16
Dianne Baldwin, Corinth People of the Crossroads Staff photo by Zack Steen “I have always loved my job, but I’m finally fixing to retire,” said Dianne Baldwin, whose has worked in the dietary department and as the kitchen operations man- ager at Magnolia Regional Health Center for more than 30 years. “As soon as I re- tire, I plan on spending as much time as possible with my two grandkids and my two great-grandkids. I’ll also probably take a few trips to the Smoky Mountains — I really enjoy traveling.” Vol. 120, No. 52 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages One section Tuesday March 1, 2016 75 cents Today 63 T-storms Tonight 31 80% chance of rain Residents attend Trooper conference. Page 3 School project aims to help residents. Page 3 State Basketball Tourney schedule. Page 12 Prentiss County McNairy County Sports Daily Corinthian 25 years ago 10 years ago Construction begins on sidewalk improvements on Fillmore Street. Officials say milling and paving of Fillmore will follow the sidewalk repairs. Organizational efforts begin to establish a local chapter of Habi- tat for Humanity. Steering Committee Chair Neal Atkins says they hope to complete their first house by mid July. The Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter is reaching out to Cross- roads area youths this month. March is Children’s Month and Volunteer Director Char- lotte Doehner is welcoming families with young children to stop by the shelter for a free “How to Care for Pets” activity workbook. “The book is a perfect way to teach those kindergarten through second grade age kids how to pet, play and care for dogs and cats,” said Doehner. “The younger age is the per- fect time to teach kids and the workbook is a perfect conver- sation starter for parents and their children.” The book features informa- tion written on a child’s level and includes fun activities. “We want to help young kids understand that taking care of animals is an important job -- pets have feelings, too and they should be treated like a mem- ber of the family,” she added. The shelter kicked-oChil- dren’s Month in fashion on Feb. 26 at the Corinth Elementary School Community Day. “I spoke with more than 240 Shelter joining pets, kids during March BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Oakland Baptist Church has a desire for sharing the gospel. The congregation’s annu- al passion play has reached around 8,000 people during the four days over the last few years. The illness of music minis- ter/director Jim Pinkston has forced the annual event to be be cancelled this year. Pinkston, who has been at Oakland for almost 30 years, is required to have surgery that could not wait, according to pastor Dr. Randy Bostick. “Jim had initially scheduled the surgery the week after the passion play,” said Dr. Bostick. “Doctors didn’t want him wait- ing that long.” Oakland’s event, which in- volves over 200 of its mem- bers, has been an area xture centered around Easter for 26 years. The passion play is a dramat- ic recollection of what Jesus en- dured as He died for the sins of the world. “As important as the passion play is, it was a no brainer to cancel it because of Jim’s health … we can’t do it without him,” said Bro. Bostick. Rehearsal for the four-day performances begin in January. Last year, 30 new faces took part in the play. The Pinkston family is heav- ily involved in the plays. Jim’s son, Jon, produces the drama. Carol Pinkston, the wife of Jim, also is part of the production and is also a member of the or- chestra during the play. Oakland’s annual passion play nixed BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Staff photo by Steve Beavers Oakland’s annual passion play has been canceled this year. It was an exciting weekend lled with pajama parties, tour stops and photo-shoots as lo- cal and area title holders re- turned to Corinth for the Mrs. Mississippi and Mrs. Tennes- see pageants. After checking into the Hampton Inn on Friday, the 17 contestants experienced Corinthian hospitality at its best as they shopped with local merchants in the SoCo district, caught a ride on the Crossroads Trolley and visited t. feazell for a special meet-and-greet. The girls also gained a true taste of the Crossroads as they sampled the local fares of Pizza Grocery, Joe’s Diner and Vica- ri Italian Grill. “Overall this was a learn- ing experience for me. I didn’t grow up doing pageants,” said Mrs. Prentiss County Meghan Vaughn. “I learned so much, made many new friends and grew as a person. Each and ev- ery woman had a story to tell which made them who they were. That was amazing to me.” Following their orientation day on Friday, contestants spent most of Saturday pre- paring for the competition through rehearsals and one- on-one interviews with judges. Corinthians roll out pageant red carpet BY KIMBERLY SHELTON [email protected] Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton Mrs. Mississippi America 2015 Chelsey Crum and Mrs. Tennessee America 2015 Cheryl Brehm are welcomed to Corinth by District 2 State Representative Nick Bain. Please see PAGEANT | 3 Please see SHELTER | 5 Doug Jumper Michael McCreary Ann Hardin Rick Jones Neil Paul Alexis Rudd Marea Wilson Roger Clark Audrey McNair John Hayes 2782 S Harper Rd www.jumperrealty.com

030116 daily corinthian e edition

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Dianne Baldwin, Corinth

People of the Crossroads

Staff photo by Zack Steen

“I have always loved my job, but  I’m  finally fixing to retire,” said Dianne Baldwin, whose has worked in the dietary department and as the kitchen operations man-ager at Magnolia Regional Health Center for more than 30 years. “As soon as I re-tire, I plan on spending as much time as possible with my two grandkids and my two great-grandkids.  I’ll also probably take a few trips to the Smoky Mountains — I really enjoy traveling.”

Vol. 120, No. 52 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

TuesdayMarch 1, 2016

75 centsToday63

T-stormsTonight

3180% chance of rain

Residents attendTrooper conference.

Page 3

School project aimsto help residents.

Page 3

State BasketballTourney schedule.

Page 12

Prentiss County McNairy County Sports

Daily Corinthian

25 years ago 10 years agoConstruction begins on sidewalk improvements on Fillmore

Street. Officials say milling and paving of Fillmore will follow the sidewalk repairs.

Organizational efforts begin to establish a local chapter of Habi-tat for Humanity. Steering Committee Chair Neal Atkins says they hope to complete their fi rst house by mid July.

The Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter is reaching out to Cross-roads area youths this month.

March is Children’s Month and Volunteer Director Char-lotte Doehner is welcoming families with young children to stop by the shelter for a free “How to Care for Pets” activity workbook.

“The book is a perfect way to teach those kindergarten through second grade age kids how to pet, play and care for dogs and cats,” said Doehner. “The younger age is the per-fect time to teach kids and the

workbook is a perfect conver-sation starter for parents and their children.”

The book features informa-tion written on a child’s level and includes fun activities.

“We want to help young kids understand that taking care of animals is an important job -- pets have feelings, too and they should be treated like a mem-ber of the family,” she added.

The shelter kicked-off Chil-dren’s Month in fashion on Feb. 26 at the Corinth Elementary School Community Day.

“I spoke with more than 240

Shelter joining pets, kids during March

BY ZACK [email protected]

Oakland Baptist Church has a desire for sharing the gospel.

The congregation’s annu-al passion play has reached around 8,000 people during the four days over the last few years.

The illness of music minis-ter/director Jim Pinkston has forced the annual event to be be cancelled this year. Pinkston, who has been at Oakland for almost 30 years, is required to have surgery that could not wait, according to pastor Dr. Randy Bostick.

“Jim had initially scheduled the surgery the week after the passion play,” said Dr. Bostick. “Doctors didn’t want him wait-ing that long.”

Oakland’s event, which in-

volves over 200 of its mem-bers, has been an area fi xture centered around Easter for 26 years.

The passion play is a dramat-ic recollection of what Jesus en-dured as He died for the sins of the world.

“As important as the passion play is, it was a no brainer to cancel it because of Jim’s health … we can’t do it without him,” said Bro. Bostick.

Rehearsal for the four-day performances begin in January. Last year, 30 new faces took part in the play.

The Pinkston family is heav-ily involved in the plays. Jim’s son, Jon, produces the drama. Carol Pinkston, the wife of Jim, also is part of the production and is also a member of the or-chestra during the play.

Oakland’s annual passion play nixed

BY STEVE [email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Oakland’s annual passion play has been canceled this year.

It was an exciting weekend fi lled with pajama parties, tour stops and photo-shoots as lo-cal and area title holders re-turned to Corinth for the Mrs. Mississippi and Mrs. Tennes-see pageants.

After checking into the Hampton Inn on Friday, the 17 contestants experienced Corinthian hospitality at its best as they shopped with local

merchants in the SoCo district, caught a ride on the Crossroads Trolley and visited t. feazell for a special meet-and-greet.

The girls also gained a true taste of the Crossroads as they sampled the local fares of Pizza Grocery, Joe’s Diner and Vica-ri Italian Grill.

“Overall this was a learn-ing experience for me. I didn’t grow up doing pageants,” said Mrs. Prentiss County Meghan Vaughn. “I learned so much,

made many new friends and grew as a person. Each and ev-ery woman had a story to tell which made them who they were. That was amazing to me.”

Following their orientation day on Friday, contestants spent most of Saturday pre-paring for the competition through rehearsals and one-on-one interviews with judges.

Corinthians roll out pageant red carpet

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Mrs. Mississippi America 2015 Chelsey Crum and Mrs. Tennessee America 2015 Cheryl Brehm are welcomed to Corinth by District 2 State Representative Nick Bain.

Please see PAGEANT | 3

Please see SHELTER | 5

DougJumper

MichaelMcCreary

AnnHardin

RickJones

Neil Paul

AlexisRudd

Marea Wilson

RogerClark

Audrey McNair

John Hayes 2782 S Harper Rd

www.jumperrealty.com

2 • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

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Local/RegionDaily Corinthian • 3Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Today in

History

Today is Tuesday, March 1, the 61st day of 2016. There are 305 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On March 1, 1966, the Soviet space probe Ven-era 3 impacted the sur-face of Venus, becoming the first spacecraft to reach another planet; however, Venera was unable to transmit any data, its communications system having failed.

On this date:

In 1790, President George Washington signed a measure au-thorizing the first U.S. Census.

In 1815, Napoleon, having escaped exile in Elba, arrived in Cannes, France, and headed for Paris to begin his “Hun-dred Days” rule.

In 1867, Nebraska be-came the 37th state.

In 1890, J.P. Lippincott published the first U.S. edition of the Sherlock Holmes mystery “A Study in Scarlet” by Arthur Conan Doyle.

In 1932, Charles A. Lindbergh Jr., the 20-month-old son of Charles and Anne Lind-bergh, was kidnapped from the family home near Hopewell, New Jer-sey. (Remains identified as those of the child were found the following May.)

In 1954, four Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire from the spectators’ gallery of the U.S. House of Represen-tatives, wounding five members of Congress. The United States deto-nated a dry-fuel hydrogen bomb, codenamed Cas-tle Bravo, at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands.

In 1961, President John F. Kennedy signed an executive order estab-lishing the Peace Corps.

In 1981, Irish Republi-can Army member Bobby Sands began a hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland; he died 65 days later.

In 1996, President Bill Clinton slapped econom-ic sanctions on Colom-bia, concluding that Co-lombian authorities had not fully cooperated with the U.S. war on drugs.

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Trooper gives talk at training seminar

M/Sgt. Ray Hall of Prentiss County, Mis-sissippi Highway Patrol Public Affairs Officer for Troop F, spoke at the 2016 Mississippi Crime Stoppers Training Conference recently in Biloxi.

His topic was “Public Perception of the Law Enforcement Officer.” The theme for the con-ference was “Planting the Seeds for a Safer Mississippi.”

Ken and Barbara Shackelford were among those attending the conference representing Northeast Mississippi Crime Stoppers from Prentiss County.

Ken is a volunteer for Crime Stoppers and Barbara is a member of the board of directors of Northeast Mississippi Crime Stoppers. Also attending were Boonev-ille’s Chief of Police Mi-

chael Ramey, and Brian Taylor and Bob Tolar of the Prentiss County Sheriff’s Department.

School project aims to aid Flint residents

SELMER, Tenn. – The McNairy County School system will be collecting bottled water for the res-idents of Flint Michigan now through Saturday, March 5.

The drop-off location will be Selmer Walmart from 8 a.m. until noon on Saturday, March 5.

The water will be deliv-ered to the residents of Flint on Monday, March 7.

(For more information contact LaShell Moore or Mrs. Renee Rowsey at Selmer Elementary School.)

Annual summit will host McCullough

STARKVILLE —The Mississippi Develop-

ment Authority’s ex-ecutive director will be featured speaker March 16 for the sixth annual Manufacturing Summit at Mississippi State.

Glenn McCullough Jr. was appointed by Gov. Phil Bryant last year to head the state’s lead agency for economic and community develop-ment. An agricultural economics graduate of the university, he is a Tupelo native and former mayor of Northeast Mis-sissippi’s largest city.

The 8 a.m.-3 p.m. summit takes place at the Franklin Center, lo-cated on campus at the intersection of Black-jack Road and Loxley Way.

A $99 admission fee to the space-limited event includes lunch and conference materials. Advance registration may be completed at www.ffi.msstate.edu/summit.asp.

“Mississippi ranks

eighth in the nation in manufacturing employ-ment,” McCullough said. “More than 12 percent of our workforce is dedi-cated to some type of manufacturing.”

He said the primary goal of MDA, a 300-em-ployee agency, “is to work with partners to accelerate economic growth, strengthening the economy, attracting more and better career opportunities, in manu-facturing and across all sectors of the Missis-sippi economy.”

Other speakers for the daylong event will include:

■ James Williams, State Workforce Devel-opment Board executive director, who will dis-cuss a recent analysis of Mississippi’s current workforce and how state leaders may be utilizing the information in com-ing years.

■ Roger King, execu-tive director of the MSU

Institute for Computa-tional Research in En-gineering and Science, who will discuss disrup-tive technologies in manufacturing.

■ David Dampier, director of MSU’s Dis-tributed Analytics and Security Institute, who will lead a discussion on cybersecurity in manu-facturing.

Bill Martin, director of MSU’s Franklin Furniture Institute, said King’s presentation will focus on what is referred to as “big data” and how manufacturing sectors may best manage it.

Martin said Dampier’s remarks should help company executives and others better under-stand how to protect the data of customers, em-ployees and proprietary information centers. “Lloyds of London esti-mates that cyber-attacks are costing businesses $400 billion per year,” he noted.

Across the Region

Upon wrapping up their interviews, the ladies changed clothes and headed to Vicari for a husband/wife dinner.

“It was a wonderful time of togetherness and an opportunity for ev-eryone to get to re-know their spouses by playing the newlywed game,” said Mrs. Mississippi America 2010 Keri McMillin.

Completing their last practice from 8 to 11:30 a.m. on Sunday, orga-nizers and contestants gathered at 3 p.m. for the highly anticipated fi nal competitions.

Draped in simple white bows to indicate seating, coordinators chose to keep the decorations sim-ple and let the dazzling smiles of contestants illu-minate the Coliseum Civic Center from within.

In addition to understat-ed white bows, the ladies decorated donation boxes for the lobby and held an audience choice award al-lowing participants to give and vote for their favor-ite contestant. The eff ort raised over $2,000 for the pageant’s platform – Vic-toria’s Voice.

The program itself was a Michael Jackson-

themed show with for-mer Mrs. Mississippi and Mrs. Tennessee winners returning for a special on-stage number set to the tune of “Remember the time” in celebration of Mrs. Mississippi’s 40th Anniversary. Cur-rent contestants walked out to Jackson’s “Pretty Young Thing”.

Passing their crowns, the 2015 state titlehold-ers expressed their con-gratulations for this year’s winners.

“This past year has been a wonderful expe-rience. I was thrilled to represent my community

and state as Mrs. Mis-sissippi. I would like to congratulate Mrs. Missis-sippi America 2016,” said Mrs. Mississippi America 2015 Chelsea Crum. “I know you will be a great representative for all of Mississippi’s married women and will accom-plish so much this year. Best Wishes!”

Echoing her senti-ments, Mrs. Tennessee America 2015 also con-gratulated her state’s winner.

“This year as Mrs. Ten-nessee was without a doubt the best year of my life. It was very humbling

and I will always be grate-ful for the honor of repre-senting Tennessee,” said Cheryl Brehm. “I wish the next Mrs. Tennessee the best of luck at Mrs. America! That amazing experience comes once in a lifetime.”

The 2016 Mrs. Missis-sippi and Mrs. Tennes-see America winners are Mrs. Tupelo Ashley Buse and Mrs. West Tennessee Dawn Williamson.

First and second run-ner-ups in Mrs. Missis-sippi America are Mrs. Columbus Brittany Hop-kins, and Mrs. North Mississippi Kayla Baxter.

Mrs. Gibson County Jada Mitchell and Mrs. East Tennessee Virginia Mulrooney were fi rst and second runner-ups for Mrs. Tennessee America.

Special award win-ners for Mrs. Mississippi were: Most Photogenic – Hope Campbell, Mrs. Raymond; Top Online Ad Sales, Congeniality and Ricky Dixon Directors Award – Jaimee Dorris, Mrs. Gulf Coast; Fitness – Ashley Buse, Mrs. Tu-pelo; Best Smile – Misty Wright, Mrs. Oxford and Audience Choice – Meghan Vaughn, Mrs. Prentiss County.

Special award winners

for Mrs. Tennessee were: Most Photogenic – Mrs. Madison County Tiff any Purnell; Top Online Ad Sales and the Ricky Dixon Directors Award – Mrs. West Tennessee Dawn Williamson; Fitness and Best Smile – Mrs. Gibson County Jada Mitchell and Congeniality and Audi-ence Choice – Mrs. Nash-ville Dawne Gray.

“It was such a fun expe-rience,” said Mrs. Missis-sippi America 2016 Ash-ley Buse. “I learned more about the integrity of the pageant and it made me even prouder to be a part of it. I am so excited and still can’t believe I won.”

“I am still in shock and disbelief,” agreed Mrs. Tennessee America 2016 Dawn Williamson. “This has been a long road for me and the third year I’ve competed, so when I heard my name being called as the new Mrs. Tennessee America, I was completely beside myself.”

“I’m was so honored and blessed to be chosen to represent the state of Tennessee that I almost fainted,” she added. “I plan to serve the crown well and promote it as much as I can in the com-ing year.”

PAGEANT

CONTINUED FROM 1

Photo compliments of Bill Avery

Mrs. Tupelo Ashley Buse took home the cov-eted title of Mrs. Missis-sippi America 2016.

Photo compliments of Bill Avery

Mrs. West Tennessee Dawn Williamson now represents her home state as Mrs. Tennes-see America 2016.

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OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Tuesday, March 1, 2016www.dailycorinthian.com

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Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verifi cation. All letters are subject to editing before publication, especially those beyond 600 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Let-ters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthian.com. Email is the preferred method.

Personal, guest and commentary columns on the Opin-ion page are the views of the writer. “Other views” are editorials reprinted from other newspapers. None of these refl ect the views of this newspaper.

Letter to the editor

To the editor:I see in the newspaper almost everyday -

dogs, dogs and more dogs. Is that what we are thinking?

First of all, there are more important things to me than dogs.

I see children in the newspaper. They should be more important than dogs, in my opinion.

There are wild dogs running loose all over Alcorn County. I have a photograph of a cow I own that was almost killed on my farm after being attacked by three dogs.

It was horrible. My cow had damage to her nose, neck and mouth. You should see the pictures.

Everyone needs to keep their dogs put up. They should not be allowed to roam free and attack my cattle.

There is more to life than dogs.Larry CoolyCR 257, Glen

There are more important things

to cover than dogs

Letters Policy

Prayer for today

A verse to share

The anti-Trump on-slaught is coming. Perhaps within weeks. Just not nec-essarily from Republicans.

Almost as soon as Donald Trump is the presumptive GOP nominee – which may be as early as March 15 – Democrats will surely start to churn out their negative ads.

They will attack Trump’s credentials as a tribune of the little guy by focusing on a money-grubbing venture like Trump University, de-signed to extract as much cash as possible from peo-ple who thought they would learn something from the shell of a school.

They will dissect his busi-ness record. They will fasten on his failed casinos and the bankruptcies he used to stiff creditors while maintaining a lavish lifestyle.

They will fry him for hy-pocrisy on immigration by pointing out that Trump Tower was built by illegal Polish immigrants worked to the bone and that, ac-cording to news reports, illegal immigrants are help-ing build his new hotel in Washington.

They will make the cheap threats he throws at anyone who crosses him a charac-ter and temperament is-sue. They will hound him

about his unreleased tax returns. And, of course, they will use de-cades-worth of contro-versial state-ments to portray him as racist and sexist.

This will all be in the tradi-tion of the early Democratic ad campaigns that success-fully kneecapped Republi-can nominees in 1996 and 2012 (Bob Dole and Mitt Romney, respectively). A Democratic campaign to dis-qualify Trump would seek to make his unfavorable rating (already 60 percent with the general public) not merely alarming, but completely ra-dioactive.

How will Trump fare against such ads? Maybe he will prove impervious to all such criticism, or maybe he will wilt under the assault. Who knows?

In this sense, Republicans are outsourcing the vet-ting of their front-runner to the other party. At this rate, they will make Trump their de facto standard-bearer in a little less than three weeks, never having run him through the paces

of the painful testing that is usually inherent to the pro-cess.

Yes, Trump has been constantly criticized. But op-eds aren’t the same as attack ads. A Washington Post analysis found that of $215 million super PAC spending so far, only 4 per-cent has been directed at the man on the cusp of se-curing the nomination.

A variety of reasons ac-count for the de facto mora-torium on sustained Trump attacks to this point: clash-ing candidate interests; exhaustion after so many donors gave so much to the Jeb Bush super PAC Right to Rise with so little eff ect; fear of Trump. Democrats won’t be similarly con-strained.

The last two viable non-Trump Republican candi-dates have come up small against the mogul. You would think that the rise of Trump – a seismic politi-cal event – would inspire a larger argument about the future of the party, the na-ture of conservatism or the discontent of blue-collar America, but instead Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio are squabbling over who photo-shopped whom.

Cruz has engaged in hos-tilities with Trump when he

can’t possibly avoid them, as in Iowa and South Caroli-na, but let up in New Hamp-shire, when it didn’t suit his purposes. Rubio continues to duck and cover, putting tactics (he, of course, wants Cruz out of the race) over leadership.

If Cruz and Rubio aren’t going to consistently attack Trump, at least they should have something to say to his working-class voters who feel they are being left be-hind and ignored. Yet Cruz and Rubio, loyal sons of their party, do not naturally think in these terms. They know how to have a debate over which of them is more adamantly against gay mar-riage, but a direct appeal to blue-collar voters on bread-and-butter issues appears outside their comfort zones.

If Trump romps to the nomination by mid-March, non-Trump Republicans will have lost to him in part through a lack of try-ing. That will never be true of the Democrats, who will gleefully and maliciously do the Trump vetting that the GOP race has, so far, been missing.

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

The coming anti-Trump onslaught

Does Donald Trump’s big win in the Nevada caucuses mean he’s the inevitable Re-publican nominee? He has made himself the favorite and could sew up the nomi-nation with the fi rst winner-take-all primaries March 15. But it’s not inevitable that he will become the nomi-nee. The question is how others can prevent it.

Trump won 46 percent in Nevada; Marco Rubio won 24 percent, and Ted Cruz won 21 percent. That’s in line with polling, which showed Nevada to be one of the best Trump states.

In February polls in the nine states with March 1 primaries he gets less, be-tween 23 and 34 percent. And his fi nal percentages have tended to be a bit un-der his poll numbers. So he could lose even in three-candidate contests.

But each of the three chal-lengers faces serious chal-lenges, including a home-state primary in the next three weeks: Ted Cruz in Texas on March 1; Marco Rubio in Florida on March 15 and John Kasich in Ohio, also on March 15.

Could we see a Cruz reviv-al? Ted Cruz lost very con-servative voters to Trump in Nevada and evangelicals there and in South Carolina. He ran just 1 point ahead

of Rubio among evan-gelicals in Nevada and 5 points in South Caro-lina. These are groups he hoped would help him win, as in Iowa. But

he won’t win March 1 Super Tuesday Southern primaries without improving on those numbers.

His best opportunity is in his home state, Texas. But he’s won only one election there, in 2012, and since then has focused on nation-al politicking rather than getting better acquainted with his 27 million constitu-ents. Polling has him just a few points over Trump and, in one poll, leading Rubio by only 4 percent. He looks likely to fall short of the 50 percent that would give him all of Texas’s 155 delegates.

Absent a big victory in Texas, Cruz’s prospects look grim. His percentages so far among non-evangelicals – a larger share of primary vot-ers after March 1 – are 19, 8, 13 and 18. Enough for third place fi nishes, not more.

What about a Rubio surge? In Iowa, South Car-olina and Nevada, Marco Rubio has demonstrated an

affi rmative appeal to high-income and college-educat-ed voters – the groups that gave Mitt Romney the nom-ination in 2012. That makes him competitive in Virginia and Georgia March 1.

But he needs most of all to win Florida’s winner-take-all primary, with 99 delegates, March 15. Like Cruz, he’s won just one elec-tion there, in 2010, and has concentrated on national issues since, not in close touch with his 20 million constituents.

Rubio can certainly im-prove on his weak showings in Florida polls, none taken after Jan. 21, which show 18 percent for candidates who have left the race, including ex-Gov. Jeb Bush. Affl u-ent, high-education voters powered Mitt Romney to a 46 percent win in the high-turnout 2012 primary.

But Rubio seems deter-mined not to rely, as Rom-ney did, on negative cam-paigning. “I don’t have any voters begging me to attack anyone,” he said the morn-ing after Nevada. “I’m not in this race to attack any Republican.”

Instead, he’s likely to stress electability and the national polls, which show him running better than Trump or Cruz against Hill-ary Clinton or Bernie Sand-

ers. One bit of good news for him out of Nevada: 25 percent of voters there picked “can win in Novem-ber” as the reason for their vote, about double the per-centage in New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Is there a Kasich opening? In New Hampshire John Kasich found a constituency big enough for a 16 percent second place. Can he fi nd another? Not in Massachu-setts or Vermont March 1, the polls of the few regis-tered Republicans suggest. Not in Michigan March 8 unless he leaps ahead of his poll numbers there.

Will super PACs come to the rescue? Big donors, whose $100 million super PAC didn’t help Jeb Bush, don’t seem interested in de-constructing Donald Trump. Attacking him for political incorrectness and violations of conservative orthodoxy just seems to bolster his ap-peal. That leaves his remain-ing rivals to make the case for themselves.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examin-er, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise In-stitute, a Fox News Chan-nel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.)

Trump’s rivals must make case for themselves

Keeping in touch

State:Sen. Rita Potts ParksAlcorn, Tishomingo, Tippah counties662-287-6323 (H)662-415-4793 (cell)[email protected] Rep. Nick BainAlcorn County662-287-1620 (H)601-953-2994 (Capitol)[email protected] Rep. Lester “Bubba” CarpenterAlcorn, Tishomingo counties601-359-3374 (Capitol)662-427-8281 (H)[email protected] Rep. William Tracy ArnoldAlcorn (Rienzi area), Prentiss counties662-728-9951 (H)[email protected] state legislators can be reached via mail: c/o Capitol P.O. Box 1018Jackson, Miss. 39215 Federal:Offi ce of the late U.S. Rep. Alan Nunnelee202-225-4306 (Washington D.C.)Fax: 202-225-3549662-327-0748 (Columbus)Fax: 662-328-5982 U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran202-224-5054 (Washington D.C.)Fax: 202-224-9450601-965-4459 (Jackson)662-236-1018 (Oxford) Sen. Roger Wicker202- 224-6253 (Washington D.C.)Fax: 202-228-0378601-965-4644 (Jackson)Fax: 601-965-4007

Almighty God, grant that I may never be so discouraged that I feel my life has been spent. Help me to so live, that I may not fol-low into hopeless days, but look for the bright and beautiful in to-morrow. Forgive me for all that I have asked for and accepted through willful judgment, and make me more careful in selecting my needs. Amen.

“There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.” —Proverbs 14:12

Rich LowryNational

Review

Michael BaroneColumnist

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • 5

“The Opposite of Every-one” by Joshilyn Jackson

c.2016, William Mor-row $26.99 / $33.50 Can-ada 295 pages

You’ve always marched to the beat of a diff erent drummer.

When your friends wanted to do one thing, you were the lone voice of dissent. You rocked your own fashion, hair color, and make-up, never kow-towing to the crowd or following anyone else. But as in the new book “The Opposite of Everyone” by Joshilyn Jackson, you were never really alone.

Every month, Paula Vauss sent money to one of a series of P.O. Boxes. Every month, the check was cashed, so she knew her mother was alive, al-though Paula hadn’t seen Kai in years.

That wasn’t on purpose; Kai never stayed in one

place for long, and she told Paula more than once that she didn’t need visitors. So when the last check was returned, uncashed, Paula fi gured it was just another of her unconventional mother’s quirks.

For the fi rst ten years of Paula’s life, it had mostly been just the two of them. They’d moved a lot then, to a series of houses, often with a se-ries of boyfriends, none of whom lasted more than a year. What was constant, though, were Kai’s bedtime stories of Kali the goddess, Ganesh, and Hanuman. They were heroes to Paula then. She remembered every tale, word-for-word.

But when the adoles-cent Paula did something that still hurt to think about and Kai went to jail, everything changed between them. Kai wasn’t like her old self, and she never looked at Paula again. Paula wanted a

normal life, which she realized she wouldn’t get from her mother. She es-caped from Kai’s house as soon as she could.

Now she was every-thing her mother wasn’t, complete with a law de-gree, a great job, a fancy condo, and an alcoholic private-eye ex-lover-slash-coworker.

And then she saw the note.

Though Kai had written on the back of the check that she had cancer and her time was short, the story, she said, wasn’t done. It ended with Paula, she wrote, which made no sense - except that Paula knew her mother, and Kai held a few more sur-prises....

One of them, in a way, was this book.

I initially thought that “The Opposite of Every-one” was a mystery. It had all the elements: a hard-driven, sass-talking lawyer; a hard-drinking

PI; and a hard-living past for one of the characters who had secrets.

Ah, but no, author Joshilyn Jackson didn’t make a whodunit here. We know exactly who dun it, why, and how it resonated throughout the years, which is the round-about basis for a multi-level of story-threads and character fl aws. On that note, Jackson ’s heroine isn’t always heroic, but she’s smart enough to be refl ective and self-aware without navel-gazing, a propensity which directly allows Jackson to give this book a shimmering ending that’s as perfect as its middle.

Your book group has been looking for a book exactly like this: some-thing that’s realistic and spunky with a light dab of nasty and a plot-strand that’ll keep you tied fast to the story. For that, “The Opposite of Everyone” can’t be beat.

Novel delivers unique take on family dramaBY TERRI

SCHLICHENMEYERThe Bookworm Sez

kindergarten students and talked to them about what we do at the shel-ter and how they should properly care for cats and dogs,” said Doehner. “We had a great time.”

Doehner is also encour-aging families with chil-dren to bring their favor-ite book to the shelter to read to animals.

“People often don’t re-alize that dogs and pup-pies love to be read to,” she said. “They listen and enjoy the attention shown by any human.”

The director said Chil-dren’s Month will also in-clude weekend pet adop-tion specials.

“We currently have 265 adoptable animals includ-ing dogs, cats, puppies and kittens, all looking for a family to love,” she said.

The shelter is a no-kill, non-profi t organization on a mission to save the abused, neglected, aban-doned and injured ani-mals of Corinth and Al-corn County.

(For more information or to make a donation to shelter, contact 662-284-5800, email [email protected] or visit al-cornpets.com.)

SHELTER

CONTINUED FROM 1

My father’s Mississippi Delta farm was so remote that walking in any direc-tion brought one closer to civilization. Large drain-age canals crisscrossed the area, providing ideal habitat for creatures that would have been at home in the Jurassic Era: bull-frogs, catfi sh, moccasins, beavers, loggerhead tur-tles, fi sh eels, and alliga-tors.

My boyhood best friend and mentor, Jay-bird, told terrifying tales about the canals, hop-ing to keep us away from them. The old black man knew that if we got in trouble, we’d be too far out in the boondocks to get help in time. His stories about the canals’ alligators were the most frightening of all.

In one of those stories, he claimed that he and his pal Lucas were fi sh-ing in a canal’s sharp turn known as “No-Bot-tom Bend.” When Lu-cas’ line got hung and he waded out to untangle it, the surface erupted, and ridged, spiked lines fol-

lowing a giant, gaping, tooth-fi lled jaw, torpe-doed toward him. In a heartbeat Lucas disap-peared.

“You reckon that ga-tor is still alive?” we asked. Jaybird assured us that the monster male, whom he named Lucas in memory of his de-parted friend, still lurked in the murky depths of No-Bottom Bend and was not only alive, but also bigger and meaner than ever. Sensing that we couldn’t resist seeing for ourselves, he said, “I’m warning you boys — leave Lucas alone!”

Casting caution to the winds, my pals and I came up with an idea that was certain to lead to Melvin’s demise: We’d make a bomb.

First, we slipped into the farm shop and stole a can of calcium carbide, a compound that reacts with water and generates acetylene for use in cut-ting torches.

Next, we poured the carbide into a large glass jug, sealed watertight with a cork and weight-ed with bricks so that it

could be lowered to the bottom with a strong cord.

Once the bomb was resting on the bottom near Melvin’s lair, our plan called for run-ning the cord through a piece of iron with a hole drilled in it that would zip down the cord and burst the glass, causing an instant explosion. We couldn’t wait to drag the vanquished blood brute of the deep to Jaybird’s doorstep.

A large culvert provid-ed an ideal base of opera-tions. From it we lowered the jug to the bottom, ran the cord through the hole in the iron, and dropped it.

Following an earth-shaking seismic dooms-day rumble, a geyser the size of Old Faithful erupt-ed skyward, throwing fi sh, snakes, turtles, and mud in every direction.

Certain that everyone at the farm headquar-ters heard the blast and would come to investi-gate, we fl ed the scene. Later that day, we went back to the bend, but found no trace of Melvin.

When we told Jaybird what we’d done, he said, “I heard that racket and fi ggered y’all was up to no good. Now that mean man-killer is madder than ever, and will be la-yin’ for y’all. I’m warning you boys — leave Lucas alone!”

Oxford resident, Ole Miss alumnus, Army veteran, and retired Mississippi Delta cot-ton farmer Jimmy Reed ( j immyceci [email protected]) is a newspa-per columnist, author, and college teacher. His latest collection of short stories is available via squarebooks.com (662-236-2262).

Some things are better left aloneBY JIMMY C. REED

Columnist

JACKSON — A federal lawsuit against Missis-sippi Gov. Phil Bryant seeks to eliminate the na-tion’s last state fl ag with the Confederate battle emblem.

In the suit filed Mon-day, attorney Carlos Moore says the flag is “state-sanctioned hate speech” that makes him and other African-Americans fear for their lives. He is asking a judge to remove the flag and declare it unconsti-tutional.

Bryant says voters should decide whether to

keep the fl ag used since 1894.

The lawsuit comes less than a week after Mis-sissippi legislators killed several bills that would have either removed the Confederate emblem from the fl ag or withheld state money from schools and local governments that refuse to fl y the cur-rent banner.

Confederate symbols have been debated since the slayings of black worshippers at a South Carolina church in June. The suspect had posed for photos with the rebel fl ag.

Confederate-themed flag tested in lawsuit

The Associated Press

Northside Church of Christ3127 Harper Rd. • Corinth, Mississippi 38834

415-3558 • Minister - Lennis NowellSunday Worship ............ 9:45 am, 10:30 am, 5:00 pmWednesday Worship ...................................... 6:00 pm

LORD, CLOTHE ME IN YOUR TRUTH Truth is defi ned as that which is real, genuine, certain, valid, and

factual. Truth is actuality, that which can be trusted because it is reality. In the Bible, truth is spoken of as an attribute of God. Twice Isaiah tells us that God is the God of truth, “So that he who blesses himself in the earth Shall bless himself in the God of truth...” (Isaiah 65:16). Titus 1:2, in speaking of our hope, describes it as the “hope of eternal life which God, who cannot lie, promised before time began...”, contending with these words that God cannot lie. So, that which is revealed by God, inspired by God, and breathed by God is truth and can be trusted as genuine and valid. Note some truths about truth:

Truth Can Be KnownJesus said, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free”

(John 8:32). There is a truth we can know! His truth is found in Scripture, the inspired Word of God. John wrote, “The Word became fl esh and made His dwelling among us. We have seen His glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14). Jesus plainly stated that He was the truth in John 14:6: “I am the way and the truth and the life.” Do we know truth? Are we searching for truth, which is both the written and living Word?

Truth Obeyed Sanctifi esJesus prayed, “Sanctify them by the truth; Your word is truth” (John

17:17). As we respond to the guidance of the Spirit, we are cleansed by truth. Paul tells us as much in Ephesians 5: “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her to make her holy, cleansing her by the washing with water through the Word, and to present her to Himself as a radiant church, without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless” (Ephesians 5:25-27). You see, guilt has no place in the life of God’s children or God’s church, because obedience of truth sanctifi es.

Truth Sets Us Free and ApartWhat is sanctifi cation? It is being freed from sin and the eternal

consequences of sin. Sanctifi cation sets us free and sets us apart. When we are washed with water by the Word, we are raised to walk in a newness of life (Romans 6:4). Paul goes on to say that we become instruments of righteousness, living sacrifi ces (verse 13). Peter says we are a holy nation, a royal priesthood, a people belonging to God (1 Peter 2:9). As we allow the Spirit of truth to lead us, as we keep in step with Him, we produce His fruit: “love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. Against such there is no law. And those who are Christ’s have crucifi ed the fl esh with its passions and desires. If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit. Let us not become conceited, provoking one another, envying one another. (Galatians 5:22-26). Indeed, His fruit sets us apart from the world. Right?

Truth Must Be Contended ForJude 1:3 instructs us to “contend for the faith that was once for all

entrusted to the saints.” The faith refers to that body of truth once delivered. This truth is not only to be practiced and proclaimed, it is to be defended. Why? Because it is the good news of the Gospel that saves. In Colossians 1:5 Paul speaks of “the faith and love that spring from the hope that is stored up for you in heaven and that you have already heard about in the Word of truth, the Gospel.” Indeed, we must contend for the faith, stand up for truth, fi ght the good fi ght, keep the faith - because we are the pillar and ground of the truth.

What is truth? What is our relationship to truth? Do we know it? Do we know him? Are we being led by His Spirit? Are we bearing His fruit? Are we obeying and proclaiming truth? Are we walking in the light of truth? Have we been clothed with His truth? I pray that we are. “So if the Sons sets you free....You will be free indeed” (John 8:36). Indeed! Heb. 5:8-9. Read Your Bible- Welcome.

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2016 Medical Directory

6 • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Jerry BordenIUKA — Funeral services for Jerry

Borden, 67, are set for 11 a.m. today at Ludlam Funeral Home Chapel with burial in New Bethel Cemetery.

Mr. Borden died Saturday, Feb. 27, 2016.

Survivors include his wife, Judy Bor-den of Iuka; six sons, John Maxwell of Iuka, Steve Maxwell of Iuka, Gary Max-well of Iuka, Jerry Borden and wife Re-gina of Alabama, Clint Sumonja of Illi-nois and Randy Sumonja and wife Kim of Iuka; fi ve daughters, Linda McGee of Iuka, Rhonda Guenther and husband Jimmy of Alabama, Sandra Heaps and husband Jimmy of Alabama, Heather Arnold of Iuka and Jenny Williamson and husband Boyce Iuka; one brother, Jimmie Borden of Iuka; one sister, Mar-tha McBee and husband Jackie of Iuka; 21 grandchildren; and 21 great-grand-children.

He was preceded in death by his par-ents, Aaron and Ruby Borden; fi rst wife,

Ollie Borden; son, Ricky Cornelison; daughter, Lisa Carlisle; granddaughter, Brandi Borden; brothers, Bobby Borden and Aaron Borden; and grandparents, Eddie and Elzie Borden and Lee and Minnie Green.

Bro. Tim Ryan will offi ciate.Visitation was Monday at the funeral

home.

Alfred MartinIUKA — Funeral services for Alfred

Martin, 88, are set for 1 p.m. today at Cutshall Funeral Home with burial in Snowdown Cemetery.

Mr. Martin died Saturday, Feb. 27, 2016, at Southern Magnolia Estates in Iuka.

He was an U.S. Army veteran and member of Snowdown United Method-ist Church. He loved working on com-puters and enjoyed hunting and fi shing in years past.

Survivors include two sisters, Mary Worsham (Gene) of Iuka and Fran Weaver (Max) of Fayetteville, Tenn.;

two grandsons; and fi ve great-grand-children.

He was preceded in death by his par-ents, Rufus F. and Anna Cleo Daniel Martin; his son, Ronald A. Martin; and his sister, Edith Busby.

Bro. Jimmy Daniel will offi ciate.Visitation is 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. today.An online guestbook can be accessed

at www.cutshallfuneralhome.com.

Nellie ReddellFuneral services for Nellie Fay Hayes

Reddell, 76, of Corinth are set for 2 p.m. Wednesday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Wheeler Grove Baptist Church Cem-etery.

Mrs. Reddell died Saturday, Feb. 27, 2016 at MS Care Center.

Born May 31, 1939, she was a seam-stress and member of Wheeler Grove Baptist Church.

Survivors include her husband of 35 years, Kenneth Reddell of Corinth; sons,

Ronny Reddell of Joplin, Mo. and Timmy Reddell of Corinth; six grandchildren, James Reddell (Dana), Todd Reddell (Kayla), Charles “Tae” Reddell (Jennifer), Sabra Cade Reddell, Ronny Wade Reddell and Crystal Clark; 8 great-grandchildren; and a sister, Imajene Morelock (Donnie “Chick”) of Corinth.

She was preceded in death by a son, Ricky Reddell, her parents, Pellham G. Hayes and Mary Elizabeth Phillips Hayes; broth-ers, George Hayes and Richard Hayes; and sisters, Fannybell Spencer, Francis Eaton, Dimple Smith, Leann Reynolds, Mildred Baggett and Irene Essary.

Bro. Warren Jones and Bro. Shane Evetts will offi ciate.

Visitation is noon until service time Wednesday.

Reddell

VALDOSTA, Ga. — On the eve of Super Tues-day’s crucial primaries, a sharp new divide erupt-ed between Republicans who pledge to fall in line behind Donald Trump if he wins their party’s nom-ination and others who insist they can never back the bombastic billionaire.

The fi ssure could have major implications be-yond the primaries, ex-posing the looming chal-lenges in uniting the party after the election, no mat-ter who wins.

Nebraska’s Ben Sasse, a rising star among conser-vatives, became the fi rst current senator to pub-licly raise the prospect of backing a third party option if Trump clinches the nomination. In a let-ter posted on Facebook late Sunday, Sasse urged Republicans to consider whether a party led by Trump would still repre-

sent their interests.“If our party is no lon-

ger working for the things we believe in — like de-fending the sanctity of life, stopping Obamacare, protecting the Second Amendment, etc. — then people of good conscience should stop supporting that party until it is re-formed,” he wrote.

The Associated Press asked Republican sena-tors and governors across the country if they would support Trump if he se-cured the nomination. Just under half of those who responded would not commit to backing him, foreshadowing a poten-tially extraordinary break this fall.

“I am increasingly concerned by Donald Trump’s statements and behavior, and I have se-rious concerns about his ability to win the general election and provide pres-idential leadership,” Indi-

ana Sen. Dan Coats said in a statement to AP.

The concern among Republican leaders ap-peared to grow in light of Trump’s refusal to im-mediately disavow former Ku Klux Klan leader Da-vid Duke’s support.

Mitt Romney, the par-ty’s 2012 nominee, called that “disqualifying.” And South Carolina Gov. Nik-ki Haley, campaigning in Atlanta alongside Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, said she would “not stop fi ght-ing a man who refuses to disavow the KKK.”

Trump said he had not understood the inter-viewer who fi rst raised the question about Duke, and he did later repudiate him. “How many times do I have to continue to dis-avow people?” he said.

Several high-profi le Republicans and conser-vative writers have em-braced an anti-Trump social media campaign,

using the Twitter hashtag “NeverTrump.”

Trump has won three of four early primary con-tests, roiling a party that had assumed his populist appeal with voters would fi zzle. Instead, he’s only grown stronger and ap-pears to be in command-ing position heading into Super Tuesday, the big-gest single-day delegate haul of the year.

Tensions boiled over during Trump’s rally Monday in Radford, Vir-ginia, where he was re-peatedly disrupted by demonstrators, includ-ing 20 or more chanting “Black lives matter.” At another point, he asked a protester, “Are you from Mexico?” after he was in-terrupted during remarks about immigration. He ordered several people to be removed, then cast himself as a unifying po-litical force.

“Believe it or not, we’re

going to unify this coun-try,” he said.

If Trump sweeps most of the states up for grabs Tuesday, he could amass a delegate lead that would be diffi cult for any rival to overcome. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is banking on a win in his home state to keep him in the race, while Ru-bio wants to stay close in the delegate count until the primary hits his home state of Florida on March 15.

Meanwhile, Democrat-ic front-runner Hillary Clinton is solidifying her lead. Like Trump, Clin-ton could begin putting her party’s nomination out of reach for rival Ber-nie Sanders with a strong showing on Super Tues-day.

As Trump has rolled through the early voting states, he’s received en-thusiastic endorsements from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and from

Alabama Sen. Jeff Ses-sions, one of the most vocal opponents of immi-gration -law changes on Capitol Hill. Several other party offi cials have said they would back the real estate mogul if he does become the nominee, though some say their support would be reluc-tant.

“I’m a Republican and I will support the nomi-nee,” Alabama Gov. Rob-ert Bentley said Monday. “I do not think he is our best nominee, but I will support the nominee.”

Party leaders are partic-ularly worried about the ripple eff ect of a Trump nomination on other races. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson urged Re-publicans to remember that their White House pick also impacts “the Senate and whether we’re going to continue to elect Republican governors across the country.”

GOP badly divided heading into Super TuesdayThe Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — A former hospital worker is expected to plead guilty in the high-profi le slayings of two college students in Virginia, a prosecutor said Monday.

Albemarle County Com-monwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci announced the plea agreements in Jesse LeRoy Matthew

Jr.’s cases in a brief news release. Matthew is due in Albemarle County Cir-cuit Court on Wednesday. Details of the agreement were withheld “in the in-terest of protecting the in-tegrity of the judicial pro-cess,” Tracci wrote.

Matthew is charged with murder in the deaths of 18-year-old Hannah Graham and 20-year-old Morgan Harrington. Without the plea agree-ment, he could have faced the death penalty in the Graham case had he been convicted at trial. He’s al-ready serving life in pris-on for a sexual assault in Fairfax County.

Matthew’s attorney, public capital defender Douglas Ramseur, de-clined to comment.

Morgan’s mother, Gil Harrington, said she did not object to taking the death penalty off the ta-ble. She said the commu-nity will benefi t “because a vicious predator has been removed from their midst.”

She said that “we’re still without our daughter, so it’s not a great celebra-tion,” but added that re-solving the case will allow the family to “move for-ward and do more good in Morgan’s memory.”

Following her daugh-

ter’s disappearance, Gil Harrington formed a non-profi t organization, Help Save the Next Girl, to combat violence against women and provide out-reach to victims.

Hannah’s father, John Graham, said he would have no comment until after Wednesday’s hear-ing.

Matthew’s trial in the Graham slaying had been set for this summer, with the Harrington case fol-lowing in the fall.

Graham’s September 2014 disappearance came amid rising national con-cern about sexual assaults and other crimes around universities. A massive search ended when a team from a Richmond-area sheriff ’s offi ce found her body fi ve weeks later on abandoned property in Albemarle County, about 12 miles from the Char-lottesville campus and 6 miles from a hayfi eld where Harrington’s re-mains had been found in January 2010.

Harrington had van-ished while attending a Metallica concert at the University of Virginia in 2009. Authorities have not said exactly how ei-ther student died.

Graham disappeared after a night out with friends in Charlottesville. In surveillance video, she can be seen walking un-steadily and running at times before crossing a seven-block strip of bars, restaurants and shops. Another video captured her leaving a restaurant with Matthew, his arm around her. He was the last person seen with Graham, according to au-thorities.

After police named Matthew a person of in-terest in Graham’s disap-pearance, he fl ed and was later apprehended on a beach in southeast Texas.

Man to plead guilty to students’ slayingsThe Associated Press

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www.magnoliaplasticsurgery.org

State/NationDaily Corinthian • 7Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Across the Nation Across the State

Another Dem added to presidential ballot

JACKSON — Missis-sippi’s top elections official says the state is spending about $15,000 to follow a state Su-preme Court order and add another Democratic candidate to the March 8 presidential primary ballot.

Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann says Monday that counties could face additional costs totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Justices on Thursday ordered Hosemann to list Chicago business-man Willie Wilson on the primary ballot after the state Democratic Party had initially rejected Wil-son’s petition to run.

Other Democrats on the Mississippi ballot are Hillary Clinton, Roque ‘Rocky’ De La Fuente, Martin O’Malley and Ber-nie Sanders. The ballot was set before O’Malley dropped out.

Most counties vote electronically, but some use paper ballots.

 All Vicksburg police to get cameras soon

VICKSBURG — Vicks-burg police officers will soon be 100 percent equipped with body cam-eras. The cameras are making their way into dai-ly use by all uniformed officers.

The Vicksburg Post reports the department is assigning cameras to officers about seven at a time each week and started doing so about three weeks ago.

The idea is to imple-ment the cameras over time to avoid mass tech-nical problems and to get each officer properly trained.

Police Chief Walter Armstrong says the de-partment has about 15 more cameras left to distribute.

He says police ve-hicles have been armed with dashboard cameras for years, but the body cameras give insight into every encounter the officers have in any loca-tion.

 New eatery replaces cafe following blaze

SUMMIT — Following the devastating fire that destroyed the landmark Dixie Springs Cafe, there are plans for the restau-

rant to return by the end of the year with a new owner who’s the great-grandson of the original proprietor.

The Enterprise-Journal reports that Edward “Ted” Malta is buying the property from former own-ers Joe and Kristine Kim-mel and plans to open the restaurant by this year’s holiday season.

The new restaurant will be known as The Mal-lard, and an attached bar will be called Mallardbar.

The Dixie Springs Cafe burned to the ground in a massive December fire.

The new restaurant will be built around an old Lincoln County church that Malta bought with the intention of renovat-ing. He wants the church to serve as both the dining area and architec-tural centerpiece.

“We’re going to try to do as much as we can so it’ll have the same nostalgic feel of the place, but being new construction, that’s go-ing to be kind of tricky,” Malta said. “That’s why I like to incorporate the old chapel building in there. That’s going to give it an old feeling right off the bat.”

Malta said he also will have two cabins for nightly rentals. They will be placed next to the courtyard, and his cabin on the lake also will be available for rent.

Besides the restau-rant, Malta said he wants to open the estab-lishment up for special events, such as ban-quets, parties, wedding receptions and rehearsal dinners.

 Justices won’t undo student suspension

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is staying

out of an interesting free speech debate about the power of school officials to discipline students for things they write or say away from school.

The justices on Mon-day left in place the sus-pension of a Mississippi high school student who posted a rap song online that criticized two coach-es over allegations they behaved inappropriately toward female students.

Student Taylor Bell recorded the song at a professional studio over winter break and then posted it on his Face-book page in February 2011.

Bell sued after Itawam-ba Agricultural High School in Fulton, Mis-sissippi, suspended him for seven days. Lower courts upheld the sus-pension, saying it made no difference where Bell made and distributed the song.

The case is Bell v. Itawamba School Board, 15-666.

 Electoral candidate fees could increase

JACKSON — The Mis-sissippi Senate has ap-proved a fee increase for candidates running for political offices.

SB 2167 would require independent candidates pay filing fees to run in an election and increase the qualifying fees that party candidates pay to run for certain offices. The bill passed 44-7 Monday.

Candidates for gover-nor would pay $1,000, up from the current $500; and candidates for a state senate or rep-resentative seat would pay $250, up from the current $15.

The bill goes to the House for debate.

Associated Press

North Carolina cop fatally shoots man

RALEIGH, N.C. — A police officer fatally shot a man whom he was trying to arrest on drug charges Monday, the Raleigh police chief said.

The officer was chas-ing the man on foot and shot him at some point during the early-afternoon pursuit, Po-lice Chief Cassandra Deck-Brown told a news conference at City Hall. She said a firearm was found near the man’s body, but did not say whether it was his. She said the man was wanted on a felony drug charge. Deck-Brown declined to provide any other details about the circumstances of the shooting pending a customary investigation by the state Bureau of Investigation.

Earlier, local televi-sion coverage showed police forming a line in the street near the downtown neighborhood where the shooting took place as a number of people gathered at the scene behind yellow crime-scene tape and began chanting “No jus-tice, no peace!”

The chant has been used repeatedly across the nation in recent years to protest the deaths of black men following encounters with law enforcement officers. Deck-Brown did not reveal the man’s race.

Judith Lewis, a woman who described herself as a community activist who has lived in the area for years, said a lot of drug activity takes place in the neighborhood at night. She blamed it on buyers coming in from elsewhere.

 No murder charge in abortion attempt

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — A Tennessee woman accused of try-ing to end her pregnan-cy with a coat hanger will not face attempted murder charges, her at-torney said Monday.

Anna Yocca was charged with attempted first-degree murder when she was arrested in Murfreesboro in De-cember.

According to police, Yocca filled a bathtub with water and at-

tempted to self-abort last September. After she began bleeding, her boyfriend took her to a hospital where doctors delivered a 24-week-old, 1.5-pound boy. Doctors said the child will need medical support for the rest of his life because of the injuries he sus-tained. He is in state custody.

Public Defender Ger-ald Melton had asked the judge to dismiss the charge against Yocca, arguing that state law doesn’t allow a preg-nant woman to be charged with murdering her own fetus.

In court on Monday, Melton said the pros-ecutor in the case has agreed to bring a new indictment against Yocca before the grand jury next week. Melton told reporters outside the courtroom he antici-pates the new charge will be aggravated as-sault.

“We’re now in more realistic legal territory,” Melton said.

Assistant District At-torney General Hugh Ammerman said he does not want to com-ment on the charges until after the grand jury meeting.

Melton said Yocca will have a psychiatric evaluation.

She is currently being held on a $200,000 bond, but he said the new indictment should carry a substantially lower bond.

 Authorities identify man shot by officer

ASHVILLE, Ala. — Au-thorities have identified a man who was fatally shot by a police officer in Alabama.

Alabama Law Enforce-ment Agency spokes-man Senior Trooper Chuck Daniel says the shooting occurred Sunday evening and in-volved an Ashville police officer.

St. Clair County Dep-uty Coroner Jeremiah Gilreath on Monday identified the man as 41-year-old Nathan Gris-som of Ashville. Gilreath says Grissom is white.

Neither police nor the state Bureau of Inves-tigation would release any details about the officer.

Assistant Ashville Police Chief Wendy Brechin said in a state-ment that Grissom was

armed and violated a protection-from-abuse order his wife had filed.

Daniel says the state Bureau of Investigation will turn over its findings to the St. Clair District Attorney’s Office.

 Fired plant worker made bomb threats

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Authorities say a fired water plant worker is under arrest after he set his car on fire outside one plant and made a bomb threat against another.

West Palm Beach spokesman Elliot Cohen said during a news con-ference that 52-year-old Douglas Ellington drove his car to the city’s water treatment plant Monday and set it on fire. Cohen says Elling-ton told firefighters the car contained a bomb, so they backed off. No bomb was found.

Cohen says Elling-ton also made a false bomb threat against the nearby Riviera Beach treatment plant.

He added that Elling-ton was fired from West Palm Beach in 2011 and from Riviera Beach this year, and has been arrested several times.

Jail records show he’s been arrested three times since August for trespassing and failure to leave.

 Marriage proposals rewarded at tavern

PHILADELPHIA — A historic Philadelphia tavern is offering some Leap Day incentives to women looking to settle down.

KYW-TV reports Mc-Gillin’s Olde Ale House is trotting out a Leap Day tradition encourag-ing women to propose to men. According to Irish folklore, February 29 was the one day of the year where women could pop the question to men. Legend has it that St. Brigid had com-plained to St. Patrick about how unfair it was for women to wait for men to propose, and they brokered the Leap Day deal.

McGillin’s is offering $100 gift cards to the first five women who propose to their man at the bar on Monday.

Owner Christopher Mullins says they de-cided to embrace the legend and the day.

Associated Press

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

to Law Professionals

Odom and Allred, P.A.Attorneys at Law

404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS _________________________________________

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

___________________________________________

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Serving NortheastMississippi’s legal needs...

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at 662-287-6111 to advertise

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GREG MEYERGREG MEYERAttorney At LawAttorney At Law

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Business8 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, March 1, 2016

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

18,351.36 15,370.33 Dow Industrials 16,516.50 -123.47 -.74 -5.21 -9.69 9,214.77 6,403.31 Dow Transportation 7,345.03 -60.00 -.81 -2.18 -19.31 637.93 539.96 Dow Utilities 620.70 +1.67 +.27 +7.42 +6.43 11,254.87 8,937.99 NYSE Composite 9,559.53 -60.26 -.63 -5.76 -13.90 5,231.94 4,209.76 Nasdaq Composite 4,557.95 -32.52 -.71 -8.98 -8.99 2,134.72 1,810.10 S&P 500 1,932.23 -15.82 -.81 -5.47 -8.74 1,551.28 1,215.14 S&P MidCap 1,334.20 -6.08 -.45 -4.60 -12.08 22,537.15 18,462.43 Wilshire 5000 19,864.02 -132.50 -.66 -6.16 -11.11 1,296.00 943.09 Russell 2000 1,033.90 -3.28 -.32 -8.98 -16.80

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.64f 10 59.52 -.65 -.6AT&T Inc 1.92f 16 36.95 -.18 +7.4AerojetR ... ... 15.53 -.13 -.8AirProd 3.24 21 132.47 -1.17 +1.8AlliantEgy 2.35f 19 67.95 -.16 +8.8AEP 2.24f 20 61.75 +.28 +6.0AmeriBrgn 1.36f 61 86.62 -.92 -16.5ATMOS 1.68f 22 69.41 -.74 +10.1BB&T Cp 1.08 12 32.16 -1.14 -14.9BP PLC 2.40a ... 29.09 +.09 -6.9BcpSouth .40f 14 19.92 -.43 -17.0Caterpillar 3.08 13 67.70 +.83 -.4Chevron 4.28 34 83.44 -.91 -7.2CocaCola 1.40f 24 43.13 -.01 +.4Comcast 1.10f 18 57.73 -.18 +2.8CrackerB 4.40a 21 148.05 -.08 +16.7Deere 2.40 15 80.18 +.71 +5.1Dillards .28f 12 83.69 -1.60 +27.4Dover 1.68 14 60.78 -.33 -.9EnPro .84f ... 51.88 ... +18.3FordM .60a 7 12.51 +.04 -11.2FredsInc .24 ... 14.29 -.14 -12.7FullerHB .52 22 38.49 +.04 +5.5GenElec .92 ... 29.14 -.26 -6.5Goodyear .28 9 30.12 -.13 -7.8HonwllIntl 2.38f 17 101.35 -1.68 -2.1Intel 1.04f 13 29.59 -.21 -14.1Jabil .32 11 20.85 +.01 -10.5KimbClk 3.68f 37 130.30 -1.00 +2.4Kroger s .42f 20 39.91 +.46 -4.6Lowes 1.12 21 67.53 -1.57 -11.2McDnlds 3.56f 24 117.19 +.13 -.8

OldNBcp .52f 11 11.16 -.22 -17.7

Penney ... ... 10.20 +.61 +53.2

PennyMac 1.88 11 13.16 +.07 -13.8

PepsiCo 2.81 27 97.82 -.54 -2.1

PilgrimsP 5.77e 10 24.45 +.74 +10.7

RegionsFn .24 11 7.52 -.23 -21.7

SbdCp 3.00 18 2925.00 +86.00 +1.0

SearsHldgs ... ... 17.47 -.79 -15.0

Sherwin 3.36f 24 270.50 -2.53 +4.2

SiriusXM ... 37 3.72 +.03 -8.6

SouthnCo 2.17 17 48.18 -.01 +3.0

SPDR Fncl .46e ... 21.09 -.23 -11.5

Torchmark .54 13 51.22 -.95 -10.2

Total SA 2.71e ... 44.71 ... -.5

US Bancrp 1.02 12 38.52 -.77 -9.7

WalMart 2.00f 14 66.34 -.17 +8.2

WellsFargo 1.50 11 46.92 -1.15 -13.7

Wendys Co .24 25 9.37 -.01 -13.0

WestlkChm .73 9 43.12 -.85 -20.6

WestRock n 1.50 ... 33.77 +.21 -26.0

Weyerhsr 1.24 23 25.98 +.39 -13.3

Xerox .31f 20 9.61 -.05 -9.6

YRC Wwde ... ... 8.05 -.38 -43.2

Yahoo ... ... 31.79 +.42 -4.4

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 8 9.80 -.07AK Steel dd 2.86 +.12AMAG Ph 33 26.28 -.73API Tech dd 1.95 +.94AT&T Inc 16 36.95 -.18AbbottLab 13 38.74 -.78AbbVie 16 54.61 -1.39AberFitc 24 29.05 +.57ActivsBliz 26 31.67 -.22AMD dd 2.14 +.07AerCap 6 35.73 +.24AkamaiT 27 53.97 -1.27Alcoa 15 8.93 +.06Alibaba 27 68.81 +1.90AllyFincl dd 17.58 +.02AlpAlerMLP q 10.12 +.18Altria 23 61.57 +.03Amazon cc 552.52 -2.71Ambev ... 4.34 -.03AmAirlines 5 41.00 +.13ACapAgy 32 18.07 -.12AEagleOut 15 15.26 +.11AmExp 11 55.58 +.20AHm4Rent dd 14.00 -.21AmIntlGrp 38 50.20 -.89AmTower 68 92.20 +2.19Amgen 15 142.28 -5.32Anadarko dd 37.95 -.07AnglogldA ... 13.02 +.87Annaly cc 10.13 -.05AnteroRes 14 22.85 -1.28Anthem 13 130.69 -1.81Apache dd 38.28 -1.19Apple Inc 10 96.69 -.22ApldMatl 17 18.87 -.13ArcelorMit dd 3.80 +.27ArchDan 15 34.96 +.17AriadP dd 5.46 +.15AscenaRtl dd 8.45 +.15AstraZen s 15 28.67 -.70Atmel ... 8.08 -.01ATMOS 22 69.41 -.74AtwoodOcn 1 6.88 +.41AvisBudg 8 25.64 +.92Avon dd 3.81 +.08BB&T Cp 12 32.16 -1.14BP PLC dd 29.09 +.09Baidu 31 173.42 -.38BakrHu dd 42.87 -1.21BcoBrad s ... 5.30 +.17BcoSantSA ... 3.99 +.02BkofAm 9 12.52 -.18BkNYMel 12 35.39 -.73Barclay ... 9.44 +.13B iPVixST q 24.88 +.38BarrickG 48 13.89 +.36Baxalta n ... 38.52 -.67Baxter s 22 39.51 +.08BerkH B 15 134.17 +2.25BestBuy 13 32.39 -.06BlackBerry dd 7.81 +.35Blackstone 14 25.97 +.36BlueErth h dd .12 -.10Boeing 16 118.18 +.02BonanzaCE dd 1.86 +.05BostonSci 89 16.98 -.23BrMySq 44 61.93 -.32BroadcLtd 35 133.97 +.86BrcdeCm 12 9.93 C&J Engy dd 1.03 +.03CBS B 15 48.38 +.08CF Inds s 10 36.46 +1.51CSX 12 24.14 -.17CVS Health 20 97.17 -.49CabotO&G cc 20.13 -.31CalifRescs dd .56 +.07CallonPet dd 6.38 +.32Calpine 13 12.56 +.19CdnNRs gs ... 20.86 +.58CapOne 9 65.73 -1.47Carlisle 19 90.16 -.28Carnival 21 47.96 -.38Caterpillar 13 67.70 +.83Celgene 41 100.83 -2.54CelldexTh dd 6.80 -.82Cemex ... 5.54 +.10Cemig pf ... 1.50 +.05CenterPnt dd 18.63 +.10CentAl dd 7.15 +.38CntryLink 19 30.59 +.42CheniereEn dd 35.75 +.08ChesEng dd 2.61 -.09Chevron 34 83.44 -.91Cisco 13 26.18 -.23Citigroup 9 38.85 -.65CitizFincl 12 19.23 -.51CliffsNRs dd 2.16 +.34Coach 27 38.94 +.37CobaltIEn dd 2.66 +.07CocaCola 24 43.13 -.01Coeur dd 3.86 +.31CogentC cc 36.70 -.20CognizTch 22 56.98 -.06ColgPalm 24 65.64 -.64Comcast 18 57.73 -.18ConAgra 22 42.06 -.02ConocoPhil cc 33.83 -.29ConsolEngy dd 8.63 +.79ContlRescs dd 23.18 +.64Corning 16 18.30 -.01CSVLgNG rs q .76 -.13CSVLgCrd rs q 1.78 +.13CSVInvNG q 28.90 +3.88CSVelIVST q 18.84 -.37CSVixSh rs q 8.77 +.26Ctrip.com s 18 40.92 -.87CypSemi ... 7.98 +.12DR Horton 13 26.72 -.45Danaher 18 89.27 +.20DeltaAir 9 48.24 +.38DenburyR dd 1.28 +.09Dentsply 35 60.96 +.29DevonE dd 19.68 -.61DirSPBear q 19.01 +.49DxNGBll rs q 1.68 -.09DxGBull rs q 58.04 +5.46DxFnBull s q 20.18 -.63DxBiotBull q 5.88 -.50DirDGldBr q 4.20 -.51DrxSCBull q 46.63 -.59DirxEnBull q 18.03 -.51DiscCmA 16 25.00 -.08Disney 17 95.52 +.21DollarGen 19 74.25 -1.77DollarTree 66 80.25 -1.38DomRescs 20 69.92 -.10DowChm 12 48.61 -.13DryShips h dd .11 +.01DuPont 21 60.87 -.64DukeEngy 17 74.28 +.25DukeRlty 38 20.68 -.12Dynegy cc 10.08 +.30

E-F-G-HE-Trade 26 23.46 -.78eBay s 16 23.80 -.38EMC Cp 20 26.13 +.08EOG Rescs ... 64.74 -2.76Eaton 13 56.71 -.56ElectArts 17 64.24 -.21EliLilly 26 72.00 -1.60EmersonEl 13 48.83 -.55EmpDist 25 32.72 -.04EnCana g dd 4.29 +.34Endo Intl dd 41.81 -11.13Energen dd 26.48 -.29EgyTrEq s 8 7.00 +.19EngyTsfr 83 26.67 +.05ENSCO dd 8.67 +.26EntProdPt 18 23.37 +.34Etsy n dd 7.94 +.29ExactSci h dd 5.03 -.67ExcoRes dd 1.05 +.06Exelixis dd 3.64 -.21Exelon 12 31.49 -.24ExpScripts 20 70.38 -.95ExxonMbl 21 80.15 -1.60FMC Tech 13 24.53 Facebook 70 106.92 -1.00FedExCp 36 136.88 -.50FedMogul dd 7.26 +2.28FiatChrys ... 6.85 +.15FifthThird 9 15.26 -.42FireEye dd 16.94 +.48FstData n ... 12.50 -.42FstHorizon 14 12.02 -.45FirstEngy 13 33.47 +.65Fitbit n 14 12.23 +.08Flextrn 12 10.86 +.04FootLockr 17 62.50 -1.64FordM 7 12.51 +.04ForestCA 15 18.65 -.27

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 1186015 12.52 -.18SunEdison 655869 1.98 -.28SiriusXM 437515 3.72 +.03QEP Res 418918 9.76 -1.00FrptMcM 409563 7.63 +.20ChesEng 406302 2.61 -.09WhitingPet 385660 4.01 +.13Penney 384639 10.20 +.61MarathnO 349695 8.21 +.18Pfizer 321028 29.67 -.56

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,626Declined 1,474Unchanged 84

Total issues 3,184New Highs 43New Lows 25

NASDAQ DIARYAdvanced 1,279Declined 1,527Unchanged 162

Total issues 2,968New Highs 36New Lows 44

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

FedMogul 7.26 +2.28 +45.8ScorpBlk rs 3.15 +.79 +33.5AldeyraTh 4.90 +1.17 +31.3ResoluteF 5.13 +1.10 +27.3TerraFm n 3.17 +.63 +24.8Itus Cp rs 2.32 +.44 +23.4SupDrillg 2.00 +.36 +22.0Enphase 2.33 +.41 +21.4ClayEng 14.63 +2.41 +19.7CliffsNRs 2.16 +.34 +18.7

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

OcwenFn 3.79 -2.36 -38.4Altisrce n 26.76 -7.65 -22.2FedSignl 11.86 -3.26 -21.6UtdNtrlF 30.86 -8.39 -21.4Endo Intl 41.81 -11.13 -21.0ValeantPh 65.80 -14.85 -18.4PhilLD 38.69 -7.75 -16.7ParPetrol 19.70 -3.92 -16.6HernTher h 15.88 -2.85 -15.2XteraCm n 2.76 -.49 -15.1

AMGYacktmanSvc d20.50 -0.07 -1.8AQRMaFtStrI 10.63 +0.03 +4.4Advisors’ Inner CrclEGrthIns 19.86 -0.15 -8.6American BeaconLgCpVlIs 22.65 -0.21 -7.4SmCapInst 21.22 -0.09 -5.5American CenturyEqIncInv 8.00 -0.04 +0.5InvGrInv 26.18 -0.21 -6.7UltraInv 32.32 -0.23 -7.7ValueInv 7.26 -0.07 -4.3American FundsAMCAPA m 24.47 -0.16 -5.7AmBalA m 23.24 -0.07 -2.5BondA m 12.75 +0.01 +1.6CapIncBuA m 54.93 -0.16 -1.6CapWldBdA m19.32 +0.06 +2.2CpWldGrIA m 40.60 -0.17 -6.4EurPacGrA m 41.36 -0.03 -8.8FnInvA m 47.78 -0.30 -5.8GlbBalA m 27.58 -0.02 -2.2GrthAmA m 37.79 -0.26 -8.5HiIncA m 9.11 +0.04 -1.5IncAmerA m 19.76 -0.05 -2.3IntBdAmA m 13.55 +0.01 +1.0IntlGrInA m 26.37 -0.04 -7.0InvCoAmA m 32.17 -0.21 -3.6MutualA m 32.96 -0.26 -2.6NewEconA m 32.67 -0.15 -9.1NewPerspA m 32.99 -0.14 -8.4NwWrldA m 46.29 +0.05 -7.4SmCpWldA m 39.45 -0.05 -9.6TaxEBdAmA m13.16 ... +1.0WAMutInvA m 36.82 -0.28 -4.2ArtisanIntl 26.24 -0.13 -8.5IntlI 26.40 -0.13 -8.5IntlVal 29.83 -0.13 -5.9MidCapI 37.33 -0.33 -12.4BairdAggrInst 10.76 +0.01 +1.8CrPlBInst 10.96 +0.02 +1.4BernsteinDiversMui 14.65 ... +1.2BlackRockEngy&ResA m13.92 +0.04 -7.6EqDivA m 19.85 -0.19 -5.3EqDivI 19.90 -0.19 -5.2GlLSCrI 9.64 ... -1.3GlobAlcA m 17.03 -0.02 -4.4GlobAlcC m 15.50 -0.03 -4.5GlobAlcI 17.13 -0.02 -4.4HiYldBdIs 7.00 +0.03 -0.9StIncInvA m 9.62 ... -1.2StrIncIns 9.62 ... -1.1CausewayIntlVlIns d 12.77 +0.04 -9.3Cohen & SteersRealty 66.52 -0.29 -5.7ColumbiaAcornIntZ 36.66 -0.03 -6.3AcornZ 17.44 -0.08 -9.8DivIncZ 17.14 -0.15 -2.6DFA1YrFixInI 10.30 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 9.97 ... +0.45YrGlbFII 11.06 +0.01 +1.5EmMkCrEqI 14.94 +0.07 -5.2EmMktValI 19.37 +0.13 -5.0EmMtSmCpI 16.46 +0.11 -6.4IntCorEqI 10.47 -0.01 -8.1IntSmCapI 17.15 +0.05 -8.2IntlSCoI 15.99 +0.03 -7.1IntlValuI 14.30 ... -10.8RelEstScI 31.92 -0.10 -3.7TAUSCrE2I 12.93 -0.08 -5.4USCorEq1I 16.26 -0.10 -5.3USCorEq2I 15.46 -0.10 -5.4USLgCo 15.17 -0.12 -5.1USLgValI 28.77 -0.27 -6.7USMicroI 16.50 -0.02 -5.8USSmValI 28.63 +0.03 -6.1USSmallI 26.84 -0.05 -5.4USTgtValInst 18.67 -0.03 -5.5DavisNYVentA m 27.65 -0.31 -10.5Delaware InvestValueI 16.89 -0.15 -4.0Dodge & CoxBal 89.80 -0.56 -4.9GlbStock 9.47 -0.01 -9.5Income 13.30 +0.03 +0.1IntlStk 32.10 +0.09 -12.0Stock 150.56 -1.50 -7.5DoubleLineCrFxdIncI 10.77 ... +1.2TotRetBdN x 10.88 -0.02 +1.5Eaton VanceFltgRtI 8.24 +0.02 -1.3FMILgCap 17.97 -0.16 -3.4FPACrescent d 29.44 -0.07 -5.2NewInc d 9.96 +0.01 +0.1FederatedInstHiYIn d 8.98 +0.03 -0.2StrValI 5.73 -0.02 +2.0ToRetIs 10.68 +0.01 +0.9FidelityAstMgr20 12.58 ... -0.8AstMgr50 15.56 ... -3.0Bal 20.33 ... -4.2Bal K 20.33 ... -4.2BlChGrow 61.91 -0.53 -10.2BlChGrowK 62.01 -0.53 -10.2Cap&Inc d 8.78 ... -3.4CapApr 29.89 -0.27 -7.7Contra 91.54 -0.54 -6.8ContraK 91.48 -0.54 -6.8DivGrow 28.68 -0.23 -5.3DivrIntl d 32.11 -0.10 -8.4DivrIntlK d 32.05 -0.10 -8.4EqInc 48.74 -0.28 -4.6EqInc II 23.50 -0.18 -4.3FF2015 11.50 ... -3.5FF2035 11.72 ... -6.3FF2040 8.23 ... -6.4FltRtHiIn d 8.94 ... -1.5FrdmK2015 12.35 ... -3.5FrdmK2020 12.98 ... -4.0FrdmK2025 13.46 ... -4.5FrdmK2030 13.52 ... -5.7FrdmK2035 13.83 ... -6.3FrdmK2040 13.86 ... -6.3FrdmK2045 14.25 ... -6.3FrdmK2050 14.36 ... -6.3Free2010 14.15 ... -2.9Free2020 13.95 ... -4.0Free2025 11.87 ... -4.6Free2030 14.35 ... -5.7GNMA 11.63 ... +1.3GrInc 26.93 -0.21 -6.9GrowCo 120.49 -1.13 -11.8GrthCmpK 120.38 -1.12 -11.7IntMuniInc d 10.57 ... +1.0IntlDisc d 35.70 -0.01 -9.4InvGrdBd 7.62 ... +1.0LowPrStkK d 45.49 -0.21 -4.7LowPriStk d 45.52 -0.21 -4.7LtAm d 15.57 +0.20 -4.7Magellan 82.26 -0.73 -8.0MidCap d 30.90 -0.22 -5.6MuniInc d 13.53 ... +1.2OTC 71.13 -0.49 -14.7Puritan 19.40 ... -4.6PuritanK 19.39 ... -4.5RealInv d 39.00 -0.16 -3.9SASEqF 12.00 -0.10 -6.0SEMF 13.38 +0.05 -7.0SInvGrBdF 11.11 ... +1.1STMIdxF d 55.32 -0.40 -5.7SersEmgMkts 13.34 +0.05 -7.1SesAl-SctrEqt 12.01 -0.10 -6.1SesInmGrdBd 11.11 ... +1.2ShTmBond 8.58 ... +0.5SmCapDisc d 25.37 -0.03 -4.0StkSelec 31.11 -0.21 -7.2StratInc 10.06 ... -0.3Tel&Util 22.71 +0.01 +3.8TotBond 10.30 ... +0.9USBdIdx 11.67 ... +2.0USBdIdxInv 11.67 ... +1.9Value 90.64 -0.13 -5.3Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 24.10 -0.17 -6.9NewInsI 24.56 -0.18 -6.9Fidelity SelectBiotech d 162.06 -3.53 -31.3HealtCar d 180.51 -3.86 -13.3Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 68.15 -0.55 -5.1

Name P/E Last Chg

4,286,158,014Volume 1,888,398,459Volume

15,500

16,000

16,500

17,000

17,500

18,000

FS O N D J

16,000

16,400

16,800Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,516.50Change: -123.47 (-0.7%)

10 DAYS

500IdxAdvtgInst68.15 -0.55 -5.1500IdxInstl 68.15 -0.55 -5.1500IdxInv 68.13 -0.56 -5.1ExtMktIdAg d 46.00 -0.15 -8.4IntlIdxAdg d 32.81 -0.10 -8.7TotMktIdAg d 55.32 -0.40 -5.7Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF11.43 -0.10 -11.4First EagleGlbA m 50.56 -0.03 -1.5FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.44 +0.01 +1.1FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.56 ... +1.2GrowthA m 69.33 -0.52 -5.5HY TF A m 10.57 ... +1.6Income C m 2.04 ... -2.9IncomeA m 2.02 ... -2.9IncomeAdv 2.00 ... -2.9NY TF A m 11.54 +0.01 +1.1RisDvA m 46.88 -0.44 -1.8StrIncA x 8.97 ... -1.3USGovA x 6.38 -0.01 +1.0FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 27.40 -0.07 -6.6DiscovA m 26.93 -0.06 -6.7Shares Z 24.62 -0.13 -5.3SharesA m 24.41 -0.12 -5.3FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond C m 11.11 +0.04 -3.8GlBondA m 11.08 +0.04 -3.8GlBondAdv 11.04 +0.04 -3.7GrowthA m 19.88 -0.07 -9.3WorldA m 13.50 -0.04 -10.1GES&SUSEq 44.38 -0.42 -6.7GMOIntItVlIV 18.36 -0.09 -8.6Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 30.41 -0.28 -8.4ShDuTFIs 10.57 ... +0.5HarborCapApInst 54.01 -0.42 -11.2IntlInstl 55.80 -0.25 -6.1Harding LoevnerIntlEq d 16.05 ... -6.1HartfordCapAprA m 31.24 -0.19 -9.0CpApHLSIA 40.44 -0.26 -9.0INVESCOComstockA m 19.81 -0.18 -8.6DivDivA m 17.40 -0.07 -1.0EqIncomeA m 9.08 -0.05 -5.1HiYldMuA m 10.11 +0.01 +0.9IVAWorldwideI d 15.97 +0.02 -2.2IvyAssetStrC m 19.83 -0.05 -5.5AsstStrgI 21.00 -0.05 -5.3JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.75 +0.01 +2.0CoreBondSelect11.74 +0.02 +2.1DiscEqUlt 20.31 -0.17 -7.2EqIncSelect 13.03 -0.13 -3.7HighYldSel 6.68 +0.02 -1.4LgCapGrA m 31.44 -0.27 -11.4LgCapGrSelect31.56 -0.27 -11.3MidCpValI 32.55 -0.19 -4.2ShDurBndSel 10.84 ... +0.4USEquityI 12.76 -0.13 -7.5USLCpCrPS 24.43 -0.25 -8.9ValAdvI 26.40 -0.22 -5.5JanusBalT 27.70 -0.17 -4.3GlbLfScT 43.65 -1.07 -16.2John HancockDisValMdCpI 17.55 -0.12 -8.4DiscValI 16.10 -0.12 -6.4GAbRSI 10.11 -0.01 -2.7LifBa1 b 13.58 -0.03 -4.6LifGr1 b 13.90 -0.04 -6.3LazardEmgMkEqInst d12.82 -0.06 -4.6IntlStEqInst d 12.48 -0.03 -6.4Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m172.40-1.70-7.9CBAggressGrthI188.15 -1.86 -7.8WACorePlusBdI11.44 +0.02 +0.6Loomis SaylesBdInstl 12.56 +0.02 -2.3BdR b 12.50 +0.02 -2.3Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 13.52 -0.09 -4.2ShDurIncA m 4.28 ... ShDurIncC m 4.30 ... -0.4ShDurIncF b 4.27 ... -0.2ShDurIncI 4.27 ... -0.2MFSGrowA m 65.54 -0.54 -6.8IntlValA m 32.82 -0.21 -3.8IsIntlEq 18.87 -0.14 -8.2TotRetA x 16.80 -0.10 -1.8ValueA m 31.50 -0.31 -3.9ValueI 31.67 -0.31 -3.9Matthews AsianChina 15.06 -0.18 -18.2India 23.09 +0.23 -12.6Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.75 ... +1.5TotRtBd b 10.75 ... +1.5TtlRtnBdPl 10.12 ... +1.5NatixisLSInvBdY 10.80 +0.02 -0.2NorthernHYFixInc d 6.20 ... -3.2StkIdx 23.70 ... -4.3NuveenHiYldMunI 17.18 -0.01 +1.2OakmarkEqIncI 27.37 -0.15 -4.2Intl I 19.07 -0.02 -10.7Oakmark I 57.73 -0.51 -8.2Select I 33.98 -0.37 -13.3OberweisChinaOpp m 10.44 -0.07 -14.1Old WestburyGlbOppo 6.85 ... -5.5GlbSmMdCp 13.91 -0.05 -6.2LgCpStr 11.75 -0.07 -5.2OppenheimerDevMktA m 28.28 +0.03 -7.0DevMktY 27.91 +0.03 -6.9GlobA m 66.18 -0.29 -11.9IntlGrY 33.95 +0.08 -5.4IntlGrowA m 34.12 +0.08 -5.4MainStrA m 41.22 -0.27 -5.0Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 14.72 +0.01 +1.5OsterweisOsterStrInc 10.41 +0.02 -2.3PIMCOAllAssetI 10.01 ... -1.9AllAuthIn 7.50 ... -2.0EmgLclBdI 6.64 +0.05 ForBdInstl 10.02 ... +1.2HiYldIs 8.15 +0.02 -0.7Income P 11.59 ... -0.3IncomeA m 11.59 ... -0.3IncomeC m 11.59 ... -0.5IncomeD b 11.59 ... -0.3IncomeInl 11.59 ... -0.3LowDrIs 9.79 ... -0.5RERRStgC m 5.70 ... -5.5RealRet 10.60 ... +1.0ShtTermIs 9.63 ... -0.8TotRetA m 10.06 +0.02 +0.3TotRetAdm b 10.06 +0.02 +0.3TotRetC m 10.06 +0.02 +0.2TotRetIs 10.06 +0.02 +0.3TotRetrnD b 10.06 +0.02 +0.3TotlRetnP 10.06 +0.02 +0.3PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 29.40 -0.07 -9.3Growth 24.54 -0.19 -10.2Stock 22.11 -0.15 -6.4ParnassusCoreEqInv 35.84 -0.21 -3.1PioneerPioneerA m 30.31 -0.35 -5.0PrincipalDivIntI 10.33 ... -7.4L/T2030I 12.36 ... -4.5LCGrIInst 10.96 ... -8.4Prudential InvestmenTotRetBdZ 14.11 +0.02 +1.5PutnamGrowIncA m 18.22 -0.14 -7.5NewOpp 66.31 -0.53 -7.6Schwab1000Inv d 46.96 -0.36 -5.5FUSLgCInl d 13.51 -0.09 -3.7S&P500Sel d 29.95 -0.24 -5.1TotStkMSl d 34.05 -0.25 -5.7SequoiaSequoia 192.04 -6.25 -7.3T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 64.90 -0.62 -9.5

CapApprec 24.41 -0.11 -2.1DivGrow 33.06 -0.26 -3.0EmMktBd d 11.40 +0.04 +0.5EmMktStk d 26.38 +0.03 -7.5EqIndex d 52.13 -0.42 -4.4EqtyInc 27.20 -0.15 -3.9GrowStk 48.10 -0.37 -9.7HealthSci 59.17 -1.13 -12.4HiYield d 6.04 +0.02 -1.6InsLgCpGr 25.71 -0.22 -10.2IntlBnd d 8.53 +0.03 +3.5IntlGrInc d 12.14 -0.05 -6.7IntlStk d 14.14 -0.04 -7.5LatinAm d 15.21 +0.21 -0.2MidCapE 40.36 -0.38 -6.1MidCapVa 24.31 -0.04 -2.4MidCpGr 68.24 -0.62 -6.1NewHoriz 37.83 -0.19 -10.5NewIncome 9.46 +0.02 +1.3OrseaStk d 8.28 -0.05 -7.3R2015 13.33 ... -2.6R2025 14.35 ... -4.0R2035 14.97 ... -5.2ReaAsset d 9.04 +0.03 -0.4Real d 26.28 -0.09 -4.1Ret2050 12.02 ... -5.7Rtmt2010 16.58 ... -1.8Rtmt2020 19.02 ... -3.4Rtmt2030 20.80 ... -4.6Rtmt2040 21.31 ... -5.6Rtmt2045 14.30 ... -5.7ShTmBond 4.71 +0.01 +0.4SmCpStk 35.72 -0.17 -7.0SmCpVal d 34.68 -0.08 -4.3SpecInc 11.88 +0.02 +0.2Value 29.55 -0.26 -4.6TCWTotRetBdI 10.29 ... +1.8TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.90 +0.02 +2.2EqIx 14.22 -0.10 -5.6IntlE 15.35 -0.06 -8.8TempletonInFEqSeS 17.18 ... -9.8ThornburgIncBldA m 18.12 -0.03 -3.8IncBldC m 18.11 -0.03 -3.9IntlI 22.34 -0.21 -9.6LtdTMul 14.65 ... +1.0Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 23.19 +0.01 -5.2USAATaxEInt 13.59 ... +1.1Vanguard500Adml 178.87 -1.45 -5.1500Inv 178.84 -1.45 -5.1BalIdxAdm 28.48 -0.11 -2.5BalIdxIns 28.48 -0.11 -2.5BdMktInstPls 10.82 +0.01 +2.1CAITAdml 11.96 ... +1.4CapOpAdml 108.66 -0.82 -8.4DevMktIdxAdm10.81 -0.03 -8.5DevMktIdxInstl 10.82 -0.04 -8.5DivGr 21.84 -0.23 -2.6EmMktIAdm 25.47 +0.04 -6.8EnergyAdm 73.96 -0.40 -4.0EqInc 28.69 -0.22 -2.9EqIncAdml 60.15 -0.45 -2.9ExplAdml 68.42 -0.23 -8.5ExtdIdAdm 58.24 -0.19 -8.4ExtdIdIst 58.24 -0.19 -8.4ExtdMktIdxIP 143.73 -0.47 -8.4FAWeUSIns 78.87 -0.17 -7.9GNMA 10.78 +0.01 +1.5GNMAAdml 10.78 +0.01 +1.6GrthIdAdm 51.30 -0.40 -6.3GrthIstId 51.30 -0.40 -6.3HYCorAdml 5.46 +0.02 -0.5HltCrAdml 82.97 -1.21 -10.7HlthCare 196.70 -2.87 -10.7ITBondAdm 11.54 +0.02 +2.9ITGradeAd 9.76 +0.02 +1.7ITrsyAdml 11.59 +0.02 +3.2InfPrtAdm 25.88 +0.07 +2.7InfPrtI 10.54 +0.03 +2.6InflaPro 13.18 +0.03 +2.6InstIdxI 177.11 -1.43 -5.1InstPlus 177.13 -1.43 -5.1InstTStPl 43.35 -0.31 -5.7IntlGr 19.15 -0.02 -9.2IntlGrAdm 60.88 -0.05 -9.2IntlStkIdxAdm 22.36 -0.04 -7.8IntlStkIdxI 89.42 -0.14 -7.8IntlStkIdxIPls 89.43 -0.15 -7.8IntlVal 28.72 -0.03 -7.6LTGradeAd 10.11 +0.04 +2.9LifeCon 17.63 -0.02 -1.2LifeGro 25.97 -0.10 -4.7LifeMod 22.37 -0.05 -3.0MidCapIdxIP 151.82 -1.11 -6.3MidCpAdml 139.35 -1.02 -6.3MidCpIst 30.78 -0.23 -6.3MorgAdml 71.30 -0.53 -7.6MuHYAdml 11.38 ... +1.1MuInt 14.38 ... +1.3MuIntAdml 14.38 ... +1.3MuLTAdml 11.82 ... +1.2MuLtdAdml 11.09 ... +0.9MuShtAdml 15.85 ... +0.4PrecMtls 7.68 +0.17 +20.8Prmcp 92.07 -0.89 -7.7PrmcpAdml 95.38 -0.92 -7.6PrmcpCorI 19.54 -0.16 -6.1REITIdxAd 108.75 -0.35 -3.7REITIdxInst 16.83 -0.06 -3.8S/TBdIdxInstl 10.52 ... +1.1STBondAdm 10.52 ... +1.1STCor 10.60 +0.01 +0.7STFedAdml 10.80 +0.01 +1.0STGradeAd 10.60 +0.01 +0.7STIGradeI 10.60 +0.01 +0.7STsryAdml 10.74 ... +1.0SelValu 24.29 -0.08 -6.0ShTmInfPtScIxIn24.37 +0.02 +0.8ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.32 +0.02 +0.7SmCapIdxIP 142.71 -0.36 -6.8SmCpGrIdxAdm38.90 -0.17 -9.0SmCpIdAdm 49.44 -0.13 -6.8SmCpIdIst 49.44 -0.13 -6.8SmCpValIdxAdm40.35 -0.04 -5.0Star 22.29 -0.07 -4.3StratgcEq 26.40 -0.07 -6.7TgtRe2010 24.66 -0.02 -0.9TgtRe2015 13.94 -0.02 -2.0TgtRe2020 26.37 -0.07 -2.9TgtRe2025 15.07 -0.04 -3.5TgtRe2030 26.56 -0.08 -4.2TgtRe2035 16.02 -0.06 -4.9TgtRe2040 26.88 -0.12 -5.5TgtRe2045 16.78 -0.07 -5.6TgtRe2050 26.88 -0.12 -5.7TgtRetInc 12.38 -0.01 -0.6TlIntlBdIdxAdm x21.62+0.03 +2.7TlIntlBdIdxInst x32.44 +0.03 +2.7TlIntlBdIdxInv x10.81 +0.01 +2.7TotBdAdml 10.82 +0.01 +2.1TotBdInst 10.82 +0.01 +2.1TotBdMkInv 10.82 +0.01 +2.1TotIntl 13.37 -0.02 -7.7TotStIAdm 47.90 -0.35 -5.7TotStIIns 47.91 -0.35 -5.7TotStIdx 47.88 -0.35 -5.7TxMCapAdm 97.79 -0.76 -5.7ValIdxAdm 30.34 -0.25 -4.7ValIdxIns 30.34 -0.25 -4.7VdHiDivIx 25.84 -0.19 -2.3WellsI 24.58 -0.03 +0.2WellsIAdm 59.54 -0.09 +0.2Welltn 35.68 -0.18 -3.0WelltnAdm 61.63 -0.31 -3.0WndsIIAdm 55.78 -0.49 -6.2Wndsr 17.32 -0.17 -9.6WndsrAdml 58.43 -0.55 -9.5WndsrII 31.43 -0.28 -6.2VirtusEmgMktsOppsI 8.46 +0.03 -5.6Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 8.71 -0.07 -7.5SciTechA m 11.59 -0.03 -14.3

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FourCorP s ... 16.41 +.10FrankRes 11 35.85 -.30FreeSea rs ... .03 -.01FrptMcM dd 7.63 +.20FrontierCm ... 5.41 -.02GATX 8 43.01 +1.36Gap 11 27.65 +.42GenDynam 15 136.27 -.84GenElec dd 29.14 -.26GenGrPrp 19 27.52 -.13GenMotors 9 29.44 -.19Genworth dd 2.12 -.06Gerdau ... .88 +.01GeronCp dd 2.41 -.11GileadSci 7 87.25 -.85Globalstar 11 1.56 +.23GluMobile ... 3.71 -.13GolLNGLtd dd 18.33 +1.04GoldFLtd ... 4.27 +.20Goldcrp g dd 14.32 +.46GoldStr g dd .49 +.07GoldmanS 10 149.53 -.07GoPro 52 11.88 -.42GraphPkg 17 12.33 GtBasSci rs ... .21 +.02Groupon cc 4.78 +.29HCP Inc dd 29.58 -.32HP Inc 10 10.69 +.05Hallibrtn dd 32.28 -.35Hanesbds s 24 28.49 +.28HarmonyG ... 3.26 +.26Harsco dd 3.79 -.11HeclaM 86 2.59 +.11Herbalife 13 54.75 -.40Hertz dd 8.50 +.23Hess dd 43.60 +.53HP Ent n ... 13.27 -.17Hilton 30 20.78 +.08HimaxTch 35 9.89 +.19HomeDp 23 124.12 -2.14HonwllIntl 17 101.35 -1.68HopFedBc 33 11.77 +.04HorizPhm cc 17.16 -2.63Hormel s 30 42.51 -.46HostHotls 21 15.31 -.08HuntBncsh 11 8.75 -.20Huntsmn 10 10.86 +.38

I-J-K-LIAMGld g 10 2.42 +.05ICICI Bk ... 5.67 +.36iShGold q 11.99 +.18iSAstla q 17.28 -.02iShBrazil q 20.49 +.48iShGerm q 23.36 -.29iShJapan q 10.89 -.17iSTaiwn q 12.84 +.05iShSilver q 14.20 +.18iShChinaLC q 30.28 -.14iShUSAgBd q 110.09 +.13iShEMkts q 30.32 +.26iShiBoxIG q 115.01 +.08iShNANatR q 26.85 -.04iSh20 yrT q 130.98 +.57iSh7-10yTB q 110.57 +.18iS Eafe q 53.63 -.32iShiBxHYB q 80.08 +.85iShR2K q 102.73 -.46iSUSAMinV q 41.67 -.28iShREst q 71.46 -.12iShHmCnst q 24.49 -.14iShCorEafe q 49.66 -.29Infosys 13 16.82 -.07IngrmM 30 35.80 +.13IntgDv 19 19.42 +.17Intel 13 29.59 -.21IBM 9 131.03 -1.00IntPap 13 35.70 +.46Interpublic 18 21.39 +.03IntPotash 25 .99 -1.23InvestBncp 21 11.32 -.30iShCorEM q 36.98 +.30ItauUnibH ... 6.30 +.16JD.com dd 25.71 +.30JPMorgCh 10 56.30 -1.24JPMAlerian q 25.00 +.31Jabil 11 20.85 +.01JetBlue 11 22.00 -.30JohnJn 17 105.21 -.57JohnsnCtl 15 36.46 -.54JnprNtwk 14 24.70 +.10KB Home 12 12.20 +.15KateSpade 71 19.82 +.26KeryxBio dd 4.02 +.38Keycorp 10 10.55 -.17Kimco 13 26.75 +.06KindMorg 27 18.09 +.33KindredHlt dd 10.51 -.44Kinross g dd 2.94 +.04Kohls 11 46.67 -.15KraftHnz n ... 77.02 -.82Kroger s 20 39.91 +.46LaredoPet dd 5.11 +.16LVSands 19 48.28 +.36Lattice dd 6.33 +.23LendingClb cc 8.73 +.32LinkedIn dd 117.19 -3.72LloydBkg ... 4.05 +.02LockhdM 19 215.79 -1.45Lowes 21 67.53 -1.57LumberLiq dd 11.33 +.22LyonBas A 9 80.21 +.04

M-N-O-PMGIC Inv 3 6.84 -.09MGM Rsts 28 18.93 +.06MSCI Inc 34 70.52 -1.94Macys 12 43.21 -.22Mallinckdt ... 65.03 -4.21MannKd dd 1.03 Manulife g ... 13.36 +.11MarathnO dd 8.21 +.18MarathPt s 6 34.25 +.03MVJrGold q 25.97 +1.07MktVGold q 19.38 +.69MV OilSvc q 24.08 -.01MktVRus q 14.51 +.36MarIntA 22 68.15 MartMM 34 142.62 +.42Masco 26 28.20 -.54MasterCrd 25 86.92 -.65Mattel 30 32.52 +.05McDrmInt 66 3.30 +.12McDnlds 24 117.19 +.13Medtrnic 41 77.39 +.10MeetMe 18 3.11 -.45MemResDv dd 9.67 Merck 23 50.21 -.43MetLife 9 39.56 -.53MKors 13 56.65 +.07MicronT 6 10.63 -.07Microsoft 33 50.88 -.42Mondelez 9 40.53 -.16MorgStan 9 24.70 -.46Mosaic 9 26.65 -.17MotrlaSolu 22 73.49 -1.37MurphO 20 17.18 +.04Mylan NV 18 45.07 -2.07NRG Egy dd 10.78 -.30Nabors dd 7.16 -.14NOilVarco 11 29.27 +.46Navient 4 10.83 +.24NetApp 20 24.84 -.28Netflix s cc 93.41 -1.38NwGold g dd 3.39 +.23NY CmtyB 14 15.13 -.28NewellRub 21 38.01 -.66NewfldExp dd 27.23 +1.20NewmtM 34 25.83 +.48Nielsen plc 32 50.34 +.59NikeB s 30 61.59 -1.01NobleCorp 35 8.33 +.13NobleEngy dd 29.50 -.23NokiaCp ... 6.03 -.06NorthropG 19 192.22 NStRFn rs dd 12.49 +.14Novavax dd 4.36 -.35Nvidia 25 31.36 -.20OasisPet 3 5.39 +.10OcciPet 52 68.82 -.98OcwenFn dd 3.79 -2.36OfficeDpt cc 5.08 -.04ONEOK 20 24.00 +.99OpkoHlth dd 9.30 -.01Oracle 18 36.78 -.18Orexigen dd .71 -.26PDL Bio 2 3.01 +.08PPG s 18 96.53 -1.63PPL Corp 15 34.99 +.17PTC Thera dd 7.98 -.01Pandora dd 10.22 +.05PattUTI dd 15.54 +.22PayPal n ... 38.14 +.65PeabdyE rs dd 2.44 +.23Penney dd 10.20 +.61

PeopUtdF 17 14.61 -.30PepcoHold 21 26.18 -.42PepsiCo 27 97.82 -.54PeregrinP dd .40 -.01PetrbrsA ... 2.53 +.14Petrobras ... 3.60 +.22Pfizer 18 29.67 -.56PhilipMor 18 91.03 -.42PiperJaf 11 42.35 +.31PlainsGP 10 7.60 +.21PlatfmSpc dd 7.09 +.09Potash 11 16.94 -.16PwShs QQQ q 102.50 -.93PrivateB 15 34.36 -1.02ProLogis 23 38.46 -.15ProShtS&P q 21.85 +.20ProUltSP s q 56.12 -1.01PrUltPQQQ q 84.65 -2.30PUltSP500 s q 52.10 -1.46PUVixST rs q 39.74 +1.13PrUCrude rs q 7.91 +.40ProShtVix q 36.88 -.62ProctGam 27 80.29 -.81ProgsvCp 15 31.92 -.19ProUShSP q 21.73 +.40PShtQQQ q 22.82 +.61PUShtSPX q 35.70 +.98ProspctCap dd 7.20 +.18PulteGrp 14 17.19 -.20

Q-R-S-TQEP Res dd 9.76 -1.00Qualcom 17 50.79 -.35QuantaSvc 10 20.29 +.08RangeRs 14 23.73 -.16RltyInco 54 58.54 -.09RegionsFn 11 7.52 -.23RepubAir 1 .63 -.29RestorHdw 16 37.99 -2.44ReynAm s 17 50.43 +.15RiceEngy dd 9.16 +.19RioTinto ... 26.10 +.58RiteAid 36 7.95 -.01RossStrs s 23 54.98 -1.31Rowan dd 13.32 +.52RoyDShllB 69 45.71 -.01RoyDShllA 69 45.48 -.05RymanHP 18 47.87 +.06SM Energy dd 9.04 +.25SpdrDJIA q 164.96 -1.32SpdrGold q 118.64 +1.53S&P500ETF q 193.56 -1.53SpdrBiot s q 47.90 -1.50SpdrS&PBk q 28.32 -.65SpdrShTHiY q 25.31 +.23SpdrLehHY q 33.43 +.36SpdrLehIntTr q 61.03 +.01SpdrS&P RB q 35.07 -.82SpdrOGEx q 24.60 -.11SabreCorp 14 27.15 -.08Salesforce cc 67.75 -1.97SanDisk 25 72.26 +.18Schlmbrg 21 71.72 -.75Schwab 24 25.05 -.41ScorpioTk ... 6.22 +.51SeadrillLtd dd 2.24 +.35SignetJwlrs 20 108.40 +9.27SilvWhtn g 30 15.73 +.32SiriusXM 37 3.72 +.03SkywksSol 14 66.45 +1.55SolarCity dd 18.43 -.37SouFun 3 5.33 -.03SouthnCo 17 48.18 -.01SwstAirl 12 41.95 -.22SwstnEngy dd 5.78 -.60SpectraEn 25 29.20 -.02SpiritRltC 33 10.69 -.12Splunk dd 43.60 +2.09Sprint dd 3.44 +.11Sprouts 37 28.48 +.58SP Matls q 41.80 -.26SP HlthC q 66.23 -1.07SP CnSt q 50.92 -.17SP Consum q 74.44 -.39SP Engy q 56.58 -.65SPDR Fncl q 21.09 -.23SP Inds q 52.12 -.33SP Tech q 40.97 -.29SP Util q 46.30 +.13Staples cc 9.45 -.04Starbucks s 36 58.21 -.13StateStr 14 54.78 -.63Statoil ASA ... 14.56 +.27StemCells h dd .43 +.06StoneEngy dd 1.55 -.09Stryker 25 99.88 -1.48SumitMitsu ... 5.55 -.06Suncor g ... 24.48 +.13SunEdison dd 1.98 -.28SunTrst 9 33.18 -1.36SupEnrgy dd 10.28 +.54Supvalu 8 5.11 +.18SwiftTrans 16 17.04 -.92Symantec 21 19.31 -.13Synchrony 10 26.95 -.98Sysco 24 44.13 +.87T-MobileUS 45 37.10 -.37TECO 35 27.47 +.01TJX 22 74.10 -1.54TaiwSemi ... 23.55 -.22TargaRes 23 26.88 +1.33Target dd 78.45 +.02TASER 54 19.38 +1.90TeckRes g ... 5.79 +.13Tenaris ... 21.63 +.19TerraFm n ... 3.17 +.63TerraFmP dd 9.64 +.98TeslaMot dd 191.93 +1.59TevaPhrm 27 55.60 -1.38TexInst 19 53.02 -.283M Co 20 156.87 -1.40TW Cable 29 190.86 -1.64TimeWarn 14 66.20 -.46Total SA ... 44.71 Transocn dd 8.65 TribMda A 10 35.90 +2.9521stCFoxA 21 27.02 -.06Twitter dd 18.12 +.18TycoIntl 27 35.18 -.23Tyson 19 64.75 -.42

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUltraPt g dd .36 +.01UnionPac 14 78.86 -1.14UtdContl 3 57.26 +.68UtdNtrlF 11 30.86 -8.39UPS B 18 96.55 -.89US Bancrp 12 38.52 -.77US NGas q 6.02 -.34US OilFd q 9.00 +.22USSteel dd 9.12 +.81UtdTech 15 96.62 -1.07UtdhlthGp 20 119.10 -2.23Vale SA ... 2.94 +.23Vale SA pf ... 2.15 +.13ValeantPh 37 65.80 -14.85ValeroE 7 60.08 +.42VangREIT q 76.71 -.30VangAllW q 39.98 -.10VangEmg q 30.73 +.19VangFTSE q 33.62 -.15VBradley 22 16.63 +1.06Vereit dd 8.02 +.07VerizonCm 11 50.73 -.29ViacomB 8 36.85 +.62Vipshop 27 11.11 -.17Visa s 28 72.39 -.34VulcanM 56 98.53 -.20WPX Engy dd 4.11 -.15WalMart 14 66.34 -.17WasteConn 33 61.67 -1.12WeathfIntl dd 6.40 -.03WtWatch 24 11.77 +.76WellsFargo 11 46.92 -1.15Wendys Co 25 9.37 -.01WDigital 8 43.53 -.36WstnUnion 11 18.26 -.20Weyerhsr 23 25.98 +.39WhitingPet dd 4.01 +.13WholeFood 21 31.31 +.21WmsCos 80 15.99 +.35Windstm rs dd 7.52 +.27WTJpHedg q 41.62 -1.19Workday dd 60.45 +.93XcelEngy 20 39.54 +.27Xerox 20 9.61 -.05Yahoo dd 31.79 +.42Yamana g dd 2.84 +.13Yelp dd 20.24 +.38YumBrnds 23 72.47 +1.05Zoetis 35 41.06 -1.30Zynga ... 2.11 -.05

Eye on Dollar TreeDollar Tree serves up its latest quarterly results today.

The discount retailer is expected to report that its earnings declined in its fiscal fourth quarter versus a year earlier, even as revenue increased. Mixed results would echo Dollar Tree’s quarterly performance in the previous three quarters. The company has been integrating its operations with Family Dollar, which it acquired last summer.

Toda

y

Back in the black?Wall Street anticipates that Hertz returned to a profit in the fourth quarter.

The car rental company, due to report its latest quarterly financial results today, is expected to show earnings after posting a loss in the same period a year ear-lier. Financial analysts also forecast a slight gain in revenue. Hertz’s results have been mixed in recent quarters due to the impact of unfavor-able foreign currency exchange rates.

Housing bellwetherNew data on home construction should provide insight into the state of the market for new U.S. homes and other types of projects.

Construction spending jumped 10.5 percent to $1.1 trillion last year, the highest total since 2007. Some of the gains in December were due to home construction and spending on government projects. Economists predict that the Commerce Department will report today that construction spending rose 0.3 percent in January.

DLTR

60

75

$90$80.25

’16$79.04

Source: FactSet

Operating EPS

$1.16est.

4Q ’14 4Q ’15

Price-earnings ratio: 66based on past 12-month results

Dividend: none

$1.07

Construction spendingseasonally adjusted percent change

Source: FactSet

-0.6

-0.3

-0.0

0.3

0.6

0.9%

JDNOSA

0.7

’15 ’16

est.0.3

-0.10.1

-0.6

0.2

Mortgage real estate investment trusts, or REITs, are investment products that acquire mortgage debt and pay comparatively high dividends. These investments look especially alluring now that prospects have faded for another interest-rate hike by the Federal Reserve anytime soon.

With yields on most other income-generating investments remaining at historically low levels, the 8 percent to 12 percent dividends on mortgage REITs are indeed attractive. Yet they’re not without risk.

Mortgage REITs, which are lightly regulated, invest in commercial and residential real estate by buying securities backed by mortgages. They profit

by borrowing at low rates while pocketing the higher yields on the long-term mortgage securities they buy. That money can then be passed on to shareholders in the form of dividends.

Be careful, regulators say. REITs, especially those that aren’t traded on exchanges, carry risk. The mortgage

securities they hold can go bust, causing losses for shareholders. Non-traded REITs can’t easily be sold on the open market, and it can be hard to determine the shares’ value. They also generally charge high fees. And be wary of anyone looking to sell REITs that aren’t registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Source: S&P Global Market Intelligence Marcy Gordon; Jenni Sohn • AP

MORTGAGE REITSAlluring but sometimes risky

0

100

200

300

400

$500 billion

201520142013 201220112010200920082007

Estimated total assets of US mortgage REITS*

Median return

3.74.6

11.4

*Excluding small number of mortgage REITs that don’t publicly disclose financial data

0

2

4

6

8

10%

Our clients’ interests come fi rst.

Member SIPC

www.edwardjones.com

Steven D Hefner, CFP®Financial Advisor 413 Cruise StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Eric M Rutledge, CFP®,AAMS®Financial Advisor1500 Harper Road Suit 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

Chris MarshallFinancial Advisor 401 E. Waldron StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-7885

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, March 1, 2016

ACROSS1 Human rights

advocate Jagger7 Leaves in a big

hurry15 Seductive

quality16 Having the

capacity forlearning

17 *Whom Charlottesaved, in an E.B.White classic

18 *“Animal Farm”tyrant

19 Reason-basedfaith

20 Self-regard21 One-__ jack22 QB’s gains23 *GEICO

spokescritter whosqueals, “Weewee wee!”

27 Variety28 More pert33 Mets’ old stadium36 Singer Yoko38 “Ninotchka” star

Greta39 *“Toy Story” toy

bank40 *Stutterer in

Looney Tunessign-offs

43 *Unlikely titleshepherd in a1995 film

44 Reputed UFOpilot

46 “Golly!”47 “Great Taste...__

Filling”: Miller Liteslogan

48 Carter’s vicepresident

51 Suffix with novel53 *40-Across’ gal55 __ Grande58 Burn slightly62 Latin art63 Doggie65 With 67-Across,

annual March 1event celebratedin the answers tostarred clues

67 See 65-Across68 Biological order

including eight-armed creatures

69 Waiting one’sturn

70 Catching-upquery

71 FBI operatives

DOWN1 Ribald2 Perjurer’s

confession3 “Silent Night”

words beforecalm and bright

4 Used-up pencils5 Really bad6 __ Lingus7 Take more Time?8 Maxims9 Domelike

building top10 Earth-friendly

prefix11 Mall event12 Do as told13 Arctic chunk14 Provide (for

oneself)24 Per unit25 Strange: Pref.26 Tote27 Domesticated29 Pay television30 “Dies __”: Latin

hymn31 Flows back32 Some reddish

deer33 Bedding

accessory34 Saintly glow35 Key with one

sharp: Abbr.

37 Nonprofit URLending

41 Really eager42 Bigfoot kin45 Rest of the

afternoon49 Use as support50 Online investment

service52 Music studio

activity54 Amer. attorney’s

study

55 “The Thinker”sculptor

56 Words of refusal57 “I remember

now!”58 Skiing surface59 Per unit60 “__ girl!”61 Real hoot64 Gawk at66 Photo __: media

events67 Actress Zadora

By Jeffrey Wechsler©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 03/01/16

03/01/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie I have eight grandchildren and I love them all. I make sure to spend equal amounts of time and care with each one of them.

The problem is my son’s 3-year-old child. My son and his wife live with his mother-in-law in another state. I have been unable to see this grand-son, because the wife and her mother are so afraid of colds that they will leave the grocery if some-one so much as sneezes.

When I fi rst fl ew down to meet the new baby, my son called me in the rent-al car to say that I was not allowed to come because I had a cold three weeks earlier. I was able to ne-gotiate meeting them at a nearby restaurant, but I was not allowed to hold the baby. The mother-in-law came and took the child home before the meal was served.

Yet, my daughter-in-law refuses to vaccinate the boy against more se-rious diseases. She also lets him climb out of his car seat because he fusses in it, which exposes him to the risk of death from a minor car accident.

When I send Christmas presents, she opens them early and hands them to the child, never saying they are from me. I have sent him clothes, but have never seen a picture of him in anything but a T-shirt and diaper. At the

age of 3, he is still drink-ing formula from a bottle and eating very little real food.

I am worried about the mental and physical health of this child, not to mention my own sad-ness that we can’t have a relationship. Is there anything I can do? — Per-plexed Grandmother

Dear Perplexed: Is your son not involved in these decisions? It doesn’t bother him that his son isn’t belt-ed into a car seat? Or that he is still getting most of his nutri-tion from infant for-mula? And we won’t get into the anti-vaxx movement, which, although well-inten-tioned, we disagree with.

Please gently sug-gest to your son that he speak about these things with the child’s pediatrician, to be certain he is caring for his son in the best possible way. If he disagrees with his wife’s child-rearing methods, he should not be a coward about it. Even so, there are limits to what you can do about your re-

lationship with your grandson other than continue to keep in touch, visit whenever possible and main-tain the most compas-sionate communica-tion you can with the boy’s mother.

Dear Annie: “Out of the Loop” says her grown daughters send wish lists for holidays and birthdays that include e-books. If she wants to send something they can open on the actual day, she ought to look into gift cards. Plenty of places of-fer them for e-books.

These days, gift cards for many businesses, on-line and not, are available at grocery stores, drug stores, big-box stores, etc. It’s one-stop shopping for you and the kids can buy whatever they want. — Roanoke, Virginia

Dear Virginia: Thank you for men-tioning a gift card for an e-book, or more generally, for an on-line store that carries e-books.

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

Grandmother worries about 3-year-oldAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

10 • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

TUESDAY EVENING MARCH 1, 2016 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

The Muppets Miss Piggy is hurt. (N)

Marvel’s Agent Carter (N)

ABC News Super Tues-day Election

Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #NCIS “After Hours” (N) NCIS: New Orleans “Ra-

dio Silence” (N)CBS News: Campaign 2016 (N)

News Ch. 3 Late Show-Colbert James Corden

QVC $ . Garmin Fitness Tues. Beauty The Find With Shawn Killinger (N) Lenox - Elegant

WCBI $NCIS “After Hours” (N) NCIS: New Orleans “Ra-

dio Silence” (N)CBS News: Campaign 2016 (N)

News Late Show-Colbert James Corden

WMC % %The Voice “The Blind Auditions Premiere, Part 2” The blind auditions continue. (N)

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

WLMT & >The World Dog Awards CW30 News at 9 (N) House of

PayneMeet the Browns

There Yet? Modern Family

WBBJ _ _The Muppets Miss Piggy is hurt. (N)

Marvel’s Agent Carter (N)

ABC News Super Tues-day Election

News at 10pm

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )The Voice “The Blind Auditions Premiere, Part 2” The blind auditions continue. (N)

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

WKNO * Finding Your Roots (N) American Experience

“Space Men”Frontline “Poor Kids” Super Tuesday-

NewsHourTavis Smiley

Newsline

WGN-A + ((5:00) } ››› Back-draft (91)

Outsiders Big Foster’s lust for guns.

Outsiders Big Foster’s lust for guns.

Outsiders Big Foster’s lust for guns.

Outsiders Big Foster’s lust for guns.

WMAE , ,Finding Your Roots (N) American Experience

“Space Men”Frontline “Poor Kids” Super Tuesday-

NewsHourCharlie Rose (N)

WHBQ ` `New Girl (N)

Grandfa-thered

Brooklyn Nine

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

TMZ Dish Nation (N)

Ac. Hol-lywood

WPXX / Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Saving Hope (N) Saving Hope (N)

WPIX :The World Dog Awards PIX11 News PIX11

SportsSeinfeld Two and

Half MenTwo and Half Men

Friends

MAX 0 3(6:40) } ››› Get On Up (14, Biography) Chad-wick Boseman, Nelsan Ellis.

} ›› The Bucket List (07) Jack Nicholson.

Chemistry Chemistry } Sixth Sense

SHOW 2 (6:30) Becoming Bul-letproof (14)

60 Minutes Sports (N) Shameless “Pimp’s Paradise”

60 Minutes Sports } ››› Scream 3 David Arquette.

HBO 4 1(6:00) } Remember the Titans (00)

Vinyl “Whispered Secrets”

Gonzaga } ››› Knocked Up (07) A one-night stand has an unforeseen consequence.

Together-ness

MTV 5 2 Ridic. Ridic. Teen Wolf (N) Shannara Chr. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic.

ESPN 7 ?College Basketball: Ken-tucky at Florida.

College Basketball: Indiana at Iowa. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5(6:30) Ink Master Ink Master “Sirens of

Ink” (N) Ink Master “Initiation” (N) Ink Master

(N)Ink Master Ink Master “Sirens of Ink”

USA : 8Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

NICK ; C Henry Sponge. Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends

DISC < DMoonshiners: Outlaw Cuts (N)

Moonshiners “Presiden-tial Shine” (N)

Venom Hunters “The Minefield”

Moonshiners “Presiden-tial Shine”

Moonshiners

A&E > Married at First Sight Married at First Sight

(N) (:01) Fit to Fat to Fit “Carrie; Kenlee”

(:02) Married at First Sight

(:03) Married at First Sight

FSSO ? 4NHL Hockey: Dallas Stars at Nashville Predators. From the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tenn. (N)

Predators Live!

World Poker Tour Women’s College Bas-ketball

BET @ F (6:00) } ›› Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds Mann’s Mann’s Mann’s Mann’s Wendy Williams

H&G C HFixer Upper Fixer Upper (N) House

HuntersHunters Int’l

Fixer Upper Fixer Upper

E! D Total Divas Total Divas (N) Just Jillian (N) E! News (N)

HIST E BCounting Cars

Counting Cars

Counting Cars (N)

Counting Cars (N)

(:03) Forged in Fire (N) (:03) Forged in Fire “Khopesh”

Counting Cars

Counting Cars

ESPN2 F @ College Basketball: Baylor at Oklahoma. The Fab Five Basket NBA

TLC G The Little Couple (N) The Little Couple “New

Challenges”(:01) Rattled “Daycare Drama” (N)

(:02) The Little Couple (:02) Rattled “Daycare Drama”

FOOD H Chopped “Food Truck Fight”

Chopped “Food Truck Kitchen”

Chopped “Truck Stop Stars” (N)

Chopped “Every ’wich Way”

Chopped “Food Truck Kitchen”

INSP I Hand Hand JAG Walker, Ranger Walker, Ranger Medicine Woman

LIFE J =Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms “Nia Saves

the Day” (N)Mother/Daughter Exp. Mother/Daughter Exp. (:02) Dance Moms

TBN M Trinity Everyday Prince Cornelius Praise the Lord War & Easter Impact

AMC N 0} ››› The Bourne Supremacy (04) Jason Bourne fights back when the CIA tries to kill him.

} ››› The Fugitive (93) Harrison Ford. An innocent man must evade the law as he pursues a killer.

FREE O <Pretty Little Liars “Burn This” (N)

Shadowhunters “Bad Blood” (N)

Pretty Little Liars “Burn This”

The 700 Club Ownership of Israel.

} ››› 13 Going on 30 (04)

TCM P } ››› Sense and Sensibility (95) Two sisters forage for ro-mance in 19th-century England.

} ››› The Remains of the Day (93, Drama) A butler recalls his life at an English lord’s estate.

TNT Q ARizzoli & Isles “Scared to Death”

Rizzoli & Isles “East Meets West”

Rizzoli & Isles “East Meets West”

Castle A guitarist is murdered.

CSI: NY A fire in Stella’s apartment.

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Conan (N) 2 Broke Girls

Conan

GAME S The Chase FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud TOON T King/Hill Burgers Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King FS1 Z College Basketball College Basketball FOX Sports Live Sports Best-

FX Æ ;(6:00) } ››› The Avengers (12, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans.

The People v. O.J. Simpson: American

(:15) The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story

The People v.

OUT Ø Fear No Nugent Hunting Driven Ram Western Hunting RMEF Hunting ATK NBCS ∞ NHL Hockey: Penguins at Capitals (:15) NHL Overtime Rivals NHL Top Feherty OWN ± The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots FOXN ≤ (5:00) America’s Election HQ Super Tuesday state races and results. (N) APL ≥ To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced

HALL ∂ GLast Man Standing

Last Man Standing

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LLemonade Mouth Bridgit Mendler. Five high-school students form a music group.

Austin & Ally

Bunk’d K.C. Under-cover

Girl Meets Jessie Jessie

SYFY E(5:30) } ››› The Con-juring (13)

} ›› The Possession Parents must save their daughter from an evil spirit.

Colony Trapped in the Yonk.

House of Bones (10) Corin Nemec

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Don’t miss the next member of the Daily Corinthian’s family of magazines with Crossroads

Magazine Family coming March 27.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

D E A R ABBY: I’m 39 and sev-en months’ p r e g n a n t with my hus-band’s only child.

Since be-coming preg-nant, I have b e c o m e s o m e w h a t w i t h d r a w n

due to depression. My doctor prescribed Paxil,

but my husband won’t allow me to take it. I don’t leave the house unless I absolutely need to because he accuses me of cheating on him daily.

Two nights ago he took a single female friend out to din-ner and they were gone for fi ve hours.

It hurt my feelings because in my view it was disrespectful on both their parts.

When they got back, I was sit-ting outside and she wouldn’t even come to say goodbye to me.

When I asked my husband why I hadn’t been invited, he said, “Neither of us wanted you there.”

In his eyes he has done noth-ing wrong.

He tells me I’m crazy and I need mental help.

Am I wrong for being so up-set? -- NOT CRAZY IN TEXAS

DEAR NOT CRAZY: Not at all. It appears you are mar-ried to a controlling, emotion-ally abusive man who may be cheating on you.

One of the hallmarks of phi-landerers is that they will ac-cuse the innocent partner of cheating.

Feeling depressed during a pregnancy under these cir-cumstances isn’t surprising. (If you felt any other way, you WOULDN’T be normal.)

That your doctor would pre-scribe an antidepressant and your husband would “not allow” you to take it is alarming.

If you have close friends and family, I urge you to tell them what’s going on.

And while you’re at it, contact The National Domestic Vio-lence Hotline (thehotline.org) -- the phone number is 1-800-799-7233 -- because you may need help to get safely away.

DEAR ABBY: I currently live in a situation where my hus-band, our two kids and I share a home with my parents, two sisters and younger brother. Sometimes it seems crowded because there is no privacy and a lack of respect.

Lately I am having a problem with my sister.

Despite the fact that she and my family share the upstairs level of the home, she contin-ues to walk around nude or in

her undergarments throughout the day because she “hates” wearing clothes.

At various times my family members and I have had un-comfortable encounters with her over this.

I have talked to her about it repeatedly, but she refuses to cooperate.

I think it’s rude, inconsiderate and inappropriate, not to men-tion a completely avoidable problem.

What do you think? Am I wrong for being up-

set that her behavior doesn’t change and the message doesn’t seem to get through to her? -- CLOTHES-MINDED

DEAR CLOTHES-MINDED: I agree that your sister’s behav-ior is inappropriate.

She should not be parading around in a state of undress in front of your husband and chil-dren.

Because she has chosen to ignore your requests, enlist the help of your parents to get the message across to her. It’s their roof she’s under, and perhaps they will have better luck.

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

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You may engage in bargain-ing without even realizing it, as there are deals to be struck that don’t require any exchanging of words. Decisions will count; ac-tions will speak.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Be careful not to get caught in the middle of warring parties. There won’t be a winning side, for starters. And when the two reconcile they will surely turn on anyone who was involved in the confl ict.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The laundry list of qualities to make up the perfect partner may go out the window as it be-comes clearer to you what really matters now: namely, chemistry and compatible lifestyles. Have faith in your intuition.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Privacy is always your preroga-tive. Those who ask probably don’t deserve to know, and you have no obligation to tell, either. Besides, loved ones respect you more when you reveal less.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). It’s not hard to be part of the good stuff now. You’re aware; you look around, see what needs doing and act immediately. The sim-plicity of your choice will keep you in an exciting fl ow of life.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). There are certain issues you feel strongly enough to stand fi rm on, and therefore you’ve a few unbendable rules -- the chief one of the day being to remain fl exible in all matters at all times.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). If you don’t yet have what it takes, don’t worry; you will. Your ability will swell when the challenge at hand invites it to. This is espe-cially true on an intellectual lev-el. You’ll grow smarter in a de-manding learning environment.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Sometimes the deadline, bustle and hurry bring out the best in you, but not now. So go ahead and take off the pressure. Stroll through life instead of running around.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Your teachers have been stellar, but that’s not to say you couldn’t use a few fresh infl u-ences. Reach out and you’ll learn what you need to know to take your career to the next level.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’re a natural-born cheer-leader, inspiring and motivating all who come near, though most won’t show it. In fact, you would never guess how energizing your support really is.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your intensity level may be too much for today’s situation, so hold back. The restraint you show will be admired. Then, when the drama boils over, you’ll still have plenty of energy left in you to carry on productively.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Of course you want to succeed! The question now is, at what cost? Doing your best is one thing. Then there’s the above-and-beyond efforts you could make. Would they be worth it?

Depressed pregnant wife is confined by abusive husband

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • 11

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The Associated PressLOUISVILLE, Ky. — Trey

Lewis and Damion Lee have remained upbeat as their col-lege careers near an unex-pected ending.

The graduate transfers arrived at Louisville with goals of playing in the NCAA Tournament, a quest that ap-peared to be a lock before the school announced a self-im-posed postseason ban on Feb. 5 after an investigation into an escort’s book allegations of being hired for strip shows at the team’s dormitory discov-

ered that violations did occur.Several investigations are

still pending.But their college careers

likely will be over before those reviews end.

Their postseason dreams suddenly dashed, Lee and Lewis have tried to salvage Louisville’s suddenly short-ened season by helping them compete for the Atlantic Coast Conference regular sea-son title. Though that seems more challenging for the 11th-ranked Cardinals (22-7, 11-5 ACC) after Saturday’s loss at

fi rst-place Miami, the veter-ans’ roles in leading a young roster and keeping them in the hunt has given the duo some solace.

It hasn’t erased questions of what could have been in the postseason. But both players have cited their faith in help-ing them see the good in a situation they did not create.

“You’re torn in a way, be-cause of course you want to play in the tournament and want all these things to hap-pen,” Lewis said Monday. “But then you see all the good

that’s happened, people com-ing together (and) supporting each other and you feel loved. ...

“But as a leader, you’ve got to keep a straight face, stay composed and lead your troops.”

Lee and Lewis have done so and fi gure to be front and center in Tuesday’s home fi -nale against Georgia Tech (17-12, 7-9) and Saturday’s regular season fi nale at No. 3 Virginia. They’ve been 1-2

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Local Schedule

Today

BaseballCorinth @ Kossuth, 7SoftballCorinth @ Kossuth, 5TennisMooreville @ Corinth, 4 

This week’s quarterfinal games. 

Thursday

@ Jackson StateClass 1A GirlsBiggersville-W.Lowndes, 9 a.m.

(WXRZ)West Union-Bogue Chitto, 10:30Shaw-Nanih Waiya, NoonVardaman-McAdams, 1:30Class 4A GirlsPontotoc-McComb, 4Lafayette Co.-Florence, 5:30Corinth-Bay, 7 (WXRZ)Byhalia-Quitman, 8:30   @ Mississippi ColiseumClass 1A BoysSimmons-Leake Co., 9 a.m.Ashland-Durant, 10:30Biggersville-W.Lowndes, Noon

(WXRZ)Houlka-Sacred Heart, 1:30Class 4A BoysCorinth-Pass Christian, 4 (WXRZ)Leake Central-Quitman, 5:30Gentry-McComb, 7Shannon-NE Lauderdale, 8:30 

Friday

@ Jackson StateClass 2A GirlsIngomar-Bassfield, 9 a.m.West Tallahatchie-Newton, 10:30Baldwyn-Pelahatchie, NoonCoahoma Co.-Heidelberg, 1:30Class 5A GirlsRidgeland-W. Harrison, 4Oxford-Hattiesburg, 5:30Holmes Co. Central-Provine, 7Lanier-West Jones, 8:30 @ Mississippi ColiseumClass 2A BoysBaldwyn-Heidelberg, 9 a.m.Coahoma AHS-St. Joseph, 10:30West Tallahatchie-Prentiss, NoonCalhoun City-Newton, 1:30Class 5A BoysCenter Hill-Pascagoula, 4Oxford-Wayne Co., 5:30Saltillo-Laurel, 7Clarksdale-Provine, 8:30  

Saturday

@ Jackson StateClass 3A GirlsBooneville-Tylertown, 9 a.m.Independence-Jefferson Co., 10:30Velma Jackson-Forest, NoonHolly Springs-Choctaw Central,

1:30Class 6A GirlsCallaway-Harrison Central, 4Starkville-Jim Hill, 5:30Columbus-St. Martin, 7Murray-Brandon, 8:30 @ Mississippi ColiseumClass 3A BoysVelma Jackson-Crystal Springs, 9

a.m.Holly Springs-Forest, 10:30Humphreys Co.-Morton, NoonBooneville-Kemper Co., 1:30Class 6A BoysSouthaven-Terry, 4Columbus-George Co., 5:30Starkville-Biloxi, 7Tupelo-Meridian, 8:30

The Associated PressSAN ANTONIO — The Spurs have

signed 39-year-old guard Andre Miller four days after the oldest player on an NBA roster was waived by Minnesota.

The addition of Miller on Monday gives the Spurs the two oldest active players, according to STATS. Miller turns 40 on March 19, followed by Tim Duncan on April 25.

Miller had spent all season with the Timberwolves, his eighth team. The 17-year veteran averaged 3.4 points and 2.2 assists in 26 games. The eighth overall pick by Cleveland in 1999, Mill-er has career averages of 12.6 points, 6.6 assists and 3.7 rebounds in 1,291 appearances, which ranks 20th on the career list. He is ninth in NBA history with 8,495 assists.

The Spurs also waived guard Ray McCallum.

Spurs sign Miller,now have 2 oldestactive NBA players

BY TERESA M. WALKER,AP Sports Writer

NASHVILLE, Tenn.— Van-derbilt’s poor crowd control has resulted in a $100,000 fi ne, and athletic director Da-vid Williams knows the Com-modores need to do a better job after fans stormed the court following a 74-62 upset of Kentucky.

“We didn’t take care of our business,” Williams said Monday, “and rightfully the SEC did what they should do.”

What the Southeastern Conference did Monday was levy the hefty fi ne on the school.

Fines start at $50,000 for a fi rst off ense and go up to

$100,000 for a second of-fense and up to $250,000 for subsequent off enses after being increased at the SEC spring meetings last year.

“Unfortunately, I’m going to be one that pays one of the penalties,” Williams said.

Vanderbilt was fi ned $100,000 because it was the school’s second off ense. Van-derbilt fans also stormed the court after a men’s basketball victory over No. 1 Florida in 2007, and the Commodores aren’t the fi rst. Auburn was fi ned $100,000 in January also after a win over Ken-tucky.

Williams, who voted for both the original policy and

the increased penalties, said he and other Vanderbilt of-fi cials need to do a better job explaining why supporters need to celebrate diff erently.

“This is a safety issue,” Williams said. “I don’t want anybody hurt. I want people to have a good time. People had a good time Saturday, and you ruin that when some-body goes out and gets hurt. If someone gets hurt, all that good stuff that happened is gone.

“We just need to do a better job. I need to do a better job. My department needs to do a better job.”

The SEC policy that origi-nally took eff ect in 2004 states

“access to competition areas shall be limited to participat-ing student-athletes, coaches, offi cials, support personnel and properly-credentialed individuals at all times.” The policy adds that, “It is the re-sponsibility of each member institution to implement pro-cedures to ensure compliance with this policy.”

“While understanding the enthusiasm following an ex-citing victory, fans need to re-main in the stands and avoid the safety concerns associated with rushing on to the playing fl oor,” SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said in a state-

Vanderbilt fined for storming court

Please see FINED | 13

The Associated PressCLEMSON, S.C. — Clem-

son coach Dabo Swinney be-lieves his defense is in better shape for next season, even if attrition and the number of Tiger underclassmen at the NFL combine indicate other-wise.

Swinney said Monday as his team opened spring work-outs that the Tigers had more competitive depth up front, among linebackers and in

the secondary — a diff erence from a year ago when Clem-son needed to replace eight starters and crossed its fi n-gers that the front-line play-ers would stay healthy to keep from exposing a lack of sup-port behind them.

“I like where we are on de-fense, I really do,” Swinney said.

The Tigers, 14-1 last season, more than made up for the losses as new starters such as

defensive ends Shaq Lawson and Kevin Dodd kept Clem-son in the top 10 defensively.

The Tigers won the Atlantic Coast Conference champion-ship, were No. 1 in the College Football Playoff rankings and advanced to the national title game before losing 45-40 to Alabama seven weeks ago.

Much of that defensive group is gone and showed off its talents this past week-end in Indianapolis. Lawson

and Dodd, both considered fi rst-round NFL draft picks, along with three starters in the secondary (cornerback Mackensie Alexander and safeties Jayron Kearse and T.J. Green) all gave up their eligibility to jump to the pros.

Clemson linebacker B.J. Goodson, the team’s top tack-ler last season, was also at the combine and put up one of

Swinney: Clemson’s defense has holes to fillPlease see TRANSFERS | 13

BY STEPHEN HAWKINSThe Associated Press

SURPRISE, Ariz. — Ian Desmond started his transi-tion from one-time All-Star shortstop to everyday left fi elder with the Texas Rang-ers on Monday, a new chapter in his career that he is eagerly embracing.

“This wasn’t a desperation move,” Desmond said. “This was me getting to free agency and deciding as a man that I

was ready to make a change.”Desmond had played short-

stop throughout his seven major league seasons, all with the Nationals, but became a free agent after turning down a $15.8 million qualifying of-fer from Washington. The 30-year-old Desmond was an All-Star in 2012 but has start-ed only one of his 927 career games in the outfi eld.

When Desmond expressed his willingness to switch posi-

tions, Rangers general man-ager Jon Daniels said the $8 million, one-year deal came together quickly. Josh Ham-ilton, the 2010 AL MVP and fi ve-time All-Star, will miss at least the fi rst month of the season because of lingering issues with his left knee that was operated on twice last year.

“It was something that pre-sented itself late in the pro-cess that we couldn’t pass up,”

Daniels said. “This is a win-ning piece, a winning player, on a team that expects to win. To add that kind of piece here late in the process, it is a re-ally great fi t for us.”

After Desmond passed a physical Sunday, the deal was completed and he was in camp Monday working with the rest of the outfi elders.

“As far as swallowing my

Desmond deal done, headed to Rangers outfield

Please see DESMOND | 13

Transfers relish time spent at Louisville

Please see CLEMSON | 13

State Tournament Schedule

Photo by Randy J. Williams

State Tournament BoundArmad Wicks (4) and the rest of the Corinth Warriors secured their 18th berth in the State Basketball Tournament with an overtime win over Raymond on Saturday. Both Corinth teams, as well as both Biggersville squads, will make the trip to Jackson and open quarterfinal action on Thursday.

pride and moving to the outfi eld, that’s not going to be a problem,” Des-mond said. “Learning the position, I’m obviously a little bit behind, about 7-10 days and in some cases years and years and years, because it’s been a long time since I’ve done this. But I’m going to work as hard as I can.”

In his only start as an

outfi elder for the Nation-als, Desmond recorded three putouts in seven in-nings playing right fi eld during a 2009 game. His only other outfi eld ap-pearance since then was for one-third of an inning in 2010. Desmond has a .264 career batting aver-age with 110 home runs, 432 RBIs and three Sil-ver Slugger awards. He struggled for much of last season, when he hit .233

with 19 homers and 62 RBIs and made an NL-high 27 errors. Daniels, who spoke to Desmond several times before the deal was complete, said a review of past reports showed many scouts in-dicating that they bet he could play center fi eld.

“It’s a really natural fi t for us as far as the kind of player we look for, elite athlete, tremendous makeup,” Daniels said. “I

don’t think he’s just going to be OK out there. I think he’s going to be an asset.”

The Rangers want Hamilton to get healthy, and Daniels expects him to be a strong contributor to the team when he gets back.

Texas will forfeit its fi rst-round pick in the June amateur draft, No. 19 overall, because Des-mond rejected the qualify-ing off er after last season.

the leading performanc-es in front of NFL scouts.

Freshman defensive tackle Christian Wilkins said the Tigers have to quickly adjust to their old leaders being gone.

“It is a little weird not seeing certain guys like Kevin Dodd and Shaq not out here with us. They did a good job lead-ing this group,” Wilkins said. “Now, my mental-ity is I’ve got to be more of a leader.”

It’s a mindset that must spread through-out the defensive roster, Swinney said.

Ben Boulware is the team’s lone return-ing linebacker while only cornerback Cor-drea Tankersley is back among the secondary starters from last season.

But Swinney said the Tigers have stock-piled players at those spots the past few years and will look to tap

into those reserves this spring. The coach said Clemson must work out many players this spring to guarantee the depth necessary to make an-other run at the College Football Playoff s.

“We’ve got some guys (on defense) that could go play today,” Swinney said. “But not a lot of those guys.”

Clemson’s deepest area seems to be up front where Wilkins, ju-nior Carlos Watkins and Austin Bryant will make a solid core.

Already here for spring ball is early en-rollee Dexter Lawrence, a defensive tackle from North Carolina consid-ered the No. 2 college prospect this past re-cruiting cycle.

Center Jay Guillermo said the young linemen have already made an impression on the team. “They’re going to be hard to stop,” he said, smiling.

in scoring all season for the Cardinals, with Lee averaging 16.3 points per game and Lewis next at 11.7 in one of the na-tion’s most competitive leagues.

Things haven’t always smooth, and Louisville is just 4-3 since the ax fell. But Lee has enjoyed the ride along with fan support, even though it recently delayed a re-cent meal out with his mother.

“I said I’d buy dinner if were less than 20 people asking for a picture or autograph,” said Lee, who needs seven points to reach 2,000 in a ca-reer that included three seasons and two injuries at Drexel. “It was maybe 15 minutes and there was maybe 30 people came up and stopped me and it was like an assembly line. That’s something I wouldn’t have had the chance to get if I hadn’t come here.”

Not to mention, hav-ing his mother pay up by springing for dinner at a Buff alo wing chain.

Lee and Lewis have also been Louisville’s faces and voices be-fore playing one offi cial minute, fi elding ques-tions about the team’s mindset and outlook about the scandal dur-ing last fall’s ACC’s me-dia day. Neither player expressed opinions on

Monday about disciplin-ary alternatives to what Louisville chose, focus-ing more on enjoying the present.

Cardinals coach Rick Pitino cited their poise and composure for help-ing the roster come to-gether and provide one of his most satisfying seasons as a coach.

“The biggest disap-pointment I’ve had with them is the fact that I’ve only been able to coach them for one year,” said Pitino, who will honor Lewis, Lee and walk-on Dillon Avare in a pre-game ceremony.

The Hall of Fame coach believes both players will get a chance to pursue their dream of playing professionally and foresees coaching in Lewis’ future.

Pitino’s immediate goal right now is savor-ing these fi nal games with in a rollercoaster season that began with uncertainty before the Cardinals took fl ight be-hind his one-and-dones and developed into pos-sible tournament con-tenders.

The penalty turned that scenario into a big what-if, but Pitino is grateful for the experi-ence and direction Lewis and Lee provided. The duo is certainly happy for the opportunity to play another year even though it didn’t end the way they had hoped.

ment. “We want to have exciting experiences around SEC games, but also want to maintain a safe environment for student-athletes, coach-es, spectators and offi -cials.”

Kentucky coach John Calipari sent his play-ers who were the bench to the locker room with about 35 seconds left in the game against Van-derbilt. He said after-ward he did that to keep his players safe, expect-ing fans to rush the court to celebrate.

The Big East commis-sioner can fi ne schools with a fi rst off ense start-ing at $5,000 with a sec-ond up to $25,000. But neither the Big Ten nor the Pac-12 have penal-ties in place for fans storming the court.

Arizona coach Sean Miller is not happy with the Pac-12.

Opposing fans have rushed the court in 10 of Arizona’s last 11 con-ference road losses, in-cluding Feb. 24 after a

loss at Colorado. Miller, who suggested last sea-son that schools be fi ned $100,000, was very upset after the loss at Colorado watching his players struggle to get through the crowd.

“Eventually what’s go-ing to happen in the Pac-12 is this: An Arizona player is going to punch a fan. And they’re go-ing to punch the fan out of self-defense,” Miller said.

Earlier this season, Randy Peterson of the Des Moines Register broke his leg after be-ing knocked over when fans rushed the court in Ames following Iowa State’s 83-82 home win over rival Iowa

Kansas coach Bill Self was pinned against a table last season after a loss against Kansas State, leading to the stricter guidelines. In a measure passed last May, the Big 12 can now fi ne member schools or take away a future home game for failing to keep fans rushing the court or fi eld.

ScoreboardAuto racing

NASCAR Sprint Cup

Average Running PositionThrough Feb. 28

RACES POS.1. Martin Truex Jr. 2 4.2602. Kyle Busch 2 7.0493. Kurt Busch 2 8.1394. Kevin Harvick 2 8.4245. Jimmie Johnson 2 8.5476. Denny Hamlin 2 9.5247. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 2 10.5698. Joey Logano 2 11.1259. Matt Kenseth 2 11.77410. Brad Keselowski 2 12.014

NASCAR Sprint Cup

Driver RatingThrough Feb. 28

NASCAR Sprint Cup driver ratings with season points position, single-race high rating and overall rating: POS. HIGH RATING1. Martin Truex Jr. 2 116.6 115.52. Kevin Harvick 3 128.5 114.43. Kyle Busch 1 117.2 106.94. Matt Kenseth 12 106.4 104.75. Denny Hamlin 5 139.1 103.86. Kurt Busch 7 111.8 103.17. Jimmie Johnson 6 123.2 101.58. Joey Logano 8 96.5 94.49. D. Earnhardt Jr. 18 107.4 93.510. Carl Edwards 4 104.3 91.5

Baseball

Spring Training ScheduleMonday

Florida Southern vs. Detroit at Lake-land, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Northeastern vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Boston College vs. Boston at Fort My-ers, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

TuesdayBaltimore vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee,

Fla., 12:05 p.m.Pittsburgh vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla.,

12:05 p.m.Toronto vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater,

Fla., 12:05 p.m.Cincinnati vs. Cleveland at Goodyear,

Ariz., 2:05 p.m.U. of Arizona vs. Arizona at Scottsdale,

Ariz., 4:10 p.m. Wednesday

Detroit (ss) vs. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Detroit (ss) vs. Pittsburgh at Braden-ton, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Atlanta vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Washington vs. Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Minnesota vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m.

Philadelphia vs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla., 12:07 p.m.

L.A. Angels vs. San Francisco at Scott-sdale, Ariz., 2:05 p.m.

U. of Wisconsin vs. Milwaukee at Phoe-nix, 2:05 p.m.

Cleveland vs. Cincinnati at Goodyear, Ariz., 2:05 p.m.

Texas vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz., 2:05 p.m. (charity)

Arizona vs. Colorado at Scottsdale, Ariz., 2:10 p.m.

San Diego vs. Seattle at Peoria, Ariz., 2:10 p.m. (charity)

Basketball

NBA standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division W L Pct GBToronto 39 19 .672 —Boston 36 25 .590 4½New York 25 36 .410 15½Brooklyn 17 42 .288 22½Philadelphia 8 52 .133 32

Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 33 26 .559 —Atlanta 33 27 .550 ½Charlotte 30 28 .517 2½Washington 29 30 .492 4Orlando 26 32 .448 6½

Central Division W L Pct GBCleveland 42 17 .712 —Chicago 30 28 .517 11½Indiana 31 29 .517 11½Detroit 31 29 .517 11½Milwaukee 25 35 .417 17½

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBSan Antonio 50 9 .847 —Memphis 35 24 .593 15Dallas 32 28 .533 18½Houston 29 31 .483 21½New Orleans 23 35 .397 26½

Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 41 18 .695 —Portland 32 28 .533 9½Utah 28 31 .475 13Denver 23 37 .383 18½Minnesota 19 41 .317 22½

Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBx-Golden State 53 5 .914 —L.A. Clippers 38 20 .655 15Sacramento 24 33 .421 28½Phoenix 15 44 .254 38½L.A. Lakers 11 49 .183 43

x-clinched playoff spotSunday’s Games

Washington 113, Cleveland 99Atlanta 87, Charlotte 76Portland 111, Indiana 102Detroit 114, Toronto 101Orlando 130, Philadelphia 116Dallas 128, Minnesota 101Miami 98, New York 81

Monday’s GamesCleveland 100, Indiana 96 Washington 116, Philadelphia 108 Boston 100, Utah 95 Milwaukee 128, Houston 121Memphis 103, Denver 96 Oklahoma City at Sacramento (n) Brooklyn at L.A. Clippers (n)

Today’s GamesPhoenix at Charlotte, 6 p.m.Chicago at Miami, 6:30 p.m.Portland at New York, 6:30 p.m.Orlando at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.Atlanta at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.Brooklyn at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

Wednesday’s GamesCharlotte at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.Chicago at Orlando, 6 p.m.Utah at Toronto, 6:30 p.m.Portland at Boston, 6:30 p.m.Washington at Minnesota, 7 p.m.Indiana at Milwaukee, 7 p.m.Detroit at San Antonio, 7 p.m.Sacramento at Memphis, 7 p.m.New Orleans at Houston, 7 p.m.L.A. Lakers at Denver, 8 p.m.Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 9:30

p.m.

NBA LeadersTHROUGH FEB. 27

SCORING G FG FT PTS AVGCurry, GOL 56 577 276 1718 30.7Harden, HOU 59 497 525 1684 28.5Durant, OKC 52 502 315 1452 27.9Cousins, SAC 48 442 360 1303 27.1Lillard, POR 53 453 277 1344 25.4James, CLE 56 528 269 1385 24.7Westbrook, OKC 59 509 349 1438 24.4Davis, NOR 51 469 265 1230 24.1George, IND 59 442 338 1379 23.4DeRozan, TOR 58 453 398 1341 23.1Butler, CHI 48 357 307 1074 22.4Thompson, GOL 56 444 153 1220 21.8Thomas, BOS 60 419 334 1289 21.5Anthony, NYK 54 409 272 1159 21.5Lowry, TOR 57 387 291 1221 21.4McCollum, POR 58 470 125 1206 20.8Wiggins, MIN 59 429 329 1222 20.7Walker, CHA 57 403 251 1170 20.5Leonard, SAN 54 398 209 1105 20.5Lopez, Bro 59 478 249 1206 20.4

FG PERCENTAGE FG FGA PCTJordan, LAC 245 355 .690Whiteside, MIA 268 436 .615Howard, HOU 257 423 .608Faried, DEN 273 487 .561Kanter, OKC 276 497 .555Gortat, WAS 304 549 .554Lopez, NYK 256 469 .546Towns, MIN 431 801 .538Noel, PHL 230 430 .535Monroe, MIL 381 729 .523

REBOUNDS G OFF DEF TOT AVGDrummond, DET 60 297 605 902 15.0Jordan, LAC 56 207 581 788 14.1Howard, HOU 48 170 407 577 12.0Whiteside, MIA 50 161 413 574 11.5Cousins, SAC 48 112 431 543 11.3Gasol, CHI 55 122 486 608 11.1Pachulia, DAL 55 198 384 582 10.6Towns, MIN 60 170 445 615 10.3Davis, NOR 51 111 410 521 10.2Love, CLE 57 118 457 575 10.1

ASSISTS G AST AVGRondo, SAC 54 647 12.0Westbrook, OKC 59 604 10.2Wall, WAS 58 572 9.9Paul, LAC 53 505 9.5Rubio, MIN 54 475 8.8

Green, GOL 57 421 7.4Lillard, POR 53 373 7.0Harden, HOU 59 408 6.9Thomas, BOS 60 403 6.7James, CLE 56 372 6.66

Hockey

NHL standings, scheduleEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAFlorida 62 35 19 8 78 171 146Tampa Bay 63 37 22 4 78 175 151Detroit 63 32 20 11 75 161 163Boston 63 34 23 6 74 195 175Ottawa 63 30 27 6 66 185 196Montreal 62 30 27 5 65 171 169Buffalo 63 25 31 7 57 147 170Toronto 61 21 30 10 52 147 182

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAWashington 61 45 12 4 94 202 142N.Y. Rangers 63 37 20 6 80 180 159N.Y. Islanders 60 33 20 7 73 171 149Pittsburgh 61 32 21 8 72 165 157Philadelphia 62 29 22 11 69 157 168New Jersey 63 30 26 7 67 139 153Carolina 64 28 26 10 66 155 173Columbus 64 26 30 8 60 167 196

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 64 39 20 5 83 180 153Dallas 64 38 19 7 83 206 184St. Louis 65 36 20 9 81 162 159Nashville 63 31 21 11 73 167 158Colorado 64 32 28 4 68 172 181Minnesota 63 28 25 10 66 164 159Winnipeg 61 26 31 4 56 159 183

Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GALos Angeles 62 37 21 4 78 165 143Anaheim 61 34 19 8 76 153 144San Jose 61 33 22 6 72 182 165Vancouver 61 24 25 12 60 148 175Arizona 63 27 30 6 60 168 198Calgary 62 26 32 4 56 169 195Edmonton 64 23 34 7 53 156 193

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

Sunday’s GamesChicago 3, Washington 2St. Louis 5, Carolina 2Minnesota 3, Florida 1Tampa Bay 4, Boston 1San Jose 4, Vancouver 1Anaheim 4, Los Angeles 2Edmonton 3, N.Y. Islanders 1

Monday’s GamesN.Y. Rangers 2, Columbus 1Philadelphia 5, Calgary 3Pittsburgh 6, Arizona 0Tampa Bay 2, Toronto 1Detroit 3, Dallas 2, OTMontreal at San Jose (n)

Today’s GamesCalgary at Boston, 6 p.m.Edmonton at Buffalo, 6 p.m.Carolina at New Jersey, 6 p.m.St. Louis at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m.Pittsburgh at Washington, 6:30 p.m.Dallas at Nashville, 7 p.m.Colorado at Minnesota, 7 p.m.Florida at Winnipeg, 7 p.m.N.Y. Islanders at Vancouver, 9 p.m.

Wednesday’s GamesToronto at Washington, 6 p.m.Chicago at Detroit,7 p.m.Montreal at Anaheim, 9 p.m.

NHL Scoring LeadersThrough Feb. 28

GP G A PTSPatrick Kane, Chi 64 36 49 85Jamie Benn, Dal 63 32 38 70Tyler Seguin, Dal 63 32 36 68Erik Karlsson, Ott 63 11 56 67Evgeny Kuznetsov, Was 61 19 45 64Johnny Gaudreau, Cgy 60 24 38 62Alex Ovechkin, Was 59 40 18 58Joe Pavelski, SJ 61 27 31 58Artemi Panarin, Chi 62 22 35 57Blake Wheeler, Wpg 61 18 39 57Nicklas Backstrom, Was 58 17 40 57Joe Thornton, SJ 61 14 43 57Sidney Crosby, Pit 59 25 31 56

2 tied with 54 pts.

Transactions

Monday’s dealsBASEBALL

American LeagueTEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms

with INF/OF Ian Desmond on a one-year contract. Placed RHP Tanner Scheppers on the 60-day DL, retroactive to Feb. 18.

Named Steve Mintz manager of Hickory (SAL), Brian Shouse pitching coach for Frisco (Texas) and Joey Seaver pitching coach for Spokane (NWL).

National LeagueATLANTA BRAVES — Named Andruw

Jones special assistant to baseball op-erations.

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed P Mar-quette King to a long-term contract exten-sion.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

ARIZONA COYOTES — Acquired F Ser-gei Plotnikov from Pittsburgh for F Mat-thias Plachta and a conditional 2017 seventh-round draft pick. Acquired F Alex Tanguay, F Conner Bleackley and D Kyle Wood from Colorado for F Mikkel Boed-ker.

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Acquired G Drew MacIntyre from Carolina for D Den-nis Robertson and assigned MacIntyre to Rockford (AHL).

COLORADO AVALANCHE — Reas-signed G Reto Berra to San Antonio.

DALLAS STARS — Acquired D Kris Rus-sell from Calgary for D Jyrki Jokipakka, F Brett Pollock and a conditional 2016 second-round draft pick.

EDMONTON OILERS — Claimed F Adam Cracknell off waivers from Vancou-ver and D Adam Pardy off waivers from Winnipeg. Re-signed D Brandon Davidson and G Laurent Brossoit to two-year con-tract extensions.

MONTREAL CANADIENS — Claimed RW Mike Brown off waivers from San Jose.

NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Traded D Eric Gelinas to Colorado for a 2017 third-round draft pick. Recalled F Stefan Mat-teau from Albany (AHL).

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Reassigned D Matt Taormina to Syracuse (AHL).

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Recalled C William Nylander, RW Kasperi Kapa-nen and F Nikita Soshinkov from Toronto (AHL). Loaned Fs Mark Arcobello, Bren-dan Leipsic and Josh Leivo to Toronto.

WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Traded F Brooks Laich, D Connor Carrick and a 2016 second-round draft pick to Toronto for F Daniel Winnik and a 2016 fi fth-round draft pick.

American Hockey LeagueMILWAUKEE ADMIRALS — Signed D

Jimmy Oligny to a two-year contract exten-sion through the 2017-18 season.

SOCCERMajor League Soccer

FC DALLAS — Signed G Ryan Herman and M Timo Pitter.

COLLEGELA SALLE — Named Bill Bradshaw in-

terim director of intercollegiate athletics and recreation.

TelevisionToday’s lineupCOLLEGE BASKETBALL

6 p.m. (ESPN) — Kentucky at Florida6 p.m. (ESPNU) — Virginia at Clemson6 p.m. (FS1) — DePaul at Villanova6 p.m. (SEC) — Tennessee at Vander-

bilt6:30 p.m. (CBSSN) — Dayton at Rich-

mond7 p.m. (BTN) — Purdue at Nebraska7 p.m. (ESPN2) — Baylor at Oklahoma8 p.m. (ESPN) — Indiana at Iowa8 p.m. (ESPNU) — Texas A&M at Au-

burn8 p.m. (FS1) — Georgetown at Mar-

quette8 p.m. (SEC) — Missouri at LSU8:30 p.m. (CBSSN) — San Diego St.

at New MexicoMAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Noon (MLB) — Spring training, Toronto vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla.

3 p.m. (MLB) — Spring training, Cin-cinnati vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz. (same-day tape)

NBA BASKETBALL6:30 p.m. (NBA) — Chicago at Miami9:30 p.m. (NBA) — Atlanta at Golden

StateNHL HOCKEY

6:30 p.m. (NBCSN) — Pittsburgh at Washington

SOCCER2 p.m. (FS1) — Bundesliga, VfL Wolfs-

burg at Hannover 962 p.m. (FS2) — Bundesliga, Koln at

Ingolstadt 042:45 p.m. (NBCSN) — Premier League,

West Bromwich Albion at Leicester City7 p.m. (FS2) — CONCACAF Champions

League, Queretaro at D.C. United9 p.m. (FS2) — CONCACAF Champions

League, L.A. Galaxy at Santos Laguna

13 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, March 1, 2016

The Associated PressWASHINGTON — Floyd

Mayweather Jr. never shied away from self-pro-motion during his 49-0 career as a professional boxer, so it stands to rea-son that, now that he’s re-tired, promoting the fi ghts of others would come nat-urally, too.

That’s why what hap-pened Monday — at a news conference an-nouncing Adrien Broner’s bout against Mayweather protege Ashley Theo-phane for a minor piece of the 140-pound title on April 1 at the D.C. Armory — made all the sense in the world.

After plenty of cursing and trash-talking from Broner, who showed up nearly an hour late, the champion declared he would not take any ques-tions from the media and headed for the exit, ac-companied by rapper Rick Ross. Guess who strode to center stage? Mayweath-

er, of course, spreading his grin wide and arms wider and letting everyone know, “I’ll do some inter-views!”

As reporters and cam-eras surged forward, the man known as “Money May” spent more than 20 minutes talking, a little bit about Broner and Theo-phane, but mostly about himself. His getup includ-ed Gucci sunglasses, Gu-cci burgundy horse-riding boots and white pants, and he fi ddled with a pin-ky ring adorned by a dia-mond the size of a nickel.

Perhaps, he mentioned in passing, he will try to buy a stake in an NBA team (Mayweather at-tended a Washington Wizards game Sunday, planned to go to another Monday night, and said he has sought counsel from that club’s owner, Ted Le-onsis).

No, Mayweather insist-ed, there is zero chance that he will get back into

the ring. “I was able to retire from the sport with all my faculties and not let the sport retire me,” May-weather said. But doesn’t he miss fi ghting?

“No, not at all. Not at all. I’m blessed,” said May-weather, who turned 39 last week. “I’m a lot older now. Next year, my son will be going to college. I had a great run.”

Does he ever spar for fun?

“Ain’t no more wear-and-tear on this body,” he replied. “This body (has) got to rest.”

How does he satisfy his competitive juices?

“I fi ght through these guys. When they go out there and fi ght and they win,” Mayweather said about boxers he’s promot-ing, “I feel the same emo-tions.”

As for Mayweather Pro-motions and the business side of the sport, he ex-plained: “We’re not rush-ing. We’re taking one step

at a time.”Theophane called May-

weather a mentor and “one of the smartest, if not the smartest boxer ever, so (there is) knowledge he can give me you can’t get from no one else.”

Long acknowledged as one of the greatest de-fensive boxers in history, Mayweather likes to say he earned about $800 million in his career — a fi gure that includes $32 million for his last fi ght, a victory over Andre Berto in September.

“He seems content now. He’s happy. At the end of the day, boxers, we have to retire at some point in life,” Theophane said. “If he feels the itch to come back, then he will come back. But he’s happy now. ... A lot of professional boxers, they end up broke. He’s got a lot of money and now he wants to help out the next generation of boxers, so I think he should be applauded.”

Mayweather shifts focus to promotion

FINED

TRANSFERS

CLEMSON

DESMOND

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

14 • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

& Business– Run Your Ad On This Page For $165 Mo. –

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Property DirectoryProperty DirectoryHOME FOR RENT

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HOWELL HOME

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2000 SQ FT

MITCHELL AVE IN

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$220,000256-335-4648

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256-335-4648

Burnsville AreaMobile Home

16 x 903 BR, 2 Bath

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Call 662-750-0370 Mike662-279-6547 JoLeave Message

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MARSH TOWN3BR, 2 BATH ON

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COMPLETELY REMODELED &

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2.5 CAR GARAGE AT BACK OF LOT THAT

WOULD MAKE A GREAT WORK SHOP.

RENT $800 MONTH WITH $200 DEPOSIT.

SELL $145,000.

662-720-6766

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FEED/FERTILIZER0430

MERCHANDISE

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MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6111

for details.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107

LOST0142

FOUND0149

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL HELP0232CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.

SKILLED TRADE0240

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Daily Corinthian • Tuesday March 1, 2016 •15

SERVICES

GUARANTEEDGUARANTEEDAuto SalesAuto SalesAdvertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and

price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad.

COMMERCIAL

804BOATS

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2006 SPRINGDALE by KEYSTONEpull camper with

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No Calls after 6PM.Corinth.

$6500.00 662-284-4604

SOLDSOLD SOLDSOLD 24 FT BONANZA TRAILER

GOOSE NECK

GOOD CONDITION

$2,000.00

662-287-8894

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

14 Ft. Aluminum Boat & Trailer,25 HP Johnson

Motor.New Battery

$2000.REDUCED

Call for More Info:662-286-8455

Baker Propane Forklift

4000 LB Lift$2000.00

662-279-7011

2009 TT45ANew Holland Tractor

335 Hours8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner

deceased, Kossuth Area. $10,000- 662-424-3701

KUBOTA 20015700 HPGOOD

CONDITIONOWNER RETIRING

$10,000.00731-453-5521

FOR SALE

JOHN DEERE TRACTORS

SPRING SPECIAL

662-415-0399662-419-1587

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLDSOLDSOLD

TAX GUIDE 2016Holder Accounting Firm

1407-A Harper RoadCorinth, MS 38834

Kellie Holder, Owner

Our staff is ready to help you.

Open year-round.Thank you for your

business and loyalty.Telephone: 662-286-9946

Fax: 662-286-2713

ADVERTISE YOUR

TAX SERVICEHERE FOR

$95 A MONTH

CALL 287-6111FOR MORE DETAILS

ADVERTISE YOUR

TAX SERVICEHERE FOR

$95 A MONTH

CALL 287-6111FOR MORE DETAILS

Jackson Hewitt Income Tax

WE ARE NOT AFFILIATED WITH

ANY OF THE WALMART

JACKSON HEWITT’S

Corinth 662-286-10402003 Hwy 72 E

Booneville662-728-1080

508 W Chambers DriveOld highway 4

Ripley662-512-5829

1906B City Avenue N

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

MISSING MALE RED PIT BULL

FROM LAKEHILL/HWY 72 CAR ACCIDENT MON 2-15-16.

PLS CALL 731-453-5411 OR 731-610-1205.

REWARD.

LEGALS0955

for United States Presidentand US House of Represent-atives 1st Congressional Dis-trict.

NOTICE is also give that theAlcorn County Logic and Ac-curacy Technicians will con-duct for Public viewing thetesting of all of the ES&S Vot-ing Units, per the followingschedule, according to law:

February 24, 2016 thru Feb-ruary 27, 2016 and will re-sume March 1, 2016 thruMarch 5, 2016 all testing willstart at 8:00 o’clock a.m. inthe Election Central Room at

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955ELECTION NOTICE

(MARCH 8, 2016)

NOTICE is hereby given bythe Alcorn County Demo-crat and Republican Partiesthat a Party Primary Electionwill be held March 8, 2016, atall precincts in Alcorn Countywhich will include Candidates

HOMES FOR SALE0710

TRANSPORTATION

HOMES FOR SALE0710

crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

HOMES FOR SALE0710

nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

FURNISHED APARTMENTS0615

JUMPERTOWN APARTMENTS

3 bedroom/ 2 bath$650 PER MONTH

partial utilities furnishedPlease call 662-840-4050

TVRHA acceptedNew Ownership and

Managment

COMPLETELY REMODELED!

READY FOR IMMEDIATE

OCCUPANCY!

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-

HOMES FOR SALE0710

TRANSPORTATION

TRANSPORTATION

16 • Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • Daily Corinthian

SERVICES

868AUTOMOBILES

GUARANTEEDGUARANTEEDAuto SalesAuto SalesAdvertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO

DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad.

134,514 miles$13,900 OBO

Just serviced and ready for the road.

2004 Hummer H2

Call @ 662-664-0210

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

REDUCEDREDUCED

$5900.00 OBO

2012 JeepWrangler 4WD

00 Miles, Red Garage Kept, it has

been babied. All maintenance

records available. Call or Text:

662-594-5830

832Motorcycles/ATV’S

1990 Harley Davidson

Custom Soft-Tail$9000

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead

$9000 OBO

662-808-2994

1987 FORD 250 DIESELUTILITY SERVICE TRUCK

$4000. IN GOOD CONDITION731-645-8339 OR

731-453-5239

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster,

color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.

Call @662-664-0210

2002 Harley Fat Boy,color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO

Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.

Call @ 662-664-0210

2012 BansheeBighorn

Side-by-Side4 X 4 w/ WenchAM/FM w/ CD

$7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

2003 Mustang GTSVT Cobra CloneTuned 4.6 Engine

5 SpeedLowered

4:10 GearsAll Power & Air

$6500.662-415-0149

2010 Chevy Equinox LS

130K Miles, Fully Loaded

GREAT Condition!

$10,500662-415-8343 or 415-7205

1996 Dodge DakotaOne Owner, Bought New

in Booneville, MS.139,000 miles, Xtra Cab, Leer Bed liner with cover,

Back seat has storage under the seat.

318 Magnum Engine.

$ , 00.00662-672-0222662-750-1949

95’CHEVYASTRO

Cargo VanGood, Sound

Van

$2700872-3070

06 Chevy Trailblazer

Powereverything!Good heat

and Air$3,250 OBO

662-319-7145

2008 Harley Davidson

Electra Glide ClassicBlack w/lots of

Chrome21,600 miles

$12,500662-286-6750

2006 YAMAHA 1700GREAT CONDITION!

APPROX. 26,000 MILES

$4350(NO TRADES)

662-665-0930662-284-8251

1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color:

blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles,

$7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for

the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

1976 F115

428 MotorVery Fast

$3,500.

662-808-9313662-415-5071

1997 Mustang

BlackLike new on the inside and out.

Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles

$4,000.00662-664-0357

GT

2006 Express 25006.6 Diesel Runs

and drives great. 172,000 miles. A/C

and new tiresWell serviced!

$8500.00662-594-1860

1994 Nissan Quest New Lifters,Cam, Head,

Struts and Shocks.$2000.

Call 603-9446

1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER6 cyl., 5 speed

ConvertibleLeather Seats

All OriginalElectric Windows

& Seats88,000 miles

$10,000.00 OBO212-4882

For Sale or Trade1978 Mercedes

6.9 Motor 135,000 miles.Only made 450 that year.

$2,500. OBOSelling due to health

reasons.Harry Dixon

286-6359

2011 GMC CANYON-RED

REG. CAB, 2 WD

78,380 MILES

$11,900 OBO

662-462-7790

1989 Mercedes Benz300 CE

145K miles, Rear bucket seats,

Champagne color, Excellent Condition.

Diligently maintained. $5000.00

662-415-2657$4000.00

2007 Taurus

Well Maintained

$3,500.

662-322-5623

1995 Chevrolet Silverado Z71

Regular Cab Short Wheel Base, Red35,000 miles on rebuilt engine,

transmission, and rear differentialSuper clean interior and exterior, only

minor cosmetic fl awsComes with extra set of wheels and tires

$4,900 or best offerContact Joe anytime after 5:00 pm

(662) 415-2509

2003 FORD TAURUS

142100 MILES$2800.00

662-665-5720

2013 LINCOLN MKSWHITE - NAVIGATIONEQUIPMENT GROUP

101ADOUBLE MOON ROOF

EXTENDED WARRANTY

23,000 MILES

$23,750.00

662-415-6553

2013 Arctic Cat

308 miles4 Seater w/seat beltsPhone charger outlet

Driven approx. 10 times

Excellent ConditionWench (front bumper)

(662)279-0801

2009 Pontiac G6

Super Nice, Really Clean,

Oil changed regularly, Good cold air and has

good tires. 160k

Asking $5400. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @

662-319-7145

2004 Cadillac Seville SLSLoaded, leather, sunroof, chrome

wheels.

89,000 Miles$5500.

Call 662-603-1290

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4

4 WHEELER2nd Owner, Great

ConditionHas a Mossy Oak

Cover over the body put on when it was

bought new. Everything Works. Used for

hunting & around the house, Never for mud

riding. $1500 Firm.

If I don’t answer, text me and I will contact you. 662-415-7154

YAMAHA V STAR 650

22,883 MILES$2,650.00

665-1288

2012 Yamaha 230 Dirt Bike

Great Condition.

$2800.00Call

662.415.1173

REDUCEDREDUCED

1950 Buick 78,400 miles$4200.00 or

TradeAll Original

662-415-3408

1985 Mustang GT, HO, 5 Speed,

Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner

Last year of carburetor, All original.

$16,500

662-287-4848

2006 SATURN ION

Low miles$4,500.

662-322-5623

1998 CHEVYCUSTOM VAN

136,200 mi.Well Maintained

Looks & Runs Great

$6,500.00662-415-9062

CAR HAULERTRAILER

6 Ft 6 in. wide,13 Ft 6 in. long,Electric Brakes

& LightsGOOD

CONDITION$1,250.00415-1281

HD 1200 SPORTSTER CUSTOM XL

LOTS OF EXTRASGREAT CONDITION

39K MILES$5,200.00

662-643-8382

$7500.00

SOLD SOLD

$5,000

$3,900.00

$5900.00 OBO

2003 White

PT CruiserLimited Edition

Chrome Wheels,Tan Leather interior with heated seats.

Sunroof, 2.4 Engine.140,000 miles

Clean car, Non smoker$3,000.00 fi rm.

Call 662-286-6427

or 662-415-0846

2006 Harley Davidson Street Glide

103 Screaming Eagle Engine9700 Actual Miles-Showroom Condition-Fully Chromed and

Customized-RinehartTrue Dual Exhaust-Stage1

Breather Kit-10K Mile Full Factory Service Just Compled-

$14,000.00 Firm-662-212-0362

$8,90000

1970 MERCURYCOUGAR

Excel. Cond. Inside & OutAll Original

662-664-0357Automobile for sale

2011 TOYOTA AVALON

Blizzard White, Tan Leather Interior, Fully

Loaded, 66K miles,

$19,500Excellent Condition Call:731-610-6153

2001 Heritage Softail

LIKE NEW9K Miles

25,000 InvestedAsking 8K

Serviced by H/D Bumpas

731-645-3012

2000 Harley Davidson Road

King Classic

20,000 miles,One Owner,Garage kept.$8,500.00

662-287-2333Leave Message

1964 F100 SHORT BED

completely refurbished & recovered seat, new brakes, NOS starter,

new $125 battery. 6cyl, 3spd-

Walnut $1850.00,

750-8526

1998 Cadillac DeVilleTan Leather InteriorSunroof, green color

99,000 miles - needs motor

$1,100.00(662) 603-2635

212-2431

2001 LINCOLNTOWNCAR

GREAT CONDITION174,000 MILES

$6,000.00CALL 9AM-5PM M-F

662-415-3658

2012 Subaru Legacy$10,900

Excellent condition, One owner, Must sell!

Call662-284-8365

1999 Ford Ranger

Extended Cab

150,000 miles4.0 Liter Engine

$2,900.00662-396-1326

HONDA VAN2005 TOURING

PACKAGE

White with tan leather

DVD, Loaded180K miles,$8000 OBO

662-284-5600

2009 HONDA RUBICON

Rode 90 hoursONE OWNER662-554-2363

$3,800.00

$9,500

$2,500.00

SOLD SOLD

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

SOLDSOLD

2012 Yamaha 230 Dirt Bike

Great Condition.

$2800.00Call

662.415.1173

REDUCEDREDUCED

SOLDSOLD

INCOME TAX

FIND WHO YOU NEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

TO-DO

S

662-287-6111

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955LEGALS0955

This the 12th day of Feb-ruary, 2016.

DELORSE MOOREADMINISTRATRIX

GIFFORD & TENNISONSOLICITORS FOR ADMINIS-TRATRIX

Gifford & TennisonP.O. Box 59Booneville, MS 38829

4 tc 2/23, 3/1, 3/8, 3/15/16

15206

LEGALS0955

Letters of Administrationhaving been granted on the12th day of February, 2016,by the Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, tothe undersigned upon the es-tate of L. C. Moore, de-ceased, notice is hereby giv-en to all persons having claimsagainst said estate to presentthe same to the Clerk of thesaid Court for probate andregistration, according to law,within ninety (90) days fromthe date of first publication orthey will be forever barred.

LEGALS0955

ORDERED by the Demo-crat and Republican Execut-ive Committees

Publish:2/7, 2/9, 2/14, 2/16, 2/21,2/23, 2/29, 3/1, 3/8/2016

15190

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

IN RE: ESTATE OF L. C.MOORE

NO. 2016-0086-02

LEGALS0955be followed, accordingto law:

March 16, 2016 thru March19, 2016 and will resumeMarch 21, 2016 thru March26, 2016 starting at 8:00o’clock a.m. in the ElectionCentral Room at the AlcornCounty Courthouse.

NOTICE is hereby given thatif a run-off is required the PollWorker Training will be con-ducted March 15; March 17;March 22 and March 24, 2016starting at 6:00 o’clock p.m. inthe Courtroom at the Al-corn County Courthouse.

LEGALS0955the Election Central Room atthe Alcorn County Court-house.

NOTICE is hereby given thatthe Poll Worker Training willbe conducted February 22;February 23; February 25;February 29; March 1; andMarch 3, 2016 starting at 6:00o’clock p.m. in the Courtroomat the Alcorn County Court-house.

If a run-off (SecondPrimary) is required, itwill be held March 29,2016, the following L &A testing schedule willbe followed, according