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  • Vol. 116, No. 97 Corinth, Mississippi 16 pages 1 section

    SaturdayApril 21, 2012

    50 centsToday65

    ShowersTonight

    42

    Index On this day in history 150 years agoFresh from the victory at Island No. 10, Maj.Gen. John

    Popes Army of the Mississippi begin to arrive at Hamburg Landing near Shiloh. Three Union armies have gathered and are preparing a march against Corinth.

    Stocks........7 Classified......14 Comics......13 Wisdom......12

    Weather........5 Obituaries........3 Opinion........4 Sports......10

    New pumps being purchased by the City of Corinth may help alleviate the familiar scene of fl ooded underpasses on Cass Street and Fulton Drive.

    Each of the underpasses has two pumps. One pump on Ful-ton Drive is currently inoper-able.

    Street Commissioner Jim By-num said it doesnt make fi nan-cial sense to sink more money into repairs when the pumps can be replaced for not much more expense.

    That pump has probably been repaired eight or 10 times, if not more, he said.

    The pumps in both under-passes were installed in the 1960s.

    In a special meeting on Fri-day, the Board of Aldermen agreed to upgrade both under-passes with the purchase of four pumps and two control panels from Southern Pipe at a cost of $34,465.76. Lackeys Electrical submitted a bid of $6,850 for installation.

    The pumps are expected to be far more effi cient at removing water from the underpasses, with 20 horsepower compared to 10 horsepower provided by the existing old pumps.

    They should take the water out at least twice as fast if not three times better, said By-num.

    The freestanding, submers-ible pumps are also designed to resist clogging, which has been a persistent problem for the old pumps.

    Also, the control panels will be moved to locations that will reduce problems with moisture and heat.

    Bynum said water drained from the Fulton Drive under-pass fl ows into Elam Creek, while water from the Cass Street underpass travels to be-hind the Southgate shopping center and ultimately into Phil-lips Creek.

    The board also accepted the resignation of William D. Smith, a detective with the po-lice department, effective im-mediately.

    City buysunderpass waterpumps

    BY JEBB [email protected]

    Tickets go on sale today at Crossroads Arena for a con-cert by Luke Bryan, known for country chart-toppers such as I Dont Want This Night to End.

    The box offi ce is open today from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. The concert is set for 7 p.m. on May 31 and includes a pair of open-ing acts Craig Campbell and Chancie Neal.

    Were real excited about Luke Bryan coming and we feel like it will be a sellout crowd, said Bill Strickland, the arenas board chairman.

    In the box offi ce, Cindy Davis said the arena is getting many phone calls and seeing much excitement about the show.

    A Georgia native, Bryan is considered a rising country star whose third major label album,

    Tailgates & Tanlines, re-leased last sum-mer, has gone platinum and produced two

    number ones on Billboards Hot Country Songs chart Coun-try Girl (Shake It for Me) and I Dont Want This Night to End. He also topped the coun-try chart in 2010 with Some-one Else Calling You Baby. His current single, Drunk on You, is climbing the country top 20.

    Bryan, 35, was infl uenced as a youth by artists in his parents record collection such as Ronnie Milsap and Merle Haggard. He got a guitar at 14 and began play-ing with local bands at 15. He later moved to Nashville as he worked to break into the business.

    Bryan performed at the Acad-emy of Country Music Awards show earlier this month and last week was featured in CBS Lio-nel Richie and Friends special performing Richies 1983 hit Running with the Night.

    Opening act Craig Campbell, also a Georgia native, released his debut album in 2011. He scored a top 20 country hit with Family Man in 2010 and also reached the country top 40 with Fish and When I Get It.

    Developing artist Chancie Neal is a 17-year-old singer-songwriter from Calhoun, La.

    Ticket prices are $38.50 for pit (standing room only), $36.50 for fl oor and $32.50 for risers. Online purchases at crossroadsarena.com will have an additional fee. Visit the are-na box offi ce or call 287-7779.

    Tickets go onsale forsinger

    BY JEBB [email protected]

    Photos by Kim Jobe / Corinth School District

    Eighty-four seniors from Corinth High School will be hosting their version of Follies 2012 on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, April 26, 27 and 28. Reserved seat tickets are $7 each. The tickets will go on sale to the general public beginning at 7:30 a.m. on Monday in the CHS Office. Tickets will be sold from 7:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. daily in the office. This years theme is Time Warp. Quite by accident, CHS seniors travel back in time via music and skits. Songs from such musicians as the Beatles, Spice Girls, Etta James and Bruno Mars will be featured. Some of the selections will be At Last, Vogue and Rhythm of Love. Ann Woodhouse, Challenge teacher at Corinth Elementary School, is the director of Follies again this year. Kelly Treadway is serving as assistant director. Choreographers are Maria Fraser, Jennifer Taylor, Allison Woodhouse and Lexi Wade. The Follies once again feature a live band made up of Cindy Mathis, Ben Mathis, Allen Woodhouse, Brian Graham and Brandon Bingham. Getting some rehearsal time include (above) Molly Grace Williams, Hannah Avent, Catherine Coleman, Merrell McQueen, Tori Treadway, Meredith Wilbanks and Katie Knight, while Cullen Grantham (below) busts some 70s moves. For more pho-tos, see page 2.

    Time Wrap

    A day of activities to com-memorate a fallen local soldier and raise money for wounded warriors will be held Saturday.

    Sign-up for the 2nd Annual SSG Seth Ricketts Memorial Poker Run, Bike and Car Show will begin at 8 a.m. this morn-ing.

    It is held in memory of the 27-year old staff sergeant from

    Glen who was killed near the end of February 2010 at Bala Murghab, Afghanistan.

    The main site for the event will be at Harper Square Mall on U.S. 22 East in Corinth. Vendors will sell a wide range of items and a day-long line-up of musicians and bands from diverse musical genres will pro-vide entertainment all day be-ginning at 11 a.m.

    The entertainment line up

    includes Maty Noyes, Brian Randle, R.T. Rinehart, Surviv-ing Allison, Holy Ghost Elec-tric Show Setup, Youth in Asia, Allisons Rage, Every Other Wednesday, Southern Legend and a Taekwondo demonstra-tion by the Corinth Taekwondo Karate Kids.

    The poker run in which motorcycle riders collect play-ing cards from a number of checkpoints and the rider with

    the best hand at the end wins will begin around 11 a.m. Chris Grimes, a US Navy vet-eran and co-organizer of the event, said between 100 and 300 bikes are expected to hit the road for the poker run.

    Back at the site at Harpers Square Mall, there will be a car and bike show. The car show will feature a Peoples Choice award as well as a judged cat-egory. The bike show will be di-

    vided into American and Metric bike classes.

    Peoples Choice will continue all day. Winners will be an-nounced after the bikes return from the poker run during the afternoon.

    Proceeds from the event will go to benefi t the Fisher House, a home-like facility in Biloxi where wounded soldiers and

    Ricketts Memorial event includes bike, car show todayBY BOBBY J. SMITH

    [email protected]

    They should take the water out at least twice as

    fast if not three times better.

    Jim BynumStreet commissioner

    Aldermen agree to upgradeto ease flooding

    Luke Bryanto performMay 31

    Related

    photo.

    Page 2.

    Please see RICKETTS | 3

    Daily Corinthian

  • Local/Region2 Daily Corinthian Saturday, April 21, 2012

    Submitted photo

    ConcertplannedPopular coun-try singer Luke Bryan is set to per-form at Cross-roads Arena in Corinth on May 31.

    Follies 2012

    Seniors from Corinth High School will be

    hosting their version of Follies 2012 on

    Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, April

    26, 27 and 28. Re-served seat tickets

    are $7 each. The tickets will go on sale to the general public at 7:30 a.m. Monday

    in the CHS Office.

    Staff photo by Steve Beavers

    Wreck destroys mailbox No injuries were suffered in a one-vehicle accident in Beauregard Park. A female driver and three children were inside a Lincoln Navigator when it clipped a brick-covered mailbox around 12:25 p.m. Friday. The accident, which destroyed the mailbox, also did significant damage to the right side of the SUV. Corinth police, Magnolia EMS and Corinth First Responders all responded.

    The TLC Network was in town this week, filming a Toddlers and Tiaras segment on 22-month-old beauty contestant Ava Mc-Clamroch of Corinth. Staff writer and photog-rapher Steve Beavers followed Ava, her family and the film crew for a Sunday feature in the Daily Corinthian. Arts in McNairy an-

    nounced its photo con-test winners and three Corinth area photogra-phers took home first place awards. Daily Corinthian Editor Mark Boehler talked to the Best of Show winner to find out where, how and why the winner got the outstanding photo-graph. For a complete list of winners and a visual presentation of the Best of Show win-ner and a sampling of other great photo-graphs, see the Daily Corinthian on Sunday. National Park

    Service Ranger Tom Parson continues his stories on the Daily Corinthians new his-tory page. Union troops built Camp Davies six miles south of Corinth on Clear Creek due to the lack of a good wa-ter source in Corinth. The camp was a stock-ade with 40 buildings. Parson takes us on a trip to Camp Davies on Sunday, complete with an old drawing. An Iuka group is

    working to drum up interest in a Battle of Iuka reenactment to be held later this year with the citys annual festival. Watch for staff writer Jebb Johnstons story coming this week.

    Coming Up

    Please see EVENTS | 3

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    LAND AUCTIONSaturday, April 28, 2012

    2000 Bowling Green Rd., Lexington, MS 39095

    811 +/- AcresPrime Land

    including tillablerow crop, pasture

    and timber.

    Heirs of John M. Kimbrough III will sell their farm at public auction. Willbe sold in tracts and then offered as a whole. Property has income poten-tial as well as excellent turkey and deer hunting. For more info & a virtualvideo tour visit www.goodinauction.com

    Goodin Aucon CompanyCharleston, MO.(573) 6833544

    Bloomeld, MO.(573) 5683544

    John Goodin, Auconeer MSLic 715; MS FirmLic 716; MS RE Broker Lic 15214

    From I-55 exit 156, turn west on Hwy 12, go approx. 8 miles to BowlingGreen Rd, turn right (north) 2.5 miles to sale site on right. Watch for signs.Seller reserves the right to reject final bid, however no reasonable offer will be refused.10% non-refundable down on day of sale, balance due at closing in 30 days. 6% buyerspremium, buyer to pay all survey and closing costs. Property is broker owned.

    2-Day Public Auction Friday & Saturday, April 27 & 28

    Huge 2-Day Spring Construction and Equipment

    Auction!

    MARTIN & MARTIN Auctioneers of MS, Inc.

    Jeff Martin, MSAL# 1255 601-450-6200

    Hwy 49 South of Hattiesburg, Brooklyn, MS www.mmaofms.comSee Our Website For Details! Auctions Begin 10 AM Each Day!

  • Local3 Daily Corinthian Saturday, April 21, 2012DeathsThings to do Today

    Lain BenjaminLain Benjamin was born March 7, 1964, in

    Corinth. He attended and graduated from Kos-suth High School in 1982. Lain went on to the University of North Alabama where he was a member of Fiji Fraternal Organization and trea-surer of the Student Government Association. He received his degree in accounting after which he worked for the State of Tennessee, Nabisco Corps and most recently for Phillip Morris, which took him to New York, until his retirement.

    Lain was enjoying life to the fullest in Ft. Lau-derdale, Fla., where he attended MC Sunshine Cathedral and volunteered with many nonprofi t organizations until his passing on Tuesday, April 17, 2012. His love for life showed in his smile and laughter, both of which will be greatly missed by those who knew him and loved him.

    He was preceded in death by his father and mentor, Walter Milton Benjamin.

    Survivors include his mother, Hazel Benjamin of Corinth; a brother, Lamar Benjamin of Tupelo; niece Erica Anyzeski (Brad) of Florida; a nephew, Walter Willie Benjamin of California; and a great-niece, Abby Anyzeski.

    Lain was loved and cared for by many others, including a special friend, Juan Carlos, Linda Marsh Hardin, Eva Dale Benjamin Rorie, Mary Katherine Coleman and a host of family and friends.

    Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Monday at Mc-Peters Inc. Funeral Chapel with Bro. Joe Loncar offi ciating. Burial will follow in the Wheeler Grove Cemetery.

    Family will receive friends from 12 noon to ser-vice time and following the service.

    For online condolences: www.mcpetersfuneral-directors.com.

    Greg ButlerFuneral services for Greg Butler, 48, of Memphis,

    Tenn., are set for 2 p.m. Sunday at Memorial Funeral Home in Corinth with burial at Oaks Hill Cemetery.

    Mr. Butler died Thursday at Baptist East Hospital in Memphis. He was a heating and air service tech-nician for 28 years.

    He was preceded in death by his parents, Douglas Wayne Butler and Betty Waterford Butler, and his brother, Patrick Dean Butler.

    Survivors include a son, Christopher Brandon Butler of Memphis, Tenn., and a host of family and friends.

    Bro. Tim Dillingham will offi ciate the service.Visitation is Sunday from 12 noon until service

    time.

    their families can stay to-gether during a soldiers recovery.

    The house is large enough to accommodate several families at once and its services are free of charge.

    Its the equivalent of the Ronald McDonald House for soldiers and their families so fami-lies can be with soldiers while theyre in the hospi-tal and rehab, explained Grimes.

    The American Legion Riders will deliver all the funds raised by the event to the Fisher House on the third Saturday in May.

    Limited edition T-shirt will be available for pur-chase.

    Organizers emphasized that it will be a family-friendly event.

    We want people to bring their kids to see the cars and bikes, Grimes said. There wont be all that stuff you see at bike rallies, not a bunch of cussing and stuff. Its a family-friendly environ-ment.

    Registration for the poker run is $15 for each bike and an additional $10 for passengers. Bike Show registration is $10.

    (For more information contact Bill Ricketts at 665-5384.)

    RICKETTS

    CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

    Yard saleReal Life Church, 2040

    Shiloh Road, next to Freds in Corinth, is hav-ing a yard sale today from 8 a.m. until. There is a large selection. Proceeds to go to Extreme Youth.

    Dulcimer festival

    Tishomingo State Park will host the 34th Annual Hollis Long Dulcimer Festival today at the Loochapola Lodge. The program will begin at noon and last throughout the afternoon.

    Musicians from the local area and several surrounding states will be creating great dulcet tunes. They will be avail-able to answer questions and demonstrate the dul-cimer. Food concessions will be available.

    For more information, contact the park office at 662-438-6914.

    Memorial Poker Run

    The 2nd Annual SSG Seth Ricketts Memo-rial Poker Run is being held today at the Harper Square Shopping Cen-ter, in front of Sears, in Corinth. Sign-up begins at 8 a.m., kick stands up at 10 a.m., and the mu-sic fest starts at 11 a.m.

    Proceeds will go to the Fisher House to support our wounded warriors and their families.

    BBQ cook-off

    The 5th Annual Good hope Baptist Church

    BBQ Cook-off is set for Saturday, April 28. There is no entry fee for the contest. All cookers must be registered by today. Call the church of-fice, 731-632--0379, for an entry form. Leave a message and someone will return call.

    Civil War art

    A collection of Civil War Impressions is featured at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery to co-incide with ongoing ses-quicentennial activities.

    Prints and some of the originals will be for sale. Art gallery hours are Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

    Library exhibit

    The Corinth Artist Guild Gallery is displaying computer enhanced pho-tographs by Ray Tinsley at The Corinth Public Li-brary. Also on display at the library are the paint-ings of Dot Courson, Florence Milam, Bruce Biglow, Judy Ferguson and Toni Spink

    Tractor show

    The Tennessee River Old Iron Club announces the 1st Annual O.F. Wag-oner Memorial Tractor Show to be held today at the Stantonville Civic Center. The show will begin at 10 a.m. and feature restored and un-restored tractors. Admis-sion is free. There will be no judging.

    Also, featured will be David Dodd of Corinth who will show off his team of matched Jersey Oxen Robb and Jeff.

    Bobby Jo (Bo-Jack) Killingsworth will perform at 11 a.m. The Smoke-house Rednecks will be cooking chicken along with other foods. Pro-ceeds from the food will benefit the Stantonville Volunteer Fire Depart-ment.

    Bluegrass show

    The Clay Wagoner Me-morial Bluegrass Show will be held tonight begin-ning at 6 p.m. at The Marty (community cen-ter) in Adamsville, Tenn. Featured performers will include Crossroads Bluegrass, Flatwoods Bluegrass and Hatchie Bottom Bluegrass.

    Concessions avail-able. Donations taken for show expenses.

    Golf Month

    The Alcorn County Welcome Center is ready for golf. Stop in and reg-ister for a drawing for certificates to be given away at the end of the month provided by the Natchez Trace Golf Club in Saltillo. The Corinth Area Convention & Visi-tors Bureau has provided golf tees with their web-site information on them for random giveaways for the month.

    The Welcome Center has the 2012 Official MS Golf Guide and bro-

    chures for golf courses throughout the state including the Corinth recreational guide insert. The Mississippi Wildlife & Fisheries DVD will play throughout the month featuring state parks with golf courses.

    Just Plain Country

    Just Plain Country per-forms at the Tishomingo County Fairgrounds in Iuka every Saturday from 7-10 p.m. Good family entertainment.

    Shiloh museum

    A museum dedicated to the Battle of Shiloh and area veterans is now open next to Shiloh Na-tional Military Park. It is located at the intersec-tion of state Route 22 and Route 142 in Shiloh, across from Ed Shaws Restaurant.

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

    Student art show

    Northeast Mississippi Community College Art De-partment is exhibiting its annual Student Art Show. Gallery Hours are Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.- 3 p.m.

    For more information, contact gallery director Terry Anderson at 662-720-7336 or [email protected].

    Staff writer and pho-tographer Jebb John-ston will attend the SCV Heritage Day event Sat-urday at the Crossroads Museum. Hes hoping for good weather and his account of the event will be presented Sunday. Staff writer and

    photographer Brant Sappingtion also our editor in Booneville returns to Corinth

    on Saturday to attend the huge Alcorn County 4-H Contest Day at the MSU Extension Center. Watch for Brants cover-age of the event in an upcoming edition of the Daily Corinthian.

    EVENTS

    CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

    Read the Classifieds ( ) , , ,

    THE LUCKY ONE (PG13) 1:20 4:10 7:10 9:30 No Pass THINK LIKE A MAN (PG13) 1:35 4:25 7:25 10:05 No Pass THE THREE STOOGES (PG) 1:05 4:05 7:05 9:15 No Pass CABIN IN THE WOODS (R) 1:25 4:25 7:30 9:45 No Pass

    LOCKOUT (PG13) 1:15 4:15 7:20 9:35 No PassAMERICAN REUNION (R) 1:30 4:30 7:25 10:00

    WRATH OF THE TITANS (NON 3D) (PG13) 1:00 4:05 7:05 9:25MIRROR MIRROR (PG) 1:10 4:15 7:20 9:45THE HUNGER GAMES (PG13) 1:10 4:20 7:3021 JUMP STREET (R) 1:30 4:35 7:15 9:50

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

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  • OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.4 Saturday, April 21, 2012www.dailycorinthian.com

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

    Reece Terry publisher

    [email protected]

    L.W. Hodgespress

    foreman

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    [email protected]

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    [email protected]

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

    E-mail:[email protected]

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    To Sound Off:email :

    [email protected] 287-6111

    Classified Adv. 287-6147

    Mark Boehlereditor

    [email protected]

    Mark Boehler, editor

    The Opinion page should be a voice of the people and refl ect views from a broad range in the community. Citi-zens can express their opinion in let-ters to the editor. Only a few simple rules need to be followed. Letters should be of public interest and not of the thank you type.

    Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verifi cation. All let-ters are subject to editing before pub-lication, especially those beyond 300 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also

    be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthi-an.com. Email is the preferred method.

    Personal, guest and commentary columns on the Opinion page are the views of the writer. Other views are editorials reprinted from other news-papers. None of these refl ect the views of this newspaper.

    Sound Off

    I live at Chalet Village on North Harper Road. On Monday morning around 11:30 a.m., I heard a truck slam into a tree. Come to fi nd out, some coward in a vehicle was speed-ing toward the driver of the truck in the curve in his lane.

    The truck driver jerked the steering wheel to cross out of the other persons path and slammed his truck against a tree.

    The other driver did not stop! Neighbors in the area came out to help the hurt driver. I called the police before I left my apartment.

    When the truck drivers wife showed up, she said they had just paid cash for his truck. Now, because of the idiot speeder and cow-ard who caused this accident, the couple face repair on their truck, ambulance cost, ER cost, etc. The person responsible gets off without any charges. The person responsible did not even check on what happened to this poor man.

    If I had been outside, I would have grabbed my keys and believe me, I would have gotten the other drivers tag number.

    The curve the accident happened on is called Dead Mans Curve. I have lived here a lot of years and there have been many wrecks here. I, and others along with me, want the mayor to have the trees growing on the right side going north cut all the way down.

    This is a S-curve and no one can see around it at all. Everyone who lives in my apartment building and have to turn left into the park-ing lot experiences close calls from speeders.

    These trees have been a problem for years. We need to get rid of them so this curve is not a blind spot for all drivers.

    People never go 35 mph on North Harper Road!

    Gale SculleyN. Harper Rd., Corinth

    Trees hamper view on Dead Mans Curve

    Letters Policy

    Prayer for today

    Virtually everything said and done in a presidential election year distorts the truth, much like concave and convex mirrors in a car-nival attraction alter ones true refl ection.

    That kind of distortion oc-curred in the recent dustup over whether women who choose to stay at home can completely understand the economic challenges and personal struggles faced by women who choose, or need, to work outside the home while raising children.

    There is no question that professional women receive much more societal validation than stay-at-home moms. Few magazine covers at the checkout line or full-page ads promoting events and awards to successful women, laud mothers who stay home to raise their children. There arent a lot of television shows today like Ozzie and Har-riett, Leave It to Beaver or Father Knows Best.

    The view expressed by Democratic strategist Hil-ary Rosen that Mitt Rom-neys wife, Ann, has never

    worked a day in her life and thus cant relate to struggling families is bogus. Can a politician who has never held a job in the private sec-

    tor relate to those who work there, or are searching for a job there? Im thinking of the former community orga-nizer, now president, Barack Obama. Can a career politi-cian like Vice President Joe Biden identify with someone who doesnt have the perks planes, limousines, high pay and discounted, or free health care he has enjoyed for most of his career?

    Former Vice President Dan Quayles wife, Marilyn, who is an attorney, said it best at the 1992 Republican National Convention in Houston: ...having a profession is not incompatible with being a good mother or a good wife. ... Womens lives are different from mens lives. We make

    different trade-offs. We make different sacrifi ces. And we get different rewards.

    If a woman chooses to work at home (and arent po-litically liberal women sup-posed to support a womans career choice?) and if she feels adequately compen-sated, shouldnt her choice be affi rmed, not only by her husband or partner, if she has one, but also by society?

    Similarly, if a woman wants to work, or must work outside her home, shouldnt she be equally supported by society and not made to feel added guilt and pressure? Reasonable people ought to be able to answer, yes, to both questions.

    Still, all of this is a dis-traction. Even if Ann Rom-ney had chosen to work outside her home (and she did perform a great deal of volunteer work while bat-tling breast cancer and mul-tiple sclerosis), and even if she then could in Rosens mind relate to other women who made that same decision, how would that make anyone elses

    life better? Would such a choice by Romney have im-proved the economy so that women who want to work outside the home, but cant fi nd jobs, get one? Would it have allowed women to stay home if they were afforded that luxury?

    This is what politics has be-come. Its about feelings and image, not substance and ideas that work. Because of skyrocketing debt, high un-employment and the failed policies they have promoted, Democrats cling to feelings and focus on ones ability to relate. But its a fi ction to be-lieve that the only womens issues of importance are those promoted by the left.

    Liberal women are at-tempting to dominate wom-en who share a different po-litical and moral worldview. Its all a house of mirrors; nothing more than a distor-tion of reality in an election year. Expect to see more of the same between now and November.

    (Readers may e-mail Cal Thomas at [email protected]. )

    Latest salvo fired in Mommy Wars

    Americans are being asked to decide many things this election year, but perhaps the most im-portant is how the United States should take care of its poorest citizens. Presi-dent Barack Obama and the Democratic Party in general believe that income redis-tribution is the way to go. Since Obama has been in offi ce, entitlement spend-ing has risen 41 percent to about $1 trillion a year. There are currently an as-tounding 126 separate anti-poverty programs in place.

    Mitt Romney and the Re-publicans reject the concept of income inequality and say that a rising economy should lift all households. The GOP wants the free mar-ketplace to provide income opportunity, not a giant fed-eral nanny state. With the nation more than $16 tril-lion in debt, the Republicans have economics on their side. Emotion is another matter.

    Americans are a gen-erous people. The group

    Giving USA says that last year we do-nated almost $300 billion to charity. That largesse was volun-tary. When the govern-ment de-cides to take our money

    forcefully through taxation, things get dicey.

    And so it is instructive to examine the charitable contributions of the politi-cians who are driving fi scal policy. In 2011, President and Mrs. Obamas adjusted gross income was $789,674. The fi rst couple donated about 22 percent of that to charity. Very generous.

    But Vice President Joe Biden is another story. He and his wife donated just 1.46 percent of their $379,035 income to char-ity. Paltry? You bet. And not unusual. Since Biden took offi ce in 2009, he has made

    close to $1.1 million.His charitable donations:

    $16,710. Advice to kids: Dont go trick-or-treating at the Biden house.

    During his time in offi ce, President and Mrs. Clinton gave generously to char-ity despite big-time legal bills. So did George and Laura Bush. But Dick and Lynne Cheney topped all of them, giving a whopping 77 percent of their income to charity in 2005: a total of $6,800,000.

    The all-time miser seems to be Al Gore. As vice presi-dent in 1997, Gore donat-ed exactly $353 to charity from an income of close to $200,000. Plus, Gore has all that family trust fund mon-ey. Hey, Al, come on, man. Thats just embarrassing.

    A recent Google study shows that conservative Americans give twice as much to charity as liberals do. Some researchers be-lieve thats because more conservatives than liberals go to church, and therefore,

    they are tithing.Romney gives a lot of

    money to the Mormon Church, so there may be something to that. By the way, Romneys campaign estimates that in 2011, the governor and his wife gave about 19 percent of their $21 million income to charity.

    The bible says, To whom much is given, much is ex-pected. Obama has para-phrased that while urging higher taxation on the rich. But there is a huge differ-ence between taking mon-ey away from folks under threat of imprisonment and charitable largesse. My tax dollars dont count toward my moral obligation, be-cause I must render to Cae-sar. But otherwise, as Gore well knows, I am free to do as much or as little as I want.

    (Veteran TV news an-chor Bill OReilly is host of the Fox News show The OReilly Factor and author of the book Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand in the Age of Obama.)

    Disclosing charitable disparities among politicians

    Cal Thomas

    Columnist

    Bill OReillyThe OReilly

    Factor

    Paul wrote, The Lord said to me, My grace is suffi cient for you, for power is made per-fect in weakness. So, I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me.

    2 Corinthians 12:9 (NRSV)

    A verse to share

    Dear God, help us as we face our physical limitations. Protect us from discouraging thoughts, and replace our frustration with joy. Amen.

    State

    Sen. Rita Potts ParksAlcorn, Tishomingo, Tippah counties662-287-6323 (H)662-415-4793 (cell)[email protected]. Nick BainAlcorn county662-287-1620 (H)601-953-2994 (Capitol)[email protected]. Lester Bubba CarpenterAlcorn, Tishoming counties601-359-3374 (Capitol)662-427-8281 (H)[email protected]. William Tracy ArnoldAlcorn, Prentss counties662-728-9951 (H)[email protected]

    Federal

    U.S. Rep. Alan Nunnelee202-225-4306 (Washington D.C.)Fax: 202-225-3549662-327-0748 (Columbus)Fax: 662-328-5982U.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

    Keeping in Touch

  • Daily Corinthian Saturday, April 21, 2012 5

    SELMER, Tenn. An entertaining night of dancing and an elegant meal will attract a large crowd to the 3rd annual Dancing with the Mc-Nairy Stars on Saturday night to McNairy Central. The popular event will benefi t the Carl Perkins Child Abuse Center in Selmer.

    The evening will begin at 6 p.m. with an Ital-ian meal followed by four couples dancing to win the Peoples Choice Award. There will also be a live and silent auction with several items in the auctions.

    Luke DeLaVergne, county director of the Carl Perkins Child Abuse Center, pointed out that without the funds raised during this event that the child abuse center would be unable to provide the number of services they provide to county resi-dents.

    We expect to have a full house in the com-mons at McNairy Cen-tral, said DeLaVergne. We raised $30,000 last year and our goal this year is $33,000.

    DeLaVergne said the couples are Suzanne Hen-son, principal at Michie & Kevin Lipford, who works at Southwest Human Re-sources; Sheriff Guy Buck & Melissa Stewart, attor-ney at Deusner & Ken-nedy; Tami Buck, a nurse and wife of the sheriff, & Brandon Burton, man-ager at Monogram Refrig-eration and Sam Vise, fi -nancial adviser at Edward Jones and Marie Hurst, a team leader at the De-partment of Childrens Services.

    I have a real passion for children because I have been in education for 33 years, said Hen-son. Ive seen how these agencies get involved and help children over the years. Im doing a small part to help because there

    is such a need now more than ever for agencies like the child abuse center.

    The winning couple will be the one who has raised the most money. DeLaVergne said couples have worked hard to raise money prior to the event and those at the dance can vote for their favorite couple for $1 a vote.

    My wife and I are very excited about being in this event, said Sheriff Buck. This is a wonderful night for McNairy County because everyone has a great time and it raises money for a great cause.

    There will also be

    awards for the Best Danc-ing Couple and Best Cos-tume.

    This event has grown every year and has been a huge success, said DeLaVergne. This has been a fun night for the last two years and is a great way to raise money for the Carl Perkins Child Abuse Center.

    Jennifer Leckner, own-er of the Dance Academy in Adamsville, works hard behind the scenes to help make Dancing with the McNairy Stars such a suc-cessful night. She serves on the local advisory board of the Carl Perkins

    Child Abuse Center.A special attraction

    during the night will be a dance from Bart & Kendra Browder, who have par-ticipated in several dance

    contests in Nashville. Bart is the son of Henson.

    (For information on Dancing with the Mc-Nairy Stars, call the cen-ter at 731-646-3627.)

    Dancing with the McNairy Stars raises money for a good causeBY JEFF YORK

    For the Daily Corinthian

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  • 6 Saturday, April 21, 2012 Daily Corinthian

    Slain Marinesservice dog dies

    JACKSON The bomb-sniffing military dog that made national headlines when he was adopted by a fallen Ma-rines family has now died of cancer.

    A 2007 rocket explo-sion in Iraq killed Cprl. Dustin Lee and injured his canine companion, Lex. The dog stayed by Lees side on the battle-field, and medics had to pull Lex away from the 20-year-old Marine from Quitman, Miss.

    The Marines later al-lowed Lees parents to adopt Lex the first time the corps had al-lowed such an adoption. Lex lived most of his final years in Quitman, a small town in east Mis-sissippi.

    A Marines spokesman says Lex died March 25 in Starkville, where he had been undergoing treatment at the Missis-sippi State University veterinary school.

    The Mississippi House on Friday adopted a reso-lution honoring Lex.

    Bryant OKs takeoverof Aberdeen schools

    JACKSON Gov. Phil Bryant has approved the state takeover of the Ab-erdeen school district.

    Fridays move comes hours after the Missis-sippi Board of Education asked Bryant to take action. State administra-tors could take control as early as Monday.

    The move would abol-ish the current school board. The Board of Edu-cation Friday approved hiring Bob Strebeck to act as conservator in the district, in place of a lo-cal superintendent.

    Strebeck will be paid $170,000 a year, plus $29,000 in travel ex-penses.

    Bryant said in a state-ment that it was impera-tive for the state to take the reins of the district, which educates more than 1,400 students in parts of Monroe County.

    Bryant says violations of accreditation stan-dards, state law and fed-eral law contributed to his decision, as did poor academic performance.

    Bryant names Wilsonbanking commissioner

    JACKSON Retired banker Jerry Wilson of Columbus has been cho-sen by Gov. Phil Bryant to become Mississippis next banking commis-sioner.

    Wilson must be con-firmed by the state Senate. He would serve a four-year term begin-ning July 1 as the head of the Department of Banking and Consumer Finance. The department regulates state-chartered

    banks, thrifts and credit unions, as well as loan companies, pawn bro-kers, check cashers and mortgage lenders.

    Wilson is the former president of BankFirst Fi-nancial Services, based in Macon, Miss., having retired in 2011.

    Before joining what was then Merchants and Farmers Bank in 1984, Wilson worked for Peo-ples Bank in Grenada and BancorpSouth. From 1967 to 1969, he was a bank examiner for the Of-fice of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regu-lates national banks.

    Judge rules againstCIA whistle-blower

    WASHINGTON A federal judge has ruled a CIA whistle-blower will have to forfeit any future money he earns from a scathing book he wrote about the spy agency after he failed to get ap-proval from his former employer prior to publica-tion.

    The CIA accused the officer of breaking his secrecy agreement with the U.S. The former offi-cer, who worked deep un-dercover, published the book in July 2008 using the pseudonym Ishmael Jones.

    The CIA says his book, The Human Factor: Inside the CIAs Dysfunc-tional Intelligence Cul-ture, was submitted to the agencys publications review board under a secrecy agreement that covers books written by former employees.

    But Jones published the book before the process was completed. Jones has said the book contained no classified information.

    In a written ruling entered Thursday, U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee in Alexandria, Va., also barred Jones from publishing anything in the future without the CIAs blessing.

    Jones said he put the profits in brokerage accounts belonging to children of U.S. soldiers killed in action. After the judges ruling, Jones, who hasnt revealed his identity, took aim at the government.

    CIA spokeswoman Jen-nifer Youngblood said: The Jones case dem-onstrates that the CIA is committed to enforcing the secrecy agreements of its employees and contractors. The breach of such an agreement is a violation of a solemn public trust.

    Obama preparesto make his pitch

    WASHINGTON Pivot-ing to his latest election-year theme, President Barack Obama will go before college crowds in three swing states to warn of financial doom

    for millions of students if Congress does not halt a looming spike in interest rates. His clear political mission: rallying young voters whose support he needs again.

    Obamas trip next week will take him to the University of North Caro-lina at Chapel Hill, the University of Colorado at Boulder and the Uni-versity of Iowa. All three provide him potentially giant audiences in states he carried in 2008 and ones that are key to his re-election prospects against presumptive op-ponent Mitt Romney.

    The issue at hand: Interest rates are set to double on July 1, from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent, on a popular federal loan for low- and middle-income under-graduates.

    Congress voted in 2007 to drop the rate in half over four years. Now the looming expiration is an election-year issue.

    It was Obamas fellow Democrats in the House, however, who led the crafting of a law that left the rates to double in 2012. Republican Presi-dent George W. Bush signed the deal into law after it was approved by bipartisan but Demo-cratic-heavy majorities in both chambers.

    For Obama, the mat-ter gives him a platform to position himself as a defender of the middle class or those working to make their way into it. He is shifting from the issue of tax fairness, which he has hammered for weeks, to education in front of young voters who helped fuel his win-ning coalition in 2008.

    Romney campaign pulls in $12 million

    WASHINGTON Mitt Romneys presidential campaign raised $12.6 million in contributions in March, adding to roughly $14 million his Republi-can Party brought in last month. But the combined figure puts Romney at a disadvantage with the man whose job he wants in November.

    President Barack Obama countered Rom-neys fundraising haul with about $53 million in donations between his campaign and the Demo-cratic Party during the same period. That left his campaign with $104 million cash on hand about 10 times more than the $10 million Romney had in the bank at the end of March.

    Yet a fire hose of cash from a major GOP su-per political committee is likely to bring some financial parity to the race. Restore Our Future, a super PAC supporting Romney, raised about $8.6 million last month. It spent more than $11 million on ads.

    Associated Press

    Nation/State Briefs

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. Darius Williams saw the light. It just happened to be blue.

    A police offi cer found Williams, 19, walking before dawn Thursday

    along Interstate 240.Police said after ask-

    ing if the offi cer was Je-sus, Williams became irate in the back of the police car, pushed down the window and climbed on top of the vehicle. The

    offi cer got out and ended up in a scuffl e with him.

    Williams got into the police car and took off the wrong way on the freeway. He wrecked a short distance away and was captured.

    Suspect asks officer if hes JesusAssociated Press

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    SbdCp ... 7 1875.29 +25.04 -7.9

    SearsHldgs .33t ... 53.12 -2.54 +67.1

    Sherwin 1.56 27 118.39 +1.66 +32.6

    SiriusXM ... 17 2.23 -.01 +22.3

    SouthnCo 1.96f 18 45.83 +.33 -1.0

    SprintNex ... ... 2.37 -.03 +1.3

    SPDR Fncl .22e ... 15.19 -.08 +16.8

    StratIBM12 .71 ... 25.31 ... +.2

    TecumsehB ... ... 4.14 -.01 -7.0

    TecumsehA ... ... 3.97 +.01 -15.5

    Trchmrk s .60f 10 48.63 ... +12.1

    Total SA 2.38e ... 48.15 +.43 -5.8

    USEC ... ... .99 +.01 -13.2

    US Bancrp .78f 12 31.29 +.07 +15.7

    WalMart 1.59f 14 62.45 +.70 +4.5

    WellsFargo .88f 11 33.00 -.12 +19.7

    Wendys Co .08 ... 4.81 +.02 -10.3

    WestlkChm .30 16 61.02 +.59 +51.6

    Weyerhsr .60 32 20.98 +.23 +12.4

    Xerox .17 8 7.87 -.04 -1.1

    YRC rs ... ... 6.44 ... -35.4

    Yahoo ... 18 15.60 +.21 -3.3

    YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDSA-B-C-D

    ABB Ltd ... 20.48 +.39ACE Ltd 16 75.30 +.46AES Corp 19 12.26 +.14AK Steel dd 7.53 -.07ASML Hld ... 49.59 -.46AbtLab 15 59.88 +.37Accenture 19 63.40 +.35AcmePkt 43 26.90 -1.94ActivsBliz 13 12.20 -.05AdobeSy 21 33.06 +.16AMD dd 7.76 -.21Aeropostl 26 21.73 +.09AkamaiT 35 37.40 -.46AlcatelLuc ... 1.85 -.03Alcoa 18 9.70 -.06AllosThera dd 1.82 +.01Allstate 22 32.65 -.16AlphaNRs dd 16.15 -.67AlteraCp lf 17 35.25 -3.25Altria 19 31.89 +.11AmBev ... 44.18 +.86Amarin ... 10.40 +.86Amazon cc 189.98 -1.12AMovilL s 11 24.33 +.38ACapAgy 6 30.62 -.08AmCapLtd 3 9.03 +.23AEagleOut 23 17.55 +.05AmExp 14 57.45 -.12AmIntlGrp 3 32.06 -.21Amgen 17 68.47 +1.34Amylin dd 22.92 +.15Anadarko dd 71.73 -.56AnalogDev 15 37.81 -.47Annaly 33 16.00 +.09Aon plc 17 49.80 +.09Apache 8 91.47 -.64AptInv dd 26.20 +.28Apple Inc 17 572.98 -14.46ApldMatl 10 11.77 -.10ArcelorMit 13 17.02 +.07ArchCoal 13 9.40 -.54ArchDan 14 30.71 +.04ArenaPhm dd 2.17 -.10AriadP dd 15.28 +.48ArmHld ... 27.86 -1.05ArmourRsd cc 6.79 +.06ArubaNet 40 20.06 -1.46Atmel 13 8.76 -.23AvagoTch 15 34.28 -1.43Avon 19 22.00 -.19BHP BillLt ... 73.41 +.41BPZ Res dd 4.20 +.33Baidu 48 144.91 +.17BakrHu 11 40.46 -.56BcBilVArg ... 6.70 +.23BcoBrad pf ... 16.31 +.11BcoSantSA ... 6.27 +.17BcoSBrasil ... 8.49 +.05BkofAm dd 8.36 -.41BkNYMel 11 22.85 +.09Barclay ... 13.66 +.06Bar iPVix q 17.77 -.61BarrickG 9 40.26 -.69BasicEnSv 6 13.22 -.72Baxter 14 54.17 -.01BeazerHm dd 2.75 +.02BerkH B 17 78.90 -.38BestBuy dd 21.47 -.53BioSante h dd .59 -.02Blackstone dd 13.95 -.19BlockHR 15 16.80 -.08Boeing 14 73.55 +.45BostonSci 17 5.94 +.09BoydGm dd 8.25 +.14BrMySq 16 34.23 +.30Broadcom 21 34.77 -.96BrcdeCm 31 5.31 -.12CA Inc 15 26.56 +.03CBRE Grp 19 18.37 -.09CBS B 17 33.31 +.03CMS Eng 14 22.30 +.26CSX s 12 21.61 +.05CVR Engy 8 30.08 -.08CVS Care 17 44.33 +1.00CblvsNY s 13 13.79 +.10CabotOG s 44 30.14 -.84Calpine dd 18.30 +.38Cameco g ... 22.15 +.97Cameron 22 49.00 -.76CdnNRs gs ... 32.24 -.09CapOne 7 53.85 -.08CpstnTrb h dd 1.15 +.04CardnlHlth 15 41.55 +.38CareFusion 20 25.90 +.29Carlisle 18 50.46 +.46Carnival 14 31.68 -.92CatalystH 51 89.61 -.57Celgene 28 79.10 +.51Cemex dd 6.78 +.12CntryLink 23 38.12 +.05Cepheid dd 37.96 -2.62CheniereEn dd 17.77 -.05ChesEng 5 17.44 -.56Chimera 6 2.78Chubb 12 71.92 -.27CienaCorp dd 15.99 -.63Cigna 10 48.02 +.01Cirrus 9 21.07 -1.89Cisco 15 19.91 +.01Citigrp rs 9 33.89 -.96Clearwire dd 1.67 +.01CliffsNRs 6 67.30 -1.05Coach 24 75.67 +.84CocaCE 13 28.96 +.36CognizTech 25 71.61 -.29Comc spcl 19 29.10 -.05ConAgra 15 26.25 +.18ConocPhil 8 72.88 -.01ConsolEngy 11 33.72 -.72ConstellA 10 21.24 +.14Corning 7 13.18 -.35CorrectnCp 20 31.50 +1.00Covidien 14 54.55 +.35CSVS2xVxS q 7.62 -.41CSVelIVSt s q 11.22 +.38CredSuiss ... 26.07 -.12Cree Inc 65 30.49 +.37CrwnCstle cc 54.90 +.11CypSemi 15 15.50 -.50DCT Indl dd 5.84 +.06DR Horton 40 15.38 +.76DanaHldg 14 13.94 -.14Danaher 17 53.14 +.14DeltaAir 9 10.75 -.07DenburyR 12 17.79 -.21Dndreon dd 10.35 +.32DeutschBk ... 45.36 +1.09DevonE 6 65.23 -.68DirecTV A 14 48.13 +.18DxFnBull rs q 98.82 -.98DirSCBear q 19.18 -.31DirFnBear q 22.27 +.21DirxSCBull q 56.11 +.93Discover 7 32.93 +.16DishNetwk 9 31.65 +.21Disney 16 42.35 +.27DomRescs 17 51.02 +.48DowChm 17 35.31 +.35DryShips dd 3.16 -.01DuPont 14 52.62 +.01DukeEngy 16 21.01 +.14DukeRlty cc 14.51 +.15

    E-F-G-HE-CDang dd 8.57 -.22E-Trade 27 10.48 +.60eBay 16 40.29 -.33EMC Cp 24 27.90 -.20Eaton 12 47.44 +.51ElPasoCp cc 29.67 +.07EldorGld g 23 13.96 -.29ElectArts dd 14.93 +.18Embraer ... 34.58 -.71EmersonEl 16 50.27 +.19EmpDist 15 20.20 +.41EnCana g 34 18.02 -.05Ericsson ... 9.56 -.01ExcoRes 12 6.06 -.16Exelixis 9 4.83 +.16Exelon 10 37.75 +.14Expedia s 14 31.94 +.39ExpdIntl 23 41.96 -3.78ExpScripts 23 57.88 -.69ExtrmNet dd 3.82 -.50ExxonMbl 10 85.30 +.02Ezcorp 9 26.21 -4.13FMC Tech 29 47.40 +.05FairchldS 16 13.60 -.90FedExCp 14 89.67 +.28FifthThird 9 13.95 +.23FstHorizon 17 9.08 -.10

    INDEXES

    Name Vol (00) Last ChgBkofAm 2651592 8.36 -.41S&P500ETF 1257606 137.95 +.23Microsoft 1023910 32.42 +1.41RiteAid 728084 1.55 +.02GenElec 652842 19.36 +.22NokiaCp 609954 3.70 -.12PwShs QQQ 551022 65.68 -.18SPDR Fncl 548137 15.19 -.08FordM 516463 11.41 -.25SprintNex 513994 2.37 -.03

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

    NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,998Declined 1,048Unchanged 112

    Total issues 3,158New Highs 120New Lows 30

    NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,488Declined 993Unchanged 128

    Total issues 2,609New Highs 65New Lows 34

    GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %ChgSGOCO h 2.37 +1.09 +85.2MGTCap rs 2.90 +.95 +48.7NwCentBcp 3.98 +.88 +28.4PremGlbSv 9.86 +1.80 +22.3DigDMda n 7.55 +1.15 +18.0PacBkrM g 12.12 +1.60 +15.2Ramtrn 2.19 +.29 +15.0Synageva n 39.87 +4.85 +13.8CambLrng 2.48 +.28 +12.7SuprmInd 3.91 +.42 +12.0

    LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %ChgRiverbedT 19.85 -8.01 -28.8TempurP 66.53 -17.22 -20.6CrumbBke 2.42 -.53 -18.0Motorcar lf 8.17 -1.48 -15.3Ezcorp 26.21 -4.13 -13.6Crumbs un 2.60 -.40 -13.3HomeoC pf 12.37 -1.83 -12.9Freescale n 12.49 -1.79 -12.5Rambus 4.90 -.70 -12.5ExtrmNet 3.82 -.50 -11.6

    American BeaconLgCpVlInv 19.68 +0.03 +11.6LgCpVlIs 20.75 +0.04 +11.7American CentEqIncInv 7.60 +0.02 +4.9GrowthInv 27.91 ... +13.6InfAdjI 13.04 +0.03 +2.4UltraInv 25.96 -0.07 +13.3ValueInv 6.08 +0.01 +7.7American FundsAMCAPA m 20.90 +0.04 +11.0BalA m 19.46 +0.03 +7.4BondA m 12.71 ... +2.1CapIncBuA m 51.27 +0.33 +5.1CapWldBdA m20.97 +0.04 +3.1CpWldGrIA m 34.95 +0.26 +9.3EurPacGrA m 39.01 +0.24 +10.9FnInvA m 38.65 +0.05 +9.6GrthAmA m 32.24 -0.04 +12.2HiIncA m 11.00 ... +5.5IncAmerA m 17.40 +0.08 +4.8IntBdAmA m 13.69 ... +1.0IntlGrInA m 29.20 +0.29 +6.8InvCoAmA m 29.41 +0.08 +9.0MutualA m 27.38 +0.15 +6.5NewEconA m 27.32 +0.03 +14.9NewPerspA m 29.43 +0.11 +12.5NwWrldA m 51.45 +0.28 +11.6SmCpWldA m 38.41 +0.19 +15.8TaxEBdAmA m12.82 ... +3.6USGovSecA m14.43 -0.01 +0.5WAMutInvA m 30.11 +0.14 +6.6AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.93 ... +1.8ArtisanIntl d 22.80 +0.07 +15.0IntlVal d 27.25 +0.12 +8.6MdCpVal 21.01 ... +6.6MidCap 39.46 -0.09 +19.8BaronGrowth b 55.10 +0.20 +8.0SmCap b 25.77 +0.12 +12.4BernsteinDiversMui 14.85 ... +1.2IntDur 13.93 -0.01 +1.3TxMIntl 13.64 +0.11 +9.3BlackRockEngy&ResA m30.52 -0.22 -5.4EqDivA m 19.37 +0.11 +7.2EqDivI 19.41 +0.11 +7.3GlobAlcA m 19.26 +0.01 +6.1GlobAlcC m 17.91 +0.01 +5.8GlobAlcI 19.36 +0.01 +6.1CalamosGrowA m 52.84 -0.40 +13.9Cohen & SteersRealty 67.13 +0.77 +10.9ColumbiaAcornA m 30.03 +0.11 +12.8AcornIntZ 39.18 +0.29 +14.2AcornZ 31.10 +0.12 +12.8DivBondA m 5.11 ... +2.3DivIncZ 14.52 +0.09 +7.3StLgCpGrZ 14.09 -0.04 +17.2TaxEA m 13.99 +0.01 +3.8ValRestrZ 48.32 +0.01 +8.9DFA1YrFixInI 10.34 ... +0.52YrGlbFII 10.12 ... +0.45YrGlbFII 11.09 -0.01 +1.6EmMkCrEqI 19.46 +0.04 +12.9EmMktValI 29.25 +0.04 +12.7IntSmCapI 15.29 +0.10 +12.6RelEstScI 25.69 +0.33 +11.3USCorEq1I 11.83 +0.02 +10.2USCorEq2I 11.62 +0.03 +9.9USLgCo 10.88 +0.01 +10.2USLgValI 20.81 -0.02 +9.1USMicroI 14.42 +0.12 +9.1USSmValI 25.47 +0.14 +10.0USSmallI 22.45 +0.13 +9.4DWS-ScudderGrIncS 17.75 +0.02 +10.7DavisNYVentA m 35.49 +0.08 +9.2NYVentY 35.88 +0.09 +9.3Delaware InvestDiverIncA m 9.26 ... +2.2Dimensional InvestmeIntCorEqI 10.10 +0.07 +9.3IntlSCoI 15.49 +0.12 +12.0IntlValuI 15.60 +0.11 +6.0Dodge & CoxBal 73.04 +0.23 +8.9Income 13.62 -0.01 +3.4IntlStk 31.89 +0.31 +9.1Stock 111.99 +0.48 +10.7DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.24 ... +3.6DreyfusApprecia 43.68 +0.12 +8.2Eaton VanceLrgCpValA m 18.53 +0.06 +8.5FMILgCap 16.73 +0.09 +9.7FPACres d 28.30 +0.05 +5.7NewInc m 10.63 +0.01 +0.6Fairholme FundsFairhome d 29.44 -0.30 +27.2FederatedStrValI 4.88 +0.04 +1.4ToRetIs 11.43 ... +2.4FidelityAstMgr20 13.12 ... +3.5AstMgr50 15.96 +0.01 +6.6Bal 19.55 +0.01 +7.9BlChGrow 48.99 -0.21 +15.5Canada d 53.01 +0.11 +5.7CapApr 28.73 ... +16.7CapInc d 9.16 -0.01 +7.5Contra 76.19 -0.18 +13.0DiscEq 23.73 +0.05 +10.3DivGrow 29.09 -0.02 +12.4DivrIntl d 28.22 +0.13 +10.6EqInc 44.54 +0.13 +8.4EqInc II 18.73 +0.11 +8.2FF2015 11.61 +0.01 +6.2FF2035 11.50 +0.02 +9.0FF2040 8.02 +0.01 +9.0Fidelity 34.85 +0.05 +11.9FltRtHiIn d 9.82 ... +2.8Free2010 13.90 +0.02 +6.1Free2020 14.04 +0.02 +7.0Free2025 11.67 +0.02 +8.0Free2030 13.89 +0.02 +8.2GNMA 11.88 ... +1.2GovtInc 10.77 ... +0.5GrowCo 95.90 -0.59 +18.6GrowInc 20.17 +0.05 +11.0HiInc d 8.98 +0.01 +5.8Indepndnc 25.09 -0.13 +15.9IntBond 10.96 -0.01 +1.6IntMuniInc d 10.57 ... +2.1IntlDisc d 30.64 +0.18 +11.0InvGrdBd 7.80 ... +2.0LatinAm d 53.73 +0.53 +9.9LowPriStk d 40.06 +0.20 +12.1Magellan 71.48 -0.03 +13.5MidCap d 29.79 +0.18 +11.7MuniInc d 13.31 +0.01 +3.3NewMktIn d 16.61 +0.05 +6.8OTC 61.32 -0.56 +12.1Puritan 19.21 +0.01 +9.0RealInv d 30.90 +0.39 +12.1Series100Idx 9.73 +0.01 +10.3ShIntMu d 10.86 ... +1.0ShTmBond 8.54 ... +0.9StratInc 11.07 +0.01 +3.8Tel&Util 17.40 +0.16 +0.8TotalBd 11.05 ... +2.2USBdIdx 11.83 ... +1.3USBdIdxInv 11.83 ... +1.2Value 70.94 +0.13 +11.8Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 22.22 -0.04 +12.7NewInsI 22.51 -0.04 +12.8StratIncA m 12.37 +0.01 +3.8Fidelity SelectGold d 38.14 -0.23 -9.7Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 48.89 +0.05 +10.3500IdxInstl 48.90 +0.06 +10.3500IdxInv 48.89 +0.06 +10.3ExtMktIdAg d 39.23 +0.12 +11.9IntlIdxAdg d 32.23 +0.23 +8.3TotMktIdAg d 39.82 +0.07 +10.6First EagleGlbA m 47.92 +0.13 +6.2OverseasA m 21.53 +0.06 +5.7ForumAbStratI 11.10 -0.02 +0.5

    Name P/E Last Chg

    3,758,956,102Volume 1,871,798,411Volume

    11,000

    11,500

    12,000

    12,500

    13,000

    13,500

    O AN D J F M

    12,680

    12,940

    13,200Dow Jones industrialsClose: 13,029.26Change: 65.16 (0.5%)

    10 DAYS

    FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.45 +0.01 +3.5FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.35 ... +4.5Growth A m 49.51 +0.05 +10.9HY TF A m 10.63 +0.01 +5.3Income A m 2.14 ... +4.1Income C m 2.16 ... +3.9IncomeAdv 2.13 ... +4.7NY TF A m 11.99 ... +2.6RisDv A m 36.86 +0.19 +5.9StrInc A m 10.46 +0.01 +5.0US Gov A m 6.90 -0.01 +0.7FrankTemp-MutualDiscov A m 28.72 +0.09 +5.8Discov Z 29.09 +0.09 +5.9QuestZ 17.26 +0.01 +6.3Shares A m 21.35 +0.07 +7.8Shares Z 21.52 +0.07 +7.9FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 6.35 +0.04 +7.3GlBond A m 13.03 +0.03 +6.6GlBond C m 13.05 +0.03 +6.5GlBondAdv 12.99 +0.03 +6.7Growth A m 17.57 +0.12 +7.9World A m 14.96 +0.09 +8.9Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 10.54 +0.04 +6.7GES&SUSEq 43.44 +0.01 +12.1GMOEmgMktsVI 11.44 +0.07 +11.0IntItVlIV 19.54 +0.19 +3.3QuIII 23.77 +0.13 +8.5QuVI 23.78 +0.13 +8.5Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.12 +0.01 +5.8MidCpVaIs 36.86 +0.10 +9.8HarborBond 12.56 -0.01 +3.5CapApInst 43.22 -0.04 +17.1IntlInstl d 59.28 +0.49 +13.0IntlInv m 58.69 +0.48 +12.9HartfordCapAprA m 32.77 -0.09 +13.7CapAprI 32.79 -0.09 +13.8CpApHLSIA 42.00 -0.09 +12.9DvGrHLSIA 20.86 +0.07 +7.9TRBdHLSIA 11.90 -0.01 +2.3HussmanStratGrth d 11.70 +0.01 -5.9INVESCOCharterA m 17.39 +0.01 +8.3ComstockA m 16.75 +0.03 +10.5EqIncomeA m 8.89 +0.01 +7.3GrowIncA m 20.16 +0.03 +8.9HiYldMuA m 9.75 ... +5.6IvyAssetStrA m 25.40 -0.03 +14.1AssetStrC m 24.62 -0.04 +13.8JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.95 ... +1.8CoreBondA m 11.95 ... +1.6CoreBondSelect11.94 ... +1.7HighYldSel 7.90 +0.01 +5.4IntmdTFSl 11.33 ... +1.3MidCpValI 26.21 +0.12 +10.4ShDurBndSel 11.00 ... +0.8ShtDurBdU 11.00 ... +0.9USEquit 11.03 ... +11.7USLCpCrPS 22.00 +0.01 +11.4JanusBalT 26.47 ... +8.7GlbLfScT d 28.55 +0.40 +14.7OverseasT d 35.94 +0.14 +14.4PerkinsMCVT 21.67 +0.04 +7.3TwentyT 61.02 -0.09 +19.4John HancockLifAg1 b 12.46 +0.02 +10.9LifBa1 b 13.13 +0.02 +7.9LifGr1 b 13.06 +0.02 +9.7LazardEmgMkEqtI d 19.15 +0.02 +14.0Legg Mason/WesternCrPlBdIns 11.32 -0.01 +2.9MgdMuniA m 16.79 ... +4.5Longleaf PartnersLongPart 28.87 +0.10 +8.3Loomis SaylesBondI 14.68 +0.02 +6.7BondR b 14.62 +0.02 +6.5Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 11.51 +0.02 +9.6BondDebA m 7.90 ... +5.4ShDurIncA m 4.60 +0.01 +2.6ShDurIncC m 4.63 +0.01 +2.4MFSIsIntlEq 17.82 +0.12 +11.9TotRetA m 14.84 +0.02 +6.5ValueA m 24.61 +0.08 +10.3ValueI 24.72 +0.07 +10.4MainStayHiYldCorA m 5.94 +0.01 +4.2Manning & NapierWrldOppA 7.42 +0.04 +11.9Matthews AsianChina d 23.81 ... +10.7India d 16.51 -0.02 +21.5MergerMerger b 15.77 +0.01 +1.2Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.60 ... +3.6TotRtBd b 10.60 -0.01 +3.5Morgan Stanley InstlIntlEqI d 13.53 +0.11 +10.4MdCpGrI 37.65 -0.13 +14.4NatixisInvBndY 12.40 +0.01 +5.1StratIncA m 15.10 +0.03 +6.3StratIncC m 15.18 +0.03 +6.0Neuberger BermanGenesisIs 48.74 +0.19 +5.0GenesisTr 50.56 +0.20 +4.9NorthernHYFixInc d 7.28 ... +5.7OakmarkEqIncI 28.80 +0.06 +6.5Intl I d 18.36 +0.10 +10.9Oakmark I 46.83 +0.02 +12.3OberweisChinaOpp m 10.44 +0.10 +20.0Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 15.04 +0.05 +11.7OppenheimerDevMktA m 33.37 +0.13 +13.8DevMktY 33.01 +0.13 +13.9GlobA m 59.47 +0.11 +10.0IntlBondA m 6.32 +0.01 +3.0IntlBondY 6.32 +0.01 +3.2IntlGrY 28.58 +0.21 +12.0LtdTmNY m 3.37 ... +2.8MainStrA m 36.11 -0.09 +12.3RocMuniA m 16.69 +0.01 +6.4RochNtlMu m 7.26 ... +8.1StrIncA m 4.20 +0.01 +4.9PIMCOAllAssetI 12.14 +0.03 +6.2AllAuthIn 10.65 +0.03 +7.2ComRlRStI 6.56 +0.04 +1.2DivIncInst 11.69 ... +5.2EMktCurI 10.45 +0.03 +5.9EmMktsIns 11.71 +0.02 +5.4FloatIncI 8.62 +0.01 +5.4ForBdIs 10.80 ... +2.9ForBondI 10.96 +0.03 +1.4HiYldIs 9.25 ... +5.0InvGrdIns 10.70 ... +4.7LowDrA m 10.45 ... +2.3LowDrIs 10.45 ... +2.4RERRStgC m 4.72 +0.07 +14.6RealRet 12.14 +0.02 +3.3RealRtnA m 12.14 +0.02 +3.2ShtTermIs 9.81 ... +1.7ToRtIIIIs 9.85 ... +3.9TotRetA m 11.19 ... +3.9TotRetAdm b 11.19 ... +3.9TotRetC m 11.19 ... +3.6TotRetIs 11.19 ... +4.0TotRetrnD b 11.19 ... +3.9TotlRetnP 11.19 ... +4.0ParnassusEqIncInv 28.20 +0.09 +7.3PermanentPortfolio 48.31 +0.06 +4.8PioneerPioneerA m 41.30 +0.02 +7.2PrincipalL/T2020I 12.25 +0.02 +8.8L/T2030I 12.11 +0.02 +9.6LCGrIInst 10.26 -0.03 +15.5PutnamGrowIncA m 13.99 +0.01 +10.6NewOpp 57.81 -0.14 +14.8VoyagerA m 22.66 -0.16 +16.2

    RoycePAMutInv d 11.68 +0.03 +8.6PremierInv d 20.12 +0.06 +8.6TotRetInv d 13.47 +0.05 +6.5RussellStratBdS 11.15 ... +3.2Schwab1000Inv d 39.07 +0.05 +10.5S&P500Sel d 21.58 +0.03 +10.3ScoutInterntl d 31.28 +0.24 +11.8SelectedAmerican D 43.01 +0.09 +9.1SequoiaSequoia 160.04 +0.15 +10.0T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 45.09 -0.14 +16.7CapApprec 22.26 +0.02 +8.0EmMktBd d 13.37 +0.04 +7.0EmMktStk d 31.70 +0.07 +11.2EqIndex d 37.19 +0.05 +10.2EqtyInc 24.90 +0.04 +8.5GrowStk 37.24 -0.11 +17.0HealthSci 38.64 +0.26 +18.5HiYield d 6.72 ... +5.8InsLgCpGr d 18.73 -0.13 +16.2IntlBnd d 9.86 +0.03 +1.9IntlGrInc d 12.54 +0.09 +8.9IntlStk d 13.82 +0.06 +12.4LatinAm d 41.96 +0.24 +8.1MidCapVa 23.35 +0.06 +9.2MidCpGr 58.75 +0.03 +11.4NewAsia d 15.81 +0.02 +13.7NewEra 43.11 +0.02 +2.5NewHoriz 35.44 +0.02 +14.2NewIncome 9.76 ... +1.8OrseaStk d 8.00 +0.07 +9.3R2015 12.51 +0.02 +8.0R2025 12.71 +0.02 +9.8R2035 12.94 +0.02 +11.0Rtmt2010 16.07 +0.03 +7.0Rtmt2020 17.34 +0.03 +9.0Rtmt2030 18.27 +0.02 +10.5Rtmt2040 18.42 +0.03 +11.2ShTmBond 4.85 ... +1.5SmCpStk 34.76 +0.22 +11.2SmCpVal d 37.44 +0.31 +8.6SpecGrow 18.90 +0.03 +12.1SpecInc 12.65 +0.01 +4.0Value 24.70 +0.02 +9.6TCWTotRetBdI 9.92 ... +4.6TempletonInFEqSeS 18.12 +0.13 +6.3ThornburgIncBldC m 18.36 +0.10 +3.7IntlValA m 26.55 +0.10 +10.5IntlValI d 27.14 +0.10 +10.7Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 23.64 +0.12 +8.2USAAIncome 13.26 ... +2.1VALIC Co IStockIdx 25.71 +0.03 +10.2Vanguard500Adml 127.14 +0.15 +10.3500Inv 127.14 +0.16 +10.3BalIdx 23.15 +0.02 +6.8BalIdxAdm 23.15 +0.02 +6.8BalIdxIns 23.15 +0.02 +6.8CAITAdml 11.56 +0.01 +2.7CapOpAdml d 73.39 -0.13 +7.7DevMktsIdxIP d95.12 +0.83 +8.4DivGr 16.47 +0.12 +6.8EmMktIAdm d 35.46 +0.11 +12.0EnergyAdm d110.07 -0.07 -0.5EnergyInv d 58.63 -0.03 -0.6EqInc 23.29 +0.12 +7.1EqIncAdml 48.82 +0.25 +7.1ExplAdml 73.84 +0.04 +11.1Explr 79.34 +0.05 +11.1ExtdIdAdm 43.99 +0.12 +11.8ExtdIdIst 43.99 +0.13 +11.8FAWeUSIns d 84.88 +0.58 +9.2GNMA 11.05 -0.01 +1.0GNMAAdml 11.05 -0.01 +1.0GlbEq 17.74 +0.06 +11.5GrowthIdx 35.90 -0.01 +13.2GrthIdAdm 35.90 -0.01 +13.2GrthIstId 35.90 -0.01 +13.2HYCor d 5.83 ... +4.5HYCorAdml d 5.83 ... +4.5HltCrAdml d 58.14 +0.33 +7.2HlthCare d 137.80 +0.80 +7.2ITBondAdm 11.85 -0.01 +2.0ITGradeAd 10.14 ... +3.2ITIGrade 10.14 ... +3.2ITrsyAdml 11.64 -0.01 +0.6InfPrtAdm 28.27 +0.06 +2.3InfPrtI 11.52 +0.03 +2.3InflaPro 14.39 +0.03 +2.2InstIdxI 126.32 +0.15 +10.3InstPlus 126.33 +0.16 +10.3InstTStPl 31.20 +0.05 +10.7IntlGr d 18.42 +0.11 +12.7IntlGrAdm d 58.59 +0.33 +12.7IntlStkIdxAdm d23.88 +0.16 +9.3IntlStkIdxI d 95.50 +0.63 +9.4IntlStkIdxIPls d95.52 +0.63 +9.4IntlVal d 29.01 +0.20 +8.9LTGradeAd 10.40 -0.01 +2.9LTInvGr 10.40 -0.01 +2.9LifeCon 16.91 +0.02 +4.7LifeGro 22.88 +0.06 +8.4LifeMod 20.42 +0.04 +6.6MidCapIdxIP 107.82 +0.02 +11.0MidCp 21.80 ... +11.0MidCpAdml 98.97 +0.03 +11.0MidCpIst 21.86 ... +11.0MidCpSgl 31.23 +0.01 +11.0Morg 20.08 -0.02 +14.9MorgAdml 62.28 -0.04 +15.0MuHYAdml 10.99 ... +3.8MuInt 14.19 ... +2.1MuIntAdml 14.19 ... +2.1MuLTAdml 11.56 ... +3.2MuLtdAdml 11.17 ... +0.7MuShtAdml 15.93 ... +0.4PrecMtls d 18.51 +0.02 -1.5Prmcp d 66.53 +0.17 +7.8PrmcpAdml d 69.04 +0.18 +7.8PrmcpCorI d 14.35 -0.01 +6.4REITIdxAd d 90.77 +1.18 +11.4STBond 10.63 -0.01 +0.7STBondAdm 10.63 -0.01 +0.7STBondSgl 10.63 -0.01 +0.7STCor 10.75 ... +1.8STFedAdml 10.84 ... +0.6STGradeAd 10.75 ... +1.8STsryAdml 10.77 -0.01 +0.2SelValu d 19.97 +0.05 +7.4SmCapIdx 36.74 +0.20 +10.1SmCpIdAdm 36.78 +0.21 +10.2SmCpIdIst 36.77 +0.20 +10.1SmCpIndxSgnl 33.13 +0.18 +10.2Star 20.18 +0.02 +7.7StratgcEq 20.58 +0.03 +12.2TgtRe2010 23.64 +0.04 +5.4TgtRe2015 13.08 +0.03 +6.3TgtRe2020 23.21 +0.04 +7.0TgtRe2030 22.67 +0.05 +8.4TgtRe2035 13.64 +0.04 +9.0TgtRe2040 22.41 +0.07 +9.3TgtRe2045 14.07 +0.04 +9.3TgtRetInc 11.95 +0.02 +4.0Tgtet2025 13.22 +0.03 +7.7TotBdAdml 11.03 ... +1.2TotBdInst 11.03 ... +1.3TotBdMkInv 11.03 ... +1.2TotBdMkSig 11.03 ... +1.2TotIntl d 14.28 +0.10 +9.3TotStIAdm 34.47 +0.05 +10.6TotStIIns 34.48 +0.06 +10.6TotStISig 33.27 +0.05 +10.6TotStIdx 34.46 +0.05 +10.6TxMCapAdm 68.97 +0.09 +10.6ValIdxAdm 21.99 +0.05 +8.1ValIdxIns 21.99 +0.05 +8.1WellsI 23.64 +0.04 +3.9WellsIAdm 57.28 +0.10 +3.9Welltn 33.16 +0.09 +6.5WelltnAdm 57.27 +0.15 +6.5WndsIIAdm 50.21 +0.13 +9.7Wndsr 14.23 -0.01 +11.4WndsrAdml 48.00 -0.04 +11.4WndsrII 28.29 +0.08 +9.7Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 8.22 ... +11.8SciTechA m 10.25 -0.03 +15.0YacktmanFocused d 19.87 +0.09 +5.8Yacktman d 18.62 +0.06 +6.3

    YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

    FstNiagara 15 9.07 -.12FstSolar 5 20.65 -.75FirstEngy 17 45.75 +.33Flextrn 10 6.79 -.01FBHmSc n ... 20.70 +.28FMCG 8 37.57 -.46Freescale n dd 12.49 -1.79FrontierCm 24 4.13GATX 19 42.47 +.41GT AdvTc 6 7.53 +.07Gafisa SA ... 4.13 -.08GameStop 9 22.38 +.09Gannett 7 13.75 +.01Gap 18 27.85 +.35GaylrdEnt cc 30.70 -.15GenDynam 10 69.76 +.83GenMills 17 38.94 -.08GenMotors 5 23.60 -.41GenOn En dd 1.95 +.03Gentex 18 21.23 -.12Genworth 22 6.06 +.02Gerdau ... 9.55 +.05GileadSci 14 51.00 -1.25GlaxoSKln ... 47.29 +.60GoldFLtd 2 12.53 -.12Goldcrp g 19 41.37 -.01GoldmanS 16 112.44 -1.16Google 18 596.06 -3.24GrifolsSA n ... 8.45 +.40Groupon n ... 11.13 -.63Hallibrtn 10 33.29 -.69Hanesbrds 16 30.02 +3.08HarleyD 20 51.70 +2.13HartfdFn 11 20.04 -.03HltMgmt 8 7.25 -.19Heckmann dd 4.01 +.01HeclaM 8 4.09 -.02HercOffsh dd 4.87 +.40Hertz 36 14.58 +.07Hess 11 55.07 -.18HewlettP 9 24.51 -.20HollyFrt s 5 29.75 -.46HomeDp 21 51.46 -.10HopFedBc dd 8.65HostHotls dd 16.78 +.18HudsCity dd 6.66 +.01HumGen dd 14.36 +.19HuntBnk 12 6.55 +.11Huntsmn 14 14.49 -.01Hyperdyn dd 1.09 -.05

    I-J-K-LIAMGld g 10 12.30 -.40ICICI Bk ... 32.99 -.63ING ... 7.26 +.23iShGold q 16.01 +.01iShBraz q 62.13 +.56iShGer q 22.30 +.30iShJapn q 9.74 +.03iSTaiwn q 12.78 -.10iShSilver q 30.75 -.05iShChina25 q 38.00 +.24iShEMkts q 42.33 +.28iShB20 T q 117.07 +.02iS Eafe q 53.45 +.51iSR1KV q 68.51 +.09iShR2K q 80.21 +.46iShREst q 62.52 +.65iShDJHm q 14.42 +.30ITW 13 55.79 +.38Illumina 72 44.36 +.30Infoblox n ... 21.30IngerRd 40 40.61 +.48IngrmM 12 18.76 +.12InteractBrk 12 15.15 -1.48IBM 15 199.60 +.09IntlGame 18 16.57 +.43IntPap 11 33.02 +.06Interpublic 11 10.87 +.01Intuit 26 57.25 -3.65Invesco 16 24.18 -.11ItauUnibH ... 17.20 +.43IvanhM g dd 12.78 -.26JDS Uniph 93 12.95 -.25JPMorgCh 9 42.72 -.50JanusCap 10 8.10 +.09JetBlue 17 4.78 -.06JohnJn 17 63.71 +.68JohnsnCtl 13 31.96 -.39JnprNtwk 22 20.60 -.33KB Home dd 7.85 +.23KeyEngy 20 13.34 -.40Keycorp 8 7.87 -.04Kimco 75 18.80 +.23KindMorg 53 36.16 -.57Kinross g dd 9.07 -.08KodiakO g 43 8.99 +.44Kohls 12 50.46 -.07Kraft 19 38.54 +.34LSI Corp 14 7.93 -.14LamResrch 18 40.39 -1.05LVSands 30 57.91 -.45Lattice 9 5.75 -.43LennarA 61 25.77 +.91Level3 rs dd 23.20 -.05LibtyIntA 22 18.52 +.10LillyEli 10 39.91 +.16Limited 17 49.26 +.22LincNat 27 23.66 -.24LinearTch 16 32.33 -.60LinkedIn n cc 105.01 +.43LockhdM 12 90.84 +.50

    M-N-O-PMBIA dd 9.61 -.40MEMC dd 3.49 -.04MGIC dd 3.68 -.22MGM Rsts 2 13.52 -.25Macys 13 39.10 -.55MagHRes dd 5.66 -.23Manitowoc dd 14.68 +.08Manulife g ... 13.42 -.09MarathnO s 7 29.47 +.06MarathP n 6 39.90 +.16MktVGold q 46.12 -.49MV OilSv s q 39.59 -.06MV Semi n q 34.04 -.60MktVRus q 30.33 +.35MarIntA 64 38.90 -.55MarshM 18 32.38 -.51MartMM 46 82.07 +.18MarvellT 15 15.20 -.24Masco dd 12.00 +.03Mattel 15 32.06 +.30MaximIntg 17 27.17 -.57McDrmInt 17 11.42 +.09McMoRn dd 8.20 -.30Medtrnic 12 37.61 -.31MelcoCrwn 28 15.58 +.28Merck 19 38.73 +.37Meritor 10 6.48 -.35MetLife 7 34.96 -.42MetroPCS 10 8.04 -.10MicronT dd 6.64 -.37Microsoft 12 32.42 +1.41MidstPet n ... 15.00Molycorp 24 29.99 -.81MonstrWw 19 8.26 -.24MorgStan 31 17.48 -.59Mosaic 11 51.27 +.43MotrlaMob dd 38.83 -.06Mylan 15 21.84 -.25NCR Corp 71 23.31 +1.05NRG Egy 21 15.39 +.33NXP Semi ... 23.19 -.90NYSE Eur 11 26.86 +.12Nabors 11 15.71 -.13NasdOMX 12 25.04 +.34NOilVarco 16 77.68 -.46Navistar 11 34.61 -1.25NetApp 24 38.74 -.93Netflix 25 106.11 -.98NY CmtyB 12 13.12 +.08NewellRub 39 17.40 +.04NewfldExp 7 32.48 -.19NewmtM 12 47.25 -.56NewsCpA 15 19.01 +.12NewsCpB 17 19.35 +.10Nexen g ... 19.18 +.10NiSource 23 24.41 +.34NikeB 23 110.77 +1.16NobleCorp 28 37.67 -.21NokiaCp ... 3.70 -.12NorflkSo 13 69.53 +.83NorthropG 8 61.81 +.79NovaGld g ... 6.61 +.02Novartis 11 56.38 +.91NuanceCm 50 22.84 -.04Nucor 16 39.67 -.42Nvidia 14 13.39 -.26OCZ Tech dd 5.64 -.33OCharleys dd 9.85OcciPet 11 88.61 +.39OfficeDpt 14 3.03 -.12Omnicom 15 50.05 +.66

    OmniVisn 12 18.31 -1.14OnSmcnd 67 8.07 -.22OpenTable 46 41.34 +.01OpkoHlth dd 4.99 +.10Oracle 15 28.88 -.13PNC 11 65.38 +.78PPG 14 101.29 +.29PPL Corp 10 27.15 +.25Paccar 15 42.22 -.29PacEth rs 9 1.02 +.17PatriotCoal dd 6.21 -.52Paychex 21 30.76 -.01PeabdyE 8 29.80 -.66PeopUtdF 19 12.41 -.02PetrbrsA ... 22.98 +.14Petrobras ... 23.99 +.16Pfizer 18 22.56 +.23PhilipMor 17 87.81 +1.06PiperJaf dd 24.23 -.22PitnyBw 6 17.24 +.31Polycom s 20 12.89 +.06Popular 12 1.89 +.07Potash 13 43.93 +.52PwShs QQQ q 65.68 -.18ProShtS&P q 36.40 -.05PrUShS&P q 15.65 -.03ProUltQQQ q 112.24 -.77PrUShQQQ q 31.86 +.22ProUltSP q 55.94 +.13ProUShL20 q 18.59 -.03PrUPShQQQ q 11.62 +.14ProUSSP500 q 9.54 -.04PrUVxST rs q 15.63 -1.05ProceraN cc 21.01 -.72ProctGam 17 67.51 +.94ProgrssEn 27 52.48 +.55ProgsvCp 15 21.37 -1.01Proofpnt n ... 14.08Prudentl 8 59.73 -.44PSEG 10 30.41 +.33PulteGrp dd 8.37 +.14

    Q-R-S-TQualcom 19 62.25 -.32QksilvRes 7 3.89 -.07RF MicD 31 4.08 -.20RadianGrp 1 3.10 -.10Rambus dd 4.90 -.70Renren n ... 7.13 +.08Rentech dd 2.16 +.02RschMotn 4 13.34 -.13RioTinto ... 57.12 +.68RiteAid dd 1.55 +.02RiverbedT 58 19.85 -8.01RobtHalf 28 28.96 +.11RockColl 14 55.56 -.29Rowan 31 33.62 +.09RylCarb 10 26.92 -1.95RoyDShllA 14 68.71 +.49SAIC 68 12.21 +.16SAP AG ... 65.22 +.94SLM Cp 14 15.08 +.18SpdrDJIA q 129.98 +.59SpdrGold q 159.54 +.11S&P500ETF q 137.95 +.23SpdrHome q 20.50 -.03SpdrS&PBk q 22.98 -.01SpdrLehHY q 39.29 +.08SpdrRetl q 60.94 +.23SpdrOGEx q 52.68 -.38SpdrMetM q 47.62 -.67SXC Hlth 66 95.81 -1.19Safeway 15 22.09 +.10StJude 12 38.02 -.31SanDisk 10 35.91 -4.56SandRdge 54 7.06 +.01Sanofi ... 37.30 +.50SaraLee 54 21.69 +.01Schlmbrg 20 71.70 +1.90Schwab 21 14.02 +.04SeagateT 77 29.21 +.44SelCmfrt 27 30.76 -2.92Sequenom dd 5.01 +.33SiderurNac ... 9.06 +.04SilvWhtn g 19 29.34 -.17Sina dd 58.25 -.75SkywksSol 21 24.38 -1.53SwstAirl 38 7.91 -.32SwstnEngy 15 27.85 -.39SpectraEn 17 30.26 -.12SprottGold q 13.96 -.08SP Matls q 36.48 -.02SP HlthC q 37.29 +.20SP CnSt q 34.31 +.31SP Consum q 44.64 +.07SP Engy q 68.96 -.16SP Inds q 36.77 +.31SP Tech q 29.28 -.11SP Util q 35.02 +.34StanBlkDk 16 73.41 +.50Staples 11 15.66 -.01Starbucks 35 59.16 +.35StateStr 12 45.12 +.09StlDynam 13 12.89 -.23Stryker 15 53.93 -.43Suncor gs 9 31.20 -.39SunTrst 21 22.60 -.14Supvalu dd 6.08 -.11SwiftTrans ... 10.07 -.03Symantec 18 18.14 +.05Synovus dd 2.08Sysco 15 29.03 -.52TD Ameritr 17 18.44 +.11THQ h dd .75 +.18TJX s 21 41.02 -.07TaiwSemi ... 15.11 -.14TalismE g ... 12.56 -.32Target 13 57.28 +.49TataMotors ... 29.96 -.32TeckRes g ... 36.94 -.31TelefEsp ... 14.61 +.37TempurP 20 66.53 -17.22TenetHlth 49 5.41 -.03Teradyn 14 16.30 -.27Terex 65 24.57 +.35Tesoro 6 22.94 -.16TevaPhrm 15 45.08 -.56TexInst 17 32.47 -.17Textron 25 26.75 +.403M Co 15 87.48 +.68TibcoSft 49 33.50 -.21TimeWarn 14 36.60 +.29TollBros cc 23.74 +.37Transocn dd 50.29 +.01Travelers 16 62.75 +1.05TriQuint 18 5.35 -.14TycoIntl 21 55.29 +.30

    U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 12.50 +.09UDR dd 26.39 +.18US Airwy 18 9.34 -.17USG dd 15.72 -.10UltraPt g 6 18.11 -.67UndrArmr 55 101.53 +5.03UnionPac 15 107.26 +1.56UtdContl 10 22.91 -.43UPS B 21 80.27 +.41US NGs rs q 14.40 +.15US OilFd q 39.39 +.43USSteel dd 28.99 +.40UtdTech 15 81.00 +.60UtdhlthGp 12 59.51 +.80Vale SA ... 22.98 +.02Vale SA pf ... 22.35ValeroE 6 23.75 -.15VangEmg q 42.75 +.27VerizonCm 42 38.73 +.58ViacomB 16 47.28 +.02VirgnMda h ... 23.84 +.18Vivus dd 22.95 +.76Vodafone ... 27.69 -.01VulcanM dd 41.18 +.16Walgrn 12 35.93 +.30WalterEn 11 65.02 -.82WsteMInc 18 35.96 +.22WatsnPh 34 69.36 +1.25WeathfIntl 41 13.78 -.06WellPoint 10 70.68 +.06WDigital 14 41.44 -.61WstnUnion 10 18.00 -.05WmsCos 22 32.30 +.12Windstrm 35 11.28 +.01WT India q 18.87 -.01XL Grp dd 21.38 +.01XcelEngy 15 26.76 +.45Xilinx 17 34.40 -.64YPF Soc ... 14.59 +.17Yamana g 15 14.23 -.06YumBrnds 23 73.93 +2.52Zimmer 15 63.08 +.02ZionBcp 25 20.54 -.39Zynga n dd 9.22 -.36

    The

    Wee

    k A

    head

    Fed committee meetsThe Federal Open Market Committee holds one of its eight meetings for the year on Tuesday and Wednesday.

    The nation's economic picture has been mixed of late. The trade deficit is down and inflation is tame, but hiring slowed sharply in March after three months

    of strong job growth.

    Will the Fed stick to its plan to hold interest rates near record lows until at least late 2014?

    Consumer condenceEconomists are anticipating that a key measure of consumers condence is essentially unchanged from last month.

    The Conference Board reveals its index on consumer condence for April on Tuesday.

    Although hiring has strengthened and unemployment is down to the lowest level since January 2009, consumers are facing higher gas prices, which can lead to curtailed spending on other goods and services.

    D.R. Hortons 2QThe spring home-buying season got an early start this year thanks to a mild January and February.That bodes well for home-builders like D.R. Horton, which reports scal second-quarter results on Monday.

    The builder was cautiously optimistic entering the spring and is expected to report a prot for the quarter.

    Price-to-earnings ratio: 41based on past 12 months results

    7

    12

    $17

    2Q 11

    Operating EPS

    2Q 12

    est.$0.09 $0.04

    DHI $15.38$11.81 11

    Source: FactSet

    Consumer condence index

    50

    60

    70

    Source: FactSet N D J F M A

    est.70.0

    11 12

    Bernard Condon; J.Paschke APSource: FactSet

    For once-unstoppable Apple, its been a rough two weeks.

    The stock has closed down eight of the past 10 trading days. A decline of 9.6 percent wiped out $56 billion of the companys market value. Over the same period, the Standard & Poors 500 index fell 1.4 percent.

    Apple traded at about $100 three years ago. It rose steadily in 2009, 2010 and 2011, took off this year and set an all-time high of $644 on April 10. The company was valued at $600 billion.

    No one is sure why the stock finally stopped rising, but one explanation is a financial analyst named Walter Piecyk.

    On April 9, he downgraded Apple to a rating of neutral somewhat of a bold move considering

    that, of the 48 analysts who cover the company, nobody rates it a sell.

    Piecyk, who works for the broker-age BTIG, is worried that Apple will

    have a harder time selling iPhones if cellphone

    companies stop subsidizing most of

    the $600 price.Piecyk expects Apple

    to sell 27.5 million iPhones this quarter, down from 33 million in the three months before.

    Others have pointed to the risks of a federal

    investigation into how Apple and publish-ers set e-book

    prices, and rumors that the company will

    launch a smaller iPad that might hurt sales of

    higher-priced models.Then theres perhaps the

    best explanation: It was time for investors to take profits in a stock that another analyst, Shaw Wu of the brokerage Sterne Agee, says had gone vertical.

    Apple (APPL)

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