Day in the Life
Dorsett wins Rowan Masters Sports, 1B
Readers’ photos, 8A
Monday, June 28, 2010 | 50¢ Check throughout the day for news updates
Neighbors: Domestic violence preceded alleged murder BY KARISSA MINN
kminn@salisburypost.com
Neighbors of a Landis woman charged with murder say the man who was killed had been abusing her. The Rowan County Sheriff’s Office charged Brandy Nicole Lyons, 32, of 613 S. Vance St. in Landis, in connection with death of 35year-old Roy Daniels on Friday. Lyons’ uncle, J.B. Pittard, lives nearby at 805 S. Kimmons St. Whatever happened, he said, “I know it was selfdefense.” Daniels would often hit her and “beat her up,” he said. “It’s always been a
mess,” Pittard said. “I’ve been waiting for something to happen. I knew how scared she was of him. She was going to do something.” Pittard said the couple has been in an onagain, offagain relationship for LYONS about six years — the age of their daughter. “She’s been trying to get rid of him, but he’s one of those kinds of fellows that don’t take no for answer,” he said.
Lyons had taken out a restraining order against Daniels, Pittard said, but that didn’t keep him away for long. He said he saw police come out to the house Friday, but Daniels had left the property by the time they arrived. Daniels returned later that night. The Landis Police Department and the Sheriff’s Office responded to a shooting report at 10:55 p.m. Friday. When they arrived at Lyons’ home, authorities found Daniels in the kitchen apparently bleeding from the stomach. Neighbors say the narrow street was blocked off Friday
night by several emergency vehicles — police, fire and EMS — which could not get in or out easily. The Criminal Investigative Division collected evidence and statements that led to the arrest of Lyons. Pending a court appearance today, she was being held in the Rowan County Detention Center with no bond. Bob Ridenhour, who lives next door to Lyons at 609 S. Vance St., said he had heard loud yelling and slamming doors at the house on a few occasions. KARISSA MINN/SALISBURY POST After one of those occasions last weekend, he said, Police say Roy Daniels Jr., 36, was shot at this house on Vance
Street in Landis. It is the home of Brandy Nicole Lyons, 32, See VIOLENCE, 9A who was arrested and charged with murder.
Murder victim found at wreck
Taking aim at ADHD Campers have fun, learn skills BY SHAVONNE POTTS
spotts@salisburypost.com
K
aty Ramsue has found her niche in drama and wants to be a playwright when she gets older. She honed her skills while attending camp last week. Ramsue, 11, spent her week at an Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder camp at Dan Nicholas Park. The camp is designed for children ages 6-13 who have been identified with ADHD to teach them social skills and teamwork, and boost their self-esteem. It included lunch, activities, crafts, a water splashdown courtesy of Union Fire Department, karate, a science project and teambuilding exercises. The camp was started about eight years ago. It began as a way to fill a void for children with ADHD and has developed into something for returning campers to look forward to and newcomers to enjoy. Ramsue is one of those newcomers. She’s always acted in plays but never thought about writing her own until attending the camp. “Instead of getting hyper, I started writing my play,” Ramsue said. People with ADHD exhibit inattentiveness, overactivity, impulsivity or a combination. “Camp helps me figure out more ways to deal with my ADHD,” she said. Last week, campers had activities that centered around the theme “Pirate’s Cove,” which included the play “The Pirates of Penzance.” It was the play that inspired Ramsue to write her own pirate-themed work. Every day at camp brought a new idea for her
JON C. LAKEY/SALISBURY POST
Brandon Kasprzak, right, learned some karate moves from Lincoln Barringer at ADHD Camp at Dan Nicholas Park.
Campers look at hour glasses they made at the camp.
Driver critical after crash
“Camp helps me figure out more ways to deal with my ADHD.” KATY RAMSUE
Camper at ADHD Camp
See CAMP, 9A
Corbin Ritchie uses a small garden shovel to dig a hole and bury some treasure during a science exercise at the camp. Seth Trexler, right, sits in a Union Fire Department truck.
[|xbIAHD y0 0 1rzu Please recycle this newspaper
Firefighters responding to a reported wreck Sunday discovered a murdered man behind the wheel. Around 4 p.m. Sunday, Ellis Volunteer Fire Department personnel responded to the reported one-vehicle crash in the 1900 Block of Grubb Ferry Road. They found a wrecked 1995 Buick LeSabre with a dead man behind the wheel, the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office said in a press release. Checking for a pulse, the firefighters saw blood on the steering wheel. They then discovered the man had multiple stab wounds in his chest, the press release said. Rowan Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to investigate the apparent homicide and called in the Criminal Investigation Division. Authorities identified the victim as Kevin Michael Rufty, 52, of 6455 Long Branch Road. Crime scene investigators took pictures and collected evidence, and the vehicle was towed from the scene for processing. Investigators conducted a neighborhood canvas of homes and interviewed residents. Authorities ask with information to contact Lt. Chad Moose or Investigator Sam Henline at 704216-8700.
A driver was critically burned in a wreck Sunday evening in eastern Rowan County, emergency responders said. The injured driver was flown by helicopter from a landing zone set up at Liberty Volunteer Fire Department on Bringle Ferry Road, according to emergency radio communications. In a call to the Rowan County 911 center around 5:30 p.m., a witness said a driver was pinned in a possibly burning vehicle after a crash at River Road and Bird Haven Lane, near the Yadkin River off Stokes Ferry Road. Emergency responders said there were three patients, one critical with burns, a second with a possible broken shoulder and leg fracture, and a third with road rash.
Today’s forecast 93º/ 73º
A few strong PM T-storms
Deaths
Charles ‘Lindy’ Smith Catherine C. Bowers Juanita Chaffin Owens
Jennie Kesler Lemley Elbert O.K. Deal Leon Sloan Bradshaw
Contents
Bridge Classifieds Comics Crossword
11B 5B 10B 10B
Deaths 4A Horoscope 11B Opinion 10A Day in the Life 8A
Second Front 3A Sports 1B Television 11B Weather 12B
M O N D AY R O U N D U P
2A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
TOWN CRIER Community events
Today
• Rowan-Cabarrus Community College dedication of North Campus Building 400, 2:30 p.m., 1333 Jake Alexander Blvd, S. • Faith Fourth of July, 6 p.m. food booths and rides open (rides $1 each), 7:30 p.m. The Fabulous Kays.
Tuesday
• Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Craig Woolard Band. • Rowan-Salisbury Board of Education meeting, 5 p.m., administrative offices at 110 S. Long St., East Spencer. • Rowan-Kannapolis ABC Board, 5:15 p.m., 510 N. Lee St. 704-633-1641.
Wednesday
• Plant sale presented by Rowan Master Gardeners, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., 2727 Old Concord Road. The sale will feature a wide variety of perennials, trees and shrubs. 704-216-8967. • Southeast Old Threshers Reunion, at the Denton FarmPark, June 30-July 4. One of the largest antique gas and steam engine shows in the country. Includes farming demonstrations, steam engine train rides, country, gospel and bluegrass entertainment and crafts. 1-800-4582755. • Faith Fourth of July, Food Lion MVP Card night. Show MVP Card for $5 off armband. 6 p.m. food booths and rides open, 7:30 p.m. Johnny White and the Elite Band.
Thursday
• AARP Local Chapter Meeting, 1-2:30 pm., at the Rufty-Holmes Senior Center, 1120 S. Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave. Presentation: Update on Recycling Electronics. Contact Rufty-Holmes Senior Center at 704-216-7714. • Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Atlantic Groove, 8:30 p.m. Faith Idol, 12 and under competition.
Friday
• Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Big Sam, 8:30 p.m. Faith Idol junior division competition.
Saturday
• Big Band dance, 7 to 10 p.m. J.F. Hurley YMCA. Music by The Hi-Liters. Bring a snack to share. $5. 704-636-0111. • Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Band of Gold, 8:30 p.m. Faith Idol adult competition.
Sunday
• Patriotic concert, 5 p.m., Faith Baptist Church, Main Street, Faith. Seventeen area church honor veterans. Free admission. • Faith Fourth of July, 4 p.m. food booths open, 4:30 p.m. Shrine band at Faith Baptist Church, 5 p.m. Faith patriotic program at Faith Baptist Church, 6 p.m. Rides open, 6:30 p.m. N Harmony, 7 p.m. One Road Home (gospel), 8 p.m. Cornerstone Church Praise Band and dance groups.
Monday, July 5
• Faith Fourth of July, 10 a.m. parade, 7 p.m. Faith Idol finals; games begin at Faith School ballpark, 8 p.m. Too Much Sylvia, 9 p.m. 63rd Regiment NC Troop Confederate Skirmish, at ballpark, 10 p.m. Salute to America video, 10:30 p.m. fireworks
Tuesday, July 6
• Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners work session, 3:30 p.m., Cabarrus County Governmental Center, 65 Church Street, SE, Concord. • Salisbury City Council, 4 p.m., Salisbury City Hall, 217 S. Main St. • China Grove Town Council, 7 p.m. in the Municipal Building, 205 Swink St.
Sunday, July 11
Cruzin’ Round Spencer, 2 p.m to dark. Classic vehicles, entertainment, food. 704-636-0036.
Monday, July 12
• Rockwell Town Board, 7 p.m., at the Town Hall, 202 E. Main St., Rockwell.
Friday, July 16
• Downtown Salisbury Ghost Walk, 7 p.m., 7:45 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., tour starts at the Old Salisbury Post Office, 130 W Innes St. Learn about the history, myths and legends of historic Salisbury. $10 adults, $5 students, free for children under 5. Email boo@salisburyghostwalk.com for reservations and information. 704-213-4232.
To have a public event listed in Town Crier, e-mail it to towncrier@salisburypost.com.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
YESTERDAY This photograph was taken July 17, 1942, on the lawn of the old Miller homeplace, belonging to Ernest E. and Agatha Eller Miller, the couple in darker clothing who are pictured at the far left. Their children are lined up to the right. The Miller homeplace was located on Long Ferry Road where Interstate 85 came through in 1955, forcing the house to be moved to another location. Where the Miller family is standing in this photo is where the Long Ferry Road bridge goes across I-85 today. From left are Ernest Miller, Agatha Miller, Olivia Miller File, Coy R. Miller, Rena Miller Morris, Edgar R. Miller, Pauline Miller Leazer, Ernest E. Miller, Zeta Miller Smith and James J. Miller. The three children on the far right are still living. Family members would visit the old homeplace every Sunday until they had to move, and now the descendants of the Millers have a reunion every year in June at Dan Nicholas Park. This year, the 43rd family reunion for the descendants of Ernest E. and Agatha E. Miller was held June 19. This photo was submitted by Pat Floyd.
Hydrate, stay cool when running in extreme heat Q: I like to run outside and it has been so hot lately, how can I prevent myself from getting heat exhaustion? A: The most important factor is to remember to take it easy when running in hot conditions. Even the most well conditioned athletes have to be careful; although the more fit a person is, the better that person can cope with running in ESTER hot weather. The best time MARSH of the day to run during periods of extreme hot weather is early in the morning before the sun rises, or late at night after the sun has disappeared. Also, it’s best to leave your portable music for the treadmill or indoor track. Why? Because you really take away one of your most valuable "safety senses"— your hearing. If you absolutely need music to run have one ear “unplugged” to hear the cars, motorcycles and bicycles pass by you. Back to running in hot weather, with the high humidity in Rowan County, it is better to run in the morning since humidity gets worse throughout the day. If it is unavoidable to run at these times, run in shaded areas such as trails. Avoid running on long, open blacktop roads. The dark surface of the roads absorbs heat and causes hotter conditions.
Now, of course, you can run on an indoor track or treadmills that are located in a well air conditioned area. We have both at the YMCA. Run small circuits close to where you start. Therefore, if you start to feel the effects of the heat you can stop before causing serious damage to your health. When running in hot weather, it is advisable to wear lightweight and light-colored outfits. Outfits with the words "cool-max" or “dri-fit” are great. They stay a lot dryer and they are very lightweight. Remember to hydrate, hydrate, hydrate. All runners running in heat should abundantly hydrate themselves before the start of a run. Remember, when you are thirsty, you are already dehydrated. The longer the distance, the more fluid is lost. During all runs in hot weather, the runner should attempt to drink. Likewise, it is important to drink after the run to keep the body hydrated. Hot, humid conditions promote sweating, which in return can cause dehydration. Sweating is good for you (really!) because it cools your body. But when you lose too much water you become dehydrated. Remember that some decongestants, such as ones allergy sufferers might take, can also contribute to dehydration. Coffee and alcohol can also cause dehydration. The average (sedentary) person needs around eight 8-ounce glasses of fluid a day. Runners
need more, at least sixteen 8ounce glasses daily. Two hours before your daily summer workout or race, you should drink 16 ounces of fluid. Ten minutes before you start your run, drink another one or two cups of water or a sports drink. Drinking early and drinking often is the key. Drink immediately after finishing a run in amounts of about 16 ounces for every 30 minutes you ran. If you don't, the following could happen: • Heat cramps — very painful cramps that rarely “work themselves out” What to do: -Stop running. -Drink fluids immediately -Massage the muscles once the pain begins to subside. -Cool your body with wet towel -Get out of the sun
-Drink large amount of fluids (in intervals), including sports drinks. -Lie down and elevate your feet above your heart. -Loosen clothing.
• Heat stroke — unfortunately, runners will sometimes ignore the symptoms of heat exhaustion and will continue to push themselves until they are nearing a total thermoregulatory breakdown. Symptoms are very similar to those of heat exhaustion, but rapidly progress to: - Disorientation - Weakness in the legs to the point that the runner may fall - Strange behavior - "Fuzzy" thinking - Rapid pulse - Hot/dry skin - Body temperature of 104 or higher - Lack of consciousness - Convulsions or seizures • Heat exhaustion — very - Coma serious and can lead to heat Someone suffering a heat stroke. Symptoms are: stroke needs immediate med-Dizziness and "goose bumps" ical attention. They should be -Nausea sometimes accompa- moved out of the sun, cooled by nied with vomiting either rubbing their body with -Moderate to severe ice or immersing them in cold headache water and given fluids intra-Weak legs venously. Heat stroke can be -Lack of coordination fatal. -Rapid pulse So please follow the recom-Heavy sweating often acmendations to stay hydrated companied by moist and cold and "cool". If you don't, you are skin not running to improve your -Muscle cramping health anymore.....you are putWhat to do: ting your health in jeopardy. -Stop running -Get medical attention Ester H Marsh works at the -Get out of the sun J.F. Hurley Family YMCA.
Lottery numbers — RALEIGH (AP) — These North Carolina lotteries were drawn Sunday: Cash 5: 01-18-19-2837, Evening Pick 3: 6-2-5, Mega Millions: Estimated jackpot: $16 million, Pick 4: 7-2-8-3, Powerball: Estimated jackpot: $27 million HOW TO REACH US Phone ....................................(704) 633-8950 for all departments (704) 797-4287 Sports direct line (704) 797-4213 Circulation direct line (704) 797-4220 Classified direct line Business hours ..................Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fax numbers........................(704) 630-0157 Classified ads (704) 633-7373 Retail ads (704) 639-0003 News After-hours voice mail......(704) 797-4235 Advertising (704) 797-4255 News Salisbury Post online........www.salisburypost.com
Daily &Sun. Sunday Only
Home Delivered Rates: 1 Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. 11.25 33.75 66.00 8.00 24.00 46.80
Yr. 132.00 93.60
Published Daily Since 1905, Afternoon and Saturday and Sunday Morning by The Post Publishing Co., Inc. Subscription Rates By Mail:(Payable in advance) Salisbury,NC 28145-4639 - Phone 633-8950 In U.S. and possessions • 1 Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. Yr. Carriers and dealers are independent contractors Daily &Sun. 29.00 87.00 174.00 348.00 and The Post Publishing Co.,Inc. Daily Only 25.00 75.00 150.00 300.00 is not responsible for Sunday Only 16.00 48.00 96.00 192.00 advance payments made to them. Member, Audit Bureau of Circulation • Salisbury Post (ISSN 0747-0738) is published daily; Second Class Postage paid at Salisbury, NC POSTMASTER:Send address changes to: Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145-4639
Unclaimed Photos If you have submitted photos to the Salisbury Post of loved ones for Birthdays, Engagements, Anniversaries, Weddings, Obituaries, etc., and the photos were not picked up, please do so. All unclaimed photos will be discarded June 30th, 2010.
Looking for a chiropractor ?
Effective and gentle treatment for neck and back pain, sciatica, herniated/ruptured discs, headache, pinched nerves, pain/tingling in the arms/legs, carpal tunnel syndrome, tennis elbow, bursitis and arthritis pain. Spinal decompression available. Foot orthotics fitted. Participating provider for most insurances and Medicare & Medicaid. We await settlement for auto accidents. Referrals not needed unless required by insurance.
Salisbury Chiropractic
Dr. David D. Godwin Dr. Michael B. Pryor (40 years combined experience)
Thank you! S45584
2907 S. Main Street • Salisbury • www.salisburychiropractic.us
See Dr. Godwin’s Guest Column on Dr.Peter Gott’s website www.AskDrGottMD.com
704-633-9335
R123789
SECONDFRONT
The
MONDAY
June 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
3A
www.salisburypost.com
Local barbers lend time, skills to offer children free haircuts BY SCOTT JENKINS
sjenkins@salisburypost.com
EAST SPENCER — Michael Mitchell says he was “just sitting around one day thinking about something we can do for the kids to stop the violence and make them feel good about themselves.” The associate pastor of Southern City A.M.E. Zion Church says God gave him the answer: haircuts. “There’s ones that really can’t afford it and need it” Mitchell said. “Some kids haven’t never been to a barber-
shop in their life.” So Mitchell got approval from the church’s pastor, the Rev. Timothy Bates, and the Men’s Mentoring Ministry took on the task of lining up barbershops to help carry it out. Seven barbershops have agreed to donate their services. “Every barber in Rowan County we went to was excited,” Mitchell said. “We had not one who said they couldn’t do it.” While it might seem an unusual offering for a church, it’s already proved a popular one. Mitchell said the parents of be-
tween 30 and 40 children had notified the church by Friday their kids would be there Tuesday morning. “They said nothing like this has ever happened in our area,” he said. And, he said, if more children and youth in grades kindergarten through 12 want to take advantage of the ministry, there’s room. “Some of the barbers say they want more,” he said. To get a free haircut, parents should have their children at Southern City, 940 S. Long St., between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Tuesday. The church will hand out tickets to various barbershops taking part in the service, and if parents don’t have transportation, the church will provide it. Though it’s not required, Mitchell said the church is also encouraging the children who get haircuts to ask the barbers if they can perform some act of service in their shops that day, such as sweeping the floor. “We hope they take away just feeling good about themselves and know that somebody cares about them, the community cares about them, and they
don’t have to go out and be violent,” Mitchell said. Mitchell said the church plans another free haircut day when it’s time for kids to go back to school. And while this round of haircuts is on the barbers, he said, Southern City members will be asking local funeral homes and other churches to help sponsor that effort. Tuesday’s day of service, he said, will also be dedicated to Willie McCree, a barber with Jones’ Barber Shop in East Spencer and one of those who was most excited about the
free-haircut event. McCree recently underwent a kidney transplant and won’t be able to take part. “We just thank God he was able to receive a kidney,” Mitchell said. In addition to Jones, other barber shops participating are White’s Barber Shop; Addison Barber Shop; Elite Barber Shop; B&B Barber Shop, Big V Barber Shop; and Ted’s Barber Shop. For more information, contact Mitchell at 704-245-0279. Contact Scott Jenkins at 704-797-4248.
11 to compete in Miss Rowan County Veteran
SHELLEY SMITH / SALISBURY POST
Myron Goodman, Bob Reed and Wayne Bradshaw check out a 650 Triumph Bonneville, which was made in England. Motorcycle enthusiasts gathered in Gold Hill on Saturday to show of their antique rides.
Vintage rides Motorcycle enthusiasts gather in Gold Hill to show off antique models BY SHELLEY SMITH
ssmith@salisburypost.com
Many motorcycle enthusiasts at the Gold Hill antique motorcycle show Saturday said the same thing about riding: “If you’ve never done it, you wouldn’t know what it’s like.” The same goes for their love of antique motorcycles and the yearly gathering in Gold Hill. Hundreds of antique motorcycles lined the Gold Hill Historic Park on Saturday for the fourth annual antique motorcycle show, which Gold Hill resident Gary Poole started in 2007. The show is put on each year by the Tyler Poole foundation and the Blue Ridge Chapter of the Antique Motorcycle Club of America. Poole began the event as part of a fundraiser for an East Rowan High School student scholarship from the Tyler Poole Foundation. The foundation was created in honor of his son, Tyler, who passed
away in 2004 after a car accident. Poole and his family members provide food and drinks for purchase, and all proceeds go toward a $1,000 college scholarship. Rick Furr and his wife, Renate, drove from Stanfield. He drove to Gold Hill on his 1974 R90\5 blue BMW bike, original and unrestored, and riding well with only 101,000 miles. Renate drove in her own fully-restored cream-colored 1967 R60\2 BMW bike. She had the bike for 16 years and decided to restore it last year. She’ll need three more to catch up to her husband’s four motorcycles. The pair came to Gold Hill on Saturday and enjoyed sharing road stories with others at the show. Furr has been riding for more than 25 years, he said, and he enjoys each one. “If you’ve ever ridden in the back of a pickup truck, stood up, and let the wind blow you in the face, that’s what it feels like — but
better,” he said of riding. Renate said she has driven fourwheelers in the past, but nothing compares to riding a motorcycle. “Riding a bike is a different experience,” she said. “It’s relaxing.” And, she said she will never want a new bike. “I don’t care anything about buying a new bike,” she said. “Once you start getting into and buying old motorcycles, it’s an addiction.” Chan and Barbara Hatley rode from Oakboro on Chan’s antique 1953 Tangerine Indian, with fringed saddlebags. They’ve been coming to the show since it began and said they always enjoy the ride up. “I love riding,”Barbara said. “I love cruising through the countryside. It’s just an awesome experience you’ll never feel on anything else. It’s a breed of its own.”
See RIDES, 5A
Rowan seniors hit the diamond for a day of softball Salisbury/Rowan seniors recently braved the heat for senior softball on the field at the City Sports Complex and Ellis Park, setting up tents and rolling out watermelons along with gallons of water for a full day of senior softball. There were 10 teams from across North Carolina and South Carolina joined in the fun and heat June 18 to play a total of 26 games. “Thank God, we had a wonderful safe day of play, maybe a few pulled muscles, but other than that we were a 100 percent on target for a safe day of softball,” said Senior Games coordinator Phyllis LoflinKluttz. The team women’s team sponsored by Davis & Davis Attorneys at Law, Salisbury split a double header with Charlotte’s women’s team at Ellis Park. The City Sports Complex was rolling all day long with eight teams, one of which was the Salisbury/Rowan Senior
Games “Oak Park Retirement” men’s team 55–59 years old. They all played hard and safe, Loflin-Kluttz said. “I could not be prouder of my seniors and of the volunteers who braved the heat to keep water in all the dugouts and a running supply of snacks. Also, we would like to thank Rufty-Holmes Senior Center for opening up their facility to us. This helped keep everyone safe from the heat,” she said. Attending the event was: Salisbury/Rowan Senior Games Oak Park Retirement 55s, Charlotte Blue’s, Hickory 55s, Dirty Dozen out of Greenville, S.C., Hickory Lou’s Royals, Charlotte Whites, Lake Norman, Charlotte Women’s and Hickory 60s. Salisbury/Rowan Senior Games is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing year-round health promotion and education for adults 55
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Salisbury/Rowan senior played at total of 26 softball games Saturday, June 19 at City Sports Complex and Ellis Park. years of age and older. Salisbury/Rowan Senior Games is sponsored by: • Gold level — Comfort Keepers of Salisbury, Genesis HealthCare of Salisbury, Humana MarketPoint, Magnolia Gardens, Oak Park Retirement.
• Bronze level — Davis & Davis Attorneys at Law, HomeHealth Professionals and Rowan Regional Medical Center. For more information about Senior Games and SilverArts, contact Loflin-Kluttz at 704-216-7780.
Eleven young ladies will compete for the title Miss Rowan County Veteran during this year’s Faith Fouth of July festivities. The winner will be crowned July 5 following the parade. The contestants are: • Charlotte Brown, 18, representing Harold B. Jarrett American Legion Post 342. She is the daughter of Scott and Bonnie Brown. She attends Grace Bible Church and is an East Rowan High School graduate. Her activities include National Honor Society, Junior Civitans and cheerleading. She has assisted at vacation Bible school and taught at elementary school cheerleading camps. She plans to attend UNC Charlotte and pursue a career in physical therapy. • Julie Bruce, 18, representing Faith American Legion Post 327. She is the daughter of John and Ann Bruce. She attends Faith Lutheran Church and Jesse C. Carson High School. She is a member of the National Honor Society and swim team and attended Girls State. She plans to attend Catawba College. • Chacity Renee Earnhardt, 21, representing Vanhoy-Sells Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9134. She is the daughter of Donna H. Torres and Bret M. Earnhardt. She attends Grace Lower Stone Church. Her activities include VFW, FFA and employment at Richard’s BBQ. She plans to join the Navy. • Sara Hopkins, 18, representing AMVETS Post 845. She is the daughter of Robert and Denise Hopkins. She attends St. James Lutheran Church
See COMPETE, 4A
Miss Rowan County Veteran contestants
BROWN
BRUCE
EARNHARDT
HOPKINS
KELLY
RITCHIE
SHUE
TADLOCK
Not pictured: Cortney Shoemaker and Misty Parrish WILLIAMS
Memories of a festive Fourth of July in Faith
G
rowing up, one of the largest Fourth of July celebrations I attended each year was held in Faith, a little town in eastern Rowan County. In the memories of those native to Rowan County, one alliteration is most apt for the month of July: “The Faith Fourth.” It always MACK a couWILLIAMS begins ple of days earlier with a street dance, but on the morning of the Fourth, the greatest number of people assembles along Main Street prior to 10 a.m. The parade begins with a flyover of jets, the audial concussion that dwarfed the sounds of blasting from the nearby quarries. Appropriately, patriotic floats paid remembrance to veterans of the series of wars, over the years, in which we have be-
come involved. On that hot summer day, standing at the edge of that hot asphalt road, I can still picture a couple of army tanks — recruited for festivities instead of war — as they made their slow advance through the little town. As hot as the civilian tires of rubber could become on a day in July, they couldn’t do what the “hot metal tire treads” of those weighty engines of war could do — leave the impressions of their journey in a road made so malleable by the summer heat. Veterans would march and floats would drift by. There was barbecue, rides, and tents hawking novelties that children of that era loved: magic tricks, smoke bombs, and “whoopie cushions.” Old-fashioned sack races and greased pole climbs were featured, along with baseball games. When the evening became so dark that the stars
See FESTIVE, 5A
NEWS/OBUTIRAIES
4A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Carving walking canes as inspiration B Y K.J. W ILLIAMS
The StarNews of Wilmington
WILMINGTON (AP) — Bryant Shephard’s canes are his calling card. He says thank you, offers support for an unsteady gait, or lets you know he’s glad to have met you with a handcarved cane that’s art and function. At 77, he may carry one of his canes for a little assist. His wife, Addie, does too. The Maple Hill native retired from the Air Force after 21 years. He followed military service with stints as a shopping mall operations manager before settling back here full-time in 1994. He’s back where his life began, on acres owned by his family for about 100 years. “I was born and raised next door,” he said. “Father gave me these five acres.” Here, he has a workbench in his garage. An array of knives with different blades lay sheathed until they’re needed. “I don’t own a lathe,” he says. “It’s done with knives and rasps.” Shephard said he gets his inspiration from God. Until he does, he doesn’t finish carving a piece of wood. “At some time in the early morning, I get a vision of where I want to go.”
The handles he carves are fashioned from requests. A co-worker once asked for a cane with a rattlesnake handle. He wasn’t clear on how to approach this task, until he saw a photograph of a rattlesnake on a magazine cover while browsing in a bookstore. “And I just took it as a sign,” Shephard said. He bought the magazine, but he says his motivation came from his co-worker’s confidence in his ability to grant her wish. Now, the rattlesnake is a specialty. One of his more intricate canes has a smooth surface with a vine-like outer carving snaking around it. Carved from sweet gum, the black walnut handle is a gleaming rattlesnake’s head. Its jaw is open to display two whitepainted fangs. Its eyes are glittery purple stones. “I hardly show this one because I’m afraid someone’s going to buy it,” Shephard said. He estimates it took him more than 60 hours to create. Other cane handles feature a poodle’s head, or an elephant, or a bear. One day, a friend said her mother needed a cane but wouldn’t use one. She asked for a cane with a dolphin handle, thinking that might entice her mother to use it. Another specialty was born.
Over the years, Shephard has given away about 60 canes. Sometimes, a simpler design will find its way to a needy person. Sometimes, a more elaborate one will be given to someone he met while working as a movie extra in Wilmington. Actor Louis Gossett Jr. was a recipient. Renowned poet Maya Angelou also received a cane as a gift. Shephard takes orders for custom canes. The basic canes start at $70 while the fancier ones start at $150. The people around Shephard aren’t the only ones to benefit from his gift. He says he’s also grown from it, becoming a more patient and understanding man through the focus he’s learned while carving. It’s a pleasurable process that he came to later in life. His late brother, James, also was a carver. Shephard’s most recent gift is a staff, reminiscent of the one Moses’ carried, which he plans to give to a religious leader from Washington, D.C. The church bishop and members of that church attended an event last month, celebrating the construction of the new Lees Chapel Missionary Baptist Church. Shephard’s staff is his way of showing his thanks.
Better Business Bureau offers money saving tips for air-conditioning units CHARLOTTE — As the heat wave continues, many people are having problems with their air conditioning units and are contacting the Better Business Bureau about where to turn for service. In the previous 12 months, the BBB has provided consumers with 68,796 Reliability Reports on 342 air conditioning/heating contractors in the Southern Piedmont area. The BBB grades for these contractors range from A+ to F. Of the 342 contractors, 214 have a grade of A+, A, or A-. “Air conditioning units can be the most expensive equipment in your home,” said BBB President Tom Bartholomy. “Given the large number of contractors and companies that provide air conditioning service, it’s important to distinguish between the good and the bad.” Emergency service — If your air conditioning breaks and you need emergency service, the BBB has this advice: • Check out air conditioning contractors with the BBB at www.bbb.org. It only takes a few minutes to find a company with a good track record for service. • Make sure that the con-
tractor is licensed, bonded and insured. • Be wary of unsolicited offers and high pressure sales pitches for air conditioning systems, windows and roofing. • Don’t fall for devices and products that promise drastic reductions in home cooling costs. The high temperatures also mean high utility bills. “Many people go without air conditioning because they can’t afford it,” said BBB President Tom Bartholomy.” Unfortunately, extreme heat can be deadly.” If you cannot afford to pay your air conditioning bills, the BBB has this advice: • Ask your utility company about an annualized billing plan to avoid spikes in your bills during extremely hot or cold months. • If you're on a fixed income and have trouble paying your utility bills, contact your utility company to find out about emergency assistance plans. • Get help. nonprofit organizations like Crisis Assistance Ministry help low-income individuals pay their utility bills.
Year-round home maintenance — The BBB has advice for steps you can take to make your home more energy-efficient year-round: • Have your central air conditioning system inspected and serviced each year. • Check your attic, garage and basement to make sure your home is well-insulated. • Clean or replace air conditioning and furnace filters on a regular basis. • Install a programmable thermostat and keep your home at a set temperature. • Close curtains, shades or bslinds during the day to block the sun and the heat. • Install ceiling fans. • Prune back shrubs that may block the air flow to your air conditioning units. • Plant a tree. Landscaping is a natural way to shade your home. • Shade room air conditioners from direct sun to reduce their workload. • Apply a reflective coating to your roof or windows to reflect heat away from your home. For more information, visit www.bbb.org or call the BBB at 1-877-317-7236.
BRIEFS Honeycutt first runner up in Miss North Carolina pageant
at Greensboro. In February, she was named Miss Thomasville. Adrienne Leigh Core, of Raleigh, was named Miss A former East Rowan High North Carolina for 2010. School student won first runner up Saturday in the Miss Beach county may North Carolina pageant. Mallory Honeycutt is the rein in new wild daughter of Stan and Rita horse tours Honeycutt of Salisbury. COROLLA (AP) — A counIn 2007, Honeycutt was named Miss Rowan County ty along North Carolina’s OutVeterans. She was named er Banks is considering limits Miss Cabarrus County in 2008 on increasingly popular tours while a nursing student at the to see wild horses galloping University of North Carolina along the beach.
COMPETE FROM 3A and East Rowan High School. She is a member of Junior Civitans and employed by Dairy Queen. She plans to attend UNC Charlotte and major in biology. • Kacie Kelly, 16, representing AMVETS Post 565. She is the daughter of Kristy and Chad Carnes. She attends First Wesleyan Church and Jesse C. Carson High School. She is a member of the rifle team. She plans to attend a four-year college. • Misty Parrish, representing Freeze-Seymour American Legion Post 185. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reggie Faggart. She attends South Rowan High School. She is a member of JROTC. • Laura Elaine Ritchie, 21, representing Peeler-Livengood-Wood Post American Legion Post 448. She is the
daughter of Cameron and Laurie Ritchie. She attends Christiana Lutheran Church and Catawba College. She is a teaching scholar, Catawba College ambassador and president of the Women’s Society and teaching organization on campus. She plans to become a middle school teacher in language arts and social studies. • Cortney Michelle Shoemaker, 16, representing Kennedy Hall American Legion Post 106. She is the daughter of Cortley and Sherry Shoemaker. She attends West Rowan High School. She is a member of JROTC, the Spanish Club and the TRU Club. • Emily Shue, 16, representing Disabled American Veterans Post 96. She is the daughter of Tim And Alison Shue. She attends Faith Baptist Church and Carson High School. She plays volleyball and softball. She plans to be a physical therapist. • Morgan Elizabeth Tadlock, 17, representing Landis
Currituck County commissioners told The Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk, Va., they are considering a moratorium on new horse tours to protect the animals and respond to complaints from residents. The Outer Banks are one of the few places where wild horses roam along the beach. Currently, eight companies with 45 vehicles have county permits to take tourists to see the 100 or so horses that usually travel in small groups. This is the first year Currituck County has required permits. American Legion Post 146. She is the daughter of Jon and Lisa Tadlock. She attends First Reformed Church and South Rowan High School. Her activities included cheerleading, National Honor Society, track, Science Club, of which she was president, Bible Club, Junior Civitans and American Legion Auxiliary. She plans to attend Appalachian State University and earn a teaching degree. • Janoah G. Williams, 17, representing J.C. Price American Legion Post 107. She is the daughter of Eldridge and Brenda Williams. She attends Glory Church World Outreach Ministries and Salisbury High School. Her activities include Honor Society, DECA club, Black History Club, of which she is vice president, Junior Civitans and employment at Innes Street Drug. She plans to attend UNC Charlotte or UNC Chapel Hill and major in psychology with a minor in law.
SALISBURY POST Elbert O.K. Deal
Leon Sloan Bradshaw
SALISBURY — Leon Sloan Bradshaw, husband of the late Eleanor Churchill Hoey Bradshaw, died Sunday, June 27, 2010, at his home in Salisbury. Mr. Bradshaw was born July 17, 1917, in Salisbury, to the late Leonidas Sloan and Henrietta Kestler Bradshaw. He attended Boyden High School in Salisbury and graduated from The Citadel in Charleston, S.C., in 1938, where he was a member of the Summerall Guards drill team. After graduation, he joined the firm of L.S. Bradshaw General Contractors, established in 1898, alongside his father, Leonidas, and brother Richard Allen. He met his true love, Eleanor, in Shelby and married her there on Dec. 6, 1941. Mr. Bradshaw went on to serve four years in active duty as Lieutenant Colonel and 18 years in the reserves. “Brad” and Eleanor made their home in Salisbury after World War II, and he purchased the family business in 1963, changing the name to L.S. Bradshaw Real Estate. Mr. Bradshaw was a vibrant member of the Salisbury and Blowing Rock communities, a respected leader, and the consummate Southern gentleman. He was also a passionate golfer, an avid traveler and a driven businessman. Alongside his lovely wife, Brad delighted in opening his home to friends, family, visiting church members and new acquaintances. He was also a devoted attendant and member of First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury since 1929. Mr. Bradshaw's indelible contributions include a significant influence on the building and development of Salisbury businesses, schools and facilities, as well community organizations. At First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury, he was an elected Deacon, an elected Elder, Superintendent of Sunday Schools and member of the Building Committee. He was also a summer member of Blowing Rock Methodist Interdenominational Church, where he was on the church Board. Mr. Bradshaw was President of Salisbury Country Club and the Blowing Rock Country Club. He also served as President of the Kiwanis Club, Lieutenant Governor of Kiwanis, member of the Citadel Alumni Board, Co-Chairman of the YMCA Building Fund, YMCA Board Member, President of Salisbury Community Foundation and Chairman of the Edgar Tufts Memorial Association. Mr. Bradshaw was preceded in death by his wife of 65 years, Eleanor Churchill Hoey Bradshaw. He is survived by three children, daughter Eleanor Churchill Bradshaw Thompson (husband Simon), son Christopher Sloan Bradshaw (wife Renee) and daughter Ashley Alexander Bradshaw Shoaf (husband Bays); grandchildren Douglas Thompson, Courtney Thompson, Brandon Thompson, Stuart Bradshaw, and Harris Lambert; and four great-grandchildren. Service: Memorial Services will be held 11 a.m. Wednesday, June 30 at First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury with the Rev. Dr. Jim Dunkin, Rev. Randy Kirby and Dr. Hal Warlick officiating. Visitation will follow the service. Memorials: May be made to First Presbyterian Church, Rowan Helping Ministries and Grandfather Home for Children. Summersett Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be made at www.summersettfuneralhome.com
Jennie Kesler Lemley
SALISBURY — Jennie Kesler Lemley, age 81, of Salisbury, went home to be with the Lord June 26, 2010. She was born April 11, 1929, in Stanly County to the late William Kesler and Verna Parker Kesler. Mrs. Lemley was employed in the textile industry with Cone Mills over 40 years. She was a faithful member of Bethel Baptist Church in Rockwell until declining health. She was a loving wife, mother, grandmother and friend. Everyone would call Jennie for advice or wisdom and she always took time to listen. Her love for the Lord, her family and others were a shining testimony. Her warm smile and great sense of humor will be treasured by her family and friends. Preceding her in death were her precious son, Perry, in 2005, who she devoted her life to taking care of; and her brothers, Howell, Narvie and Roy Kesler. Those left to treasure her memories are her loving, devoted husband of 60 years, Herman Lemley; daughter Ginger McNally (Rev. Dave McNally) of Winter Haven, Fla.; granddaughters Jennifer Evans (Bryan) of Lynchburg, Va., Janette McNally of Winter Haven, Fla.; and greatgrandson Ashton Evans of Lynchburg, Va. Visitation: 1-2:15 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Bethel Baptist Church, 410 Depot St., Rockwell, NC 28138. Service and Burial: Service is 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Bethel Baptist Church with the Rev. John Houghton and son-in-law Rev. Dave McNally officiating. Burial will follow at Rowan Memorial Park. Lyerly Funeral Home is assisting the Lemley family. Online condolences may be made at www.lyerlyfuneralhome.com
Charles 'Lindy' Smith
SALISBURY — Charles “Lindy” Lindbergh Smith, 82, of Salisbury, died Sunday, June 27, 2010, at Rowan Regional Medical Center. Arrangements are incomplete with Evergreen Cremation Services of Salisbury.
Juanita Chaffin Owens
ROCKWELL — Mrs. Juanita Doss Chaffin Owens, 75, of Rockwell, went to be with the Lord Saturday, June 26, 2010, at her home. She was born April 6, 1935, in Rowan County to the late Eva Marie Connell Doss and William Archibald Doss. Mrs. Owens graduated from Woodleaf High School in 1954. She was a seamstress at Rowan Manufacturing for 10 years. She was baptized at Needmore Baptist Church in 1950 and was of the Baptist faith. Juanita was preceded in death by one sister, Collen Doss Wiles, in 1992. Those left to cherish her memory include four children, Richard S. Chaffin Sr. of Rockwell, Kathy A. Simmons of China Grove, Timothy S. Chaffin of Salisbury and Angela C. Owens of Salisbury; one brother, Ray Doss of Trinity; one sister, Geraldine Powell of Yorktown, Va.; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Service and Visitation: Memorial service will be held 12 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Summersett Memorial Chapel with Pastor Ralph Robinette and Pastor Rick Perry officiating. Visitation will follow the service. Memorials: In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the family for the Juanita Owens funeral. Summersett Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be made at www.summersettfuneralhome.com
Catherine C. Bowers
SALISBURY — Mrs. Catherine Curlee Bowers, 88, of Salisbury, passed away on Saturday, June 26, 2010, at her residence. Arrangements are incomplete. Powles Funeral Home in Rockwell is assisting the Bowers family.
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
CHINA GROVE — Elbert O.K. Deal, age 94, died Sunday, June 27, 2010, at Rowan Regional Medical Center, Salisbury, after four weeks of declining health. He was born Dec. 9, 1915, in Rowan County, the son of the late Brunner Deal and Zeola Kimball Deal. In earlier years, he was a farmer and caretaker of Greenlawn Cemetery, China Grove. In later years, he worked with the former Cannon Mills Company, Plant 1 Weave Room 7 for 45 years until his retirement in 1981. Throughout the years he was an active member of Mount Zion United Church of Christ, China Grove, where he was involved with Boy Scouts, was former president of the Bible Class, former First Aid Team, and other phases of church activities. He also served his country as an engineer in the U.S. Army during World War II and was a member of VFW Poston-Perkins Post 8989. In addition to parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Lucille Kincaid Deal, who died Sept. 1, 2007; and a brother, Bernard Deal. Survivors include his son, E. Keller Deal and wife Vicky of Kannapolis; two granddaughters, Kelly Teague and husband Phil and Beth Pike and husband Joe, both of Concord; two great-grandchildren, Taylor and Tori Pike; three brothers, Bittle Deal of China Grove, Jay Deal of Salisbury and Ralph Deal of Rockwell; two sisters, Lala Lowder of China Grove and Eva Yost of Mooresville; and a special caregiver, Arnetta Long of Kannapolis. Service and Visitation: The funeral service will be 3 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Mount Zion United Church of Christ, China Grove, officiated by Rev. Jerry Moore. Burial will follow at West Lawn Memorial Park, China Grove. The family will receive friends at the church from 1:30-3 p.m. Tuesday prior to the service. Memorials: May be made to Mt. Zion United Church of Christ, 1415 S. Main St., China Grove, NC 28023. Online condolences may be left at www.whitleysfuneralhome.com.
Mrs. Jennie Kesler Lemley Visitation: Tuesday 1-2:15 PM Service: Tuesday 2:30 PM Bethel Baptist Church Rockwell, NC ——
Mrs. Lois Minton Kincaid Miss Brenda Lee Hirschfeld Mr. Robert C. Poole Mrs. Evi Turpeinen Salonen All Pending
Mr. Ned Calvin Towell 2:00 PM Monday Summersett Mem. Chapel Visitation: 1-2:00 PM Monday ——
Mr. Victor Doyle Sullivan Noon Monday Summersett Mem. Chapel Visitation: 11-12:00 PM Monday ——
Mr. Terry Dale Yost 2:00 PM Tuesday Summersett Mem. Chapel Visitation: 1-2 PM Tuesday ——
Mrs. Armie Kyles Graveside Service 10:00 AM Monday Rowan Memorial Park ——
Mrs. Juanita Doss Owen Memorial Service 12 PM Tuesday Summersett Funeral Home ——
Mr. Leon Bradshaw Memorial Service 11:00 AM Wednesday First Presbyterian Church
AREA
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 5A
City may fight graffiti with spray paint laws
Local Red Cross chapter offers training classes
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) — Officials in one North Carolina city want to fight graffiti by making it illegal to for anyone under age 18 to buy spray paint or possess it near often defaced areas like bridges and public playgrounds. The Winston-Salem Journal reports that a Winston-Salem City Council committee will discuss the new laws next month. City Manager Lee Garrity says fighting graffiti is critical to keep neighborhood appearances and property values up and also helps police fight gangs.
The E.H.Dole Chapter of the American Red cross offers various ways to certify or re-certify for training. Regular courses are great for firsttimers or long-ago certified participants because they offer a “practice-whileyou –watch” DVD and “hands-on” practice.” Individual courses are recommended for these participants. For participants who have been certified in the previous 12 months,” review” courses save time and combination courses save money. Included in all of the full courses are discussions
about disease prevention and the Good Samaritan laws. For more information or to register for classes, call 704-633-3854. Also, if you are a Registered Nurse and would like to volunteer to teach or help teach our Nurse Aide 1 Program, contact Amy McGuire at the number above. • July 7 — Adult/Child/Infant CPR, $40, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. • July 9 — Babysitter’s Training, $50, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • July 10 — CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer/
Health care Provider, $50, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. • July 12- 15 — Guard Start- At SR YMCA, $20, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. • July 13 — Adult CPR/AED, $30, 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. • July 15 — First Aid $25, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. • July 17- CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer/ Health care Provider, $50, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. • July 19 — Babysitter’s Training, $50, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • July 21- First Aid $25, 9 a.m. to noon • July 21- Wilderness and
Remote First Aid starts at SR YMCA, $90, 6 to 9 p.m. • July 22 — Wilderness and Remote First Aid continues, 6 to 9 p.m. • July 23 — Wilderness and Remote First Aid continues, 6 to 9 p.m. • July 24- Wilderness and Remote First Aid ends, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. • July 24 — Babysitter’s Training, $50, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • July 26 — Adult CPR/AED review, $25, 9 a.m. to noon • July 28 — Infant/Child CPR, $30, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
How To Get The Perfect Shoe Fit
go to view the
at
R122864
SALISBURY POST
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
Summer Sale!
30-50 $15
% off*
Additional
Off Any Purchase
Two micro midgets were on display at the show, both owned by John Earnhardt, originally from Gold Hill.
Expires 7-3-10. One coupon per customer. Not valid on previous purchases. *Excludes Brighton
We’re worth the drive to Concord!
Anne’s
SHELLEY SMITH / SALISBURY POST
RIDES FROM 3A Chan has six Indians, and the one he brought Saturday, the 1953, was one of the last Indian’s ever made. “This is my favorite one,” Barbara said. “I love the bench seat and the way that it rides. My feet touch the ground. It’s the most comfortable one.” Barbara also said the1953 Indian was very rare and that she hadn’t seen anyone with a bike the same color. “The big thing about these bikes is everything’s original — there’s no replicas,” she said. The Hatleys said they will definitely be back next year for the fifth bash. “We look forward to this every year,” she said. John and Crystal Earnhardt drove from South Carolina with two micro midget racecars, not exactly a bike, but still antiques that got a lot of attention. Dale Earnhardt raced the micro midget track in Gold Hill that before NASCAR was born. And John’s family raced with him. “A lot of your NASCAR greats were right here in Gold Hill at the time,” said Crystal, who wrote about the book “Victory Lane,” about her husbands racing days. “They were all friends. It was a different era.” John said he was thrilled to hear of such an event being in Gold Hill after moving to South Carolina. “I was born and raised here and never knew about this,” he said. He has been coming for the past two
years. “It was a real joy to be here today. “I played in these gold mines when I was a kid.” Myron Goodman, of Salisbury, drove a short distance to Gold Hill on his 1931 Harley Davidson EL — also known as, “The Knucklehead.” ELs were made from 1936 until 1947, Goodman said the nickname comes from its awkward engine design. Goodman helped Poole with the idea of having the show in Gold Hill, while also contributing to Poole’s scholarship. “Gary Poole’s a good friend of mine,” he said. Poole said the show was “as lovely as always.” “There was a good turnout, a good show, good people, good food and good weather,” he said. “These bikes that show up down here are some of the best around. We’re starting to get a better variety. “It’s amazing to see how people have preserved these things as well as they have. It’s artwork, really.” Poole said that aside from his foundation and the fellowship the show brings, he mainly puts on the show each year to bring people into Gold Hill from all areas. “We have a large group of people from out of state,” he said. “And hopefully, they’ll like the area, and come back again.” Poole’s wife, Vicki, said her favorite part of the show was making money for the scholarship. “It is such a benefit to us,” she said. “And it’s growing every year. “They know it’s for a good cause and they’re very gen-
erous. And we thank them.” The show is held in Gold Hill every year, and admission is free. The shops and restaurant in Gold Hill are also open during the day. Poole expects to bring an
even larger crowd and variety of bikes to the area next year. For more information, visit www.historicgoldhill.com. Contact Shelley Smith at 704-797-4246.
“The Fashion Lover’s Boutique”
Located in K&W Shopping Center Concord • 704-793-4943 From Salisbury: I-85 S, exit 60 Turn left, 2 miles on right R125073
with
! l s a d San
Renate Furr, of Stanfield, poses next to her first bike, a restored 1967 R602.
FESTIVE FROM 3A were visible, then it was time for the “stars of pyrotechnics” to make their appearance. I remember watching the fireworks there with my mother. All of a sudden there was pain on my forehead and descending red sparks from that hurt, but it was not from the professional fire-
works display. A careless man dangling his ignited “firework of tobacco” in his hand between inhalations had done what those explosive bursts in the sky had not done — burned me. My mother spoke very harshly to him and he was most apologetic. On her own part, the things that were injurious to her, she would absorb and keep to herself, but such was not the case when something was injurious to me.
Home Owned / Home Operated
428 N. Main St., Salisbury, NC • 704-636-1850 HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10:00 to 5:00
ralphbakershoes.com
God Bless America! R118736
H E A LT H
6A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Americans treated, and overtreated, to death
No Leaf
Gutter
Associated Press
FREE FLOWING WATER CONTROL
J.A. FISHER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
4243 S. Main St. Salisbury, NC
R121882
704-633-8095 Mark Stout
Celebration Holiday
Deadline
If you desire your announcement to run on the July 11th Celebrations page, please note an
early deadline
of
Friday, July 2. If you have questions or need further information, call
Sylvia Andrews 704/797-7682
sunsets and cold fried chicken.
To advertise in this directory
call 704-797-4220 R121022
Come make memories on Lake Tillery. Affordable boat slips now available, with full-service marina and dry dock storage coming soon. jjordan@janrorealestate.com 910-573-0629 www.UwharrieHaven.com
Jackson Park Pentecostal
Holiness Church Games, Crafts, Music, Food & Fun! lilly’s bridge marina
1008 Moose RoadKannapolis NC 28083
July 18th-22nd 6:00 PM thru 8:30 PM 704-938-3153
Come early or call for pre-registration
W.E.E. Center
First Baptist Church
of Salisbury
4.99 $ 5.49
REGISTERING FOR 2010-2011 SCHOOL YEAR!
FAMILY PACKS TO GO
Preschool Classes:
Grilled Chicken Breast
Includes hushpuppies, slaw and choice of potato
dea
R123631
Customer Appreciation Day
6.99
eadrlliyne
2 Years 3 Years 4-5 Years
COME CHECK OUT OUR FRIDAY LUNCH SPECIALS Fridays 11am-2:30pm at Both Locations
1007 E. Innes St Salisbury • 704-633-9585
2050 Statesville Blvd. Salisbury • 704-639-9500
Mon-Thur 4-9PM Fri 11AM-2:30PM, 4PM-9:30PM Sat. 3PM-9:30PM Sun 11:30AM-9PM
2 days per week 3 days per week 4 days a week
8:30-11:30 8:30-12:00 8:30-12:30
704-639-1062
223 N. Fulton St., Salisbury weecenter@fbcsalisbury.org
S45299
*Based on 2002 ARI Directory Listings.
129 N. Main Street, Salisbury • 704-636-7100 www.kluttzreamer.com
boat slips now selling
EVERY MONDAY
$
Tyou’ll he only law firm ever need
percent” when that actually might mean living three weeks or months longer instead of two. “It’s amazing how little benefit those studies show,” Storey said, referring to research on the new drugs. Dan Waeger tried just about all of them. A nonsmoker, he was diagnosed with lung cancer at age 22, and pursued treatment after treatment before dying nearly four years later, in March 2009. “He decided if there were odds to be beat, he was going to beat the odds,” said his boss, Ellen Stovall, then-president of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship, where Waeger worked as a fundraiser and development manager. “He received just about every experimental new drug for lung cancer that I’m aware of in his last two years of life. He would get a treatment on a Friday afternoon, be sick all weekend and come to work on Monday,” she recalled. “He had these horrific rashes. He would get these horrible coughs that were not just the lung cancer. The treatments were making him cough up blood, just horrific side effects — vertigo, numbness, tingling in his hands and feet. He suffered.”
R124022
“She kept throwing up, she couldn’t go to the bathroom,” and her body ached, Browne said. The doctors urged hospice care and said, “your mom was stubborn,” Browne recalled. “She wanted her chemo and she wanted to live.” Browne, who lives in New York, formed a women’s cancer foundation in her mother’s honor. She said she would encourage dying cancer patients to choose comfort care over needless medicine that prolongs suffering. It’s easier said than done. The American way is “never giving up, hoping for a miracle,” said Dr. Porter Storey, a former hospice medical director who is executive vice president of the hospice group that Morrison heads. “We use sports metaphors and war metaphors all the time. We talk about never giving up and it’s not over till the fat lady sings .... glorifying people who fought to their very last breath,” when instead we should be helping them accept death as an inevitable part of life, he said. This is especially true when deciding whether to try one of the newer, extremely expensive cancer drugs such as Avastin, Erbitux and Tarceva. Some are touted as “improving survival by 30 or 50
R124706
pice and Palliative Medicine and a doctor at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. “Nobody had really sat down with them about what his choices are and what the options were,” said Morrison, who became his doctor. About a year later, Felker withdrew his own feeding tube, and “it enabled us to go out and have a wonderful evening at a jazz club two nights before he died” in July 2008, Sheehy said. Doctors can’t predict how soon a patient will die, but they usually know when an illness has become incurable. Even then, many of them practice “exhaustion medicine” — treating until there are no more options left to try, said Dr. Martha Twaddle, chief medical officer of Midwest Palliative & Hospice Care Center in suburban Chicago. A stunning number of cancer patients get aggressive care in the last days of their lives, she noted. One large study of Medicare records found that nearly 12 percent of cancer patients who died in 1999 received chemo in the last two weeks of life, up from nearly 10 percent in 1993. Guidelines from an alliance of leading cancer centers say patients whose cancer has spread should stop getting anti-cancer medicine if sequential attempts with three different drugs fail to shrink their tumors. Yet according to IntrinsiQ, a cancer data analysis company, almost 20 percent of patients with colorectal cancer that has spread are on at least their fourth chemotherapy drug. The same goes for roughly 12 percent of patients with metastatic breast cancer, and for 12 percent of those with lung cancer. The analysis is based on more than 60,000 cancer patients. Often, overtreating fatal illnesses happens because patients don’t want to give up. Saideh Browne said her mother, Khadija Akmal-Lamb, wanted to fight her advanced ovarian cancer even after learning it had spread to her liver. The 55-year-old Kansas City, Mo., woman had chemo until two weeks before she died last August.
R123225
money. With side-by-side Climatuff ®Compressors for twostage cooling and the industry’s highest efficiency rating*, the XL19i operates efficiently, lowering your energy costs. Throw in the industry’s best warranty, and the XL19i makes the world a better place to live – both outside and inside.
Emily, a Davie County native, joined the firm as an associate in 2007. Miss Hunter’s practice includes helping local businesses with their needs ranging from leases, collections, and simple disputes to complex litigation. She also assists workers who have been injured on the job.
Alexandra Drane shows a picture of her sister in-law Rosaria Vandenberg at her Winchester, Mass. home. After watching her sister in-law lose a battle with cancer in the hospital, Drane created a website to help support a persons option to spend their final days at home instead.
Baby Shrimp
The Trane helps you protect a precious resource: your *Based on 2002 ARI XL19i Directory Listings.
Kannapolis
Emily R. Hunter
$
The Trane XL20i helps you protect a precious resource: The Trane helps you protect a precious resource: your The Trane XL19iXL19i helps you protect a precious resource: your ® ® your With money. With side-by-side Climatuff Compressors money. With side-by-side Climatuff for twomoney. side-by-side Climatuff Compressors for®Compressors twofor cooling two-stage cooling and the industryʼs highest stage cooling the industry’s highest stage and theand industry’s highest efficiency rating*, efficiency rating*, * efficiency rating, efficiently, the XL20i operates efficiently, theXL19i XL19i operates energy costs. the operates efficiently, loweringcosts. your lowering energy costs.your lowering your energy Throw in the industryʼs Throw in industry’s the industry’s and the XL19i makes Throw the best andwarranty, the XL19i makes bestinwarranty, andwarranty, thebest XL20i maked the world a better the world a better place to live –and both the world a better place to live–both outside inside.outside and inside. place to live - both outside and inside.
www.jafisherconstruction.com
Kluttz, Reamer, Hayes, Randolph, Adkins & Carter, LLP
Your Choice: Perch, Baby Flounder, Canadian Flounder or Chicken Tenders
THE WORLD’S MOST PASSIONATE ENERGY CONSERVATIONIST.
704-788-3217
Salisbury
R124211
A Specialty Contractor Since 1979 With Over 6000 Completed Jobs
S44339
The doctors finally let Rosaria Vandenberg go home. For the first time in months, she was able to touch her 2year-old daughter who had been afraid of the tubes and machines in the hospital. The little girl climbed up onto her mother’s bed, surrounded by family photos, toys and the comfort of home. They shared one last tender moment together before Vandenberg slipped back into unconsciousness. Vandenberg, 32, died the next day. That precious time at home could have come sooner if the family had known how to talk about alternatives to aggressive treatment, said Vandenberg’s sister-in-law, Alexandra Drane. Instead, Vandenberg, a pharmacist in Franklin, Mass., had endured two surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation for an incurable brain tumor before she died in July 2004. “We would have had a very different discussion about that second surgery and chemotherapy. We might have just taken her home and stuck her in a beautiful chair outside under the sun and let her gorgeous little daughter play around her — not just torture her” in the hospital, Drane said. Americans increasingly are treated to death, spending more time in hospitals in their final days, trying last-ditch treatments that often buy only weeks of time, and racking up bills that have made medical care a leading cause of bankruptcies. More than 80 percent of people who die in the United States have a long, progressive illness such as cancer, heart failure or Alzheimer’s disease. More than 80 percent of such patients say they want to avoid hospitalization and intensive care when they are dying, according to the Dartmouth Atlas Project, which tracks health care trends. Yet the numbers show that’s not what is happening: • The average time spent in hospice and palliative care, which stresses comfort and quality of life once an illness is incurable, is falling because people are starting it too late. In 2008, one-third of people who received hospice care had it for a week or less, says the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization. • Hospitalizations during the last six months of life are rising: from 1,302 per 1,000 Medicare recipients in 1996 to 1,441 in 2005, Dartmouth reports. Treating chronic illness in the last two years of life gobbles up nearly one-third of all Medicare dollars. “People are actually now sicker as they die,” and some find that treatments become a greater burden than the illness was, said Dr. Ira Byock, director of palliative care at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Families may push for treatment, but “there are worse things than having someone you love die,” he said. Gail Sheehy, author of the “Passages” books, learned that as her husband, New York magazine founder Clay Felker, spent 17 years fighting various cancers. On New Year’s Day 2007, they waited eight hours in an emergency room for yet another CT scan until Felker looked at her and said, “No more hospitals.” “I just put a cover over him and wheeled him out of there with needles still in his arms,” Sheehy said. Then she called Dr. R. Sean Morrison, president of the American Academy of Hos-
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
ADVICE
SALISBURY POST
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 7A
Ask Amy: Mom wants son to respond to cousins’ texts Dear Amy: My son receives text messages often from his cousins, who live in another state. He refuses to respond to these cousins because they both have a history with drugs. I know their involvement with drugs isn’t really their fault because their mother has a drug ASK problem. AMY How can I explain to him that it isn’t the kids’ fault that they have had problems with drugs? I want him to at least realize that they have had a hard life and that they need a friend and cousin. — Wondering Mom Dear Mom: You should not interfere in this relation-
ship. You don’t say how old your son is or what the nature of these text messages is, but he should be trusted to use his own judgment regarding what kind of contact he wants to have with family members. There could be more to this story than you realize. Your son’s instinct to stay away from these cousins might be a good one, and you should respect it. Your son could be encouraged to understand whatever factors drive these cousins, but beyond encouraging him to be compassionate, forcing them into a relationship could spell trouble. Dear Amy: I no longer speak to my uncle (due to a falling-out over his fourth wife), though he occasionally talks to other relatives that I have a good relationship with. My uncle and these other
relatives are social “friends” on a Web site. Out of curiosity, I checked out my uncle’s profile. His profile is a “professional” one where he communicates with clients and friends. My uncle’s profile is rife with blatant lies about his life and education. He lists a degree that he does not hold, as well as other phony experiences from his life. There is no doubt in my mind that these “credentials” are fake, (I even contacted the school in question to verify whether he ever attended classes there, and they confirmed that he had not), and it is obvious that the degree and experience are listed to attract clients. Should I call him out on this? Or tell someone else? I know I will be labeled as mean and spiteful if I do, but I have a real problem with a professional who lies to create a persona to at-
tract clients. My other family members just blow it off, saying that it’s just the way he is. I agree that we need to accept shortcomings in others as well as ourselves, but what if these shortcomings involve bilking others out of money? I know that I am not able to really look at this from a neutral standpoint, so I’d like your view, please! — Troubled by Lies Dear Troubled: Your conclusions about your uncle may be a stretch, but if he is actually and actively bilking people out of money you should notify his company of his activities. You obviously can’t stand the guy, and if you want to bury him by exposing his lies, then that’s the price he will pay for having a vengeful relative. I suggest you realistically examine his actions and your own motives.
You could give him a “friendlier” heads-up that his inconsistencies have been noticed and contact him through the online “friendship” site to say, “Your profile surprises me. I had no idea you were so accomplished!” Dear Amy: I was upset by a reader’s reference to ”’vehicular Tourette’s” and the fact that you embraced this reference so lightheartedly. As a parent of two sons with Tourette syndrome, I have spent the last 10 years fighting this kind of stereotype while watching my children struggle for acceptance. Most people with Tourette syndrome do not curse, but they do have to deal with involuntary sounds and movements. Tourette’s can be a devastating neurological disorder that I would not wish on
Making a wish list is the secret to successful saving Mary Hunt is the founder of www.DebtProofLiving. com and author of 18 books, including her best-selling classic "Debt-Proof Living." You can e-mail her at mary@everydaycheapskate.com, or write to Everyday Cheapskate, P.O. Box 2135, Paramount, CA 90723. To find out more about Mary Hunt and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. CREATORS.COM--
Job hunting tips for recent college graduates BY MARVIN WALBERG
Scripps Howard News Service
Everything we read and everything we hear tells us that things are getting better and many companies that reduced staffs during the last year and a half are starting to rebuild. They may be looking for YOU! “A key consideration for companies starting to rebuild their staffs is how to recruit great talent cost-effectively,” says Tony Lee, publisher, CareerCast.com. “College graduates have a big advantage over other job seekers given their low starting salaries and great potential to grow with the company. It’s been several years since we’ve seen companies so interested in talking with new grads.” If you’re a new graduate, CareerCast.com offers tips for successful job-hunting: • Check out your college or university career-services office. Their advice is free and targeted to your market. • Join alma mater alumni groups. Networking is still the best way to find a new job.
• Research job boards that include lots of entry-level jobs. • Watch what you post online. Recruiters will search social media to investigate your background. • Expand your search radius to include companies where you would like to live and work. • Take extra courses. Learning should be a lifelong goal. • Don’t underestimate the value of a good cover letter and resume. • Create a “personal branding statement” to stand out from other inexperienced college grads. • Prepare and rehearse before each interview. Don’t assume you can wing it just because you’re smart. • Dress for success. Looking good never hurts. • Be personable and nice to everyone you meet during your interview. • Follow up with thank-you notes to everyone you met. • Most importantly, don’t get discouraged. Job-hunting is one of the toughest “jobs” you’ll ever have. Stay positive and keep your network active. Referrals are one of the best
1999 1500 $ New Spa Head ............... 2999
Summer Specials Pedicure Kid Spa
ways to find a job. To access the complete Graduate Guide to Job-Hunting, visit www.careercast. com/jobs/content/job-huntingcollege-grad-survival-guide .
WINDOWS
FREE Hot Stone Massage with pedicure service
704.636.0390
edi t
J.A. FISHER
A Specialty Contractor Since 1979 With Over 6000 Completed Jobs
704-788-3217
Salisbury
www.jafisherconstruction.com
Kannapolis
PRE 4thMATTRESS OF JULY SALE MARCH SALE! 20% OFF Last Year’s Mattress Models! 25% OFF Mattress Floor Samples!
No Additional Charge for Mattress Foundations
Night Dimensions Mattress Set Twin
149
$
Full
189
$
Queen
199
$
Park Place Mattress Set
Please bring ad to receive special pricing. Exp. 07/31/10
Need Dental Work? • Tooth Colored Crowns start at $495 • Dental Implants for $695 • Mini-Dental Implants for denture stabilization $250 • Zoom Whitening $300 • Cleanings, Fillings and Extractions
www.salisburypost.com Payment Plan with CareCredit www.salisburypost.com Morton Dentistry www.salisburypost.com Mikewww.mikemortondentistry.com 201 Security Street, Kannapolis, NC 28083 www.salisburypost.com info@mikemortondentistry.com 704/938-3189
Sensa Adjustable Beds Starting at
$
999
DENTURES Most Insurance Accepted Now Accepting Medicaid Same Day Service On Repairs and Relines Repairs $50 & up Relines $175 per Denture
Dentures $475 ea.; $950 set Partials $495 & up Extractions $150 & up
Dr. B. D. Smith, General Dentistry 1905 N. Cannon Blvd., Kannapolis
(704) 938-6136
R103631
JERRY’S SHELL SERVICE
(704) 636-3803
This Months Specials! Most Vehicles
68
$
99
BY APPOINTMENT
State Inspections 4 Inspectors for Faster Service Auto A/C Service & Repair One Day Service Brake Service Lifetime Warranty on Pads & Shoes Free Battery Check By Interstate Batteries Tires-Tires-Tires
Most Brands - All Sizes Best Service. Call us for prices.
399
$
Queen Plush or Firm....
Send questions via e-mail to askamy@tribune.com or by mail to Ask Amy, Chicago Tribune, TT500, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611. Amy Dickinson’s memoir, “The Mighty Queens of Freeville: A Mother, a Daughter and the Town that Raised Them” (Hyperion), is available in bookstores.
4 Wheel Alignment
Free Rotations & Flat Repairs on Tires Sold! Save On Factory Recommended Services at Jerry’s!
Refreshments Served
OPEN SUNDAY 12-5
1040 Freeland Dr., Ste 112 Salisbury, NC 28144
0 r 0
FACTORY DIRECT DISCOUNTS
$
Eyelashes .............................$1999
Tax C
All Styles • Doors 100 Styles & Colors
.........................
Massage Available
$15
“The Best Insulated”
$ ............................
Gel Nails ...................$2999 Full Set......................$1999 Fill-in ........................$1299
Marvin Walberg is a jobsearch coach. Contact him at mwalberg@bellsouth.net, marvinwalberg.blogspot.com, or PO Box 43056, Birmingham, AL 35243.
Dear Defensive: Point taken. Thank you. For more information on Tourette syndrome, readers can check www.tsa-usa.org.
Park PlaceBeautyrest Red Rose Simmons Mattress Set Plush or Firm
699
Queen Set ..........$$299 Queen Pillowtop....
600 Jake Alexander Blvd. W. Salisbury, NC Mon-Sat 7am til 7pm
R123883
Next time you click on a web page, make sure it’s the right one. Communications insiders are warning consumers of a new type of phishing scam aimed at stealing information from users on the Internet. Called “tabnabbing,” it’s when a fraudulent web page disguises itself as a trusted website, whereupon users enter sensitive information such as passwords or bankaccount numbers. The scam occurs when a consumer opens a malicious website and then clicks on another tab within the browser. That other web page will appear to be a website the user has visited before, but it’s actually a fraud, collecting information from the consumer. The only indicator of the change is that the URL address remains the same, according to a news release from the Better Business Bureau. Computer users who are unaware of the scam may be signing into nonexistent websites and delivering e-mail addresses, passwords and account numbers into the hands of scammers. Some tabnabbing websites can even detect which Web pages someone most often visits and create duplicate pages asking for a user log in, according to the news release. Staff with the Mozilla Firefox Internet browser are credited with discovering the scam. A few tips for avoiding a tabnabbing website: Check URL addresses before logging in with sensitive information; log out and close out after using a sensitive site; change passwords frequently; and report any fraud. Consumers can make complaints about tabnabbing at the Internet Crime Complaint Center at www.ic3.gov.
money will be safe from you so you can't borrow it back in a weak moment. Now, don't you wish you'd thought of that sooner?
R124210
Scripps Howard News Service
for a period of time that you have designated for yourself, start saving for it, even if all you can put away is 10 bucks a week. So what if it takes you a year to save for an iPad? You'll have a full 12 months to change your mind. If you still want it a year from now, you'll own it outright with no new debt. Want to add a high-tech dimension to your wish list? Go to www.smartypig.com. There you can set up an online savings account to save for a specific goal. You'll have a lot of fun doing it. SmartyPig won't charge you any fees, and it will pay you an amazing interest rate, given today's economy. It will help you reach your goal even faster. And your
Discovery Panel Bed
Albany Futon
Drawers & Nightstand sold separately
Includes standard 6” Mattress.
$
169
289
$
!"#$%&'#($)*+,(&+),&-.-#/-0/%&)+&1%23*"4!%'#$&-+'&),5%"&(%/%$,%'&2%"$5-+'#(%6 Voted 18 Times Best Place to Buy Beds!
FINANCING AVAILABLE!
Kannapolis
204 N. Cannon Blvd. • 933-6307 Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10am-7pm • Sat. 10am-6pm
R124978
BY STEVEN ALFORD
wish list. Be sure to date the entry. Once each week, review your wish list. It's likely that the neon purple flatware that you just had to have last week will fade in importance. In fact, by this week, you might think it's really dumb. What were you thinking? Great. Delete it from your list. Consider other items on the list, deleting or confirming as you go. Then look at the order in which the items appear. Which one still holds a burning desire? Move it to the top of the list. Arrange items in order of importance below No. 1. Repeat every week or so. Once an item has remained at the top of the list
R123946
Watch out for fake web pages while trolling for data
your computer. A written wish list is magical because it gives credence to your heart's desires. Once you turn it into a management tool, you'll see how things will change for you. When you create a wish list, you'll stop feeling sorry for yourself. You'll stop making stupid impulse purchases, and you'll stop digging your debt hole even deeper. Here's how it works: When a wish enters your mind, examine it carefully. Do you want an iPad because you have a good use for it or just because your friend has one and, well, it looks cool? If you can justify such a thing in your life, go ahead and add it to your
R122513
Feeling down in the dumps because you don't have an iPad or a pretty new sofa? Wish you could take your hubby to a nice restaurant for his birthday, but alas, you are broke? Turn around your attitude and MARY cancel your HUNT pity party with a simple tool: a wish list. How you create your wish list is up to you. It can be a small notebook that you keep in your handbag, a scrap of paper on the refrigerator door or even a file on
anyone. It saddens me when a foul-mouthed individual blames his or her lack of self-control on this condition. Would you be so glib about cancer? I think not. I had you pegged as a more insightful individual, was I wrong? — Defensive Mom
DAYintheLIFE
Andy Mooney, Copy Editor, 704-797-4245 amooney@salisburypost.com
MONDAY
June 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
8A
www.salisburypost.com
Become a part of the Post’s Day in the Life feature by sending in your photos online. To submit your photos, go to www.salisburypost.com and click on the Salisbury Postables link on the right side of the homepage; then click on “A Day in the Life.” You’ll see the Day in the Life group there and can follow the easy instructions to share your digital photos. The photos will become part of an online gallery, and we’ll select some to publish in the paper each Monday in a Day in the Life. Submissions need to include who shot the picture and information about who is in the picture. For more information, contact Jeremy Judd at jjudd@salisburypost.com or call 704-797-4280.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Rick Thibodeau enjoys a lazy Sunday afternoon with his new granddaughter, Piper Thomas of Mooresville.
SUBMITTED PHOTO BY LYNN KEARNS
Lara Drew swimming while on vacation at Lake Murray, S.C.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
SUBMITTED PHOTO
SUBMITTED PHOTO
CONTINUED
SALISBURY POST
play. And that’s not all. Ramsue discovered she likes karate. The campers learned a few stances and stretches from two instructors. “I never took it, but it’s something I want to continue,” she said. This is the second year Cyntrina Knight, 18, has volunteered as a camp counselor. She signed on after hearing about it through friend De’Shari Griffin. “The kids are fun to work with and you learn interesting stuff about them. They teach me stuff,” Knight said. She just graduated high school and hasn’t decided what she’ll study in college, but is leaning toward something in child care. Madisyn Duffy, 9, has attended camp for a number of years. The best part of it for her is getting sprayed with the fire hose.
VIOLENCE FROM 1A police responded to a call from another neighbor. Rowan County 911 operators would not confirm that sheriff’s officers responded to the residence at any time other than 10:55 p.m. Friday. Though Daniels’ address is listed as 604 E. 12th St., Ridenhour often saw him at Lyons’ house and believed he was living there. Ridenhour said the two normally “seemed like a nice enough couple.” But their fights were intense, he said, and largely one-sided. “The couple of times I saw
them arguing, it was mostly him yelling at her,” Ridenhour said. “I honestly don’t remember hearing her very much.” According to the N.C. Department of Correction website, Daniels was convicted in 2006 of two counts of assault on a female. The offenses occurred in June and December of that year. Daniels was also convicted of violating a protective order and communicating threats in 2006, state records show. He was jailed from April 26, 2007 to July 15, 2007, according to the state records.
DePompa’s
Contact Karissa Minn at 704-797-4222.
Taste the Best Kept Secret in Kannapolis
C O M F O RTA B L E
RALEIGH (AP) — A turnout of 4.5 percent of the eligible voters was better than expected for North Carolina’s second primary last week, raising the question of whether runoffs have outlived their usefulness. Fifty years ago, when North Carolina was a one-party state, nearly as many people would vote in a statewide Democratic runoff as the first race, because their votes likely would choose the eventual winner of the general election. Today, in a competitive twoparty state, turnout at the lo-
cal firehouse on the day of the runoff may not be much more than the poll workers themselves. That’s led some election reform advocates to argue there’s got to be a better way to choose only a handful of nominees who didn’t win the first time. “One way or another, it seems like the runoff election systems for picking a party’s nominee in a statewide election is outdated,” said Bob Hall, with the election reform group Democracy North Carolina. Save for experiments in two
READING FOR THE 4TH t The Devil Amongs the Lawyerurmsb by Sharyn McC
FOODS
Mexican Buffet
Join the fiesta with our authentic mexican buffet
Thursday
Wednesday
municipalities with voters ranking candidates on the first election day, North Carolina lawmakers don’t seem interested in changing the runoff system. Some like it because it ultimately declares victory to the candidate who receives a majority of votes. “I realize turnout’s low and it costs a lot of money, but it still keeps people in the process,” said Rep. Phil Haire, D-Jackson. He’s a past critic of legislation that would reduce or eliminate the 40 percent threshold a candidate must surpass in the first primary to
704-857-5684 S.A SLOOP HTG & AC, INC. 705 W. RYDER AVE, LANDIS, NC 28088
www.SASLOOP.com Visit us on Facebook @ www.SASLOOP.com/FACEBOOK 19627
Sizzling Sixteen
UP TO $1,500 TAX CREDIT*! How’s That For Efficiency
by Janet Evanovich
In today’s marketplace, it doesn’t get much better than 12 Months Zero Interest with regular payments. And a financing offer this good on a new qualifying Trane heating and cooling system is even better. Because a Trane will keep you comfortable and help you save money year round.
5-8:30
Pizza & Pasta Buffet
Try a great variety of homemade pizza, pastas, salad bar & dessert... just $6.95! (1/2 price for kids under 6)
5-8:30
Get Your Country Fixin’
with our southern style country buffet! Famous chicken pot pies and other favorites...just $7.99
(on the corner of West A St & Oak Ave in Cannon Village)
704.932.1555
Mon 11-2, Tues-Thurs 11-8:30, Fri & Sat 11-9
$50.00
to the learned...
FIRST YEAR MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
Expires 08/31/2010
EMAIL: mail@literarybookpost.com
110 SOUTH MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN SALISBURY www.LiteraryBookpost.com
WE ARE YOUR ANSWER TO HIGH
UTILITY BILLS
Just purchase your qualifying Trane system during the eligible program period. Reliability, energy-efficiency, indoor air quality, and the flexibility of payment options and a Tax Credit...they’re all yours with Trane. Receive up to $1,500 in federal Tax Credits. Ask your dealer for details.**
Call Now For The Lowest Payments On High Efficiency Trane Equipment.
704-630-9788 R123417
215 West A Street
Or...choose Payments As Low As $125/Month and up to $1,500 tax credit on qualifying Trane systems.*
When you purchase a new Trane comfort system from S.A. Sloop Htg & AC, Inc you’ll receive $148 off of your first year preventative maintenance agreement.
Mention this ad and let us treat you to a FREE dessert
avoid a runoff. “I believe in elections.” North Carolina is one of only nine states — all in the South — where runoffs are used regularly in all races, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The leading vote-getter must receive a majority of all votes cast to avoid a primary or general election runoff in each one except North Carolina, where the threshold fell to 40 percent in 1990 after some argued that it was preventing minorities from becoming nominees.
BUY NOW, PAY OVER TIME WITH 12 MONTHS SAME AS CASH.
R125235
5-8:30
Contact Shavonne Potts at 704-797-4253.
Are North Carolina runoffs still worth the cost?
Restaurant • Catering • Frozen Entrées to go
Tuesday
in his practice at Salisbury Pediatric Associates. Many people volunteer to teach a session and help the children. “We have the best staff we’ve had. These are teachers. We have a lot of people who are dedicating time and effort to these kids,” Koontz said. And a lot of kids are taking advantage of that. The camp was at capacity this year with 40 children. Koontz said local restaurants provide meals for the campers all week, and Tshirts and water are donated. “It lets us run a camp at a very reasonable amount of money,” Koontz said. The whole purpose of the week, he said, is to give children a learning atmosphere that isn’t so structured. The Woodson and Robertson foundations are the main supporters of the camp.
See your participating independent Trane dealer for complete program eligibility, dates, details and restrictions. Special financing offers and tax credits are valid on qualifying systems only. All sales must be to homeowners in the contiguous United States. Void where prohibited. Financing through The Home Projects® Visa® card issued by Wells Fargo Financial National Bank is a dual-line credit card. Special terms apply to qualifying purchases with approved credit to the Home Projects line of credit. For newly opened accounts, the regular APR is 25.99%. The APR may vary. The APR is given as of 1/1/2010. If the cardholder is charged interest in any billing cycle, the minimum interest charge will be $1.00. If the cardholder uses the card for cash advances, the cash advance fee is 4% of the amount of the cash advance, but not less than $10.00. 9.9% APR - The special-terms APR will continue to apply until all qualifying purchases are paid in full, unless the cardholder is in default. Regular minimum monthly payments of 1.75% of the promotional purchase amount are required during the special-terms period. The regular APR applies if the cardholder is in default or uses the card for other transactions. 12 months, no interest - The minimum monthly payment will be regular minimum monthly payments of 1.75% of the promotional purchase amount are required during the special-terms period. Monthly payment, if shown, based on $7,100 purchase. *To download and print the government’ s summary of Energy Star products that are eligible for HVAC credits for homeowners, visit www.energystar.gov/taxcredit.
R124247
FROM 1A
karate, “because I’m very good at it,” he said. Wallace, 9, said he enjoys camp and wants to return every year because it’s fun. Ariel Watkins, 10, heard about the camp at school. The biggest lesson she learned is “you should respect everybody.” She’s a newcomer to the camp and karate is also her favorite activity. “I like to learn new things. But we can only use it on people who are trying to hurt us,” she said. Watkins said at first, when her classmates found out she had ADHD they acted a little “weird.” She believes it was because she had to take medication. “Some boys at my school thought I was weird. I was JON C. LAKEY/SALISBURY POST sad,” she said. Trevor Wallace makes a pirate belt during an art exercise at a camp held last week at Dan Watkins said she exNicholas Park for children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. plained to her classmates the medication helps her “I like getting wet,” she to play during the week. bottles. not be hyper. It’s Brandon Wallace’s said. Duffy also liked making an Dr. Wayne Koontz, one of She also enjoys karate hourglass with sand, a funthird year at the camp. The the founders of the camp, and other the sports she got nel and two plastic water best part of it for him was treats children with ADHD
RE With utility bills going BA TE up every day, you’ve S U got to find ways to lower TO P & $ TA se er your monthly energy bill. Your XC ev 2 er se ,7 0 RE fo heating and air conditioning unit rd et 0 DI ai ls * TS uses as much as half of your energy costs, so it only makes sense to see if it needs replacing. In most cases, the energy savings can help make up for the cost of a new unit, especially if yours is over ten years old. CALL BEAVER BROTHERS, INC. TODAY!
25 OFF YOUR NEXT RESIDENTIAL
$ 807 Corporate Circle Salisbury, NC 28147
704-637-9595
SERVICE CALL
www.beaverbrosinc.com License# 146
807 Corporate Circle Salisbury, NC 28147
704-637-9595
Not valid with any other offers. Must present coupon at time of service. Expires 6/30/2010
www.beaverbrosinc.com
* Rebate savings range from $50 to $1200 depending on equipment purchased. Expires 6/30/2010. See Beaver Brothers for details. ** Federal tax credits of up to $1,500 on qualifying Energy Star equipment. See your tax advisor for qualifications. Must be placed in service prior to 12/31/2010. WAC.
R123862
CAMP
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 9A
10A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 GREGORY M. ANDERSON Publisher
704-797-4201 ganderson@salisburypost.com
ELIZABETH G. COOK Editor
704-797-4244 editor@salisburypost.com
CHRIS VERNER
Editorial Page Editor
704-797-4262 cverner@salisburypost.com
CHRIS RATLIFF
Advertising Director
704-797-4235 cratliff@salisburypost.com
RON BROOKS
Circulation Director
704-797-4221 rbrooks@salisburypost.com
SALISBURY POST
OPINION
The Monday forum
BP stations wrong site to protest Gulf spill
“The truth shall make you free”
MY TURN: Matthew Leatherman
Turning our guns against ourselves F
This commentary from Bill Tome, chairman of Mark Oil Company, Inc., is reprinted from the Charlotte Observer.
A
s the owner of a BP distributor in Mecklenburg County, you might expect me to sympathize with the company about the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. There is much I sympathize with and it begins with the 11 Deep Horizon oil rig workers who were killed and their families. I also identify strongly with the more than 600 independently owned BP distributors in the United States and the over 10,000 independently-owned convenience stores and service stations they serve. My company, Mark Oil, supplies gasoline for 35 convenience stores and service stations in Mecklenburg County that carry the BP brand. Protests and boycotts can be well meaning. But taking actions designed to harm the livelihood of these independent station owners is wrong. These are local business owners, men and women, who are wrestling with a recovery from the deepest economic downturn since The Great Depression. To all customers who have patronized these business people previously and those of you who continue to do so, thank you very much.
They have absolutely no role in the tragedy unfolding in the Gulf. Besides selling gasoline, these operators offer food, groceries and other necessities. In some cases, they perform mechanical work. They typically employ eight to 10 full-time people. They represent a variety of ethnic groups. But they share important traits. They live in local communities and depend on goodwill of people around Charlotte. They work hard. Besides providing top-notch services, they are involved in their communities in a wide variety of ways. And here’s their other commonality: They have absolutely no role in the tragedy unfolding in the Gulf. It saddens them as much as it saddens you and me. I know about them and care about them deeply because my company supplies the gasoline they sell. That brand is BP and has been for a long time. The stations we supply are mostly one-station operators, working hard to meet the needs of motorists. These station operators enjoy their business and take great pride in what they do. At Mark Oil, our connection to BP is singular. The company supplies the products we distribute. That relationship started in 1960. I recently visited the BP Command Center in southern Louisiana for a personal view of their operations. Everywhere I turned, I could see BP personnel and volunteers working hand-in-hand with the U.S. Coast Guard to fight the leak below the surface, on the surface and on the coastline. It was very apparent that everyone there is working diligently and, to a person, is dedicated to the task. The same is true of your neighbors who own and operate the BP service stations in the Charlotte area. They have no role in the Gulf, but they can and do facilitate our local routines. By offering the best products and service they can, they add value to our lives. So that’s why protestors with signs at area BP stations cause me great anguish. I understand their sentiments. But I believe their tactics are misguided. I hope they will abandon easy targets whose potential losses are a pain many of us would share.
Salisbury Post
LETTERS TO Some more things I just don’t understand 1. Why is the ACLU, through the John Adams project, supporting Gitmo detainees? Why is the ACLU so anti-American? 2. Our country is collapsing, yet Congress takes valuable time to deal with gays in the military. I didn't know this was a critical issue to our country’s welfare. 3. Racial profiling (all races) could prevent terrorists from blowing up passenger airplanes or killing innocent people anywhere in the U.S.A. So our government makes it illegal, risking our lives just because profiling offends someone feelings. 4.Why does our government owe everyone a living (including illegal aliens)? 5. Ninety-nine percent Californians support legalizing marijuana. That explains a lot. 6. Why is government so concerned about the foods we eat, but does little to stop the drugs from Mexico? 7. Did you know that ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) is allowing Mexican drug cartel lookouts to control the flow of drugs into the U.S.A. from mountaintops in Arizona? 8. Our government gave 1,300 prisoners $9 million worth of first-time homebuyer credits. Watch what happens when the 2,409 page Health care bill goes into affect. Or the proposed 1,428 page Cap & Trade bill, or the 2000+ page Financial Reform bill. 9. I think the terrorists hate us because they watched the “Maury” and “Jerry Springer” shows and believe we’re all like their guests. 10. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis pledges in an ad to help illegal aliens get fair pay. What about Americans? 11. Why did the Democrats in Congress give a standing ovation to the President of Mexico when he trashed our and Arizona's Immigration law? Aren't they supposed to be looking out for us? Guess not. 12. How come only 50 percent of us pay federal income taxes and Washington wants us to pay more so they can give more to those who don’t?
Common sense
(Or uncommon wisdom, as the case may be) “Education is not the filling of a bucket, but the lighting of a fire.” — W.B. Yeats
THE
EDITOR
13. And finally, how come only 7 percent of us care to vote? — Donald Schumacher Salisbury
Citizen rights repressed
When I read the newspapers and watch television I see that the legislature is spending time on such items as Internet cafes, dictating that sugar free lunches must be served within the school systems, and many more personal freedom interference type bills. I wonder why they are so insistent on repressing the liberties, rights and freedoms of North Carolinians. It’s apparent the majority of the General Assembly would prefer to limit the freedoms of their fellow North Carolinians rather than respect them by granting them the liberties and freedoms they deserve. When will the the General Assembly learn citizens are intelligent and brilliant people? Many great ideas come from N.C. citizens but apparently the members of the General Assembly see it as their responsibility to quash those ideas along with the freedoms and rights granted by God. Only God can grant true freedom. Governmental entities such as the General Assembly can only take away freedoms as they have so aptly done over the years and this year’s General Assembly session is no different. We, the citizenry of North Carolina have had enough! It is time that the General Assembly enacted ethical statutes that protects our property, our liberties, our rights, and our freedoms. It is time that the General Assembly stopped interfering with the freedoms granted by God. It is time the General Assembly stopped taking away our property, our liberties, our rights, and our freedoms in order to cater to special interests within North Carolina and allowing the destruction of a way of life within the state. It is time that our God given freedoms are no longer being destroyed by the whims of a few for false promise of a better way of life when in reality our way of life is being destroyed by the few. — Ray Shamlin Rocky Mount
Letters policy Letters should be limited to 300 words and include the writer’s name, address and daytime phone number. Letters may be edited for clarity and length. Limit one letter each 14 days. Write Letters to the Editor, Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145-4639. Or fax your letter to 639-0003. E-mail: letters@salisburypost.com
ew words have been pored over more strenuously and passionately than those of the Second Amendment: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” Understanding exactly what the Founding Fathers meant with this language — or what we want them to mean — likely is a never-ending conversation. One issue is indisputable, though — the “militia” they referred to is an American one. The Bill of Rights positively did not intend to protect the rights of foreign militias to keep and bear arms. That, however, is exactly what is happening. Over 20,000 weapons (87 percent of the total) recovered from drug traffickers by Mexican law enforcement from 2004-2008 originated in the United States. These weapons commonly include AR-15 semi-automatic assault rifles, the civilian version of the Army’s standard-bearer, the M-16. President Obama is preparing to send 1,200 National Guardsmen to a border surveillance mission in this region, and the Senate Armed Services Committee has encouraged him to send 4,800 more. When — and it is just a matter of time — these troops or their border patrol colleagues come under fire, more likely than not it will be from a weapon of our own making. It may even be technically superior to their own. Drug traffickers in Mexico aren’t the only foreign militias whose right to keep and bear arms we’re protecting, though. Suspected members of Al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations also are extended the same courtesy. Being on the no-fly list or in one of our terrorist tracking data bases in no way affects someone’s ability to buy weapons in the U.S. Indeed, individuals on the terrorist watch list were involved in 1,119 weapons transactions from 2004–2010. It’s as though we think that only airplanes are vulnerable to terrorism. Though the outcomes of these two glaring gaps are equally dangerous, the reasons for them are different. Terrorist tracking lists aren’t used to screen gun buyers because our political leaders know they are unserious lists. Over a million individuals are on them, despite estimates that there are only 25,000 Taliban fighters and a few hundred Al Qaeda operatives in the world. Reasons for being on the list range from posing a real threat to simple cases of mistaken identity. At the end of the day, these lists provide the illusion of better security rather than the reality. No politician expects to regulate gun rights on these grounds. The problem of drug traffickers turning our guns against us is tougher because many of those weapons are legally bought by American citizens before being illegally resold to those gangs. No avenue for regulating that market is palatable to U.S. politicians because all of them run afoul of the nearly-omnipotent NRA lobby. Dramatically increased screening of southbound traffic at the U.S.-Mexico border is no more viable, both due to cost and privacy issues. Yet dead Americans, service-members and civilians alike, slain by U.S. produced and sold weapons, have a way of focusing the mind. Troops and police officers share a term for this self-destructive behavior: friendly fire. It’s unacceptable. Staying up in the clouds debating Second Amendment abstractions might be entertaining, but it does an appalling disservice to all those in harm’s way — ourselves included. It’s time to come back down to Earth. The Second Amendment doesn’t protect foreign militia’s right to keep and bear arms, and we have an interest in making sure they don’t. With respect to terrorism, individuals that our government suspects of posing a tangible threat should not be able to buy or possess a weapon in our borders under any circumstance. By extension, our government needs to know who poses a real and tangible threat. Those people should be our priority, while others that are on there for political benefit, “just in case something happens,” should be set aside. A more refined combination of responses is needed for military-styled drug traffickers. Penalties for illegally reselling weapons to these organizations should be far stiffer than more routine violations. Southbound vehicles in hightrafficking areas should be searched more invasively than in other areas. Counterdrug efforts should focus more heavily on the public health implications, undercutting the demand that fuels these organizations. And the decision to send National Guardsmen to the border must accept that their risk is elevated because of our own illicit arms market. Objections to these steps doubtless will come from far and wide. They, in fact, are the best evidence of how detached our conversation on the Second Amendment has become. Yet our Founding Fathers would find it preposterous that we provide sanctuary to foreign militias in our right to keep and bear arms. As we again prepare to send troops into the border region, now is the time to defend against this friendly fire. Those in harm’s way deserve nothing less. • • • Former Salisbury resident Matthew Leatherman recently graduated from the Masters in International Affairs program at Columbia University and is pursuing a career in foreign policy and national security. He lives in Arlington, Va.
Have a ‘My Turn’ idea?
“My Turn” columns should be between 500 and 700 words. E-mail submissions are preferred. Send to cverner@salisburypost.com with “My Turn” in the subject field. Include your name, address, phone number and a digital photo of yourself, if possible.
N AT I O N / W O R L D
SALISBURY POST
CIA chief: US has driven al-Qaida into hiding
Police arrest more than 500 at Toronto economic summit TORONTO (AP) — Police raided a university building and rounded up more protesters Sunday in an effort to quell further violence at the global economic summit after black-clad youths rampaged through the city, smashing windows and torching police cruisers. Police said they have arrested more than 500 demonstrators, many of whom were hauled away in plastic handcuffs and taken to a temporary holding center constructed for the summit. Despite the violence, no serious injuries were reported among police, protesters and bystanders, Toronto Police Constable Tony Vella said Sunday. Thousands of police in riot gear formed cordons to prevent radical anti-globalization demonstrations from breaching the steel and concrete security fence surrounding the Group of 20 summit site. Toronto Police Sgt. Tim Burrows said police made at least 70 arrests in a Sunday morning raid on a building on the campus of the University of Toronto, where they seized a cache of “street-type weaponry” such as bricks, sticks and rocks.
Pope says Belgian church sex abuse raids deplorable VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI lashed out Sunday at what he called the “deplorable” raids carried out by Belgian police who detained bishops, confiscated computers, opened a crypt and took church documents as part of an investigation into priestly sex abuse. Benedict made a rare personal entry into the escalating diplomatic dispute with Belgium, issuing a message of solidarity to the head of the Belgian bishops’ conference and other bishops who were detained in the June 24 raid. He said justice must take its course, but also asserted the right of the Catholic Church to investigate clerical abuse alongside civil law enforcement authorities. It was first time the pope himself had commented on the raids, and his message to Monsignor Andre Joseph Leonard capped a daily ratcheting up of the Vatican’s criticism. On Saturday, the No. 2 Vatican official said the raids
were unprecedented even under communism. Belgium’s justice minister defended the searches on Sunday, saying the bishops were treated normally and that the search warrant was fully legitimate.
Longtime Sen. Byrd, 92, seriously ill WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Robert C. Byrd, who holds the record as the longest-serving member of Congress, is seriously ill in a Washington-area hospital, his office said Sunday. The 92y e a r - o l d BYRD West Virginia Democrat has been in the hospital since late last week, his office said in a statement. At first Byrd was believed to be suffering from heat exhaustion and severe dehydration, the statement said, but other medical conditions have developed. His condition was described as serious. The statement did not name the hospital. In November, Byrd broke the record for congressional service that had been set by Democrat Carl Hayden of Arizona, who served in the House and Senate from 1912 to 1969. Byrd began his career in Washington in 1952 with his election to the House. His elevation to the Senate came six years later.
Republicans question whether Kagan can be impartial justice WASHINGTON (AP) — Leading Republican senators on Sunday questioned whether Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan could be an impartial judge as they tried to inject some drama into her upcoming confirmation hearing. Democrats praised K a g a n ’ s KAGAN record and predicted she will win confirmation as the 112th justice — and only the court’s fourth woman. The Senate Judiciary Committee begins the weeklong hearing today. Kagan is not expected to face questions until Tuesday. Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the top Republican on the committee, said Kagan’s nomination has “real problems” that she will have to address. “I think the first thing we need to decide is, is she committed to the rule of law even if she may not like the law? Will she as a judge subordinate herself to the Constitution and keep her political views at bay?” Sessions said.
Relentless oil spill’s mental toll weighs on Katrina-weary coast NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Gulf of Mexico oil disaster feels far worse to shrimper Ricky Robin than Katrina, even though he’s still haunted by memories of riding out the hurricane on his trawler and of his father’s suicide in the storm’s aftermath. The relentless spill is bringing back feelings that are far too familiar to Robin and others still dealing with the physical and emotional toll wrought by Katrina five years ago. “I can’t sleep at night. I find myself crying sometimes,” said Robin, of Violet, a blue-collar community on the southeastern edge of the New Orleans suburbs, along the highway that hugs the levee on the Mississippi River’s east bank nearly all the way to the Gulf. Psychiatrists who treated people after Katrina and have held group sessions in oil spill-stricken areas say the symptoms showing up are much the same: Anger. Anxiety. Drinking. Depression. Suicidal thoughts.
“Everybody’s acting strange,” said Robin, 56. “Real angry, frustrated, stressed out, fighting brothers and sisters and mamas and family.”
Marilyn Monroe chest X-rays auctioned for $45,000 LOS ANGELES (AP) — The apparently endless market for images of Marilyn Monroe now extends to inside the bombshell’s body. A set of three Monroe chest X-rays from a 1954 hospital visit sold Sunday for $45,000 at the Hollywood Legends auction at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casi-
NORTHAMPTON, Pa. (AP) — A man who served prison time for a 1992 murder was charged Sunday with fatally stabbing four people, including a woman described as the suspect’s former girlfriend and her 87-year-old grandfather. Police charged Michael Eric Ballard, 36, with four counts of homicide for Saturday’s rampage in the northeastern Pennsylvania town of Northampton, about 70 miles north of Philadelphia. Police alleged that Ballard killed 39-year-old Denise Merhi, her father and her grandfather along with a neighbor who rushed over to help when he heard the initial screams from Merhi’s home. Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli said he will seek the death penalty.
no in Las Vegas. Julien’s Auctions, which sold the X-rays, estmated that they would only fetch a total of about $3,000. Other Monroe-abilia that sold included a chair from her last photo shoot that went for $35,000. The auction included items from other actresses, includ-
ing a pair of earrings worn by Kate Winslet in “Titanic” that sold for $25,000 and a dress Audrey Hepburn wore when she starred opposite Fred Astaire in the musical “Funny Face” that fetched $56,250.
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
IMPRESSIVE Cars Affordable Prices
Man charged in Pa. stabbing rampage that killed 4
2008 HONDA CIVIC SI
2006 MERCEDES-BENZ C230 SPORT Full Power, Leather, Loaded, Sunroof, Only 49K Miles, Local Trade, K3629B
Full Power, 6 Spd, Sunroof, Alloy Wheels, Loaded, Red, Only 32K Miles, K3648
$
18,990
$
5 Spd, Full Power, Sunroof, Local Trade, CD, A/C, K3584A
Only 27K Miles, Full Power, Alloy Wheels, Just Reduced! K3589
$
18,990
2001 HONDA CIVIC COUPE
2007 CHEVY 1500 Z71
5,990
17,990
$
Come In For A FREE Appraisal We will buy your vehicle whether it is paid for or not.
941 S. Cannon Blvd. • Exit 58 Off I-85 • Kannapolis R124982
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. has driven al-Qaida into hiding and undermined its leadership, but is struggling to oust its primary sympathizer, the Taliban, f r o m Afghanistan, the nation’s spymaster said Sunday. CIA Director Leon PANETTA Panetta’s assessment comes as President Barack Obama advances a risky new war plan that relies on 98,000 U.S. troops to prop up the Afghan government and prevent al-Qaida from returning. No longer overseeing the commander in chief’s mission is Gen. Stanley McChrystal, sacked this past week in a stunning shake-up in U.S. military leadership after his critical comments about the White House. “We’re seeing elements of progress, but this is going to be tough,” Panetta told ABC’s “This Week.” He said al-Qaida’s evolving attack strategy increasingly relies on operatives without any record of terrorism involvement or those already in the U.S. As for Osama bin Laden, Panetta said it’s been years since the U.S. had good intelligence about his whereabouts. Panetta estimated there are fewer than 100 al-Qaida militants operating inside Afghanistan, with the rest hiding along Pakistan’s mountainous western border. He said U.S. drone strikes and other spy operations have helped to “take down” half of al-Qaida’s senior leaders.
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 11A
704/933-1077 *All prices plus tag, tax & $389 admin fee
PRICES GOOD
Other GREAT deals at www.benmynattpreowned.com THRU 07-02-10
THE BEST DEALS ARE UNDER THE SIGN ON HWY 29!
No. 60079
No. 60160
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Donna Gantt Bowers Penland, 635 Statesville Blvd., Salisbury, NC 28144. This is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 16th day of September, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. This the 9th day of June, 2010. Donna Bowers Leonard, Executor of the estate of Donna Gantt Bowers Penland, File #10E326, 685 Leonard Rd., Salisbury, NC 28146 Attorney at Law, Graham Carlton, 109 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Judy A. Hill, 819 Lincolnton Road, Salisbury, NC 28144, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 4th day of October, 2010, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. Today's Date: June 23, 2010. Shannon C. Hill, as Admn. Of the estate of Judy A. Hill, deceased, File 10E142, 811 Lincolnton Road, Salisbury, NC 28144 Attorney at Law: John T. Hudson, 122 N. Lee St., Salisbury, NC 28144
No. 60081
No. 60041
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of: Robin Elaine Peacock, 345 Bonanza Dr., Salisbury, NC 28144, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 17th DAY OF September, 2010 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. This the 10th day of June, 2010. Donald G. Peacock, Sr., Administrator of the estate of Robin Elaine Peacock, File #10E628, 345 Bonanza Dr., Salisbury, NC 28144 Attorney At Law, Graham Carlton, 109 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144
No. 60110
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having Qualified as Co-Executor for the estate of Ronnie Venson Wilkerson, 927 N. Jackson St., Salisbury, NC 28144, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporation having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of September, 2010 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. This the 1st day of June, 2010. Pat Pack Wilkerson, Co-Executor of the estate of Ronnie Venson Wilkerson, File #10E594, 927 N. Jackson St., Salisbury, NC 28144, Buddy Lomax, Co-Executor, 9982 Old Salisbury Rd., Linwood, NC 27299 Attorney at Law, Richard D. Locklear, P.O. Box 56, Landis, NC 28088
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF ROWAN 2010-SP-370
No. 60112
IN RE: DAVID A. WATSON and LAURA R. WATSON, Foreclosure of that Deed of Trust dated August 20, 2003, recorded in Book 984 at Page796, Rowan County Registry, Under Foreclosure By: K. Todd Phillips, Substitute Trustee.
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by Pamela Louise Morrison, a single person, dated June 6, 2007 and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rowan County, North Carolina, recorded on June 13, 2007, in Book 1096 at Page 664; and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will place for sale, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale at Rowan County Courthouse, in Salisbury, North Carolina at 1:00 PM on Wednesday, June 30, 2010, that parcel of land, including improvements thereon, situated, lying and being in the City of China Grove, County of Rowan, State of North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:
Pursuant to the order of the Clerk of Court of Rowan County and under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson dated August 20, 2003 and recorded in Book 984 at Page 796 in the Rowan County Registry, and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein, and pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash at the door of the Rowan County Courthouse, 210 North Main Street, Salisbury, North Carolina, at 10:00 a.m. on July 6, 2010, the following property that is located in Rowan County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a new iron on the northern side of North Church Street, corner with Corrine E. Loflin; thence with North Church Street, South 66 deg. 55 min. 49 sec. West 48.5 feet to a new iron, corner with Gladys Talley; thence with Talley's line North 23 deg. 00 min. 00 sec. West 149.51 feet to a new iron in the line of Loflin; thence two lines with Loflin as follows: (1) North 66 deg. 53 min. 14 sec. East 48.50 feet to a new iron, and (2) South 23 deg. 00 min 00 sec. East 149.55 feet to a new iron, the point and place of BEGINNING and containing 0.166 acre, more or less, and generally known as 1418 North Church Street, Salisbury, North Carolina, all as shown on the survey for Steven R. Moore and wife, Charlotte K. Moore by James T. Hill, RLS, dated March 4, 1993, a copy of a portion of which is attached hereto for further reference. Property Address:
1418 North Church Street, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144
Improvements on the Property:
Unknown
Present Record Owner(s):
David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson
The property offered pursuant to this Notice is being offered for sale, transfer, and conveyance "AS IS, WHERE IS." Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust, security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor their officers, directors, attorneys, representatives, employees, or agents make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, health, environmental, or safety conditions relating to said property, and any liability or responsibility arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition is expressly disclaimed. The Trustee may, in the Trustee's sole discretion, delay the sale for one hour as provided in North Carolina General Statutes ("Gen. Stat.") 45-21.23. At the sale, any bid must be at least $100.00 more than the immediately preceding bid. If the highest bidder is anyone other than the holder of the indebtedness, such high bidder must pay, in addition to the bid price, the fees or taxes imposed by Gen. Stat. 7A-308(a)(1) and 105 228.30 and any other tax or fee based upon the sale of the subject property or the sale price thereof. The Trustee reserves the right to require of the successful bidder at such sale a deposit of 5% of the amount bid in the form of certified funds, official bank check, or the equivalent (as provided in the Deed of Trust or by law), or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater. The sale is subject to unpaid taxes, special assessments, restrictions and easements of record, and prior liens, if any. The sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by law. Thereafter, all remaining amounts are immediately due and owing and time is of the essence. Any announcement made at the sale takes precedence over these terms of sale to the extent allowed by law. If the subject property is residential real property with less than 15 rental units, pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.16A(b), the following notice is provided: (1) An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold; and (2) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days' written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. This Is an Effort to Collect a Debt and Any Information Obtained Will Be Used for That Purpose. This the 17th day of June, 2010. SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE: K. Todd Phillips, N.C. Bar No. 13940 HARTSELL & WILLIAMS, P.A. 71 McCachern Boulevard, S.E., Post Office Box 368, Concord, North Carolina 28026-0368 Telephone: 704-786-5161
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY - 10-SP-000378
Lying and Being in China Grove Township, Rowan County, North Carolina, and more fully described as follows: BEGINNING at an iron stake on the Five Forks Road, Will C. Sherrill's corner, and runs thence South 68 West with said Sherrill's line, 370 feet to an iron stake; thence North 20-45 West 102.9 feet to an iron stake, corner of Lot No. 12; thence North 68 East 360 feet to the Five Forks Road and front corner of Lot No. 12; thence South 26 East 100 feet to the BEGINNING, containing acres, more or less, and being Lot No. 11 on the map of the L.A. Corriher Subdivision of the Sherrill and Pethel Place, Plat No. 2 and lying and being mile from the Depot of the Town of Landis, N.C. Address of property: 1255 Flat Rock Road, China Grove, NC 28023 Present Record Owners: Pamela Louise Morrison The terms of the sale are that the real property hereinbefore described will be sold for cash to the highest bidder. A deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, is required and must be tendered in the form of certified funds at the time of the sale. In the event that the Owner and Holder or its intended assignee is exempt from paying the same, the successful bidder shall be required to pay revenue stamps on the Trustee's Deed, and any Land Transfer Tax. The real property hereinabove described is being offered for sale "AS IS, WHERE IS" and will be sold subject to all superior liens, unpaid taxes, and special assessments. Other conditions will be announced at the sale. The sale will be held open for ten (10) days for upset bids as by law required. If the Trustee is unable to convey title to this property for any reason, the sole remedy of the purchaser is the return of the deposit. Reasons of such inability to convey include, but are not limited to, the filing of a bankruptcy petition prior to the sale and reinstatement of the loan without the knowledge of the Trustee. If the validity of the sale is challenged by any party, the Trustee, in his sole discretion, if he believes the challenge to have merit, may declare the sale to be void and return the deposit. The purchaser will have no further remedy. Additional Notice Where the Real Property is Residential With Less Than 15 Rental Units: An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days' written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a bona fide lease or tenancy may have additional rights pursuant to Title VII of 5.896 - Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act which became effective on May 20, 2009. Dated: June 17, 2010 David A. Simpson, P.C., Substitute Trustee, Attorney at Law Rogers Townsend & Thomas, PC, Attorneys for the Substitute Trustee (704) 442-9500 914.0000924
Call Classifieds to place your yard sale ad... 704-797-4220
12A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Rowan Public Libraries Summer Reading Series Sponsored by Sacred Heart Catholic School
Headquarters 201 W. Fisher St., Salisbury 704.216.8234 East Branch 110 Broad St., Rockwell 704.216.7842 South Library 920 Kimball Rd., China Grove 704.216.7728
Make a SPLASH at Rowan Public Libraries
Call your local branch for program dates and times.
C h i l d r e n ' s Pr o g r a m s - M a k e a S p l a s h Begin the week of June 14th
GUPPIES - 12-24 Month Old Children
SEAHORSES - 3-5 years old
MINNOWS - 2 years old (must be 2 by May 1st)
SHARKS - Rising 1st through 5th graders
Runs for 4 weeks Begins at 10:30 a.m. and lasts approximately 30 minutes Mondays: East Branch Tuesdays: Headquarters Thursdays: South Library
Runs for 4 weeks Begins at 10:30 a.m. and lasts approximately 30 minutes Tuesdays: East Branch Wednesdays: South Library Thursdays: Headquarters
-AKE A 30,!3(
Runs for 7 weeks Begins at 10:30 a.m. and lasts approximately 30-45 minutes Mondays: South Library Wednesdays: Headquarters Thursdays: East Branch
Runs for 7 weeks Each program lasts approximately 45 minutes Tuesdays: South Library at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays: East Branch at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays: Headquarters at 2:00 p.m.
4FBSDI UIF OFXT
N_\e pfl Ô e[ fe\ f] k_\ ]fccfn`e^ `e k_\ e\nj# dXib fi Zfcfi fe\ f] k_\ jkXiÔ j_ Xe[ [Xk\ pfli \oXdgc\1
Te e n Pr o g r a m s - M a k e Wa v e s Mondays: East Branch from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Tuesdays: Headquar ters from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Thursdays: 3:30-5:00 p.m.
LETTERBOXING 101: June 14th-17th
SOUND FACTORY: July 12th-15th
LIGHT PAINTING: June 21st-24th
PHOTO SCAVENGER HUNT: July 19th-22nd
WATER CRAFTS: June 28th-July 1st
BEACH BLAST & PRIZE AUCTION July 29th
Letterboxing and how to create your own stamp Paint a digital picture using glow sticks
Create a digital sound effect library
Scavenger hunt throughout the library
Get creative using water and other art supplies
UNDERWATER EXPLORATIONS: June 6th-8th
End of summer celebration at South Library from 5:30-7:00 p.m.
Horizons presents
;8K< VVVV(% VVVV)% VVVV*% VVVV+% VVVV,% VVVV-% VVVV.% VVVV/% VVVV0%
K_\ nfi[ ÈnXk\iÉ fi k_\ c\kk\ij kf jg\cc ÈnXk\iÉ 8 nfi[ k_Xk pfl XjjfZ`Xk\ n`k_ nXk\i K_\ eXd\ f] X Yf[p f] nXk\i Fe\ f] k_i\\ ]fidj f] nXk\i 8e fYa\Zk k_Xk j`ebj `e nXk\i 8e fYa\Zk k_Xk Õ fXkj 8e Xe`dXc fi gcXek k_Xk c`m\j `e fi Xifle[ k_\ nXk\i 8 kfp fi kffc ]fi gcXp`e^ fi nfib`e^ n`k_ nXk\i Jfd\fe\ ZfeZ\ie\[ XYflk k_\ hlXc`kp f] nXk\i
5HRHS 8NTQ KHAQ@QX I\X[ X Yffb XYflk Xe Xe`dXc fi gcXek k_Xk c`m\j `e fi Xifle[ k_\ nXk\i fi cffb ]fi `e]fidXk`fe XYflk Xefk_\i `k\d c`jk\[ XYfm\%
www.row anpubliclibrary.org Visit our website for more information. Click on Make a Splash for children or Make Waves for teens
A Sea Turtle Story
THE STORY SO FAR… A female loggerhead sea turtle (Pancake) is hit by a boat and badly injured. The poor turtle becomes trapped in heavy surf and is in real danger of drowning or being stranded on the shore. Several beach-goers see the struggling sea turtle and call for help. But, will rescuers reach Pancake in time?
Chapter Two The Rescue Not a minute too soon, the rescuers reached the hurt turtle. Gently they wrapped Pancake in towels soaked with seawater and strapped her onto a special carrier. The rescuers took Pancake to a nearby animal clinic. Luckily the vet, Dr. Mary, was there. She had had experience with all kinds of wildlife. Pancake was in good hands! The first thing Dr. Mary did was to examine Pancake, clean her wounds and give her a shot to guard against infection. Pancake’s shell or carapace was badly cut. She would need extensive surgery to repair her carapace. Dr. Mary did the best she could, but she had limited resources at her clinic. She called the Vet School at the State University. The doctors there were some of the best and had helped other sea turtles with injuries just like Pancake’s. The school would have the surgeons and equipment needed to help Pancake! Volunteers rushed Pancake to the Vet School. They kept her comfortable and watched her carefully on the trip. Once there, doctors operated to fix Pancake’s shell. They used screws, pins and metal plates to hold it together! Then the doctors put a bandage on the sea turtle. Pancake would
“Right away, Jan,” Lolly said. She hurried to get her cleaning supplies. Lolly never minded cleaning or any of the other jobs she was asked to do. She was eager to help. Lolly worked hard scrubbing the turtle tank. She wanted to make sure that it was clean for the new patient. Lolly always worked hard even though she didn’t get paid. Lolly was a volunteer. She and other volunteers helped keep the hospital running smoothly. Just as Lolly finished getting the turtle tank ready, Pancake arrived. The scared sea turtle was carried in on a stretcher. Pancake was carefully placed on a table. The staff examined her bandages and discussed what they needed to do to care for the injured turtle. Lolly helped calm the frightened turtle. Gently, she patted the turtle’s back. “There, there…” Lolly talked softly as the staff looked Pancake over. “What a good girl you are!” Pancake seemed to respond to Lolly and relax under her tender touch. Lolly listened intently as Jan described
Pancake’s injuries. She paid close attention to the details of what would be done to help the turtle get well. “Poor Pancake,” Lolly whispered softly, “don’t worry. We’ll take good care of you!” Lolly had helped take care of lots of turtles before. She cared deeply about each and every one. But she felt a special bond with this turtle. Pancake seemed to feel it too. Lolly was determined to do all she could to help Pancake get well. Someday she hoped the sea turtle would be well enough to be returned back to her ocean home. But only time would tell! Next Time… The Sea Turtle Hospital Illustrated By Vicki Wallace Copyright 2001 by Mary Maden. All rights reserved. Mary Maden is an award-winning author. Visit her on the web at: www.marymaden.com!
Sacred Heart Catholic School…
Where reading is COOL!
Academics
Faith
Tradition
Come visit! Everyone is welcome! Our new campus is located at 385 Lumen Christi Lane in Salisbury. Call 704.633.2841 for more information or visit our website www.salisburycatholic.org
R121638
By Mary Maden
be all right; her injuries would heal. But it would take time and lots of special care for the sea turtle to get better. Pancake needed to go to a place where she could get the care she needed. Pancake would have to depend on people to help her. The doctors knew just what to do. They would send Pancake to a very special place to get well. They would send her to a hospital just for sea turtles! One of the doctors at the Vet School, Dr. Beth, called the sea turtle hospital to see if they could take Pancake. “Jan, can you take a female loggerhead turtle?” Dr. Beth asked the nice lady who ran the hospital. “What’s wrong with her?” Jan questioned. “A boat hit her,” Dr. Beth answered. “The turtle’s carapace was badly cut by the propeller. We patched her up, but she still needs lots of care.” “We’ll make room!” Jan said. “Tell me more about the turtle’s injuries.” Dr. Beth began describing Pancake’s injuries and explaining the details of her course of treatment when a young girl burst through the door. Lolly was in a hurry––as always! She couldn’t wait to get to work. Lolly loved her job at the sea turtle hospital. Her official title was “Junior Biologist.” Although Lolly was still a very young lady, she was as dedicated as anyone when it came to helping sea turtles. Lolly took her job seriously and was very responsible. Lolly had already decided that she wanted to be a marine biologist when she grew up. “Jan!” Lolly called out. “I decided to come in a little early…” Lolly quit talking when she saw that Jan was on the phone. “Okay, we’ll be ready. Thanks, Beth.” Jan finished her conversation with Dr. Beth and hung up. “What good timing!” Jan cried. “We have a loggerhead on its way. I need you to get a tank ready.”
S46865
A Quality Serials Story
SPORTS Master Blaster Old man
Moyer pitches Phillies past Blue Jays/4B
Ronnie Gallagher, Sports Editor, 704-797-4287 rgallagher@salisburypost.com
1B
MONDAY
June 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
www.salisburypost.com
RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST
Keith Dorsett acknowledges the cheers of the fans with a smile after chipping in from off the green on No. 14 during his Rowan Masters victory on Sunday at the Warrior Golf Club.
Champ was on a mission at Warrior C
HINA GROVE — Keith Dorsett hadn’t won a major golf tournament in two years and people were letting him know about it. Not directly, of course. “I’ve just been hearing some comments that I’m not as good as people make me out to be,” Dorsett said RONNIE while sitting GALLAGHER in the Warrior Golf Club pro shop Sunday afternoon. “I’ve been playing pretty good but not as good as I’d like to be.” Sounds like Tiger Woods on the PGA Tour, huh? Tiger hasn’t come through since all of the drama surrounding the star and his wife. Dorsett has now. He won the eighth-annual Rowan Masters golf tournament
yesterday, beating 16-yearold high school junior Alex Nianouris 3 & 2. Dorsett was without a doubt the steadiest and most consistent golfer on the 6,609-yard, par 71 course during a three-day endurance test that included beating talented golfers and a burning sun. He played five rounds of golf — two rounds each on Saturday and Sunday — and showed no mercy. He got up on his opponents and never let them back in. “I wanted to prove I could still do it,” Dorsett said. • Dorsett is being too hard on himself. Why would anyone think the former South Rowan star doesn’t have what it takes to win major golf tournaments. In the past two years, he has always contended, but as he said Sunday, there are plenty of great players in this county.
Dorsett wins Rowan Masters for 5th time BY RONNIE GALLAGHER
RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST
Keith Dorsett said he had something to prove this weekend. And don’t forget. Dorsett has now won five of the eight Rowan Masters. You didn’t find anyone at the Warrior this weekend questioning his ability. “Keith’s a really good golfer,” Warrior pro Brian
Johnson passes Busch
Lee kept saying throughout the weekend.“I’ve known him since he was in diapers.” “He’s so good,” said Nianouris. “It was an honor to play against him.”
See GALLAGHER, 3B
CHINA GROVE — Alex Nianouris did not lose the Rowan Masters championship at the Warrior Golf Course on Sunday. Keith Dorsett won it. Dorsett rolled in an 18-footer for birdie on No. 17 to defeat the Salisbury High teenager 3 & 2 and take his fifth title in the eight years of the event. It was the second match for each on Sunday. Dorsett took care of Jason Meadows 3 & 2 and Nianouris defeated two-time defending champion Ronnie Eidson 1-up in morning semifinal matches to set up the meeting. But Dorsett was simply too tough. He led by two strokes going into the turn and never allowed Nianouris to even things up. “He doesn’t give you many shots to work with,” Nianouris admitted after-
NIANOURIS
gle stroke. A pivotal hole all weekend was the par-5, 532-yard 13th. Dorsett missed an eagle try and settled for birdie. Nianouris missed a 15-foot birdie opportunity and Dorsett’s lead was back to two shots. The 14th is where Dorsett took total command, chipping in for a three-shot lead with four holes left. Nianouris showed no nerves, however, getting a birdie on 15 to rally back within two. That impressed Dorsett.
See MASTERS, 3B
LEGION BASEBALL
South routs Mocksville BY JORDAN HONEYCUTT sports@salisburypost.com
MOCKSVILLE — The S o u t h S. Rowan 13 Rowan LeMocksville 1 gion team showed off its offensive prowess yet again in hot and humid Mocksville on Sunday night. South scored five runs in the eighth inning after piling up eight other runs through
BY JENNA FRYER Associated Press
LOUDON, N.H. — Kurt Busch tried to bump-and-run past Jimmie Johnson for a win. What he really did was anger the four-time Cup champion. “I thought, I don’t care if I win this race or not,” Johnson said. “I don’t care if I finish this damn thing. I’m running into him and get by him one way or another.” Johnson paid back Busch with a poke of his own in the final stretch to surge ahead with two laps left and win the Sprint Cup race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on Sunday for his fifth victory of the season. “For sure, that’s what the fans want to see,” Johnson said. Busch grabbed the lead with about seven laps left when he nudged Johnson in the left rear and out of the way. Johnson ran down Busch and quickly got side-by-side to energize what had been a lackluster race on the 1.058-mile track.
w a r d . “ Y o u have to win off birdies.” N i anouris tried. He birdied No. 10 to get within a sin-
rgallagher@salisburypost.com
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jimmie Johnson celebrates after winning the NASCAR Lenox Industrial Tools 301.
Thomas starts Rowan runaway BY JAKE MILLER
sports@salisburypost.com
Johnson put a little bump on Busch to move him up the track, allowing the No. 48 to slip underneath for the victory. His five wins tie Denny Hamlin for the series lead. “I’m not good at doing that stuff,” Johnson said. “Usually I crash myself in the process. So I tried it once and moved him. The second time I moved him out of the way
See RACE, 3B
South won going away, getting more of a test from Mother Nature’s nearly unbearable dry heat than it did from the home team at Rich Park. Leading the way for coach Michael Lowman’s squad offensively were the table setHOUSTON ZUBILLAGA ters — Blake Houston and Julio Zubillaga. the previous seven to 10-run Houston was 3-for-5, inrule Mocksville 13-1 in eighth See SOUTH, 4B innings.
LEXINGTON — All it took was one Rowan 12 swing, but Lexington 4 R o w a n County’s Luke Thomas turned Sunday’s tilt with LexingtonDavidson from a relative pitchers’ duel into a runaway game.
With two on and two out in the top of the eighth inning and Rowan County leading 4-3, Thomas sent a full-count THOMAS pitch — the last of 138 thrown by Post 8 starter Clark Beeker — well over the fence
in center field. The visitors tacked one more in the eighth and four more in the ninth to outpace Lexington-Davidson 12-4 at Holt-Moffitt Field in both teams’ regular-season finales. A win over Stanly County on Saturday solidified a playoff spot for Post 8, but it drops to 7-11 in Area III Southern
See ROWAN, 4B
SCOREBOARD
2B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
TV Sports Monday, June 28 COLLEGE BASEBALL 7:30 p.m. ESPN — World Series, finals, game 1, UCLA (51-15) vs. South Carolina (52-16), at Omaha, Neb. GOLF 3:30 p.m. TGC — PGA of America, Professional National Championship, second round, at French Lick, Ind. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Washington at Atlanta SOCCER 10 a.m. ESPN — FIFA, World Cup, round of 16, Netherlands vs. Slovakia, at Durban, South Africa 2:30 p.m. ESPN — FIFA, World Cup, round of 16, Brazil vs. Chile, Johannesburg TENNIS 6:30 a.m. ESPN2 — The Championships, fourth round, at Wimbledon, England 10 a.m. NBC — The Championships, fourth round, at Wimbledon, England (live and same-day tape) 1 p.m. ESPN2 — The Championships, fourth round, at Wimbledon, England
Area schedule Monday, June 28 AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL 7 p.m. South Rowan at Statesville (South Iredell High School) Mocksville at Kannapolis Concord at Mooresville INTIMIDATORS BASEBALL 7:05 p.m. Augusta GreenJackets at Kannapolis JUNIOR LEGION BASEBALL 7 p.m. Salisbury at Lexington
South Atlantic Standings Northern Division W L Pct. GB Greensboro (Marlins) 3 1 .750 — x-Lakewood (Phillies) 3 1 .750 — Hagerstown (Nats) 2 2 .500 1 Hickory (Rangers) 2 2 .500 1 Delmarva (Orioles) 1 3 .250 2 Kannapolis (ChiSox) 1 3 .250 2 West Virginia (Pirates)1 3 .250 2 Southern Division W L Pct. GB Greenville (Red Sox) 3 01.000 — 1 ⁄2 Augusta (Giants) 3 1 .750 Asheville (Rockies) 2 1 .667 1 1 Lexington (Astros) 2 2 .500 1 ⁄2 Rome (Braves) 2 2 .500 11⁄2 x-Savannah (Mets) 1 2 .333 2 Charleston (Yankees) 0 3 .000 3 x-clinched division Sundays Games Rome 6, Lexington 3 Hickory 4, Hagerstown 1 West Virginia 6, Greensboro 5 Augusta 17, Kannapolis 14 Lakewood 4, Delmarva 2 Asheville 2, Savannah 0, 3 innings, susp. Mondays Games Rome at Lexington, 12:05 p.m. West Virginia at Greensboro, 12:30 p.m. Greenville at Charleston, 7:05 p.m. Augusta at Kannapolis, 7:05 p.m. Hickory at Hagerstown, 7:05 p.m.
American Legion
Lakewood at Delmarva, 7:05 p.m. Asheville at Savannah, 7:05 p.m.
Standings Area III Southern Division W L Overall Mooresville 14 3 17-4 South Rowan 13 3 18-4 Rowan County 14 4 21-8 Kannapolis 9 8 10-11 Wilkes County 8 8 8-8 Lexington 7 11 11-14 Mocksville 6 11 9-13 Concord 5 11 7-12 Stanly 5 12 7-12 Statesville 3 13 4-14 Saturdays games South Rowan 8, Stanly 7 South Rowan 13, Concord 8 Lexington 14, Stanly 10 Kannapolis 13, Wilkes 10 Statesville 6, Mocksville 5 Rowan 6, Mooresville 0 Sundays games South Rowan 13, Mocksville 1 Rowan 12, Lexington 4 Mooresville 5, Huntersville 1 Wilkes 7, Statesville 3 Mondays games South Rowan at Statesville Mocksville at Kannapolis Concord at Mooresville Stanly at Wilkes Tuesdays games Mocksville at Western Forsyth South Rowan at Wilkes Statesville at Concord Northern Division W L Overall 11 4 12-5 10 5 16-12 10 5 10-6 10 5 10-11 8 7 11-10 8 8 12-9 4 11 4-13 4 11 5-12 3 12 4-18
Western Forsyth Randolph High Point Burlington Kernersville Surry Thomasville Winston-Salem E. Randolph
College baseball World Series Championship Series (best-of-3) Monday, June 28: UCLA (51-15) vs. South Carolina (52-16), 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 29: UCLA vs. South Carolina, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 30: UCLA vs. South Carolina, 7:30 p.m., if needed
ML Baseball Standings National League
East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 44 32 .579 — 1 ⁄2 New York 43 32 .573 Philadelphia 40 33 .548 21⁄2 1 Florida 35 40 .467 8 ⁄2 Washington 33 43 .434 11 Central Division W L Pct GB Cincinnati 42 34 .553 — 1 ⁄2 St. Louis 41 34 .547 Milwaukee 34 41 .453 71⁄2 1 Chicago 33 42 .440 8 ⁄2 Houston 29 47 .382 13 Pittsburgh 25 50 .333 161⁄2 West Division W L Pct GB San Diego 45 30 .600 — San Francisco 40 34 .541 41⁄2 Los Angeles 40 35 .533 5 Colorado 39 36 .520 6 Arizona 30 46 .395 151⁄2 Sundays Games Cleveland 5, Cincinnati 3 N.Y. Mets 6, Minnesota 0 San Diego 4, Florida 2 Detroit 10, Atlanta 4 Philadelphia 11, Toronto 2 Baltimore 4, Washington 3 Arizona 2, Tampa Bay 1 Chicago Cubs 8, Chicago White Sox 6 Milwaukee 3, Seattle 0 Kansas City 10, St. Louis 3 L.A. Angels 10, Colorado 3 Boston 5, San Francisco 1 Oakland 3, Pittsburgh 2 Texas 10, Houston 1 N.Y. Yankees 8, L.A. Dodgers 6, 10 innings Mondays Games N.Y. Mets (Dickey 6-0) vs. Florida (Nolasco 6-6) at San Juan, 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-2) at Cincinnati (Cueto 7-2), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 2-1) at Atlanta (T.Hudson 7-3), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Maholm 4-6) at Chicago
Cubs (R.Wells 3-6), 8:05 p.m. Houston (Norris 2-5) at Milwaukee (M.Parra 2-5), 8:10 p.m. Arizona (Haren 7-6) at St. Louis (Carpenter 9-1), 8:15 p.m. Colorado (Jimenez 13-1) at San Diego (Correia 5-5), 10:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Billingsley 6-4) at San Francisco (Zito 7-4), 10:15 p.m.
American League
East Division W L Pct GB 47 28 .627 — 46 31 .597 2 44 31 .587 3 40 36 .526 71⁄2 23 52 .307 24 Central Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 41 34 .547 — 1 ⁄2 Detroit 40 34 .541 Chicago 39 35 .527 11⁄2 Kansas City 32 44 .421 91⁄2 Cleveland 27 47 .365 131⁄2 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 46 29 .613 — Los Angeles 43 35 .551 41⁄2 Oakland 37 40 .481 10 Seattle 31 44 .413 15 Mondays Games Toronto (R.Romero 6-3) at Cleveland (Westbrook 4-4), 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 6-6) at Kansas City (Lerew 0-1), 8:10 p.m. Detroit (Bonderman 3-5) at Minnesota (Liriano 6-5), 8:10 p.m. New York Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore
Sundays boxes Red Sox 5, Giants 1 Boston
San Francisco h bi ab r h bi 2 1 Torres cf 4 1 1 0 1 0 FSnchz 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 A.Huff lf 4 0 0 1 1 1 Posey 1b 4 0 0 0 2 0 Renteri ss 4 0 2 0 0 0 BMolin c 4 0 1 0 0 0 Sndovl 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 Schrhlt rf 3 0 0 0 2 1 Linccm p 0 0 0 0 1 0 Rownd ph 1 0 1 0 0 1 Runzler p 0 0 0 0 Bmgrn ph 1 0 0 0 Mota p 0 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Burrell ph 1 0 0 0 DBatst p 0 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 11 5 Totals 32 1 5 1 Boston 121 000 001—5 San Fran 100 000 000—1 Dp—San Francisco 1. Lob—Boston 9, San Francisco 5. 2b—Hall (5), D.mcdonald (8). 3b—J.drew (2). Hr—D.ortiz (16), Beltre (12). Sb—Torres 2 (13). Cs—Scutaro (3). Sf— Lester. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Lester W,9-3 9 5 1 1 1 9 San Francisco Lincecum L,8-3 3 5 4 4 3 4 Runzler 2 1 0 0 0 5 Mota 1 1 0 0 1 1 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 2 D.Bautista 1 1 0 0 0 2 Romo 1 2 1 1 0 1 T—2:51. A—41,528 (41,915). ab Sctaro ss 5 Nava lf 5 D.Ortiz 1b 4 Beltre 3b 1 Youkils 3b 5 VMrtnz c 1 Varitek c 3 J.Drew rf 3 Hall 2b 4 DMcDn cf 3 Lester p 2
r 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0
Athletics 3, Pirates 2 Pittsburgh Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Tabata lf 4 0 2 1 Crisp cf 3 0 0 1 Crosby 2b 4 0 1 0 Barton 1b 4 0 0 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 1 0 CJcksn lf 3 0 0 0 GJnes 1b 4 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 1 1 1 Dumit dh 3 0 0 0 RSwny rf 4 0 0 0 Milledg rf 4 1 2 1 Kzmnff 3b 3 0 0 0 AnLRc 3b 2 1 1 0 Cust dh 2 1 1 0 DlwYn ph 1 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 3 0 0 0 Jarmll c 4 0 0 0 Pnngtn ss 2 1 1 0 Cdeno ss 3 0 0 0 Alvrez ph 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 8 2 Totals 28 3 3 2 Pittsburgh 000 000 200—2 Oakland 001 010 01x—3 E—G.jones (5), Ohlendorf (4), Jaramillo (2), A.mccutchen (4), Breslow (1). Dp—Oakland 3. Lob—Pittsburgh 8, Oakland 5. 2b—Tabata (4), Crosby (8). Hr—Milledge (1), K.suzuki (10). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Ohlendorf 6 2 2 0 4 3 Meek L,3-2 2 1 1 0 0 4 Oakland G.Gonzalez 6 4 1 1 4 2 Ziegler Bs,2-2 1 2 1 1 0 0 Breslow W,3-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 A.bailey S,14-17 1 2 0 0 1 0 G.Gonzalez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—2:37. A—15,238 (35,067).
Padres 4, Marlins 2 San Diego ab Gwynn cf 4 Eckstn 2b 4 AdGnzl 1b 5 Headly 3b 3 Torreal c 4 Venale rf 3 Denorfi lf 2 R.Webb p 0 Salzar ph 1 Mujica p 0 Grgrsn p 0 ECbra ss 3 Latos p 1 Cnghm lf 2
Florida h bi ab r h bi 2 0 Coghln lf 5 1 1 0 1 0 GSnchz 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 3 0 1 0 1 1 Cantu 3b 4 0 2 1 2 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 1 0 1 3 C.Ross rf 3 1 1 0 1 0 RPauln c 2 0 0 0 0 0 Bonifac cf 4 0 2 1 0 0 AnSnch p 2 0 0 0 0 0 Lamb ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 T.Wood p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tnkrsly p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sanchs p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nunez p 0 0 0 0 Helms ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 4 Totals 33 2 8 2 San Diego 100 001 020—4 Florida 000 001 100—2 E—Eckstein (1), Uggla (7), Cantu (8). Dp— San Diego 3, Florida 1. Lob—San Diego 8, Florida 9. 2b—Uggla (15), C.ross (18). Hr— Venable (8). Sb—Bonifacio (2). Cs—Gwynn (4). S—Latos. Sf—Venable. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego 5 1 1 4 5 Latos 52⁄3 3 1 1 1 0 Webb W,3-1 11⁄3 Mujica H,4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gregerson S,1-3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Florida Ani.Sanchez 6 4 2 1 4 1 2 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 T.Wood 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Tankersley 2 2 2 0 0 Sanches L,0-1 2⁄3 Nunez 1 0 0 0 1 1 WP—Latos. T—2:58. A—16,044 (38,560). r 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Royals 10, Cardinals 3 St. Louis Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h bi Schmkr rf 2 1 0 0 Pdsdnk lf 5 3 2 0 Lopez 2b 4 0 1 0 Kendall c 5 2 3 4 Pujols 1b 3 1 1 1 DeJess cf 5 0 3 2 Hollidy dh 3 0 0 1 BButler dh 4 0 0 0 Freese 3b 3 0 0 0 JGuilln rf 3 0 2 1 LaRue c 1 0 0 0 Getz ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Rasms cf 3 1 1 1 Callasp 3b 4 1 1 0 Winn lf 3 0 0 0 Aviles ss 3 1 0 0 Stvinh ph 1 0 0 0 Betemt 1b 4 2 2 3 YMolin c 2 0 0 0 Blmqst rf 4 1 2 0 Miles 2b 2 0 1 0 B.Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 3 4 3 Totals 3810 1510 St. Louis 100 010 001—3 Kansas City 032 200 03x—10 E—B.ryan (11). Dp—St. Louis 2. Lob—St. Louis 6, Kansas City 8. 2b—Kendall 2 (14). Hr—Pujols (16), Rasmus (16), Betemit (3). Sb—Pujols (7), B.Ryan 2 (6), Podsednik 2 (22). Sf—Holliday. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis J.garcia L,7-4 2 4 5 5 2 0 Boggs 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 5 5 0 2 Ottavino 4 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 D.Reyes Kansas City Chen W,4-2 5 2 2 2 4 5 Farnsworth 2 1 0 0 0 0 Tejeda 1 0 0 0 0 1 Bl.Wood 1 1 1 1 0 1 J.Garcia pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. HBP—by D.Reyes (Getz), by Chen (Schumaker). T—2:55. A—32,938 (37,840).
Angels 10, Rockies 3 Colorado Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi JHerrr 2b 4 0 1 0 EAyar ss 5 0 2 0 Helton 1b 4 0 0 0 HKndrc 2b 5 0 1 0 CGnzlz cf 4 1 3 0 BAreu rf 3 2 1 0 Giambi dh 3 0 1 1 Willits rf 0 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 4 0 1 0 TrHntr cf 4 1 1 0 Iannett c 4 1 1 0 HMatsu dh 3 1 1 1 Stwart 3b 3 1 1 1 JRiver lf 4 2 1 1 Mora 3b 1 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 2 2 1 3 Splrghs rf 4 0 0 0 JMaths c 4 0 0 0 Barmes ss4 0 2 1 BrWod 3b 3 2 1 4 Totals 35 310 3 Totals 3310 9 9 Colorado 010 100 100— 3 Los Angeles 000 410 05x—10 E—Stewart (7), Iannetta (3). Dp—Colorado
1. Lob—Colorado 6, Los Angeles 4. 2b—Giambi (5), Iannetta (3), J.rivera (13). 3b— B.abreu (1). Hr—Stewart (9), Napoli (13), Br.wood (3). Cs—Barmes (1). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado J.chacin L,4-7 6 5 5 2 3 12 1 2 2 1 0 F.Morales 11⁄3 2 ⁄3 3 3 3 1 1 Corpas Los Angeles 8 3 3 1 7 Santana W,8-5 62⁄3 1 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 S.shields H,1 Jepsen H,17 1 1 0 0 0 1 F.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:53. A—37,314 (45,285).
Orioles 4, Nationals 3 Washington Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Morgan cf 4 0 0 0 CPttrsn lf 4 1 1 0 AKndy 2b 4 0 2 0 MTejad 3b 4 0 2 1 Zmrmn 3b 3 1 1 0 Markks rf 3 0 0 0 A.Dunn dh2 0 0 0 Wggntn 1b 4 0 0 0 Wlngh lf 4 1 1 1 CIzturs ss 0 0 0 0 Berndn rf 3 1 1 2 Scott dh 3 1 1 0 Morse 1b 4 0 0 0 AdJons cf 3 1 1 1 AlGzlz ss 3 0 0 0 Wieters c 3 1 1 0 WHrrs ph 0 0 0 0 SMoore 2b 3 0 1 1 Nieves c 3 0 0 0 Lugo ss 3 0 1 0 IRdrgz ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 3 5 3 Totals 30 4 8 3 Washington 000 300 000—3 Baltimore 000 030 01x—4 E—A.kennedy (8). Dp—Baltimore 1. Lob— Washington 7, Baltimore 3. 2b—C.patterson (7), Scott (15), Ad.jones (9), Lugo (2). 3b— Willingham (2). Hr—Bernadina (5). IP H R ER BB SO Washington Atilano 7 5 3 2 0 3 Clippard L,8-5 1 3 1 1 1 0 Baltimore Guthrie 6 3 3 3 4 4 Berken 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 Ohman 0 0 0 0 2 Hrnndez W,3-6 2⁄3 Simon S,9-10 1 0 0 0 1 1 HBP—by Guthrie (A.Dunn). T—2:30. A—22,951 (48,290).
Indians 5, Reds 3 Cleveland ab Crowe cf 4 Choo rf 4 CSantn c 4 Kearns lf 2 JhPerlt 3b 4 LaPort 1b 4 C.Perez p 0 K.Wood p 0 AHrndz ss 4 J.Nix 2b 4 Talbot p 3 AMarte 1b 1
Cincinnati h bi ab r h bi 1 0 BPhllps 2b 4 1 1 0 2 4 OCarer ss 3 0 0 0 2 1 Votto 1b 3 1 2 2 0 0 Rolen 3b 3 0 0 1 1 0 Gomes lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Ondrsk p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Stubbs cf 3 0 0 0 2 0 CMiller c 3 0 1 0 0 0 L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 Arroyo p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Owings ph 1 0 0 0 JrSmth p 0 0 0 0 DHerrr p 0 0 0 0 Heisey lf 0 1 0 0 Totals 34 5 8 5 Totals 30 3 4 3 Cleveland 100 030 010—5 Cincinnati 100 000 020—3 E—O.cabrera (7). Dp—Cincinnati 2. Lob— Cleveland 4, Cincinnati 5. Hr—Choo 2 (12), C.santana (4), Votto (16). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Talbot W,8-6 7 3 1 1 3 5 C.Perez 1 1 2 2 1 2 K.wood S,6-9 1 0 0 0 0 3 Cincinnati Arroyo L,7-4 5 6 4 4 2 3 Jor.Smith 2 0 0 0 0 1 D.Herrera 1 2 1 1 0 1 Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by C.Perez (Rolen). T—2:42. A—25,877 (42,319). r 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Tigers 10, Braves 4 Detroit
Atlanta h bi ab r h bi 3 2 Prado 2b 4 1 2 0 1 2 Conrad 3b 4 2 1 0 1 0 Hinske lf 4 0 1 1 0 0 McCnn c 2 1 1 1 0 0 D.Ross c 1 0 0 0 2 1 Glaus 1b 4 0 1 1 2 3 OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 3 0 MeCarr rf 2 0 0 1 1 0 JChavz p 0 0 0 0 1 1 Hicks 3b 0 0 0 0 3 1 YEscor ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 GBlanc cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Hanson p 1 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 1 0 0 0 Infante rf 2 0 1 0 Totals 39101710 Totals 32 4 7 4 Detroit 100 522 000—10 Atlanta 000 220 000— 4 E—Hanson (1). Dp—Detroit 1, Atlanta 2. Lob—Detroit 7, Atlanta 7. 2b—Prado (23), Mccann (12), Glaus (12). Hr—Boesch (12). Sb— Damon 2 (7), Laird (2), Prado (3), Conrad (4). Cs—A.jackson (3). S—Verlander. Sf—Santiago, Me.cabrera. IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Verlander W,9-5 7 6 4 4 2 6 Coke 1 0 0 0 1 0 Valverde 1 1 0 0 0 1 Atlanta 8 6 5 2 4 Hanson L,7-5 32⁄3 C.Martinez 2 6 4 4 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 J.Chavez 21⁄3 OFlaherty 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Verlander (Conrad, Prado). WP— Verlander. T—3:14. A—26,034 (49,743). ab AJcksn cf 5 Sntiag ss 4 Damon lf 4 Coke p 0 Valvrd p 0 MiCarr 1b 4 Boesch rf 5 CGuilln 2b 3 Inge 3b 1 Kelly 3b 5 Laird c 5 Verlndr p 3 Worth 2b 0
r 2 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 2 0 0
Cubs 8, White Sox 6 Chicago (N) ab r Colvin rf 5 2 Byrd cf 5 1 D.Lee dh 5 0 Nady 1b 5 0 ArRmr 3b 5 0 ASorin lf 2 2 Soto c 4 1 JeBakr 2b 4 0 SCstro ss 4 2
Chicago (A) h bi ab r h bi 3 4 Pierre lf 4 0 1 2 1 0 Vizquel 3b 3 1 2 0 2 2 Viciedo 3b 1 0 0 0 1 0 AnJons ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 Lillirdg pr 0 0 0 0 1 1 Rios cf 5 1 2 0 3 1 Konerk dh 4 1 1 1 0 0 Quentin rf 4 0 1 2 2 0 Kotsay 1b 3 1 1 0 Przyns c 3 1 0 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 2 0 Bckhm 2b 4 1 1 1 Totals 39 814 8 Totals 35 6 11 6 Chicago (N) 003 021 020—8 Chicago (A) 200 001 003—6 Dp—Chicago (N) 2, Chicago (A) 2. Lob— Chicago (N) 6, Chicago (A) 6. 2b—D.lee (11), Ar.ramirez (7), Soto (8), S.castro (5), Beckham (10). Hr—Colvin (10), A.soriano (11), Konerko (20). Sb—Pierre (29), Rios (21). Cs— Rios (7). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago (N) Dempster W,6-6 7 9 3 3 1 8 Marshall 1 0 0 0 0 0 Marmol 1 2 3 3 3 2 Chicago (A) Danks L,7-6 5 7 6 6 2 5 T.Pena 2 4 1 1 0 2 Williams 1 2 1 1 0 0 Linebrink 1 1 0 0 0 1 Danks pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. T.Pena pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. WP—Dempster, Danks. T—2:57. A—39,682 (40,615).
Phillies 11, Blue Jays 2 Philadelphia Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi Rollins ss 6 0 3 2 JMcDnl lf 5 0 0 0 Utley 2b 4 0 1 1 AlGnzlz ss 3 1 1 0 JuCstr 2b 0 0 0 0 FLewis lf 1 0 0 0 Werth rf 5 0 0 0 JBautst rf 4 0 1 0 Hward 1b 3 3 1 0 V.Wells cf 3 1 2 2 Gload 1b 1 0 0 0 Wise cf 1 0 0 0 Victorn cf 5 2 3 1 Lind dh 3 0 0 0 BFrncs lf 5 1 3 2 A.Hill 2b 4 0 1 0 Ibanez dh 4 2 1 0 Overay 1b 4 0 0 0 Valdz 3b 5 2 0 1 JMolin c 4 0 1 0 Sardinh c 5 1 1 2 Hoffpar 3b 3 0 1 0 Totals 431113 9 Totals 35 2 7 2 Philadelphia 040 210 400—11 Toronto 002 000 000— 2 E—Ju.castro (6), Howard (8), Ale.gonzalez (11), Frasor (1), A.hill 2 (5). Dp—Philadelphia 1, Toronto 1. Lob—Philadelphia 8, Toronto 8. 2b—Howard (13), Victorino (10), B.francisco 2 (6), Sardinha (1), Ale.gonzalez (20). Hr—V.wells (19). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Moyer W,9-6 7 6 2 2 0 7 Herndon 1 1 0 0 1 0 Baez 1 0 0 0 1 0 Toronto Cecil L,7-5 42⁄3 10 7 5 1 5 0 0 0 0 1 Janssen 11⁄3 2 ⁄3 2 4 0 1 0 Frasor 1 0 0 0 2 Tallet 11⁄3 Purcey 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Tallet (Utley). PB—J.Molina. T—3:04. A—42,571 (43,651).
Mets 6, Twins 0 Minnesota New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Span cf 4 0 1 0 JosRys ss 5 0 0 0 Hudsn 2b 4 0 2 0 JFelicn cf 5 1 3 0 Mauer c30 0 0 DWrght 3b
4 1 3 2 Cuddyr 1b 3 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 4 2 2 1 DlmYn lf 4 0 0 0 Bay lf 4 1 1 0 Vlenci 3b 3 0 1 0 Barajs c 4 0 1 1 Repko rf 4 0 1 0 Francr rf 4 1 3 2 Punto ss 4 0 2 0 RTejad 2b 4 0 1 0 SBaker p 2 0 0 0 Niese p 2 0 0 0 AlBrntt p 0 0 0 0 Dessns p 0 0 0 0 Mahay p 0 0 0 0 PFelicn p 0 0 0 0 Thome ph 1 0 0 0 Tatis ph 1 0 0 0 Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Mijares p 0 0 0 0 Kubel ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 37 6 14 6 Minnesota 000 000 000—0 New York 000 240 00x—6 Dp—Minnesota 1, New York 1. Lob—Minnesota 9, New York 8. 2b—J.feliciano (2), Francoeur (13). 3b—Bay (5). Hr—D.wright (14), I.davis (9), Francoeur (8). Sb—D.wright (13). IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota 1 S.baker L,6-7 4 ⁄3 11 6 6 0 6 1 ⁄3 2 0 0 1 0 Al.Burnett 1 0 0 0 0 Mahay 11⁄3 Guerrier 1 0 0 0 0 1 Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York Niese W,5-2 6 4 0 0 3 5 Dessens 1 2 0 0 0 1 P.Feliciano 1 0 0 0 0 1 Parnell 1 1 0 0 0 1 Niese pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—3:14. A—37,644 (41,800).
Diamondbacks 2, Rays 1 Arizona
Tampa Bay h bi ab r h bi 0 0 Jaso c 2 0 0 0 0 0 Crwfrd pr 0 0 0 0 1 0 Shppch c 0 0 0 0 1 0 SRdrgz 2b 4 1 0 0 0 0 Longori 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 C.Pena 1b 4 0 1 1 1 0 Zobrist rf 3 0 0 0 1 2 Joyce lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 BUpton cf 3 0 0 0 Blalock dh 2 0 1 0 Brignc ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 2 4 2 Totals 27 1 2 1 Arizona 000 020 000—2 Tampa Bay 000 001 000—1 Dp—Arizona 1, Tampa Bay 2. Lob—Arizona 3, Tampa Bay 6. 2b—J.upton (12), C.pena (9). 3b—Ryal (1). Hr—G.parra (2). Sb—K.johnson (6), Longoria (12). IP H R ER BB SO Arizona R.lopez W,4-6 6 2 1 1 5 3 Boyer H,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.gutierrez H,7 1 0 0 0 1 1 Heilman S,2-5 1 0 0 0 1 0 Tampa Bay 1 4 2 2 3 5 W.davis L,5-9 7 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Choate Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 3 PB—Montero. T—2:46. A—25,442 (36,973). ab Jhnsn 2b 2 S.Drew ss 4 J.Upton rf 3 Monter c 4 CYoung cf 4 AdLRc dh 3 Ryal 1b 3 GParra lf 3 TAreu 3b 3
r 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0
Brewers 3, Mariners 0 Seattle
Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi ISuzuki rf 4 0 0 0 Weeks 2b 5 1 4 1 Figgins 2b 4 0 1 0 Hart rf 3 1 1 1 Bradly lf 3 0 1 0 Fielder 1b 4 0 1 1 Pauley p 0 0 0 0 Braun lf 4 0 0 0 White p 0 0 0 0 McGeh 3b 3 0 2 0 Ktchm ph 1 0 0 0 Lucroy c 4 0 1 0 JoLpz 3b 4 0 2 0 Gomez cf 4 0 1 0 JoWlsn 1b 4 0 0 0 AEscor ss 2 1 0 0 Alfonzo c 3 0 0 0 Narvsn p 3 0 0 0 JaWlsn ss 3 0 1 0 Inglett ph 1 0 1 0 MSndrs cf 3 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 JVargs p 1 0 0 0 Lngrhn lf 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 0 5 0 Totals 33 3 11 3 Seattle 000 000 000—0 Milwaukee 100 020 00x—3 E—Narveson (1). Dp—Seattle 1, Milwaukee 1. Lob—Seattle 5, Milwaukee 10. 2b— Bradley (8), Weeks (15), Hart (17), Mcgehee (17), Lucroy (3). 3b—Inglett (3). Hr—Weeks (13). Sb—Figgins (21). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle J.vargas L,6-3 5 7 3 3 1 2 Pauley 2 2 0 0 3 2 White 1 2 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Narveson W,7-4 8 4 0 0 1 7 Axford S,7-7 1 1 0 0 0 3 T—2:30. A—41,995 (41,900).
Yankees 8, Dodgers 6 (10) New York Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Jeter ss 4 0 3 0 Furcal ss 2 1 2 2 Swisher rf 4 0 0 0 Bellird 2b 4 1 1 1 Chmrln p 0 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 Cervelli ph1 0 0 0 Kemp cf 0 0 0 0 MRiver p 0 0 0 0 Ethier rf 4 0 1 1 Teixeir 1b 5 1 1 0 MnRmr lf 3 0 0 0 Rdrgz 3b 5 3 2 2 GAndrs lf 1 0 0 0 Cano 2b 5 2 2 3 Troncs p 0 0 0 0 Posada c 5 1 1 0 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Grndrs cf 4 1 0 0 Blake 3b 5 0 1 0 Gardnr lf 0 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 1 0 Huffmn lf 3 0 2 2 RMartn c 4 0 0 0 Pettitte p 1 0 0 0 RJhnsn lf 5 2 3 0 DRrtsn p 0 0 0 0 Kershw p 0 1 0 0 DMarte p 0 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0 Curtis rf 2 0 0 1 JCarrll 2b 2 1 1 0 Totals 39 8 11 8 Totals 34 6 10 4 New York 000 002 004 2—8 Los Angeles 003 200 010 0—6 E—Pettitte 2 (2). Dp—New York 2, Los Angeles 1. Lob—New York 5, Los Angeles 9. 2b—Cano (22), Furcal (11), Re.johnson 2 (7). Hr—A.rodriguez (11), Cano (15), Belliard (2). Sb—J.carroll (6). S—Pettitte, Belliard, Kershaw 3. Sf—Furcal, Ethier. IP H R ER BB SO New York Pettitte 5 6 5 4 3 5 2 ⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 D.Robertson 0 0 0 0 1 D.Marte 11⁄3 Chamberlain 1 2 1 1 1 0 M.rivera W,2-1 2 1 0 0 0 3 Los Angeles Kershaw 7 4 2 2 0 5 Belisario H,11 1 1 0 0 0 0 Broxton 1 4 4 4 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 Troncoso L,1-2 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 1 1 1 0 0 Sherrill HBP—by Kershaw (Gardner). WP— D.Robertson. T—4:02. A—56,000 (56,000). .
Late Saturday
Angels 4, Rockies 2 Colorado ab JHerrr 2b 4 Splrghs rf 3 CGnzlz cf 4 Giambi dh 4 Mora 1b 3 Olivo c 4 Stwart 3b 2 S.Smith lf 3 Brmes ss 3
Los Angeles r h bi ab r h bi 0 1 0 HKndrc 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 Frndsn 3b 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 BAreu dh 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 TrHntr cf 3 1 1 0 1 1 0 HMatsu lf 2 1 1 4 0 1 1 Willits lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 JRiver rf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 EAyar ss 3 0 0 0 BoWlsn c 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 2 5 2 Totals 28 4 4 4 Colorado 001 100 000—2 Los Angeles 400 000 00x—4 E—Stewart (6). Dp—Colorado 1, Los Angeles 1. Lob—Colorado 4, Los Angeles 1. 2b—Mora (6). Hr—Barmes (5), H.matsui (10). Cs—Olivo (4). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado Cook L,2-5 8 4 4 3 1 3 Los Angeles Saunders W,6-8 7 4 2 2 2 8 Rodney H,12 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fuentes S,13-16 1 0 0 0 1 0 T—2:12. A—39,225 (45,285).
Athletics 5, Pirates 0 Pittsburgh Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Tabata lf 3 0 1 0 Crisp cf 3 3 2 0 DlwYn dh 2 0 0 0 Barton 1b 4 0 3 4 AnLRc dh 1 0 0 0 CJcksn lf 4 0 0 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 1 1 1 GJnes 1b 4 0 0 0 RSwny rf 2 0 0 0 Doumit c 4 0 0 0 Kzmnff 3b 4 0 0 0 Alvrez 3b 3 0 0 0 Cust dh 3 1 1 0 Milledg rf 3 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 1 0 Crosby 2b 3 0 0 0 Pnngtn ss 3 0 0 0 Cdeno ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 2 0 Totals 31 5 8 5 Pittsburgh 000 000 000—0 Oakland 120 010 10x—5 Lob—Pittsburgh 5, Oakland 6. 2b—Barton 3 (20). Hr—K.suzuki (9). Sb—Tabata (4), Crisp (1), R.sweeney (1). Cs—M.ellis (1). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh D.McCtchn L,0-3 6 7 4 4 2 2 J.Thomas 1 1 1 1 1 0 Dotel 1 0 0 0 1 1 Oakland 2 2 0 0 3 10 Cahill W,7-2 7 ⁄3 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Breslow A.Bailey 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:18. A—25,068 (35,067).
SALISBURY POST
Soccer World Cup SECOND ROUND Saturday, June 26 Uruguay 2, South Korea 1 Ghana 2, Unites States 1 Sunday, June 27 Germany 4, England 1 Argentina 3, Mexico 1 Monday, June 28 Netherlands vs. Slovakia, 10 a.m. Brazil vs. Chile, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 Paraguay vs. Japan, 10 a.m. Spain vs. Portugal, 2:30 p.m.
Racing Sprint Cup Lenox Industrial Tools 301 Lineup Sundays race At New Hampshire Motor Speedway (Start position in parentheses) 1. (10) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 301 laps, 124 rating, 190 points, $264,928. 2. (25) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 301, 107, 175, $206,598. 3. (3) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 301, 114.6, 170, $173,498. 4. (16) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 301, 106.9, 160, $162,576. 5. (24) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 301, 91, 155, $150,726. 6. (5) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 301, 96.8, 155, $133,979. 7. (9) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 301, 104.8, 146, $99,500. 8. (31) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 301, 90.9, 142, $94,850. 9. (11) Joey Logano, Toyota, 301, 87.1, 138, $121,890. 10. (28) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 301, 97.8, 134, $123,701. 11. (22) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 301, 107.8, 135, $127,106. 12. (17) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 301, 118.9, 132, $116,940. 13. (12) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 301, 74.1, 124, $108,273. 14. (20) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 301, 77, 121, $95,350. 15. (6) David Reutimann, Toyota, 301, 86.8, 118, $109,456. 16. (34) Greg Biffle, Ford, 301, 73.9, 115, $87,900. 17. (33) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 300, 61.1, 112, $122,076. 18. (27) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 300, 69.7, 109, $111,404. 19. (30) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 300, 55.6, 111, $85,275. 20. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 300, 71.1, 103, $87,275. 21. (4) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 300, 80.7, 100, $93,625. 22. (26) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 300, 64.9, 97, $76,375. 23. (8) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 300, 63.2, 94, $84,400. 24. (29) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 300, 53.9, 91, $113,898. 25. (21) Carl Edwards, Ford, 299, 66.8, 88, $113,173. 26. (14) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 299, 57.2, 85, $102,010. 27. (15) Scott Speed, Toyota, 299, 53.7, 82, $91,498. 28. (13) Paul Menard, Ford, 299, 64.4, 79, $82,625. 29. (23) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 298, 55, 76, $75,350. 30. (42) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 297, 40.4, 73, $89,673. 31. (38) David Stremme, Ford, 294, 40.2, 70, $78,900. 32. (41) Kevin Conway, Ford, 292, 33.8, 67, $72,650. 33. (18) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 292, 44.2, 64, $78,450. 34. (1) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, accident, 280, 97.2, 66, $119,506. 35. (39) David Gilliland, Ford, 268, 38.8, 58, $82,123. 36. (2) Kasey Kahne, Ford, engine, 236, 104.8, 65, $120,415. 37. (40) Andy Lally, Chevrolet, brakes, 142, 33.5, 52, $69,625. 38. (35) J.J. Yeley, Dodge, brakes, 84, 35.4, 49, $69,425. 39. (7) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 68, 32, 46, $69,300. 40. (43) Todd Bodine, Toyota, transmission, 31, 30.1, 43, $69,150. 41. (37) Michael McDowell, Toyota, electrical, 24, 34.1, 40, $68,970. 42. (36) Dave Blaney, Toyota, power steering, 20, 30.9, 37, $68,840. 43. (32) Max Papis, Toyota, brakes, 11, 28.3, 34, $69,218. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 113.308 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 48 minutes, 38 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.753 seconds. Caution Flags: 4 for 19 laps. Lead Changes: 14 among 9 drivers. Lap Leaders: J.Montoya 1-36; E.Sadler 37; K.Kahne 38-105; J.Johnson 106; Ku.Busch 107; R.Newman 108; T.Stewart 109-110; K.Kahne 111-152; Ky.Busch 153176; J.Burton 177-178; Ky.Busch 179-200; J.Burton 201-287; J.Johnson 288-293; Ku.Busch 294-299; J.Johnson 300-301. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Kahne, 2 times for 110 laps; J.Burton, 2 times for 89 laps; Ky.Busch, 2 times for 46 laps; J.Montoya, 1 time for 36 laps; J.Johnson, 3 times for 9 laps; Ku.Busch, 2 times for 7 laps; T.Stewart, 1 time for 2 laps; R.Newman, 1 time for 1 lap; E.Sadler, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 2,489; 2. J.Johnson, 2,384; 3. Ky.Busch, 2,328; 4. D.Hamlin, 2,304; 5. J.Gordon, 2,302; 6. Ku.Busch, 2,288; 7. M.Kenseth, 2,204; 8. J.Burton, 2,159; 9. T.Stewart, 2,158; 10. G.Biffle, 2,126; 11. M.Martin, 2,047; 12. C.Edwards, 2,020.
Golf PGA Tour Travelers Championship Sundays final round At TPC River Highlands Cromwell, Conn. Purse: $6 million Yardage: 6,841; Par: 70 (x-Won on second playoff hole) x-Bubba Watson 65-68-67-66—266 Corey Pavin 65-66-69-66—266 Scott Verplank 67-69-66-64—266 Chris Riley 68-65-69-65—267 Padraig Harrington 64-71-69-64—268 Chad Campbell 67-70-65-66—268 Retief Goosen 68-69-64-67—268 Ricky Barnes 69-67-64-68—268 Kris Blanks 68-67-67-67—269 Brendon de Jonge 70-63-67-69—269 Vaughn Taylor 67-65-67-70—269 Justin Rose 64-62-68-75—269 Vijay Singh 65-66-73-66—270 Ryan Moore 68-67-69-66—270 Rickie Fowler 71-65-68-66—270 Nic Thompson 68-70-66-66—270 Kevin Sutherland 65-65-71-69—270 Matt Jones 65-67-68-70—270 Scott McCarron 68-66-66-70—270 Ben Curtis 65-68-64-73—270
Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Designated 1B Garrett Atkins for assignment. Activated RHP Koji Uehara from the 15-day DL. CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Placed RHP Bobby Jenks on the bereavement/family medical emergency List. CLEVELAND INDIANS—Traded 1B Russell Branyan to Seattle for OF Ezequiel Carrera and SS Juan Diaz and a player to be named. SEATTLE MARINERS—Placed DH Mike Sweeney on the 15-day DL. Called up RHP David Pauley from Tacoma (PCL). National League CINCINNATI REDS—Recalled LHP Bill Bray from Louisville (IL). Optioned RHP Sam LeCure to Louisville. FLORIDA MARLINS—Announced the resignation of first-base coach Dave Collins. Named Tarrik Brock interim first-base coach. HOUSTON ASTROS—Designated RHP Josh Banks for assignment.
Three Mustangs on All-State team From staff reports
The N.C. Softball Coaches Association has named East Rowan rising senior pitcher Chelsea White the District 6 Player of the Year and the 3A State Player of the Year. East shortstop Ericka Nesbitt and center fielder Kayla Kirk, also rising seniors, joined White on the All-State and All-District 6 teams. North Iredell’s Karley Harkey and Taylor Rosenbalm made the 3A All-State WHITE team. The list of All-State players included Mooresville’s battery of Margaret Whitestone and Hope Smith and Northwest Cabarrus’ Michaela Boyd. Northwest’s Taylor Allen was an all-district pick. District 6 includes nine counties and 27 schools.
MLB baseball Bobby Parnell (East Rowan) finished the New York Mets’ 6-0 win against Minnesota on Sunday with a scoreless ninth. Parnell struck out Jason Kubel swinging to end the game.
Minor leagues Chattanooga’s Jerry Sands (Catawba) hit a run-scoring double in the first to chase home Dee Gordon, the Dodgers’ top prospect, and a solo homer in the third. The homer was Sands’ 21st of the season and third since his promotion to the DoubleA Lookouts last week. A story on Sands is upcoming.
Legion baseball Mooresville baseball players signed a baseball for Rowan County’s Patrick Snider, who is battling cancer. The best-of-three first-round playoff series are set to begin on Thursday in Area III. Rowan, South Rowan and Mooresville will open at home against opponents still to be determined. Kannapolis should finish fourth and would also be home for the first round. Mooresville closes the regular season tonight at home against Concord. South plays Statesville at South Iredell High. Kannapolis is home against Mocksville. If both Mooresville (14-3) and South (13-3) win their remaining games, the teams would tie for first. The first tiebreaker used to determine the division’s top seed is head-to-head, and the teams split their league meetings. The second tiebreaker is runs allowed in division games. Mooresville should have the edge there. Rowan has finished the regular season. Tonight’s scheduled non-division game against Surry has been canceled. Rowan will host Area III All-Star Game activities on Wednesday. Mooresville topped Huntersville 5-1 on Sunday in non-division action. Nick Keith pitched seven innings and shut down the Area IV Eastern Division champs. Jake Beaver hit a three-run homer, and Billy Nantz also connected for the Moors.
Junior Legion The Salisbury Cavornets won 6-5 against Mocksville at Rich Park on Saturday. Mocksville scored three runs and had the bases loaded in the seventh before Salisbury pitcher Philip Tonseth got the final out on a popup to left. Tonseth pitched a six-hitter and also hit a long home run. Tonseth, Clint Veal, Scott Van der Poel and Kyle Wolfe TONSETH had two hits each.
Rowan Rampage Rowan Rampage football returns this summer. The first game is at 4 p.m. on July 10 at the Dunbar Center.
Junior Golf Salisbury’s Roy Dixon’s shot 71 in the Carolinass Junior PGA Championships held at Quail Creek in Conway, S.C. Dixon tied for eighth at 1-under. The tournament was shortened to 18 holes by bad weather.
Hole-in-one Andre Cannon made a hole-in-one at Warrior Golf Club on Sunday. Cannon aced the 177-yard No. 12 hole. He was playing with Dax Perry, Ricky Holloway and Todd Dutch.
Intimidators baseball Augusta outscored Kannapolis 17-14 in a rare slugfest at Fieldcrest Cannon Stadium on Sunday. Kannapolis trailed 8-1, battled back to take a 14-11 lead, then couldn’t hold that edge. Ian Gac hit his 14th homer for the Intimidators, while Brady Shoemaker launched his eighth of the season.
Kannapolis hoops camp A.L. Brown head boys basketball coach Shelwyn Klutz will hold a summer hoops camp on July 5-8. Camps will be held at Kannapolis Middle School and are for boys and girls ages 7-15 from 9-1 daily. The cost of the camp is $45. Contact Klutz at 704-491-3752.
SPORTS
SALISBURY POST
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 3B
RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST
Alex Nianouris chips to the green on the 16th hole. Nianouris ousted defending champion Ronnie Eidson in Sundays semifinals before falling to Keith Dorsett in the title match.
MASTERS FROM 1B “He never quit,” the champ said. “He came right back and didn’t let it bother him.” Nianouris appeared to be in deep trouble when he hit his ball out of bounds on 16. “I tried to ease a five-wood but I just finished with my hands wide open at impact. I hit in right into the hazard.” But Dorsett hit his ball in the water and the two halved the hole. Nianouris had a chance to pull closer on No. 17 when
Dorsett sent his drive left into the rough and was forced to lay up. Nianouris put his ball on the green in two and had a try for eagle. Dorsett lied three and was going for birdie. “I knew it would be in the deep rough,” Dorsett said of his tee shot. “I was going to make him make an eagle to beat me. I just wanted to play it smart.” Nianouris missed his eagle and Dorsett ended the match RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST with a birdie putt. Keith Dorsett, right, is congratulated by Alex Nianouris. “I felt I had a good chance to make that birdie,” Nianouris said, “but he came up Dorsett was gracious as the old opponent. and sunk it. It was a good two headed for the clubhouse, “He’s got a great future stroke.” praising his talented 16-year- ahead of him,” Dorsett said. “I
think he’s way past where I was at that age. I was decent but I wasn’t hitting it like he does.” • NOTES: Eidson didn’t let a semifinal loss slow him down. He beat Meadows in the thirdplace match. • With a slight breeze blowing, Dorsett said Sunday’s heat wasn’t as bad as the other two days. The thermometer still read 96 degrees. • Dorsett will go for the second leg of the Rowan County Triple Crown in the Rowan Amateur next month. “I’m not getting ahead of myself,” he said. “There’s a lot of good golfers who didn’t
come down here. But there were still a lot of good golfers here.” • Nianouris was asked if he felt any pressure in the title match. “Not really, he said. “Actually, I had more jitters in the first match.” • Lee said a key to having a good tournament was superintendant Mike Marsh, who kept the greens soft by continuously watering them. If you ask Lee, Marsh was the MVP of this year’s Rowan Masters. “He’s the best thing that’s ever happened to us,” Lee said. “This course has been in great shape for 10 years.”
GALLAGHER
Let’s answer that question with what happened next. Nianouris put his second effort on the FROM 1B green and he had a shot at eagle. Dorsett laid up and put his ball on the Dorsett showed the savvy of a veteran on green in three. He was going for a birdie. the back nine Sunday, putting distance beA Nianouris eagle and a Dorsett par would tween himself and Nianouris. tie this match up going into the final hole. He birdied 13 to go up two shots and then Didn’t happen, of course. This was faced a chip from 10 yards off the green on Dorsett’s time. No. 14. Nianouris missed his eagle, which meant “It was a straight uphill chip,” Dorsett Dorsett could wrap it up with a birdie. said. His 18-footer weaved left to right and With a lot of eyes from the spectators on dropped in. him, many of whom have been following his For the first time during the weekend, exploits on the golf course for years, Dorsett allowed himself to pump his fist and Dorsett came up big at the biggest moment. let out a yell. The ball took one bounce and hopped right “I thought I played good enough to win,” in the bottom of the cup, drawing cheers. Nianouris said. “It just didn’t happen. He’s a That put him up three with four holes to great golfer.” go, essentially sealing Nianouris’ fate. And a golfer that did exactly what he “It wasn’t awful hard,” Dorsett said of the wanted. Dorsett didn’t say much the entire shot. “But it came out a little hot. I was weekend. His game did the talking for him. lucky the pin got in the way.” “I haven’t won anything in two years,” he • mused before being presented the Rowan Nianouris didn’t give up, getting a shot Masters trophy by Lee. “I wanted to get back back on 15 with a birdie. Then, both hit in on top. “I was on a mission for this one.” the water on 16. They halved it and Dorsett Mission accomplished. was still two up with two holes to play. • RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST His drive on 17 almost rolled into a ditch. Contact Ronnie Gallagher at 704-797-4287 Keith Dorsett, right, receives his trophy from Warrior golf pro Brian Lee. Was he feeling the pressure? or rgallagher@salisburypost.com.
Kahne didn’t finish Gordon seemingly had half the field angry at him last week The NASCAR notebook ... at Infineon Raceway for agLOUDON, N.H. — Kasey gressive driving. This time, Kahne led more laps than any Montoya accused Gordon of not driver at New Hampshire Mogiving him any room. tor Speedway. “He has it coming one day,” He would haved traded them Montoya said. all to finish the race. • Kahne’s stellar early perBURTON’S BUNGLE: Jeff Burformance Sunday collapsed ton led 89 laps and had his first with about 95 laps left when his win in nearly two years in his No. 9 Ford experienced engine sight when he decided to gamtrouble. Kahne, who led 110 ble. He stayed on the track durlaps, was running third when ing a caution while all the lead his car woes hit and he started lap cars pitted for fresh tires. sliding back in the field. Burton fell behind on his old Kahne hung in there until the tires, spun into Kyle Busch and engine finally blew with 65 laps took them both out of conleft, pouring oil on the track tention. and bringing out the caution. Burton, who finished 12th, The caution ended 201 straight accepted responsibility. laps of green flag racing. “It’s easy to sit back now and He expected the engine to say we should have changed last. tires, but all we had to do was “When you put it on the drag two other cars with us and track, they’re not supposed to we’d win the race,” Burton break,” he said. “It’s probably said. “Sometimes leading the just something small inside race is a difficult position to be that happened, but when we in.” brought it here, we had no idea Busch mad a great save and that it would break. It’s ready. finished 11th. It’s prepared.” • • OH, BABY: Aric Almirola was BAD LUCK: Juan Pablo Montold not to wander anywhere toya still hasn’t won a Cup race without his cell phone. on an oval. He’s on standby for Jimmie He had a great shot Sunday Johnson for the next few races. at New Hampshire MotorJohnson’s wife, Chandra, is at speedway and was a serious home and due with their first threat to win until he got child in about three weeks. caught up with Jeff Gordon, Almirola took some spins in fell back and was plowed by the No. 48 Chevrolet at New Reed Sorenson. Sorenson, who Hampshire Motor Speedway on was down a lap, got into the Saturday to prepare for a possirear of Montoya’s No. 42 ble last-minute switch. Chevrolet and sent it into the “He’s really hoping for the wall. opportunity and I know he’ll do
RACE FROM 1B
Associated Press
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Juan Pablo Montoya, who won the pole in the race, hits the wall. an amazing job given the opportunity,” Johnson said after winning Sunday’s race. “I want to stay in my ride and try to win as many races as I can.” Almirola has 30 career Cup starts, including four this year. He has only one career top-10 finish. Johnson knows they’ll have a daughter. He feels the baby is already taking after his wife. “If she’s anything like her mother, she’ll be late, so I should be fine,” he said to laughter. “I might not have a place to sleep tonight, just for the record.” • ROUGH ROUSH: All the Roush Fenway Racing drivers had a rough day at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Each driver was a lap down at one point and Greg Biffle had the highest finish in 16th. Matt Kenseth was 17th, David Ragan was 20th and Carl Edwards was 25th. Roush Fenway hasn’t won a race all season and frustration is building in the Ford camp. “As a company, we’ve still got to keep working on it,” Ragan said.
and got by him.” Busch said his intention was to pass Johnson cleanly until he realized he could just push him out of his path. Johnson said he’d be surprised if Busch tried to purposely wreck him. “If that’s his intentions, that’d be the first time in nine years racing with him I’d experienced that,” Johnson said. “It definitely changes the way I race with him from that point on. I hate that he felt I wasn’t going to wreck him, because that was my goal, to wreck him.” “Strike that from the comments, he didn’t really mean that,” Johnson crew chief Chad Knaus interjected. Johnson didn’t believe there would be further retaliation. “He didn’t wreck me, so at the end of the day I guess I didn’t owe him,” Johnson said. The four-time defending champion pulled away to win his second straight race after taking the checkered flag last week on the road course at Infineon Raceway. It was a bump off the track that Johnson was most concerned about — his wife’s baby bump. Johnson dedicated the win to his pregnant wife, Chandra, who is at home and due with their first child around the time of the July 10 race at Chicagoland Speedway. Johnson used Aric Almirola as his standby driver. “Hopefully you didn’t go into labor with this victory,” he said to his wife. “Wait for me, I want to be a part of this.” Tony Stewart finished second and Busch was third. Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick rounded out the top five. “When you struggle as bad as we have, it definitely wasn’t going to hurt to go do something like that,” Stewart said. The 318-mile race was almost absent of cautions until the very end, with 201 straight laps of green flag racing.
Kasey Kahne drove up front for most of the race and led 110 laps until engine problems knocked him out. Pole sitter Juan Pablo Montoya also was in contention until he was knocked out late by a lapped car. Jeff Burton was a serious threat to win for the first time in two years until he made the decision not to pit with 17 laps left. He was the only lead lap driver not to pit and it cost him when he spun into Kyle Busch and took them both out of contention. Kurt Busch knew his car wasn’t strong enough to win and just hoped that late-race tap was enough to hold off Johnson. “We did what we could to get the lead,” he said. “I was just counting the laps and was like, man, there’s not enough laps. The thought was, those 10 points for winning would look a lot better stacked in our deck than in his chip count.” Johnson has stormed back to championship form. He has totally silenced the doubts that he was in a slump or appeared vulnerable during a five-race stretch from April to May. He has two straight wins for the second time this season and four straight top-six finishes. “Yeah, I don’t think we went anywhere,” Johnson said. “It was easy to overreact because we had some poor finishes and that was due to overagression.” Ryan Newman, Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Joey Logano and A.J. Allmendinger completed the top 10. One week after short tempers and rugged driving on the road course led to threats of payback, it was a tame race in New Hampshire. In this one, Montoya said Gordon “messed him up” but said he wasn’t angry with him. “I’m confused,” Johnson said to laughter. “For a while there, our sport was boring. Then we wrecked the crap out of them last week and now all of a sudden we have a problem because everybody is wrecking, and now this week it wasn’t as exciting.”
SPORTS DIGEST
4B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Moyer, Phillies win
SOUTH FROM 1B
Associated Press
The Major League Roundup ... PHILADELPHIA — Jamie Moyer gave up his record-breaking 506th home run but was sharp otherwise, and the Philadelphia Phillies took advantage of Toronto’s troubles to beat the Blue Jays 11-2 Sunday. Moyer only mistake was a two-run homer by Vernon Wells in the third inning. Moyer passed former Phillies Hall of Famer Robin Roberts for the most homers allowed in a career. The Blue Jays made a season-high four errors, including a pair by second baseman Aaron Hill, that set up six unearned runs. The 47-year-old Moyer (9-6), whose mound opponent wasn’t even born when he made his major league debut, gave up two runs and six hits in seven innings. He struck out seven and walked none. Moyer made his big league debut on June 16, 1986, 16 days before Toronto starter Brett Cecil (7-5) was born. Yankees 8, Dodgers 6, 10 innings LOS ANGELES — Robinson Cano hit a two-run homer in the 10th inning after the Yankees rallied with four runs in the ninth off Dodgers closer Jonathan Broxton and New York beat Los Angeles 8-6 Sunday night in a stunning ending to manager Joe Torre’s first series against his old team. Mark Teixeira led off the 10th with a single off Ramon Troncoso (1-2) and Alex Rodriguez grounded into a force play. Torre brought in left-hander George Sherrill, whose second pitch was driven into the left-field pavilion by Cano for his 15th homer. Mariano Rivera (2-1) pitched two scoreless innings to get the victory. Diamondbacks 2, Rays 1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Tampa Bay stars Evan Longoria and B.J. Upton had to be separated in a dugout dispute after Gerardo Parra hit a tworun homer in the fifth inning that helped Arizona beat the Rays. Cubs 8, White Sox 6 CHICAGO — The White Sox’s 11game winning streak came to an end when a ninth-inning rally fell short. The White Sox scored three times
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphias Jamie Moyer was in the majors before his opponent was born. in the bottom of the ninth. But Alex Rios struck out swinging against Carlos Marmol with runners at first and second to finish it. The White Sox had their longest winning string since a 12-game run in June 1961. Mets 6, Twins 0 NEW YORK — Jeff Francoeur and David Wright each hit a two-run homer in a victory over Minnesota. Ike Davis also went deep — very, very deep — and the Mets racked up 14 hits to back the fourth straight win by Jonathon Niese (5-2) since coming off the disabled list. Francoeur finished a triple shy of the cycle, emphatically ending a 3for-22 slide. Red Sox 5, Giants 1 SAN FRANCISCO — Jon Lester pitched a five-hitter, David Ortiz splashed a home run into McCovey C Lincecum (8-3), the two-time reigning NL Cy Young Award winner, was done after a season-low three innings having already thrown 79 pitches. Indians 5, Reds 3 CINCINNATI — Shin-Soo Choo homered twice off Bronson Arroyo — the second time he’s done it this season — and the Cleveland Indians ended their seven-game losing streak. The Indians traded power hitter Russell Branyan to Seattle for a pair of prospects before the game, conceding this season is a lost cause. Tigers 10, Braves 4 ATLANTA — Rookie Brennan Boesch homered and drove in three runs as Detroit chased Tommy Hanson early. Boesch hit an RBI single during a five-run fourth inning that finished Hanson (7-5). Boesch added a two-run homer, his 12th of the season and eighth in June, the next inning. Justin Verlander (9-5) gave up six hits and four runs in seven innings as the Tigers avoided being swept. Royals 10, Cardinals 3
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jason Kendall had a pair of two-run doubles and Jose Guillen stretched his hitting streak to 21 games for Kansas City. Wilson Betemit hit a three-run homer as the Royals took two of three from their I-70 rivals. Guillen had two singles, his first glanced off the glove of shortstop Brendan Ryan and drove in a run. His 21-game streak is the longest by a Royal since Rey Sanchez hit in 21 straight in 2001. Orioles 4, Nationals 3 BALTIMORE — Miguel Tejada singled in the tiebreaking run in the eighth inning, and the Orioles rallied for their season-high fourth straight win. Baltimore scored the game’s final four runs after trailing 3-0 in the fourth. David Hernandez (3-6) struck out both batters he faced and Alfredo Simon worked the ninth for his ninth save. Brewers 3, Mariners 0 MILWAUKEE — Chris Narveson pitched four-hit ball for eight innings and Rickie Weeks hit a leadoff homer, lifting the Brewers. Angels 10, Rockies 3 ANAHEIM, Calif. — Brandon Wood hit his first career grand slam and Mike Napoli added a three-run homer for the Angels. Ervin Santana (8-5) struck out seven in 6 2-3 innings for his second straight victory. Athletics 3, Pirates 2 OAKLAND, Calif. — Kurt Suzuki homered with two outs in the eighth inning after a dropped foul popup and the Athletics handed Pittsburgh its 17th straight road loss. National League Padres 4, Marlins 2 MIAMI, Fla. — Will Venable hit a tiebreaking two-run home run in the eighth inning, and the San Diego completed three-game sweep.
What will Week 2 produce? “My concern to be quite blunt, is I don’t want to happen what happened WIMBLEDON, England — If it’s to Denver and George Karl,” Jackson hard to imagine how this wildest of said. Wimbledons — does 70-68 ring a bell? Jackson has two replaced hips, a — could top itself in Week 2, consider sore knee requiring a brace under his all the characters still strutting on suit during the season and a previous tennis’ biggest stage. heart problem. Roger Federer, bidding for a He’s one of the most successful record-tying seventh championship at coaches in league history with a .705 the All England Club. Rafael Nadal, regular-season winning percentage, a seeking a second after declining to record 225 postseason victories and defend his 2008 title because of intwo more titles than Boston’s Red jury. Andy Roddick, yearning for one Auerbach. His Lakers beat the Boston Wimbledon trophy after three runCeltics in Game 7 of the NBA finals ner-up finishes. Andy Murray, well last week to claim their second straight aware that all of Britain is counting title, and Jackson sounds increasingly on him to end its 74-year wait for a interested in going out on top. ASSOCIATED PRESS homegrown men’s champion. But he told the governors that his Serena and Venus Williams are still A pair of sisters named Serena and 13 total championships — two as a Venus, aiming for a fifth all-Williams player — seems like an odd figure. alive at Wimbledon. final, and third in a row, at the grass“Which is a hard number to stop at court Grand Slam tournament; one or if you think about it,” he said to enthe other has won eight of the past 10 thusiastic applause. overcoming a six-stroke deficit and women’s championships. Justine beating Scott Verplank with a 3-foot WORLDCUP Henin and Kim Clijsters, back at par putt on the second hole of playoff. JOHANNESBURG — Carlos Tevez Wimbledon after years away and hop• ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Loren scored twice — once on a disputed ing to finally win it. Another former Roberts birdied the final hole for a 7goal — and Gonzalo Higuain added No. 1 and major champion, Maria under 65 and a one-stroke victory another as Argentina beat Mexico 3-1 over Fred Funk in the Dick’s Sporting Sharapova, striving to return to releon Sunday to advance to the World vance in the latter stages of big Goods Open. Cup quarterfinals. events. COLLEGEHOOPS Germany 4, England 1 Each of those names — indeed, ORLANDO, Fla. — Another son of BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa — each of the 32 men and women left in Michael Jordan appears headed to the singles draws — is featured on the Germany’s latest World Cup victory over England will be remembered not play for Central Florida. fourth-round schedule when action Jeffrey Jordan posted on his Twitfor any of the brilliant goals, but for resumes Monday, following Wimbleter account that he was off to UCF, the one that didn’t count. don’s traditional day of rest on the his “new school.” Thomas Mueller scored twice in middle Sunday. The 6-foot-1 point guard left Illithe second half and England had a PHILJACKSONUPDATE goal that the referee did not award in nois in May after playing two seaWHITEFISH, Mont. — Seeing Den- a 4-1 victory Sunday that put Gersons. He would have to sit out the ver Nuggets coach George Karl side- many into the World Cup quarterfi2010-11 season under NCAA transfer lined last season with cancer will inrules. nals. fluence Phil Jackson’s upcoming deciJeffrey Jordan would join his GOLF sion on whether to return as coach of younger brother, Marcus, who was a PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Cristie Kerr the Los Angeles Lakers, the legfreshman for UCF last season. cruised to a 12-stroke victory in the endary coach said at a meeting of NFL LPGA Championship on Sunday in Western governors on Sunday. DETROIT — Detroit Lions Presione of the most lopsided wins at a maJackson told reporters that he’s jor, leaving her in position to become dent Tom Lewand apologized after he waiting to hear from doctors on was arrested on suspicion of drunken whether he’s healthy enough to make the first American ranked No. 1. Kerr, the 2007 U.S. Women’s Open driving while at a charity golf tournait through another 82-game regular ment in northern Michigan. champion, closed with a 6-under 66 season. Lewand said that he is “deeply sorfor a 19-under 269 total. She led wireThe 64-year-old said he wouldn’t to-wire, opening with rounds of 68, 66 ry” for his actions and takes full rewant to leave his squad without a sponsibility. and 69. coach in the middle of the season, as Team spokesman Matt Barnhart • CROMWELL, Conn. — Bubba Karl was forced to do earlier this year confirmed Sunday that Lewand was Watson won the Travelers Champiwhile undergoing chemotherapy and arrested and released Friday night. onship for his first PGA Tour title, radiation for throat and neck cancer. Associated Press
SALISBURY POST
cluding a triple. He scored three runs, knocked in three more and drew a walk. Zubillaga went 3-for-6, scoring twice, driving in three runs and stealing a base. Record-setting Maverick Miles had an off night by his standards but still finished 2for-6 with two RBIs. Perhaps the most impressive performance was the gem on the mound turned in by South right-hander Randy Shepherd (3-1). Shepherd baffled the Mocksville offense, while going the distance What stood out most in Shepherd’s stat-line was eight strikeouts and zero walks, although he did hit three batters. South was playing its fourth game in a span of 48 hours. After falling to Rowan on Friday, South showed resilience and perseverance by bouncing back to sweep a day-night double header on Saturday, then completely dominated Mocksville on the road. Mocksville’s only run came courtesy of Shepherd’s only mistake, a fastball that left fielder Ryan Carter deposited over the wall in left field in the seventh. Not only did the top of South’s lineup produce, the the bottom of the order flexed its muscles and contributed greatly. No. 7 hitter Tyler Freeze, the catcher, was 2-for-4 with a run scored and an RBI. Batting eighth, third baseman Parker Hubbard went 2for-4 and made a couple of dazzling stops and throws from the hot corner. Left fielder and No. 9 batter Tripp Cross also went 2for-4 and scored twice. South is definitely dangerous enough when its big
MILES
SHEPHERD
hitters Miles, Shepherd and Gunnar Hogan are blasting homers over the walls, but when everyone contributes as they did last night and the pitching supports the bats, this South squad is super scary. South won’t return home, where it hasn’t lost, until the postseason starts on Thursday. Having one of the best seasons in its history, South will open a best-of-three series against an opponent to be determined. South plays Statesville at South Iredell tonight and makes the trip to Wilkes County on Tuesday. South (184, 13-3) looks to finish the regular season in style and still could finish first or tied for first. Mooresville (14-3) concludes its regular season against Concord tonight, while Rowan (14-4) finished up on Sunday.
S. Rowan 13, Mocksville 1 SOUTH ROWAN ab r h bi Hstn cf 5 3 3 3 Zblga 2b 6 2 3 3 Miles rf 6 0 2 2 Brdn 1b 5 0 2 1 Bsngr dh 5 2 2 0 Hogan ss 4 2 1 0 Freeze c 4 1 2 1 Hbbrd 3b 4 1 2 0 Cross lf 4 2 2 1 Totals 43 13 19 11
MOCKSVILLE ab r Ptrsn 2b 3 0 Jrdn ss 3 0 Crtnr 1b 4 0 Crtr lf 4 1 Long cf 4 0 Pttrsn rf 4 0 Brwll 3b 4 0 Byrly c 1 0 Hwrd p 3 0 Totals 30 1
h 1 2 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 8
bi 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
S. Rowan 110 210 25 — 13 Mocksville 000 000 10 — 1 E — Byerly, Jordan 2, Burwell. DP — South 1. LOB — Mocksville 10, South 12. 2B — Freeze, Jordan. 3B----- Houston. HR — Carter. SB — Zubillaga. CS —Hogan. S---- Bearden, Byerly. IP H R ER BB K S. Rowan Shpherd W,3-1 8 8 1 1 0 8 Mocksville Howard L 6 10 6 6 3 5 Cartner 2 9 7 6 3 2 WP — Cartner. HBP — by Shepherd (Peterson, Byerly, Jordan).
ROWAN FROM 1B Division play, good for sixth place. Rowan County’s 14-4 record currently sits third, but the team’s final playoff seeding could change as both Mooresville and South Rowan, the teams ahead, have games to play. For six innings, neither team could get much off the opposing pitcher. Rowan’s Zach Simpson conceded two runs on seven hits in his sixinning start, while Beeker gave up four runs through seven innings, but only one earned. Post 8 pulled one run back in the bottom of the seventh when Kelly Secrest singled home Ethan Conrad, making the game 4-3, but Beeker had 118 pitches on the odometer entering the top of the eighth. After getting the first two batters, Zach Smith and Noah Holmes singled, with Holmes moving to second on a passed SMITH ball. The next batter was Thomas, whose bomb offered no doubts to those in attendance. “We had runners on second and third and we had a full count on their DH, we threw him a fastball and he ended up hitting it into the trees,” Lexington-Davidson coach Chris Sotriffer said. “That’s a big momentum buster there.” It was a difficult conclusion for Beeker, who gave up nine hits in his first seven innings. “It was getting late, his pitch count had gotten up,” Rowan County coach Jim Gantt said. “We had seen him a couple times and we got a couple pitches to hit, but he was pretty sharp early. He did a good job.” Rowan County added four more on five hits in the ninth off Post 8 reliever Joe Tippett, plating 11 batters. Smith had a two-RBI single, Thomas notched a run-scoring fielder’s choice and Will Sapp capped the scoring with an RBI base hit. Lexington-Davidson got an RBI double from Conrad in the eighth, but Rowan’s Will Johnson closed the door in the ninth. Though Thomas’ home run proved the fatal blow, Gantt was full of praise for his
TROUTMAN
SIMPSON
starter Simpson. “That’s one of the better games he’s thrown” Gantt said. “He’s been getting better each time this summer, and he had a little bit better breaking ball tonight.” The complexion of the game might have been different, Sotriffer said, had the hosts not allowed three unearned runs early, as Preston Troutman tallied two RBIs and Smith added another. For the game, Post 8 committed six errors to Rowan County’s two, both in the first inning. “We spotted them some runs,” Sotriffer said. “Before the eighth inning, if you take those runs off the board it’s a totally different ballgame. … Beek pitched his butt off. We didn’t exactly make the plays behind him.” Should the standings hold, the teams could meet in the playoffs. Gantt said his team’s playoffs lie with starting pitching, while Sotriffer said he hopes to see his bats resurrected. “This team is very talented. As slim in numbers as we are, we’ve got very good talent,” Sotriffer said. “Our pitching is limited, but the ones we got are very quality pitchers. If we get back to the way we’ve been swinging in the midseason of the year, we can put runs on the board against anybody. It’s been done.”
Rowan 12, Lexington 4 ROWAN
ab r Trtmn ss 6 1 ZSmth rf 5 2 Hlmes 3b 5 2 Thoms dh 6 1 Sapp cf 6 1 Austin 1b 6 1 Untz 2b 6 2 Barker c 5 1 Morris lf 4 1 Totals 49 12
h bi 3 2 2 3 3 0 2 4 1 1 2 1 3 1 1 0 1 0 18 12
LEXINGTON ab Jarvis lf 5 Scrst cf 5 Tptt 2b 2 Brkhrt 1b 5 Rdmnd c 5 BSmth 3b4 Shprd ss 4 Cnrad dh 4 Goss rf 3 Totals 37
r 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4
h bi 1 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 12 4
Rowan 020 100 144 — 12 Lexington 001 100 110 — 4 E — Untz, Morris, Burkhart, Shepherd, Tippett 2, Redmond, Beeker. DP — Rowan 2. LOB — Rowan 14, Lexington 9. 2B — Austin, BSmith, Conrad. HR — Thomas (3). S — Morris, Goss. SF — Tippett. IP H Rowan Smpsn W, 3-2 6 7 Litaker 1 2 Johnson 2 2 Lexington Beeker 72⁄3 9 Tippett 12⁄3 6 PB — Barker, Redmond
R
ER
BB
K
2 1 1
2 1 1
1 1 1
5 0 3
7 5 2.
4 4
1 1
7 3
CLASSIFIED
SALISBURY POST
Employment
Employment
Employment Healthcare
Driver
Education
Merle Norman of Kannapolis is seeking an experienced Cosmetologist for booth rental. 704-933-0216
Flatbed CDL/A. $2,000 Sign On Bonus. Great pay and benefits! 6 months Experience Required. Lease Purchase Available. No Felonies. 800-441-4271, x NC100
DRIVER
Driver
CDL-A. We Have more Miles. Just Ask Our Drivers. Western Express Flatbed. Stay rolling and earn Big $$. Limited tarping. Class-A CDL, TWIC Card and Good Driving Record a must. 866-863-4117.
WTI TRANSPORTFlatbed Drivers Hauling High Paying Freight on Percentage Pay. Make more in less miles, Hometime 93% Weekends...ask us how we do it! 800828-6452. www.wtitransport.com
Fayetteville Technical Community College is now accepting proposals: Criminal Justice Curriculum Consultant (DOD Funded Grant) The primary purpose of this position is to develop exportable training packages to be used worldwide. Must have knowledge of US defense policy and have experience with online instruction and curriculum development. A completed packet including a cover letter, resume or portfolio, and copies of college transcripts, must be received in the HR Office to be considered. For further information please visit our website or call (910) 6788225. FTCC HR Office, PO Box 35236,Fayetteville, NC 28303. Phone: (910) 678-8378 Fax: (910) 678-0029. Internet: http://www.faytechcc.edu -EOE
Employment Cosmetologist
DRIVER
Drivers
CDL/A Now Hiring. Teams, Solos, Owner Operators. Referral Bonus is Back! Great Pay, Miles & Benefits. CDL/A with 1yr. OTR required. 800-9422104 ext. 238 or 243. www.totalms.com
Driver needed for tractor trailer frameless dump. Clean Class A CDL. Apply in person: Peeples Bark & Stone, 3513 Mooresville Rd, Salisbury Drivers
Drivers Wanted Full or part time. Req: Class A CDL, clean MVR, min. 25 yrs old w/3 yrs exp. Benefits: Pd health & dental ins., 401(k) w/match, pd holidays, vac., & qtrly. bonus. New equip. Call 704630-1160 Drivers
NEED CDL DRIVERS A or B with 2 years recent commercial experience to transfer motor homes, straight trucks, tractors and buses. www.mamotransportation.com 1800-501-3783.
Is Your House To SMALL For Your Family? Is Your House Too BIG For Just You? MAKE THE RIGHT MOVE! Houses for Sale & Rent or Apartments It’s All HERE in the
Drivers
OTR drivers
$250 Sign On Bonus. CDL-A and 3 yrs exp req'd. Clean MVR. Apply in person: Trinity Transport, 317 Green Needles Rd, Lexington. 336-956-6200
Drivers & Transportation
Sales
CNA's NEEDED Primary Health Concepts, Jake Alexander Blvd., 704-637-9461
Make Your Ad Pop!
Color backgrounds as low as $5 extra* 704-797-4220 *some restrictions apply
Government
STATE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION seeking bi-lingual applicants. Fluent in reading, writing, speaking & listening to both English & Spanish required. SBI Agent application packet not required, only State Application Form PD-107. Applications accepted 6/02-7/13/10. Additional information & PD107 at http://www.ncdoj.gov.
Drivers & Transportation
Drivers
DRIVERS NEEDED Due to increases in business Swing Transport is now hiring drivers for its Salisbury NC Location. Benefits include: ! Competitive pay ! Health, Life, Dental and Vision Plan ! Paid Vacation ! Paid Holidays ! 401k/Profit Sharing Plan ! No Touch Freight ! No Haz-Mat
SR. MARKET SALES Seeking outside / inhome sales rep for insurance/estate planning. We provide direct mail leads, advanced training and ongoing support. $1,650 - $2,550 weekly commission potential. 866-769-7964
Drivers
DRIVERS NEEDED 2 yrs. CDL-A experience. Great earning potential. Some runs home daily. Some layover runs. Low cost major medical. 401K and many other benefits. Apply in person at Salem Carriers, Inc., 191 Park Plaza Dr., Winston Salem, NC 27105 or online at www.salemcarriers.com. Call 1-800-709-2536 Customer Service
RUSHCO MARKETS IS
NOW HIRING ! CUSTOMER SERVICE CASHIERS Openings in: Salisbury, Kannapolis & Mooresville
WE OFFER: *Excellent Starting Pay *Insurance Benefits *Paid Vacation
Government
PART-TIME JOB with FULL-TIME BENEFITS. You can receive cash bonus, monthly pay check, job training, money for technical training or college, travel, health benefits, retirement, and much, much more! Call now and learn how the National Guard can benefit you and your family! 1-800-GO-GUARD.
Employment
Requirements: Valid driver's license A Nationwide Criminal Record Background check
To apply, fax resume to: 704-636-7772 or call: 704-633-3211 or 704-633-8233 ext. 20 to schedule an interview Accounting
Accounting Clerk part-time. Reports to Accounting/HR Mgr needed for family owned business located between Salisbury and Mooresville. Duties include full cycle Accts Payable, heavy duties in Accts Receivable, general assistance to the Accounting/HR Mgr as well as learning other office jobs in order to fill in when necessary. 20-30 hrs/week M-F 9:30am- 3:30pm. Requirements: 2+ yrs accounting experience; strong problem-solving skills; stable work history; excellent people & communication skills; professional appearance, phone voice and attitude. $12 to $15 an hour based on experience. Submit resume w/cover letter in Word or pdf format to ncfamilybusiness@gmail.com Marketing
Visitor Services Coordinator Part-time position as Visitor Services Coordinator for the Rowan County Tourism Development Authority. Responsible for four key areas: Visitor Services, Marketing Support & Public Relations, Trolley Coordination, and General Administrative Support. For more information: VisitSalisburyNC.com. Education & Experience: Bachelor's degree (preferred by not required) and a minimum of three years experience in the hospitality industry preferred. Working nights, weekends and travel may be required. Salary Range: $11/hr (20-25 hours per week) Send resume and salary history to Rowan County Tourism Development Authority, 204 E Innes Street, Ste. 120, Salisbury, NC 28144 by July 9, 2010.
You can drive a truck and have a home life We operate primarily in MD, VA, NC, SC, GA, TN and AL. Two years tractor-trailer experience required. Must be DOT qualified and have a Safe Driving Record.
Nuclear Power Trainees
Advertising Sales Consultant The Salisbury Post, Rowan County’s largest and oldest media company, has a full time opportunity for multi-media sales professional to join our team as an Advertising Sales Consultant. This position requires selling print and online advertising to local businesses. The Advertising Sales Consultant will sell print advertising in the Salisbury Post and online banners and buttons on salisburypost.com and marketplaceminer.com. We are looking for a sales professional who will call on advertisers in their place of business and produce presentations designed to convince advertisers of the value of the Salisbury Post, salisburypost.com and other Post products. The Advertising Sales Consultant will be responsible for achieving and increasing advertising sales revenue with new and existing accounts. Advertising Consultants must establish, develop and maintain a professional relationship with advertisers in the assigned area and maintain contact with key decision makers with companies doing business with the Post. Interested candidates must be highly motivated to sell, be a self-starter and possess excellent communications skills. The candidate must be proficient in Micro-soft word, Excel and PowerPoint. Experience in face to face selling, knowledge of presentation techniques and closing skills are necessary. Candidates must have access to reliable transportation, required auto insurance coverage and a good driving record. Mileage and phone allowances apply. Company benefits include vacation, sick pay and 401-k savings plan. The Salisbury Post is a non-smoking, drug free workplace.
C47106
Apply to cratliff@salisburypost.com
Boocoo Auction Items
Boocoo Auction Items
Boocoo Auction Items
Boocoo Auction Items
1900's Art Nouveau Ink Well. Listing #2130. Buy Now $25. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Hull Woodland Planter. Listing #2124. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1149. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Red Leather Ninewest Purse. Listing #2457. Buy Now $16. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
9-11-01 Memorial Knife Stainless Steel. Listing #936. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Insight Meditation, Step by Step Guide #951. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1148. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Salt and Pepper Shaker Set. Listing #2091. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Necklace & Bracelet. Listing #2489. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
School of Fish, Metal Sculpture Wall Hanging. Listing #941. Buy Now $25. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
All Boocoo Auction Items are subject to prior sale and can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
J Khaki green girls top. Listing #2113. Buy Now for $1.50. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
American Brilliant Cut Glass, Listing #2150. Buy now $25. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Jiffy Kodak Camera. Listing #2135. Buy Now $35. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
ATV – 2005 Honda Foreman. Buy Now $5500. Listing #2161. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
John Wayne “The Cowboy” Series Collectible Knife. Listing #922. Buy Now $45. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
BCBG Peep Toe Wedge. Listing #2111. Buy Now for $37. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com BCBG Peep Toe Wedge. Listing #2112. Buy Now for $55. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Beanie Baby Dogs. Buy Now $10. Listing #2002. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Black Coach Briefcase. Listing #2140. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Blue Stone Bracelet. Listing #2491. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Caribbean Joe Denim Skirt 6x. Listing #2115. Buy Now for $2.50. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Cell Phones – set of four, Listing #2434. Buy now $25.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Coach Purse. Listing #2110. Buy Now for $55. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Collection of Six books on the economy. Listing #2462. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Cookbooks. Listing #2436. Buy Now for $17.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Crib Bedding Set . Listing #2108. Buy Now for $37.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Elliptical Trainer, hardly used, exercise machine. Listing #939. Buy Now $400. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Figurines – Boy Sitting on Dog and Animals by a Water Well. Listing #2090. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Junior Johnson. Listing #2435. Buy Now for $35.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Knife Bear & Son Cutlery, Amarillo Bone Mini 3 ½” . Listing #929. Buy Now $40. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Like New HP Presario CQ50-139WM. Listing #2990. Buy Now $300. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Marxkafe and Ashley Shoes. Listing #2470. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com McCoy USA – 2 PC. Set of Vases. Listing #2089. Buy Now $27. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com McDonald's Ty Beanie Babies. Listing #1996. Buy Now $12.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
No. 2c Autographic Kodak Jr. w/Case. Listing #2137. Buy Now $20. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Northside Cold Weather boots. Listing #2468. Buy Now $16. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Paint Ball Gun. Listing #2142. Buy Now $200. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Pillow Shams by Croscill. Listing #2486. Buy Now $5. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2082. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Taco Serving Tray. Listing #2475. Buy Now $8. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2083. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Two Books, Common Diseases & Drugs. Listing #2461. Buy Now $2. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2085. Buy Now $12. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2086. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2117. Buy Now $12. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Mikasa Fine China. Listing #2092. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2123. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1151. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Star Trek Set of Books & Collectibles, Listing #2151. Buy now $200. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Student Violin ½ Size. Listing #2105. Buy Now for $55. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2120. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1152. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Specialized Expedition Men's Bicycle. Listing #657. Buy Now $150. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Doll. Listing #2080. Buy Now $12. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Microwave Cornpopper. Listing #2474. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1153. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Small Antique Inwell KKA.PRIV. Listing #2132. Buy Now $20. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Two Coffee Table Books – Gnomes & Faeries. Listing #2464. Buy Now $30. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Ty Beanie Babies Rabbits. Buy Now $12. Listing #1998. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Ty Beanie Baby Bears. Listing #2124. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Verizon Boulder Cell phone, Listing #1144, Buy Now $35.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Set. Listing #2081. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Verizon Boulder Cell Phone, Listing #1398, Buy Now $35. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann Doll. Listing #2087. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
VHS Assortment of 4 Movies. Listing #2467. Buy Now $4.50. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Ray Ban Vintage Cats Sunglasses. Listing #940. Buy Now $45. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Vintage Broach. Listing #2490. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
FloTV – Brand New. Listing #2493. Buy Now $125. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Four – 35mm Cameras – Vivatar, Canon & Kodak. Listing #2471. Buy Now $20. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
• Pay your subscription online: salisburypost.com/renew
Framed – Count Your Blessings. Listing #2482. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
• Place a vacation hold: salisburypost.com/subscription
Framed rubbing of Sheep. Listing #2141. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
• Send any comments: salisburypost.com/subscription
Hand Loomed Wool Purse. Listing #2136. Buy Now $7. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
C44624
$10 to start. Earn 40%. 704-637-3440 or 704278-2399 Military
Please Call 704-633-3567
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 5B
H.S. Grads - US Navy has immediate openings. Nuclear Power Trainees: B average in science and math. Special OPS: excellent physical condition. Career opportunity, will train, relocation required, no medical or legal issues. Good pay, full benefits, money for college. Call Mon-Fri, 800-6627419 for local interview. Sales
Parts Counter Salesperson w/GM and/or Reynolds experience needed immediately. Pay will be determined by experience. Apply to David Harrington. LARRY KING CHEVROLET KANNAPOLIS, NC 704-933-1104
Antiques & Collectibles Carnival Glass-6 Berry Bowels 5" Color-Marigold $30.00 704-938-4342 Cut outs. Two Dale Earnhardt stand up Hersheys Legends cardboard lifesize cutouts. One is opened and one never out of box. $75.00 obo. 704-305-0355, 704305-2321 Old toys made in the 1950's, $350. Please call 980-234-5984 for more information. Spuds Mackenzie 1988 Bud Light dog. Light. Good condition. $125 obo. 704-633-1746
Baby Items White plain crib only used 1 time in excellent condition. Paid $200.00 will sell for $75.00. Little girls clothes sizes 0-24 months like new. Different Prices. 704-3052321 or 704-305-0355
Boocoo Auction Items “You're an Angel” Mirror. Listing #2143. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com 7 ½ inch reel tapeGershwin. Listing #2466. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Birds Free Cockatiels. Two, to good home only. No calls before 4pm. 980-2346507 No calls after 9pm
Cats
Dogs
Free kittens. Very sweet. Approx. 9 weeks. Black & white, grey. Please call 919-338-2424
Free dog to good home. Mixed breed, male, about 1 yr old, no shots. For more info call 704-279-8272
Free Persian cat to good home, female, white, blue eyes, has to be only cat. No calls before 4pm. No calls after 9pm 980-2346507
Free dog. To good home only. Female Pit Bull/Wolf Terrier mix. Housebroken, 2yrs. Old, inside dog, loves to ride. Very playful. Named Suzy. Please call 336-284-5038
Free cat, female. Spayed. Indoor or outdoor. Loves kids & dogs. Great hunter! 704-245-1386
Free playful, loving kitten to good home. Female black & tan in color. Will give litter box, litter, food & toys with her. Please call Heather @704-6331624 for information.
Free kitten. Beautiful & affectionate. 9 weeks old. Solid black female. Please call 980-234-7759
Dogs
Cats
Free Kitten. Tabby & white. Male, approx. 10 weeks old. Rescued from local parking lot. 704636-0619
AKC Basset Hound Puppies
Free kittens to good home only. Will pay to have them spayed or neutered. 704-637-1101 Free kittens. Beautiful, one black & one white w/tabby colors. Both male. Inside only. Very sweet. Please call 704636-0619
Puppies For Sale. Black Labrador. Born: 5/15/10. AKC registered. Parents onsite. Excellent Blood lines. 3 males, 2 females left, ready for homes after July 4th. $350. Call Caleb to see the pups. 704-856-8292
Dogs
Puppies, Labrador. AKC registered. Males & shots, females. 1st wormed. Parents on site. Please call 336-406-6893
Puppies. AKC Labrador Retriever. Chocolate and black, ready July 5. Both parents working bird hunters and family pets. Dewclaws removed and first shots. $450. 704-201-5875
Want to attract attention?
1 male tri-color, 1st shot and wormed, parents on site. $300 CASH ONLY! Call Esther, 704-546-3410
Get Bigger Type!
Puppies. German Shepherd, full blooded, mother on site, 7 weeks old, $150 each. 704-798-4607
CLASSIFIED
6B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 Boocoo Auction Items
Medical Equipment
Misc For Sale
Zebra Clutch – Green & Tan. Listing #2459. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Walker with hand brakes, seat and brace. Used but in good condition. $25. Call before 5pm. 704-232-3636
Phone. Samsung Verizon SCH-A870 camera flip phone with flash. Like new call. $45. Scottie 704-637-2322
Misc. Equipment & Supplies
Pool table for children with balls and easy storage. $50. 704-642-7155
Zeiss Ikon Camera 1934. Listing #2134. Buy Now $30. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Computers & Software Computer Scanner (Visonaire). Used once. $50.00. 704-938-4342, Kannapolis
Consignment Growing Pains Family Consignments Call (704)638-0870 115 W. Innes Street
Hospital Bed, electric. Like New. $99; 4 Like New 16” Tires, $125. 704-245-4398
Misc For Sale ANDERSON'S SEW & SO, Husqvarna, Viking Sewing Machines. Patterns, Notions, Fabrics. 10104 Old Beatty Ford Rd., Rockwell. 704-279-3647 BUILDING SALE! "Rock Bottom Prices!" Final Week. 25X30 $4577. 30X40 $7140. 32X60 $11,950. 35X60 $13,990. 40X70 $14,650. 40X100 $24,900. 46X140 $37,600. Others. Ends optional. Pioneer Manufacturers Direct. 1-800-668-5422.
Electronics CB Radio with Weather Channel and Antenna. $55. Please Call 704-213-6201 Computer monitor, brand new 15 inch LCD. Paid $150 - Sell for $80. Call Kip @ 704-433-2499 DVD and VHS Player, Sansui. $20; Oreck XL Air Purifier, $95 704-213-6201
Farm Equipment & Supplies Farm Equipment, new & used. McDaniel Auction Co. 704-278-0726 or 704798-9259. NCAL 48, NCFL 8620. Your authorized farm equipment dealer.
Food & Produce Blackberries for Sale
$3.50 per Quart $12.00 per Gallon
704-636-2124 Gold Hill Area
Blackberries for Sale Washed and ready for the freezer, $4 per quart. Call 704-633-3935
Furniture & Appliances Air Conditioners, Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Frig. $65 & up. Used TV & Appliance Center Service after the sale. 704-279-6500 Bedroom set. 1940's Blonde 6 Piece - 2 Twin Beds, Nightstand, Tall Dresser, Long Dresser w/mirror. Very Sturdy. $350 or Best Offer. Call Kip @ 704-433-2499 Bedroom suite, new 5 piece. All for $297.97. Hometown Furniture, 322 S. Main St. 704-633-7777 Bedroom suite, white, queen/full bed, nightstand, chest of drawers, dresser w/hutch. $200. Pine dresser w/mirror hutch. $100. Antique desk. $200. 336-998-2850 Computer Desk, Large; Bunk Bed with Bunkies. $40 Each. Please Call. 704-239-5784 Dining Set. 4 Piece 1950's Cherry Wood Dining Set (Buffet, Hutch, China Case, Table plus 4 chairs). Needs some repair/refinishing. $500 or best offer. Call Kip @ 704-433-2499
Building, 10' x 10' by Outback Buildings in Lexington. A frame, trim is white, color is pearl. Roof is Aspen Grey. 2 vents. $2,400. 704-8573220 or 980-297-5382
Get Cooking
Range. Self cleaning, smooth top, white, Whirlpool, excellent condition, 2000 model. $285. 704-636-4580 Mattress Overstock: Sets start at T-$119, F-$149, Q-$159, K-$239. Warranties, delivery option. 704-677-6643
SOLD
I was able to sell my bedroom and couch to a reader who saw my ad in the Post! B.N., Salisbury
SOLD SOLD
We sold all of our puppies in 2 weeks! Thanks Salisbury Post! ~ T.N., Salisbury
SOLD
Table with 6 Chairs; Couch and Chair; Entertainment Center. $40 Each. 704-239-5784
Games and Toys Foosball Table, Harvard. Multi-game. $125. Please Call 704-636-6767
Lawn and Garden Holshouser Cycle Shop Lawn mower repairs and trimmer sharpening. Pick up & delivery. (704)637-2856 Want to buy your low priced, unused or fixable lawn mowers & tillers. Also, I do repairs. 704-431-4837
STEEL, Channel, Angle, Flat Bars, Pipe Orders Cut to Length. Mobile Home Truss- $6 ea.; Vinyl floor covering- $3.85 yd.; Carpet- $5.75 yd.; Masonite Siding 4x8- $15.50. RECYCLING, Top prices paid for Aluminum cans, Copper, Brass, Radiators, Aluminum. Davis Enterprises Inc. 7585 Sherrills Ford Rd. Salisbury, NC 28147 704-636-9821 Stop Smoking Cigarettes No Patches, No Gum, No Pills With Hypnosis It's Easy! Also Weight Control. 704-933-1982
Swingset. 12'x6' metal swingset w/2 swings, monkey bar, see- saw and 5ft plastic slide w/metal ladder. $60. Call Scott 704-637-2322 Trailer, 4x8, 14” Tires with Spare. $350. Please Call 704-425-9838
GOING ON VACATION? Send Us Photos Of You with your Salisbury Post to: famous@salisburypost.com
Free Stuff
Let us know! We will run your ad with a photo for 15 days in print and online. Cost is just $30. Call the Salisbury Post Classified Department at 704-797-4220 or email classads@salisburypost.com !
Daylilies, select varieties. 30 – 3 gallon pots. $10 each. Please call 704798-2953 for more info. DIRECTV FREE Standard Installation! Free Showtime & Starz (3 mo)! Free HD/DVR upgrade! Ends 7/14/10. New Customers Only, Qual. Pkgs. From $29.99/mo. DirectStarTV, 1-888-634-6459 FREE HD FOR LIFE! Only on DISH Network! Lowest Price in America! $24.99/mo for over 120 channels! $500 Bonus! 1888-679-4649 Handbag, Betty Boop, medium size, new. $25. Call before 5pm. 704-232-3636
Music Sales & Service Lowery organ for sale. Sounds and plays good. tape recorder, tape players, and differnt sounds.$100 obo. 704-305-2321, 704-3050355
Free male dog to good home, mixed breed. 1-1/2 to 2 yrs old. 704-6337060 after 5 pm please
Good condition
Computer Station, nice Basset Cherrywood, $75 OBO call 704-633-1341 or 704-798-1341 if interested
Heaters, electric. Calendator is a digital electric heater with remote. $30. Other is small ceramic heater, $15 obo. 704-633-1746 Hubcaps, 13”, fits all cars and vans, new in box. $40. Call before 5pm. 704-232-3636 Kannapolis-NASCAR books 3 Hardcover, 1 Soft cover NASCAR FOR DUMMIES. All $25 704-938-4342
Let's cook!
Char-Broil Gas Grill. Dual burner. 22x12 cooking surface. Warming rack. Piezo igniter. Very little use. No tank. $50. 704638-6470.
Organ. Vintage Hammond Organ. Two key boards, great sound $550. Good for small church or beginner. 704603-4171
Sporting Goods ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Bike. Like new 18 speed fs grand teton men's bike $60. Call 704-209-1680 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Mans and Ladies Cruiser Bikes 26". Excellent Condition. $60 & $50. 704938-4342
Want to Buy Merchandise Lumber. 2x3x16 $1.50; 2x3 stud $1; 2x6x8 $3.25; 2x6x15 $5; 14' double wide trusses $5; single wide trusses $8; floor trusses $5. All new! Please call 704-2020326
METAL: Angle, Channel, Pipe, Sheet & Plate Shear Fabrication & Welding FAB DESIGNS 2231 Old Wilkesboro Rd Open Mon-Fri 7-3:30 704-636-2349 MYRTLE BEACH Vacation Ownership at the Yachtsman Resort in Myrtle Beach. 2br/2ba Ocean front sleeps 8 Located at Pier 14 on the Beach on Ocean Blvd. Have lots of pictures can email. Myrtle Beach is one of the best 10 Beaches in the United States. Call for details. 704-212-7313 Office desk, metal. New. $50. New adult potty chair, $30. Please call 336-655-5034
Show off your stuff!
AA Antiques. Buying anything old, scrap gold & silver. Will help with your estate or yard sale. 704-433-1951.
AIRLINES ARE HIRINGTrain for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 877-300-9494.
Lost & Found Found Dog, Chihuahua on Newsome Road. Call to identify. 704-637-0227
Watches – and scrap gold jewelry. 704-636-9277 or cell 704-239-9298
Business Opportunities AVON - Buy or Sell Call Lisa 1-800-258-1815 or Tony 1-877-289-4437 thebennetts1@comcast.net
J.Y. Monk Real Estate School-Get licensed fast, Charlotte/Concord courses. $399 tuition fee. Free Brochure. 800-849-0932
With our
Send us a photo and description we'll advertise it in the paper for 15 days, and online for 30 days for only
30*!
$
Call today about our Private Party Special!
704-797-4220
*some restrictions apply
Free Stuff
Free dog. 7 year old Collie mix, male. Left by his owners at the clinic 3 years ago, Retired Blood Donor Dog needs a Forever Home now! Neutered, shots, looking for a family!704-855-7468
BUYER BEWARE The Salisbury Post Classified Advertising staff monitors all ad submissions for honesty and integrity. However, some fraudulent ads are not detectable. Please protect yourself by checking the validity of any offer before you invest money in a business opportunity, job offer or purchase.
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
New Home
Salisbury. Forest Creek. 3 Bedroom, 1.5 bath. New home priced at only $98,900. R48764 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 PM
Found young cat June 23 in Concordia Church Rd area, gray tabby, has collar. Call to identify. 704-433-6592
Lost
Longhair Mini Dachshund. Red/white Piebald. Mocksville Area. REWARD! 336-480-8092
Lost Boston Terrier named Jasper. Black and white, 2 yrs old. Sherrills Ford Rd area. Please Call 704-638-0463
Lost Small Dog
West End area - West Monroe St. - White w/ brown markings - close cut Shih-Tzu - has sister (litermate) and puppy who are depressed while waiting for her return. Call 9105275572 or 704968-2201 - REWARD
REWARD
Lost Dog. Siberian Huskey, Woodleaf/ Foster Rd & S. River areas, Saturday a.m., June 19. Brown & white, answers to Twilight, has been spayed. 704-450-4281
5.64 ac., 4BR, 4BA, 3100 SqFt. Timothy Livengood, Mid Carolina Real Estate, LLC. (704) 202-1807
Notices HOST FAMILIES for Foreign Exchange Students, ages 15-18 & have own spending money & insurance. Call Now for students arriving in August! Great life experience. 1-800SIBLING. www.aise.com
Faith. 1145 Long Creek. 3 Beds, 2 Baths, 2 Bonus Rooms. Master on main, Hardwood and ceramic tile floors. Storage everywhere. $199,900. Kerry, Key Real Estate 704-857-0539. Directions: Faith Rd to L on Rainey. R into Shady Creek.
OPEN HOUSE SAT. 12NOON-2PM 3 BR, 1½ BA, 1100 sq. ft., new carpet, 24x36 double garage with attic storage & fan. Includes custom plantation blinds throughout. Large backyard perfect for garden, pool or fun and games! Low taxes! Two wells. Reduced to $121,000!
Apartments & Condos for Sale Salisbury
Open House Saturday 2-4pm
www.applehouserealty.com
BANK SPECIAL!
3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, large lot! Make offer! Gracious Living Realty. www.graciousliving.org. email: home4you@rcn.com. 800-749-5263. Bank says, "Sell, Sell, Sell!" BANK SPECIAL! 3BR, 2BA, large lot! Make offer! Gracious Living Realty. www.graciousliving.org. email: home4you@rcn.com. 800-749-5263. Bank says, "Sell, Sell, Sell!"
3 BR. 2 BA. Stack stone fireplace, REAL HARDWOODS, ceramic and carpet, maple cabinets, GRANITE countertops, chair railing galore, split bedrooms for privacy, Enormous back deck, Completion date 07/30/2010 STILL MAY PICK COLORS!! Monica Poole 704.245.4628 B&R Realty East Rowan
For Sale, Lease or Poss. Rent to Own!
Salisbury, 317 Martin Luther King Ave. N. 3-4 BR. Completely remodeled home in Hist. Dist. Sale price $109,900. Lease $850/ mo. or rent to own with min. $5,000 down. $800/mo. $100 toward purchase price. Call 704-633-3584
FORECLOSURE
Gorgeous Historic Condo in the Heart of Salisbury's Premier Historic District. Must see to believe! 319 West Horah St., Fairmont Terrace. 704-202-0091. MLS#929946
Home Builders Spencer C. Lane Construction-Quality Home Builder Custom & Spec Homes 704-633-4005
Homes for Sale
1123 Edgedale Drive. 3 BR, 1 BA brick home. New HVAC. Energy Saving Windows. Fenced Back Yard. 2 Carports. REALTORS WELCOME. $94,900. 704-202-0505
Salisbury. Immaculate home, private setting, 2 BR, great room, D/R, screened rear porch & deck overlook pond. 1065 Rock Pond Rd. $160,000 Kennedy Realty 704-640-0413 Directions: Faith Rd. (through Town of Faith), Right on Castor Rd, right on Big Rock Rd, left on Rock Pond Rd.
Bank Foreclosures & Distress Sales. These homes need work! For a FREE list:
If you used Type 2 Diabetes Drug AVANDIA and suffered a stroke or heart attack, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles Johnson, 1-800-535-5727. MONEY FOR SCHOOLExciting career fields with US Navy. High demand for nuclear specialists and SEALS. Paid training, excellent benefits and even money for college. HS grads, 1734, relocation required. Call Mon-Fri 800-6627419 for local interview.
Home Warranty
Call Cathy Griffin at 704-213-2464
602 Lockshire Lane, Woodleaf, all brick, 3BR / 2BA, Lg great room w/fireplace & solid wood floors, split BR plan, Lg Mstr BR w/walk-in closest & lg bath, lg wrap around porch, screened in breezeway & deck. 10 x 20 vinyl bldg., private bk yd. Lot size .62 acs. $3500 towards closing costs for pre-qualified buyers only. $149,900. MOVE IN READY! 704-278-9779
CHINA GROVE This beautiful neutered cat belongs to someone. He is used to the indoors and needs to find his home again. Very loving, long haired, white, male. I've taken him for his shots and am searching for his owner. Found in Wellington Hills area. Call 704-647-0104 8am-9pm.
4BR/3BA in Timber Run. Approx. 4,000 SF brick home in established neighborhood, oversized 2 car garage, bonus room, walk-in closet in master BR, beautiful hardwood floors, 2 gas log fireplaces, Rinnai tankless water heater, generator, fenced in back yard, finished walk-out basement, storage area & workshop. E. Rowan Schools. Mins. away from I-85 & shopping $369,000. Call Tina at 980-234-2881 Salisbury
3 BR, 2 BA. All appliances stay. Free standing gas log fireplace in master bedroom. Garden tub in masterbath. 24X30 garage with lean to. Out building with attached play house. Swingset stays. R50545A $89,900 Lesa Prince (704) 796-1811 B&R Realty
Homes for Sale
Granite Quarry
Found dog. Female Bassett Hound. China Grove/Landis area. Call to identify 704-647-2611
All Coin Collections Silver, gold & copper. Will buy foreign & scrap gold. 704-636-8123 Timber wanted - Pine or hardwood. 5 acres or more select or clear cut. Shaver Wood Products, Inc. Call 704-278-9291.
Homes for Sale
Instruction
Make some music!
Casio LK-90TV Keyboard, 61 lighted touchsensitive keys, 32-note polyphony, 264 PCM tones, 120 rhythm patterns. 100-tune song bank, built-in speakers. headphone output, too many features to list. $100, 704-633-0060.
113 Prestwick Court in Corbin Hills
Free dogs. AKC shetland sheepdog, male, 4 years old. AKC smooth collie, male, 4 years old. Call for more info. 704-637-6639
Lost
Dishwasher, Kenmore. White front. $85 Please Call 704-213-6201 Executive office desk $200, Matching bookcase and lateral file $100 Highback swivel chair free with desk. Near exit 70 on I-85. 704-855-3747
Set of tour model golf clubs with bag- good shape call 704-637-2322 $25.
Homes for Sale
SALISBURY POST
Concord, 1.5 story, level lot, nice subdivision. Thousands below tax value. Tons of extras, crown molding, work island in kitchen, office upstairs, bonus room. 3 BR, 2.5 Baths. $244,750. Dream Weaver Properties of NC LLC 704-906-7207
www.dreamweaverprop.com
Great Location!
Salisbury, Olde Salisbury subdivision, 3BR / 2BA, 1200 sq. ft, laundry room, 2 linen closets, pantry, hardwood & carpeted floors, detached garage, central heat & air. Convenient to I-85 and shopping! $129,900. 704645-8030 or 704-202-8745
You'll love all seasons of the year in this cozy home in Plantation Ridge. Spend your summer days grilling on the back deck or relaxing on the front porch swing. Winters will be warmer as you enjoy the gas logs in the spacious family room. Fully renovated over the last 2 years, this house is move-in ready. You'll be surprised at the space this 3 br 2 ½ ba, 2495 sf house has to offer. $219,900. Call 704-645-1093 Woodleaf
Land for Sale Land for Sale 25 Acres Beautiful Land for Sale by Owner 1 Hr to/from Charlotte, NC nr Cleveland & Woodleaf and 3 Interstates: I-40, I77, I-85. Restricted, no mobile or mod. Very rural, mostly wooded. Good hunting, deer, small game. Frontage on Hobson Rd., 2nd gravel driveway beside 2075 Hobson Rd mailbox. Interior very secluded, a real sanctuary from cities. Needs to be sold this year. Owner phone: 336-766-6779, or E-mail to: hjthabet@cs.com See photos and directions at: http://NCHorseCountryFarmland.com
Manufactured Home Sales
Manufactured Home Sales
Drastically Reduced!
380 Granny's Pl. 1,700 sq. ft. ranch on 10 acs in quiet community off Needmore Rd. Entire tract fenced w/16' cedar gated driveway. 3BR, 1½BA. Maintenance free floors. 40 year metal roof, vinyl siding, roomy garage w/ automatic door, energy efficient heat pump, central air. Concrete slab. Newly dug well. $175,000 $160,000 but we are open to offers. Motivated seller. 336-998-3510 or 336-407-3510
281 Ferrell Lane Salisbury, NC. Located off of Majolica Rd. Call 704-642-1024 for appointment
Motivated Seller!
Gold Hill area. 3BR, 1BA. 1,123 sq. ft. living area. Hardwood floors, partial basement, storage building. Large lot. 2.03 acres. East/Rockwell schools. Call Glenn 704-279-5674 / 704-267-9439
Mt. Ulla. 1 mile from Millbridge Elementary. 4BR, 2BA. Doublewide on 1 acre private lot. Approx. 1,640 sq. ft. New carpet. Open floor plan. Very spacious. Kitchen has parquet floors, ceramic sinks in baths & kitchen. Large bedrooms w/walk-in closets. Dish and cable available. Dishwasher, refrigerator & stove. $79,900. 704-857-9495 or 704-223-1136
New Listing
Davis Farm - One of the last exterior lots available - 613 Fly Fisher Drive .95 acres cleared, ready to build. Trees on the rear of the property offer great privacy. Perk is on file. MLS # 50324 Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. (704) 433-2582
OLDE SALISBURY
Salisbury, New Home 3 BR. 2 BA. REAL HARDWOODS, Gorgeous kitchen, stainless appliances, vaulted ceiling in great room! Pretty front porch, even has a 1 car garage! Pick your own colors. Monica Poole 704.245.4628 B&R Realty
Price Reduced
365 D. Earnhardt Rd., Rockwell, East Rowan - 3 BR, 2 Baths, Located on 3.11 acres, Large rooms with great closet/storage space, oversized garage. A definite must see!! Priced in the 200s !! MLS #50302 Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. www.tmrdevelop.com (704) 433-2582
The Salisbury Post
Will Be Closed Monday, July 5th, 2010 in Observance of Independence Day Please Note The Following Holiday Deadline Schedule:
LINE ADS Publication Date
Deadline Date
Saturday, July 3 Sunday, July 4 Monday, July 5 Tuesday, July 6 Wednesday, July 7 TMC (Wednesday, July 7)
Friday, July 2 • 2pm Friday, July 2 • 2pm Friday, July 2 • 3pm Friday, July 2 • 4pm Tuesday, July 6 • 4pm Friday, July 2 • 3pm
DISPLAY ADS Publication Date
Deadline Date
Monday, July 5 Tuesday, July 6
Friday, July 2 • 10am Friday, July 2 • 12 Noon
Wednesday, July 7 TMC (Wednesday, July 7)
Friday, July 2 • 4pm Friday, July 2 • 11am
704-797-POST C46650
CLASSIFIED
SALISBURY POST Homes for Sale
Manufactured Home Sales
Apartments
E. schools. Lease purchase. 3BR, 2BA. Garage, kit. appl., Please call 704-638-0108
Harrison Rd. near Food Lion. 3BR, 2BA. 1 ac. 1,800 sq. ft., big BR, retreat, huge deck. $580/mo. Financing avail. 704-489-1158
1, 2, & 3 BR Huge Apartments, very nice. $375 & up. 704-890-4587
Genesis Realty 704-933-5000 genesisrealtyco.com Foreclosure Experts
Price Reduced
Ashland Place. 1153 Greenheather Dr. 3BR, 2½BA. Great home with lots of extras!! Immaculate condition. Priced in the low $200s Call today. MLS #49114. Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. (704) 433-2582 www.tmrdevelop.com
REDUCED
Salisbury Area 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 baths, $500 down under $700 per month. 704-225-8850
Manufactured Lots for Sale
1BR apt furnished with washer/dryer, refrig & stove. All utilities furnished incl'd cable. Rent $350.00 ever 2 weeks with $350.00 dep. Call Rowan Properties, 704-633-0446.
Grace Church/Miller Rd. location. 2.8 acres with well & septic. $38,000. Please call 704-660-3930
2 BR, 1 BA Eaman Park Apts. Near Salisbury High. $375/mo. Newly renovated. No pets. 704-798-3896
Rockwell. Single • Doublewide • Modular • Site Built. Rental lots available. 704-279-3265
20 Different Units 1-3BR, $300-$695 Chambers Realty 704-637-1020
Real Estate Services
2BR, 1BA apt. Very large. Has gas heat. We furnish refrig, stove, yard maint, and garbage pick up. No pets. Rent $425. Deposit $400. Call Rowan Properties 704633-0446
Arey RealtyREAL Service in Real Estate 704-633-5334 www.AreyRealty.com Rockwell. 2 BR, 1 BA, hardwood floors, detached carport, handicap ramp. $99,900 R47208 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
REDUCED
Salisbury, Adorable bungalow close to shopping and I-85. Two bedrooms one bath with a nice lot. Home has been remodeled and is charming. $76,900. Dream Weaver Properties of NC LLC 704-906-7207
www.dreamweaverprop.com Salisbury
Price Reduced $119,900
B & R REALTY 704-633-2394
www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Bentley Julian Realty 704-938-2530
www.bentleyrealtyinc.com Info@bentleyrealtyinc.com
Century 21 Towne & Country 474 Jake Alexander Blvd. (704)637-7721 Forest Glen Realty Darlene Blount, Broker 704-633-8867 KEY REAL ESTATE, INC. 1755 U.S. HWY 29. South China Grove, NC 28023 704-857-0539 Rebecca Jones Realty 610 E. Liberty St, China Grove 704-857-SELL
www.rebeccajonesrealty.com
Rowan Realty www.rowanrealty.net, Professional, Accountable, Personable . 704-633-1071 US Realty 516 W. Innes, Salisbury 704-636-9303
Salisbury. Olde Salisbury subdivision. 2110 Chantilly Lane. New Home 3BR, 2BA. All kitchen appliances, vaulted ceiling in great room. Gorgeous stone on front of home, nice 2 car garage! You pay NO Closing Costs! Vickie 704-754-5700 Spear Salisbury. 2 or 3 bedroom Townhomes. For information, call Summit Developers, Inc. 704-797-0200
Unusual Opportunity
www.USRealty4sale.com
William R. Kennedy Realty 428 E. Fisher Street 704-638-0673
Real Estate Commercial 2250 sf Prime Office Condo For Sale or Lease. 4 office suites w/ private and public rest room, board room & more. Statesville Blvd. Call Apple House Realty @ 704-633-5067 for info.
ALEXANDER PLACE 1,540 Sq. Ft. 3BR, 2BA. Walk-in closets, formal dining room, alarm system, central air, new paint, carpet & flooring ~ immaculate throughout. True modular (not a doublewide). To be moved from present location & priced accordingly at $92,000. 704-636-2732
Land for Sale 3 + acres, native timber canopy opens to sunlit meadow, creek w/ private sandy beach. $59,900 close to town, fin. Must See. 704 535-4159
Faith. 7 Acres. Pasture, woods and creek. 175 ft road frontage. $70,000. Call 704-279-9542 Rockwell. Off Lower Stone Ch. Rd at end of Lavista Rd, 2½ acs. $25,000, $500 down, owner will finance 10 years, 7% interest. 704202-5879 W. Rowan 1.19 acs. Old Stony Knob Rd. Possible owner financing. Reduced: $19,900. 704-640-3222
Manufactured Home Sales $500 Down moves you in. Call and ask me how? Please call (704) 225-8850
A TREE PARADISE
China Grove, 3 homes available: 2 under construction, 1 move in ready. All 3 BR, 2 BA. Call for details. $109,900 to $114,900 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
Mocksville 133 Avgol Dr. 50x100 (5,000 sq. ft.) commercial metal building on 1.1 ac, 3 phase electrical, 3 bay doors, office, breakroom, zoned HC (Highway Commercial). Extra nice $219,000. Call 336-391-6201
OFFICE SPACE
Resort & Vacation Property
Myrtle Beach. 3BR/2BA “K” condo/rancher FOR SALE in Seagate Village at former Myrtle Beach Air Force base. Minutes from Market Commons. Call 704-425-7574
Wanted: Real Estate *Cash in 7 days or less *Facing or In Foreclosure *Properties in any condition *No property too small/large
American Homes of Rockwell Oldest Dealer in Rowan County. Best prices anywhere. 704-279-7997
Are you trying to sell your property? We guarantee a sale within 1430 days. 704-245-2604
Mount Pleasant, 1BR, 1BA, 3-room apartment, quiet historic district. For information, call 704-436-9176.
Salisbury. 3BR, 2BA 1,400 sf. townhome. W/D incl. $800 rent & dep. No Section 8. 704-637-1711
Near Rockwell. 3 room apt. Appliances, W/D, & water furnished. $400/mo. 704-279-8880 704-279-7082 Rockwell Area. Apt. & Duplexes. $500-$600. 2BR Quiet Community. Marie Leonard-Hartsell at Wallace Realty 704-239-3096 Rolling Hills Townhomes 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms Salisbury's Finest! 315 Ashbrook Rd 704-637-6207 Summer Specials! Salis. Nice modern 1BR, energy efficient, water furnished, off Jake Alexander $395 + dep. 704-640-5750 Salisbury-Downtown. Two bedroom/1 bath loft style apartment in the old Cheerwine Building. Nice open living area. $750.00 Call Waggoner Realty Co. at 704-633-0462 Salisbury. 2BR duplex. Excellent condition with appl. $565/mo. Ryburn Rentals 704-637-0601
Cemetery St., Salisbury 2 BR, 1 BA. Section 8 Accepted. 704-340-8031
China Grove. 501 West Hillside Drive. 3BR, 1½BA. Convenient to I-85. Full basement. Great neighborhood. No pets, no smoking. $750/ month plus deposit. Available now. Call 704857-0643 or 704-3611262 Cleveland-3 bedroom/ 1bath house off Main St. Appliances, central heat & air, hard wood floors. $600.00 Call Waggoner Realty Co. 704-633-0462
E. Rowan, 2BR/1BA, Private country setting, refrigerator and stove, no pets. $575/mo + $575 dep. 704-279-3010 or 704-213-8783
Airport Rd. Duplex. 2BR, 2BA. $575/mo. 2BR, 1BA $550/mo., lease + dep., water furnished. No pets. Call 704-637-0370
Spencer 1BR/1BA, large apartment in convenient location $350/mo + dep. 704-202-2484
East Rowan. New 3BR, 2BA. Appliances, water yard work incl'd. Section 8 Ok. 704-279-3990
STONWYCK VILLIAGE IN GRANITE QUARRY Nice 2BR, energy efficient apt., stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, water & sewer furnished, central heat/ac, vaulted ceiling, washer/dryer connection. $495 to $535 /Mo, $400 deposit. 1 year lease, no pets. 704-279-3808
Faith/Carson district. 3BR / 2BA, no pets. $700/mo + dep + refs. 704-279-8428
Apartment Management- Moving to Town? Need a home or Apartment? We manage rental homes from $400 - $650 & apartments $350 - $550. Call and let us help you. Waggoner Realty Co. 704-633-0462 www.waggonerrealty.com
BEST VALUE
Quiet & Convenient, 2 bedroom town house, 1 ½ baths. All Electric, Central heat/air, no pets, pool. $550/mo. Includes water & basic cable.
West Side Manor
China Grove. 2BR, 2BA. All electric. Clean & safe. No pets. $575/month + deposit. 704-202-0605 China Grove. Nice 2BR, 1BA. $550/mo., includes washer & dryer. No pets. 704-279-8428 China Grove. One room eff. w/ private bathroom & kitchenette. All utilities incl'd. $379/mo. + $100 deposit. 704-857-8112 City. 2BR cent. H/A, no pets, on job 6 months, utilities by tenant. $375 per month. Call 704202-5879 for more info. CLANCY HILLS APARTMENTS 1, 2 & 3 BR, conveniently located in Salisbury. Handicap accessible units available. Section 8 assistance available. 704-6366408. Office Hours: M–F 9:00-12:00. TDD Relay 1-800-735-2962 Equal Housing Opportunity.
Clean, well maint., 2 BR Duplex. Central heat/air, all electric. Section 8 welcome. 704-202-5790
Colonial Village Apts.
WELCOME HOME TO DEER PARK APTS. We have immediate openings for 1 & 2 BR apts. Call or come by and ask about our move-in specials. 704-278-4340 for info. For immediate info call 1-828-442-7116 White Rock Garden Apts 1BR elderly units, located in Granite Quarry, w/handicap accessible units available. Sect. 8 assistance available. 704-2796457, 8am - 1pm TDD Relay 1-800-735-2962 “Equal Housing Opportunity”
Wiltshire Village 2BR, 1½BA Condo. All appl., W/D, patio. Near Jake & I-85. Pool, Tennis. $600/ mo., $500 dep. For sale or lease. 336-210-5862
Condos and Townhomes Kannapolis. 2 story townhouse. 2BR, 2BA brick front. Kitchen/dining combo, large family room. Private deck. $550/mo. 704534-5179 / 704-663-7736 Wiltshire Village Condo for Rent, $700. 2nd floor. Looking for 2BR, 2BA in a quiet community setting? Call Bryce, Wallace Realty 704-2021319
Houses for Rent
$99 1 Month For Brand New Duplex! st
Rockwell. Holshouser Rd. 2BR/1BA, back deck & storage area, all appliances, available July 1st. NO Smoking or Pets! $525/mo + $500 deposit, yard, trash service & water / sewer included 704-2090131 for application. 2BR RENT TO OWN Central heat/AC. Hardwoods, fireplace, siding. $2,500 down. $550/mo. 704-630-0695
“A Good Place to Live” 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms Affordable & Spacious Water Included 704-636-8385 Colony Garden Apartments. 2 BR, 1½ BA town homes near VA hospital. $550/mo. + deposit. 704-762-0795 Eastwind Apartments Low Rent Available For Elderly & Disabled. Rent Based on Social Security Income *Spacious 1 BR *Located on bus line *Washer/Dryer Hookups Call Fisher Realty at: 704-636-7485 for more information. Elm St. 2br apt. Hardwood flrs. Marble bathrm. $450 + dep. Also 2BR house. 704-636-1633 Holly Leaf Apts. 2BR, 1½BA. $555. Kitchen appliances, W/D connection, cable ready. 704-637-5588
Lovely Duplex
Moreland Pk area. 2BR all appls furnished. $495-$595/mo. Deposit negotiable. Section 8 welcome. 336-247-2593
FREE RENT Carolina Piedmont Properties. Call for details. Sec 8 OK. 704-248-4878 Granite Quarry. 3BR, 1BA quadplex. E. Salis. 3BR, 2BA. All electric. Appliances. 704-638-0108 Houses: 3BRs, 1BA. Apartments: 2 & 3 BRs, 1BA Deposit req'd. Faith Realty 704-630-9650
Mocksville. Green Hill Rd. 3BR, 2BA brick ranch. Great room & living room. Central air & heat. Carport, utility/storage room. Beautiful shade trees. $750/mo. 704-534-5179 Rockwell area. 3BR, 2BA. Washer/dryer incl. Central air. References & deposit req. 704-2020605, ask for Dennis Rockwell
Very Nice Home! Rockwell. 3BR, 2 full BA brick home. New paint, new carpet, new floors, new appli-ances. Fenced backyard. Free trash pickup. Near Rockwell Park. $850/mo. + $850 deposit. No pets, no smoking. 704-202-0436 Rockwell. 3BR, 2BA w. appliances. $750 with deposit. Ryburn Rentals 704-637-0601 Rockwell. 3BR. Central heat/AC, range, fridge, dishwasher. Storage bldg. $725/mo. 704-279-6850 or 704-798-3035 Rowan Hospital area. 3BR, 2BA. Appl., central AC, gas heat. No Sect. 8. No pets. $800/mo. 1St & last month's rent & deposit. Call before 5pm 704-636-4251 Salis. 3-4 BR house by Livingstone College. Rent $575, dep $500. Call Rowan Properties, 704633-0446
4BR, 2 ½BA. 2000 sq. ft +/-. Tri-level, hardwoods fireplace. Great area. $995/mo. 704-630-0695 5 houses to choose from Affordable to luxury Chambers Realty 704-637-1020 5BR, 2 ½ BA. RENT TO OWN. 3000 sq. ft. +/garage, basement, fenced. $8,000 down. $998/mo. 704-630-0695 610 Florence Ave, Kannapolis - 2 bedroom, 1 bath $510 monthly; 314 North Avenue, Kannapolis 3 bedroom 2 bath $895 Monthly KREA 704-933-2231
Attn. Landlords
Apple House Realty has a 10 year / 95+% occupancy rate on prop's we've managed. 704-633-5067
Salisbury. Brick 2BR, 1BA. Garage, washer/ dryer hook-up. Central heat/air. No pets. $650 deposit, $650/mo. References. Call 704-6363698 or 704-637-1138
Sells Rd, 3BR /2 BA homes, all electric, free water, $675-$775/mo. Sect. 8 OK 704-633-6035.
Very Nice
Salisbury 2BR. $525 and up. GOODMAN RENTALS 704-633-4802
Salisbury City 2BR / 1BA, new central H/A, total elec., $475/mo + dep. 704-640-5750 Salisbury city. 2BR, 1BA. Remodeled. Central air & heat. Good neighbors. $495 + dep 704-640-5750 Salisbury H.S. Area. 4BR/1½ BA, cent. Gas & electric H/A $700/mo. Sec. 8 OK. 704-636-3307 Salisbury, city limits. 2 - 3BR. $450-$700. Central HVAC. 704-2394883 Fountain Quarters Realty Broker Salisbury- Hidden Creek. 2 bedrooms/2 baths. Ground level across from Clubhouse. No pets or smokers. $850.00 Call Waggoner Realty Co. at 704-633-0462 Salisbury. 1326 Old Plank Rd. 3BR, 1BA. Sect. 8 OK. $550/mo. No pets. 704-507-3915 Salisbury. 138 Crawford St. 1BR, 1BA. Stove, refrigerator, W/D hook-up. $395/mo. + deposit. 704-633-5397
Salisbury. 3BR, 1½BA House. NEW central air. GREAT Neighborhood $725/mo. Please call 704-232-7238
No. 60111
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF ROWAN 2010-SP-369 IN RE: DAVID A. WATSON and LAURA R. WATSON, Foreclosure of that Deed of Trust dated October 24, 2005, recorded in Book 1052 at Page 955, Rowan County Registry, Under Foreclosure By: K. Todd Phillips, Substitute Trustee. Pursuant to the order of the Clerk of Court of Rowan County and under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson dated October 24, 2005 and recorded in Book 1052 at Page 955 in the Rowan County Registry, and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein, and pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash at the door of the Rowan County Courthouse, 210 North Main Street, Salisbury, North Carolina at 10:00 a.m. on July 6, 2010, the following property that is located in Rowan County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: TRACT FIVE: 513 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, NC BEGINNING at an existing iron, said iron being the common corner with Lot 17 in the Western margin of the right of way of Vance Street, and runs thence with the line of Lot 17 South 62 degrees 51 minutes, 29 seconds West 144.89 feet to an existing iron in the Eastern margin of a 12-foot alley; thence with the Eastern margin of said 12-foot alley North 27 degrees 34 minutes 31 seconds West 50.00 feet to a new iron, a common corner with Lot 19; thence with the line of Lot 19 North 62 degrees 55 minutes 27 seconds East 145.00 feet to an existing iron in the Eastern margin of the right of way of Vance Street; thence with the Western margin of the right of way of Vance Street South 27 degrees 26 minutes 59 seconds East 49.83 feet to the point of BEGINNING and being Lot 18, Block 7 of Melrose Heights, as shown in Book of Maps at Page 57, and being in accordance with a survey and map by Sheulenburger Surveying Company for Dudley E. and Lynn A. Denison dated May 18, 1993. TRACT SIX: 511 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, NC BEGINNING at a stake in the Southwest margin of Vance Avenue between Maple and Hillsboro Streets at a point 150 feet distance from the South corner at intersection of Vance Avenue and Maple Street and runs thence with the margin of Vance Avenue South 27 degrees East 50 feet to a stake in the margin of Vance Avenue; thence South 63 degrees West 145 feet to an alley; thence with the margin of this alley, North 27 deg. West 50 feet to the rear corner of Lot No. 20 on this alley; thence with the line of Lot No. 20 North 63 deg. East 145 feet to the BEGINNING corner, and being Lot No. 19, Block 7, Map of Melrose Heights. TRACT SEVEN: 509 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, NC
3BR, 1BA home with kitchen, dining, living, sun porch, full basement, attached garage & unattached garage. Large, beautiful fenced in corner lot for rent or lease to own, $1,200/mo. Dennis, 704-202-0605.
Office and Commercial Rental 1250 sqft office. Lobby, 3 offices and 2 restrooms. Bradshaw Real Estate. 704-633-9011 23,000 sq ft manufacturing building with offices for lease. Bradshaw Real Estate. 704-633-9011 450 to 1,000 sq. ft. of Warehouse Space off Jake Alexander Blvd. Call 704279-8377 or 704-279-6882
5,000 or 10,000 sq. ft. distribution bldg., loading docks, office & restrooms. Bradshaw Real Estate 704-633-9011 Class A Office space. 118 E. Council St. $750/mo., utilities incl. Call 704-642-0071 Commercial warehouses available. 1,400 sq. ft. w/dock. Gated w/security cameras. Convenient to I-85. Olympic Crown Storage. 704-630-0066
Corner Lot
12,000 sq ft building on Jake Alexander Blvd. Could be office or retail. Heat and air. Call 704-279-8377 Granite Quarry -Best Deal Commercial Metal buildings and office space. 300-1800 SF. Utilities and gated parking available. 704-279-4422
Numerous Commercial and office rentals to suit your needs. Ranging from 500 to 5,000 sq. ft. Call Victor Wallace at Wallace Realty, 704-636-2021
PRICED TO SELL
BEGINNING at an existing iron in the western margin of Vance Avenue at the common corner of Lots Nos. 21 and 20, and running thence with the margin of Vance Avenue, South 23 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. East 50.01 feet to an iron in the line of Lot No. 19; thence South 66 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. West 144.86 feet to an iron in the margin of a 10-foot alley; thence with the margin of said alley, North 23 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. West 50.01 feet to an iron in the rear corner of Lot No. 21; thence North 66 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. East 144.86 feet to the point of BEGINNING and containing 0.166 acres, and being Lot. No. 20, Block 7, of Melrose Heights, recorded in Book of Maps at Page 57, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Rowan County, North Carolina. TRACT FOUR: 2240 Moore Street, Salisbury, NC (324A-00201) BEGINNING at an iron pin in the northern margin of Moore Street, common corner of Lots 4 and 5, Block E, Belle Meade Subdivision; thence with the margin of Moore Street South 76 deg. 22 min. 41 sec. West 94-93 feet to an iron pin thence North 12 deg. 54 min. 56 sec. West 179.01 feet to an iron rod; thence North 76 deg. 31 min. 09 sec. East 94.92 feet to an iron rod in the common line of Lots 4 and 5; thence with the common line of Lots 4 and 5, South 12 deg. 55 min. 00 sec. East 176.76 feet to the point of BEGINNING, being lots 5, 6, 7, and part of Lot 8, of Block E, as shown on a map of Belle Meade Subdivision, recorded in Book of Maps at Page 788, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Rowan County, North Carolina, and as more particularly shown on survey for Shulenburger Surveying dated August 14, 1990. TRACT ONE: 600 S. Spencer Avenue, Spencer, NC (033-401) BEING known as 600 Spencer Avenue, Spencer, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a new iron at the western corner of the intersection of the rights of way of Spencer Avenue and Sixth Street, and running thence with the Northwestern margin of the right of way of Spencer Avenue South 58 deg. 15 min. 00 sec. West 72.0 feet to a new iron in the front line of Lot 2; thence a new line through Lot 2 North 3 deg. 45 min. 00 sec. West 194 feet to a new iron in the southeastern margin of an alley; thence with said margin of the alley North 58 deg. 15 min. 00 sec. East 72.50 feet to a new iron in the southeastern margin of the right of way of Sixth Street; and thence with said margin of the right of way of Sixth Street South 31 deg. 45 min. 00 sec. East 194 feet to the BEGINNING, containing 0.323 acre and being all of Lot 1 and part of Lot 2, Block 41 of the property of Elizabeth B. Henderson and Mary E. Vanderford as shown in Book of Maps at Page 42-A in the Rowan County Registry and being Lot B as shown on plat of survey of Shulenburger Surveying Company dated November 17, 1986, revised December 3, 1986. TRACT TWO: 602 S. Spencer Avenue, Spencer, NC (033-208) BEGINNING at an iron stake, said iron stake being South 58 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds West 72.50 feet from the West corner of the intersection of Sixth Street and Spencer Avenue, a common corner with Michael O. Pulliam (Deed Book 684, Page 195) and runs thence with the Northwestern margin of the right of way of Spencer Avenue South 58 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds West 72.50 feet to an iron, in the Eastern margin of an alley; thence with the Eastern margin of said alley, North 31 degrees 45 minutes 00 seconds West 194.00 feet to an iron, said iron being North 84 degrees 54 minutes 35 seconds East 11.66 feet from a common corner of Lots 10 and 11; thence with the Southeastern margin of an alley North 58 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds East 72.50 feet to an iron; thence a new line South 31 degrees 45 minutes 00 seconds East 194.00 feet to the point of BEGINNING and being part of Lot 2 and Lot 3 and consisting of 0.323 acre and being in accordance with a property survey for Andrew Clayton by Shulenburger Surveying Company, dated November 17, 1986 and revised December 3, 1986. Property Address: (i) 509 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 017-076); (ii) 511 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 017-077); (iii) 513 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 017-078); (iv) 600 South Spencer Avenue, Spencer, North Carolina 28159 (Parcel No. 033-401); (v) 602 South Spencer Avenue, Spencer, North Carolina 28159 (Parcel No. 033-208); and (vi) 2240 Moore Street, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 324A00201) Property Improvements: Present Record Owner(s):
Granite Quarry-Garland Place, 3 BR, 2 BA, triple attached garage, single detached garage, whole house generator. Nice yard. R50640 $164,900 B&R Realty 704.633.2394 www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Salisbury & Mocksville HUD – Section 8 Nice 2 to 5 BR homes. Call us 1st. 704-630-0695
Salisbury 3BR/1½BA 622 W. Horah St., brick house, cent H/A, $700/mo + dep. 704-433-8308
Salisbury 3BR, 2BA. All Electric. No pets. Rent, $750, $500 deposit. Spacious ranch-style. Home has a carport and spacious front and back yard with a lovely deck on the back. Call AJ Realty and Investment 919-332-0585
Salisbury. 3BR, 2BA. 723 Mack St. All appliances included. Single car garage, all electric. No Section 8. $800/mo + deposit. Call 704-754-5700
Salisbury/Spencer 2, 4 & 5 BR $450-$850/mo. 704202-3644 or leave message. No calls after 7pm
East area. 2BR, 1BA. Outbuildings. 1 year lease. $725/month + deposit. 704-279-5602
Rowan Hospital area. 2BR, 1BA. Heat, air, water, appl. incl. $695. 704-633-3997
Apartments
Salisbury. 3 & 2 Bedroom Houses. $500-$1,000. Also, Duplex Apartments. 704636-6100 or 704-633-8263
2BR/1BA, new floor, available today! All elec. $425/mo, 704-279-5018
Airport Rd., 1BR with stove, refrig., garbage pickup & water incl. Month-month lease. No pets. $395/mo+$200 deposit. Furnished $420/mo. 704-279-3808
Houses for Rent
Luxury apartments Fulton Heights $695/mo. 704-239-0691
Spanish Spoken!
Clancy-hills@cmc-nc.com
Salisbury. Off 13th St. Huge lot. Could be nice home, too. Conveniently located. 1200+ sq. ft. with lots of extras. Call our office for more information. C48040. $129,900. B&R Realty 704-6332394
Houses for Rent
403 Carolina Blvd. Duplex For Rent. 2BR,1BA. $500/Mo. Call 704-2798467 or 704-279-7568
704-633-1234
Call 24 hours, 7 days ** 704-239-2033 ** $$$$$$
15 minutes N. of Salisbury. 2001 model singlewide 3 bdr/2 bath on large treed lot in quiet neighborhood. $1,200 start-up, $475/month includes lot rent, home payment, taxes, insurance. RENT or RENTTO-OWN. 704-2108176.
3 Shive St. 2 story house w/3 apts. 3 big rooms w/BA. Furnished. 134 Gold Hill Dr. 4 room house w/BA. Trailer avail. also. 704-633-5397
2345 Statesville Blvd. Near Salisbury Mall
Downtown Salis, 2300 sf office space, remodeled, off street pking. 633-7300 Woodleaf. 4320 Potneck Rd. 2-story house on .67 acre. 1,985 sq. ft. living space w/attached 2-vehicle garage. 4BR, 2 full BA, living, dining, den, pantry, hardwood floors. New roof & heating/cooling system. Detached 1-vehicle garage workshop, 248 sq. ft. Walking distance to Woodleaf School. $125,000. Call 704-278-4703 after 7 p.m.
2BR, 1BA duplex on E. Franklin St. Recently refurbished w/ new carpet. Nice. Rent - $475, Dep. - $400. Call Rowan Properties, 704-633-0446
Apartments
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 7B
Prime Location, 1800+ sq.ft. office space 4 private offices, built in reception desk. Large open space with dividers, 2 bathrooms and breakroom. Ample parking 464 Jake Alexander Blvd. 704 223 2803
RENTAL SPACE Salisbury. We have office suites available in the Executive Center. With all utilities from $250 and up. Lots of amenities. Call Karen Rufty at B & R Realty 704-202-6041 www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Salisbury, Kent Executive Park office suites, $100 & up. Utilities paid. Conference room, ample parking. 704-202-5879 Salisbury. Six individual offices, new central heat/air, heavily insulated for energy efficiency, fully carpeted (to be installed) except stone at entrance. Conference room, employee break room, tile bathroom, and nice, large reception area. Perfect location near the Court House and County Building. Want to lease but will sell. Perfect for dual occupancy. By appointment only. 704-636-1850 Spencer Shops Lease great retail space for as little as $750/mo for 2,000 sq ft at. 704-431-8636
Unknown David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson
Pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes ("Gen. Stat.") 45-21.8 and 45-21.9, the Trustee gives notice that the Property in question consists of multiple parcels of real estate and the Trustee expressly reserves the right to sell only as many of such parcels as the Trustee in the Trustee's judgment believes necessary to satisfy the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust and the costs and expenses of the sale. If the Trustee effects to sell only a portion of the parcels subject to the Deed of Trust but the proceeds thereof are inadequate to satisfy the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust and the costs and expenses of the sale, the Trustee expressly reserves the right to exercise the power of sale contained in the Deed of Trust and re-advertise the unsold parcels or a portion thereof and sell as many additional units or parcels as the Trustee believes is in the Trustee's judgment to be necessary to satisfy the remainder of the secured obligation and costs and expenses of such sale. The property offered pursuant to this Notice is being offered for sale, transfer, and conveyance AS IS, WHERE IS. Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust, security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor their officers, directors, attorneys, representatives, employees, or agents make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, health, environmental, or safety conditions existing in, on, at, or relating to said property, and any liability or responsibility arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition is expressly disclaimed. The Trustee may, in the Trustee's sole discretion, delay the sale for one hour as provided in Gen. Stat. 45-21.23. At the sale, any bid must be at least $100.00 more than the immediately preceding bid. If the highest bidder is anyone other than the holder of the indebtedness, such high bidder must pay, in addition to the bid price, the fees or taxes imposed by Gen. Stat. 7A-308(a)(1) and 105 228.30 and any other tax or fee based upon the sale of the subject property or the sale price thereof. The Trustee reserves the right to require of the successful bidder at such sale a deposit of 5% of the amount bid in the form of certified funds, official bank check, or the equivalent (as provided in the Deed of Trust or by law), or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater. The sale is subject to unpaid taxes, special assessments, restrictions and easements of record, and prior liens, if any. The sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by law. Thereafter, all remaining amounts are immediately due and owing and time is of the essence. Any announcement made at the sale takes precedence over these terms of sale to the extent allowed by law. If the subject property is residential real property with less than 15 rental units, pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.16A(b), the following notice is provided: (1) An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold; and (2) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days' written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. This Is an Effort to Collect a Debt and Any Information Obtained Will Be Used for That Purpose. This the 17th day of June, 2010. SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE: K. Todd Phillips, N.C. Bar No. 13940 HARTSELL & WILLIAMS, P.A. 71 McCachern Boulevard, S.E., Post Office Box 368 Concord, North Carolina 28026-0368 Telephone: 704-786-5161
CLASSIFIED
8B â&#x20AC;˘ MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Auctions
Carport and Garages
Auctions
Rowan Auction Co. Professional Auction Services: Salis., NC 704-633-0809 Kip Jennings NCAL 6340.
Lippard Garage Doors Installations, repairs, electric openers. 704636-7603 / 704-798-7603
Auction Thursday 12pm 429 N. Lee St. Salisbury Antiques, Collectibles, Used Furniture 704-213-4101
Tony McBride Auction Your Full Service Auction Co. One Piece/Entire Estate. 704-791-5625. NCAL 6894
Carolina's Auction Rod Poole, NCAL#2446 Salisbury (704)633-7369
www.piedmontauction.com
www.thecarolinasauction.com
Heritage Auction Co. Glenn M.Hester NC#4453 Salisbury (704)636-9277 www.heritageauctionco.com
Job Seeker meeting at 112 E. Main St., Rockwell. 6:30pm Mons. Rachel Corl, Auctioneer. 704-279-3596 KEN WEDDINGTON Total Auctioneering Services 140 Eastside Dr., China Grove 704-8577458 License 392 R. Giles Moss Auction & Real Estate-NCAL #2036. Full Service Auction Company. Estates ** Real Estate Had your home listed a long time? Try selling at auction. 704-782-5625 www.gilesmossauction.com
Put your picture in your business or service ad for instant recognition.
Perry's Overhead Doors Sales, Service & Installation, Residential / Commercial. Wesley Perry 704-279-7325 www.perrysdoor.com
Brickwork & Masonry
Grading & Hauling
We Build Garages, 24x24 = $12,500. All sizes built! ~ 704-633-5033 ~
Brick & Concrete All types of improvements & repairs. Over 29 yrs exp.
704-202-3293
Child Care and Nursery Schools
Caregiving Services
Experienced Home Child Care
Caregiver will sit with elderly in home, hospital or nursing home. 8 yrs experience and references. 704-856-8557 or 704-213-6246
6 weeks11 years 6am-6pm Reasonable rates Call Michelle 704-603-7490
Cleaning Services !!!!! Residential & Commercial Free Estimates References available Call Zonia 704-239-2770
Junk Removal
Beaver Grading Quality work, reasonable rates. Free Estimates 704-6364592
Garages, new homes, remodeling, roofing, siding, back hoe, loader 704-6369569 Maddry Const Lic G.C.
Anthony's Scrap Metal Service. Top prices paid for any type of metal or batteries. Free haul away. 704-433-1951
Grading, Clearing, Hauling, and Topsoil. Please Call 704-633-1088
H&H Construction. Bath, Kitchen, Decks & Roofs! Interior & Exterior Remodeling & Repairs! 704-633-2219 www.hhconstruction19.com
Wife For Hire Inc.,
All types concrete work ~ Insured ~ NO JOB TOO SMALL! Call Curt LeBlanc today for Free Estimates
Brown's Landscape & Backhoe Bush hogging, tilling for gardens & yards. Free Est. 704-224-6558
Drywall Services
FREE Estimates 704-636-3415 704-640-3842 www.earlslawncare.com
The Floor Doctor
olympicdrywall@aol.com olympicdrywallcompany.com
Heating and Air Conditioning
Fencing
Piedmont AC & Heating Electrical Services Lowest prices in town!! 704-213-4022
C47107
S44339
July 18th-22nd 6:00 PM thru 8:30 PM 704-938-3153
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
Earl's Lawn Care
Reliable Fence All Your Fencing Needs, Reasonable Rates, 21 years experience. (704)640-0223
1008 Moose RoadKannapolis NC 28083
Lyerly's ATV & Mower Repair Free estimates. All types of repairs Pickup/delivery avail. 704-642-2787
" Mowing " Trimming " Edging " Landscaping " Trimming Bushes
Free Estimates Bud Shuler & Sons Fence Co. 225 W Kerr St 704-633-6620 or 704-638-2000 Price Leader since 1963
Holiness Church Games, Crafts, Music, Food & Fun!
Lawn Equipment Repair Services
alservicesunltd.com
Since 1955
GAYLOR'S LAWNCARE For ALL your lawn care needs! *FREE ESTIMATES* 704-639-9925/ 704-640-0542
Wood floor leveling, jacks installed, rotten wood replaced due to water or termites, brick/block/tile work, foundations, etc. 30 YEARS EXP. 704-933-3494
Outdoors by overcash Mowing, Mulching, Leaf Removal. Free Estimates. 704-630-0120
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
Ads with a price ALWAYS generate more qualified calls
Home Improvement
The Federal Trade Commission says companies that promise to scrub your credit report of accurate negative information for a fee are lying. Under federal law, accurate negative information can be reported for up to seven years, and some bankruptcies for up to ten years. Learn about managing credit and debt at ftc.gov/credit.
First Baptist Church
of Salisbury
REGISTERING FOR 2010-2011 SCHOOL YEAR!
A message from the Salisbury Post and the FTC.
Preschool Classes:
704-639-1062
223 N. Fulton St., Salisbury
S45299
8:30-11:30 8:30-12:00 8:30-12:30
Guttering, leaf guard, metal & shingle roofs. Ask about tax credits.
~ 704-633-5033 ~
Septic Tank Service David Miller Septic Tank Co. Installation/ Repairs â&#x20AC;&#x153;Since 1972â&#x20AC;? 704-279-4400 or 704-279-3265
Stoner Painting Contractor â&#x20AC;˘ 25 years exp. â&#x20AC;˘ Int./Ext. painting â&#x20AC;˘ Pressure washing â&#x20AC;˘ Staining â&#x20AC;˘ Insured & Bonded 704-239-7553
Tree Service A-1 Tree Service
Pools and Supplies Bost Pools â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Call me about your swimming pool. Installation, service, liner & replacement. (704) 637-1617
For all your landscape needs. Free estimates Patios, walkways, fences, retaining walls, plantings, mulch, drainage, lighting
A HANDYMAN & MOORE Kitchen & Bath remodeling Quality Home Improvements Carpentry, Plumbing, Electric Clark Moore 704-213-4471
NC LANDSCAPE CONTRACTOR 1589 704-630-1126 ! 704-267-8694
Granite & solid surface for kitchens & baths, cultured marble vanity tops, tubs & enclosures, standard & custom walk-in showers. FREE ESTIMATES!
Brisson - HandyMan Home Repair, Carpentry, Plumbing, Electrical, etc. Insured. 704-798-8199 Browning ConstructionStructural repair, flooring installations, additions, decks, garages. 704-637-1578 LGC
Charla, Barbara and Kristin will help you with your classified ads.
704-797-4220
â&#x20AC;˘ Home Improvement
Manufactured Home Services
HMC Handyman Services No Job too Large or Small. Please call 704-239-4883
Mobile Home Supplies~ City Consignment Company New & Used Furniture. Please Call 704636-2004
Kitchens, Baths, Sunrooms, Remodel, Additions, Wood & Composite Decks, Garages, Vinyl Rails, Windows, Siding. & Roofing. ~ 704-633-5033 ~
Junk Removal $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ We Buy Any Type of Scrap Metal At the Best Prices...
Guaranteed! !
We will come to you! ! David, 704-314-7846
!Established since 1978 !Reliable & Reasonable !Insured Free Estimates!
~ 704-202-8881~
Recognized by the Salisbury Tree Board
AAA Trees R Us
Pressure Washing
Bucket Truck Chipper/Stumps !Free Estimates
We Will Try to Beat Any Written Estimates!
704-239-1955
"
" "
"
Roofing and Guttering
Graham's Tree Service Free estimates, reasonable rates. Licensed, Insured, Bonded. 704-633-9304 John Sigmon Stump grinding, Prompt service for 30+ years, Free Estimates. John Sigmon, 704-279-5763. Johnny Yarborough, Tree Expert trimming, topping, & removal of stumps by machine. Wood splitting, lots cleared. 10% off to senior citizens. 704-857-1731
! Roofing & Siding ! Additions & Decks ! Windows & Doors ! In Business 35 Years ! I've Got You Covered
Let's Talk...it's Free!
â&#x20AC;&#x153;We can remove bankruptcies, judgments, liens, and bad loans from your credit file forever!â&#x20AC;?
W.E.E. Center
SEAMLESS GUTTER Licensed Contractor C.M. Walton Construction, 704-202-8181
Eddleman's Landscape Services
Financial Services
Come early or call for pre-registration
Roofing and Guttering
WILL BUY OLD CARS Complete with keys and title, $150 and up. (Salisbury area only) R.C.'s Garage & Salvage 704-636-8130 704-267-4163
Professional Services Unlimited Licensed Gen. Contractor #17608. Complete contracting service specializing in foundation & structural floor repairs, basement & crawlspace waterproofing & removal, termite & rot damage, ventilation. 35 yrs exper. Call Duke @ 704-6333584. Visit our website: www.profession-
Concrete Work
Painting and Decorating
CASH FOR JUNK CARS And batteries. Call 704-279-7480 or 704-798-2930
Hometown Lawn Care & Handyman Service. Mowing, pressure washing, gutter cleaning, odd jobs ~inside & out. Comm, res. Insured. Free estimates. â&#x20AC;&#x153;No job too smallâ&#x20AC;? 704-433-7514 Larry Sheets, owner
C.R. General Cleaning Service. Comm. & residential. Insured, Bonded. Spring Cleaning Specials! 704-433-1858 www.crgeneral.com
704-279-2600
Jackson Park Pentecostal
weecenter@fbcsalisbury.org
Home Improvement
For All Your Drywall & Painting Needs Residential & Commercial
call 704-797-4220
2 days per week 3 days per week 4 days a week
Grading & Hauling
OLYMPIC DRYWALL & PAINTING COMPANY
To advertise in this directory
2 Years 3 Years 4-5 Years
SALISBURY POST
FREE ESTIMATES! LOWEST PRICES!
MOORE'S Tree TrimmingTopping & Removing. Use Bucket Truck, 704-209-6254 Licensed, Insured & Bonded Plummer & Sons Tree Service, free estimates. Reasonable rates, will beat any written estimate 15%. Insured. Call 704-633-7813. TREE WORKS by Jonathan Keener. Insured â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Free estimates! Please call 704-636-0954.
Upholstery
Moving and Storage TH Jones Mini-Max Storage 116 Balfour Street Granite Quarry Please 704-279-3808
Painting and Decorating AFFORDABLE RATES WOODIE'S PAINTING INC., Residential & Churches 704-637-6817 Bowen Painting Interior and Exterior Painting 704-630-6976
www.bowenpaintingnc.com
Cathy's Painting Service Interior & exterior, new & repaints. 704-279-5335
ROOFING ! Framing ! Siding ! Storm Repair Local, Licensed & Insured
704-791-6856 www.insuranceroofclaim.com
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 The Salisbury Post reserves the right to edit or exclude any birthday submission. Space is limited, 1st come 1st served, birthdays only. Please limit your birthday greetings to 4 per Birthday. Fax: 704-630-0157 In Person: 131 W. Innes Street Online: www.SalisburyPost.com (under Website Forms, bottom right column)
FOR FREE BIRTHDAY GREETINGS Please Fax, hand deliver or fill out form online 18 WORDS MAX. Number of free greetings per person may be limited, combined or excluded, contingent on space available.
Happy Happy Birthday to our grandpa, Jeff Trexler. Love, Reagan & Ryleigh Happy birthday Lisa McDonald. May all your wishes come true. Thank you for being my sister. I love you bunches. Love always, Teresa Harrison
Country Porch Cafe
Happy BIRTHDAY Tonia Parks, Pam Alexander, Vivian Smith, Stephanie Sides, Ronesha Lipscomb Hope each and every one of u have a Blessed Day!
Daily Breakfast & Lunch Specials
S44329
Tues.-Fri. 7:00am-2pm Sat. 7am-11am (Breakfast)
Building rental for private parties & in-house catering available Call for details
Happy Birthday Pam, Stephanie, Nita and Ronesha hope you all have many more! Tonia Happy birthday Tonia enjoy this day to the fullest Luv your Mom, Kim, Terrall and Doug, etc.
3665 Liberty Road, Gold Hill
704.636.9933
Happy 4th birthday wishes for Makalya Williams. We love you.Your God parents, Mr. & Mrs. Clayton Campbell & Jazmine Happy 4th Birthday Makayla Willilams! Grandmother Mary Harris loves you. Hope this day will be special for a special little girl. Happy B-Day Tonia Parks Luv your sons Mario and Maine! Luv u Ma!!
Tell Someone HAPPY BIRTHDAY! A 2â&#x20AC;?x3â&#x20AC;? greeting with photo is only $20, and includes 4 copies of the Post
704-797-4220
birthday@salisburypost.com
Fax: 704-630-0157
S45555
Birthday? ...
%LUWKGD\ &DERR &DERRVH RVH
We want to be your flower shop!
FFOR OR MUSEUM MEMB MEMBERS ERS FOR FOR NON MEMBERS NON MEM MBERS 3ATURDAYS ONLY #ALL EXT 3ATU
Salisbury Flower Shop S40137
3 3 3ALISBURY ALISBURY ! !VENUE VENUE 3PENCER
3 PENCER
.# WWW NCTRANS ORG WWW NCTRANS ORRG
S46181
1628 West Innes St. Salisbury, NC â&#x20AC;˘ 704-633-5310
Hours of daily personal attention and doggie fun at our safe 20 acre facility. Professional homestyle boarding, training, and play days with a certified handler/trainer who loves dogs as much as you do.
S45263
! UNIQUE BIR BIRTHDAY THDAY EEXPERIENCE XPERIENCE %%NJOY NJOY YYOUR OUR TWO TWO HOUR PARTY PARTY AND RIDE RIDE THE TRAIN TRAIN AATT THE -USEUM . # 44RANSPORTATION RANSPORTATION USEUM )N 3PENCER 3PEN NCER
S46423
CLASSIFIED
SALISBURY POST Office and Commercial Rental
Autos
Autos
Warehouse space / manufacturing as low as $1.25/sq. ft./yr. Deposit. Call 704-431-8636
South Rowan area. Attractive mobile home lots. Water, garbage, sewer furnished. $160/mo. 704636-1312 or 704-798-0497
03 Honda CR-V EX 4x4, 4 cylinder, Auto, Roof, RW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys, Low miles, 1 owner. 10H122A $11,984 704.637.9090
Ford, 1999 Crown Victoria LX 4 Door Sedan Spruce green. 4 speed automatic. $7,345. 1-800-542-9758. Stock # F10305A2. 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com Chevrolet, 2006, Impala. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off! Ford, 2003, Ranger XLT. 4 door extended cab. Power windows, cruise, tilt, power mirrors. 80,000 miles. Very clean. $6,495. 704-637-7327
3990 Statesville Blvd for sale or rent, lot 6. 2BR. $329/mo. Call 704-6403222 for more information.
Cleveland. D/W 3BR / 2BA No pets. $575/mo + $575 dep. 704-2784508 or 704-798-5558
04 Ford F150 FX4 Supercab 4x4, V8, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AC,CD, Tow Pkg, Chrome Wheels 9K166A $11,864 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
trash and lawn service included. No pets. $475 month. 704-433-1255
East Area. Nice range, refrig, W/D, AC, elec.heat, garbage and lawn service, water all furnished. Adults only. $425.00/mo. plus deposit. 704-6402667 or 704-857-8724 or 704-279-7121.
05 Toyota Camry LE, 4 cylinder, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AC, CD, 1 Owner Car! 10BH104B $10,944 704.637.9090
Faith 2BR/2BA, private lot, appliances included, $490/mo + dep. No pets. 704-279-3518 Faith 3BR/2BA, $495/mo + dep, no pets. 2BR/1BA, $375/mo + dep. Hwy 152 /I-85. 704-239-2833 Faith. 2BR, 1BA. Very nice. ½ acre lot. Limit 3. No pets. Ref. $400. 704279-4282 or 704-202-7294
Roseman Rd. area. 2 BR. No pets, appliances & trash pickup incl. $525/ mo. + dep. 704-855-7720
Chevy, 2009 Cobalt Black w/ gray cloth interior am, fm, cd, 4 cylinder,auto, like new 24,000 miles, nonsmoker, extra clean inside and out, aluminum alloy wheels wrapped in good tires,cheap newer car for a great price. 704-603-4255 Ford, 2010, Mustang. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
06 Chevrolet Malibu LT, 4 Cylinder, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Alloys 10H288A $9,979 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
06 Scion XA Hatchback, 4 cylinder, Auto, PW,PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Great on Gas! 10H496A $9,987 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
07 Chevrolet Impala LS, V6, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AC, CD, Priced to sell $9993 704.637.9090
Cobra, 2001 Convertible 4.6 V8 w/ cold air intake. 5 speed short throw shifter, 2 tone leather/ suede seats, all pwr ops, lowering kit, 18'' staggered FR500 rims with 3'' lip, fog lights, cruise. 704603-4255
Service & Parts
Authorized EZGO Dealer. 30 years selling, servicing GOLF CARS Golf Car Batteries 6 volt, 8 volt. Golf car utility sales. US 52, 5 miles south of Salisbury. Beside East Rowan HS & Old Stone Winery. Look for EZGO sign. Buy 6 batteries & receive $10 gift receipt for purchase of a bottle of OLD STONE Wine. Coupon good until 7/31/10. 704-245-3660
6-volt – $58 8-volt – $68 12 month warranty If it's a battery, we sell it! We Buy Old Batteries! Faith Rd. to Hwy 152 Store across from Sifford's Marathon
North Myrtle Beach
Ocean Front Condo
07 KIA Sedona EX, V6, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, Dual Air, CD, 7 passenger seating, 1 Owner Car! 10BC111B $9,940 704.637.9090
Jeep, 1998, Grand Cherokee Limited. Black. 138,000 miles. Roof rack with tire. Good condition. $3,500. Please call 704-637-2986
Chevrolet, 2003 Tahoe LT 4 Door SUV 4 Speed Automatic, V 8. $14,745. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # T10109A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Transportation Financing
Ford, 1992 F-150 Custom 2 Door Regular Cab Truck 4 WD. V8. $7,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10267A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Chevy, 2003 Silverado V8 with auto tranny am, fm, cd, cold ac, bed liner, like new tires. Extra Clean Inside & Out!! 704-603-4255
Chevy, 2003 Suburban LT black w/ tan leather interior, AM, FM, CD changer, DVD, rear audio, duel climate control, duel power and heated seats, sunroof, running boards, 3rd seat. RUNS & DRIVES GREAT. 704-603-4255
Chevy, 2004 Colorado Extra clean inside & out! 4 doors, 5 cylinder, this gas saver is perfect for the first time driver or great for a back to work and home vehicle. All power, like new tires, cold ac, roll pan, exhaust. 704-603-4255
CLONINGER FORD, INC. “Try us before you buy.” 511 Jake Alexander Blvd. 704-633-9321
Ford, 1998 Explorer Limited 4 Door SUV 5 Speed automatic, V6. $7, 945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock #P7472A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Ford, 1998, Ranger. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Ford, 2003 Expedition XLT 4.6 V8 with auto trans, front & rear AC, AM, FM, CD, tape, cloth interior, after market rims, GREAT SUV FOR THE FAMILY!! 704-603-4255
Chevy, 2005 Tahoe LS white w/ tan cloth interior 5.3 V8 auto trans, all pwr options, am, fm, tape, cd, 3rd seat, duel pwr seats, clean, cruise, alloy rims, drives great. Ready for retail! 704-603-4255
Ford, 2003 Explorer Sport Track XLT 4X4 LOADED! Blue/Gray leather interior am, fm, cd DUEL HEATED SEATS, bed cover, aluminum alloy wheels good tires, running boards, sunroof, good miles, runs & drives great! 704-603-4255
08 Chrysler Sebring Touring, V6, Auto, PW,PL, Tilt, Cruise, ABS, CD, Alloys, Chrysler Certified. 10BC124A $10,998 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2003, Stratus, SE. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Transportation Financing Bad Credit? No Credit? No Problem! Tim Marburger Dodge 877-792-9700
Bank Financing available. First time buyers welcome! You deserve a fresh start! Don't wait! Low Rates Available. Minimum down payment. Carfax & warranties available. Call Steve today! 704-603-4255 or 704-224-3979 after 6pm. Visit us at: www.JakeAlexanderAutoSales.com
Autos
Chrysler, 2005 Town & Country LX 4 Door Passenger Van. Stone white, 4 Speed, automatic, V8.$10,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10246C 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Financing Available! 08 Ford Focus SES, 4 Cylinder, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Alloys, Great on Gas, 1 owner. 10BK137A $10,549 704.637.9090
HONDA, 2003, ACCORD EX. $500-700 down, will help finance. Credit, No Problem! Private party sale. Call 704-838-1538
01 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series, Loaded V8, Heated Leather Seats, Roof, Climate Control, Alloys, Low Miles, Excellent Condition!! 10BC163A $8,969 704.637.9090
02 Mercury Sable GS, V6, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Power Seat, Alloys, Low Miles 57K, 10BC92B $6,944 704.637.9090
Mazda, 2002 Miata Conv DON'T GET CAUGHT with your TOP up this summer! PERFECT and AFFORDABLE! Sunlight silver w/ dark gray cloth interior. 1.8 4 cylinder gas saver w/ auto tranny. Low Miles, alloy wheels like new tires. 704-603-4255
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Chrysler, 2007 Pacifica Touring Blue/ Lt. Gray leather interior 4.0 auto am, fm, cd, DVD, TV, SUNROOF, front and rear HEATED SEATS, rear air controls, power rear door, LOADED, EXTRA CLEAN. 704-603-4255
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
KIA, 2006 Sorento 3.5 V6 auto, 4x4, cloth seats, CD, towing pkg, good tires, all power, luggage rack, runs& drives NICE!! 704-603-4255
Mazda, 2005 Tribute S 4 Door SUV. V 6. $8,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10404A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Ford, 2004 Ranger Edge 2 Door Truck V 6. 5 speed. RWD. $7,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10327A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com Oldsmobile, 2001, Silhouette. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Toyota, 2002 Camry SE V6 4 Door Sedan 4 speed automatic $8,745. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # T10487A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Boats & Watercraft
Buick, 2004, Ranier. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2002 Dakota BASE 2 Door Long Bed Truck. V 6. $10,445. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # T10554A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Ford, 2004, Expedition XLT. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
16 foot Silver Line walk thru Wind Shield. 4 cylinder, inboard/ outboard motor. Clean and runs good. $1,250. 704-636-8865
Suburban, 2005 LT Sport Leather interior 5.3 V8 backed w/ 4 speed automatic tranny, all pwr options incl'd heated seats, sunroof, cd, dvd, 3RD seat, steering wheel controls, running boards! 704-603-4255
Collector Cars Ford Focus 2001, 4 door, 87K miles, new tires, automatic, power windows, cruise, $3,700. 704-202-0326
Pontiac, 2008, Grand Prix. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Chevrolet, 2003, S10. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Kia, 2005, Sedona. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Autos
BMW, 2004 330Xi Silver with black leather interior, 6 cylinder with auto tranny, AM, FM, CD, duel seat warmers, all power options, SUNROOF, run & drives like a DREAM! 704-603-4255
Honda, 2005 Odyssey EXL Van Silver/dark gray leather interior, cd, dvd, steering wheel controls, sunroof, 3rd seat, duel heated seats, LOADED, alloy wheels with good tires. 704-6034255
Ford, 2003, Explorer Eddie Bauer. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Older man in Kannapolis has a nice, spacious, furnished room for rent. It's in a nice neighborhood. No smoking, drugs, loud music or animals. Cable available. Free parking. Only $85/week + $45 deposit. References required. 704-932-5008
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Mazda, 2000 B3000 Extended Cab 4 Speed, automatic, V6. $7,945. Stock # F10347C 1-800-542-9758 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Lincoln, 1998, Town Car. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
GMC, 2007,Sierra. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Troutman Motor Co. Highway 29 South, Concord, NC 704-782-3105
Dodge, 2003, Stratus R/T. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Rooms for Rent
GMC, 1997 Jimmy 4 Wheel drive, 4 door, V6, leather, sunroof, pwr windows, doors and seats. New AC. $2,700. Call 704-647-0881
Transportation Dealerships
Tim Marburger Honda 1309 N First St. (Hwy 52) Albemarle NC 704-983-4107
Volvo, 2006 S60 2.5T Onyx black with cream leather interior, sunroof, cd player, all power, alloy wheels, super nice! 704-603-4255
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
BATTERY-R-US GOLF CART BATTERIES
TEAM CHEVROLET- GEO, CADILLAC, OLDSMOBILE 404 Jake Alexander Blvd., Salisbury. Call 704-636-9370
Jaguar, 2001 S-Type 4.0L V8 Sedan 5 Speed automatic, V8. $11,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # P7486A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Recreational Vehicles
NEED CASH? We buy cars & scrap metal by the pound. Call for latest prices. Stricklin Auto & Truck Parts. Call 704-278-1122 or 888-378-1122
Volkswagon, 2006, Beetle Convertible. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Resort & Vacation Rentals
MILLER HOTEL Rooms for Rent Weekly $110 & up 704-855-2100
Toyota, 2006 Camry LE White w/gray cloth interior. 2.4 4 cylinder with auto tranny am, fm, cd, cold ac, sunroof, power driver seat, extra clean inside & out. Runs & drives awesome! 704603-4255
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Salis., Pickler Rd, 2BR/1BA in country, priv lot, quite n'hood, cent H/A, limit 3, no pets. 704-639-1242 lv msg
2BR, 2BA Ocean front condo. Sleeps 6, fully equipped. Outdoor pool. Quiet family area, yet close to shops and restaurants. Locally owned. Reasonbly priced. 704-603-8647
Toyota, 1998, Camry LE. Automatic, 4 cylinder. Leather, sunroof, green. New tires, great shape. 159K miles, $3,500. 704-636-8027
Hyundai, 2006, Tiberon GT. LIKE NEW!!! Blue/Black leather interior, SUNROOF, AM/FM/ CD. V6. Tiptronic transmission. Aluminum rims, good tires. 704-603-4255
S. Rowan area. 3BR, 2BA $600/mo. + $600 deposit. No pets. 2 year contract. 704-640-5496
West & South Rowan. 2 & 3 BR. No pets. Perfect for 3. Water included. Please call 704-857-6951
Kawasaki 2002, Vulcan 800 Classic. Beautiful red & chrome. Very low miles, 4K. Newer grips, backrest, windshield. 1 owner. Only asking $3,800. Call anytime. 980-234-4360
704-213-1005 Chrysler, 1999, Concorde LX. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
You Must See This!
www.battery-r-us.com
Hurley School Rd. area. 2BR, 1BA. Nice subdiv. Well kept. 3 people. $425 + dep. 704-640-5750 Near Lexington. Nice 2BR, 1½BA. $115/wk. References & deposit required. 704-638-5538
Ford, 2007 Focus SE White over gray cloth interior, 2.0 with auto trans, AM, FM, CD, sat radio, power windows, brakes & locks. Cold ac, LOW MILES, runs & drives great! 704-603-4255
Motorcycles & ATVs
2001 24' camper on High Rock Lake. Shared dock. $6,500. Includes lot rent through April 2011. 828-754-6829 Toyota, 1996 Camry LE 4 Door Sedan. Tan, 4 speed automatic $5,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10051B 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Chevrolet, 2006, Malibu. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
East area, 2 bedroom,
East Area. 2BR, water, trash. Limit 3. Dep. req. No pets. Call 704-6367531 or 704-202-4991
Toyota Forerunner 1995, V6, automatic, 4wheel drive, all power, new tires, very clean. 168K miles, $2,500. 704202-0326
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Manufactured Home for Rent
China Grove. 2BR,1BA. Ref. $465/mo. + $400 dep. Incl. garbage, water. No pets. 704-857-3473 or 704-202-4344
Autos ELLIS AUTO AUCTION 10 miles N. of Salisbury, Hwy 601, Sale Every Wednesday night 6 pm.
Audi, 2000. A6. Black, 4-door, clean. Please call 704-279-8692
Salis. 1,000 s.f. Free standing, ample pkg., previously restaurant. Drive-In window 704-202-5879
Manufactured Home Lot Rentals
Autos
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 9B
Ford, 2002 ThunderBird Convertible. White w/ dark gray leather interior, am, fm, cd changer, 3.9 V8, auto trans, all power options, fog lights, chrome rims with good tires. A REAL Must See! 704-603-4255
Suzuki, 2007, Forenza. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Ford, 1966, Fairlane 500 ~ restored. 2 Door Coupe. Completely rebuilt 390 Motor w/GT parts. 428 Cobra Jet Heads, new interior, new original paint. Many spare parts. Only non-original parts are wheels and power steering rack. Painted original Carolina blue w/dark blue interior. Must see & drive to appreciate! $21,500 OBO. Beautiful car. Runs and drives great. 504-638-7600
Motorcycles & ATVs Yamaha, 2001. 2 wheel drive. $1,800. 704-636-3605. Call after 5pm.
Chevrolet, 1998, Tahoe. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2003, Durango. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Ford, 2006 Expedition Eddie Bauer Edition. cd, DVD, SUNROOF, duel heated seats, POWER 3rd seat, luggage rack. Steering wheel controls, nonsmoker. Like new. MUST SEE! 704-603-4255 2005 Jeep Liberty V6 4x4 3.5L Blk w/Tan int., 4 cyl., all power, AM/FM, C/D, low miles, chrome rims w/like new tires, Extra Clean Gas Saver !!!! 704-603-4255
Chevrolet, 1999, Suburban. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2006 Durango LIMITED 4.7. V8 auto 4x4 Leather,DVD, all pwr options, duel power/ heated seats, rear POWER LIFT GATE, good tires, DON'T WANT TO MISS THIS ONE! 704-603-4255
FORD, 2006 Freestyle, SE AWD. 4 door. 92K miles. Local company car that has been used for marketing purposes. All services performed by Ford dealership. Asking price $7,995. All inquires, call Charles Church 704-4318898 anytime
Want to Buy: Transportation DONATED passenger van or bus needed for newly formed Youth Group. Call Pastor Rob at 980-721-3371. Thanks for letting your love shine!
COMICS
10B â&#x20AC;˘ MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Zits/Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Jump Start/Robb Armstrong
For Better or For Worse/Lynn Johnston
Frank & Ernest/Bob Thaves
SALISBURY POST
Dilbert/Scott Adams Non Sequitur/Wiley Miller
Garfield/Jim Davis Pickles/Brian Crane
Hagar The Horrible/Chris Browne Dennis/Hank Ketcham
Family Circus/Bil Keane
Blondie/Dean Young and John Marshall
Crossword/NEA
Get Fuzzy/Darby Conley
The Born Loser/Art and Chip Sansom
Sudoku/United Feature Syndicate Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Celebrity Cipher/Luis Campos
TV/HOROSCOPE
SALISBURY POST
MONDAY EVENING JUNE 28, 2010 7:00
7:30
8:00
Wheel of Fortune Å WBTV News Prime Time (N)
Jeopardy! (N) Å Who Wants to Be a Millionaire
How I Met Your Mother How I Met Your Mother Å
3
CBS ( WGHP
22
FOX ) WSOC
9
ABC ,
WXII NBC
2 WCCB
11
D WCNC
Nightly 6 NBC News (N) (In
NBC J
WTVI
Å
Stereo) Å
4 Everyday Edisons Å
ABC World News Guy (In WJZY 8 Family Stereo) Å The Simpsons WMYV Deal or No Deal WMYT 12 A home health nurse. (:00) PBS WUNG 5 NewsHour (N) Å
M WXLV N P W Z
9:30
Rules of Two and a Half (:31) The Big Engagement Men Bang Theory Two and a Half (:31) The Big Rules of Men (In Stereo) Bang Theory Å Engagement “Flirting” Å Å TMZ (N) (In Are You Smarter Lie to Me “React to Contact” The Good Guys “$3.52” A drug Lightman tries to help a war vetStereo) Å Than a 5th smuggler is set free. (N) (In Stereo) eran. (N) (In Stereo) Å Grader? Å Inside Edition Entertainment The Bachelorette (N) (In Stereo) Å Tonight (N) (In Å Stereo) Å Inside Edition Entertainment Last Comic Standing Semifinals begin. (N) (In Stereo) Å Tonight (N) (In Å Stereo) Å My Name Is Earl Lie to Me “React to Contact” The King of The Good Guys “$3.52” A drug Queens “Missing “Teacher Earl” Å Lightman tries to help a war vetsmuggler is set free. (N) (In Stereo) Links” eran. (N) (In Stereo) Å Å Jeopardy! Wheel of Last Comic Standing Semifinals begin. (N) (In Stereo) Å (N) Å Fortune “Historic Boston” Å PBS NewsHour (N) (In Stereo) Å Forever Wild (In Stereo) The Secret Life of Seahorses Deal or No Who Wants/ Deal Å Millionaire Two and a Half Two and a Half Men Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Uncivilized” An attorney defends a known pedophile. Nightly North Carolina Business Now Mary Lou Report (N) Å Harcharic.
The Bachelorette (N) (In Stereo) Å 90210 “Wild Alaskan Salmon” (In Stereo) Å Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent A young man is killed while trying to steal evidence. Å Antiques Roadshow Collection of 20th-century Remington ammunition-themed calendars.
Gossip Girl Private Lady Gaga concert. (In Stereo) Å Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Detectives probe the slaying of a female Secret Service agent. History Detectives Hand-drawn map from World War II. (N) (In Stereo) Å
10:00
10:30
(:01) CSI: Miami A man is murdered in outer space. Å (:01) CSI: Miami “Miami, We Have a Problem” A man is murdered in outer space. Å FOX 8 10:00 News (N)
11:00
11:30
News 2 at 11 (N) Å WBTV 3 News at 11 PM (N)
Late Show W/ Letterman Late Show With David Letterman (N) Seinfeld A base- Seinfeld Jerry ball hero falls for thinks girlfriend has fungus. Elaine. (:02) True Beauty “Change My WSOC 9 News (:35) Nightline Score!” A contestant tries to change Tonight (N) Å (N) Å a score. (N) Å Persons Unknown “Exit One” Joe WXII 12 News at (:35) Wimbledon visits someone in town. (N) (In 11 (N) Å Update (N) Å Stereo) Å Fox News at (:35) Fox News The Simpsons King of the Hill 10 (N) Edge (In Stereo) Å VFW meets at the Hill home. Persons Unknown “Exit One” Joe NewsChannel (:35) Wimbledon Update (N) Å visits someone in town. (N) (In 36 News at Stereo) Å 11:00 (N) Get Off Your Knees: The John The Teachings of Jon (In Stereo) Robinson Story Å Å (:02) True Beauty A contestant Frasier (In (:35) Nightline tries to change a score. (N) Stereo) Å (N) Å WJZY News at (:35) Family (:05) The Office (:35) Seinfeld Å 10 (N) Guy Å Å The Office The Office House-Payne House-Payne Tyler Perry’s George Lopez Tyler Perry’s My Wife and House of Payne House of Payne Kids “Restaurant “Split Decision” Wars” Å Å Å The Wall -- A World Divided BBC World Charlie Rose (N) The opening of the Berlin Wall in News (In Stereo) (In Stereo) Å November 1989. (N) Å Å
CABLE CHANNELS A&E
Intervention Intervention “Vinnie” Crack addict. Intervention Exercise addict, 36 (:00) “Phillip” bulimic and alcoholic. Å Å
AMC
27
ANIM BET BRAVO CNBC CNN
38 59 37 34 32
DISC
35
DISN
54
E!
49
ESPN
39
ESPN2
Intervention An alcoholic drinks Obsessed “Cindee & Graham” Obsessed “Richie” Richie is a with her son. (N) Å Cindee works out alot. Å hoarder. Å (4:30) Movie: ››› “Cold Mountain” (2003) Jude Movie: ››› “The Client” (1994) Susan Sarandon, Tommy Lee Jones, Mary-Louise (:45) Movie: ›› “Fear” (1996) Mark Wahlberg, Law, Nicole Kidman. Å Parker. Reese Witherspoon. Animal Cops River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live TBA Movie: “Steppin: The Movie” (2009) Darius McCrary. Smash! Best of BET Awards The Mo’Nique Show Å Housewives Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ What Happens Housewives Mad Money The Kudlow Report (N) The Oprah Effect Biography on CNBC American Greed Mad Money Situation Rm John King, USA (N) Campbell Brown (N) Larry King Live (N) Å Anderson Cooper 360 Å Cash Cab (N) Å Ultimate Car Build-Off A mini-van Chasing Classic Chasing Classic Ultimate Car Build-Off “HillHeartland Thunder Race to repair Chasing Classic Chasing Classic is turned into a supercar. Cars Å Cars Å Climbing Hearse” (N) Å badly damaged cars. (N) Cars Å Cars Å The Suite Life Wizards of Hannah Movie: “Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure” (2009) Phineas and Phineas and Hannah Wizards of The Suite Life on Deck Å Waverly Place Montana Å Voices of Mae Whitman, Lucy Liu. Ferb Å Ferb Å Montana Å Waverly Place on Deck Å The Soup E! News The Daily 10 Take Miami Take Miami Holly’s World Holly’s World Kardashian Chelsea Lately E! News (:00) SportsCenter (Live) Å College Baseball NCAA World Series Championship, Game 1: Teams TBA. From Omaha, Neb. (Live) Å SportsCenter (Live) Å MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live) Å Baseball Tonight (Live) Å World Cup Primetime (N) That ’70s Show The Secret Life of the American The Secret Life of the American Huge Will arrives at the weight-loss Make It or Break It The girls have The 700 Club Å Teenager Å Teenager (N) Å camp. Å concerns with Sasha. Å Movie: ››› “Coach Carter” (2005) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard. A high-school basketball coach turns a losing team The Good Guys (In Stereo) Å Movie: ››› “He Got Game” around, then faces criticism for pushing the athletes to put grades first. (1998) Ray Allen Special Report FOX Report W/ Shepard Smith The O’Reilly Factor (N) Å Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Reds Live MLB Baseball Philadelphia Phillies at Cincinnati Reds. (Live) Golden Age Final Score Golden Age Final Score Golf Fitness The Golf Fix (Live) Big Break Sandals Resorts Big Break Sandals Resorts (N) The Golf Fix Golf Central Learning M*A*S*H Å Touched by an Angel Å Touched by an Angel Å Movie: “For the Love of Grace” (2008) Mark Consuelos. Å Golden Girls Golden Girls Holmes House Hunters House Hunters Green Home Property Virgin House Hunters My First Sale House Hunters House Hunters Selling New My First Place Pawn Stars Å American Pickers The Holy Grail Pawn Stars Å Pawn Stars “Aw American Pickers The guys finish Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Å American Pickers Frank finds a of picking. Å Shucks!” their trip in the South. (N) (N) Å gold mine of signs. Å I Gospel Paid Program Helpline Today Joyce Meyer Jewish Jesus Inspir. Today Life Today Paid Program Secrets/Bible Hal Lindsey Giving Hope (:00) Wife Swap Reba (In Stereo) Reba “Vanny Reba Reba gets Reba “All Fore Movie: ›› “Where the Heart Is” (2000) Natalie Portman, Ashley Drop Dead Diva “Home & Away” Dearest” Å the blame. One” Å Judd, Stockard Channing. Å Tony receives news. Å Å (:00) Movie: “True Confessions of a Hollywood Movie: “Acceptance” (2009) Joan Cusack. A woman tries to help her Movie: ›‡ “Dying to Belong” (1997) Hilary Swank, Mark-Paul Starlet” (2008) Joanna “JoJo” Levesque. Å teenage daughter with the college-admissions process. Gosselaar, Jenna von Oy. Å The Ed Show Hardball With Chris Matthews Countdown With K. Olbermann The Rachel Maddow Show (N) Countdown With K. Olbermann The Rachel Maddow Show Great White Biker Chicks: Leather & Lace Taboo “Outsiders” Taboo “Misfits” Taboo Shedding clothes. Taboo “Outsiders” iCarly (N) (In Big Time Rush SpongeBob Behind: The Family Matters Everybody Everybody George Lopez George Lopez Malcolm in the Malcolm in the Stereo) Å SquarePants Last Airbender Å Hates Chris Hates Chris Middle Å Middle Å Å Å Å Dance Your America’s Got Talent (N) Å America’s Got Talent (N) Å Dance Your A... Off Å Dance Your A... Off (N) Å Dance Your A... Off Å CSI UFC 116: Countdown: Lesnar v (:07) Movie: ›› “Cradle 2 the Grave” (2003) Jet Li, DMX. (In Stereo) Entourage Entourage Entourage World Poker WNBA Basketball Los Angeles Sparks at Atlanta Dream. In My Words In My Words Spotlight Spotlight Women’s College Lacrosse (:00) Ghost Ghost Whisperer Melinda remem- Ghost Whisperer (In Stereo) Å Ghost Whisperer “Giving Up the Ghost Whisperer “Cat’s Claw” (In Monster “I’m Monster Whisperer bers when she met Jim. Ghost” (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Back” (N) “Ruhenheim” (N) The King of Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Family Guy (In Family Guy (In Family Guy (In Family Guy (In Neighbors From Family Guy (In Lopez Tonight Queens Å Stand-In” Butter Shave” Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Hell (N) Stereo) Å (:15) Movie: ››‡ “Music in Manhattan” (1944) Movie: ››› “The Great Race” (1965) Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, Natalie Wood. Å (:45) Movie: ››‡ “Inside Daisy Clover” (1965) Anne Shirley, Dennis Day. Natalie Wood, Robert Redford. Say Yes Inedible, Incre. Inedible, Incre. Food Buddha Food Buddha Cake Boss (N) Cake Boss Inedible, Incre. Inedible, Incre. Food Buddha Food Buddha (:00) Law & Bones “Death in the Saddle” (In Bones A farmer is suspected of Bones “Mummy in the Maze” A Bones “Intern in the Incinerator” (In The Closer “Make Over” Several Order “Enemy” Stereo) Å murder. (In Stereo) Å Halloween killer. Å Stereo) Å old cases are reviewed. Police Videos Cops Å Cops Å Oper. Repo Oper. Repo Operate-Repo Operate-Repo All Worked Up All Worked Up Memphis Beat Å All in the Family Sanford and Sanford and The Cosby The Cosby EverybodyEverybodyMovie: ››› “Stand by Me” (1986) Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Son Å Son Å Show Å Show Å Raymond Raymond Corey Feldman. (:00) NCIS (In NCIS “Iced” The body of a missing NCIS The team probes a cryptogra- WWE Monday Night RAW (In Stereo Live) Å (:05) Burn Notice “Breach of Stereo) Å Marine is found. Å pher’s death. Å Faith” Å W. Williams Judge Brown Judge Brown Dr. Phil (In Stereo) Å The Oprah Winfrey Show Eyewitness Entertainment The Insider (N) (:35) Friends Becker “Heart America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos WGN News at Nine (N) (In Stereo) Scrubs “My New Scrubs “My First Breaker” (In Stereo) Å (In Stereo) Å (In Stereo) Å Game” Kill” Å
68 NASCAR Now
FAM
29
FX
45
FXNWS FXSS GOLF HALL HGTV
57 40 66 76 46
HIST
65
INSP
78
LIFE
31
LIFEM
72
MSNBC NGEO
50 58
NICK
30
OXYGEN SPIKE SPSO
62 44 60
SYFY
64
TBS
24
TCM
25
TLC
48
TNT
26
TRU
75
TVL
56
USA
28
WAXN
2
WGN
13
PREMIUM CHANNELS
Movie: ››‡ “City of Ember” (2008) Saoirse 15 (:15) Ronan. (In Stereo) Å
HBO2
302
HBO3
304
MAX
320
SHOW
340
REAL Sports With Bryant Kevorkian Dr. Jack Kevorkian runs for Congress after Movie: ››‡ “Notorious” (2009) Angela Bassett, Gumbel (In Stereo) Å leaving prison. (N) (In Stereo) Å Derek Luke. (In Stereo) Å (5:45) Movie: ›››‡ “Jurassic Park” (1993) Sam True Blood “It Hurts Me Too” Entourage Hung “Just the Movie: ››‡ “The Last House on the Left” (2009) Tony Goldwyn, Neill. (In Stereo) Å Sookie heads to Jackson. “Stunted” Tip” Å Monica Potter. (In Stereo) Å (5:15) Movie: (:15) Movie: ›› “Hackers” (1995) Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie, Movie: ››› “Cast Away” (2000) Tom Hanks, Helen Hunt, Nick Searcy. (In Stereo) Å Movie: “Away “Shoot to Kill” Jesse Bradford. (In Stereo) Å We Go” (2009) (:45) Movie: ››› “I Love You, Man” (2009) Paul Rudd, Jason Segel, Movie: ››‡ “The Strangers” (2008) Liv Tyler, Movie: ››‡ “A Perfect Getaway” (2009) Steve (:40) Movie: Rashida Jones. (In Stereo) Å Gemma Ward. (In Stereo) Å Zahn, Milla Jovovich. Å “Brüno” (2009) (5:30) Movie: Movie: ››› “Adventureland” (2009) Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen The Real L Word “Game On!” (iTV) Weeds “Su-Su- The Green The Real L Word “Game On!” (iTV) “Labor Pains” Stewart, Martin Starr. iTV. Sucio” Room
BY PHILLIP ALDER
United Feature Syndicate
What are the most common errors made by declarer at trick one? Here are a few of the more important: Failing to count top tricks in a no-trump contract; failing to count losers in a trump contract; not analyzing the opening lead; forgetting the information available from the auction; and playing without forming a plan. That last one leads into the most serious: playing too quickly. Unless the deal is trivial, you should be happy to take at least 60 seconds before calling for a card from the dummy. This week, let’s look at some deals where the key play comes at trick one. Declarer must win the first trick in the right hand and, sometimes, with the correct card. In this example, how would you plan the play in four spades after West leads the heart queen? When partner made a gameinvitational spade raise, you reevaluated, adding three points for your singleton. Hence your game bid. There are three aces missing plus a potential fourth loser in hearts. If you win the first trick and play a trump, East will win and return a heart, setting up that setting trick. The answer is to lead the club king immediately, the honor from the shorter side first. This will establish a discard for dummy’s heart loser on the third round of the suit. But did you notice that it is vital to win the
UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE
Today’s celebrity birthdays Comedian-director Mel Brooks is 84. Comedian John Byner is 73. Bassist Dave Knights of Procol Harum is 65. Actor Bruce Davison is 64. Actress Kathy Bates is 62. Actress Alice Krige is 56. Actress Jessica Hecht (“Friends,” “The Single Guy”) is 45. Guitaristviolinist Saul Davies of James is 45. Actress Mary Stuart Masterson is 44. Actor John Cusack is 44. Actor Gil Bellows is 43. Actress Danielle Brisebois (“All in the Family”) is 41. Actress Tichina Arnold (“Everybody Hates Chris”) is 39. Bassist Tim Nordwind of OK Go is 34. Bassist Mark Stoermer of The Killers is 33. Country singer and former “American Idol” contestant Kellie Pickler is 24.
Is change in bladder a culprit of catheter?
The card-play key is trick one
first trick in the dummy? If not, West can duck the first round of clubs, win the second, and lead another heart. You will have to win that with dummy’s ace and have no quick hand-entry for the vital discard.
‘Toy Story 3,’ Sandler are hot LOS ANGELES (AP) — The “Toy Story 3” gang and Adam Sandler are finding plenty of playmates at movie theaters. Tom Cruise is not so popular, though. The Disney-Pixar Animation smash “Toy Story 3” remained the No. 1 film with $59 million in its second weekend, raising its domestic total to $226.6 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Sandler’s “Grown Ups” debuted at No. 2 with a healthy $41 million. Released by Sony, the comedy costarring Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider did well despite a thrashing from critics.
Dear Dr. Gott: I had gyneCould this change in my cology surgery in December ability to empty my bladder 2009 because I was having quickly be a result of generheavy menstrual cycles. An al anesthesia or the ultrasound showed a buildup catheter? What tests and of the uterine treatment should I seek? lining, so my Will this go away, or is it gynecologist something I have to live performed a with? I now urinate freD&C and a quently to intentionally precolposcopy, vent my bladder from getand biopsied ting too full, but I’m not sure a few spots. what else I could or should All the rebe doing. Many thanks for sults were sharing knowledge and expertise. DR. PETER normal. After the GOTT surgery, I Dear Reader: A catheter is was able to a thin, flexible tube that is urinate a few times a day inserted into the body to eibut retained two pounds of ther introduce or withdraw fluid for two days. On the fluids. The word catheter is third day after the surgery, most often used to describe I was finally able to elimia tube that is used to empty nate all of the retained fluid the bladder. This can be and I urinated every 20 min- achieved by insertion directutes all day long. Since then, ly into the urethra, which I have noticed that my urine leads to the bladder, or in stream is weak. It has been some instances, a special five months since the suropening is created within gery, and lately, when my bladder is full in the morning, I am not able to empty it fast enough, and it causes pelvic pressure and pain and sometimes cramping We buy small & large until it slowly empties. I do tracts of timber. not have a fever, blood in Also firewood for sale. my urine or a burning senPlease call for sation. I do not have a history of kidney stones and have only had one UTI, which was 11 years ago. The only medication that I Tri-axle Dump Trucks currently take is atenolol in For Hire the morning. The night priWe Sell Creek Sand, or to the surgery, I was givField Dirt, Gravel, en misoprostol to ripen my Mulch & Firewood. cervix. The procedure required a catheter, which 430 Chesapeake Dr. • Salisbury Jerome Hosch Licensed & Insured was removed before I reWorkers Comp. 704-363-6164 gained consciousness. hoschtrucking@yahoo.com
the abdomen for the catheter to be placed. Dilation and curettage (D&C) is a surgical procedure in which a physician dilates the cervix and then scrapes the uterine lining. This is done for a number of reasons, including following abortion or miscarriage, heavy menstrual cycles or as a diagnostic tool for determining the presence of certain gynecologic disorders. Now, to your specific concerns. First, because of the proximity of the vagina to the urethra and bladder, your question is whether either or both were inadvertently damaged. This is fairly unlikely; however, it is a possibility that should be looked into. Next, a catheter can cause scarring of the urethra if inserted improperly and repeatedly over time.
Since you mentioned its use only once, during your surgery, this is probably not your problem, but I can’t rule it out entirely. Request a referral to a urologist for further examination and testing. He or she can then determine whether your problem is directly related to the D&C or some other condition, such as a urinary-tract infection. While it’s uncommon, some people don’t experience any symptoms or have only mild ones that go unnoticed. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com. UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE
HOSCH Grown Need LOGGING HomeTomatoes, FREE ESTIMATE LOW RATES!!!
R120107
HBO
Chances are something you thought to be quite promising was derailed in the past year because of poor timing. Conditions are likely to change for you in the year ahead, making it possible for you to now succeed. Do try again. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Don’t hesitate to appear unafraid of a challenge, even if you’re a bit uncertain. Act as if you can’t lose, and the competition will wilt right in front of your eyes. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Diplomacy and tact are two tools you always use quite effectively in order to put others at ease. You’ll be applauded for your use of them when you are confronted with a shy person. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — A fortuitous shift in conditions could put more money in your pocket. Chances are someone who likes what you do and how you go about doing it will be responsible for triggering the windfall. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Take some time to do things with friends, because it will be through persons with whom you’re involved socially that a number of good things could happen for you. Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — If you recognize it to be an opportunity, act on what you perceive to be a moneymaker because it could contribute to your financial well-being in a big way. Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — It should come as no surprise that you are a tad more fortunate than usual, especially with things that involve a pronounced element of chance. You’re used to being lucky. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Someone who likes you might volunteer to do something for you that would make your life a whole lot easier. Chances are it will be a loving relative who makes this warm gesture. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Someone else’s far-fetched idea could actually work and turn out to be quite feasible and functional. Don’t hesitate to take a crack at if you get a chance. Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) — Concealed within your personal makeup are an inner strength and resolve others have little idea exist. Should you be confronted with either opportunity or challenge, one or both could emerge. Aries (March 21-April 19) — You definitely have something others want, so don’t hold back anything you’re thinking and/or would like to promote. You’ll be shocked at how quickly listeners will respond. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Don’t base whether or not you attempt something on the experiences of another. This is another day and you are another person who will work things out entirely differently. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Granted, you always have an abundance of ideas, but this time there is likely to be one that will be outstanding. You shouldn’t have any trouble recognizing it when it pops in your head.
A/C?
Cucumbers, Squash, Zucchini, Hot Peppers, Okra & More! 704-239-0097 or 704-213-4926 MON - FRI 9AM-6PM SAT 9AM-4PM Old Mocksville Rd., Salisbury (2.4 miles from hospital)
Granite Auto Parts & Service
209-6331
704/
Hwy. 52 Granite Quarry
36 95
# WBTV
CBS Evening News-Couric CBS Evening News With Katie Couric (N) Access Hollywood (N) Å ABC World News With Diane Sawyer NBC Nightly News (N) (In Stereo) Å Everybody Loves Raymond
9:00
12
^ WFMY
8:30
Monday, June 28
R
6:30
A - Time Warner/Salisbury/Metrolina
R123200
A
BROADCAST CHANNELS
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 11B
W E AT H E R
12B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Custom Corn Hole Boards • Bags • $25 per set • Lifetime warranty • 20+ colors available
Boards
ready in a week
•
•
Custom made to order
90 day warranty
R125232
Prices start at $120
Largest Selection of Collegiate Merchandise in Rowan & Cabarrus Counties
704-637-5144
Open Monday-Friday 9am-5pm www.ConferenceWear.com
AccuWeather® 5-Day Forecast for Salisbury
National Cities City
Tonight
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
A few strong p.m. t-storms
Mostly cloudy with t-storms
Clouds and sun with a t-storm
Partly sunny and nice
Some sunshine
Mostly sunny and nice
High 93°
Low 73°
High 93° Low 71°
High 88° Low 68°
High 82° Low 64°
High 86° Low 65°
Zero Turn Mowers as low as $3,69995
R121938
Today
Faith Farm & Equipment Sales, Inc. Ad goes here
585 WEST RITCHIE RD., SALISBURY, NC • I-85 AT EXIT 74
www.faithfarm.com
(704) 431-4566
Regional Weather Boone 84/66 Knoxville 89/71 Hickory 94/70 Franklin 88/65
Asheville 87/67
Danville 94/72 Winston Salem Durham 91/72 96/72 Greensboro 92/72 Raleigh 96/77 Salisbury 93/73
Spartanburg 95/69
Charlotte 94/72
Greenville 95/72
Kitty Hawk 87/79
Goldsboro 95/75
Lumberton 96/75
Morehead City 87/79 Columbia 94/75
Atlanta 91/73
Sunrise today .................. 6:08 a.m. Sunset tonight .................. 8:42 p.m. Moonrise today .............. 10:17 p.m. Moonset today .................. 8:05 a.m.
Last
July 4
New
July 11
First
July 18
Augusta 93/73
Allendale 94/71
Full
July 25
Savannah 93/75
Data from Salisbury through 8 a.m. yest. Temperature High .................................................. 91° Low .................................................. 73° Last year's high ................................ 91° Last year's low .................................. 70° Normal high ...................................... 88° Normal low ...................................... 66° Record high ...................... 103° in 1952 Record low .......................... 53° in 1985 Humidity at noon ............................ 50% Precipitation 24 hours through 8 a.m. yest. ........ 0.00" Month to date ................................ 5.77" Normal month to date .................. 3.51" Year to date ................................ 28.15" Normal year to date .................... 21.86"
Today at noon .................................. 103°
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2010 -10s -0s Seattle 66/51
Hilton Head 89/77 Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Air Quality Index Charlotte Yesterday .. 100 Mod. ............................ Ozone Today's forecast .. Moderate N. C. Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources 0-50 good, 51-100 moderate, 101-150 unhealthy for sensitive grps., 151-200 unhealthy, 201-300 very unhealthy, 301-500 hazardous
AccuWeather.com UV Index
TM
Highest today ......................... 9, Very High Noon ...................................... 9, Very High 3 p.m. ............................................. 6, High 0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
MONDAY, JUNE 28
20s
LAKE LEVELS
Lake
The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exlcusive index or the effects or temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, pressure and elevation on the human body.
10s
Statistics are through 7 a.m. yesterday. Measured in feet. Charleston 92/76
Tues. Hi Lo W
® REAL FEEL TEMPERATURE RealFeel Temperature™
Minneapolis 76/56
Billings 93/61
30s
Myrtle Beach 92/79
Today Hi Lo W
Almanac
Chicago 84/59
40s
Aiken 94/71
SUN AND MOON
Wilmington 91/79
City
Amsterdam 80 62 s 76 61 s Atlanta 91 73 t 91 73 t Athens 82 69 t 85 71 s Atlantic City 95 75 t 89 65 pc Beijing 95 75 pc 95 73 s Baltimore 96 72 t 90 63 pc Beirut 73 71 s 76 73 s Billings 93 61 s 97 63 pc Belgrade 77 63 sh 84 60 pc Boston 92 68 t 84 64 pc Berlin 82 59 s 86 64 s Chicago 84 59 s 77 54 s Brussels 81 63 s 79 58 sh Cleveland 83 60 t 72 52 sh Buenos Aires 57 43 s 59 48 pc Dallas 95 76 t 92 73 t Cairo 101 77 s 104 74 s Denver 91 58 pc 88 59 s Calgary 82 50 pc 70 49 t Detroit 87 58 pc 73 53 pc Dublin 68 55 pc 68 59 pc Fairbanks 74 52 pc 75 56 sh Edinburgh 71 54 pc 67 57 pc Honolulu 88 75 s 88 75 s Geneva 80 62 t 76 62 t Houston 95 77 t 94 77 t Jerusalem 82 60 s 86 61 s Indianapolis 85 62 pc 80 55 s Johannesburg 61 39 c 58 35 pc Kansas City 87 66 s 84 63 s London 82 59 s 79 59 pc Las Vegas 108 79 s 107 80 s Madrid 91 60 pc 91 60 pc Los Angeles 78 62 pc 78 63 pc Mexico City 78 52 pc 76 53 c Miami 90 80 t 90 79 t Moscow 75 43 pc 72 48 s Minneapolis 76 56 s 77 57 s Paris 87 62 t 85 59 sh New Orleans 92 79 t 91 79 t Rio de Janeiro 79 66 s 76 67 s New York 95 72 t 87 70 pc Rome 84 65 s 85 64 s Omaha 87 60 s 84 62 s San Juan 91 78 sh 90 78 sh Philadelphia 95 72 t 88 66 pc Seoul 84 68 pc 84 68 pc Phoenix 108 78 s 109 82 s Sydney 59 41 s 57 39 s Salt Lake City 94 68 s 98 70 t Tokyo 84 74 sh 77 72 sh San Francisco 76 55 pc 68 51 pc Toronto 78 58 t 70 53 sh Seattle 66 51 pc 66 49 pc Winnipeg 68 45 pc 69 52 s Tucson 105 72 s 104 76 s Zurich 81 56 s 78 59 s Washington, DC 96 75 t 88 68 pc Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
0s
Southport 86/77
Tues. Hi Lo W
Source: NWS co-op (9 miles WNW)
Cape Hatteras 87/78
Darlington 96/75
Today Hi Lo W
World Cities
Above/Below Observed Full Pool
High Rock Lake .... 652.50 ...... -2.50 Badin Lake .......... 539.90 ...... -2.10 Tuckertown Lake .. 595.00 ...... -1.00 Tillery Lake .......... 278.00 ...... -1.00 Blewett Falls ........ 177.80 ...... -1.20 Lake Norman ........ 97.85 ........ -2.15
50s 60s
San Francisco 76/55
Denver 91/58
Detroit 87/58
Kansas City 87/66
70s 80s
Los Angeles 78/62
Atlanta 91/73
90s 100s 110s Precipitation
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
New York 95/72 Washington 96/75
El Paso 97/73
Cold Front
Houston 95/77 Miami 90/80
Warm Front Stationary Front
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Day in the Life
Dorsett wins Rowan Masters Sports, 1B
Readers’ photos, 8A
Monday, June 28, 2010 | 50¢ Check throughout the day for news updates
Neighbors: Domestic violence preceded alleged murder BY KARISSA MINN
kminn@salisburypost.com
Neighbors of a Landis woman charged with murder say the man who was killed had been abusing her. The Rowan County Sheriff’s Office charged Brandy Nicole Lyons, 32, of 613 S. Vance St. in Landis, in connection with death of 35year-old Roy Daniels on Friday. Lyons’ uncle, J.B. Pittard, lives nearby at 805 S. Kimmons St. Whatever happened, he said, “I know it was selfdefense.” Daniels would often hit her and “beat her up,” he said. “It’s always been a
mess,” Pittard said. “I’ve been waiting for something to happen. I knew how scared she was of him. She was going to do something.” Pittard said the couple has been in an onagain, offagain relationship for LYONS about six years — the age of their daughter. “She’s been trying to get rid of him, but he’s one of those kinds of fellows that don’t take no for answer,” he said.
Lyons had taken out a restraining order against Daniels, Pittard said, but that didn’t keep him away for long. He said he saw police come out to the house Friday, but Daniels had left the property by the time they arrived. Daniels returned later that night. The Landis Police Department and the Sheriff’s Office responded to a shooting report at 10:55 p.m. Friday. When they arrived at Lyons’ home, authorities found Daniels in the kitchen apparently bleeding from the stomach. Neighbors say the narrow street was blocked off Friday
night by several emergency vehicles — police, fire and EMS — which could not get in or out easily. The Criminal Investigative Division collected evidence and statements that led to the arrest of Lyons. Pending a court appearance today, she was being held in the Rowan County Detention Center with no bond. Bob Ridenhour, who lives next door to Lyons at 609 S. Vance St., said he had heard loud yelling and slamming doors at the house on a few occasions. KARISSA MINN/SALISBURY POST After one of those occasions last weekend, he said, Police say Roy Daniels Jr., 36, was shot at this house on Vance
Street in Landis. It is the home of Brandy Nicole Lyons, 32, See VIOLENCE, 9A who was arrested and charged with murder.
Murder victim found at wreck
Taking aim at ADHD Campers have fun, learn skills BY SHAVONNE POTTS
spotts@salisburypost.com
K
aty Ramsue has found her niche in drama and wants to be a playwright when she gets older. She honed her skills while attending camp last week. Ramsue, 11, spent her week at an Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder camp at Dan Nicholas Park. The camp is designed for children ages 6-13 who have been identified with ADHD to teach them social skills and teamwork, and boost their self-esteem. It included lunch, activities, crafts, a water splashdown courtesy of Union Fire Department, karate, a science project and teambuilding exercises. The camp was started about eight years ago. It began as a way to fill a void for children with ADHD and has developed into something for returning campers to look forward to and newcomers to enjoy. Ramsue is one of those newcomers. She’s always acted in plays but never thought about writing her own until attending the camp. “Instead of getting hyper, I started writing my play,” Ramsue said. People with ADHD exhibit inattentiveness, overactivity, impulsivity or a combination. “Camp helps me figure out more ways to deal with my ADHD,” she said. Last week, campers had activities that centered around the theme “Pirate’s Cove,” which included the play “The Pirates of Penzance.” It was the play that inspired Ramsue to write her own pirate-themed work. Every day at camp brought a new idea for her
JON C. LAKEY/SALISBURY POST
Brandon Kasprzak, right, learned some karate moves from Lincoln Barringer at ADHD Camp at Dan Nicholas Park.
Campers look at hour glasses they made at the camp.
Driver critical after crash
“Camp helps me figure out more ways to deal with my ADHD.” KATY RAMSUE
Camper at ADHD Camp
See CAMP, 9A
Corbin Ritchie uses a small garden shovel to dig a hole and bury some treasure during a science exercise at the camp. Seth Trexler, right, sits in a Union Fire Department truck.
[|xbIAHD y0 0 1rzu Please recycle this newspaper
Firefighters responding to a reported wreck Sunday discovered a murdered man behind the wheel. Around 4 p.m. Sunday, Ellis Volunteer Fire Department personnel responded to the reported one-vehicle crash in the 1900 Block of Grubb Ferry Road. They found a wrecked 1995 Buick LeSabre with a dead man behind the wheel, the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office said in a press release. Checking for a pulse, the firefighters saw blood on the steering wheel. They then discovered the man had multiple stab wounds in his chest, the press release said. Rowan Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to investigate the apparent homicide and called in the Criminal Investigation Division. Authorities identified the victim as Kevin Michael Rufty, 52, of 6455 Long Branch Road. Crime scene investigators took pictures and collected evidence, and the vehicle was towed from the scene for processing. Investigators conducted a neighborhood canvas of homes and interviewed residents. Authorities ask with information to contact Lt. Chad Moose or Investigator Sam Henline at 704216-8700.
A driver was critically burned in a wreck Sunday evening in eastern Rowan County, emergency responders said. The injured driver was flown by helicopter from a landing zone set up at Liberty Volunteer Fire Department on Bringle Ferry Road, according to emergency radio communications. In a call to the Rowan County 911 center around 5:30 p.m., a witness said a driver was pinned in a possibly burning vehicle after a crash at River Road and Bird Haven Lane, near the Yadkin River off Stokes Ferry Road. Emergency responders said there were three patients, one critical with burns, a second with a possible broken shoulder and leg fracture, and a third with road rash.
Today’s forecast 93º/ 73º
A few strong PM T-storms
Deaths
Charles ‘Lindy’ Smith Catherine C. Bowers Juanita Chaffin Owens
Jennie Kesler Lemley Elbert O.K. Deal Leon Sloan Bradshaw
Contents
Bridge Classifieds Comics Crossword
11B 5B 10B 10B
Deaths 4A Horoscope 11B Opinion 10A Day in the Life 8A
Second Front 3A Sports 1B Television 11B Weather 12B
M O N D AY R O U N D U P
2A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
TOWN CRIER Community events
Today
• Rowan-Cabarrus Community College dedication of North Campus Building 400, 2:30 p.m., 1333 Jake Alexander Blvd, S. • Faith Fourth of July, 6 p.m. food booths and rides open (rides $1 each), 7:30 p.m. The Fabulous Kays.
Tuesday
• Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Craig Woolard Band. • Rowan-Salisbury Board of Education meeting, 5 p.m., administrative offices at 110 S. Long St., East Spencer. • Rowan-Kannapolis ABC Board, 5:15 p.m., 510 N. Lee St. 704-633-1641.
Wednesday
• Plant sale presented by Rowan Master Gardeners, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., 2727 Old Concord Road. The sale will feature a wide variety of perennials, trees and shrubs. 704-216-8967. • Southeast Old Threshers Reunion, at the Denton FarmPark, June 30-July 4. One of the largest antique gas and steam engine shows in the country. Includes farming demonstrations, steam engine train rides, country, gospel and bluegrass entertainment and crafts. 1-800-4582755. • Faith Fourth of July, Food Lion MVP Card night. Show MVP Card for $5 off armband. 6 p.m. food booths and rides open, 7:30 p.m. Johnny White and the Elite Band.
Thursday
• AARP Local Chapter Meeting, 1-2:30 pm., at the Rufty-Holmes Senior Center, 1120 S. Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave. Presentation: Update on Recycling Electronics. Contact Rufty-Holmes Senior Center at 704-216-7714. • Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Atlantic Groove, 8:30 p.m. Faith Idol, 12 and under competition.
Friday
• Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Big Sam, 8:30 p.m. Faith Idol junior division competition.
Saturday
• Big Band dance, 7 to 10 p.m. J.F. Hurley YMCA. Music by The Hi-Liters. Bring a snack to share. $5. 704-636-0111. • Faith Fourth of July, 7:30 p.m. Band of Gold, 8:30 p.m. Faith Idol adult competition.
Sunday
• Patriotic concert, 5 p.m., Faith Baptist Church, Main Street, Faith. Seventeen area church honor veterans. Free admission. • Faith Fourth of July, 4 p.m. food booths open, 4:30 p.m. Shrine band at Faith Baptist Church, 5 p.m. Faith patriotic program at Faith Baptist Church, 6 p.m. Rides open, 6:30 p.m. N Harmony, 7 p.m. One Road Home (gospel), 8 p.m. Cornerstone Church Praise Band and dance groups.
Monday, July 5
• Faith Fourth of July, 10 a.m. parade, 7 p.m. Faith Idol finals; games begin at Faith School ballpark, 8 p.m. Too Much Sylvia, 9 p.m. 63rd Regiment NC Troop Confederate Skirmish, at ballpark, 10 p.m. Salute to America video, 10:30 p.m. fireworks
Tuesday, July 6
• Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners work session, 3:30 p.m., Cabarrus County Governmental Center, 65 Church Street, SE, Concord. • Salisbury City Council, 4 p.m., Salisbury City Hall, 217 S. Main St. • China Grove Town Council, 7 p.m. in the Municipal Building, 205 Swink St.
Sunday, July 11
Cruzin’ Round Spencer, 2 p.m to dark. Classic vehicles, entertainment, food. 704-636-0036.
Monday, July 12
• Rockwell Town Board, 7 p.m., at the Town Hall, 202 E. Main St., Rockwell.
Friday, July 16
• Downtown Salisbury Ghost Walk, 7 p.m., 7:45 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., tour starts at the Old Salisbury Post Office, 130 W Innes St. Learn about the history, myths and legends of historic Salisbury. $10 adults, $5 students, free for children under 5. Email boo@salisburyghostwalk.com for reservations and information. 704-213-4232.
To have a public event listed in Town Crier, e-mail it to towncrier@salisburypost.com.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
YESTERDAY This photograph was taken July 17, 1942, on the lawn of the old Miller homeplace, belonging to Ernest E. and Agatha Eller Miller, the couple in darker clothing who are pictured at the far left. Their children are lined up to the right. The Miller homeplace was located on Long Ferry Road where Interstate 85 came through in 1955, forcing the house to be moved to another location. Where the Miller family is standing in this photo is where the Long Ferry Road bridge goes across I-85 today. From left are Ernest Miller, Agatha Miller, Olivia Miller File, Coy R. Miller, Rena Miller Morris, Edgar R. Miller, Pauline Miller Leazer, Ernest E. Miller, Zeta Miller Smith and James J. Miller. The three children on the far right are still living. Family members would visit the old homeplace every Sunday until they had to move, and now the descendants of the Millers have a reunion every year in June at Dan Nicholas Park. This year, the 43rd family reunion for the descendants of Ernest E. and Agatha E. Miller was held June 19. This photo was submitted by Pat Floyd.
Hydrate, stay cool when running in extreme heat Q: I like to run outside and it has been so hot lately, how can I prevent myself from getting heat exhaustion? A: The most important factor is to remember to take it easy when running in hot conditions. Even the most well conditioned athletes have to be careful; although the more fit a person is, the better that person can cope with running in ESTER hot weather. The best time MARSH of the day to run during periods of extreme hot weather is early in the morning before the sun rises, or late at night after the sun has disappeared. Also, it’s best to leave your portable music for the treadmill or indoor track. Why? Because you really take away one of your most valuable "safety senses"— your hearing. If you absolutely need music to run have one ear “unplugged” to hear the cars, motorcycles and bicycles pass by you. Back to running in hot weather, with the high humidity in Rowan County, it is better to run in the morning since humidity gets worse throughout the day. If it is unavoidable to run at these times, run in shaded areas such as trails. Avoid running on long, open blacktop roads. The dark surface of the roads absorbs heat and causes hotter conditions.
Now, of course, you can run on an indoor track or treadmills that are located in a well air conditioned area. We have both at the YMCA. Run small circuits close to where you start. Therefore, if you start to feel the effects of the heat you can stop before causing serious damage to your health. When running in hot weather, it is advisable to wear lightweight and light-colored outfits. Outfits with the words "cool-max" or “dri-fit” are great. They stay a lot dryer and they are very lightweight. Remember to hydrate, hydrate, hydrate. All runners running in heat should abundantly hydrate themselves before the start of a run. Remember, when you are thirsty, you are already dehydrated. The longer the distance, the more fluid is lost. During all runs in hot weather, the runner should attempt to drink. Likewise, it is important to drink after the run to keep the body hydrated. Hot, humid conditions promote sweating, which in return can cause dehydration. Sweating is good for you (really!) because it cools your body. But when you lose too much water you become dehydrated. Remember that some decongestants, such as ones allergy sufferers might take, can also contribute to dehydration. Coffee and alcohol can also cause dehydration. The average (sedentary) person needs around eight 8-ounce glasses of fluid a day. Runners
need more, at least sixteen 8ounce glasses daily. Two hours before your daily summer workout or race, you should drink 16 ounces of fluid. Ten minutes before you start your run, drink another one or two cups of water or a sports drink. Drinking early and drinking often is the key. Drink immediately after finishing a run in amounts of about 16 ounces for every 30 minutes you ran. If you don't, the following could happen: • Heat cramps — very painful cramps that rarely “work themselves out” What to do: -Stop running. -Drink fluids immediately -Massage the muscles once the pain begins to subside. -Cool your body with wet towel -Get out of the sun
-Drink large amount of fluids (in intervals), including sports drinks. -Lie down and elevate your feet above your heart. -Loosen clothing.
• Heat stroke — unfortunately, runners will sometimes ignore the symptoms of heat exhaustion and will continue to push themselves until they are nearing a total thermoregulatory breakdown. Symptoms are very similar to those of heat exhaustion, but rapidly progress to: - Disorientation - Weakness in the legs to the point that the runner may fall - Strange behavior - "Fuzzy" thinking - Rapid pulse - Hot/dry skin - Body temperature of 104 or higher - Lack of consciousness - Convulsions or seizures • Heat exhaustion — very - Coma serious and can lead to heat Someone suffering a heat stroke. Symptoms are: stroke needs immediate med-Dizziness and "goose bumps" ical attention. They should be -Nausea sometimes accompa- moved out of the sun, cooled by nied with vomiting either rubbing their body with -Moderate to severe ice or immersing them in cold headache water and given fluids intra-Weak legs venously. Heat stroke can be -Lack of coordination fatal. -Rapid pulse So please follow the recom-Heavy sweating often acmendations to stay hydrated companied by moist and cold and "cool". If you don't, you are skin not running to improve your -Muscle cramping health anymore.....you are putWhat to do: ting your health in jeopardy. -Stop running -Get medical attention Ester H Marsh works at the -Get out of the sun J.F. Hurley Family YMCA.
Lottery numbers — RALEIGH (AP) — These North Carolina lotteries were drawn Sunday: Cash 5: 01-18-19-2837, Evening Pick 3: 6-2-5, Mega Millions: Estimated jackpot: $16 million, Pick 4: 7-2-8-3, Powerball: Estimated jackpot: $27 million HOW TO REACH US Phone ....................................(704) 633-8950 for all departments (704) 797-4287 Sports direct line (704) 797-4213 Circulation direct line (704) 797-4220 Classified direct line Business hours ..................Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fax numbers........................(704) 630-0157 Classified ads (704) 633-7373 Retail ads (704) 639-0003 News After-hours voice mail......(704) 797-4235 Advertising (704) 797-4255 News Salisbury Post online........www.salisburypost.com
Daily &Sun. Sunday Only
Home Delivered Rates: 1 Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. 11.25 33.75 66.00 8.00 24.00 46.80
Yr. 132.00 93.60
Published Daily Since 1905, Afternoon and Saturday and Sunday Morning by The Post Publishing Co., Inc. Subscription Rates By Mail:(Payable in advance) Salisbury,NC 28145-4639 - Phone 633-8950 In U.S. and possessions • 1 Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. Yr. Carriers and dealers are independent contractors Daily &Sun. 29.00 87.00 174.00 348.00 and The Post Publishing Co.,Inc. Daily Only 25.00 75.00 150.00 300.00 is not responsible for Sunday Only 16.00 48.00 96.00 192.00 advance payments made to them. Member, Audit Bureau of Circulation • Salisbury Post (ISSN 0747-0738) is published daily; Second Class Postage paid at Salisbury, NC POSTMASTER:Send address changes to: Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145-4639
Unclaimed Photos If you have submitted photos to the Salisbury Post of loved ones for Birthdays, Engagements, Anniversaries, Weddings, Obituaries, etc., and the photos were not picked up, please do so. All unclaimed photos will be discarded June 30th, 2010.
Looking for a chiropractor ?
Effective and gentle treatment for neck and back pain, sciatica, herniated/ruptured discs, headache, pinched nerves, pain/tingling in the arms/legs, carpal tunnel syndrome, tennis elbow, bursitis and arthritis pain. Spinal decompression available. Foot orthotics fitted. Participating provider for most insurances and Medicare & Medicaid. We await settlement for auto accidents. Referrals not needed unless required by insurance.
Salisbury Chiropractic
Dr. David D. Godwin Dr. Michael B. Pryor (40 years combined experience)
Thank you! S45584
2907 S. Main Street • Salisbury • www.salisburychiropractic.us
See Dr. Godwin’s Guest Column on Dr.Peter Gott’s website www.AskDrGottMD.com
704-633-9335
R123789
SECONDFRONT
The
MONDAY
June 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
3A
www.salisburypost.com
Local barbers lend time, skills to offer children free haircuts BY SCOTT JENKINS
sjenkins@salisburypost.com
EAST SPENCER — Michael Mitchell says he was “just sitting around one day thinking about something we can do for the kids to stop the violence and make them feel good about themselves.” The associate pastor of Southern City A.M.E. Zion Church says God gave him the answer: haircuts. “There’s ones that really can’t afford it and need it” Mitchell said. “Some kids haven’t never been to a barber-
shop in their life.” So Mitchell got approval from the church’s pastor, the Rev. Timothy Bates, and the Men’s Mentoring Ministry took on the task of lining up barbershops to help carry it out. Seven barbershops have agreed to donate their services. “Every barber in Rowan County we went to was excited,” Mitchell said. “We had not one who said they couldn’t do it.” While it might seem an unusual offering for a church, it’s already proved a popular one. Mitchell said the parents of be-
tween 30 and 40 children had notified the church by Friday their kids would be there Tuesday morning. “They said nothing like this has ever happened in our area,” he said. And, he said, if more children and youth in grades kindergarten through 12 want to take advantage of the ministry, there’s room. “Some of the barbers say they want more,” he said. To get a free haircut, parents should have their children at Southern City, 940 S. Long St., between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Tuesday. The church will hand out tickets to various barbershops taking part in the service, and if parents don’t have transportation, the church will provide it. Though it’s not required, Mitchell said the church is also encouraging the children who get haircuts to ask the barbers if they can perform some act of service in their shops that day, such as sweeping the floor. “We hope they take away just feeling good about themselves and know that somebody cares about them, the community cares about them, and they
don’t have to go out and be violent,” Mitchell said. Mitchell said the church plans another free haircut day when it’s time for kids to go back to school. And while this round of haircuts is on the barbers, he said, Southern City members will be asking local funeral homes and other churches to help sponsor that effort. Tuesday’s day of service, he said, will also be dedicated to Willie McCree, a barber with Jones’ Barber Shop in East Spencer and one of those who was most excited about the
free-haircut event. McCree recently underwent a kidney transplant and won’t be able to take part. “We just thank God he was able to receive a kidney,” Mitchell said. In addition to Jones, other barber shops participating are White’s Barber Shop; Addison Barber Shop; Elite Barber Shop; B&B Barber Shop, Big V Barber Shop; and Ted’s Barber Shop. For more information, contact Mitchell at 704-245-0279. Contact Scott Jenkins at 704-797-4248.
11 to compete in Miss Rowan County Veteran
SHELLEY SMITH / SALISBURY POST
Myron Goodman, Bob Reed and Wayne Bradshaw check out a 650 Triumph Bonneville, which was made in England. Motorcycle enthusiasts gathered in Gold Hill on Saturday to show of their antique rides.
Vintage rides Motorcycle enthusiasts gather in Gold Hill to show off antique models BY SHELLEY SMITH
ssmith@salisburypost.com
Many motorcycle enthusiasts at the Gold Hill antique motorcycle show Saturday said the same thing about riding: “If you’ve never done it, you wouldn’t know what it’s like.” The same goes for their love of antique motorcycles and the yearly gathering in Gold Hill. Hundreds of antique motorcycles lined the Gold Hill Historic Park on Saturday for the fourth annual antique motorcycle show, which Gold Hill resident Gary Poole started in 2007. The show is put on each year by the Tyler Poole foundation and the Blue Ridge Chapter of the Antique Motorcycle Club of America. Poole began the event as part of a fundraiser for an East Rowan High School student scholarship from the Tyler Poole Foundation. The foundation was created in honor of his son, Tyler, who passed
away in 2004 after a car accident. Poole and his family members provide food and drinks for purchase, and all proceeds go toward a $1,000 college scholarship. Rick Furr and his wife, Renate, drove from Stanfield. He drove to Gold Hill on his 1974 R90\5 blue BMW bike, original and unrestored, and riding well with only 101,000 miles. Renate drove in her own fully-restored cream-colored 1967 R60\2 BMW bike. She had the bike for 16 years and decided to restore it last year. She’ll need three more to catch up to her husband’s four motorcycles. The pair came to Gold Hill on Saturday and enjoyed sharing road stories with others at the show. Furr has been riding for more than 25 years, he said, and he enjoys each one. “If you’ve ever ridden in the back of a pickup truck, stood up, and let the wind blow you in the face, that’s what it feels like — but
better,” he said of riding. Renate said she has driven fourwheelers in the past, but nothing compares to riding a motorcycle. “Riding a bike is a different experience,” she said. “It’s relaxing.” And, she said she will never want a new bike. “I don’t care anything about buying a new bike,” she said. “Once you start getting into and buying old motorcycles, it’s an addiction.” Chan and Barbara Hatley rode from Oakboro on Chan’s antique 1953 Tangerine Indian, with fringed saddlebags. They’ve been coming to the show since it began and said they always enjoy the ride up. “I love riding,”Barbara said. “I love cruising through the countryside. It’s just an awesome experience you’ll never feel on anything else. It’s a breed of its own.”
See RIDES, 5A
Rowan seniors hit the diamond for a day of softball Salisbury/Rowan seniors recently braved the heat for senior softball on the field at the City Sports Complex and Ellis Park, setting up tents and rolling out watermelons along with gallons of water for a full day of senior softball. There were 10 teams from across North Carolina and South Carolina joined in the fun and heat June 18 to play a total of 26 games. “Thank God, we had a wonderful safe day of play, maybe a few pulled muscles, but other than that we were a 100 percent on target for a safe day of softball,” said Senior Games coordinator Phyllis LoflinKluttz. The team women’s team sponsored by Davis & Davis Attorneys at Law, Salisbury split a double header with Charlotte’s women’s team at Ellis Park. The City Sports Complex was rolling all day long with eight teams, one of which was the Salisbury/Rowan Senior
Games “Oak Park Retirement” men’s team 55–59 years old. They all played hard and safe, Loflin-Kluttz said. “I could not be prouder of my seniors and of the volunteers who braved the heat to keep water in all the dugouts and a running supply of snacks. Also, we would like to thank Rufty-Holmes Senior Center for opening up their facility to us. This helped keep everyone safe from the heat,” she said. Attending the event was: Salisbury/Rowan Senior Games Oak Park Retirement 55s, Charlotte Blue’s, Hickory 55s, Dirty Dozen out of Greenville, S.C., Hickory Lou’s Royals, Charlotte Whites, Lake Norman, Charlotte Women’s and Hickory 60s. Salisbury/Rowan Senior Games is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing year-round health promotion and education for adults 55
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Salisbury/Rowan senior played at total of 26 softball games Saturday, June 19 at City Sports Complex and Ellis Park. years of age and older. Salisbury/Rowan Senior Games is sponsored by: • Gold level — Comfort Keepers of Salisbury, Genesis HealthCare of Salisbury, Humana MarketPoint, Magnolia Gardens, Oak Park Retirement.
• Bronze level — Davis & Davis Attorneys at Law, HomeHealth Professionals and Rowan Regional Medical Center. For more information about Senior Games and SilverArts, contact Loflin-Kluttz at 704-216-7780.
Eleven young ladies will compete for the title Miss Rowan County Veteran during this year’s Faith Fouth of July festivities. The winner will be crowned July 5 following the parade. The contestants are: • Charlotte Brown, 18, representing Harold B. Jarrett American Legion Post 342. She is the daughter of Scott and Bonnie Brown. She attends Grace Bible Church and is an East Rowan High School graduate. Her activities include National Honor Society, Junior Civitans and cheerleading. She has assisted at vacation Bible school and taught at elementary school cheerleading camps. She plans to attend UNC Charlotte and pursue a career in physical therapy. • Julie Bruce, 18, representing Faith American Legion Post 327. She is the daughter of John and Ann Bruce. She attends Faith Lutheran Church and Jesse C. Carson High School. She is a member of the National Honor Society and swim team and attended Girls State. She plans to attend Catawba College. • Chacity Renee Earnhardt, 21, representing Vanhoy-Sells Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9134. She is the daughter of Donna H. Torres and Bret M. Earnhardt. She attends Grace Lower Stone Church. Her activities include VFW, FFA and employment at Richard’s BBQ. She plans to join the Navy. • Sara Hopkins, 18, representing AMVETS Post 845. She is the daughter of Robert and Denise Hopkins. She attends St. James Lutheran Church
See COMPETE, 4A
Miss Rowan County Veteran contestants
BROWN
BRUCE
EARNHARDT
HOPKINS
KELLY
RITCHIE
SHUE
TADLOCK
Not pictured: Cortney Shoemaker and Misty Parrish WILLIAMS
Memories of a festive Fourth of July in Faith
G
rowing up, one of the largest Fourth of July celebrations I attended each year was held in Faith, a little town in eastern Rowan County. In the memories of those native to Rowan County, one alliteration is most apt for the month of July: “The Faith Fourth.” It always MACK a couWILLIAMS begins ple of days earlier with a street dance, but on the morning of the Fourth, the greatest number of people assembles along Main Street prior to 10 a.m. The parade begins with a flyover of jets, the audial concussion that dwarfed the sounds of blasting from the nearby quarries. Appropriately, patriotic floats paid remembrance to veterans of the series of wars, over the years, in which we have be-
come involved. On that hot summer day, standing at the edge of that hot asphalt road, I can still picture a couple of army tanks — recruited for festivities instead of war — as they made their slow advance through the little town. As hot as the civilian tires of rubber could become on a day in July, they couldn’t do what the “hot metal tire treads” of those weighty engines of war could do — leave the impressions of their journey in a road made so malleable by the summer heat. Veterans would march and floats would drift by. There was barbecue, rides, and tents hawking novelties that children of that era loved: magic tricks, smoke bombs, and “whoopie cushions.” Old-fashioned sack races and greased pole climbs were featured, along with baseball games. When the evening became so dark that the stars
See FESTIVE, 5A
NEWS/OBUTIRAIES
4A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Carving walking canes as inspiration B Y K.J. W ILLIAMS
The StarNews of Wilmington
WILMINGTON (AP) — Bryant Shephard’s canes are his calling card. He says thank you, offers support for an unsteady gait, or lets you know he’s glad to have met you with a handcarved cane that’s art and function. At 77, he may carry one of his canes for a little assist. His wife, Addie, does too. The Maple Hill native retired from the Air Force after 21 years. He followed military service with stints as a shopping mall operations manager before settling back here full-time in 1994. He’s back where his life began, on acres owned by his family for about 100 years. “I was born and raised next door,” he said. “Father gave me these five acres.” Here, he has a workbench in his garage. An array of knives with different blades lay sheathed until they’re needed. “I don’t own a lathe,” he says. “It’s done with knives and rasps.” Shephard said he gets his inspiration from God. Until he does, he doesn’t finish carving a piece of wood. “At some time in the early morning, I get a vision of where I want to go.”
The handles he carves are fashioned from requests. A co-worker once asked for a cane with a rattlesnake handle. He wasn’t clear on how to approach this task, until he saw a photograph of a rattlesnake on a magazine cover while browsing in a bookstore. “And I just took it as a sign,” Shephard said. He bought the magazine, but he says his motivation came from his co-worker’s confidence in his ability to grant her wish. Now, the rattlesnake is a specialty. One of his more intricate canes has a smooth surface with a vine-like outer carving snaking around it. Carved from sweet gum, the black walnut handle is a gleaming rattlesnake’s head. Its jaw is open to display two whitepainted fangs. Its eyes are glittery purple stones. “I hardly show this one because I’m afraid someone’s going to buy it,” Shephard said. He estimates it took him more than 60 hours to create. Other cane handles feature a poodle’s head, or an elephant, or a bear. One day, a friend said her mother needed a cane but wouldn’t use one. She asked for a cane with a dolphin handle, thinking that might entice her mother to use it. Another specialty was born.
Over the years, Shephard has given away about 60 canes. Sometimes, a simpler design will find its way to a needy person. Sometimes, a more elaborate one will be given to someone he met while working as a movie extra in Wilmington. Actor Louis Gossett Jr. was a recipient. Renowned poet Maya Angelou also received a cane as a gift. Shephard takes orders for custom canes. The basic canes start at $70 while the fancier ones start at $150. The people around Shephard aren’t the only ones to benefit from his gift. He says he’s also grown from it, becoming a more patient and understanding man through the focus he’s learned while carving. It’s a pleasurable process that he came to later in life. His late brother, James, also was a carver. Shephard’s most recent gift is a staff, reminiscent of the one Moses’ carried, which he plans to give to a religious leader from Washington, D.C. The church bishop and members of that church attended an event last month, celebrating the construction of the new Lees Chapel Missionary Baptist Church. Shephard’s staff is his way of showing his thanks.
Better Business Bureau offers money saving tips for air-conditioning units CHARLOTTE — As the heat wave continues, many people are having problems with their air conditioning units and are contacting the Better Business Bureau about where to turn for service. In the previous 12 months, the BBB has provided consumers with 68,796 Reliability Reports on 342 air conditioning/heating contractors in the Southern Piedmont area. The BBB grades for these contractors range from A+ to F. Of the 342 contractors, 214 have a grade of A+, A, or A-. “Air conditioning units can be the most expensive equipment in your home,” said BBB President Tom Bartholomy. “Given the large number of contractors and companies that provide air conditioning service, it’s important to distinguish between the good and the bad.” Emergency service — If your air conditioning breaks and you need emergency service, the BBB has this advice: • Check out air conditioning contractors with the BBB at www.bbb.org. It only takes a few minutes to find a company with a good track record for service. • Make sure that the con-
tractor is licensed, bonded and insured. • Be wary of unsolicited offers and high pressure sales pitches for air conditioning systems, windows and roofing. • Don’t fall for devices and products that promise drastic reductions in home cooling costs. The high temperatures also mean high utility bills. “Many people go without air conditioning because they can’t afford it,” said BBB President Tom Bartholomy.” Unfortunately, extreme heat can be deadly.” If you cannot afford to pay your air conditioning bills, the BBB has this advice: • Ask your utility company about an annualized billing plan to avoid spikes in your bills during extremely hot or cold months. • If you're on a fixed income and have trouble paying your utility bills, contact your utility company to find out about emergency assistance plans. • Get help. nonprofit organizations like Crisis Assistance Ministry help low-income individuals pay their utility bills.
Year-round home maintenance — The BBB has advice for steps you can take to make your home more energy-efficient year-round: • Have your central air conditioning system inspected and serviced each year. • Check your attic, garage and basement to make sure your home is well-insulated. • Clean or replace air conditioning and furnace filters on a regular basis. • Install a programmable thermostat and keep your home at a set temperature. • Close curtains, shades or bslinds during the day to block the sun and the heat. • Install ceiling fans. • Prune back shrubs that may block the air flow to your air conditioning units. • Plant a tree. Landscaping is a natural way to shade your home. • Shade room air conditioners from direct sun to reduce their workload. • Apply a reflective coating to your roof or windows to reflect heat away from your home. For more information, visit www.bbb.org or call the BBB at 1-877-317-7236.
BRIEFS Honeycutt first runner up in Miss North Carolina pageant
at Greensboro. In February, she was named Miss Thomasville. Adrienne Leigh Core, of Raleigh, was named Miss A former East Rowan High North Carolina for 2010. School student won first runner up Saturday in the Miss Beach county may North Carolina pageant. Mallory Honeycutt is the rein in new wild daughter of Stan and Rita horse tours Honeycutt of Salisbury. COROLLA (AP) — A counIn 2007, Honeycutt was named Miss Rowan County ty along North Carolina’s OutVeterans. She was named er Banks is considering limits Miss Cabarrus County in 2008 on increasingly popular tours while a nursing student at the to see wild horses galloping University of North Carolina along the beach.
COMPETE FROM 3A and East Rowan High School. She is a member of Junior Civitans and employed by Dairy Queen. She plans to attend UNC Charlotte and major in biology. • Kacie Kelly, 16, representing AMVETS Post 565. She is the daughter of Kristy and Chad Carnes. She attends First Wesleyan Church and Jesse C. Carson High School. She is a member of the rifle team. She plans to attend a four-year college. • Misty Parrish, representing Freeze-Seymour American Legion Post 185. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reggie Faggart. She attends South Rowan High School. She is a member of JROTC. • Laura Elaine Ritchie, 21, representing Peeler-Livengood-Wood Post American Legion Post 448. She is the
daughter of Cameron and Laurie Ritchie. She attends Christiana Lutheran Church and Catawba College. She is a teaching scholar, Catawba College ambassador and president of the Women’s Society and teaching organization on campus. She plans to become a middle school teacher in language arts and social studies. • Cortney Michelle Shoemaker, 16, representing Kennedy Hall American Legion Post 106. She is the daughter of Cortley and Sherry Shoemaker. She attends West Rowan High School. She is a member of JROTC, the Spanish Club and the TRU Club. • Emily Shue, 16, representing Disabled American Veterans Post 96. She is the daughter of Tim And Alison Shue. She attends Faith Baptist Church and Carson High School. She plays volleyball and softball. She plans to be a physical therapist. • Morgan Elizabeth Tadlock, 17, representing Landis
Currituck County commissioners told The Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk, Va., they are considering a moratorium on new horse tours to protect the animals and respond to complaints from residents. The Outer Banks are one of the few places where wild horses roam along the beach. Currently, eight companies with 45 vehicles have county permits to take tourists to see the 100 or so horses that usually travel in small groups. This is the first year Currituck County has required permits. American Legion Post 146. She is the daughter of Jon and Lisa Tadlock. She attends First Reformed Church and South Rowan High School. Her activities included cheerleading, National Honor Society, track, Science Club, of which she was president, Bible Club, Junior Civitans and American Legion Auxiliary. She plans to attend Appalachian State University and earn a teaching degree. • Janoah G. Williams, 17, representing J.C. Price American Legion Post 107. She is the daughter of Eldridge and Brenda Williams. She attends Glory Church World Outreach Ministries and Salisbury High School. Her activities include Honor Society, DECA club, Black History Club, of which she is vice president, Junior Civitans and employment at Innes Street Drug. She plans to attend UNC Charlotte or UNC Chapel Hill and major in psychology with a minor in law.
SALISBURY POST Elbert O.K. Deal
Leon Sloan Bradshaw
SALISBURY — Leon Sloan Bradshaw, husband of the late Eleanor Churchill Hoey Bradshaw, died Sunday, June 27, 2010, at his home in Salisbury. Mr. Bradshaw was born July 17, 1917, in Salisbury, to the late Leonidas Sloan and Henrietta Kestler Bradshaw. He attended Boyden High School in Salisbury and graduated from The Citadel in Charleston, S.C., in 1938, where he was a member of the Summerall Guards drill team. After graduation, he joined the firm of L.S. Bradshaw General Contractors, established in 1898, alongside his father, Leonidas, and brother Richard Allen. He met his true love, Eleanor, in Shelby and married her there on Dec. 6, 1941. Mr. Bradshaw went on to serve four years in active duty as Lieutenant Colonel and 18 years in the reserves. “Brad” and Eleanor made their home in Salisbury after World War II, and he purchased the family business in 1963, changing the name to L.S. Bradshaw Real Estate. Mr. Bradshaw was a vibrant member of the Salisbury and Blowing Rock communities, a respected leader, and the consummate Southern gentleman. He was also a passionate golfer, an avid traveler and a driven businessman. Alongside his lovely wife, Brad delighted in opening his home to friends, family, visiting church members and new acquaintances. He was also a devoted attendant and member of First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury since 1929. Mr. Bradshaw's indelible contributions include a significant influence on the building and development of Salisbury businesses, schools and facilities, as well community organizations. At First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury, he was an elected Deacon, an elected Elder, Superintendent of Sunday Schools and member of the Building Committee. He was also a summer member of Blowing Rock Methodist Interdenominational Church, where he was on the church Board. Mr. Bradshaw was President of Salisbury Country Club and the Blowing Rock Country Club. He also served as President of the Kiwanis Club, Lieutenant Governor of Kiwanis, member of the Citadel Alumni Board, Co-Chairman of the YMCA Building Fund, YMCA Board Member, President of Salisbury Community Foundation and Chairman of the Edgar Tufts Memorial Association. Mr. Bradshaw was preceded in death by his wife of 65 years, Eleanor Churchill Hoey Bradshaw. He is survived by three children, daughter Eleanor Churchill Bradshaw Thompson (husband Simon), son Christopher Sloan Bradshaw (wife Renee) and daughter Ashley Alexander Bradshaw Shoaf (husband Bays); grandchildren Douglas Thompson, Courtney Thompson, Brandon Thompson, Stuart Bradshaw, and Harris Lambert; and four great-grandchildren. Service: Memorial Services will be held 11 a.m. Wednesday, June 30 at First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury with the Rev. Dr. Jim Dunkin, Rev. Randy Kirby and Dr. Hal Warlick officiating. Visitation will follow the service. Memorials: May be made to First Presbyterian Church, Rowan Helping Ministries and Grandfather Home for Children. Summersett Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be made at www.summersettfuneralhome.com
Jennie Kesler Lemley
SALISBURY — Jennie Kesler Lemley, age 81, of Salisbury, went home to be with the Lord June 26, 2010. She was born April 11, 1929, in Stanly County to the late William Kesler and Verna Parker Kesler. Mrs. Lemley was employed in the textile industry with Cone Mills over 40 years. She was a faithful member of Bethel Baptist Church in Rockwell until declining health. She was a loving wife, mother, grandmother and friend. Everyone would call Jennie for advice or wisdom and she always took time to listen. Her love for the Lord, her family and others were a shining testimony. Her warm smile and great sense of humor will be treasured by her family and friends. Preceding her in death were her precious son, Perry, in 2005, who she devoted her life to taking care of; and her brothers, Howell, Narvie and Roy Kesler. Those left to treasure her memories are her loving, devoted husband of 60 years, Herman Lemley; daughter Ginger McNally (Rev. Dave McNally) of Winter Haven, Fla.; granddaughters Jennifer Evans (Bryan) of Lynchburg, Va., Janette McNally of Winter Haven, Fla.; and greatgrandson Ashton Evans of Lynchburg, Va. Visitation: 1-2:15 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Bethel Baptist Church, 410 Depot St., Rockwell, NC 28138. Service and Burial: Service is 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Bethel Baptist Church with the Rev. John Houghton and son-in-law Rev. Dave McNally officiating. Burial will follow at Rowan Memorial Park. Lyerly Funeral Home is assisting the Lemley family. Online condolences may be made at www.lyerlyfuneralhome.com
Charles 'Lindy' Smith
SALISBURY — Charles “Lindy” Lindbergh Smith, 82, of Salisbury, died Sunday, June 27, 2010, at Rowan Regional Medical Center. Arrangements are incomplete with Evergreen Cremation Services of Salisbury.
Juanita Chaffin Owens
ROCKWELL — Mrs. Juanita Doss Chaffin Owens, 75, of Rockwell, went to be with the Lord Saturday, June 26, 2010, at her home. She was born April 6, 1935, in Rowan County to the late Eva Marie Connell Doss and William Archibald Doss. Mrs. Owens graduated from Woodleaf High School in 1954. She was a seamstress at Rowan Manufacturing for 10 years. She was baptized at Needmore Baptist Church in 1950 and was of the Baptist faith. Juanita was preceded in death by one sister, Collen Doss Wiles, in 1992. Those left to cherish her memory include four children, Richard S. Chaffin Sr. of Rockwell, Kathy A. Simmons of China Grove, Timothy S. Chaffin of Salisbury and Angela C. Owens of Salisbury; one brother, Ray Doss of Trinity; one sister, Geraldine Powell of Yorktown, Va.; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Service and Visitation: Memorial service will be held 12 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Summersett Memorial Chapel with Pastor Ralph Robinette and Pastor Rick Perry officiating. Visitation will follow the service. Memorials: In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the family for the Juanita Owens funeral. Summersett Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be made at www.summersettfuneralhome.com
Catherine C. Bowers
SALISBURY — Mrs. Catherine Curlee Bowers, 88, of Salisbury, passed away on Saturday, June 26, 2010, at her residence. Arrangements are incomplete. Powles Funeral Home in Rockwell is assisting the Bowers family.
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
CHINA GROVE — Elbert O.K. Deal, age 94, died Sunday, June 27, 2010, at Rowan Regional Medical Center, Salisbury, after four weeks of declining health. He was born Dec. 9, 1915, in Rowan County, the son of the late Brunner Deal and Zeola Kimball Deal. In earlier years, he was a farmer and caretaker of Greenlawn Cemetery, China Grove. In later years, he worked with the former Cannon Mills Company, Plant 1 Weave Room 7 for 45 years until his retirement in 1981. Throughout the years he was an active member of Mount Zion United Church of Christ, China Grove, where he was involved with Boy Scouts, was former president of the Bible Class, former First Aid Team, and other phases of church activities. He also served his country as an engineer in the U.S. Army during World War II and was a member of VFW Poston-Perkins Post 8989. In addition to parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Lucille Kincaid Deal, who died Sept. 1, 2007; and a brother, Bernard Deal. Survivors include his son, E. Keller Deal and wife Vicky of Kannapolis; two granddaughters, Kelly Teague and husband Phil and Beth Pike and husband Joe, both of Concord; two great-grandchildren, Taylor and Tori Pike; three brothers, Bittle Deal of China Grove, Jay Deal of Salisbury and Ralph Deal of Rockwell; two sisters, Lala Lowder of China Grove and Eva Yost of Mooresville; and a special caregiver, Arnetta Long of Kannapolis. Service and Visitation: The funeral service will be 3 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 at Mount Zion United Church of Christ, China Grove, officiated by Rev. Jerry Moore. Burial will follow at West Lawn Memorial Park, China Grove. The family will receive friends at the church from 1:30-3 p.m. Tuesday prior to the service. Memorials: May be made to Mt. Zion United Church of Christ, 1415 S. Main St., China Grove, NC 28023. Online condolences may be left at www.whitleysfuneralhome.com.
Mrs. Jennie Kesler Lemley Visitation: Tuesday 1-2:15 PM Service: Tuesday 2:30 PM Bethel Baptist Church Rockwell, NC ——
Mrs. Lois Minton Kincaid Miss Brenda Lee Hirschfeld Mr. Robert C. Poole Mrs. Evi Turpeinen Salonen All Pending
Mr. Ned Calvin Towell 2:00 PM Monday Summersett Mem. Chapel Visitation: 1-2:00 PM Monday ——
Mr. Victor Doyle Sullivan Noon Monday Summersett Mem. Chapel Visitation: 11-12:00 PM Monday ——
Mr. Terry Dale Yost 2:00 PM Tuesday Summersett Mem. Chapel Visitation: 1-2 PM Tuesday ——
Mrs. Armie Kyles Graveside Service 10:00 AM Monday Rowan Memorial Park ——
Mrs. Juanita Doss Owen Memorial Service 12 PM Tuesday Summersett Funeral Home ——
Mr. Leon Bradshaw Memorial Service 11:00 AM Wednesday First Presbyterian Church
AREA
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 5A
City may fight graffiti with spray paint laws
Local Red Cross chapter offers training classes
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) — Officials in one North Carolina city want to fight graffiti by making it illegal to for anyone under age 18 to buy spray paint or possess it near often defaced areas like bridges and public playgrounds. The Winston-Salem Journal reports that a Winston-Salem City Council committee will discuss the new laws next month. City Manager Lee Garrity says fighting graffiti is critical to keep neighborhood appearances and property values up and also helps police fight gangs.
The E.H.Dole Chapter of the American Red cross offers various ways to certify or re-certify for training. Regular courses are great for firsttimers or long-ago certified participants because they offer a “practice-whileyou –watch” DVD and “hands-on” practice.” Individual courses are recommended for these participants. For participants who have been certified in the previous 12 months,” review” courses save time and combination courses save money. Included in all of the full courses are discussions
about disease prevention and the Good Samaritan laws. For more information or to register for classes, call 704-633-3854. Also, if you are a Registered Nurse and would like to volunteer to teach or help teach our Nurse Aide 1 Program, contact Amy McGuire at the number above. • July 7 — Adult/Child/Infant CPR, $40, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. • July 9 — Babysitter’s Training, $50, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • July 10 — CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer/
Health care Provider, $50, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. • July 12- 15 — Guard Start- At SR YMCA, $20, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. • July 13 — Adult CPR/AED, $30, 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. • July 15 — First Aid $25, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. • July 17- CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer/ Health care Provider, $50, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. • July 19 — Babysitter’s Training, $50, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • July 21- First Aid $25, 9 a.m. to noon • July 21- Wilderness and
Remote First Aid starts at SR YMCA, $90, 6 to 9 p.m. • July 22 — Wilderness and Remote First Aid continues, 6 to 9 p.m. • July 23 — Wilderness and Remote First Aid continues, 6 to 9 p.m. • July 24- Wilderness and Remote First Aid ends, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. • July 24 — Babysitter’s Training, $50, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • July 26 — Adult CPR/AED review, $25, 9 a.m. to noon • July 28 — Infant/Child CPR, $30, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
How To Get The Perfect Shoe Fit
go to view the
at
R122864
SALISBURY POST
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
Summer Sale!
30-50 $15
% off*
Additional
Off Any Purchase
Two micro midgets were on display at the show, both owned by John Earnhardt, originally from Gold Hill.
Expires 7-3-10. One coupon per customer. Not valid on previous purchases. *Excludes Brighton
We’re worth the drive to Concord!
Anne’s
SHELLEY SMITH / SALISBURY POST
RIDES FROM 3A Chan has six Indians, and the one he brought Saturday, the 1953, was one of the last Indian’s ever made. “This is my favorite one,” Barbara said. “I love the bench seat and the way that it rides. My feet touch the ground. It’s the most comfortable one.” Barbara also said the1953 Indian was very rare and that she hadn’t seen anyone with a bike the same color. “The big thing about these bikes is everything’s original — there’s no replicas,” she said. The Hatleys said they will definitely be back next year for the fifth bash. “We look forward to this every year,” she said. John and Crystal Earnhardt drove from South Carolina with two micro midget racecars, not exactly a bike, but still antiques that got a lot of attention. Dale Earnhardt raced the micro midget track in Gold Hill that before NASCAR was born. And John’s family raced with him. “A lot of your NASCAR greats were right here in Gold Hill at the time,” said Crystal, who wrote about the book “Victory Lane,” about her husbands racing days. “They were all friends. It was a different era.” John said he was thrilled to hear of such an event being in Gold Hill after moving to South Carolina. “I was born and raised here and never knew about this,” he said. He has been coming for the past two
years. “It was a real joy to be here today. “I played in these gold mines when I was a kid.” Myron Goodman, of Salisbury, drove a short distance to Gold Hill on his 1931 Harley Davidson EL — also known as, “The Knucklehead.” ELs were made from 1936 until 1947, Goodman said the nickname comes from its awkward engine design. Goodman helped Poole with the idea of having the show in Gold Hill, while also contributing to Poole’s scholarship. “Gary Poole’s a good friend of mine,” he said. Poole said the show was “as lovely as always.” “There was a good turnout, a good show, good people, good food and good weather,” he said. “These bikes that show up down here are some of the best around. We’re starting to get a better variety. “It’s amazing to see how people have preserved these things as well as they have. It’s artwork, really.” Poole said that aside from his foundation and the fellowship the show brings, he mainly puts on the show each year to bring people into Gold Hill from all areas. “We have a large group of people from out of state,” he said. “And hopefully, they’ll like the area, and come back again.” Poole’s wife, Vicki, said her favorite part of the show was making money for the scholarship. “It is such a benefit to us,” she said. “And it’s growing every year. “They know it’s for a good cause and they’re very gen-
erous. And we thank them.” The show is held in Gold Hill every year, and admission is free. The shops and restaurant in Gold Hill are also open during the day. Poole expects to bring an
even larger crowd and variety of bikes to the area next year. For more information, visit www.historicgoldhill.com. Contact Shelley Smith at 704-797-4246.
“The Fashion Lover’s Boutique”
Located in K&W Shopping Center Concord • 704-793-4943 From Salisbury: I-85 S, exit 60 Turn left, 2 miles on right R125073
with
! l s a d San
Renate Furr, of Stanfield, poses next to her first bike, a restored 1967 R602.
FESTIVE FROM 3A were visible, then it was time for the “stars of pyrotechnics” to make their appearance. I remember watching the fireworks there with my mother. All of a sudden there was pain on my forehead and descending red sparks from that hurt, but it was not from the professional fire-
works display. A careless man dangling his ignited “firework of tobacco” in his hand between inhalations had done what those explosive bursts in the sky had not done — burned me. My mother spoke very harshly to him and he was most apologetic. On her own part, the things that were injurious to her, she would absorb and keep to herself, but such was not the case when something was injurious to me.
Home Owned / Home Operated
428 N. Main St., Salisbury, NC • 704-636-1850 HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10:00 to 5:00
ralphbakershoes.com
God Bless America! R118736
H E A LT H
6A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Americans treated, and overtreated, to death
No Leaf
Gutter
Associated Press
FREE FLOWING WATER CONTROL
J.A. FISHER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
4243 S. Main St. Salisbury, NC
R121882
704-633-8095 Mark Stout
Celebration Holiday
Deadline
If you desire your announcement to run on the July 11th Celebrations page, please note an
early deadline
of
Friday, July 2. If you have questions or need further information, call
Sylvia Andrews 704/797-7682
sunsets and cold fried chicken.
To advertise in this directory
call 704-797-4220 R121022
Come make memories on Lake Tillery. Affordable boat slips now available, with full-service marina and dry dock storage coming soon. jjordan@janrorealestate.com 910-573-0629 www.UwharrieHaven.com
Jackson Park Pentecostal
Holiness Church Games, Crafts, Music, Food & Fun! lilly’s bridge marina
1008 Moose RoadKannapolis NC 28083
July 18th-22nd 6:00 PM thru 8:30 PM 704-938-3153
Come early or call for pre-registration
W.E.E. Center
First Baptist Church
of Salisbury
4.99 $ 5.49
REGISTERING FOR 2010-2011 SCHOOL YEAR!
FAMILY PACKS TO GO
Preschool Classes:
Grilled Chicken Breast
Includes hushpuppies, slaw and choice of potato
dea
R123631
Customer Appreciation Day
6.99
eadrlliyne
2 Years 3 Years 4-5 Years
COME CHECK OUT OUR FRIDAY LUNCH SPECIALS Fridays 11am-2:30pm at Both Locations
1007 E. Innes St Salisbury • 704-633-9585
2050 Statesville Blvd. Salisbury • 704-639-9500
Mon-Thur 4-9PM Fri 11AM-2:30PM, 4PM-9:30PM Sat. 3PM-9:30PM Sun 11:30AM-9PM
2 days per week 3 days per week 4 days a week
8:30-11:30 8:30-12:00 8:30-12:30
704-639-1062
223 N. Fulton St., Salisbury weecenter@fbcsalisbury.org
S45299
*Based on 2002 ARI Directory Listings.
129 N. Main Street, Salisbury • 704-636-7100 www.kluttzreamer.com
boat slips now selling
EVERY MONDAY
$
Tyou’ll he only law firm ever need
percent” when that actually might mean living three weeks or months longer instead of two. “It’s amazing how little benefit those studies show,” Storey said, referring to research on the new drugs. Dan Waeger tried just about all of them. A nonsmoker, he was diagnosed with lung cancer at age 22, and pursued treatment after treatment before dying nearly four years later, in March 2009. “He decided if there were odds to be beat, he was going to beat the odds,” said his boss, Ellen Stovall, then-president of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship, where Waeger worked as a fundraiser and development manager. “He received just about every experimental new drug for lung cancer that I’m aware of in his last two years of life. He would get a treatment on a Friday afternoon, be sick all weekend and come to work on Monday,” she recalled. “He had these horrific rashes. He would get these horrible coughs that were not just the lung cancer. The treatments were making him cough up blood, just horrific side effects — vertigo, numbness, tingling in his hands and feet. He suffered.”
R124022
“She kept throwing up, she couldn’t go to the bathroom,” and her body ached, Browne said. The doctors urged hospice care and said, “your mom was stubborn,” Browne recalled. “She wanted her chemo and she wanted to live.” Browne, who lives in New York, formed a women’s cancer foundation in her mother’s honor. She said she would encourage dying cancer patients to choose comfort care over needless medicine that prolongs suffering. It’s easier said than done. The American way is “never giving up, hoping for a miracle,” said Dr. Porter Storey, a former hospice medical director who is executive vice president of the hospice group that Morrison heads. “We use sports metaphors and war metaphors all the time. We talk about never giving up and it’s not over till the fat lady sings .... glorifying people who fought to their very last breath,” when instead we should be helping them accept death as an inevitable part of life, he said. This is especially true when deciding whether to try one of the newer, extremely expensive cancer drugs such as Avastin, Erbitux and Tarceva. Some are touted as “improving survival by 30 or 50
R124706
pice and Palliative Medicine and a doctor at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. “Nobody had really sat down with them about what his choices are and what the options were,” said Morrison, who became his doctor. About a year later, Felker withdrew his own feeding tube, and “it enabled us to go out and have a wonderful evening at a jazz club two nights before he died” in July 2008, Sheehy said. Doctors can’t predict how soon a patient will die, but they usually know when an illness has become incurable. Even then, many of them practice “exhaustion medicine” — treating until there are no more options left to try, said Dr. Martha Twaddle, chief medical officer of Midwest Palliative & Hospice Care Center in suburban Chicago. A stunning number of cancer patients get aggressive care in the last days of their lives, she noted. One large study of Medicare records found that nearly 12 percent of cancer patients who died in 1999 received chemo in the last two weeks of life, up from nearly 10 percent in 1993. Guidelines from an alliance of leading cancer centers say patients whose cancer has spread should stop getting anti-cancer medicine if sequential attempts with three different drugs fail to shrink their tumors. Yet according to IntrinsiQ, a cancer data analysis company, almost 20 percent of patients with colorectal cancer that has spread are on at least their fourth chemotherapy drug. The same goes for roughly 12 percent of patients with metastatic breast cancer, and for 12 percent of those with lung cancer. The analysis is based on more than 60,000 cancer patients. Often, overtreating fatal illnesses happens because patients don’t want to give up. Saideh Browne said her mother, Khadija Akmal-Lamb, wanted to fight her advanced ovarian cancer even after learning it had spread to her liver. The 55-year-old Kansas City, Mo., woman had chemo until two weeks before she died last August.
R123225
money. With side-by-side Climatuff ®Compressors for twostage cooling and the industry’s highest efficiency rating*, the XL19i operates efficiently, lowering your energy costs. Throw in the industry’s best warranty, and the XL19i makes the world a better place to live – both outside and inside.
Emily, a Davie County native, joined the firm as an associate in 2007. Miss Hunter’s practice includes helping local businesses with their needs ranging from leases, collections, and simple disputes to complex litigation. She also assists workers who have been injured on the job.
Alexandra Drane shows a picture of her sister in-law Rosaria Vandenberg at her Winchester, Mass. home. After watching her sister in-law lose a battle with cancer in the hospital, Drane created a website to help support a persons option to spend their final days at home instead.
Baby Shrimp
The Trane helps you protect a precious resource: your *Based on 2002 ARI XL19i Directory Listings.
Kannapolis
Emily R. Hunter
$
The Trane XL20i helps you protect a precious resource: The Trane helps you protect a precious resource: your The Trane XL19iXL19i helps you protect a precious resource: your ® ® your With money. With side-by-side Climatuff Compressors money. With side-by-side Climatuff for twomoney. side-by-side Climatuff Compressors for®Compressors twofor cooling two-stage cooling and the industryʼs highest stage cooling the industry’s highest stage and theand industry’s highest efficiency rating*, efficiency rating*, * efficiency rating, efficiently, the XL20i operates efficiently, theXL19i XL19i operates energy costs. the operates efficiently, loweringcosts. your lowering energy costs.your lowering your energy Throw in the industryʼs Throw in industry’s the industry’s and the XL19i makes Throw the best andwarranty, the XL19i makes bestinwarranty, andwarranty, thebest XL20i maked the world a better the world a better place to live –and both the world a better place to live–both outside inside.outside and inside. place to live - both outside and inside.
www.jafisherconstruction.com
Kluttz, Reamer, Hayes, Randolph, Adkins & Carter, LLP
Your Choice: Perch, Baby Flounder, Canadian Flounder or Chicken Tenders
THE WORLD’S MOST PASSIONATE ENERGY CONSERVATIONIST.
704-788-3217
Salisbury
R124211
A Specialty Contractor Since 1979 With Over 6000 Completed Jobs
S44339
The doctors finally let Rosaria Vandenberg go home. For the first time in months, she was able to touch her 2year-old daughter who had been afraid of the tubes and machines in the hospital. The little girl climbed up onto her mother’s bed, surrounded by family photos, toys and the comfort of home. They shared one last tender moment together before Vandenberg slipped back into unconsciousness. Vandenberg, 32, died the next day. That precious time at home could have come sooner if the family had known how to talk about alternatives to aggressive treatment, said Vandenberg’s sister-in-law, Alexandra Drane. Instead, Vandenberg, a pharmacist in Franklin, Mass., had endured two surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation for an incurable brain tumor before she died in July 2004. “We would have had a very different discussion about that second surgery and chemotherapy. We might have just taken her home and stuck her in a beautiful chair outside under the sun and let her gorgeous little daughter play around her — not just torture her” in the hospital, Drane said. Americans increasingly are treated to death, spending more time in hospitals in their final days, trying last-ditch treatments that often buy only weeks of time, and racking up bills that have made medical care a leading cause of bankruptcies. More than 80 percent of people who die in the United States have a long, progressive illness such as cancer, heart failure or Alzheimer’s disease. More than 80 percent of such patients say they want to avoid hospitalization and intensive care when they are dying, according to the Dartmouth Atlas Project, which tracks health care trends. Yet the numbers show that’s not what is happening: • The average time spent in hospice and palliative care, which stresses comfort and quality of life once an illness is incurable, is falling because people are starting it too late. In 2008, one-third of people who received hospice care had it for a week or less, says the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization. • Hospitalizations during the last six months of life are rising: from 1,302 per 1,000 Medicare recipients in 1996 to 1,441 in 2005, Dartmouth reports. Treating chronic illness in the last two years of life gobbles up nearly one-third of all Medicare dollars. “People are actually now sicker as they die,” and some find that treatments become a greater burden than the illness was, said Dr. Ira Byock, director of palliative care at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Families may push for treatment, but “there are worse things than having someone you love die,” he said. Gail Sheehy, author of the “Passages” books, learned that as her husband, New York magazine founder Clay Felker, spent 17 years fighting various cancers. On New Year’s Day 2007, they waited eight hours in an emergency room for yet another CT scan until Felker looked at her and said, “No more hospitals.” “I just put a cover over him and wheeled him out of there with needles still in his arms,” Sheehy said. Then she called Dr. R. Sean Morrison, president of the American Academy of Hos-
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
ADVICE
SALISBURY POST
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 7A
Ask Amy: Mom wants son to respond to cousins’ texts Dear Amy: My son receives text messages often from his cousins, who live in another state. He refuses to respond to these cousins because they both have a history with drugs. I know their involvement with drugs isn’t really their fault because their mother has a drug ASK problem. AMY How can I explain to him that it isn’t the kids’ fault that they have had problems with drugs? I want him to at least realize that they have had a hard life and that they need a friend and cousin. — Wondering Mom Dear Mom: You should not interfere in this relation-
ship. You don’t say how old your son is or what the nature of these text messages is, but he should be trusted to use his own judgment regarding what kind of contact he wants to have with family members. There could be more to this story than you realize. Your son’s instinct to stay away from these cousins might be a good one, and you should respect it. Your son could be encouraged to understand whatever factors drive these cousins, but beyond encouraging him to be compassionate, forcing them into a relationship could spell trouble. Dear Amy: I no longer speak to my uncle (due to a falling-out over his fourth wife), though he occasionally talks to other relatives that I have a good relationship with. My uncle and these other
relatives are social “friends” on a Web site. Out of curiosity, I checked out my uncle’s profile. His profile is a “professional” one where he communicates with clients and friends. My uncle’s profile is rife with blatant lies about his life and education. He lists a degree that he does not hold, as well as other phony experiences from his life. There is no doubt in my mind that these “credentials” are fake, (I even contacted the school in question to verify whether he ever attended classes there, and they confirmed that he had not), and it is obvious that the degree and experience are listed to attract clients. Should I call him out on this? Or tell someone else? I know I will be labeled as mean and spiteful if I do, but I have a real problem with a professional who lies to create a persona to at-
tract clients. My other family members just blow it off, saying that it’s just the way he is. I agree that we need to accept shortcomings in others as well as ourselves, but what if these shortcomings involve bilking others out of money? I know that I am not able to really look at this from a neutral standpoint, so I’d like your view, please! — Troubled by Lies Dear Troubled: Your conclusions about your uncle may be a stretch, but if he is actually and actively bilking people out of money you should notify his company of his activities. You obviously can’t stand the guy, and if you want to bury him by exposing his lies, then that’s the price he will pay for having a vengeful relative. I suggest you realistically examine his actions and your own motives.
You could give him a “friendlier” heads-up that his inconsistencies have been noticed and contact him through the online “friendship” site to say, “Your profile surprises me. I had no idea you were so accomplished!” Dear Amy: I was upset by a reader’s reference to ”’vehicular Tourette’s” and the fact that you embraced this reference so lightheartedly. As a parent of two sons with Tourette syndrome, I have spent the last 10 years fighting this kind of stereotype while watching my children struggle for acceptance. Most people with Tourette syndrome do not curse, but they do have to deal with involuntary sounds and movements. Tourette’s can be a devastating neurological disorder that I would not wish on
Making a wish list is the secret to successful saving Mary Hunt is the founder of www.DebtProofLiving. com and author of 18 books, including her best-selling classic "Debt-Proof Living." You can e-mail her at mary@everydaycheapskate.com, or write to Everyday Cheapskate, P.O. Box 2135, Paramount, CA 90723. To find out more about Mary Hunt and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. CREATORS.COM--
Job hunting tips for recent college graduates BY MARVIN WALBERG
Scripps Howard News Service
Everything we read and everything we hear tells us that things are getting better and many companies that reduced staffs during the last year and a half are starting to rebuild. They may be looking for YOU! “A key consideration for companies starting to rebuild their staffs is how to recruit great talent cost-effectively,” says Tony Lee, publisher, CareerCast.com. “College graduates have a big advantage over other job seekers given their low starting salaries and great potential to grow with the company. It’s been several years since we’ve seen companies so interested in talking with new grads.” If you’re a new graduate, CareerCast.com offers tips for successful job-hunting: • Check out your college or university career-services office. Their advice is free and targeted to your market. • Join alma mater alumni groups. Networking is still the best way to find a new job.
• Research job boards that include lots of entry-level jobs. • Watch what you post online. Recruiters will search social media to investigate your background. • Expand your search radius to include companies where you would like to live and work. • Take extra courses. Learning should be a lifelong goal. • Don’t underestimate the value of a good cover letter and resume. • Create a “personal branding statement” to stand out from other inexperienced college grads. • Prepare and rehearse before each interview. Don’t assume you can wing it just because you’re smart. • Dress for success. Looking good never hurts. • Be personable and nice to everyone you meet during your interview. • Follow up with thank-you notes to everyone you met. • Most importantly, don’t get discouraged. Job-hunting is one of the toughest “jobs” you’ll ever have. Stay positive and keep your network active. Referrals are one of the best
1999 1500 $ New Spa Head ............... 2999
Summer Specials Pedicure Kid Spa
ways to find a job. To access the complete Graduate Guide to Job-Hunting, visit www.careercast. com/jobs/content/job-huntingcollege-grad-survival-guide .
WINDOWS
FREE Hot Stone Massage with pedicure service
704.636.0390
edi t
J.A. FISHER
A Specialty Contractor Since 1979 With Over 6000 Completed Jobs
704-788-3217
Salisbury
www.jafisherconstruction.com
Kannapolis
PRE 4thMATTRESS OF JULY SALE MARCH SALE! 20% OFF Last Year’s Mattress Models! 25% OFF Mattress Floor Samples!
No Additional Charge for Mattress Foundations
Night Dimensions Mattress Set Twin
149
$
Full
189
$
Queen
199
$
Park Place Mattress Set
Please bring ad to receive special pricing. Exp. 07/31/10
Need Dental Work? • Tooth Colored Crowns start at $495 • Dental Implants for $695 • Mini-Dental Implants for denture stabilization $250 • Zoom Whitening $300 • Cleanings, Fillings and Extractions
www.salisburypost.com Payment Plan with CareCredit www.salisburypost.com Morton Dentistry www.salisburypost.com Mikewww.mikemortondentistry.com 201 Security Street, Kannapolis, NC 28083 www.salisburypost.com info@mikemortondentistry.com 704/938-3189
Sensa Adjustable Beds Starting at
$
999
DENTURES Most Insurance Accepted Now Accepting Medicaid Same Day Service On Repairs and Relines Repairs $50 & up Relines $175 per Denture
Dentures $475 ea.; $950 set Partials $495 & up Extractions $150 & up
Dr. B. D. Smith, General Dentistry 1905 N. Cannon Blvd., Kannapolis
(704) 938-6136
R103631
JERRY’S SHELL SERVICE
(704) 636-3803
This Months Specials! Most Vehicles
68
$
99
BY APPOINTMENT
State Inspections 4 Inspectors for Faster Service Auto A/C Service & Repair One Day Service Brake Service Lifetime Warranty on Pads & Shoes Free Battery Check By Interstate Batteries Tires-Tires-Tires
Most Brands - All Sizes Best Service. Call us for prices.
399
$
Queen Plush or Firm....
Send questions via e-mail to askamy@tribune.com or by mail to Ask Amy, Chicago Tribune, TT500, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611. Amy Dickinson’s memoir, “The Mighty Queens of Freeville: A Mother, a Daughter and the Town that Raised Them” (Hyperion), is available in bookstores.
4 Wheel Alignment
Free Rotations & Flat Repairs on Tires Sold! Save On Factory Recommended Services at Jerry’s!
Refreshments Served
OPEN SUNDAY 12-5
1040 Freeland Dr., Ste 112 Salisbury, NC 28144
0 r 0
FACTORY DIRECT DISCOUNTS
$
Eyelashes .............................$1999
Tax C
All Styles • Doors 100 Styles & Colors
.........................
Massage Available
$15
“The Best Insulated”
$ ............................
Gel Nails ...................$2999 Full Set......................$1999 Fill-in ........................$1299
Marvin Walberg is a jobsearch coach. Contact him at mwalberg@bellsouth.net, marvinwalberg.blogspot.com, or PO Box 43056, Birmingham, AL 35243.
Dear Defensive: Point taken. Thank you. For more information on Tourette syndrome, readers can check www.tsa-usa.org.
Park PlaceBeautyrest Red Rose Simmons Mattress Set Plush or Firm
699
Queen Set ..........$$299 Queen Pillowtop....
600 Jake Alexander Blvd. W. Salisbury, NC Mon-Sat 7am til 7pm
R123883
Next time you click on a web page, make sure it’s the right one. Communications insiders are warning consumers of a new type of phishing scam aimed at stealing information from users on the Internet. Called “tabnabbing,” it’s when a fraudulent web page disguises itself as a trusted website, whereupon users enter sensitive information such as passwords or bankaccount numbers. The scam occurs when a consumer opens a malicious website and then clicks on another tab within the browser. That other web page will appear to be a website the user has visited before, but it’s actually a fraud, collecting information from the consumer. The only indicator of the change is that the URL address remains the same, according to a news release from the Better Business Bureau. Computer users who are unaware of the scam may be signing into nonexistent websites and delivering e-mail addresses, passwords and account numbers into the hands of scammers. Some tabnabbing websites can even detect which Web pages someone most often visits and create duplicate pages asking for a user log in, according to the news release. Staff with the Mozilla Firefox Internet browser are credited with discovering the scam. A few tips for avoiding a tabnabbing website: Check URL addresses before logging in with sensitive information; log out and close out after using a sensitive site; change passwords frequently; and report any fraud. Consumers can make complaints about tabnabbing at the Internet Crime Complaint Center at www.ic3.gov.
money will be safe from you so you can't borrow it back in a weak moment. Now, don't you wish you'd thought of that sooner?
R124210
Scripps Howard News Service
for a period of time that you have designated for yourself, start saving for it, even if all you can put away is 10 bucks a week. So what if it takes you a year to save for an iPad? You'll have a full 12 months to change your mind. If you still want it a year from now, you'll own it outright with no new debt. Want to add a high-tech dimension to your wish list? Go to www.smartypig.com. There you can set up an online savings account to save for a specific goal. You'll have a lot of fun doing it. SmartyPig won't charge you any fees, and it will pay you an amazing interest rate, given today's economy. It will help you reach your goal even faster. And your
Discovery Panel Bed
Albany Futon
Drawers & Nightstand sold separately
Includes standard 6” Mattress.
$
169
289
$
!"#$%&'#($)*+,(&+),&-.-#/-0/%&)+&1%23*"4!%'#$&-+'&),5%"&(%/%$,%'&2%"$5-+'#(%6 Voted 18 Times Best Place to Buy Beds!
FINANCING AVAILABLE!
Kannapolis
204 N. Cannon Blvd. • 933-6307 Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10am-7pm • Sat. 10am-6pm
R124978
BY STEVEN ALFORD
wish list. Be sure to date the entry. Once each week, review your wish list. It's likely that the neon purple flatware that you just had to have last week will fade in importance. In fact, by this week, you might think it's really dumb. What were you thinking? Great. Delete it from your list. Consider other items on the list, deleting or confirming as you go. Then look at the order in which the items appear. Which one still holds a burning desire? Move it to the top of the list. Arrange items in order of importance below No. 1. Repeat every week or so. Once an item has remained at the top of the list
R123946
Watch out for fake web pages while trolling for data
your computer. A written wish list is magical because it gives credence to your heart's desires. Once you turn it into a management tool, you'll see how things will change for you. When you create a wish list, you'll stop feeling sorry for yourself. You'll stop making stupid impulse purchases, and you'll stop digging your debt hole even deeper. Here's how it works: When a wish enters your mind, examine it carefully. Do you want an iPad because you have a good use for it or just because your friend has one and, well, it looks cool? If you can justify such a thing in your life, go ahead and add it to your
R122513
Feeling down in the dumps because you don't have an iPad or a pretty new sofa? Wish you could take your hubby to a nice restaurant for his birthday, but alas, you are broke? Turn around your attitude and MARY cancel your HUNT pity party with a simple tool: a wish list. How you create your wish list is up to you. It can be a small notebook that you keep in your handbag, a scrap of paper on the refrigerator door or even a file on
anyone. It saddens me when a foul-mouthed individual blames his or her lack of self-control on this condition. Would you be so glib about cancer? I think not. I had you pegged as a more insightful individual, was I wrong? — Defensive Mom
DAYintheLIFE
Andy Mooney, Copy Editor, 704-797-4245 amooney@salisburypost.com
MONDAY
June 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
8A
www.salisburypost.com
Become a part of the Post’s Day in the Life feature by sending in your photos online. To submit your photos, go to www.salisburypost.com and click on the Salisbury Postables link on the right side of the homepage; then click on “A Day in the Life.” You’ll see the Day in the Life group there and can follow the easy instructions to share your digital photos. The photos will become part of an online gallery, and we’ll select some to publish in the paper each Monday in a Day in the Life. Submissions need to include who shot the picture and information about who is in the picture. For more information, contact Jeremy Judd at jjudd@salisburypost.com or call 704-797-4280.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Rick Thibodeau enjoys a lazy Sunday afternoon with his new granddaughter, Piper Thomas of Mooresville.
SUBMITTED PHOTO BY LYNN KEARNS
Lara Drew swimming while on vacation at Lake Murray, S.C.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
SUBMITTED PHOTO
SUBMITTED PHOTO
CONTINUED
SALISBURY POST
play. And that’s not all. Ramsue discovered she likes karate. The campers learned a few stances and stretches from two instructors. “I never took it, but it’s something I want to continue,” she said. This is the second year Cyntrina Knight, 18, has volunteered as a camp counselor. She signed on after hearing about it through friend De’Shari Griffin. “The kids are fun to work with and you learn interesting stuff about them. They teach me stuff,” Knight said. She just graduated high school and hasn’t decided what she’ll study in college, but is leaning toward something in child care. Madisyn Duffy, 9, has attended camp for a number of years. The best part of it for her is getting sprayed with the fire hose.
VIOLENCE FROM 1A police responded to a call from another neighbor. Rowan County 911 operators would not confirm that sheriff’s officers responded to the residence at any time other than 10:55 p.m. Friday. Though Daniels’ address is listed as 604 E. 12th St., Ridenhour often saw him at Lyons’ house and believed he was living there. Ridenhour said the two normally “seemed like a nice enough couple.” But their fights were intense, he said, and largely one-sided. “The couple of times I saw
them arguing, it was mostly him yelling at her,” Ridenhour said. “I honestly don’t remember hearing her very much.” According to the N.C. Department of Correction website, Daniels was convicted in 2006 of two counts of assault on a female. The offenses occurred in June and December of that year. Daniels was also convicted of violating a protective order and communicating threats in 2006, state records show. He was jailed from April 26, 2007 to July 15, 2007, according to the state records.
DePompa’s
Contact Karissa Minn at 704-797-4222.
Taste the Best Kept Secret in Kannapolis
C O M F O RTA B L E
RALEIGH (AP) — A turnout of 4.5 percent of the eligible voters was better than expected for North Carolina’s second primary last week, raising the question of whether runoffs have outlived their usefulness. Fifty years ago, when North Carolina was a one-party state, nearly as many people would vote in a statewide Democratic runoff as the first race, because their votes likely would choose the eventual winner of the general election. Today, in a competitive twoparty state, turnout at the lo-
cal firehouse on the day of the runoff may not be much more than the poll workers themselves. That’s led some election reform advocates to argue there’s got to be a better way to choose only a handful of nominees who didn’t win the first time. “One way or another, it seems like the runoff election systems for picking a party’s nominee in a statewide election is outdated,” said Bob Hall, with the election reform group Democracy North Carolina. Save for experiments in two
READING FOR THE 4TH t The Devil Amongs the Lawyerurmsb by Sharyn McC
FOODS
Mexican Buffet
Join the fiesta with our authentic mexican buffet
Thursday
Wednesday
municipalities with voters ranking candidates on the first election day, North Carolina lawmakers don’t seem interested in changing the runoff system. Some like it because it ultimately declares victory to the candidate who receives a majority of votes. “I realize turnout’s low and it costs a lot of money, but it still keeps people in the process,” said Rep. Phil Haire, D-Jackson. He’s a past critic of legislation that would reduce or eliminate the 40 percent threshold a candidate must surpass in the first primary to
704-857-5684 S.A SLOOP HTG & AC, INC. 705 W. RYDER AVE, LANDIS, NC 28088
www.SASLOOP.com Visit us on Facebook @ www.SASLOOP.com/FACEBOOK 19627
Sizzling Sixteen
UP TO $1,500 TAX CREDIT*! How’s That For Efficiency
by Janet Evanovich
In today’s marketplace, it doesn’t get much better than 12 Months Zero Interest with regular payments. And a financing offer this good on a new qualifying Trane heating and cooling system is even better. Because a Trane will keep you comfortable and help you save money year round.
5-8:30
Pizza & Pasta Buffet
Try a great variety of homemade pizza, pastas, salad bar & dessert... just $6.95! (1/2 price for kids under 6)
5-8:30
Get Your Country Fixin’
with our southern style country buffet! Famous chicken pot pies and other favorites...just $7.99
(on the corner of West A St & Oak Ave in Cannon Village)
704.932.1555
Mon 11-2, Tues-Thurs 11-8:30, Fri & Sat 11-9
$50.00
to the learned...
FIRST YEAR MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
Expires 08/31/2010
EMAIL: mail@literarybookpost.com
110 SOUTH MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN SALISBURY www.LiteraryBookpost.com
WE ARE YOUR ANSWER TO HIGH
UTILITY BILLS
Just purchase your qualifying Trane system during the eligible program period. Reliability, energy-efficiency, indoor air quality, and the flexibility of payment options and a Tax Credit...they’re all yours with Trane. Receive up to $1,500 in federal Tax Credits. Ask your dealer for details.**
Call Now For The Lowest Payments On High Efficiency Trane Equipment.
704-630-9788 R123417
215 West A Street
Or...choose Payments As Low As $125/Month and up to $1,500 tax credit on qualifying Trane systems.*
When you purchase a new Trane comfort system from S.A. Sloop Htg & AC, Inc you’ll receive $148 off of your first year preventative maintenance agreement.
Mention this ad and let us treat you to a FREE dessert
avoid a runoff. “I believe in elections.” North Carolina is one of only nine states — all in the South — where runoffs are used regularly in all races, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The leading vote-getter must receive a majority of all votes cast to avoid a primary or general election runoff in each one except North Carolina, where the threshold fell to 40 percent in 1990 after some argued that it was preventing minorities from becoming nominees.
BUY NOW, PAY OVER TIME WITH 12 MONTHS SAME AS CASH.
R125235
5-8:30
Contact Shavonne Potts at 704-797-4253.
Are North Carolina runoffs still worth the cost?
Restaurant • Catering • Frozen Entrées to go
Tuesday
in his practice at Salisbury Pediatric Associates. Many people volunteer to teach a session and help the children. “We have the best staff we’ve had. These are teachers. We have a lot of people who are dedicating time and effort to these kids,” Koontz said. And a lot of kids are taking advantage of that. The camp was at capacity this year with 40 children. Koontz said local restaurants provide meals for the campers all week, and Tshirts and water are donated. “It lets us run a camp at a very reasonable amount of money,” Koontz said. The whole purpose of the week, he said, is to give children a learning atmosphere that isn’t so structured. The Woodson and Robertson foundations are the main supporters of the camp.
See your participating independent Trane dealer for complete program eligibility, dates, details and restrictions. Special financing offers and tax credits are valid on qualifying systems only. All sales must be to homeowners in the contiguous United States. Void where prohibited. Financing through The Home Projects® Visa® card issued by Wells Fargo Financial National Bank is a dual-line credit card. Special terms apply to qualifying purchases with approved credit to the Home Projects line of credit. For newly opened accounts, the regular APR is 25.99%. The APR may vary. The APR is given as of 1/1/2010. If the cardholder is charged interest in any billing cycle, the minimum interest charge will be $1.00. If the cardholder uses the card for cash advances, the cash advance fee is 4% of the amount of the cash advance, but not less than $10.00. 9.9% APR - The special-terms APR will continue to apply until all qualifying purchases are paid in full, unless the cardholder is in default. Regular minimum monthly payments of 1.75% of the promotional purchase amount are required during the special-terms period. The regular APR applies if the cardholder is in default or uses the card for other transactions. 12 months, no interest - The minimum monthly payment will be regular minimum monthly payments of 1.75% of the promotional purchase amount are required during the special-terms period. Monthly payment, if shown, based on $7,100 purchase. *To download and print the government’ s summary of Energy Star products that are eligible for HVAC credits for homeowners, visit www.energystar.gov/taxcredit.
R124247
FROM 1A
karate, “because I’m very good at it,” he said. Wallace, 9, said he enjoys camp and wants to return every year because it’s fun. Ariel Watkins, 10, heard about the camp at school. The biggest lesson she learned is “you should respect everybody.” She’s a newcomer to the camp and karate is also her favorite activity. “I like to learn new things. But we can only use it on people who are trying to hurt us,” she said. Watkins said at first, when her classmates found out she had ADHD they acted a little “weird.” She believes it was because she had to take medication. “Some boys at my school thought I was weird. I was JON C. LAKEY/SALISBURY POST sad,” she said. Trevor Wallace makes a pirate belt during an art exercise at a camp held last week at Dan Watkins said she exNicholas Park for children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. plained to her classmates the medication helps her “I like getting wet,” she to play during the week. bottles. not be hyper. It’s Brandon Wallace’s said. Duffy also liked making an Dr. Wayne Koontz, one of She also enjoys karate hourglass with sand, a funthird year at the camp. The the founders of the camp, and other the sports she got nel and two plastic water best part of it for him was treats children with ADHD
RE With utility bills going BA TE up every day, you’ve S U got to find ways to lower TO P & $ TA se er your monthly energy bill. Your XC ev 2 er se ,7 0 RE fo heating and air conditioning unit rd et 0 DI ai ls * TS uses as much as half of your energy costs, so it only makes sense to see if it needs replacing. In most cases, the energy savings can help make up for the cost of a new unit, especially if yours is over ten years old. CALL BEAVER BROTHERS, INC. TODAY!
25 OFF YOUR NEXT RESIDENTIAL
$ 807 Corporate Circle Salisbury, NC 28147
704-637-9595
SERVICE CALL
www.beaverbrosinc.com License# 146
807 Corporate Circle Salisbury, NC 28147
704-637-9595
Not valid with any other offers. Must present coupon at time of service. Expires 6/30/2010
www.beaverbrosinc.com
* Rebate savings range from $50 to $1200 depending on equipment purchased. Expires 6/30/2010. See Beaver Brothers for details. ** Federal tax credits of up to $1,500 on qualifying Energy Star equipment. See your tax advisor for qualifications. Must be placed in service prior to 12/31/2010. WAC.
R123862
CAMP
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 9A
10A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 GREGORY M. ANDERSON Publisher
704-797-4201 ganderson@salisburypost.com
ELIZABETH G. COOK Editor
704-797-4244 editor@salisburypost.com
CHRIS VERNER
Editorial Page Editor
704-797-4262 cverner@salisburypost.com
CHRIS RATLIFF
Advertising Director
704-797-4235 cratliff@salisburypost.com
RON BROOKS
Circulation Director
704-797-4221 rbrooks@salisburypost.com
SALISBURY POST
OPINION
The Monday forum
BP stations wrong site to protest Gulf spill
“The truth shall make you free”
MY TURN: Matthew Leatherman
Turning our guns against ourselves F
This commentary from Bill Tome, chairman of Mark Oil Company, Inc., is reprinted from the Charlotte Observer.
A
s the owner of a BP distributor in Mecklenburg County, you might expect me to sympathize with the company about the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. There is much I sympathize with and it begins with the 11 Deep Horizon oil rig workers who were killed and their families. I also identify strongly with the more than 600 independently owned BP distributors in the United States and the over 10,000 independently-owned convenience stores and service stations they serve. My company, Mark Oil, supplies gasoline for 35 convenience stores and service stations in Mecklenburg County that carry the BP brand. Protests and boycotts can be well meaning. But taking actions designed to harm the livelihood of these independent station owners is wrong. These are local business owners, men and women, who are wrestling with a recovery from the deepest economic downturn since The Great Depression. To all customers who have patronized these business people previously and those of you who continue to do so, thank you very much.
They have absolutely no role in the tragedy unfolding in the Gulf. Besides selling gasoline, these operators offer food, groceries and other necessities. In some cases, they perform mechanical work. They typically employ eight to 10 full-time people. They represent a variety of ethnic groups. But they share important traits. They live in local communities and depend on goodwill of people around Charlotte. They work hard. Besides providing top-notch services, they are involved in their communities in a wide variety of ways. And here’s their other commonality: They have absolutely no role in the tragedy unfolding in the Gulf. It saddens them as much as it saddens you and me. I know about them and care about them deeply because my company supplies the gasoline they sell. That brand is BP and has been for a long time. The stations we supply are mostly one-station operators, working hard to meet the needs of motorists. These station operators enjoy their business and take great pride in what they do. At Mark Oil, our connection to BP is singular. The company supplies the products we distribute. That relationship started in 1960. I recently visited the BP Command Center in southern Louisiana for a personal view of their operations. Everywhere I turned, I could see BP personnel and volunteers working hand-in-hand with the U.S. Coast Guard to fight the leak below the surface, on the surface and on the coastline. It was very apparent that everyone there is working diligently and, to a person, is dedicated to the task. The same is true of your neighbors who own and operate the BP service stations in the Charlotte area. They have no role in the Gulf, but they can and do facilitate our local routines. By offering the best products and service they can, they add value to our lives. So that’s why protestors with signs at area BP stations cause me great anguish. I understand their sentiments. But I believe their tactics are misguided. I hope they will abandon easy targets whose potential losses are a pain many of us would share.
Salisbury Post
LETTERS TO Some more things I just don’t understand 1. Why is the ACLU, through the John Adams project, supporting Gitmo detainees? Why is the ACLU so anti-American? 2. Our country is collapsing, yet Congress takes valuable time to deal with gays in the military. I didn't know this was a critical issue to our country’s welfare. 3. Racial profiling (all races) could prevent terrorists from blowing up passenger airplanes or killing innocent people anywhere in the U.S.A. So our government makes it illegal, risking our lives just because profiling offends someone feelings. 4.Why does our government owe everyone a living (including illegal aliens)? 5. Ninety-nine percent Californians support legalizing marijuana. That explains a lot. 6. Why is government so concerned about the foods we eat, but does little to stop the drugs from Mexico? 7. Did you know that ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) is allowing Mexican drug cartel lookouts to control the flow of drugs into the U.S.A. from mountaintops in Arizona? 8. Our government gave 1,300 prisoners $9 million worth of first-time homebuyer credits. Watch what happens when the 2,409 page Health care bill goes into affect. Or the proposed 1,428 page Cap & Trade bill, or the 2000+ page Financial Reform bill. 9. I think the terrorists hate us because they watched the “Maury” and “Jerry Springer” shows and believe we’re all like their guests. 10. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis pledges in an ad to help illegal aliens get fair pay. What about Americans? 11. Why did the Democrats in Congress give a standing ovation to the President of Mexico when he trashed our and Arizona's Immigration law? Aren't they supposed to be looking out for us? Guess not. 12. How come only 50 percent of us pay federal income taxes and Washington wants us to pay more so they can give more to those who don’t?
Common sense
(Or uncommon wisdom, as the case may be) “Education is not the filling of a bucket, but the lighting of a fire.” — W.B. Yeats
THE
EDITOR
13. And finally, how come only 7 percent of us care to vote? — Donald Schumacher Salisbury
Citizen rights repressed
When I read the newspapers and watch television I see that the legislature is spending time on such items as Internet cafes, dictating that sugar free lunches must be served within the school systems, and many more personal freedom interference type bills. I wonder why they are so insistent on repressing the liberties, rights and freedoms of North Carolinians. It’s apparent the majority of the General Assembly would prefer to limit the freedoms of their fellow North Carolinians rather than respect them by granting them the liberties and freedoms they deserve. When will the the General Assembly learn citizens are intelligent and brilliant people? Many great ideas come from N.C. citizens but apparently the members of the General Assembly see it as their responsibility to quash those ideas along with the freedoms and rights granted by God. Only God can grant true freedom. Governmental entities such as the General Assembly can only take away freedoms as they have so aptly done over the years and this year’s General Assembly session is no different. We, the citizenry of North Carolina have had enough! It is time that the General Assembly enacted ethical statutes that protects our property, our liberties, our rights, and our freedoms. It is time that the General Assembly stopped interfering with the freedoms granted by God. It is time the General Assembly stopped taking away our property, our liberties, our rights, and our freedoms in order to cater to special interests within North Carolina and allowing the destruction of a way of life within the state. It is time that our God given freedoms are no longer being destroyed by the whims of a few for false promise of a better way of life when in reality our way of life is being destroyed by the few. — Ray Shamlin Rocky Mount
Letters policy Letters should be limited to 300 words and include the writer’s name, address and daytime phone number. Letters may be edited for clarity and length. Limit one letter each 14 days. Write Letters to the Editor, Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145-4639. Or fax your letter to 639-0003. E-mail: letters@salisburypost.com
ew words have been pored over more strenuously and passionately than those of the Second Amendment: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” Understanding exactly what the Founding Fathers meant with this language — or what we want them to mean — likely is a never-ending conversation. One issue is indisputable, though — the “militia” they referred to is an American one. The Bill of Rights positively did not intend to protect the rights of foreign militias to keep and bear arms. That, however, is exactly what is happening. Over 20,000 weapons (87 percent of the total) recovered from drug traffickers by Mexican law enforcement from 2004-2008 originated in the United States. These weapons commonly include AR-15 semi-automatic assault rifles, the civilian version of the Army’s standard-bearer, the M-16. President Obama is preparing to send 1,200 National Guardsmen to a border surveillance mission in this region, and the Senate Armed Services Committee has encouraged him to send 4,800 more. When — and it is just a matter of time — these troops or their border patrol colleagues come under fire, more likely than not it will be from a weapon of our own making. It may even be technically superior to their own. Drug traffickers in Mexico aren’t the only foreign militias whose right to keep and bear arms we’re protecting, though. Suspected members of Al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations also are extended the same courtesy. Being on the no-fly list or in one of our terrorist tracking data bases in no way affects someone’s ability to buy weapons in the U.S. Indeed, individuals on the terrorist watch list were involved in 1,119 weapons transactions from 2004–2010. It’s as though we think that only airplanes are vulnerable to terrorism. Though the outcomes of these two glaring gaps are equally dangerous, the reasons for them are different. Terrorist tracking lists aren’t used to screen gun buyers because our political leaders know they are unserious lists. Over a million individuals are on them, despite estimates that there are only 25,000 Taliban fighters and a few hundred Al Qaeda operatives in the world. Reasons for being on the list range from posing a real threat to simple cases of mistaken identity. At the end of the day, these lists provide the illusion of better security rather than the reality. No politician expects to regulate gun rights on these grounds. The problem of drug traffickers turning our guns against us is tougher because many of those weapons are legally bought by American citizens before being illegally resold to those gangs. No avenue for regulating that market is palatable to U.S. politicians because all of them run afoul of the nearly-omnipotent NRA lobby. Dramatically increased screening of southbound traffic at the U.S.-Mexico border is no more viable, both due to cost and privacy issues. Yet dead Americans, service-members and civilians alike, slain by U.S. produced and sold weapons, have a way of focusing the mind. Troops and police officers share a term for this self-destructive behavior: friendly fire. It’s unacceptable. Staying up in the clouds debating Second Amendment abstractions might be entertaining, but it does an appalling disservice to all those in harm’s way — ourselves included. It’s time to come back down to Earth. The Second Amendment doesn’t protect foreign militia’s right to keep and bear arms, and we have an interest in making sure they don’t. With respect to terrorism, individuals that our government suspects of posing a tangible threat should not be able to buy or possess a weapon in our borders under any circumstance. By extension, our government needs to know who poses a real and tangible threat. Those people should be our priority, while others that are on there for political benefit, “just in case something happens,” should be set aside. A more refined combination of responses is needed for military-styled drug traffickers. Penalties for illegally reselling weapons to these organizations should be far stiffer than more routine violations. Southbound vehicles in hightrafficking areas should be searched more invasively than in other areas. Counterdrug efforts should focus more heavily on the public health implications, undercutting the demand that fuels these organizations. And the decision to send National Guardsmen to the border must accept that their risk is elevated because of our own illicit arms market. Objections to these steps doubtless will come from far and wide. They, in fact, are the best evidence of how detached our conversation on the Second Amendment has become. Yet our Founding Fathers would find it preposterous that we provide sanctuary to foreign militias in our right to keep and bear arms. As we again prepare to send troops into the border region, now is the time to defend against this friendly fire. Those in harm’s way deserve nothing less. • • • Former Salisbury resident Matthew Leatherman recently graduated from the Masters in International Affairs program at Columbia University and is pursuing a career in foreign policy and national security. He lives in Arlington, Va.
Have a ‘My Turn’ idea?
“My Turn” columns should be between 500 and 700 words. E-mail submissions are preferred. Send to cverner@salisburypost.com with “My Turn” in the subject field. Include your name, address, phone number and a digital photo of yourself, if possible.
N AT I O N / W O R L D
SALISBURY POST
CIA chief: US has driven al-Qaida into hiding
Police arrest more than 500 at Toronto economic summit TORONTO (AP) — Police raided a university building and rounded up more protesters Sunday in an effort to quell further violence at the global economic summit after black-clad youths rampaged through the city, smashing windows and torching police cruisers. Police said they have arrested more than 500 demonstrators, many of whom were hauled away in plastic handcuffs and taken to a temporary holding center constructed for the summit. Despite the violence, no serious injuries were reported among police, protesters and bystanders, Toronto Police Constable Tony Vella said Sunday. Thousands of police in riot gear formed cordons to prevent radical anti-globalization demonstrations from breaching the steel and concrete security fence surrounding the Group of 20 summit site. Toronto Police Sgt. Tim Burrows said police made at least 70 arrests in a Sunday morning raid on a building on the campus of the University of Toronto, where they seized a cache of “street-type weaponry” such as bricks, sticks and rocks.
Pope says Belgian church sex abuse raids deplorable VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI lashed out Sunday at what he called the “deplorable” raids carried out by Belgian police who detained bishops, confiscated computers, opened a crypt and took church documents as part of an investigation into priestly sex abuse. Benedict made a rare personal entry into the escalating diplomatic dispute with Belgium, issuing a message of solidarity to the head of the Belgian bishops’ conference and other bishops who were detained in the June 24 raid. He said justice must take its course, but also asserted the right of the Catholic Church to investigate clerical abuse alongside civil law enforcement authorities. It was first time the pope himself had commented on the raids, and his message to Monsignor Andre Joseph Leonard capped a daily ratcheting up of the Vatican’s criticism. On Saturday, the No. 2 Vatican official said the raids
were unprecedented even under communism. Belgium’s justice minister defended the searches on Sunday, saying the bishops were treated normally and that the search warrant was fully legitimate.
Longtime Sen. Byrd, 92, seriously ill WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Robert C. Byrd, who holds the record as the longest-serving member of Congress, is seriously ill in a Washington-area hospital, his office said Sunday. The 92y e a r - o l d BYRD West Virginia Democrat has been in the hospital since late last week, his office said in a statement. At first Byrd was believed to be suffering from heat exhaustion and severe dehydration, the statement said, but other medical conditions have developed. His condition was described as serious. The statement did not name the hospital. In November, Byrd broke the record for congressional service that had been set by Democrat Carl Hayden of Arizona, who served in the House and Senate from 1912 to 1969. Byrd began his career in Washington in 1952 with his election to the House. His elevation to the Senate came six years later.
Republicans question whether Kagan can be impartial justice WASHINGTON (AP) — Leading Republican senators on Sunday questioned whether Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan could be an impartial judge as they tried to inject some drama into her upcoming confirmation hearing. Democrats praised K a g a n ’ s KAGAN record and predicted she will win confirmation as the 112th justice — and only the court’s fourth woman. The Senate Judiciary Committee begins the weeklong hearing today. Kagan is not expected to face questions until Tuesday. Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the top Republican on the committee, said Kagan’s nomination has “real problems” that she will have to address. “I think the first thing we need to decide is, is she committed to the rule of law even if she may not like the law? Will she as a judge subordinate herself to the Constitution and keep her political views at bay?” Sessions said.
Relentless oil spill’s mental toll weighs on Katrina-weary coast NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Gulf of Mexico oil disaster feels far worse to shrimper Ricky Robin than Katrina, even though he’s still haunted by memories of riding out the hurricane on his trawler and of his father’s suicide in the storm’s aftermath. The relentless spill is bringing back feelings that are far too familiar to Robin and others still dealing with the physical and emotional toll wrought by Katrina five years ago. “I can’t sleep at night. I find myself crying sometimes,” said Robin, of Violet, a blue-collar community on the southeastern edge of the New Orleans suburbs, along the highway that hugs the levee on the Mississippi River’s east bank nearly all the way to the Gulf. Psychiatrists who treated people after Katrina and have held group sessions in oil spill-stricken areas say the symptoms showing up are much the same: Anger. Anxiety. Drinking. Depression. Suicidal thoughts.
“Everybody’s acting strange,” said Robin, 56. “Real angry, frustrated, stressed out, fighting brothers and sisters and mamas and family.”
Marilyn Monroe chest X-rays auctioned for $45,000 LOS ANGELES (AP) — The apparently endless market for images of Marilyn Monroe now extends to inside the bombshell’s body. A set of three Monroe chest X-rays from a 1954 hospital visit sold Sunday for $45,000 at the Hollywood Legends auction at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casi-
NORTHAMPTON, Pa. (AP) — A man who served prison time for a 1992 murder was charged Sunday with fatally stabbing four people, including a woman described as the suspect’s former girlfriend and her 87-year-old grandfather. Police charged Michael Eric Ballard, 36, with four counts of homicide for Saturday’s rampage in the northeastern Pennsylvania town of Northampton, about 70 miles north of Philadelphia. Police alleged that Ballard killed 39-year-old Denise Merhi, her father and her grandfather along with a neighbor who rushed over to help when he heard the initial screams from Merhi’s home. Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli said he will seek the death penalty.
no in Las Vegas. Julien’s Auctions, which sold the X-rays, estmated that they would only fetch a total of about $3,000. Other Monroe-abilia that sold included a chair from her last photo shoot that went for $35,000. The auction included items from other actresses, includ-
ing a pair of earrings worn by Kate Winslet in “Titanic” that sold for $25,000 and a dress Audrey Hepburn wore when she starred opposite Fred Astaire in the musical “Funny Face” that fetched $56,250.
www.salisburypost.com www.salisburypost.com
IMPRESSIVE Cars Affordable Prices
Man charged in Pa. stabbing rampage that killed 4
2008 HONDA CIVIC SI
2006 MERCEDES-BENZ C230 SPORT Full Power, Leather, Loaded, Sunroof, Only 49K Miles, Local Trade, K3629B
Full Power, 6 Spd, Sunroof, Alloy Wheels, Loaded, Red, Only 32K Miles, K3648
$
18,990
$
5 Spd, Full Power, Sunroof, Local Trade, CD, A/C, K3584A
Only 27K Miles, Full Power, Alloy Wheels, Just Reduced! K3589
$
18,990
2001 HONDA CIVIC COUPE
2007 CHEVY 1500 Z71
5,990
17,990
$
Come In For A FREE Appraisal We will buy your vehicle whether it is paid for or not.
941 S. Cannon Blvd. • Exit 58 Off I-85 • Kannapolis R124982
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. has driven al-Qaida into hiding and undermined its leadership, but is struggling to oust its primary sympathizer, the Taliban, f r o m Afghanistan, the nation’s spymaster said Sunday. CIA Director Leon PANETTA Panetta’s assessment comes as President Barack Obama advances a risky new war plan that relies on 98,000 U.S. troops to prop up the Afghan government and prevent al-Qaida from returning. No longer overseeing the commander in chief’s mission is Gen. Stanley McChrystal, sacked this past week in a stunning shake-up in U.S. military leadership after his critical comments about the White House. “We’re seeing elements of progress, but this is going to be tough,” Panetta told ABC’s “This Week.” He said al-Qaida’s evolving attack strategy increasingly relies on operatives without any record of terrorism involvement or those already in the U.S. As for Osama bin Laden, Panetta said it’s been years since the U.S. had good intelligence about his whereabouts. Panetta estimated there are fewer than 100 al-Qaida militants operating inside Afghanistan, with the rest hiding along Pakistan’s mountainous western border. He said U.S. drone strikes and other spy operations have helped to “take down” half of al-Qaida’s senior leaders.
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 11A
704/933-1077 *All prices plus tag, tax & $389 admin fee
PRICES GOOD
Other GREAT deals at www.benmynattpreowned.com THRU 07-02-10
THE BEST DEALS ARE UNDER THE SIGN ON HWY 29!
No. 60079
No. 60160
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Donna Gantt Bowers Penland, 635 Statesville Blvd., Salisbury, NC 28144. This is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 16th day of September, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. This the 9th day of June, 2010. Donna Bowers Leonard, Executor of the estate of Donna Gantt Bowers Penland, File #10E326, 685 Leonard Rd., Salisbury, NC 28146 Attorney at Law, Graham Carlton, 109 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Judy A. Hill, 819 Lincolnton Road, Salisbury, NC 28144, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 4th day of October, 2010, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. Today's Date: June 23, 2010. Shannon C. Hill, as Admn. Of the estate of Judy A. Hill, deceased, File 10E142, 811 Lincolnton Road, Salisbury, NC 28144 Attorney at Law: John T. Hudson, 122 N. Lee St., Salisbury, NC 28144
No. 60081
No. 60041
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of: Robin Elaine Peacock, 345 Bonanza Dr., Salisbury, NC 28144, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 17th DAY OF September, 2010 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. This the 10th day of June, 2010. Donald G. Peacock, Sr., Administrator of the estate of Robin Elaine Peacock, File #10E628, 345 Bonanza Dr., Salisbury, NC 28144 Attorney At Law, Graham Carlton, 109 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144
No. 60110
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having Qualified as Co-Executor for the estate of Ronnie Venson Wilkerson, 927 N. Jackson St., Salisbury, NC 28144, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporation having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of September, 2010 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. This the 1st day of June, 2010. Pat Pack Wilkerson, Co-Executor of the estate of Ronnie Venson Wilkerson, File #10E594, 927 N. Jackson St., Salisbury, NC 28144, Buddy Lomax, Co-Executor, 9982 Old Salisbury Rd., Linwood, NC 27299 Attorney at Law, Richard D. Locklear, P.O. Box 56, Landis, NC 28088
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF ROWAN 2010-SP-370
No. 60112
IN RE: DAVID A. WATSON and LAURA R. WATSON, Foreclosure of that Deed of Trust dated August 20, 2003, recorded in Book 984 at Page796, Rowan County Registry, Under Foreclosure By: K. Todd Phillips, Substitute Trustee.
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by Pamela Louise Morrison, a single person, dated June 6, 2007 and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rowan County, North Carolina, recorded on June 13, 2007, in Book 1096 at Page 664; and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will place for sale, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale at Rowan County Courthouse, in Salisbury, North Carolina at 1:00 PM on Wednesday, June 30, 2010, that parcel of land, including improvements thereon, situated, lying and being in the City of China Grove, County of Rowan, State of North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:
Pursuant to the order of the Clerk of Court of Rowan County and under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson dated August 20, 2003 and recorded in Book 984 at Page 796 in the Rowan County Registry, and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein, and pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash at the door of the Rowan County Courthouse, 210 North Main Street, Salisbury, North Carolina, at 10:00 a.m. on July 6, 2010, the following property that is located in Rowan County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a new iron on the northern side of North Church Street, corner with Corrine E. Loflin; thence with North Church Street, South 66 deg. 55 min. 49 sec. West 48.5 feet to a new iron, corner with Gladys Talley; thence with Talley's line North 23 deg. 00 min. 00 sec. West 149.51 feet to a new iron in the line of Loflin; thence two lines with Loflin as follows: (1) North 66 deg. 53 min. 14 sec. East 48.50 feet to a new iron, and (2) South 23 deg. 00 min 00 sec. East 149.55 feet to a new iron, the point and place of BEGINNING and containing 0.166 acre, more or less, and generally known as 1418 North Church Street, Salisbury, North Carolina, all as shown on the survey for Steven R. Moore and wife, Charlotte K. Moore by James T. Hill, RLS, dated March 4, 1993, a copy of a portion of which is attached hereto for further reference. Property Address:
1418 North Church Street, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144
Improvements on the Property:
Unknown
Present Record Owner(s):
David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson
The property offered pursuant to this Notice is being offered for sale, transfer, and conveyance "AS IS, WHERE IS." Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust, security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor their officers, directors, attorneys, representatives, employees, or agents make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, health, environmental, or safety conditions relating to said property, and any liability or responsibility arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition is expressly disclaimed. The Trustee may, in the Trustee's sole discretion, delay the sale for one hour as provided in North Carolina General Statutes ("Gen. Stat.") 45-21.23. At the sale, any bid must be at least $100.00 more than the immediately preceding bid. If the highest bidder is anyone other than the holder of the indebtedness, such high bidder must pay, in addition to the bid price, the fees or taxes imposed by Gen. Stat. 7A-308(a)(1) and 105 228.30 and any other tax or fee based upon the sale of the subject property or the sale price thereof. The Trustee reserves the right to require of the successful bidder at such sale a deposit of 5% of the amount bid in the form of certified funds, official bank check, or the equivalent (as provided in the Deed of Trust or by law), or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater. The sale is subject to unpaid taxes, special assessments, restrictions and easements of record, and prior liens, if any. The sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by law. Thereafter, all remaining amounts are immediately due and owing and time is of the essence. Any announcement made at the sale takes precedence over these terms of sale to the extent allowed by law. If the subject property is residential real property with less than 15 rental units, pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.16A(b), the following notice is provided: (1) An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold; and (2) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days' written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. This Is an Effort to Collect a Debt and Any Information Obtained Will Be Used for That Purpose. This the 17th day of June, 2010. SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE: K. Todd Phillips, N.C. Bar No. 13940 HARTSELL & WILLIAMS, P.A. 71 McCachern Boulevard, S.E., Post Office Box 368, Concord, North Carolina 28026-0368 Telephone: 704-786-5161
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY - 10-SP-000378
Lying and Being in China Grove Township, Rowan County, North Carolina, and more fully described as follows: BEGINNING at an iron stake on the Five Forks Road, Will C. Sherrill's corner, and runs thence South 68 West with said Sherrill's line, 370 feet to an iron stake; thence North 20-45 West 102.9 feet to an iron stake, corner of Lot No. 12; thence North 68 East 360 feet to the Five Forks Road and front corner of Lot No. 12; thence South 26 East 100 feet to the BEGINNING, containing acres, more or less, and being Lot No. 11 on the map of the L.A. Corriher Subdivision of the Sherrill and Pethel Place, Plat No. 2 and lying and being mile from the Depot of the Town of Landis, N.C. Address of property: 1255 Flat Rock Road, China Grove, NC 28023 Present Record Owners: Pamela Louise Morrison The terms of the sale are that the real property hereinbefore described will be sold for cash to the highest bidder. A deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, is required and must be tendered in the form of certified funds at the time of the sale. In the event that the Owner and Holder or its intended assignee is exempt from paying the same, the successful bidder shall be required to pay revenue stamps on the Trustee's Deed, and any Land Transfer Tax. The real property hereinabove described is being offered for sale "AS IS, WHERE IS" and will be sold subject to all superior liens, unpaid taxes, and special assessments. Other conditions will be announced at the sale. The sale will be held open for ten (10) days for upset bids as by law required. If the Trustee is unable to convey title to this property for any reason, the sole remedy of the purchaser is the return of the deposit. Reasons of such inability to convey include, but are not limited to, the filing of a bankruptcy petition prior to the sale and reinstatement of the loan without the knowledge of the Trustee. If the validity of the sale is challenged by any party, the Trustee, in his sole discretion, if he believes the challenge to have merit, may declare the sale to be void and return the deposit. The purchaser will have no further remedy. Additional Notice Where the Real Property is Residential With Less Than 15 Rental Units: An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days' written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a bona fide lease or tenancy may have additional rights pursuant to Title VII of 5.896 - Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act which became effective on May 20, 2009. Dated: June 17, 2010 David A. Simpson, P.C., Substitute Trustee, Attorney at Law Rogers Townsend & Thomas, PC, Attorneys for the Substitute Trustee (704) 442-9500 914.0000924
Call Classifieds to place your yard sale ad... 704-797-4220
12A • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Rowan Public Libraries Summer Reading Series Sponsored by Sacred Heart Catholic School
Headquarters 201 W. Fisher St., Salisbury 704.216.8234 East Branch 110 Broad St., Rockwell 704.216.7842 South Library 920 Kimball Rd., China Grove 704.216.7728
Make a SPLASH at Rowan Public Libraries
Call your local branch for program dates and times.
C h i l d r e n ' s Pr o g r a m s - M a k e a S p l a s h Begin the week of June 14th
GUPPIES - 12-24 Month Old Children
SEAHORSES - 3-5 years old
MINNOWS - 2 years old (must be 2 by May 1st)
SHARKS - Rising 1st through 5th graders
Runs for 4 weeks Begins at 10:30 a.m. and lasts approximately 30 minutes Mondays: East Branch Tuesdays: Headquarters Thursdays: South Library
Runs for 4 weeks Begins at 10:30 a.m. and lasts approximately 30 minutes Tuesdays: East Branch Wednesdays: South Library Thursdays: Headquarters
-AKE A 30,!3(
Runs for 7 weeks Begins at 10:30 a.m. and lasts approximately 30-45 minutes Mondays: South Library Wednesdays: Headquarters Thursdays: East Branch
Runs for 7 weeks Each program lasts approximately 45 minutes Tuesdays: South Library at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays: East Branch at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays: Headquarters at 2:00 p.m.
4FBSDI UIF OFXT
N_\e pfl Ô e[ fe\ f] k_\ ]fccfn`e^ `e k_\ e\nj# dXib fi Zfcfi fe\ f] k_\ jkXiÔ j_ Xe[ [Xk\ pfli \oXdgc\1
Te e n Pr o g r a m s - M a k e Wa v e s Mondays: East Branch from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Tuesdays: Headquar ters from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Thursdays: 3:30-5:00 p.m.
LETTERBOXING 101: June 14th-17th
SOUND FACTORY: July 12th-15th
LIGHT PAINTING: June 21st-24th
PHOTO SCAVENGER HUNT: July 19th-22nd
WATER CRAFTS: June 28th-July 1st
BEACH BLAST & PRIZE AUCTION July 29th
Letterboxing and how to create your own stamp Paint a digital picture using glow sticks
Create a digital sound effect library
Scavenger hunt throughout the library
Get creative using water and other art supplies
UNDERWATER EXPLORATIONS: June 6th-8th
End of summer celebration at South Library from 5:30-7:00 p.m.
Horizons presents
;8K< VVVV(% VVVV)% VVVV*% VVVV+% VVVV,% VVVV-% VVVV.% VVVV/% VVVV0%
K_\ nfi[ ÈnXk\iÉ fi k_\ c\kk\ij kf jg\cc ÈnXk\iÉ 8 nfi[ k_Xk pfl XjjfZ`Xk\ n`k_ nXk\i K_\ eXd\ f] X Yf[p f] nXk\i Fe\ f] k_i\\ ]fidj f] nXk\i 8e fYa\Zk k_Xk j`ebj `e nXk\i 8e fYa\Zk k_Xk Õ fXkj 8e Xe`dXc fi gcXek k_Xk c`m\j `e fi Xifle[ k_\ nXk\i 8 kfp fi kffc ]fi gcXp`e^ fi nfib`e^ n`k_ nXk\i Jfd\fe\ ZfeZ\ie\[ XYflk k_\ hlXc`kp f] nXk\i
5HRHS 8NTQ KHAQ@QX I\X[ X Yffb XYflk Xe Xe`dXc fi gcXek k_Xk c`m\j `e fi Xifle[ k_\ nXk\i fi cffb ]fi `e]fidXk`fe XYflk Xefk_\i `k\d c`jk\[ XYfm\%
www.row anpubliclibrary.org Visit our website for more information. Click on Make a Splash for children or Make Waves for teens
A Sea Turtle Story
THE STORY SO FAR… A female loggerhead sea turtle (Pancake) is hit by a boat and badly injured. The poor turtle becomes trapped in heavy surf and is in real danger of drowning or being stranded on the shore. Several beach-goers see the struggling sea turtle and call for help. But, will rescuers reach Pancake in time?
Chapter Two The Rescue Not a minute too soon, the rescuers reached the hurt turtle. Gently they wrapped Pancake in towels soaked with seawater and strapped her onto a special carrier. The rescuers took Pancake to a nearby animal clinic. Luckily the vet, Dr. Mary, was there. She had had experience with all kinds of wildlife. Pancake was in good hands! The first thing Dr. Mary did was to examine Pancake, clean her wounds and give her a shot to guard against infection. Pancake’s shell or carapace was badly cut. She would need extensive surgery to repair her carapace. Dr. Mary did the best she could, but she had limited resources at her clinic. She called the Vet School at the State University. The doctors there were some of the best and had helped other sea turtles with injuries just like Pancake’s. The school would have the surgeons and equipment needed to help Pancake! Volunteers rushed Pancake to the Vet School. They kept her comfortable and watched her carefully on the trip. Once there, doctors operated to fix Pancake’s shell. They used screws, pins and metal plates to hold it together! Then the doctors put a bandage on the sea turtle. Pancake would
“Right away, Jan,” Lolly said. She hurried to get her cleaning supplies. Lolly never minded cleaning or any of the other jobs she was asked to do. She was eager to help. Lolly worked hard scrubbing the turtle tank. She wanted to make sure that it was clean for the new patient. Lolly always worked hard even though she didn’t get paid. Lolly was a volunteer. She and other volunteers helped keep the hospital running smoothly. Just as Lolly finished getting the turtle tank ready, Pancake arrived. The scared sea turtle was carried in on a stretcher. Pancake was carefully placed on a table. The staff examined her bandages and discussed what they needed to do to care for the injured turtle. Lolly helped calm the frightened turtle. Gently, she patted the turtle’s back. “There, there…” Lolly talked softly as the staff looked Pancake over. “What a good girl you are!” Pancake seemed to respond to Lolly and relax under her tender touch. Lolly listened intently as Jan described
Pancake’s injuries. She paid close attention to the details of what would be done to help the turtle get well. “Poor Pancake,” Lolly whispered softly, “don’t worry. We’ll take good care of you!” Lolly had helped take care of lots of turtles before. She cared deeply about each and every one. But she felt a special bond with this turtle. Pancake seemed to feel it too. Lolly was determined to do all she could to help Pancake get well. Someday she hoped the sea turtle would be well enough to be returned back to her ocean home. But only time would tell! Next Time… The Sea Turtle Hospital Illustrated By Vicki Wallace Copyright 2001 by Mary Maden. All rights reserved. Mary Maden is an award-winning author. Visit her on the web at: www.marymaden.com!
Sacred Heart Catholic School…
Where reading is COOL!
Academics
Faith
Tradition
Come visit! Everyone is welcome! Our new campus is located at 385 Lumen Christi Lane in Salisbury. Call 704.633.2841 for more information or visit our website www.salisburycatholic.org
R121638
By Mary Maden
be all right; her injuries would heal. But it would take time and lots of special care for the sea turtle to get better. Pancake needed to go to a place where she could get the care she needed. Pancake would have to depend on people to help her. The doctors knew just what to do. They would send Pancake to a very special place to get well. They would send her to a hospital just for sea turtles! One of the doctors at the Vet School, Dr. Beth, called the sea turtle hospital to see if they could take Pancake. “Jan, can you take a female loggerhead turtle?” Dr. Beth asked the nice lady who ran the hospital. “What’s wrong with her?” Jan questioned. “A boat hit her,” Dr. Beth answered. “The turtle’s carapace was badly cut by the propeller. We patched her up, but she still needs lots of care.” “We’ll make room!” Jan said. “Tell me more about the turtle’s injuries.” Dr. Beth began describing Pancake’s injuries and explaining the details of her course of treatment when a young girl burst through the door. Lolly was in a hurry––as always! She couldn’t wait to get to work. Lolly loved her job at the sea turtle hospital. Her official title was “Junior Biologist.” Although Lolly was still a very young lady, she was as dedicated as anyone when it came to helping sea turtles. Lolly took her job seriously and was very responsible. Lolly had already decided that she wanted to be a marine biologist when she grew up. “Jan!” Lolly called out. “I decided to come in a little early…” Lolly quit talking when she saw that Jan was on the phone. “Okay, we’ll be ready. Thanks, Beth.” Jan finished her conversation with Dr. Beth and hung up. “What good timing!” Jan cried. “We have a loggerhead on its way. I need you to get a tank ready.”
S46865
A Quality Serials Story
SPORTS Master Blaster Old man
Moyer pitches Phillies past Blue Jays/4B
Ronnie Gallagher, Sports Editor, 704-797-4287 rgallagher@salisburypost.com
1B
MONDAY
June 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
www.salisburypost.com
RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST
Keith Dorsett acknowledges the cheers of the fans with a smile after chipping in from off the green on No. 14 during his Rowan Masters victory on Sunday at the Warrior Golf Club.
Champ was on a mission at Warrior C
HINA GROVE — Keith Dorsett hadn’t won a major golf tournament in two years and people were letting him know about it. Not directly, of course. “I’ve just been hearing some comments that I’m not as good as people make me out to be,” Dorsett said RONNIE while sitting GALLAGHER in the Warrior Golf Club pro shop Sunday afternoon. “I’ve been playing pretty good but not as good as I’d like to be.” Sounds like Tiger Woods on the PGA Tour, huh? Tiger hasn’t come through since all of the drama surrounding the star and his wife. Dorsett has now. He won the eighth-annual Rowan Masters golf tournament
yesterday, beating 16-yearold high school junior Alex Nianouris 3 & 2. Dorsett was without a doubt the steadiest and most consistent golfer on the 6,609-yard, par 71 course during a three-day endurance test that included beating talented golfers and a burning sun. He played five rounds of golf — two rounds each on Saturday and Sunday — and showed no mercy. He got up on his opponents and never let them back in. “I wanted to prove I could still do it,” Dorsett said. • Dorsett is being too hard on himself. Why would anyone think the former South Rowan star doesn’t have what it takes to win major golf tournaments. In the past two years, he has always contended, but as he said Sunday, there are plenty of great players in this county.
Dorsett wins Rowan Masters for 5th time BY RONNIE GALLAGHER
RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST
Keith Dorsett said he had something to prove this weekend. And don’t forget. Dorsett has now won five of the eight Rowan Masters. You didn’t find anyone at the Warrior this weekend questioning his ability. “Keith’s a really good golfer,” Warrior pro Brian
Johnson passes Busch
Lee kept saying throughout the weekend.“I’ve known him since he was in diapers.” “He’s so good,” said Nianouris. “It was an honor to play against him.”
See GALLAGHER, 3B
CHINA GROVE — Alex Nianouris did not lose the Rowan Masters championship at the Warrior Golf Course on Sunday. Keith Dorsett won it. Dorsett rolled in an 18-footer for birdie on No. 17 to defeat the Salisbury High teenager 3 & 2 and take his fifth title in the eight years of the event. It was the second match for each on Sunday. Dorsett took care of Jason Meadows 3 & 2 and Nianouris defeated two-time defending champion Ronnie Eidson 1-up in morning semifinal matches to set up the meeting. But Dorsett was simply too tough. He led by two strokes going into the turn and never allowed Nianouris to even things up. “He doesn’t give you many shots to work with,” Nianouris admitted after-
NIANOURIS
gle stroke. A pivotal hole all weekend was the par-5, 532-yard 13th. Dorsett missed an eagle try and settled for birdie. Nianouris missed a 15-foot birdie opportunity and Dorsett’s lead was back to two shots. The 14th is where Dorsett took total command, chipping in for a three-shot lead with four holes left. Nianouris showed no nerves, however, getting a birdie on 15 to rally back within two. That impressed Dorsett.
See MASTERS, 3B
LEGION BASEBALL
South routs Mocksville BY JORDAN HONEYCUTT sports@salisburypost.com
MOCKSVILLE — The S o u t h S. Rowan 13 Rowan LeMocksville 1 gion team showed off its offensive prowess yet again in hot and humid Mocksville on Sunday night. South scored five runs in the eighth inning after piling up eight other runs through
BY JENNA FRYER Associated Press
LOUDON, N.H. — Kurt Busch tried to bump-and-run past Jimmie Johnson for a win. What he really did was anger the four-time Cup champion. “I thought, I don’t care if I win this race or not,” Johnson said. “I don’t care if I finish this damn thing. I’m running into him and get by him one way or another.” Johnson paid back Busch with a poke of his own in the final stretch to surge ahead with two laps left and win the Sprint Cup race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on Sunday for his fifth victory of the season. “For sure, that’s what the fans want to see,” Johnson said. Busch grabbed the lead with about seven laps left when he nudged Johnson in the left rear and out of the way. Johnson ran down Busch and quickly got side-by-side to energize what had been a lackluster race on the 1.058-mile track.
w a r d . “ Y o u have to win off birdies.” N i anouris tried. He birdied No. 10 to get within a sin-
rgallagher@salisburypost.com
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jimmie Johnson celebrates after winning the NASCAR Lenox Industrial Tools 301.
Thomas starts Rowan runaway BY JAKE MILLER
sports@salisburypost.com
Johnson put a little bump on Busch to move him up the track, allowing the No. 48 to slip underneath for the victory. His five wins tie Denny Hamlin for the series lead. “I’m not good at doing that stuff,” Johnson said. “Usually I crash myself in the process. So I tried it once and moved him. The second time I moved him out of the way
See RACE, 3B
South won going away, getting more of a test from Mother Nature’s nearly unbearable dry heat than it did from the home team at Rich Park. Leading the way for coach Michael Lowman’s squad offensively were the table setHOUSTON ZUBILLAGA ters — Blake Houston and Julio Zubillaga. the previous seven to 10-run Houston was 3-for-5, inrule Mocksville 13-1 in eighth See SOUTH, 4B innings.
LEXINGTON — All it took was one Rowan 12 swing, but Lexington 4 R o w a n County’s Luke Thomas turned Sunday’s tilt with LexingtonDavidson from a relative pitchers’ duel into a runaway game.
With two on and two out in the top of the eighth inning and Rowan County leading 4-3, Thomas sent a full-count THOMAS pitch — the last of 138 thrown by Post 8 starter Clark Beeker — well over the fence
in center field. The visitors tacked one more in the eighth and four more in the ninth to outpace Lexington-Davidson 12-4 at Holt-Moffitt Field in both teams’ regular-season finales. A win over Stanly County on Saturday solidified a playoff spot for Post 8, but it drops to 7-11 in Area III Southern
See ROWAN, 4B
SCOREBOARD
2B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
TV Sports Monday, June 28 COLLEGE BASEBALL 7:30 p.m. ESPN — World Series, finals, game 1, UCLA (51-15) vs. South Carolina (52-16), at Omaha, Neb. GOLF 3:30 p.m. TGC — PGA of America, Professional National Championship, second round, at French Lick, Ind. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Washington at Atlanta SOCCER 10 a.m. ESPN — FIFA, World Cup, round of 16, Netherlands vs. Slovakia, at Durban, South Africa 2:30 p.m. ESPN — FIFA, World Cup, round of 16, Brazil vs. Chile, Johannesburg TENNIS 6:30 a.m. ESPN2 — The Championships, fourth round, at Wimbledon, England 10 a.m. NBC — The Championships, fourth round, at Wimbledon, England (live and same-day tape) 1 p.m. ESPN2 — The Championships, fourth round, at Wimbledon, England
Area schedule Monday, June 28 AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL 7 p.m. South Rowan at Statesville (South Iredell High School) Mocksville at Kannapolis Concord at Mooresville INTIMIDATORS BASEBALL 7:05 p.m. Augusta GreenJackets at Kannapolis JUNIOR LEGION BASEBALL 7 p.m. Salisbury at Lexington
South Atlantic Standings Northern Division W L Pct. GB Greensboro (Marlins) 3 1 .750 — x-Lakewood (Phillies) 3 1 .750 — Hagerstown (Nats) 2 2 .500 1 Hickory (Rangers) 2 2 .500 1 Delmarva (Orioles) 1 3 .250 2 Kannapolis (ChiSox) 1 3 .250 2 West Virginia (Pirates)1 3 .250 2 Southern Division W L Pct. GB Greenville (Red Sox) 3 01.000 — 1 ⁄2 Augusta (Giants) 3 1 .750 Asheville (Rockies) 2 1 .667 1 1 Lexington (Astros) 2 2 .500 1 ⁄2 Rome (Braves) 2 2 .500 11⁄2 x-Savannah (Mets) 1 2 .333 2 Charleston (Yankees) 0 3 .000 3 x-clinched division Sundays Games Rome 6, Lexington 3 Hickory 4, Hagerstown 1 West Virginia 6, Greensboro 5 Augusta 17, Kannapolis 14 Lakewood 4, Delmarva 2 Asheville 2, Savannah 0, 3 innings, susp. Mondays Games Rome at Lexington, 12:05 p.m. West Virginia at Greensboro, 12:30 p.m. Greenville at Charleston, 7:05 p.m. Augusta at Kannapolis, 7:05 p.m. Hickory at Hagerstown, 7:05 p.m.
American Legion
Lakewood at Delmarva, 7:05 p.m. Asheville at Savannah, 7:05 p.m.
Standings Area III Southern Division W L Overall Mooresville 14 3 17-4 South Rowan 13 3 18-4 Rowan County 14 4 21-8 Kannapolis 9 8 10-11 Wilkes County 8 8 8-8 Lexington 7 11 11-14 Mocksville 6 11 9-13 Concord 5 11 7-12 Stanly 5 12 7-12 Statesville 3 13 4-14 Saturdays games South Rowan 8, Stanly 7 South Rowan 13, Concord 8 Lexington 14, Stanly 10 Kannapolis 13, Wilkes 10 Statesville 6, Mocksville 5 Rowan 6, Mooresville 0 Sundays games South Rowan 13, Mocksville 1 Rowan 12, Lexington 4 Mooresville 5, Huntersville 1 Wilkes 7, Statesville 3 Mondays games South Rowan at Statesville Mocksville at Kannapolis Concord at Mooresville Stanly at Wilkes Tuesdays games Mocksville at Western Forsyth South Rowan at Wilkes Statesville at Concord Northern Division W L Overall 11 4 12-5 10 5 16-12 10 5 10-6 10 5 10-11 8 7 11-10 8 8 12-9 4 11 4-13 4 11 5-12 3 12 4-18
Western Forsyth Randolph High Point Burlington Kernersville Surry Thomasville Winston-Salem E. Randolph
College baseball World Series Championship Series (best-of-3) Monday, June 28: UCLA (51-15) vs. South Carolina (52-16), 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 29: UCLA vs. South Carolina, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 30: UCLA vs. South Carolina, 7:30 p.m., if needed
ML Baseball Standings National League
East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 44 32 .579 — 1 ⁄2 New York 43 32 .573 Philadelphia 40 33 .548 21⁄2 1 Florida 35 40 .467 8 ⁄2 Washington 33 43 .434 11 Central Division W L Pct GB Cincinnati 42 34 .553 — 1 ⁄2 St. Louis 41 34 .547 Milwaukee 34 41 .453 71⁄2 1 Chicago 33 42 .440 8 ⁄2 Houston 29 47 .382 13 Pittsburgh 25 50 .333 161⁄2 West Division W L Pct GB San Diego 45 30 .600 — San Francisco 40 34 .541 41⁄2 Los Angeles 40 35 .533 5 Colorado 39 36 .520 6 Arizona 30 46 .395 151⁄2 Sundays Games Cleveland 5, Cincinnati 3 N.Y. Mets 6, Minnesota 0 San Diego 4, Florida 2 Detroit 10, Atlanta 4 Philadelphia 11, Toronto 2 Baltimore 4, Washington 3 Arizona 2, Tampa Bay 1 Chicago Cubs 8, Chicago White Sox 6 Milwaukee 3, Seattle 0 Kansas City 10, St. Louis 3 L.A. Angels 10, Colorado 3 Boston 5, San Francisco 1 Oakland 3, Pittsburgh 2 Texas 10, Houston 1 N.Y. Yankees 8, L.A. Dodgers 6, 10 innings Mondays Games N.Y. Mets (Dickey 6-0) vs. Florida (Nolasco 6-6) at San Juan, 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-2) at Cincinnati (Cueto 7-2), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 2-1) at Atlanta (T.Hudson 7-3), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Maholm 4-6) at Chicago
Cubs (R.Wells 3-6), 8:05 p.m. Houston (Norris 2-5) at Milwaukee (M.Parra 2-5), 8:10 p.m. Arizona (Haren 7-6) at St. Louis (Carpenter 9-1), 8:15 p.m. Colorado (Jimenez 13-1) at San Diego (Correia 5-5), 10:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Billingsley 6-4) at San Francisco (Zito 7-4), 10:15 p.m.
American League
East Division W L Pct GB 47 28 .627 — 46 31 .597 2 44 31 .587 3 40 36 .526 71⁄2 23 52 .307 24 Central Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 41 34 .547 — 1 ⁄2 Detroit 40 34 .541 Chicago 39 35 .527 11⁄2 Kansas City 32 44 .421 91⁄2 Cleveland 27 47 .365 131⁄2 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 46 29 .613 — Los Angeles 43 35 .551 41⁄2 Oakland 37 40 .481 10 Seattle 31 44 .413 15 Mondays Games Toronto (R.Romero 6-3) at Cleveland (Westbrook 4-4), 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 6-6) at Kansas City (Lerew 0-1), 8:10 p.m. Detroit (Bonderman 3-5) at Minnesota (Liriano 6-5), 8:10 p.m. New York Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore
Sundays boxes Red Sox 5, Giants 1 Boston
San Francisco h bi ab r h bi 2 1 Torres cf 4 1 1 0 1 0 FSnchz 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 A.Huff lf 4 0 0 1 1 1 Posey 1b 4 0 0 0 2 0 Renteri ss 4 0 2 0 0 0 BMolin c 4 0 1 0 0 0 Sndovl 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 Schrhlt rf 3 0 0 0 2 1 Linccm p 0 0 0 0 1 0 Rownd ph 1 0 1 0 0 1 Runzler p 0 0 0 0 Bmgrn ph 1 0 0 0 Mota p 0 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Burrell ph 1 0 0 0 DBatst p 0 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 11 5 Totals 32 1 5 1 Boston 121 000 001—5 San Fran 100 000 000—1 Dp—San Francisco 1. Lob—Boston 9, San Francisco 5. 2b—Hall (5), D.mcdonald (8). 3b—J.drew (2). Hr—D.ortiz (16), Beltre (12). Sb—Torres 2 (13). Cs—Scutaro (3). Sf— Lester. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Lester W,9-3 9 5 1 1 1 9 San Francisco Lincecum L,8-3 3 5 4 4 3 4 Runzler 2 1 0 0 0 5 Mota 1 1 0 0 1 1 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 2 D.Bautista 1 1 0 0 0 2 Romo 1 2 1 1 0 1 T—2:51. A—41,528 (41,915). ab Sctaro ss 5 Nava lf 5 D.Ortiz 1b 4 Beltre 3b 1 Youkils 3b 5 VMrtnz c 1 Varitek c 3 J.Drew rf 3 Hall 2b 4 DMcDn cf 3 Lester p 2
r 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0
Athletics 3, Pirates 2 Pittsburgh Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Tabata lf 4 0 2 1 Crisp cf 3 0 0 1 Crosby 2b 4 0 1 0 Barton 1b 4 0 0 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 1 0 CJcksn lf 3 0 0 0 GJnes 1b 4 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 1 1 1 Dumit dh 3 0 0 0 RSwny rf 4 0 0 0 Milledg rf 4 1 2 1 Kzmnff 3b 3 0 0 0 AnLRc 3b 2 1 1 0 Cust dh 2 1 1 0 DlwYn ph 1 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 3 0 0 0 Jarmll c 4 0 0 0 Pnngtn ss 2 1 1 0 Cdeno ss 3 0 0 0 Alvrez ph 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 8 2 Totals 28 3 3 2 Pittsburgh 000 000 200—2 Oakland 001 010 01x—3 E—G.jones (5), Ohlendorf (4), Jaramillo (2), A.mccutchen (4), Breslow (1). Dp—Oakland 3. Lob—Pittsburgh 8, Oakland 5. 2b—Tabata (4), Crosby (8). Hr—Milledge (1), K.suzuki (10). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Ohlendorf 6 2 2 0 4 3 Meek L,3-2 2 1 1 0 0 4 Oakland G.Gonzalez 6 4 1 1 4 2 Ziegler Bs,2-2 1 2 1 1 0 0 Breslow W,3-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 A.bailey S,14-17 1 2 0 0 1 0 G.Gonzalez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—2:37. A—15,238 (35,067).
Padres 4, Marlins 2 San Diego ab Gwynn cf 4 Eckstn 2b 4 AdGnzl 1b 5 Headly 3b 3 Torreal c 4 Venale rf 3 Denorfi lf 2 R.Webb p 0 Salzar ph 1 Mujica p 0 Grgrsn p 0 ECbra ss 3 Latos p 1 Cnghm lf 2
Florida h bi ab r h bi 2 0 Coghln lf 5 1 1 0 1 0 GSnchz 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 3 0 1 0 1 1 Cantu 3b 4 0 2 1 2 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 1 0 1 3 C.Ross rf 3 1 1 0 1 0 RPauln c 2 0 0 0 0 0 Bonifac cf 4 0 2 1 0 0 AnSnch p 2 0 0 0 0 0 Lamb ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 T.Wood p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tnkrsly p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sanchs p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nunez p 0 0 0 0 Helms ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 4 Totals 33 2 8 2 San Diego 100 001 020—4 Florida 000 001 100—2 E—Eckstein (1), Uggla (7), Cantu (8). Dp— San Diego 3, Florida 1. Lob—San Diego 8, Florida 9. 2b—Uggla (15), C.ross (18). Hr— Venable (8). Sb—Bonifacio (2). Cs—Gwynn (4). S—Latos. Sf—Venable. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego 5 1 1 4 5 Latos 52⁄3 3 1 1 1 0 Webb W,3-1 11⁄3 Mujica H,4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gregerson S,1-3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Florida Ani.Sanchez 6 4 2 1 4 1 2 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 T.Wood 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Tankersley 2 2 2 0 0 Sanches L,0-1 2⁄3 Nunez 1 0 0 0 1 1 WP—Latos. T—2:58. A—16,044 (38,560). r 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Royals 10, Cardinals 3 St. Louis Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h bi Schmkr rf 2 1 0 0 Pdsdnk lf 5 3 2 0 Lopez 2b 4 0 1 0 Kendall c 5 2 3 4 Pujols 1b 3 1 1 1 DeJess cf 5 0 3 2 Hollidy dh 3 0 0 1 BButler dh 4 0 0 0 Freese 3b 3 0 0 0 JGuilln rf 3 0 2 1 LaRue c 1 0 0 0 Getz ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Rasms cf 3 1 1 1 Callasp 3b 4 1 1 0 Winn lf 3 0 0 0 Aviles ss 3 1 0 0 Stvinh ph 1 0 0 0 Betemt 1b 4 2 2 3 YMolin c 2 0 0 0 Blmqst rf 4 1 2 0 Miles 2b 2 0 1 0 B.Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 3 4 3 Totals 3810 1510 St. Louis 100 010 001—3 Kansas City 032 200 03x—10 E—B.ryan (11). Dp—St. Louis 2. Lob—St. Louis 6, Kansas City 8. 2b—Kendall 2 (14). Hr—Pujols (16), Rasmus (16), Betemit (3). Sb—Pujols (7), B.Ryan 2 (6), Podsednik 2 (22). Sf—Holliday. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis J.garcia L,7-4 2 4 5 5 2 0 Boggs 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 5 5 0 2 Ottavino 4 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 D.Reyes Kansas City Chen W,4-2 5 2 2 2 4 5 Farnsworth 2 1 0 0 0 0 Tejeda 1 0 0 0 0 1 Bl.Wood 1 1 1 1 0 1 J.Garcia pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. HBP—by D.Reyes (Getz), by Chen (Schumaker). T—2:55. A—32,938 (37,840).
Angels 10, Rockies 3 Colorado Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi JHerrr 2b 4 0 1 0 EAyar ss 5 0 2 0 Helton 1b 4 0 0 0 HKndrc 2b 5 0 1 0 CGnzlz cf 4 1 3 0 BAreu rf 3 2 1 0 Giambi dh 3 0 1 1 Willits rf 0 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 4 0 1 0 TrHntr cf 4 1 1 0 Iannett c 4 1 1 0 HMatsu dh 3 1 1 1 Stwart 3b 3 1 1 1 JRiver lf 4 2 1 1 Mora 3b 1 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 2 2 1 3 Splrghs rf 4 0 0 0 JMaths c 4 0 0 0 Barmes ss4 0 2 1 BrWod 3b 3 2 1 4 Totals 35 310 3 Totals 3310 9 9 Colorado 010 100 100— 3 Los Angeles 000 410 05x—10 E—Stewart (7), Iannetta (3). Dp—Colorado
1. Lob—Colorado 6, Los Angeles 4. 2b—Giambi (5), Iannetta (3), J.rivera (13). 3b— B.abreu (1). Hr—Stewart (9), Napoli (13), Br.wood (3). Cs—Barmes (1). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado J.chacin L,4-7 6 5 5 2 3 12 1 2 2 1 0 F.Morales 11⁄3 2 ⁄3 3 3 3 1 1 Corpas Los Angeles 8 3 3 1 7 Santana W,8-5 62⁄3 1 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 S.shields H,1 Jepsen H,17 1 1 0 0 0 1 F.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:53. A—37,314 (45,285).
Orioles 4, Nationals 3 Washington Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Morgan cf 4 0 0 0 CPttrsn lf 4 1 1 0 AKndy 2b 4 0 2 0 MTejad 3b 4 0 2 1 Zmrmn 3b 3 1 1 0 Markks rf 3 0 0 0 A.Dunn dh2 0 0 0 Wggntn 1b 4 0 0 0 Wlngh lf 4 1 1 1 CIzturs ss 0 0 0 0 Berndn rf 3 1 1 2 Scott dh 3 1 1 0 Morse 1b 4 0 0 0 AdJons cf 3 1 1 1 AlGzlz ss 3 0 0 0 Wieters c 3 1 1 0 WHrrs ph 0 0 0 0 SMoore 2b 3 0 1 1 Nieves c 3 0 0 0 Lugo ss 3 0 1 0 IRdrgz ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 3 5 3 Totals 30 4 8 3 Washington 000 300 000—3 Baltimore 000 030 01x—4 E—A.kennedy (8). Dp—Baltimore 1. Lob— Washington 7, Baltimore 3. 2b—C.patterson (7), Scott (15), Ad.jones (9), Lugo (2). 3b— Willingham (2). Hr—Bernadina (5). IP H R ER BB SO Washington Atilano 7 5 3 2 0 3 Clippard L,8-5 1 3 1 1 1 0 Baltimore Guthrie 6 3 3 3 4 4 Berken 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 Ohman 0 0 0 0 2 Hrnndez W,3-6 2⁄3 Simon S,9-10 1 0 0 0 1 1 HBP—by Guthrie (A.Dunn). T—2:30. A—22,951 (48,290).
Indians 5, Reds 3 Cleveland ab Crowe cf 4 Choo rf 4 CSantn c 4 Kearns lf 2 JhPerlt 3b 4 LaPort 1b 4 C.Perez p 0 K.Wood p 0 AHrndz ss 4 J.Nix 2b 4 Talbot p 3 AMarte 1b 1
Cincinnati h bi ab r h bi 1 0 BPhllps 2b 4 1 1 0 2 4 OCarer ss 3 0 0 0 2 1 Votto 1b 3 1 2 2 0 0 Rolen 3b 3 0 0 1 1 0 Gomes lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Ondrsk p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Stubbs cf 3 0 0 0 2 0 CMiller c 3 0 1 0 0 0 L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 Arroyo p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Owings ph 1 0 0 0 JrSmth p 0 0 0 0 DHerrr p 0 0 0 0 Heisey lf 0 1 0 0 Totals 34 5 8 5 Totals 30 3 4 3 Cleveland 100 030 010—5 Cincinnati 100 000 020—3 E—O.cabrera (7). Dp—Cincinnati 2. Lob— Cleveland 4, Cincinnati 5. Hr—Choo 2 (12), C.santana (4), Votto (16). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Talbot W,8-6 7 3 1 1 3 5 C.Perez 1 1 2 2 1 2 K.wood S,6-9 1 0 0 0 0 3 Cincinnati Arroyo L,7-4 5 6 4 4 2 3 Jor.Smith 2 0 0 0 0 1 D.Herrera 1 2 1 1 0 1 Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by C.Perez (Rolen). T—2:42. A—25,877 (42,319). r 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Tigers 10, Braves 4 Detroit
Atlanta h bi ab r h bi 3 2 Prado 2b 4 1 2 0 1 2 Conrad 3b 4 2 1 0 1 0 Hinske lf 4 0 1 1 0 0 McCnn c 2 1 1 1 0 0 D.Ross c 1 0 0 0 2 1 Glaus 1b 4 0 1 1 2 3 OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 3 0 MeCarr rf 2 0 0 1 1 0 JChavz p 0 0 0 0 1 1 Hicks 3b 0 0 0 0 3 1 YEscor ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 GBlanc cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Hanson p 1 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 1 0 0 0 Infante rf 2 0 1 0 Totals 39101710 Totals 32 4 7 4 Detroit 100 522 000—10 Atlanta 000 220 000— 4 E—Hanson (1). Dp—Detroit 1, Atlanta 2. Lob—Detroit 7, Atlanta 7. 2b—Prado (23), Mccann (12), Glaus (12). Hr—Boesch (12). Sb— Damon 2 (7), Laird (2), Prado (3), Conrad (4). Cs—A.jackson (3). S—Verlander. Sf—Santiago, Me.cabrera. IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Verlander W,9-5 7 6 4 4 2 6 Coke 1 0 0 0 1 0 Valverde 1 1 0 0 0 1 Atlanta 8 6 5 2 4 Hanson L,7-5 32⁄3 C.Martinez 2 6 4 4 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 J.Chavez 21⁄3 OFlaherty 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Verlander (Conrad, Prado). WP— Verlander. T—3:14. A—26,034 (49,743). ab AJcksn cf 5 Sntiag ss 4 Damon lf 4 Coke p 0 Valvrd p 0 MiCarr 1b 4 Boesch rf 5 CGuilln 2b 3 Inge 3b 1 Kelly 3b 5 Laird c 5 Verlndr p 3 Worth 2b 0
r 2 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 2 0 0
Cubs 8, White Sox 6 Chicago (N) ab r Colvin rf 5 2 Byrd cf 5 1 D.Lee dh 5 0 Nady 1b 5 0 ArRmr 3b 5 0 ASorin lf 2 2 Soto c 4 1 JeBakr 2b 4 0 SCstro ss 4 2
Chicago (A) h bi ab r h bi 3 4 Pierre lf 4 0 1 2 1 0 Vizquel 3b 3 1 2 0 2 2 Viciedo 3b 1 0 0 0 1 0 AnJons ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 Lillirdg pr 0 0 0 0 1 1 Rios cf 5 1 2 0 3 1 Konerk dh 4 1 1 1 0 0 Quentin rf 4 0 1 2 2 0 Kotsay 1b 3 1 1 0 Przyns c 3 1 0 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 2 0 Bckhm 2b 4 1 1 1 Totals 39 814 8 Totals 35 6 11 6 Chicago (N) 003 021 020—8 Chicago (A) 200 001 003—6 Dp—Chicago (N) 2, Chicago (A) 2. Lob— Chicago (N) 6, Chicago (A) 6. 2b—D.lee (11), Ar.ramirez (7), Soto (8), S.castro (5), Beckham (10). Hr—Colvin (10), A.soriano (11), Konerko (20). Sb—Pierre (29), Rios (21). Cs— Rios (7). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago (N) Dempster W,6-6 7 9 3 3 1 8 Marshall 1 0 0 0 0 0 Marmol 1 2 3 3 3 2 Chicago (A) Danks L,7-6 5 7 6 6 2 5 T.Pena 2 4 1 1 0 2 Williams 1 2 1 1 0 0 Linebrink 1 1 0 0 0 1 Danks pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. T.Pena pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. WP—Dempster, Danks. T—2:57. A—39,682 (40,615).
Phillies 11, Blue Jays 2 Philadelphia Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi Rollins ss 6 0 3 2 JMcDnl lf 5 0 0 0 Utley 2b 4 0 1 1 AlGnzlz ss 3 1 1 0 JuCstr 2b 0 0 0 0 FLewis lf 1 0 0 0 Werth rf 5 0 0 0 JBautst rf 4 0 1 0 Hward 1b 3 3 1 0 V.Wells cf 3 1 2 2 Gload 1b 1 0 0 0 Wise cf 1 0 0 0 Victorn cf 5 2 3 1 Lind dh 3 0 0 0 BFrncs lf 5 1 3 2 A.Hill 2b 4 0 1 0 Ibanez dh 4 2 1 0 Overay 1b 4 0 0 0 Valdz 3b 5 2 0 1 JMolin c 4 0 1 0 Sardinh c 5 1 1 2 Hoffpar 3b 3 0 1 0 Totals 431113 9 Totals 35 2 7 2 Philadelphia 040 210 400—11 Toronto 002 000 000— 2 E—Ju.castro (6), Howard (8), Ale.gonzalez (11), Frasor (1), A.hill 2 (5). Dp—Philadelphia 1, Toronto 1. Lob—Philadelphia 8, Toronto 8. 2b—Howard (13), Victorino (10), B.francisco 2 (6), Sardinha (1), Ale.gonzalez (20). Hr—V.wells (19). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Moyer W,9-6 7 6 2 2 0 7 Herndon 1 1 0 0 1 0 Baez 1 0 0 0 1 0 Toronto Cecil L,7-5 42⁄3 10 7 5 1 5 0 0 0 0 1 Janssen 11⁄3 2 ⁄3 2 4 0 1 0 Frasor 1 0 0 0 2 Tallet 11⁄3 Purcey 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Tallet (Utley). PB—J.Molina. T—3:04. A—42,571 (43,651).
Mets 6, Twins 0 Minnesota New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Span cf 4 0 1 0 JosRys ss 5 0 0 0 Hudsn 2b 4 0 2 0 JFelicn cf 5 1 3 0 Mauer c30 0 0 DWrght 3b
4 1 3 2 Cuddyr 1b 3 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 4 2 2 1 DlmYn lf 4 0 0 0 Bay lf 4 1 1 0 Vlenci 3b 3 0 1 0 Barajs c 4 0 1 1 Repko rf 4 0 1 0 Francr rf 4 1 3 2 Punto ss 4 0 2 0 RTejad 2b 4 0 1 0 SBaker p 2 0 0 0 Niese p 2 0 0 0 AlBrntt p 0 0 0 0 Dessns p 0 0 0 0 Mahay p 0 0 0 0 PFelicn p 0 0 0 0 Thome ph 1 0 0 0 Tatis ph 1 0 0 0 Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Mijares p 0 0 0 0 Kubel ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 37 6 14 6 Minnesota 000 000 000—0 New York 000 240 00x—6 Dp—Minnesota 1, New York 1. Lob—Minnesota 9, New York 8. 2b—J.feliciano (2), Francoeur (13). 3b—Bay (5). Hr—D.wright (14), I.davis (9), Francoeur (8). Sb—D.wright (13). IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota 1 S.baker L,6-7 4 ⁄3 11 6 6 0 6 1 ⁄3 2 0 0 1 0 Al.Burnett 1 0 0 0 0 Mahay 11⁄3 Guerrier 1 0 0 0 0 1 Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York Niese W,5-2 6 4 0 0 3 5 Dessens 1 2 0 0 0 1 P.Feliciano 1 0 0 0 0 1 Parnell 1 1 0 0 0 1 Niese pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—3:14. A—37,644 (41,800).
Diamondbacks 2, Rays 1 Arizona
Tampa Bay h bi ab r h bi 0 0 Jaso c 2 0 0 0 0 0 Crwfrd pr 0 0 0 0 1 0 Shppch c 0 0 0 0 1 0 SRdrgz 2b 4 1 0 0 0 0 Longori 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 C.Pena 1b 4 0 1 1 1 0 Zobrist rf 3 0 0 0 1 2 Joyce lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 BUpton cf 3 0 0 0 Blalock dh 2 0 1 0 Brignc ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 2 4 2 Totals 27 1 2 1 Arizona 000 020 000—2 Tampa Bay 000 001 000—1 Dp—Arizona 1, Tampa Bay 2. Lob—Arizona 3, Tampa Bay 6. 2b—J.upton (12), C.pena (9). 3b—Ryal (1). Hr—G.parra (2). Sb—K.johnson (6), Longoria (12). IP H R ER BB SO Arizona R.lopez W,4-6 6 2 1 1 5 3 Boyer H,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.gutierrez H,7 1 0 0 0 1 1 Heilman S,2-5 1 0 0 0 1 0 Tampa Bay 1 4 2 2 3 5 W.davis L,5-9 7 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Choate Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 3 PB—Montero. T—2:46. A—25,442 (36,973). ab Jhnsn 2b 2 S.Drew ss 4 J.Upton rf 3 Monter c 4 CYoung cf 4 AdLRc dh 3 Ryal 1b 3 GParra lf 3 TAreu 3b 3
r 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0
Brewers 3, Mariners 0 Seattle
Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi ISuzuki rf 4 0 0 0 Weeks 2b 5 1 4 1 Figgins 2b 4 0 1 0 Hart rf 3 1 1 1 Bradly lf 3 0 1 0 Fielder 1b 4 0 1 1 Pauley p 0 0 0 0 Braun lf 4 0 0 0 White p 0 0 0 0 McGeh 3b 3 0 2 0 Ktchm ph 1 0 0 0 Lucroy c 4 0 1 0 JoLpz 3b 4 0 2 0 Gomez cf 4 0 1 0 JoWlsn 1b 4 0 0 0 AEscor ss 2 1 0 0 Alfonzo c 3 0 0 0 Narvsn p 3 0 0 0 JaWlsn ss 3 0 1 0 Inglett ph 1 0 1 0 MSndrs cf 3 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 JVargs p 1 0 0 0 Lngrhn lf 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 0 5 0 Totals 33 3 11 3 Seattle 000 000 000—0 Milwaukee 100 020 00x—3 E—Narveson (1). Dp—Seattle 1, Milwaukee 1. Lob—Seattle 5, Milwaukee 10. 2b— Bradley (8), Weeks (15), Hart (17), Mcgehee (17), Lucroy (3). 3b—Inglett (3). Hr—Weeks (13). Sb—Figgins (21). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle J.vargas L,6-3 5 7 3 3 1 2 Pauley 2 2 0 0 3 2 White 1 2 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Narveson W,7-4 8 4 0 0 1 7 Axford S,7-7 1 1 0 0 0 3 T—2:30. A—41,995 (41,900).
Yankees 8, Dodgers 6 (10) New York Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Jeter ss 4 0 3 0 Furcal ss 2 1 2 2 Swisher rf 4 0 0 0 Bellird 2b 4 1 1 1 Chmrln p 0 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 Cervelli ph1 0 0 0 Kemp cf 0 0 0 0 MRiver p 0 0 0 0 Ethier rf 4 0 1 1 Teixeir 1b 5 1 1 0 MnRmr lf 3 0 0 0 Rdrgz 3b 5 3 2 2 GAndrs lf 1 0 0 0 Cano 2b 5 2 2 3 Troncs p 0 0 0 0 Posada c 5 1 1 0 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Grndrs cf 4 1 0 0 Blake 3b 5 0 1 0 Gardnr lf 0 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 1 0 Huffmn lf 3 0 2 2 RMartn c 4 0 0 0 Pettitte p 1 0 0 0 RJhnsn lf 5 2 3 0 DRrtsn p 0 0 0 0 Kershw p 0 1 0 0 DMarte p 0 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0 Curtis rf 2 0 0 1 JCarrll 2b 2 1 1 0 Totals 39 8 11 8 Totals 34 6 10 4 New York 000 002 004 2—8 Los Angeles 003 200 010 0—6 E—Pettitte 2 (2). Dp—New York 2, Los Angeles 1. Lob—New York 5, Los Angeles 9. 2b—Cano (22), Furcal (11), Re.johnson 2 (7). Hr—A.rodriguez (11), Cano (15), Belliard (2). Sb—J.carroll (6). S—Pettitte, Belliard, Kershaw 3. Sf—Furcal, Ethier. IP H R ER BB SO New York Pettitte 5 6 5 4 3 5 2 ⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 D.Robertson 0 0 0 0 1 D.Marte 11⁄3 Chamberlain 1 2 1 1 1 0 M.rivera W,2-1 2 1 0 0 0 3 Los Angeles Kershaw 7 4 2 2 0 5 Belisario H,11 1 1 0 0 0 0 Broxton 1 4 4 4 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 Troncoso L,1-2 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 1 1 1 0 0 Sherrill HBP—by Kershaw (Gardner). WP— D.Robertson. T—4:02. A—56,000 (56,000). .
Late Saturday
Angels 4, Rockies 2 Colorado ab JHerrr 2b 4 Splrghs rf 3 CGnzlz cf 4 Giambi dh 4 Mora 1b 3 Olivo c 4 Stwart 3b 2 S.Smith lf 3 Brmes ss 3
Los Angeles r h bi ab r h bi 0 1 0 HKndrc 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 Frndsn 3b 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 BAreu dh 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 TrHntr cf 3 1 1 0 1 1 0 HMatsu lf 2 1 1 4 0 1 1 Willits lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 JRiver rf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 EAyar ss 3 0 0 0 BoWlsn c 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 2 5 2 Totals 28 4 4 4 Colorado 001 100 000—2 Los Angeles 400 000 00x—4 E—Stewart (6). Dp—Colorado 1, Los Angeles 1. Lob—Colorado 4, Los Angeles 1. 2b—Mora (6). Hr—Barmes (5), H.matsui (10). Cs—Olivo (4). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado Cook L,2-5 8 4 4 3 1 3 Los Angeles Saunders W,6-8 7 4 2 2 2 8 Rodney H,12 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fuentes S,13-16 1 0 0 0 1 0 T—2:12. A—39,225 (45,285).
Athletics 5, Pirates 0 Pittsburgh Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Tabata lf 3 0 1 0 Crisp cf 3 3 2 0 DlwYn dh 2 0 0 0 Barton 1b 4 0 3 4 AnLRc dh 1 0 0 0 CJcksn lf 4 0 0 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 1 1 1 GJnes 1b 4 0 0 0 RSwny rf 2 0 0 0 Doumit c 4 0 0 0 Kzmnff 3b 4 0 0 0 Alvrez 3b 3 0 0 0 Cust dh 3 1 1 0 Milledg rf 3 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 1 0 Crosby 2b 3 0 0 0 Pnngtn ss 3 0 0 0 Cdeno ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 2 0 Totals 31 5 8 5 Pittsburgh 000 000 000—0 Oakland 120 010 10x—5 Lob—Pittsburgh 5, Oakland 6. 2b—Barton 3 (20). Hr—K.suzuki (9). Sb—Tabata (4), Crisp (1), R.sweeney (1). Cs—M.ellis (1). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh D.McCtchn L,0-3 6 7 4 4 2 2 J.Thomas 1 1 1 1 1 0 Dotel 1 0 0 0 1 1 Oakland 2 2 0 0 3 10 Cahill W,7-2 7 ⁄3 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Breslow A.Bailey 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:18. A—25,068 (35,067).
SALISBURY POST
Soccer World Cup SECOND ROUND Saturday, June 26 Uruguay 2, South Korea 1 Ghana 2, Unites States 1 Sunday, June 27 Germany 4, England 1 Argentina 3, Mexico 1 Monday, June 28 Netherlands vs. Slovakia, 10 a.m. Brazil vs. Chile, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 29 Paraguay vs. Japan, 10 a.m. Spain vs. Portugal, 2:30 p.m.
Racing Sprint Cup Lenox Industrial Tools 301 Lineup Sundays race At New Hampshire Motor Speedway (Start position in parentheses) 1. (10) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 301 laps, 124 rating, 190 points, $264,928. 2. (25) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 301, 107, 175, $206,598. 3. (3) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 301, 114.6, 170, $173,498. 4. (16) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 301, 106.9, 160, $162,576. 5. (24) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 301, 91, 155, $150,726. 6. (5) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 301, 96.8, 155, $133,979. 7. (9) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 301, 104.8, 146, $99,500. 8. (31) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 301, 90.9, 142, $94,850. 9. (11) Joey Logano, Toyota, 301, 87.1, 138, $121,890. 10. (28) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 301, 97.8, 134, $123,701. 11. (22) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 301, 107.8, 135, $127,106. 12. (17) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 301, 118.9, 132, $116,940. 13. (12) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 301, 74.1, 124, $108,273. 14. (20) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 301, 77, 121, $95,350. 15. (6) David Reutimann, Toyota, 301, 86.8, 118, $109,456. 16. (34) Greg Biffle, Ford, 301, 73.9, 115, $87,900. 17. (33) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 300, 61.1, 112, $122,076. 18. (27) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 300, 69.7, 109, $111,404. 19. (30) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 300, 55.6, 111, $85,275. 20. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 300, 71.1, 103, $87,275. 21. (4) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 300, 80.7, 100, $93,625. 22. (26) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 300, 64.9, 97, $76,375. 23. (8) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 300, 63.2, 94, $84,400. 24. (29) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 300, 53.9, 91, $113,898. 25. (21) Carl Edwards, Ford, 299, 66.8, 88, $113,173. 26. (14) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 299, 57.2, 85, $102,010. 27. (15) Scott Speed, Toyota, 299, 53.7, 82, $91,498. 28. (13) Paul Menard, Ford, 299, 64.4, 79, $82,625. 29. (23) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 298, 55, 76, $75,350. 30. (42) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 297, 40.4, 73, $89,673. 31. (38) David Stremme, Ford, 294, 40.2, 70, $78,900. 32. (41) Kevin Conway, Ford, 292, 33.8, 67, $72,650. 33. (18) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 292, 44.2, 64, $78,450. 34. (1) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, accident, 280, 97.2, 66, $119,506. 35. (39) David Gilliland, Ford, 268, 38.8, 58, $82,123. 36. (2) Kasey Kahne, Ford, engine, 236, 104.8, 65, $120,415. 37. (40) Andy Lally, Chevrolet, brakes, 142, 33.5, 52, $69,625. 38. (35) J.J. Yeley, Dodge, brakes, 84, 35.4, 49, $69,425. 39. (7) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 68, 32, 46, $69,300. 40. (43) Todd Bodine, Toyota, transmission, 31, 30.1, 43, $69,150. 41. (37) Michael McDowell, Toyota, electrical, 24, 34.1, 40, $68,970. 42. (36) Dave Blaney, Toyota, power steering, 20, 30.9, 37, $68,840. 43. (32) Max Papis, Toyota, brakes, 11, 28.3, 34, $69,218. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 113.308 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 48 minutes, 38 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.753 seconds. Caution Flags: 4 for 19 laps. Lead Changes: 14 among 9 drivers. Lap Leaders: J.Montoya 1-36; E.Sadler 37; K.Kahne 38-105; J.Johnson 106; Ku.Busch 107; R.Newman 108; T.Stewart 109-110; K.Kahne 111-152; Ky.Busch 153176; J.Burton 177-178; Ky.Busch 179-200; J.Burton 201-287; J.Johnson 288-293; Ku.Busch 294-299; J.Johnson 300-301. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Kahne, 2 times for 110 laps; J.Burton, 2 times for 89 laps; Ky.Busch, 2 times for 46 laps; J.Montoya, 1 time for 36 laps; J.Johnson, 3 times for 9 laps; Ku.Busch, 2 times for 7 laps; T.Stewart, 1 time for 2 laps; R.Newman, 1 time for 1 lap; E.Sadler, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 2,489; 2. J.Johnson, 2,384; 3. Ky.Busch, 2,328; 4. D.Hamlin, 2,304; 5. J.Gordon, 2,302; 6. Ku.Busch, 2,288; 7. M.Kenseth, 2,204; 8. J.Burton, 2,159; 9. T.Stewart, 2,158; 10. G.Biffle, 2,126; 11. M.Martin, 2,047; 12. C.Edwards, 2,020.
Golf PGA Tour Travelers Championship Sundays final round At TPC River Highlands Cromwell, Conn. Purse: $6 million Yardage: 6,841; Par: 70 (x-Won on second playoff hole) x-Bubba Watson 65-68-67-66—266 Corey Pavin 65-66-69-66—266 Scott Verplank 67-69-66-64—266 Chris Riley 68-65-69-65—267 Padraig Harrington 64-71-69-64—268 Chad Campbell 67-70-65-66—268 Retief Goosen 68-69-64-67—268 Ricky Barnes 69-67-64-68—268 Kris Blanks 68-67-67-67—269 Brendon de Jonge 70-63-67-69—269 Vaughn Taylor 67-65-67-70—269 Justin Rose 64-62-68-75—269 Vijay Singh 65-66-73-66—270 Ryan Moore 68-67-69-66—270 Rickie Fowler 71-65-68-66—270 Nic Thompson 68-70-66-66—270 Kevin Sutherland 65-65-71-69—270 Matt Jones 65-67-68-70—270 Scott McCarron 68-66-66-70—270 Ben Curtis 65-68-64-73—270
Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Designated 1B Garrett Atkins for assignment. Activated RHP Koji Uehara from the 15-day DL. CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Placed RHP Bobby Jenks on the bereavement/family medical emergency List. CLEVELAND INDIANS—Traded 1B Russell Branyan to Seattle for OF Ezequiel Carrera and SS Juan Diaz and a player to be named. SEATTLE MARINERS—Placed DH Mike Sweeney on the 15-day DL. Called up RHP David Pauley from Tacoma (PCL). National League CINCINNATI REDS—Recalled LHP Bill Bray from Louisville (IL). Optioned RHP Sam LeCure to Louisville. FLORIDA MARLINS—Announced the resignation of first-base coach Dave Collins. Named Tarrik Brock interim first-base coach. HOUSTON ASTROS—Designated RHP Josh Banks for assignment.
Three Mustangs on All-State team From staff reports
The N.C. Softball Coaches Association has named East Rowan rising senior pitcher Chelsea White the District 6 Player of the Year and the 3A State Player of the Year. East shortstop Ericka Nesbitt and center fielder Kayla Kirk, also rising seniors, joined White on the All-State and All-District 6 teams. North Iredell’s Karley Harkey and Taylor Rosenbalm made the 3A All-State WHITE team. The list of All-State players included Mooresville’s battery of Margaret Whitestone and Hope Smith and Northwest Cabarrus’ Michaela Boyd. Northwest’s Taylor Allen was an all-district pick. District 6 includes nine counties and 27 schools.
MLB baseball Bobby Parnell (East Rowan) finished the New York Mets’ 6-0 win against Minnesota on Sunday with a scoreless ninth. Parnell struck out Jason Kubel swinging to end the game.
Minor leagues Chattanooga’s Jerry Sands (Catawba) hit a run-scoring double in the first to chase home Dee Gordon, the Dodgers’ top prospect, and a solo homer in the third. The homer was Sands’ 21st of the season and third since his promotion to the DoubleA Lookouts last week. A story on Sands is upcoming.
Legion baseball Mooresville baseball players signed a baseball for Rowan County’s Patrick Snider, who is battling cancer. The best-of-three first-round playoff series are set to begin on Thursday in Area III. Rowan, South Rowan and Mooresville will open at home against opponents still to be determined. Kannapolis should finish fourth and would also be home for the first round. Mooresville closes the regular season tonight at home against Concord. South plays Statesville at South Iredell High. Kannapolis is home against Mocksville. If both Mooresville (14-3) and South (13-3) win their remaining games, the teams would tie for first. The first tiebreaker used to determine the division’s top seed is head-to-head, and the teams split their league meetings. The second tiebreaker is runs allowed in division games. Mooresville should have the edge there. Rowan has finished the regular season. Tonight’s scheduled non-division game against Surry has been canceled. Rowan will host Area III All-Star Game activities on Wednesday. Mooresville topped Huntersville 5-1 on Sunday in non-division action. Nick Keith pitched seven innings and shut down the Area IV Eastern Division champs. Jake Beaver hit a three-run homer, and Billy Nantz also connected for the Moors.
Junior Legion The Salisbury Cavornets won 6-5 against Mocksville at Rich Park on Saturday. Mocksville scored three runs and had the bases loaded in the seventh before Salisbury pitcher Philip Tonseth got the final out on a popup to left. Tonseth pitched a six-hitter and also hit a long home run. Tonseth, Clint Veal, Scott Van der Poel and Kyle Wolfe TONSETH had two hits each.
Rowan Rampage Rowan Rampage football returns this summer. The first game is at 4 p.m. on July 10 at the Dunbar Center.
Junior Golf Salisbury’s Roy Dixon’s shot 71 in the Carolinass Junior PGA Championships held at Quail Creek in Conway, S.C. Dixon tied for eighth at 1-under. The tournament was shortened to 18 holes by bad weather.
Hole-in-one Andre Cannon made a hole-in-one at Warrior Golf Club on Sunday. Cannon aced the 177-yard No. 12 hole. He was playing with Dax Perry, Ricky Holloway and Todd Dutch.
Intimidators baseball Augusta outscored Kannapolis 17-14 in a rare slugfest at Fieldcrest Cannon Stadium on Sunday. Kannapolis trailed 8-1, battled back to take a 14-11 lead, then couldn’t hold that edge. Ian Gac hit his 14th homer for the Intimidators, while Brady Shoemaker launched his eighth of the season.
Kannapolis hoops camp A.L. Brown head boys basketball coach Shelwyn Klutz will hold a summer hoops camp on July 5-8. Camps will be held at Kannapolis Middle School and are for boys and girls ages 7-15 from 9-1 daily. The cost of the camp is $45. Contact Klutz at 704-491-3752.
SPORTS
SALISBURY POST
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 3B
RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST
Alex Nianouris chips to the green on the 16th hole. Nianouris ousted defending champion Ronnie Eidson in Sundays semifinals before falling to Keith Dorsett in the title match.
MASTERS FROM 1B “He never quit,” the champ said. “He came right back and didn’t let it bother him.” Nianouris appeared to be in deep trouble when he hit his ball out of bounds on 16. “I tried to ease a five-wood but I just finished with my hands wide open at impact. I hit in right into the hazard.” But Dorsett hit his ball in the water and the two halved the hole. Nianouris had a chance to pull closer on No. 17 when
Dorsett sent his drive left into the rough and was forced to lay up. Nianouris put his ball on the green in two and had a try for eagle. Dorsett lied three and was going for birdie. “I knew it would be in the deep rough,” Dorsett said of his tee shot. “I was going to make him make an eagle to beat me. I just wanted to play it smart.” Nianouris missed his eagle and Dorsett ended the match RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST with a birdie putt. Keith Dorsett, right, is congratulated by Alex Nianouris. “I felt I had a good chance to make that birdie,” Nianouris said, “but he came up Dorsett was gracious as the old opponent. and sunk it. It was a good two headed for the clubhouse, “He’s got a great future stroke.” praising his talented 16-year- ahead of him,” Dorsett said. “I
think he’s way past where I was at that age. I was decent but I wasn’t hitting it like he does.” • NOTES: Eidson didn’t let a semifinal loss slow him down. He beat Meadows in the thirdplace match. • With a slight breeze blowing, Dorsett said Sunday’s heat wasn’t as bad as the other two days. The thermometer still read 96 degrees. • Dorsett will go for the second leg of the Rowan County Triple Crown in the Rowan Amateur next month. “I’m not getting ahead of myself,” he said. “There’s a lot of good golfers who didn’t
come down here. But there were still a lot of good golfers here.” • Nianouris was asked if he felt any pressure in the title match. “Not really, he said. “Actually, I had more jitters in the first match.” • Lee said a key to having a good tournament was superintendant Mike Marsh, who kept the greens soft by continuously watering them. If you ask Lee, Marsh was the MVP of this year’s Rowan Masters. “He’s the best thing that’s ever happened to us,” Lee said. “This course has been in great shape for 10 years.”
GALLAGHER
Let’s answer that question with what happened next. Nianouris put his second effort on the FROM 1B green and he had a shot at eagle. Dorsett laid up and put his ball on the Dorsett showed the savvy of a veteran on green in three. He was going for a birdie. the back nine Sunday, putting distance beA Nianouris eagle and a Dorsett par would tween himself and Nianouris. tie this match up going into the final hole. He birdied 13 to go up two shots and then Didn’t happen, of course. This was faced a chip from 10 yards off the green on Dorsett’s time. No. 14. Nianouris missed his eagle, which meant “It was a straight uphill chip,” Dorsett Dorsett could wrap it up with a birdie. said. His 18-footer weaved left to right and With a lot of eyes from the spectators on dropped in. him, many of whom have been following his For the first time during the weekend, exploits on the golf course for years, Dorsett allowed himself to pump his fist and Dorsett came up big at the biggest moment. let out a yell. The ball took one bounce and hopped right “I thought I played good enough to win,” in the bottom of the cup, drawing cheers. Nianouris said. “It just didn’t happen. He’s a That put him up three with four holes to great golfer.” go, essentially sealing Nianouris’ fate. And a golfer that did exactly what he “It wasn’t awful hard,” Dorsett said of the wanted. Dorsett didn’t say much the entire shot. “But it came out a little hot. I was weekend. His game did the talking for him. lucky the pin got in the way.” “I haven’t won anything in two years,” he • mused before being presented the Rowan Nianouris didn’t give up, getting a shot Masters trophy by Lee. “I wanted to get back back on 15 with a birdie. Then, both hit in on top. “I was on a mission for this one.” the water on 16. They halved it and Dorsett Mission accomplished. was still two up with two holes to play. • RONNIE GALLAGHER/SALISBURY POST His drive on 17 almost rolled into a ditch. Contact Ronnie Gallagher at 704-797-4287 Keith Dorsett, right, receives his trophy from Warrior golf pro Brian Lee. Was he feeling the pressure? or rgallagher@salisburypost.com.
Kahne didn’t finish Gordon seemingly had half the field angry at him last week The NASCAR notebook ... at Infineon Raceway for agLOUDON, N.H. — Kasey gressive driving. This time, Kahne led more laps than any Montoya accused Gordon of not driver at New Hampshire Mogiving him any room. tor Speedway. “He has it coming one day,” He would haved traded them Montoya said. all to finish the race. • Kahne’s stellar early perBURTON’S BUNGLE: Jeff Burformance Sunday collapsed ton led 89 laps and had his first with about 95 laps left when his win in nearly two years in his No. 9 Ford experienced engine sight when he decided to gamtrouble. Kahne, who led 110 ble. He stayed on the track durlaps, was running third when ing a caution while all the lead his car woes hit and he started lap cars pitted for fresh tires. sliding back in the field. Burton fell behind on his old Kahne hung in there until the tires, spun into Kyle Busch and engine finally blew with 65 laps took them both out of conleft, pouring oil on the track tention. and bringing out the caution. Burton, who finished 12th, The caution ended 201 straight accepted responsibility. laps of green flag racing. “It’s easy to sit back now and He expected the engine to say we should have changed last. tires, but all we had to do was “When you put it on the drag two other cars with us and track, they’re not supposed to we’d win the race,” Burton break,” he said. “It’s probably said. “Sometimes leading the just something small inside race is a difficult position to be that happened, but when we in.” brought it here, we had no idea Busch mad a great save and that it would break. It’s ready. finished 11th. It’s prepared.” • • OH, BABY: Aric Almirola was BAD LUCK: Juan Pablo Montold not to wander anywhere toya still hasn’t won a Cup race without his cell phone. on an oval. He’s on standby for Jimmie He had a great shot Sunday Johnson for the next few races. at New Hampshire MotorJohnson’s wife, Chandra, is at speedway and was a serious home and due with their first threat to win until he got child in about three weeks. caught up with Jeff Gordon, Almirola took some spins in fell back and was plowed by the No. 48 Chevrolet at New Reed Sorenson. Sorenson, who Hampshire Motor Speedway on was down a lap, got into the Saturday to prepare for a possirear of Montoya’s No. 42 ble last-minute switch. Chevrolet and sent it into the “He’s really hoping for the wall. opportunity and I know he’ll do
RACE FROM 1B
Associated Press
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Juan Pablo Montoya, who won the pole in the race, hits the wall. an amazing job given the opportunity,” Johnson said after winning Sunday’s race. “I want to stay in my ride and try to win as many races as I can.” Almirola has 30 career Cup starts, including four this year. He has only one career top-10 finish. Johnson knows they’ll have a daughter. He feels the baby is already taking after his wife. “If she’s anything like her mother, she’ll be late, so I should be fine,” he said to laughter. “I might not have a place to sleep tonight, just for the record.” • ROUGH ROUSH: All the Roush Fenway Racing drivers had a rough day at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Each driver was a lap down at one point and Greg Biffle had the highest finish in 16th. Matt Kenseth was 17th, David Ragan was 20th and Carl Edwards was 25th. Roush Fenway hasn’t won a race all season and frustration is building in the Ford camp. “As a company, we’ve still got to keep working on it,” Ragan said.
and got by him.” Busch said his intention was to pass Johnson cleanly until he realized he could just push him out of his path. Johnson said he’d be surprised if Busch tried to purposely wreck him. “If that’s his intentions, that’d be the first time in nine years racing with him I’d experienced that,” Johnson said. “It definitely changes the way I race with him from that point on. I hate that he felt I wasn’t going to wreck him, because that was my goal, to wreck him.” “Strike that from the comments, he didn’t really mean that,” Johnson crew chief Chad Knaus interjected. Johnson didn’t believe there would be further retaliation. “He didn’t wreck me, so at the end of the day I guess I didn’t owe him,” Johnson said. The four-time defending champion pulled away to win his second straight race after taking the checkered flag last week on the road course at Infineon Raceway. It was a bump off the track that Johnson was most concerned about — his wife’s baby bump. Johnson dedicated the win to his pregnant wife, Chandra, who is at home and due with their first child around the time of the July 10 race at Chicagoland Speedway. Johnson used Aric Almirola as his standby driver. “Hopefully you didn’t go into labor with this victory,” he said to his wife. “Wait for me, I want to be a part of this.” Tony Stewart finished second and Busch was third. Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick rounded out the top five. “When you struggle as bad as we have, it definitely wasn’t going to hurt to go do something like that,” Stewart said. The 318-mile race was almost absent of cautions until the very end, with 201 straight laps of green flag racing.
Kasey Kahne drove up front for most of the race and led 110 laps until engine problems knocked him out. Pole sitter Juan Pablo Montoya also was in contention until he was knocked out late by a lapped car. Jeff Burton was a serious threat to win for the first time in two years until he made the decision not to pit with 17 laps left. He was the only lead lap driver not to pit and it cost him when he spun into Kyle Busch and took them both out of contention. Kurt Busch knew his car wasn’t strong enough to win and just hoped that late-race tap was enough to hold off Johnson. “We did what we could to get the lead,” he said. “I was just counting the laps and was like, man, there’s not enough laps. The thought was, those 10 points for winning would look a lot better stacked in our deck than in his chip count.” Johnson has stormed back to championship form. He has totally silenced the doubts that he was in a slump or appeared vulnerable during a five-race stretch from April to May. He has two straight wins for the second time this season and four straight top-six finishes. “Yeah, I don’t think we went anywhere,” Johnson said. “It was easy to overreact because we had some poor finishes and that was due to overagression.” Ryan Newman, Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Joey Logano and A.J. Allmendinger completed the top 10. One week after short tempers and rugged driving on the road course led to threats of payback, it was a tame race in New Hampshire. In this one, Montoya said Gordon “messed him up” but said he wasn’t angry with him. “I’m confused,” Johnson said to laughter. “For a while there, our sport was boring. Then we wrecked the crap out of them last week and now all of a sudden we have a problem because everybody is wrecking, and now this week it wasn’t as exciting.”
SPORTS DIGEST
4B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Moyer, Phillies win
SOUTH FROM 1B
Associated Press
The Major League Roundup ... PHILADELPHIA — Jamie Moyer gave up his record-breaking 506th home run but was sharp otherwise, and the Philadelphia Phillies took advantage of Toronto’s troubles to beat the Blue Jays 11-2 Sunday. Moyer only mistake was a two-run homer by Vernon Wells in the third inning. Moyer passed former Phillies Hall of Famer Robin Roberts for the most homers allowed in a career. The Blue Jays made a season-high four errors, including a pair by second baseman Aaron Hill, that set up six unearned runs. The 47-year-old Moyer (9-6), whose mound opponent wasn’t even born when he made his major league debut, gave up two runs and six hits in seven innings. He struck out seven and walked none. Moyer made his big league debut on June 16, 1986, 16 days before Toronto starter Brett Cecil (7-5) was born. Yankees 8, Dodgers 6, 10 innings LOS ANGELES — Robinson Cano hit a two-run homer in the 10th inning after the Yankees rallied with four runs in the ninth off Dodgers closer Jonathan Broxton and New York beat Los Angeles 8-6 Sunday night in a stunning ending to manager Joe Torre’s first series against his old team. Mark Teixeira led off the 10th with a single off Ramon Troncoso (1-2) and Alex Rodriguez grounded into a force play. Torre brought in left-hander George Sherrill, whose second pitch was driven into the left-field pavilion by Cano for his 15th homer. Mariano Rivera (2-1) pitched two scoreless innings to get the victory. Diamondbacks 2, Rays 1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Tampa Bay stars Evan Longoria and B.J. Upton had to be separated in a dugout dispute after Gerardo Parra hit a tworun homer in the fifth inning that helped Arizona beat the Rays. Cubs 8, White Sox 6 CHICAGO — The White Sox’s 11game winning streak came to an end when a ninth-inning rally fell short. The White Sox scored three times
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphias Jamie Moyer was in the majors before his opponent was born. in the bottom of the ninth. But Alex Rios struck out swinging against Carlos Marmol with runners at first and second to finish it. The White Sox had their longest winning string since a 12-game run in June 1961. Mets 6, Twins 0 NEW YORK — Jeff Francoeur and David Wright each hit a two-run homer in a victory over Minnesota. Ike Davis also went deep — very, very deep — and the Mets racked up 14 hits to back the fourth straight win by Jonathon Niese (5-2) since coming off the disabled list. Francoeur finished a triple shy of the cycle, emphatically ending a 3for-22 slide. Red Sox 5, Giants 1 SAN FRANCISCO — Jon Lester pitched a five-hitter, David Ortiz splashed a home run into McCovey C Lincecum (8-3), the two-time reigning NL Cy Young Award winner, was done after a season-low three innings having already thrown 79 pitches. Indians 5, Reds 3 CINCINNATI — Shin-Soo Choo homered twice off Bronson Arroyo — the second time he’s done it this season — and the Cleveland Indians ended their seven-game losing streak. The Indians traded power hitter Russell Branyan to Seattle for a pair of prospects before the game, conceding this season is a lost cause. Tigers 10, Braves 4 ATLANTA — Rookie Brennan Boesch homered and drove in three runs as Detroit chased Tommy Hanson early. Boesch hit an RBI single during a five-run fourth inning that finished Hanson (7-5). Boesch added a two-run homer, his 12th of the season and eighth in June, the next inning. Justin Verlander (9-5) gave up six hits and four runs in seven innings as the Tigers avoided being swept. Royals 10, Cardinals 3
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jason Kendall had a pair of two-run doubles and Jose Guillen stretched his hitting streak to 21 games for Kansas City. Wilson Betemit hit a three-run homer as the Royals took two of three from their I-70 rivals. Guillen had two singles, his first glanced off the glove of shortstop Brendan Ryan and drove in a run. His 21-game streak is the longest by a Royal since Rey Sanchez hit in 21 straight in 2001. Orioles 4, Nationals 3 BALTIMORE — Miguel Tejada singled in the tiebreaking run in the eighth inning, and the Orioles rallied for their season-high fourth straight win. Baltimore scored the game’s final four runs after trailing 3-0 in the fourth. David Hernandez (3-6) struck out both batters he faced and Alfredo Simon worked the ninth for his ninth save. Brewers 3, Mariners 0 MILWAUKEE — Chris Narveson pitched four-hit ball for eight innings and Rickie Weeks hit a leadoff homer, lifting the Brewers. Angels 10, Rockies 3 ANAHEIM, Calif. — Brandon Wood hit his first career grand slam and Mike Napoli added a three-run homer for the Angels. Ervin Santana (8-5) struck out seven in 6 2-3 innings for his second straight victory. Athletics 3, Pirates 2 OAKLAND, Calif. — Kurt Suzuki homered with two outs in the eighth inning after a dropped foul popup and the Athletics handed Pittsburgh its 17th straight road loss. National League Padres 4, Marlins 2 MIAMI, Fla. — Will Venable hit a tiebreaking two-run home run in the eighth inning, and the San Diego completed three-game sweep.
What will Week 2 produce? “My concern to be quite blunt, is I don’t want to happen what happened WIMBLEDON, England — If it’s to Denver and George Karl,” Jackson hard to imagine how this wildest of said. Wimbledons — does 70-68 ring a bell? Jackson has two replaced hips, a — could top itself in Week 2, consider sore knee requiring a brace under his all the characters still strutting on suit during the season and a previous tennis’ biggest stage. heart problem. Roger Federer, bidding for a He’s one of the most successful record-tying seventh championship at coaches in league history with a .705 the All England Club. Rafael Nadal, regular-season winning percentage, a seeking a second after declining to record 225 postseason victories and defend his 2008 title because of intwo more titles than Boston’s Red jury. Andy Roddick, yearning for one Auerbach. His Lakers beat the Boston Wimbledon trophy after three runCeltics in Game 7 of the NBA finals ner-up finishes. Andy Murray, well last week to claim their second straight aware that all of Britain is counting title, and Jackson sounds increasingly on him to end its 74-year wait for a interested in going out on top. ASSOCIATED PRESS homegrown men’s champion. But he told the governors that his Serena and Venus Williams are still A pair of sisters named Serena and 13 total championships — two as a Venus, aiming for a fifth all-Williams player — seems like an odd figure. alive at Wimbledon. final, and third in a row, at the grass“Which is a hard number to stop at court Grand Slam tournament; one or if you think about it,” he said to enthe other has won eight of the past 10 thusiastic applause. overcoming a six-stroke deficit and women’s championships. Justine beating Scott Verplank with a 3-foot WORLDCUP Henin and Kim Clijsters, back at par putt on the second hole of playoff. JOHANNESBURG — Carlos Tevez Wimbledon after years away and hop• ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Loren scored twice — once on a disputed ing to finally win it. Another former Roberts birdied the final hole for a 7goal — and Gonzalo Higuain added No. 1 and major champion, Maria under 65 and a one-stroke victory another as Argentina beat Mexico 3-1 over Fred Funk in the Dick’s Sporting Sharapova, striving to return to releon Sunday to advance to the World vance in the latter stages of big Goods Open. Cup quarterfinals. events. COLLEGEHOOPS Germany 4, England 1 Each of those names — indeed, ORLANDO, Fla. — Another son of BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa — each of the 32 men and women left in Michael Jordan appears headed to the singles draws — is featured on the Germany’s latest World Cup victory over England will be remembered not play for Central Florida. fourth-round schedule when action Jeffrey Jordan posted on his Twitfor any of the brilliant goals, but for resumes Monday, following Wimbleter account that he was off to UCF, the one that didn’t count. don’s traditional day of rest on the his “new school.” Thomas Mueller scored twice in middle Sunday. The 6-foot-1 point guard left Illithe second half and England had a PHILJACKSONUPDATE goal that the referee did not award in nois in May after playing two seaWHITEFISH, Mont. — Seeing Den- a 4-1 victory Sunday that put Gersons. He would have to sit out the ver Nuggets coach George Karl side- many into the World Cup quarterfi2010-11 season under NCAA transfer lined last season with cancer will inrules. nals. fluence Phil Jackson’s upcoming deciJeffrey Jordan would join his GOLF sion on whether to return as coach of younger brother, Marcus, who was a PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Cristie Kerr the Los Angeles Lakers, the legfreshman for UCF last season. cruised to a 12-stroke victory in the endary coach said at a meeting of NFL LPGA Championship on Sunday in Western governors on Sunday. DETROIT — Detroit Lions Presione of the most lopsided wins at a maJackson told reporters that he’s jor, leaving her in position to become dent Tom Lewand apologized after he waiting to hear from doctors on was arrested on suspicion of drunken whether he’s healthy enough to make the first American ranked No. 1. Kerr, the 2007 U.S. Women’s Open driving while at a charity golf tournait through another 82-game regular ment in northern Michigan. champion, closed with a 6-under 66 season. Lewand said that he is “deeply sorfor a 19-under 269 total. She led wireThe 64-year-old said he wouldn’t to-wire, opening with rounds of 68, 66 ry” for his actions and takes full rewant to leave his squad without a sponsibility. and 69. coach in the middle of the season, as Team spokesman Matt Barnhart • CROMWELL, Conn. — Bubba Karl was forced to do earlier this year confirmed Sunday that Lewand was Watson won the Travelers Champiwhile undergoing chemotherapy and arrested and released Friday night. onship for his first PGA Tour title, radiation for throat and neck cancer. Associated Press
SALISBURY POST
cluding a triple. He scored three runs, knocked in three more and drew a walk. Zubillaga went 3-for-6, scoring twice, driving in three runs and stealing a base. Record-setting Maverick Miles had an off night by his standards but still finished 2for-6 with two RBIs. Perhaps the most impressive performance was the gem on the mound turned in by South right-hander Randy Shepherd (3-1). Shepherd baffled the Mocksville offense, while going the distance What stood out most in Shepherd’s stat-line was eight strikeouts and zero walks, although he did hit three batters. South was playing its fourth game in a span of 48 hours. After falling to Rowan on Friday, South showed resilience and perseverance by bouncing back to sweep a day-night double header on Saturday, then completely dominated Mocksville on the road. Mocksville’s only run came courtesy of Shepherd’s only mistake, a fastball that left fielder Ryan Carter deposited over the wall in left field in the seventh. Not only did the top of South’s lineup produce, the the bottom of the order flexed its muscles and contributed greatly. No. 7 hitter Tyler Freeze, the catcher, was 2-for-4 with a run scored and an RBI. Batting eighth, third baseman Parker Hubbard went 2for-4 and made a couple of dazzling stops and throws from the hot corner. Left fielder and No. 9 batter Tripp Cross also went 2for-4 and scored twice. South is definitely dangerous enough when its big
MILES
SHEPHERD
hitters Miles, Shepherd and Gunnar Hogan are blasting homers over the walls, but when everyone contributes as they did last night and the pitching supports the bats, this South squad is super scary. South won’t return home, where it hasn’t lost, until the postseason starts on Thursday. Having one of the best seasons in its history, South will open a best-of-three series against an opponent to be determined. South plays Statesville at South Iredell tonight and makes the trip to Wilkes County on Tuesday. South (184, 13-3) looks to finish the regular season in style and still could finish first or tied for first. Mooresville (14-3) concludes its regular season against Concord tonight, while Rowan (14-4) finished up on Sunday.
S. Rowan 13, Mocksville 1 SOUTH ROWAN ab r h bi Hstn cf 5 3 3 3 Zblga 2b 6 2 3 3 Miles rf 6 0 2 2 Brdn 1b 5 0 2 1 Bsngr dh 5 2 2 0 Hogan ss 4 2 1 0 Freeze c 4 1 2 1 Hbbrd 3b 4 1 2 0 Cross lf 4 2 2 1 Totals 43 13 19 11
MOCKSVILLE ab r Ptrsn 2b 3 0 Jrdn ss 3 0 Crtnr 1b 4 0 Crtr lf 4 1 Long cf 4 0 Pttrsn rf 4 0 Brwll 3b 4 0 Byrly c 1 0 Hwrd p 3 0 Totals 30 1
h 1 2 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 8
bi 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
S. Rowan 110 210 25 — 13 Mocksville 000 000 10 — 1 E — Byerly, Jordan 2, Burwell. DP — South 1. LOB — Mocksville 10, South 12. 2B — Freeze, Jordan. 3B----- Houston. HR — Carter. SB — Zubillaga. CS —Hogan. S---- Bearden, Byerly. IP H R ER BB K S. Rowan Shpherd W,3-1 8 8 1 1 0 8 Mocksville Howard L 6 10 6 6 3 5 Cartner 2 9 7 6 3 2 WP — Cartner. HBP — by Shepherd (Peterson, Byerly, Jordan).
ROWAN FROM 1B Division play, good for sixth place. Rowan County’s 14-4 record currently sits third, but the team’s final playoff seeding could change as both Mooresville and South Rowan, the teams ahead, have games to play. For six innings, neither team could get much off the opposing pitcher. Rowan’s Zach Simpson conceded two runs on seven hits in his sixinning start, while Beeker gave up four runs through seven innings, but only one earned. Post 8 pulled one run back in the bottom of the seventh when Kelly Secrest singled home Ethan Conrad, making the game 4-3, but Beeker had 118 pitches on the odometer entering the top of the eighth. After getting the first two batters, Zach Smith and Noah Holmes singled, with Holmes moving to second on a passed SMITH ball. The next batter was Thomas, whose bomb offered no doubts to those in attendance. “We had runners on second and third and we had a full count on their DH, we threw him a fastball and he ended up hitting it into the trees,” Lexington-Davidson coach Chris Sotriffer said. “That’s a big momentum buster there.” It was a difficult conclusion for Beeker, who gave up nine hits in his first seven innings. “It was getting late, his pitch count had gotten up,” Rowan County coach Jim Gantt said. “We had seen him a couple times and we got a couple pitches to hit, but he was pretty sharp early. He did a good job.” Rowan County added four more on five hits in the ninth off Post 8 reliever Joe Tippett, plating 11 batters. Smith had a two-RBI single, Thomas notched a run-scoring fielder’s choice and Will Sapp capped the scoring with an RBI base hit. Lexington-Davidson got an RBI double from Conrad in the eighth, but Rowan’s Will Johnson closed the door in the ninth. Though Thomas’ home run proved the fatal blow, Gantt was full of praise for his
TROUTMAN
SIMPSON
starter Simpson. “That’s one of the better games he’s thrown” Gantt said. “He’s been getting better each time this summer, and he had a little bit better breaking ball tonight.” The complexion of the game might have been different, Sotriffer said, had the hosts not allowed three unearned runs early, as Preston Troutman tallied two RBIs and Smith added another. For the game, Post 8 committed six errors to Rowan County’s two, both in the first inning. “We spotted them some runs,” Sotriffer said. “Before the eighth inning, if you take those runs off the board it’s a totally different ballgame. … Beek pitched his butt off. We didn’t exactly make the plays behind him.” Should the standings hold, the teams could meet in the playoffs. Gantt said his team’s playoffs lie with starting pitching, while Sotriffer said he hopes to see his bats resurrected. “This team is very talented. As slim in numbers as we are, we’ve got very good talent,” Sotriffer said. “Our pitching is limited, but the ones we got are very quality pitchers. If we get back to the way we’ve been swinging in the midseason of the year, we can put runs on the board against anybody. It’s been done.”
Rowan 12, Lexington 4 ROWAN
ab r Trtmn ss 6 1 ZSmth rf 5 2 Hlmes 3b 5 2 Thoms dh 6 1 Sapp cf 6 1 Austin 1b 6 1 Untz 2b 6 2 Barker c 5 1 Morris lf 4 1 Totals 49 12
h bi 3 2 2 3 3 0 2 4 1 1 2 1 3 1 1 0 1 0 18 12
LEXINGTON ab Jarvis lf 5 Scrst cf 5 Tptt 2b 2 Brkhrt 1b 5 Rdmnd c 5 BSmth 3b4 Shprd ss 4 Cnrad dh 4 Goss rf 3 Totals 37
r 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4
h bi 1 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 12 4
Rowan 020 100 144 — 12 Lexington 001 100 110 — 4 E — Untz, Morris, Burkhart, Shepherd, Tippett 2, Redmond, Beeker. DP — Rowan 2. LOB — Rowan 14, Lexington 9. 2B — Austin, BSmith, Conrad. HR — Thomas (3). S — Morris, Goss. SF — Tippett. IP H Rowan Smpsn W, 3-2 6 7 Litaker 1 2 Johnson 2 2 Lexington Beeker 72⁄3 9 Tippett 12⁄3 6 PB — Barker, Redmond
R
ER
BB
K
2 1 1
2 1 1
1 1 1
5 0 3
7 5 2.
4 4
1 1
7 3
CLASSIFIED
SALISBURY POST
Employment
Employment
Employment Healthcare
Driver
Education
Merle Norman of Kannapolis is seeking an experienced Cosmetologist for booth rental. 704-933-0216
Flatbed CDL/A. $2,000 Sign On Bonus. Great pay and benefits! 6 months Experience Required. Lease Purchase Available. No Felonies. 800-441-4271, x NC100
DRIVER
Driver
CDL-A. We Have more Miles. Just Ask Our Drivers. Western Express Flatbed. Stay rolling and earn Big $$. Limited tarping. Class-A CDL, TWIC Card and Good Driving Record a must. 866-863-4117.
WTI TRANSPORTFlatbed Drivers Hauling High Paying Freight on Percentage Pay. Make more in less miles, Hometime 93% Weekends...ask us how we do it! 800828-6452. www.wtitransport.com
Fayetteville Technical Community College is now accepting proposals: Criminal Justice Curriculum Consultant (DOD Funded Grant) The primary purpose of this position is to develop exportable training packages to be used worldwide. Must have knowledge of US defense policy and have experience with online instruction and curriculum development. A completed packet including a cover letter, resume or portfolio, and copies of college transcripts, must be received in the HR Office to be considered. For further information please visit our website or call (910) 6788225. FTCC HR Office, PO Box 35236,Fayetteville, NC 28303. Phone: (910) 678-8378 Fax: (910) 678-0029. Internet: http://www.faytechcc.edu -EOE
Employment Cosmetologist
DRIVER
Drivers
CDL/A Now Hiring. Teams, Solos, Owner Operators. Referral Bonus is Back! Great Pay, Miles & Benefits. CDL/A with 1yr. OTR required. 800-9422104 ext. 238 or 243. www.totalms.com
Driver needed for tractor trailer frameless dump. Clean Class A CDL. Apply in person: Peeples Bark & Stone, 3513 Mooresville Rd, Salisbury Drivers
Drivers Wanted Full or part time. Req: Class A CDL, clean MVR, min. 25 yrs old w/3 yrs exp. Benefits: Pd health & dental ins., 401(k) w/match, pd holidays, vac., & qtrly. bonus. New equip. Call 704630-1160 Drivers
NEED CDL DRIVERS A or B with 2 years recent commercial experience to transfer motor homes, straight trucks, tractors and buses. www.mamotransportation.com 1800-501-3783.
Is Your House To SMALL For Your Family? Is Your House Too BIG For Just You? MAKE THE RIGHT MOVE! Houses for Sale & Rent or Apartments It’s All HERE in the
Drivers
OTR drivers
$250 Sign On Bonus. CDL-A and 3 yrs exp req'd. Clean MVR. Apply in person: Trinity Transport, 317 Green Needles Rd, Lexington. 336-956-6200
Drivers & Transportation
Sales
CNA's NEEDED Primary Health Concepts, Jake Alexander Blvd., 704-637-9461
Make Your Ad Pop!
Color backgrounds as low as $5 extra* 704-797-4220 *some restrictions apply
Government
STATE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION seeking bi-lingual applicants. Fluent in reading, writing, speaking & listening to both English & Spanish required. SBI Agent application packet not required, only State Application Form PD-107. Applications accepted 6/02-7/13/10. Additional information & PD107 at http://www.ncdoj.gov.
Drivers & Transportation
Drivers
DRIVERS NEEDED Due to increases in business Swing Transport is now hiring drivers for its Salisbury NC Location. Benefits include: ! Competitive pay ! Health, Life, Dental and Vision Plan ! Paid Vacation ! Paid Holidays ! 401k/Profit Sharing Plan ! No Touch Freight ! No Haz-Mat
SR. MARKET SALES Seeking outside / inhome sales rep for insurance/estate planning. We provide direct mail leads, advanced training and ongoing support. $1,650 - $2,550 weekly commission potential. 866-769-7964
Drivers
DRIVERS NEEDED 2 yrs. CDL-A experience. Great earning potential. Some runs home daily. Some layover runs. Low cost major medical. 401K and many other benefits. Apply in person at Salem Carriers, Inc., 191 Park Plaza Dr., Winston Salem, NC 27105 or online at www.salemcarriers.com. Call 1-800-709-2536 Customer Service
RUSHCO MARKETS IS
NOW HIRING ! CUSTOMER SERVICE CASHIERS Openings in: Salisbury, Kannapolis & Mooresville
WE OFFER: *Excellent Starting Pay *Insurance Benefits *Paid Vacation
Government
PART-TIME JOB with FULL-TIME BENEFITS. You can receive cash bonus, monthly pay check, job training, money for technical training or college, travel, health benefits, retirement, and much, much more! Call now and learn how the National Guard can benefit you and your family! 1-800-GO-GUARD.
Employment
Requirements: Valid driver's license A Nationwide Criminal Record Background check
To apply, fax resume to: 704-636-7772 or call: 704-633-3211 or 704-633-8233 ext. 20 to schedule an interview Accounting
Accounting Clerk part-time. Reports to Accounting/HR Mgr needed for family owned business located between Salisbury and Mooresville. Duties include full cycle Accts Payable, heavy duties in Accts Receivable, general assistance to the Accounting/HR Mgr as well as learning other office jobs in order to fill in when necessary. 20-30 hrs/week M-F 9:30am- 3:30pm. Requirements: 2+ yrs accounting experience; strong problem-solving skills; stable work history; excellent people & communication skills; professional appearance, phone voice and attitude. $12 to $15 an hour based on experience. Submit resume w/cover letter in Word or pdf format to ncfamilybusiness@gmail.com Marketing
Visitor Services Coordinator Part-time position as Visitor Services Coordinator for the Rowan County Tourism Development Authority. Responsible for four key areas: Visitor Services, Marketing Support & Public Relations, Trolley Coordination, and General Administrative Support. For more information: VisitSalisburyNC.com. Education & Experience: Bachelor's degree (preferred by not required) and a minimum of three years experience in the hospitality industry preferred. Working nights, weekends and travel may be required. Salary Range: $11/hr (20-25 hours per week) Send resume and salary history to Rowan County Tourism Development Authority, 204 E Innes Street, Ste. 120, Salisbury, NC 28144 by July 9, 2010.
You can drive a truck and have a home life We operate primarily in MD, VA, NC, SC, GA, TN and AL. Two years tractor-trailer experience required. Must be DOT qualified and have a Safe Driving Record.
Nuclear Power Trainees
Advertising Sales Consultant The Salisbury Post, Rowan County’s largest and oldest media company, has a full time opportunity for multi-media sales professional to join our team as an Advertising Sales Consultant. This position requires selling print and online advertising to local businesses. The Advertising Sales Consultant will sell print advertising in the Salisbury Post and online banners and buttons on salisburypost.com and marketplaceminer.com. We are looking for a sales professional who will call on advertisers in their place of business and produce presentations designed to convince advertisers of the value of the Salisbury Post, salisburypost.com and other Post products. The Advertising Sales Consultant will be responsible for achieving and increasing advertising sales revenue with new and existing accounts. Advertising Consultants must establish, develop and maintain a professional relationship with advertisers in the assigned area and maintain contact with key decision makers with companies doing business with the Post. Interested candidates must be highly motivated to sell, be a self-starter and possess excellent communications skills. The candidate must be proficient in Micro-soft word, Excel and PowerPoint. Experience in face to face selling, knowledge of presentation techniques and closing skills are necessary. Candidates must have access to reliable transportation, required auto insurance coverage and a good driving record. Mileage and phone allowances apply. Company benefits include vacation, sick pay and 401-k savings plan. The Salisbury Post is a non-smoking, drug free workplace.
C47106
Apply to cratliff@salisburypost.com
Boocoo Auction Items
Boocoo Auction Items
Boocoo Auction Items
Boocoo Auction Items
1900's Art Nouveau Ink Well. Listing #2130. Buy Now $25. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Hull Woodland Planter. Listing #2124. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1149. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Red Leather Ninewest Purse. Listing #2457. Buy Now $16. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
9-11-01 Memorial Knife Stainless Steel. Listing #936. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Insight Meditation, Step by Step Guide #951. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1148. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Salt and Pepper Shaker Set. Listing #2091. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Necklace & Bracelet. Listing #2489. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
School of Fish, Metal Sculpture Wall Hanging. Listing #941. Buy Now $25. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
All Boocoo Auction Items are subject to prior sale and can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
J Khaki green girls top. Listing #2113. Buy Now for $1.50. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
American Brilliant Cut Glass, Listing #2150. Buy now $25. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Jiffy Kodak Camera. Listing #2135. Buy Now $35. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
ATV – 2005 Honda Foreman. Buy Now $5500. Listing #2161. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
John Wayne “The Cowboy” Series Collectible Knife. Listing #922. Buy Now $45. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
BCBG Peep Toe Wedge. Listing #2111. Buy Now for $37. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com BCBG Peep Toe Wedge. Listing #2112. Buy Now for $55. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Beanie Baby Dogs. Buy Now $10. Listing #2002. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Black Coach Briefcase. Listing #2140. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Blue Stone Bracelet. Listing #2491. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Caribbean Joe Denim Skirt 6x. Listing #2115. Buy Now for $2.50. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Cell Phones – set of four, Listing #2434. Buy now $25.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Coach Purse. Listing #2110. Buy Now for $55. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Collection of Six books on the economy. Listing #2462. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Cookbooks. Listing #2436. Buy Now for $17.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Crib Bedding Set . Listing #2108. Buy Now for $37.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Elliptical Trainer, hardly used, exercise machine. Listing #939. Buy Now $400. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Figurines – Boy Sitting on Dog and Animals by a Water Well. Listing #2090. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Junior Johnson. Listing #2435. Buy Now for $35.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Knife Bear & Son Cutlery, Amarillo Bone Mini 3 ½” . Listing #929. Buy Now $40. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Like New HP Presario CQ50-139WM. Listing #2990. Buy Now $300. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Marxkafe and Ashley Shoes. Listing #2470. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com McCoy USA – 2 PC. Set of Vases. Listing #2089. Buy Now $27. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com McDonald's Ty Beanie Babies. Listing #1996. Buy Now $12.00. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
No. 2c Autographic Kodak Jr. w/Case. Listing #2137. Buy Now $20. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Northside Cold Weather boots. Listing #2468. Buy Now $16. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Paint Ball Gun. Listing #2142. Buy Now $200. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Pillow Shams by Croscill. Listing #2486. Buy Now $5. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2082. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Taco Serving Tray. Listing #2475. Buy Now $8. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2083. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Two Books, Common Diseases & Drugs. Listing #2461. Buy Now $2. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2085. Buy Now $12. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2086. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2117. Buy Now $12. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Mikasa Fine China. Listing #2092. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2123. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1151. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Star Trek Set of Books & Collectibles, Listing #2151. Buy now $200. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Student Violin ½ Size. Listing #2105. Buy Now for $55. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Dolls. Listing #2120. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1152. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Specialized Expedition Men's Bicycle. Listing #657. Buy Now $150. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Doll. Listing #2080. Buy Now $12. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Microwave Cornpopper. Listing #2474. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Motorola Adventure V750 cell phone, Listing #1153. Buy now $25.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Small Antique Inwell KKA.PRIV. Listing #2132. Buy Now $20. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Two Coffee Table Books – Gnomes & Faeries. Listing #2464. Buy Now $30. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Ty Beanie Babies Rabbits. Buy Now $12. Listing #1998. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Ty Beanie Baby Bears. Listing #2124. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Verizon Boulder Cell phone, Listing #1144, Buy Now $35.00. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann & Andy Set. Listing #2081. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Verizon Boulder Cell Phone, Listing #1398, Buy Now $35. See at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Raggedy Ann Doll. Listing #2087. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
VHS Assortment of 4 Movies. Listing #2467. Buy Now $4.50. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Ray Ban Vintage Cats Sunglasses. Listing #940. Buy Now $45. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Vintage Broach. Listing #2490. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
FloTV – Brand New. Listing #2493. Buy Now $125. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com Four – 35mm Cameras – Vivatar, Canon & Kodak. Listing #2471. Buy Now $20. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
• Pay your subscription online: salisburypost.com/renew
Framed – Count Your Blessings. Listing #2482. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
• Place a vacation hold: salisburypost.com/subscription
Framed rubbing of Sheep. Listing #2141. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
• Send any comments: salisburypost.com/subscription
Hand Loomed Wool Purse. Listing #2136. Buy Now $7. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
C44624
$10 to start. Earn 40%. 704-637-3440 or 704278-2399 Military
Please Call 704-633-3567
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 5B
H.S. Grads - US Navy has immediate openings. Nuclear Power Trainees: B average in science and math. Special OPS: excellent physical condition. Career opportunity, will train, relocation required, no medical or legal issues. Good pay, full benefits, money for college. Call Mon-Fri, 800-6627419 for local interview. Sales
Parts Counter Salesperson w/GM and/or Reynolds experience needed immediately. Pay will be determined by experience. Apply to David Harrington. LARRY KING CHEVROLET KANNAPOLIS, NC 704-933-1104
Antiques & Collectibles Carnival Glass-6 Berry Bowels 5" Color-Marigold $30.00 704-938-4342 Cut outs. Two Dale Earnhardt stand up Hersheys Legends cardboard lifesize cutouts. One is opened and one never out of box. $75.00 obo. 704-305-0355, 704305-2321 Old toys made in the 1950's, $350. Please call 980-234-5984 for more information. Spuds Mackenzie 1988 Bud Light dog. Light. Good condition. $125 obo. 704-633-1746
Baby Items White plain crib only used 1 time in excellent condition. Paid $200.00 will sell for $75.00. Little girls clothes sizes 0-24 months like new. Different Prices. 704-3052321 or 704-305-0355
Boocoo Auction Items “You're an Angel” Mirror. Listing #2143. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com 7 ½ inch reel tapeGershwin. Listing #2466. Buy Now $10. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Birds Free Cockatiels. Two, to good home only. No calls before 4pm. 980-2346507 No calls after 9pm
Cats
Dogs
Free kittens. Very sweet. Approx. 9 weeks. Black & white, grey. Please call 919-338-2424
Free dog to good home. Mixed breed, male, about 1 yr old, no shots. For more info call 704-279-8272
Free Persian cat to good home, female, white, blue eyes, has to be only cat. No calls before 4pm. No calls after 9pm 980-2346507
Free dog. To good home only. Female Pit Bull/Wolf Terrier mix. Housebroken, 2yrs. Old, inside dog, loves to ride. Very playful. Named Suzy. Please call 336-284-5038
Free cat, female. Spayed. Indoor or outdoor. Loves kids & dogs. Great hunter! 704-245-1386
Free playful, loving kitten to good home. Female black & tan in color. Will give litter box, litter, food & toys with her. Please call Heather @704-6331624 for information.
Free kitten. Beautiful & affectionate. 9 weeks old. Solid black female. Please call 980-234-7759
Dogs
Cats
Free Kitten. Tabby & white. Male, approx. 10 weeks old. Rescued from local parking lot. 704636-0619
AKC Basset Hound Puppies
Free kittens to good home only. Will pay to have them spayed or neutered. 704-637-1101 Free kittens. Beautiful, one black & one white w/tabby colors. Both male. Inside only. Very sweet. Please call 704636-0619
Puppies For Sale. Black Labrador. Born: 5/15/10. AKC registered. Parents onsite. Excellent Blood lines. 3 males, 2 females left, ready for homes after July 4th. $350. Call Caleb to see the pups. 704-856-8292
Dogs
Puppies, Labrador. AKC registered. Males & shots, females. 1st wormed. Parents on site. Please call 336-406-6893
Puppies. AKC Labrador Retriever. Chocolate and black, ready July 5. Both parents working bird hunters and family pets. Dewclaws removed and first shots. $450. 704-201-5875
Want to attract attention?
1 male tri-color, 1st shot and wormed, parents on site. $300 CASH ONLY! Call Esther, 704-546-3410
Get Bigger Type!
Puppies. German Shepherd, full blooded, mother on site, 7 weeks old, $150 each. 704-798-4607
CLASSIFIED
6B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 Boocoo Auction Items
Medical Equipment
Misc For Sale
Zebra Clutch – Green & Tan. Listing #2459. Buy Now $15. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Walker with hand brakes, seat and brace. Used but in good condition. $25. Call before 5pm. 704-232-3636
Phone. Samsung Verizon SCH-A870 camera flip phone with flash. Like new call. $45. Scottie 704-637-2322
Misc. Equipment & Supplies
Pool table for children with balls and easy storage. $50. 704-642-7155
Zeiss Ikon Camera 1934. Listing #2134. Buy Now $30. Can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Computers & Software Computer Scanner (Visonaire). Used once. $50.00. 704-938-4342, Kannapolis
Consignment Growing Pains Family Consignments Call (704)638-0870 115 W. Innes Street
Hospital Bed, electric. Like New. $99; 4 Like New 16” Tires, $125. 704-245-4398
Misc For Sale ANDERSON'S SEW & SO, Husqvarna, Viking Sewing Machines. Patterns, Notions, Fabrics. 10104 Old Beatty Ford Rd., Rockwell. 704-279-3647 BUILDING SALE! "Rock Bottom Prices!" Final Week. 25X30 $4577. 30X40 $7140. 32X60 $11,950. 35X60 $13,990. 40X70 $14,650. 40X100 $24,900. 46X140 $37,600. Others. Ends optional. Pioneer Manufacturers Direct. 1-800-668-5422.
Electronics CB Radio with Weather Channel and Antenna. $55. Please Call 704-213-6201 Computer monitor, brand new 15 inch LCD. Paid $150 - Sell for $80. Call Kip @ 704-433-2499 DVD and VHS Player, Sansui. $20; Oreck XL Air Purifier, $95 704-213-6201
Farm Equipment & Supplies Farm Equipment, new & used. McDaniel Auction Co. 704-278-0726 or 704798-9259. NCAL 48, NCFL 8620. Your authorized farm equipment dealer.
Food & Produce Blackberries for Sale
$3.50 per Quart $12.00 per Gallon
704-636-2124 Gold Hill Area
Blackberries for Sale Washed and ready for the freezer, $4 per quart. Call 704-633-3935
Furniture & Appliances Air Conditioners, Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Frig. $65 & up. Used TV & Appliance Center Service after the sale. 704-279-6500 Bedroom set. 1940's Blonde 6 Piece - 2 Twin Beds, Nightstand, Tall Dresser, Long Dresser w/mirror. Very Sturdy. $350 or Best Offer. Call Kip @ 704-433-2499 Bedroom suite, new 5 piece. All for $297.97. Hometown Furniture, 322 S. Main St. 704-633-7777 Bedroom suite, white, queen/full bed, nightstand, chest of drawers, dresser w/hutch. $200. Pine dresser w/mirror hutch. $100. Antique desk. $200. 336-998-2850 Computer Desk, Large; Bunk Bed with Bunkies. $40 Each. Please Call. 704-239-5784 Dining Set. 4 Piece 1950's Cherry Wood Dining Set (Buffet, Hutch, China Case, Table plus 4 chairs). Needs some repair/refinishing. $500 or best offer. Call Kip @ 704-433-2499
Building, 10' x 10' by Outback Buildings in Lexington. A frame, trim is white, color is pearl. Roof is Aspen Grey. 2 vents. $2,400. 704-8573220 or 980-297-5382
Get Cooking
Range. Self cleaning, smooth top, white, Whirlpool, excellent condition, 2000 model. $285. 704-636-4580 Mattress Overstock: Sets start at T-$119, F-$149, Q-$159, K-$239. Warranties, delivery option. 704-677-6643
SOLD
I was able to sell my bedroom and couch to a reader who saw my ad in the Post! B.N., Salisbury
SOLD SOLD
We sold all of our puppies in 2 weeks! Thanks Salisbury Post! ~ T.N., Salisbury
SOLD
Table with 6 Chairs; Couch and Chair; Entertainment Center. $40 Each. 704-239-5784
Games and Toys Foosball Table, Harvard. Multi-game. $125. Please Call 704-636-6767
Lawn and Garden Holshouser Cycle Shop Lawn mower repairs and trimmer sharpening. Pick up & delivery. (704)637-2856 Want to buy your low priced, unused or fixable lawn mowers & tillers. Also, I do repairs. 704-431-4837
STEEL, Channel, Angle, Flat Bars, Pipe Orders Cut to Length. Mobile Home Truss- $6 ea.; Vinyl floor covering- $3.85 yd.; Carpet- $5.75 yd.; Masonite Siding 4x8- $15.50. RECYCLING, Top prices paid for Aluminum cans, Copper, Brass, Radiators, Aluminum. Davis Enterprises Inc. 7585 Sherrills Ford Rd. Salisbury, NC 28147 704-636-9821 Stop Smoking Cigarettes No Patches, No Gum, No Pills With Hypnosis It's Easy! Also Weight Control. 704-933-1982
Swingset. 12'x6' metal swingset w/2 swings, monkey bar, see- saw and 5ft plastic slide w/metal ladder. $60. Call Scott 704-637-2322 Trailer, 4x8, 14” Tires with Spare. $350. Please Call 704-425-9838
GOING ON VACATION? Send Us Photos Of You with your Salisbury Post to: famous@salisburypost.com
Free Stuff
Let us know! We will run your ad with a photo for 15 days in print and online. Cost is just $30. Call the Salisbury Post Classified Department at 704-797-4220 or email classads@salisburypost.com !
Daylilies, select varieties. 30 – 3 gallon pots. $10 each. Please call 704798-2953 for more info. DIRECTV FREE Standard Installation! Free Showtime & Starz (3 mo)! Free HD/DVR upgrade! Ends 7/14/10. New Customers Only, Qual. Pkgs. From $29.99/mo. DirectStarTV, 1-888-634-6459 FREE HD FOR LIFE! Only on DISH Network! Lowest Price in America! $24.99/mo for over 120 channels! $500 Bonus! 1888-679-4649 Handbag, Betty Boop, medium size, new. $25. Call before 5pm. 704-232-3636
Music Sales & Service Lowery organ for sale. Sounds and plays good. tape recorder, tape players, and differnt sounds.$100 obo. 704-305-2321, 704-3050355
Free male dog to good home, mixed breed. 1-1/2 to 2 yrs old. 704-6337060 after 5 pm please
Good condition
Computer Station, nice Basset Cherrywood, $75 OBO call 704-633-1341 or 704-798-1341 if interested
Heaters, electric. Calendator is a digital electric heater with remote. $30. Other is small ceramic heater, $15 obo. 704-633-1746 Hubcaps, 13”, fits all cars and vans, new in box. $40. Call before 5pm. 704-232-3636 Kannapolis-NASCAR books 3 Hardcover, 1 Soft cover NASCAR FOR DUMMIES. All $25 704-938-4342
Let's cook!
Char-Broil Gas Grill. Dual burner. 22x12 cooking surface. Warming rack. Piezo igniter. Very little use. No tank. $50. 704638-6470.
Organ. Vintage Hammond Organ. Two key boards, great sound $550. Good for small church or beginner. 704603-4171
Sporting Goods ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Bike. Like new 18 speed fs grand teton men's bike $60. Call 704-209-1680 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Mans and Ladies Cruiser Bikes 26". Excellent Condition. $60 & $50. 704938-4342
Want to Buy Merchandise Lumber. 2x3x16 $1.50; 2x3 stud $1; 2x6x8 $3.25; 2x6x15 $5; 14' double wide trusses $5; single wide trusses $8; floor trusses $5. All new! Please call 704-2020326
METAL: Angle, Channel, Pipe, Sheet & Plate Shear Fabrication & Welding FAB DESIGNS 2231 Old Wilkesboro Rd Open Mon-Fri 7-3:30 704-636-2349 MYRTLE BEACH Vacation Ownership at the Yachtsman Resort in Myrtle Beach. 2br/2ba Ocean front sleeps 8 Located at Pier 14 on the Beach on Ocean Blvd. Have lots of pictures can email. Myrtle Beach is one of the best 10 Beaches in the United States. Call for details. 704-212-7313 Office desk, metal. New. $50. New adult potty chair, $30. Please call 336-655-5034
Show off your stuff!
AA Antiques. Buying anything old, scrap gold & silver. Will help with your estate or yard sale. 704-433-1951.
AIRLINES ARE HIRINGTrain for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 877-300-9494.
Lost & Found Found Dog, Chihuahua on Newsome Road. Call to identify. 704-637-0227
Watches – and scrap gold jewelry. 704-636-9277 or cell 704-239-9298
Business Opportunities AVON - Buy or Sell Call Lisa 1-800-258-1815 or Tony 1-877-289-4437 thebennetts1@comcast.net
J.Y. Monk Real Estate School-Get licensed fast, Charlotte/Concord courses. $399 tuition fee. Free Brochure. 800-849-0932
With our
Send us a photo and description we'll advertise it in the paper for 15 days, and online for 30 days for only
30*!
$
Call today about our Private Party Special!
704-797-4220
*some restrictions apply
Free Stuff
Free dog. 7 year old Collie mix, male. Left by his owners at the clinic 3 years ago, Retired Blood Donor Dog needs a Forever Home now! Neutered, shots, looking for a family!704-855-7468
BUYER BEWARE The Salisbury Post Classified Advertising staff monitors all ad submissions for honesty and integrity. However, some fraudulent ads are not detectable. Please protect yourself by checking the validity of any offer before you invest money in a business opportunity, job offer or purchase.
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
New Home
Salisbury. Forest Creek. 3 Bedroom, 1.5 bath. New home priced at only $98,900. R48764 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 PM
Found young cat June 23 in Concordia Church Rd area, gray tabby, has collar. Call to identify. 704-433-6592
Lost
Longhair Mini Dachshund. Red/white Piebald. Mocksville Area. REWARD! 336-480-8092
Lost Boston Terrier named Jasper. Black and white, 2 yrs old. Sherrills Ford Rd area. Please Call 704-638-0463
Lost Small Dog
West End area - West Monroe St. - White w/ brown markings - close cut Shih-Tzu - has sister (litermate) and puppy who are depressed while waiting for her return. Call 9105275572 or 704968-2201 - REWARD
REWARD
Lost Dog. Siberian Huskey, Woodleaf/ Foster Rd & S. River areas, Saturday a.m., June 19. Brown & white, answers to Twilight, has been spayed. 704-450-4281
5.64 ac., 4BR, 4BA, 3100 SqFt. Timothy Livengood, Mid Carolina Real Estate, LLC. (704) 202-1807
Notices HOST FAMILIES for Foreign Exchange Students, ages 15-18 & have own spending money & insurance. Call Now for students arriving in August! Great life experience. 1-800SIBLING. www.aise.com
Faith. 1145 Long Creek. 3 Beds, 2 Baths, 2 Bonus Rooms. Master on main, Hardwood and ceramic tile floors. Storage everywhere. $199,900. Kerry, Key Real Estate 704-857-0539. Directions: Faith Rd to L on Rainey. R into Shady Creek.
OPEN HOUSE SAT. 12NOON-2PM 3 BR, 1½ BA, 1100 sq. ft., new carpet, 24x36 double garage with attic storage & fan. Includes custom plantation blinds throughout. Large backyard perfect for garden, pool or fun and games! Low taxes! Two wells. Reduced to $121,000!
Apartments & Condos for Sale Salisbury
Open House Saturday 2-4pm
www.applehouserealty.com
BANK SPECIAL!
3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, large lot! Make offer! Gracious Living Realty. www.graciousliving.org. email: home4you@rcn.com. 800-749-5263. Bank says, "Sell, Sell, Sell!" BANK SPECIAL! 3BR, 2BA, large lot! Make offer! Gracious Living Realty. www.graciousliving.org. email: home4you@rcn.com. 800-749-5263. Bank says, "Sell, Sell, Sell!"
3 BR. 2 BA. Stack stone fireplace, REAL HARDWOODS, ceramic and carpet, maple cabinets, GRANITE countertops, chair railing galore, split bedrooms for privacy, Enormous back deck, Completion date 07/30/2010 STILL MAY PICK COLORS!! Monica Poole 704.245.4628 B&R Realty East Rowan
For Sale, Lease or Poss. Rent to Own!
Salisbury, 317 Martin Luther King Ave. N. 3-4 BR. Completely remodeled home in Hist. Dist. Sale price $109,900. Lease $850/ mo. or rent to own with min. $5,000 down. $800/mo. $100 toward purchase price. Call 704-633-3584
FORECLOSURE
Gorgeous Historic Condo in the Heart of Salisbury's Premier Historic District. Must see to believe! 319 West Horah St., Fairmont Terrace. 704-202-0091. MLS#929946
Home Builders Spencer C. Lane Construction-Quality Home Builder Custom & Spec Homes 704-633-4005
Homes for Sale
1123 Edgedale Drive. 3 BR, 1 BA brick home. New HVAC. Energy Saving Windows. Fenced Back Yard. 2 Carports. REALTORS WELCOME. $94,900. 704-202-0505
Salisbury. Immaculate home, private setting, 2 BR, great room, D/R, screened rear porch & deck overlook pond. 1065 Rock Pond Rd. $160,000 Kennedy Realty 704-640-0413 Directions: Faith Rd. (through Town of Faith), Right on Castor Rd, right on Big Rock Rd, left on Rock Pond Rd.
Bank Foreclosures & Distress Sales. These homes need work! For a FREE list:
If you used Type 2 Diabetes Drug AVANDIA and suffered a stroke or heart attack, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles Johnson, 1-800-535-5727. MONEY FOR SCHOOLExciting career fields with US Navy. High demand for nuclear specialists and SEALS. Paid training, excellent benefits and even money for college. HS grads, 1734, relocation required. Call Mon-Fri 800-6627419 for local interview.
Home Warranty
Call Cathy Griffin at 704-213-2464
602 Lockshire Lane, Woodleaf, all brick, 3BR / 2BA, Lg great room w/fireplace & solid wood floors, split BR plan, Lg Mstr BR w/walk-in closest & lg bath, lg wrap around porch, screened in breezeway & deck. 10 x 20 vinyl bldg., private bk yd. Lot size .62 acs. $3500 towards closing costs for pre-qualified buyers only. $149,900. MOVE IN READY! 704-278-9779
CHINA GROVE This beautiful neutered cat belongs to someone. He is used to the indoors and needs to find his home again. Very loving, long haired, white, male. I've taken him for his shots and am searching for his owner. Found in Wellington Hills area. Call 704-647-0104 8am-9pm.
4BR/3BA in Timber Run. Approx. 4,000 SF brick home in established neighborhood, oversized 2 car garage, bonus room, walk-in closet in master BR, beautiful hardwood floors, 2 gas log fireplaces, Rinnai tankless water heater, generator, fenced in back yard, finished walk-out basement, storage area & workshop. E. Rowan Schools. Mins. away from I-85 & shopping $369,000. Call Tina at 980-234-2881 Salisbury
3 BR, 2 BA. All appliances stay. Free standing gas log fireplace in master bedroom. Garden tub in masterbath. 24X30 garage with lean to. Out building with attached play house. Swingset stays. R50545A $89,900 Lesa Prince (704) 796-1811 B&R Realty
Homes for Sale
Granite Quarry
Found dog. Female Bassett Hound. China Grove/Landis area. Call to identify 704-647-2611
All Coin Collections Silver, gold & copper. Will buy foreign & scrap gold. 704-636-8123 Timber wanted - Pine or hardwood. 5 acres or more select or clear cut. Shaver Wood Products, Inc. Call 704-278-9291.
Homes for Sale
Instruction
Make some music!
Casio LK-90TV Keyboard, 61 lighted touchsensitive keys, 32-note polyphony, 264 PCM tones, 120 rhythm patterns. 100-tune song bank, built-in speakers. headphone output, too many features to list. $100, 704-633-0060.
113 Prestwick Court in Corbin Hills
Free dogs. AKC shetland sheepdog, male, 4 years old. AKC smooth collie, male, 4 years old. Call for more info. 704-637-6639
Lost
Dishwasher, Kenmore. White front. $85 Please Call 704-213-6201 Executive office desk $200, Matching bookcase and lateral file $100 Highback swivel chair free with desk. Near exit 70 on I-85. 704-855-3747
Set of tour model golf clubs with bag- good shape call 704-637-2322 $25.
Homes for Sale
SALISBURY POST
Concord, 1.5 story, level lot, nice subdivision. Thousands below tax value. Tons of extras, crown molding, work island in kitchen, office upstairs, bonus room. 3 BR, 2.5 Baths. $244,750. Dream Weaver Properties of NC LLC 704-906-7207
www.dreamweaverprop.com
Great Location!
Salisbury, Olde Salisbury subdivision, 3BR / 2BA, 1200 sq. ft, laundry room, 2 linen closets, pantry, hardwood & carpeted floors, detached garage, central heat & air. Convenient to I-85 and shopping! $129,900. 704645-8030 or 704-202-8745
You'll love all seasons of the year in this cozy home in Plantation Ridge. Spend your summer days grilling on the back deck or relaxing on the front porch swing. Winters will be warmer as you enjoy the gas logs in the spacious family room. Fully renovated over the last 2 years, this house is move-in ready. You'll be surprised at the space this 3 br 2 ½ ba, 2495 sf house has to offer. $219,900. Call 704-645-1093 Woodleaf
Land for Sale Land for Sale 25 Acres Beautiful Land for Sale by Owner 1 Hr to/from Charlotte, NC nr Cleveland & Woodleaf and 3 Interstates: I-40, I77, I-85. Restricted, no mobile or mod. Very rural, mostly wooded. Good hunting, deer, small game. Frontage on Hobson Rd., 2nd gravel driveway beside 2075 Hobson Rd mailbox. Interior very secluded, a real sanctuary from cities. Needs to be sold this year. Owner phone: 336-766-6779, or E-mail to: hjthabet@cs.com See photos and directions at: http://NCHorseCountryFarmland.com
Manufactured Home Sales
Manufactured Home Sales
Drastically Reduced!
380 Granny's Pl. 1,700 sq. ft. ranch on 10 acs in quiet community off Needmore Rd. Entire tract fenced w/16' cedar gated driveway. 3BR, 1½BA. Maintenance free floors. 40 year metal roof, vinyl siding, roomy garage w/ automatic door, energy efficient heat pump, central air. Concrete slab. Newly dug well. $175,000 $160,000 but we are open to offers. Motivated seller. 336-998-3510 or 336-407-3510
281 Ferrell Lane Salisbury, NC. Located off of Majolica Rd. Call 704-642-1024 for appointment
Motivated Seller!
Gold Hill area. 3BR, 1BA. 1,123 sq. ft. living area. Hardwood floors, partial basement, storage building. Large lot. 2.03 acres. East/Rockwell schools. Call Glenn 704-279-5674 / 704-267-9439
Mt. Ulla. 1 mile from Millbridge Elementary. 4BR, 2BA. Doublewide on 1 acre private lot. Approx. 1,640 sq. ft. New carpet. Open floor plan. Very spacious. Kitchen has parquet floors, ceramic sinks in baths & kitchen. Large bedrooms w/walk-in closets. Dish and cable available. Dishwasher, refrigerator & stove. $79,900. 704-857-9495 or 704-223-1136
New Listing
Davis Farm - One of the last exterior lots available - 613 Fly Fisher Drive .95 acres cleared, ready to build. Trees on the rear of the property offer great privacy. Perk is on file. MLS # 50324 Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. (704) 433-2582
OLDE SALISBURY
Salisbury, New Home 3 BR. 2 BA. REAL HARDWOODS, Gorgeous kitchen, stainless appliances, vaulted ceiling in great room! Pretty front porch, even has a 1 car garage! Pick your own colors. Monica Poole 704.245.4628 B&R Realty
Price Reduced
365 D. Earnhardt Rd., Rockwell, East Rowan - 3 BR, 2 Baths, Located on 3.11 acres, Large rooms with great closet/storage space, oversized garage. A definite must see!! Priced in the 200s !! MLS #50302 Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. www.tmrdevelop.com (704) 433-2582
The Salisbury Post
Will Be Closed Monday, July 5th, 2010 in Observance of Independence Day Please Note The Following Holiday Deadline Schedule:
LINE ADS Publication Date
Deadline Date
Saturday, July 3 Sunday, July 4 Monday, July 5 Tuesday, July 6 Wednesday, July 7 TMC (Wednesday, July 7)
Friday, July 2 • 2pm Friday, July 2 • 2pm Friday, July 2 • 3pm Friday, July 2 • 4pm Tuesday, July 6 • 4pm Friday, July 2 • 3pm
DISPLAY ADS Publication Date
Deadline Date
Monday, July 5 Tuesday, July 6
Friday, July 2 • 10am Friday, July 2 • 12 Noon
Wednesday, July 7 TMC (Wednesday, July 7)
Friday, July 2 • 4pm Friday, July 2 • 11am
704-797-POST C46650
CLASSIFIED
SALISBURY POST Homes for Sale
Manufactured Home Sales
Apartments
E. schools. Lease purchase. 3BR, 2BA. Garage, kit. appl., Please call 704-638-0108
Harrison Rd. near Food Lion. 3BR, 2BA. 1 ac. 1,800 sq. ft., big BR, retreat, huge deck. $580/mo. Financing avail. 704-489-1158
1, 2, & 3 BR Huge Apartments, very nice. $375 & up. 704-890-4587
Genesis Realty 704-933-5000 genesisrealtyco.com Foreclosure Experts
Price Reduced
Ashland Place. 1153 Greenheather Dr. 3BR, 2½BA. Great home with lots of extras!! Immaculate condition. Priced in the low $200s Call today. MLS #49114. Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. (704) 433-2582 www.tmrdevelop.com
REDUCED
Salisbury Area 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 baths, $500 down under $700 per month. 704-225-8850
Manufactured Lots for Sale
1BR apt furnished with washer/dryer, refrig & stove. All utilities furnished incl'd cable. Rent $350.00 ever 2 weeks with $350.00 dep. Call Rowan Properties, 704-633-0446.
Grace Church/Miller Rd. location. 2.8 acres with well & septic. $38,000. Please call 704-660-3930
2 BR, 1 BA Eaman Park Apts. Near Salisbury High. $375/mo. Newly renovated. No pets. 704-798-3896
Rockwell. Single • Doublewide • Modular • Site Built. Rental lots available. 704-279-3265
20 Different Units 1-3BR, $300-$695 Chambers Realty 704-637-1020
Real Estate Services
2BR, 1BA apt. Very large. Has gas heat. We furnish refrig, stove, yard maint, and garbage pick up. No pets. Rent $425. Deposit $400. Call Rowan Properties 704633-0446
Arey RealtyREAL Service in Real Estate 704-633-5334 www.AreyRealty.com Rockwell. 2 BR, 1 BA, hardwood floors, detached carport, handicap ramp. $99,900 R47208 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
REDUCED
Salisbury, Adorable bungalow close to shopping and I-85. Two bedrooms one bath with a nice lot. Home has been remodeled and is charming. $76,900. Dream Weaver Properties of NC LLC 704-906-7207
www.dreamweaverprop.com Salisbury
Price Reduced $119,900
B & R REALTY 704-633-2394
www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Bentley Julian Realty 704-938-2530
www.bentleyrealtyinc.com Info@bentleyrealtyinc.com
Century 21 Towne & Country 474 Jake Alexander Blvd. (704)637-7721 Forest Glen Realty Darlene Blount, Broker 704-633-8867 KEY REAL ESTATE, INC. 1755 U.S. HWY 29. South China Grove, NC 28023 704-857-0539 Rebecca Jones Realty 610 E. Liberty St, China Grove 704-857-SELL
www.rebeccajonesrealty.com
Rowan Realty www.rowanrealty.net, Professional, Accountable, Personable . 704-633-1071 US Realty 516 W. Innes, Salisbury 704-636-9303
Salisbury. Olde Salisbury subdivision. 2110 Chantilly Lane. New Home 3BR, 2BA. All kitchen appliances, vaulted ceiling in great room. Gorgeous stone on front of home, nice 2 car garage! You pay NO Closing Costs! Vickie 704-754-5700 Spear Salisbury. 2 or 3 bedroom Townhomes. For information, call Summit Developers, Inc. 704-797-0200
Unusual Opportunity
www.USRealty4sale.com
William R. Kennedy Realty 428 E. Fisher Street 704-638-0673
Real Estate Commercial 2250 sf Prime Office Condo For Sale or Lease. 4 office suites w/ private and public rest room, board room & more. Statesville Blvd. Call Apple House Realty @ 704-633-5067 for info.
ALEXANDER PLACE 1,540 Sq. Ft. 3BR, 2BA. Walk-in closets, formal dining room, alarm system, central air, new paint, carpet & flooring ~ immaculate throughout. True modular (not a doublewide). To be moved from present location & priced accordingly at $92,000. 704-636-2732
Land for Sale 3 + acres, native timber canopy opens to sunlit meadow, creek w/ private sandy beach. $59,900 close to town, fin. Must See. 704 535-4159
Faith. 7 Acres. Pasture, woods and creek. 175 ft road frontage. $70,000. Call 704-279-9542 Rockwell. Off Lower Stone Ch. Rd at end of Lavista Rd, 2½ acs. $25,000, $500 down, owner will finance 10 years, 7% interest. 704202-5879 W. Rowan 1.19 acs. Old Stony Knob Rd. Possible owner financing. Reduced: $19,900. 704-640-3222
Manufactured Home Sales $500 Down moves you in. Call and ask me how? Please call (704) 225-8850
A TREE PARADISE
China Grove, 3 homes available: 2 under construction, 1 move in ready. All 3 BR, 2 BA. Call for details. $109,900 to $114,900 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
Mocksville 133 Avgol Dr. 50x100 (5,000 sq. ft.) commercial metal building on 1.1 ac, 3 phase electrical, 3 bay doors, office, breakroom, zoned HC (Highway Commercial). Extra nice $219,000. Call 336-391-6201
OFFICE SPACE
Resort & Vacation Property
Myrtle Beach. 3BR/2BA “K” condo/rancher FOR SALE in Seagate Village at former Myrtle Beach Air Force base. Minutes from Market Commons. Call 704-425-7574
Wanted: Real Estate *Cash in 7 days or less *Facing or In Foreclosure *Properties in any condition *No property too small/large
American Homes of Rockwell Oldest Dealer in Rowan County. Best prices anywhere. 704-279-7997
Are you trying to sell your property? We guarantee a sale within 1430 days. 704-245-2604
Mount Pleasant, 1BR, 1BA, 3-room apartment, quiet historic district. For information, call 704-436-9176.
Salisbury. 3BR, 2BA 1,400 sf. townhome. W/D incl. $800 rent & dep. No Section 8. 704-637-1711
Near Rockwell. 3 room apt. Appliances, W/D, & water furnished. $400/mo. 704-279-8880 704-279-7082 Rockwell Area. Apt. & Duplexes. $500-$600. 2BR Quiet Community. Marie Leonard-Hartsell at Wallace Realty 704-239-3096 Rolling Hills Townhomes 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms Salisbury's Finest! 315 Ashbrook Rd 704-637-6207 Summer Specials! Salis. Nice modern 1BR, energy efficient, water furnished, off Jake Alexander $395 + dep. 704-640-5750 Salisbury-Downtown. Two bedroom/1 bath loft style apartment in the old Cheerwine Building. Nice open living area. $750.00 Call Waggoner Realty Co. at 704-633-0462 Salisbury. 2BR duplex. Excellent condition with appl. $565/mo. Ryburn Rentals 704-637-0601
Cemetery St., Salisbury 2 BR, 1 BA. Section 8 Accepted. 704-340-8031
China Grove. 501 West Hillside Drive. 3BR, 1½BA. Convenient to I-85. Full basement. Great neighborhood. No pets, no smoking. $750/ month plus deposit. Available now. Call 704857-0643 or 704-3611262 Cleveland-3 bedroom/ 1bath house off Main St. Appliances, central heat & air, hard wood floors. $600.00 Call Waggoner Realty Co. 704-633-0462
E. Rowan, 2BR/1BA, Private country setting, refrigerator and stove, no pets. $575/mo + $575 dep. 704-279-3010 or 704-213-8783
Airport Rd. Duplex. 2BR, 2BA. $575/mo. 2BR, 1BA $550/mo., lease + dep., water furnished. No pets. Call 704-637-0370
Spencer 1BR/1BA, large apartment in convenient location $350/mo + dep. 704-202-2484
East Rowan. New 3BR, 2BA. Appliances, water yard work incl'd. Section 8 Ok. 704-279-3990
STONWYCK VILLIAGE IN GRANITE QUARRY Nice 2BR, energy efficient apt., stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, water & sewer furnished, central heat/ac, vaulted ceiling, washer/dryer connection. $495 to $535 /Mo, $400 deposit. 1 year lease, no pets. 704-279-3808
Faith/Carson district. 3BR / 2BA, no pets. $700/mo + dep + refs. 704-279-8428
Apartment Management- Moving to Town? Need a home or Apartment? We manage rental homes from $400 - $650 & apartments $350 - $550. Call and let us help you. Waggoner Realty Co. 704-633-0462 www.waggonerrealty.com
BEST VALUE
Quiet & Convenient, 2 bedroom town house, 1 ½ baths. All Electric, Central heat/air, no pets, pool. $550/mo. Includes water & basic cable.
West Side Manor
China Grove. 2BR, 2BA. All electric. Clean & safe. No pets. $575/month + deposit. 704-202-0605 China Grove. Nice 2BR, 1BA. $550/mo., includes washer & dryer. No pets. 704-279-8428 China Grove. One room eff. w/ private bathroom & kitchenette. All utilities incl'd. $379/mo. + $100 deposit. 704-857-8112 City. 2BR cent. H/A, no pets, on job 6 months, utilities by tenant. $375 per month. Call 704202-5879 for more info. CLANCY HILLS APARTMENTS 1, 2 & 3 BR, conveniently located in Salisbury. Handicap accessible units available. Section 8 assistance available. 704-6366408. Office Hours: M–F 9:00-12:00. TDD Relay 1-800-735-2962 Equal Housing Opportunity.
Clean, well maint., 2 BR Duplex. Central heat/air, all electric. Section 8 welcome. 704-202-5790
Colonial Village Apts.
WELCOME HOME TO DEER PARK APTS. We have immediate openings for 1 & 2 BR apts. Call or come by and ask about our move-in specials. 704-278-4340 for info. For immediate info call 1-828-442-7116 White Rock Garden Apts 1BR elderly units, located in Granite Quarry, w/handicap accessible units available. Sect. 8 assistance available. 704-2796457, 8am - 1pm TDD Relay 1-800-735-2962 “Equal Housing Opportunity”
Wiltshire Village 2BR, 1½BA Condo. All appl., W/D, patio. Near Jake & I-85. Pool, Tennis. $600/ mo., $500 dep. For sale or lease. 336-210-5862
Condos and Townhomes Kannapolis. 2 story townhouse. 2BR, 2BA brick front. Kitchen/dining combo, large family room. Private deck. $550/mo. 704534-5179 / 704-663-7736 Wiltshire Village Condo for Rent, $700. 2nd floor. Looking for 2BR, 2BA in a quiet community setting? Call Bryce, Wallace Realty 704-2021319
Houses for Rent
$99 1 Month For Brand New Duplex! st
Rockwell. Holshouser Rd. 2BR/1BA, back deck & storage area, all appliances, available July 1st. NO Smoking or Pets! $525/mo + $500 deposit, yard, trash service & water / sewer included 704-2090131 for application. 2BR RENT TO OWN Central heat/AC. Hardwoods, fireplace, siding. $2,500 down. $550/mo. 704-630-0695
“A Good Place to Live” 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms Affordable & Spacious Water Included 704-636-8385 Colony Garden Apartments. 2 BR, 1½ BA town homes near VA hospital. $550/mo. + deposit. 704-762-0795 Eastwind Apartments Low Rent Available For Elderly & Disabled. Rent Based on Social Security Income *Spacious 1 BR *Located on bus line *Washer/Dryer Hookups Call Fisher Realty at: 704-636-7485 for more information. Elm St. 2br apt. Hardwood flrs. Marble bathrm. $450 + dep. Also 2BR house. 704-636-1633 Holly Leaf Apts. 2BR, 1½BA. $555. Kitchen appliances, W/D connection, cable ready. 704-637-5588
Lovely Duplex
Moreland Pk area. 2BR all appls furnished. $495-$595/mo. Deposit negotiable. Section 8 welcome. 336-247-2593
FREE RENT Carolina Piedmont Properties. Call for details. Sec 8 OK. 704-248-4878 Granite Quarry. 3BR, 1BA quadplex. E. Salis. 3BR, 2BA. All electric. Appliances. 704-638-0108 Houses: 3BRs, 1BA. Apartments: 2 & 3 BRs, 1BA Deposit req'd. Faith Realty 704-630-9650
Mocksville. Green Hill Rd. 3BR, 2BA brick ranch. Great room & living room. Central air & heat. Carport, utility/storage room. Beautiful shade trees. $750/mo. 704-534-5179 Rockwell area. 3BR, 2BA. Washer/dryer incl. Central air. References & deposit req. 704-2020605, ask for Dennis Rockwell
Very Nice Home! Rockwell. 3BR, 2 full BA brick home. New paint, new carpet, new floors, new appli-ances. Fenced backyard. Free trash pickup. Near Rockwell Park. $850/mo. + $850 deposit. No pets, no smoking. 704-202-0436 Rockwell. 3BR, 2BA w. appliances. $750 with deposit. Ryburn Rentals 704-637-0601 Rockwell. 3BR. Central heat/AC, range, fridge, dishwasher. Storage bldg. $725/mo. 704-279-6850 or 704-798-3035 Rowan Hospital area. 3BR, 2BA. Appl., central AC, gas heat. No Sect. 8. No pets. $800/mo. 1St & last month's rent & deposit. Call before 5pm 704-636-4251 Salis. 3-4 BR house by Livingstone College. Rent $575, dep $500. Call Rowan Properties, 704633-0446
4BR, 2 ½BA. 2000 sq. ft +/-. Tri-level, hardwoods fireplace. Great area. $995/mo. 704-630-0695 5 houses to choose from Affordable to luxury Chambers Realty 704-637-1020 5BR, 2 ½ BA. RENT TO OWN. 3000 sq. ft. +/garage, basement, fenced. $8,000 down. $998/mo. 704-630-0695 610 Florence Ave, Kannapolis - 2 bedroom, 1 bath $510 monthly; 314 North Avenue, Kannapolis 3 bedroom 2 bath $895 Monthly KREA 704-933-2231
Attn. Landlords
Apple House Realty has a 10 year / 95+% occupancy rate on prop's we've managed. 704-633-5067
Salisbury. Brick 2BR, 1BA. Garage, washer/ dryer hook-up. Central heat/air. No pets. $650 deposit, $650/mo. References. Call 704-6363698 or 704-637-1138
Sells Rd, 3BR /2 BA homes, all electric, free water, $675-$775/mo. Sect. 8 OK 704-633-6035.
Very Nice
Salisbury 2BR. $525 and up. GOODMAN RENTALS 704-633-4802
Salisbury City 2BR / 1BA, new central H/A, total elec., $475/mo + dep. 704-640-5750 Salisbury city. 2BR, 1BA. Remodeled. Central air & heat. Good neighbors. $495 + dep 704-640-5750 Salisbury H.S. Area. 4BR/1½ BA, cent. Gas & electric H/A $700/mo. Sec. 8 OK. 704-636-3307 Salisbury, city limits. 2 - 3BR. $450-$700. Central HVAC. 704-2394883 Fountain Quarters Realty Broker Salisbury- Hidden Creek. 2 bedrooms/2 baths. Ground level across from Clubhouse. No pets or smokers. $850.00 Call Waggoner Realty Co. at 704-633-0462 Salisbury. 1326 Old Plank Rd. 3BR, 1BA. Sect. 8 OK. $550/mo. No pets. 704-507-3915 Salisbury. 138 Crawford St. 1BR, 1BA. Stove, refrigerator, W/D hook-up. $395/mo. + deposit. 704-633-5397
Salisbury. 3BR, 1½BA House. NEW central air. GREAT Neighborhood $725/mo. Please call 704-232-7238
No. 60111
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF ROWAN 2010-SP-369 IN RE: DAVID A. WATSON and LAURA R. WATSON, Foreclosure of that Deed of Trust dated October 24, 2005, recorded in Book 1052 at Page 955, Rowan County Registry, Under Foreclosure By: K. Todd Phillips, Substitute Trustee. Pursuant to the order of the Clerk of Court of Rowan County and under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson dated October 24, 2005 and recorded in Book 1052 at Page 955 in the Rowan County Registry, and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein, and pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash at the door of the Rowan County Courthouse, 210 North Main Street, Salisbury, North Carolina at 10:00 a.m. on July 6, 2010, the following property that is located in Rowan County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: TRACT FIVE: 513 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, NC BEGINNING at an existing iron, said iron being the common corner with Lot 17 in the Western margin of the right of way of Vance Street, and runs thence with the line of Lot 17 South 62 degrees 51 minutes, 29 seconds West 144.89 feet to an existing iron in the Eastern margin of a 12-foot alley; thence with the Eastern margin of said 12-foot alley North 27 degrees 34 minutes 31 seconds West 50.00 feet to a new iron, a common corner with Lot 19; thence with the line of Lot 19 North 62 degrees 55 minutes 27 seconds East 145.00 feet to an existing iron in the Eastern margin of the right of way of Vance Street; thence with the Western margin of the right of way of Vance Street South 27 degrees 26 minutes 59 seconds East 49.83 feet to the point of BEGINNING and being Lot 18, Block 7 of Melrose Heights, as shown in Book of Maps at Page 57, and being in accordance with a survey and map by Sheulenburger Surveying Company for Dudley E. and Lynn A. Denison dated May 18, 1993. TRACT SIX: 511 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, NC BEGINNING at a stake in the Southwest margin of Vance Avenue between Maple and Hillsboro Streets at a point 150 feet distance from the South corner at intersection of Vance Avenue and Maple Street and runs thence with the margin of Vance Avenue South 27 degrees East 50 feet to a stake in the margin of Vance Avenue; thence South 63 degrees West 145 feet to an alley; thence with the margin of this alley, North 27 deg. West 50 feet to the rear corner of Lot No. 20 on this alley; thence with the line of Lot No. 20 North 63 deg. East 145 feet to the BEGINNING corner, and being Lot No. 19, Block 7, Map of Melrose Heights. TRACT SEVEN: 509 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, NC
3BR, 1BA home with kitchen, dining, living, sun porch, full basement, attached garage & unattached garage. Large, beautiful fenced in corner lot for rent or lease to own, $1,200/mo. Dennis, 704-202-0605.
Office and Commercial Rental 1250 sqft office. Lobby, 3 offices and 2 restrooms. Bradshaw Real Estate. 704-633-9011 23,000 sq ft manufacturing building with offices for lease. Bradshaw Real Estate. 704-633-9011 450 to 1,000 sq. ft. of Warehouse Space off Jake Alexander Blvd. Call 704279-8377 or 704-279-6882
5,000 or 10,000 sq. ft. distribution bldg., loading docks, office & restrooms. Bradshaw Real Estate 704-633-9011 Class A Office space. 118 E. Council St. $750/mo., utilities incl. Call 704-642-0071 Commercial warehouses available. 1,400 sq. ft. w/dock. Gated w/security cameras. Convenient to I-85. Olympic Crown Storage. 704-630-0066
Corner Lot
12,000 sq ft building on Jake Alexander Blvd. Could be office or retail. Heat and air. Call 704-279-8377 Granite Quarry -Best Deal Commercial Metal buildings and office space. 300-1800 SF. Utilities and gated parking available. 704-279-4422
Numerous Commercial and office rentals to suit your needs. Ranging from 500 to 5,000 sq. ft. Call Victor Wallace at Wallace Realty, 704-636-2021
PRICED TO SELL
BEGINNING at an existing iron in the western margin of Vance Avenue at the common corner of Lots Nos. 21 and 20, and running thence with the margin of Vance Avenue, South 23 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. East 50.01 feet to an iron in the line of Lot No. 19; thence South 66 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. West 144.86 feet to an iron in the margin of a 10-foot alley; thence with the margin of said alley, North 23 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. West 50.01 feet to an iron in the rear corner of Lot No. 21; thence North 66 deg. 30 min. 00 sec. East 144.86 feet to the point of BEGINNING and containing 0.166 acres, and being Lot. No. 20, Block 7, of Melrose Heights, recorded in Book of Maps at Page 57, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Rowan County, North Carolina. TRACT FOUR: 2240 Moore Street, Salisbury, NC (324A-00201) BEGINNING at an iron pin in the northern margin of Moore Street, common corner of Lots 4 and 5, Block E, Belle Meade Subdivision; thence with the margin of Moore Street South 76 deg. 22 min. 41 sec. West 94-93 feet to an iron pin thence North 12 deg. 54 min. 56 sec. West 179.01 feet to an iron rod; thence North 76 deg. 31 min. 09 sec. East 94.92 feet to an iron rod in the common line of Lots 4 and 5; thence with the common line of Lots 4 and 5, South 12 deg. 55 min. 00 sec. East 176.76 feet to the point of BEGINNING, being lots 5, 6, 7, and part of Lot 8, of Block E, as shown on a map of Belle Meade Subdivision, recorded in Book of Maps at Page 788, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Rowan County, North Carolina, and as more particularly shown on survey for Shulenburger Surveying dated August 14, 1990. TRACT ONE: 600 S. Spencer Avenue, Spencer, NC (033-401) BEING known as 600 Spencer Avenue, Spencer, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a new iron at the western corner of the intersection of the rights of way of Spencer Avenue and Sixth Street, and running thence with the Northwestern margin of the right of way of Spencer Avenue South 58 deg. 15 min. 00 sec. West 72.0 feet to a new iron in the front line of Lot 2; thence a new line through Lot 2 North 3 deg. 45 min. 00 sec. West 194 feet to a new iron in the southeastern margin of an alley; thence with said margin of the alley North 58 deg. 15 min. 00 sec. East 72.50 feet to a new iron in the southeastern margin of the right of way of Sixth Street; and thence with said margin of the right of way of Sixth Street South 31 deg. 45 min. 00 sec. East 194 feet to the BEGINNING, containing 0.323 acre and being all of Lot 1 and part of Lot 2, Block 41 of the property of Elizabeth B. Henderson and Mary E. Vanderford as shown in Book of Maps at Page 42-A in the Rowan County Registry and being Lot B as shown on plat of survey of Shulenburger Surveying Company dated November 17, 1986, revised December 3, 1986. TRACT TWO: 602 S. Spencer Avenue, Spencer, NC (033-208) BEGINNING at an iron stake, said iron stake being South 58 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds West 72.50 feet from the West corner of the intersection of Sixth Street and Spencer Avenue, a common corner with Michael O. Pulliam (Deed Book 684, Page 195) and runs thence with the Northwestern margin of the right of way of Spencer Avenue South 58 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds West 72.50 feet to an iron, in the Eastern margin of an alley; thence with the Eastern margin of said alley, North 31 degrees 45 minutes 00 seconds West 194.00 feet to an iron, said iron being North 84 degrees 54 minutes 35 seconds East 11.66 feet from a common corner of Lots 10 and 11; thence with the Southeastern margin of an alley North 58 degrees 15 minutes 00 seconds East 72.50 feet to an iron; thence a new line South 31 degrees 45 minutes 00 seconds East 194.00 feet to the point of BEGINNING and being part of Lot 2 and Lot 3 and consisting of 0.323 acre and being in accordance with a property survey for Andrew Clayton by Shulenburger Surveying Company, dated November 17, 1986 and revised December 3, 1986. Property Address: (i) 509 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 017-076); (ii) 511 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 017-077); (iii) 513 Vance Avenue, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 017-078); (iv) 600 South Spencer Avenue, Spencer, North Carolina 28159 (Parcel No. 033-401); (v) 602 South Spencer Avenue, Spencer, North Carolina 28159 (Parcel No. 033-208); and (vi) 2240 Moore Street, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144 (Parcel No. 324A00201) Property Improvements: Present Record Owner(s):
Granite Quarry-Garland Place, 3 BR, 2 BA, triple attached garage, single detached garage, whole house generator. Nice yard. R50640 $164,900 B&R Realty 704.633.2394 www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Salisbury & Mocksville HUD – Section 8 Nice 2 to 5 BR homes. Call us 1st. 704-630-0695
Salisbury 3BR/1½BA 622 W. Horah St., brick house, cent H/A, $700/mo + dep. 704-433-8308
Salisbury 3BR, 2BA. All Electric. No pets. Rent, $750, $500 deposit. Spacious ranch-style. Home has a carport and spacious front and back yard with a lovely deck on the back. Call AJ Realty and Investment 919-332-0585
Salisbury. 3BR, 2BA. 723 Mack St. All appliances included. Single car garage, all electric. No Section 8. $800/mo + deposit. Call 704-754-5700
Salisbury/Spencer 2, 4 & 5 BR $450-$850/mo. 704202-3644 or leave message. No calls after 7pm
East area. 2BR, 1BA. Outbuildings. 1 year lease. $725/month + deposit. 704-279-5602
Rowan Hospital area. 2BR, 1BA. Heat, air, water, appl. incl. $695. 704-633-3997
Apartments
Salisbury. 3 & 2 Bedroom Houses. $500-$1,000. Also, Duplex Apartments. 704636-6100 or 704-633-8263
2BR/1BA, new floor, available today! All elec. $425/mo, 704-279-5018
Airport Rd., 1BR with stove, refrig., garbage pickup & water incl. Month-month lease. No pets. $395/mo+$200 deposit. Furnished $420/mo. 704-279-3808
Houses for Rent
Luxury apartments Fulton Heights $695/mo. 704-239-0691
Spanish Spoken!
Clancy-hills@cmc-nc.com
Salisbury. Off 13th St. Huge lot. Could be nice home, too. Conveniently located. 1200+ sq. ft. with lots of extras. Call our office for more information. C48040. $129,900. B&R Realty 704-6332394
Houses for Rent
403 Carolina Blvd. Duplex For Rent. 2BR,1BA. $500/Mo. Call 704-2798467 or 704-279-7568
704-633-1234
Call 24 hours, 7 days ** 704-239-2033 ** $$$$$$
15 minutes N. of Salisbury. 2001 model singlewide 3 bdr/2 bath on large treed lot in quiet neighborhood. $1,200 start-up, $475/month includes lot rent, home payment, taxes, insurance. RENT or RENTTO-OWN. 704-2108176.
3 Shive St. 2 story house w/3 apts. 3 big rooms w/BA. Furnished. 134 Gold Hill Dr. 4 room house w/BA. Trailer avail. also. 704-633-5397
2345 Statesville Blvd. Near Salisbury Mall
Downtown Salis, 2300 sf office space, remodeled, off street pking. 633-7300 Woodleaf. 4320 Potneck Rd. 2-story house on .67 acre. 1,985 sq. ft. living space w/attached 2-vehicle garage. 4BR, 2 full BA, living, dining, den, pantry, hardwood floors. New roof & heating/cooling system. Detached 1-vehicle garage workshop, 248 sq. ft. Walking distance to Woodleaf School. $125,000. Call 704-278-4703 after 7 p.m.
2BR, 1BA duplex on E. Franklin St. Recently refurbished w/ new carpet. Nice. Rent - $475, Dep. - $400. Call Rowan Properties, 704-633-0446
Apartments
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 7B
Prime Location, 1800+ sq.ft. office space 4 private offices, built in reception desk. Large open space with dividers, 2 bathrooms and breakroom. Ample parking 464 Jake Alexander Blvd. 704 223 2803
RENTAL SPACE Salisbury. We have office suites available in the Executive Center. With all utilities from $250 and up. Lots of amenities. Call Karen Rufty at B & R Realty 704-202-6041 www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Salisbury, Kent Executive Park office suites, $100 & up. Utilities paid. Conference room, ample parking. 704-202-5879 Salisbury. Six individual offices, new central heat/air, heavily insulated for energy efficiency, fully carpeted (to be installed) except stone at entrance. Conference room, employee break room, tile bathroom, and nice, large reception area. Perfect location near the Court House and County Building. Want to lease but will sell. Perfect for dual occupancy. By appointment only. 704-636-1850 Spencer Shops Lease great retail space for as little as $750/mo for 2,000 sq ft at. 704-431-8636
Unknown David A. Watson and Laura R. Watson
Pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes ("Gen. Stat.") 45-21.8 and 45-21.9, the Trustee gives notice that the Property in question consists of multiple parcels of real estate and the Trustee expressly reserves the right to sell only as many of such parcels as the Trustee in the Trustee's judgment believes necessary to satisfy the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust and the costs and expenses of the sale. If the Trustee effects to sell only a portion of the parcels subject to the Deed of Trust but the proceeds thereof are inadequate to satisfy the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust and the costs and expenses of the sale, the Trustee expressly reserves the right to exercise the power of sale contained in the Deed of Trust and re-advertise the unsold parcels or a portion thereof and sell as many additional units or parcels as the Trustee believes is in the Trustee's judgment to be necessary to satisfy the remainder of the secured obligation and costs and expenses of such sale. The property offered pursuant to this Notice is being offered for sale, transfer, and conveyance AS IS, WHERE IS. Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust, security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor their officers, directors, attorneys, representatives, employees, or agents make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, health, environmental, or safety conditions existing in, on, at, or relating to said property, and any liability or responsibility arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition is expressly disclaimed. The Trustee may, in the Trustee's sole discretion, delay the sale for one hour as provided in Gen. Stat. 45-21.23. At the sale, any bid must be at least $100.00 more than the immediately preceding bid. If the highest bidder is anyone other than the holder of the indebtedness, such high bidder must pay, in addition to the bid price, the fees or taxes imposed by Gen. Stat. 7A-308(a)(1) and 105 228.30 and any other tax or fee based upon the sale of the subject property or the sale price thereof. The Trustee reserves the right to require of the successful bidder at such sale a deposit of 5% of the amount bid in the form of certified funds, official bank check, or the equivalent (as provided in the Deed of Trust or by law), or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater. The sale is subject to unpaid taxes, special assessments, restrictions and easements of record, and prior liens, if any. The sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by law. Thereafter, all remaining amounts are immediately due and owing and time is of the essence. Any announcement made at the sale takes precedence over these terms of sale to the extent allowed by law. If the subject property is residential real property with less than 15 rental units, pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.16A(b), the following notice is provided: (1) An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to Gen. Stat. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold; and (2) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days' written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination. This Is an Effort to Collect a Debt and Any Information Obtained Will Be Used for That Purpose. This the 17th day of June, 2010. SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE: K. Todd Phillips, N.C. Bar No. 13940 HARTSELL & WILLIAMS, P.A. 71 McCachern Boulevard, S.E., Post Office Box 368 Concord, North Carolina 28026-0368 Telephone: 704-786-5161
CLASSIFIED
8B â&#x20AC;˘ MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Auctions
Carport and Garages
Auctions
Rowan Auction Co. Professional Auction Services: Salis., NC 704-633-0809 Kip Jennings NCAL 6340.
Lippard Garage Doors Installations, repairs, electric openers. 704636-7603 / 704-798-7603
Auction Thursday 12pm 429 N. Lee St. Salisbury Antiques, Collectibles, Used Furniture 704-213-4101
Tony McBride Auction Your Full Service Auction Co. One Piece/Entire Estate. 704-791-5625. NCAL 6894
Carolina's Auction Rod Poole, NCAL#2446 Salisbury (704)633-7369
www.piedmontauction.com
www.thecarolinasauction.com
Heritage Auction Co. Glenn M.Hester NC#4453 Salisbury (704)636-9277 www.heritageauctionco.com
Job Seeker meeting at 112 E. Main St., Rockwell. 6:30pm Mons. Rachel Corl, Auctioneer. 704-279-3596 KEN WEDDINGTON Total Auctioneering Services 140 Eastside Dr., China Grove 704-8577458 License 392 R. Giles Moss Auction & Real Estate-NCAL #2036. Full Service Auction Company. Estates ** Real Estate Had your home listed a long time? Try selling at auction. 704-782-5625 www.gilesmossauction.com
Put your picture in your business or service ad for instant recognition.
Perry's Overhead Doors Sales, Service & Installation, Residential / Commercial. Wesley Perry 704-279-7325 www.perrysdoor.com
Brickwork & Masonry
Grading & Hauling
We Build Garages, 24x24 = $12,500. All sizes built! ~ 704-633-5033 ~
Brick & Concrete All types of improvements & repairs. Over 29 yrs exp.
704-202-3293
Child Care and Nursery Schools
Caregiving Services
Experienced Home Child Care
Caregiver will sit with elderly in home, hospital or nursing home. 8 yrs experience and references. 704-856-8557 or 704-213-6246
6 weeks11 years 6am-6pm Reasonable rates Call Michelle 704-603-7490
Cleaning Services !!!!! Residential & Commercial Free Estimates References available Call Zonia 704-239-2770
Junk Removal
Beaver Grading Quality work, reasonable rates. Free Estimates 704-6364592
Garages, new homes, remodeling, roofing, siding, back hoe, loader 704-6369569 Maddry Const Lic G.C.
Anthony's Scrap Metal Service. Top prices paid for any type of metal or batteries. Free haul away. 704-433-1951
Grading, Clearing, Hauling, and Topsoil. Please Call 704-633-1088
H&H Construction. Bath, Kitchen, Decks & Roofs! Interior & Exterior Remodeling & Repairs! 704-633-2219 www.hhconstruction19.com
Wife For Hire Inc.,
All types concrete work ~ Insured ~ NO JOB TOO SMALL! Call Curt LeBlanc today for Free Estimates
Brown's Landscape & Backhoe Bush hogging, tilling for gardens & yards. Free Est. 704-224-6558
Drywall Services
FREE Estimates 704-636-3415 704-640-3842 www.earlslawncare.com
The Floor Doctor
olympicdrywall@aol.com olympicdrywallcompany.com
Heating and Air Conditioning
Fencing
Piedmont AC & Heating Electrical Services Lowest prices in town!! 704-213-4022
C47107
S44339
July 18th-22nd 6:00 PM thru 8:30 PM 704-938-3153
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
Earl's Lawn Care
Reliable Fence All Your Fencing Needs, Reasonable Rates, 21 years experience. (704)640-0223
1008 Moose RoadKannapolis NC 28083
Lyerly's ATV & Mower Repair Free estimates. All types of repairs Pickup/delivery avail. 704-642-2787
" Mowing " Trimming " Edging " Landscaping " Trimming Bushes
Free Estimates Bud Shuler & Sons Fence Co. 225 W Kerr St 704-633-6620 or 704-638-2000 Price Leader since 1963
Holiness Church Games, Crafts, Music, Food & Fun!
Lawn Equipment Repair Services
alservicesunltd.com
Since 1955
GAYLOR'S LAWNCARE For ALL your lawn care needs! *FREE ESTIMATES* 704-639-9925/ 704-640-0542
Wood floor leveling, jacks installed, rotten wood replaced due to water or termites, brick/block/tile work, foundations, etc. 30 YEARS EXP. 704-933-3494
Outdoors by overcash Mowing, Mulching, Leaf Removal. Free Estimates. 704-630-0120
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
Ads with a price ALWAYS generate more qualified calls
Home Improvement
The Federal Trade Commission says companies that promise to scrub your credit report of accurate negative information for a fee are lying. Under federal law, accurate negative information can be reported for up to seven years, and some bankruptcies for up to ten years. Learn about managing credit and debt at ftc.gov/credit.
First Baptist Church
of Salisbury
REGISTERING FOR 2010-2011 SCHOOL YEAR!
A message from the Salisbury Post and the FTC.
Preschool Classes:
704-639-1062
223 N. Fulton St., Salisbury
S45299
8:30-11:30 8:30-12:00 8:30-12:30
Guttering, leaf guard, metal & shingle roofs. Ask about tax credits.
~ 704-633-5033 ~
Septic Tank Service David Miller Septic Tank Co. Installation/ Repairs â&#x20AC;&#x153;Since 1972â&#x20AC;? 704-279-4400 or 704-279-3265
Stoner Painting Contractor â&#x20AC;˘ 25 years exp. â&#x20AC;˘ Int./Ext. painting â&#x20AC;˘ Pressure washing â&#x20AC;˘ Staining â&#x20AC;˘ Insured & Bonded 704-239-7553
Tree Service A-1 Tree Service
Pools and Supplies Bost Pools â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Call me about your swimming pool. Installation, service, liner & replacement. (704) 637-1617
For all your landscape needs. Free estimates Patios, walkways, fences, retaining walls, plantings, mulch, drainage, lighting
A HANDYMAN & MOORE Kitchen & Bath remodeling Quality Home Improvements Carpentry, Plumbing, Electric Clark Moore 704-213-4471
NC LANDSCAPE CONTRACTOR 1589 704-630-1126 ! 704-267-8694
Granite & solid surface for kitchens & baths, cultured marble vanity tops, tubs & enclosures, standard & custom walk-in showers. FREE ESTIMATES!
Brisson - HandyMan Home Repair, Carpentry, Plumbing, Electrical, etc. Insured. 704-798-8199 Browning ConstructionStructural repair, flooring installations, additions, decks, garages. 704-637-1578 LGC
Charla, Barbara and Kristin will help you with your classified ads.
704-797-4220
â&#x20AC;˘ Home Improvement
Manufactured Home Services
HMC Handyman Services No Job too Large or Small. Please call 704-239-4883
Mobile Home Supplies~ City Consignment Company New & Used Furniture. Please Call 704636-2004
Kitchens, Baths, Sunrooms, Remodel, Additions, Wood & Composite Decks, Garages, Vinyl Rails, Windows, Siding. & Roofing. ~ 704-633-5033 ~
Junk Removal $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ We Buy Any Type of Scrap Metal At the Best Prices...
Guaranteed! !
We will come to you! ! David, 704-314-7846
!Established since 1978 !Reliable & Reasonable !Insured Free Estimates!
~ 704-202-8881~
Recognized by the Salisbury Tree Board
AAA Trees R Us
Pressure Washing
Bucket Truck Chipper/Stumps !Free Estimates
We Will Try to Beat Any Written Estimates!
704-239-1955
"
" "
"
Roofing and Guttering
Graham's Tree Service Free estimates, reasonable rates. Licensed, Insured, Bonded. 704-633-9304 John Sigmon Stump grinding, Prompt service for 30+ years, Free Estimates. John Sigmon, 704-279-5763. Johnny Yarborough, Tree Expert trimming, topping, & removal of stumps by machine. Wood splitting, lots cleared. 10% off to senior citizens. 704-857-1731
! Roofing & Siding ! Additions & Decks ! Windows & Doors ! In Business 35 Years ! I've Got You Covered
Let's Talk...it's Free!
â&#x20AC;&#x153;We can remove bankruptcies, judgments, liens, and bad loans from your credit file forever!â&#x20AC;?
W.E.E. Center
SEAMLESS GUTTER Licensed Contractor C.M. Walton Construction, 704-202-8181
Eddleman's Landscape Services
Financial Services
Come early or call for pre-registration
Roofing and Guttering
WILL BUY OLD CARS Complete with keys and title, $150 and up. (Salisbury area only) R.C.'s Garage & Salvage 704-636-8130 704-267-4163
Professional Services Unlimited Licensed Gen. Contractor #17608. Complete contracting service specializing in foundation & structural floor repairs, basement & crawlspace waterproofing & removal, termite & rot damage, ventilation. 35 yrs exper. Call Duke @ 704-6333584. Visit our website: www.profession-
Concrete Work
Painting and Decorating
CASH FOR JUNK CARS And batteries. Call 704-279-7480 or 704-798-2930
Hometown Lawn Care & Handyman Service. Mowing, pressure washing, gutter cleaning, odd jobs ~inside & out. Comm, res. Insured. Free estimates. â&#x20AC;&#x153;No job too smallâ&#x20AC;? 704-433-7514 Larry Sheets, owner
C.R. General Cleaning Service. Comm. & residential. Insured, Bonded. Spring Cleaning Specials! 704-433-1858 www.crgeneral.com
704-279-2600
Jackson Park Pentecostal
weecenter@fbcsalisbury.org
Home Improvement
For All Your Drywall & Painting Needs Residential & Commercial
call 704-797-4220
2 days per week 3 days per week 4 days a week
Grading & Hauling
OLYMPIC DRYWALL & PAINTING COMPANY
To advertise in this directory
2 Years 3 Years 4-5 Years
SALISBURY POST
FREE ESTIMATES! LOWEST PRICES!
MOORE'S Tree TrimmingTopping & Removing. Use Bucket Truck, 704-209-6254 Licensed, Insured & Bonded Plummer & Sons Tree Service, free estimates. Reasonable rates, will beat any written estimate 15%. Insured. Call 704-633-7813. TREE WORKS by Jonathan Keener. Insured â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Free estimates! Please call 704-636-0954.
Upholstery
Moving and Storage TH Jones Mini-Max Storage 116 Balfour Street Granite Quarry Please 704-279-3808
Painting and Decorating AFFORDABLE RATES WOODIE'S PAINTING INC., Residential & Churches 704-637-6817 Bowen Painting Interior and Exterior Painting 704-630-6976
www.bowenpaintingnc.com
Cathy's Painting Service Interior & exterior, new & repaints. 704-279-5335
ROOFING ! Framing ! Siding ! Storm Repair Local, Licensed & Insured
704-791-6856 www.insuranceroofclaim.com
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 The Salisbury Post reserves the right to edit or exclude any birthday submission. Space is limited, 1st come 1st served, birthdays only. Please limit your birthday greetings to 4 per Birthday. Fax: 704-630-0157 In Person: 131 W. Innes Street Online: www.SalisburyPost.com (under Website Forms, bottom right column)
FOR FREE BIRTHDAY GREETINGS Please Fax, hand deliver or fill out form online 18 WORDS MAX. Number of free greetings per person may be limited, combined or excluded, contingent on space available.
Happy Happy Birthday to our grandpa, Jeff Trexler. Love, Reagan & Ryleigh Happy birthday Lisa McDonald. May all your wishes come true. Thank you for being my sister. I love you bunches. Love always, Teresa Harrison
Country Porch Cafe
Happy BIRTHDAY Tonia Parks, Pam Alexander, Vivian Smith, Stephanie Sides, Ronesha Lipscomb Hope each and every one of u have a Blessed Day!
Daily Breakfast & Lunch Specials
S44329
Tues.-Fri. 7:00am-2pm Sat. 7am-11am (Breakfast)
Building rental for private parties & in-house catering available Call for details
Happy Birthday Pam, Stephanie, Nita and Ronesha hope you all have many more! Tonia Happy birthday Tonia enjoy this day to the fullest Luv your Mom, Kim, Terrall and Doug, etc.
3665 Liberty Road, Gold Hill
704.636.9933
Happy 4th birthday wishes for Makalya Williams. We love you.Your God parents, Mr. & Mrs. Clayton Campbell & Jazmine Happy 4th Birthday Makayla Willilams! Grandmother Mary Harris loves you. Hope this day will be special for a special little girl. Happy B-Day Tonia Parks Luv your sons Mario and Maine! Luv u Ma!!
Tell Someone HAPPY BIRTHDAY! A 2â&#x20AC;?x3â&#x20AC;? greeting with photo is only $20, and includes 4 copies of the Post
704-797-4220
birthday@salisburypost.com
Fax: 704-630-0157
S45555
Birthday? ...
%LUWKGD\ &DERR &DERRVH RVH
We want to be your flower shop!
FFOR OR MUSEUM MEMB MEMBERS ERS FOR FOR NON MEMBERS NON MEM MBERS 3ATURDAYS ONLY #ALL EXT 3ATU
Salisbury Flower Shop S40137
3 3 3ALISBURY ALISBURY ! !VENUE VENUE 3PENCER
3 PENCER
.# WWW NCTRANS ORG WWW NCTRANS ORRG
S46181
1628 West Innes St. Salisbury, NC â&#x20AC;˘ 704-633-5310
Hours of daily personal attention and doggie fun at our safe 20 acre facility. Professional homestyle boarding, training, and play days with a certified handler/trainer who loves dogs as much as you do.
S45263
! UNIQUE BIR BIRTHDAY THDAY EEXPERIENCE XPERIENCE %%NJOY NJOY YYOUR OUR TWO TWO HOUR PARTY PARTY AND RIDE RIDE THE TRAIN TRAIN AATT THE -USEUM . # 44RANSPORTATION RANSPORTATION USEUM )N 3PENCER 3PEN NCER
S46423
CLASSIFIED
SALISBURY POST Office and Commercial Rental
Autos
Autos
Warehouse space / manufacturing as low as $1.25/sq. ft./yr. Deposit. Call 704-431-8636
South Rowan area. Attractive mobile home lots. Water, garbage, sewer furnished. $160/mo. 704636-1312 or 704-798-0497
03 Honda CR-V EX 4x4, 4 cylinder, Auto, Roof, RW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys, Low miles, 1 owner. 10H122A $11,984 704.637.9090
Ford, 1999 Crown Victoria LX 4 Door Sedan Spruce green. 4 speed automatic. $7,345. 1-800-542-9758. Stock # F10305A2. 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com Chevrolet, 2006, Impala. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off! Ford, 2003, Ranger XLT. 4 door extended cab. Power windows, cruise, tilt, power mirrors. 80,000 miles. Very clean. $6,495. 704-637-7327
3990 Statesville Blvd for sale or rent, lot 6. 2BR. $329/mo. Call 704-6403222 for more information.
Cleveland. D/W 3BR / 2BA No pets. $575/mo + $575 dep. 704-2784508 or 704-798-5558
04 Ford F150 FX4 Supercab 4x4, V8, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AC,CD, Tow Pkg, Chrome Wheels 9K166A $11,864 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
trash and lawn service included. No pets. $475 month. 704-433-1255
East Area. Nice range, refrig, W/D, AC, elec.heat, garbage and lawn service, water all furnished. Adults only. $425.00/mo. plus deposit. 704-6402667 or 704-857-8724 or 704-279-7121.
05 Toyota Camry LE, 4 cylinder, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AC, CD, 1 Owner Car! 10BH104B $10,944 704.637.9090
Faith 2BR/2BA, private lot, appliances included, $490/mo + dep. No pets. 704-279-3518 Faith 3BR/2BA, $495/mo + dep, no pets. 2BR/1BA, $375/mo + dep. Hwy 152 /I-85. 704-239-2833 Faith. 2BR, 1BA. Very nice. ½ acre lot. Limit 3. No pets. Ref. $400. 704279-4282 or 704-202-7294
Roseman Rd. area. 2 BR. No pets, appliances & trash pickup incl. $525/ mo. + dep. 704-855-7720
Chevy, 2009 Cobalt Black w/ gray cloth interior am, fm, cd, 4 cylinder,auto, like new 24,000 miles, nonsmoker, extra clean inside and out, aluminum alloy wheels wrapped in good tires,cheap newer car for a great price. 704-603-4255 Ford, 2010, Mustang. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
06 Chevrolet Malibu LT, 4 Cylinder, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Alloys 10H288A $9,979 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
06 Scion XA Hatchback, 4 cylinder, Auto, PW,PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Great on Gas! 10H496A $9,987 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
07 Chevrolet Impala LS, V6, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AC, CD, Priced to sell $9993 704.637.9090
Cobra, 2001 Convertible 4.6 V8 w/ cold air intake. 5 speed short throw shifter, 2 tone leather/ suede seats, all pwr ops, lowering kit, 18'' staggered FR500 rims with 3'' lip, fog lights, cruise. 704603-4255
Service & Parts
Authorized EZGO Dealer. 30 years selling, servicing GOLF CARS Golf Car Batteries 6 volt, 8 volt. Golf car utility sales. US 52, 5 miles south of Salisbury. Beside East Rowan HS & Old Stone Winery. Look for EZGO sign. Buy 6 batteries & receive $10 gift receipt for purchase of a bottle of OLD STONE Wine. Coupon good until 7/31/10. 704-245-3660
6-volt – $58 8-volt – $68 12 month warranty If it's a battery, we sell it! We Buy Old Batteries! Faith Rd. to Hwy 152 Store across from Sifford's Marathon
North Myrtle Beach
Ocean Front Condo
07 KIA Sedona EX, V6, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, Dual Air, CD, 7 passenger seating, 1 Owner Car! 10BC111B $9,940 704.637.9090
Jeep, 1998, Grand Cherokee Limited. Black. 138,000 miles. Roof rack with tire. Good condition. $3,500. Please call 704-637-2986
Chevrolet, 2003 Tahoe LT 4 Door SUV 4 Speed Automatic, V 8. $14,745. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # T10109A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Transportation Financing
Ford, 1992 F-150 Custom 2 Door Regular Cab Truck 4 WD. V8. $7,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10267A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Chevy, 2003 Silverado V8 with auto tranny am, fm, cd, cold ac, bed liner, like new tires. Extra Clean Inside & Out!! 704-603-4255
Chevy, 2003 Suburban LT black w/ tan leather interior, AM, FM, CD changer, DVD, rear audio, duel climate control, duel power and heated seats, sunroof, running boards, 3rd seat. RUNS & DRIVES GREAT. 704-603-4255
Chevy, 2004 Colorado Extra clean inside & out! 4 doors, 5 cylinder, this gas saver is perfect for the first time driver or great for a back to work and home vehicle. All power, like new tires, cold ac, roll pan, exhaust. 704-603-4255
CLONINGER FORD, INC. “Try us before you buy.” 511 Jake Alexander Blvd. 704-633-9321
Ford, 1998 Explorer Limited 4 Door SUV 5 Speed automatic, V6. $7, 945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock #P7472A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Ford, 1998, Ranger. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Ford, 2003 Expedition XLT 4.6 V8 with auto trans, front & rear AC, AM, FM, CD, tape, cloth interior, after market rims, GREAT SUV FOR THE FAMILY!! 704-603-4255
Chevy, 2005 Tahoe LS white w/ tan cloth interior 5.3 V8 auto trans, all pwr options, am, fm, tape, cd, 3rd seat, duel pwr seats, clean, cruise, alloy rims, drives great. Ready for retail! 704-603-4255
Ford, 2003 Explorer Sport Track XLT 4X4 LOADED! Blue/Gray leather interior am, fm, cd DUEL HEATED SEATS, bed cover, aluminum alloy wheels good tires, running boards, sunroof, good miles, runs & drives great! 704-603-4255
08 Chrysler Sebring Touring, V6, Auto, PW,PL, Tilt, Cruise, ABS, CD, Alloys, Chrysler Certified. 10BC124A $10,998 704.637.9090
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2003, Stratus, SE. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Transportation Financing Bad Credit? No Credit? No Problem! Tim Marburger Dodge 877-792-9700
Bank Financing available. First time buyers welcome! You deserve a fresh start! Don't wait! Low Rates Available. Minimum down payment. Carfax & warranties available. Call Steve today! 704-603-4255 or 704-224-3979 after 6pm. Visit us at: www.JakeAlexanderAutoSales.com
Autos
Chrysler, 2005 Town & Country LX 4 Door Passenger Van. Stone white, 4 Speed, automatic, V8.$10,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10246C 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Financing Available! 08 Ford Focus SES, 4 Cylinder, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Alloys, Great on Gas, 1 owner. 10BK137A $10,549 704.637.9090
HONDA, 2003, ACCORD EX. $500-700 down, will help finance. Credit, No Problem! Private party sale. Call 704-838-1538
01 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series, Loaded V8, Heated Leather Seats, Roof, Climate Control, Alloys, Low Miles, Excellent Condition!! 10BC163A $8,969 704.637.9090
02 Mercury Sable GS, V6, Auto, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Power Seat, Alloys, Low Miles 57K, 10BC92B $6,944 704.637.9090
Mazda, 2002 Miata Conv DON'T GET CAUGHT with your TOP up this summer! PERFECT and AFFORDABLE! Sunlight silver w/ dark gray cloth interior. 1.8 4 cylinder gas saver w/ auto tranny. Low Miles, alloy wheels like new tires. 704-603-4255
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Chrysler, 2007 Pacifica Touring Blue/ Lt. Gray leather interior 4.0 auto am, fm, cd, DVD, TV, SUNROOF, front and rear HEATED SEATS, rear air controls, power rear door, LOADED, EXTRA CLEAN. 704-603-4255
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
KIA, 2006 Sorento 3.5 V6 auto, 4x4, cloth seats, CD, towing pkg, good tires, all power, luggage rack, runs& drives NICE!! 704-603-4255
Mazda, 2005 Tribute S 4 Door SUV. V 6. $8,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10404A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Ford, 2004 Ranger Edge 2 Door Truck V 6. 5 speed. RWD. $7,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10327A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com Oldsmobile, 2001, Silhouette. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Toyota, 2002 Camry SE V6 4 Door Sedan 4 speed automatic $8,745. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # T10487A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Boats & Watercraft
Buick, 2004, Ranier. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2002 Dakota BASE 2 Door Long Bed Truck. V 6. $10,445. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # T10554A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Ford, 2004, Expedition XLT. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
16 foot Silver Line walk thru Wind Shield. 4 cylinder, inboard/ outboard motor. Clean and runs good. $1,250. 704-636-8865
Suburban, 2005 LT Sport Leather interior 5.3 V8 backed w/ 4 speed automatic tranny, all pwr options incl'd heated seats, sunroof, cd, dvd, 3RD seat, steering wheel controls, running boards! 704-603-4255
Collector Cars Ford Focus 2001, 4 door, 87K miles, new tires, automatic, power windows, cruise, $3,700. 704-202-0326
Pontiac, 2008, Grand Prix. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Chevrolet, 2003, S10. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Kia, 2005, Sedona. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Autos
BMW, 2004 330Xi Silver with black leather interior, 6 cylinder with auto tranny, AM, FM, CD, duel seat warmers, all power options, SUNROOF, run & drives like a DREAM! 704-603-4255
Honda, 2005 Odyssey EXL Van Silver/dark gray leather interior, cd, dvd, steering wheel controls, sunroof, 3rd seat, duel heated seats, LOADED, alloy wheels with good tires. 704-6034255
Ford, 2003, Explorer Eddie Bauer. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Older man in Kannapolis has a nice, spacious, furnished room for rent. It's in a nice neighborhood. No smoking, drugs, loud music or animals. Cable available. Free parking. Only $85/week + $45 deposit. References required. 704-932-5008
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Mazda, 2000 B3000 Extended Cab 4 Speed, automatic, V6. $7,945. Stock # F10347C 1-800-542-9758 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Lincoln, 1998, Town Car. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
GMC, 2007,Sierra. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Troutman Motor Co. Highway 29 South, Concord, NC 704-782-3105
Dodge, 2003, Stratus R/T. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Rooms for Rent
GMC, 1997 Jimmy 4 Wheel drive, 4 door, V6, leather, sunroof, pwr windows, doors and seats. New AC. $2,700. Call 704-647-0881
Transportation Dealerships
Tim Marburger Honda 1309 N First St. (Hwy 52) Albemarle NC 704-983-4107
Volvo, 2006 S60 2.5T Onyx black with cream leather interior, sunroof, cd player, all power, alloy wheels, super nice! 704-603-4255
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
BATTERY-R-US GOLF CART BATTERIES
TEAM CHEVROLET- GEO, CADILLAC, OLDSMOBILE 404 Jake Alexander Blvd., Salisbury. Call 704-636-9370
Jaguar, 2001 S-Type 4.0L V8 Sedan 5 Speed automatic, V8. $11,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # P7486A 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Recreational Vehicles
NEED CASH? We buy cars & scrap metal by the pound. Call for latest prices. Stricklin Auto & Truck Parts. Call 704-278-1122 or 888-378-1122
Volkswagon, 2006, Beetle Convertible. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Resort & Vacation Rentals
MILLER HOTEL Rooms for Rent Weekly $110 & up 704-855-2100
Toyota, 2006 Camry LE White w/gray cloth interior. 2.4 4 cylinder with auto tranny am, fm, cd, cold ac, sunroof, power driver seat, extra clean inside & out. Runs & drives awesome! 704603-4255
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Salis., Pickler Rd, 2BR/1BA in country, priv lot, quite n'hood, cent H/A, limit 3, no pets. 704-639-1242 lv msg
2BR, 2BA Ocean front condo. Sleeps 6, fully equipped. Outdoor pool. Quiet family area, yet close to shops and restaurants. Locally owned. Reasonbly priced. 704-603-8647
Toyota, 1998, Camry LE. Automatic, 4 cylinder. Leather, sunroof, green. New tires, great shape. 159K miles, $3,500. 704-636-8027
Hyundai, 2006, Tiberon GT. LIKE NEW!!! Blue/Black leather interior, SUNROOF, AM/FM/ CD. V6. Tiptronic transmission. Aluminum rims, good tires. 704-603-4255
S. Rowan area. 3BR, 2BA $600/mo. + $600 deposit. No pets. 2 year contract. 704-640-5496
West & South Rowan. 2 & 3 BR. No pets. Perfect for 3. Water included. Please call 704-857-6951
Kawasaki 2002, Vulcan 800 Classic. Beautiful red & chrome. Very low miles, 4K. Newer grips, backrest, windshield. 1 owner. Only asking $3,800. Call anytime. 980-234-4360
704-213-1005 Chrysler, 1999, Concorde LX. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
You Must See This!
www.battery-r-us.com
Hurley School Rd. area. 2BR, 1BA. Nice subdiv. Well kept. 3 people. $425 + dep. 704-640-5750 Near Lexington. Nice 2BR, 1½BA. $115/wk. References & deposit required. 704-638-5538
Ford, 2007 Focus SE White over gray cloth interior, 2.0 with auto trans, AM, FM, CD, sat radio, power windows, brakes & locks. Cold ac, LOW MILES, runs & drives great! 704-603-4255
Motorcycles & ATVs
2001 24' camper on High Rock Lake. Shared dock. $6,500. Includes lot rent through April 2011. 828-754-6829 Toyota, 1996 Camry LE 4 Door Sedan. Tan, 4 speed automatic $5,945. 1-800-542-9758 Stock # F10051B 2 Year Warranty www.cloningerford.com
Chevrolet, 2006, Malibu. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
East area, 2 bedroom,
East Area. 2BR, water, trash. Limit 3. Dep. req. No pets. Call 704-6367531 or 704-202-4991
Toyota Forerunner 1995, V6, automatic, 4wheel drive, all power, new tires, very clean. 168K miles, $2,500. 704202-0326
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Manufactured Home for Rent
China Grove. 2BR,1BA. Ref. $465/mo. + $400 dep. Incl. garbage, water. No pets. 704-857-3473 or 704-202-4344
Autos ELLIS AUTO AUCTION 10 miles N. of Salisbury, Hwy 601, Sale Every Wednesday night 6 pm.
Audi, 2000. A6. Black, 4-door, clean. Please call 704-279-8692
Salis. 1,000 s.f. Free standing, ample pkg., previously restaurant. Drive-In window 704-202-5879
Manufactured Home Lot Rentals
Autos
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 9B
Ford, 2002 ThunderBird Convertible. White w/ dark gray leather interior, am, fm, cd changer, 3.9 V8, auto trans, all power options, fog lights, chrome rims with good tires. A REAL Must See! 704-603-4255
Suzuki, 2007, Forenza. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Ford, 1966, Fairlane 500 ~ restored. 2 Door Coupe. Completely rebuilt 390 Motor w/GT parts. 428 Cobra Jet Heads, new interior, new original paint. Many spare parts. Only non-original parts are wheels and power steering rack. Painted original Carolina blue w/dark blue interior. Must see & drive to appreciate! $21,500 OBO. Beautiful car. Runs and drives great. 504-638-7600
Motorcycles & ATVs Yamaha, 2001. 2 wheel drive. $1,800. 704-636-3605. Call after 5pm.
Chevrolet, 1998, Tahoe. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2003, Durango. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Ford, 2006 Expedition Eddie Bauer Edition. cd, DVD, SUNROOF, duel heated seats, POWER 3rd seat, luggage rack. Steering wheel controls, nonsmoker. Like new. MUST SEE! 704-603-4255 2005 Jeep Liberty V6 4x4 3.5L Blk w/Tan int., 4 cyl., all power, AM/FM, C/D, low miles, chrome rims w/like new tires, Extra Clean Gas Saver !!!! 704-603-4255
Chevrolet, 1999, Suburban. 100% GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL. OVER 50 VEHICLES IN STOCK! Summer Sell-Off!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Dodge, 2006 Durango LIMITED 4.7. V8 auto 4x4 Leather,DVD, all pwr options, duel power/ heated seats, rear POWER LIFT GATE, good tires, DON'T WANT TO MISS THIS ONE! 704-603-4255
FORD, 2006 Freestyle, SE AWD. 4 door. 92K miles. Local company car that has been used for marketing purposes. All services performed by Ford dealership. Asking price $7,995. All inquires, call Charles Church 704-4318898 anytime
Want to Buy: Transportation DONATED passenger van or bus needed for newly formed Youth Group. Call Pastor Rob at 980-721-3371. Thanks for letting your love shine!
COMICS
10B â&#x20AC;˘ MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
Zits/Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Jump Start/Robb Armstrong
For Better or For Worse/Lynn Johnston
Frank & Ernest/Bob Thaves
SALISBURY POST
Dilbert/Scott Adams Non Sequitur/Wiley Miller
Garfield/Jim Davis Pickles/Brian Crane
Hagar The Horrible/Chris Browne Dennis/Hank Ketcham
Family Circus/Bil Keane
Blondie/Dean Young and John Marshall
Crossword/NEA
Get Fuzzy/Darby Conley
The Born Loser/Art and Chip Sansom
Sudoku/United Feature Syndicate Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Celebrity Cipher/Luis Campos
TV/HOROSCOPE
SALISBURY POST
MONDAY EVENING JUNE 28, 2010 7:00
7:30
8:00
Wheel of Fortune Å WBTV News Prime Time (N)
Jeopardy! (N) Å Who Wants to Be a Millionaire
How I Met Your Mother How I Met Your Mother Å
3
CBS ( WGHP
22
FOX ) WSOC
9
ABC ,
WXII NBC
2 WCCB
11
D WCNC
Nightly 6 NBC News (N) (In
NBC J
WTVI
Å
Stereo) Å
4 Everyday Edisons Å
ABC World News Guy (In WJZY 8 Family Stereo) Å The Simpsons WMYV Deal or No Deal WMYT 12 A home health nurse. (:00) PBS WUNG 5 NewsHour (N) Å
M WXLV N P W Z
9:30
Rules of Two and a Half (:31) The Big Engagement Men Bang Theory Two and a Half (:31) The Big Rules of Men (In Stereo) Bang Theory Å Engagement “Flirting” Å Å TMZ (N) (In Are You Smarter Lie to Me “React to Contact” The Good Guys “$3.52” A drug Lightman tries to help a war vetStereo) Å Than a 5th smuggler is set free. (N) (In Stereo) eran. (N) (In Stereo) Å Grader? Å Inside Edition Entertainment The Bachelorette (N) (In Stereo) Å Tonight (N) (In Å Stereo) Å Inside Edition Entertainment Last Comic Standing Semifinals begin. (N) (In Stereo) Å Tonight (N) (In Å Stereo) Å My Name Is Earl Lie to Me “React to Contact” The King of The Good Guys “$3.52” A drug Queens “Missing “Teacher Earl” Å Lightman tries to help a war vetsmuggler is set free. (N) (In Stereo) Links” eran. (N) (In Stereo) Å Å Jeopardy! Wheel of Last Comic Standing Semifinals begin. (N) (In Stereo) Å (N) Å Fortune “Historic Boston” Å PBS NewsHour (N) (In Stereo) Å Forever Wild (In Stereo) The Secret Life of Seahorses Deal or No Who Wants/ Deal Å Millionaire Two and a Half Two and a Half Men Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Uncivilized” An attorney defends a known pedophile. Nightly North Carolina Business Now Mary Lou Report (N) Å Harcharic.
The Bachelorette (N) (In Stereo) Å 90210 “Wild Alaskan Salmon” (In Stereo) Å Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent A young man is killed while trying to steal evidence. Å Antiques Roadshow Collection of 20th-century Remington ammunition-themed calendars.
Gossip Girl Private Lady Gaga concert. (In Stereo) Å Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Detectives probe the slaying of a female Secret Service agent. History Detectives Hand-drawn map from World War II. (N) (In Stereo) Å
10:00
10:30
(:01) CSI: Miami A man is murdered in outer space. Å (:01) CSI: Miami “Miami, We Have a Problem” A man is murdered in outer space. Å FOX 8 10:00 News (N)
11:00
11:30
News 2 at 11 (N) Å WBTV 3 News at 11 PM (N)
Late Show W/ Letterman Late Show With David Letterman (N) Seinfeld A base- Seinfeld Jerry ball hero falls for thinks girlfriend has fungus. Elaine. (:02) True Beauty “Change My WSOC 9 News (:35) Nightline Score!” A contestant tries to change Tonight (N) Å (N) Å a score. (N) Å Persons Unknown “Exit One” Joe WXII 12 News at (:35) Wimbledon visits someone in town. (N) (In 11 (N) Å Update (N) Å Stereo) Å Fox News at (:35) Fox News The Simpsons King of the Hill 10 (N) Edge (In Stereo) Å VFW meets at the Hill home. Persons Unknown “Exit One” Joe NewsChannel (:35) Wimbledon Update (N) Å visits someone in town. (N) (In 36 News at Stereo) Å 11:00 (N) Get Off Your Knees: The John The Teachings of Jon (In Stereo) Robinson Story Å Å (:02) True Beauty A contestant Frasier (In (:35) Nightline tries to change a score. (N) Stereo) Å (N) Å WJZY News at (:35) Family (:05) The Office (:35) Seinfeld Å 10 (N) Guy Å Å The Office The Office House-Payne House-Payne Tyler Perry’s George Lopez Tyler Perry’s My Wife and House of Payne House of Payne Kids “Restaurant “Split Decision” Wars” Å Å Å The Wall -- A World Divided BBC World Charlie Rose (N) The opening of the Berlin Wall in News (In Stereo) (In Stereo) Å November 1989. (N) Å Å
CABLE CHANNELS A&E
Intervention Intervention “Vinnie” Crack addict. Intervention Exercise addict, 36 (:00) “Phillip” bulimic and alcoholic. Å Å
AMC
27
ANIM BET BRAVO CNBC CNN
38 59 37 34 32
DISC
35
DISN
54
E!
49
ESPN
39
ESPN2
Intervention An alcoholic drinks Obsessed “Cindee & Graham” Obsessed “Richie” Richie is a with her son. (N) Å Cindee works out alot. Å hoarder. Å (4:30) Movie: ››› “Cold Mountain” (2003) Jude Movie: ››› “The Client” (1994) Susan Sarandon, Tommy Lee Jones, Mary-Louise (:45) Movie: ›› “Fear” (1996) Mark Wahlberg, Law, Nicole Kidman. Å Parker. Reese Witherspoon. Animal Cops River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live TBA Movie: “Steppin: The Movie” (2009) Darius McCrary. Smash! Best of BET Awards The Mo’Nique Show Å Housewives Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ What Happens Housewives Mad Money The Kudlow Report (N) The Oprah Effect Biography on CNBC American Greed Mad Money Situation Rm John King, USA (N) Campbell Brown (N) Larry King Live (N) Å Anderson Cooper 360 Å Cash Cab (N) Å Ultimate Car Build-Off A mini-van Chasing Classic Chasing Classic Ultimate Car Build-Off “HillHeartland Thunder Race to repair Chasing Classic Chasing Classic is turned into a supercar. Cars Å Cars Å Climbing Hearse” (N) Å badly damaged cars. (N) Cars Å Cars Å The Suite Life Wizards of Hannah Movie: “Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure” (2009) Phineas and Phineas and Hannah Wizards of The Suite Life on Deck Å Waverly Place Montana Å Voices of Mae Whitman, Lucy Liu. Ferb Å Ferb Å Montana Å Waverly Place on Deck Å The Soup E! News The Daily 10 Take Miami Take Miami Holly’s World Holly’s World Kardashian Chelsea Lately E! News (:00) SportsCenter (Live) Å College Baseball NCAA World Series Championship, Game 1: Teams TBA. From Omaha, Neb. (Live) Å SportsCenter (Live) Å MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live) Å Baseball Tonight (Live) Å World Cup Primetime (N) That ’70s Show The Secret Life of the American The Secret Life of the American Huge Will arrives at the weight-loss Make It or Break It The girls have The 700 Club Å Teenager Å Teenager (N) Å camp. Å concerns with Sasha. Å Movie: ››› “Coach Carter” (2005) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard. A high-school basketball coach turns a losing team The Good Guys (In Stereo) Å Movie: ››› “He Got Game” around, then faces criticism for pushing the athletes to put grades first. (1998) Ray Allen Special Report FOX Report W/ Shepard Smith The O’Reilly Factor (N) Å Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Reds Live MLB Baseball Philadelphia Phillies at Cincinnati Reds. (Live) Golden Age Final Score Golden Age Final Score Golf Fitness The Golf Fix (Live) Big Break Sandals Resorts Big Break Sandals Resorts (N) The Golf Fix Golf Central Learning M*A*S*H Å Touched by an Angel Å Touched by an Angel Å Movie: “For the Love of Grace” (2008) Mark Consuelos. Å Golden Girls Golden Girls Holmes House Hunters House Hunters Green Home Property Virgin House Hunters My First Sale House Hunters House Hunters Selling New My First Place Pawn Stars Å American Pickers The Holy Grail Pawn Stars Å Pawn Stars “Aw American Pickers The guys finish Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Å American Pickers Frank finds a of picking. Å Shucks!” their trip in the South. (N) (N) Å gold mine of signs. Å I Gospel Paid Program Helpline Today Joyce Meyer Jewish Jesus Inspir. Today Life Today Paid Program Secrets/Bible Hal Lindsey Giving Hope (:00) Wife Swap Reba (In Stereo) Reba “Vanny Reba Reba gets Reba “All Fore Movie: ›› “Where the Heart Is” (2000) Natalie Portman, Ashley Drop Dead Diva “Home & Away” Dearest” Å the blame. One” Å Judd, Stockard Channing. Å Tony receives news. Å Å (:00) Movie: “True Confessions of a Hollywood Movie: “Acceptance” (2009) Joan Cusack. A woman tries to help her Movie: ›‡ “Dying to Belong” (1997) Hilary Swank, Mark-Paul Starlet” (2008) Joanna “JoJo” Levesque. Å teenage daughter with the college-admissions process. Gosselaar, Jenna von Oy. Å The Ed Show Hardball With Chris Matthews Countdown With K. Olbermann The Rachel Maddow Show (N) Countdown With K. Olbermann The Rachel Maddow Show Great White Biker Chicks: Leather & Lace Taboo “Outsiders” Taboo “Misfits” Taboo Shedding clothes. Taboo “Outsiders” iCarly (N) (In Big Time Rush SpongeBob Behind: The Family Matters Everybody Everybody George Lopez George Lopez Malcolm in the Malcolm in the Stereo) Å SquarePants Last Airbender Å Hates Chris Hates Chris Middle Å Middle Å Å Å Å Dance Your America’s Got Talent (N) Å America’s Got Talent (N) Å Dance Your A... Off Å Dance Your A... Off (N) Å Dance Your A... Off Å CSI UFC 116: Countdown: Lesnar v (:07) Movie: ›› “Cradle 2 the Grave” (2003) Jet Li, DMX. (In Stereo) Entourage Entourage Entourage World Poker WNBA Basketball Los Angeles Sparks at Atlanta Dream. In My Words In My Words Spotlight Spotlight Women’s College Lacrosse (:00) Ghost Ghost Whisperer Melinda remem- Ghost Whisperer (In Stereo) Å Ghost Whisperer “Giving Up the Ghost Whisperer “Cat’s Claw” (In Monster “I’m Monster Whisperer bers when she met Jim. Ghost” (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Back” (N) “Ruhenheim” (N) The King of Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Family Guy (In Family Guy (In Family Guy (In Family Guy (In Neighbors From Family Guy (In Lopez Tonight Queens Å Stand-In” Butter Shave” Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Hell (N) Stereo) Å (:15) Movie: ››‡ “Music in Manhattan” (1944) Movie: ››› “The Great Race” (1965) Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, Natalie Wood. Å (:45) Movie: ››‡ “Inside Daisy Clover” (1965) Anne Shirley, Dennis Day. Natalie Wood, Robert Redford. Say Yes Inedible, Incre. Inedible, Incre. Food Buddha Food Buddha Cake Boss (N) Cake Boss Inedible, Incre. Inedible, Incre. Food Buddha Food Buddha (:00) Law & Bones “Death in the Saddle” (In Bones A farmer is suspected of Bones “Mummy in the Maze” A Bones “Intern in the Incinerator” (In The Closer “Make Over” Several Order “Enemy” Stereo) Å murder. (In Stereo) Å Halloween killer. Å Stereo) Å old cases are reviewed. Police Videos Cops Å Cops Å Oper. Repo Oper. Repo Operate-Repo Operate-Repo All Worked Up All Worked Up Memphis Beat Å All in the Family Sanford and Sanford and The Cosby The Cosby EverybodyEverybodyMovie: ››› “Stand by Me” (1986) Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Son Å Son Å Show Å Show Å Raymond Raymond Corey Feldman. (:00) NCIS (In NCIS “Iced” The body of a missing NCIS The team probes a cryptogra- WWE Monday Night RAW (In Stereo Live) Å (:05) Burn Notice “Breach of Stereo) Å Marine is found. Å pher’s death. Å Faith” Å W. Williams Judge Brown Judge Brown Dr. Phil (In Stereo) Å The Oprah Winfrey Show Eyewitness Entertainment The Insider (N) (:35) Friends Becker “Heart America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos WGN News at Nine (N) (In Stereo) Scrubs “My New Scrubs “My First Breaker” (In Stereo) Å (In Stereo) Å (In Stereo) Å Game” Kill” Å
68 NASCAR Now
FAM
29
FX
45
FXNWS FXSS GOLF HALL HGTV
57 40 66 76 46
HIST
65
INSP
78
LIFE
31
LIFEM
72
MSNBC NGEO
50 58
NICK
30
OXYGEN SPIKE SPSO
62 44 60
SYFY
64
TBS
24
TCM
25
TLC
48
TNT
26
TRU
75
TVL
56
USA
28
WAXN
2
WGN
13
PREMIUM CHANNELS
Movie: ››‡ “City of Ember” (2008) Saoirse 15 (:15) Ronan. (In Stereo) Å
HBO2
302
HBO3
304
MAX
320
SHOW
340
REAL Sports With Bryant Kevorkian Dr. Jack Kevorkian runs for Congress after Movie: ››‡ “Notorious” (2009) Angela Bassett, Gumbel (In Stereo) Å leaving prison. (N) (In Stereo) Å Derek Luke. (In Stereo) Å (5:45) Movie: ›››‡ “Jurassic Park” (1993) Sam True Blood “It Hurts Me Too” Entourage Hung “Just the Movie: ››‡ “The Last House on the Left” (2009) Tony Goldwyn, Neill. (In Stereo) Å Sookie heads to Jackson. “Stunted” Tip” Å Monica Potter. (In Stereo) Å (5:15) Movie: (:15) Movie: ›› “Hackers” (1995) Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie, Movie: ››› “Cast Away” (2000) Tom Hanks, Helen Hunt, Nick Searcy. (In Stereo) Å Movie: “Away “Shoot to Kill” Jesse Bradford. (In Stereo) Å We Go” (2009) (:45) Movie: ››› “I Love You, Man” (2009) Paul Rudd, Jason Segel, Movie: ››‡ “The Strangers” (2008) Liv Tyler, Movie: ››‡ “A Perfect Getaway” (2009) Steve (:40) Movie: Rashida Jones. (In Stereo) Å Gemma Ward. (In Stereo) Å Zahn, Milla Jovovich. Å “Brüno” (2009) (5:30) Movie: Movie: ››› “Adventureland” (2009) Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen The Real L Word “Game On!” (iTV) Weeds “Su-Su- The Green The Real L Word “Game On!” (iTV) “Labor Pains” Stewart, Martin Starr. iTV. Sucio” Room
BY PHILLIP ALDER
United Feature Syndicate
What are the most common errors made by declarer at trick one? Here are a few of the more important: Failing to count top tricks in a no-trump contract; failing to count losers in a trump contract; not analyzing the opening lead; forgetting the information available from the auction; and playing without forming a plan. That last one leads into the most serious: playing too quickly. Unless the deal is trivial, you should be happy to take at least 60 seconds before calling for a card from the dummy. This week, let’s look at some deals where the key play comes at trick one. Declarer must win the first trick in the right hand and, sometimes, with the correct card. In this example, how would you plan the play in four spades after West leads the heart queen? When partner made a gameinvitational spade raise, you reevaluated, adding three points for your singleton. Hence your game bid. There are three aces missing plus a potential fourth loser in hearts. If you win the first trick and play a trump, East will win and return a heart, setting up that setting trick. The answer is to lead the club king immediately, the honor from the shorter side first. This will establish a discard for dummy’s heart loser on the third round of the suit. But did you notice that it is vital to win the
UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE
Today’s celebrity birthdays Comedian-director Mel Brooks is 84. Comedian John Byner is 73. Bassist Dave Knights of Procol Harum is 65. Actor Bruce Davison is 64. Actress Kathy Bates is 62. Actress Alice Krige is 56. Actress Jessica Hecht (“Friends,” “The Single Guy”) is 45. Guitaristviolinist Saul Davies of James is 45. Actress Mary Stuart Masterson is 44. Actor John Cusack is 44. Actor Gil Bellows is 43. Actress Danielle Brisebois (“All in the Family”) is 41. Actress Tichina Arnold (“Everybody Hates Chris”) is 39. Bassist Tim Nordwind of OK Go is 34. Bassist Mark Stoermer of The Killers is 33. Country singer and former “American Idol” contestant Kellie Pickler is 24.
Is change in bladder a culprit of catheter?
The card-play key is trick one
first trick in the dummy? If not, West can duck the first round of clubs, win the second, and lead another heart. You will have to win that with dummy’s ace and have no quick hand-entry for the vital discard.
‘Toy Story 3,’ Sandler are hot LOS ANGELES (AP) — The “Toy Story 3” gang and Adam Sandler are finding plenty of playmates at movie theaters. Tom Cruise is not so popular, though. The Disney-Pixar Animation smash “Toy Story 3” remained the No. 1 film with $59 million in its second weekend, raising its domestic total to $226.6 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Sandler’s “Grown Ups” debuted at No. 2 with a healthy $41 million. Released by Sony, the comedy costarring Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider did well despite a thrashing from critics.
Dear Dr. Gott: I had gyneCould this change in my cology surgery in December ability to empty my bladder 2009 because I was having quickly be a result of generheavy menstrual cycles. An al anesthesia or the ultrasound showed a buildup catheter? What tests and of the uterine treatment should I seek? lining, so my Will this go away, or is it gynecologist something I have to live performed a with? I now urinate freD&C and a quently to intentionally precolposcopy, vent my bladder from getand biopsied ting too full, but I’m not sure a few spots. what else I could or should All the rebe doing. Many thanks for sults were sharing knowledge and expertise. DR. PETER normal. After the GOTT surgery, I Dear Reader: A catheter is was able to a thin, flexible tube that is urinate a few times a day inserted into the body to eibut retained two pounds of ther introduce or withdraw fluid for two days. On the fluids. The word catheter is third day after the surgery, most often used to describe I was finally able to elimia tube that is used to empty nate all of the retained fluid the bladder. This can be and I urinated every 20 min- achieved by insertion directutes all day long. Since then, ly into the urethra, which I have noticed that my urine leads to the bladder, or in stream is weak. It has been some instances, a special five months since the suropening is created within gery, and lately, when my bladder is full in the morning, I am not able to empty it fast enough, and it causes pelvic pressure and pain and sometimes cramping We buy small & large until it slowly empties. I do tracts of timber. not have a fever, blood in Also firewood for sale. my urine or a burning senPlease call for sation. I do not have a history of kidney stones and have only had one UTI, which was 11 years ago. The only medication that I Tri-axle Dump Trucks currently take is atenolol in For Hire the morning. The night priWe Sell Creek Sand, or to the surgery, I was givField Dirt, Gravel, en misoprostol to ripen my Mulch & Firewood. cervix. The procedure required a catheter, which 430 Chesapeake Dr. • Salisbury Jerome Hosch Licensed & Insured was removed before I reWorkers Comp. 704-363-6164 gained consciousness. hoschtrucking@yahoo.com
the abdomen for the catheter to be placed. Dilation and curettage (D&C) is a surgical procedure in which a physician dilates the cervix and then scrapes the uterine lining. This is done for a number of reasons, including following abortion or miscarriage, heavy menstrual cycles or as a diagnostic tool for determining the presence of certain gynecologic disorders. Now, to your specific concerns. First, because of the proximity of the vagina to the urethra and bladder, your question is whether either or both were inadvertently damaged. This is fairly unlikely; however, it is a possibility that should be looked into. Next, a catheter can cause scarring of the urethra if inserted improperly and repeatedly over time.
Since you mentioned its use only once, during your surgery, this is probably not your problem, but I can’t rule it out entirely. Request a referral to a urologist for further examination and testing. He or she can then determine whether your problem is directly related to the D&C or some other condition, such as a urinary-tract infection. While it’s uncommon, some people don’t experience any symptoms or have only mild ones that go unnoticed. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com. UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE
HOSCH Grown Need LOGGING HomeTomatoes, FREE ESTIMATE LOW RATES!!!
R120107
HBO
Chances are something you thought to be quite promising was derailed in the past year because of poor timing. Conditions are likely to change for you in the year ahead, making it possible for you to now succeed. Do try again. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Don’t hesitate to appear unafraid of a challenge, even if you’re a bit uncertain. Act as if you can’t lose, and the competition will wilt right in front of your eyes. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Diplomacy and tact are two tools you always use quite effectively in order to put others at ease. You’ll be applauded for your use of them when you are confronted with a shy person. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — A fortuitous shift in conditions could put more money in your pocket. Chances are someone who likes what you do and how you go about doing it will be responsible for triggering the windfall. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Take some time to do things with friends, because it will be through persons with whom you’re involved socially that a number of good things could happen for you. Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — If you recognize it to be an opportunity, act on what you perceive to be a moneymaker because it could contribute to your financial well-being in a big way. Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — It should come as no surprise that you are a tad more fortunate than usual, especially with things that involve a pronounced element of chance. You’re used to being lucky. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Someone who likes you might volunteer to do something for you that would make your life a whole lot easier. Chances are it will be a loving relative who makes this warm gesture. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Someone else’s far-fetched idea could actually work and turn out to be quite feasible and functional. Don’t hesitate to take a crack at if you get a chance. Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) — Concealed within your personal makeup are an inner strength and resolve others have little idea exist. Should you be confronted with either opportunity or challenge, one or both could emerge. Aries (March 21-April 19) — You definitely have something others want, so don’t hold back anything you’re thinking and/or would like to promote. You’ll be shocked at how quickly listeners will respond. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Don’t base whether or not you attempt something on the experiences of another. This is another day and you are another person who will work things out entirely differently. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Granted, you always have an abundance of ideas, but this time there is likely to be one that will be outstanding. You shouldn’t have any trouble recognizing it when it pops in your head.
A/C?
Cucumbers, Squash, Zucchini, Hot Peppers, Okra & More! 704-239-0097 or 704-213-4926 MON - FRI 9AM-6PM SAT 9AM-4PM Old Mocksville Rd., Salisbury (2.4 miles from hospital)
Granite Auto Parts & Service
209-6331
704/
Hwy. 52 Granite Quarry
36 95
# WBTV
CBS Evening News-Couric CBS Evening News With Katie Couric (N) Access Hollywood (N) Å ABC World News With Diane Sawyer NBC Nightly News (N) (In Stereo) Å Everybody Loves Raymond
9:00
12
^ WFMY
8:30
Monday, June 28
R
6:30
A - Time Warner/Salisbury/Metrolina
R123200
A
BROADCAST CHANNELS
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010 • 11B
W E AT H E R
12B • MONDAY, JUNE 28, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Custom Corn Hole Boards • Bags • $25 per set • Lifetime warranty • 20+ colors available
Boards
ready in a week
•
•
Custom made to order
90 day warranty
R125232
Prices start at $120
Largest Selection of Collegiate Merchandise in Rowan & Cabarrus Counties
704-637-5144
Open Monday-Friday 9am-5pm www.ConferenceWear.com
AccuWeather® 5-Day Forecast for Salisbury
National Cities City
Tonight
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
A few strong p.m. t-storms
Mostly cloudy with t-storms
Clouds and sun with a t-storm
Partly sunny and nice
Some sunshine
Mostly sunny and nice
High 93°
Low 73°
High 93° Low 71°
High 88° Low 68°
High 82° Low 64°
High 86° Low 65°
Zero Turn Mowers as low as $3,69995
R121938
Today
Faith Farm & Equipment Sales, Inc. Ad goes here
585 WEST RITCHIE RD., SALISBURY, NC • I-85 AT EXIT 74
www.faithfarm.com
(704) 431-4566
Regional Weather Boone 84/66 Knoxville 89/71 Hickory 94/70 Franklin 88/65
Asheville 87/67
Danville 94/72 Winston Salem Durham 91/72 96/72 Greensboro 92/72 Raleigh 96/77 Salisbury 93/73
Spartanburg 95/69
Charlotte 94/72
Greenville 95/72
Kitty Hawk 87/79
Goldsboro 95/75
Lumberton 96/75
Morehead City 87/79 Columbia 94/75
Atlanta 91/73
Sunrise today .................. 6:08 a.m. Sunset tonight .................. 8:42 p.m. Moonrise today .............. 10:17 p.m. Moonset today .................. 8:05 a.m.
Last
July 4
New
July 11
First
July 18
Augusta 93/73
Allendale 94/71
Full
July 25
Savannah 93/75
Data from Salisbury through 8 a.m. yest. Temperature High .................................................. 91° Low .................................................. 73° Last year's high ................................ 91° Last year's low .................................. 70° Normal high ...................................... 88° Normal low ...................................... 66° Record high ...................... 103° in 1952 Record low .......................... 53° in 1985 Humidity at noon ............................ 50% Precipitation 24 hours through 8 a.m. yest. ........ 0.00" Month to date ................................ 5.77" Normal month to date .................. 3.51" Year to date ................................ 28.15" Normal year to date .................... 21.86"
Today at noon .................................. 103°
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2010 -10s -0s Seattle 66/51
Hilton Head 89/77 Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Air Quality Index Charlotte Yesterday .. 100 Mod. ............................ Ozone Today's forecast .. Moderate N. C. Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources 0-50 good, 51-100 moderate, 101-150 unhealthy for sensitive grps., 151-200 unhealthy, 201-300 very unhealthy, 301-500 hazardous
AccuWeather.com UV Index
TM
Highest today ......................... 9, Very High Noon ...................................... 9, Very High 3 p.m. ............................................. 6, High 0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
MONDAY, JUNE 28
20s
LAKE LEVELS
Lake
The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exlcusive index or the effects or temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, pressure and elevation on the human body.
10s
Statistics are through 7 a.m. yesterday. Measured in feet. Charleston 92/76
Tues. Hi Lo W
® REAL FEEL TEMPERATURE RealFeel Temperature™
Minneapolis 76/56
Billings 93/61
30s
Myrtle Beach 92/79
Today Hi Lo W
Almanac
Chicago 84/59
40s
Aiken 94/71
SUN AND MOON
Wilmington 91/79
City
Amsterdam 80 62 s 76 61 s Atlanta 91 73 t 91 73 t Athens 82 69 t 85 71 s Atlantic City 95 75 t 89 65 pc Beijing 95 75 pc 95 73 s Baltimore 96 72 t 90 63 pc Beirut 73 71 s 76 73 s Billings 93 61 s 97 63 pc Belgrade 77 63 sh 84 60 pc Boston 92 68 t 84 64 pc Berlin 82 59 s 86 64 s Chicago 84 59 s 77 54 s Brussels 81 63 s 79 58 sh Cleveland 83 60 t 72 52 sh Buenos Aires 57 43 s 59 48 pc Dallas 95 76 t 92 73 t Cairo 101 77 s 104 74 s Denver 91 58 pc 88 59 s Calgary 82 50 pc 70 49 t Detroit 87 58 pc 73 53 pc Dublin 68 55 pc 68 59 pc Fairbanks 74 52 pc 75 56 sh Edinburgh 71 54 pc 67 57 pc Honolulu 88 75 s 88 75 s Geneva 80 62 t 76 62 t Houston 95 77 t 94 77 t Jerusalem 82 60 s 86 61 s Indianapolis 85 62 pc 80 55 s Johannesburg 61 39 c 58 35 pc Kansas City 87 66 s 84 63 s London 82 59 s 79 59 pc Las Vegas 108 79 s 107 80 s Madrid 91 60 pc 91 60 pc Los Angeles 78 62 pc 78 63 pc Mexico City 78 52 pc 76 53 c Miami 90 80 t 90 79 t Moscow 75 43 pc 72 48 s Minneapolis 76 56 s 77 57 s Paris 87 62 t 85 59 sh New Orleans 92 79 t 91 79 t Rio de Janeiro 79 66 s 76 67 s New York 95 72 t 87 70 pc Rome 84 65 s 85 64 s Omaha 87 60 s 84 62 s San Juan 91 78 sh 90 78 sh Philadelphia 95 72 t 88 66 pc Seoul 84 68 pc 84 68 pc Phoenix 108 78 s 109 82 s Sydney 59 41 s 57 39 s Salt Lake City 94 68 s 98 70 t Tokyo 84 74 sh 77 72 sh San Francisco 76 55 pc 68 51 pc Toronto 78 58 t 70 53 sh Seattle 66 51 pc 66 49 pc Winnipeg 68 45 pc 69 52 s Tucson 105 72 s 104 76 s Zurich 81 56 s 78 59 s Washington, DC 96 75 t 88 68 pc Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
0s
Southport 86/77
Tues. Hi Lo W
Source: NWS co-op (9 miles WNW)
Cape Hatteras 87/78
Darlington 96/75
Today Hi Lo W
World Cities
Above/Below Observed Full Pool
High Rock Lake .... 652.50 ...... -2.50 Badin Lake .......... 539.90 ...... -2.10 Tuckertown Lake .. 595.00 ...... -1.00 Tillery Lake .......... 278.00 ...... -1.00 Blewett Falls ........ 177.80 ...... -1.20 Lake Norman ........ 97.85 ........ -2.15
50s 60s
San Francisco 76/55
Denver 91/58
Detroit 87/58
Kansas City 87/66
70s 80s
Los Angeles 78/62
Atlanta 91/73
90s 100s 110s Precipitation
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
New York 95/72 Washington 96/75
El Paso 97/73
Cold Front
Houston 95/77 Miami 90/80
Warm Front Stationary Front
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.