052914 daily corinthian e edition

16
Vol. 118, No. 126 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages 1 section Thursday May 29, 2014 50 cents Today 82 Thunderstorm Tonight 66 Index On this day in history 150 years ago Gen. Stephen D. Lee receives a telegram from Gen. Forrest, “The time has arrived, and if I can be allowed 2,000 picked men, will attempt to cut enemy’s communication in Middle Tennessee.” So begins 3 months of intense activity in northeast Mississippi. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather...... 10 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 50% chance of thunderstorms Corinth will receive grants to- taling $400,000 to help deter- mine whether potentially reus- able sites are contaminated. The U.S. Environmental Pro- tection Agency announced it will award Brownelds 2014 Assessment Grants to the City of Corinth in the amount of $200,000 for hazardous sub- stances and $200,000 for pe- troleum. The grants are for the assessment of the property only, not including any cleanup measures that might follow. “These grants are not site- specic but are community- wide,” said Dave Huwe, direc- tor of community development and planning. “It allows us to get assistance to property own- ers to assess their properties to see if they’ve got any potential problems that might limit their ability to market the property.” A browneld site is one that may face obstacles to redevel- opment because of the presence or potential presence of pollu- tion. The goal is to help revi- talize these areas, potentially bringing in new jobs. The city could, for example, seek an assessment of anoth- er former industrial site. The abandoned gas station with a City awarded assessment grants BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] IUKA Tishomingo na- tives Eddie and Frank Thomas are ready to feed concert goers great music. After sell out shows in Febru- ary and March, the two sing- er-songwriters are planning a third home town show next month. “November Café” is set for Friday, June 20 at 7:30 p.m., at the Little Episcopal Church in Iuka. Proceeds from the pre- vious two concerts beneted the Iuka Heritage, Inc., to help maintain the church building. Free refreshments will be served under the Magnolia tree during the concert break. “It’s part music and part the- ater, but it’s not musical the- ater,” said Eddie. “November Cafe features a menu of com- mon stories that connect us all.” The brothers pride them- selves on being able to tell unique stories from a baby boomers’ perspective through their music. “We grew up in Iuka - the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains,” added Eddie. “We aren’t sugar coating or over dramatizing the experiences we sing about.” The brothers are a multi tal- ented pair that, in their more than 30-year career, have learned how to paint pictures with words. The two founded Thomas- lms, Inc., and often personal- Concert uses common stories to connect folks BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Photo compliments of Opal Lovelace Eddie and Frank Thomas played two sold out shows earlier this year at the Little Episcopal Church in Iuka. Members of the Crossroads Arena Board want assurance the facility will be taken care of in years to come. For a second consecutive month, the seven-member board hosted a representa- tive from local government to address questions about the almost 15-year-old building’s future. Corinth Mayor Tommy Ir- win was the latest ofcial to speak with the board on Wednesday. Supervisors Low- ell Hinton and Tim Mitchell appeared before the board last month. “We aren’t asking for more, more, more,” said board mem- ber Penn Majors. “We just want to know what the plan is.” The board’s concern arose after supervisors voted to re- nance the bond on the arena to pay for the expansion of Cross- roads Regional Park. Debt on the approaching 15-year multi-purpose building will be retired in 2017. Supervisors are awaiting a response from the attorney general before proceeding with the project. Hinton and Mitchell both expressed to the board last month the arena would have $500,000 budget- ed in a brick and mortar fund. Another $50,000 would go into the fund each month. The bond payment on the arena is currently about $440,000 per year. A new bond payment is expected to be around $535,000. According to Hinton, super- visors intend for the arena to get everything over $535,000 in a bricks and mortar fund. CA would also still get its $200,000 allotment from tourism under the new bond agreement. “There are two things I see need to be done when talking about the Crossroads Arena,” said Irwin. “We have to get the parking lot paved and look- ing great and we need to paint the building … this is just as important as anything down- town.” Board members aren’t sure adequate funding will be passed their way once the park is complete. “We don’t have the security in knowing we are going to get X amount of money every year,” said vice-chairman Jane Summers. “We are at the mer- cy of tourism.” “I don’t have anything to do with tourism,” responded Ir- win. “I recommend a meeting with them. You have a great relationship with tourism.” “All of us love the tour- ism board and working with Arena board seeks future security BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] In order to fulll his high- est requirement, Boy Scout Troop 123 Life Member Mor- gan Toomer, his fellow Scouts, parents, troop leader and other volunteers met at the Light- house Foundation on Saturday morning to erect a agpole at the corner of the building. “The scouts teach us how to go out into our communities and treat people,” said Toomer. “It also teaches us how to work and get along with others.” The 14 year-old beamed ex- citedly as he explained the “hole in the ground ceremony.” “This is my last requirement,” said Toomer, a student at Corinth Middle School. “I will be an Eagle Scout after this.” After unloading the truck and clearing the area, Toomer and other volunteers dug a 2-foot hole in the ground, assembled the agpole, measured and lev- eled off the space, mixed and poured the concrete, positioned the agpole and more as they assisted him in the achieve- ment of his goal. “You did remember to call 811 before digging, right Morgan?,” said troop leader Kevin Roberts with a grin. “You wouldn’t want to accidently hit a waterline or something.” Whether he did or didn’t call 811, Toomer never responded. However, he managed not to hit a waterline. In the end, the ag was raised and congratulations uttered. With hard work, sweat and determination, Toomer com- pleted his Eagle Scout project, and after a board of review later this year, will be able to call himself an Eagle Scout like his older brother Denzel. Scout, volunteers erect flagpole at Lighthouse BY KIMBERLY SHELTON [email protected] Morgan Toom- er and Sekiah Pollard level off the site of the Light- house Foun- dation’s future flagpole. Re- lated photos on Page 2. FARMINGTON Police Chief Tony Holmes is crack- ing down on property main- tenance abusers in the city of Farmington. “Since the city has put in place the property mainte- nance ordinance, we have re- ally been able to get some ar- eas cleaned up,” said Holmes. The old reworks stand across from the Exxon Central Mini Mart at 385 County Road 218 has been the reason for numerous phone calls to the City Hall. “The property owner was rst told to clean up in 2001,” said Holmes. “Since the or- dinance was put in place, we have sent them two letters with the most recent letter in- cluding a notice to appear in court.” Several board members ex- pressed concern about the property during the May city board meeting. “The people of Farmington want the property cleaned up,” Holmes added. “We hear about it everyday.” The chief said the property would be cleaned up within 30 days. “Whether it’s the city doing it or the property owner, it will get done,” he said. Holmes said the police de- partment and the city will continue to enforce the prop- erty ordinance throughout the summer. The ordinance, which in- Farmington pushing city cleanup BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Please see GRANTS | 2 Please see CONCERT | 2 Please see ARENA | 2 Please see CLEANUP | 2 Daily Corinthian 2015 Hwy 72 E. Corinth, MS. 38834 • 662-594-1877 Mon. - Sat. 10 A.M.- 9 P.M. • www.JRwinespirit.com 1.75L 750ML 1L 750ml 750ML Crown Royal Crown Royal $ $ 29 29 99 99 750ML 750ML Kraken Black Spiced Rum Kraken Black Spiced Rum $ $ 17 17 99 99 7 ML 7 750ML Jose Cuervo Rep or Silver Jose Cuervo Rep or Silver $ $ 17 17 99 99 1.75L 1.75L Jose Cuervo Jose Cuervo Ready to Drink Ready to Drink $ $ 16 16 99 99 750m 750 7 m Bulleit Bourbon Bulleit Bourbon $ $ 22 22 99 99 Pinnacle Vodka Pinnacle Vodka $ $ 17 17 99 1.75L 1.75L

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Page 1: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 118, No. 126 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

ThursdayMay 29, 2014

50 centsToday82

ThunderstormTonight

66

Index On this day in history 150 years agoGen. Stephen D. Lee receives a telegram from Gen. Forrest,

“The time has arrived, and if I can be allowed 2,000 picked men, will attempt to cut enemy’s communication in Middle Tennessee.” So begins 3 months of intense activity in northeast Mississippi.

Stocks........8 Classified......14 Comics........9 State........5

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

50% chance of thunderstorms

Corinth will receive grants to-taling $400,000 to help deter-mine whether potentially reus-able sites are contaminated.

The U.S. Environmental Pro-tection Agency announced it

will award Brownfi elds 2014 Assessment Grants to the City of Corinth in the amount of $200,000 for hazardous sub-stances and $200,000 for pe-troleum. The grants are for the assessment of the property only, not including any cleanup

measures that might follow.“These grants are not site-

specifi c but are community-wide,” said Dave Huwe, direc-tor of community development and planning. “It allows us to get assistance to property own-ers to assess their properties to

see if they’ve got any potential problems that might limit their ability to market the property.”

A brownfi eld site is one that may face obstacles to redevel-opment because of the presence or potential presence of pollu-tion. The goal is to help revi-

talize these areas, potentially bringing in new jobs.

The city could, for example, seek an assessment of anoth-er former industrial site. The abandoned gas station with a

City awarded assessment grantsBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

IUKA — Tishomingo na-tives Eddie and Frank Thomas are ready to feed concert goers great music.

After sell out shows in Febru-ary and March, the two sing-er-songwriters are planning a third home town show next month.

“November Café” is set for Friday, June 20 at 7:30 p.m., at the Little Episcopal Church in Iuka. Proceeds from the pre-vious two concerts benefi ted the Iuka Heritage, Inc., to help maintain the church building.

Free refreshments will be served under the Magnolia tree during the concert break.

“It’s part music and part the-ater, but it’s not musical the-

ater,” said Eddie. “November Cafe features a menu of com-mon stories that connect us all.”

The brothers pride them-selves on being able to tell unique stories from a baby boomers’ perspective through their music.

“We grew up in Iuka - the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains,” added Eddie. “We aren’t sugar coating or over dramatizing the experiences we sing about.”

The brothers are a multi tal-ented pair that, in their more than 30-year career, have learned how to paint pictures with words.

The two founded Thomas-fi lms, Inc., and often personal-

Concert uses commonstories to connect folks

BY ZACK [email protected]

Photo compliments of Opal Lovelace

Eddie and Frank Thomas played two sold out shows earlier this year at the Little Episcopal Church in Iuka.

Members of the Crossroads Arena Board want assurance the facility will be taken care of in years to come.

For a second consecutive month, the seven-member board hosted a representa-tive from local government to address questions about the almost 15-year-old building’s future.

Corinth Mayor Tommy Ir-win was the latest offi cial to speak with the board on Wednesday. Supervisors Low-ell Hinton and Tim Mitchell appeared before the board last month.

“We aren’t asking for more, more, more,” said board mem-ber Penn Majors. “We just want to know what the plan is.”

The board’s concern arose after supervisors voted to refi -nance the bond on the arena to

pay for the expansion of Cross-roads Regional Park. Debt on the approaching 15-year multi-purpose building will be retired in 2017.

Supervisors are awaiting a response from the attorney general before proceeding with the project. Hinton and Mitchell both expressed to the board last month the arena would have $500,000 budget-ed in a brick and mortar fund. Another $50,000 would go into the fund each month.

The bond payment on the arena is currently about $440,000 per year. A new bond payment is expected to be around $535,000.

According to Hinton, super-visors intend for the arena to get everything over $535,000 in a bricks and mortar fund. CA would also still get its $200,000 allotment from tourism under the new bond agreement.

“There are two things I see need to be done when talking about the Crossroads Arena,” said Irwin. “We have to get the parking lot paved and look-ing great and we need to paint the building … this is just as important as anything down-town.”

Board members aren’t sure adequate funding will be passed their way once the park is complete.

“We don’t have the security in knowing we are going to get X amount of money every year,” said vice-chairman Jane Summers. “We are at the mer-cy of tourism.”

“I don’t have anything to do with tourism,” responded Ir-win. “I recommend a meeting with them. You have a great relationship with tourism.”

“All of us love the tour-ism board and working with

Arena board seeks future securityBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

In order to fulfi ll his high-est requirement, Boy Scout Troop 123 Life Member Mor-gan Toomer, his fellow Scouts, parents, troop leader and other volunteers met at the Light-house Foundation on Saturday morning to erect a fl agpole at the corner of the building.

“The scouts teach us how to go out into our communities and treat people,” said Toomer. “It also teaches us how to work and get along with others.”

The 14 year-old beamed ex-citedly as he explained the “hole in the ground ceremony.”

“This is my last requirement,” said Toomer, a student at Corinth Middle School. “I will be an Eagle Scout after this.”

After unloading the truck and clearing the area, Toomer and other volunteers dug a 2-foot

hole in the ground, assembled the fl agpole, measured and lev-eled off the space, mixed and poured the concrete, positioned the fl agpole and more as they assisted him in the achieve-ment of his goal.

“You did remember to call 811 before digging, right Morgan?,” said troop leader Kevin Roberts with a grin. “You wouldn’t want to accidently hit a waterline or something.”

Whether he did or didn’t call 811, Toomer never responded. However, he managed not to hit a waterline.

In the end, the fl ag was raised and congratulations uttered.

With hard work, sweat and determination, Toomer com-pleted his Eagle Scout project, and after a board of review later this year, will be able to call himself an Eagle Scout like his older brother Denzel.

Scout, volunteers erect flagpole at Lighthouse

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Morgan Toom-er and Sekiah Pollard level off the site of the Light-house Foun-dation’s future flagpole. Re-lated photos on Page 2.

FARMINGTON — Police Chief Tony Holmes is crack-ing down on property main-tenance abusers in the city of Farmington.

“Since the city has put in place the property mainte-nance ordinance, we have re-ally been able to get some ar-eas cleaned up,” said Holmes.

The old fi reworks stand across from the Exxon Central Mini Mart at 385 County Road 218 has been the reason for

numerous phone calls to the City Hall.

“The property owner was fi rst told to clean up in 2001,” said Holmes. “Since the or-dinance was put in place, we have sent them two letters with the most recent letter in-cluding a notice to appear in court.”

Several board members ex-pressed concern about the property during the May city board meeting.

“The people of Farmington want the property cleaned

up,” Holmes added. “We hear about it everyday.”

The chief said the property would be cleaned up within 30 days.

“Whether it’s the city doing it or the property owner, it will get done,” he said.

Holmes said the police de-partment and the city will continue to enforce the prop-erty ordinance throughout the summer.

The ordinance, which in-

Farmington pushing city cleanupBY ZACK STEEN

[email protected]

Please see GRANTS | 2

Please see CONCERT | 2

Please see ARENA | 2

Please see CLEANUP | 2

Daily Corinthian

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Page 2: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

prominent location at the corner of Tate and Fill-more is another example of a site that might ben-efi t.

It could help erase the question mark hanging over properties that could be diffi cult to sell, said Huwe.

Mayor Tommy Irwin is excited about the oppor-tunity it gives the city to help bring new life to va-cant properties. He said the city applied for a dif-ferent brownfi eld grant that was not awarded while working on the Wurlitzer project but found success with the EPA program.

The city has already done Phase I and Phase II assessments at the old Wurlitzer property, and demolition is about to be-gin.

Following planning to identify priority sites, the hazardous substances funds may be used to con-duct 15 Phase I and fi ve

Phase II environmental site assessments, and the petroleum funds may be used to conduct 16 Phase I and six Phase II envi-ronmental site assess-ments. Funds from each grant may also be used to support the development of cleanup alternatives and community engage-ment activities.

Others in Mississippi awarded brownfi eld as-sessment grants are Bi-loxi, Gautier and Laurel for community-wide proj-ects, while Monroe Coun-ty was awarded $350,000 for an assessment of the former Gulf Ordnance Plant at the Prairie Indus-trial Park.

Across the U.S., a total of approximately $23.5 million is going to com-munities that have been impacted by plant clo-sures. Other selected re-cipients include tribes and communities in 44 states, and more than 50 of the grants are going to HUD-DOT-EPA grant re-cipient communities.

GRANTS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

ized their fi lms with origi-nal sound tracks.

With their four-CD box set release called “Angels on the Backroads,” the duo paid tribute to blues and jazz.

“Angels on the Back-roads” became a multi-media stage show that spanned 12 years and was featured on N.P.R.’s Weekend Edition.

Daily Corinthian col-umnist Rheta Grinsley Johnson once took in a Thomas brothers show.

“Eddie and Frank’s

songs come with stories, and he has that knack all good storytellers share: using the evoca-tive detail,” she said. “As the light faded and the stained glass went inside-out, we heard enough good music to keep us humming through the next workweek.”

(Tickets are $10 each and are available at the Iuka Public Library, by phone at 662-423-3333 or online at eddieand-frank.com. For more information about Iuka Heritage, visit thelittle-church.org.)

CONCERT

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

cludes a penalty if needed, specifi es the regulation and use of private prop-erty, property conditions, maintaining structures and being responsible for the property.

In other business:■ The board approved

the contract from Corinth based Buzz Plaxico Dozer to start the sewer im-provement project. Engi-neer Ricky Newcomb said work on the sewer addi-tion would begin June 2.

The project will add 44 new households to the sewer system, including 21 houses on county roads 130 and 121 and Farming-ton Road on the east side and 23 houses on CR 119 on the west side.

■ The board approved tune-up work to be com-pleted on the code en-

forcement vehicle. The Ford Ranger truck has been in use by the city for more than fi ve years.

Already this year, the city has replaced the ve-hicle’s tires and battery.

■ Alderman Low-ell Gann presented the Farmington Sewer De-partment report through April 30.

The report included the active outstanding balance of $20,106, the active past due amount of $10,071 and the inac-tive past due amount of $25,018. The department placed 69 hang tags and fi ve customers were dis-connected for non pay-ment.

■ The next board meet-ing is scheduled for June 17 at 6 p.m. at the Farm-ington City Hall on Farm-ington Road. The public is welcome to attend.

CLEANUP

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

them,” added Majors. “But what about next year and the next after that?”

“What the board would like to see down the road is a letter of intent from this board and tourism with a percentage tacked on,” said new arena board member Brett Marlar.

Irwin then expressed his support for the facil-ity.

“All of this is impor-tant,” he said. “The arena is important, and I am all for you, the park is important and tourism is important. You may have to go to the city and county and say we have been forgotten the last couple of years and need X amount.”

“So what you are saying is if we need it, we have to ask for it,” said arena

General Manager Tammy Genovese.

“I do,” answered Irwin. “At the end of the day, you may have to go to the city and say we need X … that’s just common sense.”

The mayor told the board Crossroads Arena plays a part in making Corinth better.

“Economic develop-ment only occurs when something is going on in your city,” he said. “There is a lot of inter-est in Corinth … in then next fi ve years Corinth is going to hit a home run and before it’s over with, it will be an investment mecca.”

In other board busi-ness, members voted to change their regular meeting time to 10 a.m. on the last Wednesday of each month.

ARENA

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Daily CorinthianCheck out theclassifi eds daily

Flagpole at LighthouseDenzel Toomer, 18, Morgan Toomer, 14, and Sekiah

Pollard, 13, gather at the Lighthouse Foundation to complete Morgan’s final project, above. Story and

related photo on Page 1.

Morgan Toomer celebrates his acheivement with fel-low Scouts, Scout leader and friends, right.

JACKSON — Missis-sippi’s Senate primary has morphed from a high-profi le proxy for the national fi ght between the tea party and estab-lishment Republicans into an ad war driven by clandestine images of Sen. Thad Cochran’s ailing wife in an online video.

State Sen. Chris Mc-Daniel, who aims to de-liver a rare victory for the tea party this midterm election year primary season, unveiled a state-wide ad Tuesday accus-ing Cochran of “outra-geous” attacks.

Cochran was cam-paigning on Wednesday.

McDaniel’s campaign describes the spot as a “six-fi gure” ad buy. It comes after the Cochran campaign launched its own ad last week that shows a McDaniel sup-porter — conservative Mississippi blogger Clayton Kelly — who’s charged in the crimi-nal case over a photo of 72-year-old Rose Co-chran. She has lived in a nursing home the past 13

years with dementia.A police investigator

has said the image of Rose Cochran appeared at the end of a video al-leging Cochran was in-volved in an inappro-priate relationship with another woman. Co-chran campaign spokes-man Jordan Russell has said any suggestion the senator is in such a rela-tionship is “outrageous and offensive and the dirtiest form of politics.”

In the 30-second TV spot from the Cochran campaign, a narrator says: “It’s the worst. Chris McDaniel support-er charged with a felony for posting video of Sen. Thad Cochran’s wife in a nursing home.” The Cochran ad urges Mis-sissippians to “rise up and say no to dirty poli-tics and yes to our strong conservative leader Thad Cochran.”

Kelly and three other men, including an attor-ney who’s a Central Mis-sissippi Tea Party board member, face felony charges in what police describe as a conspiracy to illegally photograph a vulnerable adult in a place where there’s an expectation of privacy.

A police investigator said Rose Cochran was photographed on Easter Sunday.

District Attorney Mi-chael Guest has said it’s possible others could be charged in the case.

Cochran and McDaniel meet in a primary Tues-day that has garnered national attention as Mc-Daniel, a tea party favor-ite who promises to serve in the mold of Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, tries to unseat Cochran, a former Sen-ate Appropriations Com-mittee chairman who was elected to the House in 1972 and the Senate in 1978.

McDaniel, 41, had been running on the no-tion that Cochran is a “gentleman” and a “fi ne Mississippian,” but one who simply hasn’t been conservative enough over four decades of ris-ing national debt and expanding government. However, in an open let-ter to Cochran last week, McDaniel said he was reconsidering his respect for Cochran because he believed the incumbent’s campaign had resorted to “shameful slander” against him.

McDaniel has en-

dorsements from sev-eral Mississippi tea party groups as well as nation-al groups, including FreedomWorks, Senate Conservatives Fund, Tea Party Express and Club for Growth.

Cochran, 76, hasn’t had a serious challenge in three decades and has made few campaign stops in Mississippi in re-cent weeks — partly, his campaign says, because of his work in Washing-ton. Cochran appeared at a Memorial Day event Monday in Vicksburg and has stops scheduled Wednesday and Thurs-day in southern Mis-sissippi. He also spoke last Friday to a business group in the Jackson area, telling reporters outside that it was “un-fortunate” and “sort of bizarre” that somebody photographed his ailing wife. The Cochrans’ two grown children released a statement last week saying their father has been devoted to their mother as her health has deteriorated.

On April 25, Cochran did a six-minute inter-view with The Associated

Bitter GOP battle floods airwavesBY BILL BARROW

AND EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

Associated Press

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Page 3: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

Today in

history

Today is Thursday, May 29, the 149th day of 2014. There are 216 days left in the year.

 Today’s Highlightin History:

On May 29, 1914, the Canadian ocean liner RMS Empress of Ireland sank in the St. Lawrence River in eastern Quebec after colliding with the Norwegian cargo ship SS Storstad; of the 1,477 people on board the Em-press of Ireland, 1,012 died. (The Storstad suf-fered only minor dam-age.)

On this date:

In 1765, Patrick Henry denounced the Stamp Act before Virginia’s House of Burgesses.

In 1790, Rhode Island became the 13th original colony to ratify the Unit-ed States Constitution.

In 1917, the 35th president of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was born in Brookline, Massachusetts.

In 1932, World War I veterans began arriving in Washington to de-mand cash bonuses they weren’t scheduled to receive until 1945.

In 1942, the movie “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” starring James Cagney as George M. Cohan, premiered at a war-bonds benefit in New York. Bing Crosby, the Ken Darby Singers and the John Scott Trotter Orchestra recorded Irving Berlin’s “White Christ-mas” in Los Angeles for Decca Records.

In 1953, Mount Ever-est was conquered as Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tensing Nor-gay of Nepal became the first climbers to reach the summit.

In 1954, English run-ner Diane Leather be-came the first woman to run a sub-five-minute mile, finishing in 4:59.6 during the Midland Championships in Bir-mingham.

In 1961, a couple in Paynesville, West Virgin-ia, became the first re-cipients of food stamps under a pilot program created by President John F. Kennedy.

In 1973, Tom Bradley was elected the first black mayor of Los Ange-les, defeating incumbent Sam Yorty.

In 1985, 39 people were killed at the Europe-an Cup Final in Brussels, Belgium, when rioting broke out and a wall sep-arating British and Italian soccer fans collapsed.

In 1999, Discovery became the first space shuttle to dock with the International Space Sta-tion. Olusegun Obasanjo became Nigeria’s first civilian president in 15 years, ending a string of military regimes.

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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To start your home delivered subscription:Call 287-6111 Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.For your convenience try our office pay plans.

Miss your paper?To report a problem or delivery change call the circulation department at 287-6111. Late, wet or missing newspaper complaints should be made before 10 a.m. to ensure redelivery to immediate Corinth area.

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at 1607 South Harper Road, Corinth, Miss.Periodicals postage paid at Corinth, MS 38834

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P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

COLUMBUS — The Mississippi School for Mathematics and Sci-ence has announced the graduation of Stearman McCalister of Corinth.

He is is the 17-year-old son of Mike McCali-ster and Cinnamon Al-exander and grandson of Martha Albright and Frances McCalister.

McCalister will attend the University of Missis-sippi in the fall, where he plans to major in Psy-chology. He has already been awarded more than $28,000 in scholarships. He plans to continue his education in the Medical School at the University Medical Center in Jack-son.

McCalister represents the 110 members of the Class of 2014. Gradua-

tion was held on Satur-day in Rent Auditorium on the campus of the Mississippi University for Women.

The Class of 2014 alone was offered more than $20 million in scholar-ships from schools and universities all over the nation.

The Mississippi School for Mathematics and Sci-ence is the state of Mis-sissippi’s only public, residential high school specifi cally designed to meet the needs of the state’s most academically talented students. The school, which is located on the campus of the Mississippi University for Women in Columbus, plays host to academical-ly talented students dur-ing their fi nal two years of high school.

The school has been

singled out as one of the best high schools in America. Currently, 234 students representing more than 50 Mississippi counties compose the MSMS student body.

McCalister is the only MSMS graduate this year from Alcorn County. He attended Christian Life Learning Center and Corinth Elementary School before his fam-ily moved to Tallahassee, Florida, where he attend-ed Alfred B. Maclay Col-lege Preparatory School, a highly academically ranked private school. The family moved back to Corinth and McCali-ster attended Corinth High School before ac-ceptance in to MSMS.

While at MSMS, the student was president of the Film Club, vice-pres-ident of Future Physi-

cians of America, found-ed the fi rst annual MSMS Film Festival, along with membership in National Beta Club, National Hon-ors Society, FCA and The

Key Club, Mu Alpha The-ta and Chemistry.

He has won many aca-demic achievements and is the only student to take Spanish 3 at Corinth High School as a fresh-man.

He is a published photographer and has won many photography awards.

McCalister enjoys fi lm-making, cinematography and theatre and has co-wrote, co-directed an co-fi lmed a 30-minute inde-pendent fi lm.

The student has voluunteered his time for many charitable organi-zations. He also enjoys sculpting and travel.

He has visited nine countries, including Ger-many, France, Switzer-land, Austria, Lichten-stein, Morocca, Vatican City, Spain and Mexico.

Corinth native graduates from MSMSBY MARK BOEHLER

editor@dailycorinthian

Stearman McCalister

Relay For Life deemed success

IUKA – Organizers are calling the 2014 edition of the Tishomingo Relay For Life a success.

The event held on May 16 at Mineral Springs Park included games, food and activities to raise money for the research on a cure for cancer.

Teams raised more than $60,000 during the Friday 6 p.m. to 6 a.m., event.

Schools to provide free lunch for summer

TISHOMINGO – The Tishomingo County School District will offer children free lunch this summer as part of the Summer Food Service program.

Meals will be provided to all children regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age or dis-ability and there will be no discrimination in the course of the meal ser-vice.

Meals will be provided beginning June 2 and will be served Monday-Friday at Belmont Elementary, Burnsville School Cafete-ria, Iuka Elementary Caf-eteria and Tishomingo Middle School Cafeteria.

Across

the Region

GULFPORT — A judge has found Auditor Sta-cey Pickering and public offi cials in contempt of court for withholding public records sought by a Gulf Coast news-paper in an investiga-tion of the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources.

Harrison County Chancellor Jennifer Schloegel has ordered State Auditor Stacey Pickering, his offi ce and the state Department of Marine Resources to pay the more than $36,000 in attorney fees The Sun Herald in its 19-month legal battle to see the documents.

Schloegel fi ned Pick-ering, Attorney General Jim Hood and auditor investigator David Hug-gins, audit special agent Chris Lott and assistant attorneys general Me-lissa Patterson, Joseph Runnels, Sandra Ches-nutt and Harold Piz-zetta $100 each for their roles in the “willful and

wrongful denial” of the public-records request by the paper.

“There is evidence At-torney General Hood counseled the defendant auditor to disregard the ruling and order of the chancery court,” Schloe-gel wrote.

Pickering would not comment on the ruling or on the question of whether he would ap-peal.

Hood’s offi ce said he would appeal.

“We respectfully dis-agree with the judge on both the facts and the law,” spokeswoman Jan Schaefer said.

Bill Walker, the for-mer head of the ma-rine resources agency, pleaded guilty to a fed-eral conspiracy charge in the case.

Two other MDMR of-fi cials — Tina Shumate and Joe Ziegler — are awaiting trial in federal court.

Walker’s son Scott also pleaded guilty in the DMR case and in a case involving former D’Iberville City Manag-er Michael Janus, who also pleaded guilty, and they await sentencing.

Pickering’s offi ce seized the records Jan. 15, 2013, and moved

them into another room of the Bolton Building in Biloxi, which the au-ditor’s offi ce shares with the MDMR and other state agencies.

Schloegel said the MDMR should have kept a copy of the re-cords “it was charged to keep as a public body” and should have added the auditor as a party to the initial records dis-pute with the paper.

She said the agency had done that it would have shown “a good faith and genuine ef-fort to comply with the plaintiff’s public records request.”

Judge holds Pickering in contemptAssociated Press “There is evidence

Attorney General Hood counseled the defendant auditor to disregard the ruling and order of the

chancery court.”

Jennifer SchloegelHarrison County chancellor

“We respectfully disagree withthe judge on

both the facts and the law.”

Jan SchaeferAttorney General’s

Office spokeswoman

Associated Press

Broken A/C closes three buildings

PASCAGOULA — Three Jackson County government building will be closed until at least Thursday while workers repair air con-ditioning systems.

About 100 workers were sent home Tues-day.

The shutdown affects the county courthouse, the courts building and the county services complex.

County administra-tor Brian Fulton says a backup “chiller” went out Sunday while the main chiller was being

repaired.Fulton says portable

units and fans didn’t help against the heat.

Officials say the county does plan to reopen Thursday, how-ever, it will depend on the circumstances and whether the repairs are completed.

 Funding approvedfor new high school

GULFPORT — The Gulfport School District will soon see a new high school as well as improvements to five other schools in the district after over-whelming support from voters.

Complete, but unoffi-cial, returns from Tues-day’s election show 81 percent of voters supported the $41 mil-lion bond issue. Bond issues require approval of 60 percent of those voting.

Superintendent Glen East said he hopes to have a construction timeline within two to three weeks, with Gulf-port High being the top priority. The bond will also pay to add class-room space at Bayou View Middle and Bayou View, Pass Road, An-niston and West el-ementary schools.

The entire project is expected to take about

three years.A 1996 bond issue

for Gulfport schools will be paid off in 2016.

Across the State

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OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Thursday, May 29, 2014www.dailycorinthian.com

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STARKVILLE — While Mis-sissippians have been wit-ness of late to the bizarre political theater that has be-come the Republican U.S. Senate primary replete with nursing home infi ltrations and voyeurism with corre-sponding arrests and “perp” walks, the rest of the country is paying attention to which

party will control the U.S. Senate after the November general election.

Nate Silver, the founder of the FiveThir-tyEight website and the hottest political prognosticator in the country based on his 2012 success in predicting electoral out-comes in all 50 states, has forecast that the GOP will claim the six seats necessary to regain control of the U.S. Senate from the Democrats in the 2014 midterm elections.

The GOP needs six seats in the U.S. Sen-ate to regain control. Silver predicts that the Republicans will win exactly six additional seats. But Silver hedged his predictions by saying the GOP had a 60 percent chance of regaining control – which he couched as making the GOP “slightly favored” to retake the Senate reins in 2014.

One factor is that geography favors the GOP in the seats that are contested in the 2014 midterm elections. And while Silver and other prognosticators are agreeing on the general notion that the GOP appears to be headed for realigning wins in 2014, there is likewise a growing awareness that the Senate seats that will be contested in 2016 are in states that would favor Demo-crats.

Some 23 Republican seats will be con-tested in 2016 compared to just 10 Demo-cratic seats. A number of those GOP seats are in states that have traditionally elected Democrats. In geography favors the Dems in 2016. So what some see is a situation in which the GOP is likely to retake the Sen-ate in 2014 only to struggle to hold onto the majority in 2016.

The University of Virginia Center for Pol-itics’ Larry Sabato and most other national political forecasters give incumbent Re-publican U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran the edge in Mississippi’s Republican primary show-down with state Sen. Chris McDaniel.

Should the GOP make good on Nate Silver’s called shot, Cochran is poised to reclaim the chairmanship of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Mississippi is seen as a “safe” Republican seat in the Sen-ate regardless, but there is the political fact that “safe” seats aren’t always “safe.”

In Indiana in 2012, veteran incumbent Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar was targeted in the GOP primary by Tea Party Republican opponents and was upset in the primary by Richard Mourdock. Mourdock, in turn, lost the November 6, 2012 general election for Lugar’s seat to Democratic U. S. Rep. Joe Donnelly.

Politics has long been a spectator sport in Mississippi and while the Senate race here has not lacked for twists and turns, it ap-pears that most of the national focus has been lost.

Partisan control of the U.S. Senate is far more effective in impacting public policy than are stunts like a poor man’s reenact-ment of “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” or shouting insults at the President during a State of the Union address.

Republican primaries are about Repub-lican priorities and it is by defi nition the process by which Republicans choose the standard bearer of their party. When Mis-sissippi Republican voters enter the polls on June 3, they do so as the party in power in Mississippi – controlling both houses of the Mississippi Legislature, the Governor’s Mansion and seven-of-eight statewide offi -cial offi ces.

But Republican voters might do well to consider the fact that Democrats begin each race in Mississippi with around 43 percent of the vote. There is the primary battle, yes, but it is followed by the general election war.

(Daily Corinthian columnist Sid Salter is a syndicated statewide. Contact him at 601-507-8004 or [email protected].)

Republicans predictedto wrestle control away

from Democrats

Prayer for today

A verse to share

SALT LAKE CITY — Ev-erybody talks about religion here, though people come at it a couple of ways. No-body seems to shy from the subject, though only about half the city is Mormon.

It would be like avoiding the subject of football in Birmingham, Alabama, to ignore Mormonism in the shadow of the iconic tem-ple.

“He is LDS,” someone will mention, meaning a member of the principal branch of the Latter Day Saint movement of Restora-tionist Christianity. That’s a mouthful, but then to those of us not used to identifying the LDS and non-LDS it is easy to slip and say.”

In Birmingham you’d say, “He’s an Auburn fan,” or, “He’s a Bammer.”

Religion even rears its head in the state-run liquor stores, where you can buy Five Wives Vodka distilled in Ogden, Utah. Then there are the breweries where Polygamy Porter teases “Why have just one?” and

suggests that c o n s u m e r s “Take some home to the wives!” The label is a las-civious scene of a near-na-ked man sur-rounded by three nearly-bare women.

If you sit down for a meal, however, and order a drink, the waiter, by law, must ask, “Do you plan to eat?”

Fortunately, for me, the answer was always an em-phatic “Yes.”

I went downtown to Tem-ple Square — it’s what you do in Salt Lake City — which is behind a wall and across the street from a church-owned shopping mall. The mall houses major chains, which, by contractual agreement, cannot open on Sunday.

Behind the wall, the grounds are immaculate and impressive. Flowers and statuary and tourists with cameras are every-

where. Outsiders can’t tour the temple — not even all Mormons can go inside, as I understand it — but you can visit the famous tabernacle where the choir sings.

Inside the tabernacle, visitors are given a dem-onstration on the remark-able acoustics. A mission-ary stands a football fi eld away at a lectern and tears a newspaper and drops a pin in a plate and you can hear both without any amplifi ca-tion.

When the domed-roof tabernacle was built in 1864, there was no electrical amplifi cation, but Brigham Young was determined that everyone hear his sermons. I guess it wasn’t as easy to be a far-reaching spiritual leader in the days before microphones and tele-phones. Jimmy Lee Swag-gart would still be behind a plow in Ferriday, Louisiana.

Young missionaries are all around Temple Square, smiling and guiding and be-ing so polite you eventually grow suspicious. It’s a nice

and dramatic change to see youth acting solicitous to their elders. Nobody slams a door in your face or runs over you when you’re walk-ing too slowly on the side-walk.

At fi rst I decide it might be something other reli-gions could add to their te-nets — subservient youth — but by the end of the tour it makes me more than a little nervous. No young men are hitching up their low-rider jeans, and no young women have tattoos. All of a sudden it’s eerie.

Greeting-card racks in regular old convenience stores have cards that con-gratulate new missionaries, and some of them are even funny. One I saw depicted two young women survey-ing a mountain of luggage and saying, “That’s about all I need for the mission trip.”

I think about buying one for its novelty, but then re-alize that’s not kosher. I think I’m more comfortable where football is the reli-gion.

It’s all about saints and sinners

More discussion on the topic of pragmatism and politics is critical. If conser-vatives decide to take their marbles and go home rather than fi ght to the bitter end because they feel their prin-ciples have been compro-mised, they will needlessly subject future generations to untold misery.

Voting for someone who agrees with you 90 percent of the time is far superior to voting for someone who dis-agrees with you 100 percent of the time. This is exactly what will happen if people refuse to exercise their civic duty and boycott elections because they feel betrayed. Personally, I am not sup-portive of abortion at all, but I can support people who feel differently if, in the gigantic scheme of things, they can help put an end to the murder of innocent ba-bies. This is especially true of those who are personally inclined to save and protect life.

Perhaps an illustration is in order: Two armies are engaged in a war. Let’s call the good army that is trying to defend an entire society the red army and the bad army that is trying to invade and pillage society the blue army. The blue army oc-cupies a superior strategic position and is composed of slightly more troops, put-ting the red army at a dis-tinct disadvantage. Some in the red army feel that they are right and, there-fore, should simply march directly into battle with the

blue army because right always wins.

F o r t u -nately, some members of the red army are wise and have a better plan. They send a battal-ion of troops

to the base of the mountain occupied by the blue army to distract them while the vast majority of red troops ap-proach the mountain from the backside. They descend upon the blue army by sur-prise, completely vanquish-ing them and winning the war. The decoy red battalion may have sustained some casualties, but in the long run, the war was won, and the entire society was saved.

I hope this illustration is useful in helping some to understand that achieving a critical mass of conser-vatives and RINOs (Re-publicans in Name Only, as some call them) in of-fi ce will ensure that we can get non-activist Supreme Court and federal judges in place who respect the U.S. Constitution. It is es-sential to achieve a critical mass of individuals in the U.S. House and Senate who can join with a president in upholding the Constitu-tion. These representatives must believe in personal responsibility and creating a business-friendly envi-ronment, understand the balance between abundant fossil-fuel development and

environmental safety, and yearn to elevate the gov-ernment-dependent 47 per-cent rather than make them more dependent. They also must be totally pro-life and believe that the rule of law can undo a host of damag-ing regulations and restore the value system that made this nation great.

In the long run, with the help of God, we will be in a position to save millions of babies who otherwise would be slaughtered. With this kind of responsible empowerment, energizing a sluggish economy, bring-ing stability to a leaderless planet and facilitating inno-vation will not be that diffi -cult. To sit helplessly by and pray for deliverance when the tools to achieve victory are in our hands is not use-ful. God helps those who help themselves.

Conservatives and those who share their values are the last bastion between freedom and tyranny. If the secular liberals, who are very clever, succeed in dividing us during the next two national elections, America as we know it will be gone. We can stop this, but we must work together. I disagree with those who think it is going to take de-cades to undo the damage that already has been done. Americans are exceptional and extremely resilient. We cannot allow ourselves to be defi ned by those who wish to fundamentally change our society.

I am convinced that

Americans with common sense will soon regain pow-er. It is essential that we not use the opportunity to exact revenge upon the liberals. Rather, we must govern by the Constitution in a way that is fair for all. It is not reasonable to have favorites and to enforce laws selec-tively. Most importantly, it is not the place of our gov-ernment to rule the people; the government must al-ways remember that it is in place to serve the people.

I believe that when people who were being manipulat-ed by the secular liberals, including the media, have an opportunity to see how much better off they are when the proper relation-ship between the people and the government is restored, they will adopt a different attitude. This will empower them and the entire nation.

Now is the time to rise above partisan politics and recognize the incredible blessings God has bestowed upon our nation. It is time to elevate common sense, decency, honesty and com-passion to their proper posi-tions. Rather than simply re-peating the words, we must actually achieve “one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

(Ben S. Carson is profes-sor emeritus of neurosur-gery at Johns Hopkins Uni-versity. To fi nd out more about Ben Carson and to read features by other Cre-ators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.)

Conservatives won’t win elections by refusing to compromise

“The Lord put a new song in my mouth, a hymn of praise to our God.”

-- Psalm 40:3

O God, help us to make our lives a song of praise to you. Amen.

Sid SalterColumnist

Rheta Johnson

Columnist

Ben CarsonColumnist

Page 5: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

Across The Nation Across The State

Environment agency chief set to resign

JACKSON — Mississip-pi’s chief environmental regulator is resigning.

Trudy Fisher told Mis-sissippi Department of Environmental Quality employees Wednesday in an email that she in-tends to resign later this summer.

She says she will ex-plore options outside of state government.

Fisher was appointed to the top spot at MDEQ by Gov. Haley Barbour in 2007 and was held over by Gov. Phil Bryant.

A former general coun-sel at MDEQ, the lawyer was working for the Jackson-based Brunini, Grantham, Grower & Hewes firm when named.

Fisher and MDEQ have been leading planning ef-forts on how Mississippi should spend money from BP PLC resulting from the 2010 Deepwa-ter Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

 Amory boat maker plans to hire 30

AMORY — NauticStar will expand its Monroe County factory to build larger boats, adding 30 jobs.

The recreational boat maker, which currently employs 130, announced its plans Wednesday.

The privately-owned 12-year-old com-pany says it will invest $460,000 to add 20,000 square feet, connecting two build-ings that currently total 160,000 square feet.

NauticStar President Phil Faulkner says the boat market has recov-

ered from the recession, with company recording higher sales in 2012 than it did in 2007.

The expansion will al-low NauticStar to make offshore fishing boats longer than 28 feet. Nau-ticStar makes a series of deck and fishing boats ranging in length from 18 to 25 feet.

 Woman arrestedin ID theft probe

BRANDON — Missis-sippi Attorney General Jim Hood says a woman allegedly involved in a scheme to steal identi-ties and forge prescrip-tions has been arrested following a seven-month investigation.

Hood says in a news re-lease that 59-year-old Syl-via Cook was arrested this week in Rankin County.

Hood says Cook is wanted by Mississippi and Louisiana authori-ties for multiple counts of identity theft and pre-scription forgery.

Cook is accused of fraudulently using oth-

ers’ identity and using fictitious IDs to visit multiple care providers, while claiming illnesses to obtain pain prescrip-tions and then selling the medication.

Cook faces 30 years imprisonment and fines up to $60,000 if convict-ed of the current charges against her.

 Body found in Mississippi River

SHELBY — Bolivar County authorities are seeking help in identify-ing the body of a man found Monday in the Mississippi River near Shelby.

Sheriff Kelvin Williams tells The Bolivar Com-mercial the body was spotted by a fisherman and was recovered about 6 p.m. Monday.

Williams says the body appeared to be a black male of undetermined age between 35-50 years of age. He says the body may have been in the water for a couple of weeks or longer.

Associated Press

Students return after rampage

GOLETA, Calif. — Stu-dents returned to class-es Wednesday at the University of California, Santa Barbara, after the weekend rampage that left six students and their assailant dead and 13 others injured in nearby Isla Vista.

Some people were ea-ger to resume academic routines in the closing days of the quarter. Others still struggled to cope with the tragedy.

“It’s kind of a relief to get back together with other people, and to see what the profes-sors have to say,” said Kelly Frances Dilnessa, 23, of Oroville. “Some-times you’re walking down the street and you feel like giving every-body a hug.”

Some students yelled at reporters to go home or cursed them, but many politely declined to speak as they rushed to class after the holi-day weekend and Tues-day’s suspension of classes for a memorial observance.

Three students were stabbed to death, three were fatally shot, and 13 others were wounded Friday night in the attack by Elliot Rodger, 22, a commu-nity college student who had posted an Internet video outlining his plan to slaughter as many people as possible.

 Prosecutor: Spilleddrink led to killings

BOSTON — Former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernan-

dez gunned down two men he did not know in their car because one of them bumped into him while dancing at a Boston nightclub, spilling his drink, pros-ecutors said in court Wednesday.

Hernandez pleaded not guilty in at the Suf-folk Superior Court hearing to seven charges in the 2012 shooting that killed Dan-iel de Abreu and Safiro Furtado. A third man was wounded.

Hernandez’s attor-ney, Charles Rankin, objected, saying the prosecutor’s account of the shooting was an at-tempt to poison the jury pool. Clerk Magistrate Gary Wilson dismissed the objection.

Prosecutor Patrick Haggan said that in the months leading up the shooting, Hernandez had become increasing-ly convinced that people “had been testing, try-ing or otherwise disre-specting him when he frequented nightclubs in the area.”

Haggan told the court Hernandez and a friend drove from Connecticut to Boston that night to go to a nightclub called Cure. They were standing at the edge of the dance floor when de Abreu accidentally bumped into Hernan-dez, smiled at him and did not apologize, ac-cording to prosecutors.

 Beethoven letter, Ali speech offered

NEW YORK — A rare letter by Ludwig van Beethoven is among over 400 historical documents coming to

auction.The Profiles in History

sale is June 13, online and at its Calabasas, California, galleries.

In his 1806 letter, Beethoven writes a conciliatory request to court theater direc-tor Baron Peter von Braun. They had argued over royalties for his only opera, “Fidelio.” It is expected to bring $150,000 to $250,000.

Other highlights in-clude a speech by Mu-hammad Ali written for a college lecture tour in the 1960s. Handwritten on index cards, it presents his views on the Muslim faith and race relations.

Other highlights in-clude documents by Nikita Khrushchev and Al Capone.

 Suspect in deathof race fan released

INDIANAPOLIS — Au-thorities have dropped a preliminary murder charge against a man accused in a deadly shooting near the India-napolis Motor Speed-way on the eve of the Indy 500 and freed him from custody.

Avory Johnson, 19, was released shortly before 3 p.m. Tues-day, Marion County Jail spokesman Julio Fernandez said. No phone number for John-son was listed in the Kokomo area and The Associated Press could not reach him for com-ment.

Marion County pros-ecutor’s office spokes-man A.J. Deer said there were problems with witnesses’ identi-fication of Johnson as the shooter.

Associated Press

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Page 6: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Thursday, May 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Obituary PolicyThe Daily Corinthian include the following in-

formation in obituaries: The name, age, city of residence of the deceased; when, where and manner of death of the deceased; time and location of funeral service; name of offi ciant; time and location of visitation; time and location of memorial services; biographical information can include date of birth, education, place of employment/occu-pation, military service and church member-ship; survivors can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step includ-ed), and grandchildren, great-grandchildren can be listed by number only; preceded in death can include spouse, children, par-ents, grandparents, siblings (step included), grandchildren; great-grandchildren can be listed by number only. No other information will be included in the obituary.

All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication.

Obituaries will only be accepted from fu-neral homes.

Deaths

Cleo HendersonFuneral services for Cleo Laderral Henderson,

66, of Corinth, are set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Co-rinthian Funeral Home with burial in Valley of the Dogwood Cemetery.

Visitation will be from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday.Mr. Henderson died Sunday, May 25, 2014, in

Corinth.He was born May 16, 1948, in Water Valley

to the late James and Sarah Kathleen Cornelius Henderson. He was a driver for Liberty Cab for 43 years and a member of Farmington Baptist Church.

Mr. Henderson loved God and his family and friends. He enjoyed listening to Michael Combs, fi shing, hunting and working in his yard. He was a very kind and loving man and would help anyone that he could.

Survivors include his daughter, Melody Dawn Patterson (Tony) of Corinth; his son Daniel Ray Henderson Sr. of Corinth; his nephew, David Henderson (Vicky) of Conifer, Colo.; his niece, Janet Petterson (James) of Fayetteville, N.C.; and eight grandchildren, Landon, Logan, Hannah, Katlynn, Anna, Tabitha, Osheana Paige and Dan-iel Jr.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his son, Michael Shawn Henderson; his brother, Bobby Henderson; and his infant sister.

Bro. Charlie Browning will offi ciate.

Jeffery BriggsFuneral services for Jeffery Jay Briggs, 64, of

Corinth, are set for 2 p.m. Friday at Magnolia Fu-neral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at For-rest Memorial Park.

Visitation is Friday from noon until service time.Mr. Briggs died Wednesday, May 28, 2014, at

Magnolia Regional Health Center. Born March 22, 1950, he was a member of Crossroads Baptist Church.

Survivors include his mother, Virginia Shipman Briggs of Corinth.

He was preceded in death by his father, James Henry Briggs; his brother, Phillip Eddie Briggs; his paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson Pierce; and his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Shipman.

Bro. Warren Jones and Bro. Josh Hodum will of-fi ciate the service.

Mary McKim

IUKA — Mary McKim, 87, died Wednesday, May 21, 2014. Burial will be in Ohio beside her late hus-band.

Survivors include four sons, Mark Lamphear, Kenny Lamphear and John Lamphear, all of Ohio, and Jerry Lamphear of Georgia; two daughters, Al-ice Mayo of Iuka and Cathy Maynard of Ohio; 10 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Alfred John Webber and Daisy Oozeball.

Ludlam Funeral Home is in charge of arrange-ments.

Bernice Petty

ACTON, Tenn. — Funeral services for Bernice Daisy Bowen Petty, 98, of Michie, Tenn., are set for 1 p.m. today at Shackelford Funeral Directors in Ac-ton, Tenn., with burial at Center Hill Cemetery in Counce, Tenn.

Visitation is from 10 a.m. until service time.Ms. Petty died Tuesday, May 27, 2014, at her resi-

dence.She was born Nov. 4, 1915, in Alcorn County. She

worked as a sales representative and was a member of Trinity Baptist Church in Michie, Tenn.

Survivors include several nieces, nephews and friends.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Lurley Petty; two sisters, Marie Bryant, Mozell Brown and Joe L. Bowen.

George Kyle will offi ciate.

CHICAGO — Answer: She predicted in her eighth grade yearbook that she would someday be a “Jeopardy!” cham-pion.

Question: Who is Julia Collins?

To be fair, anyone who watches contestants go egghead-to-egghead on the show wouldn’t be sur-prised if any one of them made the prediction. But Collins has made good on her prediction, and then some.

On the episode that aired Tuesday, the 31-year-old resident of the Chicago suburb of Wilmette became the third person in “Jeop-ardy!” history to win as many as 17 consecutive non-tournament games, earning her a total of $372,700 and making her the show’s winningest

woman.“I went into this feeling

like I could win a show and put in a good effort ... but this, it’s kind of a day-dream come true,” Collins said Tuesday.

Collins’ appearances on the show also answer another question all but her closest friends and family who watched some of the shows being taped had about why she didn’t seem stressed about quit-ting her consulting job or in a hurry to fi nd work.

“I did a lot of hem-ming and hawing about why I was less aggressive

than I could have been,” said Collins, explaining that she was prohibited by the show from talking about the program at all between mid-January, when she started taping them, and April, when they started to air, or the $10,000 to $35,000 she was winning a day.

Sworn to secrecy about shows that haven’t aired, she won’t say if she wins her 18th straight game, which aired Wednesday, or whether she will go for the 19th win on Thurs-day’s show, which would tie her for second all-time

in consecutive wins. Her chuckle, however, sug-gests she hasn’t caught the all-time winningest contestant, Ken Jennings, who won 74 straight games.

That’s not to say she hasn’t had plenty to say about the show. She has posted dozens of tweets about shows as they’ve aired, confessing she made a mathematical er-ror when deciding how much she could bet on Fi-nal Jeopardy and still win with a wrong answer even if another contestant got it right.

She mentioned ques-tions that as an art his-tory major, she couldn’t believe she got wrong, as well as one she got right, “Who was Lucian Freud?”

“I think Alex (the show’s host, Alex Trebek) was impressed with that one,” she said.

Woman enjoys ‘Jeopardy!’ successBY DON BABWIN

Associated Press “I went into this feeling like I could win a show and put in a good effort ... but this, it’s kind

of a daydream come true.”

Julia CollinsWilmette, Ill.

WASHINGTON — Pres-ident Barack Obama said Wednesday the U.S. will increase assistance to the Syrian opposition, open-ing the way for the likely training and possibly equipping of moderate rebels fi ghting to oust leader Bashar Assad.

In a speech at the U.S. Military Academy, Obama framed the situ-ation in Syria as a coun-terterrorism challenge and said it would be cen-terpiece of a new focus on battling violent extrem-ism even as Assad’s re-moval is a priority.

“In helping those who fi ght for the right of all Syrians to choose their own future, we also push back against the grow-ing number of extremists who fi nd safe-haven in the chaos,” Obama told the graduating cadets.

“I will work with Con-gress to ramp up support for those in the Syrian opposition who offer the best alternative to terror-ists and a brutal dictator,” he said.

His remarks were im-mediately hailed by the Syrian Opposition Co-alition, which said in a statement it “appreciates American support to the Syrian people in their struggle against the Assad

regime.”Administration offi cials

said the proposed mission would be aligned with, but not necessarily part of a new $5 billion counter-terrorism initiative that Obama announced in his speech.

The offi cials said they would seek congressio-nal authorization for the program because it might require invoking the War Powers Act.

The Senate Armed Ser-vices Committee last week passed a bill that autho-rizes the Defense Depart-ment to provide training and equipment elements of the Syrian opposition that have been screened. It is unclear when the bill may be considered by the full Senate or the House.

Under the planned ini-tiative, the U.S. would send a limited number of American troops to Jordan to be part of a re-gional training mission that would instruct care-fully screened members of the Free Syrian Army on weapons handling and tactics, offi cials said.

The offi cials spoke on condition of anonym-ity because they were not authorized to discuss administration delibera-tions by name.

In addition to the coun-terterrorism aspect, the State Department, the Pentagon and U.S. intel-

ligence agencies, along with many in Congress who back the move, have concluded Assad will not budge without a change in the military situation in Syria.

The U.S. has covert sup-port operations in place for the Syrian opposition and has spent $287 mil-lion so far in nonlethal aid on the civil war, now in its fourth year with a death toll surpassing 160,000, according to estimates.

Rebel commanders for three years have asked the U.S. for lethal assistance as they’ve seen gains wiped out one after an-other. The U.S. has been reluctant to move to that kind of aid for fear weap-ons could end up in the hands of extremist reb-els who might then turn on neighboring Israel or against U.S. interests.

The proposed mission would be coordinated by the U.S. but involve many of the regional players ac-tive in assisting the rebels, including Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emir-ates, the offi cials said.

Saudi cooperation is critical and has been a main topic of conver-sation in recent weeks between the U.S. and the kingdom, including Obama and Saudi King Abdullah, the offi cials said.

The proposal has evolved in intense, high-level discussions between the United States and Jordan, which over the weekend expelled the Syr-ian ambassador as part of what is planned to be an escalation in the effort to isolate Assad.

Assad is running for re-election in a June vote that the U.S. and its al-lies have condemned as a farce.

Jordan’s King Abdullah II was in Washington last week and met with Secre-tary of State John Kerry. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel made a stop in Jor-dan this month during a Middle East trip.

The U.S. has roughly 1,500 military troops in Jordan, in addition to the approximately 6,000 that recently arrived there for a limited time to partici-pate in the annual Eager Lion military exercise.

Eager Lion 2014 in-cludes members of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, as well as U.S. ships and aircraft. The exercise started this past weekend.

Last year, after Eager Lion 2013 fi nished, the U.S. left a detachment of F-16 fi ghter jets and a Pa-triot missile battery there and about 1,000 person-nel associated with the aircraft and the missile system.

US eyes training moderate Syrian rebels

BY MATTHEW LEEAND LOLITA C. BALDOR

Associated Press

Press between campaign stops in northern Mississippi. Standing out-side a tire warehouse in Batesville, where he had spent about an hour shaking hands and talking with work-ers, Cochran said he’s in good health and intends to serve the full six-year term if re-elected. He also defended his record on federal spending and said he has declined invitations to de-bate McDaniel because he believes the challenger misrepresents his Wash-ington record.

“I disagree with the criticism that my opponent is making of my service in the Senate,” Cochran told the AP. “But I think I’ve acquitted myself with due diligence and have performed in a way that refl ects credit on our state.”

Cochran has blanketed the state with ads promoting himself as a consistent conservative. His most recent ad notes endorsements from the National Rifl e

Association, National Right to Life and Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, a tea party ally.

Through May 14, Cochran had spent $3 million on his campaign, an impressive sum for primary race in a state with about 3 million residents and nearly 1.9 million registered vot-ers. McDaniel had spent just more than $1 million. But both men have benefi ted from a deluge of outside spending expected to top $8 million by the time polls open Tuesday.

The matchup gives the hard right another opportunity to do what it hasn’t been able to do this year: knock off a sitting Republican senator. Sen-ate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell easily dispatched a tea party opponent in Kentucky. Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts is a favorite over challenger Milton Wolf. Challengers to Tennessee’s La-mar Alexander and South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham have struggled to gain traction.

McDaniel’s latest ad hits on the theme of his battle against the estab-lishment. “Mississippians deserve a senator who will repeal Obamacare entirely, limit government spending and stand up for working families,” he says, later concluding, “I approved this message, because after 40 years we de-serve better from Washington.”

Yet, the images of Cochran’s wife threaten to defi ne the race.

McDaniel has said repeatedly that his campaign had nothing to do with the photos. He called the violation of Rose Cochran’s privacy “reprehen-sible.”

McDaniel told the AP on May 15 that Cochran has a liberal record with votes to increase the debt ceiling and to con-fi rm Chuck Hagel as defense secretary and John Kerry as secretary of state.

“These are the votes of a senator who’s been in Washington so long, he’s forgotten his Mississippi conser-vative values,” McDaniel said.

BATTLE

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Page 7: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, May 29, 2014 • 7

WASHINGTON — An out-break of antibiotic-resistant salmonella linked to a Califor-nia chicken company hasn’t run its course after more than a year, with 50 new illnesses in the past two months and 574 people sickened since March 2013.

The federal Centers for Dis-ease Control and Prevention

says there are about eight new salmonella illnesses linked to the outbreak a week, most of them in California. So far, there has been no recall of Foster Farms chicken.

The Agriculture Department says it is monitoring Foster Farms facilities and that mea-sured rates of salmonella in the company’s products have been going down since the outbreak began. The department threat-

ened to shut down Foster Farms’ facilities last year but let them stay open after it said the compa-ny had made immediate changes to reduce salmonella rates.

The CDC said 37 percent of victims were hospitalized, and that the outbreak is resistant to many antibiotics. In addition, the CDC said that 13 percent of the victims had developed blood infections, almost three times the normal rate. Victims

came from 27 states and Puerto Rico.

Three-fourths of victims who were able to provide the CDC with brand information said they had consumed chicken produced by Foster Farms be-fore they became ill.

In a statement, Foster Farms said it has put many new mea-sures in place, including tighter screening of birds before they buy them, improved safety on

the farms where the birds are raised and better sanitation in its plants. The company sug-gested that the recent cases may be because salmonella in-cidence increases in the warmer months.

In January, USDA inspec-tors briefl y closed the a Foster Farms plant in Livingston, Cali-fornia, after fi nding cockroach-es on fi ve separate occasions over four months.

No end yet to salmonella outbreak tied to chicken

BY MARY CLARE JALONICKAssociated Press

LOS ANGELES — Google will build a car without a steering wheel.

It doesn’t need one because it drives itself.

The two-seater won’t be sold publicly, but Google said Tuesday it hopes by this time next year, 100 prototypes will be on public roads. Though not driving very quickly — the top speed would be 25 mph.

The cars are a natural next step for Google, which already has driv-en hundreds of thousands of miles in California with Lexus SUVs and Toyota Priuses outfi tted with a combination of sensors and com-puters.

Those cars have Google-em-ployed “safety drivers” behind the wheel in case of emergency. The new cars would eliminate the driv-er from the task of driving.

No steering wheel, no brake and gas pedals. Instead, buttons for go and stop.

“It reminded me of catching a

chairlift by yourself, a bit of soli-tude I found really enjoyable,” Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, told a Southern California tech conference Tuesday evening of his fi rst ride, according to a transcript.

The electric-powered car is com-pact and bubble-shaped — some-thing that might move people around a corporate campus or congested downtown.

Google is unlikely to go deeply into auto manufacturing. In un-veiling the prototype, the company emphasized partnering with other fi rms.

The biggest obstacle could be the law.

Test versions will have a wheel and pedals, because they must un-der California regulations.

Google hopes to build the 100 prototypes late this year or early next and use them in a to-be-determined “pilot program,” spokeswoman Courtney Hohne said.

Meanwhile, by the end of this year, California’s Department of Motor Vehicles must write regula-tions for the “operational” use of truly driverless cars.

The DMV had thought that re-ality was several years away, so it would have time to perfect the rules.

That clock just sped up, said the head of the DMV’s driverless car program, Bernard Soriano.

“Because of what is potentially out there soon, we need to make sure that the regulations are in place that would keep the public safe but would not impede prog-ress,” Soriano said.

Google to build car minus steering wheel BY JUSTIN PRITCHARD

Associated Press “It reminded me of catching a chairlift by yourself, a bit

of solitude I found really enjoyable.”

Sergey BrinCo-founder of Google

WASHINGTON — Vet-erans at the Phoenix vet-erans hospital waited on average 115 days for their fi rst medical appoint-ment, which is 91 days longer than the hospital reported, the Depart-ment of Veteran Affairs’ internal watchdog said Wednesday.

The news brought im-mediate calls for the res-ignation of Veterans Sec-retary Eric Shinseki from Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans’ Affairs Com-mittee, and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

Miller also said Attor-ney General Eric Holder should conduct a crimi-nal investigation into the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Richard J. Griffi n, the department’s acting in-spector general, reported that investigators had “substantiated serious conditions” at the Phoe-nix VA hospital, including 1,700 veterans awaiting care who were not on an offi cial waiting list.

“We have substantiated that signifi cant delays in access to care negatively impacted the quality of care at this medical facil-ity,” Griffi n wrote.

Miller said the report confi rmed that “wait time schemes and data ma-nipulation are systemic throughout VA and are

putting veterans at risk in Phoenix and across the country.”

Griffi n said his offi ce has increased the number of VA health care facilities it is investigating to 42 nationwide.

The report said 84 per-cent of a statistical sam-ple of 226 veterans at the Phoenix hospital waited more than 14 days for an appointment. VA guide-lines say veterans should be seen within 14 days of their desired date for an appointment.

About 25 percent of the 226 received some level of care, such as in the emergency room or walk-in clinics, while awaiting a primary care appoint-ment, the report said.

The report said the in-spector general is study-ing allegations that delays in appointments resulted in patient deaths. It said conclusions on that ques-tion won’t be reached until after investigators analyze medical records, death certifi cates and au-topsy results.

It recommended that Shinseki take immediate action to provide care for the 1,700 veterans whose names were not on an of-fi cial waiting list.

The report said Shinse-ki should review existing waiting lists at Phoenix to identify veterans at great-est risk because of the appointment delays and provide appropriate care.

Watchdog reports waitof 115 days for Phoenix VA center appointment

BY MATTHEW DALYAssociated Press

“We have substantiatedthat significant delays

in access to care negatively impacted the quality of care

at this medical facility.”

Richard J. GriffinDepartment of Veterans Affairs

Acting inspector general

CALEDONIA — An Ethelsville, Alabama, man has died follow-ing a Memorial Day drowning incident in the Buttahatchie River in Lowndes County.

Oscar Ponds, 59, was pronounced dead at Bap-tist Memorial Hospital-Golden Triangle at about 12:28 a.m. Tuesday, Coroner Greg Merchant tells The Commercial Dispatch.

Another person was also transported there but neither his name nor condition was released.

Authorities said Ponds and a handful of fam-ily members were spend-ing the day at Lawrence Bridge, a popular swim-ming spot near Caledo-

nia. At about 3:45 p.m. Monday, one of the fam-ily members “got in trou-ble” with the river’s un-dertow near a boat ramp and several others tried to help.

Ponds was pulled be-neath the water’s surface. Merchant said witnesses told investigators Ponds remained submerged for roughly nine minutes before being pulled to safety.

Lowndes County Sher-iff’s Department Chief Deputy Marc Miley said someone on scene per-formed CPR while emer-gency responders made their way to the scene. Ponds was transported to the hospital where he later died.

In a separate, unre-

Alabama man drowns in Buttahatchie River

Associated Press

Daily CorinthianCheck out the

classifi eds daily

lated incident Monday an 11-year-old boy was fl own to University Med-ical Center in Jackson.

Anthony Colom with Columbus Fire and Res-cue said that three young boys were swimming in the Tombigbee River near the Columbus Riv-erwalk shortly after 12 p.m. Monday. Two of them made it back to shore. The 11-year-old did not, according to Co-lom.

Two wildlife offi cers in the area and the two boys

fl agged them down. One of the offi cers went into the river and, after going under three times, found the child and pulled him to safety. Columbus Fire and Rescue responded to the scene.

Colom, who did not identify the boy, said he was initially taken to Baptist Memorial Hos-pital-Golden Triangle, where it was decided that he should be fl own to Jackson, where he re-mained in the hospital Tuesday.

ARE YOU FOLLOWING CHRIST? Jesus states in (Matthew 16:24), “Then said Jesus unto his disciples, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and FOLLOW ME”. What does following Christ involve? It involves being the servant of Christ. Jesus further stated, “lf any man serve me, let him FOLLOW ME; and where I am, there shall also my servant be; if any man serve me, him will my Father honour.” (John 12:26). Consider the rich young ruler who came unto Jesus and asked him, “Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life? (Matthew 19:16). Jesus instructed him, “if thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments” (Matthew 19:17). The young man said unto Jesus, “All these things have I kept from my youth up: What lack I yet? (Matthew 19:20). Jesus responded, “lf thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven, and come and FOLLOW ME” (Matthew 19:21). The scripture tells us that when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions (Matthew 19:22). Jesus saw two brothers (Peter and Andrew) who were casting their nets into the Sea of Galilee, and asked them, “FOLLOW ME and I will make you fi shers of men” (Matthew 4:19). The scripture says “And they straightway left their nets, and followed him” (Matthew 4:20). On another occasion, Jesus asked another, and as Jesus passed forth from thence, he saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom (place of toll) and he saith unto him, FOLLOW ME. And he arose, and followed him” (Matthew 9:9). FOLLOWING CHRIST often involves leaving things of the world behind and focusing upon that which is spiritual. Note that those who followed were willing to leave their occupations, possessions, and family, to FOLLOW CHRIST. FOLLOWING CHRIST may involve persecution. Jesus said, “Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake, Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you.” (Matthew 5:11-12). Are you willing to give up things of the world to follow him? Jesus states, “For what shall it profi t a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul” (Mark 8:36). ARE YOU FOLLOWING CHRIST? OR FOLLOWING SATAN?

Danville Church of Christ481 cr 409 Corinth MS • c/o 471 cr 513, Rienzi MS • 662-287-0312

CrossroadsMagazine

Bridal Edition

The Crossroads Magazine is a supplement to the Daily Corinthian

If you were married betweenJanuary 2013 and December 2013 we are

looking for your picture and wedding information forour upcoming Crossroads Magazine Bridal Edition.

Simply submit your wedding photo and fi ll out a simple form at the Daily Corinthian and you will be included in

our June Edition.

Deadline for submitting your photo and form isFriday, June 6, 2014

For more information call:662-287-6111

Page 8: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

16,735.51 14,551.27 Dow Industrials 16,633.18 -42.32 -.25 +.34 +8.698,044.32 5,952.18 Dow Transportation 8,075.88 +58.04 +.72 +9.13 +27.58

558.29 462.66 Dow Utilities 540.42 +2.61 +.49 +10.16 +11.4411,334.65 8,814.76 NYSE Composite 10,702.73 -17.89 -.17 +2.91 +13.594,371.71 3,294.95 Nasdaq Composite 4,225.07 -12.00 -.28 +1.16 +21.851,912.28 1,560.33 S&P 500 1,909.78 -2.13 -.11 +3.32 +15.861,398.91 1,114.04 S&P MidCap 1,374.56 -3.84 -.28 +2.39 +15.85

20,261.57 16,442.14 Wilshire 5000 20,229.91 -28.91 -.14 +2.66 +16.431,212.82 942.79 Russell 2000 1,136.68 -5.52 -.48 -2.32 +15.17

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PepsiCo 2.62f 20 87.07 +.54 +5.0

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US Bancrp .92 14 42.03 +.29 +4.0

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Xerox .25 13 12.20 +.05 +.2

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Yahoo ... 29 34.78 -.34 -14.0

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 20 13.87 +.10AK Steel dd 6.17 -.36AbbottLab 24 39.67 +.09AbbVie 21 54.07 +.08AberFitc 50 35.12 -1.54ActivsBliz 21 20.33 -.25AMD 80 4.00 -.04Aeropostl dd 3.98 +.06AirLease 20 40.02 +.63AlcatelLuc ... 3.99 +.01Alcoa 43 13.37 -.11Allergan 38 156.12 -8.90AlldNevG 31 2.81 -.16AlphaNRs dd 3.58 -.11AlpAlerMLP q 18.16 -.02Altria 18 40.77Amarin ... 1.46 +.06Amazon cc 310.16 -.66Ambev n ... 7.17 +.06AmAirl n dd 39.80 +.45ACapAgy 8 23.65 -.14AmCapLtd 26 14.54 -.17AEagleOut 19 10.81 -.13AmExp 18 91.06 -.33AHm4Rnt n ... 17.53 -.13AmIntlGrp 9 53.48 -.27ARltCapPr dd 12.41 -.03Amgen 19 115.67 -.22Anadarko dd 102.00 +.67AnglogldA ... 15.46 -.33Annaly 4 11.75 -.02Apache 21 91.76 +1.40ApolloInv 6 8.35 +.04Apple Inc 15 624.01 -1.62ApldMatl 29 20.54 -.04ArQule dd 1.34 -.06ArcelorMit dd 15.39 -.11ArchCoal dd 3.59 -.14ArenaPhm dd 6.26 -.05AriadP dd 6.37 -.12ArmourRsd dd 4.32 +.01ArrayBio dd 4.25 +.15Arris cc 32.59 +.89ArrowRsh dd 13.33 +.48ArubaNet dd 18.62 +.42AstraZen 16 71.16 -.89Atmel cc 8.19 -.01AuRico g dd 3.49 -.12AvagoTch 32 70.10 -.83AvanirPhm dd 5.18 +.14Avon dd 14.10 -.15B2gold g ... 2.50 -.02Baidu 32 166.17 -3.15BakrHu 26 69.99 +.07BallardPw dd 3.88 +.62BcoBrad pf ... 14.59 +.22BcoSantSA ... 10.21 +.03BcoSBrasil ... 6.83 +.12BkofAm 20 15.14 -.08BkNYMel 15 34.37 -.28B iPVix rs q 33.78 -.09BarrickG dd 15.69 -.20BedBath 13 60.51 -.94BerkH B 16 127.46 -.06BestBuy 9 26.94 -.13BioMedR 86 21.47 -.04BlackBerry dd 7.29 +.01Blackstone 15 30.96 +.01BlockHR 35 29.44 -.03Boeing 23 134.33 +.16BostonSci 22 13.15 +.20BrMySq 28 48.63 -.26Broadcom 43 31.40 +.57BrcdeCm 16 8.95 +.04Brookdale dd 33.55 +.39CA Inc 14 28.90 -.45CBS B 20 60.48 +.02CMS Eng 16 29.53 +.30CNH Indl 8 10.86 -.06CSX 16 29.59 +.27CVS Care 20 77.25 +.08CYS Invest dd 9.18CabotOG s 43 35.96 -.43Cadence 42 16.87 -.05Calpine 85 22.82 +.24CdnSolar 33 26.05 +.62CapOne 11 78.55 +.80CpstnTurb dd 1.49 +.07Carlisle 29 84.81 -.03Carters 27 71.88 -2.03Celgene 49 154.30 -.83CellThera dd 3.09 -.05Cemex ... 12.99 +.06Cemig pf s ... 7.27 +.01CntryLink dd 37.80 +.48Cerner s 47 54.53 +.41ChesEng 24 28.41 +.09Chicos 19 15.14 -.47Chimera ... 3.11 -.02CienaCorp dd 20.16 -.32Cisco 17 24.82 +.11Citigroup 11 47.32 -.25CitrixSys 34 60.86 -.26CliffsNRs 6 16.06 -.31Coach 12 40.81 -.55CobaltIEn dd 18.09 -.07CocaCE 17 45.85 +.55Coeur dd 6.83 -.29CognizTc s 23 48.90 +.06ColgPalm 29 66.12 -.59CmtyHlt rt ... .07 +.01Compuwre 26 10.03 +.04ConAgra 16 31.58 +.02ConocoPhil 13 79.57 +.53Corning 17 21.26 -.08Costco 26 114.24 +.37CSVInvNG q 2.93 -.25CSVelIVST q 38.74 +.12CSVxSht rs q 4.27Ctrip.com 64 54.84 -1.52DaraBio rs dd 2.18 +1.08DCT Indl ... 7.83 -.05DR Horton 15 23.33 +.20DSW Inc s 14 23.62 -8.90Danaher 22 78.68 +.03DeanFds rs dd 17.11 +.12DeltaAir 3 40.27 +.81DenburyR 16 16.78 +.13DevonE 18 73.44 +.31DiamRk 42 12.22 -.18DicksSptg 16 42.70 -.25DirecTV 16 82.29 -.45DxGldBll rs q 27.40 -1.57DrxFnBear q 19.33 +.14DrxSCBear q 16.43 +.28DirGMnBull q 14.09 -.26DirDGdBr s q 30.05 +1.42DrxSCBull q 70.18 -1.22Discover 12 58.72 +.64DishNetw h 39 59.19 -.67Disney 21 83.60 -.14DollarGen 17 54.60 -1.70DomRescs 20 68.35 -.47DowChm 14 51.77 +.84DragonW g dd 1.40 +.13DryShips dd 3.01 -.07DuPont 22 68.41 +.25DukeEngy 17 70.76 +.30DyaxCp dd 8.54 +.13

E-F-G-HE-CDang dd 9.77 -.22E-Trade 40 20.19 -.08eBay dd 50.39 -1.38EMC Cp 21 26.56 -.01EOG Res s 24 105.19 +.46EldorGld g 35 5.67 -.01EmersonEl 19 66.65 -.20EmpDist 15 24.22 +.02EnCana g 15 22.93 +.22ENSCO 10 51.42 -.45EnteroMed dd 1.99 +.03EsteeLdr 28 75.65 +.27ExcoRes 34 5.37 +.12Exelon 17 35.99 +.61Express 10 13.55 -.49ExpScripts 32 71.09 +.44ExxonMbl 11 101.06 -.30Facebook 84 63.51 +.03FamilyDlr 17 58.26 -.12FedExCp 27 143.47 +1.23FifthThird 11 20.60 -.10FireEye n ... 34.38 -.59FstSolar 12 61.87 +.61FirstEngy 18 33.64 +.41Flextrn 23 10.09 +.03ForestOil 19 2.25FormFac dd 7.12 +1.00Fortress 9 7.03 +.05FMCG 12 33.83 -.13FrontierCm 50 5.95 +.14

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 699518 15.14 -.08S&P500ETF 602755 191.38 -.14Twitter n 585180 33.77 +3.26Facebook 468795 63.51 +.03iShEMkts 428522 43.02 +.25iShR2K 355080 112.99 -.59StratHotels 348887 10.65 -.45MktVGold 343219 22.04 -.37SPDR Fncl 325754 22.19 -.04SiriusXM 299018 3.30 -.03

52-Week Net YTD 52-wkHigh Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,615Declined 1,489Unchanged 112

Total issues 3,216New Highs 147New Lows 28

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,014Declined 1,593Unchanged 140

Total issues 2,747New Highs 72New Lows 29

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

DaraBio rs 2.18 +1.08 +98.2LiveDeal s 5.07 +1.28 +33.8Jumei n 29.04 +5.95 +25.8BallardPw 3.88 +.62 +19.0Lentuo 2.63 +.42 +19.0Spherix 3.46 +.49 +16.5FormFac 7.12 +1.00 +16.3PTC Ther n 24.37 +3.19 +15.1Corcept 2.23 +.27 +13.822ndCentry 2.75 +.33 +13.6

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

DSW Inc s 23.62 -8.90 -27.4FX Ener 3.88 -.92 -19.2Daktronics 11.80 -2.67 -18.5NewLead rs 2.42 -.46 -16.0NewConcEn 2.31 -.29 -11.23D Sys 50.44 -6.20 -10.9SungyMo n 12.51 -1.35 -9.7WalterEn 5.03 -.48 -8.7HeliosMAn 4.11 -.39 -8.7ChinaSun h 3.47 -.32 -8.4

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.29 +0.03 +3.2YkmFcsSvc d 26.00 +0.04 +3.4AQRMaFtStrI 9.90 -0.01 -6.5American BeaconLgCpVlIs 30.09 -0.02 +4.7American CenturyEqIncInv 9.02 +0.01 +5.6InvGrInv 33.79 -0.04 +3.5UltraInv 34.51 -0.06 +1.0ValueInv 8.63 ... +5.1American FundsAMCAPA m 28.85 -0.01 +5.6BalA m 25.07 +0.02 +3.2BondA m 12.80 +0.04 +4.2CapIncBuA m 60.80 -0.03 +5.5CapWldBdA m21.01 +0.05 +4.9CpWldGrIA m 47.42 -0.02 +5.0EurPacGrA m 50.32 -0.06 +2.5FnInvA m 52.70 -0.05 +2.7GrthAmA m 44.20 -0.05 +2.8HiIncA m 11.51 +0.01 +3.7IncAmerA m 21.56 +0.01 +5.2IntBdAmA m 13.60 +0.02 +1.9IntlGrInA m 36.54 +0.01 +5.7InvCoAmA m 38.67 +0.01 +5.8MutualA m 36.07 +0.03 +4.1NewEconA m 39.04 -0.02 +2.1NewPerspA m 38.25 -0.08 +1.8NwWrldA m 61.06 +0.06 +3.9SmCpWldA m 49.26 -0.06 +0.2TaxEBdAmA m12.97 +0.02 +6.4WAMutInvA m 40.82 -0.02 +4.0AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.79 +0.02 +4.1ArtisanIntl d 30.66 -0.07 +0.6IntlVal d 38.22 +0.06 +3.9MdCpVal 27.37 ... +1.4MidCap 46.90 -0.10 -1.5BBHTaxEffEq d 22.10 -0.02 +3.3BaronGrowth b 70.39 -0.29 -2.7BlackRockEngy&ResA m35.98 +0.03 +9.3EqDivA m 24.75 -0.03 +2.4EqDivI 24.81 -0.03 +2.5GlobAlcA m 21.74 ... +1.9GlobAlcC m 20.09 +0.01 +1.6GlobAlcI 21.87 +0.01 +2.1HiYldBdIs 8.38 ... +4.4HiYldInvA m 8.38 ... +4.3StrIncIns 10.34 ... +2.8CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.52 ... +2.2Cohen & SteersRealty 72.00 -0.46 +15.3ColumbiaAcornIntZ 48.18 -0.05 +3.2AcornZ 36.73 -0.18 -1.6DivIncZ 18.89 -0.01 +3.6Credit SuisseComStrInstl 7.70 ... +6.5DFA1YrFixInI 10.33 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 10.02 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 11.05 +0.02 +2.2EmMkCrEqI 20.50 +0.09 +5.3EmMktValI 28.94 +0.12 +4.8IntCorEqI 13.24 -0.03 +3.9IntSmCapI 21.59 ... +6.1IntlSCoI 20.03 -0.01 +4.3IntlValuI 20.22 -0.05 +3.6RelEstScI 29.98 -0.21 +16.1TAUSCrE2I 13.74 -0.01 +2.9USCorEq1I 17.03 -0.02 +3.2USCorEq2I 16.79 -0.02 +2.8USLgCo 15.11 -0.02 +4.1USLgValI 32.75 +0.04 +3.9USMicroI 19.60 -0.09 -2.5USSmValI 35.42 -0.12USSmallI 30.52 -0.12 -1.5USTgtValInst 23.03 -0.06 +1.2DWS-ScudderGrIncS 23.58 -0.05 +1.8DavisNYVentA m 42.33 -0.08 +2.2NYVentY 42.88 -0.07 +2.3Dodge & CoxBal 100.82 -0.03 +3.8GlbStock 12.24 -0.01 +6.6Income 13.96 +0.04 +4.3IntlStk 45.98 +0.01 +6.8Stock 173.44 -0.28 +3.4DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.03 ... +4.0DreyfusAppreciaInv 54.41 -0.10 +4.3DriehausActiveInc 10.77 ... +0.6Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.14 ... +0.9FMILgCap 21.81 -0.02 +4.6FPACres d 34.05 -0.01 +3.3NewInc d 10.31 +0.01 +1.2Fairholme FundsFairhome d 41.50 -0.06 +5.9FederatedStrValI 6.22 -0.01 +9.5FidelityAstMgr20 13.65 +0.02 +3.0AstMgr50 18.11 +0.01 +3.7Bal 23.46 ... +3.6Bal K 23.46 ... +3.7BlChGrow 65.33 -0.18 +3.1CapApr 36.45 -0.11 +0.7CapInc d 10.19 +0.01 +5.2Contra 96.45 -0.16 +1.4ContraK 96.42 -0.16 +1.4DivGrow 36.62 -0.03 +3.5DivrIntl d 37.47 -0.01 +1.5DivrIntlK d 37.42 -0.01 +1.6EqInc 60.65 -0.05 +4.1EqInc II 25.28 -0.01 +3.7FF2015 12.65 ... +2.9FF2035 13.24 -0.01 +2.7FF2040 9.33 -0.01 +2.6Fidelity 43.83 -0.10 +2.8FltRtHiIn d 9.97 ... +1.5FrdmK2015 13.67 ... +2.9FrdmK2020 14.29 -0.01 +2.9FrdmK2025 14.85 -0.01 +3.0FrdmK2030 15.15 -0.01 +2.9FrdmK2035 15.57 -0.01 +2.8FrdmK2040 15.61 -0.02 +2.7FrdmK2045 16.01 -0.02 +2.8Free2010 15.48 +0.01 +2.9Free2020 15.40 -0.01 +2.9Free2025 13.16 ... +3.0Free2030 16.12 -0.02 +2.7GNMA 11.58 +0.03 +4.3GrowCo 122.22 -0.46 +2.5GrowInc 28.63 -0.04 +3.2GrthCmpK 122.10 -0.46 +2.6HiInc d 9.48 ... +3.4IntlDisc d 40.43 +0.01 -0.2InvGrdBd 7.93 +0.03 +4.4LatinAm d 32.23 +0.18 +3.1LowPrStkK d 50.28 -0.10 +1.7LowPriStk d 50.31 -0.09 +1.7Magellan 89.66 -0.17 +3.5MidCap d 40.85 -0.07 +3.4MuniInc d 13.33 +0.03 +6.7OTC 78.83 -0.37 +1.9Puritan 21.93 ... +3.8PuritanK 21.92 ... +3.8SASEqF 14.35 -0.01 +4.0SInvGrBdF 11.46 +0.03 +4.3STMIdxF d 55.94 -0.08 +3.7SesAl-SctrEqt 14.35 -0.02 +3.9SesInmGrdBd 11.46 +0.04 +4.3ShTmBond 8.62 ... +0.9SmCapDisc d 31.28 -0.12 +0.1StratInc 11.21 +0.02 +4.9Tel&Util 23.77 +0.08 +9.9TotalBd 10.76 +0.03 +4.3USBdIdx 11.70 +0.04 +4.1USBdIdxInv 11.70 +0.04 +4.0Value 108.81 -0.11 +5.0Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 26.94 -0.06 +2.6NewInsI 27.42 -0.06 +2.8Fidelity SelectBiotech d 186.31 -0.57 +2.5HealtCar d 195.60 -0.54 +9.7Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 67.92 -0.07 +4.2500IdxInstl 67.93 -0.06 +4.2500IdxInv 67.91 -0.07 +4.2ExtMktIdAg d 53.34 -0.16 +1.5

Name P/E Last Chg

2,861,441,513Volume 1,714,735,092Volume

15,200

15,600

16,000

16,400

16,800

MD J F M A

16,320

16,520

16,720Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,633.18Change: -42.32 (-0.3%)

10 DAYS

IntlIdxAdg d 41.78 -0.10 +3.4TotMktIdAg d 55.94 -0.08 +3.7Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF10.84 -0.04 +2.5First EagleGlbA m 55.55 -0.05 +3.6OverseasA m 24.24 +0.01 +4.9FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.37 +0.02 +7.2FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.39 +0.03 +8.5GrowthA m 68.15 -0.08 +4.6HY TF A m 10.46 +0.03 +9.2Income C m 2.56 +0.01 +6.4IncomeA m 2.53 ... +6.7IncomeAdv 2.51 ... +6.4RisDvA m 49.42 -0.08 +2.1StrIncA m 10.69 +0.01 +3.6FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 35.32 ... +4.7DiscovA m 34.77 ... +4.6Shares Z 29.84 -0.02 +5.3SharesA m 29.57 -0.03 +5.2FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 8.58 ... +3.2GlBond C m 13.34 +0.02 +2.6GlBondA m 13.31 +0.01 +2.7GlBondAdv 13.27 +0.02 +2.9GrowthA m 26.11 -0.02 +4.6WorldA m 20.08 -0.02 +3.5GES&SUSEq 57.00 -0.04 +4.1GMOEmgMktsVI d 11.02 +0.05 +2.3IntItVlIV 27.26 -0.07 +6.7QuIII 26.01 -0.08 +4.4USCorEqVI 17.84 -0.03 +3.7Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 46.77 -0.04 +5.3HarborBond 12.30 +0.04 +3.4CapApInst 56.89 -0.17 +0.4IntlInstl 73.63 -0.24 +3.7IntlInv b 72.81 -0.24 +3.5HartfordCapAprA m 47.67 -0.05 +2.1CpApHLSIA 61.21 -0.11 +2.6INVESCOCharterA m 22.90 -0.04 +4.8ComstockA m 24.50 -0.01 +3.4EqIncomeA m 11.00 ... +3.6GrowIncA m 27.83 -0.05 +3.3IVAWorldwideI d 18.58 ... +4.3IvyAssetStrA m 31.39 -0.02 -2.0AssetStrC m 30.44 -0.03 -2.2AsstStrgI 31.67 -0.03 -1.9JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.79 +0.03 +3.6CoreBondA m 11.78 +0.03 +3.4CoreBondSelect11.78 +0.04 +3.5HighYldSel 8.16 ... +4.2LgCapGrA m 31.92 -0.10 +0.4LgCapGrSelect31.95 -0.09 +0.5MidCpValI 36.77 -0.02 +4.7ShDurBndSel 10.93 ... +0.6USLCpCrPS 28.78 -0.03 +3.7JanusGlbLfScT 46.35 -0.05 +7.8John HancockLifBa1 b 15.74 ... +3.3LifGr1 b 16.50 -0.02 +2.9LazardEmgMkEqInst d19.83 +0.11 +6.2Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m193.41-0.38 +6.6Longleaf PartnersLongPart 35.26 ... +4.5Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.68 +0.01 +5.1BdR b 15.61 +0.01 +5.0Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.08 +0.01 +3.8BondDebA m 8.33 +0.01 +4.2ShDurIncA m 4.56 ... +1.7ShDurIncC m 4.59 ... +1.4ShDurIncF b 4.56 ... +1.8MFSIntlValA m 35.15 ... +4.2IsIntlEq 23.04 -0.04 +2.7TotRetA m 18.11 +0.03 +3.8ValueA m 33.77 -0.02 +2.4ValueI 33.94 -0.02 +2.5MainStayMktfield 17.67 -0.03 -4.6Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.42 ... +4.1Matthews AsianChina d 21.05 +0.05 -7.8India d 20.88 ... +28.3MergerInvCl b 16.29 -0.02 +1.7Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.86 +0.04 +4.0TotRtBd b 10.86 +0.03 +3.9Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 43.06 -0.09 -5.0NatixisLSInvBdY 12.39 +0.02 +5.6LSStratIncA m 16.98 +0.01 +5.2LSStratIncC m17.08 ... +4.8Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 59.64 -0.31 -3.7NorthernHYFixInc d 7.66 +0.01 +4.7IntlIndex d 12.73 -0.05 +3.2StkIdx 23.71 -0.02 +4.2OakmarkEqIncI 33.65 -0.01 +3.1Intl I 27.00 -0.06 +2.6Oakmark I 66.22 -0.08 +4.1Select I 43.10 +0.02 +7.6OberweisChinaOpp m 15.92 +0.06 -5.4Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.14 +0.01 +3.0GlbSmMdCp 17.43 +0.01 +1.5LgCpStr 12.78 -0.02 +2.5OppenheimerDevMktA m 39.17 -0.01 +3.0DevMktY 38.74 -0.01 +3.1GlobA m 80.83 -0.30 +2.6IntlGrY 38.96 -0.12 +2.1IntlGrowA m 39.11 -0.12 +2.0MainStrA m 49.99 -0.08 +3.2SrFltRatA m 8.40 ... +1.4StrIncA m 4.21 +0.01 +3.8Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.38 +0.02 +10.5OsterweisOsterStrInc d 12.06 +0.01 +2.7PIMCOAllAssetI 12.64 ... +5.2AllAuthIn 10.34 ... +5.1ComRlRStI 6.03 +0.01 +9.8DivIncInst 11.87 +0.03 +5.4EMFdIdPLARSTIns10.28 ... +6.2EMktCurI 10.34 +0.01 +2.7EmMktsIns 11.21 +0.06 +7.0EmgLclBdI 9.63 ... +5.2ForBdInstl 10.82 +0.01 +4.0HiYldIs 9.75 ... +3.9IncomeA m 12.65 ... +5.3IncomeD b 12.65 ... +5.3IncomeInl 12.65 ... +5.4LgDrTRtnI 11.56 +0.11 +12.0LgTmCrdIn 12.77 +0.09 NALowDrIs 10.40 +0.01 +1.3RERRStgC m 4.13 ... +24.9RealRet 11.60 +0.06 +6.2ShtTermIs 9.89 ... +0.8StkPlARShStrIn 2.63 ... -3.1TotRetA m 10.97 +0.02 +3.3TotRetAdm b 10.97 +0.02 +3.4TotRetC m 10.97 +0.02 +3.0TotRetIs 10.97 +0.02 +3.5TotRetrnD b 10.97 +0.02 +3.4TotlRetnP 10.97 +0.02 +3.4UnconstrBdIns 11.30 +0.01 +2.4PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 30.54 +0.01 +3.0ParnassusCoreEqInv 38.63 -0.11 +5.6PermanentPortfolio 44.25 -0.06 +2.8PioneerPioneerA m 40.39 -0.04 +3.3PrincipalDivIntI 12.19 -0.01 +2.4L/T2020I 14.66 ... +3.2LCGrIInst 12.72 -0.04 +0.3Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 40.63 -0.14 +0.3PutnamGrowIncA m 20.76 ... +4.8

NewOpp 82.22 -0.18 +3.2RoycePAMutInv d 14.46 -0.07 -1.8PremierInv d 22.55 -0.06 +2.0Schwab1000Inv d 50.58 -0.06 +3.9S&P500Sel d 30.05 -0.03 +4.2ScoutInterntl 37.69 -0.06 +1.2SequoiaSequoia 223.60 -1.21 +0.3T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 64.95 -0.16 +0.5CapApprec 26.98 ... +5.1EmMktStk d 33.93 +0.12 +5.3EqIndex d 51.62 -0.05 +4.1EqtyInc 33.72 +0.01 +3.3GrowStk 52.53 -0.15 -0.1HealthSci 61.41 -0.27 +6.2HiYield d 7.29 +0.01 +4.5InsLgCpGr 27.45 -0.09 +0.7IntlBnd d 9.81 ... +4.2IntlGrInc d 16.28 ... +4.6IntlStk d 17.03 -0.05 +4.5LatinAm d 31.49 +0.20 +4.9MidCapVa 31.78 +0.01 +5.8MidCpGr 74.45 -0.19 +2.3NewEra 48.13 +0.03 +8.4NewHoriz 44.86 -0.22 -3.0NewIncome 9.59 +0.03 +4.3OrseaStk d 10.43 -0.03 +2.8R2015 14.86 ... +3.8R2025 15.95 ... +3.7R2035 16.86 -0.01 +3.6Rtmt2010 18.51 +0.01 +3.9Rtmt2020 21.16 ... +3.8Rtmt2030 23.43 -0.01 +3.7Rtmt2040 24.23 -0.02 +3.5Rtmt2045 16.15 -0.01 +3.5ShTmBond 4.80 ... +0.8SmCpStk 44.06 -0.23 -1.1SmCpVal d 49.74 -0.21 -1.3SpecInc 13.14 +0.03 +4.4Value 35.72 +0.08 +5.8TCWTotRetBdI 10.29 +0.02 +3.6TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.86 +0.04 +4.0EqIx 14.64 -0.02 +3.7IntlE d 19.86 -0.07 +3.3TempletonInFEqSeS 23.56 -0.02 +3.7ThornburgIncBldA m 21.72 ... +5.8IncBldC m 21.71 ... +5.5IntlValI 30.88 -0.05 -3.7Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.89 +0.01 +4.8Vanguard500Adml 176.68 -0.17 +4.2500Inv 176.64 -0.17 +4.1500Sgnl 145.94 -0.14 +4.2BalIdxAdm 28.43 +0.01 +3.8BalIdxIns 28.43 +0.01 +3.8BdMktInstPls 10.86 +0.03 +4.0CAITAdml 11.71 +0.02 +5.3CapOpAdml 112.63 +0.04 +5.6DevMktIdxAdm13.62 -0.04 +3.1DevMktIdxInstl 13.64 -0.04 +3.1DivGr 21.86 -0.09 +2.6EmMktIAdm 35.48 +0.11 +4.8EnergyAdm 137.03 -0.02 +8.8EnergyInv 73.00 -0.01 +8.8EqInc 30.95 ... +4.8EqIncAdml 64.87 -0.02 +4.8ExplAdml 94.02 -0.45 -2.2Explr 101.04 -0.49 -2.3ExtdIdAdm 63.65 -0.19 +1.5ExtdIdIst 63.65 -0.19 +1.5ExtdMktIdxIP 157.09 -0.46 +1.5FAWeUSIns 102.17 -0.20 +3.6GNMA 10.74 +0.03 +4.2GNMAAdml 10.74 +0.03 +4.3GlbEq 24.47 ... +4.3GrthIdAdm 49.50 -0.15 +3.7GrthIstId 49.50 -0.14 +3.7HYCorAdml 6.14 ... +4.2HltCrAdml 83.13 -0.33 +9.9HlthCare 197.06 -0.77 +9.9ITBondAdm 11.52 +0.05 +5.2ITGradeAd 9.97 +0.03 +4.6InfPrtAdm 26.92 +0.14 +5.8InfPrtI 10.97 +0.06 +5.8InflaPro 13.71 +0.07 +5.7InstIdxI 175.52 -0.17 +4.2InstPlus 175.54 -0.17 +4.2InstTStPl 43.70 -0.05 +3.7IntlGr 23.58 -0.05 +1.0IntlGrAdm 75.02 -0.15 +1.1IntlStkIdxAdm 28.86 -0.04 +3.8IntlStkIdxI 115.41 -0.18 +3.8IntlStkIdxIPls 115.43 -0.18 +3.8IntlStkIdxISgn 34.62 -0.05 +3.8IntlVal 38.34 -0.05 +2.6LTGradeAd 10.54 +0.10 +11.5LifeCon 18.65 +0.02 +3.9LifeGro 28.65 -0.02 +3.7LifeMod 23.99 +0.01 +3.8MidCapIdxIP 154.57 -0.20 +4.2MidCp 31.25 -0.04 +4.1MidCpAdml 141.86 -0.19 +4.2MidCpIst 31.34 -0.04 +4.2MidCpSgl 44.77 -0.06 +4.2Morg 26.01 -0.06 +1.6MorgAdml 80.63 -0.18 +1.6MuHYAdml 11.11 +0.02 +7.6MuInt 14.18 +0.02 +4.7MuIntAdml 14.18 +0.02 +4.7MuLTAdml 11.60 +0.02 +7.1MuLtdAdml 11.08 ... +1.3MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.5PrecMtls 10.85 -0.04 +4.9Prmcp 98.35 -0.09 +6.5PrmcpAdml 102.01 -0.10 +6.6PrmcpCorI 20.78 -0.02 +6.9REITIdxAd 105.11 -0.71 +15.5REITIdxInst 16.27 -0.11 +15.5STBondAdm 10.55 ... +1.1STBondSgl 10.55 ... +1.1STCor 10.79 +0.01 +1.7STGradeAd 10.79 +0.01 +1.7STIGradeI 10.79 +0.01 +1.7STsryAdml 10.72 +0.01 +0.6SelValu 29.18 +0.01 +3.5SmCapIdx 53.35 -0.18 +1.3SmCapIdxIP 154.16 -0.52 +1.3SmCpGrIdxAdm42.35 -0.24 -1.5SmCpIdAdm 53.40 -0.19 +1.3SmCpIdIst 53.40 -0.18 +1.3SmCpIndxSgnl 48.11 -0.16 +1.3SmCpValIdxAdm43.34 -0.07 +3.7Star 24.87 +0.01 +4.1StratgcEq 31.61 ... +5.4TgtRe2010 26.51 +0.03 +3.6TgtRe2015 15.32 +0.01 +3.7TgtRe2020 28.14 +0.01 +3.8TgtRe2030 28.68 -0.01 +3.8TgtRe2035 17.62 -0.01 +3.8TgtRe2040 29.37 -0.03 +3.7TgtRe2045 18.42 -0.02 +3.7TgtRe2050 29.24 -0.02 +3.7TgtRetInc 12.88 +0.02 +3.4Tgtet2025 16.35 ... +3.8TlIntlBdIdxInst 30.68 +0.07 +3.8TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.22 +0.02 +3.7TotBdAdml 10.86 +0.03 +4.0TotBdInst 10.86 +0.03 +4.0TotBdMkInv 10.86 +0.03 +3.9TotBdMkSig 10.86 +0.03 +4.0TotIntl 17.25 -0.03 +3.7TotStIAdm 48.19 -0.07 +3.7TotStIIns 48.20 -0.07 +3.7TotStISig 46.51 -0.06 +3.7TotStIdx 48.17 -0.06 +3.6TxMCapAdm 97.64 -0.12 +4.2ValIdxAdm 30.94 +0.02 +4.5ValIdxIns 30.94 +0.02 +4.5WellsI 25.85 +0.05 +4.9WellsIAdm 62.62 +0.11 +5.0Welltn 39.40 -0.01 +4.5WelltnAdm 68.06 -0.01 +4.5WndsIIAdm 68.37 -0.02 +4.8Wndsr 21.38 -0.05 +5.1WndsrAdml 72.15 -0.15 +5.1WndsrII 38.52 -0.01 +4.8VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.22 +0.01 +7.0Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.28 -0.02 +3.5SciTechA m 15.92 +0.01 -0.8

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FuelCellE dd 2.44 +.21GATX 16 64.60 +1.51GT AdvTc dd 16.39 +.43GalenaBio dd 2.48 +.05GameStop 12 38.21 +.92Gap 16 40.96 -.04GenDynam 17 117.56 +1.21GenGrPrp 64 23.61 +.04GenMotors 14 34.59 +.65Genworth 14 17.30 -.15Gerdau ... 6.20 +.04GeronCp dd 2.12 +.02GileadSci 30 81.86 -.30GlaxoSKln ... 53.78 -1.18GlimchRt dd 10.90 -.05GbXMLP&E q 18.22 +.05GluMobile dd 4.03 +.13Gogo n dd 17.68 +.19GolLNGLtd 28 46.35 +3.24GoldFLtd ... 3.53 -.11Goldcrp g dd 23.14 -.42GramrcyP dd 5.84GraphPkg 20 10.78 +.05Groupon dd 6.09 -.18HCP Inc 19 41.45 -.66HalconRes dd 6.04 +.21Hallibrtn 21 63.44 -.53HarmonyG ... 2.61 -.20HartfdFn 10 34.62 -.25HltCrREIT cc 62.35 -2.08HeclaM dd 2.75 -.06Hersha cc 6.28 -.22Hertz 37 29.17 -.22Hess 7 89.97 +.54HewlettP 12 33.35 +.25Hillshire 27 44.99 -.20HimaxTch 35 6.91 +.29HomeDp 20 79.68 -.01HomeAway cc 31.20 -1.52HopFedBc 27 11.36 +.01HorizPhm dd 14.75 +.46HostHotls 37 21.68 -.13HuntBncsh 13 9.21 +.04Huntsmn 24 26.49 +.04

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 3.04 -.11ICICI Bk ... 50.79 +.02iShGold q 12.19 -.07iShBrazil q 47.65 +.57iShEMU q 43.17 -.15iShJapan q 11.43 -.05iSTaiwn q 15.22 +.07iShSilver q 18.28 -.08iShChinaLC q 36.59 +.44iSCorSP500 q 192.56 -.17iShEMkts q 43.02 +.25iSh20 yrT q 114.76 +1.40iS Eafe q 68.98 -.23iShiBxHYB q 94.86 +.03iShR2K q 112.99 -.59iShREst q 71.23 -.29iShHmCnst q 24.03 -.04IderaPhm dd 2.94 +.32IndiaGCap dd 1.51 +.03Infosys 17 51.16 -1.76IngerRd 19 59.84 +1.29IngrmM 15 27.54 -.10InovioPhm dd 2.12 +.02IntgDv 23 13.15 +.12InterMune dd 40.38 +.75IBM 12 183.08 -1.70IntlGame 14 12.60 +.04IntPap 16 46.76 +.02Interpublic 28 18.93 +.11Invesco 16 35.94 -.11InvBncp s 27 10.61 -.07IridiumCm 11 7.90 +.37IronMtn 49 30.84 +.29Isis dd 30.79 +.42IsoRay dd 2.47 +.22ItauUnibH ... 16.24 +.41JA Solar dd 9.87 +.18JD.com n ... 24.78 +1.81JDS Uniph 27 11.16 +.24JPMorgCh 14 55.45 +.31JetBlue 20 9.45 +.19JohnJn 19 100.30 -.51JohnsnCtl 17 48.56 -.30Jumei n ... 29.04 +5.95JnprNtwk 28 25.23 +.21KB Home 23 16.63 +.05KBR Inc 16 24.38 +.12KeyEngy dd 8.16 -.08Keycorp 13 13.56 +.01Kimco 48 22.75 -.16KindMorg 29 33.59 -.01KindrM wt ... 2.33 +.05Kinross g dd 3.73 -.09KodiakO g 22 12.47 -.04Kohls 14 53.96 -.34LVSands 27 75.97 +.03LennarA 18 40.37 -.10LexRltyTr dd 11.37 +.03LillyEli 16 59.70 -.03LincNat 10 47.88 -.96LiveDeal s dd 5.07 +1.28LloydBkg ... 5.29 +.04LockhdM 17 162.10 -.85Lorillard 19 58.85 -.53LaPac 22 14.59 -.31LyonBas A 14 98.99 +.52

M-N-O-PMFA Fncl 11 8.22 +.01MGIC Inv 37 8.56MGM Rsts dd 25.71 +.09Macys 15 58.60 +.19MagneGas dd 1.67 +.37MagHRes dd 7.87 +.54MannKd dd 8.17 +.17MarathnO 10 36.55 +.26MarathPet 17 87.37 +.42MVJrGld rs q 33.10 -.13MktVGold q 22.04 -.37MktVRus q 25.34 +.14MartMM 48 123.64 -.63MarvellT 24 15.72 -.04Masco 28 21.27 +.04MasterCd s 29 76.93 -.10Mattel 15 38.47 -.22MaximIntg 25 34.23 +.04McDrmInt 27 7.12 +.05McEwenM dd 2.07 -.01Medtrnic 20 60.16 -.26MelcoCrwn 57 35.30 +.64Merck 37 56.40 -.29MetLife 15 51.01 -.55MKors 43 97.01 +1.27MicronT 12 28.61 +.55Microsoft 15 40.01 -.18MobileTele ... 18.47 -.05Molycorp dd 2.91 +.06Mondelez 19 37.40 -.03Monsanto 24 120.28 +.09MorgStan 18 30.93 -.19Mylan 31 48.87 +.45NII Hldg dd .57 -.01NQ Mobile dd 7.35 -.20NRG Egy dd 35.16 -.15NXP Semi ... 61.81 -.60Nabors 56 26.12 +.13NBGrce rs ... 3.44 +.07Navient n ... 15.68 -.30NetApp 21 36.84 +.21Netflix cc 401.24 +2.43Neuralstem dd 4.35 +.31NwGold g 56 5.07 -.08NewResid ... 6.29 -.04Newcastle 13 4.81 +.04NewLead rs ... 2.42 -.46NewmtM dd 22.48 -.20NikeB 26 76.27 -.34NobleCorp 9 30.49 -.48NokiaCp ... 7.85 -.01NAtlDrll n ... 9.55 -.10NorthropG 14 120.27 +.10NStarRlt dd 16.33 +.13Novavax dd 4.92 -.21NuanceCm 54 16.19 +.19Nvidia 22 18.98 +.16OcciPet 13 99.05 +1.60OfficeDpt dd 5.15 -.02Oi SA C ... .92 +.08Oi SA ... .88 +.03Omnicom 19 70.65 +.59OnSmcnd 20 8.69 -.04Oracle 17 41.57 -.34Orexigen dd 6.26 +.36PDL Bio 5 9.31 +.01PG&E Cp 23 45.30 +.52PPG 26 200.25 +2.13PPL Corp 13 34.64 +.30Pandora dd 25.29 -.34ParsleyE n ... 23.33 +.65

PeabdyE 84 16.76 -.41PetSmart 14 55.57 -.09PetrbrsA ... 15.82 +.17Petrobras ... 14.78 +.16Petrologis 12 14.30 +1.37Pfizer 16 29.61PhilipMor 17 87.35 +.44Phillips66 16 82.99 +.81PinnaclFds 35 31.58 +.10PiperJaf 15 44.20 -.45PlugPowr h dd 4.36 +.36Potash 20 36.19 +.01PwSFoodBv q 27.16 -.12PwShs QQQ q 90.72 -.28PranaBio ... 2.10 +.20ProLogis cc 41.04 -.42ProUltSP q 109.85 -.20PrUPQQQ s q 67.03 -.64PUVixST rs q 37.80 -.25ProctGam 21 80.10 +.02ProgsvCp 13 25.26 +.20ProUShSP q 26.90 +.04PUShQQQ rs q 53.92 +.34ProUShL20 q 60.02 -1.49PShtQQQ rs q 48.32 +.49PUShSPX rs q 51.79 +.17ProspctCap ... 9.97 -.10Provectus dd .80 +.05PSEG 14 38.19 +.84PulteGrp 3 19.76 -.04

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 86 95.14 +5.16Qualcom 20 80.22 -.24QuantaSvc 19 34.12 +.46QksilvRes 3 2.50 +.11RBS pfG ... 24.00 +.01RF MicD 57 9.71 +.01Rackspace 60 35.47 -.15RadianGrp 20 14.30 -.11Realogy 10 37.73 +.60RltyInco 51 43.16 +.01ReneSola dd 2.70 -.05Rentech dd 2.36 +.06RioTinto ... 53.01 -1.57RiteAid 38 8.31 +.04RossStrs 17 67.48 -.82RymanHP 36 45.57 +.05SLM Cp 3 8.74 -.08SpdrDJIA q 166.09 -.38SpdrGold q 121.20 -.65S&P500ETF q 191.38 -.14SpdrHome q 31.62 -.23SpdrS&P RB q 38.33 -.27SpdrOGEx q 76.44 +.86StJude 25 65.76 +1.61Salesforce dd 53.34 -1.02SanchezEn dd 33.91 +1.08SanDisk 20 96.03 +.53SandRdge dd 6.60 +.04Schlmbrg 19 101.87 -.29Schwab 30 25.29 -.18SeadrillLtd 16 37.54 -.02SenHous 23 23.68 -.12ServcNow dd 53.81 -.49SiderurNac ... 4.00 -.01SilvWhtn g 22 20.21 -.39Sina dd 45.07 -.72SiriusXM 55 3.30 -.03SkywksSol 25 42.24 +.07SolarCity dd 51.98 -1.21Sonus dd 3.73 -.02SonyCp ... 16.33 -.31SouFun s 19 13.36 +.62SwstAirl 24 26.43 +.56SwstnEngy 79 45.29 +.41Spectranet dd 22.39 -1.97Spherix dd 3.46 +.49SpiritRC n dd 11.38 +.07Splunk dd 48.88 -.01Sprint n dd 9.20 -.03SP Matls q 48.60 +.02SP HlthC q 59.16 -.17SP CnSt q 44.34 -.06SP Consum q 65.35 -.07SP Engy q 94.57 +.16SP Inds q 53.87 +.04SP Tech q 37.56 -.10SP Util q 42.34 +.25StdPac 16 8.12 +.04Staples 13 11.34 -.08Starbucks 30 73.27 -.39StarwdPT 13 24.23 +.02StateStr 14 64.83 -.34StratHotels 11 10.65 -.45Stryker 34 82.64 +2.28Suncor gs 12 38.48 -.07SunEdison dd 19.47 +.09SunPower 23 33.13 +.73SunstnHtl cc 14.53 +.04Supvalu 11 7.45 -.17Symantec 17 22.06 -.42Synaptics 18 67.78 +7.31Synovus rs 20 22.86 +.09T-MobileUS dd 34.40 +.08TD Ameritr 21 29.88 -.38TJX 18 54.30 -.36TableauA cc 62.02 -.83TaiwSemi ... 20.86 -.03TalismE g ... 10.24Target 19 55.34 -.43TataMotors ... 38.72 -1.00TeslaMot dd 210.24 -1.32TevaPhrm cc 50.92 -.97TexInst 25 46.46 +.113D Sys cc 50.44 -6.203M Co 20 141.43 -.01TibcoSft 41 21.21 -.12TimeWarn 16 70.67 +.08TollBros 31 36.38 +.74Transocn cc 42.02 -1.34TrinaSolar 53 13.24 +.34TriQuint dd 16.07TurqHillRs dd 3.73 -.0921stCFoxA 21 35.16 +.3821stCFoxB 12 34.16 +.35Twitter n ... 33.77 +3.26TwoHrbInv 11 10.44 -.11TycoIntl dd 43.72 +.07Tyson 15 40.75 -.71

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUTiWrldwd dd 9.83 +.18UltraPt g 13 27.21 +.63UndArmr s 65 50.15 +.30UtdContl 43 44.89 +1.40UtdMicro ... 2.30 +.05UPS B 23 103.41 +.24US NGas q 25.47 +.64USSteel dd 23.67 -.61UtdhlthGp 14 78.58 -.53UraniumEn dd 1.91 +.09UrbanOut 18 33.05 +.46Vale SA ... 13.06 -.01Vale SA pf ... 11.91 +.05ValeantPh dd 126.95 -3.00ValeroE 10 55.69 +1.95VangREIT q 74.20 -.47VangEmg q 42.71 +.16Ventas 42 66.23 -1.01VerizonCm 11 49.74 +.12VimpelCm dd 8.30 +.03Vivus dd 4.95 +.28Vodafone ... 34.96 +.09VoyaFincl cc 36.45 -.73Vringo dd 3.28 -.13VulcanM 59 61.41 +.06Walgrn 25 69.81 -.43WalterEn dd 5.03 -.48WashPm wi ... 21.03 +.06WsteMInc cc 44.25 +.52WeathfIntl dd 20.98 +.03WellPoint 14 107.88 -.60WstnRefin 18 41.30 +1.74WstnUnion 11 15.87 +.09WhiteWave 53 31.01 +.71WholeFd s 25 37.85 -.80WidePoint dd 1.65 +.07WmsCos 56 46.71 -.14Windstrm 25 9.69 +.30WisdomTr 19 10.39 -.35WT India q 21.96 +.05Workday dd 84.04 +1.91XcelEngy 16 30.50 +.13YY Inc ... 63.69 +2.07Yamana g 36 7.12 -.13Yandex ... 31.90 -.83Yelp dd 63.42 -.14YingliGrn dd 3.41 +.06YoukuTud dd 19.99 +.02YumBrnds 31 76.94 +.77Zoetis 29 30.48 -.22Zynga dd 3.44 +.03

Today

Economic monitor

Economists predict that the U.S. economy didn’t grow in the first three months of the year.

The Commerce Department’s initial estimate in April had the economy growing at a barely discernible 0.1 percent annual rate in the January-March period. The second estimate, due out today, is expected to show that the economy shrank by 0.5 percent as the frigid weather exacted a toll on business activity.

Consumers holding back?

Costco reports financial results for its third fiscal quarter today.

Wall Street will be listening for an update on the wholesale club operator’s sales trends and what they suggest about con-sumer spending. The retailer’s second-quarter results were dampened by softer sales of some nonfood items and weaker profit margins in its fresh foods business.

Rough quarter?

Restructuring costs and declining sales hurt Abercrombie & Fitch’s financial results in its fourth fiscal quarter.

Financial analysts anticipate the trend continued in the retailer’s subsequent quarter. The company is expected to report today a wider quarterly loss and lower revenue for its first fiscal quarter versus a year ago. Abercrombie & Fitch has been closing its Gilly Hicks stores, shifting the brand’s products to its Hollister stores and website. Source: FactSet

30

40

50

$60ANF $35.12

$50.02 ’14

Price-earnings ratio: 51 based on trailing 12 month results

Dividend: $0.80 Div. yield: 2.3%

1Q ’13Operating EPS

1Q ’14

-$0.09 est.-$0.19

Source: FactSet

GDP annualized percent change,seasonally adjusted

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5%

Q1Q4Q3Q2Q1Q4Q3

-0.5

2.8

0.1

1.1

2.5

4.1

2.6

’12 ’13 ’14

Sources: FactSet; Goldman Sachs *based on last 12 month results Stan Choe; J. Paschke • AP

Hedge funds still have cachet. Even after many failed to keep up with the stock market last year, they’ve continued to attract billions of dollars each month. And they’re putting that money to work in stocks such as Cheniere Energy.

Hedge funds invest for wealthy families, pension funds and other institutions. Although they’re not required to disclose much about their strategies, they provide regular updates on their holdings.

Goldman Sachs strategists analyze hedge fund portfolios at the end of each quarter to create a list of hedge-fund “VIP” stocks — the 50 that show up most often among the top-10 holdings of hedge funds. The group hasn’t

performed so well this year — its 1.4 percent return in the first quarter lagged behind the 1.8 percent return of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index. But since 2001, the VIP list’s quarterly returns have topped the S&P 500’s 65 percent of the time.

This quarter, Google is at the top of the VIP list. Of 645 hedge funds surveyed, the tech giant was on 58 top-10 lists at the end of March. Cheniere Energy was the most popular newcomer on the list: It’s a top-10 holding of 28 hedge funds. The company owns a liquefied natural gas terminal in Louisiana, and the 35.3 percent jump of its stock this year is more than 10 times that of the S&P 500.

Hedge-fund faves

Joining the party These nine stocks joined Goldman Sachs’ list of hedge-fund favorites in the first quarter.

WEDNESDAY’S CLOSE

P/ERATIO*

TOTALRETURN

YTD

NO. OF FUNDSWITH STOCKAS A TOP-10

HOLDING

1. Cheniere Energy (LNG) $58.33 35.3% N/A 282. Forest Laboratories (FRX) 94.53 57.5 155 263. American Realty Capital Properties (ARCP) 12.41 0.1 N/A 204. Verizon Communications (VZ) 49.74 3.5 11 185. Walgreen (WAG) 69.81 22.7 25 186. Halliburton (HAL) 63.44 25.3 20 177. CF Industries (CF) 241.87 4.7 8 168. News Corp. (NWSA) 17.11 -5.1 N/A 169. SunEdison (SUNE) 19.47 49.2 N/A 15

AVG. BROKERRATING

sell hold buy

How will you pay for retirement? Let’s talk.

Member SIPC

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

1500 Harper Road Suite 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

www.edwardjones.com

Page 9: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

ACROSS1 Chain named for

two oceans6 Diet guru Jenny

11 Slender slider14 Patch plant15 Cuban dance16 “The Lead With

Jake Tapper”airer

17 *Aperture19 __ polloi20 Suffix with

Senegal21 First American to

orbit Earth22 Oak product ... or

source24 *Words said

betweencourses

26 Email again29 Pie perch30 Seed-bearing

organ31 Many a

preadolescent34 Hiker’s reference37 Southernmost Ivy38 Game where the

ends of theanswers tostarred clues arecommonly heard

39 Bean used infalafel

40 Call off41 Underground

anchors42 Turning part43 Mine find45 Like some

partners46 *It can be a

painful reminder51 Atelier fixture52 Mission where

Jim Bowie fell53 Hub WNW of

LAS56 Mohawked

muscleman57 *Sister’s symbol60 In the infirmary61 Hold water62 Maudlin63 Lao-__64 Irritable65 Fast-growing

school’s need,perhaps

DOWN1 Seaman

descriptor

2 God with avulture symbol

3 Diamond group4 Trial VIPs5 Scion6 Walk on tiptoe7 Like noses, at

times8 Kind of acid in

proteins9 Hebrew : Ben ::

Arabic : __10 First Russian to

orbit Earth11 *Part of a class

act12 Stock market

giant?13 Confident way to

solve crosswords18 Earnestly

appealed23 Grey Cup org.24 “Show Boat”

composer25 Takes advantage

of26 It’s often skipped27 __ number28 *Place to see

shell decorations31 Nevertheless,

informally32 Slippery, perhaps33 Pothook shape

35 Skin So Softseller

36 Barbershopdivision?

38 Future stallion39 Traditional genre41 Gives a tongue-

lashing42 Cannoli cheese44 World Cup cheer45 One usually

keeping to theright

46 Send in47 British nobles48 Barbecue venues49 Influence50 Half-woman, half-

bird monster53 Bridge54 Blaze55 Jet-black

gemstone58 Flowery

composition59 Kyoto currency

By David Steinberg(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 05/29/14

05/29/14

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

g yEdited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: I have a 24-year-old daughter by an ex-girlfriend. When “Tiffany” was a child, her mother made it very dif-fi cult for me to see her. At one point, her attorney sent me a letter saying I would not have to pay child support if I gave up all parental rights. I re-fused. When Tiffany was 9 years old, my ex moved to another state with-out telling me. I found her through her former neighbors. Consequently, I was only able to see Tif-fany for a couple of weeks in the summer.

Considering all of her mother’s obstructions, I think Tiffany and I have a good relationship. I at-tended her high school and college graduations, and she comes to visit me once a year. I call her every month to see how she’s doing.

Tiffany is getting mar-ried next year and just told me that although she doesn’t want to hurt me, she wants her mother to walk her down the aisle. She said her Mom has al-ways been there for her. Tiffany did suggest that I could wait at the front pew of the church and ac-tually give her away to her fi ance.

I am very hurt by this, and I think Tiffany is be-ing unfair to me. Do you have any suggestions? — Heartbroken

Dear Heartbroken: We know your ex made it diffi cult for you to be a more in-volved parent, and you did what you could,

but regardless, your relationship is not as close as the one she has with Mom, and it serves no purpose to point fi ngers now. Tiffany wants Mom to walk her down the aisle, and she has asked you to have the honor of “giving her away.” This is actually a decent compromise and not the snub you seem to think. It is simply one moment of one day of the rest of your lives. If you want to continue your good relationship with Tif-fany, please tell her you would be thrilled to wait at the front of the church and escort her to her fi ance.

Dear Annie: Before my wife and I were married eight years ago, sex was a frequent occurrence. She seemed to enjoy it. But on our honeymoon night, she said, “Let’s get this over with.”

A couple of years lat-er, when the frequency had signifi cantly de-creased, she told me that sex makes her feel “all yucky.” A few years after that, she said, “It always hurts.” When I suggested she talk to her physician, she sidestepped the issue and wouldn’t go. Now she tells me she “needs time to heal.” From what?

Sex is nonexistent. She has headaches, is too tired or pretends to be asleep so often that although she is quite attractive, I no lon-ger see her as an intimate partner. We tried coun-seling, but all she would talk about was the lamp I had installed at the wrong location. The psychologist indicated that we are not ready for meaningful ses-sions. Any suggestions? -- Bewildered Husband

Dear Husband: Your wife has never enjoyed sex. Most women who experi-ence painful inter-course would seek medical attention. We think her most hon-est assessment was when she said sex felt “yucky.” That would indicate a psychologi-cal hang-up that she has no intention of working on.

Please go back to your counselor -- on your own -- and dis-cuss these issues. De-cide how important sex is in relation to the other qualities your wife brings to the marriage, because she may never be more interested than she is right now.

Annie’s Mailbox is writ-ten by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Land-ers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Father doesn’t get to walk daughter down aisleAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

10 • Thursday, May 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

THURSDAY EVENING MAY 29, 2014 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

The Bachelorette This Wild Life performs on a date. Black Box “Forget Me” (N)

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(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #Big Bang Theory

(:31) The Millers

Two and Half Men

(:31) Bad Teacher

(:01) Elementary “Tremors”

News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

QVC $ . Destination Gold May is gold month. Shoe Shopping Dell Computers Women, Control

WCBI $Big Bang Theory

(:31) The Millers

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(:31) Bad Teacher

(:01) Elementary “Tremors”

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Ferguson

WMC % %Hollywood Game Night (N)

(:01) Un-dateable

Undateable (N)

Last Comic Standing “Invitational 3”

News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers

WLMT & >The Vampire Diaries The Originals CW30 News at 9 (N) The Arsenio Hall Show House of

PayneMeet the Browns

WBBJ _ _The Bachelorette This Wild Life performs on a date. Black Box “Forget

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(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )Hollywood Game Night (N)

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Undateable (N)

Last Comic Standing “Invitational 3”

News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers

WKNO * Crossroads Best Tms Family

Plot: GaSports Files

Smart Medicine

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WGN-A + (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-

reatParks/Rec-reat

WMAE , ,Miss. Roads

Fit to Eat Miss. Out-doors

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Oxford Sounds Tavis Smiley

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `Hell’s Kitchen “10 Chefs Again” (N)

Gang Related (N) Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 News

TMZ (N) Dish Nation (N)

Access Hollyw’d

WPXX / Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Flashpoint Flashpoint Flashpoint

WPIX :The Vampire Diaries The Originals PIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld The Arsenio Hall Show Seinfeld

MAX 0 3(5:50) } ›› The Hobbit: An Unex-pected Journey (12)

MAX on Set } ›› Two for the Money (05, Drama) Al Pacino, Matthew McConaughey.

(:05) The Super Sex Program (13, Adult)

SHOW 2 } ›› Lawless (12, Crime Drama) Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy.

Penny Dreadful “Resur-rection”

Penn & Teller

Californica-tion

Nurse Jackie

Katt Wil-liams

HBO 4 1REAL Sports With Bry-ant Gumbel

The Normal Heart HIV and AIDS strike the gay community in the early 1980s.

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VICE 2 Days: Ruslan

MTV 5 2 Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV The Challenge Chal The Challenge Ridic.

ESPN 7 ?2014 Scripps National Spelling Bee From National Harbor, Md. (N) (Live)

Baseball Tonight (N) (Live)

SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling (N) Hungry Investors “Bris-

ket Beatdown”Comedy Tribute to Don Rickles

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NICK ; C Instant Thunder Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends (:12) Friends

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(N) (:02) The First 48 (:01) The First 48

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E! D Total Divas Kardashian E! News Chelsea E! News Chelsea

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(N)Pawn Stars (N)

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Ticket Out (10) Ray Liotta. A mother runs away from her abusive ex-husband.

(:02) Dirty Teacher (13) Josie Davis.

TBN M Behind Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord (N) (Live) Holy Turning

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(:01) } ››› Space Cowboys

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} ›› The Last Song (10) A man tries to reconnect with his estranged daughter.

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OUT Ø Fishing Feeders Teco Bow RMEF Outdoors Stories Crush Bone NBCS ∞ NHL Hockey: Canadiens at Rangers NHL Road to Ferrari Auto Racing OWN ± Our America Our America Our America Our America Our America FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ North Woods North Woods Law River Renegade North Woods Law River Renegade

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} ›› Lockout (12) Inmates at a space prison capture the president’s daughter.

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Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

The Daily Corinthian family of magazines continues on June 28 with Crossroads Magazine

– Bridal Edition.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

D E A R A B B Y : “Holding on in Arkan-sas” (Feb. 27) asked where to go for free coun-seling. You s u g g e s t e d she call her local men-tal health department

for counseling options for her marriage and money issues. Another resource would be her local church.

Pastors often offer counseling to couples. Many churches also have support groups for parents to connect with each other. I have seen churches save mar-riages and get couples back on the right track emotionally and fi -nancially. -- PASSING IT ON IN TENNESSEE

DEAR PASSING IT ON: Your suggestion was mentioned by a number of other readers. They, too, felt that solving her fi nan-cial problems would lessen or eliminate the marital discord “Holding” and her husband are experiencing. Read on:

DEAR ABBY: One of the larg-est contributors to our national

charitable network -- United Way -- offers many helpful ser-vices. The Consumer Credit Counseling Service may also be a resource, if credit cards are part of the problem.

If there is a choice between paying a bill or buying groceries, the bill should come fi rst. There are many food pantries. The family can also apply for food stamps.

Asking for help can be diffi cult or embarrassing, but know-ing your kids won’t be hun-gry makes it worth it. -- BEEN THERE, DONE THAT, TOO

DEAR ABBY: “Holding” should contact her bank about refi nancing her mortgage. If she can’t pay her electric bill, she should see if she qualifi es for a reduced rate for her income level.

As for the kids, if they’re in school, they probably meet the criteria for the reduced-cost lunch program. -- FULL OF IDEAS IN WASHINGTON

DEAR ABBY: “Holding” should seek help from the school counselor. He/she can recommend mental health sup-port within the family’s fi nancial means, and connect them with additional community resources

to lessen some of the stresses of daily life. With many families struggling in many ways, en-couraging this woman to seek out available help is crucial. -- SCHOOL COUNSELOR-IN-TRAINING

DEAR ABBY: Does her em-ployer or her husband’s have an Employee Assistance Program? These services offer a wide range of help, including dealing with mental health and fi nancial issues, and may be paid for as part of the employer’s contract with the EAP organization. -- JUST MY TWO CENTS

DEAR ABBY: If the woman’s county doesn’t have a mental health department, her region should have a department of public health. Or she could be guided by the school nurse at her children’s school.

School nurses are often the fi rst responders to families in crisis or in need of counseling. -- NEW ENGLAND NURSE

Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Some days are just harder. This is a day in which you are glad for your challenges because you recognize how they shape you, body and soul. You are getting better and better.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). There are dogs who go wild dur-ing storms -- chewing through drywall and the like once the thunder and lightning hits. You’ll encounter a skittish soul and bring some comfort to the situ-ation.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). There are people who like you so much that it’s like you have your own fan club. You’ll reward them by taking genuine plea-sure in generously honoring their requests.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll gain recognition for your individuality and talent. Making money from this is another story. You have to fi gure out how to fi t your talent with what the group needs and wants.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Once a showman, always a showman -- but your venue has changed. Now you’ll entertain people in a different way and glow as if a spotlight is trained on you.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Secret clubs and odd alliances are part of the action, which may also involve code words, cos-tumes or keys. It’s fun to feel a part of something bigger, even if that something is ridiculous and inane.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Right now, you’re just trying to get comfortable and learn a little more about the people you’re meeting. But farther down the road, these casual social oppor-tunities will lead to partnership and joint ventures.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Some worry that their lives are too ordinary to be interesting. You have the opposite concern. When it’s your turn to talk about yourself, your mind will race to come up with the stories that will

help you fi t in the best.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Because you’re brave and strong, you’ll be the one ap-pointed to a messy situation. Ap-proach this like you’re cleaning out a junk drawer. Be merciless. If it isn’t essential, it must go.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Some people never learn to listen, and most people fi nd it challenging to listen well. As you work on this skill, know that your efforts will soon help you shine in a highly competitive situation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). What is personal to you will ring true with the general public. Broadcast a bit of what you’re going through on social media, and you’ll be met with encour-agement and support.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Your desire is to be comfort-able and uncontroversial. You’ll connect in an easy, positive and light way, building trust among your peers. Your motto: Relax and enjoy.

Couple feeling financial strain receives helpful ideas

Page 11: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Last Sunday, Derek Jeter col-lected four hits in a game for the

45th time in his career. Can youname the only active player with more

4-hit games?

San Francisco at St. LouisTwo of the best teams in the National

League will face off in a four-game series thisweekend. Heading into the week, the Giantsown the best record in baseball. The Cardi-nals have won nine of their last 11 and arewithin a game and a half of the NL Central-leading Brewers. Last season, the Redbirdswere off the charts with a .300 batting aver-age with runners in scoring position. This sea-son, both the Cardinals and the Giants arebatting just .242 in that situation. The pitchingmatchup to watch will be Friday night whenSan Francisco ace Madison Bumgarner willface Cy Young candidate Adam Wainwright.

Atlanta at MiamiRuns will be difficult to come by this

weekend in Miami. This series features twoof the best pitching staffs and offenses thatare struggling. Few expect the Marlins to stayin the NL East race deep into the season, butMiami has an opportunity for a huge confi-dence boost with a series win over the first-place Braves.

Los Angeles Angels at OaklandThe surging Angels expect to have Josh

Hamilton back this week when they face thedivision-leading A’s in Oakland. Hamilton wasbatting .444 through the first eight gameswhen he was sidelined with a thumb injury.Oakland has terrific starting pitching led byace Sonny Gray, who will pitch on Sunday. TheOakland bullpen has been suspect, as has theAngels’ relief corps.

Nelson Cruz, BaltimoreThe Orioles have been rewarded for their pa-tience in waiting until the eve of spring train-ing to sign the free agent Cruz. Last week, theoutfielder/DH hit safely in all seven games andhad at least one run and one RBI in all but onecontest. He batted .455 with a 1.672 OPS andled the AL with nine runs scored.

Mike Montgomery, SP, Tampa BayLest you think the pitching pipeline is drying upfor Tampa Bay, lefthander Mike Montgomeryhas found success at Triple-A. He’s 6-1 with a3.47 ERA and 1.158 WHIP.

8 Wins for Mark Buehrle of the Toronto Blue Jays. The veteran lefthander captured his eighth win on May 22, the earliest date in his career he has won eight games. The long-time hurler for the Chicago White Sox earned his eighth win in 2002 on May 24, the only other time he has won eight games in the first two months. On eight different occasions his eighth win has come in July, once in August.

441 Hits for the Yankees this season, also the number of hits for Yankees’ opponents this season.

6 Starts this season by Adam Wainwright of the St. Louis Cardinals in which he has pitched seven innings or more and allowed no runs.

1 Walk drawn by St. Louis farmhand Aledmys Diaz in 80 plate appearances at Double-A Springfield.

.281 On-base percentage for Cincinnati leadoff hitters this season, last in the majors.

.415 On-base percentage for Cincinnati leadoff hitters last season, best in the majors.

Nelson Cruz Athlon Sports

Dallas Keuchel, HoustonIn his first start last week, Keuchel came withinone out of a complete game in Houston’s 5-2win at Los Angeles. He improved in his nextstart, going one out farther, defeating theMariners 4-1 at Seattle. In the complete gamehe allowed just four hits, no walks and noearned runs.

Jonathan Lucroy, MilwaukeeThe Brewers’ catcher has been the team’smost consistent performer all season. Thatwas certainly true last week. Of his 14 hits,eight were doubles. Now hitting in the No. 3spot in the Brewers’ order, Lucroy raised hisaverage last week from .299 to .331, nowthird in the National League.

Adam Wainwright, St. LouisJust when you think Wainwright can’t get anybetter, he tosses a one-hit shutout over the Di-amondbacks with no walks. Then follows thatperformance with eight shutout innings atCincinnati, giving up five hits, one walk andties his career-best with 12 strikeouts

•Typically, lineup stability is a sign of offen-sive success. Managers who find a lineup thatworks will stick with it, as teams on a roll rarelychange things up. That isn’t the case with theMilwaukee Brewers this season. Manager RonRoenicke has used 42 different lineups in 51games this season, including a new lineup ineach of the last 19 games through Sunday.

•Twice last week players went deep in agame four times. No, it didn’t happen in themajors, but Arizona farmhand Jon Griffin hitfour bombs on May 21 for Double-A Mobile atthe Tennessee Smokies. The clouts were part ofsix in three games for the slugging first base-man. Not to be outdone, Mike Ford of theCharleston RiverDogs in the Yankees’ system,hit four homers against the Hickory Crawdadson May 25. Only four times in the 2000s has amajor leaguer hit four home runs in a singlegame. Josh Hamilton of the Rangers was thelast to accomplish it on May 8, 2012.

• Catcher Drew Butera of the Dodgerscaught Josh Beckett’s no-hitter last Sundayagainst the Phillies. The backup backstop wasalso behind the plate in 2011 when FranciscoLiriano, then of Minnesota, pitched a no-noagainst the White Sox. Liriano and Beckett arescheduled to face each other on Friday.

• There are 11 clubs with playoff droughtsof four years or longer. Kansas City fans havesuffered the longest having not reached thepostseason since winning the World Series in1985. As MLB passes the quarter pole of theseason, it appears that the Blue Jays, Rockiesand Angels may have the best shot at endingthe suffering.

Team (last playoff appearance) DroughtKansas City Royals (1985) 28Toronto Blue Jays (1993) 20Seattle Mariners (2001) 12Miami Marlins (2003) 10Houston Astros (2005) 8New York Mets (2006) 7San Diego Padres (2006) 7Chicago Cubs (2008) 5Chicago White Sox (2008) 5Colorado Rockies (2009) 4Los Angeles Angels (2009) 4

1. Giants Cool in the clutch: .281 with runners in scoring position, 2 outs.2. A’s Won last 10 when scoring three or more runs.3. Brewers Lost seven of last 12.4. Tigers Best road record in the majors (14-7).5. Rockies 6-16 when Rox fail to score six runs on the road.6. Braves 334 ABs with runners in scoring position is fewest in majors.7. Dodgers Batting just .217 vs. lefties.8. Angels One of three teams to draw 1,000,000 fans this season.9. Blue Jays Best offense in the majors in May.

10. Cardinals Won nine of 11 with only three home runs. 11. Yankees David Robertson on pace for 33 saves as Mo’s replacement.12. Orioles Zach Britton becoming an effective closer for Baltimore.13. Marlins Best home record in majors (20-8); worst home attendance in NL.14. Nationals Nats batting .245, opponents .251.15. Royals Cleanup hitters have just 11 extra-base hits this season.16. Rangers Not Beltre, not Fielder, but Alex Rios is team’s best weapon.17. Mariners Robinson Cano hitting .323, rest of team .222.18. White Sox Team batting .261 with Jose Abreu, .262 without him.19. Rays Scuffling Rays happy to see struggling Red Sox come to town.20. Padres Cleanup hitters batting .174 with five homers and 21 RBIs.21. Mets Lost eight of 11 since reaching .500 mark May 13.22. Reds Bats are slumping, fewest runs in majors in May.23. Phillies No-hit on Sunday, held clinic for kids on Monday. Hmm.24. Twins Managed just four runs and hit .158 in three games in San Fran.25. Indians Won three extra-inning games last week.26. Pirates Begin tough 10-game road trip this week.27. Diamondbacks On the upswing, 11-9 so far in May.28. Red Sox Losers of 10 in a row for the first time since 1994.29. Astros Youngster George Springer gives fans glimpse of future.30. Cubs -12 wins/losses; -6 runs/runs allowed.

May 28, 1951Rising star Willie Mays of the New York Giants endsan 0-12 skid to start his career with his first homerun. It comes off Hall of Famer Warren Spahn of theBoston Braves. The clout represents the only run offof Spahn as the Braves win 4-1.

June 1, 1975Nolan Ryan of the California Angels stymies the Bal-timore Orioles for the fourth no-hitter of his career.The Angels get nine hits, but manage just one run,which came in the third inning. Ryan walks four andstrikes out nine, improving his record to 9-3 on theseason.

Compiled by Charlie Miller. Follow Charlie on Twitter @AthlonCharlie or email him at [email protected]

While the 2014 All-Star Game is stillmore than a month away, we’ll take aquick glimpse into the future and proj-ect the 2017 All-Star lineups. Whichprospects will continue to rise and be-come the best players in their leagues?Which veterans will continue to per-form at high standards? This week, theNational League. Next week, the AL.

Yasiel Puig, RF, Los Angeles DodgersIn 2017, Puig will be exasperating hismanager with concentration lapsesand annoying old-timers with some ofhis antics, but he’ll also be one of themost productive players in the NL.Oscar Taveras, LF, St. LouisWhile fans in St. Louis are gettingrestless, the Redbirds are resisting thetemptation of rushing him to the bigs. Freddie Freeman, 1B, AtlantaThe Braves’ first baseman will besquarely in his prime in 2017 and bestamong NL first sackers. Giancarlo Stanton, DH, MiamiHe’ll be an All-Star for many seasonsregardless which logo is on his chest.Andrew McCutchen, CF, PittsburghThe 2013 MVP will likely win an-other trophy before 2017. Anthony Rendon, 3B, WashingtonThe 2011 first-round pick continuesto develop, and with Ryan Zimmer-man injured, he’s been given the op-portunity to play third base everyday. Alex Guerrero, 2B, Los Angeles DodgersThe native of Cuba has followed inYasiel Puig’s footsteps in Los Angeles.He’ll start at least one All-Star GameAndrelton Simmons, SS, AtlantaThe defensive whiz will be a main-stay at short for the NL as he wowsfans with his glove and cannon arm. Devin Mesoraco, C, CincinnatiThe Reds traded reliable catcher RyanHanigan over the winter to makeroom for their rising star. Mesoracohas responded well with a .377 bat-ting average and 1.099 OPS.

Michael Wacha, SP, St. LouisHaving supplanted fellow All-Star Adam Wainwright as theRedbirds’ ace, Wacha is themanager’s choice to start for thesenior circuit.

ReservesBuster Posey, C, San FranciscoWith the emergence of first base-man Brandon Belt, and Posey’sinsistence to stay behind theplate, we’ll assume that Poseywill be catching in 2017. Christian Bethancourt, C, AtlantaThe Atlanta rising star will makethe team as a third catcher.Anthony Rizzo, 1B, Chicago CubsSurrounded by a better lineup —which should be the case by 2017— the first baseman will hit con-sistently at an All-Star level.Paul Goldschmidt, 1B, ArizonaGoldschmidt and Freeman may finish1-2 in MVP voting before this decadeis over.Starlin Castro, 2B, ChicagoMoved off of short by Javier Baez,Castro will struggle at third beforefinding a home at second.Nolan Arenado, 3B, ColoradoArenado is already the best defensivethird baseman in the league. By 2017,he may be the best offensive third base-man as well. But Rendon will get morerespect from the fans at the ballot box.Kris Bryant, 3B, Chicago CubsThe poster child for the Cubs’ re-building program, Bryant will not dis-appoint fans on the North Side. Aledmys Diaz, SS, St. LouisIn his first experience outside ofCuba, Diaz is hitting better than .300and slugging over .500 at Double-ASpringfield. The Cardinals insist he istheir shortstop of the very near future. Justin Upton, OF, AtlantaThe 2017 All-Star Game will beplayed a month before Upton turns 30.

Gregory Polanco, OF, PittsburghThe future star for Pittsburgh shouldmake his debut with the big club laterthis summer. Jean Segura, SS, MilwaukeeThe Brewers’ shortstop will be theBrew Crew’s sole representative onthe 2017 team.Jose Fernandez, SP, MiamiThe Marlins will handle Fernandezwith care in 2015-16 after TommyJohn surgery this year. Miami will easehim back into the rotation in 2017 ashis first huge post-surgery season. Adam Wainwright, SP, St. LouisThe veteran will have won multipleCy Young awards by 2017 and havean All-Star start to accompany hismultiple World Series rings.Max Fried, SP, San DiegoThe newest ace of the San DiegoPadres will be the teams’ only repre-sentative.Cole Hamels, SP, PhiladelphiaAs is the case with Fried, Hamelsmakes the team because every teammust be represented. The last-placePhillies will have few candidates.

Clayton Kershaw, SP, L.A. DodgersThere will likely be another CyYoung award in Kershaw’s futureprior to 2017.Matt Harvey, SP, New York MetsHarvey joins Fernandez and Wain-wright as Tommy John surgery sur-vivors turned All-Stars.Gerrit Cole, SP, PittsburghThe Pirates’ ace will have multipleAll-Star appearances by 2017.Alex Wood, SP, AtlantaThe lefthander continues to pitch wellfor one of the best teams in the NL.Madison Bumgarner, SP, San FranciscoThe lefthander form North Carolinawill be only 27 at the 2017 Classic. Craig Kimbrel, CL, AtlantaThe Braves’ closer will still be amongthe best in 2017.Trevor Rosenthal, CL, St. LouisThe Cardinals will toy with movingRosenthal into the rotation, but clos-ing suits him better than starting.Aroldis Chapman, CL, CincinnatiThe Cuban Missile will still be firingdarts well into the latter part of thisdecade.

2017 National League All-Stars

TRIVIA ANSWER:Jeter’s teammate Ichiro Suzukiowns 50 4-hit games in his Hall of Fame career.

Athlon SportsKris Bryant (left) of the Cubs will play in his first All-Star Game in 2017. By that time, Andrew McCutchen of Pittsburgh will be an All-Star veteran.

BY NOAH TRISTERThe Associated Press

Ian Kinsler says join-ing the Detroit Tigers has been a bit of a relief so far.

His team is in fi rst place and he’s among the league leaders in hitting — and that’s about all he has to worry about when he shows up at the ballpark each day. “I’m here to play baseball. I’m here to win, I’m here to help the team any way I can and perform,” Kinsler said. “That’s really it.”

“I’m not worried about taking care of any young

kids, or making sure dress code is met, or anything like that. Just here to play ball and help the team,” he said. Kinsler was sent to Detroit in the offsea-son blockbuster trade that moved Prince Fielder to Texas. And although De-troit made the deal with fi -nancial fl exibility in mind, it also was getting an ac-complished player.

Kinsler has certainly lived up to his end of the bargain to this point. The 31-year-old second base-man was hitting .330 en-tering Tuesday night’s

game at Oakland.Although Detroit has

slumped recently, the Tigers still lead the AL Central by a comfort-able margin, and it looks like Kinsler has a shot to hit over .300 for only the second time in his career. He’s been more than just a steady replacement at sec-ond base for Omar Infan-te, who left via free agency.

Kinsler has been a cata-lyst for the Detroit offense, fi tting in well on and off the fi eld. “He’s actually funnier than I thought he was. He always looks very

serious,” manager Brad Ausmus said. “Managing him, he’s outstanding — couldn’t ask for more.”

After being traded by the Rangers, Kinsler was quoted in an ESPN The Magazine story as saying he hoped Texas would go 0-162 this season.

He later said he was joking, and he bristled a bit when asked about that comment last week, when the Rangers arrived in Detroit for a four-game series.

Kinsler was asked if any of the Rangers had given

him any good-natured grief about his remarks.

“They thought it was funny, like everyone prob-ably should,” Kinsler said. “The way that it was taken was serious, but it’s sup-posed to be funny. They saw it as funny, I saw it as funny.”

Kinsler says he still has some contact with former teammates, but it’s clear that he’s found a comfort zone in Detroit. He played eight seasons in Texas, and the move to the Tigers enabled him to start fresh with a team full of veter-

ans.Those off-the-fi eld re-

sponsibilities Kinsler has little use for? They aren’t much of an issue now.

“I want to play baseball. I want to be on the fi eld and compete, and talk about the game, help my teammates in that way,” Kinsler said.

“I love to talk about base-ball and what I see on the fi eld and things that you can take advantage of.

As far as the other stuff, in my opinion, it’s for the birds, and not something I enjoy doing.”

11 • Thursday, May 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Kinsler a productive fit at 2B for Tigers

Page 12: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

Shorts

Softball Tournament

The 20th Annual Coca-Cola Clas-sic Women’s Tournament will be held Saturday at Crossroads Regional Park. Entry fee is $150 and only 14 teams will be accepted. Prizes for top 4 teams. ASA sanctioned and only approved balls and bats allowed. Deadline in May 29. For more info call J.C. Hill (293-0290) or the park office (286-3067).

 Football Meeting

Alcorn Central High School and Alcorn Middle School will have a foot-ball meeting June 2 at 6:30 p.m. in the weight room.

 Corinth Area Softball Camp

The 3rd Annual Corinth Area Soft-ball Camp for ages 6-12 is set for June 2-5 at Crossroads Regional Park. Cost is $70 for entire session and includes noon meal each day along with camp T-shirt. Accident in-surance is included. Discount will be given if more than one family mem-ber attends. Camp goes from 8:30 a.m. until 1 p.m.

A $40 deposit is required with the remaining balance due on the first day of camp. Checks should be made payable to Diamond S/Baseball Camp, 3159 Kendrick Road, Corinth, Ms. 38834. For more information contact John Smillie at 808-0013.

 Basketball Camps

Blue Mountain College has re-leased its summer basketball camp schedule. The first camp will be June 9-12 and is open to boys in grades 3rd-5th.

The camp is set for 9:30-11:30 a.m. Cost is $60 by June 4 and $70 after the deadline. An afternoon camp for boys in grades 6th-9th is also slated for June 9-12 from 1:30-4 p.m. Cost is $70 and $80 after June 4. A camp for kindergarten through 2nd grade boys is scheduled for June 14 from 1-5 p.m. Cost is $25 and $35 after June 11.

All camps will be held at Tyler Gymnasium on the BMC campus. For more information contact BMC coach J.D. Parker at 479-422-4542 or at [email protected]

The Associated PressMARIETTA, Ga. — Cobb County

leaders on Tuesday approved seven agreements governing the Atlanta Braves’ move and plans to build a new stadium.

The Cobb County Commission voted 5-0 on an operating agreement that calls for the Braves to occupy the new stadium for at least 30 years.

Opponents to the move and stadium deal spoke out during the meeting, and local news media outlets reported that some were asked to leave for be-ing disruptive.

The agreements up for a vote includ-ed deals with the Braves, the Cum-berland Community Improvement District; and the Cobb-Marietta Ex-hibition Hall Authority.

The county is set to contribute $368 million toward the cost of the $672 million project, with the team providing the remainder of the fund-ing. The new stadium is scheduled to open in 2017, replacing Turner Field.

The Braves have said the new ball-park will seat 41,500 and will be the hub of a “play, work, stay” destina-tion including shops, restaurants and entertainment venues, as well as a boutique hotel, offi ce space and approximately 500 residences.

“It will be a fi rst of its kind: a new place that will simultaneously create a major sports venue and surround-ing community, which will fi t seam-lessly together from the fi rst pitch,” the team said.

The city of Atlanta, meanwhile, is considering proposals for the Braves’ current home, which was built for the 1996 Summer Olympics and converted into a baseball stadi-um the following year.

Georgia State University has pro-posed converting Turner Field into a 30,000-seat football stadium and building a new college baseball park on the footprint of the former Atlan-ta-Fulton County Stadium, which was torn down in 1997.

Georgia State’s proposal is part of a $300 million development that would also include retail space, resi-dential housing and student dorms.

County leadersapprove Bravesstadium deal 

BY MARK LONGThe Associated Press

DESTIN, Fla. — Florida coach Billy Donovan won’t guarantee he will be back next season.

It’s not because he doesn’t want to make that promise.

It’s because he doesn’t want to break it.

Donovan reiterated at the Southeastern Conference’s annual spring meetings Tues-day that he’s committed to the Gators, but left open the possibility of jumping to the NBA.

Donovan said last week he has been in contact with “sev-eral” NBA teams about head-coaching jobs. He declined again to say which teams,

but reports say the Cleveland Cavaliers have shown inter-est.

“I think when you start making guarantees about life and start making guarantees about where you’re going to be, that’s not good because if for some reason I ever change my mind and did something, I wouldn’t want (people) say-ing, ‘Well, he promised, he guaranteed, he said this on record,’” Donovan said. “I just think when you start doing that, that’s a mistake.”

Donovan left Florida briefl y in 2007, agreeing to become coach of the NBA’s Orlando Magic. He changed his mind a few days later, returned to Gainesville and has been

there since. He just fi nished his 18th season at Florida, where he has guided the Ga-tors to two national champi-onships and four Final Four appearances.

He signed a three-year con-tract extension in February that raised his average salary to $3.7 million over the fi nal six years of the deal, which runs through the 2018-19 season.

But he raised eyebrows a month later by saying he’s still intrigued by the NBA. He made similar comments Tuesday.

“All I can say is I love Flor-ida, I’m happy here ... the school’s been great to me,” he said. “But at the same point,

some of the NBA stuff, as I’ve said before, is intriguing in a lot of ways — the basketball part of it. That’s not to say that I’m unhappy here; that’s not the case at all.

“But when people start get-ting into forecasting where they’re going to be or what they’re going to do, and I’ve seen a lot of coaches over the years come out and say,’ No, no, no, no, I’m not go-ing anywhere, I’m not going anywhere,’ and then all of a sudden they go somewhere and it’s like, ‘Well, this guy is a complete liar.’ I don’t want to get into that situation.

“There’s been some teams that have called, but that’s re-ally it.”

Donovan won’t guarantee return

Recent results from Satur-day action at North Missis-sippi Motor Park Speedway.

Forty cars ran in both heat-ed and feature races. Orga-nizers of the speedway will be having a demolition derby Saturday night.

“Saturday was an awe-some night of racing,” said the speedway’s Treassa Wil-banks. “We are working really hard at getting the track sur-face as best as we can so the racing will be the very best.”

LLM/6041. 17 Ronald Dunn (fi rst win of the year)2. 18 Chuck Wilkerson3. 0 Tracy Martin4. 12 Joe Reaves5. 43 Kurt Radojsics6. 58 Brandon Shaw7. 75 Dan Crane8. 58 Steve Nelms9. 33 Howard Means10. 10 Steve null11. 8 Chris Tays

 602/Stock Late Model1. 72 Jesse Smith2. 12 Joey Maxwell3. F17 Felix George4. 33 Anthony Jones5. 19 Hunter Whaley6. 7 Todd Talley7. 4 Ed Felks8. B1jr Travis Bobo9. 11 Dustin Jones10. 01 Bruce Sanders

 Outlaw1. 7D Todd Robinson2. 77 Billy Thompson3. 78 Mike Jones4. 80 Kara Kelly5. J77 John Tigner

Modifi ed Street1. 78 Richie Berryhill2. 3 Todd Robinson3. T27 Trina Nelms4. 88 Billy Miller5. 16 Nathan Page6. 18x Terry Bobo7. 74 Nick Stoop8. 28 Chris Baldini9. J100 Jason Stone

 Pure Street

1. 16 Richard Page2. 1 Chance Burcham3. 77 Brandon Whitley4. M5 Tadpole Matlock5. 79 Colton Bain

The Associated PressDESTIN, Fla. — Tennessee

coach Butch Jones doesn’t expect quarterback Riley Fer-guson to return to the Volun-teers.

“Riley’s no longer with the program,” Jones said Tues-day night during the South-eastern Conference spring meetings. Earlier Tuesday, Volquest had reported that Jones said he didn’t expect

Ferguson to remain with the Vols.

Ferguson, a redshirt fresh-man, was expected to com-pete with senior Justin Wor-ley and sophomores Joshua Dobbs and Nathan Peterman for the starting job. Although a leg injury prevented Fergu-son from playing last season — he was the only one of the four quarterbacks who didn’t start at least one game — he

impressed coaches with his arm strength and upside.

Ferguson had quarter-backed two state champion-ship teams at Butler High School in Matthews, North Carolina. During Tennessee’s spring game last month, he went 7 of 12 for 83 yards and a touchdown, but also threw an interception and lost a fumble.

Ferguson’s departure

would leave Tennessee with a three-man quarterback com-petition featuring Worley, Dobbs and Peterman.

Worley started seven games last season before having sea-son-ending thumb surgery. He completed 55.6 percent of his passes for 1,239 yards with 10 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Tennessee

Northeast Mississippi Motor Park Speedway

Vols’ Jones doesn’t expect QB Ferguson to return

Please see FERGUSON | 13

The Associated PressBILOXI — Architects have

told the Biloxi City Council site work for the city’s minor league baseball stadium will be done and a general con-tractor could start building July 21.

“That’s making it work quickly, to get it July 21. So, if we have an awardable bid by July 9, we should be able to do that,” Leigh Jaunsen with

Dale Partners Architects told council members Tuesday.

If all goes as planned, con-struction could offi cially be-gin at the end of July on the site where prep work has been taking place for weeks. But, that means an extended com-pletion date. “We anticipate a substantial completion date of May 17, 2015,” said Jaunsen.

Jaunsen said the city will start advertising for bids June

5 and bid packages from gen-eral contractors are due July 9.

The bid will be for a 10-month completion, with a 12-month option. Jaunsen said that will determine if the city will pay more for speeding up the project or for paying the penalty for not having the stadi-um done on time for next year’s baseball stadium. The agree-ment calls for the city to pay a $10,000 penalty for each home

game that can’t be played in the 2015 season. The city had expected to start work after a deal for the team was fi nal-ized in October or November. But the Huntsville (Alabama) Stars AA team’s move was not completed until January. The Huntsville Stars AA is sched-uled to start play in Biloxi in April 2015. The city broke ground Jan. 23 on the $36 million MGM Park.

Biloxi baseball stadium construction could begin July 21

The Associated PressIRVING, Texas — Dallas

Cowboys linebacker Sean Lee could miss the 2014 season after tearing a ligament in his left knee in the fi rst offseason practice.

The team hasn’t announced results of an MRI but report-ed on its website Wednesday that Lee has been told he has a torn anterior cruciate liga-ment.

The oft-injured Lee went

down during the 11-on-11 portion of Tuesday’s practice. His left leg slid out from un-der him as rookie guard Zack Martin was closing in for a block, and Martin rolled over him.

With Lee’s injury and the release of franchise sacks leader DeMarcus Ware, the Cowboys could be without their top two defenders after fi nishing last in the league in total defense a year ago.

Contact isn’t allowed in off-season workouts, but block-ers frequently engage line-men and linebackers before plays stop in 11-on-11 drills. Lee was already on his way to the ground when Martin lunged over him.

“I don’t really know what happened,” said Martin, the Cowboys’ fi rst-round pick at No. 16. “Two guys playing hard, running to the ball.”

The 27-year-old Lee hasn’t

played a full season in four years. The middle linebacker has missed 15 games over the past two years, including fi ve of the fi nal six games in 2013 with hamstring and neck in-juries.

Lee signed a six-year ex-tension worth up to $51 mil-lion last year, but durability-based incentives are built into the deal. He’s already likely

Cowboys’ Sean Lee likely out for 2014 with knee injury

Please see LEE | 13

 Photo compliments of Treassa Wilbanks

Ronald Dunn claimed the Late Model division for his first win of the year.

Page 13: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

ScoreboardBaseball

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBAtlanta 28 23 .549 —Miami 27 25 .519 1½Washington 25 26 .490 3New York 24 28 .462 4½Philadelphia 22 27 .449 5

Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 31 22 .585 —St. Louis 29 23 .558 1½Pittsburgh 23 29 .442 7½Cincinnati 22 28 .440 7½Chicago 19 31 .380 10½

West Division W L Pct GBSan Francisco 33 19 .635 —Los Angeles 29 24 .547 4½Colorado 28 24 .538 5San Diego 24 29 .453 9½Arizona 21 33 .389 13

–––Tuesday’s Games

Colorado 6, Philadelphia 2Miami at Washington, ppd., rainBoston 6, Atlanta 3N.Y. Mets 4, Pittsburgh 2Milwaukee 7, Baltimore 6, 10 inningsSt. Louis 6, N.Y. Yankees 0San Diego 4, Arizona 3L.A. Dodgers 6, Cincinnati 3San Francisco 4, Chicago Cubs 0

Wednesday’s GamesN.Y. Mets 5, Pittsburgh 0Chicago Cubs at San FranciscoColorado at PhiladelphiaMiami at WashingtonAtlanta at BostonBaltimore at MilwaukeeN.Y. Yankees at St. LouisSan Diego at ArizonaCincinnati at L.A. Dodgers

Today’s GamesN.Y. Mets (Z.Wheeler 1-5) at Philadel-

phia (Buchanan 1-0), 6:05 p.m.Atlanta (Minor 2-3) at Boston (Peavy

1-2), 6:10 p.m.San Francisco (Vogelsong 3-2) at St.

Louis (J.Garcia 1-0), 7:15 p.m.Cincinnati (Cingrani 2-4) at Arizona

(Collmenter 3-2), 8:40 p.m.Pittsburgh (Cole 4-3) at L.A. Dodgers

(Haren 5-3), 9:10 p.m.Friday’s Games

Colorado at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.Texas at Washington, 6:05 p.m.Atlanta at Miami, 6:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.San Diego at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m.San Francisco at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.Cincinnati at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.

Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

N.L. leaders G AB R H Pct.Tulowitzki Col 50 166 45 62 .373Puig LAD 47 179 28 62 .346Utley Phi 46 183 28 61 .333Lucroy Mil 48 184 20 61 .332MaAdams StL 51 193 16 63 .326Blackmon Col 51 187 35 60 .321Pagan SF 47 182 26 58 .319CGomez Mil 47 189 33 60 .317YMolina StL 46 183 22 58 .317Stanton Mia 52 196 37 62 .316

Home RunsStanton, Miami, 15; Tulowitzki, Colora-

do, 14; JUpton, Atlanta, 13; AdGonzalez, Los Angeles, 12; Reynolds, Milwaukee, 12; CGomez, Milwaukee, 11; Gattis, Atlanta, 10; Morse, San Francisco, 10; Puig, Los Angeles, 10; Walker, Pittsburgh, 10.

Runs Batted InStanton, Miami, 49; Puig, Los Angeles,

38; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 37; AdGonzalez, Los Angeles, 36; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 34; Morse, San Francisco, 34; Blackmon, Colorado, 33; JUpton, Atlanta, 33.

PitchingGreinke, Los Angeles, 8-1; Wainwright,

St. Louis, 8-2; Lohse, Milwaukee, 6-1; Lynn, St. Louis, 6-2; SMiller, St. Louis, 6-3; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 6-3; JDe La Rosa, Colorado, 6-3.

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBToronto 31 22 .585 —New York 27 24 .529 3Baltimore 26 24 .520 3½Tampa Bay 23 30 .434 8Boston 22 29 .431 8

Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 29 19 .604 —Chicago 27 27 .500 5Minnesota 24 25 .490 5½Kansas City 24 28 .462 7Cleveland 24 29 .453 7½

West Division W L Pct GBOakland 31 21 .596 —Los Angeles 29 22 .569 1½Texas 26 26 .500 5Seattle 25 26 .490 5½Houston 22 32 .407 10

–––Tuesday’s Games

Toronto 9, Tampa Bay 6Boston 6, Atlanta 3Milwaukee 7, Baltimore 6, 10 inningsChicago White Sox 2, Cleveland 1Houston 3, Kansas City 0Minnesota 4, Texas 3St. Louis 6, N.Y. Yankees 0Detroit 6, Oakland 5

L.A. Angels 6, Seattle 4Wednesday’s Games

Houston 9, Kansas City 3Tampa Bay at TorontoAtlanta at BostonBaltimore at MilwaukeeCleveland at Chicago White SoxTexas at MinnesotaN.Y. Yankees at St. LouisDetroit at OaklandL.A. Angels at Seattle

Today’s GamesTexas (N.Martinez 1-1) at Minnesota

(Deduno 1-3), 12:10 p.m.Detroit (Porcello 7-2) at Oakland

(J.Chavez 4-2), 2:35 p.m.Kansas City (Shields 6-3) at Toronto

(Dickey 5-4), 6:07 p.m.Atlanta (Minor 2-3) at Boston (Peavy

1-2), 6:10 p.m.Baltimore (U.Jimenez 2-6) at Houston

(Peacock 1-4), 7:10 p.m.L.A. Angels (LeBlanc 0-0) at Seattle

(Maurer 1-3), 9:10 p.m.Friday’s Games

Colorado at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m.Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m.Texas at Washington, 6:05 p.m.Kansas City at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.Tampa Bay at Boston, 6:10 p.m.Baltimore at Houston, 7:10 p.m.San Diego at Chicago White Sox, 7:10

p.m.L.A. Angels at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.Detroit at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

Basketball

NBA playoff scheduleCONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)Sunday, May 18

IIndiana 107, Miami 96Monday, May 19

San Antonio 122, Oklahoma City 105Tuesday, May 20

Miami 87, Indiana 83Wednesday, May 21

San Antonio 112, Oklahoma City 77Saturday, May 24

Miami 99, Indiana 87Sunday, May 25

Oklahoma City 106, San Antonio 97Monday

Miami 102, Indiana 90, Miami leads series 3-1

TuesdayOklahoma City 105, San Antonio 92,

series tied 2-2Wednesday

Miami at Indiana,Today

Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 8 p.m.Friday

x-Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m.

SaturdaySan Antonio at Oklahoma City, 7:30 p.m.

Sundayx-Miami at Indiana, 8730 p.m.

Monday, June 2x-Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 8 p.m.

FINALS(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)

Thursday, June 5Eastern champion at San Antonio or

Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.Sunday, June 8

Eastern champion at San Antonio or Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.

Tuesday, June 10Western champion at Indiana or

Miami, 8 p.m.Thursday, June 12

Western champion at Indiana or Miami, 8 p.m.

Sunday, June 15x-Eastern champion at San Antonio or

Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.Tuesday, June 17

x-Western champion at Indiana or Miami, 8 p.m.

Friday, June 20x-Eastern champion at San Antonio or

Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.

Tennis

French Open Wednesday at Stade Roland Garros,

Paris. Seeded players only.SINGLES

Men Second RoundNovak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Jeremy

Chardy, France, 6-1, 6-4, 6-2.Roger Federer (4), Switzerland, def. Di-

ego Sebastian Schwartzman, Argentina, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4.

Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. Aleksandr Nedovyesov, Kazakhstan, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-5, 6-3.

Milos Raonic (8), Canada, def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 7-6 (4), 6-4, 6-1.

John Isner (10), United States, def. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (4), 6-3, 7-6 (4).

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (13), France, def. Ju-rgen Melzer, Austria, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4.

Mikhail Youzhny (15), Russia, lost to Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, 6-0, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4.

Tommy Robredo (17), Spain, def. Kenny de Schepper, France, 6-2, 6-3, 6-3.

Ernests Gulbis (18), Latvia, def. Fac-undo Bagnis, Argentina, 6-2, 7-5, 6-0.

Alexandr Dolgopolov (20), Ukraine, lost to Marcel Granollers, Spain, 1-6, 3-6, 6-3, 6-0, 6-2.

Jerzy Janowicz (22), Poland, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4), 6-4.

13 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, May 29, 2014

BY CLIFF BRUNTAP Sports Writer

OKLAHOMA CITY — The San Antonio Spurs have seen this nightmare before.

In 2012, the Spurs won the fi rst two games of the Western Conference fi -nals against the Thunder, then lost four straight and were bounced out of the playoffs. This season, the Spurs were cruising in the West fi nals, winning two blowouts against Okla-homa City before Thun-der defensive wiz Serge Ibaka unexpectedly came back from a left calf strain. With renewed confi dence and energy, Oklahoma City’s youngsters rolled past their veteran counter-parts in Game 3, and the reminders started coming.

The Thunder dominat-

ed Game 4 to tie the series, and now, the Spurs again face a most uncomfortable scenario. They host Game 5 on Thursday in danger of falling behind 3-2. If they lose, they’ll travel to Oklahoma City on Satur-day facing elimination.

Just like in 2012.“Reminding people

about what happened in the past helps in some way, but we have to go out there and execute and do things,” Spurs forward Tim Duncan said.

The Thunder also have tried to distance them-selves from their rare comeback, though they said it helped them re-main hopeful when they were down 0-2.

“We can’t think about the past,” forward Kevin Durant said. “We have

to focus on right now. This team (San Antonio) is well-coached and has a great group of guys. They’ll make it tough. We have to worry about get-ting better and having our focus and energy on every single play.”

Duncan, Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker and the rest of the Spurs must match the intensity of their youthful opponents. Russell West-brook, just 25, was all over the place in his 40-point, 10-assist, fi ve-steal effort in Game 4.

“It doesn’t matter what we do tactically if we don’t up that determination, that attitude, that per-sistent, aggressive, ugly, hard-nosed attitude and I think that was embodied in them in Russell West-brook,” San Antonio coach

Gregg Popovich said. “He played like it was his last game, and that’s the way it’s got to be.” Oklahoma City looks like a new team. The Thunder lost the fi rst two games of this year’s series by a combined 52 points, and a 112-77 loss in Game 2 left them embar-rassed. Now, the Thun-der appear to have things fi gured out. The Thunder played a more physical defensive style in Games 3 and 4 and used their length and athletic ability to disrupt the Spurs’ nor-mally precise offense.

“I don’t think there’s no way we can match their athleticism, so we’ve got to play smart and take advantage of a few situ-ations, because that ath-letic part is not going to be matched.” Popovich said.

BY DOUG FERGUSONAP Golf Writer

DUBLIN, Ohio — Tiger Woods withdrew from the U.S. Open on Wednesday as he recovers from back surgery that has kept him out of golf for nearly three months.

It will be the second U.S. Open, and sixth major, he has missed because of in-jury over the last six years.

The U.S. Open is June 12-15 at Pinehurst No. 2, where Woods tied for third in 1999 and was run-ner-up in 2005. The an-nouncement on his web-site was not surprising. A week ago at a promotional event for the Quicken Loans National at Con-gressional, Woods said he still had not taken a full swing with a golf club and did not know when he could.

He had microdisceto-my surgery to relieve a pinched nerve on March

31.“Unfortunately, I won’t

be there because I’m not yet physically able to play competitive golf,” Woods said.

“I’d like to convey my regrets to the USGA lead-ership, the volunteers and the fans that I won’t be at Pinehurst. The U.S. Open is very important to me, and I know it’s going to be a great week.”

Woods last played on March 9 at Doral, where he closed with a 78 while suffering what he called back spasms. He with-drew in the middle of the fi nal round at the Honda Classic with back pain a week earlier.

Woods is a three-time U.S. Open champion, one short of the record shared by Jack Nicklaus, Ben Hogan, Bobby Jones and Willie Anderson. His most recent U.S. Open vic-tory was in 2008 at Torrey

Pines, where he won in a playoff over Rocco Medi-ate a week before he had season-ending knee sur-gery.

That was his 14th victo-ry in 46 majors, a winning rate of 30 percent as a pro. He has not won a major since Torrey Pines, leaving him four short of Nicklaus’ record.

Woods missed the Brit-ish Open and PGA Cham-pionship after knee sur-gery in 2008. He missed the U.S. Open and British Open while allowing leg injuries to heal in 2011. He missed the Masters for the fi rst time in April because of back surgery.

Nicklaus said earlier Wednesday that Woods’ health would be the big-gest obstacle in breaking his record in the majors. Woods called Nicklaus earlier Wednesday to ex-press regrets about miss-ing the Memorial, and

Nicklaus said that Woods indicated he was making progress.

“If he’s healthy, I think Tiger has got 10-plus years to play top quality tour-nament golf,” Nicklaus said. “And I’ve said many times, he’s got a little over 40 tournaments to play the major championships; he’s only got to win fi ve to pass my record. As good a player as he is, I don’t think that should be a big deal. But then again, he’s got to do it.

Plus, he’s also got to be healthy to be able to do it.”

Woods has not indicat-ed when he might be able to return to competition, saying that would be up to his doctors and how he recovers from the surgery.

“Despite missing the fi rst two majors, and sev-eral other important tour-naments, I remain very optimistic about this year and my future,” he said.

Spurs try to avert new collapse vs Thunder

Woods withdraws from the U.S. Open

FERGUSON

LEE

went 4-3 in the games he started.

Dobbs started the fi -nal four games in place of Worley and com-pleted 59.5 percent of his passes for 695 yards with two touchdowns and six interceptions. He also rushed for 189 yards and one touchdown on 38 carries. Tennessee went 1-3 in the games he started.

Peterman started ahead of Worley in a 31-17 loss to Florida before injuring his throwing hand. Peterman played as a backup in two other games and fi nished the season 10 of 23 for 45

yards with two intercep-tions.

Jones hasn’t named a leader in the competi-tion. Tennessee opens its season Aug. 31 against Utah State.

“Each individual’s had their moments,” Jones said last month. “I thought Josh Dobbs had a very, very good per-formance in our spring game. I thought Justin Worley was extremely consistent throughout the whole process. We saw glimpses of what Riley Ferguson could be, and I thought Nate Peterman showed some consistency through-out the entire course of spring.”

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

to miss out on a bonus in 2015 for not playing enough snaps in 2013 or the coming season.

When healthy, Lee is among the most produc-tive linebackers in the league, leading his po-sition with 11 intercep-tions since entering the league in 2010 despite missing 18 games.

But his injury history

dates to his college days, when he also tore a knee ligament during offsea-son workouts. The right knee injury in spring practice in 2008 kept him out that season, pushing his senior year to 2009.

The Cowboys had a fi rst-round grade on him for the 2010 draft but got him late in the sec-ond round because of the injuries.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

BY HOWARD FENDRICH

AP Sports WriterPARIS — For all the

problems facing Taylor Townsend on Wednes-day at the French Open, the 18-year-old Ameri-can’s fi rst Grand Slam tournament, she always had her notebook to of-fer comfort and counsel.

So along the way to beating 20th-seeded Alize Cornet of France 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 to reach the third round, the 205th-ranked Townsend sat at changeovers and read what she’d written dur-ing practices. Those jot-tings were useful when Townsend was losing fi ve games in a row to blow a 4-1 lead in the second set, or letting most of a 5-1 edge slip away in the third, or dealing with the wildly partisan crowd.

“They just kind of get me back into a state of mind ... (of) keeping things simple,” she said. “I mean, I have been doing it for so long, it’s kind of a habit now, so if I don’t read it, it’s weird. ... But it also helps me, especially in situations like today.”

Townsend wouldn’t offer specifi cs on what she writes in her note-book, saying with a smile: “I can’t give you my secrets.”

Townsend, who says she’s working toward a high school degree, earned a wild card from the U.S. Tennis Associa-tion based on her results during a series of lower-level tournaments this spring.

Now she’s the young-est U.S. woman in the third round at Roland

Garros since 2003.“These are the mo-

ments, these are the things, that any young professional athlete is working for,” said the bubbly Townsend.

She celebrated on court with a dance that’s popular in her home state of Georgia, then chuckled through her news conference, includ-ing when informed that Wimbledon champion Andy Murray tweeted about her.

Next for her is a match against another seeded opponent, No. 14 Carla Suarez Navarro of Spain. Win that, and Townsend would be the youngest American to get to the fourth round in Paris since Serena and Venus Williams in 1998.

It just so happens that Townsend lasted lon-ger at this French Open than the Williams sis-ters, who own a com-bined 24 Grand Slam titles but both lost earlier Wednesday.

Townsend didn’t even realize Serena Williams, the defending champion, had been defeated 6-2, 6-2 by Garbine Muguru-za of Spain. Asked at her news conference about that result, Townsend looked genuinely stunned, putting her left palm to her check and saying: “Serena lost? She did? Oh. Oops. Whoa. ... I thought she won. I saw (the score), 2 and 2. I was like, ‘Oh, that was fast.’ Wow.”

Townsend won the girls singles and doubles titles at the 2012 Austra-lian Open and became the fi rst American since 1982 to hold the year-end No. 1 junior ranking.

U.S. teen Townsend tops No. 20 Cornet at French Open

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14 • Thursday, May 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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Daily Corinthian • Thursday, May 29, 2014 •15

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NOTICE OFSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE'S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI,COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, default has oc-curred in the performance ofthe covenants, terms andconditions of a Deed of Trustdated October 27, 2003, ex-ecuted by JAMES C. WOLFE,conveying certain real prop-erty therein described toDONALD RAY DOWNS, asTrustee, for MORTGAGEELECTRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC. ASN O M I N E E F O R D E C -CISION ONE MORTGAGECOMPANY, LLC. , OriginalBeneficiary, to secure the in-debtedness therein described,as same appears of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi filed and recordedOctober 31, 2003, in DeedBook 639, Page 459; and

WHEREAS, the beneficialinterest of said Deed of Trustwas transferred and assignedto Nationstar Mortgage LLCby instrument recorded onApril 7, 2014 in the office ofthe aforesaid Chancery Clerka t I n s t rumen t Number201401360 ; and

WHEREAS, on April 9,2014, the undersigned, RubinLublin, LLC has been appoin-ted as Substitute Trustee byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk at InstrumentNumber 201401425; and

NOW, THEREFORE, theholder of said Deed of Trust,having requested the under-signed so to do, as SubstituteTrustee or his duly appoin-ted agent, by virtue of thepower, duty and authorityvested and imposed upon saidSubstitute Trustee shall, onJune 25, 2014 within the law-ful hours of sale between11:00AM and 4:00PM at thesouth steps of Alcorn CountyCourthouse proceed to sellat public outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash orcertified funds ONLY, the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississ ippi, to wit:

TRACT 1: COMMENCINGA T T H E S O U T H E A S TCORNER OF THE NORTH-WEST QUARTER OF SEC-TION 10, TOWNSHIP 2SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET TO A CORNEROF THE LAND SOLD BYVERNON SMITH TO PER-NIO WILSON BY INSTRU-MENT DATED MARCH 9,1966, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN THE CHAN-CERY CLERK`S OFFICE OFALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS-SIPPI, IN DEED BOOK 135AT PAGE 504; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESWEST 230 FEET; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESEAST 31 FEET FOR THEPOINT OF BEGINNING;THENCE RUN NORTH 11DEGREES EAST 119 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 22DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST41 FEET; THENCE RUNWEST 291 FEET, MORE ORLESS, TO THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF A PUB-LIC ROAD AND BEING THESOUTHWEST CORNER OFTHE PROPERTY CON-VEYED BY TRAVIS LITTLEAND BILLY LITTLE TO J.LARRY BARNES AND WIFE,PATTY BARNES, BY DEEDDATED SEPTEMBER 29,1969, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN SAID RE-CORDS IN DEED BOOK149 AT PAGE 194; THENCERUN IN A SOUTHERLYDIRECTION ALONG THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINEOF SAID ROAD 160 FEET,MORE OR LESS, TO THEB E G I N N I N G P O I N T .TRACT 2: COMMENCE ATTHE SOUTHEAST CORNEROF THE NORTHWESTQUARTER OF SECTION 10,TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH,RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORNCOUNTY , M ISS I S S I PP I ;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES WEST230 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST150 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 41 FEET;THENCE RUN WEST 158FEET FOR THE POINT OFBEGINNING; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 38.5 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 89DEGREES 32 MINUTESWEST 162.1 FEET TO THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY OFHILLCREST DRIVE; THENCERUN SOUTH 4 DEGREES 08MINUTES WEST ALONGSAID EAST RIGHT-OF-WAYLINE 37 FEET TO AN IRONPIN; THENCE RUN EAST150 FEET TO THE POINTOF BEGINNING, CON-TAINING 0 .13 ACRES ,MORE OR LESS .PROPERTY ADDRESS: Thestreet address of the prop-erty is believed to be 15COUNTY ROAD 209, COR-INTH, MS 38834.

In the event of any discrep-ancy between this street ad-dress and the legal descrip-tion of the property, the legaldescription shall control.

Title to the above de-scribed property is believedto be good, but I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.

THIS LAW FIRM IS AT-TEMPTING TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Rubin Lublin, LLC,Substitute Trustee

428 North Lamar Blvd,Suite 107

Oxford, MS 38655www.rubinlublin.com/prop-

erty-listings.phpTel: (877) 813-0992Fax: (404) 601-5846

Ad #70494: 2014-05-292014-06-05, 2014-06-12

2014-06-19

4TC: 05/29, 06/05 06/12,06/19/2014

14723

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OFSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE'S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI,COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, default has oc-curred in the performance ofthe covenants, terms andconditions of a Deed of Trustdated October 27, 2003, ex-ecuted by JAMES C. WOLFE,conveying certain real prop-erty therein described toDONALD RAY DOWNS, asTrustee, for MORTGAGEELECTRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC. ASN O M I N E E F O R D E C -CISION ONE MORTGAGECOMPANY, LLC. , OriginalBeneficiary, to secure the in-debtedness therein described,as same appears of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi filed and recordedOctober 31, 2003, in DeedBook 639, Page 459; and

WHEREAS, the beneficialinterest of said Deed of Trustwas transferred and assignedto Nationstar Mortgage LLCby instrument recorded onApril 7, 2014 in the office ofthe aforesaid Chancery Clerka t I n s t rumen t Number201401360 ; and

WHEREAS, on April 9,2014, the undersigned, RubinLublin, LLC has been appoin-ted as Substitute Trustee byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk at InstrumentNumber 201401425; and

NOW, THEREFORE, theholder of said Deed of Trust,having requested the under-signed so to do, as SubstituteTrustee or his duly appoin-ted agent, by virtue of thepower, duty and authorityvested and imposed upon saidSubstitute Trustee shall, onJune 25, 2014 within the law-ful hours of sale between11:00AM and 4:00PM at thesouth steps of Alcorn CountyCourthouse proceed to sellat public outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash orcertified funds ONLY, the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississ ippi, to wit:

TRACT 1: COMMENCINGA T T H E S O U T H E A S TCORNER OF THE NORTH-WEST QUARTER OF SEC-TION 10, TOWNSHIP 2SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET TO A CORNEROF THE LAND SOLD BYVERNON SMITH TO PER-NIO WILSON BY INSTRU-MENT DATED MARCH 9,1966, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN THE CHAN-CERY CLERK`S OFFICE OFALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS-SIPPI, IN DEED BOOK 135AT PAGE 504; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESWEST 230 FEET; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESEAST 31 FEET FOR THEPOINT OF BEGINNING;THENCE RUN NORTH 11DEGREES EAST 119 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 22DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST41 FEET; THENCE RUNWEST 291 FEET, MORE ORLESS, TO THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF A PUB-LIC ROAD AND BEING THESOUTHWEST CORNER OFTHE PROPERTY CON-VEYED BY TRAVIS LITTLEAND BILLY LITTLE TO J.LARRY BARNES AND WIFE,PATTY BARNES, BY DEEDDATED SEPTEMBER 29,1969, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN SAID RE-CORDS IN DEED BOOK149 AT PAGE 194; THENCERUN IN A SOUTHERLYDIRECTION ALONG THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINEOF SAID ROAD 160 FEET,MORE OR LESS, TO THEB E G I N N I N G P O I N T .TRACT 2: COMMENCE ATTHE SOUTHEAST CORNEROF THE NORTHWESTQUARTER OF SECTION 10,TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH,RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORNCOUNTY , M ISS I S S I PP I ;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES WEST230 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST150 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 41 FEET;THENCE RUN WEST 158FEET FOR THE POINT OFBEGINNING; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 38.5 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 89DEGREES 32 MINUTESWEST 162.1 FEET TO THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY OFHILLCREST DRIVE; THENCERUN SOUTH 4 DEGREES 08MINUTES WEST ALONGSAID EAST RIGHT-OF-WAYLINE 37 FEET TO AN IRONPIN; THENCE RUN EAST150 FEET TO THE POINTOF BEGINNING, CON-TAINING 0 .13 ACRES ,MORE OR LESS .PROPERTY ADDRESS: Thestreet address of the prop-erty is bel ieved to be 15COUNTY ROAD 209, COR-INTH, MS 38834.

In the event of any discrep-ancy between this street ad-dress and the legal descrip-tion of the property, the legaldescription shall control.

Title to the above de-scribed property is believedto be good, but I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.

THIS LAW FIRM IS AT-TEMPTING TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Rubin Lublin, LLC,Substitute Trustee

428 North Lamar Blvd,Suite 107

Oxford, MS 38655www.rubinlublin.com/prop-

erty-listings.phpTel: (877) 813-0992Fax: (404) 601-5846

Ad #70494: 2014-05-292014-06-05, 2014-06-12

2014-06-19

4TC: 05/29, 06/05 06/12,06/19/2014

14723

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OFSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE'S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI,COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, default has oc-curred in the performance ofthe covenants, terms andconditions of a Deed of Trustdated October 27, 2003, ex-ecuted by JAMES C. WOLFE,conveying certain real prop-erty therein described toDONALD RAY DOWNS, asTrustee, for MORTGAGEELECTRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC. ASN O M I N E E F O R D E C -CISION ONE MORTGAGECOMPANY, LLC. , OriginalBeneficiary, to secure the in-debtedness therein described,as same appears of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi filed and recordedOctober 31, 2003, in DeedBook 639, Page 459; and

WHEREAS, the beneficialinterest of said Deed of Trustwas transferred and assignedto Nationstar Mortgage LLCby instrument recorded onApril 7, 2014 in the office ofthe aforesaid Chancery Clerka t I n s t rumen t Number201401360 ; and

WHEREAS, on April 9,2014, the undersigned, RubinLublin, LLC has been appoin-ted as Substitute Trustee byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk at InstrumentNumber 201401425; and

NOW, THEREFORE, theholder of said Deed of Trust,having requested the under-signed so to do, as SubstituteTrustee or his duly appoin-ted agent, by virtue of thepower, duty and authorityvested and imposed upon saidSubstitute Trustee shall, onJune 25, 2014 within the law-ful hours of sale between11:00AM and 4:00PM at thesouth steps of Alcorn CountyCourthouse proceed to sellat public outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash orcertified funds ONLY, the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississ ippi, to wit:

TRACT 1: COMMENCINGA T T H E S O U T H E A S TCORNER OF THE NORTH-WEST QUARTER OF SEC-TION 10, TOWNSHIP 2SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET TO A CORNEROF THE LAND SOLD BYVERNON SMITH TO PER-NIO WILSON BY INSTRU-MENT DATED MARCH 9,1966, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN THE CHAN-CERY CLERK`S OFFICE OFALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS-SIPPI, IN DEED BOOK 135AT PAGE 504; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESWEST 230 FEET; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESEAST 31 FEET FOR THEPOINT OF BEGINNING;THENCE RUN NORTH 11DEGREES EAST 119 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 22DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST41 FEET; THENCE RUNWEST 291 FEET, MORE ORLESS, TO THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF A PUB-LIC ROAD AND BEING THESOUTHWEST CORNER OFTHE PROPERTY CON-VEYED BY TRAVIS LITTLEAND BILLY LITTLE TO J.LARRY BARNES AND WIFE,PATTY BARNES, BY DEEDDATED SEPTEMBER 29,1969, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN SAID RE-CORDS IN DEED BOOK149 AT PAGE 194; THENCERUN IN A SOUTHERLYDIRECTION ALONG THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINEOF SAID ROAD 160 FEET,MORE OR LESS, TO THEB E G I N N I N G P O I N T .TRACT 2: COMMENCE ATTHE SOUTHEAST CORNEROF THE NORTHWESTQUARTER OF SECTION 10,TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH,RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORNCOUNTY , M ISS I S S I PP I ;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES WEST230 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST150 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 41 FEET;THENCE RUN WEST 158FEET FOR THE POINT OFBEGINNING; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 38.5 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 89DEGREES 32 MINUTESWEST 162.1 FEET TO THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY OFHILLCREST DRIVE; THENCERUN SOUTH 4 DEGREES 08MINUTES WEST ALONGSAID EAST RIGHT-OF-WAYLINE 37 FEET TO AN IRONPIN; THENCE RUN EAST150 FEET TO THE POINTOF BEGINNING, CON-TAINING 0 .13 ACRES ,MORE OR LESS .PROPERTY ADDRESS: Thestreet address of the prop-erty is believed to be 15COUNTY ROAD 209, COR-INTH, MS 38834.

In the event of any discrep-ancy between this street ad-dress and the legal descrip-tion of the property, the legaldescription shall control.

Title to the above de-scribed property is believedto be good, but I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.

THIS LAW FIRM IS AT-TEMPTING TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Rubin Lublin, LLC,Substitute Trustee

428 North Lamar Blvd,Suite 107

Oxford, MS 38655www.rubinlublin.com/prop-

erty-listings.phpTel: (877) 813-0992Fax: (404) 601-5846

Ad #70494: 2014-05-292014-06-05, 2014-06-12

2014-06-19

4TC: 05/29, 06/05 06/12,06/19/2014

14723

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

LARGEST SELECTION ofPre-Owned MobileHomes for Sale!!We have Single &

Double Wides to choosefrom, and we handle

delivery and set up withthe purchase of your

home. Call 662-401-1093and let me find yournext home and save

you LOTS of $$$,

TRANSPORTATION

AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES

0848

DANA 60 For FORD 3/4ton 410 geared POSI-$300.00- 662-396-1098

GRILL FOR 94" 4-Runner,$40.00 662-396-1098

RECEIVER HITCH for 94'4-Runner, $50.00- 662-396-1098

RECEIVER HITCH for 94'Dakota- $50.00. 662-396-1098

CARS FOR SALE086879' FORD F- 100 &

99' Pontiac MontanaFor info Call:662-660-6447

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955NOTICE OF

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE'S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI,COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, default has oc-curred in the performance ofthe covenants, terms andconditions of a Deed of Trustdated October 27, 2003, ex-ecuted by JAMES C. WOLFE,conveying certain real prop-erty therein described toDONALD RAY DOWNS, asTrustee, for MORTGAGEELECTRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC. ASN O M I N E E F O R D E C -CISION ONE MORTGAGECOMPANY, LLC. , OriginalBeneficiary, to secure the in-debtedness therein described,as same appears of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi filed and recordedOctober 31, 2003, in DeedBook 639, Page 459; and

WHEREAS, the beneficialinterest of said Deed of Trustwas transferred and assignedto Nationstar Mortgage LLCby instrument recorded onApril 7, 2014 in the office ofthe aforesaid Chancery Clerka t I n s t rumen t Number201401360 ; and

WHEREAS, on April 9,2014, the undersigned, RubinLublin, LLC has been appoin-ted as Substitute Trustee byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk at InstrumentNumber 201401425; and

NOW, THEREFORE, theholder of said Deed of Trust,having requested the under-signed so to do, as SubstituteTrustee or his duly appoin-ted agent, by virtue of thepower, duty and authorityvested and imposed upon saidSubstitute Trustee shall, onJune 25, 2014 within the law-ful hours of sale between11:00AM and 4:00PM at thesouth steps of Alcorn CountyCourthouse proceed to sellat public outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash orcertified funds ONLY, the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to wit:

TRACT 1: COMMENCINGA T T H E S O U T H E A S TCORNER OF THE NORTH-WEST QUARTER OF SEC-TION 10, TOWNSHIP 2SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET TO A CORNEROF THE LAND SOLD BYVERNON SMITH TO PER-NIO WILSON BY INSTRU-MENT DATED MARCH 9,1966, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN THE CHAN-CERY CLERK`S OFFICE OFALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS-SIPPI, IN DEED BOOK 135AT PAGE 504; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESWEST 230 FEET; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESEAST 31 FEET FOR THEPOINT OF BEGINNING;THENCE RUN NORTH 11DEGREES EAST 119 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 22DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST41 FEET; THENCE RUNWEST 291 FEET, MORE ORLESS, TO THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF A PUB-LIC ROAD AND BEING THESOUTHWEST CORNER OFTHE PROPERTY CON-VEYED BY TRAVIS LITTLEAND BILLY LITTLE TO J.LARRY BARNES AND WIFE,PATTY BARNES, BY DEEDDATED SEPTEMBER 29,1969, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN SAID RE-CORDS IN DEED BOOK149 AT PAGE 194; THENCERUN IN A SOUTHERLYDIRECTION ALONG THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINEOF SAID ROAD 160 FEET,MORE OR LESS, TO THEB E G I N N I N G P O I N T .TRACT 2: COMMENCE ATTHE SOUTHEAST CORNEROF THE NORTHWESTQUARTER OF SECTION 10,TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH,RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORNCOUNTY , M ISS I S S I PP I ;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES WEST230 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST150 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 41 FEET;THENCE RUN WEST 158FEET FOR THE POINT OFBEGINNING; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 38.5 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 89DEGREES 32 MINUTESWEST 162.1 FEET TO THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY OFHILLCREST DRIVE; THENCERUN SOUTH 4 DEGREES 08MINUTES WEST ALONGSAID EAST RIGHT-OF-WAYLINE 37 FEET TO AN IRONPIN; THENCE RUN EAST150 FEET TO THE POINTOF BEGINNING, CON-TAINING 0 .13 ACRES ,MORE OR LESS .PROPERTY ADDRESS: Thestreet address of the prop-erty is believed to be 15COUNTY ROAD 209, COR-INTH, MS 38834.

In the event of any discrep-ancy between this street ad-dress and the legal descrip-tion of the property, the legaldescription shall control.

Title to the above de-scribed property is believedto be good, but I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.

THIS LAW FIRM IS AT-TEMPTING TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Rubin Lublin, LLC,Substitute Trustee

428 North Lamar Blvd,Suite 107

Oxford, MS 38655www.rubinlublin.com/prop-

erty-listings.phpTel: (877) 813-0992Fax: (404) 601-5846

Ad #70494: 2014-05-292014-06-05, 2014-06-12

2014-06-19

4TC: 05/29, 06/05 06/12,06/19/2014

14723

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

NEW MISS State Purse,$8. 603-1382

OLD WOOD door, 36"-$35.00, 415-3770

PETUNIAS, ASSORTEDColors, .30 cents each.662-212-4450

QUEEN MATTRESS withBox Springs- $45, 415-3770

QUEEN RAILS for bed-$25.00- 415-3770

RAZOR MOPAD, runsgood, $125.00- 287-6993

RECEIVER HITCH off FordVan (full Framer) $20.00and a step bumper re-ceiver, $20.00- 872-3109

SEVERAL SMALL Jacks,wi l l work for smal lp ickups or tra i lers ,$5.00- 284-5609, 286-8628

STACK WASHER and Dry-er, Excellent Condition,Moving Back to Wiscon-sin and don't need it,$350.00- 262-496-8392

STAINLESS STEEL Sink w/Delta Faucet, 33 x 22 x 6,$30.00. 660-1382

TWIN MATTRESS and BoxSprings- $45, 415-3770

VERY LARGE assort-m e n t o f B r o k e n &Chipped arrowheads,scrappers, drills, birdpoints, etc from all overthe US. Beautiful colorsi n c l u d i n g p e t r i f i e dwood. Call to set up anappt. to view- $350.00-286-8257

VINTAGE LIBBY'S RoastBeef wooden shippingbox, product of Brazil-$25.00- 286-8257

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375/ $400 sec. de-posit + util, 284-7433.

FURNISHED APARTMENTS0615

2BR/ 1BA all electricapartment, $350 permonth plus Dep. 662-210-2472

HOMES FOR RENT0620

2 BR, 1 BA, in AlcornCent. Sch. Dist., $475mo., $475 dep. Ref's.req'd. No TVRHA. 662-415-1838.

3 BEDROOM, 1.5 BathBrick home on KendrickRd. No Smokers, $800mo/ $800 Deposit- 731-926-0229

3BR/ 2BA House forrent. Ref. and Depositrequired, 662-210-2472

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

4005 IVY LANECORINTH SCHOOL

DISTRICT

3BR, 2 Bath Brick/VinylHome in Nice, QuietNeighborhood, Ap-prox. 1500 sq. ft. Incl.L a r g e K i t c h e nw/Breakfast Bar, Hard-wood & Tile Floors,Marble Vanities, Re-cent ly Remodeled,N e w P a i n tThroughout, AttachedDbl. Garage, Shed andFenced Backyard.

Call 662-808-0339$135,000.

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

55" TV, RCA HDTV, Excel-lent Condition, movingback to Wisconsin andd o n t h a v e r o o m ,$350.00- Corinth, 262-496-8392

OLD WOOD hand carvedspira l and diamonddesign walking cane w/round ball on the top,all one piece. 36.5" tall-$20.00- 286-8257

LARGE 58" x 58" Bronzedouble pane fixed win-d o w w i t h g r i d sbetween the glass, veryheavy, $25.00- 286-8257

OLD MILK or cream can,one handle w/ woodencork. 15.5 T x 8" w, has as m a l l b r a s s p l a t esoldered that says "fillto this point" $25.00-286-8257

ELVIS PRESLEY Belt andBuckle made by VonWest Ft. Collins, CO,USA. Elvis on a 29 centpostage stamp, no. 166of 500, about 30 yearsold. $50. 286-8287

8 UNOPENED Bundles ofTamko Elite glass-seal,terra-cotta (red)3 tabshingles, all for $100.00-286-8257

OLD ANTIQUE Potato Binabout 2' tal l and 2'deep, 4 ' wide on 4square legs- $30.00- 286-8257

ALL WOOD Twin Bed,$30.00- 415-3770

BAG CONTAINING 34teeth, 19 bear and 15shark. $40.00- 286-8257

BRAND NEW Elmo Let'sRock- $25.00, Call 660-2392

COBRA GRAVITY BackDrive w/ 9.5 loft rh, $15.603-1382

(2 PAIR) Designer boots,Bought at Austins, sizes6 & 7, $75.00 OBO Call662-415-9098.

DIAMOND CLAD tool boxf o r a s m a l l t r u c k -$ 1 0 0 . 0 0 - 2 8 6 - 2 6 5 5

EARTHQUAKE 2 manauger, Model 9800, 3.8H P , l i k e n e w . O i lChanged, carb rebuilt,new spark plug... cometake her for a test run.$250 FIRM- 872-3109

FIVE BOXES of ComicBooks, 300 books in abox, $100 each- 415-3770

FRONTLINE PLUS, 89-132lb dogs, 3 dose packs.$25.00 662-212-2492

FULL SIZE bed with rails-$30.00- 415-3770

FULL SIZE Mattress withbox springs- $45, 415-3770

GAS STOVE, GE, light Al-mond, 30", Works Good.$125- 415-8180

GM GOLF Mallet Putter,model 415CR. $20 OBO.603-1382

GOOD STARTER SportsCard Col lect ion, 40cards that are all All StarPlayers, $30- 603-1382

JUNIOR JEANS , somenew, some s l ight lyworn, sizes 3-7, $5 pair,Call 662-415-9098.

KING COBRA SS 380Dr iver rh 10 .5 loft .$15.00, needs new grip.603-1382

MENS BLACK Converseall star hightop shoes,sz 13, like new, $30.00-286-5216

MENS BOWLING shoes,size 11, like new, $15.286-5216

NEW OLE Miss Purse, $8.603-1382

OLD CHEVY hub-cap dogdish, 68-70 Camero novaor Chevelle, $15- 603-1382

OLD WOOD Cabinet, has3 shelves and doors,$35.00- 415-3770

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

4 USED, all aluminum,complete whirley birdsoff remodel job. DarkGrey, good condition,all 4 for $40.00- 286-8257

2 BRAND new rolls ofGalvanized flashing. Earoll is 20" x 50ft. boughtat Lowes, was $53.45 ea,will sell for $35 ea. or$50 for both, FIRM- 286-8257

10 OLD rough sawn oakboards from very oldbarn, average 8' long 7"wide, all for $50. 286-8257

OLD WOODEN Keg w/ 4metal bands, 23" tall x18" w - $25.00- 286-5257

1955 CHEVY Belair hubcap- $15, 603-1382

2 BEAUTIFUL Brown Bo-er Bucklings for sale,$75 ea. 872-3109

2 BRAND New MasterLocks w/ Key, $10- 603-1382

2 LADIES Fossil watches,in good condition, needbatteries, $15 for bothor $10.00 each- 603-1382

KOBALT ROLLER roof re-mover tools, was $54.00ea, get them both for$40.00-286-8257

KOHLER DECO S i lverMedicine Cabinets (Newin the Box) 20x 26 x 53/8, K-CB-CLW202655,was $158.00 ea, sell for$75 ea or both for $100.286-8257

HANSEN TEXAS CottonScales, model # 8916, upto 160lbs, $40.00, 286-8257

BAG OF 123 pieces: cuff-l inks, lapel pins, tieclasps, earrings, medal-lions, and pins, $25.00.286-8257

BAG OF costume jew-elry, 60pc. Rings, neck-l a c e s , b r o a c h e s , &bracelets. $30.00- 286-8257

8 JIM Beam collectione d i t i o n d e c a n t e rbottles, great condi-tion, all for $25- 286-8257

GIANT PAIR of 29" long,heavy duty snips. Weigh12lbs and has an an-chor symbol stampedinto both sides, maybeused by blacksmith orSailor. Perfect for cut-ting vinyl siding. $35.00286-8257

EXPLODED AND SplitOpen length ways, shellcasing from WWII, thickcasing, 13" long, 4-5"across, weighs 28lbs.$20.00- 286-8257

2 EXPENSIVE Textured,oriental look, lamps, co-balt blue & light blue w/white flower pattern-$40.00 for both- 286-8257

4 X 8 Tilt Trailer, $400.00-286-2655

BEAUTIFUL, RARE 1/4sawn oak f i replace,d o u b l e m a n t l e w /beveled mirror, 72x56, asteal @ $400. 286-8257

15 NEW Corning glassblock terrariums per-fect for making gifts orfor beta fish bowls, ovalopening in the top. Paid$150, asking $50 for all.286-8257

VERY OLD 100+ years, 3d r a w e r d r e s s e r w /beveled mirror androsette trim, $150. 286-8257

VERY OLD, 100+ years, 1drawer & 1 door w/beveled mirror, rosettetrim, gossip bench ornight stand, $100- 286-8257

OLD, SINGLE handledcrock for churning but-ter. Complete with lidand hole with woodenchurn. 18" x 11", $50.286-8257

RESTAURANT0260

WE ARE seeking a fullyqualified

LEAD COOKin Corinth.

The appl icant musthave 3 years experi-ence in food prepara-tion in a busy kitchen,operating all kitchenequipment, able to fol-low recipes, maintainc l e a n l i n e s s o f t h ecook's area and have aServ-Safe Certification.Attention to detail andgetting along with oth-ers is a must. The ap-p l i c a n t m u s t h a v eknowledge of Missis-sippi State Health De-partment Rules andRegulations, ability totake direction and workwith others, have skill inpresenting and garnish-ing food and know-ledge in record keep-ing.

Please email yourresume to:

[email protected]

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320FREE PUPPIES,ALREADYwormed and had shots.Call: 662-396-1097

FARM

MERCHANDISE

MUSICAL MERCHANDISE0512

CASIO ELECTRIC Key-board, $35.00, 415-3770

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT0521

2 WHEEL Lawn MowerTrailer, $60.00- 662-396-1098

ANTIQUE SEARS REELMOWER. Quiets, no gas,cords, 18" cut, eco-friendly- $45.00- 665-9897

CRAFTSMAN 42" cut,$325. 286-2655

RYOBI LEAF B lower,Nearly New, $50.00- 662-212-2492

SNAPPER 33" cut- $325,286-2655

FURNITURE0533BEAUTIFUL MATCHINGoak sofa table, coffeetable, and 2 end tables,moving back to Wiscon-sin and don't needthem. $375.00 OBO, 262-496-8392

BROWN FAUX Leatherlove seat, $50.00- 662-396-1098

MEDIUM SIZE Table, nochairs- $35.00- 415-3770

RIVERSIDE COUCH andC h a i r , 2 r e c l i n e r s ,$ 1 7 5 . 0 0 - 2 8 6 - 3 6 0 8

MISC. TICKETS0536OTTERBOX (NEW in box)a r m o r s e r i e s f o riphone5, waterproof,dust proof, crush proof,drop proof. $40.00 212-2492

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

OLD STEAMER Trunk, 34"w x 20" d x 22" H, goodshape for the age ,$40 .00- 286-8257

10 NEW 16x16x8 con-crete blocks for build-ing flue for wood heat-er, $100. 284-5609, 286-8628

NICE OAK stack-able cas-sette tape cases with 36mint condition country-western tapes, Elvis,Merl Haggard, GeorgeJones, Johnny Cash, 19different artists, $40.00OBO 286-8257

MAKITA 1/2" routermodel 3612B no. 5675E,Missing bottom plasticanti-friction plate, $50.286-8257

3 BRAND New Rolls ofa l u m i n u m f l a s h i n g .Each roll is 14" x 50 ft,bought at Lowes, was$40.47ea will sell for$25.00 ea or all 3 for $60FIRM- 286-8257

VERY OLD, 2 man cross-cut saw. 71" x 5.5" with2 8.5" wooden handles.Beaut i fu l ly pa intedlandscape scene withbarns, houses, trees &gristmill, $100. 286-8257

Page 16: 052914 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Thursday, May 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

SERVICES

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. Auto Sales

GUARANTEED

868AUTOMOBILES

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

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-fl at 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.

$85,000662-415-0590

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

2004 Nissan Murano,

black, 120k miles, loaded, adult driver, garage kept, Bose, leather,

exc. cond., $10,500.

662-284-6559.

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

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

work.$1500

662-664-3958

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a

High Five stainless prop,

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

details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr.,

new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS

AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO731-453-5031

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

2013 KUBOTA3800 SERIES

TRACTOR16’ TRAILER, DOUBLE

AXEL, BUSH HOG, BACKHOE,

FRONT LOADER$25,000

WILL TRADE662-643-3565

REDUCED

1991 Mariah 20’ ski boat, 5.7 ltr.

engine, new tires, $6700.

662-287-5893, leave msg. & will

return call.

804BOATS

1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC

19’6” LONGFIBERGLAS

INCLUDES TRAILERTHIS BOAT IS

KEPT INSIDE AND IS IN EXCELLENT

CONDITIONNEW 4 CYL MOTOR

PRICE IS NEGOTIABLECALL 662-660-3433

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LT

EXTENDED CAB4.8

One of a kind46,000 mi.

garage kept.$20,000

CALL662-643-3565

REDUCED

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc.

drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical

condition”. $7400.

662-664-3538

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $2600 obo.

662-664-1957.

1984 CORVETTE383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum.

heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt

w/new paint job (silver fl eck paint). $9777.77

Call Keith662-415-0017.

REDUCED

868AUTOMOBILES

1979 OLDSMOBILE

OMEGA6 CYLINDER

RUNS GREAT!38,000 ORIGINAL MILES

$5,000CALL PICO:

662-643-3565

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2001 CAMERO CONVERTIBLE

NEW TOPV6

30+ MPGZ28 APPEARANCE

PACKAGEALL POWER

$4900662-415-9121

NEWREDUCED

Suzuki DR 200

Dual Sport

2,147 miles

LIKE NEW!

$1,950

231-667-4280

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1996 VW CabrioConvertible

178,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee

283,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

662-396-1182

FOR SALE

Call:287-1552

2000 ChryslerTown & Country

$2,70000

2007 White Toyota Tundra

double cab, 5.7 V8 SR5, Aluminum wheels, 64,135

miles, lots of extras, $19,000.

Call 662-603-9304

Loweline Boat

14’ fl at bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor

and all. Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503

2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer

Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube

$19,300662-427-9063

2004 Volvo S80

113,000 Miles, 1 Owner

4 New tires, New Battery

$5900287-7424

OMC Cobra out drive4.3 Chevy V6, runs great

New Tires on trailer$ 00

662-287-2935 or 901-489-9413

9 Four Winds18ft. Ski Boat -

Model 180 Freedom

2000Town CarApproximately: 114,000 miles

Needs air conditioning

work.

287-6357

2000 FORDEXCURSION

115,769 Miles4 Wheel Drive

Black with Tinted Windows

$7500, negotiable Call Patrick:

662-287-6626

17’ 1991 Evinrude40 h.p.Bass

Tracker$2500.00

Call: 662-287-0991

or662-665-2020

Suzuki DR 2002007 Dual Sport

With Helmet2,147 milesLIKE NEW!$1,550 OBO

231-677-4280

2008 Ford Ranger XL

Regular Cab

4CYL- 2.3 Liter

Automatic 5 Speed

w/ overdrive

2wd, ABS (4wheel),

Power Steering

AM/FM radio, White

68,500 Miles

$8,279.00Call:

662-286-8866

YAMAHAGOLF CART

2012 LIMITED EDITIONLOW USAGE,

MINT CONDITIONBALL AND CLUB WASHER

SAND BOTTLE KITSSPEED KIT

LOW USAGE, MINT CONDITIONBALL AND CLUB WASHER

SAND BOTTLE KITS, SPEED KITS662-286-9909

2000 Chevy Express RV

Handicap Van w/ Extra Heavy DutyWheelchair Lift101,538 Miles

$ ,000 OBO

662-287-7403

2006 ChryslerSebring

New Tires, CD Player,Cold Air

Call 662-319-7145

$2,575.00 OBO

FOR SALE1988 Dodge

15 Passenger VanLow Miles $750.00

662-287-7807

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

$1,500.00662-462-5669

BED ONLY Fully Enclosed Utility Truck

8' Long BedAll tool trays and Boxes have locks

$7975.00

LEGAL SERVICES

ATTN: CANDIDATESList your name and offi ce under the political listing for only $190.00. Runs every publishing day until fi nal election. Come by the Daily Coriathian offi ce at 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 287-8147 for more info. Must be paid in advance.

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTThis is a paid political advertisement which is intended as a public service for the voters. It has been submitted to and approved and submitted by each political candidate listed below or by the candidate’s campaign manager or assistant manager. This listing is not intended to suggest or imply that these are the only candidates for these offi ces.

CHIEF OF POLICE

BEN GANN

AUTO REPAIR0844

We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse

Let our certifi ed technicians quickly restore your vehicle to pre-accident condition with a satisfaction guarantee.

State-of-the-Art Frame StraighteningDents, Dings & Scratches RemovedCustom Color Matching Service

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance CompanyNo up-front payments.No hassle. No paperwork.

Free Estimates25 Years professional service experienceRental cars available

Corinth Collision Center810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING

Announcement is hereby giv-en that the Walnut HousingAuthority will conduct a pub-lic hearing to discuss itsAgency Plan, which has beendeveloped in compliance withthe Quality Housing andWork Responsibility Act of1998. In Addition, WalnutHousing Authority will dis-cuss the implementation ofnew flat rents that will be ef-fective September 1, 2014.The Agency Plan and pro-posed flat rent schedule isavailable for review at the of-fices of Tennessee Valley Re-gional Housing Authority, loc-ated at 1200 Proper Street,Corinth, MS. The public hear-ing will be held at the WalnutHousing Housing AuthorityCommunity Center, 241James Street, Walnut, MS onThursday, August 28, 2014 at1:00 p.m. All residents andother interested parties areinvited to attend.

WALNUT HOUSING AU-THORITY

THOMAS M. COLEMANEXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

1tc 05/28/201414741

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOORAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE ESTATE OFDIANE SAVAGE

NO. 2013-0686-02-MM

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters of Administrationhaving been granted the 12thday of May, 2014, by theChancery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to theundersigned upon the Estateof Diane Savage, deceased,not is hereby given to all per-sons having claims against saidEstate to present the same tothe Clerk of said Court forprobate and registration, ac-cording to law, within ninety(90) days from the date offirst publication or they willbe forever barred.

This the 22 of May, 2014.

IDA HODGEADMINSTRATRIX

LANGSTON & LOTT, P.A.100 South Main StreetP.O. Box 382Booneville, MS 38829Telephone: 662-728-9733Facsimile: 662-728-1992

4tc 05/22, 05/29, 06/05, &06/12/201414733

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL AND TESTA-MENT OF MARY RUTHTYSON, DECEASED

NO.2014-0286-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters Testamentaryhave been on this day gran-ted to the undersigned, BillyWayne Tyson and Jerry AllenTyson, on the estate of MaryRuth Tyson, deceased, by theChancery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, and allpersons having claims againstsaid estate are required tohave the same probated andregistered by the Clerk ofsaid Court within ninety (90)days after the date of the firstpublication of this notice orthe same shall be foreverbarred. The first day of pub-lication for this notice is the22nd day of May, 2014.

WITNESS our signatureson this 20th day of May, 2014.

BILLY WAYNE TYSON

JERRY ALLEN TYSON

JOINT EXECUTORSOF THE ESTATE OF

MARY RUTH TYSON,DECEASED

3tc 05/22, 05/29, &06/05/201414734

LEGALS0955

CAP LOAN PROGRAM

Public Notice

The Board of Supervisorsacting for and on behalf of Al-corn County, Mississippi tookup for consideration the mat-ter of authorizing and approv-ing a loan on behalf of theCounty from the MississippiDevelopment Authority (the"Department") for the pur-pose of completing capital im-provements identified as:

PURCHASE OF BUILDINGAND INFRASTRUCTURE

IMPROVEMENTS

BE IT RESOLVED BYTHE GOVERNINGBODY OF ALCORNCOUNTYAS FOL-

LOWS:

Section 1. The GoverningBody of Alcorn County doeshereby declare its intentionto enter into a loan agree-ment with the Department inthe principal amount not toexceed one million dollars($1,000,000.00) for the pur-pose of completing the capit-al improvements identifiedabove.

Section 2. The Loan will besecured by a Note executedand delivered by the Countyto the Department. Failure ofthe County to meet its repay-ment obligations shall resultin the forfeiture of homesteadexemption reimbursement inan amount sufficient to repayobligations due until suchtime as the indebtedness hasbeen discharged or arrange-ments to discharge such in-debtedness satisfactory to theDepartment have been made.

Section 3. The GoverningBody proposes to authorizeand approve the Loan fromthe Department in theamount and for the aforesaidpurposes at a meeting of theGoverning Body to be held atits regular meeting place atthe Alcorn County Board-room in Corinth, Mississippiat 10:00 a.m. on the 13th dayof June 2014, or at somemeeting held subsequentthereto. This date assignedto authorize and approve theaforementioned loan docu-ments has been set to meetprogram requirements whichmandate that four public no-tices be issued prior to loanclosing. This will allow suffi-cient time for public com-ments.

The motion having receivedthe foregoing vote of theGoverning Body, the Presid-ent declared the motion car-ried and the Resolution adop-ted, on this the 19th day ofMay 2014.

Lowell Hinton,President/BOS

Alcorn County, Mississippi

Bobby MaroltChancery Clerk

4tc 5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12/201414731

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given thatthe Alcorn Board of Educa-tion, Alcorn School District,Alcorn County, Mississippiwill receive until 2:00 p.m. onFriday, June 6, 2014, in theOffice of the Superintendentof Education, Alcorn SchoolDistrict Administrative Office,31 CR 401, Corinth, MSsealed bids for the purchaseof the following for the 2014-2015 SY:

(1) Gasoline/Diesel Fuel

Bid forms may be pickedup at the Superintendent's of-fice or may be requested tobe emailed or faxed by calling662-286-5591.

2tc 5/22, 5/29/201414728

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE ESTATE OFDIANE SAVAGE

NO. 2013-0686-02-MM

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters of Administrationhaving been granted the 12thday of May, 2014, by theChancery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to theundersigned upon the Estateof Diane Savage, deceased,not is hereby given to all per-sons having claims against saidEstate to present the same tothe Clerk of said Court forprobate and registration, ac-cording to law, within ninety(90) days from the date offirst publication or they willbe forever barred.

This the 22 of May, 2014.

IDA HODGEADMINSTRATRIX

LANGSTON & LOTT, P.A.100 South Main StreetP.O. Box 382Booneville, MS 38829Telephone: 662-728-9733Facsimile: 662-728-1992

4tc 05/22, 05/29, 06/05, &06/12/201414733

LEGALS0955

CAP LOAN PROGRAM

Public Notice

The Board of Supervisorsacting for and on behalf of Al-corn County, Mississippi tookup for consideration the mat-ter of authorizing and approv-ing a loan on behalf of theCounty from the MississippiDevelopment Authority (the"Department") for the pur-pose of completing capital im-provements identified as:

PURCHASE OF BUILDINGAND INFRASTRUCTURE

IMPROVEMENTS

BE IT RESOLVED BYTHE GOVERNINGBODY OF ALCORNCOUNTYAS FOL-

LOWS:

Section 1. The GoverningBody of Alcorn County doeshereby declare its intentionto enter into a loan agree-ment with the Department inthe principal amount not toexceed one million dollars($1,000,000.00) for the pur-pose of completing the capit-al improvements identifiedabove.

Section 2. The Loan will besecured by a Note executedand delivered by the Countyto the Department. Failure ofthe County to meet its repay-ment obligations shall resultin the forfeiture of homesteadexemption reimbursement inan amount sufficient to repayobligations due until suchtime as the indebtedness hasbeen discharged or arrange-ments to discharge such in-debtedness satisfactory to theDepartment have been made.

Section 3. The GoverningBody proposes to authorizeand approve the Loan fromthe Department in theamount and for the aforesaidpurposes at a meeting of theGoverning Body to be held atits regular meeting place atthe Alcorn County Board-room in Corinth, Mississippiat 10:00 a.m. on the 13th dayof June 2014, or at somemeeting held subsequentthereto. This date assignedto authorize and approve theaforementioned loan docu-ments has been set to meetprogram requirements whichmandate that four public no-tices be issued prior to loanclosing. This will allow suffi-cient time for public com-ments.

The motion having receivedthe foregoing vote of theGoverning Body, the Presid-ent declared the motion car-ried and the Resolution adop-ted, on this the 19th day ofMay 2014.

Lowell Hinton,President/BOS

Alcorn County, Mississippi

Bobby MaroltChancery Clerk

4tc 5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12/201414731

LEGALS0955

CAP LOAN PROGRAM

Public Notice

The Board of Supervisorsacting for and on behalf of Al-corn County, Mississippi tookup for consideration the mat-ter of authorizing and approv-ing a loan on behalf of theCounty from the MississippiDevelopment Authority (the"Department") for the pur-pose of completing capital im-provements identified as:

PURCHASE OF BUILDINGAND INFRASTRUCTURE

IMPROVEMENTS

BE IT RESOLVED BYTHE GOVERNINGBODY OF ALCORNCOUNTYAS FOL-

LOWS:

Section 1. The GoverningBody of Alcorn County doeshereby declare its intentionto enter into a loan agree-ment with the Department inthe principal amount not toexceed one million dollars($1,000,000.00) for the pur-pose of completing the capit-al improvements identifiedabove.

Section 2. The Loan will besecured by a Note executedand delivered by the Countyto the Department. Failure ofthe County to meet its repay-ment obligations shall resultin the forfeiture of homesteadexemption reimbursement inan amount sufficient to repayobligations due until suchtime as the indebtedness hasbeen discharged or arrange-ments to discharge such in-debtedness satisfactory to theDepartment have been made.

Section 3. The GoverningBody proposes to authorizeand approve the Loan fromthe Department in theamount and for the aforesaidpurposes at a meeting of theGoverning Body to be held atits regular meeting place atthe Alcorn County Board-room in Corinth, Mississippiat 10:00 a.m. on the 13th dayof June 2014, or at somemeeting held subsequentthereto. This date assignedto authorize and approve theaforementioned loan docu-ments has been set to meetprogram requirements whichmandate that four public no-tices be issued prior to loanclosing. This will allow suffi-cient time for public com-ments.

The motion having receivedthe foregoing vote of theGoverning Body, the Presid-ent declared the motion car-ried and the Resolution adop-ted, on this the 19th day ofMay 2014.

Lowell Hinton,President/BOS

Alcorn County, Mississippi

Bobby MaroltChancery Clerk

4tc 5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12/201414731

LEGALS0955

CAP LOAN PROGRAM

Public Notice

The Board of Supervisorsacting for and on behalf of Al-corn County, Mississippi tookup for consideration the mat-ter of authorizing and approv-ing a loan on behalf of theCounty from the MississippiDevelopment Authority (the"Department") for the pur-pose of completing capital im-provements identified as:

PURCHASE OF BUILDINGAND INFRASTRUCTURE

IMPROVEMENTS

BE IT RESOLVED BYTHE GOVERNINGBODY OF ALCORNCOUNTYAS FOL-

LOWS:

Section 1. The GoverningBody of Alcorn County doeshereby declare its intentionto enter into a loan agree-ment with the Department inthe principal amount not toexceed one million dollars($1,000,000.00) for the pur-pose of completing the capit-al improvements identifiedabove.

Section 2. The Loan will besecured by a Note executedand delivered by the Countyto the Department. Failure ofthe County to meet its repay-ment obligations shall resultin the forfeiture of homesteadexemption reimbursement inan amount sufficient to repayobligations due until suchtime as the indebtedness hasbeen discharged or arrange-ments to discharge such in-debtedness satisfactory to theDepartment have been made.

Section 3. The GoverningBody proposes to authorizeand approve the Loan fromthe Department in theamount and for the aforesaidpurposes at a meeting of theGoverning Body to be held atits regular meeting place atthe Alcorn County Board-room in Corinth, Mississippiat 10:00 a.m. on the 13th dayof June 2014, or at somemeeting held subsequentthereto. This date assignedto authorize and approve theaforementioned loan docu-ments has been set to meetprogram requirements whichmandate that four public no-tices be issued prior to loanclosing. This will allow suffi-cient time for public com-ments.

The motion having receivedthe foregoing vote of theGoverning Body, the Presid-ent declared the motion car-ried and the Resolution adop-ted, on this the 19th day ofMay 2014.

Lowell Hinton,President/BOS

Alcorn County, Mississippi

Bobby MaroltChancery Clerk

4tc 5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12/201414731

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION OFTHE ESTATE OF DANNYKENDALL STRICKLAND

NO. 2014-0268-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on this daygranted to the undersigned,Danny Richmond Strickland,on the estate of Danny Kend-all Strickland, deceased, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, andall persons having claimsagainst said estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theClerk of said Court withinninety (90) days after the dateof first publication of this no-tice or the same shall beforever barred. The first dayof publication of this notice isthe 15th day of May, 2014.

Witness my signature onthis 13th day of May, 2014.

DANNY RICHMONDSTRICKLAND,

ADMINISTRATOR OF THEESTATE OF DANNY

KENDALL STRICKLAND,DECEASED

3tc 05/15, 05/22, 0529/201414724

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OFSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE'S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI,COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, default has oc-curred in the performance ofthe covenants, terms andconditions of a Deed of Trustdated October 27, 2003, ex-ecuted by JAMES C. WOLFE,conveying certain real prop-erty therein described toDONALD RAY DOWNS, asTrustee, for MORTGAGEELECTRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC. ASN O M I N E E F O R D E C -CISION ONE MORTGAGECOMPANY, LLC. , OriginalBeneficiary, to secure the in-debtedness therein described,as same appears of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi filed and recordedOctober 31, 2003, in DeedBook 639, Page 459; and

WHEREAS, the beneficialinterest of said Deed of Trustwas transferred and assignedto Nationstar Mortgage LLCby instrument recorded onApril 7, 2014 in the office ofthe aforesaid Chancery Clerka t I n s t rumen t Number201401360 ; and

WHEREAS, on April 9,2014, the undersigned, RubinLublin, LLC has been appoin-ted as Substitute Trustee byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk at InstrumentNumber 201401425; and

NOW, THEREFORE, theholder of said Deed of Trust,having requested the under-signed so to do, as SubstituteTrustee or his duly appoin-ted agent, by virtue of thepower, duty and authorityvested and imposed upon saidSubstitute Trustee shall, onJune 25, 2014 within the law-ful hours of sale between11:00AM and 4:00PM at thesouth steps of Alcorn CountyCourthouse proceed to sellat public outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash orcertified funds ONLY, the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississ ippi, to wit:

TRACT 1: COMMENCINGA T T H E S O U T H E A S TCORNER OF THE NORTH-WEST QUARTER OF SEC-TION 10, TOWNSHIP 2SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET TO A CORNEROF THE LAND SOLD BYVERNON SMITH TO PER-NIO WILSON BY INSTRU-MENT DATED MARCH 9,1966, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN THE CHAN-CERY CLERK`S OFFICE OFALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS-SIPPI, IN DEED BOOK 135AT PAGE 504; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESWEST 230 FEET; THENCERUN NORTH 11 DEGREESEAST 31 FEET FOR THEPOINT OF BEGINNING;THENCE RUN NORTH 11DEGREES EAST 119 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 22DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST41 FEET; THENCE RUNWEST 291 FEET, MORE ORLESS, TO THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF A PUB-LIC ROAD AND BEING THESOUTHWEST CORNER OFTHE PROPERTY CON-VEYED BY TRAVIS LITTLEAND BILLY LITTLE TO J.LARRY BARNES AND WIFE,PATTY BARNES, BY DEEDDATED SEPTEMBER 29,1969, WHICH HAS BEENRECORDED IN SAID RE-CORDS IN DEED BOOK149 AT PAGE 194; THENCERUN IN A SOUTHERLYDIRECTION ALONG THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINEOF SAID ROAD 160 FEET,MORE OR LESS, TO THEB E G I N N I N G P O I N T .TRACT 2: COMMENCE ATTHE SOUTHEAST CORNEROF THE NORTHWESTQUARTER OF SECTION 10,TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH,RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORNCOUNTY , M ISS I S S I PP I ;THENCE RUN WEST 867F E E T ; T H E N C E R U NNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST392 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES WEST230 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 11 DEGREES EAST150 FEET; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 41 FEET;THENCE RUN WEST 158FEET FOR THE POINT OFBEGINNING; THENCE RUNNORTH 22 DEGREES 30MINUTES EAST 38.5 FEET;THENCE RUN NORTH 89DEGREES 32 MINUTESWEST 162.1 FEET TO THEEAST RIGHT-OF-WAY OFHILLCREST DRIVE; THENCERUN SOUTH 4 DEGREES 08MINUTES WEST ALONGSAID EAST RIGHT-OF-WAYLINE 37 FEET TO AN IRONPIN; THENCE RUN EAST150 FEET TO THE POINTOF BEGINNING, CON-TAINING 0 .13 ACRES ,MORE OR LESS .PROPERTY ADDRESS: Thestreet address of the prop-erty is believed to be 15COUNTY ROAD 209, COR-INTH, MS 38834.

In the event of any discrep-ancy between this street ad-dress and the legal descrip-tion of the property, the legaldescription shall control.

Title to the above de-scribed property is believedto be good, but I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.

THIS LAW FIRM IS AT-TEMPTING TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Rubin Lublin, LLC,Substitute Trustee

428 North Lamar Blvd,Suite 107

Oxford, MS 38655www.rubinlublin.com/prop-

erty-listings.phpTel: (877) 813-0992Fax: (404) 601-5846

Ad #70494: 2014-05-292014-06-05, 2014-06-12

2014-06-19

4TC: 05/29, 06/05 06/12,06/19/2014

14723

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION OFTHE ESTATE OF DANNYKENDALL STRICKLAND

NO. 2014-0268-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on this daygranted to the undersigned,Danny Richmond Strickland,on the estate of Danny Kend-all Strickland, deceased, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, andall persons having claimsagainst said estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theClerk of said Court withinninety (90) days after the dateof first publication of this no-tice or the same shall beforever barred. The first dayof publication of this notice isthe 15th day of May, 2014.

Witness my signature onthis 13th day of May, 2014.

DANNY RICHMONDSTRICKLAND,

ADMINISTRATOR OF THEESTATE OF DANNY

KENDALL STRICKLAND,DECEASED

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