053114 daily corinthian e edition

16
Vol. 118, No. 128 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages 1 section Saturday May 31, 2014 50 cents Today 86 T-storms Tonight 68 Index On this day in history 150 years ago Grant’s Overland Campaign to Richmond has been a tactical failure, but a strategic success. Over the last month he has driv- en Lee’s army from the Rapidan River to the gates of Richmond. He has taken the initiative and forced Lee onto the defensive. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather........ 7 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 40% chance of rain In an effort to improve the safety of pedestrian and bicy- cle trafc to and from Kossuth schools, the Town of Kossuth submitted an application for funding assistance in early Feb- ruary. The town has built new and replaced old sidewalks along Polk Street which run from downtown to the schools in re- cent years. Funding for the projects was procured primarily from the town and from grants given by the Municipal Development Authority. “Good value for the dollar has been achieved on our projects so far,” said Town of Kossuth Mayor Don Pace. “We’ve re- placed or added over a half mile of concrete sidewalks in the central part of town.” These improvements, accord- ing to Pace, have greatly im- proved safety and convenience for pedestrians. Pedestrian trafc conges- tion in the downtown area and along Highway 2 has been of great concern to the Alcorn County School District, Kossuth schools and the Town of Kos- suth since the current school year began in the fall of 2013. During a recent town meet- ing, attended by school repre- sentatives, the Board of Super- visors, interested citizens and the Mississippi Department of Improvements boost Kossuth safety BY KIMBERLY SHELTON [email protected] Youngsters can learn how to “use the force” when it comes to theatre. Corinth Theatre-Arts is giv- ing young individuals the op- portunity to experience theatre though its annual summer camp June 16-27. Students will be taught the methods of acting, speaking in verse, stage combat, prop building, playwriting and much more during the Star Wars- themed event. “Whether they decide to do the theatre or not, students of- ten nd life-long friends and become patrons of the arts,” said CT-A Artistic Director Cris Skinner. “Some nd the spark for professional careers, al- though that isn’t our goal, and some students overcome shy- ness and learn to solve prob- lems creatively through the camp … ultimately they learn how to work as a group in a fun way.” Skinner and Tupelo’s Cheryl Theatre to host camp for kids BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] The Northeast Mississippi Boys & Girls Club raised over $5,000. In phenomenal fashion. Through its 3rd Annual Phenom- enal Woman of the Year Gala, the club was able to raise funds to keep its many youth pro- grams going. Corinth Area Conven- tion and Visitors Bureau Direc- tor Christy Burns was selected the 2014 Phenomenal Woman of the Year. Burns was among 11 other women vying for the coveted honor started by Boys & Girls Club Corinth Unit Di- rector Christy Grice. “It was a great honor just to be nominated,” said Burns. “The event was a lot of fun for a great cause.” Other nalist for the award included Chylencia Phelan, Burns honored at B&G Club gala BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Most people who engage in target practice want to im- prove their marksmanship. But for Kelly Young, who enjoys making and sharing jewelry from expended bullet casings, it’s more about the bling. She sells the handmade cre- ations — earrings, necklaces and bracelets — at festivals including Corinth’s Green Market. “It’s hard to come up with an original anything any- more,” said Young, an art in- structor at the Monroe County Advanced Learning Center. “I’m really into repurposing and recycling, and I had seen somebody that was making some things out of bullets. I thought I could do that, and I thought in our area it would be very popular.” The bullet jewelry is among the offerings of Rescued Rel- ics, the business of Young and her husband Britt, who makes welded yard art. They hold a season seller spot at the Green Market. “We always have at least 10 vendors selling handcrafted jewelry,” said Museum Direc- tor Brandy Steen. “Kelly’s bul- let jewelry is very unique, and Sandra and Russ Waller also make and sell jewelry made out of bullets.” Young is accustomed to surprised reactions as people realize what the conversation pieces are. Artist turns bullets into bling BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Staff photo by Zack Steen Kelly Young of Smithville is a regular at the Green Market with unusual jewelry made from bullet casings. SELMER, Tenn. — Arts in Mc- Nairy is taking a little stress out of their annual photo contest. “One of the new unique fea- tures is the way winners are categorized,” said Lanessa Miller, contest organizer. “En- trants no longer have to stress over a label. The photo of a bird swooping across a lake scape could belong in Landscape or in Wildlife. The entrants no longer have to decide what category a photo should go in.” Miller is excited about the change for the contest. “By entering without catego- ries, our judges can be exible when dividing winners into one of four areas of strength,” she added. Offering over $500 in cash prizes, the contest is open to all ages. Photographers earning a signicant portion of their in- come through photography are not eligible. “We would like to see more semi-professional photogra- phers enter and more young people and students,” said Mill- er. “Parents should encourage their young photographers to enter for the experience, regard- less of the competitive aspect. It is a show of talent, everyone who enters is displayed.” Photos taken over three years ago, previously published photos or past AiM photo contest win- ning entries are not eligible. Digi- tal enhancement/HDR photos are welcomed, but not required. “The contest is in reality an opportunity to nancially sup- port the arts while participating in an art exhibit,” said Miller. “It also looks good on applica- tions and resumes.” Photos must be submitted as 8x10 prints and as .jpg digi- tal les. No 5x7 prints will be accepted. For display consis- tency, prints must be matted or mounted. “Judges will be looking at composition, lighting, contrast, use of depth of eld and point of view,” Miller added. “Judges assign winners according to ar- eas of strength.” The categories include Por- trait - character of a subject, such as person, animal, plant, or object and often close-ups; Environment - essence of a place, rural or urban, interior or exterior and often long shots with McNairy County and sur- rounding areas given prefer- ence; Artistry - shows creativity of the photographer in concept, editing, or staging; Moment - should capture a eeting mo- ment due to action, coincidence or lighting, etc; and Best of Show - qualities in all the areas. “Last year’s Best in Show by Nichole Parks was essentially a wonderful portrait of a gleeful young girl. Artistry in the colors and composition, the backyard party environment and the can- did moment captured made it our Best in Show,” added Mill- er. “One of the Portrait winners was a close-up on a Cadillac by Jack Huff, while not a typical portrait of a living person or animal, the image showed the personality and character of the vintage Cadillac.” Miller said those who are hoping to win should pay close attention to the descriptions of Portrait, Environment, Mo- ment and Artistry when choos- ing which work to submit. Entry fees are $10 per photo (up to three photos) and $5 per photo for each additional entry. Cash prizes include Best in Show, $100. Winners in the four categories will receive $70, rst place and $35, second place. Third place and honor- able mentions will receive a entry fee waiver for the 2015 contest. Entries must be postmarked by June 14 or hand-delivered to Simpson & Simpson Law in downtown Selmer by June 21. Entries may be mailed to Paige Holmes c/o AiM Photo Contest, P.O. Box 66, Selmer, Tenn., 38375. Checks or money order for entry fee total should be made payable to Arts In McNairy. Winners will be notied at the conclusion of judging. En- tries will be on display at the AiM Gallery in the Latta Visi- tor’s and Cultural Center in Selmer, across from the court- house. Prizes will be awarded at the closing reception on Aug. 15 at 6pm. (For more information, con- tact Miller at 931-206-4860. To download a entry form or to pay entry fee, visit artsinmc- nairy.com or facebook.com/ artsinmcnairy. Email .jpgs dig- ital les to AbleArtist@gmail. com. Include entrant name and title in each lename.) Arts in McNairy contest celebrates area’s best photography BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Burns Please see SAFETY | 2 Please see BURNS | 2 Please see JEWELRY | 2 Please see CAMP | 2 Daily Corinthian 2782 S Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com 2782 S Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com Doug Jumper Michael McCreary Ann Hardin 662-286-2828 “Clients move for FREE” Realty & Associates, LLC Realty & Associates, LLC

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053114 daily corinthian e edition

TRANSCRIPT

Vol. 118, No. 128 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

SaturdayMay 31, 2014

50 centsToday86

T-stormsTonight

68

Index On this day in history 150 years agoGrant’s Overland Campaign to Richmond has been a tactical

failure, but a strategic success. Over the last month he has driv-en Lee’s army from the Rapidan River to the gates of Richmond. He has taken the initiative and forced Lee onto the defensive.

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

Weather........7 Obituaries........6 Opinion........4 Sports......12

40% chance of rain

In an effort to improve the safety of pedestrian and bicy-cle traffi c to and from Kossuth schools, the Town of Kossuth submitted an application for funding assistance in early Feb-ruary.

The town has built new and replaced old sidewalks along Polk Street which run from downtown to the schools in re-cent years.

Funding for the projects was procured primarily from the town and from grants given by the Municipal Development

Authority.“Good value for the dollar has

been achieved on our projects so far,” said Town of Kossuth Mayor Don Pace. “We’ve re-placed or added over a half mile of concrete sidewalks in the central part of town.”

These improvements, accord-

ing to Pace, have greatly im-proved safety and convenience for pedestrians.

Pedestrian traffi c conges-tion in the downtown area and along Highway 2 has been of great concern to the Alcorn County School District, Kossuth schools and the Town of Kos-

suth since the current school year began in the fall of 2013.

During a recent town meet-ing, attended by school repre-sentatives, the Board of Super-visors, interested citizens and the Mississippi Department of

Improvements boost Kossuth safetyBY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Youngsters can learn how to “use the force” when it comes to theatre.

Corinth Theatre-Arts is giv-ing young individuals the op-portunity to experience theatre though its annual summer camp June 16-27.

Students will be taught the methods of acting, speaking in verse, stage combat, prop building, playwriting and much more during the Star Wars-themed event.

“Whether they decide to do the theatre or not, students of-ten fi nd life-long friends and become patrons of the arts,” said CT-A Artistic Director Cris Skinner. “Some fi nd the spark for professional careers, al-though that isn’t our goal, and some students overcome shy-ness and learn to solve prob-lems creatively through the camp … ultimately they learn how to work as a group in a fun way.”

Skinner and Tupelo’s Cheryl

Theatre to host camp for kids

BY STEVE [email protected]

The Northeast Mississippi Boys & Girls Club raised over $5,000.

In phenomenal fashion.Through its

3rd Annual P h e n o m -enal Woman of the Year Gala, the club was able to raise funds to keep its many youth pro-grams going.

C o r i n t h Area Conven-tion and Visitors Bureau Direc-tor Christy Burns was selected the 2014 Phenomenal Woman of the Year. Burns was among 11 other women vying for the coveted honor started by Boys & Girls Club Corinth Unit Di-rector Christy Grice.

“It was a great honor just to be nominated,” said Burns. “The event was a lot of fun for a great cause.”

Other fi nalist for the award included Chylencia Phelan,

Burns honored at B&G Club gala

BY STEVE [email protected]

Most people who engage in target practice want to im-prove their marksmanship.

But for Kelly Young, who enjoys making and sharing jewelry from expended bullet casings, it’s more about the bling.

She sells the handmade cre-ations — earrings, necklaces and bracelets — at festivals including Corinth’s Green Market.

“It’s hard to come up with

an original anything any-more,” said Young, an art in-structor at the Monroe County Advanced Learning Center. “I’m really into repurposing and recycling, and I had seen somebody that was making some things out of bullets. I thought I could do that, and I thought in our area it would be very popular.”

The bullet jewelry is among the offerings of Rescued Rel-ics, the business of Young and her husband Britt, who makes welded yard art. They hold a

season seller spot at the Green Market.

“We always have at least 10 vendors selling handcrafted jewelry,” said Museum Direc-tor Brandy Steen. “Kelly’s bul-let jewelry is very unique, and Sandra and Russ Waller also make and sell jewelry made out of bullets.”

Young is accustomed to surprised reactions as people realize what the conversation pieces are.

Artist turns bullets into blingBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Staff photo by Zack Steen

Kelly Young of Smithville is a regular at the Green Market with unusual jewelry made from bullet casings.

SELMER, Tenn. — Arts in Mc-Nairy is taking a little stress out of their annual photo contest.

“One of the new unique fea-tures is the way winners are categorized,” said Lanessa Miller, contest organizer. “En-trants no longer have to stress over a label. The photo of a bird swooping across a lake scape could belong in Landscape or in Wildlife. The entrants no longer have to decide what category a photo should go in.”

Miller is excited about the change for the contest.

“By entering without catego-ries, our judges can be fl exible when dividing winners into one of four areas of strength,” she added.

Offering over $500 in cash prizes, the contest is open to all ages. Photographers earning a signifi cant portion of their in-come through photography are

not eligible.“We would like to see more

semi-professional photogra-phers enter and more young people and students,” said Mill-er. “Parents should encourage their young photographers to enter for the experience, regard-less of the competitive aspect. It is a show of talent, everyone who enters is displayed.”

Photos taken over three years ago, previously published photos or past AiM photo contest win-ning entries are not eligible. Digi-tal enhancement/HDR photos are welcomed, but not required.

“The contest is in reality an opportunity to fi nancially sup-port the arts while participating in an art exhibit,” said Miller. “It also looks good on applica-tions and resumes.”

Photos must be submitted as 8x10 prints and as .jpg digi-tal fi les. No 5x7 prints will be accepted. For display consis-tency, prints must be matted or

mounted.“Judges will be looking at

composition, lighting, contrast, use of depth of fi eld and point of view,” Miller added. “Judges assign winners according to ar-eas of strength.”

The categories include Por-trait - character of a subject, such as person, animal, plant, or object and often close-ups; Environment - essence of a place, rural or urban, interior or exterior and often long shots with McNairy County and sur-rounding areas given prefer-ence; Artistry - shows creativity of the photographer in concept, editing, or staging; Moment - should capture a fl eeting mo-ment due to action, coincidence or lighting, etc; and Best of Show - qualities in all the areas.

“Last year’s Best in Show by Nichole Parks was essentially a wonderful portrait of a gleeful young girl. Artistry in the colors and composition, the backyard

party environment and the can-did moment captured made it our Best in Show,” added Mill-er. “One of the Portrait winners was a close-up on a Cadillac by Jack Huff, while not a typical portrait of a living person or animal, the image showed the personality and character of the vintage Cadillac.”

Miller said those who are hoping to win should pay close attention to the descriptions of Portrait, Environment, Mo-ment and Artistry when choos-ing which work to submit.

Entry fees are $10 per photo (up to three photos) and $5 per photo for each additional entry.

Cash prizes include Best in Show, $100. Winners in the four categories will receive $70, fi rst place and $35, second place. Third place and honor-able mentions will receive a entry fee waiver for the 2015 contest.

Entries must be postmarked

by June 14 or hand-delivered to Simpson & Simpson Law in downtown Selmer by June 21. Entries may be mailed to Paige Holmes c/o AiM Photo Contest, P.O. Box 66, Selmer, Tenn., 38375.

Checks or money order for entry fee total should be made payable to Arts In McNairy.

Winners will be notifi ed at the conclusion of judging. En-tries will be on display at the AiM Gallery in the Latta Visi-tor’s and Cultural Center in Selmer, across from the court-house. Prizes will be awarded at the closing reception on Aug. 15 at 6pm.

(For more information, con-tact Miller at 931-206-4860. To download a entry form or to pay entry fee, visit artsinmc-nairy.com or facebook.com/artsinmcnairy. Email .jpgs dig-ital fi les to [email protected]. Include entrant name and title in each fi lename.)

Arts in McNairy contest celebrates area’s best photographyBY ZACK STEEN

[email protected]

Burns

Please see SAFETY | 2

Please see BURNS | 2Please see JEWELRY | 2Please see CAMP | 2

Daily Corinthian

2782 S Harper Rd. • Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com2782 S Harper Rd. • Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com

DougJumper

MichaelMcCreary

AnnHardin 662-286-2828

“Clients move

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Realty & Associates, LLCRealty & Associates, LLC

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 2014

Debra Gallaher, Debo-rah Cooper, Amy Bonds, Felesica Hill, Dr. Blak-ley Fowler, Mary Kelly, Suzzy Marlar, Veronica Goett, Tonya Maxedon and Maya Mayes.

The winner was deter-mined by who raised the most funds for the club.

Kelly was runner-up for the honor.

“Christy (Grice) does a great job of putting to-gether the gala,” added Burns. “She is great for the club and the kids … she is the real phenom-enal woman.”

Rebecca Spence was named the fi rst winner of the coveted award in 2012. Dorothy Cum-mings took home the prize last year.

Honorees were recog-nized with a red carpet reception followed by a dinner and awards cer-emony at the Crossroads Arena.

To be nominated for the award, women had to meet the criteria which included:

■ The role(s) or area(s) the nominee has excelled

■ How the nominee has demonstrated ser-vice worthy of recogni-tion

■ How the nominee’s contribution to diversity has impacted a particu-lar fi eld, group, com-munity, or humanity at large

■ Over what period of time has the nominee made a major commit-ment

■ Has the nominee’s

contribution been recog-nized elsewhere (i.e.: the media, by other awards, interest groups, church-es, professional organi-zations, etc.)

Burns, a University of Mississippi graduate, is currently a board mem-ber for MS Hills Heritage Area and the MS/AL Ru-ral Tourism Association and former member of the Main Street Board. She is also a life member of the Junior Auxiliary.

“Helping others was ingrained in me at a very early age,” said the winner. “I believe com-munity service is some-thing our children learn by watching us do … we have always strived to teach our children to look for ways to help others.”

“The fi rst couple of times when I was wearing mine, people would stop and say, ‘Those are bullets …’”

Just about any used bullet of any caliber will do. Many of the ones Young turns into jewelry are given by friends.

“There was a lady I met at the Green Market that she and her husband have a hunting camp,” said Young. “She saved me all the shotgun shells over

the winter and brought me a garbage sack full.”

But if the supply runs short, the Youngs may spend a little time fi ring at targets.

Sometimes she may give the bullet shells a lit-tle cleanup, but often she does not.

“I personally like the natural way that brass ages, so I just leave most of them the way they are,” said Young, who lives in Smithville.

She combines the cas-

ings with adornments such as glass beads, brass pieces and deer antler.

“I have done some spe-cial ones where I draw on them and then I acid etch them,” said Young. “I’ve painted some of them.”

She believes they are ver-satile fashion accessories.

“With jeans and a t-shirt, they look great,” said Young. “I make some that have rhinestones and are a little fancier. They can go from dressy down to casual.”

She enjoys repurposing vintage items in general and also makes unusual jewelry with old silverware.

“I think people like the fact that we are not wast-ing,” said Young. “Repur-posing right now is very big.”

Sproles, a winner of the Eu-dora Welty New Playwright Series and former CT-A tech-nical director, will serve as camp instructors.

“A treat for students will be learning how to create a show from writing, acting to be-hind the scenes work,” added Skinner.

The junior camp, for ages 6-11, is slated for 9 a.m. to noon both weeks. Cost is $100.

Senior theatre camp, ages 12-18, goes from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and cost $175.

Cost includes a T-shirt.Campers will present their

work on June 27.Deadline to register is June

13.For more information

about the camp, email CT-A at [email protected], call 662-287-2995 or drop by the theatre from 1-6 p.m. Tuesday-Friday.

JEWELRY

CONTINUED FROM 1

Transportation (MDOT) it was decided that efforts to reduce traffi c confl icts and congestion were war-ranted. Prompt permis-sion was given by MDOT who offered to assist in the installation of fl ash-ing warning signs along

Highway 2.A funding opportunity

called Safe Routes to school (SRTS) was iden-tifi ed through MDOT and an application for consideration was sub-mitted.

“We haven’t gotten an answer yet, but we feel our chances are good. We

have prepared a good ap-plication,” said Mayor Pace. “The proposed im-provements will not only provide more sidewalks, but will provide encour-agement for bicyclists and a safer overall environ-ment for everyone with the improved fl ashing signs.”

BURNS

CONTINUED FROM 1

Kossuth Mayor Don Pace and members of the Board of Aldermen review maps of proposed areas in need of improvement.

SAFETY

CONTINUED FROM 1

Green Market at the Crossroads

Museum

■ Saturday, June 7, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

■ Handmade crafts and locally grown pro-duce

■ Free museum ad-mission

■ Entertainment in front of the museum

■ For vendor applica-tion: corinthgreenmar-ket.com

CAMP

CONTINUED FROM 1

ELLISVILLE — Sarah Palin told a friendly audience Friday that Mississippi state Sen. Chris McDaniel would be an uncom-promising opponent of debt and President Barack Obama, insisting that’s the real issue in a race overshadowed by the ar-rests of four McDaniel support-ers in a bizarre plot against six-term Sen. Thad Cochran.

“Those are distractions to take your eye off the ball,” Palin told the crowd at Jones County Junior college in McDaniel’s hometown, ahead of Tuesday’s GOP Senate primary.

“Chris McDaniel knows that the status quo has got to go,” Palin said, taking aim at Co-chran. “If we are going to get America back on the right track, it’s insane to assume we will get any different results from what we have been seeing by re-electing the same old guard

that’s been doing the same old thing... going along with Barack Obama’s failed policies that have dug us so deep into debt.”

McDaniel is trying to change the subject from the arrests of four of his supporters in a nursing home scandal that has eclipsed the contest. Those ar-rested are charged with con-spiracy to illegally photograph Cochran’s bedridden wife, Rose Cochran, in a nursing home. Mrs. Cochran has been institu-tionalized since 2001, has lost her ability to speak and is in hospice care, according to her family.

McDaniel and his support-ers have raised questions about whether it’s appropriate for a female aide to accompany Cochran on taxpayer-funded overseas trips. Cochran’s cam-paign has denied any implica-tion of wrongdoing. McDaniel says he had nothing to do with the nursing home plot.

Mississippi is central to the Republicans’ goal of gaining the six seats required to take control of the Senate after the November elections. After a string of losses by tea party can-didates in Georgia, North Caro-lina, and Kentucky, McDaniel is seen by conservatives as per-haps their best chance to oust a GOP incumbent whom and run the candidate they prefer. But the GOP establishment and its allies have showered money on incumbents like Cochran, who has a chance to become Sen-ate Appropriations Committee chairman if he’s elected to a seventh term.

But in Mississippi, the story line has jutted into bizarre ter-ritory.

The four men charged in the photo incident are McDaniel supporters. One of them, at-torney Mark Mayfi eld of Ridge-land, is a Central Mississippi Tea Party board member who

has raised campaign cash for McDaniel. Another, John Mary of Hattiesburg, took over host-ing a conservative talk radio show after McDaniel left that job before being elected to the state Senate. The blogger, Clayton Kelly of Pearl, has pro-McDaniel photos on his Face-book page and anti-Cochran statements on his blog. Sager’s Facebook page includes an an-nouncement he shared for a McDaniel campaign event.

Moving on to the looming pri-mary, McDaniel called on his supporters Friday to rally their neighbors and continue Missis-sippi’s tradition of defi ance.

“Every so often, we’re just stubborn enough to look at Washington, D.C., and say ‘Leave us alone,’ “ McDaniel said. He said he respects Co-chran, but also said “career pol-iticians are killing this country” and closed by telling the crowd “Let’s send him home.”

Palin backs McDaniel to unseat CochranBY JEFF AMYAssociated Press

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Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 2014

Today in

history

Today is Saturday, May 31, the 151st day of 2014. There are 214 days left in the year.

 Today’s Highlight

in History:

On May 31, 1889, some 2,200 people in Johnstown, Pennsylva-nia, perished when the South Fork Dam hold-ing back Lake Conem-augh collapsed, send-ing 20 million tons of water rushing through the town.

On this date:

In 1594, Italian artist Tintoretto died in Ven-ice in his mid-70s.

In 1669, English diarist Samuel Pepys (peeps) wrote the final entry of his journal, blaming his failing eye-sight for his inability to continue.

In 1790, President George Washington signed into law the first U.S. copyright act.

In 1913, U.S. Sec-retary of State Wil-liam Jennings Bryan proclaimed the 17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, providing for popular election of U.S. senators, to be in effect.

In 1935, movie stu-dio 20th Century Fox was created through a merger of the Fox Film Corp. and Twentieth Century Pictures.

In 1949, former State Department official and accused spy Alger Hiss went on trial in New York, charged with perjury (the jury dead-locked, but Hiss was convicted in a second trial).

In 1961, South Africa became an indepen-dent republic as it with-drew from the British Commonwealth.

In 1962, former Nazi official Adolf Eichmann was hanged in Israel a few minutes before midnight for his role in the Holocaust.

In 1977, the trans-Alaska oil pipeline, three years in the mak-ing, was completed.

In 1989, House Speaker Jim Wright, dogged by questions about his ethics, an-nounced he would resign. (Tom Foley later succeeded him.)

In 1994, the United States announced it was no longer aiming long-range nuclear mis-siles at targets in the former Soviet Union.

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.

All other areas will be delivered the next day.

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Postmaster:Send address changes to:

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Photo & History Walk successful

IUKA – Last weekend’s Iuka Photo & History Walk has been deemed a success.

More than 80 people took part in the walk that featured 17 historical or photogenic stops around downtown Iuka.

Organizer Opal Lovelace said people from Corinth, Selmer, Tenn., Red Bay, Ala., Nashville, Jackson and Starkville attended the free event, along with many from the Tishom-ingo County area.

“Those with cameras naturally enjoyed the pho-tography aspect of it,” said Lovelace. “Others enjoyed the history and many locals had many memories to  share and stories to tell.”

According to Lovelace, plans to make the walk an annual event are in the works.

 Dates of Heritage Festival changed

IUKA – The Iuka Heri-tage Festival committee recently announced a date change for their an-nual event.

The festival dates will change from August 31-

31 to August 29-30.Thousands normally at-

tend the two-day festival featuring local entertain-ment, activities, food and fun.

The festival pays hom-age to the diverse his-tory of the area including Indian heritage, the Civil War, the railroad and the town’s world famous Min-eral Springs.

 Charges filed in scrap metal theft

BOONEVILLE — A Booneville man faces felony charges after al-legedly being caught in the act while stealing scrap metal.

John D. Coleman, 30,

of County Road 3130, Booneville, was arrested May 19 and charged with grand larceny. He has been released on a $2,500 bond.

Prentiss County Sheriff Randy Tolar said Cole-man was arrested after a property owner saw him stealing the metal.

“We continue to have a serious problem with scrap metal theft and ask that the public be ex-tra aware of suspicious activity and immediately report such activity to the sheriff’s office, along with a good description of vehicles involved, oc-cupants, and if possible, a direction of travel,” said Tolar.

NE gradsNortheast Mississippi Community College gradu-ates Allie Downs of Booneville (left) and Price Coleman of Kossuth (right) take a moment to com-memorate the college’s sixty-sixth commencement exercises on Friday, May 16 inside the Bonner Arnold Coliseum. Downs and Coleman were part of 400 Northeast students that took part in the two-day graduation ceremonies at the Booneville based-college. In total nearly 700 students re-ceived their diplomas from Northeast.

NE math and scienceNortheast Mississippi Community College mathematics and science division recently held its annual high school mathematics and science competition on the Booneville campus. High schools from across Northeast’s five-county area – Alcorn, Prentiss, Tippah, Tishomingo and Union – competed in the one-day com-petition in late March that tested students on their mathematic and scientific ability. Each school was allowed to send up to six participants to the competition with competitors scoring on a pair of timed, multiple-choice tests – one in math-ematics and one in science. Awards were given to the top ten students in each category that scored the highest on each of the respective tests and schools were awarded based on their students’ performances for the top overall school in each category and the top three schools with the combine student scores in mathematics and science. Placing in the Top 10 in the science category were Luke Wooten of Kossuth High School, Shelby Lambert of Walnut High School, Hunter Wommack of Walnut High School, Kristen Olsen of New Albany High School, Kayla Bates of Walnut High School, (back row l-r) Jacob South of Tishom-ingo County High School, Mariah Morrow of Walnut High School, Hayden Park of Corinth High School, William Rossell of Walnut High School and Isaiah Siddell of Walnut High School. Lambert captured top honors for the science division while Wommack was the division’s runner-up.

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Letter to the editor

To the Editor:I am writing in response to an article in the

Corinthian on Sunday, May 11, 2014, page 1 at top. I reacted to the article on two levels. One was that if $199,238,890 is the cost of one year for providing free breakfasts and lunches to all Alcorn County school students and that will amount to a 4-7 percent in-crease in the taxes, then the present ad valor-em taxes in the county must amount to $2.8 billion (which they can not be). The other level was that not all students are so needy as to require taxpayers to feed them two meals a day. I drive up and down the county roads and fi nd all these beautiful homes, many very large, with expensive vehicles sitting in the driveways and garages. Surely most people can afford to feed their own children!!!

I wrote to Mr. Zack Steen, the writer of the article, and he told me that the State was go-ing to pay 70 percent of the amount. I am, however, not attracted by the idea that some other taxing entity will pick up the tab. All of that money comes from taxpayers.

Another way to look at this proposed in-crease, just for one school district in the State of Mississippi, is to remember that our State lawmakers have just recently voted $65,000,000 to give all the teachers in the state a raise in salary. Somehow, I can’t see spending three times the cost of that much needed salary increase just to give free meals to one school district.

When we went to school we ate breakfast at home (meaning we had to get up at 6:30 in the morning to eat, get ready and go to school). We either took our lunches from home or took the money to pay for those lunches at school. What has happened to parental responsibility? Please, people of Alcorn County, consider carefully before we cross such a line. May God give you wisdom.

Lawrence Barr

No free lunch?

Prayer for today

A verse to share

With his address at West Point, President Obama succeeded where all his pre-vious efforts had failed. He brought us together.

Nobody seems to have liked the speech.

A glance shows that the New York Times and Wash-ington Times, the Finan-cial Times and Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal were all disap-pointed with it.

As was said of one of Har-ding’s addresses, it was “an army of pompous phrases marching across the land-scape in search of an idea.”

What Obama has is less a foreign policy doctrine than a foreign policy disposition. He is a reluctant interven-tionist.

He got us out of Iraq and is taking us out of Afghani-stan. Yet he was pushed into a war on Libya that turned out disastrously and is now dipping his toe into what he has called “somebody else’s civil war” in Syria.

Still, Obama’s foreign policy is not going to be judged on what he said, but what he did and failed to do. The same holds for the Belt-way hawks, now so harsh on Obama, who once whooped it up for George W. Bush.

Perhaps it is time to re-view the respective records.

After America backed him in going after al-Qaida after 9/11, Bush, on a tri-umphal high, invaded Iraq.

Soon we were mired in the two longest wars in our history.

A m e r i c a r e s p o n d e d by evicting Bush’s party from leader-ship of both houses of

Congress and the White House in 2008.

And what did we miss out on by not electing John Mc-Cain?

McCain would have put us into the Russo-Georgian war over South Ossetia. He would have bombed Iran’s nuclear sites. We would still have troops in Iraq. He would have bombed Syria. He would have sent weapons to Kiev to oust the Russians from Crimea and crush the pro-Russian militias in the Donbass. He would be pushing for membership in NATO for Ukraine and Georgia, so the next time there was a dust-up with Putin’s Russia, we could be right in the thick of it.

As for Obama’s foreign policy, while the think tanks and media elite regard it as vacillating and weak, the people who gave him two electoral victories seem generally to approve.

Broadly speaking, Ameri-cans are delighted our sol-diers are coming home from

Iraq and Afghanistan. They were passionately opposed last August to U.S. action in Syria. They dislike Iran, but like that the president is ne-gotiating with Iran.

Thus, whoever persuaded Obama to send TOW anti-tank missiles to the Syrian rebels and train and arm them may end up respon-sible for his worst foreign policy blunder.

For we are now extending and broadening a Syrian war that has left 150,000 dead. And we have become de facto allies of both the al-Qaida-linked Al Nusra Front and the more ex-treme Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, which is carving out a caliphate from Aleppo to Anbar.

President Obama de-clared years ago that Assad must go.

But has he thought through who rises when Assad falls?

Another worrisome pos-sibility must be considered.

When President Rea-gan inserted U. S. Marines into Lebanon’s civil war in 1983, blowback came in the bombing of our embassy and the terrorist attack on the Beirut barracks, killing 241.

Are we not, by sending antitank missiles into a war where Assad is backed by Hezbollah and Iran, in-viting terrorist retaliation against us or the Jordanian

monarchy that is playing host to U.S. advisers?

There is a reason why Obama has been unable to formulate an Eisenhower Doctrine or a Reagan Doc-trine. The nation is divided within itself about where and when we should stand or fi ght.

Putin’s Russia is not Sta-lin’s. Xi Jinping’s China is not Mao’s. The 20th cen-tury’s ideological struggles between communism, fas-cism and democracy that produced World War II and the Cold War are over.

Quite naturally, old allies from Saudi Arabia to South Korea and from Japan to Europe want to know why the U.S. is not out there on point, confronting their ad-versaries, as we once did.

But the reality is that we are not threatened by Assad in Syria, or by whose fl ag fl ies over Crimea or Donetsk, or by who gets custody of the islets in the South or East China Sea.

“Great Britain has lost an empire, but not yet found a role,” said Dean Acheson, also at West Point, half a century ago.

Something similar to that is happening to us.

Obama’s speech simply mirrored our own ambiva-lence.

Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of “Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?”

Is Obama blundering into Syrian quagmire?

It takes a nearly impen-etrable obtuseness to con-clude that the most salient thing to know about Uni-versity of California Santa Barbara killer Elliot Rodger is that he was a white male who didn’t like women.

Yet many liberal com-mentators have managed it in the painful festival of stu-pidity that has followed his horrifi c act of mass murder. The reaction has featured rants about sexism, white privilege and Hollywood, all of which are absurdly detached from the reality of what happened at UCSB.

It is usually only the de-tails of these sorts of ram-page killings that differ, not the central element: a sick young man not getting proper treatment for his severe mental illness. Rod-ger’s mother had been so frightened by his YouTube videos that she alerted his counselor, and the police visited his apartment. Ac-cording to The New York Times, Rodger had been prescribed risperidone, an anti-psychotic, but evident-ly refused to take it.

Even without any of that

background, it is obvious that Rod-ger’s fi nal Y o u T u b e video and his 140-page m a n i f e s t o p r o m i s i n g to exact ven-geance upon the women who spurned

him are the ravings of a de-ranged person; as such, it is the derangement itself that is most important. None-theless, some commenta-tors have plumbed his lu-nacy for meaning as if they were reading “The Bell Jar.”

Washington Post fi lm critic Ann Hornaday led the way with a piece assert-ing that it is “clear that his delusions were infl ated, if not created, by the enter-tainment industry he grew up in” (his father works in Hollywood). According to Hornaday, “a sexist movie monoculture” -- captured by Judd Apatow comedies that often star Seth Rogen -- dangerously misled Rod-ger into believing that he could always get the girl in

the end.It is certainly true that

our pop culture is coarse and coarsening. But Judd Apatow movies don’t make people criminally insane. If lovable schlubs like Seth Rogen are partly respon-sible for Rodger’s rampage, let’s go all the way and blame Jonah Hill, too.

Salon ran a piece by Brittney Cooper arguing that “white male privilege kills.” Cooper seems to be-lieve that severe psychiat-ric disorders are something that rich white kids are prone to because they con-sider themselves so entitled.

The other interpreta-tion is that, as Jessica Val-enti put it in a piece for The Guardian, “misogyny kills.” There is no doubt that Rod-ger hated women. But who watches Rodger’s fi nal video promising to annihilate all of unworthy humanity like a god and thinks: You know what’s wrong with that guy? The sexism. If only he were cool with women, he would want to spare humanity from his wrath.

Nonetheless, the Twit-ter hashtag #YesAllWomen

got started as a rebuke to Rodger’s toxic attitude to women. It cataloged all that women suffer from sexism. I don’t doubt that it’s hurt-ful, to sample some of the tweets, to be a female shark biologist told that the pub-lic isn’t ready to see you on camera, or to go to a school where a visible bra strap violates the dress code but a “Cool story, babe, now make me a sandwich” T-shirt doesn’t. It just has nothing to do with Elliot Rodger’s condition or his crime.

The reaction to the UCSB killings is sadly typical. Our political and media culture has proven impervious to serious discussion of severe mental illness and how it is treated in this country, de-spite repeated, heartbreak-ing occasions for it.

Rep. Tim Murphy, a Pennsylvania Republican, actually has a proposal to make it easier to treat the severely mentally ill. Alas, his bill won’t get a viral Twitter campaign because it focuses on the real prob-lem rather than exploiting the latest horror for cheap ideological points.

Shootings bring hashtag idiocy

Other Voices

Maybe Mississippi’s relatively new superin-tendent of education, Carey Wright, has more backbone than some of her predecessors.

Maybe she was left with no choice after The Clarion-Ledger of Jackson exposed what ap-pears to be signifi cant cheating on state tests at an elementary school in Clarksdale.

Whatever the reason, we’re glad to see that the Department of Education has hired Utah-based Caveon Test Security to investigate what happened at Heidelberg Elementary School on the assessments the state uses to evaluate schools and school districts.

Caveon has a lot of experience in these types of investigations, including high-profi le probes into the Washington, D.C., and Atlan-ta public schools. The Atlanta investigation, spurred also by a newspaper’s bold work, ex-posed a broad and systemic pattern there of cheating by teachers and administrators.

Mississippi’s Department of Education should have conducted an investigation then, or one when Heidelberg jumped in two years from an entrenched “F’’ rating to an “A’’ - a highly improbable leap over that short of a time frame. Instead, MDE told Clarksdale’s superintendent to look into the matter and - surprise, surprise - the report came back that nothing improper had been done.

What The Clarion-Ledger discovered, and what the state could have learned had it devot-ed some resources, is that students who aced the tests as fi fth-graders at Heidelberg could barely read and write a few months later when tested at their new school.

Was all this implicating information fabri-cated or embellished? That’s doubtful. Fur-thermore, the position the Clarksdale school offi cials initially took after the story broke - threatening to fi nd and fi re teachers who co-operated with The Clarion-Ledger’s reporter - showed a district that was circling the wagons rather than trying to get at the truth.

But let’s see what Caveon fi nds out. Wright emphasized that she was making no rush to judgment, that she would wait until a thorough, impartial investigation had been completed.

That’s as it should be.We’re just glad there’s going to be a real in-

vestigation rather than a pretend one.The Greenwood Commonwealth

“But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed.” James 1:6

Lord Jehovah, all goodness, tenderness, and forbearance that are in my life have come from thee. May I not lose them in self, but by them make possible happiness and endur-ance for others. Amen.

Cheating scandal tests new state superintendent

Rich LowryNational

Review

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 2014

Across The Nation Across The State

Man dies when car crashes into building

VICKSBURG — A Vicksburg man was killed when his car knocked a hole in the back of Vicks-burg Police Department and caught fire.

Deputy Coroner Kelda Bailess tells The Vicks-burg Post 59-year-old Carl James was pro-nounced dead at the scene of the crash about 7 p.m. Thursday. An autopsy is being con-ducted.

Police Chief Walter Armstrong says no one was hurt in the police department.

Armstrong says James’ car veered off the street, ran through a fence and then knocked a hole in the juvenile investigation office of the police de-partment. No one was in the office.

At least three rooms of the police depart-ment suffered heavy fire, smoke and water dam-age.

Company installs bypass for runoff

PASCAGOULA — Fertil-izer manufacturer Mis-sissippi Phosphates has put an emergency by-pass in place to collect runoff from its sulfuric acid plant that was go-ing into a storm drain, according to a published report Friday.

The Mississippi Press reports it has obtained documents that show the company notified the U.S. Coast Guard Na-tional Response Center about the incident on Wednesday.

The plant has been operating under certain

restrictions handed down from the Mississippi De-partment of Environmen-tal Quality in late October.

State regulators issued cease-and-desist orders in August and again in September for Missis-sippi Phosphates to shut down their sulfuric acid plants due to reports of an acid mist that was af-fecting residents in east Pascagoula as well as other industries along Bayou Casotte.

The newspaper re-ports an email circulated among Jackson County leaders and city of Pas-cagoula officials notes Mississippi Phosphates “has started their emer-gency bypass of process water off the gyp(sum) stack. They are planning on a 10-day bypass.”

Federal trial delayed for DMR’s Shumate

HATTIESBURG — U.S. District Judge Keith Star-rett has rescheduled for Sept. 22 the criminal tri-al of former Mississippi Department of Marine

Resources manager Tina Shumate.

The Sun Herald reports Shumate was scheduled to be tried June 9 on charges of fraud and conspiracy to defraud the government. She asked for more time to prepare her defense because investigators seized personal items from her home, includ-ing computers, during a January 2013 search.

Her attorney told the court he learned April 29 he would need a court order to retrieve the items for trial prepara-tion. The U.S. Attorney’s Office did not object to the delay.

Shumate resigned as head of MDMR’s Coastal Resource Management and Planning office less than two weeks after her home was searched. She has denied any wrongdo-ing.

In May, Starrett agreed to separate trials for Shumate and Joe Ziegler, who also worked for the marine resources agency.

Associated Press

Obama’s daughter attends first prom

WASHINGTON — A teenage rite of passage has come to the White House, with President Barack Obama revealing that daughter Malia re-cently attended her first prom.

Obama wouldn’t say whether his older daughter had a date or went with friends. He joked it’s “classified information” during an interview airing Friday on the talk show “Live! With Kelly and Michael.”

But the president said he doesn’t think he’d been too intimidating for any boy who might roll up to the White House to pick Malia up.

Obama said it was “a little bit jarring” to see his 15-year-old 10th grader in heels for the first time. He said Malia looked beautiful.

Man charged with stealing human skin

PHILADELPHIA — A medical company sales representative was charged with stealing more than $350,000 worth of human skin over a period of several years.

Gary Dudek, 54, of Wallingford, was arrest-ed Monday and charged with theft, receiving sto-len property and tam-pering with records.

Authorities say he worked until September as a sales representa-tive for a regenerative medicine firm, manag-ing accounts for the bioscience department of Mercy Philadelphia Hospital. In that role,

Dudek was allowed to order the skin grafts for the hospital whenever he wanted.

Authorities said the hospital only needed a few grafts at a time. Dudek, however, or-dered more than 200 without authorization from November 2011 through July that the hospital never received, investigators said.

Philadelphia police said they do not know the motive or what hap-pened to the grafts, which were valued at $1,700 each.

Dudek was released Tuesday after posting 10 percent of $10,000 bail.

Panel: Baker must sell to gay couples

DENVER — Colo-rado’s Civil Rights Commission on Friday ordered a baker to make wedding cakes for same-sex couples, find-ing his religious objec-tions to the practice did not trump the state’s anti-discrimination stat-utes.

The unanimous ruling from the seven-member commission upheld an administrative law judge’s finding in De-cember that Jack Phil-lips violated civil rights law when he refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple in 2012. The couple sued.

“I can believe any-thing I want, but if I’m going to do business here, I’d ought to not discriminate against people,” Commissioner Raju Jaram said.

Phillips, a devout Christian who owns the Masterpiece Cakeshop

in the Denver suburb of Lakewood, said the decision violates his First Amendment rights to free speech and free exercise of his religion. “I will stand by my con-victions until somebody shuts me down,” he told reporters after the ruling.

District: Officer abused student

SAN FRANCISCO — A San Francisco Bay Area school district has fired a high school secu-rity officer who faces a felony charge after he repeatedly slapped a handcuffed, wheelchair-bound student suffering from cerebral palsy and dumped him onto the floor, authorities said.

The May 19 at-tack at Oakland High School was caught on surveillance footage that shows the officer wheeling the student down a hallway, leaning down toward him and then winding up and striking him three times before pushing him to the ground. The officer appears ready to strike the student another time before another of-ficer grabs his arm and pushes him away.

The district identified the officer as Marchell Mitchell and said on Thursday he was fired immediately after the in-cident. Mitchell pleaded not guilty on May 22 to a charge of corporal injury to a child, said Stephanie Chan, a spokeswoman for the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office. Chan said she did not know whether he had an at-torney.

Associated Press

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6 • Saturday, May 31, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Gwen GrimesCOLDWATER — Gwen Wetzel Grimes, 59, died

Friday, May 30, 2014 at her residence.Arrangements are incomplete and will be an-

nounced by Magnolia Funeral Home.

Ann SamplesAnn Samples died Friday, May 30, 2014 at Cor-

nerstone Health and Rehab.Arrangements are incomplete and will be an-

nounced by Memorial Funeral Home.

WASHINGTON — Vet-erans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki apologized in public and then re-signed in the privacy of the White House on Fri-day, driven from offi ce by a mushrooming scandal over the agency’s health care system that serves millions of the nation’s former warriors.

President Barack Obama said he accepted the resignation “with considerable regret,” and appointed Sloan Gibson, the agency’s No. 2 offi -cial, as temporary secre-tary. Obama also said that the Justice Department would determine if any il-legality had occurred, and that a top White House aide who has been de-tailed to the Veterans Af-fairs Department would remain there for the time being,

As for Shinseki, Obama said, “I regret that he has to resign under these circumstances.” He lav-ished praise on the Viet-nam veteran and former Army chief of staff for his decades of service. He said the Cabinet offi cer had told him “he does not want to be a distrac-tion” from the need to repair the agency, a task the president said point-edly could well require Congress to approve ad-ditional money.

A lifetime of service, in uniform and out, wasn’t enough to save Shin-seki’s career, though, after agency investiga-tors reported widespread problems in its sprawling hospital system. They re-ported that 1,700 veter-ans seeking treatment at the Phoenix facility alone were consigned to limbo because they had never been added to offi cial wait lists.

In the 36 hours that followed the fi ndings on Wednesday, Democrats in tough re-election races joined Republicans in clamoring for Shinseki’s resignation.

In an appearance be-fore a veterans group be-fore he met with Obama, Shinseki said, “I extend an apology to the people whom I care most deeply about — that’s the veter-ans of this great country — to their families and loved ones, who I have been honored to serve for over fi ve years now. It’s the calling of a lifetime.”

He called the problems outlined in the midweek report “totally unaccept-able” and a “breach of trust” that he found inde-fensible.

He announced he would

take a series of steps to respond, including oust-ing senior offi cials at the troubled Phoenix health care facility.

He concurred with the report’s conclusion that the problems extended throughout the VA’s 1,700 health care facilities nationwide, and he said that “I was too trusting of some” in the VA system.

Obama said Shinseki told him the agency needs new leadership and that he didn’t want to be a distraction. “I agree. We don’t have time for dis-tractions. We need to fi x the problem.”

As his last act as a Cabinet offi cial, Shinseki submitted a preliminary audit, which concluded that some VA schedulers were pressured to make waiting times for medi-cal appointments appear shorter than they actually were.

The review said the agency would revoke a 14-day standard as a goal in performance reviews, and also suspend bonuses for this budget year.

Republicans in Con-gress said Shinseki’s res-ignation alone wasn’t enough to solve prob-lems at an agency that

has been struggling to keep up with a huge in-crease in demand for its services. About 9 million veterans are now enrolled in the health care system, roughly 1 million more than only six years ago. The infl ux comes from re-turning Iraq and Afghani-stan veterans, aging Viet-nam War vets who now have more health prob-lems, a move by Congress to expand the number of those eligible for care and the migration of veterans to the VA during the last recession after they lost their jobs.

And Shinseki’s depar-ture seemed unlikely to end an election-year po-litical struggle between the parties.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said the resignation “does not absolve the president of his responsibility to step in and make things right for our veterans.” He and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell called on Democrats to join them in legislation “that would help to fi x this sys-tem that has so failed our veterans.”

The Republican-con-trolled House passed one measure recently to give the VA more ability to fi re up to 450 senior ex-ecutives. The Democrat-ic-controlled Senate is likely to debate a different version in the following week.

Shinseki resigns amid vets’ woesBY JULIE PACE

AND PAULINE JELINEKAssociated Press

“I regret that he has to resign under these circumstances.”

President Barack Obama

DALLAS — Texas’ pris-on system doesn’t have to reveal where it gets its execution drugs, the state attorney general said Thursday, marking a reversal by the state’s top prosecutor on an issue be-ing challenged in several death penalty states.

Attorney General Greg Abbott, the Republican nominee for governor in the nation’s busiest death penalty state, had rebuffed three similar attempts by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice since 2010. His decision can be appealed to the courts.

The department argues

that the compounding pharmacy providing the drug should remain se-cret in order to protect it from threats of violence. Lawyers for death row inmates say they need its name to verify the drugs’ potency and protect in-mates from cruel and un-usual punishment.

Similar legal fi ghts are ongoing in other death penalty states, including Oklahoma and Missouri, but courts — including the U.S. Supreme Court — have yet to halt an ex-ecution based on a state’s refusal to reveal its drug supplier.

The secrecy argument also was used ahead of

a bungled execution last month in Oklahoma, though that inmate’s faulty veins, not the ex-ecution drug, were cited as the likely culprit.

The issue has put Ab-bott in a thorny position during an election year in Texas, where the death penalty is like gun rights: Candidates don’t get in the way of either. Holding fi rm would please death penalty opponents, who prison offi cials say want to target drug suppliers with protests and threats; reversing course goes against his vows of gov-ernment transparency.

But his Democratic opponent, Wendy Da-vis, can’t easily exploit the issue. Portraying the law-and-order Abbott, who has been attorney general since 2003, as soft on crime would be implausible. She has said the information should be public.

Abbott’s latest deci-sion is expected to be ap-pealed, meaning it likely won’t take immediate ef-fect.

It stems from an open

records request fi led ahead of the April ex-ecutions of serial killer Tommy Lynn Sells and convicted killer Ramiro Hernandez-Llanas. Texas prison offi cials were using a new supply of pentobar-bital, a powerful sedative, but they refused to name the supplier. The inmates’ attorneys said that violat-ed the inmates’ rights and asked Abbott to step in. They made similar argu-ments in court, but those appeals were turned down.

The Associated Press also has fi led a request for information about the compounding pharmacy under the Texas Public Information Act.

Death penalty states have been scrambling to fi nd new sources of drugs after several drugmakers, including many based in Europe, refused to sell drugs for use in lethal in-jections. That’s led sever-al states to compounding pharmacies, which are not as heavily regulated by the Food and Drug Ad-ministration as more con-ventional pharmacies.

Official: Texas can keep lethal drug source secretAssociated Press

JACKSON — Three people have been indicted on federal charges of con-spiracy to commit murder related to a deadly prison riot in Mississippi.

Federal prosecutors say in a news release Friday that Hector Miguel Diaz-Osuna, Ricardo Gonzalez-Porras and Jesus Beltran-Rodriguez were indicted by a grand jury. Prosecu-tors say Gonzalez-Porras is also charged with as-saulting a prison guard.

Two other defendants, Juan Geraldo Arredondo and Ernesto Granados, are charged in the indict-ment with rioting.

One guard was killed and 20 people were in-jured in the May 20, 2012, riot at the privately-run Adams County Correc-tional Facility in Natchez, which holds immigrants convicted of crimes while being in the U.S. illegally.

Court records show Beltran-Rodriguez is one of the inmates suspected

of beating the guard, Cat-lin Carithers, who died.

The prison holds nearly 2,500 inmates, most of them convicted on charg-es of coming back to the U.S. after deportation for being in the country ille-gally. The prison is owned by Nashville, Tennessee-based Corrections Corpo-ration of America, one of the nation’s largest pri-vate prison companies.

Several other inmates have been charged — or convicted — with partici-

pating in the riot.Gerson Benavides was

sentenced Thursday in federal court to 75 months imprisonment. Benavides was previously convicted of rioting at the Adams County Correctional Fa-cility. Benavides was also ordered to pay restitution of $1.3 million.

Humberto Cuellar was sentenced Thursday 110 months imprisonment. He also was ordered to pay restitution of $1.3 million.

3 indicted on conspiracy charges in prison riotAssociated Press

HATTIESBURG — A dining hall manager has been arrested and ac-cused of stealing steaks, seafood and other ed-ibles that belonged to the Mississippi National Guard Youth ChalleNGe Academy, authorities said Thursday.

Jerry L. Howard, 50, owner of Jerry’s Sea-soned Food in Hatties-burg, was free on bond after being booked on a charge of grand larceny, State Auditor Stacey Pickering said at a news conference at Camp Shelby. A grand jury will get the case next to de-cide on an indictment.

Pickering said his in-vestigators determined that large quantities of invoiced food never appeared on cafeteria menus.

Pickering and Na-tional Guard Maj. Gen. Augustus Collins said investigators found food at Howard’s home and restaurant that be-longed to the academy that serves at-risk youth between ages 16 and 18.

“We’re not sure when it started,” Collins said, “but once we were cer-tain that food ordered for the Youth ChalleNGe

program was not being served, we contacted the State Auditor’s Offi ce.”

End of the year totals for food purchases in-creased from $216,000 in fi scal year 2009 to $306,000 in the previ-ous fi scal year, while the number of academy par-ticipants has remained virtually the same.

The types of food found in Howard’s home and restaurant included rib-eye steaks and seafood, said Brett Kittredge, a spokesman for Pickering’s offi ce.

He said the pro-gram follows dietary guidelines set for high schools. “You don’t usu-ally get steaks and rib-eyes in high school,” he said.

Kittredge esti-mated the amount of food involved was worth $100,000 and $150,000.

“It is never easy to see people ruin their careers by trying to rip-off tax-payers,” Pickering said.

Two business phone listings for Howard were disconnected and there was no answer at a home listing under his name.

The auditor’s offi ce said more arrests are possible.

Restaurateur accusedof taking program food

Associated Press

BOSTON — A friend of the brothers suspected of bombing the Boston Marathon was accused Friday of obstructing the investigation into the deadly attack by de-leting information from his computer and lying to investigators.

The friend, Khairul-lozhon Matanov, 23, of Quincy, was arrested at his apartment. He later appeared in federal court, but entered no plea and was being held until a detention hear-ing Wednesday.

Matanov, a legal resi-dent of the U.S. origi-nally from Kyrgyzstan, deleted references to videos and photos of

the bombing suspects released by the FBI, a photo of the MIT police offi cer who authorities say the bombing sus-pects killed days after the attack and fi les that contained violent con-tent or calls to violence, an indictment alleges.

Matanov is not charged with participat-ing in the bombings or knowing about them in advance, U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz said.

Matanov knew Ta-merlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who authori-ties say planted two homemade bombs that killed three people and wounded more than 260 at the marathon fi n-ish line last year.

Man charged with impedingmarathon bombing probe

Associated Press

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Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Corinth native Jerry King uses unique lighting to create photographic works of art. Staff Writer

Zack Steen shares the artist’s story in Sunday’s Daily Corinthian.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

D E A R ABBY: I’m 20 years old. My boyfriend and I don’t drink. Almost every person my age does, and it’s start-ing to get to me.

I’d love to have friends besides my

boyfriend I can hang out with, but I fi nd that I only connect with him because everyone else al-ways wants to go out and party.

He is an introvert, so the se-clusion doesn’t bother him. I, on the other hand, am greatly both-ered by it.

I have always been ahead of the curve in terms of people my age. I have more in common with 30-year-olds than people in college. Unfortunately, I would feel weird spending time with 30-year-olds, and I’m sure they’d feel the same about spending time with me.

Most of my spare time is spent with my family. They just seem to get me.

How can I fi nd people my age who think the way I do?

I don’t want to be the kind of girl who only spends time with her boyfriend. I would appreci-

ate other relationships. -- LIZ IN NEW JERSEY

DEAR LIZ: I agree that it’s time to expand your circle of ac-quaintances.

That’s why I’m advising you to join a gym or some other physical activity group and start meeting people who are in-volved in physical fi tness.

None of the ones I know want to spend their time drinking and partying because they are more interested in eating and living healthfully. I’m sure if you try it, you will meet others who think the way you do.

DEAR ABBY: I am 15, and all of my friends my age and a grade lower have their belly but-tons pierced.

I have been asking my mom for a very long time and she doesn’t have a problem with it, but my dad does.

He won’t let me get it done be-cause he doesn’t want me look-ing like trash at this age.

I don’t want it to impress boys; I want it for my own beauty and to look good with a cute jewel to go with my summer outfi ts or bathing suits.

They said to ask you if you think it’s wrong to have a belly button pierced at the age of 15. Is it wrong? -- KYLIE IN WASH-INGTON

DEAR KYLIE: I don’t think

that having a belly button pierced is a question of right or wrong.

I suspect that your father’s objection -- and I’m not sure I disagree with him -- is that he would prefer you make an im-pression by attracting attention in some other way.

I’m suggesting you hold off for now and have it done when you’re older -- providing you haven’t changed your mind by then.

DEAR ABBY: 1. What do you call a person who is neither a morning lark nor a night owl? (That’s me.)

2. What do you call someone who is neither a giver nor a tak-er? (That’s me, too.)

Your answers will help me win a delicious meal! -- INQUISI-TIVE IN OTTAWA

DEAR INQUISITIVE: A per-son who is neither a lark nor a night owl is called a robin.

Someone who is neither a giver nor a taker is probably a loner.

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). Victory and defeat are two sides of the same coin. Since you can’t pay with only one side, in order to buy a new future, you have to rst accept that some-times you win and sometimes you lose.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’re not afraid of the dark; you just prefer to see where you’re going. A discussion with a bright re-sign friend (Aries, Leo and Sagittarius) will illumi-nate new options.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’re ready to get real about what’s not working so that you can change it. There’s no room for shame or blame. They only muddy up your list of what needs to happen next and next and next.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll celebrate the things you like. This is more fun with friends who like the same things. You’ll get deeper into a topic or interest and delight in the details.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ll be required to make a brief trib-ute to a person, organization or idea -- a kind of toast. Even though you’re mighty ne ex-temporaneously, you’ll do even better if you rehearse this a bit.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You will be admired for your tal-ent and praised for your ambi-tion. Before that glorious part of the day, there’s quite a lot of work to accomplish, and some of it is quite physical, so the proper nutrition and drink will be key.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You feel so appreciative for all you have. Because you are lov-ing more about your life, you are clinging less to your wants and needs. This easier grip helps things come to you freely.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’ll nd that someone you love is further along than you thought in their evolution to-ward a new incarnation. This will be motivating to you. You’ll progress quickly, too, once you

decide to.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Even though you’re a con -dent person, groups sometimes still give you the jitters. The good news is, you don’t have to get over that in order to make a stellar rst impression.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Familiarize yourself with a person’s background and ex-periences before you attempt to impress. The most impressive thing you could do is to remem-ber the details of his or her story.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’ll be compelled to do a few things differently to pull some ro-mance into your world. Guided by a strong sense of whimsy, what you do in the name of love will surprise even you.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). To clean a oor is a ne en-deavor, but it’s not like nding the cure for cancer. Around noon, it will bene t you to stop and reorder your day. Put the most time into the most impor-tant and enjoyable tasks.

Refusal to drink leaves woman out of step with all of her peers

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, May 31, 2014 • 7

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 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 16,717.17 +18.43 +.11 +.85 +10.608,110.46 5,952.18 Dow Transportation 8,104.57 -5.78 -.07 +9.51 +28.84

558.29 462.66 Dow Utilities 544.96 +4.12 +.76 +11.09 +13.0211,334.65 8,814.76 NYSE Composite 10,756.31 +4.19 +.04 +3.42 +15.634,371.71 3,294.95 Nasdaq Composite 4,242.62 -5.33 -.13 +1.58 +22.761,920.03 1,560.33 S&P 500 1,923.57 +3.54 +.18 +4.07 +17.961,398.91 1,114.04 S&P MidCap 1,377.98 -2.55 -.18 +2.64 +16.35

20,333.04 16,442.14 Wilshire 5000 20,348.35 +15.36 +.08 +3.26 +18.221,212.82 942.79 Russell 2000 1,134.50 -5.57 -.49 -2.50 +15.28

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Yahoo ... 29 34.65 -.25 -14.3

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 20 14.10 +.14AK Steel dd 6.12 -.15AbbottLab 25 40.01 +.41AbbVie 21 54.33 +.30AberFitc 61 38.01 +.87Accenture 17 81.45 +1.03Actavis 37 211.54 -1.91ActivsBliz 22 20.78 +.03AdobeSy cc 64.54 -.91AMD 80 4.00 -.03Agilent 21 56.94 -.02AlcatelLuc ... 4.01Alcoa 44 13.61 +.03Allergan 40 167.46 +8.96AlldNevG 31 2.76Allstate 13 58.26 -.04AlphaNRs dd 3.38 -.18AlpAlerMLP q 18.24 +.09AlteraCp lf 24 33.13 -.12Altria 18 41.56 +.25Amazon cc 312.55 -1.23Ambev n ... 7.04 -.16AMovilL 11 19.33 -.51AmAirl n dd 40.16 +.34ACapAgy 8 23.73 +.17AmCapLtd 27 14.76 -.09AEagleOut 19 10.73 -.12AmExp 18 91.50 +.22AHm4Rnt n ... 17.62 +.08AmIntlGrp 9 54.07 -.11ARltCapPr dd 12.41 +.07Annaly 5 11.79 +.09Annies 36 32.72 -2.16AnteroRs n dd 61.50 -.10Apache 22 93.22 +.16ApolloInv 6 8.38 +.02Apple Inc 15 633.00 -2.38ApldMatl 28 20.19 -.09Aramark n ... 26.38 +.55ArcelorMit dd 15.15 -.33ArchCoal dd 3.56 -.05ArenaPhm dd 6.15 -.11AresCap 9 17.24 +.09AriadP dd 6.46 +.08ArmourRsd dd 4.35 +.03AstraZen 16 72.20 +.91Atmel cc 8.38 +.03AutoNatn 19 57.17 +.27AvagoTch 32 70.67 -.12AvanirPhm dd 5.28 -.11Avon dd 14.29 -.11BHP BillLt ... 67.88 -2.01BakrHu 26 70.52 -.16BallardPw dd 3.81 +.11BcoBrad pf ... 13.95 -.48BcoSantSA ... 10.22 +.09BcoSBrasil ... 6.76 +.03BkofAm 20 15.14 -.01BkNYMel 15 34.56 -.02B iPVix rs q 33.52 -.12BarrickG dd 16.11 +.34Baxter 20 74.41 +.01BerkH B 16 128.34 +.23BestBuy 9 27.66 +.19BigLots 20 42.44 +4.93BlackBerry dd 7.60 -.14Blackstone 15 31.08 -.17Boeing 23 135.25 +.11BostonSci 22 12.83 -.16BoydGm dd 10.95 -.07BrMySq 29 49.74 +.22Brixmor n ... 21.75 +.07Broadcom 44 31.87 +.20BrcdeCm 17 9.12 +.12Brookdale dd 33.26 +.01CA Inc 14 28.69 -.26CBL Asc 43 18.82 +.04CBS B 19 59.61 -.54CDW Cp n ... 29.41 +.29CMS Eng 16 29.75 +.29CSX 16 29.40 -.12CVS Care 20 78.32 +.66CblvsnNY 8 17.63 +.16CabotOG s 43 36.24 -.30Cadence 42 16.69 -.11Calpine 86 23.32 +.54CampSp 28 45.90 +.76CdnSolar 32 25.75 -1.55CapOne 11 78.89 +.17CpstnTurb dd 1.51 -.03Carlisle 29 84.86 +.18Carnival 31 40.03 +.29CellThera dd 2.94 -.12CelldexTh dd 14.61 +.31Cemex ... 12.87 -.15Cemig pf s ... 7.02 -.22CenterPnt 30 24.12 +.06CntryLink dd 37.67 -.01ChathLTr cc 22.50 -.23CheniereEn dd 68.11 +5.59ChesEng 24 28.72 -.17Chimera ... 3.15 +.04CienaCorp dd 19.40 -.52Cigna 12 89.78 -.32Cisco 17 24.62 -.06Citigroup 11 47.57 +.29CitrixSys 35 61.97 +.31Civeo wi ... 23.06 +.17CliffsNRs 6 15.68 -.92Coach 12 40.71 +.10CobaltIEn dd 18.49 +.12CocaCE 17 45.64 -.33CognizTc s 23 48.61 -.35ColgPalm 29 68.40 +1.48Comc spcl 19 51.84 +.19ConAgra 17 32.30 +.13ConocoPhil 13 79.94 +.39ConsolEngy 13 44.17 -.52Corning 17 21.30 -.10Costco 26 116.02 +1.88CSVInvNG q 3.01 +.03CSVelIVST q 38.95 +.07CSVxSht rs q 4.21 +.01DaraBio rs dd 1.19 -.41DCT Indl ... 7.92 +.06DDR Corp dd 17.31 +.13DR Horton 15 23.68 -.20DSW Inc s 15 25.05 +.32Danaher 22 78.43 -.12DeanFds rs dd 17.38 -.02DeltaAir 3 39.91 -.23DenburyR 16 16.89 -.07DicksSptg 16 44.45 +1.33DirecTV 16 82.44 +.29DxGldBll rs q 29.02 +.95DrxFnBear q 19.11 -.08DrxSCBear q 16.46 +.22DrxSCBull q 69.94 -.93Discover 12 59.13 +.45DishNetw h 39 58.66 -.89Disney 22 84.01 -.02DollarGen 17 53.78 +.28DomRescs 20 68.96 +.44DonlleyRR 18 15.84 -.21DoralFn rs dd 3.93 +1.11DowChm 14 52.12 -.35DryShips dd 3.01 -.07DuPont 22 69.31 +.34DukeEngy 17 71.08 +.15DukeRlty 38 17.70 +.05

E-F-G-HE-Trade 41 20.37 -.05eBay dd 50.73 +.59EMC Cp 21 26.56 -.21EldorGld g 36 5.75 +.03ElectArts dd 35.13 +.37EmersonEl 19 66.73 -.07EmpDist 14 24.01 +.11EmpStR n ... 16.39 -.10EnCana g 15 23.31 +.03Endo Intl 20 70.59 -.81EngyXXI 12 21.45 -1.30ENSCO 10 52.66 +.19EnteroMed dd 2.12 +.10Ericsson ... 12.45 +.12ExcoRes 33 5.26 -.18Exelixis dd 3.31 -.07Exelon 17 36.83 +.77Express 12 12.61 -1.02ExpScripts 32 71.47 +.41ExtrmNet dd 3.98 -.01ExxonMbl 11 100.53 -.74Facebook 83 63.30 -.53FamilyDlr 17 58.60 +.34FedExCp 27 144.16 -.37FifthThird 11 20.69 +.14Finisar 28 23.75 -1.11FireEye n ... 32.87 -1.78FstSolar 12 61.78 -1.63FirstEngy 18 33.82 +.34

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

SiriusXM 855628 3.28 -.04iShEMkts 670775 42.55 -.59S&P500ETF 645336 192.68 +.31Facebook 439994 63.30 -.53BkofAm 436547 15.14 -.01Intel 403330 27.32 +.36Twitter n 389256 32.44 -1.56iShR2K 374795 112.86 -.51Microsoft 326644 40.94 +.60Vale SA 300409 12.75 -.39

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,580Declined 1,508Unchanged 126

Total issues 3,214New Highs 180New Lows 27

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,016Declined 1,590Unchanged 135

Total issues 2,741New Highs 67New Lows 29

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

Voltari 2.42 +.70 +40.4DoralFn rs 3.93 +1.11 +39.4TrovaGn wt 2.79 +.39 +16.3Retrophin 14.62 +1.74 +13.5NPS Phm 31.13 +3.68 +13.4BigLots 42.44 +4.93 +13.1KingtoneW 5.40 +.60 +12.5NQ Mobile 7.59 +.80 +11.8OmniVisn 22.48 +2.34 +11.6ChenEHld n 26.76 +2.76 +11.5

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

Infoblox 12.96 -7.56 -36.8PacSunwr 2.42 -.52 -17.7Splunk 41.86 -8.18 -16.3Envivio 2.22 -.40 -15.3eOnCom h 2.80 -.50 -15.2ChiAutL rsh 2.10 -.35 -14.3Tecogen n 8.30 -1.19 -12.5NwstBio wt 3.40 -.46 -11.9LionsGt g 26.13 -3.40 -11.5GluMobile 3.64 -.43 -10.5

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.45 +0.05 +3.9YkmFcsSvc d 26.19 +0.04 +4.3AQRMaFtStrI 9.91 ... -6.4American BeaconLgCpVlIs 30.32 +0.08 +5.5American CenturyEqIncInv 9.07 +0.03 +6.2InvGrInv 34.03 +0.02 +4.2UltraInv 34.64 -0.07 +1.4ValueInv 8.67 +0.01 +5.6American FundsAMCAPA m 29.02 ... +6.2BalA m 25.19 +0.04 +3.7BondA m 12.78 -0.01 +4.1CapIncBuA m 61.07 +0.13 +5.9CapWldBdA m21.01 -0.01 +4.9CpWldGrIA m 47.56 +0.03 +5.3EurPacGrA m 50.33 -0.01 +2.6FnInvA m 53.04 +0.06 +3.3GrthAmA m 44.45 -0.03 +3.4HiIncA m 11.53 +0.01 +4.0IncAmerA m 21.68 +0.05 +5.8IntBdAmA m 13.59 -0.01 +1.8IntlGrInA m 36.69 +0.12 +6.1InvCoAmA m 38.89 +0.02 +6.4MutualA m 36.31 +0.09 +4.8NewEconA m 39.22 +0.05 +2.6NewPerspA m 38.37 -0.01 +2.2NwWrldA m 61.14 -0.01 +4.1SmCpWldA m 49.45 -0.01 +0.6TaxEBdAmA m12.98 ... +6.5WAMutInvA m 41.15 +0.11 +4.8AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.78 -0.01 +4.0ArtisanIntl d 30.76 +0.02 +0.9IntlVal d 38.37 ... +4.4MdCpVal 27.47 +0.01 +1.7MidCap 46.80 -0.26 -1.7BBHTaxEffEq d 22.25 +0.05 +4.0BaronGrowth b 70.20 -0.17 -3.0BlackRockEngy&ResA m36.32 -0.06 +10.4EqDivA m 24.93 +0.07 +3.2EqDivI 25.00 +0.08 +3.3GlobAlcA m 21.81 -0.01 +2.3GlobAlcC m 20.15 -0.01 +1.9GlobAlcI 21.94 -0.01 +2.4HiYldBdIs 8.39 ... +4.6HiYldInvA m 8.39 ... +4.5StrIncIns 10.34 ... +2.8CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.53 +0.01 +2.2Cohen & SteersRealty 72.49 +0.35 +16.0ColumbiaAcornIntZ 48.40 +0.09 +3.7AcornZ 36.70 -0.15 -1.7DivIncZ 19.03 +0.06 +4.4Credit SuisseComStrInstl 7.64 -0.06 +5.7DFA1YrFixInI 10.33 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 10.02 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 11.04 -0.01 +2.1EmMkCrEqI 20.37 -0.18 +4.7EmMktValI 28.72 -0.29 +4.0IntCorEqI 13.31 +0.01 +4.4IntSmCapI 21.67 +0.03 +6.5IntlSCoI 20.16 +0.04 +4.9IntlValuI 20.28 -0.02 +3.9RelEstScI 30.20 +0.15 +16.9TAUSCrE2I 13.80 ... +3.3USCorEq1I 17.12 ... +3.8USCorEq2I 16.86 -0.01 +3.3USLgCo 15.22 +0.02 +4.9USLgValI 32.93 +0.02 +4.5USMicroI 19.55 -0.09 -2.8USSmValI 35.44 -0.11 +0.1USSmallI 30.48 -0.11 -1.6USTgtValInst 23.05 -0.08 +1.3DWS-ScudderGrIncS 23.88 +0.07 +3.0DavisNYVentA m 42.54 ... +2.7NYVentY 43.09 ... +2.8Dodge & CoxBal 101.17 +0.02 +4.1GlbStock 12.27 -0.04 +6.9Income 13.95 ... +4.3IntlStk 45.98 -0.17 +6.8Stock 174.41 +0.05 +4.0DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.05 ... +4.2DreyfusAppreciaInv 54.86 +0.09 +5.1DriehausActiveInc 10.77 ... +0.6Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.14 ... +0.9FMILgCap 21.98 +0.05 +5.4FPACres d 34.17 +0.02 +3.7NewInc d 10.30 ... +1.1Fairholme FundsFairhome d 42.02 +0.07 +7.2FederatedStrValI 6.26 +0.03 +10.5FidelityAstMgr20 13.65 ... +3.0AstMgr50 18.14 -0.01 +3.8Bal 23.56 +0.01 +4.0Bal K 23.56 +0.01 +4.1BlChGrow 65.69 -0.05 +3.7CapApr 36.66 -0.02 +1.3CapInc d 10.21 ... +5.4Contra 97.00 -0.01 +1.9ContraK 96.97 -0.01 +2.0DivGrow 36.83 +0.06 +4.1DivrIntl d 37.57 +0.03 +1.8DivrIntlK d 37.53 +0.04 +1.9EqInc 61.02 +0.13 +4.8EqInc II 25.43 +0.06 +4.3FF2015 12.68 ... +3.1FF2035 13.28 -0.01 +3.0FF2040 9.36 -0.01 +3.0Fidelity 44.09 +0.01 +3.4FltRtHiIn d 9.97 ... +1.5FrdmK2015 13.70 ... +3.2FrdmK2020 14.33 ... +3.2FrdmK2025 14.89 -0.01 +3.3FrdmK2030 15.20 ... +3.2FrdmK2035 15.62 -0.01 +3.1FrdmK2040 15.67 ... +3.1FrdmK2045 16.07 ... +3.2Free2010 15.50 ... +3.1Free2020 15.44 ... +3.2Free2025 13.19 ... +3.2Free2030 16.17 -0.01 +3.1GNMA 11.56 +0.01 +4.1GrowCo 122.66 -0.37 +2.9GrowInc 28.84 +0.06 +3.9GrthCmpK 122.54 -0.38 +3.0HiInc d 9.49 ... +3.5IntlDisc d 40.56 +0.06 +0.1InvGrdBd 7.92 ... +4.2LatinAm d 31.80 -0.49 +1.8LowPrStkK d 50.53 +0.08 +2.2LowPriStk d 50.55 +0.08 +2.2Magellan 90.12 -0.02 +4.0MidCap d 40.93 -0.06 +3.6MuniInc d 13.33 -0.01 +6.7OTC 79.06 -0.42 +2.2Puritan 22.02 ... +4.2PuritanK 22.01 ... +4.2SASEqF 14.44 +0.01 +4.6SInvGrBdF 11.45 ... +4.2STMIdxF d 56.29 +0.05 +4.3SesAl-SctrEqt 14.44 +0.01 +4.5SesInmGrdBd 11.44 -0.01 +4.1ShTmBond 8.62 ... +0.9SmCapDisc d 31.34 +0.03 +0.3StratInc 11.22 ... +5.1Tel&Util 24.11 +0.24 +11.5TotalBd 10.75 -0.01 +4.2USBdIdx 11.68 ... +3.9USBdIdxInv 11.68 ... +3.8Value 109.28 -0.03 +5.5Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 27.07 -0.02 +3.1NewInsI 27.56 -0.01 +3.3Fidelity SelectBiotech d 186.47 -1.22 +2.6HealtCar d 196.46 -0.72 +10.2Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 68.42 +0.12 +4.9500IdxInstl 68.42 +0.12 +4.9500IdxInv 68.41 +0.12 +4.9ExtMktIdAg d 53.43 -0.16 +1.7

Name P/E Last Chg

3,104,702,512Volume 1,760,434,963Volume

15,200

15,600

16,000

16,400

16,800

D MJ F M A

16,320

16,540

16,760Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,717.17Change: 18.43 (0.1%)

10 DAYS

IntlIdxAdg d 41.97 +0.02 +3.9TotMktIdAg d 56.29 +0.05 +4.3Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF10.88 -0.03 +2.8First EagleGlbA m 55.67 ... +3.8OverseasA m 24.26 ... +5.0FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.38 ... +7.3FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.40 ... +8.6GrowthA m 68.61 +0.06 +5.3HY TF A x 10.46 -0.01 +9.7Income C m 2.57 +0.01 +6.8IncomeA m 2.54 ... +7.1IncomeAdv 2.52 ... +6.8RisDvA m 49.85 +0.17 +3.0StrIncA x 10.66 -0.04 +3.6FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 35.48 +0.01 +5.2DiscovA m 34.92 ... +5.1Shares Z 30.03 +0.02 +6.0SharesA m 29.76 +0.02 +5.8FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 8.57 -0.03 +3.1GlBond C m 13.35 -0.02 +2.7GlBondA m 13.32 -0.02 +2.8GlBondAdv 13.28 -0.01 +3.0GrowthA m 26.16 -0.03 +4.8WorldA m 20.12 -0.02 +3.7GES&SUSEq 57.29 +0.02 +4.7GMOEmgMktsVI d 10.97 -0.11 +1.9IntItVlIV 27.38 ... +7.2QuIII 26.25 +0.10 +5.3USCorEqVI 17.98 +0.05 +4.5Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 46.97 ... +5.7HarborBond 12.28 -0.01 +3.2CapApInst 57.15 -0.19 +0.8IntlInstl 73.98 +0.04 +4.2IntlInv b 73.16 +0.04 +4.0HartfordCapAprA m 47.84 -0.05 +2.5CpApHLSIA 61.47 -0.09 +3.1INVESCOCharterA m 23.02 +0.01 +5.3ComstockA m 24.67 +0.06 +4.1EqIncomeA m 11.03 ... +3.9GrowIncA m 27.95 ... +3.7IVAWorldwideI d 18.61 -0.01 +4.4IvyAssetStrA m 31.41 +0.03 -1.9AssetStrC m 30.46 +0.02 -2.2AsstStrgI 31.69 +0.03 -1.8JPMorganCoreBdUlt x 11.75 -0.04 +3.5CoreBondA x 11.75 -0.03 +3.3CoreBondSelect x11.74-0.03 +3.4HighYldSel x 8.14 -0.03 +4.3LgCapGrA m 32.05 -0.05 +0.8LgCapGrSelect32.08 -0.04 +0.9MidCpValI 36.97 +0.06 +5.3ShDurBndSel x10.93 ... +0.6USLCpCrPS 28.95 +0.01 +4.4JanusGlbLfScT 46.50 -0.05 +8.1John HancockLifBa1 b 15.78 -0.01 +3.5LifGr1 b 16.56 -0.01 +3.3LazardEmgMkEqInst d19.70 -0.23 +5.5Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m195.04-0.02 +7.5Longleaf PartnersLongPart 35.38 ... +4.8Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.72 +0.01 +5.4BdR b 15.65 +0.01 +5.3Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.19 +0.03 +4.5BondDebA m 8.34 +0.01 +4.4ShDurIncA m 4.56 ... +1.7ShDurIncC m 4.59 ... +1.5ShDurIncF b 4.56 ... +1.8MFSIntlValA m 35.33 +0.10 +4.8IsIntlEq 23.07 -0.01 +2.9TotRetA x 18.14 -0.01 +4.2ValueA m 34.01 +0.09 +3.2ValueI 34.18 +0.08 +3.2MainStayMktfield 17.61 -0.08 -4.9Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.43 -0.02 +4.2Matthews AsianChina d 21.02 +0.01 -8.0India d 21.12 +0.29 +29.7MergerInvCl b 16.34 ... +2.1Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.85 ... +3.9TotRtBd b 10.85 ... +3.8Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 42.63 -0.63 -5.9NatixisLSInvBdY 12.40 ... +5.7LSStratIncA m 17.03 +0.01 +5.5LSStratIncC m17.14 +0.01 +5.2Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 59.64 -0.13 -3.7NorthernHYFixInc d 7.66 ... +4.7IntlIndex d 12.80 ... +3.7StkIdx 23.84 ... +4.7OakmarkEqIncI 33.77 +0.01 +3.4Intl I 27.12 +0.03 +3.0Oakmark I 66.65 +0.12 +4.7Select I 43.35 +0.04 +8.2OberweisChinaOpp m 15.79 -0.03 -6.2Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.16 ... +3.3GlbSmMdCp 17.48 +0.02 +1.7LgCpStr 12.86 +0.01 +3.1OppenheimerDevMktA m 38.93 -0.35 +2.4DevMktY 38.51 -0.34 +2.5GlobA m 81.16 -0.03 +3.0IntlGrY 39.22 +0.07 +2.8IntlGrowA m 39.37 +0.06 +2.7MainStrA m 50.27 +0.09 +3.7SrFltRatA m 8.40 ... +1.4StrIncA m 4.21 ... +3.8Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.40 +0.02 +10.7OsterweisOsterStrInc d 12.07 +0.01 +2.8PIMCOAllAssetI 12.68 ... +5.6AllAuthIn 10.37 ... +5.4ComRlRStI 6.03 ... +9.8DivIncInst 11.89 ... +5.6EMFdIdPLARSTIns10.34 ... +6.8EMktCurI 10.37 ... +3.0EmMktsIns 11.26 ... +7.5EmgLclBdI 9.68 ... +5.8ForBdInstl 10.82 ... +4.0HiYldIs 9.75 ... +3.9IncomeA m 12.68 ... +5.5IncomeD b 12.68 ... +5.6IncomeInl 12.68 ... +5.7LgDrTRtnI 11.52 ... +11.6LgTmCrdIn 12.75 ... +11.8LowDrIs 10.39 ... +1.2RERRStgC m 4.13 ... +24.9RealRet 11.61 ... +6.3ShtTermIs 9.89 ... +0.8StkPlARShStrIn 2.62 ... -3.5TotRetA m 10.97 ... +3.3TotRetAdm b 10.97 ... +3.4TotRetC m 10.97 ... +3.0TotRetIs 10.97 ... +3.5TotRetrnD b 10.97 ... +3.4TotlRetnP 10.97 ... +3.4UnconstrBdIns 11.30 ... +2.4PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 30.50 -0.14 +2.9ParnassusCoreEqInv 38.82 +0.11 +6.1PermanentPortfolio 44.11 -0.19 +2.4PioneerPioneerA m 40.70 +0.09 +4.1PrincipalDivIntI 12.22 ... +2.6L/T2020I 14.70 ... +3.5LCGrIInst 12.80 -0.01 +0.9Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 40.83 -0.07 +0.8PutnamGrowIncA m 20.88 +0.02 +5.4

NewOpp 82.63 -0.05 +3.7RoycePAMutInv d 14.44 -0.04 -2.0PremierInv d 22.60 -0.04 +2.2Schwab1000Inv d 50.93 +0.07 +4.6S&P500Sel d 30.27 +0.06 +4.9ScoutInterntl 37.79 -0.04 +1.4SequoiaSequoia 225.71 +0.79 +1.3T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 65.40 -0.04 +1.2CapApprec 27.11 +0.05 +5.7EmMktStk d 33.61 -0.31 +4.3EqIndex d 52.00 +0.09 +4.9EqtyInc 33.89 +0.05 +3.8GrowStk 52.86 -0.04 +0.6HealthSci 61.84 -0.05 +7.0HiYield d 7.30 ... +5.2InsLgCpGr 27.63 -0.06 +1.4IntlBnd d 9.82 ... +4.5IntlGrInc d 16.35 +0.01 +5.0IntlStk d 17.08 -0.01 +4.8LatinAm d 30.91 -0.58 +3.0MidCapVa 31.94 +0.04 +6.3MidCpGr 74.67 -0.10 +2.6NewEra 48.55 -0.02 +9.3NewHoriz 44.73 -0.33 -3.3NewIncome 9.57 -0.01 +4.4OrseaStk d 10.47 ... +3.2R2015 14.90 -0.01 +4.1R2025 16.00 ... +4.0R2035 16.93 ... +4.0Rtmt2010 18.55 ... +4.1Rtmt2020 21.22 -0.01 +4.1Rtmt2030 23.51 -0.01 +4.0Rtmt2040 24.33 -0.01 +3.9Rtmt2045 16.22 ... +3.9ShTmBond 4.80 ... +1.0SmCpStk 43.97 -0.20 -1.3SmCpVal d 49.72 -0.10 -1.3SpecInc 13.14 -0.01 +4.7Value 36.00 +0.08 +6.6TCWTotRetBdI 10.28 ... +3.5TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.85 ... +3.9EqIx 14.73 +0.01 +4.3IntlE d 19.97 ... +3.9TempletonInFEqSeS 23.59 -0.02 +3.8ThornburgIncBldA m 21.79 ... +6.2IncBldC m 21.78 -0.01 +5.8IntlValI 30.89 ... -3.6Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.96 ... +5.0Vanguard500Adml 177.97 +0.32 +4.9500Inv 177.94 +0.33 +4.9500Sgnl 147.01 +0.27 +4.9BalIdxAdm 28.52 +0.01 +4.1BalIdxIns 28.52 +0.01 +4.1BdMktInstPls 10.84 -0.01 +3.8CAITAdml 11.71 -0.01 +5.3CapOpAdml 113.19 -0.08 +6.2DevMktIdxAdm13.69 ... +3.7DevMktIdxInstl 13.71 ... +3.6DivGr 22.07 +0.06 +3.6EmMktIAdm 35.19 -0.36 +3.9EnergyAdm 137.88 -0.25 +9.5EnergyInv 73.45 -0.14 +9.4EqInc 31.17 +0.08 +5.5EqIncAdml 65.35 +0.18 +5.6ExplAdml 94.00 -0.50 -2.2Explr 101.02 -0.54 -2.3ExtdIdAdm 63.75 -0.19 +1.6ExtdIdIst 63.75 -0.19 +1.6ExtdMktIdxIP 157.33 -0.47 +1.6FAWeUSIns 102.42 -0.20 +3.8GNMA 10.72 ... +4.0GNMAAdml 10.72 ... +4.1GlbEq 24.55 -0.03 +4.6GrthIdAdm 49.86 +0.03 +4.5GrthIstId 49.86 +0.03 +4.5HYCorAdml 6.15 +0.01 +4.4HltCrAdml 83.78 +0.01 +10.7HlthCare 198.58 +0.01 +10.7ITBondAdm 11.50 -0.01 +5.0ITGradeAd 9.96 -0.01 +4.5InfPrtAdm 26.85 -0.07 +5.5InfPrtI 10.94 -0.02 +5.6InflaPro 13.67 -0.04 +5.4InstIdxI 176.81 +0.32 +4.9InstPlus 176.83 +0.33 +5.0InstTStPl 43.97 +0.04 +4.4IntlGr 23.61 -0.04 +1.2IntlGrAdm 75.11 -0.12 +1.2IntlStkIdxAdm 28.94 -0.04 +4.1IntlStkIdxI 115.72 -0.18 +4.1IntlStkIdxIPls 115.74 -0.18 +4.1IntlStkIdxISgn 34.71 -0.06 +4.1IntlVal 38.54 -0.03 +3.1LTGradeAd 10.49 -0.01 +11.0LifeCon 18.68 ... +4.0LifeGro 28.76 -0.01 +4.1LifeMod 24.05 -0.01 +4.1MidCapIdxIP 155.44 +0.09 +4.8MidCp 31.43 +0.02 +4.7MidCpAdml 142.66 +0.08 +4.8MidCpIst 31.52 +0.02 +4.8MidCpSgl 45.02 +0.03 +4.8Morg 26.13 -0.02 +2.0MorgAdml 81.01 -0.06 +2.1MuHYAdml 11.12 ... +7.7MuInt 14.19 ... +4.8MuIntAdml 14.19 ... +4.8MuLTAdml 11.61 ... +7.2MuLtdAdml 11.09 ... +1.4MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.5PrecMtls 10.85 -0.06 +4.9Prmcp 99.04 +0.05 +7.3PrmcpAdml 102.73 +0.05 +7.3PrmcpCorI 20.91 +0.02 +7.6REITIdxAd 105.86 +0.51 +16.3REITIdxInst 16.38 +0.08 +16.3STBondAdm 10.55 ... +1.1STBondSgl 10.55 ... +1.1STCor 10.78 ... +1.6STGradeAd 10.78 ... +1.6STIGradeI 10.78 ... +1.6STsryAdml 10.71 ... +0.5SelValu 29.31 +0.04 +3.9SmCapIdx 53.40 -0.17 +1.3SmCapIdxIP 154.30 -0.50 +1.4SmCpGrIdxAdm42.32 -0.24 -1.5SmCpIdAdm 53.45 -0.18 +1.4SmCpIdIst 53.45 -0.18 +1.4SmCpIndxSgnl 48.16 -0.15 +1.4SmCpValIdxAdm43.44 -0.05 +3.9Star 24.93 ... +4.4StratgcEq 31.75 ... +5.8TgtRe2010 26.54 -0.01 +3.7TgtRe2015 15.35 ... +3.9TgtRe2020 28.21 -0.01 +4.1TgtRe2030 28.78 ... +4.1TgtRe2035 17.69 ... +4.2TgtRe2040 29.50 ... +4.2TgtRe2045 18.50 ... +4.2TgtRe2050 29.37 ... +4.2TgtRetInc 12.89 ... +3.5Tgtet2025 16.40 ... +4.1TlIntlBdIdxInst x30.63 -0.04 +3.7TlIntlBdIdxInv x10.21 -0.01 +3.7TotBdAdml 10.84 -0.01 +3.8TotBdInst 10.84 -0.01 +3.8TotBdMkInv 10.84 -0.01 +3.7TotBdMkSig 10.84 -0.01 +3.8TotIntl 17.30 -0.03 +4.0TotStIAdm 48.49 +0.04 +4.3TotStIIns 48.50 +0.04 +4.3TotStISig 46.80 +0.04 +4.3TotStIdx 48.47 +0.04 +4.3TxMCapAdm 98.28 +0.12 +4.9ValIdxAdm 31.16 +0.08 +5.2ValIdxIns 31.16 +0.08 +5.2WellsI 25.89 +0.02 +5.1WellsIAdm 62.73 +0.06 +5.2Welltn 39.58 +0.06 +5.0WelltnAdm 68.36 +0.10 +5.0WndsIIAdm 68.95 +0.20 +5.7Wndsr 21.52 +0.02 +5.8WndsrAdml 72.62 +0.06 +5.8WndsrII 38.84 +0.11 +5.6VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.16 -0.04 +6.4Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.33 ... +3.9SciTechA m 15.93 -0.08 -0.7

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

Flextrn 23 10.17 -.02ForestLab cc 94.78 -.97ForestOil 21 2.46 +.09FMCG 12 34.05 -.22FrontierCm 48 5.79 -.02FuelCellE dd 2.34 -.04Fusion-io dd 7.99 -.36GATX 17 65.85 +.55GT AdvTc dd 16.86 -.36GameStop 12 37.85 -.32Gap 16 41.23 +.37GnCable dd 25.50 +.30GenDynam 17 118.12 +.15GenGrPrp 64 23.83 +.18GenMills 20 54.93 +.23GenMotors 14 34.58 +.13Genworth 13 16.99 -.19Gerdau ... 5.94 -.22GeronCp dd 2.08 -.04GileadSci 30 81.21 -.87Globalstar dd 3.46 +.13GluMobile dd 3.64 -.43Gogo n dd 18.09 -.58GoldFLtd ... 3.54 +.03Goldcrp g dd 23.37 +.26GoodrPet dd 29.00 +.10GramrcyP dd 5.87 +.04GraphPkg 20 10.99 +.09Groupon dd 5.88 -.11GpFnSnMx ... 13.40 -.10Guess 15 25.50 -1.38HCA Hldg 15 52.99 -.40HCP Inc 19 41.75 +.14HDFC Bk ... 45.03 -.86HalconRes dd 6.24 -.12Hallibrtn 22 64.64 +.64HltCrREIT cc 63.23 +.56HlthcreTr 48 12.10 +.05HeclaM dd 2.77HercOffsh dd 4.54 -.01Hersha cc 6.33 +.03Hertz 38 29.52 +.28Hess 7 91.30 +.71HewlettP 12 33.50 -.14Hillshire 32 53.28 +.52Hilton n 50 22.62 +.44HimaxTch 33 6.63 -.32Hologic dd 24.44 +.19HomeDp 20 80.23 +.33HopFedBc 27 11.35 -.10HorizPhm dd 14.19 -.35HostHotls 37 22.07 +.27HudsCity 26 9.77 -.01HuntBncsh 13 9.27 +.03

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 3.05 -.03iShGold q 12.13 -.04iShBrazil q 46.49 -1.01iShEMU q 43.41 +.09iShGerm q 32.14 +.05iShJapan q 11.58 +.02iShMexico q 66.22 -.88iSTaiwn q 15.11 -.12iSh UK q 21.73 -.03iShSilver q 18.08 -.22iShS&P100 q 85.57 +.14iShChinaLC q 36.85 +.19iSCorSP500 q 193.87 +.34iShCorTBd q 109.67 +.10iShEMkts q 42.55 -.59iSh20 yrT q 114.10 -.05iS Eafe q 69.41 +.01iShiBxHYB q 95.05 +.10iShR2K q 112.86 -.51iShREst q 71.67 +.35iShHmCnst q 24.03 -.14Infoblox dd 12.96 -7.56Infosys 17 51.43 +.68IngrmM 15 27.77 +.11InovioPhm dd 2.25 -.01IBM 12 184.36 +.60IntlGame 14 12.55 -.03IntPap 16 47.63 +.78Interpublic 28 19.12 +.01Invesco 17 36.70 +.07InvBncp s 27 10.80 +.09IridiumCm 11 7.92 -.21ItauUnibH ... 15.50 -.54JA Solar dd 9.95 -.62JD.com n ... 25.00 -.40JDS Uniph 27 10.97 -.24JPMorgCh 14 55.57 -.15JetBlue 21 9.66 +.11JohnJn 19 101.46 +.70JohnsnCtl 17 48.36 -.06JosABank 27 64.95 +.85JnprNtwk 27 24.46 -.99KeyEngy dd 8.05 -.17Keycorp 13 13.69 +.06Kimco 49 22.92 +.13KindMorg 29 33.39 -.21Kinross g dd 3.78 +.05KodiakO g 22 12.73 -.02Kohls 14 54.44 -.04KraftFGp 13 59.46 +.43LVSands 27 76.52 -.49LeidosHld 20 38.15 -.12LennarA 18 40.90 +.03LibGlobC s ... 42.80 -.23LillyEli 17 59.86 +.39LionsGt g 26 26.13 -3.40LiveDeal s dd 4.67 +.06LockhdM 17 163.65 +.50Lorillard 20 62.17 +1.93LaPac 22 14.20 -.42LyonBas A 14 99.57 -.78

M-N-O-PMBIA 7 11.76 -.12MFA Fncl 11 8.23 +.04MGIC Inv 37 8.48 -.06MGM Rsts dd 25.75 -.25MackCali dd 21.75 -.15Macys 15 59.89 +.73MagHRes dd 7.66 -.16MannKd dd 8.90 +.35MarathnO 10 36.66MVJrGld rs q 34.11 +.71MktVGold q 22.50 +.26MktVRus q 25.10 -.48MarIntA 29 61.62 +.94MartMM 47 122.80 -.78MarvellT 24 15.57 -.17Masco 28 21.30Mastec 22 36.00 -2.82MasterCd s 29 76.45 -.34Mattel 15 38.83 +.03MaximIntg 25 34.25 -.25Medtrnic 20 61.03 +.41MelcoCrwn 55 34.47 -.50Merck 38 57.86 +.16MetLife 15 50.93 +.11MKors 42 94.38 +2.10MicronT 12 28.59 +.01Microsoft 15 40.94 +.60MobileTele ... 18.49 -.28Molycorp dd 2.77 -.10Mondelez 19 37.62 +.14Monsanto 24 121.85 +.28MorgStan 18 30.86 -.27MotrlaSolu 17 67.42 +.51Mylan 32 49.84 +.11NII Hldg dd .50 -.05NPS Phm dd 31.13 +3.68NQ Mobile dd 7.59 +.80NRG Egy dd 35.64 +.09Nabors 56 26.23 +.06NBGreece ... 3.65 +.18NOilVarco 15 81.87 -.21Navient n ... 15.80 +.12NetApp 21 37.01 -.04Netflix cc 417.83 +2.63NwGold g 59 5.28 +.16NewResid ... 6.34 +.02Newcastle 13 4.82 -.01NewLead rs ... 1.38 -.29NewmtM dd 22.89 +.13NewsCpA n ... 17.06 -.06NikeB 26 76.91 +.53NimbleSt n ... 25.37 -1.51NobleCorp 9 31.46 +.12NokiaCp ... 8.13 +.21NA Pall g ... .28 -.02NorthropG 14 121.55 +1.35NStarRlt dd 16.55 +.17Novavax dd 4.71 -.20NOW wi ... 32.35 +.95Nvidia 22 19.00 +.05OcciPet 14 99.69 -.14OceanPw h dd 2.49 -.01OfficeDpt dd 5.12 -.01Oi SA ... .84 -.02OmniVisn 13 22.48 +2.34OnSmcnd 20 8.69 -.01

Oracle 18 42.02 -.18Orexigen dd 6.46 +.04PDL Bio 5 9.37 +.05PG&E Cp 23 45.87 +.19PHH Corp 58 25.47 +.03PPG 26 201.61 +.61PPL Corp 13 35.09 +.31PacSunwr dd 2.42 -.52PaloAltNet dd 74.91 +1.74Pandora dd 24.53 -.89Paychex 25 41.11 -.33PeabdyE 81 16.16 -.53PennVa dd 15.18 -1.30PeopUtdF 19 14.37 -.01PepcoHold 23 27.70 +.04PetSmart 14 57.47 +.97PetrbrsA ... 14.93 -.68Petrobras ... 14.10 -.48Pfizer 16 29.63 +.03PhilipMor 17 88.54 +.17Phillips66 16 84.79 +.47PiperJaf 15 44.03 -.58PlugPowr h dd 4.35 -.01Potash 20 36.32 -.08PwshDB q 26.03 -.20PS SrLoan ... 24.83 +.05PwShs QQQ q 91.31 +.01ProLogis cc 41.51 +.17ProShtS&P q 23.87 -.05ProUltSP q 111.31 +.30PrUPQQQ s q 68.33 -.06PUVixST rs q 37.35 -.22ProctGam 21 80.79 +.39ProgsvCp 13 25.03 -.14ProUShSP q 26.55 -.07PUShQQQ rs q 53.23ProUShL20 q 60.69 +.05PShtQQQ rs q 47.39 -.03PUShSPX rs q 50.71 -.24ProspctCap ... 9.94 -.06PSEG 15 38.96 +.46PulteGrp 3 19.56 -.18

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 83 91.83 -3.83Qualcom 20 80.45 +.26RF MicD 55 9.41 -.04RLJ LodgT 30 27.71 -.09Rackspace 62 36.49 +.22RadianGrp 20 14.42 -.07ReneSola dd 2.54 -.21RenewEn 3 9.89 -.12Retrophin dd 14.62 +1.74ReynAmer 21 59.63 +.02RioTinto ... 51.38 -2.13RiteAid 38 8.36 -.02Rowan 16 30.96 +.02RoyDShllA 10 78.60 -.21RymanHP 36 46.13 -.32SLM Cp 3 8.61 +.04SpdrDJIA q 166.93 +.15SpdrGold q 120.43 -.51SpdrEuro50 q 44.26 +.17S&P500ETF q 192.68 +.31SpdrHome q 31.50 -.13SpdrRetl q 83.78 +.34SpdrOGEx q 77.04 -.79Salesforce dd 52.63 -1.77SanDisk 20 96.63 +.02SandRdge dd 6.67 -.07SantCUSA n ... 19.65 -.11Schlmbrg 20 104.04 +.18Schwab 30 25.21 -.34SeadrillLtd 16 38.00 -.38SeagateT 11 53.73 +.67SiderurNac ... 3.88 -.12SigmaDsg dd 3.44 -.09SilvWhtn g 23 20.54 +.09Sina dd 44.81 -1.83SiriusXM 55 3.28 -.04SkywksSol 26 43.31 +.40SolarCity dd 52.50 -2.57SouFun s 17 11.97 -.94SwstAirl 24 26.45 +.01SwstnEngy 80 45.47 -.29SpectraEn 23 40.58 -.14Spherix dd 1.93 -.14SpiritRC n dd 11.29 -.01Splunk dd 41.86 -8.18Sprint n dd 9.55 +.11SP Matls q 49.08 -.01SP HlthC q 59.79 +.16SP CnSt q 45.04 +.35SP Consum q 65.68 +.06SP Engy q 95.31 -.07SP Inds q 54.05 -.04SP Tech q 37.82 +.04SP Util q 42.74 +.28Staples 13 11.25 -.12Starbucks 30 73.24 +.13StratHotels 11 10.90 +.08Stryker 34 84.49 +.60SunEdison dd 19.69 -.81SunPower 23 33.34 -.65Symantec 17 21.99 -.18Synovus rs 21 23.06 +.01Sysco 23 37.53 +.36T-MobileUS dd 34.33 -.53TD Ameritr 22 30.34 +.05TJX 18 54.45TaiwSemi ... 20.56 -.14TalismE g ... 10.32 +.03Target 19 56.76 +.88TataMotors ... 37.24 -.43TeckRes g ... 22.31 -.33TeslaMot dd 207.77 -2.47TevaPhrm cc 50.49 -.17TexInst 25 46.98 +.323D Sys cc 50.65 -.723M Co 21 142.55 +.16TimeWarn 15 69.83 -.48TotalSys 23 30.26 -.32Transocn cc 42.49 +.12TrinaSolar 55 13.67 -.67TurqHillRs dd 3.59 -.0421stCFoxA 21 35.41 -.1021stCFoxB 12 34.46 -.04Twitter n ... 32.44 -1.56TwoHrbInv 11 10.53 +.17TycoIntl dd 43.64 -.06Tyson 16 42.46 -.79

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUndArmr s 66 50.79UtdContl 43 44.37 -.23UPS B 23 103.88 -.18UtdRentals 23 101.05 -.46US NGas q 25.20 -.10USSteel dd 23.04 -1.11UtdTech 19 116.22 -.13UtdhlthGp 15 79.63 +.26UraniumEn dd 1.75 -.05UrbanOut 18 33.52 +.25Vale SA ... 12.75 -.39Vale SA pf ... 11.48 -.54ValeantPh dd 131.21 +1.99ValeroE 10 56.05 -.59VangREIT q 74.69 +.34VangEmg q 42.21 -.55VangEur q 60.98 +.04VangFTSE q 42.66VeevaSys n ... 20.96 -1.08VerizonCm 11 49.96 +.24VimpelCm dd 8.37 +.01Vivus dd 4.93 -.19Vodafone ... 35.01 -.03Vonage 42 3.80 +.06VoyaFincl cc 35.80 -.41VulcanM 59 60.97 +.04WPX Engy dd 21.18 -.14Walgrn 25 71.91 +.80WalterEn dd 4.88 -.21WashPrm n ... 19.89 -.71WeathfIntl dd 21.69 +.43WellPoint 14 108.36 -.19WDigital 21 87.85 +.72WstnUnion 11 16.17 +.14WholeFood 25 38.24 +.14WmsCos 57 46.96 +.18Windstrm 25 9.57 -.06WiscEngy 17 45.52 +.42WT India q 21.48 -.31Workday dd 78.37 -2.59xG Tech n dd 1.93 -.17YY Inc ... 65.11 -.04Yamana g 37 7.36 +.23Yandex ... 31.14 -.77Yelp dd 66.15 -2.41YingliGrn dd 3.38 -.13YumBrnds 31 77.31 +.59Zoetis 30 30.70 -.02Zogenix dd 2.30 +.13Zynga dd 3.45 +.04

The W

eek A

head

Spotlight on jobs

U.S. employers have ramped up hiring this year, a trend that has helped drive down the unemploy-ment rate to 6.3 percent.

Employers added 288,000 jobs in April, the biggest hiring surge in two years. All told, employers added an average of 214,000 jobs a month between January and April. That's up from 194,000 last year. Did hiring pick up strongly again in May? Find out on Friday, when the government reports its latest monthly job figures.

Production ramping up?

Orders to U.S. factories advanced strongly in March for a second month in a row.

Those gains followed two months of declines in December and January. The reversal suggests what many economists have been saying: Rising demand should boost factory production as the economy emerges from a slowdown during a harsh winter. The Commerce Department reports its data on April factory orders on Tuesday.

Trade gap monitor

The Commerce Department reports on Wednesday its latest tally of the nation’s trade deficit.

Economists predict the trade gap widened slightly in April to $40.8 billion from $40.4 billion a month earlier, when a pickup in exports, led by strong gains in sales of aircraft, autos and farm goods, helped cut the imbalance from a five-month high. A smaller trade deficit can boost growth because it means U.S. companies are earning more on their overseas sales.

20142014

Factory ordersMonthly percent change

Source: FactSet

N D J F M A

est.0.2%

Source: FactSet

Nonfarm payrollsmonthly change in thousands

215est.

D J F M A M50

100

150

200

250

Stepping asideFord CEO Alan

Mulally announces he is retiring and will

turn over the job to Mark Fields

on July 1.

CEO ousterTarget

CEO Gregg Steinhafel loses his job in the aftermath of last year’s data breach involving the personal data of millions of customers.

Get readyAlibaba Group, an

e-commerce giant in China, files for an initial public stock offering in the U.S. It could prove to be one of the biggest IPOs in history.

Woe CanadaSears Holdings says it may

sell its stake in Sears Canada and

on May 20, Target fires the president of its troubled Canadian operations.

Record recalls

General Motors is fined $35 million by federal safety regulators. A review of past safety issues has led GM to recall 13.8 million cars and trucks so far this year.

Set adriftDarden Restaurants sells its Red Lobster chain to investment firm Golden Gate Capital for $2.1 billion.

How low?The yield on the 10-yr

Treasury note falls to a low point for the year of 2.44 percent, down from 2.97 percent in January.

Basket BallmerFormer Microsoft CEO

Steve Ballmer agrees to buy the NBA’s Los Angeles Clippers for $2 billion.

Source: FactSet Trevor Delaney; Jenni Sohn • AP

Going shoppingSell in May? Not so fast. Both the Dow and S&P 500 finish the month at an all-time high.

S&P 500 2.1% 4.1%

Dow 0.8 0.9

Nasdaq 3.1 1.6

May YTDChange

May snapshot

16

29

30

7

1

5Make me a match Apple opened its wallet to buy the headphone and music-streaming company Beats Electronics for $3 billion, but it was just one of many that sought to pair up in May.

• Pfizer is turned down by AstraZeneca • AT&T agrees to buy DirecTV• Valeant pursues Allergan • Apple buys Beats Electronics • Pilgrim’s Pride and Tyson Foods both eye Hillshire Brands

SteFor

Mulalis

111111

14

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

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 2014

ACROSS1 California/Arizona

border reservoir11 Has yet to

settle15 “Let a new

chapter begin”16 Salinger’s “__

Stories”17 Yellow sticky,

often18 With 3-Down,

WingeyWallace’s comicstrip girlfriend

19 __’acte20 Pkg. measures21 Wife of Jacob23 Ominous time25 Smiley creator26 Treated with

malice29 57501

preceder, onenvelopes

30 Place31 __ ball32 A little

freedom?33 Lea grazers34 Star of the 1931

film “M”35 Film36 Yet, poetically37 Toon lead

singer in aleopard-printleotard

38 Outlook39 Building and

grounds41 Comprehend42 Post-reaping

sights43 Japanese

sandal44 Bunches45 Thrice, in Rx’s46 Egyptian

Christian50 Nonexistent51 Blew up54 “Gotcha”55 Liven up56 Experiment57 Number that’s

physicallyimpossible towrite out instandard form

DOWN1 __ drive2 “The company

for women”company

3 See 18-Across4 Honored retiree5 Selling fast6 Swore7 Sleeveless

garments8 Summer quaffs9 Nuevo __:

Peruvian currency10 Remove

restrictions from11 Like many a

garage12 Enthusiastically13 Signs, as an

agreement14 Type of

headlight22 Start to bat?24 __ Arc,

Arkansas25 Petrol purchase26 Weighs options27 Dominant team28 Winter soil

phenomena29 Trojan War

figure

31 Law recipient34 Takes a bath35 It merged with

Travelers in1998

37 Tease, in slang38 Irreg. spelling40 Xylophonist’s

tool41 Antecede43 1983 Woody

Allen title role

45 TV watcher’sconvenience

47 Like zero48 Best of the

Beatles49 Big natural

history museumattraction

52 Bride in 1969news

53 N.Z. currency

By Barry C. Silk(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 05/31/14

05/31/14

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

g yEdited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: After 20 years of living together, my partner informed me that she was in love with someone else and had been slipping off to his house when she told me she was visiting a girl-friend. “Lois” says there was no sex involved — just hugging and kissing, etc.

I confronted this man, and he denied he had any feelings for Lois except as a friend.

He said she asked him for a hug, so he hugged her, but nothing else hap-pened. He denied they kissed. Twice after that, he told Lois to her face that he has no feelings for her.

This guy is a snowbird and is here only during the winter.

Lois says she loves me, but is not “in love” with me, and when this guy returns, she is going to be hugging and kissing him whether I like it or not. She believes he loves her, no matter what he says.

Lois is 76, and I am 81. I told her there is no way she can continue to live with me if she’s going to remain friendly with this guy, and that I would leave.

I love her, but will not share her. I also don’t be-lieve this guy cares for her, but he doesn’t have the nerve to stop her from coming over.

Please don’t suggest counseling. Lois has no in-terest in it.

The guy returns in No-vember. Should I wait or leave? — Florida Problems

Dear Florida: Lois wants both of you — you for the security,

and the Other Man for the romance.

He makes her feel young, and unless he actually turns her away, she will keep go-ing over there.

Can you rev up the romance over the summer so that Lois is less interested in anyone else? Do you think her infatuation will wear thin and fade away? Do you want to have an open relation-ship in which both of you can see other peo-ple?

You cannot change Lois’ behavior or that of the Other Man. You can only decide how you are going to handle the situation in whatever way works best for you.

Dear Annie: I have been married to my husband for 20 years, and we have two kids in junior high.

My problem is, my hus-band does not wash his hands after using the bath-room or blowing his nose, which drives me crazy.

I mentioned it early on, and he claimed he was “careful enough” so that nothing ever got on his hands. I know that’s not possible. How do I get through to him that he’s risking illness for himself and the entire family? — Grossed Out in Quebec

Dear Quebec: Not washing one’s hands after using the bath-room, coughing or blowing one’s nose is a surefi re way to trans-mit germs.

It is particularly im-portant to wash one’s hands before handling food. You could ask your husband to dis-cuss the health risks with his doctor, or you could try behav-ior modifi cation — re-fusing to kiss or touch him until he washes his hands, for exam-ple.

But you cannot force him to be more con-siderate, sorry.

Dear Annie: I read the letter from “M.S. in Mon-treal, Quebec,” who told the amusing story about a doctor and a lawyer who were always asked professional questions by friends. I would like to add a comment.

In my pre-retirement career, I hosted a home improvement call-in ra-dio show. At any social function I attended, I was bombarded by questions about how to fi x things. Once, a doctor came up to me and said, “I have a problem with a rain gut-ter. Can you help me?” I said, “Yes, give it two aspi-rins, and if it’s not better in the morning, call my radio show on Saturday.”

He apologized and said he had done the very thing he hated people doing to him. (By the way, he called me on Saturday.) — MCH, Kelowna, B.C.

Woman wants relationship with 2 menAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

10 • Saturday, May 31, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Taylor Heating &Air Conditioning

402 W. Tate St(662) 286-5717

Taylor Heating &Air Conditioning

402 W. Tate St(662) 286-5717

am; Worship 11:00am & 5pm; Wed.Prayer Serv. 6pm.Rienzi Baptist Church, 10 School St, Rienzi, MS; Pastor Titus Tyer S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 6:30pmSaint Luke Missionary Baptist Church, 140 Rd 418., Pastor, John Pams, Jr. ; S.S. 9am; Worship 10:30am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pmSt. Mark Baptist Church, 1105 White St. Kim Ratliff, Pastor, 662-287-6718, church phone 662-286-6260. S.S. 10am; Worship Service 11am; Wed. Prayer Service & Bible Study 6:30pm.Shady Grove Baptist Church, 19 CR 417, Bro. Jimmy Lancaster, Pastor, Bro. Tim Edwards, Youth Minister;. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Sun. Night Service 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 7pm. Shiloh Baptist Church, U.S. 72 West. Rev. Phillip Caples, pastor S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm.South Corinth Baptist Church, 300 Miller Rd., Charles Stephenson, Pastor SS 10am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Prayer & Bible Study 6 pmSt. Rest M.B. Church, Guys TN Rev. O. J. Salters, pastor. Sun.Worship 11am; S.S. 9:45am; Wed. Bible study 6:00pm.Strickland Baptist Church, 554 CR 306 Corinth, MS., SS 10am, Worship Service 11am, Sunday Night 6pm, Wed Night 7pm.Synagogue M.B. Church, 182 Hwy. 45, Rieniz, 462-3867 Steven W. Roberson, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Morning Worship & Praise 11 am, Community Bible Study (Tues.) 11 am, Evening Bible Study (Wed.) 7 p.m.Tate Baptist Church, 1201 N. Harper Rd. 286-2935; Mickey Trammel, pastor Sun.: SS 9:30am; Morn. Worship, Preschool Church; Children’s Worship (grades 1-4) 10:45am; Worship 6pm; Wed., Fellowship Meal 4:45 pm, Nursery, Mission Friends, Tater Chips (grades 1-4), Big House (grades 5-8), Youth (grades 9-12), Adult Bible Study/ Prayer 6 PM; Adult Choir Rehearsal 7 PMTishomingo Chapel Baptist Church, 136 CR 634, Pastor: Bro. Bruce Ingram: S.S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Discipleship Training 5pm, Worship 6pm, 4th Sunday Worship at 5pm, Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pmTrinity Baptist Church, Michie, Tenn., 901-239-2133, Pastor: Bro. George Kyle; S. S.10am; Sun. Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Prayer Service Wed. 6:30pm.Tuscumbia Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Prayer Service Wed. pm.Union Baptist Church, Rayborn Richardson, pastor. S.S. 10 am. Church Training 5pm. Evening Worship 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 6:30pm. Unity Baptist Church, 5 CR 408, Hwy. 45 South Biggersville. Excail Burleson, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm.Unity Baptist Church, 825 Unity Church Rd, Ramer, TN, Dr. Ronald Meeks, Pastor; Bro. Andrew Williams, Music Director; Jason Webb, Youth Minister; Janice Lawson, Pianist; Sunday: Men’s Prayer 9:45am; SS 10am, Morning Worship 11am, Evening Worship 6pm; Wed. AWANA-Prayer Meeting 6:30pm. West Corinth Baptist Church, 308 School St., Bro. Seth Kirkland, Pastor; Marshall Cook, Youth Pastor; S.S. 9:00am. Worship 10:00am & 6pm; Wed Prayer 6:45pm; Wed Bible Study 7:00pm.Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, Kara Blackard, pastor. S.S. 9am. Worship Service10am & 6:30pm; Wed. prayer mtg. & classes 6:30pm.

CATHOLIC CHURCHSt. James Catholic Church, 3189 Harper Rd., 287-1051 - Office; 284-9300 - Linda Gunther. Sun. Mass: 9am in English and 7pm Saturday in Spanish

CHRISTIAN CHURCH Charity Christian Church, Jacinto. Minister, Bro. Travis Smith S.S. 10am;Worship 11am; Bible Study 5pm; Wed. 7pm.Guys Christian Church, Guys, Tenn. 38339. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am. Oak Hill Christian Church, Kendrick Rd. At Tn. Line, Frank Williams, Evangelist, Bible School 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm (Winter); 6pm (Summer) Salem Christian Church, 1030 CR 400, Dennis Smith, minister. SS 9 am, Morning Worship 10am, Evening Service 5pm (Standard time) 6pm (Daylight Saving time). Need a ride? - Bro. Smith at 662-396-4051Waldron Street Christian Church, Drew Foster, Minister. S.S. 9:30am; Worship10:45am & 6pm; Youth Mtgs. 6 pm; Wed. 6pm.

CHURCH OF CHRIST Acton Church of Christ, 3 miles north of Corinth city limits on Hwy. 22. Shawn Weaver, Minister; Michael Harvill, Youth Min. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:50am & 5 p.m; Wed. Bible Study 7:00pm.Berea Church of Christ, Guys, TN. Minister Will Luster. Sun. School 10am, Worship Service 11am.Central Church of Christ, 306 CR 318, Corinth, MS, Don Bassett, Minister Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6p.m., Wed. Bible Study 7p.m.Clear Creek Church of Christ, Waukomis Lake Rd. Duane Ellis, Minister. Worship 9am & 5pm; Bible School 10am; Wed. 6:30pm. Danville Church of Christ, 287-0312, 481 CR 409. Corinth; Sunday Bible Study 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. East Corinth Church of Christ, 1801 Cruise Ronald Choate, Minister. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Worship 10:30am & 5pm;Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Foote Street Church of Christ, Charles Curtis, Minister., Terry Smith, Youth Minister; S.S. 9am; Worship 10am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.

APOSTOLICJesus Christ Church of the Second Chance, 1206 Wood St., Corinth. Bishop Willie Davis. S.S 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. worship 7 pm. “We care and are in the neighborhood to be a service.”Christ Temple Church, Hwy. 72 W. in Walnut, MS. Rev. J.C. Hall, ; Clay Hall, Asst. Pastor. Services Sun. 10am & 6pm; Wed. 7:30pm Community Tabernacle, 18 CR 647, Kossuth, MS. Pastor: Bro. DJ Roseberry (662) 284-4602 Services Sun. 10am & 5 pm, Thurs. 7:00 pmGrace Apostolic Church, CR 473 on left off Hwy 45 S. approx 2 1/2 mi. S. of Biggersville, Bro. Charles Cooper, Pastor; Sun. Service 10am, Sun. Evening 6 pm; Thurs. night 7 pm; 462-5374.Holy Assembly Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ, 201 Martin Luther King Dr., Booneville, MS; Pastor: Bishop Jimmy Gunn, Sr.; 1st Sun.: SS 10am, Worship 11:45am; 2nd Sun: Pastoral Day 11:45am; 3rd Sun: Missionary Serv. 11:45am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm

ASSEMBLY OF GODCanaan Assembly of God, 2306 E. Chambers Dr. 728-3363, Pastor Ricky & Sarah Peebles, Deaf Ministry: Michael Woods 728-0396. S.S. 9:30 am; Children’s Church 10:30 am; Worship 10:30 am & 6 pm; Wed. 7 pm.Christian Assembly of God, Hwy 2, Rev. Skip Alexander pastor. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm. Wed. Bible Study & Youth 7pm First Assembly of God, Jason Pellizzer, pastor, 310 Second St., S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm.

BAPTISTAlcorn Baptist Church, CR 355 Kossuth, MS; Rev. Larry Gillard, Pastor, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6pm.Antioch Baptist Church, Galda Stricklen, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm. Antioch Baptist Church No. 2, County Rd. 518. Greg Warren, pastor. S.S. 9:45am,Worship 11:00am, D.T. 5:00pm-6:00pm Wed. Prayer Mtg.7:00pm.Bethlehem Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am, DT 5:30pm, Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm; WMU 1st Sun. monthly 4pm; Brotherhood 1st Sun. monthly 7am; Youth Night Every 4th Wed.Biggersville First Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm. Training Union 6pm, Wed. 7pm.Brush Creek Baptist Church, Off Hwy. 72 West. Bro. Carroll Talley, pastor. S.S. 10am; Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Service 6:30pm.Butler’s Chapel Baptist Church, Bro. Wayne McKee, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Service 7pm.Calvary Baptist Church, 501 Norman Rd. (Behind Buck’s 66 Station). Bro. Tim Bass, pastor. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6:45pm; Sun. Discipleship Training 6pm; Wed Bible Study, Children & Youth Missions 7pm.Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, Burnsville. Bro. John Cain, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Prayer Meeting 7pm; Ladies’ Auxiliary 2nd & 4th Tuesday 6pm.Center Hill Baptist Church, Keith Driskell, pastor. S.S. 10am. Worship 10:55am & 6:30pm Church Training 6pm Prayer Mtg 7pm.Central Grove Baptist Church, County Road 614, Kossuth, MS, 287-4085.S.S. 10:15 am; Worship Service 11:00 am; Wednesday Night 6:30 pm, Bible Class and Usher Board Meeting immediately followingCentral Missionary Baptist Church, Central School Rd, Bro. Frank Wilson, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pmChewalla Baptistt Church, Chewalla, TN. Richard Doyle, pastor, 239-9802. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6:15pm; AWANA 5pm; Discipleship Training 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Study-Youth-Children’s Choir 7pmCounty Line Baptist Church, 8 CR 600, Walnut, MS, Sunday School 9am, Morning Worship Service 10amCovenant Baptist Church, 6515 Hwy 57 E, Miche, TN; Pastor K. Brian Rainey Sun Worship 10am and 6pm, Wed. Night 7pmCrossroads Baptist Church, Salem Rd (CR 400), Warren Jones, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pmDanville Baptist Church, Danville Rd., Interim Pastor: Rev. Charlie Cooper. S.S.10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm.East Fifth Street Missionary Baptist Church, Rev. Richard Wade, pastor S.S. 9:30am. Worship 10:45am; Wed. bible study & prayer meeting 6pm. Choir Rehearsal Saturday 11am. East Corinth Baptist Church, 4303 Shiloh Road. 286-2094. Pastor Ralph Culp, S.S. 9:30am; Service 10:45am & 6:30pm. Wed.Service 6:30pm.Eastview Baptist Church, Ramer, TN. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.; all youth organizations Wed. 7pm.Farmington Baptist Church, Timothy Nall, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. AWANA (for ages 3 & up) 6:30-8pm Men’s Brotherhood & Ladies WMA 6:30pm; Bible Study 7pm.Fellowship Baptist Church, 1308 High School Rd., Selmer, TN. Pastor, Bro. J.D. Matlock. S.S. 10am; Serv. 11am & 6pm.; Wed. 7pm. First Baptist Church, Corinth, 501 Main. Rev. Dennis Smith, Pastor. Sun. Worship Service 8:20am;Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:45am & 7pm Youth Choir Rehearsal 4:45pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 6:30pm; Adult choir rhrsl. 7:30pm.First Baptist Church, Burnsville. S.S. 10-10:50am. Worship 11am & 6pm; DT 5:30pm; Wed.Bible Study 7pm.First Baptist Church, Michie, Tn. Pastor: James Hardin; S.S. 10am; Sun. Morn. Worship 11am; Sun. Evening Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Night Discipleship Training 7pm.First Baptist Church of Counce, Counce, TN. Bro. Jimmy McChristial. S.S. 9am; Worship 10:15am & 6pm; Prayer Meeting Wed. 6:30pm. Friendship Baptist Church, CR 614, Corinth; Craig Wilbanks, Pastor; Early Morn Service 9:30am; S.S. 10:00 am; Worship 11:00am; Wed. night 6:30pm.Glendale Baptist Church, US 72 East, Glen. Pastor: Bro. Jon Haimes, Minister of Music: Bro. Richard Yarber; Awana Program: Sunday Nights 5:30; S.S. 9:45am;Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Discipleship Training 5:30pm; Choir Practice: Sunday, Children & Youth 5pm, Adults: 7:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 7pm. Hinkle Baptist Church, Internim Pastor Paul Stacey. Min. of Music Beverly Castile, S.S. 9am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm.Holly Baptist Church, Holly Church Rd. Pastor John Boler. 8:45 am- Early Morning Worship, 10:00 am S.S., 11:00 am Late Worship, 6:00 pm Evening Worship, Wed. Service 6:30 pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study, Children & Youth Activities, www.hollybaptist.orgHopewell Missionary Baptist Church, 464 Hwy 356, Rienzi. Rev. Gabe Jolly III, Pastor; S.S. 9am; Children’s Church: 10am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Bible Study: Wed 5pm. Jacinto Baptist Church, Ken White, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. service 6:30pm.Kemps Chapel Baptist Church, Pastor: Tim Dillingham; Rt. 1, Rienzi. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6:15pm; Church Trng. 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Study. 7 pm.Kendrick Baptist Church, Bro. Zack Howell, pastor. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 10:30am, & 6:30pm; Church Trng. 5:30pm, Wed. 7pm.Kossuth First Baptist Church, 893 Hwy #2; Bro David Bishop, Pastor, SS 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm; Wed Bible Study, 6:30pm; 287-4112Lakeview Missionary Baptist Church, Charles Martin, pastor. 5402 Shiloh Rd. 287-2177 S.S. 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm; Wed. Adult Bible Study, Youth Min. 7pm.Liberty Hill Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 5:00pm; Wed. 7:00 pm.Little Flock Primitive Baptist Church, 4 mi. so. of Burnsville off Hwy. 365. Turn west at sign. Pastor: Elder Bob Ward. Sun. Bible Study 9:45 am; Worship 10:30am.Little Zion Missionary Baptist Church, 3395 N Polk St, Pastor - Christopher Traylor; Sunday School - 9am; Worship 10:15 am - Communion - 1st Sunday at 11am; Bible Study - Wednesday Night at 6:00 pmLone Oak Baptist Church, Charles Mills, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Prayer Service 5:30pm; Wed. 7pm.Love Joy Baptist Church, on the Glen-Jacinto Road, Hwy 367. Pastor, Bro. David Robbins, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6 pm.Macedonia Baptist Church, 715 Martin Luther King Dr. Pastor - Bro. Lawrence Morris. S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; Wed. Worship. 6pmMason St. Luke Baptist Church, Mason St. Luke Rd. 287-1656. Rev. Wayne Wooden, pastor; S.S. 9:45 am Worship 11am.; Wed. 6:30pm. McCalip Baptist Chapel, Rt.1 Pocahontas,TN Pastor, Rev. Johnny Sparks Services Sunday 11am & 6p.m. Michie Primitive Baptist Church, Michie Tenn. Pastor: Elder Ricky Taylor. Worship Service Sunday 10:30 am. Everyone is cordially invited. Mills Commuity Baptist Church, 397 CR 550 Rienzi, MS. Bro. Robby Johnson, pastor. S. S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am & Sun. Night 5pm; Wed. Bible Stdy. 6:30pmNew Covenant Baptist Church, 1402 E. 4th St., Pastor David Harris, pastor, Sunday School 9:45am; Worship 11:00am, Bible Study Wednesdays 6:30 pm.New Lebanon Free Will Baptist Church, 1195 Hwy. 364, Cairo Community; Jack Whitley, Jr, pastor; 462-8069 or 462-7591; 10am S.S. for all ages; Worship, 11am Children’s Church, 5pm; Choir Practice, 6pm; Evening Worship, Wed. 7 pm Midweek Bible Study & Prayer Meeting, 7pm;Young People Bible Classes.North Corinth Baptist Church,Rev. Bill Wages,pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; ChurchTraining 6:00pm; Wed. 7pm Oakland Baptist Church, 1101 S. Harper Rd., Dr. Randy Bostick, Pastor. SS all ages 9am; Worship Serv. 10:15am & 6:20pm; Sun. Orchestra Reh. 4pm; Student Choir & Handbells 5pm; Children’s Choir (age 4-Grade 6) 5:15pm; Wed. AWANA clubs (during school year) 6pm; Prayer & Praise 6:30pm; Student “XTREME Life” Worship Service 6:45pm; “Life Institute” Small Group Classes 7pm; Sanctuary choir reh. 8:05pm 662-287-6200Olive Hill West, Guys, TN; Pastor, Robert Huton;S.S. 10am; Worship 11 am & 6pm; Training 5:30; Wed. 7pmPinecrest Baptist Church, 313 Pinecrest Rd., Corinth, Bro. Jeff Haney, pastor. S.S.9:30am; Worship 10:30am; Sun. Serv. 6:00pm; Wed. Worship Serv. 6:00pm Pleasant Grove Missionary Baptist Church,Inc., 1572 Wenasoga Rd, Corinth; Pastor Allen Watson. Sunday School - 9:45am; Worship Serv. - Sun 11am; Bible Class & Prayer Service-Wed 6pm; Every second Sunday 6PM (Need a ride to Church - Don Wallace 286-6588)Ramer Baptist Church, 3899 Hwy 57 W, Ramer, TN; Pastor: Rev. James Young; Church office: 731-645-5681; SS 9:45am, Morn. Worship 11am; Discipleship Training 6pm, Evening Worship 7pm; Wed. Family Supper 5:30pm, Mid-Week Prayer Service 6:30pm

Ridgecrest Baptist Church, Farmington Rd., Pastor: Carl Weeden; SS:10:00

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Daily Corinthian • Saturday, May 31, 2014 • 11

Box Chapel United Methodist Church, Anne Ferguson, Pastor 3310 CR 100 (Intersection of Kendrick & Box Chapel Road) S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 11 am, Evening Worship 5 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m.Burnsville United Methodist Church, 118 Front St., Burnsville. 423-1758. Wayne Napier, Pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 9 a.m. Danville CME Methodist Church, Rev. James Agnew, Pastor, Sun. S.S. 10 am, Worship Service 11 am, Bible classes Wed. night 6:30 to 7:30. Christ United Methodist Church, 3161 Shiloh Rd. Pastor: Dr. Danny Rowland; 286-3298. S.S. 9:45 am (all ages); Fellowship 10:45am; Worship 11am (nursery provided). Mons: Boy Scouts 5pm; Witness/Evangelism work 6pm; Tues: Cub Scouts 5:30pm; Weds: Gather & Worship 5:30pmCity Road Temple (C.M.E.) Church, Martin Luther King Dr., Rev. Robert Field, S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 11:00 am; Wed. Youth Meeting 5 pm.First United Methodist Church, Rev. Roger Shock, Pastor; Ken Lancaster, Music Dir.; S.S. 9am, Worship 10 am; Wed. Family Supper 5pm, Bible Study 6pm; Choir Practice 7pm (Televised Cablevision Channel 16) Wed. Worship Service; Chris Vandiver, Dir. of Youth Ministries and TV Ministry Gaines Chapel United Methodist Church, 1802 Hwy 72 W, Rev. Trey Lambert, Pastor, S.S. 9:45 am. Worship 10:45am & 6:30pm; Children’s Activities 5pm, Youth 6:30pm & Wed. Night Children/Youth Activities and Adult Bible Study 6:00pmHopewell United Methodist Church, 4572 CR 200; Jonathan Cagle, Pastor; SS 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.; Sun night & Wed night 5 p.m.Indian Springs United Methodist Church, Rev. Richard C Wells, Jr. Pastor; Sun: SS 9am, Worship 10am; Youth 5pm; Worship 6:30 pm; Wed: Youth 5pm, Bible Study 6:30pmKossuth United Methodist Church, Kenny McGill, pastor, Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Worship Service 11am & 6pm. Mt. Carmel Methodist Church, Henry Storey, Minister, Worship 9:30 a.m. S.S. 10:30 a.m. Bible Study 1st & 3rd Tues. 6:30 p.m.Mt. Moriah United Methodist Church, Meigg St., S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. Wed. night bible study 6 p.m. Children & Youth for Christ Sat. 9:30 a.m. Sapada Thomas Pastor.Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church, Rev. Ben Luttrell, pastor. S.S. 10:30am Worship Service 11am; Wed night bible study 6pm.Oak Grove C.M.E. Church, Alcorn County Road 514, West of Biggersville, MS, Rev. Ida Price, Pastor Sunday School 9:30am, Worship services 10:45am, Bible Study Wed. Night 7pmPickwick United Methodist Church, 10575 Hwy 57 So., Pickwick Dam, TN 731-689-5358, Worship Services: Sun 8 a.m. & 11 a.m., SS 10 a.m.Pleasant Hill United Methodist Church, Kenny McGill, pastor, Sun Services, Worship 9:15am, Sunday School 10:30am, Evening 5pm.Saulter’s Chapel CME Church, Acton, TN; Rev.James Agnew, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Service 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 p.m.Shady Grove United Methodist Church, D. R. Estes, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m.Stantonville United Methodist Church, 8351 Hwy 142, Stantonville, TN; David Harstin, pastor, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m.New Hope Methodist Church, New Hope & Sticine Rd., Guys/Michie, TN; Pastor David Harstin; Services: Sun. Worship 10 am, S.S. 11 am, Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm.MORMONThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Corinth Ward. Hwy. 2 Old Worsham Bros. Building Sun, 10 am-1pm, Wed. 6:30 pm. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 204 George E. Allen Dr. Booneville, MS. Services: Booneville Ward 9-12 am Wed 6:30 pmNON-DENOMINATIONALAgape World Overcoming Christian Center, 1311 Lyons St. Pastor Doris Day. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Corporate Worship 11:30 a.m., Tues. Night Prayer/Bible Study 7pmBrand New Life Church, 2079 Hwy 72 E, Corinth MS 38834 (in the old Marty’s Steak house) Pastors John & Sally Wilbanks; Sunday Service 10:30am.Another Chance Ministries, 2066 Tate St, Corinth, MS 662-284-0801 or 662-284-0802. Prayer Serv. 8am, Praise & Worship 9am, Mid-Week Bible study 7pm. Bishop Perry and Dimple Carroll (Pastors), Overseers - A Christ Centered, Spirit Filled, New Creation Church. New Sun morning service 8:00am. Come out and be blessed.Bethel Church, CR 654-A, Walnut (72W to Durhams Gro, left at store, follow signs), Sun. Morn 10am; Sun. Worship 5pm; Thurs. Service 6pm.Brush Creek House of Prayer, 478 CR 600 (just out of Kossuth) Walnut, MS. Pastor Bro. Jeff and Sister Lisa Wilbanks.Burnsville Tabernacle Church, Sun. School 10a.m. Wor. Service 11 a.m., Eve. Worship 5p.m., Wed Service 7 p.m.Church of the Crossroads, Hwy 72 E., Nelson Hight, pastor, 286-6838, 1st Morn. Worship 8:30, S.S.10am, 2nd Morn. Worship 11am & Life Groups 5pm; Wed. 6:30 pm Life Groups & Childrens Services; Cicero AME Church, 420 Martin Luther King Dr., Corinth, MS 286-2310 S.S. 9:30 am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pmCity of Refuge, 300 Emmons Rd. & Hwy 64, Selmer, TN. 731-645-7053 or 731-610-1883. Pastor C. A. Jackson. Sun. Morn. 10am, Sun. Evening 6pm, Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Christ Gospel Church, Junction 367 & 356, 1 1/2 miles east of Jacinto. Rev. Bobby Lytal, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun 6:30 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. Fri Night 7 p.m.Church On Fire Dream Center, Intersection of Holt Ave. & Hwy 365 North, Burnsville. Michael Roberts, pastor, Sun. Morn. Worship 10am, 662-415-4890(cell)City of Refuge Church, 950 Hwy 72 E. (behind Rib Shack) Corinth, MS Pastor, Harvern Davis; Sun Prayer Service 10 am; Worship 10:30 am Wednesday Service, 7 pmCornerstone Christian Fellowship, 145 South. Services: Sun. 10am Youth and Home Meetings, Wednesday Night. Billy Joe Young, pastor.FaithPointe Church, Lead Pastor, Mike Sweeney. 440 Hwy. 64 E. Adamsville, TN. Sun. 9 am SS,10:30 am Morn. Worship; Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. (all ages) Website: faithpointechurch.comFull Gospel House of Prayer, 2 miles S. of Hightown. Ancel Hancock, Minister, Jane Dillingham, Assoc., Serv every Mon. night 7pmFoundation of Truth Christian Fellowship, 718 S. Tate St., Corinth, MS, Frederick C. Patterson Sr, pastor, S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 11 p.m. Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. God’s Church, 565 Hwy 45 S, Biggersville; Pastor David Mills, Asso. Pastor Larry Lovett; SS 10am; Sun Worship 11am; Wed. Night 7pmKossuth Worship Center, Hwy. 2, Kossuth. Pastor Bro. Larry Murphy. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. Services 6:00 p.m. 287-5686Life in the Word Fellowship Church, Pastor Merle Spearman. 706 School St, Worship Sun. 10:30 am & 6:00 pm; Wed. 7:00 pm.Mt. Zion Church, Highway 365 N. of Burnsville. Pastor Billy Powers. Worship Service 2 pm; Wed. Serv 7 pm.Mt. Carmel Non-Denominational Church, Wenasoga Rd. Pastor Bro. Jason Abbatoy. Sunday Morning Service 11:00 am River of Life, Cruise & Cass St. Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 a.m., Pastor Heath LovelaceRutherford Chapel, CR 755, Theo Community, Rev. Casey Rutherford, Pastor, Sun. 10:30 am Worship & 6 pm; Thurs. 7 p.m. 662-396-1967Still Hope Ministries, Main St, Rienzi; Pastor: Bro. Chris Franks, 662-603 3596. Services: Sun 2pm; Fri. 7pm.The Anchor Holds Church, Hwy 348 of Blue Springs, MS. 662-869-5314, Pastor Mike Sanders, Sun. School 9:30 a.m; Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 am; Sun. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m; Wed. Service 7:00 p.m; Nursery Provided For Ages 0-3; Children Church For Ages 4-10; Youth Program For Ages 11-21; Anointed Choir and Worship TeamTriumph Church, Corner of Dunlap & King St. S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 11:30 a.m. Tuesday night worship 7:00 p.m.Triumphs To The Church and Kingdom of God in Christ, Rev. Billy T., Kirk, pastor S.S. of Wisdom 10 a.m. Regular Services 11:30 a.m. Tuesday & Thursday 7:30p.m.Word Outreach Ministries, Hwy. 45 North, MS-TN State Line. Pastor Elworth Mabry. Sun. Bible Study 10am, Worship 11am, Wed. 6:30pm.

PENTECOSTALCalvary Apostolic Church, Larry W. McDonald, Pastor, 1622 Bunch St. Services Sun 10am & 6pm, Tues 7:30 pm For info. 287-3591.Central Pentecostal Church, Central School Road. Sunday Worship 10 am; Evangelistic Service 5 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm; Terry Harmon II, Pastor. Apostolic Life Tabernacle, Hwy. 45 S. Sunday Worship & S.S. 10 am & 6 p.m. Thurs. Prayer Meeting 7:15pm Mike Brown, pastor. 287-4983.Biggersville Pentecostal Church, U.S. 45 N., Biggersville. Rev. T.G, Ramsy, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Youth Services, Sunday 5 p.m. Evangelistic Service 6 p.m. Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m.Burnsville United Pentecostal Church, Highway 72 West of Burnsville. L. Rich, pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11 am and 6:30 pm; Youth Service 5:30 pm; Wed Prayer and Bible Study 7:15 pm.Community Pentecostal Church, Rev. Randle Flake, pastor. Sun. Worship 10am & 5:30pm; Wed. Acts Class 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pmCounce, Tenn. First Pentecostal Church, State Route 57, Rev. G.R. Miller, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Evening Worship 6 p.m. Wed 7 p.m.Eastview United Pentecostal Church, Rev. Wayne Isbell, pastor. 287-8277 (pastor), (662) 645-9751 (church) S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m.Gospel Tabernacle, Glover Drive. Rev. Josh Hodum, pastor. S.S. 10 am Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7 p.m.Greater Life United Pentecostal Church, 750 Hwy. 45 S. Rev. Don Clenney, Pastor; SS 10am, Sun. Morn. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. Worship 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pmLife Tabernacle Apostolic Pentecostal, 286-5317, Mathis Subd. Sunday Worship 10am&6:30pm;Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Pleasant Hill Pentecostal Church, C.D. Kirk, pastor, Hwy. 2, S.S. 10am, Adult Worship 10am, Sun. Night Explosion 6pm & Wed. night 7:30pmRockhill Apostolic, 156 CR 157, 662-287-1089, Pastor Steve Findley SS. 10am, Sun. Morn. 11am, Sun. Night 6pm, Wed night 7:15pmSanctuary of Hope 1108 Proper St,, Sun. Worship 10 a.m. & 6pm; Thursday worship 7:30 p.m. “Where there’s breath, there’s hope.”

Fraley’s Chapel Church of Christ, Minister, Ferrill Hester. Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 5pm. Wed. Bible Study7pm.Jacinto Church of Christ, 1290 Hwy 356, Rienzi, Jerry Childs, Minister, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pm.Jerusalem Church of Christ, Farmington Rd. Ben Horton, Minister. S.S. 10am; Church 10:45am; Sun. Bible Study & Worship, 5pm. Kossuth Church of Christ, Duane Estill, Minister, 287-8930. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Kendrick Rd Church of Christ, S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm..Meeks St. Church of Christ, 1201 Meeks St; Evg: Chuck Richardson, 287-2187 or 286-9660; S.S. 9am; Wed. 7pm.Meigg Street Church of Christ, 914 Meigg St. Will Luster, Jr., Minister. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship Service 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm.New Hope Church of Christ, Glen, MS, Minister, Roy Cox .S.S. 9:30am; Worship Service 10:30am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. North Rienzi Church of Christ, Located in Rienzi by Shell Station on 356 Minister, Wade Davis, Sun. 10am, & 6pm., Wed. 7:00pm Northside Church of Christ, Harper Rd., Lennis Nowell, Minister. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:35am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Pleasant Grove Church of Christ, 123 CR 304, Doskie, MS, Craig Chandler, Minister-287-1001; S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am.South Parkway Church of Christ, 501 S. Parkway St., Bro. Andrew Blackwell,Minister, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm.Strickland Church of Christ, Central Sch. Rd. at Hwy. 72 E., Brad Dillingham, Minister, S.S. 10am;Worship 10:45am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm.Theo Church of Christ, Ron Adams, minister. Hwy. 72 W. Bible Study 9am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study pm.Wenasoga Church of Christ, G.W. Childs, Pastor. Worship Service 9am & 5pm; Bible Class 10am; Wed. 7pm.West Corinth Church of Christ, Hwy 45 No. at Henson Rd. Blake Nicholas, Pastor S.S. 9:45am; Worship service 10:40am & 5 pm; Wed 7pm.

CHURCH OF GODChurch of God of Prophecy, Bell School Rd. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship services 11 a.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Pastor James Gray.Hilltop Church of God, 46 Hwy 356 - 603-4567, Pastor, Donald McCoy SS 10am, Sun. Worship 10:45am, Sun. Even. 5pm, Wed. 7pm. New Mission Church of God in Christ, 608 Wick St. Pastor Elder Yarbro. S.S. 10 a.m. Sunday Worship 11 a.m., & 7 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7pm.New Life Church of God in Christ, 305 West View Dr., Pastor Elder Willie Hoyle, 286-5301. Sun. Prayer 9:45 am, S.S. 10 am, Worship 11:30 am, Thurs. Worship 7:30 pm, Wed. night worship services 7 pm, YPWW 1st & 3rd Sunday 6 pm.St. James Church of God in Christ, 1101 Gloster St. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship Services 11:30 a.m.; Youth/Adult Bible Study Thurs. 7pm Pastor Elder Anthony Fox.St. James Church of God in Christ-Ripley, 719 Ashland Rd, Ripley, MS, 662-837-9509; Sun. Worship Morning Glory 8am; SS 9am; Worship 11am; Thurday is Holy Ghost night 7pm; Superintendent Bernell Hoyle, Pastor.Church of God of Union Assembly, 347 Hwy 2, (4 miles from Hwy 45 bypass going East to 350), North Gospel Preaching and singing. Services Wed. 6:30 pm , Sun.Evening Service 6:30 pm, Sun. morning 10:30 am. Everyone invited to come and worship with us. Pastor Brother David Bledsoe; 286-2909 or 287-3769The Church of God , Hwy 57, West of four-way in Michie, TN. Paster Joe McLemore, 731-926-5674.Wings of Mercy Church, 1703 Levee St. (Just off 45 S. at Harper Exit). Church: 287-4900; Pastor: James Tipton, Sunday Morn. 10:30am, Sunday Evening 5:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm

EPISCOPALSt. Paul’s Episcopal, Hwy. 2 at N. Shiloh Rd. Rev. Ann B. Fraser, Priest; 9:30am Holy Eucharist followed by Welcome & Coffee; 10:45am Sunday School. Nursery opens at 9:15am.

FREE WILL BAPTISTCalvary Free Will Baptist Mission, Old Jacinto Supply Building, Jacinto. S.S. 10 am Worship 11 am & 5 pm Wed. Service 7 pm.Life Gate Free Will Baptist Church, 377 CR 218, Corinth, MS, 462-8353, S.S. 10am, Worship Serv 10:45 am & 6 pm. Wed. Bible Study 7pm.Macedonia Freewill Baptist Church, 9 miles S. of Corinth on CR 400. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Pastor: Rev. Herschel Shamblins; Sun Worship 11 a.m& 6 pm; Wednesday 6 p.m.

HOLINESSBy Faith Holiness Church, 137 CR 430, Ritenzi, MS, 662-554-9897/462 7287; Pastor: Eddie Huggins; Sun 10am& 6pm; Thurs. 7pmFull Gospel Jesus Name Church, Located 3 miles on CR 400, (Salem Rd) Old Jehvohah Witness Church. Pastor: Larry Jackson; Sunday Evening 2pm. 662-728-8612. Glen Jesus Name Holiness Church, CR 248 Glen, Bro. Jimmy Jones, Pastor; Sun. Service 10 am, Evening 6 pm; Thurs. night 7 pm; 287-6993Theo Holiness Church, Hwy. 72 West, Corinth. Pastor: Rev. Ronald Wilbanks, Phone:662-223-5330; Senior Pastor: Rev. Rufus Barnes; SS 10am, Worship Service 11am, and 6:30 pm, Wed. Prayer Meeting 7 pmTrue Holiness Church, 1223 Tate St, 287-5659 or 808-0347, Pastor: Willie Saffore; S.S. 10 am, Sun. Worship 11:30 am, Tues/Fri Prayer Service 9am; Prayer & Bible Band Wed. 7pm.

INDEPENDENT BAPTISTBrigman Hill Baptist Church, Pastor Bob Harris, S.S. 10am; Sun Worship 11 am & 5 pm.; 7 mi. E. on Farmington Rd.; 256-503-7438Grace Bible Baptist Church, Hwy. 145 No. Donald Sculley, pastor. 286-5760, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m., Children’s Bible Club 7 p.m.Juliette Independent Missionary Baptist Church, Interim Pastor, Harold Talley, S.S.10 a.m. Preaching 11 a.m. Evening Service 5 p.m.Maranatha Baptist Church, CR 106, Bro. Scotty Wood, Pastor. S.S.10 a.m. Sun Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m.Jones Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun. Worship Services 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m.Strickland Baptist Church, 514 Strickland Rd., Glen MS 38846, Pastor Harold Burcham; Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday Services 11 a.m& 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m.

INDEPENDENT FULL GOSPELHarvest Church, 349 Hwy 45 S., Guys, TN. Pastor Roger Reece; 731-239-2621. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship & Children’s Church 11am; Evening Service 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m.

INDEPENDENT METHODISTClausel Hill Independent Methodist Church, 8 miles S. of Burnsville, just off 365 in Cairo Community. Pastor, Gary Redd. S.S. 10 a.m. Morning Worship 11:15 a.m. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer Meeting 6:45 p.m.Chapel Hill Methodist Church, , 2 1/2 mi. W. of Burnsville. CR 944. Scotty McCay, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Sunday Worship, 11 am. & 5 pm.

LUTHERANPrince of Peace Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. 4203 Shiloh Rd. 287 1037, Divine Worship 10:00 a.m. Holy Communion celebrated on the first, third and fifth Sunday. Christian Ed. 9 a.m.

METHODISTBethel United Methodist, Jerry Kelly, pastor. Worship 10 am S.S. 11 amBiggersville United Methodist Church, Jimmy Glover, Pastor. S.S. 9:15 a.m., Church Service 10:00 am Sunday Worship 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Bible Study Thurs 7 p.m.

Meeks’

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Memorial Funeral HomeFrazier, Jones & Wooley

613 Bunch St. • Corinth, MS • 662-286-2900

The Full Gospel Tabernacle of Jesus Christ, 37 CR 2350, Pastor Jesse Hisaw, 462-3541. Sun, 10am & 5pm; Wed. 7:30 pm.Tobes Chapel Pentecostal Church, 520 CR 400, Pastor: Rev. J.C. Killough, SS. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. 5:30am, Wed. Bible Study 7pm, 462-8183.United Pentecostal Church, Selmer, Tenn., S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & 7 pm.Walnut United Pentecostal Church, Hwy. 72 W. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm. Rev. James Sims.West Corinth U.P.C., 5th & Nelson St., Rev. Merl Dixon, Minister, S.S. 10 am. Worship 11 am.; Prayer meeting 5:30 pm., Evang. Serv. 6 pm., Wed. 7 pm.Soul’s Harbor Apostolic Church, Walnut, Worship Sun. Services 10 a.m. & 6, Wed. 7:30 p.m., Rev. Jesse Cuter, pastor, Prayer Request, call 223-4003.Zion Pentecostal Church In Christ., 145 N. on Little Zion Rd. Bld 31, Rev. Allen Milam, Pastor, S.S. 10am. Worship 11am.; Evang. Service 6pm, Wed. 7pm.

PRESBYTERIANCovenant Presbyterian Church, Tennessee St. at North Parkway; S.S.10 am; Worship 11 am. 594-5067 or 210-2991. First Presbyterian Church, EPC, 919 Shiloh Rd., Dr. Donald A. Elliot, Min. Gregg Parker, Director of Youth & Fellowship. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:45; Fellowship 5 & 6 pm. Shiloh Cumberland Presbyterian Church, off U.S. 72 W. Rev. Brenda Laurence. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 6 p.m.The New Hope Presbyterian Church, Biggersville. Nicholas B. Phillips, pastor; Sunday School for all ages 9:45 am Morning Worship 10:45 am.Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA), 4175 No Harper Rd; Sun. Morn. Worship 9:30 am; Sunday school, 11:00 am, Wed. Bible study, 5:30 p.m., http://www.tpccorinth.org.

SATURDAY SABBATHSpirit & Truth Ministries, 408 Hwy 72 W. (across from Gateway Tires) P.O. Box 245, Corinth, MS 38835-0245 662-603-2764 ; Sat. 10:30 am Service

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTSeventh-day Adventist Church, 2150 Hwy.72 E., Sean Day, Minister. Sat. Services: Bible Study 10am-11:10, Worship 11:20am- 12:30pm; Prayer Meeting: Tuesday 7:00pm

SOUTHERN BAPTISTCrossroads Church, 1020 CR 400 Salem Rd; Warren Jones, Pastor; Sun. -Bible Study 9 a.m., Worship/Preaching 10 a.m.Victory Baptist Church, 9 CR 256., Alan Parker, Pastor. S.S. 9am; Worship 10am. Church Training 5:30pm; Worship 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm

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Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 2014

Shorts

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 after-noon 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].

 Bishop Park Softball

The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department is con-ducting youth co-ed softball registra-tion beginning June 2 through June 17. League is open to ages 6-12 with birth date cutoff of August 31. Play-ers must fill out form, bring birth cer-tificate and pay $10 registration fee. Season begins July 8. League is also in need of coaches and volunteers.

For more information contact the park office at 286-3067. Office hours are 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday-Friday.

 NE Hoop Camps

BOONEVILLE – The Northeast Mis-sissippi Community College men’s basketball program is giving local athletes a chance increase their knowledge of the sport with a pair of summer camps.

The Tigers have announced that their annual Tiger Pride camp will run from June 2-5 inside legendary Bonner Arnold Coliseum. In addi-tion, Northeast is set to host a Skills Camp from July 21-24 also on the Booneville campus.

The four-day sessions are open to any boy in the fifth-through-twelfth grades. Several experienced area coaches and players will aid North-east head coach Cord Wright in pro-viding instruction during the camp.

In addition, members of 2013-14 Tiger hoops squad are slated to be in attendance as well as new players for the 2014-15 team to help direct the different drills and tasks.

Athletes who are present will learn the fundamentals of basketball while establishing the mental aspect of the game through sportsmanship, leader-ship and citizenship.

Boys will also have time to work on ball handling, dribbling, shooting, passing, defense and other essential techniques while participating in a fun and relaxing environment.

Northeast’s Tiger Pride camp is open to both day and overnight campers. Those who stay on campus will be housed in Murphy Hall and are subject to constant supervision at all occasions.

Each participant is expected to bring their own gear, which includes but is not limited to athletic apparel, tennis shoes, t-shirts and swimwear for time at the Gaye Roden Carr Aquatic Center.

Overnight campers should also pack extra amenities, including one set of single sheets, a pillow, pil-lowcase, laundry bag, towels and toiletries.

Registration is available at a cost of $110 for day campers and $130 for those spending the night in Boon-eville during the Tiger Pride camp. All athletes must submit a non-refund-able deposit of $30 with their forms.

To register, go to www.nemccathlet-ics.com and completely fill out the brochure that is available to print. Please make checks payable to

LAFAYETTE, La. — Myles Gentry pitched four perfect innings of relief and Missis-sippi State vmade a four-run second inning stand up in a 5-2 victory over San Diego State on Friday in a fi rst-round NCAA tournament

game.Gentry retired the 12 bat-

ters he faced on only 34 pitches to earn his fourth save for Mississippi State (38-22), last season’s nation-al runner-up.

Starter Trevor Fitts (5-3) went fi ve innings for the win.

SDSU (42-20) struck fi rst with two runs in the top of the second, but Jake Vicker-son’s bases-loaded triple to the wall in right put MSU up 4-2 in the bottom of the in-ning.

All four of Mississippi State’s runs in the second in-

ning came after a two-out er-ror by shortstop Evan Potter on a fl ip to second base. The Bulldogs added another run on Alex Detz’s two-out single in the fi fth.

Aztecs starter Mark Seyler (8-6) was chased after 4 2-3 innings.

MSU downs SDSU in tourney openerThe Associated Press

All-Star Yards

DESTIN, Fla. — Southeast-ern Conference revenue re-mains on the rise. It should make a major jump next year following the launch of the SEC Network.

The SEC will distribute a record $309.6 million in rev-enue to its 14 member institu-tions, which equates to $20.9 million per school.

Commissioner Mike Slive announced the payout Friday, the fi nal day of the annual SEC meetings.

The revenue is generated from football and basketball television contracts, bowl

games, the league’s football championship game, the league’s men’s basketball tournament, NCAA champi-onships and supplemental surplus. It has nearly doubled since 2009, when the league doled out $165.9 million to its schools.

It could rise signifi cantly next year, with estimations ranging from $15 million to $20 million because of added television revenue.

“There are some numbers fl oating around out there, but everything is speculative,” Slive said. “We’re optimistic. We believe the product is so good. We believe the network

is so strong. We believe the network will be national. We believe it will generate rev-enue as it grows over the next decade, but to speculate as to how much that will add to the revenue through the confer-ence to our institutions is re-ally speculative.”

The SEC also passed fi ve proposals Friday.

The most signifi cant change involved an automatic waiver for graduate-school transfers with less than two years of eligibility remaining, a move that should expedite the transfer process.

Previously, the SEC re-quired a waiver for anyone

to transfer with less than two years of eligibility remain-ing. The waiver had to be ap-proved by the conference, es-sentially causing red tape that football and basketball coach-es felt was putting them at a competitive disadvantage.

“I think it’s been a factor — not the only factor — in the success of men’s basketball and it’s being addressed,” Au-burn basketball coach Bruce Pearl said.

Not everyone agreed.Florida president Bernie

Machen called the graduate-transfer rule “bad.”

SEC distributes record $309.6 million for 2013-14 BY MARK LONG

Associated Press

Please see SEC | 13

DESTIN, Fla. — The South-eastern Conference sent a strong message to the NCAA on Friday: provide the Big Five some autonomy or they’ll form their own division.

SEC Commissioner Mike Slive said if the Big Five con-ferences — which also include the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Big 12, the Big Ten and the Pac-12 — don’t get the fl exibil-ity needed to create their own bylaws, the next step would be to move to “Division IV.”

“It’s not something we want to do,” Slive said on the fi nal day of the SEC meetings. “We want to the ability to have autonomy in areas that has a nexus to the well-being of stu-dent athletes. I am somewhat optimistic it will pass, but if it doesn’t, our league would cer-tainly want to move to a Divi-sion IV. My colleagues, I can’t speak for anybody else, but I’d be surprised if they didn’t

feel the same way.”Moving to Division IV

would keep the Big Five un-der the NCAA umbrella while granting college football’s biggest money makers the kind of power to better take care of student-athletes.

The SEC, for example, would like to pay full cost of college attendance, provide long-term medical coverage and offer incentives to kids who return to school and complete degrees.

Smaller Division 1 schools likely can’t afford the chang-es the major conferences are seeking. And while D-II and D-III have their own rules, forming a D-IV would seem-ingly create a wider divide be-tween the Big Five and other smaller schools.

Slive, however, said a po-tential move wouldn’t disrupt championship formats, in-cluding the NCAA men’s bas-ketball tournament.

“I’ve been so optimistic that

we’re going to stay in Division I that we haven’t sat down and tried to map it out,” Slive said. “But we know that fail-ure to create what we’re try-ing to create would result in doing something different. How we would construct a Di-vision IV? We haven’t looked in that.

“We hope everyone real-izes we are moving into a new era and this is the way to re-tain your collegiate model. It would be a disappointment and in my view a mistake not to adapt the model. This is a historic moment. If we don’t seize the moment, we’ll make a mistake.”

Florida President Bernie Ma-chen wasn’t nearly as confi dent about staying in Division I.

“We’re in a squeeze here,” Machen said. “There are now six lawsuits that name our conference in them that spe-cifi cally have to do with the whole cost of attendance and stuff like that. We would like

to make changes, but we can’t because the NCAA doesn’t al-low us to. We’re really caught between a rock and a hard play. We desperately would like some fl exibility.”

The SEC wants the NCAA steering committee to adopt its proposal for the voting threshold, which would allow the Big Five to pass legislation with more ease. The NCAA board of directors will vote on the steering committee’s pro-posal in August. Currently, the NCAA requires two-thirds vote of the 65 schools and 15 student representatives as well as four out of fi ve confer-ences.

“What we fear is that nothing will change because the thresh-old is so high,” Machen said. “We’re asking them to lower the threshold, which we pro-pose is 60 percent and three conferences. With three con-ferences out of fi ve and 60 per-cent of the 65 and 15, you can make those kinds of changes.”

SEC ponders potential move to ‘Division IV’ BY MARK LONG

Associated Press

Photo compliments of Michael H. Miller

Biggersville’s Darian Barnett breaks free for some yards during the 2nd Annual Robertson’s Sportswear Northeast Mis-sissippi Football Coaches’ Association (NEMFCA) All-Star football game held at Tiger Stadium last week. The East squad captured a 36-0 win in the second version of the all-star event. Barnett and Kossuth’s Jacob Meeks were members of the West squad. Corinth’s Kyoshia Agnew, Bo Howell and John Michael McFall were part of the winning East unit.

Please see SHORTS | 13

ScoreboardBaseball

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBAtlanta 29 25 .537 —Miami 28 26 .519 1Washington 26 27 .491 2½New York 25 28 .472 3½Philadelphia 23 28 .451 4½

Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 32 22 .593 —St. Louis 29 25 .537 3Pittsburgh 24 29 .453 7½Cincinnati 23 29 .442 8Chicago 19 32 .373 11½

West Division W L Pct GBSan Francisco 35 19 .648 —Colorado 28 25 .528 6½Los Angeles 29 26 .527 6½San Diego 24 30 .444 11Arizona 23 33 .411 13

–––Thursday’s Games

N.Y. Mets 4, Philadelphia 1Boston 4, Atlanta 3San Francisco 6, St. Louis 5Arizona 4, Cincinnati 0Pittsburgh 6, L.A. Dodgers 3

Friday’s GamesWashington 9, Texas 2Colorado at Cleveland, (n)N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, (n)Atlanta 3, Miami 2Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, (n)San Diego at Chicago White Sox, (n)San Francisco at St. Louis, (n)Cincinnati at Arizona, (n)Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, (n)

Today’s GamesTexas (Tepesch 2-0) at Washington (Fis-

ter 2-1), 11:05 a.m.San Diego (T.Ross 5-4) at Chicago

White Sox (Rienzo 4-1), 1:10 p.m.San Francisco (Petit 3-2) at St. Louis

(Wacha 3-3), 1:15 p.m.Colorado (Morales 3-4) at Cleveland

(Bauer 1-2), 2:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets (deGrom 0-2) at Philadelphia

(K.Kendrick 1-5), 2:05 p.m.Atlanta (E.Santana 4-2) at Miami (Ja.

Turner 1-2), 3:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Hammel 5-3) at Milwau-

kee (W.Peralta 4-4), 3:10 p.m.Pittsburgh (Cumpton 0-1) at L.A. Dodg-

ers (Ryu 5-2), 6:15 p.m.Cincinnati (Cueto 4-4) at Arizona (Mc-

Carthy 1-6), 9:10 p.m.Sunday’s Games

Colorado at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m.Atlanta at Miami, 12:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 12:35 p.m.Texas at Washington, 12:35 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m.San Diego at Chicago White Sox, 1:10

p.m.San Francisco at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m.Cincinnati at Arizona, 3:10 p.m.Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, 7:05 p.m.

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBToronto 32 24 .571 —New York 28 25 .528 2½Baltimore 26 27 .491 4½Boston 25 29 .463 6Tampa Bay 23 32 .418 8½

Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 30 20 .600 —Chicago 28 28 .500 5Kansas City 26 28 .481 6Minnesota 25 27 .481 6Cleveland 25 30 .455 7½

West Division W L Pct GBOakland 32 22 .593 —Los Angeles 30 23 .566 1½Texas 28 27 .509 4½Seattle 26 27 .491 5½Houston 24 32 .429 9

–––Thursday’s Games

Texas 5, Minnesota 4

Detroit 5, Oakland 4Kansas City 8, Toronto 6, 10 inningsBoston 4, Atlanta 3Houston 3, Baltimore 1L.A. Angels 7, Seattle 5

Friday’s GamesCleveland 5, Colorado 2Minnesota 6, N.Y. Yankees 1Washington 9, Texas 2Kansas City 6, Toronto 1Boston 3, Tampa Bay 2, 10 inningsHouston 2, Baltimore 1San Diego 4, Chicago White Sox 1L.A. Angels at Oakland, (n)Detroit at Seattle, (n)

Today’s GamesTexas (Tepesch 2-0) at Washington (Fis-

ter 2-1), 11:05 a.m.Minnesota (Correia 2-6) at N.Y. Yan-

kees (Tanaka 7-1), 12:05 p.m.Kansas City (Brooks 0-0) at Toronto

(Hutchison 4-3), 12:07 p.m.San Diego (T.Ross 5-4) at Chicago

White Sox (Rienzo 4-1), 1:10 p.m.Colorado (Morales 3-4) at Cleveland

(Bauer 1-2), 2:05 p.m.Baltimore (Tillman 4-2) at Houston

(Keuchel 6-2), 3:10 p.m.Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 2-4) at Boston

(R.De La Rosa 0-0), 6:15 p.m.L.A. Angels (Skaggs 4-2) at Oakland

(Milone 3-3), 9:05 p.m.Detroit (Smyly 2-3) at Seattle (C.Young

4-2), 9:10 p.m.Sunday’s Games

Colorado at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m.Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m.Kansas City at Toronto, 12:07 p.m.Tampa Bay at Boston, 12:35 p.m.Texas at Washington, 12:35 p.m.Baltimore at Houston, 1:10 p.m.San Diego at Chicago White Sox, 1:10

p.m.L.A. Angels at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.Detroit at Seattle, 3:10 p.m.

NCAA Division I Baseball Regionals opener

Double Elimination; x-if necessaryAt Charlottesville, Va.

FridayVirginia 10, Bucknell 1Arkansas 3, Liberty 2

TodayGame 3 — Bucknell (30-20-1) vs. Lib-

erty (41-17), 1 p.m.Game 4 — Virginia (45-13) vs. Arkan-

sas (39-23), 7 p.m.At Columbia, S.C.

FridayMaryland 4, Old Dominion 3South Carolina 5, Campbell 2

TodayGame 3 — Old Dominion (36-25) vs.

Campbell (40-20), noonGame 4 — Maryland (37-21) vs. South

Carolina (43-16), 6 p.m.At Gainesville, Fla.

FridayLong Beach State 6, North Carolina 1Game 2 — Florida (40-21) vs. College

of Charleston (41-17), (n)Today

Game 3 — North Carolina (34-26) vs. Game 2 loser, Noon

Game 4 — Long Beach State (33-24) vs. Game 2 winner, 6 p.m.

At Coral Gables, Fla.Friday

Texas Tech 3, Columbia 2Miami 1, Bethune-Cookman 0

TodayGame 3 — Columbia (29-19) vs. Bet-

hune-Cookman (26-32), 1 p.m.Game 4 — Texas Tech (41-18) vs. Mi-

ami (42-17), 6 p.m.At Tallahassee, Fla.

FridayKennesaw State 1, Alabama 0Georgia Southern 7, Florida State 0

TodayGame 3 — Alabama (34-23) vs. Florida

State (43-16), 1 p.m.Game 4 — Kennesaw State (38-21) vs.

Georgia Southern (40-21), 5 p.m.At Louisville, Ky.

Game 1 — Kansas 10, Kentucky 6Game 2 — Louisville (45-15) vs. Kent

State (36-21), 9:25 p.m.Today

Game 3 — Kewntucky (35-23) vs. Game 2 loser, Noon

Game 4 — Kansas (35-24) vs. Game 2 winner, 4 p.m.

At Bloomington, Ind.Friday

Stanford 8, Indiana State 1Indiana 10, Youngstown State 2

TodayGame 3 — Indiana State (35-17) vs.

Youngstown State (16-37), 1 p.m.Game 4 — Stanford (31-23) vs. Indi-

ana (43-13), 5 p.m.At Nashville, Tenn.

FridayOregon 18, Clemson 1Game 2 — Vanderbilt (41-18) vs. Xavi-

er (29-27), (n)Today

Game 3 — Clemson (36-24) vs. Game 2 loser, 1 p.m.

Game 4 — Oregon (43-18) vs. Game 2 winner, 7 p.m.

At Oxford, Miss.Friday

Game 1 — Georgia Tech (36-25) vs. Washington (39-15-1), , ppd., rain

Game 2 — Mississippi (41-18) vs. Jacksonville State (36-25), ppd., rain

TodayGame 1 — Georgia Tech (36-25) vs.

Washington (39-15-1), 1 p.m.Game 2 — Mississippi (41-18) vs.

Jacksonville State (36-25), 5 p.m.At Baton Rouge, La.

FridayLSU 8, Southeastern Louisiana 4Game 2 — Bryant (42-14) vs. Houston

(44-15), 8 p.m.Today

Game 3 — Southeastern Louisiana (37-24) vs. Game 2 loser, 3 p.m.

Game 4 — LSU (45-14-1) vs. Game 2 winner, 8 p.m.

At Lafayette, La.Friday

Mississippi State 5, San Diego State 2Jackson State 1, Louisiana-Lafayette 0

TodayGame 3 — San Diego State (42-20) vs.

Louisiana-Lafayette (53-8), 1 p.m.Game 4 — Mississippi State (38-22)

vs. Jackson State (32-23), 6 p.m.At Stillwater, Okla.

FridayCal State Fullerton 5, Nebraska 1Oklahoma State 8, Binghamton 0

SaturdayGame 3 — Nebraska (40-20) vs. Bing-

hamton (25-26), NoonGame 4 — Cal State Fullerton (33-22)

vs. Oklahoma State (46-16), 6 p.m.At Fort Worth, Texas

FridaySam Houston State 2, Dallas Baptist 1TCU 2, Siena 1, 11 innings

TodayGame 3 — Dallas Baptist (40-20) vs.

Siena (26-32), 2:30 p.m.Game 4 — Sam Houston State (42-17)

vs. TCU (43-15), 7 p.m.At Houston

FridayTexas 8, Texas A&M 1Game 2 — Rice (41-18) vs. George Ma-

son (34-20), 8 p.m.Today

Game 3 — Texas A&M (33-25) vs. Game 2 loser, 3 p.m.

Game 4 — Texas (39-18) vs. Game 2 winner, 7 p.m.

At Corvallis, Ore.Friday

UC Irvine 10, UNLV 3Game 2 — Oregon State (42-12) vs.

North Dakota State (25-24), 11 p.m.Saturday

Game 3 — UNLV (35-24) vs. Game 2 loser, 4 p.m.

Game 4 — UC Irvine (36-22) vs. Game 2 winner, 10 p.m.

At San Luis Obispo, Calif.Friday

Pepperdine 3, Arizona State 2Cal Poly 4, Sacramento State 2

Today

Game 3 — Arizona State (33-23) vs. Sacramento State (39-23), 3 p.m.

Game 4 — Pepperdine (40-16) vs. Cal Poly (46-10), 8 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 90Tuesday

Oklahoma City 105, San Antonio 92Wednesday

Indiana 93, Miami 90Thursday

San Antonio 117, Oklahoma City 89, San Antonio leads series 3-2

FridayMiami 117, Indiana 92, Miami wins

sereis 4-2Today

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

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

p.m.FINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)Thursday, June 5

Eastern champion at San Antonio or Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.

Sunday, June 8Eastern champion at San Antonio or

Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.Tuesday, June 10

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

Thursday, June 12Western champion at Indiana or

Miami, 8 p.m.Sunday, June 15

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

Tuesday, June 17x-Western champion at Indiana or

Miami, 8 p.m.Friday, June 20

x-Eastern champion at San Antonio or Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.

WNBA standings, scheduleEASTERN CONFERENCE

W L Pct GBChicago 5 1 .833 —Atlanta 3 2 .600 1½Washington 2 2 .500 2Indiana 2 3 .400 2½New York 2 3 .400 2½Connecticut 1 5 .167 4

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBMinnesota 6 0 1.000 —Los Angeles 2 1 .667 2½Phoenix 2 1 .667 2½San Antonio 3 3 .500 3Seattle 1 5 .167 5Tulsa 0 3 .000 4½

___Thursday’s Games

Indiana 79, Connecticut 65Friday’s Games

Washington 68, New York 60Atlanta 80, Seattle 69Minnesota 88, San Antonio 72Chicago 101, Connecticut 82Tulsa at Phoenix, (n)

Saturday’s GamesNew York at Indiana, 6 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesAtlanta at Connecticut, 2 p.m.Los Angeles at Washington, 3 p.m.Minnesota at San Antonio, 3:30 p.m.Tulsa at Seattle, 8 p.m.

13 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, May 31, 2014

Northeast Mississippi Community College and send by mail to Cord Wright, Men’s Basket-ball, 101 Cunningham Blvd., Booneville, Miss., 38829. For more infor-mation about the 2014 Northeast Tiger Bas-ketball Camps, contact Wright at 662-720-7241 or by email at [email protected].

 Corinth Invitational

The Corinth Invita-tional is set for June 21-22 at Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club. The two-day tournament allows players to sign up for Individual Stroke Play, a Two-Person Team format or both formats. Those choosing to play in the

team format will be playing a scramble on Saturday and best ball on Sunday. The tourney will consist of two days of golf, Saturday night dinner from the Chop House and entertain-ment by Hurricane Kevin and The Breeze.

This year, the tourna-ment will be benefiting the Boy Scouts of Amer-ica. For over a century, the BSA has helped build the future leaders of this country by com-bining educational activi-ties and lifelong values with fun. Sponsorship opportunities are avail-able to help support the event.

Call the Shiloh Ridge Pro Shop at 662-286-8000 for questions or for registration informa-tion.

“I just don’t think that it’s a rule that the NCAA ought to have at all,” Ma-chen said. “If they really wanted to transfer some-where else, then they should sit out a year. If you didn’t have anything to do, you could track and

see how many of them completed their grad program. It was put to-gether under the banner of helping the athlete. It’s really not. It’s just a way for a school to fi ll a void at a very last moment or a player to get more play-ing time without sitting out.”

The league also:• Allowed the use of

artifi cial noisemakers — even music and sound controlled by the school — at any time during foot-ball games except from the time the center is over the football until the end of the play.

• Increased the roster

size for tennis teams from eight to 10 during SEC championship play.

• Tweaked roster rules for soccer teams, allowing coaches to change his or her 22 available players from game to game in-stead of setting the roster before the SEC tourna-ment begins.

SHORTS

SEC

CONTINUED FROM 12

CONTINUED FROM 12

LOS ANGELES — The NBA has called off a hear-ing to oust embattled Los Angeles Clippers co-owner Donald Sterling in ad-vance of a vote on a po-tentially record-breaking deal negotiated by his wife Shelly Sterling to sell the team to former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer for $2 billion.

The announcement by the NBA came as Donald Sterling’s attorneys fi led suit in a Los Angeles fed-eral court against the NBA and Commissioner Adam Silver asking for damages in excess of $1 billion. The suit alleges that the league violated Sterling’s consti-tutional rights by relying

on information from an “illegal” recording that publicized racist remarks he made to a girlfriend. It also says the league committed a breach of contract by fi ning Ster-ling $2.5 million for those remarks and that it violated antitrust laws by forcing a sale.

Shelly Sterling, who is a co-owner, negotiated the deal to sell to Ballmer late Thursday despite objections expressed through her estranged husband Donald Ster-ling’s attorneys. She was able to do so, however, because Donald Sterling was stripped of his abil-ity to act as a co-trustee of the family’s fortunes, including the Clippers.

NBA to vote on sale of Clippers

BY TAMI ABDOLLAHAssociated Press

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14 • Saturday, May 31, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community ProfilesFOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(Daily Corinthian Only $165)

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDERUN YOUR ADON THIS PAGE

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR GRISHAM INSURANCE

(662)415-2363

Final Expense Life Insurance

Long Term Care Medicare Supplements

Part D Prescription Plan

Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?

Call me for a free quote.

“ I will always try to help you”1801 South Harper Road

Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

FiFinall EExpense

CHRIS GRISHAM

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Structure demolition & RemovalCrushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

“Let us help with your project” “Large or Small”

Bill Jr., 284-6061G.E. 284-9209

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000GUNS

SEWER DRAIN SOLUTIONS

Specializing in Clogged Sewers

& Drains662-415-3676

Licensed and Bonded

Water JettingCamera

Inspections

SOUTHERN HOMESAFETY, INC.TOLL FREE

888-544-9074or 662-315-1695www.southernhomesafety.com

TORNADO SHELTERS

Large full size -6x12 tall x 6’9” concrete

Seating Available @ Extra Charge

Call aboutSenior Citizen

Special

“WE BUILD THE BEST POOLS”

BACKYARD POOLS

Family Owned & Operated for over 30 years

SPECIALIZING IN ABOVE GROUND POOLS

Hours: Monday - Friday 9-6Saturday 9-4

www.backyardpoolstupelo.com

662-842-27281292A N. Veterans Memorial Blvd.

Advertise Your Property For Sale or Lease Here!

Cane Creek Properties

Under New Ownership and Management

Newly Remodeled Units

Starting at

$400 Plus Deposit2 BR/ 1 BA

Stove and Fridge Furnished

W/D Hook Ups5 Mins. from the

HospitalKossuth & Corinth

School District

Call for an appointment

662-643-0162 or 662-415-4052

APARTMENTS

2 Story Brick3 or 4 Bedroom,

2.5 BathLiving Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Den,

Equipment Building, 2 car garage

Michie, Melvin Qualls Road 7 Miles from

Corinth, 19 Miles from Pickwick

$185,000Call: 662-286-7046

PICTURE YOUR

PROPERTY HERE!

LAND, FARM,COMMERCIAL

or HOME

662-594-6502 orclassad@

dailycorinthian.com

1800 Sq Ft Brick Home

3 Bedroom, 2 BathroomCentral Heat and AirHardwood Floors,

front and back porch2.5 Car Garage and

2 Out Buildings4 Acres with Hookup for Mobile Home or Shop.

760 John Deere Tractor w/ 5 foot fi nishing mower &

17.5 HP Riding Lawn Mower included.

130 CR 516 Rienzi, Mississippi

662-462-8226

$130,000 FIRM

1206 PINE ROADExcellent Built 5BR

3 /BA Brick home in a great family neighborhood.

Property has hardwood floors plus formal living room, dining room, den, and double carport. It also has a small back porch on a corner lot with asphalt drive to the back. 2542 Sqft.

$139,000662-419-3553662-396-1967

Norwood Estates2107 Weston Drive

3 bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms, 2 Bonus rooms Upstairs

2390 SQFT, 2 car garage

$155,900Corner Lot

available too$18,000

Call 662-643-3221

Lonah Elyse Vanderford

Turns 1!!!! 5/27/14

We love you sweetheart!Daddy, Mommy, Poppy & MeMaw,

& BIG SISTER Londen

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT0521

2 WHEEL Lawn MowerTrailer, $60.00- 662-396-1098

CRAFTSMAN 42" cut,$325. 286-2655

RYOBI LEAF B lower,Nearly New, $50.00- 662-212-2492

SNAPPER 33" cut- $325,286-2655

FURNITURE0533BROWN FAUX Leatherlove seat, $50.00- 662-396-1098

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

WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE0554

M&M. CASH FOR JUNKCARS & TRUCKS. 662-415-

5435 or 731-239-4114.WE PICK UP!

WANT TO BUY, STATION-ARY EXERCISE BIKE. CALL731-239-8668

RESTAURANT0260WE ARE seeking a fully

qualified

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]

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320FREE PUPPIES,ALREADYwormed and had shots.Call: 662-396-1097

ACCOUNTING0228EXPERIENCED ACCOUNT-ANT/ TAX PREPARER,CPA Preferred, mail re-sume to: PO Box 1922,Corinth MS, 38835

GENERAL HELP0232FITTERS NEEDED- Cur-rent ly work ing 50+hours per week. Comp.Benefit package. SignOn Bonus!!! 2 years exp.w/ ability to pass writ-ten test/ able to readblueprints. 501-490-5175or email [email protected], LR, AR.

KITCHEN CREWS NEEDEDOFFSHORE in the Oil andGas industry. Entry levelposistions start at $710-810 per week. Sign upnow for training today.Call 850-424-2622

INDUSTRIAL TRADE0236

WAREHOUSE WORKER/PRODUCTION WORKERneeded current produc-tion workers are aver-aging $500 per week.662-660-4346 (leave amessage if no answer)Email:[email protected]

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

SATURDAY ONLY- lots ofname brand boys andgirls, clothes and shoes,misc. . . 1096 CountyRoad 400 (Salem)

SATURDAY ONLY- Namebrand clothes, huntingitems, and much More!35 County Road 634

THUR/FRI/ SAT- antiquefurn., McCoy glassware,dolls, tools,games forALL systems , MuchMore- 58 CR 116

YARD SALE in ChurchGym. Saturday- Furn.,h.h. items, clothes, toys& More. Rain or Shine.293 CR 218

YARD SALE- Friday andSaturday. 423 CountyRoad 500, follow thesigns

INSTRUCTION0180AIRLINE JOBS STARTHERE- Get trained asFAA certified AviationTechnician. Financial Aidfor qualified students.Housing and Job place-ment assistance. CallAviation Institute ofMaintenance, 888-242-3193

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,7-Till,

46 County Road 238

INDOOR SALE on Sat-urday from 7-4 @ RienziMethodist Church. Fur-niture and HouseholdItems

MOVING SALE, MAY 31st& June 6 & 7, 300 N. MainStreet in Booneville,Furniture, HH items,clothes , Lawn eqt.

M O V I N G S A L E : S A T -URDAY ONLY! Begins @7AM, Huge variety, toomuch to name. 4321County Road 200

SAT ONLY! Furniture,Lawn Tractor, Misc., H.H.Items & Much More! 35County Road 237 from7AM- 2PM

SAT ONLY: 79 CountyRoad 106 A- House holditems, clothes, etc...

SAT. MOVING SALE, Hol-land's Mini Storage, 3mi. past KC on left.F u r n , r u g s , g i r l sSmocked clothes, Toys

SATURDAY ONLY! Baby &Women Clothes, fur-n i t u r e , h o u s e h o l ditems. 1318 Highway 2

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

ESTATE SALE: FRI & SAT.-199 County Road 213(Oakland School Road)

THUR/FRI/ SAT 8- until,Rain or Shine- BesideF a r m i n g t o n S c h o o lApartments, too muchto name.

FRI/ SAT- 4242 CR 200, 4Family Sale, LOTS of NICEstuff. Furn., Clothes,Knick-Knacks, crafts,DVD's, & Much More!

FRI/ SAT- 7- Until: h.h.i t e m s , a p p l i a n c e s ,c lothes , and MUCHMore- 144 CR 409 RIENZI

FRI/ SAT- ladies scrubs,Clothes sz L, children's3t-6x, h.h. items, furn.,appliances, shoes, toys:1703 Cruise Street

FRI/SAT- 7:30- till, Furn.,N.B. c lothes, MUCH,MUCH More! Kossuth @Crossroads of 600 & 619-Follow the signs!

FRI/SAT- OFF HWY 45behind Mike's Wind-shield, kids clothes,hard saddle bags, toys,rest. table & Chairs, etc.

FRI/SAT-6AM- 2PM, h.hitems, clothes & shoes(ladies & men), jewelry,baby items & More.1508 East Third St.

SPECIAL NOTICE0107

D I V O R C E W I T H O RW I T H O U T C H I L D R E N$125. Includes namechange and propertysettlement agreement.SAVE HUNDREDS. Fastand Easy. Call 1-888-733-7165 24/7

SPECIAL NOTICE0107BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-tion, f loor level ing,bricks cracking, rottenw o o d , b a s e m e n t s ,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. FREE ESTIM-ATES. 731-239-8945 or662-284-6146.

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, May 31, 2014 •15

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

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

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/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES

0848

96' FORD Ranger 2.3 Ltr.Motor, W/ exhaust, fan,radiator, intake,& 5 sp.manual trans. $700.00OBO 731-610-2492

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

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOORAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

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 $$$,

*SALE * SALE* SALE*

MODEL DISPLAYSMUST GO!

SAVE THOUSANDS!!New Spacious 4 BR/2BA

Starting at $43,500Clayton HomesHWY 72 West

1/4 Mile past theHospital

NICE PALM Harbor 3BR/2BA Double Wide forSale. Appl iances in-cluded, will deliver andset up on your prop-erty for $21,900. Call662-760-2120

WE BUY & TRADE FORUSED HOMES662-287-0354

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

I PAY TOP DOLLAR FORUSED MOBILE HOMES,CALL 662-296-5923

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

2005 16X 80 Clayton,Beautiful Home. ThisHome is in GREAT condi-tion and had an awe-some floorplan. Bigwalk-in shower, separ-ate tub, tons of cabin-ets. Delivery and set upon your property for$26,000. 662-397-9339

HOMES FOR RENT0620

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

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

2BR/1BA, REF, stv, A/C's,city gas, W. Alc. Co. 223-5223 or 750-1184

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

GIANT ANTIQUE band-saw blade from the oldC o r i n t h M a c h i n e r ybuilding. 10" tall, apprx38ft long w/ 8 teeth perfoot, very heavy. $100.286-8257

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

WALL OVEN, BLACK, 30",GOOD CONDITION $150.662-287-3398

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

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

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

HANSEN TEXAS CottonScales, model # 8916, upto 160lbs, $40.00, 286-8257

SMALL HEAVY Duty Trail-er with new tires to pullbehind riding mower or4 wheeler, perfect forgrandkids, firewood,hay, deer corn, or coondogs. $150 286-8257

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

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

(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

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

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

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

M A R O O N R E C L I N E R -ROCKER, GOOD CONDI-TION. $50. 662-287-3398

NEW BOYS 22" bicycle.Still have papers. Cost$80. Take $40. Call 287-7875

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

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

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

3 NEW Boxes of PasloadS t a p l e s w i t h 1 5 / 1 6crown and 1" length. All3 for $50.00 FIRM- 286-8257

MENS HUFFY S toneMountain bike, needsnew tires fixed, $20.00-286-8257

OLD WOODEN Keg w/ 4metal bands, 23" tall x18" w - $25.00- 286-5257

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

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

22 BOXES of Para SleeveMasonry anchors, 20 perbox, 5/16x2.5 completew/ washer and nut,$50.00- 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

3/8" ALL thread, 4 Foot& 10 Foot pcs, .50 centsper foot, 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

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

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

VINTAGE GALVENIZEDmilk crate. October1959 . Protected byPinkerton's DetectiveAgency. Ver rare. $50firm. 286-8257

8 OLD lead and porcel-ain Ball Mason jar lids.Fair condition. $15. firm286-8257

VERY OLD Dr. Schollswo o d e n s l i d e f o o tmeasure & shoe size in-dicater, good shape forage. $20. 286-8257

3M BRAND Handimastermodel M3000. new inbox, plus demonatra-tion video. was $85. Sell$35. firm. 286-8257

LOT OF 25 tubes of vin-tage lipsticks. some incool containers. All for$20. 286-8257

LOT OF 7 very nice largeb e l t b u c k l e s ;Winchester, Philemont,2 Texas, 2 Boyscout & 1Horseshoe. All for $25.286-8257

1 VERY old indian hand-made clay pot w/indianwriting. only 1 smallchip missing. beautifulpiece. $50. firm. 286-8257

45 NEW thumbprint 4 in1 screwdriver . Key-chains w/pricetag & in-structions still attached.Was $97.75. sell all for$25. firm. 286-8257

OLD IMPORTED handheld sugar cane cutter.21" lg, Gavilan brandf r o m D e I n c o l m aColumbia riveted hick-ory handle. $20. 286-8257

4 0 N Y L O N s t r i p p e rbrushes w/short stiffbristles, built-in scraper,comfort grip handle. 7"lg. was $70. sell all for$25. firm. 286-8257

10 OLD rough sawn oakboards from very oldbarn, average 8' long 7"wide, all for $50. 286-8257

Take stock in America.

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16 • Saturday, May 31, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

2013 KIA OPTIMA

2 To Choose From$18,900

2006 NISSAN MURANO $12,888

TOYOTA CAMRY2 To Choose From

Starting at$11,900

2007 NISSAN ALTIMA$9,900

2013 CHEVY CAPTIVA

14K Miles$18,900

2012 DODGE RAM

28K Miles$19,500

2013 FORD F-150

CREW CAB42K Miles

$25,900

2012 NISSAN LEAF SLFully Electric

2008 PONTIAC G-6

2006 DODGE CHARGER R/T

$9,900

2013 DODGE JOURNEY SXT

30K Miles$19,900

#17994 #17878 #17956

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2010 MERCEDES C300

Loaded, Navigation, Sunroof, Leather, 68K Miles$21,900

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King Kars Loves to say...

YES WE CAN!

Yes We Can Offer Monthly Payments As Low As $199/month.

Yes We Can Offer Down Payments As Low As $25.00.

RICKY KING

662-842-5277

966 S. Gloster

Tupelo, MS 38804

662-287-8773

916 Hwy. 45 South

Corinth, MS 38834

Bring Us Your Trade-In

Readers Choice Favorite Used Car Dealer 2013 WWW.KINGKARS.NETRICKY KING MIKE DORAN TONY BONDS

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2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LTZ

4X4

#18008

CHEVY MALIBU

2 to Choose From!

#18022

2005 NISSAN MAXIMA

Leather, Sunroof$8,900

#17897

#17949

2012 CHRYSLER 300 Limited

#18057

2010 FORD MUSTANG

#18039

2007 FORD F150 XLT

95K Miles

#18018

2013 CHEVY SILVERADO

20K Miles

#18040

2003 NISSAN XTERRA$3,900

#18035 2013 Dodge Challenger

24K Miles

$25,900

#18058

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2009 JEEP WRANGLER

52K Miles

$21,900

#18032

2010 CHEVY SILVERADO

79K Miles$21,885

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2013 NISSAN ALTIMA

13K Miles$17,900

#17854

2013 Dodge Charger

39K Miles

#18061

2013 CHEVY CAMARO

35K Miles

#18062

2009 JAGUAR XF48K Miles

$24,900

#17982