hpe09202010

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MONDAY

HARLEM NIGHTS: Event proceeds support Coltrane festival. 1C

September 20, 2010 127th year No. 263

SCHOOL IMPROVEMENTS: Board approves grant request. 1B

www.hpe.com High Point, N.C.

BIG BUCS: Tampa Bay makes Carolina pay. 1D

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Making the turn

WHO’S NEWS

Once a ‘white elephant,’ Winding Creek has started pulling in the green

Brandy Barnes joined First Mortgage Corp. The Guilford County native has been in the mortgage industry for more than six years.

BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

THOMASVILLE – Once a political issue in the Chair City several years ago, Thomasville officials say revenues for cityowned Winding Creek Golf Course have exceeded operating expenses for the last five years. For revenues to exceed operating expenses the last five years, city officials said they streamlined the golf course’s operations, cut employees and changed marketing strategies. The city also hasn’t taken on additional capital projects at Winding Creek, City Manager Kelly Craver said. “The course is in good shape,” said Jason Gentel, Winding Creek’s golf pro. “The one thing is that we are not spending as much. Our operational costs are down, and we market it. We are doing a little bit better in our marketing, trying to get our name out there.” The course has lost money in all but six years since it opened in 1996. As a result, some residents and City Council members, such as former Thomasville Councilman Dwight Cornelison, previously called for the course

INSIDE

BAD MARKET: Chair City’s last new car dealership closes doors. 1B SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Winding Creek Golf Pro Jason Gentel is pictured with part of the golf course in the background. to be sold or leased, citing that the amenity was too costly for the city to afford. Cornelison said he still thinks Thomasville shouldn’t be in the golfing business. “Theoretically, I would always rather private enterprise do it, but that’s not plausible with this situation,” Cornelison said, adding that the city would have made little money by leasing the golf course.

Costing the city $3,450,000 to build, the golf course is nestled on rolling terrain off N.C. 109 and is located on a former city landfill. A total of $643,492 is remaining on a loan for the golf course that the city projects to be paid off in 2013, said Tony Jarrett, the city’s finance director. “A lot of times people will say, ‘Well, it’s not turning profit because it’s

not covering the debt,’” City Manager Kelly Craver said. “We all understand that, but it was set up as a recreational facility and for recreation programs.” While the issue was once political, the golf course has a bright future, Gentel said. Between 30,000 to 33,000 rounds have been played annually at the golf course for the last five years, he said. Gentel

believes the golf course will remain consistently profitable for years to come. “I have no doubt it will,” Gentel said. “We are going through a challenging economic time, and we are holding our own right now. I think this trend is hopefully going to keep going and even get better.”

OBITUARIES

Mozelle Craven, 89 George Dorsette, 73 Mary Fitzgerald, 64 Cordela Gaines, 105 Ruby Knopps, 77 Kathleen Lanier, 89 Terry Pickett, 71 Michael Shore, 53 Robert Trogdon Obituaries, 2B

dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

WEATHER

Fire, police departments get project funding BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – City public safety agencies have gotten the go-ahead for funding for projects that will entail capital improvements and technological enhancements. The City Council approved a $1.3 million contract for Triad Builders of King to convert the site of the former Fire Station No. 4 on Fisher Avenue into the department’s maintenance facility. It will give the department much needed new space for its maintenance and logistics operations, which had been housed in the basement of the department’s headquarters on S. Elm Street, according to High Point Fire Department Chief David Taylor. “This is certainly an appropriate reuse of a facility. It’s more centrally located than the current site on the south end of town,” Taylor told the council last week. The headquarters basement is prone to

flooding and is too small to accommodate the department’s ladder trucks. As a result, maintenance crews have to work outside on some fire apparatus year-round. The new site

The funds, which do not require a city match, will be used by the police department to purchase license plate readers and in-car cameras. will have higher ceilings, which should solve this problem. The contract calls for upgrading the existing facility and the construction of an addition to the building. The project will entail expenditure of the

last of the $6.5 million budgeted for public safety improvements in bond money approved by voters in a 2004 referendum. Bond funds also have been used for a replacement fire station on Chestnut Drive and a new station 4 on Old Winston Road. The High Point Police Department is getting a piece of a federal grant thanks to a budget amendment approved by the council to appropriate $324,109 in grant funds for the 2010 Justice Assistance Grant program. The funds, which were awarded by the U.S. Department of Justice and do not require a city match, will be used by the department to purchase license plate readers and in-car cameras. Under an agreement with the Greensboro Police Department and Guilford County Sheriff’s Office, High Point’s share of the funds is $76,569.60. The money is included in the 201011 budget. pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

Trinity to decide on garbage, recycling service BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

TRINITY – Trinity officials may take the next step Tuesday toward implementing a mandatory trash and recycling service. At its regular monthly meeting Tuesday night, the Trinity City Council is set to consider a resolution of intent to provide the curbside service in January. The City Council would provide the service by contracting with a corporation formed by three of the city’s haulers – Roadside Trash, Smith Disposal and Handy’s Garbage. “It’s for the task force and for the haulers,” City Manager Ann

Bailie said of the resolution. “We have been down the road of providing curbside trash and recycling services twice before. It’s to give assurance to the haulers to go ahead and get those things in process. “It’s not a commitment to award the contract to them by any means, but it is assurance that the council is really going to do it. That’s what we are looking to do.” If the City Council approves the resolution Tuesday night, city staff would look to have a contract for the haulers for the City Council’s consideration in October, Bailie said. The goal is

to have the service implemented in January, according to the city manager. The service “would be mandatory, but there would be exceptions for residents whose driveways are accessed from private roads,” Bailie said. She said the city is considering the service because City Hall currently gets about 20 calls a week from residents who don’t have a place to recycle since the N.C. General Assembly changed the laws on recycling. If the city implements the service in January, forming the corporation of the three haulers would mean that the city would

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

have to pay displacement fees of $1,880 to the other haulers operating in Trinity, according to information reviewed by the City Council last month. If the city decided to contract with anyone other than Roadside Trash, Smith Disposal and Handy’s Garbage, it would have to pay displacement fees of $180,000 to the three haulers. City officials have said they expect the fee for the service to be approximately $15 each month. Last year, the service was projected to cost $486,000 a year, with a monthly fee of $15. dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

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CAROLINAS 2A www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Habitat for Humanity kicks off fall building blitz

Holy Angels fires worker after charge in incident MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

BELMONT – A staff member at Holy Angels, a residential facility in Belmont for people with physical and mental disabilities, has been charged with taking indecent liberties with an underage female resident. Dana Michael Thomas, 50, was booked into Gaston County jail on Friday and was there late Saturday on $100,000 bond. He had worked at Holy Angels for nine months. Thomas doesn’t have a prior criminal arrest in North Carolina, according to a search of N.C. Court records conducted by the Observer. Thomas is accused of touching a mentally disabled resident on Tuesday, said Sister Nancy Nance, vice president of community relations for the organization. He was

MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

CHARLOTTE – The roof leaked, the floor sagged and kitchen cabinets were falling apart at Frances Carter’s threebedroom ranch in northeast Charlotte. Her adult sons had fixed what they could, but the 72-year-old widow and her family couldn’t afford what they really needed: a new roof, new flooring and repairs throughout the kitchen and bathroom of the Hidden Valley home. On Saturday, volunteers tackled Carter’s problems with hammers, saws and crowbars as part of Habitat for Humanity of Charlotte’s fall building blitz. The project aims to build eight new houses, refurbish eight foreclosed homes and make critical repairs at homes of three families in need. About 200 volunteers kicked off the blitz Saturday with work throughout Charlotte. About 2,000 volunteers are expected to take part before the projects wrap up by the end of the year. When work is complete, “we will have served 19 families,” said Phil Prince, communication director for the nonprofit Habitat for Humanity of Charlotte. “They won’t have to worry about rain coming in through their roof or critters coming up through the floor.”

fired the next day. Nance said that, to her knowledge, the incident involves one alleged act, though Belmont Police and the Department of Social Services are investigating. Holy Angels is a private, nonprofit corporation that provides programs and services for children and adults with varying degrees of disabilities in a residential setting. Some of the people the program serves, according to the Holy Angels website, “have physical disabilities and are medically fragile.” Nance said this is the first incident of this nature in the organization’s 55-year history. “We are devastated,” she said Saturday night. Thomas worked the night shift as a direct support professional for Holy Angels. His job was to take care of the day-today needs of residents.

Raleigh woman killed when car crashes into creek

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Snagged in the web

RALEIGH (AP) – North Carolina police say a 73year-old Raleigh woman has died after the car she was riding in ran off the road and landed in a creek. Sharon Smith with the Highway Patrol said Paula Joan Wheeler died Saturday when the car went down an embank-

A small fragment of pine tree flotsam is snared by a spiderweb at T. W. Andrews High School.

Health department focuses on infant mortality BY DAVID NIVENS ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

WALK TO REMEMBER

GUILFORD COUNTY – Sixty-four babies died before their first birthday in Guilford County in 2009. That’s why the Guilford County Department of Public Health’s Coalition on Infant Mortality is drawing attention to infant mortality with an awareness commercial on selected Time Warner Cable television networks during September and an October walk at Triad Park. For health experts, infant mortality is defined as the death of an infant before its first birthday. North Carolina’s infant mortality rate dropped in 2009 to the lowest level since records have been kept to 7.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared with 8.2 percent in 2008. Guilford’s 2009 rate was 10.4. “Infant mortality is a complex

What: The Heartstrings Pregnancy & Infant Loss Support 6th Annual Walk to Remember. When: Oct. 9, registration starts at 9:15 a.m. The program begins at 10:15 a.m. followed by a 1.5-mile walk at 11:15 a.m. Register online at www.heartstringssupport.org. Where: Triad Park, 9652 East Mountain Street, at shelter No. 1 in Kernersville. and continuing problem that strikes all types of families at any income level and stems from a variety of health and societal ills,” said Merle Green, county health director. “In 1988, North Carolina

was ranked the absolute worst state in the nation, and while strides have been made to overcome that fateful distinction, we have to be vigilant in our fight to save babies so that no family has to bear this unfathomable loss.” The previous state low was 8.1 per 1,000 births in 2006 when the state ranked 10th highest in infant deaths. Family, friends and professional caregivers whose lives have been touched by the tragic death of a baby are invited to participate in the walk. “We walk to honor the babies that have touched our lives and left an indelible mark on our hearts forever,” said Charmaine Purdum, coordinator for the Guilford County Coalition on Infant Mortality.

ment and landed in Swift Creek. WRA L -TV in Ral e ig h re porte d th at an oth e r w oman in h e r 70s an d a 10-ye arol d ch il d w e re al so i n th e car. They were taken to WakeMed for treatment, but their conditions were not available.

Camp Lejeune discovers bed bugs in barracks CAMP LEJEUNE (AP) – The Marines have a fight on their hands that is a bit closer to home than usual. Officials at Camp Lejeune tell The Daily News of Jacksonville that bed bugs were discovered in a barracks room on the massive North Carolina base. Public Affairs Office Maj. Brad Gordon says the pests will be eradicated and prevented from

spreading. He says the Marines have been told there is sufficient funding to pay for the treatments. Bedbugs have been infesting U.S. households on a scale unseen in more than a half-century. They are largely resistant to common pesticides. The bloodsuckers are not known to spread disease but their bites leave itchy red welts.

LOTTERY

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Winning numbers selected Saturday in the N.C. Lottery: Powerball 1-18-37-39-44 Powerball: 13 Power Play: 4

dnivens@hpe.com | 888-3626

DAY Pick 3: 7-1-8 NIGHT Pick 3: 0-8-1 Pick 4: 5-7-2-0 Cash 5: 7-13-14-20-24

Winning numbers selected Saturday in the Virginia Lottery:

BOTTOM LINE

ACCURACY

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The High Point Enterprise strives for accuracy. Readers who think a factual error has been made are encouraged to call the newsroom at 888-3500. When a factual error has been found a correction will be published.

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Illinois woman charged in dog poop-infused meltdown NAPERVILLE, Ill. (AP) – Dog owners, beware: If you live in suburban Chicago and don’t pick up after your pet, you might get tossed an unpleasant reminder. Police in Naperville say a woman who stepped in dog feces outside her apartment appears to have retali-

ated by heaving it at the door of her neighbor who owns a dog. Susan Miller was charged with disorderly conduct after her bizarre protest Wednesday. The Naperville Sun reports that police say Miller also uprooted a sign telling residents to pick up dog waste

and placed it on the neighbor’s patio. Miller was arrested after the neighbor called police. An unapologetic Miller says if she can pick up the poop from her 80pound dog, her neighbor can pick up after a 20-pound dog. Naperville is about 30 miles west of Chicago.

DAY NIGHT Pick 3: 4-9-7 Pick 3: 4-5-9 Pick 4: 9-1-3-9 Pick 4: 6-2-7-5 Cash 5: 3-8-20-22-34 Cash 5: 2-5-18-29-31 1-804-662-5825 Win For Life: 12-18-21-29-37-42 Free Ball: 28 Winning numbers selected Saturday in the S.C. Lottery: DAY Pick 3: 3-5-2 Pick 4: 2-3-4-8

Winning numbers selected Saturday in Tennessee Lottery: DAY Cash 3: 7-5-8 Cash 4: 1-3-5-1

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT US

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CAROLINAS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 www.hpe.com

Body of Concord police chief’s daughter found MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

The body of Valerie Hamilton, the 23-year-old daughter of Concord’s police chief, was found Saturday night in a storage unit on Monroe Road in southeast Charlotte, police say. Charlotte-Mecklenburg police have issued a murder warrant for 34-year-old Michael Neal Harvey, a registered sex offender with a lengthy criminal record.

Harvey is thought to be the man seen on video surveillance leaving the Thomas Street Tavern in Plaza Midwood early last Wednesday morning with Hamilton. She had not been seen or heard from since leaving the restaurant. Police say they believe Harvey is still in the Charlotte area and are asking the public for help. The search was continuing early Sunday afternoon. Harvey has past arrests for offenses that include firearm possession, according to a check of court records. “We’re very earnestly asking the public’s help in locating Mr. Harvey

or the Chevy Blazer he is driving,� CMPD Maj. Harold Medlock said Sunday. The missing person case had attracted national attention, with the TV show “America’s Most Wanted� including Hamilton’s status on its website Saturday. Medlock said he had hoped for a better ending to the search. “When we start a search like this, we always hope we can return the missing person safely to their family,� Medlock said Sunday morning. Instead, a three-day search by police ended Saturday evening at the Mini-Storage Center, in the

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4500 block of Monroe Road. That’s where investigators found Hamilton’s body. Police say auto theft warrants also have been issued for Harvey, although he is not driving Hamilton’s car. That vehicle was found parked near the Thomas Street Tavern. Instead, police say Harvey was last seen in a white 1996 Chevrolet Blazer, with N.C. tags ZXE-1756. Anyone who spots that vehicle or knows the whereabouts of Harvey is asked to call 911, or contact detectives at 704-336-VCAT. Information also can be left with Crime Stoppers, 704334-1600.

Peters Medical Research Is currently conducting a clinical research study of investigational medication for subjects with inadequately controlled asthma. If you are between the ages of 18 and 65 and do not smoke, Call Peters Medical Research at 336-883-9773 ext 275

Clayton officials say string of fires are arson CLAYTON (AP) — Police are investigating another suspicious fire in an abandoned home in Clayton. Multiple media outlets reported that Saturday’s fire was the ninth intentionally

set in the town about 15 miles southeast of Raleigh since October 2009. Wilson Mills Fire Chief Ricky Barbour said the burned house had been abandoned for decades and had

no power. Barbour said authorities and landowners are taking steps to secure other abandoned homes in the town about 15 miles southeast of Raleigh. Eight other abandoned homes or those

of each month at Lebanon United Methodist Church, 237 Idol St. Jennifer Chilton, 906-0934.

Take Off Pounds Sensibly, High Point chapter 618, meets at 6 p.m. each Thursday at Christ United Methodist Church, 1300 N. College Drive. Rick Penn at 821-2093.

ON THE SCENE

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Items to be published in this column must be in the offices of The High Point Enterprise no later than seven calendar days before the date of the event. On the Scene runs Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

SPECIAL INTEREST Fall Sewing Day will be held 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday at New Covenant Lutheran Church, 10445 N. Main St., Archdale. Participants will make pillows for Randolph Hospital’s Cancer Center, guilts for local homeless people and shopping bags to sell to benefit Community Outreach of Archdale-Trinity. Sewing machines will be provided. Refreshments will be available. Falls Prevention Awareness Day events will be held 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Thursday at Millis Regional Health Education Center, 600 N. Elm St. Events include free health information, screenings and giveaways. 878-6888

Co-Dependents Anonymous, a 12-step group for men and women to recover from co-dependence and to develop and maintain healthy relationships, meets 6-7 p.m. each Thursday at Lebanon United Methodist Church, 237 Idol Drive. Jan, 882-6480 Mother Baby PEP (Postpartum Emotion with Possibilities) Talks, for mothers of new babies, and afternoon tea are held at 4 p.m. every Thursday at the YWCA of High Point, 112 Gatewood Ave. Free, 8123937, e-mail motherbabyfoundation@northstate. net, online at www.motherbabyfoundation.org

SUPPORT GROUPS

Triad Job Search Network of Greensboro/High Point, a group for unemployed professionals, meets 9-11 a.m. each Tuesday at Covenant United Methodist Church, 1526 Skeet Club Road. 3331677, www.tjsn.net

Harmony Women’s Group, a therapeutic group for women age 21 and older with mild to moderate depression and life adjustment issues, meets 4:30-5:30 p.m. the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month at Regional Psychiatric Associates/High Point Behavioral Health, 320 Boulevard Ave. Cost is $10 per session. To register or for information, call Tara Ayers or Molly Fowler at 878-6226.

Grandparents Raising Grandchildren, a group for people age 55 and older serving as parents, meets noon-1 p.m. every third Tuesday at the YWCA, 112 Gatewood Ave. It is sponsored by Senior Resources of Guilford and the YWCA in High Point and Greensboro. Lunch is provided; transportation and child care can be provided. Registration is required. 884-4816

Western Carolina Piedmont Chapter of the Alzheimer’s and Related Disorders Association family support group meets at 6 p.m. the fourth Thursday

Family Crisis Center of Archdale support group sessions are held 6-8 p.m. Mondays at 10607 N. Main St., Archdale. Laura Stockwell, 434-5579.

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Better Hearing, Better You

Take Off Pounds Sensibly meets at 6 p.m. each Monday at Trinity Heights Wesleyan Church, 5814 Surrett Drive, Archdale. Pattie, 434-1912 Nurturing the New Mother, a support group, meets at 4 p.m. each Thursday at High Point Regional Hospital’s Outpatient Behavioral Health office, 320 Boulevard Ave. It is led by Cynthia Palmer, a marriage and family therapist. Sessions are $10 each, and they are in an open-group-discussion format. Alternate child care should be arranged. 878-6098.

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under construction in the Clayton area have been set on fire since Oct. 31, 2009. State police are helping local investigators determine whether all the fires are related.

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Monday September 20, 2010

JOHN HOOD: Why are lobbyists big fans of federal bailouts? TOMORROW

Opinion Page Editor: Vince Wheeler vwheeler@hpe.com (336) 888-3517

4A

The TV programming we get is a bunch of junk We talk about being taken by our government, but how about the high prices we pay to watch television? You pay around $75 a month for programing. You get about 30 channels out of 200-plus that are not garbage. You watch an hourlong show and you see 20 minutes of it and the rest is ads. I know because we record a lot on DVR and have timed how long it takes to watch the program. In a twohour program you see about 50 minutes of program and the rest is ads. Live programs are the same, you forget what they are talking about while there are five minutes of ads in between, like the news and weather. I don’t know about all the rest of your readers, but I’m tired of paying for all the ads and reruns. There are not hardly any new shows anymore, and what there are aren’t worth watching with so many ads. Because of rentals and DVD sells, all the movies have been taken off except 20- to 30-year-old movies, and they show them over and over. Let’s quit buying this junk and the networks will start putting out something beside Raymond, Andy Griffith, etc. shows 15 times a day. It’s time to stand up for ourselves. God bless. ALONZO INMAN Trinity

You watch an hourlong show and you see 20 minutes of it and the rest is ads.

Southwest students were just having ‘football fun’ On Friday, Sept. 10, I was in attendance with my family at the Southwest versus Andrews football game in High Point. There was an outstanding group of wholehearted supporters present, being the students of Southwest High School, Southwest Middle and Southwest Elementary Schools! The students were a taped-off portion of the stands. They were in very high spirits, dressed in school colors from head to toe. They cheered, yelled, chanted

forever” (Hebrews 13:8). That internal, as well as external, force involved in the history of life is the Lord Jesus Christ; “in Him is life” (I John 5:11, 12). CLAYTON L. PROCTOR SR. Trinity

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An independent newspaper Founded in 1883 Michael B. Starn Publisher

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Thomas L. Blount Editor

for the next 10 years

and sang. I was very proud to be present and be a part of such an enthusiastic crowd. I hope that any Southwest parent that reads this small note will tell their children to keep up the spirit; it is an important part of the game. These students were all just having football fun. It was a shame when a school official tried to dampen the spirit by taking away a beach ball being batted around and singled out a student to come out of the stands. I concede with taking away the ball so that it would not go onto the field, but I did not see any spectators complaining, and hoped that the school official would decide to let the kids have some good clean fun. I completely understand that students must abide by the Guilford County Schools Disciplinary policy while on school property, but I must point out that I am sure many parents were happy that their kids where at the ballgame with peers having some good clean fun rather than out on the streets looking for trouble. Cheer on! PAULA B. PEARMAN Colfax

How can random DNA mutations be source of life? A few weeks ago, Fox8 evening news showed a six-legged calf, a perfect example of mutation (a mistake in the DNA code). Evolutionists believe that time, change, and selected beneficial mutations produce all the diversity we see today, believing

random changes in the DNA are the source of all life on Earth. All forms of life are an accumulation of beneficial mistakes which in turn have created a mathematical impossibility, forcing many world-leading evolutionists to admit said benefits present a serious problem for their theory on mutation. They all agree that, “The textbook of minuscule mutations, being slowly selected to produce elaborate evolution, is just flatly false.” Also the vast majority of evolutionists at the Chicago conference agreed that the neo-Darwinian mechanism of mutation selection could no longer be regarded as a scientifically tenable explanation for the origin and diversity of life. Evolutionist Colin Patterson, the senior paleontologist at the British Museum, stated, “A theory that simply accepts diversity of life without offering a mechanism to explain how that diversity came into being cannot be considered a scientific theory at all.” Evolutionist Pierre Grassé, known as the dean of French zoologists said, “My knowledge of ‘the living world’ convinces me that there must be some internal force involved in the history of life.” Yet many evolutionists still believe and teach minuscule mutations produce elaborate complexity, diversity and origin of life despite all the evidence to the contrary. Would you like a theory that is supported by all evidence, is impossible to prove wrong, is unchangeable and is forever settled in heaven? God’s Word is “the same yesterday, today and

It was with great excitement that I watched WGHP’s news reports on High Point University’s expansion plans. As an alumnus, I know firsthand the unique educational experiences available at HPU. The addition of new facilities, especially the proposed football, basketball and other sports arenas, would catapult the university and by extension the city of High Point to a new level of distinction that can only make a sustained, positive contribution to the quality of life. Currently, it is estimated that the university contributes over $300 million per year to the city’s economy, in addition to thousands of hours of community service by students. Imagine the future impact of such an expansion as this! High Point University has proven itself to be a responsible and fair neighbor, buying land and homes at fair prices and never forcing people out of their homes against their will. As HPU President Nido Qubein mentioned in the interview, the university needs the help of the city to make these plans reality. I would like to urge the High Point City Council to assist the university – and the entire community – in this endeavor. I can’t wait to see what the university and the city will look like in 10 years! EDWINA L. CRADY Clemmons

YOUR VIEW POLL

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Could Tea Party candidate successes in Republican Party primaries harm or help the GOP’s attraction to independent and unaffiliated voters in November? In 30 words or less (no name, address required), e-mail us your thoughts to letterbox@hpe.com. Here is one response: • No one has ever used the divide and conquer weapon more efficiently than the Democrats.

Vince Wheeler Opinion Page Editor 210 Church Ave., High Point, N.C. 27262 (336) 888-3500 www.hpe.com

ARCHDALE

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City Council Mayor Bert Lance-Stone, 203 Belgian Drive, Archdale, NC 27263; 431-6924 h; 431-2130 4319141 w Larry Warlick, 415 Trindale Road, Archdale, NC 27263; 4313860 Eddie Causey, 1006 Bryan Lane, Archdale, NC 27263; 431-7233 Roger Blackwell, 5125 Village Lane, Archdale, NC 27263; 4318170 h Tim Williams, 323 Daniel Paul Dr., Archdale, NC 27263; 431-9235 h Trey Gray, 118 Apollo Circle, Archdale, NC 27263; 431-3074 h, 434-5400 w Lewis Dorsett, 222 Alison Lane, 27263; 431-0368 h, 431-8656 w

OUR MISSION

On race, some look away, look away ... forget “I wish I was in the land of cotton, old times there are not forgotten ...” – lyric from “Dixie.”

A

ctually, old times there are forgotten quite a bit. For 145 years, ever since a grim-faced Robert E. Lee rode away from Wilmer McLean’s house in Appomattox, Va., where he had surrendered his army, apologists for the South have been trying to induce the rest of us to forget the causes of the Civil War, to imbue an act of treachery and treason with a nobility of purpose it did not, in fact, possess. “State’s rights,” they say. “State’s rights to maintain a system of human slavery,” they do NOT say. It is the social and political equivalent of an extreme makeover. The thinking seems to be: when history collides with cherished self image, change history. Something very similar seems to be afoot with regard to a related event much closer to us in time: the civil rights movement of the ’50s and ’60s. Just a few months ago, we saw conservative activist Glenn Beck claim ownership of that move-

ment, in defiance of historical memory. “... We were the people that did it in the first place!” he cried. Last week, in an essay in the WashOPINION ington Post, University of Virginia Leonard Professor Gerard Pitts Alexander analyzed ■■■ voting trends from the civil rights era to bolster his thesis that social conservatism is not intolerant. Somehow, he never got around to explaining how it is, then, that social conservatives were always the ones standing in schoolhouse doors, blockading polling places, burning buses and cracking skulls. And now, here’s Haley Barbour. The governor of Mississippi raised eyebrows and blood pressures a few weeks ago when, in an interview with Human Events, a conservative website and magazine, he credited his generation of white Southerners with leading the South into a new era of integration. It was, he said, “my generation, who went to integrated schools. I went to in-

tegrated college – never thought twice about it.” Barber is 62. In the Mississippi of his youth, he legally could not have gone to integrated schools. As for college: he attended Ole Miss in 1965; three years before, the attempt by a single black man, James Meredith, to enroll there required negotiations between the attorney general and the governor and ultimately, the intercession of U.S. marshals; a riot ensued in which more than 100 marshals were injured and two people killed. Pressed on this in a later interview, Barbour doubled down. Those years of forced integration were, he said, “a very pleasant experience.” He singled out a black classmate, Verna Bailey, with whom he said he developed a friendly rapport. They sat next to each other, she let him copy her notes. “I still love her,” he said. So Margaret Talev of McClatchy Newspapers called Bailey, now an educator in Oregon. “I don’t remember him at all, no,” said Bailey, “because during that time that certainly wasn’t a pleasant experience for me. My interactions with white people were very, very limited. Very,

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

very few reached out at all.” While she didn’t remember Barbour, Bailey did remember days when “I thought my life was going to end.” She did remember being pelted with coins and beer. She did remember “this mass of anger and hostility.” Bailey completed four years of course work in three – not because she was a great student, she said, but because she couldn’t wait to get out of there. Memory is a funny thing, isn’t it? It softens rough places. It absolves our sins. Memory forgives us. But sometimes, it is morally necessary to forgo that salve, to embrace the rough places and lack of absolution, for the lessons they have to teach. Apparently, some conservatives still can’t bring themselves to do that, even now. That’s truly sad. When history collides with self-image, it is not history a principled person seeks to change. LEONARD PITTS JR., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald. E-mail him at lpitts@miamiherald.com. Pitts chats with readers every Wednesday from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. EDT on www.MiamiHerald.com.

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The High Point Enterprise is committed to this community ... and always will serve it by being an intensely local newspaper of excellent quality every day.

LETTER RULES

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The Enterprise welcomes letters. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for length and clarity and decorum. Writers are limited to 300 words and to no more than one letter every two weeks. Please include name, home address and daytime phone number. Mail to: Enterprise Letter Box P.O. Box 1009 High Point, NC 27261 Fax to: (336) 888-3644 E-mail to: letterbox@hpe.com


Monday September 20, 2010

NOT A SPY: Released US hiker claims no crimes committed against Iran. 6A

Managing Editor: Sherrie Dockery sdockery@hpe.com (336) 888-3539

5A

Big waves pound Bermuda

Re-Silvering Clinic A Specialist will be in our store to provide a restoration evaluation for your family heirlooms.

Hurricane Igor downgraded to Category 1 HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP) – Big waves pounded Bermuda’s beaches Sunday as islanders rushed to board up windows, fill sandbags and stock up on water, food and other supplies before Hurricane Igor’s expected arrival. Under dark, cloudy skies, onlookers gathered along beaches to watch the 15-foot (5-meter) surf smash into breakwaters. Some were optimistic that a weakened Igor, which was downgraded to a Category 1 hurricane overnight, would spare the wealthy British enclave serious damage. “We prayed that the storm would be downgraded, and it looks like our prayers have been answered,� said Fred Swan,

BRIEFS

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Vatican declares Pope’s trip a success BIRMINGHAM, England – The Vatican declared Pope Benedict XVI’s fourday visit to Britain a “great success� Sunday, saying the pontiff was able to reach out to a nation wary of his message and angry at his church’s sex abuse scandal. Benedict praised British heroics against the Nazis to mark the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Britain on Sunday.

Dutch arrest alleged UK terror suspect AMSTERDAM – Dutch police on Sunday arrested a British man of Somali ancestry at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport for possible links to a terrorist group, a spokesman for the Dutch prosecutors said. The man was arrested after flying in from Liverpool, England, and before he flew out to Uganda on a tip from British authorities.

6 abducted police found slain in Mexico ACAPULCO, Mexico – The bodies of six kidnapped police officers, most of them dismembered, were found Sunday in a ravine in the Mexican state of Guerrero. It brought the death toll to eight from a mass abduction of policemen, officials said. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

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Waves crash onto the beach at John Smith’s Bay in Bermuda as Hurricane Igor approaches. Igor was expected to make landfall late Sunday or early today. a 52-year-old teacher. Igor was expected to pass over or very close to Bermuda late Sunday or early today, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. Wind gusts of hurricane force were already being reported on Bermuda by late morning. It had maximum sustained winds of 85 mph – significantly weakened

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from previous days when it was an extremely dangerous Category 4 storm, but still dangerous. Officials urged islanders to take shelter at home. Public Safety Minister David Burch warned “the storm will be a long and punishing one.� High surf has already swept two people out to sea in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Car bombs rip through Iraq; 36 dead BAGHDAD (AP) – Three car bombs tore through Baghdad and the former insurgent stronghold of Fallujah Sunday, killing at least 36 people. The blasts in the capital were so powerful they sheared the sides off buildings and left streets choked with chunks of rubble. It was the worst violence since the U.S. military dropped to 50,000 troops in Iraq and formally declared an end

Big concern over Afghan vote fraud KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – The main Afghan election observer group said Sunday it had serious concerns about the legitimacy of this weekend’s parliamentary vote because of reported fraud, even as President Hamid Karzai commended the balloting as a solid success. The conflicting statements underscored the difficulty of determining the credibility of the vote also hit by militant attacks that hurt the turnout. Afghan officials started gathering and tallying results Sunday in a process that could take weeks if not months to complete.

Ahmadinejad: The future is Iran’s NEW YORK (AP) – Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Sunday that “the future belongs to Iran,� and challenged the United States to accept that his country has a major role in the world. The comments came in an hourlong interview with The Associated Press on the first day of his visit to the United States to attend the annual general assembly of the United Nations this week. He insisted that his gov-

Feeding the hungry across 18 counties including Guilford, Davidson and Randolph.

ernment does not want an atomic bomb – something he has said in the past – and that Iran is only seeking peace and a nuclear-free world. He gave no indication of when Iran would resume talks on its nuclear program. The Iranian president said he was pleased about the release of American hiker Sarah Shourd from a prison in Tehran, but said her two companions still in prison would have to prove their innocence.

to combat operations on Sept. 1, saying Iraqi forces were up to the task of protecting their own country. Insurgents have hammered Iraqi forces and government buildings, capitalizing on gaps in security as the U.S. scales back its military mission and Iraqi politicians fail to overcome divisions and form a new government after national elections in March.

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Monday September 20, 2010

FRANTIC SEARCH: Missing California sect members found praying at park. 6D

Managing Editor: Sherrie Dockery sdockery@hpe.com (336) 888-3539

6A

Released US hiker says she’s not a spy

BRIEFS

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Powell says illegal immigrants do repairs

Hawaii race to feature Abercrombie, Aiona HONOLULU – Former U.S. Rep Neil Abercrombie convincingly won the Democratic nomination for Hawaii governor and will face Republican Lt. Gov. James “Duke� Aiona in an attempt to regain leadership of President Barack Obama’s birth state. Abercrombie defeated former Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann with 60 percent of the vote Saturday.

3 children found shot dead in Texas HOUSTON – Authorities say three children were found shot to death and a man was found wounded at a suburban Houston apartment complex. Harris County Sheriff’s Deputy Jamie Wagner says detectives are trying to determine who was responsible for the shootings. She says the shootings were reported about 9:45 a.m. Sunday at the apartment, about three miles south of Bush Intercontinental Airport.

AP

Sarah Shourd (center) stands with Cindy Hickey, mother of Shane Bauer (left), and Laura Fattal, mother of Josh Fattal, during a news conference in New York Sunday.

Blown-out BP well finally killed at bottom of Gulf The well is dead. Finally. A permanent cement plug sealed BP’s well nearly 2.5 miles below the sea floor in the Gulf, five agonizing months after an explosion sank a drilling rig and led to the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history. Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the federal government’s point man on the disaster, said Sunday BP’s well “is effectively dead� and posed no further threat to the Gulf. Allen said a pressure test to ensure the cement plug would hold was completed at 5:54 a.m. CDT. The April 20 blast killed 11 workers, and 206 million gallons of

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because her fiance, Shane Bauer, and their friend Josh Fattal remain in Tehran’s Evin Prison. “This is not the time to celebrate,� Shourd, 32, said at a New York news conference. “The only thing that enabled me to cross the gulf from prison to freedom alone was the knowledge that Shane and Josh wanted with all their hearts for my suffering to end.�

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NEW YORK (AP) – An American who was held in Iran for more than 13 months said Sunday she and two men detained with her never spied or committed any crime, calling their arrest “a huge misunderstanding.� Discussing her experience for the first time since her release Tuesday, Sarah Shourd underscored her gratitude but said she felt only “one-third free�

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WASHINGTON – Former Secretary of State Colin Powell says illegal immigrants do essential work in the U.S. and he has firsthand knowledge of that – because they fix his house. Powell, a moderate Republican, urged his party Sunday to support immigration generally because it is “what’s keeping this country’s lifeblood moving forward.�


B

SAFE AND SOUND: State earns top grade for protecting voters. 3B FATAL MYSTERY: Fort Bragg families want answers after infant deaths. 3B

Monday September 20, 2010 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

DEAR ABBY: Father’s obituary leaves out important survivor. 3B

Night City Editor: Chris McGaughey cmcgaughey@hpe.com (336) 888-3540

Last of its kind Final new car dealership in Thomasville closes its doors

Thomasville Ford has consolidated with Crescent Ford in High Point, which also is co-owned by Bertschi. Bertschi said Crescent

‘At one point, there were seven new car dealerships in Thomasville. As of now, there are none. That says it all.’

BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

THOMASVILLE – The owners of Thomasville Ford, the Chair City’s last new car sales dealership, say they closed the doors to their dealership last week because of market conditions. “It’s been challenging over here for some time,” said Owen Bertschi, co-owner of Thomasville Ford at 1315 National Highway. “At one point, there were seven new car dealerships in Thomasville. As of now, there are none. That says it all.” According to Bertschi, Ford has had a presence in Thomasville since the 1920s. Bertschi and Claude Draughen, who also is a co-owner of Thomasville Ford, opened Thomasville Ford in 1990, moving from its former Turner Street location to National Highway in 1999. Thomasville Ford employed

WHO’S NEWS

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Owen Bertschi Co-owner Owen Bertschi stands in front of the shuttered Thomasville Co-owner, Thomasville Ford SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Ford dealership on National Highway. 19 workers. The owners said employees will receive severance and health insurance benefits have been paid through the end of the month. “It’s hard to close a business and deal with the employees,” Draughen said. “Just emotionally, it’s tough to do. We gave them some extra pay, paid all the vacations and got caught up on everything. We also quit when we had money enough to pay for everyone else. “Everybody we owed, we have

written checks and have already put them in the mail. “We didn’t want to stay here long enough where somebody would help us close.” Bertschi said the decision to close the dealership did not come from Ford. He said it was made by he and Draughen. “We see a trend where the people in small villages and towns are shopping in larger places.” Draughen said.

Ford is now honoring the sales and service for Thomasville Ford. “We are looking at this glass as half full because the market has now been consolidated and Crescent Ford is responsible for keeping the Ford banner flying high in this whole market area,” he said. “We are aggressively accepting that responsibility and looking forward to that opportunity.”

Dr. Jose Bardelas, founder of the Allergy and Asthma Center of North Carolina, is among the top 4 percent of doctors included on the 2009 list of Best Doctors in North Carolina. Bardelas and his associates are recognized specialists in the treatment of asthma and allergic disorders.

Do you know anyone who deserves some extra attention? You can submit names and photographs of people who could be profiled in the daily “Who’s News” column in The High Point Enterprise. Send information to: Who’s News, The High Point Enterprise, P.O. Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261. E-mail versions with an attached color photograph can be sent to whosnews@hpe.com.

dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

Davidson joins safe-community initiative BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

DAVIDSON COUNTY – If there was a perfect example of what Davidson County law enforcement officers hope will come from a new countywide initiative launched Friday, Brent Bailey is it. Bailey, project reentry coordinator for Goodwill Industries of Northwest North Carolina, provided remarks at the kick-off event for Project Safe Neighborhoods at Davidson County Community College. About 11 years ago in Forsyth County, Bailey was charged with trafficking cocaine and was sentenced to five to seven years in prison. After serving his sentence, the time came to get back on his feet. “I really needed the community to embrace me,” he said, “When I came back, they did embrace me, and I engaged with them and, more specifically, the faith community. In church, I heard the message that I had worth, I had value, I had destiny and not just history, that I had opportunity if I just had initiative and took it and did the things I needed to do.” Bailey did do the things he needed do. He went to Bible college and has established what he says is the fastest growing ministry in Wilkes County. He even became a motivational speaker in an effort to detour youngsters from making the same mistakes he did. Bailey urged community involvement in the PSN initiative, which is a comprehensive prevention, intervention and

prosecution approach to reduce illegal gun and gang-related violence across the country. Davidson County’s four law enforcement agencies have banded together to create Project Safe Davidson County. Project Safe Neighborhoods is being made possible through the United States Attorney’s Office and a grant from the N.C. Governor’s Crime Commission, said Lexington police Chief John Lollis. “This is not just a law enforcement initiative,” Lollis said. “To be successful, we need support from our judicial branch, elected and government officials, community leaders and community service providers.” The first PSN site was established in High Point 13 years ago, said Robert Lang, assistant United States attorney and PSN coordinator for the Middle District of North Carolina. Lang said creating the PSN in Davidson County means all of the counties along the Interstate 85 corridor in the Middle District now have a PSN program. “This is intentional that we are here,” Lang said, noting the gang activity along the Interstate 85 corridor. “We need the community to step up and begin to provide information to the law enforcement so that we can take the chronic violent offenders and put them so where they don’t bring their little brothers and cousins into this stuff because that’s how they get introduced,” Lang said. dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

CHECK IT OUT!

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DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Helping hand Henry Lehnert gets help from his buddy Cary Berrier with decorating a hand puppet at a craft table at Day in the Park on Saturday.

Officials seek expanded grant BY DAVID NIVENS ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

GUILFORD COUNTY – An expanded federal grant to improve the performance of 10 additional schools was just too good for school officials to turn down. The Guilford County Board of Education approved seeking a total of $23 million over five years for 20 schools after hearing from two educators last week. Federal officials have granted permission for the district to expand the program to 20 schools and have offered to nearly double the funding sought for 10 schools. About $19 million of the total grant would go to salaries, teacher bonuses, school incentives and

benefits over five years. “We need the funds for the teachers and resources for the students,” said Geraldine Cox, principal of Rankin Elementary School. “The program will improve student achievement. We’d like to be able to do more with more.” In March, the school board approved a revised teacher incentive pay plan to pay for as much as 40 percent of the annual $4.4 million cost of the Mission Possible program. The proposed strategic compensation plan would replace Mission Possible and two other programs in August 2011 to help the district recruit and retain teachers for hard to staff positions. Montlieu Math and Science Academy, a High

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

Point elementary school, and Jamestown Middle School are among the 20 schools eligible for the Teacher Incentive Fund. Richard Thomae, principal of Murphey Traditional Academy, said the funding would allow him to recruit highly-qualified teachers. All strategic compensation plan target school employees, including cafeteria workers and custodians, would earn bonuses. Mission Possible pays teachers and principals in 20 schools bonuses and higher salaries for working in schools where turnover is a problem and for teaching state-tested courses. Grants allow 10 other schools to participate. dnivens@hpe.com | 888-3626

At the new hpe.com, you’re just a few clicks of the mouse away from your best source for the news that impacts your community. Join our Twitter feed – hpenterprise – to get news alerts, or use it to let us know what’s going on in your community – from high school sports to breaking news. Visit the redesigned hpe.com, and let us know what you think.

INDEX CAROLINAS COMICS NEIGHBORS OBITUARIES TELEVISION

3B 5B 4B 2B 6B


OBITUARIES 2B www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES

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Mozelle Craven.Thomasville George Dorsett...High Point Mary Fitzgerald..High Point Cordela Gaines...High Point Ruby Knopps......High Point Kathleen Lanier...Lexington Terry Pickett...........Archdale M. Shore......Winston-Salem Robert Trogdon....Asheboro The High Point Enterprise publishes death notices without charge. Additional information is published for a fee. Obituary information should be submitted through a funeral home.

George “Leon� Dorsette HIGH POINT - George “Leon� Dorsette of High Point died September 16, 2010 at High Point Regional Hospital. He was 73 years old. He was born on July 17, 1937 in High Point, North Carolina to Henry Augustus Dorsette and Blanche Elizabeth Gannaway. Leon attended Fairview Elementary School and graduated from William Penn High School in 1956. He enlisted in the Air Force branch of the U.S. Armed Forces and served from 1956-1960. Leon married Lovie Tate on July 23, 1957. Leon retired from the U.S. Postal Service after 37 years. He was a member of the John McLean American Legion Post #196, a member of Prince Hall Mason and High Point Swingers Golf Association. Leon enjoyed playing cards and was an avid golfer. He was preceded in death by his parents, Henry and Blanche Dorsette, brothers, Charles Dorsette, Clarence Dorsette and a sister, Sarah Holmes. Leon leaves to mourn, his wife of 53 years, Lovie Dorsette; two sons, Michael Dorsette and Gerald Dorsette (Shawn); four daughters, Candice DeGraff, Toni Jackson (Greg), Stacy Dorsette and Stephanie Dorsette (Gary); eleven grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; two brothers, Frank Dorsette and George Dorsette; one sister, Margaret Ingram (Ceasar); and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, other relatives and friends. Memorial services will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, September 21, 2010 at Phillips Funeral Service Chapel, 1810 Brockett Avenue, High Point, NC. Visitation will be 1:30 until 2:00 p.m. at the chapel. Final arrangements are entrusted to Phillips Funeral Service, High Point, NC.

Kathleen P. Lanier LEXINGTON - Kathleen Potts Lanier, 89 of Lanier Road passed away Saturday, September 18, 2010. A funeral service will be held at 2:00 pm on Tuesday at Friendship United Methodist Church. Davidson Funeral Home is serving the Lanier Family. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Mozelle Craven THOMASVILLE - Mrs. Mozelle Cecil Craven, 89, a resident of John Green Rd., died Sunday, September 19, 2010 at the Henry Etta & Bruce Hinkle Hospice House in Lexington. She was born on July 18, 1921 in Davidson County to Jacob Ransom Asbury Cecil and Effie Swaim Cecil. She was a graduate of Hasty High School in 1939 and a member of Spring Hill United Methodist Church. She worked at Britthaven of Davidson for 18 years as activities planner and also worked for a number of years in the cafeteria at Ledford Sr. High School. She had a love of flowers, music, and baking. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Reva Joyce Craven Wright; brothers, Clayton, Billy, and JR Cecil; and sister, Victoria Brock. On January 26, 1946, she married James Stanton Craven, who survives of Britthaven of Davidson; also surviving is a son, Jimmy Craven and wife LuAnn of Thomasville; brother, Everett Cecil and wife Myrt of High Point; sister, Cora Hilton of High Point; grandchildren, William Wright and wife Karen, Christy Fox and husband Russel, Adam Craven and friend Emily Burgess, Marshall Vining, and Mary Kathryn Vining; great-grandchildren, Joshua and Benjamin Fox, Morgan, Isaiah, and Ethan Turner; and son-in-law, Will Wright of High Point. A funeral service will be held on Wednesday, September 22, 2010 at 11:00 AM at Spring Hill United Methodist Church with Rev. Chuck Garner and Rev. Vernon Smith officiating. Interment will follow in the church cemetery. Mrs. Craven will remain at the J.C. Green & Sons Funeral Home in Wallburg until taken to the church 30 minutes prior to the service. The family will be at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6-8 pm and at other times at the home of her son, Jimmy. Memorials may be directed to Spring Hill UMC, 240 Spring Hill Church Rd. High Point, NC 27262 or to Hospice of Davidson County, 200 Hospice Way, Lexington, NC 27292. On-line condolences may be sent to www.jcgreenandsons. com.

Michael Shore WINSTON-SALEM - Michael Dwayne Shore, 53, of Winston-Salem, died Sunday, September 19, 2010, at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. A funeral service will be held at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, September 21, 2010 at Friedland Moravian Church. Burial will follow in the church graveyard.

Cordela Gaines HIGH POINT - Mrs. Cordela Gaines, 105 years old, of High Point, died September 18, 2010. Funeral arrangements are incomplete and being handled by Phillips Funeral Service in High Point.

Robert Trogdon ASHEBORO - Robert Trogdon of Asheboro died Saturday, September 18, 2010. Funeral arrangements are incomplete and being handled by Phillips Funeral Service in High Point.

Terry Julian Pickett

Ruby Louise Knopps

Mary Ellen Fitzgerald

ARCHDALE - Mr. Terry Julian Pickett, 71, of Archdale passed away on September 19, 2010. Mr. Pickett was born on March 31, 1939 in Guilford County to W.J. Pickett and Margaret Lowe Pickett. He was a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a degree in Pharmacy. Mr. Pickett had been employed by Rite Aid Pharmacy , formerly Eckerd Pharmacy. In addition to his parents, Mr. Pickett was preceded in death by a son, Terry Anthony “Tony� Pickett and a sister, Margaret Ann Pickett. Mr. Pickett was married to Sara Orr Pickett who survives of the residence. Also surviving are three sons, Jeffrey Alan Pickett and wife, Joan of Franklinville, Douglas Matthew Pickett and wife, Laura of Sterling Heights, Michigan and Michael Joseph Pickett and wife, Jerri of Trinity; a sister, Sue Turner and husband, Fred of Trinity and four grandchildren and one great-grandchild. A Memorial Service by the Rev. Harold Shives will be at 4:00 P.M. Tuesday in the chapel of Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale . A visitation will follow the service. Following the visitation, all friends are invited to a Celebration of Life Dinner at the Messiah Too on Bonnie Place in Archdale. Memorials may directed to Hospice and Palliative Care, 2500 Summit Avenue, Greensboro, N.C. 27405. The family of Mr. Pickett would like to thank Dr. James Granfortuna and his staff for the care given to Mr. Pickett during his illness. Online condolences may be made through www.cumbyfuneral.com.

TRINITY - Mrs. Ruby Louise Knopps Galloway, age 77, a former resident of Hall Street in High Point, died Saturday, September 18th at the GrayBrier Nursing and Retirement Center, where she was a resident. A native of Scottsboro, Alabama, Louise was born July 24, 1933 a daughter to the late William Ernest Knopps and the late Kittie Pearl Matchen Knopps. She had lived in this area for many years, was of the Baptist faith and worked for Brayton International Funiture Company until her retirement in 1999. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Jessie Waylon Galloway on May 21st, 2003. Surviving are three daughters, Syble Wall and her husband Lawrence of Sophia, Felecia Jacobs and her husband Glen of High Point and Pam Chand of Trinity; one son Pete Galloway and his wife Pam of Thomasville; two sisters, Adean Murphy of Virginia and Marynell Mack of Georgia; grandchildren, Amy Frady, Kelly Stanley, Chris & Kirby Jacobs, Paige & Zachary Chand and great-grandchildren, Trevor Stanley and Emily Chand. Graveside services and burial will be at 11:00 am Tuesday at Guilford Memorial Park with Joseph Neal officiating. The family will receive friends from 6:30 until 8:00 pm tonight at Cumby Family Funeral service in Archdale. Memorials may be directed to Hospice of Randolph County, Post Office Box 9, Asheboro, NC 27204. Online condolences can be submitted at www.cumbyfuneral. com. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale.

HIGH POINT - Ms. Mary Ellen Fitzgerald, 64, a former resident of High Point Manor, died Saturday afternoon, September 18, 2010 at the Hinkle Hospice House in Lexington. She was born October 22, 1945 in San Francisco, CA., a daughter of John Fitzgerald and Juanita Hoffcroft Fitzgerald. She was formerly employed with Piedmont Crossing in Thomasville. Ms. Fitzgerald was a member of High Point Seventh Day Adventist Church. In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by a son, Jason Robert Bradley on December 6, 1976. Surviving are a son Kevin Bradley and his wife Cindy of Thomasville and his father, Glenn Eugene Bradley, also of Thomasville; her pride and joy in life – her grandchildren, Christian Thomas Bradley, Conner Baker Bradley, Cameron Alexis Bradley and James Patrick Whitesell and his fiancÊe Natalie Rose Ratcliffe; and a sister, Miss Lee Anne Butterfield of Greenville, PA. Honoring Ms. Fitzgerald wishes, she will be cremated and no formal services will be held.* The family will receive friends at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, Kevin and Cindy Bradley, 5 Big Buck Court, Thomasville. J.C. Green & Sons Funeral Home in Thomasville is assisting the family and on-line condolences may be sent to the Fitzgerald family at www. jcgreenandsons.com. The family would like to thank the staffs of Hinkle Hospice House, Britthaven of Davidson, High Point Manor and their loving friends for all the support and care given to Mrs. Fitzgerald and the family during her illness.

FUNERAL

Solo circumnavigator Dodge Morgan dies Sechrest PORTLAND, Maine (AP) – Dodge Morgan, who became the first American to sail solo around the globe without stopping – and did it in record time – has died of complications from cancer. He was 78. Morgan, who died Tuesday at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, turned his small marine radar company into the successful Whistler brand of detectors before sailing around the world. Hobbs Funeral Home in South Portland is handling the arrangements and confirmed the death. He set a world record in 1986 when he completed the solo sail in his 60-foot American Promise in 150 days, 1 hour and 6 minutes, beating British sailor Chay Blyth, who took 292 days to accomplish the same feat in 1971. Ted Hood, who designed Morgan’s boat, said the American Promise was a rugged sailboat with two of everything,

including a spare generator and a spare rudder. “Everyone said there’s no way that boat is going to get around the world in record speed, but it did,� Hood said Friday from his office in Portsmouth, R.I. Those who knew Morgan described him as a genuine American hero, a larger-than-life character who didn’t mind taking risks. Peter Bragdon, who served as headmaster of Governor Dummer Academy, now known as the Governor’s Academy in Byfield, Mass., while Morgan was chairman of the trustees, described him as a “wild and wonderful guy.� “He could not stand the nay-sayers. He could not stand the people who resisted change, who never made mistakes because they never did anything,� Bragdon said. “He celebrated the ‘yay-sayers’ who took the risk, who dared to be great, who made things happen.�

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CHICAGO (AP) – John “Jack� Goeken, founder of telecom giant MCI and the father of air-toground telephone communication, has died after a long battle with cancer. He was 80. Goeken is widely viewed as the father of air-to-ground telephone communication. As a founder of MCI and Airfone Inc., he sought to make communication possible anywhere people go. He also won a reputation as “Jack the Giant Killer� because of his passion for busting up communications monopolies like AT&T.

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431-9124 MONDAY Mr. Larry McKinley Pyrtle 1 p.m. – Graveside Service at Old Orchard Church Cemetery, Westfield, NC TUESDAY Mrs. Ruby Louise Knopps Galloway 11 a.m. – Graveside service at Guilford Memorial Park Cemetery Mr. Terry Julian Pickett 4 p.m. – Memorial Service in the Chapel of Cumby Family Funeral Service, Archdale

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Study calls NC best among 10 at protecting voters RALEIGH (AP) – North Carolina voters will have unique choices to make this fall when they rank their top three candidates among 13 people seeking a single Court of Appeals seat. While officials are still finalizing the mechanics of how those instant runoff votes will be counted, an outside report examining election policies in what it calls ten “swing� states in the Nov. 2 election provides comfort to some – and a warning from others about a format never used statewide in North Carolina.

The study conducted by the election reform group Demos and the good-government Common Cause said North Carolina has the strongest laws by far among the states examined to protect voters. It also said the state does a good job making sure their votes count. They point to laws that allow citizens to register and vote the same day during the early voting period, make it a felony to deliberately attempt to deceive voters with misinformation and count the choices of voters who wind up by mistake at

the wrong precinct on Election Day. The other states examined were Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada and Ohio. North Carolina “ranked first among the states in the study in terms of being good for voters,� said report co-author Tova Wang, a senior democracy fellow at Demos. The high marks stem from a 2007 state law creating same-day voter registration in a 212⠄ -week period before a primary or general election and a 2005 law mak-

ing clear provisional ballots cast in the correct county but wrong precinct must still be counted. The 2005 law and other important changes designed to bring uniformity to state elections were approved in the wake of a legal challenge to the provisional ballots accelerated when an electronic voting machine failed to record more than 4,400 ballots in Carteret County. “It’s one of the best states. You have a better chance of having your vote counted accurately,� said Joyce McCloy of Winston-Salem, founder of the

N.C. Coalition for Verified Voting and a key activist involved in the 2005 law changes. “The access to the polls is very fair and reasonable.� McCloy is worried North Carolina won’t be able to keep its high stature when it carries out a 2006 law for the first time requiring instant runoff voting be used statewide to fill a Court of Appeals judgeship vacated in August. She’s concerned procedures for counting votes can’t meet current standards and voters won’t be educated enough on the ranking process.

Friends hold vigil for murdered woman RALEIGH (AP) – The family and friends of a North Carolina woman whose convicted killer was declared innocent earlier this year held a vigil to make sure people remain aware of her case. The vigil for 26-yearold Jacquetta Thomas was held Sunday afternoon in southeast Raleigh at the industrial site where her body was found Sept. 26, 1991. Greg Taylor was convicted of her murder

and served almost 17 years in prison before a three-judge panel declared him innocent in February. Thomas’ sister Yolanda Littlejohn says holding the vigil isn’t easy but she believes it’s necessary so people remain aware of her sister’s death. Taylor was among those planning to attend. Littlejohn has long believed that Taylor didn’t kill her sister and supported his exoneration.

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Reporters talk with Fort Bragg officials about the deaths of infants in military housing, at Striker Golf Course at Fort Bragg on Aug. 31.

Bragg families want answers after infant deaths FORT BRAGG (AP) – Fort Bragg families are asking for environmental tests on their homes since officials announced an investigation into infant deaths on the base. A manager for the company that maintains base housing told The Fayetteville Observer that at least 70 families have asked for tests. John Shay says that they will be done in coming weeks. The newspaper also reported Sunday some relatives of the 10 infants that

have died since 2007 want Congress to investigate. Lori Gray of Owensboro, Ky., asked for help after two of her grandchildren died last year at the same home. Members of North Carolina’s Washington delegation say they first want the results of an investigation by the Army and the Consumer Product Safety Commission. No foul play is suspected in the 10 deaths. No environmental links have been found.

Son thinks dad’s obit left out important survivor

D

ear Abby: My father just passed away. He was a pastor. He and Mom were married 40 years, but their relationship became very strained during the last 10. Counseling was unsuccessful and they divorced 15 years ago. Dad was hurt and humiliated by it. Mom felt she had to escape a marriage that was killing her emotionally. I received a draft of Dad’s obituary from my two siblings. It mentions all surviving relatives except my mother, who is still alive and living in the same town where she and Dad spent most of their lives together. I feel omitting her is a slap in the face, but my sister says that because they were divorced, Mom “deserves� no mention. What is protocol in such a situation? – Surviving Son in California Dear Son: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your father. While your sister may have said it in a way that seemed judgmental, she is technically correct. After a couple divorces and one of them dies, the name of the former spouse is usually not mentioned in the obituary. Dear Abby: I had a suspicion that my wife’s

attentiveness to a neighbor was more than casual. He’s a womanizer who boasts ADVICE about his extramariDear tal affairs Abby to anyone ■■■who will listen. I noticed some marks on my wife’s body, and when I asked how she’d gotten them, her response was evasive. I found it so off-putting that I installed surveillance cameras in our house. The cameras revealed in detail what has been going on. Our family and friends think my wife is prim and proper. It turns out she is anything but. In fact, I’m no longer sure I fathered our children. Would it be wrong to send copies of her video activities to everyone so they can see who she really is? – Sad And Angry in East Texas Dear Angry: No one would blame you if you ended the marriage, but for your children’s sake, do not yield to the temptation to get even with your wife in this way. Making the tapes public could cause them emotional harm. Talk to a lawyer. Have genetic

tests run to determine your children’s paternity, but do not make the tapes public. Dear Abby: I’m 17. My girlfriend of eight months and I have an incredible relationship, but something is eating at me. She often mentions things she did with her past boyfriends. It’s not like she’s telling stories about the “good old days,� but the fact that I hear their names in everyday conversation bothers me. I want to be understanding because these guys were a big part of her life when they were in it. But I’m tired of hearing their current whereabouts or what they used to talk about. How can I get her to leave the past behind? – In The “Now� in Alameda, Calif.

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Dear In The “Now�: Your girlfriend may not be aware of what she’s doing and the effect it has on you. Tell her how her constant reminders of past relationships make you feel. If she cares about your feelings, she’ll stop doing it. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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Monday September 20, 2010

HEALTH BEAT: Stress can be detrimental to your health. TOMORROW

Neighbors: Vicki Knopfler vknopfler@hpe.com (336) 888-3601

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t sure has been a hot summer so I imagine the chimney is the last thing you want to think about while sweltering through a long North Carolina heat wave. Fortunately the weather will soon cool as summer leaves and fall arrives, which means the winter months are not FIREHOUSE far beCHAT hind. It Lee almost Knight seems ■■■that autumn is a warning from Mother Nature to change our way of thinking and prepare for the coming winter and the ice storms so famous in North Carolina. Many people only use their fireplace because of the cozy and relaxing atmosphere it creates, but with the rise in fuel prices, the use of wood as a primary heating source has increased. To assure safety, have chimneys cleaned and inspected on a regular basis by a professional chimney sweep. The National Fire Protection Association recommends that chimneys be inspected yearly. One of the big problems we see in chimneys is the build-up of creosote. Anytime you burn wood, whether it’s soft or hardwood, creosote will build up in the chimney. There are many factors that affect how fast creosote accumulates in a chimney. Wood stove inserts create much more creosote than a fireplace. Green wood and smoldering fires are also big culprits in creosote build-up. Creosote can stop up a chimney, but more important, it is the fuel for chimney fires that can cause extensive damage to chimneys and possibly the house. Another common problem is cracks in the chimney. These can often be found in the terra-cotta clay liners, throat of the chimney and the firebox area. They can be the result of heat damage, improper construction practices and settling of the home. Cracks are dangerous because they can leave possible avenues for fire to travel into the walls and attic of houses. A chimney fire is a scary and dangerous experience that no one wants to experience more than once. Just like any other part of the house, the chimney must be properly serviced and maintained to assure safety and optimum performance. Autumn will soon be here, so don’t forget your chimney. 24/7/365: You call; we respond.

KENNETH LEE KNIGHT is a battalion chief in the High Point Fire Department.

CLUB CALENDAR

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Items to be published in the Club Calendar should be in writing to the Enterprise by noon on Wednesday prior to publication. CHAIR CITY Toastmasters Club meets at noon Monday at the Thomasville Public Library, 14 Randolph St. Sharon Hill at 431-8041. FURNITURELAND ROTARY Club meets at noon Monday at the String and Splinter Club, 305 W. High Ave.

PIEDMONT TRIAD FLEET Reserve Association meets at 7 p.m. Tuesday at American Legion Post 55, 111 Miller St., Winston-Salem. All honorably discharged retired Navy, Marines and Coast Guard may attend. 788-3120 or 472-3115. DISABLED AMERICAN Veterans and the Ladies Auxiliary meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the American Legion building, 729 Creekridge Road, Greensboro. TRIAD ROTARY Club meets at noon Tuesday at the String and Splinter Club, 305 W. High Ave.

KERNERSVILLE ROTARY Club meets at 7 a.m. Wednesday at First Christian Church, 1130 N. Main St., Kernersville. THOMASVILLE ROTARY Club meets at 12:05 p.m. Wednesday at the Woman’s Club, 15 Elliott Drive. ASHEBORO-RANDOLPH ROTARY Club meets at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday at AVS Banquet Centre, 2045 N. Fayetteville St. HIGH POINT BUSINESS and Professional Men’s Club meets at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Carl Chavis YMCA, 2351 Granville St.

ROTARY CLUB of High Point Austin Public Library, 901 N. meets at noon Thursday at High Main St. Point Country Club, 800 Country Club Drive. Phyllis Picklesimer GOLDEN ARCH Charter and Anne Andrews of the Doll Chapter of American Business & Miniature Museum of High Women’s Association meets Point are guest speakers. at 6 p.m. Thursday at Messiah, Too, 101 Bonnie Place, Archdale. ROTARY CLUB of Willow Terri Moore, 431-4246, 688Creek meets at 7:15 a.m. Thurs5286 day at High Point Country Club, 800 Country Club Drive. Karen HIGH POINT-THOMASMorris, 887-7435 VILLE Association of Insurance Women meets at 6 p.m. ThursTHOMASVILLE LIONS Club day at Memorial United Methmeets at noon Thursday at odist Church, 101 Randolph St., Big Game Safari Steakhouse, Thomasville. 889-7500 15 Laura Lane, Room 300, Thomasville. HIGH POINT KIWANIS meets at 11:45 a.m. Friday at PREMIER CIVITAN CLUB High Point Country Club, 800 meets noon-1 p.m. every secCountry Club Drive. Wendy Rivond and fourth Thursday at Tex ers, 882-4167 & Shirley’s Family Restaurant, 4005 Precision Way. 621-4750. ASHEBORO ROTARY Club meets at noon Friday at AVS PIEDMONT TRIAD LIONS Banquet Centre, 2045 N. FayClub meets at 6:30 p.m. every etteville St., Asheboro. second and fourth Thursday at the Woman’s Club of High Point, 4106 Johnson St.

PIEDMONT AMBUCS meets at noon Monday at Great Western High Point hotel, 135 S. HIGH POINT CIVITAN Club meets at noon Tuesday at High Main St. Janice Blankenship at Point Country Club, 800 Country BUSINESS NETWORK Inter869-2166. national meets noon-1:15 p.m. Club Drive. Wednesday at Golden Corral at OAKVIEW LIONS Club Oak Hollow Mall. LEXINGTON ROTARY Club meets at 6:30 p.m. Monday meets at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday at at Oakview United Methodist HIGH POINT ELKS LODGE the YMCA, 119 W. 3rd Ave. Church, 321 Oakview Road. 1155 meets at 7:30 p.m. the second and fourth Wednesdays HIGH POINT TOASTMASTHOMASVILLE RIFLES, of each month at 700 Old Mill TERS meets at 6:30 p.m. Sons of Confederate Veterans Road. 869-7313. Tuesday at Coldwell Banker Camp 172, meets 7-8 p.m. WALLBURG LIONS CLUB Triad Realtors, 2212 Eastchester Monday at Sunrise Diner, meets at 6 p.m. the second and TRIAD WOMEN’S Forum Drive (side entrance). 1100 Randolph St., Thomasfourth Thursday at Shady Grove of High Point meets at 11:45 ville. United Methodist Church, 167 a.m. Wednesday at High Point JAMESTOWN ROTARY Club Shady Grove Church Road. Country Club, 800 Country Club meets at 6 p.m. Tuesday at FAIRGROVE LIONS Club Drive. Jamestown Town Hall, 301 E. meets at 6:30 p.m. Monday at JAMESTOWN LIONS Club Main St. 502 Willowbrook Drive, Thommeets at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at BUSINESS AND PROFESasville. 476-4655. Parkwood Baptist Church, 2107 RANDOLPH COUNTY Repub- SIONAL WOMEN of the Triad meets 6-8 p.m. Wedneslican Women meets at 7 p.m. Penny Road. Ralph Holmes at GUILFORD COUNTY Hortiday at The Moose Cafe, Tuesday at 122 Sunset Ave., 454-8620. cultural Society meets at 7:15 Piedmont Triad Farmers Market, Asheboro. Ron Woodard of NC p.m. Monday at the Natural 2914 Sandy Ridge Road, Colfax. THOMASVILLE JAYCEES Listen will speak on immigraScience Center, 4301 Lawndale Members pay for the cost of tion policy and how it affects Drive, Greensboro. Marilyn meets at 7 p.m. Thursday at dinner. info@bpwofthetriad.org North Carolina. ncgopgal@ Ruberg at 643-1911. Thomasville Jaycees Clubhouse, hotmail.com, 707-0022 1017 Lacy Hepler Road. Heather PIEDMONT/TRIAD TOASTEnglish at 472-1306 or 883MODEL NATIONAL AsMASTERS Club meets at noon 0353. ARCHDALE-TRINITY ROsociation of Investors Corp. Wednesday at Clarion Hotel, TARY Club meets at noon meets at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday at 415 Swing Road, Greensboro. Wednesday at Archdale United NAT GREENE TOASTMASthe Greensboro Public Library, J.C. Coggins at 665-3204 or Methodist Church, 11543 N. TERS Club meets at 7 p.m. Nussbaum Room, 219 Church 301-0289 (cell). Main St. Thursday at High Point Neal F. St., Greensboro.

APPLAUSE

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211 W. Lexington Avenue, Suite 104, High Point, NC

Church appreciates work of firefighters Hats off to our local firefighters. On Sunday, Sept. 12, Hayworth Wesleyan Church hosted a special day of remembrance for the victims of 9/11, and a service of recognition for our local firefighters and police officers. We were thrilled to have the firefighters from station No. 3, Cshift, in attendance. In addition we had a firefighter from station No. 8 and one from Station No. 2. High Point can be proud of these fine men, who not only protect us but conduct themselves with pride and dignity. We are blessed! DAVID M. EMERY, Senior pastor Hayworth Wesleyan Church

889.9977

BIBLE QUIZ

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Yesterday’s Bible quiz: Complete: “Nevertheless let everyone of you in particular so love his wife even as ...; and the wife see that she ... her husband.� Answer to yesterday’s quiz: himself, reverence. (Ephesians 5:33) Today’s Bible quiz: Under the law, what was the penalty for traffic with spirit mediums and occult teachers? BIBLE QUIZ is provided by Hugh B. Brittain of Shelby.

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GARFIELD

Polycystic ovary syndrome can manifest in early teens

D

ear Dr. Donohue: Please help me understand polycystic ovary syndrome – or, as it now is called, hyperandrogenism. My granddaughter is 13. Several months ago, her mother noticed a patch of hair on her chest and a slight mustache. Her pediatrician checked her testosterone level, and it was high. The doctor sent her to a pediatric endocrinologist, who did a battery of tests. They were normal except for the testosterone. She feels my granddaughter should be on the birthcontrol pill. Untreated, this condition could lead to diabetes and heart problems. My granddaughter is of normal height and weight. Your input would be appreciated. – A.D.

BLONDIE

B.C.

Originally, large ovaries studded with cysts, hair growth in places common in men but not in women (chest, face), obesity and irregular periods or loss of periods were the emphasized signs of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Now attention is directed to the overproduction of the male hormone testosterone (hyperandrogenism). Other signs include insulin that doesn’t lower blood sugar like it should and infertility. Not every woman with PCOS has all these signs. PCOS often makes itself known shortly after the onset of puberty. How best to treat PCOS depends on the wom-

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an’s age and her wishes. For someone your granddaughter’s age, birthHEALTH control pills are Dr. Paul ideal, beDonohue cause they ■■■ provide the female hormones that regulate menstrual periods. The importance of that lies in preventing uterine cancer, which might develop without regular periods. If, when she’s older, your granddaughter wants to start a family, then a different approach with different medicines is appropriate. Treatment has other important purposes. For one, it restores normal blood sugar control. It abolishes other metabolic problems that can lead to heart disease. Eventually, it will control the growth of unwanted hair. That can take some time. In the meantime, your granddaughter can get rid of the hair in a number of ways, including shaving, until the hormone situation is righted. Dear Dr. Donohue: The article you wrote on stasis dermatitis interested me. I have it. My lower legs are discolored reddish-brown with flecks of darker pigmentation. The ankles and lower legs swell until I elevate them. Does the “leakage” you referred

to mean water? I think a more thorough explanation of this would be helpful to readers and me. – L.H. If you’re a leg watcher, you’ll see that many people have stasis dermatitis. It’s a discoloration of the skin of the ankles and lower legs. The problem lies in leg veins. Something has gone wrong with their valves. Those valves make it possible for blood to flow upward and out of the leg veins to its final destination: the heart. Blood piles up in the veins. The fluid part of blood leaks out of them and causes swelling. Red blood cells also leak out. The disintegrating red blood cells release their iron, and that accounts for the color change of your skin. At first the skin discoloration is on the purple side. It eventually turns brownish. You’re doing the correct thing by elevating your legs. That stops the leakage of fluid from the veins and the accompanying red blood cells. Compression stockings also keep blood moving up and out of leg veins.

DR. DONOHUE regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but he will incorporate them in his column whenever possible. Readers may write him or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475


TELEVISION 6B www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE


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SKILLS PAY: They’ll increase your income, Libra. 2C

Monday September 20, 2010

PUZZLING: Try working Jumble, Sudoku and crossword. 2C CLASSIFIED ADS: Check them out for plenty of bargains. 3C

Life&Style (336) 888-3527

MASTER GARDENERS

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SPECIAL | HPE

Triad performers will portray jazz and blues greats during “Harlem Nights” Saturday at Centennial Station.

‘Harlem Nights’ Musical program supports Coltrane festival BY JIMMY TOMLIN ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

H

IGH POINT – Harlem will come to High Point Saturday, when The Friends of John Coltrane presents a Harlem-inspired musical program to raise funds. “Harlem Nights: A Musical Celebration of the Harlem Renaissance,” featuring Triad singers portraying such legends as Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday and Cab Calloway, will be presented in two shows Saturday at Centennial Station. Tickets are $35 apiece, and The Friends of John Coltrane will use the proceeds to produce the inaugural International John Coltrane Jazz and Blues Festival, scheduled for next September at High Point’s Oak Hollow Festival Park. “‘Harlem Nights’ captures a really great era of music,” says Saundra Adams of Greensboro, the show’s producer. Adams describes the Harlem Renaissance as “the first full flowering of AfricanAmerican culture in the United States,” adding that many of the artists of that era influenced John Coltrane. “This show is a celebration of the music and talent that was part of the Harlem

The North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service is accepting applications for the 2011 Guilford County Master Gardeners volunteer program. Classes begin in January and meet every Wednesday morning for 12 weeks. The initial classroom training is intended to establish the foundation for home gardening inquiries, using the resources available through the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service. Interns who have completed classroom training must then contribute 45 volunteer hours before being certified. After their intern year, Master Gardeners volunteer 30 hours of service and agree to participate in at least 10 hours of ongoing training each year to maintain certification. For information, a brochure and application, call Linda Brandon at (336) 375-5876.

SPECIAL | HPE

WANT TO GO?

Women in red portray Cotton Club dancers. Fashion contest will be held at both “Harlem Nights” shows.

“Harlem Nights: A Musical Celebration of the Harlem Renaissance,” a fundraiser for The Friends of John Coltrane, will be presented at 1 and 6:30 p.m. Saturday at Centennial Station, 121 S. Centennial St. The 1 p.m. show will include a lunch buffet with cash bar and a Cotton Club attire contest. The 6:30 p.m. show will include a dinner buffet with cash bar, a Cotton Club attire contest and an after-party. Tickets are $35 apiece and can be purchased at the High Point Theatre box office, 220 E. Commerce Ave. Tickets can also be ordered by calling 887-3001 or online at www.highpointtheatre.com. Proceeds will be dedicated to implementing the International John Coltrane Jazz and Blues Festival in High Point. For more information about The Friends of John Coltrane, visit www.friendsof johncoltrane.com.

Renaissance in the Cotton Club era,” Adams says. “It’s the type of show where people tend to stand up and cheer, because we bring back the likes of Billie Holiday, Lena Horne, Cab Calloway and Sarah Vaughan.” The show will feature such Triad-area vocalists as Joe Robinson, Bertha Young, Saundra Crenshaw, Matt Wiley, Sophia Kelly and Diana Tuffin, as well as master of ceremonies Rod Johnson. The production will also include a live band and a number of Cotton Club dancers. Guests are encouraged to wear period attire, and each show will include a Cotton Club attire contest. Prizes for the attire contest are: • First place: A pair of tickets to The Friends of John Coltrane’s second annual Jazzy Dinner in May 2011. • Second place: A pair of tickets to see Acoustic Alchemy on Oct. 9 at the High Point Theatre.

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• Third place: A Friends of John Coltrane T-shirt. According to Adams, “Harlem Nights” was first produced in Greensboro in 2003 as “The Blue Hour,” and it has remained a crowd favorite. “Over the years, people have said, ‘When are you gonna do something like that again?’” she says. “It’s the kind of show that people are now asking me to bring as a fundraiser. It’s something I’m really proud of.” The Friends of John Coltrane, formed in 2009, was established to preserve and celebrate the life and music of Coltrane – who grew up in High Point – through the introduction of jazz and other musical genres. Its mission is to create the International John Coltrane Jazz and Blues Festival, which officially will be launched next Labor Day weekend. jtomlin@hpe.com | 888-3579

Boo-tique hopes for frighteningly good bargains The Junior League of WinstonSalem will present Boo-tique, its inaugural holiday shopping market, Oct. 28-30 at the Benton Convention Center in downtown Winston-Salem. More than 65 local and national vendors will offer clothing, accessories, food and gift items, jewelry, stationary, children’s

items, holiday items and more. The event will kick off with “Mistletoe Miss-chief,” a ladiesnight-out event on Oct. 28 from 7 to 10 p.m. Tickets are $25 each or five for $100 in advance, $30 at the door, and are available at www.jlws.org. The evening will include a fashion show, wine and cheese, and first access to all the

vendors. The purchase of a “Mistletoe Miss-chief” ticket includes admission for an additional day during the weekend. Boo-tique also will be open for shoppers from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Oct. 29 and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 30. One-day tickets are $6, and weekend tickets for both days are $8 and will be available

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

for purchase at the door. All proceeds from Boo-tique will be used to help underwrite the many community projects the Junior League of WinstonSalem currently supports. For more information, call the Junior League of Winston-Salem at (336) 722-9681 or send an e-mail to bootique@jlws.org.

INDEX FUN & GAMES 2C DEAR ABBY 3B DR. DONOHUE 5B CLASSIFIED 3C-6C


FUN & GAMES, NOTABLES 2C www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

WORD FUN

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TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

SURE THING After South draws trumps, he has a sure thing. South takes three heart tricks to pitch a club from dummy and exits with a club. When West takes the queen, he must lead a spade, solving South’s problem in that suit, or lead a heart or a club, letting South ruff in dummy and discard the jack of spades. Not every end play is easy to spot, but when declarer has extra trumps in both his own hand and dummy, the conditions may be ripe.

This week: end plays.

DAILY QUESTION You hold: S 10 8 6 2 H K Q D Q 9 8 4 C A 5 2. Your partner opens one heart, you respond one spade, he bids two diamonds and you raise to three diamonds. Partner next bids three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: You had full values for your invitational raise to three diamonds. Partner bid again, and since your ace of clubs will be an ideal card opposite his singleton, you must make an aggressive move. Bid four hearts or five diamonds or cue-bid four clubs. North dealer N-S vulnerable

‘Town’ is talk of box office LOS ANGELES (AP) – “The Town” is the talk of the box office, opening with $23.8 million to take the No. 1 spot. The intense Warner Bros. drama about bank robbers in an insular section of Boston earned rave reviews. This is the second movie directed by Ben Affleck, who stars alongside Jeremy Renner, Rebecca Hall, Jon Hamm and Chris Cooper.

CROSSWORD

Monday, Sept. 20, 2010 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Juan Pablo Montoya, 35; Kristen Johnston, 43; Gary Cole, 54; Sophia Loren, 76 HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Socializing more will lead you to people willing to help you reach both personal and professional goals. Your creative imagination will allow you to come up with ideas that surprise others and show your potential to think outside the box. Don’t limit what you can do. Your numbers are 6, 9, 23, 26, 30, 34, 46 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Live moment-tomoment, striving to be and do your best without making a fuss. Productivity will be what counts. Self-deception is the enemy, self-reliance your best friend, and embracing change the road to victory. ★★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Take a lead position regarding reforms you want to see incorporated at work or within a group you belong to. Your insight, coupled with charm and a good plan will be enough to get others to follow your lead. Make sure you follow through. ★★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t make a move based on your emotional insecurity. You will be better off working diligently, trying to finish the work you’ve been assigned. Too much complaining or negotiating will work against you. ★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Find out what’s required and what’s expected of you before you start working on something you may not be able to finish. Love is on the rise and spending time with someone you enjoy being with will enhance your relationship. ★★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You will be pulled in different directions when it comes to partnerships, contracts and finances. Don’t let anyone put pressure on you to make changes or do something differently. Arguments are likely to develop if you haven’t honored the promises you’ve made. ★★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ask questions and show interest in what friends, relatives or neighbors are doing. Travel plans can be made that allow you to combine business with pleasure. Networking, conferences or setting up meetings will all lead to success. ★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t let depression hold you back. Look at the big picture and start to plan how you can use your skills to increase your income. A change of pace is heading your way. You have to stretch and diversify if you want to get anywhere. ★★★★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Change is needed in order to bring about greater opportunities. Let the past go and move on. It’s time to start anew and to make the most of what you still have. ★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Put your plans in motion but don’t make waves at home or at work that will lead to setbacks. There will be a time to share your thoughts but now isn’t one of them. Focus on what you know and what you can learn. A short trip will pay off. ★★★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’ll feel stifled by someone trying to take over or control what you do. Sidestep anyone trying to manipulate a situation. When it comes to any financial dealing, speak up and do your own negotiating. ★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You’ll feel emotionally attached to someone or something. Don’t let this need be your demise. You have to deal with whatever may hold you back. A love connection will be hard to deal with if you don’t have the same life goals. ★★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Take a look at your personal papers or go over investments or money ventures you are involved in with other people. You can collect old debts or take out a loan in order to invest. Changes at home will benefit you. Focus on increasing your income. ★★★

ACROSS 1 __ and crafts 5 Undress 10 Give off 14 Do an electrician’s job 15 Harmony 16 Hurry 17 Review text before printing 18 Container 20 Caribbean __ 21 Pig’s comment 22 Deathly pale 23 Au pair 25 Definite article 26 Refrigerator decoration 28 Thingamajig 31 Is adjacent to 32 Out of the way 34 Cerise or ruby 36 Boy or man 37 Remembered Texas mission 38 Scoff 39 One __ time; consecutively 40 Idaho or Iowa 41 Lustrous fabric 42 Builds

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BRIDGE “If we learn from our mistakes, I ought to be a genius by now,” a player told me at the club, “but I still can’t seem to spot an end play.” My friend had been declarer at five diamonds. When West led the king of clubs, he took dummy’s ace and drew trumps with the ace and nine. South next led a spade from dummy and pondered when East followed low. Alas, the spades were unguessable. South tried his jack, but West took the queen and ace and cashed the queen of clubs. Down one. How would you play the hand?

HOROSCOPE

It was a crowded field this weekend as the fall film season began in earnest: Three other movies opened nationwide, with several more in limited release. The high-school comedy “Easy A” from Columbia Pictures came in second place with $18.2 million, according to Sunday estimates. And the Universal Pictures thriller “Devil” landed in third with $12.6 million.

ONE STAR: It’s best to avoid conflicts; work behind the scenes or read a good book. Two stars: You can accomplish but don’t rely on others for help. Three stars: If you focus, you will reach your goals. Four stars: You can pretty much do as you please, a good time to start new projects. Five stars: Nothing can stop you now. Go for the gold.

AT THE BOX OFFICE

1. “The Town,” $23.8M 2. “Easy A,” 18.2M 3. “Devil,” $12.6M 4. “Resident Evil: Afterlife,” $10.1M 5. “Alpha and Omega,” $9.2M 6. “Takers,” $9M 7. “The American,” $2.8M 8. “Inception,” $2M 9. “The Other Guys,” $2M 10. “Machete,” $1.7M

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44 Fourscore 45 Craving 46 Lady’s address 47 Fluttering tree 50 Go out with 51 Sense of self-esteem 54 Property 57 Celebrity 58 Cloak 59 Refueling ship 60 Stack 61 Narrow board 62 Michelobs 63 __ a test; passes easily DOWN 1 Fills with wonder 2 “Ticket to __”; Beatles song 3 Shaped like a piece of pizza 4 __ up; arrange 5 Run fast for a short distance 6 __-weeny; very small 7 Off-the__; not custommade 8 Cold cubes 9 Energy 10 Rubbed

Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

out 11 Very __; quite a bit 12 __ of Capri 13 At that time 19 Nevada border lake 21 Small bills 24 Opening bet 25 Uproar 26 Baby’s word 27 Let up 28 Thin coin 29 Mathematics 30 Left-side ledger entry 32 “Woe is me!” 33 Made a lap 35 Opposite of admit 37 Business

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envelope abbr. Very enthused Stage setting __ with; support Decorative embroidered hole Diners Alma __; one’s former school Curved paths Official stamp Father Valley Actor Gordon Raw minerals Cry loudly Neckwear item Hot tub


Call 888-3555, fax 888-3639 or email classads@hpe.com for help with your ad HOW TO PLACE YOUR AD Call: 888-3555 or Fax: 336-888-3639 Mail: Enterprise Classified P.O. Box 1009 High Point, NC 27261 In Person: Classified Customer Service Desk 210 Church Avenue High Point

POLICIES The High Point Enterprise reserves the right to edit or reject an ad at any time and to correctly classify and edit all copy. The Enterprise will assume no liability for omission of advertising material in whole or in part.

ERRORS

Please check your ad the first day it runs. If you find an error, call DEADLINES the first day so your Call before 3:45 p.m. ad can be corrected. the day prior to The Enterprise will publication. Call give credit for only Friday before 3:00 the first for Saturday, Sunday incorrect publication. or Monday ads. For Sunday Real Estate, PAYMENT call before 2:45 p.m. Wednesday. Fax Pre-payment is deadlines are one required for hour earlier. all individual ads and all business ads. Business accounts may apply for preDISCOUNTS approved credit. For Businesses may earn your convenience, lower rates by we accept Visa, advertising on a Mastercard, cash or regular basis. Call for checks. complete details. Family rates are YARD SALE available for individuals RAIN (non-business) with INSURANCE yard sales, selling When you place a household items or yard sale ad in The selling personal vehicles. Call to see if High Point Enterprise you can insure your you qualify for this sale against the rain! low rate. Ask us for details!

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NNOUNCEMENTS

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Personals

ABORTION

Lost

2 Toned Gold and Silver, Ann Kline watch, lost either at Harris Teeter or Green Street Baptist Church. Call if found 336-869-6706

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Found

FOUND: 9/13 2 Small Dogs near College Dr and Leonard Ave. Please call to identify. 336-688-5570

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MPLOYMENT

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ANNOUNCEMENTS Special Notes Happy Ads Card of Thanks Personals Lost Found GARAGE/ESTATE SALES Garage/Estate Sales Instruction EMPLOYMENT Administrative Sales Professional Education/Teaching Medical/Dental Technical Accounting General Help Industrial Trade Skilled Trade Trucking Office Help Retail Help Hotel/Motel Restaurant Child Care Part-time Employment People Seeking Employment Business Opportunity Businesses for Sale Employment Information Elderly Care Summer Employment PETS Pet Boarding Cats/Dogs/Pets Pet Services FARM Farm Market You Pick Feed/Fertilizer Nursery Stock Livestock Horses Farm Equipment Farms for Sale Farm Services MERCHANDISE Auction Sales Antiques/Art Household Goods Musical Merchandise Computer

General Help

Immediate opportunity for experienced finishing sanders, 5 yrs exp. req'd, background and drug screen req'd. Email resume Winstonsalem.NC@ na.manpower.com PT CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERK

PRIVATE DOCTOR'S OFFICE 889-8503 0142

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Administrative

The High Point Enterprise is seeking an individual that enjoys interacting with the public. Candidate must have good communication, phone & organizational skills. Also must be able to type a minimum of 25 to 30 wpm. This position will be answering incoming calls as well as calling past and current subscribers to The High Point Enterprise. Hours of operation are 6:00am to 5:00pm Monday - Friday also Saturday and Sunday 6:00am-12:00pm and Holidays. Must be flexible in working daytime & weekend hours. Please apply in person at The High Point Enterprise Monday thru Friday 9am-3pm. No phone calls please. EOE. Shuler Meats is seeking Dock Worker, heavy lifting required, must speak and read English. Clean and neat appearance , ID required, Apply in person 124 Shuler Rd. Thomasville 27360.

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0518 Electronics 0521 Lawn & Garden Equipment 0524 Snow Removal Equipment 0527 Sporting Goods 0530 Swimming Pools 0533 Furniture 0536 Misc. Tickets 0539 Firewood 0542 Building Materials 0545 Machinery & Tools 0548 Restaurant Equipment 0551 Store/Office Equipment 0554 Wanted to Rent/Buy/ Trade 0557 Holiday Time 0560 Christmas Trees 0563 Misc. Items for Sale 0600 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT 0605 Real Estate for Rent 0610 Unfurnished Apartments 0615 Furnished Apartments 0620 Homes for Rent 0625 Condominiums for Rent 0630 Duplexes for Rent 0635 Rooms for Rent 0640 Misc for Rent 0645 Wanted to Rent 0650 Rentals to Share 0655 Roommate Wanted 0660 Lake/River/Resort 0665 Vacation Property 0670 Business Places/ Offices 0675 Mobile Homes for Rent 0680 Specialty Shops 0685 Bargain Basement 0700 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 0710 Homes for Sale 0715 Condominium for Sale 0720 Duplex/Apts 0728 Lake/River/Resort 0734 Lots & Acreage 0741 Mobile Homes for Sale 0747 Manufactured Homes for Sale 0754 Commercial/Office 0760 Business Properties 0767 Industrial 0773 Income Property 0780 Misc. Real Estate

Growing manufacturer and distributor of industrial shredding systems seeks skilled individual for startup and service of equipment at customer locations. Extensive North America Travel required. Driverʼs license required. The right candidate not only must possess an excellent working knowledge of electrical systems, but must have superior communication skills for customer relations. This demanding position rewards the people who perform. Individual must know industrial controls, PLCʼs, VFDʼs, and National Electrical Code. Above average salary and comprehensive benefits package-medical and dental insurance, vacation, retirement plan. Send resume of qualifications to: ATTN: Todd Carswell, Vecoplan, LLC, PO Box 7224, High Point, NC 27264.

0244

Trucking

Skilled Trade

Skilled Machinist wanted 5+ yrs experience. Current Positions Open, CNC Turning, VMC, and CNC EDM. Paid Hospitalization , 401K, Holiday.mbbob@gmail.com

Kimmies Kutties Licensed In Home Child Care. Enrolling Now. N. HP. 336-880-1615

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0268

Child Care

Part-time Employment

Triad-Fabco, a division of Hickory Springs Mfg. co. in High Point, NC is currently seeking an experienced Industrial Maintenance Mechanic for 1st shift. The ideal candidate should have at least 5 years experience in maintenance and equipment repqir, or a Journeyman certificate in Industrial Maintenance. The candidate must be able to preform various manual tasks necessary to repair, build and over haul various types of machinery and equipment. Must be able to read and understand blueprints, schematics and standard metric measurements. Various types of machines, tools, and equipment will be used in this position: Power Tools, Grinders, Mills, Lathes, Boring Machine, Testing Equipment, Forklift, Welder, Drill Press, Saws, Various hand tools and Measuring equipment.

Avon Reps needed part time, work your on schedule, Call Mary 336-447-4758

Traid-Fabco/Hickory Springs Mfg. Co. offers and excellent benefits package: Major Medical with a $20 copay, Dental, Life, Pharmacy Card, 7 paid holidays, 2 weeks vacation, 401k plan, educational assistance, credit association and more. Apply in person: 1325 Baker Rd, High Point, 27263.

$200 off. Too Many Puppies! Carin Ter, Shih Poo, Cock A Chon. Lhasapoo. Greene's Kennels. 336-498-7721

Hickory Springs Manufacturing Company is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/D

Find What You’re Looking for in a Snap!

Dump Truck Drivers Needed. CDL's & References Required. 5 yrs. Experience A Must. Apply In Person @ Smith & Jennings, Inc. 1020 Hedgecock Rd High Point, NC

0232

Experienced Massage Therapist & Hair Dresser with Clientele. 336-905-2532

Alterations Assisted Living Catering Chauffeur Services Christmas Trees Computer Services Counseling Crafters & Hobbies Dance Instruction Income Tax Day Care Licensed Divorces Driving Schools Elderly Care Errand Services Firewood Furniture Upholstery Health & Nutrition Health Care Holistic House sitting Insurance Interior Design Karate/Martial Arts Kennels Legal Services Machine Shop Massage Therapy Music Lessons Nails Services Optical Services Paralegal Party Planning Personal Trainer Pest Control Pet Care Photography Pool Services Private Investigator Psychics Salon Services Surveying Services Taxidermy Tutoring Services Upholstery Weight Management Welding Services SPECIAL OCCASIONS Christmas Father’s Day Graduation Memorial Day Mother’s Day Valentine’s Day Veteran’s Day Church Page

SAM KINCAID PAINTING FREE ESTIMATES CALL 472-2203

Furniture Peddler: Immediate openings. Hiring CDL Drivers and Helpers. Absolutely No Drugs. Carolina Furniture 324-7666

Adult Entertainers, $150 per hr + tips. No exp. Necessary. Call 336-285-0007 ext 5

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Skilled Trade

Start Earning Christmas $$ Now. Sell Avon to Family, Friends & Work. 908-4002 Independent Rep.

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1114 Exterior Cleaning 1120 Fence Installation 1126 Floor Covering/ Installation 1132 Garage Doors/Builders 1138 Gutters 1144 Handyman 1150 Hauling 1156 Heating/Cooling 1162 Home Improvement & Repair 1168 Home Inspection/ Appraisal 1174 Home Organization 1180 Insulation 1186 Internet Services 1192 Lawn Mower Repair 1198 Lawn/Landscape/ Tree Svc 1200 Tree Services 1204 Manufactured Homes 1210 Masonry 1216 Mobile & Modular Home Rep 1222 Movers 1228 Paint/Wallcover 1234 Phone Services 1236 Plastering 1240 Plumbing 1246 Pole Barn 1252 Porches & Enclosure 1258 Pressure Washing 1264 RV Repair 1270 Recycling 1276 Roofing 1282 Rototilling 1288 Satellite Systems 1294 Security Services 1300 Septic/Sewer Services 1306 Services 1312 Sharpening Service 1318 Small Engine Repair 1324 Small Engine Service 1330 Snow Removal 1336 Sprinkler Systems 1342 Storage, Indoor/ Outdoor 1348 Telephone Services 1354 Tile/Stone Installation 1360 Tractor Repair 1366 Window Cleaning 1500 PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY 1509 Accounting

Electrical Service Technician

Secretarial Opening. Hours 8am-4pm Mon-Fri, Need experience in Bookkeeping & Accounting, Also Quickbooks. Salary Neg. Call Scott Andrews. 336-688-3833

General Help

0786 Wanted to Buy Real Estate 0793 Monuments/Cemeteries 0800 TRANSPORTATION 0804 Boats for Sale 0808 Boat Slips 0812 Boat Storage 0816 Recreational Vehicles 0820 Campers/Trailers 0824 Motor Homes 0828 Snowmobiles 0832 Motorcycles 0836 Airplanes & Equipment 0840 Auto Services 0844 Auto Repair 0848 Auto/Truck Parts & Accessories 0852 Heavy Equipment 0856 Sport Utility Vehicles 0860 Vans for Sale 0864 Pickup Trucks for Sale 0868 Cars for Sale 0872 Classic/Sports/ Collector Cars 0876 Bicycles 0880 Off-Road Vehicles 0900 FINANCIAL 0910 Business Opportunities 0920 Loans 0930 Investments 0950 LEGALS 0955 Legals 1000 HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY 1006 Additions & Renovations 1012 Appliances 1018 Asphalt/Concrete 1024 Backhoe 1030 Basement Waterproofing 1036 Carpet Cleaning 1042 Carpet Sales/ Installation 1048 Cleaning Services 1054 Crane/Lift Services 1060 Custom Cabinets 1066 Decks/Porches/ Enclosures 1072 Demolition 1078 Ditches & Trenches 1084 Driveways 1090 Drywall 1096 Duct Cleaning 1102 Electrical Services 1108 Excavating

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Shop the Classifieds for gifts to give yourself and others!

ETS

0320

Cats/Dogs/Pets

10 week old Male AKA Teacup Yorkie, 1st shots and dewormed. $800. Call 336-847-9130

AKC Registered Pitt Bulls. 2Blues, Females, 1 Male Fawn. $250 each. Call 336-476-7440

www.hpe.com


4C www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE 0320

Cats/Dogs/Pets

AKC Registered German Rottweilers, 7wks full blooded, shots and dewormed, $375. each all females. Call 336-777-1724/ 336-529-8173 Free Kitten to good indoor home only. Good w/other animals & UTD on Shots. Comes w/all access. 471-5388 Free Kittens to good home. Call after 1pm. Call 336-883-4868 Free Kittens to good homes only. Grey, Black & White Striped. Adorable, approx 6 weeks. Call 336-434-6677 Free to good home Lab mixed puppies, 10 weeks old, Call 803-1251 Sheltie Puppy black and white, beautiful, AKC registered, vet checked, 1st shots, 10 wks. old, $300. 336-591-7011

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Farm Market

Bernie's Berries & Produce. Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Squash, Cukes, Apples, Green Beans, Peas, Peaches, Pumpkins, Gourds and more. 5421 Groometown Rd. 852-1594

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ERCHANDISE

0509 Household Goods Kenmore Electric Stove Digital Clock. Good Condition. $85 Call 336-479-0445 Kenmore Washer & Dryer. Matching Set. Super Capacity. Like new. $250. Call 336-479-0445 Whirlpool Self Cleaning Stove. EC. $200., Electrolux Vacuum Cleaner, LN, $75. Call 869-7002 Whirlpool White Refrigerator, 25 cu ft. Side by Side. Outside Ice & Water Dispenser. Like New. $275. 803-0596

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Computer

SCOOTERS Computers. We fix any problem. Low prices. 476-2042

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Lawn & Garden Equipment

Great Sand Rock! Tri Axle Load Delivered, $150. Archdale, Thomasville, Trinity & High Point. 336-688-9012

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Furniture

Moving Sale! 5 pc T-ville Furn BR Suite, $450, 6 pc LR set, $400. Call 336-819-9867

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Wanted to Rent/ Buy/Trade

QUICK CASH PAID FOR JUNK CARS & TRUCKS. 434-1589. Top cash paid for any junk vehicle. T&S Auto 882-7989

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Misc. Items for Sale

Handicap Legend Scooter, $300. Motor w/3.4 lt, V6, $500. 18 in. Ford Mags after market-$300. 476-5872 Mountain Land in Dobson Township. 1+/-ac. Cheap! Homemade Camper, Complete. Runs good, Sleeps 4. Call 336-301-0372 Sunquest Tanning Canopy 6 bulbs,$400.,Call 336-475-6839 or 336-689-1327

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EAL ESTATE FOR RENT

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Unfurnished Apartments

Spacious All Electric. 1 Level, 1Br Brick Apt. W/D Conn. Stove, Refrig. 883-7010 WE have section 8 approved apartments. Call day or night 625-0052.

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Furnished Apartments/

1 br efficiency, completely furnished, all utilities paid, NO PETS, 434-4001 / 848-2276 T-ville 3BR/2BA, Cent H/A, 125 A Kendall Mill Rd. $700/mo, $700/dep. Ph 472-0310/491-9564

0620

Homes for Rent

2BR/1BA 1112 Richland St, $395 336-434-2004 1102 Cassell 2br 300 523 Flint 2br 275 913-B Redding 2br 300 HUGHES ENTERPRISES 885-6149 2BR, carpet, blinds, appli. No Pets. $500. mo. 883-4611 Leave message. 2BR/1BA, 800 Barbee, Newly Renovated. $425/mo plus dep. 2BR/1BA, 600 Willoubar, Newly Renovated. $450/mo plus dep. Call 919-960-3242 3BR, 2BA, $675. plus dep., central heat/air, 1907 Ardeen Pl., HP Call between 4pm-8pm 989-2434 3BR/1.5BA, 2 Story, Cent H/A. Stove, Refrig. Archdale. $750/mo, $750/sec. Call 336-382-6102 3BR/2BA. On 3 ac in Davidson Co. Like New. $825/mo + $825/dep. No Pets! 474-7204 A-1 ROOMS. Clean, close to stores, buses, A/C. No dep. 803-1970. Archdale, Nice 2BR, $400 mo. Call 336-431-7716 1002 Mint-2br 918 Ferndale-2br 883-9602

3 BEDROOMS 2631 Ingram.....................$450 604 Parkwood.................$450 111 Avery.........................$435 236 Grand........................$435 1934 Cedrow....................$425 1804 E Commerce......... $425 1600 E Lexington.............$575 151 Hedgecock................$750 303 Sinclair..................... $550 523 Guilford.....................$450 2346 Brentwood...............$550 1009 True Lane................$450 1015 True Lane................$450 100 Lawndale...................$450 1609 Pershing..................$400

2 BEDROOMS 700 B Redding................$298 1206 Vernon....................$298 1116 B Richland..............$265 1718 L E. Kivett................$298 520 E Dayton..................$485 308 Cedar........................$298 1908 Leonard...................$498 1502 A Leonard...............$275 511 E. Fairfield.................$398 2411 B Van Buren........... $325 515 E. Fairfield.................$398 1605 & 1613 Fowler.........$400 804 Winslow.....................$335 824-H Old Winston Rd.....$550 706-C Railroad.................$345 305-A Phillips...................$300 1101 Carter St.................$350 705-B Chestnut................$390 201-G Dorothy.................$375

1 BEDROOM 211 E. Kendall..................$345 1600 A Long...................$325 620-19A N. Hamilton........$310 618-12A N. Hamilton........$298 320G Richardson.............$335 620-20B N. Hamilton........$375 1003 N. Main................... $305 314 B Meadow Place....$298

SECTION 8 614 Everette....................$498 1106 Grace......................$425

Unfurnished Apartments

************** Quality 1 & 2 BR Apts for Rent Starting @ $395 Southgate Garden & Piedmont Trace Apartments (336)476-5900 ***************

1br Archdale $395 3br House $795 2br Archdale $495 L&J Prop 434-2736 2BR Apartment, in Archdale. $450/month plus Deposit. No Pets. Call 431-5222 2BR, 1BA avail. 2427 Francis St. Nice Area. $475/mo Call 336-833-6797 2Br/1BA Apt. Range & Ref., furnished. Cent H/A. NO PETS. $425 + dep. 336-472-7009 2BR/1BA, Ready to Rent. 602 Memorial Park Dr, Tville. Call 704-277-5398 502-C Playground (Archdale) – 1BR/1BA apt. Stove, refrig. furn. WD hookup, No pets, no inside smoking. $350 mo. 434-3371 Clositers & Foxfire $1000 FREE RENT! 885-5556 Large 1BR, Duplex $280. near Penn-Griffin, very clean, blinds, 882-2030 Nice clean 2BR, bath and half Apt., Stove and Refridge., Central air and heat, no smoking and no pets. Call 476-4570 2 BR, Appls, AC, Clean, W/D Connection. Good Location. $450. 431-9478

0620

4 BEDROOMS 1124 Meadowlawn.........$995 809 Doak.........................$775 520 Pendleton..................$625 3 BEDROOMS 3603 Grindstaff..............$1195 1506 Chatham................$695 423 Aldridge.....................$675 112 Hedgecock................$675 2713 Ernest St.................$675 2305 Friends...................$600 222 Montlieu....................$595 726 Bridges......................$575 1020 South.......................$550 701 Habersham..............$550 2507 Dallas......................$550 2208-A Gable Way...........$550 209 Earle..........................$535 2415 Williams...................$525 507 Hedrick......................$525 2915 Central...................$525 601 Willoubar...................$525 324 Louise.......................$525 637 Wesley......................$525 834 Cummins..................$500 409 N Centennial............$500 2207 Gable Way..............$500 12 Forsyth........................$495 1016 Grant.......................$475 2543 Patrick.....................$475 919 Old Winston..............$525 1220-A Kimery.................$500 2219 N. Centennial..........$495 836 Cummins..................$450 913 Grant........................$450 502 Everett......................$450 606 Barbee......................$450 410 Vail...........................$425 328 Walker......................$425 914 Putnam.....................$399

2 BEDROOM 6117 Hedgecock #1A......$750 1720 Beaucrest...............$600 1111 N. Hamilton.............$595 1540 Beaucrest...............$525 101 #13 Oxford..............$525 120 Kendall....................$475 1610 Brentwood............$475 905 Old Tville Rd............$450 215 Friendly....................$450 1198 Day........................$450 914 Newell.....................$450 1119 Textile....................$435 1804 Johnson.................$425 205-D Tyson Ct..............$425 114-A Marshall...............$425 1501-B Carolina..............$425 541 E. Dayton................$410 324 Walker....................$400 2306 Palmer..................$400 611 Paramount.............$400 305 Barker......................$400 713-B Chandler.............$399 2903-B Esco....................$395 622-A Hendrix...............$395 1704 Whitehall..............$385 609-A Memorial Pk........$375 1100 Adams.................$375 2306-A Little..................$375 1227 Redding.................$350 311-B Chestnut...............$350 309-B Griffin...................$335 900-A W. Kearns..............$335 4703 Alford......................$325 313-B Barker...................$300 1116-B Grace...................$295 306-B Meredith..............$290 1515 Olivia......................$280 1700 A & B Brockett........$275

1 BEDROOM 1123-C Adams...............$450 402-C W. Lexington.......$400 620-A Scientific..............$375 508 Jeanette..................$375 910 Proctor.....................$325 1119-A English...............$295 305 E. Guilford................$275 412 Denny.....................$275 309-B Chestnut...............$275 1103-A S. Elm.................$275 502-B Coltrane................$270 405-A Kennedy...............$250 1317-A Tipton..................$235 CONRAD REALTORS 512 N. Hamilton 885-4111

0635

0640

Misc for Rent

3 BEDROOMS 109 Quakerwood............$1100 317 Washboard................$895 330 W. Presnell................$790 1704 Azel.........................$600 603 Denny.......................$600 2209 B Chambers...........$575 1014 Grace......................$575 800 Carr..........................$575 281 Dorothy.....................$550 1414 Madison..................$525 116 Underhill...................$525 1439 Madison..................$495 840 Putnam......................$475 5693 Muddy Creek #2......$475 920 Forest.......................$450 1032 Grace......................$430 1711 Edmondson............$350 2 BEDROOMS 606 Liberty.....................$625 3911 C Archdale............$600 1114 Westbrook..............$550 285 Dorothy...................$500 532 Roy............................$495 8798 US 311 #3..............$495 931 Marlboro..................$475 112 A Marshall................$450 307 Liberty......................$450 813 E. Guilford...............$450 306 Terrace Trace...........$450 410 Friddle......................$435 10721 N Main..................$425 500 Lake.........................$425 800 Barbee.....................$425 804 Wise.........................$400 283 Dorothy...................$400 107 Plummer.................$400 304-A Kersey...................$395 1033-A Pegram.............$395 1418 Johnson.................$375 600 Willowbar..................$375 1429 E Commerce..........$375 309 A N. Hall....................$365 1031 B Pegram................$355 802 Barbee.....................$350 215-B & DColonial...........$350 417 B White Oak..............$350 1 BEDROOMS 3306 A Archdale..........$350 311 A&B Kersey...............$335 203 Baker.......................$325 205 A Taylor....................$285 909 A Park.....................$250 529 A Flint......................$250 KINLEY REALTY 336-434-4146

0670

Business Places/ Offices

1000 SF retail space close to new 85. $595/month. Call day or night 336-625-6076

Misc for Rent

3BR, $665. 2BR Apt, $500, Furnished Room $100/wk. Section 8 ok. Call 887-2033 Mobile Homes & Lots Auman Mobile Home Pk 3910 N. Main 883-3910

The FAX are in… and they’re FASTER! Fax us your ad 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to: CLASSIFIED FASTFAX at 336-888-3639 Please include your name, address, city, zip code, daytime number, ad copy, and date(s) ad should appear. If you have a regular account, please include your sales rep’s name and fax. If you need confirmation of receipt, please make sure your fax machine is programmed to print your fax number at the top of your page(s).

0741

Mobile Homes for Sale

MH's Completely remodeled on nice private lots. Some Owner Financing available. 434-2365 leave message

0754 Commercial/Office 1,000 sq. ft retail space near new 85. Reasonable rent & terms. Phone day or night 336-625-6076. 70,000 ft. former Braxton Culler bldg. Well located. Reasonable rent. Call day or night. 336-625-6076 Almost new 10,000 sq ft bldg on Baker Road, plenty of parking. Call day or night 336-625-6076 Houses $295-$495 in High Point Area. Phone day or night 336-625-0052 Proven Money Maker For Sale Successful upholstery business in beautiful St. Augustine, Florida. After 23 profitable years, I'm ready to retire. Will be in High Point, North Carolina September 24th and 25th. Call Bill at 904-325-4207 with serious inquiries only. 2111 Shore Dr 2300 sqft, $700 Baptist Childrens Home Rd, T-ville 3200 sqft $750 Conrad Realtors 336-885-4111

0780 Misc. Real Estate FSBO low price to prevent foreclosure. 2BR, 2BA Condo Archdale area. 843-997-2460

0793

Monuments/ Cemeteries

1 Plot at Holly Hill Cemetery in the Front Sec. Will Sell Cheap! 336-491-9564 or 472-0310 Floral Garden, 2 Side by Side plots, Sells for $6400 asking 5000. Call 610-698-7056 Oakwood Cemetery, "Roadside Lot". 16'x16' w/8 graves $3000 + $100/per site for Cemetery trust fund. 882-9353

T

RANSPORTATION

8000 SF Manuf $1800 168 SF Office $250 600 SF Wrhs $200 T-ville 336-561-6631

0816

Recreational Vehicles

'90 Winnebago Chiefton 29' motor home. 73,500 miles, runs good, $11,000. 336-887-2033 2003 Club Car Golf Cart 48 volts, sun top, windshield, rear seat, $2850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426

0820

Campers/Trailers

06 Fifth Wheel Cardinal. 30' w/2 Slideouts. Immaculate. $27,000. New Tires. 474-0340

0824

Motor Homes

'01 Damon motorhome. 2 slides, 2 ACs, 10k, loaded. 36ft. Very good cond., $52,000. Back-up camera. 431-9891

0832

Motorcycles

00 Harley Davidson Fatboy, 1,900 miles, extras, Must See!. $11,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293 06 HD Road King. 3700 miles. Always Garaged. $1000's of Chrome front to back. $15,500. Call 431-9473

0856

Sport Utility Vehicles

95 Toyota 4-Runner, 145K miles, Exc Cond. $5,200. Call 336-687-8204

0864

Pickup Trucks for Sale

06 Chev. Silverado, 2500 HD Crew, 4X4, Loaded, Lthr, DVD. Onstar, Heated Seats, Long bed. $22,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293 08 Chev Colorado, Ext Cab, LT. 14K mi. Loaded. LN. $16,700. 784-5369/817-6222 08 Mitsubishi Raider, LS. Ext Cab. 6spd OD. 12k mil. LN. $13,500 784-5369/817-6222 1984 GMC Caballero, 93K miles. VGC. Runs Good. $5000 obo. Call 336-841-1525 1986 Toyota Truck SR5 Turbo. Highway mileage, PS, Tilt, PB, PW. $2,200 obo. Call 336-880-5690

0868

Cars for Sale

05 Chev. Suburban, 4X4, Loaded, Leather, DVD, Onstar. $19,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293

COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL 128 CHURCH former pharmacy. Approx. 2100 sf, gas heat, central air, parking in rear.................................$1200 501 ENGLISH RD. Approx 4,200 sf, gas heat, central air, ample parking.............. $1000 106 W. KIVETT Showroom space. Approx. 1750 SF just off Main.......................... $985 788 A N. MAIN Approx. 1500 SF, gas heat, central air, several compartments........ $950 614 N. HAMILTON Ideal for beauty or nail salon. Heat, water, hot water, central AC $685 652 N. MAIN showroom, approx. 5000 SF...............$5000 3407 E ARCHDALE RD. Office space, approx 1000 SF, gas heat, central air....... $525 120-122 W. BROAD Approx 560 SF Gas ht., air, brick, paved street across from railroad station.................... $596 116 W. BROAD 280 SF.. $298

Rooms for Rent

A Better Room 4U. Walking distance of stores, buses. 886-3210 LOW Weekly Rates - a/c, phone, HBO, eff. Travel Inn Express, HP 883-6101 no sec. dep. AFFORDABLE Rooms for rent. Call 336-491-2997

0640 T-ville, Hasty/Ledford Schools. 3BR/2BA. No Pets. $700/mo, 475-7323 or 442-7654 Lovely 2BR home. Hdwd flr. Cent. heat/air. Nice Fireplace 882-9132

Homes for Rent

Large bar behind Home Depot on N. Main Street. Reasonable rent. Call day or night 336-625-6076. Retail/Office/Church Intersection Hwy 29/70 & 68 1100sf $600 336-362-2119

0675

Mobile Homes for Rent

2BR, 2 BA private lot, storage building, NO PETS, Archdale, 431-9665 or 689-1401 2BR/1BA Mobile Home in Quiet Park. $400/mo, $350/dep. Ledford Area. Call 442-7806 2BR/2BA, dishwasher, Island, Range. Big Private Yard. Trash & Water incld. Background check req'd. $450/dep plus 1st Months Rent $450. Call 861-5262 3BR Trailer, Cent H/A. Inside Like New. Big Rooms. $600 & dep. Call 476-9591 Mobile Home for rent Archdale & Thomasville area. Weekly or monthly. Call 883-8650 Trinity 2BR/1BA, Private Lot, $400/mo + Deposit. Call 336-861-7471 Daytime, 861-4938 Evening

R

EAL ESTATE FOR SALE

0710

Homes for Sale

Auction Today 5:45:pm High Bidder Buys! Absolute Home Auction 810 Carter St in HP see@peggauction.com #5098 JCPegg 996-4414 Payments to Owner! Nice 2BR House. 75x150ft lot. $3000 down. Call 336-882-9132

Time Warner Cableʼs agreements with programmers and broadcasters to carry their services and stations routinely expire from time to time. We are usually able to obtain renewals or extensions of such agreements, but in order to comply with applicable regulations, we must inform you when an agreement is about to expire. The following agreements are due to expire soon, and we may be required to cease carriage of one or more of these services/stations in the near future: Azteca America Bandamax BBC America BBC America HD BBC On Demand DePelicula DePelicula Classico E! Encore Encore Action Encore Drama Encore Love Encore Mystery Encore Westerns Encore WAM! Erotic Networks Lifetime NHL Network NHL Center Ice RetroPlex Starz Starz Cinema Starz Edge Starz HD Starz InBlack Starz Kids & Family Starz On Demand Style TruTV TruTV HD Weather Channel WGSR In addition, from time to time we make certain changes in the services that we offer in order to better serve our customers. The following changes are planned: * Fox Sports Espanol on channel 818 will change its name to Fox Deportes on October 1, 2010. * Discovery Kids on channel 211 will change its name to The Hub on October 10, 2010. * Celebrity Shopping Network will be removed from channel 378 on October 20, 2010. * Liquidation is replacing Wize Buys on channel 376 on October 20, 2010. * Black Shopping Channel is replacing Art & Coin on channel 377 on October 20, 2010. * ShopZeal 3 replacing Cornerstore TV on channel 380 on October 20, 2010. * Encore West will launch on channel 636 as part of the Movie Tier on November 1, 2010. * Movie Pass On Demand will launch on channels 650 and 1029 as part of the Movie Tier on November 1, 2010. The new services listed below cannot be accessed on CableCARD-equipped Unidirectional Digital Cable Products purchased at retail without additional, two-way capable equipment: Liquidation Black Shopping Channel ShopZeal 3 Encore West Movie Pass On Demand For more information about your local channel line-up, visit www.yourtwc.com in the Help section under Channel Changes or call 1-866-Triad-TWCable (1-866-874-2389). To receive all services, Digital Cable service, a remote control and lease of a Digital set-top box are required. To receive all High-Definition services offered by Time Warner Cable, Digital Cable, HD Receiver and associated equipment are required at an additional fee. HDTV set required for HD Service. Some services are not available to CableCARD customers. Not all equipment supports all services. All services may not be available in all areas. Subject to change without notice. Some restrictions apply. Check your local listings. September 20, 2010


5C

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 www.hpe.com Cars for Sale

0880 Off-Road Vehicles

05 Taurus Wagon very nice, 70k, $4400. Call 336-431-6020 or 336-847-4635 2007 Mercury Millan, 31K, Silver. Excellent Condition. $12,900. Call 336-869-2022

2007 Honda 400 EX, Less than 10 hrs. Sport Type 4 Wheeler. Bought New in 10/09. Adult Owned. Black, Electric Start & Reverse. Asking $3800. Call 688-3964

87 Thunderbird, LX. 106K miles. All power. New Tires, AC. 5.0 V8. EC. $1800. Call 336-495-9636 / 336-301-6673

visit us online...

98 Honda Accord $2950. 99 Lincoln Navigator $5500. 07 BMW wife's car, white with tan interior, $24,500. Contact Lacy 336-884-5446 99 Dodge Caravan can be seen at address 226 Crestwood Cir 454-5910 2000. AT Quality Motors you can buy regardless. Good or bad credit. 475-2338 99 Nissan Altima GXE, 4 dr, auto, A/C, pwr windows, cd, new tires, ex. cond., $4850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426 97 Honda Accord LX, 4 door, auto, a/c, Pwr windows, CD, 4 cycliner, 30MPG, $4850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426

GUARANTEED RESULTS!

We will advertise your house until it sells!

• 2X2 Display Ad (Value $64.60/day) • Ad will include photo, description and price of your home

hpe.com

0868

• Ad will run EVERYDAY • Ad runs up to 365 days

$400

Certain restrictions apply. This offer valid for a limited time only.

Call 888-3555 or email classads@hpe.com For Sale By Owner, Realtors & Builders are Welcome!

Showcase of Real Estate NEW HOMES DAVIDSON COUNTY

Water View

164 Emily Ann Drive, N. Davidson County-FSBO Desirable Davidson County Schools, gorgeous, custom brick home built in 2005, 2,864 SF, quiet cul-de-sac,3BR,2.5BA,possible 4th BR in unďŹ nished space, spacious modern open oor plan on one level, HW oors, bonus room over garage, custom kitchen w/granite countertops, maple cabinets, SS appliances, and beautiful tile oor, wonderful master suite with HUGE walk-in closet, tons of storage, too many extras to list here. See our ad at http://www.InfoTube.net/236019 for more details or call 336-201-3943. Shown by appointment only. $379,000.00

Lots starting at $34,900 Homes starting at $225,000 Special Financing at 4.75% (Certain Restrictions Apply)

Builders personal home with many upgrades: hardwood oors, jetted tub, separate shower, beautiful granite counters, fabulous kitchen, 2 story family room AND DRAMATIC VIEWS!! Plus much, much more‌.

WENDY HILL REALTY CALL 475-6800

7%.$9 (),, 2%!,49 s #!,,

3152 WINDCHASE COURT 3 BR 2 BA 1164 SF, New carpet & paint, New HVAC, GE Appliances. End Unit $96,900

CED

CED

H I G H

REDU

REDU

For Sale By Owner 232 Panther Creek Court

315 S. Elm St, High Point Commercial Building for Sale $499,900

Best Price in The Neighborhood! 3BR/2.5BA/BSMT/GAR - Sparkling hardwood oors on the ML, sunny bkft room, spacious kitchen w/island-pantry-tiled backsplash-u/c lighting, formal DR, elegant MSTR w/trey ceiling and TWO walk-in closets, oversized deck, covered patio w/tv & frig, outdoor sink, beautifully landscaped w/ agstone courtyard for entertaining/dining. BSMT studded for future expansion. Private n’hood pool, walking trails, tennis courts, parks, lakes plus golf course. Summer fun for the whole family! $309,000 3HARON $ANIEL 2EALTOR s -ORE )NFO 0ATTERSON$ANIEL COM

8,400 Sq. Ft +/-, SHOW ROOM DISTRICT

3OUTHERN 7OODS AT -EADOWLANDS s 7ALLBURG .#

Ed Price & Associates Diana Baxendale, Broker Sales Associate 118 Trindale Road, Archdale, NC 27263 Direct (336)475-1052 OfďŹ ce & Cell (336) 870-9395 Fax (336)475-1352 Email: diana.baxendale@edpricetriad.com Website: dianabsellshomes.com

2)#(,!.$

Quiet rural living, new high quality 3BR/2BA, 1800 sq ft, 0.83 acres, lots of storage, 9/10 ft ceilings, large porches and garage, $225,000, $15,000 to closing and down pay, 3865 Tarmac Dr., SoďŹ a/ Hillsville, FSBO, (336) 287-6107

2300 + Square Foot, 5 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Living Room, Dining Room, Eat-in Kitchen, Laundry Room, Gas Heat with a/c, completely remodeled, large backyard, $98,900

Call 336-689-5029 OPEN HOUSE

PRICE REDUCED

3930 Johnson St.

398 NORTHBRIDGE DR.

Contact us at Lamb’s Realty- 442-5589.

3BR, 2BA, Home, 2 car garage, Nice Paved Patio Like new $169,900 OWNER 883-9031 OPEN HOUSE MOST SAT. & SUN. 2-4

A Must See! Beautiful home set on 3 acres, New cabinets, corian countertops, hardwood, carpet, appliances, deck, roof. Home has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room, dining room, great room. $199,900.

LARGE HOUSE Big Family - Home OfďŹ ces Family Compound

PRICE CUT WENDOVER HILLS

LINDA FAIRCLOTH COLDWELL BANKER TRIAD REALTORS 336-847-4970

8 Unit Apartment Building Available

1.2 acres, 3.5 baths, 14 rooms

336-886-4602 Near Wesley Memorial Methodist/ Emerywood

$259,900 Tell Your Friends - Move in Condition!

All Brick Exterior Built 1987. Paved Parking. Each unit 2BR, 1BA (Approx. 750 square Ft.) Electric Heat & Air Conditioning. Many Upgrades and new appliances, oor coverings, cabinets, paint. Public water & sewer (individual meters). Convenient to public transportation and downtown. Asking price $350,000.00. For additional information call (336)833-6797.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

LEDFORD SOUTH OPEN TUES-SAT 11AM-5PM OPEN SUNDAY 1PM-5PM

Beautifully remodeled brick home at 502 Birchwood 3bedrooms, 2 updated baths, new windows, new appliances, countertops and kitchen oors. Completely remodeled, this is like new. Call for appointment. PRICE CUT $132,750.

P O I N T

Directions: Westchester to West Lexington, south on Hwy. 109, Community is on the left just past Ledford Middle School. Quality construction beginning at $169,900! Eight Flexible oorplans! - Three to seven bedrooms - 1939 square feet to 3571 square feet - Friendship/Ledford Schools - Low Davidson County Taxes - Basement lots Available. No City Taxes, No Slab, All Crawspace Construction MORE INFO @ PattersonDaniel.com Marketed Exclusively by Patterson Daniel Real Estate, Inc.

Debra Murrow, Realtor New Home Consultant 336-499-0789

2 Bedroom/ 2 Bath Condo. Excellent High Point location convenient to Winston-Salem and Greensboro. Apprx. 950 square feet. Spacious bedrooms and closets. Garden tub in the master bath. Tray ceilings and crown molding in the living room. Private balcony overlooking a wooded area. Includes: Refrigerator, dishwasher, stove, microwave and washer/dryer connection MOTIVATED SELLER. New Lower Price $79,900!

Call 336-769-0219

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4

WIN WIN SITUATION

Help Support I AM NOW, INC., a local Non-ProďŹ t Your Chance to Win - $100 Rafe Tickets 226 Cascade Drive, High Point Visit www.IAMNOWINC.com and www.RafeThisHouse.Info Canned Food Drive Begins In September

OWNER FINANCING

DON’T MISS TAX CREDIT 189 Game Trail, Thomasville

Rent to Own - Your Credit is approved!

Enjoy living in a quiet, distinctive neighborhood with no through trafďŹ c. 3 BR 2.5 BA, 2300 sq’, open oor plan, vaulted ceilings & lg. windows, Oak oors & carpeted BRs, marble tiled bathrooms, lg. large master bath with separate shower, double ďŹ re place in master BR & LR w. gas logs, kitchen w. granite counter tops, double oven, stereo system. 2 car garage, large patio overlooking a beautiful back yard. Low taxes. $299,800 $321,000 Visit www.forsalebyowner.com/22124271 or call 336.687.3959

4 bedrooms 2 and 1/2 bath Two-story home in Avalon community, 2078 sq.ft. in High Point (Guilford Co.). Formal living room, dining room, ďŹ replace, laundry, great kitchen with breakfast area, Jetted tub in master with separate shower. $1,330 per month with credits toward down payment. Visit www.crs-buy.com or call

505 Willow Drive, Thomasville Over 4,000 Sq. Ft. Brick home with 4 Bedrooms & 4 bathrooms, 2 ďŹ replaces, hardwood oors, updated kitchen, 2 master suites, fenced yard. Grand dining room – Priced at $319,900!!

Wendy Hill 475-6800

FOR SALE

125 Kendall Mill Road, Thomasville 4 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Large Rooms. East Davidson Area. s SQUARE FEET

336-491-9564 or 336-472-0310

5.9 acres, Homesite in Hasty School area. With Underground Electric. Davidson Water and existing Septic. Borders Creek with 3.9 acres wooded & 2.0 acres mostly clear. Ready for your Building. $65K. Call 336-869-1351 or 336-689-0388 AM PM

336-790-8764

Located at 1002 Barbee St, High Point 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Fireplace, New Vinyl, Completely Remodeled. Garage & Storage. $89.900. Have other homes to ďŹ nance. Will trade for land.

Call 886-7095

FOR SALE

Beautiful townhouse at 1740 Ternberry Rd. in Cherokee Hills with 2BR, 2.5 baths, sunny eat-in kitchen, security system, ďŹ replace and private deck area, approx. 1400 SF.... lovely established n’hood conv to all of High Point & Triad. A great value for $114,900... Contact Shirley Ramsey, Broker, Keller Williams Realty for more info 336-992-7602

4493 Orchard Knob Ln Built in 2007, this nearly 1800 SF townhome features 3br/2ba, hardwoods, carpet, tile. Corian counter tops w/ undermount sink & tile back splash. Large living-dining with gas ďŹ replace, stainless steel appliance, rear stamped concrete patio with awning, and 2 car garage. Many upgrades from the standard home. Look, decide & make an offer!

OR

Like quiet neighborhoods? ...backyard privacy? ...secluded living yet near everything? ...downsizing a priority? ...home ready to move into?

then...657 Sonoma Lane is for you! This 1343 s/f, 3br, 2ba townhome is perfectly maintained and features 9’ ceilings w/crown mouldings, custom drapes and blinds, heat pump, gas logs and water heater, Whirlpool appliances and mature plants. Upgrades include: privacy fence, water puriďŹ er, glass enclosed sun room and brick patio. All exterior maintenance through homeowners assn. $169,900.

Call 888-3555 to advertise on this page!

Call 336-869-4040 or 336-471-3900 to visit. 30033022


Cash In on a Classic. Start Something New. Buy and sell your auto the easy way with the Classifieds.

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CONSTRUCTION

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J & L CONSTRUCTION Remodeling, RooďŹ ng and New Construction

,ANDSCAPE )RRIGATION 3OLUTIONS ,,#

YEAR ROUND SERVICE/ REASONABLE RATES/ QUALITY WORK

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D

ROUGH START: Favre, Vikings fall to 0-2 on the season. 3D

Monday September 20, 2010

TOUGH TRIP: Wake Forest endures hard times at Stanford. 3D Sports Editor: Mark McKinney mmckinney@hpe.com (336) 888-3556

GETTING SMALLER: Americans’ net worth slowly shrinks. 5D

‘Moore’ woes for Panthers BY GREER SMITH ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

CHARLOTTE – A glimpse of the possible future of the Carolina Panthers came onto the field with a quarterback change at Bank of America Stadium on Sunday. It came as the present had largely been decided as Tampa Bay carved out a 20-7 victory in a duel of young teams and young quarterbacks. “I don’t think there were any positives,” Panthers coach John Fox said. “It’s too early to look at the positives. I know it was 20-7 and we’ll be back at the drawing board (today) and look for the positives.” Josh Freeman of the Buccaneers (2-0), a second-year player from Kansas State, was easily more impressive than Carolina starter Matt Moore. Freeman went 12-of-24 for 178 yards with two touchdowns and repeatedly scrambled out of trouble, one of those times coming when he evaded two Panthers to complete a pass on third-and-17 to Kellen Winslow at the Panthers’ 35. On the next play, he connected with Michael Williams to cover the remaining distance, putting the Buccaneers ahead for good at 14-7 in the second quarter. They added two field goals in the second half and that was more than enough as the Panthers (0-2) had trouble threatening even though they outgained Tampa 278-273. Carolina’s only score came when Moore hit Steve Smith over the middle on a 37-yard pass to make it 7-7 with 11:43 left in the first half.

NFL TAMPA BAY CAROLINA

20 7

CHICAGO DALLAS

27 20

ATLANTA ARIZONA

41 7

PHILADELPHIA DETROIT

35 32

WHO’S NEWS

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AP

Carolina quarterback Matt Moore (right) is sacked by Tampa Bay linebacker Quincy Black in the second half of the Buccaneers’ 20-7 win on Sunday in Charlotte.

Inside...

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Carolina searches for answers to offensive struggles. 3D Moore never got the Panthers inside the Tampa 32 after that. After throwing an interception to Ronde Barber early in the third quarter and fumbling when he was sacked at the Tampa 38 early in the fourth, he was replaced by rookie Jimmy Clausen with 10:03 to play. “The game wasn’t going our way,” Fox said.

LOUDON, N.H. (AP) – As the last seed in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, Clint Bowyer didn’t land on many lists of legitimate title contenders. Bowyer wasn’t mentioned in the same breath as four-time defending champion Jimmie Johnson, and that spotlight on favorites Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick never drifted in his direction. Bowyer was pressure-free as he headed into the Chase opener at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, and with nothing to lose, he swung for the fences. Bowyer dominated Sunday until a series of cautions found him trailing Tony Stewart over the closing laps of the Chase opener. With both drivers trying to nurse their sputtering fuel tanks to the finish, Bowyer found himself in position to pounce when Stewart’s tank ran dry a lap from the checkered flag. It snapped an 88-race losing streak for Bowyer, jettisoned him from 12th in the standings to

“He’s a good, young quarterback and we gave him opportunities to get some reps.” The change was met with hearty cheers from those still in the stands. Clausen led the Panthers on a 79-yard drive that started at the Carolina 20 and ended when Jonathan Stewart was stuffed for a 1-yard loss on fourth-

and-goal at the Bucs’ 1. On the next possession, Clausen fumbled a snap and threw an interception. He finished 7-of-13 for 59 yards with the pick. “I thought I did OK,” Clausen said. “There are some throws I could have made better. A loss is a loss.” Moore said he wasn’t going to complain about the change and felt that he should be the starter again Sunday against Cincinnati. “I haven’t talked to anyone about that,” he said.

“That’s just the way I feel.” He obviously had not talked to Fox, who minutes earlier was noncommittal about who might start. “It’s way too early to tell,” Fox said. “Right now, I can’t make that decision at this point. Matt has not been benched by any stretch. We’ll go with whoever gives us the best chance to win next week and that will take some time (to determine).” gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3556

second, and sent the Richard Childress Racing driver into Round 2 of the Chase loving his championship chances. “I had a lot of fun, it was kind of a reBowyer laxing weekend,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s going to be that way from now on. But I’m telling you, we launched ourselves into the pressure cooker early. You’ve got to be able to continue to have as much fun as we did this weekend. If we can do that, we can continue to have the success and run at this pace.” And what a pace it was. In arguably the best Chase opener since the format’s 2004 debut, the championship contenders bounced all over the field Sunday as driver after driver faced various issues. Hamlin, the points leader, was spun by Carl Edwards on a midrace restart and rallied from 22nd to finish second. Harvick, the points leader for most of the “reg-

CHASE STANDINGS

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1. Denny Hamlin 5,230 2. Clint Bowyer -35 3. Kevin Harvick -45 4. Kyle Busch -62 5. Jeff Gordon -75 6. Kurt Busch -86 7. Jimmie Johnson -92 8. Carl Edwards -95 9. Greg Biffle -108 10. Jeff Burton -112 11. Tony Stewart -124 12. Matt Kenseth -136

ular season,” struggled through a series of bad pit stops to fall as low as 18th before finishing fifth. Johnson was derailed by a loose right wheel late in the race to finish 25th, the lowest of the Chase drivers. And after stressing that New Hampshire was his biggest concern of the Chase, Matt Kenseth capped a weekend of struggles with a noncompetitive 23rd-place finish. Then there was Stewart, who

tried to stretch his gas the final 92 laps in pursuit of the victory. When it backfired, he limped his car home to a 24th-place finish that cost him five spots in the standings. “We went down swinging,” he said, shrugging. “It’s a tough way to start the Chase.” The Chase shifts next weekend to Dover, Del., where Hamlin takes a 35-point lead over Bowyer into one of his weakest race tracks. Bowyer was pressed by crew chief Shane Wilson to save his fuel, and the order frustrated him as he tried to run down Stewart. Bowyer knew if he couldn’t run wide-open, he wouldn’t catch Stewart, and he wanted the win after leading a race-high 177 laps. He successfully managed his fuel, and Stewart ran out of gas right before he took the white flag. Bowyer sailed past him, held off the hard-charging Hamlin, and never second-guessed Wilson’s call.

HIT AND RUN

A

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HOUSTON 30 WASHINGTON (OT) 27

Bowyer snaps 88-race drought in Chase opener

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TOP SCORES

funny thing happened to this year’s trendy pick to capture the NFC West championship in their season opener. The 49ers left their heart in San Francisco and got crushed 31-6 in Seattle. With Kurt Warner retired in Arizona, Pete Carroll bringing a new system to the Seahawks and St. Louis being, well, St. Louis, the 49ers entered the season with lofty expectations. Lots of folks – me included – were prepared to hand them the division title by default. Not so fast.

San Francisco welcomes New Orleans to the City by the Bay tonight (8:30 p.m., ESPN) needing to erase the embarrassing memories of a week one meltdown in a hurry. The 49ers raced to an early 6-0 lead against the Seahawks, then slammed on the brakes. That enabled a team that went 5-11 a year ago to explode for 31 unanswered points. San Francisco running back Frank Gore managed only 38 yards on 17 carries. 49er quarterback Alex Smith completed just 26 of 45 passes with two picks. The porous defense made Seattle’s Matt

Hasselbeck look like Otto Graham in his prime. None of this bodes well for the game against the defending Super Bowl champion Saints. Drew Brees is no Matt Hasslebeck. He’s much, much better. The Saints defense loves to stuff the run and feast on shaky quarterbacks. That trendy preseason pick to win the NFC West could be staring at an 0-2 start. That’s not a positive trend.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

– MARK MCKINNEY ENTERPRISE SPORTS EDITOR

Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio had a mild heart attack and was hospitalized Sunday morning, shortly after calling an audacious fake field goal to beat Notre Dame in overtime. The 54-year-old Dantonio had surgery to put a stent in a blocked blood vessel leading to the heart. He’s expected to remain in the hospital a few more days, and offensive coordinator Don Treadwell will lead the team during Dantonio’s indefinite absence. “This morning, in the very early hours, not long after the football game, Coach Dantonio began experiencing some symptoms,” said Dr. Chris D’Haem, who performed the relatively common procedure to restore blood flow. “Fortunately, his heart damage is minimal. He’s going to do very well and we’re optimistic he’ll have a full recovery.” The Spartans defeated Notre Dame 34-31 in a game that ended just before midnight Saturday night. After Michigan State lined up for a 46-yard field goal that could have forced a second overtime, holder Aaron Bates threw a pass to Charlie Gantt for a winning touchdown. D’Haem said Dantonio began experiencing symptoms of a heart problem around 12:30 a.m.

TOPS ON TV

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7 p.m., SportSouth – Baseball, Braves at Phillies 8:30 p.m., ESPN – Football, NFL, Saints at 49ers INDEX SCOREBOARD 2D HPU 2D NFL 3D COLLEGE FOOTBALL 3D BASEBALL 3D BUSINESS 5D WEATHER 6D


SCOREBOARD 2D www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

BASEBALL

HOLE-IN-ONE

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Major Leagues

New York Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore

W 90 89 83 75 59

L 59 59 66 74 90

Pct .604 .601 .557 .503 .396

Minnesota Chicago Detroit Cleveland Kansas City

W 89 79 74 62 61

L 60 69 74 87 87

Pct .597 .534 .500 .416 .412

Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle

W 83 74 73 57

L 65 74 76 92

Pct .561 .500 .490 .383

Philadelphia Atlanta New York Florida Washington

W 89 86 74 73 62

L 61 64 76 75 87

Pct .593 .573 .493 .493 .416

Cincinnati St. Louis Houston Milwaukee Chicago Pittsburgh

W 84 77 72 69 68 51

L 66 71 77 79 81 98

Pct .560 .520 .483 .466 .456 .342

San Francisco San Diego Colorado Los Angeles Arizona

W 84 83 82 73 59

L 66 66 67 77 91

Pct .560 .557 .550 .487 .393

AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division GB WCGB — — 1 ⁄2 — 7 61⁄21 15 141⁄2 31 30 ⁄2 Central Division GB WCGB — — 91⁄2 10 141⁄2 151 27 27 ⁄2 271⁄2 28 West Division GB WCGB — — 9 15 1011⁄2 1611⁄2 26 ⁄2 32 ⁄2 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division GB WCGB — — 3 — 15 12 15 12 261⁄2 231⁄2 Central Division GB WCGB — — 61 8 11 ⁄2 131⁄2 141 161 151⁄2 171⁄2 32 ⁄2 34 ⁄2 West Division GB WCGB — — 1 ⁄2 21⁄2 11⁄2 31⁄2 11 13 25 27

AMERICAN LEAGUE Saturday’s Games Minnesota 4, Oakland 2 Detroit 6, Chicago White Sox 3 N.Y. Yankees 11, Baltimore 3 Cleveland 6, Kansas City 4 Tampa Bay 4, L.A. Angels 3, 10 innings Toronto 4, Boston 3 Texas 6, Seattle 1 Sunday’s Games Baltimore 4, N.Y. Yankees 3, 11 innings Boston 6, Toronto 0 L.A. Angels 6, Tampa Bay 3 Kansas City 6, Cleveland 4 Oakland 6, Minnesota 2 Seattle 2, Texas 1 Detroit at Chicago White Sox, late Today’s Games Kansas City (Greinke 9-12) at Detroit (Porcello 9-11), 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Garza 14-8) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 1-0), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore (Matusz 8-12) at Boston (Matsuzaka 9-5), 7:10 p.m. Cleveland (J.Gomez 3-4) at Minnesota (Duensing 9-2), 8:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Floyd 10-13) at Oakland (G.Gonzalez 14-9), 10:05 p.m. Texas (D.Holland 3-3) at L.A. Angels (Jer. Weaver 12-11), 10:05 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Kansas City at Detroit, 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. Seattle at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. Texas at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

WHO: Windley Dunbar L10 4-6 5-5 6-4 3-7 6-4

Str L-1 L-1 W-1 L-1 W-1

Home 49-25 46-29 43-32 39-33 34-43

Away 41-34 43-30 40-34 36-41 25-47

L10 7-3 2-8 6-4 5-5 4-6

Str L-1 L-5 W-2 L-1 W-1

Home 49-25 40-33 47-28 32-42 34-40

Away 40-35 39-36 27-46 30-45 27-47

L10 8-2 6-4 7-3 2-8

Str L-1 W-1 W-1 W-1

Home 48-26 44-30 38-34 35-42

Away 35-39 30-44 35-42 22-50

L10 9-1 6-4 5-5 3-7 2-8

Str W-7 W-3 L-3 L-6 L-3

Home 48-27 52-23 44-30 35-39 35-36

Away 41-34 34-41 30-46 38-36 27-51

L10 5-5 4-6 6-4 5-5 8-2 4-6

Str L-1 W-1 W-1 L-1 W-6 W-3

Home 45-30 46-28 41-37 36-38 33-42 36-39

Away 39-36 31-43 31-40 33-41 35-39 15-59

L10 6-4 4-6 7-3 4-6 2-8

Str W-1 L-1 L-1 W-1 L-3

Home 45-30 42-32 51-24 42-33 35-40

Away 39-36 41-34 31-43 31-44 24-51

NATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday’s Games Atlanta 4, N.Y. Mets 2 Colorado 12, L.A. Dodgers 2 San Diego 8, St. Louis 4 Pittsburgh 9, Arizona 6 Cincinnati 11, Houston 1 Philadelphia 5, Washington 2 Chicago Cubs 5, Florida 3 Milwaukee 2, San Francisco 1 Sunday’s Games Atlanta 6, N.Y. Mets 3 Chicago Cubs 13, Florida 3 Pittsburgh 4, Arizona 3 Philadelphia 7, Washington 6 Houston 4, Cincinnati 3 St. Louis 4, San Diego 1 San Francisco 9, Milwaukee 2 L.A. Dodgers 7, Colorado 6, 11 innings Today’s Games St. Louis (C.Carpenter 15-7) at Florida (Volstad 9-9), 3:10 p.m. Atlanta (Jurrjens 7-6) at Philadelphia (Hamels 11-10), 7:05 p.m. Houston (Norris 8-8) at Washington (Li.Hernandez 10-11), 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati (H.Bailey 3-3) at Milwaukee (Capuano 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Houston at Washington, 7:05 p.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Florida, 7:10 p.m. San Francisco at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.

Orioles 4, Yanks 3 (11)

Mariners 2, Rangers 1 Texas

ab Gardnr lf 3 Teixeir ph1b0 Jeter ss 4 Brkmn 1b 6 Curtis rf 0 Cano 2b 4 Swisher dh 5 Posada c 4 Grndrs cf 5 Kearns rf 2 Golson rf 0 ARdrgz ph 0 ENnz pr-3b 0 R.Pena 3b 4 Thams ph-lf1 Totals 38

r 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

h 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 8

bi ab 1 BRorts 2b 4 0 Andino 3bss4 0 Markks rf 4 0 AdJons cf 5 0 J.Fox dh 2 1 Scott ph-dh 3 0 Wggntn 1b 5 0 CPttrsn lf 4 1 Wieters c 2 0 J.Bell pr-3b 1 0 CIzturs ss 2 0 Pie ph 1 0 Tatum c 1 0 0 3 Totals 38

r 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

h bi 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0

4 10 4

New York 100 200 000 00 — 3 Baltimore 100 000 011 01 — 4 No outs when winning run scored. E—M.Gonzalez (1). DP—New York 1, Baltimore 3. LOB—New York 12, Baltimore 8. 2B— Scott (28). HR—Scott (27). SB—B.Roberts (11), C.Patterson (21). S—B.Roberts. IP H R ER BB SO New York Pettitte 6 3 1 1 1 2 Chambrln H,25 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Logan H,12 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 K.Wood H,9 1 2 0 0 1 1 M.Rivera BS,4-35 1 2 1 1 0 1 D.Robrtson L,4-5 1 2 1 1 1 2 Baltimore Tillman 32⁄3 3 3 3 6 1 1 Albers 2 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 Hendrickson 12⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 Ji.Johnson 11⁄3 2 0 0 0 2 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 3 M.Gonzalez W,1-31 0 0 0 3 1 Logan pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. D.Robertson pitched to 2 batters in the 11th. HBP—by Albers (Kearns). WP—Tillman. T—3:41. A—39,537 (48,290).

Athletics 6, Twins 2 Oakland ab RDavis cf 4 Barton 1b 4 M.Ellis 2b 3 KSuzuk c 5 Carson rf 4 Hermd ph-rf1 Dnldsn dh 1 Cust ph-dh 0 Iwamr 3b 4 Carter lf 3 Gross lf 1 Tollesn ss 2 Pnngtn ph-ss Totals 34

r 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 6

h 1 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 9

Minnesota bi ab 1 Revere cf 4 0 Hardy ss 4 2 Mauer c 3 1 JMorls c 1 0 Cuddyr 1b 3 0 DlmYn lf 3 0 Thome dh 4 0 Valenci 3b 3 2 Repko rf 4 0 Punto 2b 3 0 0 10 6 Totals 32

r 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0

h bi 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 6 2

Oakland 300 020 001 — 6 Minnesota 000 002 000 — 2 E—Hardy (11), Revere (1). DP—Oakland 1, Minnesota 1. LOB—Oakland 8, Minnesota 7. 2B—M.Ellis (20). HR—M.Ellis (4), Cuddyer (13), Thome (24). CS—R.Davis (10), Cust (2). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Cramer W,2-0 52⁄3 5 2 2 3 2 Ziegler H,17 11⁄3 0 0 0 1 1 Wuertz H,10 1 1 0 0 0 1 Breslow 1 0 0 0 0 2 Minnesota Liriano L,14-8 5 7 5 5 1 2 Al.Burnett 1 0 0 0 1 2 Neshek 1 0 0 0 3 1 R.Flores 1 0 0 0 1 1 Manship 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 Mijares ⁄23 0 0 0 1 0 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Rauch Manship pitched to 3 batters in the 9th. WP—Al.Burnett. Balk—Al.Burnett. T—3:02. A—40,088 (39,504).

Angels 6, Rays 3 Los Angeles ab Callasp 3b 5 BAreu lf 5 Willits lf 0 TrHntr rf 5 HMatsu dh 4 HKndrc 2b 3 JRiver 1b 4 Conger c 3 BrWod ss 3 Bourjos cf 4

Totals

Tampa Bay bi ab r h bi 0 Jnnngs cf 4 0 0 0 2 WAyar ph 1 0 0 0 0 Zobrist rf-2b4 1 2 1 0 Crwfrd lf 5 0 3 0 1 Longori 3b 3 0 1 0 0 Baldelli dh 2 0 0 0 0 DJnsn phdh2 0 0 1 0 SRdrgz 2b 3 0 1 0 0 Joyce ph-rf 0 0 0 0 3 Hawpe 1b 4 0 0 0 Shppch c 2 1 1 1 Jaso ph-c 2 0 0 0 Bartlett ss 3 0 1 0 Brignc ph 0 1 0 0 36 6 9 6 Totals 35 3 9 3 r 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1

h 0 2 0 2 1 2 0 1 0 1

Los Angeles 100 310 100 — 6 Tampa Bay 010 000 011 — 3 DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—Los Angeles 6, Tampa Bay 9. 2B—H.Matsui (23), Zobrist (24), Longoria (45). HR—B.Abreu 2 (20), Bourjos (4), Shoppach (5). SB—H.Kendrick (13), Bartlett (11). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Kazmir W,9-14 5 6 1 1 2 4 Palmer 22⁄3 2 1 1 1 1 Kohn H,1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Walden S,1-1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Tampa Bay 6 5 5 3 5 Niemann L,10-7 412⁄3 Wheeler ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Hellickson 2 1 1 1 0 1 Sonnanstine 1 2 0 0 0 0 McGee 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—3:14. A—25,794 (36,973).

Royals 6, Indians 4 Cleveland ab Brantly cf 5 Sutton ss 5 Choo dh 4 Duncan lf 4 LaPort 1b 4 Crowe rf 4 AMarte 3b 4 Valuen 2b 4 Gimenz c 2 ACarer ph 1 Totals 37

r 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4

Kansas City h bi ab 1 0 GBlanc cf 4 3 0 Aviles 2b 4 2 2 BButler dh 4 0 0 JaMillr pr-dh0 2 0 Betemt 3b 4 1 0 Kaaihu 1b 3 2 0 B.Pena c 4 1 1 Gordon lf 3 0 0 YBtncr ss 2 0 0 Maier rf 3 12 3 Totals 31

r 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 6

h bi 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 2 8 5

Cleveland 210 000 010 — 4 Kansas City 040 002 00x — 6 DP—Cleveland 1, Kansas City 1. LOB— Cleveland 7, Kansas City 3. 2B—Sutton (1), Crowe (22), A.Marte (6), B.Butler (41), Betemit (20), Ka’aihue (4). HR—Choo (20). SB— Choo (20), Y.Betancourt (1), Maier (2). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Tomlin L,4-4 5 6 6 6 2 4 Laffey 2 1 0 0 0 1 J.Lewis 1 1 0 0 0 1 Kansas City Hochevar W,6-5 6 8 3 3 1 5 Meche H,3 1 2 0 0 0 1 Bl.Wood H,15 1 2 1 1 0 0 Soria S,39-41 1 0 0 0 0 1 Tomlin pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. WP—Bl.Wood. T—2:41. A—17,803 (37,840).

ab Andrus ss 5 MYong 3b 4 DvMrp lf 5 Guerrr dh 4 Germn prdh0 N.Cruz rf 4 Kinsler 2b 3 Morlnd 1b 4 Treanr c 3 C.Davis ph 0 Borbon cf 4 Totals 36

r 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1

Seattle h bi ab 1 0 ISuzuki rf 4 2 0 Figgins 2b 4 2 0 FGtrrz dh 3 2 0 JoLopz 3b 4 0 0 Smoak 1b 4 1 1 Lngrhn lf 3 1 0 JoWilsn ss 3 1 0 MSndrs cf 3 0 0 Quiroz c 3 0 0 0 0 10 1 Totals 31

r 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

h bi 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 0

2 7 2

Texas 000 001 000 — 1 Seattle 000 001 10x — 2 E—Jo.Wilson (19). LOB—Texas 11, Seattle 7. 2B—F.Gutierrez (24). 3B—Langerhans (1). HR—N.Cruz (21). CS—German (1). IP H R ER BB SO Texas Tom.Hnter L,12-4 6 6 2 2 1 1 Rapada 1 0 0 0 0 0 Nippert 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 D.Oliver 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Seattle Fister W,6-12 7 9 1 1 0 2 League H,13 1 1 0 0 1 2 Aardsma S,31-36 1 0 0 0 2 0 Tom.Hunter pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. HBP—by Nippert (F.Gutierrez). T—2:37. A—20,764 (47,878).

Red Sox 6, Blue Jays 0 Toronto McCoy lf YEscor ss JBautst rf V.Wells cf Overay 1b J.Buck c Encrnc 3b Arencii dh JMcDnl 2b Totals

Boston ab 2 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 4

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2

bi 0 Kalish cf 0 J.Drew rf 0 Reddck rf 0 VMrtnz c 0 D.Ortiz dh 0 Lowell 1b 0 LAndrs 1b 0 Lowrie ss 0 Hall 2b Nava lf YNavrr 3b 32 0 5 0 Totals

ab 4 4 0 4 4 4 0 4 4 3 2 33

r 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 6

h bi 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 1 1 9 5

Toronto 000 000 000 — 0 Boston 000 150 00x — 6 E—McCoy (2). LOB—Toronto 9, Boston 4. 2B—Hall (12), Nava (13). HR—J.Drew (19), V.Martinez (18). IP H R ER BB SO Toronto Marcum L,12-8 51⁄3 9 6 6 0 3 Mills 12⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 T.Buchholz 1 0 0 0 0 0 Boston Lester W,18-8 7 4 0 0 4 4 Atchison 1 1 0 0 0 1 Coello 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:37. A—37,234 (37,402).

Braves 6, Mets 3 Atlanta r 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

h 2 1 0 2 2 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0

New York bi ab 0 JosRys ss 4 0 Pagan rf 4 0 Beltran cf 4 0 DWrght 3b 4 4 I.Davis 1b 4 0 Duda lf 1 2 NEvns ph-lf 1 0 Carter ph 1 0 Thole c 3 0 RTejad 2b 3 0 Misch p 0 0 Dickey p 2 0 PFelicn p 0 0 Acosta p 0 0 Valdes p 0 Dessns p 0 J.Arias ph-2b

OInfant 2b Heywrd rf Prado 3b McCnn c D.Lee 1b McLoth lf AlGnzlz ss Ankiel cf D.Lowe p MeCarr ph OFlhrt p Glaus ph DHrndz pr Venters p Kimrel p

ab 4 4 4 4 5 3 5 4 2 1 0 0 0 0 0

0 Totals

36 6 12 6 Totals

r 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

h bi 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

32 3 8 2

Atlanta 010 001 400 — 6 New York 200 000 100 — 3 E—Thole (2). DP—Atlanta 3, New York 2. LOB—Atlanta 10, New York 3. 2B—D.Lee (29), Ankiel (5), D.Lowe (3). HR—D.Lee (18), D.Wright (24). SB—McLouth (6). IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta D.Lowe W,14-12 6 4 2 2 1 2 O’Flaherty 1 2 1 1 0 1 Venters H,23 1 1 0 0 0 0 Kimbrel S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 3 New York Dickey L,11-7 6 10 4 4 2 0 2 P.Feliciano ⁄3 0 1 1 1 0 1 ⁄3 1 1 1 1 0 Acosta 2 Valdes ⁄13 0 0 0 2 1 Dessens ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Misch 1 1 0 0 0 0 Dickey pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. HBP—by Dickey (McLouth). WP—O’Flaherty. PB—Thole. T—2:57. A—33,612 (41,800).

Phillies 7, Nationals 6 Washington ab Espinos 2b 5 Dsmnd ss 5 Zmrmn 3b 5 A.Dunn 1b 3 Maxwll cf 0 Berndn cf-lf 4 Morse rf-1b 3 WHarrs lf-rf 4 IRdrgz c 4 Maya p 2 Slaten p 0 JoPerlt p 0 AlGnzlz ph 1 SBurntt p 0 Clipprd p 0 Mench ph 1 Storen p 0 Totals 37

r 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

h 1 2 0 1 0 1 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11

THE DETAILS: No. 11, 176 yards, with a 7wood WITNESSES: Steve Hoffman, Ken Smith and Bob Erdin OF NOTE: It was Dunbar’s third career ace

HPU ROUNDUP

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ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

TRIVIA QUESTION

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Q. Which school took the 1983 Big Ten football title with a 9-0 league mark?

Dodgers 7, Rockies 6 (11) Colorado

New York

Baltimore

WHERE: Willow Creek

Philadelphia bi ab r h bi 1 Victorn cf 4 0 0 0 0 Baez p 0 0 0 0 0 JRomr p 0 0 0 0 0 Contrrs p 0 0 0 0 0 Gload ph 1 0 0 0 0 Worley p 0 0 0 0 3 Polanc 3b 4 2 2 0 2 Utley 2b 5 1 3 0 0 Howard 1b 4 1 1 2 0 Werth rf-cf 5 2 3 3 0 Ibanez lf 3 1 2 0 0 Schndr c 4 0 3 2 0 WValdz ss 4 0 0 0 0 Blanton p 2 0 0 0 0 Dobbs ph 1 0 0 0 0 BFrncs rf 1 0 0 0 0 6 Totals 38 7 14 7

Washington 001 003 110 — 6 Philadelphia 000 210 004 — 7 No outs when winning run scored. E—Zimmerman (17). DP—Philadelphia 1. LOB—Washington 6, Philadelphia 10. 2B— Bernadina (17), Utley (19), Schneider (4). HR—Espinosa (4), Morse (11), W.Harris (9), Werth (24). SB—Desmond (16), Polanco (5), Werth (11), Ibanez (4). CS—A.Dunn (1). IP H R ER BB SO Washington 2 Maya 4 ⁄3 6 3 3 2 2 1 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 Slaten Jo.Peralta H,8 1 0 0 0 0 1 S.Burnett H,20 1 2 0 0 0 2 Clippard H,22 1 1 0 0 0 1 Storen L,3-4 0 4 4 4 0 0 Philadelphia Blanton 6 7 4 4 1 8 Baez 1 1 1 1 0 0 2 J.Romero ⁄13 2 1 1 1 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Contreras Worley W,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Storen pitched to 4 batters in the 9th. HBP—by Maya (Polanco). Balk—Maya. T—3:15. A—44,936 (43,651).

Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Fowler cf 5 2 3 0 Furcal ss 6 2 2 1 JHerrr 2b 4 2 2 1 Kemp cf 5 1 3 2 Dlcrmn p 0 0 0 0 Ethier rf 4 1 1 1 CGnzlz rf 5 0 1 1 Gions lf 5 1 0 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 1 0 1 A.Ellis c 1 0 1 1 Mora 3b 4 0 0 0 Blake 3b 5 0 0 0 Giambi 1b 3 0 1 3 Loney 1b 5 0 0 0 Helton 1b 2 0 0 0 Theriot 2b 5 1 2 0 Splrghs lf 4 0 0 0 Barajs c 4 1 2 1 PPhllps c 4 0 0 0 Kuo p 0 0 0 0 EYong ph 1 0 0 0 Oeltjen ph 1 0 0 0 Olivo c 0 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 Hamml p 2 1 0 0 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Beimel p 0 0 0 0 Kershw p 1 0 1 0 ERogrs p 0 0 0 0 JCarrll ph 1 0 1 1 CNelsn ph 1 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 Mitchll ph 1 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Dotel p 0 0 0 0 Ausms c 0 0 0 0 RBtncr p 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph-lf2 0 1 0 Payton ph 1 0 0 0 Street p 0 0 0 0 S.Smith ph 0 0 0 0 Barmes 2b 0 0 0 0 Totals 40 6 7 6 Totals 46 7 14 7 Colorado 330 000 000 00 — 6 Los Angeles 100 300 101 01 — 7 One out when winning run scored. E—Tulowitzki (9), Gibbons (1). DP—Colorado 1, Los Angeles 1. LOB—Colorado 9, Los Angeles 11. 2B—J.Herrera (5), Giambi (9), Furcal 2 (23), Kemp (24). HR—Kemp (23), Ethier (23). SB—J.Herrera (2). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado Hammel 4 6 4 4 1 2 1 Beimel ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 E.Rogers Belisle H,21 1 2 1 1 0 2 2 Mat.Reynolds ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Dotel H,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 R.Betancrt H,23 1 0 0 0 0 2 Street BS,5-25 2 3 1 1 1 0 3 1 1 1 0 Delcarmen L,0-2 1⁄3 Los Angeles Kershaw 4 4 6 4 4 2 Belisario 2 0 0 0 0 2 Jansen 2 1 0 0 1 2 Kuo 2 1 0 0 0 3 2 Broxton ⁄3 1 0 0 3 0 1 Sherrill W,2-2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Belisle pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. WP—Hammel, E.Rogers, Belisle, Street. T—4:21. A—37,402 (56,000).

Pirates 4, D’backs 3 Arizona ab S.Drew ss 4 RRorts lf 4 CYoung cf 3 MrRynl 3b 4 AdLRc 1b 4 TAreu 2b 4 Hester c 3 KJhnsn ph 1 GParra rf 3 DHdsn p 3 Demel p 0 Heilmn p 0 Hmptn p 0 Totals 33

r 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

h 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 6

Pittsburgh bi ab 0 AMcCt cf 4 1 Tabata lf 4 0 NWalkr 2b 4 0 Alvarez 3b 3 1 Doumit c 3 0 Bowker 1b 2 1 Moss rf 3 0 Presley rf 0 0 Cedeno ss 3 0 Duke p 2 0 Hanrhn p 0 0 GJones ph 1 0 Meek p 0 3 Totals 29

r 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 4

h bi 2 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 4

Arizona 000 200 010 — 3 Pittsburgh 100 000 03x — 4 E—Bowker (1). DP—Arizona 1. LOB—Arizona 4, Pittsburgh 3. 2B—Ad.LaRoche (32), Hester (6), G.Parra (18), Tabata (21). HR— R.Roberts (2), A.McCutchen (16), N.Walker (12). CS—S.Drew (4). IP H R ER BB SO Arizona D.Hudson 612⁄3 3 1 1 2 6 Demel H,3 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 2 Heilman L,5-8 ⁄3 3 3 3 0 1 1 Hampton ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Duke 71⁄3 6 3 3 1 3 Hanrahan W,4-1 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 Meek S,3-9 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:30. A—18,331 (38,362).

Cubs 13, Marlins 3 Chicago

Florida bi ab 1 Bonifac ss 4 0 Hatchr ph 1 2 Maybin cf 3 1 Morrsn lf 2 1 Uggla 2b 3 0 GSnchz 1b 4 2 Stanton rf 3 2 Helms 3b 4 3 MiRivr c 3 0 AMiller p 0 0 Sinkeil p 0 0 Ceda p 1 0 Sosa p 0 0 Luna ph 1 Sanchs p 0 Cousins ph 1 LNunez p 0 Badnhp p 0 OMrtnz ph 0 37 13 1012 Totals 30

ab Fuld cf 6 Barney ss 3 JBakr 2b1b 5 MHffpr 1b-lf4 Colvin rf 1 DeWitt 2b 4 Scales 3b 4 BSnydr lf-rf 4 WCastll c 4 Smrdzj p 1 SCastro ph 1 Mateo p 0 Dimnd p 0 SMaine p 0

Totals

r 2 3 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0

h 2 0 4 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0

r 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

h bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3

Chicago 260 010 004 — 13 Florida 000 210 000 — 3 E—Uggla (16). LOB—Chicago 10, Florida 8. 2B—Fuld (1), Je.Baker 2 (13), W.Castillo (2). HR—W.Castillo (1), Uggla (31), Luna (2). S—Samardzija. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Samardzija W,2-1 6 3 3 3 3 4 Mateo 1 0 0 0 1 1 Diamond 1 0 0 0 1 2 S.Maine 1 0 0 0 1 2 Florida A.Miller L,1-3 11⁄3 3 5 5 4 1 2 Sinkbeil ⁄3 2 3 3 4 1 Ceda 2 0 0 0 1 3 Sosa 1 1 1 0 1 1 Sanches 2 0 0 0 1 3 L.Nunez 1 1 0 0 0 1 Badenhop 1 3 4 3 1 0 HBP—by Mateo (Mi.Rivera), by Samardzija (Uggla). PB—Mi.Rivera 2. T—3:15. A—20,203 (38,560).

Astros 4, Reds 3 Cincinnati ab BPhllps 2b 5 Cairo 3b 4 Rolen ph 1 Votto 1b 5 Gomes lf 4 Bruce rf 3 RHrndz c 4 Stubbs cf 4 Janish ss 3 Alonso ph 1 TrWood p 2 Edmnd ph 1 JrSmth p 0 Bray p 0 Fisher p 0 Ondrsk p 0 JFrncs ph 1 Totals 38

r 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

h 1 0 1 3 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11

Houston bi ab 0 Bourn cf 3 0 Bourgs phcf0 0 Kppngr 2b 4 0 Pence rf 4 0 Ca.Lee 1b 4 1 Lyon p 0 2 Michals lf 3 0 CJhnsn 3b 3 0 Manzell ss 3 0 Quinter c 3 0 Myers p 1 0 Blum ph 1 0 Lndstr p 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 Wallac 1b 0 0 0 3 Totals 29

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

h bi 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

4 6 4

Cincinnati 000 000 030 — 3 Houston 000 030 10x — 4 E—R.Hernandez (2), Tr.Wood (3). LOB— Cincinnati 9, Houston 4. 2B—Votto 2 (35), C.Johnson (20). HR—R.Hernandez (7), C.Johnson (10). SF—Myers. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Tr.Wood L,5-4 6 4 3 2 0 5 2 Jor.Smith ⁄3 1 1 1 0 0 Bray 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 Fisher ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 0 Houston Myers W,13-7 7 6 0 0 1 5 2 Lindstrom ⁄3 3 3 3 0 0 1 Melancon H,7 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Lyon S,18-20 1 2 0 0 0 2 Bray pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. HBP—by Tr.Wood (Michaels). T—2:35. A—32,520 (40,976).

Cards 4, Padres 1 San Diego ab Venale cf 3 Eckstn 2b 4 MTejad ss 4 AdGnzl 1b 3 Ludwck rf 3 Headly 3b 4 Torreal c 4 Cnghm lf 4 Garlnd p 2 Gwynn ph 1 Frieri p 0 Stairs ph 1 Totals 33

r 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

h 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6

St. Louis bi ab 0 Schmkr 2brf4 0 Jay rf 3 0 YMolin c 0 1 Pujols 1b 3 0 Hollidy lf 4 0 Rasms cf 3 0 P.Feliz 3b 3 0 Pagnzz c 3 0 Miles 2b 0 0 B.Ryan ss 2 0 Wnwrg p 3 0 Frnkln p 0 1 Totals 28

r 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

h bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 6 4

San Diego 000 000 010 — 1 St. Louis 200 101 00x — 4 LOB—San Diego 8, St. Louis 5. 2B—Venable (11), Torrealba (13). HR—Rasmus (23). SB—Venable (27). SF—P.Feliz, B.Ryan. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Garland L,14-12 7 5 4 4 3 4 Frieri 1 1 0 0 0 1 St. Louis Wawrght W,19-11 8 5 1 1 3 7 Franklin S,25-27 1 1 0 0 0 2 T—2:22. A—37,885 (43,975).

Giants 9, Brewers 2 Milwaukee ab Weeks 2b 3 Hart rf 4 Braun lf 4 Fielder 1b 4 McGeh 3b 3 L.Cain cf 4 AEscor ss 4 Lucroy c 3 Narvsn p 1 McClnd p 0 L.Cruz ph 1 Coffey p 0 Brddck p 0 Kintzlr p 0 Gamel ph 1 MParr p 0 Totals

San Francisco bi ab r 0 C.Ross cf-lf 5 0 0 FSnchz 2b 5 1 2 A.Huff 1b 4 2 0 Posey c 2 3 0 Burrell lf 2 2 0 Schrhlt rf 1 0 0 JGuilln rf 4 1 0 Ford cf 0 0 0 Uribe ss 4 0 0 Sandovl 3b 4 0 0 Zito p 2 0 0 Ishikaw ph 0 0 0 SCasill p 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 C.Ray p 0 0 0 Rownd ph 1 0 JaLopz p 0 0 Mota p 0 0 32 2 5 2 Totals 34 9 r 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

h bi 1 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 3 0 0 2 6 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 9

Milwaukee 000 002 000 — 2 San Francisco 400 020 30x — 9 LOB—Milwaukee 5, San Francisco 8. 2B— Posey 2 (23). HR—Braun (23), Burrell (16), J.Guillen (3). IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee Narveson L,11-8 421⁄3 4 6 6 4 1 McClendon ⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 Coffey 1 0 0 0 1 1 Braddock 0 1 1 1 0 0 Kintzler 1 2 2 2 0 1 M.Parra 1 2 0 0 1 2 San Francisco Zito W,9-13 6 3 2 2 1 3 S.Casilla 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Affeldt 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 C.Ray ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 1 Ja.Lopez ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2 Mota ⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 Affeldt pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Braddock pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. WP—Coffey. PB—Posey.T—2:56. A—41,113 (41,915).

MOTORSPORTS

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NASCAR Sprint Cup

Sylvania 300 Sunday At New Hampshire Motor Speedway Loudon, N.H. Lap length: 1.058 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (2) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 300 laps, 149.4 rating, 195 points, $248,250. 2. (22) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 300, 106.5, 170, $178,550. 3. (4) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 300, 121, 170, $169,954. 4. (32) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 300, 98.4, 160, $118,900. 5. (27) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 300, 88.4, 155, $145,826. 6. (17) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 300, 97.1, 155, $143,526. 7. (7) David Reutimann, Toyota, 300, 95.7, 146, $120,581. 8. (24) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 300, 86.4, 142, $120,254. 9. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 300, 94.4, 138, $129,581. 10. (15) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 300, 80.5, 134, $95,025. 11. (10) Carl Edwards, Ford, 300, 109.9, 135, $122,348. 12. (6) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 300, 89.7, 127, $119,476. 13. (12) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 300, 91.7, 124, $123,248. 14. (21) Kasey Kahne, Ford, 300, 76.6, 121, $119,265. 15. (13) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 300, 101.3, 118, $115,065. 16. (5) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 300, 84.2, 115, $113,731. 17. (14) Greg Biffle, Ford, 300, 74.3, 112, $86,500. 18. (1) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 300, 90.4, 114, $111,960. 19. (20) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 300, 61.7, 106, $85,350. 20. (16) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 300, 71.6, 103, $77,275. 21. (19) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 300, 58.9, 100, $85,950. 22. (11) David Ragan, Ford, 300, 63.9, 97, $84,700. 23. (33) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 300, 64.1, 94, $121,226. 24. (3) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 300, 99.9, 96, $119,848. 25. (25) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 299, 94.9, 88, $127,103. 26. (29) Robby Gordon, Toyota, 299, 52.1, 90, $94,223. 27. (37) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 299, 48.7, 82, $113,548. 28. (8) Paul Menard, Ford, 299, 63.7, 79, $82,900. 29. (26) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 298, 59.3, 76, $91,625. 30. (23) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 298, 54.1, 73, $101,448. 31. (30) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 297, 42.8, 70, $73,400. 32. (40) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 295, 33.1, 67, $89,410. 33. (39) David Gilliland, Ford, 295, 39.2, 64, $85,973. 34. (41) Tony Raines, Ford, 295, 36.1, 61, $70,250. 35. (31) Joey Logano, Toyota, accident, 256, 53.6, 58, $106,565. 36. (28) Scott Speed, Toyota, 213, 30.5, 55, $81,898. 37. (42) Andy Lally, Chevrolet, brakes, 138, 32.9, 52, $69,625. 38. (18) Casey Mears, Toyota, vibration, 93, 44.6, 49, $69,425. 39. (43) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, electrical, 89, 36, 46, $69,300. 40. (35) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, clutch, 60, 35.2, 48, $69,150. 41. (36) Mike Bliss, Toyota, brakes, 55, 30, 40, $68,970. 42. (34) Landon Cassill, Toyota, brakes, 40, 30.9, 37, $68,840. 43. (38) Michael McDowell, Dodge, engine, 29, 27.8, 34, $69,218. Race Statistics Average Speed of Winner: 106.769 mph. Time: 2 hours, 58 minutes, 22 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.477 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 34 laps. Lead Changes: 21 among 8 drivers. Lap Leaders: B.Keselowski 1; T.Stewart 2-25; B.Keselowski 26; R.Gordon 27; J.Nemechek 28; C.Bowyer 29; J.McMurray 30; C.Bowyer 31-43; J.McMurray 44; C.Bowyer 45-97; C.Edwards 98-99; J.Gordon 100-101; R.Gordon 102; C.Bowyer 103147; C.Edwards 148; C.Bowyer 149-207; C.Edwards 208; C.Bowyer 209-212; T.Stewart 213-237; J.McMurray 238-247; T.Stewart 248-298; C.Bowyer 299-300. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): C.Bowyer, 7 times for 177 laps; T.Stewart, 3 times for 100 laps; J.McMurray, 3 times for 12 laps; C.Edwards, 3 times for 4 laps; J.Gordon, 1 time for 2 laps; B.Keselowski, 2 times for 2 laps; R.Gordon, 2 times for 2 laps; J.Nemechek, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. D.Hamlin, 5,230; 2. C.Bowyer, 5,195; 3. K.Harvick, 5,185; 4. Ky.Busch, 5,168; 5. J.Gordon, 5,155; 6. Ku.Busch, 5,144; 7. J.Johnson, 5,138; 8. C.Edwards, 5,135; 9. G.Biffle, 5,122; 10. J.Burton, 5,118; 11. T.Stewart, 5,106; 12. M.Kenseth, 5,094.

IRL Indy Japan 300 Sunday at Twin Ring Motegi Motegi, Japan Lap length: 1.5 miles All cards Dallara-Honda (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (1) Helio Castroneves, 200, Running. 2. (4) Dario Franchitti, 200, Running. 3. (3) Will Power, 200, Running. 4. (2) Ryan Briscoe, 200, Running. 5. (12) Danica Patrick, 200, Running. 6. (11) Scott Dixon, 200, Running. 7. (6) Tony Kanaan, 200, Running. 8. (16) Graham Rahal, 200, Running. 9. (7) Ryan Hunter-Reay, 200, Running. 10. (9) Dan Wheldon, 200, Running. 11. (5) Marco Andretti, 200, Running. 12. (10) Takuma Sato, 200, Running.

PANTHER WOMEN’S SOCCER FALLS, 1-0

ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

CULLOWEE – The High Point University women’s soccer team dropped a 1-0 decision to Western Carolina on Sunday evening. The Panthers outshot WCU 9-6 but could not find the back of the net. The Catamounts took a 1-0 lead on a goal by Kayla Sedgely in the 18th minute. High Point falls to 2-7-0 with the loss while Western improved to 3-4-1.

‘99 PSA STARS 4, GYSA 2

PANTHERS PLACE 22ND

YOUTH SOCCER ROUNDUP

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GREENSBORO – Bryce Lennon had a goal and two assists to lead the 1999 PSA Stars White to a 4-2 win over the GYSA Silver in Sunday’s game at Bryan Park. Will Lown scored twice for the Stars and Davis Swing also found the back of the net. Other assists went to Luke Crocker – the winning goal keeper – and Josh Vernon.

U-13 THUNDER 2, NTSC STRIKE FORCE 2

TRINITY – Bailey Allred and Cameron Lopez scored goals and Jonathan Adkins dished an assist as the Under-13 GuilRand Thunder boys soccer team battled the NTSC Strike Force to a 2-2 tie on Sunday. Julian Lopez served in goal for the Thunder (2-0-1).

13. (23) Alex Tagliani, 200, Running. 14. (17) Hideki Mutoh, 200, Running. 15. (8) E.J. Viso, 200, Running. 16. (18) Justin Wilson, 200, Running. 17. (14) Vitor Meira, 200, Running. 18. (19) Raphael Matos, 200, Running. 19. (25) Milka Duno, 197, Running. 20. (21) Roger Yasukawa, 195, Running. 21. (15) Alex Lloyd, 131, Contact. 22. (22) Paul Tracy, 114, Contact. 23. (24) Simona de Silvestro, 85, Mechanical. 24. (20) Mario Moraes, 66, Contact. 25. (13) Bertrand Baguette, 1, Contact. Race Statistics Winners average speed: 147.008. Time of Race: 2:04:04.4780. Margin of Victory: 4.5746 seconds. Cautions: 5 for 50 laps. Lead Changes: 4 among 3 drivers. Lap Leaders: Castroneves 1-70, Matos 7185, Briscoe 86-117, Castroneves 118-200. Points: Power 587, Franchitti 575, Castroneves 501, Dixon 497, Briscoe 450, HunterReay 426, Kanaan 418, Wheldon 366, M.Andretti 366, Wilson 349.

NHRA O’Reilly Auto Parts Nationals Sunday at zMax Dragway Concord Finish Order TOP FUEL 1, Larry Dixon. 2, Doug Kalitta. 3, Cory McClenathan. 4, Brandon Bernstein. 5, Steve Torrence. 6, Rod Fuller. 7, Antron Brown. 8, Tony Schumacher. 9, T.J. Zizzo. 10, Morgan Lucas. 11. Shawn Langdon. 12, David Grubnic. 13, Doug Herbert. 14, Bob Vandergriff. 15, Troy Buff. 16, Pat Dakin. FUNNY CAR 1, Cruz Pedregon. 2, Jack Beckman. 3, Bob Tasca III. 4, Jeff Arend. 5, Paul Lee. 6, Tony Pedregon. 7, Ashley Force Hood. 8, Matt Hagan. 9, Melanie Troxel. 10, Bob Bode. 11, Ron Capps. 12, John Force. 13, John Smith. 14, Jim Head. 15, Del Worsham. 16, Robert Hight. PRO STOCK 1, Greg Anderson. 2, Greg Stanfield. 3, Warren Johnson. 4, Kurt Johnson. 5, V. Gaines. 6, Jeg Coughlin. 7, Rodger Brogdon. 8, Ronnie Humphrey. 9, Mike Edwards. 10, Ron Krisher. 11, Johnny Gray. 12, Larry Morgan. 13, Shane Gray. 14, Jason Line. 15, Dave Connolly. 16, Vinnie Deceglie. PRO STOCK MOTORCYCLE 1, LE Tonglet. 2, Andrew Hines. 3, Angie Smith. 4, Michael Phillips. 5, Matt Smith. 6, Eddie Krawiec. 7, Steve Johnson. 8, Craig Treble. 9, Karen Stoffer. 10, Shawn Gann. 11, Hector Arana. 12, Jim Underdahl. 13, Junior Pippin. 14, Joe DeSantis. 15, Mike Berry. 16, David Hope. Final Results Top Fuel—Larry Dixon, 3.858 seconds, 316.60 mph def. Doug Kalitta, 3.901 seconds, 309.20 mph. Funny Car—Cruz Pedregon, Toyota Solara, 4.171, 299.13 def. Jack Beckman, Dodge Charger, 4.212, 301.81. Pro Stock—Greg Anderson, Pontiac GXP, 6.604, 209.30 def. Greg Stanfield, GXP, 6.651, 207.91. Pro Stock Motorcycle—LE Tonglet, Suzuki, 6.921, 192.82 def. Andrew Hines, HarleyDavidson, 6.972, 189.63. Pro Modified—Melanie Troxel, Chevy Camaro, 5.938, 245.94 def. Scott Ray, Chevy Corvette, broke. Top Alcohol Dragster—Monroe Guest, 5.361, 273.16 def. Ken Perry, 5.348, 264.08. Top Alcohol Funny Car—Frank Manzo, Chevy Monte Carlo, 5.578, 259.91 def. Clint Thompson, Monte Carlo, 5.587, 256.31. Super Stock—Lincoln Morehead, Chevy Camaro, 10.198, 122.72 def. Lee Zane, Pontiac Firebird, 10.924, 119.25. Stock Eliminator—Dan Fletcher, Chevy Camaro, 11.206, 112.35 def. Jeff Strickland, Chevy Nova, 10.529, 114.93. Super Comp—Frank Altilio, Dragster, 8.902, 179.66 def. Joe Flynn, Dragster, 8.888, 178.83. Super Gas—Peter Biondo, Chevy Corvette, 9.899, 158.86 def. Delaney Richardson, Corvette, 9.896, 159.64. Point Standings Top Fuel 1, Larry Dixon, 2,355. 2, Cory McClenathan, 2,270. 3, Tony Schumacher, 2,207. 4, Doug Kalitta, 2,190. 5, Brandon Bernstein, 2,172. 6, Antron Brown, 2,146. 7, Shawn Langdon, 2,134. 8, Steve Torrence, 2,115. 9, Morgan Lucas, 2,104. 10, David Grubnic, 2,066. Funny Car 1, John Force, 2,245. 2, Jack Beckman, 2,241. 3, Matt Hagan, 2,203. 4, Ashley Force Hood, 2,192. 5, Bob Tasca III, 2,160. 6, Robert Hight, 2,157. 7, Ron Capps, 2,123. 8, Tony Pedregon, 2,085. 9, Tim Wilkerson, 2,082. 10, Del Worsham, 2,077. Pro Stock 1, Mike Edwards, 2,260. 2, Greg Anderson, 2,233. 3, Greg Stanfield, 2,226. 4, Jeg Coughlin, 2,180. 5, Allen Johnson, 2,164. 6, Jason Line, 2,159. 7, Ron Krisher, 2,121. 8, Shane Gray, 2,105. 9, Rodger Brogdon, 2,085. 10, Johnny Gray, 2,075. Pro Stock Motorcycle 1, Andrew Hines, 2,347. 2, LE Tonglet, 2,281. 3, Eddie Krawiec, 2,180. 4, Michael Phillips, 2,176. 5, Hector Arana, 2,171. 6, Matt Smith, 2,167. 7, Steve Johnson, 2,160. 8, Craig Treble, 2,085. 9, Karen Stoffer, 2,078. 10, David Hope, 2,061.

GOLF

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PGA Europe

Austrian Open Sunday at Diamond Country Club Atzenbrugg, Austria Purse: $1 million Yardage: 7,242; Par: 72 Final x-won on first playoff hole x-Jose M. Lara, Spain 66-71-70-64—271 David Lynn, England 68-71-64-68-271 Danny Willett, England 69-69-65-71 — 274 Graeme McDowell, N.Ire. 69-68-68-69—274 Alexander Noren, Swe. 69-70-67-68 — 274

FOOTBALL

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NFL

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Miami 2 0 0 1.00029 20 N.Y. Jets 1 1 0 .500 37 24 New England 1 1 0 .500 52 52 Buffalo 0 2 0 .000 17 49 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 2 0 0 1.00064 51 Jacksonville 1 1 0 .500 37 55 Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 49 32 Indianapolis 0 1 0 .000 24 34 North W L T Pct PF PA Pittsburgh 2 0 0 1.00034 20 Cincinnati 1 1 0 .500 39 48 Baltimore 1 1 0 .500 20 24 Cleveland 0 2 0 .000 28 33 West W L T Pct PF PA Kansas City 2 0 0 1.00037 28 San Diego 1 1 0 .500 52 34 Denver 1 1 0 .500 48 38 Oakland 1 1 0 .500 29 52 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 1 0 0 1.00031 18 Philadelphia 1 1 0 .500 55 59 Washington 1 1 0 .500 40 37 Dallas 0 2 0 .000 27 40 South W L T Pct PF PA Tampa Bay 2 0 0 1.00037 21 New Orleans 1 0 0 1.00014 9 Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 50 22 Carolina 0 2 0 .000 25 51 North W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 2 0 0 1.00046 34 Green Bay 2 0 0 1.00061 27 Detroit 0 2 0 .000 46 54 Minnesota 0 2 0 .000 19 28 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 1 1 0 .500 45 37 Arizona 1 1 0 .500 24 54 San Francisco 0 1 0 .000 6 31 St. Louis 0 2 0 .000 27 33 Sunday’s Games Chicago 27, Dallas 20 Atlanta 41, Arizona 7 Green Bay 34, Buffalo 7 Philadelphia 35, Detroit 32 Pittsburgh 19, Tennessee 11 Cincinnati 15, Baltimore 10 Kansas City 16, Cleveland 14 Tampa Bay 20, Carolina 7 Miami 14, Minnesota 10 Denver 31, Seattle 14 Oakland 16, St. Louis 14 San Diego 38, Jacksonville 13 N.Y. Jets 28, New England 14 Houston 30, Washington 27, OT N.Y. Giants at Indianapolis, 8:20 p.m. Today’s Game New Orleans at San Francisco, 8:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 26 Dallas at Houston, 1 p.m. Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Atlanta at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Tennessee at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Carolina, 1 p.m. San Francisco at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Washington at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Jacksonville, 4:05 p.m. San Diego at Seattle, 4:15 p.m. Oakland at Arizona, 4:15 p.m. Indianapolis at Denver, 4:15 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Miami, 8:20 p.m. Monday, Sept. 27 Green Bay at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.

The AP Top 25

TENNIS

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WAYNESVILLE – Sophomores Audra McShane and Jessica Neese each shot 74 In the final round of the Great Smokies Intercollegiate, leading the High Point University women’s golf team to a two-day total of 629 and a 22nd-place finish. The tournament was HPU’s first under new head coach Vici Pate Flesher. The Panthers totaled 309 on the second and final day of the tournament, improving from 320 in the first round. McShane led HPU in the tournament with a two-day total of 151 (77-74). Neese shot 74 in the final round after an 82 on Saturday, totaling 156. Senior Leahanna Norris shot 81 on Saturday and 80 on Sunday for a 161 and senior Danielle Soderburg shot 80 on the first day and 82 on the second for a 162. Finally for HPU, sophomore Maggie Sahms recovered from an opening-round 89 to 81 on Sunday and a two-day total of 170. Jacksonville State won the tournament with a two-day total of 578 (289-289), beating Radford by eight strokes. The Highlanders made a huge comeback, shooting 301 on the first day and 285 on the second for a two-day total of 586. Elon and Western Carolina tied for third at 588. Besides Radford, other Big South schools competing in the tournament were Gardner-Webb (fifth), Presbyterian (14th), Winthrop (17th) and Charleston Southern (19th).

Davis Cup

WORLD GROUP Semifinals/Winners to World Group finals, Nov. 26-28 France 5, Argentina 0 Serbia 3, Czech Republic 2 Playoffs Winners to 2011 World Group; losers to 2011 Zonal groups United States 3, Colombia 1 At Plaza de Toros La Santamaria Bogota, Colombia Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Mardy Fish, United States,def. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4. Santiago Giraldo Colombia, def. Sam Querrey, United States 6-2, 6-4, 7-5. Doubles Mardy Fish and John Isner, United States, def. Robert Farah and Carlos Salamanca, Colombia, 6-4, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-3. Reverse Singles Mardy Fish, United States, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 4-6, 8-6. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, vs. Sam Querrey, United States, ccd., rain. Austria 3, Israel 2 Germany 5, South Africa 0 Sweden 3, Italy 2 India 3, Brazil 2 Australia 2, Belgium 1 Kazakhstan 5, Switzerland 0 Romania 5, Ecuador 0

At Quebec City WTA Tour Challenge Bell Sunday Singles Championship Tamira Paszek, Austria, def. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, 7-6 (6), 2-6, 7-5.

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 18, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Alabama (53) 3-0 1,492 1 2. Ohio St. (5) 3-0 1,435 2 3. Boise St. (1) 2-0 1,333 3 4. TCU 3-0 1,280 4 5. Oregon 3-0 1,238 5 6. Nebraska 3-0 1,175 8 7. Texas (1) 3-0 1,164 6 8. Oklahoma 3-0 1,114 7 9. Florida 3-0 1,044 10 10. Arkansas 2-0 903 12 11. Wisconsin 3-0 803 11 12. South Carolina 3-0 739 13 13. Utah 3-0 703 14 14. Arizona 3-0 663 24 15. LSU 3-0 654 15 16. Stanford 3-0 606 19 17. Auburn 3-0 600 16 18. Iowa 2-1 482 9 19. Miami 1-1 472 17 20. Southern Cal 3-0 414 18 21. Michigan 3-0 291 20 22. West Virginia 3-0 258 21 23. Penn St. 2-1 198 22 24. Oregon St. 1-1 75 25 25. Michigan St. 3-0 45 — Others receiving votes: Air Force 44, Nevada 41, Florida St. 40, Pittsburgh 40, Fresno St. 35, Missouri 30, Oklahoma St. 22, Clemson 14, Georgia Tech 14, N.C. State 14, James Madison 8, Kansas St. 4, Arizona St. 3, California 3, Northwestern 3, Houston 1, Notre Dame 1, Temple 1, Texas A&M 1.

TRIVIA ANSWER

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A. Illinois.


SPORTS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 www.hpe.com

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Bucs 20, Panthers 7 Tampa Bay Carolina

7 7 3 3 — 20 0 7 0 0 — 7 First Quarter TB—Graham 14 pass from Freeman (Barth kick), 7:11. Second Quarter Car—Smith 37 pass from Moore (Kasay kick), 11:43. TB—M.Williams 35 pass from Freeman (Barth kick), 7:43. Third Quarter TB—FG Barth 24, 7:40. Fourth Quarter TB—FG Barth 33, 14:46. A—72,577. TB Car First downs 14 16 Total Net Yards 273 278 Rushes-yards 34-95 33-119 Passing 178 159 Punt Returns 2-21 4-8 Kickoff Returns 1-18 5-92 Interceptions Ret. 2-26 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 12-25-0 13-29-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 4-25 Punts 6-41.2 5-41.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 4-30 4-48 Time of Possession 30:49 29:11 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Tampa Bay, C.Williams 2751, Freeman 4-43, Graham 3-1. Carolina, D.Williams 17-54, Stewart 8-43, Goodson 520, Moore 1-2, Clausen 1-0, Fiammetta 1-0. PASSING—Tampa Bay, Freeman 12-24-0178, Spurlock 0-1-0-0. Carolina, Moore 6-161-125, Clausen 7-13-1-59. RECEIVING—Tampa Bay, Graham 5-33, Winslow 4-83, M.Williams 2-54, C.Williams 1-8. Carolina, Smith 3-66, Rosario 3-47, D.Williams 3-20, Goodson 2-33, Gettis 2-18. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Texans 30, Redskins 27 (OT) Houston 0 Washingtn 6

7 10 10 3 — 30 14 7 0 0 — 27 First Quarter Was—FG Gano 41, 9:37. Was—FG Gano 27, 5:48. Second Quarter Hou—Jones 5 pass from Schaub (Rackers kick), 14:56. Was—Portis 1 run (Gano kick), 12:29. Was—Portis 1 run (Gano kick), 1:20. Third Quarter Hou—FG Rackers 47, 9:22. Was—Cooley 22 pass from McNabb (Gano kick), 3:51. Hou—Walter 6 pass from Schaub (Rackers kick), :00. Fourth Quarter Hou—FG Rackers 43, 11:10. Hou—Johnson 34 pass from Schaub (Rackers kick), 2:03. Overtime Hou—FG Rackers 35, 3:24. A—88,240. Hou Was First downs 29 21 Total Net Yards 526 421 Rushes-yards 24-58 17-18 Passing 468 403 Punt Returns 4-28 0-0 Kickoff Returns 6-88 4-82 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-5 Comp-Att-Int 38-52-1 28-38-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-29 3-23 Punts 3-40.3 4-48.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5-45 7-58 Time of Possession 39:49 31:47 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Houston, Foster 19-69, Slaton 3-14, Schaub 1-2, Turk 1-(minus 27). Washington, Portis 13-33, Sellers 1-0, Johnson 2(minus 7), Moss 1-(minus 8). PASSING—Houston, Schaub 38-52-1-497. Washington, McNabb 28-38-0-426. RECEIVING—Houston, Johnson 12-158, Walter 11-144, Jones 6-53, Foster 3-69, Daniels 2-24, Leach 2-20, Dreessen 1-28, Anderson 1-1. Washington, Moss 10-89, Sellers 4-38, K.Williams 4-15, Galloway 3-88, Cooley 3-64, Armstrong 2-36, Davis 1-62, R.Williams 1-34. MISSED FGs—Houston, Rackers 47 (WR). Washington, Gano 29 (BK), 52 (WR).

Packers 34, Bills 7 Buffalo Green Bay

0 7 0 0 — 7 13 0 14 7 — 34 First Quarter GB—FG Crosby 44, 11:49. GB—FG Crosby 24, 7:35. GB—Jackson 1 run (Crosby kick), :11. Second Quarter Buf—Jackson 3 run (Lindell kick), 10:49. Third Quarter GB—Driver 7 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 8:32. GB—Rodgers 9 run (Crosby kick), 1:56. Fourth Quarter GB—J.Jones 30 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 11:41. A—70,741. Buf GB First downs 14 18 Total Net Yards 186 346 Rushes-yards 32-124 27-91 Passing 62 255 Punt Returns 1-0 3-22 Kickoff Returns 7-192 2-61 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-9 Comp-Att-Int 11-18-2 19-29-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-40 0-0 Punts 5-46.4 3-40.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 4-35 6-49 Time of Possession 29:04 30:56 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Buffalo, Lynch 17-64, Jackson 939, T.Edwards 3-12, Parrish 1-4, Spiller 1-3, McIntyre 1-2. Green Bay, Kuhn 9-36, Jackson 11-29, Rodgers 5-20, Nance 2-6. PASSING—Buffalo, T.Edwards 11-18-2-102. Green Bay, Rodgers 19-29-0-255. RECEIVING—Buffalo, Spiller 4-23, St.Johnson 3-31, Parrish 2-34, Stupar 2-14. Green Bay, Finley 4-103, Driver 4-38, Jennings 3-36, J.Jones 3-32, Nelson 2-26, Johnson 1-11, Jackson 1-10, D.Lee 1-(minus 1). MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Dolphins 14, Vikings 10 Miami Minnesota

7 0 7 0 — 14 0 0 7 3 — 10 First Quarter Mia—Hartline 5 pass from Henne (D.Carpenter kick), 4:40. Third Quarter Mia—Misi fumble recovery in end zone (D.Carpenter kick), 6:29. Min—Peterson 1 run (Longwell kick), 2:38. Fourth Quarter Min—FG Longwell 28, 7:52. A—63,846. Mia Min First downs 12 22 Total Net Yards 226 364 Rushes-yards 29-120 33-156 Passing 106 208 Punt Returns 0-0 3-14 Kickoff Returns 2-37 2-44 Interceptions Ret. 3-17 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 9-15-0 22-36-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-8 3-17 Punts 6-40.3 2-44.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 2-1 Penalties-Yards 2-15 7-44 Time of Possession 24:12 35:48 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Miami, Brown 13-80, Williams 10-30, Polite 4-10, Henne 2-0. Minnesota, Peterson 28-145, Gerhart 4-10, Tahi 1-1. PASSING—Miami, Henne 9-15-0-114. Minnesota, Favre 22-36-3-225. RECEIVING—Miami, Marshall 4-71, Hartline 3-28, Bess 1-12, Brown 1-3. Minnesota, Shiancoe 6-86, Peterson 5-41, Harvin 5-32, Berrian 2-24, Kleinsasser 1-20, Lewis 1-14, Gerhart 1-5, Camarillo 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Falcons 41, Cards 7 Arizona Atlanta

0 7 0 0 — 7 7 17 10 7 — 41 First Quarter Atl—White 7 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 10:33. Second Quarter Atl—FG Bryant 24, 13:06. Ari—Hightower 80 run (Feely kick), 12:54. Atl—Snelling 19 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 9:18. Atl—Snelling 1 run (Bryant kick), 3:31. Third Quarter Atl—Finneran 12 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 13:18. Atl—FG Bryant 35, 3:57. Fourth Quarter Atl—Snelling 7 run (Bryant kick), 3:05. A—66,824. Ari Atl First downs 11 33 Total Net Yards 267 444 Rushes-yards 13-118 45-221 Passing 149 223 Punt Returns 0-0 1-17 Kickoff Returns 5-91 2-64 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 3-84 Comp-Att-Int 18-33-3 21-32-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-15 1-2 Punts 5-44.0 2-34.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 10-109 6-75 Time of Possession 20:47 39:13 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Arizona, Hightower 11-115,

Wright 2-3. Atlanta, Snelling 24-129, Turner 9-75, Mughelli 5-16, Ryan 6-6, Douglas 1(minus 5). PASSING—Arizona, Anderson 17-31-2-161, Hall 1-2-1-3. Atlanta, Ryan 21-32-0-225. RECEIVING—Arizona, Fitzgerald 7-83, Stephens-Howling 3-25, Breaston 3-10, S.Williams 2-26, Hightower 2-9, Patrick 1-11. Atlanta, White 7-78, Snelling 5-57, Finneran 3-31, Douglas 2-31, Gonzalez 2-19, Mughelli 2-9. MISSED FGs—Arizona, Feely 54 (SH).

Bengals 15, Ravens 10 Baltimore Cincinnati

0 0 7 3 — 10 0 6 3 6 — 15 Second Quarter Cin—FG Nugent 36, 14:52. Cin—FG Nugent 30, 9:46. Third Quarter Bal—Mason 31 pass from Flacco (Cundiff kick), 11:46. Cin—FG Nugent 46, :14. Fourth Quarter Bal—FG Cundiff 38, 5:46. Cin—FG Nugent 38, 4:34. Cin—FG Nugent 25, 2:48. A—64,071. Bal Cin First downs 14 14 Total Net Yards 259 253 Rushes-yards 23-109 31-94 Passing 150 159 Punt Returns 5-31 2-6 Kickoff Returns 3-92 1-60 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 4-44 Comp-Att-Int 17-39-4 16-35-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-4 1-8 Punts 7-36.7 8-44.1 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 5-45 9-56 Time of Possession 25:44 34:16 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Baltimore, Rice 16-87, McGahee 310, Flacco 3-9, L.McClain 1-3. Cincinnati, Benson 23-78, Scott 5-17, C.Palmer 3-(minus 1). PASSING—Baltimore, Flacco 17-39-4-154. Cincinnati, C.Palmer 16-35-0-167. RECEIVING—Baltimore, Boldin 5-35, Heap 4-35, Rice 4-30, Mason 1-31, Dickson 1-17, L.McClain 1-5, Pitta 1-1. Cincinnati, Shipley 5-42, Ochocinco 4-44, Owens 3-57, Gresham 3-15, Kelly 1-9. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Chiefs 16, Browns 14 Kansas City Cleveland

3 7 3 3 — 16 0 14 0 0 — 14 First Quarter KC—FG Succop 35, 8:43. Second Quarter Cle—Hillis 1 run (Dawson kick), 12:31. KC—Flowers 33 interception return (Succop kick), 10:02. Cle—Cribbs 65 pass from Wallace (Dawson kick), 8:43. Third Quarter KC—FG Succop 26, 8:45. Fourth Quarter KC—FG Succop 23, 7:41. A—65,377. KC Cle First downs 16 13 Total Net Yards 312 299 Rushes-yards 39-140 26-73 Passing 172 226 Punt Returns 4-6 1-5 Kickoff Returns 3-58 5-50 Interceptions Ret. 1-33 2-1 Comp-Att-Int 16-28-2 16-31-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-4 1-3 Punts 6-41.5 8-42.1 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 4-30 9-78 Time of Possession 33:13 26:47 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Kansas City, Jones 22-83, Charles 11-49, Cassel 4-5, McCluster 1-3, Castille 1-0. Cleveland, Hillis 8-35, Harrison 16-33, Wallace 1-4, Cribbs 1-1. PASSING—Kansas City, Cassel 16-28-2176. Cleveland, Wallace 16-31-1-229. RECEIVING—Kansas City, Moeaki 5-58, Bowe 4-45, Chambers 3-33, Castille 2-8, Charles 1-27, Jones 1-5. Cleveland, Watson 4-62, Cribbs 3-74, Harrison 3-35, Hillis 3-26, Robiskie 1-12, Stuckey 1-11, Massaquoi 1-9. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Cleveland, Dawson 42 (WL).

Bears 27, Cowboys 20 Chicago Dallas

10 10 0 7 — 27 7 7 3 3 — 20 First Quarter Chi—FG Gould 38, 7:31. Dal—Bryant 62 punt return (Buehler kick), 2:44. Chi—Olsen 39 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 1:09. Second Quarter Dal—Gronkowski 1 pass from Romo (Buehler kick), 8:16. Chi—Hester 9 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 3:38. Chi—FG Gould 40, :20. Third Quarter Dal—FG Buehler 28, 10:36. Fourth Quarter Chi—Forte 3 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 5:16. Dal—FG Buehler 48, 1:17. A—85,168. Chi Dal First downs 14 23 Total Net Yards 308 410 Rushes-yards 19-38 20-36 Passing 270 374 Punt Returns 1-(-5) 3-66 Kickoff Returns 4-85 4-107 Interceptions Ret. 2-38 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 21-29-0 34-51-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 0-0 Punts 6-39.3 3-42.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 2-10 6-50 Time of Possession 26:20 33:40 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Chicago, Forte 10-29, Taylor 4-6, Cutler 5-3. Dallas, Barber 11-31, Jones 7-7, Choice 1-(minus 1), Romo 1-(minus 1). PASSING—Chicago, Cutler 21-29-0-277. Dallas, Romo 34-51-2-374. RECEIVING—Chicago, Forte 5-37, Bennett 5-29, Knox 4-86, Hester 4-77, Taylor 2-9, Olsen 1-39. Dallas, Austin 10-142, Bennett 745, Witten 5-51, R.Williams 4-53, Gronkowski 3-13, Bryant 2-52, Jones 2-12, Choice 1-6. MISSED FGs—Dallas, Buehler 44 (WL).

Eagles 35, Lions 32 Philadelphia Detroit

7 14 7 7 — 35 7 10 0 15 — 32 First Quarter Phi—D.Jackson 45 pass from Vick (Akers kick), 8:39. Det—Best 14 run (Hanson kick), 5:39. Second Quarter Det—FG Hanson 49, 12:28. Det—Best 75 pass from Sh.Hill (Hanson kick), 8:16. Phi—McCoy 14 run (Akers kick), 3:53. Phi—Maclin 9 pass from Vick (Akers kick), :13. Third Quarter Phi—McCoy 4 run (Akers kick), 5:54. Fourth Quarter Phi—McCoy 46 run (Akers kick), 6:17. Det—Best 2 run (Hanson kick), 4:13. Det—C.Johnson 19 pass from Sh.Hill (C.Johnson pass from Sh.Hill), 1:50. A—56,688. Phi Det First downs 24 22 Total Net Yards 409 444 Rushes-yards 28-162 26-115 Passing 247 329 Punt Returns 3-15 3-34 Kickoff Returns 4-63 5-109 Interceptions Ret. 2-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 21-34-0 25-45-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 6-37 2-6 Punts 7-48.7 4-52.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 9-75 9-51 Time of Possession 30:52 29:08 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Philadelphia, McCoy 16-120, Vick 7-37, D.Jackson 1-5, Bell 4-0. Detroit, Best 17-78, Sh.Hill 3-16, A.Brown 3-13, Morris 3-8. PASSING—Philadelphia, Vick 21-34-0-284. Detroit, Sh.Hill 25-45-2-335. RECEIVING—Philadelphia, D.Jackson 4135, McCoy 4-8, Avant 3-33, Celek 3-27, Maclin 3-26, Schmitt 2-21, Cooper 1-20, Mills 1-14. Detroit, Best 9-154, Pettigrew 7-108, C.Johnson 4-50, A.Brown 2-10, Scheffler 1-5, Burleson 1-4, B.Johnson 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Steelers 19, Titans 11 Pittsburgh Tennessee

7 6 0 6 — 19 3 0 0 8 — 11 First Quarter Pit—Brown 89 kickoff return (Reed kick), 14:46. Ten—FG Bironas 21, 10:46. Second Quarter Pit—FG Reed 36, 14:12. Pit—FG Reed 34, :00. Fourth Quarter Pit—FG Reed 25, 14:56. Pit—FG Reed 27, 4:59. Ten—Washington 2 pass from Collins (Britt pass from Collins), :58. A—69,143. Pit Ten

First downs 7 14 Total Net Yards 127 238 Rushes-yards 33-106 22-46 Passing 21 192 Punt Returns 4-33 3-43 Kickoff Returns 2-115 4-97 Interceptions Ret. 3-8 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 9-17-0 24-35-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-22 4-23 Punts 8-43.5 5-48.8 Fumbles-Lost 4-1 7-4 Penalties-Yards 5-35 11-72 Time of Possession 33:40 26:20 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Pittsburgh, Mendenhall 23-69, Dixon 3-28, Redman 4-8, Moore 2-1, Batch 10. Tennessee, C.Johnson 16-34, Young 2-12, Ringer 2-1, Collins 2-(minus 1). PASSING—Pittsburgh, Batch 5-11-0-25, Dixon 4-6-0-18. Tennessee, Collins 17-25-1-149, Young 7-10-2-66. RECEIVING—Pittsburgh, Wallace 2-25, Miller 2-3, Ward 1-9, Mendenhall 1-3, Redman 13, Moore 1-0, Randle El 1-0. Tennessee, Britt 5-41, C.Johnson 5-19, Gage 4-74, Washington 4-34, Scaife 3-20, Hall 1-13, Stevens 1-9, Cook 1-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Chargers 38, Jags 13 Jacksonville San Diego

3 3 0 7 — 13 7 14 3 14 — 38 First Quarter SD—Tolbert 2 run (Kaeding kick), 11:42. Jac—FG Scobee 44, 5:29. Second Quarter SD—Gates 9 pass from Rivers (Kaeding kick), 11:32. Jac—FG Scobee 48, 1:55. SD—Gates 4 pass from Rivers (Kaeding kick), :10. Third Quarter SD—FG Kaeding 41, 4:55. Fourth Quarter SD—Tolbert 1 run (Kaeding kick), 13:18. SD—Floyd 54 pass from Rivers (Kaeding kick), 8:06. Jac—Sims-Walker 3 pass from Garrard (Scobee kick), :00. A—62,691. Jac SD First downs 20 25 Total Net Yards 350 477 Rushes-yards 24-71 30-151 Passing 279 326 Punt Returns 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns 6-112 3-56 Interceptions Ret. 2-8 4-25 Comp-Att-Int 26-42-4 22-29-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-14 1-8 Punts 0-0.0 2-17.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 1-1 Penalties-Yards 5-33 4-25 Time of Possession 30:24 29:36 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Jacksonville, Jennings 9-38, Jones-Drew 12-31, McCown 1-4, Garrard 1(minus 1), Thomas 1-(minus 1). San Diego, Tolbert 16-82, Sproles 5-37, Mathews 5-26, Hester 3-7, Volek 1-(minus 1). PASSING—Jacksonville, Garrard 15-23-4173, McCown 11-19-0-120. San Diego, Rivers 22-29-2-334. RECEIVING—Jacksonville, Sims-Walker 10-105, Lewis 5-70, Jennings 4-50, Thomas 4-43, Jones-Drew 1-17, G.Jones 1-5, Wilford 1-3. San Diego, Gates 5-57, Davis 5-48, Sproles 4-63, Floyd 3-95, Mathews 2-29, Crayton 1-15, Naanee 1-14, Tolbert 1-13. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Broncos 31, Seahawks 14 Seattle Denver

0 0 7 7 — 14 7 10 7 7 — 31 First Quarter Den—Royal 13 pass from Orton (Prater kick), 3:48. Second Quarter Den—Buckhalter 1 run (Prater kick), 10:30. Den—FG Prater 20, :11. Third Quarter Sea—Obomanu 11 pass from Hasselbeck (Mare kick), 9:47. Den—Moreno 1 run (Prater kick), 3:31. Fourth Quarter Den—D.Thomas 21 pass from Orton (Prater kick), 9:11. Sea—Hasselbeck 20 run (Mare kick), 5:59. A—75,130. Sea Den First downs 17 23 Total Net Yards 339 369 Rushes-yards 20-109 38-65 Passing 230 304 Punt Returns 3-82 2-2 Kickoff Returns 1-13 1-11 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 3-13 Comp-Att-Int 20-35-3 25-35-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-3 1-3 Punts 2-53.5 4-51.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 7-64 3-35 Time of Possession 22:33 37:27 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Forsett 8-44, Hasselbeck 3-21, Washington 4-17, Robinson 1-15, Jones 4-12. Denver, Moreno 24-51, Buckhalter 11-19, Orton 3-(minus 5). PASSING—Seattle, Hasselbeck 20-35-3233. Denver, Orton 25-35-0-307. RECEIVING—Seattle, Butler 5-50, Carlson 5-48, Branch 4-31, Obomanu 2-30, Tate 152, Forsett 1-8, Robinson 1-7, Williams 1-7. Denver, D.Thomas 8-97, Royal 5-65, Moreno 4-67, Lloyd 3-53, Gaffney 2-15, Graham 2-6, Larsen 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Patriots 28, Jets 14 New England 0 14 0 0 — 14 N.Y. Jets 0 10 11 7 — 28 Second Quarter NE—Welker 6 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 13:17. NYJ—Edwards 10 pass from Sanchez (Folk kick), 6:22. NE—Moss 34 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), :53. NYJ—FG Folk 49, :00. Third Quarter NYJ—FG Folk 36, 4:53. NYJ—Cotchery 2 pass from Sanchez (Edwards pass from Sanchez), :38. Fourth Quarter NYJ—Keller 1 pass from Sanchez (Folk kick), 6:09. A—78,535. NE 20 291 20-52 239 2-26 5-123 0-0 20-36-2 1-9 3-48.7 1-1 6-79 27:28

First downs Total Net Yards Rushes-yards Passing Punt Returns Kickoff Returns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession

NYJ 23 336 32-136 200 2-11 2-30 2-0 21-30-0 3-20 4-51.3 0-0 6-58 32:32

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New England, Faulk 5-22, Green-Ellis 10-19, Taylor 5-11. N.Y. Jets, Tomlinson 11-76, Greene 15-52, Cotchery 26, Sanchez 4-2. PASSING—New England, Brady 20-36-2248. N.Y. Jets, Sanchez 21-30-0-220. RECEIVING—New England, Hernandez 6101, Welker 6-38, Moss 2-38, Faulk 2-15, Morris 1-19, Tate 1-17, Gronkowski 1-14, Edelman 1-6. N.Y. Jets, Keller 7-115, Edwards 5-45, Cotchery 4-26, Tomlinson 4-26, Greene 1-8. MISSED FIELD GOALS—New England, Gostkowski 37 (WL).

Raiders 16, Rams 14 St. Louis Oakland

0 7 0 7 — 14 0 3 10 3 — 16 Second Quarter StL—Clayton 7 pass from Bradford (Jo.Brown kick), 12:04. Oak—FG Janikowski 38, 3:22. Third Quarter Oak—FG Janikowski 41, 10:53. Oak—Murphy 4 pass from Gradkowski (Janikowski kick), 6:07. Fourth Quarter Oak—FG Janikowski 22, 9:50. StL—Clayton 17 pass from Bradford (Jo. Brown kick), 3:18. A—48,396. StL Oak First downs 16 25 Total Net Yards 210 404 Rushes-yards 21-75 40-173 Passing 135 231 Punt Returns 1-0 3-54 Kickoff Returns 5-118 3-61 Interceptions Ret. 2-16 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 14-25-1 19-37-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-32 2-18 Punts 7-45.6 3-43.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-0 Penalties-Yards 8-92 12-90 Time of Possession 23:11 36:49 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—St. Louis, Jackson 19-75, Darby 20. Oakland, D.McFadden 30-145, J.Campbell 3-19, Reece 3-9, Gradkowski 4-0. PASSING—St. Louis, Bradford 14-25-1167. Oakland, Gradkowski 11-22-1-162, J.Campbell 8-15-1-87. RECEIVING—St. Louis, Jackson 4-50, Amendola 4-39, Clayton 2-24, Fells 1-36, Bajema 1-13, Robinson 1-4, Karney 1-1. Oakland, Murphy 6-91, Heyward-Bey 6-80, Z.Miller 349, Reece 2-21, D.McFadden 2-8. MISSED FIELD GOALS—St. Louis, Jo.Brown 36 (WR). Oakland, Janikowski 46 (WL).

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Panthers sputter again BY GREER SMITH ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

CHARLOTTE – Matt Moore became the most visible fall guy for the Carolina Panthers’ continuing struggles on offense when he was sent to the bench for good early in the fourth quarter on Sunday. He wasn’t the only one responsible for the 20-7 loss to Tampa Bay. Starting running backs DeAngelo Williams and Jonathan Stewart combined for just 98 yards rushing and were pushed into the background behind reserve Mike Goodson when Clausen engineered a drive from the Panthers’ 20 to the Tampa 1. The wide receivers again struggled to get open, with no one coming up with three catches and David Gettis, who started opposite Steve Smith, getting two. “We just weren’t good offensively,” Panthers coach John Fox said. “That was evident. We had opportunities. We had misses, We had drops.” The Panthers outgained the Bucs 278 yards to 273, but got inside the Tampa 32 just twice. “We left a lot of big plays out there,” Williams said. “We need to get to a point where we are consistent. You

have to be consistent to win games.” The Panthers have two touchdowns, both by Smith, in two games. “You practice and practice until you are blue in the face and sometimes it just doesn’t work out,” Williams said. Moore was unsure why the Panthers are having trouble scoring this season after he guided them to a 4-1 finish as replacement for Jake Delhomme. “I feel scheme-wide, it is the same,” Moore said. “We just need to turn this thing around.” Smith wasn’t shocked Moore was yanked. “Nothing surprises me around here anymore,” Smith said. “But as a wide receiver, I run my routes and don’t care who throws me the ball.” Carolina’s defense was also suspect, failing to record a sack or an interception as the Panthers had trouble containing quarterback Josh Freeman. “We have to look at ourselves individually and figure out what we have to do,” linebacker Jon Beason said. “Over the course of a game there are going to be a lot of plays and when you get the opportunity to make a play, you have to make it. They did and we didn’t.” gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3556

Dolphins stuff Favre, Vikings THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EAGLES 35, LIONS 32

MINNEAPOLIS – Brett Favre had his worst game as a Viking, throwing three interceptions and losing a fumble, and the Miami Dolphins stopped Adrian Peterson on fourth-and-goal from the 1 to preserve a 14-10 victory over Minnesota on Sunday. Koa Misi recovered Favre’s fumble in the end zone for a touchdown and Brian Hartline scored on a 5-yard pass from Chad Henne to keep the Dolphins (2-0) undefeated. The 40-year-old Favre was 19 of 28 for 197 yards as the Vikings fell to 0-2.

DETROIT – Michael Vick’s first start in four years was a winning one, with the quarterback throwing two touchdown passes in the first half before Philadelphia held off a late rally.

TEXANS 30, REDSKINS 27 (OT) LANDOVER, Md. – Neil Rackers kicked a 35-yard field goal with 3:24 left in overtime, and Matt Schaub passed for a franchise-record 497 yards as Houston improved to 2-0. Donovan McNabb completed 28 of 38 passes for 426 yards with one TD for the Redskins (1-1).

BEARS 27, COWBOYS 20

JETS 28, PATRIOTS 14 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. – Mark Sanchez threw a career-high three touchdown passes, including two in the second half, and the Jets held off Tom Brady and New England despite losing Darrelle Revis to injury.

ARLINGTON, Texas – Jay Cutler overcame several early hard hits to throw three touchdown passes, leading Chicago to its first 2-0 start since its Super Bowl season in 2006. Dallas fell to 0-2 for the first time since 2001.

Giants regain NL West lead THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

lanta Braves. The teams begin a threegame series in Philadelphia tonight.

SAN FRANCISCO – Jose Guillen hit a grand slam and drove in six runs, Barry Zito won for the first time in two months and the San Francisco Giants regained first place in the NL West with a 9-2 win over the Milwaukee Brewers on Sunday. The Giants moved a half-game up on the Padres, who lost to St. Louis 4-1.

PHILLIES 7, NATIONALS 6 PHILADELPHIA – Jayson Werth hit a two-run homer in the ninth inning after Ryan Howard had a two-run single to lift the Phillies to their seventh straight win. The Phillies maintained their threegame lead in the NL East over the At-

BRAVES 6, METS 3 NEW YORK – Derrek Lee delivered the huge hit the Braves desperately needed from him, launching a go-ahead grand slam in the seventh inning that sent Atlanta to a three-game sweep.

ORIOLES 4, YANKEES 3 (11) BALTIMORE – Luke Scott tied the game with a ninth-inning homer off Mariano Rivera, then scored the winning run in the 11th to give the Baltimore Orioles a 4-3 victory over the New York Yankees on Sunday. New York has a half-game lead over Tampa Bay, which opens a four-game series at Yankee Stadium tonight.

Stanford’s good Luck dooms Wake STANFORD, Calif. (AP) – After watching Stanford blow an early lead a year ago at Wake Forest, Andrew Luck made sure the Cardinal never stopped scoring in the rematch. Luck threw four touchdown passes, ran 52 yards for another score and led No. 19 Stanford to the end zone on all eight drives that he played in a 68-24 victory over Wake Forest on Saturday night. “We were very, very, very motivated, especially after last year,” Luck said. “We knew we had to maybe light the scoreboard up if we wanted to beat them.” Chris Owusu caught two TD passes in his first game of the season and Tyler Gaffney ran for two scores to help the Cardinal (3-0) score their most points in 42 years. Stanford has won its first three games for the first time since 2001, avenging last year’s 24-17 last-second loss at Wake Forest in a game the Cardinal led 17-3 at the half. The Demon Deacons (2-1) scored 107 points in winning their first two games but didn’t have nearly enough offense to keep up with Luck and Stanford.

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4D www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

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Monday September 20, 2010

BACK TO WORK: See how investors begin the week. TOMORROW

Business: Pam Haynes PHaynes@hpe.com (336) 888-3617

5D

Websites offer new source of funding

FILE | AP

In this Aug. 31, 2010 photograph, a home with a sold sign is shown in Palo Alto, Calif. Americans’ wealth shrank in the spring for the first time since early 2009 as financial turmoil eroded stock portfolios and the real estate market collapsed.

Americans’ net worth slowly shrinks WASHINGTON (AP) – Americans’ long journey to regain the wealth they lost in the recession is stalled. Households failed even to run in place during the April-June quarter as sinking stock prices eroded wealth. Stocks have since recovered about two-thirds of those losses. But based on last quarter’s data, household net worth would have to surge 23 percent to reach its pre-recession peak. Net worth – the value of assets like homes and investments, minus debts like mortgages and credit cards – fell 2.7 percent last quarter, or $1.5 trillion, the Federal Reserve said Friday. It now stands at $53.5 trillion. That’s above the bottom hit during the recession, $48.8 trillion in the first quarter of 2009. But it’s far below the pre-recession peak in wealth of $65.8 trillion. The drop from April to June was the first quarterly decline in Americans’ wealth since early 2009. Before then, net worth had risen slowly for four straight quarters.

Economists generally think household wealth has ticked up in the July-to-September quarter so far, because of higher stock prices. Yet given last quarter’s setback and expectations of scant gains ahead, some economists

The decline in net worth from April to June amounted to an average drop of $12,941 per household. have pushed back their forecast for when Americans will regain all their lost wealth: Not until the middle of this decade. Their stagnant wealth will likely keep Americans from spending freely – and the struggling economy from picking up strength. Consumers tend to spend according to how wealthy

they feel. And their spending accounts for about 70 percent of the economy. In the meantime, people are saving more and paring debt, Friday’s data showed. The decline in net worth from April to June amounted to an average drop of $12,941 per household. Average household wealth now amounts to $455,173. That’s up from $415,185 during the recession. But it’s down from a peak of $563,438 in 2007. One reason why economists foresee only slight gains in wealth is they expect real-estate values to stay weak. Residential real-estate accounts for 32 percent of net worth; individual stocks make up 13 percent. The balance includes retirement accounts, taxable mutual funds, bank accounts, bonds and possessions such as cars and jewelry. During the recession, sinking home equity and stock prices made shoppers skittish. More than a year after the recession is thought to have ended, the housing and stock markets remain

fragile. That’s why most Americans aren’t spending as much as they typically do after recessions. Consumer spending grew at an annual rate of just 2 percent last quarter, about the same pace as in the first three months of this year. Most economists think Americans will spend at about the same pace, or only slightly better, in the current quarter. By contrast, after the 1981-82 recession, consumer spending averaged a robust 6.5 percent pace during 1983. “Consumer spending is going to show only stunted growth this year because the wherewithal to spend – jobs, income, wealth – are only inching higher,” said Ken Mayland, president of ClearView Economics. Carla Fehribach, a retired airport ticket agent in St. Louis, said the stock market’s failure to generate any real growth this year has made her more cautious about spending. “I’ll feel a little more comfortable about spending more if the stock market and the economy turn around,” said Fehribach, 67.

NEW YORK (AP) – One project strapped dozens of digital cameras to kites and balloons and sent them above the Gulf of Mexico to document the oil spill. Another will, hopefully, fly a smart phone into the upper reaches of the atmosphere so it can send photos and video back down. These projects cost anywhere from a few hundred to tens of thousands of dollars. And to help pay for them, their creators are turning not to deep-pocketed investors but to friends and strangers online. Through websites including Kickstarter and IndieGoGo, these people pledge as little as $1 in exchange for bragging rights and thank-you gifts such as limited-run CDs and books. “This is widening the scope of who is getting funded,” said Tiffany Shlain, filmmaker and founder of the Webby Awards, for which IndieGoGo was nominated this year. Kickstarter, based in New York City, lets people set a budget and make a pitch, usually in a self-shot video. Creators put a lot of work into displaying their projects on the sites to show, not just tell. There are photos, videos, blogs and links to Facebook and Twitter, along with detailed descriptions of the rewards offered to backers. IndieGoGo co-founder Slava Rubin said strangers don’t tend to fund projects that haven’t already raised money. Kickstarter’s small staff, meanwhile, vets projects before they go up on the site. The sites also have various fraud-prevention measures in place.

Investors reap rewards from emerging markets NEW YORK (AP) – You can boil down the appeal of emerging markets for investors to three words: growth, debt and fishmeal. For more than a decade, industrializing countries like Brazil and China have drawn investors seeking to ride their rapid economic growth. Now, money managers are looking to places that feed these emerging giants – like Peru, the world’s top source for fishmeal, a key ingredient in animal feeds. Since the financial crisis hit two years ago, cash has flooded into the developing world from those seeking better returns and safety. Unlike the U.S. and other developed

DILBERT

countries whose governments borrowed heavily for stimulus spending, countries in South America and Asia have smaller debt burdens along with higher bond yields. So far, investors’ bets in developing countries have paid off. The MSCI emerging market stock index posted a 78 percent gain for 2009 and is up 3.8 percent this year. Funds that invest in emergingmarket bonds returned 32 percent last year. This year, JPMorgan’s emerging market bond index has gained 7.4 percent on price terms alone. In the 1990s, emerging-market investments were a great way to lose money. The Asian financial crisis, Russia’s debt

default and other events crushed many investors. The stigma from those

crises has largely disappeared. Brad Durham, man-

aging director at fund tracker EPFR Global, said it’s remarkable how quickly attitudes have changed, a shift he sees reflected in the numbers. Durham said that in a typical year over the past decade investors might have dropped $15 billion into emerging-market stocks and $9 billion into emergingmarket bonds. Contrast that with the haul for emerging-market funds so far this year: $40 billion into stocks and a record $25.6 billion into bonds. Last year, investors put a record $83.3 billion into emergingmarket stock funds. “The idea that emerging markets are a risky asset has started to un-

ravel,” Durham said. Judging by the flow of cash, investors seem to fear U.S. stocks. EPFR’s data shows they’ve pulled $23.4 billion from U.S. equity funds this year. Financial turmoil in the United States and Europe has helped make developing countries alluring to investors worried about another Greek debt crisis. Taken together, the world’s advanced countries have debt levels above 90 percent of gross domestic product, according to the International Monetary Fund. The tally for developing countries is 38 percent and shrinking, according to the IMF.

GM to test electric cars in S. Korea NEW YORK (AP) – General Motors says it will launch a test fleet of electric cars in South Korea as it continues to develop battery-powered models of its Chevrolet Cruze. The automaker will begin the project at the end

of October. It is working with LG Electronics on the project. The Cruze EV demo fleet will be GM’s first compact sedan electric vehicles to hit the road and will be powered by batteries from LG Chemical and

propulsion systems from LG Electronics. The demo fleet in South Korea will consist of Chevrolet Cruzes and GM Daewoo Lacetti Premieres. GM says there’s no plan to sell an electric Cruze in the U.S.


WEATHER, NATION 6D www.hpe.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

High Point Enterprise Weather Today

Tuesday

Wednesday

Friday

Thursday

Sunny

Sunny

Mostly Sunny

Sunny

Mostly Sunny

91º 62º

88º 64º

91º 64º

93º 63º

93º 61º

Local Area Forecast Kernersville Winston-Salem 89/62 90/61 Jamestown 91/62 High Point 91/62 Archdale Thomasville 91/63 91/63 Trinity Lexington 91/63 Randleman 92/62 91/63

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 84/64

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

High Point 91/62

Asheville 86/57

Charlotte 93/63

Denton 92/63

Greenville 88/62 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 90/62 82/69

Almanac

Wilmington 87/69 Today

Tuesday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s

89/64 84/58 82/67 84/67 89/65 74/56 87/63 84/58 86/64 87/64 80/71 84/56 86/62 89/64 86/64 86/63 88/63

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . . .87/58 ATLANTA . . . . . . . . .94/63 BOISE . . . . . . . . . . . .69/45 BOSTON . . . . . . . . . .70/50 CHARLESTON, SC . .92/70 CHARLESTON, WV . .83/55 CINCINNATI . . . . . . .86/60 CHICAGO . . . . . . . . .75/64 CLEVELAND . . . . . . .69/54 DALLAS . . . . . . . . . .95/73 DETROIT . . . . . . . . . .68/56 DENVER . . . . . . . . . .90/51 GREENSBORO . . . . .90/62 GRAND RAPIDS . . . .68/55 HOUSTON . . . . . . . . .93/74 HONOLULU . . . . . . . .88/74 KANSAS CITY . . . . . .89/68 NEW ORLEANS . . . .93/74

Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy

s s pc s s pc pc t pc s pc s s s s s s s

Tuesday

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

86/58 92/66 71/48 67/57 87/68 80/63 88/63 83/65 82/64 91/74 79/65 78/47 88/64 80/60 92/75 88/73 86/65 90/74

LAS VEGAS . . . . . . .98/71 LOS ANGELES . . . . .80/58 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . . .96/69 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .88/80 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .73/62 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .89/70 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .75/55 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .91/73 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . .104/75 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .73/53 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .77/52 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .71/46 SAN FRANCISCO . . .67/54 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .91/68 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .64/53 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .93/72 WASHINGTON, DC . .83/55 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .92/68

s s s s s s s s s pc s s s t t s t pc

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UV Index

.7:06 .7:20 .5:49 .4:35

a.m. p.m. p.m. a.m.

UV Index for 3 periods of the day.

8 a.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Noon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 4 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9

s s s s pc s s s s pc s s s s sh s pc s

Hi/Lo Wx 96/71 77/58 94/69 89/79 69/51 83/68 73/60 92/72 103/75 78/60 79/64 68/54 64/54 90/65 64/54 90/72 80/63 88/66

s s s t t s s s s s s s s s pc s s s

Full 9/23

New 10/7

Last 9/30

First 10/14

0-2: Low The higher the UV 3-5: Moderate index, the higher the 6-7: High need for eye and 8-10: Very High skin protection. 11+: Extreme

Lake Levels & River Stages Lake and river levels are in feet. Change is over the past 24 hrs. Flood Pool Current Level Change High Rock Lake 655.2 651.0 +0.5 Badin Lake 541.1 538.1 -0.2 Flood Stage Current Level Change Yadkin College 18.0 0.63 -0.04 Elkin 16.0 1.10 -0.02 Wilkesboro 14.0 2.05 0.00 High Point 10.0 0.51 -0.01 Ramseur 20.0 0.73 -0.10

Pollen Forecast

Today

Tuesday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

ACAPULCO . . . . . . . .85/77 AMSTERDAM . . . . . .61/52 BAGHDAD . . . . . . . .106/76 BARCELONA . . . . . .78/58 BEIJING . . . . . . . . . .67/59 BEIRUT . . . . . . . . . . . . .98/78 BOGOTA . . . . . . . . . .65/51 BERLIN . . . . . . . . . . .60/49 BUENOS AIRES . . . .75/51 CAIRO . . . . . . . . . . . .93/72

Statistics through 6 p.m. yesterday at Greensboro

Tuesday

Hi/Lo Wx

Around The World City

24 hours through 6 p.m. . . . . . . .0.00" Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.16" Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . .2.76" Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30.50" Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . .32.31" Record Precipitation . . . . . . . . . .1.87"

Sunrise . . Sunset . . Moonrise Moonset .

Across The Nation

s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s

High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60 Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .79 Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . .59 Last Year’s High . . . . . . . .72 Last Year’s Low . . . . . . . . .64 Record High . . . . .93 in 1954 Record Low . . . . . .41 in 1984

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

COPENHAGEN . . . . .58/51 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .72/45 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .98/78 GUATEMALA . . . . . .77/60 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .96/77 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .88/70 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .82/52 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .65/53 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .60/43 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .88/80

t 84/76 t ra 63/52 s s 107/76 s pc 76/60 sh ra 63/53 sh s 97/78 s cl 63/51 sh ra 62/49 pc mc 70/48 pc s 92/73 s

pc s t t s t s ra pc pc

Tuesday

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

60/47 74/47 85/78 76/60 97/78 82/70 82/53 67/53 60/43 88/79

PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .70/48 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .81/61 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .83/65 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .76/70 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .88/77 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .59/44 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .68/55 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .83/67 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .82/73 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .65/43

sh s t t pc t s pc pc sh

Tuesday

Hi/Lo Wx pc s s t t sh pc s t s

Today: High

Hi/Lo Wx 72/49 80/61 85/68 77/65 87/77 56/43 70/50 84/65 86/73 66/45

s pc pc t t sh s s pc s

Pollen Rating Scale

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .93/63 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .87/57 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .87/69 EMERALD ISLE . . . .83/67 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .91/64 GRANDFATHER MTN . .75/54 GREENVILLE . . . . . .88/62 HENDERSONVILLE .87/58 JACKSONVILLE . . . .87/63 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .87/62 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .80/68 MOUNT MITCHELL . .84/55 ROANOKE RAPIDS .87/60 SOUTHERN PINES . .92/64 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .87/62 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .89/62 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .89/61

Precipitation (Yesterday)

Sun and Moon

Around Our State City

Temperatures (Yesterday)

Air Quality

Predominant Types: Weeds

75

51 50

26 25

1 0

Today: 62 (Moderate) 0-50: 51-100: 101-150:

100

Trees

Grasses

Weeds

0: Absent, 1-25: Low, 26-50: Moderate, 51-75: High, >75: Very High

151-200: 201-300: 301-500:

Good Moderate Unhealthy (sensitive) Unhealthy Very Unhealthy Hazardous

Air quality data is provided by the Forsyth County Environmental Affairs Department.

How do you predict fall foliage? With lots of eyes

AP

A maple tree shows its fall colors in Woodstock, Maine, Friday.

WOODSTOCK, Vt. (AP) – Jon Bouton does his leaf-peeping from his car, traveling Vermont’s bumpy back roads in a 2001 Geo Prizm. When the sugar maples, ash and poplars begin to show their colors, the Windsor County forester sends e-mails to the state tourism office, describing where the colors are brightest and what roads to drive to see them. His counterparts in Vermont’s other 13 counties do the same twice a week, their reports eventually combined into an online “foliage forecast.” Bouton, 59, is part of a small army of foresters, park rangers, volunteers and attraction opera-

tors in foliage-rich states whose observations point the way. “If we’re driving somewhere, we’re looking,” he said. Fall foliage is a multimilliondollar business for tour operators, inns, restaurants and attractions who cash in on the rush of visitors. In Vermont alone, visitors spend $374 million a year in the September-to-November season. In North Carolina, the state Division of Tourism’s “Leaf Peepers” program puts forecasts online and on a telephone hotline beginning Sunday. In Tennessee, the Great Smoky Mountains Association posts a web page the observations of a volunteer.

Leader of California religious sect hospitalized PALMDALE, Calif. (AP) – The leader of a breakaway religious sect has been hospitalized for a mental evaluation, after members of her group went missing and left behind evidence they were

awaiting the rapture or some catastrophic event. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Thomas Kim says Reyna Chicas, 32, was placed under a 72hour hold Sunday. The 13 adults and children were

found safe late Sunday morning, praying in a park near Palmdale. They said they had no intention of harming themselves.

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