011415 daily corinthian e edition

18
Index On this day in history 150 years ago A furlough system has been established to allow the soldiers of Hood’s Army of Tennessee to go home for a period of 10 days each. This is done by Hood’s order in “consideration of their faithful service” during the recent Nashville campaign. Stocks...... 8A Classified...... 3B Comics...... 2B State...... 5A Weather.... 12A Obituaries...... 6A Opinion...... 4A Sports.... 10A Vol. 119, No. 12 Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages Two sections Wednesday Jan. 14, 2015 50 cents Taste Onions pack flavor in a healthy package. Page 1B Winter reveals lichen growth on plants. Page 7A Daily Corinthian Today 42 Chilly Tonight 23 0% chance of rain/snow The spirit of giving the holi- day season is alive and well in the Alcorn County area. Donations are still needed this year for the 19th Annual Corinth Rotary Club/Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund. A $25,000 fundraising goal was set so 1,000 food baskets could be given to local families on Saturday, Dec. 6. Baskets were given away based upon faith the goal will be reached. So far, $19,029 has been raised, meaning $5,971 still needs to be raised to make the goal. The deadline to give has been extended to Friday, Jan. 16 Recent donations include a $100 from Brenda, Hayden and Alyssa Park in memory of Thomas Park; and $100 from William J. Dennie and Marga- ret W. Dennie. Contributions to the Christ- mas Basket Fund can be made “in honor of” or “in memory of” a special person or persons. The tribute will be published in the Daily Corinthian. Donations can be brought by the newspaper ofce 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or mailed to: Daily Corinthian, Attn.: Christmas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835. Basket fund donations top $19,000 Home & Garden Another seven candidates are in the running for county ofces after the last few days of qualifying activity. Three of the seven led to run for 4th District supervisor, bringing the number of candi- dates for that post to six thus far. Not yet among them is the three-term incumbent, Gary Ross. “As of right now, I do plan to run,” he told the Daily Corin- thian on Tuesday, although he is yet to make it ofcial. New to that race are Don- nie Dunn and Steve Glidewell, running as Democrats, and Keith “Dude” Conaway, run- ning as a Republican. The post 2 constable race picked up two more candidate s as Billy Joel Flake and Billy Mathis led to run as Demo- crats, giving the race six can- didates. The constable post 1 race gained two more candidates as James McAnally led a peti- tion to run as an independent candidate and Wayne Maddox led a statement of intent to run as a Democrat. Both constable posts are open races during this election cycle. 7 more qualify for offices BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] A proposed reduction in Corinth High School’s cheer- leading squad is before the Corinth School District Board of Trustees for consideration. The board on Monday de- cided to table the proposal from the athletic director for some further deliberation. The re- quest is to decrease the number of members from 20 to 14. The number of dancers has already been reduced to 14. Superintendent Lee Childress wants the board to make a deci- sion by February, as tryouts will be coming up in the spring. He Board weighs cutting cheer squad to 14 BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] The Alcorn School District board elected new ofcers this week during its regular month- ly meeting. James Voyles, who has held the secretary position for the last year, declined a nomination by Russ Nash for president. “Since I am seeking another ofce, I feel it would be unfair for me to hold the president seat on this board,” said Voyles, who recently announced his bid for the Alcorn County Dis- trict 2 super- visor post. “I would like to nominate Mary Cole- man to ll out my term as president.” Coleman will continue to serve as the board’s president for the second consecutive year. “I am honored to be able to serve another year,” said Cole- man. Board member Carroll Mor- ton was elected as secretary for Board elects Coleman president BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Coleman Carla Taylor, a Prentiss County dairy farmer, has been named Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation (MFBF) Farm Woman of the Year. Taylor, a longtime Farm Bureau volunteer leader, says she appreciates the many ways Farm Bureau supports our nation’s farm- ers, especially its efforts to carry the farmer’s story to the general public. “The Farm Families of Mississippi campaign is do- ing a fantastic job of helping consumers across the state gain an understanding of the importance of farming,” she said. “The Women’s, Ag in the Classroom and Farm Woman of the Year pro- grams are giving women farmers a voice and an ave- nue to teach schoolchildren and others about agricul- ture.” Taylor, who serves as women’s chair for Prentiss County Farm Bureau and has also served on the Young Farmers & Ranchers (YF&R) Farm Woman of the Year For the Daily Corinthian Prentiss dairy farmer gets award Dairy farmer Carla Taylor looks over some of the herd recent- ly at her family’s farm in Prentiss County. Ticket sales for next month’s 4th Annual Father-Daughter Ball event are off to a great start. Set for Valentine’s Day night - Saturday, February 14 - from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Crossroads Arena, the ball will provide a fairy tale setting for fathers, grandfathers and father-g- ures to carry their daughter or granddaughter to the ball. Sales kicked off prior to Christmas for the “A Night to Remember” themed dance and unlike previously years, tickets to the 2015 fundrais- er for Corinth Kiwanis Club can only be purchased online at corinthkiwanis.org. “This year, due the great re- sponse to the event, we felt it necessary to move solely to online registration and ticket sales in order to streamline the registration process and speed up entry into the event,” said event chair Ken Weeden. “At- tendees will need to print out their online receipts which provide an itemized list of their event purchases.” Weeden said if any issue should arise during the eve- ning, dads or father gures should approach dance volun- teers for assistance. “Online registrations this year are outpacing prior years, so we are hoping for a large crowd to help raise funds for very worthwhile causes,” he added. The rst father-daughter couple ticket is $40, with each additional daughter costing only $10 each. The fee in- cludes variety of food, a profes- sional dance oor with family friendly music by a live deejay, Meet the Princesses, Beauty Makeover Station and Make a Cupcake for Dad Station. Early deadline for ticket sales is February 2, with a $25 late fee added to tickets purchased from February 3-13. “The dancing, food, limos and princesses are all a big hit with the girls, but another of our main objectives is relation- ship building between girls and their dads or father-gures,” Weeden said. “Moms seem to typically have dedicated one- Tickets off to sweet start for ball BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] T-shirts for the 4th Annual Father-Daughter Ball can be added to the online purchase of tickets at corinthkiwanis. org. Set for Saturday, Feb. 14 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Crossroads Arena, the ball will provide a fairy tale setting for fathers, grandfathers and father-figures to carry their daughter or granddaughter to the ball. Please see BALL | 3A Please see CHEER | 3A Please see TAYLOR | 3A Please see SCHOOLS | 3A Please see CANDIDATES | 3A Coming Soon the All-New Brose Autoplex. YES we are OPEN! Coming Soon the All-New Brose Autoplex. YES we are OPEN!

description

011415 daily corinthian e edition

Transcript of 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Page 1: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Index On this day in history 150 years agoA furlough system has been established to allow the soldiers

of Hood’s Army of Tennessee to go home for a period of 10 days each. This is done by Hood’s order in “consideration of their faithful service” during the recent Nashville campaign.

Stocks......8A Classified......3B Comics......2B State......5A

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

Vol. 119, No. 12 • Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages • Two sections

WednesdayJan. 14, 2015

50 cents

TasteOnions pack flavor

in a healthy package.

Page 1B

Winter reveals lichengrowth on plants.

Page 7A

Daily Corinthian Today42

ChillyTonight

230% chance of rain/snow

The spirit of giving the holi-day season is alive and well in the Alcorn County area.

Donations are still needed this year for the 19th Annual Corinth Rotary Club/Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund.

A $25,000 fundraising goal was set so 1,000 food baskets could be given to local families on Saturday, Dec. 6. Baskets were given away based upon faith the goal will be reached.

So far, $19,029 has been raised, meaning $5,971 still needs to be raised to make the goal. The deadline to give has been extended to Friday, Jan. 16

Recent donations include a $100 from Brenda, Hayden and Alyssa Park in memory of Thomas Park; and $100 from William J. Dennie and Marga-ret W. Dennie.

Contributions to the Christ-mas Basket Fund can be made “in honor of” or “in memory of” a special person or persons. The tribute will be published in the Daily Corinthian.

Donations can be brought by the newspaper offi ce 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or mailed to: Daily Corinthian, Attn.: Christmas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835.

Basket funddonationstop $19,000

Home & Garden

Another seven candidates are in the running for county offi ces after the last few days of qualifying activity.

Three of the seven fi led to run for 4th District supervisor, bringing the number of candi-dates for that post to six thus

far. Not yet among them is the three-term incumbent, Gary Ross.

“As of right now, I do plan to run,” he told the Daily Corin-thian on Tuesday, although he is yet to make it offi cial.

New to that race are Don-nie Dunn and Steve Glidewell, running as Democrats, and

Keith “Dude” Conaway, run-ning as a Republican.

The post 2 constable race picked up two more candidate s as Billy Joel Flake and Billy Mathis fi led to run as Demo-crats, giving the race six can-didates.

The constable post 1 race gained two more candidates

as James McAnally fi led a peti-tion to run as an independent candidate and Wayne Maddox fi led a statement of intent to run as a Democrat.

Both constable posts are open races during this election cycle.

7 more qualify for officesBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

A proposed reduction in Corinth High School’s cheer-leading squad is before the Corinth School District Board of Trustees for consideration.

The board on Monday de-cided to table the proposal from the athletic director for some further deliberation. The re-quest is to decrease the number of members from 20 to 14. The number of dancers has already been reduced to 14.

Superintendent Lee Childress wants the board to make a deci-sion by February, as tryouts will be coming up in the spring. He

Board weighscutting cheersquad to 14

BY JEBB [email protected]

The Alcorn School District board elected new offi cers this week during its regular month-ly meeting.

James Voyles, who has held the secretary position for the last year, declined a nomination by Russ Nash for president.

“Since I am seeking another offi ce, I feel it would be unfair for me to hold the president seat on this board,” said Voyles, who recently a n n o u n c e d his bid for the Alcorn County Dis-trict 2 super-visor post. “I would like to nominate Mary Cole-man to fi ll out my term as president.”

Coleman will continue to serve as the board’s president for the second consecutive year.

“I am honored to be able to serve another year,” said Cole-man.

Board member Carroll Mor-ton was elected as secretary for

Board electsColeman president

BY ZACK [email protected]

Coleman

Carla Taylor, a Prentiss County dairy farmer, has been named Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation (MFBF) Farm Woman of the Year.

Taylor, a longtime Farm Bureau volunteer leader, says she appreciates the many ways Farm Bureau supports our nation’s farm-ers, especially its efforts to carry the farmer’s story to the general public.

“The Farm Families of Mississippi campaign is do-ing a fantastic job of helping consumers across the state gain an understanding of the importance of farming,” she said. “The Women’s, Ag in the Classroom and Farm Woman of the Year pro-grams are giving women farmers a voice and an ave-nue to teach schoolchildren and others about agricul-ture.”

Taylor, who serves as women’s chair for Prentiss County Farm Bureau and has also served on the Young Farmers & Ranchers (YF&R)

Farm Woman of the Year

For the Daily Corinthian

Prentissdairy farmergets award

Dairy farmer Carla Taylor looks over some of the herd recent-ly at her family’s farm in Prentiss County.

Ticket sales for next month’s 4th Annual Father-Daughter Ball event are off to a great start.

Set for Valentine’s Day night - Saturday, February 14 - from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Crossroads Arena, the ball will provide a fairy tale setting for fathers, grandfathers and father-fi g-ures to carry their daughter or granddaughter to the ball.

Sales kicked off prior to Christmas for the “A Night to Remember” themed dance and unlike previously years, tickets to the 2015 fundrais-er for Corinth Kiwanis Club can only be purchased online at corinthkiwanis.org.

“This year, due the great re-

sponse to the event, we felt it necessary to move solely to online registration and ticket sales in order to streamline the registration process and speed up entry into the event,” said event chair Ken Weeden. “At-tendees will need to print out their online receipts which provide an itemized list of their event purchases.”

Weeden said if any issue should arise during the eve-ning, dads or father fi gures should approach dance volun-teers for assistance.

“Online registrations this year are outpacing prior years, so we are hoping for a large crowd to help raise funds for very worthwhile causes,” he added.

The fi rst father-daughter

couple ticket is $40, with each additional daughter costing only $10 each. The fee in-cludes variety of food, a profes-sional dance fl oor with family friendly music by a live deejay, Meet the Princesses, Beauty Makeover Station and Make a Cupcake for Dad Station. Early deadline for ticket sales is February 2, with a $25 late fee added to tickets purchased from February 3-13.

“The dancing, food, limos and princesses are all a big hit with the girls, but another of our main objectives is relation-ship building between girls and their dads or father-fi gures,” Weeden said. “Moms seem to typically have dedicated one-

Tickets off to sweet start for ballBY ZACK STEEN

[email protected]

T-shirts for the 4th Annual Father-Daughter Ball can be added to the online purchase of tickets at corinthkiwanis.org. Set for Saturday, Feb. 14 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Crossroads Arena, the ball will provide a fairy tale setting for fathers, grandfathers and father-figures to carry their daughter or granddaughter to the ball.Please see BALL | 3APlease see CHEER | 3A

Please see TAYLOR | 3A Please see SCHOOLS | 3A

Please see CANDIDATES | 3A

Coming Soon the All-New Brose Autoplex. YES we are OPEN!Coming Soon the All-New Brose Autoplex. YES we are OPEN!

Page 2: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

2A • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

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Page 3: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Local/StateDaily Corinthian • 3AWednesday, January 14, 2015

Today in

History

Today is Wednesday, Jan. 14, the 14th day of 2015. There are 351 days left in the year.

 Today’s Highlightin History:

On Jan. 14, 1784, the United States ratified the Treaty of Paris ending the Revolutionary War; Britain followed suit in April 1784.

On this date:

In 1914, Ford Motor Co. greatly improved its assembly-line operation by employing an endless chain to pull each chas-sis along at its Highland Park plant.

In 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and French General Charles de Gaulle opened a war-time conference in Casa-blanca.

In 1952, NBC’s “Today” show premiered, with Dave Garroway as the host, or “communicator.”

In 1954, Marilyn Mon-roe and Joe DiMaggio were married at San Francisco City Hall. (The marriage lasted about nine months.)

In 1963, George C. Wallace was sworn in as governor of Alabama with the pledge, “Segregation forever!” — a view Wal-lace later repudiated.

In 1969, 27 people aboard the aircraft car-rier USS Enterprise, off Hawaii, were killed when a rocket warhead explod-ed, setting off a fire and additional explosions.

In 1975, the House In-ternal Security Committee (formerly the House Un-American Activities Com-mittee) was disbanded.

In 1989, President Ronald Reagan delivered his 331st and final week-ly White House radio ad-dress, telling listeners, “Believe me, Saturdays will never seem the same. I’ll miss you.”

In 1994, President Bill Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed an accord to stop aiming missiles at any nation; the leaders joined Ukrainian Presi-dent Leonid Kravchuk in signing an accord to dismantle the nuclear arsenal of Ukraine.

Ten years ago:

Army Spc. Charles Gra-ner Jr., the reputed ring-leader of a band of rogue guards at the Abu Ghraib prison, was convicted at Fort Hood, Texas, of abusing Iraqi detainees. (Graner was sentenced the next day to 10 years in prison; he was re-leased from prison in Aug. 2011 after serving more than 6 1/2 years.) The European Huygens space probe sent back the first detailed pictures of the frozen surface of Saturn’s moon, Titan.

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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believes the reduction in the dance team resulted in an improved team, and the same could be true for the cheerleading squad.

“If you reduce the number, everybody’s going to have to work harder to get to have one of those slots,” he said.

On the other hand, it would cut six stu-dents out of participating, he said.

“You would, in all probability, have some children that are cheerleaders this year not be cheerleaders next year,” he said.

The number of students trying out for cheerleading has decreased some in the last few years. However, 27 tried out in the current school year, up from 21 the

prior year.The cheerleading squad does not cur-

rently participate in competitions, while the dancers do compete.

The decision on reducing the number falls to the school board as the policy-making body for the district.

“I just want to be sure that we have considered it from all angles,” said Ann Walker, board president.

In other business, the board agreed to prioritize some upcoming building proj-ects for spring break and the summer months in favor of safety and structural integrity. The miscellaneous projects range from general maintenance and painting to removal of a ticket booth and white vinyl fi eld house at the old Warrior Stadium.

on-one time more often than dads, and we are proud to offer a night to give dads or father-fi gures an occasion to focus just on their girls.”

This year’s T-shirt design was also recently released. The special event T-shirts are $15 each and should be added at the time of online registration.

Other add-ons include a customized stretch Hummer or sedan limo ride for $20 and a Ball Memories photo printed on site for $15.

Sponsorships are available for the Princess booths and a eight person reserved table. Spon-sorships are $200 and include sponsor recogni-tion on big screen throughout the night.

(For more information, visit corinthkiwanis.org or contact 662-286-3317. Messages will be returned.)

CHEER

CONTINUED FROM 1A

DANCE

CONTINUED FROM 1A

the upcoming year.District Five board member

Randy Wilbanks was also sworn into offi ce this week.

Wilbanks took the oath after winning his uncontested seat in November.

In other business,■ The board approved the in-

district transfer of Alcorn Cen-tral High School Assistant Prin-cipal Chad Lindamood to fi ll the vacant position of Biggersville High School principal.

Long time BHS principal Gary Johnson retired at the end of 2014.

■ The board approved to em-ployee Elizabeth Wamsley as assistant principal to be split between Alcorn Central Elemen-tary School and Alcorn Central

Middle School for the remainder of the 2014-15 school year.

Wamsley had previously held a position in the Curriculum, Test-ing and Federal Programs offi ce of the school district.

■ The board approved several new hires including Geraldine Grissom as Glendale Elementary School part-time interventionist and Addy Brown as Kossuth Mid-dle School Special Ed teacher.

Max Butler was approved as a substitute teacher and Kyle Nich-ols was approved as a Kossuth High School substitute bus driver.

The board also approved the rehiring of Leota Cornelius as ACHS softball head coach and Haylei Bell as ACHS volunteer assistant softball coach.

The board accepted the resig-nation of KES special ed teacher Leigh Clayton.

With a Feb. 27 deadline, candidates have about six more weeks to consider quali-fying.

The lineup to date (“inc.” denotes incumbent):

■ Chancery clerk: Greg Younger (D)

■ Circuit clerk: Joe Caldwell (D, inc.)

■ Constable post 1: Scotty Lee Bradley (R), John C. But-ler Jr. (D), Wayne Maddox (D), James McAnally (Inde-pendent), Landon Tucker (D)

■ Constable post 2: Daniel Cooper (D), Paul Copeland (D), Wayne Duncan (D), Billy Joel Flake (D), Billy Mathis (D), Jason Willis (D)

■ Coroner: Jay Jones (D, inc.), Ron Strom (D)

■ County attorney: Bob Moore (D, inc.)

■ Justice court judge post 1: Luke Doehner (R), Chris Grisham (D), George Haynie (D), Steve Little (Indepen-dent, inc.)

■ Justice court judge post 2: Lashunder Blanchard (R), Jimmy McGee (D., inc.)

■ Sheriff: David Derrick (D), Mike LaRue (D), Keith Settlemires (D), Roger Voyles (D)

■ Supervisor 1st District: Lowell Hinton (D, inc.), Jerry Miller (D)

■ Supervisor 2nd District: Rufus “Jaybird” Duncan Jr. (D), Scotty Little (Indepen-dent), Brodie McEwen (R), Dal Nelms (D, inc.), James L. Voyles (D)

■ Supervisor 3rd District: Tim Mitchell (D, inc.)

■ Supervisor 4th District: Mike Coleman (D), Keith “Dude” Conaway (R), Don-nie Dunn (D), Steve Glidewell (D), Danny “Shorty” Mincey (D), Reed Mitchell (D)

■ Supervisor 5th District: Jimmy Tate Waldon (D, inc.)

■ Superintendent of educa-tion: Gina Rogers Smith (D, inc.)

■ Tax assessor: Kenneth Brawner (D, inc.)

■ Tax collector: Larry Ross (D., inc.)

■ Mississippi House of Rep-resentatives District 2: Nick Bain (D, inc.)

■ Mississippi House of Rep-resentatives District 1: Lester “Bubba” Carpenter (R, inc.)

■ Mississippi House of Rep-resentatives District 3: Tracy Arnold (R)

■ Mississippi Senate Dis-trict 4: Rita Potts Parks (R, inc.), Joe Wallace (D)

State Committee and the MFBF Board of Directors, says she has taken advantage of every op-portunity given her through her involvement with Farm Bureau to attend a class, a seminar or a workshop to learn how to make the public more aware of agri-culture and how important it is to their lives. Most notably, she was selected from among farm women across the nation to par-ticipate in the American Farm Bureau Federation’s Women’s Communications Boot Camp in Washington, D.C.

“Most people today are so far removed from farming they aren’t aware of what farmers are doing to protect their food, their environment, their land and their water,” she said. “I try to let them know that they can’t go through a single day without the benefi ts of agriculture, whether it’s the food they eat, the clothes on their back, even the roads they travel and the plastics used in their vehicles.”

Taylor and her husband, Brad-ley, make a point of working with agricultural organizations like Farm Bureau despite their sometimes hectic schedule. The

Taylors have three sons, Lee, 7, Carl, 5, and Holden, 4. Along with Bradley’s parents, they op-erate Taylor Jersey Farm near Booneville. The dairy has one full-time employee.

“I get up at 4:30 every morn-ing to help my husband with the milking, and we milk again at 4:30 in the afternoon,” she said. “We milk our cows, feed our cows and calves, then wash up and get our boys up and fed. I take them to school then rush back home to fi nish any morn-ing chores that need to be done. During the day, in addition to our usual chores, there are al-most always other things that need our attention, whether it’s heifers that need vaccinating, manure that needs spreading or pastures that need planting.

“We volunteer with Farm Bureau, and we participate in school activities whenever possi-ble,” she said. “We are very busy at times, but it’s also fun. Being able to work side by side with my husband, who is also my friend and business partner, is great. Having our children grow up on a farm is a wonderful opportu-nity to spend time with them, teach them responsibilities and give them experiences that a lot

of children don’t have today.“Our 7-year-old has his daily

chores, and he knows they have to be done. He also knows how to help keep the animals safe and happy and the same holds true for our younger sons,” she said. “It is so gratifying to see that our sons enjoy the dairy. We don’t push, but we think they might want to work here when they are grown.”

Taylor Jersey Farm milks 110 registered Jerseys and has 150 calves and heifers. The Taylors also farm pasture/hay and tim-ber. Some of their land is in CRP and some is rented to a neigh-boring farmer for soybeans.

Taylor says she absolutely sees herself in agriculture for the rest of her life.

“I grew up on a dairy farm, and whether or not my future keeps me in the dairy industry, I know I can never get away from agricul-ture because it has sort of been bred into me,” she said. “It was also instilled in me by my parents to be a voice for agriculture.

“Farmers must take every op-portunity we are given to talk to consumers about agriculture, whether it’s an interview for a local paper, showing livestock at local fairs or just talking to

someone at the grocery store. We must also express our opin-ions and have an infl uence on what is happening in the farm-ing community. We must let our voices be heard.

“I don’t wait to be asked,” she added with a smile. “I speak right up.”

Taylor was a regional YF&R Achievement Award winner in 2013. Her husband, Bradley, re-ceived the same award in 2003. The Taylors were recipients of the Young Jersey Breeder Award from the American Jersey Cattle Association in 2013. They mar-ket their milk through Dairy Farmers of America, where Bradley serves as a delegate as well as secretary for the South-east Area Council

The MFBF Farm Woman of the Year Award was estab-lished to recognize, encourage and reward the achievements of women farmers. The recipient personifi es the highest level of professional excellence in agri-culture. For more information about the award, contact MFBF Women’s Programs and Ag in the Classroom Coordinator Clara Bilbo at 601-977-4245. Or visit the Farm Bureau website at www.msfb.org.

TAYLOR

CONTINUED FROM 1A

CANDIDATES

CONTINUED FROM 1A

SCHOOLS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Associated Press GULFPORT — The Saturday

death of longtime Mississippi Gulf Coast forensic pathologist Dr. Paul McGarry is raising con-cerns about future autopsies in South Mississippi.

For more than 30 years, Mc-Garry performed autopsies for

investigations across the coast. Mississippi coroners do not

perform autopsies. They oversee investigations into deaths and order autopsies, but those autop-sies must be performed by board certifi ed forensic pathologists.

McGarry was the only certifi ed pathologist on the coast.

Fate of future autopsies questioned

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OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Wednesday, January 14, 2015www.dailycorinthian.com

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President Barack Obama’s absence from the great gather-ing in Paris of national leaders from other countries, to show their solidarity with France in its opposition to Islamic ter-rorists, was another sign of the Obama administration’s con-tinuing irresolution in the face of terror.

Even the recent courageous message of Egypt’s president,

Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, calling on his fellow Muslims around the world to “revolutionize” the interpretation of Islam, to make it more compatible with peaceful relations with other peoples, put no steel in the spine of Barack Obama.

From his earliest days in the White House, our president has downplayed the terrorist threat from Islamic extremists. He declared victory as he pulled American troops out of Iraq, setting the stage for a huge defeat when ISIS moved in to create their own new government – while committing atrocities against men, women and children not seen since the days of the Nazis.

Undaunted, President Obama has since re-affi rmed his determination to similarly pull American troops out of Afghanistan, with a similar declaration that they are no longer needed.

But a war is not over until the enemy stops fi ghting. The terrorist enemies of Iraq and Afghanistan are enemies of the United States as well. ISIS has left no doubt of that by be-heading Americans and spreading the video-tapes of these beheadings for the enjoyment of like-minded people in the Middle East and beyond.

Not even the movement of the world’s biggest sponsor of terrorism – Iran – to-ward building a nuclear bomb has caused the Obama administration to change its vi-sion of the world. For Obama, the question has never been how to stop Iran from going nuclear, but how to stop Israel from stopping Iran from going nuclear.

He has accomplished that by public dec-larations of support for Israel, while engag-ing in protracted negotiations with Iran that serve only to allow Iran to fortify and prolif-erate the sites of its nuclear facilities, to the point where Israel’s bombers may no longer be able to destroy those facilities.

At one time, information was leaked that Israel had a secret arrangement with Azer-baijan for Israeli bombers to land there and refuel on their way back from bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities.

It is doubtful if anyone in the Obama ad-ministration would have dared leak Israel’s military secrets without knowing that it was alright with the president. Since it is unlikely that very many people in the White House had this information, the leaker’s identity could hardly have remained secret from the president.

Barack Obama cannot be unaware of the consequences of these and other foreign pol-icy decisions that undermine the security of America and America’s allies. He is not stu-pid, nor is there any reason to believe that he is cowardly.

Instead, there is a remarkable consistency between Obama’s domestic policies and his foreign policies. It was a sign of this consis-tency that he was proposing to have the tax-payers pay for free community college educa-tion while everyone else was focused on the terror attacks in Paris.

In Barack Obama’s vision of the world, those who are undeservedly thriving are to be forced to pay for benefi ts to those who are not thriving, whether the latter are people on welfare, community college students or im-migrants.

On the international stage, it is the same principle, where the problem is seen as West-ern nations being undeservedly better off than other nations, both economically and in terms of military power. Here too, Obama is for redistribution, even at the expense of his own country – if someone with such a “citi-zen of the world” viewpoint really thinks of America as his country, rather than a staging area for his ideologically-driven crusades.

(Daily Corinthian columnist Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover In-stitution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.)

Irresolution inthe face of terror

Prayer for today

A verse to share

The message of the Paris terrorists couldn’t have been clearer. They didn’t target the instruments of state power, the military or the police. They didn’t target the representatives of the state, its elected of-fi cials. They targeted car-toonists.

They targeted, in other words, some of the most physically harmless people on Earth. Cartoonists don’t carry guns for a living, or command armies. They are formally powerless. They are people whose infl uence is entirely dependent on free expression.

That’s why the attack on Charlie Hebdo was not just an attack on an institution but on a value. The terror-ists wanted to bring a taste of Mosul to the 11th ar-rondissement of Paris, and they succeeded in ghoulish fashion. Their goal was to undercut free speech it-self, and thus the power of people who operate in the realm of images, words and ideas.

In the fi ght over free ex-pression, the editors and cartoonists of Charlie Heb-do occupied the most for-ward and exposed position. They lit a fl are over their own parapet every night and said to the enemy that you may bring your worst,

but you can’t make us afraid.

That their craft re-quired such bravery in perhaps the most cos-mopol i tan city in the world is a testament to

the embattled state of free speech in the West.

The sad fact is that physi-cal intimidation works. Some press outlets pixilated or cropped out the covers of Charlie Hebdo in their cov-erage of the Paris attacks, as if they were the works of obscenity that the attackers consider them.

One line of argument is, in effect, that Charlie Hebdo had it coming. A writer for the Financial Times scored the publication in the wake of the attacks for lacking “common sense.” Back in 2012, then-White House spokesman Jay Carney questioned the magazine’s “judgment” for publishing cartoons mocking Muham-mad, and rued its “potential to be infl ammatory.”

But we don’t usually look to satirical magazines for “judgment.” Besides, no one ever has to question anyone’s death-defying

lack of “common sense” for mocking Christians.

After the Benghazi attack in 2012, which the admin-istration pretended was the result of an anti-Islam YouTube video, President Barack Obama said, “We reject all efforts to denigrate the religious beliefs of oth-ers.”

Since when? Thomas Paine, a quasi-Founding Father, excoriated Chris-tianity. Thomas Jefferson chopped up the Bible to leave in what he considered only the properly enlight-ened parts. It is true that the U.S. government doesn’t denigrate religions. But it is constitutionally obligated to protect the freedom of those who do.

The president said at the United Nations after Beng-hazi that “the future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Is-lam.” He did not add that the future must have a place for those who slander Is-lam.

It is that aspect of the fu-ture that the Islamists hope to snuff out. There has been a calculated and growing threat to free speech in the West emanating from the Muslim world since the Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwa against Salman Rushdie.

This offensive has long

relied on violence, as well as a noxious campaign of international diplomacy, to export the Muslim world’s anti-blasphemy laws to the West. The diplomatic cam-paign has met with partial success in Europe, where “hate speech” can be pros-ecuted, and the Obama administration has had a shamefully accommodating attitude to it.

Now, it should be met with the offi cial contempt that it deserves. And, do-mestically, we should fos-ter a robust culture of free speech that forswears the insidious logic of “your right to free speech ends where my right not to be offended begins.”

We all love the cliche that the pen is mightier than the sword. But it hasn’t been true through most of hu-man history and isn’t true in many places – especially in the Muslim world – even today. The pen is an instru-ment that needs constant protection and the enliven-ing spirit of satirists of all sorts.

The cartoonists of Char-lie Hebdo understood that. Does the West?

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: [email protected].)

The crisis of free speech

The massacre in Paris of the staff of the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo was an act of terrorism, but also a successful act of war in the clash of civilizations between Islamism and the West.

Nor were we lacking for warning signs.

In 1989, Ayatollah Kho-meini issued a fatwa, a li-cense to kill author Salman Rushdie for his anti-Muslim novel “Satanic Verses.”

Danish cartoons of the Prophet with his turban in the shape of a bomb caused riots across the Middle East. Charlie Hebdo published them. The vulgarian Theo Van Gogh was carved up alive on a street in Amster-dam for insulting Islam in his 10-minute fi lm “Submis-sion.”

Have we not known that millions of Muslims now take their faith so seriously they will die for it, and kill for it? Mock and insult Is-lam, ridicule and lampoon the Prophet, and you risk your life.

The editor and cartoonists at Charlie Hebdo knew this. Their offi ces had been fi re-bombed. They had guards. There was a combination lock on their offi ce doors.

Shocked by the slaugh-

ter, we of the West have been reasserting our belief in freedom of speech and freedom of the press.

“Je Suis C h a r l i e ! ” read the signs at the

Paris demonstration for Charlie Hebdo on Wednes-day night – “I am Charlie.”

One sees no such ban-ners in the Islamic world. Regimes there may deplore terrorism in Paris, but no one weeps for Charlie Heb-do.

If there is one goal that unites Boko Haram in Ni-geria, al-Shabab in Somalia, al-Qaida in the Maghreb and Arabian Peninsula, ISIS in Syria and Iraq, the Taliban in Afghanistan and Paki-stan, it is to cleanse their so-cieties of non-believers and Westerners.

The differences between a liberal secularized Europe and the Islamic world are ir-reconcilable. And it is their world, not ours, that is grow-ing in numbers, militancy, converts, crusaders and con-fi dence.

Yet, what was German Chancellor Angela Merkel bewailing in her New Year’s message? Islamophobia.

Merkel’s attack on rising anti-immigrant sentiment in Germany was echoed on by President Francois Hol-lande who denounced the “dangerous” stances of the National Front of Marine Le Pen.

In presidential polls in France, Le Pen is now run-ning fi rst.

Instead of demonizing the right, Merkel and Hollande and other leaders of Eu-rope, if they do not wish to be swept away, ought to ask themselves: Why have these populist and anti-immigrant movements exploded on the continent in recent years at their expense?

Europe’s elites appear fro-zen in a dead past, addicted to an idea of Europeans in-exorably melding into a sin-gle economic and political entity, like the United States, to become the model for the world.

They seem in denial of the new realities explod-ing on the continent. Scots, Basque, Catalans, Bretons, Corsicans, Flemish and Piedmontese now want to separate from the nations

to which they have belonged for generations; parties like the UK Independence Party as well as the National Front want out of the European Union.

Europeans are asking di-rect questions of their gov-ernments, and demanding answers:

Why, when our own eco-nomics are stagnant, do we need all these new immi-grants with whom we have little in common?

Why are we altering the identity of our people and nation?

What gain is there for our countries by bringing in more Arabs, Muslims and Africans to swamp our na-tive born and remake our nations in their image rather than our own?

Often, the response to such questions from govern-ments in Berlin, Paris, Lon-don and Madrid is to call the defectors xenophobes, rac-ists, neo-fascists and Nazis. The name-calling is no lon-ger working.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Pat Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, au-thor, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcast-er.)

The paralysis of Europe

Rich LowryNational

Review

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

“But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” Romans 5:8

Almighty God, help me to appreciate the sacredness of work while I have it to do. Grant that I may be spared the wretchedness that comes from working with fragments from idleness. May I do my part, even if it be in obscurity and the night overtakes me be-fore it is done. Amen.

Thomas Sowell

Columnist

Page 5: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

State/NationDaily Corinthian • 5AWednesday, January 14, 2015

Across the Nation Across the State

House OKs alternate amendment option

JACKSON — House lawmakers are pushing forward alternative word-ing to a state constitu-tional referendum on school funding.

The House voted Tues-day 64-57 for a resolu-tion to guarantee an “ef-fective” system of public schools.

Language placed on the ballot by petition seeks an “adequate and efficient” system.

House Speaker Pro Tem Greg Snowden, a Meridian Republican sponsoring the alterna-tive, says that it’s more important to focus on school effectiveness.

The resolution goes to the Senate.

If lawmakers agree, both original language and the Legislature’s ver-sion would appear on No-vember’s ballot. Voters can choose one or the other, or reject both.

 Florida firm cited on no-call rules, fined

JACKSON — Missis-sippi regulators have or-dered a Florida company named Active Periodicals to pay $25,000 for vio-lating the state’s ban on unwanted telemarketing.

The Public Service Commission voted Tues-day to impose the pen-alty against Active Peri-odicals, which is based in Deerfield Beach.

It is the latest in a series of fines that the Public Service Commis-sion has issued against companies that violate the state’s prohibition on calling people who have registered their phone

numbers to get telemar-keters to stop calling.

The order alleges Ac-tive Periodicals failed to register as a telemar-keter, failed to buy the state’s no-call list and made unauthorized calls to phone numbers in Mississippi.

 Khosla says state scared off buyer

JACKSON — KiOR financier Vinod Khosla is asking a Mississippi state court judge to name a receiver for the company’s Columbus plant, at the same time that he’s accusing the state of scaring off a po-tential buyer for the shut-tered biofuel refinery.

Companies controlled by Khosla filed the mo-tion Friday in Lowndes County Chancery Court, another escalation in a fight between the bil-lionaire venture capitalist and the state of Missis-sippi.

A hearing Jan. 27 hear-ing is set on the matter.

In a Sunday letter to

Mississippi Development Authority Executive Direc-tor Brent Christensen, Khosla accuses Missis-sippi of grandstanding and intransigence.

The state wants to push Texas-based parent company of KiOR, which filed for bankruptcy reor-ganization, into liquida-tion.

 MDA to lead South Africa delegation

JACKSON — The Mis-sissippi Development Authority will lead a del-egation of Mississippi companies on a busi-ness development mis-sion to South Africa on March 23-27.

MDA officials say in a news release that the trip will include stops in Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town.

MDA executive director Brent Christensen says South Africa is Mississip-pi’s top export location in Africa. He says the trip will help companies look-ing to do business in the market.

Associated Press

Victims’ attorney: PLO killed civilians

NEW YORK — A law-yer for victims of terror attacks in Israel be-tween 2001 and 2004 has told a New York jury that the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Au-thority routinely killed civilians.

Attorney Kent Yalowitz made the remarks in an opening statement Tuesday in Manhattan federal court.

In a packed court-room, Yalowitz in-troduced some of the plaintiffs as he described the pain of victims of seven shoot-ings and bombings in or near Jerusalem. The attacks killed 33 people and wounded hundreds more, including scores of U.S. citizens.

The openings came 11 years after a lawsuit sought a billion dollars from the Palestinian Authority and the Pales-tine Liberation Organiza-tion. The lawsuit said they were behind the attacks.

 Yosemite climbers near historic feat

SAN FRANCISCO — The two climbers vying to become the first in the world to use only their hands and feet to scale a sheer granite face in California’s Yo-semite National Park are almost to the top.

A spokeswoman said Tuesday that 30-year-old Kevin Jorgeson of California and 36-year-old Tommy Caldwell of Colorado will likely fin-ish the half-mile climb up El Capitan’s Dawn Wall on Wednesday evening.

For 17 days, the two have been attempting what many thought impossible. The men are “free-climbing” to the 3,000-foot summit, meaning they don’t use climbing aids other than ropes only to prevent deadly falls.

Each trained for more than five years, and they have battled blood-ied fingers and unsea-sonably warm weather. Plus, Jorgeson fell 11 times over seven days trying to get past one tough section.

 Subway malfunction leaves questions

WASHINGTON — The subway train had just pulled out from a busy Washington station when it ground to a halt and foul-smelling smoke began filling the cars and the tunnel.

“We’re going to die here!” passengers

cried.In the fear and chaos

that followed, riders prayed but also helped one another, perform-ing mouth-to-mouth on an unconscious woman and offering an inhaler to a man curled in a fetal position on the train’s floor. Some waited anxiously for rescuers as instructed, while others opened the doors and broke out of the cars on their own.

One woman died and more than 80 other people were sent to the hospital, mostly for smoke inhalation, after an electrical malfunc-tion Monday that left a multitude of unanswered questions a day later.

Commuters de-manded to know: Was the train’s evacuation unnecessarily delayed? Were passengers given the right information? And what caused the death of the woman?

 Military command’s sites back online

WASHINGTON — The Twitter and YouTube sites for the U.S. mili-tary’s Central Command are back online after being taken over by hackers claiming to sup-port the Islamic State militant group, and Pentagon officials are reviewing some security protocols in the wake of the breach.

Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said Tuesday that it is too soon to tell who the hackers are and where they got some of the official documents they placed on Central Command’s Twitter feed Monday. The docu-ments included some personal phone num-bers and email address-es and a few slides that were prepared by an independent research group.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, visiting

Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo., said Tues-day that the hack “was a violation, it wasn’t a big deal. But it shows you, it reminds you, once again, of how dan-gerous these different groups are and how ca-pable they are.”

The hacker group, calling itself CyberCa-liphate, was already un-der FBI investigation for incursions into the Twit-ter feeds or websites of media outlets in New Mexico and Maryland, prompting officials to question whether the group has any real af-filiation with the Islamic State militants.

 Jet returns to L.A. after emergency

LOS ANGELES — The pilots of a Delta Air Lines flight from Los Angeles to Minneapolis declared an emergency soon after takeoff Tues-day when they began having trouble control-ling their Boeing 757.

Flight 2116 safely returned to Los Angeles International Airport after circling off the Southern California coast for about an hour to burn fuel. There were no reports of injuries among the 152 people on board.

Comments from the pilots to air traffic con-trollers indicated they were struggling to keep the aircraft flying on a straight line.

Within minutes of takeoff, the crew calmly declared an emergency and an unidentified per-son in the cockpit ex-plained, “we got a yaw problem, and we’re hav-ing a little trouble con-trolling the airplane,” according to recordings between the pilots and air traffic controllers posted on the website LiveATC.net, a website that monitors and posts air traffic control audio recordings.

Associated Press

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6A • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Lamar MurrahIUKA — Lamar Murrah died Tuesday,

Jan. 13, 2015, at Southern Magnolia Es-tates. Cutshall Funeral Home of Iuka will have the arrangements.

Randy White

Funeral services for Randell Wade White, 51, of Corinth, are set for 2 p.m. to-day at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Lorraine Baptist Church Cemetery.

Visitation is from 1 p.m. until service time.Mr. White died Sunday, Jan. 11, 2015,

at his home. Born June 1, 1963, he was a retired construction worker and a Baptist.

Survivors include his parents, Anna Cubelle White and Bobby D. White, both of Corinth; two brothers, Jimmy White

(Kay) of Corinth and Dewayne White of New York, N.Y.; a sister, Deb-bie McMasters (Randy) of Corinth; half-broth-ers Bobby L. White of Corinth and Timmy W. White (Sheila) of Corinth; a stepbrother, Dale Fulks of Corinth; and a stepsister, Marita Hood (Karen) of Chat-tanooga, Tenn.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Ruby Janet “Jan” White; paternal grand-parents Dolmer and Ludi White; maternal grandparents John Lancaster Sr. and Lav-era Brown; and a stepbrother, Terry Fulks.

Bro. Scotty Wood will offi ciate the ser-vice.

Jerry Lee OwenFuneral services for Jerry Lee

Owen, 81, were held Friday, Jan. 2, 2015, at Charlet Funeral Home, Inc., in Zachary, La., followed by inter-ment of ashes at Hillcrest Memorial Park in Baker, La.

Mr. Owen is formerly of Corinth and graduated from Corinth High School in 1952, where he was a cap-tain on the football team and also a member of the band. He and his family relocated to Baker, La., in 1965 and ultimately relocated to Zachary, La., where he lived until his passing.

Mr. Owen is preceded in death by his father, Charles S. Owen of Jack-son, Tenn.; his mother and stepfa-

ther, Lois Gookin Counce and hus-band Wirt Counce of Corinth; his fi rst wife and mother of his children, Thelma Rock Owen of Hazleton, PA, and two brothers, David Lynn Owen of Redding, Calif., and Charles Neal Owen of Dallas.

Survivors include his second wife, Jan Doss Owen of Zachary, La.; his four children, Gerald Ray Owen and wife Vicky of Wichita, Kan., Gregory Lynn Owen and wife Beth of Baton Rouge, La., Steven Neal Owen and wife Gudrun of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Margaret Lois Owen of Zachary, La.; and his sister, Mary Francis Wil-lis of Sikeston, Mo.

For online condolences: charletfu-neralhome.com

White

Community Events

Scholarship pageants

The Miss Magnolia and Miss Heritage Scholarship Pageants will be held at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17 at the Corinths Coliseum Civic Center. These pageants are preliminaries to the Miss Mississippi Schol-arship Pageant. There will also be an Outstand-ing Teen Division. The pageants are open to young women who are residents of Alcorn Coun-ty. For more information call Margaret Henry at 662-396-1667; 731-239-5655 or Joyce White at 662-287-2293.

 Home invasion seminar

Crossroads Martial Arts will hold a Home Invasion Seminar on Monday, Jan. 19 through Friday, Jan. 23. A dif-ferent senario will be presented each day with a review on Friday. The event is free and open to the public. Call 662-286-2904 for times and details.

Free clinic

The Living Healthy Free Clinic will open at 1 p.m. on Sat. Jan. 24. Walk-ins are welcome.

 4-H

• The Alcorn County 4-H Advisory Council will meet at noon on Wednesday, Jan. 28 at the Alcorn County Exten-sion Service. The adviso-

ry council is responsible for approving county 4-H program regulations, program promotion, and sustaining financial sup-port to continue the edu-cational efforts offered to 4-H youth and volun-teers. Those who are interested in serving on the advisory council or who wish to gather more information should con-tact the Alcorn County MSU Extension Service at 662-286-7756.

• The annual 4-H Pub-lic Speaking Contest will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 31at the Alcorn County Extension Service. The 4-H Public Speaking contest is a great way for youth to learn how to prepare and present a speech. The deadline to register is Wednesday, Jan. 28. For more information about the county 4-H program, contact the Alcorn Coun-ty MSU Extension Ser-vice at 662-286-7756.

 Federal employees

The National Associa-tion of Active and Retired Federal Employees (NARFE) Jacinto Chapter 1879 will hold its Thurs-day, Jan. 15 monthly meeting at Ryan’s Res-taurant, 2210 Harper Road, Corinth, MS at 11:30 a.m.  All active and retired federal em-ployees are encouraged to attend.

 Mission Mississippi

Join in the conversa-tion at Mission Missis-sippi at 11:30 a.m. on

Thursday, Jan. 15 in the lower level of Martha’s Menu. The group will dis-cuss issues facilitated by the Revs. Ann Fraser and Bobby Capps.

 Ice Bowl/Survivor Doubles

Tishomingo State Park will host its 15th Annual Ice Bowl and Survivor Doubles Disc Golf Tour-naments on Saturday, Jan. 17 and Sunday Jan. 18. Registration for the Ice Bowl will be from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Saturday with tee off scheduled at 10 a.m. There will be two rounds of singles and each player that brings a minimum of 4 cans of food will receive a $10 discount off the registra-tion fee. The Survivor Doubles on Sunday will consist of two rounds utilizing the “Best Shot” format with registration from 7 to 8:30 a.m. and tee off scheduled for 9 a.m. For more informa-tion visit sndg.org or con-tact Tishomingo State Park at [email protected] or 662-438-6914.

 Bishop Center Activities

The Bishop Senior Citizens Activity Center will host the following activities for the week of Jan. 14-16: Today; Bible study by Jackie Calvart from Oakland Baptist Church; Thursday, Jan. 15: Bingo; Friday, Jan. 16; Grocery shopping at Roger’s Supermarket. Daily activities include quilting, jigsaw puzzles, table games, rolo golf and washer games. Se-nior citizens age 60 and above are welcome and encouraged to attend.

Camp meeting

The Colonel William P. Rogers Sons of Confed-erate Veterans will hold its monthly meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 20 at Martha’s Menu, located at 302 Taylor Street. Male descen-dants of Confederate soldiers may join the SCV, a non-political, edu-cational, historical pres-ervation organization. Visitors are welcome to attend all meetings. For more information contact Larry Mangus at 662-287-0766. The website is www.battleofcorinth.com.

 MRHC

Magnolia Regional Health Center is offering workforce development classes for those inter-ested in employment at MRHC as a Patient Care Tech from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 14 – Friday, Jan. 23. The classes are free, but sign up is required. This is not a certification course. The deadline to register is Monday, Jan. 5. To sign up or for gen-eral questions contact Evelyn Mathis at 662-293-1202 or Traci John-son at 662-293-1206.

 Retired Railroaders

There will be a meet-ing for retired railroaders at 8 a.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at Martha’s Menu Res-taurant in downtown Corinth. Active railroad-ers are welcome.

 Guild annual meeting

The 2015 Corinth Art-ist Guild annual member-

ship meeting will be at 6 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 22 at the artist guild gallery located at 609 Fillmore Street in downtown Corinth.

Members are urged to attend to give ideas about the future of the local guild. Future plans will be discussed and board members will be elected or reelected. Per-sons interested in joining the guild are also encour-aged to attend.

 Community Garden

The Easom Community Center’s Garden is open to the public on Monday, Wednesday and Friday to pick mustard and/or turnip greens for family consumption. The garden is open during the hours of 1 p.m - 4 p.m. Stop by the kitchen area and sign-in before entering the garden,

The Community Gar-den is made possible through the volunteer work of Danny Finger, William Dilworth, Charlie Betts, Bobby Ratliff and others.

  Legacy Hospice

Legacy Hospice is looking for volunteers from the age of 17 and up. Legacy Hospice of-fers three types of vol-unteers: Direct patient volunteers do things directly with the patient and caregiver. Indirect volunteers help with cleri-cal work in the office. Bereavement volunteers help families and loved ones on their journey through the grieving process. For more infor-mation contact Sherry Dalton at 662-286-5333 or by email at [email protected].

Alliance Hospice

Alliance Hospice seeks volunteers from 16 to 85 to interact with lo-cal senior citizens. For more information contact Sabrina Hall at 662-286-9833 or [email protected]

 VFW Post 3962

• VFW Post No. 3962 will hold its monthly meetings on the third Thursday of each month with brunch at 6 p.m. VFW ladies and men’s Auxiliary will have a joint meeting at 7 p.m.

• VFW Post No. 3962 hosts a Karaoke Night every Friday at the post on Purdy School Road in Corinth. Karaoke begins at 8 p.m. with music by D.J. Lanny Cox. Lanny Cox also provides music at the VFW on Saturday Dance Night which be-gins at 8 p.m.

• The VFW Post 3962 will hold a singles/’50s dance from 8 p.m. until midnight every Thursday. Admission is $5.

 Checkers Players

Checkers players are needed, especially Intex retirees, to play from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Mon-days at the American Steel Builders Union building across from Ability Works. For more information, call 662-728-5498.

 American Legion Post 6 Bingo

American Legion Post 6, located on South Tate St., holds bingo every Fri-day. Doors will open at 4 p.m. with sales starting at 5:30 p.m. Games will begin at 6:30 p.m.

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Page 7: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Home & Garden7A • Daily Corinthian Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Winter is a good time to examine landscape plants. With many of the deciduous plants drop-ping their leaves, it is easy to see defects and other problems, especially strange things growing on the landscape plants.

Extension of-fi ces all across Mississippi are going to be re-ceiving calls from concerned hom-eowners about a moldy-looking, gray-green stuff on their plants. The cause for the concern 99 per-cent of the time is an or-ganism called lichen.

Lichens are interesting organisms that are found throughout the world. They are composed of an unlikely combination of fungi and algae that survives in a symbiotic relationship. The algae supply the food through photosynthesis, and the fungi gather the water and other needed nutri-ents. In other words, the fungi and algae have tak-en a likin’ to each other. (Sorry.)

Lichens are commonly observed on trees and shrubs that are struggling and often get blamed for the plants’ decline. Most of the time, the lichens were already present be-fore any decline started. Trees that are stressed may lose a few branches, allowing more sunlight into the canopy, and the lichen begins to grow more in the brighter light. So as the tree continues to decline, the lichen con-tinues to grow, giving the illusion of causing the problem. The lichens are only using the plants for support and grow on the surface of the bark. In fact, lichen will grow on

any hard surface outdoors – from wooden fences to rocks.

There are three main types of lichens found in the landscape. Some are

spreading and have a fl attened appearance that may even look a little crusty. Another lichen spreads across branches and de-velops wavy folds that resemble a crumpled sheet. Some resemble highly branched balls of fuzzy stuff

with projections going out in all directions. Despite the varied appearances, they are all lichens.

There are not any com-pounds to remove lichens, but there really isn’t any need to remove them. Li-chens are naturally occur-ring organisms that are opportunistic to increase their growth as a tree canopy starts to decline. The best solution is keep-ing the landscape plants in optimum condition by following recommended watering, fertilization and other management prac-tices. A healthy growing plant will have a canopy that will discourage li-chen growth. Light prun-ing of damaged branches encourages new branch growth, which, in turn, helps establish a denser canopy.

Just as a piece of metal garden art will mature and gain an aged patina, I personally think that lichen adds that touch of patina to landscape plants.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Dr. Gary Bach-man is an associate Extension research pro-fessor of horticulture at the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Bi-loxi.)

Winter reveals lichen growth on plants

Photo by Gary Bachman/MSU Extension Service

Lichens are harmless, opportunistic organisms that grow on hard outdoor surfaces, such as wooden fenc-es, rocks and tree bark. A healthy plant has a canopy that discourages lichen growth.

Gary Bachman

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Page 8: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Business8A • Daily Corinthian Wednesday, January 14, 2015

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

18,103.45 15,340.69 Dow Industrials 17,613.68 -27.16 -.15 -1.17 +7.579,310.22 7,009.98 Dow Transportation 8,765.34 -41.36 -.47 -4.10 +17.56

645.74 488.32 Dow Utilities 623.86 +1.80 +.29 +.94 +27.3511,108.39 9,732.47 NYSE Composite 10,622.96 -17.78 -.17 -2.00 +2.714,814.95 3,946.03 Nasdaq Composite 4,661.50 -3.21 -.07 -1.57 +11.442,093.55 1,737.92 S&P 500 2,023.03 -5.23 -.26 -1.74 +10.011,478.22 1,264.57 S&P MidCap 1,432.14 -1.52 -.11 -1.40 +6.39

22,004.68 18,575.20 Wilshire 5000 21,280.56 -50.07 -.23 -1.80 +8.331,221.44 1,040.47 Russell 2000 1,180.64 +.55 +.05 -2.00 +1.48

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.56f 9 58.00 -.29 -5.1AT&T Inc 1.88f 10 33.49 ... -.3AirProd 3.08 31 141.62 -.75 -1.8AlliantEgy 2.04 19 66.93 +.46 +.8AEP 2.00 17 61.87 +.31 +1.9AmeriBrgn 1.16f 79 91.64 +.71 +1.6ATMOS 1.56f 18 55.61 +.27 -.2BB&T Cp .96 13 36.43 -.06 -6.3BP PLC 2.40f 6 35.96 -.09 -5.7BcpSouth .30 17 20.38 ... -9.5Caterpillar 2.80 14 86.37 -.52 -5.6Chevron 4.28 10 104.20 -1.68 -7.1CocaCola 1.22 23 42.63 -.01 +1.0Comcast .90 18 56.84 +.67 -2.0CrackerB 4.00 24 136.73 +1.51 -2.9Deere 2.40 10 85.89 +.44 -2.9Dillards .24 17 120.20 -.60 -4.0Dover 1.60 15 69.15 +.41 -3.6EnPro ... 52 60.83 +.46 -3.1FordM .60f 10 15.21 -.01 -1.9FredsInc .24 ... 17.44 +.55 +.2FullerHB .48 19 41.40 -.01 -7.0GenCorp ... ... 17.39 +.13 -5.0GenElec .92f 17 23.86 -.12 -5.6Goodyear .24 13 26.05 -1.99 -8.8HonwllIntl 2.07f 19 99.15 +.70 -.8Intel .96f 17 36.50 -.10 +.6Jabil .32 22 21.38 -.10 -2.1KimbClk 3.36 21 116.08 +.32 +.5Kroger .74f 20 66.00 ... +2.8Lowes .92 27 67.86 +.01 -1.4McDnlds 3.40f 18 92.83 -.18 -.9

MeadWvco 1.00a 9 44.84 -.10 +1.0

OldNBcp .44 15 13.84 -.03 -7.0

Penney ... ... 7.97 -.17 +23.0

PennyMac 2.44 8 21.96 +.10 +4.1

PepsiCo 2.62 22 96.35 -.07 +1.9

PilgrimsP ... 12 31.69 -1.47 -3.4

RadioShk ... ... .47 +.08 +26.8

RegionsFn .20 12 9.39 -.15 -11.1

SbdCp 3.00 15 4160.20+124.20 -.9

SearsHldgs ... ... 34.77 -.56 +5.4

Sherwin 2.20 31 269.14 -1.96 +2.3

SiriusXM ... 51 3.54 -.03 +1.1

SouthnCo 2.10 19 49.68 -.03 +1.2

SPDR Fncl .40e ... 23.84 -.08 -3.6

Torchmrk s .51 13 51.81 -.29 -4.4

Total SA 3.22e ... 48.52 +.07 -5.2

US Bancrp .98 14 42.10 -.46 -6.3

WalMart 1.92 18 89.31 -.71 +4.0

WellsFargo 1.40 13 51.85 -.20 -5.4

Wendys Co .22f 29 9.97 +.04 +10.4

WestlkCh s .66 12 56.38 -1.45 -7.7

Weyerhsr 1.16 28 36.69 +.12 +2.2

Xerox .25 14 13.66 +.07 -1.4

YRC Wwde ... ... 19.33 -.24 -14.1

Yahoo ... 6 48.30 -.50 -4.4

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 17 13.02 +.14AK Steel dd 4.16 -.49AbbottLab 26 44.61 -.73AbbVie 28 63.39 -1.88Accenture 19 89.83 +.32Achillion dd 14.34 -.30ActivsBliz 21 18.56 -.30AMD 44 2.66 +.03Aetna 15 90.33 +1.06Agenus dd 5.70 -.47Agnico g 28 29.75 -1.07AlcatelLuc ... 3.34 -.03Alcoa 83 15.80 -.37Alibaba n ... 100.77 -.85AlldNevG dd 1.20 +.01AllyFin n ... 21.66 -.91AlphaNRs dd 1.19 -.07AlpAlerMLP q 16.39 -.26AlteraCp lf 28 35.52 -.61Altisrce n 2 16.49 -10.45Altria 24 51.32 +.40Amazon dd 294.74 +3.33Ambev ... 6.37 +.05AmAirlines dd 50.40 +.82ACapAgy 25 21.64 -.26AEagleOut 26 14.24 +.10AmExp 17 89.23 -.27AmIntlGrp 8 51.87 -.49ARCapH n ... 12.99 +.04ARltCapP lf dd 9.39 -.05Amgen 24 155.14 -1.08Anadarko dd 75.80 +.75AnglogldA ... 10.46 -.31Annaly 14 10.64 -.17Anthem 17 130.28 +1.45Apache dd 58.46AptInv 15 38.86 -1.45Apple Inc s 17 110.22 +.97ApldMatl 26 23.33 -.33ArcelorMit dd 9.85 -.21ArchCoal dd 1.35 -.11ArchDan 18 48.28 +.07ArenaPhm dd 6.05 +.40AriadP dd 6.37 -.60ArmourRsd dd 3.51 -.05ArrowRsh dd 6.32 -.58Atmel 76 8.35 -.05AuRico g dd 4.02 -.17Avon dd 7.96 -.01B2gold g dd 1.97 -.08BakrHu 17 55.24 +.15BcoBrad pf ... 13.26 +.15BcoSantSA ... 6.98 +.07BkofAm 15 16.45 -.23BkNYMel 16 38.40 -.07BarcGSOil q 10.59 +.12B iPVixST q 34.39 +.90BarrickG 26 10.68 -.65BedBath 15 74.15 +.73BenefBncp 54 10.82 -.13BerkH B 18 148.63 +.35BestBuy 14 39.10 +.01BlackBerry dd 9.71 -.41Blackstone 12 34.08 -.27Boeing 19 131.17 +.30BostonSci 69 14.50 -.08BreitBurn dd 5.39 -.27BrMySq 39 63.12 +.94BrixmorP 75 26.25 -.24Broadcom 57 41.47 -.26BrcdeCm 22 11.95 -.05BurlStrs 44 48.44 -.85CA Inc 18 31.23 -.04CBS B 18 55.60 +.75CMS Eng 20 35.69 +.52CSX 18 33.55 -.36CTI BioPh dd 2.39 +.09CVS Health 25 97.24 +.04CblvsnNY 18 20.00 +.23CabotO&G 31 29.66 +.30CalifRes n ... 3.96 -.52Calpine 14 21.74 -.07Cameco g ... 14.76 -.69Cameron 12 43.29 -1.16CdnNRs gs ... 26.69 +.13CapOne 11 78.39 -.67Carlisle 23 94.11 +.32Carnival 30 45.96 -.33Celgene s 63 119.98 +2.98Cemex ... 9.93 -.14Cemig pf ... 4.48 +.11CenterPnt 18 22.64 -.12CntryLink 28 38.60 -.05ChannAdv dd 9.83 -11.32CheniereEn dd 69.70 +1.22ChesEng 19 17.85 +.25Chimera ... 3.22 -.03CienaCorp dd 19.10 -.25Cisco 19 28.09 +.05Citigroup 12 50.02 -.36CitrixSys 36 58.88 -2.27Civeo n ... 3.33 +.05CliffsNRs dd 7.85 +.15Coach 15 37.88 -.69CobaltIEn dd 8.11 -.13Coeur dd 5.74 -.36CognizTc s 23 54.15ColgPalm 30 68.73 +.47Comc spcl 18 56.23 +.57ConAgra cc 35.82 +.14ConocoPhil 10 62.44 -.63ConsolEngy 8 30.37ContlRes s 13 35.81 +.84Corning 23 23.15 -.13CousPrp 93 11.13 -.19Covidien 28 103.82 -1.47CSVInvNG q 7.47 -1.26CSVLgNGs q 3.90 +.46CSVLgCrde q 3.08 +.13CSVelIVST q 28.11 -.81CSVixSht q 3.26 +.19CrwnCstle cc 81.33 -.19CypSemi 31 14.69 -.30DDR Corp 55 19.21 +.04DHT Hldgs 17 8.81 -.24DR Horton 16 24.82 -1.26DanaHldg 15 20.99 -.58Danaher 22 84.35 -.12DelphiAuto 16 67.65 -1.24DeltaAir 4 46.61 +.55DenburyR 7 6.82 -.07DeuEafeEq q 26.95 +.17DevonE 11 58.89 -.24DrGMnBll rs q 36.92 -4.33DirSPBear q 21.54 +.14DxGldBull q 15.11 -2.19DrxFnBear q 13.67 +.11DxEnBear q 25.64 +.61DrxSCBear q 12.63 -.05DirGMBear q 9.01 +.85DirDGldBr q 16.43 +1.69DrxSCBull q 75.98 +.15DirxEnBull q 47.84 -1.32Discover 12 62.44 -.58DiscCmA s 10 31.21 -.43Disney 22 95.19 +.73DollarGen 20 67.80 +.69DollarTree 23 68.00 -1.43DomRescs 23 76.44 -.06DowChm 14 43.61 -.54DryShips dd 1.00 -.05DuPont 22 73.14 -1.27DukeEngy 28 85.47 +.46Dunkin 30 45.88 +1.80

E-F-G-HE-Trade 22 22.99 +.28eBay dd 55.13 -.07EMC Cp 23 28.65 -.29EOG Res s 15 85.06 +.55Eaton 18 65.46 -.02ElPLoco n ... 24.50 +1.13EldorGld g 45 6.70 -.31ElectArts 39 46.42 -.64EmersonEl 20 60.08 -.09EmpDist 18 29.82 +.35Emulex dd 7.01 +1.21EnCana g 8 12.62 -.03Endo Intl 25 79.87 +1.91EngyXXI ... 2.57 -.21ENSCO dd 29.10 +.73EntPrdPt s 21 31.85 -.84Ericsson ... 11.99 -.16Exelon 15 36.51 -.12ExpScripts 33 83.58 +.50ExxonMbl 11 90.00 -.33Facebook 73 76.45 -.27FamilyDlr 35 76.86 +.17FedExCp 22 171.50 -1.07FiatChry n ... 12.11 +.06FifthThird 11 18.51 -.13

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 1966135 202.08 -.57BkofAm 989562 16.45 -.23MktVGold 680637 20.55 -.94Apple Inc s 654165 110.22 +.97SiriusXM 640549 3.54 -.03B iPVixST 558651 34.39 +.90PwShs QQQ 546055 101.52 -.03iShEMkts 536369 39.29 +.34CSVixSht 493791 3.26 +.19iShR2K 478271 117.27 +.09

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,478Declined 1,653Unchanged 109

Total issues 3,240New Highs 221New Lows 129

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,321Declined 1,389Unchanged 139

Total issues 2,849New Highs 117New Lows 115

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

InterENT n 23.04 +4.20 +22.3Emulex 7.01 +1.21 +20.9BebeStrs 2.98 +.50 +20.2Innocoll n 8.33 +1.35 +19.4500.com 19.04 +3.02 +18.9Dynegy wt 4.00 +.60 +17.6Tillys 13.63 +2.02 +17.4NV5 wt 3.25 +.46 +16.5Pharmacyc144.00 +20.29 +16.4ATRM Hld 3.65 +.51 +16.2

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

ChannAdv 9.83 -11.32 -53.5Altisrce n 16.49 -10.45 -38.8OcwenFn 7.78 -4.41 -36.2AltisrcAst 214.28 -107.53 -33.4SwftEng 2.13 -.56 -20.8HmeLnSvc 12.95 -3.14 -19.5TrovaGn wt 3.50 -.84 -19.4KB Home 13.87 -2.70 -16.3ChinaJJ h 2.67 -.49 -15.5NeuroDm n 13.00 -2.32 -15.1

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.78 -0.03 -1.4YkmFcsSvc d 25.59 -0.04 -1.1AQRMaFtStrI 10.94 +0.02 +2.9American BeaconLgCpVlIs 28.40 -0.10 -2.5American CenturyEqIncInv 8.69 -0.01 -0.7InvGrInv 28.38 -0.08 -1.4UltraInv 34.34 -0.03 -1.3ValueInv 8.44 -0.03 -2.0American FundsAMCAPA m 27.52 -0.08 -1.7AmBalA m 24.54 -0.04 -0.8BondA m 12.93 ... +1.0CapIncBuA m 59.34 +0.05 -0.4CapWldBdA m19.91 ... +0.3CpWldGrIA m 45.56 +0.07 -1.1EurPacGrA m 46.84 +0.24 -0.6FnInvA m 51.12 -0.04 -1.8GrthAmA m 41.83 -0.03 -2.0HiIncA m 10.70 -0.01 -0.3IncAmerA m 21.51 ... -0.3IntBdAmA m 13.60 ... +0.7IntlGrInA m 31.36 +0.14 -1.5InvCoAmA m 36.44 -0.11 -1.7MutualA m 36.62 -0.11 -1.4NewEconA m 36.66 -0.03 -0.3NewPerspA m 35.83 +0.05 -1.2NwWrldA m 53.36 +0.15 -0.3SmCpWldA m 45.00 +0.12 -0.7TaxEBdAmA m13.21 +0.01 +0.9WAMutInvA m 40.26 -0.07 -1.7ArtisanIntl d 29.88 +0.13 -0.3IntlVal d 33.66 +0.05 -1.6MdCpVal 24.01 -0.08 -2.6MidCap 44.73 -0.03 -1.6MidCapI 47.17 -0.03 -1.5BBHCoreSelN d 22.15 ... -2.4BernsteinDiversMui 14.64 +0.02 +0.8BlackRockEngy&ResA m22.08 ... -9.7EqDivA m 24.35 -0.08 -2.2EqDivI 24.40 -0.08 -2.2GlLSCrI 10.37 ...GlobAlcA m 19.64 +0.04 -0.7GlobAlcC m 18.05 +0.03 -0.7GlobAlcI 19.74 +0.04 -0.7HiYldBdIs 7.85 ... -0.2StrIncIns 10.12 -0.01 +0.2CausewayIntlVlIns d 14.65 +0.14 -0.9Cohen & SteersRealty 81.11 -0.25 +5.5ColumbiaAcornIntZ 41.48 +0.12 -0.6AcornZ 31.31 -0.02 -2.0DivIncZ 18.78 -0.04 -0.9Credit SuisseComStrInstl 5.83 -0.04 -3.0DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 +0.01 +0.22YrGlbFII 9.92 +0.01 +0.25YrGlbFII 11.03 +0.01 +0.9EmMkCrEqI 19.01 +0.08 +0.5EmMktValI 25.79 +0.05 +0.2EmMtSmCpI 20.12 +0.04 +1.2IntCorEqI 11.46 +0.04 -2.1IntSmCapI 18.19 ... -2.2IntlSCoI 16.69 +0.03 -1.7IntlValuI 17.22 +0.07 -2.4RelEstScI 35.01 -0.06 +5.9TAUSCrE2I 13.91 -0.02 -2.5USCorEq1I 17.55 -0.03 -2.1USCorEq2I 17.08 -0.02 -2.4USLgCo 15.95 -0.04 -1.7USLgValI 32.93 -0.14 -3.1USMicroI 18.80 +0.04 -2.9USSmValI 33.67 +0.05 -3.7USSmallI 30.27 +0.07 -2.8USTgtValInst 21.38 ... -3.5DavisNYVentA m 35.77 +0.09 -2.9NYVentY 36.28 +0.09 -2.9Dodge & CoxBal 100.99 -0.10 -1.5GlbStock 11.64 +0.03 -1.6Income 13.86 ... +0.6IntlStk 41.43 +0.20 -1.6Stock 176.57 -0.27 -2.4DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.06 ... +0.8DreyfusAppreciaInv 52.97 -0.08 -1.7Eaton VanceFltgRtI 8.90 ...FMILgCap 20.84 -0.02 -1.8FPACres d 33.33 -0.01 -1.2NewInc d 10.15 ... +0.3Fairholme FundsFairhome d 32.96 -0.39 -6.0FederatedStrValI 5.92 +0.01 +0.2ToRetIs 11.12 ... +0.8FidelityAstMgr20 13.26 ... +0.2AstMgr50 16.97 ... -0.4Bal 22.54 -0.04 -1.0Bal K 22.54 -0.03 -1.0BlChGrow 67.53 -0.17 -1.3BlChGrowK 67.60 -0.16 -1.3CapApr 35.68 -0.01 -1.0CapInc d 9.65 -0.01 -0.2Contra 96.30 ... -1.7ContraK 96.23 ... -1.7DivGrow 32.76 -0.08 -2.0DivrIntl d 33.95 +0.16 -1.5DivrIntlK d 33.88 +0.15 -1.5EqInc 58.20 -0.10 -2.0EqInc II 26.32 -0.07 -1.7FF2015 12.54 ... -0.6FF2035 13.09 ... -1.3FF2040 9.22 ... -1.3Fidelity 42.05 -0.06 -1.9FltRtHiIn d 9.62 ... +0.1FrdmK2015 13.53 ... -0.5FrdmK2020 14.16 +0.01 -0.6FrdmK2025 14.74 +0.01 -0.8FrdmK2030 14.99 ... -1.2FrdmK2035 15.41 ... -1.3FrdmK2040 15.45 ... -1.3FrdmK2045 15.86 +0.01 -1.2Free2010 15.34 ... -0.3Free2020 15.27 ... -0.6Free2025 13.03 ... -0.8Free2030 15.95 ... -1.1GNMA 11.68 -0.01 +0.2GrowCo 130.86 -0.40 -0.8GrowInc 29.39 -0.03 -2.7GrthCmpK 130.70 -0.39 -0.8HiInc d 8.89 ... +0.1IntlDisc d 37.52 +0.18 -1.2InvGrdBd 7.98 ... +0.9LatinAm d 23.13 +0.05 -2.8LowPrStkK d 49.29 +0.10 -1.8LowPriStk d 49.33 +0.09 -1.8Magellan 90.62 -0.26 -2.1MidCap d 37.79 -0.01 -1.6MuniInc d 13.66 +0.01 +1.1OTC 78.33 +0.14 -1.5Puritan 21.31 -0.02 -0.8PuritanK 21.30 -0.02 -0.8RealInv d 43.17 -0.04 +5.7SASEqF 13.90 -0.02 -1.6SEMF 16.79 +0.11 +0.6SInvGrBdF 11.57 +0.01 +1.1STMIdxF d 58.89 -0.11 -1.7SersEmgMkts 16.75 +0.10 +0.5SesAl-SctrEqt 13.91 -0.02 -1.7SesInmGrdBd 11.56 ... +1.1ShTmBond 8.60 ... +0.3SmCapDisc d 29.30 +0.14 -2.6StratInc 10.69 ... +0.1Tel&Util 24.01 +0.05 -0.5TotalBd 10.77 ... +1.0USBdIdx 11.86 +0.01 +1.2USBdIdxInv 11.86 +0.01 +1.1Value 110.53 -0.36 -2.4Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 26.19 -0.05 -1.8NewInsI 26.66 -0.05 -1.8Fidelity SelectBiotech d 231.23 -0.62 +4.5HealtCar d 222.35 -0.18 +2.1Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 71.63 -0.18 -1.7500IdxAdvtgInst71.63 -0.18 -1.7500IdxInstl 71.63 -0.18 -1.7

Name P/E Last Chg

4,029,855,657Volume 2,125,811,503Volume

16,000

16,500

17,000

17,500

18,000

18,500

J JA S O N D

17,240

17,660

18,080Dow Jones industrialsClose: 17,613.68Change: -27.16 (-0.2%)

10 DAYS

500IdxInv 71.62 -0.18 -1.7ExtMktIdAg d 54.35 +0.01 -1.5IntlIdxAdg d 36.63 +0.17 -1.6TotMktIdAg d 58.89 -0.11 -1.6Fidelity®SerBlueChipGrF11.94 -0.02 -1.2SeriesGrowthCoF11.89 -0.03 -0.8First EagleGlbA m 52.05 -0.09 -0.7FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.64 +0.02 +1.0FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.62 ... +1.3GrowthA m 73.88 -0.01 -1.1HY TF A m 10.75 +0.01 +1.3Income C m 2.39 -0.01 -1.3IncomeA m 2.37 ... -0.8IncomeAdv 2.35 -0.01 -0.8RisDvA m 51.23 -0.10 -1.6StrIncA m 10.00 ...FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 32.95 +0.07 -1.1DiscovA m 32.44 +0.07 -1.1Shares Z 29.17 ... -1.2SharesA m 28.93 -0.01 -1.2FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond C m 12.46 +0.01 -0.2GlBondA m 12.43 ... -0.2GlBondAdv 12.39 +0.01 -0.2GrowthA m 23.37 +0.09 -1.8WorldA m 16.83 +0.05 -2.2Franklin Templeton IGlTlRtAdv 12.49 -0.01 -0.5GES&SUSEq 53.25 -0.09 -2.0GMOAABdIV 25.26 ... +0.6IntItVlIV 21.47 +0.13 -2.2QuIII 22.23 ... -0.7USEqAllcVI 15.85 -0.01 -1.6Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 6.74 ... +0.1MidCpVaIs 40.88 -0.10 -1.7SmCpValIs 53.92 +0.03 -3.1HarborCapApInst 57.53 -0.02 -1.7IntlInstl 63.35 ... -2.2IntlInv b 62.75 ... -2.2HartfordCapAprA m 36.52 -0.08 -1.5CpApHLSIA 53.92 -0.07 -1.4INVESCOComstockA m 24.89 -0.05 -2.5EqIncomeA m 10.19 -0.02 -1.6GrowIncA m 25.83 -0.06 -2.7HiYldMuA m 10.12 +0.01 +1.4IVAWorldwideI d 17.36 +0.04 -0.6IvyAssetStrA m 25.09 -0.04 -1.6AssetStrC m 24.16 -0.03 -1.6AsstStrgI 25.34 -0.03 -1.6JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.90 +0.01 +1.2CoreBondA m 11.89 +0.01 +1.1CoreBondSelect11.89 +0.01 +1.2HighYldSel 7.60 ... +0.1LgCapGrA m 33.98 -0.01 -1.6LgCapGrSelect34.05 -0.01 -1.6MidCpValI 36.59 -0.01 -1.5ShDurBndSel 10.90 ... +0.4USEquityI 14.28 -0.03 -1.9USLCpCrPS 28.83 -0.07 -1.9JanusBalT 30.32 -0.04 -0.9GlbLfScT 54.36 +0.27 +3.5John HancockDisValMdCpI 19.76 -0.03 -1.1DiscValI 18.48 -0.06 -2.6LifBa1 b 15.35 +0.01 -0.7LifGr1 b 16.10 ... -1.1LazardEmgMkEqInst d17.04 +0.05 -0.9Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m199.34-0.22-2.1CBAggressGrthI216.12 -0.25 -2.1WACorePlusBdI11.75 ... +1.0Longleaf PartnersLongPart 30.47 ... -2.5Loomis SaylesBdInstl 14.82 ... -0.1BdR b 14.75 ... -0.1Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.05 -0.06 -1.4ShDurIncA m 4.46 ... +0.1ShDurIncC m 4.49 ... +0.1ShDurIncF b 4.46 ... +0.4MFSIntlValA m 32.81 +0.07 -0.8IsIntlEq 20.63 +0.09 -1.3TotRetA m 18.08 -0.01 -0.6ValueA m 34.34 -0.06 -1.7ValueI 34.52 -0.05 -1.7MainStayMktfield 16.04 -0.06 -1.2Manning & NapierWrldOppA 7.20 +0.03 -1.8Matthews AsianChina d 22.09 +0.16 +2.9India d 27.54 +0.20 +4.1Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 11.01 +0.01 +1.1TotRtBd b 11.01 +0.01 +1.0NatixisLSInvBdY 11.89 -0.01 +0.2LSStratIncC m16.38 -0.01 -0.1Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 55.14 +0.04 -2.6NorthernHYFixInc d 7.06 ... -0.2StkIdx 24.92 ... -1.4NuveenHiYldMunI 17.42 +0.02 +1.0OakmarkEqIncI 31.34 -0.06 -1.8Intl I 22.94 +0.02 -1.7Oakmark I 64.39 -0.20 -3.0Select I 39.26 -0.07 -3.8OberweisChinaOpp m 14.00 ... +1.5Old WestburyGlbOppo 7.53 +0.01 -0.8GlbSmMdCp 16.00 -0.02 -1.4LgCpStr 12.71 -0.02 -1.5OppenheimerDevMktA m 34.97 +0.07 -1.5DevMktY 34.52 +0.07 -1.5GlobA m 74.96 +0.33 -1.4IntlGrY 34.54 +0.03 -1.5IntlGrowA m 34.73 +0.03 -1.6MainStrA m 46.76 -0.08 -2.4SrFltRatA m 8.09 -0.01 -0.1StrIncA m 4.07 ... +0.7Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.50 ... +1.2OsterweisOsterStrInc 11.41 ... +0.2PIMCOAllAssetI 11.57 ... -0.3AllAuthIn 9.09 ... -0.4ComRlRStI 4.37 ... -2.5EMktCurI 9.22 ... -0.4EmgLclBdI 8.36 ... +0.6ForBdInstl 10.84 ... +0.7HiYldIs 9.14 ... +0.2Income P 12.27 ... -0.3IncomeA m 12.27 ... -0.3IncomeC m 12.27 ... -0.4IncomeD b 12.27 ... -0.3IncomeInl 12.27 ... -0.3LgDrTRtnI 12.34 ... +2.9LowDrIs 10.04 ...RERRStgC m 3.43 ... +7.2RealRet 10.98 ... +0.6ShtTermIs 9.72 ... -0.3TotRetA m 10.76 -0.01 +1.0TotRetAdm b 10.76 -0.01 +1.0TotRetC m 10.76 -0.01 +0.9TotRetIs 10.76 -0.01 +1.0TotRetrnD b 10.76 -0.01 +1.0TotlRetnP 10.76 -0.01 +1.0UnconstrBdIns 11.13 ... -0.4PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 32.09 +0.04 -2.6Growth 25.56 -0.10 -1.9ParnassusCoreEqInv 40.08 -0.06 -1.5PermanentPortfolio 39.96 -0.07 +1.0PioneerPioneerA m 36.01 -0.09 -1.8PrincipalDivIntI 11.19 +0.05 -1.6LCGrIInst 12.21 +0.01 -1.8Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 39.14 -0.05 -2.2

PutnamCpSpctrmY 37.70 -0.12 -2.9GrowIncA m 21.26 ... -1.8NewOpp 79.05 -0.12 -1.8Schwab1000Inv d 51.62 -0.11 -1.6FUSLgCInl d 15.01 -0.04 -1.8S&P500Sel d 31.61 -0.08 -1.7ScoutInterntl 31.67 +0.05 -2.8SequoiaSequoia 236.43 +0.89 +0.6T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 66.36 +0.03 -1.4CapApprec 25.96 -0.01 -0.7EmMktStk d 32.50 +0.12 +0.4EqIndex d 54.53 -0.14 -1.7EqtyInc 31.99 -0.08 -2.5GrowStk 51.18 +0.08 -1.5HealthSci 69.92 +0.15 +2.8HiYield d 6.77 ...InsLgCpGr 26.99 +0.03 -1.8IntlBnd d 8.90 -0.01 -0.4IntlGrInc d 13.57 +0.08 -1.5IntlStk d 15.48 +0.07 -0.8LatinAm d 21.38 +0.07 -2.6MidCapE 42.67 +0.04 -1.0MidCapVa 28.27 -0.03 -1.9MidCpGr 74.68 +0.07 -1.0NewHoriz 43.19 +0.11 -1.3NewIncome 9.67 +0.01 +1.0OrseaStk d 9.29 +0.05 -1.4R2015 14.38 ... -0.6R2025 15.57 +0.01 -0.9R2035 16.48 +0.02 -1.1Real d 28.24 -0.06 +5.1Rtmt2010 17.66 ... -0.4Rtmt2020 20.56 +0.01 -0.7Rtmt2030 22.79 +0.02 -1.0Rtmt2040 23.63 +0.02 -1.2Rtmt2045 15.81 +0.02 -1.2ShTmBond 4.76 ... +0.2SmCpStk 43.51 +0.08 -1.8SmCpVal d 45.40 +0.06 -3.0SpecInc 12.70 ... +0.1Value 33.99 -0.06 -1.9TCWTotRetBdI 10.39 ... +0.8TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 11.03 ... +1.2EqIx 15.26 -0.03 -1.6IntlE d 17.19 +0.09 -1.4TempletonInFEqSeS 19.72 +0.18 -1.6ThornburgIncBldA m 20.84 +0.07IncBldC m 20.83 +0.07IntlI 27.30 -0.04 -0.4LtdTMul 14.63 +0.02 +0.6Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 25.95 +0.14 -0.3VALIC Co IStockIdx 36.81 -0.09 -1.7Vanguard500Adml 186.70 -0.46 -1.7500Inv 186.69 -0.46 -1.7BalIdxAdm 29.53 -0.03 -0.5BalIdxIns 29.53 -0.03 -0.5BdMktInstPls 10.99 ... +1.2CAITAdml 11.91 +0.01 +0.9CapOpAdml 119.95 -0.09 -1.5DevMktIdxAdm12.02 +0.07 -1.2DevMktIdxInstl 12.03 +0.06 -1.2DivGr 22.87 -0.03 -1.0EmMktIAdm 33.30 +0.16 +0.2EnergyAdm 93.94 -0.18 -6.7EqInc 30.79 -0.05 -1.3EqIncAdml 64.54 -0.11 -1.3ExplAdml 84.61 ... -2.1Explr 91.01 ... -2.1ExtdIdAdm 65.59 +0.01 -1.5ExtdIdIst 65.58 +0.01 -1.5ExtdMktIdxIP 161.84 +0.02 -1.5GNMA 10.84 -0.01 +0.3GNMAAdml 10.84 -0.01 +0.3GrthIdAdm 52.87 -0.06 -1.6GrthIstId 52.87 -0.06 -1.5HYCorAdml 5.96 ...HltCrAdml 91.52 +0.21 +2.5HlthCare 216.96 +0.49 +2.5ITBondAdm 11.65 +0.01 +1.7ITGradeAd 9.96 +0.01 +1.4InfPrtAdm 26.02 -0.05 +0.6InfPrtI 10.60 -0.02 +0.6InflaPro 13.25 -0.03 +0.5InstIdxI 185.50 -0.46 -1.7InstPlus 185.51 -0.46 -1.7InstTStPl 46.02 -0.09 -1.6IntlGr 21.27 +0.08 -1.3IntlGrAdm 67.63 +0.28 -1.2IntlStkIdxAdm 25.66 +0.11 -1.3IntlStkIdxI 102.62 +0.43 -1.3IntlStkIdxIPls 102.64 +0.44 -1.3IntlVal 33.35 +0.17 -1.8LTGradeAd 11.04 -0.02 +2.8LifeCon 18.45 ... +0.1LifeGro 28.52 ... -1.0LifeMod 23.97 ... -0.5MidCapIdxIP 164.03 -0.29 -1.6MidCp 33.18 -0.06 -1.6MidCpAdml 150.56 -0.27 -1.6MidCpIst 33.26 -0.06 -1.6Morg 25.07 -0.05 -1.1MorgAdml 77.67 -0.13 -1.1MuHYAdml 11.40 +0.01 +1.2MuInt 14.38 +0.01 +0.9MuIntAdml 14.38 +0.01 +0.9MuLTAdml 11.86 +0.01 +1.1MuLtdAdml 11.08 +0.01 +0.4MuShtAdml 15.86 +0.01 +0.2PrecMtls 9.48 -0.34 +3.5Prmcp 101.46 -0.19 -1.4PrmcpAdml 105.11 -0.20 -1.4PrmcpCorI 21.28 -0.05 -1.7REITIdxAd 121.38 -0.20 +5.7REITIdxInst 18.79 -0.03 +5.7STBondAdm 10.54 ... +0.6STCor 10.70 ... +0.4STGradeAd 10.70 ... +0.4STIGradeI 10.70 ... +0.4STsryAdml 10.72 ... +0.3SelValu 27.68 -0.10 -2.5ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.20 -0.01SmCapIdx 54.90 -0.03 -1.7SmCapIdxIP 158.52 -0.09 -1.7SmCpGrIdxAdm43.94 -0.04 -0.7SmCpIdAdm 54.92 -0.03 -1.7SmCpIdIst 54.92 -0.03 -1.7SmCpValIdxAdm44.26 -0.01 -2.6Star 24.46 -0.02 -0.6StratgcEq 31.74 ... -1.4TgtRe2010 26.32 ...TgtRe2015 15.24 ... -0.3TgtRe2020 28.32 ... -0.5TgtRe2030 28.78 -0.01 -0.9TgtRe2035 17.64 ... -1.1TgtRe2040 29.38 -0.01 -1.3TgtRe2045 18.41 -0.01 -1.3TgtRe2050 29.24 -0.01 -1.3TgtRetInc 12.93 ... +0.2Tgtet2025 16.41 ... -0.7TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.37 ... +0.7TlIntlBdIdxInst 32.07 ... +0.7TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.69 ... +0.8TotBdAdml 10.99 ... +1.2TotBdInst 10.99 ... +1.2TotBdMkInv 10.99 ... +1.2TotIntl 15.34 +0.06 -1.4TotStIAdm 50.75 -0.10 -1.6TotStIIns 50.76 -0.10 -1.6TotStIdx 50.73 -0.10 -1.6TxMCapAdm 102.07 -0.20 -1.7ValIdxAdm 32.38 -0.10 -1.7ValIdxIns 32.38 -0.10 -1.7WellsI 25.67 -0.01 +0.4WellsIAdm 62.18 -0.02 +0.4Welltn 38.94 -0.03 -0.5WelltnAdm 67.25 -0.05 -0.5WndsIIAdm 64.71 -0.30 -2.3Wndsr 20.93 -0.06 -2.5WndsrAdml 70.57 -0.22 -2.5WndsrII 36.47 -0.17 -2.3VirtusEmgMktsIs 9.91 +0.04 +0.2Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 10.29 -0.01 -2.3SciTechA m 14.88 -0.03 -0.7

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FireEye dd 34.17 -1.12FMajSilv g 54 6.52 -.26FstNiagara dd 7.64 -.17FirstEngy 23 38.63 +.17Flextrn 13 10.80 -.01FrptMcM 9 21.04 -1.72FreshMkt 26 36.16 -4.63FrontierCm 32 6.76 +.01Frontline dd 4.04 -.59GATX 12 53.62 +.35GalenaBio dd 1.86 +.06Gap 15 41.59 -.66GenDynam 20 137.79 -.11GenGrPrp cc 30.20 -.19GenMills 19 52.71 +.06GenMotors 23 35.25 -.59Genworth dd 7.63 -.03Gerdau ... 3.52 -.03GeronCp dd 3.20 +.06GileadSci 17 97.21 -4.00GlaxoSKln ... 42.91 -.02GlimchRt dd 13.95 +.08GolLinhas ... 5.06 -.16GoldFLtd ... 5.57 -.39Goldcrp g dd 20.35 -1.06GoldStr g dd .25 -.02GoodrPet dd 2.73 -.12Google A 21 501.80 +4.74GoPro n ... 49.87 -6.91Groupon dd 7.48 +.06HCA Hldg 17 72.14 -.06HCP Inc 21 47.21 -.09HalconRes dd 1.49 -.03Hallibrtn 10 38.29 -.25Halozyme dd 14.70 +.13HarmonyG ... 2.73 -.13HartfdFn 13 40.41 +.10HeclaM dd 3.06 -.12Hertz ... 22.85 -.27Hess 5 67.69 -.74HewlettP 15 39.81 -.11Hilton 47 25.65 +.20HimaxTch 35 7.37 -.58HollyFront 11 32.53 -1.68Hologic cc 28.78 +.05HomeDp 24 103.73 -.69HmeLnSvc 4 12.95 -3.14HopFedBc 22 13.16 -.16HostHotls 16 23.75 -.04HovnanE 2 3.93 -.15HudsCity 29 9.51 +.05HuntBncsh 14 9.98 -.03Huntsmn 15 22.72 -.02

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 2.98 -.15ICICI Bk s ... 11.42 -.18ING ... 12.42 +.18iShBrazil q 35.71 +.39iShEMU q 35.39 +.18iShGerm q 27.03 +.12iSh HK q 21.15 +.37iShItaly q 12.97 +.10iShJapan q 11.18 +.09iShSpain q 32.40 +.14iSTaiwn q 14.84 +.11iShSilver q 16.29 +.42iShChinaLC q 42.50 +.60iSCorSP500 q 203.56 -.53iShUSAgBd q 111.15 +.03iShEMkts q 39.29 +.34iSh ACWI q 57.61 +.04iSh20 yrT q 131.82iS Eafe q 59.80 +.30iShiBxHYB q 89.99iShR2K q 117.27 +.09iShREst q 80.35 -.21iShHmCnst q 25.99 -.68IderaPhm dd 5.14 -.23Infosys s 19 33.86 +.34IngrmM 16 26.26 +.13IntgDv 51 17.43 -.38IBM 12 156.81 +.37IntPap 16 53.30 +.09IntlRectif 38 39.98 -.01Interpublic 24 20.26 +.08InvenSense dd 14.07 -.88Invesco 15 37.33 -.10iSh UK q 17.57 +.05Isis dd 71.63 -1.71ItauUnibH ... 12.87 +.15JD.com n ... 23.84 -.27JPMorgCh 11 58.84 +.01JanusCap 22 17.00 +.09JetBlue 14 14.81 +.26JohnJn 17 104.76 +.18JnprNtwk 19 22.40 -.05JunoTher n ... 56.56 -4.95KB Home 15 13.87 -2.70KeyEngy dd 1.35 +.01Keycorp 12 12.70 -.16Kimco 44 26.82 +.12KindMorg 34 40.89 -.72Kinross g dd 3.20 -.24Kohls 15 60.64 +.01KraftFGp 16 62.99 -.55LaredoPet 10 8.89 +.21LVSands 17 55.45 +.44LeggPlat 50 44.57 +.17LendingC n ... 21.13 +.12LennarA 19 46.28 -.79LibGlobC s ... 46.47 +.29LillyEli 28 69.38 -.04LinearTch 23 45.17 -.28LinnEngy dd 9.89 -.45LockhdM 20 194.35 -.12Lorillard 20 64.46 +.54lululemn gs 39 63.06 +.47LyonBas A 9 75.30 -.85

M-N-O-PMGIC Inv 20 8.70 +.04MGM Rsts 68 20.35 +.13Macys 16 65.58 -.46MagHRes dd 2.39 -.29Manitowoc 20 18.88 -.34MannKd dd 5.49MarathnO 8 25.89 -.35MarathPet 10 80.86 -4.56MVJrGold q 27.84 -1.10MktVGold q 20.55 -.94MV OilSvc q 32.58 -.01MV Semi q 53.11 -.30MktVRus q 14.77MartMM 35 108.75 -1.34MarvellT 18 15.71 -.21Masco 11 24.75 -.44MasterCd s 29 83.55 +.19Mattel 14 28.27 -.64MaximIntg 26 32.35 -.41McDrmInt 3 2.44 -.19McGrwH 28 90.89 +5.13Medtrnic 25 72.79 -1.68MelcoCrwn 18 23.89 -.25Merck 34 62.19 -.11MetLife 10 49.81 -.62MicronT 10 30.84 -.83Microsoft 18 46.36 -.25MobileTele ... 8.11 +.16Mondelez 18 36.63 -.25Monsanto 24 117.86 -1.70MorgStan 16 36.03 -.34MotrlaSolu 24 64.11 -.24NPS Phm cc 45.55 +.20NRG Egy dd 26.88 +.19NXP Semi ... 79.24 -1.11Nabors 9 10.41 -.04NOilVarco 9 57.97 -.63NetApp 21 39.32 -.56Netlist h dd 1.33 +.17NwGold g dd 4.35 -.38NY CmtyB 15 15.63 -.11NewfldExp 12 22.90 +.17NewmtM 15 20.36 -.83NewsCpA 34 15.23 -.05NikeB 28 95.01 -.85NobleCorp 5 16.11 +.22NobleEngy 17 42.54 +1.02NokiaCp ... 7.46 -.06NA Pall g ... .18 -.01NthnO&G 6 5.97 +.27NorthropG 17 152.00 +.03NStarRlt dd 17.83 -.29Novavax dd 6.20 -.21NuanceCm 39 13.49 -.12Nvidia 19 19.66 -.04OasisPet 3 13.10 -.26OcciPet 10 74.97 +.02OcwenFn 7 7.78 -4.41OfficeDpt dd 7.90 -.17OnSmcnd 20 10.08 -.31Oracle 18 42.93 -.34Orexigen dd 5.43 -.32PDL Bio 5 7.43 +.05PG&E Cp 18 56.51 +1.08

PNC 12 84.52 -1.16PPG 24 226.99 +.74PPL Corp 15 34.80 -.37Pandora dd 16.98 +.02PattUTI 17 14.03 +.11PeabdyE dd 6.91 +.03Pengrth g ... 2.90 +.12PennVa dd 5.64 -.09PennWst g ... 1.64 +.02PeopUtdF 18 14.50 -.06PetrbrsA ... 6.92 +.29Petrobras ... 6.78 +.21Pfizer 17 32.44 -.33Pharmacyc cc 144.00 +20.29PhilipMor 16 83.10 +.05Phillips66 10 61.50 -2.74PhotMdx h dd 1.79 -.01PioNtrl dd 137.89 +2.96PiperJaf 12 55.87 +.03PlugPowr h dd 2.91 -.03Potash 22 34.95 -.73PwShs QQQ q 101.52 -.03ProLogis 43 43.71 -.89ProShtS&P q 22.15 +.08ProUltSP q 123.83 -.64PrUPQQQ s q 92.32 -.08PUVixST rs q 29.65 +1.66PrShtVix s q 55.12 -1.64PrUltCrude q 7.74 +.18ProctGam 25 90.30 +.38ProgsvCp 13 26.50 -.04ProUShSP q 22.73 +.11PUShQQQ rs q 40.67 +.04ProUShL20 q 42.26PShtQQQ rs q 31.17 +.02PUShSPX rs q 39.78 +.35PSEG 17 41.91 +.52PulteGrp 18 22.13 -.56

Q-R-S-TQEP Res 11 19.27 -.15Qualcom 16 72.97 -.60QuantaSvc 15 26.47 -.21RadianGrp 6 15.69 +.20RangeRs 21 47.02 -.60RexEnergy 18 2.73 -.21RiteAid 23 7.57 -.22RiverbedT cc 20.61 +.06RymanHP 37 54.50 +.02SLM Cp 6 9.70 +.02SpdrDJIA q 175.98 -.26SpdrGold q 118.16 -.40SpdrEuro50 q 35.61 +.17S&P500ETF q 202.08 -.57SpdrHome q 34.55 -.53SpdrS&PBk q 30.90 -.22SpdrShTHiY q 29.02 -.03SpdrLehHY q 38.83 -.04SpdrS&P RB q 37.50 -.17SpdrOGEx q 42.86 -.24SABESP ... 5.92 -.21Salesforce dd 57.97 +.24SanchezEn 45 8.62 +.06SanDisk 17 81.00 -2.57SandRdge 27 1.34Schlmbrg 15 77.78 -.27Schwab 30 28.19 +.02ScorpioBlk ... 2.08 -.06SeadrillLtd 1 9.66 +.14SelMedHld 17 14.41 +.40SiderurNac ... 1.93 -.05SilvStd g dd 6.30 +.01SilvWhtn g 26 22.49 -.24SiriusXM 51 3.54 -.03SkywksSol 31 72.84 +.52SouFun s 12 7.50 +.10SthnCopper 16 26.55 -1.34SwstAirl 24 40.48 +.23SwstnEngy 11 24.13 +.06SpectraEn 22 33.55 -.15SpiritRltC dd 12.33 -.05Sprint dd 4.15 +.02SP Matls q 47.75 -.54SP HlthC q 69.93 -.31SP CnSt q 48.95 -.01SP Consum q 70.51SP Engy q 73.57 -.59SP Inds q 54.93 -.11SP Tech q 40.74 -.03SP Util q 47.40 +.13StdPac 14 7.28 -.47Staples 28 16.98 -.26Starbucks 30 80.87 +.64Statoil ASA ... 16.54 +.20StlDynam 15 17.51 -.66StifelFin 19 48.01 -.65Stryker 49 94.22 +.20Suncor g 9 29.10 +.43SunEdison dd 20.51 +.59SunPower 31 26.57 +1.06SunTrst 12 38.08 -.33Supvalu 14 9.26 -.24SwftEng dd 2.13 -.56Symantec 18 25.34 +.05Sysco 25 40.75 -.12T-MobileUS cc 29.47 +.20TD Ameritr 24 34.31 +.39TJX 22 67.16 -.24TaiwSemi ... 21.05 +.26TalismE g 21 7.52 +.02Target 32 75.95 -.68TeckRes g ... 12.28 -.77TeekayTnk ... 6.39 -.32Tekmira g dd 22.95 -1.73TenetHlth dd 46.16 -.84Teradyn 19 18.18 -.31Terex 8 23.32 -.54TeslaMot dd 204.25 +2.04Tesoro 12 66.67 -3.33TevaPhrm 18 57.06 +.05TexInst 23 52.79 -.333D Sys cc 30.88 -.483M Co 22 160.62 -.12Tiffany 21 86.30 -2.71TimeWarn 18 85.16 +1.11TollBros 19 34.60 -.41Transocn dd 15.52 +.01TriPointe 17 15.31 -.72TrinaSolar 10 8.71 +.03Trinity s 6 25.56 -.27TurqHillRs 46 2.78 -.1721stCFoxA 20 35.13 -.2521stCFoxB 19 33.56 -.25Twitter dd 39.65 +.28TycoIntl 11 43.36 +.09Tyson 13 38.85 -.25

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUS Silica 12 24.00 +.29USG 51 29.53 -.92UnionPac s 21 111.83 -2.14UtdContl 19 66.41 +.49UPS B 23 110.11 +.47US NGas q 14.94 +.76US OilFd q 17.62 +.21USSteel dd 22.90 -.48UtdTech 17 114.34 -.11UtdhlthGp 19 103.07 +.52UrbanOut 20 34.51 -1.91Vale SA ... 8.50 -.05Vale SA pf ... 7.56 +.06ValeantPh cc 158.04 +2.54ValeroE 7 45.95 -1.42VangREIT q 85.65 -.13VangEmg q 40.02 +.28VangEur q 51.22 +.23VangFTSE q 37.35 +.18VerizonCm 10 47.18 +.10ViacomB 13 72.63 +.23Vipshop s cc 21.48 -.22Vivus dd 3.09 -.21Vodafone ... 34.49 +.17VulcanM 49 67.36 -.89WPX Engy dd 10.80 -.21WalgBoots 35 75.26 -.44WalterEn dd 1.23 -.03WeathfIntl dd 10.03 -.01WstnUnion 12 17.80 -.02WetSeal h dd .09 +.01WhitingPet 6 27.58 +.23WholeFood 33 51.73 -.09WmsCos 57 40.94 -.34Windstrm 29 8.35 +.04WTJpHedg q 48.15 +.18WT India q 22.46 -.05XL Grp 26 35.58 +.04Xilinx 17 41.85 -.63Yamana g cc 4.13 -.60YumBrnds 23 72.61 -.30ZionsBcp 24 25.22 -.44Zoetis 36 42.81 -.61Zogenix dd 1.34 -.04Zynga dd 2.56 -.06

Today

Eye on hiring

A new report could provide clues as to how the Federal Reserve will size up the economy at its next policy meeting.

The January Beige Book, due out today, is a snapshot of business conditions in each of the Fed’s 12 regional bank districts. December’s Beige Book showed that the U.S. economy kept expanding in October and November. The report will form the basis for discussion at the central bank’s policymaking meeting on Jan. 27-28.

Housing bellwether

Wells Fargo delivers its latest quarterly financial report card today.

Financial analysts anticipate that the biggest U.S. mortgage lender will report that its earnings and revenue improved in the October-December quarter. Earnings aside, Wall Street will be listening for an update on how demand for home loans is faring ahead of the spring home-selling season.

Sizing up retail sales

Retail sales have mostly edged higher in recent months, aided by cheaper gas and an improving job market.

They rose 0.7 percent in November, the biggest increase in eight months, as shoppers hit malls and online stores to begin their holiday season shopping. Did the sales trends continue in December? Find out today, when the Commerce Depart-ment reports its latest retail sales data. AP

Retail salesMonthly percent change

est.Dec.(est.)

Nov.

Oct.

Sept.

Aug.

July

Source: FactSet0.1

0.3%

0.6

-0.1

0.5

0.7

Short-term bond funds

-0.1% 1.1%

Intermediate-termbond funds

1.2 5.3

Long-termbond funds

4.7 11.9

Short-term bond funds have struggled in recent months, while longer-term options have thrived.

Short- and long-term interest rates have been moving in opposite directions.

3-mo

12-mo

2-year 0.45% 0.54%Treasury ( 0.09)

10-year 2.97 1.90Treasury ( 1.07)

30-year 3.89 2.50Treasury ( 1.39)

Short LongIntermediate

No need to tilt your head upside down. Bond-fund returns really are like that.

Mutual funds that hold only short-term bonds have been struggling, and slightly more than a third have lost money over the last three months. Longer-term bond funds, meanwhile, are cruising.

It may seem like the opposite of what would be expected, given long-term bond funds are supposed to be the riskier investments. But it’s a result of how interest rates are moving across different parts of the bond market.

When rates rise, the price of existing bonds fall because their yields suddenly look less

attractive. Because long-term bonds lock investors into yields for longer periods, their prices are more sensitive to changes in interest rates.

But rates don’t always move uniformly. Short-term rates have been rising due to expectations that the Federal Reserve will start raising its target for short-term interest rates later this year.

However the Federal Reserve has less control over long-term interest rates, which reflect how investors feel about the economy’s health, inflation and other factors. Weakness in Europe, Japan and other areas of the global economy are helping to keep long-term rates low.

Stan Choe; Jenni Sohn • APSources: FactSet; Morningstar Return data through Jan. 12

3 month

12 month

A year ago Today

Total returnYields

Short-term struggles

Financial Solutions with a Smile and a Handshake

Member SIPC

www.edwardjones.com

Page 9: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • 9A

With new rules coming into play and other changes on the NASCAR horizon, how the 2015 Sprint Cup season will turn out is anyone’s guess. Two of the sport’s longtime personalities, Darrell Waltrip and Larry McReynolds, re-cently weighed in with their thoughts about the upcoming season. Waltrip, a retired championship-winning driver, and the veteran crew chief McReynolds, will begin their 15th season together in the FOX TV booth beginning with the season-opening Daytona 500. Here are their thoughts on some of the stories of 2015. On the new electronic officiating on pit road: Waltrip: “I think initially the new system will be prob-lematic for teams, because where situations such as when a crew member going over the wall too soon were judg-ment calls before, they’re now monitored electronically. I expect teams will struggle with the implementation of this new program until they get comfortable with it and understand completely how it works, what is expected of them and where the parameters are. “NASCAR said they’re going to show teams how the system works and monitor them in the preliminary races at Daytona before they drop the hammer on them. I’m a little concerned that we’ll see a lot of penalties early in the year, but maybe they’ll prove me wrong.” On the rules change that will have the most im-pact: McReynolds: “The biggest one is the ban on testing other than the tests in conjunction with NASCAR or Goodyear. This is my 35th year in NASCAR, but the first time I haven’t been to Daytona for January testing in forever. “Will that change the competition? Well, the cream still rises to the top. Rule changes affect some teams more than others. We saw that last year with the no-ride-height and downforce changes. Joe Gibbs Racing struggled when compared to their 2013 performance. If anything, what the testing ban could do is give an advantage to the middle-tier teams who typically can’t afford to test. It levels the playing field a bit more for them. “I’ll admit I am a little nervous about the reduction in horsepower, because I’ve never seen a reduction in horse-power save teams money, and I’ve never seen it make bet-ter racing. But maybe with the package deal and pulling back on downforce, the horsepower reduction will have an impact. But I’m cautiously optimistic and waiting it out with an open mind.”

On the best new driver/crew chief combo? Waltrip: “I’ve never seen so many crew chief/driver changes. Dale [Earnhardt] Jr. is the first one everyone will be watching. He and Greg Ives should be a good combina-tion because of Greg’s experience with the Xfinity Series cars, which have less horsepower and downforce — simi-lar to what the Cup cars will be like this year. That could be a plus for Dale to get the car set up the way he needs it. “Then the question will be if they can communicate well. When you move up to Cup, you enter a whole new level for everything, including pit strategy. Any Cup crew chief who is in his first year in the Cup Series will have growing pains.

“I’ll say the same thing with Kyle Busch. He’s worked with Adam Stevens before in the Xfinity Series. For what-ever reason, Dave Rogers and Kyle Busch just had a fall-ing out. It will be interesting to see how Kyle and Adam do together in the Cup Series. I think they’ll be pretty good because they’ve worked together before. “Keith Rodden moves over to work with Kasey Kahne after being with Jamie McMurray for a while and proving what he can do. Kasey absolutely has to perform this year, and this combination has to work. This is a crucial year for Kahne to make something happen, and Keith could be the guy to help him. “Carl Edwards and Darian Grubb could be the winners in this game of musical chairs. Darian is smart, calls a good race, and Carl is driven and hungry. Just like Matt Kenseth and Kevin Harvick when they changed teams, Carl has something to prove. I think he could be a factor in winning races and even a championship. “Denny Hamlin and Dave Rogers are another pairing to keep an eye on. I like the changes Joe Gibbs Racing has made. The question, though, is whether or not they can manage four teams. It gets harder every time you add a team, and four is a lot.” On the surprises the 2015 Chase might bring: McReynolds: “He wouldn’t be a surprise and many prob-ably are glad he wasn’t in the Chase last year — Kyle

Larson. He will be a Chase contender and possibly a true championship contender. With what we saw last year, especially as he saw some tracks for the second time, it’s obvious this kid will not only be a factor in 2015, but also win some races. “And I don’t think all four Joe Gibbs Racing drivers will make the Chase. Can I tell you which one misses? No. But my gut tells me there will be some growing pains with the fourth team.”

On whether the second-place jinx will get Ryan Newman: McReynolds: “The last driver to finish second in points and come back the next year and be successful was Matt Kenseth, and that was several years ago. The drivers who finished second haven’t come close to finishing high in points the next year, and they’ve also won very few races combined that next year. I think 2015 will be different, though, because Ryan Newman’s best race of the year was the season finale. That was his best finish and best performance. I think he and Luke Lambert will build on that momentum. Because they exceeded expectations in 2014, I don’t think that jinx will affect them negatively. I’m looking for them to win some races.” On the favorite to win the championship: Waltrip: “I look back to Homestead and how the season concluded last year. The No. 4 car won the race and the championship. Newman was the big surprise and I expect good things to continue in that camp. They improved a lot as the year went on and seem to have peaked at the right time. Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski should be fast again. Jeff Gordon seems to be getting better with age. He’s certainly not slowing down. But can he perform like he did last year? Can the guys who ended 2014 on a high note pick up where they left off? Nobody knows for sure. That’s why we go to Daytona and the 35 races thereafter.”

With the start of a new year, and a new NASCAR season just around the corner, the lineup of crew chiefs is tak-ing shape, and it represents one of the biggest off-season shake-ups ever in the sport. One of the most significant changes is with Dale Earn-hardt Jr.’s No. 88 team at Hendrick Motorsports. There, Greg Ives, who just led rookie Chase Elliott to the championship in the series now known as Xfinity, is moving over to be crew chief for Earnhardt. He replaces veteran Steve Letarte, who has moved into a new role as a TV commentator for NBC, which will begin broadcasting NASCAR races this year. There has also been a shuffling of crew chiefs at Joe Gibbs Racing, and Kasey Kahne and Jamie McMurray both have new crew chiefs. Longtime crew chief Donnie Wingo, who most recently worked with the Wood Brothers and Trevor Bayne, has moved to Front Row Motorsports to run David Gilliland’s No. 38 team. Wingo’s old job at the Wood Brothers’ team has been filled by Jeremy Bullins, who moved to the No. 21 with its new driver, Ryan Blaney. At Roush Fenway Racing, a new crew chief roster was released last week. The biggest change there is the return of veteran crew chief Bob Osborne to the top of the pit box. He’ll head up the No. 6 Ford of Trevor Bayne, who left his part-time ride with the Wood Brothers to take on a full-time gig at Roush Fenway. Osborne’s days as a crew chief saw him win 18 races from 2004 to 2012, all with driver Carl Edwards, who left Roush Fenway at the end of 2014 to drive for Joe Gibbs Racing. Matt Puccia will remain as crew chief of Greg Biffle’s No. 16 Ford, where the duo has qualified for the Chase for the past three seasons. A newcomer to the lineup is Nick Sandler, a longtime en-gineer for the No. 99 team that Edwards recently vacated. He’s taking over the top spot at the No. 17 team, where he will work with driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Mike Kelley, who was crew chief for the No. 17 last year, will step into the role of car chief. Veteran Jimmy Fennig, who worked as crew chief for Ed-wards last year, has retired from the pit box and will serve as the company’s research and development coordinator. Fennig won 36 Cup races in his career, including Roush’s 300th win, which came in the 2012 Daytona 500. Late last year, Roush Fenway hired Mark McArdle to head up engineering for the company’s Sprint Cup and Xfinity Series teams, and added former Joe Gibbs Racing crew chief Kevin Kidd, who is overseeing the company’s three Sprint Cup teams. “We are excited about our 2015 crew chief lineup,” team co-owner Jack Roush said in a team release. “Much like our driver lineup, our crew chief assembly features a qual-ity mix of veteran leadership and youthful insight. We feel

this lineup, combined with the addition of Kevin Kidd to oversee our Sprint Cup efforts, is a big step forward in the direction of placing our teams up front and contending week-in and week-out.” Roush is also pleased to have Fennig continue with his team, even as he retires from day-to-day duties as a crew chief. “Jimmy’s experience is unparalleled in our sport, and I anticipate his input in this new role will have a major influence in a positive direction across the board with all of our teams going forward,” Roush said. For the Xfinity Series, Roush has hired Phil Gould, previously with the No. 2 team of Brian Scott at Richard Childress Racing, to work with the No. 1 team and driver Elliott Sadler. Seth Barbour will remain with the No. 16 team as will Scott Graves at the No. 60. Chad Norris, who was with the No. 6 team and Trevor Bayne in 2014, will crew chief for Roush newcomer Darrell Wallace Jr. Some Sprint Cup teams are not planning to change crew chiefs for 2015, but the decision is never certain until the contracts are signed. JTG Daugherty Racing announced last week that crew chief Brian Burns will continue with driver A.J. Allmend-inger and the No. 47 Chevrolet. The two combined to win last year at Watkins Glen, and thereby made the cut for the Chase for the Sprint Cup. That’s no small feat for a small, one-car team in its first year with a new manufacturer after switching from Toyo-tas to Chevrolets. “Last season, I was able to get to know A.J. both person-ally and professionally, and I feel like the relationship we have formed is great,” Burns said in a team release. “Chemistry is vitally important to have between the driver, crew chief and team, and we have all gotten to know each other more. I feel like great things are in store for us this season. “Actually, last year was a rebuilding year for us, and to run as well as we did at times — win a race and make the Chase — shows what an organization of our size is capable of doing.” Burns, who is beginning his third season as a crew chief, is a Purdue University mechanical engineering graduate and former Indiana Army National Guard Sergeant (E-5).

In the Camping World Truck Series, one of the most significant personnel moves is the hiring of veteran crew chief Scott Zipadelli to run the No. 11 Toyota team for driver Ben Kennedy, the great-grandson of NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. and the 2014 Truck Series Rookie of the Year. Zipadelli, the brother of longtime Sprint Cup crew chief and competition director Greg Zipadelli, said in a team release that he’s looking forward to working with Ken-nedy and for the Red Horse Racing team owned by Tom DeLoach. “Ben (Kennedy) is a talented driver and I have high expectations for him and the No. 11 team,” Zipadelli said, “He had an outstanding rookie season, and our goal this year is to win races and put ourselves in position to con-tend for the 2015 championship.” Zipadelli spent last season working in the Xfinity Series with driver Kyle Larson, who won two races, giving Zi-padelli three for his career in the series formerly known as Nationwide.

Darrell Waltrip and Larry McReynolds discuss new rules, new driver/crew chief pairings for Sprint Cup 2015

Greg Ives, who will crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the Sprint Cup series, is one new driver/crew chief pairing that everyone will be watching in 2015.

This is a crucial year for Kasey Kahne, and Keith Rodden, his new crew chief, could be the guy to help him.

Darian Grubb is the new crew chief for Carl Edwards.

Roush Fenway’s Jack Roush is excited about his 2015 crew chief lineup.

Scott Zipadelli moves to Ben Kennedy’s Sprint Cup team as crew chief.

Adam Stevens will crew chief for Kyle Busch in Cup for 2015.

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Career Sprint Cup races as a crew chief for Jimmy Fennig, who retired from the pit box after the 2014 season.

Drivers who won Cup races with Jimmy Fennig: Bobby Allison, 2; Mark Martin, 14; Kurt Busch, 14; Matt Kenseth, 6; and Carl Edwards, 4.

Career Sprint Cup races as a crew chief for Steve Letarte, who retired after the 2014 season.

Drivers who won Cup races with Letarte: Jeff Gordon, 10, and Dale Earnhardt Jr., 5.

NUMERICALLYSPEAKING

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Page 10: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Sports10 • Daily Corinthian Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Local Schedule

Friday

BasketballBelmont @ Central, 6 (WXRZ)Blue Mountain @ Biggersville, 6Corinth @ Tish County, 6Kossuth @ Adamsville, 6Mantachie @ Walnut, 6SoccerTish County @ Corinth, 5 

Saturday

BasketballBelmont Challenge(G) Central, (G) Corinth, WalnutSoccerCorinth @ South Pontotoc, 3 

Tuesday, Jan. 20

BasketballPontotoc @ Corinth, 6Belmont @ Kossuth, 6Thrasher @ Biggersville, 6Central @ Hardin Co., 6Walnut @ Baldwyn, 6SoccerMooreville @ Corinth, 5

Monday’s Games

(W) Northwest 83, Northeast 62Halftime: Northwest, 41-33.Leading scorers: (NE) LaKeiya Lane 17, Jasmine Allen 14, Aushiana Ivy 13; (NW) Aspriona Gilbert 21, Kris-tina Mays 11.Records: Northeast 6-7 (1-2), North-west 12-2 (2-1).Notes: Aushiana Ivy was one re-bound away from recording her fifth double-double of the season. The Lady Tigers welcome rival Itawamba Community College to Bonner Arnold Coliseum on Thursday, January 15 for a 5:30 p.m. tipoff.

 (M) Northeast 101, Northwest 97 (F/2OT)Halftime: Northeast, 35-27.End of Regulation: Tied, 80-80.End of Overtime: Tied, 89-89.Leading scorers: (NE) Raheem Sor-rell 22, Dimario Jackson 21, Desmin Harris 15, Jack Nichols 13; (NW) Sebastian Petty 15, De’Sean Dock-ery 14, Sharwyn McGee 13, Ashton Woodson 13, Kieth Broome, Jr. 10.Records: Northeast 9-5 (1-2), North-west 7-5 (1-2).Notes: It is the first time that North-east eclipsed the century mark since a 102-95 win at Northwest on De-cember 1, 2011. The Tigers are now 2-1 in overtime contests under the direction of head coach Cord Wright. Dexter Stafford’s 15 rebounds were a career-high. The Biggersville prod-uct was two points shy of recording a double-double. Raheem Sorrell’s 22 points were a career-high.

The Associated PressKNOXVILLE, Tenn .— Josh Richard-

son scored 20 points and Tennessee withstood a furious Arkansas come-back to hang on for a 74-69 victory over the 19th-ranked Razorbacks on Tuesday night.

After trailing by 13 points with un-der four minutes left, Arkansas (13-3, 2-1 Southeastern Conference) cut the margin to three and had a chance to tie the game when Anton Beard was fouled by Kevin Punter while attempt-ing a 3-pointer with 5.1 seconds re-maining.

But Beard missed all three of his ensuing free throws. Armani Moore clinched the victory by sinking two free throws with 3.7 seconds remaining.

Tennessee (10-5, 2-1) snapped Ar-kansas’ seven-game winning streak despite shooting just 14 of 26 from the line, including 12 of 22 in the second half.

Robert Hubbs scored a career-high 16 points and Moore added 14 for

Vols hang onfor win againstNo. 19 Arkansas

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

KOSSUTH — Parrish Tice and the Lady Aggies bounced back with a fl ourish.

Three nights after be-ing held to her second low-est point total of the season, Tice tossed in a game-high 34 points as Kossuth thumped Mooreville 72-47.

The Troopers countered with an 81-74 decision in the nightcap as the teams split their Division 1-3A double-header. Tice busted out for 16 points in the opening quarter, one game removed from an 11-point showing as Kossuth fell in the fi nals of the Alcorn County Tournament. She had 25 by the break as Kossuth enjoyed a 46-30 lead.

Cheyenne Daniel followed with 13 points and Kasey McKee came of the bench for 10 as Kossuth improved to 12-6 overall and evened its mark in league play at 1-1.

All told nine Lady Aggies scored in the route.

It was Tice’s seventh 30-point effort of the sea-son, all coming over the last 10 games. She recorded four straight 30-point efforts from Dec. 12 through Dec. 30.

The senior recorded 11 fi eld goals, one of the 3-point vari-ety, and was 11-of-15 from the stripe.

• In the nightcap, Kossuth rallied from a 23-14 defi cit to lead 35-34 at the break before Mooreville outscored the host club 47-39 in the second half.

The loss dropped the Ag-gies to 11-7 overall and 0-2 in league play. It was Kossuth’s fi fth setback in six outings fol-lowing a 10-2 start.

Rick Hodum paced Kossuth with 21 points and had fi ve of the Aggies’ six 3-pointers.

Beau Lee came off the bench for 14 and Jacob Wilcher add-ed 10.

Bo Thomas (31) and Payton McCord (20) combined for 51 points to pace the Troopers. Mooreville had 10 3-pointers on the night.

(G) Kossuth 72, Mooreville 47

Mooreville 16 14 11 6 -- 47Kossuth 29 17 14 12 -- 72 MOOREVILLE (47): Erin Jones 26, Adrianna Gamble 7, Taylor Hardin 7, Bailey Filgo 5, Kelsey Minga 2.

KOSSUTH (72): Parrish Tice 34, Cheyenne Daniel 13, Kasey McKee 10, Bailey Mitchell 5, Jade Barnes 3, Darbie Coleman 2, Abby Gray 2, Kayla Bonds 2, Elizabeth Ingram 1.3-Pointers: (M) Jones 4, Filgo. (K) McKee 2, Tice, Mitchell.Record: Kossuth 12-6, 1-1 Division 1-3A (B) Mooreville 81, Kossuth 74

Mooreville 23 11 27 20 -- 81Kossuth 14 21 17 22 -- 74 MOOREVILLE (81): Bo Thomas 31, Payton McCord 20, Jay Cee Horn 16, Ben Seay 7, Santo Jamerson 4, Adam Pierce 2, Trace Henry 1.KOSSUTH (74): Rick Hodum 21, Beau Lee 14, Jacob Wilcher 10, Ken-nedy Dye 7, Weston Bobo 6, Matthew Stewart 6, Nik Wilcher 4, Dusty Rob-erts 4, Emitt Burke 2.3-Pointers: (M) Thomas 3, Horn 3, McCord 2, Seay 2. (K) Hodum 5, Dye.Record: Kossuth 11-7, 0-2 Division 1-3A

Lady Aggies even Division 1-3A mark

BY DAVID BRANDTAP Sports Writer

OXFORD — Halfway through the season, it’s hard to fi gure out how good the Mississippi Rebels are.

There have been a handful of respectable wins against teams such as Creighton, Or-egon and Cincinnati. There have also been some head-scratching home losses to Charleston Southern and Western Kentucky.

Then there was one loss that

in some ways felt like a win: Last week’s 89-86 overtime setback to No. 1 Kentucky at Rupp Arena that proved the Rebels are able to play with the nation’s elite.

Now an important show-down looms when Ole Miss (10-5, 1-1 Southeastern Con-ference) hosts LSU (12-3, 1-1) on Wednesday at Tad Smith Coliseum.

The Rebels are coming off a relatively easy 65-49 victory over South Carolina on Satur-

day, which was just four days after the close loss to the top-ranked Wildcats. Ole Miss coach Andy Kennedy said he’s optimistic the Kentucky game — even in defeat — gave his team some confi dence.

“My hope was that our guys saw that this is the new stan-dard, and this is what we are capable of doing if we take the right approach,” Kenne-dy said. “If we take the right approach, this team has a chance.”

The Rebels are led by a mix of veterans and newcomers who are still trying to fi nd the right combinations on the court.

Nowhere is that more ap-parent than in the backcourt, where veteran Jarvis Sum-mers and junior college trans-fer Stefan Moody are learning to share the ball.

Summers is a below-the-rim scorer who has a diverse

Inconsistent Ole Miss hits crucial game

Please see OLE MISS | 11

BY RALPH D. RUSSOAP College Football Writer

ARLINGTON, Texas — The fi rst College Football Playoff was a success on almost every level — except maybe for fans of TCU and Baylor.

Otherwise, there was not much to gripe about. And Ohio State walking away with the fi rst championship by beating Oregon 42-20 on Monday night after get-ting the fourth spot ahead of TCU and Baylor certainly helped justify the selection committee’s choice. Now that it’s over, let’s look ahead and examine where the College Football Playoff goes from here.

HAPPY NEW YEARIf you thought New Year’s

Day was just perfect, spend-ing your lazy day off watching football, with a semifi nal dou-bleheader kicking off around 5 p.m. ET, we’ve got some bad

news for you.The semifi nals next season

will be played on New Year’s Eve at the Orange Bowl in Mi-ami and at the Cotton Bowl at AT&T Stadium.

“We really do think we’re going to change the paradigm of New Year’s Eve,” College Football Playoff executive di-rector Bill Hancock said.

The Rose Bowl goes back to being Big Ten vs. Pac-12 and the Sugar Bowl will now have a similar setup with the Southeastern Conference and the Big 12 in a matchup. But those two bowls keep those premium time slots, back-to-back on New Year’s Day.

“Traditions were existing when we started the playoff,” Hancock said. “And one of those is the Rose Bowl. And SEC and the Big 12 grabbed that night spot in New Year’s Day. It’ll be a great thing for them.”

Maybe not for fans, though.

THE COMMITTEEThe 13-member selection

committee, which turned into a 12-member selection commit-tee, needs to fi nd at least one new member.

After Oliver Luck resigned as athletic director at West Virginia, the committee needs another representative from the Big 12 conference.

Baylor coach Art Briles, who complained about not having enough Texas representation on the panel, might not like it, but don’t be surprised if Kansas State’s John Currie or Oklaho-ma’s Joe Castiglione ended up taking Luck’s spot.

Former Mississippi quarter-back Archie Manning had to withdraw from the committee during the season because of health issues and it’s still very much up in the air if he will be back. Hard to say who would re-place Manning. It likely would be someone with ties to SEC coun-

try, but the conference commis-sioners who ultimately choose the committee members might want to look for someone who could lower the average age of the panel. None of the members were below 50.

There are a couple of things that will be up for discussion when the committee and com-missioners start talking about whether changes need to be made to the rankings process:

— Do the committee members need to meet in person every week to do the rankings?

— Should the rankings con-tinue to be weekly? If ESPN has a say (and it does) the answer will be yes.

— Could the rankings start later in the season?

CONFERENCE RESETOhio State’s championship,

along with some other Big Ten bowl wins and a handful of high-

How could the playoffs change next year?

Local Scores

GirlsBooneville 65, Central 36Biggersville 59, Wheeler 47Corinth 63, Amory 40Kossuth 72, Mooreville 47 BoysBiggersville 59, Wheeler 46Booneville 77, Central 62Corinth 76, Amory 25Mooreville 81, Kossuth 74

JUCO Basketball

Please see VOLS | 11

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected] — Corinth be-

gan its second leg through Division 1-4A the same way it ended it -- with a sweep.

Corinth showed no signs of a hangover from sweeping the Alcorn County Tournament for the second straight year, winning a pair of easy games at Amory.

The Lady Warriors took the opener 63-40, improv-ing to 12-5 overall and 4-2 in league play.

Teosha Boyd led all scorers with 14 points. Aundrea Adams and Tyesha Gunn were right behind with 12 points each as 11 Lady Warriors marked in the affair.

Corinth led 32-18 at the break.

All played and 13 scored in the nightcap as the War-riors (15-4, 5-1) cruised to a 76-25 win.

Corinth led 21-6 af-ter one and 46-15 at the break. Amory didn’t break double fi gures in any of the four quarters.

Javen Morrison was the lone player in double fi g-ures, netting a career-high 11.

• At Wheeler, Biggers-ville opened its second

season by sweeping the host club in the Divi-sion 1-1A opener for both clubs.

The Lady Lions got a game-high 24 points from Jada Tubbs in taking a 59-47 win.

Elly Nash added 13 as Biggersville improved to 8-10 overall and 1-0 in league play.

Devonte Spears and Greg Robinson combined for 37 points as the Lions closed the twinbill with a 59-46 win. Spears led all scorers with 19 and hit two of the three Lion 3-pointers.

Biggersville improved to 6-12, 1-0. The Lions are 6-3 following an 0-9 start.

(G) Corinth 63, Amory 40

Corinth 11 21 15 16 -- 63Amory 5 13 17 5 -- 40 CORINTH (63): Teosha Boyd 14, Aundrea Adams 12, Tyesha Gunn 12, Parker Peterson 7, Made-lynn Lynch 4, Jamia Kirk 4, Che Curlee 3, Kristen Herman 2, Na-kidja Powell 2, Colby Cox 2, Arika Payne 1.AMORY (40): Sarah Hampton 11, Miracle Jones 10, Ash-ley Thompson 9, Vicky Hale 4, Charkayla French 4, Candace Shaw 2.3-Pointers: (C) Boyd 2, Peterson. (A) Hampton 3, Thompson 2,

Corinth, Biggersvillesweep league games

Photo by Randy J. Williams

Corinth’s Antares Gwyn slams home one of his two dunks in the finals of the Alcorn County Tournament. Corinth and Biggersville swept league doubleheaders on Tuesday. Please see ROUNDUP |11

Please see PLAYOFFS | 11

Page 11: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

ScoreboardBasketball

NBA standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division W L Pct GBToronto 25 12 .676 —Brooklyn 16 22 .421 9½Boston 13 23 .361 11½Philadelphia 7 30 .189 18New York 5 35 .125 21½

Southeast Division W L Pct GBAtlanta 30 8 .789 —Washington 26 12 .684 4Miami 16 21 .432 13½Charlotte 15 24 .385 15½Orlando 14 27 .341 17½

Central Division W L Pct GBChicago 26 13 .667 —Milwaukee 20 19 .513 6Cleveland 19 20 .487 7Indiana 15 25 .375 11½Detroit 14 24 .368 11½

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBHouston 27 11 .711 —Memphis 26 11 .703 ½Dallas 26 12 .684 1San Antonio 23 16 .590 4½New Orleans 18 19 .486 8½

Northwest Division W L Pct GBPortland 30 8 .789 —Oklahoma City 18 19 .486 11½Denver 17 20 .459 12½Utah 13 26 .333 17½Minnesota 6 31 .162 23½

Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBGolden State 30 5 .857 —L.A. Clippers 25 13 .658 6½Phoenix 23 18 .561 10Sacramento 16 21 .432 15L.A. Lakers 12 26 .316 19½

___Sunday’s Games

Atlanta 120, Washington 89Miami 104, L.A. Clippers 90Memphis 122, Phoenix 110,2OTSacramento 103, Cleveland 84Portland 106, L.A. Lakers 94

Monday’s GamesDetroit 114, Toronto 111Houston 113, Brooklyn 99Boston 108, New Orleans 100Orlando 121, Chicago 114

Tuesday’s GamesAtlanta 105, Philadelphia 87Washington 101, San Antonio 93Minnesota 110, Indiana 101Phoenix 107, Cleveland 100Golden State 116, Utah 105Dallas at Sacramento (n)Miami at L.A. Lakers (n)

Today’s GamesHouston at Orlando, 7 p.m.San Antonio at Charlotte, 7 p.m.Philadelphia at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.New Orleans at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.Memphis at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.Washington at Chicago, 8 p.m.Atlanta at Boston, 8 p.m.Dallas at Denver, 9 p.m.Miami at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.L.A. Clippers at Portland, 10:30 p.m.

Thursday’s GamesNew York vs. Milwaukee at London,

England, 3 p.m.Oklahoma City at Houston, 8 p.m.Cleveland at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Football

NFL postseason

Wild-card PlayoffsSaturday, Jan. 3

Carolina 27, Arizona 16Baltimore 30, Pittsburgh 17

Sunday, Jan. 4Indianapolis 26, Cincinnati 10Dallas 24, Detroit 20

Divisional PlayoffsSaturday

New England 35, Baltimore 31Seattle 31, Carolina 17

SundayGreen Bay 26, Dallas 21Indianapolis 24, Denver 13

Conference ChampionshipsSunday, Jan. 18

Green Bay at Seattle, 2:05 p.m. (FOX)Indianapolis at New England, 5:40

p.m. (CBS)Pro Bowl

Sunday, Jan. 25At Glendale, Ariz.

Team Irvin vs. Team Carter, 7 p.m. (ESPN)

Super BowlSunday, Feb. 1

At Glendale, Ariz.AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 5:30

p.m. (NBC)

Remaining Bowl Games, schedule

Saturday, Jan. 17East-West Shrine ClassicAt St. Petersburg, Fla.

East vs. West, 4 p.m. (NFLN)NFLPA Collegiate Bowl

At Carson, Calif.National vs. American, 4 p.m. (ESPN2)

Saturday, Jan. 24Senior Bowl

At Mobile, Ala.North vs. South, 4 p.m. (NFLN)

Hockey

NHL standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GATampa Bay 45 27 14 4 58 146 122Montreal 41 26 12 3 55 111 95Detroit 43 23 11 9 55 120 107Boston 44 23 15 6 52 117 114Florida 41 20 12 9 49 102 113Toronto 43 22 18 3 47 137 132Ottawa 42 17 17 8 42 114 118Buffalo 44 14 27 3 31 82 150

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAN.Y. Islanders 43 29 13 1 59 134 116Pittsburgh 42 26 10 6 58 129 100Washington 42 23 11 8 54 125 106N.Y. Rangers 40 24 12 4 52 124 98Philadelphia 43 17 19 7 41 119 129Columbus 40 18 19 3 39 104 131New Jersey 44 15 21 8 38 96 124Carolina 43 14 24 5 33 91 114

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GANashville 42 29 9 4 62 130 94Chicago 43 28 13 2 58 134 95St. Louis 43 27 13 3 57 140 107Winnipeg 44 22 14 8 52 121 111Dallas 42 19 16 7 45 131 139Colorado 44 18 17 9 45 115 127

Minnesota 42 18 19 5 41 113 128Pacifi c Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAAnaheim 43 27 10 6 60 121 118San Jose 44 23 16 5 51 119 120Los Angeles 43 20 13 10 50 121 112Vancouver 41 23 15 3 49 114 109Calgary 43 22 18 3 47 123 114Arizona 42 16 22 4 36 99 139Edmonton 44 10 25 9 29 99 149

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.

Sunday’s GamesFlorida 4, Edmonton 2Chicago 4, Minnesota 1Anaheim 5, Winnipeg 4, SO

Monday’s GamesPhiladelphia 7, Tampa Bay 3Washington 2, Colorado 1Los Angeles 2, Toronto 0

Tuesday’s GamesCarolina 3, Colorado 2, SOBoston 4, Tampa Bay 3Detroit 3, Buffalo 1N.Y. Islanders 3, N.Y. Rangers 0Pittsburgh 7, Minnesota 2St. Louis 4, Edmonton 2Nashville 5, Vancouver 1Winnipeg 8, Florida 2Dallas 5, Ottawa 4San Jose 3, Arizona 2

Wednesday’s GamesMontreal at Columbus, 7 p.m.Philadelphia at Washington, 8 p.m.Toronto at Anaheim, 10 p.m.New Jersey at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

Thursday’s GamesN.Y. Rangers at Boston, 7 p.m.Minnesota at Buffalo, 7 p.m.Vancouver at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.Montreal at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.Edmonton at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.Colorado at Florida, 7:30 p.m.Detroit at St. Louis, 8 p.m.Winnipeg at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.Calgary at Arizona, 9 p.m.Toronto at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

BaseballArbitration Eligibles

NEW YORK — The 179 players eligible for salary arbitration. Eligible players may fi le on Jan. 13:

AMERICAN LEAGUEBALTIMORE (11) — Zach Britton, lhp;

Chris Davis, 1b; Alejandro de Aza, of; Ryan Flaherty, inf; Miguel Gonzalez, rhp; Tommy Hunter, rhp; Brian Matusz, lhp; Bud Norris, rhp; Steve Pearce, 1b; Chris Tillman, rhp; Matt Wieters, c.

BOSTON (4) — Wade Miley, lhp; Dan-iel Nava, of; Rick Porcello, rhp; Junichi Tazawa, rhp.

CHICAGO (6) — Tyler Flowers, c; Javy Guerra, rhp; Nate Jones, rhp; Hector Noesi, rhp; Jeff Samardzija, rhp; Dayan Viciedo, of.

CLEVELAND (6) — Carlos Carrasco, rhp; Lonnie Chisenhall, 3b; Brandon Moss, 1b; Marc Rzepczynski, lhp; Bryan Shaw, rhp; Josh Tomlin, rhp.

DETROIT (4) — Al Alburquerque, rhp; J.D. Martinez, of; David Price, lhp; Alfredo Simon, rhp.

HOUSTON (7) — Chris Carter, dh; Ja-son Castro, c; Hank Conger, c; Carlos Corporan, c; Dexter Fowler, of; Marwin Gonzalez, ss; Tony Sipp, lhp.

KANSAS CITY (9) — Lorenzo Cain, of; Louis Coleman, rhp; Tim Collins, lhp; Danny Duffy, lhp; Jarrod Dyson, of; Kelvin Herrera, rhp; Greg Holland, rhp; Eric Hos-mer, 1b; Mike Moustakas, 3b.

LOS ANGELES (8) — Drew Butera, c;

Collin Cowgill, of; David Freese, 3b; Matt Joyce, of; Cesar Ramos, lhp; Garrett Rich-ards, rhp; Fernando Salas, rhp; Hector Santiago, lhp.

MINNESOTA (6) — Brian Duensing, lhp; Casey Fien, rhp; Tommy Milone, lhp; Edu-ardo Nunez, ss; Trevor Plouffe, 3b; Jordan Schafer, of.

NEW YORK (4) — David Carpenter, rhp; Nathan Eovaldi, rhp; Ivan Nova, rhp; Mi-chael Pineda, rhp.

OAKLAND (10) — Fernando Abad, lhp; Jesse Chavez, rhp; Ryan Cook, rhp; Sam Fuld, of; Craig Gentry, of; John Jaso, c; Brett Lawrie, 3b; Jarrod Parker, rhp; Josh Reddick, of; Eric Sogard, 2b.

SEATTLE (6) — Dustin Ackley, of; Char-lie Furbush, lhp; Austin Jackson, of; Lo-gan Morrison, 1b; Justin Ruggiano, of; Tom Wilhelmsen, rhp.

TAMPA BAY (7) — Alex Cobb, rhp; Lo-gan Forsythe, 2b; Desmond Jennings, of; Kevin Jepsen, rhp; Jake McGee, lhp; Rene Rivera, c; Drew Smyly, lhp.

TEXAS (3) — Ross Detwiler, lhp; Neftali Feliz, rhp; Mitch Moreland, 1b.

TORONTO (5) — Brett Cecil, lhp; Josh Donaldson, 3b; Marco Estrada, rhp; Mi-chael Saunders, of; Danny Valencia, 3b.

___NATIONAL LEAGUE

ARIZONA (3) — Jeremy Hellickson, rhp; Addison Reed, rhp; Mark Trumbo, of-1b.

ATLANTA (2) — Mike Minor, lhp; James Russell, lhp.

CHICAGO (7) — Jake Arrieta, rhp; Wel-ington Castillo, c; Chris Coghlan, of; Felix Doubront, lhp; Pedro Strop, rhp; Luis Val-buena, 3b; Travis Wood, lhp.

CINCINNATI (5) — Aroldis Chapman, lhp; Zack Cozart, ss; Todd Frazier, 3b; Mike Leake, rhp; Devin Mesoraco, c.

COLORADO (8) — Rex Brothers, lhp; Jhoulys Chacin, rhp; Tyler Chatwood, rhp; Jordan Lyles, rhp; Mike McKenry, c; Adam Ottavino, rhp; Wilin Rosario, c; Drew Stubbs, of.

LOS ANGELES (5) — A.J. Ellis, c; Chris Heisey, of; Kenley Jansen, rhp; Juan Nica-sio, rhp; Justin Turner, inf.

MIAMI (7) — Henderson Alvarez, rhp; Steve Cishek, rhp; Aaron Crow, rhp; Mike Dunn, lhp; Dee Gordon, 2b; Mat Latos, rhp; David Phelps, rhp.

MILWAUKEE (2) — Martin Maldo-nado, c; Gerardo Parra, of.

NEW YORK (5) — Lucas Duda, 1b; Dillon Gee, rhp; Jenrry Mejia, rhp; Dan-iel Murphy, 2b; Ruben Tejada, ss.

PHILADELPHIA (2) — Domonic Brown, of; Ben Revere, of.

PITTSBURGH (12) — Pedro Alvarez, 3b-1b; Antonio Bastardo, lhp; Francis-co Cervelli, c; Josh Harrison, 3b; Jared Hughes, rhp; Mark Melancon, rhp; Sean Rodriguez, inf-of; Travis Snider, of; Chris Stewart, c; Neil Walker, 2b; Tony Watson, lhp; Vance Worley, rhp.

ST. LOUIS (4) — Peter Bourjos, of; Tony Cruz, c; Jon Jay, of; Lance Lynn, rhp.

SAN DIEGO (7) — Yonder Alonso, 1b; Alexi Amarista, ss; Andrew Cash-ner, rhp; Shawn Kelley, rhp; Ian Kenne-dy, rhp; Tyson Ross, rhp; Dale Thayer, rhp.

SAN FRANCISCO (5) — Brandon Belt, 1b; Gregor Blanco, of; Brandon Crawford, ss; Casey McGehee, 3b; Yusmeiro Petit, rhp.

WASHINGTON (9) — Jerry Blevins, lhp; Tyler Clippard, rhp; Danny Espino-sa, 2b; Doug Fister, rhp; Jose Lobaton, c; Wilson Ramos, c; Craig Stammen, rhp; Drew Storen, rhp; Stephen Stras-burg, rhp.

11 • Daily Corinthian Wednesday, January 14, 2015

VOLS

OLE MISS

mid-range game. Moody stands just 5-foot-10, but has a 40-inch verti-cal that allows him to dunk with ease and score from inside or outside. He scored all 16 of his points against South Caro-lina in the second half and leads the Rebels with 14.8 points per game.

Moody’s ability to score in bunches has drawn some comparisons to for-mer Ole Miss star Mar-shall Henderson, who scored nearly 20 points per game over the previ-ous two seasons with the Rebels.

But unlike Henderson — who was a threat to at-tempt a 3-pointer at the

rim as soon as he crossed the half-court line — Moody is more likely to score his points within the Rebels’ offense. His 16 points against South Carolina were scored in effi cient fashion on 5 of 8 shooting from the fi eld, including 3 of 5 from 3-point range.

“I just took them as they came,” Moody said. “I’m not going to come in and start launching them just because I didn’t get to in the fi rst half. I’m going to take them as they come.”

Ole Miss does have at least one elite skill: Free-throw shooting.

The Rebels are making 79.1 percent of their at-tempts from the line, which ranks No. 1 in the country.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

Tennessee. Bobby Por-tis scored 17, Michael Qualls had 15 and Beard added 12 for Arkansas.

Richardson, Hubbs and Moore shot a com-bined 20 of 26 from the fl oor.

Tennessee was coming off a 56-38 loss to Ala-bama in which the Vols were held without a bas-ket for a stretch of over 14 minutes in the second half. The Vols’ defense helped their offense bounce back from that dreadful performance.

The Vols shot 51 per-cent (27 of 46) and out-scored Arkansas 27-15 in points off turnovers.

Tennessee led 33-31 at halftime and started the second half on a 10-2 run to build a 10-point advantage. Arkan-sas answered with fi ve straight points to cut the defi cit in half, but Ten-nessee responded with an 11-0 run to grab a 54-38 advantage. The

spurt included a pair of 3-pointers from Detrick Mostella.

After reducing Ten-nessee’s lead to 43-38, Arkansas scored just one point over the next seven minutes. As much as the Razorbacks heated up down the stretch, they couldn’t quite come all the way back.

TIP-INSArkansas: The Razor-

backs had been seeking to match their best start in SEC competition. Ar-kansas won its fi rst three SEC games in 1992-93 and 1997-98.

Tennessee: The Vols used their eighth differ-ent starting lineup of the season. Junior forward Derek Reese and Hubbs moved into starting roles Tuesday, with Punter and freshman forward Willie Carmichael com-ing off the bench.

NEXT UPArkansas: Hosts Mis-

sissippi on SaturdayTennessee: At Mis-

souri on Saturday

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

ROUNDUP

JonesRecord: Corinth 12-5, 4-2 Divi-sion 1-4A (B) Corinth 76, Amory 25

Corinth 21 25 16 14 -- 76Amory 6 9 6 4 -- 25 CORINTH (76): Javen Morrison 11, Hack Smith 8, Armad Wicks 8, Dee Brown 8, Kendall Staf-ford 6, Jon D. Warren 6, Tairek Johnson 6, Trae Burcham 5, Tameric Perry 5, Antares Gwyn 4, Quentin Patterson 4, Elijah Gates 3, Tada Stricklen 2.AMORY (25): Austin Watkins 9, Jalen Holland 4, Kamden Parks 4, Jalen Bell 4, Noah Hol-comb 2, Gabe Buckner 2.3-Pointers: (C) Morrison, Bur-cham. (A) Watkins 3.Record: Corinth 15-4, 5-1 Divi-sion 1-4A (G) Biggersville 59, Wheeler 47

Biggersville 19 10 17 13 -- 59Wheeler 8 15 3 21 -- 47 BIGGERSVILLE (59): Jada

Tubbs 24, Elly Nash 13, Savan-nah Davis 8, Taylor Beth Nash 5, Taylor Durham 4, Alexis Shumpert 3, Blaklie Mitchell 2.WHEELER (47): Reagan Criswell 20, Mandi Wilson 12, Aliyah Miller 10, Latasha Os-walt 3, Josie Coats 2.3-Pointers: (B) Davis 2, Tubbs, E, Nash. (W) Miller 2, Criswell 2, Wilson 2.Records: Biggersville 8-10, 1-0 Division 1-1A; Wheeler 7-8, 0-1 (B) Biggersville 59, Wheeler 46

Biggersville 19 12 7 21 -- 59Wheeler 18 10 7 11 -- 46 BIGGERSVILLE (59): Devonte Spears 19, Greg Robinson 18, Bradley Davis 9, Tyran Davis 8, Jordan Strickland 3, Xae Neal 2.WHEELER (46): Cole Swinney 15, Cameron McGaha 11, Bran-don Erby 7, P.J. Welch 7, Dylan Harris 2, Luke McBrayer 2.3-Pointers: (B) Spears 2, B. Davis. (W) Swinney 3, McGaha 2, Erby.Records: Biggersville 6-12, 1-0 Division 1-1A; Wheeler 8-8, 0-1

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

PLAYOFFS

profi le SEC losses, could re-set a narrative that many outside the Deep South had grown tired of during the BCS era.

After seven straight BCS titles by the SEC, it has now been shut out of the last two national champi-onships.

No need to panic, SEC fans. The league is still loaded, but offense rules the day in college foot-ball and a conference with sketchy quarterback play throughout can’t call itself the undisputed No. 1 in the land.

Meanwhile, things are looking up for the Big Ten.

“It was a good bowl sea-son,” Big Ten Commission-er Jim Delany said after the national champion-ship game . “We had sev-

eral chances to play great teams. Ohio State just got better and better. Michigan State had a good season.” Ohio State is built to last under Urban Meyer. Mich-igan State isn’t going any-where under Mark Danto-nio. Penn State is racking up in recruiting with coach James Franklin. And then there’s this new guy Jim Harbaugh at Michigan. He’s kind of a big deal.

REFORMThe playoff is infl uenc-

ing NCAA reform and re-structuring because of how much money it is pumping into the top level of college sports — more than $500 million per year just from ESPN television contracts related to big bowl games. Meyer was among the fi rst to call for the NCAA to fi nd a way to pay for players’ families to attend the extra

postseason game the Buck-eyes and Ducks had in the playoff. In about a month, the NCAA came up with a pilot program to reimburse players’ parents or guard-ians up to $3,000 for travel expenses. Meyer, speaking at a news conference with quarterback Cardale Jones and safety Tyvis Powell, said he’s grateful the dis-cussion is happening.

“It’s not always about corporate America, it’s not always about money, it’s about the guys to my left over here that put on an in-credible show.” Autonomy is coming for the Big Five conferences, and with it more money will be moved toward college athletes. It remains to be seen whether it will be enough consid-ering all the playoff cash

that’s coming in.WHO WILL BE IN?Pencil in Ohio State as

preseason No. 1 in the AP poll. TCU has a load of play-ers back, led by star quar-terback Trevone Boykin, so fi gure the Horned Frogs will be second. After that the pre-season playoff hopefuls look like a lot of usual suspects.

— SEC: Auburn, Alabama and Georgia.

— Big Ten: Michigan State should push Ohio State again.

— Big 12: Baylor.— Pac-12: Stanford,

Southern California, Arizona and Arizona State.

— ACC: Florida State, Georgia Tech and Clemson.

OUR (WAY TOO EAR-LY) PLAYOFF PICKS:

Ohio State, TCU, Georgia and Clemson.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

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Page 12: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

12A • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

WEDNESDAY EVENING JANUARY 14, 2015 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

The Middle (N)

Goldbergs Modern Family

(:31) black-ish

Forever “New York Kids” Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #The Mentalist “Little Yel-low House”

Criminal Minds (N) Stalker “Secrets and Lies” (N)

News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

(:37) The Talk (N)

QVC $ . In the Kitchen With David Cooking with David Venable. Susan Graver Style White Hot Linens

WCBI $The Mentalist “Little Yel-low House”

Criminal Minds (N) Stalker “Secrets and Lies” (N)

News Late Show With David Letterman

(:37) The Talk (N)

WMC % %The Mysteries of Laura (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (N)

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

WLMT & >Arrow Oliver meets with Ra’s al Ghul.

The Flash CW30 News at 9 (N) There Yet? There Yet? Two and Half Men

Modern Family

WBBJ _ _The Middle (N)

Goldbergs Modern Family

(:31) black-ish

Forever “New York Kids” News at 10pm

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )The Mysteries of Laura (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (N)

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

WKNO * Nature Evolution of dogs. NOVA “Big Bang Ma-

chine” (N) Nazi Mega Weapons (N) Waiting for

GodManor Born Tavis

SmileyNewsline

WGN-A + (America’s Funniest Home Videos

How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Engage-ment

Engage-ment

WMAE , ,Nature Evolution of dogs. NOVA “Big Bang Ma-

chine” (N) Nazi Mega Weapons (N) Tavis

SmileyCharlie Rose (N) World

News

WHBQ ` `American Idol “Auditions No. 3” (N)

(:01) Empire “The Out-spoken King”

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

TMZ (N) Dish Nation (N)

Access Hollyw’d

WPXX / Cold Case Cold Case Cold Case “Wings” Cold Case Cold Case

WPIX :Arrow Oliver meets with Ra’s al Ghul.

The Flash PIX11 News PIX11 Sports

Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

MAX 0 3(6:25) } ›› Bullet to the Head (12)

Banshee “The Fire Trials” } ›››› The Untouchables (87) Kevin Costner, Sean Connery.

Stacked Racks From Mars (14)

SHOW 2 Inside the NFL Shameless “Milk of the

Gods” Episodes House of

Lies Web Therapy

Inside the NFL Web Therapy

HBO 4 1Looking Girls “Iowa” } ›› Beautiful Creatures (13, Fantasy) Alden

Ehrenreich, Alice Englert.(:05) Real Time With Bill Maher

Together-ness

(:35) Look-ing

MTV 5 2 Real World Snooki & JWOWW Snooki & JWOWW Snooki Eye Candy “K3U” Being

ESPN 7 ?NBA Basketball: Washington Wizards at Chicago Bulls. From the United Center in Chicago. (N) (Live)

NBA Basketball: Los Angeles Clippers at Portland Trail Blazers. (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5} ››› Ocean’s Thirteen (07) George Clooney, Brad Pitt. Danny Ocean and his gang seek to right a wrong.

} › Wild Hogs (07, Comedy) Tim Allen. Four friends take a motorcycle road trip.

USA : 8NCIS Jimmy and Ducky go missing.

NCIS “Anonymous Was a Woman”

NCIS “Once a Crook” NCIS: Los Angeles “War Cries”

NCIS: Los Angeles “The Watchers”

NICK ; C Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Raymond Raymond

DISC < D(6:00) Naked and Afraid (N)

Dual Survival “Biggest Blow-Outs” (N)

Dude, You’re Screwed Dual Survival “Biggest Blow-Outs”

Dude, You’re Screwed

A&E > Duck Dy-nasty

Duck Dy-nasty

Duck Dy-nasty

Duck Dy-nasty (N)

Wahlburg-ers (N)

Donnie-Jenny

(:02) Donnie Loves Jenny

Duck Dy-nasty

Duck Dy-nasty

FSSO ? 4College Basketball College Basketball: Florida State at Pittsburgh.

(N) (Live)World Poker Tour: Season 12

College Basketball

BET @ F Game Game To Be Announced Game Game Game Game Wendy Williams

H&G C HProperty Brothers “San-dra & Kyle”

Property Brothers “Amy & Graham”

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Property Brothers Property Brothers “Amy & Graham”

E! D } ››› Hairspray (07) John Travolta. Fashion Police E! News (N) Sex-City Sex-City

HIST E BAmerican Pickers American Pickers “Mu-

seum Man” (N)(:03) Down East Dicker-ing (N)

(:03) American Pickers (:01) American Pickers

ESPN2 F @ College Basketball College Basketball: UCLA at USC. (N) College Basketball

TLC G My 600-Lb. Life: Where Are They

My 600-Lb. Life: Where Are They

My Addic-tion

My Addic-tion

My 600-Lb. Life: Where Are They

My Addic-tion

My Addic-tion

FOOD H Mystery Diners

Mystery Diners

Mystery Diners

Mystery Diners

Restaurant: Impossible “Revved Up”

American Diner

Diners, Drive

Mystery Diners

Mystery Diners

INSP I The Waltons JAG “Guilt” Walker, Ranger Matlock A plot to conceal counterfeiting.

LIFE J =Little Women: LA “Mama Drama”

Little Women: LA “Baby Bump” (N)

(:02) Big Women: Big Love (N)

(:02) Little Women: LA “Baby Bump”

(:02) Little Women: LA “Mama Drama”

TBN M Trinity Turning Prince By Faith Praise the Lord Good Duplantis

AMC N 0} ›› Hard to Kill (90) Years after nearly dying, a policeman seeks revenge.

} ›› On Deadly Ground Steven Seagal. An oil-company troubleshooter battles a corrupt chairman.

} Aliens vs. Pred.

FAM O <Melissa & Joey

Baby Daddy

} ›› Liar Liar (97, Comedy) Jim Carrey. A fast-talking lawyer cannot tell a lie.

The 700 Club Miraculous healings.

Melissa & Joey

Melissa & Joey

TCM P } ››› The Lady From Shanghai (48) Rita Hayworth.

(:45) } ››› A Raisin in the Sun (61) A black family plans to move to an all-white Chicago suburb.

} ››› Gunman’s Walk (58)

TNT Q AGrimm Investigating a teacher’s death.

Grimm “The Three Bad Wolves”

Grimm “Let Your Hair Down”

Grimm “Game Ogre” Supernatural “Meet the New Boss”

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Conan (N) Cougar Town

Conan

GAME S Idiotest (N) Baggage Baggage FamFeud FamFeud Idiotest Baggage Baggage TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Pickles TVLD U K FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Cleve The Exes King King Friends Friends FS1 Z College Basketball College Basketball: Xavier at Villanova. FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live

FX Æ ;(6:00) } ›› Battleship Earth comes under attack from a superior alien force.

American Horror Story: Freak Show

American Horror Story: Freak Show

American Horror Story: Freak Show

OUT Ø Gun Shoot Shooting USA Rifleman Shots Gun Gu Sas Shoot Shooting NBCS ∞ NHL Hockey: Flyers at Capitals NHL NFL Turning Point NFL Turning Point OWN ± Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters

HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The Return”

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ L} ›› The Little Rascals (94) Travis Tedford, Bug Hall.

I Didn’t Do It

Austin & Ally

Jessie Dog With a Blog

Liv & Mad-die

So Raven So Raven

SYFY E(5:30) } ›› Blade: Trinity (04)

} ›› The Scorpion King (02) A warrior battles an evil ruler and a sorceress.

} › The Spirit A rookie cop, believed to be dead, fights crime in Central City.

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

The Daily Corinthian’s family of quality magazines continues with an all new product coming out on Saturday, Jan. 31. Watch for Crossroads

Magazine – Healthy Living.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’re allowed to make lists that you have no intention of ever executing, and it’s a good exercise for today. A list can be like a playground for your mind, a mental way of trying things on for size.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’re still trying to break your-self of a certain habit that no longer serves you well. You’ll have more success when you think of replacing the habit with a better one.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Before you let yourself fall for the thing that is out of reach, be sure it’s worth falling for. Make sure that “unobtainable” isn’t the most appealing thing about it.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Hold on, because today’s at-mosphere may turn wild, hectic and unsupportive. It’s why you need to give yourself a good breakfast and leave plenty of time for getting from place to

place.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). No

one can be exactly like you, though a few will try! Take it as a compliment. You’re the big sibling of the zodiac now, and the others are learning from the way you manage things.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The ones who try to eliminate the competition through nega-tive press are clearly insecure about what they have to offer. The only legitimate way to elimi-nate the competition is to do it better, faster or cheaper. Maybe all three!

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). To-day features high stakes and in-tense competition. Keep in mind that an obliging attitude will gain you more respect than any fi ne trapping you could drive around in or throw on your back.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You give smiles, help and many other things besides money. It just doesn’t quite feel right to hand over cash. Tighten those

purse strings. Hold back until you’re sure where your money will do the most good.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Change is natural, but it’s not always easy. In order to become who you want to be, you have to sacrifi ce something about the person you are now.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Happiness is simple to-day. You put your whole self into mundane tasks like paying bills or making dinner. Conse-quently, your good fortune will continue.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Without an injection of fan-tasy, things could get very dull indeed. Today is for imagining something different for your life. Draw it or write about it to fl esh out the delightful details.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The social basics will apply: no whispering or telling secrets about others. If everyone would keep these rules, the world would be a much happier place.

D E A R ABBY: I’m a good person, but when I get frustrated over some-thing, I fl y off the handle. I date, have several close friends and a good job in a fi eld I enjoy.

Stresses in life are normal.

But sometimes I blow up over things.

When it happens, I can see my co-workers and friends are taken aback by my behavior.

I need to improve this. I’m worried my explosive temper will affect my relationships, my job and the people I see social-ly. I heard you have a booklet about this issue.

Where can I get one, and do you have any advice for me? -- HOT AND BOTHERED IN ATLANTA

DEAR HOT AND BOTH-ERED: Yes, I do.

While anger is a normal emo-tion, the problem with a hair-trigger temper is that people who fl y off the handle often shoot themselves in the foot.

That’s why it’s important to develop tools to recognize, control and channel anger ef-

fectively without exploding.A fi rst step in doing that is to

analyze what may be setting you off.

Does being overtired, hungry or not feeling up to par cause you to lash out?

Feeling vulnerable has been known to make people feel an-gry and has negatively affected relationships.

When a person’s beliefs or values are questioned, they can become angry and, believe it or not, low self-esteem causes people to fl y off the handle.

People who suffer from feel-ings of inadequacy constantly try to prove themselves -- which drives them to win every “battle” whether it’s a discussion about sports or any other subject that arises.

Most adults learn from early childhood to manage anger.

But it’s equally important to learn to EXPRESS anger in ways that are constructive.

In my booklet “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It,” I offer tools for channeling anger.

(First among them is to rec-ognize you are becoming angry before losing control.)

It also contains suggestions for managing and expressing anger appropriately. I

t can be ordered by sending your name and mailing ad-

dress, plus a check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to Dear Abby -- Anger Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. Shipping and han-dling are included in the price.

I hope it will be helpful for you. It takes maturity to identify and verbalize negative emotions rather than lash out at others.

Being able to calmly say, “When you do that (or say that) it makes me angry” will earn you the respect of others.

And it’s the key to defusing anger before losing control.

DEAR ABBY: What are my fi nancial obligations if I invite a gentleman to a formal out-of-state wedding?

Must I pay 100 percent for air-fare, hotel, meals and clothing? -- PROPER MISS IN OHIO

DEAR PROPER MISS: If the man is a gentleman, he will of-fer to split the cost of the airfare, hotel and meals with you.

If he’s not -- or can’t afford it -- then the person footing the bills will be you and only you.

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

Before you lose your cool, find out what makes you hot

Page 13: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Taste1B • Daily Corinthian Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Associated Press

Looking to warm up with a hot bowl of soup? Turn to onions for a flavorful — and healthy — wintertime option.

Slow cooker onion soup

Start to finish: 10 hours (plus 20 minutes active)

Servings: 6For the caramelized onions:

5 cups sliced yellow onions, (about 4 large onions)

2 shallots, peeled and sliced1 clove garlic, minced1 tablespoon olive oilSalt and ground black pepper

For the soup:1 teaspoon all-purpose flour1⁄4 cup dry sherry1 teaspoon dry thymeSmall sprig fresh rosemary1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce2 cups low-sodium chicken broth2 cups low-sodium beef broth1 cup water1 tablespoon lemon juice6 thin slices baguette, toasted until

golden and quite dry1⁄2 cup grated Gruyere cheese

Onions pack a good deal of flavor in a healthy package

BY MELISSA D’ARABIANAssociated Press

Quick-pickled carrots and radishes

Start to finish: 20 minutes, plus coolingServings: 8

3 cups cider vinegar1 cup sugar1⁄4 cup kosher salt1 teaspoon cumin seeds1 teaspoon caraway seeds1 teaspoon mustard seeds1 teaspoon garlic powder1 teaspoon onion powder2 pounds carrots, peeled,

trimmed and cut into spears1 pound red radishes, trimmed

and quartered

Use quick pickles as a healthy snack

BY J.M. HIRSCHAssociated Press

Associated Press

Quick-pickled carrots and rad-ishes

Buffalo chicken and kale stuffed mushrooms

Start to finish: 45 minutesMakes 15 mushrooms

Two 10-ounce packages medium white button, baby bella or cremini mushrooms, stemmed

Kosher salt and ground black pepper

1 tablespoon butter1 shallot, minced3 cloves garlic,

minced1⁄2 bunch kale,

stems removed, finely chopped (about 1 cup)

1 table-spoon lemon juice

3⁄4 cup chopped cooked chicken

8 ounces light cream cheese, soft-ened

1⁄4 cup hot sauce, such as Frank’s

1⁄4 cup blue cheese crumblesOlive oil cooking spray

Mushrooms on the Super Bowl snack line? Yes!BY MELISSA D’ARABIAN

Associated Press

Page 14: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety2B • Daily Corinthian Wednesday, January 14, 2015

ACROSS1 Monday Night

Football regularuntil 1983

7 Gobbled, as aturkey

10 Site with a “Buy ItNow” option

14 Mecca’speninsula

15 In the bath16 “__ Rock”17 Hires a new crew

for18 Styled after19 Shot up20 Confounded

Britishillumination?

23 Jamaican genre24 Walkway material25 Meter or liter29 Med. plan option31 “Twin Peaks” co-

creator David34 White House

maiden namebetween Pierceand Welch

37 Dr. J hairstyle39 Lone Ranger and

Tonto, e.g.40 Confounded

British posies?43 First __44 Horner’s find45 Have a strong

desire (for)46 Things to fulfill48 It’s on the streets50 Flanders river51 Vinegar vessel53 Dangerous

snake56 Confounded

Britishresidences?

62 Actor Bean of“Game ofThrones”

63 Aegean __64 Give one’s word65 Stock options,

e.g.66 WWII intel agcy.67 Look through

partially opencurtains, say

68 Roundcomponents

69 Vague degree70 Flowed in circles

DOWN1 Prep for a

marathon, with“up”

2 N.L. Cy YoungAward winnerthree years afterDwight

3 Nordic language4 “Voice of Israel”

author5 Rory McIlroy’s

milieu6 Big name in

vision correction7 Like an excited

puppy’s tail8 Takes to task9 Web business

10 San Francisco-to-Teaneckinterstate

11 Round servers12 Iowa State city13 Swerve from a

course21 “I’ll pass”22 Clumsy sort25 Citified26 “Cross my

heart”27 “Bless my soul!”28 Howe’er30 Molten rock32 Bend33 Car wash

employee, attimes

35 Excites36 Wire thickness

unit

38 “Kidnapped”author’smonogram

41 Most eccentric42 Manner47 Round

components49 Cloth

remnant52 HP competitor54 Configure55 Prepared for a

shot56 Texture

57 “I don’t mind eels/ Except asmeals / And theway they feels”poet

58 Previouslydriven, say

59 TomKat’sdaughter

60 Lake at one endof the NiagaraRiver

61 Final email step62 Place for a pedi

By Harald Hornung©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 01/14/15

01/14/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: My daugh-ter and her husband are using a surrogate to have a baby. What do I do about a shower when someone else is carrying their child?

It is my daughter’s fi rst child, and she and her husband are in their late 40s. Should I make the shower for them as a couple? Does she not get a shower because someone else is actually pregnant with the child? I have no idea what is proper here. Please help. -- Grandma-To-Be

Dear Grandma: It doesn’t matter who is carrying the child. Any new mother -- and your daughter will be one -- is enti-tled to a baby shower if someone wants to host one. Of course, it is better if the shower is given by friends and not immediate fam-ily, but these days few people pay attention to those rules.

Couples showers have become more popular, since both Mom and Dad (pre-sumably) are raising this child. Whether you do that or not is entirely your choice.

Congratulations.

Dear Annie: I would like to know why frail, elderly people get to “choose to stay in their home” while the rest of the family

runs in circles trying to meet their needs. This is like asking a 2-year-old whether he wants to eat broccoli.

My husband and I were stressed out and exhausted trying to care for our parents because they wouldn’t leave their home. We all work full-time, so we took turns making sure they were OK in their old house. No one could get a night’s rest, because the folks were up and down all night opening doors, turning on lights and once, even using the oven and going outside.

People are living longer, and when severe physical frailty or dementia sets in, the family suffers. Not only is there the stress of caregiving, but also there is resentment that they refuse to be more help-ful and cooperative about their living arrangements. I think some of this stress can lead to elder abuse.

Why can’t family and social workers sign these folks up for assisted liv-ing?

I understand personal freedom, but where is the freedom for the rest of the family? -- Still Stressed Out

Dear Stressed: Se-niors who are still capable of mak-ing sound decisions should look into con-tinuing care facili-ties that allow them to live independently until they are no lon-ger able to do so, and then will transfer them to assisted liv-ing or nursing home care. These are not al-ways pleasant choices to contemplate, but the alternative often turns out to be mis-ery for everyone. And once a parent has de-mentia, it becomes both diffi cult and de-bilitating to remove them from familiar surroundings.

Those who are adamant about re-maining in their own homes should check out whether it is safe. Most people do not re-main in perfect health and then suddenly drop dead. Does your home have stairs? Safety bars in the bathroom? Will you someday need to pay for a caregiver? If you become widowed, will the loneliness cause you to decline? At some point, each of us must decide whether staying in our home is truly the best deci-sion, and how fair we are being to our loved ones.

Grandma wonders what to do about baby showerAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 15: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • 3B

Meet theBabies of 2014

Babies of 2014c/o Daily Corinthian

P. O. Box 1800Corinth MS 38835 or

drop off at 1607 S Harper Rd - Corinth MSYou may also email to:

[email protected]

Deadline is Monday, January 19, 2015. “Babies of 2014” will publish on Sunday,

January 25, 2015.

The Daily Corinthian will be featuring the “Babies of 2014” on January 25, 2015. If you or someone

you know would like to feature a baby on this special page,

Please send Baby’s Name, Date of Birth, Parents Name, Address & Phone # along with photo

& payment of $20 to:

Page 16: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

4B • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

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3. Collect $50.

GENERAL HELP0232

CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.

HELP WANTEDSuitor's Meat Co.

is in need of someonein the:

MEAT DEPARTMENT

Please call: 662-462-7413

PART TIME WarehouseHelp wanted. ApplyTuesdays and Thursdays1-4PM. No phone calls.M u s t h a v e a v a l i dDrivers License. Apply inperson Casabella Cor-inth Clearance Center.

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320(2) FEMALE PomeranianPuppies, 7wks, S & W,CKC Reg. $300 Cash-284-4572 or 594-5407

AKC REGISTERED, SnowWhite German Shep-herds- born 11/16/14-$200.00 662-423-3207

FREE KITTENS: (5) Blk &Grey (2) Blonde-Prettyand Fluffy! 415-6954

FARM

MERCHANDISE

FURNITURE0533COMPUTER DESK. 2'x4.5'w/ small hutch & filingdrawer. Xcellent Cond.$90.00. Leave Msg if noanswer 287-6069

FIREWOOD0539DRY FIRE Wood for Sale:731-239-4428 ( leavemessage)

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

RECONDITIONED APPL.Excellent Condition! Re-frig, stoves, w/d, freez-ers. Call Robert 731-225-9050 or 731-695-9050

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

(Deadline is 3 p.m. daybefore ad is to run!)

(Exception-Sun. dead-line is 3 pm Fri.)

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUSTBE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

2X3 Birthday

Ad(with or without

picture.)Only $30.

Deadline Noon 2 days before publication.

662-594-6502

Take stock in America.

Buy U.S. Savings Bonds.

Page 17: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • 5B

GENERAL HELP0232

Founded in 1913 as a Bleach Manufacturer, The Clorox Company is today one of the premier international marketers and manufacturers of more than 90 household and food products. Kingsford Manufacturing facility in Glen, MS is now accepting applications for Retort Production Operator.

RETORT PRODUCTION OPERATORStrives to maintain and improve the system to meet or exceed all required operations and product

Heavy Equipment Operation:k

Retort Controls Operation: Controls the operation of the Retort and its ancillary equipment by

Required Skills and Abilities:

Interested candidates must apply at the WIN Job Center

Equal Opportunity Employer

LEGAL SERVICES

BUILDING MATERIALS0542

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

The Best Deals on Building &

Remodeling Products!!Check Here First!

Landscape Timber ...................$249

5/8’’ T-1-11 Siding ..........$1895

3/8” T-1-11 Siding ...........$1395

Crossties ............................................. $959

Air Compressors. Starting at$4695

7/16 OSB Tech Shield ............................$750

Vinyl Floor Remnants ..$100

sq. yd.

Laminate Floor From 39¢-$109sq. ft.

Pad for Laminate Floor $500-$1000

Huge Selection of Area Rugs .................Starting at

$6995

Handicap Commodes .....$6995

3/4” Plywood each .....................$2195

1/2” Plywood each .....................$1650

25 Year 3 Tab Shingle .$4695

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

$5595

1 X 12 X 16 Masonite Siding $895

1 X 16 X 16 Masonite Siding $1195

12 x 12 Celotex Ceiling (40 Sq Ft) .....$3995

box

Croft Windows ......................................................

Tubs & Showers .. starting at $21500

2 x 4 x 16 Utility .................................$539

All types of lumberregular and treated

Smith Discount Home Center

GENERAL HELP0232

Second (2nd) SHIFTINJECTION MOLDING LEAD/PROCESS SET-UP PERSON

EcoWater Systems, the world’s largest manufacturer of residential water treatment equipment is seeking a hands on, 2nd Shift Injection Molding Lead/Set-Up person for its plant located in Ripley, Mississippi.

The successful candidate will perform process corrections, mold set-ups and lead a crew of approximately 6 people.

Qualifi ed candidates for this position should be familiar with decoupled molding principles and willing to look at molding from a different perspective than “traditional molding”. Experience with Milacron and Toshiba injection molding presses are a plus. Candidates should also possess good communication skills, be detailed oriented, and be familiar with auxiliary equipment operation. A minimum of 3-5 years set-up experience on injection mold machines and the skills to positively lead and direct people is required.

We offer an excellent benefi ts/wage package and the opportunity to work with modern state-of-the-art molding machines in a clean, air-conditioned environment. A high school diploma or GED is required.

Please submit resume to:

EcoWater Systems, LLCAttn: Human resources Dept.

17471 Highway 15 NorthRipley, MS 38663

Fax: (662) 837-5536Email: [email protected]

Equal Opportunity Employer

GENERAL HELP0232

ROUTE SALES DELIVERY DRIVER

Corinth, MS area. Valid Class A or B CDL.

Current valid Medical Card. Great benefi ts.

Great job opportunity. Apply in person at

Turner Holdings, LLC. 2678 S Eason Blvd. Tupelo, MS 38801.

(662)842-7415.

EXPERIENCEDTAX

PREPARERMail

Resume to:

PO Box 730

Corinth,

MS 38835

Part-time Warehouse Worker

needed at Casabella Corinth Clearance Center. Apply in person starting January 13th on Tuesdays and

Thursdays from 1:00-4:00. NO phone

calls please.Must have a valid

drivers license.

ATTN:

CANDIDATESList your name and offi ce

under the political listing for

only $190.00. Runs every

publishing day until fi nal

election. Come by the Daily

Coriathian offi ce at 1807 S.

Harper Rd. or call 287-8147

for more info. Must be paid in

advance.

POLITICAL

ANNOUNCEMENTThis is a paid political

advertisement which is

intended as a public service

for the voters. It has been

submitted to and approved

and submitted by each

political candidate listed

below or by the candidate’s

campaign manager or

assistant manager. This listing

is not intended to suggest or

imply that these are the only

candidates for these offi ces.

Justice Court Post 1

Supervisor District 1

Steve Little

Jerry Miller

Rufus “Jaybird” Duncan, JR.Scotty Little

Supervisor District 2

Sheriff

David DerrickDavid Nunley

Constable Post 1

Landon Tucker

Coroner

Jay Jones

Let the CLASSIFIEDS be the KEY to listing

your home!

662-287-6111

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on September 21,2006, Billy R. Wilbanks, Jr.and wife, Tasha Wilbanks ex-ecuted a certain deed of trustto John H. Shows, Trustee forthe benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registrations Systems,Inc. as nominee for Com-merce National Bank, its suc-cessors and assigns whichdeed of trust is of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Stateof Mississippi in InstrumentNo. 200606134; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed to Federal NationalMortgage Association, its suc-cessors or assigns by instru-ment dated January 28, 2014and recorded in InstrumentNo. 201403756 of the afore-said Chancery Clerk's office;and

WHEREAS, Federal NationalMortgage Association ("Fan-nie Mae"), a corporation or-ganized and existing under thelaws of the United States ofAmerica has heretofore sub-stituted Shapiro & Massey,LLC as Trustee by instru-ment dated October 3, 2014and recorded in the aforesaidChancery Clerk's Office in In-strument No. 201406124; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), acorporation organized andexisting under the laws of theUnited States of America, thelegal holder of said indebted-ness, having requested the un-dersigned Substituted Trust-ee to execute the trust andsell said land and property inaccordance with the terms ofsaid deed of trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney's fees, trustee'sfees and expense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Sha-piro & Massey, LLC, Substi-tuted Trustee in said deed oftrust, will on January 21, 2015offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), atthe South Main Door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, located at Cor-inth , Miss iss ippi , to thehighest and best bidder forcash the following describedproperty situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Lying and being in SmithCreek Subdivision, Phase I,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Lot No. 13 of Smith CreekSubdivision, Phase I, accord-ing to the map or plat of saidsubdivision on file in Plat Cab-inet A, Slide A167 in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi.

I WILL CONVEY only suchtitle as vested in me as Substi-tuted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATUREon this 24th day of Decem-ber, 2014.

SHAPIRO & MASSEYSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

26 County Road 505 Corinth, MS 3883414-009278AH

3tc: December 31, 2014 andJanuary 7 & 14, 201514688

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on September 21,2006, Billy R. Wilbanks, Jr.and wife, Tasha Wilbanks ex-ecuted a certain deed of trustto John H. Shows, Trustee forthe benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registrations Systems,Inc. as nominee for Com-merce National Bank, its suc-cessors and assigns whichdeed of trust is of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Stateof Mississippi in InstrumentNo. 200606134; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed to Federal NationalMortgage Association, its suc-cessors or assigns by instru-ment dated January 28, 2014and recorded in InstrumentNo. 201403756 of the afore-said Chancery Clerk's office;and

WHEREAS, Federal NationalMortgage Association ("Fan-nie Mae"), a corporation or-ganized and existing under thelaws of the United States ofAmerica has heretofore sub-stituted Shapiro & Massey,LLC as Trustee by instru-ment dated October 3, 2014and recorded in the aforesaidChancery Clerk's Office in In-strument No. 201406124; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), acorporation organized andexisting under the laws of theUnited States of America, thelegal holder of said indebted-ness, having requested the un-dersigned Substituted Trust-ee to execute the trust andsell said land and property inaccordance with the terms ofsaid deed of trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney's fees, trustee'sfees and expense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Sha-piro & Massey, LLC, Substi-tuted Trustee in said deed oftrust, will on January 21, 2015offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), atthe South Main Door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, located at Cor-inth , Miss iss ippi , to thehighest and best bidder forcash the following describedproperty situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Lying and being in SmithCreek Subdivision, Phase I,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Lot No. 13 of Smith CreekSubdivision, Phase I, accord-ing to the map or plat of saidsubdivision on file in Plat Cab-inet A, Slide A167 in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi.

I WILL CONVEY only suchtitle as vested in me as Substi-tuted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATUREon this 24th day of Decem-ber, 2014.

SHAPIRO & MASSEYSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

26 County Road 505 Corinth, MS 3883414-009278AH

3tc: December 31, 2014 andJanuary 7 & 14, 201514688

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on September 21,2006, Billy R. Wilbanks, Jr.and wife, Tasha Wilbanks ex-ecuted a certain deed of trustto John H. Shows, Trustee forthe benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registrations Systems,Inc. as nominee for Com-merce National Bank, its suc-cessors and assigns whichdeed of trust is of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Stateof Mississippi in InstrumentNo. 200606134; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed to Federal NationalMortgage Association, its suc-cessors or assigns by instru-ment dated January 28, 2014and recorded in InstrumentNo. 201403756 of the afore-said Chancery Clerk's office;and

WHEREAS, Federal NationalMortgage Association ("Fan-nie Mae"), a corporation or-ganized and existing under thelaws of the United States ofAmerica has heretofore sub-stituted Shapiro & Massey,LLC as Trustee by instru-ment dated October 3, 2014and recorded in the aforesaidChancery Clerk's Office in In-strument No. 201406124; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), acorporation organized andexisting under the laws of theUnited States of America, thelegal holder of said indebted-ness, having requested the un-dersigned Substituted Trust-ee to execute the trust andsell said land and property inaccordance with the terms ofsaid deed of trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney's fees, trustee'sfees and expense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Sha-piro & Massey, LLC, Substi-tuted Trustee in said deed oftrust, will on January 21, 2015offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), atthe South Main Door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, located at Cor-inth , Miss iss ippi , to thehighest and best bidder forcash the following describedproperty situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Lying and being in SmithCreek Subdivision, Phase I,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Lot No. 13 of Smith CreekSubdivision, Phase I, accord-ing to the map or plat of saidsubdivision on file in Plat Cab-inet A, Slide A167 in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi.

I WILL CONVEY only suchtitle as vested in me as Substi-tuted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATUREon this 24th day of Decem-ber, 2014.

SHAPIRO & MASSEYSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

26 County Road 505 Corinth, MS 3883414-009278AH

3tc: December 31, 2014 andJanuary 7 & 14, 201514688

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

16 X 80, 3BR/2BA, Freshpaint and New floorcovering throughout,delivered and set up for$16,900- 662-419-9762

TRANSPORTATION

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE'S NOTICEOF SALE

WHEREAS, on September 21,2006, Billy R. Wilbanks, Jr.and wife, Tasha Wilbanks ex-ecuted a certain deed of trustto John H. Shows, Trustee forthe benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registrations Systems,Inc. as nominee for Com-merce National Bank, its suc-cessors and assigns whichdeed of trust is of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Stateof Mississippi in InstrumentNo. 200606134; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed to Federal NationalMortgage Association, its suc-cessors or assigns by instru-ment dated January 28, 2014and recorded in InstrumentNo. 201403756 of the afore-said Chancery Clerk's office;and

WHEREAS, Federal NationalMortgage Association ("Fan-nie Mae"), a corporation or-ganized and existing under thelaws of the United States ofAmerica has heretofore sub-stituted Shapiro & Massey,LLC as Trustee by instru-ment dated October 3, 2014and recorded in the aforesaidChancery Clerk's Office in In-strument No. 201406124; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), acorporation organized andexisting under the laws of theUnited States of America, thelegal holder of said indebted-ness, having requested the un-dersigned Substituted Trust-ee to execute the trust andsell said land and property inaccordance with the terms ofsaid deed of trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney's fees, trustee'sfees and expense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Sha-piro & Massey, LLC, Substi-tuted Trustee in said deed oftrust, will on January 21, 2015offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), atthe South Main Door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, located at Cor-inth , Miss iss ippi , to thehighest and best bidder forcash the following describedproperty situated in AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi,to-wit:

Lying and being in SmithCreek Subdivision, Phase I,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Lot No. 13 of Smith CreekSubdivision, Phase I, accord-ing to the map or plat of saidsubdivision on file in Plat Cab-inet A, Slide A167 in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi.

I WILL CONVEY only suchtitle as vested in me as Substi-tuted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATUREon this 24th day of Decem-ber, 2014.

SHAPIRO & MASSEYSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

26 County Road 505 Corinth, MS 3883414-009278AH

3tc: December 31, 2014 andJanuary 7 & 14, 201514688

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

REDUCED!!

HOUSEFOR SALE

Over1500 sq ft

3 Bedroom2 Bath

Brick Home

Quiet Neighbor-hood in Corinth

City LimitsOpen floor plan,

New Paintthroughout!!

Very Large kit-chen, living

room and bed-rooms. Walk-inclosets in everyBedroom. Mas-

ter bedroomwith on-suite.

Fenced in back-yard, doublegarage, Large

storage building.

Call662-808-0339

NOW: $129,900!!!

Owner Wants Offers!This property is NOTfor rent or rent to

own.

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

280 HANDY Rifle withscope in new condition-$250- 662-720-6855

540 SQ ft of red oakhardwood, pre-finished3/4 x 3 1/4- $1500.00-212-3883

ANTIQUE TEAKWOODDining table w/ leaf andpads, lt. cherry finish,$125.00- 318-729-0819- InCorinth

ANTIQUE TEAKWOODServing cart- $125.00-318-729-0819 In Corinth

ANTIQUES OVAL Ma-hogany Dining Table w/leaf-$125.00- 318-729-0819- In Corinth

ATT MOTOROLA TUNDRAFLIP PHONE. GOOD CON-DITION. HINGES GOOD.$30. 662-416-0229

BRAND NEW NetTenphone with 1 month ac-tivation card. New inthe box, got too manyfor Christmas. Paid $85,will take $45- 731-689-3397

BRYCO ARMS 380 Pistolin New Condition- $175-662-720-6855

FLOOR LAMP and tablelamp set, new in box-$40.00- 318-729-0819 InCorinth

MEC 9000G 12 GaugeShot Shell Re-loader.Comes with 3 shotweight bars and severaldifferent powder bush-ings. It is attached to aheavy duty desk withs t o r a g e d r a w e r s -$ 2 5 0 . 0 0 - 2 8 7 - 6 0 6 9

NIGHTSTAND, BLACK byBassett- $50.00- 318-729-0819 In Corinth

PRO-FORM PT6.0 EKGTrainer treadmill- foldsto save space. $50.00662-808-7822

SMALL WICKER DressingTable w/ bench & Mir-ror- $60.00- 318-729-0819In Corinth

STEVENS 410 pump, innew condition- $300.662-720-6855

SUNQUEST PRO, 24 BulbT a n n i n g B e d - 2 2 0 .$ 3 0 0 . 0 0 - 6 0 3 - 2 9 7 1

TWIN BED w/ head-board, frame and all lin-ens- $100.00 318-729-0819 In Corinth

WALNUT TV/Entertain-ment center by Bassett-$125.00- 318-729-0819 InCorinth

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375/ $400 sec. de-posit + util, 603-5767.

HOMES FOR RENT0620

4BR/3BA- Single FamilyHome. $800mo + Dep &Ref. *Historic Dist.*,leave message- 287-7424

U.S. Savings Bonds

are gifts with a future.

Page 18: 011415 daily corinthian e edition

6B • Wednesday, January 14, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse

Let our certifi ed technicians quickly restore your vehicle to pre-accident condition with a satisfaction guarantee.

State-of-the-Art Frame StraighteningDents, Dings & Scratches RemovedCustom Color Matching Service

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance CompanyNo up-front payments.No hassle. No paperwork.

Free Estimates25 Years professional service experienceRental cars available

Corinth Collision Center810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

HOMES FOR SALE0710

Patti'sProperty Rentals

662-279-7453

467 CR 306Strickland

2 Bed - 1 BathLge Garage & Storage

Shed.$600 Mo./$500 Dep.

9 CR 1283 Bed - 1.5 Bath

Central School DistrictLarge Garage

$675 Mo/$500 Dep.

Both Have Central Heat & Air

PICKWICK RENTAL

3BR/2BA HomeFireplace,Carport

$900 per month plus utilities.

Requiresreferences & credit check.

Pet’s are negotiable,

Rentersinsurancerequired.

731-689-8657

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Call Ronnie:662-287-8111

52 CR 731(2 miles from the hospital)

Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath Custom Built home. Hardwood,

Vaulted ceilings, Designer Ceramic tile showers. Lots of high end details in this home. Sitting on

2 acres with 2 additionalacres available.

$228,500

52 CR 713925 5th Street

3BR/1BA1600 Sq ft

115x105 ft lot included.

new fl oors, storm windows,

Children could walk to school.

16x16 bedrooms, New Central Heat and Air System &

Alarm System.$92,500

662-415-4339

J. L. ALDRIDGE ESTATE AUCTION CONTENTS AND REAL ESTATE (Corner of Jackson and Bunch Streets)

SAT. JAN. 17th @ 10:AM 811 JACKSON STREET - CORINTH MS 38834All contents including beautiful antiques Selling Regardless of Price!

Real Estate sells with Owners Confi rmation

Lot Size 142’ x 150’ 0.48 Acres +/-

3,381 Sq. Ft. +/-4-BR, 3 & 1/2 Baths Hardwood Floors Elevator Basement plus out building for storage

Old Carriage House Remodeled for Offi ce complete with Kitchen

This Prop-erty has

been vacant for a while

but could be made a

Show Place. Located in downtown

Corinth close to Churches,

Library, & City Hall, only

blocks away from Res-

taurants and Downtown Shopping.

Partial Listing of Contents Selling Regardless of Price!!!!

Don’t Miss This Opportunity !!! Real Estate will be offered at approximately 11:AM

Guns, Sofas, wing back chairs, antiques include tables, chairs, secretary, chests, sculptures, lamps, dining suite, display cabinets, armoires, wardrobes, chests and dressers, 1/2 beds, bedroom suites, grandfather clock, fl at screen TVs, offi ce desks, fi le cabinets, (2) stainless steel refrigerators, upright and chest freezers, tea cart, piano, silver serving items and silverware, collectable glassware and pottery, make up dresser, small kitchen appliances, pots and pans, all types of cooking utensils, Royal Albert and Nikko china, wicker furniture, chandeliers, outdoor grills, lots of framed pictures, mirrors and decor items, 98 Chevy Blazer, push mowers, 3 small tillers, assorted hand and yard tools, shop vac, hedge trimmer, tool box, band saw, concrete yard planters and decor items, 2 wheel dolly, outdoor furniture, small single axel trailer, post and tomato cages, MUCH MORE!!! DON’T MISS THIS ONE!!!

TERMS: Cash, personal or company checks accepted with bank letter of guarantee made to Mid-South Real Estate Sales & Auctions. Payment due in full on sale day on all personal property. Everything sold as-is, where· is, with no guarantee. 10% buyers premium will be added to determine the fi nal bid. REAL ESTATE TERMS: Cash, personal or company checks accepted with bank letter of guarantee made to Mid-South Real Estate Sales & Auctions. 10% down day of sale, balance due in full upon delivery of deed in 30 days or less. Everything is believed true, but not guaranteed. Any announcement made sale day supersedes all advertisements. Property will be sold as-is, where-is with no guarantee. 10% buyer’s premium will be added to determine the fi nal bid.

Auctioneer reserves the right to group & regroup as he sees fi t. IF YOU WANT TO SELL IT, CALL US !!

SCOTTY LITTLE (sales) Mal #150 or STEVE LITTLE (broker) Tal #5945 - TN Firm #5083

In Conjunction With Harvey Pendergrast (broker) MID-SOUTH REAL ESTATE SALES & AUCTIONS, LLC 110 HWY 72 E. - CORINTH, MS 38834 • 662-286-2488

FOR PICTURES VISIT WWW.MS·AUCTION.COM

Call Jessica for an Appointment or Stop By1101 N. Second Street • Booneville

662.728.4462Hours: M-F 7:30am-5:00pm

• Oil Changes • Transmission

Service• Tune-Ups• Tire Rotation• Brakes• Hoses• Belts• Wiper Blades

• Alternators• Struts• Tires (All Brands)• Shocks• Wash & Detail• A/C Delco Batteries• Air Conditioner• Water Pumps• Fuel Pumps

COURTESY AUTOMOTIVE

Service Center

*FREE:27 Point Inspection

with Every Oil Change- Wednesday’s Ladies’ Day - Ladies Bring Your Vehicle In

and Receive $5.00 OFF Your Oil Change

Your AC Delco DealerServing Booneville & Surrounding

Area for the Past 20 Years

HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

ALL-PRO Home Mainten-ance and Repair- 662-415-6646

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color

287-1024

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE ESTATE OFFRANCES KATHYLEENFRANKS, DECEASED

CAUSE NO: 2014-0620-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters of Testamentaryhav ing been granted onDecember 11, 2014, to theundersigned Testatrix of theEstate of Frances KathyleenFranks, Deceased, notice ishereby given to all personshaving claims against said Es-tate to present the same tothe Clerk of this Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law within ninety(90) days from the first pub-lication of this notice, which isJanuary 14, 2014, or they willforever be barred.

This the 14 day of January,2014.

MARGARET STRICKLANDTESTATRIX

DAVID O. BUTTS, MSB NO.7642Attorney for Estate and Ad-ministratorRenasant Center, Suite 100398 East Main StreetTupelo, MS 38804662-841-1134

3tc: 1/14, 1/21, 1/28/201514702

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: LAST WILLAND TESTAMENT OFJEWELL E. PALMER,DECEASED

CAUSE NO.: 2014-0641-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby given thatLetters Testamentary havebeen on the 29th day ofDecember 2014, granted tothe undersigned Executor ofthe Estate of Jewell E. Palmer,deceased,by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against the Estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days after thedate of the first publication ofthis notice, which is the 7thday of January 2015, or thesame shall be forever barred.

WITNESS, this the 31st dayof December, 2014.

LOWREY WAYNE GAILOREXECUTOR OF THE LAST

WILL AND TESTAMENTAND ESTATE OF JEWELL E.

PALMER, DECEASED

Prepared by:Danny L. LowreyAttorney for Petitioner595 Yellow Creek LaneCounce, TN 38326662-415-9088MS BAR# 1465

3tc:1/7, 1/14, 1/21/201414690

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE ESTATE OFFRANCES KATHYLEENFRANKS, DECEASED

CAUSE NO: 2014-0620-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters of Testamentaryhav ing been granted onDecember 11, 2014, to theundersigned Testatrix of theEstate of Frances KathyleenFranks, Deceased, notice ishereby given to all personshaving claims against said Es-tate to present the same tothe Clerk of this Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law within ninety(90) days from the first pub-lication of this notice, which isJanuary 14, 2014, or they willforever be barred.

This the 14 day of January,2014.

MARGARET STRICKLANDTESTATRIX

DAVID O. BUTTS, MSB NO.7642Attorney for Estate and Ad-ministratorRenasant Center, Suite 100398 East Main StreetTupelo, MS 38804662-841-1134

3tc: 1/14, 1/21, 1/28/201514702

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: LAST WILLAND TESTAMENT OFJEWELL E. PALMER,DECEASED

CAUSE NO.: 2014-0641-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby given thatLetters Testamentary havebeen on the 29th day ofDecember 2014, granted tothe undersigned Executor ofthe Estate of Jewell E. Palmer,deceased,by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against the Estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days after thedate of the first publication ofthis notice, which is the 7thday of January 2015, or thesame shall be forever barred.

WITNESS, this the 31st dayof December, 2014.

LOWREY WAYNE GAILOREXECUTOR OF THE LAST

WILL AND TESTAMENTAND ESTATE OF JEWELL E.

PALMER, DECEASED

Prepared by:Danny L. LowreyAttorney for Petitioner595 Yellow Creek LaneCounce, TN 38326662-415-9088MS BAR# 1465

3tc:1/7, 1/14, 1/21/201414690