tvt10172009

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DCCC volleyball cruises past Central Carolina in Region X play.

Coming Tuesday

THOMASVILLE

See who comes out victorious at the Banking 500 for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

Times

See Story, Page B1

Saturday, October 17, 2009

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War keeps family’s hearts torn BY KARISSA MINN Staff Writer

Candace Barnhart was not going to let her husband Mike go without saying goodbye. She had already seen him earlier on the morning of Aug. 21, but when she came to meet him again at a parking ramp at Fort Bragg, he had already boarded one of the buses. Sgt. Michael Barnhart was preparing to deploy to Afghanistan as part of the U.S. Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, and this was the last she would see of him until a two-week break in April.

“I guess I just went crazy for a second and just took off,” Candace said. “I climbed up the bus tire to the window.” The couple met two years ago while Candace was racing in a Lady U-Car competition at Caraway Speedway in Asheboro. Mike was visiting his mother and wanted to see a race, and he met Candace’s family while sitting on the bleachers. “My mom said, ‘You need to talk to that boy,’” she said. “I was so nervous, but I went over there and I talked to him, and we’ve been together ever since.”

Candace had been waiting for him to propose when they found out Mike’s deployment date, and he finally popped the question by offering to “make you one of them dependents.” That was on a Thursday. The next Monday, Aug. 3, they were married in a small ceremony with just the two of them and Candace’s two sons. “I’m a newlywed with no husband,” Candace said. She says that an outpouring of support from her friends and family helps her cope, but when she’s alone, the sadness and worry sometimes catch up

to her. “It feels like somebody’s just taken a knife in your heart, and every day he’s gone, it’s just turning,” Candace said, holding a clenched fist to her chest. “I just miss him so much.” When asked about how it feels when Mike calls, Candace’s whole demeanor changes. She leans forward and grins, as if she’s whispering about a schoolgirl crush. “Oh, it’s better than Xanax, honey,” she said. “He’s just a wonderful, awesome and hu-

See TORN, Page A4

Denton man leaves kids unattended at home BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer A Denton man left town last month for a six-day trip but found himself in trouble when police discovered his children were at home unattended. Michael Daniel Rosser, 48, of 1213 Old Camp Road in Denton, is facing two counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor for leaving the state and his two teenage children at home with no supervision in early September, according to a press release from the Davidson County Sheriff ’s Office. On Sept. 8, detectives received information from the Department of Social Services regarding possible child neglect. Following an investigation, detectives allege that between Sept.

See LEAVES, Page A2

TIMES PHOTO/LARRY MATHIS

BULLDOG ROYALTY Yolimar Morales was named Homecoming Queen for Thomasville High School Friday night at Cushwa Stadium during halftime of the Thomasville-East Davidson football game.

Democratic Women honored for service BY KARISSA MINN Staff Writer

LEXINGTON — The Democratic Women of Davidson County honored distinguished party members at Yarborough’s Restaurant Thursday. Joan Dressler, secretary of the Democratic Women of North Carolina, presented State Rep. Hugh Holliman and County Commissioner Max Walser with Star Awards “in recognition of their outstanding dedication, tireless work and loyal commitment to the Democratic Women of Davidson County.” Eight county Democrats were recognized for their service to the party and given plaques and painted donkey figurines. Anne Newber presented these items to Dressler, saying that she helped revive the county Democratic Women with her leadership. “She has also served as first vice chair for the Sixth Congressional District and county co-chair for Bev Perdue this past year,” Newber said. “She is now secretary of the state Democratic Women, and she’s in her second term on the state party’s council of review. Joann is now chair of the Davidson County Democratic Party.” Holliman was presented with his second award of the night by Josie Laumann, who commended his work in sponsoring and passing legislation to prohibit smoking in certain public places and give equitable insurance coverage to the treatment of mental illness. “I really and truly believe that we are there to

See SERVICE, Page A4

Former councilman remembered through amphitheater donation BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer As Thomasville unveiled the second phase to the new downtown amphitheater, Susan Hunter couldn’t help feeling her late husband was looking down on the Chair City with a smile. Shortly after being elected to city council five years ago, Dr. Jim Hunter died suddenly from a rare form of lymphoma, but the long-time resident left a lasting impression on his family to always give back. On a

cold and dreary Thursday afternoon, Hunter’s family was recognized for keeping his legacy alive through a donation that is making the amphitheater a reality. Mayor Joe Bennett presented Sue Hunter with a granite monument that thanks the Hunter family for their generosity in helping revitalize Thomasville’s downtown. “When they needed the money, I thought what would Jim think,” Sue Hunter said. “He taught us that wherever we lived and made our liv-

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ing we were going to give back. That’s what we’ve tried to do. I think he would be smiling a huge smile. This is something everyone can enjoy in any walk of life. We care for this city. If we can all band together and give a little back, we can keep going and we can keep our town.” Plans for the project started in April and the amphitheater debuted at Everybody’s Day, but that was just the beginning. Phase 2 of the project

TIMES PHOTO/ELIOT DUKE

Thomasville mayor Joe Bennett presents Sue Hunter with a granite monument thankSee DONATION, Page A4 ing her for the generous monetary donation on behalf of her late husband Jim.

Today’s Weather

Partly Cloudy 55/39

Full Forecast Page 2

What’s Inside

Weather Focus Opinion Obituaries Sports TV Listings Classifieds

Thomasville, North Carolina • Your Town. Your Times.

A2 A3 A5 A6 B1 B4 B7


A2 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009 Coltrane Family Reunion

What’s happening? Humane Society yard sale

Humane Society of Davidson County will have a yard sale, bake sale, and hot dogs starting at 8 a.m. today at Bank of the Carolinas, West Center Street, Lexington.

Old Salem Harvest Day

Celebrate the arrival of autumn today when Old Salem Museums & Gardens presents Harvest Day, a fun-filled and educational festival with a focus on grain and its many uses. Harvest Day will be held from 9:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. at Old Salem, 900 Old Salem Road. To the Moravians in Salem, harvest time was a festive and busy time of year. Crops were brought in from the field and put away for winter. Grains were the most important crops, providing the staples of diets. On Harvest Day, Old Salem will look at a variety of grains, how they were harvested, how they were used, and how they were important to the Moravians in Salem. Visitors can learn about beer and hops, straw and bedding, baking bread and the use of grains in medicine. Hands-on activities include making corn husk dolls and cooking and tasting rice fritters. Don’t miss the premiere performance of the Heirloom Puppet Theater’s newest puppet show, “Agatha’s Feather Bed” at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. in the Horton Museum Center. Harvest Day activities are included with an All-in-One ticket to Old Salem Museums & Gardens. For more information, call the Visitor Center at 336721-7350.

The 76th annual Coltrane Clan Reunion will be held on Sunday at Centre Friends Meetinghouse, located at 325 East N.C. Highway 62 in Greensboro. The descendants of William Coltrane, born about 1743, have met annually in northern Randolph County since 1929, missing only four war years. An updated Coltrane genealogy book has been published and will be distributed at the reunion. Coltrane descendants are invited, and they are encouraged to attend the worship service at Centre at 11 a.m. and stay for the covered dish lunch to follow in the church fellowship hall. For more information, call Joe Coltrane at 993-3217.

Annual meeting The Wallburg Fire Department will be having its annual community meeting on Monday, Oct. 19 at 7 p.m.

will be covered during presentations in February and April. Register by calling the Temple at 722-6640 or sending a note to templeemanuel1@triad.rr.com.

Roy’s Folks Crafts Fair The Ninth annual Roy’s Folks Crafts Fair will be held Friday, Nov. 20 at the Loft at Union Square located at 410 English Road in High Point. The event will run from 6 a.m. until 6 p.m. The fair features more than 45 vendors, all who have been featured on one of FOX8’s “Roy’s Folks” segments. The crafts range from handmade yo-yo’s, to rocking chairs, jewelry, pottery, fine art, along with copper, glass and metal artistry, just to name a few. Admission is $3 for adults, $1 for seniors, and children get in free. There is plenty of free parking. All of the money raised from the entrance fee goes to benefit FOX8 Gifts for Kids.

Fraser Fir sale

Inspirational speaker Dr. Clifton Black, guest minister for the Finch Preaching Mission at Memorial United Methodist Church, will be giving an inspirational lecture at the Tom A. Finch Community YMCA on Tuesday, Oct. 20. Dr. Black’s topic will be titled “The Table of Memory.” The lecture will be held in the meeting room at the YMCA from 12:10 – 12:50 p.m. There is no charge and the event is open to all in our community. The YMCA will provide light snacks and beverages and attendees can bring their own lunch if they wish. Call 4756125 with any questions.

A Taste of Judaism Want to learn more? Join Rabbi Mark Strauss-Cohn for “A Taste of Judaism” — three one-hour presentations that are open to the public on Thursday evenings in October, at Temple Emanuel on Oakwood Drive in Winston-Salem. Each presentation begins at 7:30 p.m. and will be followed by a half-hour social. They are free, but donations are accepted. Topics and dates are “Sex in the Text” on Oct. 15, “Miracles in Jewish history” on Oct. 22 and “Jesus and Judaism” on Oct. 29. Additional topics

Wheatmore Athletic booster club is now pre-selling discounted premium grade Fraser Fir trees 6’-7’ ($35.00 preorder) and 7’-8’ ($40.00 pre-order) until Nov. 20. Pay $25.00 deposit now, and balance upon receipt. Great for businesses and home, while supporting a great cause. For ordering information, contact Kevin Meyers at 870-2536 or madipher@northstate.net.

Annual meeting North Lexington Triangle Volunteer Fire Department will hold its annual meeting Nov. 17 at the fire station at 7 p.m. The station is located at 2976 Greensboro St. Ext., across from Lexington Water Works. After the business meeting there will be door prizes and refreshments.

Christmas Parade The Fair Grove Lions Club is pleased to announce full sponsorship of the Thomasville Christmas Parade this year. The parade will be held Saturday, Nov. 21 and will begin at 3 p.m. Luther Watford, who is the parade chairman, reports that entry forms and instructions can be printed from the Lions

website at www.fairgrovelions.com or picked up at the Chamber of Commerce downtown. Pictures and information about professional floats that are available for rental are also on the website. Downtown Thomasville, near the Big Chair, there will be a stage with a P.A. system, announcers, judges, live cable TV coverage and bleacher seating. The judges will determine winners in several categories, including Most Creative, Best Religious, Best Musical, Best Dance, Best Spirit and Best Overall. This year the Lions plan to add the Most Humorous award — an old favorite — to the float competition. A bleacher seat can be purchased day of the event for $5. Coffee and hot chocolate will also be available for $1 a cup. Special seating will also be available for the handicapped. All proceeds from the parade are donated to the North Carolina Lions White Cane Fund. The fund is used to pay for North Carolina Lions Foundation programs and services including helping blind campers attend Camp Dogwood, purchasing eyeglasses and paying for medical expenses through the Matching Fund Program. For additional parade information, contact Luther Watford at (336) 9051232.

Strength Training Weekly Strength Training Classes meet each Thursday morning at 11 a.m. at the Lexington Senior Center at 106 Alma Owens Drive. This 45-minute low-impact program will consist of strength training and flexibility exercises. The strength exercises increase endurance, improve reaction time, prevent back problems, tone muscles and build calorie burning muscle tissue, which aids in losing weight. The flexibility exercises help maintain an individual’s range of motion, slow down the development of arthritis, and strengthen muscles to prevent them from becoming short and tight. All Davidson County residents 55 and older are invited to attend. For more information or to register, call 242-2290.

Oct. 17, 2009

Thomasville Times Weather 7-Day Local Forecast

Weather Trivia Does lightning strike land a lot more often than at sea?

Sunday Partly Cloudy 56/39

Monday Sunny 62/38

Tuesday Sunny 67/44

Wednesday Mostly Sunny 70/49

Almanac Last Week High Day 73 Thursday 80 Friday 76 Saturday 68 Sunday 63 Monday 76 Tuesday Wednesday 66

Low Normals Precip 46 72/50 0.00" 58 72/50 0.00" 60 72/49 0.63" 56 71/49 0.00" 52 71/49 0.32" 48 70/48 0.00" 45 70/48 0.13"

Sunrise 7:29 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 7:31 a.m. 7:32 a.m. 7:33 a.m. 7:34 a.m.

New 10/18

Today we will see partly cloudy skies with a high temperature of 55º, humidity of 62% and an overnight low of 39º. The record high temperature for today is 84º set in 1980. The record low is 34º Average temperature . . . . . . .61.9º set in 1995. Sunday, skies will remain partly cloudy Average normal temperature .60.1º with a high temperature of 56º, humidity of 58% and Departure from normal . . . . .+1.8º an overnight low of 39º. Expect sunny skies Monday Data as reported from Greensboro with a high temperature of 62º.

Moonrise 6:51 a.m. 7:58 a.m. 9:05 a.m. 10:10 a.m. 11:10 a.m. 12:05 p.m. 12:53 p.m. Full 11/2

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

Moonset 6:05 p.m. 6:39 p.m. 7:17 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 8:48 p.m. 9:41 p.m. 10:37 p.m. Last 11/9

Lake Levels

City

Saturday Hi/Lo Wx

Sunday Hi/Lo Wx

Monday Hi/Lo Wx

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

50/36 61/56 57/40 59/40 59/44 58/41 64/51 54/39

51/36 sh 62/49 sh 55/40 pc 57/38 pc 57/43 mc 56/42 pc 62/45 pc 54/38 pc

61/37 63/57 62/39 64/41 61/43 62/40 67/50 62/39

sh mc pc mc mc pc pc pc

Staff Writer Karissa Minn 888-3576 newsdesk@tvilletimes.com

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Lake level is in feet. Lake Date Thom-A-Lex Oct. 12

Lake Level 1” above full pond R

All forecasts, data and graphics provided by Accessweather.com, Inc. © 2009. All rights reserved.

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s s s s s s s s

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

Publisher Michael B. Starn 888-3655 mstarn@hpe.com

Staff Writer Eliot Duke 888-3578 duke@tvilletimes.com

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 . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.08" Normal precipitation . . . . . . .0.75" Departure from normal . . . .+0.33"

Sunset 6:42 p.m. 6:41 p.m. 6:40 p.m. 6:38 p.m. 6:37 p.m. 6:36 p.m. 6:35 p.m. First 10/25

Friday Partly Cloudy 69/46

In-Depth Local Forecast

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

Thursday Partly Cloudy 70/48

Answer: Yes, due to storms developing more frequently over land.

Saturday Partly Cloudy 55/39

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Saturday, October 17, 2009 – Thomasville Times – A3

East band continues excellence in competitions

Christiansen couple celebrates 50 years of marriage

TIMES STAFF REPORT The 2009 East Davidson Marching Eagles showcase performance, ‘Night Life – East Coast Style’, takes you for a night out on the town. The show begins in New York with the jazz chart “Blue Shades� featuring clarinet soloist Kristen Sessions. A later stop in Atlantic City features “La Suerte De Los Tontos�, and the final stop in Miami features the Lionel Richie classic, “All Night Long�. Other featured soloists include Josh Crouse, Robert Lamb, Brittany Wilson, and Dylan King. The show is under the direction of Mr. David Deese and Mr. Wes Allred. Guard instructors are Tina Hall, Erin Brewer, and Ricky Martin. Drum majors are Paige Kriegel, Tavaris Baxter, and Dylan King. Guard captain is Erin Adams. Music arrangements and drill design are by David Deese and Ed Kiefer. Guard choreography is by Tina Hall. Performances at Mt. Pleasant Showcase of Champions, Providence High School, Ledford Festival of Bands, and the Spartan Southern Classic, have given the March-

ANNIVERSARY

COURTESY PHOTO

L-R, drum majors; Paige Kriegel, Dylan King, Tavaris Baxter, and color guard captain Erin Adams. ing Eagles top awards. A rating of superior has been received at each performance, in addition to first place awards in all categories; drum major, color guard, percussion, general effect, music, and visual ensemble. At the Ledford Festival of Bands the highest percussion award, regardless of class, was presented to East Davidson, along with the “Band of the Day� award. In addition, the Pit Crew Award was received at the Mt. Pleasant Showcase of Champions. After a phenomenal performance in the Spartan Southern Classic on Saturday night, the Marching Eagles were awarded the “Grand Champion� trophy. This

award is presented to the band with the highest overall score, regardless of the size of the band. Director, David Deese, commented, “Winning Grand Champion is always great, but it is more important to us to put on a show that gets the crowd excited. I am very proud of the kids for their hard work. This show is very demanding musically as

well as physically. I am also proud that in addition to the marching show, all of these kids, including the guard, are also learning their concert music, and many are learning Jazz as well�. The band will travel to Mt. Airy High School this coming Saturday for an afternoon performance then on to Appalachian State University to

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perform at 8:00 pm in the Appalachian Band Festival. On Saturday, October 24th the band will perform its final competition of the season at James Madison University Parade of Champions in Harrisonburg, Va.

John and Carol Christiansen celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 11, 2009, with a reception at Greenwood Baptist Church. The couple were married on Oct. 10, 1959, in Utica, N.Y. They reside in Thomasville and are both retired. The Christiansens have one daughter, Kim and husband Joe Hedrick of Thomasville, and three sons, Jeff Christiansen of Thomasville, Eric Christiansen and wife Sheila of Raleigh and Carl Christiansen and wife Rachel of Las Cruses, N.M. They have nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.


A4 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009

FROM PAGE 1 SERVICE

DONATION

From page A1

From page A1

Staff Writer Karissa Minn can be reached at 888-3576 or newsdesk@tvilletimes.com.

Your Town. Your Times.

TIMES PHOTO/KARISSA MINN

Candace Barnhart holds a picture of her husband Mike with her son Lane and mother-in-law Lili Willard sitting by her side.

TORN From page A1 morous person. I mean, he’s somebody that as soon as you hear his voice, he’s going to lift you up. He’s my hero, that’s for sure.� The two typically talk on the phone every day. He doesn’t want to discuss what’s happening in Afghanistan, so they talk instead about her sons, Lane and Cooper, who have bonded with him over the years. Candace and Mike’s mother, Lili Willard, say they try to keep him focused on the everyday things going on at home, and only the positive parts. “We don’t want to give him more stuff to worry about,� Willard said. “We want him to know that we’re keeping home fires burning over here.� On the rare occasions when Mike isn’t allowed to call home for two or three days due to conditions in Afghanistan, Candace and Willard call each other for support. When asked how she deals with any anxiety she feels, Candace points to her mother-in-law and says “her,� and the two share a knowing laugh. Candace says she would like to see if there is anyone else near her she could talk to who is “in the same boat.� Others who have loved ones in the military are invited to e-mail Candace at 1.hot.race.lady@gmail. com. Mike entered the Army in 1992, right out of high

COURTESY PHOTO

Candace climbs on a bus tire to get one final moment with her husband. school, and he quickly became airborne and was assigned to the Signal Corps. A few years later, he was involved in an accident. One of his friends was killed, another was hurt, and Mike suffered a brain injury that took him out of the army for eight years. Once doctors determined that he would survive, they told Willard that Mike would never go back into the military again. After intensive therapy and rehabilitation, he became a security guard for several years, and in 2003, Mike did indeed return to the Army. He was stationed at Fort Bragg, just under 100 miles of his mother, so he could come visit on the weekends. Then, in 2005, he was deployed to Iraq for one year. “That was my first deployment,� Willard said. “His brother’s in the Army, too, and he’s been to Afghanistan twice, so this is actually my fourth deployment to go

through.� When Mike was single, his mother used to worry that she would come home from work and find a military car sitting in front of her house, ready to deliver devastating news. Now, she knows that they would come to Candace first. The two women say that they try not to worry, though, by trusting that Mike is in God’s hands. His own faith helps him make peace with the danger he faces. “He’ll be first to tell you, ‘I don’t worry, because I know where I’m going,’� Candace said. “He doesn’t worry.� Candace and Willard show that they’re thinking of their beloved soldier by decorating their houses with yellow ribbons, which 11-year-old Lane says that people can’t help noticing. “At school, kids ask me why there are yellow bows in front of my house, and I say, ‘My stepdad’s in Afghanistan,� Lane said. “All you got to do is look for the house with the yellow bows, and you know that’s mine.� Thanks to his loved ones, Sgt. Michael Barnhart will have no problem finding his way home.

was unveiled Thursday that will feature seating for any shows and park benches in the old Belk parking lot on Guilford Street underneath the water tower. The area will be known as PACE Community park for the city committee People Achieving Community Enhancement. “Mom has always been a big believer in Thomasville and volunteerism and trying to make the place better,� said Sue’s son, Rob Hunter. “She has always wanted to do things to improve a place. The fact all this is being done without adding to the tax base is amazing. More cities should do more of this. [Jim Hunter] was a humble man and he would be awfully proud of this.� PACE member and general contractor Ben Watford said construc-

Staff Writer Eliot Duke can be reached at 88-3578, or duke@tvilletimes.com.

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do good for the people of North Carolina and for the people of Davidson County, and we’re going to continue to do that,� Holliman said. Walser was presented with his second award by Josie Laumann, who recognized his work with the party and in his two terms on the board of commissioners. “Although he is the only Democrat on the board — the ‘Lone Ranger’ here — he has been able to positively affect the outcome of many issues facing Davidson County,� Laumann said. “Two examples are the 50-year Alcoa relicensing of the use of water on High Rock Lake and funding of a new Interstate 85 bridge over the Yadkin River.� Katherine Craver presented awards to Myra and Randall Lanier. She said that Myra was instrumental in helping reorganize the county Democratic Women, and she and her husband have worked hard for the party ever since. “When I think of a Democrat that I would consider to be ‘Mr. Democrat,’ I think of Randall Lanier,� Craver said. “When he was chairman, he worked tirelessly and never refused a job.� Loretta Martin, president of the county Democratic Women, was introduced by Jane Hill as a person who has been very active within the party. Martin has served on the Davidson County Board of Education, been named the first vice chair of the county Democratic Party, and run for county commissioner three times. “With these opportunities that I’ve had, I got to fight for and support those core Democratic principles that all of us believe in,� Martin said. Kay Brown introduced Faye Powell and Robert Thomason as people who are always there when they are needed. Powell was a charter member of the Democratic Women of Davidson County when it was reorganized in 2003, and Thomason currently serves as first vice chair of the county party. “I have a son that’s growing up, and I want him to have good things in life,� Thomason said. “Every time I look at my son, I know that’s the reason I do this.� The keynote speaker was State Auditor Beth Wood, who thanked the organization’s members for supporting her candidacy.

tion will begin as soon as enough funds are raised. According to Watford, costs will run approximately $50,000 and fundraising efforts are underway. “We’re probably a third of the way there,� Watford said. “We’re going to get there. We’re just getting started and this is something we have to work at.� High Point Regional Hospital also donated funds for landscaping the park and was honored with a plaque as well. Anyone interested in contributing can take part in PACE’s master plan where tax deductible donations can purchase trees, personalized bricks, landscape areas, trash receptacles and park benches. For more infomration, contact PACE at 475-7223.

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Saturday, October 17, 2009 – Thomasville Times – A5

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

Unions calling in their chits VIEWPOINT

LINDA CHAVEZ Syndicated Columnist “That’s not the change America voted for.” The implied criticism of President Obama comes not from Rush Limbaugh or Fox News but from the AFL-CIO in a newspaper ad this week letting the president and congressional Dems know unions’ “bottom line for health care reform.” The unions are calling in their chits. If health care legislation doesn’t include a public option, they won’t support it. And if it does include a tax on so-called gold-plated plans, they’ll oppose it. No wonder White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel has been meeting behind closed doors with Democrats trying to craft a final bill. He’s more afraid of a few union bosses than he is the thousands of voters who have flocked to town hall meetings to oppose health care reform. Without the unions and their money, no Democrat can win the White House and Democratic control of the House and Senate might slip away. The irony is that unions helped create the health care mess in the first place. Ever wonder why most Americans receive their health insurance through work? After all, we don’t get our home or car insurance through our employers. Nor do most employers pay directly for other essentials like housing or food. Our current employer-provided health insurance dates back to World War II, when FDR’s National War Labor Board tried to impose wage and price controls to stem inflation during the war boom years. But the board found it easier to impose price controls than effective wage controls since it was possible to simply shift pay increases from cash into employerprovided benefits like health insurance. Such benefits were exempt from the board’s control and weren’t subject to taxes, making employerprovided health insurance even more attractive. As a result, unions began demanding generous health care benefits as part of their bargaining strategy, which is why so many of the Cadillac health care plans cover unionized workers — literally since the

kind of plan envisioned is exactly what General Motors provided its workers. But what was bad for America was bad for General Motors, to turn an old adage on its head. GM’s estimated $54 billion in health care obligations for its retired unionized workers helped drive the company into bankruptcy, from which it was only able to emerge by giving away 17.5 percent of the company’s stock to the United Autoworkers’ health trust fund. But having employers buy health insurance for their employees never made good sense. For one thing, it made it difficult for an employee to change jobs without risking losing health care coverage. It also made it harder for individuals to choose the kind of care they wanted — or to know what they were actually paying for when they went to the doctor’s office. Lack of choice means that many people will pay for benefits they don’t want or will never use. And third-party payment means doctors and their patients rarely have discussions about the costs of fees or tests — driving up health care spending. So now the unions want to have their cake and eat it, too. They want to make sure that those generous health care plans they demanded at the bargaining table still receive the same tax break all others do, while insisting that the government pick up the tab for those who can’t afford the costs of health care they helped drive up. Of course the only way to pay for the latter — without forcing the country ever further into debt — is to tax the former. The unions are no fools either. They know that the proposed 40 percent excise tax on insurance companies in the Senate Finance Committee-passed bill will be paid for by policy holders one way or another. Insurance companies will pass the costs on to employers, who, in turn, will either take it out of employees’ pay or shift to lower-cost plans. Democrats — including the president — can try to appease unions by passing a health care reform bill that can’t possibly pay for itself. But following the unions’ advice will be a bad bargain. Just look what caving into the unions did to GM: first the company went bankrupt, then it ended up owned by the unions. Is America next?

Mortgage madness, again VIEWPOINT

STEVE CHAPMAN Syndicated Columnist Watching Washington policymakers in action, I sometimes think they make mistakes because of unrealistic goals, flawed thinking, blind obedience to party or dubious information. And sometimes I think they make mistakes because they are — how to put this? — clinically insane. There is no other way to explain what is going on at the Federal Housing Administration, which provides federal guarantees for home mortgages. Given the collapse in real estate prices, the weak economy and the epidemic of foreclosures, banks are acting with more caution than before. They now commonly require home buyers to make down payments of 20 percent to qualify for a loan. But the FHA often requires only 3.5 percent. That’s the equivalent of playing pool with a guy named Snake, and it’s had two predictable effects. The first is that the agency is insuring about four times as many home loans as it did just three years ago. The other is that the number of FHA-approved borrowers who are not repaying their loans is climbing. Since last year, the default rate has jumped by 76 percent. Another likely consequence looms: you and I eating the losses. A former executive of mortgage giant

Fannie Mae told a congressional subcommittee that the FHA “appears destined for a taxpayer bailout in the next 24 to 36 months.” Commissioner David Stevens had to assure the subcommittee that it would not need help — well, unless there is a “catastrophic home price decline.” But who says there won’t be? It’s not as though anyone at the FHA foresaw the housing bubble or the housing bust. Yet now it feels confident betting its $30 billion cash reserve that prices won’t fall. Just a few years ago, after all, everyone assumed that U.S. home values were bound to keep rising. In fact, on average, they have dropped by a third since the peak of the market. If prices can drop by a third, they could certainly drop some more. That’s why many private lenders wouldn’t touch a 96.5 percent loan with a 96-foot pole. One dip in the economy, and the house is worth less than the mortgage. That’s an invitation for the owner to stop paying, drop the keys in the mailbox and find a place to rent — an invitation hordes of people have already accepted. What most foreclosures have in common is that the mortgage holder owes more than the property could sell for. “Not everybody who has negative equity goes into foreclosure, but nearly everybody who goes into foreclosure has negative equity,” says Paul Willen, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. But Stevens sees no reason the agency should raise its down payment requirement to 5 percent. “All that’s going to do is retard recovery,” he says, by making it harder for people to buy homes. But guess what? It should be harder for people to buy homes. Making it too

easy to buy homes is what caused the foreclosure epidemic, which led to the financial crisis, which helped crater the economy. Right now, the real estate market is adjusting to the new environment, where Americans are not willing to pay as much because they perceive that when you buy a house, you cannot be certain of making money on the investment and, in fact, may lose your shirt. The FHA’s easy-money policy is supposed to prevent that adjustment, and push up prices, by assuring that people who cannot afford the risks of home ownership will be able to buy. If many of the loans turn into pumpkins, that’s OK. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., actually told The New York Times, “I don’t think it’s a bad thing that the bad loans occurred. It was an effort to keep prices from falling too fast.” In other words, soaring defaults are not a bug. They’re a feature. But as Willen points out, prices didn’t rise during the boom because there was reckless lending. There was reckless lending because everyone thought prices would rise. But the FHA imagines that it can cure the problems created by easy credit by promoting more easy credit. Is it fair to call that approach shortsighted? Imprudent? Economically fallacious? Sure. But mainly, it’s just plain crazy. 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.

Linda Chavez is the author of “An Unlikely Conservative: The Transformation of an Ex-Liberal.” To find out more about Linda Chavez, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

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


A6 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009

OBITUARIES

FROM PAGE 1 LEAVES

Index

From page A1 3 and Sept. 8, Rosser went out of state and left his two children, ages 13 and 15, at home unsupervised. “We don’t know what his reason for going out of town was,” Sheriff David Grice said. “The kids weren’t tiny but this isn’t a good thing.” Detectives received confirmation on Wednesday from the Davidson County District Attorney’s Office to obtain misdemeanor warrants for Rosser on the two charges, based on a statute neglect clause. Rosser was arrested on Friday and issued a $2,000 secured bond. He is scheduled to appear in Lexington District Court on Nov. 9. Two charged with breaking & entering Thomasville Police Department arrested two local men for breaking into a pair of houses earlier in the week. Robert Hugh Smith, 40, of 8 Jones Ave., and Sandy Mark Hannah, 45, of the same address, were taken into custody Wednesday and charged with two counts of felony breaking and entering and two counts of felony larceny. According to a TPD press release, at approximately 12:55 Wednesday afternoon, officers responded to 1030 Ferndale Ave. in reference to a breaking and entering call. Officers found the home broken into and ransacked, prompting police to canvass the surrounding area. The homeowner came in during the crime and the suspects ran out the back door. “They kicked in a residential door and the homeowner came home during lunch,” Mill said. “She found the door kicked in and saw the suspects in the house. She ran out and police gave chase. Putting everything together, officers were able to make an arrest.” Capt. James Mills said officers found the suspects car and set up a perimeter with information obtained at the scene. Det. Darrin Lewis said police linked Smith and Hannah to a Tuesday breaking and entering and larceny at 8 Meadowlark Lane because the men were already suspects in that crime. “They were suspects to start with,” said Lewis. “We were able to clear [both break-ins] up at the same time.”

Thomasville James W. Leonard Sr., 83 Elizabeth Miller, 93 Lexington Verna Daniel, 96 Canda Kinney, 21 Dixie McLamb, 89 Wendy Baker Myers, 53 Betty B. Queen, 74 Verna Daniel LEXINGTON — Verna Sue Hames Daniel, 96, of 8th Street, died Thursday, Oct. 15, 2009, at her home following declining health of six years. Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. today at Davidson Funeral Home Lexington Chapel with the Rev. Brian Alexander officiating. Burial will follow in Lexington City Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 10-11 a.m. today at the funeral home. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Canda Kinney LEXINGTON — Canda Faye Kinney, 21, left this life for a better one on Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2009. Canda was a cherished and loving daughter, an adored sister, a precious granddaughter, a beloved niece, and a dear friend to many people. Canda, a Senior at Wake Forest University, was a sister in the Phi Mu Sorority. She would have graduated in May with a double major in Spanish and Psychology. Canda was born on Sept. 23, 1988, to Dwayne Kinney and Elizabeth Garner Kinney of Lexington, N.C. She graduated from Central Davidson High School where she was a member of the National Honors Society, Coca-Cola Scholar Athlete in tennis, member of the Tri M Music Honors Society, Teen Court student attorney, and volunteer in our own community and throughout the world. Whether she was living with missionaries in Mexico helping underprivileged children or tutoring children here at home, her joyous spirit illuminated hope and love to everyone around her.

Canda’s adventurous spirit and thirst for knowledge took her throughout the world. In addition to attending Wake Forest University she studied Spanish at the Tecnólgico de Monterrey in Querétaro, Mexico and at the Universidad de Salamanca in Salamanca, Spain. Canda also studied German at Wake Forest’s Flow House in Vienna, Austria. When Canda wasn’t in class she reveled in the beauty of nature. Her innate curiosity of the world around her led to her fascination with hiking the North Carolina mountains in pursuit of picturesque waterfalls. Canda’s appreciation of the natural world was also evident in the artistic endeavors in which she excelled. Her natural skill behind the camera, inspired brushstrokes on the canvas, and incredible musical talent brought joy to everyone in her life. At an early age Canda learned the value of spending time with her family. She was extremely devoted to her family and was always a loyal friend. Canda is survived by her parents Dwayne and Elizabeth Kinney; her brothers Dwayne Kinney Jr. and Matthew Kinney; her grandparents Larry and Linda Garner of Lexington and David and Jewel Kinney of Lexington; her aunts and their husbands, Cynthia and Charles Dry II of Salisbury, Kimberly and Kenneth Lookabill of Lexington, Carrie and Scott Craver of Lexington, and Sonja and Lee Parks of Lexington; and cousins Collin Lookabill, Jordan Dry, Austin Parks, and Aiden Parks. Funeral service will be at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 17, 2009, at Davidson Funeral Home Lexington Chapel with the Rev. Darrell Cartrette of Mount Carmel Freewill Baptist Church, the Rev. Craig Barnhill of Holloways Baptist Church, and Chaplain Tim Auman of Wake Forest University officiating. The family will receive friends from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, Oct. 16, 2009 at the funeral home. Memorials may be made to Special Olympics Davidson County in Lexington. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneral-

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James W. Leonard Sr. James. W. Leonard Sr., 83, a resident of Raymond Drive, died Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2009, in the High Point Regional Hospital. Leonard was born March 8, 1926, in Davidson County, a son of the late Charles Leonard and Pearl Darr Leonard. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army, serving in infantry replacement during World War II. He was a retired employee of Celand Yarn Inc. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by three sisters and three brothers. Surviving are his wife, Hazel Hoover Leonard, of the home; a daughter, Judy Carol Poole, of Charlotte; three sons, Tommy L. Leonard and wife Vickie, of Thomasville, Ray Leonard and wife Annette, of Trinity, and James Leonard Jr. and wife Bernice, of Lexington; his twin brother, John J. Leonard and wife Ruth, of Thomasville; former sisters-in-law, Josephine Tate and Velna Leonard, both of Thomasville; nine grandchildren and nineteen greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in J.C. Green & Sons Chapel with the Rev. Stanley Savage officiating. Burial with military honors by the Randolph County Honor Guard will follow in Guilford Memorial Park Cemetery in Greensboro. The family will receive friends at 1 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home and other times at the home of his son, Tommy L. Leonard, 590 Walker Blvd. in Thomasville. Online condolences may be sent to the Leonard family at www.jcgreenandsons.com. ***

Dixie McLamb LEXINGTON — Dixie Mae Marshburn McLamb, 89, of Carolina House, died Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2009, at the nursing home. Funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday, Oct. 19, 2009, at National Cemetery in Salisbury with Pastors Ray Sipe and Ruth Ann Sipe officiating. The family will receive friends at the daughter’s home on Fairview Drive.

Memorials may be made to Alzheimers Association, Piedmont Triad N.C. Chapter, in Winston-Salem. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Elizabeth Miller Elizabeth “Lib” Whitener Miller, 93, of Piedmont Crossing, went to be with her Lord on Thursday, Oct. 15, 2009, after a long and healthy life. She formerly resided at 982 Lee Road, and had resided at Piedmont Crossing since July of this year. She was born in Burke County, N.C., on Jan. 24, 1916, as one of 14 children of Felix T. Whitener and Ida Elizabeth Rockett Whitener. She was a devout Christian, even though she was not a church member for the last several years. She was married to World War II Navy veteran David S. Miller in December of 1945 until his death in 1968. Elizabeth resided in High Point from 1945 until 2002, when she moved to Thomasville to be close to family. She had a special place in her heart for veterans, and she served her country during World War II by working in the Glenn L. Martin Aircraft plant in Baltimore. She lost a brother in the Pearl Harbor attack and a nephew in the 9/11 incident. She was preceded in death by 12 brothers and sisters. Among those are her brother, James V. Whitener, who was a resident of Thomasville, and Mary Barker, who was a resident of High Point. Elizabeth is survived by her son and his wife, Mike Miller and Janet Armentrout Miller, and her beloved grandson, Isaac Miller, all of Thomasville; and her only surviving sibling, Inez Prevatt, of High Point. Also surviving are her brother-in-law and his wife, the Rev. and Mrs. Fred Miller, of Thomasville; and several nieces and nephews. A graveside service will be held for Elizabeth at 2 p.m. Sunday at Mitchell’s Grove United Methodist with the Rev. Sarah Snell officiating. Visitation will be held from 7-9 p.m. Saturday at the home of her son, Mike Miller, 982 Lee Road. Memorials may be di-

rected to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Online condolences may be sent to the family at www.jcgreenandsons.com. ***

Wendy Baker Myers

LEXINGTON — Rhonda “Wendy” Wendolyn Baker Myers, 53, of Maxwell Drive in Lexington, died Monday, Oct. 12, 2009, at her home. Myers was born May 29, 1956, in Camden, S.C. to Ted Stanley Baker and Rochella Cook Baker. She was a homemaker. There will be no formal service. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

Betty B. Queen

LEXINGTON — Betty Lorraine Beck Queen, 74, of Fisher Street in Lexington, died Thursday, Oct. 15, 2009, at Lexington Memorial Hospital. Queen was born July 21, 1935, in Davidson County, to William A. Beck and Macy McCaskill Beck. She was a former employee of Burlington Industries and a member of The Meeting House UCA. Funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Davidson Funeral Home Chapel, with the Revs. Jerry Bowen and Stan Martin officiating. Entombment will follow in the Mausoleum at Forest Hill Memorial Park. The family will receive friends from 6-8 p.m. Sunday at Davidson Funeral Home and at other times at the home. Memorials should be directed to The Meeting House UCA in Lexington. Online condolences may be made at www.davidsonfuneralhome.net.

10301 North N.C. 109 Winston-Salem Wallburg Area 769-5548


Saturday, October 17, 2009 – Thomasville Times – 7

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A8 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009 FINCH PREACHING MISSION MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

CHURCH NOTES

101 Randolph Street, Thomasville Welcomes one of Thomasville’s own

Fall Festival Fairview United Methodist Church, located at 2876 Old Greensboro Rd. in Thomasville, will have a fall festival starting at 7 a.m. today with a country breakfast with all the fixin’s. There will also be chicken pies, baked goods and a country store. Hot dogs will be served for lunch. For more information, call 475-3181.

Yard sale and bake sale Pleasant Hill Church, located at 2624 Fuller Mill Road, will hold a yard sale and bake sale from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. today. There will be biscuits, hot dogs and baked goods.

Pancake breakfast Fair Grove United Methodist Church, 138 Fairgrove Road in Thomasville, will host an allyou-can-eat pancake breakfast from 7:30 to 10:30 a.m. today. It is sponsored by United Methodist Men, and donations are appreciated.

Preaching Mission Heidelberg United Church of Christ, located at 118 Salem St. in Thomasville, will have a Preaching Mission at 7 p.m Sunday. The Rev. David Carter, pastor of Hebron UCC in WinstonSalem, will be the guest speaker. The community is invited to worship.

gan in 1929 in a tent, and now everyone is invited to join in the birthday celebration.

Fall Revival Services at New Jerusalem UCC New Jerusalem United Church of Christ will conclude their Fall Revival with services at 7 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Amelia Stinson Wesley will be the guest speaker, and there will be music by The Grove Singers. Refreshments will be served following the service in the fellowship hall. New Jerusalem is located at 4104 Jerusalem Road, just off Old Highway 64, in the Silver Valley Community. Butch Conrad is the pastor. For directions or more information call 746-5046.

Women’s Conference The women’s ministry of Union Baptist Church in Thomasville will have its Women’s Conference from Oct. 19-21. The speaker for Monday is Elder Pamela Taylor, the speaker for Tuesday is Elder Pamela Jackson, and the speaker for Wednesday is the Rev. Dr.

Pamela Holder.

Yard sale Pleasant Grove Methodist Church is holding a yard sale on Saturday, Oct. 24 from 7 a.m. to 12 p.m., rain or shine. There will be breakfast food, baked goods and clothes – something for everyone. Proceeds will go to church missions. The church is located on Old Highway 64 at the Davidson and Randolph County Line, east of Silver Valley School.

Sixth annual Pumpkin Patch at MUMC The Memorial United Methodist Church Department of Music will hold its sixth annual Great Pumpkin Patch now through Oct 30. Pumpkins of all sizes and prices will be available from 2 p.m. to dark weekdays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays, and 1-6 p.m. Sundays. The church is located at 101 Randolph St. in downtown Thomasville. Area schools and daycares are invited to call and schedule for weekday visits and photo opportunities. For further information,

call Mr. Tom Holladay, event coordinator at the church office, at 472-7718.

THE REVEREND DOCT C OR C. CLIFTON BLACK

Calling all pumpkin carvers Pumpkin carving, bobbing for apples and a lot more are in store at New Jerusalem United Church of Christ on Friday, Oct. 23 from 6-8 p.m. Bring a pumpkin, or call the church and they can provide one. Youth age 2 and up are invited. New Jerusalem is located at 4104 Jerusalem Road, just off Old Highway 64, in the Silver Valley Community. Butch Conrad is the pastor. For more information, call Butch at 746-5046 or Linda at 859-8111.

Pinto Bean Supper New Life Baptist Church, located at 152 Litwin Drive off old I-85, will host a Pinto Bean Supper on Saturday, Oct. 24, from 4-7 p.m. This allyou-can-eat supper costs $6 at the door. For more information, call 4796437, 479-6436 or 847-2955.

See more Church Notes on Page B6

Graduate of Wake Forest University, the University of Bristol, Emory University, Duke University Currently serves as the Otto A. Piper Professor of Biblical Theology and former chairman of the Department of Biblical Studies, Princeton Theological Seminary. He is an orained elder in the United Methodist Church. Preaching Mission will be held October 18-20, 2009 11:00 am Sunday, 7:00 pm Sunday, Monday, Tuesday Music provided by the Memorial UMC Chancel Choir and Praise Team, George W. Smith, Jr. and the “Zionettes”, and “One Road Home” from Lexington Music begins at 6:45 pm Child Care provided 472-7718 Website: www.finchpreachingmission.org Offering each evening goes to Cooperative Community Ministries

Guest Speaker Pastor Viola Sterling, of Amazing Faith in Winston-Salem, will be the guest speaker at New Hope Tabernacle of Prayer at 4 p.m. Sunday. The church is located at 508 Carlton St. in Thomasville.

Pastor Appreciation Day First Baptist Church of Thomasville is honoring its pastor, Jay Lambeth, on Sunday. They will meet in the Fellowship Hall after the worship service for a covered dish meal. After the meal, cakes and desserts will be auctioned off. The proceeds will go to the purchase of a new church sign.

Guest Speaker The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Winston-Salem, located at 4055 Robinhood Road, will hear the Rev. D. Charles David speak on “How Much Should We Share?” at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. At the pre-service forum at 9 a.m., Ken Ostberg will lead a discussion of current events. For more information, call 659-0331 or see www. uufws.org.

Birthday Party at Johnsontown UMC Johnsontown United Methodist Church, located at 1057 Johnsontown Road in Thomasville, is celebrating its 80th birthday this year with a party beginning at 4 p.m. Sunday. There will be games such as croquet, kickball, adult horseshoes, children’s horseshoes and corn hole toss. Hot dogs and desserts will be served from 5-6 p.m., and tent revival services out on the lawn will begin at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. The Rev. Jenna Grogan will be speaking Sunday evening. The Rev. Bobby Beck will be speaking Monday evening, and special music will be provided by the “Gospel Sounds.” JUMC’s own the Rev. Wes Smith will be speaking Tuesday evening. Johnsontown United Methodist Church be-

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NASCAR BANKING 500: TONIGHT, 7 P.M. ON ABC THOMASVILLE TIMES

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2009

Sports

Coming Tuesday • Banking 500 race recap • On NASCAR with Cathy Elliott

B1

tvillesports@yahoo.com

CCC FOOTBALL

Bulldogs throttle East CALENDAR SUNDAY VOLLEYBALL DCCC @ Sandhills CC 1 p.m. VOLLEYBALL DCCC vs C. Carolina 3 p.m.

MONDAY SOCCER E. Davidson @ Thomasville 7 p.m. SOCCER NE Guilford @ Ledford 7 p.m. VOLLEYBALL DCCC @ Piedmont 6 p.m.

TUESDAY CROSS COUNTRY CCC finals @ Dan Nicholas Park 4 p.m.

Greene, Riley run wild over Eagle defense BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer East Davidson found out the hard way that two is indeed better than one. Thomasville’s twoheaded rushing attack of Kesean Green and Quin Riley proved too much for the Golden Eagles Friday night at Cushwa Stadium in the Bulldogs 34-0 victory. “We were able to run the ball and stop the run,” THS coach Allen Brown said. “We try to do that every week if we can. Our kids got up and were able to dominate the line of scrimmage. Using multiple backs helped. Some of the runs we made in the first half started showing up in the second.” On the other side, EDHS running back Dylan Gallimore found the going rough, as THS held the star junior to just 70 yards rushing. Gallimore still eclipsed the 1,000mark for the season. Friday night’s shutout was the Bulldogs second in as many conference games. “It feels great, espe-

See THROTTLE, Page B4

TIMES PHOTO/LARRY MATHIS

Thomasville running back Kesean Greene fights for every yard he can get as East Davidson’s Dylan Hutchins grabs hold to try and bring Greene down to the ground. Greene finished with 162 yards rushing.

Schedule change rubs fans right way

NJCAA VOLLEYBALL

VOLLEYBALL CCC Semis @ E. Davidson TBA

WEDNESDAY VOLLEYBALL CCC Finals @ E. Davidson TBA SOCCER Thomasville @ W. Davidson 7 p.m. SOCCER C. Davidson @ E. Davidson 7 p.m. SOCCER Ledford @ SW Randolph 7 p.m.

GAME REPORT DEADLINES: Monday-Friday 9 p.m.

TIMES PHOTO/ZACH KEPLEY

Cougar hitter Jamie Yateman tries to get the ball past DCCC blocker Katie Watkins.

DCCC beats up Cougars BY ZACH KEPLEY Sports Editor LEXINGTON — Davidson County Community College’s Region X conference match with Central Carolina Community College on Thursday, turned out to be the equivalent of a glorified practice for the Storm in its home finale of the season. With just six players in uniform, the Cougars were overmatched in number and ability, as the Storm breezed to a 25-8, 25-10, 25-8 victory, improving its conference record to 4-0. They have not dropped a single game in a match this year in conference play. Davidson looked good for the most part in the match, but understandably was sloppy at times in communication

and passing. Wanting to keep his team primed for a postseason run, head coach Kevin Hammond was not too thrilled to have such a laid back match. “You have to play them, but I just hate Hammond when we get in a situation like that we always play down,” he said. “That is what tears me up the most is not playing at our level.” The Cougars held one of their two leads for the night in the first game, jumping out to a 2-0 lead. DCCC put its powerful net game to work soon after,

See BEATS, Page B3

If there is one thing the tale of Aladdin and his magic lamp from “One Thousand and One Nights” has taught us, it is that no matter how hard you try, or how good your intentions are, you can never put a genie back into a bottle once he’s been set free. Oh, really? Judging from an announcement made on Wednesday, October 7 regarding the 2010 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race schedule, NASCAR has decided to do just that. There is a reason why roosters crow at sunrise, why bears crawl into caves for a long winter’s nap and why when temperatures head south, geese follow suit. All creatures great and small come into this world retrofitted with an internal clock that tells us what to do and when to do it. A farmer, for example, senses those first glimmers of light in the eastern sky and knows daybreak, and the beginning of his workday, is fast approaching. A factory worker, on the other hand, hears a whistle blow and

ON NASCAR

CATHY ELLIOTT NASCAR Columnist knows his work day is drawing to its close. Every 9-to-5 employee is conditioned to smile when his office clock signals five o’clock on Friday afternoon. It didn’t come to be called “Happy Hour” by accident, you know. And when that same hour hand hits one o’clock on Sunday afternoon, the backs of NASCAR fans’ necks begin to prickle. They know it’s time for the race to start. At least that’s the way it used to be. But NASCAR underwent the mother of all growth spurts, outgrowing the confines of its early fan base faster than

See WAY, Page B4


B2 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009

SPORTS

The carry gun

The Concealed Carry laws that are now in almost every state of the union have proved a tremendous success with crime levels dropping in every state where they’ve been enacted. Further, there have been few cases of civilians who have qualified for the license using their firearms wrongly. While those who’ve gone to the trouble to take the class and get the license make good choices when it comes to using deadly force, I’ve certainly seen some poor choices in which firearm they choose to carry. It’s not a pleasant thought that I might have to use deadly force to protect my life or the life of someone I love, but the alternative is even worse. In the process of teaching the legal and moral issues involved in self defense, I’m constantly reminded of the importance of making the right decisions. As a North Carolina Concealed Carry instructor, I get a lot of questions about what kind of gun folks should carry. Just like everything else, what you buy has to suit way you plan to use it. Often, a new CCH (Concealed Carry, Handgun) license holder buys a large powerful gun and finds it’s just too heavy to tote around from car to house and especially to wear on their person. The odds of ever using a firearm to prevent loss of life of yourself or a loved one are quite slim. Therefore, carrying a gun designed for everyday combat situations is almost certainly overkill. Everything in life is a compromise. No one would argue that wearing a crash helmet in your car could save your life in an accident, but I don’t know anyone who wears one to work. You’re much more likely to be in a serious auto accident than a situation where you have to use deadly force to save your life so it makes sense to buy a gun that is capable yet user friendly. The hottest selling guns that qualify as concealed carry guns are the small semi automatics with high capacity magazines. They are the same or similar guns to the guns police officers are issued. They may

OFF THE PORCH

DICK JONES Outdoor Columnist be very effective for a police officer but I think they come up short as guns to carry every day by a CCH license holder. The big selling point of these guns is the high magazine capacity. High magazine capacity is desirable in a policeman’s or soldier’s gun. It’s hardly an issue in the hands of a lay person. While the odds of ever needing to use a firearm to defend yourself are slim, the odds of needing more that 5 shots are astronomically slim. While the law allows for the use of deadly force under certain circumstances, it does not excuse you from civil proceedings in the form of a lawsuit and is very clear in the issue of using excessive force. If you shoot more than five shots in self defense, unless you are a very bad shot, your chances of winning a civil case are diminished. The other disadvantage of a semi automatic as a personal carry firearm comes from what happens if you have a bad round. With a revolver, you simply pull the trigger again. With a semi auto, you must clear the gun by racking the slide. Under stress, this is not as simple as it sounds. Unless you really shoot a lot, you would likely use a lot of precious time in that exercise. I’ve been carrying a Charter Arms Undercover .38 for about 25 years. It’s never failed to operate on the regular operational checks I do to make sure it’s working properly and it’s traveled with me hundreds of thousands of miles. I’m about to retire that old gun, though. Last week at Archdale Arms, I picked up a Charter Arms Bulldog in .44 Special. It’s only slightly heavier than my old .38 and, as a .44 Special, it packs a serious punch.

While I hope I never have occasion to use the Bulldog, it certainly gives one confidence to have a gun with so much power and accuracy in such a small package. Whether it’s the longer, three inch barrel, or the slight extra weight that makes the difference, the Bulldog is considerably more accurate than my old two inch, Undercover .38. On 8” plate targets, I can hit every plate at 15 yards in slow double action fire. At 24 ounces, it weighs just five ounces more than the .38 and the weight difference is hardly noticeable. Since the gun is stainless steel, it should require even less care than my old .38 and the only care the .38 got was an oily rag every few months and a pinhead of grease on the hand and bolt every few years. Therein lies the value of the revolver. A proven design over a hundred years old with a few modern improvements, trouble free operation, light weight and small size, the ability to shoot any ammunition that will fit in the gun and no worries about rust. What’s not to like. No matter which gun you choose, make certain the two main criteria are reliability and comfort. For the last 25 years, I’ve relied on my little .38 but, seeing the better accuracy and power of the Bulldog, I think I’ll switch. Now all I have to do is figure out what to do with my old undercover. For more information on the Charter Arms Bulldog, go to charterfirearms.com Dick Jones is a freelance writer living in High Point. He is a retired competitive shooter, and NRA Certified Instructor. He captained numerous National Championship Teams. He is a Distinguished Rifleman and an NRA Certified Rifle, Shotgun, and Pistol Instructor. He teaches NC Concealed Carry Classes and does public speaking for clubs and organizations, hosts outdoor events, and helps church and youth groups raise money with outdoor events. You can visit his website at offtheporchmedia.com and contact him at offtheporch52@yahoo.com.

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Saturday, October 17, 2009 – Thomasville Times – B3

SPORTS AREA SPORTS BRIEFS

The Ledford Lady Panthers finished out the Mid-Piedmont Conference regular season beating Asheboro 25-10, 2517, 31-29 on Thursday in Wallburg. Cady Ray finished with 21 service points and 17 assists, Carman Pericozzi 13 kills, Stevi Williams six kills, Taylor Ballard 10 digs and Taylor Parks 14 digs. Ledford is 15-6 on the year and finish 7-3 in the conference. The MPC tournament begins Monday.

Junior Panthers defeat Asheboro The Ledford junior varsity handled Asheboro 25-12, 25-21 on Thursday in its conference finale at home. Torri Griffitts had 12 assists and four digs, Hayley Leonard four kills, Molly Holbert three kills and Chloe Barnes seven kills and four blocks. Ledford improved to 163 overall, 7-3 in the MidPiedmont Conference.

BASEBALL Fall Classic The HiToms are hosting a fall, 18U Baseball Classic Oct. 24-25.

BEATS From page B1 delivering kill after kill with Central Carolina unable to handle any of it. Lauren Leonard and Whitley Saintsing took care of the first half of the set up front to stake DCCC to a 10-5 lead. The rotation brought Katie Watkins to the front and she picked up where the other two left off, hammering a pair of kills to make it 19-6. The Cougars earned the next point on a Davidson mistake, but would only score once more on the first of two game points. Leonard finished it off with a tip for the 1-0 set lead. CCCC held its only other advantage at 1-0 to start the second game, and kept it close at 6-4 following a kill by Terran Tysor. Logan Ballue answered for the home team booming a kill to the floor. A kill and block by Saintsing suddenly made it 11-5 and another route was on. Leading 2010, the Storm would score the final five points with four kills and a double hit by Cougar setter Tiffany Alford. The Davidson dominance continued in the third. Central Carolina

The round-round robin tournament guarantees each entrant three games and is open to all 18U squads, regardless of affiliation. For more information call the HiToms office at 472-8667 or e-mail info@ hitoms.com.

DADDY’S HOME

BY TONY RUBINO AND GARY MARKSTEIN

GENERAL Concealed Handgun classes There will be a concealed handgun class today at Pilot Fire Department and Oct. 24 at the Fairgrove Fire Department. The classes run from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. This class is mandatory for anyone wishing to get a concealed handgun permit. The class is covered by Jason Livingston, N.C. certified firearms instructor and 16 years law enforcement experience. The class covers laws for citizens governing the use of deadly force to protect their homes, as well as deadly force laws in general as they pertain to citizens of N.C. Also, gun safety, marksmanship and fundamentals are covered and practiced during the class, with hands on range time. To sign up for either class call Livingston at 687-0290 or go by the respective fire department.

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had difficulties handling the running serve of Tiffany Love, as she accounted for five aces in the final game to allow the Storm to win easily. With the Region X championship approaching and no other team seriously challenging the Storm, Hammond has his sights set on the bigger prizes. He believes the tough scheduling of Division I and DII schools is what has helped put his team in this position. “If you look back at the competition we have played, it has helped us to move towards district and nationals,” said Hammond. The national championships will be held in Rochester, Minn. and the second year coach intends on being there. “I want to be there so bad,” he said. “We all want to go and every practice we just keep pushing and working hard to get there.”

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Notes: DCCC has an overall record of 13-6 ... The team wore pink shirts before the game to bring recognition of Breast Cancer Awareness Month ... Each player was playing for an individual that has had a bout with breast cancer.

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B4 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009

SPORTS THROTTLE From page B1 cially on Homecoming,� said Bulldog linebacker Jaquan Harris. “We felt if we worked hard we could shut them down, and we pitched a shutout.� On offense, 10 turned into Thomasville’s lucky number on the Bulldogs first two scoring drives of the first half. Midway through the opening quarter, Quin Riley sprung a 33-yard run and Sam Nelson completed a key fourth down pass to Brandon Lucas during THS’ 10-play, 69 yard drive to the end zone. Riley capped the attack with a one-yard plunge, but the extra point kick sailed right. “We just stayed focus,� said Green. “It’s not about one player but the whole team. The offensive line really opened

WAY From page B1 a baby outgrows its one-sies. The sport got so big so fast that print publications and television networks and even the geographic boundaries of America itself had to scramble to keep up with it. Folks in Alabama back in the 1960s may have never envisioned a day when folks in the deserts of Arizona would embrace “theirâ€? sport of stock car racing. Carolinians probably took the same view of Californians. But that’s exactly what happened. As more and more fans in other time zones began watching NASCAR events, fewer and fewer of them wanted to do that watching early in the morning. The result was an attempt to satisfy as many fans as possible. NASCAR and its TV broadcast partners — including FOX, ABC, ESPN and TNT — made a number of adjustments to the start times of races. East Coast races, which in years past may have seen their green flags as early as noon, now sometimes got under way as late as 3 p.m. Viewers began complaining that they sometimes missed those oh-so-important green flags because they weren’t always entirely certain when the race actually started. On a side note, if anyone has ever found a way to please all of the race fans, all of the time, I surely do wish they would share that secret with me. Maybe if NASCAR outlawed restrictor plates, put rockets in the rear ends and installed those hydraulic-looking legs on the cars like they have in the “Transformersâ€? movies so they could just hop over the competition instead of having to go around it, that might help. But I don’t see that happening. NASCAR took a less drastic but very satisfactory approach. In the October 7 press conference, NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France said that, “ ‌ Fans have been asking for earlier and more consistent start times, and we are making this change for our fans, beginning with the Daytona 500 next February.â€? “It’s become clear to us that traditional, early Sunday afternoon start times are favored by NASCAR fans who both attend races and watch on television,â€? added FOX Sports Chairman David Hill. “NASCAR, perhaps more than any

up some holes for us and all my blessings go out to them.� A series later, the Bulldogs put together another 10-play drive with Green running the ball eight times for 59 of the 71 yards. Riley tacked on his second short scoring run and Nelson connected with Lawrence Thomas on the two-point conversion, putting THS up 14-0 with 9:47 to go until halftime. Green finished with 162 yards on the ground. “Our kids have worked to get better executing our stuff,� Brown said. “A lot of it is getting assignments right and we’ve been close for awhile now. The game was big for us in terms of community relationships and having to go out with a loss to a nearby neighbor. Our kids were up to play.� Special teams set up the Bulldogs third touchdown. Dee Dow’s 53-yard punt return to the East 2-yard line paved the way for Green’s short scoring plunge

other sport, belongs to the generations of fans who have passed on their passion, father to son, mother to daughter, so whatever we can do to make them feel better connected to the sport they love should be done.� When asked to predict the outcome of the decision to standardize start times, Mr. Hill went on to jokingly invoke the ancient principle of Roman divination. “It involves killing a chicken, and then looking at the entrails. And the great Roman Empire used that to base their decisions on whether to go to war, whether to go to peace, what have you. I’ve got a cage of chickens in the corner of my office, and that’s what they’re telling me,� he said. Eewww. (Settle down, children. He was just kidding.) It takes courage for a sports entity of NASCAR’s magnitude to admit that just maybe, it made a misstep. It takes even more courage to take appropriate and decisive action to correct that misstep. So Mr. Hill’s analogy, while perhaps not well-suited for the more squeamish among us, SATURDAY EVENING CBS PBS FOX NBC ION CW ABC MNT WLXI

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perfectly encapsulates the tenacious spirit NASCAR has personified since it first hit the beach in Daytona more than a half century ago. No guts; no glory. It seems that NASCAR and its TV partners may actually have succeeded in finding a way to put that unpredictable genie back in the bottle. For once, he went willingly ... and he’s happy to be there.

and a 20-0 THS lead with 2:40 left in the third quarter. The Golden Eagles briefly had momentum following a Justin Kiett fumble in the red zone, but EDHS failed to gain a first down and had to punt the ball away to Dow. “My hats off to them on defense,� East coach Bryan Lingerfelt said. “They ran the ball and were able to do some good things against us. We just couldn’t sustain any offense and that killed us. I thought our kids fought and played hard, but we hadn’t seen a defensive line like that in any of our previous games.� Green tacked on his second score early in the fourth quarter with a 15yard run and Nelson connected with Donovan Merchant on a 64-yard scoring strike with 4:19 left in the game. Merchant dragged two East defenders the final yards into the end zone.

TIMES PHOTO/LARRY MATHIS

Dylan Gallimore turns the corner following a block by one of his linemen.

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Locked Up Explorer Deadly Dozen Alaska State Troopers Locked Up Abroad Deadly Dozen Alaska State Troopers Locked Up Abroad iCarly iCarly iCarly iCarly (N) Jackson The Troop iCarly Lopez Lopez The Nanny The Nanny Malcolm Malcolm Malcolm Malcolm Warrior Deadliest Warrior Deadliest Warrior Deadliest Warrior ›› “Sniperâ€? (1993, Action) Tom Berenger. Ă… › “Sniper 2â€? (2002, Suspense) Tom Berenger. Richardson Supernanny Ă… Supernanny Ă… Whose Wedding Is It? The Dish Dallas Sweet 16 Reality Hell Whose Wedding Is It? The Dish Dallas (4:30) Saw ›› “Saw IIâ€? (2005) Donnie Wahlberg, Tobin Bell. ›› “Saw IIIâ€? (2006) Tobin Bell, Shawnee Smith. Premiere. Beneath › “Joy Ride 2: Dead Aheadâ€? (2008) Nicki Aycox. Seinfeld ››› “Independence Dayâ€? (1996) (PA) Will Smith, Bill Pullman. Ă… ›› “Lethal Weapon 4â€? (1998) (PA) Mel Gibson. Ă… (DVS) ›› “Stealthâ€? (2005) Josh Lucas. (:00) ››› “2010â€? (1984) Ă… ›››› “Mutiny on the Bountyâ€? (1935) Charles Laughton. ›› “The Wreck of the Mary Deareâ€? (1959) Ă… ›› “Pursuit of the Graf Speeâ€?, War Dress Dress Dress Dress Dress Wedded to Perfection Wedded to Perfection Dress Dress Wedded to Perfection Wedded to Perfection (:00) ›› “I Think I Love My Wifeâ€? ›› “Madea’s Family Reunionâ€? (2006) Premiere. ›› “Madea’s Family Reunionâ€? (2006) Ă… ›› “The Honeymoonersâ€? (2005) Mike Epps Ă… Stoked Johnny T Johnny T Teen Titans Teen Titans ĂŠ10 Count ĂŠSports King of Hill King of Hill Chicken Aqua Teen The PJs Boondocks Bleach Moribito ĂŠPoker Tour Halloween Attractions Creepiest Destinations Smithsonian Relic Relic Roadside Adventures Creepiest Destinations Smithsonian Speeders Most Shocking Top 20 Most Shocking World’s Dumbest... Bait Car Bait Car Forensic Forensic The Investigators The Investigators “OfďŹ cer-Gentleâ€? Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Ă‹Noticiero La Familia P. Luche SĂĄbado Gigante Impacto Ă‹Noticiero FĂĄbrica de Risas “AdiĂłs Lagunillaâ€? (:00) NCIS NCIS “Witch Huntâ€? NCIS “Sandblastâ€? Ă… NCIS “Drivenâ€? Ă… NCIS Ă… Psych Ă… ĂŠAction Sports Ă… Law & Order: SVU Tool Acad Behind the Music Ă… My Antonio Sex: The Revolution Sex: The Revolution Chicago ››› “Chicagoâ€? (2002) Catherine Zeta-Jones. Premiere. (:00) Bones Bones Ă… Funniest Home Videos Scrubs Scrubs ›› “High Crimesâ€? (2002) Ashley Judd. Ă… ›› “Godsendâ€? (2004) Greg Kinnear. Ă… 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) ›› “The Womenâ€? (2008) Ă… Curb (:20) ››› “Slumdog Millionaireâ€? ››› “Slumdog Millionaireâ€? (2008) Dev Patel. ‘R’ (:05) ››› “I Am Legendâ€? (2007) Will Smith. Ă… (:15) ››› “The Bourne Ultimatumâ€? (:15) ››› “Under Siegeâ€? (1992) Steven Seagal. ›› “Mamma Mia!â€? (2008) Meryl Streep. ‘PG-13’ Life on Top Sex Games Sex Games Exit Wnds Charlie B ĂŠInside the NFL Ă… ĂŠBoxing Andre Dirrell vs. Carl Froch. (iTV) (Live) Dexter (iTV) Ă… Russell Peters Presents (iTV) (N) ›› “Charlie Bartlettâ€? Mighty (6:55) ››› “Get on the Busâ€? (1996, Drama) ‘R’ (12:10) ›› “Gacyâ€? (2003) ‘R’ Ă… Ted Bundy ›› “Gacyâ€? (2003) Mark Holton. ‘R’ ›› “Ted Bundyâ€? (2002) ‘R’ Ă… ĂŠFootball


Saturday, October 17, 2009 – Thomasville Times – B5

Youth to present ‘Cinderella’

SPORTS

TIMES STAFF REPORT

Tips to having a successful tailgate

MOVE MORE WINNER Julie Lloyd is the Move More Thomasville winner for September. She wins $100 for her participation with the program. To learn more about Move More Thomasville contact the Thomasville Parks & Recreation at 475-4280.

STATEPOINT

Are you ready for some football? The tailgate party is the ultimate rite of the season and the perfect way to show team spirit. But before you kick off a tailgating bash you need to be properly prepared to host your pigskin party. Whether you’re hosting a tailgate outside the stadium or simply throwing a party at home for the big game, here are a few tips to ensure it will be an event your friends and family remember: * Plan That Menu: It’s all about the food, so be sure you have enough for everybody on hand. Do prep work in advance so you don’t waste time and can join in the reveling. Make a list of everything you’ll need -- from burgers and dogs to plates, utensils, cooking gear and cleaning supplies. Fire-up the grill early, so food is ready at least an hour before game time. * Get Your Party Place In Shape: Tailgating or entertaining outdoors? Quickly scrub down the grill, cooking utensils and portable furniture. Entertaining at home? Clean kitchen grease and grime or bathroom mold and mildew before guests arrive. Using a multipurpose cleaner and degreaser like Greased Lightning — which conquers tough grease, grime and stains — can save time, as it’s great for both indoor and outdoor chores. * Grab A Choice Spot: Tailgating veterans know to choose a choice spot in the parking lot to secure extra room for their shindig. That last spot in a row means more party space, as does any spot adjacent to a car-free or grassy area. If you are hosting guests inside your home, make sure there are plenty of seats with a great view of the game so everyone can see the action. * Kick Up Condiments: Rough and tumble football fans like some heat, so don’t just offer mustard, ketchup and mayo. Spicy peppers and relishes will give your grub an extra boost. * Keep It Dry: Always keep a tarp or tent on hand to protect your food, friends and fun should the weather turn. * Clean Up Your Mess: Leave your spot clean, just like mom always told you. Keep plenty of garbage bags available. A multipurpose cleaner and degreaser like Greased Lightning can help you quickly wipe down just about any surface and also can be used as a laundry pre-treat for those set-in stains that just can’t be handled with seconds left in the game. It removes red wine, grass, mud, BBQ sauce and more. It’s also good for blood stains, but if you’re not a member of the offensive line you shouldn’t have any of those. For more fast cleaning tips, visit www. greased-lightning.com. Bottom line, it doesn’t matter if you win or lose, it’s how you prep for the game.

COURTESY PHOTO

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Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Da Vinci’s Legend of the Seeker CSI: Miami “Rampage” Deadliest Catch Triad Jim Paid Prog Van Impe Desperate Housewives Half & Half Half & Half Calvary Deliverance Manna-Fest Van Impe Come In Believers ËTriad Pulpit Restoration Bates Ask the Pastor Answers in Genesis TCT Today Health and 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 CSI: Miami CSI: Miami “Man Down” Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å CSI: Miami Å (12:01) Criminal Minds (:01) Criminal Minds Mad Men (N) Å (:02) Mad Men Å (12:03) Breaking Bad Mad Men Å ››› “The Shining” (1980, Horror) Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall. Premiere. Å Lost Tapes Lost Tapes Lost Tapes Weird, True Weird, True Werewolves: The Dark Survivors (N) Weird, True Weird, True Werewolves: The Dark Survivors “Love for Sale” (2008) Jackie Long, Jason Weaver, Mya. BET’s Weekend Inspiration › “The Cookout” (2004) Ja Rule, Tim Meadows. Law CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI (5:15) “Caddyshack” Comedy (:15) ›› “Caddyshack” (1980, Comedy) Chevy Chase. Cable Guy Comedy Comedy ›› “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” Get Ripped Diabetes Wall St Biography on CNBC Big Mac: Inside Made in China, Profit Biography on CNBC American Greed NEW Wal-Mart ËNewsroom ËNewsroom CNN Presents Å ËNewsroom CNN Presents Å State of the Union Dunham South Park Tosh.0 Girlfriend Futurama Futurama Futurama ››› “American Pie” (1999) Jason Biggs. › “The Ex” (2006) Zach Braff, Amanda Peet. Å American Politics Q&A Intl American Politics Q&A Intl American Politics Words Book TV Book TV Book TV: After Words Book TV Book TV Book TV: After Words Book TV Da Vinci Angels vs. Demons Hunting the Lost Symbol (N) Å Storm Chasers (N) Hunting the Lost Symbol Å Storm Chasers Å Happy Feet Mickey Mouse Phineas Phineas Wizards Wizards Montana Suite Life Cory Replace K. Possible ›› “Halloweentown” (1998) Å Fatal True Hollywood Story Courteney Cox: THS Lamas Girls Girls Lamas The Soup Chelsea Girls Lamas Keep Up Keep Up ÊBaseball ÊSportsCenter (Live) Å ÊCollege Football Live (Live) Å ÊSportsCenter (Live) Å ÊSportsCenter (Live) Å ÊSoccer ÊYachting ÊWorld Series ÊWorld Series ÊNASCAR Now Å ÊWorld Series ÊWorld Series ÊNFL’s Greatest Game “Tim Burton” J. Osteen Feed Zola Levitt Paid Prog. ››› “Edward Scissorhands” (1990) Johnny Depp. Premiere. ››› “Beetlejuice” (1988) Michael Keaton. Å Challenge The Next Iron Chef Challenge (N) The Next Iron Chef (N) Iron Chef America (N) Bobby Flay Bobby Flay The Next Iron Chef Iron Chef America (:00) ›› “Van Helsing” (2004, Fantasy) Hugh Jackman. Sons of Anarchy Nip/Tuck “Enigma” ’70s Show ’70s Show › “Wild Hogs” (2007) Tim Allen, John Travolta. News Sun. FOX Report ËHuckabee Special Programming ËGeraldo at Large Å ËHuckabee ËRed Eye ËGeraldo at Large Å ÊPoker ÊWorld Poker ÊAir Racing (N) ÊSport Science ÊTop 50 ÊFinal Score ÊGolden Age ÊFinal Score ÊPremier League ÊFinal Score ÊFinal Score ÊPGA Golf ÊGolfCentrl ÊPGA Tour Golf: Champions -- AT&T Championship ÊPGA Tour Golf Frys.com Open -- Final Round. ÊGolfCentrl ÊPGA Tour Golf: Nationwide Tour -- Champ. Love “Wedding Daze” (2004) John Larroquette. Å “Always and Forever” (2009) Dean McDermott. “Love Is a Four Letter Word” (2007) Teri Polo. Walker, Texas Ranger To Sell Curb House Amazing Log Homes House House Intervention Income For Rent Property House House Intervention Income Primal Fear Haunted Hist. MysteryQuest Å MonsterQuest “Abominable Snowman” (N) Å MonsterQuest Å (12:01) MysteryQuest (:01) MonsterQuest Living With “Unstable” (2009) Shiri Appleby, Kathy Baker. Å How I Met How I Met › “Karla” (2006) Laura Prepon, Tess Harper. Å › “Karla” (2006) Laura Prepon, Tess Harper. Å Dahmer Will You Kill for Me: Charles Manson Witness to Jonestown Witness to Waco The Mind of Manson Parents “My Super Psycho Sweet Sixteen” (2009, Horror) The City The Hills P. Diddy’s Starmaker (N) Real World-Road Rules Fantasy Fantasy “Super Psycho” Troopers Hooked Mob Rampage Russian Gangsters Rescue Ink Unleashed Mob Rampage Russian Gangsters Rescue Ink Unleashed iCarly iCarly Jackson Nick News Malcolm Hates Chris Hates Chris Lopez Lopez The Nanny The Nanny Malcolm Malcolm Malcolm Malcolm CSI CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn ›› “Zombie Strippers” (2008) Robert Englund. (:00) ›› “Never Been Kissed” Dallas Dallas Clean House Supernanny Å Dallas Dallas Clean House “Never Been Kissed” (:00) Rose Red (Part 3 of 3) Å “Sometime-More” ›› “Stephen King’s Desperation” (2006) Tom Skerritt, Steven Weber. ›› “Sometimes They Come Back... Again” (:15) ›› “Men in Black II” (2002) (:10) ››› “The School of Rock” (2003) Jack Black. Å “Without a Paddle: Nature’s Calling” ››› “The School of Rock” (2003) Jack Black. (:15) ››› “The Steel Helmet” ›› “The Blob” (1958) Earl Rowe ›› “Die, Monster, Die!” (1965) Å ›› “Riders to the Stars” (1954) ›››› “Nosferatu” (1922, Horror) Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss Cake Boss (5:00) ››› “The Patriot” (2000) (10:55) ››› “Gladiator” (2000) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. Å ››› “Gladiator” (2000) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. Å Haunting “Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Begins” (2009) Total Star Wars King of Hill Family Guy Family Guy Titan Max Venture Metal Mighty King of Hill Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Man Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food Ghost Man/Food Man Food Man/Food Man/Food Man/Food PoliceVids Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Inside Jail Inside Jail Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne ÊFútbol de la Liga Mexicana Viva el Sueño Ë¿Quién Tiene la Razón? 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ÊFootball

MONDAY EVENING CBS PBS FOX NBC ION CW ABC MNT WLXI

Lexington Youth Theatre is proud to celebrate its 25th season with the production of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella, the Enchanted Edition. Performances will be held Nov. 6-8 at the Edward C. Smith Civic Center in Lexington. Performance times are Friday at 2 p.m., Saturday at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. The cast will feature over 90 young performers in grades K-12 and includes some of the area’s

best local talent. Come and watch mice turn into horses, the pumpkin turn into a carriage, and Cinderella transform from rags to a beautiful ball gown. This musical production promises to be wonderful entertainment for the entire family as this timeless fairy tale comes to life before your eyes. Tickets are $8 pre-sale or $10 at the door plus a can of food for local charities. Tickets are available from cast members, the Smith Civic Center office (336-249-7875).

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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 Fortune Jeopardy! How I Met On Purpose Two Men Big Bang CSI: Miami “Bad Seed” ËNews ËLate Show-Letterman ËLate Late Show Paid Prog Business N.C. Now Antiques Roadshow Matisse Color, Myth Summit ËBBC News ËCharlie Rose (N) Å ËSmiley N.C. Now Business TMZ (N) Smarter House “Brave Heart” (N) Lie to Me “Honey” (N) ËFOX 8 10:00 News (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Bernie Mac King of Hill Wall St Malcolm Inside Entertain Heroes “Tabula Rasa” Trauma “Stuck” (N) ËThe Jay Leno Show (N) ËNews ËTonight Show ËLate Night-Jimmy Fallon ËLast Call Fam Feud Ghost Whisperer Å Ghost Whisperer Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Durham County Å Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Pastor Melissa Scott Family Guy King King One Tree Hill (N) Å Gossip Girl (N) Å Raymond Raymond Punk’d Comics Un. Family Guy RENO 911! Paid Prog Recipe TV ËABC News Deal No Millionaire Dancing With the Stars (Live) Å (:02) Castle (N) Å Frasier ËNightline ËJimmy Kimmel Live (:06) Extra South Park Simpsons Two Men Two Men Law Order: CI Law Order: CI The Office The Office Payne Payne Law & Order: SVU ’70s Show Lopez Come In A Word From Glory Manna-Fest Starks This Is Day Life 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 Paranormal Criminal Minds Å Intervention “Tom” Intervention (N) Å Extreme Paranormal Medium P.I. Paranormal (12:01) Intervention (:01) Intervention Å (5:30) ››› “Field of Dreams” (:45) Mad Men “The Color Blue” (11:47) ››› “Field of Dreams” (1989, Fantasy) ›››› “Rain Man” (1988) Dustin Hoffman, Tom Cruise. Untamed Raw Nature Å SuperFetch SuperFetch Dogs 101 Animal Cops Houston SuperFetch SuperFetch Dogs 101 Animal Cops Houston (:00) 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live Pay It Off ËThe Mo’Nique Show ËW. Williams “Dough Boys” (2009) › “The Inkwell” (1994) Larenz Tate, Joe Morton. $1M Listing Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Million Dollar Listing (N) Million Dollar Listing Flipping Out Å Million Dollar Listing Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Smarter Smarter ÊDallas Cheerleaders ÊCheer Strict Parents Smarter Smarter Crossroads Parents Mad Money Kudlow Report Biz Innovation Biography on CNBC The Entrepreneurs Mad Money Biography on CNBC Biz Innovation Situation Lou Dobbs Tonight ËCampbell Brown (N) ËLarry King Live (N) ËAnderson Cooper 360 Å ËLarry King Live ËAnderson Cooper 360 RENO 911! Daily Show ËColbert ›› “Waiting ...” (2005) Ryan Reynolds. Å Futurama Futurama Daily Show ËColbert Tosh.0 Girlfriend Futurama Daily Show (5:00) House of Representatives ËTonight From Washington ËCapital News Today (5:00) U.S. Senate Coverage Commun. ËTonight From Washington ËCapital News Today Cash Cab Destroyed Destroyed Destroyed Destroyed U.S. Marshals: Falcon U.S. Marshals: Falcon Destroyed Destroyed U.S. Marshals: Falcon U.S. Marshals: Falcon Suite Life Wizards Montana “Minutemen” (2008) Jason Dolley. Phineas Phineas Montana Wizards So Raven Life Derek Cory Replace K. Possible Lamas E! News (N) Daily 10 20 Most Shocking Unsolved Crimes Girls Girls Chelsea E! News Chelsea Girls Girls The Soup ÊSports ÊMonday Night Countdown Å ÊNFL Football Denver Broncos at San Diego Chargers. (Live) ÊSportsCenter (Live) Å ÊNFL PrimeTime (N) ÊNASCAR Ê30 for 30 ÊWorld Series ÊWorld Series ÊWorld Series ÊE:60 (N) ÊSportsNation Å ÊBaseball ÊNFL Films Fresh Pr. ’70s Show ’70s Show Lincoln Heights (N) Greek “Fight the Power” Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club Å Lincoln Heights Å Slim Jeans Paid Prog. Minute Challenge Good Eats Good Eats Unwrapped Unwrapped Diners Diners Good Eats Unwrapped Unwrapped Unwrapped Diners Diners (:00) ›› “Premonition” (2007) ’70s Show ›› “Ghost Rider” (2007, Action) Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes, Wes Bentley. ›› “The Omen” (2006, Horror) Liev Schreiber, Julia Stiles. Bret Baier FOX Report The O’Reilly Factor (N) ËHannity (N) On the Record The O’Reilly Factor ËHannity On the Record ÊTop 50 ÊBest Damn 50 ÊGolden Age ÊReloaded ÊSport Science ÊTop 50 ÊFinal Score ÊJay Glazer ÊFinal Score ÊBest Damn 50 ÊFinal Score ÊFinal Score ÊTop 10 ÊLearning ÊLessons ÊGolf Fix ÊTop 10 ÊBig Break Disney Golf ÊGolf ÊLearning ÊGolf Fix ÊGolfCentrl ÊBig Break Disney Golf ÊGolf ÊLearning I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Amazing House House Property Property House First Place House For Rent Intervention First Place House First Place House For Rent Marvels Modern Marvels Å Modern Marvels Å I Know What I Saw Å That’s Impossible Å (12:01) Modern Marvels (:01) I Know What I Saw Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Å Medium “Wicked Game” “Sorority Wars” (2009) Lucy Hale, Faith Ford. Å Will-Grace Will-Grace Frasier Frasier Will-Grace Medium ËEd Show ËHardball Å ËCountdown-Olbermann ËMaddow Show ËCountdown-Olbermann ËMaddow Show ËHardball Å ËCountdown-Olbermann Parental True Life Å True Life Å Gone Too Far “Amy” Gone Too Far (N) Gone Too Far Real World-Road Rules True Life Hooked Locked Up Abroad Hooked “Super Bass” Hooked Hooked (N) Hooked “Super Bass” Hooked Hooked Jackson iCarly SpongeBob Malcolm Malcolm Hates Chris Hates Chris G. Martin Lopez The Nanny The Nanny Malcolm Malcolm Lopez Lopez CSI CSI: Crime Scn ÊUFC Unleashed Å ÊUFC Fight Night ÊUFC Countdwn: Machida DEA CSI: Crime Scn House Supernanny Å Keep Up Keep Up Dallas The Dish Supernanny Å Messiest Home Dallas The Dish Supernanny Å Ghost Whisperer Å Ghost Whisperer Å Ghost Whisperer Å Monster (N) Monster (N) Voltron Voltron The X-Files Å ›› Carrie Ghost Whisperer Å The Office Name Earl ÊPregame ÊMLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Philadelphia Phillies. (Live) Å ÊMLB Post Seinfeld Sex & City “The Great Outdoors” (:15) ››› “The Doctor’s Dilemma” (1958) ›› “Bedtime Story” (1941) ›››› “The L-Shaped Room” (1963) Tom Bell ››› “Gaby” (1956) Leslie Caron. Å Dress Little Little Little Little Jon & Kate Jon & Kate Ultimate Cake Off (N) Little Little Jon & Kate Jon & Kate Ultimate Cake Off Å (:00) Bones Bones Å Bones Å The Closer Å The Closer Å Raising the Bar Å Raising the Bar Å CSI: NY “Jamalot” Billy “Billy & Mandy: Wrath” Scary Godmother Stoked 6TEEN King of Hill King of Hill Family Guy Family Guy Chicken Aqua Teen Stroker Awesome A. Bourdain Anthony Bourdain Bizarre World Å Anthony Bourdain Anthony Bourdain Madvent Madvent Bizarre World Å Anthony Bourdain PoliceVids Cops Å Cops Å Bait Car (N) Bait Car (N) Worked Worked World’s Dumbest... Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Forensic Little Hse. Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne ËNoticiero Un Gancho al Corazón En Nombre del Amor Sortilegio ËCristina SIDA: 27 Años. Impacto ËNoticiero La Casa de la Risa Torrente, un Torbellino (:00) NCIS NCIS “Lost & Found” NCIS Å ÊWWE Monday Night Raw (Live) Å (:05) ››› “Casino Royale” (2006, Action) Daniel Craig, Eva Green. Å Reality My Antonio Tool Academy Real Chance of Love Griffin Real Chance of Love Griffin Tool Academy My Antonio Becker Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos 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 “Mummy: Dragon Emp.” Real Time Schmatta: Rags to Riches to Rags Wanda Sykes: I’ma Be Me Å ››› “Wanted” (2008) James McAvoy. ‘R’ Å “Sex Games Cancun 2” (:15) “Halloween II” ‘R’ ›› “Good Advice” (2001) ‘R’ Å ›› “Doomsday” (2008) Rhona Mitra. ‘R’ Å ›› “Mamma Mia!” (2008) Meryl Streep. ‘PG-13’ Married Ê2008 Beijing Summer Olympics Dexter (iTV) Å Californ Californ Dexter (iTV) Å ›› “Beer League” (2006) ‘R’ Å › Fall iTV. (:25) “Scenes of a Sexual Nature” ‘R’ ›› “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” (2001) ‘PG-13’ “Stiletto” (2008) Tom Berenger. ‘R’ (:40) › “Cruel World” (2005) ‘R’ Å (:10) “Black and White”


B6 – Thomasville Times – Saturday, October 17, 2009

SCHOOL MENUS Thomasville City Schools Monday, Oct. 19 — Breakfast: Danish, fruit juice, milk; Lunch: Sloppy Joe on bun, chef salad, potato wedges, chilled pears, fresh fruit, milk, turkey sub. Tuesday, Oct. 20 — Breakfast: French toast, fruit juice, milk; Lunch: Oven fried chicken, wheat roll, chef salad, creamed potatoes, chilled peaches, fresh fruit, milk. Wednesday, Oct. 21 — Breakfast: Cereal with animal crackers, fruit juice, milk; Lunch: Pizza with cheese, chef salad, seasoned corn, tossed salad, fruit sherbet, fresh

fruit, milk. Thursday, Oct. 22 — Breakfast: Chicken biscuit, fruit juice, milk; Lunch: Beef vegetable soup, grilled cheese sandwich, chef salad, pork and beans, baked potato half, cherries, milk. Friday, Oct 23 — No school.

Davidson County Schools Monday, Oct. 19 — Breakfast: French toast sticks, assorted fruit, juice, milk; Lunch: Pizza, Sloppy Joe on a bun, chicken and noodles with roll, peas and carrots, hash brown sticks, garden salad, peach cups, assorted fresh fruit.

Tuesday, Oct. 20 — Breakfast: Goody Bun, assorted fruit, juice, milk; Lunch: Hot dog with slaw and chili, oven baked chicken with roll, hoagie sandwich, vegetarian beans, steamed broccoli, garden salad, strawberry fruit pop, assorted fresh fruit. Wednesday, Oct. 21 — Breakfast: Breakfast bagel, assorted fruit, juice, milk; Lunch: Chicken nuggets with roll, beans and franks with buttered texas toast, soft chicken taco, baby potatoes, green beans, garden salad, pears, assorted fresh fruit. Thursday, Oct. 22 — Breakfast: Cinnamon bun, assorted fruit,

juice, milk; Lunch: Nachos, lasagna with roll, Rib-B-Que, lima beans and corn, onion rings, garden salad, baked apples, assorted fresh fruit, cherry crisp. Friday, Oct. 23 — Breakfast: Sausage biscuit, assorted fruit, juice, milk; Lunch: Chicken filet, chicken tetrazzini, grilled cheese, squash casserole, corn, garden salad, fruit mix, assorted fresh fruit. * Cereal and toast served daily with breakfast. * Chef salad meal w/ crackers, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and boxed raisins offered daily with lunch.

Zoo festival to highlight red wolves TIMES STAFF REPORT ASHEBORO — The third week of the monthlongZooFest 2009 continues at the North Carolina Zoo today, with activities from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Saturday’s festivities, HOWL-O-Ween, celebrate red-wolves, with information stations, games, crafts, face painting and

a wolf-howling contest. Zoo guests can visit wolf information stations from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the red-wolf exhibit, check out the hands-on information available and then meet and talk to keepers there at 1:30 p.m. There will be games and crafts at the North America Plaza, Prairie

Outpost and Junction Plaza and face painting for kids of all ages at the “kidZone” exhibit. And those wanting to howl like a wolf (or just learn how) can compete with others in a wolf-howling contest at noon at Junction Plaza. ZooFest 2009 will conclude Oct. 24 & 25 with the zoo’s annual Boo at

the Zoo, featuring game booths, entertainers, music, story telling and costume contests and parades. All the fun takes place each weekend during regular zoo hours of 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. and is included in the regular zoo admission of $10 for adults, $8 for seniors (62+) and $6 for children.

Perdue addresses plans for health care in state BY KEVIN REID Times Correspondent GREENSBORO — Gov. Beverly Perdue showcased ambitious plans for health care in the state in a speech to members of the N.C. Institute of Medicine (NC IOM). “We have to stay true to our goal of making North Carolina the healthiest state in America,” Perdue said. “We’ve got a long way to go, but we really have begun the work.” The governor said the basis for her quest to make North Carolina the healthiest state was for its health leaders to focus on wellness rather than on taking care of the sick. “We need well care,” Perdue said. “The best way to bring down the amount being spent in health-care dollars, we all know, is to prevent us from getting sick in the first place. I know that some of us are going to get sick regardless of what we do. That’s just the way life is. But, for the most part, we can all have a better life and live cheaper with the healthcare dollars if we take care of ourselves.” In her quest for wellness of North Carolinians, Perdue has taken an about-face on the tobacco industry from the policies of past state administrations. North Carolina governors and U.S. senators and representatives from the state have vigorously defended tobacco use for decades, as leaders from other parts of the country have worked to curb it. “When we decided to focus on wellness, we knew we had to take on tobacco — even though we were in a state that was born and bred on tobacco,”

said Perdue, who was the lieutenant governor from 2001 until earlier this year (when she became governor) and served in the N.C. House from 1986 to 1990 and the N.C. Senate from 1990 to 2000. “I can remember several of my friends in the General Assembly telling me, ‘You can’t do this. There never has been a political person in this state that took on tobacco.” Perdue did — and eventually rose to the highest executive position in N.C. state government. Now that she is governor, a major media campaign, funded by the state, exists discouraging people — especially young people — from smoking. Taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products have increased this year. “I stood up with all of you to try to get a larger tobacco tax than we got this year,” she told the NC IOM members. “I will continue to fight for these efforts because they are important for the wellness of North Carolinians.” As governor, Perdue has signed an executive order to ban smoking on all state owned property. She also signed the state Smoking Ban Bill, introduced and sponsored by Rep. Hugh Holliman of Davidson County. “Hugh Holliman is one of my heroes,” Perdue said in an interview after her speech. “He stands up time after time for health and wellness in North Carolina.” Holliman, who lives in Lexington, is a lungcancer survivor, and the Democrat is in his second term as House Majority Leader. “His own personal battle with cancer has led him, in a lot of ways, to

CHURCH NOTES Spaghetti supper and bake sale New Mt. Vernon United Methodist Church, located at 6408 Friendship-Ledford Road in the Wallburg community, will host a buffet-style spaghetti supper and bake sale on Wednesday, Nov. 4 from 5-7 p.m. It will feature spaghetti

with meat sauce or plain sauce, salad, garlic bread, dessert and a beverage. The meal costs $7 for adults, $3.50 for children ages 6-12 and free for children under 6 years old. Take-outs cost $8 each. The event is sponsored by the United Methodist Men and the United Methodist Women.

change the face of North Carolina,” Perdue continued about Holliman. “He’s a good friend and adviser, and we wouldn’t be where we are today but for the efforts of a man like Rep. Holliman.” In her speech at Prevention Summit that the NC IOC was holding at the Marriott Downtown Hotel, Perdue urged the organization to partner with other organizations with similar goals. “If I could have a magic wand, I would ask that you all figure out a way to do a group effort so that those little pockets of wellness-and-prevention institutions all over North Carolina can somehow come together, in one big seamless quilt of initiatives, so that we don’t duplicate and replicate the limited amount of dollars we have in our

system,” she said. “If you can do that, you will change wellness care for the better.” Perdue enthusiastically supports universal health care. She just doesn’t want too much responsibility put on the states to finance it. “I know that you join me and believe to the bottom of your soul that we must have health care for the people of America and the people of North Carolina,” Perdue said to appreciative audience at the Prevention Summit. “I urge you to continue with me to urge the Congress to pass a bill this session that does the right thing on health care — but adds one caveat: that billions of dollars of the program don’t end up being stuck on states across America.”

11 West Holly Hill Rd Thomasville (336) 472-1761 “TRUST AND DEPENDABILITY YOU CAN RELY ON”

Ben Watford

Sandy York 475-2680

Rodney Fields 442-6765

Liddy Houston 861-4014

Vickie Burney 906-6434

Billy Sue Sellers 906-2837

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.

0010

NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS

0010

Legals

NORTH CAROLINA DAVIDSON COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE UNDERSIGNED, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of BRUCIE C. GREGORY, late of 372 S h u l e r R o a d , Thomasville, Davidson C o u n t y , N o r t h Carolina, this is to notify all persons, f i r m s a n d corporations having claims against the Estate to present them to the below named attorney for the Estate of BRUCIE C. GREGORY on or before January 4, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. ALL PERSONS, firms or c o r p o r a t i o n s indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned attorney. This the 3rd October, 2009.

WALK TO Thomasville School. Home has 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. Fireplace in living room with gas logs. Paved drive. $114,900

OLDER HOME with 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining room and kitchen on 3.43 acres in the county. $89,900

BRICK AND ROCK with 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, hardwood floors, tile w/ lots of extras. Triple garage and paved drive on 2 acres. $295,000

NEED MORE ROOM? 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, with partial basement (some of it finished), fresh paint in living room and bedrooms. New carpet in bedrooms. Double garage in basement on .94 acres. $149,900.

GOOD STARTER OR RENTAL with 1 bedroom and 1 bath. Den could be used as 2nd bedroom. Screened back porch. $47,000.

RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY OVER 13 ACRES IN EAST DAVIDSON DISTRICT. $139,900 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY CLOSE TO 29-70 ZONED M-1. 15.75 ACRES $290,000

LAND FOR SALE 13.05 ACRES fenced and perfect for horses. Stall and septic tank on property. $89,900

491024©HPE

day

THE UNDERSIGNED, having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Doris Colleen Hilliard, deceased late of Davidson County, this is to notify all persons, f i r m s , a n d corporations having cla ims agai nst said Estate to present t h e m t o t h e undersigned on or before the 1st day of January, 2010, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 1st October, 2009.

day

of

Charles Rex Childers, Sr. Executor of the Estate of Doris Colleen Hilliard 17125 Players Ridge Dr. Cornelius, NC 28031 October 2009

3,

10,

17,

24,

Classified Ads Work for you!

of

Roger D. Gregory, Administrator 404 Old Highway 29 Lexington, NC 27292 WILLIAM B. MILLS, ATTORNEY LAW OFFICES OF MILLS AND HAUSER, L.L.P. 48 Salem Street Thomasville, NC 27360 (336)475-8131 October 24, 2009

3,

10,

17

&

Buy * Save * Sell Place your ad in the classifieds! Buy * Save * Sell Want... Need.... Can not Live Without?

1053

The Classifieds

NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE UNDERSIGNED, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of NANCY C. BLACK, late of 206 Forest Drive, Thomasville, Davidson County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the Estate to present them to the below named attorney for the Estate of NANCY C. BLACK on or before January 4, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. ALL PERSONS, firms or corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned attorney. This the 3rd October, 2009.

day

of

Toni Jean B. Nicholson, Executrix 4344 E. Holly Grove Road Thomasville, NC 27360 WILLIAM B. MILLS, ATTORNEY LAW OFFICES OF MILLS AND HAUSER, L.L.P. 48 Salem Street Thomasville, NC 27360 (336)475-8131 3,

10,

17

Cosmetology

Part-Time Hairdresser needed, Mon, Wed & Sat. Booth Rent Neg. North Main St Salon. Call 869-2684

NORTH CAROLINA DAVIDSON COUNTY

October 24, 2009

LARGE Brick Ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Gas heat and central air. Several updates. Double garage. Home has a lake view.$142,900

Legals

1110

Medical/ General

Do you Want a Special Job? Want a part-time job that makes a difference? Help the elderly to stay in their own homes. Caregivers needed. PROVIDENCE SENIOR CARE 4723810 ext. 308

1120

Miscellaneous

Carpet/Water Tech. Experience preferred, but not necessary. Valid drivers license required. Competitive wages plus commission. Fax resume to: 336476-6085 or apply in person at: 100 Cloniger Dr., Thomasville, between 10AM & 2PM. Drug free workplace.

1130

Part-Time

GLAMOUR MODELS NEEDED Females 18-35 No exp. necessary. C&M Photographics

855-3116

1150

&

Restaurant/ Hotel

Hiring Drivers-$14.$16. an hour, Donatos Pizza 5872 Samet Dr. 336-437-7474


High Point OfďŹ ce

.ORTH -AIN s 812-3161

Archdale OfďŹ ce

Locally Owned & Operated!

4RINDALE 2OAD s 861-7653

Wendover at Eastchester OfďŹ ce

1220 N. MAIN Three OfďŹ ces to Serve You! www.edpricetriad.com 812-3175

4INSLEY $RIVE s 883-7200

O P E N

H O U S E S

S U N D A Y

2 - 4

S H O W R O O M S

PENNFIELD

UNDER CONTRACT

1941 WILLOW OAK DRIVE - IMMACULATE ONE OWNER 683 CHAS COURT- 3 BEDROOM/2 BATH TOWNHOME IN 2735 CROQUET CIRCLE - HIGH POINT’S PREMIER HOME W/3BR -2BA PLUS BONUS ROOM. EXTRA LARGE GOURMET HERITAGE RIDGE IN DAVIDSON COUNTY. DOUBLE GARAGE PLUS LUXURY TOWNHOME COMMUNITY. 5 FLOOR PLANS KITCHEN, HARDWOOD FLOORS, FIREPLACE AND MORE! ALL ON AN SPECIALS! HOA DUES PAID FOR 1 YEAR! BLINDS! CLOSING COSTS - 2-3 BEDROOMS, 1 STORY W/OPTION FOR 2ND. ACRE LOT IN RANDOLPH HILLS. DONNA LAMBETH 240-3456 $2500! SIDE BY SIDE REFRIGERATOR! PAT COLONNA 906-2265 YOUR HOST: RICK VAUGHN DIRECTIONS: I-85 TO FINCH FARM RD. EXIT. LEFT ON FINCH FARM RIGHT ON OLD DIRECTIONS: N. ON MAIN . LEFT ON OLD 311 LEFT ON HEDGE- DIRECTIONS: WESTCHESTER DR. TO W. LEXINGTON MOUNTAIN LEFT ON FULLER MILL LEFT ON POST LEFT ON WILLOW OAK . HOME ON LEFT. COCK RIGHT ON ANSLEY RIGHT ON CHAS COURT. AVE. ADJACENT TO SWANSGATE.

HICKSWOOD

BRECKENRIDGE

518 N. Hamilton St. $1,225,000.00

442 N. Wrenn St. $1,800,000.00

10,664 SF Zoned GB Call Alex 878-7037

13,791 SF Zoned CB Call Ivan 255-8799

PRICE REDUCED 194 FREEMONT DRIVE - BEAUTIFUL BRECKENRIDGE PAST 202 MAGNOLIA LANE - BRADFORD DOWNS, ARCHDALE. ATTENTION TO COLONIAL COUNTRY CLUB. SPACIOUS 2BR/2BATH TOWNHOME DETAIL, 3 BEDROOMS, 2.5 BATHS, BONUS ROOM, FORMAL DINING, FORMAL W/MANY UPGRADES. 2)#+ 6!5'(. s LIVING ROOM, GREAT ROOM, BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN, 3-CAR GARAGE, LARGE TILE DIRECTIONS: I-85 TAKE FINCH FARM RD. EXIT AND GO NORTH SHOWER. LOTS OF EXTRAS. $289,000 -)+% 05'( s ACROSS HWY 62 TO UNITY ST.PAST COLONIAL COUNTY CLUB. RIGHT DIRECTIONS: 311S TO LEFT ON TARHEELDR. TO RIGHT ON WOODAVE. TO LEFT ON BRADFORD LANE TO RIGHT ON SHADY OAK LANE TO RIGHT ON BYRON LANE TO LEFT ON MAGNOLIA LANE. INTO BRECKENRIDGE. ROAD WILL DEAD END INTO FREEMONT.

N E W

5008 BENNINGTON SWANS LANDING 4BDRMS(2 ON MAIN) AND 3 BATHS 3100#PLUS 1900# UNFINISHED BASEMENT DESIGNER KITCHEN - SCREENED PORCH LARGE LOT JEANNE STEWART 878-7584

LOW $100S – ONLY 5 REMAINING OPEN DAILY 11-6; SAT. & SUN. 2-6

s %8#%,,%.4 ,/#!4)/. -),% &2/- 7%.$/6%2 s HWY 68/EASTCHESTER TO HICKSWOOD RD. COMMUNITY ON LEFT.Y #!,, +2)34) s /2

L I S T I N G S

1568 WALKER ROAD $134,900 QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD IN RANDOLPH CO. TRADITIONAL HOME WITH A FULL BASEMENT FOSTER FERRYMAN 253-8888

100 E. Green Drive For Lease

521 N. Hamilton Street $999,999.00

Zoned CB- $10.00SF 12,000 Available Call Alex 878-7037

16,680 SF Zoned CB Call Dennis 878-7000

422 South Main Street For Sale/For Lease

126 Virginia Place For Sale/For Lease

$520,000.000 Negotiable Zoned CB 6000 SF Call Alex 878-7037

$795,000.00-$13.00SF Zoned CB Call Ivan 255-8799

1512 SOUTHTREE LANE $116,900 3 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS ANGELA BROWN 689-4559

SOLD 3910 GISBOURNE DRIVE $158,900 3BDRMS/2BATHS - TRADITIONAL HOME MAIN LEVEL OFFICE W/FIREPLACE DECK W/RETRACTABLE AWNING FOSTER FERRYMAN 253-8888

1431 MOTES COURT $89,900 QUAINT HOME W/ACERAGE HARDWOODS - 2BDRMS/1BATH SCREENED PORCH- PRICED TO SELL! DONNA LAMBETH 240-3456

R E S I D E N T I A L

4370 ASTON OAKS $415,000 CUSTOM BUILT 4BDRMS/3.5BATHS BONUS ROOM AND GAME ROOM CALL SUE 689-4381

4010 GLENN LANDING DRIVE $149,500 BELOW TAX VALUE! UNION CROSS AREA 3 OR 3 BEDROOMS - CUL-DE-SAC CALL MARIEA 687-9464

3863 FOX MEADOW $149,500 3BEDROOM/3BATH HOME IN TRINITY FINISHED BASEMENT WITH DEN LAUNDRY ROOM PLUS A BONUS ROOM PAMELA CARTER 210-4241

L I S T I N G S

2990 CLEAR RIDGE ONLY 3 YEARS OLD. 1.05 ACRES. 3BDRMS/2BATHS PLUS BONUS OVER GARAGE. HARDWOODS AND CERAMIC FLOORS. SELLER RELOCATING! JOANN CRAWFORD 906-0002

2996 AUTUMN ACRES $334,900 A MUST SEE W/4BDRMS/3.5BATHS FORMAL DRM/LVRM PLUS A SUNROOM CALL KAREN 688-6539

5278 FINCH FARM ROAD $142,000 3 BD/2BA CONVENIENTLY LOCATED OFF I-85 CALL LISA 847-1142

201 W. High Avenue Willow Green Showroom

258 South Main Street For Sale/For Lease

$325,000.00 Zoned CB - 2,990SF Call Ivan 255-8799

$2,200,000 - Zoned CB 16,000SF Call Dennis 878-7000

341 South Main St. For Lease

901 Johnson Street $289,900.00

1,339SF Zoned CB Showroom Call Ron 812-3175

3,100SF Victorian Home Ideal Market & Co. Housing Call Rick 803-0514

Price Commercial Properties welcomes Alex Field and Ivan Garry.

2906 KIPPENSHIRE LANE $335,900 LUXURY 3BDRM TOWNHOME 2 CAR GARAGE PLUS A SUNROOM CALL TEAM BEESON 848-7560

Alex Field 442-0744 Commercial

Ivan Garry 255-8799 Commercial

Janie Avant 509-7223

Vida Bailey 906-0132

Dianna Baxendale 870-9395

Pam Beeson 848-7560

Paul Bowers 878-7568

Deborah Bryant 215-4236

Shelby Brewer 707-8629

Angela Brown 689-4559

Stacy Brown 399-4868

Janet Brown 906-2108

Carolina Burnett 803-1970

Pam Carter 210-4241

Sheila Cochrane 259-4932

Karen Coltrane 442-0555

Sam Cosher 471-8826

JoAnn Crawford 906-0002

Fidel Davila 687-5804

Karen Dietz 688-6539

Shane Earnhardt 669-6849

Foster Ferryman 253-8888

Lynn Finnegan 413-6158

Woody Grady 687-8111

Larry Guy 880-6767

Beverly Hardy 803-1793

Sue Hoult 689-4381

Sharon Johnson 870-0771

Jack Lance 442-1133

Chris Long 689-2855

Stan Martin 889-5319

Aaron Mattern 669-9096

Juanita Miller 880-5113

Barbara Moore 878-7565

Scott Myers Broker In Charge 906-4069

Mike Pugh 471-1129

Angela Renshaw 878-7002 ext. 351

Vic Sanniota 906-2875

Kristy Schrock 847-6899

Sharon Sink 688-2122

Janice Spainhour 681-2791

Robert Smith 215-4465

Kathy Sprague 307-0877

Jeanne Stewart 878-7584

Tyler Walsh 688-1137

Rick Vaughn 803-0514

Linda Weaver 878-7004

Charles Willett 327-5225

Janice Wilson 442-1859

Jay Wood 878-7591

Char Bivins 870-0222 Saddlebrook

Pat & Bill Colonna 906-2265 Heritage Ridge

Donise Bailey 442-0012 Cambridge

Karen Boulware 906-0091 Brunswick

Amber Doyle 880-1789 Colonial Village

Renee Harper 992-0553 Vernon Farms

Sallie Ledford 456-8690 Ashebrook

Kristi Lucas 870-0421 Hickswood

Lisa Sherman 847-1142 Ledford South

Mariea Shean 687-9464 Water’s Edge

Linda Solando 548-7544 Planter’s Walk

Laurie Edwards 906-0555 Westover

Ivan Garry 878-7541 Commercial

Ron Hinkle 878-7544 Commercial

Jerry Hughes 878-7005 Commercial

Van McSwaim 906-5240 Commercial

John Parks 906-0657 Commercial

Todd Peacock 878-7553 Commercial

Gary Snipes 880-5727 Commercial

Dennis Speckman 442-2000 Commercial

Ed Price 812-3161

Susan Woody 689-3819 Westover

Van Boyles 878-7573 Commercial

Alex Field 442-0744 Commercial


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