G-Team hears voices of experience — Page 2 Sports Big man in middle Hollis Thomas has added 350 pounds into the middle of the Panthers’ defense and a light-hearted approach in the locker room
Page 7
Thursday, October 15, 2009, Forest City, N.C.
NATION
50¢
Early voting begins today
READY FOR DISASTER
By SCOTT BAUGHMAN
Dow Jones tops 10,000 for first time in a year
Daily Courier Staff Writer
SPINDALE — Voters wanting to get a jump on this year’s municipal elections can start casting ballots today. “One-Stop Voting starts Thursday and will run through Oct. 31,” said Debbie Bedford, director of elections. “Hours will be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the week and will be 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Oct. 31. It is only here at our office at 298 Fairground Road in Spindale, and is only for the town elections. If you’re not yet registered to vote you can show up and register and vote all on the same day.” According to the board’s Web site: A North Carolina resident who is qualified to vote but who misses the 25 day deadline for voter registration may register and vote at a OneStop Site during the OneStop Absentee Voting period. The One-Stop Voting period extends from 19 to 3 days before Election Day. The process is sometimes referred to as “Same-Day Registration,” but it is important to recognize that it not permitted on Election Day
Page 11
SPORTS
The King joins four others in NASCAR HOF Page 7
GAS PRICES
The Rutherford County Chapter of the American Red Cross and Father’s Vineyard Church conducted a joint disaster drill Tuesday at the church in Spindale as a part of the Red Cross’s advanced feeding course. The focus of the drill was training volunteers in the procedures of assisting and feeding disaster victims. A group of around 75 mock disaster victims, comprised of volunteers form the church, were on hand. This drill helps the Red Cross and Father’s vineyard disaster team members to be prepared to meet the needs of the community in the event of a real disaster. David Bibler, right, offers a helping hand to mock disaster victim John Mitchell. Garrett Byers/Daily Courier
Please see Voting, Page 6
Low: High: Avg.:
$2.23 $2.36 $2.30
DEATHS Forest City
Jeremy Cole
Ellenboro
Grace Philbeck
Bostic
Robert Powell
Clark decides not to run for state House By SCOTT BAUGHMAN Daily Courier Staff Writer
FOREST CITY — Phil Clark has ended his Independent bid for the District 112 seat in the North Carolina House of Representatives. “After looking at the whole issue, I realized that by running as an Independent I would be splitting the ticket and handing the seat to the Democrats,” Clark
said of his resignation from the race on Wednesday. “I will now support the Republican candidate as Mike Hager is a conservative and I’m a conservative.” Hager, who is serving as chair of the Rutherford County Republican Party, is trying to unseat four-term incumbent Democrat Bob England in the 2010 election. “I think he looked at it and decided that if it came down between a liberal
house member or a conservative member, he’d chose the conservative,” Hager said. “Phil’s core is a conservative guy and he looked at it objectively and said we had to win for a conservative member. He felt I had the inside track to win it and now I have it even more.” For both men, the central issue in the campaign has been and will continue to
Lake Lure
Virginia Edgerton
Mooresboro
Bobby Hambright Elsewhere Jennifer Bailey James Wright Page 5 Shelby Mayor Ted Alexander and Sally Cook, with Faith Link, were just a few of several guest speakers at Tuesday’s Poverty Forum in Lake Lure, hosted by Shepherd’s Care.
WEATHER
High
Low
59 47 Today and tonight, 50 percent chance of scattered rain. Complete forecast, Page 10
INSIDE Classifieds . . . 15-17 Sports . . . . . . . . 7-9 County scene . . . . 6 Opinion . . . . . . . . 4 Vol. 41, No. 246
LAKE LURE — Service organizations throughout Western North Carolina came to discuss growing poverty issues here Tuesday, in a forum presented by Shepherd’s Care. Speakers from The Free Clinics, Manna Foodbank, Faith Link, Job Link, Isothermal Planning and Development Commission, Yokefellow, Pisgah Legal Services, Carolina First Bank and others addressed many prob-
Now on the Web: www.thedigitalcourier.com
From staff reports
lems that stem from rising poverty in the area. “On any given snapshot night in Shelby, you’ll find several hundred homeless,” said Shelby Mayor Ted Alexander. “Of those, the majority are from our city or Cleveland County, but some are from outside the area. That homelessness is really just a symptom of growing poverty.” Alexander highlighted Shelby’s 10-year plan Please see Poverty, Page 6
Please see Historian, Page 6
Poverty issues are discussed Daily Courier Staff Writer
County historian honored RUTHERFORDTON — Robin Lattimore, an author, journalist and president of the Rutherford County Historical Society, has been named the 2009 Historian of the Year. Lattimore was recognized by the North Carolina Society of Historians Inc. with its highest honor at the group’s annual meeting held last weekend in Morehead City. The NCSH celebrates the accomplishments and publications of historians from all 100 counties. The Historian of the Year is chosen by a distinguished panel of scholars and professional historians. More than 10 individuals were nominated for this year’s honor. “Robin S. Lattimore exemplifies the mission of this organization and is setting a standard of achievement that future historians will
Scott Baughman/ Daily Courier
By SCOTT BAUGHMAN
Please see Clark, Page 6
2
— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
Local
Carolina House Alzheimers walk is Oct. 23
Pastor Robert Coleman addresses Grahamtown residents during a meeting Tuesday night.
By ALLISON FLYNN Daily Courier Staff Writer
Larry Dale/ Daily Courier
Voices of experience address G-Team By LARRY DALE Daily Courier Staff Writer
FOREST CITY — A Shelby pastor talked about revitalizing neighborhoods at a special meeting of the Grahamtown Team on Tuesday afternoon. Pastor Robert Coleman of Hoppers Chapel said the key to taking back a drug- and crimeinfested neighborhood is “transforming hearts” and “love, oldfashioned love.”
Coleman said when he came to West Shelby five years ago he saw a situation where “it seemed like there was a murder every other day.” He said Shelby had the second highest crime rate in North Carolina, and West Shelby was an especially troubled neighborhood. “A lot of people had lost hope and begun to perish,” he said. He remembered that he prayed, “Lord, what can we do?” And the response, he said, was, “Do something about it.” He added, “We made up our minds. We were tired. We said, ‘enough is enough.’” Coleman said the groups working with his church began to take back the neighborhood “one street at a time” from the drug dealers, gangs and gang wannabes. A key to helping neighbor-
hoods recover, he noted, is, “You must be seen and heard.” One way they did that, he said, was with prayer walks through West Shelby. “We had over 100 (walkers) the first time,” he commented. Another effective tool to bring people together was the use of radio to get the message out, he added. A crucial factor in revitalizing a community, he noted, is the rehabilitation of housing in the area. Coleman said the church bought and adopted dilapidated housing and began to make it safe and livable. “When you control it, you set the rules,” he said, adding that that meant many evictions until people began to understand that crime would not be tolerated. He said, “We went to slumlords and said, ‘work with us.’” Coleman also noted that home ownership is a crucial factor in safe neighborhoods because owners take pride in what they own. The effort also was helped by simple things like cleaning up a neighborhood and replacing broken windows so that criminals would know they were not welcome there. One result of the efforts to reclaim the neighborhoods of West Shelby is a reduction in violent crime. “It’s the power
of people working together,” he said. “People who take pride will turn in drug dealers.” “We were afraid at first,” he conceded. “But we prayed and took action. We said ‘enough is enough.’ I hope this will inspire you in what you are doing.” Suzanne Porter, United Way Community Engagement Team coordinator, spoke briefly at the meeting about efforts to obtain a federal grant for a Weed and Seed program to fight crime and rebuild neighborhoods. She said Fred Hudson, program manager in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Charlotte, who is helping Rutherford County’s bid for funding, “has been pleased with what he has seen so far. So many agencies are involved here. He said we might be a trend-setter.” Danielle Withrow, Forest City town planner, said Grahamtown is a targeted neighborhood for the Weed and Seed program. Of the Weed and Seed program, which operates in Shelby, Coleman said, “I love Weed and Seed. It is a powerful, powerful program.” The Grahamtown Team, or GTeam, is a two-year-old organization that is working to revitalize Grahamtown, a 100-year-old neighborhood in the heart of Forest City.
OctOber is
FOREST CITY — Carolina House will be doing its part to help with Alzheimer’s research by hosting a walk for the Alzheimer’s Association on Oct. 23. Scheduled for 2 to 4 p.m. in the assisted living center’s parking lot, in past years the event has raised more than $10,000 for the Alzheimer’s Association. Carolina House, which has a specialized unit for caring for those with Alzheimer’s, has been involved in raising money for the association since 2000. The Alzheimer’s Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer care, support and research. “Any research they do affects our residents,” said Linda Shoup, executive director. “If a cure is found, that would be a major impact for us. And they are always trying to develop new medications. “We have a 22-bed specialized memory care unit, so Alzheimer’s is very near and dear to us.” According to the Alzheimer’s Association, every 70 seconds someone will develop Alzheimer’s. This year alone, Shoup said she’d received numerous calls from families saying they had a loved one who had walked off or been found disoriented. “Alzheimer is a devastating disease. There aren’t many people who can say they haven’t known someone affected by it,” In addition to the walk, Carolina House has held yard sales, bake sales, rockathons and craft sales to raise money for the Alzheimer’s Association. Saturday the center will host a “Carnival for a Cause,” an event with games, prizes and inflatables. “I’d been wanting to do one in the past,” said Program Coordinator Christy Ayers. “For $3 children 12 and under can play all the games.” The event also allows residents to interact with children and families, Shoup said. “Something we stress is intergenerational involvement,” Shoup said. “So it serves more than one purpose.” The carnival will be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Gifts and donations were given to help with it from local businesses, including Smith’s Drugs, Spindale Drugs, Belk, Pepsi, Wells, Jenkins and Wells, The Wine Shop, It’s All in the Bag, Main Street Emporium and Ghost Town. To sign up to take part in the walk, call Carolina House at 288-1171. Contact Flynn via e-mail at aflynn@thedigitalcourier. com.
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226 S. Washington St., Uptown Shelby, NC
NO TIME LIKE THE PRESENT
TO KEEP YOUR FUTURE
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Lots of times, changes in life also affect your investments. That’s why there’s never been a better time to schedule your free portfolio review. We’ll talk about the changes in your life, and help you decide whether it makes sense to revise your investments because of them.
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A portfolio review will help ensure your investments are keeping pace with your goals. Call your local financial advisor today. Lots of times, changes in life also affect your investments. That’s why there’s never been a better time to schedule your free portfolio review. We’ll talk about the changes in your life, and help you decide whether it makes sense to revise your investments because of them. A portfolio review will help ensure your investments are keeping pace with your goals. Call your local financial advisor today. Frank Faucette Jr
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612 Oak Street Forest City, NC 28043 828-245-1158
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www.edwardjones.com Tracy A Faucette
All ads must be prepaid. Mail or bring payment to: The Daily Courier, Attn: Breast Cancer Page, 601 Oak Street, Forest City, NC 28043. Must be received by 5pm, Monday, October 19th.
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The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009 — 3
LOCAL/state
Town will seek to have speed limit increased
ADAVILLE BAPTIST MARKS 100TH
From staff reports
ELLENBORO — Aldermen on Tuesday night voted to ask the state to change the speed limit from 35 to 45 mph along a stretch of Business U.S. 74 within the town limits. The controversial lowering of the speed limit along that stretch earlier had drawn criticism from some residents. Board member Truett Murray said, “It’s going downhill on both sides. They’re not abiding by it anyway.” Also, aldermen unanimously approved a water tank service maintenance agreement with Utility Services Co. of Boiling Springs, S.C., at their regular monthly meeting Tuesday. Alderman Jim Rhyne commented, “It is important to maintain the water tank so the school (Ellenboro Elementary) has a sprinkler system.” Concerning another water issue, the board discussed, but took no action on, a plan offered by board member Allan “Bunt” Black that would reduce water rates for people who use less than 2,000 gallons a month. The plan would raise rates for people who use more than 10,000 gallons a month, Black said, so the town would be “in line with the state to get grant money.” The state is encouraging water conservation. Board members decided to table the matter until the next meeting so that they would have time to study the proposal. Aldermen voted to contract out the putting up and taking down of the town’s Christmas lights, at a total cost of $700. Board members also unanimously voted to enter into an agreement with Tony’s Restaurant whereby the restaurant can build a pump station and extend lines to the town’s first manhole. Board member Jim Rhyne noted, “We have to agree to own the line, otherwise DOT (Department of Transportation) won’t let it go by the road.” The agreement comes at no cost to the town.
Rutherford Notes AARP offering senior driving class
FOREST CITY — An AARP Driver Safety Program class will be held Thursday, Oct. 22, at Rutherford County Senior Center, from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 to 2 p.m. The course explains the changes that occur in vision, hearing, and reaction time as drivers age and provides safety tips for handling these changes. Other topics include: n How to handle problem situations such as left turns, right-of way, free-way traffic, trucks and blind spots; n What to do if confronted by an aggressive driver; n How medications may affect driving; n How to properly use anti-lock brakes, air bags and safety belts; n How to properly assess one’s own and other’s abilities via a Personal Driving Capability Index. The course is open to senior adults ages 55 and over. No tests are included. There is a $12 fee for the program. Pre-registration required. Contact the Senior Center at 287-6409 to register.
Benefit Horse Show scheduled
FOREST CITY — A horse show on Halloween to benefit the Community Pet Center will begin at 9 a.m. at Squirrel’s Nest Farm, off Old Caroleen Road. Sarah Lawing is organizing the show as her senior project. Riders must wear breeches or jodhpurs, paddock or tall boots, and an approved helmet. Half chaps are acceptable and Halloween costumes are welcomed. Riders planning to participate in a cross-country ride must have a vest and armband. Horses must have a negative Coggins which must be presented at registration. No dogs allowed on the show grounds. A fee of $5 per class will be charged. For more information and a list of classes, contact Miss Lawing at 828-447-3405 or Deana Gilliam at 828-429-0688. If it rains, the event will be moved to Nov. 7. You may also visit the farm web site at www.squirrelsnestfarm.com Food and other items will be available for sale including Community Pet Center “Pets Rule” T-shirts and other items that event officials say might make great Christmas presents. The farm is located about 1.5 miles from Hwy. 74 on Old Caroleen Road. From the west, turn right at the ramp; from the east, turn left. Enter the farm from Squirrel’s Nest Farm Lane.
Bears are causing problem
ASHEVILLE(AP) — A record bear population in the North Carolina mountains has led more of the beasts to look for food near areas where humans work and live. The Asheville Citizen-Times reported Tuesday that a black bear mauled a llama used to guard sheep at a Buncombe County farm. The llama had to be euthanized because its injuries were severe. North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission biologist Mike Carraway said an abundance of acorns, grapes and other food sources have built bear populations to a record 10,000 in the mountains this year. Carraway said while most bears feed on acorns and other nuts, they are opportunistic and will eat garbage and seeds from bird feeders around homes. They also sometimes kill and eat livestock.
Scott Baughman/Daily Courier
This display highlights historical moments in the 100-year long history of Adaville Baptist Church. The congregation, under the leadership of the Rev. Cal Sayles, celebrated the 100th anniversary of the church’s founding on Sunday.
Court hears water wars arguments COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s top prosecutor said Tuesday that he’s pleased with oral arguments before the nation’s highest court as to why a city, a water supply company and a major utility should stay out of a water dispute with North Carolina. “I was very happy to see the intense interest that they are taking in the case,” South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster said by phone from Washington after the hourlong hearing before the U.S. Supreme Court. “I have never seen the justices appear to be as interested and knowledgeable and active in their questions. They were highly engaged.” At the heart of the case is a plan by North Carolina to allow two cities to pump up to 10 million gallons a day from both the Catawba and Yadkin river basins, both of which cross the state line with South Carolina. The Catawba River winds 225 miles through the Carolinas and provides drinking water to more than 1 million people and electricity to more than twice that many. Arguing that the plan would deprive South Carolina of its equitable share of the Catawba’s precious water, McMaster filed a federal lawsuit in 2007 to stop North Carolina from draining the basin. The high court, McMaster argued, should rule that the water be apportioned between the states, not hoarded
by the upriver state. “North Carolina’s position is that they can do whatever they want with the water, no matter the impact on South Carolina,” McMaster said. “That is and would be a disaster for the economic prosperity and future of South Carolina. Our entire economy in our state depends on water.” At issue Tuesday was the decision by the special master appointed to help resolve the dispute to allow the city of Charlotte, N.C., Duke Energy and a water system into the case. Duke, which has thousands of customers in both Carolinas, has argued its interests in the water aren’t encompassed by either state, a contention also made by the Catawba River Water Supply Project. Charlotte, which sits perched on the border of the two states, said it should be allowed in as a major stakeholder in Duke’s relicensing agreements. McMaster says the water should be meted out between the states, after which the third parties can hash out their shares with North Carolina. McMaster has also said the case may impact other southeastern water disputes. Tennessee and South Carolina have worried Atlanta may look to the nearby Tennessee or Savannah rivers for relief for droughts that often plague the area. And Georgia, Alabama and Florida have fought over how much water can be stored in
north Georgia lakes. “If an upriver state can turn our water off whenever they want to, then we’re at an enormous disadvantage,” he said. “And if they can do it, so could Georgia, for the Savannah River.” U.S. Solicitor General Edwin Kneedler has waded in on McMaster’s side, arguing in February that the third parties should be kept out because they “do not have a sufficiently distinct interest at stake to justify allowing them to interject themselves.” A spokeswoman for North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper declined to comment Tuesday. In March, Cooper said the lawsuit should be settled by the Catawba-Wateree River Basin Advisory Committee rather than the courts. A Duke spokesman echoed the company’s original arguments Tuesday. “Duke Energy is in a unique situation operating in both Carolinas, and our customers, communities and stakeholders have unique interests that we are representing in this federal court case, that can’t be adequately represented by North Carolina or South Carolina,” Walls said, adding that the company feels that its federal relicensing agreement “represents an equitable distribution of water and should be protected in these court proceedings.”
SAVE THE Your weekly guide to
DATE! Carnival Benefiting the Alzheimer’s Association for Memory Walk CAROLINA HOUSE OF FOREST CITY 493 Piney Ridge Road Forest City, NC 28043 Saturday, October 17 11am – 2pm
COME ONE COME ALL!! $3.00 Armbands for children 12 and under covers all games HOTDOGS $1.00 INFLATABLES • GAMES AND GREAT PRIZES! • FUN FOR ALL!! *We will reschedule if it rains*
what’s coming up in Rutherford County!
Off The Beaded Path
Saturday, Oct. 17th Glass Bead Making Class & Hand-Made Glass Bead Trunk Show By Pauline Mullikin 10am – 4pm Call for more info
120B W. Trade St., Forest City, NC (828) 245-0306 Mon-Fri 10-6, Tues 10-7 & Sat 10-4
www.offthebeadedpathbeadstore.com
4
— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
■ A daily forum for opinion, commentary and editorials on the news that affects us all.
James R. Brown/ publisher Steven E. Parham/ executive editor 601 Oak Street, P.O. Box 1149, Forest City, N.C. 28043 Phone: 245-6431 Fax: 248-2790
E-mail: dailycourier@thedigitalcourier.com
Our Views Candidates must do homework
I
t’s election time in Rutherford County. This is truly a grassroots election, with voters selecting mayors and council members for our communities. An earlier editorial encouraged potential voters to learn more about the candidates before casting ballots on Tuesday, Nov. 3, or during early voting. Now it’s time to encourage candidates to do their homework. In most cases, incumbents have a big advantage on challengers because of name recognition. More importantly, though, incumbents have been in the middle of dealing with the current issues facing their respective towns. They have been through the budget wars and usually have a good working relationship with the town’s appointed officials. Of course, that doesn’t include Ellenboro where the mayor and council members are at each other’s throats. However, this fall the discord has drawn a large number of candidates for the Ellenboro alderman positions. A challenger who has done his or her homework would benefit from letting voters know they are intimately aware of the challenges facing the town and the board on which they wish to serve. The day of learning on the job is long past.
Our readers’ views Health insurance numbers challenged To the editor: Let me start by saying that I feel for the people who have lost their health insurance because of losing their jobs. I have been only getting to work one, maybe two weeks a month for over the past year, so I could be in the same situation that these people are in just any time now. I’ve never said we shouldn’t help the people that don’t have health insurance because of this, what I said was the government shouldn’t shove it down everybody’s throat. The 47 or 50 million that the government would have you to believe are without health insurance is an over-bloated statement to say the least. Take away the people that choose not to have health insurance and the illegal immigrants at the very least and see what that number would be. This is a quote from a letter that was printed in this paper, it was about people that have health insurance. “If you didn’t have these (health insurance benefits) you would be screaming about the high costs, the pre-existing exclusions, and the cancellation of your policy if you neglected to disclose any medication or past illness.” If you have a history of bad or past health issues, of course, your insurance is going to be higher because they are going to have to pay out more for you and, of course, if you exclude information from your application and they find out about it, they are going to cancel your insurance. It’s the same as if a person has wrecked nine cars and I have not had an accident, who is going to pay the higher auto insurance premium. And, if a person fails to mention that they have had four DWI’s, is the auto insurance company going to cancel their auto insurance ... sure, they are.
Another quote I would like to bring up is by none other than Ray Crawford and I quote, “I suggest the president get all Democrats together, (including blue dogs — some of which have sold out) and forget about the party of obstruction and run the health care reform over the Republicans.” If the shoe were on the other foot and a Republican had said that, the Democrats would act like the world was coming to an end. I can hear it now. Why they should be run out of office for making a statement like that. That is totally uncalled for. One last comment to Tara Wright concerning illegals not being allowed to enroll at a Community College. One of the reasons some people have a problem with this is just what you said; they are illegal, and are not supposed to be here in the first place. Also, there are only so many slots available for each curriculum, so is your or my child supposed to be denied access to, let’s say nursing school, to give the slot to an illegal immigrant. I don’t think so, but after reading your letter I guess you do. Harry Hallman Bostic
Offers his view of airport board To the editor: I have a lot of people ask me how the Airport Authority is doing now days since they have some new members. Well, all I can say that we have a couple of new members that are trying to change things around, but it’s about the same as before. Since July, here are a few things that have happened that the public taxpayers of the county need to know. Leading Edge Aviation, Greg Turner went out of business three and a half years into a 5-year lease. The first thing the Airport
Authority did was write a letter of agreement that let him out of the lease without consequences. This was accomplished and signed before the meeting of the Airport Authority on July 14. It was approved after the fact. Next, the airport authority hired Greg Turner at $22 an hour to manage the same airport. Next the Airport Authority ran ads in various papers and magazines for a new FBO and a temporary airport manager. Since it took so long to run the ads, three months, they extended Turner’s temporary job until December. It appears to me that Mr. Turner is getting special treatment Some time soon, the Airport Authority will have to select a new manager or a FBO. Does any one have an idea of who they will select to manager the airport? Could it possibly be Greg Turner? We’ll see. Keith Hunter Rutherfordton
Says disrespect of God will always be costly To the editor: Ignorance and blatant disrespect for the Word of God is causing our nation to perish. As most of us can see, our country is in great turmoil spiritually, mentally, physically and financially. The King of Nineveh was a discerning ruler and took heed of Jonah’s call for the people to repent. The King humbled himself and called all the people to fast and turn from their wickedness. Our leaders should be as wise and discerning as Nineveh’s. If not, we will be judged as fools one day. God’s word has been and is being removed from the judicial systems, the educational institutions and our public arenas. Do not be deceived. God will not be mocked. Roger Hornback Forest City
From a nerd galaxy, not so far away ... Darth lives I’m probably going to be all over the place with this week’s column, so dear readers, please be patient. I promise it’ll all gel together in the end. I like to joke that in the newsroom I’m the filling in the nerd sandwich. I sit between two smart guys who also happen to love all things “Star Wars,” “Star Trek” and quantum physics. Seriously. They can jump between those topics within 10 minutes. I also like to joke that I’m always around nerds — I’m married to one as well. And it looks as though I’ve got a nerd in training at home in my three-year-old. He, too, is already geeking
Total momsense Allison Flynn
out over video games and adores to tear things apart and put them back together again. I’m a proud mama and don’t mind to brag that I think he’s brilliant. (And I’m honest enough to say he gets his science smarts from his Daddy and his ability to overanalyze and ask a bluemillion questions from yours truly.) So it really should’ve come
as no surprise to me that when asked what Nathan wanted to be for Halloween this year he replied “Dartha (his pronunciation) Vadar.” Yes, that’s right. At his tender preschool age, we’ve already introduced him to “Star Wars.” Here’s where I digress a bit. Two years ago for Halloween, Nathan, then a little over a year old, was Yoda. This was all my idea — I had always wanted a stuffed Yoda to snuggle and Nathan was as close to it as I thought I’d get. (I later got a stuffed Yoda for Christmas, thanks to ThinkGeek.com.) Fast forward to now, when Nathan is just as apt to hug me as he is to run to his room, screaming all the way
“I’m going to go to my room and slam my door HARD!” His choice of Halloween costume is quite perfect for his recent behavior and for his budding nerdism. It’s totally plausible to me that he could go, in two short years, from Jedi to Sith Lord. Husband now wants to be Obi Wan Kenobi, but we’ve not found the costume yet. He’s persuading me to go as Padme Amidala or Princess Leia, but I just don’t think I can rock the wild hair that either of those getups would require. Nathan’s costume didn’t come with a light saber, and since I’m pretty sure Scott Baughman’s won’t work as it’s green (Jedi, duh!), we went ahead and bought
Nathan a toy light saber to go with the costume. I’m just glad to have it out of the way. With a little over two weeks until Halloween, at least he’ll have something to wear when he goes around yelling “Trick or Treat!” As for me, if I don’t find something soon I’m going to wear a pair of ripped jeans, an old flannel shirt and some dark makeup and call myself a teen from the 90s. I figure I’ve lived that once, why not do it again? And if that doesn’t work, I’ll just pretend to be one of the many nerds in my life. Allison Flynn is editor/reporter at The Daily Courier. Contact her via e-mail at aflynn@thedigitalcourier.com.
The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
Michael Phillips of Phillips Farms in Cary said he and several family members spent the summer months building an eight-acre corn maze that looks like Yow from an aerial shot. Yow was the North Carolina State University women’s basketball coach until she died in January after a long fight against breast cancer. Phillips said since the Sept. 4 opening, up to 2,000 people have traveled through Yow’s ear, navigated through her hair and necklace, and exited her right shoulder. The entire maze, which includes a breast cancer symbol, takes about half an hour to complete. Phillips, a 21-year-old former business major from Campbell University, said he wanted to find a way to give back to Yow and help his family’s farm. “I thought of her struggles. And really, in her struggles, she was able to look into the good of her situation and build on it.”
Phillips said $1 of every admission is going to the Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund. Adult tickets are $10 and tickets for children and seniors over 55 are $6. “Between all the staycations, you can spend a whole afternoon here and spend
Robert Powell
Robert Hoyle Powell, 88 of Pearidge Road, Bostic, died Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2009, at Rutherford Hospital. A native of Rutherford County, he was a son the late Ruffin Powell and Grady Scoggins Powell, and also Phillips said his family, preceded in death by his which has run the farm for wife, Mildred Powell, earlier four generations, has been losing business due to anoth- this year. He was a retired contracer corn maze farm nearby. tor, and a Holiness preacher He said he wanted to branch and evangelist. out. Survivors include a son, “I really wanted to try something that’s unique and Rick Bailey of Morganton; two daughters, Betty popular with everyone,” he Mayfield of Morganton said. “This is really what I and Joye Stevens of Bostic; came up with.” one sister, Irene Ward of Phillips said his family Hickory; four great-grandwas initially skeptical of the children; and a number of almost $10,000 investment. nieces and nephews. But some financial backing A graveside service will and planning made the projbe held at 2 p.m. Friday in ect possible. the Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church cemetery Life insurance company Modern Woodmen Fraternal with the Rev. John Jackson officiating. Visitation will Financial helped back the follow at the graveside. The project. The Maize, a Utahbased company that special- Padgett and King Mortuary izes in corn maze design, cre- is serving the Powell family. ated a computer mock-up. Online condolences www.padgett“They were kinda uneasy king.com. about it,” Phillips said of his family. “But then I did some Jeremy Cole research on it. Now they’re Jeremy Cole, 29, of Forest just hoping and praying that City, died Tuesday, Oct. 13, I just keeping doing like I am 2009. doing.” Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced Phillips said Yow’s maze is scheduled to close Nov. 1, but by Harrelson Funeral Home. he’s hoping the weather will Grace Philbeck permit him to extend it. Yow, who lived in Cary, led Grace Toms Philbeck, 87, of N.C. State’s women’s basketBridge Road, Ellenboro, died ball team to more than 700 Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2009, at wins during a career that Autumn Care Center. spanned more than three A native of Rutherford decades. She also led the County, she was a daughter 1988 U.S. Olympic women’s of the late George Pinkney team to a gold medal. and Jimmie Eula Edgerton Toms, and the widow of Charles Philbeck. She retired from General Fireproofing Company and was a member of Corinth Baptist Church. She was also a member of the Forest Spindale City Senior Group as well as n The Spindale Police the Corinth Baptist Church Department responded to 30 Senior Group. E-911 calls Tuesday. Survivors include two sisters, Ruth Toms Hodge and Annabelle Toms Smith, both Lake Lure of Forest City, and a number n The Lake Lure Police of nieces and nephews, and Department responded to 11 great-nieces and nephews. E-911 calls Tuesday. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Forest City Corinth Baptist Church with the Rev. Ad Hopper officin The Forest City Police Department responded to 65 ating. Interment will follow in the church cemetery. E-911 calls Tuesday. n Travis Moore reported an Visitation will be held Friday from 1 until 2 p.m., prior to incident of obtaining propthe service at the church. erty by false pretense. Memorials may be made n Jacqueline Parks reportto Corinth Baptist Church, ed a breaking and entering 767 Pinehurst Rd., Ellenboro, and damage to property. n Bobby Maloney reported NC 28040. The Padgett and a breaking and entering and King Mortuary is in charge damage to property. The inci- of arrangements. dent occurred on Greenfield Online condolences www.padgettDrive. king.com. less than $50, and have dinner,” Phillips said. “You really can’t find that anywhere else, and you’re participating in a great cause.”
Police Notes Firefighters, police aid passing victim
FOREST CITY — When a 62-year-old woman began having chest pains Wednesday morning, her husband pulled their vehicle into the Police Department parking lot to seek help. Police officers called the Fire Department, which is just across the street, and firefighters responded to provide treatment. Fire Chief Mark McCurry said the woman was still conscious, and firefighters gave her oxygen and checked her vital signs until an EMS ambulance arrived on the scene. EMS could not provide any information on the woman’s condition or say if she was transported to the hospital.
Sheriff’s Reports
n The Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office responded to 164 E-911 calls Tuesday. n Geoffrey Scott Toney reported the theft of a shotgun and other items. n April Lanette Stacey reported the theft of medication. n Derick Ryan Bostic reported the theft of a 200 Honda convertible. n The theft of tools was reported at Brian White Construction Co., 685 Harris Henrietta Rd., Forest City. n The theft of copper was reported at Vernon Manor Apartments, 1880 U.S. 64, Rutherfordton. n William Monroe Self reported the theft of six radiators. n Jason Blake Godfrey reported the theft of a 1995 Acura Integra. n David George Eischen reported vandalism to a mailbox. n Angela B. Putnam reported the theft of appliances. n Charles Camron reported a theft. n Benjamin Franklin Weast reported the theft of medication.
Rutherfordton
n The Rutherfordton Police Department responded to 37 E-911 calls Tuesday.
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Local/obituaries
Farm honors Yow Obituaries with corn maze
CARY (AP) — A North Carolina man who’s trying to keep his family’s farm afloat during the tough economy said Wednesday he’s getting help from late women’s college basketball coach Kay Yow.
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Arrests n Tysanna Alexander, of Harmon Street, Forest City; served with a criminal summons for theft of property from a public library. (FCPD) n Matthew Donte Young, 21, of 1032 Young St., Spindale; charged with resist, obstruct and delay; placed under a $3,000 secured bond. (RPD)
Virginia Edgerton
Virginia Lynch Edgerton, 60, died Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009, at Pardee Hospital in Hendersonville. She was a daughter of the late Howard and Bessie Lynch. Survivors include her husband, Joseph Isiah Edgerton of Lake Lure; one daughter, Cynthia Ann Edgerton of Lake Lure; three sons, Cornelius Edgerton of EMS/Rescue Ellenboro, and Howard n The Rutherford County Edgerton Jr. and Lamont EMS responded to 40 E-911 Edgerton, of Lake Lure; calls Tuesday. seven sisters, Euretta n The Volunteer Life Williamson of Bradenton, Saving and Rescue, Hickory Fla., Dorie Lucille Carthens, Nut Gorge EMS and Bessie Gray, Evelyn Allen, Rutherford County Rescue Beulah Landrum, and Gloria responded to 11 E-911 calls Simmons, of Hendersonville, Tuesday. and Peggy Mills of Etowah; four brothers, Clifford Lynch, Fire Calls Michael Lynch, Wade Lynch, and Illar Lynch; five grandn Cliffside firefighters responded to a motor vehicle children; and a number of nieces, nephews and other crash. relatives. n Cherry Mountain fireFuneral services will be fighters responded to a motor conducted at 1 p.m. Saturday vehicle crash. at Ulysses D. Miller Funeral n Ellenboro firefighters responded to two motor vehi- Home, 485 Poors Ford Rd., Rutherfordton. cle crashes. n Forest City firefighters responded to a motor vehicle Bobby Hambright crash. Bobby Lewis Hambright, n Rutherfordton firefight74, of 3443 Griffin Rd., ers responded to a smoke Mooresboro died Wednesday, report. Oct. 14, 2009, at Robin n Sandy Mush firefighters Johnson Hospice House in responded to a smoke report. Dallas.
A native of Cleveland County, he was a son of the late Lewis Kendrick Hambright and Vergie Weaver Hambright. He was an Air Force veteran, a member of New Hope Baptist Church, a former employee of Fiber Industries and retired from Baxter Corp. He is survived by his wife, Barbara Thompson Hambright; two daughters, Debbie Smith of Boiling Springs, and Donna H. Coleman of Hickory; two stepdaughters, Melody Bridges of Mooresboro, and Bianca Spizzo of Shelby; one stepson, Joe Griffin of Hickor; one brother, Richard Hambright of Charlotte; 14 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at The A.C. McKinney Memorial Chapel of McKinney-Landreth Funeral Home with the Revs. Keith Dixon and Ed Brown officiating. Burial will follow in Cleveland Memorial Park. Visitation will be held Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home. At other times, the family will be at the home of Debbie and Johnny Smith, 530 Clyde Wallace Rd., Boiling Springs. Memorials may be made to Robin Johnson House, 5005 Shepherds Way Dr., Dallas, NC 28034. Online condolences www.mckinneylandrethfuneralhome.com.
James Wright James Edmond Wright, 70, of Wellford, S.C., died October 13, 2009, following a long illness. A native of Rutherfordton, he was a son of the late William Marcus Wright and Samantha Odom Wright. He was a member of Jackson Baptist Church and retired from Mitsubishi. Survivors include his wife, Susan Wright of the home; two daughters, Donna W. Bobby and Michelle W. Blankenship; a son, J. Douglas Wright; five grandchildren; two sisters, Ann W. Gowan and Joyce W. Jaynes; one brother, Bill Wright; and a number of nieces and nephews. Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Fort Prince Memorial Gardens with the Rev. Jim McMakin officiating. The family will receive friends following the service. The family is at the Wright home in Wellford. Memorials may be made to Four Seasons Hospice, 571 S. Allen Rd., Flat Rock, NC 28731 The Stribling Funeral Home of Duncan, S.C., is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences www.stribling funeralhome.net.
Jennifer Bailey Jennifer Irene Bailey, 27, of 5103 Sharon Terrace Dr., Jacksonville, Fla., died Thursday, Oct. 8, 2009, at her residence. Born in Rutherford County, she was a daughter of Lee Thrift and Barbara Beatty. She was employed as a server and cashier for Popeyes Chicken. In addition to her parents, she is survived by a daughter, Veronica Bailey of Jacksonville; three half sisters, Tammy Michelle Bailey of Gastonia, Marie Thornton of Lawndale, and Anna Marie Thrift of Ellenboro; her fiancée, Mark Jackson. Funeral services will be conducted at 3 p.m. Saturday at Pisgah Baptist Church, Casar, with the Rev. Alton Martin officiating. Visitation will be Saturday from 2 to 3 p.m., prior to the service at the church. Burial in the church cemetery. Memorials may be made to a the Trust Fund for Vernonica Bailey, c/o Brisette R. Quinn, 3611 Boiling Springs Rd., Spartanburg, SC 29303. Stamey Funeral Home of Fallston is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences www.stameyfuneralhome.com.
Deaths
Bruce Wasserstein NEW YORK (AP) — Bruce Wasserstein, the CEO of Lazard Ltd. and a prominent Wall Street dealmaker, has died, a company spokeswoman said. He was 61. Wasserstein was hospitalized with an irregular heartbeat on Sunday. The company said in a statement Wednesday the cause of death had not yet been determined. Wasserstein had been a Wall Street superstar since the 1980s, working on such landmark deals as Kohlberg Kravis Roberts’ takeover of RJR Nabisco, and the Morgan Stanley-Dean Witter and AOL-Time Warner mergers. He was the driving force behind Lazard, one of Wall Street’s top mergers and acquisitions advisory firms. Vice Chairman Steven J. Golub was named interim CEO of Lazard. Golub, 63, has been with the company since 1984. He has served in various senior leadership positions, including CFO and chairman of Lazard’s Financial Advisory business. Lou Albano NEW YORK (AP) — “Captain” Lou Albano, who became one of the most recognized professional wrestlers of the 1980s after appearing in Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” music video, died Wednesday. He was 76. Albano, whose real name was Louis Vincent Albano, died in Westchester County in suburban New York, said Dawn Marie, founder of Wrestlers Rescue, an organization that helps raise money for the health care of retired wrestlers. He died of natural causes, Marie said. Nan Robertson ROCKVILLE, Maryland (AP) — Nan Robertson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter who wrote a book about female employees’ fight for equal treatment at the newspaper, has died. She was 83. The veteran reporter won a 1983 Pulitzer Prize for feature writing for a personal piece — an unsparing account of her sudden encounter with toxic shock syndrome. The article, published in The New York Times Magazine, detailed how the illness led to the amputation of the end joints of all her fingers except for her thumbs. William Wayne Justice AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice, whose rulings shattered old Texas by changing the way the state educated children, treated prisoners and housed its poorest and most vulnerable citizens, has died. He was 89. The soft-spoken jurist spent three often tumultuous decades on the bench following his appointment by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1968. To some, Justice was a judicial renegade who disregarded the public’s will by imposing his own concepts on a conservative state.
THE DAILY COURIER
Published Tuesday through Sunday mornings by Paxton Media Group LLC dba The Daily Courier USPS 204-920 Periodical Postage paid in Forest City, NC. Company Address: 601 Oak St., P.O. Box 1149, Forest City, NC 28043. Phone: (828) 245-6431 Fax: (828) 248-2790 Subscription rates: Single copy, daily 50¢ / Sunday $1.50. Home delivery $11.75 per month, $35.25 for three months, $70.50 for six months, $129 per year. In county rates by mail payable in advance are: $12.50 for one month, $37.50for three months, $75 for six months, $150 per year. Outside county: $13.50 for one month, $40.50 for three months, $81 for six months, $162 per year. College students for school year subscription, $75. The Digital Courier, $6.50 a month for non-subscribers to The Daily Courier. Payment may be made at the website: www.thedigitalcourier.com The Daily Courier is not responsible for advance subscription payments made to carriers, all of who are independent contractors.
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— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
Calendar/Local Voting Continued from Page 1
Health/education Health Fair: Thursday, Oct. 15, 8:30 to 11:30 a.m., Rutherford County Senior Center; includes a number of screenings such as bone density, hearing, vision, stroke and others; no charge for service except a minimal charge of $8 for blood profiles. AARP Driver Safety Program class: Thursday, Oct. 22, Rutherford County Senior Center, from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 to 2 p.m.; open to senior adults ages 55 and over; $12 fee; pre-registration required; contact the Senior Center at 287-6409.
Red Cross The following blood drives are scheduled: Oct. 22 — Corinth Baptist Church, 767 Pinehurst Rd., Ellenboro, 4 to 9 p.m., call Linda McCurry at 453-1775 for an appointment; Oct. 24 — Cliffside Masonic Lodge, Old Main St., 7:30 a.m. to noon; call Wayne or Betty Millis at 245-7606 an appointment, breakfast served; Oct. 26 — Red Cross Chapter, 838 Oakland Rd., Forest City, 2 to 6:30 p.m.; call 287-5916 for appointment.
Miscellaneous Hunter Safety course: Monday, Oct. 19-21, 6 to 9 p.m., Greenhill Community Center; register online at www.wildlife.org or contact Dan Vogel NCWRC Officer at 288-1037, leave message. Volunteers needed: Youth Empowerment is in the process of creating a teen center for youth 10-17. Volunteers are needed to paint at the Power Center and help with making small repairs during the week of caring. Located at the old Special Occasions building behind Bojangle’s. For more information call 288-1021. Fall Festival: Friday, Oct. 23, 4 to 7:30 p.m., Forest City-Dunbar Elementary School; Bingo, games, inflatables, raffle, entertainment, lots of food, music provided by The Sound Connection and much more.
Fundraisers Fish fry: Friday, Oct. 16, 4 to 8 p.m.; Long Branch Road Baptist Church; 621 Long Branch Rd., Forest City, (Shiloh community); no set price, donations accepted; proceeds for a new fellowship hall. Barbecue fundraiser: Saturday, Oct. 17, begins at 4 p.m., at Hair Biz on Withrow Road; barbecue with all the fixings, $8 per plate, include drink and dessert; all proceeds for a mission trip to Nicaragua; sponsored by Drop Kick Ministries and Gantt’s Grove Baptist Church. Fish fry: Saturday, Oct. 17, 4 to 7 p.m., Green Hill Community Center, 1501 US 64/74A Hwy., Rutherfordton; fried fish or grilled chicken, $8 per plate. Buffet breakfast: Saturday, Oct. 17, 7 to 10:30 a.m., Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, Forest City; $5 per person, all you can eat. Yard sale: Saturday, Oct. 17, 7 a.m. until, at the home of Martha Lyles, 128 Sourwood Circle, Rutherfordton; sponsored by Mt. Pleasant CME Church, Union Mills; proceeds for missionaries. Spaghetti dinner, bake sale: Sunday, Oct. 18, 12:30 to 2 p.m., at Immaculate Conception Church Hall, Forest City; $5 per person, includes salad, drink and dessert; children under 5 are free; take outs available; sponsored by the Knights of Columbus fraternity. Poor man’s supper: Saturday, Oct. 24, 4 to 8:30 p.m., at the VFW Building, 940 Withrow Rd.; plenty of good country food; $5 per person; all proceeds got to the aid local veterans; sponsored by VFW.
itself. To use this process, a citizen must go to a One-Stop Voting Site in the county of residence during the One Stop Absentee Voting period, fill out a voter registration application, and provide proof of residency by showing the elections official an appropriate form of identification with the citizen’s current name and current address. The new registrant may vote only at a One-Stop Absentee Voting Site in the county of registration during One-Stop Absentee Voting period and not on Election Day. Acceptable forms of identification include:
Clark Continued from Page 1
be jobs for Rutherford County. “There are many key issues, but if you go and ask the average county resident, certainly they’ll say it is the economy that is driving the county,” Hager said. “We’ve had the highest unemployment rates for the state of North Carolina in the past few years and we’re still one of the highest. Not being able to pay your bills is a rough thing and unfortunately that’s where many people are right now, and that is where the need is most. We have been under-represented in the past
Poverty Continued from Page 1
to solve the homeless problem in their city, but said more work was needed. Sally Cook came to speak on behalf of Faith Link, a new program to connect church group volunteers with families and teens trying to get off government assistance programs. “You have to get the children involved if you want welfare reform,” Cook said. “Our program helps families get together with volunteers to get them a leg-up on escaping that lifestyle of living off government assistance. It’s a hybrid program of government and religion, so we do have to walk a fine line with our volunteers and tell them no proselytizing. What folks from these churches are doing is offering help and hope.” The forum on poverty didn’t focus just on assistance programs. Speakers from groups like Job Link highlighted
Historian Continued from Page 1
find difficult to surpass,” said Elizabeth Bray Sherrill, president of the NCSH Inc. “We are in awe of the scholarly books that Lattimore writes as well as the many preservation and historic projects that he coordinates. He exhibits incredible energy and passion for preserving significant pieces of this state’s wonderful story.” Lattimore has written and published more than a dozen books of regional and local history. He currently serves as an official Rutherford County Historian, the president of the Rutherford County Historical Society, chairman of the Rutherford County Historic Preservation Commission and chairman of the Rutherford County Library Board of Trustees. In addition, Lattimore is a member of The Genealogical Society of Old Tryon County, Preservation North
Singing program: Sunday, Oct. 18, 4 p.m., Doggett Grove AME Zion Church; featuring the gospel group Changed and several others. Singing: Sunday, Oct. 18, 6 p.m., Bostic Missionary Methodist Church; featuring the group Promised. Pipe organ concert: Sunday, Oct. 18, 3 p.m., First United Methodist Church of Forest City, featuring Timothy Scruggs. Singing: Sunday, Oct. 18, 6 p.m., First Baptist Church, Spindale; featuring the gospel quartet Grateful from Shelby. Singing: Sunday, Oct. 18, 6 p.m., Piney Knob Baptist Church; featuring The Griggs of Stanley.
government agency n A birth certificate n A student photo ID along with a document from the school showing the student’s name and current address n A paycheck or paycheck stub from an employer or a W-2 statement n A bank statement or bank-issued credit card statement “Last election in November we had more than 50 percent of people who voted in the county to come vote early,” Bedford said. “Every year it gets more and more popular, so it is gaining speed.”
and certainly now we’re represented well by Debbie Clary in the Senate and now we need to finish that job and be adequately represented in the house. The jobs and the economy are the number one issue and everything else is secondary.” Clark agreed and added, “The central issue is the economy and jobs, but also looking at our tax rates and the overall state economy.” And while he feels it was the right decision to drop out, Clark said it wasn’t an easy one. “It took about a month for me to come to the decision, along with seeking advice from my family and the good Lord in prayer,” Clark said. “No one coerced me or tried to force me
out of the race, I made this decision on my own with my family. I feel Mike would do a fine job representing us in Raleigh.” Hager said it was a surprise that Clark had dropped out, but he was grateful for the endorsement and support. “Phil brings a lot to the table,” Hager added. “He’s a smart guy and has a constituency that brings a very conservative base to the movement. He cares a lot about the community and I’m very appreciative and humbled by what he said. That is a responsibility I do not take lightly.”
state run efforts to provide further job training, assessment of work skills and courses on producing eye-catching resumes for those who are trying to find work. “We administer the Workforce Investment Act programs,” said Bill Robertson of IPDC. “And we’re preparing to open a new center in McDowell County soon. We’ve survived a number of economic downturns in the 1980s and 1990s, but I can tell you that this is one of the worst economic climates we’ve seen.” Robertson said the key to helping alleviate poverty — and the hunger, homelessness and other problems that come from widespread poverty — was to provide people with jobs and a way to work their way out of the poverty. “We do rapid response meetings where we go and meet with employees who are in the process of losing their jobs and seeing their workplace close or go out of business entirely,” Robertson said. “And recently we’ve been doing more and more of those.
We serve those dislocated workers, youth and adults in our community.” The forum was hosted by Shepherd’s Care and sponsored by LogFinish. com, Rumbling Bald Resort, Mary Dotson and Kurtis Ledford’s HomeSweet-Home.
Carolina and the National Camp of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. He is also a member of the Western North Carolina Writer’s Group.
Society of Historians, and was not submitted for evaluation until this year. “North Carolina is a proud state with 100 very proud counties,” said Lattimore on Saturday.
He is a 1991 graduate of Appalachian State University with a B.S. degree in Historical and Cultural Research, and completed a semesterlong internship with the curator’s office at Biltmore Estate in Asheville while working toward a graduate degree in 1992. During the awards ceremony on Saturday, Lattimore also received the prestigious D.T. Smithwick Journalism Award for six historical features he wrote for The Daily Courier in 2008 and 2009. In addition, he was awarded the Willie Parker Peace North Carolina History Book Award for his book, “Across Two Centuries: The Lost World of Green River Plantation.” That book was published in 2003, prior to Lattimore’s membership in the North Carolina
For more information, contact the Board of Elections at 287-6030 or visit www.rutherfordcountync.gov. Contact Baughman via e-mail at sbaughman@thedigitalcourier.com.
Contact Baughman via e-mail at sbaughman@thedigitalcourier.com.
“We’ve had many people in the Lake Lure area coming to us and asking what they can do to help,” said Mary Ann Ransom, president of Shepherd’s Care. “There were so many different groups who are trying to tackle the various aspects of poverty and its effect on our area, that we thought a forum to help educate the public would be a great service. I hope that people learned a lot from this and that now they can know who to help and how to help them.” For more information about any of the groups from the forum, visit www.shepherdscarehng.org. Contact Baughman via e-mail at sbaughman@thedigitalcourier.com.
Traditionally, the North Carolina Historian of the Year is encouraged to travel the state during their award year to visit as many counties and historic sites as possible. Lattimore plans to honor that tradition, but concedes that traveling around the state makes it difficult to keep up with his regimen of writing five to eight hours each day. “I’m sure that I will visit areas of the state that I have never been to and revisit a lot of familiar territory,” Lattimore said. “But, nothing pleases me more professionally than being here in Rutherford County working daily to record our past. Writing is what I love best about my role as a working historian.”
About us...
Music/concerts The Far City Boys will be in concert Sunday, Oct. 18, Harriett Memorial Free Will Baptist Church. Music begins at 6 p.m. The church is located at 1938 Hwy. 221-A in Caroleen.
n A North Carolina driver’s license with current address n A utility bill with name and current address n A telephone or mobile phone bill n An electric or gas bill n A cable television bill n A water or sewage bill n A document with name and current address from a local, state, or U.S. government agency, such as: n A passport n A government-issued photo ID n U.S. military ID n A license to hunt, fish, own a gun, etc. n A property or other tax bill n Automotive or vehicle registration n Certified documentation of naturalization n A public housing or Social Service Agency document n A check, invoice, or letter from a
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The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009 — 7
Inside Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . Page 8 NHL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 8 NASCAR . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 9
NASCAR’s First Class Florida State releases NCAA documents TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida State has released documents that the NCAA tried to keep secret about an academic cheating case. The school Wednesday made public the 695-page transcript of an NCAA hearing to comply with a final decision Tuesday by the 1st District Court of Appeal. The court ruled such documents are public records. The transcript was released although the NCAA earlier Wednesday appealed to the Florida Supreme Court. It concerns Florida State’s appeal of a proposal to strip athletes and coaches of wins. That includes football coach Bobby Bowden who would lose 14 victories. It would dim Bowden’s chances of catching Penn State’s Joe Paterno — the winningest coach in major college football.
Ex-Navy player sentenced for stealing ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — A military judge sentenced a former U.S. Naval Academy football player Wednesday to two years in prison with one year suspended for stealing charge cards from teammates’ lockers. Christopher O. Rivers, of Durham, pleaded guilty to larceny and forgery charges. The sophomore also pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice for trying to impede a Navy probe by asking a teammate to tell investigators he had permission to use a charge card. The sentence means Rivers will serve at least one year in prison, with another year possible if he is not a model prisoner.
Wake extends Gaudio by 2 additional years WINSTON-SALEM (AP) — Wake Forest has given coach Dino Gaudio a contract extension through the 2013-14 season. School officials said Wednesday in conjunction with the team’s preseason media day that Gaudio’s deal was extended two more seasons. Details of the contract were not available because the private school generally does not discuss them. Gaudio has gone 41-20 with one NCAA tournament berth.
Local Sports
Dale Earnhardt, Sr.
Bill France, Sr.
Richard Petty
Frances headline 2009 Hall of Fame By JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer
CHARLOTTE — NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. headlined the five inductees into the first Hall of Fame class, a group that drew mixed reactions to the inclusion of France’s son instead of driver David Pearson. France, who formed the National
Association of Stock Car Racing in 1947, was the first inductee announced Wednesday in a ceremony that followed a lengthy voting session at the Charlotte Convention Center. Richard Petty, the seven-time Cup champion and NASCAR’s all-time wins leader, was the second inductee revealed by current NASCAR chairman Brian France, who received the
five envelopes one at a time from an independent accounting firm. Next up was Bill France Jr., son of the NASCAR founder who spent nearly 30 years at the helm of America’s top motorsports series. “When I seen the two Frances was in, I knew I didn’t have a chance,”
Please see NASCAR, Page 9
Panthers like their run-stuffing jokester CHARLOTTE (AP) — Hollis Thomas walked into the Carolina locker room Wednesday and sneaked up from behind on an unsuspecting group. “Hey!” Thomas yelled, causing two reporters to jump and another to flinch. “How are things going!” Thomas then let out a hearty laugh and walked to his locker, where a SpongeBob SquarePants backpack sat on the shelf. A self-proclaimed “happy-go-lucky fat kid,” the Panthers’ newest starting nose tackle has brought girth and a lighthearted personality to a club in desperate need of both. “He’s a funny dude,” fullback Brad Hoover said. “I like Hollis a lot. He’s so jolly all the time.” The 35-year-old Thomas was signed on Oct. 1, a day after he was released by St. Louis. The 14-year veteran was the latest in a revolving door of nose tackles to pass through since top run-stuffer Maake Kemoeatu ruptured his Achilles’ tendon on the first day of training camp. Marlon Favorite, Ra’Shon Harris, Nick Hayden and Louis Leonard either got hurt, weren’t big enough or didn’t work out. The Panthers entered Sunday’s game against Washington — Thomas’ Associated Press debut — winless and allowing a league- The Carolina Panthers’ Hollis Thomas, left, tries to prevent the Washington worst 182.7 yards rushing per game. Redskins’ Clinton Portis (26) from scoring. Portis scored on the play, but Thomas Please see Panthers, Page 8
and Panthers went on to win the game, Sunday. The win was the first of the year for the Panthers.
VOLLEYBALL R-S Central at Chase, JV 4:30/Varsity 6 p.m. Patton at East Rutherford, JV 4:30/Varsity 6 p.m. TJCA at Hendersonville, JV 4:30/Varsity 6 p.m. JV FOOTBALL TJCA at Mountain Heritage, 7 p.m. Chase at Shelby, 7 p.m. Patton at R-S Central, 7 p.m. Burns at East Rutherford, 7 p.m.
On TV 6 p.m. (ESPN2) NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series — Dollar General 300 Final Practice. 7 p.m. (ESPN2) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup — NASCAR Banking 500 Qualifying. 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) College Football Cincinnati at South Florida. 8 p.m. (FSS) College Football Virginia Union at Virginia State. 8 p.m. (TBS) MLB Baseball National League Championship Series Game 1 — Philadelphia at Los Angeles.
Associated Press
Florida State Korey Mangum, left, reacts following the game against Georgia Tech Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009, in Tallahassee, Fla. Florida State lost 49-44. North Carolina State’s Darrell Davis, right, and Owen Spencer (13) celebrate Spencers’ touchdown against Duke during the first half in Raleigh, Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009. NC State lost, 49-28. Both Florida State and North Carolina State are winless against ACC opponents.
ACC’s Atlantic Division: Parity or parody WINSTON-SALEM (AP) — Wake Forest has taken its turn atop the Atlantic Coast Conference’s “other” division. This year, that might not be much to brag about. The ACC’s power appears concentrated in a Coastal Division with three ranked teams and two of those in the top 10. Meanwhile, the Demon Deacons are in charge of an Atlantic
Division that at best is a step behind. It’s a division devoid of star power, where teams have risen in the standings seemingly by default. Florida State, the preseason favorite and standard-bearing program, is winless in the league — mired in its worst season in three decades. The trendy dark horse, North Carolina State, hasn’t won an ACC game,
either. Barring a flurry of upsets, the division winner figures to have two or more league losses. The quagmire raises the question: Is this a supremely balanced division or simply a collection of six average teams? “Any given week, a team can go up Please see ACC, Page 8
8
— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
sports
Scoreboard BASEBALL Postseason Baseball (x-if necessary) DIVISION SERIES American League NEW YORK 3, MINNESOTA 0 New York 7, Minnesota 2 New York 4, Minnesota 3, 11 innings New York 4, Minnesota 1 LOS ANGELES 3, BOSTON 0 Los Angeles 5, Boston 0 Los Angeles 4, Boston 1 Los Angeles 7, Boston 6 National League LOS ANGELES 3, ST. LOUIS 0 Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 3 Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 1 PHILADELPHIA 3, COLORADO 1 Philadelphia 5, Colorado 1 Colorado 5, Philadelphia 4 Philadelphia 6, Colorado 5 Philadelphia 5, Colorado 4 LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES American League Friday: Los Angeles (Lackey 11-8) at New York (Sabathia 19-8) Saturday: Los Angeles at New York Monday, Oct. 19: New York at Los Angeles Tuesday, Oct. 20: New York at Los Angeles Thursday, Oct. 22: x-New York at Los Angeles Saturday, Oct. 24: x-Los Angeles at New York Sunday, Oct. 25: x-Los Angeles at New York National League Thursday, Philadelphia at Los Angeles, late Friday: Philadelphia at Los Angeles Sunday: Los Angeles at Philadelphia Monday, Oct. 19: Los Angeles at Philadelphia Wednesday, Oct. 21: x-Los Angeles at Philadelphia Friday, Oct. 23: x-Philadelphia at Los Angeles Saturday, Oct. 24: x-Philadelphia at Los Angeles WORLD SERIES Wednesday, Oct. 28: National League at American League, (n) Thursday, Oct. 29: NL at AL, (n) Saturday, Oct. 31: AL at NL, (n) Sunday, Nov. 1: AL at NL, (n) Monday, Nov. 2: x-AL at NL, (n) Wednesday, Nov. 4: x-NL at AL, (n) Thursday, Nov. 5: x-NL at AL, (n)
FOOTBALL AMERICAN CONFERENCE East L T Pct PF 2 0 .600 101 2 0 .600 104 3 0 .400 112 4 0 .200 77 South W L T Pct PF Indianapolis 5 0 0 1.000 137 Jacksonville 2 3 0 .400 97 Houston 2 3 0 .400 115 Tennessee 0 5 0 .000 84 North W L T Pct PF Cincinnati 4 1 0 .800 101 Baltimore 3 2 0 .600 138 Pittsburgh 3 2 0 .600 113 Cleveland 1 4 0 .200 55 West W L T Pct PF Denver 5 0 0 1.000 99 San Diego 2 2 0 .500 101 Oakland 1 4 0 .200 49 Kansas City 0 5 0 .000 84 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Giants 5 0 0 1.000 151 Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 127 Dallas 3 2 0 .600 122 Washington 2 3 0 .400 73 South W L T Pct PF New Orleans 4 0 0 1.000 144 Atlanta 3 1 0 .750 102 Carolina 1 3 0 .250 57 Tampa Bay 0 5 0 .000 68 North W L T Pct PF Minnesota 5 0 0 1.000 156 Chicago 3 1 0 .750 105 Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 104 Detroit 1 4 0 .200 103 West W L T Pct PF San Francisco 3 2 0 .600 112 Arizona 2 2 0 .500 85 Seattle 2 3 0 .400 115 St. Louis 0 5 0 .000 34
SOCCER Major League Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF y-Columbus 13 5 10 49 41 Chicago 10 7 11 41 38 New England 10 10 8 38 32 Toronto FC 9 10 9 36 36 D.C. 8 8 12 36 40 Kansas City 8 12 8 32 29 New York 4 18 6 18 22
GA 29 34 37 41 42 37 45
WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF x-Houston 12 8 8 44 36 x-Los Angeles 11 6 11 44 34 Chivas USA 13 9 5 44 30 Seattle 10 7 11 41 33 Colorado 10 8 10 40 41 FC Dallas 10 12 6 36 47 Real Salt Lake 9 11 7 34 38 San Jose 7 13 8 29 34
GA 27 31 25 26 33 44 34 46
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. x-clinched playoff berth y-clinched conference Saturday’s Games San Jose 1, Toronto FC 1, tie Columbus 1, New England 0 Chivas USA 2, Kansas City 0
National Football League
W N.Y. Jets 3 New England 3 Miami 2 Buffalo 1
Pittsburgh 28, Detroit 20 N.Y. Giants 44, Oakland 7 Cleveland 6, Buffalo 3 Dallas 26, Kansas City 20, OT Minnesota 38, St. Louis 10 Cincinnati 17, Baltimore 14 Carolina 20, Washington 17 Philadelphia 33, Tampa Bay 14 Atlanta 45, San Francisco 10 Seattle 41, Jacksonville 0 Arizona 28, Houston 21 Denver 20, New England 17, OT Indianapolis 31, Tennessee 9 Open: San Diego, Chicago, Green Bay, New Orleans Monday’s Game Miami 31, N.Y. Jets 27 Sunday, Oct. 18 Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m. N.Y. Giants at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Houston at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Kansas City at Washington, 1 p.m. Carolina at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Baltimore at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Arizona at Seattle, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 4:15 p.m. Tennessee at New England, 4:15 p.m. Chicago at Atlanta, 8:20 p.m. Open: Indianapolis, Miami, Dallas, San Francisco Monday, Oct. 19 Denver at San Diego, 8:30 p.m.
PA 88 91 106 116 PA 71 127 120 139 PA 90 97 98 121 PA 43 102 130 138 PA 71 86 98 82 PA 66 63 104 140 PA 90 78 93 162 PA 98 89 82 146
Sunday’s Games
ACC Continued from Page 7
from the bottom or down from the top,” Wake Forest running back Josh Adams said. For now, first place belongs to the Demon Deacons, who along with Maryland (52-13 losers to California) are the Atlantic’s only teams with just one ACC loss. Bringing up the rear are preseason contenders Florida State (0-3) and NC State (0-2). All six teams in the division went to bowl games last year will while this season only two teams are above .500. The silver lining: The gap between first and worst in the Atlantic appears narrow, at least compared to the Coastal Division, which is dominated by No. 4 Virginia Tech, No. 9 Miami, No. 19 Georgia Tech. And North Carolina, a team that spent much of the season in the polls before dropping out, is
Wednesday’s Game New York at Real Salt Lake, late
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct Dallas 2 1 .667 Houston 2 2 .500 San Antonio 1 1 .500 Memphis 1 3 .250 New Orleans 1 3 .250 Northwest Division W L Pct
L.A. Clippers Golden State L.A. Lakers Phoenix Sacramento
2 1 .667 2 2 .500 1 1 .500 1 1 .500 1 2 .333 Pacific Division W L Pct 2 1 .667 3 2 .600 1 1 .500 0 2 .000 0 2 .000
GB — 1 2 2 1/2 4 GB — 2 2 1/2 3 1/2 4 GB — — — 1 1/2 1 1/2 GB — 1/2 1/2 1 1/2 1 1/2 GB
lurking in the wings. “It just kind of happens that’s the way it is maybe this year and there’s still a lot of football to be played,” Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson said. Atlantic teams are 0-5 against the Coastal. And while the Coastal has claimed its share of marquee wins so far, with Miami beating Oklahoma and Virginia Tech topping Nebraska, the Atlantic’s best victory might be North Carolina State over Big East favorite Pittsburgh — the Wolfpack’s only win against a Bowl Subdivision team. So, who stands the best chance to claim the Atlantic’s spot in the winner-take-all title game and play for an Orange Bowl berth? n Wake Forest? The Demon Deacons’ two overall losses have come by a combined six points, but their two rotating Coastal opponents are Miami and Georgia Tech. n Clemson? The Tigers might have the most talent in the division, with speedy C.J. Spiller and
— 1/2 1/2 1/2 1 GB — — 1/2 1 1/2 1 1/2
Monday’s Games Atlanta 107, Charlotte 90 Cleveland 111, Olympiacos 94 Orlando 102, Memphis 83 Oklahoma City 110, Phoenix 105, OT Milwaukee 96, Houston 92 L.A. Clippers 124, Golden State 117 Tuesday’s Games Boston 91, New Jersey 88 Washington 101, Detroit 98 Philadelphia 93, New York 85 Chicago 87, Milwaukee 86 Orlando 121, New Orleans 86 Wednesday’s Games Washington 109, Cleveland 104 Boston 106, Toronto 90 Atlanta at Memphis, late Miami vs. Oklahoma City, late Chicago at Minnesota, late L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, late Phoenix at Portland, late Thursday’s Games Houston at Toronto, 7 p.m. New Orleans vs. Miami at Kansas City, Mo., 8:30 p.m. Detroit at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Portland at Utah, 9 p.m. Sacramento vs. L.A. Lakers at Las Vegas, 10 p.m.
HOCKEY National Hockey League EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts N.Y. Rangers 6 5 1 0 10 Pittsburgh 6 5 1 0 10 Philadelphia 5 3 1 1 7 New Jersey 5 3 2 0 6 N.Y. Islanders 4 0 1 3 3 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts Buffalo 4 3 0 1 7 Ottawa 5 3 2 0 6 Boston 5 2 3 0 4 Montreal 5 2 3 0 4 Toronto 6 0 5 1 1 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts Tampa Bay 5 2 1 2 6 Washington 6 2 2 2 6 Atlanta 3 2 1 0 4 Carolina 5 2 3 0 4 Florida 5 1 4 0 2
GF 24 21 19 14 9
GA 12 15 15 15 13
GF 10 12 16 12 13
GA 5 14 19 18 28
GF 15 22 12 13 10
GA 16 21 9 17 20
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF 5 4 1 0 8 14 5 3 1 1 7 19 4 2 2 0 4 7 4 2 2 0 4 12 5 2 3 0 4 14 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF Colorado 6 4 1 1 9 21 Calgary 7 4 2 1 9 25 Edmonton 5 3 1 1 7 20 Vancouver 5 2 3 0 4 17 Minnesota 4 1 3 0 2 10 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF Los Angeles 5 4 1 0 8 19 San Jose 6 3 2 1 7 20 Phoenix 5 3 2 0 6 11 Anaheim 5 2 2 1 5 13 Dallas 4 1 0 3 5 14 Columbus Chicago Nashville St. Louis Detroit
Saturday, Oct. 17 Real Salt Lake at Toronto FC, 4 p.m. Chicago at New England, 6 p.m. Columbus at D.C. United, 8 p.m. Seattle FC at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m. Colorado at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. San Jose at Chivas USA, 10:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18 Los Angeles at Houston, 3 p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Philadelphia 4 0 1.000 Boston 3 1 .750 Toronto 2 2 .500 New York 1 2 .333 New Jersey 0 4 .000 Southeast Division W L Pct Orlando 5 0 1.000 Atlanta 2 1 .667 Washington 2 2 .500 Charlotte 1 3 .250 Miami 0 3 .000 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 2 0 1.000 Chicago 3 1 .750 Detroit 3 1 .750 Milwaukee 2 3 .400 Indiana 1 2 .333
Portland Denver Minnesota Utah Oklahoma City
GA 11 15 11 12 19 GA 13 25 15 17 15 GA 15 18 7 13 14
Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Monday’s Games Colorado 4, Boston 3 Los Angeles 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 N.Y. Rangers 7, Toronto 2 New Jersey 3, Washington 2, SO Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 1 Tampa Bay 3, Florida 2 Edmonton 6, Nashville 1 Chicago 6, Calgary 5, OT Phoenix 1, San Jose 0, SO Tuesday’s Games Buffalo 6, Detroit 2 Columbus 2, Calgary 1 Colorado 4, Toronto 1 Wednesday’s Games Pittsburgh 3, Carolina 2, SO N.Y. Rangers 4, Los Angeles 2 Edmonton at Chicago, late Nashville at Dallas, late. Minnesota at Anaheim, late Thursday’s Games San Jose at Washington, 7 p.m. Colorado at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Tampa Bay at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Nashville, 8 p.m. St. Louis at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Jacoby Ford, but with two ACC losses already, they can’t afford many more slip-ups. n Boston College? The Eagles have won the division the last two years, but their most recent showing — a 48-14 loss to Virginia Tech — perhaps best illustrates the gap between the divisions. n N.C. State? Even with last year’s ACC rookie of the year, quarterback Russell Wilson, the defense gave up a combined 820 yards passing and 79 points in consecutive losses to Wake Forest and Duke. The Wolfpack are 1-3 against the FBS. n Florida State? The preseason favorite desperately needs a quick turnaround after calls for coach Bobby Bowden’s job surfaced during the program’s 0-3 start to league play. n Maryland? The Terrapins were the Atlantic’s last unbeaten team in ACC play before last week’s loss at Wake Forest, but their out-of-conference performance have raised questions.
Associated Press
Carolina Hurricanes goalie Cam Ward (30) looks back as Pittsburgh Penguins’ Ruslan Fedotenko celebrates Mike Rupp’s goal during the first period in Raleigh, Wednesday.
Penguins drop Hurricanes in SO
RALEIGH (AP) — Chris Kunitz beat Cam Ward on the 12th shot of a shootout to help the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Carolina Hurricanes 3-2 on Wednesday night and continue their early season road success. Evgeni Malkin and Michael Rupp scored goals for the Penguins, who improved to 5-0 on the road to set a franchise record for most consecutive road wins to open a season. Pittsburgh had won its first four twice before, the last time coming two seasons ago, but bested that with its fifth straight win against the Hurricanes. Ray Whitney scored twice for Carolina, helping the Hurricanes rally from a 2-0 deficit to force overtime. It was the first meeting between the teams since last season’s Eastern Conference finals, which Pittsburgh swept by a combined score of 20-9 on the way to the Stanley Cup.
Panthers Continued from Page 7
Then the portly, 6-foot Thomas, who the Panthers claim weighs only 340 pounds, effectively took on the double teams the position requires. He clogged the middle of the line, and the Redskins managed only 74 yards rushing as Carolina rallied for a 20-17 win. “It was kind of a perfect fit so to speak,” Thomas said of coming to Carolina. “I was talking to them a year ago to the date and nobody knew that this was going to come about. Nobody knew all of the big guys would get hurt and the Rams were going to release me. Everything happens for a reason.” Now the Panthers hope Thomas can last the rest of the season at nose tackle and help Carolina rebound from an awful start. Bringing a smile to his teammates in the locker room, film room and team plane won’t hurt, either. “Um, this is a game. I always thought when you are playing a game you’re supposed to have fun and enjoy what you’re doing,” Thomas said. “Sometimes you can have fun with looking at mistakes and stuff and making light of stuff. You might have gotten dumped on a play or rolled up on. It’s not going to be the first time and it won’t be the last.” Thomas’ attitude worked as he made a difficult jump to the NFL. He went undrafted out of Northern Illinois, but not only made the Philadelphia Eagles as a rookie, he became a fulltime starter his second year. He went to St. Louis in the offseason, but Thomas knows his physical limitations, and running around trying to play the so-called 3-technique defensive tackle spot was too much for him at this stage of his career. Thomas played only on short yardage situations and was released when the struggling Rams decided to focus on younger players. It took only hours for coach John Fox and the Panthers to call. “Every once in a while, you get double-teamed in there and I think that size is a real advantage,” Fox said. “We call it the 600-pound block. That’s what you’re getting two 300-pound (offensive) linemen coming off on you.” But Thomas provides more than a hefty on-field presence. His personality helped a team feeling loads of pressure after its 0-3 start. For a guy who once wore SpongeBob SquarePants pajamas in public, he’s an irreverent addition that’s lightened the atmosphere. “He just brings that vibe to the team as far as having fun,” defensive end Everette Brown said.
Attorney Laura Slaughter www.kinglawoffices.com
(828) 286-3332
The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009 — 9
Sports
Roush still excited to have Biffle on team By KEVIN CARVER Sports Reporter
Associated Press
Richard Petty, right, talks to reporters after being named as a member of the five-person class for the new NASCAR Hall of Fame, during a news conference in Charlotte, Wednesday.
NASCAR Continued from Page 7
Pearson said moments after the ceremony ended. The final two nods instead went to Dale Earnhardt, NASCAR’s other seven-time champion, and Junior Johnson, a former driver and car owner whose early days of running moonshine through backroads of North Carolina stands as a symbol of NASCAR’s start. Pearson’s exclusion surprised many, including Petty. Ushered into the ballroom moments after the inductees were announced, the King had to be told who had been selected with him for next May’s induction ceremony. “That wouldn’t have been my pick,” he said. Decided upon by a panel of 50 NASCAR executives, journalists, former participants and one combined fan vote from NASCAR’s official Web site, the voters had a list of 25 nominees to consider. Petty, who was not on the panel, said he made his own list and had Pearson as his top pick. “Anybody that won 105 races and didn’t make the cut — some-
body ain’t adding right,” Petty said of Pearson. Known as the “Silver Fox,” Pearson ranked second only to Petty’s 200 victories on NASCAR’s all-time win list. The three-time Cup champion had a winning percentage of 18.2 percent in a career that spanned 27 years — but never a complete season. Had he ever run a full schedule, many believed he could have challenged Petty’s marks. It was hard to tell if Pearson felt snubbed. He spoke for less than a minute after the ceremony, citing the need to get fellow nominee Cotton Owens home to his ailing wife. “The same people don’t like everybody,” Pearson said. “So there got to be some people voting for other people. If they don’t like me, they’re going to vote for somebody else anyway, so that’s all right. I’m happy.” The differing opinions created a strange dynamic through the convention center, where the voters gathered earlier Wednesday to debate the nominees before a secret ballot. As many of NASCAR’s pioneers discussed the selections, six women clad in black dresses, dark sunglasses and fake Earnhardt-like mustaches distributed invitations to
a celebratory reception hosted by Earnhardt’s widow, Teresa. Some of the voters lingered and described an emotional two-plus-hour meeting that was moderated by NASCAR spokesman Jim Hunter. A presentation was made for each of the 25 nominees, and then the floor was opened for discussion. “It was a meeting like I’ve never been in in racing, because I think everybody wanted to do the right thing and I think NASCAR was really nervous about the two Frances getting in,” said voter Humpy Wheeler, longtime motorsports executive. “There was definitely a division there of people who felt ’Hey, lets get the guys in that started this thing first, and then we’ll move on from there.’ That was argued about.” France Sr., widely known as “Big Bill,” began as a promoter of beach racing in Daytona Beach, Fla., until he gathered several principals at the Streamline Hotel to form a governing body that became NASCAR. Regarded as one of the most influential figures in the history of American motorsports, he ruled with an iron first from NASCAR’s first race in 1949 until his 1972 retirement, when he handed control over to his son, Bill Jr.
SHELBY — For those who like Dr. Suess, Wednesday was a fun tale in a neighboring county, as “The Cat in the Hat” dropped by Shelby. A long line awaited NASCAR championship owner Jack Roush at Keeter Ford as he did an autograph appearance. Roush, who is known as “The Cat in the Hat,” talked with area media before fans got to embrace one of the most prolific businessmen in America. Rutherford County has its own connection with at least three people who are employed by Roush/ Fenway Racing. Heath Landis and Jeff Silver, a car chief and a body shop manager in the business are two of those, but the most notable name is racer, Greg Biffle. Biffle, who owns a house Roush in Rutherford County, headed east to then-Roush Racing following a meeting in the 1990’s with the late Wilkes County resident and NASCAR legend, Benny Parsons. “Benny and I were friends and he kept talking about this guy that lived in Washington state and raced in the Winter Heat Series,” Jack Roush said. “Benny wouldn’t get off the subject of Biffle and I believed in Benny, so I hired him sight unseen.” While Roush didn’t know much about Biffle’s abilities, he soon learned that Biffle was like finding a needle in a haystack. “I was enthralled with his talent and work ethic after seeing him in person, but I will tell you exactly how committed he was to being a part of this organization,” Roush said. “He had a racing shop that he owned, well, he closed it down and also owned a restaurant. He turned that over to another person and came eastbound.” Roush’s drivers have been solid in Nationwide Racing this season with seven victories, but the Nextel Cup side is another story. Biffle and teammate Carl Edwards are less than 200 points behind in the NASCAR’s Chase to the Championship with three of his other teams sitting 14th or worse in points. When he talked about what is holding them back, he had an interesting an answer to the question. “We have thought about everything else, the owner maybe suspect,” a chuckling Roush said. “The rest of the field has caught up with us and I believe we get the advantage back. It’s not over. Biffle and Edwards still have a chance in the championship, they can come back from that deficit and it’s been done before.” Roush, who is from Michigan, started working for Ford in 1964 and began racing Ford Mustangs in 1966. From there, he grew his empire to a multimillion dollar success story.
NASCAR’s Hornish making strides
FONTANA, Calif. (AP) — It only would have taken a phone call. A quick chat with Roger Penske and Sam Hornish Jr. could have headed back to the security — and success — of IndyCar. The three-time series champion wouldn’t have been the first open-wheel star to decide the transition to NASCAR wasn’t worth the trouble. Crew chief Travis Geisler wouldn’t have blamed his driver, not after a tough rookie Sprint Cup season in 2008, when the Indy 500 winner finished 35th in points, never cracked the top 10 in 34 races and struggled to get a handle on the bigger, boxier cars.
“It would have been much easier for him to go get in (IRL driver Ryan) Briscoe’s car this year or somebody’s car and take that deal back over and get back to winning championships,” Geisler said. “But he wants to make this work and he’s committed to it.” So Hornish has taken his
lumps. Now he’s hoping to take the leap, the same one former Formula One driver Juan Pablo Montoya has pulled off so artfully during his third full season on the circuit. Hornish points to Montoya’s breakthrough 2009 season — the Colombian became the first foreign-born driver to qualify for the Chase for the championship and is third in the standings heading into Saturday’s race at Lowe’s Motor Speedway — as proof open-wheel drivers can thrive in Cup racing. “If you look at it, we have more top-10s this year (seven) than he did last year (three) and I feel there’s a great opportunity,” Hornish said. “I feel if I can continue to learn and make those kind of steps for next year we’ll be able to be where he’s at.” The signs of progress are easy to spot, both in the standings and on the track. Hornish is 26th in the points with six races left. He finished 12th at Auto
Club Speedway last week, his best performance at the 2-mile oval in five career Cup starts there, an upward trend that has become common during his second full year on the circuit. The driver who needed directions to some of the tracks early in his Cup career now finds himself running in fast company most weekends. The bad days aren’t nearly as bad as they were a year ago, and the good days are even better. Not that it’s good enough, not yet anyway. “We’re starting to turn a corner, but the thing that we really need to work on for next year, we want to be in the Chase,” Hornish said. “It’s a tough thing to do but we know that with the strength of the races that we’ve had so far, there’s good possibilities that if we do things right and play our cards right that that could be a possibility for us.” Making it a reality won’t be easy.
Associated Press
Sam Hornish Jr. helping push his car up pit road during qualifying for the NASCAR Samsung 500 auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, in this April 3, 2009, file photo.
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10
— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
Weather/Nation Weather The Daily Courier Weather Today
Tonight
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Scat'd Rain
Scat'd Rain
Mostly Cloudy
Few Showers
Mostly Sunny
Sunny
Precip Chance: 50%
Precip Chance: 50%
Precip Chance: 20%
Precip Chance: 30%
Precip Chance: 5%
Precip Chance: 0%
59º
47º
59º 44º
57º 40º
59º 39º
68º 42º
Almanac
Local UV Index
Around Our State Today
Statistics provided by Broad River Water Authority through 7 a.m. yesterday.
0 - 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11+
Temperatures
0-2: Low, 3-5: Moderate, 6-7: High, 8-10: Very High, 11+: Extreme Exposure
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.76 .55 .72 .45
Precipitation 24 hrs through 7 a.m. yest. .0.13" Month to date . . . . . . . . .1.99" Year to date . . . . . . . . .39.89"
Barometric Pressure
City
Asheville . . . . . . .59/44 Cape Hatteras . . .70/61 Charlotte . . . . . . .57/48 Fayetteville . . . . .60/49 Greensboro . . . . .52/45 Greenville . . . . . .59/49 Hickory . . . . . . . . . .55/46 Jacksonville . . . .65/52 Kitty Hawk . . . . . .67/61 New Bern . . . . . .65/50 Raleigh . . . . . . . .55/46 Southern Pines . .58/48 Wilmington . . . . .67/54 Winston-Salem . .51/45
Sun and Moon Sunrise today . Sunset tonight . Moonrise today Moonset today .
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.7:34 .6:52 .5:50 .5:12
a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m.
Moon Phases
High yesterday . . . . . . .30.21"
Relative Humidity High yesterday . . . . . . . . .94%
New 10/18
Full 11/2
First 10/25
Friday
Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx ra sh ra ra ra ra ra ra sh ra ra ra sh ra
52/42 66/55 59/43 61/43 56/41 60/47 56/42 64/48 64/55 63/48 57/43 60/43 65/48 56/40
sh ra mc ra ra ra mc ra ra ra ra ra sh ra
In this image released Wednesday by People Magazine, the cover of the magazine is shown with Jaycee Dugard. Associated Press
Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy
Last 11/9
North Carolina Forecast
Greensboro 52/45
Asheville 59/44
Forest City 59/47 Charlotte 57/48
Today
Raleigh 55/46
Kinston 60/50 Wilmington 67/54
Today’s National Map
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Greenville 59/49
Fayetteville 60/49
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Across Our Nation
Elizabeth City 60/52
Durham 54/46
Winston-Salem 51/45
65/46 49/43 47/40 47/34 47/36 89/61 88/76 48/40 52/41 78/54 70/55 64/56 84/67 50/42
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Nation Today Burned teen still at risk
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A 15-year-old doused with rubbing alcohol and set on fire after he turned in another teen for trying to steal his father’s bicycle is at extremely high risk for organ failure and infection, his doctor said. Michael Brewer was heavily sedated and breathing with a ventilator at Jackson Memorial Ryder Trauma Center in Miami and Dr. Nicholas Namias said he is doing as well as can be expected but is not “out of the woods yet.” Brewer’s troubles started when 15-year-old Matthew Bent gave him a video game and expected him to pay $40 for it, Broward County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Jim Leljedal. Brewer never paid for the game so Bent tried to steal a $500 custom bike that belonged to Brewer’s father, Leljedal said.
’Birther’ attorney fined
COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) — A federal judge in Georgia fined a leader of the movement challenging President Barack Obama’s citizenship and warned her against using the legal system to pursue “political rhetoric and insults.” U.S. District Judge Clay D. Land’s scathing 43-page order Tuesday said California lawyer and dentist Orly Taitz filed “frivolous” litigation and attempted to misuse the federal courts to push a political agenda. Taitz, a leader of the so-called birther movement, sued in Georgia federal court on behalf of Army Capt. Connie Rhodes. Rhodes sought to avoid deployment to Iraq by claiming Obama wasn’t born in the U.S. and that he was “an illegal usurper, unlawful pretender and unqualified impostor.” Documents show the president was born in Hawaii. Land, appointed in 2001 by President George W. Bush, had already dismissed the lawsuit, but
• • • •
Taitz continued filing motions. He said he fined her $20,000 “as a deterrent to prevent future misconduct and to protect the integrity of the court.”
Mafia members plead FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — One by one, members of a South Florida crew of the New York-based Bonanno crime family stood before a federal judge Wednesday to plead guilty to racketeering charges, including one enforcer who said it was impossible to escape the Mafia life. Six of the 11 purported crew members indicted in May pleaded guilty to charges that carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. The enforcer, 43-year-old Pasquale Rubbo, told U.S. District Judge William Zloch that he’d already done prison time for his underworld ties and that he had some debts to pay after his release a few years ago. Also pleading guilty were Rubbo’s brother, 46-year-old Joseph Rubbo, and four other associates of the Bonanno crew allegedly led by 46-year-old Thomas Fiore.
Beating ends meeting TACOMA, Wash. (AP) — A meeting of magazine salesmen at a motel in Washington state ended with two in the hospital and six in jail. KOMO-TV reports that when two of the men said Monday night they wanted out of the business, they were beaten with baseball bats and golf clubs. Police stopped a car that was driving away with its lights out and found a man armed with a gun and brass knuckles. All six men in the car were arrested. KOMO reports that the door-todoor subscription operation was a scam in which young men claiming to make a fresh start in life take donations without delivering magazines.
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First photos of kidnap victim are released SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Jaycee Dugard is emerging from obscurity after police say she spent 18 years as a captive in a sex offender’s yard, releasing the first photos of herself as an adult and her first statement. A picture on the cover of People magazine, which hits newsstands Friday, shows Dugard smiling brightly, her light brown hair loosely falling on her shoulders. In other photos, she is snapped with her mother, sister Shayna and two daughters at an undisclosed Northern California location, where she has been since she resurfaced two months ago. “I’m so happy to be back with my family,” she said in a statement to People. “Nothing is more important than the unconditional love and support I have from them.” A family spokeswoman said Dugard wanted to release the photos because she knows people have been curious about how she is doing and what she looks like. She trusted that the magazine, which has covered several kidnappings including hers in 1991, would be sensitive with the story, spokeswoman Erika Price Schulte said. Dugard doesn’t want to put herself in the spotlight, Schulte said. “This was a kind of thank you to the people who have expressed their support and shared their joy for her,” Schulte said. “She’s eager to live a quiet life right now with her daughters, mother and sister.”
Schulte declined to comment on whether Dugard has spoken about her captors or the 18 years she was kept from her family. Dugard’s attorney has previously said that she understands terrible things have happened to her and she is prepared to testify if necessary. People magazine has been in contact with family representatives since the story broke and has a strong relationship with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, said Betsy Gleick, the publication’s executive director. “These tales of hope are few and far between,” she said. “She’s doing well, but there is a long, difficult road ahead.” Gleick would not disclose details of the arrangement the magazine had made with Dugard for the photos, but said, “People, like lots of news outlets, does pay for photos, and we have in the past.” The Associated Press doesn’t pay newsmakers for interviews, to take their photographs or to film or record them. Schulte said Dugard does not plan to do any interviews, but said Dugard’s mother, Terry Probyn, would likely write a book. People magazine said Probyn is writing a book about her experience for Broadway Books that is expected next spring, and Dugard might contribute the forward.
Father admits drowning his three young children BALTIMORE (AP) — A man with a history of mental illness pleaded guilty Wednesday to drowning his three young children one by one in a Baltimore hotel bathtub during a custody dispute with his former wife, who said she still cries every day over the deaths. Mark A. Castillo, 43, told police and a fellow inmate that he wanted to cause anguish for his pediatrician ex-wife when he killed the children in March 2008. Dr. Amy Castillo, a born-again Christian, said in court that she has compassion for her former husband and believes the family will be reunited after death, but she remains overwhelmed by grief. “I have flashbacks, nightmares, chest pains — it’s terrible — and some days I feel like I can’t live,” Amy Castillo said outside court. “Sometimes I get tired of the amount of time that it takes to get better.” In statements to police, Mark Castillo said he spent “a good day” with the children — Anthony, 6, Austin, 4, and Athena, 2 — at the Maryland Science Center before checking into a downtown hotel. He calmly described how he held them underwater for 10 minutes each, using a stopwatch, and laid their
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bodies on a bed. Castillo then tried to commit suicide by stabbing himself in the neck with a steak knife. He was sentenced to three consecutive life terms without the possibility of parole, and Baltimore Circuit Judge Wanda K. Heard recommended that he be committed to the Patuxent Institution, a maximumsecurity psychiatric facility. “You have chosen to not make a spectacle,” the judge told Castillo. “Your family can try to mend and move forward.” In his statement to the court, Castillo said, “I was wrong,” then quoted from the Book of Ecclesiastes: “No man has authority to restrain the wind with the wind, or authority over the day of death.” Castillo’s attorneys had planned to argue that he was not criminally reponsible for the killings — Maryland’s version of an insanity plea. He withdrew the plea last year before his public defenders reinstated it, and after some discussion in court Wednesday morning, he said he wanted to dismiss them. Heard tried to dissuade him, and Castillo then announced that he was pleading guilty.
The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009 — 11
Business/finance
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS
u
NYSE
7,182.38+150.51
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Conseco FstPfd pfA CIT Gp pfC KV PhmA lf ReddyIce h MaguirePr ExprsJet CallonP h MGIC KV PhmB lf
Last 6.46 8.83 4.10 3.88 5.65 2.68 3.84 2.12 7.48 4.77
Chg +1.47 +1.67 +.72 +.60 +.83 +.37 +.51 +.28 +.91 +.58
%Chg +29.5 +23.3 +21.3 +18.3 +17.2 +16.0 +15.3 +15.2 +13.9 +13.8
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
u
AMEX
1,848.93 +27.28
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last TravelCtrs 6.91 Barnwell 5.85 ChinaGrn n13.63 IndiaGC un 2.50 PyramidOil 5.41 ChinaEd n 6.10 ManSang 2.58 StreamG un 6.36 ExeterR g 6.20 EasternCo 17.35
Chg +1.13 +.61 +1.36 +.24 +.51 +.55 +.23 +.56 +.54 +1.46
%Chg +19.6 +11.6 +11.1 +10.6 +10.4 +9.9 +9.8 +9.7 +9.4 +9.2
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last Chg %Chg DirREBear 18.05 -2.40 -11.7 SwESPRet103.21 -.36 -10.1 DirxEMBear 5.69 -.61 -9.7 FredM pfS 2.35 -.25 -9.5 DirFBear rs17.53 -1.82 -9.4 ProUShBrz26.18 -2.31 -8.1 PimcoMuni 12.24 -1.01 -7.6 ProUShtRE 9.19 -.72 -7.3 DirxDMBear15.54 -1.18 -7.1 PrUShCh25 8.22 -.63 -7.1
Name Last PwSBMetL 18.91 AmO&G 2.60 Nevsun g 2.73 NIVS IntT n 2.54 LGL Grp 3.20 HMG 4.44 EVInsMA 13.31 NovaGld g 5.74 Aerosonic 4.62 Solitario 2.10
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg Citigrp 5319358 5.00 +.17 BkofAm 2196793 18.59 +.78 SPDR 1654605 109.31 +1.85 Pfizer 1353081 17.37 +.59 SPDR Fncl 1265300 15.73 +.52 CIT Gp 1143977 1.06 +.14 GenElec 900442 16.84 +.45 DirFBear rs 879883 17.53 -1.82 iShEMkts 842707 41.55 +1.30 SprintNex 691116 3.57 +.16
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg CardiumTh 111136 1.40 -.56 CelSci 98469 1.28 -.11 Oilsands g 71176 1.32 -.08 NovaGld g 59957 5.74 -.28 EldorGld g 58429 12.40 +.09 GranTrra g 40083 4.89 +.27 OrsusXel 38552 1.24 +.38 GoldStr g 36855 3.52 -.06 DenisnM g 31062 1.76 -.06 BMB Munai 28788 1.21 +.13
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
DIARY
2,316 767 76 3,159 461 2 5,453,929,480
Chg %Chg -1.56 -7.6 -.21 -7.5 -.19 -6.5 -.15 -5.6 -.18 -5.3 -.23 -5.0 -.65 -4.7 -.28 -4.7 -.22 -4.5 -.10 -4.5
DIARY
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
323 225 57 605 49 ... 157,631,878
u
DAILY DOW JONES
schedule a free
NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last Chg LJ Intl 3.29 +.70 PSB Hldg 3.80 +.77 KandiTech 2.99 +.59 Ziopharm 3.60 +.71 BioMimetic 15.32 +2.63 PowerSec 8.80 +1.37 LiveDeal 2.09 +.32 WonderAuto14.20 +2.05 TaylrDv 4.56 +.61 AsiaInfo 23.77 +3.15
%Chg +27.0 +25.4 +24.6 +24.6 +20.7 +18.4 +18.1 +16.9 +15.4 +15.3
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last Chg DNB Fnl n 6.06 -1.42 SRISurg 2.50 -.50 OceanPw h 6.73 -.99 CEurMed 28.18 -3.99 DotHill lf 2.34 -.32 CmtyWest 2.26 -.29 FPB Bncp 2.56 -.33 EuroTech 2.30 -.29 Isramco 98.55-11.44 FstPacTrst 4.74 -.54
%Chg -19.0 -16.7 -12.8 -12.4 -12.0 -11.4 -11.4 -11.2 -10.4 -10.2
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name Vol (00) Intel 1559694 PwShs QQQ842680 ETrade 536583 Cisco 479054 Microsoft 404331 Oracle 403769 ApldMatl 296600 Nvidia 272449 Comcast 248803 Dell Inc 238439
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
Last Chg 20.83 +.34 43.16 +.58 1.69 ... 24.38 +.49 25.96 +.15 21.19 +.28 13.71 +.27 13.94 -.02 15.36 ... 15.63 +.32
DIARY
2,032 688 118 2,838 257 9 2,307,785,159
10,040
Dow Jones industrials retirement Close: 10,015.86 Change: 144.80 (1.5%)
2,172.23 +32.34
52-Week High Low
review.
9,931.82 4,217.28 395.11 7,092.70 1,837.30 2,167.70 1,080.15 710.20 11,195.31 625.30
9,720 9,400
10,500
10 DAYS
10,000 9,500 9,000
6,469.95 2,134.21 288.66 4,181.75 1,130.47 1,265.52 666.79 397.97 6,772.29 342.59
STOCK MARKET INDEXES Name
8,500
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
Name
PIMCO TotRetIs American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds CapIncBuA m American Funds CpWldGrIA m TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST Fidelity Contra Vanguard TotStIdx YTD YTD American Funds IncAmerA m Name Div Yld PE Last Chg%Chg Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg American Funds InvCoAmA m AT&T Inc 1.64 6.3 13 25.83 -.07 -9.4 LeggPlat 1.04 5.2 73 19.82 +.42 +30.5 Vanguard 500Inv Vanguard InstIdx Amazon ... ... 64 97.46 +2.63 +90.1 Lowes .36 1.7 16 21.73 +.37 +1.0 American Funds EurPacGrA m ArvMerit ... ... ... 8.96 -.02+214.4 Microsoft .52 2.0 16 25.96 +.15 +33.5 Dodge & Cox Stock American Funds WAMutInvA m BB&T Cp .60 2.1 16 28.53 +.91 +3.9 PPG 2.12 3.4 28 61.53 +.89 +45.0 Dodge & Cox IntlStk BkofAm .04 .2 50 18.59 +.78 +32.0 ParkerHan 1.00 1.9 17 53.65 +1.42 +26.1 American Funds NewPerspA m BerkHa A ... ... 54102000.00+1410.00 +5.6 Fidelity DivrIntl d Cisco ... ... 23 24.38 +.49 +49.6 ProgrssEn 2.48 6.6 13 37.69 +.10 -5.4 American Funds FnInvA m ... ... 64 28.64 +.62+116.6 American Funds BalA m Delhaize 2.01 2.8 ... 72.60 +.60 +15.3 RedHat Dell Inc ... ... 17 15.63 +.32 +52.6 RoyalBk g 2.00 ... ... 54.43 +1.16 +83.5 PIMCO TotRetAdm b DukeEngy .96 6.1 16 15.78 +.17 +5.1 SaraLee .44 3.9 22 11.18 +.13 +14.2 FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m American Funds BondA m ExxonMbl 1.68 2.3 12 71.84 +1.58 -10.0 SonicAut ... ... ... 12.18 +1.07+206.0 Fidelity GrowCo FamilyDlr .54 1.9 14 28.20 +.09 +8.2 SonocoP 1.08 3.6 20 29.63 +.88 +27.9 Vanguard Welltn Vanguard 500Adml FifthThird .04 .4 ... 10.35 +.19 +25.3 SpectraEn 1.00 5.0 14 20.10 +.34 +27.7 Vanguard TotStIAdm FCtzBA 1.20 .7 36 164.25 +2.24 +7.5 SpeedM .36 2.4 ... 15.22 +.27 -5.5 Vanguard TotIntl GenElec .40 2.4 13 16.84 +.45 +4.0 .36 1.6 75 23.11 +.33 +17.7 Vanguard InstPlus GoldmanS 1.40 .7 38 192.28 +5.05+127.8 Timken Fidelity LowPriStk d 1.80 3.1 27 57.21 +1.48 +3.7 T Rowe Price EqtyInc Google ... ... 37 535.32 +9.21 +74.0 UPS B KrispKrm ... ... ... 3.98 +.44+136.9 WalMart 1.09 2.2 15 50.19 -.15 -10.5 Hartford CapAprA m Pioneer PioneerA m Goldman Sachs ShDuGovA m Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 Alliance Bernstein GrowIncA m percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the DWS-Scudder REstA m Hartford GrowthL m last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants.
S
L
I
Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
+1.47 +3.92 +.25 +2.14 +1.50 +1.51 +1.75 +1.82 +1.71 +2.00
+14.12 +14.36 +1.90 +24.76 +32.30 +37.74 +20.90 +32.38 +24.48 +24.93
12-mo %Chg
+16.76 +11.35 +11.89 +24.69 +32.45 +33.40 +20.29 +32.88 +23.49 +24.26
Total Assets Obj ($Mlns) NAV
Total Return/Rank Pct Min Init 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt
CI 107,798 LG 63,925 IH 57,511 WS 55,088 LG 53,656 LB 53,496 MA 47,865 LB 47,348 LB 46,574 LB 41,003 FB 40,009 LV 39,993 LV 37,864 FV 35,309 WS 31,930 FG 31,833 LB 29,549 MA 28,943 CI 28,858 CA 27,764 CI 27,411 LG 27,170 MA 27,044 LB 26,919 LB 25,590 FB 24,646 LB 24,229 MB 23,586 LV 14,741 LB 9,356 LB 4,080 GS 1,232 LV 1,214 SR 408 LG 185
+1.2 +20.1/A +6.8/A NL 5,000,000 +4.3 +18.0/C +4.5/A 5.75 250 +2.2 +12.8/E +5.1/C 5.75 250 +5.0 +21.7/C +8.6/A 5.75 250 +5.0 +14.0/D +6.1/A NL 2,500 +4.2 +14.5/C +2.6/B NL 3,000 +2.4 +13.5/D +3.5/C 5.75 250 +3.2 +13.6/C +2.7/B 5.75 250 +4.2 +12.4/C +1.8/C NL 3,000 +4.2 +12.5/C +1.9/C NL 5,000,000 +5.5 +29.8/A +10.8/A 5.75 250 +3.2 +17.2/A +1.7/C NL 2,500 +3.3 +5.8/E +0.8/D 5.75 250 +7.2 +34.6/A +9.6/A NL 2,500 +4.6 +24.1/B +8.0/A 5.75 250 +4.8 +19.3/D +6.7/C NL 2,500 +4.8 +17.9/B +5.6/A 5.75 250 +2.7 +12.3/D +2.8/C 5.75 250 +1.2 +19.8/A +6.5/A NL 5,000,000 +3.2 +27.2/A +4.0/B 4.25 1,000 +1.3 +13.5/D +2.5/E 3.75 250 +4.1 +22.0/B +6.3/A NL 2,500 +2.8 +18.5/B +5.8/A NL 10,000 +4.2 +12.5/C +1.9/C NL 100,000 +4.2 +14.6/C +2.7/B NL 100,000 +5.2 +27.9/A +8.4/A NL 3,000 +4.2 +12.6/C +1.9/C NL200,000,000 +3.5 +28.7/A +5.7/A NL 2,500 +4.0 +12.2/C +2.4/B NL 2,500 +4.8 +23.9/A +5.9/A 5.50 1,000 +3.6 +9.8/E +2.5/B 5.75 1,000 +0.3 +7.3/B +4.6/A 1.50 1,000 +3.2 +14.3/B -0.3/E 4.25 2,500 +3.0 -6.0/D +1.3/C 5.75 1,000 +4.8 +21.1/B +1.8/D 4.75 0
10.91 26.92 47.67 34.04 56.38 26.97 15.12 25.17 100.74 100.10 39.28 95.22 23.72 33.38 25.47 28.55 32.13 15.88 10.91 2.00 11.78 66.15 28.49 100.75 26.98 14.90 100.10 31.36 20.80 29.97 34.44 10.49 2.91 13.11 14.92
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -Foreign LargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
In this photo made Oct. 6, a shopper walks past a Coldwater Creek store in downtown Seattle. The Commerce Department said Wednesday retail sales declined 1.5 percent in September as car sales plummeted following the end of the government’s popular Cash for Clunkers program.
By TIM PARADIS AP Business Writer
Join Now & Pay NO DUES till Jan. 15, 2010
YTD %Chg %Chg
MUTUAL FUNDS
8,000 7,500
Net Chg
Dow Industrials 10,015.86 +144.80 Dow Transportation 4,045.06 +152.64 Dow Utilities 377.80 +.94 NYSE Composite 7,182.38 +150.51 Amex Market Value 1,848.93 +27.28 Nasdaq Composite 2,172.23 +32.34 S&P 500 1,092.02 +18.83 S&P MidCap 712.58 +12.73 Wilshire 5000 11,312.02 +190.12 Russell 2000 623.94 +12.24
Dow finishes past 10,000 — will it last?
NEW YORK — When the Dow Jones industrial average first passed 10,000, traders tossed commemorative caps and uncorked champagne. This time around, the feeling was more like relief. The best-known barometer of the stock market entered five-figure territory again Wednesday, the most visible sign yet that investors believe the economy is clawing its way back from the worst downturn since the Depression. The milestone caps a stunning 53 percent comeback for the Dow since early March, when stocks were at their lowest levels in more than a decade. “It’s almost like an announcement that the bear market is over,” said Arthur Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies & Co. in Boston. “That is an eye-opener — ’Hey, you know what, things must be getting better because the Dow is over 10,000.”’ Cheers went up briefly when the Dow eclipsed the milestone in the early afternoon, during a daylong rally driven by encouraging earnings reports from Intel Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The average closed at 10,015.86, up 144.80 points. It was the first time the Dow had touched 10,000 since October 2008, that time on the way down. “I think there were times when we were in the deep part of the trough there back in the springtime when it felt like we’d never get back to this level,” said Bernie McSherry, senior vice president of strategic initiatives at Cuttone & Co. So where does the market go from here? Some market watchers see 10,000 as an illusion because there are still lingering threats to an economic recovery — rising unemployment, weak consumer spending and a battered housing market. The investors who have driven stocks higher since March are the pros: hedge funds and institutions whose furious selling hastened the collapse of the market in the first place. And red flags are showing up in the technical charts that professional investors use as they make their trading decisions. The Dow sits about 18 percent above its average of the past 200 days. On the other hand, Wall Street analysts say 10,000 is more than just a number — it can have legitimate psychological implications. A recovering stock market soothes the psyche as people watch their portfolios and 401(k) retirement accounts being replenished. And if people start spending again, that may persuade more investors, including some reluctant pros, to go back into the market. “Psychology plays a huge role in investing ...,” said Carl Beck, a partner at Harris Financial Group. Three stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where 431 stocks hit new 52-week highs and only two hit new lows. Volume on the NYSE came to 1.3 billion shares. Oil jumped $1.03 to settle at $75.18 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange and gold finished up at 1,064.70. Bond prices fell as stocks soared. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.43 percent from 3.35 percent late Tuesday. The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 12.24, or 2 percent, to 623.94.
Last
Associated Press
Excluding autos, sales are up WASHINGTON (AP) — Retail sales declined in September by the largest amount this year as car sales plummeted following the end of the government’s popular Cash for Clunkers program. But outside of autos, sales were better than expected. The Commerce Department said Wednesday that retail sales dropped 1.5 percent last month. That’s smaller than the 2.1 percent fall economists had expected, but still the biggest setback since sales dropped 3.2 percent in December. Car sales plunged 10.4 percent, but excluding autos, retail sales rose 0.5 percent. That’s better than the 0.2 percent increase analysts expected. Consumer demand, which accounts for 70 percent of total economic activity, is being watched closely by economists who worry that any recovery from the recession could stall due to the strong headwinds that households still face. “The increase in sales excluding autos is still fairly modest by normal standards,” Paul Dales, an economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a research note. “Moreover, with households’ finances likely to remain constrained by falling employment, declining real incomes and tight credit, we doubt that consumption will continue to growth at such rates.” But on Wall Street, the betterthan-expected retail sales figures and surprisingly strong earnings reports from Intel Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. pushed the Dow Jones
industrials about 45 points away from the 10,000 mark, a level not seen in a year. Major stock indexes all rose about 1 percent in early trading. Analysts had expected increases at general merchandise stores following reports last week from the nationwide retailers that sales grew in September at stores open at least a year compared with activity in September 2008. It marked the first yearover-year rise in sales after a year of declines, according to data from the International Council of Shopping Centers and Goldman Sachs. Shoppers are hungry for markdowns, looking for sales signs at stores, while cashing in on a tax credit for first-time homebuyers and low mortgage rates and home prices. A late Labor Day and delayed school openings also helped retailers last month because consumers purchased some items in September that they would normally have bought in August. Kohl’s Corp. department store chain, Limited Brands Inc., which runs Victoria’s Secret and Bath & Body Works, and accessories chain The Buckle Inc. all said their September sales rose at stores open more than a year. J.C. Penney Co., Cincinnatibased Macy’s Inc. and Target Corp. reported their same-store sales fell, but not as much as they had expected. Also Wednesday, the Commerce Department said businesses slashed their inventories 1.5 percent in August, the 13th straight decline and more than the 0.9 percent fall analysts
had expected. Still, many economists say businesses soon may begin rebuilding depleted store shelves after more than a year of cuts. If that occurs, factory production will begin to rise and help bolster a broad recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s. Analysts believe the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, is growing in the second half of this year at an annual rate of 3 percent or more. But the concern is that growth rate could slip sharply next year if consumer spending falters. The 1.5 percent drop in retail sales in September followed a 2.2 percent surge in August, which was revised down from an initial estimate of 2.7 percent. Demand for new cars surged in August as buyers rushed to take advantage of the government’s incentives of up to $4,500 to trade in old models for more fuel-efficient cars under the clunkers program that wrapped up at month’s end. Outside of autos, demand at gasoline stations rose 1.1 percent September, partially reflecting higher prices. Excluding gas and auto sales, retail sales rose 0.4 percent in September. Other areas of strength included demand at furniture stores, which jumped 1.4 percent, reflecting the rebound in the housing industry. Sales at general merchandise stores, a category that includes big retailers such as Wal-Mart and Target, rose 0.9 percent. Sales at department stores edged up 0.4 percent.
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Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
Nation
Another GOP Senator backs health care reform
WASHINGTON (AP) — A second Republican senator signaled Wednesday she’s open to voting for sweeping health care legislation this year, putting President Barack Obama closer to a historic achievement that has eluded generations of Democratic leaders. But Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, told The Associated Press that the bill approved Tuesday by the Finance Committee needs substantial improvements to make coverage more affordable, contain costs and protect Medicare. Nevertheless, she joined her Maine GOP colleague Sen. Olympia Snowe in endorsing the goal of far-reaching changes. “My hope is we that can fix the flaws in the bill and come together with a truly bipartisan bill that could garner widespread support,” Collins said in an interview. “I think this bill is far superior to the ones passed by the Senate (health) committee and the three House committees, but it needs substantial additional work.” The 10-year, $829 billion Finance bill was approved by the committee Tuesday on a 14-9 vote, after Snowe broke ranks with her Republican colleagues to support Chairman Max Baucus’ middle-of-the-road plan.
White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, second from right, meets with, from left: Phil Schiliro, White House Director of Legislative Affairs; Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius; Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.; Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.; and Nancy-Ann DeParle, Director of the White House Office for Health Reform, Wednesday. Associated Press
On Wednesday, top White House aides, including Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and Health Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, traveled to the Capitol to meet with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., and Baucus about combining the Finance bill with the Senate Health panel measure. Earlier in the day, Snowe tackled the most divisive issue still on the table: creation of a government insurance plan that would compete with private ones. While emphasizing that she still opposes the so-called
public option, Snowe said on CBS TV that she could foresee a government-run plan that would “kick in” if private insurers failed to live up to expectations that they keep premiums in check. “I think the government would have a disproportionate advantage” in the event of a government-run option, Snowe acknowledged. If the industry didn’t follow through on congressionally mandated changes aimed at making health care more affordable, she said, “then you could have the public option kick in immediately.” Snowe previously had pro-
posed using the public option as an incentive, or a threat, to private insurers. This “trigger” option, or some version of it, has survived the bitter debate and scrutiny to remain a viable option for compromise. Such a statement from a Republican can be very influential in an environment in which GOP lawmakers almost universally have opposed any kind of government-run health care option to compete with private insurers. It represents a break in party solidarity, even if finite. Health care proposals advanced in the
House include such a government option. Snowe broached her standby notion again as talks among lawmakers on health care were going back behind closed doors; Senate leaders are trying to merge two very different bills into a new version that can get the 60 votes needed to guarantee passage. Collins, however, said she could not support Snowe’s idea because she thinks it would make it too easy for a Democratic administration to impose a government plan nationwide. “It would simply delay the public plan for a couple of years,” she told AP.
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Keep our focus on providing quality services to our citizens at the lowest price
Treat our citizens with respect and concern for we work for them and are accountable to them for our actions and decisions. Advertisement paid for by the candidate.
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The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009 — 13
Nation
U.S. students’ math score progress stalls
WASHINGTON (AP) — New math scores show fourth-graders made no gains since 2007, the first time in two decades they have failed to improve. Eighth-graders advanced for yet another year. Education officials called the results troubling, even though it is impossible to know from one test whether progress over the long term has stalled. “We’re clearly not requiring enough of our math teachers,” said David Driscoll, chairman of the board that oversees the tests and a former education commissioner in Massachusetts. Teachers lack training even in his state, which posted the highest scores in math. When Massachusetts beefed up the math portion of the elementary teacher test in 2007, 55 percent of teachers failed, he said. And yet teachers are crucial to learning. Driscoll noted that eighth graders whose teachers majored in math scored 9 points higher than other kids on this year’s test. The results are from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, a series of federally funded achievement tests often referred to as the nation’s report card. Students are tested in nine subjects, but they are tested most often in math and reading; the next reading scores should be released next year. Generally, kids have been making more progress in math than in reading. This year, on a 500-point scale, fourth-graders on average scored 240 in math, unchanged from two years ago. Eighth-graders on average scored 283, up from 281 two years ago. The scores put 39 percent of fourth-graders and 34 percent of eighth-graders at the proficient level, meaning they show the knowledge and skills they should have at that grade. That, in turn, means that millions of kids are a long way off from meeting the goal of the No Child Left Behind law championed by George W. Bush, which is that every student can read and do math at their grade level by 2014. Congress hopes to rewrite the law next year. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the results mean “the status quo isn’t good enough.”
OBAMA DISCUSSES JOBS
President Barack Obama makes remarks about the Recovery Act during a tour of the the Fairfax County Parkway extension project in Springfield, Va. Wednesday. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is at left. The President said he is committed to exploring all avenues to create jobs. Associated Press
Panel looking at financial rules
WASHINGTON (AP) — A key House panel moved to tighten rules on previously unregulated financial instruments Wednesday, a long-awaited step toward governing the obscure and complex transactions at the heart of the troubles that befell some of Wall Street’s most wellknown financial houses. The House Financial Services Committee was poised to adopt a proposal close to the Obama’s administration’s plan to move most private trading in over-the-counter derivatives to regulated exchanges. Committee Chairman Barney Frank dropped his proposal for an outright ban on trades that regulators judge detrimental to markets. While many companies use derivatives to protect themselves against market fluctuations, these products have also become Tom Loveless, an education expert at the a means for financial speculaBrookings Institution think tank, said results tion. They grew into a $600 trilreally weren’t much different from 2007. It will take another four to six years to see if fourth-grade lion global market that regulators say can threaten the entire progress has truly stalled, he said. economy. “Each of these is kind of like a public opinion Frank, D-Mass., said exemppoll; it’s an estimate,” Loveless said. “I think people rush to take each release of test scores far too seri- tions would apply to companies that use derivatives for commerously and try to explain every little wiggle in the cial reasons to protect against data.”
7,500 apply for tax amnesty deal
WASHINGTON (AP) — Some 7,500 international tax dodgers have applied for an amnesty program that promises no jail time and reduced penalties for tax cheats who come forward, the IRS announced Wednesday. The tax dodgers were hiding money in more than 70 countries and on every continent except Antarctica. Accounts ranged from just over $10,000 to more than $100 million. Response to the program has been
unprecedented, IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman said. “The whole idea of this program was to get people in and get them on the right side of the law,” Shulman said. The IRS long has had a policy that certain tax evaders who come forward before they are contacted by the agency usually can avoid jail time as long as they agree to pay back taxes, interest and hefty penalties.
risk, not those that use it for financial reasons. Companies could lose that exemption if regulators see a pattern of activity that places other participants in the transactions at risk. Exempt or not, companies also would have to report their trades and the prices. “There will be no more hidden trades where we don’t know the price,” Frank said. Frank said he was persuaded not to give regulators the power to ban so-called abusive swaps. “There was a concern that a broad grant to ban absolutely abusive swaps was going to be unsettling,” he said. Instead, regulators would be required to oversee transactions and look for potential problems. Regulating derivatives is one of the elements of President Barack Obama’s proposal for correcting the practices of banks, investment houses and other financial institutions that caused last year’s economic collapse. Obama also wants a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency to police mortgages, credit cards and other consumer products offered by banks and other financial institutions, a proposal
opposed by banks and business groups. Frank intends to have his committee adopt those measures by the end of the week. House Democratic leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said Wednesday that he would expect the legislation to reach the House floor for a vote in three to four weeks. The Senate has yet to act on the Obama proposals. Derivatives such as credit default swaps brought down Wall Street banking house Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and nearly toppled insurance giant American International Group Inc. Republicans said derivative transactions should be disclosed and operate under great visibility but object to trading them in regulated exchanges. Rep. Spencer Bachus, the top Republican on the committee, said exchanges, together with requirements for more capital to protect against the risks, could backfire and hurt investors who are unfamiliar with the complicated instruments. “You’ll price out smaller companies,” Bachus, R-Ala., said.
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14
— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
SHOE by Chris Cassat and Gary Brookins
THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schoor
BROOM-HILDA by Russell Myers
DILBERT by Scott Adams
GIL THORP by Jerry Jenkins, Ray Burns and Frank McLaughlin
THE BORN LOSER by Art and Chip Sansom
ARLO AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
FRANK AND ERNEST by Bob Thaves
EVENING
OCTOBER 15 DSH DTV 7:00
7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
BROADCAST STATIONS
# WBTV $ WYFF _ WSPA ) WSOC ` WLOS 0 WGGS 5 WHNS A WUNF H WMYA Q WRET Æ WYCW
3 4 7 13 2 12 6 8 97 10
3 4 7 9 13 16 21 33 40 62
News Mil Survivor: Sa CSI Enter Inside Com Parks Office 30 News Scene Survivor: Sa CSI Inside Enter FlashForward Grey’s Anat. For Jeop FlashForward Grey’s Anat. Vic Faith Niteline P. Two Sein Bones (N) Fringe (N) Busi NC Our Ex North Folk High School Football Seneca at Woodmont. Trek Big Perform. Rice Fam Office Vampire Supernatural
265 329 249 202 278 206 209 360 248 258 312 229 269 252 299 241 244 247 256 280 245 296 649 242 307
Criminal The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 Crime 360 The First 48 106 & Park } ››› The Matrix (‘99) Keanu Reeves. Movie Spring Bling Daily Col Scru Scru Jeff Dunham Tosh. S. Daily Col Tosh. Futur Lou Dobbs Camp. Brown Larry King Anderson Cooper 360 Å Larry King De De De De Nature Planet De De Nature Base College Football Cincinnati at South Florida. SportsCenter Å Base NFL NASCAR Racing: Sprint Cup 30 for 30 World Series World Series SportsNation FOX Report O’Reilly Hannity (N) On Record O’Reilly Hannity SEC Gridiron College Football Virginia Union at Virginia State. Final Top 50 Pre } ›› Fantastic Four (‘05, Action) It’s Sunny It’s Sunny } Elektra That Thing } ››› Mrs. Doubtfire :15 } That Thing You Do! Mrs. Dfire Lucy Lucy Angel Angel Angel Gold Gold Gold Gold House House First First House House House Estate Prop First House House Marvels The Kennedy Assassination Gangland Underworld The Kennedy Medium Å Medium Å Runway Runway Mod Runway Mod Spon Spon Mal Mal Chris Chris Lopez Geor Nanny Nanny Mal Mal Ult. Fighter Unleashed TNA Wrestling (N) Å MAN Game } ›› The Lost World: Jurassic Park (‘97) Horror Horror Horror Name Pre MLB Baseball: NLCS Game 1 -- Teams TBA MLB Name Sex & Shaggy Dog } ››› Paper Moon (‘73) O Brother, Where Art Thou? } Sounder Police Police Police Mall Cops Police Mall Cops CSI: NY Å CSI: NY Å } ›› Rush Hour 2 (‘01) } ›› Rush Hour 2 (‘01) John John Chow Flap Total Stok King King Fam Fam Chick Aqua College College Football UT-Chattanooga at Samford. ACC College NCIS Å House Å House Å House Å Monk Å Law CI Home Videos WWE Stars Home Videos WGN News Scru Scru WWE Stars
8651 8182 8181 8650 8180 8192 8183 8190 8184 8185
The Mentalist News Jay Leno News The Mentalist News Practice News Practice News Praise the Lord News Sein Craft BBC News Poltergeist II Lens Smi News Office Fam
Late Show Late Tonight Show Late Late Show Late Night Kimmel Night Kimmel Something Frien Frien Jim Charlie Rose Smi Chea BBC Charlie Rose 70s Name Lopez
CABLE CHANNELS
A&E BET COM CNN DISC ESPN ESPN2 FNC FSS FX FXM HALL HGTV HIST LIFE NICK SPIKE SYFY TBS TCM TLC TNT TOON TS USA WGN
23 17 46 27 24 25 37 15 20 36 38 16 29 43 35 40 44 45 30 42 28 19 14 33 32 -
118 124 107 200 182 140 144 205 137 133 187 112 120 108 170 168 122 139 132 183 138 176 437 105 239
PREMIUM CHANNELS
MAX ENC HBO SHO STARZ
510 520 500 540 530
310 340 300 318 350
512 526 501 537 520
Inc :45 } ›› Body of Lies (‘08) Å Meet the Spartans } ›› Swordfish Cable Guy Walk Hard :45 } From Dusk Till Dawn :40 } Superbad (‘07) Out Mummy: Dragon Emp. Wanda Sykes Confessions Aliens vs 3:10 to Yuma Dexter } Meet the Browns :45 } ›› Shaft (‘00) iTV. Mike } ›› Seven Pounds (‘08) :05 } Gone Baby Gone (‘07) Crash Å Lakeview
Gifts for grands can be practical Dear Abby: This is in response to “Where’s the Fun in Upstate New York” (July 26), whose husband, “Hugh,” insisted they buy their grandson a $100 savings bond for his first birthday when she wanted to splurge on toys and clothes. Couples should decide together what to do, not tell the other what will be done. That said, I agree with Hugh that $100 to $150 on gifts for a 1-yearold is excessive. The child’s room will soon look like an overloaded toy store. I have seen this in our extended family. At Christmas it took 2 1/2 hours to open all the gifts. Egads! We’ve become a nation of excess, and kids expect it. I hope the couple will not let this drive a wedge. — Sensible Dear Sensible: The majority of those who wrote to comment on the letter from “Where’s the Fun” were — like you — as concerned about the state of the woman’s marriage as the gift issue. Read on: Dear Abby: It’s not like you to miss the warning sign of a controlling spouse. If Hugh is truly “wonderful in every way,” then they should agree to disagree on this issue. She should spend what she wants, within reason, on gifts of her choice for their grandson’s birthday. If he feels strongly about the savings bond, which is also a wonderful gift, then they should get that, too. Because
Dear Abby Abigail van Buren
they are financially comfortable, and this is the only area of disagreement, surely Hugh can compromise. I am alarmed that he has already decided what they’ll be giving the child for every birthday. And by the way, “fun” is not a dirty word. It’s Baby’s first birthday — lighten up! — Melissa Dear Abby: Some spouses suffer from “economic abuse” when one partner dominates financial decisions. I agree that a baby won’t be impressed by pricey items, but this woman’s gift choices are a form of self-expression. She should be allowed the joy of choosing present — My Two Cents Dear Abby: While the adults in my life did give me toys and material things for my birthdays and holidays, I am 26 now and I have little recollection of what they were. What I know now is that because of the generous gifts of savings bonds from those loved ones, my fiance and I were able to make a down payment on a beautiful home. — Sarah
Cod liver oil may help eczema Dear Dr. Gott: A gentleman working with me had eczema so bad it hurt just to look at it. He’s a veteran and was being treated at the local VA hospital. I suggested he try taking a tablespoon of cod-liver oil every day, since it’s a great source of vitamins A and D. He tried it, and his eczema cleared up. He told me that he had never thought of treating it internally. I was so happy I was able to help him and hope that you print my letter so that it may help others. Dear Reader: Cod-liver oil has a starring role in the nightmares of most adults over the age of 50. In earlier years, it was common for parents to force their children to take it daily for good health. Back then, it was thought to be healthful; today, it is known to be healthful. Cod-liver oil is a good source of omega-3 and vitamins A and D. It has been used to treat various forms of rheumatism and rickets for many
PUZZLE
Ask Dr. Gott Dr. Peter M. Gott
years, but recent studies suggest it may be beneficial for other ailments, as well. These may include cardiac conditions, inflammatory disorders and, as you pointed out, certain skin problems, such as eczema. Because research is still ongoing, no definitive results are available. However, there is little harm in considering the product. Anyone interested should first discuss the issue with his or her physician, because there is always a possibility of adverse reaction or allergy. Furthermore, there is a risk of interaction when taken in conjunction with other over-the-counter and/or prescription medications.
IN THE STARS
Your Birthday, Oct. 15;
Although many exciting and unexpected developments could occur in the year ahead, take care not to let things overwhelm. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Stand up for yourself or a stronger personality will dominate you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — If you are short of cash, it might be best not to hang out with friends who can afford things you can’t. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — Should you and your friends be at odds concerning an activity, it might be better to go your separate ways. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Establishing one set of rules for yourself and another for everyone else is why you’ll have all kinds of problems. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — “What’s in it for me?” should not be your primary consideration. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Up against someone in a far stronger position that has more authority? Find a way to diplomatically back off. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — That tendency to jump in headfirst without looking could be disastrous once again. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Don’t be gullible and believe someone who hasn’t dealt openly with you in the past. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Tasks performed in haste are likely to be worth little and need to be done all over again. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Ignoring the specifics could lead to headaches and problems down the line. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — A once rock-solid financial deal could start to show signs of disintegration. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — It’ll be quite annoying to others if you are too headstrong and unyielding.
The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009 — 15 The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, THURSDAY, October 15, 2009 — 15
State
Carolina Today
STATE FAIR OPENS TODAY
Church plans to burn Bibles
CANTON (AP) — A North Carolina pastor says his church plans to burn Bibles and books by Christian authors on Halloween to light a fire under true believers. Pastor Marc Grizzard told Asheville TV station WLOS that the King James version of the Bible is the only one his small western North Carolina church follows. He says all other versions, such as the Living Bible, are “satanic” and “perversions” of God’s word. On Halloween night, Grizzard and the 14 members of the Amazing Grace Baptist Church also will burn music and books by Christian authors, such as Billy Graham and Rick Warren.
Duke Energy makes rate deal CHARLOTTE (AP) — North Carolina’s utility regulators agreed Wednesday to postpone a hearing on Duke Energy’s requested rate increase for the state’s electric consumers to allow more time to finalize a compromise. The state Utilities Commission’s Public Staff, which represents consumers, had sought a twoday delay of a hearing planned Monday so the deal and supporting information could be prepared. In June, Duke Energy filed a request for an overall increase of 12.6 percent for its 1.8 million North Carolina customers, bringing in an extra $496 million in annual revenue. It would be the Charlotte-based power company’s first general rate increase in North Carolina since 1991. It would have raised a typical monthly electric bill by about $11 to $93 beginning Jan. 1. But the Public Staff said Duke deserved only an overall increase of 4.7 percent, or about $183 million a year in added revenue.
Sheriff pleads not guilty
LINCOLNTON (AP) — A North Carolina sheriff has pleaded not guilty in a case involving his chief deputy getting an acquaintance out of a drunken driving arrest. The Charlotte Observer reported that Lincoln County Sheriff Tim Daugherty pleaded not guilty to two counts of obstruction of justice during his first court appearance on Tuesday. Daugherty is charged with helping his chief deputy cover up a DWI investigation against a local physician. Investigators said Daugherty gave conflicting statements and evidence about his knowledge of the DWI arrest.
Remains found in submerged car
BEAUFORT (AP) — A sports utility vehicle that disappeared in 2005 at the same time as its driver has been found in waters off Beaufort with the remains of a body in it. Multiple media outlets reported Tuesday that a recreational diver found the 1998 Jeep Cherokee in Gallants Channel. Authorities said the Jeep and its Virginia license plate matched the description of a vehicle driven by George Edward Quinn, who has been missing since Feb. 5, 2005.
Associated Press
Theron Maybin, left, and Marvin Stodghill, both of Hendersonville, set up their apple display at the Exhibition Hall at the State Fairgrounds in Raleigh Wednesday. The N.C. State Fair opens Thursday afternoon, drawing vendors, exhibitors and spectators from across the state.
Court hears video poker appeal RALEIGH (AP) — Appeals court judges hearing arguments Wednesday on the legality of North Carolina’s video poker ban sounded wary of negating the will of the General Assembly to grant an exception to machines on the Cherokee Indian reservation. Two of the three judges on the panel of the state Court of Appeals, which considered a Wake County judge’s ruling earlier this year that overturned the 2006 law, peppered an attorney for an amusement machine vendor with questions about why it should step into a legislative policy question. Video poker machines could be permitted again in all 100 counties should the lower court keep the ruling remain in place. “I always thought that the Legislature set public policy,” Judge Robert Hunter of Marion asked Hugh Stevens, representing vendor McCracken and Amick Inc., which sued over the ban. “You seem to argue that this is somehow contrary to the public policy of the state.” Stevens said in this case, the 2006 law runs counter to the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act that required then-Gov. Jim Hunt to negotiate a gambling deal with the Eastern Band of
Cherokee Indians. “Saying that you can’t have any anywhere else in the state while you allow them for the tribe is not a comprehensive public policy. It’s something different,” Stevens said. Mark Davis, a special deputy attorney general, argued the Legislature had the authority to grant exclusive video gambling rights to the Cherokee tribe. Court of Appeals Judge Martha Ann Geer also asked Stevens to explain why the 2006 law was not a “profound statement” by the Legislature that should be left alone. Much of the nearly 90 minutes of arguments centered on the wording of the federal Indian gambling act and the intent of Congress when it approved the law in 1988. It could be months before the panel rules in the case, which ultimately could wind up before the state Supreme Court. Davis said North Carolina followed the federal Indian gaming law by creating a way for Cherokees to improve their economy and giving citizens a say in how the tribe could conduct those games, Davis said. The Cherokees operate a casino on their reservation that employs 1,800 people and provides thou-
sands of dollars a year to each tribal member. “It’s given tribes favorable gaming rights so they can have strong tribal economies and maintain self-sufficiency,” Davis said. The vendor’s “interpretation is consistent with neither,” he added. Wake Superior Court Judge Howard Manning ruled in February the video poker ban violated the federal law by prohibiting video poker machines in much of the state while allowing the Eastern Band to operate the same games. Manning issued a stay on his order, but the ruling has added confusion in the courts. Associations with the video poker industry sent one western North Carolina sheriff to federal prison and led to an investigation of former House Speaker Jim Black, who ultimately received prison time in a corruption-related plea unrelated to video poker. A couple dozen sheriffs filled a small courtroom to hear the arguments. They sought the 2006 law after struggling for years to keep track of legal machines and hearing complaints of large illegal cash jackpots.
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Run a 20 word yard sale ad Thurs., Fri., & Sat. for ONLY $20.
Additional words are only 75¢ each. Deadline: Wed. at 2 p.m.
*Private party customers only! This special must be mentioned at the time of ad placement. Valid 10/12/09 - 10/16/09
Homes
Mobile Homes
Mobile Homes
Mobile Homes
Work Wanted
For Sale
For Sale
For Sale
For Rent
We will do what you want us to do! Housework, yard work, trees, gutters.
GARAGE/APT, bath, kitchen From $39,900. 90 day completion. Call 828-287-5789 3BR/1.5BA Fernwood Circle in Rfdtn. Lots of updates, big backyard! $139K Call 305-0555
Homes For Rent Nice 3BR/1.5BA Brick Ranch on 1/2 ac. off Old Wagy Rd. $575/ mo. + dep. 245-7434
LAND OWNERS BRAND NEW HOMES Well, septic, grading. We do it all!
704-484-1640 Paid off in 10 Years!! 3BR
Home $428/mo. Limited time only!
704-484-1640 10% down, 7.75%apr., 120mo., wac
Pay off your New Home In record time & save! 4BR Home $568/mo. Pd. off in 10 years 704-484-1677 10% down, 7.75%apr., 120mo., wac.
Mobile Homes For Rent 3BR/2BA in nice area Stove, refrig. No Pets! $400/mo. + deposit Call 287-7043
Single wide Shiloh: 2BR/2BA No Pets! $425/mo. + $300 dep. 245-5703 or 286-8665
3BR/2BA DW
in Rutherfordton!
RENT TO OWN!
Will Finance! No Banks! Hurry! You pay no lot rent, taxes, or insurance!
NEG. + deposit
704-806-6686 2BR/2BA on private lot in Caroleen area. No pets. References. Call 429-6691
Free Estimates!
828-289-3024 Sell or rent your property in the Classifieds! Call today to place your ad! 245-6431
FILL UP ON
V A L U E Shop the Classifieds!
The Daily Courier
Call 828-245-6431 to place your ad.
16 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, THURSDAY, October 15, 2009 Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
For Sale
Motorcycles
Yard Sales
Yard Sales
Earn $65k, $50k, $40k
RN’s/LPN’s $2500 Sign-On Bonus Immediate Positions In-Home Shifts Weekends 8 or 12 hrs PRN & Baylor Available
HUGE Rutherfordton 3511 Hudlow Rd. Sat. Oct. 17th and Sat. Oct. 24th 7A-until Too much to mention. Rain or shine!
Rutherfordton Area Nurse-Owned... Nurse-Managed Agency CALL TODAY: 704-874-0005
Plug & Socket Halloween costume Great for a couple! Purchased from Party City. Original price $50, will sell for $25. Pepper shaker costume $10 2 Safety 1st carseats Forward facing $15 ea. Call 704-974-3620
2 FAMILY Spindale 311 Georgia St. Sat. 7A-until Riding & push mowers, furniture, gas logs, household items and much more!
We currently have managers making this, and need more for expansion. 1 year salaried restaurant management experience required.
Van Driver/Child Care Provider Mon., Tues., Wed from 7:45A-3:15P Requires child care background and experience, excellent driving record, background check and drug screen. Send letter of interest and resume to: Director, PO Box 1619, Forest City, NC 28043
07 Buele Blast 500cc 3,800 mi. Windshield, new rear tire. Exc. starter bike! $2,500 287-3843
(GM, Co Mgr, Asst Mgr)
Imagine Time is a national software company based in Rutherfordton, NC that develops products for accountants. We currently have an opening for a software programmer to assist in expanding our software product line. Applicants must be able to code in Microsoft vb.net, Microsoft Sql and Microsoft Access. Sharepoint and mobile phone development a plus, but not required. Fax resume to 704-259-0412 or email flindsley@ imaginetime.net
BIG YARD SALE Mooresboro: 2121 Ferry Rd. Sat. 7A-til 50” TV, motorcycle, DVD players, futon, knives, swords, clothes and more!
LAST SALE FC: R. Robbins: 164 Brookfield Dr. (take Doggett Rd. behind church) Fri. 8A4P & Sat. 8A-12:30P Decorator accessories, household, bedding (king), furniture includes antique chest, chair frames, tables, women’s shoes 7.5, women’s clothing sm-med., coats, copiers.
NOW HIRING
Fax resume to 336-431-0873
866-304-9935 (toll free) Health & Home Services
“Discover the Difference”
•RN 3-11 SUPERVISOR M-F •LPN 7A-7P WEEKENDS Apply in person at: Brookview Healthcare 510 Thompson Street Gaffney, SC 29340
For Sale 2 Burial Plots: Sunset Memorial in Memory Garden Section. Lot 42 Space 1 & 2. $1,100 or best serious offer! Spaces sell for $1,495 ea. 305-8923 after 3p
Want To Buy
WILL BUY YOUR JUNK Cars & Trucks Pick up at your convenience!
Call 223-0277 Autos 2006 BMW 325i 94,000 mi. Exc. cond.! Silver/gray leather, 6 spd. manual $15,800 firm 828-748-1294
Call 864-489-3101 for directions. Brookview is a drug free workplace EOE/M/F/D/V NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of GLADYS JUSTICE DOGGETT of Rutherford County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said GLADYS JUSTICE DOGGETT to present them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of January 2010 or the same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This is the 8th day of October, 2009.
Having qualified as Administrator CTA of the estate of MARY KATHERINE ASENTE of Rutherford County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said MARY KATHERINE ASENTE to present them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of January 2010 or the same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This is the 8th day of October, 2009.
John Charles Doggett, Executor 244 Justice Road Rutherfordton, NC 28139
Mary Floyd Asente, Administrator CTA 165 Grandview Drive Rutherfordton, NC 28139
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Lake Structure Appeals Board Town of Lake Lure The Lake Lure Lake Structure Appeals Board will hold its monthly meeting at the Town of Lake Lure Municipal Center, 2948 Memorial Highway, Lake Lure, North Carolina on Tuesday, October 27, 2009 at 1:00 p.m., or shortly thereafter, to consider the following: (1) LSA-2009001, a request by Darrell Panner, agent for Eric Panner, to exceed the maximum projection into the water of no more than 1/3 the distance to the opposite shore as required in section 94.05 (B) of the Lake Structure Regulations. The property (Tax PIN 1631743) is located at 2125 Buffalo Shoals Road, Lake Lure, North Carolina.
2002 Chrysler Concord Auto, a/c, ps, pw, pl, pb. 98k mi. Clean, nice car! $3,000 firm 828-287-4843 2005 Mercury Sable Auto, a/c, pw, pl, cd, cruise. Excellent condition! 88,000 miles $5,200 Call 287-0057 Selling a vehicle? Specials available. Call us today!
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Collector of Affidavit of the estate of JACK RAY MELTON of Rutherford County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said JACK RAY MELTON to present them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of January 2010 or the same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This is the 8th day of October, 2009. Gail Parton, Collector of Affidavit 251 Painter’s Gap Road Rutherfordton, NC 28139
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE OF NORTH CAROLINA SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION RUTHERFORD COUNTY 09 SP 382 IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY KIMBERLY H. CALLAHAN AND PAUL B. CALLAHAN DATED AUGUST 23, 2002 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 686 AT PAGE 288 IN THE RUTHERFORD COUNTY PUBLIC REGISTRY, NORTH CAROLINA NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to a Court order and under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in the above-referenced deed of trust and because of default in the payment of the secured indebtedness and failure to perform the stipulation and agreements therein contained and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the secured debt, the undersigned substitute trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale at the county courthouse of said county at 2:30 PM on October 28, 2009 the following described real estate and any other improvements which may be situated thereon, in Rutherford County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: Situate, lying and being in Rutherfordton Township, Rutherford County North Carolina, and on the Northwest side of a road leading from Highway 74 to Highway 221 and being bounded on the North by an 81 acre tract formerly owned by L. B. Harris and now owned by the heirs at law of Mrs. L. B. (Catherine) Harris and bounded on the South and East by the public road leading from Highway 74 to Highway 221 and on the West by the lands of Mitchell Elizabeth Harris and John Harris and BEGINNING at an iron pin in the Northern margin of Mitchell Elizabeth Harris line, said pin being offset from the center of the public road and running thence with Mitchell Elizabeth Harris line North 22 West 210 feet to an iron pin, a corner of John Harris and of the lands known as the L. B. Harris Estate Lands; thence a new line North 43 East 560 feet to an iron pin; thence another new line South 64 East 212 feet to the center of the public road; thence with the center of the public road the following courses and distances: South 31-1/2 West 200 feet, South 36 West 100 feet, South 44 West 100 feet, South 50 West 100 feet and South 53 West 40 feet to a point in the center of the public road offset by an iron pin in the Southeastern margin of said road; thence leaving said public road and running South 53 East 58 feet to an iron pin in a private drive; thence South 73 West 193 feet to the BEGINNING point in the center of the public road, said point in the center of the road being offset by an iron pin in the Northwestern margin of said road and containing 4.4 acres, more or less. THERE IS EXCEPTED HEREFROM that certain tract of land described as follows:
Farm Equipment 2007 John Deere 790 tractor, front end loader, 5’ bush hog, 31 hrs. $11,500. 248-3204 or 828-305-2116
Lost Black Lab/Dalmation mix Male, 85 lbs., white spots on feet & neck, orange collar Lost 10/5 in Green Hill. 305-4659 Small Male Dog tan w/white & black. Last seen Sat. Pleasant St. Spindale. Neutered w/stitches. 286-1718
Miscellaneous WANTED: Fish Aquariums and accessories of all sizes and types but prefer 29 gallons or larger for non-profit project. Call Don at 828-748-0102 to get more info or have your aquarium picked up.
Yard Sales 10 FAMILY Rfdtn 1764 Poors Ford Rd. Saturday 7A-until Furniture, household, exercise equipment, clothing for all, shoes, crafts, fleece blankets 2 FAMILY Spindale 303 Courtland Fri. & Sat. 8A-2P Household items, Christmas, tools, books, big screen TV, and much more! 2 FAMILY Forest City 776 Old Ballpark Rd. Sat. 8A-until A little bit of everything!
TOWN OF FOREST CITY PUBLIC NOTICE
FC: Coventry Lane (off Old Caroleen Rd.) Sat. 17th 7A- 2P Clothes, toys, Tupperware, plants, household items, Pampered Chef FUNDRAISER FOR YOUTH MISSIONS FC: Bethany Baptist Church 760 Bethany Church Rd. Sat. 7Auntil Large variety of items! Rain or Shine! GARAGE SALE Cliffside: 1955 Island Ford Rd. (1/2 mi. from old go-kart track) Sat. 7A-until Crafts, drapes. Rain or shine! HUGE 3 FAMILY FC: Idlewood Ln. (in Weatherstone off Hudlow) Fri. 3P-6:30P & Sat. 9A-2P Men’s jeans (42), household items, huge selection of ladies clothing and more!
MULTI FAMILY Sunshine: 2819 Bostic Sunshine Hwy Sat. 8A-until Furniture, books, clothes, assorted golf clubs! Too much to mention! NEIGHBORHOOD SALE Rfdtn West 7th Street (off Main St.) Sat. 7:30A-until Kids clothes, toys, too much to mention! 828-429-4974 Rain or shine! HUGE Rfdtn: 1650 Maple Creek Rd. Thurs., Fri., Sat. 7A-until Numerous Christmas items, furniture, and much more!
HUGE 6 FAMILY YARD/ESTATE SALE Harris: Clarence Henson Rd. (off 221S) Fri. & Sat. 8A-until Household, furniture, books, costumes, Christmas items and more! YARD SALE Spindale 207 S. Oak St. Sat. 7:30A-11:30A Men/women’s clothes, girls (18 mo.-2T), entertainment center, CD’s, movies, and more!
YARD SALE SPECIAL ONLY $20.00 Comes with a 20 word ad, runs Thurs., Fri., & Sat., 3 yard sale signs, pricing stickers, and a rain day guarantee!
Deadline is Wed. by 2pm
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The Board of Commissioners of the Town of Forest City has considered a waiver of competitive bidding under G.S. 143-129(g) and will use the Piggy Back process as approved at its regular meeting on September 29, 2009 for the purchase of one Sutphen Pumper from Sutphen Corporation. The seller has agreed to extend to the Town of Forest City the same or more favorable prices and terms set forth in its contract with the Town of Bozeman, Montana, dated March 17, 2009. For additional information, contact Mark McCurry, Forest City Fire Chief at 828-245-2111.
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of JOHN STEPHEN DORSETT, late of Roanoke, Virginia, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of January, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 15th day of October, 2009. Lynn D. Barnes 1706 Old Bridge Road Dolphin, Virginia 23843-2500 Jarald N. Willis, Attorney 120 East Court Street Rutherfordton, North Carolina 28139
Sandra P. Mayse City Clerk
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF RUTHERFORD NOTICE OF SALE File No: 09 SP 257 TAKE NOTICE THAT: Raintree Realty and Construction, Inc., Substitute Trustee, has begun proceedings to FORECLOSE under the Deed of Trust described below, and under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in such Deed of Trust, and an Order entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of the above County, will sell the below described property at public auction as follows: 1. The instrument pursuant to which such sale will be held is a Deed of Trust executed by Marie L. Peterson and Joseph Lee Peterson, original mortgagors, and recorded in the Office of the Rutherford County Register of Deeds in Deed of Trust Book 977 at Page 83. The record owner of such property, as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds not more than ten (10) days prior to posting this Notice of Sale, if not the original mortgagors, is: N/A
Situate, lying and being in Rutherfordton Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina, and on the North side of State Road 1367, sometimes known as the Thompson Road, and being a part of that 4.4 acre tract described in deed from Walker H. Harris, et al, to Dovie Sue Harris, Single, of recorded in Deed Book 385, Page 374, Rutherford County Registry, and BEGINNING at a point in the center of State Road 1367 in John Harris' line, said point being offset by an iron pin in the margin of said road, said iron pin being located North 25 West 25 feet from said beginning point in the center of said road; and runs thence with an old marked line, same now being John Harris' line, North 25 West 210 feet to an iron pin in John Harris line; thence with another old marked line North 52 East 210 feet to an iron pin at a dogwood, a new corner and in the line of the lands owned by Dovie Sue Harris; thence a new line South 25 East 217 feet to a point in the center of State Road 1367, said line passing an iron pin offset on the margin of said road at 25 feet from the point in the center of the road; thence with the center of State Road 1367 South 52 degrees West 100 feet and South 58 West 110 feet to the BEGINNING and containing one (1) acre more or less, same being taken from a survey and map made by Clyde C. Sorrels, Registered Surveyor, in October of 1977.
2. The property will be sold by the Substitute Trustee at 1:00 p.m. on the 22nd day of October, 2009 at the Courthouse door in the City of Rutherfordton, North Carolina.
And Being more commonly known as: 375 Thompson Rd, Rutherfordton, NC 28139
4. The property will be sold by the Substitute Trustee to the highest bidder for CASH. The highest bidder will be required to deposit IN CASH with the Substitute Trustee at the date and time of the sale the greater of five percent (5.0%) of the amount of the bid or Seven Hundred Fifty and no/100 Dollars ($750.00).
The record owner(s) of the property, as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds, is/are Kimberly H. Callahan. The property to be offered pursuant to this notice of sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance "AS IS, WHERE IS." Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the note secured by the deed of trust, being foreclosed, nor the officers, directors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either Trustee or the holder of the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at or relating to the property being offered for sale. Any and all responsibilities or liabilities arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition expressly are disclaimed. This sale is made subject to all prior liens and encumbrances, and unpaid taxes and assessments including but not limited to any transfer tax associated with the foreclosure. A deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid or seven hundred fifty dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, is required and must be tendered in the form of certified funds at the time of the sale. This sale will be held open ten days for upset bids as required by law. Following the expiration of the statutory upset period, all remaining amounts are IMMEDIATELY DUE AND OWING. Failure to remit funds in a timely manner will result in a Declaration of Default and any deposit will be frozen pending the outcome of any re-sale. SPECIAL NOTICE FOR LEASEHOLD TENANTS: If you are a tenant residing in the property, be advised that an Order for Possession of the property may be issued in favor of the purchaser. Also, if your lease began or was renewed on or after October 1, 2007, be advised that you may terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. You may be liable for rent due under the agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.
The real property to be sold is known located at 248 Lillian’s Farm Lane, Rutherford County, Forest City, North Carolina, and more fully described as follows: BEING all of Lot No. 5 and No. 6 of the Lillian’s Farms Subdivision as shown on plat duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Rutherford County, NC in Plat Book 25, at Page 35, to which reference is hereby made for a more full and complete description. TAX PIN No. 16-36517 and 16-36518. Subject to the restrictions recorded in Deed Book 846, at Page 438, Rutherford County Registry. 3. Any buildings located on the above-described property are also included in the sale.
5. All bidders bid for the property AS IS on the date of sale. Absolutely no warranties are made as to the condition, value or title of the property. While the Substitute Trustee believes the title to be good, all bidders are advised that they should obtain independent counsel to examine record title as the property is sold subject to prior record interests. The Noteholder has reserved the right to withdraw the sale up to and until the Deed is delivered by the Substitute Trustee. 6. The property will be sold subject to all unpaid taxes and special assessments. 7. The property being sold is all of that property described in Deed of Trust except as specifically set forth above. It is the intention to extinguish any and all rights or interests in the property subordinate to the Deed of Trust. 8. Additional Notice Where the Real Property is Residential with Less Than 15 Rental Units: An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Superior Court of the County in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the Notice of Sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. This the 25th day of September, 2009.
The date of this Notice is October 7, 2009. Grady Ingle Substitute Trustee 8520 Cliff Cameron Drive, Suite 300 Charlotte, NC 28269 (704) 333-8107 http://shapiroattorneys.com/nc/ 04-62559
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE: RAINTREE REALTY AND CONSTRUCTION, INC. A. Robert York, President PO Box 8942 Asheville, NC 28814-8942 Phone: 828.253.9063 Dates October 8, 2009 and October 15, 2009
The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, THURSDAY, October 15, 2009 — 17
WEB DIRECTORY Visit the advertisers below by entering their Web address
AUTO DEALERSHIPS
HEALTH CARE
NEWSPAPER
REAL ESTATE
HUNNICUTT FORD
BUSINESS&SERVICE DIRECTORY (828) 245-1626 www.hunnicuttfordmercury.com
(828) 245-0095 www.hospiceofrutherford.org
(828) 245-6431 www.thedigitalcourier.com
(828) 286-1311 www.keeverrealestate.com
To List Your Website In This Directory, Contact The Daily Courier Classified Department at (828) 245-6431 Erika Meyer, Ext. 205
AIR CONDITIONING & HEATING
“We’re Not Comfortable Until You Are” “Serving Rutherford & Cleveland County For 30 Years” NC License 6757 • SC License 4299 FAST RELIABLE SERVICE ON ALL BRANDS Free Estimates • Best Warranties All Work Guaranteed Service • Installation • Duct Cleaning • IAQ Gas / Oil / Heat Pumps / Geothermal / Boilers Residential & Commercial 24 Hour Emergency Service
245-1141 www.shelbyheating.com
CARPET
CONSTRUCTION
Bailey’s Flooring
Hutchins Remodeling
Carpet/Vinyl for sale $5-$10 per yard Carpet Repairs
Samples and FREE estimates available Rental property owners, call today and let me save you money!
30 yrs. local experience Larry Bailey
453-0396 or 223-3397
Decks ~ Handicap Ramps Painting ~ Porches Roofing ~ Seamless Gutters & Gutter Cleaning Service FREE ESTIMATES CALL LANCE HUTCHINS
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Office
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DAVID’S GRADING We do it all
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828-657-6006 Track Hoe Work, Tractor Work , Dozer Work, Bobcat Work, Trenching, Grading and Land Clearing, Hauling Gravel, Sand, Dirt, Etc. FREE ESTIMATE
Does your business need a boost? Let us design an eye catching ad for your business! Business & Services Directory ads get results! Call the Classified Department!
245-6431 HOME IMPROVEMENT
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Specializing In Metal Roofing.....Offered In Many Colors
Bill Gardner Construction, Inc
Guaranteed Lowest Prices on Vinyl DH Windows Vinyl Replacement Windows Double Pane, Double Hung 3/4" Glass, Energy-Star Rated
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Wood & Vinyl Decks • Vinyl Siding • Kitchen & Bath Remodeling Reface Your Cabinets, Don't Replace Them!
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H & M Industries, Inc.
828-248-1681
704-434-9900
Website - hmindustries.com
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HOME REPAIR
* roofing * concrete * decks & steps * painting * carpentry * skirting * plumbing * sheet rock * room additions * metal roofing
LAWN CARE
* Seed & Fertilize * Leaf Removal * Mulching * Mowing * Trimming * Bush Hogging * Weed Control * Gutter Cleaning
828-657-6518 828-223-0310
Quality Lawn Care 223-8191
ROOFING
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No Job Too Small Discount for Senior Citizens
GARY LEE QUEEN’S ROOFING
Golden Valley Community Over 35 Years Experience ✓ All work guaranteed ✓ Specializing in all types of roofing, new & old ✓ References furnished ✓ Vinyl Siding ✓ 10% DISCOUNT FOR SENIOR CITIZENS CHURCHES & COMMUNITY BUILDINGS ALSO METAL ROOFS
5 YEAR WARRANTY ON LABOR FREE ESTIMATES
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Hensley’s Power Washing
828-245-6333 828-253-9107 AFFORDABLE HOUSE WASHING WITH experience & knowledge & Great Customer service We Can Bring Water
PAINTING
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WINDOWS & SIDING ENTRANCE DOORS
Great references Free Estimates John 3:16
TREE CARE
Free Estimates & Fully Insured Licensed Contractor
Licensed Contractor with 35 Years Experience
245-6367
PAINTING
Fully Insured Free Estimates 20 Years Experience Senior Citizens & Veterans Discounts
Mark Reid 828-289-1871
ROOFING E. P. & Assoc. Roofing Keeping You Dry
Interior & Exterior INSURED FREE ESTIMATES Reasonable Rates
All types of roofs Metal & Shingles Roof Repairs No job too big or too small, we do them all! All work guaranteed!
Ernie Pennington
Owner Jerry Lancaster 286-0822
828-223-0201 cell 828-657-9132 home
TREE TREE CARE CARE
VETERINARIAN
Carolina Carolina Tree Tree Care Care
& & Stump Stump Grinding Grinding Topping & Removal Stump Grinding
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Family Owned & Operated Local Business
Interior & Exterior 22 years experience
Todd McGinnis Roofing Rubberized/Roofing Metal Fix Leaks
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(828) (828) 289-7092 289-7092 Senior SeniorCitizen CitizenDiscounts Discounts
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Spindale Denny’s 286-0033 *Dog/Cat spay/neuter program *Low-cost monthly shot clinic *Flea & tick control *Heart worm prevention *SALE* Save Up To $4600 Today
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18
— The
Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, Thursday, October 15, 2009
nation/world
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2000 Buick Regal GS
#3170 3800 V6 Leather All Power Chrome Wheels
4,970
$
2001 Lincoln Continental
#3100A V8 Leather P-Seat Fully Equipped
5,880
$
1999 Ford Mustang
#3176 V6 5-Spd AC All Power Sporty!
$
5,980
In this 2009 file photo, family and comrades grieve as they escort the coffin of a slain Iraqi traffic policeman in Baghdad, Iraq. It was reported Wednesday that at least 85,000 Iraqis lost their lives from 2004-2008 in violence, which the government said in its first comprehensive tally released since the war began, the toll counted Iraqi civilians, military and police.
Govermment: 85,000 Iraqis killed in violence 2005 Dodge Stratus R/T
$
#2405 V6 Auto AC CD Alloys
6,988
2002 Ford Ranger Ext Cab Edge
$
#2052 V6 Auto AC Alloys
7,595
EASY FINANCING AVAILABLE
1996 Lexus LS 400
7,780
$
#3175 V8 Leather Moonroof All Power Like New!
2000 Cadillac Eldorado ETC
#3114 Only 64K Miles V8 Leather Like New!
$
7,945
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2005 Ford F-150 XL 4x4
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$
8,960
2004 Chevy Trailblazer LS #3111 Auto AC CD All Power Alloys
$
8,975
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2007 Chevy Silverado Ext Cab
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$
10,840
2003 Acura MDX
#3177 V6 Moonroof CD P-Seats Leather 3rd Row Seat
$
10,940
BAGHDAD (AP) — At least 85,000 Iraqis lost their lives from 2004-2008 in violence, the government said in its first comprehensive official tally released since the war began. The report by the Human Rights Ministry said 85,694 people were killed from the beginning of 2004 to Oct. 31, 2008 and 147,195 were wounded. It counted Iraqi civilians, military and police but did not cover U.S. military deaths, insurgents, or foreigners, including contractors or U.S. forces. And it did not include the first months of the war after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. The Associated Press reported in April that the government had recorded 87,215 Iraqi deaths from 2005 to February 2009, a toll very similar to the latest release. It was based on government statistics obtained by the AP. Until the AP report, the government’s toll of Iraqi deaths had been one of the most closely guarded secrets of the war. It has been hotly disputed because of the high political stakes in a war opposed by many countries and by a large portion of the American public. Critics on each side accuse the other of manipulating
the toll to sway public opinion. The ministry’s report came out late Tuesday as part of a larger study on human rights in the country. Violence has declined dramatically since the worst years, but almost every person in Iraq has been touched by the violence. Insurgents continue to target civilians, especially Shiites and their shrines. Iraq’s death toll continued to climb on Wednesday when three near simultaneous blasts struck the southern Shiite holy city of Karbala. At least six people were killed, Iraqi police and medical officials said. The ministry’s report said 1,279 children and 2,334 women were killed in the five-year period covered. It said 263 university professors, 21 judges, 95 lawyers and 269 journalists were killed, singling out some of the professions which were specifically targeted as the country descended into chaos. According to the report, 2006 was the deadliest year with 32,622 killed or found dead. The toll for 2004 was 11,313, rising to 15,817 the next year. The second deadliest year in the period covered was 2007 with 19,155 killed or found dead. The toll fell to 6,787 in 2008.
Calling all ghouls, ghosts & goblins un-boo-lievable Costume Pictures to be featured in the Daily Courier on saturday, october 31, 2009
show us your best Costume.
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only 10. $
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2007 Honda Civic Coupe #3174 Auto AC CD All Power 35 MPG Hwy
$
10,985
2003 Toyota 4-Runner Sport #2171 V8 Moonroof All Power CD Alloys
$
13,775
BEST SERVICE BEST SELECTION • BEST PRICES
The Daily Courier
Attn: Halloween Costume Page 601 Oak Street • Forest City, NC 28043 Must be received by 5PM, Monday, october 26, 2009
Publisher reserves the right to rejeCt any entry.
Please Print Clearly! - Calling all ghouls, ghosts & goblins Name(s): ___________________________________________________________ City, State ___________________________________________________________
2004 Ford F-150 Ext Cab XLT #3179 V8 All Power CD Tilt & Cruise Alloys 4x4
14,875
$
2007 Toyota Camry SE
#3181 2.4L Auto AC All Power CD Alloys, Moonroof
$
Each picture . . . $10.00
15,960
828-245-0128 800-356-3166
269 West Main • Forest City
DLR #2458
Total $______________________________
Name ________________________________ Home # _______________________ Address _________________________________City ________________________ I, ____________________________, take full responsibility for the contents of this ad. signed: _____________________________ Date:_____________________ Picture(s) will not be published unless this form is COMPLETELY FILLED OUT.