tvt03022010

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DCCC Storm wins Region X championship.

Inside Today

THOMASVILLE

Dr. David Lipschitz discusses childhood obesity and how it’s affected the first lady. See HEALTH, Page 4

Times

See SPORTS, Page 7

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

119th Year - No. 65 50 Cents

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Three arrested in series of break-ins BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer

Davidson County Sheriff ’s Office filed additional charges against three people arrested on Thursday for breaking and entering, including one count of child abuse upon a Thomasville man and Lexington woman for having their infant with them during the alleged crimes. According to a DCSO press release, Michael Ray Thompson, 28, of 1301 Liberty Drive,

ing for an Talitha alleged R e n e e h o m e Thompbreakson, 23, in near of 894 Mithe Holly chael Road G r o v e in Lexingcommuton, and nity. After B r a d l e y Thompson Thompson Stone further Steven investigaStone, 25, of 338 Becks Church Road in tion, detectives filed additional Lexington, were arrested and charges related to four other charged last week with one house break-ins in the Tyro count of felony breaking and community. Michael Thompson is now entering and one count of larceny after breaking and enter- charged with three counts of

felony breaking and entering, three counts of larceny after breaking and entering, one count of felony attempted breaking and entering and one count of misdemeanor child abuse after detectives allege his 4-month-old infant was present during the crimes. Talitha Thompson, the child’s mother, also is charged with one count of misdemeanor child abuse. Stone is facing the same charges as Michael Thompson minus the count of misdemeanor child abuse. “We allege they had the child

with them on the break-in that occurred on Feb. 25,” Sheriff David Grice said. “During the course of conducting interviews, we established they broke into more houses in the Tyro community.” Last Thursday, deputies responded to an alarm call at 3864 E. Highway 64 in the Holly Grove community and discovered a home had been burglarized. During the investigation, Davidson County 911 received a call from a person saying they

County Schools looks to improve virtual classroom enrollment

Winter weather takes toll on homeless

BY ERIN WILTGEN Staff Writer

BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer

Rev. Billy Parham spotted city trucks sprinkling Thomasville streets with brine solution Monday afternoon and knew alltoo well what that meant — more winter weather is on the horizon. With a brutal February in the past, March isn’t starting much better for Parham and the Shepherd’s Inn, Thomasville’s lone homeless shelter, as snow is expected in the area throughout the day, driving more people in to escape the cold at a place that’s already almost full. “There has just been so much snow and inclement weather,” Parham said. “When we have snow and ice like that, we’re just about at capacity now, we’ll have folks coming in at both our women’s and our men’s shelters.” Parham said the men’s shelter can hold one more person, but the women’s shelter is packed. Four women and a six-monthold baby recently checked in and Parham said there are two other ladies with a pair of children each set to come. The extra burden from the weather is extending and an already extended shelter. “It’s going to get rough with the weather getting cold, it always does,” said Parham. “Every time we get snow, we get packed. We have people coming in and eating who normally wouldn’t be there. This winter seems to be worse than last year. With the economy in the shape it’s in has certainly played a role just as much as the weather.” In addition to shelter,

See WEATHER, Page 6

See SERIES, Page 6

COURTESY PHOTO

SHARING CULTURES Thomasaville Primary School Spanish teacher Vivian Dulcey represents her native country of Columbia during the school’s annual Multi-Cultural Night Friday. About 500 parents, teachers and community members came out to celebrate the diversity of the school. Tables were set up with displays representing a variety of different countries and cultures.

LEXINGTON — At its Monday night meeting, the Davidson County Board of Education shifted its focus to look at not only students who have dropped out but also those enrolled in virtual courses. With the number of W2 students — students who have currently dropped out of school but have the potential to come back — still down from last year, the Board considered statistics of students who have enrolled in online courses either to gain new credits or recover failed credits. Ben Terrell, director of research and student development, said that although the numbers are constantly changing, Davidson County has consistently had one of the highest enrollments in virtual courses, with a total of 403 for the first semester. “We’re brining the over-

aged and under-credited student back towards an appropriate place in the scheme of things for graduating on time,” Terrell said. “I think our kids are doing very well.” Currently 20 students from high schools across Davidson County are participating in the iSchool online courses offered through UNC-Greensboro. Learn and Earn courses, also college-level classes, have 18 students enrolled county-wide. These programs, as well as the NCVPS program, have allowed high schools to expand their curriculum in ways not possible through face-toface classes. “Either this year or next year we will probably have at least one student, maybe more than one student, who will graduate from a traditional school with diploma in hand and AED in hand,” Terrell said. “That is only made possible through virtual

See SCHOOLS, Page 3

Thomasville man receives Combat Action Badge BY ERIN WILTGEN Staff Writer For Brandon Farlow, it was business as usual. When an improvised explosive device (IED) detonated during a routine drive in Baghdad on Feb. 2, the 21-yearold private first class from Thomasville acted on instinct, maintaining open communications and assessing the situation. But Farlow’s actions didn’t go unnoticed. He received a Combat Action Badge for excellence in performance of his duty along with his 20-odd com-

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patriots. The Combat Action Badge is only awarded to those who have been engaged in conflict during a time of war. “The prestige to it is that not everybody is going to deal with that kind of conflict,” said Capt. Schultheis, human resource officer for Farlow’s battalion. “The ones that do, how they act in those situations really shows a distinction in their service during times of conflict.” Farlow — who is assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment 1st Bri-

COURTESY PHOTO

Pvt. 1st Class Brandon Farlow receives the Combat AcSee BADGE, Page 3 tion Badge for excellence in performance of his duty. Today’s Weather

Rain/Snow 39/29

Full Forecast Page 2

What’s Inside

Weather Health Opinion Obituaries Sports Classifieds TV Listings

Thomasville, North Carolina • Your Town. Your Times.

2 4 5 6 7 8 10


2 – Thomasville Times – Tuesday, March 2, 2010

What’s happening?

recycling. Bring unused cell phones to one of the following locations: Lexington Senior Center, 106 Alma Ownes Drive; Thomasville Senior Center, 211 W. Colonial Drive; Davidson County landfill or at any of the county’s recycling centers. The collected phones will either be refurbished and reused or recycled according to EPA standards. For more information, contact Lexington Senior Center, 242-2290, or Thomasville Senior Center, 474-2754.

Relay For Life

Free tax advice

The Davidson County Department of Senior Services Senior Dynamics program, in partnership with Davidson County Tax Coalition, is offering free tax advice and tax form preparation for residents of Davidson County at the Lexington and Thomasville Senior Centers. Assistance is available at the Thomasville Senior Center, 211 W. Colonial Drive, Mondays and Fridays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; and the Lexington Senior Center, 106 Alma Owens Drive, Wednesdays and Fridays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Persons wishing to use this free tax service should bring with them copies of last years tax return forms, both federal and state, Picture ID, Social Security Card, checking or savings account information for direct deposit of refunds, and 2009 income information, including W-2s and 1099s for wages, interest, and dividends. Appointments are required. To schedule an appointment in Lexington, call 242-2290. For an appointment in Thomasville, call 474-2754. No Walk-Ins.

Recycle cell phones

The Lexington and Thomasville Senior Centers will sponsor a movement to recycle old and used cell phones. In the U.S. alone, an estimated 500 million cell phones have been retired, meaning they are unused in someone’s home or in the trash. The Davidson County Department of Senior Services Senior Dynamics program along with the Davidson County Solid Waste Management Departmnet have partnered together to collect old cell phones for

High Point’s 2010 Relay For Life will take place Saturday, May 22, 2010, at Southwest High School. Relay is a major annual fund raiser sponsored by the American Cancer Society in the fight to find a cure for cancer. This event will be a character builder for participants while having a lot of fun working with peers from throughout the area and supporting a very worthwhile cause. In addition to the fundraising, there will be plenty of fun, food, ceremony, entertainment and fellowship. This is a family event. To enter a team, contact Rich at 336905-7954, or at rrichray@email.com.

Blood pressure checks The Davidson County Department of Senior Services Senior Dynamics program offers free bi-monthly blood pressure checks. Visit the Lexington Senior Center at 106 Alma Owens Drive the 2nd Tuesday of each month from 1 to 3 p.m. and the last Friday of each month from 1 to 3 p.m. to have your blood pressure checked. The blood pressure checks are being provided by CareSouth Home Care Professionals and Piedmont Home Care. For more information, call the Senior Center 242-2290.

Relay For Life meeting Davidson County Relay For Life will have a meeting today at Rich Fork Baptist Church, 3993 Old Hwy 29. The team captain meeting will start at 6 p.m., and the committee meeting will start at 7 p.m. To learn more about Relay For Life, attend the team captain meeting or visit http://events.cancer.org/davidsonrfl.

Parent education class Fairgrove Family Resource Center will hold the first class for its new parent education program on Thursday, March 4. The program — called STEP, or Systematic Training for Effective Parenting — focuses on children from birth to age 6. The class includes a free meal prior to class as well as child care. All materials are free of charge and space is limited. The class is seven weeks long with the eighth week being a “celebration night.” The meal is served at 6 pm and class begins at 6:45 p.m. Classes are held at Fair Grove United Methodist Church. To register, call 472-7217.

Democratic Women Democratic Women of Davidson County will meet March 9 at 7 p.m. at Grace Episcopal Church, corner of South Main and Fifth Avenue, Lexington. Candidates for County Commissioner will speak. All Democratic Women in the County are invited to attend.

Reitred School Personnel Thomasville Retired School Personnel will meet on March 9 at 11:15 a.m. at Loflin’s Restaurant. Legislators representing Davidson County have been invited to present the program — Senator Stan Bingham, Representative Hugh Holliman, Representative Jerry Dockham, Representative Larry Brown. All Retired School Personnel are invited to attend. For more information, contact Deanna Geter at 476-5252.

Special presentation Enjoy an afternoon with at Piedmont Crossing on Thursday, March 11 at 2 p.m. in Unity Place as husband and wife, William and Sue Wills, portray a live, hour-long presentation to make people of American history spring to life. These two veteran actors have over 7,700 performances and use their talents to entertain and educate. Their 2010 featured couple on tour is Andrew and Eliza Johnson. For more information on the program, call 474-3605. This program is free and open to the public.

On This Day in History: March 2 March 2, 1978 Davidson County Airport Commission hired MooreGardner & Associates of Asheboro to conduct an airport feasibility study in Davidson County.

March 2, 1984 Mr. Snow closed his camera and hobby shop on Salem Street due to a decrease in downtown traffic. Snow had been the owner and operator of the shop since Feb. 1, 1958.

March 2, 1988 Thomasville Planning and Zoning Commission weighed an increase in child care against the possibility of increasing the size of a puddle. The commission voted to recommend approval of a special-use permit to allow Robert H. Wilson to expand Personal Touch Learning Center.

March 3, 1942 Civilian defense equipment was allocated to Thomasville as part of a wide-spread protection plan. Thomasville was considered a war danger zone, as were all areas within 300 miles of the coast. Equipment, such as 11,041 gas masks, were set to be sent.

March 2, 2010

Thomasville Times Weather 7-Day Local Forecast

Weather Trivia How was the ozone hole discovered?

Wednesday Snow Possible 37/28

Thursday Mostly Sunny 45/27

Friday Sunny 47/29

Saturday Partly Cloudy 51/29

Almanac Last Week High Day 58 Saturday 62 Sunday 51 Monday 56 Tuesday Wednesday 41 39 Thursday 47 Friday

Low Normals Precip 30 53/31 0.00" 30 53/32 0.00" 43 54/32 0.33" 40 54/32 0.00" 34 54/32 0.22" 28 54/33 0.00" 28 55/33 0.00"

Sunrise 6:49 a.m. 6:48 a.m. 6:46 a.m. 6:45 a.m. 6:44 a.m. 6:42 a.m. 6:41 a.m.

Last 3/7

Today we will see cloudy skies with a 50% chance of rain and snow, high temperature of 39º, humidity of 70% and an overnight low of 29º. The record high temperature for today is 75º set in 1980. The record Average temperature . . . . . . .41.9º low temperature is 12º set in 1963. Wednesday, Average normal temperature .43.0º skies will remain cloudy with a 30% chance of snow, Departure from normal . . . . . .-1.1º high temperature of 37º, humidity of 52% and an Data as reported from Greensboro overnight low of 28º.

Moonrise 8:59 p.m. 10:09 p.m. 11:17 p.m. No Rise 12:22 a.m. 1:22 a.m. 2:15 a.m. First 3/23

Moonset 7:37 a.m. 8:10 a.m. 8:46 a.m. 9:26 a.m. 10:11 a.m. 11:01 a.m. 11:55 a.m.

UV Index 0-2: Low, 3-5: Moderate, 6-7: High, 8-10: Very High 11+: Extreme Exposure

Full 3/29

Lake Levels

City

Tuesday Hi/Lo Wx

Wednesday Hi/Lo Wx

Thursday Hi/Lo Wx

Asheville Cape Hatteras Chapel Hill Charlotte Greenville Raleigh Wilmington Winston-Salem

35/30 50/41 41/30 40/29 48/34 42/31 54/36 39/29

38/28 ra 46/39 ra 39/28 sn 42/29 mc 44/31 ra 40/29 sn 47/32 ra 36/27 sn

44/28 47/39 45/28 49/28 47/31 47/29 52/31 43/27

sn ra ra rs ra ra ra rs

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Lake level is in feet. Lake Date Thom-A-Lex Feb. 22

Lake Level 3” above full pond R

All forecasts, data and graphics provided by Accessweather.com, Inc. © 2010. All rights reserved.

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0 - 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11+

Around the State Forecast

CONTACT US

Sports Editor Zach Kepley 888-3631 tvillesports@yahoo.com

Local UV Index

Precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.55" Normal precipitation . . . . . . .0.77" Departure from normal . . . . .-0.22"

Sunset 6:17 p.m. 6:17 p.m. 6:18 p.m. 6:19 p.m. 6:20 p.m. 6:21 p.m. 6:22 p.m. New 3/15

Monday Mostly Sunny 54/30

In-Depth Local Forecast

Sun/Moon Chart This Week Day Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday

Sunday Mostly Sunny 52/31

Answer: The hole was first discovered by the Nimbus 7 polar orbiting satellite.

Tuesday Rain/Snow 39/29

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Tuesday, March 2, 2010 – Thomasville Times – 3

FROM PAGE 1 BADGE From page 1 gade Combat Team-Augmented, 3rd Infantry Division in Baghdad — was driving the lead convoy vehicle when the IED went off. Though the situation was unexpected, Farlow said his reaction to pull the vehicle over, check for casualties and keep up communication came automatically. “It was a little frightening at first,� he said. “But after that, the training that I had previously received for this type of situation kind of kicked in.� Schultheis said that, though he wasn’t present during the situation, the reports all stated that Farlow reacted admirably. “I would say he did a fabulous job,� Schultheis said. “The results of the situation were handled in a very professional manner. I think everyone’s reaction during the time frame was that for which we trained for.� Farlow himself said that even though he was merely doing his job, he felt honored to receive the award, particularly since the incident resulted in

zero casualties. “I felt like at that point in time I did my part,� Farlow said. “I felt it was a great honor to get the Combat Action Badge just because I felt like I had some hand in keeping my fellow soldiers safe.� Deployed to Iraq Dec. 19, 2009, Farlow said he had thought about joining the military since childhood. When he graduated from high school, he looked into getting a full-time job to save money. Eventually, he began thinking about building a career, and his thoughts once again drifted to military service. “The Army, from what I had heard when I was a kid, it consisted of some of the toughest training in the entire military,� Farlow said. “You have to have great discipline. All around, you had to be the best.� A competitive person by nature, Farlow saw an opportunity to not only start a career but also to develop himself as a person. “I always wanted to prove to myself that in order to be the best, I had to work with the best,� he said. “I did it to prove to myself that I could be part of one of the best fighting

forces in the world.� Farlow joined the army in September 2008, and though his decision scared his mother, Tina Farlow said she fully supported her son. “I thought it was a very good decision as far as his life goals,� she said. “He’s a very caring person, a very trusting person. He would do anything for anybody.� Tina Farlow said that her son’s caring personality fits in well with his actions during the attack, when he immediately thought about the safety of his fellow soldiers. “That’s just him, that’s normal,� she said. “As his family we’re very proud of him. We love him very much, and we miss him very much. We just couldn’t be prouder.�

SCHOOLS From page 1

online classes.� While all of the NN courses and a few of the NCVPS courses are made up of students recovering credits, a majority of the NCVPS are students looking to gain new credit, such as AP classes. “Because of NCVPS, we’re able to have one student or five students or seven students taking an AP course online,� Terrell said. “It’s awesome. It’s just downright awesome.� The board also looked at the policy issue of domicile regarding school districts, focusing particularly on students whose parents are divorced or separated. Under the old Staff Writer Erin Wilt- policy, a child’s assigned gen can be reached at 336- school district depended 888-3576, or newsdesk@ on the county of residence of their custodial tvilletimes.com

parent. While that policy still applies, the question answered in the policy adjustment is what happens when parents have joint custody of the child. “What this policy really addresses in greater detail than we have in the past is addressing situations of students that may have divorced or separated parents,â€? Board Attorney Bradley Hunt said. “It defines how the custody order may define domicile.â€? In the case of parents with joint custody, domicile would mean the home where the child spends most of his or her time, Hunt said. In other news, the Board also: • Approved consent of policy revisions and bud-

get amendments • Discussed the revision of the policy regarding community use of facilities • Approved the appointment of Paula Justice and Stephanie Hall as interim assistant principals at Ledford Middle School • Approved the appointment of Gary Buie as the permanent Transportation Director • Discussed growth trends for Wallburg Elementary • Discussed participation trends for school cafeterias • Discussed the use of Quality School Construction Bonds for the building of three roofs • Changed the time of its April meeting to March 31 at 4 p.m.

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4 – Thomasville Times – Tuesday, March 2, 2010

HEALTH

Meyer joins Cornerstone Board TIMES STAFF REPORT

David D. Meyer, MD, was elected Chairman of the Board of Directors of Cornerstone Health Care at a recent Board meeting. According to Grace E. Terrell, MD, President and CEO of the large multi-disciplinary physician group, “Dr. Meyer brings a wealth of experience to his new position, serving as a respected leader in the Winston-Salem medical community for over thirty years and Meyer as a member of our Board of Directors since 2007. As Chairman of our Strategic Planning Committee, he has provided valuable guidance during a time of significant increases in the number of practices joining Cornerstone, and a subsequent expansion of our service area.” Dr. Meyer is a partner with Triad Neurological Associates of WinstonSalem, a specialty practice that joined

Cornerstone in 2005. He is the incoming President of the North Carolina Neurological Society. Dr. Meyer holds a medical degree from Bowman Gray School of Medicine, where completed his residency training in Neurology and served as an Instructor in Neurology. He was awarded a Master of Business Administration degree by the University of Phoenix. His undergraduate studies were completed at Wake Forest University. Dr. Meyer has led an extensive amount of research studies, several of which have been published in national medical journals. Thomas R. Walsh, MD, was recognized at the January Shareholder meeting as the outgoing Chairman, having served with distinction in that key leadership role since 2001. Kalpen Patel, MD, another outgoing Board Member, was also recognized for his six years of service. The other Cornerstone 2010 Board of Directors officers include Van Fletcher, MD, Vice President; James C. Anderson, MD, Secretary; Michael J. Lucas, MD, Treasurer; John W. Weaver, MD, Assistant Secretary.

Huff joins Emerywood Hematology/Oncology TIMES STAFF REPORT

Cornerstone Health Care announces that Dr. Jason D. Huff has joined Emerywood Hematology/Oncology. Dr. Huff completed his undergraduate studies at Nebraska Wesleyan University in Lincoln, Neb. and was awarded his medical degree by the University of Nebraska Medical Center College Of Medicine in Omaha. His internship and residency training was completed at Wake Forest University Medical Cen-

ter in Winston-Salem, where he also served a fellowship in Hematology and Oncology. Dr. Huff is certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in Internal Medicine, Hematology and Oncology. Before joining Cornerstone, Dr. Huff served as an oncologist at Penrose Cancer Center in Colorado Springs, Col. Dr. Huff joins Susan K. Williford, MD, Bernard R. Chinnasami, MD, George H. Sanders, MD and V. C. Harish, MD at Emerywood Hematology/Oncology. The practice is located at 302 Westwood in

High Point in the Charles E. and Pauline Lewis Hayworth Cancer Center at High Point Regional Heath System, which was rated No. 1 Community Hospital Comprehensive Cancer Program in the Triad by U.S. News and World Report in August, 2009. The practice will open a satellite office in Suite 202 of the Premier Medical Plaza building at 4515 Premier Drive at the corner of Wendover Avenue in High Point. Appointments may be made by calling 802-2500.

Carolina Cardiology receives re-accreditation TIMES STAFF REPORT

Carolina Cardiology Cornerstone was recently re-accredited by the Intersocietal Commission for Accreditation of Nuclear Medicine Laboratories (ICANL) for the quality of its advanced Nuclear Laboratory. Initial accreditation was given in 2001 and according to a statement issued by the ICANL, “Cornerstone Cardiology’s laboratory was one of the first nuclear cardiology laboratories in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico to be so recognized for its commitment to high quality patient care and its provision of quality

diagnostic testing.” Participation in the accreditation process is voluntary, and achieving accreditation signifies that the facility has been reviewed by an independent agency that analyzes the interpretive and technical abilities of the physicians and technologists to determine the diagnostic accuracy of their nuclear cardiology testing. Darryl A. Kalil, MD, Helgi J. Oskarsson, MD, Fareed Al-Khori, MD, and J. Andy Chiu, MD were involved in the re-accreditation process for the Nuclear Lab located at 300 Gatewood Avenue in High Point. The practice may be reached at 336 802-2125.

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Childhood obesity fight is personal for first lady LIFELONG HEALTH

DR. DAVID LIPSCHITZ Syndicated Columnist Not a week goes by without medical journals and the national press being full of new information about obesity. While the war against weight gain has been mounting for several years, recent leadership from first lady Michelle Obama and the White House aims to push the cause further. As a mother of two, Obama has experienced the personal struggle against weight gain and poor health habits. Several years ago, the Obamas’ pediatrician warned that their children were gaining too much weight -- it was a wake-up call for the family. This simple dialogue with a caring physician set the family on a new course to health. With small, simple lifestyle changes, the Obamas saw big results. This personal commitment to end childhood obesity perhaps represents the greatest hope for turning the tide against poor health. Michelle Obama hopes to use her new public awareness and education campaign to inspire Americans to make the same simple changes. Beyond mere inspiration, this campaign will provide a platform for lawmakers to make changes in childhood nutrition legislation that will promote healthful eating habits. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 30 percent of U.S. adults (90 million) and 16 percent of U.S. children are obese. The many well-known health effects of obe-

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Dr. David Lipschitz is the author of the books, “Breaking the Rules of Aging” and “Dr. David’s First Health Book of More Not Less.” To find out more about Dr. David Lipschitz and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators. com. More information is available at www. DrDavidHealth.com.

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Here exercise only reduced the risk of dying by 28 percent. When overweight adults reach the age of 80, the risk of being physically dependent is much greater than for those who are at a lower weight. In other words, maintaining an ideal weight is the best course for health promotion and lifelong independence, even if you do not have high blood pressure, diabetes or elevated cholesterol. Encouragingly, the CDC has recently announced that the prevalence of obesity is leveling off at 30 percent for adults, with a further third being overweight. Though the lack of increase in obesity is considered a breakthrough, the cause for concern remains high. Yes, obesity is epidemic. And it threatens the health of generations of Americans. But this is not an insurmountable problem. What you eat affects the risk of illness and death even more than how much you weigh. Research published in American Journal of Epidemiology has shown that a diet low in starches and rich in olive oil, fish, fruits and vegetables is associated with a longer life expectancy, lower cholesterol and decreased blood pressure. With simple, straightforward lifestyle habits, any American can turn the tide against obesity. Switch vegetable oil for olive oil, swap sodas for water, and encourage every family member to get active -- we should all follow the Obamas’ lead.

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sity -- including raising blood pressure, altering metabolism that leads to diabetes and elevating cholesterol -- have led to a higher risk of virtually every common disease affecting us. Being overweight is a strong risk factor for heart disease, cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease. The wide-ranging impact of obesity can be seen in hospitals and clinics throughout the medical community. While the negative impact of being obese is linked with illness and a shorter life span, the impact of being overweight is less clear. Just published in the Journal of the American Geriatric Society, a series of studies clearly shows that for adults beyond the age of 70, being overweight is accompanied by a longer life expectancy. Studies from Australia and Canada have shown that overweight individuals over the age of 70 live from 13 percent to 17 percent longer than those whose weight was ideal. It seems that the natural and modest increase in girth, which accompanies advancing age, has some physiological benefit. Furthermore, weight loss in older adults, either voluntary or due to an illness, is associated with a worse prognosis. Though the “fit and fat” mantra has been encouraging to chubby Americans everywhere, new research paints a less cheery picture. The data indicate that any unnecessary weight gain is an independent risk factor for heart disease and cancer. Overweight individuals are far more likely to be sedentary, which in turn leads to deconditioning, impaired gait and balance, osteoporosis and risks of falling. A study in the same journal showed that overweight women who were sedentary were twice as likely to die as those who exercised moderately. For some unknown reasons, the benefits of exercise appeared less for men.

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Tuesday, March 2, 2010 – Thomasville Times – 5

OPINION

Thomasville Times MICHAEL B. STARN Publisher mstarn@hpe.com • LYNN WAGNER Advertising Director lwagner@hpe.com

LISA M. WALL Editor editor@tvilletimes.com • ZACH KEPLEY Sports Editor tvillesports@yahoo.com

Safe Toyotas and other surprises VIEWPOINT

STEVE CHAPMAN Syndicated Columnist Last week, facing a congressional committee acutely dissatisfied with his company’s safety record, the head of Toyota, Akio Toyoda, was asked what he would tell President Barack Obama if he had the chance. His surprising reply: “Toyota cars are safe.” It was surprising because more than 8 million Toyotas have been recalled for safety flaws that have caused dozens of deaths. It was even more surprising because he was right. No one denies that these defects have caused some horrifying accidents that were preventable. Still, worrying that you are going to be killed while driving a Toyota that suddenly zooms out of control on the road is like worrying that you are going to die of a spider bite while climbing a ladder onto your roof. Though either is possible, the chief dangers are the ones you take for granted. Driving is a hazardous activity, but rarely because of unsafe cars. During the last decade, the sudden acceleration of Toyota vehicles has been blamed for 34 fatalities. In that same period, more than 21,000 other people died in accidents while riding in Toyotas. Your own lapses, and those of other drivers, are far riskier than the flaws found in your automobile. Chuck Hurley, CEO of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, agrees on the pressing need for Toyota to repair its troubled cars. But he estimates that more than 80 percent of traffic deaths are the result of excessive speed, drunken driving or unused seat belts. Last year alone, more than 11,000 Americans died in accidents involving drunk drivers. By contrast, only about 2 percent of wrecks stem from vehicle defects. Yet Congress is not holding hearings to ask Toyoda why his company sells cars that can travel well above the speed limit, with engines that start even if the operator is too drunk to spell “key.” It would rather worry about freakish risks inflicted on us than common ones within the control of individual motorists. The current sentiment on Capitol Hill is that carmakers cannot be trusted with our well-being and therefore stern

government action is in order. In fact, safety is a big selling point in the auto marketplace — which happens to be one reason Toyota has sold so many cars. No vehicle is flawless, and a vehicle that accelerates for no reason poses an unacceptable danger. But there’s no reason to single out Toyota for congressional histrionics. In the latest analysis of driver fatality rates in different vehicles by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, Toyota vehicles do not turn out to be the four-wheeled caskets Congress imagines. In fact, they consistently rank better than average. The Matrix, for example, has the best record among station wagons, with a death rate less than half of that of the worst vehicle in its class. The 4Runner and Highlander finished first and second among midsize SUVs. The popular Camry and Corolla get high marks for crash-worthiness. When it comes to defects, the company is hardly unique. Over the past five years, The Wall Street Journal reports, the federal government got more complaints from owners of Fords than owners of Toyotas. Out of 20 carmakers, says Edmunds.com, Toyota is fourth best in the number of complaints per vehicle sold. But none of the others is being used as a piñata. A more expansive government role is one of those answers that is neat, simple and wrong. “There are 250 million vehicles with 3,000 parts apiece,” says Hurley. It’s safe to assume the government couldn’t police them all, even if it chose to do nothing else. Fortunately, it doesn’t have to do that in order for consumers to be protected. A carmaker’s need to attract buyers is a far more powerful force for safety. As Yoshimi Inaba, head of North American operations, told Congress, “Nothing costs Toyota more than the loss of customer trust in our vehicles.” Another reliable motivator is the urgent desire not to pay millions of dollars in damages, as Toyota is likely to do once the courts have had their say. So it is likely to make its vehicles safer than before — which doesn’t mean your morning commute will necessarily be less fraught with peril. Angry members of Congress would like to blame highway carnage on selfinterested auto executives. They forget that as a rule, cars don’t kill people. Drivers do.

Still talking about pirates VIEWPOINT

D.G. MARTIN N.C. Columnist On Ocracoke Island they still talk about pirates. In fact, the first thing I saw as I got off the ferry that brought Bob Anthony and me across Pamlico Sound to Ocracoke was a historical marker that read, “Lt. Robert Maynard — Of the Royal Navy. Sent by Gov. Spotswood of Virginia, in the sloop ‘Ranger,’ killed the pirate Blackbeard off shore, 1718.” In his book, “Ocracokers,” Alton Ballance tells how some people still, erroneously, tie the island’s name to Blackbeard. “In the early morning hours before his fatal encounter with Lieutenant Robert Maynard, Blackbeard, anxious for the dawn to arrive, was supposed to have looked ashore near Ocracoke Village and bellowed ‘O Crow Cock! O Crow Cock!’” Ballance was our host, and he let us join a group of public school teachers at a seminar sponsored by the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching. He told us a lot more about pirates, shipwrecks, fishing, hurricanes, cur-

rents, the restless movement of barrier islands, and the special accents and character of island people. He took us up and down the streets of the Ocracoke village, telling us who lived in every house and how the families have been intertwined for centuries. He showed us the island’s forests and the wide, shifting beaches, explaining how the fierce ocean leaves its mark on everything. Ballance worried that the isolation of island life might limit the prospects of its residents, like the 77-year-old woman who, he said, never left the island, even for a day. Then, the next minute, he worried that the connections of modern times and the influx of new people might destroy the island life he obviously loves so much. Twenty years ago, in “Ocracokers,” Ballance wrote what he still says today: “Even though parts of the old fishing village have made way for motels, restaurants, and shops, there are still remnants of the past: wooden, white-painted boats tied to stakes in the Creek; nets and other fishing gear cluttering front yards; and old people who watch a faster way of life, measuring its worth against days long past. And there are the children of the transition, myself included, who must balance the old ways and the new and go on living in the village beneath the lighthouse and the water tower.” There was a part of me that wanted to stay on the island with Ballance and enjoy those remnants of island

life while they still remain. But it was time to go home. On the ferry for the two and a half hour ride to the mainland, a crowd of lively teenagers joined us. They settled into their seats so quickly that you’d think they had been assigned. Out came the cards and the games began, a scrabble game at another table, books and study groups in the corners. They were the Ocracoke Dolphins girls and boys basketball teams on their way to games against the Mattamuskeet High School. The high school component of the Ocracoke School has only about 25 students. So most of them get to “make the team.” We listened for the distinctive High Toide-Ocracoke brogue. We heard not a single hint of an accent from them. Only their coach had a touch of a seacoast accent. “I grew up in Baltimore,” he explained. Those basketball players have now been “off the island” many times. And there will probably never be another islander like the woman who never left for even a single day. But we can ask, as Ballance meant for us to do, what is our own island and must we leave its protected shores to find the challenges that make a rewarding and useful life possible? Or can we find that life right where we are? D.G. Martin is the author of “Interstate Eateries,” a guide to family owned homecooking restaurants near North Carolina’s interstate highways www.interstateeateries.com.

Steve Chapman blogs daily at newsblogs.chicagotribune. com/steve_chapman. To find out more about Steve Chapman, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR All letters should include name, address and daytime phone number. Anonymous letters will not be printed. Letters should be no more than 400 words, unless otherwise approved by editor. Limited to one letter every 30 days. All letters are subject to editing.

EMAIL: Editor@tvilletimes.com FAX: 888-3632 MAIL: Letters to the Editor Thomasville Times 210 Church Ave. High Point, N.C. 27262

EDITORIALS All unsigned editorials are the consensus of Editor Lisa Wall and Sports Editor Zach Kepley


6 – Thomasville Times – Tuesday, March 2, 2010

FROM PAGE 1 SERIES From page 1 were following a blue Chevrolet Cavalier on Highway 64 East that was seen leaving the residence. Detectives and the Breaking and Entering Task Force responded to the area where the vehicle was last seen. DCSO contacted the Randolph County Sheriff ’s Office and advised them on the vehicle. Detectives located property thrown from the vehicle while RCSO deputies pulled over the suspect’s car. Detectives allege that at some point, the couple stopped off at a relative’s home and dropped off the child before being pulled over. “What happened was a person who lived close to the location of the breakin heard the alarm going off, looked that way and saw some people coming from the back of the house,” said Grice. “The person got in the car and

WEATHER From page 1 Parham said the Shepherd’s Inn also is trying to feed as many people as it can within the community. Not only has the weather wreaked havoc on the city but several families have been displaced by fires who also need assistance with items such as clothes. “When we have someone in the community who has been burned out we certainly want to help,” Parham said. “The Thrift Store has helped us a bunch and we have good volunteers. We have enough for everybody to do.” What the Shepherd’s Inn needs help with the most is paying its utility bills. Parham said the power bill has more than doubled this winter due to the constant cold that requires leaving heaters on throughout the day. The Thrift Store, located at 103 Salem St., is a valued source of revenue for the Shepherd’s Inn. Extra items not needed at the shelter are sold at the store which is run mainly by volunteers. “If someone can’t help us monetarily, we can always use donations at the Thrift Store,” said Parham. “We sell what we have left over. We are able to put that money back to offset our utility bills.” Local churches play a big part in helping the shelter. First Baptist Church comes once a month and holds a dinner for residents. Parham hopes more churches will step up and help out. Parham added that the Shepherd’s Inn also has complied with everything

started following the suspects. We moved officers into the area and the suspects started throwing out some of the jewelry onto the road. We walked the road south of Thomasville and recovered most of the jewelry. The suspects eventually sped away from the vehicle following them and we missed them as they got into Randolph County. The child, we allege, was in the car during the commission of the breakins, but before Randolph County got to them, they got to a family member’s house and put the child out of the car.” Additional property was located on the suspects and all three were taken into custody. Thompson was issued a $55,000 secured bond, Talitha was issued a $8,500 secured bond and Stone a $35,000 secured bond. All three are scheduled to appear in court on March 8. Staff Writer Eliot Duke can be reached at 888-3578, or duke@tvilletimes.com.

the city has asked it to do, such as installing a sprinkler system, two separate phone lines and a fire alarm. Parham said High Point Sprinkler installed the sprinkler system for free. “We’ve tried to comply with everything [the city] said we needed,” Parham said. “This is new to the city as well.” Huey Turner, pastor at The Shepherd’s Inn and the Church of Tomorrow, said his nonprofit is currently applying for 501 C-3 status that will allow the shelter to receive additional support from organizations like the United Way. Any donations made to the Shepherd’s Inn also will now be a full tax write-off, much like the Salvation Army. “We will become eligible for more grants now,” Turner said. “It makes things easier. This is a done deal. It takes times to process an application, but it’s not a deal where you get declined. The biggest thing was we had to do was be incorporated separate from the Church of Tomorrow. We’ve got our ducks in a row.” For more information on the Shepherd’s Inn, call Parham at 491-6879 or Turner at 240-4006. Staff Writer Eliot Duke can be reached at 888-3578, or duke@tvilletimes.com.

OBITUARIES Index

Winnifred Green Lexington Golda N.Cook, 77 Norman Franz, 86 Winnifred Green, 98 Lola Mae W. Moretz, 93 N. Marie Moretz, 76 Other areas Adam D. Fisher, 24 Tim Goodwin, 52 Barbara McGehee, 60 Bobby Witherspoon, 47

LEXINGTON — Mrs. Winnifred Virginia Ebelein Zimmerman Green, age 98, of Piedmont Crossing Homes, in Thomasville, and formerly of Kildee Drive, Lexington, died Monday, March 1, 2010, at Piedmont Crossing Homes after a long illness. Arrangements are incomplete at Davidson Funeral Home Lexington Chapel. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Golda N.Cook LEXINGTON — Mrs. Golda Nance Cook, 77, died Saturday, Feb. 27, 2010. Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. today at Higher Ground Baptist Church. Davidson Funeral Home is serving the family. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Adam D. Fisher TRINITY — Adam David Fisher, 24, died Thursday, Feb. 25, 2010, at High Point Regional Hospital. Born in Guilford County on Aug.13, 1985, to Steven Wayne Fisher and Robin Van Patten Fisher, Adam attended Randolph County Schools. Memorial visitation will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on today at Thomasville Funeral Home. Audio and written condolences may be made through www.thomasvillefh.com.

Norman Franz LEXINGTON — Norman Henry Franz, 86, of Peachtree Street, died Sunday, Feb. 28, 2010, at Hinkle Hospice House. A mass of Christian burial will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of the Rosary Catholic Church, with Father Al Gondek officiating. Burial will follow in Lexington City Cemetery. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Barbara McGehee WELCOME — Barbara Moon McGehee, age 60, of Craver Road, died Friday, Feb. 26, 2010, at her residence. Memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Davidson Funeral Home, Hickory Tree Chapel, with Dr. Harold Fletcher officiating. Davidson Funeral Home, Hickory Tree Chapel, is serving the family. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

LEXINGTON — Lola Mae Walker Moretz, age 93, of Alston Brook Nursing Home, formerly of Front Street, Lexington, died Friday in Alston Brook Nursing Home after a two-week illness. Born Sept. 6, 1916, in Wilkes County to Harrison Roby Walker and Bertha Elizabeth Green Walker, she was a homemaker and a member of the Lexington Church of God. Funeral service was held at 2 p.m. Monday at Davidson Funeral Home Chapel with J.C. Miles and Preacher Clyde Akers officiating. Burial will follow in Forest Hill Memorial Park. The family received friends from 12:30 to 2 p.m. Monday prior to the service. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Tim Goodwin

N. Marie Moretz LEXINGTON — N. Marie Tysinger Moretz, age 76, of Linwood Southmont Road, Lexington,

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is given that on the 9th day of March 2010 at 5:45 P.M. in the City Council Chambers in the Police Department Building at 7 West Guilford Street in Thomasville, North Carolina, the Thomasville Historic Preservation Commission will conduct a Public Hearing in consideration of the following: Request for Certificate of Appropriateness Property Owner: Kevin Vandy Applicant: Lawrence Wilson Location: 207 Spring Street Colonial Drive School Historic District Request: To repaint the exterior of the home (same colors); to replace the exisiting windows with vinyl replacement windows (different configuration) and to replace the roof shingles (same type and color) Case #: COA-10-04

The Public is further advised that at said hearing all interested and affected parties will be heard on this matter. Hearing impaired persons desiring additional information or having questions regarding this subject should call the North Carolina Relay Number for the Deaf (Dial 7-1-1 or 1-800-7352962). The meeting facilities of the City of Thomasville are accessible to people with disabilities. The City provides the opportunity to request in advance auxiliary aids and services. If you need special accommodations, please contact Kelly Craver, City Manager, at 336-475-4222.

Bobby J. Witherspoon

For further information please call Bill Colonna at 906-5272.

2:30 p.m. S.E. Thomas Funeral Home

Natalie P. Wall, Chairperson Historic Preservation Commission City of Thomasville, NC

This the 26th day of February 2010.

died Friday in Hinkle Hospice House after several years of declining health. Born June 28, 1934, in Davidson County to Mozelle Tysinger and Etta Hedrick Tysinger, she retired from Link Taylor Furniture after 33 years of service and was a member of Cotton Grove United Methodist Church. Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. today at Cotton Grove United Methodist Church with the Rev. Ed Armfield, Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. The family received friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at Davidson Funeral Home and other times at the home. Memorials may be directed to Cotton Grove United Methodist Church

General Fund, 175 Jersey Church Road, in Lexington. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Bobby J. Witherspoon

WINSTON-SALEM — Bobby James Witherspoon, 47, of 1400 Bethlehem Lane, died Monday, March 1, 2010, in Forsyth Medical Center. Funeral service will be held Friday at 2:30 p.m. at S.E. Thomas Funeral Service, 110 Highland Avenue. The family will receive friends at the funeral home 30 minutes before the funeral service and other times at the home of his brother, Jerome Witherspoon, 118 College Drive.

Thomasville Times Periodicals Postage Paid Thomasville, N.C. USPS 628-080 ISSN 1068-1523 Published Tuesday, Thursday & Saturday Mornings By the Thomasville Times PO Box 1009/210 Church St.

High Point, NC 27261 Postmaster: Send address changes to the above address All carriers, dealers, distributors are independent contracted agents (not employees) of the Thomasville Times. All subscriptions are due and payable in advance prior to the fifth (5th) of each month. When paying in advance for more than one month, we suggest that payment be made to this office where it will be held in escrow and credited monthly to your carrier’s account. The Thomasville Times will not be responsible for advance payments made to any carrier, dealer, or distributor exceeding one (1) month.

Lola Mae W. Moretz

DENTON — Timothy “Tim” L. Goodwin, 52, of New Bern and formerly of Denton, died Thursday, Feb. 25, 2010, at his residence. Funeral service was held at 11 a.m. Monday at Briggs Funeral Home Memorial Chapel. The family received friends Sunday at Briggs Funeral

Copies of the Application and Staff Report concerning this request for a Certificates of Appropriateness are available for inspection prior to the Public Hearing in the offices of the Planning and Inspection Department, Second Floor, City Hall, 10 Salem between the hours of 8:00 AM and 12:00 Noon and between 1:00 PM and 5:00 PM Monday through Friday.

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THOMASVILLE TIMES

Coming This Week • Spring high school sports • Off the Porch with Dick Jones

TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 2010

Sports

7

tvillesports@yahoo.com

REGION X CHAMPIONSHIP

NO MORE HEARTACHE FOR DCCC CALENDAR TODAY BASEBALL Roxboro @ Thomasville 5 p.m. BASEBALL Trinity @ E. Davidson 4:30 p.m. BASEBALL Ledford @ C. Davidson 5 p.m. GOLF Ledford @ Davie 3 p.m. TENNIS E. Davidson @ Wheatmore 4 p.m. TENNIS Ledford @ Salisbury 4:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY BASEBALL Thomasville @ Ledford 4:30 p.m.

Storm demolish Flying Eagles to win Tarheel Conference tourney BY ZACH KEPLEY Sports Editor LEXINGTON — There was no teary-eyed ride home nor broken hearts to deal with this time around Saturday afternoon for the Davidson County Community College Storm. Instead, there was jubilaRidge tion and a sense of redemption after a dominating 113-63 win over Southwest Virginia in the Region X championship game at Brinkley Gym. DCCC has made the title game in each of the last three seasons, only to come home empty-handed the first two in heartbreaking fashion. Given the chance to play in front of its home crowd this year, the Storm did not disappoint, scoring 64 second half points and taking out two years of frustration on the Flying Eagles. “The way the last two years have went this certainly makes it a little sweeter,” said Storm head coach Matt Ridge. “We tell them going to practice is like going to work and gameday is payday — I think we got paid pretty well today.” Sophomore Phillip Williams, who missed a shot

BASEBALL Randleman @ E. Davidson 5 p.m.

at the buzzer that would have won the championship game for Davidson in 2009, made it his top priority to get back in the title game and give Ridge his first regional title. Mission accomplished, as seven of the eight Storm players reached double figures with Williams scoring 11. “It feels like Christmas to me right now,” Williams said. “I wanted this so much. The day we lost last year I made sure we were going to win it this year. We worked so hard for this game right here. When we play together it is hard to beat us.” Teammate Eric Potts had tears in his eyes last season, and suffered a tough loss the year before as a member of the state runner-up team at Trinity High School. Potts has been an emotional leader for the Storm both seasons, and was not holding back his emotions in the locker room with his teammates. “It is unexplainable,” he said. “We bought in and we played together and are a family. We all wanted it so bad.” DCCC trailed only once at 6-5, but were hardly challenged over the last 37 minutes of action. A baseline dunk by Zack Williams and two slams from Justin Glover highlighted a 15-2 Storm run over the next six

TIMES PHOTO/LARRY MATHIS

Storm guard Roderick Geter goes up for two on Saturday in the finals of the Tarheel See DCCC, Page 8 Conference tournament. Geter scored 20 points as DCCC rolled to a 113-63 win.

SPRINT CUP SERIES

McDonald helps UNC beat Wake

GOLF Forbush @ Ledford 3 p.m.

BY BRIANA GORMAN Durham Herald Sun WINSTON-SALEM — North Carolina’s Leslie McDonald is not a superstitious person, but he is going to be keeping his new haircut for a while. He and fellow freshman John Henson sported new hairdos, dubbed small mohawks, for Saturday’s game against Wake Forest and the Tar Heels left

SOCCER Thomasville @ Davie 5:15 p.m.

THURSDAY SOFTBALL Reagan @ E. Davidson 4 p.m. TENNIS E. Davidson @ Trinity 4 p.m.

GAME REPORT DEADLINES: Monday-Friday 9 p.m. tvillesports@yahoo.com

Lawrence Joel Coliseum with a 77-68 victory — just their second win in the past nine games. McDonald had a breakout game, finishing with a team-high 16 points off the bench and took a key charge at the end of the game, while Henson added nine points, 12 rebounds and five blocks. “Me and John just de-

See UNC, Page 8

GETTY IMAGES

Teammates Juan Montoya (No. 42) and Jamie McMurray get together in the turn at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday in the Shelby American.

Johnson does it again

Devils keep road streak alive at UVA BY BRYAN STRICKLAND

NASCARMEDIA.COM LAS VEGAS, NV. — Jimmie Johnson has done it again. He played possum most of the day and then turned on the afterburner to pass teammate Jeff Gordon with just 16 laps to go and win the Shelby American NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Gordon led more than 210 laps of the 267-lap event before losing the lead to Johnson, who seems hellbent to win his fifth NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship before Gordon does. Johnson won last week at Auto Club Speedway and told members of the media leading up to Sunday’s race he could care less about the people

who think he’s tainting NASCAR racing with his dominance. “You compete to win. I’m not gonna apologize for winnning,” he said. “I want to win every race.” While Johnson drove away for Sunday’s victory, Kevin Harvick also passed Gordon for the runnerup spot. Gordon

See DOES, Page 10

Durham Herald Sun CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — The knock on Duke early on was that they struggled away from Cameron Indoor Stadium. Losses at N.C. State and Georgia Tech overshadowed a road win at Clemson. Pile on a 12-point loss at Georgetown, and a perception was created.

But the No. 5 Blue Devils have put together a string of four straight ACC road wins, capped by their 67-49 victory over Virginia on Sunday night at John Paul Jones Arena. Kyle Singler owned the first half for Duke (25-4, 12-2 ACC), posting 15 of his team-high 21 points in the period. Jon Schey-

See ALIVE, Page 8


8 – Thomasville Times – Tuesday, March 2, 2010

SPORTS ALIVE

UNC

From page 7

From page 7

er took over in the second half, finishing with 20 points after netting seven before halftime. “It’s definitely a good win,” Scheyer said. “We did a good job defensively. We wanted to come out from the start and set a tone, and I thought we did a good job of that.” One play, in particular, caught the attention of Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski. With the Blue Devils leading 44-27 at the 12:34 mark of the second half, Scheyer dove to recover a loose ball, then passed to Mason Plumlee for a driving basket. “That was a huge play; that was a big-time play,” Krzyzewski said. “You need that, you know. That’s the kid who’s probably played the best for us all year making that one. “Then Mason finishes — you get excited when you see your guys making those plays.” Meanwhile, Virginia (14-13, 5-9) struggled without sophomore Sylven Landesberg, the Cavs’ leading scorer who did not play because of a thigh bruise suffered in Tuesday night’s loss to Miami. Landesberg is averaging 17.4 points and five rebounds. “They obviously missed one of the best players in the conference with Landesberg not playing,” Krzyzewski said. “Sometimes, when that happens, you’ve got to be careful that you don’t just assume that you’re going to win, that it’s going to be easy.” Add the Cavs’ 31.4-percent shooting to Duke’s pressure defense, and it may be understandable why some of the 13,663 in attendance began to leave with 9:23 remaining in the game. “His kids couldn’t hit a shot tonight, and his best kid’s out,” Krzyzewski said of UVa coach Tony Bennett, whose team has lost seven games in a row. “In this losing streak they’ve had, they could have won two or three of them. It’s not easy.” The first half belonged to the Blue Devils, as they scored 20 points through the 11:26 mark interrupted only by a pair of free throws and a field goal by Jerome Meyinsse. Singler did the majority of the damage for Duke, posting 11 points during the run and making 4 of 5 shots in the half, 2 of 3 from 3-point range. In the second half, a 10-2 run through the 9:23 mark gave Duke a 54-29 lead and prompted the first wave of departures by UVa fans. Mason Plumlee had six points for the Blue Devils during that spurt. Even when the Cavs posted a 5-0 run, which ended with Andre Dawkins’ drive inside for a 56-34 Duke lead, UVa fans continued their exodus during each media timeout. Meyinssee led the Cavs with 21 points, while Assane Sene grabbed a game-high 10 rebounds. “In a game like this, for us to make it competitive, we needed a number of guys to contribute,” Bennett said. “I thought we shot quickly to relieve pressure, and I thought some guys were a little nervous. “It was frustrating not to have a few of those shots go in. We are not playing well, there’s no doubt about it.” Duke heads to Maryland on Wednesday.

cided to get the haircut just because ... I guess it’s helped me out tremendously,” McDonald said with a grin. There were plenty of smiles in the UNC locker room after the game and even Coach Roy Williams cracked a joke in the postgame press conference. And while Williams said the Tar Heels (15-14, 4-10 ACC) handled the close game better than they had in recent weeks, he also acknowledged the Tar Heels had a bit of luck on their side. The Demon Deacons (18-8, 8-6 ACC), who lost their third straight game, shot a season-low 29.7 percent from the field, and their top two scorers, AlFarouq Aminu and Ishmael Smith, combined for 7 of 28 from the floor for 19 points. The pair totaled 33 points in WFU’s 92-69 victory at the Smith Center on Jan. 20. “We did try to get up on the shooters,” Williams said. “The other goal was trying to make sure that we built a wall to stop Ish from getting inside the lane so easily. He still got in there, but those were the goals, and we were fortunate that they missed some.” McDonald scored the final four points of the first half — he had nine in the first period — to give the Tar Heels a 32-28 advantage at the break, but at the start of the second half the Demon Deacons tied the score twice and eventually took a 42-41 lead with 13 minutes to play. But it would be WFU’s last lead of the game. The Tar Heels got buckets from five different players, and a pair of Will Graves free throws gave UNC it’s largest lead of the game at 64-53 with 4:44 to play. “We just found that poise tonight,” said Ginyard, who had eight points and a career-high 13 rebounds. “We didn’t let a 5-0 run turn into an 18-0 run so we were just calmer on offense and didn’t make as many marginal plays as we

normally do.” But WFU’s perimeter shooting and UNC’s missed free throws made things interesting in the closing minutes. L.D. Williams’ two free throws put the score at 67-60, and then UNC’s Larry Drew II went 2 of 8 from the line as the Demon Deacons got within four with a 1:20 to play. UNC pushed its lead back up to six thanks to two more free throws from Graves, but Williams scored a 3 on the other end to cut the margin to three with 59 seconds remaining. Eight seconds later, however, McDonald scored off a fast break layup and then took a charge to give the Tar Heels back the ball with 42.2 seconds remaining. UNC went 4 of 6 from the free-throw line the rest of the way to seal the victory. “We’re just not scoring the ball well enough to win,” WFU coach Dino Guadio said. “We only had 11 turnovers and we had a lot of looks at the basket, but we missed 52 shots.” Ari Stewart led Wake Forest with 16 points, while L.D. Williams added 14. The Tar Heels finished the game shooting 40 percent and outrebounded (52-50) an opponent for the first time in three games. “It feels good for sure,” Ginyard said. “We just got make sure we come out ready to play the next game and still understand that winning this game doesn’t mean we haven’t gotten our butts kicked all year.” The win over the Demon Deacons added more pressure for UNC to win Tuesday’s game against Miami. Not only will the Tar Heels be trying to become the second program to reach 2,000 victories on senior night but a win over the Hurricanes would almost guarantee UNC would finish above .500 and earn an NIT Tournament bid. “It feels like [this win] is a sign,” said Graves, who had 13 points. “This late we could’ve folded but we haven’t, and I just feel like it’s a sign that we’re going to fight on from here.”

DCCC From page 7 minutes. Davon Crawford and Shane Roark gave the Eagles a lift and kept them close at 23-15 just two minutes under the 10 minute mark, but an 8-0 Davidson run doubled up Southwest. DCCC took a 49-29 lead into the half. A Glover steal and slam opened the final half of play with Rico Geter following with a 3-pointer and two Potts free throws. That looked like it would be the end of the Eagles, but they quietly came back to make it 69-51 with 10:45 left. DCCC has proven its capability to hit teams with big runs in the past, but even Southwest was knocked back at the fury unleashed by the Storm over the next three minutes. A 20-3 spurt finished off by a Zack Williams alley-OOP dunk made it an 89-54 lead that kept building to the end. Winners of 20 straight, the Storm (28-4) will host Montgomery College (Md.) Germantown (21-8) in the District VII championship next Saturday at 3 p.m. A win would

TIMES PHOTO/LARRY MATHIS

Kimani Hunt glides to the hole for two points on Saturday at DCCC. advance them to the NJCAA Division III national tournament in Delhi, N.Y. March 11-13. “Next Saturday is going to be a big-time test, but we get to host it and that hopefully will be an advantage,” said Ridge. “I would like to again thank our community that provides us so much energy.” Notes: Glover finished with 29 points, Geter 20, Zack Williams and Kimani Hunt 15 each, Potts 11 and Robbie Rives 10 ... DCCC hit 14 3s for the game. Sports Editor Zach Kepley can be reached at 888-3631, or at kepley@tvilletimes.com.

The publisher of High Point Enterprise, Thomasville Times, and Archdale-Trinity News is not liable for slight typographical errors or other minor mistakes that do not lessen the value of the advertisement. The publisherʼs liability for other errors is limited to the publication of the advertisement or the refund of money paid for the advertisement. Please check your advertisement on the first day of publication. The High Point Enterprise, Thomasville Times, or Archdale-Trinity News will not give credit after the first insertion. The High Point Enterprise, Thomasville Times, or Archdale-Trinity News will not be held libel for the omission of an advertisement. All claims for adjustments must be made within 7 business days of insertion of advertisement.

0550

Found

FOUND: Medium Sized Golden Colored Dog in the Mt. Zion Church Rd Area on 2/23. Has collar. Please call to identify 336-472-1602

Buy * Save * Sell Place your ad in the classifieds! Buy * Save * Sell

In Print & Online Find It Today 0570

Special Notices FISH FRY

Where Buyers & Sellers Meet

The Classifieds Ads that work!!

This Friday, 5:30PM-7PM Our Lady of the Highways Church, Ball Park Rd., T’ville. Off Unity St. $6-adults, $3children under 10.

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed by Tri Force Holding, Inc., dated the 2nd day of June, 2005, and recorded in Book 1616, page 81, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Davidson County, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured, and the said deed of trust being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, and the holder of the indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, and the undersigned Trustee having petitioned the Clerk of Superior Court of Davidson County for an Order Allowing Foreclosure to proceed and such Order having been entered the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door of the Davidson County Courthouse, Lexington, North Carolina, at 12:00 noon on the 4th day of March, 2010, all of the property conveyed in said deed of trust, including all buildings and permanent improvements affixed thereto, which property as of ten (10) days prior to the posting of this notice was owned by Tri Force Holding, Inc., the same lying and being in Davidson County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows: hereto

and

incorpo-

EXHIBIT “A“ First Tract: BEGINNING at an iron located on the East side of Shoaf Street, Southwest corner of Lot Number 1, and running thence along the East side of Shoaf Street North 22 degrees 02 minutes East 41.65 feet to an iron; thence continuing along the East side of Shoaf Street an arc distance of 47.15 feet to a stake, a new corner; thence South 82 degrees 44 minutes East approximately 140 feet to a stake on the back line of Lot Number 1; thence South 8 degrees 16 minutes West along the back line of Lot Number 1, 86 feet to an iron stake; thence North 82 degrees 44 minutes West 155.85 feet to the point of beginning, and being Lot Number 1 of the Property of Mrs. R. Grady Shoaf, Plat Book 13, page 94, EXCEPT for a 25-foot strip, which strip is the northern portion of said lot and adjoins Lot Number 2. Subject to restrictions recorded in Book 453, page 202A. Second Tract: BEGINNING at a stake on the east side of Shoaf Street, which stake is located South 7 degrees 16 minutes West 20 feet from the Southwest corner of Lot Number 3, and running thence South 82 degrees 44 minutes East approximately 139 feet to a stake, new corner, on the back line of Lot Number 2; thence along the back lines of Lot Number 2 and Lot Number 1, South 8 degrees 16 minutes West 80 feet to a stake, a new corner; thence a new line bisecting Lot Number 1, North 82 degrees 44 minutes West approximately 139 feet to a stake on the east side of Shoaf Street; thence along the east side of Shoaf Street as it curves to the north approximately 80 feet to the point of beginning, and being the southern portion of Lot Number 2 and the northern portion of Lot Number 1 of the property of Mrs. R. Grady Shoaf, a Map of which is recorded in Plat Book 13, page 94, in the Davidson County Registry. Subject to restrictions recorded in Book 455, page 221. Third Tract: BEGINNING at an iron pipe in the eastern right of way line for Shoaf Street and being located South 07 degrees 16 minutes West 15 feet from the southwestern corner of Lot Number 4 of the Property of Mrs. R. Grady Shoaf as shown on a Map recorded in Plat Book 13, page 94, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Davidson County, North Carolina; thence South 82 degrees 41 minutes 18 seconds East 139.77 feet to an iron pipe in the back line of Lot 3; thence along the back lines of Lots 3 and 2, South 8 degrees 11 minutes 06 seconds West 79.87 feet to an iron pipe; thence North 82 degrees 44 minutes 08 seconds West 138.49 feet to an iron pipe in the eastern right of way line for Shoaf Street; thence along the eastern right of way line for Shoaf Street, North 07 degrees 16 minutes 00 seconds East 79.98 feet to an iron pipe, the beginning and containing .25 acre and being the northern portion of Lot 2 and the southern portion of Lot 3 of the Property of Mrs. R. Grady Shoaf. Subject to restrictions recorded in Book 455, page 221. Fourth Tract: BEGINNING at an existing iron pipe in the eastern right of way line for Shoaf Street and being located South 7 degrees 16 minutes 00 seconds West 15 feet from the southwestern corner of Lot 4 of the Property of Mrs. R. Grady Shoaf as shown on a Map recorded in Plat Book 13, page 94, in the office of the Register of Deeds for Davidson County, North Carolina; thence along the eastern right of way line for Shoaf Street, North 7 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds East 80 feet to a point in concrete; thence South 82 degrees 40 minutes 54 seconds East 141.36 feet to an existing iron pipe in the back line of Lot 4; thence along the back line of Lots 4 and 3, South 8 degrees 24 minutes 14 seconds East 80 feet to an existing iron pipe in the back line of Lot 3; thence North 82 degrees 41 minutes 18 seconds West 139.77 feet to an existing iron pipe, the beginning and containing 0.26 acre and being the southern 65 feet of Lot 4 and the northern 15 feet of Lot 3 of the Property of Mrs. R. Grady Shoaf. The property is subject to the restrictions recorded in Deed Book 465, page 292. This conveyance includes and is subject to an easement for a driveway along the northern line as described in Deed Book 465, page 285. The Trustee is advised that the property is located at 409 Shoaf Street, Lexington, North Carolina 27292, 411 Shoaf Street, Lexington, North Carolina 27292, 413 Shoaf Street, Lexington, North Carolina 27292, and 415 Shoaf Street, Lexington, North Carolina 27292 and is being sold as is SUBJECT to any city-county ad valorem taxes and any special assessments that are a lien against the premises, as well as all prior deeds of trust, liens, judgments, encumbrances, restrictions, easements and rights-of-way of record, if any, and THERE IS NO WARRANTY RELATING TO TITLE, POSSESSION, QUIET ENJOYMENT OF THE LIKE IN THIS DISPOSITION. SALE IS AS IS WHERE IS. An order for possession of the above-described property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007 may, after receiving the Notice of Sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. The highest bidder at said sale shall be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of his bid or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, at the time of sale, with the balance immediately due and payable upon expiration of the time allowed for filing upset beds. This sale is SUBJECT to upset bid which may be made with the Clerk of Superior Court in the manner provided by law. This the 9th day of February, 2010. Trustee Services, Inc.,Trustee 10-SP-36 February 23, 2010 March 2, 2010

Medical/ Nursingl

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Care Needed

Parents Wanted Parents needed for Therapeutic Foster Care. Extensive training required. Information meeting on Saturday March 13 at 11:00 a.m. at the Deep River Recreation Center in High Point. Contact Courtney Dabney of Children’s Home Society at 1-800-6321400, x 353. Make your classified ads work harder for you with features like Bolding, Ad Borders & eye-catching graphics

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1053

Cosmetology

A Salon has an excellent career move for Stylist who is Seeking excellent pay & benefits. Call 336-312-1885

Metro Nursing is increasing its Home Nursing activity in the High Point area-thus, WE NEED NURSES—RN or LPN IMMEDIATLEY. Since the corporate office is located in Winston-Salem, we will be glad the make it a little easier for those who live in High Point to also work in the High Point area. About the only time you would need to travel to W-S is for the hiring process. We have jobs right now to be filled. Call us and we can give you the details over the phone.

336-765-5721

1531 G Westbrook Plaza Drive Winston-Salem, NC Ads that work!!

1210

Trades

GARDEN CENTER LABORER Bell Nursery, a nationally recognized grower/vendor of plants and nursery stock is looking for h a r d w o r k i n g , enthusiastic people to merchandise our products at a Home Depot garden center near you. Must be flexible for weekend work. Supervisory and Merchandising p o s i t i o n s a r e available. Please view job descriptions, locations and apply o n l i n e a t bellimpact.com

1054 Customer Service

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

See Exhibit “A“ attached rated herein by reference.

1115

Needed Receptionists & Customer Service. F/T. Call Ron 336883-8000

1060

Drivers

Drivers & Switchers: Excellent Benefits! Great Weekly Pay, Vacation & Holidays! CDL-A, 2yrs Exp. Swing Transport: 800-849-5378 Owner Operators needed immediately, OTR, 2yr exp. req. Home weekends. Call 472-5740

1080

Furniture

Needed exp’d Cabinet Sales Person for Davidson, Guilford, Randolph and Forsyth Counties. To sell Factory & custom cabinets. Call 399-4797 or 596-2145

2050

Apartments Unfurnished

2BR Apt unfurnished, Cent Air, No Pets. Near Pilot School on Har mon Dr, T -ville. $400 mo & $400 dep. 476-4756 50% off 1st Mo Rent. Lg 2BR,1 1⁄ 2 BA/ 2br , brick duplex, Energy Eff. Good Neigh-borhood. 475-4800 L i k e n e w 2 b r Townhouse, $550. mo, Call 336-2678585

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed by Rodney Steven Martin and wife, Wendy C. Martin, dated the 2nd day of September, 2004, and recorded in Book 1551, page 1397, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Davidson County, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured, and the said deed of trust being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, and the holder of the indebtedness, thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness and the undersigned Trustee having petitioned the Clerk of Superior Court of Davidson County for an Order Allowing Foreclosure to proceed and such Order having been entered, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door of the Davidson County Courthouse, Lexington, North Carolina, at 12:00 noon on the 4th day of March, 2010, all of the property conveyed in said deed of trust, including all buildings and permanent improvements affixed thereto, which property as of ten (10) days prior to the posting of this notice was owned by Rodney Steven Martin and wife, Wendy C. Martin, the same lying and being in Davidson County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows: See Exhibit “A“ attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference. EXHIBIT A SCHEDULE OF DESCRIPTION TO BE ATTACHED TO LEXINGTON STATE BANK DEED OF TRUST FROM RODNEY S. MARTIN AND WENDY C. MARTIN DATED SEPTEMBER 2, 2004. Premises in Thomasville Township, Davidson County, North Carolina. BEGINNING: At a point in the Eastern edge of National Highway, said point being located North 35 degrees 14’47“ East 176.28 feet from a nail at the intersection of Northern right-ofway of Russell Street and the Eastern right-ofway of National Highway, and running thence with the Eastern right-of-way of National Highway North 29 degrees 14’00“ East 180.00 feet to a railroad spike; said spike being located South 29 degrees 14’ 00“ West 127.47 feet from an existing iron in the Eastern right-of-way of National Highway; thence leaving National Highway and running with a new line for J. C. Faw South 59 degrees 47’ 30“ East 180.00 feet to a railroad spike: thence with another new line for J.C. Faw South 29 degrees 19’ 09“ West 176.55 feet to a railroad spike; thence North 60 degrees 53’ 24“ West 4.35 feet to an existing iron, said iron being located North 35 degrees 24’ 39“ East 174.95 feet from a nail in the North right-of-way of Russell Street; thence with the Northern line of Taylor Oil Company North 60 degrees 53’ 24“ West, crossing an existing iron at 172.86 feet, a total distance of 175.36 feet to the Beginning, containing 0.736 acres, more or less, as shown on the plat entitled “Map for RODNEY STEVEN MARTIN“ by J. Dean Slate, R.L.S., dated March 31, 1992 and revised April 21, 1997. TOGETHER WITH a non-exclusive easement for the purpose of parking automobiles, said easement more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a point located South 59 degrees 47’ 30“ East 27.01 feet from the Northernmost corner of the above-described 0.736 acre tract, and running thence South 84 degrees 56’ 36“ East 51.76 feet to a point; thence South 59 degrees 47’ 30“ East 127.79 feet to a point; thence South 29 degrees 19’ 09“ West 198.13 feet to a point; thence north 60 degrees 53’24“ West 22.00 feet to a railroad spike, the Southernmost corner of the above-described 0.736 acre tract; thence with the 0.736 acre tract the following two courses: (1) North 29 degrees 19’ 09“ East 176.55 feet to a railroad spike, and (2) North 59 degrees 47’30“ West 152.99 feet to the Beginning, containing 0.166 acres, more or less. For reference see Deed Book 1056, Page 475, Davidson County Registry. The Trustee is advised that the property is located at 709 National Highway, Thomasville, North Carolina 27360, and is being sold as is SUBJECT to any city-county ad valorem taxes and any special assessments that are a lien against the premises, as well as all prior deeds of trust, liens, judgments, encumbrances, restrictions, easements and rights-of-way of record, if any, and THERE IS NO WARRANTY RELATING TO TITLE, POSSESSION, QUIET ENJOYMENT OR THE LIKE IN THIS DISPOSITION. SALE AS IS WHERE IS. An order for possession of the above-described property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007 may, after receiving the Notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. The highest bidder as said sale shall be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of his bid or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, at the time of sale, with the balance immediately due and payable upon expiration of the time allowed for filing upset bids. This sale is SUBJECT to upset bid which may be made with the Clerk of Superior Court in the manner provided by law. This the 9th day of February, 2010. Trustee Services Inc., Trustee 10-SP-34 February 23, 2010 March 2, 2010


10 – Thomasville Times – Tuesday, March 2, 2010

SPORTS DOES From page 7 finished third ahead of fourth-place Mark Martin. And Matt Kenseth edged Joey Logano for fifth. Logano was sixth, a very impressive finish for the young driver. Tony Stewart was seventh, Clint Bowyer eighth, Kasey Kahne ninth and Greg Biffle 10th. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., continued his struggle to compete with the frontrunners by finishing 16th. On a sunny, gorgeous afternoon, hometown favorite and pole winner Kurt Busch led the field into turn one but Gordon went to the front shortly thereafter. Two laps weren’t completed before the first caution flag waved. Rookie Kevin Conway lost control of his Ford and tapped the wall out of turn four. Gordon led on the restart at lap five. When the field settled in at 20 laps, Gordon was leading with the Busch Boys in tow. Newman was fourth with Earnhardt Jr. fifth. Rounding out the top 10 were Biffle, Stewart, Edwards, Montoya and Logano. Mike Bliss brought out the second caution flag on lap 46 when he got into the wall in turn four. Gordon beat everyone out of the pits to maintain his lead. The buzz all week had centered on speed with the track record being broken by Kurt Busch and numerous other drivers but Sunday’s pace was slower than anticipated due to the sunshine. A caution light malfunction brought out another yellow flag right after the restart. The caution lights failed to shut off so NASCAR had to slow the field and fix the problem. In the process, Biffle took the lead with Gordon second. On the ensuing restart at lap 57, it was Biffle, Gordon, Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch, Kenseth, Edwards, Johnson, Earnhardt Jr., Stewart, Newman and Burton. Gordon quickly went to the front again. Kyle Busch took the top spot on lap 65, and Kenseth moved into second but Gordon was having none of that and went back out front on lap 67. By lap 70, last week’s winner in California, Johnson, had moved from 20th starting position to third place behind teammate Gordon and Kenseth. At lap 88, Hornish Jr. spun off turn four and complained to his crew his car was so loose he couldn’t hang on to it. Johnson had a bad pit stop this round when his tire changer had a lug nut problem. He came in third and went back out sixth. Kenseth took the lead out of the pits with Edwards ahead of Gordon. At lap 93, after the restart, teammates Juan Pablo Montoya and Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray tangled, and Kurt Busch got caught up in it to bring out the fifth caution. On the restart at lap 97, Gordon recaptured the lead from Kenseth. Edwards was third. Gordon, at this point in the race, seemed to clearly have the fastest car. Another caution light malfunction prompted the sixth caution period of the day at 108 laps. The restart on lap 114 had Scott Speed in front

briefly but Gordon sped past before they made a lap. Kenseth was next with Johnson third and Kyle Busch fourth. Burton was fifth. At the halfway point (133 laps), it was an all Hendrick Chevrolet race with Gordon leading and Johnson second, a battle of four-time champions. Kenseth was third in a Roush Ford. Two Childress Chevrolets were running fourth and fifth, Burton and Harvick.

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The exciting ride for the Thomasville Lady Bulldogs in the 2-A state playoffs ended Friday evening, as Shelby pulled away for a 59-45 victory. Brooke ward led the Lady Bulldogs in scoring with 15 points. Thomasville ended its season at 11-10.

WRESTLING Burgess 2nd, Harrington 6th in state tourney Thomasville junior Ronta Burgess nearly brought home an individual championship Saturday in the 135-pound, 2-A NCHSAA state finals at the Greens-

boro Coliseum, but fell a couple points short. Burgess lost a 5-3 decision to Central Carolina Conference foe Joseph Figueroa of Salisbury. Burgess had beaten the Hornet senior earlier in the year but could not find the right moves on Saturday. East Davidson’s Jamar Harrington did well in the 2-A tournament finishing sixth at 119 pounds.

SOFTBALL Adult softball organization meeting Thomasville Parks & Recreation in holding a meeting on March 9, for anyone interested in fielding a team in an adult softball league. The meeting will start at 6 p.m. For more information, call 475-4287.

A - High Point/Archdale/Guilford Co. Ê - Sports D - Davidson Co. Ë - News/Talk

7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 Wheel Jeopardy! ÊCollege Basketball Miami at North Carolina. (Live) The Good Wife “Bang” ËNews ËLate Show W/Letterman ËLate Late Show/Craig Paid Prog. Business N.C. Now Leonard Cohen Live in London Å Leonard Cohen Live in London Å ËBBC World ËCharlie Rose (N) Å ËT. Smiley N.C. Now Bookwatch TMZ (N) Smarter American Idol (Live) Å ËFOX 8 10:00 News (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Bernie Mac King of Hill Paid Prog. Malcolm Inside Ed. ËEnt The Biggest Loser (N) Å Parenthood “Pilot” ËNews ËTonight Show w/J. Leno ËLate Night ËLast Call Fam. Feud Ghost Whisperer Å Ghost Whisperer Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Shark “LAPD Blue” Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Pastor Melissa Scott King Name Earl Name Earl 90210 Å Melrose Place Å Raymond Raymond King Hates Chris Family Guy Scrubs Punk’d Comics ËABC News Deal No Millionaire Lost “Lighthouse” Å Lost “Sundown” (N) 20/20 (N) Å Frasier ËNightline ËJimmy Kimmel Live (N) Ë(:06) Extra South Park Simpsons Two Men Two Men Smarter Smarter Deal No Deal No The Office The Office Payne Payne Law & Order: SVU ’70s Show Lopez Baptist Kerwin First Baptist Church Kenneth This Is Day ËLife Today Today Your Bible Gospel Just Sayin’ Answers in Genesis TCT Today Healing 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 First 48 Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds “Lo-Fi” Criminal Minds Å CSI: Miami Å CSI: Miami Å (12:01) Criminal Minds (:01) Criminal Minds (5:00) ››› “Philadelphia” (1993) ›››› “To Kill a Mockingbird” (1962) Gregory Peck, Mary Badham. ›››› “To Kill a Mockingbird” (1962) Gregory Peck, Mary Badham. Untamed River Monsters Å Untamed and Uncut Wild Recon (N) Å Madman of the Sea Wild Recon Å Untamed and Uncut Madman of the Sea (:00) 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live ›› “National Security” (2003) Martin Lawrence. Vick Tiny-Toya ËThe Mo’Nique Show ËWendy Williams Show “National Security” Matchmkr Millionaire Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Makeover Smarter Smarter Extreme-Home ››› “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” (2000) George Clooney. ››› “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” (2000) George Clooney. Mad Money Kudlow Report (Live) Big Mac: Inside Coca-Cola Stry Biography on CNBC (N) Mad Money Coca-Cola Stry Biography on CNBC The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer ËCampbell Brown (N) ËLarry King Live (N) ËAnderson Cooper 360 Å ËLarry King Live ËAnderson Cooper 360 Comedy ËDaily Show ËColbert Scrubs Scrubs South Park South Park South Park South Park ËDaily Show ËColbert South Park South Park Futurama ËDaily Show (5:00) House of Representatives ËTonight From Washington ËCapital News Today (5:00) U.S. Senate Coverage ËTonight From Washington ËCapital News Today Cash Cab Dirty Jobs Å Dirty Jobs Å Dirty Jobs (N) Å Dirty Jobs Å Dirty Jobs Å Dirty Jobs Å Dirty Jobs Å Suite/Deck Wizards Montana “Homeward Bound” Phineas Phineas Montana Wizards Suite/Deck Suite Life So Raven Cory K. Possible Lust E! News (N) Daily 10 E! Investigates: Crime Too Young to Kill: 15 Shocking Crimes ËChelsea E! News ËChelsea Kendra Sexiest “Cover Girls” ÊSportsCtr. ÊCollege Basketball Vanderbilt at Florida. (Live) ÊCollege Basketball Illinois at Ohio State. (Live) ÊSportsCenter Å ÊNFL Live ÊFastbreak ÊSportsCenter Å ÊInterruption ÊCollege Basketball Villanova at Cincinnati. (Live) ÊNBA Coast-to-Coast (Live) Å ÊSportsNation Å ÊFinal ÊSportsNation Å ÊNASCAR 8, Rules Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest The 700 Club Å Whose? Whose? Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Minute Challenge Ace, Cakes Cakes Unwrapped Best Thing Chopped (N) Good Eats Unwrapped Unwrapped Best Thing Chopped (:00) ›› “X-Men: The Last Stand” ’70s Show ’70s Show ›› “Underworld: Evolution” (2006, Horror) Kate Beckinsale. ›› “Underworld: Evolution” (2006, Horror) Kate Beckinsale. Bret Baier ËFOX Report The O’Reilly Factor (N) ËHannity (N) On the Record The O’Reilly Factor ËHannity On the Record ÊUnd. ÊNHL Hockey Carolina Hurricanes at Toronto Maple Leafs. (Live) ÊPostgame ÊMy Words ÊFinal Score ÊGame 365 ÊFinal Score Ê ÊFinal Score ÊFinal Score ÊLessons ÊLearning ÊInside PGA ÊHonda Classic John Daly John Daly ÊHaney ÊHaney ÊGolfCentrl ÊInside PGA John Daly John Daly ÊHaney ÊHaney 7th Heaven 7th Heaven “Blind” “Jane Doe: The Wrong Face” (2005, Mystery) Å Touched by an Angel Golden Golden Golden Golden Videos Videos Holmes House House First Place First Place House Hunt Bang, Buck House House Property First Place House Hunt Bang, Buck House House Earth Modern Marvels Å Modern Marvels (N) How the Earth Life After People (N) Life After People Å (12:01) Modern Marvels How the Earth Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Å Grey’s Anatomy Å “Obsessed” (2002) Jenna Elfman. Å (DVS) Will-Grace Will-Grace Frasier Medium “Soul Survivor” Medium ËEd Show ËHardball Å ËCountdown-Olbermann ËMaddow Show ËCountdown-Olbermann ËMaddow Show ËHardball Å ËCountdown-Olbermann Made (N) “Turn the Beat Around” (2010) Romina D’Ugo. 16 and Pregnant Å 16 and Pregnant (N) 16 and Pregnant Å Life, Liz Life, Liz Buried Buried Explorer Lockdown Journey to the Edge of the Universe Explorer (N) Journey to the Edge of the Universe Explorer Big Time iCarly SpongeBob Malcolm Malcolm Hates Chris Hates Chris Lopez Lopez The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny Lopez Lopez CSI ÊUFC Unleashed Å ÊUFC Unleashed Å ÊUFC Unleashed Å BlueMount Players ÊUFC Unleashed Å ÊUFC Unleashed Å BlueMount Players House Supernanny Å Supernanny Å Ruby Clean House Supernanny Å Supernanny Å Clean House Stargate Star Trek: Next Gener. Star Trek: Generation Star Trek: Next Gener. WWE NXT (Live) Å “100 Feet” (2008, Suspense) Famke Janssen. Å Highlander “Finale” The Office Seinfeld Seinfeld The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office ËLopez Tonight (N) Name Earl Name Earl Sex & City Sex & City “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers” ›››› “West Side Story” (1961) Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer. Å ››› “Rebel Without a Cause” (1955) Å ›››› “Giant” (1956) Say Yes Ultimate Cake Off Å Tiniest Girl 19 Kids 19 Kids Little Little Tiniest Girl 19 Kids 19 Kids Little Little Southland Southland “Two Gangs” Southland “Westside” Southland “Derailed” Southland Å CSI: NY “Zoo York” CSI: NY Å Southland Å Chowder Johnny T Johnny T Ed, Edd Ed, Edd Teen Titans Teen Titans King of Hill King of Hill Family Guy Family Guy Chicken Aqua Teen Moral Orel Oblongs Hamburger Pizza Paradise Å Uniq McDonald Best Places to Pig Out Man/Food Man/Food Best Fast Food Stops Uniq McDonald Best Places to Pig Out Cops Å Repo Oper. Repo Repo Repo World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Murder by the Book All-Family Sanford Sanford Griffith Griffith Home Imp. Home Imp. Home Imp. Home Imp. Boston Legal Å Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Å ËNotic. En Nombre del Amor Hasta que el Dinero Corazón Salvaje (SS) Aquí y Ahora (SS) Impacto Noticiero Un Gancho al Corazón Amar sin Límites (SS) Law Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU White Collar (N) Å Psych “Think Tank” Burn Notice Å White Collar Å Hotties 90s Celebrity Fit Club Å Let’s Talk Fantasia Tool Academy Celebrity Rehab, Drew Crime ›› “Be Cool” (2005, Comedy) John Travolta, Uma Thurman. Becker Funniest Home Videos ››› “Stir Crazy” (1980, Comedy) Gene Wilder. ËWGN News at Nine (N) Scrubs Scrubs South Park South Park Star Trek: Next Gener. 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 (5:45) ›› “17 Again” Big Love Å Ricky ››› “Reporter” (2009) ‘NR’ Å ›› “Fast & Furious” (2009) Vin Diesel. ‘PG-13’ ›› “17 Again” (2009) Zac Efron. (5:40) ›››› “The Dark Knight” (:15) ›› “The Bucket List” (2007) ‘PG-13’ Å (12:15) “Naked Lust” (2009) ‘NR’ Å Life on Top › “Showgirls” (1995) Elizabeth Berkley. ‘NC-17’ “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle” “Baby on Board” (2008) Jerry O’Connell. ‘R’ Union La La Land Call Girl ››› “The Bank Job” (2008) Jason Statham. ‘R’ Powder Bl (:00) ›› “Assassination Tango” ‘R’ ››› “The Baader Meinhof Complex” (2008) Martina Gedeck. ››› “The Believer” (2001) ‘R’ Å (12:10) ›› “Some Girl” (1998) ‘R’ Say Uncle

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9

BASKETBALL Thomasville girls exit playoffs

6:30

WEDNESDAY EVENING CBS PBS FOX NBC ION CW ABC MNT WLXI

AREA SPORTS BRIEFS

6:30

A - High Point/Archdale/Guilford Co. Ê - Sports D - Davidson Co. Ë - News/Talk

7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 Wheel Jeopardy! Chris Unmarried Criminal Minds (N) CSI: NY (N) Å ËNews ËLate Show W/Letterman ËLate Late Show/Craig Paid Prog. Business N.C. Now The National Parks: America’s Best Idea Biologist Adolph Murie. Faces of America ËBBC World ËCharlie Rose (N) Å ËT. Smiley TMZ (N) Smarter American Idol (Live) Å ËFOX 8 10:00 News (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Bernie Mac King of Hill Paid Prog. Malcolm Inside Ed. ËEnt Mercy (N) Å Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “P.C.; Savior” ËNews ËTonight Show w/J. Leno ËLate Night ËLast Call Fam. Feud Ghost Whisperer Å Ghost Whisperer Å Ghost Whisperer Å Criminal Minds Å Shark “Dr. Feelbad” Paid Prog. Tomorrow’s Pastor Melissa Scott King Name Earl Name Earl ÊCollege Basketball Kentucky at Georgia. (Live) Raymond Raymond King Hates Chris Family Guy Scrubs Punk’d Comics ËABC News Deal No Millionaire Family The Middle Family Cougar Oprah Winfrey Frasier ËNightline ËJimmy Kimmel Live (N) Ë(:06) Extra South Park Simpsons Two Men Two Men The Unit Å The Unit Å The Office The Office Payne Payne Law & Order: SVU ’70s Show Lopez Faith Berean Baptist Hour TCT Today Pstr Greg This Is Day ËLife Today Today Your Bible Gospel Just Sayin’ Gaither Gospel Hour TCT Today Healing 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 First 48 Criminal Minds Å Dog the Bounty Hunter Dog the Bounty Hunter Dog the Bounty Hunter Seagal Seagal Dog the Bounty Hunter Dog the Bounty Hunter (5:30) ››› “The Terminator” Å Terminatr ››› “Enter the Dragon” (1973) Bruce Lee, John Saxon. Å ››› “Fight Club” (1999, Suspense) Brad Pitt, Edward Norton. Å Untamed Tarantula-King Monsters Inside Me I Shouldn’t Be Alive I Was Bitten Monsters Inside Me I Shouldn’t Be Alive I Was Bitten (:00) 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live ›› “Devil in a Blue Dress” (1995) Denzel Washington. Crews ËThe Mo’Nique Show ËWendy Williams Show “Devil in a Blue Dress” Match Millionaire Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Shear Genius Å Shear Genius (N) Å Shear Genius Å Real Housewives Shear Genius Å Makeover Extreme-Home Smarter Smarter (:15) › “Son-in-Law” (1993) Pauly Shore, Carla Gugino. Cribs › “Son-in-Law” (1993, Comedy) Pauly Shore. Mad Money Kudlow Report (Live) American Greed American Greed (N) American Greed Mad Money American Greed American Greed The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer ËCampbell Brown (N) ËLarry King Live (N) ËAnderson Cooper 360 Å ËLarry King Live ËAnderson Cooper 360 Scrubs ËDaily Show ËColbert Chappelle’s Chappelle’s Futurama Futurama South Park Tosh.0 (N) ËDaily Show ËColbert Tosh.0 South Park Futurama ËDaily Show (5:00) House of Representatives ËTonight From Washington ËCapital News Today (5:00) U.S. Senate Coverage ËTonight From Washington ËCapital News Today Cash Cab Arctic Roughnecks Alaska’s Most Extreme Mayday! Bering Sea (N) Solv.History Alaska: Most Extreme Mayday! Bering Sea Solv.History Suite/Deck Wizards Montana “Wendy Wu: Homecoming Warrior” Phineas Phineas Montana Wizards Suite/Deck Suite Life So Raven Cory K. Possible Vanished E! News (N) Daily 10 SPINdustry Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian ËChelsea E! News ËChelsea Kendra Sexiest Miami Jobs ÊSportsCtr. ÊCollege Basketball Connecticut at Notre Dame. ÊCollege Basketball Duke at Maryland. (Live) ÊSportsCenter Å ÊNFL Live ÊFastbreak ÊSportsCenter Å ÊInterruption ÊCollege Basketball Wake Forest at Florida State. ÊCollege Basketball Oklahoma State at Texas A&M. ÊSportsNation Å ÊFinal ÊSportsNation Å ÊNASCAR 8, Rules Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club Å Whose? Whose? Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Minute Challenge Unwrapped Bobby Flay Bobby Flay Dinner: Impossible (N) Good Eats Unwrapped Bobby Flay Bobby Flay Dinner: Impossible (4:30) “Man on Fire” Nip/Tuck Nip/Tuck Damages ’70s Show ’70s Show ››› “The Italian Job” (2003, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg. Bret Baier ËFOX Report The O’Reilly Factor (N) ËHannity (N) On the Record The O’Reilly Factor ËHannity On the Record ÊGame 365 ÊPregame ÊNBA Basketball Charlotte Bobcats at Boston Celtics. (Live) ÊPostgame ÊFinal Score ÊGolden Age ÊFinal Score M1 Fighting Champion ÊFinal Score ÊFinal Score ÊLessons Ê19th Hole (Live) ÊGolf Videos ÊTop 10 ÊTop 10 (N) ÊHaney John Daly Ê19th Hole ÊGolfCentrl ÊLessons ÊTop 10 ÊTop 10 John Daly Ê19th Hole 7th Heaven 7th Heaven “Gossip” “Where There’s a Will” (2006) Frank Whaley. Å Touched by an Angel Golden Golden Golden Golden Videos Videos Holmes House House Property Property House Hunt House Holmes on Homes Income First Place House Hunt House Holmes on Homes The States MonsterQuest Å MonsterQuest Å MonsterQuest (N) Å Ax Men Å Modern Marvels “Axes” (12:01) MonsterQuest (:01) MonsterQuest Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Å Grey’s Anatomy Å Will-Grace Will-Grace Frasier Medium Å Medium ›› “Management” (2008) Jennifer Aniston. Å ËEd Show ËHardball Å ËCountdown-Olbermann ËMaddow Show ËCountdown-Olbermann ËMaddow Show ËHardball Å ËCountdown-Olbermann Made (N) 16 and Pregnant Å South Park South Park The Real World Å The Real World (N) The Real World Å “Turn the Beat Around” (2010) Romina D’Ugo. (:00) Taboo Lockdown “Newbies” Locked Up Abroad Outlaw Bikers Taboo Body reshaping. Locked Up Abroad Outlaw Bikers Taboo Body reshaping. Jackson iCarly SpongeBob Malcolm Malcolm Hates Chris Hates Chris Lopez Lopez The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny Lopez Lopez (:00) DEA Die Die Die Die Die Die 1,000-Lie MANswers BlueMount Players 1,000-Lie Die CSI: Crime Scn House Supernanny Å Supernanny Å Giuliana Kimora Clean House Clean The Dish Giuliana Kimora Clean House Ghost Ghost Hunters Å Ghost Hunters Å Ghost Hunters “Alcatraz Live Event” (Live) Å (:02) Ghost Hunters (12:02) Ghost Hunters “Alcatraz Live Event” Å The Office Seinfeld Seinfeld Browns Browns Browns Browns Payne Payne ËLopez Tonight (N) Name Earl Name Earl Sex & City Sex & City (:00) ››› “I’ll Cry Tomorrow” Å (:15) ›››› “Alien” (1979) Tom Skerritt. (12:15) ›› “Heaven’s Gate” (1980, Western) ››› “Cool Hand Luke” (1967) Paul Newman. Dress Tiny-Kenadie Your Kid Ate What? Child Frozen in Time Strongest Toddler Your Kid Ate What? Child Frozen in Time Strongest Toddler Law-Order Bones Å Bones Å Leverage Å Leverage Å CSI: NY Å ››› “300” (2007, Action) Gerard Butler. Å Chowder Johnny T Johnny T Dude Destroy Star Wars Super Hero King of Hill King of Hill Family Guy Family Guy Chicken Aqua Teen Moral Orel Oblongs Treasure Extreme Pig Outs Å Man/Food Man/Food Carnivore Man/Food Man, Food Man, Food Extreme Restaurants Man/Food Man/Food Carnivore Man/Food PoliceVids Cops Å Cops Å Most Daring Most Daring (N) Most Shocking (N) Forensic Forensic Most Daring Most Daring All-Family Sanford Sanford Griffith Griffith Home Imp. Home Imp. High School Reunion (N) First Love High School Reunion Roseanne Roseanne ËNotic. En Nombre del Amor Hasta que el Dinero Corazón Salvaje (SS) Don Francisco Presenta Impacto Noticiero Un Gancho al Corazón Amar sin Límites (SS) (:00) NCIS NCIS “Leap of Faith” NCIS “Bikini Wax” NCIS “Agent Afloat” Psych A shark attack. Burn Notice Å White Collar Å Psych A shark attack. Songs 90s Songs of ’90s Songs of ’90s Songs of ’90s Celebrity Fit Club Å Fantasia Fantasia Tool Academy Celebrity Rehab, Drew Becker Funniest Home Videos ›› “Sixteen Candles” (1984) Molly Ringwald. ËWGN News at Nine (N) Scrubs Scrubs South Park South Park Star Trek: Generation 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 (:00) ››› “Marley & Me” (2008) How How How The Pacific Big Love Å Real Time W/ Bill Maher Funny, Die Life, Times “Breaking and Entering” (:45) › “Max Payne” (2008) Mark Wahlberg. Å (:45) “Sex Games Cancun 3” (2006) (:15) › “Turbulence” ››› “Shrek” (2001) ‘PG’ Å ›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” Call Girl Union Penn Penn ÊInside NASCAR (iTV) (N) La La Land Union ÊInside NASCAR (iTV) ÊFight Camp Fifty Pills ››› “Bart Got a Room” (2008) (5:45) ›› “The Kite Runner” (2007) › “Deal” (2008) Burt Reynolds. (:15) ›› “Rambo” ‘R’ › “Lucky Numbers” (2000) John Travolta. ‘R’ ›› “Meet the Browns” (2008)


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