SOLD - Sole Solution

Transcription

SOLD - Sole Solution
McNairy County
Silicon Solar Project
hosts job fair.
Prentiss County
Booneville Head Start
registration under way.
Alcorn County
Three Kossuth FFA
members go to state.
Page 3
Page 3
Page 5
Tuesday
April 5,
2016
75 cents
Daily Corinthian
Vol. 120, No. 82
Plenty of sun
Today
Tonight
66
47
0% chance of rain
• Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section
Embezzlement highlights guilty pleas
BY JEBB JOHNSTON
[email protected]
A Corinth woman must repay
more than $62,000 after pleading guilty to an embezzlement
charge.
Tanya Parker, 44, of North
Harper Road, entered the plea
before Judge Paul Funderburk,
who sentenced Parker to 20
years in custody with 15 years
suspended, leaving five years
to serve, and ordered Parker to
pay restitution of $62,200.88
to the Corinth law firm of Wood
& Carlton, according to court
records.
A condition of the suspended
sentence and five years of probation is that Parker be placed
in a restitution center upon release from incarceration until
all monies are paid in full.
The indictment made in April
2015 accused Parker of engaging in embezzlement during a
period between July 2012 and
March 2014.
Parker made the plea last
Wednesday in Tupelo.
Guilty pleas made during the
latest week of Alcorn County
Circuit Court include the following:
■ John Gregory Hopper, 50,
of Highway 15, Tiplersville,
false pretense — Ten years to
serve with a $1,000 fine and
Please see PLEAS | 6
Bridal show debut a success 10-year-old upgrade
plan nears fruition
BY KIMBERLY SHELTON
[email protected]
Parking was scarce at The
Franklin Courtyard as guests
gathered at 2 p.m. on Sunday
for the venue’s first ever Corinth
Bridal and Event Show.
An excellent opportunity for
those wishing to say “I do”,
the New York-style bridal expo
married fun and matrimonial
fashion as models walked the
runway serenaded by the popular band “Shagadoo”.
Donning sparking diamonds
from Corinth Jewelers, approximately 30 models showcased exquisite gowns and
tuxedos from Kay’s Kreations
of Tupelo, t. feazell, Gingers,
Sparkle Formal Wear and Belk
of Corinth.
Tadd Feazell, owner of
t.feazell directed the models.
Hair and makeup was done by
Rossi’s Relaxstation Day Spa.
The reigning Miss Corinth
2016, Molly Warren, Mrs. Mississippi America 2016 Ashley
Buse, Mrs. Tennessee America
2016 Dawn Williamson and
Corinth’s own Ava McClamroch
who appeared on “Toddlers
& Tiaras” were in attendance.
Buse served as the emcee for
the fashion show.
The dramatic stage was built
BY JEBB JOHNSTON
[email protected]
The long-planned Five
Points intersection upgrade
continues to inch toward the
bid process.
First proposed 10 years
ago, the Five Points revamp
is a project that many people
have been asking about, said
Supervisor Lowell Hinton and
BY ZACK STEEN
The Crossroads Chili CookOff tasted great to one North
Mississippi native.
Twenty-five teams traveled
from across the country to participate in the ninth annual
event, but it was Henry Stephens
from Hernando who took home
the top prize in the Mississippi
state chili cook-off held at the
Corinth Depot on Saturday.
Not only was he victorious
in the publicly judged People’s
Choice category, but Stephens’
traditional red chili recipe
also won over the professional
judges. His “The Mississippi
Gang” team placed first in the
Please see UPGRADE | 5
Pre-ks added at all
three county schools
Photo by Kimberly Shelton
Manager Darcie McCoy, Bradley McCoy and Owner Margaret
Bradley of the Franklin Courtyard enjoy the festivities.
and illuminated by Lighting
and Staging Technician Kerry
Patton of The Company and
Media Group in Birmingham,
Ala.
Mrs. Mississippi United
States 2016 Molly Lewellyn
helped behind the scenes.
Sponsored by The Daily Corinthian, Busy Lad Rent-All,
Sparkle Formal Wear, t. feazell,
Margaret Bradley Studio, One
Main Financial and Corinth
Jewelers, the bridal show ofPlease see SHOW | 5
BY ZACK STEEN
[email protected]
Pre-kindergarten and kindergarten registration will
kickoff next week, and will
include the addition of new
classrooms at three Alcorn
County schools.
Set for Thursday, at the elementary schools at Alcorn
Central, Biggersville and Kossuth, kindergarten registration will take place from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. and pre-kindergarten will register from 4 to 6
p.m.
“With the additional classrooms being added, it is very
Please see PRE-K | 6
People of the Crossroads
Mississippian secures
top award at cook-off
[email protected]
Johnny Crotts, representing
Cook Coggin Engineers.
“The utility relocation will
be bid simultaneously with
construction and is under final review now,” said Crotts.
“It should be ready to advertise in the near future.”
The intersection east of
Carolyn Jones, Booneville
Staff photo by Angela Storey
Booneville Police Department
Dispatch Supervisor Carolyn
Jones never knows what to
expect when the telephone
rings. After having worked as
a BPD dispatcher for 22 years,
she has taken a multitude of
calls. “You never know what
type of call or situation it’s going to be. But you always try
to help any way you can,” she
said. Helping people is one of
the aspects of her work she
enjoys most. In addition to her
dispatch duties, Jones serves
as 4th district election commissioner in Prentiss County.
Away from work she likes to
travel. She looks forward to
beginning a new chapter in her
life when she retires June 30
and hopes to work part-time in
dispatch at BPD later on.
ICS Chili category where he
pocked $1,000 in cash. The win
also advances Stephens to the
International Chili Society’s
World Cook-Off Championship
later this year.
Stephens wasn’t the only big
winner.
The
cook-off’s
People’s
Choice charity, Havis’ Kids,
cashed in as well -- raising more
than $1,200.
“It was a wonderful event.
So many people came out and
supported us and tasted some
great chili as well,” said Havis
Hurley, director of the CorinthAlcorn County Special Needs
Please see COOK-OFF | 5
25 years ago
10 years ago
The 23rd anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. is marked with a community march and
services. Taurus Club President Lila Wade said the event
is an effort to show appreciation and remember his legacy.
The Mississippi Department of Health approves a certificate of need
for a $4 million expansion of Magnolia Regional Health Center including an expansion of the emergency department, a new patient tower,
12 new ICU beds, a new two-story physician office building and more.
Doug
Ann Michael Rick
Jumper Hardin McCreary Jones
Neil
Paul
Marea John
Wilson Hayes
Alexis
Rudd
Roger Audrey Carl
Clark McNair Jones
2782 S Harper Rd
www.jumperrealty.com
2A • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
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Tuesday, April 5, 2016
Today in
History
Today is Tuesday, April
5, the 96th day of 2016.
There are 270 days left
in the year.
Today’s Highlights
in History:
On April 5, 1976, during an outdoor demonstration against courtordered school busing in
Boston, a white teenager
swung a pole holding an
American flag at a black
attorney in a scene captured in a Pulitzer Prizewinning photograph now
known as “The Soiling of
Old Glory” that was taken by Stanley Forman of
the Boston Herald American. Reclusive billionaire
Howard Hughes died in
Houston at age 70.
On this date:
In 1614, Indian Chief
Powhatan’s daughter
Pocahontas married
Englishman John Rolfe
in the Virginia Colony.
England’s King James
I convened the second
Parliament of his rule;
the “Addled Parliament,”
as it came to be known
for accomplishing nothing, lasted two months.
In 1621, the Mayflower
sailed from Plymouth
Colony in present-day
Massachusetts on a
monthlong return trip to
England.
In 1764, Britain’s
Parliament passed The
American Revenue Act of
1764, also known as The
Sugar Act.
In 1895, Oscar Wilde
lost his criminal libel
case against the Marquess of Queensberry,
who’d accused the writer
of homosexual practices.
In 1915, Jess Willard
knocked out Jack Johnson in the 26th round
of their fight in Havana,
Cuba, to claim boxing’s
world heavyweight title.
In 1916, Academy
Award-winning actor
Gregory Peck was born in
La Jolla, California.
In 1925, a tornado estimated at F-3 intensity
struck northern MiamiDade County, Florida,
killing five people.
In 1933, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
signed an executive order
creating the Civilian Conservation Corps and an
anti-hoarding order that
effectively prohibited private ownership of gold.
In 1955, British
Prime Minister Winston
Churchill resigned his office for health reasons.
Democrat Richard J.
Daley was first elected
mayor of Chicago, defeating Republican Robert E.
Merriam.
In 1964, Army General
Douglas MacArthur died
in Washington, D.C., at
age 84.
In 1986, two American
servicemen and a Turkish woman were killed in
the bombing of a West
Berlin discotheque, an
incident which prompted
a U.S. air raid on Libya
more than a week later.
In 1991, former Sen.
John Tower, R-Texas, his
daughter Marian and 21
other people were killed
in a commuter plane
crash near Brunswick,
Georgia.
Local/Region
Daily Corinthian • 3
Across the Region
Booneville
Registration under
way for Head Start
BOONEVILLE — Registration for 2016-17 is
taking place at Booneville Head Start and Early
Head Start.
Booneville Head Start
serves 3 and 4 years
olds and children with
special needs. Early
Head Start serves children 8 weeks to 36
months and children
with special needs.
Registration deadline
is April 11.
Please bring the following items when registering:
Social security numbers on all family members; proof of income
(W2, check stub); birth
certificate for applying
child; proof of insurance;
121 shot record for applying child.
Children receive two
meals and a snack daily.
Children also receive
speech and health
screenings at no charge.
(For more information
call 662-728-7913.)
Selmer
Silicon Solar Project
job fair opens today
SELMER, Tenn. — A
job fair will be held at the
Latta Building today (9
a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m., 3
p.m.), and Wednesday
(10 a.m., 1 p.m., 4 p.m.)
in downtown Selmer.
Please use the 4th
Street Church of Christ
or First Baptist Church
parking lots. Job seekers
are asked to not block
the parking area around
surrounding businesses.
Silicon Ranch Selmer
Solar Project will include
a 40-hour work week
with labor to include:
system layout, steel pile
driving, motor installation, module structure
installation and module
installation. Drug test
will be given. Tools and
safety PPE will be provided.
Oxford
Music department
adds instruments
OXFORD — The University of Mississippi
Department of Music
has acquired several
instruments from the
African nation of Ghana
to further educate students about world music
cultures and to use for
public performances.
The first of those
concerts with the newly
acquired instruments is
set for 7:30 p.m. April
12 in Nutt Auditorium.
The Spring Concert will
be performed by the Ole
Miss African Drum and
Dance Ensemble, with
additional performers
selected from world music classes. The performance is free and open
to the public.
“The drums are all
carved and decorated
with Ghanian cultural
symbols that have philosophical, religious or
cultural meanings,” said
George Dor, professor
of music and OMADDE
founder. “I am very
excited, and all friends
who have seen the new
drums are excited as
well.”
The department added
10 medium-size drums,
10 small drums and
four small stick-played
drums, 10 rattles and
10 double bells to its
existing collection of
drums from Ghana.
Most of the instruments
can be played by hand
or by stick, depending
on the particular dance
students are learning to
perform.
“The new instruments
will supplement the
previously acquired instruments from Ghana,”
said Robert Riggs,
UM music chair. “This
acquisition is going to
increase Dr. Dor’s ability
to put on wonderful performances featuring African music and dance.”
The music department first acquired instruments from Ghana
in 2003. This led to
the formation of the
OMADDE, which includes faculty, students,
alumni and members of
the community. In 2009,
the department acquired
additional instruments.
However, Dor wanted
to maximize learning
within a limited time
span during his semester-long African Music
Ensemble course, which
led to the most recent
acquisition.
African drumming and
dance became an of-
ficial way for students
to earn credit as part
of the African Music
Ensemble course, but
Dor said many students
continue to use what
they learn and become
part of the OMADDE,
without the aim of earning credits.
“The fact remains that
offering students the
opportunity to learn to
play these drums and its
accompanying dances
in an ensemble is the
foremost reason for the
acquisition,” he said.
Starkville
President of MSU
welcomes citizens STARKVILLE —102
individuals representing
43 different countries
around the globe were
officially sworn in as
United States citizens
on April 1 at Mississippi
State University.
The ballroom in the
Mill at MSU’s Starkville
campus was transformed into a federal courtroom, where
friends and family members witnessed their
loved ones taking the
Oath of Allegiance to become U.S. citizens.
Serving as keynote
speaker for the event
was MSU President
Mark E. Keenum, who
extended his personal
welcome and congratulations, as well as that
on behalf of the state’s
leading university.
“We’re delighted to
have here at Mississippi State those of
you who have made a
very monumental step
in becoming citizens
of the United States of
America,” Keenum said.
“We welcome you not
only to our campus, but
we welcome you as fellow citizens of our great
nation.”
“Your country needs
your talents, your
intelligence and the
strengths that you will
bring to our society,”
Keenum continued. “For
many of you, choosing
to become American
citizens was a decision
that took courage, demanding sacrifices and
hard work. No matter
what difficulties you
had to overcome, it was
a decision that you will
always look back on with
great pride and satisfaction.”
Keenum challenged
the new citizens to work
hard and contribute to
the economic vitality
and help raise the level
of educational attainment in the nation.
“I encourage each of
you to be active in your
communities and in
the electoral process,
exercising your rights
and privileges of citizenship in a representative
democracy. I urge to
embrace the values embodied in our Constitution that make America
great.”
The university’s chief
executive also inspired
the new citizens to exercise their First Amendment right “to speak in
public, to assemble and
worship freely and as we
see fit without any fear
of persecution or retribution.”
“I hope that each
of you will join in this
ongoing national conversation about what our
country, your country,
is and ought to be, and
that when you do, you
will be tolerant of the
differing viewpoints,”
Keenum emphasized.
“Congratulations on the
citizenship that each of
you have earned, and
best wishes on your life
and your future going
forward.”
The special event
was presided over by
the Honorable Sharion
Aycock, an MSU alumna
serving as Chief U.S.
District Judge of the
U.S. District Court in the
Northern District of Mississippi.
Additionally, MSU
alumna and District
Judge Debra M. Brown,
District Judge Glen H.
Davidson and Magistrate Judge Jane M. Virden, along with Starkville
Mayor Parker Wiseman,
were in attendance.
At the ceremony, the
National Anthem was
performed by MSU student Christon Bertrand
and the Pledge of Allegiance was led by MSU
Student Association
President Roxie Raven.
The MSU State Singers
performed “God Bless
America.”
The Daughters of the
American Revolution presented the new citizens
with American flags and
copies of the U.S. Constitution, among other
mementos.
Naturalization is the
process by which U.S.
citizenship is conferred
upon a foreign citizen or
nationals after he or she
fulfills the requirements
established by Congress
in the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA).
The bureau of U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
processes all naturalization applications and
provides the Court with
a list of the candidates
selected to be naturalized in the federal court.
Many people have
no financial plan
for the future.
Do you?
I can help you create a financial plan for life – protection,
saving and retirement. Call me today. Let’s talk about
your plan for life.
Zeb Taylor* FIC
710 Cruise St., Ste. 101
Corinth, MS 38834
662-643-8295
Zeb.Taylor@
mwarep.org
Steven Eaton* FIC
710 Cruise St., Ste. 101
Corinth, MS 38834
662-287-0113
Steven.Eaton@
mwarep.org
Modern Woodmen of America
*Registered representative. Securities offered through MWA Financial Services
Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Modern Woodmen of America.
Ten years ago: Katie
Couric announced she
was leaving NBC’s “Today” show to become
anchor of “The CBS Evening News.”
Five years ago: Texas
A&M won its first national women’s basketball championship with a
76-70 victory over Notre
Dame.
P.O. Box 1800
Corinth, MS 38835
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Tuesday through Sunday by PMG, LLC.
at 1607 South Harper Road, Corinth, Miss.
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Opinion
Reece Terry,
publisher
Mark Boehler,
editor
4A • Tuesday, April 5, 2016
Corinth, Miss.
Gay marriage
objection
vote cuts
at relationships
JACKSON — Mississippi’s
debate over whether to enact
a law protecting people who
have objections to same-sex
marriage connects with national debates over the subject.
Jeff Amy
The same national spotlight
Capitol Dome that highlighted North Carolina and Georgia in recent
weeks swung toward Mississippi after the
Senate passed House Bill 1523 Wednesday.
The debate has proven intensely personal
for some participants, testing longstanding
ties.
Take for example, Rob Hill. He leads the
Mississippi chapter of the Human Rights Coalition, which is trying to improve treatment
for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
Mississippians.
“I take it personally as an LGBT Mississippian,” Hill said after Wednesday night’s Senate vote. “These are people who represent
us in the Senate, who I consider friends and
have respect for. To hear their votes, it hurts
me personally.”
That points to the enduring small-town
nature of Mississippi, where there seem to
be far fewer than six degrees of separation
among the state’s 3 million residents. Hill’s
friendship with Vicksburg Republican Briggs
Hopson — who voted for the bill — far predates his advocacy work.
Hill is a former Methodist minister who
surrendered his ordination credentials when
he took the new job because the United
Methodist Church states that “homosexuality is incompatible from Christian teaching.”
Hopson said the decision to vote “yes” was
extremely difficult.
“Probably the best way for me to put it is
this is one of the hardest, if not the hardest,
votes I’ve taken in my nine years of public
service,” the lawyer said Friday. “I think the
tough thing in a bill like this is you’re trying
to balance the fundamental right to exercise
their religious beliefs freely while not discriminating against the other side.”
Hopson, among other reasons, cited support from many churches as a persuasive factor. But he acknowledges that the measure
is polarizing in the way some others aren’t,
saying both supporters and opponents have
gotten angry feedback in the days since.
“Either way you vote on it, you’re going to
have people who were very upset because
you voted against their fundamental beliefs,”
Hopson said.
Senate President Pro Tem Terry Burton
apparently found himself similarly torn,
when his niece sent tweets to him during the
debate Wednesday to vote against the bill.
She declined to talk about her communication with the Newton Republican. Burton
paired his “yes” vote with a “no” vote from
the absent Sen. Hillman Frazier, D-Jackson.
That means his vote wasn’t actually counted
in the final 32-17 tally.
“Every time I heard an ‘aye,’ it said you’re
not valued, you’re less than,” Hill said. “It
encapsulated what LGBT individuals experience on a daily basis, and it hurt.”
Hopson, though, says that wasn’t his aim
in supporting the bill. He says it’s not much
of a change in the existing law in some ways,
but provides safeguards for churches and
church-related charities. He said he’s confident that public officials won’t be able to
deny services, although the bill creates a
path for individual public employees to opt
out.
“This ensures that a religious organization
is not going to be forced to violate their beliefs,” Hopson said.
Hill said he’s still going to extend the hand
of friendship, even though he believes those
supporting HB 1523 will find themselves on
the wrong side of history.
“Nothing’s going to change if we walk away
from those relationships,” he said.
(Daily Corinthian columnist Jeff Amy is
a writer for the Associated Press based in
Jackson.)
Prayer for today
Lord forbid that I should fear to change for
the better or be so pleased with myself and
the things which surround me that I feel no
need for a higher life. Make me dissatisfied if
I am not trying to grow in truth and to live in
noble deeds. Amen.
A verse to share
“Cast thy burden upon the LORD, and he
shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the
righteous to be moved.”
Psalms 55:22
Celebration on election reforms premature
Early this year, I praised
Mississippi Secretary of
State Delbert Hosemann’s
package of significant election reform proposals. At
inception, those reform
offerings were worthy of
praise and passage.
But the legislative process had ground those
proposals down. In recent
days, Hosemann put out a
press release celebrating
the progress of his election
reforms in the 2016 session, breathlessly claiming
in a statement: “The Mississippi Senate took another step in passing historic
election code legislation
with bipartisan cooperation. Not in recent memory
has any such massive election or voting legislation
passed with unanimous
support, truly remarkable.”
Hosemann engages in
a bit of hyperbole in those
words. Let’s review where
we were on election reform
in January and where we
are now.
Hosemann worked with
a bipartisan study group to
bring forth a substantial revamp of Mississippi’s election laws. The proposed
election law changes in
great measure would have
brought Mississippi elections into the modern era.
First,
the
proposed
changes would have consolidated election crimes
into
one
main section
in the Mississippi Code
and would
bring penalties for violaSid Salter tors into line
other
Columnist with
felonies and
misdemeanors under state law.
Second, the proposal
provided for online voter
registration for Mississippi
residents with a valid Mississippi driver’s license or
a state-issued identification card. In addition, the
study group recommendations provided for “no excuse” early voting to allow
registered voters to cast
their ballots up to 21 days
prior to an election at their
respective county courthouses.
The election law changes
would tighten financial disclosure requirements and
transparency while putting
a few teeth in the state’s
disclosure requirement in
the form of penalties for
non-compliance.
Finally, the proposal
would move the state’s
presidential
preference
primary from the second
Tuesday in March to the
first Tuesday or “Super
Tuesday” — which would
increase the state’s relevance in presidential cam-
paigns and bring us more
in line with the rest of the
South.
But the state Senate’s
unanimous passage of some
of Hosemann’s proposed
reforms glaringly omitted
online voter registration
and early voting – making
the remaining reform package decidedly less “historic”
or “remarkable” than Hosemann claimed in his press
release.
The prospects of early
voting passing in the current Mississippi have always been poor. Republicans, particularly in the
South, have been resistant
to early voting and that resistance is decidedly partisan in much the same way
that Democrats resisted
voter identification for partisan reasons for so long.
Like voter ID, the number suggest that Republican fear of early voting is
misplaced. In the 37 states
where early voting is legal,
Republicans have in large
measure gained ground.
But in a society in which
time and convenience is
all but worshiped and demands for technology solutions are rapidly increasing
– isn’t there an app for that?
– the notion that younger
voters will stop pressing for
early voting and online voter registration is laughable.
Just as Democrats strug-
gled for years to accept that
their fears and resentment
of voter ID didn’t really
equal to impediments to
voting, Republicans are going to have to come around
to the notion that early voting and online voter registration are political boats
that have already left the
dock and are sailing.
There simply is no plausible evidence that early voting hurts the GOP and the
argument that is increases
expense for county clerks
begs the question of whether the job of those clerks is
to serve their constituents
or protect their operating
status quos.
Ultimately, the perception battle is real. As long
as Mississippi’s Republican legislative majority
perceives that early voting
and online voter registration represents a danger,
they will continue to fight it
– again, just as Democrats
battled voter ID.
But there’s simply not a
lot of plausible evidence
against the benefits of early voting and online voter
registration that don’t ultimately come back around
to partisan advantage or
disadvantage.
(Daily Corinthian columnist Sid Salter is syndicated across the state. Contact
him at 601-507-8004 or
[email protected].)
Who could think filtered funds might be a bribe?
OXFORD — Let’s try
screenwriting:
SETTING: Cocktail reception for Mississippi
lawmakers. Early evening.
Large hotel banquet hall.
Jackson.
CHARACTERS:
Larry
Lobbyist and Louie Lawmaker.
FIRST CONVERSATION:
Larry: Hey, Louie. How’s
the session going?
Louie. Hey, Larry. Slow
for now, but it will pick up.
Larry: Yes, no doubt.
Look, I’ve been meaning to
talk to you about that peapicking bill. My clients don’t
like it, and I’d love to tell
them we can count on your
vote to kill it.
Louie: It hasn’t come up
yet, but if it does I’ll look at
it closely.
Larry: Thanks, and say,
how’s the family?
Louie: Good, good. My
daughter is headed to college this fall, which will
break us. But she’s a good
kid. I promised her a car,
but I don’t know how we’ll
afford it. You don’t have any
idea where we could get the
money, do you?
Larry: Look. Tell her to go
down to the dealership and
pick out what she wants.
Then you just call me and
I’ll go down there and pay
for it. No one has to know.
Louie: Wow. That’s really
generous.
Larry: Not a problem.
Now we can count on your
vote against that pea-pick-
Reece Terry
Mark Boehler
publisher
[email protected]
editor
[email protected]
Willie Walker
Roger Delgado
circulation manager
[email protected]
press
foreman
ing bill, can’t
we?
Louie: You
bet.
Definitely. It will
never see the
light of day.
Charlie
Evidence
Mitchell of a crime?
Yes.
Columnist
Based on
such a quid
pro quo conversation, no
jury would hesitate to conclude Larry Lobbyist and
Louie Lawmaker were engaged in corruption.
SECOND CONVERSATION (same setting and
characters):
Larry: Hey, Louie. How’s
the session going?
Louie. Hey, Larry. Slow
for now, but it will pick up.
Larry: Yes, no doubt.
Look, I’ve been meaning to
talk to you about that peapicking bill. My clients don’t
like it, and I’d love to tell
them we can count on your
vote to kill it.
Louie: It hasn’t come up
yet, but if it does I’ll look at
it closely.
Larry: Thanks, and say,
how’s the family?
Louie: Good, good. My
daughter is headed to college this fall, which will
break us. But she’s a good
kid. I promised her a car,
but I don’t know how we’ll
afford it. You don’t have any
idea where we could get the
money, do you?
Larry: Look. Tell her to go
down to the dealership and
pick out what she wants.
Then pay for it with your
campaign credit card. My
clients will make assorted
donations to your campaign
fund to total the cost. Then
you just pay your credit card
bill and report it as “Visa
payment” on your campaign report. Itemizing isn’t
required.
Louie: Wow. That’s really
generous.
Larry: Not a problem.
Now we can count on your
vote against that pea-picking bill, can’t we?
Louie: You bet. Definitely.
It will never see the light of
day.
Evidence of a crime? No,
not in Mississippi.
Such a practice is banned
in other states, but legal in
Mississippi. Any campaign
donation can be filtered to
personal use. The only stipulation is that a violation of
federal law has occurred if
the official fails to report the
transfer as personal income
on his or her tax returns.
Are lawmakers aware
of all these artful dodges,
methods to legally extract
fees for favors?
Yes.
Do all of them take payoffs? No. Not by a longshot.
But those who don’t approve of those who do, at
least tacitly, by failing to
require itemization and reporting.
For all the years these
machinations have existed,
the Legislature as a whole,
World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com
To Sound Off:
E-mail:
email:
[email protected]
Circulation 287-6111
Classified Adv. 287-6147
has never seen a need to
bring such practices to an
end.
Legislation to effect a
cure passed the Senate this
year, but was derailed in
the House, which opted to
commission a study. House
members indicated approval of requiring itemizations
on credit card bills, but has
balked at anything past that.
Why?
It needs more study.
That’s right. As Sen. Chris
McDaniel,
R-Ellisville,
said, the same people who
provided $600 million in
tire plant incentives in two
hours need more information about campaign fund
diversions. A big study.
And one more point: Not
too long ago, Republicans
were reveling in the super
majorities voters gave them
in both chambers of the Legislature. They were crowing
about a new era of purity
and focused leadership.
In the past, partisanship
could be blamed for any
good government initiative
becoming bogged down.
That’s no longer true.
It’s not too late to take a
stand for honesty and more
transparency in this year’s
session.
But it’s not likely to happen.
Bless our pea-picking
hearts.
(Charlie Mitchell is a Mississippi journalist. Write to
him at cmitchell43@yahoo.
com.)
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Editorials represent the voice of
the Daily Corinthian. Editorial
columns, letters to the editor and
other articles that appear on this
page represent the opinions of the
writers and the Daily Corinthian
may or may not agree.
Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • 5
Kossuth students head to state FFA Convention
BY STEVE BEAVERS
[email protected]
KOSSUTH — A trio
of Kossuth High School
FFA members are state
bound.
The students each
brought home first place
honors during the North
District Career Development competition. They
will take part in the Mississippi State FFA Convention on June 6-9.
“Individuals and teams
had to previously place in
the top two at the federation level and in the top
two at district to move on
to the state competition,”
said Brad Gillmore, KHS
FFA Advisor.
Isabella
Thompson,
Marlee Turner and Kayla
Mercer will all take part
at the convention competition. Thompson claimed
first in Junior Extemporaneous Speech. Turner
took first place in Junior
Prepared Speech while
Mercer was the overall
winner in Senior Extemporaneous Speech.
Kossuth had more students place at the district
event. Destiny Ozbirn
finished third in Junior
Creed Speech. The Junior Tool ID team of
Annalee Turner, Levi
Sides, Kaden Simmons
and James Lawson also
placed third.
State FFA Officer candidates, Sky Jackson, Mercer and M. Turner were
introduced and interviewed during the competition.
Those taking part in the North District Career Development competition were (front row from left) Marlee
Turner, Sky Jackson, Destiny Ozbirn, Annalee Turner, Kaden Simmons and Shelby Aulds – student teacher.
Back row (from left) Trey Rice, junior advisor; Chesne Joyner, Isabella Thompson, Kayla Mercer, J.T. Cox,
James Lawson, Levi Sides and Brad Gillmore, advisor.
Staff Photo by Zack Steen
Photo by Keith Jackson
The 9th Annual Crossroads Chili Cook-Off was held on Saturday at the Crossroads Museum in downtown Corinth. Winners included People’s Choice and ICS
Chili winner Henry Stephens, ICS Salsa winner Diane Lentz and ICS Chili Verde
winner Jim Deere.
Karissa Fortune, Leslie Bivens, Elaina Johnson and Sophia Maness of Rossi’s Relaxstation Day Spa volunteered their time and efforts for the event, doing the hair and makeup for all the models.
SHOW
COOK-OFF
CONTINUED FROM 1
CONTINUED FROM 1
Kids non-profit group.
“We will use this money
to help get some great
families to Disney World
in May.”
For a $5 donation to
Havis’ Kids, people were
able to taste test and
judge the People’s Choice
competition of the cookoff, which included 18 different chilies.
Hurley said 38 local
special needs children
and their families will
travel to Orlando next
month, and money raised
during Saturday’s cookoff will go to help ensure
each child has a great time
in the Magic Kingdom.
Held in conjunction
with the opening day of
the Green Market, organizers said more than
1,000 people attended
both events in downtown
Corinth on Saturday.
Cook-off sponsors included Crossroads Museum, Corinth Area Convention and Visitor’s Bureau,
“So many people came out and
supported us and tasted some
great chili as well.”
Havis Hurley
Corinth-Alcorn County Special Needs Kids director
Daily Corinthian, Super
Talk WXRZ 94.3 FM, CocaCola, Gardner’s and Roger’s
Supermarket,
Rep. Bubba Carpenter, the
U.S. Army and Magnolia
Regional Health Center.
Cook-off winners included:
■ People’s Choice - 18
entries:
5th place, Front Page
Chili, Mark Boehler; 4th
place, Tennessee Hillbilly
Chili, Dicky Thorpe; 3rd
place, Bell Breezing Bordello Chili, Diane Lentz;
2nd place, Medical Plaza,
Tashya Smith; 1st place,
The Mississippi Gang,
Henry Stephens ($100)
■ ICS Salsa - 11 entries:
3rd place, Rose’s Chili,
Rose Barrett ($25); 2nd
place, Mulligan’s Pot
of Gold, Farrah Mulligan ($75); 1st place, Bell
Breezing Bordello Chili,
Diane Lentz ($200, advances to World)
■ ICS Chili Verde - 17
entries:
3rd place, Rosita’s Chili
Surprise, Scott Barrett
($100); 2nd place, Bell
Breezing Bordello Chili,
Diane Lentz ($200); 1st
place, Jim Deere ($500,
advances to World)
■ ICS Chili - 16 entries:
4th place, Mulligan’s
Pot of Gold, Farrah Mulligan ($100); 3rd place,
The Mississippi Gang,
Jim Lewis ($200); 2nd
place, Rose’s Chili, Rose
Barrett ($500); 1st place,
The Mississippi Gang,
Henry Stephens ($1,000,
advances to World)
fered attendees VIP access to over 25 vendors.
Featured vendors included but were not limited to Corinth Flower
Shop, Floral Connections, Full Throttle Salon, Anytime Fitness of
Bolivar, Tenn., Finelight
Photography of Savannah, Tenn., Diamond
Photography,
Sweet
Temptations,
Tech-
niques Wedding, Hope
Vineyards, Rodan &
Fields, It Works and others.
In addition to the fashion show, light refreshments and invaluable
information, attendees
also had an opportunity
to win giveaways. A twohour limo service from
Crossroads Limousine
was among the prizes.
Guests were treated to
hair and makeup demos,
free gift bags, complimentary vendor items, a
live jazz performance by
John Shaw’s “Magnolia
Triangle” of Memphis
and outdoor music in the
courtyard by DJ Drummer.
“It was an event to remember,” said Owner
and Photographer Margaret Bradley. “We were
so pleased with the turnout and plan to host the
event again next year.”
da:
years.
UPGRADE
CONTINUED FROM 1
The board appointed
Jimmy Tate Waldon to
the Mississippi Partnership Board of Local
Chief Elected Officials
and Keith Settlemires
to the Northeast Mississippi Community Action Agency. Waldon,
as board president, replaces Hinton, and Settlemires replaces Joe
Roberts, who had served
the maximum eight
■
Corinth will decrease
to four points with the
removal of the Pittman
Road portion. The project also includes reducing the hill west of the
intersection.
It is designed to tie
into improvements associated with the Kimberly
Clark Parkway.
In other business on a
light open session agen-
■
Supervisors approved the change of
status of four 911 employees to full-time —
Jay Hatcher, Hanna
Lane, Misty Crotts and
Ananda Miller. They
were already working
full-time hours.
■ The board approved
the purchase of a 2017
Mac dump truck for the
Third District at a cost of
$95,765.06.
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6 • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
2 states raise minimum wages
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — California and New York
acted Monday to gradually push their statewide
minimum wages to $15
an hour — the highest in
the nation — as Hillary
Clinton and Bernie Sanders again seized on wage
disparity and the plight
of the working poor as
a defining issue in the
presidential race.
Clinton joined New
York Gov. Andrew Cuomo
as he signed the law that
will gradually boost that
state’s pay rate and she
predicted the movement
will “sweep our country.”
In a statement, Sanders said his campaign is
about building on the
steps in California and
New York “so that everyone in this country
can enjoy the dignity and
basic economic security
that comes from a living
wage.”
In Los Angeles, Gov.
Jerry Brown signed a
bill into law that will lift
the statewide minimum
wage to $15 an hour by
2022.
Together with New
York, it marks the most
ambitious moves yet to
close the national divide between rich and
poor. Experts say other
states may follow, given
Congress’ reluctance to
act despite entreaties
from President Barack
Obama.
“This is about economic justice. It’s about people. It’s about creating
a little, tiny amount of
balance in a system that
every day becomes more
unbalanced,” Brown said
before signing the bill at
the Ronald Reagan State
Building.
Republicans and business groups warn that
the move could cost
thousands of jobs, while
a legislative analysis puts
the cost to California
taxpayers at $3.6 billion
a year in higher pay for
government employees.
A $15 base wage will
have “devastating impacts on small businesses
in California,” Tom Scott,
executive director of the
state branch of the National Federation of Independent Business, said
in a statement. “Ignoring
the voices and concerns
of the vast majority of
job creators in this state
is deeply concerning and
illustrates why many feel
Sacramento is broken.”
Democrats who control
the Legislature approved
the increase Thursday,
days after the agreement
was announced. The
measure passed with no
Republican support.
The bill will bump the
state’s $10 hourly minimum by 50 cents next
year and to $11 in 2018.
Hourly $1 raises will then
come every January until
2022, unless the gover-
nor imposes a delay during an economic recession. Businesses with 25
or fewer employees have
an extra year to comply.
Wages will rise with
inflation each year thereafter.
The Democratic governor negotiated the deal
with labor unions to head
off competing laborbacked ballot initiatives
that would have imposed
swifter increases with
fewer safeguards.
About 2.2 million
Californians now earn
the minimum wage, but
University of California,
Irvine, economics professor David Neumark
estimated the boost
could cost 5 to 10 percent
of low-skilled workers
their jobs.
Brown has said California, with the world’s
eighth largest economy,
can absorb the raises
without the problems
predicted by opponents.
U.S. says Iran forces pulling back in Syria
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The
Obama administration is
making the case that Iran
is drawing down its elite
fighting force from Syria
in an effort to allay fears
that Tehran is using its
powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in
Syria to strengthen its influence across the Middle
East. Yet the Iranian government said Monday it
has dispatched commandos to the war and it is
still taking high-ranking
casualties.
Secretary of State John
Kerry, who is deeply involved in trying to broker a political solution to
end the five-year-old civil
war between President
Bashar Assad and rebels, told Congress in late
February that Iran was
recalling its IRGC forces
from Syria.
“On Iran, let me just
inform everybody here
that the IRGC has actually pulled its troops
back from Syria,” Kerry
told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee. Iran’s
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei “pulled
a significant number of
troops out. Their presence is actually reduced
in Syria.”
Other administration
officials have backed
Kerry’s assertion.
U.S. officials, who were
not authorized to publicly discuss Iran’s role in
Syria and spoke only on
condition of anonymity,
said Tehran’s drawdown
of IRGC forces will compel Assad to rely more
on his own forces, which
lack the training and intelligence capabilities of
the IRGC.
But experts say that
GOD DEMANDS PURITY
One’s soul is purified in obeying the truth, so Peter declared in 1 Pet.
1:22. Without such one could not be saved from sin, nor could he enter the
kingdom of God, the church. (Jno. 8:32; Col. 1:13; Acts 2:47.)
However, this is not the extent of purity. God demands that we serve
Him out of a pure heart (2 Tim. 2:22), that we keep ourselves pure (1
Tim. 5:22), and that we be example of the believers in purity. (I Tim
4:12). Therefore, purity of life is essential if the Christian is to serve
God faithfully, exert the proper influence, and be saved eternally. One’s
conversation (manner of life) must be “as it becometh the gospel of Christ”
(Phil. 1:27), and he must “deny ungodliness and worldly lusts,” and live
“soberly, righteously and godly in this present world.” (Tit. 2:11,12). Also,
Paul declared, “Let everyone that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity.” (2 Tim. 2:19).
As one’s obedience, that he become a Christian, must be from the heart
(Rom. 6:18), so must his worship and service to God as a Christian. So it
would be foolish for one to think that he could continue the old life of sin
(doing and saying the same things, and going to the same questionable
places) and still please God, and be saved eternally.
To entice Eve to eat what God had forbidden, Satan said, “For God
knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will
be like God, knowing good and evil” (Gen. 3:5). The tree’s very name,”
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (Gen. 2:17), gave credence
to Satan’s promise. But his promise was a half-truth; half-truths deceive
like a whole lie.
When they ate, “their eyes were opened” and they knew they were
naked; they knew evil as they had not known it before, by doing evil.
However, their knowledge of good and evil was not like God’s. He does
not know evil by participating in it. He is “of purer eyes than to see evil
and cannot look at wrong” (Hab. 1:13).
Participating in evil, disobeying God, did not make them, like God; it
brought death.
Never believe the devil. His half-truths are always destructive lies.
Are you pleasing God in your manner of life? Have you put off the old
man of sin with his deeds? Or, are you still attempting to practice the
things of the world, and at the same time please God? IT JUST CAN’T BE
DONE!! God demands purity, and one cannot escape His wrath unless
he practices it.
Ps. 24:3. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? Or who shall stand
in his holy place?
Ps. 24:4. He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart; who hath not lifted
up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully.
Mt. 5:8. Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.
1 Pe. 1:22. Seeing ye have purifed your souls in obeying the truth
through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that ye love
one another with a pure heart fervently.
Read your Bible. Welcome.
even if the IRGC has
trimmed forces, the proIranian Shiite militias
Tehran helped create
are still fighting. Iran
stepped up its fighting
in Syria in October 2015,
sending mainly IRGC officers to direct Shiite foot
soldiers from other nations, including Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
“Iran has done so much
to strengthen the Assad
regime — stabilize the
Assad regime — through
the creation of these militia groups,” said Scott
Modell, a former CIA officer who has conducted
operations throughout
the Middle East.
“They don’t want to
just build up their militia
groups and leave. This
is their way of creating a
lasting footprint” across
the region, he said. “This
isn’t Russia where they
make sure to shore up
Assad and then they
downsize.”
A senior congressional
staffer said what the U.S.
is seeing from the Iranians is not different from
what it is seeing from the
Russians — a withdrawal
of some number of forces
and resources that does
not significantly change
the battlefield. The staffer spoke only on condition of anonymity.
Russia began supporting Assad with airstrikes
on Sept. 30, helping his
military reverse the tide
of war and make some
key advances. President
Vladimir Putin recently ordered a pullout of
some Russian warplanes
from Syria, but said that
strikes against the Islamic State group and the
al-Qaida-linked Nusra
Front will continue.
Deaths
Kenneth Preston
Kenneth Preston, 83,
died Monday, April 4,
2016, at Mississippi Care
Center in Corinth. Arrangements are pending
with Patterson Memorial
Chapel.
Virginia Harland
Smith
Graveside services for
Virginia Harland Smith,
86, of Corinth is set for
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at
Woodlawn Cemetery in
Sumner.
Mrs. Smith died Monday, April 4, 2016, at Dogwood Plantation.
She was born Dec. 22,
1929, and was a homemaker. She was of the
Baptist faith and was a
member of Oakland Baptist Church
Survivors
include
her son, Ted Smith of
Michigan and her daughter, Scarlet Sonderford
(Barry) of Kentucky; her
brother, Wiley Harland
(Martha) of Corinth and
her sister-in-law, Ruth
Harland of Cleveland.
She was preceded in
death by husband, A.G.
Smith; her parents, Theodore Harland and Bertha
Harland Blaylock; and her
brother, Teddy Harland.
In Lieu of flowers the
family request donations be made to Jonathan Kirk, Network of
International Christian
Schools, Inc. 3790 Goodman Road, Southaven,
MS 38672
Bro. Ray Kirk will officiate.
Dr. Carl Welch
A Celebration of Life
service for Dr. Carl Welch
is set for 11 a.m. Thursday
at First Baptist Church.
The family will receive
friends Wednesday from
5 to 8 p.m. at McPeters
Inc. Funeral Directors.
Dr. Welch died April 3,
2016, in Memphis.
Floye Ann Wyatt
Celebration of Life services for Floye Ann Wyatt,
91, are set for 3 p.m. today
at McPeters Funeral Directors Chapel with burial
to follow in Forrest Memorial Park Cemetery.
Visitation is from 2
p.m. until service time at
the funeral home.
Mrs. Wyatt died on
March 30, 2016, at her
residence.
She was born on Sept.
27, 1924, and was of the
Baptist faith.
Mrs. Wyatt was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, James
Robert Wyatt; and a son,
James Michael Wyatt.
She is survived by her
grandson, Ryan Wyatt;
brother, Bob Phillips and
sisters, Wanda and Ruby
Phillips; and her daughter
in law, Brenda Wyatt.
First Lady to speak at JSU
JACKSON — Jackson
State University’s spring
graduates will be among
the last group of graduates to hear from first
lady Michelle Obama,
who has included the
Mississippi college as
part of her Reach Higher
initiative.
Obama has delivered
remarks on a historically
black university campus
each year since she has
served as first lady. She
will deliver the commencement address at Jackson
State on Saturday, April
23 before more than 1,000
graduates, friends, family
and members of the university community.
In addition to Jackson
State, Obama will mark
her final commencement
addresses with visits May
26 to Santa Fe Indian
School in Santa Fe, New
Mexico and June 3 to City
College of New York in
New York.
years suspended, leaving six years to serve,
with five years probation,
$1,000 fine and payment
of restitution to be determined.
Hopkins also pleaded
guilty on a criminal information for burglary of a
building and another for
possession of burglary
tools, both yielding suspended sentences.
■ Walter Dearman, 67,
aggravated stalking —
Two years to serve with
four years of probation
and a $1,000 fine. He was
ordered to have no contact with the victim and
to pay costs associated
with a jury panel being
brought in before he decided to plead guilty.
■ Brenda Joyce Burks,
43, possession of methamphetamine — Suspended three-year sentence with two years
probation and $1,000
fine
■ Kyle Wayne Mulford,
31, aggravated assault —
Suspended 20-year sentence with five years probation and $1,000 fine
■ Wyatt James Hymel,
29, possession of methamphetamine — Suspended eight-year sentence with five years
probation and $1,000
fine. He also pleaded
guilty to a second indictment for child endangerment, yielding a suspended 10-year sentence and
$1,000 fine.
■ Steven Elton Flax,
possession of methamphetamine — Suspended
eight-year sentence with
five years probation and
$1,000 fine
and kindergarten make
sure they attend the registration next week,” said
Alcorn School District Elementary Curriculum Di-
rector Tammy Johnson.
“We need to see how many
students we will have, so
that we can begin buying
supplies and preparing
the new classrooms.”
With the closure of Glendale and Rienzi, new pre-k
classrooms will be added
at Alcorn Central, Biggersville and Kossuth.
“Those students who
would attend Rienzi, will
now go to Biggersville and
those Glendale students
will now attend Alcorn
Central,” said Johnson.
Current pre-k staff
from both closed schools
will transfer to the new
locations, according to
Johnson.
Eligibility criteria for
pre-k remains unchanged
from previous years.
Children must reside
within the boundaries of
the school district, must
be 4-years-old on or before Sept. 1 of the school
year and be potty-trained
to enroll. Parents will also
be required to provide
transportation for their
children and participate
in parenting activities.
When registering, parents should bring their
child or children, two
proofs of residence, their
child’s birth certificate
and social security card
and shot record.
“If students need summer shots, then bringing
the child’s current shot
record is acceptable,”
added Johnson. “After
new shots are received after the summer, then we
can update the records.”
Johnson said each
pre-k classroom -- two
at ACES, one at BES and
two at KES -- will house a
minimum of 20 students.
“There will also be
screening if we receive
too many students,” said
Johnson. “If this happens then a teacher will
call parents to scheduling
screening in late May or
early June.”
(For more information,
contact Johnson at 662286-5591.)
The Associated Press
PLEAS
CONTINUED FROM 1
payment of restitution.
He also pleaded guilty on
a second false pretense
indictment out of Prentiss County, yielding a
suspended 10-year sentence.
In recent months, he
has been accused of offering to sell vehicles for individuals and keeping the
proceeds.
■
Plesant Hopkins,
35, of County Road 156,
burglary of a dwelling —
25-year sentence with 19
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PRE-K
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State/Nation
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Associated Press
Ex-officer arrested
again for stalking
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A
former Memphis police
officer accused of stalking his ex-girlfriend on
two other occasions
has been arrested
again.
Media outlets report
28-year-old Joshua
Barnes was booked into
jail Sunday for the third
time this year. According to court documents,
he is being charged as
a fugitive from justice
out of Mississippi.
The documents say
an active warrant was
issued last week in
Southaven, Mississippi
for Barnes for stalking
his ex-girlfriend.
Barnes has been arrested twice before for
stalking. He was first
arrested on Jan. 13
after he was accused
of placing a tracking
device underneath his
ex-girlfriend’s car. At
that time, he was an officer with the Memphis
Police Department.
He was arrested
again on Feb. 16 for
vandalism and violation
of a restraining order.
Judge OKs 2010 BP
oil spill settlement
NEW ORLEANS — A
federal judge in New
Orleans granted final
approval Monday to an
estimated $20 billion
settlement over the
2010 BP oil spill in the
Gulf of Mexico, resolving years of litigation
over the worst offshore
spill in the nation’s history.
The settlement, first
announced in July, includes $5.5 billion in
civil Clean Water Act
penalties and billions
more to cover environmental damage and
other claims by the
five Gulf states and local governments. The
money is to be paid out
over a 16-year period.
The U.S. Justice Department has estimated
that the settlement will
cost the oil giant as
much as $20.8 billion,
the largest environmental settlement in
U.S. history as well as
the largest-ever civil
settlement with a single
entity.
U.S District Judge
Carl Barbier, who approved the settlement,
had set the stage with
an earlier ruling that BP
had been “grossly negli-
gent” in the offshore rig
explosion that killed 11
workers and caused a
134-million-gallon spill.
In 2012, BP reached
a similar settlement
agreement with private
attorneys for businesses and residents
who claim the spill cost
them money. That deal,
which didn’t have a cap,
led to a protracted court
battle over subsequent
payouts to businesses.
A court-supervised
claims administrator is
still processing many of
these claims.
BP has estimated
its costs related to the
spill, including its initial
cleanup work and the
various settlements and
criminal and civil penalties, will exceed $53
billion.
Kids’ authors seek
repeal of N.C. law
CHARLOTTE, N.C. —
Nearly 270 authors and
illustrators of children’s
books have signed a
letter calling on North
Carolina to repeal a new
law preventing specific
anti-discrimination rules
for LGBT people for
public accommodations
and restroom use.
The letter, which was
posted on the School
Library Journal website,
said the 269 signees
are “disappointed and
angered by the reprehensible legislation”
signed into law by Gov.
Pat McCrory. They
called for repeal of what
they called a “hateful
piece of legislation.”
“As even the youngest
among you recognize,
a law that promotes,
enables, or encourages
discrimination of any
kind is wrong,” the letter said.
“Know that in time,
and with hard work,
hope will triumph over
fear. Know that acceptance will prevail over
intolerance,” the letter
continued. “Know that
respect - for all our differences - will always
unite us.”
Among the names
on the list are authors
Rick Riordan, author of
“Percy Jackson;” Jeff
Kinney, who wrote “Diary of a Wimpy Kid,” and
Veronica Roth, author of
“Divergent.”
“Divergent” and “Percy Jackson” were made
into movies.
The group also said it
would have to consider
participation in conferences and festivals in
Daily Corinthian • 7
Across the State
North Carolina while the
law is in effect.
New location found
for prehistoric park
LEONIA, N.J. — A
dinosaur theme park
in New Jersey that was
in danger of becoming
extinct has found a new
home.
Field Station: Dinosaurs has signed a deal
with Bergen County to
move to Overpeck County Park, which covers
more than 805 acres
and has major sections
in Teaneck, Leonia,
Ridgefield Park and Palisades Park.
The prehistoric theme
park opened in 2012.
But it left Secaucus
last year after Hudson County officials
informed them that
construction would
be starting there on a
new building for a high
school.
The park had already
renewed its lease. So
the dinosaurs were
packed up and remained in storage until
the park could find a
new home.
The park’s temporary
site will be in Leonia.
But it eventually will
move to the Teaneck
section.
Restitution denied
in deadly explosion
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— A judge has ruled
that an ex-energy company CEO does not have
to pay $28 million in
restitution related to a
mine explosion in 2010
that killed 29 men.
In her order issued
Monday, Judge Irene
Berger said ex-Massey
Energy CEO Don Blankenship doesn’t have to
pay Alpha Natural Resources for legal fees
paid for former Massey
employees, cooperation
with investigators and
fines.
Blankenship was convicted Dec. 3 of a misdemeanor conspiracy
to willfully violate mine
safety standards at Upper Big Branch Mine.
The southern West
Virginia coal mine exploded in 2010.
Berger wrote that Alpha incurred the financial hardships at least a
year after Blankenship’s
indictment period, after
Alpha bought Massey in
2011 and voluntarily entered a non-prosecution
agreement with the government.
Associated Press
Lee County leaders
discuss Youth Court
TUPELO — Efforts are
ongoing by Lee County
leaders to address an
overburdened Youth
Court. But a proposal
that would see the city of
Tupelo help pay for a solution has met with some
initial resistance.
County Court Judge
Charles Brett hears the
criminal and civil cases
that fall under the purview of County Court, but
he also acts as Youth
Court judge.
Court officials say the
case load he currently
hears is not sustainable.
The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
reported that county
supervisors are backing
state legislation to address the situation.
The bill would authorize county supervisors
to create the position of
a Youth Court referee.
23-year-old accused
of abusing 5-year-old
MCCOMB — A 23-yearold McComb man is accused of beating his girlfriend’s 5-year-old daughter and recording the
acts on his cellphone.
The Enterprise-Journal
reported that Alex
Mead’s bond was set
at $140,000 after Pike
County sheriff’s investigators charged him with
27 counts of felony child
abuse.
According to court
documents used to get
a search warrant, videos
show Mead punching
and slapping the girl,
choking her, pulling her
hair, and biting her ear.
The girl’s mother said
she discovered the videos when she searched
Mead’s phone. The
newspaper withheld her
name to protect the
child’s identity.
The mother says her
daughter must use a
breathing tube and a
wheelchair because of a
rare brain disease.
Ann Jolley presented the
request, she noted that
she had attended the
dedication of an outdoor
pavilion at Horn Lake
Intermediate School the
same day. Its planned
uses include outdoor
reading.
The Hernando Middle
School Parent-Teacher
Association offered to
build and landscape a
gazebo and donate the
$5,000 project to the
school system, associated superintendent
Thomas Spencer said.
An auto dealer gave
$32,000 to create the
pavilion at Horn Lake,
which has 1,100 third-,
fourth- and fifth-graders.
Margaritaville comes
back without casino
BILOXI — Margaritaville is returning to Biloxi
— this time, without a
casino.
Businessman and developer Cono Caranna
has released plans for a
family-friendly Margaritaville Resort Biloxi, built
around a 373-room hotel — the former Casino
Magic hotel.
It will include a
55,000-square-foot
entertainment complex
including separate ropes
courses for adults and
for children aged 2 to 7;
a zip-line roller coaster;
and a rock climbing wall
that rises to a restaurant
entrance, news media
report.
A pool, a 450-footlong “lazy river” and two
water slides will be reserved for hotel guests,
but everything else in
the entertainment complex, including several
restaurants and bars,
will be open to anyone.
Other features are to
include hundreds of arcade games, six lanes of
“boutique bowling” and
two golf simulators programmed to emulate 87
top courses.
Crews install cable
along Interstate 10
OCEAN SPRINGS —
Crews are laying fiber-optic cable along Interstate
10 in Jackson County
for a $10 million project
called an “Intelligent
Traffic System.”
The Sun Herald reported that the cables will link
92 video cameras, 40 advisory boards and sensors
that detect vehicle motion
and nine overhead electronic message boards.
A traffic management
center in Lyman, north
of Gulfport, will use the
message boards to alert
drivers to such conditions as traffic accidents
or controlled burns at
the Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge in
Gautier.
Protesters oppose
Jackson airport bill
JACKSON — A protest has broken out at
the Mississippi Capitol
against a bill that would
expand the Jackson airport board and against
Confederate symbols
used by the state.
About two dozen people chanted loudly in the
Capitol rotunda Monday
afternoon — “No airport,
no peace!” and “Hey,
hey, ho, ho. Confederate
Spring has got to go!”
An organizer, Cheryl
Nannette, says the demonstrators are with a
grassroots group called
Corporation Jackson.
She says they were
protesting the Confederate battle emblem in
the Mississippi flag and
Republican Gov. Phil
Bryant’s proclamation
of April as Confederate
Heritage Month.
DeSoto school board
OKs reading gazebo
HERNANDO — Outdoor
reading spaces have
become the newest
trend at DeSoto County
schools.
The Commercial Appeal reported that the
school board approved
a reading gazebo at Hernado Middle School last
month.
When chairwoman
Legal Scene
Your Crossroads Area Guide
to Law Professionals
)
($Contact
)*
Skylar
Mincey
)
--('
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$
at
662-287-6111"
/ to
advertise
#)(!*
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your ()*&!
/#Law Firm
on this
/(
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page.
*%($*&
)
($)*
(
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GREG MEYER
Attorney At Law
Former Assistant District Attorney
(
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for the State of Mississippi with 18 years
of experience.
Serving
Northeast
• Felony and Misdemeanor
Criminal
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Mississippi’s
needs...
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[email protected]
Odom and Allred, P.A.
Attorneys at Law
404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS
_________________________________________
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662-286-9311
William W. Odom, Jr.
Rhonda N. Allred
Attorney at Law
Attorney at Law
[email protected]
[email protected]
___________________________________________
&'&#$)#(& ,!"'#"&#$'
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-.28 iShJapan
...
6.39
q 13.66
-.13 SABESP
-.08 iSTaiwn
SabreCorp
15
29.35
iShSilver
q
14.20
-.14
-.07
14 56.07
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-.68 Salesforce
cc 75.69
-.15 iSCorSP500 q 207.29
... 41.84
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q 33.74
-.41 SantCUSA
5 10.96
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q 118.88 +.01 Schlmbrg
22 72.64
-.57 iShiBoxIG
q 130.76 +.08 Schwab
27 27.99
-.22 iSh20 yrT
3.00
-.20 iSh7-10yTB q 110.27 +.13 SeadrillLtd dd
q 84.99 +.06 SilvWhtn g 30 15.74
-.73 iSh1-3yTB
q 56.43
-.12 SiriusXM
+.10 iS Eafe
39
3.90
q 81.17
-.20 Skechers s 17 28.51
-.62 iShiBxHYB
-2.40 iShNsdqBio q 270.65 +2.34 SkySolar
dd
5.90
q 110.19
-.93 SmithWes 15 22.78
+.53 iShR2K
q 38.50
-.09 SouthnCo
+1.06 iShUSPfd
19 51.53
-.08 SwstAirl
-1.45 iSUSAMinV q 44.22
13 44.11
q 77.80
-.11 SwstnEngy dd
+.57 iShREst
8.51
iShHmCnst
q
26.64
-.45
-1.81
SpectraEn 26 30.29
26 35.71
-.23 SpiritRltC
-.35 IngrmM
42 11.26
9.66 +.41 Sprint
+.23 InovioPhm dd
dd
3.44
14 32.00
-.45 SP Matls
-.46 Intel
q 44.65
10 152.07
-.45 SP HlthC
-.34 IBM
q 69.37
15 40.56
-.41 SP CnSt
+.19 IntPap
q 53.64
19 22.90
-.17 SP Consum q 78.81
-.09 Interpublic
13 31.09
-.29 SP Engy
+.12 Invesco
q 60.61
q 41.10
-.44 SPDR Fncl
-.13 iShCorEM
q 22.59
-.20 SP Inds
-.69 iSh0-5HYCp q 44.69
q 55.10
...
8.32
-.45 SP Tech
-.22 ItauUnibH
q 44.53
dd 26.64
-.12 SP Util
-1.02 JD.com
q 49.60
-.23 Staples
-1.41 JPMorgCh 10 59.20
1 11.04
11 18.97
-.23 Starbucks s 37 60.25
-.60 Jabil
54 60.04
-.11
+.28 Jarden
StarwdHtl
26 78.93
10 20.41
-.92
-1.07 JetBlue
Statoil ASA ... 14.80
18 108.59
-.60
-.14 JohnJn
StlDynam
31 22.45
17 38.76
-.39
+.42 JohnsnCtl
Stereotaxs dd
1.65
15 25.19
-.37
-.12 JnprNtwk
.63
KB
Home
13
13.81
-.29 StoneEngy dd
-.12
Stryker
28
109.33
-.86
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SumitMitsu
...
5.81
29 78.07 +.21
-.42 Kellogg
... 27.03
10 10.96
-.01 Suncor g
+.05 Keycorp
.21
26 17.19
-.12 SunEdison dd
+.52 KindMorg
SunTrst
10
36.50
dd
3.41
-.07
-.11 Kinross g
dd 12.57
11 45.10
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-.83 Kohls
21 18.60
... 78.85
-.23 Symantec
+4.07 KraftHnz n
Synchrony
11 28.97
18 38.03
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2.92
20 50.51 -1.21 SynrgyPh dd
-.41 LVSands
8.17 +.13 T-MobileUS 48 39.66
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TahoeRes
22
9.80
dd 115.31
-.32
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... 25.85
.27
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-2.11 LinnEngy dd
dd 27.52
dd
.27
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-.03 LinnCo
15 82.30
...
3.98 +.02 Target
+.06 LloydBkg
7.33
20 224.13 +1.02 TeckRes g ...
+.67 LockhdM
... 11.98
23 76.18
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-1.36 Lowes
...
2.18
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TerrFmP lf dd
9.07
+.03
M-N-O-P
TeslaMot
dd
246.99
-.16
3
7.54
-.20 TevaPhrm
27 54.66
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-.30 TexInst
21 57.72
-.31 MGM Rsts 32 21.62
Macys
12
42.16
-.80
TherapMD
dd
7.25
-.35
8
4.31
-.05 3D Sys
dd 15.82
-.68 Manitowoc
dd
1.69 +.10 3M Co
22 166.40
+.15 MannKd
dd 10.53
-.03 TimeWarn
16 73.56
-1.19 MarathnO
6 36.65 +.26 TollBros
15 28.80
-.05 MarathPt s
q 27.50
-.78 Total SA
... 44.43
-1.76 MVJrGold
q 19.53
-.59 TransEntx dd
4.70
-.70 MktVGold
q 25.54
-.37 Transocn
dd
8.55
-1.52 MV OilSvc
q 54.91
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+2.06 MV Semi
q 15.95
-.36 Twitter
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dd 17.09
q 31.10 +.04
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U-V-W-X-Y-Z
21 66.36
-.77
-.45 MarIntA
38 159.91 -2.14 UBS Grp
... 15.54
-.09 MartMM
11
9.62
-.32 UltraPt g
dd
.33
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29 31.68
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14 78.34
-.44 Masco
MasterCrd
27
95.05
-.82
UtdContl
3 55.85
-1.88
31 33.81
-.45 UPS B
19 104.88
+.30 Mattel
26 127.57 +.55 UtdRentals
9 59.47
-.60 McDnlds
-2.86 MeadJohn 25 84.83 -1.23 US Bancrp 13 40.68
30 44.18 -2.01 US NGas
+.14 Medivat s
q
6.82
Medtrnic
40 76.30 +.93 US OilFd
q
9.08
-.05 USSteel
-.33 MemResDv dd 10.14
dd 16.13
25 54.40 +.70 UtdTech
-.56 Merck
15 100.27
10 43.68
-.88 UtdhlthGp
+.99 MetLife
22 129.49
13 56.35
-.62 Vale SA
+.14 MKors
...
4.06
11 10.80
-.23 Vale SA pf
+.96 MicronT
...
3.10
36 55.43
-.14 ValeantPh dd 26.11
+.41 Microsoft
...
2.81
-.07 ValeroE
-5.05 MizuhoFn
7 63.29
... 12.19 +1.26 VangREIT
-.40 Momo
q 83.57
9 41.22
-.02 VangEmg
+.26 Mondelez
q 34.21
9 25.04
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-1.53 MorgStan
q 48.17
9 25.81 -1.03 VangFTSE
-.48 Mosaic
q 35.40
27 23.82
-.44 Vereit
-.39 MurphO
dd
8.77
19 47.23
-.27 Vericel
-.81 Mylan NV
dd
3.72
dd 12.81 +.04
-.07 NRG Egy
VerizonCm 12 54.42
dd
8.75
-.17
-.04 Nabors
VertxPh
dd 82.87
11 29.59 +.06
+.18 NOilVarco
ViacomB
8 39.56
-.66 NatusMed 23 31.84 -7.80 Vipshop
31 12.90
Navient
4 11.68 +.03
VirginAm
16 55.11
NetElem h dd
.27
-.01
30 77.83
cc 104.35 -1.35 Visa s
+.15 Netflix s
... 31.74
-.18 Vodafone
-.07 NewellRub 25 45.36
VulcanM
61
106.00
-.90
-1.73 NewfldExp dd 31.73
W&T
Off
dd
1.98
35 26.30
-.32
-.06 NewmtM
6.34
dd 12.76
-.27 WPX Engy dd
+15.16 NewsCpA
WalMart
15
69.10
28 59.97 -1.62
-.11 NikeB s
9.62
-.31 WalgBoots 27 86.31
-.24 NobleCorp 40
32 58.68
-.86 WsteMInc
-.64 NobleEngy dd 30.00
dd
7.22
...
5.83 +.03 WeathfIntl
-.08 NokiaCp
WellsFargo
12 48.50
17 55.55 -1.68
-.21 Nordstrm
WDigital
9
46.27
NorthropG
19
201.18
+.87
-.27
dd
5.32
-.17 WstnUnion 12 19.39
-.33 Novavax
28 31.19
29 35.80
-.35 Weyerhsr
-1.23 Nvidia
dd
6.85
-.23 WhiteWave 38 39.47
-.10 OasisPet
7.80
51 68.19
-.01 WhitingPet dd
+.06 OcciPet
...
5.31
-.18 WholeFood 20 30.34
-.42 Oclaro
WmsCos
76
15.21
cc
7.35
-.20
-.01 OfficeDpt
17 10.96
15 17.15
-.38 WisdomTr
+.21 Olin
q 41.97
dd 10.40
-.01 WTJpHedg
-.15 OpkoHlth
WldW
Ent
44 16.56
20 41.07
-.09
-3.06 Oracle
55 93.40
21 112.19
-.92 Wynn
-.79 PPG s
23 11.00
.35 +.13 Xerox
+.20 PacSunw h dd
dd 37.02
dd
9.22 +.24 Yahoo
-.15 Pandora
dd
3.03
dd 16.37
-.19 Yamana g
-3.51 PattUTI
dd
7.28
... 38.79
-.61 Zafgen
-1.56 PayPal n
dd
7.92
dd 10.54
-.09 Ziopharm
+.13 Penney
38 45.76
19 16.05
-.08 Zoetis
-.04 PeopUtdF
29 103.82 +.04 Zynga
...
2.29
-.05 PepsiCo
Today
On a roll
Higher prices and increased
spending by customers have helped
lift earnings for Darden Restaurants
of late.
And Wall Street expects the
company will report strong results for
its fiscal third quarter today. Darden,
which operates the Olive Garden
and other chains, has served up
improved results going back to last
year. Activist investor Starboard
Value took over the company in 2014
and has since overseen cost-cutting
and operational changes.
-.53
-.23
+.59
+1.73
-.02
-1.97
-.20
+.04
-.38
-.01
+.01
-.19
+.07
+.09
+3.24
-.53
-.65
-.78
-.67
+.71
-.43
-.13
-.01
-.60
-.37
-.55
-.26
+.06
+.88
-.04
+1.51
+.21
+.52
-.39
-.14
-.67
-.06
-1.81
+1.64
-4.98
-.17
-.45
+.70
+.19
-.01
-.19
-.59
+.82
+.02
-.62
-.45
-.11
-.63
-.17
-.21
-.14
-.77
-.45
-.38
-.55
+.54
-.06
+.81
-.04
-.65
-.22
-.12
-.39
+.19
-.36
+.20
+.30
-.23
-.27
-.74
-.46
-.45
-.54
-.16
-.76
+9.40
+.45
-.22
+.63
+.70
-1.13
+.57
-.73
+.23
+.33
-.03
-.01
+1.11
-.27
-.07
-.58
-.87
-.07
-1.34
-.02
+.21
-.25
-.42
+.30
-.43
-.26
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-1.99
+.38
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-.47
-.01
-.08
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+.24
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-1.21
-.12
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-.49
-.24
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-.33
-.10
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-2.40
-.02
-.18
-.31
-.21
-.32
-.75
-1.34
-.10
+.54
-.07
+.58
+.30
+.77
+.09
YOUR FUNDS
Financial strategies.
One-on-one advice.
-.46
-.57
+.68
+.61
-1.42
-.48
-.64
-.18
-.15
-.01
-.02
-.02
-.36
-.42
+.07
-.41
-1.31
+.95
-.46
+.32
-1.44
-.32
-.31
+.14
+.23
+.23
-.38
-1.21
-.07
Eric M Rutledge, CFP®,
AAMS®
Financial Advisor
1500 Harper Road Suite 1
Corinth, MS 38834
662-287-1409
Steven D Hefner, CFP®
Financial Advisor
413 Cruise Street
Corinth, MS 38834
662-287-4471
Chris Marshall
Financial Advisor
401 E. Waldron Street
Corinth, MS 38834
662-287-7885
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
GM says no to rentals
Low gas prices have hurt sales of cars, for example,
but rental sales can help keep car factories humming.
Kurt McNeil, GM’s vice president of U.S. sales
operations, says GM is cutting rental sales in order to
improve consumer perception of its Chevrolet, Buick,
GMC and Cadillac brands. The cuts won’t have much
impact on production, he says, since U.S. demand is
so strong GM can replace
some rental sales with sales
to consumers.
GM cut rental car sales
by 50,000 in 2015, he said.
The company expects to
cut 100,000 this year.
McNeil said GM will
continue sales to corporate
and government fleets,
which are more profitable.
Automakers are known to boost their performance
with sales to rental car companies. General Motors
is trying to break the habit.
GM has sharply reduced rental sales and
surprised the industry when it reported lower overall
sales in the U.S. in February.
Rental sales are less profitable than sales to
individual buyers because rental
companies get volume discounts.
Rental sales can also hurt resale
values, since a car is worth less
if the market is flooded with
used rental cars. Rental
units, which have few
amenities, can also hurt
potential buyers’ opinions
of a brand.
But there are benefits.
GM sales in U.S.
rental sales
3.0 million cars
2.5
2.21
2.0
19%
&
2.50
17%
2011
2012
3.08
2.94
2.79
2.60
17%
total
13%
15%
16%
1.5
1.0
0.5
0
2010
2013
2014
Source: General Motors
2015
Dee-Ann Durbin; Jenni Sohn • AP
INDEXES
52-Week
High
Low
18,351.36 15,370.33
8,953.18 6,403.31
672.28
539.96
11,254.87 8,937.99
5,231.94 4,209.76
2,134.72 1,810.10
1,551.28 1,215.14
22,537.15 18,462.43
1,296.00
943.09
Name
Dow Industrials
Dow Transportation
Dow Utilities
NYSE Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 500
S&P MidCap
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
Last
17,737.00
7,816.99
668.34
10,182.99
4,891.80
2,066.13
1,437.93
21,239.95
1,108.46
Dow Jones industrials
17,840
Close: 17,737.00
Change: -55.75 (-0.3%)
17,600
Net
YTD 52-wk
Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg
-55.75 -.31 +1.79
-.80
-70.78 -.90 +4.11 -8.75
-2.70 -.40 +15.67 +11.83
-36.97 -.36
+.39 -7.71
-22.74 -.46 -2.31
-.52
-6.65 -.32 +1.09
-.70
-13.66 -.94 +2.81 -6.42
-94.91 -.44
+.34 -3.82
-9.22 -.82 -2.41 -12.06
10 DAYS
17,360
18,000
17,500
17,000
16,500
16,000
15,500
O
N
D
J
F
M
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Name
AFLAC
AT&T Inc
AerojetR
AirProd
AlliantEgy
AEP
AmeriBrgn
ATMOS
BB&T Cp
BP PLC
BcpSouth
Caterpillar
Chevron
CocaCola
Comcast
CrackerB
Deere
Dillards
Dover
EnPro
FordM
FredsInc
FullerHB
GenElec
Goodyear
HonwllIntl
Intel
Jabil
KimbClk
Kroger s
Lowes
McDnlds
Div
1.64f
1.92
...
3.44f
2.35f
2.24f
1.36f
1.68f
1.08
2.40a
.40f
3.08
4.28
1.40f
1.10f
4.40a
2.40
.28f
1.68
.84f
.60a
.24
.52
.92
.28
2.38f
1.04
.32
3.68f
.42f
1.12
3.56f
PE
11
17
...
22
21
21
61
24
13
...
15
15
38
26
19
21
14
12
15
...
7
...
22
...
9
18
14
11
39
18
23
26
YTD
Chg %Chg Name
Div
.52f
-.53
+6.2 OldNBcp
+.31 +14.4 Penney
...
-.24
+3.2
PennyMac
1.88
-2.61
+9.7
-.12 +20.0 PepsiCo
2.81
-.43 +14.3 PilgrimsP
5.77e
+.65 -16.0
.24
-.18 +18.0 RegionsFn
+.18 -10.9 SbdCp
3.00
+.01
-5.4
SearsHldgs
...
-.06 -10.9
3.36f
-1.07 +11.4 Sherwin
-.83
+3.9 SiriusXM
...
+.06
+9.1
SouthnCo
2.17
-.16
+9.3
.46e
-1.72 +18.7 SPDR Fncl
-.60
-.5 Torchmark
.56f
-2.83 +23.6
Total SA
2.71e
-1.20
+2.7
1.02
-1.26 +30.7 US Bancrp
-.30
-9.2 WalMart
2.00f
-.24
-8.7
WellsFargo
1.50
-.45 +17.4
.24
-.70
+.3 Wendys Co
-1.10
-3.9 WestlkChm
.73
-.68
+8.7
WestRock
n
1.50
-.45
-7.1
1.24
-.23 -18.5 Weyerhsr
+.06
+7.0 Xerox
.31f
-.29
-9.1
...
-.32
+.2 YRC Wwde
...
+.55
+8.0 Yahoo
Last
63.59
39.36
16.16
142.70
74.91
66.58
87.16
74.38
33.69
29.58
21.37
75.72
93.43
46.89
61.43
150.56
75.90
81.23
62.94
57.32
12.80
14.94
42.81
31.23
31.39
112.55
32.00
18.97
136.26
38.03
76.18
127.57
PE
12
Last
12.16
YTD
Chg %Chg
-.08 -10.3
...
10.54
-.09
+58.3
12
13.61
-.04
-10.8
29 103.82
+.04
+3.9
10
25.87
-.25
+17.1
12
7.87
-.02
-18.0
21 3035.84 -18.16
+4.9
...
14.78
-.12
-28.1
26 287.13
-.52
+10.6
39
3.90
-.06
-4.2
19
51.53
-.17
+10.1
...
22.59
-.11
-5.2
13
54.06
-.63
-5.2
...
44.43
+.23
-1.2
13
40.68
-.02
-4.7
15
69.10
+.04
+12.7
12
48.50
+.05
-10.8
29
10.87
-.12
+.9
10
44.99
-2.55
-17.2
...
37.84
-1.36
-17.1
28
31.19
+.04
+4.0
23
11.00
-.10
+3.5
...
9.12
+.10
-35.7
...
37.02
+.54
+11.3
MARKET SUMMARY
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
BkofAm
Facebook
GenElec
FordM
Pfizer
FrptMcM
Twitter
RuckusW
Apple Inc
BrcdeCm
Vol (00)
586291
471731
438677
418083
390226
383293
379418
368245
365540
333637
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Last Chg Name
13.51
112.55
31.23
12.80
30.72
9.42
17.09
13.24
111.12
9.19
-.05
-3.51
-.70
-.30
+.68
-.47
+1.11
+3.24
+1.13
-1.45
Last
OncoCyte n 6.07
VirginAm 55.11
SkySolar
5.90
RuckusW 13.24
TrnsRty
12.03
USMD
12.16
UnicoA
11.00
EdwLfSci s 105.08
FlexionTh 10.95
SorrentoTh 6.30
Chg
+1.85
+16.21
+1.64
+3.24
+2.12
+1.81
+1.61
+15.16
+1.53
+.85
NYSE DIARY
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
821 Total issues
2,277 New Highs
82 New Lows
Volume
3,431,922,916
A wider gap?
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
%Chg Name
+43.8
+41.7
+38.5
+32.4
+21.4
+17.5
+17.2
+16.9
+16.2
+15.6
Last
Vericel
3.72
GtBasSci rs 4.46
TrovaGn wt 3.00
Staff360 rs 3.61
iRadimed 15.51
NatusMed 31.84
Breitbrn pf 5.69
SmithWes 22.78
Conformis n 10.28
ARC Grp
2.17
Chg
-2.31
-2.05
-1.00
-.94
-3.85
-7.80
-1.34
-4.98
-1.71
-.36
%Chg
-38.3
-31.5
-25.0
-20.6
-19.9
-19.7
-19.1
-17.9
-14.3
-14.2
NASDAQ DIARY
3,180 Advanced
148 Declined
11 Unchanged
1,125 Total issues
1,672 New Highs
158 New Lows
Volume
1,656,276,912
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
2,955
74
25
YTD
Name
NAV Chg %Rtn
AB
DiversMui
14.64
... +1.3
AMG
YacktmanSvc d21.85 -0.03 +4.7
AQR
MaFtStrI
10.32 +0.02 +1.4
Advisors’ Inner Crcl
EGrthIns
21.23 -0.13 -3.1
American Beacon
LgCpVlIs
24.20 -0.12 -1.1
SmCapInst
22.73 -0.28 +1.2
American Century
EqIncInv
8.42 -0.02 +6.1
InvGrInv
27.85 -0.07 -0.8
UltraInv
34.63 -0.12 -1.1
ValueInv
7.71 -0.04 +2.1
American Funds
AMCAPA m 26.13 -0.08 +0.7
AmBalA m 24.21 -0.03 +2.0
BondA m
12.91 +0.01 +3.0
CapIncBuA m 57.48 +0.06 +3.8
CapWldBdA m19.91 +0.03 +5.7
CpWldGrIA m 43.12 -0.03 -0.1
EurPacGrA m 43.99 +0.05 -3.0
FnInvA m
50.94 -0.15 +0.8
GlbBalA m 29.00 +0.01 +3.1
GrthAmA m 40.34 -0.14 -2.3
HiIncA m
9.47 +0.01 +2.9
IncAmerA m 20.68 -0.01 +3.1
IntBdAmA m 13.63 +0.01 +1.7
IntlGrInA m 27.92 +0.01 -1.1
InvCoAmA m 34.27 -0.10 +3.1
MutualA m 35.00 -0.05 +3.9
NewEconA m 34.95 +0.01 -2.8
NewPerspA m 35.19 +0.01 -2.3
NwWrldA m 49.92 -0.04 -0.2
SmCpWldA m 42.33 -0.03 -3.0
TaxEBdAmA m13.20
... +1.6
WAMutInvA m 39.06 -0.09 +2.1
Artisan
Intl
27.52 +0.03 -4.0
IntlI
27.70 +0.03 -4.0
IntlVal
31.67 -0.03 -0.1
Baird
AggrInst
10.88 +0.01 +3.1
CrPlBInst
11.12 +0.01 +3.2
BlackRock
Engy&ResA m 15.69 -0.20 +4.1
EqDivA m
21.13 -0.03 +0.9
EqDivI
21.19 -0.03 +0.9
GlobAlcA m 17.65 -0.03 -1.1
GlobAlcC m 16.06 -0.02 -1.2
GlobAlcI
17.76 -0.03 -0.9
HiYldBdIs
7.16 +0.01 +1.9
HiYldBlRk
7.16
... +1.9
StIncInvA m 9.67
... -0.5
StrIncIns
9.67
... -0.4
Causeway
IntlVlIns d
13.26 +0.01 -5.8
Cohen & Steers
Realty
72.77 +0.03 +3.8
Columbia
AcornIntZ
38.76 -0.04 -0.9
AcornZ
18.75 -0.16 -3.1
DivIncZ
18.17 -0.01 +3.9
DFA
1YrFixInI
10.31
... +0.4
2YrGlbFII
9.96
... +0.6
5YrGlbFII
11.11 +0.01 +2.3
EmMkCrEqI 16.72 -0.08 +6.4
EmMktValI
21.89 -0.19 +7.6
EmMtSmCpI 18.40 -0.07 +5.0
EmgMktI
21.97 -0.11 +6.6
GlEqInst
17.65 -0.09 +0.8
GlblRlEstSecsI 10.97 +0.01 +6.8
IntCorEqI
11.08 -0.04 -2.3
IntSmCapI
18.21 -0.08 -2.1
IntlSCoI
17.05 -0.02 -0.5
IntlValuI
14.99 -0.09 -6.1
RelEstScI
34.76 -0.06 +5.9
TAUSCrE2I 13.76 -0.09 +1.1
USCorEq1I 17.33 -0.10 +1.4
USCorEq2I 16.47 -0.10 +1.2
USLgCo
16.14 -0.05 +1.7
USLgValI
30.62 -0.16 -0.1
USMicroI
17.45 -0.21 -0.1
USSmValI
30.61 -0.42 +0.6
USSmallI
28.56 -0.31 +1.0
USTgtValInst 19.94 -0.26 +1.2
Davis
NYVentA m 29.38 -0.16 -4.9
Delaware Invest
ValueI
17.85 -0.04 +1.9
Dodge & Cox
Bal
92.97 -0.15 +0.5
GlbStock
10.26 -0.04 -1.9
Income
13.48 +0.01 +2.4
IntlStk
34.65 -0.04 -5.0
Stock
157.45 -0.43 -0.8
DoubleLine
CrFxdIncI
10.87
... +2.6
TotRetBdN b 10.87
... +1.7
Eaton Vance
FltgRtI
8.50 +0.02 +2.2
FMI
LgCap
19.21 -0.09 +3.2
FPA
Crescent d 30.94 -0.08 -0.4
NewInc d
9.96 +0.01 +0.6
Federated
InstHiYIn d
9.28 +0.01 +3.8
StrValI
6.09 +0.03 +8.7
ToRetIs
10.85 +0.01 +2.8
Fidelity
AstMgr20
12.88
... +1.7
AstMgr50
16.20 -0.02 +1.0
Bal
21.28 -0.04 +0.3
Bal K
21.28 -0.04 +0.3
BlChGrow
66.30 -0.15 -3.9
BlChGrowK 66.41 -0.16 -3.9
Cap&Inc d
9.11
... +0.6
CapApr
31.72 -0.19 -2.1
Contra
97.16 -0.38 -1.1
ContraK
97.11 -0.38 -1.0
DivGrow
30.35 -0.11 +0.2
DivrIntl d
33.89 +0.05 -3.3
DivrIntlK d
33.83 +0.05 -3.3
EqInc
51.25 -0.24 +1.6
EqInc II
24.95 -0.09 +1.6
FF2015
12.03 -0.01 +0.9
FF2035
12.44 -0.03 -0.6
FF2040
8.74 -0.02 -0.6
FltRtHiIn d
9.18
... +1.6
FourInOne
36.24 -0.07 +0.2
FrdmK2015 12.91 -0.02 +0.9
FrdmK2020 13.61 -0.02 +0.7
FrdmK2025 14.15 -0.03 +0.4
FrdmK2030 14.31 -0.03 -0.1
FrdmK2035 14.68 -0.04 -0.5
FrdmK2040 14.72 -0.04 -0.5
FrdmK2045 15.14 -0.04 -0.5
FrdmK2050 15.25 -0.04 -0.5
Free2010
14.74 -0.01 +1.1
Free2020
14.62 -0.02 +0.6
Free2025
12.48 -0.02 +0.3
Free2030
15.18 -0.03 -0.2
GNMA
11.64
... +1.7
GrInc
28.74 -0.13 -0.7
GrowCo
130.09 -0.23 -4.6
GrthCmpK 129.98 -0.23 -6.5
IntMuniInc d 10.57
... +1.2
IntlDisc d
37.54 +0.03 -4.7
InvGrdBd
7.77
... +3.2
LowPrStkK d 47.99 -0.17 +0.6
LowPriStk d 48.02 -0.17 +0.6
LtAm d
17.62 -0.41 +8.0
Magellan
87.89 -0.40 -1.7
MidCap d
33.14 -0.27 +1.3
MuniInc d
13.56 +0.01 +1.8
OTC
77.37 +0.30 -7.3
Overseas d 39.71 +0.08 -2.8
Puritan
20.23 -0.03 -0.5
PuritanK
20.23 -0.02 -0.4
RealInv d
42.94 -0.07 +6.0
SInvGrBdF
11.31
... +3.2
STMIdxF d 59.34 -0.23 +1.1
SersAlSecEq 12.63 -0.04 +0.8
SersAlSecEqF 12.63 -0.03 +0.9
SersEmgMkts 14.72 -0.08 +2.5
SersEmgMktsF14.76 -0.08 +2.6
SesInmGrdBd 11.31 +0.01 +3.3
ShTmBond
8.61
... +0.9
SmCapDisc d 27.13 -0.30 +2.7
StkSelec
33.28 -0.08 -0.8
StratInc
10.38 +0.01 +3.2
Tel&Util
24.51 -0.06 +12.1
TotBond
10.51
... +3.3
USBdIdx
11.78
... +3.2
USBdIdxInv 11.78
... +3.2
Value
97.71 -0.86 +2.0
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsA m 25.73 -0.11 -0.6
NewInsI
26.23 -0.11 -0.5
Trade deficit
The nation’s trade deficit has seasonally adjusted, in billions
est.
been getting bigger.
-44.3 -45.5 -43.6 -44.7 -45.7 -46.2
A decline in exports bumped -$42
up the trade gap to $45.7 billion
in January, the second increase
in a row. Imports also fell to
the lowest level since April
-44
2011, partly due to lower oil
prices. Economists anticipate
that the nation’s trade gap
increased modestly in February. -46
S
O
N
D
J
F
The Commerce Department
reports its latest U.S. trade gap
’15 ’16
snapshot today.
Source: FactSet
Fidelity Select
Biotech d 176.12 +2.34 -25.3
HealtCar d 187.72 +2.77 -9.8
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 73.01 -0.22 +1.7
500IdxAdvtgInst73.01 -0.22 +1.7
500IdxInstl
73.01 -0.22 +1.7
500IdxInv
72.99 -0.22 +1.7
ExtMktIdAg d 49.60 -0.37 -1.2
IntlIdxAdg d 34.50 +0.02 -4.0
TotMktIdAg d 59.34 -0.22 +1.1
Fidelity®
SeriesGrowthCo12.33 -0.02 -4.4
SeriesGrowthCoF12.33 -0.03 -4.4
First Eagle
GlbA m
52.74 -0.21 +2.7
FrankTemp-Frank
Fed TF A m 12.42 +0.01 +1.6
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m
7.58 +0.01 +2.0
GrowthA m 73.69 -0.21 +0.4
HY TF A m 10.62 +0.01 +2.2
Income C m 2.12 -0.01 +1.8
IncomeA m
2.10
... +2.0
2.08
... +2.0
IncomeAdv
RisDvA m
49.87 -0.23 +4.8
StrIncA m
9.19
... +1.4
USGovA m
6.38
... +1.3
FrankTemp-Mutual
28.86 -0.02 -1.7
Discov Z
DiscovA m 28.35 -0.03 -1.8
Shares Z
26.14 -0.05 +0.5
SharesA m 25.91 -0.04 +0.5
FrankTemp-Templeton
GlBond C m 11.44 -0.06 -0.7
GlBondA m 11.42 -0.05 -0.6
GlBondAdv 11.37 -0.06 -0.5
GrowthA m 21.36 -0.03 -2.5
GE
S&SUSEq
47.30 -0.12 -0.6
GMO
IntItVlIV
19.32 -0.29 -3.8
Goldman Sachs
MidCpVaIs
32.91 -0.26 -0.9
ShDuTFIs
10.55
... +0.4
Harbor
CapApInst
57.86 -0.19 -4.9
59.33 +0.09 -0.2
IntlInstl
Harding Loevner
IntlEq d
17.06
... -0.2
Hartford
CapAprA m 33.33 -0.13 -2.8
CpApHLSIA 43.22 -0.16 -2.7
INVESCO
ComstockA m 21.08 -0.12 -2.3
DivDivA m
18.46 -0.05 +5.4
EqIncomeA m 9.48 -0.02 -1.0
HiYldMuA m 10.18
... +2.1
IVA
WorldwideI d 16.40 -0.01 +0.4
JPMorgan
CoreBdUlt
11.82 +0.01 +2.9
CoreBondSelect11.81 +0.01 +2.9
DiscEqUlt
21.75 -0.08 -0.3
EqIncSelect 13.88 -0.02 +2.8
HighYldSel
6.91 +0.01 +2.5
LgCapGrA m 33.46 -0.13 -5.7
LgCapGrSelect33.59 -0.14 -5.6
MidCpValI
35.18 -0.28 +3.6
ShDurBndSel 10.88
... +0.8
USLCpCrPS 26.31 -0.11 -1.9
ValAdvI
28.13 -0.13 +0.7
Janus
BalT
28.65 -0.03 -0.6
GlbLfScT
46.11 +0.41 -11.5
John Hancock
DisValMdCpI 19.08 -0.17 -0.4
DiscValI
17.12 -0.10 -0.5
GAbRSI
10.05
... -3.4
LifBa1 b
14.22 -0.03 +0.2
LifGr1 b
14.72 -0.04 -0.7
Lazard
EmgMkEqInst d14.48 -0.06 +7.7
IntlStEqInst d 13.20 +0.01 -1.0
Legg Mason
CBAggressGrthA m181.95-0.49-2.8
CBAggressGrthI198.64 -0.53 -2.7
WACorePlusBdI11.63 +0.01 +2.7
Loomis Sayles
BdInstl
13.14 -0.04 +2.4
BdR b
13.08 -0.03 +2.4
Lord Abbett
AffiliatA m
14.36 -0.06 +2.5
ShDurIncA m 4.32
... +1.3
ShDurIncC m 4.35
... +1.1
ShDurIncF b 4.32
... +1.3
ShDurIncI
4.32 +0.01 +1.3
MFS
GrowA m
69.64 -0.31 -1.0
IntlValA m
34.76 +0.08 +1.8
IsIntlEq
19.88 +0.05 -3.3
TotRetA m
17.53 -0.03 +2.6
ValueA m
33.50 -0.07 +2.5
ValueI
33.67 -0.08 +2.6
Matthews Asian
China
16.37 -0.06 -11.1
India
25.50 -0.06 -3.5
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI
10.83
... +2.4
TotRtBd b
10.83
... +2.4
TtlRtnBdPl
10.20
... +2.5
Natixis
LSInvBdY
11.16 -0.01 +3.4
Northern
HYFixInc d
6.42
... +0.6
IntlIndex d
10.36
... -3.9
StkIdx
25.10
... +2.0
Nuveen
HiYldMunI
17.41 +0.01 +3.1
Oakmark
EqIncI
28.55 -0.19 -0.1
Intl I
20.32
... -4.9
Oakmark I
62.29 -0.43 -0.9
Select I
36.82 -0.41 -6.1
Oberweis
ChinaOpp m 10.96
... -9.8
Old Westbury
GlbOppo
7.09 -0.01 -2.2
GlbSmMdCp 14.85 -0.06 -0.2
LgCpStr
12.48
... +0.1
Oppenheimer
DevMktA m 31.05 -0.26 +2.1
DevMktY
30.65 -0.26 +2.2
GlobA m
69.93 -0.31 -6.9
IntlGrY
36.01 -0.26 +0.3
IntlGrowA m 36.18 -0.26 +0.3
MainStrA m 43.95 +0.10 +1.2
Oppenheimer Rocheste
FdMuniA m 14.70 -0.02 +1.9
Osterweis
OsterStrInc 10.58
... +0.6
PIMCO
AllAssetI
10.64
... +4.8
AllAuthIn
7.99
... +4.9
EmgLclBdI
7.23
... +10.3
ForBdInstl
10.18
... +3.0
HiYldIs
8.37
... +2.8
Income P
11.76
... +1.7
IncomeA m 11.76
... +1.6
IncomeC m 11.76
... +1.4
IncomeD b 11.76
... +1.6
IncomeInl
11.76
... +1.7
LowDrIs
9.87
... +0.5
RERRStgC m 6.40
... +6.1
RealRet
10.93
... +4.2
ShtTermIs
9.66
... -0.3
TotRetA m
10.19
... +1.8
TotRetAdm b 10.19
... +1.9
TotRetIs
10.19
... +1.9
TotRetrnD b 10.19
... +1.8
TotlRetnP
10.19
... +1.9
PRIMECAP Odyssey
AggGr
31.35 -0.05 -3.2
Growth
26.40
... -3.4
Stock
23.59 -0.06 -0.1
Parnassus
CoreEqInv
37.82 -0.15 +2.6
Pioneer
PioneerA m 32.40 +0.18 +1.8
Principal
DivIntI
10.90 -0.04 -2.3
L/T2030I
12.96 -0.03 +0.2
LCGrIInst
11.63 -0.04 -2.8
Prudential Investmen
TotRetBdZ
14.33 +0.01 +3.4
Putnam
NewOpp
70.73 -0.29 -1.5
Schwab
1000Inv d
50.32 -0.17 +1.2
FUSLgCInl d 14.51 -0.06 +3.4
S&P500Sel d 32.08 -0.10 +1.6
TotStkMSl d 36.52 -0.13 +1.1
Sequoia
Sequoia
183.49 -1.87 -11.5
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr
68.83 -0.21 -4.9
CapApprec 25.63 -0.02 +2.3
DivGrow
35.16 -0.07
EmMktBd d 11.82
...
EmMktStk d 29.78 -0.13
EqIndex d
55.60 -0.17
EqtyInc
29.05 -0.16
GrowStk
51.09 -0.10
HealthSci
62.07 +0.66
HiYield d
6.27 +0.01
InsLgCpGr
27.25 -0.02
IntlBnd d
8.96 +0.01
IntlGrInc d
12.75
...
IntlStk d
15.08 -0.03
17.68 -0.50
LatinAm d
MidCapE
43.28 -0.30
MidCapVa
26.36 -0.22
MidCpGr
72.99 -0.48
NewHoriz
40.85 -0.16
NewIncome
9.56 +0.01
OrseaStk d
8.76 +0.01
R2015
13.93 -0.02
R2025
15.10 -0.03
R2035
15.83 -0.04
ReaAsset d
9.81 -0.07
Real d
28.43 -0.08
Ret2050
12.73 -0.03
Rtmt2010
17.27 -0.01
Rtmt2020
19.96 -0.03
Rtmt2030
21.95 -0.05
Rtmt2040
22.57 -0.06
Rtmt2045
15.15 -0.04
ShTmBond
4.73
...
SmCpStk
38.43 -0.32
SmCpVal d 37.20 -0.33
SpecInc
12.24
...
Value
31.52 -0.11
TCW
TotRetBdI
10.29
...
TIAA-CREF
BdIdxInst
10.98
...
EqIx
15.25 -0.06
IntlE
16.16 -0.02
Templeton
InFEqSeS
18.19 +0.01
Thornburg
IncBldC m
18.99
...
IntlI
23.47 +0.08
LtdTMul
14.62
...
Tweedy, Browne
GlobVal d
23.72 +0.07
USAA
TaxEInt
13.62
...
Vanguard
500Adml
190.61 -0.58
500Inv
190.61 -0.58
BalIdxAdm
29.70 -0.06
BalIdxIns
29.70 -0.06
BdMktInstPls 10.91
...
11.97
...
CAITAdml
CapOpAdml 115.23 -0.14
DevMktIdxAdm 11.38 -0.02
DevMktIdxInstl 11.39 -0.02
DivGr
23.07 -0.04
EmMktIAdm 28.51 -0.18
EnergyAdm 81.14 -0.79
EqInc
30.44 -0.08
EqIncAdml
63.79 -0.17
ExplAdml
73.86 -0.38
ExtdIdAdm
62.59 -0.45
ExtdIdIst
62.58 -0.46
ExtdMktIdxIP 154.44 -1.12
FAWeUSIns 83.99 -0.22
GNMA
10.80
...
GNMAAdml 10.80
...
GlbEq
23.50 -0.05
GrthIdAdm
55.12 -0.13
GrthIstId
55.12 -0.13
5.60 +0.01
HYCorAdml
HltCrAdml
84.31 +0.90
HlthCare
199.85 +2.13
ITBondAdm 11.65 +0.01
ITGradeAd
9.91 +0.01
ITrsyAdml
11.59 +0.01
InfPrtAdm
26.39 +0.03
InfPrtI
10.75 +0.01
InflaPro
13.44 +0.01
InstIdxI
188.74 -0.56
InstPlus
188.75 -0.56
InstTStPl
46.26 -0.17
IntlGr
20.53 -0.01
IntlGrAdm
65.27 -0.02
IntlStkIdxAdm 23.83 -0.06
IntlStkIdxI
95.30 -0.24
IntlStkIdxIPls 95.31 -0.25
IntlVal
30.56 -0.02
LTGradeAd 10.47
...
LifeCon
18.17 -0.01
LifeGro
27.50 -0.07
LifeMod
23.42 -0.04
MdCpValIdxAdm44.88 -0.38
MidCapIdxIP 163.16 -1.07
MidCpAdml 149.76 -0.98
MidCpIst
33.08 -0.22
MorgAdml
76.13 -0.23
MuHYAdml
11.44 +0.01
MuInt
14.39
...
MuIntAdml
14.39
...
MuLTAdml
11.88
...
MuLtdAdml 11.05
...
MuShtAdml 15.82
...
PrecMtls
8.06 -0.19
Prmcp
97.97 -0.17
PrmcpAdml 101.50 -0.17
PrmcpCorI
20.75 -0.04
REITIdxAd 118.38 -0.17
REITIdxInst 18.32 -0.03
S/TBdIdxInstl 10.56
...
STBondAdm 10.56
...
STCor
10.69
...
STFedAdml 10.82 +0.01
STGradeAd 10.69
...
STIGradeI
10.69
...
STsryAdml
10.75
...
SelValu
26.04 -0.18
ShTmInfPtScIxIn24.61 +0.01
ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.55 +0.01
SmCapIdxIP 153.31 -1.30
SmCpGrIdxAdm41.77 -0.25
SmCpIdAdm 53.12 -0.45
SmCpIdIst
53.11 -0.46
SmCpValIdxAdm43.39 -0.45
Star
23.42 -0.03
StratgcEq
28.27 -0.21
TgtRe2010
25.42 -0.01
TgtRe2015
14.49 -0.02
TgtRe2020
27.59 -0.04
TgtRe2025
15.83 -0.03
TgtRe2030
28.02 -0.06
TgtRe2035
16.97 -0.04
TgtRe2040
28.61 -0.08
TgtRe2045
17.87 -0.05
TgtRe2050
28.63 -0.08
TgtRetInc
12.69 -0.01
TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.81 +0.02
TlIntlBdIdxInst 32.73 +0.03
TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.91 +0.01
TotBdAdml
10.91
...
TotBdInst
10.91
...
TotBdMkInv 10.91
...
TotIntl
14.25 -0.03
TotStIAdm
51.14 -0.19
TotStIIns
51.15 -0.19
TotStIdx
51.12 -0.19
TxMCapAdm 104.40 -0.44
ValIdxAdm
32.15 -0.13
ValIdxIns
32.15 -0.13
VdHiDivIx
27.37 -0.08
WellsI
25.33 -0.01
WellsIAdm
61.36 -0.02
Welltn
37.35 -0.03
WelltnAdm
64.50 -0.06
WndsIIAdm 59.69 -0.06
Wndsr
18.73 -0.12
WndsrAdml 63.18 -0.41
WndsrII
33.64 -0.03
Virtus
EmgMktsOppsI 9.16 -0.03
Waddell & Reed Adv
AccumA m
9.26
...
SciTechA m 12.48 -0.03
+2.7
+5.2
+4.5
+1.6
+2.4
-4.8
-9.9
+3.1
-5.7
+8.7
-2.4
-1.3
+17.6
-0.3
+5.7
-0.5
-3.8
+2.8
-2.6
+1.8
+1.0
+0.3
+8.4
+3.9
-0.1
+2.3
+1.4
+0.6
-0.1
+0.8
-0.5
+2.4
+3.8
+0.9
+2.2
+3.1
+1.2
-4.0
-4.5
+1.0
-5.1
+1.0
-3.0
+1.6
+1.7
+1.6
+2.1
+2.1
+3.2
+1.7
-2.9
-3.3
-3.3
+3.3
+4.5
+5.3
+3.7
+3.7
-1.2
-1.2
-1.2
-1.2
-1.6
+2.0
+2.0
-0.6
+0.9
+0.9
+2.6
-7.0
-7.0
+4.2
+3.6
+3.5
+4.7
+4.7
+4.7
+1.7
+1.7
+1.2
-2.7
-2.7
-1.4
-1.4
-1.4
-1.7
+7.3
+2.3
+0.9
+1.6
+1.1
+0.9
+0.9
+0.9
-1.4
+2.0
+1.6
+1.7
+2.1
+0.7
+0.3
+29.2
-1.7
-1.7
-0.3
+6.0
+5.9
+1.6
+1.6
+1.8
+1.3
+1.8
+1.8
+1.2
+0.7
+1.8
+1.7
+0.4
-2.1
+0.4
+0.4
+2.6
+0.6
-0.1
+2.2
+1.8
+1.6
+1.3
+1.1
+0.8
+0.6
+0.5
+0.5
+2.3
+3.7
+3.7
+3.7
+3.2
+3.2
+3.2
-1.4
+1.2
+1.2
+1.1
+1.1
+1.7
+1.7
+4.2
+4.0
+4.0
+2.2
+2.2
+0.4
-2.2
-2.2
+0.4
+2.2
Healthy results?
WBA
$86.31
Walgreens Boots Alliance $100
delivers its latest quarterly
results today.
80
Financial analysts predict
that the drugstore chain’s
$84.26
’16
60
fiscal second-quarter
est.
earnings and revenue
Operating $1.18
$1.28
improved from a year
EPS
earlier. That result would be
2Q ’15
2Q ’16
in line with Walgreens’
Price-earnings ratio: 21
recent performance. The
based on past 12-month results
company posted higher
earnings and revenue in its Dividend: $1.44 Div yield: 1.7%
first quarter.
Source: FactSet
-1.7
-7.8
9 • Daily Corinthian
Variety
BEETLE BAILEY
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
Crossword
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
BLONDIE
HI & LOIS
BC
ACROSS
1 Riffles (through)
6 Kitty cries
10 Like some
chatter or threats
14 Birdbath buildup
15 Plant “pet”
16 Bellyache
17 *Game with a
barrel-throwing
gorilla
19 “Flip or Flop”
cable channel
20 Dueling sword
21 Stare unsubtly
22 Slammer
23 Wreck
completely
25 “Moi?”
27 __ Lingus
28 Reason for an R
rating
31 “I __ thought of
that”
34 Place to
overnight
35 Crooner Cole
36 Stat that’s better
when it’s lower
37 *Lock insert
41 Expressive rock
genre
42 Architect
Maya __
43 Serengeti grazer
44 Crease-resistant
fabric
46 Sewer system
entry points
49 Back when
50 Alpine warble
51 Art form profiled
in the
documentary
“Between the
Folds”
55 Joint sometimes
twisted
57 Fishing decoy
59 Have __: be
connected
60 “Are you for __?!”
61 *Karl Marx opus
63 Motown’s Marvin
64 Prefix meaning
“all”
65 Singer Baker
66 Call router: Abbr.
67 Bread served
with chicken tikka
masala
68 Go to pot ... or a
phonetic hint to
the answers to
starred clues
DOWN
1 Stored in the hold
2 Become running
mates?
3 Dancer de Mille
4 Skin bronzing
from a bottle
5 “Understand?”
6 Jim of “Wide
World of Sports”
7 Self-help website
8 [Don’t take me
too seriously]
9 Hang loosely
10 Announcement
from the foyer
11 *Temporary
housing for Fido
12 Behind schedule r
13 Green-eyed
monster
18 “Son of
Frankenstein”
role
22 D.C. insider
24 No longer
working: Abbr.
26 Sharpen
28 Computer
invader
29 Hunter’s garb, for
short
30 Thames school
31 Captain’s
e
position
32 Opera highlight
33 *“The Court
Jester” star
38 Stare rudely at
39 “He’s a priest,”
not a beast, per
Ogden Nash
40 Bear or Berra
45 Propecia rival
47 Shout out
48 Glorifying verse
49 Word after work
or play
51 Pest control
company
52 Bit of slapstick
53 Sporty Mazda
54 Cavity filler
55 Jason’s vessel
56 Half-moon tide
58 Midshipman’s sch.
61 Ex-Dodger
manager
Mattingly
62 __ Thai: rice
noodle dish
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
[email protected]
By C.C. Burnikel
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
04/05/16
04/05/16
April 7 is National Alcohol Awareness Day
WIZARD OF ID
DILBERT
GARFIELD
FORT KNOX
PICKLES
Dear Annie: I always
had an exaggerated response to alcohol and
could never have just one
drink.
The first time I ever
tried drinking was when
I was 14 years old, and
I got drunk. I wasn’t a
heavy drinker right away,
though. I would drink
on weekends and otherwise led a “normal” life
through my teens and
20s.
However, when I was
in my early 30s, I found
myself in a high-pressure
professional job, living
alone in a big city. My life
appeared to be great, but
I was completely miserable. On weekends, I
would start drinking at 4
p.m. and would continue until I passed out or
fell asleep. I also started
abusing pills and found
that as long as I was
passed out, I could avoid
the pain that had become
my life.
Finally, I decided to
end my life. Fortunately,
my suicide attempt did
not pan out and I went for
help. I was sent to a state
psychiatric facility for six
months. While there, I
finally admitted to myself that I had a problem
with alcohol. For years,
I thought that once I got
my mental health issues
straightened out, I could
drink alcohol safely. But
I learned that alcohol
was also causing a lot of
my problems.
Annie’s
Mailbox
With the help of Alcoholics Anonymous, I got
the support I needed and
have been sober for 12
years. I am now happily
married, have earned a
second college degree
and have a career I love.
I hope others who have
a problem with alcohol
will realize that they can’t
wait for their other problems to go away. They
need to stop drinking as
a first step. — Sarah B.
Dear Sarah: Thank
you for sharing your
story. April 7 is National Alcohol Awareness Day. It’s also a
good reminder that
any of our readers
who worry that they
or their loved ones
have a problem with
alcohol can take a
completely free and
anonymous screening at HowDoYouScore.org.
Dear
Annie:
You
missed the boat on your
response to “Confused by
Wife,” who said his wife
thinks she’s ugly, refuses
to stop drinking or smoking, and won’t go anywhere. Worse, she wants
him to stay there with
her. He says he is in good
shape, but she wants him
to go bald, give up exer-
cise and snack on junk
food so he would know
how she feels. He’s such
a typical male. Everything is about him and
his looks.
Annie, this woman is
severely depressed or she
has some kind of medical condition. She has
withdrawn from life. It
common for depressed
people to expect others
to behave the same way
so they can “see how it
feels.”
They can’t always figure out what’s wrong
with them, and they’re
tired of being misunderstood. Other indications
are her lack of energy
and not caring about her
health.
The first step is for her
to have a complete physical, and then she should
seek out a mental health
professional. With the
right medication, assistance and support, she
can start participating
in life again. — Sarasota,
Florida
Dear Sarasota: You
could be right that
the wife is depressed
or has a medical issue and should speak
to her doctor. But
she must be willing
to make the effort,
which she is not. Our
advice was for the
husband. But we will
add that if he can convince his wife to see
her doctor, it could
help.
10 • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
TUESDAY EVENING
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News
Late Show-Colbert
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Chicago Fire Brett wit- News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meynesses a murder.
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The Flash “King Shark” iZombie Liv probes a
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House of Meet the
There Yet? Modern
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seeks revenge.
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Charlie Rose (N)
World
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John Paul (N)
career.
Taken
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American Idol A retrospective speBrooklyn Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13
TMZ
Dish Nation Ac. Holcial. (N)
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The Flash “King Shark” iZombie Liv probes a
PIX11 News PIX11
Seinfeld
Two and
Two and
Friends
student’s murder.
Sports
Half Men
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(5:20) } (:20) } ›› Insidious: Chapter 3 (15) } ›› Godzilla (14) Godzilla and malevolent foes (:05) Banshee
300 (07)
Dermot Mulroney.
battle for supremacy.
Billions Chuck finds
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2016 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament: Final: Teams
SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)
Studio
TBA. (N) (Live)
Ink Master
Ink Master “New School, Ink Master New alliances Ink Master Ink Master Tattoo
Tattoo
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are formed.
(N)
Night.
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Modern
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Bella
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Full H’se
Friends
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(6:00) Deadliest Catch: Deadliest Catch “First
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(:03) Deadliest Catch
On Deck (N)
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Storage
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NHL Hockey: Colorado Avalanche at Nashville Predators. (N)
Predators The Panel The Panel The Lineup UFC
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Fixer Upper Favorite
House
Hunters
Good Bones (N)
Fixer Upper Favorite
renovations.
Hunters
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E! News (N)
Counting Counting Counting Counting Forged in Fire “The
(:03) Forged in Fire “The Counting Counting
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from Krypton take over the United States.
Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian
Make your house home sweet home with the
latest trends. Don’t miss the Daily Corinthian’s
Spring Showcase of Homes special section
coming Saturday, April 23.
Co-worker’s tempting offer
could have disastrous results
D E A R
ABBY: Last
week one of
my associates asked
me out for
drinks. I have
been workAbigail ing with him
the same
Van Buren for
length of time
that I have
Dear Abby
been
married.
I know he’s interested because he has been texting me
about unrelated work things and
is always flirting.
I am very much in love with my
husband, but my co-worker is
very tempting. I’m worried about
hurting my husband, but at the
same time I’m excited about
what this new man can offer me.
Did I mention that he’s the top
lawyer of the firm? — TEMPTED IN SOUTH CAROLINA
DEAR TEMPTED: Let’s pretend for a moment that the situation was reversed and this letter came from the husband you
“love very much.” How would
you feel if he acted on his temptation?
When people marry, they
promise each other certain
things, chief among them fidelity. That “Alpha Dog” may want
to have a fling with you may be
flattering, but it isn’t necessarily
a compliment.
Take a step back and consider
what could happen to your career at that firm and how you
would feel if things don’t go the
way you’d like.
(Example: An attractive woman is hired and you are dropped
like a hot potato.) I’m guessing
that you are not the first woman
this has happened to in that office.
DEAR ABBY: My oldest
daughter feels we should be
available to watch or pick up
our grandkids whenever she
calls. I suffer from chronic pain
and have good days and bad. I
never know when I’ll have a bad
day.
My daughter asks me to watch
or have overnights with her children a month in advance. I don’t
know how I will be doing then,
but if I cancel because I’m not
feeling well, she gets bent out
of shape.
We have had fights about this,
and I need someone else’s advice.
I raised my kids and I love
my grandkids, but sometimes I
don’t feel well enough to babysit or have an overnight.
Are grandparents obligated to
watch their grandkids whenever
their parents need them? —
FEELING USED IN OREGON
DEAR FEELING USED: If
you’re feeling used, then you
probably are. Your health concerns surely are no mystery to
your daughter. Tell her you are
glad to look after the grandchildren if you are up to it. But in
case you aren’t, she should
have an alternate ready to step
in should the need arise, because it MAY. And don’t apologize for it.
DEAR ABBY: My daughter is
being married soon and we are
getting ready to mail out the invitations. We have three couples
who will not be married when
the invitations are mailed, but
will be by the wedding. Should
we address their invitations using their single names or married names? — CHARLOTTE
IN AKRON, OHIO
DEAR CHARLOTTE: Not all
women these days change their
names to their husband’s. Address the invitations using the
names these couples are using
now. At the wedding reception,
the place cards can reflect any
name changes that are necessary.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as
Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.
DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscopes
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
When it comes to following your
heart’s desire, there’s no such
thing as being too old to start or
too young to start. It’s the happiness of your heart that counts,
not the age of it.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20).
It’s not a day for putting up
with your own trepidation. The
minute you feel yourself hesitate, push yourself to dive into
the thing that gives you pause.
Face the fears now while they
are still small.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
The candy colors of this environment were exciting to you at
one time, but you’ve matured.
Now you want to interact in a
place with more to offer. You’re
looking for variety and depth.
You’ll find it, too.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
Fast fixes, succinct answers
and brief interactions rule the
early day, because you’ve
something juicy to get to —
something you’d like to savor in
slow motion.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). A lot
could happen; a lot might hap-
pen. Playing the odds is smart
today, and the odds are against
those “coulds” and “mights.”
Focusing on what is happening
will be lucrative and satisfying.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Overcoming the fear of rejection is a simple process. All you
have to do is get rejected a few
times so you no longer fear it.
The timing couldn’t be more
perfect, as the stars favor personal risk.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
You don’t always get the laughs
you’re going for, which is why
you so appreciate how you’re
able to deliver levity now. You
are far more entertaining than
you might suspect! Your stories
help others develop a better
sense of humor.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Your success is closely linked
to confidence. Maybe you can’t
entirely fake being sure of yourself, but the fact that you try is
enough. Believing in your ideas
will be half the battle. Convincing the others will be the other
half.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). You have the attitude of a
hard worker, and so you’ll be
able to handle whatever job
comes up. Whether or not it’s
within your jurisdiction or expertise is beside the point really.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Children (and those who
behave as such) respect you
greatly, and yet something stubborn and innate will have a few
of them pushing the boundaries
anyway. Keep cool and enforce
your position as you said you
would.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18). You would prefer to travel
comfortably, first-class if possible; who wouldn’t? And yet, that
comfort comes with such a high
cost today (spiritually and financially) that it will be worthwhile
to take the “coach” alternative.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).
You feel as though you are
standing on the precipice of
something grand, overwhelming and dangerous. You’re
above this, but you’re not the
master of it. Do not let it mesmerize you away from your firm
footing.
Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • 11
SMC RECYCLING
Casabella’s
Corinth Clearance
Center
2760 S. Harper U Corinth
Mon. - Fri. 8 am - 4 pm
Sat. 8 am - 11 am
Call us for scrap pick-up.
Fax :662-286-6475
POPhone:662-665-9965
Box 1891 Corinth, MS
662-286-3127 Fax 662-286-8111
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12 • Daily Corinthian
Local Scores
Baseball
Thrasher 7, Biggersville 2
Softball
Biggersville 1, Wheeler 0
Tupelo 4, Corinth 1 (8 inn.)
Tennis
Alcorn Central 4, Kossuth 3
Local Schedule
Today
Baseball
Biggersville @ Jumpertown, 5
Belmont @ Kossuth, 7
Central @ Booneville, 7
Corinth @ Amory, 7
Softball
Corinth @ Houston, 5
Booneville @ Kossuth, 7
Golf
Corinth, Kossuth @ Redmont C.C., 9 a.m.
Tennis
Kossuth @ Corinth, 4
Track
Corinth @ Tishomingo Co.
Sports
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
’Nova wins with buzzer-beater
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — One good shot
deserved another.
Kris Jenkins of Villanova
wasn’t about to be outdone.
Jenkins overcame the shock
of watching North Carolina’s
Marcus Paige hit a doubleclutch 3 to tie it by spotting up
behind the right side of the arc
and draining a 3 of his own at
the buzzer to lift Villanova to a
77-74 victory and the national
championship Monday night.
What a shot — and what a
game.
The second-seeded Wildcats (35-5), had a six-point
lead with 1:52 left, but
watched it slowly trickle away.
Then, it was gone, when Paige
jumped — and when Ryan Arcidacono started running at
him — double clutched and
pumped one from beyond the
arc to tie the game at 74 with
4.7 seconds left.
After a timeout, Arcidacono
worked the ball upcourt and
got it to Jenkins, who swished
it from about two steps behind the 3-point line.
“Kris told him he was going to be open, Arch made the
perfect pass,” Villanova coach
Jay Wright explained. “Kris
lives for that moment.”
A few moments later, Jenkins was leaping over press
row, hugging his family and
shouting: “They said we
couldn’t, they said we couldn’t,
they said we couldn’t.”
Oh yes, they could.
It’s Villanova’s first title
since 1985, when Rollie Massimino coaxed a miracle out of
his eighth-seeded underdogs
for a victory over star-studded
Georgetown.
Hard to top this one,
though.
Jenkins, who was adopted
by the family of North Caro-
lina guard Nate Britt, now
has a spot with Keith Smart,
Lorenzo Charles and anyone else who ever made a
late game-winner to win the
whole thing.
Paige finished with 21 for
the top-seeded Heels (33-7),
who came one agonizing shot
short of giving coach Roy Williams his third national title.
Instead, this one belongs
to Villanova, a team full of
scrappers, grinders and alsorans, who proved you don’t
have to have a roster full of
NBA-bound one-and-dones
to win a title.
Thursday
Baseball
Amory @ Corinth, 7
Phil Campbell, Ala. @ Central, 7
Softball
Shannon @ Corinth, 5
Central @ Kossuth, 7
Golf
Corinth, Kossuth @ Booneville C.C., 3
Tennis
Corinth @ Itawamba, 4
Friday
Baseball
Tremont @ Biggersville, 3
Booneville @ Central, 6
Kossuth @ Belmont, 7
Softball
Tish County @ Corinth, 5
Falkner @ Kossuth, 7
Tennis
New Site @ Kossuth, 4
Saturday
Baseball
Central @ Red Bay, Ala., 1
Corinth @ Falkner, 2
Kossuth @ East Union, 5:30
Track
Central @ D. Journal Relays
Monday, April 11
Golf
(G) Corinth @ Oxford C.C.
(B) Corinth @ Shiloh Ridge
Tuesday, April 12
Baseball
Mooreville @ Kossuth, 7
Itawamba AHS @ Corinth, 7
Central @ Belmont, 7
Biggersville @ TCPS, 7
Softball
Corinth @ Shannon, 5
Mooreville @ Kossuth
Golf
Kossuth @ Hillandale, 3
Track
Division 1-4A @ Pontotoc H.S.
Thursday, April 14
Softball
Corinth @ McNairy, 5
Kossuth @ Belmont
Golf
Corinth, Kossuth @ Hillandale, Noon
Track
Division 1-3A @ Tish Co. H.S.
Division 1-4A @ Pontotoc H.S.
Shorts
Tennis Tournament
The Adamsville High School tennis
team is sponsoring a non-sanctioned
tournament open to all on April 2224 at Buford Pusser Memorial Park
in Adamsville, Tennessee. Deadline
for entry is Wednesday, April 20 at 9
p.m.
For more information or entry
forms, call Michael Harvill at 731632-3273 between 11 a.m. and
noon, Monday-Friday, or 731-2392434 after 6 p.m.
Rebel Road Trip
Ole Miss Head Coach Hugh Freeze
is coming to Corinth, along with The
University of Mississippi Athletic Director Ross Bjork, Lady Rebels Head
Coach Matt Insell and other University staff as the BancorpSouth Rebel
Road Trip 2016 rolls into the Crossroads area.
Hosted by the Tri-State Rebel Club,
the road trip is set for Wednesday,
April 20 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at
the Crossroads Arena at the intersection of U.S. Highway 45 and South
Please see SHORTS | 13
Photo by Donica Phifer
Presley Trice had two hits in Kossuth’s 11-1 win over ECS in the Lady Aggies’ second game on Saturday. Kossuth returns
to league play tonight when it hosts Booneville.
Lady Aggies hot heading into 1-3A
BY H. LEE SMITH II
[email protected]
The Kossuth Lady Aggies
made the most of their annual appearance in the Morris Hunter Invitational.
So much so, Head Coach
Steve Lyles thought he was
anywhere other than DeSoto
County.
Kossuth racked up four
wins over two days and captured the Pool C championship in the 11th annual event
held at Greenbrook Softball
Complex in Southaven.
“The way we played over the
weekend, I thought I’d been
abducted by aliens and was
on another planet,” laughed
the veteran softball and baseball coach.
Kossuth rolled to wins over
Horn Lake (15-0), Charleston
(16-1), Oxford (24-0) and ECS
(11-2) in claiming their pool
championship at the event
since 2012. Championships
in each pool are decided record, with head-to-head, runs
scored and least runs allowed
serving as tie-breakers. Lyles
noted that in winning all four
games, the Lady Aggies also
dominated both run categories among the five squads.
The Lady Aggies (11-3)
scored 66 runs in 14 innings
worth of at-bats. Defensively,
Kossuth allowed just two runs
over 16 innings in four runruled affairs.
“We played well all around
… offensively, defensively and
pitching wise,” said Lyles.
Kristen Devers racked up
three wins, allowing only an
unearned run. The senior allowed just six hits, including
one against Charleston.
Macy Mask tossed the finale, allowing one run on three
hits while earning her first
victory of the season.
Kossuth 16,
Charleston 1
in Friday’s late game. Kossuth
also drew eight walks — three
by Mason Drewery — and
got a ninth free runner when
Abby Lyles was plunked.
Avery Mullins had the lone
extra-base knock, a two-run
triple in a nine run first. Lyles
also added a pair of RBI.
Kossuth 24, Oxford 0
Kossuth banged out 16 hits,
with Brylee Kate Duncan and
Mullins recording three each
at the top and bottom, respectively, of the lineup.
Devers and Mullins each
Five different Lady Aggies
contributed to a five-hit attack Please see LADY AGGIES | 13
MSU’s RH Hudson dominating SEC foes
BY DAVID BRANDT
AP Sports Writer
Mississippi State coach
John Cohen said talented
right-hander Dakota Hudson
was raw when he arrived on
campus.
He threw a baseball 95
miles per hour, but the finer
points of pitching eluded him.
Hudson couldn’t control
the other team’s running
game. He wasn’t good at
fielding his position. He could
throw the ball hard, but it often didn’t go where he wanted
it to go.
Now the junior is much
closer to a finished product.
The 6-foot-5, 215-pound
Hudson is one of the major reasons for Mississippi
State’s improvement this season after a dreadful 2015. The
Bulldogs’ ace has a 4-1 record
and leads the Southeastern
Conference with a 0.92 ERA.
Opponents are hitting just
.187 against him.
“He’s just matured like a
lot of kids do,” Cohen said.
“He’s checked a lot of boxes
when it comes to improving
his game.”
Hudson’s been at his best
in SEC play, throwing 25 in-
nings without giving up an
earned run. He struck out
a career high 11 batters in a
complete-game win over rival
Ole Miss on Friday.
It’s been a quick rise for
the Dunlap, Tennessee, native, who was mostly an afterthought in Mississippi
State’s bullpen last season.
Please see HUDSON | 13
UConn nears 4th consecutive Division I title
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Breanna
Stewart came to UConn with
the lofty goal of winning four
national championships and
the Huskies are now just one
victory away from history.
They will play former Big
East foe Syracuse on Tuesday
night with a chance to become the first women’s team
to win four straight Division I
titles. Only UCLA, with seven
in a row from 1967-73, has
done it on the men’s side, and
a UConn victory would give
coach Geno Auriemma 11 national championships — one
more than Bruins coach John
Wooden for the most ever in
the history of college basketball.
While Stewart didn’t guarantee four titles when she was
a freshman, she did promise a
victory against Syracuse.
“I’m not going to go and
say that we’re going to lose,”
Stewart said after the Huskies
beat Oregon State in the Final
Four. “To end my college career, to end it with the other
seniors, there is no other way
that I want that to happen.”
Syracuse coach Quentin
Hillsman wasn’t planning on
using the comments as extra
motivation for his team.
“I don’t think she knew who
she was playing yet,” he said,
laughing. “So what is she supposed to say? I told our fans
and our crowd that we’re going to win, too.”
Auriemma shrugged it off.
“Having said it and now being on the verge of being able
to do it, those are amazing
things that it’s like a storybook,” Auriemma said. “You
have to admire her. She’s got
a lot of guts, Stewie does. And
you know what we talk about
on our team a lot is courPlease see UCONN | 13
13 • Daily Corinthian
Scoreboard
SHORTS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12
Harper Road in Corinth.
Tickets are $25 per
person and includes
a catfish and chicken
dinner. The Sugar Bowl,
Magnolia Bowl and Egg
Bowl trophies will also
be on display, as well
as the latest Rebel
licensed merchandise
and information from
the Alumni Association.
Baseball
To purchase tickets
contact, Tony Smith at
728-1951, Tyler Wilson
at 210-5100, Kim Lyles
at 415-6308, Susan
Holder at 603-1270 or
Kenny Carson at 2123702.
For more club information, visit tristaterebelclub.com or search
The TriState Rebel Club
on Facebook and Twitter.
LADY AGGIES
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12
had a double, with Devers driving in four runs
while going 2-for-4.
Mask drove in three
runs.
Lyles, Drewery and
Kristen Swindle also
added two hits each.
Casey Isbell recorded
her first career hit, a
run-scoring single in the
third.
Kossuth 11, ECS 1
Duncan was one of
three Lady Aggies with
two hits and tied the
game at 1-1 with a leadoff,
inside-the-park
home run. Devers and
Presley Tice also added
two hits as Kossuth tallied 10 to go along with
five free passes.
Lexi Fiveash notched
her first career hit with
a two-out single in the
fourth.
• Kossuth entertains
Booneville tonight at 7 in
a Division 1-3A contest.
The Lady Aggies sit at
2-0 in league play with
wins over Alcorn Central
and New Site.
The Lady Aggies will
have seven more league
games remaining -- including two with Mooreville and New Site -- over
the final three weeks of
the season.
“Hopefully last weekend’s success will carry
over,” said Lyles.
HUDSON
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12
Cohen said a productive
summer in the Cape Cod
League helped Hudson
gain confidence.
Mississippi State (208-1, 6-3 SEC) won two
of three games against
Ole Miss last weekend
and jumped to No. 5 in
d1baseball.com’s national rankings.
Hudson’s impressive
work on Friday nights
has helped Mississippi
State bounce back from
a 24-30 season in 2015.
The Bulldogs also have
a quality No. 2 starter in
Austin Sexton, who is 3-1
with a 2.98 ERA.
“When you’re playing
behind guys like (Hudson and Sexton), there’s
always a lot of confidence because you know
you’ve got a great chance
to win,” Cohen said. “In
some ways, it’s like running the ball behind
a huge offensive line.
You know you’re going
to move some people
around. Our league is so
good that confidence is
critical.”
A look at what’s going
on in college baseball
around the country:
Florida’s
rolling:
It was a quality week of
baseball for the Florida
Gators (27-3, 7-2 SEC),
who won a mid-week
game against rival Florida State before three
straight wins against
Texas A&M. Florida was
very good on offense
against the Aggies, scoring 24 runs over three
games, including 10 in
Sunday’s
come-frombehind victory. Florida
has won 27 straight
home games dating back
to last season. The Gators will try to keep that
streak alive this week
when they host a single
game against Jacksonville and a three-game
series vs. Mississippi
State.
Miami
sweeps
North Carolina: The
Hurricanes (23-4, 10-2
Atlantic Coast Conference) have won seven
straight games, including six in a row in the
ACC, after beating North
Carolina three times
over the weekend. Miami is 8-1 over its past
nine conference games,
which is especially impressive
considering
those games have come
against North Carolina,
Clemson and Louisville
— all currently ranked in
d1baseball.com’s top 15.
UCONN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12
age. And it takes a lot of
courage sometimes to
say certain things and
to be able to do certain
things.”
Stewart and her fellow
UConn seniors have won
74 straight games and
have never lost in the
NCAA Tournament, going 23-0.
To win the title, Stewart and the Huskies will
have to beat her hometown team.
“It definitely feels like
it’s coming full circle,”
Stewart said.
“From my freshman
year, when we played in
the Big East, we played
against Syracuse. Following that, there was
no Big East, so we obviously didn’t get to play
them and now having an
opportunity to finish it
off against them.”
The former Big East
foes met at least once a
season before the Orange went to the Atlantic
Coast Conference after
the 2013 season.
The Orange have lost
their last 23 meetings
against UConn, a skid
that dates to 1996.
“I’ve been on every
possible end of the spectrum of a UConn game,
on a regular-season
game, in a Big East Tournament game, on senior
night at their place,”
Hillsman said. “I think
teams get overwhelmed
with their speed and
quickness and their
strength. It is an overwhelming thing because
they’re very good, but
at least we understand
that because we’ve seen
it and we’ve experienced
it.”
PERFECT 10
UConn is 10 for 10 in
title games.
“I think at this time of
the year your confidence
level and your ability
have to mesh,” Auriemma said.
“There’s teams maybe
that come here with a lot
more confidence than
ability and it catches up
to you or a lot more ability than they have confidence. So when those
two things mesh, I think
you have a pretty unbeatable combination.”
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct
GB
Toronto
2 0 1.000 —
Baltimore
1 0 1.000
½
Boston
0 0 .000
1
New York
0 0 .000
1
Tampa Bay
0 2 .000
2
Central Division
W L Pct
GB
Kansas City
1 0 1.000 —
Chicago
0 0 .000
½
Cleveland
0 0 .000
½
Detroit
0 0 .000
½
Minnesota
0 1 .000
1
West Division
W L Pct
GB
Texas
1 0 1.000 —
Houston
0 0 .000
½
Los Angeles
0 0 .000
½
Oakland
0 0 .000
½
Seattle
0 1 .000
1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct
GB
Washington
1 0 1.000 —
Miami
0 0 .000
½
Atlanta
0 1 .000
1
New York
0 1 .000
1
Philadelphia
0 1 .000
1
Central Division
W L Pct
GB
Cincinnati
1 0 1.000 —
Pittsburgh
1 0 1.000 —
Chicago
0 0 .000
½
Milwaukee
0 1 .000
1
St. Louis
0 1 .000
1
West Division
W L Pct
GB
Los Angeles
1 0 1.000 —
San Francisco
1 0 1.000 —
Arizona
0 0 .000
½
Colorado
0 0 .000
½
San Diego
0 1 .000
1
Monday’s Games
San Francisco 12, Milwaukee 3
Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 2
Washington 4, Atlanta 3, 10 innings
L.A. Dodgers 15, San Diego 0
Houston at New York, ppd., rain
Baltimore 3, Minnesota 2
Texas 3, Seattle 2
Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 3
Texas 3, Seattle 2
Boston at Cleveland, ppd., cold weather
Houston at New York, ppd., rain
Colorado at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Oakland, 9:05
p.m.
Chicago Cubs at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.
Today’s Games
Houston at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m.
Boston at Cleveland, 12:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 3:15 p.m.
St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.
Detroit at Miami, 6:10 p.m.
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.
Seattle at Texas, 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
Colorado at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Oakland, 9:05
p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Milwaukee, 12:40 p.m.
Seattle at Texas, 1:05 p.m.
Colorado at Arizona, 2:40 p.m.
Detroit at Miami, 3:55 p.m.
St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 8:10 p.m.
Basketball
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct
GB
y-Toronto
51 25 .671
—
x-Boston
45 32 .584 6½
New York
31 47 .397
21
Brooklyn
21 56 .273 30½
Philadelphia
9 68 .117 42½
Southeast Division
W L Pct
GB
x-Atlanta
45 32 .584
—
x-Charlotte
44 32 .579
½
x-Miami
44 32 .579
½
Washington
37 40 .481
8
Orlando
33 44 .429
12
Central Division
W L Pct
GB
y-Cleveland
55 22 .714
—
Detroit
41 36 .532
14
Indiana
41 36 .532
14
Chicago
39 38 .506
16
Milwaukee
32 45 .416
23
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W L Pct
GB
y-San Antonio
64 12 .842
—
Memphis
41 36 .532 23½
Dallas
39 38 .506 25½
Houston
38 39 .494 26½
New Orleans
29 47 .382
35
Northwest Division
W L Pct
GB
y-Oklahoma City
53 24 .688
—
Portland
41 37 .526 12½
Utah
39 38 .506 14
Denver
32 46 .410 21½
Minnesota
25 52 .325 28
Pacific Division
W L Pct
GB
y-Golden State
69 8 .896
—
x-L.A. Clippers
48 28 .632 20½
Sacramento
31 46 .403 38
Phoenix
20 57 .260 49
L.A. Lakers
16 60 .211 52½
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
Sunday’s Games
New Orleans 106, Brooklyn 87
L.A. Clippers 114, Washington 109
Dallas 88, Minnesota 78
Houston 118, Oklahoma City 110
Cleveland 112, Charlotte 103
Utah 101, Phoenix 86
Orlando 119, Memphis 107
Chicago 102, Milwaukee 98
Indiana 92, New York 87
Golden State 136, Portland 111
Boston 107, L.A. Lakers 100
Monday’s Games
No games scheduled
Today’s Games
New Orleans at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Charlotte at Toronto, 6:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Milwaukee, 7 p.m.
Chicago at Memphis, 8 p.m.
Detroit at Miami, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Denver, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Utah, 8 p.m.
Portland at Sacramento, 9 p.m.
Minnesota at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Cleveland at Indiana, 6 p.m.
Detroit at Orlando, 6 p.m.
Brooklyn at Washington, 6 p.m.
New Orleans at Boston, 6:30 p.m.
Charlotte at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Houston at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Portland, 9 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Whiteside, MIA
Kanter, OKC
Faried, DEN
Gortat, WAS
Towns, MIN
Lopez, NYK
Dieng, MIN
Drummond, DET
Drummond, DET
Jordan, LAC
Howard, HOU
Whiteside, MIA
Cousins, SAC
Gobert, UTA
Gasol, CHI
Towns, MIN
Davis, NOR
Randle, LAL
Rondo, SAC
Westbrook, OKC
Wall, WAS
Paul, LAC
Rubio, MIN
Harden, HOU
Green, GOL
Lillard, POR
James, CLE
Curry, GOL
379
382
344
408
580
337
284
535
REBOUNDS
G OFF DEF
77 377 768
73 259 753
66 225 556
67 213 579
63 155 576
57 193 438
69 148 611
77 218 589
61 130 497
75 160 604
ASSISTS
G
71
77
77
70
71
77
76
71
73
74
618
664
611
727
1067
621
537
1016
TOT
1145
1012
781
792
731
631
759
807
627
764
.613
.575
.563
.561
.544
.543
.529
.527
AVG
14.9
13.9
11.8
11.8
11.6
11.1
11.0
10.5
10.3
10.2
AST
827
798
789
698
616
578
567
483
496
484
AVG
11.6
10.4
10.2
10.0
8.7
7.5
7.5
6.8
6.8
6.5
NCAA Tournament
FINAL FOUR
At NRG Stadium, Houston
National Semifinals
Saturday
Villanova 95, Oklahoma 51
North Carolina 83, Syracuse 66
National Championship
Monday, April 4
Villanova 77, North Carolina 74
NCAA Women’s
Tournament
FINAL FOUR
At Indianapolis
National Semifinals
Today
UConn 80, Oregon State 51
Syracuse 80, Washington 59
National Championship
Tuesday, April 5
UConn (37-0) vs. Syracuse (30-7), 7:30
p.m.
Golf
PGA Tour Champions
Money Leaders
Through April 3
Trn
1. Bernhard Langer
5
2. Duffy Waldorf
5
3. Esteban Toledo
5
4. Scott Dunlap
5
5. Miguel Angel Jimenez
2
6. Tom Lehman
4
7. Woody Austin
4
8. Jeff Sluman
5
9. Jeff Maggert
5
10. Kenny Perry
5
11. Fred Couples
2
12. Billy Andrade
5
13. Tom Pernice Jr.
5
14. Jim Carter
2
15. Tom Byrum
4
16. Joe Durant
5
17. Jay Haas
4
18. Marco Dawson
5
19. Stephen Ames
3
20. Jesper Parnevik
4
21. Jerry Smith
5
22. Wes Short, Jr.
5
23. Lee Janzen
5
24. Davis Love III
1
25. Kevin Sutherland
4
26. Loren Roberts
5
27. Colin Montgomerie
5
28. Corey Pavin
5
29. Michael Allen
5
30. Fred Funk
5
31. Scott Verplank
4
32. Todd Hamilton
4
33. Tommy Armour III
4
34. Mark O’Meara
4
35. Mark Calcavecchia
4
36. Glen Day
3
37. Steve Lowery
4
38. Doug Garwood
4
39. Scott McCarron
4
40. John Huston
4
41. Bart Bryant
4
42. Brad Bryant
3
43. David Frost
5
44. Joey Sindelar
4
45. Brandt Jobe
4
46. Scott Hoch
4
47. Paul Goydos
5
48. Mike Goodes
4
49. Gene Sauers
4
50. Olin Browne
3
Money
$517,050
$384,990
$308,914
$299,325
$278,600
$273,879
$270,165
$252,063
$241,517
$218,856
$215,800
$204,733
$173,681
$156,800
$155,238
$149,127
$148,435
$148,174
$142,353
$132,675
$129,584
$124,903
$124,383
$123,000
$115,490
$113,088
$112,635
$112,621
$106,955
$101,455
$99,485
$99,235
$95,940
$91,255
$87,922
$85,809
$84,812
$77,460
$76,803
$69,699
$69,434
$68,910
$68,469
$67,921
$67,906
$65,967
$61,292
$60,498
$59,785
$59,074
LPGA Money Leaders
Through April 3
Trn
Money
1. Lydia Ko
6 $1,004,122
2. Ha Na Jang
8
$617,098
3. Sei-Young Kim
4. Lexi Thompson
5. Haru Nomura
6. Brooke Henderson
7. Hyo-Joo Kim
8. Charley Hull
9. In Gee Chun
10. Amy Yang
11. Inbee Park
12. Stacy Lewis
13. Pornanong Phatlum
14. Ariya Jutanugarn
15. Anna Nordqvist
16. Gerina Piller
17. Jessica Korda
18. Paula Creamer
19. Jenny Shin
20. Suzann Pettersen
21. Ai Miyazato
22. Na Yeon Choi
23. Chella Choi
24. Candie Kung
25. Minjee Lee
26. Caroline Masson
27. Jacqui Concolino
28. Karrie Webb
29. Mo Martin
30. Hee Young Park
31. Paula Reto
32. Eun-Hee Ji
33. Danielle Kang
34. Carlota Ciganda
35. Shanshan Feng
36. Brittany Lang
37. Ryann O’Toole
38. Mirim Lee
39. Pernilla Lindberg
40. Lee-Anne Pace
41. Karine Icher
42. Ilhee Lee
43. Lizette Salas
44. Kim Kaufman
45. Brittany Lincicome
46. So Yeon Ryu
47. Megan Khang
48. Min Seo Kwak
49. Austin Ernst
50. M.J. Hur
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
7
6
8
7
7
7
3
5
6
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
6
7
6
8
7
8
7
6
6
8
7
6
6
6
7
5
7
6
6
8
6
8
7
7
8
7
5
5
6
7
5
$433,556
$419,529
$356,580
$342,888
$334,245
$329,929
$288,063
$257,765
$249,549
$248,549
$240,702
$209,190
$195,326
$185,669
$182,507
$167,985
$155,981
$155,294
$154,250
$150,574
$149,228
$146,542
$146,439
$131,976
$124,147
$121,705
$117,696
$106,313
$101,772
$101,270
$100,423
$99,953
$97,145
$96,434
$92,437
$91,946
$90,840
$88,139
$88,095
$87,895
$87,432
$87,396
$82,927
$80,829
$79,624
$78,238
$77,425
$76,362
Hockey
NHL standings, schedule
EASTERN CONFERENCE
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
z-Washington 78 55 17 6 116 241 182
x-Florida
79 45 25 9 99 229 197
x-Pittsburgh 79 46 25 8 100 235 194
Tampa Bay
79 45 29 5 95 219 191
x-N.Y. Rangers 79 44 26 9 97 229 209
Detroit
79 40 28 11 91 204 216
N.Y. Islanders 78 43 26 9 95 219 203
Philadelphia 78 39 26 13 91 203 208
Boston
79 41 30 8 90 233 220
Carolina
79 34 29 16 84 192 216
New Jersey
79 37 34 8 82 176 200
Ottawa
79 36 34 9 81 224 240
Montreal
79 36 37 6 78 211 228
Buffalo
79 33 35 11 77 193 214
Columbus
79 31 40 8 70 205 246
Toronto
79 28 40 11 67 192 233
WESTERN CONFERENCE
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
x-Dallas
80 48 23 9 105 260 226
x-Anaheim
78 44 24 10 98 209 185
x-St. Louis
80 48 23 9 105 221 195
x-Los Angeles 78 46 27 5 97 213 183
x-Chicago
79 46 26 7 99 224 200
x-San Jose
79 44 29 6 94 233 205
x-Nashville
79 39 26 14 92 219 207
Minnesota
80 38 31 11 87 215 201
Colorado
79 39 36 4 82 208 227
Arizona
79 35 37 7 77 205 235
Calgary
79 33 40 6 72 218 251
Winnipeg
79 32 39 8 72 204 231
Vancouver
78 29 36 13 71 179 225
Edmonton
80 30 43 7 67 194 239
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point
for overtime loss.
x-clinched playoff spot
z-clinched conference
Sunday’s Games
Chicago 6, Boston 4
Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 2
Winnipeg 5, Minnesota 1
St. Louis 5, Colorado 1
Anaheim 3, Dallas 1
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Islanders 5, Tampa Bay 2
N.Y. Rangers 4, Columbus 2
Florida 4, Toronto 3
St. Louis 5, Arizona 2
Los Angeles at Vancouver (n)
Today’s Games
Carolina at Boston, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at New Jersey, 6 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Washington, 6 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m.
Florida at Montreal, 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m.
Colorado at Nashville, 7 p.m.
San Jose at Minnesota, 7 p.m.
Arizona at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Calgary, 8 p.m.
Winnipeg at Anaheim, 9 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Columbus at Toronto, 6 p.m.
Vancouver at Edmonton, 6 p.m.
Philadelphia at Detroit, 7 p.m.
Transactions
Monday’s deals
BASEBALL
American League
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Placed LHP
Felix Doubront on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Andrew Lambo from Nashville
(PCL).
National League
CINCINNATI REDS — Placed RHP Homer Bailey on the 15-day DL, retroactive to
March 25. Recalled RHP Robert Stephenson from Louisville (IL).
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Placed OF
Tommy Pham on the 15-day DL.
American Association
FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS —
Signed RHP Tyler Stirewalt and OF Keury
De La Cruz.
JOPLIN BLASTERS — Signed RHPs Jason Zgardowski and Josh Hodges.
LAREDO LEMURS — Signed OF Drew
Martinez and RHP Jeff Inman.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Signed OF Jon
Smith.
TEXAS AIRHOGS — Signed LHP David
Napoli.
WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Signed OF
Bobby Coyle and RHP Jailen Peguero.
Atlantic League
SUGAR LAND SKEETERS — Signed
RHPs Chris Treibt and Zech Zinicola and
INFs Josh Prince and Rick Hage.
Can-Am League
NEW JERSEY JACKALS — Traded RHP
Danny Moskovits to Laredo (AA) for a
player to be named.
BASKETBALL
National Baskeball Association
UTAH JAZZ — Announced the Idaho
Stampede (NBADL) will relocate to Salt
Lake City next season.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CAROLINA PANTHERS — Re-signed DT
Kyle Love to a one-year contract.
CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed OL
Austin Pasztor and Kaleb Johnson, LB
Scott Solomon, PK Travis Coons and WR
Darius Jennings.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — SIgned OL
Stefen Wisniewski and Matt Tobin to oneyear contracts.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Named
Glen Young linebackers coach and Greg
Knox defensive backs coach.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL — Suspended Toronto F Nazem
Kadri four games for cross-checking Detroit’s Luke Glendening in the back of the
head.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Recalled F
Cody Bass from Milwaukee (AHL).
American Hockey League
ALBANY DEVILS — Released RW Alexandre Carrier from a professional tryout
agreement.
ROCHESTER AMERICANS — Returned
F Cason Hohmann and D Spiro Goulakos
to Elmira (ECHL).
SPRINGFIELD FALCONS — Released D
Kevin Montgomery from a professional
tryout agreement. Returned F Tyler Currier to Elmira (ECHL).
COLLEGE
ARIZONA — Named Adia Barnes women’s basketball coach.
BAYLOR — Promoted volunteer assistant volleyball coach Jason Williams to
full-time assistant.
DUKE — Freshman G/F Brandon Ingram announced he will enter the NBA
draft.
Television
Today’s lineup
MLB BASEBALL
3 p.m. (MLB) — N.Y. Mets at Kansas
City
6 p.m. (MLB) — Detroit at Miami or St.
Louis at Pittsburgh
9 p.m. (MLB) — Chicago White Sox at
Oakland
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m. (TNT) — Detroit at Miami
9:30 p.m. (TNT) — Minnesota at Golden State
?
NHL Scoring Leaders
Through April 3
GP G A PTS
Patrick Kane, Chi
79 43 57 100
Jamie Benn, Dal
80 41 47
88
Sidney Crosby, Pit 78 33 49
82
Erik Karlsson, Ott 79 15 64
79
Joe Thornton, SJ
79 18 60
78
Joe Pavelski, SJ
79 36 40
76
J.Gaudreau, Cgy
76 30 45
75
E.Kuznetsov, Was 78 20 55
75
Brent Burns, SJ
79 27 47
74
Tyler Seguin, Dal
72 33 40
73
Blake Wheeler, Wpg 79 23 50
73
Artemi Panarin, Chi 77 28 44
72
Anze Kopitar, LA
77 25 45
70
V.Tarasenko, StL
77 36 33
69
2 tied with 67 pts.
w
s
e
N
?
?
t
o
G
SHARE IT!
We LOVE to publish news about
LOCAL people and what they’re doing.
If its important to YOU,
it’s important to US!
NBA Leaders
THROUGH APRIL 2
SCORING
G FG FT PTS AVG
Curry, GOL
74 752 345 2227 30.1
Harden, HOU
77 653 691 2208 28.7
Durant, OKC
69 668 429 1938 28.1
Cousins, SAC
63 583 468 1703 27.0
Lillard, POR
71 591 395 1794 25.3
James, CLE
73 704 349 1836 25.2
Davis, NOR
61 560 326 1481 24.3
Westbrook, OKC
77 640 450 1828 23.7
DeRozan, TOR
74 584 537 1751 23.7
George, IND
77 580 435 1797 23.3
Thompson, GOL
75 615 187 1679 22.4
Thomas, BOS
77 558 442 1717 22.3
Anthony, NYK
69 547 320 1517 22.0
Lowry, TOR
73 489 393 1571 21.5
Butler, CHI
62 442 371 1315 21.2
Walker, CHA
75 535 349 1586 21.1
Leonard, SAN
68 521 268 1436 21.1
Wiggins, MIN
76 558 403 1572 20.7
McCollum, POR
76 606 174 1572 20.7
Lopez, Bro
73 591 317 1501 20.6
FG PERCENTAGE
FG FGA PCT
Jordan, LAC
340 484 .702
Howard, HOU
342 557 .614
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and information to
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Be sure to include contact information should we have a question.
www.dailycorinthian.com | 662.287.6111
1607 South Harper Rd., Corinth
14 • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
LAND
FOR SALE
81 Acres 15 miles
West of Corinth
*Blacktop Access
from Hwy 600
*Gravel Road access
also from CR 652
*About 71 Acres in
Timber with 10 acres
open land
*Year-Round Spring
and Good Hunting
*Water and Electricity
available at Hwy 600
*Contact Larry Mur-
FOR RENT
OR SELL
RENTED
$190,000
662-279-0935
FOR SALE
8 - 2 bedroom
rental units.
Very good
shape.
All units
occupied. 800
sq feet each.
Rent for 425.00
each per month.
Washer/dryer
hook ups each,
fridge/stove in
each. Call for
appointment
662-424-3105.
Small Storm House
$47,000. OBO
SELL $145,000.
Leave Message
EMPLOYMENT
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0232 GENERAL HELP
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products designed to
help FIND employment.
Before you send money
to any advertiser, it is
ANNOUNCEMENTS
your responsibility to
verify the validity of the
Remember: If an
0107 SPECIAL NOTICE offer.
ad appears to sound
“too good to be true”,
$'237,21
then it may be! Inquir+$33,/<0DUULHG
6XFFHVVIXO([HFXWLYH ies can be made by con6WD\+RPH0RP\HDUQ tacting the Better BusiBureau
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1-800-987-8280.
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)0=$%%
FARM
$'
Mobile Home
16 x 90
3 BR, 2 Bath
7 Acres
RENT $800 MONTH
WITH $200 DEPOSIT.
GARAGE /ESTATE SALES
0240 SKILLED TRADE
Burnsville Area
Call
662-750-0370 Mike
662-279-6547 Jo
662-720-6766
RENTED
References required
3BR, 2 BATH ON
DOUBLE LOT
2.5
CAR
AT
2
.5 CA
AR GARAGE
GA
A R AG E A
T
B
ACK OF
OF L
OT THAT
THA
BACK
LOT
WOULD MAKE A
GREAT WORK SHOP.
Shiloh Falls
Pickwick
3BR/ 3BA, Loft,
Fireplace
Deck,
car
D
eck , 2 c
ar
garage,
g
ara
age,
gated
community
g
ated c
ommunit y
$1200.00 per
month
Minimum
12 month Lease
phy @ 662-287-5686,
662-284-9164
MARSH TOWN
COMPLETELY
MO DE L E D &
REMODELED
NE W ROOF
RO O F
NEW
HOME FOR RENT
BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE
REWARD
LOST DOG
& Business
3-18-16
#41cr166 Iuka MS.
Black and White
50 lbs male Pit,
one eye blue.
– Run Your Ad On This Page For $165 Mo. –
GRISHAM
INSURANCE
662-286-9835
662-415-2363
Buddy Ayers
Rock & Sand
$500.00
We Haul:
•
•
•
•
•
reward for info.
Crusher Run
Driveway Slag
Fill Sand
Top Soil
Rip-Rap
$1000.00
if returned to me.
Loans $20-$20,000
CHRIS GRISHAM
Finall Expense
Fi
Expense
Life Insurance
Long Term Care
Medicare Supplements
Part D Prescription Plan
Are you paying too much for
your Medicare Supplement?
“ I will always try to help you”
Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834
Bill Phillips
Sand & Gravel
•
•
•
•
•
662-286-9158
or 662-287-2296
Hat Lady
Bill Jr., 284-6061
G.E. 284-9209
FULL SERVICE LAWN SPECIALIST
SPRING CLE A N UP
CREPE MYRTLE PRUNING
• MOW ING
• T RIMMING
• SM A L L T REE &
BRU SH CL E A N U P
& MORE
• Q UICK SERV ICE
• FREE E S TIM ATE S
MARTIN
L AWN SERVICE
LOCA LLY OWNED & OPER ATED
662-416-9296
Mary Coats
Thank you for
15 years!!
Call me with your
vehicle needs,
new, certified,
and pre-owned.
Come by, text or
call today!!!
Long Lewis Ford
Lincoln of Corinth
(662)664-0229 Cell /
(662)287-3184 Office
[email protected]
BRAWNER
VANDERFORD &
COMPANY
QUALITY
PAVEMENT REPAIR
•Rubberized Asphalt Seal Coating
•Asphalt Rejuvenation- Liquid Road
•Hot Pour Crack Filling
•All Types of Gravel Hauling &
Spreading
•Pot Hole Repair
10% discount for senior
citizens, churches, & military
with ID.
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Serving MS, TN, & AL
662.802.9211
662.279.5121
FREE ESTIMATES
Lawson
Lawn Care
and Tractor
Services
Storage
Buildings
Cash or
Rent to Own
No Security
Deposit
U S Hwy 45 So.
662-415-8180
www.
secureportable
buildings.com
SHELTERS
0142 LOST
40 Years
“Cash For College”
LAWN KINGS LAWN CARE
AARON 662-665-1518
1299 Hwy 2 West
(Marshtown)
Structure demolition & Removal
Crushed Lime Stone (any size)
Iuka Road Gravel
Washed gravel
Pea gravel
Fill sand
Masonry and sand
Black Magic mulch
Natural Brown mulch
Top Soil
“Let us help with your project”
“Large or Small”
Call 662-321-7804
Ronnie Waldrop, Thanks.
TORNADO
We also do:
Dozer
Back-Hoe
Track-hoe
Demolition
Crane Service
Lawn Care, Bush Hogging,
Tilling and More...
Years experience and insured
Commercial and residential
Lawn Kings would like your
business. I am starting a lawn
care business to help pay for
my college. We are insured and
we guarantee the best job at
the best price. We offer a full
service mowing package with
no contract. Lawn Kings is
family owned and operated; we
don't sub out our jobs to other
lawn care businesses or other
workers. It will always be the
same 2 family members in your
yard giving you the best looking
lawn in the neighborhood
because your yard is our
reputation.
We Clean Roofs!
ELITE
Pressure Washing
Professional
Pressure Washing
& Soft Wash
Roof Cleaning
Residential &
Commercial
High-grade mold inhibitor
chemicals & Soft wash system
used to clean roofs
References Available
Licensed & Insured.
No Job too large or too small.
Full Service Mowing Package:
• Mowing • Trimming • Blowing
• Debris/ Trash Pickup
Chad Cornelius - Owner
Ask about referral discount.
FREE ESTIMATE
Classic,
Dependable
King’s
Lawn
Care
662-665-1849
Lee’s
Lawn
Service
Yard Maintenance,
Tree Trimming,
Landscaping
Chip King
662-415-7721
Lee Hinton
662-665-2010
LOST
Young Short Haired
Yellow & White Cat.
Belly partially shaved.
Lost around Hwy. 45
& Hwy. 2 Corinth.
662-212-3304
0232 GENERAL HELP
ACCOUNTING CLERK
Refreshments, Inc. is accepting resumes for a full-time
accounting clerk. Prior experience in accounts payable,
accounts receivable and general ledger functions
preferred. Applicants must be proficient in Excel, Word,
MS and 10 key calculator. They must be well organized
and flexible for this position. This is an hourly position
with full benefits.
Qualified applicants send resume to:
Accounting Clerk
Refreshments, Inc.
P. O. Box 240
Corinth, MS 38835-0240
[email protected]
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and so much more
lawn maintenance
Great services at an
affordable rate
References available
Josh Lawson owner/operator
662-596-5177
56 County Road 430
Rienzi, MS 38865
[email protected]
www.dailycorinthian.com
Subscribe online or at 662.287.6111
Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • 15
0430 FEED/FERTILIZER
MISC. ITEMS FOR
0563 SALE
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0563 SALE
HOMES FOR
0710 SALE
MOBILE HOMES
0741 FOR SALE
6.,/6$:EODGH
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PUBLISHER’S
NOTICE
All real estate advertised herein is subject
to the Federal Fair
Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise any preference,
limitation, or discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status
or national origin, or intention to make any
such preferences, limitations or discrimination.
State laws forbid discrimination in the sale,
rental, or advertising of
real estate based on
factors in addition to
those protected under
federal law. We will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are
available on an equal
opportunity basis.
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for details.
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Holder Accounting Firm
1407-A Harper Road
Corinth, MS 38834
Kellie Holder, Owner
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
ADVERTISE
YOUR
TAX SERVICE
HERE FOR
$95 A MONTH
CALL 287-6111
FOR MORE
DETAILS
LEGALS
0955 LEGALS
NOTICE OF SALE BY
SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE
WHEREAS, JAMES
M. WILHITE and
MELISSA D. WILHITE,
made, executed and delivered to JONATHAN B.
HARRIS as Trustee for the
benefit of REDSTONE
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, a certain Deed of Trust
Jackson Hewitt
Income Tax
WE ARE NOT
AFFILIATED WITH
ANY OF THE
WALMART
JACKSON HEWITT’S
ADVERTISE
YOUR
TAX SERVICE
HERE FOR
$95 A MONTH
CALL 287-6111
FOR MORE
DETAILS
ON, a certain Deed of Trust
bearing the date of December 3, 2010, and filed of record as Instrument No.
201005990, in the land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi;
WHEREAS, RED':%5%DWK0XVWEH S T O N E F E D E R A L
P R Y H G $ 6 $ 3 CREDIT UNION, legal
&DOO7H[W holder and owner of said
Deed of Trust and the indebtedness secured thereby,
substituted W. JETT
TRANSPORTATION
WILSON as Substitute
Trustee, by instrument dated
April 13, 2015 and recorded
in the Office of the Chancery
Clerk of Alcorn County, MisFINANCIAL
sissippi, as Instrument No.
201501351;
TAX GUIDE 2016
/($7+(5 5(&/,1(5
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GLWLRQ
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
0955 LEGALS
Corinth
662-286-1040
2003 Hwy 72 E
Booneville
662-728-1080
508 W Chambers Drive
Old highway 4
Ripley
662-512-5829
1906B City Avenue N
s
e
l
a
S
GUARANTEEDAuto
WHEREAS, default
having been made in the
terms and conditions of said
Deed of Trust and the entire
debt secured thereby, having
been declared to be due and
payable in accordance with
the terms of said Deed of
Trust, and the legal holder of
said indebtedness, REDSTONE FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, having
requested the undersigned
Substitute Trustee to execute the trust and sell said
0955 LEGALS
land and property in accordance with the terms of said
Deeds of Trust for the purpose of raising the sums due
thereunder, together with attorney's fees, Substitute
Trustee's fees, and expense of
sale.
NOW, THEREFORE,
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that I, the undersigned Substitute Trustee, on
the 6th day of April, 2016, at
the South front door of the
Alcorn County Courthouse,
in the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi,
within the legal hours for
such sales (being between the
hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00
p.m.), will offer for sale and
sell, at public outcry to the
highest bidder for cash, the
following property conveyed
to me by said Deed of Trust
described as follows:
Lots 30 & 31, of East Evergreens Subdivision according
to the map or plat of said
subdivision filed in the Office
of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in
Plat Book 3 at Page 53.
Although the title to said
property is believed to be
0955 LEGALS
property is believed to be
good, I will sell and convey
only such title in said property as is vested in me as Substitute Trustee.
SIGNED, POSTED
AND PUBLISHED on this
the 15 day of March, 2016.
/s/ W. Jett Wilson
W. JETT WILSON MSB#
7316
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE
WILSON & HINTON, P.A.
Post Office Box 1257
Corinth, MS 38835
(662) 286-3366
Publish 4 times:
March 15, 22, 29,
April 5, 2016
15246
IN THE CHANCERY
COURT OF ALCORN
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
RE:
IN THE MATTER
OF
THE
ESTATE
OF LARRY A. BRINKLEY,
DECEASED
NO. 2016-0228-02
our certified technicians
We’ll Put Collision Let
quickly restore your vehicle
condition
Damage in Reverse towithpre-accident
a satisfaction guarantee.
State-of-the-Art Frame
Straightening
Dents, Dings &
Scratches Removed
Custom Color
Matching Service
We’ll Deal Directly
With Your Insurance
Company
No up-front payments.
No hassle.
No paperwork.
Free Estimates
25 Years professional
service experience
Rental cars available
Corinth Collision Center
810 S. Parkway
662.594.1023
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.
816
RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES
Pace Utility Tandem Trailer.
REDUCED
Sportsman Camper
Queen Bed, Couch
sleeps 2, lots of cabinets,
pulled 6 times,
non-smoker, clean as
new on the inside.
$9,500.00
$7000.00
287-3461 or
396-1678
(Enclosed) 6x12, Wired, A/C,
Custom detailed/paint, inlayed
equipment brackets,
windows/shades and awning
Drop down loading door and
mounted Alum tool box.
Custom Wheels like new!
Perfect for camping.
Includes 2 twin electric air
mattresses and port-a-potty.
Serious inquiries only.
No Calls after 6PM.
Corinth.
$6500.00
662-284-4604
SOLD
2011 AR-ONE Star Craft,
14ft. Fridge/AC, Stove,
Microwave, Full bath, immaculate
condition. Refinance or payoff
(prox. $5300) @ Trustmark,
payments $198.
Excellent starter for small family.
284-0138
2006 SPRINGDALE
by KEYSTONE
pull camper with
slideout. Can sleep up
to 10 with 2 bedrooms.
29’ long. Great condition
& new tires. Ready to go.
SOLD
‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’
REDUCED
2006 WILDERNESS
CAMPER
29 FT.
SOLD
5TH WHEEL
LARGE SLIDE OUT
FULLY EQUIPPED
$7000.00
Joe Roberts
662-415-5450
NON-SMOKING OWNER
IUKA
CALL 662-423-1727
gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts,
full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks
& s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000
gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera,
auto. leveling, 2-flat screen TVs, Allison
6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather
capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning,
qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed),
micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.
CED
U
D
E
R
$55,000
662-415-0590
2005
AIRSTREAM
LAND YACHT
30 ft., with slide out
& built-in TV antenna,
2 TV’s, 7400 miles.
$75,000.
662-287-7734
Excaliber made
by Georgi Boy
1985 30’ long
motor home,
new tires, Price
negotiable.
662-660-3433
470
TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.
1990
Allegro
Motor
Home
SOLD
Excellent Condition
Brand New Refrigerator
New Tires & Hot Water
Heater. Sleeps Six
7,900 ACTUAL MILES
$12,500. OBO
Must See!!
Call 662-665-1420
30' MOTOR
HOME
1988 FORD
2003 CHEROKEE 285
SLEEPS 8
EXCELLENT CONDITION
EVERYTHING WORKS
5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK
ADAPTER
CENTRAL HEAT & AIR
ALL NEW TIRES & NEW
ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER
$7500
$8995
CALL
RICHARD
662-416-0604
Call Richard
662-664-4927
D
L
O
S
51,000 MILES
SLEEPS 6
$4300
662-415-5247
WINNEBAGO JOURNEY
CLASS A , RV 2000
MODEL
34.9 FT. LONG
50 AMP HOOKUP
CUMMINS DIESEL
FREIGHTLINER CHASSIS
LARGE SLIDE OUT
ONAN QUIET
GENERATOR
VERY WELL KEPT.
,500.
662-728-2628
SOLD
ED
C
U
D
RE
24 FT BONANZA
TRAILER
GOOSE NECK
GOOD CONDITION
$2,000.00
$1,800.00
662-287-8894
WINNEBAGO
MOTOR HOME
1989
40'
Queen Size Bed
1 Bath
Sleeps 6-7
people comfortably
$8500
662-808-9313
FORD 601
WORKMASTER
TRACTOR WITH
EQUIPMENT
POWER STEERING
GOOD PAINT
$5800.00
662-416-5191
1953 FORD
GOLDEN
JUBILEE
TRACTOR
$
6000.00
662-286-6571
662-286-3924
COMMERCIAL
8N FORD
TRACTOR
GOOD
CONDITION
$2500.00
287-8456
KUBOTA 2001
FOR SALE
JOHN DEERE
TRACTORS
SPRING
SPECIAL
662-415-0399
662-419-1587
2009 TT45A
New Holland Tractor
335 Hours
8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro
Mesh Transmission. Roll
over protective structure,
hydrolic power lift. Like
New Condition, owner
deceased, Kossuth Area.
$10,000- 662-424-3701
5700 HP
GOOD
CONDITION
OWNER
RETIRING
$10,000.00
731-453-5521
601 FORD
WORKMASTER
SOLD
EXCELLENT CONDITION
$3,500
731-453-5239
731-645-8339
W & W HORSE
OR CATTLE TRAILER
ALL ALUMINUM
LIKE NEW
$7000.
731-453-5239
731-645-8339
1956 FORD 600
5 SPEED
POWER STEERING
REMOTE HYDRAULICS
GOOD TIRES
GOOD CONDITION
$4,200
662-287-4514
Hyster Forklift
Narrow Aisle
24 Volt Battery
3650.00
287-1464
804
BOATS
53' STEP DECK
TRAILER
Baker
Propane
Forklift
4000 LB Lift
$2000.00
662-279-7011
CUSTOM BUILT TO
HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1
TON TRUCKS.
662-287-1464
Loweline
Boat
14’ flat bottom
boat. Includes
trailer, motor
and all.
SOLD
Call
Big Boy Forklift
$
1250
Great for a small
warehouse
662-287-1464
Toyota Forklift
5,000 lbs
Good Condition
662-287-1464
BOOMS, CHAINS &
LOTS OF ACCESSORIES
$10,000/OBO
CALL 662-603-1547
ASKING $7500.00
Or Make Me An Offer
CALL 662-427-9591
Call (662)427-9591 or
Cell phone (662)212-4946
Built by Scully’s Aluminum Boats of Louisiana.
1989
FOXCRAFT
18’ long, 120 HP
Johnson mtr., trailer
& mtr., new paint,
new transel, 2
live wells, hot foot
control.
662-415-9461
$6500.
or
662-596-5053
662-554-5503
BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3'
PULL OUTS @ FRONT
& REAR.
Clark Forklift
8,000 lbs,
outside tires
Good Condition
$15,000
ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE
16FT./5FT.
115 HP. EVINRUDE.
NEW TROLLING MOTOR
TRAILER NEWLY REWIRED
ALL TIRES NEW
NEW WINCH
2000 MERCURY
Optimax, 225 H.P.
Imagine owning a likenew, water tested, never
launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a High Five
stainless prop,
for only $7995.
Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat
Sales in Counce, TN for details.
731-689-4050
or 901-605-6571
16' SKI BOAT
1988 Winner Escape
Sport 1750
4.3 liter mer Cruiser
Alpha One Engine
Runs but needs
some work
Includes Trailer, Winch,
Depth Finder and Side
Sonar Fish Finder
Appraised for $2,200.
Make an offer.
662-415-3752
DECK BOAT BAYLINER CLASSIC
15 FT Grumman Flat
Bottom Boat
25 HP Motor
$2700.00
Ask for Brad:
284-4826
SOLD
1995 15’ Aluminum
Boat, Outboard
Motor, Trolling Mtr.,
New Rod Holder,
New Electric
Anchor
$2550.00
462-3373
2012 Lowe Pontoon
90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer
Still under warranty.
Includes HUGE tube
$19,300
662-427-9063
SOLD
14 Ft. Aluminum
Boat & Trailer,
25 HP Johnson
Motor.
New Battery
$2000.
REDUCED
Call for More Info:
662-286-8455
BOAT & TRAILER
13 YR OLD
M14763BC BCMS
Includes Custom
19.5 LONG
Trailer Dual
Axel-Chrome
BLUE & WHITE
Retractable Canopy
REASONABLY PRICED
$4500.00
662-660-3433
662-419-1587
1985 Hurricane-150
Johnson engine
16 • Tuesday, April 5, 2016 • Daily Corinthian
0955 LEGALS
NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby given
that Letters of Administration have been on the 31st day
of March, 2016, in Cause No.
2016-0228-02, issued to the
undersigned, Karen Brinkley,
on the Estate of Larry A.
Brinkley, deceased, by the
Chancery Court of Alcorn
County, Mississippi, and all
persons having claims against
said estate are required to
have the same probated and
registered by the Clerk of
said Court within ninety (90)
days from the first publication of this Notice, and that
failure to probate and register their claims with the
Clerk within that time will
forever bar the claim.
WITNESS my signature on
this the 31 st day of March,
2016.
/s/ Karen Brinkley
Karen
Brinkley,
Executrix of the Estate of
0955 LEGALS
0955 LEGALS
Executrix of the Estate of
Larry A. Brinkley, Deceased tronic Registration Systems,
Inc. as nominee for One Reverse Mortgage, LLC, Origin/s/John O. Windsor
J o h n O . W i n d s o r ; M S B : al Beneficiary, to secure the
indebtedness therein de102155
John O. Windsor, Attorney at scribed, as same appears of
record in the office of the
Law
Chancery Clerk of Alcorn
Post Office Drawer 1860
County, Mississippi filed and
Corinth, Mississippi 38835
recorded March 5, 2012, at
(662)872-0121
Instrument Number
201201164; and WHEREAS,
3tc 4/5, 4/12, 4/19/2016
the beneficial interest of said
Deed of Trust was trans15277
ferred and assigned to Reverse Mortgage Solutions,
Inc.; and WHEREAS, the unNOTICE OF
dersigned, Rubin Lublin, LLC
SUBSTITUTE
has been appointed as SubstiTRUSTEE' S SALE
tute Trustee; and NOW,
S T A T E O F M I S S I S S I P P I THEREFORE, the holder of
C O U N T Y O F A L C O R N said Deed of Trust, having reWHEREAS, default has oc- quested the undersigned so
curred in the performance of to do, as Substitute Trustee
the covenants, terms and or his duly appointed agent,
conditions of a Deed of Trust by virtue of the power, duty
dated December 13, 2011, and authority vested and imexecuted by Eugene Justice posed upon said Substitute
and Judith Justice, conveying Trustee shall, on May 12,
certain real property therein 2016 within the lawful hours
described to Michael Lyon, as of sale between 11:00AM and
Trustee, for Mortgage Elec-
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
0955 LEGALS
0955 LEGALS
4:00PM at the south steps of
Alcorn County Courthouse
proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash or certified
funds ONLY, the following
described property situated in
Alcorn County, Mississippi, to
wit: TAX ID NUMBER(S):
090827 00800 LAND SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF
ALCORN IN THE STATE OF
MS SITUATED IN THE
COUNTY OF ALCORN,
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, TOWIT THE WEST HALF OF
THE
SOUTHWEST
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 27, TOWNSHIP 2,
RANGE 8 EAST OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI. COMMONLY
KNOWN AS: 137 COUNTY
ROAD 239, CORINTH, MS
38834 PROPERTY ADDRESS:
The street address of the
property is believed to be 137
County Road 329, Corinth,
MS 38834. In the event of any
discrepancy between this
street address and the legal
description of the property, 5,&+$5'621/$:1
6(59,&(
the legal description shall con
trol. Title to the above described property is believed
STORAGE, INDOOR/
to be good, but I will convey
only such title as is vested in
OUTDOOR
me as Substitute Trustee.
THIS LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A
STORAGE, INDOOR/
DEBT. ANY INFORMAOUTDOOR
TION OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
0(7$/&$5*2
Rubin Lublin, LLC, Substitute
&217$,1(56
Trustee 428 North Lamar
*UHDWIRU6WRUDJH
Blvd, Suite 107 Oxford, MS
3
8
6
5
5
www.rubinlublin.com/prop$0(5,&$1
erty-listings.php Tel: (877)
0,1,6725$*(
813-0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846
67DWH
PUBLISH: 04/05/2016,
$FURVV)URP
04/14/2016, 04/21/2016,
:RUOG&RORU
04/28/2016, 05/05/2016 Ad
#96430
0255,6&580
0,1,6725$*(
15278
HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY
s
e
l
a
S
GUARANTEEDAuto
PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE DIRECTORY
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o
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Be sure to include contact information should we have a question.
www.dailycorinthian.com | 662.287.6111
1607 South Harper Rd., Corinth
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.
868
AUTOMOBILES
CED
REDU
2009
Pontiac G6
Super Nice,
Really Clean,
Oil changed regularly,
Good cold air and has
good tires. 160k
Asking
$4800. OBO
CALL/TEXT
DANIEL @
662-319-7145
Automobile for sale
RE
DU
CE
D
2011
TOYOTA
AVALON
D
L
SO
Blizzard White, Tan
Leather Interior, Fully
Loaded, 66K miles,
$19,500
Excellent Condition
Call:731-610-6153
2010 Hyundai
Elantra.
1 owner extra
nice.
66500 miles.
Very clean
$6550.
662 415 5289
2006 Jeep
Liberty
New Tires
100K Miles
Never BeeWrecked
$5900.00
OBO
$8200 OBO
662-664-0357
6 cyl., 5 speed
Convertible
Leather Seats
All Original
Electric Windows
& Seats
88,000 miles
$10,000.00 OBO
212-4882
1989 Mercedes Benz
300 CE
145K miles, Rear
bucket seats,
Champagne
color,
1946 Willys Jeep
2012 Jeep
Excellent
Condition.
Wrangler 4WD
Completely
00 Miles, Red
Diligently
Restored
Garage Kept, it has
maintained.
been babied.
All maintenance
$5000.
records available.
$4000.00
$5000.00
Call or Text:
662-415-2657
662-594-5830
287-6993
SOLD
1997 Mustang
GT
SOLD
Black
Like new on the
inside and out.
Runs Great, good
tires, 114K miles
$
4,000.00
$3,900.00
662-664-0357
2003 Mustang GT
SVT Cobra Clone
Tuned 4.6 Engine
5 Speed
Lowered
4:10 Gears
All Power & Air
$6500.
662-415-0149
2012 Subaru
Legacy
$10,900
$7,900
Excellent condition,
One owner, Must sell!
Call
662-284-8365
2010 Chevy
Equinox LS
For Sale or Trade
1978 Mercedes
6.9 Motor 135,000 miles.
Only made 450 that year.
$2,500. OBO
Selling due to health
reasons.
Harry Dixon
286-6359
2005 White
Silverado
Truck
Extended Cab
with Bed Cover
130K Miles,
Fully Loaded
GREAT Condition!
$10,500
662-415-8343
or 415-7205
New Michelin Tires
Excellent Condition
462-7421
808-9114
1999 DODGE VAN
110K miles, 4
Captain Chairs,
Folding Bed/
Rear Seat, TV no
DVD, New heads
on engine, Runs
Perfect. $4500.00
OBO
287-1097 or 808-1297
2004 Cadillac
Seville SLS
D
L
SO
Loaded, leather,
sunroof, chrome
wheels.
89,000 Miles
$5500.
$5,000
Call
662-603-1290
$24,200
662-223-6569 OR
662-223-9029
D
L
SO
Very
Dependable
Car
Call for
information.
662-212-4437
2003 FORD
TAURUS
142100 MILES
$2800.00
662-665-5720
Excel. Cond.
Inside & Out
All Original
$8,90000
662-664-0357
1985 Mustang GT,
2014 Toyota Corolla
S 1.8 LOW MILES!!
$15,999
(Corinth Ms)
Silver 2014 Toyota corolla
S 1.8: Back-up camera;
Xenon Headlights;
Automatic CVT gearbox;
Paddle Shift; 25k miles
LOW MILES !!!
Up to 37mpg; One owner!
Perfect condition!
(205-790-3939)
2011 GMC
CANYON-RED
REG. CAB,
2 WD
78,380 MILES
HO, 5 Speed,
Convertible,
Mileage 7500 !!
Second owner
Last year
of carburetor,
All original.
$16,500
662-287-4848
1976 F115
428 Motor
Very Fast
$11,900 OBO
$3,500.
662-462-7790
662-808-9313
662-415-5071
2010 FORD
95’
F150 LARIAT CHEVY
ASTRO
SUPER CREW,
WHITE, LOADED
2 WHEEL DR., LTHR
CPT. CHAIRS
57,000 MILES
1970 MERCURY
COUGAR
2002 FORD
ESCORT ZX2
1998
PORSCHE
BOXSTER
Cargo Van
Good, Sound
Van
$2700
872-3070
1950 Buick
78,400 miles
$4200.00 or
Trade
All Original
662-415-3408
1998 Cadillac DeVille
Tan Leather Interior
Sunroof, green color
99,000 miles
- needs motor
$1,100.00
(662) 603-2635
212-2431
2006 Chrysler
Town & Country Van
85,000 miles
Automatic, AC,
Tape, CD Players
Electric Doors &
Windows.
Hideaway Rear
Seats.
$5000.00 OBO
662-213-7748
2001 LINCOLN
TOWNCAR
GREAT CONDITION
174,000 MILES
$6,000.00
CALL 9AM-5PM M-F
662-415-3658
06 Chevy
Trailblazer
1987
Power
FORD 250 DIESEL 1994 Nissan Quest
everything!
New Lifters,
UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK
Good heat
Cam, Head,
$4000.
and Air
Struts and Shocks.
IN GOOD CONDITION
$2000.
$3,250 OBO
731-645-8339 OR
Call 603-9446
662-319-7145
731-453-5239
832
Motorcycles/ATV’S
1964 F100 SHORT BED
2002 Chevy Silverado Z71
2 Person Owner
Heat & Air, 4 Wheel Drive,
Works Great
New Tires, 5.1 Engine
Club Cab and Aluminum
Tool Box
AM/FM Radio, Cassette &
CD Player
Pewter in Color
Great Truck for
$7000.00
662-287-8547
662-664-3179
2005 Harley
Davidson Trike
24,000 miles,
Ultra Classic
2002 Dodge
3500
5.9 Diesel. 6 speed.
391,000 miles.
5,800
$
(901) 409-0427
Side-by-Side
4 X 4 w/ Wench
AM/FM w/ CD
$5900.00 OBO
$7200.00
OBO
662-415-7407
662-808-4557
662-664-0357
1500
Goldwing
Honda
2000 Harley
Davidson Road
King Classic
$4500
662-284-9487
136,200 mi.
Well Maintained
Looks & Runs Great
$5,000.00
662-415-9062
2012
Banshee
Bighorn
Nice, $23,500.
78,000 original
miles,new tires.
1998 CHEVY
CUSTOM VAN
2001 Heritage Softail
LIKE NEW
9K Miles
25,000 Invested
Asking 8K
Serviced by H/D
Bumpas
731-645-3012
YAMAHA V
STAR 650
$8,500.00
22,883 MILES
$2,650.00
665-1288
Leave Message
750-8526
D
L
SO
2008 Harley
Davidson
Electra Glide Classic
Black w/lots of
Chrome
21,600 miles
$12,500
662-286-6750
HAS BEEN
USED QUIET
EXCESSIVELY
OVER 352,000
MILES
D
D
L
L
SO
SO
$600.00
662-415-7898
2006 YAMAHA 1700
GREAT CONDITION!
APPROX. 26,000 MILES
$4350
(NO TRADES)
662-665-0930
662-284-8251
6 Ft 6 in. wide,
13 Ft 6 in. long,
Electric Brakes
& Lights
GOOD
CONDITION
$1,250.00
415-1281
1999 Harley Classic
Touring, loaded, color:
blue, lots of extras.
70,645 Hwy. miles,
$7,900.00 OBO Just
serviced, good or new
tires, brakes, ready for
the road. Call @
662-664-0210
ED
C
U
D
RE
2012 Yamaha 230
Dirt Bike
Great Condition.
$2800.00
Call
662.415.1173
2nd Owner, Great
Condition
Has a Mossy Oak
Cover over the body
put on when it was
bought new. Everything
Works. Used for
hunting & around the
house, Never for mud
riding.
$1500 Firm.
If I don’t answer, text
me and I will contact
you. 662-415-7154
2003 100 yr.
Anniversary 883
Harley Sportster,
color: blue, 14,500
miles, $4,900. OBO.
Just serviced, good
or new tires, brakes,
ready for the road.
Call @
662-664-0210
D
L
SO
2006 Harley Davidson
Street Glide
103 Screaming Eagle Engine
9700 Actual Miles-Showroom
Condition-Fully Chromed and
Customized-Rinehart
True Dual Exhaust-Stage1
Breather Kit-10K Mile Full Factory
Service Just Compled$14,000.00 Firm-
662-212-0362
2002 Harley Fat Boy,
color: purple, 27,965
miles, $7,900 OBO
Just serviced, good
or new tires, brakes,
ready for the road.
Call @
662-664-0210
1990 Harley
Davidson
Custom Soft-Tail
$9000
2013 Arctic Cat
1949 Harley
Davidson
Panhead
$9000 OBO
308 miles
4 Seater w/seat belts
Phone charger outlet
Driven approx.
10 times
Excellent Condition
Wench (front bumper)
662-808-2994
(662)279-0801
2000 POLARIS
MAGNUM 325 4X4
4 WHEELER
20,000 miles,
One Owner,
Garage kept.
662-287-2333
completely refurbished
& recovered seat, new
brakes, NOS starter,
new $125 battery.
6cyl, 3spdWalnut $1850.00,
2001 FORD CAR HAULER
CARGO VAN
TRAILER
HD 1200
SPORTSTER
CUSTOM XL
LOTS OF EXTRAS
GREAT CONDITION
39K MILES
$5,200.00
662-643-8382