daily corinthian e-edition 022113

16
Vol. 117, No. 45 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages One section Thursday Feb. 21, 2013 50 cents Today 50 P.M. t-storms Tonight 45 Index On this day in history 150 years ago There is activity at Camp Pemberton near Greenwood, the junction of the Yazoo and Tallahatchie Rivers. Tight turns in the river make it a perfect spot for artillery to prevent the passage of Federal gunboats. Plans are laid to sink boats in the channel to further impede passage. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather...... 10 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 80% chance of rain Corinth’s building inspector is moving to the role of street commissioner. The Board of Aldermen on Tuesday in closed session ap- proved the hiring of Philip Verdung to head the street de- partment following the retire- ment of Jim Bynum, which was announced during Tuesday’s meeting. The board also moved to begin advertising for the open building inspector posi- tion. City Clerk Vickie Roach said Verdung will continue to ll in as building inspector until a new inspector is on the job. Ver- dung’s hiring as street commis- sioner came exactly ve years to the day after he was hired as building inspector. Verdung has performed both roles while Bynum has been on leave. In other business: The board accepted 3D Construction’s bid of $7,950 for the nal phase of work on the sidewalks project at Corinth National Cemetery. The nal phase is for the existing side- walk on the south side of the cemetery, where 1,160 square feet of old sidewalk will be re- moved and replaced. The work also includes modi- fying two driveway crossings to make them wheelchair acces- sible and an entrance sidewalk to the cemetery ofce. Phase two is still in progress. Construction Specialists Group submitted a competing bid of $9,165. In a 5-1 vote, the board ap- proved the purchase of an In- ternational truck and an Ameri- can Road Machinery 30 cubic yard leaf collector from Truck Center of Tupelo at a cost of $157,385. The city is looking at other uses for the truck during the months of the year when the leaf vacuum will not be needed. The leaf vacuum already owned by the city requires three or four people to operate it. The one purchased Tuesday can be attached to the truck and oper- ated by one person. Aldermen scheduled prop- erty cleanup public hearings for 5 p.m. March 5 for the follow- ing properties: Lot 6, block 658, Anderson Addition (Leslie); 1101 Philips Street (Charles A. Jackson); and an unspecied lot in the Strickland Addition (Charles A. Jackson). The board approved a plumbing license for Jeremy Fields. Verdung named new street commissioner BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith Kossuth’s Unique Motorsports was destroyed by fire on Wednesday. See additional photo page 2. Fire claimed a Kossuth busi- ness early Wednesday after- noon. Mechanic Mike Meeks’ Unique Motorsports was com- pletely destroyed in a re that started around 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. Meeks was just getting back home from a trip to town when he saw the ames coming from his shop. He arrived about ve minutes before the rst re- ghters arrived, he said. The shop was next to Meeks’ home on County Road 632. He was able to pull his tractor out of the shed and push a 1969 Camaro away from the ames, but the loss was still severe. “There’s a lot of stuff gone. Probably a million dollars worth of stuff burned,” Meeks said. “But there nothing I could do. Just stood back with my hands in my pockets and watched it burn.” Meeks said he lost around $500,000 worth of tools in the re, as well as a new Dodge du- ally, a race car worth $50,000 and an expensive paint booth. Fireghters from Kossuth and Union Center were the rst on the scene. Ofcers from the Al- corn Sheriff’s Department also responded to the re. As of Wednesday afternoon, reghters said they had not de- termined the cause of the blaze. Fire claims Kossuth business BY BOBBY J. SMITH [email protected] Jurors heard directly from the victim during the second day of the retrial of a Prentiss County woman accused of killing her mother in 2010. Rebecca Lynn Jones is charged with murder in the death of her mother Jane Jones who was shot twice during an altercation be- tween the two women at the mother’s Prentiss County home in May 2010. Prosecutors played a re- cording of Jane Jones’ frantic call to 911 in the moments im- mediately after she was shot. The wounded woman told the 911 dispatcher, “My daughter shot me” and later said her daughter, Becky, shot her twice, in the stomach and arm. Jurors were also given a transcript of the 911 record- ing to read as they listened to Jane Jones speaking to Pren- tiss County 911 dispatcher Melissa Hamlin. Hamlin also testied she received no other 911 calls re- questing help for Jane Jones, only the call from Jane Jones herself. The state rested its case im- mediately following the play- ing of the 911 tape. Prosecutors used a series of law enforcement and forensic expert witnesses to lay out their case during the second day of the trial. First on the stand was Prentiss County Sheriff’s Department Inves- tigator Roy Ragin, who de- scribed arriving at the scene and said there was no sign of a violent struggle in the house. He said he also saw no evidence of any injuries sus- tained by Rebecca Jones that would indicate a struggle. Defense attorney Rob Laher sharply questioned Ragin on cross examination, and Ragin acknowledged the defendant cooperated with investiga- tors in providing a statement about what happened prior to speaking with an attorney. Ragin however, noted under examination by Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Josh Wise that Rebecca Jones left the scene of the crime and returned a short time later and there was no evidence she had attempt- ed to seek help for her mother at any time after the shooting. Laher said there was no way Ragin could have known the normal condition of the home and had him describe the space in the house indi- cating there was room for them to have grappled for the gun without disturbing Jurors hear victim in murder trial BY ANGELA STOREY AND BRANT SAPPINGTON [email protected] Rep. Kelvin Buck of Holly Springs will speak in Corinth on Saturday as Black History Month activities continue. Now in his third term as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives, Buck will deliver a positive message at the Alcorn County Chapter of the NAACP’s black history program at 5 p.m. Sat- urday at New Covenant Baptist Church at 1402 East Fourth Street. The chapter members en- courage the entire community to attend. “Kelvin is really looking for- ward to being there,” said J.C. Hill, one of the program plan- ners. “He is going to talk about being the best that you can be with a message aimed at the young people. We also feel honored to have the Corinth High School Chorus for this event.” A Democrat representing District 5, which in- cludes Ben- ton and Marshall counties, Buck is a Tu- pelo native and a for- mer alder- man in Holly Springs. In the Missis- sippi House, he is vice-chair- man of the insurance com- mittee and a member of the conservation & water, Medic- aid, and universities & colleges committees. Buck serves on the executive board of the Southern Associa- tion of Colleges. In other Black History Month activities, James Meredith, the rst black Ole Miss student, is visiting Corinth today. He will be at St. Mark Mis- sionary Baptist Church at 1000 Scott Street at 6 p.m., and he is also scheduled to be at the Corinth Library for a book sign- ing at 3 p.m. His memoir, “A Mission from God,” was pub- lished last year. The commu- nity is invited to both events. Meredith will be at Tishom- ingo County High School at 10 a.m. Friday for a black history program and to speak about his ideas for improving Missis- sippi’s education system. Black history exhibits are on- going at the art gallery, Corinth Library and Alcorn Welcome Center. State representative headlines Black History Month event BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Buck Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith Piglet (Caden Harvell), Eeyore (Mikaela Hancock) and Christopher Robin (Max Marsh) get ready for “The House at Pooh Corner.” “The House at Pooh Corner” is coming to the Crossroads Playhouse this weekend. Adapted from A.A. Milne’s book of the same name, “The House at Pooh Corner” tells the story of how Winnie-the- Pooh, Tigger, Eeyore, Piglet and other beloved characters try to prevent their owner, Christopher Robin, from going away to school. Over the course of the story they learn a valuable lesson: Friends take care of each oth- er. “I loved this script from the rst time I read it. ‘The House at Pooh Corner’ speaks to so many truisms about growing up,” said Crossroads Theatre- Arts Technical Director David Maxedon. “It is both a story for the ages and for all ages. Come and see — you will be glad you did!” The young cast members are having fun stepping into the CT-A to present ‘The House at Pooh Corner’ BY BOBBY J. SMITH [email protected] Please see POOH | 2 Please see TRIAL | 2 Discussion about a pos- sible liquor license was on the agenda of the Crossroads Arena Board. The rst conversation on the topic saw a pair of the four members present on the side Arena considers liquor BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Please see ARENA | 2 Daily Corinthian

Upload: daily-corinthian

Post on 12-Mar-2016

249 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Vol. 117, No. 45 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

ThursdayFeb. 21, 2013

50 centsToday50

P.M. t-stormsTonight

45

Index On this day in history 150 years agoThere is activity at Camp Pemberton near Greenwood, the junction

of the Yazoo and Tallahatchie Rivers. Tight turns in the river make it a perfect spot for artillery to prevent the passage of Federal gunboats. Plans are laid to sink boats in the channel to further impede passage.

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

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

80% chance of rain

Corinth’s building inspector is moving to the role of street commissioner.

The Board of Aldermen on Tuesday in closed session ap-proved the hiring of Philip Verdung to head the street de-partment following the retire-ment of Jim Bynum, which was announced during Tuesday’s meeting. The board also moved to begin advertising for the open building inspector posi-

tion.City Clerk Vickie Roach said

Verdung will continue to fi ll in as building inspector until a new inspector is on the job. Ver-dung’s hiring as street commis-sioner came exactly fi ve years to the day after he was hired as building inspector.

Verdung has performed both roles while Bynum has been on leave.

In other business:■ The board accepted 3D

Construction’s bid of $7,950

for the fi nal phase of work on the sidewalks project at Corinth National Cemetery. The fi nal phase is for the existing side-walk on the south side of the cemetery, where 1,160 square feet of old sidewalk will be re-moved and replaced.

The work also includes modi-fying two driveway crossings to make them wheelchair acces-sible and an entrance sidewalk to the cemetery offi ce.

Phase two is still in progress.Construction Specialists

Group submitted a competing bid of $9,165.

■ In a 5-1 vote, the board ap-proved the purchase of an In-ternational truck and an Ameri-can Road Machinery 30 cubic yard leaf collector from Truck Center of Tupelo at a cost of $157,385. The city is looking at other uses for the truck during the months of the year when the leaf vacuum will not be needed.

The leaf vacuum already owned by the city requires three or four people to operate it. The

one purchased Tuesday can be attached to the truck and oper-ated by one person.

■ Aldermen scheduled prop-erty cleanup public hearings for 5 p.m. March 5 for the follow-ing properties: Lot 6, block 658, Anderson Addition (Leslie); 1101 Philips Street (Charles A. Jackson); and an unspecifi ed lot in the Strickland Addition (Charles A. Jackson).

■ The board approved a plumbing license for Jeremy Fields.

Verdung named new street commissionerBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Kossuth’s Unique Motorsports was destroyed by fire on Wednesday. See additional photo page 2.

Fire claimed a Kossuth busi-ness early Wednesday after-noon.

Mechanic Mike Meeks’ Unique Motorsports was com-pletely destroyed in a fi re that started around 2:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Meeks was just getting back home from a trip to town when he saw the fl ames coming from his shop. He arrived about fi ve

minutes before the fi rst fi re-fi ghters arrived, he said. The shop was next to Meeks’ home on County Road 632.

He was able to pull his tractor out of the shed and push a 1969 Camaro away from the fl ames, but the loss was still severe.

“There’s a lot of stuff gone. Probably a million dollars worth of stuff burned,” Meeks said. “But there nothing I could do. Just stood back with my hands in my pockets and watched it

burn.”Meeks said he lost around

$500,000 worth of tools in the fi re, as well as a new Dodge du-ally, a race car worth $50,000 and an expensive paint booth.

Firefi ghters from Kossuth and Union Center were the fi rst on the scene. Offi cers from the Al-corn Sheriff’s Department also responded to the fi re.

As of Wednesday afternoon, fi refi ghters said they had not de-termined the cause of the blaze.

Fire claims Kossuth businessBY BOBBY J. SMITH

[email protected]

Jurors heard directly from the victim during the second day of the retrial of a Prentiss County woman accused of killing her mother in 2010.

Rebecca Lynn Jones is charged with murder in the death of her mother Jane Jones who was shot twice during an altercation be-tween the two women at the mother’s Prentiss County home in May 2010.

Prosecutors played a re-cording of Jane Jones’ frantic call to 911 in the moments im-mediately after she was shot.

The wounded woman told the 911 dispatcher, “My daughter shot me” and later said her daughter, Becky, shot her twice, in the stomach and arm.

Jurors were also given a transcript of the 911 record-ing to read as they listened to Jane Jones speaking to Pren-tiss County 911 dispatcher Melissa Hamlin.

Hamlin also testifi ed she received no other 911 calls re-questing help for Jane Jones, only the call from Jane Jones herself.

The state rested its case im-mediately following the play-ing of the 911 tape.

Prosecutors used a series of

law enforcement and forensic expert witnesses to lay out their case during the second day of the trial. First on the stand was Prentiss County Sheriff’s Department Inves-tigator Roy Ragin, who de-scribed arriving at the scene and said there was no sign of a violent struggle in the house. He said he also saw no evidence of any injuries sus-tained by Rebecca Jones that would indicate a struggle.

Defense attorney Rob Laher sharply questioned Ragin on cross examination, and Ragin acknowledged the defendant cooperated with investiga-tors in providing a statement about what happened prior to speaking with an attorney. Ragin however, noted under examination by Assistant Dis-trict Attorney Josh Wise that Rebecca Jones left the scene of the crime and returned a short time later and there was no evidence she had attempt-ed to seek help for her mother at any time after the shooting.

Laher said there was no way Ragin could have known the normal condition of the home and had him describe the space in the house indi-cating there was room for them to have grappled for the gun without disturbing

Jurors hear victim in murder trial

BY ANGELA STOREY AND BRANT SAPPINGTON

[email protected]

Rep. Kelvin Buck of Holly Springs will speak in Corinth on Saturday as Black History Month activities continue.

Now in his third term as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives, Buck will deliver a positive message at the Alcorn County Chapter of the NAACP’s black history program at 5 p.m. Sat-urday at New Covenant Baptist Church at 1402 East Fourth

Street.The chapter members en-

courage the entire community to attend.

“Kelvin is really looking for-ward to being there,” said J.C. Hill, one of the program plan-ners. “He is going to talk about being the best that you can be with a message aimed at the young people. We also feel honored to have the Corinth High School Chorus for this event.”

A Democrat representing

District 5, which in-cludes Ben-ton and M a r s h a l l c o u n t i e s , Buck is a Tu-pelo native and a for-mer alder-man in Holly Springs. In the Missis-

sippi House, he is vice-chair-man of the insurance com-

mittee and a member of the conservation & water, Medic-aid, and universities & colleges committees.

Buck serves on the executive board of the Southern Associa-tion of Colleges.

In other Black History Month activities, James Meredith, the fi rst black Ole Miss student, is visiting Corinth today.

He will be at St. Mark Mis-sionary Baptist Church at 1000 Scott Street at 6 p.m., and he is also scheduled to be at the

Corinth Library for a book sign-ing at 3 p.m. His memoir, “A Mission from God,” was pub-lished last year. The commu-nity is invited to both events.

Meredith will be at Tishom-ingo County High School at 10 a.m. Friday for a black history program and to speak about his ideas for improving Missis-sippi’s education system.

Black history exhibits are on-going at the art gallery, Corinth Library and Alcorn Welcome Center.

State representative headlines Black History Month eventBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Buck

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Piglet (Caden Harvell), Eeyore (Mikaela Hancock) and Christopher Robin (Max Marsh) get ready for “The House at Pooh Corner.”

“The House at Pooh Corner” is coming to the Crossroads Playhouse this weekend.

Adapted from A.A. Milne’s book of the same name, “The House at Pooh Corner” tells the story of how Winnie-the-Pooh, Tigger, Eeyore, Piglet and other beloved characters try to prevent their owner, Christopher Robin, from going away to school.

Over the course of the story they learn a valuable lesson:

Friends take care of each oth-er.

“I loved this script from the fi rst time I read it. ‘The House at Pooh Corner’ speaks to so many truisms about growing up,” said Crossroads Theatre-Arts Technical Director David Maxedon. “It is both a story for the ages and for all ages. Come and see — you will be glad you did!”

The young cast members are having fun stepping into the

CT-A to present ‘The House at Pooh Corner’

BY BOBBY J. [email protected]

Please see POOH | 2

Please see TRIAL | 2

Discussion about a pos-sible liquor license was on the agenda of the Crossroads Arena Board.

The fi rst conversation on the topic saw a pair of the four members present on the side

Arena considers liquor

BY STEVE [email protected]

Please see ARENA | 2

Daily Corinthian

Page 2: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

of not being in favor of obtaining a license.

“I don't feel comfort-able with the Arena serving liquor,” said vice chairman Alva Dalton. “It's not something we were pursuing prior to the vote on liquor … why would we pursue it now?”

City voters approved liquor and wine sales by a 2-1 margin in a Decem-ber special election. The sale of alcoholic beverag-es by permitted retailers became legal on Feb. 1.

“This is a city-county building and county vot-ers showed they don't want it by voting it down … I think we should take a look at that, too,” said board member Sam Tull. “We have enough prob-lems without getting into liquor.”

The desire of some pri-vate parties held at the facility to serve liquor brought up the discus-sion.

“I have talked with some in the community who say 'you need to do

it' and with others who say 'not,'” said board chairman Dr. Hardwick Kay. “This is an issue we will need to look at.”

Kay said the board will also look at the policies of other arenas before making any decision on a license.

“If we decide to do it, we want to have control,” added the chairman.

In other board busi-ness, a meeting with the new Corinth Area Convention and Visitors Bureau Board was tenta-tively set for Feb. 25.

“Even though they haven't hired a new di-rector, the feeling now is we need to have a meet-ing with them,” said Dr. Kay. “We need to get both boards together in an informal way and get to know one another.”

Arena General Man-ager Tammy Genovese also told the board the fi rst Saturday in May is the target for the facility's fi rst big concert.

“Our focus is May 4 to go along with the 10K,” she said.

furniture or other items. Laher questioned how Ragin could have known for sure the condition of the house and sharply questioned his investiga-tive techniques, arguing the lack of evidence of a struggle was due to a lack of proper investigation. Ragin strongly defended his work and repeatedly stated he saw no reason to believe a struggle had occurred.

Prentiss County Sher-iff Randy Tolar testifi ed Tuesday he had known both women for many years through his law enforcement career and knew their relationship to be strained.

“It was a relationship that was very volatile,” he said.

Tolar, who along with Ragin questioned Re-becca Jones the day af-ter the shooting, said the defendant told investiga-tors she had gone to her

mother’s house to con-front her about several issues and the discussion became heated. She said as she got up to leave she reached in her purse and pulled out a gun she regularly carried to reach her keys below it and when she pulled the gun out her mother lunged at her and the gun went off during the struggle.

Tolar testifi ed he never saw Rebecca Jones show any remorse or sorrow over her mother’s death during the course of be-ing questioned.

Under cross exami-nation by Laher, Tolar said Jones did say she attempted to get to the phone while her mother was on the phone with 911 after the shooting to give her side but was un-able to make the phone work.

He said Jones told him she returned to the house after leaving because she didn’t think she had done anything wrong.

Other witnesses pre-sented Tuesday by the state included the medi-cal examiner and a fi re-arms expert from the Mississippi State Crime Lab who both testifi ed the fatal wound to Jane Jones' abdomen must have come from no more than a few feet away.

Felicia Robinson, a fi rearms examiner from the crime lab, said the hole through the victim’s shirt indicated the gun was fi red within 9 inches of the garment.

Jane Jone’s brother, Jimmy Hicks, testifi ed his late sister’s relation-ship with her daughter was “rocky” and both would call him com-plaining about the other. He also noted his sister had told him she planned to sell some property she had been holding for Re-becca Jones just prior to the shooting. He said, however, that he knows the two loved each other and wanted to love each

other. Under question-ing from Wise he said Rebecca Jones blamed her mother for taking her daughter and her land from her.

The defense began its case with testimony from Rebecca Jones’ daugh-ter, Brooke Creech. Jane Jones had obtained cus-tody of Creech when she was a child and she con-tinued living with her grandmother until she became an adult.

Creech testifi ed how well her mother was do-ing since she moved to Alabama.

Creech told the jury it was customary for her mother to always have her gun with her because she once had a break-in and been held at gun-point. “She had that gun in the hospital when my baby was born. That was her protection,” Creech said.

She said she always kept the gun in a holster and kept it with her all

the time.Creech insisted she

never told her mother that Jane Jones planned to sell property that her mother had transferred to the grandmother, though she acknowl-edged she spoke with her mother several times on the day of the shooting.

Prosecutors argued in their opening state-ment that Creech had told her mother of her grandmother’s intent to sell the property and said that was a key reason for the confrontation that led to the shooting.

Prosecutors have ar-gued the shooting oc-curred during an ar-gument between the women over that prop-erty and that Rebecca Jones had gone to the house that day to con-front her mother over the issue.

Defense attorneys claim Rebecca Jones went to the house to check on her mother af-

ter becoming concerned about her behavior and the shooting was an acci-dent that happened dur-ing a struggle for the gun They say the defendant never intended to shoot her mother.

The defense also pre-sented several witnesses Tuesday who were close friends or family of the two women who testifi ed about their relationship.

Jurors will return to the courtroom at 9 a.m. today when the defense is expected to fi nish its case. Closing arguments are expected later today. It remains unclear if the defendant will testify.

This is the second time Rebecca Jones has faced a jury on the charge. Last October a mistrial was declared on the second day of Jones’ fi rst trial after she fell ill and was hospitalized. She was lat-er released from the hos-pital and ordered held without bond until the conclusion of the case.

shoes of characters that have beloved by genera-tions of children.

I think it’s just great to be another person, to get away from ordinary life,” said 10-year-old Max Marsh, who plays Chris-topher Robin. “That’s our season’s theme this year — ‘Let the Arts Transport You‘ — and we’ve got a great set, a great play and it’s fascinating to be out here.”

Caden Harvell has a special connection to the character of Piglet.

“Piglet was my favorite character and I got the part!” said Caden.

Seventeen-year-old Ashely Austin (Winnie-the-Pooh) also feels a connection to her role.

“I enjoy the opportu-nity to live something I grew up watching,” she

said. “It’s kinda trippy — but awesome. Plus, I like Honey. So it works out for us all.”

Showtimes are 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Sat-urday and 2 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are $6 for students and $12 for adults.

Cast members are: Max Marsh (Christopher Robin), Ashely Austin (Winnie-the-Pooh), Ca-den Harvell (Piglet), Emili Gann (Owl), Mi-kaela Hancock (Eeyore), Kennedy Curtis (Tig-ger), Katelyn Mathis (Kanga), MeKyland Wil-liams (Roo), Meredith Nall (Rabbit), Ava Marsh (Early), Pearl Spears (Late) and Shelby Sewell (understudy).

For reservations call 287-2995.

(For more information visit www.corinththe-atrearts.com.)

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, February 21, 2013

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Unique Motorsports destroyedOwner Mike Meeks estimates his loss at $1 million.

POOH

CONTINUED FROM 1

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Eeyore (Mikaela Hancock) and Owl (Emili Gann) are having a serious discussion.

TRIAL

CONTINUED FROM 1

ARENA

CONTINUED FROM 1

WE PROVIDE SIMPLEFINANCING SOLUTIONS...For Enjoying The Simple Life.

For those who choose to live out here, we have financing solutions to provide for the things that make life better. Farm land, hunting land, equipment, buildings, ag production or home sites on acreage... we have a plan for you.

Give Us A Call, Stop By Our Office, or Ask A Friend.

CORINTH :

NOW OPEN!!!

1906 Shiloh Rd. (Formerly Harlows) Corinth, MS.

phone 662-396-2167 • fax 662-396-2168Open Tuesday - Sunday • 6 AM - 12 Noon

DAILY SPECIALSGroups Welcomed

Free WiFiCall or fax in large orders

Senior Discounts

Page 3: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, February 21, 2013

Today in

history

Today is Thursday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of 2013. There are 313 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlightin History:

On Feb. 21, 1613, Mikhail Romanov, 16, was unanimously chosen by Russia’s national as-sembly to be czar, begin-ning a dynasty that would last three centuries.

On this date:

In 1513, Pope Julius II, who had commissioned Mi-chelangelo to paint the ceil-ing of the Sistine Chapel, died nearly four months after the project was com-pleted.

In 1862, Nathaniel Gor-don became the first and only American slave-trader to be executed under the U.S. Piracy Law of 1820 as he was hanged in New York.

In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated.

In 1912, the Great Fifth Ward Fire broke out in Houston, Texas; although property losses topped $3 million, no one was killed in the blaze.

In 1916, the World War I Battle of Verdun began in France as German forces attacked; the French were able to prevail after 10 months of fighting.

In 1925, The New Yorker magazine made its debut.

In 1945, during the World War II Battle of Iwo Jima, the escort carrier USS Bismarck Sea was sunk by kamikazes with the loss of 318 men.

In 1947, Edwin H. Land publicly demonstrated his Polaroid Land camera, which could produce a black-and-white photograph in 60 seconds.

In 1965, black Muslim leader and civil rights ac-tivist Malcolm X, 39, was shot to death inside the Audubon Ballroom in New York by assassins identi-fied as members of the Na-tion of Islam.

In 1972, President Rich-ard M. Nixon began his historic visit to China as he and his wife, Pat, arrived in Beijing.

In 1973, Israeli fighter planes shot down Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 114 over the Sinai Desert, kill-ing all but five of the 113 people on board.

In 1986, Larry Wu-tai Chin, the first American found guilty of spying for China, killed himself in his Virginia jail cell.

Ten years ago:

The owners of The Sta-tion nightclub in West Warwick, R.I., where 100 people perished in a fast-moving fire the night before, denied giving the rock band Great White permission to use fire-works blamed for setting off the blaze, although the band’s singer insisted the use of pyrotechnics had been approved. Chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix ordered the destruction of dozens of Iraqi mis-siles with ranges that violated U.N. limits. Mi-chael Jordan became the first 40-year-old in NBA history to score 40 or more points, getting 43 in the Washington Wizards’ 89-86 win over the New Jersey Nets.

Five years ago:

Serb rioters broke into the U.S. Embassy in Bel-grade and set fire during protests against Western support for an indepen-dent Kosovo.

Things to Do Today

Mission Mississippi

Mission Mississippi Corinth Gathering will take place at Martha’s Menu, 702 Cruise St. in Corinth today beginning at 11:30 a.m.

The mission of Mission Mississippi is to encour-age and demonstrate unity in the Body of Christ across racial and denomi-national lines. For more information, contact the Rev. Ann Fraser at 662-286-2922 or Neddie at 601-665-5900.

 Meredith visits Corinth

James Meredith, the first black Ole Miss stu-dent, is speaking at St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church at 1000 Scott St. at 6 p.m. tonight. He is also scheduled to visit the Corinth Library for a book signing at 3 p.m. today. His memoir, “A Mission from God,” was published last year.

The entire community is invited to attend. The program will include mu-sic by the St. Mark choir

and a welcome from the community.

Museum extends hours

The Black History mu-seum has expanded its hours to offer more people a chance to become ac-quainted with the history of the local black commu-nity during Black History Month. During each week of February, the museum at the Webb house on Mei-gg Street near the national cemetery will open Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m.

 Black artists featured

Several venues in Corinth are hosting the work of black artists during Black History Month. The Corinth Library, Alcorn Wel-come Center and Corinth Artist Guild Gallery will all host black-themed art dur-ing the month.

■ The featured artist at the library auditorium is Billy Clifton, showcasing his highly stylized realism in his scenes that explore history and culture.

■ A selection of Ed Wade Jr.’s work is on display at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery. His watercolors draws on his inspiration in capturing the shapes of life and beauty in every day moments. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday.

■ The Alcorn County Wel-come Center is celebrating History and Black History Month with displays and handouts on historical events and places through-out the state. There is also a display board provided by the Corinth Area African-American Historical Soci-ety. There will be activity sheets for the kids to pick up, also.

 Story Hour

Pre-school Story Hour is held each Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Corinth Library. Year-round art exhibits are also on display and edu-cational non-profit groups meet in the auditorium monthly.

The Corinth Friends of the Library hold their ongo-ing book sale inside the library. Hardback, paper-

back and audio books, and VHS and DVD donations to the library are always ap-preciated. For more infor-mation, call 287-2441.

 Activity center

Bishop Activity Center on Washington St. in Corinth is having the fol-lowing activities today: pet therapy from Corinth Animal Shelter, puzzles, games and lunch. Se-nior citizens, age 60 and above, are welcome and encouraged to attend. A variety of activities for everyone is offered.

 Shiloh CCC exhibit

Throughout the month of February, in com-memoration of African American History Month, Shiloh National Military Park will be displaying a special exhibit on the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) at Shiloh Visitor Center, 1055 Pittsburg Landing Rd. Shiloh, Tenn. It features many rarely seen imag-es and documents from Shiloh’s archival collec-

tion pertaining to the African American CCC crew that was stationed at Shiloh in the 1930s.

The CCC exhibit is viewable during regular business hours, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. in the Shiloh Battlefield Visitor Cen-ter. For more informa-tion on this exhibit and upcoming events at Shi-loh go to www.nps.gov/shil or www.facebook.com/ShilohNMP, or call the Visitor Center at 731-689-5696.

  Shiloh museum

A museum dedicated to the Battle of Shiloh and area veterans is open next to Shiloh National Military Park. It is located at the inter-section of state Route 22 and Route 142 in Shiloh, across from Ed Shaw’s Restaurant.

The Shiloh Battlefield & World War II Museum is open Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. For more informa-tion call Larry DeBerry at 731-926-0360.

Army National Guard Pvt. Issac J. Vuncannon has graduated from basic infantry training at Fort Benning, Columbus, Ga.

During the nine weeks of training, the soldier received training in drill and ceremonies, weap-ons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, mili-tary justice, physical fi t-ness, fi rst aid, and Army history, core values and traditions. Additional training included devel-opment of basic combat skills and battlefi eld op-erations and tactics, and experiencing use of vari-ous weapons and weap-ons defenses available to the infantry crewman.

Vuncannon is the nephew of Jessica and Joshua Clingan of Iuka.

He is a 2011 graduate of Tishomingo County High School.

Vuncannon completes training

The Mississippi State Senate recently issued a resolution recognizing January 2013 as “Rotary Awareness Month in Mis-sissippi.”

Resolution No. 520 ac-knowledges the 108-year service history of Rotary International and its 1.2 million Rotary club mem-bers made up of profes-sional and business lead-ers from across the world. There are currently 34,000 clubs in 200 countries and geographic areas. The res-olution also recognizes the over 100 Rotary clubs in Mississippi and the service projects they support.

“Rotary is a valuable as-set to all of the towns and communities across our state. Our clubs provide numerous volunteers and funding for many needed projects,” said Danny Wil-liams, Rotary District Gov-ernor for District 6820. “It is amazing to me the number of lives that are

touched each year by the Rotarians across our state. We are doing good in the world, and we need to do a better job of making the public more aware of our organization. It’s great to have the support of our state legislators through their recent joint resolu-tion. Rotary fi nds club projects and sponsors vol-unteers with community expertise to provide medi-cal supplies, health care, clean water, food produc-tion, job training and edu-cation to millions in need, particularly to those in de-veloping countries.”

As volunteers, Rotarians conduct projects to ad-dress today’s humanitar-ian challenges including illiteracy, disease, hunger, poverty, lack of clean water and environmental con-cerns while encouraging high standards in all voca-tions.

Most notably, Rotary clubs around the world

have contributed to the near eradication of polio. Since Rotary launched PolioPlus in 1985 and spearheaded efforts with the World Health Orga-nization, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Pre-vention, and UNICEF to immunize children of the world, polio cases have dropped by 99 percent since 1988.

To date, Rotary has contributed nearly $850 million and countless vol-unteer hours to the protec-tion of more than 2 billion children in 122 countries. The organization has also raised $200 million to-wards a $300 million chal-lenge grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for a total of $355 million. These efforts are providing much needed operational support, medical person-nel, laboratory equipment and educational materi-als for health workers and parents.

Senate recognizes state Rotary clubs

Submitted photo

Freshour completes trainingAir Force Airman William J. Freshour graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas. The airman completed an intensive, eight-week program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills. Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Commu-nity College of the Air Force. Freshour is the son of Krissy Freshour of Davis Drive, Red Bay, Ala. He is a 2012 graduate of Tishomingo High School, Luka, Miss.

Life insurance from Modern Woodmen of America. It’sa gift that can last a lifetime. Let’s talk – I can help youplan for life.

to build your kids’ financial foundation?

SMA0312

Agent name(State) Lic. (number)AddressCity, StatePhoneModern Woodmen email

Agent name(State) Lic. (number)AddressCity, StatePhoneModern Woodmen email

smartWhat’s a

wayway

Jonathan Marsh, FIC*710 Cruise St,Suite 102Corinth MS [email protected]

Steven Eaton,Financial Representative710 Cruise St,Suite 102Corinth MS [email protected]

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

Home Delivery1 year - - - - - - - $139.856 months - - - - - - $73.853 months - - - - - - $38.85

Mail Rates1 year - - - - - - - -$198.906 months - - - - - - $101.603 months - - - - - - $53.45

To start your home delivered subscription:Call 287-6111 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday.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.

USPS 142-560The Daily Corinthian is published daily Tuesday through Sunday by PMG, LLC.

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

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

Page 4: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Thursday, February 21, 2013www.dailycorinthian.com

How to reach us -- extensions:Newsroom.....................317Circulation....................301Advertising...................339Classifieds....................302Bookkeeping.................333

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

Willie Walkercirculation manager

[email protected]

World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com Editorials represent the voice of the Daily Corinthian. Editorial columns, letters to the editor and other articles that appear on this page represent the opinions of the writers and the Daily Corinthian may or may not agree.

E-mail:[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

To Sound Off:email :

[email protected] 287-6111

Classified Adv. 287-6147

Mark Boehlereditor

[email protected]

Mark Boehler, editor

In the decade or so that I’ve written about the fact that Mississippi fails to collect sales

tax on online purchases, three things have become painfully evident.

First, there’s the shocking news that people who aren’t currently paying sales tax on their online purchases really don’t want any change in the status quo. Second, most of the people in the fi rst category have convinced themselves

that online sales taxes would represent “new” taxes that they didn’t previously owe.

Third, Mississippi’s political appetite for any “new” taxes is non-existent.

Still, the fact is that Congress is looking seriously at the Marketplace Fairness Act, a measure which would empower states to tax out-of-state online purchases. The bill would exempt small businesses that earn less than $1 million annually from out-of-state sales.

Proponents of the legislation say the new law would balance an unfair advantage that online retailers currently enjoy over tradi-tional bricks-and-mortar stores. Current law prohibits states from collecting sales taxes from retailers who have no physical location or “nexus” in their state.

But buyers, on the honor system, are sup-posed to pay the sales taxes they owe in the states where sales taxes are applicable. Un-fortunately, the vast majority of online buy-ers simply don’t. Therefore, if two next-door neighbors in Pontotoc buy the same hammer -- one online from another state and one in a Pontotoc store -- they both owe Mississippi sales tax of seven percent for their hammer.

The difference is the state of Mississippi makes the Pontotoc store the tax collector for the hammer purchased directly. No one en-forces collection of the seven percent Missis-sippi sales tax due from the hammer ordered online from the other state.

Online sales taxes aren’t “new” taxes be-cause Mississippi has been collecting sales taxes on hammers since 1932. What would be “new” is that there would be uniform col-lection of existing sales taxes from everyone.

The Congressional Research Service cited federal estimates of $4.1 trillion in online sales in 2010, which amounts to 16.1 percent of all U.S. sales. Estimates of foregone sales tax revenue from these transactions total some $23 billion, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The NCSL identifi es an annual $303.4 million in uncol-lected Mississippi sales tax revenues.

What is lost in translation in the political debate over this issue is the contention that “Internet taxes” are new taxes. The fact is that collecting online sales tax is simply full enforcement of a tax that Mississippi pur-chasers have owed since 1932.

Congressional efforts to deal with online sales tax collections in a uniform way may fall victim to broader overall tax code reform efforts. But many of the major online sellers like Amazon and business lobby voices like the National Retail Federation are backing the Marketplace Fairness Act.

Impatient with congressional efforts that continually kick the can of online sales tax collection down the political road, many states are trying to enact online sales tax col-lection efforts on their own -- particularly larger states where the revenue stakes are much higher than in Mississippi.

It would seem that in a conservative state like Mississippi, efforts to make every tax-payer pay the taxes they owe would be greet-ed with applause. But in the decade that I’ve watched this issue evolve -- or perhaps fes-ter is more descriptive term -- that’s just not been the case.

(Daily Corinthian and syndicated colum-nist Sid Salter can be contacted at 601-507-8004 or [email protected].)

Online sales tax collection remains a political enigma

Prayer for today

A verse to share

“It is our generation’s task, then, to reignite the true engine of America’s economic growth -- a rising, thriving middle class.”

So said B a r a c k Obama in his State of the Union.

And for one of his ideas to re-ignite that engine, Re-p u b l i c a n s applauded.

“And to-night, I am announcing that we will launch talks on a comprehensive Transatlan-tic Trade and Investment Partnership with the Euro-pean Union -- because trade that is free and fair across the Atlantic supports mil-lions of good-paying Ameri-can jobs.”

One wonders if any of those in the hall who rose robotically at the phrase “free and fair” were aware of the trade results just in from 2012.

U.S. exports to Europe fell, imports from Europe rose, and our trade defi cit with the EU shot up 16 per-cent to $116 billion.

We ran a trade defi cit with Italy of $20 billion, with Ireland of $25 billion, with Germany of $60 bil-lion. The Europeans are eating our lunch.

What about South Korea, the country with whom we signed a free-trade deal in 2012?

U.S. exports to Korea fell last year, and due to a surge in imports our trade defi cit with South Korea soared 25 percent to $16.6 billion.

Seoul’s trade minister who cut that deal should get a medal and the kind of bonus Americans reserve for people like hedge fund managers and the folks who ran Fannie and Freddie.

And Japan? Last year, Nippon ran a $76 billion trade surplus with the Unit-ed States, second largest of any country.

But that is insuffi cient for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has bullied the Bank of Japan to drive down the yen 20 percent against the dollar in three months -- to increase exports to America and cut imports.

Look for the U.S. trade defi cit with Tokyo to ex-plode.

What about that NAFTA treaty the establishments of both parties heralded in the Clinton era?

Last year, the United States ran a trade defi cit of $32 billion with Canada and twice that, $61 billion, with Mexico.

What was America’s over-all trade position in 2012?

We ran a global trade defi cit in goods of $736 bil-

lion. That is 5 percent of the U.S. economy. We are hem-orrhaging jobs, factories, wealth.

In banking, consulting, lawyering, we had a nice surplus. That’s what we Americans do now.

Since Bush 1, when some of us began to argue loudly that a mindless ideological pursuit of free trade would imperil America’s industrial base, the total of U.S. trade defi cits in goods with the world is approaching $10 trillion.

Might this humongous dumping of foreign goods into the U.S.A., killing our factories, and the liberation of our transnational elite to close plants, outsource production, and bring for-eign-made goods back free of charge into the U.S. mar-ket, have had something to do with killing the middle class?

The U.S. median income stopped growing in the mid-1970s, the same time we began to run 40 straight years of ever-expanding trade defi cits.

And how are we doing with China?

One learns that the U.S. trade defi cit in goods with China was not only an all-time record, but the largest between any two nations in the history of the world -- $315 billion.

China now exports 6.3

times as much in manufac-tured goods to the United States, $417 billion’s worth, as we export to China.

Over two decades, Re-publicans in the lead, Amer-ica granted Beijing most favored nation status, then permanent normal trade relations. Then we squired Beijing into the World Trade Organization.

And since the courtship began, the trade surpluses China has run with the U.S. have enriched, empowered and emboldened her so that, today, China has laid claim to all the islands in the South and East China seas and is telling the U.S. Navy to stay out of the Yel-low Sea and Formosa Strait.

And the free-trade fanat-ics responsible for build-ing up this Asian colossus challenging us in the Pacifi c now tell us we must shift our planes, ships and troops to Asia and the Western Pa-cifi c to contain the mighty and mammoth power their stupidity created.

Every nation seems to understand what our baby boomers were never taught. A trade balance is a mea-sure of national power that reliably identifi es rising and falling nations.

(Daily Corinthian colum-nist Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of “Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?”)

Who really killed the middle class?

President Obama boasts that his Obamacare legisla-tion will reduce the number of uninsured by 30 million. But recent actions by the states to reject his proposed expansion of Medicaid au-ger about a 25 percent re-duction in his stated goal.

The Roberts decision af-fi rming the constitutional validity of the individual mandate in Obamacare left the states free to decline the expansion of Medicaid specifi ed in the legislation without facing a penalty. Obamacare now suggests that states cover people for Medicaid up to 133 percent of the poverty level.

For a family of one, that comes to $11,490. For a family of two it is $20,628. For three it is $26,000 and for a family of four it would be $31,000.

Now, states are deciding if they will expand their Med-icaid eligibility as Obama suggests or will opt out as the Supreme Court permits.

Twenty-one states have either indicated that they will opt out or are consider-ing doing so.

At least 12 states have decided not to participate: Maine, New Jersey, Penn-

sylvania, South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Loui-siana, Georgia, Texas, Okla-homa, South Dakota and Idaho. Nine states are con-sidering opting out: Florida, Wisconsin, Utah, Tennes-see, North Carolina, West Virginia, Kansas, Alaska and Indiana.

The combined population of the opt-out states is 86 million and the population of the undecided states is 57 million.

Of the 30 states (includ-ing D.C.) who have indi-cated they will participate, six already offer Medicaid to those with 133 percent of the poverty level. There would be no increase in cov-erage for these states under the Obamacare Medicaid provisions. These states have a combined total of 50 million people.

So 62 percent of Ameri-cans will be unaffected by the Obamacare expansion of Medicaid.

In addition, 12 states who are accepting the new Med-icaid eligibility standards already cover 100 percent or more of the poverty lev-el. While they will slightly increase their coverage, it would not be by much. These states have a com-bined population of 68 mil-

lion.So here is the extent of

the Medicaid expansion, one of the two key elements in Obamacare:

Percent of U.S. Popula-tion

■ States refusing expan-sion: 28 percent

■ States which may re-fuse: 18 percent

■ States already over 133 percent eligibility: 16 per-cent

■ States already at 100-133 percent eligibility: 22 percent

■ Total: 84 percentSo only 16 percent of the

U.S. population stands to “benefi t” from the increased Medicaid eligibility levels in Obamacare.

Obamacare advertises that it will reduce the num-ber of uninsured by 30 mil-lion. About 10 million of them were to come from Medicaid expansion. Now it looks like the bulk of this expansion will not hap-pen, potentially lowering the number of uninsured covered to the 22-24 mil-lion range, effectively a one-quarter cut in the impact of Obamacare.

The states are rejecting expansion of Medicaid for several reasons:

■ While Obamacare

promises to reimburse states for the cost of the expansion for three years, it only reimburses 90 per-cent after that period. Since full implementation of the Obamacare standard would increase Medicaid coverage by about 50 percent, these costs are likely to be severe-ly burdensome.

■ Governors are worried that an expansion of Med-icaid eligibility will trig-ger an infl ux of those now eligible into the Medicaid program. The Kaiser Foun-dation estimated that half of the growth of Medicaid expected by 2022 would come from those currently eligible. These new Med-icaid recipients would be a big burden on states and the feds would only pick up an average of 60 percent of their cost.

But governors are on the lookout and are rapidly mit-igating the effects of Obam-acare on their Medicaid costs.

(Daily Corinthian colum-nist Dick Morris, former advisor to the Clinton ad-ministration, is a commen-tator and writer. He is also a columnist for the New York Post and The Hill. His wife, Eileen McGann is an attorney and consultant.)

Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion crippled by states

Sid SalterColumnist

Dear Father, heal our hearts. Help us to give up hatred and bitterness and to forgive those who have hurt us. Amen.

But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punish-ment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed.

— Isaiah 53:5

Worth quoting

Art enables us to fi nd ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time.

— Thomas Merton

BY DICK MORRIS AND EILEEN MCGANN

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

Page 5: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, February 21, 2013

Crews recover body in explosion rubble

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Search crews at the site of a massive explo-sion that destroyed a popular Kansas City, Mo., restaurant recov-ered one body Wednes-day, and the city’s mayor said there was no certainty the rubble wasn’t concealing other victims.

Mayor Sly James de-clined to say whether the body belonged to a man or a woman, though authorities have been looking for a woman who worked at JJ’s restaurant and was seen there before the Tuesday evening blast and reported missing afterward. They previ-ously said she was the only person still unac-counted for following the explosion and fire.

But James said at a news conference that authorities can’t be “100 percent sure that we can account for ev-ery single person that may have been at JJ’s when the explosion oc-curred.”

“Since this started without a list of those in the building ... those search and rescue people are out there go-ing through the rubble and will continue to go through the rubble,” James said. “They will continue to investigate until weather shuts it down.”

Crews using flash-lights, cadaver dogs and heavy equipment have been search-ing the site feverishly ahead of a major winter storm bearing down on the city. James said 15 people were injured in the blast. Six were still hospitalized Wednesday morning.

The blast occurred after a construction crew apparently struck a natural gas line. The explosion was felt for nearly a mile around the restaurant, shattering glass in nearby build-ings and sending an ominous smoke plume above the city’s prized outdoor shopping dis-trict.

One of two people first feared to be miss-ing was later found at a hospital. But the wom-an who worked at JJ’s was still missing, and James had stressed that finding her re-mained the primary focus of Wednesday’s efforts.

“We have a major storm coming in this evening,” James said. “We’re going to work diligently to get in (to

the blast site) to get un-derneath that weather.”

Searchers were continuing their work at midday at JJs, a beloved fixture on the city’s culinary scene for more than 27 years. Lo-cals knew it as a prime after-work stop, though the restaurant won a broader reputation after it consistently received high ratings from con-tributors to Zagat’s res-taurant guides, both for its food and its list of hundreds of wines.

The blast happened at around 6 p.m. Tues-day, when the dinner crowd would have been filing into JJ’s and the many other restaurants in the upscale Country Club Plaza shopping and dining district.

Firefighters had re-ceived a call about 5:15 p.m. that a construction worker had hit a gas line near the restau-rant, and they conferred with employees for Mis-souri Gas Energy, which supplies the area, Fire Chief Paul Berardi said. He said the cause of the gas leak has not yet been confirmed and is still under investigation.

It wasn’t clear Wednesday how hard firefighters or utility of-ficials worked to evacu-ate the restaurant after gas was first noticed. Both James and Berardi said the fire depart-ment deferred to MGE since the utility would have more expertise in assessing the serious-ness of the situation.

“It’s not a matter of deferring, it’s a matter of knowing a utility is in-volved. Fire department does not do gas, MGE does gas,” James said. “Everybody wants to know what happened, everybody wants to blame someone, ev-erybody wants to know details. That’s not going to happen today.”

A construction proj-ect had been going on across a narrow, one-way street from JJ’s for seven years. The work had complicated access to the street-corner restaurant, and a server needed hospital treat-ment in 2006 after she was struck by a rock sent flying by blasting for excavation of the construction site.

Baptists want gayScout ban continued

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The nation’s largest Protestant group is call-ing on members of the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America to uphold a ban on gay leaders and Scouts when it votes in May.

The Southern Baptist Convention’s executive committee passed the resolution Tuesday. It also calls on like-mind-ed corporate leaders to support the Scouts financially. And it ex-presses “dismay and disappointment” at any Scout leaders who may have lobbied to remove the ban.

The Scouts an-nounced last month that they would con-sider a proposal to let the sponsors of each individual troop decide whether to ban gays. The policy was sup-posed to be settled on Feb. 6 by the Scouts’ 70-member national executive board. Under intense pressure from both sides, the board punted the decision to the 1,400-member Na-tional Council.

Last-minute stayhalts execution

JACKSON, Ga. — The execution of a Georgia man who killed a fellow prisoner in 1990 was halted Tuesday at the last minute so courts could consider claims that he’s mentally dis-abled and other issues.

The 11th U.S. Cir-cuit Court of Appeals granted its stay of ex-ecution as 52-year-old Warren Lee Hill was being prepared for le-thal injection. In a 2-1 decision, a panel of the appeals court said further review is needed of recent affidavits by doctors who changed their minds about Hill’s mental capacity.

“In other words, all of the experts — both the State’s and the pe-titioner’s — now appear to be in agreement that Hill is in fact mentally retarded,” judges in the majority wrote in their order.

The state court of appeals also issued a stay to allow more time to consider a challenge related to the state’s le-thal injection procedure.

Earlier in the day, the state parole board, the Supreme Court of Georgia and the U.S. Supreme Court had all declined to stop the ex-ecution.

“We are greatly re-lieved that the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has stayed the execu-tion of Warren Hill, a person with mental retardation. All the doc-tors who have examined Mr. Hill are unanimous in their diagnosis of mental retardation,” defense attorney Brian Kammer said in an

Associated Press

Nation Briefs

Mrs. Obama to visit school on health tour

CLINTON — First lady Michelle Obama will visit a Clinton elementary school Feb. 27 to high-light nutritional improve-ments in school lunches.

Obama, along with chef Rachael Ray, will visit Northside & East-side Elementary School, saluting the Clinton school district’s efforts to provide nutritious food and more student exer-cise opportunities.

Obama and Ray will host a cooking competi-tion between school chefs that will air March 11 on “The Rachel Ray Show.” Obama will also talk about childhood obesity.

Mississippi has been trying to slim down its students since state lawmakers passed the Healthy Students Act in 2007. A 2010 federal law also mandated changes in food served to student under the federal school lunch program.

Suspect now heldon state charges

GULFPORT — A fed-eral judge has ordered one of two men arrested for kidnapping a retired college professor held without bond while a second man now faces state charges.

The Sun Herald reports that U.S. Magistrate John M. Roper on Tues-day ordered 31-year-old Arveanious “A.V.” Smith held without bond pend-ing trial on kidnapping charges.

Roper dismissed feder-al charges against Travis Jerome Washington after being told the man, who was initially identified by the FBI as 18, was actually 17. Pascagoula police filed state kidnap-ping charges Tuesday against Washington who is being held without bond.

Authorities say the two are accused of assault-ing and kidnapping the 63-year-old retired pro-fessor from his Fayette home on Feb. 12, steal-ing his car and driving him into Louisiana before releasing him Feb. 13 in Pascagoula.

Man pleads guiltyto shooting eagle

ABERDEEN — Authori-ties say Mississippi man has pleaded guilty to shooting a bald eagle while duck hunting in Itawamba County in De-cember.

A news release from the U.S. attorney’s office says 23-year-old Ben-jamin Tyler Wallace of

Marietta pleaded guilty Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Aberdeen.

Wallace was placed on probation for one year and is prohibited during that time from hunting or being present at any hunting camp during any open hunting season.

He also had to forfeit his boat, trailer and two guns.

Farm accident killsLauderdale teen

MERIDIAN — Authori-ties say a 13-year-old boy died in a farm ac-cident in Lauderdale County.

Authorities say the boy was helping his grandfa-ther attach a front-loader to a tractor Tuesday af-ternoon when the imple-ment fell on him.

County Coroner Clay-ton Cobler pronounced the boy dead at the scene. Chief Deputy Ward Calhoun says the boy’s name has not been released. Calhoun says no foul play is sus-pected.

Olive Branch blocks second theater

OLIVE BRANCH — Ol-ive Branch officials have blocked a movie theater developer’s attempt to put a cinema at the wooded rear of the golf course community of Wedgewood.

The Commercial Ap-peal reports the contro-

versial plans by cinema developer Ambarish A. Keshani drew about 100 area residents to Tuesday’s Board of Aldermen meeting to speak in opposition to a theater.

They expressed con-cerns over potential crime and traffic conges-tion.

Keshani, of Cinema Group Inc., announced his plans for a theater shortly after Malco The-atres Inc. said it would go forward with plans for a cinema.

Keshani preferred the site near Wedgewood to another piece of property along Goodman Road east of Malone Road. Al-dermen are scheduled to hear an application for a preliminary development plan at that site March 19.

Pontotoc man dies in one-car crash

ALGOMA — Authori-ties say a 53-year-old Pontotoc man was killed in a one-car accident on Mississippi 341 near Algoma.

Highway Patrol Of-ficer Philip Mitchell tells the Northeast Missis-sippi Daily Journal Danny Pettit was killed early Tuesday morning when his car left the road and struck a culvert.

Mitchell says Pettit was alone in the vehicle.

Associated Press

State Briefs

Please see STATE | 6

Please see NATION | 6

Pre-Planning allows you to make the important decisions about your fi nal arrangements according to your own personal wishes. It also saves your family the burden of making diffi cult choices during their time of grief. We are committed to Seniors and their insurance needs.

• Pre-planned Funerals with Magnolia Funeral Home• Final Expense / Life Insurance

•Medicare Supplements Dental / Vision / Hearing• Annuities / IRA

NEW LOCATION. Now at Magnolia Funeral Home

Floyd Insurance Services, LLC2024 A Hwy 72E Annex • Corinth, MS

bfi [email protected] • 662-665-797037 Years Insurance Experience

Bill FloydLicensed Funeral Director

Personal decisions should be in your hands.

Carry Out Limited Delivery Area

1102 Hwy 72 E Corinth

662-284-9099

Best deals Dominos.com

Hours: Sun-Thur. 10:30AM-11PM; Fri. & Sat. 10:30AM-Midnight

50% offAny Pizza Ordered Online

Online Code: 229413

NOW OPEN

Page 6: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

email.A spokeswoman for

the state attorney gen-eral declined comment.

Hill was sentenced to die for the 1990 beating death of fellow inmate Joseph Handspike. Au-thorities say he used a board studded with nails to bludgeon Handspike while he slept and other prisoners pleaded with Hill to stop. At the time Hill was already serving a life sentence for mur-der in the 1986 slaying of his girlfriend, Myra Wright, who had been shot 11 times.

Biden says shotgun will scare off intruders

WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden said Tuesday that Ameri-cans don’t need semi-automatic weapons to protect their homes be-cause a couple of blasts from a shotgun will scare off intruders.

“Buy a shotgun, buy a shotgun,” the vice presi-dent encouraged those worried about defending themselves. He was speaking in an online

video as part of a Face-book town hall hosted by Parents Magazine on the administration’s strategy for reducing gun violence, which he has led at the direction of President Barack Obama.

Biden said he keeps two shotguns and shells locked up at home and he’s told his wife, Jill, to use them if she needs protection. He presum-ably was speaking about before he became vice president, a position that gives the couple full-time Secret Service protection.

“I said, ‘Jill, if there’s ever a problem, just walk out on the balcony ... take that double-barrel shotgun and fire two blasts outside the house,’” Biden said. “You don’t need an AR-15. It’s harder to aim, it’s harder to use and in fact, you don’t need 30 rounds to protect your-self.”

Biden’s answer came in response to a ques-tion posted by a Face-book user about wheth-er the administration’s proposal to ban military-style assault weapons

and high-capacity maga-zines would make law-abiding citizens more of a target of criminals since they wouldn’t have a sufficient way of protecting themselves. Biden bristled at the question, saying he’s never heard such senti-ments in the pages of Parents Magazine.

“But I’m delighted to answer them,” he added quickly.

Biden said he learned his lessons on gun safe-ty from his father, who was a hunter. He said as a child, he wasn’t even allowed to point a cap gun at other chil-dren while playing cops and robbers. He said most gun owners are very responsible, but parents should make sure guns are locked up to keep children safe, just like pool gates and liquor cabinets.

He also said he doesn’t think the Sec-ond Amendment’s right to bear arms should be changed. He said limits on the use of assault weapons and high-capacity magazines is compatible with that right.

Hattiesburg council approves measures

HATTIESBURG — Hat-tiesburg City Council has approved measures further related to the aftermath of the Feb. 10 tornado.

The Hattiesburg Amer-ican reports the council Tuesday night approved the state of emergency declaration, signed on Feb. 10, and approved

agreements with Pine Belt Solid Waste Author-ity and Waste Manage-ment to dispose of storm debris in landfills.

The council also voted to suspend permitting fees for building proj-ects in the city for those affected by the storm. Residents still must ap-ply for the permits, but they will not be charged.

Also, the council ap-proved a professional services agreement with Schaus LLC to assist

with FEMA documenta-tion for work projects and reimbursement documentation.

Lawyer wants delay in sentencing

GULFPORT — An at-torney has asked for a two-week delay of Thurs-day’s sentencing for a woman in a prescription pain pill case.

The sentencing for Gail Owens had been set for Thursday in U.S. District Court in Gulf-port.

The attorney asked for time to investigate allegations by confi-dential informants in a presentencing report.

Prosecutors say Ow-ens and Charles Mac-George were in their hotel room at the Hard Rock Casino in Biloxi when police found more than 374 pain pills in 2010.

Court records say the search of the hotel room happened after Gulfport police ar-rested a known drug dealer with 10 Oxycon-tin pills. He allegedly led police to Owens.

Owens and Mac-George pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Gulfport last October.

6 • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Billy T. BattlesFuneral services for Billy Thurman

Battles, 81, are set for 1 p.m., Friday at Memorial Funeral Home Chapel with Bro. Warren Jones and Bro. Lendell Davis offi ciating. Burial will be in the Union Baptist Church Cemetery.

Mr. Battles died Feb. 19, 2013 at his residence. He was born Feb. 28, 1931 in Alcorn County to the late Alex and Vaudie Battles. He was a retired truck driver for Roadway Express, served in the US Army during the Korean Confl ict, and a master Mason. He was a member of the Teamsters Union, American Legion and The National Rifl e Association.

He was preceded in death by his wife Virginia Brigman Battles, an infant son and parents.

He is survived by his daughters, Ann Parker and her husband, David, and Sue Hickman and her husband, Barry, all of Tupelo; and brother, James Ed-ward Battles and his wife Kathleen of Corinth; four grandchildren, Christy Carroll and her husband Tony, Chris Latch and his wife Sarah, Stephanie Talley, and Carrie Moore and her hus-band Alan; eight great-grandchildren; four great-great-grandchildren; special friends, Brian and Kattie Linville, Fan-nie Mae Battles and Ray Latch; and a host of other family and friends.

Pallbearers will be Ricky Stewart, Monk Stewart, Trent Eaton, Billy Ea-ton, Chris Latch and Ray Latch.

Honorary pallbearers will be Jimmy Gurley and Talmadge “Jabbo” Morgan.

Family will receive friends from 11 a.m. to service time on Friday.

Jessica Wiginton

Funeral services for Jessica Nichole Wiginton, 23, were held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Magnolia Funeral Home Cha-pel of Memories with burial at Haynie Cemetery.

She died Saturday, Feb. 16, 2013 at Magnolia Regional Health Center.

She was born July 7, 1989. She was of the Christian faith and loved going to church. She enjoyed playing softball at the park, fi shing, camping and visiting with her family and friends. She loved

her pet dogs “Sugar and Spice,” espe-cially dressing them up for holidays. She was a fan of Justin Bieber.

She was preced-ed in death by her grandfathers, Nicky E. Wiginton and William Robbins; her uncle, Dave Hol-loway; and her great-

grandmother, Mary B. Haynie Walls.She is survived by her father, Dwayne

“Woody” Wiginton (Debbie) and her mother, Jennipher Robbins (Edward); brothers, Chris Gurley, Joe Gur-ley, Michael Wiginton and Matthew “Matt” Wiginton; sisters, Jenny Brooks (Shane), Heather Marolt (Keith) and Amber Meeks (Derek); seven nieces and nephews, Dylan Dunn, Emma Marolt, Hudson Marolt, Kylee Brooks, Rylee Brooks, Lilly Meeks and Bent-ley Wiginton; special friend, Diane Howard; paternal grandparents, Lin-da Walls Wiginton, Joe Holloway and Betty Holloway; great grandfather, Richard M. Walls; maternal grandpar-ents, Mary Robbns, Jim Tucker, Kathy Tucker and Irma Robbins; Uncle Jer-ry and Aunt Gwen Gurley; and other aunts and uncles, relatives and a host of friends.

Minister Terrell Gatewood offi ciated.Pallbearers were Chris Gurley, Mi-

chael Wiginton, Matt Wiginton, Joe Gurley, Dylan Dunn, Keith Marolt and Shane Brooks.

Online condolences can be left at www.magnoliafuneralhome.net.

 Troy Winters

Funeral services for Troy Thomas Winters, 93, are set for Friday at 2 p.m. at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Forrest Me-morial Park Cemetery in Corinth.

Mr. Winters died Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013 at his residence.

He was born Oct. 10, 1919. He was an auto parts salesman and cattle farmer. He worked for Moses for over 30 years and then retired from Auto Supply with 22 years of service.

He was a U.S. Navy veteran of WWII and served on the USS Carlton. Mr. Winters was a POW in Ger-many for 33 months.

He was awarded a Bronze Star. He was a member of the local American Legion and VFW.

He was an active member of South Corinth Baptist Church until his health failed him. He loved his family and friends and enjoyed fi shing, rabbit hunting and baseball, especially the St. Louis Cardinals.

Mr. Winters was a people person and a humble man who never said anything bad abut anyone. He always found the good in everyone.

He was preceded in death by his fa-ther, Edgar “Dutch” Winters and moth-er, Leo Jobe Winters; brothers, Hubert L. Winters and Bedford Winters; sister, Louise Tanner Gordon; and fi rst wife, Jean Greene Winters.

He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Ora Rencher Winters of Corinth; his sons, Tommy Winters (Joycie) of Corinth, Russell Winters (Peggy) of Rienzi, and John Winters (Angie) of Corinth; his daughters, Beverly L. Clif-ton (Claude) and Ginger Tapp (John), all of Corinth; his brother, Bill Winters (Linda) of Corinth; 10 grandchildren, Tom Winters (Becky), Chrissy Houston (James), Doug Tapp (Amber), Summer Baswell, Rhonda Glidewell (Larry), April Clifton, Ashleigh Winters, Zach Winters, Eli Winters and Carrie Kuyk-endall; 13 great-grandchildren, Jacob, Peyton and Kinley Winters, Kaitlyn and Madison Houston, Jimmy and Aiden Tapp, Tyler and Riley Lancaster, Russ Clifton, Alex Smith, Victor Kuyk-endall and Ivan Flanders; three step great-grandchildren, Curtis Glidewell (Courtney), Jake Glidewell and Gracie Glidewell; and numerous nieces and nephews and other relatives and a host of friends.

Pallbearers will be James Houston, James Kuykendall, Larry Glidewell, Daniel Ballard, Doug Tapp and Tom Winters.

Honorary pallbearers will be Hugh Winters, Jimmy Monroe, Mark Win-ters, Bryan Winters and Eddie Winters.

Eulogy will be given by Bro. Ken Rencher and message by Bro. Charles Stephenson.

Visitation is tonight from 5-8 p.m. and Friday, from 12 noon until service time at Magnolia Funeral Home.

Condolences can be made at www.magnoliafuneralhome.net.

Wiginton

Winters

Kelsey BrewerKelsey Brewer, 71, died

Feb. 20, 2013 at Magnolia Regional Health Center.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at this time and will be an-nounced later by Corin-thian Funeral Home.

Laura Bynum

RIENZI — Laura Lucille Bynum died Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013 at the Bap-tist hospital in Booneville.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete and will be announced later by Gray-son-Porter Mortuary.

James Reynolds

WALNUT — Funeral

services for James M. Reynolds, 74, are set for Friday at 2 p.m. at Corin-thian Funeral Home with burial at Hatchie Chapel Cemetery.

Mr. Reynolds died Feb. 19, 2013 at Magnolia Re-gional Health Center.

He was born Nov. 18, 1938. He was a retired mill worker from Biltrite.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Doris Reynolds; parents, Leon and Quilla Crum Reyn-olds; sisters, Carolyn Cut-berth, Joyce Reynolds, Louise Cantrell and Nell Taylor; brothers, Hubert Reynolds and Marvin Reynolds; and one great-

grandchild.He is survived by his

son, James M. Reyn-olds Jr. of Oklahoma City, Okla.; his daughter, Merri Kee of Walnut; his brother, Gerald Reynolds of Southaven; his sisters, Lois Kiddy of Corinth and Kathryn Gale Howe of Knoxville, Tenn.; and grandchildren, Kara Kee, Kortni Kee, Kiersten Kee, Anthony Kee, Shelly Reynolds and Nathan England.

Bro. Titus Mathis will offi ciate.

Visitation is Friday from 12 noon until service time at Corinthian Funer-al Home.

STATE

CONTINUED FROM 5

NATION

CONTINUED FROM 5

Obsessive-compulsives are not the only ones who should note that the sec-ond Monday in Febru-ary was National Clean Out Your Computer Day. Cleaning a computer is a great way to speed up the computer, fi nd fi les more quickly and prevent pes-ky viruses and spyware from taking control of the hard drive.

Start with the desktop. If there any unused icons or fi les saved on the desk-top, delete them. Most desktop icons are simply shortcuts for easy access to other programs in-stalled on your computer. I have a bad habit of sav-ing photos people email me to the desktop so I can fi nd them easily.

Photos take up a lot of space and should be moved to the “My Pic-tures” folder under “My

Documents.” The fewer documents, photos and other fi les saved to your desktop, the faster your computer boot-up time will be.

Don’t forget to clean out your recycle bin, which can be found on your desktop. Carefully review the items to be de-leted and then empty the recycle bin. Once items have been deleted from

Speed up computers by removing clutter

BY MARIAH SMITHExtension Center for Technology Outreach

Please see CLUTTER | 7

1000 S. Harper Rd.Corinth

662-286-5800

• 1/2 Dozen Coconut Shrimp with choice of potato, slaw, & hushpuppies $9.50

• 1 Dozen Coconut Shrimp with choice of potato, slaw, & hushpuppies $12.50

Special Dixie CoinsWe Buy

Gold, Silver & Coinsin any form

“Check us fi rst or last you will be glad you did”

“We pay more

NO BRAG JUST A FACT”

Instant Cash Payments

1503 Hwy 72 E Corinth, MSwww.dixiecoinsms.com [email protected]

CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH

CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH $ CASH

CA

SH

$ C

AS

H $

CA

SH

$ C

AS

H $

CA

SH

$ C

AS

H

CA

SH

$ C

AS

H $

CA

SH

$ C

AS

H $

CA

SH

$ C

AS

H

$ $

WHEN IS ONE SAVED? When people really desire to be saved, they will gladly receive the word of God. “Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls” (Acts 2:41). We are saved when we are obedient to the word of God. “Take heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them: for in doing this thou shalt both save thyself, and them that hear thee” (1 Tim 4:16). There are those who believe and teach the doctrine of “faith only”. The expression “faith only” appears only once in the new testament. “Ye see then how that by works a man is justifi ed, and not by faith only” ( James 2:24). However, there are those who teach that “faith only is a very wholesome doctrine and very full of comfort”. The new testament does not teach “faith only”. Notice what Peter taught on the day of Pentecost in Acts 2:38. “Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost”. Jesus also said in Mark 16:16, “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned”. Ananias told Saul of Tarsus, “And now why tarriest thou? arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins,calling on the name of the Lord”(Acts 22: 16). Sins are washed away by the precious blood of Christ. “Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death” (Rom 6:3)? One is not saved before baptism, but when one is baptized. “The like fi gure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the fi lth of the fl esh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ” (I Peter 3:21). When we do what the Bible teaches, we will be saved by the precious blood of Christ. The Bible teaches one is not saved before baptism.

Danville Church of Christ481 CR 409 • Rienzi, MS 38865

Phone: 662-287-6530 • Charles W. Leonard

Page 7: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

the recycle bin, consider them gone for good. Tech-nically speaking, they can be restored but it will take a great deal of time, effort and money to pay a tech-nician to retrieve the lost fi les.

Next up is that jungle known as the “My Docu-ments” or “Documents” folder. I always have the best of intentions of or-ganizing my fi les, but the phone rings, the dog barks, and I’ve simply saved another fi le ran-domly in the My Docs folder. The only problem is that over time it can be increasingly diffi cult to fi nd those fi les. Try orga-nizing your documents folder much like a fi ling cabinet. Create folders un-der documents for various topics such as banking, taxes, family and church. To create order out of cha-

os, open the docs folder and right-click in a blank area. In the pop-up menu, left-click “New” and then left-click “Folder.” Name the folder and press “En-ter.” If you accidently click off of the folder and it will not let you type in the name fi eld, just right-click on the folder and in the pop-up menu left-click “Rename.”

Once you have created your folders, you can left-click once on the docu-ment that needs to be fi led and then hold down your left mouse button and drag the fi le to the folder. When the fi le is hovering over the folder, release the mouse; the fi le has been successfully moved. Con-tinue until all of your fi les have been organized.

Honestly, most of us are not going to take the time to organize our fi les. So, the next best thing you can do is to defragment the

hard drive. Every comput-er has a program called Disk Defragmenter. You can fi nd yours by going to “My Computer” and do-ing a search for “Disk De-fragment.” Once you fi nd it, open the program and left-click “Defragment.” Defragmenting takes all of the same types of fi les and organizes them on your hard drive so the comput-er can access them more quickly.

Another great tip for cleaning a computer is to delete temporary Inter-net fi les and cookies. Any time you get out on the World Wide Web, cookies and temporary fi les store on your computer. Over time, they can slow the computer down and lead to annoying pop-ups. To delete them, open Inter-net Explorer and left-click “Tools/Internet Options.” In the “Delete Browsing” box, left-click “Delete.”

Check cookies and tem-porary fi les, and left-click “Delete.” If you haven’t done this in a while, it may take a few minutes to complete.

Last but not least, run a program, such as Spy-bot Search and Destroy, which looks for spyware, malware and adware on your computer. The pro-gram is free and can be downloaded from http://www.safer-networking.org/. Once the program has been installed, left-click “Check for Updates.” It may take several min-utes for the program to run. When fi nished, it will give a listing of the prob-lems it found and ask if you want the program to fi x them. Left-click “Yes.”

Now that the cleanup is done, it’s time to start the party. Celebrate National Clean-Up Your Computer day with friends, family and coworkers.

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • 7

BOONEVILLE — All they want is “A Place of Our Own.”

That’s the name of a se-nior citizens craft and ac-tivity center envisioned by local volunteer Judy George, who has served as leader of the Crafty Ladies crafting group in Booneville for more than 14 years.

George has secured a permanent location for the group in the former Kings Christian Store building on College Street across from the water tower and she’s now asking for help from the public to make the dream a reality.

The group currently meets weekly at the Sun-fl ower Park Community Center where they gather to put their talents and

skills to work creating items for area nursing home residents, hospice patients, children and families struggling with losses and illness in area women’s hospitals and neonatal intensive care units and more.

George said the goal of the group is to help oth-ers while also creating a friendly and welcoming place for senior citizens, both men and women, to get out and enjoy fellow-ship and the benefi ts of staying busy and active.

She said the new build-ing offers a great op-portunity to expand the group and make it more accessible and able to do more for the community but it will take the sup-port of the community to make it happen.

Funds are needed to pay the rent on the build-

ing along with deposits and monthly bills for utilities as well as to pur-chase materials for the craft projects. She knows countless lives have been touched through their work and she’s asking the community to get behind them now and give them a chance to grow.

“We’re looking for peo-ple to support our efforts. If we’ve ever helped you in anyway, help us now,” said George.

She’s currently in the process of establishing the group as a federally recognized non-profi t organization which will allow all donations made to them to be tax-de-ductible. A bank account has been set up at First American National Bank for donations.

The crafting group be-gan more than 14 years

ago when George saw an opportunity to give back to those who have helped her in her own life.

“All my life I’ve been helped by people. I want to pay it back,” she said.

They began operating in a small room at a lo-cal ministry and then, through the help of late Mayor Wayne Michael, were able to move into the West Side Commu-nity Center. They later moved to the current lo-cation at Sunfl ower Com-munity Center.

While George said she’s grateful for the city’s willingness to allow them to use the commu-nity center, they are lim-ited in the size of projects they can take on because they have to clear away their work at the end of each session and have limited space to set up

sewing machines and other equipment. Mov-ing into their own build-ing would give them the space to set up two full-size quilting frames and to be open fi ve days a week instead of the cur-rent once-a-week meet-ing.

“I have stepped out on a giant leap of faith, now I need a lot of faith partners. If individuals, churches and clubs would just pledge $10 a month which would amount to $100 for the rest of the year, we can do this. We have accomplished a lot over the years with dona-tions of material, thread and craft supplies. I can’t even imagine what we will be able to do with our own place and a little money,” said George.

She said the goal is to provide the classes free

of charge and to encour-age those who have craft-ing skills to pass their skills down to others.

“We have a lot of work ahead of us and the ex-citement is out of this world. Pray for this en-deavor and stop by to see what’s needed,” she said.

George emphasized all funds raised will be used directly for the payment of bills related to the new location. No one will re-ceive any kind of salary or personal benefi t from the project.

She calls the concept “A Place of Our Own” be-cause she said that’s all they’re asking for.

“We just want our own place so we can work to-gether and help others,” she said.

George hopes they will be able to open the center sometime in March.

Senior citizens group seeks new centerBY BRANT [email protected]

“Safe Haven,” PG-13, ***,Julianne Hough, Josh Duhamel, David Lyons; Relativity Me-dia fi lm; Director Lasse Hallstrom; length -- 115 minutes

“Safe Haven” is based on the novel by Nicholas Sparks. Sparks' specialty is the tear jerking heart method of writing. This time the story involves spousal abuse, a destruc-tive and an extremely sad element in our society.

In “Safe Haven,” beau-tiful Katie (Julianne Hough) is a victim of phys-ical and mental abuse. As the movie begins, we

o b s e r v e her in Bos-ton under e x t r e m e s t r e s s . Watching the open-ing scenes and fl ash-backs, the a u d i e n c e r e a l i z e s

the torture she has been through.

Katie decides to live out the Paul Simon song “Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover”: “Slip out the back, Jack, make a new plan, Stan — Don’t need to be coy, Roy — Hop on

the bus, Gus.” Which is what Katie does. She is off to a small coastal town. There she meets Alex (Josh Duhamel), owner of the local grocery store. He is a widower with two children. He and Katie go through the usual ritual of resisting the idea of dating again.

Katie fi nds a job as a waitress in the small town and a cabin in the woods for privacy. However, the mysterious young wom-an has a way of being no-ticed where ever she goes.

Something out of the ordinary takes place while Katie is at her house. A

lady appears and they begin to talk about life, troubles and recovery. In a way, I liked this part, but in a way, it is a little corny. It did have a heart warming message as the movie heads for the fi n-ish line.

Katie's husband wants to fi nd her safe haven and turn it into a dangerous storm. He is a certifi ed psycho.

“Safe Haven” has a semi-interesting and predictable story. Those who want to cry will have to wait until the end to reach for the tissue. To paraphrase a couple of

quotes, “There will be blood,” and “There will be tears.”

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Terry Burns is technology coordinator for the McNairy County School System. A life-long movie buff, he can be contacted by email

at [email protected].

Terry’s movie grad-ing scale: fi ve-plus stars — as good as it gets; fi ve stars — don’t miss; four stars — excellent; three stars — good; two stars — fair; one star — poor; no stars — don’t bother.)

Woman finds, fights to keep her ‘Safe Haven’Terry Burns’ Ratings

Side Effects, R, **** 1⁄2Broken City, R, *** 1⁄2Parker, R, *** 1⁄2Silver Linings Playbook, R, *****Zero Dark Thirty, R, *****plusTerry

BurnsMovie Critic

CLUTTER

CONTINUED FROM 6

FLORENCE, Ala. —The University of North Alabama Department of English will host its fourth annual conference for graduate-level Eng-lish students across the Southeast region Feb. 22 and 23 in the GUC Per-formance Center. The conference will feature four faculty-led academ-ic panels and 12 student presentations as well as a stand-up comedy act and theatrical performance.

The theme of this year’s conference is “No Laugh-ing Matter: Exploring the Art of Humor.” The con-ference will focus on the theme of humor in litera-ture, fi lm, stand-up com-edy, television and other media. The conference co-chairs are Dr. Lesley

Peterson, associate pro-fessor of English, and Bradley Sides, a recent M.A. graduate of UNA.

Peterson and Sides asked current and recent graduate students from universities across the Southeast to examine the role of humor in tra-ditional and modern art and media. Participants responded with propos-als focusing on topics such as satire, comics and gender stereotypes in outlets such as the television series “The Simpsons” and “Sein-feld” as well as in Larry the Cable Guy’s stand-up routine.

Sides said 12 students, including three from UNA, will give presenta-tions.

UNA hosting comedy conference

Harper Square Mall, 1801-15 South Harper Rd(Next to Treasure Chest Quilting)

662-287-7676Mon - Fri 10:00-5:30 • Sat 10-1

New Shipment of Lamps, Accessories & Picture Frames!!!

Something for Every Project...Every Budget!

Custom

Draperies

Blinds

Shutters

Check Our Flooring Department• Tile • Hardwood • Laminate • Carpet✓

New Releases 2-19-13

EXPRESS EXPRESS DVD NOWDVD NOW24 Hour Curb 24 Hour Curb

ServiceService$1.20 per day$1.20 per day

*ARGO SINISTER

*INDICATED - These movies availablebefore the other guys

2036 E Shiloh Rd • Shiloh MarketLike us on Facebook at ExpressDVDNow

5831 Hwy 57 E., Michie, TN 38357 • 731-632-3287

!A i ry

Tuesday – Thursday ONLY

Riverboat

5831 Hwy 57 E., Michie, TN 38357 • 731-632-3287H 5

Tuesday – Thursday ONLYTuesday – Thursday ONLY

RiverboatRiverboat Open: Tues-Fri @ 4:30, Sat @ 4:00, Open: Tues-Fri @ 4:30, Sat @ 4:00, Sun 12:00 - 8:30; Closed MondaysSun 12:00 - 8:30; Closed Mondays

www.topoftheriverrestaurant.comwww.topoftheriverrestaurant.com

Stop the Harassment & Keep your Property

We Care For You! We Will Help You!

Stop the Harassment & Keep your PropertyQUICK - EASY - LOW COST

Affordable fl exible payment plansZERO down payment gets you a fresh start with

February is American Heart Month

Come in to

James Bennett Apothecaryfor a FREE Blood Pressure Screening!!

2049 Shiloh Road - Corinth, MS.

Are YOU Heart Smart?

Page 8: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, February 21, 2013

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

14,043.30 12,035.09 Dow Industrials 13,927.54 -108.13 -.77 +6.28 +7.646,020.67 4,795.28 Dow Transportation 5,921.47 -99.20 -1.65 +11.58 +15.54

499.82 435.57 Dow Utilities 475.63 -1.25 -.26 +4.97 +5.159,004.41 7,222.88 NYSE Composite 8,883.63 -120.75 -1.34 +5.21 +9.752,509.57 2,164.87 NYSE MKT 2,389.49 -7.19 -.30 +1.44 -2.483,213.60 2,726.68 Nasdaq Composite 3,164.41 -49.18 -1.53 +4.80 +7.881,530.94 1,266.74 S&P 500 1,511.95 -18.99 -1.24 +6.01 +11.36

16,182.95 13,248.92 Wilshire 5000 15,966.15 -216.80 -1.34 +6.48 +11.40932.00 729.75 Russell 2000 913.50 -18.50 -1.99 +7.55 +11.88

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.40 8 49.82 +.29 -6.2AT&T Inc 1.80f 29 35.47 -.20 +5.2AirProd 2.56 19 87.61 -1.09 +4.3AlliantEgy 1.88f 16 47.56 -.46 +8.3AEP 1.88 18 45.57 +.01 +6.8AmeriBrgn .84 16 46.61 -.61 +7.9ATMOS 1.40 15 37.81 -.26 +7.7BB&T Cp .92f 11 30.00 -.37 +3.8BP PLC 2.16f 6 40.80 -.76 -2.0BcpSouth .04 16 14.81 -.32 +1.9Caterpillar 2.08 11 93.22 -2.38 +4.0Chevron 3.60 9 114.99 -.93 +6.3CocaCola s 1.02 19 37.73 +.06 +4.1Comcast .78f 22 40.95 -.50 +9.6CrackerB 2.00 15 65.90 -.84 +2.6Deere 1.84 12 88.23 -2.14 +2.1Dell Inc .32 10 13.83 +.03 +36.4Dillards .20a 14 86.45 -1.43 +3.2Dover 1.40 16 72.22 -.64 +9.9EnPro ... 21 45.93 -.42 +12.3FordM .40f 9 12.60 -.39 -2.7FredsInc .24a 15 13.60 -.12 +2.2FullerHB .34 30 40.47 -1.45 +16.2GenCorp ... ... 11.79 +.13 +28.9GenElec .76 17 23.41 -.34 +11.5Goodyear ... 19 13.86 -.23 +.4HonwllIntl 1.64 19 70.35 -.58 +10.8Intel .90 10 20.73 -.36 +.5Jabil .32 10 19.16 -.61 -.7KimbClk 2.96 21 91.74 -.47 +8.7Kroger .60 23 27.67 -.54 +6.3Lowes .64 23 38.64 -.77 +8.8

McDnlds 3.08 18 93.91 +.06 +6.5MeadWvco 1.00 30 34.51 -.66 +8.3OldNBcp .40f 14 13.70 -.22 +15.4Penney ... ... 20.19 +.58 +2.4PennyMac 2.28 8 24.36 -.40 -3.7PepsiCo 2.15 19 75.42 -.08 +10.2PilgrimsP ... 25 8.89 -.40 +22.8RadioShk ... ... 3.23 -.20 +52.4RegionsFn .04 11 7.71 -.25 +8.1SbdCp 3.00 12 2795.00 -55.00 +10.5SearsHldgs ... ... 47.90 -.64 +15.8Sherwin 2.00f 25 159.33 -4.77 +3.6SiriusXM .05e 6 3.10 -.07 +7.2SouthnCo 1.96 17 44.55 +.07 +4.1SprintNex ... ... 5.79 -.11 +2.1SPDR Fncl .26e ... 17.66 -.27 +7.7TecumsehB ... ... 9.02 -.03 +96.1TecumsehA ... ... 8.61 -.45 +86.4Torchmark .60 11 55.92 -.81 +8.5Total SA 3.03e ... 50.43 -1.08 -3.0USEC ... ... .53 -.03 -.9US Bancrp .78 12 33.85 -.23 +6.0WalMart 1.59 14 69.21 +.45 +1.4WellsFargo 1.00f 10 35.10 -.04 +2.7Wendys Co .16 ... 5.59 +.19 +18.9WestlkChm .75a 15 87.05 -5.53 +9.8Weyerhsr .68 41 29.78 -1.05 +7.0Xerox .23f 9 7.86 -.14 +15.2YRC Wwde ... ... 6.33 -.40 -6.2Yahoo ... 6 20.92 -.37 +5.1

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DADT Cp n ... 47.36 +.09AES Corp dd 11.37AK Steel dd 3.99 -.22AbtLab s 9 34.52 -.30AbbVie n ... 38.61 +.42ActivsBliz 14 14.24 -.39AdobeSy 23 38.77 -.23AMD dd 2.70 -.12Aetna 10 48.24 -.47Agilent 14 42.24 -.77AkamaiT 33 37.40 -1.18AlcatelLuc ... 1.52 -.01Alcoa 49 8.76 -.30Alexion 67 84.46 +1.07AllscriptH 51 12.72 +1.54Allstate 10 46.41 -.33AlphaNRs dd 9.13 -.37AlpAlerMLP q 17.19 -.09AlteraCp lf 21 35.45 -.74Altria 16 34.89 +.12Amarin ... 8.50 -.17Amazon dd 266.41 -3.34AMovilL 22 22.20 -.59ACapAgy 11 32.46 -.18AmCapLtd 5 14.04 +.06AmExp 16 61.91 -.37AmIntlGrp 3 37.57 -1.03Amgen 15 84.65 +.52Anadarko 17 80.37 -3.76AnalogDev 22 45.79 -1.22AnglogldA ... 24.81 -1.92Annaly 9 15.04 -.17Aon plc 18 59.02 +1.11Apache 15 75.48 -1.82Apple Inc 10 448.85 -11.14ApldMatl cc 13.59 -.30ArcelorMit dd 15.68 -.81ArchCoal dd 5.57 -.31ArchDan 15 32.50 -.58ArenaPhm dd 8.31 -.04AriadP dd 20.84 -.18ArmourRsd 9 6.55 -.10ArubaNet dd 21.29 -1.55AssuredG dd 18.55 -1.22Atmel 100 6.98 -.30AuRico g 12 6.21 -.31Autodesk 37 38.73 -.25AvagoTch 15 34.67 -.88Avon dd 20.47 -.22BHP BillLt ... 77.06 -3.40Baidu 18 88.45 -3.73BakrHu 15 46.08 -.57BcoBrad pf ... 18.06 -.47BcoSantSA ... 7.71 -.27BcoSBrasil ... 7.23 -.12BkofAm 45 11.80 -.39BkNYMel 13 27.86 -.38BariPVix rs q 22.83 +1.81BarrickG 9 30.27 -1.24BasicEnSv 9 14.87 -1.13BedBath 13 57.50 -.67BerkH B 19 100.22 -.80BestBuy dd 17.25 -.08Blackstone 28 18.73 -.42BlockHR 20 24.45 -.55Boeing 15 74.78 +.13BostonSci dd 7.29 -.21BoydGm dd 6.55 -.24Brandyw dd 13.42 -.09BrMySq 31 36.69 -.25Broadcom 28 34.34 -.76BrcdeCm 25 5.84 -.15CA Inc 12 24.65 -.33CBRE Grp 21 23.84 -.66CBS B 18 43.82 -1.06CSX 13 22.82 -.26CVS Care 17 51.85 -.81Calpine 43 18.65 -.36Cameco g 19 21.81 -.47CdnNRs gs ... 29.98 -.72CapOne 8 52.27 -.85CpstnTrb h dd 1.00 -.05CareFusion 22 32.71 -.36Carlisle 16 67.19 -1.53Carnival 21 35.43 -.83Celgene 30 100.40 -.06CelldexTh dd 8.91 +.35Cemex ... 10.49 -.47Cemig pf s ... 11.64 -.02CenterPnt 22 20.70 +.19CFCda g q 19.25 -.73CntryLink 27 33.93 -.21ChelseaT h dd 1.94 +1.18CheniereEn dd 20.55 -1.08ChesEng dd 20.24 -.12Chicos 16 17.06 -.25Chimera ... 2.96 -.03CinciBell 38 4.22 -.14Cirrus 11 25.36 -1.93Cisco 12 21.11 -.36Citigroup 14 43.22 -1.28CleanHarb 23 53.15 +2.85Clearwire dd 3.12 -.03CliffsNRs dd 27.29 -1.40Coach 13 48.13 -.89CobaltIEn dd 24.23 -.99CocaCE 16 36.19 -.31Coeur 31 18.81 -1.53Comc spcl 21 38.56 -.78Comerica 13 34.71 -.69ConAgra 22 33.65 +.20ConocPhil s 10 57.67 -.93ConstellA 19 41.80 -1.48Corning 11 12.63 -.27CSVelIVSt q 21.98 -2.14CSVS2xVx rs q 4.65 +.62Crocs 9 14.61 -.09Ctrip.com 27 20.00 -.58CypSemi 18 10.17 -.27DCT Indl dd 7.20 -.14DDR Corp dd 16.96 -.08DR Horton 8 21.93 -1.36Danaher 19 60.97 -.83DeanFds 17 16.19 -.07DeltaAir 12 13.82 -.48DemndMda cc 8.31 +.47DenburyR 11 18.04 -.68Dndreon dd 5.93 -.17DevonE 35 56.57 -4.00DigitlGn h dd 6.86 +.41DirecTV 11 48.12 -1.14DrxFnBull q 149.44 -6.21DirSCBear q 10.60 +.55DirFnBear q 11.84 +.46DirSPBear q 13.94 +.50DirDGldBll q 5.60 -.93DirxSCBull q 79.33 -4.74Discover 9 38.93 -.60DishNetwk 22 36.03 -.06Disney 18 54.60 -1.13DollarGen 16 43.80 -.16DollarTr s 16 40.29 -.11DomRescs 49 55.89 +.30DonlleyRR 6 9.87 -.20DowChm 45 31.64 -.56DrPepSnap 14 42.47 -.53DryShips dd 2.06 -.15DuPont 16 46.54 -.64DukeEn rs 19 68.85 -.11DukeRlty dd 15.75 -.22Dynavax dd 2.77 -.18

E-F-G-HE-Trade dd 11.12 -.18eBay 28 55.53 -1.15EMC Cp 19 23.50 -.42Eaton 16 60.74 -.75EdisonInt 25 46.58 -.46Elan 13 10.33 -.09EldorGld g 21 9.44 -.51ElectArts dd 17.48 -.11EmersonEl 21 57.75 -.81EmpDist 17 21.70 -.08EnCana g 13 18.10 -.19ENSCO 12 63.25 -2.20Ericsson ... 12.42 -.13ExcoRes dd 6.18 -.18Exelon 21 30.29 -.30ExpScripts 31 57.30 +.32ExxonMbl 11 88.97 -.35Facebook n cc 28.46 -.47FamilyDlr 15 54.87 -.16FedExCp 17 105.69 -1.64FidlNFin 12 25.50 -.09Fifth&Pac dd 17.31FifthThird 10 15.83 -.13Finisar 32 15.84 -1.11FstHorizon dd 10.65FstSolar dd 35.13 -1.00FirstEngy 15 40.56 -.52Flextrn 9 6.60 -.03

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 1782018 11.80 -.39S&P500ETF 1448733 151.34 -1.91OfficeDpt 1189818 4.18 -.84SiriusXM 546251 3.10 -.07NokiaCp 542716 3.82 -.11BariPVix rs 539856 22.83 +1.81RschMotn 535371 13.71 -.65SPDR Fncl 525284 17.66 -.27FordM 497077 12.60 -.39Cisco 460108 21.11 -.36

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 716Declined 2,342Unchanged 113

Total issues 3,171New Highs 289New Lows 40

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 544Declined 1,955Unchanged 86

Total issues 2,585New Highs 182New Lows 19

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

NetSpend 15.81 +3.52 +28.6Novogen s 8.15 +1.68 +26.0CornerTher 6.85 +1.35 +24.5MeruNetw 4.10 +.68 +19.9PrUVxST rs 10.31 +1.55 +17.7Ikonics 9.34 +1.34 +16.8ChiMobG n 5.58 +.80 +16.7CSVS2xVx rs4.65 +.62 +15.4DirDGldBr 55.47 +7.11 +14.7AllscriptH 12.72 +1.54 +13.8

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

HarvNRes 5.45 -3.71 -40.5MillMda n 8.95 -5.38 -37.5MethesE n 4.35 -.95 -17.9GMX Rs pfB10.36 -2.14 -17.1OfficeDpt 4.18 -.84 -16.7Oncolyt g 3.90 -.77 -16.5VillB&T 2.04 -.37 -15.4GMX Rs rs 2.80 -.49 -14.9Anadigc 2.40 -.40 -14.3DirDGldBll 5.60 -.93 -14.3

AllianzGINFJAllCpValIns13.35 -0.21 +5.2American BeaconLgCpVlIs 22.99 -0.32 +6.2American CentEqIncInv 8.24 -0.05 +5.4GrowthInv 28.22 -0.33 +5.0InfAdjI 12.99 ... -1.4UltraInv 27.27 -0.36 +4.7ValueInv 6.85 -0.07 +7.5American FundsAMCAPA m 22.97 -0.31 +5.9BalA m 21.23 -0.19 +4.1BondA m 12.84 ... -0.6CapIncBuA m 54.28 -0.20 +2.9CapWldBdA m20.89 -0.06 -1.5CpWldGrIA m 38.71 -0.29 +4.1EurPacGrA m 42.55 -0.24 +3.2FnInvA m 42.97 -0.54 +5.4GrthAmA m 36.04 -0.47 +4.9HiIncA m 11.44 +0.01 +1.6IncAmerA m 18.70 -0.12 +3.5IntBdAmA m 13.69 +0.01 -0.3IntlGrInA m 32.51 -0.27 +2.6InvCoAmA m 31.61 -0.30 +4.8MutualA m 29.95 -0.24 +5.6NewEconA m 30.49 -0.34 +7.2NewPerspA m 32.61 -0.32 +4.3NwWrldA m 55.59 -0.32 +2.0SmCpWldA m 42.51 -0.40 +6.5TaxEBdAmA m13.18 -0.01 +0.6USGovSecA m14.10 +0.01 -0.7WAMutInvA m 32.80 -0.30 +5.1AquilaChTxFKYA m 11.02 -0.02 -0.1ArtisanIntl d 25.57 -0.18 +4.0IntlVal d 32.05 -0.17 +5.5MdCpVal 22.97 -0.27 +10.5MidCap 39.58 -0.60 +5.4BBHTaxEffEq d 18.56 -0.13 +7.0BaronGrowth b 58.58 -0.70 +9.2BernsteinDiversMui 14.79 -0.02 +0.2IntDur 13.94 ... -0.7TxMIntl 14.46 -0.16 +3.4BlackRockEngy&ResA m29.30 -1.01 +1.2EqDivA m 20.88 -0.20 +5.0EqDivI 20.93 -0.20 +5.0GlobAlcA m 20.26 -0.18 +2.6GlobAlcC m 18.85 -0.17 +2.6GlobAlcI 20.36 -0.18 +2.7HiYldBdIs 8.15 -0.01 +1.6HiYldInvA m 8.15 -0.01 +1.5Cohen & SteersRealty 67.85 -0.46 +5.1ColumbiaAcornIntZ 42.35 -0.31 +3.7AcornZ 32.44 -0.51 +6.5DivIncZ 15.73 -0.10 +6.6StLgCpGrZ 14.86 -0.26 +7.2TaxEA m 14.32 -0.02 +0.8DFA1YrFixInI 10.33 ... +0.12YrGlbFII 10.04 -0.015YrGlbFII 11.12 ... -0.3EmMkCrEqI 20.50 -0.14 +0.5EmMktValI 30.02 -0.20 +0.6EmMtSmCpI 21.75 -0.08 +2.7IntSmCapI 16.91 -0.21 +5.8RelEstScI 27.70 -0.16 +5.2USCorEq1I 13.25 -0.21 +7.3USCorEq2I 13.10 -0.23 +7.6USLgCo 11.93 -0.15 +6.3USLgValI 24.83 -0.52 +8.4USMicroI 15.68 -0.32 +7.4USSmValI 28.55 -0.69 +8.9USSmallI 24.44 -0.51 +7.8DWS-ScudderGrIncS 19.63 -0.40 +7.3DavisNYVentA m 37.57 -0.50 +8.0NYVentY 37.98 -0.50 +8.1Delaware InvestDiverIncA m 9.27 ... -0.4Dimensional InvestmeIntCorEqI 11.04 -0.14 +3.6IntlSCoI 16.66 -0.17 +4.6IntlValuI 16.97 -0.30 +2.2Dodge & CoxBal 82.37 -0.75 +5.5Income 13.86 ...IntlStk 36.03 -0.34 +4.0Stock 130.84 -1.61 +7.3DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.35 ... +0.6DreyfusApprecia 45.93 -0.36 +4.6FMILgCap 18.46 -0.20 +8.0FPACres d 29.60 -0.20 +5.2NewInc m 10.60 ... +0.3Fairholme FundsFairhome d 33.24 -0.69 +5.7FederatedStrValI 5.19 -0.02 +4.2ToRetIs 11.34 +0.01 -0.4FidelityAstMgr20 13.25 -0.04 +1.0AstMgr50 16.91 -0.10 +2.8Bal 20.89 -0.20 +3.5BlChGrow 51.84 -0.88 +5.7CapApr 30.82 -0.56 +4.9CapInc d 9.61 -0.02 +1.9Contra 80.39 -1.12 +4.6DivGrow 31.74 -0.53 +6.2DivrIntl d 30.85 -0.23 +3.0EqInc 50.25 -0.45 +6.8EqInc II 20.79 -0.19 +6.7FF2015 12.08 -0.07 +2.3FF2035 12.29 -0.11 +3.9FF2040 8.58 -0.08 +3.9Fidelity 37.94 -0.67 +5.9FltRtHiIn d 9.95 -0.01 +0.8Free2010 14.44 -0.08 +2.3Free2020 14.68 -0.09 +2.6Free2025 12.33 -0.09 +3.2Free2030 14.71 -0.12 +3.4GNMA 11.68 -0.01 -0.3GovtInc 10.50 +0.01 -0.6GrowCo 96.94 -1.61 +4.0GrowInc 22.66 -0.24 +6.6HiInc d 9.41 ... +1.5IntBond 11.08 ... -0.2IntMuniInc d 10.64 -0.01 +0.3IntlDisc d 34.31 -0.20 +3.7InvGrdBd 7.93 ... -0.6LatinAm d 45.93 -0.80 -0.8LevCoSt d 34.51 -0.67 +7.1LowPriStk d 41.78 -0.56 +5.8Magellan 77.20 -1.23 +5.4MidCap d 31.55 -0.50 +7.4MuniInc d 13.55 -0.02 +0.3NewMktIn d 17.43 -0.05 -0.8OTC 63.76 -1.16 +5.2Puritan 20.12 -0.20 +3.7RealInv d 33.84 -0.20 +5.3ShIntMu d 10.84 -0.01 +0.2ShTmBond 8.60 ... +0.1SmCapDisc d 26.62 -0.60 +10.6StratInc 11.28 -0.01 -0.2Tel&Util 19.27 -0.13 +3.4TotalBd 10.87 ... -0.4USBdIdx 11.78 +0.01 -0.6USBdIdxInv 11.78 +0.01 -0.6Value 82.90 -1.35 +8.6Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 23.76 -0.34 +4.4NewInsI 24.06 -0.34 +4.5StratIncA m 12.59 -0.02 -0.3Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 53.68 -0.67 +6.3500IdxInstl 53.68 -0.68 +6.3500IdxInv 53.67 -0.68 +6.3ExtMktIdAg d 43.12 -0.80 +8.0IntlIdxAdg d 35.53 -0.27 +3.6TotMktIdAg d 43.96 -0.60 +6.6First EagleGlbA m 49.75 -0.34 +2.4OverseasA m 22.37 -0.07 +1.6ForumAbStratI 11.12 +0.03 +0.4FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.74 -0.01 +0.3FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.55 ... +0.8Growth A m 52.97 -0.59 +4.7HY TF A m 10.95 -0.02 +0.6HighIncA m 2.10 ... +1.6

Name P/E Last Chg

4,089,228,995Volume 1,935,228,570Volume

12,400

12,800

13,200

13,600

14,000

14,400

A FS O N D J

13,360

13,740

14,120Dow Jones industrialsClose: 13,927.54Change: -108.13 (-0.8%)

10 DAYS

Income A m 2.28 -0.02 +2.8Income C m 2.31 -0.01 +3.1IncomeAdv 2.27 -0.01 +2.8NY TF A m 12.13 -0.01 +0.6RisDv A m 40.36 -0.34 +6.7StrInc A m 10.74 ... +0.9US Gov A m 6.75 ... -0.4FrankTemp-MutualDiscov A m 29.96 -0.24 +6.0Discov Z 30.37 -0.24 +6.0QuestZ 17.35 -0.14 +4.8Shares A m 23.69 -0.23 +6.2Shares Z 23.88 -0.23 +6.2FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 7.16 -0.07 +4.2GlBond A m 13.49 -0.01 +1.4GlBond C m 13.52 -0.01 +1.4GlBondAdv 13.45 -0.01 +1.5Growth A m 20.48 -0.24 +5.4World A m 16.62 -0.17 +5.6Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 11.67 -0.09 +4.8GES&SUSEq 47.59 -0.68 +7.2GMOEmgMktsVI m 11.69 -0.11 -0.4IntItVlIV 21.25 -0.36 +1.6QuIII 23.69 -0.13 +6.0QuVI 23.69 -0.14 +6.0Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.36 ... +1.6MidCpVaIs 42.43 -0.78 +8.0ShDuTFIs 10.67 ... +0.5HarborBond 12.47 ... -0.1CapApInst 43.92 -0.69 +3.3IntlInstl d 63.60 -0.87 +2.4IntlInv m 62.98 -0.86 +2.3HartfordCapAprA m 36.90 -0.73 +7.3CpApHLSIA 46.45 -0.81 +7.1DvGrHLSIA 22.93 -0.24 +6.8INVESCOCharterA m 19.17 -0.22 +6.7ComstockA m 19.12 -0.26 +7.4EqIncomeA m 9.75 -0.08 +6.1GrowIncA m 22.68 -0.26 +8.3HiYldMuA m 10.15 -0.01 +1.1IvyAssetStrA m 26.86 -0.35 +3.8AssetStrC m 26.18 -0.33 +3.7JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.99 ... -0.4CoreBondA m 11.99 +0.01 -0.5CoreBondSelect11.98 +0.01 -0.5HighYldSel 8.22 ... +1.5IntmdTFSl 11.31 -0.02LgCapGrSelect24.72 -0.42 +3.2MidCpValI 29.91 -0.41 +6.9ShDurBndSel 10.98 ...ShtDurBdU 10.98 ...USEquit 11.95 -0.17 +6.6USLCpCrPS 23.65 -0.34 +6.9JanusBalT 27.14 -0.18 +3.5GlbLfScT d 32.71 -0.29 +9.3PerkinsMCVT 22.76 -0.35 +6.7John HancockLifBa1 b 13.99 -0.10 +3.2LifGr1 b 14.06 -0.14 +4.4LazardEmgMkEqtI d 19.81 -0.03 +1.4Legg Mason/WesternCrPlBdIns 11.61 ... -0.1Longleaf PartnersLongPart 28.64 -0.33 +8.5SmCap 31.18 -0.37 +8.0Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.24 -0.06 +1.1BdR b 15.17 -0.06 +1.1Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 12.88 -0.19 +7.2BondDebA m 8.21 -0.01 +1.6ShDurIncA m 4.64 ... +0.3ShDurIncC m 4.67 ... +0.2MFSIsIntlEq 19.81 -0.15 +2.9TotRetA m 15.86 -0.11 +4.5ValueA m 27.32 -0.27 +7.8ValueI 27.45 -0.27 +7.8MainStayHiYldCorA m 6.16 ... +1.4Manning & NapierWrldOppA 8.14 -0.11 +5.0Matthews AsianChina d 23.81 -0.06 +1.4India d 17.50 -0.06 -0.1MergerMerger b 15.72 -0.05 -0.7Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.87 -0.01 +0.2TotRtBd b 10.88 ... +0.2Morgan Stanley InstlIntlEqI d 14.86 -0.10 +3.6MdCpGrI 36.74 -0.36 +5.8NatixisLSInvBdY 12.62 -0.03 +0.3LSStratIncA m 15.66 -0.10 +1.5LSStratIncC m15.75 -0.09 +1.5Neuberger BermanGenesisIs 52.01 -0.87 +6.8NorthernHYFixInc d 7.62 ... +1.8StkIdx 19.03 ... +7.6NuveenHiYldMunI 17.30 -0.02 +1.8OakmarkEqIncI 29.67 -0.36 +4.1Intl I 22.32 -0.22 +6.6Oakmark I 51.70 -0.74 +6.5OberweisChinaOpp m 12.30 -0.08 +10.6Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 15.54 -0.18 +5.8LgCpStr 10.43 -0.12 +4.1OppenheimerDevMktA m 35.96 -0.18 +1.9DevMktY 35.55 -0.17 +1.9GlobA m 68.31 -0.76 +5.9IntlBondA m 6.55 -0.02 +0.1IntlBondY 6.55 -0.02 +0.1IntlGrY 32.22 -0.20 +4.9LtdTmNY m 3.39 ... +0.6MainStrA m 38.73 -0.48 +4.4RocMuniA m 17.20 -0.04 +2.0RochNtlMu m 7.68 ... +1.7StrIncA m 4.36 -0.01 +0.8PIMCOAAstAAutP 11.09 +0.01AllAssetI 12.69 -0.02 +0.9AllAuthA m 11.06 +0.01 -0.1AllAuthC m 11.01 +0.01 -0.2AllAuthIn 11.09 +0.01ComRlRStI 6.60 -0.04 -0.6DivIncInst 12.19 -0.01 +0.3EMktCurI 10.61 -0.03 +0.9EmMktsIns 12.33 -0.01 -0.7FloatIncI 9.02 ... +1.3ForBdInstl 10.77 -0.02 +0.1ForBondI 10.47 -0.07 -3.6HiYldIs 9.67 ... +1.2InvGrdIns 11.08 +0.01 +0.2LowDrA m 10.47 ... -0.2LowDrIs 10.47 ... -0.1RERRStgC m 4.44 -0.02 +3.0RealRet 12.11 ... -1.1RealRtnA m 12.11 ... -1.2ShtTermIs 9.88 ... +0.2ToRtIIIIs 9.84 ... -0.2TotRetA m 11.19 ... -0.2TotRetAdm b 11.19 ... -0.2TotRetC m 11.19 ... -0.3TotRetIs 11.19 ... -0.1TotRetrnD b 11.19 ... -0.2TotlRetnP 11.19 ... -0.2ParnassusEqIncInv 31.55 -0.29 +8.0PermanentPortfolio 48.64 -0.58PioneerPioneerA m 34.61 -0.42 +6.7PrincipalL/T2020I 13.05 -0.11 +3.4L/T2030I 12.99 -0.13 +3.9LCGrIInst 10.46 -0.16 +6.0Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 34.13 -0.55 +5.3PutnamGrowIncA m 15.93 -0.24 +7.3NewOpp 61.75 -1.13 +5.5RoycePAMutInv d 12.39 -0.24 +7.7PremierInv d 20.14 -0.43 +5.1RussellStratBdS 11.24 ... -0.3

Schwab1000Inv d 40.94 -0.54 +6.4S&P500Sel d 23.59 -0.30 +6.3ScoutInterntl d 34.07 -0.29 +2.2SelectedAmerican D 44.85 -0.59 +7.6SequoiaSequoia 180.25 -2.07 +7.1T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 47.85 -0.78 +4.9CapApprec 23.34 -0.17 +4.9EmMktBd d 13.98 -0.01 -1.0EmMktStk d 33.97 -0.03 -0.3EqIndex d 40.82 -0.51 +6.3EqtyInc 28.22 -0.38 +6.7GrowStk 39.29 -0.55 +4.0HealthSci 44.80 -0.27 +8.7HiYield d 7.06 ... +2.0InsLgCpGr 19.79 -0.34 +4.8IntlBnd d 9.79 -0.06 -2.8IntlGrInc d 13.48 -0.11 +4.0IntlStk d 14.81 -0.11 +2.8LatinAm d 37.70 -0.77 -0.9MidCapVa 25.88 -0.37 +7.7MidCpGr 60.34 -0.79 +6.9NewAsia d 17.06 +0.03 +1.5NewEra 43.61 -1.06 +4.1NewHoriz 36.00 -0.49 +8.5NewIncome 9.77 ... -0.4OrseaStk d 8.77 -0.07 +3.2R2015 13.27 -0.10 +3.0R2025 13.62 -0.13 +3.8R2035 13.96 -0.16 +4.3Rtmt2010 16.88 -0.11 +2.5Rtmt2020 18.49 -0.16 +3.4Rtmt2030 19.70 -0.21 +4.1Rtmt2040 19.95 -0.23 +4.5ShTmBond 4.84 ...SmCpStk 36.70 -0.68 +7.8SmCpVal d 41.92 -0.77 +7.0SpecInc 13.02 -0.03 +0.6Value 28.47 -0.44 +7.9TCWEmgIncI 9.36 ... +0.9TotRetBdI 10.31 -0.01 +0.6TIAA-CREFEqIx 11.52 -0.15 +6.7TempletonInFEqSeS 20.08 -0.14 +2.4ThornburgIncBldC m 19.63 -0.12 +4.9IntlValA m 28.42 -0.11 +3.5IntlValI d 29.10 -0.11 +3.6Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 24.70 ... +6.3VALIC Co IStockIdx 27.74 -0.34 +6.3Vanguard500Adml 139.68 -1.75 +6.3500Inv 139.66 -1.75 +6.3BalIdxAdm 24.64 -0.20 +3.7BalIdxIns 24.65 -0.19 +3.7CAITAdml 11.77 -0.01 +0.7CapOpAdml 84.58 -1.25 +9.0DevMktsIdxIP 104.16 -1.29 +3.4DivGr 17.76 -0.10 +6.7EmMktIAdm 36.64 -0.30 -0.4EnergyAdm 115.50 -2.32 +3.9EnergyInv 61.53 -1.23 +3.9EqInc 25.85 -0.21 +7.0EqIncAdml 54.19 -0.45 +7.1ExplAdml 79.57 -1.42 +7.7Explr 85.53 -1.54 +7.6ExtdIdAdm 49.47 -0.92 +7.8ExtdIdIst 49.46 -0.92 +7.8ExtdMktIdxIP 122.07 -2.26 +7.9FAWeUSIns 91.41 -1.05 +2.2GNMA 10.83 -0.01 -0.4GNMAAdml 10.83 -0.01 -0.4GlbEq 19.69 -0.23 +5.5GrthIdAdm 38.48 -0.51 +5.0GrthIstId 38.48 -0.51 +5.0GrthIstSg 35.63 -0.48 +5.0HYCor 6.10 ... +0.7HYCorAdml 6.10 ... +0.7HltCrAdml 64.86 -0.32 +7.3HlthCare 153.73 -0.76 +7.3ITBondAdm 11.82 +0.01 -0.8ITGradeAd 10.24 +0.01 -0.3ITIGrade 10.24 +0.01 -0.3ITrsyAdml 11.60 +0.01 -0.6InfPrtAdm 28.16 ... -1.3InfPrtI 11.47 ... -1.3InflaPro 14.34 +0.01 -1.3InstIdxI 138.78 -1.74 +6.3InstPlus 138.79 -1.74 +6.3InstTStPl 34.42 -0.47 +6.6IntlGr 19.96 -0.25 +3.6IntlGrAdm 63.50 -0.79 +3.6IntlStkIdxAdm 25.68 -0.28 +2.5IntlStkIdxI 102.69 -1.13 +2.5IntlStkIdxIPls 102.71 -1.13 +2.5IntlStkIdxISgn 30.80 -0.34 +2.5IntlVal 32.13 -0.39 +3.0LTGradeAd 10.60 +0.01 -1.7LTInvGr 10.60 +0.01 -1.7LifeCon 17.27 -0.08 +1.8LifeGro 24.27 -0.24 +4.2LifeMod 21.17 -0.15 +3.0MidCapIdxIP 119.37 -2.08 +7.5MidCp 24.15 -0.42 +7.5MidCpAdml 109.57 -1.92 +7.5MidCpIst 24.20 -0.43 +7.5MidCpSgl 34.57 -0.61 +7.4Morg 20.93 -0.31 +5.2MorgAdml 64.87 -0.96 +5.2MuHYAdml 11.30 -0.02 +0.6MuInt 14.37 -0.02 +0.3MuIntAdml 14.37 -0.02 +0.4MuLTAdml 11.81 -0.01 +0.6MuLtdAdml 11.15 -0.01 +0.2MuShtAdml 15.92 ... +0.2PrecMtls 14.44 -0.60 -9.5Prmcp 74.76 -0.96 +7.6PrmcpAdml 77.55 -1.00 +7.6PrmcpCorI 16.00 -0.19 +7.2REITIdxAd 98.31 -0.58 +5.4STBondAdm 10.61 +0.01STBondSgl 10.61 +0.01STCor 10.82 ... +0.2STFedAdml 10.78 ... -0.1STGradeAd 10.82 ... +0.2STIGradeI 10.82 ... +0.2STsryAdml 10.73 +0.01SelValu 22.54 -0.32 +7.4SmCapIdx 41.79 -0.80 +7.9SmCpIdAdm 41.82 -0.80 +7.9SmCpIdIst 41.82 -0.79 +7.9SmCpIndxSgnl 37.67 -0.72 +7.9Star 21.46 -0.19 +3.2TgtRe2010 24.58 -0.12 +1.9TgtRe2015 13.73 -0.09 +2.6TgtRe2020 24.58 -0.20 +3.1TgtRe2030 24.33 -0.24 +4.1TgtRe2035 14.73 -0.16 +4.5TgtRe2040 24.28 -0.28 +4.7TgtRe2045 15.24 -0.18 +4.7TgtRe2050 24.18 -0.28 +4.7TgtRetInc 12.33 -0.04 +1.1Tgtet2025 14.08 -0.13 +3.6TotBdAdml 10.98 ... -0.7TotBdInst 10.98 ... -0.7TotBdMkInv 10.98 ... -0.7TotBdMkSig 10.98 ... -0.7TotIntl 15.35 -0.17 +2.5TotStIAdm 38.01 -0.52 +6.6TotStIIns 38.02 -0.51 +6.6TotStISig 36.68 -0.50 +6.6TotStIdx 37.99 -0.52 +6.6TxMCapAdm 75.75 -1.03 +6.4ValIdxAdm 24.72 -0.31 +7.8ValIdxIns 24.72 -0.31 +7.8WellsI 24.61 -0.07 +2.1WellsIAdm 59.62 -0.16 +2.1Welltn 35.27 -0.24 +4.2WelltnAdm 60.92 -0.42 +4.2WndsIIAdm 55.17 -0.66 +5.8Wndsr 16.22 -0.31 +7.4WndsrAdml 54.73 -1.05 +7.4WndsrII 31.09 -0.37 +5.8VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.40 -0.05 +0.9Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 8.55 -0.13 +4.4SciTechA m 11.94 -0.14 +7.2Wells FargoUlSTMInI 4.83 ... +0.3Western AssetMgdMuniA m 17.29 -0.01 +0.9YacktmanFocused d 22.23 -0.13 +8.3Yacktman d 20.67 -0.15 +8.1

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FootLockr 14 34.35 +.28ForestOil 9 6.04 -.31FranceTel ... 10.08 -.42FMCG 10 32.22 -2.04Freescale dd 15.11 -.72FrontierCm 19 4.02 -.15Fusion-io dd 16.11 -.68GATX 20 49.55 -.89GT AdvTc 4 3.39 -.25Gafisa SA ... 4.23 -.10GalenaBio dd 2.02 +.03Gap 16 32.29 -.35Garmin 12 35.54 -3.70GenDynam dd 66.61 -.42GenGrPrp dd 19.90 -.18GenMills 17 45.47 +.04GenMotors 9 27.10 -.58Genworth 9 8.68 -.43Gerdau ... 8.11 -.37GileadSci s 26 41.88 -.40GoldFLtd ... 10.31 -.50Goldcrp g 17 32.37 -1.30GoldStr g dd 1.46 -.13GoldmanS 14 155.18 -3.47GreenMtC 20 45.76 +.41Groupon dd 5.59 -.34GpFSnMx n ... 14.14 -1.04HCA Hldg 10 35.41 -1.00Hallibrtn 15 41.62 -1.19HarmonyG ... 6.25 -.38HartfdFn 11 24.31 -.45HarvNRes dd 5.45 -3.71HltCrREIT cc 64.11 +.17HltMgmt 13 10.53 -.42HeclaM 43 4.74 -.40Heinz 23 72.14 -.06Herbalife 10 37.78 -1.96HercOffsh dd 6.71 -.46Hertz 18 18.76 -.85Hess 10 66.01 -2.20HewlettP dd 16.70 -.19HollyFront 7 53.72 -2.60HomeDp 24 66.44 -1.11HopFedBc 27 10.10 +.19Hospira cc 29.91 -.15HostHotls cc 17.03 -.25HovnanE dd 5.29 -.47Humana 10 72.60 -.41HuntBncsh 10 7.01 -.13Huntsmn 11 16.83 -.81

I-J-K-LIAMGld g 8 7.42 -.54iShGold q 15.21 -.39iShBraz q 55.09 -1.23iSh HK q 20.02 -.13iShJapn q 10.09 +.03iSTaiwn q 13.67 -.05iShSilver q 27.59 -.86iShChina25 q 39.04 -.40iSCorSP500 q 152.06 -1.94iShEMkts q 43.69 -.40iShB20 T q 116.27 +.35iS Eafe q 58.54 -.58iShiBxHYB q 93.42 -.09iShR2K q 90.83 -1.72iShREst q 68.10 -.58iShDJHm q 21.99 -1.34IngrmM 10 19.57 -.28IBM 13 199.31 -1.01IntlGame 17 16.21 -.39IntPap 21 40.07 -1.84Interpublic 16 12.48 -.10Invesco 16 27.16 -.50ItauUnibH ... 17.39 -.40JDS Uniph dd 14.79 -.62JPMorgCh 9 48.61 -.84Jefferies 17 21.46 +.14JetBlue 15 6.02 -.10JohnJn 20 76.65 -.31JohnsnCtl 14 31.84 -.62JoyGlbl 9 65.25 +1.71JnprNtwk 60 21.71 -.54KB Home dd 18.03 -1.47KeryxBio dd 6.72 -.05KeyEngy 13 8.73 -.54Keycorp 11 9.35 -.23Kimco 60 21.52 -.40KindMorg 55 37.13 -.29Kinross g dd 7.46 -.49KodiakO g 24 9.00 -.28Kohls 11 46.57 +.09KraftFGp n ... 47.23 -.14LDK Solar dd 1.85 -.08LG Display ... 13.91 +.23LSI Corp 33 7.01 -.21LVSands 24 49.88 -1.37LeapWirlss dd 5.61 -.51LennarA 12 37.18 -2.73Level3 dd 20.93 -.27LibGlobA 53 64.57 -.48LifeTech 24 58.13 -5.23LillyEli 15 54.29 +.11Limited 16 44.01 -.33LincNat 7 29.62 -1.13LinearTch 21 38.10 -.48LinkedIn cc 158.09 -2.67LinnEngy dd 36.65 +.24LockhdM 11 87.73 -.50LaPac cc 20.57 -1.33LyonBas A 12 60.26 -.92

M-N-O-PMEMC dd 5.25 -.41MFA Fncl 11 8.88 -.06MGIC dd 2.60 -.03MGM Rsts dd 12.54 -.20Macys 12 39.51 -.92MagHRes dd 3.84 -.04Manitowoc 25 18.66 -1.11Manulife g ... 14.91 -.43MarathnO 15 34.57 -1.14MarathPet 8 80.23 -3.98MktVGold q 37.45 -1.92MV OilSvc q 43.36 -1.13MktVRus q 29.48 -.78MktVJrGld q 15.82 -.81MarIntA 25 39.72 -1.11MarshM 16 36.09 -.19MartMM 42 98.62 -3.42MarvellT 16 9.24 -.04Masco dd 18.73 -1.25Mattel 18 40.77 -.07MaximIntg 26 31.77 -1.00McDrmInt 18 12.79 -.04McGrwH 29 45.90 -.12McEwenM dd 2.50 -.15Mechel ... 5.92 -.32Medtrnic 13 44.76 -1.04MelcoCrwn 35 18.91 -.55Merck 20 42.66 +.44MetLife 32 35.89 -1.11MetroPCS 9 10.08 -.19MKors ... 61.50 -3.34MicronT dd 7.88 -.25Microsoft 15 27.87 -.18MillMda n dd 8.95 -5.38MobileTele 39 20.14 -.24Molycorp dd 6.81 -.36Mondelez 16 27.03 +.07Monsanto 24 98.66 -3.23Moodys 15 47.37 -1.20MorgStan cc 23.42 -.90Mosaic 14 58.51 -2.95Mylan 17 28.71 -.40NRG Egy dd 24.02 -.51Nabors cc 16.67 -1.33NOilVarco 12 67.84 -1.64NetApp 26 35.54 -.94Netflix cc 187.12 -9.33NetSpend 72 15.81 +3.52NwGold g 27 8.78 -.45Newcastle 4 11.00 -.38NewellRub 16 23.60 -.49NewfldExp 10 24.75 -2.55NewmtM 12 40.56 -2.34NewsCpA 17 28.70 -.47Nexen g ... 27.42NikeB s 23 54.02 -.45NobleCorp 18 37.84 -1.84NokiaCp ... 3.82 -.11NA Pall g ... 1.49 -.17NorthropG 8 66.04 -.16NStarRlt dd 8.51 -.14NovaGld g 44 4.00 -.22Novogen s ... 8.15 +1.68NuanceCm 14 18.65 -.22Nucor 28 45.95 -1.77Nvidia 14 12.38 -.18OcciPet 12 84.51 -1.29Och-Ziff dd 9.07 -.23OfficeDpt dd 4.18 -.84OfficeMax 2 12.09 -.91Oi SA s ... 3.59 -.05OnSmcnd dd 8.15 -.30

Oncolyt g dd 3.90 -.77Oracle 17 35.01 -.40OwensCorn 31 39.91 -3.43PNC 12 63.17 -.34PPG 17 131.51 -3.61PPL Corp 12 30.48 +.01PVR Ptrs 44 23.00 -2.75PacEthan h dd .39 -.03Pandora dd 12.12 -1.08PattUTI 12 23.64 -.73PeabdyE 51 23.51 -.94PeregrinP dd 1.66 -.11PetrbrsA ... 17.85 -.68Petrobras ... 15.75 -.54Pfizer 14 27.57 -.14PhilipMor 18 92.09 +.78Phillips66 n 8 62.64 -2.12PioNtrl 85 127.84 -4.61PiperJaf 20 40.77 -.65PlugPowr h dd .14 -.00Potash 17 40.38 -1.13Power-One 13 4.77 -.14PwshDB q 27.92 -.32PSHYCpBd q 19.18 -.05PwShs QQQ q 67.19 -1.05PrinFncl 12 31.60 -.68ProShtS&P q 31.94 +.40PrUShQQQ q 27.55 +.80ProUltSP q 67.79 -1.75PrUVxST rs q 10.31 +1.55ProVixSTF q 12.28 +1.00ProUltSilv q 38.44 -2.43ProctGam 20 77.08 -.30ProgsvCp 16 24.30 -.19PrUShSP rs q 47.75 +1.14PrUShL20 rs q 68.14 -.42PUSSP500 rs q 31.25 +1.17ProspctCap ... 11.26 -.05Prudentl 18 56.05 -2.10PSEG 11 31.29 -.12PulteGrp 35 18.60 -1.35

Q-R-S-TQualcom 17 65.27 -.40QuantaSvc 22 28.14 -.75Quiksilvr dd 6.33 -.04RF MicD dd 5.17 -.16Rackspace 73 54.98 -2.76RadianGrp dd 7.50 -.09Rentech cc 2.74 -.16RschMotn 27 13.71 -.65RioTinto ... 55.26 -2.20RiteAid dd 1.65 -.04RiverbedT 50 16.35 -.16RoyDShllA 8 65.57 -1.01RymanHP dd 42.97 -.93SAIC 23 11.75 -.50SLM Cp 10 19.13 -.07SpdrDJIA q 138.88 -1.09SpdrGold q 151.44 -3.89S&P500ETF q 151.34 -1.91SpdrHome q 27.73 -1.29SpdrLehHY q 40.74 -.05SpdrRetl q 67.56 -1.13SpdrOGEx q 57.31 -2.09SpdrMetM q 41.85 -2.12Safeway 10 20.13 -.33SanDisk 30 50.06 -1.59SandRdge dd 5.84 -.17Schlmbrg 19 78.53 -1.46Schwab 25 16.69 -.41SeagateT 4 32.50 -1.68SealAir cc 20.54 -.61SenHous 31 24.77 -.16SiderurNac ... 5.02 -.27SilvWhtn g 21 32.19 -2.43Sina cc 56.35 +2.87SkywksSol 22 23.62 -.92SmithfF 15 22.34 -1.37SodaStrm 23 49.10 -3.34SonyCp ... 14.47 -.18SthnCopper 16 37.49 -1.10SwstAirl 20 11.43 -.27SwstnEngy dd 33.09 -.19SpectraEn 21 29.59 -.15SprottGold q 13.11 -.47SP Matls q 38.08 -1.10SP HlthC q 43.40 -.29SP CnSt q 37.92 -.07SP Consum q 50.35 -.78SP Engy q 77.70 -1.66SP Inds q 40.82 -.54SP Tech q 29.57 -.41SP Util q 36.97 -.07StdPac 5 7.54 -.62Staples dd 13.60 -1.05Starbucks 29 53.31 -1.14StateStr 14 56.73 -.81StlDynam 21 15.20 -.85StillwtrM 26 12.72 -1.40Stryker 18 63.08 -.61Suncor gs 10 31.38 -.40SunPwr h 77 13.17 -.22SunstnHtl cc 11.70 -.24SunTrst 8 27.58 -.11SupEnrgy 13 26.26 -.65Supvalu dd 3.83 -.04Symantec 14 22.56 -.05Synovus dd 2.56 -.11Sysco 18 32.53 +.24TD Ameritr 19 19.75 -.36TJX 19 44.30 -.85TaiwSemi ... 18.89 -.26TalismE g ... 12.36 -.17Target 14 62.65 +.78TempurP 21 36.14 -3.09Terex 27 32.49 -2.42TeslaMot dd 38.54 -.74Tesoro 10 52.02 -3.11TexInst 21 33.06 -.88TexRdhse 19 18.64 +1.14ThermoFis 23 72.64 -2.36ThomCrk g dd 3.67 -.223M Co 16 103.15 -1.03TibcoSft 30 21.93 -.84TimeWarn 17 53.23 -.56TollBros 12 33.56 -3.34TotalSys 17 21.97 -1.51Transocn dd 54.32 -1.94TrinaSolar dd 4.96 -.21TriQuint dd 4.75 -.16TurqHillRs dd 6.88 -.36TwoHrbInv 12 12.50 -.28TycoIntl s 28 32.30 -.04Tyson 14 23.56 -.57

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 16.44 -.13UDR 28 24.95 +.07US Airwy 4 13.33 -.93USG dd 28.13 -1.94UltraPt g dd 16.41 -.03UnionPac 16 134.72 -2.81UtdContl dd 26.08 -.67UPS B 61 83.81 -.95UtdRentals 25 53.09 -2.55US NGs rs q 18.32 +.02US OilFd q 34.17 -.79USSteel dd 22.01 -1.13UtdTech 16 90.16 -.86UtdhlthGp 10 55.21 -1.45UrbanOut 31 41.26 -.43Vale SA ... 18.59 -.74Vale SA pf ... 17.74 -.67ValeroE 12 44.93 -2.80VangEmg q 44.02 -.41VangEur q 49.87 -.69VangEAFE q 36.35 -.34VeriFone 54 31.89 -1.15VerizonCm cc 44.92 +.42VirgnMda h ... 44.40 -.34Visa 45 155.42 -2.19VishayInt 17 13.28 -.52VMware 42 71.34 -2.32Vodafone ... 24.69 -.64Vonage 16 2.60 -.02VulcanM dd 52.32 -2.49WPX Engy dd 14.90 -.15Walgrn 19 41.60 -.10WalterEn 56 36.76 -3.20WarnerCh 10 14.29 -.27WeathfIntl ... 12.72 -.38WellPoint 8 62.58 -.19WstnUnion 8 14.00 -.25WholeFd 32 85.29 -2.07WmsCos 23 34.82 -.63Windstrm 28 8.55 -.39WT India q 19.25 -.16Xilinx 21 38.29 -.85Yamana g 16 14.40 -.65Yandex ... 23.76 +.75YumBrnds 19 64.56 -.59Zynga dd 3.08 -.17

Today

Sandy effect

Many insurers have taken a financial hit on damage claims related to Superstorm Sandy, and AIG is no exception.

In December, the company estimated it would book $1.3 billion in losses in the fourth quarter due to the storm, which made landfall at the end of October and caused damage in 11 states along the Northeast. As a result, Wall Street anticipates that AIG will report a loss today when it releases its latest quarterly results.

Holiday season bounty?

Wall Street expects that Wal-Mart Stores enjoyed a decent holiday shopping season.

The world’s largest retailer, due to report fourth-quarter results today, plied shoppers with low prices and other enticements like product layaways. Investors will be listening for clues as to how Wal-Mart’s low-income customers are reacting to a 2 percent rise in payroll taxes that started last month, delayed tax refunds and rising gas prices.

Home sales slowing?

The National Association of Realtors reports data today on sales of previously occupied homes in January.

Economists have forecast that the seasonally adjusted annual rate for sales slowed slightly last month from December, when it hit 4.94 million. One factor dampen-ing sales: The supply of available homes on the market fell to the lowest level in 12 years.Source: FactSet

Price-earnings ratio: 14based on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: $1.59 Div. yield: 2.3%

Operating EPS

4Q ’11 4Q ’12

est.$1.44 $1.57

58

68

$78WMT $69.21

$62.48

’13

Source: FactSet

Existing home salesseasonally adjusted annual rate

4.6

4.8

5 million

JDNOSA

4.83

4.69

4.76

4.99

4.94est.4.90

Stan Choe, Jenni Sohn • APSource: Morningstar; FactSet Data through Feb. 19 *annualized

ICON Energy (ICENX) 14.8% 11.3% 16.3% 1.23% $1,000

Vanguard Energy (VGENX) 6.0 7.1 15.3 0.34 3,000

Invesco Energy (FSTEX) 11.3 5.2 14.2 1.12 1,000

Standard & Poor’s 500 7.7 13.7 8.4 – –

YTD 3-yr* 10-yr*Minimum initial

investmentExpense

ratio

Total return

As goes January, so goes the year. An old Wall Street adage says that when stocks

have a good January, they usually end up having a good year. And that idea can be taken a step further. The sectors that do best in January usually end up performing best over the full year.

Last year, financial stocks jumped 8 percent in January and outpaced the 4 percent rise of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index. Over the full year, they surged 26 percent, double the 13 percent rise of the index.

Although there isn’t a clear reason for the pattern, it happens more often than not. S&P Capital IQ strategist Sam Stovall found that since 1990, the three best performing sectors in January went on to beat the S&P 500 index 61 percent of the time.

To be sure, the predictor isn’t perfect. Last January, raw material producer stocks led the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500. They rose 11 percent in January but finished the year with just a 12 percent gain, which was less than the broader market.

If the January predictor holds this year, look for gains from the energy industry (up roughly 8 percent), health care (up 7 percent) and financials (up nearly 6 percent). They were the best sectors in the S&P 500, which had its best January since 1997 with a 5 percent gain.

These energy stock mutual funds all have four-star ratings or better from Morningstar, and 10-year returns greater than the S&P 500.Energy funds: Energ

ntm

Anelectric

start

www.edwardjones.com�

������������ ���������������������

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

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

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

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

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

Page 9: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Please email your ques-tions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Cre-ators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

ACROSS1 It’s taken in court6 City founded by

King Harald III10 Silences, gang-

style14 Skateboarder’s

leap15 Pringle, e.g.16 Brother of Fidel17 *Squeaker19 Fanboy’s mag20 __ of Reason21 Exhort22 Make a fake of23 *Fall in with the

wrong crowd, say27 Nurse28 KOA parkers29 Hopeful opening31 Up on, with “of”34 Trim36 Word with

median orminimum

39 *Kobe, notably42 Related43 Redding who

sang “TheseArms of Mine”

44 Agenda bullets45 Old saw47 “Mad Men”

channel48 Tach meas.50 *“Voilà!”56 Daughter of King

Triton58 Composed59 Yokohama yes60 Kooky61 “Cantique de

Noël,” in theStates

64 Cause of a sniff65 Three-piece

piece66 Big name in

paper67 Like many

collectibles68 War god69 A/V component

DOWN1 __ point2 “Ooh, send me!”3 Northern sheets4 McCourt memoir5 Texter’s giggle

6 Yellowish shade7 Chases flies8 Energetic types9 Unlock’d

10 Small pasta usedin soups

11 Equal chance12 Mold, mildew,

etc.13 “No __ Till

Brooklyn”:Beastie Boyssong

18 Enjoys the beach22 “I feel I should tell

you,” briefly24 Trip to the dry

cleaners, e.g.25 Pizza place26 Commands

reverence from30 Certain sample31 Arroz __ Cubana:

Spanish dish32 Restaurant pan33 Area conquered

by Alexander theGreat

34 Sch. whistleblower

35 1996 Olympictorch lighter

37 Ruby or topaz

38 Hesitantutterances

40 Energetic41 Wedge in a mojito46 100%47 With great skill48 Tool used to give

the starts of thestarred answersa 17-Across?

49 Big name insmall bags

51 Western loop52 Nimrods53 “That sounds

bad!”54 “Chicago Hope”

Emmy winner55 “Me, too”57 Rochester’s love61 Eggs in a lab62 Cloak-and-

dagger org.63 Post-ER area

By Ian Livengood and Jeff Chen(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 02/21/13

02/21/13

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

[email protected]

College-bound teenager should not letgirlfriend hold him hostage emotionally

Ask Annie

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, February 21, 2013

Page 10: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

10 • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

THURSDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 21, 2013 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WPTY ^ ^

Zero Hour “Face” (N) Grey’s Anatomy (N) (:02) Scandal (N) ABC 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (N)

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #Big Bang Theory

Two and Half Men

(:01) Person of Interest “Relevance”

(:01) Elementary “Pos-sibility Two”

News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

QVC $ . You’re Home Unique Gardens Flameless Candles Honora Collection Dr. Denese

WCBI $Big Bang Theory

Two and Half Men

(:01) Person of Interest “Relevance”

(:01) Elementary “Pos-sibility Two”

News Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

WMC % %Community (N)

Parks and Recreation (N)

1600 Penn (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

News The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N)

Jimmy Fallon

WLMT & >The Vampire Diaries “Stand by Me”

Beauty and the Beast (N)

CW30 News (N) Family Feud (N)

Sanford & Son

Andy Griffith

The Jef-fersons

WBBJ _ _Zero Hour “Face” (N) Grey’s Anatomy (N) (:02) Scandal (N) News (:35) Jimmy Kimmel

Live (N) (:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )Community (N)

Parks and Recreation (N)

1600 Penn (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

News (N) The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N)

Jimmy Fallon

WKNO * Crossroads Best Times Under-

groundLocal Color Spark

“Fame”Memphis 13

Keeping Up So Haunt Me

Tavis Smiley

Newsline

WGN-A + (How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine (N) America’s Funniest

Home Videos Engage-ment

Engage-ment

WMAE , ,The This Old House Hour (N)

Frontline “Raising Adam Lanza”

After Newtown: Guns in America

Tavis Smiley

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `American Idol Ten male singers perform. (N) Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13

NewsTMZ (N) Dish Nation

(N)Family Guy

WPXX / Without a Trace Without a Trace Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds

WPIX :The Vampire Diaries “Stand by Me”

Beauty and the Beast (N)

PIX News at Ten (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

MAX 0 3(6:50) } ›› Red Tails (12) Cuba Gooding Jr., Terrence Howard.

} ›› The Chronicles of Riddick (04) Vin Diesel. A fugitive fights an invading ruler and his army.

Co-Ed

SHOW 2 } ›› Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (03) Angelina Jolie.

Tim Minchin and the Heritage

(:10) Gigo-los

(:40) Gigo-los

(:10) Jolene (08) Jessica Chastain.

HBO 4 1(6:45) } ›› Battleship Earth comes under attack from a superior alien force.

Girls “Boys” Enlight-ened

Taxicab Confessions: All’s Fare

REAL Sports With Bry-ant Gumbel

MTV 5 2 Ridic. Failoso Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Failoso Ridic. Failoso True Life

ESPN 7 ?College Basketball: Teams TBA. (N)

College Basketball: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5iMPACT Wrestling (N) Bellator MMA Live (N) Bellator 360

USA : 8NCIS “Masquerade” NCIS “Jack Knife” Suits “War” Differing

opinions. (N)(:08) Necessary Rough-ness

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

NICK ; C To Be Announced Full H’se Full H’se Nanny Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends

DISC < DMoonshiners Auction Kings “Pick-Off

Special”Property Wars (N)

Property Wars (N)

Auction Kings “Pick-Off Special”

Property Wars

Property Wars

A&E > The First 48 The First 48 After the First 48 “John

Doe” (N)(:01) The First 48 (:01) The First 48

FSSO ? 4Tennis: Champions Se-ries: Anaheim.

Best of UFC 2012 NHL Hockey: Jets at Hurricanes

BET @ F } ››› Cadillac Records (08, Drama) BET Honors 2013 Wendy Williams

H&G C HWest End Sal.

West End Sal.

Rehab Ad-dict

Rehab Ad-dict

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Hawaii Life Hawaii Life Rehab Ad-dict

Rehab Ad-dict

E! D Soup E Spec. E! Special Kourtney-Kim Chelsea E! News Chelsea

HIST E BSwamp People “Swamp Invaders”

Swamp People “Texas Hold ’Em”

Big Rig Bounty Hunt-ers (N)

Larry the Cable Guy (:01) Swamp People “Swamp Invaders”

ESPN2 F @ College Basketball College Basketball: Teams TBA. (N) College Basketball: BYU at St. Mary’s.

TLC G Say Yes, Dress

Say Yes, Dress

Say Yes, Dress

Say Yes, Dress

What Not to Wear (N) Say Yes, Dress

Say Yes, Dress

What Not to Wear

FOOD H Chopped “Class Acts, Too”

Chopped “Leftovers Overload”

Chef Wanted With Anne Burrell (N)

Worst Cooks in America Chopped “Leftovers Overload”

INSP I Little House/Prairie The Waltons Matlock Matlock Medicine Woman

LIFE J =Project Runway Project Runway The teams design for

Miranda Lambert. (N)Double Divas

Double Divas

Double Divas

(:02) Project Runway

TBN M Behind Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord Holy Evidence

AMC N 0The Walking Dead Comic Men Freakshow

(N)Immortal-ized

Comic Men Freakshow Immortal-ized

Comic Men Freakshow

FAM O <(5:00) } Drumline

} ››› Remember the Titans (00) A black man coaches high-school football after integration.

The 700 Club Fresh Prince

Fresh Prince

TCM P } ›››› Double Indemnity (44) Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck.

} ››› A Place in the Sun (51) Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor.

(:15) } ››› Alfie Mi-chael Caine.

TNT Q ANBA Basketball: Miami Heat at Chicago Bulls. From the United Center in Chicago. (N) (Live)

NBA Basketball: San Antonio Spurs at Los Angeles Clippers. From Staples Center in Los Angeles. (N)

TBS R *Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang

TheoryBig Bang Theory

King of the Nerds “Nerdy Dancing”

Conan Mila Kunis; Chris Hardwick. (N)

King of the Nerds “Nerdy Dancing”

GAME S Newly Newly Newly Newly FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Baggage Baggage TOON T Incred Regular King/Hill King/Hill American American Fam Guy Fam Guy News Delocate TVLD U K Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Cleve Cleve King King King King SPEED Z (6:30) NASCAR Racing: Sprint Cup: Budweiser Duel. Car Warriors Wrecked Wrecked

FX Æ ;(6:00) } ›› Step Brothers (08)

Anger Anger Archer (N) Legit “Fam-ily”

Totally Biased

BrandX With Russell Brand (N)

Archer

OUT Ø Furtak Teco Fishing Bow Adven Feeders Outdoors Crush Bone NBCS ∞ College Basketball Women’s College Basketball Pro Talk NHL Snowboarding OWN ± Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity APL ≥ Glory Hounds (N) North Woods Law Glory Hounds

HALL ∂ GHappy Days

Happy Days

Happy Days

Happy Days

Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ L} ›››› Toy Story 2 (99) Voices of Tom Hanks.

Dog With a Blog

Good-Charlie

Good-Charlie

A.N.T. Farm Jessie Wizards-Place

Wizards-Place

SYFY E(5:30) } ›› The Omen (06, Horror)

} › My Soul to Take (10, Horror) Max Thieriot, John Magaro.

House of Bones (10) Members of a reality TV show investigate a haunted house.

Horoscopes

Civil rights icon James Meredith, the firstAfrican-American student to attend the University of Mississippi, is visiting the Crossroads area this

week for a series of presentations.

See staff writer Bobby J. Smith’s story coming this week.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

DEAR ABBY: I’m a 43-year-old single mom with three young boys. I am also a veteran and getting ready to go back to school. I have been dating a gentleman for two months now, and we get along great. He’s three years older than I am and good with my kids and family.

I like him a lot and we seem to have a lot in common — more than most. I really want him to kiss me, but I don’t want to seem pushy. He’s a real gentle-man. We have gone from hugs to holding hands while sitting on the couch watching television. I don’t mind taking things slow, but ...

How do I fi nd out if he wants to kiss me or not? Sometimes it seems like it, but then he seems afraid to. How do I let him know it’s OK? Sorry I seem like a teen-ager. — CONFUSED IN IDAHO

DEAR CONFUSED: This man isn’t taking things slow. Glaciers have been known to move fast-er. Two months is a very long time to wait for a fi rst kiss.

The next time you fi nd yourself sitting on the couch and holding hands with him, you have my permission to turn to him and say, “I’d love it if you kissed me.” If that doesn’t do the trick, then face it — his feelings for you are only brotherly.

DEAR ABBY: You have writ-ten about children in grocery stores before. Would you please

address the risk to chil-dren by al-lowing them to stand in grocery s h o p p i n g carts? I see it all too of-ten, and I don’t think the parents/grandparents realize that if

the child falls out and lands on his or her head, neck or back, the child could end up paralyzed or dead. The adult must be the rule setter and protect the child. But too often it’s the child setting the limits, and the results can be tragic. — CONCERNED SHOP-PER IN NEW YORK

DEAR CONCERNED SHOP-PER: I’m glad to oblige. Many markets equip their shopping carts with seat belts to secure tiny passengers and avoid this problem. That way, any liabil-ity that might stem from a child falling would lie directly where it belongs, with the adult who should have been using com-mon sense.

DEAR ABBY: My oldest friend owes me a lot of money. I loaned it to her when she was being evicted. She has now come into some money and is going on a cruise.

I asked her to repay me before

the trip. She said she “needs the cruise for her mental health.” I am shocked and very angry. When I lost my temper and told her off, she accused me of being “greedy and money-obsessed.”

Abby, I helped her when she needed it! What should I do? —FURIOUS IN SAN FRAN-CISCO

DEAR FURIOUS: When your “friend” returns from her sea cruise, see if you can get her to agree to a repayment plan for the sake of your mental — and fi nancial — health. However, if she refuses, you may have to write off the loan as tuition in the school of experience. Your mis-take was not getting the terms of the loan in writing.

DEAR ABBY: I have two sons who will graduate from college on the same day. My wife and I would like to attend both cer-emonies, but for obvious rea-sons, we cannot. How do I re-solve this dilemma? — FATHER IN TEXAS

DEAR FATHER: Divide and conquer. You attend one gradu-ation and your wife the other. To decide which one, you and the Mrs. should draw straws.

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

Gentleman is too slow to seal couple’s dates with first kiss

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

ARIES (March 21-April 19). There’s a fi ne line between good use of electronic devices and excessive dependence on them. You’ll draw a healthy boundary for yourself and your family in this regard.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Your neighbors will be a topic of interest. What are they doing in there? Probably nothing as interesting as it seems from the outside. Anyway, it’s more fun to wonder than to ask.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Im-provements in your personal life will happen over time. But you can already see the early signs that things are getting better, and you should be very encour-aged by that.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You like to make people laugh; it’s one of the ways you expe-rience their love. So surround yourself with those intelligent, lighthearted types who have an obvious sense of humor.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Think

of the profound impact you’ve al-ready had on your surroundings. You’ve changed the world in many ways without even know-ing it. For instance, there are people who wouldn’t know each other at all if it weren’t for you.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Unfortunately, the solution to one problem is the seed of an-other problem. Your job is to think further into the future than the people around you and weigh potential consequences against today’s options.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Who completes you? You are wise not to be dependent on one person; it’s not a one-person job. You feel whole when you give your atten-tion to a dozen different interests and relationships.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). People are the real treasures of your world, and you value them more than anything material. It doesn’t take big gestures to make this clear. There’s a quiet heroism in your patient, friendly attitude.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You have your eye on an upgrade that will enable you to show up for work in style. This improvement will likely be more expensive than you anticipated, though, so start saving now.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). People are searching for a sense of security, but that shouldn’t all fall on you. Staying true to your word is easier if you don’t give your word in the fi rst place. Avoid making promises; it will be better for everyone.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). It’s not every day that per-fect partnerships come together. That’s why when you sense that an arrangement is going to work well, you should act on it imme-diately.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Life seems sweeter when affec-tions are reciprocated, but this is not entirely necessary for your happiness. Right now, you’re happy to give and love without worrying about how it will come back.

BY HOLIDAY MATHIS

Page 11: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • 11

BERKELEY, Calif. — California coach Mike Montgomery said Tuesday there was no excuse for him shoving star player Allen Crabbe during a game and that the action was completely out of character for him.

“It’s obvious I made a mistake and I feel very badly about it,” Mont-gomery said at his weekly news conference Tuesday. “There’s no place in sports that you can basically put your hands on one of your

student athletes. Got a lit-tle carried away in the heat and emotion of a basket-ball game so I apologized to Allen, I apologized to the team. I feel very badly. In 30-plus years of coach-ing it’s never happened before. It’s something I deeply regret. It’s not go-ing to happen again.”

Montgomery has been publicly reprimanded by the Pac-12 conference and his own athletic director for pushing Crabbe with both hands during a timeout in the second half of Cal’s 76-

68 win over Southern Cali-fornia on Sunday.

Montgomery sounded a very different tone than the one he had in the same room two nights earlier, when he downplayed the event by calling it a moti-vational tactic and saying he would do it again be-cause it worked.

He acknowledged that he didn’t initially recog-nize the gravity of the event. He fi rst saw video of the shove when he got home that night and later issued an apology through

the school.He then endured what

he called “a couple of sleepless nights” as he watched coverage of the event that to his shock be-came national news.

“I guess I shouldn’t be surprised,” he said. “It was a little bit surprising the legs that it got. I made the bed. I have to lay in it. I regret the incident. I thought Allen handled it very well. I’m really appre-ciative of that. Allen and I have a great relationship.”

Crabbe spoke before

Montgomery on Tuesday and tried to move past the controversy, saying the whole thing had been “blown out of proportion” the past two days and that he and the team have moved on from it.

“He just did it as a way to spark my play,” Crabbe said. “I don’t take it as anything negative. I just take it as motivation. He expects a lot out of me. If I want to be a leader on this team I can’t play lackadai-sical. He was just trying to help me get my mind fo-

cused on the game.”Crabbe, the leading

scorer in the Pac-12 with an average of 19.8 points, scored 14 points after the shove and led the Bears back from a 15-point defi -cit to win.

Montgomery said he called Crabbe’s father to tell him he was out of line and said he would address the issue with his team at practice Tuesday. He said his talk with Crabbe’s fa-ther was all positive and that his relationship with his star player is good.

California’s coach says no excuse for shoving playerThe Associated Press

VINCENT COUNCIL, PROVIDENCE Council recorded an unorthodox double-dou-ble, grabbing 11 rebounds and handing out 11assists as Providence raced past Notre Dame71–51 for its fourth straight win. A senior fromBrooklyn, Council is now the all-time assistleader at PC with 671. He needs three more tosurpass former Syracuse great Sherman Dou-glas as the all-time leader in Big East games.

P.J. HAIRSTON, NORTH CAROLINAHairston scored a career-high 29 points to helpNorth Carolina snap a two-game losing streakwith a 93–81 win over Virginia. The sophomoreshooting guard hit 6-of-12 shots from 3-pointrange and 7-of-8 from the line en route to hisfourth 20-point game of the season. Earlier inthe week, he scored 23 points and grabbedeight rebounds in UNC’s 73–68 loss to Duke.

MARCUS SMART, OKLAHOMA STATE The streaking Cowboys rallied for an 84–79victory in overtime over rival Oklahoma for theirseventh straight win. Smart continued his stel-lar play, scoring a career-high 28 points to goalong with seven rebounds and four assists.Smart, a freshman from Texas, has scored 20-plus points in four of the last six games.

PIERCE HORNUNG, COLORADO STATEColorado State remained in the thick of theMountain West title chase by gutting out an89–86 win on the road vs. an underrated AirForce team. Hornung scored 13 points (one offive Rams in double figures) and grabbed 16rebounds to lead the way for Larry Eustachy’sclub. It was the 12th games with at least 10 re-bounds for the 6'5" senior forward.

KYLE ANDERSON, UCLAHe’s often been overshadowed by other mem-bers of UCLA’s elite freshman class, but Ander-son came through with a huge performance inUCLA’s impressive 88–80 win at Stanford. The6'9” guard from New Jersey scored 18 pointsand had 13 rebounds to lead the Bruins to theirfourth road win in league play. Anderson com-bined with fellow freshmen Shabazz Muham-mad (25 points) and Jordan Adams (20) toscore 63 of UCLA’s 88 points.

ALEX LEN, MARYLANDLen outplayed Duke’s Mason Plumlee in a bat-tle of two of the ACC’s top big men, scoring 19points and grabbing nine rebounds in Mary-land’s 83–81 win over the Blue Devils in Col-lege Park. Len, a sophomore projected to be atop-10 pick in the June NBA Draft, hit 6-of-8from the field and 7-of-8 from the foul line.Plumlee, Duke’s 6'10" center, scored a season-low four points.

TREY BURKE, MICHIGANMichigan bounced back from a blowout loss atrival Michigan State by beating undermannedPenn State 79–71 in Ann Arbor. Burke, theWolverines’ All-America point guard, scored aseason-high 29 points and added five assists(with no turnovers) to lead Michigan to its 22ndwin of the season.

BRANDON TRICHE, SYRACUSE Triche scored a season-high 29 points and hadsix rebounds and five assists as Syracusesnapped a three-game losing streak on theroad with a 76–65 win at Seton Hall. The Or-ange had not won away from home since theirthrilling 70–68 win over then-No. 1 Louisvilleon Jan. 19.

ANTHONY BENNETT, UNLVBennett scored 21 points and grabbed 12 re-bounds to lead UNLV to a crucial 72–70 winover San Diego State on Saturday night. Astrong candidate for National Freshman of theYear honors, Bennett hit 7-of-12 from the field,including 4-of-5 from 3-point range. He is av-eraging 18.0 points and 8.7 rebounds pergame.

TRAE GOLDEN, TENNESSEE Tennessee’s recent surge has coincided withGolden’s return from a hamstring injury. Thejunior point guard scored 24 points and hadeight assists in the Volunteers’ surprisingly easy88–58 win over the Nerlens Noel-less KentuckyWildcats. Golden has averaged 17.3 points inhis three games — all Tennessee wins —since returning from the injury.

Ben Brust, Wisconsin

1. Indiana (23-3) Hoosiers sweep Purdue by a combined 65 points.2. Miami (21-3) Canes’ winning streak reaches 13 games. 3. Michigan State (22-4) Surging Spartans can start thinking about No. 1 seed.4. Michigan (22-4) Burke averaging 7.0 assists and only 1.9 turnovers.5. Florida (21-3) Gators’ closest SEC win? By 14 points over Ole Miss.6. Gonzaga (25-2) Bulldogs lead the nation with 25 wins. 7. Syracuse (21-4) Orange rank 239th in nation in 3-point shooting (.323).8. Duke (22-3) Maryland shoots 60% from the floor in win vs. Duke. 9. Kansas (21-4) KU heads to Stillwater for huge Big 12 showdown.

10. Louisville (21-5) Cards give up a total of 79 points in two games vs. USF.11. Arizona (21-4) Cats win at Utah to snap two-game losing streak. 12. Kansas State (21-5) Only two Wildcats average more than 8.3 ppg.13. Oklahoma State (19-5) Smart thriving in a leading role as a freshman. 14. Georgetown (19-4) Hoyas in a three-way tie for first in the Big East. 15. Marquette (18-6) Eagles improve to 14–0 at home with win vs. Pitt. 16. Wisconsin (18-8) Closing Big Ten schedule favors Wisconsin.17. Ohio State (18-7) Buckeyes score season-low 49 in loss at Wisconsin.18. Butler (21-5) Bulldogs one game back in chase for A-10 title. 19. Pittsburgh (20-7) Panthers grabbing 41.6% of their missed shots. 20. Colorado State (21-4) Rams have been tough vs. a difficult MWC slate.21. Memphis (22-3) C-USA’s foes only shooting 40.8% on 2-pointers. 22. New Mexico (22-4) Lobos getting it done on the defensive end.23. VCU (21-5) Rams steal the ball on 17.7% of foes’ possessions.24. Saint Louis (19-5) SLU honoring Rick Majerus with an NCAA bid.25. Notre Dame (21-6) ND has wins over Louisville and Pitt in last two weeks.

Mizzou poised to make its move

Athlon Board of Experts Mitchell Light

Braden Gall

Nathan Rush

DavidFox

Steven Lassan Consensus

This Week’s Games & Experts’ Records 35-25 39-21 37-23 37-23 32-28 39-31

Colorado St. by 1Syracuse by 3North Carolina by 1Marquette by 7Saint Mary’s by 3Oregon by 5Missouri by 4Michigan by 6Notre Dame by 3Michigan St. by 3

Colorado St. by 3Syracuse by 7North Carolina by 1Villanova by 2Saint Mary’s by 4Oregon by 1Missouri by 3Michigan by 10Notre Dame by 3Ohio State by 1

New Mexico by 1Syracuse by 4North Carolina by 3Villanova by 2Saint Mary’s by 2Oregon by 5Kentucky by 4Michigan by 6Notre Dame by 3Ohio State by 2

Colorado St. by 7Syracuse by 4North Carolina by 2Marquette by 3Saint Mary’s by 5Oregon by 8Missouri by 8Michigan by 10Notre Dame by 3Michigan St. by 2

Colorado St. by 2Syracuse by 1North Carolina by 3Marquette by 6Saint Mary’s by 3Oregon by 10Missouri by 4Michigan by 8Notre Dame by 6Michigan St. by 5

Colorado St. by 2Syracuse by 4North Carolina by 2Marquette by 2Saint Mary’s by 3Oregon by 6Missouri by 3Michigan by 8Notre Dame by 4Michigan St. by 1

New Mexico at Colorado StateGeorgetown at SyracuseNC State at North CarolinaMarquette at VillanovaCreighton at Saint Mary’sStanford at OregonMissouri at KentuckyIllinois at Michigan (Sun.)Cincinnati at Notre Dame (Sun.)Michigan St. at Ohio State (Sun.)

Bruce Schwartzman

*Records and rankings are as of Feb. 18

Trae Golden, Tennessee

AP P

hoto

/Dav

id S

tluka

Which team do you believe is

poised to make a run in the final

weeks of the regular season?

David Fox: Although Missouribumbled its way to a loss to Arkansason the road last weekend, the Tigershave a decent chance to finish theregular season on a high note. TheTigers’ SEC record has been a disap-pointment, but Mizzou is still work-ing on getting Laurence Bowers tofull strength. In the final few weeksof the season, the Tigers catch twoteams at home (Florida and Arkansas)who don’t have strong road résumésand then they visit a wounded Ken-tucky in Rupp Arena. If Bowers re-turns to form, Mizzou can enter theSEC tourney on a hot streak.

Mitch Light: I’ve been on theIowa bandwagon for a while — andnow is no time to jump off. TheHawkeyes were left for dead afterstumbling out to a 3–7 record in theBig Ten, but a close look revealedthat this team was much better thanits record. There were early homelosses to Indiana and Michigan Stateby a combined seven points and abrutal stretch that featured roadlosses at Purdue (in OT), Minnesota(by three) and at Wisconsin (in dou-ble-OT). Iowa has won three straightto improve to 6–7 in the Big Ten andhas a relatively soft schedule downthe stretch. Mark my words: Iowawill play in the NCAA Tournament.

Nathan Rush: Oklahoma Statehas a hot hand right now, and theschedule is in the Cowboys’ favor.O-State’s three toughest games downthe stretch will all tip-off in Stillwa-ter. Coach Travis Ford has finallygotten his talented team’s productionto match its enormous potential. Thestage is set for Marcus Smart to lockup National Freshman of the Yearhonors and for Oklahoma State toimprove its NCAA Tournamentseeding. Both could easily happenwith a strong run in the final weeksof the regular season.

Which team has been the

biggest disappointment since con-

ference play began?

David Fox: I looked back at thepolls from the end of December for

this question and was somewhat sur-prised to see Arizona at No. 3 onDec. 31. I don’t know how manypeople really bought into Arizonaback in December, but the Wildcatshave shown they’re not really in anationally elite class. Arizona haslost to good teams (Oregon, UCLA,Cal, Colorado), but they’ve playedclose with Utah twice, came withina fraction of a second of losing toColorado at home in the first meet-ing and squeaked by Washington.That’s a former top-three team thatneeded a few breaks simply to stayin Pac-12 contention.

Mitch Light: Baylor struggled abit early in the season, but I figuredthis team would get its act togetherafter the new year. The Bears lostthree key starters to the NBA but re-turned more than enough talent to bea factor in the Big 12 race. That,however, hasn’t happened. ScottDrew’s club lost on Saturday by 20points at Kansas State to fall to 7–5

in the Big 12. With an RPI of 55 andonly two wins vs. top-50 RPI teams,Baylor finds itself squarely on theNCAA Tournament bubble.

Nathan Rush: UCLA has been adisappointment all season long.Even Bill Walton-level Bruins apol-ogists have to admit that coach BenHowland’s club has not lived up toexpectations. On paper, UCLA ap-pears to have the talent to hang withany team in the country. The Bruinshave shown flashes during confer-ence play, most notably with a dou-ble-digit win at Arizona. But moreoften, the “Pyramid of Success”seems to be missing essential foun-dation pieces, resulting in losses toArizona State, Cal and an ugly homeloss to rival USC. Maybe this teamwill pull a Steve Lavin by under-achieving during the regular seasonbefore making a move come Tour-nament time. That’s the only thingthat could save this disappointingcampaign.

Bruce Schwartzman

Missouri has yet to live up preseason expectations, but Phil Pressey and the Tigers arewell-positioned for a strong run in the final few weeks of the regular season.

®/™ Trademarks © Mars, Incorporated 2013.Tray shape is a ® trademark. US Pat. No. D492,836 and D551,908.

WAL-MART® is a trademark of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

SATURDAY, FEB. 23NEW MEXICO AT COLORADO STATEIt’s safe to say this is the biggest week for Col-orado State basketball in recent memory. TheRams, tied with New Mexico atop the MountainWest standings (in the loss column), travel to UNLVon Wednesday before returning home to host theLobos in Fort Collins. Colorado State is searchingfor its first conference championship since 1988-89, when Boyd Grant led the Rams to the outrightWAC title. New Mexico beat CSU 66–61 in Albu-querque in late January. GEORGETOWN AT SYRACUSEIt’s the last regular-season matchup betweenthese two rivals as members of the Big East. Andplenty is at stake. Georgetown, Syracuse and Mar-quette head into this week’s action tied for first inthe league at 9–3, and Louisville is not far behindat 9–4. Syracuse has struggled a bit on the road oflate, but the Orange are unbeaten at home. Sur-prising Georgetown, which has won six straight,has proven itself on the road, with wins at NotreDame and Cincinnati. This should be a classic. CREIGHTON AT SAINT MARY’SThe marquee matchup in this year’s Bracket-Busters pits Creighton and Saint Mary’s in a Sat-urday night showdown in Moraga. Creighton,despite its recent struggles, isn’t in danger ofmissing the NCAA Tournament. Saint Mary’s, onthe other hand, desperately needs a quality win.The Gaels have a gaudy record (21–5), but theirRPI is 50 and they don’t have any wins vs. top-60RPI teams. It’s fair to call this a must win for SMC.MISSOURI AT KENTUCKYKentucky’s NCAA Tournament hopes took a hugehit last Saturday with a 30-point loss at Tennessee.It’s imperative the Wildcats show they can beatquality opponents without center Nerlens Noel(torn ACL) in the lineup. They whiffed on their firstattempt — though it’s debatable if Tennessee is a“quality” foe — but still have opportunities againstMissouri and Florida. The Tigers will be in the NCAATournament, but they will not like their seed toomuch unless they start winning some games awayfrom home. Mizzou is 1–6 in true road games, withthe only win coming at Mississippi State. SUNDAY, FEB. 24CINCINNATI AT NOTRE DAMEJust two weeks ago, Cincinnati was 18 –4 overalland 6–3 in the Big East. Now, after three losses infour games (including two at home), the Bearcatsare 7–6 in the league with road trips to Connecti-cut, Notre Dame and Louisville looming. It’s notquite time to panic, but Mick Cronin’s team couldreally use a win. Notre Dame picked up a much-needed win on Monday night, rallying from anearly 19–3 deficit to beat Pittsburgh 52–42 on theroad. The Fighting Irish had struggled in their pre-vious two games, losing at Providence and need-ing overtime to beat DePaul at home.MICHIGAN STATE AT OHIO STATEIt’s another huge battle between Big Ten heavy-weights. Michigan State is making a push towarda No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. This mightnot be Tom Izzo’s most talented team, but theSpartans are finding ways to win. Ohio State islikely out of the Big Ten title race after losing threeof its last four, but this is still a very good team thatis in position to secure a top-four seed in the NCAAs. ILLINOIS AT MICHIGANIt’s been a streaky season for the streak-shootingFighting Illini. After losing six of seven during onelong stretch of Big Ten action, Illinois has now wonthree straight, highlighted by the buzzer-beatingvictory over Indiana two weeks ago. Michiganstruggled to beat Penn State at home on Sunday,but the Wolverines were due for a sluggish per-formance after facing Indiana, Ohio State, Wis-consin and Michigan State in consecutive games.

Page 12: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, February 21, 2013

Boys Schedule

Girls Schedule

Class 1A

at IngomarBiggersville-Ingomar, 4Falkner-Coffeeville, 5:30Coldwater-Blue Mountain, 7Shaw-Tremont, 8:30 

Class 2A

at BaldwynBaldwyn-Coahoma Co., 4S.V. Marshall-W. Bolivar, 5:30Coahoma AHS-Okolona, 7Broad Street-Simmons, 8:30 

Class 3A

at MoorevilleBooneville-Mooreville, 4East Side-Water Valley, 5:30Aberdeen-Velma Jackson, 7North Panola-Ruleville, 8:30 

Class 4A

at CorinthCorinth-New Albany, 4Noxubee Co-Lafayette Co., 5:30Rosa Fort-Shannon, 7Amanda Elzy-Houston, 8:30

Class 1Aat H.W. ByersFalkner-Coldwater, 4Vardaman-Ashland, 5:30H.W. Byers-Pine Grove 7Coffeeville-Biggersville, 8:30 

Class 2A

at New SiteCoahoma Co-New Site, 4S.V. Marshall-West Tallahatchie,

5:30Potts Camp-Baldwyn, 7Mound Bayou JFK-South Delta,

8:30 

Class 3A

at RipleyRipley-Mooreville, 4Ruleville-North Panola, 5:30Byhalia-Belmont, 7Charleston-East Side, 8:30 

Class 4A

at PontotocPontotoc-Lafayette, 4Shannon-Greenwood, 5:30North Pontotoc-Itawamba, 7Gentry-Corinth, 8:30

Shorts

7U Baseball Tryouts

The Booneville Bombers baseball team will be holding tryouts for their 7U travel team on March 9 at p.m. at the Booneville City Park. Players can’t turn eight years of age before May 1st of this year to be eligible to play. For more information contact Seth Janzen at 416-3373.

 Tennis Camp

Tupelo Park and Recreation and the Tupelo Tennis Association will host a 2013 Spring Camp at Rob Leake City Park from March 18-April 22. The six weeks of lessons will be held for pee wee, youth, and adult groups. Lessons for Pee Wee and adult age groups will be held Mondays, Pee Wee from 5-5:45 and adults from 7-8

An early tip-off coupled with a host role will have some schools closing early today.

The Corinth School District will dismiss at 2:30 today. Corinth High School is hosting the Class 4A Boys North Half Tournament, and the War-riors drew the 4 p.m. tip against New Albany.

Six other schools will also be par-ticipating in the State Tournament qualifi er, which continues Friday and Saturday.

The Lady Warriors will also be in ac-tion at the girls’ event, facing off with Gentry in the 8:30 game at Pontotoc.

Biggersville will be let out at 2 p.m. today. The Lions will play the 4 p.m. game at Ingomar in the fi rst of four Class 1A Boys’ games.

The Lady Lions will play the late game against Coffeeville in the girls’ event at H.W. Byers.

Tourney timesrequire earlydismissal

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

The road to Jackson is at home for the Corinth War-riors.

Corinth will play host to the fi nal three rounds of the Class 4A Boys North Half Tourna-ment, which begins today at 4 p.m. with the fi rst of a four-game set.

Corinth (24-6) will face off with former 1-3A and 1-4A rival New Albany (16-13) in Game One. The Bulldogs ad-vanced with a 63-60 double-overtime win over Green-wood on Tuesday.

CHS, the defending North champions, rolled past Cale-donia 75-46 on Tuesday, to

improve to 50-3 at home the past fi ve years.

Six of the eight teams — including Corinth and New Albany — that converged in Shannon in 2012 are back. Amanda Elzy, the reigning state champs, Houston, Nox-ubee County and Shannon were also in last year’s quar-terfi nals.

Lafayette County and Rosa Fort are new to the mix this time around. Greenwood and North Pontotoc rounded out last season’s fi eld

Today’s other three games, in order, include Noxubee Co-Lafayette Co., Rosa Fort-Shannon and Amanda El-zy-Houston. The fi nale is a

rematch of last year’s quarter-fi nal, which Elzy won 72-64.

The Warriors will take an 18-game home winning streak into today’s elimina-tion contest.

Corinth has qualifi ed for the State Tournament each of the six years — 1993, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2011 — its hosted the event.

Corinth fi nished as runner-up to eventual state champion Booneville in the 2011 event. The Warriors fi nished third in 1993 before going on to claim their third state title.

Today’s and Friday’s match-es are elimination games with the Saturday participants earning a berth in the State

Tournament. The consolation round to determine the third qualifi er was eliminated with the advent of a sixth class in 2009-10.

■ The Corinth Lady War-riors will be out to make more history tonight at Pontotoc. Corinth (13-15) will face Gen-try in the fourth and fi nal game of the 4A Girls North Half Tournament in Ponto-toc.

Corinth claimed only its second North Half win — and fi rst away from home — with a 60-49 win at Houston. The Lady Warriors will face a touch task in adding to that by drawing a 23-2 Lady Ram squad.

Corinth’s state path starts at homeBY H. LEE SMITH II

[email protected]

PEORIA, Ariz. — San Di-ego Padres shortstop Everth Cabrera says he was “a little surprised” and “disappoint-ed” by a report that his name was listed in the records of a now-closed Florida clinic at the center of a Major League Baseball investigation into banned performance-en-hancing drugs.

ESPN reported Tuesday that Cabrera was on a list as having received performance-enhancing drugs, although the network said the docu-

ments are not proof he used or received them.

Cabrera declined specifi c comment on Biogenesis of America, the closed anti-ag-ing clinic in Coral Gables, Fla. He did not say whether he had taken, purchased or re-ceived performance-enhanc-ing drugs.

“I’m going to fully cooper-ate with Major League Base-ball,” Cabrera said, “but I can’t say anything about that right now.”

Cabrera, who led the NL with 44 stolen bases last

season, said he spoke with Padres manager Bud Black twice Wednesday about the issue, the fi nal time with gen-eral manager Josh Byrnes present.

Black, who has a strong relationship with Cabrera, didn’t sound overly con-cerned about the situation.

“We’re satisfi ed by what we heard,” Black said. “We be-lieve this will resolve itself in a positive way.”

While he wouldn’t divulge details, Black said his con-versation with Cabrera con-

vinced him all will be well.“It’s something that, for a

moment, might be a distrac-tion,” Black said. “There is some disappointment that some of our guys are men-tioned in the press, but I think, in the long run, every-thing will work itself out.”

Cabrera has not tested posi-tive for performance-enhanc-ing drugs. But he could be subject to a 50-game suspen-sion if MLB fi nds evidence he possessed banned substances or participated in their sale or distribution.

Cabrera disappointed by link to PEDThe Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS — Barkevi-ous Mingo is ready for ques-tions he will face this week-end in Indianapolis.

Seemingly every NFL team at the annual scouting com-bine will ask about his rela-tionship with former college

teammate Tyrann Mathieu and whether he ever hung out with the troubled cornerback.

The answers could make as much difference in Mingo living up to his projection as a fi rst-round draft pick as his time in the 40-yard dash. So the LSU star has left nothing

to chance, carving out time to prepare for the 15-minute in-terviews.

“It’s one thing that all the guys that came out from LSU are going to face,” Mingo said during a telephone interview. “We know what kind of guy he was and we’re always go-

ing to be there for him.”Interview training has be-

come an essential component for draft hopefuls. Most, if not all, of the 333 players expect-ed to arrive in Indy for the combine have been instructed

Answers could have big impact on draft stockThe Associated Press

Please see DRAFT | 13

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — The NCAA believes former Miami assistant coaches Clint Hurtt, Aubrey Hill and Jorge Fernandez provided false or misleading information dur-ing the probe into the Hurri-canes’ athletic department.

The NCAA said all three violated “principles of ethical conduct” as part of the notice

of allegations served against the Hurricanes, according to a person who spoke to The Associated Press Wednesday on condition of anonymity because the allegations have not been released publicly.

Hurtt and Hill were mem-bers of Miami’s football staff. Fernandez worked on the men’s basketball staff.

Several other coaches are

named or referenced in the al-legations, including Missouri basketball coach Frank Haith, who is alleged of failing “to promote an atmosphere for compliance.” But only Hurtt, Hill and Fernandez are facing the ethical-conduct charge, commonly known as NCAA Rule 10.1.

Hurtt is currently on the staff at Louisville. Hill is not

working as a coach at this time, and Fernandez spent last season as an assistant at Marshall, resigning last May.

The notice of allegations was delivered to Miami on Tuesday, and the university is facing the charge that it had a “lack of institutional control” — one of the worst things the

NCAA claims 3 coaches misled probeThe Associated Press

Please see SHORTS | 13

Photo by Donica Phifer

Corinth’s Darius Gaines (left) drives past Pontotoc’s Caleb Warren during action earlier this season. Corinth is hosting the Class 4A Boys North Half Tournament and will face New Albany today at 4 p.m. in the first of four games.

Please see NCAA | 13

Page 13: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Scoreboard Daily Corinthian • 13Thursday, February 21, 2013

Pro basketball

NBA standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division W L Pct GBNew York 32 18 .640 —Brooklyn 32 22 .593 2Boston 28 25 .528 5½Philadelphia 22 29 .431 10½Toronto 22 32 .407 12

Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 36 14 .720 —Atlanta 29 22 .569 7½Washington 15 37 .288 22Orlando 15 38 .283 22½Charlotte 13 40 .245 24½

Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 32 21 .604 —Chicago 31 22 .585 1Milwaukee 26 26 .500 5½Detroit 21 34 .382 12Cleveland 16 37 .302 16

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 43 12 .782 —Memphis 34 18 .654 7½Houston 29 26 .527 14Dallas 23 29 .442 18½New Orleans 19 35 .352 23½

Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 39 14 .736 —Denver 34 21 .618 6Utah 31 24 .564 9Portland 25 29 .463 14½Minnesota 19 31 .380 18½

Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBL.A. Clippers 39 17 .696 —Golden State 30 23 .566 7½L.A. Lakers 25 29 .463 13Sacramento 19 36 .345 19½Phoenix 18 36 .333 20

–––Tuesday’s Games

Charlotte 105, Orlando 92Toronto 96, Washington 88Brooklyn 113, Milwaukee 111, OTMemphis 105, Detroit 91Chicago 96, New Orleans 87Denver 97, Boston 90Utah 115, Golden State 101Phoenix 102, Portland 98San Antonio 108, Sacramento 102

Wednesday’s GamesDetroit at CharlotteMemphis at TorontoNew York at IndianaOklahoma City at HoustonPhiladelphia at MinnesotaBrooklyn at MilwaukeeMiami at AtlantaNew Orleans at ClevelandOrlando at DallasPhoenix at Golden StateBoston at L.A. Lakers

Today’s GamesMiami at Chicago, 7 p.m.San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.

Friday’s GamesChicago at Charlotte, 6 p.m.New York at Toronto, 6 p.m.

Detroit at Indiana, 6 p.m.Denver at Washington, 6 p.m.Sacramento at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m.Houston at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m.Orlando at Memphis, 7 p.m.Dallas at New Orleans, 7 p.m.Minnesota at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.Boston at Phoenix, 8 p.m.San Antonio at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.Portland at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

Golf

Match Play Championship partial results

At Dove Mountain, The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, Marana, Ariz. Yardage: 7,791; Par: 72

First RoundWednesday

Seeds in parenthesesPlay was suspended by snowSergio Garcia (12), Spain, leads Thongchai

Jaidee (53) Thailand, 2 up through 15 holes.Matt Kuchar (21), United States, leads Hi-

royuki Fujita (44), Japan, 3 up through 14 holes.Ian Poulter (11), England, leads Stephen Gal-

lacher (54), Scotland, 3 up through 12 holes.Bo Van Pelt (22), United States, leads John

Senden (43), Australia, 5 up through 12 holes.Charl Schwartzel (9), South Africa, all square

with Russell Henley (56), United States, through 11 holes.

Jason Day (41), Australia, leads Zach Johnson (24), United States, 6 up through 10 holes.

Richard Sterne (55), South Africa, leads Ja-son Dufner (10), United States, 3 up through 10 holes.

Hunter Mahan (23), United States, leads Mat-teo Manassero (42), Italy, 4 up through 9 holes.

Justin Rose (5), England, leads K.J. Choi (60), South Korea, 2 up through 9 holes.

Nicolas Colsaerts (37), Belgium, leads Bill Haas (28), United States, 3 up through 8 holes.

Adam Scott (6), Australia, leads Tim Clark (59), South Africa, 1 up through 8 holes.

Thorbjorn Olesen (38), Denmark, leads Jamie Donaldson (27), Wales, 3 up through 7 holes.

Bubba Watson (8), United States, all square with Chris Wood (37), England, through 6 holes.

Jim Furyk (25), United States, all square with Ryan Moore (40), United States, through 6 holes.

Lee Westwood (7), England, leads Rafael Ca-brera Bello (58), Spain, 2 up through 5 holes.

George Coetzee (39), South Africa, leads Mar-tin Kaymer (26), Germany, 1 up through 4 holes.

Keegan Bradley (13), United States, all square with Marcus Fraser (52), Australia, through 3 holes.

Ernie Els (20), South Africa, leads Fredrik Jacobson (45), Sweden, 1 up through 3 holes.

Steve Stricker (14), United States, leads Hen-rik Stenson (51), Sweden, 2 up through 2 holes.

Nick Watney (19), United States, all square with David Toms (46), United States, through 1 hole.

Dustin Johnson (16), United States, all square with Alexander Noren (49), Sweden, through 1 hole.

Graeme McDowell (17), Northern Ireland, vs. Padraig Harrington (48), Ireland, 1st hole not completed.

Webb Simpson (15), United States, vs. David Lynn (50), England, 1st hole not completed

Peter Hanson (18), Sweden, vs. Thomas Bjorn

(47), Denmark.Louis Oosthuizen (4), South Africa, vs. Richie

Ramsay (61), Australia.Branden Grace (29), South Africa, vs. Robert

Garrigus (36), United States.Luke Donald (3), England, vs. Marcel Siem

(62), Germany.Paul Lawrie (30), Scotland, vs. Scott Piercy

(35), United States.Rory McIlroy (1), Northern Ireland, vs. Shane

Lowry (64), Ireland.Rickie Fowler (32), United States, vs. Carl Pet-

tersson (33), Sweden.Tiger Woods (2), United States, vs. Charles

Howell III (63), United States.Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano (31), vs. Fran-

cesco Molinari (34), Italy.

Hockey

NHL standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GANew Jersey 16 9 3 4 22 42 38Pittsburgh 16 11 5 0 22 52 38N.Y. Rangers 15 8 6 1 17 39 38Philadelphia 17 7 9 1 15 45 49N.Y. Islanders 16 6 9 1 13 46 57

Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAMontreal 16 11 4 1 23 46 35Boston 13 9 2 2 20 37 31Ottawa 17 9 6 2 20 40 32Toronto 17 10 7 0 20 48 40Buffalo 17 6 10 1 13 47 56

Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GACarolina 14 8 5 1 17 41 40Tampa Bay 15 8 6 1 17 59 47Winnipeg 15 6 8 1 13 37 47Florida 15 4 7 4 12 35 56Washington 15 5 9 1 11 41 51

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 16 13 0 3 29 55 34Nashville 17 8 4 5 21 39 38St. Louis 16 9 6 1 19 53 50Detroit 16 7 6 3 17 43 48Columbus 16 4 10 2 10 36 51

Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAVancouver 15 8 3 4 20 44 37Minnesota 15 7 6 2 16 33 38Edmonton 15 6 6 3 15 36 41Calgary 14 5 6 3 13 39 51Colorado 14 6 7 1 13 37 43

Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAAnaheim 15 12 2 1 25 53 39San Jose 15 8 4 3 19 39 34Phoenix 16 8 6 2 18 44 41Dallas 16 8 7 1 17 41 43Los Angeles 14 6 6 2 14 33 37

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for over-time loss.

Today’s GamesChicago 4, Vancouver 3, SOWinnipeg 2, Buffalo 1Montreal 3, N.Y. Rangers 1Ottawa 3, N.Y. Islanders 1Tampa Bay 4, Toronto 2San Jose 2, St. Louis 1Nashville 4, Detroit 3, OTLos Angeles 3, Edmonton 1

Wednesday’s GamesPhiladelphia at PittsburghSt. Louis at ColoradoLos Angeles at Calgary

Today’s GamesBuffalo at Toronto, 6 p.m.Florida at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.New Jersey at Washington, 6 p.m.Winnipeg at Carolina, 6 p.m.N.Y. Islanders at Montreal, 6:30 p.m.N.Y. Rangers at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m.Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m.Columbus at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.Vancouver at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.Minnesota at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m.

Friday’s GamesFlorida at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m.Vancouver at Nashville, 7 p.m.San Jose at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.

Television

Today’s lineupSchedule subject to change and/or

blackoutsAUTO RACING

9 a.m. (ESPN2) – NASCAR, Nation-wide Series, practice for DRIVE4COPD 300, at Daytona Beach, Fla.

11 a.m. (SPEED) – NASCAR, Truck Series, practice for NextEra Energy Re-sources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla.

1 p.m. (SPEED) – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Budweiser Duel, at Daytona Beach, Fla.

5 p.m. (SPEED) – NASCAR, Truck Se-ries, fi nal practice for NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla.

GOLF8 a.m. (TGC) – LPGA Thailand, fi rst

round, at Chonburi, Thailand (same-day tape)

Noon (TGC) – PGA Tour-WGC, Accen-ture Match Play Championship, second round matches, at Marana, Ariz.

MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL6 p.m. (ESPN) – Cincinnati at Con-

necticut6 p.m. (ESPN2) – Georgia at Arkan-

sas6 p.m. (NBCSN) – Drexel at Dela-

ware8 p.m. (ESPN) – Duke at Virginia

Tech8 p.m. (ESPN2) – Iowa at Nebraska10 p.m. (ESPN2) – BYU at Saint

Mary’s (Cal)NBA BASKETBALL

7 p.m. (TNT) – Miami at Chicago9:30 p.m. (TNT) – San Antonio at

L.A. Clippers

Transactions

Wednesday’s dealsBASEBALL

American LeagueBOSTON RED SOX — Placed OF Ryan Kalish

on the 60-day DL.KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Agreed to terms with

LHP Tim Collins, LHP Danny Duffy, LHP John Lamb, LHP Will Smith, RHP Kelvin Herrera, RHP Greg Holland, INF Johnny Giavotella, INF Eric

Hosmer, INF Elliot Johnson, INF Mike Mousta-kas, OF Lorenzo Cain and OF David Lough on one-year contracts.

SEATTLE MARINERS — Traded 1B/OF Mike Carp to Boston for a player to be named or cash considerations.

TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Josh Lindblom, OF Engel Beltre, OF Julio Borbon and OF Craig Gentry on one-year contracts.

National LeagueMIAMI MARLINS — Agreed to terms with RHP

Arquimedes Caminero, RHP Jose Ceda, RHP Sam Dyson, RHP Nathan Eovaldi, LHP Brad Hand, RHP Chris Hatcher, LHP Braulio Lara, RHP A.J. Ramos and OF Marcell Ozuna on one-year contracts.

BASKETBALLWomen’s National Basketball Association

SEATTLE STORM — Signed F/C Nakia San-ford.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

NFL — Named John Brody senior vice presi-dent of sponsorship and media sales.

HOUSTON TEXANS_Named Jeff Zgonina as-sistant defensive line coach and Russell Joyner director of football information systems.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

ANAHEIM DUCKS — Agreed to terms with G Viktor Fasth on a two-year contract extension.

BOSTON BRUINS — Promoted F Alden Hirschfeld from South Carolina (ECHL) to Provi-dence (AHL).

BUFFALO SABRES — Fired coach Lindy Ruff. Waived F Cody McCormick.

FLORIDA PANTHERS — Recalleed G Jacob Markstrom from San Antonio (AHL). Promoted G Brian Foster from Cincinnati (ECHL) to San Antonio.

American Hockey LeagueNORFOLK ADMIRALS — Released D Sacha

Guimond from his professional tryout contract.PROVIDENCE BRUINS — Signed F Nicolas

Tremblay to a professional tryout contract.ECHL

LAS VEGAS WRANGLERS — Traded G Jody O’Neill to Gwinnett for future considerations.

SAN FRANCISCO BULLS — Traded F Ryan Galiardi to Idaho for future considerations.

MOTORSPORTSSCCA — Named Chris Berg public relations

coordinator.SOCCER

Major League SoccerFC DALLAS — Announced the resignation

of president and chief executive offi cer Doug Quinn.

NEW YORK RED BULLS — Signed M Jonny Steele.

PHILADELPHIA UNION — Waived M Alex Men-doza and D Damani Richards.

PORTLAND TIMBERS — Signed D Mikael Sil-vestre.

SEATTLE SOUNDERS — Traded the rights to D Mikael Silvestre to Portland for a 2014 fi rst-round supplemental draft pick and a conditional 2015 draft pick.

National Women’s Soccer LeaguePORTLAND THORNS — Signed D Jazmyne

Avant.COLLEGE

ILLINOIS — Promoted assistant director of player personnel and relations Mike Bellamy to wide receivers coach.

KANSAS STATE — Named Andre Coleman wide receivers coach.

p.m. Youth lessons will be held Mondays or Tuesdays from 6-7 p.m. Cost is $65 per person, and classes are limited to 14 people. To sign up, or for more information, contact Dennis Otono at 891-7589 or Curtis Brown at 231-2797.

 Youth Leagues

The Corinth/Alcorn County Park and Recreation Depart-ment will hold registration for youth softball and baseball leagues through March 1. Age groups for softball include 3-4 Co-Ed T-Ball, 6U Coach Pitch, 8U Coach Pitch, 10U Fast Pitch, 12U Fast Pitch and 14U Fast Pitch. Boys age groups include 4-5 Co-Ed T-Ball, 6 year old Coach Pitch, 7-8 Coach Pitch, 9-10, 11-12 and 13-15. Cost for participation is $35 for one child, $70 for two children, and $100 for three or more. Registration will be at the park office. For more information, including age cut-off dates, call (662) 287-3067.

 Adult Softball Leagues

The Corinth/Alcorn County Park and Recreation Depart-ment will hold registration adult softball leagues through March 8. Leagues include Women’s, Industrial, Open, Church, Se-niors, Co-Ed and Wood Bat. Leagues will begin play on March 25, and information for a mandatory managers meet-ing will be given upon registra-tion. Cost is $350 for teams with an Alcorn County Sponsor, other teams outside of Alcorn County will pay $400. Teams are required to wear matching jerseys. For more information, call (662) 286-3067.

 Sportsplex Youth Leagues

The Corinth Sportsplex will hold registration for youth softball and baseball leagues fthrough March 14. Five age groups (4-5 Boys and Girls T-Ball, 6-8 Coach Pitch, 9/10, 11/12 and 13/15 Live Pitch) will be of-fered for the league. Season will run from April 15-June 8 and end with a tournament. Slow-Pitch softball and all girls leagues will be offered if there is enough in-terest. Cost for members of the Sportsplex is $20, and $60 for non-members. A $20 late-fee will be applied to the cost if registra-tion is after March 14.

in how to answer coaches and general managers properly.

This year, the questions run the gamut.

Running back Mar-cus Lattimore is trying to prove he can return from a gruesome knee injury. Mathieu, a cornerback, and Da’Rick Rogers, a re-ceiver, both were booted

off the teams they intend-ed to play for last fall after failing drug tests. Line-backer Alec Ogletree will have to answer for a series of problems that included a suspension for violating team rules early last sea-son, and linebacker Manti Te’o will likely contend with the girlfriend hoax all over again. And those are just the big-name guys.

Lee Gordon, a former

television anchor, runs a training program for Ath-letes Performance, whose client list includes Mingo and Lattimore. His advice: Be appealing, believable and positive.

“We tell them up front that coaching you on this is similar to tackling tech-niques and the things you do on the fi eld, but you have to be yourself,” Gor-don said.

SHORTS

DRAFT

CONTINUED FROM 12

CONTINUED FROM 12

NCAA can levy against a member school.The charge revolves around how the school

allegedly failed to monitor conduct of Nevin Shapiro, a rogue booster and convicted felon who provided cash, gifts and other items to players on the football and men’s basketball teams.

University President Donna Shalala said Tuesday night that the Hurricanes have suf-fered enough already through self-imposed sanctions. Through a university spokesman, she declined further comment Wednesday.

The NCAA said Hurtt and Hill committed the same violations, at least related to the ethical-conduct matter.

The sanctions portion of this saga could take several months. The NCAA has asked some of the people who are facing major charges to respond by May 20.

NCAA

CONTINUED FROM 12

Plaza Plaza Bowling LanesBowling LanesCOME OUT AND SEE WHY BOWLINGCOME OUT AND SEE WHY BOWLING

IS THE #1 PARTICIPATING SPORTIS THE #1 PARTICIPATING SPORT WITH OVER 70 MILLION PARTICIPANTS WITH OVER 70 MILLION PARTICIPANTS

2001 Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS2001 Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS662-286-8105 662-286-8105

Special Rates for Church and School Groups Call David Curry 286-8105 and reserve your lane!!

COME ROLL COME ROLL A BALLA BALL

$2.00 PER GAME WEDNESDAY NIGHTS

W/COUPON(1 COUPON PER

PERSON)

Now Open

Guaranteed Best Prices in TownGuaranteed Best Prices in TownHours: Mon.–Sat. 10am–10pm

1100B Hwy 72 West • Corinth, MS

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

to Law Professionals

Odom and Allred, P.A.Attorneys at Law

404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS _________________________________________

662-286-9311William W. Odom, Jr. Rhonda N. AllredAttorney at Law Attorney at [email protected] [email protected]___________________________________________

(Payment Plans available)

Serving NortheastMississippi’s legal needs...

MS/TNMS/TN

FinancialFreedom Begins

With A PlanLet Us Develop A Plan For

Your Individual Needs

Page 14: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

14 • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

ServiceS

JIMCOROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BIDALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

$1,000,000 LIABILITY

INSURANCE• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975• LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY

(NO SECONDS)• METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE,

SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST

WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS& DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

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

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

Licensed & Bonded

• Bucket Truck Service • Backhoe

662-396-1023JASON ROACH-OWNER

1159 B CR 400Corinth, MS 38834

R

Large full size -6x12 tall x 6’9” concreteSOUTHERN HOME

SAFETY, INC.TOLL FREE

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

TORNADO SHELTERS

FACTORY DIRECT PRICING

All types of Counter Tops. Formica and

Granite.We have them in stock and we can do all of the

preparations for you. Smith Cabinet Shop1505 South Fulton Dr.,

Corinth, MS662-287-2151

LET US SHOW YOU... Before

you buykitchen cabinets, let us show you what good quality should cost.

Excellent prices. And we have been serving this area

for many years. Smith Cabinet Shop1505 South Fulton Dr.,

Corinth, MS662-287-2151

BEAUTIFY YOUR KITCHEN

FOR2013

It’s very easy and affordable at...

Smith Cabinet ShopCorinth Industrial Park1505 South Fulton Dr.,

Corinth, MS662-287-2151

NEED NEW CABINETS? Very affordable at our modern cabinet mfg. plant. All wood

construction. Numerous styles. Prefi nished and ready

for fast installation.Buy Factory Direct!

Smith Cabinet Shop1505 South Fulton Dr.

Corinth (Industrial Park)662-287-2151

Located on Hwy 45 at the TN/MS line, 5500 s.f. with paved parking. Currently leased until 2014. Would

make good manufacturing fac., retail business,

warehouse/storage or investment prop.

Owner willing to consider partial trade.

Call Brooke @ Action Realty. Cell: 731-610-4197

or offi ce: 731-645-7101.

HOME REPAIRS

• Carports • Vinyl Siding• Room Additions• Shingles & Metal Roofi ng• Concrete Drives• Interior & Exterior Painting

FREE ESTIMATES30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

FULLY INSURED731-689-4319

JIMMY NEWTON

We offer Paint stripping and media blastingNew Powder-Coating equipment including a 10’x20’

curing oven

Automotive PartsYard / Patio Furniture

Decorative Iron Fences, Tools, BicyclesDeer Stands

Motorcycle/ PartsUtility Trailers

Rails, Gates, BanistersOffi ce FurnitureFarm Equipment

Call or come by for a free estimatePick-Up & Delivery Available

662-427-96611-877-432-9774

Like us on Facebook @http://www.facebook.com/PlantProcessSupport

50 Industrial Park DriveBurnsville MS 38833

Mid-South Powder-Coating

60 CR 6203110 heated sq. ft., 3 BR, 3 full BA w/4th full bath in garage. Newly remodeled

master bath, laundry room, gas fi replace w/built-ins,

24x24 metal shop w/roll-up door & 24x14 side shed.

All appliances included. On 2 acres. In Kossuth School

district. By appt. REDUCED to $183,900.

662-415-5973 or 662-587-0055

HOUSE FOR SALE

Smith Discount Home Center

412 Pinecrest Road

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

8’X12’ Utility Building .....$99500

(w/5’ Double Door)

Air Compressors ...................$11295

Huge Selection of Area Rugs

(8’ x 11’) ............................... Starting at $129

4 x 8 Masonite 8” oc .....$1895

st.

5/8-T1-11 siding .....................$1595

Foil Back Foamboard 1/2” .......$595

Foil Back Faomboard 3/4” .....$695

Foil Back Foamboard 1” ........$895

1x6 & 1x8 White Pine Pattern $50000

1,000 Board Ft.

Exterior Astro Turf .............$100

sq. yd.

Vinyl Floor Remnants ...............$100

CROSSTIES ..............................................$695

25 Year 3 Tab Shingle ......$5495

35 Year ArchitecturalShingle ................................................

$6295

Laminate Floor From ....39¢-$109

Pad for Laminate Floor ............$500-$1000

Handicap Commodes ...............$6995

Round Commodes .......................$4995

12 x 12 Celotex Ceiling (40Sq Ft)

..............................................................$3995

box

Board

10 CR 318, 6 BR’s, 4.5 BA’s

40 A CR 520, 4 BR’s, 3.5 BA’s.View virtual tours At www.corinthhomes.com or Call Bailey Williams Realty at

662-286-2255 for more info

TWO AMAZING FAMILY HOMES

BUDDYAYERS

FREE ESTIMATES 287-2296

We haul: gravel & stone, rip-rap, Iuka gravel, pea & wash gravel, masonry

sand, red fi ll sand, etc. for driveways & roads

DOZER & EXCAVATOR SERVICEHouse lots cleaned off, Culvert Installation &

Concrete WorkLet us help you with your

projects, big or small.

Construction &Crane Rental

income TaxTAX GUIDE 2013

Holder Accounting Firm1407-A Harper Road

Corinth, Mississippi 38834Kellie Holder, Owner

Th ere are several changes to our taxes for 2012.

Our staff is ready to help you.Open year-round.

Thank you for your business and loyalty. Telephone: 662-286-9946

Fax: 662-286-2713

Free Electronic Filing with paid preparation.

Fully computerized tax preparation. Offi ce hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-8pm Sat. 9am-5pm • Sun. By appt. only

2003 Hwy 72 E, Corinth, 662-286-1040(Old Junkers Parlor)

508 W. Chambers St., Booneville, 662-728-1080

1210 City Ave., Ripley, 662-512-5829

Advertise Your Tax Service

Here for$95 A MonthCall 287-6147

for more details

Advertise Your Tax Service

Here for$95 A MonthCall 287-6147

for more details

Advertise Your Tax Service

Here for$95 A MonthCall 287-6147

for more details

TOMLINSONACCOUNTING

• Authorized IRS-Efi le Provider• Individual, Corporate & Partnership

• More Th an 25 Years Tax Service• Open year-round

Hours: 8-6 M-F Sat. 8-121604 S Harper Road- Corinth

662-287-1995

LoST0142

for missing 12 year old black Toy Poodle. Her name is Curly & she is hard of hear-ing. She disappeared on CR 151 at the 5-point area near Kimberly Clark. Call Lisa Miller at 731-610-7054 or 731-610-7039 if you have any informa-tion. No questions asked!

$250 REWARD

HELPI’M LOST!

LoST0142

LOST!$50 REWARD!For return of large white male bob-tail cat, missing since 1/28/13,

approx. 1 yr. old, answers to Cotton. Geisler Lane/Hwy 72 East/Lake Heights/Waukomis Lake Rd. area. Family pet. Please call if seen, 662-415-4893 or 415-6954.

LoST0142

$500 REWARD!Stolen on 2/14/13 off carport on

Geisler Lane near Hwy 72 E., 2012 Yamaha TTR-50 child's dirt bike, blue in color. Call 662-808-7718, 662-808-7719 or contact Corinth Police Department.

GeneraL HeLp0232

GREAT SALESOPPORTUNITY

D o y o u w a n t t h echance to earn $30-$40K a year? Do youwant to enjoy goodhealth benefits? Doyou want effect ivetraining to help you doyour best? Do youwant to work for acompany that has adistinguished 80 yearhistory? We may havethe job for you! Go on-line now to jobs.terminix.com or con-tact Dusty Hutchins [email protected]. EOE/AA/M/F/D/V

THE KOSSUTH WATERASSOCIATION has a jobopening for Mainten-ance/Meter Reader .Please apply at officelocated at 10 CR 613,Corinth Mon.-Fri . , 8-4:30.

TruckinG0244DRIVER TRAINEES

Needed Now!Learn to drive for

US Xpress!Earn $800 per week!

No experience needed!CDL Trained and

Job-Ready in 15 days!1-888-540-7364

GaraGe/eSTaTe SaLeS0151

THURS/FRI/Sat. 3803 CR100. Tbl/chairs, cmpw/printer, exer. equip:stepper, bike, gazelle,wt bench, ab lounge.

EMPLOYMENT

SaLeS0208SALESPERSON NEEDEDat Casabella Furniture.Must be able to workevery weekend. Apply inperson Tuesdays &Thursdays only at 2401S. Harper Rd. No phonecalls accepted.

medicaL/denTaL0220

LPN'S needed for PRNwork. Please bring re-sume by 1921 Droke Rd.,Mon.-Fri., 9-4.

GeneraL HeLp0232CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.

GaraGe/eSTaTe SaLeS0151

CROSSROADS CLOSET ,502 Tate St. Big Sale!!50% off all store items,except TV's. Thurs., Fri.& Sat. only, 9-5.

MONA LISA'S Thrift Close-out Sale! 99¢-all cloth-ing thru Sat. Coats 50%off . 1007 Hwy 72 E.across from Pizza Hut.

THURS. THRU SAT., 8-4.3281 N. Polk St. Tables &chairs, glassware, newleather jackets & t -shirts , misc . i tems.

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

(Deadline is 3 p.m. daybefore ad is to run!)

(Exception-Sun. dead-line is 3 pm Fri.)

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

LoST0142

$250 REWARD. Lost 2/15,12 yr. old blk Toy Poodlename Curly. Hard ofhearing. CR 151 near KC.731-610-7054, 610-7039.

$500 REWARD: Stolen2012 blue Yamaha TTR-50 dirt bike, 2/14 off car-port, Geisler Ln. off 72E.662-808-7718, 808-7719.

Found0149FOUND DOG: North Cor-inth at State Line. Call662-396-1559.

PIT BULL PUPPYNO. CORINTH BAPTISTC H U R C H A R E A .(STATELINE) 287-5540

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GaraGe/eSTaTe SaLeS0151

OR

OR

ASK ABOUT THESE &OTHER

ATTENTION GETTINGGRAPHICS!

HUGE SALE!!

MOVING SALE!

LoST0142

$50 REWARD for returnof large white malebob-tail cat, missingsince 1/28/13, approx. 1yr. old. Answers to Cot-ton. Geisler Lane/Hwy7 2 E a s t / L a k eH e i g h t s / W a u k o m i sLake Rd. area. Familypet. Please call if seen662-415-4893 or 415-6954.

LOST!

SpeciaL noTice0107

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.

perSonaLS0135*ADOPT:*

ADORING Prof. Coupleyearn to share LOVE ofhorses, the arts, travel,each other w/1st baby.

Expenses paid.1-800-563-7964

*Christian & Jessica*

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.

Page 15: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • 15

auTo ServiceS0840

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

470FARM/LAWN/

GARDEN EQUIP.

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

2006 Wildcat 30 ft. 5th wheel camper, 2 slides, fi berglass ext., awning, holding tanks, full sofa

sleeper, refrig., mi-cro., glass shower, recliner, sleeps 6,

$18,500662-223-0056.

’04 HONDA SHADOW

750$3900

662-603-4407

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

1995 DODGE RAM 15004x4, Pwr. DL & Windows, Exc.

Cond., Too Many Extras To List

$4500 OBO.731-239-5770 OR

662-808-8033

GUARANTEED

2008 NISSAN ROGUE S

Black, 42K miles, new tires, excel.

cond.$12,900

662-287-6613leave message

or text

2005 HONDA ATV TRX 250 EX

“New” Condition$1995

215-666-1374662-665-0209

2006 GMC YUKONExc. cond. inside & out,

106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front

& rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded

$13,995662-286-1732

REDUCED

804BOATS

868AUTOMOBILES

868AUTOMOBILES

ALUMA CRAFT 14’ BOAT, 40 H.P.

JOHNSON, TROLLING MTR., GOOD COND., INCLUDES TRAILER,

$1200 OBO OR WILL TRADE. 731-610-8901 OR EMAIL FOR

PICS TO

[email protected]

804BOATS

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER,

RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP,

24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW

BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER

LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$7,900. 662-808-0113.

1959 Ford diesel

tractor

$4000662-750-0607

3000 series, new rear tires

& tubes

BUSH HOG 61” ZERO TURN,

COMMERCIAL, 28 HP KOEHLER, 45 HOURS,

NEW $6700

662-728-3193

1967 CHEVYNeeds paint &

body work$4000.

504-952-1230

2000 CHEVY MONTE CARLO,

maroon, sunroof,

$3600662-415-6008

2005 Ram 1500P/U, 4-dr., all power,

$10,500. 1 other vehicle

for $6,700. Priced to sell.

Call 731-239-9226 Today.

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

4-dr., 41,000 miles, dark blue ext. & gray int., 4 cyl. auto., CD/

XM radio, 36 mpg. payoff is

$11,054731-610-7241

1996 FORD F150 4X4

stick, camoufl age,

186,200 miles (mostly interstate

driving), runs good.

$3000 obo. 662-607-9401

$10,500

2000 Custom Harley

Davidson Mtr. & Trans.,

New Tires, Must See

$12,000 662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

$9,500

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc. drive train, 215k miles, exc. mechanically w/body defects.

$7800. 662-664-3538.

REDUCED

1992 FORDF-250

rebuilt trans., tool box, wired for elect.

brake trailer$1,950

662-462-8391

‘96 Challenger Radical One Pro Bass Boat,

130 HP Johnson, 24v motorguide trol mtr., on-board charger for all 3

batteries, Hummingbird Fish fi nder, good trailer w/new tires, looks good

for ‘96 model & runs good. $4500 obo.

662-286-6972or 415-1383.

1985 1/2 TON SILVERADO

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

DRIVEN DAILY. REDUCED

$3,000287-1213 AFTER

4 P.M.

1991 Ford Econoline

Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one

owner, serious interest. $6500

287-5206.

2002 Chevrolet Z-71,4-dr.,

4W.D., Am.Fm cass./CD, pewter in color, $6200.

662-643-5908 or662-643-5020

2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER

Fiberglass 18’ bunk house, gray &

black water tanks, cable ready w/TV.

Will consider trade for small tractor w/mower

$10,500662-396-1390

2004 DODGE RAM 1500V-8, QUAD CAB, GREAT COND.

$9000CONTACT

662-603-1407.

2007 DODGE GRAND

CARAVAN XLE127,000 MILES, GOOD COND.,

SILVER,

$6495662-279-9076

‘65 FORD GALAXIE 500, 4dr sedan, 390 Eng., 4 bbl. carb, no broken

glass, good paint, good tires, cast alum.

wheels, new brake sys., everything works exc.

clock, fuel gauge & inst. lights,

$2500 731-439-1968.

REDUCED!

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $3250 obo.

340-626-5904.

2004 Ford F350 work truck, V10, underbed tool boxes, towing package, DVD.

$8600 obo. Truck is in daily use. Please call for appt. to see,

340-626-5904.

1984 CHRYSLER LEBARON

convertible, antique tag,

39,000 actual miles.

$5000286-2261

Cruisemaster Motorhome by

Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000

miles with white Oak interior. $19,500.

$14,999 662-808-7777 or

662-415-9020

REDUCED

1976 Corvettewith original window sticker, bright

blue metallic, t-tops, L48-350, 90,400 miles, Sr. Citizen 2nd

owner since 1986, 4-spd. manual, new tires, positraction, upgraded

4 wheel disc brakes, anti theft alarm, factory air (not working) &

tinted glass.

$7,500 286-3014.

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

2006 Ford F-150

V-8, auto., 4-dr. quad cab, PW, PDL,

XLT pkg., brand new BFGoodrich

tires, 102,980 mi., super nice.

$11,450 obo.662-665-1995

2005 NISSAN ALTIMA

87,000 miles, 4 cyl., auto., CD,

pearl white w/tan leather, new tires, great gas mileage.

$7,650662-665-1995

2000 TOYOTA TACOMA

PRERUNNER w/ camper shell,

AT, air, PS/PB, AM/FM, 119,000 miles, clean, good cond.,

$5995731-689-3684

2005MAZDA 6

6 cyl., black w/black leather, moon roof, Bose speakers,

53,750 miles. $7500 OBO.662-415-7746

REDUCED

2006 Satin Jade Chrysler 300 LX,

V-6, 4-dr., 72k miles. $12,500.

662-594-1441.

ADVERTISE YOUR AUTO, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR,

MOTORCYCLE, RV OR ATVLIST IN OURGUARANTEED AUTO SECTIONFOR AS LITTLE AS.................................(No Dealers - Non Commercial Only)

1607 South Harper Rd email: [email protected] Corinth MS 38834 662-287-6111

compuTer0515

Tomlinson Computers, Inc.1604 S. Harper Rd., Corinth, MS 38834

662-287-5158

iPad2 16GB White $399

While supplies last.

XBOX 360 GamesFIFA2013 $40

• Laptop Computers $399• HP all-in-one PC $519• LCD Monitors• Desktop PC starting at $499

Used PC with new LCD monitorstarting at $250

662-287-5158 ph.662-287-6187 fax

Store hoursMonday-Friday 8-5

iPad2SECRET SHOPPER TIP #9

How to Find A New Job

The classifieds really workfor job seekers.

The Daily Corinthian Classifieds...The Best Kept Secret in Town

662-287-6147

miSc. iTemS For SaLe0563

1950'S Bubble Footglass water goblets, 5for $35. Call 662-660-2392.

5 AFGHANS - CorinthJacinto scenes. $15 - $5.286-8073.

A N T I Q U E W O O D E Nroaster canister set,$30. 286-8073.

BOY'S North Face jack-et, size 3 toddler, wornvery little, $50. 286-0204.

miSc. iTemS For SaLe0563

1950'S Bubble Footglass dessert dishes, 9for $35. Call 662-660-2392.

1950'S Bubble Footglass juice glasses, 6 for$30. Call 662-660-2392.

1950'S Bubble Footglass sherbet/cham-pagne glasses, 8 for $35.Call 662-660-2392.

FurniTure0533

HARD ROCK Maple cof-fee table & 2 end tables,plus 2 lamps, $100 obo.286-2096.

PRIDE LIFT CHAIR, goodcond., $100 obo. 286-3792.

WanTed To renT/Buy/Trade0554

M&M. CASH for junk cars& trucks. We pick up.6 6 2 - 4 1 5 - 5 4 3 5 o r731-239-4114.

FurniTure0533

BURGUNDY INVACARElift chair, fair cond., $100obo. 286-2096.

DROP LEAF table with 4chairs, $100 obo. 286-3792.

MED-LIFT power re-cliner, 3-position, bat-tery backup, blue fabric,used very few months,$375. 662-665-1816.

SporTinG GoodS0527

YOUTH GOLF Set, madeDelta, $20. Call 662-603-1382.

FurniTure0533BLACK METAL tab lew/wood look top, 1 leaf,8 chairs, swivel w/blackleather look, $75 obo.286-2096.

BROYHILL PLAID bur-gundy, green & tancouch, barely used, $200obo. 662-415-9202.

MERCHANDISE

HouSeHoLd GoodS0509

ROPER WASHER & dryerpair, white, like new,used little over a yearby single person. $380.662-396-1188.

muSicaL mercHandiSe0512

1936 WURLITZER babygrand butterfly electricpiano, in good cond. &can be played. Rare an-t ique piece. Only 6made. $500. 287-6993.

compuTer0515DESK COMPUTER, used,in great cond., Win-dows XP Pro software,new keyboard, mouse,etc. Old files cleanedoff. $100. Call Jim @ 284-6724.

LaWn & Garden equipmenT0521

CRAFTSMAN MOWER, 18H.P., 46" cut, $375. 286-2655.

Y A R D M A N 3 8 " c u tmower, good cond.,$400 662-286-2655.

SporTinG GoodS0527

USED WILSON 13 1/2"softball glove, $35. Call662-284-8292.

caTS/doGS/peTS0320

FREE LARGE beautifulmixed puppies, 3 1/2mos, S&W, make goodpets, guard or huntingdogs. 662-287-1035.

FARM

Farm markeT0410INSULATED INCUBATOR,new, 4-drawers, holds250 lg . eggs, greathatches, $495. 462-3976or 415-0146.

Feed/FerTiLizer0430HORSEQUALITYh a y ,Tifton44,lg.sq.b a l e s$4.50,fertilized,dryi nbarn.6 6 2 - 8 0 8 - 0 2 9 1 ,C o r i n t h .

ROLLS OF HAY, 5x5 ,horse quality, mostlySerecia, $30 roll. 462-3976 or 415-0146.

VAUGHN HYBRID Ber-muda hay, fertilized,horse quality, lg. sq.bales, $4.50 ea. 731-609-3730 or 731-376-0102.

LiveSTock0450LG. DUCKS, ExhibitionRuins, $45 pair. 462-3976or 415-0146.

Farm ServiceS0490GEORGIA QUAIL incubat-or, $300. 286-2655.

parT-Time empLoymenT0268

ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for

Part-Time EmploymentNo Ins. No Benfits. In-cludes some mechanic-al/maintenance/grounds keeping dut ies .Must have a neat ap-pearance with goodcustomer service skillsand an ability to com-plete daily sales re-p o r t s . E x p e r i e n c ehandling petroleumproducts and/or fuel-ing a plus. Drug screenand background checkrequired. Must have aHigh School diploma orequivalent. This is arare opportunity towork in a fun and inter-ested environment.Send resume to Box353 c/o The Daily Cor-inthian, P. O. Box 1800,Corinth, MS 38835.

PETS

caTS/doGS/peTS0320CHA-POMS & PappyPoms, 12 & 9 wks. old,CKC reg., S&W, parentson site. $150 cash. 662-665-1364.REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.

Page 16: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 022113

16 • Thursday, February 21, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

auTo/Truck parTS & acceSSorieS0848

1-662-728-4462 WEBUYCARS

1101 N. 2nd Street • Booneville, MS • www.courtesyautoms.com

2008 Dodge Avenger SXTBlue, 75K

$11,950

2008 Chevy Colorado Crew CabOnly 40K

$17,900

2006 GMC SierraCrew Cab Z-71, Charcoal

$18,950

2008 Saturn Aura XEV6, 71k, Blue

$11,950

2009 Dodge Crew Cab98k, Super Clean$19,950

2012 Dodge Journey SXT21K, White

$21,950

2010 Hyundai Santa FeDark Red, 33K

$18,950

2009 Silverado Crew Cab 4X4Red, New Tires

$22,950

2009 Pontiac Vibe70K, White

$11,950

2012 Chevy Malibu LT25K, White

$18,950

2012 Nissan Altima 2.5SBlue, 28k

$19,950

2012 Traverse LTZWhite, 17K

$33,950

2008 Chevy Malibu LT LTRHeated Seats, Moonroof, 34K

$14,950

2007 Ford F150 Lariat 4x470K

$22,950

2011 Chevy Impala LTWhite, 33K, Remote Start

$15,950

3 toChoosefrom

Nights & Weekends662-424-1271

2009 Dodge Caravan SXTStow-N-Go, White, Power Sliding Doors.

$11,950

2008 Saturn Vue XRSilver, 89 K Mi.

ONLY$13,950

2007 Chevy SilveradoWhite, Regular Cab, LWB, 103K

$10,900

2010 Chevy Impala LT54K, Silver

$13,950

2007 Dodge NitroLeather, Moonroof, Black

$12,900

$32,950

2011 Chevy Silverado Crew Cab LTLeather, 25K, Black$28,900

$18,950

2007 Chevy LTZ Z714x, Ltr., Heated Seats, New Tires

$21,950

2012 Dodge Ram Quad-Cab22K, White

$22,950

2012 Chevy Impala LT 24k, Red

$17,950

2010 Hyundai Santa FeRed - 34K

$17,950

2010 Buick Enclave CXLGoldmist

$26,950

2009 Chevy Impala LTBlack, 96K

$11,950

2012 Chevy Silverado Z714x4, Extended Cab

2 to Choose From, Blue or Red

$28,950

2012 Dodge JourneyGray, 30k

$19,950

LeGaLS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 16thday of September, 2006, ScottRay Voyles and Barbara K.McPeters Voyles, executed aDeed of Trust to J. Gary Mas-sey, Trustee for the use andbenefit of Mortgage Electron-ic Registration Systems, Inc.,which Deed of Trust is on fileand of record in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi, inDeed of Trust records as In-strument No. 200606156thereof; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrus t was a s s i gned toCitiMortgage, Inc., by assign-ment on file and of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201103529 thereof; and

WHEREAS, the legal hold-er of the said Deed of Trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201103530 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 14th day ofMarch, 2013, the followingdescribed land and propertybeing the same land and prop-erty described in said Deed ofTrust, situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Lot 17, Candler Park Addi-tion, City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, accord-ing to the Plat thereof recor-ded in the Office of the Chan-cery Clerk of said County,the dimensions of said lot be-ing, the West line, alongMaple Road, 125 feet, theSouth line, 153.4 feet, theEast line 125.2 feet and theNorth line 160 feet.

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

WITNESS my signature,on this the 12th day of Febru-ary, 2013.

BRADLEY P. JONESSUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY: ADAMS &EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #12-03192P U B L I S H : 0 2 / 2 1 / 2 0 1 3 ,02 /28 /2013 , 03 /07 /201314116

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THEESTATE OFJOE MICHAEL FRANKS,DECEASED

NO. 2013-0096-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby given thatLetters Testamentary wereon the 13th day of February,2013, issued to the under-signed by the Chancery Courtof Alcorn County, Mississippi,on the Estate of Joe MichaelFranks, Deceased, and all per-sons having claims against thesaid estate are hereby noti-fied to present the same tothe Clerk of said Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law within ninety(90) days from February 21st,2013, the date of the firstpublication or they will beforever barred.

THIS the 13th day of Febru-ary, 2013.

SHARON P. FRANKS,Executrix of theEstate of Joe Michael Franks,Deceased

3t 2/21, 2/28, 3/7/1314123

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pursuant to resolution ofthe Alcorn County Board ofSupervisors adopted on Feb-ruary 19, 2013, at a regularmeeting thereof , AlcornCounty, Mississippi, doeshereby give notice of its in-tention to borrow the sum of$500,000.00 to be evidencedby a negotiable note of Al-corn County, Mississippi, witha final maturing date of twoyears from execution date. Allentities desiring to submit abid for purchase of said nego-tiable note shall submit awritten, sealed bid therefor atthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, in the ChanceryBui ld ing thereof on thecorner o f F i l lmore andWaldron Streets in the Cityof Corinth, Alcorn County,Mississippi, by 9:00 A.M. onthe 4th day of March 2013.

Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, intends to accept thelowest rate of interest or thebid that represents the low-est net cost to AlcornCounty, Mississippi, but Al-corn County, Mississippi, re-serves the right to reject anyand all bids.

The rate of interest to bequoted by interested biddersshall not exceed that author-ized in Section 75-17-101,Mississippi Code of 1972. Saidpromissory note shall maturewith one-half of the principaland all accrued interest dueand payable one year fromdate of executin and the bal-ance (principal and interest)shall be due and payable twoyears after the date of execu-tion. The County shall re-serve the right to prepay inwhole or in part any any timewithout penalty.

This 19th day of February,2013.

ALCORN COUNTYBOARD OF SUPERVISORS

BY: Lowell Hinton,President

ATTEST:

Bobby Marolt,Chancery Clerk

1t 2/21/1314124

Handyman

HANDYMAN'S H o m ecare, anything. 662-643-6892.

HauLinG

BIG D 'S Hauling, LLC.Owner, Dale Brock. 648CR 600, Walnut, MS38683. If you need ithauled, give us a call! 1-901-734-7660.

Home improvemenT & repair

BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-tion, floor leveling,bricks cracking, rottenwood, basements,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. Free est.7 3 1 - 2 3 9 - 8 9 4 5 o r662-284-6146.

ServiceS

COMM. REFRIGERATIONREPAIR. Qualified Tech-nician, 662-212-4735

SToraGe, indoor/ouTdoorAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

proFeSSionaL Service direcTory

LeGaLS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

WALTER L. FRYAND WIFE,BETTY FRY,PLAINTIFFS

V.

HEIRS OF MABEL FRYWHITMORE, DECEASED,AND ANY UNKNOWNHEIRS OF C. L. FRYAND WIFE,HATTIE FRY,DECEASED,DEFENDANTS

CAUSE NO. 2013-0087-02-L

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

To : Barbara Whi tmoreRooks, a nonresident of thisstate or not to be foundtherein after deligent searchand inquiry.

Renita Whitmore Plummer, anonresident of this state ornot to be found therein afterdiligent search and inquiry.

Any unknown heirs of DwightWhitmore, deceased, whoseaddresses and whereaboutsare unknown after diligentsearch and inquiry.

Any unknown heirs of MabelFry Whitmore, deceased andany unknown heirs of C. L.Fry and wife, Hattie Fry, de-ceased, whose addresses andwhereabouts are unknownafter diligent search and in-quiry.

You have been made aDefendant in the Complaintfiled in this Court by WalterL. Fry and wife, Betty Fry,seeking to quiet and confirmtitle of property.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against theComplaint filed in this actionat 9:30 O'Clock A.M. on the9th day of April, 2013, in thecourtroom of the AlcornCounty Chancery Building inCorinth, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will beentered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the Complaint.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ings, but may do so if you de-sire.

Issued under my hand andofficial seal of said Court, this11 day of February, 2013.

Bobby Marolt,Alcorn County

Chancery ClerkBy: Karen Burns, D.C.

3t 2/14, 2/21, 2/28/1314110

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 16thday of September, 2006, ScottRay Voyles and Barbara K.McPeters Voyles, executed aDeed of Trust to J. Gary Mas-sey, Trustee for the use andbenefit of Mortgage Electron-ic Registration Systems, Inc.,which Deed of Trust is on fileand of record in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi, inDeed of Trust records as In-strument No. 200606156thereof; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrus t was a s s i gned toCitiMortgage, Inc., by assign-ment on file and of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201103529 thereof; and

WHEREAS, the legal hold-er of the said Deed of Trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201103530 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 14th day ofMarch, 2013, the followingdescribed land and propertybeing the same land and prop-erty described in said Deed ofTrust, situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Lot 17, Candler Park Addi-tion, City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, accord-ing to the Plat thereof recor-ded in the Office of the Chan-cery Clerk of said County,the dimensions of said lot be-ing, the West line, alongMaple Road, 125 feet, theSouth line, 153.4 feet, theEast line 125.2 feet and theNorth line 160 feet.

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

WITNESS my signature,on this the 12th day of Febru-ary, 2013.

BRADLEY P. JONESSUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY: ADAMS &EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #12-03192P U B L I S H : 0 2 / 2 1 / 2 0 1 3 ,02 /28 /2013 , 03 /07 /201314116

LeGaLS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on November18, 2008, William Robert Jen-kins executed and delivered acertain Deed of Trust untoJohn H. Shows, Trustee forthe benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registration Systems,Inc acting solely as nomineefor Commerce National Bankits successors assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inI n s t r u m e n tNo.1065802805200807062;and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201300071 and WHEREAS,the holder of said Deed ofTrust substituted and/or ap-pointed Nationwide TrusteeServices, Inc., as Trustee insaid Deed of Trust by instru-ment recorded in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryC l e r k ; I n s t r u m e n tN o . 2 0 1 3 0 0 5 0 0 a n d

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on March 7,2013, the Substitute or Ap-pointed Trustee shall, duringlegal hours (between thehours of 11 o’ clock a.m. and4 o’ clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Lying and being Block 536 ofWalker's Addition to the Cityof Corinth, County of Alcorn,State of Mississippi, more par-ticularly described as follows:

Beginning at the Southwestcorner of Block 536 of Walk-ers Addition to the City ofCorinth, Mississippi as plat ofwhich is on file in Plat BookNo. 1 on Page 217 of theChancery records of AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi , runthence North along the Eastright of way line of Tishom-ingo Street 107.50 to a point;run thence East 100 feet to apoint; run thence South107.50 feet to the point onthe North right of way line ofThird Street (unopened); runthence West along the Northright of way line of ThirdStreet 100.00 feet to thepoint of beginning, all lyingand being in Block 536 ofWalker's Addition to the Cityof Corinth, Mississippi. Prop-erty is being sold “as-is where-is”.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the Fifth day of February,2013

Shavonne Clark,Assistant Vice PresidentNationwide Trustee Services,Inc.400 Northridge RoadSuite 700- MC- 7Sandy Springs Georgia, 30350 404-417-4040File No.: 1818712P U B L I S H : 2 / 1 4 / 2 0 1 3 ,2 / 2 1 / 2 0 1 3 , 2 / 2 8 / 2 0 1 314094

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OFMARILYN GALEVANDERFORD,DECEASED

CAUSE NO.: 2013-0093-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is given that Let-ters Testamentary have beenon this day granted the un-ders igned, CHARLOTTEVANDERFORD KING, onthe Estate of MARILYN GALEVANDERFORD, deceased, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, andall persons having claimsagainst said estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theclerk of said court withinninety (90) days after the dateof the first publication of thisnotice, or the same shall beforever barred. The first dayof publication of this notice isFebruary 14, 2013.

WITNESS MY SIGNA-TURE on this 11th day ofFebruary, 2013.

/s/Charlotte VanderfordKing

CharlotteVanderford King,

EXECUTRIX

3t 2/14, 2/21, 2/28/1314107

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on October12, 2006, Amy Merryman, amarried woman and JeffreyMerryman executed a certaindeed of trust to Jay Morris,Trustee for the benefit of JP-Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.which deed of trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inInstrument No. 200606762;and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, National Associ-ation a/k/a JPMorgan ChaseBank, N.A. has heretoforesubstituted J. Gary Massey asTrustee by instrument datedJune 6, 2012 and recorded inthe a foresa id ChanceryClerk's Office in InstrumentNo. 201202821; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,JPMorgan Chase Bank, Na-tional Association a/k/a JP-Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., thelegal holder of said indebted-ness, having requested the un-dersigned Substituted Trust-ee to execute the trust andsell said land and property inaccordance with the terms ofsaid deed of trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney's fees, trustee'sfees and expense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, J.Gary Massey, SubstitutedTrustee in said deed of trust,will on March 7, 2013 offerfor sale at public outcry andsell within legal hours (beingbetween the hours of 11:00a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at theSouth Main Door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, located at Cor-inth , Miss iss ippi , to thehighest and best bidder forcash the following describedproperty situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Situated in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 13, Town-ship 2 South, Range 6 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the Southw-est Corner of the SouthwestQuarter of Section 13, Town-ship 2 South, Range 6 East;thence run East 39.14 feet toa 6 inch post and old fencerunning East along the Sec-tion Line, and on the Eastr i gh t -o f -way o f A l cornCounty Road 512; thence runalong said right-of-way, North00 degrees 00 minutes 44seconds East 530.00 feet to a3/8 inch steel pin set at thePoint of Beginning; thencecontinue along said right-of-way, North 00 degrees 06minutes 19 seconds West150.00 feet to a 3/8 inch steelpin; thence run East 290.40feet to a 3/8 inch steel pin;thence run South 150.00 feetto a 3/8 inch steel pin; thencerun West 290.12 feet to thepoint of beginning, containing1.00 acres, more or less.

I WILL CONVEY onlysuch title as vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNA-TURE on this 8th day of Feb-ruary, 2013.

J. Gary MasseySUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, L.L.C.1910 Lakeland Drive Suite BJackson, MS 39216(601)981-9299

240 County Road 604Corinth, MS 3883412-004549 JC

Publication Dates:February 14, 21, and 28, 201314108

LeGaLS0955

NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, the UnitedStates of America, acting byand through the United StatesDepartment of Agriculture, isthe owner and holder of thefollowing real estate deed(s)of trust, securing an indebted-ness therein mentioned andcovering certain real estatehereinafter described locatedin Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, said deed(s) of trust be-ing duly recorded in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk inand for said County and State:

GRANTORS:Joyce M. Youngblood,A single person

DATE EXECUTED:March 26, 2001

TRUST DEED BOOK: 553

PAGE: 538

WHEREAS, default hasoccurred in the payment of theindebtedness secured by saiddeed(s) of trust, and theUnited States of America, asBeneficiary, has authorizedand instructed me as Substi-tute Trustee to foreclose saiddeed(s) of trust by advertise-ment and sale at public auc-tion in accordance with thestatutes made and providedtherefor.

THEREFORE, notice ishereby given that pursuant tothe power of sale contained insaid deed(s) of trust and in ac-cordance with the statutesmade and provided therefor,the said deed(s) of trust willbe foreclosed and the prop-erty covered thereby and here-inafter described will be soldat public auction to thehighest bidder for cash at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse in the cityof Corinth, Mississippi, in theaforesaid County and will sellwithin legal hours (beingbetween the hours of 11:00AM and 4:00 PM) on March4, 2013, to satisfy the in-debtedness now due under andsecured by said deed(s) oftrust.

I will convey only suchtitle as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

The premises to be sold aredescribed as:

Commencing at the NWcorner of the NE quarter ofthe SE quarter of Section 23,Township 2 South, Range 8East, Alcorn County, Missis-s ippi; thence run East1022.23 feet to the Westerlyright-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #255; thencerun S 53° 41' 34" E alongsaid R.O.W., 108.00 feet tothe POINT OF BEGIN-NING for this description,thence run S 53° 41' 34"along said R.O.W., 107.66feet to the intersection withthe Northerly right-of-wayof a proposed roadway;thence, leaving said countyroad R.O.W., run Southerlyalong said proposed R.O.Wthe following calls:S 42° 36' 40" W 100.00 feet,S 47° 23' 20" E 19.22 feet,S 42° 36' 40" W 184.63 feet;thence leaving said pro-posed R.O.W., run N 47° 23'20" W 200.17 feet; thencerun N 57° 46' 38" E 282.65feet to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 1.00acre.

February 7, 2013Date

/s/ Clifton F. RussellClifton F. RussellSubstitute Trustee

Duly authorized to act in the premises by instrument

dated April 2, 2012,and recorded by

Instrument Number201202163

of the records of theaforesaid County and State

4t 2/7, 2/14, 2/21, 2/28/1314092

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on November18, 2008, William Robert Jen-kins executed and delivered acertain Deed of Trust untoJohn H. Shows, Trustee forthe benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registration Systems,Inc acting solely as nomineefor Commerce National Bankits successors assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inI n s t r u m e n tNo.1065802805200807062;and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201300071 and WHEREAS,the holder of said Deed ofTrust substituted and/or ap-pointed Nationwide TrusteeServices, Inc., as Trustee insaid Deed of Trust by instru-ment recorded in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryC l e r k ; I n s t r u m e n tN o . 2 0 1 3 0 0 5 0 0 a n d

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on March 7,2013, the Substitute or Ap-pointed Trustee shall, duringlegal hours (between thehours of 11 o’ clock a.m. and4 o’ clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Lying and being Block 536 ofWalker's Addition to the Cityof Corinth, County of Alcorn,State of Mississippi, more par-ticularly described as follows:

Beginning at the Southwestcorner of Block 536 of Walk-ers Addition to the City ofCorinth, Mississippi as plat ofwhich is on file in Plat BookNo. 1 on Page 217 of theChancery records of AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi , runthence North along the Eastright of way line of Tishom-ingo Street 107.50 to a point;run thence East 100 feet to apoint; run thence South107.50 feet to the point onthe North right of way line ofThird Street (unopened); runthence West along the Northright of way line of ThirdStreet 100.00 feet to thepoint of beginning, all lyingand being in Block 536 ofWalker's Addition to the Cityof Corinth, Mississippi. Prop-erty is being sold “as-is where-is”.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the Fifth day of February,2013

Shavonne Clark,Assistant Vice PresidentNationwide Trustee Services,Inc.400 Northridge RoadSuite 700- MC- 7Sandy Springs Georgia, 30350 404-417-4040File No.: 1818712P U B L I S H : 2 / 1 4 / 2 0 1 3 ,2 / 2 1 / 2 0 1 3 , 2 / 2 8 / 2 0 1 314094

LeGaLS0955

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE’S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on Septem-ber 30, 2004, Cynthia M.Shaw, executed a promissorynote payable to the order ofAmSouth Bank; and

WHEREAS, the aforesaidpromissory note was securedby a Deed of Trust datedSeptember 30, 2004, ex-ecuted by Cynthia Shaw, Anunmarried woman, to Am-South Bank, the same havingbeen recorded on October 1,2004, in Trust Deed Book665 at Page 688 in the landrecords of Alcorn County,Mississippi, William E. Hor-ton, Trustee; and

WHEREAS, Thad J .Mueller was substituted astrustee in the place and steadof William E. Horton by Sub-stitution of Trustee datedJanuary 10, 2013, executed byRegions Bank, as Successor-By-Merger with AmSouthBank, the beneficiary undersaid Deed of Trust, the samehaving been recorded onJanuary 16, 2013, as Instru-ment Number 201300229 inthe land records of AlcornCounty, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, default havingoccurred under the termsand conditions of the saidpromissory note and deed oftrust and the holder havingdeclared the entire balancedue and payable; and

WHEREAS, Regions Bank,as Successor-By-Merger withAmSouth Bank, having direc-ted the undersigned Substi-tuted Trustee to sell theproperty under the terms andby authority conferred in thesaid deed of trust and by thelaws of the State of Missis-sippi; now therefore,

I, Thad J. Mueller, Substi-tuted Trustee, shall on the1st day of March, 2013,dur i ng the l e ga l hoursbetween the hours of 11:00a.m. and 4:00 p.m., offer forsale and will sell at public out-cry to the highest and bestbidder for cash at the FrontDoor of the Alcorn CountyCourthouse located in Cor-inth, Mississippi, the followingdescribed property locatedand s i tua ted in A lcornCounty, Mississippi, to wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Lot Twelve (12) of GracelandAcres Subdivision in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, accord-ing to the map or plat of saidsubdivision which is recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of said County in theland records thereof in PlatBook 3 at page 36.

As the undersigned Substi-tuted Trustee, I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme under said deed of trust.

This the 24th day of Janu-ary, 2013.

Thad J. MuellerSubstituted Trustee

4t 2/7, 2/14, 2/21, 2/28/1314071

NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, the UnitedStates of America, acting byand through the United StatesDepartment of Agriculture, isthe owner and holder of thefollowing real estate deed(s)of trust, securing an indebted-ness therein mentioned andcovering certain real estatehereinafter described locatedin Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, said deed(s) of trust be-ing duly recorded in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk inand for said County and State:

GRANTORS:Joyce M. Youngblood,A single person

DATE EXECUTED:March 26, 2001

TRUST DEED BOOK: 553

PAGE: 538

WHEREAS, default hasoccurred in the payment of theindebtedness secured by saiddeed(s) of trust, and theUnited States of America, asBeneficiary, has authorizedand instructed me as Substi-tute Trustee to foreclose saiddeed(s) of trust by advertise-ment and sale at public auc-tion in accordance with thestatutes made and providedtherefor.

THEREFORE, notice ishereby given that pursuant tothe power of sale contained insaid deed(s) of trust and in ac-cordance with the statutesmade and provided therefor,the said deed(s) of trust willbe foreclosed and the prop-erty covered thereby and here-inafter described will be soldat public auction to thehighest bidder for cash at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse in the cityof Corinth, Mississippi, in theaforesaid County and will sellwithin legal hours (beingbetween the hours of 11:00AM and 4:00 PM) on March4, 2013, to satisfy the in-debtedness now due under andsecured by said deed(s) oftrust.

I will convey only suchtitle as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

The premises to be sold aredescribed as:

Commencing at the NWcorner of the NE quarter ofthe SE quarter of Section 23,Township 2 South, Range 8East, Alcorn County, Missis-s ippi; thence run East1022.23 feet to the Westerlyright-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #255; thencerun S 53° 41' 34" E alongsaid R.O.W., 108.00 feet tothe POINT OF BEGIN-NING for this description,thence run S 53° 41' 34"along said R.O.W., 107.66feet to the intersection withthe Northerly right-of-wayof a proposed roadway;thence, leaving said countyroad R.O.W., run Southerlyalong said proposed R.O.Wthe following calls:S 42° 36' 40" W 100.00 feet,S 47° 23' 20" E 19.22 feet,S 42° 36' 40" W 184.63 feet;thence leaving said pro-posed R.O.W., run N 47° 23'20" W 200.17 feet; thencerun N 57° 46' 38" E 282.65feet to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 1.00acre.

February 7, 2013Date

/s/ Clifton F. RussellClifton F. RussellSubstitute Trustee

Duly authorized to act in the premises by instrument

dated April 2, 2012,and recorded by

Instrument Number201202163

of the records of theaforesaid County and State

4t 2/7, 2/14, 2/21, 2/28/1314092

LoTS & acreaGe0734HENRY CEMETERY lots, 7avai lable, $600 each(minimum of 4) in oldersection M-1. 225-924-4772.

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LeGaLS0955 NOTICE OF

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE’S SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on Septem-ber 30, 2004, Cynthia M.Shaw, executed a promissorynote payable to the order ofAmSouth Bank; and

WHEREAS, the aforesaidpromissory note was securedby a Deed of Trust datedSeptember 30, 2004, ex-ecuted by Cynthia Shaw, Anunmarried woman, to Am-South Bank, the same havingbeen recorded on October 1,2004, in Trust Deed Book665 at Page 688 in the landrecords of Alcorn County,Mississippi, William E. Hor-ton, Trustee; and

WHEREAS, Thad J .Mueller was substituted astrustee in the place and steadof William E. Horton by Sub-stitution of Trustee datedJanuary 10, 2013, executed byRegions Bank, as Successor-By-Merger with AmSouthBank, the beneficiary undersaid Deed of Trust, the samehaving been recorded onJanuary 16, 2013, as Instru-ment Number 201300229 inthe land records of AlcornCounty, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, default havingoccurred under the termsand conditions of the saidpromissory note and deed oftrust and the holder havingdeclared the entire balancedue and payable; and

WHEREAS, Regions Bank,as Successor-By-Merger withAmSouth Bank, having direc-ted the undersigned Substi-tuted Trustee to sell theproperty under the terms andby authority conferred in thesaid deed of trust and by thelaws of the State of Missis-sippi; now therefore,

I, Thad J. Mueller, Substi-tuted Trustee, shall on the1st day of March, 2013,dur i ng the l e ga l hoursbetween the hours of 11:00a.m. and 4:00 p.m., offer forsale and will sell at public out-cry to the highest and bestbidder for cash at the FrontDoor of the Alcorn CountyCourthouse located in Cor-inth, Mississippi, the followingdescribed property locatedand s i tua ted in A lcornCounty, Mississippi, to wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Lot Twelve (12) of GracelandAcres Subdivision in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, accord-ing to the map or plat of saidsubdivision which is recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of said County in theland records thereof in PlatBook 3 at page 36.

As the undersigned Substi-tuted Trustee, I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme under said deed of trust.

This the 24th day of Janu-ary, 2013.

Thad J. MuellerSubstituted Trustee

4t 2/7, 2/14, 2/21, 2/28/1314071

FurniSHed aparTmenTS0615

1 BR, fully furn. apt.,$450 w/out util., $650w/util. 287-4848.

WanTed To renT0645

WANTED TO rent a hun-dred or more acres ofpasture land for cattle.Will pay good price forgood pasture. call: 731-607-9667.

moBiLe HomeS For renT0675

TAKING APPLICATIONS: 2& 4 BRs. Oakdale MobileHome Pk. 286-9185.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HomeS For SaLe0710

8 CR 522, Corinth -Fantastic home forgrowing family. 2 liv-ing areas, breakfastnook, formal diningroom, office or 5thbedroom, basementwith gaming area, largelaundry, situated on 2acres with 5 additionalacres that can be pur-chased as well! Largedeck, shop, pond andlots of room to roam!Priced reduced! By ap-pointment, 662-284-5379.

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

miSc. iTemS For SaLe0563

B R A N D N E W Y o u t hRawlings baseball glove,$15. Call 662-603-1382.

COCA COLA tin tray, 50years of bottl ing inVicksburg, Ms. $10. Call662-603-1382

COMMERCIAL LINE Win-dex 32 oz. bottle, $3each or all 4 for $10. Call662-603-1382.

COMMERICAL LINE Win-dex by the gallon, $8each or all 6 for $40. Call662-603-1382.

DALE SR . Empty Sundrop bottle, $5. Call 662-603-1382.

DIFFERENT FIGURINES,all for $25 obo. 286-3792.

DOG HOUSE, large, insu-lated, $125. 662-415-8180.

FIESTA COFFEE Cups,colors are Red, Choc.,shamrock, peacock andplum. $2.50 each. Call662-603-1382.

FIESTA WARE Yellow (re-tired color), bread plat-ter w/a turkey in thecenter. $15. Call 662-603-1382.

FIESTA WHITE (retiredcolor) platter, $15. Call662-603-1382.

HISTORICAL CORINTHplates & small misc.items. $45 - $8. 286-8073.

P A N T S , S W E A T E R S ,blouses, new coats, size8-XL, $50¢ - $3.00. 286-8073.

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

unFurniSHed aparTmenTS0610

2 BR upstairs apt., lg. LR,Hwy 72 E. No pets. $375mo. 287-3333.

MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR,stove, refrig., water.$365. 286-2256.

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375+util, 286-2255.