hpe09242010

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HITTING THE ROAD: Harley-Davidson shop to close in city. 1B

THOMASVILLE – With the goal of cleaning up neighborhoods in the Chair City, the Thomasville Police Department and several city departments have established a nuisance abatement program. Thomasville police Chief Jeff

Insley said the program has been created because of concerns he heard when he took over as police chief last year and other concerns brought to him from the city’s public safety committee. He said the city’s fire, planning and public works departments have partnered for the program. “There are limited things that

CHAMPIONSHIP MOMENTS: Payne, Swaim savor titles. 1D

50 Cents Daily $1.25 Sundays

each department could do,” Insley said. “If all of those departments come together under one umbrella, there’s no telling what we could do because each of us bring different tools to fix particular issues.” Since the program was established four months ago, the program has targeted the National

Highway and Culbreth Avenue areas. Insley said letters, signed by the head of each department and the city manager, have been sent to the landlords of two homes on Culbreth. “You’ve got the big five (city officials) who are saying there are

PROGRAM, 2A

What: Fifth annual FarmPark Bluegrass Festival. Where: Denton FarmPark, 1072 Cranford Road, Denton.

acts begin at noon and end at 10:50 p.m. Admission: Tickets are $25 each day and $15 after 5 p.m. Children under 15 admitted free with parent.

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Jack Hailey of Huntersville picks under the awning of his camper.

MEET AND GREET: High Point police set Community Day. 1B OBITUARIES

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Gloria Adderton, 85 William Alley, 60 Cordelia Gaines, 105 Mellissa Harris, 30 Robert Jarrell, 62 Mary LeCrone, 98 Elsie Meadows, 97 Harold Myers, 80 Nelson Silver, 81 Wesley Tubbs, 60 Anna Woodell, 75 Obituaries, 2A,2B

WEATHER

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

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This group is made up of musicians, some from Montgomery County, others from Gastonia, who meet and play every year at the festival. as the master of ceremonies all five years of the festival. “This is one of the best festivals anywhere – great family fun, great music and people are well behaved, too.” Huntersville’s Jack and Frances Hailey, who are frequent visitors of the Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver festival, attended the September festival for the first time Thursday. The couple arrived on Tuesday with their camper. Jack Hailey previously played with a bluegrass group. “It’s just a tradition and I meet a lot of friends I used to play with here,” said Jack Hailey, with banjo in hand. dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

Sunny, hot High 91, Low 66 6D

INDEX

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

“None of the Above” from the Mount Airy area was the first group to perform Thursday.

City gets update on county operations HIGH POINT – City leaders don’t always see eye-to-eye with their counterparts from Guilford County when it comes to issues such as High Point Market funding and zoning jurisdiction. County Manager Brenda JonesFox and Tax Director Ben Chavis briefed City Council members this week on how revamped county services are taking effect in High Point – which appears to be an area of common ground between the city and county governments. Some of the changes have contributed to decreases in city costs associated with the ser-

Ross Jackson, a 27 year employee with K&W Cafeterias, was promoted to the general manager position in Burlington. He recently held the same position with K&W in Chapel Hill.

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BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

WHO’S NEWS

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INSIDE

TICKETS

When: Today and Saturday,

DENTON – As Bruce Newcomb of Pikeville put it, the opening day of the fifth annual FarmPark Bluegrass Festival gave him the chance to “jam.” Minutes before the start of the festival Thursday and far away from the main stage, Newcomb and several friends gathered with banjos under shade trees to give an informal rendition of the song “Prayer Bells of Heaven.” For regular festivalgoers, informal performances are a tradition at the Denton FarmPark. “I could care less what’s on stage,” said Newcomb, who provided vocals for the impromptu performance. “This is the reason why I came – just the opportunity to jam with these fellows.” The annual festival in September was established five years ago because of the popular Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver Bluegrass Festival that’s held annually in May. This year’s FarmPark Bluegrass Festival has the best lineup in its five-year history, said Karen Miller, general manager of Denton FarmPark. Fifteen different acts will be performing during the three-day event, which runs from Thursday through Saturday night. In all, five different acts will perform two sets each day, beginning at noon and winding up just before 11 p.m. each night. Miller said the popular music lineup today includes performances from The Grascals at 4 p.m. and 10 p.m. and the group Larry Cordle and the Lonesome Standard Time at 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. She said another popular group, Bobby Osborne and The Rocky Top Express will perform at 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. Saturday. “These are some of the best acts you will see in the bluegrass world,” said Buddy Michaels, a radio personality who has served

127th year No. 267 www.hpe.com High Point, N.C.

BLUEGRASS BASH Festival picks its way into Denton

September 24, 2010

INVESTIGATION CONTINUES: Local police probe shooting incident. 1B

Program targets Chair City problem areas BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

FRIDAY

vices the past couple of years. “I think the path Brenda has been on is designed to make county government more efficient and leaner, and without that, costs would go up,” City Manager Strib Boynton said. Several departments, including the tax department, board of elections, register of deeds and social services, moved into the new county building in the city at 325 E. Russell Ave. earlier this month. County officials said the move has given them more space and has made it more convenient for the public to access certain services that were previously housed at the courthouse, where they had to pass through security checks.

Councilman Mike Pugh said he was concerned about reductions in the size of the tax office’s staff because it could impact people who come to the department to look up records or pay a bill. County officials said new software has made tax information vastly easier to access for the public via the Internet. “From a customer service standpoint, I can’t say I’ve seen anyone suffer,” Chavis said. “We’re thrilled at the Web piece and how the citizens have all this information at their fingertips.” The tax department’s website lets anyone view real property, billing and collections information, as well as deed and owner-

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

ship history. Chavis said some of the information was previously kept on about 500,000 index cards, and images of each one have been linked to the website. “The real estate community loves that. It’s all public information. We’ve just made it easier for folks to get to it now,” Chavis said. “As many people as I can direct to the Web, the better.” Chavis said other new efficiencies in county tax operations include outsourcing of property tax bill printing and a bank lockbox operation where bills are mailed to Charlotte and posted to bank accounts the same day. pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

ABBY 3B BUSINESS 5D CLASSIFIED 3-6C COMICS 5B CROSSWORD 2C DONOHUE 5B FUN & GAMES 2C KIDS NEWS 6A LIFE&STYLE 1C LOCAL 1B LOTTERY 2A NEIGHBORS 4B NATION 3B, 6B NOTABLES 6B OBITUARIES 2A, 2B OPINION 4A SPORTS 1-4D STATE 2A STOCKS 5D TV 6B WEATHER 6D WORLD 5A

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CAROLINAS, OBITUARIES 2A www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES (MORE ON 2B)

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Anna Lynn Woodell

Robert E. Lee Jarrell

Mellissa Lindsay Harris

GREENSBORO – Mr. Robert E. Lee Jarrell, 62, of Greensboro, passed away on Wednesday, September 22, 2010, at his residence. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, September 25, 2010 at 2:00 p.m. in the chapel of Forbis and Dick Guilford Chapel with Rev. Mark Norman Vickers officiating. Robert was born in West Virginia to the late Clarence and Mary Jane Jarrell. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army. He was employed by the U.S. Postal Service for the past 20 years where he worked as an electrical maintenance mechanic and served diligently as an arbitration advocate. He was the president of the local chapter of APWU. He enjoyed golf, fishing, reading, and crossword puzzles. His greatest love in life was his family. He is survived by his wife Sharon, son Robbie and wife Allison, three daughters, Stacy, Katherine, and Meredith and fiancé’ Nick, a sister Brenda, three grandchildren, Jessica, Justin, and Jordan Jarrell, his sister-in-laws, Susie Baker, Jan Triplett and husband King, and his beloved “dog children” Dixie, Sully, Maggie, Herman, and Duncan. He was preceded in death by his sister, Elsie Jarrell Loudermilk. Memorial contributions may be made to the SPCA of the Triad, 3163 Hines Chapel Road, Greensboro, NC 27405. The family will receive friends following the memorial service. On-line condolences may be offered at www.forbisanddick. com.

HIGH POINT – Mrs. Mellissa Lindsay Harris was born on December 7, 1979 to Darrell Lindsay and Joann Wallace Lindsay in Guilford County, NC. She passed away on September 21, 2010 at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. Mellissa was married to Corey Harris for 13 years. She was a wonderful wife and was a dedicated servant of Jehovah for 15 years. Mellissa served as a regular pioneer, giving of her time to help others. She loved to decorate and entertain others. Mellissa was loved by everyone she met. Honoring her life and memories include: her husband, Corey Harris of the home; her parents; three brothers; Darrell (Michelle) Lindsay Jr. of High Point, Edwin (Yvonne) Lindsay of Greensboro, NC and Corey Lindsay of High Point; grandmother, Sarah Moore of High Point; four nieces, Nickayla Lindsay, Averi Lindsay, Evann Lindsay and Leigha Lindsay. A memorial service will be held at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, September 25, 2010 at High Point Central H.S. Auditorium. The family will receive friends at 607 N. Rotary Dr. Professional arrangements entrusted to People’s Funeral Service, Inc. You may express your online condolences at www.peoplesfuneralservice.net.

Senate candidate sues opponent ROCKY MOUNT (AP) – A North Carolina state Senate candidate has sued his incumbent challenger for defamation over a campaign mailer. Lawyers for Republican Buck Newton filed the lawsuit Thursday in Wilson County against Sen. A.B.

Swindell, Swindell’s campaign committee and the state Democratic party The lawsuit centers on a mailer paid for by the party and authorized by Swindell that refers to official court documents showing Newton being arrested on eight felony drug counts in 1990.

BESSEMER CITY – Rev. Nelson Orlando Silver, 81, resident of 425 Weaver Dairy Rd. died September 22nd, 2010 at Carolina’s Medical Center. Rev. Silver was born August 16th, 1929 in Entrican MI, a son to Giles Silver Sr. and Eva Space Silver. He was a resident of the High Point area since 1985 and later of Bessemer City since 2007. He had worked at Wesleyan Christian Academy as Director of Recruitment and Development and was a member of First Wesleyan Church where he had served as Business Director. In 1952 he married the former Dorcas Stauffer who survives of the residence. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by four brothers and sisters. Also surviving is a daughter, Esther Boyle and husband Scott of Bessemer City; three sisters, Mary Arntz, Margaret Strawser and Evahlena Sauer; a brother, John Silver; five grandchildren, Caleb, Anna, Joshua, Elizabeth and Daniel Boyle; and a sister-in-law, Pat Silver. Funeral service will be held at 2:00 p.m. Sunday at the Performing Arts Center at Wesleyan Christian Academy with Mr. Joel Farlow and Mr. David Sanford officiating. Interment will follow in Floral Garden Park Cemetery. Visitation will be one hour prior to the service at the academy. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be directed to the Nelson Silver Scholarship Fund at Wesleyan Christian Academy, 1917 N. Centennial St. High Point NC 27262. Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point is assisting the family. On-line condolences may be made through www.cumbyfuneral.com.

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.

Johnson says the boy showed the picture to his mom, who took him to the police department. Authorities say the bones are human and show no obvious sign of trauma like a gunshot wound. The remains will be examined by the Medical Examiner’s Office, and investigators are checking missing person reports in the area.

Is your hearing current? 211 W. Lexington Avenue, Suite 104, High Point, NC

SP00504750

Woman fends off bear attack with zucchini FRENCHTOWN, Mont. (AP) – Police say a Montana woman fended off a bear attack with an unlikely weapon – a zucchini. Missoula County Sheriff’s Lt. Rich Maricelli says a 200-pound black bear attacked one of the woman’s dogs just after midnight

PROGRAM

Some described as ‘smoke houses’ FROM PAGE 1

some issues over here and you’ve got to fix them,” Insley said. “These are homes where they are dilapidated and need to be repaired. Some of it was just basic services – no running water, commodes not working. That’s basic stuff. That’s things that folks need.” Insley described some of the homes as being boarded with grass growing up and with graffiti. He said some of the homes in the National Highway/ Culbreth area are used as “smoke houses.”

Wednesday on the back porch of her home about 15 miles west of Missoula. When the woman, whom police did not name, tried to separate the animals, the bear bit her in the leg. Maricelli says the woman reached for the nearest object at hand on the porch’s railing – a large

zucchini that she had harvested from her garden. The woman flung the vegetable at the bear, striking it and forcing it to flee. Maricelli says the woman did not need medical attention. Wildlife officials were trying to locate the bear on Thursday.

Powerball 10-24-36-52-55 Powerball: 15 Power Play: 5

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MID-DAY Pick: 5-7-7 NIGHT Pick 3: 9-8-2 Pick 4: 7-3-9-3 Carolina Cash 5: 1-7-32-36-38

NIGHT DAY Pick 3: 0-3-8 Pick 3: 1-0-1 Pick 4: 3-1-8-7 Pick 4: 7-7-5-7 Cash 5: 1-3-29-32-34 Cash 5: 10-19-25-29-34 Win For Life: 8-14-19-26-31-37 1-804-662-5825 Free Ball: 30 The winning numbers selected Wednesday in the S.C. Lottery: DAY Pick 3: 0-3-7 Pick 4: 3-3-8-1

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The winning numbers selected Wednesday in the Tennessee Lottery: DAY Cash 3: 1-4-1 Cash 4: 9-5-3-6

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dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

The winning numbers selected Wednesday in the Virginia Lottery:

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“That is just a nuisance and an eyesore,” he said. Insley said it’s not his goal to take homes as part of the program. He said that would be a last resort. “It’s not where I would like to go in and take homes away,” he said. “I just want to encourage and hold landlords to be accountable and provide a good standard of living for the folks who want to come there.”

The winning numbers selected Wednesday in the N.C. Lottery:

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT US The High Point Enterprise

legislative candidates offered their own reform agenda in 1994 before they took over the state House. Republicans would have to win six additional Senate seats and nine in the House to take over one or both chambers. “A political party should do what it says it will do,” House Minority Leader Paul Stam, RWake, told about 75 people eating lunch at Gardner’s BBQ. “If it’s been out of power, it should say how it would change things. We actually intend to change things.” Stam argues that Democratic overspending in state government has led North Carolina to some of the highest tax rates compared to surrounding states, pushing businesses interested in setting up shop in North Carolina to go elsewhere. The Democratic-led Legislature approved a 2009 budget that raised sales tax rates by a penny and placed an income tax surcharge on the highest wage earners.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KINGS MOUNTAIN (AP) – Police say human remains were found by teenagers swimming in an abandoned Cleveland County quarry. Kings Mountain Police Capt. Derek Johnson said one of the teens snapped a photo of bones he found while swimming Thursday at Chemetall Foote Corp.’s quarry near Interstate 85.

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ROCKY MOUNT (AP) – North Carolina Republicans are traveling around the state presenting a 10-point plan they pledge they’ll work to pass if they win control of the Legislature for the first time in 112 years, including reductions in spending and tax rates. The proposals, being offered in hopes of energizing the GOP faithful and other voters in state House and Senate races, also include cutting red tape for small business operators and requiring voters to present photo identification at the polls. State GOP leaders and Republican lawmakers visited Rocky Mount to outline those and other proposals Thursday, the same day the national party rolled out its agenda if it gains a majority in Congress. Democrats have led the state House and Senate or shared power almost continuously since the 1898 election, except for four years in the House in the mid-1990s. GOP

Teens swimming in abandoned LOTTERY quarry find bones ---

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ACCURACY...

889.9977

KERNERSVILLE – Anna Lynn Woodell, 75, of Kernersville, died Thursday, September 23, 2010 at the Hospice Home at High Point. Miss Woodell was born March 21, 1935, in Randolph County to the late Marcus D. Woodell and Leta Woodell Moffitt. She had worked for Southern Elevator for 35 years prior to retiring. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister, Clyda A. Woodell and three brothers, Staley, Randall and Bruce Woodell. Miss Woodell leaves behind nieces, Becky (Larry) Hedrick, Nancy (Harold) Kennedy, Joyce (Paul) Sullivan, Kay (Michael) Manley, Sue (Jim) Schendt; nephews, Gerald (Lee) Woodell, Steve (Bets) Woodell and Wayne (Dottie) Woodell; several great nieces and nephews; and great-great nieces and nephews. She is also survived by a very special greatgreat nephew, Robert “Alex” Loflin, and a very special friend, Dorsie H. Walker, with whom she shared a home. A celebration of her life will be held 11:00 a.m. Saturday in the chapel of Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point officiated by Rev. Nancy Kennedy and Dr. Ron Hamilton. Interment will follow in Oakwood Municipal Cemetery. The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service. Memorial may be made to Hospice of the Piedmont, 1801 Westchester Dr., High Point, NC 27262. Online condolences can be made at www. cumbyfuneral.com. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point.

Rev. Nelson Orlando Silver

NC GOP offers 10-point plan if there’s takeover

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NIGHT Cash 3: 3-9-1 Cash 4: 1-7-7-3


THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 www.hpe.com

OUR FACULTY FAMILY HAS

DOUBLED AND SO HAS OUR DETERMINATION TO PROVIDE THE HIGHEST LEVEL OF INDIVIDUAL STUDENT ATTENTION.

HAVE

Over the past five years, we’ve attracted 90 new full-time faculty members. And as we grow, our $2.1 billion financial commitment will help us achieve the goal of attracting and keeping the best—250 faculty in all.

LUNCH WITH

Amelia Earhart.

A Prime location

for a choice learning experience. Located on the fourth floor of the University C e n t e r, t h i s f i r s t class steakhouse provides st u d e n t s a fine dining experience as well as a learning lab for business etiquette.

C AT E G O R I E S O F C O M M I T M E N T Academics Housing Student Life Scholarships Athletics

$600,000,000 300,000,000 250,000,000 200,000,000 200,000,000

Endowment Campus Improvements Technology Campus Expansion

$200,000,000 150,000,000 100,000,000 100,000,000

S t u d e n t s s i t a c ro ss campus with the likes of George Washington, Galileo, Gandhi, Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King, Jr. Each one of the 16 distinct sculptures of great figures in history is an example of our focus on holistic learning opportunities for students.

EXTRAORDINARY 417 new jobs have been created in the last five years

Traditional undergraduate enrollment has grown from 1,450 students to 3,300 students

Parade Magazine lists HPU as one of the top 25 private schools in the nation in its annual “College A-List”

Forbes ranks HPU in the top seven percent of all universities and colleges in the U.S.

Average SAT scores have risen by over 100 points in five years

Over the next 10 years, HPU’s transformation plan will grow from $300 million to $2.1 billion. This is truly extraordinary, not only because of the unprecedented investment, but for the impact it will have on our students. The focus will be on academics, holistic and values-based education, experiential learning and cutting-edge facilities and technology.

277,000 square feet of “WOW!” Part of the Nido R. Qubein School of Communication, the new Survey Research Center resources and publishes national polls.

Students live, learn and dine in HPU’s impressive new University Center which houses 500 and features the inspiring Learning Commons library.

NEIGHBORS When tornados struck more than 600 homes in the community students stepped up to clean debris, and packed and delivered 1,000 meals for American Red Cross workers.

www.highpoint.edu/extraordinary

AT HIGH POINT UNIVERSITY, EVERY STUDENT RECEIVES AN EXTRAORDINARY EDUCATION IN AN INSPIRING ENVIRONMENT WITH CARING PEOPLE.

3A


Friday September 24, 2010

KRISTINE KAISER: Don’t allow showmen to lead nation back to God. TOMORROW

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

4A

GOP only wants to obstruct Democratic progress You know, the leaders of the national Republican Party are such crassly self-interested people it’s hard to believe that the news media aren’t jumping all over them. When that recent legislation to boost the economy through tax incentives to business was before Republicans, they voted against it. This, even though previously they had called for such legislation. They and their allies in business have called for it for years, but because, now when it’s actually needed, it could help the poll numbers of Obama and Democrats, they won’t support it. Their leaders, Boehner and McConnell, don’t care if it helps the economy; they want to win votes. So, their crass strategy is to harm the recovery and win votes in November. Nice … for all of us in the dwindling middle class and all those out of work. This is the same cynical strategy Republican leaders have followed in their criticism of health care reform, the stimulus, and taking other actions to improve the economy. It’s past time that their hand in this crass game of political poker was called, and they be held to task for it. Vote Democratic and continue some

YOUR VIEW

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measure of progress in health care reform, economic recovery and improved international affairs, or vote Republican and regress to the Bush-Boehner days of a broken health care system, two wars and an economy in free-fall. GARY PARKER Archdale

The state shouldn’t have the power to take DNA from innocent citizens, or the right to know what innocent citizens put in their bodies. No individual can be truly free unless he or she has some rights to privacy. CHUCK MANN Greensboro

Sheriff’s group supports

Homosexual marriage is

invasion of our privacy

not a constitutional right

A law was recently passed that allows law enforcement officials in our state to take the DNA of some suspects even though they haven’t been tried or convicted of a crime. There wasn’t much talk about we citizens losing yet another privacy right. Now, it has been announced that the N.C. Sheriff’s Association wants access to prescription records, and a lot of people are talking about the right to privacy. Apparently there are a lot of people in our state that don’t mind if the government takes their DNA as long as they don’t try to take their drugs.

Some People are now saying that homosexual marriage is a constitutional right. This is an idea that is being accepted in some of our courts and that some are leading us to believe. I am saying that homosexual marriage is no more a constitutional right than having sex in public or having sex with children. Mores and morals are things that laws in America are built upon. As an example: if lying and stealing are accepted as being good, then our laws will allow them. As mores and morals change, then so will laws. Mores and morals are not written into

our Constitution per se. Our Constitution is based upon what was considered valuable at the time it was written. Those values have changed little since then. Americans are now beginning to surrender to deviancy and are going along to get along. What we have long thought to be sexual perversion is now being taught to be normal and accepted by more Americans, because our culture is changing. We need to be very careful about cultural ideas we help introduce into our society. Some cultures in the world think that sex with animals is acceptable and even watch it for entertainment. Is this what we want? Should we go along to get along? I don’t think so. DOUGLAS S. RIDDICK Archdale

YOUR VIEW POLL

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Should N.C. sheriffs have access to prescription records of N.C. residents as a way to combat drug abuse and illegal activity? In 30 words or less (no name, address required), e-mail us your thoughts to letterbox@hpe.com.

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Where does HPU go now to build?

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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.

Michael B. Starn Publisher Thomas L. Blount Editor Vince Wheeler Opinion Page Editor 210 Church Ave., High Point, N.C. 27262 (336) 888-3500 www.hpe.com

THOMASVILLE

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City Council Mayor Joe Bennett, 222 Rockspring Drive, Thomasville, NC 27360; 475-0235

Neal Grimes, 119 Circle Drive, Thomasville, NC 27360; 475-3755 h; 731-8338 w Pat Harris Shelton, 314 Crestview Drive, Thomasville, NC 27360; 475-2562 h

L

OUR MISSION

Founded in 1883

Ronald Bratton, 502 Gail Street, Thomasville, NC 27360; 475-3604

OUR VIEW

ast week, as High Point University President Nido Qubein announced the next round of ambitious facility, athletics and educational program expansion plans at HPU, it quickly became evident there’s just not enough space on the current campus to hold it all. Qubein confirmed that, saying another 100 acres is needed in order for the now 230-acre campus to accommodate what is planned. And that doesn’t even include any estimates of space that may be needed farther down the road when the university seriously begins considering adding a football program. This need for more space is why we’ve heard Qubein on recent occasions throw out the idea of a satellite campus or maybe even satellite campuses to address the university’s acreage demands. Gone are the days, he says, of the university buying 50-foot lots to gradually enlarge the campus perimeter. (As a side note here, recognize that Qubein also makes it clear that the university is not interested in purchasing Oak Hollow Mall, as has been rumored for years.) So perhaps Qubein and the university’s board of trustees should look toward the heart of High Point as a possible location for a satellite campus. It’s been said that the university’s planned health sciences building will be constructed on land that has been added to campus recently. But we wonder if maybe such a facility with the advanced studies it will offer – such as a doctoral program in pharmacy and studies for becoming a physician’s assistant or physical therapist – might work well in the center city area. We wonder whether a location in the general vicinity of High Point Regional Hospital and other medical facilities might be practical. Surely, a first-class health sciences program with its advanced degrees would spawn auxiliary services that would provide direct support to the health sciences facility. Then, it would seem, the HPU operation also would entice other businesses to locate in the area and cater to the needs of students and health sciences faculty. Certainly, HPU’s health sciences programs will provide another huge boost to the university. But is there the potential for them also to provide a shot in the arm for redeveloping part of the heart of High Point?

An independent newspaper

Jackie Jackson, 201 Tremont St., Thomasville, NC 27360; 472-4334

Veterans gather to share interesting, helpful information

R

epresentatives from the Disabled American Veterans and the Department of Veterans Affairs will be the featured speakers at the quarterly veterans luncheon to be held Oct. 2 at Highland United Methodist Church in High Point. All veterans are invited to attend. The church is located at 1015 Mill Ave. The luncheon begins at 11 a.m. and runs until 2 p.m. This informational meeting will give veterans the chance to ask questions. It will be a good time to get some answers. It might be helpful to make a list of your questions. We look forward to seeing you; please pass the word along to your veteran friends and bring a guest along. These luncheons also are good times to fellowship with other veterans. We have six World War II veterans who attend regularly. As I recall, we have seven Korean War veterans. Most attendees are from the Vietnam War, so you are never too old or too young to attend. All of us have so much work to do helping veterans obtain the benefits they earned. I encourage everyone to keep informed and tell your friends to join you in standing up for veterans. Remember, we stood up for you. Make it your business before Election Day to learn about issues that are so important to veterans and their families. Call the local offices of your elected leaders, tell their staff members that you would appreciate knowing about pending legislation that affects veterans. Ask your U.S. Congress member how he or she voted on a certain bill that offers aid to veterans. Find out what bills they have sponsored to benefit veterans. Write your Opinion page editor, also, and let your community know that you support veterans. Most importantly, get out and vote; don’t let anything prevent you from casting your vote!

If not for the many veterans organizations working on the local level, thousands of veterans would never know about the benefits they are entitled to. Veterans organizations are very involved in getting bills passed through Congress. I saVETERAN’S lute all these veterans groups; they do extraordinary work VIEWS on behalf of veterans and their families. Stan I am more familiar with the Spangle Sr. Disabled American Veterans ■■■ (DAV), which is celebrating 90 years of service to veterans. Created by disabled veterans returning from World War I, the DAV is 1.2 million members strong, made up of disabled men and women who served this country. Every year the DAV assists more than 200,000 veterans and their dependents with filing claims for benefits. The national service officers provide expert knowledge and advocacy to disabled comrades. Veterans have a powerful voice in Washington through the DAV, this is made possible by educating lawmakers about veterans issues. If you are a veteran and not a member of the DAV, I encourage you to join with us in meeting the needs of disabled veterans and their families. After all, isn’t it the duty of all good citizens to maintain a constant awareness of all our freedoms? Without veterans, these freedoms would not have been possible. I leave with each of you: Stand up for veterans, we stood up for you! God bless America and all the other nations. ... Semper Fi. STAN SPANGLE SR. is a 21-year veteran of the Marine Corps, serving in Korea and Vietnam. He’s a member of numerous veterans organizations.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

Scott Styers, 116 Mount Calvary Road, Thomasville, NC 27360; 475-3238 h David Yemm, 92 Ford St., Thomasville, NC 27360; 475-2686 h; 2594522 w Raleigh York Jr., 22 Forest Drive, Thomasville, NC 27360, 475-6076 h; 472-7028 w

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


WORLD THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 www.hpe.com

5A

Officials: Palestinians will consider compromise

AP

This photo shows a general view of the West Bank Jewish settlement of Ariel. The settlement issue is one of the thorniest in the peace talks. Some 300,000 Israelis live in settlements dotting the West Bank.

Karzai calls for release of journalists KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – President Hamid Karzai called Thursday for the quick release of three Afghan journalists – arrests that analysts said were reminiscent of a strategy the U.S. military used in Iraq to detain local journalists as a way

BRIEFS

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Israeli leaders blast Bill Clinton comments JERUSALEM – Israeli leaders have sharply criticized Bill Clinton over comments the former U.S. president made this week calling Russian immigrants in Israel an obstacle to peace. Clinton is usually a well-loved figure in Israel.

Paris report: U. S. leads in fat people PARIS – A new study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development warns that citizens of the world’s richest countries are getting fatter and fatter, with the United States leading the charge. Three out of four Americans will be overweight or obese by 2020, the OECD said. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

to disrupt insurgents’ propaganda networks. All three journalists were picked up over the past week – two by a joint NATO and Afghan force and one by Afghan intelligence officials. Previously, only two other journalists were believed to have been detained in Af-

ghanistan over the course of the nearly 9-year-old war, according to the New Yorkbased Committee to Protect Journalists. The NATO-led coalition said it had information linking the journalists to networks that act as a mouthpiece for the Taliban.

Baghdad gunmen kill army officer BAGHDAD (AP) – Gunmen opened fire on the car of an army officer assigned to protect Iraqi Cabinet members, killing him and wounding his wife and son in the second attack Thursday targeting staff from Iraq’s government offices, officials said. Earlier, a bomb attached to the car of a government worker exploded with his family and relatives inside, killing four children. The attacks are the latest round of violence in the capital, which has seen isolated strikes and major car bombings in recent weeks, including blasts Sunday that claimed

more than 30 lives . The ambush against Lt. Hazim Abdullah occurred on a road in northern Baghdad, said police and hospital officials. Abdullah worked with protection units for Iraq’s government officials. The bombing, meanwhile, tore through the car of Anmar Taha Ridha, who worked on the maintenance crew of Iraq’s government headquarters. Ridha and his wife were wounded, but their two children – aged six and eight – and two young nephews were killed, police officials said. Hospital officials confirmed the death toll.

JERUSALEM (AP) – Hopes of averting a breakdown in Middle East peace talks grew Thursday as senior Palestinian officials said their side would consider an expected U.S.-brokered compromise on Israeli settlement-building in the West Bank. At issue is the 10-monthold Israeli slowdown on settlement building – a nearhalt to new projects aimed at coaxing the Palestinians

into talks with the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The restrictions expire Sunday, only weeks after U.S.-sponsored talks were finally launched amid much fanfare. As the deadline looms the region has grown increasingly tense, fearing not only a collapse of the brittle peace effort but perhaps a return to violence as well – fears stoked by a bout of Palestinian riot-

ing Wednesday near key Jerusalem holy sites. The so-called settlement “moratorium� is far from a freeze on building, because thousands of housing units whose construction preceded November 2009 were allowed to continue under its self-declared terms. But with several notable exceptions, new projects were not launched. The Palestinians want this extended, and the United States publicly backs the demand.

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When you call The Arc of High Point, the warm, professional voice you first hear will likely belong to Julie, their receptionist --- who also receives support services! Julie, who has worked at The Arc for over nine years now, started out as a participant in The Arc’s Supportive Employment Program, working at Books-A-Million. When that store closed, The Arc happened to be looking for a part-time receptionist...and the rest is history! “I am glad to have a job,� says Julie. “I like to come to work and see everyone.� Julie, who lives independently, still receives long-term support from a job coach and life skills coach provided by The Arc. They help her with things like paying her bills and shopping for groceries, so she can maintain her independence. “Working at The Arc makes me feel like I am helping,� says Julie. “Before that, I didn’t realize how much they do for all the people we support with these services. It makes me feel lucky, too.� We are all very lucky to live in a community with such strong support for United Way and its 29 partner agencies. On behalf of Julie and the estimated 70,000 lives United Way programs touch each year, thank you!

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6A www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

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MYSTERY OBJECT: Scientific tests leave questions unanswered. 1C TRAIN: Excursions available to Roanoke, Va., Asheville. 4B

Friday September 24, 2010 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

DR. DONOHUE: Vitamin D trumps all others. 5B

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

WHO’S NEWS

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Benson Solomon, a junior majoring in chemistry at High Point University, spent his summer with marine life through an internship with the Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Fla. Solomon was one of only 10 students to receive a paid internship at the aquarium.

DON DAVIS JR. HPE

The Harley-Davidson dealership on Brentwood Stret will close next month as part of a consolidation.

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.

Harley moves on Local motorcycle dealership will be consolidated with Greensboro’s BY PAUL B. JOHNSON ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Harley-Davidson motorcycle riders in the High Point area seeking parts or service will have to travel to Greensboro starting early next month as the dealership consolidates into one Triad location. The dealership will consolidate its High Point and Reidsville locations to the Greensboro Harley-Davidson during October. The High Point location, opened in August 2000, will be eliminated as of Oct. 5, while the

Reidsville location will be eliminated as of Oct. 19. The Harley-Davidson of Greensboro dealership is at 538 Farrugut St. near the interchange of Interstate 40 Business and Interstate 85 Business. The consolidation of the Harley-Davidson satellite locations reflects economic conditions, said Mark Wheelihan, president of Wheelihan Motor Co. that operates the dealership. The consolidation is designed to ensure that Harley-Davidson of Greensboro maintains its ability to continue servicing customers in its territory, adjusts

its business to current market conditions and ensures that the business maintains its ability to continue its charitable work, Wheelihan said. The current staff in High Point and Reidsville will relocate to Greensboro, said Amy Jacobson, marketing director with the dealership. Wheelihan purchased the Harley-Davidson of Greensboro dealership in 1998 when he moved to the Triad from California. The area Harley-Davidson dealership was established in 1937. The consolidation in the Triad reflects overall moves taken by

Annual Community Day celebration Saturday Lunch and raffle planned by Citizens Academy Alumni Associaton BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – The High Point Police Department will turn its focus to interacting with the community this weekend. The department’s annual Community Day celebration is scheduled for Saturday at police headquarters on Leonard Avenue. It provides a way for the public to learn about the department’s functions, view demonstrations and tour the department. Lunch will be served and a raffle will be conducted by the police Citizens Academy Alumni Association, with gift certificates to be given away to Harris Teeter, Chick-filA, Subway, “A Way to Go Travel” and Adora Spa. “All of our doors are going to be open. It’s a good time for anyone who’s interested to come by for a question-and-answer session or just to see some of what we do and meet some of the officers that serve the community,” said Lt. Steve Myers, a spokesman for the police department.

The department will have many pieces of police equipment available for viewing and demonstrations by the Tacti-

‘It’s a good time for anyone who’s interested to come by for a questionand-answer session or just to see some of what we do and meet some of the officers that serve the community.’ Lt. Steve Myers High Point Police Department cal Team are scheduled to take place at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. The National Guard also will have a

helicopter on site from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. McGruff the Crime Dog also will be be on hand distributing child identification kits, assisted by the High Point Police Explorers. “They will be doing car-seat checks, so if you’re not quite sure what type of seat you need for your child, it will be a good opportunity to ask about that,” Myers said. Other items in the raffle are a folding queen-size bed frame, a six-month new membership to the YMCA on Hartley Drive or a three-month membership for a current member, a UFX Polo Shirt, two Votive lamps, two Streicher’s Ball Caps and one large 42-inch-by-50-inch framed landscape print. Lunch will be provided at no charge in exchange for a donation of a can of food, which will go to the United Way of Greater High Point. Community Day is scheduled to take place from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

Harley-Davidson Motor Co. because of the recession, Wheelihan said. “Over the past two years, Harley-Davidson has consolidated its production operations to effectively adjust to the current economic environment. In light of the reduced volumes, the motor company has been encouraging dealers to consolidate in certain markets, including central North Carolina,” he said. The consolidation won’t change any of the services the dealership provides, Wheelihan said. pjohnson@hpe.com | 888-3528

Police probe shooting incident ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Police on Thursday were continuing their investigation into a shooting that occurred Wednesday night. Officers responded to E. Kivett Drive and Hoskins Street just before 9 p.m. and located a red Ford F-150 pickup truck that had run off the roadway at the intersection. Two people were inside the truck and one of them had sustained a nonlife-threatening gunshot wound to the left shoulder. Paramedics responded and took the wounded person to High Point Regional Hospital. No arrests had been reported as of Thursday and police had not yet released the identities of the people involved. Police said their investigation is ongoing and asked anyone with information to call High Point Crimestoppers at 889-4000.

CHECK IT OUT!

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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 ABBY 3B COMICS 5B DR. DONOHUE 5B NATION 3,6B NEIGHBORS 4B NOTABLES 6B OBITUARIES 2A,2B


OBITUARIES 2B www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES (MORE ON 2A)

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Gloria Adderton..Statesville William Alley........Lexington Cordelia Gaines..High Point Mellissa Harris....High Point Robert Jarrell....Greensboro Mary LeCrone.....High Point Elsie Meadows...High Point Harold Myers.......Asheboro Nelson Silver.Bessemer City Wesley Tubbs......High Point Anna Woodell..Kernersville

Elsie Cook Meadows HIGH POINT – Mrs. Elsie Cook Meadows, 97, of High Point, died Tuesday, September 21, 2010, at the Piedmont Christian Home in High Point. Born July 19, 1913, in Guilford County, she was the daughter of the late Jeter and Hattie Hayworth Cook. Elsie was a member of First Wesleyan Church for over 70 years and worked in the church nursery for a number of those years. She was a homemaker and the best mom and friend ever. Some of her friends will remember her writings to the High Point Enterprise, but most of all remember her smiling face and her glowing Christian spirit. God bless her memory. On April 12, 1930, she was married to Otis Meadows who preceded her in death in February of 1989. Additionally, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Becky Watson, a brother Jeter Cook, and three sisters, Ruth O’Neal, Dorothy Farlow and Agnes O’Neal. Survivors include her daughter, Joyce M. Kennedy, of Thomasville; three grandsons, Paul S. Kennedy and wife, Tina, S. Lindsey Kennedy and Donnie Watson and wife, Cindy; seven great grandchildren, Cory, Hannah, Camille and Eli Kennedy, Logan, Lauren and Luke Watson; a son-in-law, Donald R. Watson; and many nieces and nephews. A memorial service will be held 3:00 p.m. Sunday in the chapel of Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point officiated by Rev. Carroll Upton and Mr. Jerry Farlow. The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service. Memorials may be directed to Hospice of the Piedmont, 1801 Westchester Dr., High Point, NC 27262, or to a charity of the donor’s choice. Online condolences can be made at www.cumbyfuneral.com. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point.

Gloria Carlton Adderton STATESVILLE – Gloria Carlton Adderton, 85, died peacefully with family present on Tuesday, September 21, 2010, at Iredell Memorial Hospital in Statesville, North Carolina. She was born August 5, 1925, in Durham, NC to the late Ivey Sorrell Carlton and the late Joseph Patterson Carlton and was the second of three daughters. Her sisters, Glatha Madden and Janet Fisher preceded her in death. On March 9, 1946, she married Donald James Adderton in Durham. He preceded her in death in December 2008. Gloria is survived by her daughter Diane Prendergast (husband Dr. Mark) of Statesville, her son, Brian Adderton (wife Patti) and grandsons Matt and Blaine Adderton, of Advance, NC. As a lifelong North Carolina resident, she lived in Durham, Raleigh, Wilmington, Charlotte, Winston-Salem, High Point and Statesville. A loving wife, mother, grandmother and friend, Gloria took pleasure and pride in being a homemaker. She also enjoyed bridge, knitting, sewing and golf. After her move to Statesville, she excelled as “Vice President of All Stuff� at daughter Diane’s store, Express Yourself. She was a member of Broad Street United Methodist Church and Women of the Church Prayer Shawl Ministry. Memorial services will be at 2:00 PM on Friday, September 24th at Broad Street United Methodist Church in Statesville. Senior Pastor Don Shuman will officiate. Memorials may be made to Broad Street United Methodist Church Building Fund, PO Box 169, Statesville, NC 28687; Gordon Hospice House of Statesville, 2347 Simonton Road, Statesville, NC 28625; or Western Carolina Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, 3800 Shamrock Road, Charlotte, NC 28215. Nicholson Funeral Home is serving the family of Gloria Adderton.

Mary Jane LeCrone HIGH POINT – Mrs. Mary Jane LeCrone, 98, died September 23, 2010, at Shannon Gray Rehabilittion Center. Memorial service will be held in Arkansas at a later date. Davis Funerals and Cremations is serving the family.

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Cordelia A. Gaines HIGH POINT – High Point - Mrs. Cordelia A. Gaines, 105, formerly of 1514 Vernon Place in High Point, a resident of Shannon Gray Rehabilitation Center in Jamestown, NC departed this life on September 18, 2010. She lived a long life and served God faithfully. She was born on November 10, 1904 to the late Frank and Laura Abernathy, the fourth of six children. All of her siblings, Flossie Hill, Rosa Miller, Odessa Smith, Eunice Kirby, and Henry (J.C.) Abernathy preceded her in death. Cordelia was united in marriage to the love of her life, the late Arthur Robert Gaines, Sr. They were blessed with three children, Rebecca (Fletcher) Cheek, Alease (R.J.) Terry and Arthur “Pete� (Anna) Gaines, Jr. All of whom preceded her in death. She was also preceded in death by three grandsons, Thomas Cheek, Ray Terry and Frederick Cheek. At an early age, Cordelia accepted the Lord as her personal Savior. She joined Mount Vernon Baptist Church in 1929. Cordelia was an active member many years and was bestowed the title as the oldest member having served for 81 years. She loved her God, her family and her church. For a time, she worshipped with her grandson, Overseer David Terry at Cedar Cliff Holiness Church in Graham, NC. Cordelia loved unconditionally. Every one fondly called her “MaMa�. She worked and retired from

Wachovia Bank and Trust in High Point, NC. Cordelia was a faithful employee for over 60 years, retiring at the age of 84. She attended Winston Salem Teachers’ College, renamed Winston Salem State University, Winston Salem, NC. Left to cherish her memories are five granddaughters, Linda (Chester) Cooper of Crestview, FL, Gloria (Michael) Becote, Mattie Kelly (Eric) Evans, Lisa Cheek, and Kathy Wallace all of High Point, NC; four grandsons, James Arthur Cheek, Roger (Cynthia) Terry and Overseer David (Minnie) Terry all of High Point, NC, and Robert (Audrey) Cheek of New London, NC; 39 great-grandchildren, 37 great-great grandchildren, 7 great-greatgreat grandchildren, 17 nieces and nephews, and a host of other relatives and friends, including her faithful visitors, Maxine Barber, Lluya Evans and Glorie Evans. Cordelia loved her family however, she loved her God more. Her desire was that all come to know her God as their personal Savior and live their lives for Him. Let us follow her as she followed the Lord. Funeral services will be held at 12:00 p.m. Saturday, September 25, 2010, at Mount Vernon Baptist Church, 716 Leonard Avenue, High Point, NC. Burial will follow in Greenhill Cemetery. Visitation will be from 11:30 until 12: 00 p.m. at the church. Final arrangements are entrusted to Phillips Funeral Service, High Point, NC.

Wesley R. Tubbs

LEXINGTON – William Lee Alley, 60, died September 22, 2010. Memorial service and visitation will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday at he home of his sister, Mary Ann Nester, 289 Preston Road, Martinsville, Va.

HIGH POINT – Wesley R. Tubbs, 60, died September 22, 2010, at Heritage Health Care. Arrangements are incomplete with Phillips Funeral Service, High Point.

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Harold L. Myers ASHEBORO – Harold L. Myers, age 80, of Trinity died Wednesday, September 22, 2010 at Clapp’s Convalescent Nursing Home, Asheboro. A graveside service will be held on Saturday, September 25, 2010 at 11:00 a.m. at Randolph Memorial Park, 4538 US Hwy 220 Bus. North, Asheboro. Mr. Myers was a native of Randolph County, was a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean Conflict, and was self-employed as a contractor for 47 years. He was preceded in death by his brother, Wayne Myers. Harold loved his work,

helping people, and visiting the beach. He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Peggy Trotter Myers; son, Tim Myers and his wife Brenda of Asheboro, NC; granddaughters, Molly E. Myers and Dana L. Myers both of Asheboro, NC; brother, Dallas Myers and his wife Betty of Trinity, NC. The family will receive friends on Saturday, September 25, 2010 from 9:3010:30 a.m. at Pugh Funeral Home, 437 Sunset Avenue, Asheboro, NC. Online condolences may be made at www.pughfuneralhome.com.

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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.

William Alley


NATION, ABBY THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 www.hpe.com

Obama: Time for Mideast peace UNITED NATIONS (AP) – Grasping for peace, President Barack Obama on Thursday challenged a pessimistic world to overcome decades of shattered promises and help Israelis and Palestinians close a historic deal within a year. “This time will be different,” he declared, offering a now-or-never choice between Mideast stability and perpetual bloodshed. To a hushed audience of global leaders, Obama made Mideast peace the dominant theme of his yearly address to the U.N. General Assembly, a sign of the fragile state of the latest talks and the importance he attaches to their success. Nearly every other topic of his international agenda was shoved to the margins, save for a vigorous call for support of human rights. In a message to allies and foes alike, Obama de-

1st woman in 5 years executed in US JARRATT, Va. (AP) – The first woman to be executed in the U.S. in five years has been put to death in Virginia for arranging the killings of her husband and a stepson over a $250,000 insurance payment. Teresa Lewis, 41, died by injection at 9:13 p.m. Thursday. She became the first woman executed in Virginia in nearly a century. Supporters and relatives of the victims watched her execution at Greensville Correctional Center. Lewis enticed two men through sex, cash and a promised cut in an insurance policy to shoot the sleeping men in October 2002.

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Dear In Love: Being under life-and-death pressure sharpens all of the senses. When people are in a strange or dangerous environment, their emotions can be heightened. This is not to say that people in a war zone can’t fall legitimately in love – it

Flooding forces Wisconsin city to evacuate downtown ARCADIA, Wis. (AP) – A powerful storm drenched parts of the upper Midwest on Thursday, flooding creeks and rivers and forcing numerous residents of one Wisconsin town to evacuate their homes for higher ground. Governors in Minnesota and Wisconsin issued emergency declarations for large segments of their states. Heavy rains prompt-

ed an evacuation order affecting as many as 1,500 residents of Arcadia, Wis., a town of around 2,400 people 100 miles southeast of Minneapolis. Police officers went door-to-door in the steady rain Thursday to urge Arcadia residents to flee rising floodwater, City Clerk Angela Berg said. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

AP

President Barack Obama addresses the 65th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday at the United Nations headquarters in New York. voted the final passage of his speech to a need for people to live freely, and he warned that “we will call out those who suppress ideas.”

Meanwhile, the U.S. delegation walked out of the U.N. speech of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Thursday after he said some in the

world have speculated that Americans were behind the Sept. 11 terror attacks, staged in an attempt to assure Israel’s survival.

Homecoming

Woman shoots 3, self in Seattle SEATTLE (AP) – A woman shot and killed three people and herself at a Seattle home Thursday, injuring another woman who fled into the front yard and told officers “my mom has gone crazy,” police said. Officers responded to a report of gunshots at about 1:30 p.m. and could still hear shots being fired from the house when they arrived, police spokesman Sean Whitcomb said. As police approached the scene, a man in his 50s ran into the house. Two more shots were fired and he ran back out, telling officers his wife had shot herself. When police were able to go inside, they found

four dead, including a woman in her 50s they believe is the shooter, Whitcomb said. Whitcomb said police don’t think anyone else is involved and were not looking for anyone. In addition to the older woman, the dead are two women in their late teens and a man in his 30s, police said. Their relationships were not immediately known. Assistant Police Chief Jim Pugel told Seattlepi.com a 42-year-old wounded woman – who fled the house and is expected to survive – was able to speak to officers when they arrived. “All she said was, “My mom has gone crazy,”’ Pugel said.

War-zone romance will be put to the test at home ear Abby: I met a man here in Afghanistan. (We are both deployed.) Since that day we have been together. “Ben” knows that I love him very much. He is scheduled to leave in two months. I am scheduled to leave two months after that. Ben lives in Georgia, and I come from Texas. We want to make it work when we leave here. I’ll continue with my job, but because he’s a contractor, Ben will be unemployed. I’m not worried about it because I know he’s a go-getter. Abby, I have had difficulty when it comes to relationships. I am scared to let my guard down and let this good man provide a life for my children and me. I trusted my kids’ father and he walked out of our lives. Ben is everything I have prayed for. He took the step of giving me a promise ring and told me he’d always be here for me. Please give me some good advice on how I should handle this. – In Love in Afghanistan

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does happen. And it may have happened for you and Ben. However, the test of the ADVICE strength of your reDear lationship Abby will come ■■■ after you are both back home in the USA. You two have a ways to go before you step up to the altar. Your children need to meet Ben, get to know him and accept him. And he needs to prove to you that he can be not only a life partner to you, but a father to your children. So my heartfelt advice is to take this one step at a time. Don’t rush into anything. If this was meant to be, it will happen in its own time. Dear Abby: A close female friend moved near me with the intention of starting a serious relationship. We’re in our 20s and finishing college. “Hallie” has just been diagnosed with stage 2 ovarian cancer. While her prognosis is fairly optimistic, her doctors say she’ll be unable to have children. Hallie loves kids. Knowing she can’t have any has broken her heart. I love kids, too, but it’s not an absolute requirement for me.

I just started student teaching and can’t be there for her during her chemo treatments and doctor visits. Last night, after a few days of pushing me away, Hallie offered me an “out.” She told me I should think carefully about everything before deciding to go through all of this with her. I want to be with her in every way I can, but I can’t help wondering how things may change for both of us if she beats this. – Torn Apart in Michigan Dear Torn Apart: Hallie is an intelligent young woman. She understands the strain a diagnosis like hers can place on a relationship, so do as she has asked. If she beats the cancer, and you stay together and decide to marry, you will be like many other childless couples – deciding whether to remain childless, adopt or hire a surrogate. You will also appreciate more fully than most what a gift each day you have together really is. And you’ll love each other until death do you part. 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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Friday September 24, 2010

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Rotary recognizes Westchester student Molly Harris, a senior at Westchester Country Day School, was named Student of the Month by Rotary Club of Willow Creek. The Rotary Student of the Month program recognizes students who excel in both school performance and community volunteer activity. Harris is Harris a member of French Club, SADD and the Honor Council at Westchester Country Day, which she has attended since kindergarten. She is a varsity athlete and serves as captain of the volleyball and track teams. She is an active member of her church and has participated in mission trips to Hungary and Belize. She spent several weeks in Germany this summer with the German-American Partnership Program and is a volunteer with Habitat for Humanity. She is the daughter of Martha and Charles Harris of High Point.

Train excursions head to Asheville, Roanoke NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

SPENCER – Two day-trip excursions to Roanoke, Va., and Asheville are available through the N.C. Transportation Museum Foundation and the Watauga Valley Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. The Virginia Autumn Special will travel to Roanoke Oct. 30. The Blue Ridge Special will travel to Asheville Oct. 31. Departing Spencer at 7 a.m., the Virginia Autumn Special will offer additional passenger pick-up at the Greensboro Amtrak Station at 8 a.m. The train will travel through the northern portion of the North Carolina Piedmont, including High Point and Reidsville, before crossing into Virginia. The western part of central Virginia offers views of the fall foliage, crossing the Dan and Roanoke rivers. Moving onto the old Virginian Railway line, the train will pass through the towns of Huddleston, Moneda and Goodview, traveling through four tunnels. Passengers will also travel over trestles that provide views of the tributaries into Smith Mountain Lake. The train will arrive in Roanoke, the “Star City of the South,� at noon, passing by the historic Roanoke Shops, where Norfolk Southern built its classic steam engines. Passengers will have nearly

SPECIAL | HPE

Train crosses James River in Virginia. three hours to spend in Roanoke. They will get off the train at the old Norfolk and Western Passenger Station, home of the O. Winston Link museum, which offers a photographic and auditory history of 1950s’ steam engine locomotive history. Advance tickets to the museum are available to excursion passengers at the discounted group rate of $4 per person. Lunch is available at the historic Hotel Roanoke for $19 for excursion passengers only, and only with advance reservations.

Boys & Girls Clubs name directors The Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater High Point named the following people to its board of directors: Teresa Cox-McGee, a selfemployed upholstery fabric representative; Brandon Flinchum, manager with Dixon Hughes PLLC; Rebecca Nash, founder/owner of MadieDeluxe(C’est Bella, Inc); Pat Simmons, Simco; Juanita Hudson-Wilson, customer service supervisor with Aetna Inc.; Bradley Gibson, Jones & Peacock Insurance.

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Yesterday’s Bible question: Find eight facts concerning the foolish young man in Proverbs 7. Answer to yesterday’s question: This is a description of the foolish young man as found in Proverbs: 1. He was among the simple; 2. He was void of understanding; 3. He walked along the street near the harlot’s corner; 4. He went the way to her house; 5. In the night he passed by where she waited on the corner. 6. He was met by the harlot; 7. he was persuaded by her to spend the night with her; 8. He went to his doom as an ox to the slaughter.

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Departing Roanoke at 3 p.m., the train will arrive back in Greensboro at 6:45 p.m. and in Spencer at 8 p.m. During the Oct. 31 trip, the Blue Ridge Special will travel through the western Piedmont into the foothills and on to the Blue Ridge Mountains. Departing Spencer at 7 a.m., the train will roll through the cities of Statesville, Hickory, Morganton, Marion, Black Mountain and Swannanoa. The train will climb the famed loops of the Blue Ridge Mountains

and pass through several tunnels before arriving in Asheville at noon. Passengers will have nearly three hours for an outing at Biltmore Village. Departing Asheville at 3 p.m., the Blue Ridge Special will return to Spencer at 8 p.m. Only coach tickets remain for both trips. They are $145 per person. All cars feature air conditioning, heat and rest rooms. A box lunch in a souvenir lunch tote is available $14. More information is online at www.nctrans.org.


COMICS, DONOHUE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 www.hpe.com

GARFIELD

Vitamin D rules D

ear Dr. Donohue: Will you tell me the value of vitamin D-3? Is it good for you? – T.P. Vitamin D is more than good for you. It has been crowned king of vitamins. Sunlight falling on the skin turns a skin material into vitamin D-3 (cholecalciferol). Another form of vitamin D is D-2 (ergocalciferol). It’s found in some foods and in most supplements. Both forms of vitamin D are approximately equal and can be used as a supplement. Both of these vitamins are further transformed by the liver and then by the kidney into the active vitamin D. Many people are vitamin D-deficient. People living in northern climates don’t get enough sunlight in the winter to provide them with natural vitamin D. In the summer, many older people have little exposure to the sun, so they are shortchanged year-round. D’s main function is to facilitate the absorption of calcium from the digestive tract and to promote its incorporation into bones. Many women and quite a few men develop osteoporosis, bone thinning, because of a deficiency of vitamin D. This vitamin is said to promote heart health, keep teeth healthy, protect against prostate cancer and keep muscles strong. And that’s only a

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HEALTH Dr. Paul Donohue ■■■

sample of the things attributed to it. Experts believe that the daily recommendation for vitamin D should be 1,000 IU.

Dear Dr. Donohue: My husband is 72 years old and has been diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia. Can I have your thoughts on it? – C.N. “Dementia” is word that causes much confusion. It denotes a decline in mental function and a loss of memory. Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body disease, multiple small strokes and Binswanger’s disease are all specific examples of dementia. Frontotemporal dementia comes from a shrinkage of two brain lobes, the frontal (behind the forehead) and the temporal (behind the ear). The frontal lobe is the area governing personality traits. Signs associated with its malfunction are behavior changes, a disinterest in other people and lack of insight into one’s own and others’ problems. The temporal lobe deals with word recognition and language fluency. Signs of temporal lobe involvement are a loss of coherent speech and nonrecognition of the meaning of words. These are

but a few of the mental problems that come with this illness. No medicine improves frontotemporal dementia. If people with the disorder have other mental problems, like depression or anxiety, medicines can address those difficulties. Dear Dr. Donohue: My friend recently had surgery for Mohs disease. He was told it is a rare form of cancer. We’ve been unable to find out much about it. If you have any information, please share it. – G.G. Something has gone wrong in the transmission of information about your friend’s illness to you. Mohs isn’t a cancer. It’s a surgical technique for skin cancers, particularly for skin cancers on the face or those involving large areas of skin or ones without a definite border. Very thin slices of skin are removed from the affected skin and immediately examined microscopically to identify cancer cells. The procedure continues until the doctor reaches a level where no more cancer cells can be seen. The Mohs technique yields gratifying results. 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


NATION, NOTABLES 6B www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Number of unmarried, live-in couples jumps in 2010

FAMOUS, FABULOUS, FRIVOLOUS

NEW YORK (AP) – Katy Perry’s cleavage is fine for Russell Brand – not so for Elmo and Sesame Street. The children’s show says it won’t air a taped segment featuring the “California Gurls� singer and Elmo. The pop star – who is known for her risque outfits – wore a gold bustier top as she sang a version of her hit “Hot & Cold.� But some felt it was too revealing for the kid set.

Wife takes Ellen Degeneres’ name LOS ANGELES (AP) – Portia de Rossi has officially taken wife Ellen Degeneres’ last name. The couple was married in August 2008.

Joaquin Phoenix returns to Letterman to apologize NEW YORK (AP) – Actor Joaquin Phoenix returned to David Letterman’s “Late Show� on Wednesday to apologize for his wacky appearance last year that turned out to be an elaborate piece of performance art. “You’ve interviewed many, many people and I assumed that you would know the difference between a character and a real person, so – but I apologize,� Phoenix said. “I hope I didn’t offend you in any way.� Phoenix was clean-cut

and shaven Wednesday, without the shaggy beard, unruly hair and sunPhoenix glasses he wore on Feb. 11, 2009, when he told a befuddled Letterman that he was giving up acting for a rap career. Instead, Phoenix was playing a role for filmmaker friend Casey Affleck.

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WASHINGTON (AP) – For love or money? The number of unmarried couples living together is rising sharply as many young adults who are having a hard time finding jobs are now “doubling up� with significant others. The number of opposite-

sex unmarried couples who shared living quarters jumped 13 percent this year to 7.5 million, the Census Bureau reported Thursday. That’s compared to a 2 percent decrease between 2008 and 2009. There were about 620,000 same-sex couples living together, a figure

not statistically different from a 2008 census estimate of 565,000. Demographers say a sluggish job market is the likely factor. Many young adults turned first to friends and parents for financial help since the recession began in late 2007, and may now be leaning on boyfriends.


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LUCKY LEO? Adventure may be headed your way. 4C

Friday September 24, 2010

PUZZLING: Try your hand at Jumble, Sudoku and crossword. 2C CLASSIFIED ADS: Check them out for lots of bargains. 3C

Life&Style (336) 888-3527

Chili Cookoff to benefit local charity

HISPANIC HERITAGE

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larke Martin, executive director of Guilford Interfaith Hospitality Network, offers an excuse for not cooking dinner Saturday. GIHN is hosting a Chili Cookoff from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at First Baptist Church, 405 N. Main St., offering cornbread, chili and desserts for $5 per person (children 5 and under eat free). More details: HERE & www.GIHN. org. RSVP by THERE calling (336) 574-0333 or Tom by e-mailing Blount Cathy Hegyi ■■■ at CLHegyi@ yahoo.com or Martin at Clarke@GIHN. org.

SPECIAL | HPE

Don Knotts (left) as Barney Fife and Andy Griffith as Sheriff Taylor play a scene on “The Andy Griffith Show,” which celebrates its 50th anniversary on Oct. 3.

Does Mayberry live in your heart?

PLENTY OF VISITORS Nearly 5,500 visitors are expected in town during the Sept. 30-Oct. 4 weekend, with 90 percent of them involved in the Fall Family Weekend at High Point University and others coming here Oct. 1-2 for “In the Presence of The King Dance & Mime Conference,” according to Nancy Bowman of the High Point Convention & Visitors Bureau.

HIT LINKS, SUPPORT ARTS The Wheatmore Cultural Arts Department will host a captain’s choice Marching Warrior Golf Tournament from 1:30 to 6 p.m. Oct. 9 at Holly Ridge Golf Course. Greens fees: $50 per person, $175 for four-person teams. More info/registration: Tee Vanlandingham at vanslanding@northstate. net | (336) 689-6399 or Lori Lowe at llowe@northstate. net | (336) 689-3099.

WILLOW CREEK ROTARY Rotary Club of Willow Creek will host its sixth annual captain’s choice golf tournament, beginning with a shotgun start at 12:30 p.m. Oct. 28 at Willow Creek Country Club. Register by calling: Paul Kremer at (336) 236-7604 or Alan Lomax at (336) 474-6506.

‘GOLF’ WITH A TWIST Archdale/Trinity Rotary Club will host the Creekside Classic Disc Golf Tournament Nov. 6 at Creekside Park in Archdale. Sign-in begins at 8 a.m., with a 9 a.m. shotgun start doubles tourney – $25 for a team of two. Drinks will be sold on site. Call (336) 430-7077 or email jdwells76@yahoo.com to reserve a spot for your team.

KIWANIS HARVEST Bob Martin and Eric Olmedo, Garden Committee chairmen for the Kiwanis Club of High Point, report the garden project has wound down for the year. The club’s Tuesday night gardeners donated 1,055 pounds of produce (squash, zucchini, cucumbers, corn, beans, tomatoes, eggplants, cantaloupes, okra and peppers), with a retail value of $2,212, to the Salvation Army shelter. Volunteers worked a total of 179 hours in the garden. Club members thank Davis Furniture for allowing use of its property and for assistance with tilling the field. tblount@hpe.com | 888-3543

ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

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o you say you’re a hardcore fan of “The Andy Griffith Show”? Tell us about it. The High Point Enterprise, in conjunction with the upcoming 50th anniversary of “The Andy Griffith Show,” next weekend will publish a special tribute to the popular show, which has never left the air since its debut on Oct. 3, 1960. We’re looking for Mayberry’s biggest fans to feature in the article. Do you know the episodes

by name? Do you routinely quote dialogue from the show? Can you name the guest stars who visited Mayberry during the show’s eight-season run? Or maybe you’re even more hardcore: Do you collect Mayberry memorabilia? Have you ever attended the annual Mayberry Days festival in Mount Airy? Do you have funny experiences you can share about the time you met Andy Griffith, Don Knotts or one of the other stars on the show? Do you belong to a local chapter of

The Andy Griffith Show Rerun Watchers Club? Is your club planning any special activities to celebrate the show’s 50th anniversary? Tell us your Mayberry stories, and we’ll include the best ones in our tribute next weekend. Or if you know someone else who’s a hardcore Mayberry fan, tell us about him or her. Send your stories to feature writer Jimmy Tomlin at jtomlin @hpe.com, or call him at 8883579. The deadline to contact us is 5 p.m. Monday.

After tests, scientist proclaims object’s makeup is crystal-clear BY JIMMY TOMLIN ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

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IGH POINT – The tale of Arthur “Doc” Hazzard’s mysterious UFO – unidentified falling object – has a resolution that’s as clear as glass. A geology expert at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences, who scientifically analyzed a piece of the approximately 30-pound object at Hazzard’s request, says it is definitely glass. “The chemical analysis shows that the glass is man-made and not natural, and certainly not any sort of meteorite,” says Chris Tacker, curator of geology at the Raleigh-based museum, who subjected the object to several scientific tests. So where did it come from and how did it end up on the roof of a building in downtown High Point 40-some years ago? Well, um, that part of the story is still a mystery – and likely will remain so. “It could be some kind of optical glass,” Tacker says, responding to Hazzard’s suggestion that the grayish-green, translucent object was part of a large optical instrument such as a telescope. “But I’m not sure what it was used for because I’m not sure where it came from, whether it fell from a weather balloon or an airplane or what.” Last spring, Hazzard shared his story with Enterprise readers about how he found the object embedded in a downtown rooftop one day in the

FILE | HPE

Arthur Hazzard found mysterious object on High Point roof in 1960s. late 1960s, when he was called to the building to repair its leaking roof. Around the object was a shallow, circular crater – about 10 feet in diameter – that appeared to have been caused by the object when it hit the roof. Hazzard kept his find to himself at the time, he told the Enterprise, because “people were talking about UFOs and flying saucers and aliens from outer space, and I didn’t want people to think I was one of them idiots.” He does believe, though, that the object fell from outer space, perhaps having broken off of a satellite or some other kind of space-age technology. Not likely, according to Tacker.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

“I guess it could be, but if it fell off something in orbit, it’s pretty likely that it would’ve burned up on re-entry, so we’re very likely looking at something that operated within the atmosphere,” Tacker says. “Also, things that come through the atmosphere from outer space have distinctive characteristics. One is what’s called a fusion crust – a meteor has it – that’s about a millimeter thick and covers the entire sample.” Hazzard’s object does not have a fusion crust. Using a sliver of the object sent to him by Hazzard, Tacker examined the sample first with a binocular microscope, then with a higher-powered instrument that allowed him to view it in cross-polarized light. That showed him that the object was glass. Tacker then sent the sample to the Southeastern North Carolina Regional Microanalytical and Imaging Center at Fayetteville State University, where an electron microprobe was used to determine the glass is manmade, not natural. Hazzard seems grateful to know with certainty that the object is glass, but he’s still not satisfied. “Who made it and where did it come from?” he says. “That’s what I’m trying to find out. All I know is that it’s a piece of glass of some sort.” jtomlin@hpe.com | 888-3579

The International Civil Rights Center & Museum in Greensboro, in observance of Sept. 15 through Oct. 15 as Hispanic Heritage Month, will host “The Hispanic Presence in U.S. Society” at 3 p.m. Saturday. Hispanic professionals from the Piedmont Triad area will discuss challenges facing their communities within academia and the workplace. Panelists will include Hernando RamirezSantos, Emmy Award-winning executive editor and news director at Que Pasa Media Network; Rosario Lopez, volunteer for the N.C. Dream Team, a group of Hispanic and Asian undocumented students in the Research Triangle Park area; and Dr. Darlene Rodriguez, professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Admission to the museum – $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and students, $6 for youth – includes access to all exhibitions and programs. For access to programs and activities only, fees are $6 for adults, seniors and students, $4 for children. For more information, call the museum at (336) 274-9199 or visit www.sitinmove ment.org.

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


FUN & GAMES 2C www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

WORD FUN

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TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

ASSURED South’s play was badly inspired. Can he virtually assure his contract? South should rely on an end play (my topic this week). South cashes the ace of trumps at Trick Two, takes the A-K of diamonds and ruffs dummy’s jack. He then exits with a heart. Whether the defenders lead a red card next (conceding a ruffsluff), a club or a trump, South loses at most two more tricks.

CROSSWORD

Friday, Sept. 24, 2010 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Spencer Treat Clark, 23; Erin Chambers, 31; Nia Vardalos, 48; Kevin Sorbo, 52 HAPPY BIRTHDAY: This is the time to reunite with old friends and to make new ones. Surround yourself with people able to inspire and motivate you to move along toward your goals. Problems at home must be sorted out. Anyone holding you back must be dealt with before you can advance. Your numbers are 6, 14, 18, 24, 27, 30, 41 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take a creative stab at something you’ve wanted to produce for some time. It’s not good to have idle time on your hands. A love relationship can take a passionate turn but be careful about how much you share. ★★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Speak up if you have something to contribute. Now is not the time to let someone take advantage of you or push you around, especially if it has to do with work. Romance is on the rise. ★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): If you try to take advantage of someone or try to get something for nothing you will be stopped in your tracks. Equality and balance, along with moderation and simplicity, will be required. ★★★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t mix business with pleasure. Your emotions will be difficult to control. Instead, make whatever adjustments are asked of you without complaining. Your patience and tolerance will lead to future advancement. ★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You will be looking for a little adventure and, with the right group of people, you will find exactly what you are looking for. Be careful, however, when it comes to love. High standards and honesty will keep you from making a mistake. ★★★★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Good fortune is within reach. A chance to sell something you’ve wanted to get rid of or taking care of financial paperwork will ease your tension and help you regroup and start anew. A short trip will lead to a romantic encounter. ★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Show your emotional side and let the people you care about most know how you feel. Don’t give in to pushy behavior and you will have greater self- respect and will send the message that you want to be treated equally. ★★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Make plans to socialize with people you know who will inspire and motivate you. Change is upon you. Your ability to assess a situation and contribute responsibly will make you a promising candidate for a financially positive venture. ★★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Deal with your responsibilities before moving on to more pleasurable pastimes. Expect someone you have to discuss plans with to cause problems or delays. Don’t show disappointment but do offer to lend a helping hand. ★★★★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Travel should be kept to a minimum. Problems with friends, relatives or siblings will keep you on your toes. Don’t get emotional when what’s required is a little common sense and practical application. ★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You can expect to take on added responsibilities, but not ones you should mind. What you get in return for what’s required of you will be well worth your time and effort. Physical problems will be magnified if you don’t get proper rest and relaxation. ★★★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Promising to do the impossible may be a nice gesture but, when you cannot follow through, it will leave you in an awkward position. Take a closer look at what you have to offer, along with what your plans are for the future. It’s time to make some hard choices. ★★★

ACROSS 1 Rower’s item 4 Slip of paper used as cash 9 __ chowder 13 Old radio knob 15 Wear away 16 Greasy 17 First James Bond movie 18 Measuring stick 19 Sassy child 20 Unable to hear 22 Bathe 23 Not crazy 24 “__ to Billy Joe” 26 Stick; cling 29 Classic board game 34 Strange twist of circumstances 35 Hand digit 36 Youth 37 Guacamole and salsa 38 Disgusting 39 Ping-__; table tennis 40 Adam’s wife 41 Some golf clubs 42 Ever __;

---

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BRIDGE

Inspiration is like an old sock; you can never find it when you need it. Maybe that explains why South went down at today’s game. When West led the queen of hearts, South took dummy’s ace and led a trump to finesse with his queen. West took the king, cashed the jack of hearts and led a diamond. South won and led another trump. When East showed out, South took the ace and tried to combine his chances by cashing the K-A of clubs. When both defenders played low, South finessed with the jack of diamonds. East won and cashed the queen of clubs, and West also got the jack of trumps. Down two.

HOROSCOPE

DAILY QUESTION You hold: S A Q 8 7 5 2 H 8 6 D 7 3 C A 10 3. Your partner deals and passes, and the next player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Open two spades, promising seven to 11 points with a sixcard suit. Many experts would open one spade in any position, contending that the hand contains too many defensive values for a weak two-bid. In my opinion, it’s fine to open two spades with this hand when partner has passed and would be permissible even in first position. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

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.

Mosquito’s worst enemy A dragonfly is perched on a branch at Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge near Roswell, N.M. He’s sunning himself while waiting for a meal to fly by. AP

from that time on 43 Set aside for a special purpose 45 Pieces of grass 46 Bill denomination 47 Dime or quarter 48 Fusses 51 Not intended 56 Sticky strip 57 Insect stage 58 New Delhi woman’s attire 60 __ surgeon; tooth extractor 61 With all one’s might 62 Bleacher level 63 Ill-gotten gain 64 Answer 65 Strong alkaline DOWN 1 Peculiar 2 Broadcasts 3 Carry on 4 Peaceful 5 Unrefined 6 Acting part 7 Thought 8 Goes on

Yesterday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

stage 9 Spider’s creation 10 Italy’s dollar before the euro 11 Cry of regret 12 Tale about Greek or Norse deities 14 Unties 21 __ a soul; no one 25 Apply a small amount 26 Assisted 27 Operate an automobile 28 Had aspirations 29 Glowed 30 Use bad words 31 Lighthaired 32 Bicyclist

Armstrong 33 Borders 35 Horse’s gait 38 Like sand and sugar 39 Liberace, e.g. 41 Cold cubes 42 Thin opening 44 “...nothing to fear but fear __” 45 Study of plants 47 Polite 48 Perched upon 49 Be bold 50 Ring gem 52 Moniker 53 Coat or shawl 54 Talon 55 Earl __ tea 59 Rage


Call 888-3555, fax 888-3639 or email classads@hpe.com for help with your ad

A

NNOUNCEMENTS

0135

Personals

ABORTION PRIVATE DOCTOR'S OFFICE 889-8503 0142

Lost

Lost September 11, small dog, Dachshund mix, no collar, last seen Randolph County Kennedy Rd. area. Call 883-6555

G

ARAGE /ESTATE SALES

0151

Garage/Estate Sales

3 Family Huge Sale. Antiques, Barbie's, HH, etc. Fri. 9/24,& Sat. 9/25, 7am-until 5772 Tobacco Rd. Trinity, Off Hwy 311 3 Family Inside & Outside Sale. All Must Go! Lots of Nice Furniture, Lamps, Antique Vanity, Dishes, Refrigerator, Much Miscellaneous. Call 882-8067 or 339-6810. 1816 W. Rotary Dr. Fri 9/24 & Sat 9/25, &am-Noon. 311 Flea Market 7190 US Hwy 311 Sophia. Gigantic Yard Sale Sat. & Sun. 336-442-2237 Basement Clean Out Sale Call Friday 812-1114 For Details!! Benefit, Bake, Hot Dogs & Drinks and Yard Sale. Sat. 9/25, 7am-until. Community Baptist Church 9006 Hillsville Rd., Trinity. Big Church Yard Sale. Sat 9/25, 8am-Until. God's House of Prayer, 311 Trindale Rd. Archdale, Beside Southern Center. Nice 3pc Men's Suits Big Yard Sale Sat. 9/25, 7am-12noon. HH items & misc., Some Sm. Furn., 3615 Fairlane St. HP. Car Port Sale Fri. 8am-4pm and Sat. 8am-1pm 700 Rockspring Rd. corner of Rockspring and Pinehurst Clothing, HH items, lots of misc. items! Sat. 9/25, 8am-12pm, 401 Walnut Grove Rd., Westwood Subdivision. Community Yard Sale Mason Manor Apts across from Aldi's Sat 9/25 7:30-2:00. Drum set, furn, tools, clothes, household items, and much more. Follow the signs. Community Yard Sale Sat. 9/25, 7:30a-until. Between Centennial and Johnson St. Community Yard Sale, Name Brand Clothes, Lawn Mower & Miscellaneous. Shamrock Village at End of Frazier St off Hwy 311 in Archdale. (Beside Archdale Marathon) Sat 9/25, 7am-Until Estate & Multi Family Yard Sale. Sat. 9/25, 114 Columbus Dr. Archdale. 7am-1pm (behind O'Reilly's Auto Parts)

0151

Garage/Estate Sales

0151

Garage/Estate Sales

Estate Sale Sat. 9am-1pm. Everything Must Go! 710 Baker Rd., HP

YARD SALE FRI 9/24 8-2, SAT. 9/25 7-12. 1740 Country Club Dr. HP

Fall Festival, Sandy Ridge UMC, 2223 Sandy Ridge Rd Sat, 9/25, 8am-2pm. Yard Sale, Silent Auction, Crafts. Homemade baked & canned goods, BBQ $8/lb. Fun for all ages. Vendors Welcome $15/space or Pre-order BBQ. Call: 336-665-0774 or Email: info@sandyridgeumc.org

Yard Sale Sat. 9/25, 7am-12noon, 222 Alison Lane Archdale. TV, CD Player, Furn., Clothes, Jewelry, Designer Purses, Seasonal Decor, File Cabinet, Cell Phone, Entertainment Center, etc.

Furniture, Bikes, Toys, File Cabinets, & etc. Sat. 9/25 8am-12noon. 1910 Lazy Lane HP.

Yard Sale, Sat 9/25, 7am-12pm. 901 Frendale Blvd. Household items, Some Furniture, Victorian Antique Sofa & Chairs.

Good Adult & Kid's Clothing, Shoes, Books, Toys, Sports Items, Booster Seats, HH, & Much More. Sat 9/25, 7am-Noon. Skeet Club, to N. on Braddock, 1st L to Sparrowhawk Dr. Waterford Sbd.

Yard Sale, 8am-Noon. Baby Items, Kids Clothes, Bikes. 750 Younger Pl. Laurel Oak

Yard Sale, Sat 9/25, 8am-2pm. 702 W. Parkway Ave. HUGE Variety of Items, Including Holiday Decorations. Great Prices. Stop by and Shop!

Huge Moving Sale. Furn, clothes, housegoods. 2 DAYS - Sat. 9/25 & 10/2. 1807 Shalotte Dr., off Chestnut

Yard Sale, Sat 9/25, 8am-Until. NO Early Birds! Womens Clothes, Size 10 tot 12. Holiday, Collectibles, etc. 306 Englewood, Archdale

Huge Yard Sale. Sat 9/25, Shady Grove Methodist Church. 7am-1pm. Hwy 109, Food Available.

Yard Sale, Sat 9/25, 7am-Until. 2945 Triangle Lake Rd

Large Yard Sale, Fri 9/24 & Sat 9/25, 7am-2pm. 100 Kingsdale Ct, Jamestown. Like New Girls Items, Sizes 4, 5 & 6. Dirt Bike Parts, 2X Men's Clothes. 2 Miles past Fairfield Church. 1062 NC Hwy 62 West. 431-5248 Moving Yard Sale, Sat 9/25, 7:30am-2pm Only! 1213 Kennison Ct, in Broadstone Village in High Point. Off Banbridge Multi Family Yard Sale 4104 Cedarcrest Ln. HP. Sat. 9/25, 7am-12noon. Multi Family Yard Sale Sat. 9/25, 713 Skeetclub Rd. Corner of Skeetclub and Cornish Glenn, Art work and Scrapbook items, TV, Sm. Fridge, Christmas Items, 1 table of free items, lots of really good clothes, etc. MULTI FAMILY Yard Sale. 1358 Crosswinds Dr., Laurel Springs Subdivision. Sat. 7am-11am. TV, housewares, furniture, holiday items. Multi Family Yard Sale. Sat 9/25, 7am-Noon. 569 Lee Rd, 3 mi S of T-ville off Hwy 109 Rummage Sale All Saints Episcopal Church. 4211 Wayne Rd. Greensboro. 9/25, 7am-12pm. Furn., Clothing, Jewelry, Pottery, Housewares, Bake Goods. Sat. 9/25, 242 Cedar Lodge Rd. T-ville. Old Antiques, Clothing, Lawn Equip., Speakers, Fishing Gear, Toys, Misc., Lots of Stuff! Tools, Clothes, Household. 717 Baker Rd, High Point. Fri 9/24 & Sat 9/25, 8am-Unitl

WESTCHESTER KEY CLUBHOUSE W. Lexington & Westchester, Sat 9/25, 8am-Noon. Lots of Nice Things, Come Join Us! Women on Mission Yard Sale. Lots of Things! Sat. 9/25, 7am-1pm Glenola Baptist Church Fellowship Building. Hwy 311 S. in Glenola

Estate & Yard Sale, 1306 Yard & Jewelry Sale. Great Baker Rd. Thurs 9/23 & Fri, time to Shop for Christmas. 9/24, 8am-4pm, 60 Plus Years 206 Larkspur Lane, Thomasof Household. ville. Sat 9/25, 7:30am-Until Prepress Coordinator for Printing Center Production & Creative work - Prepare graphic files for various output devices - Preflight files for outsourcing - Edit Both Mac and PC files - Design marketing pieces and in house ads - Some web design - Data management - Responsible for keeping organized file archives and work area - Some digital color production work - Comfortable seeking graphic solutions Proficiency on Mac and PC, Adobe CS4(strong background in Acrobat), Font Management, Office, Illustrator, Photoshop, Freehand. Hrs. 8-5 M-F Qualified applicants only Email questions, resume and cover letter to: Prepress5193@yahoo.com

High Point Enterprise Carriers Needed Need to earn extra money? Are you interested in running your own business? This is the opportunity for you. The High Point Enterprise is looking for carriers to deliver the newspaper as independent contractors. You must be able to work early morning hours. Routes must be delivered by 6am. This is seven days a week, 365 days per year. We have routes available in the following areas: * Thomasville/East Davidson: E. Holly Grove Rd, Johnsontown, Cunningham, Fisher Ferry.

Yard Sale/Auction! Proceeds will Benefit Whirlwind Ministries. Sale begins Noon-11pm, Sat 9/25, Food All Day, Auction begins 5-8pm. Authentic Autographed NASCAR Memorabilia, Bob Timeberlake Art & More! Located Behind Denny's in T-ville. 111 Sedgehill Dr. Yard Sale: Sat 9/25, 8am-1pm. 1619 Bolingbroke Rd. HH items, clothing (various sizes, men's & women's to 2X) & Misc.

E

MPLOYMENT

0208

Sales

Local gift Shop has Sales Position Opening. Candidate must have good People and Communications Skills, Creativity & Be Detail Oriented. Sales experience necessary. Send resume: Sales Position, PO Box 6437, High Point, NC 27262

0220

Part-Time, Experienced Upholsterer for high-end quality com furntiure. Basic Furniture Styles. 889-2818 Start Earning Christmas $$ Now. Sell Avon to Family, Friends & Work. 908-4002 Independent Rep.

0240

If you are interested in any of the above routes, please come by the office at 210 Church Avenue between 8:30am-4:30pm.

Skilled Trade

Customer Service-UCC Distribution seeking person with significant furniture industry experience in warehousing, transportation, and customer service. Ability to use Windows Office Suite and other computer-based applications is required. A four-year college degree is a plus. Apply 1350 Bridgeport Dr Kernersville NC. Open Technicians Positions Available, AC Shop, 401K plan, Vacation program. Apply in person: 1810 S. Main St. Call Craig Spencer. 884-4123

SAM KINCAID PAINTING FREE ESTIMATES HOME 472-2203 CELL 442-0171/880-0035 TBOE Furniture is growing, looking for skilled workers, Part time, some full time, Double needle and Regular Sewers, Some Casual work, Upholsters, Outsiders. Apply in person 227 Berkley St. HP 10am-4pm

0244

Trucking

In home delivery driver needed. Class B CDL required, 3 years experience min. Call for interview 336-476-8001 Class A CDL Drivers 2 Yrs Tractor/Trailer Fulltime/Part-time/Weekends Available Local-Home Every Night Flatbed-5 days OTR, Tarping exp required Local-Foodservice Switchers-All shifts available2yrs exp Regional- 1-2 nights out and back Excellent Benefits & Pay 336-315-9161

General Help

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

0260

Restaurant

Cats/Dogs/Pets

$200 off. Too Many Puppies! Carin Ter, Cock A Chon. Lhasapoo. Greene's Kennels. 336-498-7721 Adult Female, Cat, Ginger Tabby. Declawed, Free to Good Home. Call 336-884-0686 AKC Registered Pitt Bulls. 2Blues, Females, 1 Male Fawn. $250 each. Call 336-476-7440

F

0410

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

M

ERCHANDISE

0503

Auction Sales

Estate Auction Sat 9/25, 9:30am, 310 Northridge Rd, Jamestown Cast Iron Tea Kettle, Assorted Cast Iron, M. L. Owens Pitcher, Assorted Dolls, Bedroom Suite, Washer/Dryer, Upright Freezer, Treadle Sewing Machine, Enamelware, Housewares, Assorted Tools, Old Washboards, Power Tools. Sale Conducted by Tackett Auctions. NCAL 8580. 336-870-5048

0509 Household Goods Home Renovation Sale! Stainless Steel Side by Side Refrig, Whirlpool Frige, Black Ceramic Top Stove, Stainless Steel Dbl Sink, Kitchen Aide DW, Sm Chrome/Blk Round Pub Table w/2 Chairs, Buffet, Bakers Rack, Glass Top Round DR Table, 4 Uph DR Chairs, Chandelier, Lg Mirror, Rugs, End Tables, Coke Signs. Call for Pricing 431-2462 Stove, Refrigerator, Washer, all for $300. Moving Must Sell. Call 336-491-4334

Musical Merchandise

0264

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

Child Care

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

0268

Part-time Employment

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

P

WHEREAS, the City Council is requesting to close the following right-of-ways: 1) Case # SA10-12 – An improved right-of-way of Fifth Court (identified as Sherwood Court on a plat titled “Plat No. 2 – Sherwood Park” as recorded in Plat Book 11 Page 67) lying east of Fifth Street between E. Farriss Avenue and North Avenue (private) and 2) Case # SA10-13 - An improved portion of Quaker Lane and Pine Street (identified as Avery Street and Pine Street on a plat titled “Fuller Place” as recorded in Plat Book 9 Page 66) lying east of Lindsay Street between Westwood Avenue and W. Ray Avenue. WHEREAS, G.S. 160A-299 requires the Council to first adopt a resolution declaring its intent to close the streets and calling a public hearing on the question; NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, THAT THE COUNCIL declares its intent to consider the abandonment of the streets above described and sets Monday, October 18, 2010, at 5:30 p.m. as the date for said public hearing before the Council of the City of High Point, in the Council Chambers of the Municipal Building, High Point, on the closing of said streets. Persons wishing to be heard either for or against the said street closings are asked to be present for the hearing. The meeting facilities of the City of High Point are accessible to people with disabilities. If you need a special accommodation, call 336/883-3298 or TDD# 336/883-8517. Further information pertaining to these requests are available at the Planning and Development in the Municipal Office Building, 211 South Hamilton Street, Room 316, High Point, North Carolina, 336/883-3328 or FAX 336/883-3056. By Order of the City CouncilThis the 20th day of September, 2010.

Petitions Submitted By: High Point University (SA10-12) High Point Regional Health System (SA10-13)

0512

0515

0521

Computer

Lawn & Garden Equipment

1976 John Deere 210 Series, 10HP, 47" cut. Kohler engine. Call 336-475-0288 Craftsman Triple Leaf Bagger, fits Craftsman riding mower, $275. Call 336-819-9106 Great Sand Rock! Tri Axle Load Delivered, $150. Archdale, Thomasville, Trinity & High Point. 336-688-9012 John Deere LT-166 Lawn Tractor, ex. cond., $1200., 476-1182 after 6pm Troy Built Riding Lawnmower, 7 spd. 17.5 HP. Been Used Twice. $700. 476-3523

0533

Moving Sale! 5 pc T-ville Furn BR Suite, $450, 6 pc LR set, $400. Call 336-819-9867 Qn BR Set w/matt, $200, Wood DR Table w/4 chairs, $100. 2 Chests: 1, $40 & 1 $25, Desk w/Hutch $25. 476-3523

0545 Machinery & Tools 12inch Radial Saw like new-$225., 2 Radial Alarm Drill press New-$125. each. Call 475-2410 or 888-8058

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

0563

Misc. Items for Sale

Schwinn Exercise Bike, Like New Condition. $125. Call 336-855-8292 War Nickels, SNOW FALL IN ROCKFORD. Signed, Numbered & Framed. $1500. Call 336-869-6119

R

EAL ESTATE FOR RENT 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 2702 Ingram Rd., HP $445, AC Central, W/D Hook up, 336-688-8490 2BR Apartment, in Archdale. $450/month plus Deposit. No Pets. Call 431-5222 2br Apt for rent, South end HP, Appl. furn., Heat & air, clean, $425. mo., Call 905-7345 2BR, 1BA avail. 2427 Francis St. Nice Area. $475/mo Call 336-833-6797 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 A-dale/Duplex, 1BR, Stove & Ref incld. W/D conn. $460/mo. Inc Water/Sewer. 803-3111 Clositers & Foxfire $1000 FREE RENT! 885-5556 Emerywood 700B Arbordale 1br/1ba/living room/newly updated, $425. mo., Dep. Req'd. 336-918-3072 Fall Special! 2Br Apt. Archdale. 127-A Columbus Ave. Quiet, Clean, A/C, Refrig, Stove, W/D Hookups. $395/mo. Call 434-6236 Large 1BR, Duplex $280. near Penn-Griffin, very clean, blinds, 882-2030 Nice 1BR Condo $400-$460 Nice 2BRCondo $560 Convenient location Kitchen appls. furn. GILWOOD NORTH Call (336) 869-4212 Raintree Apartments Carefree living Convenient location No Security Deposit. (336) 869-6011 2 BR, Appls, AC, Clean, W/D Connection. Good Location. $450. 431-9478 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.

0620

Homes for Rent

2BR/1BA 1107 Cassell St., $395 336-434-2004 1102 Cassell 2br 300 523 Flint 2br 275 913-B Redding 2br 300 HUGHES ENTERPRISES 885-6149

Furniture

Dining Room Furn. Hickory White-Mahogany/Burl Rect. Table, 6 chairs & Lg China Cabt. Also-Dinette set, round table, 4 chairs. 434-4300 or 442-7350

0554

0563

0610

ARM

Piano Baldwin console 41" High Very New Will Deliver. $895. Call 336-427-3062

Movie Extras to Stand in the ETS Backgrounds for a major film. Earn up to $200 per day. Exp Not Req'd. 877-292-5034 RESOLUTION OF INTENT TO CONSIDER A STREET ABANDONMENT (Case # SA10-12 and SA10-13)

September 24, 2010 October 1, 8, 15, 2010

0320

NOW accepting applications for night time wait staff & lunch weekend wait staff . Apply in person at Lubranos 2531 Eastchester Dr. High Point. Ask for Frank or Carmine 454-3686

Lisa B. Vierling, City Clerk Applicants for this contract position should be: Responsible, Motivated, Diligent, Customer Service Oriented.

General Help

Medical/Dental

Westchester Manor at Providence Place, a 129 bed Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Facility is currently seeking a fulltime MDS Nurse. Applicants must be licensed as a Registered Nurse and have two years experience in MDS. American Health Tech (AHT/LTC) experience preferred.Resumes can be submitted by email to: sblakely@providenceplacenc.c om or by mail to: 1795 Westchester Drive High Point, NC 27262

0232

0232

Misc. Items for Sale

Large Collection of Dolls with 3 Display Cases Madame Alexander-Marie Osmond-Barbie, many more. All for $1,500. 434-4300 or 442-7350

2BR, carpet, blinds, appli. No Pets. $500. mo. 883-4611 Leave message. 314 Charles 2 Bdrs $475 1509 Cook 3Bdrs $625 Klemme Investments 889-7599 3BR/2BA. On 3 ac in Davidson Co. Like New. $825/mo + $825/dep. No Pets! 474-7204 510 E. Lexington. 3BR/1BA. Newly Renovated. $700/mo + $700/dep. Call 869-2963 A-1 ROOMS. Clean, close to stores, buses, A/C. No dep. 803-1970. Archdale 5367 Jennifer Ct. 3br, 2ba, $650. mo. + dep., good credit, NO pets, inquire there Sunday 4pm-5pm. MOVE-IN SPECIALS 1 & 2 BRs 883-9602 N.W. Hamilton St, 3BR/1BA W/D Conn. Nice Neighborhood. $375/mo. Universal Rentals. 336-454-5067 or 336-508-5287 206 Edgeworth-1br 918 Ferndale-2br 883-9602 T-ville 3BR/2BA, Cent H/A, 125 A Kendall Mill Rd. $700/mo, $700/dep. Ph 472-0310/491-9564


PageSection www.hpe.com DAYHERE, MONTHHERE DATEHERE, YEARHERE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE 0620

Homes for Rent

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 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 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......................$325 508 Radford....................$300 313-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................$275 309-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

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

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

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Recreational Vehicles

Misc for Rent

0754 Commercial/Office

0816

3 BEDROOMS 109 Quakerwood............$1100 330 W. Presnell................$790 1704 Azel.........................$600 603 Denny.......................$600 2209 B Chambers...........$575 1014 Grace......................$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

Almost new 10,000 sq ft bldg on Baker Road, plenty of parking. Call day or night 336-625-6076

Dream Team, 2008 Ford F-250 Super Duty King Ranch Truck & 2008 38" Montana 5th Wheel. Perfect for traveling the beautiful USA. Both for $50,000. 336-847-3133

0640

2 BEDROOMS 606 Liberty......................$625 3911 C Archdale.............$600 1114 Westbrook..............$550 6 Hart...............................$530 285 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...........$450 600 Willowbar..................$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 1429 E Commerce..........$375 309 A N. Hall....................$365 1031 B Pegram................$355 802 Barbee.....................$350 215-B & D Colonial..........$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

0665 Vacation Property MB Condo. (2) 2BR/2BA, Shore Dr. Call for Special Fall Rates 887-4000

0670

Business Places/ Offices

1000 SF retail space close to new 85. $595/month. Call day or night 336-625-6076 8000 SF Manuf $1800 168 SF Office $250 600 SF Wrhs $200 T-ville 336-561-6631 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/1BA, Remodeled MH. Stove, Refrigerator, AC, Oil Heat, $110/wk. Call 847-7570 3BR Trailer, Cent H/A. Inside Like New. Big Rooms. $600 & dep. Call 476-9591 Clean 2BR, 1BA, water incl. NO Pets. $200 dep. $100 wkly. 472-8275 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

Historic Bldg, Downtown, Restored. For Office/Showroom /Gallery. 2000 sqft. Must See! $885, 106 Oak. 887-5130 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

0793

Monuments/ Cemeteries

1 Plot at Holly Hill Cemetery in the Front Sec. Will Sell Cheap! 336-491-9564 or 472-0310 2 Cemetery Plots at Floral Garden Sect. G, Lot 168, Plots 3 & 4 $1550 each. Call 1-706-291-4286 Floral Garden, 2 Side by Side plots, Sells for $6400 asking 5000. Call 610-698-7056 Two cemetery plots at Floral Garden. Call 823-2810 or 823-2811.

T

RANSPORTATION

0804

Boats for Sale

14ft. Semi V Lowes Boat. 25HP, electric start, Johnson Motor, long trailer, 5 years old, used very little, $2500. Call 848-5850

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

2000 Chevy Blazer LS. 4WD. New Tires, m 123,500. Knocking Sound in motor. $1500 firm. Call 336-688-0206 95 Toyota 4-Runner, 145K miles, Exc Cond. $5,200. Call 336-687-8204

Pickup Trucks for 0864 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

Manufactured Homes for Sale

2 & 3 BR homes Sophia, Randleman & Elon plus Handyman Homes Fix it and it's yours! Sophia & Randleman 336-799-4199 Elon 336-449-3090

0754 Commercial/Office 1,000 sq. ft retail space near new 85. Reasonable rent & terms. Phone day or night 336-625-6076. 3 bay garage w/lift, 2 air compressors, in Archdale area. $1200. neg, Call 689-0346 70,000 ft. former Braxton Culler bldg. Well located. Reasonable rent. Call day or night. 336-625-6076

0955

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF Kermit Marshall Bailey, who died May 28, 2010 The undersigned, having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Kermit Marshall Bailey, deceased, late a resident of Guilford County, North Carolina, hereby notifies all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the above named decedent that they are required to present them to either undersigned before December 10, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Anyone indebted to said estate should make immediate payment to either undersigned.

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

NOTICE OF GENERAL ELECTION November 2, 2010 (Published pursuant to G.S. 163-33(8)) A county-wide general election will be held in Guilford County, on November 2, 2010. The polls will be open for voting on election day from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The partisan races in the general election will be for US Senate, US House of Representatives for the 6th, 12th, and 13th Districts, State Senators for the 26th, 27th, 28th, and 33rd Districts, State House of Representatives for the 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, and 62nd Districts, District Attorney for the 18th District, and County Commissioner for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 6th, and 9th Districts, Clerk of Superior Court, and Sheriff. The nonpartisan races in the general election will be for Associate Justice of the NC Supreme Court, four seats on the Court of Appeals, Superior Court Judge for Districts 18A, 18B, and 18D, District Court Judge, Board of Education At-Large and the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th Districts, and two seats for Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisor. All Guilford County residents will vote on a proposed N.C. Constitutional Amendment providing that no person convicted of a felony may serve as Sheriff, and also a referendum to raise the sales tax rate in the county. There will be a special Instant Runoff Voting contest at the end of the ballot to elect an Appeals Court Judge. Voters will rank their first, second, and third choice candidates. Instructions on this will be provided to each voter when they vote. Residents of High Point will have races for Mayor and for City Council At-Large, and the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Wards. Residents of Archdale will have races for Mayor and for City Council At-Large, and the 1st and 4th Wards. Residents of Summerfield will vote on a referendum to change the townʼs form of government.

Persons with questions about registration, location of polling places, or other matters pertaining to elections may visit our website, www.guilfordelections.org, or call the Elections Office in Greensboro, 641-3836, or High Point, 845-7895, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Guilford County Board of Elections will meet at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, November 12, 2010 at the Old County Courthouse, Greensboro, to canvass the votes cast in the primary election. T.J. Warren, Sr., Chairman Guilford County Board of Elections September 24, October 1 & 7, 2010

Jeffrey S. Iddings, Attorney P. O. Box 5505 Greensboro, NC 27435-5505 September 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2010

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Legals

0955

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF Shirley Ann Johnson, who died August 5, 2008 The undersigned, having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Shirley Ann Johnson, deceased, late a resident of Guilford County, North Carolina, hereby notifies all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the above named decedent that they are required to present them to either undersigned before December 10, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Anyone indebted to said estate should make immediate payment to either undersigned. This the day 3rd day of September, 2010. Joseph Michal Busby, Administrator Post Office Box 5505 Greensboro, NC 27435-5505

Legals

Emma B. McAdams, Executrix Post Office Box 5505 Greensboro, NC 27435-5505

Registered voters in Guilford County may vote early by mail or in person. In-person early voting for the election begins on Thursday, October 14th and ends on Saturday, October 30stat 1:00 p.m. Same-day registration will be available only during in-person early voting to people who missed the October 8th registration deadline. They will have to provide identification with their name and current address. In-person early voting will be available in the Greensboro and High Point offices during regular office hours, and will be open at other locations at different dates and times prior to election day. Please visit our website, www.guilfordelections.org, or call 641-3836 in Greensboro or 845-7895 in High Point for exact times and dates of in-person and by-mail absentee voting, and for more information on same-day registration. The deadline to request a ballot by mail is Tuesday, October 26th. An extension may be possible for persons with a sickness or disability. All polling places are accessible to the elderly and disabled.

0747

0880 Off-Road Vehicles 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

1984 GMC Caballero, 93K miles. VGC. Runs Good. $5000 obo. Call 336-841-1525

Payments to Owner! Nice 2BR House. 75x150ft lot. $3000 down. Call 336-882-9132

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

97 Honda Accord LX, 4 door, auto, a/c, Pwr windows, CD, 4 cycliner, 30MPG, $4850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426

This the day 3rd day of September, 2010.

Residents of Guilford County who are not registered to vote must register by 5:00 p.m. Friday, October 8, 2010, to be eligible to vote in the election. Voters who wish to change party affiliation, address, or name must make that change with the Board of Elections by the same date. A person may register to vote or make changes to an existing record at the Guilford County Elections Office, 301 West Market Street, Greensboro or the High Point Elections Office, 325 E. Russell Ave., High Point, between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. weekdays, or the Department of Motor Vehicles when renewing or obtaining a driverʼs license. Registration-by-mail forms are available at all public libraries or may be printed from our website, www.guilfordelections.org, and mailed in.

Mobile Homes for Sale

Cars for Sale

08 Mitsubishi Raider, LS. Ext Cab. 6spd OD. 12k mil. LN. $13,500 784-5369/817-6222

For Sale by owner/broker-Lg 2BR/2BA Condo. Davidson County. Crosswinds Condos, cul-de-sac, 1310 Bayswater Dr. Walburg/Ledford Schools. Off Old Plank Rd. Lg LR w/FP. Spacious MB, lg BA w/shower, garden tub & dbl vanity. Lg Closet. Plenty of storage. Stove, DW, Microwave & Blinds Carpet & tile floors. Fncd patio. $114,000. Call 336-848-1446 for appt.

0741

0868

05 Taurus Wagon very nice, 70k, $4400. Call 336-431-6020 or 336-847-4635 2000 Ford Ranger XLT fully loaded duel exhaust new Mich tires 98,000 ml like new. 336-769-0209 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

Jeffrey S. Iddings, Attorney P. O. Box 5505 Greensboro, NC 27435-5505 September 3, 10, 17 & 24, 2010

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GUILFORD NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of SAVANNAH M. PRESSWOOD, late of High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms andcorporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersignedat the address below on or before the December 17, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of theirrecovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 9th day of September, 2010. JANICE P. CHAPMAN, ExecutrixEstate of Savannah M. Presswood Elizabeth M. KoonceRoberson Haworth & Reese, P.L.L.C. Attorneys and Counsellors at LawSuite 300 High Point Bank & Trust Bldg. Post Office Box 1550 High Point, NC 27261 September 17, 24, 2010 October 1, 8, 2010

FOR RENT 618 N. HAMILTON. William & Mary Apts. Close to Senior Center & Cloverleaf Supermarket on bus line. Apt. 19A. 3 rooms, stove, refrig., heat, air conditioning unit, water, hot water .......................................................... $375 APT. 12-A 1 room ..................................................................................... $298 211-G DOROTHY Westwood Heights Apts. 4 rms & 1 1/2 ba. Elect ht/air, carpet, stv, refrig. w/d conn ........................................ MOVE IN SPECIAL $360 824-H OLD WINSTON RD. 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, central air, stove, refrig., D/W, disposal, hardwood floors, W/D conn., covered patio ...................... $550 1600 A LONG 3 rooms & bath, heat, water, hot water, stove, refrig., laundromat on grounds ..........................................................................$325 916 WESTBROOK CT., ARCHDALE. 4 rooms, & 2 baths, stove, refrig., dishwasher, carpet, electric heat ............................................................. $590 1003 N. MAIN ST. Rowella Apts. 2 room efficiency. Stove, refrig., heat, water, hot water ...................................................................................... $305 151 HEDGECOCK RD 5 rooms & 2 baths, gas heat, central air, w/d conn $750 2411 B VAN BUREN 4 rooms & bath, electric heat, w/d conn. ................. $325 320-G RICHARDSON. Downtown apts. 3 rooms & bath. Stove, refrig., water, elec. heat & air, carpet ............................................................................. $335 604 PARKWOOD. 5 rooms & bath, elec. heat, W/D connect., hardwood flrs. ..$450 314B MEADOW PLACE 3 rooms & bath, w/d conn .................................. $298 1934 CEDROW 5 rooms & bath, gas heat, w/d conn.,..............................$425 308 CEDAR 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, w/d conn .....................................$298 1908 LEONARD. 5 rooms & bath, elec. heat, W/D conn., brick.................$498 1718 L E. KIVETT, Rosewood Apts. 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, w/d conn . $298 1804 E. COMMERCE 5 rooms & bath, electric heat, w/d conn................. $425 511 & 515 E. FAIRFIELD. 4 rooms and bath, Electric heat, a/c unit, stove, refrig, carpet, W/D connect ...................................................................... $398 1701 A & B EUGENE. 4 rooms, & bath, electric heat, w/d conn .............. $298 2631 INGRAM, 3 rooms & bath, carpet, elec. heat, W/D connect. ............ $450 700 B REDDING, 4 rooms & bath, electric heat, just renovated, w/d conn ................................................................................................................. $298 1217 A CLOVERDALE. 4 rooms, & bath, gas heat, brick, large front porch ................................................................................................................. $250 1201 A S.ELM. 3 rooms & bath, gas heat.................................................$220 1600 E. LEXINGTON 6 rooms & bath (3BR), gas heat, central air, stove & refrig., w/d conn ...................................................................................... $575 1206 VERNON, 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, central air, carpet, w/d conn .. $298 520 E DAYTON, 4 rooms & bath, electric heat, w/d conn ......................... $485 111 AVERY 5 rooms & bath, gas heat, central air, w/d conn. ...................$435 1502 A LEONARD 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, new carpet ........................ $275 211 E. KENDALL. 3 rooms and bath, electric heat, central air, stove, refrig., water ....................................................................................................... $345 1116 B RICHLAND 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, some carpet & hardwood floors, w/d, MOVE IN SPECIAL .................................................................$265 523 GUILFORD. 5 rooms & ba, carpet, gas ht, W/D conn ......................... $450 706-C RAILROAD, THOMASVILLE. 4 rooms & bath, stove, refrig., electric heat .................................................................................... MOVE IN SPECIAL $345 04 WINSLOW. 5 rooms & bath (2BR), hardwood floors, gas heat, W/D conn.... ................................................................................................................. $335 305-A PHILLIPS. 4 rooms & bath, gas heat .............................................. $300 1609 PERSHING. 5 rms & ba, gas heat, air, W/D conn ............................. $400 705-B CHESTNUT. 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, W/D conn .......................... $390 1201 B ELM. 3 rooms, & bath, gas heat heat ......................................... $215 1605 & 1613 FOWLER. 4 rooms & bath, oil heat...................................... $400 100 LAWNDALE. 5 rooms & ba, electric heat, W/D conn.......................... $450 1009 TRUE LANE. 5 rooms & bath. Electric heat & AC unit. Hardwood floors, w/d conn.................................................................................................. $450 1015 TRUE LANE. 5 rooms & ba, electric heat, W/D conn........................ $425 1101 CARTER. 4 rooms and bath, gas heat, W/D conn ............................ $350 614 EVERETTE LANE. 4 rooms & bath, gas heat, carpet, clean ....................................................................................Section 8 or $498 2346 BRENTWOOD. 5 rooms & 1 1/2 baths, gas heat, central air W/D conn .............................................................................................Section 8 or $550 1106 GRACE. 4 rms & ba, gas heat......................................Section 8 or $425


5C

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 www.hpe.com NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY

0955

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Legals

NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY

The undersigned, having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Mabel Covington Grout, aka Mabel VEnable late of 1909-O N. Centennial St., High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina, 27262, does hereby notify all persons, firms or corporations having claims against the estae of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned in care of Angela Krein brink, McAllister & Tyrey, PLLC, at P.O. Box 5006, 201 Neal Place, High Point, North Carolina 27262 on or before the 21st day of December, 2010 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms or corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

THE UNDERSIGNED, having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Annie Frank Truesdale, deceased late of Guilford County, this is to notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 3rd day of December, 2010, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment to the undersigned.Zarnita Truesdale LefetteAdministratrix of the Estate of Annie Frank Truesdale1221 Cedrow DriveHigh Point, NC 27260SEptember 3, 10, 17 & 24, 2010

This the 17th day of September, 2010.

1626

Mary Scott Grout, Executor of the Estate of Mabel Covington Grout, aka Mabel Venable Angela Kreinbrink Attorney at Law RESIDENT PROCESS AGENT McAllister & Tyrey, PLLC P.O. Box 5006 201 Neal Place High Point, North Carolina, 27262 September 17, 24, October 1 & 8, 2010

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Elderly Care

Golden Years Senior Helpers Housekeeping, run errands, etc. website. GoldenYearsSeniorHelpers. yolasite.com Call 336-736-1219

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Showcase of Real Estate NEW HOMES DAVIDSON COUNTY

PRICE REDUCED

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 unfinished space, spacious modern open floor plan on one level, HW floors, bonus room over garage, custom kitchen w/granite countertops, maple cabinets, SS appliances, and beautiful tile floor, 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

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

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 floors, 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 #!,,

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

For Sale By Owner 315 S. Elm St, High Point Commercial Building for Sale $499,900 8,400 Sq. Ft +/-, SHOW ROOM DISTRICT

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

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 Offices Family Compound

PRICE CUT WENDOVER HILLS

LINDA FAIRCLOTH COLDWELL BANKER TRIAD REALTORS 336-847-4970

P O I N T

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, floor 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 floors. Completely remodeled, this is like new. Call for appointment. PRICE CUT $132,750.

H I G H

REDU

704 RICHLAND

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., Sofia/ Hillsville, FSBO, (336) 287-6107

336-480-7847

CED

CED

REDU

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 purifier, glass enclosed sun room and brick patio. All exterior maintenance through homeowners assn. $169,900.

3152 WINDCHASE COURT 3 BR 2 BA 1164 SF, New carpet & paint, New HVAC, GE Appliances. End Unit $94,500 w/ 1 year home warranty

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 floorplans! - 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

WIN WIN SITUATION

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4

Help Support I AM NOW, INC., a local Non-Profit Your Chance to Win - $100 Raffle Tickets 226 Cascade Drive, High Point Visit www.IAMNOWINC.com and www.RaffleThisHouse.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 traffic. 3 BR 2.5 BA, 2300 sq’, open floor plan, vaulted ceilings & lg. windows, Oak floors & carpeted BRs, marble tiled bathrooms, lg. large master bath with separate shower, double fire 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, fireplace, 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 fireplaces, hardwood floors, 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 8am-7pm

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 finance. Will trade for land.

Call 886-7095

FOR SALE

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D

LEFTY IN THE HUNT: Mickelson starts fast in Tour finale. 4D

Friday September 24, 2010

WARRIORS KEEP ROLLING: Wheatmore tennis blanks Providence Grove. 3D Sports Editor: Mark McKinney mmckinney@hpe.com (336) 888-3556

ON THE INCREASE: New jobless claims rise for first time in five weeks. 5D

WHO’S NEWS

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DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

On the beaten path Cross country athletes from Westchester Country Day School and High Point Christian Academy tear through Gibson Park during Thursday’s meet. See prep roundup on 3D.

Payne, Swaim savor titles J

ay Payne never attempted to run for points before this season. Contending for titles was old hat for Travis Swaim. Both are celebrating this week. Swaim, of High Point, captured a record fourth championship in Caraway Speedway’s featured NASCAR Late Model division, eclipsing the three won by Dennis Setzer and Steve Loflin. “It’s cool,” Swaim said. “To do something that no one else has ever done is something special. We didn’t have a DNF all year, so I have to give credit to my crew chief Ronald Fox, who has been with me for all four championships.” Thomasville resident Payne, an engineer at Tyco Electronics in Greensboro who admits that he races primarily as a hobby, got his first Late Model Stock crown at Concord Motorsports Park. “It’s very satisifying,” Payne said. “A lot of people can say they have won races but not a lot can say they have won championships, so it give me a lot of satisfaction. I can always say that I was a champion.”

Payne, 33 and the son of former racer Harold Payne, has raced late models since 1999. He admits that he has done it as a hobby, often deciding not SPORTS to race in the dead of summer. Greer “It takes a lot of Smith fun out if it when ■■■ it is 100 degrees,” Payne said. “I have to cross a lake to get to the track and when it is that hot, I always wish I was out on the lake.” For most of his career, Payne raced when and where he pleased. The past couple of years, he has limited his racing to the Concord track. When he won four of the first five races this season, he decided to contend for the championship. “We made a commitment to see how it would play out all the way to the end,” Payne said. He never won again, but kept the lead for all but one week of the season and wound up edging Jerry Miracle for the title by two points. Payne held a six-point

lead after the first of two races on Saturday and then did what he needed to do to win the title in the second race by finishing third while Miracle won. “I points raced the second race,” Payne said. “I stayed close enough so I would win the championship.” The title made this season the best of his career. “I won seven races out of 12 or 13 in 2007,” Payne said. “I won five in a row, but I missed part of the season and wasn’t in contention for the points. Winning the championship makes this year the most successful I’ve ever had.” Swaim didn’t have to sweat that much, winning by 22 points over Dan Moore. Jason York, who was second in standings going into the final night, didn’t show after wrecking in the next to last race. “I pretty much knew he wasn’t going to be back when he came over and shook my hand and congratulated me after the nextto-last race,” Swaim said. “When he crashed, it tore up the front of his car. I think they decided just

to concentrate on getting ready for the big race at Martinsville (on Oct. 3).” York’s absence left Swaim starting Saturday’s feature with an 18-point lead over Moore and needing to finish ninth or better in a 12-car field to win the title. Instead of taking the conservative approach, Swaim tried to win and finished second to former Wallburg area resident Robert Tyler. “We won the pole and led the first 25 laps before the right-rear tire started leaking,” Swaim said. “We found a pop rivet in it when we got to the shop. We wanted to win Saturday.” The opportunity to set the championship record lured Swaim back to Caraway this season. He does not think he will be racing for points in the forseeable future. “I think I’m done points racing for now,” Swaim said. “I think next year we will run a combination of NASCAR and UARA races, probably the race at Rockingham, just whatever we want to do.” gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3556

Vikings’ Favre presses during frustrating 0-2 start EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) – The hair on Brett Favre’s head looks just a little grayer these days. His passes don’t seem quite as precise as they once were and the magic that he created in his first season with the Minnesota

Vikings – both on the field and in the locker room – has been conspicuously absent. Such is the pall cast by an 0-2 start for a team that expects to contend for the Super Bowl. With injuries to his favorite receivers and a

more challenging schedule than the welcome mat that was rolled out for him last season, Favre and the Vikings offense have failed to continue the roll that took them all the way to the NFC championship game last season.

much more at stake than an iron skillet. The fourth-ranked Horned Frogs (3-0) make the short drive from Fort Worth with legitimate national championship aspirations. TCU routed its first three opponents by a combined score of 137-38. Horned Frog quarterback Andy Dalton completed a school and Mountain West record 21 of 23 passes (91 percent completion percentage) in last week’s 45-10 romp past Baylor. Dalton leads all active BCS quarterbacks with 32 wins as a starter.

The Horned Frogs are for real, but don’t sleep on the Mustangs (2-1). Coach June Jones would like nothing better than to help SMU shock its long-time rival and play the role of BCS buster. Since 1915, TCU and SMU have met every season but three (1919, 1920, 2006). The Horned Frogs lead the all-time series 43-39-7. Look for a spirited Texas tussle tonight. It should be fun to watch.

HIT AND RUN

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I

’ll admit it. I get a kick out of those colorful college football rivalry prizes. The Backyard Brawl, The Iron Bowl, The Civil War, The Big Game – you can’t beat them. We’re treated to another great matchup when Texas Christian and Southern Methodist clash tonight in Dallas in “The Battle for the Iron Skillet.” The game kicks off shortly after 8 p.m. and will be televised by ESPN. But in this Lone Star State contest, there is

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

– MARK MCKINNEY ENTERPRISE SPORTS EDITOR

Audie Cole has always loved to hit. Since he’s been at N.C. State, the former Golden Gloves fighter has been doing it with pads. A boxer in high school, Cole has found a home as a linebacker at State. He’s one of the top tacklers for the Wolfpack (30) and will play a focal role in their defense during this week’s Atlantic Coast Conference matchup with ground-oriented Georgia Tech (2-1, 1-0). “When you’re having fun playing football, it’s hard to lose,” Cole said. “That’s the only way to have fun, is by winning.” Especially if those victories come with plenty of hard hits. He says he’s given up boxing because he can’t find anyone in Raleigh with whom he could spar, though he admitted he did once trade a few jabs during a trip home.

TOPS ON TV

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8:30 a.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, PGA Europe, The Vivendi Cup 9:30 a.m., Speed – Motorsports, Formula One, Singapore Grand Prix practice 11:30 a.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup Series, practice from Dover, Delaware 1 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, PGA, The Tour Championship 1 p.m., ESPN2 – Motorsports, NASCAR Nationwide Series, practice from Dover, Delaware 3 p.m., ESPN2 – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup Series, qualifying from Dover, Delaware 6:30 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, Champions Tour, SAS Championship 7 p.m., SportSouth – Baseball, Braves at Nationals 7 p.m., ESPN2 – Prep football, South Pointe (S.C.) at Spartanburg (S.C.) 8 p.m., ESPN – College football, TCU at SMU 10 p.m., WGN – Baseball, White Sox at Angels INDEX SCOREBOARD PREPS GOLF MOTORSPORTS FOOTBALL BUSINESS STOCKS WEATHER

2D 3D 4D 4D 4D 5D 5D 6D


SCOREBOARD 2D www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

BASEBALL

WAVER TRAILS BY ONE

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Major Leagues

New York Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore

W 92 91 84 77 61

L 61 61 68 75 91

Pct .601 .599 .553 .507 .401

x-Minnesota Chicago Detroit Kansas City Cleveland

W 92 80 77 63 62

L 60 72 75 89 91

Pct .605 .526 .507 .414 .405

Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle

W 84 76 75 58

L 67 75 77 94

Pct .556 .503 .493 .382

Philadelphia Atlanta Florida New York Washington

W 92 86 76 74 65

L 61 67 75 78 88

Pct .601 .562 .503 .487 .425

Cincinnati St. Louis Houston Milwaukee Chicago Pittsburgh

W 86 78 73 70 69 53

L 67 74 80 81 83 99

Pct .562 .513 .477 .464 .454 .349

W San Diego 85 San Francisco 86 Colorado 82 Los Angeles 73 Arizona 61 x-clinched division

L 66 67 69 79 91

Pct .563 .562 .543 .480 .401

AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division GB WCGB — — 1 ⁄2 — 1 7 7 ⁄21 141⁄2 14 30 ⁄2 30 Central Division GB WCGB — — 12 11 15 14 29 28 291⁄2 301⁄2 West Division GB WCGB — — 81 141⁄2 9 ⁄21 16 33 26 ⁄2 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division GB WCGB — — 6 — 15 9 171⁄2 111⁄2 27 21 Central Division GB WCGB — — 71⁄2 71⁄2 13 13 15 15 1611⁄2 1611⁄2 32 ⁄2 32 ⁄2 West Division GB WCGB — — — — 31 3 121⁄2 1211⁄2 24 ⁄2 24 ⁄2

L10 5-5 5-5 6-4 5-5 6-4

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

Home 51-27 46-29 44-34 41-34 34-43

Away 41-34 45-32 40-34 36-41 27-48

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

Str W-3 W-1 W-1 W-1 L-5

Home 52-25 40-34 49-29 34-40 32-43

Away 40-35 40-38 28-46 29-49 30-48

L10 6-4 5-5 6-4 3-7

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

Home 48-26 46-31 40-35 35-42

Away 36-41 30-44 35-42 23-52

L10 10-0 4-6 4-6 4-6 5-5

Str W-10 L-3 W-3 L-5 W-3

Home 51-27 52-23 38-39 44-30 38-37

Away 41-34 34-44 38-36 30-48 27-51

L10 5-5 4-6 5-5 5-5 7-3 5-5

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

Home 45-30 46-28 41-37 37-40 34-44 38-40

Away 41-37 32-46 32-43 33-41 35-39 15-59

L10 5-5 6-4 5-5 3-7 4-6

Str W-2 W-1 L-3 L-2 W-2

Home 42-32 45-30 51-24 42-35 37-40

Away 43-34 41-37 31-45 31-44 24-51

AMERICAN LEAGUE Wednesday’s Games Minnesota 5, Cleveland 1 Chicago White Sox 4, Oakland 3 Detroit 4, Kansas City 2 Tampa Bay 7, N.Y. Yankees 2 Seattle 6, Toronto 3 Boston 6, Baltimore 1 Texas 2, L.A. Angels 1, 12 innings Thursday’s Games Toronto 1, Seattle 0 Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2 Tampa Bay 10, N.Y. Yankees 3 Texas at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. Today’s Games Boston (Beckett 5-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 11-2), 7:05 p.m. Kansas City (Hochevar 6-5) at Cleveland (Tomlin 4-4), 7:05 p.m. Minnesota (Liriano 14-8) at Detroit (Verlander 17-8), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 1-4) at Toronto (Cecil 13-7), 7:07 p.m. Seattle (J.Vargas 9-11) at Tampa Bay (Niemann 10-7), 7:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (F.Garcia 11-6) at L.A. Angels (Pineiro 10-7), 10:05 p.m. Texas (Tom.Hunter 12-4) at Oakland (Cramer 2-0), 10:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Baltimore at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 7:05 p.m. Seattle at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Kansas City at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Seattle at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m. Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 8:05 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia 1, Atlanta 0 Washington 4, Houston 3

Pittsburgh 11, St. Louis 6 Florida 7, N.Y. Mets 5 Chicago Cubs 2, San Francisco 0 Milwaukee 13, Cincinnati 1 Arizona 8, Colorado 4 San Diego 3, L.A. Dodgers 1 Thursday’s Games St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 2 Washington 7, Houston 2 San Francisco 13, Chicago Cubs 0 Florida at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.

Blue Jays 1, Mariners 0

2 8 2 2 1 2 Diamond 2 ⁄3 Mateo 12⁄3 1 1 1 0 1 J.Russell 1 0 0 0 0 0 Berg 1 3 1 1 0 0 Marshall 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Dempster (J.Guillen, J.Guillen). WP—Bumgarner, Dempster. T—2:48. A—34,481 (41,210).

Seattle ab ISuzuki rf 5 Figgins 2b 3 JoLopz 3b 4 Smoak 1b 3 MSndrs lf 3 FGtrrz ph 1 Lngrhn lf 0 AMoore c 4 Mangin dh 4 Tuiassp pr 0 Halmn cf 4 JoWilsn ss 2 Carp ph 1 Totals 34

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 7

Toronto bi 0 Snider lf 0 YEscor ss 0 JBautst rf 0 V.Wells cf 0 Overay 1b 0 A.Hill 2b 0 Lind dh 0 Encrnc 3b 0 Arencii c 0 0 0 0 0 Totals

ab 4 2 2 2 1 3 3 3 3

r 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

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

23 1 2 1

Seattle 000 000 000 — 0 Toronto 100 000 00x — 1 DP—Seattle 2. LOB—Seattle 10, Toronto 3. 2B—I.Suzuki (28). HR—J.Bautista (50). S—Y.Escobar. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle F.Hrnndz L,12-12 8 2 1 1 4 5 Toronto Sh.Hill W,1-2 5 4 0 0 1 7 Mills H,1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Frasor H,12 1 0 0 0 0 0 S.Downs H,24 1 1 0 0 1 2 Gregg S,35-40 1 1 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Sh.Hill (Jo.Wilson). WP—Sh.Hill. T—2:21. A—12,590 (49,539).

Rays 10, Yankees 3 Tampa Bay ab BUpton cf 5 Bartlett ss 5 Crwfrd lf 5 Longori 3b 3 Brignc ph2b1 Zob 1b2b3b4 Baldelli rf 3 Jnnngs pr-rf1 WAyar dh 3 Shppch c 3 SRdrgz 2b 2 DJhsn ph1b1

Totals

New York r 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 1 0

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

bi ab 2 Jeter ss 3 0 ENunez ss 1 2 Swisher rf 3 0 Curtis rf 1 0 Teixeir 1b 4 1 Mirand 1b 1 1 ARdrgz 3b 2 0 R.Pena 3b 0 1 Cano 2b 4 1 Vazquz p 0 1 Thams dh-lf 4 1 Posada c 3 Moeller c 1 Grndrs cf 3 Russo 2b 1 Golson lf-cf 4 36 10 1310 Totals 35

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

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

Tampa Bay 001 007 200 — 10 New York 020 010 000 — 3 DP—Tampa Bay 1, New York 1. LOB—Tampa Bay 9, New York 9. 2B—B.Upton (35), Longoria (46), Teixeira (34), Golson (2). HR— Thames (12). S—W.Aybar. SF—D.Johnson. IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Price W,18-6 6 8 3 3 4 7 Ekstrom 1 1 0 0 0 0 McGee 1 0 0 0 0 1 Sonnanstine 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York Sabathia L,20-7 51⁄3 10 7 7 3 6 2 Chamberlain ⁄3 2 1 1 0 0 Vazquez 3 1 2 2 2 3 HBP—by Vazquez (Jennings, W.Aybar, Shoppach). T—3:23. A—47,646 (50,287).

Royals 4, Indians 2 Kansas City ab Dyson cf 5 Aviles 2b 5 BButler 1b 3 Betemt 3b 4 Kaaihu dh 4 YBtncr ss 4 Gordon lf 4 May c 4 Maier rf 3 Totals

Cleveland bi ab r h bi 0 Crowe cf 4 0 3 0 1 Sutton ss 3 0 0 0 0 Choo rf 4 0 0 0 0 Hafner dh 4 0 1 0 1 Duncan lf 2 1 0 0 1 J.Nix 3b 4 1 1 0 0 LaPort 1b 2 0 0 0 1 Valuen 2b 3 0 0 1 0 Marson c 2 0 0 0 JBrown ph 1 0 0 0 Carlin c 1 0 0 0 36 4 8 4 Totals 30 2 5 1 r 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0

h 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 0 1

Kansas City 201 000 010 — 4 Cleveland 000 000 200 — 2 E—B.Butler (6), Valbuena (10). DP—Kansas City 2. LOB—Kansas City 10, Cleveland 7. 2B—B.Butler (42), Y.Betancourt (26), Gordon (9), Crowe (23), J.Nix (14). HR—Aviles (7), Ka’aihue (5). SB—Dyson (5), Y.Betancourt (2), Crowe 2 (18). IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City O’Sullivan W,3-6 6 4 2 2 4 3 Humber H,1 1 1 0 0 1 1 Tejeda H,10 1 0 0 0 1 1 Soria S,41-43 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cleveland Talbot L,9-13 5 5 3 3 3 2 Germano 2 1 0 0 0 0 Sipp 1 2 1 1 1 2 Pestano 1 0 0 0 1 1 O’Sullivan pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. T—3:04. A—16,625 (45,569).

Giants 13, Cubs 0 San Francisco ab r Fntnt 3b-ss 6 2 FSnchz 2b 5 1 Burriss 2b 1 0 A.Huff 1b 2 0 Ishikaw 1b 2 0 Posey c 4 2 Whitsd c 1 1 Burrell lf 3 1 Rownd cf 1 0 JGuilln rf 1 2 Schrhlt rf 2 0 Uribe ss 4 2 Sndvl ph-3b1 0 C.Ross cf-lf5 1 Mota p 0 0 Runzler p 0 0 Bmgrn p 4 1 Velez ph-lf 1 0 Totals

Chicago bi ab r 0 Barney 2b 3 0 1 SCastro ss 4 0 0 Byrd cf 3 0 0 Fuld cf 1 0 0 ArRmr 3b 3 0 2 Scales 3b 1 0 0 Nady 1b 3 0 0 JRussll p 0 0 0 Berg p 0 0 0 Marshll p 0 0 0 WCastll ph 1 0 6 ASorin lf 4 0 1 Fukdm rf 2 0 1 Mateo p 0 0 0 MHffpr 1b 2 0 0 K.Hill c 3 0 0 Dmpstr p 0 0 0 Dimnd p 1 0 BSnydr rf 2 0 43 13 19 11Totals 33 0 h 2 4 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 2 1 3 0 0 2 0

h bi 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0

San Francisco 191 001 010 — 13 Chicago 000 000 000 — 0 DP—Chicago 3. LOB—San Francisco 8, Chicago 7. 2B—Fontenot (13), F.Sanchez (20), A.Soriano 2 (38). HR—Posey (16), Uribe 2 (22), C.Ross (12). IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Bumgarner W,6-6 7 7 0 0 1 9 Mota 1 0 0 0 0 1 Runzler 1 0 0 0 0 2 Chicago 7 9 9 2 2 Dempstr L,14-11 12⁄3

Today’s Games St. Louis (Wainwright 19-11) at Chicago Cubs (Gorzelanny 7-8), 2:20 p.m. Atlanta (T.Hudson 16-8) at Washington (Zimmermann 0-2), 7:05 p.m. Houston (Myers 13-7) at Pittsburgh (Ja.McDonald 4-5), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Dickey 11-7) at Philadelphia (Blanton 7-6), 7:05 p.m. Florida (A.Miller 1-3) at Milwaukee (M.Rogers 0-0), 8:10 p.m. San Francisco (Lincecum 14-10) at Colorado (J.Chacin 9-9), 8:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 12-10) at Arizona (Enright 6-5), 9:40 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 16-10) at San Diego (C.Young 1-0), 10:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Atlanta at Washington, 1:05 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati at San Diego, 4:10 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Florida at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 8:10 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 8:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Atlanta at Washington, 1:35 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m. Florida at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. Cincinnati at San Diego, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.

Cardinals 9, Pirates 2 St. Louis

Pittsburgh bi ab 1 AMcCt cf 2 0 Tabata lf 4 0 Presley lf 0 3 NWalkr 2b 4 0 GJones 1b 4 1 Alvarez 3b 3 0 JMrtnz p 0 1 A.Diaz ph 1 0 JThms p 0 0 Doumit c 3 0 Bowker rf 3 0 Cedeno ss 3 0 Ciriaco ss 1 2 Burres p 0 0 SJcksn p 0 0 Jarmll ph 1 0 Park p 0 0 Gallghr p 0 0 Moss ph 1 Ledezm p 0 AnLRc 3b 1 40 9 15 8 Totals 31

ab Schmkr 2b 4 Miles ph-2b1 Mather cf 5 Pujols 1b 4 Craig 1b 0 Hollidy lf 3 Winn ph-rf 1 Stavinh rf 4 TMiller p 0 Motte p 0 MHmlt ph 1 DReyes p 0 McCllln p 0 Descals 3b 5 Pagnzz c 4 Greene ss 3 Suppan p 3 Salas p 0 Jay rf-lf 2 Totals

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

h 1 1 1 3 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 1

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

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

St. Louis 004 212 000 — 9 Pittsburgh 000 100 100 — 2 E—Greene (7). DP—St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St. Louis 11, Pittsburgh 6. 2B—Holliday (45), Stavinoha (4), Descalso (2), Alvarez (18). HR—Pujols 2 (41). SB—Descalso (1), G.Jones (7). S—Pagnozzi. SF— A.McCutchen. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Suppan W,2-7 5 4 1 1 2 2 Salas 0 1 0 0 0 0 T.Miller 1 2 1 1 1 1 Motte 1 1 0 0 0 2 D.Reyes 1 0 0 0 0 0 McClellan 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh 1 6 4 4 2 1 Burres L,3-4 22⁄3 S.Jackson ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Park 1 2 2 2 0 0 Gallagher 1 2 1 1 1 0 Ledezma 1 2 2 2 1 1 J.Martinez 2 1 0 0 1 1 J.Thomas 1 2 0 0 0 0 Salas pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. T.Miller pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. HBP—by Park (Pujols). WP—Park. PB— Doumit. T—3:08. A—15,802 (38,362).

GOLF

---

PGA

Tour Championship Thursday at East Lake Golf Club Atlanta Purse: $7.5 million Yardage: 7,319; Par: 70 (35-35) Geoff Ogilvy 32-34 — Luke Donald 33-33 — Paul Casey 33-33 — Jim Furyk 33-34 — K.J. Choi 33-35 — Kevin Na 34-35 — Hunter Mahan 32-37 — Phil Mickelson 36-33 — Jason Day 33-36 — Kevin Streelman 37-33 — Ryan Moore 35-35 — Tim Clark 35-35 — Robert Allenby 36-35 — Nick Watney 35-36 — Ben Crane 35-36 — Retief Goosen 35-36 — Ernie Els 35-36 — Charley Hoffman 36-35 — Matt Kuchar 37-35 — Camilo Villegas 36-37 — Dustin Johnson 38-35 — Bo Van Pelt 37-37 — Zach Johnson 38-36 — Ryan Palmer 36-38 — Justin Rose 38-36 — Adam Scott 37-37 — Steve Stricker 36-38 — Jeff Overton 36-39 — Bubba Watson 38-37 — Martin Laird 39-36 —

66 66 66 67 68 69 69 69 69 70 70 70 71 71 71 71 71 71 72 73 73 74 74 74 74 74 74 75 75 75

Vivendi Cup Thursday at Golf de Joyenval Chambourcy, France Marly Course: 6,729 yards, par 72 Retz Course: 6,811 yards; par 72 Purse: $1.5 million First Round Johan Edfors, Sweden 31-30 — David Dixon, England 32-31 — Jean-Francois Remsy, Fra 31-33 — John parry, England 31-33 — Chris Gane, England 35-30 — Todd Hamilton, U.S. 32-33 — Soren Kjeldsen, Denmark 32-33 — Kenneth Ferrie, England 31-34 — Pelle Edberg, Sweden 33-32 — Julien Guerrier, France 31-34 — Jarmo Sandelin, Sweden 32-33 — Francois Delamntgne, Fra 32-34 — Paul Waring, England 34-32 — Andrew McArthur, Scotland 35-31 — Robert-Jan Derksen, Neth. 34-32 — James Morrison, England 33-33 — Mark Haastrup, Denmark 32-34 — Scott Strange, Australia 34-33 — Raphael Jacquelin, France 34-33 — Fabien Marty, France 35-32 — Jean-Baptist Gonnet, Fra 33-34 — Peter Whiteford, Scotland 32-35 —

WHERE: Cabarrus Country Club FORMAT: Four rounds of stroke play LEADERS: High Point’s Drew Weaver stands at 12-under 132 after rounds of 64 and 68. He trails Jason Caron of Jupiter, Fla. by one strokes. Weaver has five top-six finishes in his last six eGolf events

TRIVIA QUESTION

---

Q. Which school captured outright ACC football titles every season from 1960-62?

Gary Woodland Bubba Dickerson Ewan Porter Luke List Brett Lederer Travis Bertoni Steven Bowditch Geoffrey Sisk Brad Elder Jhonattan Vegas Michael Connell Scott Dunlap Matt Davidson

35-32 34-34 34-34 35-33 35-33 35-33 33-35 34-34 35-33 33-35 33-35 35-33 35-33

— — — — — — — — — — — — —

67 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68

BASKETBALL

---

Source: Nelson expected to leave Warriors Monday Coach Don Nelson is expected to part ways with the Golden State Warriors on Monday, an NBA source told The Associated Press, possibly ending the career of the league’s victory leader. The source spoke on condition of anonymity Thursday night because the surprising move by new team owner Joe Lacob likely won’t be announced until the start of the Warriors’ training camp next week. The 70-year-old Nelson has a record 1,335 victories in 31 seasons coaching Milwaukee, Golden State, New York and Dallas. The former Boston forward won five championships largely as a sixth man with the Celtics, but he has never led a team to a title or even reached the NBA finals. He passed Lenny Wilkens’ NBA record of 1,332 wins on April 7, near the close of the fourth season in his second stint with the Warriors. Golden State finished 26-56 last season. The source wasn’t certain whether Nelson technically would resign or be fired, but the sometimes-litigious coach is expected to be paid the full $6 million he’s owed for the final year of his contract.

HOCKEY

---

NHL preseason

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Philadelphia 2 1 0 1 3 6 6 N.Y. Rangers 1 1 0 0 2 4 3 Pittsburgh 1 1 0 0 2 5 1 New Jersey 2 0 0 2 2 6 8 N.Y. Islanders0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 3 2 1 0 4 7 8 Boston 2 1 1 0 2 6 5 Ottawa 2 1 1 0 2 6 4 Buffalo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Montreal 1 0 1 0 0 2 4 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 2 2 0 0 4 7 3 Tampa Bay 2 2 0 0 4 8 4 Washington 1 1 0 0 2 6 2 Carolina 2 1 1 0 2 4 5 Atlanta 1 0 1 0 0 2 5 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Columbus 2 1 1 0 2 7 8 St. Louis 2 1 1 0 2 6 4 Chicago 1 0 1 0 0 2 4 Detroit 1 0 1 0 0 1 5 Nashville 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Calgary 2 2 0 0 4 6 3 Edmonton 1 1 0 0 2 3 2 Colorado 2 1 1 0 2 5 5 Minnesota 1 0 1 0 0 1 5 Vancouver 3 0 3 0 0 5 9 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 1 1 0 0 2 4 2 Phoenix 1 1 0 0 2 4 1 Anaheim 2 1 1 0 2 6 6 Dallas 1 0 1 0 0 2 4 San Jose 1 0 1 0 0 2 5 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday’s Games Pittsburgh 5, Detroit 1 Toronto 4, Ottawa 1 Washington 6, Columbus 2 Boston 4, Montreal 2 Tampa Bay 4, Chicago 2 St. Louis 5, Minnesota 1 Los Angeles 4, Colorado 2 Edmonton 3, Vancouver 2 Anaheim 5, San Jose 2 Thursday’s Games Toronto 3, Philadelphia 2, SO Florida 3, Boston 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, New Jersey 3, OT Carolina 3, Nashville 1 Tampa Bay at Edmonton, 9 p.m. Los Angeles (ss) at Phoenix (ss), 10 p.m. Phoenix (ss) at Los Angeles (ss), 10:30 p.m. Today’s Games Chicago at Detroit, 7 p.m. Nashville at Carolina, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Toronto, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at Columbus, 7 p.m. Ottawa at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Minnesota at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Colorado at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

Hurricanes top Predators, 3-1 NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Patrick O’Sullivan and Sergei Samsonov scored second-period goals to lead the Carolina Hurricanes to a 3-1 victory over the Nashville Predators on Thursday night. Carolina is 1-1 in the preseason. The game was Nashville’s preseason opener. Nashville veteran J.P. Dumont opened the scoring at 9:18 of the opening period when he intercepted an attempted clearing pass on the right faceoff dot and beat Carolina goaltender Justin Peters with a wrist shot high to the stick side. After scoring a career-high 29 goals in 2007-08, Dumont had just 16 in 2008-09 and 17 last season. O’Sullivan evened the game at 4:46 of the second period.

PREPS

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Junior varsity Volleyball HPCA de. Hickory Grove 27-25, 25-22

61 63 64 64 65 65 65 65 65 65 65 66 66 66 66 66 66 67 67 67 67 67

Nationwide Tour WNB Golf Classic Thursday at Midland Country Club Midland, Texas Purse: $525,000 Yardage: 7,380; Par 72 (36-36) First Round Ron Whittaker 33-33 — Brenden Pappas 35-31 — Alistair Presnell 34-33 — Brandt Jobe 32-35 — Nate Smith 35-32 — Andrew Svoboda 34-33 — Major Manning 33-34 — William McGirt 34-33 —

WHAT: Second round of eGolf Professional Tour CFAC Classic

Leaders: HPCA – Rachel Cox 7 aces; Sheridan Miller 5 kills; Caroline Harding 3 kills Records: HPCA 9-0 Next game: HPCA plays host to Durham Academy today at 4 p.m.

West Davidson def. East Davidson 25-19, 25-16 Records: East 1-11, 0-3 Next game: East plays at Randleman on Monday

Salem Baptist def. Westchester 25-17, 25-16 Records: WCDS is 1-3

Middle school Volleyball Caldwell def. WCDS 15-25, 25-7, 25-22

66 66 67 67 67 67 67 67

Leaders: WCDS – Campbell Kinley 15 service points, 17 assists; Miranda Bryson 11 service points; Kayla Watson 10 kills Records: WCDS – 1-5 Next game: WCDS plays host to Canterbury on Monday on 4:30 p.m.

Soccer

Caldwell 1, Westchester 0 Goalies: Westchester – Stephen Smith 7 saves Records: ECDS 4-2, 3-1 conference Next game: WCDS plays host to Canterbury on Monday at 4:30 p.m.

Softball Archdale-Trinity 12, SW Randolph 2 Winning pitcher: A-T – Morgan Halo 5 Ks, 0 walks, 0 earned runs Leading hitters: A-T – Katie Bailiff 2-4, 2B, 2 RBIs; Halo 3-3, 2 RBIs; Davey Albertson 3-4, triple; Rumor Buchanon 2-3, RBI Records: A-T 4-0 Next game: A-T plays at North Asheboro on Tuesday at 4:15 p.m.

FOOTBALL

---

NFL

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Miami 2 0 0 1.00029 N.Y. Jets 1 1 0 .500 37 New England 1 1 0 .500 52 Buffalo 0 2 0 .000 17 South W L T Pct PF Houston 2 0 0 1.00064 Jacksonville 1 1 0 .500 37 Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 49 Indianapolis 1 1 0 .500 62 North W L T Pct PF Pittsburgh 2 0 0 1.00034 Cincinnati 1 1 0 .500 39 Baltimore 1 1 0 .500 20 Cleveland 0 2 0 .000 28 West W L T Pct PF Kansas City 2 0 0 1.00037 San Diego 1 1 0 .500 52 Denver 1 1 0 .500 48 Oakland 1 1 0 .500 29 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Washington 1 1 0 .500 40 N.Y. Giants 1 1 0 .500 45 Philadelphia 1 1 0 .500 55 Dallas 0 2 0 .000 27 South W L T Pct PF Tampa Bay 2 0 0 1.00037 New Orleans 2 0 0 1.00039 Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 50 Carolina 0 2 0 .000 25 North W L T Pct PF Chicago 2 0 0 1.00046 Green Bay 2 0 0 1.00061 Detroit 0 2 0 .000 46 Minnesota 0 2 0 .000 19 West W L T Pct PF Seattle 1 1 0 .500 45 Arizona 1 1 0 .500 24 San Francisco 0 2 0 .000 28 St. Louis 0 2 0 .000 27 Sunday’s results 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 Houston 30, Washington 27, OT San Diego 38, Jacksonville 13 N.Y. Jets 28, New England 14 Indianapolis 38, N.Y. Giants 14 Monday’s result New Orleans 25, San Francisco 22 Sunday’s games 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’s game Green Bay at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.

PA 20 24 52 49 PA 51 55 32 48 PA 20 48 24 33 PA 28 34 38 52 PA 37 56 59 40 PA 21 31 22 51 PA 34 27 54 28 PA 37 54 56 33

NFL injury report

NEW YORK — The National Football League injury report, as provided by the league (OUT - Definitely will not play; DNP - Did not practice; LIMITED - Limited participation in practice; FULL - Full participation in practice):

SUNDAY CINCINNATI BENGALS at CAROLINA PANTHERS — BENGALS: DNP: DE Jonathan Fanene (hamstring), DT Tank Johnson (toe), CB Adam Jones (shoulder), DE Frostee Rucker (toe). LIMITED: DE Antwan Odom (wrist), WR Terrell Owens (back). FULL: RB Brian Leonard (foot), LB Keith Rivers (foot). PANTHERS: DNP: WR Brandon LaFell (hamstring), T Jeff Otah (knee). LIMITED: DE Tyler Brayton (ankle), LB Jordan Senn (ankle), WR Steve Smith (thigh). FULL: DT Louis Leonard (elbow). BUFFALO BILLS at NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — BILLS: DNP: G Andy Levitre (neck), LB Paul Posluszny (knee). FULL: S Cary Harris (hamstring). PATRIOTS: DNP: T Nick Kaczur (back), CB Terrence Wheatley (foot). LIMITED: WR Julian Edelman (foot). FULL: QB Tom Brady (right shoulder). SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS at KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — 49ERS: Practice not complete. CHIEFS: DNP: DE Tyson Jackson (knee), T Ryan O’Callaghan (groin). LIMITED: DE Wallace Gilberry (back), LB Tamba Hali (foot), S Jon McGraw (hamstring). TENNESSEE TITANS at NEW YORK GIANTS — TITANS: DNP: DT Tony Brown (knee), DE Jacob Ford (knee), T Mike Otto (knee). GIANTS: OUT: T William Beatty (foot). DNP: LB Chase Blackburn (knee), LB Phillip Dillard (hamstring), S Michael Johnson (back), WR Mario Manningham (illness), C Shaun O’Hara (ankle, achilles). CLEVELAND BROWNS at BALTIMORE RAVENS — BROWNS: DNP: QB Jake Delhomme (ankle), RB Jerome Harrison (thigh), T Shawn Lauvao (ankle), TE Evan Moore (head), CB Derrick Roberson (hip), WR Brian Robiskie (hamstring), DT Shaun Rogers (ankle, hip), DE Robaire Smith (ankle). LIMITED: LB D’Qwell Jackson (chest), LB Matt Roth (foot), G Floyd Womack (knee). FULL: G Eric Steinbach (thigh), T Joe Thomas (elbow). RAVENS: OUT: LB Tavares Gooden (shoulder), WR Donte’ Stallworth (foot). DNP: T Jared Gaither (back), WR Derrick Mason (knee), RB Le’Ron McClain (shoulder). LIMITED: LB Dannell Ellerbe (knee). FULL: TE Todd Heap (shoulder), LB Jarret Johnson (back), LB Jameel McClain (knee), DT Haloti Ngata (back), RB Ray Rice (ankle), LB Terrell Suggs (ankle). PITTSBURGH STEELERS at TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — STEELERS: DNP: QB Dennis Dixon (knee), G Trai Essex (ankle). FULL: NT Casey Hampton (hamstring), T Max Starks (ankle). BUCCANEERS: DNP: C Jeff Faine (calf), LB Niko Koutouvides (ankle). LIMITED: RB Carnell Williams (hamstring). FULL: QB Josh Freeman (right thumb), RB Kareem Huggins (groin), TE Kellen Winslow (knee). ATLANTA FALCONS at NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — FALCONS: DNP: S Erik Coleman (knee). LIMITED: WR Michael Jenkins (shoulder), RB Michael Turner (groin). SAINTS: Practice not complete. DETROIT LIONS at MINNESOTA VIKINGS — LIONS: DNP: WR Nate Burleson (ankle), S Louis Delmas (groin, biceps, calf), LB Zack Follett (concussion), G Stephen Peterman (foot), QB Matthew Stafford (right shoulder). LIMITED: DE Cliff Avril (knee, finger), S C.C. Brown (forearm), LB DeAndre Levy (groin). VIKINGS: DNP: WR Percy Harvin (hip, illness). LIMITED: WR Bernard Berrian (knee), CB Cedric Griffin (knee), LB Ben Leber (back). FULL: CB Chris Cook (knee), QB Brett Favre (ankle), DT Jimmy Kennedy (knee), T Bryant McKinnie (finger), C John Sullivan (calf). DALLAS COWBOYS at HOUSTON TEXANS — COWBOYS: DNP: RB Deon Anderson (knee), WR Dez Bryant (ribs), DT Jay

Ratliff (not injury related). LIMITED: CB Mike Jenkins (knee), LB Sean Lee (hamstring), TE Jason Witten (head), T Sam Young (knee). TEXANS: DNP: TE James Casey (ankle), WR Andre Johnson (ankle). LIMITED: TE Owen Daniels (knee), DT Amobi Okoye (ankle), DE Mario Williams (groin). FULL: RB Vonta Leach (knee), CB Antwaun Molden (ankle). PHILADELPHIA EAGLES at JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — EAGLES: DNP: T Austin Howard (back). LIMITED: DE Brandon Graham (shoulder). FULL: LB Stewart Bradley (concussion), TE Brent Celek (chest), G Nick Cole (knee), G Todd Herremans (ankle), QB Kevin Kolb (concussion), DT Trevor Laws (oblique). JAGUARS: DNP: LB Justin Durant (ankle). LIMITED: DT Landon Cohen (knee), RB Maurice Jones-Drew (ankle), RB Deji Karim (thumb), S Anthony Smith (foot), LB Daryl Smith (thigh). FULL: G Uche Nwaneri (foot), G Justin Smiley (ankle). WASHINGTON REDSKINS at ST. LOUIS RAMS — REDSKINS: DNP: WR Anthony Armstrong (groin), S Chris Horton (ankle), T Trent Williams (knee, toe). LIMITED: DT Albert Haynesworth (ankle). FULL: S LaRon Landry (wrist), S Kareem Moore (knee), RB Clinton Portis (wrist). RAMS: OUT: LB Chris Chamberlain (toe), TE Michael Hoomanawanui (ankle), DT Darell Scott (ankle). DNP: TE Billy Bajema (knee), S Craig Dahl (head), CB Kevin Dockery (hamstring), TE Daniel Fells (knee), DT Clifton Ryan (migraines). LIMITED: S Oshiomogho Atogwe (thigh), RB Steven Jackson (knee), WR Laurent Robinson (foot), T Rodger Saffold (back). INDIANAPOLIS COLTS at DENVER BRONCOS — COLTS: DNP: RB Joseph Addai (knee), LB Gary Brackett (back), DE Dwight Freeney (not injury related), WR Anthony Gonzalez (ankle), LB Ramon Humber (hand), T Charlie Johnson (foot), S Bob Sanders (biceps), LB Clint Session (hamstring). LIMITED: WR Pierre Garcon (hamstring), C Jeff Saturday (knee). FULL: CB Jerraud Powers (foot). BRONCOS: DNP: CB Champ Bailey (foot), CB Andre’ Goodman (thigh), LB Wesley Woodyard (hamstring). LIMITED: T Ryan Harris (ankle), G Chris Kuper (knee), RB Laurence Maroney (thigh), S Darcel McBath (forearm). OAKLAND RAIDERS at ARIZONA CARDINALS — RAIDERS: Practice not complete. CARDINALS: OUT: WR Early Doucet (groin). LIMITED: WR Steve Breaston (knee), LB Will Davis (head), RB Beanie Wells (knee). FULL: S Hamza Abdullah (hamstring), LB Clark Haggans (heel), DE Kenny Iwebema (knee). SAN DIEGO CHARGERS at SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — CHARGERS: DNP: WR Malcom Floyd (leg), RB Ryan Mathews (ankle). LIMITED: LB Stephen Cooper (knee). SEAHAWKS: OUT: LB Leroy Hill (calf, Achilles). DNP: RB Quinton Ganther (knee), LB Will Herring (not injury related), T Russell Okung (ankle). LIMITED: LB Matt McCoy (quadricep). FULL: G Ben Hamilton (knee), G Chester Pitts (knee), WR Mike Williams (thigh). NEW YORK JETS at MIAMI DOLPHINS — JETS: OUT: LB Calvin Pace (foot), CB Darrelle Revis (hamstring). DNP: T Wayne Hunter (shin), C Nick Mangold (shoulder). LIMITED: LB Jason Taylor (elbow). DOLPHINS: DNP: G John Jerry (illness), DT Jared Odrick (ankle). LIMITED: LB Channing Crowder (groin).

ACC standings All Times EDT ATLANTIC DIVISION W Wake 1 NC State 0 Boston Col. 0 Clemson 0 Florida St. 0 Maryland 0

Conf. L PF PA 0 54 48 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

W 2 3 2 2 2 2

Overall L PF PA 1 131 129 0 106 47 0 64 33 1 117 58 1 110 63 1 96 48

COASTAL DIVISION Ga. Tech Miami Virginia Va. Tech Duke N. Carolina

W 1 0 0 0 0 0

Conf. L PF 0 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 48 1 24

PA 24 0 0 0 54 30

W 2 1 1 1 1 0

Overall L PF PA 1 96 62 1 69 36 1 48 30 2 95 81 2 102 143 2 48 60

Thursday, Sept. 16 N.C. State 30, Cincinnati 19

Saturday, Sept. 18 West Virginia 31, Maryland 17 Georgia Tech 30, North Carolina 24 Virginia Tech 49, East Carolina 27 Alabama 62, Duke 13 Florida St. 34, BYU 10 Auburn 27, Clemson 24 (OT) Stanford 68, Wake Forest 24

Thursday, Sept. 23 Miami (ESPN)

at

Pittsburgh,

7:30

p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 25 N.C. State at Georgia Tech, noon (ESPN) Florida International at Maryland, noon (ESPNU) Virginia Tech at Boston College, noon VMI at Virginia, 1:30 p.m. Army at Duke, 3 p.m. North Carolina at Rutgers, 3:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Wake Forest at Florida State, 3:30 p.m. (ABC, WXLV, Ch. 45)

Saturday, Oct. 2 Duke at Maryland, 6 p.m. East Carolina at North Carolina, 3:30 p.m. Georgia Tech at Wake Forest, 7 p.m. Notre Dame at Boston College, 8 p.m. Virginia Tech at N.C. State, TBD Florida State at Virginia, TBD Miami at Clemson, TBD

Saturday, Oct. 9 Boston College at N.C. State Central Michigan at Virginia Tech Clemson at North Carolina Florida State at Miami Navy at Wake Forest Virginia at Georgia Tech

Saturday, Oct. 16 N.C. State at East Carolina, 12 p.m. (CBSCS) Boston College at Florida State Maryland at Clemson Miami at Duke Middle Tennessee State at Georgia Tech North Carolina at Virginia Wake Forest at Virginia Tech

Saturday, Oct. 23 Duke at Virginia Tech Eastern Michigan at Virginia Georgia Tech at Clemson Maryland at Boston College North Carolina at Miami

Thursday, Oct. 28 Florida State at N.C. State, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Saturday, Oct. 30 Clemson at Boston College Duke at Navy Miami at Virginia Wake Forest at Maryland William & Mary at North Carolina

Thursday, Nov. 4 Georgia Tech at Virginia Tech, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Saturday, Nov. 6 Boston College at Wake Forest Maryland at Miami N.C. State at Clemson North Carolina at Florida State Virginia at Duke

Saturday, Nov. 13 Boston College at Duke Clemson at Florida State Maryland at Virginia Miami at Georgia Tech Virginia Tech at North Carolina Wake Forest at N.C. Stat

Top 25 schedule Thursday’s Game No. 19 Miami at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. Friday’s Games No. 4 TCU at SMU, 8 p.m. Saturday’s Games No. 1 Alabama at No. 10 Arkansas, 3:30 p.m. No. 2 Ohio State vs. Eastern Michigan, 3:30 p.m No. 3 Boise State vs. No. 24 Oregon State, 8 p.m. No. 5 Oregon at Arizona State, 10:30 p.m. No. 6 Nebraska vs. S. Dakota St., 7 p.m. No. 7 Oklahoma at Cincinnati, 6 p.m. No. 8 Texas vs. UCLA, 3:30 p.m. No. 9 Florida vs. Kentucky, 7 p.m. No. 11 Wisconsin vs. Austin Peay, Noon No. 12 South Carolina at No. 17 Auburn, 7:45 p.m. No. 13 Utah vs. San Jose State, 8 p.m. No. 14 Arizona vs. California, 10 p.m. No. 15 LSU vs. No. 22 West Virginia, 9 p.m. No. 16 Stanford at Notre Dame, 3:30 p.m.

No. 18 Iowa vs. Ball State, Noon No. 20 Southern Cal at Washington State, 3 p.m. No. 21 Michigan vs. Bowling Green, Noon No. 23 Penn State vs. Temple, 3:30 p.m. No. 25 Michigan State vs. Northern Colorado, Noon

College schedule All Times EDT (Subject to change) Thursday, Sept. 23 EAST Miami (1-1) at Pittsburgh (1-1),late Friday, Sept. 24 SOUTHWEST TCU (3-0) at SMU (2-1), 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 25 EAST Virginia Tech (1-2) at Boston College (20), Noon Bryant (3-0) at Cent. Connecticut St. (12), Noon Buffalo (1-2) at Connecticut (1-2), Noon Albany, N.Y. (1-1) at Duquesne (2-1), Noon Morehead St. (1-2) at Marist (1-1), Noon Lehigh (2-1) at New Hampshire (1-2), Noon Robert Morris (2-1) at Wagner (1-1), Noon Towson (1-2) at Columbia (0-1), 12:30 p.m. Yale (1-0) at Cornell (0-1), 12:30 p.m. Assumption (3-0) at Fordham (2-1), 1 p.m. Old Dominion (1-2) at Monmouth, N.J. (02), 1 p.m. Sacred Heart (1-2) at Dartmouth (1-0), 1:30 p.m. Holy Cross (1-2) at Georgetown, D.C. (21), 2 p.m. Morgan St. (1-2) vs. Howard (0-3) at East Rutherford, N.J., 2 p.m. Temple (3-0) at Penn St. (2-1), 3:30 p.m. North Carolina (0-2) at Rutgers (2-0), 3:30 p.m. Colgate (1-1) at Syracuse (2-1), 3:30 p.m. Harvard (1-0) at Brown (1-0), 6 p.m. William & Mary (2-1) at Maine (1-2), 6 p.m. Lafayette (0-2) at Princeton (0-1), 6 p.m. Massachusetts (2-1) at Stony Brook (1-2), 6 p.m. Penn (1-0) at Villanova (2-1), 7 p.m. SOUTH N.C. State (3-0) at Georgia Tech (2-1), Noon Fla. International (0-2) at Maryland (2-1), Noon North Greenville (1-3) at Presbyterian (03), Noon UAB (1-2) at Tennessee (1-2), 12:21 p.m. Georgia St. (1-2) at Campbell (1-2), 1 p.m. Jacksonville (2-1) at Davidson (1-2), 1 p.m. VMI (1-1) at Virginia (1-1), 1:30 p.m. The Citadel (2-1) at Furman (1-1), 2 p.m. Albany St., Ga. (3-0) vs. Savannah St. (03) at Waycross, Ga., 2 p.m. Alabama St. (3-0) at Alcorn St. (1-0), 3 p.m. Army (2-1) at Duke (1-2), 3 p.m. Appalachian St. (3-0) at Samford (2-1), 3 p.m. Tennessee St. (1-2) vs. Florida A&M (2-1) at Atlanta, 3:30 p.m. Wake Forest (2-1) at Florida St. (2-1), 3:30 p.m. Delaware (3-0) at Richmond (1-1), 3:30 p.m. Arkansas St. (1-2) at Troy (1-2), 3:30 p.m. Norfolk St. (2-1) at Bethune-Cookman (20), 4 p.m. Bacone (1-2) at Nicholls St. (0-3), 5 p.m. Delaware St. (0-2) at Coastal Carolina (03), 6 p.m. Elon (1-2) at Georgia Southern (2-1), 6 p.m. Liberty (2-1) at James Madison (2-0), 6 p.m. N. Carolina A&T (0-3) at N.C. Central (12), 6 p.m. Chattanooga (1-2) at W. Carolina (1-2), 6 p.m. Southern U. (1-1) at Alabama A&M (1-2), 7 p.m. Kentucky (3-0) at Florida (3-0), 7 p.m. North Texas (0-3) at Florida Atlantic (1-1), 7 p.m. MVSU (0-3) at Jackson St. (2-1), 7 p.m. Southern Miss. (2-1) at Louisiana Tech (1-2), 7 p.m. Middle Tennessee (1-2) at Louisiana-Lafayette (1-1), 7 p.m. SE Louisiana (1-2) at Louisiana-Monroe (0-1), 7 p.m. Ohio (1-2) at Marshall (0-3), 7 p.m. Georgia (1-2) at Mississippi St. (1-2), 7 p.m. Tenn.-Martin (1-2) at Murray St. (0-3), 7 p.m. W. Kentucky (0-3) at South Florida (1-1), 7:05 p.m. Fresno St. (2-0) at Mississippi (1-2), 7:30 p.m. South Carolina (3-0) at Auburn (3-0), 7:45 p.m. Cal Poly (2-1) at McNeese St. (1-1), 8 p.m. West Virginia (3-0) at LSU (3-0), 9 p.m. MIDWEST Ball St. (1-2) at Iowa (2-1), Noon Bowling Green (1-2) at Michigan (3-0), Noon N. Colorado (2-1) at Michigan St. (3-0), Noon Cent. Michigan (2-1) at Northwestern (30), Noon Toledo (2-1) at Purdue (2-1), Noon Austin Peay (2-1) at Wisconsin (3-0), Noon UCF (2-1) at Kansas St. (3-0), 12:30 p.m. Miami (Ohio) (2-1) at Missouri (3-0), 2 p.m. Drake (1-2) at Valparaiso (0-3), 2 p.m. Jacksonville St. (3-0) at E. Illinois (0-3), 2:30 p.m. Stanford (3-0) at Notre Dame (1-2), 3:30 p.m. E. Michigan (0-3) at Ohio St. (3-0), 3:30 p.m. Indiana St. (1-1) at W. Illinois (2-1), 4 p.m. S. Illinois (1-2) at Youngstown St. (2-1), 4 p.m. Northwestern St. (1-2) at North Dakota (1-2), 5 p.m. Oklahoma (3-0) at Cincinnati (1-2), 6 p.m. Central St., Ohio (1-2) at Dayton (2-1), 7 p.m. Missouri St. (1-1) at Illinois St. (2-1), 7 p.m. Akron (0-3) at Indiana (2-0), 7 p.m. N. Iowa (1-1) at Iowa St. (1-2), 7 p.m. New Mexico St. (0-2) at Kansas (1-2), 7 p.m. South Dakota (2-1) at N. Dakota St. (2-1), 7 p.m. S. Dakota St. (0-2) at Nebraska (3-0), 7 p.m. Tennessee Tech (1-2) at SE Missouri (21), 7 p.m. N. Illinois (1-2) at Minnesota (1-2), 8:30 p.m. SOUTHWEST Tuskegee (2-1) at Texas Southern (1-2), 2 p.m. Alabama (3-0) at Arkansas (2-0), 3:30 p.m. Tulane (1-1) at Houston (2-1), 3:30 p.m. UCLA (1-2) at Texas (3-0), 3:30 p.m. Clark Atlanta (2-1) vs. Ark.-Pine Bluff (0-2) at St. Louis, 4 p.m. Grambling St. (1-1) vs. Prairie View (1-2) at Dallas, 7 p.m. Gardner-Webb (1-1) at Sam Houston St. (0-2), 7 p.m. Lamar (2-1) at Stephen F.Austin (2-1), 7 p.m. S. Utah (1-2) at Texas St. (2-1), 7 p.m. Cent. Arkansas (3-0) at Tulsa (1-2), 7 p.m. Baylor (2-1) at Rice (1-2), 8 p.m. Memphis (1-2) at UTEP (2-1), 9:05 p.m. FAR WEST Air Force (2-1) at Wyoming (1-2), 2 p.m. Sacramento St. (2-1) at Montana (1-2), 3 p.m. Southern Cal (3-0) at Washington St. (12), 3 p.m. E. Washington (2-1) at Montana St. (2-1), 3:05 p.m. Idaho (2-1) at Colorado St. (0-3), 4 p.m. N. Arizona (1-1) at Idaho St. (1-2), 5:35 p.m. Nevada (3-0) at BYU (1-2), 6 p.m. Oregon St. (1-1) at Boise St. (2-0), 8 p.m. Utah St. (1-2) at San Diego St. (2-1), 8 p.m. San Jose St. (1-2) at Utah (3-0), 8 p.m. UC Davis (1-2) at Weber St. (1-2), 8 p.m. Butler (2-1) at San Diego (0-3), 9 p.m. California (2-1) at Arizona (3-0), 10 p.m. New Mexico (0-3) at UNLV (0-3), 10 p.m. Oregon (3-0) at Arizona St. (2-1), 10:30 p.m. Charleston Southern (2-1) at Hawaii (1-2), 11:30 p.m.

TRIVIA ANSWER

---

A. Duke.


SPORTS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 www.hpe.com

3D

Wheatmore, Wesleyan, Ledford net victories ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

Westchester plays host to High Point Christian Academy today at 6:30 p.m.

TENNIS WHEATMORE 9, PROVIDENCE GROVE 0

NW GUILFORD 5. RAGSDALE 0

TRINITY – Wheatmore ran its record to 9-1 with a 9-0 blanking of Providence Grove on Thursday. Jessica VanLeuvan, Ashton Allen, Heather Griffin, Lane Vecellio, Mary Vecellio and Brook Herring won in singles for the Warriors. GriffinL. Vecellio, Van LeuvanAllen and M. VecellioLaurel Idol prevailed in doubles. Wheatmore plays at West Stanly on Monday afternoon.

JAMESTOWN – Northwest Guilford defeated Ragsdale 5-0 on Thursday night. Brad Davis made 10 saves in goal for the Tigers (2-10-2). Ragsdale plays host to Trinity on Tuesday.

HP CENTRAL 10, PARKLAND 0

WESLEYAN 8, SW GUILFORD 1 HIGH POINT – Wesleyan Christian Academy netted an 8-1 victory over Southwest Guilford on Thursday. Ginny Brodd, Morgan Speight, Sydney Brodeur, Dakota Griffin and Morgan Allred won in singles for the Trojans (4-3). Brodd-Speight, Brodeur-Allred and Griffin-Lauren Southards notched doubles triumphs for WCA. For the Cowgirls (5-8), Paola Ibe posted a singles triumph.

LEDFORD 8, NORTH DAVIDSON 1 WELCOME – Ledford swept the singles en route to an 8-1 victory at North Davidson on Thursday night. Kathryn Stroup, Elona Jones, Katherine Sullivan, Drew Sapp, Brielle Anthony and Logan Allen won in singles for the Panthers. Stroup-Sapp and JonesSullivan prevailed in doubles for Ledford.

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Sherry McKinney rings a cowbell to show support for a High Point Christian Academy cross country runner during Thursday’s meet held at Gibson Park. SOUTHERN GUILFORD 9, T.W. ANDREWS 1 HIGH POINT – Southern Guilford topped T.W. Andrews 9-0 on Thursday. Christina Perry, Lindsey Rose, Samantha Wall, Francesca Riker, Tidara Morazme and Rosie Zitare won in singles for the Storm. Perry-Wall, RoseRiker and Morasme-Miranda Major took doubles victories. Andrews (0-8) plays at Trinity on Monday at 4:30 p.m.

HIGH POINT – Salem Baptist secured a 25-19, 27-25, 25-10 victory over Westchester Country Day School on Thursday. The Wildcats moved to 8-6 on the season and play host to Salem Academy on Monday at 6 p.m.

VOLLEYBALL

TRINITY DEF. ATKINS

HPCA DEF. HICKORY GROVE

HIGH POINT – Asheboro downed High Point Central 6-3 on Thursday. Maja Salcin won in singles for the Bison (3-9). Hannah Howell-Salcin and Megan PattersonGrace Jung prevailed in doubles for the homestanding Bison. Central plays host to Parkland on Monday at 4:30 p.m.

CHARLOTTE – High Point Christian Academy outlasted Hickory Grove for a 20-25, 22-25, 25-19, 25-16, 15-8 victory on Thursday. Bethany Gesell led the Cougars (15-4) with 22 kills, seven aces and five blocks. Kathryn Cox added eight kills and five blocks for HPCA, while Macy Scarborough had 39 assists and four aces. Claire Phipps had seven kills and four blocks. HPCA plays host to Durham Academy today in “Dig For A Cure” night. The game will raise money and awareness for breast cancer research. Call HPCA at 841-8702 for more details.

COVENANT DAY 8, HPCA 1

WEST DAVIDSON DEF. EAST DAVIDSON

HIGH POINT – Covenant Day topped High Point Christian Academy 8-1 on Thursday. Sydney Curry won in singles for the Cougars.

THOMASVILLE – West Davidson posted a 25-14, 25-9, 25-23 victory over East Davidson on Thursday. Taylor Alexander an

ASHEBORO 6, HP CENTRAL 3

Chelsea Turner had three kills each for the Golden Eagles (2-12, 2-2 CCC 2A). East plays at Randleman on Monday.

SALEM BAPTIST DEF. WESTCHESTER

TRINITY – Trinity downed Atkins 25-6, 23-25, 25-12, 25-12 on Thursday. The Bulldogs improved to 3-10.

RAGSDALE DEF. PARKLAND JAMESTOWN – Ciara Jackson led a balanced attack with 13 kills and five blocks as Ragsdale stopped Parkland 25-17, 25-13, 25-8 on Thursday. Morgan Hooks added seven kills and three blocks for the Tigers (104, 5-2 PTC 4A). Caity Kerr had five kills. Ragsdale plays host to T.W. Andrews on Monday.

SOUTHERN GUILFORD DEF. SW RANDOLPH SUMNER – Southern Guilford stormed past Southwestern Randolph for a 25-20, 29-27, 25-20 victory o Monday. Rachel Earnhardt finished with 26 kills, six blocks and six digs for the Storm (9-3). Karley Hyatt added 10 digs and eight kills, while Peyton Daly

had 10 digs and Audrey Earnhardt had 24 assists and nine digs. Southern plays at High Point Central on Monday.

EAST FORSYTH DEF. HP CENTRAL HIGH POINT – East Forsyth stopped High Point Central 25-7, 25-15, 25-19 on Thursday night. The Bison play host to Southern Guilford on Monday.

RANDLEMAN DEF. WHEATMORE TRINITY – Randleman scored a 25-19, 25-18, 25-14 victory over Wheatmore on Thursday. Brittany Rich tallied 15 kills, eight digs and six aces for the Tigers (14-1, 4-0 conference). Logan Douglas had 12 digs and nine aces for Randleman. The Tigers also took the junior varsity match, winning 19-25, 25-21, 25-13 to improve to 13-1, 3-0.

SOCCER WESTCHESTER 5, CAROLINA FRIENDS 1 HIGH POINT – Jose Vanencia recorded the hat trick and Angel Valencia dished two assists as Westchester Country Day School defeated Carolina Friends 5-1 on Thursday night. George Freiberger and Lasse Palomaki added one goal each for the Wildcats (10-2). Kevin Permenter and Matt Crooker each had an assist for WCDS. Dylan Gaffney made three saves in goal for the Wildcats.

HIGH POINT – Denys Guerrero scored three goals and dished two assists, while Austin Miller collected three goals and an assist as High Point Central cruised past Parkland 10-0 on Thursday night. Max Law notched a goal and three assists for the Bison (11-1, 2-1 PTC 4A). Caleb Green and Maki Kafi had a goal apiece, while Grant Faytol, Chris Boyarizo, Scott Faytol and Seth Cranford dished one assist apiece. Brandon Couden served in Bison goal.

CROSS COUNTRY AT GIBSON PARK GREENSBORO – Team buses broke down as the heat was unseasonable, but all of the nearly 50 high school runners that got to the race were able to make it through the finish of the hot and hilly 3 mile cross country course at Gibson Park Thursday. The Salem Baptist bus dropped the volleyball team off at Westchester Country Day School’s gym, but broke down on the way to the cross country course and was unable to get to the meet. Trinity Academy’s bus suffered a flat tire on the way to the meet, but enough parents were following in cars to get them to the race. When the race started, the boys of High Point Christian Academy set a pace more torrid than

the unseasonable heat as they swept the top five places in the boys’ competition with David Loy winning in a time of 18:18, followed by teammate Connor Flater in 18:31, Will Cliff in 18:46, Davis Pack in 19:06 and Austen Zente in 19:23. Chris Anderson of host Westchester Country Day School finished 6th in a time of 20:15. Other Wildcat finishers were: Luke Vandeplancke, 10th, 23:35; Aaron Caffey, 18th, 24:48; Cameron Ball, 19th, 28:22 and Bo Henley, 21st, 29:44. HPCA won the boys’ meet with 15 points followed by Trinity with 60 who edged Westchester with 62. Avery Goho of Westchester was just as hot winning the girls competition by more than a minute as she finished with a time of 22:25. Other Wildcat finishers were Carson Thorn in 9th, 25:30; Mary Marshall Fariss in 11th, 26:38; Leigh Tyson in 17th, 20:08; Julia Ormond 20th, 31:23 and Anna Hood, 21st in 31:29. Sydney Harris and Abby Cliff led HPCA finishers in 6th and 7th with times of 24:34 and 24:35 respectively followed by teammates Courtney Hale, 14th, 27:58 and Tess Allison, 15th, 29:00, but did not have enough runners to figure in the team scoring. Salem Academy won the girls competition with 37 points followed by Trinity Academy with 41 and Westchester with 46.

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DCCC takes marathon volleyball win ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

WINSTON-SALEM – The last of Megan Everhart’s 22 kills provided the match-winning point as Davidson County Community College defeated

Piedmont Baptist in four games on Thursday night. The Storm won 25-15, 13-25, 25-17, 35-33. Everhart also had two blocks, two aces and two assists for the Storm (9-

3). Katie Watins collected 14 kills and five blocks for DCCC, while Kelsey Templeton had 36 assists and a kill. Lauren Leonard notched six kills and two

aces, while Jacqueline Thompson had seven kills and two blocks for the Storm. The same teams play again on Monday at 6 p.m. at DCCC.

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SPORTS 4D www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

NASCAR Hall’s second class to be named Oct. 13 BY GREER SMITH ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

The public can attend the announcement with purchase of a general admission ticket to the Hall.

MOTORSPORTS NOTEBOOK: Final voting that will decide the NASCAR Hall of Fame’s second class of inductees is slated Oct. 13th, with announcement of the selections to be carried on Speed from the Hall that day at 4 p.m. The announcement is slated the day before action starts at Charlotte Motor Speedway with qualifying for the Oct. 16 Bank of American 500. Among the 25 nominees, David Pearson is a considered a lock after being passed over in favor of Bill France the younger last year.

CREW CHIEF CHANGE Roush-Fenway Racing announced Drew Blickensderfer is getting another shot as crew chief, replacing Donnie Wingo in that position on the No. 6 Fords driven by David Ragan. Blickensderfer most recently served as crew chief for Carl Edwards in the Nationwide Series. His previous first stint as a Cup crew chief began in storybook fashion as he guided Matt Kenseth to victory in last year’s Daytona 500 and the following week at Auto Club Speedway in California. The magic ended

Casey seeks another prize ATLANTA (AP) – Paul Casey won’t be going to the Ryder Cup. He wouldn’t mind a $10 million consolation. Casey was the only player among the top five in the FedEx Cup standings to break par Thursday, running off three straight birdies around the turn at East Lake for a 4-under 66 and a share of the lead with Geoff Ogilvy and Luke Donald in the Tour Championship. It was the seventh time Casey has shot in the 60s in the nine rounds since European captain Colin Montgomerie left him off the Ryder Cup team. Whether that’s motivating him to play well, the Englishman isn’t saying. A different kind of cup does have his attention. At stake in this playoff finale is a $10 million bonus to the FedEx Cup champion. The top five in the standings – Casey got to No. 5 with his runner-up finish two weeks ago at Cog Hill – can claim golf’s biggest payoff by winning, no matter what anyone else does. “I’ve got an opportunity to accomplish one of the goals which I set for myself at the beginning of the year,� Casey said. “I’m just trying to put myself in that position to win and then tick off that goal, which would be a huge goal. I’m not get-

ting wrapped up in any sort of extra motivation. I don’t need extra motivation. I’m motivated enough.� Breaking par was hard work on a difficult course in steamy conditions. The fairways are fast and more narrow than ever, and only nine players in the 30man field broke 70. One of them was defending champion Phil Mickelson, who has an outside chance to win the FedEx Cup and a better chance to replace Tiger Woods at No. 1 in the world. Woods did not qualify for the Tour Championship for the first time in his career. Mickelson had two eagles in a span of four holes, including a shot he holed from the fairway on No. 12. Not so good was making bogey after both eagles, along with consecutive bogeys after his first birdie of the tournament. He shot 69, not a bad start. “It’s a better position than I started last year,� said Mickelson, who opened with a 73 and went on to a three-shot victory. “Could have been better, could have been worse, and it was an interesting day.� Jim Furyk had a 67, while K.J. Choi was at 68. The group at 69 included Hunter Mahan, Jason Day, Kevin Na and Mickelson.

Edfors surges into first-round lead at Vivendi Cup CHAMBOURCY, France (AP) – Sweden’s Johan Edfors shot an 11-under 61 to open a two-shot lead after the first round of the Vivendi Cup on Thursday. David Dixon was in second place, followed another stroke back by John Parry and Jean-Francois Remesey. All four of those players played their rounds on the Marly course, while Chris Gane posted the best effort on the slightly longer Retz course with a 7-under 65. Padraig Harrington is the only member of Europe’s Ryder Cup team at the Golf de Joyenval Club, following the withdrawal of Peter Hanson due to illness. Harrington shot 4-under 68.

The Irishman added the event to his schedule at late notice in a bid to find some form ahead of next week’s Ryder Cup, and despite three-putting from close on three occasions, he said he was satisfied with his effort. Parry, who is in his first season on the European Tour, said he also was thinking of 59. The Vivendi Cup, which has a pro-am format for the first two rounds, is being played on two courses, both of which are much shorter than those found at most normal European tournament venues. The Marly course is just 6,754 yards while the Retz is 6,811 yards.

Panthers’ Davis wishes he’d worn knee brace CHARLOTTE (AP) – Thomas Davis glanced down at the large knee brace in front of his locker on Thursday and shook his head. The Carolina Panthers linebacker is convinced that if he had been wearing it in June, he wouldn’t be sweating through a second grueling rehabilitation from a torn knee ligament in seven months. Davis thinks that bulky brace would have allowed him to be preparing for Sunday’s game against Cincinnati

when Kenseth finished last in his next start at Las Vegas. Kenseth struggled the rest of the year and Blickensderfer was demoted.

instead of vowing to return sometime in November. “If I had it on I don’t think we’d be standing here talking about a second surgery, Davis said. It was the lone moment Davis strayed from his upbeat tone. He had just finished what he called his first pain-free, fullspeed running session. He glanced over at the schedule on the wall in the back of the locker room and pointed at Nov. 14 at Tampa Bay as the target date for his return.

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POINTS MATTERS Junior Kendrick of Thomasvillle captured the Limited Late Model title at Caraway. ... The PASS South series resumes Saturday at Hickory Speedway, with Ryan Blaney as the standings leader by six points over Preston Peltier. ... L.W.Miller is eight points ahead of Andy Suess in NASCAR Southern Modified Tour standings heading into Saturday’s race at Tri-County Motor Speedway near Hudson. . ... Burt Myers won the North Carolina championship for fea-

tured division drivers at all NASCAR tracks in the state. Lee Jeffreys was second as Bowman Gray Stadium drivers swept the top six spots. Andy Mercer of Hickory Speedway was the top late model driver in seventh with Swaim eighth. ... After winning last Sunday at zMax Dragway to remain perfect in 11 NHRA Top Fuel final round appearances this season, Larry Dixon has an 85-point lead going into this weekend’s action in Ennis, Texas. John Force is four points ahead in Funny Car, with Mike Anderson 22 up in Pro Stock and Andrew Hines leading by 66 in Pro Stock Bike. gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3556

LANGER LOOKING FOR SCHWAB CUP PUSH AT SAS

---

CARY (AP) – Bernhard Langer hopes a strong showing at this week’s SAS Championship will propel him to the elusive Schwab Cup. “I came close the last two years, and I had chances to be there, but I missed a few events that some guys didn’t,� said Langer, the Champions Tour’s player of the year in 2008 and ’09. “The year has been very good – not that the last two years weren’t. But this one was a little bit more special with the two majors, back-to-back wins.� Langer has five victories this year, including the Senior British Open and the U.S. Senior Open. He has a 575-point lead over Champions Tour rookie Fred Couples in the chase for the Schwab Cup and its $1 million payday. Both will have to contend with the strongest field to play Prestonwood Country Club. Eight World Golf Hall of Famers are in suburban Raleigh for the SAS, which starts today. Tom Pernice Jr. also is back to defend his title. He claimed a one-stroke victory last year by draining a 35-foot birdie putt on the final hole. There are five events left before the season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship. Couples says he hopes to chip into Langer’s lead on the points list. “If I’m this close to winning the Schwab Cup, I might as well keep playing, although I’ve missed a couple of majors by not going to them,� said Couples, the first player to win three of his first four starts on the Champions Tour. “I still have a shot at catching Bernhard, but it’s going to take some unbelievable golf.� Couples, who turned 50 last October, has bounced between the Champions and PGA tours this year.

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PHaynes@hpe.com (336) 888-3617

5D

New jobless claims rise WASHINGTON (AP) – The tally of newly laid-off workers requesting unemployment benefits rose last week for the first time in five weeks as the job market remains sluggish. Initial claims for jobless aid rose by 12,000 to a seasonally adjusted 465,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. Many economists had expected a flat reading or small drop. The rise suggests that jobs remain scarce and some companies are still cutting workers amid weak economic growth. Initial claims have fallen from a recent spike above a half-million last month. But they have been stuck above 450,000 for most of this year.

BRIEFS

---

Verizon iPhone likely not coming soon NEW YORK (AP) – Comments from Verizon Communications Inc. CEO Ivan Seidenberg on Thursday left little room for the possibility of a Verizon version of the iPhone any time soon. Speaking to investors at a Goldman Sachs conference, Seidenberg said nothing about an iPhone for the company’s current network, but said he hopes Apple Inc. will come around and allow Verizon to sell the phone for a new network it is building.

Avis makes bigger bid for Dollar Thrifty PARSIPPANY, N.J. (AP) – Avis raised its offer for Dollar Thrifty to $1.52 billion in cash and stock Thursday, one week before a scheduled vote by shareholders on a bid from rival car rental company Hertz. The latest offer from Avis values Dollar thrifty at $53 per share, compared with a $50 per-share offer from Hertz. The rental-car rivals are fighting for control of Dollar Thrifty to gain additional access to vacationers and premium business travelers.

Leading indicators rise in August NEW YORK (AP) – A gauge of future economic activity rose modestly in August, suggesting that slow economic growth will continue this winter. The Conference Board, a private research group, said Thursday its index of leading economic indicators increased 0.3 percent last month after rising 0.1 percent in July.

DILBERT

“What’s becoming increasing clear is that this isn’t a normal recovery,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak. “There’s little we can do to create jobs until demand returns, and demand isn’t returning.” Claims typically fall below 400,000 when hiring is robust and the economy is growing. The four-week average of claims, a less volatile measure, declined by 3,250 to 463,250. That’s the lowest level since the end of July, but down by only 4,000 since January. Initial claims, while volatile, are considered a real-time snapshot of the job market. The weekly

claims figures are considered a measure of the pace of layoffs and an indication of companies’ willingness to hire. New requests for jobless benefits have fallen sharply since June 2009, the month the recession ended. They topped 600,000 at the end of that month. But most of the decline took place last year. Economic growth has slowed considerably in recent months, and many employers are reluctant to add new employees. The economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate in the second quarter, an anemic pace that isn’t fast enough to reduce the jobless rate, now at 9.6 percent.

Debt, changing market topple Blockbuster NEW YORK (AP) – Blockbuster Inc., once the dominant movie rental company in the U.S., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Thursday, reeling from mounting losses, rising debt and competitors that have better catered to Americans’ changed media habits. For now, Blockbuster will continue to operate its 3,300 U.S. stores, although analysts expect hundreds of them to close under new owners led by billionaire investor Carl Icahn. The Dallas-based company has about 25,500 employees, including 7,500 full-time workers. The prepackaged bankruptcy case, in the works since the spring, marks the end of an era that Blockbuster and its gold-and-blue torn ticket logo helped establish. Americans used to troop to video stores on Friday for the latest movies. Now, they’re skipping

Blockbuster and watching movies from DVD-bymail services like Netflix Inc., cable video on demand and Redbox vending machines. The bankruptcy, filed in New York, will wipe out Blockbuster’s badly battered stock, which was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange two months ago because it was nearly worthless. Icahn and his group own 80 percent of top-priority Blockbuster debt, with a face value of $675 million. Under the proposed reorganization plan, they will get new stock and control of Blockbuster’s board in return for forgiving the debt. This marks the second time that Icahn has tried to turn around Blockbuster. He pushed Blockbuster to build up its DVD-by-mail service after acquiring a 10 percent stake in the company in 2005, only to see the chain get into deeper trouble.

Home sales remain weak WASHINGTON (AP) – Sales of previously occupied homes rose last month, but not enough to keep August from being the second-worst month for sales in more than a decade. Sales rose 7.6 percent in August from July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.13 million, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday. Sales were down 19 percent from

the same month a year earlier. July was the worst month for sales in 15 years. That was unchanged by a slightly upward revision. High unemployment and a record number of foreclosures have kept the economy from gaining strength since the recession ended. Those factors have also deterred many people from buying homes.

LOCAL FUNDS % Chg.

50-day Average

AMERICAN BALANCED FUND, CLASS A 16.75 - 0.09

- 0.53%

16.48

16.45

AMERICAN FDS BOND FD OF AMERICA 12.44 0.00

0.00%

12.39

12.15

CAPITAL INCOME BUILDER CL A SHS 48.37 - 0.19

- 0.39%

47.52

46.85

AMERICAN FDS CAPITAL WORLD GROW 33.60 - 0.20

- 0.59%

32.54

32.34

AMERICAN FDS EUROPACIFIC GROWTH 38.93 - 0.12

- 0.31%

37.33

36.80

FUNDAMENTAL INVESTORS, CLASS A 32.98 - 0.23

- 0.69%

32.21

32.55

AMERICAN FDS GROWTH FD OF AMERI 27.41 - 0.16

- 0.58%

26.63

27.15

AMERICAN FDS INCOME FD OF AMERI 15.82 - 0.07

- 0.44%

15.60

15.48

AMERICAN FDS INVESTMENT CO OF A 25.58 - 0.17

- 0.66%

25.03

25.48

AMERICAN FDS NEW PERSPECTIVE A 26.11 - 0.10

- 0.38%

25.11

25.10

WASHINGTON MUTUAL INVS FD CL A 25.07 - 0.21

- 0.83%

24.46

24.60

DAVIS NEW YORK VENTURE FUND A 30.79 - 0.21

- 0.68%

30.09

30.80

DODGE COX INCOME FUND 13.49 0.00

0.00%

13.40

13.25

DODGE COX INTERNATIONAL STOCK 32.70 - 0.35

- 1.06%

31.56

31.20

DODGE COX STOCK FUND 95.33

- 0.70

- 0.73%

93.05

96.33

FIDELITY CONTRA FUND 61.23

Name

Last

Change

200-day Average

- 0.17

- 0.28%

58.55

58.88

FIDELITY DIVERSIFIED INTERNATIO 27.79 - 0.18

- 0.64%

26.71

26.59

FIDELITY FREEDOM 2020 FUND 12.94 - 0.05

- 0.38%

12.66

12.68

FIDELITY GROWTH CO FUND 73.13 - 0.08

- 0.11%

69.81

70.65

FIDELITY LOWPRICED STOCK FUND 33.89 - 0.20

- 0.59%

32.88

33.46

FIDELITY MAGELLAN 62.95

- 0.52%

61.05

63.71

TGIT TEMPTON INCOME FUND CLASS 2.68 - 0.01

- 0.33

- 0.37%

2.60

2.59

HARBOR INTERNATIONAL FUND INSTI 55.17 - 0.48

- 0.86%

53.16

52.52

PIMCO FUNDS TOTAL RETURN FUND C 11.56 0.00

0.00%

11.49

11.23

PIMCO FUNDS TOTAL RETURN FUND A 11.56 0.00

0.00%

11.49

11.23

PIMCO FUNDS TOTAL RETURN FUND I 11.56 0.00

0.00%

11.49

11.23

VANGUARD 500 INDEX FD ADMIRAL S 103.52 - 1.43

- 1.36%

101.39

103.40

VANGUARD INDEX TRUST 500 INDEX 103.52 - 1.40

- 1.33%

101.37

103.38

VANGUARD GNMA FUND ADMIRAL SHS 11.02 - 0.01

- 0.09%

11.05

VANGUARD INSTITUTIONAL INDEX 103.39 - 0.87

- 0.83%

100.72

102.71

VANGUARD INSTITUTIONAL INDEX FU 103.40 - 0.87

- 0.83%

100.73

102.72

VANGUARD MID CAP GROWTH FUND 16.46 - 0.07

- 0.42%

15.69

15.81

VANGUARD PRIMECAP FUND 59.38 - 0.31

- 0.52%

57.78

58.54

VANGUARD BOND INDEX FD TOTAL BO 10.87 0.01

0.09%

10.84

10.64

VANGUARD TOTAL INTERNATIONAL ST 14.62 - 0.11

- 0.75%

14.10

13.88

VANGUARD TOTAL STOCK MARKET IND 27.90 - 0.37

- 1.31%

27.29

27.87

VANGUARD WELLINGTON INCOME FUND 29.54 - 0.17

- 0.57%

29.06

29.07

VANGUARD WELLINGTON FD ADMIRAL 51.03 - 0.30

- 0.58%

50.19

50.22

VANGUARD WINDSOR II FUND 23.23 - 0.21

- 0.90%

22.73

23.54

10.92

Job numbers sink stocks NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks slumped Thursday on disappointment about a suprise jump in unemployment claims and more signs of trouble for Europe’s economy. The market got off to a bad start following an unexpected increase in unemployment benefits claims last week and a lower reading on business activity in the 16 countries that use the euro. More bad news came from Ireland, which reported that its economy shrank 1.2 percent in the second quarter. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 77 points. The late-day slide raised doubts about whether a three-week rally that vaulted stocks higher in September would hold. The Dow is still up 6.5 percent for the month, but 4.8 percent below its 2010 high reached on April 26. For the year, it’s up 2.2 percent. Traders were disappointed to see first-time unemployment claims rise last week, breaking a recent trend of declines. The Labor Department said claims jumped by 12,000 and are still at levels that signal employers are not significantly adding new jobs. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 76.89, or 0.7 percent, to close at 10,662.42. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 9.45.

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name

Symbol

Last

AT&T Aetna Alcatel-Lucent Alcoa Allstate AmEx AIG Ameriprisel Analog Devices Aon Corp. Apple Avon BB&T Corp. BNC Bancorp BP Bank of America Bassett Furniture Best Buy Boeing CBL & Asso. CSX Corp. CVS Caremark Capital One Caterpillar Inc. Chevron Corp. Cisco Systems Inc. Citigroup Coca-Cola Colgate-Palmolive Colonial Prop. Comcast Corp. Corning Inc. Culp Inc. Daimler AG Deere & Co. Dell Inc. Dillard’s Inc. Walt Disney Co. Duke Energy Corp Exxon Mobil Corp FNB United Corp. FedEx Corp. First Citizens Bank of NC Ford Fortune Brands Furniture Brands Gap Inc. General Dynamics General Electric GlaxoSmithKline Google Hanesbrands Harley-Davidson Hewlett-Packard Home Depot Hooker Furniture Intel IBM JP Morgan Chase Kellogg Kimberly-Clark Krispy Kreme La-Z-Boy LabCorp Lance

T 28.51 30.63 AET ALU 3.06 AA 11.74 ALL 30.45 AXP 42.36 AIG 35.07 AMP 45.85 ADI 29.45 AON 38.25 AAPL 288.92 AVP 31.8 BBT 23.63 BNCN 9.8 BP 38.13 BAC 13.17 BSET 4.74 BBY 38.63 BA 62.65 CBL 12.79 CSX 54.39 CVS 29.9 COF 37.67 CAT 76.26 CVX 78.54 CSCO 21.53 C 3.8 KO 57.87 CL 78.06 CLP 15.69 CMCSK 16.87 GLW 17.4 CFI 9.48 DDAIF.PK 58.6 DE 71.19 DELL 12.15 DDS 23.28 DIS 33.12 DUK 17.76 XOM 61.15 FNBN 0.76 FDX 82.66 FCNCA 181.65 F 12.31 FO 48.81 FBN 5 GPS 18.51 GD 61.98 GE 16.14 GSK 39.43 GOOG 513.48 HBI 23.59 HOG 27.32 HPQ 40.15 HD 30.84 HOFT 11.6 INTC 18.98 IBM 131.67 JPM 39.1 K 50.56 KMB 66.48 KKD 4.26 LZB 7.98 LH 75.9 LNCE 20.97

Chg.

High

Low

-0.08 -0.16 -0.03 0.04 -0.51 -0.43 -0.6 -0.67 0.14 -0.5 1.17 0.12 -0.03 -0.14 0.04 -0.25 -0.12 0.33 -1.25 -0.52 -1.01 -0.19 -0.22 0.08 -0.71 -0.14 -0.08 -0.36 -0.39 -0.62 0.02 0.24 0.21 -1.59 -0.89 -0.23 -0.21 -0.87 -0.22 -0.3 -0.11 -1.64 -1.35 -0.07 -0.62 -0.29 -0.12 -0.89 -0.36 -0.72 -2.52 -0.7 -0.41 0.6 -0.04 0.06 -0.03 -0.9 -0.84 -0.21 -0.28 -0.08 -0.07 -0.35 -0.17

28.75 30.98 3.09 12.16 30.99 43 35.86 46.49 29.97 38.97 292.76 32.02 24.26 10.12 38.35 13.43 4.85 39.25 63.49 13.3 55.23 30.35 38.41 77.5 79.37 21.81 3.89 58.29 78.43 16.29 17.13 17.83 9.54 59.26 72.57 12.36 23.82 33.73 18.05 61.57 0.91 84.42 183.99 12.45 49.37 5.33 18.72 62.85 16.39 40.51 519.69 24.06 27.88 40.67 31.09 11.63 19.31 132.78 39.7 50.8 66.81 4.4 8.28 76.79 21.21

28.45 30.4 3.02 11.48 30.41 42.21 35 45.76 28.76 38.23 286 31.32 23.28 9.76 37.84 13.12 4.57 37.75 62.56 12.73 54.21 29.78 37.4 75 78.16 21.43 3.8 57.72 77.64 15.64 16.59 16.95 9.25 58.35 70.51 12.12 23 33 17.71 60.9 0.76 82.37 180.71 12.15 48.67 5 18.33 61.86 16.05 39.01 511.3 23.26 27.05 39.09 30.58 11.27 18.75 131.22 38.99 50.25 66.1 4.22 7.86 75.75 20.81

Name

Symbol

Last

Chg.

High

Legg Mason Leggett & Platt Lincoln National Lowe’s McDonald’s Merck MetLife Microsoft Mohawk Industries Morgan Stanley Motorola NCR Corp. New York Times Co. NewBridge Bancorp Norfolk Southern Novartis AG Nucor Old Dominion Office Depot PPG Industries Panera Bread The Pantry J.C. Penney Pfizer Pepsico Piedmont Nat.Gas Polo Ralph Lauren Procter & Gamble Progress Energy Qualcomm Quest Capital RF Micro Devices Red Hat Reynolds American RBC Ruddick Corp. SCM Micro Sara Lee Sealy Sears Sherwin-Williams Southern Company Spectra Energy Sprint Nextel Standard Micro Starbucks Steelcase Inc. SunTrust Banks Syngenta AG Tanger Targacept Inc. Target 3M Co. Time Warner US Airways Unifi Inc. UPS Inc. VF Corp. Valspar Verizon Vodafone Vulcan Materials Wal-Mart Wells Fargo Yahoo Inc.

LM LEG LNC LOW MCD MRK MET MSFT MHK MS MOT NCR NYT NBBC NSC NVS NUE ODFL ODP PPG PNRA PTRY JCP PFE PEP PNY RL PG PGN QCOM QCC RFMD RHT RAI RY RDK INVE SLE ZZ SHLD SHW SO SE S SMSC SBUX SCS STI SYT SKT TRGT TGT MMM TWX LCC UFI UPS VFC VAL VZ VOD VMC WMT WFC YHOO

29.11 21.92 23.25 21.52 74.64 36.66 37.86 24.43 48.48 24.74 8.38 13.74 7.77 3.75 57.99 56.32 37 24.91 4.39 71.45 85.69 22.69 24.6 17.04 65.79 28.04 86.04 61.22 44.01 43.65 0 5.55 40.07 58.49 50.93 34.55 1.63 13.79 2.53 70.95 74.43 37 21.63 4.36 20.49 25.45 7.24 24.86 50.85 46.23 21.55 53.77 85.53 30.76 8.83 4.47 66.39 77.31 31.34 32.17 25.41 35.7 53.65 25.04 14.17

-0.47 -0.03 -0.69 -0.24 -0.49 -0.3 -1.53 -0.18 -0.83 -0.21 0.09 -0.06 0.32 0.1 -0.94 0.15 -0.84 -0.73 0.1 -0.63 -1.29 0 0.01 -0.18 -0.87 -0.34 -1.79 -0.57 -0.41 0.35 N/A -0.45 3.32 -0.83 -0.32 0.46 -0.06 -0.23 -0.13 -0.82 -1.04 -0.47 -0.24 -0.01 0 -0.48 0.7 -0.61 -0.13 -1.56 -0.59 -0.33 -1.1 -0.49 -0.13 -0.01 -1.13 -0.63 0.01 -0.22 -0.21 -1.1 -0.17 -0.77 0.13

29.72 22.42 23.84 21.9 75.43 36.99 39.11 24.59 49.76 25.33 8.41 13.99 7.79 3.75 58.9 56.66 37.64 25.63 4.67 72.32 87.54 23.31 24.92 17.24 66.19 28.57 87.79 61.58 44.36 43.75 N/A 5.91 41.48 59.05 51.48 34.87 1.69 13.98 2.72 72.17 75.6 37.4 21.91 4.48 20.95 26.18 7.93 25.65 51.26 47.58 22.5 54.35 86.75 31.23 9.01 4.51 67.24 77.94 31.75 32.6 25.59 36.63 53.92 25.67 14.24

Low 29.05 21.71 23.19 21.45 74.58 36.52 37.76 24.36 48.17 24.66 8.16 13.65 7.35 3.62 57.81 56.09 36.92 24.8 4.18 71.11 85.65 22.46 23.9 17.02 65.66 28.01 85.81 61.15 43.89 42.76 N/A 5.5 39.33 58.34 50.49 33.78 1.6 13.78 2.53 70.07 74.3 36.92 21.57 4.32 20.09 25.37 6.82 24.72 50.69 46.09 21.21 53.37 85.35 30.63 8.75 4.42 66.04 77.02 31 32.07 25.31 35.67 53.53 25.04 13.93

METALS PRICING NEW YORK (AP) — Spot nonferrous metal prices Thursday: Aluminum -$0.9788 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.4948 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $3.5585 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Lead - $2159.50 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.9654 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1290.75 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1290.20 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $21.200 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $21.036 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Platinum -$1633.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1632.90 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed.

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WEATHER 6D www.hpe.com FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

High Point Enterprise Weather Saturday

Sunny

91ยบ

Sunday

Mostly Sunny

66ยบ

90ยบ

Few Showers

62ยบ

76ยบ

Tuesday

Monday

76ยบ

Kernersville Winston-Salem 91/65 92/66 Jamestown 92/66 High Point 91/66 Archdale Thomasville 92/66 92/66 Trinity Lexington 91/66 Randleman 92/66 92/66

Scat'd T-storms

Few Showers

66ยบ

Local Area Forecast

77ยบ

64ยบ

64ยบ

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 92/72

Shown is todayโ s weather. Temperatures are todayโ s highs and tonightโ s lows.

Asheville 85/55

High Point 91/66 Charlotte 91/64

Denton 92/66

Greenville 91/69 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 96/68 84/72

Almanac

Wilmington 87/70 Today

Saturday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .92/65 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .83/58 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .87/70 EMERALD ISLE . . . .82/71 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .93/68 GRANDFATHER MTN . .74/59 GREENVILLE . . . . . .91/69 HENDERSONVILLE .84/57 JACKSONVILLE . . . .88/69 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .91/68 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .84/74 MOUNT MITCHELL . .84/56 ROANOKE RAPIDS .94/67 SOUTHERN PINES . .92/66 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .91/69 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .91/66 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .93/68

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

93/66 83/62 88/71 82/73 95/69 75/57 91/67 83/63 89/69 90/67 84/72 79/58 93/65 94/68 91/67 92/60 94/66

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

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

Sunrise . . Sunset . . Moonrise Moonset .

Across The Nation Saturday

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . ATLANTA . . . . . . . BOISE . . . . . . . . . . BOSTON . . . . . . . . CHARLESTON, SC CHARLESTON, WV CINCINNATI . . . . . CHICAGO . . . . . . . CLEVELAND . . . . . DALLAS . . . . . . . . DETROIT . . . . . . . . DENVER . . . . . . . . GREENSBORO . . . GRAND RAPIDS . . HOUSTON . . . . . . . HONOLULU . . . . . . KANSAS CITY . . . . NEW ORLEANS . .

. . . . .

.83/54 .90/66 .79/47 .84/66 .88/72 . .96/73 . .91/59 . .69/53 . .90/59 . .91/75 . .81/50 . .82/50 . .92/66 . .72/48 . .90/74 . .88/73 . .75/58 . .88/77

s s s sh s s t sh t pc t s s t t s s s

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

84/54 91/68 87/49 80/56 88/71 87/57 77/54 65/55 65/51 88/67 65/48 78/46 90/62 66/43 90/75 87/72 77/56 88/75

LAS VEGAS . . . . . . .97/72 LOS ANGELES . . . . .87/61 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . . .94/69 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .88/80 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .60/49 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .87/69 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .87/71 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .91/74 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . . .99/74 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .87/55 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .91/70 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .84/66 SAN FRANCISCO . . .81/58 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .78/57 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .69/55 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .81/62 WASHINGTON, DC . .96/73 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .83/59

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

Hi/Lo Wx

Today

Saturday

Hi/Lo Wx

t sh s ra s s cl s s s

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

.7:09 .7:14 .7:34 .8:19

UV Index 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

Saturday

s 99/74 s s 95/62 s s 84/64 pc t 89/80 t mc 60/46 sh s 87/70 s s 82/58 s t 89/74 t s 104/75 s s 67/48 mc s 82/56 s pc 83/52 s s 83/57 s t 75/56 s mc 74/57 s t 82/61 s s 87/57 s s 80/56 s

Last 9/30

New 10/7

First Full 10/14 10/22

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. Current Level Change Flood Pool High Rock Lake 655.2 651.0 0.0 Badin Lake 541.1 537.5 -0.1 Current Level Change Flood Stage Yadkin College 18.0 0.58 -0.03 Elkin 16.0 1.01 +0.01 Wilkesboro 14.0 1.98 -0.01 High Point 10.0 0.53 -0.04 Ramseur 20.0 1.03 +0.20

Pollen Forecast

Hi/Lo Wx

ACAPULCO . . . . . . . .86/77 AMSTERDAM . . . . . .60/52 BAGHDAD . . . . . . . .109/83 BARCELONA . . . . . .73/56 BEIJING . . . . . . . . . .76/55 BEIRUT . . . . . . . . . . . . .97/78 BOGOTA . . . . . . . . . .63/49 BERLIN . . . . . . . . . . .73/55 BUENOS AIRES . . . .66/46 CAIRO . . . . . . . . . . . .92/72

Statistics through 6 p.m. yesterday at Greensboro

Hi/Lo Wx

Around The World City

Precipitation (Yesterday) 24 hours through 6 p.m. . . . . . . .0.00" Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.16" Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . .3.34" Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30.50" Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . .32.89" Record Precipitation . . . . . . . . . .1.71"

Sun and Moon

Around Our State City

Temperatures (Yesterday) High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67 Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .77 Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . .58 Last Yearโ s High . . . . . . . .82 Last Yearโ s Low . . . . . . . . .69 Record High . . . . .97 in 1931 Record Low . . . . . .38 in 1983

86/78 60/52 109/79 72/54 75/55 96/77 65/50 63/55 72/49 93/73

t ra s s pc s cl ra s s

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

COPENHAGEN . . . . .64/53 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .60/49 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .92/78 GUATEMALA . . . . . .74/61 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .89/76 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .86/80 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .76/52 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .57/48 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .60/44 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .90/79

pc ra t t t t s ra pc t

Saturday

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

61/51 57/47 91/78 72/62 88/77 86/70 78/52 57/49 65/44 88/80

PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .63/50 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .80/61 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .80/63 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .73/61 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .87/77 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .61/48 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .73/56 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .88/67 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .70/65 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .59/49

sh ra t t t t s pc s t

Hi/Lo Wx pc ra pc s t mc s s ra ra

Saturday

58/48 76/60 73/60 74/60 87/77 49/43 76/55 86/66 76/63 52/47

ra ra ra s t ra mc s pc ra

Air Quality

Today: Moderate Predominant Types: Weeds Today: 90 (Moderate)

Hi/Lo Wx

Pollen Rating Scale

Today

0-50: 51-100: 101-150:

100 75 50

26

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

35

25

0 0

Trees

Grasses

Weeds

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

Good Moderate Unhealthy (sensitive) Unhealthy Very Unhealthy Hazardous

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

Demo Day Price!

See Store for

$

Demo Day Price!

314

99

%

F F O 10 75

2 2

Demo Day Price!

$

-

Demo Day Price!

$

43199

Demo Day Price!

$

34

8999

ONE DAY ONLY!

Demo Day Price!

$

3499

Saturday, September 25, 2010

99

FREE Food starting at 11:00! Prize Drawings

H @ 95

H @ 20

While supplies last Demo Day Price!

$

1799

%

75 OFF

Demo Day Price!

$

1799

UP TO

%

75 OFF

Clothing Select WChileleaSurappnliecseLast TORE HOURS: HOURS: Monday Saturday 8 - 8, Sunday 9-5 S O STORE O -S S Saturday 8-8 Demo Day Price!

$ 99

1

Reg. $399

6โ x 8โ Green/Brown Tarp

Demo Day Price!

$ 99

8

4-Pk. Cambuckle Tie-Downs

99

Reg. $12

*Colfax/Greensboro

Burlington*

8521 Triad Dr. 336-996-8655

2495 Eric Ln. 336-506-6837

Demo Day Price!

$ 99

8

3/8โ x 50โ Hose Kit Reg. $19 Air

Northern reserves the right to correct printing errors and to limit quantities of sale items to individual customers. Some items may require assembly.

Apply for your Northern Power Card Today!

In the JR Outlet Mall S5

99

*Extended store hours

*Newspaper advertised items re๏ฌ ect 10 - 75% savings. All other items 10% off current store pricing. Not valid on prior purchases, gift cards, or any other offers or coupons. Limit 1 generator per customer.


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