time, it’s still sitting in a box in her basement. If she doesn’t like it, I would like to ask for it back, so I can use and enjoy it. Abby, can I do this? What could I say? — LORRIE IN FLORIDA DEAR LORRIE: It has always been my belief that once a gift has been given, it’s inappropriate to ask for it back. However, if you feel comfortable enough with your friend to do so, tell her exactly what you told me: That since she has never used the wreath, you would like to have it for your own front door. 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). Make things simple for all: Give to yourself. It would be helpful to your loved ones because they no longer would have to guess about what you need or what will make you happy. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Your patience is legendary, and here you go again today, sticking with projects long after others would have given up. Someone is falling in love with your quiet strength and fortitude. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). In some ways, you feel like you’ve been punished in the past. So it’s only right that you should now be rewarded for the adjustments you’ve made. You’ll like how this reward unfolds. CANCER (June 22-July 22). There’s an interpersonal volley in both work and play, and you have a talent for serving up something that’s easily returned. The better you interact with others the more successful you’re likely to be.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You have a low tolerance for the kind of surprises and spontaneous changes that come from an unorganized system. You’d rather spend hours creating a better system than running with one you don’t trust. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). There will be eager pupils around you. You are willing to share and help, but you correctly sense that not all of your methods will work for others. Their development will happen in stages. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Don’t be too quick to give up what you have to gain for what you don’t. Look deeply into the trade you are offered. The values that matter most in this deal are not so obviously determined. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There’s nothing static about relationships. You expect changes and structure your life accordingly. The smart way is to check in often but not obviously to assess how things are working.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’ll be rather selective about what you pay attention to, and that is only smart. Why learn what you can’t apply? Once you see the practicality in a solution, you’ll be eager to know more. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Not wanting to miss an opportunity to be generous, you may feel compelled to give more than is necessary or even appropriate -- and it’s not a move you’ll ever regret. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You have a talent for putting the right people together, and you’ll create scenarios that never could have happened without your expertise, instinct and involvement. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’re no party animal, but you’ve mastered the secret to maintaining a robust social life that many party animals mess up time and again: You go home when you’re tired.


Business

8A • Daily Corinthian

YOUR STOCKS Name

P/E Last

A-B-C-D AES Corp AK Steel AbbottLab AbbVie Accenture AdobeSy AMD Aetna Agnico g AlcatelLuc Alcoa Alexion AlignTech Allergan AlldNevG AllyFin n AlphaNRs AlpAlerMLP AlteraCp lf Altria Amazon Ambev n AMovilL AmAirl n AmApparel ACapAgy AEagleOut AmExp AmIntlGrp ARltCapPr AmTower Amgen Anadarko AnalogDev AngiesList AnglogldA Annaly Apache Apple Inc ApldMatl ArcelorMit ArchCoal ArenaPhm AriadP ArrayBio AstraZen Atmel AvagoTch Avon Baidu BakrHu BallardPw BcoBrad pf BcoSantSA BcoSBrasil BkofAm BkNYMel B iPVix rs BarrickG Baxter BedBath BestBuy BlackBerry Blackstone Boeing BostonSci BrMySq Broadcom BrcdeCm Brookdale CBS B CMS Eng CSX CVS Care CabotOG s Cadence CallGolf Calpine Cameron CdnSolar CapOne CpstnTurb Carlisle Carnival Cbeyond Celgene Cemex Cemig pf s CenterPnt CntryLink Cerner s CescaTher ChesEng Chimera CienaCorp Cirrus Cisco Citigroup CitrixSys CliffsNRs Coach CocaCE ColgPalm s Comc spcl ConAgra ConocoPhil ConsolEngy Corning CovantaH Covidien CSVInvNG CSVelIVST CSVxSht rs Cree Inc CrwnCstle Ctrip.com Cytokinet rs DCT Indl DR Horton DanaHldg Danaher DeltaAir DenburyR DevonE DiaOffs DxGldBll rs DrxFnBear DrxSCBear DrxFnBull DirDGdBr s DrxSCBull Discover Disney DollarGen DomRescs DowChm DrPepSnap DryShips DuPont DukeEngy Dunkin

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14.51 7.08 38.43 49.32 78.36 63.22 4.28 72.96 28.29 3.97 13.58 156.01 50.80 166.61 3.66 24.38 4.50 18.03 34.14 38.40 337.15 7.81 19.72 37.26 .73 22.57 11.32 87.41 52.49 13.21 83.56 113.72 100.19 53.70 12.98 17.88 11.43 87.96 567.77 19.37 16.48 4.39 6.17 7.45 4.09 69.01 8.20 65.38 14.95 159.74 69.77 3.96 15.12 9.83 5.81 16.34 33.62 41.55 17.47 72.30 62.83 24.19 7.34 31.94 129.86 13.75 50.71 31.14 9.46 32.03 58.27 29.95 28.40 73.07 37.97 15.05 8.91 22.33 64.90 30.70 74.74 2.17 82.28 38.17 9.86 141.25 12.38 7.43 24.56 34.63 52.30 2.06 29.22 3.10 21.33 20.63 23.33 48.33 60.00 18.76 50.00 46.51 66.43 50.72 31.06 74.49 43.31 21.19 18.47 70.96 2.87 31.76 6.50 50.03 73.84 48.61 12.99 7.95 23.13 23.35 73.66 36.73 17.27 71.91 51.69 35.74 20.02 16.46 90.58 24.24 72.02 56.25 79.59 55.31 71.52 49.24 53.82 3.22 67.11 73.06 46.69

E-F-G-H

Today

E-CDang dd 12.39 E-Trade 45 22.67 eBay 25 54.84 EMC Cp 20 25.51 EOG Res s 26 103.48 EaglRkEn dd 4.03 EldorGld g 97 5.81 EmersonEl 20 69.50 EmpDist 17 24.50 EnCana g 21 23.00 Endo Intl 22 61.86 ENSCO 10 51.49 Ericsson ... 12.26 ExcoRes 6 5.94 Exelixis dd 3.41 Exelon 18 36.01 ExpScripts 31 71.43 ExxonMbl 11 100.01 F5 Netwks 29 105.98 Facebook 80 60.87 FedExCp 26 136.08 FidlNFin 17 31.85 FifthThird 11 21.03 Finisar 33 28.45 FireEye n ... 44.45 FstNiagara 13 9.20 FstSolar 15 70.62 FirstEngy 15 34.18 Flextrn 22 9.46 Flowserv s 20 73.96 Fortinet 96 22.93 FMCG 12 33.93 Freescale dd 25.88 FrontierCm 48 5.81 FuelCellE dd 2.44 FultonFncl 15 12.55 Fusion-io dd 8.64 GATX 19 68.75

Chg GT AdvTc dd 17.28 GW Phm n ... 67.90 GalenaBio dd 2.28 18 27.40 +.23 Gannett 14 38.92 +.02 Gap -.17 GenDynam 16 110.42 -.82 GenMotors 14 34.17 16 17.53 -.75 Genworth ... 6.09 -1.17 Gerdau dd 2.03 +.03 GeronCp 27 74.08 +4.05 GileadSci ... 55.51 -.19 GlaxoSKln ... 5.94 -.04 GolLinhas GoldFLtd ... 4.03 -.05 dd 24.55 +3.78 Goldcrp g -1.65 GoldmanS 11 160.85 20 10.42 +.96 GraphPkg dd 7.41 -.18 Groupon 15 50.53 +.10 HCA Hldg +.19 HMS Hldgs 35 16.21 5.41 -.10 HalconRes dd 21 63.49 -.22 Hallibrtn +.09 HannArms dd 13.15 20 34.86 +12.57 HartfdFn dd 3.07 -.05 HeclaM +.09 HelmPayne 18 107.02 HercOffsh dd 4.34 +.17 27 96.02 +.07 Hershey 36 28.25 +.19 Hertz HewlettP 12 32.00 +.22 46 9.13 +.28 HimaxTch dd 20.73 +.85 Hologic HomeDp 21 79.77 -.03 -.47 HomeAway cc 36.94 +.41 HopFedBc 23 11.40 49 21.12 +1.21 HostHotls 38 4.57 +.41 HovnanE 26 9.97 +.16 HudsCity 9.33 -.29 HuntBncsh 13 +.03 I-J-K-L +.38 18 3.47 +43.02 IAMGld g q 12.54 +.12 iShGold q 47.47 +.02 iShBrazil q 42.62 -.09 iShEMU iShGerm q 31.27 +.01 q 20.63 -.05 iSh HK iShJapan q 11.09 +.29 iSTaiwn q 14.77 +1.23 q 21.11 +.17 iSh UK q 18.92 +.78 iShSilver iShChinaLC q 34.98 +.18 q 41.38 +.40 iShEMkts q 111.17 -.61 iSh20 yrT q 67.73 +.01 iS Eafe iShNsdqBio q 229.62 +.27 q 131.31 +.03 iSR2KGr iShR2K q 113.61 +.03 q 69.25 -.03 iShREst q 23.90 -.59 iShHmCnst dd 3.29 +.55 IderaPhm Illumina cc 151.68 -.34 dd 1.20 +.06 Imris g dd 9.35 -.09 Infinera IngerRd 19 59.60 -.08 15 27.49 -.02 IngrmM 2.60 -.22 InovioPhm dd IntgDv 25 12.03 -.77 Interface 29 19.22 +.06 IBM 13 190.22 -.24 IntlGame 14 12.63 +.73 Interpublic 25 17.30 -.14 Invesco 17 35.38 +.69 IronwdPh dd 12.01 -.12 ItauUnibH ... 16.44 +.29 JA Solar dd 11.38 +.24 JPMorgCh 14 56.19 -.02 JanusCap 20 12.37 +1.83 JetBlue 16 8.37 +.18 JinkoSolar 28 30.80 -.78 JohnJn 19 99.96 +.05 JohnsnCtl 16 45.77 +.72 JnprNtwk 28 25.24 +1.49 KB Home 23 16.51 -.18 KBR Inc 17 26.03 KKR 11 24.41 -.65 KLA Tnc 21 67.74 +.75 Keycorp 13 13.62 +.03 KindMorg 29 33.68 -3.57 Kinross g dd 4.09 -.11 KodiakO g 25 13.47 -.02 Kohls 14 54.73 -.06 LamResrch 21 58.26 +.02 LamarAdv cc 51.36 -.59 LVSands 28 79.48 +.46 LennarA 18 39.51 +.20 LillyEli 13 58.68 -.01 LinearTch 26 46.75 +.77 LinkedIn cc 171.59 +1.40 LockhdM 17 160.62 -.17 Logitech dd 13.85 -.07 Lorillard 17 54.06 +4.01 lululemn gs 25 47.10 +.47 M-N-O-P -.06 +1.48 MBIA 10 12.15 +.56 MFA Fncl 10 7.95 +.29 MGIC Inv 38 8.71 -.10 MGM Rsts dd 24.55 +.47 MagellPet dd 1.95 +1.08 MagHRes dd 8.35 +.04 Mallinck n ... 67.61 +.12 MannKd dd 6.38 +.41 MarathnO 14 36.38 +.09 MVJrGld rs q 35.86 -.39 MktVGold q 23.94 +.19 MV OilSvc q 52.16 -1.01 MktVRus q 22.40 -1.01 MktV Agri q 54.21 -1.61 MartMM 49 126.64 +1.07 MarvellT 24 15.90 -.09 Masco 30 22.45 +1.78 MasterCd s 29 74.35 +.20 Mattel 14 37.68 +.28 MaximIntg 24 32.99 -.36 McDrmInt 13 7.01 -.13 McEwenM dd 2.42 +.60 MeadJohn 28 88.22 +3.16 Medidata s cc 41.09 -1.53 Medtrnic 17 58.34 -.01 MelcoCrwn 59 37.05 +.11 Merck 39 57.53 -.08 MetLife 15 51.95 +.98 Microchp 30 48.39 -.65 MicronT 11 26.16 -.03 Microsoft 15 39.86 +.07 MobileTele ... 16.48 -.02 Molycorp dd 4.92 +.46 Mondelez 16 35.30 -.13 Monsanto 22 110.60 -.66 MorgStan 18 30.94 -.03 Mylan 32 50.35 -.23 NRG Egy dd 32.97 +.45 NXP Semi ... 62.00 -.90 Nabors 53 24.74 NOilVarco 15 82.88 NetApp 22 35.62 -.44 Netflix cc 344.07 +1.17 NY CmtyB 15 15.99 -.10 NewLead rs ... .16 -.40 NewmtM dd 25.49 -1.60 NielsenH 24 46.06 -.82 NikeB 25 73.39 -.14 NobleCorp 9 31.79 +.10 NobleEn s 28 74.95 +.04 NokiaCp ... 7.30 -.17 NA Pall g ... .30 -.16 NorthropG 14 119.18 +1.43 NStarRlt dd 15.77 -.02 Novartis 21 84.59 -.15 Novavax dd 4.13 -.05 Nucor 34 51.49 +.11 Nvidia 26 19.26 +.50 OcwenFn 19 38.00 -.49 OfficeDpt dd 4.24 -2.21 Oi SA ... 1.17 -.49 OnSmcnd 27 9.77 -.25 Oracle 17 39.75 +.52 OwensCorn 25 41.75 -.12 PDL Bio 5 8.42 +.39 PPG 25 194.51 -2.31 PPL Corp 13 33.39 -.05 Pandora dd 28.20 +.58 ParametS dd 9.32 +.89 ParaG&S dd 1.05 -.09 PattUTI 25 32.45 -4.17 PeabdyE 52 17.84 +.89 PnnNGm ... 11.68 +.43 PennVa dd 17.78 +1.08 PeopUtdF 19 14.54 -.09 PepcoHold 19 21.44 -.05 PetrbrsA ... 14.48 -.07 Petrobras ... 13.73 -1.04 Pfizer 15 30.71 +1.12 PhilipMor 16 83.49

+.44 -1.42 -.01 +.30 -.19 -1.16 -.22 +.15 +.04 +.03 +.22 +.37 +.36 -.08 -.16 +.40 +.40 -.01 +.13 +.47 +.08 -1.23 -.03 +.11 -.04 -6.79 +.07 -4.13 -.06 +.26 -.15 +.25 +1.25 -.06 -.05 +.12 +.10 -.05 -.12 -.08 +.08 +.39 -.11 -.06 -.04 +.06 +.07 +.23 +.05 +.04 +.21 -.01 -1.37 -.47 -.29 +.23 +.57 -.02 -2.01 -.21 +.53 -.25 -2.78 -.01 +.17 -.45 -1.51 +.01 -.13 -.39 +.23 +.46 +.54 +.14 +.01 -.22 +.93 -.26 -.69 +.38 +.17 -.27 +.77 +1.02 -.27 +.07 -.07 +.15 -.04 +6.01 +.20 +1.53 +1.32 -.88 -.13 -4.12 -1.36 -1.03 +.41 -.41 -.15 -.01 -.15 +.36 +.19 -.13 +3.28 +.02 -.09 -1.04 -.34 -.09 -.52 -.20 -.19 +.09 +.30 +.99 +.12 +.30 -.15 +3.95 -2.84 -.04 +.69 +.03 +.04 +.35 -.09 +.17 -.44 -.08 +.19 -1.53 -.10 +.07 +.33 +1.48 -.46 +.23 -.25 -9.43 -.22 -.05 -.43 +.92 -.71 +.84 -.12 +.01 -2.48 +.31 -1.58 -.04 -1.05 +.17 +.20 +.06 +.01 +.04 -.04 -.34 -.06 -1.79 +.28 +.03 -3.68 -.06 -1.04 +.42 -1.25 +.66 -.11 -.07 +.11 +.09 -.21 +.14

Phillips66 14 82.57 +.27 PiperJaf 16 45.19 +.99 PlugPowr h dd 6.01 -.40 Polycom dd 12.36 -.81 Potash 20 35.43 +.29 PwShs QQQ q 87.59 +.83 PrecDrill 19 12.49 -.48 ProShtS&P q 24.53 -.04 ProUltQQQ q 98.90 +1.89 ProUltSP q 105.98 +.34 PrUPQQQ s q 60.69 +1.74 PUVixST rs q 57.41 +1.27 ProctGam 22 81.15 +.79 ProgsvCp 12 23.94 +.25 ProUShSP q 27.99 -.11 PUShQQQ rs q 58.10 -1.17 ProUShL20 q 64.60 -.26 PShtQQQ rs q 54.20 -1.60 PUShSPX rs q 54.93 -.36 ProspctCap ... 10.99 +.02 PSEG 16 39.77 +.38 PulteGrp 3 18.99 +.42

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS , CFP

92.26 24.46 77.87 57.57 82.30 2.96 8.54 14.33 95.92 2.13 47.41 1.05 53.93 7.12 52.43 46.22 25.64 164.69 124.56 43.17 187.83 31.71 41.26 39.29 77.94 34.02 54.73 85.19 6.91 38.19 101.80 27.09 34.26 19.42 49.88 4.09 22.23 51.64 3.20 42.16 42.49 58.32 3.15 18.15 13.55 24.27 48.37 59.23 8.06 47.50 57.82 43.73 64.54 93.79 53.03 36.21 42.62 8.17 85.53 12.11 71.09 76.18 23.00 65.73 18.65 77.88 37.15 20.26 32.02 38.81 32.54 7.04 10.54 20.57 4.89 3.28 36.40 32.49 58.25 59.94 20.56 10.70 61.45 18.24 207.86 49.84 48.47 115.38 51.44 136.65 65.64 63.58 16.29 34.78 29.39 66.69 43.13 13.13 14.28 7.30 3.80 32.88 32.03 44.82 10.21 42.21 42.50

U-V-W-X-Y-Z

-.46 +.33 -2.84 -.78 +2.23 -.05 +.59 -.01 -4.31 -.03 +.66 +.01 +.53 -.01 -.20 -.02 -.16 +.05 +.80 -.03 +.38 +.33 -.02 -.72 +.27 -.91 +.54 -.11 -.72 -.41 -.15 +1.26 +.50 -3.19 -.05 -.14 -1.63 +.03 +.66 -2.27 -.90 -.51 -.45 +.19 +.11 -2.22 -.31 -.21 -.09 +.17 +.35 +.03 -.10 +.28 +.29 +.23 +3.09 +.20 +.70 -.73 -.16 -.18 +.10 -.51 -.40 -.07 +.54 -.23 -.18 -.50 -.62 -.07 +.48 -.02 -.03 +.26 -.60 -3.39 +.15 -.10 +.71 -.94 -.13 -.83 +2.01 -4.01 +.96 -1.34 -.36 +3.90 -1.52 +1.12 +.61 -.65 +1.71 +.35 +1.00 -1.05 -.01 +.16 +.13 -1.13 -.07 -.19 -.75

®

Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suite 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409

Brian S Langley Financial Advisor 605 Foote Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471

Q-R-S-T Qihoo360 cc QlikTech dd Qualcom 20 QstDiag 10 Questcor 16 QksilvRes 3 RF MicD dd RadianGrp dd Raytheon 16 Rentech dd ResMed 21 RexahnPh dd ReynAmer 19 RiteAid 32 RylCarb 22 RymanHP 26 SLM Cp 9 SpdrDJIA q SpdrGold q SpdrEuro50 q S&P500ETF q SpdrHome q SpdrLehHY q SpdrS&P RB q SpdrOGEx q Safeway 3 Salesforce dd SanDisk 18 SandRdge dd SareptaTh dd Schlmbrg 19 Schwab 33 SeadrillLtd 15 ServiceCp 24 ServcNow dd SiderurNac ... SilvWhtn g 21 Sina dd SiriusXM 53 SkywksSol 25 SodaStrm 18 SolarCity ... Sonus dd SonyCp ... SouFun s 20 SwstAirl 22 SwstnEngy 85 Splunk dd Sprint n dd SP Matls q SP HlthC q SP CnSt q SP Consum q SP Engy q SP Inds q SP Tech q SP Util q StdPac 17 StanBlkDk 27 Staples 13 Starbucks 30 StarwdHtl 23 StarwdPT 13 StateStr 15 StlDynam 24 Stryker 32 Suncor gs 13 SunEdison dd SunPower 26 SunTrst 14 SupEnrgy dd Supvalu 10 SusqBnc 12 Symantec 17 SynrgyPh dd Synovus 21 Sysco 22 TD Ameritr 23 TJX 20 TableauA n ... TaiwSemi ... TalismE g ... Target 20 Teradyn 26 TeslaMot dd TevaPhrm 100 TexInst 26 ThermoFis 30 3D Sys cc 3M Co 20 TimeWarn 17 Timken 22 Titan Intl 35 TollBros 29 TotalSys 22 TractSup s 28 Transocn cc TrinaSolar dd TriQuint dd Tsakos ... TurqHillRs dd 21stCFoxA ... 21stCFoxB 11 Twitter n ... TwoHrbInv 10 TycoIntl dd Tyson 18

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Drilling For Profit projects,” writes Citi’s Alastair Syme. “What is left has strong value potential.” Among the most prolific new resources: gas and oil trapped in shale formations in North America, oil in the deep waters off of Brazil, and the enormous onshore oil fields of Iraq. The five companies Citi likes best: the British natural gas company BG Group, the Canadian oil company Cenovus Energy, the U.S. oil and natural gas company Chesapeake Energy, the Australian natural gas company Santos, and the French oil giant Total.

Big oil and gas companies have spent increasingly large amounts in recent years on enormous projects needed to find and produce crude oil and natural gas in difficult locations around the globe. The returns, however, haven’t measured up: prices for these commodities have stayed about flat. That has squeezed profits and turned off many investors and analysts. An index of global energy company stocks, which is dominated by Big Oil, has grown only about half as fast as a broad index of global companies over the past five years. But analysts at Citigroup believe that is about to change, citing a newfound discipline. For example, the companies are conducting more thorough engineering before projects begin to reduce delays during construction that can quickly push projects over budget. Citi argues that oil companies shouldn’t stop investing, but should invest only in those projects that will deliver the highest returns. “The industry needs to push forward on good

Source: Citigroup

Jonathan Fahey, Jenni Sohn • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 16,631.63 14,457.60 7,774.58 5,952.18 550.08 462.66 11,334.65 8,814.76 4,371.71 3,198.74 1,897.28 1,548.19 1,398.91 1,109.81 20,257.19 16,308.50 1,212.82 899.92

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

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg ... ... -.45 +12.25 -32.24 -.42 +4.18 +26.17 +2.87 +.53 +11.30 +2.61 -5.98 -.06 +1.69 +15.09 +21.37 +.52 -.68 +26.09 +3.22 +.17 +1.64 +18.51 +.60 +.04 +1.55 +18.93 +14.97 +.07 +1.34 +19.34 -2.73 -.24 -1.66 +21.70

Last 16,501.65 7,710.02 546.02 10,575.90 4,148.34 1,878.61 1,363.33 19,970.12 1,144.35

Dow Jones industrials

16,600

Close: 16,501.65 Change: 0.00 (0.0%)

16,300 16,000

16,800

10 DAYS

16,400 16,000 15,600 15,200

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

Div 1.48 1.84 3.08f 2.04 2.00 .94 1.48 .92 2.28 .20 2.40 4.00 1.22f .90f 3.00 2.04 .24 1.50 ... .50 .24 .48f ... .88 .20 1.80 .90 .32 3.36f .66 .72 3.24

PE 9 10 25 17 17 50 19 15 11 22 19 11 22 19 19 10 14 16 51 9 26 23 8 20 13 19 14 15 20 16 22 18

YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 8 38.39 +.15 +4.0 15 14.13 -.27 -8.1 ... 8.15 ... -10.9 9 23.28 +.11 +1.4 20 85.52 +.11 +3.1 11 22.33 -.18 +37.4 ... 1.36 +.05 -47.7 14 10.31 -.10 +4.2 15 2520.00 -9.66 -9.8 ... 43.22 -.03 +8.8 27 201.04 -.91 +9.6 53 3.20 +.03 -8.5 20 45.68 +.46 +11.1 ... 22.03 -.01 +.8 ... 5.85 +.01 -35.6 ... 6.00 -.02 -33.7 14 78.89 -.11 +.9 ... 68.51 +.52 +11.8 ... 3.50 -.01 -47.1 14 40.65 -.29 +.6 16 78.31 +.27 -.5 12 49.32 -.27 +8.6 76 8.37 -.08 -4.0 14 65.77 -.31 +7.8 25 28.74 +.14 -9.0 13 11.99 +.03 -1.5 ... 20.65 +1.10 +18.9 29 35.24 -.20 -12.9

YTD Last Chg %Chg Name Div 62.16 -.54 -6.9 MeadWvco 1.00a 34.50 -.42 -1.9 OldNBcp .44f 118.45 -.02 +6.0 Penney ... 57.88 +.07 +12.2 PennyMac 2.36 52.33 +.43 +12.0 PepsiCo 2.27 64.89 +.05 -7.7 ... 50.79 +.40 +11.8 PilgrimsP ... 37.81 -.24 +1.3 RadioShk 49.39 +.58 +1.6 RegionsFn .20f 23.63 -.52 -7.0 SbdCp 3.00 105.28 +1.90 +15.9 SearsHldgs ... 124.30 -.39 -.5 Sherwin 2.20 40.70 -.03 -1.5 ... 51.37 +.16 -1.1 SiriusXM 2.10f 96.53 +.62 -12.3 SouthnCo .34e 93.89 +.32 +2.8 SPDR Fncl 95.85 +.73 -1.4 TecumsehB ... 86.19 -.16 +7.6 TecumsehA ... 72.60 -.19 +25.9 Torchmark .76f 16.32 +.09 +5.8 Total SA 3.19e 18.31 -.03 -.9 ... 46.80 -.39 -10.1 USEC rs .92 17.51 +.19 -2.8 US Bancrp 1.92f 26.46 +.04 -5.6 WalMart 28.20 +.88 +18.2 WellsFargo 1.20 93.63 -.40 +2.5 Wendys Co .20 26.75 ... +3.1 WestlkCh s .50f 18.00 +.21 +3.2 Weyerhsr .88 109.03 +.32 +4.4 .25f 45.35 -.10 +14.7 Xerox ... 47.16 +.94 -4.8 YRC Wwde ... 99.84 +.71 +2.9 Yahoo

USG 76 30.99 -1.33 UltraPt g 20 30.10 -.12 UndArmr s 65 50.42 -4.02 UtdContl 29 41.53 -4.53 UPS B 21 98.64 -.60 US NGas q 26.09 -.25 USSteel dd 27.47 +.29 UtdhlthGp 14 76.59 +1.26 Vale SA ... 13.86 +.27 Vale SA pf ... 12.71 +.32 ValeantPh dd 134.42 +1.19 ValeroE 11 56.55 +.09 VlyNBcp 15 10.33 -.47 VangEmg q 40.93 VangEur q 59.65 +.07 VangFTSE q 41.60 -.01 Verisign 13 49.25 -.78 VerizonCm 12 46.28 -1.15 VimpelCm dd 8.67 -.13 Visa 27 209.40 +.58 VMware 40 96.44 +.91 Vodafone ... 36.42 +.50 VulcanM cc 65.25 +.84 WPX Engy dd 21.60 -.19 Walgrn 24 67.42 +.03 WalterEn dd 7.72 +.07 WsteMInc cc 42.84 +.85 WeathfIntl dd 18.41 -.14 Weibo n ... 20.44 -.97 WellPoint 12 96.54 +1.85 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) WstnUnion 11 15.81 +.07 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg WholeFd s 34 51.02 +1.22 Name WmsCos 48 41.33 -.72 Facebook 1310755 60.87 -.49 CescaTher 2.06 +.46 +28.8 ParametS 9.32 -3.68 -28.3 Windstrm 20 8.99 -.02 SiriusXM 896445 3.20 +.03 MicroStr 126.75 +19.55 +18.2 Clearfield 15.49 -5.29 -25.5 WTJpHedg q 46.27 -.18 S&P500ETF 818361 187.83 +.38 NwstBio wt 4.24 +.65 +18.1 SequansC 2.02 -.45 -18.2 Workday dd 72.59 -4.05 BkofAm 691949 16.34 -.03 SynrgyP wt 2.00 +.25 +14.3 SilcLtd 47.90 -9.88 -17.1 Wynn 30 213.13 +6.31 Zynga -.82 -16.9 680087 4.35 -.07 ElizArden 36.00 +4.17 +13.1 EaglRkEn 4.03 XcelEngy 16 31.50 +.18 9.39 +1.08 +13.0 BncpBnk 15.84 -2.77 -14.9 PwShs QQQ 458307 87.59 +.83 VascoDta Xilinx 21 47.66 -4.76 Zimmer 101.97 +10.52 +11.5 MyersInd 20.87 -3.17 -13.2 iShR2K 418355 113.61 -.29 YY Inc ... 64.80 -3.77 7.30 -1.05 -12.6 Yamana g 22 7.57 -.25 VerizonCm 406679 46.28 -1.15 LamResrch 58.26 +6.01 +11.5 Tsakos 42.51 -5.89 -12.2 389804 26.16 -.09 SynrgyPh 4.89 +.48 +10.9 IPC Yandex ... 26.69 -1.58 MicronT 8.25 +.79 +10.6 TxCapBsh 56.74 -7.83 -12.1 380823 41.38 +.04 VertexEn Yelp dd 62.70 -1.80 iShEMkts YingliGrn dd 4.22 -.11 YoukuTud dd 24.45 -1.37 YSE IARY ASDA IARY Zimmer 21 101.97 +10.52 1,579 Total issues 3,213 Advanced 1,079 Total issues 2,721 ZionBcp 18 29.16 -.64 Advanced 1,497 New Highs 135 Declined 1,486 New Highs 59 Zoetis 30 29.89 +.50 Declined 137 New Lows 15 Unchanged 156 New Lows 26 Zogenix dd 2.84 +.03 Unchanged Volume 3,121,952,704 Volume 2,059,974,774 Zynga dd 4.35 -.07

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Name NAV AQR MaFtStrI 9.87 American Beacon LgCpVlIs 29.64 American Century EqIncInv 8.89 HeritInv 25.28 InvGrInv 33.09 UltraInv 33.76 ValueInv 8.49 American Funds AMCAPA m 28.16 BalA m 24.78 BondA m 12.64 CapIncBuA m 59.33 CapWldBdA m20.77 CpWldGrIA m 46.12 EurPacGrA m 49.33 FnInvA m 51.77 GrthAmA m 43.36 HiIncA m 11.49 IncAmerA m 21.20 IntBdAmA m 13.51 IntlGrInA m 35.49 InvCoAmA m 37.63 MutualA m 35.39 NewEconA m 38.35 NewPerspA m 37.64 NwWrldA m 59.26 SmCpWldA m 48.80 TaxEBdAmA m12.81 WAMutInvA m 40.22 Aquila ChTxFKYA m 10.73 Artisan Intl d 29.98 IntlVal d 37.21 MdCpVal 27.37 MidCap 46.94 BBH TaxEffEq d 21.85 Baron Growth b 70.86 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 36.54 EqDivA m 24.48 EqDivI 24.54 GlobAlcA m 21.48 GlobAlcC m 19.86 GlobAlcI 21.60 HiYldBdIs 8.35 HiYldInvA m 8.35 StrIncIns 10.29 Causeway IntlVlIns d 16.25 Cohen & Steers Realty 70.19 Columbia AcornIntZ 47.38 AcornZ 36.80 DivIncZ 18.58 Credit Suisse ComStrInstl 7.89 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.32 2YrGlbFII 10.00 5YrGlbFII 10.93 EmMkCrEqI 19.84 EmMktValI 27.71 IntCorEqI 13.08 IntSmCapI 21.48 IntlSCoI 19.99 IntlValuI 19.89 RelEstScI 29.25 TAUSCrE2I 13.59 USCorEq1I 16.81 USCorEq2I 16.61 USLgCo 14.83 USLgValI 32.25 USMicroI 19.89 USSmValI 35.63 USSmallI 30.75 USTgtValInst 23.08 DWS-Scudder GrIncS 23.16 Davis NYVentA m 41.75 NYVentY 42.28 Dodge & Cox Bal 99.47 GlbStock 11.98 Income 13.78 IntlStk 44.62 Stock 171.01 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 10.94 Dreyfus AppreciaInv 53.40 Driehaus ActiveInc 10.75 Eaton Vance FltgRtI 9.12 FMI LgCap 21.35 FPA Cres d 33.53 NewInc d 10.25 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 41.10 Federated StrValI 6.03 Fidelity AstMgr20 13.51 AstMgr50 17.84 Bal 23.10 Bal K 23.09 BlChGrow 63.83 CapApr 35.67 CapInc d 10.07 Contra 94.42 ContraK 94.38 DivGrow 35.74 DivrIntl d 36.71 DivrIntlK d 36.66 EqInc 59.88 EqInc II 24.82 FF2015 12.93 FF2035 13.61 FF2040 9.61 Fidelity 43.26 FltRtHiIn d 9.93 FrdmK2015 14.45 FrdmK2020 15.09 FrdmK2025 15.72 FrdmK2030 16.04 FrdmK2035 16.55 FrdmK2040 16.65 FrdmK2045 16.98 Free2010 15.54 Free2020 15.83 Free2025 13.50 Free2030 16.47 GNMA 11.42 GrowCo 120.25 GrowInc 28.10 GrthCmpK 120.13 HiInc d 9.45 IntlDisc d 39.73 InvGrdBd 7.83 LatinAm d 31.75 LowPrStkK d 49.83 LowPriStk d 49.86 Magellan 93.75 MidCap d 40.48 MuniInc d 13.16 OTC 77.40 Puritan 21.57 PuritanK 21.56 SASEqF 14.08 SInvGrBdF 11.32 STMIdxF d 55.07 SesAl-SctrEqt 14.08 SesInmGrdBd 11.31 ShTmBond 8.60 SmCapDisc d 31.02 StratInc 11.08 Tel&Util 23.00 TotalBd 10.63 USBdIdx 11.56 USBdIdxInv 11.56 Value 107.36 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 26.61 NewInsI 27.08 Fidelity Select Biotech d 181.47 HealtCar d 189.61 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 66.66 500IdxInstl 66.66 500IdxInv 66.65 ExtMktIdAg d 53.17 IntlIdxAdg d 41.00 TotMktIdAg d 55.06

YTD Fidelity® Chg %Rtn SerBlueChipGrF10.71 +0.03 +0.6 SeriesGrowthCoF10.66 -0.01 +0.8 -0.01 -6.8 First Eagle GlbA m 54.92 -0.03 +2.4 +0.02 +3.1 OverseasA m 23.89 -0.02 +3.4 FrankTemp-Frank ... +5.4 ... +4.1 Fed TF A m 12.20 -0.12 -0.8 FrankTemp-Franklin 7.26 ... +6.2 +0.01 +1.3 CA TF A m ... +2.7 +0.12 -1.2 GrowthA m 66.94 HY TF A m 10.25 ... +6.6 +0.01 +3.4 Income C m 2.54 ... +5.2 2.51 ... +5.5 +0.04 +3.0 IncomeA m IncomeAdv 2.50 +0.01 +5.5 +0.07 +2.0 ... +4.6 ... +2.7 NY TF A m 11.50 RisDvA m 48.99 -0.14 +1.2 +0.04 +2.9 10.58 ... +2.2 ... +3.7 StrIncA m 6.51 ... +1.8 +0.07 +2.2 USGovA m -0.06 +0.5 FrankTemp-Mutual Discov Z 34.57 +0.14 +2.5 +0.18 +0.8 +0.07 +0.8 DiscovA m 34.04 +0.13 +2.4 Shares Z 29.18 +0.13 +3.0 ... +3.0 +0.02 +3.5 SharesA m 28.93 +0.13 +2.9 ... +1.1 FrankTemp-Templeton 8.46 +0.03 +1.8 +0.08 +2.6 Fgn A m +0.13 +2.9 GlBond C m 13.09 -0.01 +0.5 +0.06 +2.2 GlBondA m 13.06 -0.02 +0.5 -0.05 +0.3 GlBondAdv 13.02 -0.01 +0.7 +0.05 +0.2 GrowthA m 25.89 +0.05 +3.7 19.85 +0.05 +2.3 -0.09 +0.9 WorldA m -0.10 -0.7 GE S&SUSEq 55.86 +0.02 +2.1 +0.01 +4.7 +0.05 +2.5 GMO EmgMktsVI d 10.59 +0.01 -1.7 26.76 +0.09 +4.8 -0.02 +3.2 IntItVlIV QuIII 25.49 +0.03 +2.3 USCorEqVI 17.49 +0.02 +1.7 +0.08 -1.6 Goldman Sachs +0.07 +1.2 46.02 +0.02 +3.6 +0.03 +1.4 MidCpVaIs -0.11 -1.4 Harbor Bond 12.11 ... +1.8 56.17 -0.03 -0.9 -0.03 +2.1 CapApInst IntlInstl 72.75 +0.24 +2.5 71.96 +0.23 +2.3 -0.65 -2.1 IntlInv b Hartford CapAprA m 46.86 -0.01 +0.4 +0.08 +11.0 ... +1.2 -0.06 +1.3 CpApHLSIA 60.37 -0.06 +1.4 INVESCO CharterA m 22.67 -0.03 +3.7 +0.01 +0.7 +0.01 +0.5 ComstockA m 24.16 -0.02 +1.9 +0.01 +0.8 EqIncomeA m 10.87 +0.01 +2.4 +0.02 +3.6 GrowIncA m 27.49 +0.02 +2.0 +0.02 +3.5 IVA ... +2.0 WorldwideI d 18.23 -0.02 +2.3 Ivy +0.03 +0.5 AssetStrA m 31.53 +0.11 -1.5 AssetStrC m 30.60 +0.10 -1.7 31.81 +0.11 -1.5 +0.40 +12.4 AsstStrgI JPMorgan 11.66 ... +2.2 +0.05 +1.5 CoreBdUlt ... +2.1 -0.09 -1.4 CoreBondA m 11.65 CoreBondSelect11.65 ... +2.2 -0.02 +1.9 HighYldSel 8.12 +0.01 +3.2 +0.03 +9.1 LgCapGrA m 31.13 +0.03 -2.0 LgCapGrSelect31.15 +0.03 -2.0 36.09 -0.04 +2.8 ... +0.2 MidCpValI ... +0.3 ... +0.1 ShDurBndSel 10.90 USLCpCrPS 28.22 +0.03 +1.7 -0.01 +1.1 ... +2.0 Janus 44.53 -0.05 +3.5 -0.04 +0.4 GlbLfScT +0.02 +2.6 John Hancock 15.53 +0.01 +1.9 +0.02 +5.6 LifBa1 b 16.27 +0.01 +1.5 +0.04 +4.1 LifGr1 b Lazard +0.01 +1.9 +0.15 +13.3 EmgMkEqInst d18.82 -0.10 +0.8 +0.01 +1.8 Legg Mason +0.01 +1.9 CBAggressGrthA m190.21-0.87 +4.9 +0.01 +1.7 Longleaf Partners 34.32 +0.07 +1.7 +0.02 +2.2 LongPart +0.01 +2.3 Loomis Sayles 15.53 -0.04 +3.7 -0.06 -1.1 BdInstl x 15.46 -0.03 +3.7 -0.05 +0.6 BdR x Lord Abbett -0.06 -0.7 15.85 ... +2.4 -0.04 +1.4 AffiliatA m BondDebA m 8.28 ... +3.2 ShDurIncA m 4.55 ... +1.2 +0.02 -0.1 ShDurIncC m 4.58 ... +0.9 ... +1.2 +0.01 +0.8 ShDurIncF b 4.55 +0.01 +0.9 MFS IntlValA m 34.06 +0.03 +1.0 22.58 +0.09 +0.7 -0.07 +2.4 IsIntlEq 17.85 -0.01 +2.1 ... +4.4 TotRetA m 33.19 -0.07 +0.7 ... +3.0 ValueA m 33.36 -0.07 +0.8 +0.02 +3.7 ValueI -0.22 +1.9 MainStay Mktfield 17.99 -0.04 -2.9 ... +2.7 Manning & Napier WrldOppA 9.29 -0.01 +2.7 +0.23 +2.3 Matthews Asian China d 21.10 +0.03 -7.6 18.60 -0.01 +14.3 ... +0.4 India d Merger 16.15 +0.02 +0.9 -0.01 +0.3 Merger b Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.72 ... +2.4 ... +2.3 TotRtBd b 10.72 ... +2.3 -0.02 +1.7 Morgan Stanley MdCpGrI 43.20 -0.32 -4.7 -0.01 +0.6 Natixis 12.26 +0.01 +4.1 +0.37 +4.8 LSInvBdY LSStratIncA x 16.82 -0.04 +3.9 +0.02 +6.0 LSStratIncC x 16.93 -0.03 +3.6 Neuberger Berman ... +1.8 GenesisInstl 60.06 -0.17 -3.0 +0.02 +2.1 Northern 7.62 ... +3.6 +0.03 +2.0 HYFixInc d 12.50 +0.01 +1.3 +0.03 +2.0 IntlIndex d 23.27 +0.04 +2.2 +0.16 +0.7 StkIdx -0.12 -1.4 Oakmark 33.32 ... +2.1 +0.01 +3.5 EqIncI 26.69 +0.08 +1.4 -0.17 -0.8 Intl I 65.06 +0.12 +2.2 -0.17 -0.7 Oakmark I 42.28 +0.18 +5.5 +0.03 +1.0 Select I +0.03 -0.5 Oberweis +0.03 -0.5 ChinaOpp m 16.54 -0.05 -1.7 +0.07 +2.8 Old Westbury 8.01 ... +1.4 +0.03 +1.8 GlbOppo ... +1.0 +0.01 +1.4 GlbSmMdCp 17.36 LgCpStr 12.60 +0.01 +1.0 +0.01 +1.0 +0.01 +0.9 Oppenheimer ... +1.4 DevMktA m 37.50 -0.15 -1.4 37.08 -0.15 -1.3 -0.01 +0.7 DevMktY 78.90 +0.30 +0.2 +0.01 +1.5 GlobA m 38.65 +0.11 +1.3 +0.01 +1.4 IntlGrY IntlGrowA m 38.81 +0.11 +1.2 +0.01 +1.4 +0.01 +1.1 MainStrA m 49.24 +0.18 +1.6 ... +0.8 +0.02 +1.0 SrFltRatA m 8.38 4.17 ... +2.4 +0.02 +1.1 StrIncA m +0.02 +1.1 Oppenheimer Rocheste +0.01 +1.5 FdMuniA m 14.99 +0.01 +7.2 +0.01 +1.4 Osterweis +0.01 +1.4 OsterStrInc d 12.02 +0.01 +2.4 +0.01 +1.0 PIMCO 12.41 +0.01 +3.3 +0.01 +2.6 AllAssetI 10.16 ... +3.3 -0.06 +0.9 AllAuthIn 6.10 +0.02 +11.1 +0.09 +1.3 ComRlRStI 11.69 -0.01 +3.3 -0.06 +0.9 DivIncInst ... +2.5 EMFdIdPLARSTIns9.69-0.01 +0.1 10.18 +0.01 +1.0 +0.04 -1.9 EMktCurI 10.93 -0.01 +3.8 ... +2.8 EmMktsIns 9.43 +0.01 +2.6 +0.17 +1.6 EmgLclBdI 10.77 ... +3.2 +0.07 +0.8 ForBdInstl 9.73 +0.01 +3.1 +0.08 +0.8 HiYldIs ... +3.7 +0.16 +1.5 IncomeA m 12.51 ... +3.7 -0.03 +2.5 IncomeD b 12.51 12.51 ... +3.8 -0.01 +5.0 IncomeInl LgDrTRtnI 11.24 +0.01 +8.5 +0.45 +0.03 +2.1 LgTmCrdIn 12.44 +0.02 +8.6 10.35 ... +0.6 +0.03 +2.1 LowDrIs +0.03 +2.0 RERRStgC m 3.91 +0.02 +18.3 11.33 +0.01 +3.6 ... +2.8 RealRet 9.88 ... +0.6 +0.06 +2.0 ShtTermIs ... -1.6 +0.02 +1.9 StkPlARShStrIn 2.67 10.82 ... +1.7 ... +2.7 TotRetA m ... +1.7 ... +0.5 TotRetAdm b 10.82 ... +1.5 -0.21 -0.8 TotRetC m 10.82 10.82 ... +1.8 ... +3.4 TotRetIs ... +1.7 -0.11 +6.3 TotRetrnD b 10.82 10.82 ... +1.8 ... +2.7 TotlRetnP ... +1.4 +0.01 +2.6 UnconstrBdIns 11.21 +0.01 +2.5 PRIMECAP Odyssey 30.03 -0.16 +1.3 +0.33 +3.6 AggGr Parnassus 37.56 +0.10 +2.7 -0.08 +1.4 EqIncInv -0.08 +1.5 Permanent Portfolio 44.33 +0.12 +2.9 -0.67 -0.1 Pioneer -0.42 +6.4 PioneerA m 39.70 -0.02 +1.6 Principal 11.94 ... +0.3 +0.12 +2.2 DivIntI 14.44 ... +1.7 +0.11 +2.2 L/T2020I 14.65 +0.01 +1.5 +0.11 +2.2 L/T2030I 12.59 ... -0.7 -0.10 +1.2 LCGrIInst +0.06 +1.5 Prudential Investmen +0.05 +2.0 JenMidCapGrZ 40.06 -0.27 -1.1

Better quarter?

Ford in focus

Overseas strength?

first-quarter earnings and revenue.

Wall Street anticipates that Ford Motor’s first-quarter earnings and revenue will fall from a year ago. After enjoying one of the best years in its history in 2013, the automaker warned in January that it would post leaner results this year. Investors get a look today at how Ford’s sales trends fared in the first three months of the year, when a severe winter dampened auto sales industrywide.

Colgate-Palmolive has sought to offset stagnant sales in developed markets with growth in emerging markets overseas. The maker of toothpaste, soap and other consumer products is also banking on a slate of new products. Management has predicted that new products will help drive sales growth for the company this year. Colgate-Palmolive reports first-quarter financial results today.

$154.66 WHR Whirlpool reports financial results $200 $122.00 for the first three months of the year today. 150 The appliance maker, whose product lines include KitchenAid and ’14 Maytag in addition to its namesake 100 brand, capped 2013 with strong est. Operating sales growth in the Americas. Sales $1.97 $2.32 EPS inched higher in Europe and 1Q ’13 1Q ’14 declined in Asia. Did the sales Price-earnings ratio: 15 trends extend into this year? Finanbased on trailing 12 month results cial analysts think so. They project Dividend: $3.00 Div. yield: 1.9% that Whirlpool will report improved Source: FactSet

$70

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+3.1 +1.6 -0.7 +1.8 +2.1 +2.2 +0.1 +1.9 -1.8 +3.5 +1.3 +2.2 +2.2 -2.4 +2.5 +3.5 -1.4 +3.6 +2.8 +1.5 +2.6 +4.3 +1.4 -2.6 +2.7 +0.2 +2.1 +1.9 +1.7 +2.2 +2.0 +1.8 +1.6 +1.6 +0.5 -0.5 -0.2 +3.0 +4.3 +2.1 +2.4 +2.1 +1.4 +2.5 +3.7 +3.6 -4.5 +2.3 +2.2 +2.2 +2.2 +2.2 +2.3 +2.6 +4.0 +3.2 +1.6 +0.6 +7.4 +3.0 +3.0 -1.4 -1.5 +1.1 +1.1 +1.1 +1.2 +2.6 +2.6 +2.3 +1.0 +1.0 +3.3 +6.3 +6.3 +3.1 +3.0 +3.4 +3.4 +3.3 +2.2 +2.3 +2.1 -0.3 -0.2 +1.6 +1.6 +1.6 +1.6 +0.2 +8.4 +2.3 +2.0 +2.2 +2.5 +2.5 +2.5 +2.5 +2.5 -0.1 +5.6 +3.6 +3.6 +5.4 +1.0 +0.4 +6.5 +4.0 +4.0 +4.2 +12.8 +0.5 +0.5 +1.0 +1.0 +1.1 +0.3 +1.6 +1.2 +1.3 -0.6 +1.3 +1.3 +1.3 +2.9 +2.4 +4.0 +2.1 +2.2 +2.2 +2.1 +2.0 +1.9 +2.0 +2.0 +2.0 +2.1 +2.7 +2.7 +2.6 +2.6 +2.5 +2.6 +1.5 +2.1 +2.1 +2.1 +2.0 +2.4 +3.2 +3.2 +3.4 +3.4 +3.0 +3.0 +3.2 +4.1 +4.1 +3.1 +3.6 +2.1 -1.9 +1.6 +1.4

$66.43

CL $60.72

63 ’14

56 Operating EPS

$0.66

est. $0.68

3Q ’13

3Q ’14

Price-earnings ratio:

28

based on trailing 12 month results

Dividend: $1.44 Div. yield: 2.2% Source: FactSet


9A • Daily Corinthian

Variety

Friday, April 25, 2014

Crossword

BEETLE BAILEY

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Sputnik letters 5 Insert 8 *Scarlet letter? 14 “Hello, I didn’t see you there” 15 Tax-advantaged vehicle 16 Like unmiked orators, maybe 17 Collins contemporary 18 Like some sales 20 *Rio jokester? 22 Part of a black suit 23 It may be packed 24 Grand squared 27 General of Chinese cuisine 28 “Bueller? Bueller?” actor Stein 29 “Die Lorelei” poet 31 Shaver brand 33 *Law against certain intrafamily marriages? 35 First-century Judean monarch Herod __ 37 Portion portion 38 *Game disc on the farm? 40 Prefix with morph 41 Healthy greens 42 Storage unit 43 Muscle prone to tears, briefly 44 Fashion monogram 45 A long way 46 Waffle __ 48 *Fighter running on tequila? 52 Tevye-playing Tony winner 55 Prom rental 56 Inverse trig function 57 Spreading tree 58 Foreign attorneys’ degs. 59 Like the answers to starred clues before they were edited for content? 60 Call for help 61 “Uh-huh”

DOWN 1 Georgia county planned to be the 2017 home of the Braves 2 Blackens 3 It doesn’t provide lasting enjoyment 4 Quick lunch, perhaps 5 Window alternative 6 German crowd? 7 Broken 8 Gymnast Johnson who was a “Dancing With the Stars” winner 9 Inner Hebrides isle 10 Da __, Vietnam 11 Play about Capote 12 Hard-rock link 13 Crystallize 19 How a chorus may sing 21 Vow on a stand 24 Site of Los Angeles’ Museum Row 25 Like krypton 26 Not a __ stand on 28 Contoured chairs

29 Connecting flight site 30 In particular 31 Nonsensical 32 Ottoman nobility 33 Ajar, poetically 34 Curly-tailed canine 36 Soccer stat 39 1979 World Series champs 43 What life imitates, so it’s said

45 Fern leaf 46 Festival features 47 1994 film king 48 Very 49 Grenoble gal pal 50 Move shortly? 51 “My stars!” 52 Either of two stubborn Seuss characters 53 Go off 54 Early ’N Sync label

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Samuel A. Donaldson (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

04/25/14

04/25/14

Teen worrying about losing best friend WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: I am a high school student. Last year, “Ellie” invited me to her 16th birthday party, and after that, we became inseparable best friends. She was wonderful and supportive. Lately, we have grown more and more distant. A few weeks ago, Ellie’s family had a crisis, and we took up a collection to help. I didn’t want Ellie to feel like a charity case and wanted her to see that the collection was due to compassion. She seemed thankful, but now she spends time with other friends and rarely with me. She says she is too busy to hang out and won’t answer most of my texts. But I see her Facebook posts, and she tags other friends. The funny thing is, when I tell her about things I’ve done with others, she becomes jealous. How do I bring old Ellie back? I have other friends, but she and I used to be so close, and it’s sad to see our friendship wither. I don’t want to lose her as a friend, but I also don’t want to appear desperate. Any advice for me? — Chicago Student Dear Student: Ellie’s distancing may have nothing to do with the collection for her family. It is not unusual for high school friendships to change.

Annie’s Mailbox Try talking to her. Say that you miss the closeness you once had, and ask how to warm things up again. But understand that Ellie may simply feel that a different crowd is more to her liking at this point in time. And if that is the case, you will simply need to let her go. Dear Annie: When my stepmother died, my husband and I took Dad to live with us. Dad was 90, used a walker and could not be left alone for more than a few hours. He died at home three years later. During this time, I expected we’d get offers of help from my two sisters, but it didn’t happen. When I asked my oldest sister to postpone her summer trip and stay with Dad so my husband and I could attend our daughter’s college graduation, she refused. There were other occasions when I had to beg for help and was turned down. In three years, my sister took care of Dad for all of six weeks. My other sister stayed with Dad once for three days. I realize I should have

had this discussion with my sisters when I first took Dad to live with me. Instead, I am filled with resentment, and our sibling relationship has suffered. Many of your readers will someday be the caregiver of an elderly parent. Please remind them to have “the conversation” with their family before they make my mistake. I am seeing a therapist to help me work through my resentment, but I have a long way to go. — Just Venting Dear Venting: Our condolences on this entire situation. You are right that these arrangements should be hashed out in advance, knowing that some children are unwilling or unable to be caregivers. We hope readers in this situation will check out eldercare.gov or the Family Caregiver Alliance (caregiver.org) for information on respite care. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Email questions to anniesmailbox@ comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.


10A • Daily Corinthian

Playoff Schedule Today Baseball Class 3A O’Bannon @ Kossuth 4:30 Class 4A Corinth @ Gentry, 4 Softball Class 1A Biggersville @ Ray Brooks(DH), 4:30 Class 4A Corinth @ Yazoo Co.

Sports

Friday, April 25, 2014

Dampeer out at McNairy Central BY JEFF YORK For the Daily Corinthian

SELMER, Tenn. — McNairy Central will be searching for a new football coach for next season. Coach Charlie Dampeer will not have his contract renewed after this school year is completed. While Dampeer was very successful at many other stops prior to coming to McNairy Central, his record at

MCHS has been 5-15. The ‘Cats were 2-8 in his first season in 2012 and were 3-7 this past season. Dampeer’s teams only won three district games during the two seasons and two of those came against winless Fayette-Ware. The Bobcats began the 2013 season with some promise after beating Kossuth in their opening game before they lost

six of their next seven games. New McNairy County Director of Schools John Prince is a former football coach at Trenton Peabody and his football knowledge will be a plus in the coaching search. Dampeer came to MCHS after coaching at Lincoln High in Talladega, Ala. He spent nine seasons at Kossuth, including an unbeaten regular season in 1998.

His other coaching stops have been Saltillo (twice), Tishomingo County, Pontotoc, Columbus Caldwell and Mendenhall. The Bobcats lost both games to Adamsville in Dampeer’s two years. The history shows that all four MCHS football coaches that have lost to county rival AHS did not survive as coach of the Bobcats.

Softball playoffs

Corinth rolls past Yazoo Co. BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

After winning three straight Division 1-4A games to even get into the playoffs, the Corinth Lady Warriors had little trouble in their opener on Thursday. Corinth used just 11 outs in posting 15 runs in blanking of Division 3 runner-up Yazoo County in Game 1 of the best-of-3 play-in series. The two teams will complete the series today, with the winner facing Region 4 champion Kosciusko. Second-round action will be played on Monday and Tuesday. • Biggersville earned the No. 3 spot in Division 1-1A and the Lady Lions (13-11, 7-5) will be at Ray Brooks today for a doubleheader. Should Game 3 be needed, it will be played Monday in Biggersville. The series winner draws Division 4 champion Smithville in the second round. • Kossuth earned an opening round by after winning Division 1-3A for the second straight year. The Lady Aggies (12-11, 7-1) draw the winner between Division 2 runnerup Winona and South Pontotoc, the No. 3 team from Division 3. • Corinth (16-9) scored 13 of its 15 runs over the even frames in recording its fifth straight win. McKenzie Patterson ran her mark to 8-1 overall while tossing a one-hit, four-inning shutout. Seven batters combined on nine hits, with Anna Kayte Webb and Katie Vandiver leading the way with two each. Webb doubled and homered while driving in four runs. Colby Cox also homered and drove in four as five of the Lady Warriors hits went for extra bases.

Corinth 15, Yazoo Co. 0 Yazoo Co. 000 0 -- 0 1 8 Corinth 151 8 -- 15 9 1 WP: McKenzie Patterson (8-1). LP: Hall. Multiple Hits: (YC) None. (C) Anna Kayte Webb 2, Katie Vandiver 2. 2B: (C) Webb, Vandiver. 3B: (C) Tatiana Selmon. HR: (C) Webb, Colby Cox. Record: Corinth 16-9

Shorts Athletic Physicals Magnolia Regional Health Center will be providing athletic physicals to Junior High and High School athletes from Alcorn Central, Biggersville, Corinth, Kossuth, and Tishomingo County on April 29 at Crossroads Arena. Cost for the comprehensive exam is $10 and includes t-shirt. Time slots are assigned for each school, and we urge you to adhere to your school’s time slot. Those times are 5 p.m. -- Alcorn Central, Biggersville, Tishomingo County; 5:30 -- Kossuth; and 6 p.m. -- Corinth. Athletes MUST have a signed waiver from parent/guardian to get an athletic physical. Waivers are provided to schools prior to athletic physical date.

Golf Tourney The Corporal Jacob Wooley Memorial Golf Tournament will be held Saturday, May 3 at Shiloh Ridge. The four-person scramble begins at 8 a.m. Cost is $75 per person or $300 per team. Proceeds will benefit the scholarship fund. Contact the golf course, David Reece or Rick Wallin for more information.

Former MSU player arrested on two charges Associated Press

STARKVILLE -— Former Mississippi State offensive lineman Charles Siddoway and current defensive lineman Jordan Washington were arrested on Wednesday and charged with burglary and robbery. The 6-foot-7, 300-pound Siddoway Please see ARREST | 11A

Photo by H. Lee Smith II

Gentry’s Fred Spencer dives back to first ahead of the tag by Corinth’s Payton Tucker during Thursday night’s game.

Corinth rallies with 4-run sixth BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Gentry’s William Ross had a 4-for-4 night at the plate in Thursday’s Class 4A playoff game with Corinth. His big out on the bases ended Game One at Jesse Bynum Field. After Gentry (7-9) got the tying run to the plate with two outs in the seventh, Tanner Maness gunned down Ross trying to steal third and sent Corinth to an 8-5 win in the series opener.

Game Two is set for 4 p.m. today in Indianola. If a Game Three is needed, it will be back in Corinth on Saturday. The winner will face Division 2 champion Lafayette County in the second round, which is set for Thursday-Saturday next week. • In other Alcorn County action, Kossuth was leading 19-0 in the top of the second at O’Bannon. That game will conclude today at Kossuth before the teams take the field again in Game Two.

• Corinth’s first lead proved to be the decisive lead. The Warriors (12-10) scored all eight runs over their final three at-bats. The Division 1-4A runnersup scored four runs in the sixth, all coming with two outs. Noah Hill put CHS up to stay with a two-strike, tworun double after the sixth Gentry error of the night extended the inning. A pair of wild pitches gave Corinth two more insurance runs and an 8-5 lead entering

the top of the seventh. Hack Smith, who allowed just two earned runs and struck out 11 while going the distance, got the first two batters out on nine pitches. With the rain picking up its pace, the Rams got a single and a walk to bring the tying run to the plate. Ross tried to swipe third on a 1-1 pitch, but a Maness bullet to Cody Davis ended the contest. Please see CORINTH | 11A

Grizzlies blow lead, beat Thunder in OT BY TERESA M. WALKER Associated Press

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Mike Conley scored five of his 20 points in overtime, and the Memphis Grizzlies beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 9895 Thursday night in taking a 2-1 lead in their first-round

Western Conference series. The Grizzlies won their second straight overtime game after blowing a fourth-quarter lead. This time, they led by 17 before going cold for most of the final 7:43 of regulation. Courtney Lee clinched the win, hitting three of four

free throws in the final 10.9 seconds of OT. Game 4 is Saturday night in Memphis. NBA scoring champ Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook each scored 30 for the Thunder who even got another four-point play in the fi-

nal minute to force overtime. This time, it was Westbrook’s turn with 26.6 seconds left. But Durant missed all eight 3-point attempts and was 10 of 27. Westbrook was 9 of 26. The Thunder hit only 3 of 12 Please see GRIZZLIES | 11A

Pineda banned 10 games for using pine tar Associated Press

BOSTON — Michael Pineda says he was just trying to get a better grip on the ball. Now, he won’t need one for a while. A day after being caught using pine tar on the mound, the New York Yankees pitcher was suspended for 10 games by the commissioner’s office

on Thursday. Pineda said he won’t appeal, costing him two starts before he can return May 5 at the Los Angeles Angels. “I accept it,” Pineda said before Thursday night’s game at Fenway Park. “I know I made a mistake.” Pineda was ejected in the second inning of New York’s

5-1 loss to Boston after umpires found the pine tar on the right side of the righthander’s neck. After the game, Pineda admitted that he used the pine tar to help him grip the ball on a cool, windy night. “I feel so bad,” he said Thursday. Pineda said he had never

used pine tar before this season. He spent his first season in the majors with the Seattle Mariners in 2011, then missed the last two with the Yankees following right shoulder surgery. “I think he understood” the seriousness of his action, Please see PINEDA | 11A

Premature to say union will opt out of CBA Associated Press

NEW YORK — NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said Thursday he has “no expectation” that players will opt out of the collective bargaining agreement in 2017, potentially leading to another lockout. The 10-year deal the league and players agreed to that ended the 2011 lockout gave either side the right to opt out after six years. With the league projecting

financial growth, there has been speculation that players will take that option in three years, especially since a new national TV contract will be in place by then. But Silver told a gathering of Associated Press Sports Editors that it was too soon to consider that. “We’ll always be prepared, but I have no expectation that they’re going to opt out. I mean, we haven’t had any

discussions whatsoever about that possibility,” Silver said. “I think it’s premature, frankly, for either side to be making determinations about how well this deal has or hasn’t worked, and I think especially given that their leader hasn’t even been installed yet, which is something that they of course are freely acknowledging. So I don’t really buy into sort of that speculation that they’re already planning

to opt out or that we’re thinking about it.” The 2011 deal cut the players’ guarantee of basketball revenues from 57 percent to 50, saving owners hundreds of millions in salary costs. They have seen the benefit, with sales of franchises soaring, though Silver said there are still eight teams that aren’t profitable. The league sought a 10-year deal, much longer than players wanted.


Scoreboard

11A • Daily Corinthian

CORINTH

Auto racing Weekend schedule

CONTINUED FROM 10A

Gentry scored two runs in its initial at-bat and led 3-0 heading to the bottom of the fourth. Corinth, which had just one hit through four, scored twice without a hit, including a doublesteal by Austin McClamroch and Kyle Webb. The Rams got the two runs back in the sixth, but Webb kept the third off the board with an inning-ending throw to the plate from center field. An error and a two-out single by Quade Reaves, who had two of Corinth’s six hits, pulled the Warriors to within 5-4. Corinth had three hits in the frame, but none of the runs were earned thanks to another error.

NASCAR SPRINT CUP TOYOTA OWNERS 400 Site: Richmond, Va. Schedule: Today, practice (Fox Sports 1, 9-11 a.m,, noon-1 p.m.), qualifying (Fox Sports 1, 4-5:30 p.m.); Saturday, race, 8 p.m. (Fox, 5:30-9:30 p.m.). Track: Richmond International Raceway (oval, 0.75 miles). Race distance: 300 miles, 400 laps. Last year: Kevin Harvick drove from seventh to first in a two-lap overtime sprint to the finish. Clint Bowyer was second. Last race: Harvick won the Southern 500 on April 12 at Darlington to become the first repeat winner this season. Dale Earnhardt Jr. was second. Fast facts: The race is the third shorttrack event of the season. Carl Edwards won at Bristol on March 16, and Kurt Busch took the Martinsville race March 30. Edwards won the September race at Richmond. ... Kyle Busch swept the spring races at the track from 20092012. ... Jeff Gordon leads the season standings. ... Denny Hamlin is from nearby Chesterfield. ... Richard Petty won a record 13 times at the track. Next race: Aaron’s 499, May 4, Talladega Superspeedway, Talladega, Ala. Online: http://www.nascar.com NATIONWIDE TOYOTACARE 250 Site: Richmond, Va. Schedule: Thursday, practice; Today, qualifying (ESPN2, 2-3:30 p.m.), race, 6 p.m. (ESPN News, 5:30-8:30 p.m.). Track: Richmond International Raceway (oval, 0.75 miles). Race distance: 300 miles, 400 laps. Last year: Brad Keselowski took the lead from Kyle Busch with 10 laps to go and held off Kevin Harvick. Last race: Chase Elliott won at Darlington on April 11 for his second straight series victory. The 18-year-old Elliott, also the Texas winner, is the son of NASCAR great Bill Elliott. Fast facts: Busch won this year at Phoenix and Bristol to push his seriesrecord victory total to 65. He has won four times at Richmond. ... Harvick has a series-record six victories at the track. ... Elliott leads the season standings, 13 points ahead of JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith. Smith won at the opener at Daytona. ... Keselowski won the September race at the track. Next race: Aaron’s 312, May 3, Talladega Superspeedway, Talladega, Ala. Online: http://www.nascar.com

Corinth had a chance to for more in the fifth, but Davis -- who had the second consecutive twoout hit in the frame -was gunned down trying to take second. Down 5-4 heading to the sixth, Corinth had nobody on with two outs. A hustling infield hit my Kerrigan Maness and another Gentry error set the stage for Hill’s goahead two-bagger.

Corinth 8, Gentry 5 Gentry 201 020 0 -- 5 9 6 Corinth 000 224 x -- 8 6 2 Â WP: Hack Smith. LP: Armond Wyms. Multiple Hits: (G) William Ross 4, Kameron Spencer 2, Wyms 2. (C) Quade Reaves 2. 2B: (G) Ross, Wynn. (C) Noah Hill. Records: Gentry 7-9, Corinth 12-10

GRIZZLIES CONTINUED FROM 10A

overall in overtime. Zach Randolph scored 16 points and had 10 rebounds for Memphis, which now has won 15 straight at home. Tony Allen, who scored 16 points for Memphis, gave the Thunder one final chance at an improbable play to keep the game alive. After Lee split his free throws with 1.7 seconds left, Westbrook was racing up the right sideline trying to get a shot off before the buzzer. Allen tripped Westbrook, sending him to the line for three attempts. Westbrook hit the first, missed the sec-

ond and then clanked the third off the rim on purpose. But Ed Davis tipped away the ball to seal the win for Memphis. Marc Gasol scored 14 points for Memphis. Beno Udrih added 12 points, and Lee finished with 10. Serge Ibaka had 12 points for the Thunder, which went 5 of 28 beyond the arc. The Thunder trailed 81-64 in the fourth quarter. Then they scored 17 straight with Westbrook’s 3-pointer in the left corner tying it up with 57.3 seconds left, and setting up yet another thrilling finish between these teams.

Baseball N.L. standings, schedule East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 14 7 .667 — New York 12 10 .545 2½ Washington 12 11 .522 3 Philadelphia 10 11 .476 4 Miami 10 12 .455 4½ Central Division W L Pct GB Milwaukee 16 6 .727 — St. Louis 12 11 .522 4½ Cincinnati 11 11 .500 5 Pittsburgh 9 14 .391 7½ Chicago 7 14 .333 8½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 13 9 .591 — San Francisco 12 10 .545 1 Colorado 12 11 .522 1½ San Diego 11 12 .478 2½ Arizona 7 18 .280 7½ Wednesday’s Games Atlanta 3, Miami 1 Arizona 7, Chicago Cubs 5 San Francisco 12, Colorado 10, 11 innings Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 2 Washington 5, L.A. Angels 4 N.Y. Mets 3, St. Louis 2 Milwaukee 5, San Diego 2 L.A. Dodgers 5, Philadelphia 2 Thursday’s Games Cincinnati 2, Pittsburgh 1 N.Y. Mets 4, St. Louis 1 Arizona 5, Chicago Cubs 2 San Diego 4, Washington 3, 12 innings Philadelphia at L.A. Dodgers, (n) Today’s Games San Diego (Erlin 1-2) at Washington (Strasburg 1-2), 6:05 p.m. Miami (H.Alvarez 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Wheeler 1-2), 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Bailey 1-1) at Atlanta (E.Santana 2-0), 6:35 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Villanueva 1-4) at Milwaukee (Garza 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Cole 2-1) at St. Louis (S.Miller 1-2), 7:15 p.m. Philadelphia (R.Hernandez 1-0) at Arizona (Collmenter 0-2), 8:40 p.m. Colorado (Lyles 3-0) at L.A. Dodgers

ARREST CONTINUED FROM 10A

started all 26 games of his Mississippi State career at right tackle over the last two seasons. The Eugene, Ore., native is a possible late round selection in next month’s NFL draft. Washington is a 6-foot2, 280-pound sophomore who did not play in a game last season. He is expected to be a backup on Mississippi State’s defensive line next season. The Oktibbeha County Sheriff’s Department confirmed the arrests. Lieutenant Brett Watson

said the pair had an initial court appearance on Thursday and bond was set at $20,000. Watson said the alleged incident happened on Wednesday afternoon at an apartment complex just off of Mississippi State’s campus. One of the victims identified Siddoway and then after a short investigation, Washington was also identified and arrested. Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen said in a statement that the program is aware of the situation.

(Beckett 0-0), 9:10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 0-2) at San Francisco (Hudson 2-1), 9:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games San Diego at Washington, 12:05 p.m. Cleveland at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 3:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. Miami at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Arizona, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Miami at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 12:35 p.m. San Diego at Washington, 12:35 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m. Cleveland at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 3:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Arizona, 3:10 p.m.

A.L. standings, schedule East Division W L Pct GB New York 12 9 .571 — Baltimore 11 10 .524 1 Toronto 11 11 .500 1½ Boston 10 12 .455 2½ Tampa Bay 10 12 .455 2½ Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 11 8 .579 — Minnesota 11 10 .524 1 Cleveland 11 11 .500 1½ Chicago 11 12 .478 2 Kansas City 10 11 .476 2 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 14 8 .636 — Oakland 13 8 .619 ½ Los Angeles 10 11 .476 3½ Seattle 8 13 .381 5½ Houston 7 15 .318 7 ––– Wednesday’s Games Texas 3, Oakland 0 Seattle 5, Houston 3 Cleveland 5, Kansas City 3 Washington 5, L.A. Angels 4 Baltimore 10, Toronto 8 Chicago White Sox 6, Detroit 4 Minnesota 6, Tampa Bay 4, 12 innings Boston 5, N.Y. Yankees 1 Thursday’s Games Cleveland 5, Kansas City 1 Detroit 7, Chicago White Sox 4 Minnesota 9, Tampa Bay 7 Baltimore 11, Toronto 4 N.Y. Yankees at Boston, (n) Oakland at Houston, (n) Today’s Games Kansas City (Ventura 1-1) at Baltimore (Jimenez 0-3), 6:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 2-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 2-1), 6:05 p.m. Boston (Peavy 0-0) at Toronto (Buehrle 4-0), 6:07 p.m. Detroit (Porcello 2-1) at Minnesota (Correia 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (J.Chavez 1-0) at Houston (Peacock 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Archer 2-1) at Chicago White Sox (Er.Johnson 1-1), 7:10 p.m. Texas (Ross Jr. 1-1) at Seattle (Elias 1-2), 9:10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 0-2) at San Francisco (Hudson 2-1), 9:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m. Boston at Toronto, 12:07 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m. Cleveland at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Kansas City at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Oakland at Houston, 6:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 8:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Boston at Toronto, 12:07 p.m. Kansas City at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m. Oakland at Houston, 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m. Cleveland at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 3:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.

Basketball NBA playoff schedule FIRST ROUND (x-if necessary) Monday Memphis 111, Oklahoma City 105, OT, L.A. Clippers 138, Golden State 98, series tied 1-1 Tuesday Indiana 101, Atlanta 85 Toronto 100, Brooklyn 95, series tied 1-1 Washington 101, Chicago 99, OT, Washington leads series 2-0 Wednesday, Miami 101, Charlotte 97, Miami leads series 2-0 Dallas 113, San Antonio 92, series tied 1-1 Portland 112, Houston 105, Portland leads series 2-0 Thursday Atlanta 98, Indiana 85, Atlanta leads

PINEDA CONTINUED FROM 10A

said Yankees manager Joe Girardi, who expected a suspension of about 10 games, “but I think he got caught up in the moment of competing and it got the best of him.� Girardi indicated David Phelps would take Pineda’s turn in the rotation. Phelps came into the game with two outs in the second after Pineda was ejected. The ejection set off a debate in the baseball world about pitchers who try pine tar, and whether it should be allowed in certain circumstances. Many former aces said they had done it, albeit in a more discreet manner. “I’ve seen a lot of things in my career, so I’m not blind to it� being viewed as part of baseball, said Girardi, a former catcher in his seventh year as Yankees manager. Rule 8.02(b) prohibits

pitchers from altering the ball to gain an unfair advantage, and forbids them from having a foreign substance on them or in their possession on the mound. “I wouldn’t be against coming up with an idea� to modify the rule so pitchers could get a better grip on the ball in cold weather, Girardi said. “It would be a great time for someone to start looking at� finding one substance pitchers would be allowed to use. Pineda wasn’t seen with

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the pine tar in the first inning, when the Red Sox roughed him up. Boston manager John Farrell asked plate umpire Gerry Davis to check Pineda after two fast outs the next inning. “I felt like it was a necessity to say something,� Farrell said. “You know, I fully respect on a cold night you’re trying to get a little bit of a grip. But when it’s that obvious, something has got to be said.�

Davis went to the mound, touched Pineda’s neck and ejected him. Pineda said no one told him to use it, that he did it “by myself.� Earlier this month, Pineda pitched well in a 4-1 win over the Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. Television cameras showed a substance on his hand in the fourth inning — Pineda said it was dirt, not pine tar. His hand was clean in the fifth and Farrell didn’t ask for him to be checked.

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Golf PGA: Zurich Classic scores Thursday at TPC Louisiana, Avondale, La. Purse: $6.8 million. Yardage: 7,425; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round Ben Martin 30-32—62 -10 Andrew Svoboda 34-30—64 -8 Peter Hanson 32-33—65 -7 Seung-Yul Noh 34-31—65 -7 Erik Compton 34-32—66 -6 Chad Collins 32-34—66 -6 Michael Thompson 36-30—66 -6 Jeff Overton 32-35—67 -5 Stuart Appleby 34-33—67 -5 Robert Streb 34-33—67 -5 Doug LaBelle II 34-34—68 -4 David Lingmerth 34-34—68 -4 David Duval 35-33—68 -4 Charles Howell III 34-34—68 -4 J.J. Henry 31-37—68 -4 D.H. Lee 34-34—68 -4 Sang-Moon Bae 34-34—68 -4 Charley Hoffman 35-33—68 -4 Will Wilcox 34-34—68 -4 Graham DeLaet 34-35—69 -3 Carl Pettersson 35-34—69 -3 Nick Watney 34-35—69 -3 Rory Sabbatini 34-35—69 -3 Keegan Bradley 35-34—69 -3 Cameron Beckman 36-33—69 -3 Chris DiMarco 33-36—69 -3 Roberto Castro 35-34—69 -3 Joe Durant 34-35—69 -3 Chris Stroud 35-34—69 -3 Kevin Kisner 35-34—69 -3 Brice Garnett 32-37—69 -3 John Merrick 33-36—69 -3 Spencer Levin 36-33—69 -3 Kevin Foley 34-35—69 -3 Shawn Stefani 37-32—69 -3 Luke Guthrie 36-34—70 -2 Padraig Harrington 36-34—70 -2 Chad Campbell 37-33—70 -2 Martin Laird 36-34—70 -2 John Senden 36-34—70 -2 Ben Curtis 35-35—70 -2 Charlie Wi 33-37—70 -2 Ricky Barnes 34-36—70 -2 Tim Wilkinson 36-34—70 -2 Kevin Tway 33-37—70 -2 Alex Prugh 34-36—70 -2 Scott McCarron 36-34—70 -2 Morgan Hoffmann 32-38—70 -2 Andres Romero 35-35—70 -2 Vijay Singh 34-36—70 -2 Scott Langley 36-34—70 -2 Bronson La’Cassie 34-36—70 -2 Lee Williams 35-35—70 -2

Hockey NHL playoffs (x-if necessary) FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) Monday Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 3 Minnesota 1, Colorado 0, OT, Colorado leads series 2-1 Chicago 2, St. Louis 0 Dallas 3, Anaheim 0 Tuesday Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 3, Montreal wins series 4-0 Boston 3, Detroit 0, Boston leads series 2-1 N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 1, N.Y. Rangers leads series 2-1 San Jose 4, Los Angeles 3, OT, San Jose leads series 3-0 Wednesday Columbus 4, Pittsburgh 3, OT, series tied 2-2 Dallas 4, Anaheim 2, series tied 2-2 Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, OT, series tied 2-2 Thursday Boston 3, Detroit 2, OT, Boston leads series 3-1 x-Montreal at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 8:30 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Friday N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. x-Chicago at St. Louis, 7 p.m. x-Dallas at Anaheim, 9:30 p.m. Saturday x-Detroit at Boston, 2 p.m. x-Columbus at Pittsburgh, TBD x-Minnesota at Colorado, TBD

x-Los Angeles at San Jose, TBD Sunday x-Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, Noon x-St. Louis at Chicago, 3 p.m. x-Tampa Bay at Montreal, TBD x-Anaheim at Dallas, TBD

Television Today’s lineup AUTO RACING 9 a.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Toyota Owners 400, at Richmond, Va. Noon (FS1) – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, “Happy Hour Series,� final practice for Toyota Owners 400, at Richmond, Va. 2 p.m. (ESPN2) – NASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qualifying for ToyotaCare 250, at Richmond, Va. 4 p.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Toyota Owners 400, at Richmond, Va. 6 p.m. (ESPN2) – NASCAR, Nationwide Series, ToyotaCare 250, at Richmond, Va. GOLF 8:30 a.m. (TGC) – European PGA Tour, China Open, second round, at Shenzhen, China (same-day tape) 2 p.m. (TGC) – PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, second round, at New Orleans 5:30 p.m. (TGC) – LPGA, Swinging Skirts Classic, second round, at Daly City, Calif. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 7 p.m. (MLB) – Regional coverage, Pittsburgh at St. Louis or Cincinnati at Atlanta (7:30 p.m.) NBA 6 p.m. (ESPN2) – Playoffs, first round, game 3, Toronto at Brooklyn 7 p.m. (ESPN) – Playoffs, first round, game 3, Chicago at Washington 9:30 p.m. (ESPN) – Playoffs, first round, game 3, Houston at Portland NHL 6 p.m. (CNBC) – Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia 7 p.m. (NBCSN) – Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Chicago at St. Louis 9:30 p.m. (NBCSN) – Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Dallas at Anaheim

Transactions Thursday’s deals BASEBALL MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL — Suspended N.Y. Yankees RHP Michael Pineda 10 games for possessing a foreign substance on his person during Wednesday’s game. American League BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned RHP Alex Wilson to Pawtucket (IL). CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Reinstated 2B Gordon Beckham from the 15-day DL. MINNESOTA TWINS — Reassigned RHP Matt Guerrier from New Britain (EL) to Rochester (IL). Claimed OF Kenny Wilson off waivers from Toronto and optioned him to New Britain (EL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned INF Dean Anna and RHP Preston Claiborne to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Transferred RHP Ivan Nova to the 60-day DL. Agreed to terms with RHP Bruce Billings on a one-year contract. Recalled RHP Shane Greene from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. SEATTLE MARINERS — Optioned INF Nick Franklin to Tacoma (PCL) and RHP Erasmo Ramirez to High Desert (Cal). Selected the contract of OF Cole Gillespie from Tacoma. TEXAS RANGERS — Named Darren Oliver special assistant to the general manager. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Placed OF Mark Trumbo on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Roger Kieschnick from Reno (PCL). ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent RHP Gavin Floyd to Gwinnett (IL) for a rehab assignment. CHICAGO CUBS — Placed OF Justin Ruggiano on the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Blake Parker to Iowa (PCL). Recalled LHP Zac Rosscup and RHP Neil Ramirez from Iowa. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Optioned RHP Alfredo Figaro to Nashville (PCL). Reinstated RHP Brandon Kintzler from the 15-day DL. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned RHP Jared Hughes to Indianapolis (IL). Recalled RHP Brandon Cumpton from Indianapolis. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Assigned 2B Nick Noonan to San Jose (Cal). Atlantic League LONG ISLAND DUCKS — Signed RHP Brad Holt. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Fined Charlotte F Josh McRoberts $20,000 for making unnecessary and excessive contact with Miami F LeBron James during Wednesday’s game.

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12A • Friday, April 25, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Community events Reminder Events need to be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event. Community events publishes on Wednesdays and Sundays and on Friday if space is available.

Corinth Registration Registration at Corinth Elementary for the 20142015 school year is ongoing for all grades with an emphasis on registering incoming Kindergarten students. Please register your child as soon as possible. The following documents are needed: child’s Social Security card, child’s certified birth certificate, child’s Mississippi immunization Form 121, and two proofs of residency. Your child needs to be present at the time of registration. For more information, contact the school office at 662-286-5245. Â

MRHC Auxiliary Scholarship Magnolia Regional Health Center Auxiliary is offering scholarships for students pursuing careers in the health care fields. Students must be accepted into their chosen medical field in order to be eligible. Application forms and rules may be obtained at the MRHC Gift Shop or at the Auxiliary desk at the south entrance B. All completed applications must be received by June 1, Applications can be dropped off at the hospital gift shop marked to the attention of Marilyn Easter or they can be mailed to her at the address listed on the application. If you have any questions about the scholarship, please call 662-286-2272.

Women’s Conference A women’s conference is set for Saturday, APRIL 26 starting at 10 a.m and ending at 2:30 p.m. at the Lighthouse Foun-

dation located at 1103 S John St in Corinth. The theme is “Pushing Past the Painâ€?. Dr. Sanders Anderson will be the guest speaker. She is a missionary of Romania and Haiti, franchise owner, retired pediatrician, but most importantly a Woman of God. Loretta Stafford, the pastor of Warren Chapel in Mantachie, will make a guest appearance. Cost is $5 and includes lunch. For tickets call 662-643-5102.

Community Fellowship Dinner The Easom OutReach Foundation Community Center will host the monthly Community Fellowship Dinner on Sunday, May 4 from noon to 2:30 p.m. at the community center with all proceeds going to support the Hot Meals program. Tickets are $10 for those ages 10 and up and include a menu of chicken dressing, smoked turkey, meatloaf, green beans, sweet potatoes, mac and cheese, homemade rolls, banana pudding, strawberry cobbler, and beverage. For tickets contact Ernestine Hollins at 662-643-8024 or Samuel Crayton at 404386-3359. Â

Head Start Registration

your child’s shots are upto-date and get a signed 121 form. You will need your child’s Social Security card. You can apply for one at the Social Security Office.

Free Clinic The Living Healthy Free Medical Clinic is a free clinic open to adults and children age 12 and up with no income and no health insurance. Located in the old South Corinth/ Easom School on Cass Street, the clinic is open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., on the second Wednesday and fourth Saturday of each month. Physician Dr. Thomas L. Sweat and his volunteer staff can help patients with acute or chronic conditions like high blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol, arthritis or emphysema. At present there are no free medicines available and $4 prescriptions are used as much as possible. Only pain medicines without prescription will be used, such as Aleve, Ibuprofen, Tylenol and Aspirin. The clinic is always looking for volunteers to add to their list. Medical volunteers should contact Ann Walker at awalker@ mrhc.org or 662-2847361. Non-medical volunteers should contact Ann White at eaw3@comcast. net or 662-415-9446.

Day of Prayer

Corinth and Kendick Head Start are now registering children for the upcoming fall 2014-2015 school year. If you have a child who will be 3 or 4 on or before September 1, 2014 contact your local Head Start, Corinth’s number is 286-5802 and Kendrick’s number is 287-2671.  Slots are limited and filling up fast. Things to bring: Make sure you have a certified birth certificate. If you do not have one, Head Start can help you order one. Have your W2 or tax return available. Be sure

The 63rd annual National Day of Prayer observance is set for Thursday, May 1. The theme this year is “One Voice United in Prayer,� and the focused scripture is Romans 15:6, “. . . so that with one heart and voice you may glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.� Christians in the Corinth/Alcorn County community will gather at the south front steps of the Courthouse starting at 11:45 a.m.

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Ramer, Tenn. Class of 1964 will celebrate its 50th Class Reunion on May 17, at Pickwick Inn Restaurant, Pickwick, Tenn. They will meet at 4 p.m. for fellowshipping and getting reacquainted and will eat at 5:30 p.m. Meal will be buffet style dinner with dutch treat. Casual dress. Classmates who have not RSVP’d yet can do so by calling Judy Suggs Messner at 662-643-4388. Â

Spring Fest and Re-enactment Rienzi will celebrate Spring Fest in conjunction with the 4th annual Battle of Rienzi Reenactment on Friday and Saturday, May 2-3 with the reenactment continuing through Sunday, May 4. The event is sponsored by the Rienzi Heritage Committee. The Spring Fest will feature an array of funfilled activities both Friday and Saturday. There will be games, entertainment, food, buggy rides and arts and crafts. Booths are available for a $10 setup fee for individuals wanting to sell items. Saturday activities start at 8 a.m. with Studio LaRue, located on Front Street, doing Individual or Family Shots featuring Mary K products from 9-12. Several area singers will showcase their talents from 10 until noon. From 12 to 2 p.m., is an afternoon auction by auctioneer Wayne Duncan. Some of the items available are a 16 x 20 framed picture and several apparel items from C & W Embroidery in Rienzi. A talent show competition is set from 3:30 until. Registration may be done at Studio LaRue. First, second and third place trophies will be given away. The Battle of Rienzi Reenactment is an open reenactment, therefore all reenactors are welcomed. Re-enactor fees are $5 per person. Sutler fees, which is name for a civilian merchant who sells to an army in camp or quarters, are $10. Friday is School Day for the reenactors. Schools are encouraged to come visit the camps and see their way of life and listen to war stories. Saturday at 2 p.m. is the Battle of Rienzi Reenactment with an evening meal for those participating. The conclusion is Sunday with another afternoon reenactment set for 2. All rules and regulations are sanctioned under Cleburne’s Division of Reenactors, Inc. For additional information, please contact Mayor Walter Williams 662808-0917, Captain Bobby Ross 662-554-7671 or Captain Berry Ayers 662-279-1189.

versity will hold their Associates Annual Benefit Dinner Friday April 25 at 7 p.m. at Foote Street Church of Christ Annex. There will be entertainment by F-HU’s Main Street Fuzion. Silent Auction will begin at 6:30 p.m. Adult tickets are $15. Children 10 and under $5. High School Students Free. All proceeds will benefit the general scholarship fund. Tickets can be purchased in advance from any FHU Associate or at the door the evening of the dinner. For more information, contact Beverly Grisham at 662287-5419.

NAACP The Alcorn County Branch NAACP will be having their Annual Freedom Fund Banquet on Friday, April 25 at 7 p.m. at The Weaver Center at 101 West Linden St. The speaker will be Christopher Epps, Commissioner of Mississippi Department of Corrections. Tickets are $25 for adults in advance or $30 at the door. Youth 18 and below are $15 in advance at the door. For more information contact Alexis Brown 662-286-2433, Andreda (Dee Dee) Brown 662643-3833, Pauline Sorrell 662-415-3099 0r J.C. Hill 662-293-0290. Â

Magnolia Antique Car Club Magnolia Antique Car Club and Arby’s will host a Cruise-In on Sunday, April 27 from 1 to 4 p.m. at Arby’s. Car Guy Fellowship by The Joe Rickman Band. Bring lawn chairs. Drawing for free food. $5.00 registration fee. Money received will be given back as door prizes to participants. For more information call Rick Kelly at 662-284-7110.

Fame! The Alcorn High School seniors will present “Fame!â€? Thursday, May 1, Friday, May 2 and Saturday, May 3 at 7 p.m. each night at the Coliseum Civic Center at 404 Taylor Street in downtown Corinth. Admission is $10. Tickets go on sale April 9 at the high school office during school hours or can be purchased at the door each performance night. For more information call 662-286-8720. Â

Silent Auction Magnolia Regional Health Center’s Life Saver’s presents: Relay For Life Silent Auction from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednesday, May 7 at the MRHC Conference Center. For more information or to donate items, call Janie at 662-287-6913 or janderson2@mrhc.org.

Class of 1964 The Corinth High School Class of 1964 will have its 50th class re-

Freed-Hardeman Freed-Hardeman Uni-

union on May 16-17. If interesed in attending, please contact Betsy Whitehurst at bwhitehurstuw@yahoo.com or call these numbers for more information: 662-2874296 or 662-665-5392.

Lifeguard training Northeast Mississippi Community College will offer a three-day American Red Cross Lifeguard Training class on May 19-21. Classes will meet each day from 4-9 p.m. at the Gaye Roden Carr Aquatic Center on the Booneville campus. Cost of attendance is $250 for the three-day course for new certification and $150 for individuals seeking recertification. Upon completion of the course, participants will receive certification in lifeguarding, professional American Red Cross cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and automated external defibrillation (AED). In order to receive certification, participants must attend all classes. Participants must be 15 years of age or older. Class size is limited to 10 individuals and the deadline to apply is April 30. Pre-registration is required and the registration form is located on the Northeast Mississippi Community College homepage or by visiting http://bit.ly/NEMCCLifeguardTraining. For more information about lifeguard training or to obtain a pre-registration form, contact the Northeast Student Activities Office at 662- 720-7409 or 662720-7772.

ACHS Class of 1964 The Alcorn Central Class of 1964 will have a planning meeting at 6 p.m. on Saturday, April 26 at the Pickwick Lake home of Janis and Jerry Fowler. For more information call 662-415-3619. Â

Benefit Bluegrass Festival A Bluegrass Festival benefit for Lanell Coln will be held on Saturday, April 26 at the American Legion in Corinth. Admission is $5. A bake sale and door prizes will be included. To donate for those events, contact Lola Porter at 662-2875993. Bands and performance times include Courthouse pickers, 10 a.m.; Shady Grove Bluegrass 11 a.m.; Goodtime Grass, noon; Hatchie Bottom Boys with guest Freddie Boy Burns, 1 p.m.; Bobby Parker and Old Time Bluegrass Gospel, 2 p.m.

KHS Class of ‘64 There will be a final meeting for the 50th year reunion for the 1964 class of Kossuth High School at Pizza Hut on May 1 at 11:30. Anyone interested please be present.

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Daily Corinthian • Friday, April 25, 2014 • 1B

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2B • Daily Corinthian

Religion

Friday, April 25, 2014

Kids’ laughter is a gift from God “I love music of all kinds, but there’s no greater music than the sound of my grandchildren laughing; my kids, too.” This quote from Sylvia Earle rings true with me – it is so important to enjoy the precious moments of laughter with the children and grandchildren. Springtime always reminds me of when my kids were growing up and it was finally time to play outside in the warm sunshine. I would raise the windows and open the doors so I could hear them and keep up with where they were, and most of the time the sounds were good, happy ones with lots of giggles and laughter. Occasionally, I had to play referee and settle arguments but overall, the days were usually good. Now I get to hear their children do the same things. It’s not unusual

for one of them to ask, “Momaw, can we ride the 4-wheeler?” or Lora Ann m a y b e Huff say, “Momaw, I’ll Back Porch ride my bicycle and you ride the 4-wheeler.” They want to explore in the woods and pastures, build “forts” and look for treasures. About the time I feel my age creeping up on me, they perk me up and get me moving again. Yes, I have lots of things I like to do and many things I need to do, but I don’t want to ever be too busy for the kids – they make life worth living. They brighten every room they enter and give us a reason to look positively toward the future. Someone said that

Yes, I have lots of things I like to do and many things I need to do, but I don’t want to ever be too busy for the kids – they make life worth living. They brighten every room they enter and give us a reason to look positively toward the future. every child comes with the message that God is not discouraged with man – He keeps sending new ones to brighten our world and keep it going. How thankful we should be and how determined we should be to care for them, encourage them to make the most of every day, and help them use their talents and ideas for good. Life is too short to waste the gifts we are given by God. …So enjoy your hobbies and be diligent in

your work, but always take time to enjoy the children and their laughter. You won’t worry nearly as much and you won’t have time to think about all the bad in the world – you will be consumed with the good things the children share. (Lora Ann Huff is a Wenasoga resident and special columnist for the Daily Corinthian. Her column appears Fridays. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corint, MS 38834.)

Will you show kindness to someone? Not long ago a good friend of mine shared a letter with me he titled, “Kindness Unforgotten.” It was a letter to he and his wife from a young man that visited with them over 20 years ago. This child, who was six years old at the time, spent three months with my friend and his family and now 20 years later continues to thank them for their courtesies and kindness extended to him and his family. This is something that will never be forgotten and a good example that will be passed on from this young man to others. In a similar situation, I spent some time when I was in the Air Force in California. Unknown to me before I went to Edwards AFB, CA, I had a cousin, about the same age of my dad that lived close to the base, and he befriended me when I arrived and treated me as if I was a member of his fam-

ily. His daughter and I became friends and still communiGary cate with Andrews each other today even Devotionals though we haven’t seen each other in years. Kindness has an everlasting effect. I am sure that most of you can look back on times in your life when someone was kind to you and treated you with gentleness. I am also sure that you can remember some times when you were treated unkindly. In today’s society one doesn’t hear much about the Golden Rule anymore. Sadly to say I haven’t heard anyone repeat it or use it because of the dog eats dog worldly traditions we are a part of. “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,” is something all

Kindness has an everlasting effect. I am sure that most of you can look back on times in your life when someone was kind to you and treated you with gentleness. I am also sure that you can remember some times when you were treated unkindly. of us need to remember and use in our daily living. Kind actions are always going to be remembered. Treat someone with kindness today and your return will great! In Matthew 7:12 Jesus tells us, “So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets.” Prayer: Thank you Lord for the people I have met and for the kindness that has been shown to me. I pray that I also will show kindness to someone each

Three men were crucified that day Roman soldiers crucified three men that day: two thieves and one extremist. We have extremists across the political spectrum today, but not like this extremist. He was so extreme, he pronounced himself God. No one is more despicable than a thief, especially one who steals from the innocent, from the mouths of babes, and who lies about it. A thief who steals for pleasure and not from need, who steals because others think they’re so high and mighty and have nice things they don’t deserve. Thieves love to steal from those who are so comfortable in their own arrogance, who don’t even recognize they only have things because someone else has given them…stuff. It’s all just stuff. Society recoils against thievery. Some societies chop off hands of thieves. Romans crucified thieves and zealots as well as any who threatened to break the peace of Rome. All thieves get what’s coming eventually. All meet their Maker at the end. One of the two thieves literally met his Maker at the end of his miserable life. While the Maker and Creator of all things is the first to despise thievery and corruption and to judge and condemn the worst in all of us, the Maker on the

cross forgave. It’s hard to imagine. The One Who had creDanny ated and Gardner made all things had Columnist come into His creation as a creature, but no one recognized Him. Instead, they rejected Him and reviled Him, beating and scourging Him to do away with Him finally and forever. He was the cause of all that’s wrong in this world! He was an extremist Who rallied men and women against all that’s natural and human. He lifted Himself up above everyone else and proclaimed marvels and utopia and supernatural abilities no one else could imagine. And, this extremist demanded and expected His followers to live at supernatural levels, not grovel in the grime of everyday lives, doing what comes naturally. What difference is there between a religious man and a non-religious man anyway? Many see the non-religious man as more righteous than the hypocritical religious man who wears his religion on his sleeves as though he were better than those around him. But, one of the thieves did not. The extremist

was not like other religious men. He was in fact innocent. One thief argued with the other thief: “Do you not even fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation? And we indeed justly, for we are receiving what we deserve for our deeds; but this man has done nothing wrong.” Then he appealed to his Maker: “Jesus, remember me when You come in Your kingdom?” And, Jesus his Maker replied, “Truly I say to you, today you shall be with Me in Paradise.” If our Maker and Creator of all things, while hanging from nails on rugged timbers after being brutally beaten, scourged to the bone… if He welcomed the worst among us into His kingdom, then how should we live among our fellow men? Are we not all the same? Does anyone among us have a justified claim of being any better than anyone else? Anyone who does is a fool! “God is not a man, that He should lie….” Jesus has risen from the dead. He is alive! Hallelujah! Daniel L. Gardner is a syndicated columnist who lives in Starkville, MS. You may contact him at Daniel@DanLGardner.com, or visit his website at http://www.danlgardner.com

and everyday of my life. Amen. (Suggested daily Bible readings: Sunday - Ephesians 4:32; Monday - Proverbs 14:21; Tuesday - Gensis 50:15-21; Wednesday - Romans 12:10-15; Thursday - 2 Peter 1:5-7; Friday - Proverbs 31:20; Saturday - Psalm 23:6.) Daily Corinthian columnist and Corinth native Gary Andrews is retired after 35 years in the nuewspaper and magazine business. He may contacted at gary@ devotionals.com

Worship Call Sister to Sister Program Alcorn M.B. Church will host their 10th annual Sister to Sister program Sunday, April 27 at 3 p.m. The program will include nine speakers, each with a different message, along with special music.

Church at 554 CR 306, Corinth, will have revival services Monday, May 5 through Wednesday, May 7 at 7 p.m. nightly. Bro. Jimmy Lancaster, pastor of Shady Grove Baptist Church will hold the revival which will feature old time preaching and singing.

Revival Men’s Day Central Grove M.B. Church will host its annual Men’s Day program Sunday, April 27 at 3 p.m. Guest speaker will be Min. Isaac Patterson of Oak Grove CME Church along with the Oak Grove CME Male Choir. There will also be special music by the Springhill MB Church Male Choir of Booneville.

Kendrick Baptist Church will have revival services from Sunday, May 4 through Wednesday, May 7 with Dr. Ronald Meeks, bible professor at Blue Mountain College, with Donnie Glissen leading the music. Sunday school: 9:30 a.m.; morning worship: 10:30 a.m.; evening worship, 6:30 p.m.; Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday services: 7 p.m.

Homecoming Zion Pentecostal Church of Christ will have homecoming from 10 a.m. until – on Sunday May 4. The church is located on Little Zion Road North of Corinth off old Hwy 45 North.

Revival Victory Baptist Church will hold revival services at 6:30 p.m. each Tuesday in April. Speaker this Tuesday, April 22 is Frank Wilson. On April 29, Nicky Trammel will speak.

Special Service Butlers Chapel Baptist Church will host a special service on Sunday, May 4 at 10:45 a.m. Bro Keith Carpenter, a chalk artist, will be the guest speaker. The church is located at 3337 Butlers Chapel Road.

Fourth Sunday Service New Covenant Baptist Church at 140w East Fourth Street in Corinth will host its 4th Sunday Community Service on Sunday, April 27 at 6 p.m. Rev. William Sorrell, associate minister, will be the speaker.

Homecoming Strickland Baptist Church at 554 CR 306, Corinth, will have homecoming from 11 a.m. until on Sunday, May 4. Following a fellowship meal at noon there will be a special singing by Fishers of Men of Oxford.

Revival Strickland Baptist

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. Post membership is not required to attend. For more information, call 462-5815.

Bible Study Spirit & Truth Ministries – across from Gateway Tire – is hosting a Bible Study each Tuesday night called Tuesday Night Truth Seekers. The event is open to the public and is set for 6:30-8 p.m. each week. For more information call 662-603-2764,

Bible Study City Road Temple will hold a Bible study each Wednesday at noon and 6:30 p.m.

Bloodied shirt, unwashed fork: Relics of John Paul II abound BY FRANCES D’EMILIO Associated Press

ROME — Inside a chapel on the edge of Rome, a nun uses a key to open a wooden wall panel, revealing a hidden niche. Behind glass and stitched loosely to supporting backing hangs a relic of holy suffering: the bulletpocked, bloodstained undershirt that John Paul II was wearing when a gunman shot him in St. Peter’s Square. The short-sleeved garment bears the initials “JP,” sewn in red cotton thread on the label by nuns who did his laundry. Jagged rips run down from the neck and sides, made when emergency room staff tore open John Paul’s shirt as they raced to save the 60-year-old pontiff’s life. It’s one of the most remarkable of the endlessly surfacing relics of John Paul, who will be declared a saint on Sunday in the very same square where a Turkish wouldbe assassin shot him on May 13, 1981. Relics of John Paul have enjoyed a boom ever since the beloved pope was beatified in 2011, and they are gaining heightened significance — as well as a surge of veneration — ahead of his canonization. The phe-

nomenon has been fueled by John Paul’s longtime Polish confidant and secretary, Stanislaw Dziwisz, who doles them out to churches that request them. The Vatican also played a role in the relic fever by breaking its own rules to allow worldwide veneration of John Paul’s relics as soon as he was beatified, rather than waiting until he became a saint. The famous undergarment was discovered by the head nurse in the operating room at Rome’s Gemelli Polyclinic as she was cleaning the floor. “She understood that the undershirt could be important,” said Sister Amelia Cicconofri, who displays the undershirt at Regina Mundi church upon request. “She picked it up, rolled it in a towel and kept it in her closet at home.” Nurse Anna Stanghellini, who lived out her last years at the church’s convent, donated the shirt to the nuns there, bequeathing a vivid and tangible testimony to John Paul’s physical suffering. Relics of John Paul are by no means limited to Rome. John Paul was the world’s first globetrotting pope, and he left things associated with him scattered around the

globe. The Manila area restaurant where John Paul dined during his 1995 pilgrimage to the Philippines shows off the spoon, fork, water goblet, knives and napkin — all still unwashed after his meal of grilled fish and fried shrimp. Elsewhere in the predominantly Catholic Asian nation, shopping malls this month are showing strands of his silvery-white hair and a piece of bedsheet from his deathbed. Irish Julia Feniquito, a 24-year-old nurse in the Phillipines’ Querzon City, was still wearing her blue scrubs and looking to buy a dress when she passed by a traveling exhibit of John Paul relics in one shopping mall. She kneeled to pray for several minutes in front of a makeshift altar and wrote her reflections on a sheet of paper, which she slipped into a box under a papal skull cap. “John Paul II probably has stuff all over the place,” considering he was the third-longest serving pontiff, said the Rev. Raymond Kupke, a professor of church history at Seton Hall University in New Jersey. “If you think of all the places he has been, the amount of relics is enormous.”


Daily Corinthian • Friday, April 25, 2014 •3B

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

5 Secrets to a Successful Sale!

BUTLER, DOUG: Foundation, floor leveling, bricks cracking, rotten wood, basements, shower floor. Over 35 yrs. exp. FREE ESTIMATES. 731-239-8945 or 662-284-6146.

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GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

12 CR 322. Oak Forest Fri /Sat. Couch, small kitchen appl., 2 entry doors, patio tables, etc

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246 CR 604. Thurs, Fri, Sat. 4 Fam (HUGE) glass, tools, kids, mens, womens, 6-34. H/H, Linens

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your sale around popular intersections where cars will be stopped.

HUGE YARD SALE, Multiple Families, SATURDAY, 7AM-TIL, 1802 HIGHLAND DR.

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#4 Use brightly colored sign

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#5 Put a price on all items for

items like antiques, electronics, vintage or baby merchandise in your adver tising.

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sale and set up a “free� box in front of your sale to draw in customers.

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS Ad must run prior to or day of sale! (Deadline is 3 p.m. day before ad is to run!) (Exception-Sun. deadline is 3 pm Fri.)

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4B • Friday, April 25, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

MOVING SALE 372 Wood- 0212 PROFESSIONAL land Cir, Eastview Fri & Sat. Sofa, Armoir, china AIRLINE JOBS Start Herecab., parsons chairs, HH Get Trained as FAA certified Aviation Technicitems, clothing al. Financial Aid for SALE 254 CR 218. 8 firm qualified students. Job until. Fri/Sat. decor, lin- Placement assistance. en, clothes, glassware, Call Aviation Institute of tables, toys, etc. Clean- Maintenance. 888-2423193 ing out 4 houses SATURDAY: 2706 Davis Dr. (Pine Lake Est.) Exercise equip, Children & Adult clothes, table saw, tools & Much More.

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00 EXTRA Call 662-287-6147 for details.

GENERAL HELP

0232

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0232 GENERAL HELP

PART-TIME BOOKKEEPER, must have computer experience! and experience in bookkeeping! Phone: 662279-5554.(leave a message if there is no ans w e r ) E m a i l : bluecrest.llc@gmail.com

LOCAL COMPANY seeking motivated, energetic, dependable person to work as a marketing assistant. Duties are: appointment setting and confirming by phone (no phone sales). Hours are Mon-Fri 4PM- 9PM and 2PM- 7PM on Sunday. Call only if available to work these hours, start now. Pay is $250 per week. Rapid promotion is possible. Call 662-212-4553, leave name and number if no answer to schedule in person interview.

EMPLOYMENT

0232 GENERAL HELP

CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money INDUSTRIAL to any advertiser, it is 0236 TRADE your responsibility to LACOSTA FACILITY verify the validity of the Services offer. Remember: If an hasSupport the following openad appears to sound ings in our “too good to be true”, Corinth, MS location: then it may be! InquirForklift Operators ies can be made by conMachine Operators tacting the Better BusiLaytable Operators ness Bureau at High school diploma or 1-800-987-8280.

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0264 CHILD CARE

0518 ELECTRONICS

0533 FURNITURE

32" TOSHIBA ( not flat SOLID OAK Round Table. screen ) TV, $25. 287Good Condition. $175. 8288 662-603-1476 PAIR OF Sony Xplod speakers 6x9, 4-way, 270 WANTED TO watts, used very little. 0554 RENT/BUY/TRADE $30 firm. 662-287-9739

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HOUSEHOLD 0509 GOODS

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CARS FOR SALE

BOLENS WEED Eater. $40. 662-286-2655 YARD MACHINE 20hp 46" cut, $400. 286-2655

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M&M. CASH FOR JUNK CARS & TRUCKS. 662-415- 2 A N T I Q U E / V I N T A G E 5435 or 731-239-4114. wooden and galvinized WE PICK UP! CRAFTSMAN 17.5HP, 42"washboards, 1 lg and 1 400.00- 286-2655 sm, $25.00 for both. 286MISC. ITEMS FOR 8257 GARDEN T I L L E R , 0563 SALE 195ccMTD front line. LOT OF vintage matchLike new. $275. 662-284- NICE COFFEE table, end box, hot-wheels, old catable, accent table. 2 stiron and stamped tin 5085. MURRAY 14.5HP 42" cut. mirrors and lamp. All cars, trucks and train matching set, gold with cars $450.00. 286-2655 stained wood with glass VINTAGE GALVANIZED MURRAY 17.5HP 42" cut, t o p s . A l l 6 p c . f o r milk crate, October $100.00- 286-8257 $500.00. 286-2655 1959, protected by MURRAY 18HP 46" cut NICE OAK stack-able cas- Pinkerton's Detective $375.00. 286-2655 sette tape cases with 36 Agency, very rare, $50. mint condition country- 286-8257 SNAPPER 14.5HP 30" western tapes, Elvis, 10PC OF mason's jewelectric start, $375. 286Merl Haggard, George elry including: cufflinks, 2655 Jones, Johnny Cash, 19 2 tie clasps, and black WHITE 18HP, 42" $400.00. different artists, $40. bowties w/ medallions, 286-8257 286-2655 $20. 286-5287

LAWN & GARDEN

0521 EQUIPMENT

8 WEEKS- Pre-K, Between Jumpertown and Booneville, 1/2 Mile from Pisgah Head Start. Qualified with References. 662-603-4897 YARD MACHINE 20 h.p. 6 ASSORTED donut tires 46" cut. $450. 662-286- & rims, great shape. $15 2655 PETS ea or $60 for all. 286GED required. Must 8257 have reliable transportYARD MACHINE 17.5 h.p. ation. Manufacturing 42" cut. $500. 662-286- M A K I T A 1 / 2 " r o u t e r 0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS 2655 experience is a plus. model 3612B no. 5675E, Please apply online at: TO A good home. SiberiMURRAY 17.5 h.p. 42" Missing bottom plastic www. an husky. Black & White cut. $425. 662-286-2655 anti-friction plate, $50. lacostaservices.com with 2 blue eyes. 3 yrs. 286-8257 You MUST fill out SNAPPER 10.5 h.p. 28" 396-1512. application entirely. cut. $300. 662-286-2655 2 SUPER H.D. log chain tensioners, $20.00 ea or FARM SNAPPER 12 h.p. 30" $35 for both. 286-8257 cut. $375. 662-286-2655 FUNNY LOOKING old 2-SELF PROPELLED 21" MERCHANDISE bucksaw, great shape, cut. $125 each. 662-286$30.00. 286-8257 2655

Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30 E.O.E.

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MUST HAVE for classic truck collector, 869 page book: Motor's Truck Repair Manual, copyright 1960, $25. 662286-5287

2 VINTAGE Green canvas & wood folding Army cots, possibly WWII, great condition, $100 for both. 286-8257

NICE TREADMILL, Sportscraft TX335, Folds flat for storage, $100. 2868257

VINTAGE MALLEABLE cobbler stand, 14"tall, VERY OLD, 2 man cross- shoe part is 8.5", $25. cut saw. 71" x 5.5" with 286-8257 2 8.5" wooden handles. OLD IRON Pot w/ pour B e a u t i f u l l y p a i n t e d spout, long wire heat landscape scene with resistant handle & Swivbarns, houses, trees & el lid. B & B Mfg Co, gristmill, $100. 286-8257 N a s h v i l l e , D o u b l e Struck, $25. 286-8257 NON-WORKING, NON-REPAIRABLE jacuzzi 80 x 80 8 OLD lead and porcelx 29. Nice turquoise col- ain Ball mason jar lids, or, no leaks. Perfect for fair condition, $15. 286r a i s i n g m i n n o w s , 8257 worms, koi pond, or VERY OLD Dr. Scholls raised flower bed. $100. w o o d e n s l i d e f o o t 286-8257 measure & show indicIDEAL TELEMASTER Modular Plug Termination crimp cable: catalog no. 3 0 - 4 9 6 , E b a y 1813B1588084, First $20 get's it. 286-8257

ator, good shape for age, $20. 286-8257

ONE VINTAGE pack of 1 dozen Coca-Cola advertisement pencils, $10. 286-8257

Automatic • stk# H14-095

– OR –

plus tax

0.9% for 60 months

*36 month lease. 12,000 miles per year. Thru American Honda Credit with approved credit. Payments are plus tax. Picture is for illustration only.

down payment 1st month’s payment security deposit due at lease signing

2014 Honda

2014 Honda

CRV LX

ODYSSEY LX

Automatic • 2WD • stk# H14-127

330mo.

269mo.

$

– OR –

0

$

269mo.

$

$

plus tax

– OR –

0.9% for 60 months

*36 month lease. 12,000 miles per year. Thru American Honda Credit with approved credit. Payments are plus tax. Picture is for illustration only.

plus tax

0.9% for 60 months

*36 month lease. 12,000 miles per year. Thru American Honda Credit with approved credit. Payments are plus tax. Picture is for illustration only.

A car you can TRUST, a program you can DEPEND on. Not just another certified program

While most manufacturers offer some type of certified program for used vehicles, this does not mean that they are all the same. Far from it.

Major differences can be found in: • The Warranty - 7 year/100,000 total vehicle mile on Powertrain • The Inspection List - 150 Point Inspection • Transferable Warranty - Between Private Parties

find your next home in the

With a Honda Certified Used Car, your vehicle meets the most stringent qualifications, backed by a lengthy comprehensive warranty.*

DOSSETT BIG 4 House of Honda

628 SOUTH GLOSTER • TUPELO • 842-4162 or 1-888-892-4162

classifieds 662-287-6111

0710 HOMES FOR SALE

Advertise Your Property For Sale or Lease Here! HOUSE & 15 ACRES

REDUCED 52 Henson Road 1044 Sq. Ft. Home on .6 Ac. Located I/S Corinth city limits. Newly remodeled. 2 BR, 1 BA. Orig. H/W floors in LR & 1 BR. New Carpet & laminate tile in rest of home. Gas heat & water heater. Carport w/concrete drive. No immediate Neighbors, Quiet neighborhood. Country living in city. $65,000

Call 662-415-6995

Beautiful 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home with New Metal Roof, situated on over an acre, fronting US Hwy 45 in the friendly neighborhood of Biggersville, MS. This home is located directly across from the Biggersville School and Kennys BBQ restaurant. This home has many features. Central heat and Air, Large Double Car Garage, Storm Shelter, Patio, Pool. This is a must see.

$89,900 - Owner wants offers! 564 Hwy 45 Corinth, MS 38834 Lyle Murphy United Country

2 CR 783, • Corinth, MS 38834 662-212-3796 662-287-7707

United Country River City Realty realtyandauction@gmail.com http://www.soldoncorinth.com Robert Hicks Principal Broker

Kossuth School District 3BR/ 2BA 21 CR 685 Corinth, MS 38834 $95,000

662-665-5187

Picture your PROPERTY HERE!

LAND, FARM, COMMERCIAL OR HOME 662-594-6502 or classad@dailycorinthian.com

600 Hwy 365 Located in Prentiss County A MUST SEE PROPERTY PRICED THOUSANDS BELOW APPRAISED VALUE!! Fabulous 4 bedroom, 3 bath, brick home with a 1 bedroom, 1.5 bath apartment and shop situated on 5 acres. This property offers a formal dining room,vaulted ceilings, office area,fireplace with gas logs, stained deck, patio,large pasture, pond and 2 stables. House sits off road. OFFERED BY CHILDERS REALTY

662-728-7694

LISTING AGENT

JANE GILLESPIE

662-416-4296

HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER 24 SUNNY WOOD LN SPRING FOREST ESTATE OPEN HOUSE MON. THROUGH SAT. 1 PM TO 4 PM OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT AT 662-287-7453 OR 713-301-5489

CR 500 KOSSUTH & BIGGERSVILLE SCHOOL 3 BR with 1 BATH Finished basement with private bath & patio. Shop & Barn

Appointment Only 662-462-5403


Daily Corinthian • Friday, April 25, 2014 •5B

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

NEW IN the Box, Cross Brand Chrome 3502 Ball Point Pens, $10ea or $15 for both. 286-8257

LOT OF 4 vintage brown bottles w/ brown plastic screw on caps, 3 gal & 1 pint, $20. 2868257

8 UNOPENED bundles of Tamko Elite glass-seal terracotta (red) 3 tab shingles. All for $100 286-8257

BAG OF costume jewelry, 60pc. Rings, necklaces, broaches, & bracelets. $40.00- 2868257

BEAUTIFUL, RARE 1/4 sawn oak fireplace, double mantle w/ beveled mirror, 72x56, a steal @ $400. 286-8257

2 VERY Large 5' x 5' shop fans with 220 V 3 Phase motors, weighs about 300lbs each. $100 ea. 286-8257

NEW IN the Box, Dewalt H.D. Construction Tripod $75. 286-8257

VERY HEAVY Steel Pipe 118" tallx 5.5" Thickw 15" x 15" x3/8 plate on the bottom w/ 4 holes & 4 gussestts for swing arm wench from Caterpillar. $100.00- 286-8257

GIANT PAIR of 29" long, heavy duty snips. Weigh 12lbs and has an anchor symbol stamped into both sides, maybe used by blacksmith or Sailor. Perfect for cutting vinyl siding. $35.00 286-8257

15 NEW Corning glass block terrariums perfect for making gifts or for beta fish bowls, oval opening in the top. Paid $150, asking $50 for all. 286-8257

BEAUTIFUL 376 pg full color, harbound book: McClanes Game and Fish of North America $20.00- 286-8257

21 BUNDLES, 70 OC Oakridge Twilight Black lifetime guaranteed shingles. Enough for a shop, garage, or large shed. $300. 286-8257

ELECTRIC AIRLESS handheld paint sprayer made by Electro Engineering products, model 2500, $25. 286-8257

(2) 24" curved rubber squeegees w/ long wooden handles, bought at Lowes & used once, both for $25. 286SET OF 19 hard bound 8257 books by Boston Publishing Co entitled "The 3M BRAND handimaster Vietnam Experience, a model M3000, New in Nation Divided", excel- the box, includes demo lent condition, thou- video, $35. 286-8257 sands of graphic color FOLD OUT Murphy Bed, photos, $50. 286-8257 custom built (one of a 10 OLD rough sawn oak kind) solid oak with boards from very old s t a i n e d gl ass d oor s, barn, average 8' long 7" c o m p l e t e w i t h m a t wide, all for $50. 286- tress. Heirloom quality piece, 65 x 16x 32, $350. 8257 286-8257

BAG CONTAINING 19 bear t e e t h a n d 1 5 s h a r k MAZDA P/U Bed comteeth, total of 34 teeth, p l e t e w i t h b u m p e r , all for $40.00- 286-8257 lights, chrome, bedliner, rearend, shocks, BAG OF 123 cufflinks, springs, frame, and alulapel pins, tie clasps, minum wheels & Tires. earrings, medallions, No Dents, would make a and pins, $25.00. 286- nice trailer. $350 OBO286-8257 8257

VERY OLD 100+ years, 3 drawer dresser w/ beveled mirror and rosette trim, $150. 2868257

OLD IMPORTED hand held sugar cane cutter, 21" long. Gavilan Brand from DeIncolma Columbia, riveted hickory handle, $20. 2868257

VERY OLD, 100+ years, 1 drawer & 1 door w/ beveled mirror, rosette trim, gossip bench or night stand, $100- 2868257

OLD, SINGLE handled crock for churning butter. Complete with lid and hole with wooden churn. 18" x 11", $50. 286-8257

ELVIS PRESLEY Belt and Buckle made by Von West Ft. Collins, CO, USA. Elvis on a 29 cent VERY NICE 384 page, postage stamp, no. 166 hard bound book with of 500, about 30 years jacket, The way things old. $50. 286-8287 work: from levers to lasers, cars to com- SMALL HEAVY Duty Trailputers, $25. 286-8257 er with new tires to pull behind riding mower or NEW IN the Box, Dewalt 4 wheeler, perfect for H.D.18v, self leveling, grandkids, firewood, cordless rotary laser hay, deer corn, or coon #DW0477K1, $350. 286- dogs. $150 286-8257

8257

OLD VINTAGE Stanley Brand Black Leathe r OVER 100 coke and Dr. D o c t o r ' s b a g , w i t h Pepper crimp on bottle stethoscope, blood colcaps with cork inside, all l e c t i o n e q p t , e t c . . . for $20. 286-8257 $30.00- 286-8257

ADVERTISE YOUR AUTO, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV OR ATV LIST IN OUR GUARANTEED AUTO SECTION FOR AS LITTLE AS................................. (No Dealers - Non Commercial Only)

1607 South Harper Rd Corinth MS 38834

email: classad@dailycorinthian.com 662-287-6111 SERVICES

GUARANTEED Auto Sales 868 AUTOMOBILES

2011 HYUNDAI ACCENT Nordic White

868 AUTOMOBILES

2000 TOYOTA COROLLA CE

4 cylinder, automatic, Extra Clean

662-462-7634 or

662-664-0956

Rienzi

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

1996 VW Cabrio Convertible 178,000 Approx. Miles $3000.

1977 Chevy Big 10 pickup,

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee 283,000 Approx. Miles $3000.

136,680 miles $4200

18,470 MILES 4 CYL., 36 MPG Remainder of 5/60 Warranty

$9,800

868 AUTOMOBILES

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.

662-396-1182

662-664-0789

long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some work.

$1500

Automatic 5 Speed

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new leather seat covers, after market stereo, $2600 obo.

662-664-1957.

2wd, ABS (4wheel), Power Steering AM/FM radio, White 68,500 Miles

$8,279.00 Call:

662-286-8866

2004 DODGE 4x4 Super Nice, 5.7 Hemi, Loaded out, Leather Heated Seats-All Power, 1200.00 New Tires, 105,000 miles, $9000.00, Steve 662-665-1781

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

1979 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA

NEW TOP V6 30+ MPG Z28 APPEARANCE PACKAGE ALL POWER

6 CYLINDER RUNS GREAT! 38,000 ORIGINAL MILES

$5,000

$4900

CALL PICO:

662-415-9121

662-643-3565

REDUCED

FOR SALE 2000 Chrysler Town & Country

31 Ft. Sierra

by Forest River Fifth Wheel Camper For Sale. 2 Slides, Oak Cabinets, High Ceilings, VERY NICE!

15,000 O.B.O.

$

662-415-4597

2,700

$

00

Call: 287-1552

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

1989 FORD F350 DIESEL MOVING VAN WITH TOMMY GATE RUNS GOOD

$3800

731-607-3173

2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LT EXTENDED CAB 4.8 One of a kind 46,000 mi. garage kept. $20,000 CALL 662-643-3565

2004 Nissan Murano, black, 120k miles, loaded, adult driver, garage kept, Bose, leather, exc. cond.,

$10,500. 662-284-6559.

470 TRACTORS/ FARM EQUIP.

YAMAHA GOLF CART 2012 LIMITED EDITION LOW USAGE, MINT CONDITION BALL AND CLUB WASHER SAND BOTTLE KITS SPEED KIT

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.

Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503 804 BOATS

16’ TRAILER, DOUBLE AXEL, BUSH HOG, BACKHOE, FRONT LOADER

$25,000

WILL TRADE

662-643-3565

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

$4500

662-284-9487

2000 Ford F-350

1991 Mariah 20’

ski boat, 5.7 ltr. engine, new tires, $6700.

662-287-5893, leave msg. & will return call.

1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC

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

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc. drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical condition”.

$7400.

662-664-3538

$25,000 OBO

Will Trade

415-5912

2005 Crew Cab Lariat F150 2wd, Limited Edition

Limited Slip Edition, Automatic, Moon Rood, Leather Interior, Bed Liner, Sliding back window, One Owner 105,000 Miles- $11,900 Call 662-287-5765 or 662-212-0677

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN 48,000 ONE OWNER MILES POWER EVERYTHING

$4995. CALL: 662-808-5005

Suzuki Suzuki DR DR 200 200

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

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

17’ 1991 Evinrude 40 h.p. Bass Tracker

1989 FOXCRAFT

Call: 662-287-0991 or 662-665-2020

REDUCED

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy

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

2500.00

$85,000 662-415-0590

$75,000. 662-287-7734

2007 Dual Sport Dual Sport With 2,147Helmet miles 2,147 miles LIKE NEW! LIKE NEW! $1,950 $1,950 OBO 231-667-4280 231-677-4280

$

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

PRICE IS NEGOTIABLE CALL 662-660-3433

210 Hydraulic Excavator Good Condition.

816 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

REDUCED

REDUCED

1984 CORVETTE

2013 KUBOTA 3800 SERIES TRACTOR

832 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S

NEW REDUCED

2001 CAMERO CONVERTIBLE

731-453-5031

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

REDUCED

4CYL- 2.3 Liter w/ overdrive

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES $12,000/OBO

662-664-3958

2008 Ford Ranger XL Regular Cab

Loweline Boat

470 TRACTORS/ FARM EQUIP.

for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

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

$6500. 662-596-5053

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

662-660-3433

2007 V-Star Classic 1100 Silverado 11,000 miles, custom exhaust, Great Bike, Ready to Ride Call or Text Kevin at

662-415-0485


You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint or petition filed against you in this action at 0955 LEGALS LEGALS 9:00 a.m. on the 16th day of June, 2014, in the courtroom of the Alcorn County Chancery Building at Corinth, Alcorn 0955 LEGALS County, Mississippi, and in case of your failure to apIN THE CHANCERY pear and defend a judgment COURT OF ALCORN will be entered against you COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI for money or other the things demanded in the complaint or petition. KELLY S. SWITCHER, PLAINTIFF

6B • Friday, April 25, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

HAND PAINTED China ELECTRONIC SCOOTER. Set from Japan, Fuk- $350. 662-286-2661 agawa 931. I have over 200 pc, all complete. Worth $1800, sell for $200. 286-8257

700 GALLON steel tank, very large, build a hog smoker. $150. 286-8257

WANT TO make certain GIANT ANTIQUE bandyour ad gets attention? saw blade from the old Ask about attention Corinth Machinery getting graphics. building. 10" tall, apprx 38ft long w/ 8 teeth per MOBILE HOMES foot, very heavy. $100. 0675 FOR RENT 286-8257 5 MIN East on CR 301. 2 VERY OLD cast Iron radiBR $375 mo. 662-212ant heater, very ornate 4102 design, propane. 19"wx 21" hx 18"d, beautiful piece. $100. 286-8257 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

0734 LOTS & ACREAGE

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.

40 ACRES, Burnsville. $80,000 for all. 662-8089313 or 415-5071. FOR SALE: 23.25 Acres in Pocahontas Tennessee. Call 662-750-1910 LARGE BUILDING Lot, Box Chapel Area. 287-0243

MANUFACTURED

0747 HOMES FOR SALE

VS.

ment Authority (the "Department") for the purpose of completing capital improvements identified as:

0955 LEGALS

TOMMY IRWIN 0955 LEGALS

MAYOR CITY OF CORINTH, Improvements to the Tishomingo/Polk Street Drainage MISSISSIPPI Basin as described in the Preliminary Engineering Report “2 012 Drainage System Improvements� prepared by Cook Coggin Engineers as 4tc 04/04, 04/11, 04/18, supporting documentation for 0425/2014 the FY 2012 Disaster Relief Opportunity offered by the 14671 United States Economic DeIN THE CHANCERY velopment Administration. COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

You are not required to file an answer or other pleading BE IT RESOLVED BY RE: LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF JAMES EDWARD but you may do so if you de- T H E G O V E R N I N G NEWCOMB, DECEASED BODY OF THE CITY, sire. AS FOLLOWS: NO. 2014-0213-02 Issued under my hand and the nd NOTICE TO seal of said Court, this 22 Section 1. The Governing CREDITORS day of April, 2014. Body of the City does hereby liver and Set up InNOTICE is hereby given declare its intention to enter cluded, ONLY $15,000, into a loan agreement with that Letters Testamentary SUMMONS Sarah Frenn, 662-587have been on this day granCHANCERY CLERK OF the Department in the prin- ted to the undersigned, CHAIN LINK Fence, 130 1195 cipal amount not to exceed THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI ALCORN COUNTY Rickey E. Newcomb and ReYards, Like New condiHOMES FOR MISSISSIPPI O n e M i l l i o n D o l l a r s becca "Becky" Shanklin, on tion, you remove. $200. 0710 ($1,000,000) for the purpose the estate of James Edward SALE BOBBY MAROLT 396-1333 TRANSPORTATION of completing the capital im- Newcomb, deceased, by the TO: EZGO GOLF Cart with DAKOTA L Y N N BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C. provements identified above. Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, and all Utility bed, 36 Volt with LOVELACE DEPUTY CLERK persons having a claim against CAMPERS/ Charger, $1500. 287-0243 1507 OAK TERRACE said estate are required to 0820 TRAILERS Section 2. The Loan will be CORINTH, MS 38834 3tc 04/25, 05/02, 05/09/2014 have the same probated and FRONTLINE PLUS, 89-132 secured by a Note executed registered by the Clerk of INNSBRUCK GULFlb dogs, 3 dose packs. and delivered by the City to said Court within ninety (90) 14694 STREAM w/ Slide out, $25.00 662-212-2492 the Department. Failure of days after the date of the first 35ft, $4700. 731-439-1411 the City to meet its repay- publication of this notice or NOTICE TO 4005 IVY LANE NEW 17,000 BTU 120 Volt CAP LOAN PROGRAM ment obligations shall result the same shall be forever DEFENDANT(S) CORINTH SCHOOL Air Conditioner. $275. in the forfeiture of sales tax barred. The first day of pubDISTRICT 662-286-6582 0832 MOTORCYCLES lication of this notice is the Public Notice allocation or homestead ex- 18th day of April, 2014. emption reimbursement in an 2003 HARLEY DAVIDSON You have been made a DeREVERSE YOUR 3BR, 2 Bath Brick/Vinyl 1200 custom sportster. fendant in the suit filed in this The Board of Mayor and Al- amount sufficient to repay ob- WITNESS our signatures on Home in Nice, Quiet AD FOR $1.00 Low miles, mint condi- Court by Kelly S. Switcher, dermen, acting for and on be- ligations due until such time this 15th day of April, 2014 Neighborhood, ApEXTRA t i o n , n e w b k t i r e , Plaintiff, seeking custody. De- half of the City of Corinth, as the indebtedness has been prox. 1500 sq. ft. Incl. RICKEY E. NEWCOMB Call 662-287-6147 L a r g e K i t c h e n $5300/OBO 309-261-5508 fendants other than you in Mississippi (the “City�) took up discharged or arrangements for consideration the matter to discharge such indebtedthis action are Tommy Eric for details. w/Breakfast Bar, HardREBECCA "BECKY" of authorizing and approving a ness satisfactory to the DeSwitcher. wood & Tile Floors, SHANKLIN loan on behalf of the City partment have been made. CARS FOR SALE 0868 SONY XPLOD speakers 6 Marble Vanities, Refrom the Mississippi Develop9,4 way,270 X JOINT EXECUTORcently Remodeled, (5) RACE cars, a Mercury ment Authority (the "Departwatts,used very little ELECUTRIX OF THE You are summoned to apN e w P a i n t Cougar, 66' Fury, Mazda ment") for the purpose of Section 3. The Governing ESTATE OF JAMES $30 Call 662-287-9739 pear and defend against the Throughout, Attached Pick-up, Tow Truck, completing capital improve- Body proposes to authorize EDWARD NEWCOMB, STEPHEN KING hardback Dbl. Garage, Shed and Grennewood Corvette, complaint or petition filed ments identified as: DECEASED and approve the Loan from against you in this action at books, 9 total. Very nice Fenced Backyard. and Speed Boat w/ trailth day t h e D e p a r t m e n t i n t h e 9:00 a.m. on the 16 Call 662-808-0339 04/18, 04/25, & 05/02/2014 condition. Some 1ts edier 662-808-9313 or 662amount and for the aforesaid of June, 2014, in the $135,000. tions. $25- 287-9739 415-5071. Improvements to the Tishom- purposes at a meeting of the 14690 courtroom of the Alcorn ingo/Polk Street Drainage Governing Body to be held at AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES County Chancery BuildBasin as described in the Pre- its regular meeting place at ing at Corinth, Alcorn 0848 liminary Engineering Report 300 Childs Street in Corinth, HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY County, Mississippi, and “2 012 Drainage System Im- Mississippi at 5:00 o'clock in case of your failure to approvements� prepared by p.m. on the 6 th day of May, WWW.BROSECHRYSLER.COM WWW.BROSECHRYSLER.COM WWW.BROSECHRYSLER.COM pear and defend a judgment Cook Coggin Engineers as 2014, or at some meeting will be entered against you HANDYMAN supporting documentation for held subsequent thereto. for money or other the things the FY 2012 Disaster Relief This date assigned to author- HANDYMAN'S HOME demanded in the complaint or Opportunity offered by the ize and approve the aforeCARE, ANYTHING. petition. United States Economic De- mentioned loan documents 662-643-6892. velopment Administration. has been set to meet program requirements which LAWN/LANDSCAPE/ mandate that four public noYou are not required to file TREE SVC BE IT RESOLVED BY tices be issued prior to loan an answer or other pleading WWW.BROSECHRYSLER.COM T H E G O V E R N I N G closing. This will allow suffi- LANDSCAPING TREES but you may do so if you deBODY OF THE CITY, cient time for public com- Heritage River Birch sire. multi-Trucked. 8-10' tall. AS FOLLOWS: BRAND NEW ments. In 15 gallon pots. $50 ea. Issued under my hand and the 662-643-3902 seal of said Court, this 22nd Section 1. The Governing The motion having received day of April, 2014. STORAGE, INDOOR/ Body of the City does hereby the foregoing vote of the *# declare its intention to enter Governing Body, the Mayor OUTDOOR into a loan agreement with declared the motion carried PER MONTH AMERICAN the Department in the prin- and the Resolution adopted, CHANCERY CLERK OF MINI STORAGE cipal amount not to exceed th on this the 18 day of March, STK# 2624R, 2626R,COUNTY 2629R, ALCORN 2058 S. Tate 2631R, 2636R DEAL# 51968 O n e M i l l i o n D o l l a r s 2014. MISSISSIPPI Across from ^RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES SAVE ANOTHER $500.00 ($1,000,000) for the purpose #PRICE & PAYMENT INCLUDES $250 CHRYSLER FINANCE BONUS - ALREADY APPLIED. BOBBY MAROLT World Color of completing the capital im-

$17,999

$285 *#

BRAND NEW

2014 DODGE CHARGER SE

CHOOSE FROM 3 AT THIS PRICE!

BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C. 2014 CHRYSLER 300 DEPUTY CLERK CHOOSE FROM 3 AT THIS PRICE! INCLUDES LUXURY LEATHER SEATING, 292 HORSEPOWER V6, & 8-SPEED AUTO WITH E-SHIFTER!

$26,999

$23,999

* STK# 1126D, 1128D, 1129D DEAL# 21371

14694

$379

PER MONTH

BRAND NEW“MOTOR TREND TRUCK OF THE YEAR�

STK# 1107D, 1109D, 1110D, DEAL# 51280

2014 JEEP CHEROKEE LATITUDE

ALL NEW

2014 RAM 1500

$23,499

*

395 HORSEPOWER HEMI V8, 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC, AIR CONDITIONING, NING, EXTERIOR LS, MUCH MORE! APPEARANCE PKG, POWER/REMOTE ENTRY PKG, ALUMINUM WHEELS,

Section 2. The Loan will be secured by a Note executed TOMMY IRWIN and delivered by the City to the Department. Failure of MAYOR the City to meet its repayCITY OF CORINTH, ment obligations shall result BUILDINGMISSISSIPPI in the forfeiture of sales tax allocation or homestead ex- 0542 MATERIALS emption reimbursement in an amount sufficient to repay obligations due until such time 4tc 04/04, 04/11, 04/18, * $411 PER MONTH as the indebtedness has been 0425/2014 discharged ^RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATESor SAVEarrangements ANOTHER $500.00 to discharge such indebted- 14671 ness satisfactory to the Department have been made.

* 3tc 04/25, 05/02, 05/09/2014

INCLUDES SPORT APPEARANCE PKG!

*

Section 3. The Governing *# Body proposes to authorize and approve the Loan from STK# 2593R, 2597R DEAL# 46180 the Department in the *# $340 PER MONTH amount and for the aforesaid * YOU MIGHT SAVE MORE! LOOK! purposes at a meeting of the Governing Body to be held at PER MONTH STK# 871J its regular meeting place at CHOOSE FROM 2 DEAL# 53342 #PRICE & PAYMENT INCLUDES $500 CHRYSLER FINANCE BONUS - ALREADY APPLIED. A ^RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES SAVE ANOTHER $500.00 AT THIS PRICE! 300 Childs Street in Corinth, $// '($/6 3$<0(176 $5( 3/86 7$;(6 7,7/( 67$7( ,163(&7,21 67,&.(5 '2&80(17 352&(66,1* )(( 3/($6( 81'(567$1' 7+(6( $5( 127 ,1&/8'(' ,1 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 /,67(' $// '($/(5 ',6&28176 0$18)$&785(6Âś 5(%$7(6 $/5($'< $33/,(' 72 385&+$6( 35,&( Mississippi at 5:00 o'clock 81/(66 63(&,),(' 35,25 '($/6 (;&/8'(' )520 '($/(5 672&. 21/< 12 '($/(5 75$16)(56 $7 7+(6( 35,&(6 $&78$/ 9(+,&/( 0$< ',))(5 )520 3,&785( '8( 72 38%/,&$7,21 '($'/,1(6 9(+,&/( 0$< %( $/5($'< %( 62/' 5(6,'(17,$/ 5(675,&7,216 0$< $))(&7 5(%$7(6 $//2:(' 3$<0(176 ),*85(' $7 02 $35 7,(5 &5(',7 5$7,1* : $ & 7 21/< p.m. on the 6 th day of May, ,1&/8'(6 7+( &+5<6/(5 &$3,7$/ ),1$1&( 5(%$7( :+,&+ 5(48,5(6 <28 72 ),1$1&( 7+( 385&+$6( :,7+ &+5<6/(5 &$3,7$/ 72 *(7 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 6+2:1 : $ & 7 21/< 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 48$/,)<,1* '(7$,/6 A5(&(17 &2//(*( *5$'6 25 83&20,1* &2//(*( *5$'6 0$< %( (/,*,%/( 72 6$9( $127+(5 2)) 285 $/5($'< /2: 35,&(6 &(57$,1 7(506 &21',7,216 $33/< 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 &203/(7( 48$/,)<,1* '(7$,/6 *22' 7,// 2014, or at some meeting held subsequent thereto. This date assigned to authorize and approve the aforementioned loan documents has been set to meet program requirements which mandate that four public notices be issued prior to loan closing. This will allow sufficient time for public comments.

$21,499

$372

^FFA MEMBERS: SAVE ANOTHER $500. ^ACTIVE OR RETIRED MILITARY: SAVE ANOTHER $500. ^RECENT COLLEGE GRADS: SAVE ANOTHER $500. ^CURRENT CASE-NEW HOLLAND OWNERS: SAVE ANOTHER $1000. 000. ^PLUMBING-HAVC-GEN. CONTRACTORS: SAVE ANOTHER $500. 0.

BRAND NEW

2014 ALTIMA 2.5S

POWER DRIVE SEAT, BLUETOOTH HANDSFREE SYSTEM, 16� WHEELS, CRUISE CONTROL, MUCH MUCH MORE!

CHOOSE FROM 6 AT THIS PRICE! the foregoing STK# 2557N, 2540N, 2584N, 2595N, 2596N,

The motion having received vote of the Governing Body, the Mayor 2598N MODEL# 13114 VIN# 166386 DEAL# 43060 declared the motion carried and the Resolution adopted, on this the 18th day of March, 2014.

BUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

*#

BRAND NEW

CHOOSE FROM 7 AT THIS PRICE!

CVT AUTO TRANSMISSION, AIR CONDITIONER, CD PLAYER, 15� WHEELS, MUCH MUCH MORE! BUY IT NOW! 2630N, ZERO DOWN! STK# 2631N, 2638N,

$15,899

STK# 2265NT, 2270NT, 2294NT, 2319NT, 2337NT, 2339NT, 2340NTMODEL# 20114 VIN# 351393 DEAL# 52638

2639N, 2640N MODEL# 12014 VIN# 206949 DEAL# 24090

$251 PER MONTH

**RATED 39 MPG HIGHWAY! ^RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES SAVE ANOTHER $600.00 #PRICE & PAYMENT INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS - ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW

2014 PATHFINDER S CHOOSE FROM 5 AT THIS PRICE!

*#

$17,488

*#

*#

AIR CONDITIONER, 14� WHEELS, CD PLAYER, MUCH MUCH MORE!

$12,644

*

$204

PER MONTH

$395

4tc 04/04, 04/11, 04/18, BRAND NEW

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$363

*

PER MONTH

$18,6442318NT, 2331NT

*

$475 PER MONTH

2013 370Z COUPE

W/ AUTOMATIC

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$29,744

*#

STK# 2305N MODEL# 41113 VIN# 380420 DEAL# 54413

$475 PER MONTH

*#

$// '($/6 3$<0(176 $5( 3/86 7$;(6 7,7/( 67$7( ,163(&7,21 67,&.(5 '2&80(17 352&(66,1* )(( 3/($6( 81'(567$1' 7+(6( $5( 127 ,1&/8'(' ,1 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 /,67(' $// '($/(5 ',6&28176 0$18)$&785(6Âś 5(%$7(6 $/5($'< $33/,(' 72 385&+$6( 35,&( 81/(66 63(&,),(' 35,25 '($/6 (;&/8'(' )520 '($/(5 672&. 21/< 12 '($/(5 75$16)(56 $7 7+(6( 35,&(6 $&78$/ 9(+,&/( 0$< ',))(5 )520 3,&785( '8( 72 38%/,&$7,21 '($'/,1(6 9(+,&/( 0$< %( $/5($'< %( 62/' 5(6,'(17,$/ 5(675,&7,216 0$< $))(&7 5(%$7(6 $//2:(' 3$<0(176 ),*85(' $7 02 $35 7,(5 &5(',7 5$7,1* : $ & 7 21/< ,1&/8'(6 7+( 10$& &$37,9( &$6+ 5(%$7( :+,&+ 5(48,5(6 <28 72 ),1$1&( 7+( 385&+$6( :,7+ 10$& 72 *(7 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 6+2:1 : $ & 7 21/< 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 '(7$,/6 A 5(&(17 &2//(*( *5$'6 6$9( $127+(5 :,7+ 7+( 1,66$1 &2//(*( *5$' 352*5$0 &(57$,1 58/(6 5(675,&7,216 $33/< 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 &203/(7( 48$/,)<,1* '(7$,/6 $&78$/ 0,/($*( 0$< 9$5< ,) <28 '5,9( /,.( 03+ $// 7+( 7,0( <28 352%$%/< :21Âś7 *(7 7+( 67$7(' 03* -867 6$< ,1*ÂŤ6(( '($/(5 )25 '(7$,/6 25 )8(/(&2120< *29 *22' 7,//

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All types of lumber regular and treated

1795 100 $ 4695 $

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$295

*#

#PRICE & PAYMENT INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS - ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW

*

14671

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MAYOR CITY OF CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

2014 ROGUE0425/2014 SELECT S

$22,990

PER MONTH

TOMMY IRWIN

^RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES SAVE ANOTHER $600.00 #PRICE & PAYMENT INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS - ALREADY APPLIED.

REAR AIR CONDITIONER, FOLD FLAT 2ND ROW CAPTAINS CHAIRS, 6-WAY ADJUSTABLE DRIVER’S SEAT, MUCH MUCH MORE!

STK# 2320NT, 2321NT MODEL# * 55114 VIN# 107950 DEAL# 27661

2636N, 2643N, 2648N, 2663N, 2677N MODEL# 11454 VIN# 414352 DEAL# 31534

*

$276

PER MONTH

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*#

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*#

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*#

**RATED 38 MPG HIGHWAY!

^RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES SAVE ANOTHER $600.00 #PRICE & PAYMENT INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS - ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW

2014 SENTRA S

$288

PER MONTH

$18,244

*#

287-1024

provements identified above.

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Daily Corinthian • Friday, April 25, 2014 •7B

5 9 Down D E L I V E R S

$

00

NEW

NEW

2014 Ford F-150 Supercab

2013 Ford Edge

Supercrew, 301A Package, Chrome Pkg. stk#0124

MSRP..........................................................$36,555 PKG CHROME DISC..........................................-$1,250 FORD CASH..................................................-$3,000 FORD CREDIT..................................................-$1,000 TRADE ASSISTANCE.........................................-$750 CARTWRIGHT DISCOUNT....................................-$3,000

Sale Price

2013 Ford Fusion SE

White, 2.0 Ecoboost, Aluminum wheels. stk#4612

Navigation, 20” wheels. stk#5057

MSRP..........................................................$25,020 FORD CASH..................................................-$2,000 CARTWRIGHT DISCOUNT....................................-$1,500

24,985 *

$ * Sale Price

27,555

2014 Ford Expedition Limited

Baby Red. stk#97288

MSRP..........................................................$29,785 FORD CASH..................................................-$3,000 CARTWRIGHT DISCOUNT.....................................$1,800

$

NEW NEW

NEW Sale Price

MSRP..........................................................$52,405 FORD CASH....................................................-$4,250 FORD CREDIT..................................................-$1,750 CARTWRIGHT DISCOUNT....................................-$3,500

21,520 *

$

Sale Price

42,905 *

$

PROGRAM VEHICLES 2014 Ford Mustang

2012 Ford Focus SE

Silver 4 Dr. stk#8926

Red, stk#1946

22,959

OR

344 MONTH

$

229 MONTH

374 MONTH

OR

387 MONTH

$

OR

332 MONTH

$

LATE MODEL VEHICLES

$

2011 Ford Fusion SE

13,959

$

Sport Package, Red stk#1219

OR

209 MONTH

$

23,959

Silver, 7 passenger. stk#8820

OR

Black, stk#2329

359 MONTH

$

$

OR

359 MONTH

$

23,959

$

White, stk#7720

OR

Black, stk#9887

$

22,959

$

2007 Ford Mustang GT

284 MONTH

18,959

$

18,959

$

2012 Nissan Altima

344 MONTH

254 MONTH

16,959

$

2009 Impala LTZ

2013 Kia Optima L

White, MR, Leather stk#3417

OR

295 MONTH

$

2011 Toyota Camry LE

1 Owner, 39k miles stk#576000

14,980

239 MONTH

15,959

$

2011 HHR LT

Black, stk#2954

OR

$

254 MONTH

16,959

$

Grey, stk#5533

OR

$

2012 Nissan Altima

White, stk#5747

OR

$

21,959

$

2010 Ford Edge Limited

Silver, stk#1808

OR

$

Red, stk#9592

OR

25,859

$

2013 Chevy Captiva LT

2012 Chrysler 300 Limited

329 MONTH

21,959

$

2013 Chevy Equinox LT

OR

$

24,959

$

2013 Dodge Charger

2012 Nissan Maxima SV

19,959 299 MONTH $

$

2013 Dodge Challenger

2013 Dodge Journey SXT

$

14,959

OR

$

Leather Ecoboost White stk#5313

Silver, 2 to choose from, leather. stk#8661

Silver stk#5503

OR

$

2013 Ford Escape SE

2013 Ford Edge Limited

2013 Ford Explorer XLT

$

2011 GMC Acadia

2011 Ford Fusion

Gold, Leather, 38k miles. stk#8542

22,959

$

Silver. stk#0166

OR

344 MONTH

$

15,959

$

Red, stk#0346

24,959

$

OR

217 MONTH

$

∫Black, Moonroof. stk#7766

OR

388 MONTH

2011 Ford Escape

21,959

$

OR

342 MONTH

$

18,959

$

OR

Blue, stk#9502

41,490

$

16,459

$

255 MONTH

$

18,759

$

Silver, Leather stk#0295

12,459

$

Taupe, loaded, local 1 owner. stk#UC72360

9,850

$

27,459

$

64k, miles. stk#UC07739

11,459

$

198 MONTH

$

2014 Ford Explorer Limited

34,959

$

Silver, stk#1490

295 MONTH

$

18,959

$

2007 Ford Taurus

Moonroof, Black, Leather, 19k miles. stk#0028

8,559

$

Touring, Leather, DVD. stk#5450

329 MONTH

2009 Nissan Maxima

Black, 1 owner, stk#1278

OR

OR

$

21,859

$

2008 Toyota Highlander

OR

Moonroof, Blue. stk#6328

OR

217 MONTH

Red, Auto, Power Window. stk#4129

2008 Honda CRV

2007 Chevy Tahoe LT

13,959

$

2008 Ford Mustang

Tan, stk#4093

295 MONTH

$

240 MONTH

Silver, stk#5224

OR

$

2011 BMW 535 XI Extreme 2008 Mercury Grand Marq. 2013 Chrysler Town & Country

2009 Nissan Murano

Red, Leather, MR stk#1635

4 door, Silver, stk#2011

15,959

$

Grey, stk#1832

OR

$

329 MONTH

$

21,959

$

2013 Ford Taurus SEL

OR

13,959

Red, Leather. stk#5332

OR

2011 Toyota Venza

295 MONTH

$

18,959

$

2009 BMW 35I

$

$

2011 Nissan Juke SV

222 MONTH

$

14,259

$

Gray, Leather, stk#8417

248 MONTH

$

2011 Toyota Corolla LE

OR

OR

17,959

$

OR

Grey, stk#1280

279 MONTH

$

2006 Toyota Avalon

only 73K stk#8173

11,959

$

Grey, stk#3363

TRUCKS•TRUCKS•TRUCKS 2012 Ford F250 Crew

2007 GMC Sierra SLT Crew

2013 GM Terrain

2012 Nissan Frontier

White/Tan, Leather. stk#0662 4x4, Diesel stk#3865

NOW $44,759

NOW $21,959 2012 Dodge Ram 2500 Crewcab 4x4, Diesel, 14k miles, Black. stk#0779

NOW $41,500

BUY HERE! PAY HERE!

2006 Ford Escape XLT

Blue/Black, 2 to choose, loaded. stk#UT10576

Crewcab, Black, SV stk#2492

NOW $20,859 2008 Ford F150 XLT

NOW $10,759

2005 Ford Escape

ltd., tan, stk#2559 ................................

NOW $10,459

2012 Colorado Xcab

2011 Ford F150 4x4 Crew

2010 Jeep Wrangler 4x4

NOW $18,890

$

9,959

26,559

$

2002 Ford Escape

2002 Mitsubishi Montero Silver stk#1139........................... $ 7,959

2002 Ford Explorer

2003 Grand Marquis LS .White, stk#2174 ....................... 7,959 $

White stk#2636.................

$

6,959

Black, Hardtop. stk#7078

Grey, stk#3434

2002 Chevy Trailblazer White

2006 Ford Freestar Van .Grey, stk#5644.......................... 8,959 $

2003 Ford Crown Victoria LX

Reg Cab, SWB stk#5769

King Ranch, 4x4, Maroon, stk#8857

NOW $25,459

Silver, only 18k miles, automatic. stk#UT66586

NOW $19,859

2005 Dodge Ram 1500

NOW $26,590

Red Moonroof. stk#UV03065 Crewcab, 4x4, White. stk#5021

2009 Ford F150 Crew Cab

2001 Ford Ranger

NOW $25,800

stk#8448 .....................

Xtra Clean, Gray, stk00017 ..................... Grey, stk4122 .....................................

Supercab, Blue, stk#8298 .......................

1995 Jeep Wrangler

Hard Top, stk#9389 ..........................

$

6,959

$

6,450

$

5,959

$

5,959

$

5,959

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

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@JPC 14


8B • Friday, April 25, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Spring

2013 KIA OPTIMA

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2006 NISSAN MURANO $ 12,888

2 To Choose From

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2012 Nissan Leaf SL $ 17,888

Chevy Malibu

2007 NISSAN ALTIMA $9,900

2007 CHRYSLER 300 $ 14,888

INFINTY $ 13,900

#17897

#17964

#17892

#17949

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#17894

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2010 Chevy Silverado 79K $ 21,885

2013 NISSAN ALTIMA 2009 JAGUAR XF 17,900

$

#17854

#18009

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48K Miles

13K

2009 Jeep Wrangler 4 Door, 4X4, leather, Sahara, 3pc Hard Top, 46K Miles

26,900

$

24,900

$

#17982

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