Saturday, December 4, 2010 | 50¢
Salisbury losing 490 jobs in PGT move BY EMILY FORD eford@salisburypost.com
Lured by $600,000 in cash incentives from Sarasota County in Florida, PGT Industries announced plans Friday to shutter its Salisbury plant and move operations to corporate headquarters in Venice, Fla. The consolidation will eliminate jobs for about 490 workers who manufacture hurricane-resistant windows at the PGT plant on Heilig Road. Rowan County recruited PGT away from Davidson County in 2006 with tax breaks and other incentives. Friday’s announcement came 22 days before Christmas. Layoffs are expected to begin in January, and the plant will shut down by June 30.
The news surprised nearly everyone who heard it Friday afternoon, especially employees called to a 2 p.m. meeting by Rod Hershberger, the company’s president and CEO. With Christmas music playing and all three shifts reporting, some employees expected to hear about holiday bonuses or some other good news, said Mike Cotilla, a line specialist at PGT. Instead, Hershberger announced the plant will close. “The reaction was pretty ugly,” Cotilla said. “It didn’t turn violent or anything, but there was a lot of cussing and moping and women crying.” Hershberger closed the plant for the weekend and sent everyone home with pay, employees said. Law-enforcement officers were outside the plant after the
meeting, Cotilla said. Previously, employees had been told the plant was doing well and should make a profit this year, Cotilla said. The plant has so many orders, Cotilla said, he’s been working 10-hour days and was scheduled to work today. “I don’t have a lot of bad things to say about PGT, but the way they did this was tasteless — playing lively Christmas music with big speakers set up,” he said. Employee Jorge Allende said the atmosphere at the meeting was like a party. Hershberger and other company executives “were all laughing and having JON C. LAKEY/SALISBURY POST fun up there, and he got up so everyone could see him and then he just dropped PGT Industries, which makes impact-resistant windows and
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doors at its facility on Heilig Road, is moving the work to Florida.
Police officer shoots man
Typhoon ties generations Grandfather guides grandson in restoring car
BY SHELLEY SMITH urtis Waller had forgotten about the 1964 Rambler Typhoon. The car, which hasn’t been driven since the late 1970s, was buried under some things in a garage Waller seldom visited. Maybe three years ago, Waller’s young grandson Marius Doyle was poking around in the building and noticed the Typhoon. His discovery led to numerous conversations about the car over the months to MARK come. WINEKA The notion soon struck both grandfather and grandson that a restored Typhoon might make a good first car for Marius when he starts driving. Marius is one of those 14-yearold kids with an old soul. He likes hanging around with his grandfather, an accomplished local artist and old body shop man who has never lost his passion for cars. They often attend car shows together or work side-by-side in Waller’s backyard shop. If Waller is welding, so is Marius. Or Marius will draw in his grandfather’s art studio while Waller is working on one of his paintings. Both have the patience to pay attention to detail. “What you’re doing is what he wants to do,” Waller, 67, explains. Marius says it another way: “I don’t liked being bored.” On a 95-degree summer day, Waller used his van to pull the disheveled Typhoon up to his body
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Curtis Waller and his grandson Marius Doyle, 14, stand next to the 1964 Rambler Typhoon that has been in Waller's possession since the 1970s. shop, where he set it next to the 1950 Chevrolet he has slowly been restoring for years, sometimes with Marius’ help. Now the pair had two restoration projects, but Waller is letting Marius take the lead on the Typhoon’s rehabilitation. Marius has recently been sanding and grinding on the front fenders. “It had the power, but it looks more like an upscale car,” Marius says of his attraction to the rare Typhoon. “It kind of reminded me of something you’d see in the movies, like gangsters in New York riding around in it.” The two-door hardtop Typhoon is spacious. The black interior has bucket seats and plenty of room in
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Teaching positions may be cut in budget BY SARAH CAMPBELL scampbell@salisburypost.com
The Typhoon was a commemorative model for American Motors and was only available in yellow with a black top. Production was limited to 2,520 cars.
Children get lesson in giving BY KARISSA MINN kminn@salisburypost.com
Preschoolers from First United Methodist Church dropped off the fruit of their “Penny Harvest” fundraiser Friday — $288.35 for the Christmas Happiness Fund. “Every year, they collect loose change through the month of November,” said Patsy Langlais, one of their teachers. “The 4-year-old class gets the honor of bring-
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ing it in.” Smith. Another The group of 18 child, Chord bundled-up chilCoyle, said the dren walked to the class collects monSalisbury Post ey for other people building with “so they can get Langlais and ansome things too.” other teacher, PatApplications ty Langford. for Christmas “Who knows Happiness are why we’re giving money?” available on the Rowan CounLanglais asked them. ty Department of Social Serv“So we can help people who don’t have food or water,” reSee CHILDREN, 2A sponded preschooler Brenna Today’s forecast 47º/31º 55 percent chance of rain
A Salisbury Police officer shot a man Friday night while investigating a call about a suspicious person on Vance Avenue, police said. The man’s name was not released, but he was taken to Rowan Regional Medical Center, and later flown to another hospital, Police Chief Rory Collins said. The shooting happened about 9:40 p.m. Someone called police to report that a suspicious person was walking behind a Vance Avenue home, and an officer responded. Vance Avenue is a side street off of South Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. The officer, whose name
Deaths
George Turner Jack McGuire
Man faces charges involving children SPENCER — A Spencer man charged last December with six felonies involving child pornography has been charged with 12 more offenses. Sidney Morrison Lefler, 62, of 1515 S. LEFLER Salisbury Ave., was arrested Friday on 12 counts of third-degree sexual exploitation of a minor. Bond was set at $5,000. According to the arrest report, Lefler’s 12 charges stem from April 15, 2009. The war-
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rants for his arrest were drawn by the SBI. The report said Lefler possessed images of a child between 9 and 12 year engaged in sexual activity. Lefler was arrested for the original six counts Dec. 17, 2009. Investigators searched Lefler’s home and found evidence of child pornography on his computer. Details of the new charges were not disclosed.
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In a worst-case scenario for the coming budget year, the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction projects the Rowan-Salisbury School System could lose more than $11 million from its portion of state funding. That figure is based on a forecast of a 10 percent reduction to the state’s public education fund. Bracing for an estimated $3.5 billion budget hole next year, the N.C. Office of State Budget and Management has asked each government agency to provide budget forecasts that calculate 5 percent and 10 percent cuts. The N.C. Department of Public Instruction estimates
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The upcoming year could be particularly challenging with the expiration of the federal stimulus dollars, which made up $6.1 million of this year’s budget. State dollars currently make up about 64 percent of the district’s operational budget, with county, federal and grant funds combining to supply the remaining 36 percent Tara Trexler, the school system’s chief financial officer, said she will meet with the administrative team Thursday to provide broad scope of how the potential budget cuts would affect Rowan-Salisbury Schools. Contact Sarah Campbell at 704-797-7683.
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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
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Deadline for posters is 5 p.m. • Rufty-Holmes "Singing Seniors" annual Christmas Concert, 3 p.m., Sunday, Dec. 5, Rufty-Holmes Senior Center, 1120 S. Boundary St. • Bus trip to Restoration Church for production of “The Rapture,” Saturday, Dec. 18. For info, contact Brenda Cowan, 704-633-9073. • United House of Prayer for All People, kitchen closed Saturday, open Sunday 11 a.m.-4 p.m. • Holiday Jam, Sunday, 9 p.m.-2 a.m., J.C. Price Post 107. Music by DJ Clean “New Music” and give-aways; dress code; $5 donation.
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ices website. Completed forms must be received by Social Services by Dec. 6. Eligible families will receive a $25 voucher per child, with a maximum of $100 per family. Last year, 2,857 children received gifts. Applications will be processed on a first-come, first-serve basis until funds are exhausted. For questions about the application process, call Social Services at 704-2168330. Contributions to the Christmas Happiness Fund can be brought to the Salisbury Post, 131 W. Innes St., between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays or mailed to The Salisbury Post Christmas Happiness Fund, P.O. Box 4639 Salisbury, NC 28144. Make checks payable to the Christmas Happiness Fund and indicate how you want your donation listed. Donations will be accepted through Dec. 24. Beginning balance.....$22,785 In memory of my Aunt Judy Morris by Charles Myers.........$10 Oasis Bookclub...............$100 Scotch-Irish Goodtimers.....$30 In honor of our friends we eat with on Saturday afternoon at the Faith Soda Shop and in honor of the owners of the Soda Shop, We love them all. by Howard and Arlene Haynes.......................$50 Merry Christmas to everyone with love by First United Methodist Preschool....$288.35 In honor of the marriage of Kim Loflin and Jeff Grove by Dad and Janette............................$75 In memory of my parents Marion and Aubrey Linton and grandparents Wilma and Jim Cline and
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looking into Edwards’ campaign finances for more than a year. The former Democratic senator ran for president in 2004 and 2008. Earlier this year, former aide Andrew Young claimed in a tell-all book that he and Edwards agreed in 2007 to ask Mellon for money and use it to keep Edwards mistress Rielle Hunter happy so she would not go public with their relationship. Forger has said Mellon made a personal gift, filed proper tax paperwork and had no idea how the money would be used. Hunter gave birth to a child that Edwards later acknowledged he had fathered.
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RALEIGH (AP) — Relatives of a wealthy donor who gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to former presidential candidate John Edwards were subpoenaed to appear Friday before a federal grand jury investigating his campaign finances. Alexander Forger, the attorney for Rachel “Bunny” Mellon, told the Associated Press that Mellon’s son, two grandsons and one of the grandson’s wives were at the federal courthouse in Raleigh. Forger did not know whether they had actually testified. Mellon, who turned 100 in August, was not there. Grand jurors have been
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Adele and William Linton and in honor of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ by Marsha Linton.....................................$49 In honor of Harriet Fisher and Jim Earnhardt, Sunday School teachers for the Brownie Fisher Class.................................$25 In loving memory of my dear friend, Beatrice Blount by Helen Robichaud..........................$25 In memory of Clifford Ray by Jean Ray..................................$100 In memory of my parents, Wilbert and Pearl Kluttz Lyerly by Jean Ray.................................$100 In honor of my brother and sisterin-law Wilbert and Carolyn Lyerly by Jean Ray......................$100 Jim and Nina....................$100 Earl C. Wilkinson...............$100 In memory of Kathryn and Lee Poole by Doctor Bubba and Young William...............................$50 In memory of Margaret Wagoner Barrier by Bob Wagoner.......$50 In memory of Ray E. Hollowell by Libby Hollowell....................$25 In memory of Mark and Wilma McKnight and Claude and Ruth Benson by M.D. and Mary Ann McKnight.........................$200 In memory of my parents, Ott and Edna C. Pinkston by Dorothy P. Roddick.............................$50 In honor of our teachers by Hanna and Claire Thompson....$150 In loving memory of our Nana by Carson and Kennedy Walker and Cooper and Avery Doty........$20 In memory of Lloyd and Gennie, Callie and Calvin by Bud and Retta....................................$100 In memory of John, Martha and Rick Rufty, R.V. and Ethel Myers and Daniel DiNardo by Carlene Myers Davis.....................$100 Happy Birthday Libby Hollowell by Robbie...............................$25 Monica and Michael Humphries.......................... $25 Total.............................$1,947 Running total................$24,732 Contact Karissa Minn at 704-797-4222.
Relatives of Edwards’ donor visit grand jury
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the district will lose $7.1 million if the education fund is slashed by 5 percent. Those cuts would be on top of the 4 percent budget reductions that are an ongoing part of the state’s public school budget. “In reality, the 5 percent cut would add up to a 9 percent cut when you consider the ongoing hole built in our schools’ budget,” said Philip Price, chief financial officer for the Department of Public Instruction. “The 10 percent cut would become a 14 percent cut. The possibility of deep cuts to the state’s public school fund, which makes up about 40 percent of the state budget, is due to the expiration of temporary sales taxes and income-tax surcharges, resulting in the loss of about $1 billion. Officials with the Department of Public Instruction say cuts would mean teacher layoffs, larger class sizes, fewer course offerings and less help for struggling students. “We have already reduced non-essential costs,” State Superintendent June Atkin-
Statewide, central office adminstration could be slashed $8 million and mentor pay completely cut. This isn’t the first time the school system has faced a major shortfall. During the first year of recessionary budgeting in 2009-10, more than $10 million in federal funding was cut, resulting in 137 job losses countywide. This year, the school system dealt with more than $1.5 million in state cuts by eliminating exceptional children, science and math hiring incentive; cutting 21⁄2 vacant assistant principal positions; and freezing three central office adminstration positions.
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son said. “Additional cuts will hit the classroom and hurt teachers and students.” A 10 percent reduction in the state’s education fund could eliminate 73 classroom teachers and 91 instruction support positions in the Rowan district. About 59 teacher layoffs could be in the works with 5 percent in cuts, and 10 instruction support jobs could be eliminated. A total of 13,259 teacher assistants could be eliminated across the state, with Rowan-Salisbury Schools losing $2.7 million in salaries under the 5 percent reduction formula. It’s unclear how many positions in the school system are in jeopardy. A 10 percent reduction would result in the elimination of teacher assistants in every grade except kindergarten. The state currently funds teacher assistants in kindergarten through third grade. The school district could see a $5.5 million loss in teacher assistants with a 10 percent reduction. The Department of Public Instruction indicated services for children with special needs and academically gift might also dwindle with the loss of state funds.
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 3A
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Obama makes surprise trip to Afghanistan
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WASHINGTON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; President Barack Obama has granted the first pardons of his presidency, to nine people convicted of crimes including possessing drugs, counterfeiting and even mutilating coins. No one well-known was on the list, and some of the crimes dated back decades or had drawn little more than a slap on the wrist in the first place â&#x20AC;&#x201D; such as the Pennsylvania man sentenced in 1963 to probation and a $20 fine for mutilating coins. The White House didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t explain the charge, but tampering with federal currency is a crime. The White House declined to give details on the cases or comment on why these particular people were selected by a president who previously had only pardoned Thanksgiving turkeys. Presidential pardons often come in the holiday season toward yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s-end, but they can sometimes be extremely controversial, such as when Bill Clinton pardoned fugitive fin-
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WASHINGTON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; President Barack Obamaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s budget deficit commission failed to garner enough support Friday to prompt quick congressional action on its austere spending blueprint. But the support of a bipartisan majority of the panel should give it momentum. Commission members said that by winning over 11 of the 18 panelists, they had defied expectations. They said it showed that Washington is capable of having an â&#x20AC;&#x153;adult conversationâ&#x20AC;? on a bipartisan basis about the painful choices required to avert a European-style debt crisis. Devout Senate conservatives Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., joined with close Obama allies Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Kent Conrad, D-N.D., in support of the plan. Panel members said the commissionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work has fundamentally changed the national debate on the deficit The plan received â&#x20AC;&#x153;ayeâ&#x20AC;? votes from five of six senators who served on the 18-member panel, chaired by former White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles and former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson of the GOP.
WASHINGTON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; A child nutrition bill on its way to President Barack Obama â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and championed by the first lady â&#x20AC;&#x201D; gives the government power to limit school bake sales and other fundraisers that health advocates say
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WASHINGTON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bucking the Pentagonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top leaders, the chiefs of the Army and Marines urged Congress on Friday not to allow openly gay people to serve in the military, at least not while troops are at war in Afghanistan. The generals publicly rebutted their own bosses and the White House, arguing that it is too risky to change the policy now. That gave political ammunition to congressional Republicans trying to retain the ban known as â&#x20AC;&#x153;donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t ask, donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tell.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s important that weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re clear about the military risks,â&#x20AC;? said Gen. George Casey, the Armyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top officer. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Repeal of â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t ask, donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tellâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; would be a major cultural and policy change in the middle of a war.â&#x20AC;?
LONDON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; WikiLeaks became an Internet vagabond Friday, moving from one website to another as governments and hackers hounded the organization, trying to deprive it of a direct line to the public. The organization that has embarrassed Washington and foreign leaders by releasing a cache of secret â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and brutally frank â&#x20AC;&#x201D; U.S. diplomatic cables found a new home after an American company stopped directing traffic to wikileaks.org. Then French officials moved to oust it from its new site. By late Friday, WikiLeaks was up in at least three new places. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The first serious infowar is now engaged. The field of battle is WikiLeaks. You are the troops,â&#x20AC;? tweeted John Perry Barlow, co-founder of the online free-speech group Electronic Frontier Foundation. His message was reposted by WikiLeaks to its 300,000-odd followers. Legal pressure increased on WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange after Swedish authorities revised a warrant for his arrest in response to procedural questions from British officials.
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BOSTON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Immigrant advocates have staged sit-ins, held rallies and gone on hunger strikes in recent days in an 11th hour bid to get Congress to pass legislation that would give illegal immigrants a pathway to citizenship by going to college or serving in the military. As Congress gets closers to a possible vote on the bill, called the DREAM Act, college-aged illegal immigrants are literally shedding blood for the cause. On Friday, a group of illegal immigrant college students, or â&#x20AC;&#x153;DREAMersâ&#x20AC;? as they called themselves, donated blood at Harvard University and other colleges. The students said they wanted to show the rest of the country that they are ready to perform community service and are good citizens, even if they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have U.S. citizenship. The DREAM Act is in the pile of legislation awaiting action in the final days of the current Congress.
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president Barack obama greets troops at a rally during an unannounced visit at Bagram air Field in afghanistan on Friday.
sometimes replace wholesome meals in the lunchroom. Republicans, notably Sarah Palin, and public school organizations decry the bill as an unnecessary intrusion on a common practice often used to raise money. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This could be a real train wreck for school districts,â&#x20AC;? Lucy Gettman of the National School Boards Association said Friday, a day after the House cleared the bill. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The federal government should not be in the business of regulating this kind of activity at the local level.â&#x20AC;? The legislation, part of first lady Michelle Obamaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s campaign to stem childhood obesity, provides more meals at school for needy kids, including dinner, and directs the Agriculture Department to write guidelines to make those meals healthier. The legislation would apply to all foods sold in schools during regular class hours, including in the cafeteria line, vending machines and at fundraisers. It wouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t apply to afterhours events or concession stands at sports events.
TORONTO (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; A Canadian man was charged with first-degree murder Friday for fatally shooting his father in the back with a crossbow in a Toronto library as shocked mothers and children watched. Zhou Fang, 24, appeared in court to face the murder charge a day after Si Cheng, 52, was killed in the library about an hour after a nearby school let out for the day. The judge ordered that Fang be held without bail. Toronto police Const. Tony Vella said Cheng was pronounced dead at the scene and Fang was arrested later Thursday in a Toronto suburb.
Backers of illegal immigrant-college bill donate blood
Boehner vows GOP will lead in extending Obama commissionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s debt-reduction fails tax cuts for all to advance WASHINGTON (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; With unemployment rising, incoming House Speaker John Boehner vowed Friday that Republicans will show the way toward extending tax cuts in 2011 if the outgoing Democrats fail to do it sooner. Boehner, R-Ohio, made his comment as partisan wrangling in the Senate slowed attempts to pass legislation ensuring that tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t expire. The White House has signaled that President Barack Obama is prepared to sign a bill extending tax cuts at all levels, as Republicans want. At the same time, Democrats want the bill to include an extension of unemployment benefits for long-term unemployed, renewal of tax provisions benefiting college students, companies that hire the jobless and lower- and middleincome workers, even if they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t make enough to pay federal taxes. Additionally, private talks include a possible increase in the debt limit to permit the Treasury to borrow funds needed to meet its obligations. But Senate Democrats, who propose allowing tax cuts to lapse for the upper income, accused Republicans of favoring the wealthy at the expense of the middle class.
Man with crossbow kills father in library
ancier Marc Rich at the end of his presidency. President George W. Bush drew heat for commuting the sentence of I. Lewis â&#x20AC;&#x153;Scooterâ&#x20AC;? Libby, Vice President Dick Cheneyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s former chief of staff, in the case of the 2003 leak of CIA operative Valerie Plameâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s identity. But Bush rejected Cheneyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s vigorous urging that he later pardon Libby as well.
BU
BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan (AP) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; In a rousing holiday-season visit, President Barack Obama on Friday told cheering U.S. troops in Afghanistan theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re succeeding in their vital mission fighting terrorism. But after he flew in secrecy for 14 hours to get here, foul weather kept him from nearby Kabul and a meeting to address frayed relations with Afghan President Hamid Karzai Obamaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s surprise visit to the war zone, his second as president, came 10 days before he is to address the nation about a new review of U.S. strategy to defeat the Taliban and strengthen the Afghan government so American troops can begin leaving next year. The trip also came at a particularly awkward moment in already strained U.S. relations with Afghanistan because of new and embarrassing leaked cables alleging widespread fraud and underscoring deep American concerns about Karzai. There was no mention of that as the president spoke to more than 3,500 service members packed into a huge airplane hangar. After his remarks, he spent more than 10 minutes shaking hands, going around the hangar three times as they grabbed his hand and held cameras and cell phones high to take photos. Obama stayed on this U.S. military base, the headquarters of the 101st Airborne Division, the entire time he was here, just under four hours. He huddled with U.S. Gen. David Petraeus, the top NATO commander in Afghanistan and U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry. And he visited wounded soldiers at a base hospital, personally dispensing five Purple Hearts to wounded service members.
SECONDFRONT
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SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY December 4, 2010
4A
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Volunteers, city staff plant crepe myrtles along Park Avenue BY EMILY FORD eford@salisburypost.com
Park Avenue will pop this summer when dozens of crepe myrtles planted Thursday start to bloom. The trees are the latest improvement in the revitalized neighborhood, where parks, restored homes and a community center are replacing blight caused by years of neglect. Neighborhood volunteers, city staff and homeless people from Rowan Helping Ministries planted 65 crepe myrtles along the avenue, part of a beautification effort approved by City Council. Fifteen more trees will complete the gateway effect, with crepe myrtles lining both sides of Park Avenue from Long Street to Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue. In addition to the blooming trees,
the neighborhood will have new crosswalks and planters at the Spee Dee Mart. “This is an ongoing effort the neighborhood initiated for beautification and improvements,” said Lynn Raker, a city planner who works with the Park Avenue Redevelopment Corporation. The city used about $4,000 left over from a $127,000 Blanche & Julian Robertson Family Foundation grant to buy trees and hire a contractor to dig holes. The original grant paid for improvements to Shaver, Liberty and Council streets and a park. Volunteer labor kept the tree project cost down, Raker said. Members of the New Tomorrows group planted most of the trees within about an hour. “They really seemed to enjoy it,”
Well-known Salisbury business leader dies
Raker said. “They worked very enthusiastically.” New Tomorrows is a partnership between Rowan Helping Ministries and Park Avenue United Methodist Church. The city removed about 15 old trees to make room for the crepe myrtles, Raker said. The trees had grown into the power lines and had been poorly pruned over the years, she said. The crepe myrtle variety was chosen because it will top out under the power lines, she said. The city adopted a strategic redevelopment plan for the Park Avenue neighborhood in 1998. “It might be one of our biggest successes,” council member Paul subMiTTed phoTo Woodson said recently. homeless joined city staff and volunteers in planting crepe myrtles The Contact Emily Ford at 704-797along park Avenue. The project was part of a city beautification effort. 4264.
Man airlifted after wreck
Vic Shive suffers brain aneurysm at work BY EMILY FORD eford@salisburypost.com
Vic Shive, 62, the general manager of Perma-Flex Roller Technology Inc., died Friday night at Presbyterian Hospital in Charlotte. He had suffered a brain aneurysm, according to family friends. Shive experienced a dizzy spell at work Thursday afternoon and was taken to Rowan Regional Medical Center, where doctors detected bleeding on the brain, said family friend Rick Anderson McCombs. Shive was taken to Presbyterian Hospital, where his condition worsened, McCombs said. Life support was removed Friday, and Shive was transfered from the intensive care unit to a larger room in the hospice unit, where family and friends gathered. He died peacefully just before 10 p.m. after two longtime friends arrived to say goodbye, McCombs said. Shive was a well-known Salisbury resident, and a longtime member of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church. Shive was married to Starr Shive for 39 years. He is survived by his wife and their two sons, Victor and Daniel, as well as three grandchildren. Contact Emily Ford at 704-797-4264.
Police find crack rocks in lip balm tube A Salisbury police officer arrested a man in a parking lot Thursday after finding a tube of lip balm in the man’s pocket filled with five crack rocks. Officer Mark Hunter arrested Bobby David Leach, Jr. 25,and charged him with felony possession with intent to manufacture, sell or deliver a schedule II controlled substance and using profane or indecent language on highways. Leach’s address is listed in the police report as “the streets of Salisbury.” According to the police report, Hunter was patrolling the parking lot of an apartment complex on Hall Street, when he noticed Leach, whom he knew was not a resident of LEACH the complex, and decided to talk to him. Leach refused to talk to Hunter. Hunter reported that Leach’s actions and behavior during the encounter were suspicious, and decided to pat Leach down. Hunter felt a hard object in the right front pocket that was consistent with a tube of lip balm, however, the contents rattled when it was moved, the report said. Hunter found five crack rocks in the tube, a total of 0.8 grams. Leach was placed in the Rowan County jail under a $2,500 secured bond.
Shelley Smith/sALisbuRY posT
brandon baucon is transported to Carolinas Medical Center by MedCenter Air. he was airlifted after his dirt bike was hit by a truck.
Dirt bike, pickup collide head-on B Y S HELLEY S MITH ssmith@salisburypost.com
KANNAPOLIS — A 24year-old motorcyclist was airlifted to Carolinas Medical Center and underwent surgery Friday. Brandon Baucom, 24, of Longbriar Drive, Kannapolis, was riding a dirt bike on Longbriar Drive when he collided head-on with a pickup, throwing him from the bike. The truck, driven by Juanita Presley, 32, also of Longbriar Drive, was navigating a sharp curve on the dirt road, and drove into the oncoming lane and collided with Baucom. The N.C. Highway Patrol said Presley will not be charged because the road is
on private property. A landing zone for MedCenter Air was set up in the yard of a Longbriar Drive home, next door to where Baucom, his mother and father — Wayne and Deborah Baucom — live. Trooper D. Deal said Brandon Baucom likely broke his leg, but that his injuries did not appear to be life threatening. Neighbors of the Baucoms, James and Ann Wright, have known Baucom for more than 20 years and said residents of the neighborhood know to drive slowly and watch for pedestrians, as well people riding all-terrain vehicles and dirt bikes. “It’s country out here, and that’s why we moved
here,” Ann Wright said. “Everyone rides fourwheelers and dirt bikes,” James Wright said. “We know they’re on the road, and that’s why we don’t fly.” Ann Wright, best friends with Deborah Baucom, was worried about Brandon Baucom, and said he’s like a son to her. “I’ve known him since he was a little boy,” she said. “He’s loving, caring, sweet, and he’ll do anything for anybody. You couldn’t ask for a better kid.” Wayne nor Deborah Baucom were available Friday night, but Brandon Baucom’s brother, Justin Royce, said his brother had been in the emergency room for hours and was headed to surgery about 8:30 p.m.
The MedCenter Air helicopter leaves the scene.
Postmarked North Pole: Santa’s mailbox on the Square B Y E MILY F ORD eford@salisburypost.com
which stands on the corner of West Innes and South Main streets in front of the clock, will accept letters through Dec. 21. Last year, between 150 and 200 children dropped letters in the mailbox. Santa has relied on Downtown Salisbury Inc. for 15 years to help him by setting up the mailbox every December. He told the folks at Downtown Salisbury that he looks forward to hearing from children in the area and wishes everyone a Merry Christmas and happy holidays.
Ready to mail your letter to Santa, but not sure where to send it? Santa Claus has his own mailbox on the Square in downtown Salisbury, ready and waiting for children’s Christmas wishes. According to sources close to Santa, the jolly old elf loves to receive letters, artwork and notes from children. As long as the letter includes a return address, St. Nick will send a personalized reply to the child, straight from the North Pole. Contact Emily Ford at Santa’s festive mailbox, 704-797-4264.
emily Ford/sALisbuRY posT
doug smith and bill Fisher walk by santa’s mailbox during their lunch break Friday on the downtown square.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 5A
AREA
A suspicious and uncooperative man was arrested for not taking his hands out of his pockets Thursday night. The arrest originated from a call to the Salisbury Police Department from a clerk at the Wilco Hess, 500 E. Innes St. A suspiman cious was harassing customers outside, police reported, and Salisbury Police Officer T. Moore investigated. M o o r e HENDERSON found 29year-old Antonio Devon Henderson, of 305 Malcom Road, outside the gas station and asked him to take his hands out
of his pockets. Henderson refused, even after being asked two more times to take his hands from his pockets, and he was arrested with resisting, delaying or obstructing arrest. As Moore walked Henderson to the patrol car he called for back-up. Moore and officer M. Morgan forced Henderson’s hands from his pockets, but Henderson kept his hands in fists. Police eventually got Henderson to unclench his fist, and found a bag with a small amount of crack cocaine. Henderson was charged with felony possession of a schedule II controlled substance, and received a $1,500 secured bond. Police said a field test identified the substance, less than on gram, as cocaine.
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NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Marvin Anderson Lackey, 134 Childers Road, Mt. Ulla, NC 28125, deceased, 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 8th day of March, 2011 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 2nd day of December, 2010. Marvin Anderson Lackey, deceased, Rowan County File #2010E1178, Larry Eugene Lackey, 115 Childers Road, Mt. Ulla, NC 28125 Attorney: Graham M. Carlton, 109 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Bernice Garwood Wilson, 301 W. Corriher Ave Salisbury, NC 28144. This is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims agains the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 1st day of March, 2011, o 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 23rd day of November, 2010. Bernice Garwood Wilson, deceased, Rowan County File #2010E1156, John Thomas Wilson, 812 N. Craige Street, Salisbury, NC 28144 Attorney: William W. Cameron, III, 117 W. Council Street, Salisbury, NC 28144 No. 60778
No. 60779 NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of George Howard Groff, 217 W. Colonial 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 24th day of February, 2011, 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 17th day of November, 2010. Elizabeth Groff Williams, Executor of the estate of George Howard Groff, File #10E1139, 217 W. Colonial Dr., Salisbury, NC 28144 Attorney at Law: J. Andrew Porter, 120 N. Jackson St., Salisbury, NC 28144
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Richard Clyde Bost, this is to notify all persons firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the under signed on or before the 28th day of February, 2011, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of thei recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make imme diate payment. This the 17th day of November, 2010. Anne Goodman, Administratrix of the estate of Richard Clyde Bost, 104 Wheaton Court, Salis bury, NC 28144 John T. Hudson, Attorney at Law, Doran, Shelby, Pethel & Hudson, 122 N. Lee St., Salisbury NC 28144
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The results came in Nov. 30 with the fox testing positive for rabies. Menius was notified of the test results. The livestock involved were examined by a veterinarian from the NC Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the veterinarian’s findings indicated there was no established exposure to rabies. The animals had no evidence of any wounds and no findings of contact, officials said.
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from Concord to Thomasville. Video footage was gathered from several stores and showed the same two suspects using the stolen credit cards to buy thousands of dollars in goods from multiMALE SUSPECT ple locations. If anyone has information regarding the identity of these suspects or the location of this property, please contact the Cabarrus Area Crime stoppers at 704-93-CRIME or the Cabarrus County Sheriff's Office at 704-920-3000. Crime Stoppers may pay up to $1,000 for information leading to the arrest or recovery of this property.
The Rowan County Animal Control reported the 18th rabies case of the year, which involved a fox in a pasture in southern Rowan. Lee Menius, who owns Wild Turkey Farms, Old Cress Road, China Grove, reported he discovered a dead fox in the pasture area near a barn where he had several livestock. Due to the risk of possible exposure, the fox was submitted for rabies testing Nov. 29, a report said.
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The Cabarrus County Sheriff’s Office is looking for two suspects they believe are responsible for v e h i c l e break-ins a r o u n d Cabarrus County. The suspects apparently used credit cards FEMALE SUSPECT stolen from the vehicles and bought items across the state. The sheriff’s office received multiple reports of breaking and entering of vehicles in Harrisburg during the early morning hours of Nov. 25. The suspects involved in these break-ins used the victim’s credit cards to make multiple purchases at businesses
Rabid fox makes for 18th case this year
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OPINION
6A • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
New baby gets in on family act
Salisbury Post “The truth shall make you free” GREGORY M. ANDERSON
CHRIS RATLIFF
ELIZABETH G. COOK Editor
Advertising Director
704-797-4244 editor@salisburypost.com
704-797-4235 cratliff@salisburypost.com
CHRIS VERNER
RON BROOKS
Editorial Page Editor
Circulation Director
704-797-4262 cverner@salisburypost.com
704-797-4221 rbrooks@salisburypost.com
DARTS AND LAURELS
Not too late than modesty at stake to contribute More Terrorist threat to airline travel is real Laurels to all the local businesses and individual donors whose campaign pledges have put the Rowan County United Way within sight of its fundraising goal. Although it still needs an additional $151,000 to hit the $1.65 million bulls-eye, United Way officials have extended the deadline and pledges continue to come in. Like other nonprofits, businesses and families, the United Way has had to pare back its expectations in recent years. But somehow, this community comes through. With the help of a few more generous donors, the United Way can meet this year’s goal and provide much-needed support for the 16 member agencies who provide important services for people here in Rowan County. • • • Dart to yet another consequence of the economic downturn. The percentage of U.S. households who have life insurance is at its lowest level in half a century, according to USA Today. About 30 percent of U.S. households have no individual or employer-provided life insurance, according to a survey by the insurance-sponsored group LIMRA. For husband-wife families with kids under 18, the statistics are somewhat better — 77 percent have some kind of life insurance coverage. But that’s down from 90 percent in 2004. • • • Laurels to all of you who’ve seen the light and are taking advantage of Duke Energy’s offer of free CFLs. Compact fluorescent light bulbs are coming into wider use as consumers learn more about the potential energy savings and durability of the bulbs. If every American home replaced just one incandescent light with an Energy Star-rated CFL, it would save enough energy to light 3 million homes for a year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Along with the potential energy savMore than an 2 mil- ings, keep in mind that lion customers have CFLs do contain a responded to Duke small amount of merEnergy’s bulb offer. cury. They need to be recycled, not thrown away. Lowe’s and Home Depot are among the big-box retailers that recycle CFLs. You can learn more about safe handling and disposal of CFLs at www.p2pays.org/ Fluorescent/households.asp, a new website set up by the N.C. Division of Environmental Assistance and Outreach.
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The world hates change yet it is the only thing that has brought progress. — Charles F. Kettering
Moderately confused
f you could choose the family that you were born to, what kind of people would you choose? My 3-month-old, first-ever grandchild spent last weekend getting passed around the room like a box of candy. I hogged most of the pieces, of course. You would, too, if you saw him. I’ve waited a long time to get my SHARON hands on that candy. Now that RANDALL he’s finally here, I’m not big on sharing him. But trying to hold Randy is like trying to hang onto a 16pound sack of potatoes that suddenly comes alive and tries to make a break from the potato patch. Picture the body of a sumo wrestler with the speed of the Karate Kid, the strength of Iron Man and the neck of a bobblehead doll. Talk about mixed martial arts. He jabs with his arms, kicks with his legs, butts with his head, arches his back to try a double back flip, then lunges sideways, left and right, to throw you off balance. Finally, when all else fails, he looks you straight in the eye, lights up like Christmas, grins from ear to ear and spits up. In your hair. On your sweater. Down your last pair of clean stretch pants. And into the furry lining of your UGG boots. Don’t ask me to explain it, but somehow, he even manages to soak your underwear. Not that I mind. On the contrary. I’ve been spit up on (and worse) plenty of times by his dad and his aunt and uncle. Someday I will tell him that when his dad was a baby, he didn’t just spit up; he hosed me down from across the room. I’ll tell him other things, too, anything he wants to know, if his dad doesn’t bring him to see me as often as he should. This is not blackmail. It’s maternal motivation. Grandmas use it only as necessary. Like many families that gather for the holidays, sometimes we enjoy a board game. And sometimes we don’t. It’s gotten better since the kids are adults and have outgrown, pretty much, their childhood habits of jumping on each other at the least provocation like a bunch of rabid spider monkeys. But childhood habits die hard. And it isn’t just the kids. This may surprise you, but they come by their natures honestly. As a family, we (including the people we married) are a hot-blooded clan of know-it-all cutthroat competitors, who hate to lose, love to win and will fight tooth and nail to the finish. I wasn’t sure Randy was ready to see that side of his family. But ready or not, the game was on. While the kids paired up for Cranium — a game in which you draw, act, hum or maybe sculpt clues for your partner — I opted to referee and watch Randy, who sat in his baby swing, cranked up to full speed. One other thing about our family: We are loud. And we laugh a lot. And the more we laugh, the louder we get. At one point, my oldest, who earns his living as an actor, had to act out a word: toaster. I can’t begin to describe his actions, but I can assure you he gave it his all. I laughed so hard that Diet Pepsi blew out of my nose. I looked around the table at those faces that I love, those once-little people who aren’t little anymore. They were laughing as hard as I was. We don’t get to choose the family we’re born to, the kind of people they may be — rich, poor, Republican, Democrat, lazy or ambitious, straightlaced, fun-loving or hot-blooded, know-it-all, cutthroat competitors. But we can choose to get together and hope for the best — for good times and big laughs and memories that last a lifetime — and try not to fight like spider monkeys. I looked at Randy. Sound asleep, he’d missed the toaster act. It’s OK. He’ll grow into us. Soon he’ll be acting out clues. • • • Contact Sharon Randall at www.sharonrandall.com.
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Publisher 704-797-4201 ganderson@salisburypost.com
or those of you who are upset about the prospect of passing through a full-body scanner or undergoing an enhanced patdown, um, people, do you realize that determined men and women are working persistently to bring down an airplane full of passengers? Last week, one of my students paraphrased Ben Franklin’s famous quotation about those who are willing to relinquish essential liberty in order to obtain a little temporary safety; they deserve neither liberty nor safety. Well said. But maybe today Franklin would have called safe air travel a sort of liberty in its own right. Since the threat is real — remember the “Underwear JOHN Bomber” and the recent atCRISP tempts to crash several cargo planes — why are we so exercised over increased efforts to protect us? Some of it has to do with the nature of modern political discourse. It thrives on indignation and its lifeblood is outrage. Both are constantly needled into paranoia on talk radio and partisan news channels. Let’s call it the “How-Dare-They?!” Syndrome: the persistent agitation of the notion that someone is constantly besieging us, in this case faceless bureaucrats at the Transportation Security Administration and, by extension, the Obama administration. Our consternation over violations of our modesty is puzzling. Our country is saturated in sex and we’re used to hearing our most private bodily functions discussed in public. We use sex to sell everything from mouthwash to automobiles. We allow strangers on television to discuss erectile dysfunction and hemorrhoids during dinner, but when someone tries to breastfeed in public and when we go to the airport, we suddenly turn into Puritans. I was thinking about this last week as I was having my prostate examined. The details aren’t important, but clearly we already
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dog takes the delivery when mail left in yard China Grove rural mail customers, be aware that our Post Office apparently bears no responsibility for how/where they leave packages too large for a mailbox. I recently ordered photos online and evidently mistakenly trusted the postal service to deliver them. My photos came in a heavy folder clearly marked “Photos.” As this was too large to fit into our standard-size mailbox, the carrier made at least one correct and responsible move by attempting to deliver the photos to our door. We were not at home at the time, so instead of exercising intelligence, responsibility and care, the carrier then decided to leave my photos on an overturned childs’ wagon in our yard near our uncovered back door. We returned home to find the photos ripped to shreds all over our yard as a dog found them before we did. We then took the shredded package contents to the Post Office and explained what we found, only to be interrogated, blamed and harassed as if we caused this ourselves. After three separate conversations, the wonderful folks at the Post Office offered us no recourse for the damages. I just wanted to warn other potential victims that if you trust the China Grove Post Office to deliver your packages safely to you, you might want to reconsider. I know I will. It is funny that all of my bills make it safely to me, though ... — Beth Atkinson China Grove
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.
submit ourselves to humiliating indignities in the interest of our health and safety. So why do we stumble over an indistinct and anonymous full-body scan? Why aren’t we more willing to tolerate a little more inconvenience and indignity for the sake of safety? After all, a lot is at stake, more than a planeload or two of air passengers: The 9/11 hijackers can’t have imagined the far-reaching damage that their actions would inflict on our nation. Because of 9/11, we started a mostly justifiable war in Afghanistan. But after nearly a decade, that war has lost its way and probably is now doing more harm than good. We used 9/11 as an excuse to start an unnecessary war in Iraq. The most optimistic and ideological among us would like to consider that war a success, but the odds of Iraq morphing into a stable, livable democracy do not look good. However, neither of these dubious wars has done much to undermine our overconfidence in military solutions to complicated problems. Unfortunately, the 9/11 hijackers still threaten to change our nation in other fundamental ways. It’s disconcerting to see our government — and many of us — accept torture as a weapon against terror. Furthermore, while squandering the international sympathy and feelings of mutual humanity that arose spontaneously after 9/11, we’ve managed to alienate some 1.3 billion Muslims and undermine some of the world’s confidence in our global leadership. At home, our nation seems more insular, less generous, more angry, more afraid. In short, our country doesn’t feel like quite the same place since 9/11. If we’re willing to fight wars and to torture to prevent another 9/11, then let’s be willing to suffer the inconvenience and indignity of a scan or patdown. A lot more is riding on this than just our modesty. • • • John M. Crisp teaches English at Del Mar College in Corpus Christi, Texas. E-mail: jcrisp@delmar.edu.
U.S. whiffs again in World Cup bid Scripps Howard News Service
as it something we did? Something we said? The U.S. has again struck out in a bid to host a prestigious international sporting event. U.S. soccer officials were desperately hoping to win the 2022 World Cup, confident of repeating the success of 1994, still a record for number of tickets sold. The marquis event and the growing popularity of soccer, the officials reasoned, might finally and permanently launch the Utopian thought of soccer moving into the firmament of big league American sports. But we lost to Qatar, a thumb-shaped peninsula in the Persian Gulf. Nothing against Qatar but it is short on both scenery and people. The CIA’s fact book describes it as “mostly flat and barren desert covered with loose sand and gravel.” And it's hot. An average of 106 degrees when the Cup is normally played with the occasional furnacelike 130-degree day. The CIA says the population is 840,426, putting right behind Detroit. The Associated Press says it is 1.7 million, slightly larger than Phoenix. The discrepancy is perhaps due to the vast number of foreign workers, who outnumber the indigenous population as will the fans when the Cup is played. Qatar is not generally counted among the soccer superpowers and indeed has never qualified for Cup play. What it does have is oil and gas and the second highest per capital income in the world. FIFA, soccer's governing world body, awarded the 2018 World Cup to Russia, which is already host to the 2014 Winter Olympics. The big loser there was England, which, despite a claim to have invented soccer, last hosted a Cup in 1966. What was perhaps most painful: England was voted out in the first round. Qatar has pledged to renovate three existing stadiums and build nine new ones. The advantage of being a small country is that travel times between the stadiums will be very short. The disadvantage of being a small country is that, after the Cup, it doesn't need the stadiums. The Qataris say they will dismantle them and give the stadiums to poor countries. FIFA President Sepp Blatter said of the decision: “We go to new lands.” With Qatar, they've certainly done that.
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SALISBURY POST
FROM 1a the bomb,” Allende said. Several weeks ago, PGT approached Sarasota County officials about creating jobs in exchange for incentives, said Kathy Baylis, president and CEO of the Sarasota County Economic Development Commission. In exchange for creating 300 new jobs in 2011 and 100 more over the next five years, PGT will earn $600,000 from Sarasota County over an undetermined period, Baylis said. “The support we are receiving from our local EDC and Sarasota County proved critically important in our decision-making process as we look to create hundreds of new jobs locally,” Hershberger said in a press release. PGT had a five-year incentive agreement with Rowan County. In exchange for creating 300 jobs and making capital improvements, PGT earned back a 75 percent property tax refund on the new investment. So far, PGT has received $162,213 from the county coffers. The company was scheduled to receive cash incentives for two more years but won’t if the workforce falls below 300 employees. PGT had talked recently about expanding the Salisbury plant, said Robert Van Geons, executive director for RowanWorks Economic Development. “This is a real loss,” Van Geons said. “PGT was an employer who had a product we were very proud of showcasing.” Van Geons said no one expected the announcement. “Even in the last couple months, we were talking about ramping up for next year and adding additional employees,” he said. The county will see a net gain of about $588,000 from PGT, even after incentives are paid, he said. “And we had employment of 400 to 500 for five years,” Van Geons said. But former employee Roy Watson called PGT’s decision to leave “a slap in the face” to the Rowan County Board of Commissioners and the community. PGT took taxpayer money and then “turned around and left,” said Watson, who has a nephew and several friends working at PGT. Before they award incentives, “commissioners really need to sit down and go deeper into the background of the company and not listen to word of mouth,” he said. “They need to look at the broader side.” PGT released a statement Friday afternoon. Moving the Salisbury operations to Florida will better position the company to provide “core customers” with the products and high level of service they expect, Hershberger said. “We expect that the consolidation of manufacturing operations to our Florida facility will enhance long-term competitiveness and improve efficiencies,” he said. “We continue to make good progress in executing our strategy during a very difficult economic and market environment.” PGT has about a 60 percent market share in Florida, Salisbury plant Manager Monte Burns told the Post previously. Burns could not be reached Friday for comment. PGT has about 700 fulltime workers in Florida, down from 2,600 during the housing boom. In August, for the first time since 2006, PGT reported year-over-year sales growth. The 4.6 percent increase was due mainly to expansion outside of Florida, Hershberger said. “During this downturn, we have demonstrated our ability to establish a stronger foothold in new markets, including states outside Florida, where sales increased 28.3 percent,” he said in a statement. Bringing PGT jobs back to Sarasota County was important, Baylis said. “I think this is particularly rewarding to us because this is a homegrown company,” she said. “I know this is very difficult for your community, in terms of having the plant close and losing those jobs.” Contact Emily Ford at 704797-4264.
Burglar falls through church ceiling A Salisbury man, apparently desperate for copper, fell through the ceiling of St. Matthews Church Thursday after he and another man broke into the church, stripping the building of copper wires and pipes. According to the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office, a construction crew near St. Matthews Church, 9275 Bringle Ferry Road, called 911 after they saw two men inside. When deputies arrived, they found the double doors of the church’s sanctuary had been forced open, and things inside the church — tools, copper pipes and wires — were piled nearby. Damage was found in church where the the KINCAID copper had been taken, and there was damage to the ceiling. Two men were quickly found at Tamarac Marina with burglary tools and items from the church.
James Ashley Kincaid, 22, of 415 Hyde Lane, and Jeremy Edward Moss, 24, of 355 Hyde Lane, were arrested. Kincaid was injured from falling through the ceiling, and was taken to Rowan Regional Medical Center before he was charged. Moss was charged with felony possession of burglary tools and felony breaking, entering and larceny. He was given a $50,000 secured bond. Kincaid was charged with felony breaking and entering, felony possession of burglary tools, possession with intent to manufacture, sell or deliver a schedule II controlled substance and schedule IV substance. He was also given a $50,000 secured bond. The two men remained MOSS in the Rowan County jail Friday night. Kincaid was charged with larceny in April, and Moss has previously been charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.
Man charged with marijuana trafficking A Concord man was charged with marijuana trafficking, Concord police said Friday. Romero Lamont Massey, 31, of S.W. 292 Lincoln St., was arrested Thursday and charged with felony trafficking in marijuana, two felony counts of counts of possession with intent to sell and deliver marijuana, three felony counts of maintaining a vehicle or dwelling for controlled substance, resisting or delaying a police officer and with possession of drug paraphernalia. MASSEY Police seized about 25 pounds of marijuana. Massey was taken to the Cabarrus County jail and bond was set at $300,000. He was not listed among the inmates Friday night.
George Turner
Forecast predicts few flakes for Rowan The National Weather Service says a few flakes of snow could fall in Rowan County tonight as a fast-moving storm threatens to drop 1 to 3 inches of snow along the Blue Ridge Mountains of Northwest North Carolina. The forecast for Rowan County calls for a chance for rain after 3 p.m. The high temperature will be in the mid-40s, with a low of 31. If snow does fall, the best chance will be before 1 a.m. No accumulation is expected. Clear skies return on Sunday, with a high in the mid-40s. Winds will be gusty during the day, before a low temperature in the mid-20s sets in overnight.
Cheerwine has selected a University of North CarolinaChapel Hill sophomore from Salisbury to represent the brand as its new “Cheerwine Czar,” the company announced Friday. Carrie Teter will be rewarded for hanging out, mingling and sampling Cheerwine at specified events and TETER popular student hangouts in 2011, spreading “cheer” and helping to fuel a grassroots movement on campus, Salisbury-based Cheerwine said in a press release. She will take the reins from Cheerwine’s inaugural Czar, Junior Lauren Odom, who ruled during all of 2010. Cheerwine launched its second annual czar search in September. Students who wanted to be considered for
the position uploaded videos of themselves to CheerwineCzar.com explaining why they’d make the best Czar. Cheerwine then selected the top finalists, featured their videos on the website for voting and went to Chapel Hill to interview each person before selecting the winner. “The finalists invest so much time into their videos, and we’re blown away each contest by the creativity they put into them and their passion for the brand,” said Tom Barbitta, vice president of marketing for Cheerwine. “Then, during voting, the finalists truly showed their marketing talent by helping to drive thousands of people to CheerwineCzar.com for voting.” As Czar, Teter will have a chance to earn $1,000 for going to Cheerwine-selected events, among other Czar duties, with the potential to earn more. To see Teter’s video, visit www.cheerwineczar.com.
Thrivent sponsors sixth Habitat for Humanity project Habitat for Humanity of Rowan County is receiving $41,415 in funding to help build a house in East Spencer as part of Thrivent Builds with Habitat for Humanity in 2011. This will be the sixth Habitat house built by Thrivent in Rowan County since 2007 and the first one to be constructed in East Spencer. Area Lutheran Churches have effectively used the Thrivent sponsored Habitat constructions as an outreach service to persons with a housing need in our local community. The local Habitat project
is part of an excellent national and international initiative begun in 2005 between Thrivent Financial for Lutherans and Habitat for Humanity. Since its inception, Thrivent Builds with Habitat for Humanity has helped more than 2,500 families in the U.S. and around the world achieve the dream of homeownership. Thrivent Financial for Lutherans continues to be one of the largest supporters of Habitat for Humanity. Thrivent has committed 10.4 million in 2011 in the U.S. to build at least 164 homes in 33 states.
Jack McGuire
SALISBURY — Jack SALISBURY — George Turner, 59, of Pinnacle Drive, McGuire, 80, of Salisbury, died Friday, Dec. 3, 2010, at passed away Friday, Dec. 3, his residence after a brief ill- 2010, at Rowan Regional Medical Center. ness. Rowan Funeral Services Mr. is assisting the Turner family. McGuire was born Dec. 7, 1929, in Avery County, son of the late Howard Lewis McGuire and Bertha Guy McGuire. Jack was educated in the Avery and Rowan County school sysMrs. Mae Kennerly Canup tems. 3:00 PM Saturday A veteran of the United St. Paul's Lutheran Church States Navy, he had worked for and retired from Atlantic Oil Service of Salisbury after 40 years of service. Jack was a member of Organ Lutheran Church, where he was a member of the Adult 2 Sunday School Class and a past Council Member. He was also a member of Miller-Russell American Legion Post 112 of Rockwell. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by daughter Sharon McGuire Owens; brother Douglas McGuire; and sister Mary Brown. Jack is survived by his wife of over 60 years Mrs. Dolores Combs McGuire, whom he married July 7, 1950; son Randall Keith McGuire of Rockwell; brothers Blake McGuire and wife Louise of Rockwell and Guy McGuire and wife Keli of SalView the isbury; sisters Claudia Snipes and husband Wayne of SherSalisbury Post’s rills Ford, Pat Cole of Saliscomplete list of bury and Jean Chabon and obituaries husband Steve of Wilmington; and sign the granddaughter Jamie Obituary Guest Book McGuire Osborn and husband Jason of Faith; and greatat www.salisburypost.com granddaughter Gracie Osborn. Services: The funeral service will be held at Organ Lutheran Church Sunday, Dec. 5 at 2 p.m. conducted by the Rev. Terrell Long, pastor. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Visitation: The family will receive friends Sunday from 1 to 2 p.m. in the Parlor at Organ Lutheran Church. Memorials: May be made to Organ Lutheran Church 1515 Organ Church Road Salisbury NC 28146. Powles Funeral Home of Rockwell is assisting the McGuire family. Online condolences may be made at www.powlesfuneralhome.com.
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Cheerwine selects new ‘czar’
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 7A
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8A • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
Lawyers stick with clients in Zahra case HICKORY (AP) — Lawyers for the father and stepmother of a 10-year-old girl who authorities believe was killed and dismembered are sticking by their clients even though North Carolina will no longer pay the tab because no charges have been filed in the girl’s death. The state Office of the Capital Defender said this week it will cease paying the lawyers it appointed for Elisa and Adam Baker — a move that comes after the local prosecutor objected to their work. But the attorneys for both Elisa Baker and Adam said they will continue helping their clients. “I’ll probably stay on to assist him in this matter if he needs me to,” attorney Mark Killian said Friday. Killian said Adam Baker, an Australian citizen, was in unfamiliar territory and he was “just trying to help him out the best I can.”
Killian also represents Baker on unrelated charges. Lisa Dubs, Elisa Baker’s lawyer, told the Hickory Daily Record that she planned to remain with her client as well. Like Killian, Dubs said she was not concerned if she were not paid by a client or the state. “As a practical matter, it doesn’t effect my or Mark Killian’s ability to represent Elisa Baker or Adam Baker,” Lisa Dubs told the newspaper. The lawyers were appointed for the Bakers after Zahra Baker was reported missing Oct. 9 and authorities later characterized the case as a homicide. Court documents said the Capital Defender Office appointed Dubs because it believed Elisa Baker was about to be accused of murder. Nobody has been charged in the girl’s death. Elisa Baker has been charged with obstruction, accused of faking a ransom note to mislead investigators.
SHOOTING
lowed to cross the crime tape that circled their block, and had to wait in their cars until the investigation was complete. Three residents of Vance Avenue, who did not want to be identified, said they didn’t hear any gunshots. Friday’s shooting by a police officer was the second in three weeks for the Salisbury Police Department. On Nov. 13, Officer J.R. Cable shot and killed Rick Brown at 2410 Stokes Ferry Road after police say Brown came at him with a baseball bat. Police were initially responding to a reported domestic disturbance at the home. Police said Brown had struck his father, Dewitt Brown, with a baseball bat and then approached the officer. Collins said Cable felt in danger, justifying the “last resort” shooting of Brown. Contact Shelley Smith at 704-797-4246.
FROM 1a was also withheld, found the man and tried to arrest him, Collins said, but the man assaulted the officer. “At that time he used his weapon to stop the threat against him in order to prevent him from being seriously injured,” Collins said. As of Friday night, the man who was shot did not have life-threatening injuries, Collins said. More than 10 patrol cars, EMS and firefighters responded to the scene. Lt. Sheila Lingle, a detective, and Rory Collins arrived at the scene around 10:30 p.m. Police blocked off the 300 block of Vance Avenue, and Collins said police and the State Bureau of Investigation were expected to be on the scene for several hours. Residents of the 300 block of Vance Avenue were not al-
SALISBURY POST
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CAR FROM 1a the back. The only color it came in was “solar yellow” with a black top — a sport variety of Rambler’s Classic 770. It was a commemorative model for American Motors, and the company only produced 2,520 Typhoons in 1964 — the lone year it was made. The main differences between the Classic 770 and the Typhoon were the color, the script nameplate on the Typhoon and its unique grille and black accents. It also highlighted what was then AMC’s new shortstroke, inline 6-cylinder engine that put out 145 horsepower. Marius promises he’ll put his own signature on the Typhoon. “The personalization will be the motor,” he says. “You’ll hear it when it comes by.” Waller predicts he and Marius will have both cars — the 1964 Typhoon and the 1950 Chevrolet — ready for the road in about 18 months. And Waller plans to make the Chevrolet an everyday driver. “It’s not going to sit in the shed when I’m done,” Waller says. He plans to paint it black. The Typhoon actually belonged to Waller’s father. Waller worked for more than 20 years in the body shop for Wood’s, an American Motors dealer in Spencer. He later worked full-time out of his backyard body shop when the dealership closed. More and more after 1994, Waller devoted all of his time to his art and framing business. Waller remembers there being one other Typhoon in town when he first saw the one now in his shed. It had been wrecked, and the owner hinted that he was interested in selling. Waller asked his father whether he might be interested in the Typhoon, and they went to the owner’s house to take a look.
JON C. LAKEY/SaLISBURY POST
Marius Doyle heads off to his grandfather’s garage where the restoration project is under way. “When we turned into the driveway, Daddy said, ‘I’m going to buy that car,’” Waller remembers. The Typhoon passed to Waller when his father died in 1975. He drove it about a year, put it in storage and pretty much forgot about it until Marius became interested. The 1950 Chevrolet has another family connection. It belonged to the great aunt of Waller’s wife, Jean, who would drive her aunt to the doctor’s office in the car. When the great aunt died, her son in Danville, Va., gave Jean the car in appreciation of all the help she had provided. It has not been driven since 1978, and Waller’s ongoing restoration has seemingly gone on for years. The Typhoon’s dashboard is sitting on a work bench Waller has fashioned out of an old television cabinet. Marius points to a dent on the bottom left of the dashboard. The original owner’s knee had left an impression there after an accident, he explains. A new windshield for the Typhoon is sitting on top of the car. Its grille leans against a wall on the far side of the shed. Bumpers also are scattered here and there. “Rambler was a tough old car,” says Waller, who has
The 1964 Rambler Typhoon was labeled to differentiate it from the regular model, the Classic. performed several awardwinning restorations on other vehicles in the past. Looking at the 1950 Chevrolet, Waller notes that a fender, hood, trunk and left door have come off other cars. He thinks the car was involved in at least two wrecks, including a sandwich job in which the back and front were hit at the same time. Restorations involve a lot of shaping, aligning, putting together, tearing apart, painting, rechroming, salvaging and sweat equity. “You’ve got to have everything right for a good paint job,” Waller says. Son of Keith and Kelli Doyle, Marius is a ninthgrader at West Rowan High School and plays bass drum
e t a u Eval cts and u d ! o r $ p $ $ n r ea
for the band. He says he doesn’t like working in the shop without his grandfather nearby. “I like to have him down here in case I need advice,” Marius says. Kelli Doyle enjoys seeing her son and father working together on the cars and knowing that Marius could be driving the Typhoon that belonged to his great-grandfather some day. “Marius is already starting to fret about finding an old car to fix up for his brother,” Kelli Doyle says. “I told him Atticus is only 9, so there is time. “But he wants to be able to do it with my dad.” Contact Mark Wineka at 704-797-4263, or mwineka @salisburypost.com
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SATURDAY December 4, 2010
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Rumbles of war on the horizon “And ye shall hear of wars and rumors of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all [these things] must come to pass, but the end is not yet.…” Matthew 24:6 here is something very deadly brewing on the other side of the planet. A 60-year-old dispute called the Korean Conflict or the Korean War (June 6, 1950-July 27, 1953) has flared up again. Old tensions beREV. DR. came GEORGE JACKSON frayed when the United States and South Korea announced joint military exercises in the Yellow Sea. North Korea, under the iron fist of Kim Jong Il, shelled a South Korean island killing two marines and two civilians on Nov. 26. Is war inevitable or can the United States, China, Russia and Japan finally bring the two founding brothers to the negotiation table and officially end the Korean War? It’s a lot to ask of sworn enemies backed by super powers China and the U.S. As a whole, Korea suffered more than three million casualties during the three-year civil war that’s often overshadowed by World War II and the Vietnam War. It still seems surreal to me to talk about war in the post-modern era. We live in an era of unparalleled technology and information exchange. Our vehicles travel to the far reaches of the solar system. Our research has advanced to the brink of eliminating once deadly diseases. Our life expectancy has surpassed that of the last ten generations and yet we still fight destructive, devastating wars. Maybe that’s just who we are: a species of beings that cannot resolve its disputes without resorting to violence and bloodshed. We kill each other daily with words and deeds. We assassinate each others’ character without the slightest concern about how much collateral damage we cause. School Boards in Wake and Mecklenburg Counties clashed with concerned citizens over school closings and redistricting resulting in several arrests. Pro-life forces clash with Pro-choice forces leaving clinics bombed and doctors shot to death. South of the border, the Mexican government is at war with vicious drug cartels leaving hundreds of innocent civilians dead in a wake of flying bullets. The list of the atrocities of man’s inhumanity to his fellow man goes on and on, fueled by war. I have long believed that domestic violence is inspired by international hostilities. We must find new ways to settle our disputes. We must create fresh approaches to defuse hostilities. We are too civilized, too intellectually advanced, too sophisticated to attempt to resolve every domestic conflict with deadly force. “Come now, and let us reason, together, saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool,” (Isaiah 1:18). Martin King warned us, “Only refusal to hate or kill can put an end to the chain of violence in the world and lead us toward a community where men can live together without fear.”
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AssociAted Press
A billboard sponsored by an atheist group is displayed near the entrance to the Lincoln tunnel.
Battle of the billboards Drivers traveling into New York City caught in Christmas billboard feud
A billboard sponsored by a catholic group is displayed near an exit of the Lincoln tunnel in New York.
NEW YORK (AP) — As if trying to negotiate the traffic wasn’t hard enough, drivers coming into New York City via the Lincoln Tunnel are getting caught up in a battle of beliefs. First, an anti-Christmas billboard was set up by the American Atheists outside a New Jersey entrance to the tunnel. It says: “You know it’s a myth. This season, celebrate reason!” The Catholic League countered with its own billboard near one of the tunnel’s New York City entrances bearing the message, “You know it’s real. This season, celebrate Jesus.” “There was a certain sense of exasperation” when the anti-Christmas billboard went up before Thanksgiving, said Bill Donohue, president of the Catholic League, which put up its response on Monday. “We can’t enjoy the Christmas season without someone trying to dumb it down or neuter it.” The atheist group picked its billboard site because of the high-profile location that
would guarantee it was seen by a lot of drivers going by, said group President David Silverman. “We wanted to get people who were sitting in traffic and had nothing to do but think about what they think and what they know,”he said. Silverman said the group hoped the billboard would gain attention, but was surprised by the Catholic group’s response. He said he thought it was a kind of mockery, since it so closely followed the text of the atheists’ sign. “It’s almost as if they’re about to say, ‘I know you are but what am I?” he said. Donohue said his group’s billboard was not negative, and was actually a positive statement. “We wanted to respond with a more positive statement as opposed to denigrating them,” he said. Silverman said the atheist billboard cost around $20,000. Donohue said his group's billboard was about $18,500. Both billboards will be up for at least the next couple of weeks.
Islam and adoption Muslim orphans caught between Islamic,Western law BY RACHEL ZOLL Associated Press
Helene Lauffer knew Muslim children — orphaned, displaced, neglected — needed homes in the United States. She knew American Muslim families wanted to take them in. But Lauffer, associate executive director of Spence-Chapin, one of the oldest adoption agencies in the country, couldn't bring them together. The problem was a gap between Western and Islamic law. Traditional, closed adoption violates Islamic jurisprudence, which stresses the importance of lineage. Instead, Islam has a guardianship system called kafalah that resembles foster care, yet has no exact counterpart in Western law. The differences have left young Muslims with little chance of finding a permanent Muslim home in America. So Lauffer sought out a group of Muslim women scholars and activists, hoping they could at least start a discussion among U.S. Muslims about how adoption and Islamic law could become compatible. “At the end of the day, it’s about trying to find families for
kids,” said Lauffer. Lauffer is not alone in raising the issue. As Muslim communities become more established in the United States, pressure is building for a re-examination of Islamic law on adoption. Refugee children from Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere are being resettled here. Muslim couples who can't conceive want to adopt, but don't want to violate their faith’s teachings. State child welfare agencies that permanently remove Muslim children from troubled homes usually can't find Muslim families to adopt them because of the restrictions in Islamic law. “I get all kinds of families who come to me for fertility issues. They want to adopt and they want to adopt Muslim children and I’m thinking this is a crime that they can’t,” said Najah Bazzy, a nurse and founder of Zaman International, a humanitarian service group in Dearborn, Mich. “No one is going to convince me that Islam makes no allocation for this. Either somebody is not interpreting it right, or it needs to be reinterpreted.” Mohammad Hamid, a clinical psychologist and co-founder of the Hamdard Center, a social
AssociAted Press
An orphaned Afghan girl listens to her teacher during class in a dormitory in an orphanage in Kabul, Afghanistan. two decades of war in Afghanistan has left many thousands orphans and abandoned children across the country. service agency in the Chicago area that has many Muslims among its clients, said he regularly received requests from American Muslims for advice on how they could adopt. “We don’t tell them it's Islamic or un-Islamic,” said Hamid, whose nonprofit does not handle adoptions. “Our job is to facilitate
the process. We believe if the child can be adopted, you are saving a child.” The prohibition against adoption would appear contrary to the Quran's heavy emphasis on helping orphans. The Prophet Muhammad's father died before
See ADOPTION, 5B
Dr. George B. Jackson is pastor of Citadel of Faith Christian Fellowship, Inc.
2B • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
FA I T H
The LORD is gracious and righteous; our God is full of compassion. The LORD protects the unwary; when I was brought low, he saved me. Return to your rest, my soul, for the LORD has been good to you. For you, LORD, have delivered me from death, my eyes from tears, my feet from stumbling, that I may walk before the LORD in the land of the living. PSALM 116:5-9 NIV
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 â&#x20AC;˘ 3B
FA I T H
Hood Theological Seminary presents Service of Lessons and Carols Dec. 10 N. Kannapolis Baptist KANNAPOLIS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Dave McVay, gospel singer, recording artist and worship leader from Nashville, Tenn., will present a mini-concert at North Kannapolis Baptist Church on Sunday, Dec. 5, at 10:45 a.m. Now a solo artist, McVay is a former member of the Three Bridges gospel group and was instrumental in helping develop the sound they became known for. In addition, the Central Piedmont Community College voice ensemble, known as the North Mecklenburg Community Chorus, will present their Christmas concert at North Kannapolis Baptist on Tuesday, Dec. 7, at 7:30 p.m. . There is no charge for the concert; a love offering will be received.
The church is located at 312 Locust Street in Kannapolis.
Stallings Memorial On Sunday, Dec. 5, Jeff Palmer, executive director of B a p t i s t Global Response, will be the guest speaker at the morning and evening service at Stallings Memorial Baptist Church, 817 S. Main St. JEFF PALMER Palmer currently resides in Mt. Juliet, Tenn. and is a native of Waverly, Tenn.
See BRIEFS, 3B R128279
Gethsemane events
Mighty Miracle Temple SPENCER â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mighty Miracle Temple Fellowship Center, 117 Long Ferry Road, presents an evening of songs at 4 p.m. this afternoon, Dec. 4. There will be quartets, choirs, praise dancers and more. Dinner will be served afterward. For more information call Bishop Miller at 336-410-1554 or Bishop Hackett at 704-2672830.
New Beginnings Apostle Harold and Evangelist Mary Wilson, pastors and founders of New Beginnings End Time Ministries, will be honored at a service this afternoon, Dec. 4 at 4 p.m. There will be messages and music by gospel recording artists. For more information, call 336-479-0617. The event is being held at Outreach Christian Tabernacle, 722 W. Horah St. Host pastor is Apostle R. E. Taylor.
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Gethsemane Missionary Baptist Church, 719 S. Caldwell St., presents the North Rowan Connection Choir in concert. The Friends and Family Mass Choir will sing on Sunday, Dec. 5 at 4 p.m., and this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s concert also includes a Rainbow Tea. Proceeds will help the North Rowan Connection Fundâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s six scholarships for North Rowan and Rowan county students. The choir is under the direction of Milton Griffith. On Saturday, Dec. 11 from 9 a.m. -3 p.m., Gethsemane will hold a Bake Sale and Cake Walk Holiday Celebration and Fellowship with prizes, music and dance, sponsored by the Westside Community Foundation, Inc. in partnership with Gethsemane Missionary Baptist Church. The Rev. Dr. C. L. Phelps is pastor.
R81440 541096
Hood Theological Seminary will celebrate the Holy Season of Advent on Friday, Dec. 10, with the observance of the Service of Lessons and Carols. This service originated at Kingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s College Cambridge, England in the early part of the twentieth century and is observed widely today. The Rev. Dr. Vernon Shannon, senior pastor of John Wesley AME Zion Church, Washington, D.C., will deliver the message at the service. The service is open to the public and will begin at 6 p.m. in the multipurpose room of Building 100. Seating is limited and reservations should be made through the Development Office at 704-636-6926. Hood Theological Seminary is located at 1810 Lutheran Synod Drive and is sponsored by the AME Zion Church.
811 W. Innes St., Salisbury, Phone 704-633-5951
Holiday Open House
Saturday, December 4th 1:00 - 5:00 PM
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LEXINGTON â&#x20AC;&#x201D; The Blessing of God Ministry, 412 Westside Drive, will present a Gospel program at 6 p.m. this evening.
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CONCORD â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Concord First Assembly, 150 Warren C. Coleman Blvd., presents â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Gift,â&#x20AC;? featuring three different shows on three weekends. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Joyâ&#x20AC;? is a holiday show celebrating the sounds of a Southern Christmas, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Peaceâ&#x20AC;? is a concert of worship and â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hopeâ&#x20AC;? is a Broadway style musical. Presentation dates are Saturdays, Dec. 4, 11 and 18 at 6 p.m., and Sundays, Dec. 5, 12, 19 at 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Admission is free. More information can be found at www.christmastrilogy.com.
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First Assembly shows
Second Presbyterian Second Presbyterian, 732 Lincolnton Road, will be led in worship by the children of the church this Sunday at 11 a.m. The preschool choir, dressed as angels and shepherds, will begin with advent songs, followed by a presentation of the Christmas story. The congregation will join in singing familiar Christmas hymns. The service will be followed by a Christmas covered dish lunch in the fellowship hall. A special guest from the North Pole has been invited and has promised to bring along his favorite elf.
Community Baptist Dave McVay will sing Christmas music at Community Baptist Church, 18 Carolina St., at 6 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 5.
Choral Society concert CONCORD — The Piedmont Choral Society will present its annual December concerts on Friday, Dec. 10 at 7 p.m. and again on Sunday, Dec. 12 at 3 p.m. at Forest Hill United Methodist Church, 265 Union St. N. The concerts, featuring familiar Christmas pieces, are free with a reception to follow. For more information, call 704-699-6053.
First Presbyterian KANNAPOLIS — First Presbyterian Church in Kannapolis will host an Italian
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Early Worship . . . . . . . . 8:00 a.m. Sunday School . . . . . . . 9:15 a.m. Morning Worship. . . . . 10:30 a.m. Evening Worship . . . . . . 6:00 p.m. AWANA - Wednesday . . . 6:45 p.m. Wednesday Worship . . . 7:00 p.m.
See BRIEFS, 5B
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Rev. Matthew Laughter Senior Pastor
Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church will hold a Baptism Service Sunday, Dec. 5, at 5 p.m., followed by evening worship at 5:30 p.m. with the Rev. Thomas Austin as speaker. The church is located off Hwy 70 on Enon Church Road.
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FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH - ROCKWELL
8630 Hillcrest Dr., off Hwy 52 • 704- 279-6120
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CHINA GROVE — On Sunday, Dec. 5, Pine Ridge Baptist Church will host the singing group The Straight and Narrow at the 10:30 a.m. morning worship service. Sunday school starts at 9:30 and prayers for the sick and evening service will be at 5:45 p.m. followed by evening worship and praise at 6 p.m. Pine Ridge is located at 880 United Missionary Old Linn Road between Pine KANNAPOLIS — The MisRidge and Daughtery Roads. sionaries of United MissionPastor is George Bradshaw. ary Baptist Church will host Faith Lutheran events their annual candlelight service on Sunday, Dec. 5 at 6 p.m. FAITH — Faith Lutheran Speaker for the service is the Church will celebrate the be- Rev. Deon Anderson, pastor ginning of a new church year of New Vision in China Grove. and the promise of the birth The church is located at of Christ with a musical enti- 3001 Clermont Ave. Contact tled “Festival of Carols,” cre- the church at 704-932-7316 for ated by Joseph M. Martin. The more details. work follows the order of the traditional lessons and carols First Presbyterian service and includes all nine KANNAPOLIS — First scripture readings. The joint service of Faith- Presbyterian Church in KanWorks, the churches’ contem- napolis will hold its annual Adporary service, and the tradi- vent Celebration this Sunday, tional service will offer the Dec. 5. The evening begins performance on Sunday at with a covered dish supper in 10:30 a.m. There will be no the Fellowship Hall at 6 p.m. Afterward the Kidz Khoir 8:45 FaithWorks service. Sunday school begins at 9:30 a.m. and grades 6-8 Youth Choir The worship service will be will present the musical narrated by the Rev. Clarence “How Far is it to Bethlehem?” Call 704-938-4623 or visit Sifford and the choral performance will be directed by www.FirstPresb.org for addiDon Deming, music director. tional information. Daisy Bost will accompany the choir on piano. Piedmont Singing Men On Sunday Dec. 19 at 7:30 CONCORD — The Piedp.m., Faith Lutheran’s children’s Christmas play will be mont Singing Men will prespresented in the Family Life ent a Christmas Concert on Center and the annual Christ- Sunday, Dec. 5 at 6 p.m. at Olivet United mas Eve Candlelight Service Mount with Holy Communion will be Methodist Church, 301 Mt. celebrated at 10:30 p.m. on Olivet Road. The public is inDec. 24 in the sanctuary. vited to this free concert. There will also be an afternoon Christmas Eve service Calvary Baptist film at 5:30 p.m. for those that canCalvary Baptist Church not attend the late service. The Reverend Clarence will be showing the video “The Sifford is interim pastor of Role of Pastors and Christians Faith Lutheran Church, locat- in Civil Government” this Sunday, Dec. 5 at 6 p.m. ed at 205 S. Main St. This David Barton DVD answers the question about the Lyerly Evangelical role the Christian church ROCKWELL — Lyerly played during the struggle for Evangelical Church, 1320 America’s independence. The Crescent Road, will have film depicts the efforts of guest musicians at its 10:30 Christians such as Roger a.m. service on Dec. 5. Sherman, Charles Thomson, Carrie Webster, violinist, the Rev. Dr. Samuel Cooper, and Amy Wilhelm, pianist and and the Rev. Dr. Jonathan soloist, will lead the worship Mayhew and examines the music. Biblical teachings that caused Webster graduated from generations of Christians to the NC School of the Arts and believe it was their duty to be plays and teaches classical vi- involved with government and olin. She is also a fiddler with how their actions changed the the bluegrass Dry Run Band. course of a nation. Wilhelm graduated from Calvary Baptist Church is Gardner-Webb as a voice ma- located at 2255 E. Ridge Road, jor and from UNC-G as a just beyond Ellis crossroads. speech major. They both live For additional information, in Faith. please call Pastor Cockerham W. C. Gaither Jr. is the pas- at 704-633-2567. tor of Lyerly Evangelical.
Macedonia Missionary
Supper after the parade on Saturday, Dec. 11, from 5-8 p.m. in the fellowship hall. All profits from the supper will benefit a project to install a Living Waters for the World water filtration system at a church outside of Merida, Mexico. The supper will include a pastas and toppings, lasagna, salad, garlic bread and dessert. There is no charge but donations will be accepted. First Presbyterian is located in downtown Kannapolis close to the parade route. Parade participants and audience members are welcome to stop in before or after the event to enjoy supper and benefit a great cause.
221 South Main Street, Downtown Salisbury Some exclusions may apply.
704-633-7988
R118952
Open Sundays through the Holidays 1-5pm
Assembly of God
Baptist
Other
ROWAN CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY
CALVARY BAPTIST TABERNACLE
BETHEL POWER OF FAITH
Steve Holshouser, Pastor December 5, 2010
December 5, 2010 Sunday School 9:30AM Morning Worship 10:30AM
Wednesday 7:00PM – “Crazy Love, Chapter 8” Consumed Youth: Royal Rangers (Boys 5-12); M’Pact Girls Club (Girls 5-12); Rainbows (Children 3-5)
Motto: ‘An Oasis of Healing in a Hurting World’
923 N. Salisbury Ave., Granite Quarry 704-279-6676
email: rcaog@windstream.net
website: www.rcaog.org
December 5, 2010 Sunday School ....................10AM Morning Worship ................11AM Wednesday Intercessory Prayer ..............................6:30PM Wednesday Bible Study ....7:30PM
10am Sunday School; 11am Worship Service; 6pm Evening Worship; 7pm Wednesday Evening Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
Dr. Glynn R. Dickens Dr. Glynn R. Dickens
Bishop JC Kellam & Apostle Charlene Kellam
Church Motto: “A Christ-Centered Church with a Family-Oriented Ministry”
“The Church of God for the People of God”
3760 Stokes Ferry Road • Salisbury, NC 704-645-9328
1021 N. Main St. • Salisbury, NC 28144 704-647-0870
S48241
www.calvarybaptisttabernacle.org
S48243
Bethelpof@bellsouth.net
Baptist December 5, 2010
December 5, 2010
“YOUTH SUNDAY” Youth is in charge of the 9:30am & 11:00am services
Pastor Gene Sides: Sermon: “Go A Little Farther” Anthem: “What Child Is This”
Evening Service 6:00pm “The Book of Acts” - Keith Kannenberg Other Events: Sunday - Growth Groups (Sunday School) 8:30, 9:30, 11:00am; Monday - Zumba Fitness Class 7:00pm; Wednesday - Beginners Sign Language Class 5:30pm, Evening Service, Growth Groups & Advanced Sign Language Class 7:00pm; Thursday First Place 4 Health 6:00pm; Saturday - Zumba Fitness Class 9:00am
2299 N. Main St. • Kannapolis, NC 28081 704-932-4266 Fax 704-933-6684 S48239
www.thepark.cc Email: bpbcvision@yahoo.com
HEARTSONG
EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH
BLACKWELDER PARK BAPTIST CHURCH
Gene Sides, Pastor
Ministry in Action Senior Pastor Tom Teichroew
December 5, 2010 10:30AM - Worship Speaker: Pastor Tom Teichroew Sermon: “Face Value” Scripture: Matt. 13:44
Sunday School 9:45am Morning Worship 11:00am Evening Worship 6:00 pm Wednesday 7 pm Prayer/Bible Study Youth Night
“The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field; when a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.” Motto: Where Gifts Are Nurtured and Callings Released...
2324 S. Main Street • Salisbury, NC
OUR PRAYER: “Let Us Be A Lighthouse On This Hill”
2300 Bringle Ferry Road, Salisbury 704-630-0909 S48240
email: jnetmayes@carolina.rr.com
(behind Forum in KidSports Bldg.)
704-645-7240
www.heartsongsalisbury.com
To list your church on this page, call Charlie James at the Salisbury Post 704-797-4236.
R128454
Pine Ridge Baptist
$
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S48242
He has served with the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention since 1989 as director, Asian Rural Life Development Foundations, both in Thailand and in the Philippines. He will talk about the work he and his wife have done as international missionaries and the importance of contributions made to the Cooperative Program and the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering. Each year during December, Southern Baptists place emphasis on international missionaries and support them through gifts to the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering. Palmer will speak at the 10:30 a.m. service and again at 6 p.m. The Women’s Missionary Union will serve dinner at 5:30 p.m. prior to the informal evening service in the Rhyne Building. Proceeds from the dinner will go toward the Christmas offering.
CLEVELAND — The Messengers for Christ will celebrate their 11th anniversary this Sunday, Dec 5, at 3 p.m. at The Building, 1790 Baker Mill Road. Also scheduled to perform are The Chosen Disciples of Asheboro, Gospel Echoes of Taylorsville, The Echoes for Christ of Salisbury, The Voices of Morningstar from Charlotte, The Pilgrimaires of Salisbury, The Anointed Vessels of the Carolinas, Keith Holland and Friends, The New Revelations of Salisbury, The New Voices of Faith of CharThe Main Street Gospel Band will be performing at Main Street lotte and more. Admission is free and food Baptist Church camp meeting services on Sunday evenings. will be for sale at the event. their scheduled weekly servMain Street Baptist ices. Spirit and Truth Concert CHINA GROVE — Main Pastor Larry Beaver and CONCORD — Spirit and Street Baptist Church, 1615 worship leader Billy Beaver Truth Ministries, 202 McGill Highway 29 S., announces the also announce the addition of Ave., will host a Christmas addition of “Camp Meeting” the Main Street Gospel Band concert on Dec. 5 at 4 p.m.. Sunday evening services to to the church’s music minFeatured artists will include the Reverend Dr. Grant Harrison, pastor of Soldiers Memorial AME Zion Church. Accompanying Dr. Harrison will be his wife, Joanne Harrison, a professor of piano and Use Like Cash In Most Downtown Businesses! organ at Livingstone College. No Cash Back. To purchase your Also featured on the conPlease present Downtown Dollars, call cert will be Teresa MooreDollars before Downtown Salisbury, Inc. Mitchell, professor of voice at at 704-637-7814 purchase. Livingstone College. or email Merry This concert is free, but doBetz@DowntownSalisburyNC.com nations are welcome. ProChristmas! ceeds go to the general fund www.DowntownSalisburyNC.com R127910 of Spirit and Truth Ministries. For details, call 704-785JOIN US FOR BIBLE PREACHING - BO0K BY BOOK, VERSE BY VERSE! 7932.
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FROM 3B
Messengers for Christ
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BRIEFS
SALISBURY POST
FA I T H
R111597
4B • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
Southern City EAST SPENCER — Southern City AME Zion Tabernacle Church presents “Wing Thing,” a fundraiser for Hearts of Joy Praise Dance ministry. On Dec. 11 from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and Dec. 12 from 1-4 p.m. there will be food, music and fellowship. The church is located at 940 S. Long St. For more details contact the church at 704637-9043 or Ms. Corpening, praise dance instructor, at 917-325-2791.
Singing Americans ALBEMARLE — The Singing Americans of Stanly County presents a Christmas concert on Sunday, Dec 12 at 3 p.m. at the Stanly County Agri-Civic Center on 24/27Newt Road in Albemarle. The Singing Americans is a non-denominational choir of 40 voices with four, five and six-part harmony. The show includes a mixture of secular and religious music. The concert is free, donations are accepted.
Christian book sale Jabez Family Outreach will hold a fundraiser Christian book sale through Dec. 22 at Treasures Hidden, 901 S. Main St. Phone 704-345-8834 for more information.
‘The Real Christmas’ SPENCER — Central United Methodist Church will host a special journey on Dec. 12 to “discover what the real Christmas is all about.” Attendees should meet at Library Park on Fourth Street at 4 p.m., after which the walk will proceed to Central United Methodist Church. The evening will conclude with a free dinner. Children must be accompanied by an adult. For more information contact Linda Miller at 704633-0760 or lmiller_52@hotmail.com.
Submitting Faith news To submit faith-related news to the Salisbury Post, please e-mail it to faith@salisburypost.com. E-mail is preferred but you can also deliver your news by hand to the third -floor newsroom or mail it to Faith news, Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury NC 28145. The deadline is Thursday at noon for inclusion in Saturday’s Faith section. If you have questions, please call 704-797-4243.
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adopted children can retain their birth names. The New South Wales program is the only well-known adoption campaign targeting a Muslim minority population in a Western country. The Muslim women scholars Lauffer consulted in New York, who meet annually as a shura (advisory) council, tackled the complexities of modesty rules inside the home. They debated whether Muslim adoptees in the West could be considered Islamically “unmarriageable” to their siblings or guardians, since Western governments classify adoptees the same as blood relatives. The shura
council will soon release a statement on the issue through its organizing body, the Women's Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality. It’s unclear how successful their efforts can be. There is no central authority in Islam to hand down a ruling on adoption. Muslims consult individual scholars, or, in the United States, seek an opinion from an imam at their local mosque. Catherine England, a Muslim who teaches in the Seattle area, adopted four children after she and her husband learned they could have no children of their own. One of her children is an orphan from Afghanistan. Two others are biological siblings. “I felt that my understanding — and this is entirely my understanding — is that what is forbidden in Islam is closed adoption,” said England, who converted to Islam more than three decades ago. She consulted a Muslim scholar who she said affirmed her view that open AssociAted Press adoption was allowed. Boys eat bowls of rice at the orphanage in Kabul, Afghanistan. Lauffer hopes to hear islam has a guardianship system that resembles foster care more stories like England's yet has no exact counterpart in Western law. soon.
You are entitled to a guaranteed issue Medicare Supplement.
Southside Christian Southside Christian Academy, 507 Morlan Park Road, will hold a fundraising bazaar on Saturday, Dec. 11 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. There will be homemade chicken and dumplings for $8 per plate, and vendors will have jewelry, collectibles, arts and crafts and baked goods. The academy is a ministry of Southside Baptist Church. Call 704-633-1419 for more information.
cy group in Alexandria, Va. Advocates for a new interpretation of Islamic law are more hopeful, at least about the prospect for a different approach to the issue in the United States. Mattson argues that the flexibility in Islamic law for accommodating local cultures and customs can lead to a solution. Open adoption, which keeps contact between the adoptee and his biological family, is seen as one potential answer. In New South Wales, Australia, child welfare officials created an outreach program to Muslims emphasizing that Australian adoptions are open and
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Mt. Zion Christian Methodist Episcopal Church will be celebrating its 64th Founder’s Day and church anniversary on Sunday, Dec. 5 at 11 a.m. with the pastor, the Rev.Dr. Beverly G. Rose. Guest speaker at 4 p.m. is the Rev. Dr. Lloyd Watkin of Russell Memorial CME Church in Durham, along with his choirs and congregation. Dinner will be served.
his son was born, so the boy's grandfather and uncle served as his guardians, setting an example for all Muslims to follow. However, Islamic scholars say the restrictions were actually meant to protect children, by ending abuses in pre-Islamic Arabic tribal society. Ingrid Mattson, professor of Islamic studies at Hartford Seminary in Connecticut, said adoption in that period had more in common with slavery. Men would take in boys, then erase any tie between the child and his biological family. The goal was to gather as many fighters as possible as protection for the tribe. Orphans' property was often stolen in the process. As a result, Muslims were barred from treating adopted and biologi-
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Living Waters for the World (LWW) is a mission resource of the Synod of Living Waters of the Presbyterian Church (USA) and is based in Mississippi. First Presbyterian Church of Kannapolis is partnering with the LWW network in the Yucatan of Mexico and with a small church outside of Merida to install as system that will be accessible to the surrounding community. It is the church’s goal to send one or more teams to Mexico in 2011 to complete the necessary construction and install the system. For more information, visit www.FirstPresb.org or call 704-938-4623.
cal children as identical in naming or inheritance, unless the adoptee was breastfed as a baby by the adoptive mother, creating a familial bond recognized under Islamic law. When an orphan reaches puberty, the Islamic prohibition against mixing of the sexes applies inside the home of his or her guardians. Muslim men cannot be alone with women they could potentially marry, and women must cover their hair around these men. Islamic law sets out detailed rules about who believers can and cannot marry, and an orphan taken in from another family would not automatically be considered “unmarriageable” to his siblings or guardians. For these reasons and others, Muslim countries only rarely allow international adoption. "There hasn’t been a concerted push to open doors for Muslim orphans because the expectation would be that those efforts would fall flat,” said Chuck Johnson, chief executive of the National Council for Adoption, a poli-
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Name of Donor _________________________________________________ Amount________________________________________________________ Contact Number ________________________________________________ Check if you prefer to remain anonymous Amount Name of persons to be memorialized ______________________________ ______________________________________________________________ Name of person or persons in whose honor gift is given ______________ ______________________________________________________________ Contributions may be brought to the Post’s Circulation Department, located at 131 West Innes Street, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, or mailed to “Christmas Happiness”, c/o Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145. Checks Should Be Made Payable To: Christmas Happiness Fund
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The only way substantial achievements can be made in upcoming months is if you’re perBROADCAST CHANNELS sistent and strong-willed in your efforts. But College Football: SEC Movie: ›› “Evan Almighty” (2007) Steve Carell, Morgan Freeman, 48 Hours Mystery (In Stereo) Å News 2 at 11 (:35) Panthers Wheel of even if you experience tough times, it will ^ WFMY Championship Lauren Graham. Premiere. (In Stereo) Å (N) Å Huddle Fortune Å strengthen your character and resolve, not di(:35) (4:00) Paid ›› “Evan 48 Å WBTV America College Football SEC Program Movie: Almighty” (2007) Steve Carell, Lauren Graham. A Hours Mystery (In Stereo) 3 News # WBTV 3 Now Å Championship -- Auburn vs. South newly elected congressman faces a crisis of biblical proportions when at 11 PM (N) minish them. CBS Carolina. (Live) Å God commands him to build an ark. Å Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — It always beAccess Hollywood (N) Å Cops (N) (In Cops A driver America’s Most Wanted: America FOX 8 10:00 News (N) Fringe “The Abducted” Olivia ( WGHP 22 (:00) FOX 8 hooves you to be protective of your cherished News at 6:00P Stereo) (PA) Å tries to flee. Å Fights Back An alleged drug kingreunites with Henry. (In Stereo) FOX possessions, but also watch out for all of your (N) pin. (N) Å (PA) Å belongings. Temptation might be too great for Inside Edition College Football Big 12 Championship: Teams TBA. From Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. (Live) Eyewitness ) WSOC 9 College Football Eyewitness News Tonight Weekend (N) Å Teams To Be News Tonight someone with sticky hands. ABC (N) Å Announced. (N) Å Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — The probabilNBC Entertainment Chase Å Law Law WXII (:29) Nightly Tonight (N) (In (In Stereo) & Order: Los Angeles “Playa & Order: Special Victims News Saturday , WXII ity of a request or favor being rejected is News (N) Å Stereo) Å Vista” Investigating a golfer’s Unit (In Stereo) Å Channel 12 at Night Live NBC murder. Å 11 (N) Å (N) Å greater than usual, so try to handle things on Everybody How I Met Your How I Met Your Cops (N) (In Cops A driver America’s Most Wanted: America Fox News at (:35) Fox News Fringe “The Abducted” Olivia your own. Don’t put yourself in the uncomfortMother “Sorry, Stereo) (PA) Å tries to flee. Å Fights Back An alleged drug king- 10 (N) Got Game reunites with Henry. (In Stereo) 2 WCCB 11 Loves Raymond Mother Å able position of being turned down. Bro” pin. (N) Å (PA) Å Å Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — People in genChase Saturday (In Stereo) Night NBC Nightly Paid Program Wheel of Å Law & Order: Los Angeles “Playa Law & Order: Special Victims NewsChannel D WCNC 6 Live (N) (In News (N) Å Fortune “Great Vista” Investigating a golfer’s Unit (In Stereo) Å 36 News at eral are more susceptible to accepting advice NBC Stereo) Å Northwest” murder. Å 11:00 (N) on important matters without question, so unEd Sullivan’s Rock and Roll Celtic Gospel Music of the Statler Brothers Bill Gaither hosts a celebration Ed Sullivan’s Rock and Roll Classics -- The 60s (My Music) (In 4 Fallon’s J WTVI less you are an expert on something, don’t ofChristmas Stereo) Å Classics of the group’s 40-year career. (In Stereo) Å fer any. It would stink to be wrong. College Football To Be Announced College Football Big 12 Championship: Teams TBA. From Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. (Live) NUMB3RS M WXLV “Noisy Edge” Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) — Business and Office “The Two and a Half Two and a Half Brothers & Sisters Kevin falls for a Stargate Universe “Air” (In Stereo) WJZY News at (:35) Two and a (:05) Two and a New Adv./Old pleasure do not make for a good mix just now, N WJZY 8 The soap-opera actor. Å Christine Men Half Men Men Half Men Duel” (Part 2 of 3) Å 10 (N) so if you were hoping to approach someone at Two/Half Men The Office The Office The Unit “Exposure” Å Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ’70s Show ’70s Show House-Payne House-Payne P WMYV a social gathering, rethink that plan. You could Movie: › “Highlander: Endgame” (2000) Adrian Paul, Christopher The World’s Funniest Moments Scrubs The doc- According to (:00) Da Vinci’s Deadliest Catch “Racing the Jim “In Case of Clock” The last few weeks of king Lambert, Bruce Payne. Connor and Duncan battle an evil immortal in a Å tors head to a end up being highly embarrassed. W WMYT 12 Inquest Å Jimergency” crab season. (In Stereo) bid to become the last of their kind. strip club. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Upon occasion Happy Holidays: The Best of the Andy Williams John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind (My Music) Performances Les Paul: Live in New York City The guitarist and his trio perform you enjoy a stimulating challenge, which is exby artists of the 1950s and ’60s include those of Pete Seeger and Judy at Iridium Jazz Club with guests Steve Miller and Keith Richards. (In Z WUNG 5 Christmas Shows Å actly what is likely to appeal to you at this juncCollins. (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å ture. Be careful, however, because you could CABLE CHANNELS Storage Wars Å Storage Wars Å bite off more than you can chew. The First The First 48 A man is killed while The First 48 The shooting death of The First 48 A 28-year-old stabbed The First 48 A teenager is murA&E 36 (:00) 48 Å being robbed. Å a 28-year-old. Å to death at work. dered. Å Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Your splendid Movie: ››› “Independence Day” (1996) Will Smith, Bill Pullman. A fighter pilot, a computer whiz and oth- Movie: ››› “Independence Day” (1996) Will Smith, Bill Pullman, Movie: characteristic of positive thinking might not AMC 27 (4:30) “Predator” ers fight back after 15-mile-wide alien ships zap Earth’s major cities. Jeff Goldblum. be too operative, so if you find yourself in a Dogs 101 (In Stereo) Dogs 101 (In Stereo) Dogs 101 Meet the Komondor. Pit Bulls and Parolees (N) Dogs 101 Meet the Komondor. ANIM 38 Killer Aliens negative mood, take measures to snap yourMovie: ›› “Harlem Nights” (1989) Eddie Murphy, Richard Pryor. Movie: ››‡ “The Five Heartbeats” (1991) Robert Townsend. BET 59 Jamie Foxx self out of it. House (In Stereo) Å House “Games” Å House Paralysis. Å House “Frozen” Å House “Don’t Ever Change” BRAVO 37 (:00) House Gemini (May 21-June 20) — There is nothAmerican Greed The Suze Orman Show (N) Til Debt-Part Til Debt-Part American Greed CNBC 34 Paid Program American Greed ing wrong with taking on a tough assignment, Losing Lennon (N) Larry King Live Newsroom Losing Lennon CNN 32 Situation Rm Newsroom as long as you are as methodical and organized MythBusters “Superhero Hour” (In MythBusters Six small myths are MythBusters Adam and Jamie MythBusters The guys put the MythBusters Six small myths are DISC 35 (:00) MythBusters Å Stereo) Å tested. (In Stereo) Å make magic happen. Å pedal to the metal. Å tested. (In Stereo) Å as possible about it. A lack of preparation, howGood Luck Good Luck Hannah Sonny With a The Suite Life Hannah Montana Phineas and (:15) Fish Hooks Good Luck Suite Life Hannah ever, would invite poor results. DISN 54 The Charlie on Deck Å Charlie Å on Deck Å Montana Å Montana Å Chance Forever Ferb Å Charlie Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Take great pains Movie: ›› “Honey” (2003) Jessica Alba. Premiere. Kendra Soup Presents The Soup Chelsea Lately E! 49 Married-Rock Married to Rock Å to skirt issues upon which you and your mate College Football (:45) College Football ACC Championship: Teams TBA. From Charlotte, N.C. (Live) (:45) SportsCenter (Live) Å ESPN 39 Basketball disagree. There is a strong likelihood that a Scoreboard Score College Football Teams To Be Announced. (Live) College Football Scoreboard ESPN2 68 College Basketball small discord could get blown totally out of Movie: “Harry Potter and Movie: ››› “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2005) Daniel Radcliffe. Signs of Voldemort’s return emerge as Harry’s Movie: “Tim Burton’s The proportion. FAM 29 (4:30) the Prisoner of Azkaban” Å friends help him prepare for a tournament with Europe’s best student wizards. Å Nightmare Before Christmas” Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — That advice you’re Post Game Pro Football College Football USC at UCLA. (Live) FSCR 40 Thrashers 360 NHL Hockey Atlanta Thrashers at Washington Capitals. (Live) giving to others won’t be followed if they see The League Movie: ››‡ “Eagle Eye” (2008) Shia LaBeouf, Michelle Monaghan, Rosario Dawson. Two and a Half Two and a Half Two and a Half Two and a Half The League FX 45 that you’re not following it yourself. Unless Men Men Men Men you set the proper example, don’t expect othJrnl Edit. Rpt Huckabee Campaign-Finish Geraldo at Large Å News Watch FXNWS 57 America’s-HQ FOX Report ers to comply. 12 Nights LPGA Tour Golf LPGA Tour Championship, Third Round. Fabulous World of Golf Top 10 12 Nights Golf Central GOLF 66 Golf Videos Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Be able to distinMovie: “Farewell Mr. Kringle” (2010) Christine Taylor. Premiere. Movie: “Farewell Mr. Kringle” (2010) Christine Taylor. 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A happily married LIFE 31 in Your Heart” Å Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Because you can a former news anchor. father encounters the woman of his high-school fantasies. see both sides of an issue, you usually go out Movie: “The Pregnancy Pact” (2010) Nancy Travis, Thora Birch, Movie: ›› “She’s Too Young” (2004) Marcia Gay Harden, Alexis Movie: “Mom at Sixteen” (2005) Mercedes LIFEM 72 (:00) Ruehl, Jane Krakowski. Å Camryn Manheim. Å Dziena, Mike Erwin. Å of your way to treat others fairly and imparMSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC 50 Documentary MSNBC Documentary tially. Today, however, it might be impossible Grizzly Face to Face Frontier Force Wild Justice “Thrill Killer” Wild Justice Frontier Force NGEO 58 CIA Confid. for you to identify with the other guy. Big Time Rush Victorious (In Big Time Rush The boys record a A Very School Gyrls Holla-Day George Lopez George Lopez The Nanny (In The Nanny (In Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — It’s a waste of NICK 30 SpongeBob Å Å Å SquarePants Stereo) Å Christmas EP. (N) Å (N) (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Stereo) Å your energy to get uptight and nervous over (:00) ››‡ “Barbershop” ››› “Bad ›› “Bad Å Movie: Movie: Boys” (1995) Martin Lawrence. Premiere. Movie: Boys II” (2003) OXYGEN 62 something that may never happen. Even if conThe Ultimate Fighter (In Stereo Live) SPIKE 44 Ultimate Fight The Ultimate Fighter (In Stereo) ditions look unfavorable, chances are only miHawks Live! NBA Basketball Atlanta Hawks at Miami Heat. (Live) Hawks Live! Raceline College Basketball SPSO 60 In My Words nor irritants will rear up. (:00) Movie: ››‡ “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” (2006) Johnny Depp, Movie: ››‡ “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” (2007) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira SYFY 64 TBS
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Child’s vomiting worries parents Dear Dr. Gott: My healthy and smart 8-year-old daughter vomits in restaurants. When she was 3, she had a spell of vomiting over the course of a couple of weeks that we could not explain. Her pediatrician suggested keeping track of what she ate to see if there was a pattern DR. PETER with certain foods, because GOTT there was no abdominal pain and it was not consistent with motion sickness. We discovered that the vomiting often occurred after she consumed dairy products, so after another doctor visit, we limited dairy and used Lactaid tablets. The vomiting did not occur as often; however, we noticed it was still a problem in restaurants. Then our daughter revealed something: She got nervous in restaurants. She was afraid she would vomit and be embarrassed and got herself so worked up she got sick. Back to the doctor we went. The doctor said kids usually grow out of lactose intolerance as she probably had but “some kids just barf a lot.” He said she would grow out of that, too. She still has the problem. It does not happen at home or school, or in the homes of others. We are at a loss. Eating out is not enjoyable because everyone is on edge wondering if she will get sick. We have had her talk with our pastor. We have tried rewards, praying, breathing exercises and distractions. Some
things work for a little while, maybe even months, but then it will suddenly and unexpectedly happen again. Could a medical issue be the cause? Please, Dr. Gott, any suggestions you have would be greatly appreciated. My husband and I are desperate to help our daughter get over this. Thank you! Dear reader: You certainly appear to have covered many of the bases but still have not hit a home run in resolving the problem. I do not believe the stress and anxiety your daughter undergoes is related to an underlying medical condition, nor do I feel she does it for attention, but I don’t know her. Speak with her physician to be assured of her medical well-being. Vomiting can be the result of fear or emotional stress but can also represent a viral infection, milk allergy, a blocked intestine, tumor, gastritis and the reaction to specific smells or odors. These potential conditions are relatively easy to rule out with the assistance of laboratory work and X-rays. Again, because she doesn’t complain of pain, fever, diarrhea, headache and other common symptoms, my guess is that her testing will be normal. However, her pediatrician would be remiss if he or she did not consider the big picture. If her tests fail to reveal anything and she is an otherwise normal, physically healthy child, request a referral to a child therapist with whom she feels comfortable and can see regularly. While you might give the therapist a heads-up, she should be allowed to speak freely without a parent sitting
nearby coaching her. Then back off as much as possible when an 8-year-old is involved. Allow your daughter to establish a relationship with the therapist, one she feels will help her now and in the future when other issues could come to light. Everything may be stress related, but it may be difficult to understand why she only reaches her limit when in a restaurant. This should be investigated and dealt with. You have indicated that you are on edge when dining out, expecting a repeat of her normal pattern. Whether you express it outwardly or not, I am sure she is perceptive enough to sense how you feel. And she picks up on that, no matter how well you think you are concealing your feelings. A step you may or may not have considered is to stay away from restaurants. From my perspective, it doesn’t appear worth putting your daughter through the trauma of public embarrassment. If there are compelling reasons for eating out, perhaps you can pick a corner table away from the hub of activity. Consider allowing her to bring a friend along so they can talk and giggle to reduce the tension level. Select a “restaurant” that has outdoor tables, and weather permitting, eat out of doors. Allow her and her friend to bring a handheld game board to divert her attention away from her surroundings. Rule out potential medical conditions, assure her that she can speak frankly with a professional therapist and see what transpires. United FeatUre Syndicate
United FeatUre Syndicate
Today’s celebrity birthdays Game-show host Wink Martindale is 77. Singer Freddy Cannon is 74. Actor-producerdirector Max Baer Jr. (“The Beverly Hillbillies”) is 73. Bassist Bob Mosley of Moby Grape is 68. Singer-bassist Chris Hillman (The Byrds, the Flying Burrito Brothers) is 66. Singer Southside Johnny Lyon of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes is 62. Actor Jeff Bridges is 61. Guitarist Gary Rossington (Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Rossington Collins Band) is 59. Actress Patricia Wettig is 59. Bassist Bob Griffin of The BoDeans is 51. Singer Vinnie Dombroski of Sponge is 48. Actress Chelsea Noble (“Growing Pains,” “Kirk”) is 46. Actress Marisa Tomei is 46. Comedian Fred Armisen (“Saturday Night Live”) is 44. Rapper Jay-Z is 41. Actor Kevin Sussman (“Ugly Betty”) is 40. Model Tyra Banks is 37. Country singer Lila McCann is 29.
Bridge Hand: Join the organization formed for writers ner, but the contract is guaranteed with an endplay. Win with dummy’s diamond king, draw trumps, cash the diamond ace, ruff the diamond six in your hand, and return to dummy with a trump. Now play the spade seven and cover East’s card as cheaply as possible. Let’s suppose West takes your nine with his jack. What can he do next? Nothing! If he leads a black suit, you will get an extra trick in that suit. And if he returns a diamond, you discard a club from dummy and ruff in your hand. Information is at www.ibpa.com.
BY PHILLIP ALDER United Feature Syndicate
If you like to read about bridge, you could join the International Bridge Press Association. Although you can become only an associate member unless you are a writer or publisher of bridge, you will still receive the monthly bulletin. This primarily contains reports from tournaments around the world, in theory supplying deals of use to newspaper and magazine columnists. But Tim Bourke from Australia contributes four instructive deals, of which this is one. West leads the diamond queen against your contract of six hearts. What would you do? North’s three-spade response was a splinter bid, showing four-plus hearts, at least game-forcing values, and a singleton (or void) in spades. Four clubs and four
diamonds were control-bids (cue-bids). You have 11 top tricks: one spade, six hearts, two diamonds, one club and one diamond ruff in your hand (because dummy has more trumps than your hand). You could take each black-suit finesse to try for a 12th win- *BURLESQUE (PG-13)
‘Super Bowl Shuffle’ owner sues media giant CHICAGO (AP) — The owner of a beloved ditty by the 1985 Chicago Bears is preparing to shuffle on down to federal court to take on a media conglomerate. “Super Bowl Shuffle” owner Julia Meyer filed a lawsuit in Chicago this week alleging Viacom used the video on MTV and VH1 without permission. The video features Bears boasting, “We’re so bad, we know we’re good. Blowing
your mind like we knew we could.” It sold more than 500,000 singles and became a hallmark of the Super Bowl champions. The lawsuit says interest in the video is up on the 25th anniversary of its recording and Viacom has undermined potential sales. It says a jury should determine a damages figure. Viacom spokeswoman Kelly McAndrew says the claims in the lawsuit are “unfounded.”
12:40 3:25 6:55 9:40 DUE DATE (R) 12:15 2:35 4:55 7:20 9:45 *FASTER (R) 11:55 2:20 4:45 7:05 9:25 HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS (PG-13) 11:50 12:55 2:00 3:05 4:10 5:15 6:20 7:25 8:30 9:35 *LOVE AND OTHER DRUGS (R) 1:00 3:40 6:50 9:35 MEGAMIND 3D (PG) 11:35 2:05 4:35 7:00 9:20
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A
MORNING GLORY (PG-13) 11:30 2:10 4:40 7:15 9:50 NEXT THREE DAYS (PG-13) 12:00 3:00 6:05 9:00 *TANGLED (PG) 12:55 3:35 6:00 8:35 *TANGLED 3D (PG) 11:40 2:15 4:50 7:20 9:50 UNSTOPPABLE (PG-13) 12:10 2:40 5:05 7:30 9:55 *THE WARRIOR'S WAY (R) 11:35 2:05 4:30 7:00 9:30 Times are good through Sunday only
*
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8B • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
W E AT H E R
Improve your mood… give some food! The Salisbury Post is accepting new, unopened NON-PERISHABLE food donations for the needy until December 24th.
ne everyo r o f g n ons. i t ethi c m u o s a d o n Fi ooco b t a year.r. y a d i l lines this ur list. this ho and long yo
Items Needed:
R126808
Dry food, bagged or boxed Dry or bagged beans Canned meats (ravioli, spaghetti sauce etc.) Canned fish (tuna etc.) Peanut butter/Jelly
ing malls or everyone on sy shopp u b hop ffo e h t e-stop s l with n a o e d r u o o t y No need i ns be tio oo auc c o ssurance o b t Le oocoo a b h it w : e r We offe guarante . headquarters otection t our U.S . r p r e y u B s. esk a d lp ction e h l a in au rgains a back . b s e t n Person a w io a e t r c e ut th gifts at g ack in au We p Great he awe b t t 5 7 u 1 p -5 5 e w k:: 8777-- 85 See how Help Des auctions /boocoo
/boocoo
Food donation barrel located in the lobby at
131 West Innes Street
see swhat’s tolocal www.salisburypost.com To T o To see what’s what’ new, new, go go tonew, [insert [insergo t yyour our newspaper.com] newspaper..ccom] auctions link. and click onb the click on the and boocoo o ocboocoo oo auctions link.
FPO
Just 1 block from Main Street!
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National Cities
5-Day 5-Day Forecast ffor or Salis Salisbury bury Today
Tonight
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
High 47°
Low 31°
45°/ 23°
40°/ 20°
38°/ 20°
38°/ 20°
55 percent chance of rain
Chance of rain and snow
Partly cloudy
Partly cloudy
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny
Today Hi Lo W 61 29 pc 41 26 pc 40 28 pc 21 6 f 41 30 pc 33 19 sn 34 24 fl 62 33 pc 38 24 pc 34 20 fl 6 -13 sn 33 20 sn
City Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Boston Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Indianapolis
Tomorrow Hi Lo W 44 25 pc 39 25 pc 42 29 pc 24 15 pc 38 29 fl 26 12 pc 35 23 fl 50 30 pc 42 23 pc 32 21 pc -3 -15 cd 29 15 pc
City Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Omaha Philadelphia Phoenix Salt Lake City Washington, DC
Today Hi Lo W 36 19 pc 63 41 pc 67 51 pc 74 52 pc 20 4 sn 72 46 f 42 29 pc 29 15 pc 41 28 pc 76 47 pc 40 30 sn 41 31 pc
Tomorrow Hi Lo W 31 17 pc 60 40 pc 67 51 r 77 51 pc 16 2 pc 56 39 s 37 30 pc 28 13 pc 40 27 pc 77 51 pc 41 32 pc 43 29 pc
Today Hi Lo W 80 51 s 41 32 pc 44 12 sn 37 32 sn 86 73 t 50 35 pc 59 44 s
Tomorrow Hi Lo W 78 57 s 35 19 pc 22 8 cd 41 30 r 84 73 t 55 30 pc 60 51 s
World Cities Today Hi Lo W 33 32 sn 46 32 pc 82 60 pc 22 15 s 86 60 s 22 6 s 35 24 sn
City Amsterdam Beijing Beirut Berlin Buenos Aires Calgary Dublin
Tomorrow Hi Lo W 39 30 r 48 21 pc 78 60 pc 35 28 sn 84 62 s 22 10 pc 35 15 s
City Jerusalem London Moscow Paris Rio Seoul Tokyo
Pollen Index
Almanac Data from Salisbury throough 6 p.m. yest. Temperature
Regional Regio g onal Weather Weather Knoxville K Kn le le 47/29
Wins Win Winston Salem a 43/ 9 43/29
Boone 36/25 36/
Frank Franklin n 49/27 49 4 7
Hi Hickory kkory 45/29
A Asheville s ville v lle 443/27 43/
Sp Spartanburg nb 47/31 47/3
Kit Kittyy Haw H Hawk w wk 45/32 455/32 5//3322
D Danville l 43/27 Greensboro o D Durham h m 43/29 43/29 29 Ral Raleigh al 45/31 4
Salisb S Salisbury al sb b y bury 47/31 31 1 Charlotte ha ttt 47/31
LLumberton be b 49 49/34 4 Wilmington W to 49/34
Atlanta 58/32
Co C Col Columbia bia 54/36 54/
.. ... Sunrise-.............................. Sunset tonight Moonrise today................... Moonset today....................
Darlington D Darli Darlin 52/36 /3 /36
Augusta Au A ug u 58/41 58/41 58 58/ 8/ 1
7:15 a.m. 5:08 p.m. 6:09 a.m. 4:11 p.m.
Dec 5 Dec 13 Dec 21 Dec 27 New First Fi Full Last
Aiken ken en 56/38 56//3 56 3
Allendale A Al llllen e 59/38 5 /38 38 Savannah na ah 61/43 3
High.................................................... 50° Low..................................................... 26° Last year's high.................................. 63° Last year's low....................................37° .................................... 37° Normal high........................................ 57° Normal low......................................... 37° Record high........................... 75° in 1998 .............................20° Record low............................. 20° in 1960 noon...................................... Humidity at noon......................................
Mo Moreh Morehea M Morehead orehea orehea ehea ad ad City C Ciity Cit ittyy 47/32 4 2
-10s
Ch Charleston le les est 58/43 5 58 H Hilton n He Head e 58/45 5 //45 58/ 5 Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAKE LEVELS Lake
N. C. Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources 0-50 good, 51-100 moderaate, 101-150 unhealthy for sensitive grps., 151-200 unhealthy, 201-300 very unhealthy, 301-500 haazzardous
Se eea at Seattle atttl ttlle S
Observed
Above/Below Full Pool
Lake................. .............. 0.00 High Rock Lake................. Lake..................................... 0.00 Badin Lake....................... Tuckertown Lake............ 595.6........... -0.4 Lake...................... .............. 0.00 Tillery Lake...................... Falls.................... .............. 0.00 Blewett Falls.................... Lake Norman................ 96.50........... -3.5
L
42 442/32 22///3 332 2
-0s
Forecasts and graphics provided by Weather Underground @2010
Myrtle yr le yrtl eB Be Bea Beach ea each 52/38 552/ 52 22/3 2//38 /3
Charlotte e Yesterday.... 36 ........ good .......... particulates Today..... 42 ...... good
24 hours through 8 p.m. yest........... ...........0.00" 0.00" Month to date...................................0.76" ................................... 0.76" Normal year to date....................... 35.42" Year to date................................... 35.42"
0s
Southport outh uth 550/36
Air Quality Index Index
Precipitation Cape Ha C Hatteras atter atte attera ter era raaass 4455/ 45/3 45/31 5/3 /31 3
G Greenville n e 47/32 32
SUN AND MOON
Goldsboro o bo b 47/31
Salisburry y Today: .3 - low Sunday: .1 - low Monday: .1 - low
Biiillliings B Billings nng ggss
10s
21 221/6 11///6 6
H
Sa an Francisco an Frrancisco aannc nciisssccco o San S
30s
58/49 558 88///4 449 9
442/29 29 42 2//2 2/29 /29
33/19 333 33///1 19 D Detroit etrroit et oiitt
40s
D Denver en env nver ver er
50s
338/24 38 8/2 /24
60s 80s
New N oorrrkk eew wY York
220/4 00///4 4 Chicago C hhiiicccago aago ggo o
20s
70s
nne ppo lis Miiin ea olis oli li Minneapolis nnn eaap M
334/20 4//2 4/ 20
LLos Angeles nng gge Lo os A os elle eess
Kansas K aansas nnsssa aass C City Ciiity ttyy
667/51 51 7//5
37/21 3 77/21 /21 /21
Cold Front
Atlanta A Attlla anta ant nta El El P Paso aassso o
90s Warm Front
661/29 61 1/ 1//2 29
770/35 00///3 335 5 70 mi Miami M iaam
100s
74 774/52 4//5 552 2
Staationary 110s Front Showers T-storms -sttorms
Houston Hoou oon n uusst stto
Rain n Flurries rries
Snow Ice
779/45 99///4 45 79
WEATHER UNDERGROUND’S NATIONAL WEATHER
Kari Kiefer Wunderground Meteorologist
Washington Waasshiin nggtton ng ton 41/31 331 441 1//3 1
L
Multiple weather features will bring another active winter day across the country on Saturday. A low pressure system will move southeastward from the Upper Midwest, over the Mid-Mississippi River, and into the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys. This system will continue pushing cold air in from Canada, while also bringing some light moisture with it. Expect light and scattered snow showers to develop around this system with some isolated heavy snowfall likely. Precipitation will remain as snow well southward into Kentucky. However, most of Tennessee will see rain showers, due to temperatures ranging in the upper 40s. Snowfall totals will range from 1-3 inches in most areas, up to 5 or 6 inches are likely once the system hits the higher elevations of the Appalachians. Highs will ranged in the lower 30s across most of the Midwest. Behind this system, a ridge of high pressure builds over the Northern Rockies and moves into the Northern Plains on Saturday. This will allow for cool temperatures to persist as it continues pulling cold air in from the north. Expect highs to remain in the 10s and 20s across the Dakotas and Minnesota. Further West, a low pressure system spinning just offshore of California will continue pushing moisture onshore. Due to a stalled cold front over the center of the state, this will allow for light and scattered showers to persist throughout the day, with high elevation snow in the Sierras. Snow levels will remain at about 7,000 feet across northern California, dropping to near 5,000 feet in southern California. Back East, expect more rain and snow in the Northeast, as a system hovering over eastern Canada pushes moisture onshore. Flow around this system also pushes warm air in from the South, thus, precipitation over Maine will remain as rain. Areas of New York state, Vermont, and New Hampshire may see some light snow. Areas around the Great Lakes should see a break from lake effect snow on Saturday.
Get the Whole Picture at wunderground.com wunderground.com—The —The Best Known Secret in Weather™
SPORTS
Ronnie Gallagher, Sports Editor, 704-797-4287 rgallagher@salisburypost.com
Davie War Eagles beat Porter Ridge to advance to 4A title game/7C
SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY December 4, 2010
1C
www.salisburypost.com
We’re back West Rowan in third straight state title game
jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST
West Rowan proves it’s one for all and all for one as the Falcons meet after beating Hibriten to win the Western North Carolina championship and earn another trip to Raleigh.
Hibriten is 45th straight victim BY PAUL HERSHEY sports@salisburypost.com
MOUNT ULLA — The matchup W. Rowan 20 came a year Hibriten 14 later than expected, but the game was well worth the wait - especially for West Rowan. Out of synch most of the way, B.J. Sherrill and the Falcons’ offense came alive in the fourth quarter. Then West survived a surreal final Hibriten possession to pull out a dramatic 20-14
win Frid a y night in the 3A Western Hornets beat Regional Shelby for 2AA final. title berth, 8C When Hibriten quarterback Michael Isbell’s pass on an untimed down from the West 9 fell incomplete, the Falcons extended their winning streak to 45 games and earned a chance for a third straight state championship. West (15-0) will face Eastern Alamance in a rematch of
Salisbury is in, too
last year’s state final next Saturday in Raleigh. It will be hard for that to top this one. “Awesome high school game,” West head coach Scott Young said. “There were absolutely no losers on that field tonight. Their kids are winners, our kids are winners and thank God we advance.” They did so because Sherrill rallied the Falcons for 14 fourth-quarter points, including the go-ahead 50-yard touchdown pass to Jamarian
jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST
West Rowan receiver Jamarian Mabry goes wild after scoring the go-ahead touchdown on a See WEST, 3C pass from B.J. Sherrill.
As always, B.J., Falcons were clutch OUNT ULLA — You don’t have to remind B.J. Sherrill just how lucky he is. He already knows. “Oh yes,” he said with a Cheshire-cat smile Friday night. “I feel like running around the field and hugging and kissing everybody.” The West Rowan quarterback had a night filled with overthrows, underthrows and enough near-misses to DAVID warrant a fourth-round exit from the 3A state SHAW playoffs. Instead, he and jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST his mates will ride the bus to Raleigh Assistant coach Tim Dixon (center) is hugged by players and fans. next Saturday, chasing their 46th consecutive victory and third straight state title. lucky than good.” ous the whole game. We went out there “It’s a little bit unbelievable,” SherThe only one who actually referfull of steam and got to him and got to rill said after steering the Falcons to enced West’s good fortune was Hibthe ball.” two fourth-quarter touchdowns and a riten ruffian Jacolby Stanley, a 6-footThey did. The Panthers came to jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST 20-14 win over Hibriten in the Western 4, 244-pound defensive end. “Put it this Mount Ulla determined to rattle SherB.J. Sherrill, right, stands with teammate Charles Holloway as final. “You can go ahead and say we’re way,” he said. “They ran some lucky they celebrate the Western N.C. championship. See SHAW, 4C lucky. But sometimes it’s better to be plays. The quarterback — he was nerv-
M
2C • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
TV Sports Saturday, Dec. 4 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Noon ABC — Rutgers at West Virginia ESPN — Pittsburgh at Cincinnati ESPN2 — Conference USA, championship game, SMU at UCF 3:30 p.m. ABC — National coverage, Oregon at Oregon St. 4 p.m. CBS — National coverage, Southeastern Conference, championship game, Auburn vs. South Carolina, at Atlanta 7 p.m. VERSUS — Washington at Washington St. 7:45 p.m. ESPN — ACC, championship game, Florida St. vs. Virginia Tech, at Charlotte, N.C. 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Connecticut at South Florida 8:07 p.m. ABC — Big 12 Conference, championship game, Oklahoma vs. Nebraska, at Arlington, Texas 10:30 p.m. FSN — Southern Cal at UCLA GOLF 1 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Qualifying Tournament, fourth day, at Winter Garden, Fla. 3 p.m. NBC — Chevron World Challenge, third round, at Thousand Oaks, Calif. MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 12:30 p.m. CBS — National coverage, Kentucky at North Carolina 2 p.m. FSN — California at Iowa St. 3:15 p.m. ESPN — Butler vs. Duke, at East Rutherford, N.J. 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Alabama at Purdue 4 p.m. FSN — Texas Tech at Washington 5:15 p.m. ESPN — Illinois at Gonzaga 5:30 p.m. ESPN2 — N.C. State at Syracuse NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. WGN — Houston at Chicago RODEO 9 p.m. ESPN CLASSIC — PRCA, National Finals, third round, at Las Vegas SOCCER 9:55 a.m. ESPN2 — Premier League, Chelsea vs. Everton, at London WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL Noon FSN — California at Texas A&M
Area schedule Saturday, December 4 COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL 4 p.m. Carson-Newman at Catawba 5 p.m. St. Paul’s at Livingstone COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Noon Livingstone vs. Kentucky Wesleyan (in Wilberforce, Ohio) 2 p.m. Carson-Newman at Catawba PREP BOYS BASKETBALL Jonny Richardson tournament at North Hills PREP WRESTLING West Rowan in St. Stephens Invit. East Rowan in Ledford Duals South Rowan in Hibriten Invit. North Rowan in Chair City Classic
Prep football Semifinal scores CLASS 4AA EAST (1) WF-Rolesville 28, (2) Panther Creek 7 WEST (2) Butler 44, (3) Charlotte Vance 24 CLASS 4A EAST (1) Durham Hillside 12, (1) New Bern 7 WEST (5) Davie 21, (2) Porter Ridge 14 CLASS 3AA EAST (5) N. Guilford 28, (1) Wilson Hunt 20 WEST (3) Crest 31, (2) Charlotte Catholic 10 CLASS 3A EAST (3) E. Alamance 42, (1) Havelock 25 WEST (1) West Rowan 20, (2) Hibriten 14 CLASS 2AA EAST (1) Northeastern 21, (2) Cedar Ridge 7 WEST (3) Salisbury 21, (2) Shelby 14 CLASS 2A EAST (2) Tarboro 33, (5) East Bladen 7 WEST (2) W-S Carver 41, (1) Lincolnton 27 CLASS 1AA EAST (3) Pender 28, (1) Southwest Onslow 17 WEST (5) Albemarle 22, (7) Mitchell County 7 CLASS 1A EAST (1) Wallace-Rose Hill 38, (3) Plymouth 0 WEST (1) Murphy 42, (2) Hobbton 0
Championships 1A — Noon, Saturday, Dec.11, UNC 1AA — 7:30 p.m., Friday, Dec. 10, UNCl 2A — 3 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 11, Wake Forest 2AA — 7 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 11, Wake Forest 3A — 3 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 11, N.C. State 3AA — 7 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 11, N.C. State 4A — 11 a.m., Saturday, Dec. 11, Wake Forest 4AA — 11 a.m., Saturday, Dec. 11, N.C. State
Prep hoops Standings 1A Yadkin Valley Boys YVC Overall North Rowan 2-0 2-0 West Montgomery 1-0 1-1 Gray Stone 1-0 2-3 North Moore 0-0 2-0 East Montgomery 0-0 1-0 Albemarle 0-0 0-0 Chatham Central 0-0 0-1 South Stanly 0-2 0-3 South Davidson 0-2 0-3 Thursday’s game West Stanly 61, South Stanly 26 Friday’s games North Rowan 52, South Davidson 50 Gray Stone 58, South Stanly 41 Grace Christian at Chatham Central Albemarle at East Montgomery West Montgomery at North Moore YVC Overall Girls South Stanly 1-0 1-0 North Rowan 1-1 1-1 South Davidson 1-1 1-1 Chatham Central 0-0 1-0 Gray Stone 0-0 1-2 Albemarle 0-0 0-0 East Montgomery 0-0 0-1 North Moore 0-0 0-1 West Montgomery 0-1 0-2 Thursday’s game West Stanly at South Stanly Friday’s games North Rowan 50, South Davidson 43 Gray Stone at South Stanly Grace Christian at Chatham Central Albemarle at East Montgomery West Montgomery at North Moore
2A Central Carolina Boys CCC Overall Thomasville 0-0 1-0 Lexington 0-0 1-1 West Davidson 0-0 1-1 Salisbury 0-0 0-0 Central Davidson 0-0 0-2 East Davidson 0-0 0-2 Thursday’s games Lexington 79, A.L. Brown 78 Ledford 72, Central Davidson 66 Friday’s games Ledford at East Davidson Carson 62, West Davidson 43
Overall CCC Girls Lexington 0-0 2-0 East Davidson 0-0 2-1 0-0 1-1 Salisbury Central Davidson 0-0 1-1 Thomasville 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-2 West Davidson Thursday’s games Lexington 59, A.L. Brown 58 Ledford 58, Central Davidson 48 Friday’s games Carson 86, West Davidson 24 Ledford at East Davidson
Connecticut 94, UMBC 61 Iona 94, Canisius 85 Marist 80, Niagara 72 Villanova 71, Saint Joseph's 60 SOUTH Georgia 66, UAB 64 WEST Idaho 63, North Dakota 42 Portland 58, Montana 54
College football
3A North Piedmont
D-II playoffs
Overall Boys NPC West Iredell 0-0 2-1 Statesville 0-0 1-2 0-0 1-3 Carson South Rowan 0-0 1-3 West Rowan 0-0 0-2 0-0 0-2 North Iredell East Rowan 0-0 0-4 Thursday’s game NW Cabarrus 65, South Rowan 62 Friday’s games Carson 62, West Davidson 43 South Rowan 56, Cox Mill 55 South Iredell at Statesville North Iredell at Bandys Lake Norman at West Iredell
Quarterfinals Saturday, Dec. 4 Delta State (9-3) vs. Albany State, Ga. (11-0), Noon Augustana, S.D. (11-1) at MinnesotaDuluth (12-0), 1 p.m. Central Missouri (11-2) at Northwest Missouri State (11-1), 2 p.m. Shepherd (11-1) at Mercyhurst (10-2), TBA
Overall NPC Girls West Rowan 0-0 2-0 South Rowan 0-0 3-1 0-0 2-2 Carson North Iredell 0-0 1-1 East Rowan 0-0 1-3 0-0 0-2 West Iredell Statesville 0-0 0-4 Thursday’s game South Rowan 46, NW Cabarrus 37 Friday’s games Carson 86, West Davidson 24 South Rowan 43, Cox Mill 36 South Iredell 37, Statesville 9 North Iredell at Bandys Lake Norman at West Iredell
3A South Piedmont Boys SPC Overall 0-0 3-0 Central Cabarrus Mount Pleasant 0-0 2-0 Robinson 0-0 3-1 0-0 3-1 Hickory Ridge Concord 0-0 2-1 A.L. Brown 0-0 1-1 0-0 1-1 NW Cabarrus Cox Mill 0-0 0-4 Thursday’s games Lexington 79, A.L. Brown 78 Concord 93, Lake Norman 58 NW Cabarrus 65, South Rowan 62 Friday’s games South Rowan 56, Cox Mill 55 Central Cabarrus 69, Anson 68 Mooresville 81, Robinson 64 Marvin Ridge 73, Hickory Ridge 43 Mount Pleasant at Weddington Girls SPC Overall 0-0 3-0 Robinson Hickory Ridge 0-0 2-2 Mount Pleasant 0-0 1-2 0-0 1-2 Concord A.L. Brown 0-0 1-2 Cox Mill 0-0 1-4 0-0 0-2 NW Cabarrus Central Cabarrus 0-0 0-3 Thursday’s games Lake Norman 58, Concord 56 Lexington 59, A.L. Brown 58 South Rowan 46, NW Cabarrus 37 Friday’s games South Rowan 43, Cox Mill 36 Weddington 51, Mount Pleasant 32 Anson 53, Central Cabarrus 31 Marvin Ridge 50, Hickory Ridge 45 Mooresville at Robinson
4A Central Piedmont Boys CPC Overall Mount Tabor 0-0 6-0 0-0 4-0 Davie County Reagan 0-0 4-0 North Davidson 0-0 3-0 0-0 1-1 West Forsyth R.J. Reynolds 0-0 0-4 Thursday’s games Davie 59, Alexander Central 45 Friday’s games Mount Tabor 98, Parkland 59 Reagan 75, Greensboro Smith 59 Atkins 63, R.J. Reynolds 61 North Davidson 54, East Forsyth 40 West Forsyth at Carver CPC Overall Girls 0-0 3-0 North Davidson West Forsyth 0-0 2-0 Mount Tabor 0-0 4-1 0-0 2-1 R.J. Reynolds Davie County 0-0 2-2 Reagan 0-0 2-3 Thursday’s game Davie 63, Alexander Central 50 Friday’s games Mount Tabor 59, Parkland 36 Greensboro Smith 36, Reagan 32 West Forsyth at Carver R.J. Reynolds 74, Atkins 18 North Davidson 62, East Forsyth 32
College hoops Standings SAC SAC Overall Lincoln Memorial 0-0 5-0 Mars Hill 0-0 3-2 0-0 3-2 Newberry Anderson 0-0 5-3 Wingate 0-0 3-3 0-0 2-3 Catawba Carson-Newman 0-0 2-4 Brevard 0-0 1-2 0-0 2-5 Tusculum Lenoir-Rhyne 0-0 1-4 Saturday’s games Lincoln Memorial at Wingate Carson-Newman at Catawba, 4 p.m. Lenoir-Rhyne at Mars Hill Brevard at Anderson Tusculum at Newberry
CIAA Northern Division Overall Bowie State 0-0 5-0 0-0 5-0 Elizabeth City State Virginia Union 0-0 1-0 St. Paul’s 0-0 2-2 0-0 1-3 Virginia State Chowan 0-0 1-3 Lincoln 0-0 0-4 Southern Division Overall Winston-Salem State 0-0 2-0 Shaw 0-0 3-1 Livingstone 0-0 2-1 Fayetteville State 0-0 3-2 Livingstone 0-0 2-1 Johnson C. Smith 0-0 2-3 St. Augustine’s 0-0 1-2 Friday’s games Elizabeth City State 69, Wilberforce 50 Bowie State 82, Mansfield 81 Saturday’s games St.Paul’s at Livingstone, 5 p.m. Belmont Abbey at J.C. Smith Lincoln at Millersville Virginia State vs. Virginia Union Fayetteville State at East Carolina Elizabeth City State at Central State
ACC ACC Overall Duke 0-0 7-0 Maryland 0-0 6-2 Florida State 0-0 5-2 Clemson 0-0 5-2 Boston College 0-0 5-2 Miami 0-0 4-2 N.C. State 0-0 4-2 North Carolina 0-0 4-3 Virginia 0-0 4-3 Georgia Tech 0-0 4-3 Wake Forest 0-0 4-3 Virginia Tech 0-0 4-3 Saturday’s games Kentucky at North Carolina, 12:30 p.m., CBS Holy Cross at Wake Forest, 1 p.m. Duke vs. Butler, 3:15 p.m., ESPN West Virginia at Miami, 4 p.m. N.C. State at Syracuse, 5:30 p.m., ESPN2 Boston College at UMass, 6:30 p.m. Sunday’s games Clemson at South Carolina, 4 p.m., FS South Virginia at Virginia Tech, 6 p.m., FSN Hartford at Florida State, 7 p.m. Maryland vs. Temple, 8 p.m., FSN
Other scores EAST
SALISBURY POST
SCOREBOARD
FCS playoffs Second Round Saturday, Dec. 4 Western Illinois (8-4) at Appalachian State (9-2), Noon Wofford (9-2) at Jacks. State (9-2), Noon Lehigh (10-2) at Delaware (9-2), Noon New Hampshire (7-4) at Bethune-Cookman (10-1), 1 p.m. Georgia Southern (8-4) at William & Mary (8-3), 1:30 p.m. North Dakota State (8-4) at Montana State (9-2), 2 p.m. Villanova (7-4) at Stephen F. Austin (92), 3:30 p.m. Southeast Missouri State (9-2) at Eastern Washington (9-2), 4 p.m.
Schedule Friday, Dec. 3 Miami 26, Northern Illinois 21 (MAC Championship) Illinois at Fresno St., late Saturday, Dec. 4 EAST Rutgers at West Virginia, Noon SOUTH CUSA Championship, SMU at UCF, Noon Troy at Florida Atlantic, 2 p.m. Nevada at Louisiana Tech, 3 p.m. SEC Championship, Auburn vs. South Carolina, at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Middle Tennessee at Fla. International, 6 p.m. ACC Championship, Virginia Tech vs. Florida St., at Charlotte, 7:45 p.m. Connecticut at South Florida, 8 p.m. MIDWEST Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, Noon SOUTHWEST Big 12 Championship, Oklahoma vs. Nebraska at Arlington, Texas, 8 p.m. FAR WEST Utah St. at Boise St., 3 p.m. Oregon at Oregon St., 3:30 p.m. San Jose St. at Idaho, 5 p.m. Washington at Washington St., 7 p.m. UNLV at Hawaii, 10:30 p.m. Southern Cal at UCLA, 10:30 p.m.
NFL Standings AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 9 2 0 .818 334 266 N.Y. Jets 9 2 0 .818 264 187 6 5 0 .545 205 225 Miami Buffalo 2 9 0 .182 229 295 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 6 5 0 .545 282 252 Jacksonville 6 5 0 .545 240 294 Tennessee 5 6 0 .455 257 218 Houston 5 7 0 .417 288 321 North W L T Pct PF PA 8 3 0 .727 250 188 Baltimore Pittsburgh 8 3 0 .727 254 181 Cleveland 4 7 0 .364 216 229 Cincinnati 2 9 0 .182 225 288 West W L T Pct PF PA Kansas City 7 4 0 .636 285 231 San Diego 6 5 0 .545 310 225 5 6 0 .455 255 256 Oakland Denver 3 8 0 .273 250 323 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 8 4 0 .667 344 281 7 4 0 .636 277 240 N.Y. Giants Washington 5 6 0 .455 215 262 Dallas 3 8 0 .273 256 301 South W L T Pct PF PA 9 2 0 .818 276 209 Atlanta New Orleans 8 3 0 .727 265 197 Tampa Bay 7 4 0 .636 219 223 1 10 0 .091 140 276 CAROLINA North W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 8 3 0 .727 222 172 Green Bay 7 4 0 .636 269 166 4 7 0 .364 189 239 Minnesota Detroit 2 9 0 .182 258 282 West W L T Pct PF PA 5 6 0 .455 209 275 Seattle St. Louis 5 6 0 .455 213 231 San Francisco 4 7 0 .364 187 225 3 8 0 .273 194 319 Arizona Thursday’s Game Philadelphia 34, Houston 24 Sunday’s Games San Francisco at Green Bay, 1 p.m. Denver at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Buffalo at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Tennessee, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Miami, 1 p.m. Chicago at Detroit, 1 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m. New Orleans at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Oakland at San Diego, 4:05 p.m. CAROLINA at Seattle, 4:15 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 4:15 p.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 4:15 p.m. Dallas at Indianapolis, 4:15 p.m. Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 8:20 p.m. Monday’s Game N.Y. Jets at New England, 8:30 p.m.
NBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Boston 15 4 .789 — New York 11 9 .550 41⁄2 Toronto 8 11 .421 7 New Jersey 6 14 .300 91⁄2 Philadelphia 5 14 .263 10 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Orlando 15 4 .789 — Atlanta 13 7 .650 21⁄2 Miami 12 8 .600 31⁄2 CHARLOTTE 7 12 .368 8 Washington 6 12 .333 81⁄2 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 9 8 .529 — 1 ⁄2 Indiana 9 9 .500 Cleveland 7 11 .389 21⁄2 1 Milwaukee 6 12 .333 3 ⁄2 Detroit 6 14 .300 41⁄2 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 16 3 .842 — Dallas 15 4 .789 1 New Orleans 13 6 .684 3 1 Memphis 8 12 .400 8 ⁄2 Houston 7 12 .368 9 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Utah 15 6 .714 — Denver 12 6 .667 11⁄2 Oklahoma City 13 7 .650 11⁄2 Portland 8 11 .421 6 Minnesota 4 15 .211 10 Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Lakers 14 6 .700 — Phoenix 10 9 .526 31⁄2 Golden State 8 11 .421 51⁄2 Sacramento 4 13 .235 81⁄2 L.A. Clippers 4 16 .200 10 Friday’s Games CHARLOTTE 91, New Jersey 84, OT Toronto 111, Oklahoma City 99 Washington 83, Portland 79 Atlanta 93, Philadelphia 88 Orlando 104, Detroit 91 Houston 127, Memphis 111 New York 100, New Orleans 92 Boston 104, Chicago 92
San Antonio 107, Minnesota 101 Denver 109, L.A. Clippers 104 Phoenix 105, Indiana 97 L.A. Lakers 113, Sacramento 80 Dallas 93, Utah 81 Saturday’s Games Atlanta at Miami, 7:30 p.m. CHARLOTTE at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. Houston at Chicago, 8 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Orlando at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m. Dallas at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Notable boxes Bobcats 91, Nets 84 NEW JERSEY (84) Outlaw 7-17 6-6 21, Humphries 2-6 0-0 4, Lopez 3-10 7-10 13, Farmar 6-18 3-3 16, Morrow 7-18 2-2 19, Uzoh 1-4 2-2 4, Favors 2-4 0-0 4, Petro 0-3 0-0 0, Murphy 0-2 1-2 1, Graham 0-4 0-0 0, Ross 0-0 0-0 0, James 1-5 0-0 2. Totals 29-91 21-25 84. CHARLOTTE (91) Wallace 5-14 1-4 12, Diaw 5-13 0-1 11, Mohammed 6-14 2-2 14, Augustin 5-12 3-3 15, Jackson 5-13 12-13 25, McGuire 1-7 01 2, K.Brown 0-2 0-2 0, Thomas 4-7 4-6 12, Livingston 0-4 0-0 0. Totals 31-86 22-32 91. 16 16 16 31 5 — 84 New Jersey Charlotte 18 15 27 19 12 — 91 3-Point Goals—New Jersey 5-25 (Morrow 3-8, Farmar 1-5, Outlaw 1-8, Graham 0-1, James 0-1, Murphy 0-2), Charlotte 7-15 (Jackson 3-5, Augustin 2-4, Wallace 1-2, Diaw 1-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— New Jersey 57 (Murphy, Humphries 8), Charlotte 74 (Diaw 16). Assists—New Jersey 17 (Farmar 10), Charlotte 21 (Diaw 8). Total Fouls—New Jersey 27, Charlotte 24. Technicals—New Jersey defensive three second 2. A—12,183 (19,077).
Lakers 113, Kings 80 SACRAMENTO (80) Greene 2-7 0-0 5, Thompson 9-13 1-5 19, Dalembert 1-2 2-2 4, Evans 5-15 2-4 15, Head 0-3 0-0 0, Udrih 2-6 0-0 4, Garcia 1-4 0-0 3, Cousins 3-9 3-4 9, Landry 2-6 2-4 6, Jackson 0-0 0-0 0, Casspi 1-5 2-2 4, Jeter 5-7 1-1 11. Totals 31-77 13-22 80. L.A. LAKERS (113) Artest 1-3 0-0 2, Odom 7-13 2-3 16, Gasol 6-8 4-5 16, Fisher 2-4 1-1 5, Bryant 9-18 48 22, Blake 4-7 0-0 11, Caracter 5-8 0-0 10, Brown 6-11 2-2 14, Walton 1-4 0-0 2, Barnes 1-2 2-2 4, Ebanks 4-4 1-1 9, Vujacic 1-1 00 2. Totals 47-83 16-22 113. Sacramento 16 19 17 28 — 80 21 31 30 31 — 113 L.A. Lakers 3-Point Goals—Sacramento 5-16 (Evans 3-7, Garcia 1-2, Greene 1-3, Head 0-1, Casspi 0-1, Udrih 0-2), L.A. Lakers 3-14 (Blake 3-6, Barnes 0-1, Odom 0-3, Brown 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Sacramento 52 (Thompson 10), L.A. Lakers 45 (Odom 7). Assists—Sacramento 15 (Casspi 4), L.A. Lakers 27 (Gasol 5). Total Fouls— Sacramento 21, L.A. Lakers 20. Technicals—Thompson. Flagrant Fouls—Brown. A—18,997 (18,997).
Suns 105, Pacers 97 INDIANA (97) Granger 2-13 4-6 8, McRoberts 6-9 0-0 16, Hibbert 4-6 0-0 8, Collison 1-3 3-3 5, Rush 9-16 0-0 21, S.Jones 2-4 1-2 5, Ford 4-10 2-3 10, Dunleavy 6-11 2-2 16, Posey 3-7 0-0 8. Totals 37-79 12-16 97. PHOENIX (105) Hill 2-9 4-4 8, Barron 2-9 2-6 6, Frye 1116 2-3 29, Nash 3-7 6-6 12, Richardson 711 4-4 21, Dudley 5-7 0-0 12, Childress 02 0-0 0, Dragic 3-8 2-4 9, Turkoglu 1-4 4-6 6, Warrick 0-1 0-0 0, Clark 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 35-78 24-33 105. Indiana 28 31 17 21 — 97 20 32 22 31 — 105 Phoenix 3-Point Goals—Indiana 11-26 (McRoberts 4-6, Rush 3-6, Dunleavy 2-5, Posey 2-6, Granger 0-3), Phoenix 11-22 (Frye 5-8, Richardson 3-5, Dudley 2-4, Dragic 1-4, Turkoglu 0-1). Fouled Out—Posey. Rebounds—Indiana 52 (McRoberts 9), Phoenix 46 (Dragic 6). Assists—Indiana 24 (Ford 9), Phoenix 25 (Nash 11). Total Fouls—Indiana 30, Phoenix 22. Technicals—Barron, Phoenix defensive three second. A—16,991 (18,422).
NHL Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 27 17 8 2 36 82 64 Philadelphia 26 15 7 4 34 87 64 N.Y. Rangers 28 16 11 1 33 82 74 New Jersey 25 8 15 2 18 46 74 N.Y. Islanders24 5 14 5 15 51 80 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 26 16 8 2 34 68 52 24 14 8 2 30 70 47 Boston Ottawa 26 11 14 1 23 58 79 Buffalo 26 10 13 3 23 67 73 24 8 12 4 20 51 70 Toronto Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 27 18 7 2 38 91 71 Tampa Bay 26 14 9 3 31 78 89 26 13 10 3 29 82 77 Atlanta Carolina 25 11 11 3 25 73 79 Florida 24 10 14 0 20 62 65 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 23 17 4 2 36 82 59 Detroit Chicago 28 14 12 2 30 86 82 Columbus 24 14 9 1 29 65 62 24 12 9 3 27 63 68 St. Louis Nashville 24 11 8 5 27 58 63 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 24 14 7 3 31 78 61 25 13 9 3 29 86 76 Colorado Minnesota 25 11 11 3 25 60 72 Calgary 26 11 13 2 24 72 78 Edmonton 25 9 12 4 22 68 92 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 24 15 8 1 31 70 63 24 12 7 5 29 70 70 Phoenix Anaheim 28 13 12 3 29 71 84 Los Angeles 24 14 10 0 28 66 59 24 12 8 4 28 72 68 San Jose NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Friday’s Games Calgary 3, Minnesota 2, SO N.Y. Rangers 2, N.Y. Islanders 0 Carolina 2, Colorado 1, OT Buffalo 5, Columbus 0 Vancouver 3, Chicago 0 Detroit 4, Anaheim 0 Saturday’s Games New Jersey at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. San Jose at Montreal, 2 p.m. Boston at Toronto, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Ottawa, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Washington, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at Columbus, 7 p.m. Colorado at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. Carolina at Nashville, 8 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 8 p.m. Florida at Phoenix, 8 p.m. St. Louis at Edmonton, 10 p.m. Detroit at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Transactions BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Agreed to terms with 1B Adam Dunn on a four-year contract. CLEVELAND INDIANS—Agreed to terms with RHP Jensen Lewis to a oneyear contract. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Agreed to terms with OF Ryan Sweeney on a oneyear contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Acquired RHP Carlos Villanueva from Milwaukee Brewers for a player to be named. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Acquired RHP Scott Linebrink from the Chicago White Sox for RHP Kyle Cofield. PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Agreed to terms with SS Ronny Cedeno and RHP Jeff Karstens on one-year contracts. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Agreed to terms with Pat Burrell on a 1-year contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS—Signed G-F Damien Wilkins. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL—Find Houston S Bernard Pollard $40,000 for unnecessary roughness against Tennessee WR Justin Gage in a Nov. 28 game. Fined Arizona OT Jeremy Bridges $20,000 for unnecessary roughness against San Francisco LB Takeo
Catawba opens SAC From staff reports
free throws down the stretch. The Cavs (1-1) were led by Teaunna Cuthbertson with 19 points. Brown and Ronesha Bradley had nine apiece. “It feels great to get that first win,” coach Tony Hillian said. “We’ve got a little momentum going now. I was proud of the girls. They fought hard.” • South Rowan’s CUTHBERTSON girls beat Northwest Cabarrus 46-37 on Thursday. Gaddy led the Raiders (2-1) with 12 points, and Sam Goins scored 10. Miller contributed seven points, Chelsea McManus six and Barringer five. Neisha Spears and Erica Merriman had 13 points each for NWC (0-2). “They got in foul trouble and our press was very effective,” Smith said. “We were very patient on offense and broke their press effectively. We had big games from Gaddy, especially defensively, Goins, and clutch free throws down the stretch from Miller.”
Catawba basketball teams open South Atlantic Conference play today with a doubleheader against CarsonNewman at Goodman Gym. The women’s game starts at 2 p.m. Carson-Newman’s women (3-3) have been led so far by senior Mandy Mendenhall and freshman Shannon Depew. Dana Hicks is averaging 19.9 points and 10.9 rebounds to lead Catawba (4-4), and Kisha Long has scored consistently in double figures. Carson-Newman’s men (2-4) have been led by junior college transfer John Holleman (17 points per game). Catawba’s men (2-3) have three double-digit scorers in Dominick Reid, freshman Keon Moore and Justin Huntley. Livingstone’s men are home today against CIAA foe St. Paul’s at 5 p.m. The Blue Bears are off to a 2-1 start. • Livingstone’s women defeated Central State Marauders 82-64 Friday in the third game of the Ben Waterman Classic. Brittany Wright led the Blue Bears (5-1) with 19 points and eight rebounds, while Jasmine Murray tallied Jayvee girls basketball 15 points and seven boards. CassaunSouth Rowan’s jayvee girls beat dra Rhodes added 10 points. Livingstone will take on Kentucky Northwest Cabarrus 19-11 on ThursWesleyan today at noon in the fifth day. Rachael Honeycutt scored eight points for the Raiders, and Stacie game. Robinson had four. South’s jayvee girls (4-0) beat Prep boys basketball Cox Mill 34-16 on Friday. South Rowan coach John Davis Emma Pope scored eight points, said his team couldn’t buy a 3-point- and Leah McCoy, Ashley Deal and er all night. Ashlyn Coley scored four apiece. “Until the last one,” Davis said. Qua Neal hit a 3-pointer from the Rockwell Christian corner at the buzzer to give the Rockwell Christian’s boys defeatRaiders their first win of the season, 56-55 over Cox Mill on Friday night. ed Durham Liberty Christian 60-58 when Nathan Hoehman converted South (1-3), which two free throws with less than a sechas lost three close onds left to break a tie. ones, was down two Nathan Kokubun of Liberty had a when it missed a game-high of 38 points. shot with four secPaul Adams had 16 for the Chargonds left. But the ers. Alex Straight and Andrew alert Raiders forced Straight scored 12 apiece, and a jump ball. The arHoehman added 10. row was in South’s Rockwell’s next game is at favor, and Davis NEAL Southview Christian on Tuesday. drew up a play. “Of all the options, Qua was the last,” Davis said Middle school hoops with a chuckle. Sacred Heart’s varsity girls beat Neal didn’t hesitate and sent the High Point Home Education 50-26. fans home happy. Erin Ansbro had 21 points, five re“We were swimming upstream all night,” Davis said. “We were 9-of-22 bounds, five steals and five assists. Caroline Parrott had 10 rebounds from the free-throw line. But the boys kept fighting. We got the monkey off for the Dolphins (6-4). Payton Russell had nine points, while India Biggus our back.” Johnathan Gaddy led South with and Kate Sullivan had six each. Sacred Heart’s boys beat High 21 points, while Brandon Sharpe had 11. Neal and Josh Medlin finished Point 53-50 in two overtimes. Joseph Harrison scored 7 of his with seven apiece. 11 points in the extra sessions and • Carson was in trouble. Down 27-17 at halftime to West added 5 steals. Max Fisher had sevDavidson, it looked like another loss en points, including clutch free throws, and six rebounds. for the Cougars. Christian Hester had 14 points and But Cody Clanton 23 rebounds, while Chili Chilton had started the third eight points and 17 boards. Reilly quarter with a steal Gokey had eight points. Gokey and and layup, followed Spencer Storey combined for nine by a 3-pointer, and steals. the Cougars rolled to Corriher-Lipe’s girls built an 11a 62-43 victory, their point halftime lead and defeated first of the season. Southeast 38-17. Avery Locklear had Clanton finished 17 points for the Yellow Jackets (4with a career high 30 CLANTON 1), while Caroline Hubbard had eight. points, 25 in the secKatie Wolfe scored eight points for ond half. Led by Clanton’s 13 points, Carson the Patriots. Corriher-Lipe’s boys pulled away (1-3) outscored the Dragons 25-4 over in the second half and won 72-44 the last eight minutes. “They didn’t have anybody who against Southeast. Quantarious Rhyne could stop Cody,” coach Brian Perry scored 25 points to lead the Jackets (3-2). Burke Fulcher added 12 points, said. Nick Houston was the other Kameron Sherrill 11, Travis Littlejohn eight and Andy Overcash five. Cougar in double figures with 16. Brendon Foil led Southeast with • North Rowan struggled but improved to 2-0 in the YVC by holding 13 points. Harrison Baucom had 12. Sacred Heart’s jayvee boys beat off South Davidson 52-50 on Friday. Salisbury Academy 18-12. Justin Boyd had 12 steals and five points, Prep girls basketball and James Boyd and Michael ChilSouth Rowan girls hit clutch free dress scored five points each. throws late in the fourth quarter and Marcus Corry scored seven points defeated Cox Mill 43-36 on Friday. for the Jaguars. Salisbury Academy’s jayvee Maria Gaddy led the Raiders (3-1) with nine points, while Nicole Bar- girls beat Sacred Heart 17-14. Juliana ringer and Lauren Miller had eight Anderson led the Jaguars with six points. with 6 points. Maria Strobel apiece. scored five to lead the Dolphins. Cox Mill put a tall girl on Gaddy in the fourth period so Eanes in 1AA final coach Jarrod Smith Tom Eanes’ Hambone offense wasspread it out and n’t good enough for East Rowan, but used his seasoned the former Mustang coach used it to seniors. get his current team to the state “We pressed championship game next week. them a lot,” Smith Eanes’ Pender County Patriots desaid. “We thought we feated Southwest Onslow 28-17 on Friwere more athletic GADDY day to advance to the 1AA final and it paid off.” • Carson’s girls keep breaking against Albemarle, a 22-7 winner over records. After setting a record with Mitchell. Pender was a No. 6 seed. It 73 points on Wednesday, the Cougars will play Friday at 7:30 in Chapel Hill. Eanes should have fun at the state shattered that mark Friday, beating championship press conference on West Davidson 86-24. The Cougars were led by Tyesha Monday in Raleigh. His alma mater, Phillips with 14 points, while Demya Davie County, will also be involved. Eanes is a former War Eagle quarterHeggins and Chloe back and the first Davie QB to pass Monroe had 12 each. for 1,000 yards in a season. Carson (2-2), which led by 41-9 at halftime, increased North wrestling its lead to 62-13 after The North Rowan wrestling team three quarters. lost 38-30 against No. 1-ranked Bish• North Rowan op McGuinness on Friday. Winners got its first victory included Simon Connolly, Tyler Powof the season, taking ers, Giancarlo Solorzano, Delondon a 50-43 decision PHILLIPS Krider, Thomas Fowler, Joe Wiggins, against South Davidson. Tiffany Brown hit five clutch and Will Robertson.
SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 3C
3A WESTERN FINAL
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West Rowan star defensive back Domonique Noble motions to the crowd to get louder after another good defensive play. West Rowan 20, Hibriten 14
WEST FROM 1C
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Scott Young shows some emotion after a big play.
Mabry with 5:10 left. It came on a trick play as Dinkin Miller took the snap out of the Wildcat formation, went to his left and tossed the ball to Sherrill, who hit Mabry in stride in the end zone. “We’ve been saving that for a rainy day a long time and we finally got a rainy day,” Young said. After Sherrill’s two-point conversion run made it 20-14, things got wild as Hibriten (12-3) drove frantically for a potential game-winning score. Wackiness ensued as three Hibriten penalties, a dropped long pass and two West sacks left the Panthers facing 4th and 38 at their own 29 with just over one minute left. But then a controversial interference penalty on the Falcons gave Hibriten new life. “We had fourth and forever and we get an interference call,” Young said. “I don’t want to blame anybody, but I just didn’t see it. But our kids did a great job of battling through it.” Hibriten converted another fourth-down play after that and then Isbell made a desperation completion while in the grasp of a West defender. Fullback Tripp Patterson made the 15-yard reception and ran out of bounds at the Falcons’ 18 with just :0.8 seconds on the clock. A scambling Isbell then threw to the back of the end zone and another interference penalty was called on West, giving Hibriten one more play.
jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST
Dinkin Miller celebrates his touchdown run.
First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passing (C-A-I) Punting Fumbles-Lost Penalties
H 14 164 71 8-17-0 6-30.8 4-1 6-60
WR 11 163 109 6-18-1 5-37.4 0-0 8-80
7 7 0 0 — 14 Hibriten 6 0 0 14 — 20 W. Rowan H — Isbell 4 run (Caudle kick), 7:34, 1st WR — Cowan 42 run on fake punt (kick failed), 2:34, 1st H — Patterson 11 run (Caudle kick), 1!:10, 2nd WR — Miller 10 run (pass failed), 11:14, 4th WR — Mabry 50 pass from Sherrill (Sherrill run), 5:10, 4th Individual statistics Rushing — H: Pearson 8-27, Isbell 11-(-15), Patterson 10-43, Booker 11-69, Prestwood 15, Harshaw 2-13, Gaines 1-22. WR: D. Miller 12-59. Sherrill 14-45 , Long 3-10, Cowan 2-42, Jackson 2-7. Passing — H: Isbell 8-17-0-71. WR: Sherrill 6-18-1-109. Pass receiving — H: Hinman 3-25, Davenport 2-16, Pearson 1-4, Patterson 2-26. WR: Mabry 4-63, Hampton 2-46.
Sherrill could only watch from the sideline. “I was like ‘God, please just take the time off the clock,” he said. “It seemed like the last minute or so lasted about an hour.” Isbell threw quickly to the right side of the end zone, but the ball sailed out of bounds as intended receiver Will Hinman broke to the middle instead. “He ran a stop route and I’m told to throw it to the outside shoulder because that’s where it’s hard for the corner to get,” Isbell said. “He sat there for a second and then he popped back inside and the ball went out of bounds. It was nobody’s fault, just a bad play.” Despite Isbell being held in check on the ground, Hibriten outplayed West in the first half. The Panthers put together two impressive drives for
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West Rowan defense halts the running attempt of Hibriten's Kaylen Pearson (25). touchdowns and held the Falcons to just 92 total yards in the first half. Eric Cowan accounted for 42 of them on a fake punt that he took the distance for a score and West was fortunate to only be down 14-6 at the break. “We went in at halftime and asked them if they were ready for it to be over, and our seniors stepped up and became vocal leaders,” Young said. “And we just played well enough to beat a very good team in the second half.” Undaunted by a routine touchdown pass dropped in the end zone by Daishon Barger, West’s offense finally got going late in the third, driving 74 yards on seven plays, capped by Miller’s 10-yard scoring run on the second play of the fourth quarter. “The first half we were receiving the blow a little bit and the second half we delivered them and put points on the board,” Sherrill said.
The two-point conversion pass attempt to tie failed, but Sherrill led the way on the next drive. He converted 4th and 1 from the West 29 with 6:30 left on a bruising 16-yard run and then threw the perfect pass to Mabry. “I don’t know if I want to cry... it just feels great to come back on a team such as Hibriten,” Sherrill said. Defensively, the Falcons held Hibriten to just three first downs in the second half until the wild final drive. Isbell and running back Kaylen Pearson were held to a combined 12 rushing yards, though speedster Trey Booker (69 yards) hurt the Falcons on the outside. Not enough, though. “We lost four all-state guys last year, two of were allAmericans and everybody doubted this group all year long and this group did what was necessary to win,” Young said.
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B.J. Sherill finds himself under some heavy pressure as Patrick Hampton (33) comes in to help.
4C • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
3A WESTERN FINAL
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West Rowan linebacker Terrence Polk is overwhelmed by emotions as he celebrates with the fans after the win over Hibriten.
jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST
West coach Scott Young said his team made its own luck.
SHAW FROM 1C rill out of his comfort zone and carjack West’s remarkable magic carpet ride. For much of the night, they were successful. “I think we were out-ofsync all night,” West coach Scott Young announced. “I think their defense made us be out-of-sync. You’ve got to chalk that up to nine out of 11 returning starters on a team that was 13-1 last year — and they gave us the business.” The kind of business that had West facing a 14-6 deficit before the second quarter was a minute old — and wondering if this was the night it would abdicate the throne. “We didn’t want this to be our last game,” Sherrill said. “So I was trying to do too much, trying to it all by myself. You can’t win that way. Everybody’s got a job to do.” Tight end Patrick Hampton agreed. “We knew coming in that Hibriten wanted this game for two years,” he said. “We just weren’t gonna give it to them. Yeah, we struggled in the first half. But we cranked it up and played team ball in the second half. We decided it was time to go.” Go-time began late in the third quarter when running
back Dinkin Miller ripped off a 26-yard run to the Hibriten 48. One snap later Hampton reeled in a 22-yard sideline pass from Sherrill. “That got us moving,” Hampton said. “I knew as soon as Coach Young sent the play in that I had to get to the sticks.” On the second play of the final period, Miller plowed into the end zone and the Falcons had inched within 14-12. When West regained possession on its own 20 moments later, Sherrill gave the overflow crowd another reason to believe. “He took this game and put it on his shoulders,” said teammate Eric Cowan, the senior who scored West’s first touchdown on a 42-yard faked punt. “He’s a playmaker. That’s what he does.” It’s a role Sherrill can play in his sleep. The seasonpreserving drive began with a short completion Jamarian Mabry, then a couple of 1yard keepers. Facing fourthand-1 from it own 29 — and staring elimination in the face — West called Sherrill’s number once again. “We dialed up the best play possible,” Sherrill said. “Let me run the ball behind our two senior leaders, Davon Quarles and Charles Holloway. Fortunately, I was able to get the first.” He gained 16 yards to the 45 with an incredible driving
jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST
Jamarian Mabry is mobbed by fans after his touchdown catch. The game was played before a standing-room-only crowd. burst up the middle. After a 5-yard pickup by Miller, there was more magic. On a second-down Wildcat play the ball was snapped to Miller, who pitched it to Sherrill, who lofted a 50yard touchdown pass to Mabry, who had wiggled his way into a sliver of open space down the right sideline. “That was a little trick
play we had in the bag for emergency situations,” Sherrill said. “Again, I’m glad we were able to execute it.” Young said the game-winning play had been buried in that bag for some time. “We’ve been working on that one for 10 weeks now,” he said. “Saving it for a rainy day. And believe me, there was plenty of rain tonight.”
There was also more than five minutes remaining and burning it off proved exhausting. Hibriten’s final charge up the hill — a 16play march marred by seven penalties — had to be repelled not once, but twice by West’s combat-ready defense. A pass interference call against WR’s Tre Mashore extended the game an extra play. But when vis-
iting quarterback Michael Isbell’s final pass attempt fell incomplete, West had achieved an atypical — if not lucky — triumph. “Sometimes, along the way, you’ve got to win an ugly one,” Young said. “We had to win an ugly one tonight.” But was luck a factor? “We made our own luck,” Young concluded. “And we found a way to prevail.”
jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST
West Rowan quarterback B.J. Sherrill runs up the middle for yardage during the win over Hibriten.
SALISBURY POST
2AA WESTERN FINAL
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 5C
wayne hInShaw/SALISBURY POST
Salisbury's Scott Givens (34) and James Means (32) celebrate the 21-14 win against Shelby. Salisbury 21, Shelby 14
SALISBURY
First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passing (C-A-I) Punting Fumbles-Lost Penalties
FROM 8C
Shelby Salisbury
0 0
0 14 0 0 0 21
— 14 — 21
SHE — Husky 62 pass from Fuller (Cheaney kick), 11:06, 3rd SHE — Key 3 run (Cheaney kick), 3:56, 3rd SAL — Adams 62 pass from Knox (Simons kick), 7:45, 4th SAL — Morris 21 pass from Knox (Simons kick), 2:44, 4th SAL — Dismuke 49 pass from Knox (Simons kick), 1:03, 4th Individual statistics Rushing — SHE: Key 18-60; Moss 8-25; Ussery 4-23; Fuller 6-(minus 21). SAL: Morris 15-71; Bauk 8-36; Knox 14-15; Dismuke 5-7; Team 2-(minus 2). Passing — SHE: Fuller 4-9-0, 106. SAL: Knox 7-10-0, 180. Pass receiving — SHE: Husky 2-83; Key 1-14; Moss 1-9. SAL: Adams 3-96; Dismuke 2-60; Morris 2-24.
wayne hInShaw/SALISBURY POST
Salisbury's Tre Jackson (30) makes a flying tackle on Shelby’s Kipton Key (22). “Did it go 10 yards? I won’t know until I see the film,” Norman said. “But that ball’s bouncing around and we’ve just got to go get it. Instead, the guys in the black shirts made a play.” The guys in black shirts were about to make more, following Simons’ recovery. On fourth-and-1 at the Shelby 40, Dismuke lowered his
head and bulled for a key first down when there was no hole. On second-and-7 from the Shelby 21 with 3:44 remaining, Knox found Morris on a wheel route for a TD. Knox put the ball up there, and Morris adjusted to it beautifully. Simons’ huge PAT made it 14-all. “That was about the most nervous extra point I’ve ever
kicked,” Simons said. Salisbury’s defense, which had given up a 67-yard TD to receiver Raheim Husky on the second play of the second half and a 51-yard scoring drive right after it, rose up one more time stuffing a run and getting a pass breakup from Rankin. Shelby (9-6) had to punt, and Salisbury’s offense took over
on its 47 with 1:43 left. “We’re thinking about getting into position for Simons to win it with a field goal,” Pinyan said. Instead, the Hornets got much more. On second-and-6 from the Shelby 49, Knox hit Dismuke in stride down the right sideline for the game-winner. Knox’s
third TD pass of the night and 46th of his career was a strike, probably as good a ball as he’s ever thrown. “The coaches called the right play, and the pass was perfect,” Dismuke said. “It dropped right into my hands.” Dismuke’s wheels did the rest. There was 1:03 left when he reached the end zone, and the Hornets had their first lead. Simons, his adrenaline pumping, kicked off to the end zone. After a sack for a 15-yard loss by Hillie, it was time to dance and hug and give a victorious head coach a cold shower. Its vaunted running game was stopped in its tracks, but the Hornets still found a way. “This is a moment we’ve been waiting on four years,” said Rankin, who felt the pain of losing in overtime in the 2009 Western final. “We played our hearts out. We weren’t going to leave this field with regrets.”
R128245
night long,” Salisbury running back Romar Morris said. “All we needed was that one spark to get our offense going, and we finally got it.” Sophomore Keion Adams was the spark provider. He snagged a 62-yard TD pass with 7:45 left on a tight end cross to finally put the Hornets on the scoreboard. “I saw John scrambling, running for his life, and I was looking for any way to help him out,” Adams explained. “Then I saw the ball. I remembered what the coaches always say, ‘Look it into your hands before you run with it.’ ” It would’ve been just a nice gain, but split end John Jarrett was blocking downfield. He got the last man, and Adams had a TD. The Hornets trailed 14-7, but they had momentum. Then the Hornets gambled with an onside kick. Pinyan was counting on David Simons to do two things perfectly back-toback— execute a squib kick and then recover it himself. “It’s a play (teammate) Michael Mazur and I made up just messing around,” Simons said. “The coaches liked it and we’ve practiced it, but I never thought we’d actually use it.” Simons kicked the ball 10 yards — barely — and teammates Darien Rankin and Dejoun Jones wiped out Shelby players near the ball. Simons got to the pigskin first, and when a mass of bodies unpiled, he raised the ball aloft. “Maybe you’ve got to take a big gamble to get to the championship game,” Pinyan said. Shelby coach Chris Norman felt the onside kick was the turning point.
Shelby Salisbury 10 14 87 127 106 180 4-9-0 7-10-0 4-34.0 4-24.5 1-0 2-1 3-25 5-25
wayne hInShaw/SALISBURY POST
Salisbury's Darien Rankin (2), David Simons (10) and John Knox (3) hold the trophy high
6C • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
2AA WESTERN FINAL
wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
Romar Morris races through the Shelby defense. Morris scored a touchdown by hauling in a pass from John Knox in the fourth quarter.
KNOX FROM 8C
wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
Salisbury's Kavari Hillie (43) flies toward Shelby kicker Ben Cheaney (40).
the Hornets would have to complete some throws to move the ball against Shelby’s athletic defense. That’s why the Hornets rarely lined up in their signature wishbone. They used the flexbone formation with two wings and two-receiver sets much more frequently. Though they didn’t have much success running out of either formation, their big plays in the passing game later on were likely set up by the use of different sets early in the game. “No. 98, No. 33, No. 15, No. 21,” Pinyan said, pointing out members of Shelby’s starting defense. “There was no way we were going to be able to run the football. We had to be able to throw it. We didn’t expect to get that one at the end, but that’s one of those deals where we got lucky. “We had some formations this week we wanted to use. It’s all because they are so great athletically. They took away what we wanted to do, but we were able to do some other things. … That group [of fans] up there in the corner is probably in shock, because they want me to throw more every night.” Pinyan’s decision to throw with more frequency on Friday hinged more on his team’s inability to do anything else. For three quarters, Knox and Co. found little room to run. Morris is able to turn the corner on almost any opposing defense, but he didn’t have similar success against the Golden Lions. Even when he did break off a medium gain, Shelby’s pursuit angles cut down on big ones. But Shelby’s focus on the running game eventually backfired. The Golden Lions stacked the box with eight and nine defenders, leaving their corners on an island with only one deep safety to patrol from sideline to sideline. Shelby’s defensive backs weren’t up to the task. Adams made a nice catch on a crossing route, but he wouldn’t have scored
wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
David Simons (10) recovered his onsides kick. had the Golden Lions not missed two tackles. Morris turned around a Shelby defender on his touchdown and Dismuke just burned his on the winning score. Those were the type of game-changing plays the Golden Lions wanted so desperately to avoid. They just didn’t expect them in the passing game. “We knew we couldn’t give up big plays,” Shelby coach Chris Norman said. “… There were three big pass plays and that ended up getting them back in the game. That’s 21 points. … You just can’t give up three long passes like that.”
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wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
Dominique Dismuke makes the game-winning catch as Demarrius Hardin (87) defends.
Tre Jackson celebrates after making a tackle.
SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 7C
SPORTS DIGEST
Davie’s title dream alive
Braves make trade
BY BRIAN PITTS sports@salisburypost.com
Associated Press
ATLANTA — The Atlanta Braves, seeking a veteran for their bullpen, have acquired right-hander Scott Linebrink from the Chicago White Sox. The White Sox obtained minor league right-hander Kyle Cofield in Friday's trade. The 34-year-old Linebrink will add experience to an Atlanta bullpen that loses closer Billy Wagner and Takashi Saito. He was 3-2 with a 4.40 ERA in 52 games with Chicago in 2010, his 11th season in the major leagues. He has a 38-27 career record and 3.50 ERA. • Ron Santo, who had finished his 21st season broadcasting the Cubs in September, died Thursday night in Arizona from complications of bladder cancer, according to the team and WGN Radio, his longtime employer. He was 70. • CHICAGO — First baseman Adam Dunn is joining the Chicago White Sox, reaching a preliminary agreement on a $56 million, four-year contract. The free-agent deal is subject to the slugger passing a physical, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press on Thursday.
GOLF THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Tiger Woods is starting to look like his old self at the Chevron World Challenge. Woods got off to a blazing start Friday and a solid putting stroke enabled him to play bogey-free in the second round for a 6-under 66 that gave him a four-shot lead going into the weekend of his final tournament this year. Woods was at 13-under 131, his best 36-hole score this year by six shots.
NHL Brandon Sutter scored at 1:15 of overtime, rookie Jeff Skinner had his eighth goal of the season and Cam Ward made 34 saves to help Carolina even its record at 11-11-3. In overtime, Sutter darted in on the right side, beating goalie Craig Anderson to the left for his fifth goal. Milan Hejduk scored with 7:09 left in regulation for Colorado. Canucks 3, Blackhawks 0 CHICAGO — Roberto Luongo made 32 saves for his second shutout of the season and 53rd overall, leading the Vancouver Canucks to their fourth straight victory, 3-0 over Chicago. Rangers 2, Islanders 0 NEW YORK — Henrik Lundqvist earned his fourth shutout of the season, and Marc Staal scored in the second period to help the New York Rangers sweep the home-and-home series. Sabres 5, Blue Jackets 0 BUFFALO, N.Y. — Ryan Miller made 19.
AssociAted press
Auburn quarterback cam Newton reacting with fans after an earlier win over Georgia.
NCAA responds to backlash Associated Press
The college football roundup ... NCAA President Mark Emmert responded Thursday to the backlash that the governing body is allowing Cam Newton to play in the SEC championship game even though his father sought payment for his services. “We recognize that many people are outraged at the notion that a parent or anyone else could ‘shop around’ a studentathlete and there would possibly not be repercussions on the student-athlete’s eligibility,” Emmert said in a statement on the NCAA’s web site. Emmert added that he’s committed to “further clarifying and strengthening our recruiting and amateurism rules so they promote appropriate behavior by students, parents, coaches and third parties.” He also said the NCAA will “work aggressively with our members to amend our bylaws so that this type of behavior is not a part of intercollegiate athletics.” The NCAA ruled Wednesday that the Heisman favorite was unaware of the pay-for-play scheme concocted by his father, Cecil, and the owner of a scouting service. The NCAA declared Newton eligible to play for second-ranked Auburn Saturday against No. 18 South Carolina. Cecil Newton and Kenny Rogers — the former Mississippi State player who worked for an agent — sought money for the quarterback to play for the Bulldogs.
SEC CHAMPIONSHIP ATLANTA — Gene Chizik was still in his I'm-only-talking-about-the-game mode Friday, even though Newton has been cleared to play by the NCAA. So it was left to Steve Spurrier to discuss Auburn's star quarterback. "We're glad he's playing," the venerable South Carolina coach said on the eve of the Southeastern Conference championship game. "He's played all year, and it wouldn't be right for him not to play when the championship's on the line.” Newton will definitely be on the field today for the No. 2 Tigers (12-0). Auburn, which is atop the BCS standings, can lock up a spot in the championship game at Glendale, Ariz., with a victory over No. 18 South Carolina (9-3).
ACC CHAMPIONSHIP CHARLOTTE — When the Atlantic Coast Conference raided the Big East to form a 12-team league, it had grand visions of turning the basketball-dominated conference into a football powerhouse that would regularly be in the national championship picture. Tonight’s title game between No. 12 Virginia Tech and 20th-ranked Florida State will mark the sixth time in as many years it will have no say in the BCS title picture. At least this time the stands will be full — as long as fans brave a potential cold rain. The move to Bank of America Stadium will make for a chilly night, but produce far warmer fan support after five
years of mostly dismal crowds and little buzz in Florida. It’s perhaps the first step to make this stagnant game not only more lucrative, but also decide more than which team goes to the Orange Bowl. Saturday’s loser will play in the Chickfil-A Bowl in Atlanta. Left for dead by many, the Hokies (102) responded with 10 straight wins as their young defense matured to become the first ACC team since 2000 to finish undefeated in league play in their seventh straight 10-win season. The Seminoles (9-3) are within reach of their first BCS bowl since 2005.
BIG 12 CHAMPIONSHIP NORMAN, Okla. — It's time for Nebraska to take its final bow in the Big 12. After decades of rivalries with teams across the Midwest, the Huskers will join the Big Ten next summer — but not before one last revival tonight of their storied series against Oklahoma. The 13th-ranked Cornhuskers (10-2, 6-2 Big 12) have won the North in back-toback seasons but lost the championship game to Texas last season on a field goal after one second was put back on the clock. No. 10 Oklahoma (10-2, 6-2) is going after its seventh Big 12 title since 2000.
MICHIGAN LIVONIA, Mich. — Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez fought back tears, talking about the toll his job has taken on his family, and used passages from the Bible and a Josh Groban song during an emotional address that closed the team's banquet. "I truly want to be a Michigan man," he said Thursday. Rodriguez might not get that chance next season. He didn't have to deal with the awkwardness of having Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh in the same ballroom, getting honored with the Wolverines who were honored 25 years after finishing the season ranked second, but the tension he feels about his job security was apparent. Harbaugh, who might replace Rodriguez if he is fired, planned to attend the banquet as late as Saturday night. He ended up scheduling a practice on a day teammates such as Jamie Morris, John Kolesar and Gerald White sat at a circular table. "Whoever is the coach at Michigan, I'm going to give him my support," White said. Rodriguez has three years left on his contract, but his 15-21 record, NCAA violations, a boss that didn't hire him and the possibility that the school could lure Harbaugh back to Ann Arbor have combined to raise questions about whether he will be back next season.
MAC CHAMPIONSHIP DETROIT — A year after losing 11 games, the Miami RedHawks are MidAmerican Conference champions. Austin Boucher threw a touchdown pass to Armand Robinson with 33 seconds left for the Mid-American Conference championship 26-21.
The NBA roundup ... CHARLOTTE — A quieter Stephen Jackson scored 25 points, Boris Diaw added a career-best 16 rebounds and the Charlotte Bobcats recovered from a fourth-quarter meltdown to win 91-84 in overtime over New Jersey. After the Bobcats blew a sevenpoint lead with just over a minute left in regulation, Jackson hit four straight free throws in the final 31 seconds of OT. It came in his return from a one-game suspension for berating officials and hours after he sent a letter apologizing to fans. Travis Outlaw scored 21 points and hit two free throws to force OT and Charlotte native Anthony Morrow added 19 for the Nets, who were without injured Devin Harris. New Jersey has lost three straight, playing four OT periods in its last two games. Celtics 104, Bulls 92 BOSTON — Kevin Garnett scored 20 points with a season-high 17 rebounds, and Rajon Rondo scored 12 and had 19 assists on Friday night to lead the Boston Celtics to their sixth straight win, a 104-92 victory over the
Chicago Bulls. Ray Allen scored 14 and Paul Pierce had 18 for Boston, which never trailed. Knicks 100, Hornets 92 NEW ORLEANS (AP) — When the Hornets were able to interrupt Amare Stoudemire’s dominance inside, the Knicks responded with enough 3pointers to make New Orleans pay. Stoudemire had 34 points and 10 assists to power New York to its eighth win in nine games. Raptors 111, Thunder 99 TORONTO — Andrea Bargnani had 26 points and 12 rebounds for his first double-double of the season and Leandro Barbosa scored a season-high 22 points. Wizards 83, Trail Blazers 79 WASHINGTON — On a night that top draft pick John Wall struggled in his return to the starting lineup, the Washington Wizards turned in their best defensive performance of the season. Magic 104, Pistons 91 AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Brandon Bass scored a career-high 27 points, and the Orlando Magic overcame a stomach virus that sidelined four key players. Orlando was without star center
First downs rushing yardage passing yardage passing (c-A-i) punting Fumbles-Lost penalties
DC 22 298 105 9-16-2 4-28 1-0 6-50
PR 8 63 29 9-18-0 3-36 3-2 3-15
14 7 0 0 — 21 Davie 0 7 0 7 — 14 Porter Ridge dc — Watson 13 pass from Herndon (parrish kick), 6:34), 1st dc — Herndon 1 run (parrish kick), 1:47, 1st pr — oakley 19 pass from McNeill (Wogan kick), 11:05, 2nd dc — Watson 5 pass from Herndon (parrish kick), 0:23, 2nd pr — truesdale 32 pass VanBeek (Wogan kick), 9:12, 4th Individual statistics rushing — dc: smoot 25-139; Barber 23-111; A. Newman 2-11; Herndon 11-48. pr: davis 4-34; Alexander 7-31; oakley 1-21; McNeill 3-(minus 23). passing — dc: Herndon 9-16-2, 105. pr: McNeill 7-16-0, 54; Vanbeek 2-2-0, 75. pass receiving — dc: Watson 6-66; Wilson 2-34; smoot 1-5. pr: oakley 495; truesdale 3-29; Alexander 2-5.
75 yards in 14 plays. Jacob Barber broke a series of arm tackles for 17 yards to the PR 6, and Watson caught a 5-yard slant to make it 21-7 at the break. Davie had a 12-play drive rolling when a Pirate defensive lineman sniffed out a screen pass, intercepted and returned it 55 yards to the Davie 9. But Davie’s defense rose up. Safety Alex Newman came through with an 11-yard sack, and PR pulled a 37-yard field goal. The Pirates made things very interesting by intercepting a pass at their 45. They tricked Davie on first down, with receiver Jordan VanBeek taking a lateral and unloading a 32-yard TD to Javonte Truesdale. Now it was 21-14 with 9:22 left. Davie kept the ball for nine plays, but stalled at the PR 42. The Pirates took over at their 17 with 4:04 left. They moved to the Davie 18. This is where Davie’s defense put on the brakes. Jared Barber dumped the runner for minus-2. Lineman Jamal Lackey dropped a swing pass for minus-4. Kevin Crawford, a cornerback who played the game of his life, knocked down a pass in the end zone. On fourth-and-16 from the Davie 24, Lee McNeill looked deep. But Jared Barber blitzed, left his feet and got McNeill by the ankles. His vice grip dropped McNeill for a 13-yard sack. The Davie celebration was on. That 5-6 regular season seems like centuries ago. “Jared made a lot of people better tonight just with his will,” Illing said. “After some players quit we said: ‘These are the kids that want to win.’ It’s like they came together and became determined. I’m a firm believer that good things happen to good people when you work hard, and we kept working hard.” • NOTES: Smoot (25 carries for 139 yards) and Barber (23 carries for 111) were superb. ... Herndon threw for 105 yards and rushed for 48. ... Watson had six catches for 66 yards.
UNC faces Kentucky
Bobcats beat Nets in OT Associated Press
INDIAN TRAIL — Holy Mackerel. Davie 21 The Davie P. Ridge 14 slipper still fits. There was no path from a 5-6 regular season to a berth in the 4A state championship game, so Davie’s football team tightened its laces, lowered its head, gritted its teeth and plowed one. After pulling off postseason upsets over North Davidson, Mt. Tabor and High Point Central, the War Eagles took down host Porter Ridge last night, 21-14, and made history in the process, becoming the first football team in its 55-year history to reach the state final. Heck, Davie had only reached the semifinals once (2004). Davie tamed a squad that was 13-0 on the field. Porter Ridge, which had trailed for only a few seconds in one game all season, finished 13-2. The War Eagles (9-6) were 5-6 after the regular season, but they’re 4-0 in the real season. “I’m excited for our school, I’m excited for our community, I’m proud for our kids, and I’m really just proud to be a little part of it,” Davie coach Doug Illing said. “Man, it’s special.” This game was all Davie on the stat sheet, but a few Davie hiccups let the Pirates back in the game. The War Eagles had 22 first downs, 309 rushing yards and more than doubled Porter Ridge in yards (414192). PR was held to eight first downs, 63 rushing yards and never converted a third down. “This sounds weird, but we thought our size was bigger than theirs,” Illing said. “It’s very unusual for us to be bigger than our opponent. We left some points out here in the first half. We should have had two more touchdowns. I was afraid we were going to let them hang around too long. We did and it became a ballgame.” Davie threatened to blow it wide open early. Jared Barber, the linebacker who made an unexpected return after missing five straight games with a knee injury, recovered a fumble on the game’s third play. His twin brother, Jacob Barber, churned the ball on Davie’s first seven plays, taking it from Davie territory to the PR 13. Then Carson Herndon play-actioned and completed a 13-yard TD to Joe Watson. After a three-and-out by PR’s offense, Davie marched 66 yards in nine plays. The key plays were Stephon Smoot’s 37-yard scamper and Herndon’s 14-yard keeper. Herndon walked in from the 1 for a 14-0 lead. After another three-and-out by PR, Davie dropped a pass at the PR 25 that would have been six points. Two plays later, the Pirates’ spirits were revived by a blocked punt. They took over at Davie’s 15 and scored on a pass to cut Davie’s lead to 14-7. Davie didn’t blink, driving
Davie 21, Porter Ridge 14
Associated Press
AssociAted press
Brook Lopez (11) is fouled as he shoots between Bobcats’ Nazr Mohammed (13) and stephen Jackson (1). Dwight Howard, and Jameer Nelson, J.J. Redick and Mickael Pietrus were also unavailable because of the stomach bug. In spite of all that, the Magic were able to win their sixth straight game. Rockets 127, Grizzlies 111 MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Kyle Lowry scored a career-high 28 points and matched his career best with 12 assists. Hawks 93, 76ers 88 ATLANTA — Al Horford’s threepoint play with 31 seconds remaining gave Atlanta its first lead and Atlanta won its fifth straight.
CHAPEL HILL — Harrison Barnes was hailed as an immediate savior when he walked onto the North Carolina with the Tar Heels coming off a disappointing season. Instead, the freshman who was voted an All-American before playing a game has had a frustrating start to his college career. He has had an 0-for-12 shooting performance, suffered three losses and even heard mocking chants of “Overrated!” from a hostile crowd. Barnes’ ups and downs become more glaring when looking at the quick starts by heralded Kentucky freshmen Terrence Jones and Brandon Knight, who will lead the 10thranked Wildcats into Chapel Hill today. “He’s very bright,” North Carolina coach Roy Williams said of Barnes on Friday. “He understands that what he has to do is please himself and his coaches and teammates. He’s not pleased with the way he’s played, but it’s not going to be driven by somebody else’s
opinion of him. ... I think he understands it might take a while, and that’s the way I’m looking at it.” The 6-foot-8 forward was the first freshman named to The Associated Press preseason All-American team since voting began before the 198687 season. He has a polished all-around game and gives the Tar Heels (4-3) some needed perimeter punch — something they sorely lacked during last year’s 17-loss season — but he’s struggling with his shot and is averaging 11 points per game so far. In the five games since his season-best 19-point outing against Hofstra, Barnes has failed to score in double figures three times and is shooting 14 for 57 (25 percent) and 4 for 17 (24 percent) from three-point range. He missed all 12 shots in a loss to Minnesota in the Puerto Rico Tip-Off, and is coming off a 2 for 9 shooting night in Wednesday’s loss at No. 20 Illinois — where he was serenaded with the “Overrated!” chants in the second half.
PREPPLAYOFFS
Ronnie Gallagher, Sports Editor, 704-797-4287 rgallagher@salisburypost.com
SATURDAY December 4, 2010
SALISBURY POST
8C
www.salisburypost.com
The Air-bone Passing puts Salisbury in 2AA title game
wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
Darien Rankin (2) and Tre Jackson (30) celebrate after Salisbury’s Western 2AA final victory against Shelby on Friday night at Ludwig Stadim.
Opportunity Knox for Hornets in 4th BY JOSH HOKE sports@salisburypost.com
wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
Hornet quarterback John Knox breaks away from Shelby's Wesley Norris (33).
Three late touchdowns win for Hornets BY MIKE LONDON mlondon@salisburypost.com
Salisbury students performed their “Thunder Dance” one Salisbury 21 more time, and Shelby 14 misty-eyed, soakingwet coach Joe Pinyan, drenched by a traditional Gatorade bath, staggered around in the cold at Ludwig Stadium looking for friends and strangers to hug. Embraces and dances seemed unlikely with eight minutes left and the Hornets trailing by two TDs, but Salisbury
scored three times late — all on passes by John Knox — to beat Shelby 21-14 in the 2AA Western final. “Salisbury will never give up,” halfback Dominique Dismuke declared. “Not until the last horn.” The Hornets earned a berth in the 2AA state championship game against Elizabeth City Northeastern in WinstonSalem next Saturday. The school hasn’t played for a full state title since 1957 when it was known as Boyden. “I was wondering if we’d ever get there, and I’m just happy for our coaches and kids,” Pinyan said. “It says a lot
about our guys to be able to come back the way they did against an opponent the caliber of Shelby. We may have gotten a little down, but we didn’t panic.” Salisbury (12-3) tied the school record for victories despite a dismal offensive first half. The Hornets had only 84 yards at halftime and never crossed the Shelby 40. Fortunately for the Hornets, their defense, led by Kavari Hillie, Tre Jackson and Darien Rankin also pitched a first-half shutout. “Our defense played just amazing all
See SALISBURY, 5C
The Salisbury Hornets advanced to the Class 2AA Western final with the run. They won it with the pass. Their run-oriented offense hasn’t needed to complete many throws this season, but quarterback John Knox picked the right moment to show that he can, in fact, win a game with his arm as well as his legs. Knox’s three fourth-quarter touchdown passes accounted for all of Salisbury’s scoring in a 21-14 comeback win that sent the Hornets to next week’s state championship. He threw a 61yarder to Keion Adams, a 21yarder to Romar Morris and the winning, 49-yard touchdown to Dominique Dismuke with 1:03 left. “We scored [three] touchdowns throwing the ball,” Salisbury coach Joe Pinyan said. “That’s not us.” It was especially pleasing to the Hornets to win in a fashion that few thought they could. “We came into the playoffs throwing the ball well, but then we went on a little bit of a sluggish slump throwing the ball,” said Dismuke, who beat single coverage on the winning score. “This was the best way [to break out of it]. We threw it around when we needed it most. “They were stopping the run like crazy. They were
wayne hinshaw/SALISBURY POST
Salisbury's Romar Morris (8) and John Knox celebrate Morris’ TD catch. putting so many people in the box we couldn’t go anywhere running. We had to open up the passing game. Give it up to John. He threw great balls.” Knox’s night had an inauspicious start. Eschewing their principles as a base running team, Salisbury threw passes on two of its first four plays. Knox was nearly intercepted on the first one and badly overthrew the second. Still, Salisbury coach Joe Pinyan knew that although the passing game may not be his team’s bread and butter,
See KNOX, 6C
SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 1D
w w w. s a l i s b u r y p o s t . c o m
This Week’s Featured Property
Country Club Hills Highly motivated seller.... Bring all offers! Wallace Realty 704-636-2021
- 6 Bedrooms - 4 1/2 Bathrooms - Custom Cabinets and Granite tops in designer kitchen - Granite Counters in Bathrooms - Office off Rec Room - Additional sitting area in master bedroom
- Exquisite see through fireplace in great room and sunroom - Spacious closets in every bedroom - Brazilian Cherry flooring - Yard has irrigation system - More features, too many to list! - R453887
To advertise in this section, call 704-797-4241 Five projects to take your home from cookie cutter to custom
(ARA) - A new home: It’s your chance to personalize your living space with details that suit your taste and personality. Or, so you think. Many builders only allow you to choose colors; and offer limited options beyond their builders’ grade materials. Or, if you’ve purchased a previously owned home, it too is most likely equipped with many basic options. Luckily, it’s easy to bust out of builder basics and add a few easy and inexpensive updates to make your cookie-cutter home stand out from the rest. And what better place to start than the heart of your home - the kitchen? “A minor kitchen remodel is really one of the easiest ways you can make the most of your home - while also giving it your own personal style,” says Danny Lipford, renowned home improvement expert and host of the nationally syndicated TV show, Today’s Homeowner with Danny Lipford. “Plus, according to Remodeling magazine, it’s one of the top five projects that will recoup your investment when it comes time to sell.”
Not sure where to start? Lipford recommends these five projects: Cool countertops. If your kitchen is like most, you probably have laminate countertops, since they are available in a variety of colors and patterns and are relatively inexpensive ($10 - $30 per square foot). However, they lack style and scratch and buckle easily. To give your kitchen a high-end look, consider updating your countertops with a more resistant surface, such as solid surface, a molded resin that is stain-resistant and mimics the look of concrete ($35 - 80 per square foot); marble, which in addition to its natural beauty is heat-resistant ($40 - $100 per square foot); or engineered stone, which is a mix of quartz and resins to create an extremely durable and fashionable surface ($45 -$90 per square foot).
kitchen is a staple for many builders since it’s functional and inexpensive. However, it’s not very aesthetically pleasing. Luckily, replacing fluorescent lighting is a simple project that will instantly make a style statement in your kitchen. Try one of these options: Track lighting, which is a fixture that sits close to the ceiling, but features multiple decorative lamps in a row; pendant lamps, which extend down from the ceiling like a chandelier; or mini pendant lamps, which offer a smaller version of a pendant and are available in a variety of styles and designs; are all ideal and easy-to-install options.
Wonderful walls. Are your walls still white or beige, plain slabs? Adding color and texture is an easy way to make a dramatic difference. Painting is the simplest tactic - and by using a high-quality paint, in a semi-gloss or eggshell finish, you can additionally make your walls easier to clean. However, don’t stop there. Adding textures with updates, such as wainscoting, crown molding or even a tile backFabulous faucets. Does your faucet have a pull- splash are easy enough for a DIYer - and out spout with a beautiful finish that coordinates can be cost effective as well. with the rest of your decor? If not, it’s time for an upgrade. For less than $200, you can easily swap Fabulous floors. As the foundation of the room, your no-frills faucet for one that adds functionality you want your kitchen floor to sweep you off your and fashion. Moen offers a variety of stylish high- feet - not send you packing. So, if yours is more arc pullout kitchen faucets with new innovative “blah” than “beautiful,” it’s time for an update. finishes, such as the Neva pullout faucet. Available Luckily, there are many choices available - from at Lowe’s, Neva features Moen’s two newest fin- high-end choices, such as hardwood or natural ishes - Soft Grip and Spot Resist. Soft Grip is a styl- stone; to more affordable options, such as ceramic ish, black finish that is soft to the touch for a tile and laminate. And, with the wide array of colcomfortable and sturdy feel in your hand - yet is ors, designs and textures available with each, you durable in design for everyday use; while Spot Re- can create a dramatic update that fits your budget sist Stainless does just what it says - resist finger- and your unique design style. prints and water spots - virtually eliminating the need for daily cleaning while maintaining a beauWith a few simple updates the only thing cookietiful, brilliant finish. cutter about your kitchen is what you’re baking. For more information about Moen products, visit Luxurious lighting. Fluorescent lighting in the www.moen.com.
Open House Sunday 2-4PM
OPEN HOUSES This Weekend! Go online for interactive open house maps and directions.
1029 Ashwood Place, Salisbury
MUST SEE! 3 BR, 2 BA on Cul-de-sac! New hardwoods in Master BR, large living room, new stainless appliances in kitchen. New roof, wonderful deck. R51492 $124,900 Monica Poole 704.245.4628 Directions: Crane Creek, left onto Hampshire, left onto Ashwood Place, home in cul-de-sac. B&R Realty 704-633-2394
S47912
1
SALISBURY POST Homes for Sale
E. Spencer
Alexander Place
China Grove, 2 new homes under construction ... buy now and pick your own colors. Priced at only $114,900 and comes with a stove and dishwasher. B&R Realty 704-633-2394 Bank Foreclosures & Distress Sales. These homes need work! For a FREE list: www.applehouserealty.com
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.
3 BR, 1 BA Full Unfinished Basement. Sunroom with fireplace. Double garage. R50828 $89,900 B & R Realty 704.633.2394
Lovely Home
1224 Gracebrook Dr. Very nice, well maintained home, large master suite with walk in closet. Great lot with 12x14 deck with Sun Setter Retractable awning. This one is special--Only $164,500 Key Real Estate Inc. Jim: 704-223-0459
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 704-797-4220
Jane Urban Allen Tate Realty 704-650-6075 www.janeurban.com
House and 6+ Acres with Stream
3-BR, 2-BA house at end of long, winding drive on 6plus acres on U.S. Highway 64 W in Davie County. 1,281 sq. ft. Two-car garage, 21-by-42 heated basement (outside entrance only), cottage-type outbuilding, and 10-by-42 covered back porch offers place to entertain, relax and enjoy a beautiful mountain view. Fence and row of Leyland cypresses provide privacy. Stream at back of property makes great picnic area. Call 336-407-3981, $175,000 - price negotiable.
East Salisbury. 4BR, 2½BA. Lease option purchase.1,800 sq. ft. +/-. Call 704-638-0108
West Rowan - 401 Primrose - Perfect for that growing family!! 3,700+sf, .8 acres, 6 BR, 4½ BA, large rooms, lots of stortile throughout. age, Priced in the $200's. Motivated Seller! Bring Offer! USDA 100% Financing still available - MLS #49584 Teresa Rufty, tmrdevelop.com TMR Realty, Inc. (704) 433-2582
Reduced Price
25 Acres Beautiful Land for Sale by Owner 1 Hr to/from Charlotte, NC near Cleveland & Woodleaf & 3 Interstates: I-40, I-77, 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. GPS zip code 27013. Safe distance from cities. Need sale this year. No reasonable offer refused. Owner phone: 336-766-6779, or Email to: hjthabet@cs.com See photos and directions: http://NCHorseCountryFarmland.com
CLASSIFEIDS WORK! 704-797-4220
1755 Hwy 29 S. China Grove
Rockwell
REDUCED
704.857.0539
2 BR, 1 BA, hardwood floors, detached carport, handicap ramp. $99,900 R47208 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
www.keyreal-estate.com
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2-4 PM
FAITH - 1145 Long Creek - Brand new - 4 BD/2 BA, 2200 Sq. Ft. Bonus room. $199,900. #51596 Kerry DIRECTIONS:From I-85, Exit 76 East. First right on Faith Road, Left on Rainey. Right into Shady Creek. House on left
1145 LONG CREEK • #51596
Salisbury
The ‘10’ that make the difference.
Convenient Location
FEATURED LISTINGS
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
Very nice 2 BR 2.5 BA condo overlooking golf course and pool! Great views, freshly decorated, screened in porch at rear. T51378. $103,900 Monica Poole B&R Realty 704-245-4628
Rockwell
Salisbury
CONCORD – 3 BD / 2.5 BA – granite countertops, oversized maple cabinets. $158,500 CHINA GROVE – 2 BD/2.5 BA – custom built – BEAUTIFUL OPEN FLOORPLAN. Updated kitchen #50322 CindyE cedar lined closets, built ins. $140,000 #51568 - custom cabinets & solid surface countertops. CindyT $125,000 #48385 CindyT HIGH ROCK LAKE – one of a kind waterfront home. Two separate living units ensure privacy. Private pier & floating dock. CHINA GROVE - 5 BD/3 BA – brick with walk-out CHINA GROVE $79,900 – Remodeled kitchen, $ 3 5 4 , 9 0 0 basement w/separate living quarters. 16x26 work- appliances, basement, garage. Make Offer! shop. Beautifully landscaped yard. #50456 CindyT #50286 Barbara #50569 Kerry
Rockwell, 3 BR, 2 BA. Cute brick home in quiet subdivision. Outbuilding, wooded lot, nice deck off back. Kitchen appliances stay. R51385 $129,900 B&R Realty Dale Yontz 704.202.3663 Fulton Heights
Reduced
3 BR, 2 BA, Attached carport, Rocking Chair front porch, nice yard. R50846 $119,900 Monica Poole 704.245.4628 B&R Realty www.bostandrufty-realty.com
3 BR, 2 BA in Hunters Pointe. Above ground pool, garage, huge area that could easily finished upstairs. R51150A. $179,900. B&R Realty 704-633-2394 Rockwell
China Grove. 289 Forest Abbey. (off Hwy 152).Great 2-story with basement. Lots of room, mountain-like views. Come for a warm cup of cider! $248,900. Carolina Central Homes 980-521-7816
For Sale By Owner
Land for Sale
Homes for Sale
A Must See 3BR/2BA D/W on 1.07 acres, new roof and New Price! HVAC. $89,000. MLS 982148
Land for Sale
REDUCED
China Grove
Huge Price Reduction!
Lot for sale, 50 by 150, with brick structure house present. Needs lots of work. $4800. Priced for quick sale. Call today (336)431-5092 or if no answer (336)803-2104.
Hurry, Hurry!
East Rowan
Homes for Sale
Carson Area - Lease Option available Very nice 3 BR, 2 BA home with 2 car garage. Call Mi Casa Real Estate (704) 202-8195
East Rowan
Tis the Season to be Jolly! East Rowan home $35,000 less than tax value. Over an acre, close to I-85 & Hwy 52, Rockwell. Needs TLC. 51185 $79,900. Call Varina @ 704.640.5200
Homes for Sale
Grace Ridge Gem!
East Area
1409 South Martin Luther King Jr Ave., 2 BR, 1 BA, fixer upper. Owner financing or cash discount. $750 Down $411/month. 1-803-403-9555
Homes for Sale
Salisbury
New Listing
3 BR, 2 BA, newer kitchen, large dining room, split bedrooms, nice porches, huge detached garage, concrete drives. R51548 $99,000. Monica Poole 704-245-4628 B&R Realty
Homes for Sale
C46984
Homes for Sale Homes for Sale
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 2D
CLASSIFIED
Great home priced 33k below tax value! Builder says bring all offers! Make lower interest rates work for you! Walk into your brand new home w/ equity! 3,112 sf 4BR, 4BA on .918 ac. Quality built w/lots of custom features. Central to Salis., Mooresville, Concord. MLS #50008 Teresa Rufty TMR Realty (704) 433-2582 www.tmrdevelop.com
ACREAGE
PRICE REDUCED $27K – 365 D. Earnhardt Rd. East Rowan. 3BR, 2BA. Located on 3.11 acres, Large rooms with great closet/storage space, oversized garage. A definite must see!! Priced in the $200's!! MLS #50302 Teresa Rufty, TMR Realty, Inc. www.tmrdevelop.com (704) 433-2582
Cul-de-sac
B E A U T I F U L LY DECORATED historic Salisbury home. 5 BR/2.5 BA. Corner lot. Beautiful fireplaces, woodfloors, KINGS TERRACE -3 BR/2 BA - 1471 s.f. nice, neat patio w/fire pit. home w/huge fenced backyard, 20x30 outbuild#49731 CindyT ings. County taxes only! $118,000. #50959 Ellen
3BR, 2BA. Wonderful location, new hardwoods in master BR and living room. Lovely kitchen with new stainless appliances. Deck, private back yard. R51492 $124,900 Monica Poole B&R Realty 704-245-4628
NEW CARPET, lighting, laminate, tile & paint. Money-saving Apollo heat system. Relax on the front porch. Garage/workshop wired for 220V. 109,900 #51157 CindyE
REDUCED
Salisbury
GREAT INVESTMENT
KINGS TERRACE - Bank approved short sale. 1710 s.f. HVAC less than 3 yrs .old, great double carport, large yard. No city taxes. $100,000 #51106 Ellen
REDUCED 2BR, 1BA. Cute home in city on corner lot. Easy access to shopping, great investment or for first time home buyer. $49,900 R50827 704.633.2394 B&R Realty
OLD MOCKSVILLE RD- 1 acre, remodeled, brick home/basement, screened porch. Includes two cottages with 2 BR/1BA each. Great income producing potential. $288,500. #51037 Barbara
REDUCED
KANNAPOLIS - Over $49,000 UNDER tax value. 1428 s.f., some hardwoods, replacement windows, large rooms. Priced to move fast at only $49,500. #51333 Jim
www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Homes for Sale
CHINA GROVE – 2 BR/1.5 BA- don’t buy appliances! All are included in this 1232 s.f. home. Open and inviting floor plan. Easy access for the commuter-all directions. $88,200 #51099 Ellen
LARGE MASTER SUITE - 3 BR/2 BA. Formal LR & DR on large lot. Two detached single garages plus outbuilding. Fenced yard. Over $38,000 GRACE RIDGE GEM- Very nice, well maintained home, large master suite w/walk in closet. Great under tax value. Only $59,900 #51338 Jim lot with 12x14 deck with Sunsetter retractable awning. This one is special-Only $164,500
Homes for Sale
36.6 ACRES AND HOME
TO ADVERTISE CALL
(704) 797-4220 Salisbury. 925 Agner Rd. Below tax and appraisal value at $399,000. 3 BR/2BA brick home w/sunroom and 2 car garage sits in the middle of this beautiful property. Open and wooded pasture areas w/barn. 704-603-8244 or 704-209-1405
WONDERFUL REMODEL IN SOUTHERN TERRACE. - 3 BD, 1.5 BA - new paint, new carpet, HWY 152 EAST AREA $115,900 -Total renova- new metal roof. Large level lot w/fenced backtion, 2 baths, almost an acre. #51472 Barbara yard, wired workshop. Lots of home for the $$$. $99,900 #51533 CindyT MODULAR HOME ON 4+ ACRES. - 5 BD/3 BA, 2100+ heated s.f. PLUS 1100+ unfinished attic s.f. $146,500 #51508 Jim WELL KEPT RANCH WITH LARGE ROOMS, builtins & private yard. Great location in Landis. 1362 s.f. 2BD/1BA. family room & den. $80,000 seller will help w/closing cost. #51586 Cindy T
SALISBURY - 3BD/2 BA Doublewide. Metal roof, wrap-around deck, quiet, rural street, over half acre. SOLD AS IS. Home needs some TLC.#51399 $64,500 Ellen
mortgage lenders
2.50
0.25
%
% APY*
FREE SHINE CHECKING
MORTGAGE INTEREST RATE REDUCTION**
BankoftheCarolinas.com
*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective as of 10/04/2010. $50 minimum deposit to open. APY of 2.50% paid on balances up to $25,000, 0.50% APY paid on balances over $25,000, and ATM fees refunded if the following requirements are met each qualification cycle: Direct deposit or ACH auto debit, e-Statement, and 12 debit card point-of-sale transactions. Qualification cycle means a period beginning one business day prior to the first day of the current statement cycle through one business day prior to the close of the current statement cycle. If requirements are not met, APY of 0.10% will be paid on the entire balance and no ATM refunds will be applied. Rates subject to change after account opening. Fees may reduce earnings. Powered by BancVue. **Interest rate reduction applicable on a new first mortgage when payments are drafted automatically on a Bank of the Carolinas checking account, including free Shine Checking.
LENDER/PHONE
30-YEAR FIXED RATE + POINTS
Carolina Farm Credit Libby 704-637-2380 or Janie Furr 704-786-0193
CALL FOR RATES
C47556
ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS
15-YEAR FIXED RATE + POINTS
CALL FOR RATES
C43786
No acreage requirements. Financing available for lots to large tracts and even homes inside the city limits. Call Libby or Janie for more information.
The Salisbury Post Mortgage Program is designed to give potential home buyers up-to-date mortgage lender information. You can promote your business on this grid program for as low as $37.00* per week! The grid will list your company name, phone number, and available mortgage program options. The Mortgage Lenders Chart runs in the Real Estate Saturday section. Additionally, an ad adjacency (9 columns x 1.75”) will be rotated with participating advertisers. With mortgage rates at an all-time low, and the reach of the Salisbury Post, the Mortgage Lender Chart is sure to get results! Call us today to have your business listed! 704-797-4241 *with a one-year contract. Other rates available. Call for details.
The Lifestyle You Deserve. Libby Watson
Janie Furr
Agri-Consumer Loan Officer ewwatson@carolinafarmcredit.com
Home Loan Specialist sfurr@carolinafarmcredit.com
2810 Statesville Blvd. Salisbury, NC
704-637-2380 Loans for homes, land, & living
Visit our website for rates, an online loan application, & search 1000’s of property listings! www.carolinafarmcredit.com
3D • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 Homes for Sale Genesis Realty 704-933-5000 genesisrealtyco.com Foreclosure Experts
Land for Sale
Manufactured Home Dealers
Manufactured Home Sales
W. Rowan 1.19 acs. Old Stony Knob Rd. Possible owner financing. Reduced $19,900. 704-640-3222
$500 Down moves you in. Call and ask me how? Please call (704) 225-8850
Real Estate Services
Real Estate Services
Allen Tate Realtors Daniel Almazan, Broker 704-202-0091 www.AllenTate.com
Motivated Seller Lots for Sale
Well 3 BR, 2 BA, established neighborhood. All brick home with large deck. Large 2 car garage. R50188 $163,900 B&R Realty 704.633.2394 Salisbury
New Construction
3BR, 2BA. New stainless appliances, open floor plan, wonderful location close to hospital, still time to choose colors. R51547 $99,900. Monica Poole 704.245.4628 B&R Realty
PRICED TO SELL!! BRING OFFERS!! Take advantage of lower land costs and interest rates! Six lots from .94 to 3.6 acres. Near Salis., Mooresville, Concord. Wooded & basement lots are available-builders are welcome. Teresa Rufty TMR Development. 704-433-2582. www.tmrdevelop.com Southwestern Rowan Co.
MUST Sell! Beautiful True Modular Display. 3 BR, BA, Marsh Oak 2 Cabinets™. Many features, porch included. Save over $10,000. Only $115,900. setup and Includes foundation, 50 mile radius of Richfield, NC. Call 704463-1516
American Homes of Rockwell Oldest Dealer in Rowan County. Best prices anywhere. 704-279-7997
To Sell.. Buy.. Call Classifieds 704-797-POST
Apartments
Downtown Salis, 2300 sf office space, remodeled, off street pking. 633-7300
Apartments
1, 2, & 3 BR Huge Apartments, very nice. $375 & up. 704-890-4587
1 & 2BR. Nice, well maintained, responsible landlord. $415-$435. Salisbury, in town. 704-642-1955
2 BR, 1 BA at Willow Oaks on Old Concord Rd. Has refrigerator & stove. All elect. Rent $425, Dep. $400. Rowan Properties 704-633-0446
Wanted: Real Estate
www.rebeccajonesrealty.com
www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Rowan Realty www.rowanrealty.net, Professional, Accountable, Personable . 704-633-1071
Century 21 Towne & Country 474 Jake Alexander Blvd. (704)637-7721
William R. Kennedy Realty 428 E. Fisher Street 704-638-0673
*Cash in 7 days or less *Facing or In Foreclosure *Properties in any condition *No property too small/large Call 24 hours, 7 days ** 704-239-2033 ** $$$$$$
JAMES POE Realtor, Broker
704-905-6651
Holiday Special 2BR ~ 1.5 BA Senior Discount
Water, Sewage & Garbage included
Western Rowan County
THE POE TEAM
A PA R T M E N T S
704-637-5588 WITH 12 MONTH LEASE
2205 Woodleaf Rd., Salisbury, NC 28147 Located at Woodleaf Road & Holly Avenue www.Apartments.com/hollyleaf
Timber Run Subdivision, 4 BR, 2.5 BA, granite countertops, wood floors, rec room, screened porch, deck. R51603 $349,900 Dale Yontz 704.202.3663
jpoe@carolina.rr.com
704/636-2021 704/636-2022 301 N. Main St., Salisbury First Homes, Dream Homes, and Everything In Between
C47517
Spencer
Craftsman Style
4 BR 2BA, like new Craftsman Style, huge front porch, renovated kitchen and bath, fresh paint. R51516 $127,000 Dale Yontz B&R Realty 704-202-3663
West Schools. 3BR, 2BA. Kitchen with appliances, laundry room, living & dining room, fireplace with gas logs. 2 car detached garage. Central heat & air. House built in 2003. Large lot. $134,000 Reduced $126,500 or make offer. Please call 704-633-0229
Investment Property High Point Area Handyman Special! 2 investment properties, single family. Combined est. appraisal $103K. Asking $43K for both. 704-213-3367
Land for Sale ********************** Front St. 3.37 acres, almost completed 50' x100' bldg. $44K. 704-636-1477
Beautiful 16.17 acre tract bordering the South Yadkin River. Great hunting land. Property is located off Foxwood Ln. off Potneck Rd. $79,900. 704-213-1201
Directions: East on E. Innes St., left on Newsome Rd., cross Stokes Ferry Road and go to stop sign. Turn right and right again onto Crane Creek Rd., left into Brentwood, left on Oakmont. Home on left in cul-de-sac.
NEW LISTINGS
Complete contracting services, under home repairs, foundation and masonry repairs, home and property maintenance and light tractor work. NC Licensed General Contractor #17608 NC Licensed Home Inspector #107
36 Years Experience
Duke C. Brown Sr.
704/633-3584 Visit our website at www.professionalservicesunltd.com
BETTER THAN NEW AND TOTALLY UPDATED. 3 BR, 2 BA home located in the Southeast and Carson school district. Hardwood and tile floors, columns lead from formal dining room to great room, walk-in closet, tub with seperate shower in master, freshly painted throughout, new dishwasher, double attached garage and a double detached garage, fenced side yard, nice work benches in back of garage, plus a country covered front porch and a covered back porch. MUST SEE!! Call BARBARA, 704-213-3007. MLS 51633 / 987150
KERN CARLTON ROAD- This water front lot offers 1.43 ACRES on High Rock Lake in a private Gated Community, The Reserve. This is the ultimate in nature reserve lake lots. Truely a must see! Convenants and restrictions available. Large lot, good water and exceptional views Lot prices starting in the .$140's Lot # 8 MLS#50900 www.thepoeteam.com' 704 905 6651 JAMES POE email:jpoe@carolina.rr.com
321 STONE RIDGE DR.- Lot # 8 - Restricted residential building lot. Build your custom dream home. This subdivision is located near shopping, convenient to I-85 and is very desirable. Modestly priced. 1.21 acres. www.thepoeteam.com 704 756 6930-JAMES POE MLS#51406
713B ANDREWS ST. - 5000 sq foot warehouse with private office and restroom. Located at Exit 79 at I85 within sight of interstate. Call The Dover Team at 704-633-1111 or 704-239-3010. Retail, office, warehouse. Highway zoning. MLS 51598. $240,000.
1511 Jake Alexander Blvd. Prime commercial .68 acre lot. Only $279,000 Call RODNEY QUEEN - 704-239-3617 MLS# 51631
Correll Farms: 59 residential lot subdivision, ready to build. Only $765,000 - Call RODNEY QUEEN - 704-239-3617 MLS# 51624
3645 FAITH RD. - Wood floors, fireplace w/gas logs, 2 full baths, new well 1999, CAC 2004, updated wiring 2004, 5x10 storage off back, 12'8x24 cellar w/sump pump, 18x7 screened porch. Gas heat, electric water heater. 2.04 acres. House is being sold to settle estate. Sold as is. MLS#51572. Call the Dover Team at 704-633-1111 or 704239-3010. $59,900.
318 W. THOMAS ST. - Wonderful craftsman four square house in Historic West Square in downtown Salisbury. Beautiful wood floors. Unique staircase. Dining room has masonry fireplace and makes a spacious area to entertain. Kitchen is updated. Beautiful crown moldings. Unfinished basement w/door to fenced back yard. Den upstairs would make nice 4th bedroom or office - lots of light. Call The Dover Team at 704-633-1111 or 704-239-3010. MLS#51595. $174,500.
S45648
704-633-8095 Residential & Commercial
4243 S. Main St.
• SALES • INSTALLATION • SERVICE Mark Stout
S40129
Salisbury. 2 or 3 bedroom Townhomes. For information, call Summit Developers, Inc. 704-797-0200
FREE Home Seller's Seminar! 12/7/2010 from 5:30-7:00 p.m. at the Chamber of Commerce Building, 204 East Innes Street, Salisbury, NC Our Seminar will answere the following questions and more: • What is the current market outlook for real estate? • Should you sell yourself or hire a real estate firm? • How to price your home in a Buyer’s Market? • Getting your home ready for sale. • Handling and negotiating “low-ball” offers. • Handling home inspections and repair request. • Information on “Short-sales” and “Foreclosures”. No reservations required! Bring a friend. Questions? Call 704-633-5067 or go to www.applehouserealty.com
East Rowan. 10 acres. 160 ft. road frontage on Gold Knob Rd. Wooded. Paved road. Near East Rowan High School $94,500. 704-279-4629
terrymfrancis@yahoo.com
AFFORDABLE AND MOVE-IN READY. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths located in a family neighborhood. Range, refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave and outside storage building will remain. Convenient to shopping, schools, and many resturants. Payments less than most rent. Seller wil consider lease option. DON'T LET THIS ONE GET AWAY. Come and join me and view this very nice home. MLS#51286 HOST: BARBARA LOMAX
Professional Services Unlimited Full Service Home Inspection Services Full Service General Contracting Service Quality Work at Affordable Prices
Realtor, Broker
704-490-1121
1026 OAKMONT COURT
call 704-797-4220
Over 2 Acres
TERRY M. FRANCIS
OPEN HOUSE – Check our website weekly for Open Houses 4 EN 2OPDAY N SU
To advertise in this directory
Salisbury
3 BR, 2.5 BA, nice wood floors. Range, microwave, refrigerator, dishwasher, garbage disposal, washer, dryer, gas logs, outbuilding. 1 yr home warranty. $1,500 carpet allowances. R49933A $195,500 B&R Realty Dale Yontz 704.202.3663
NANCY HENDERSON POE
C47418
Barnhardt Meadows. Quality home sites in country setting, restricted, pool and pool House complete. Use your builder or let us build for you. Lots start at $24,900. B&R Realty 704-633-2394
Knox Farm Subdivision. Beautiful lots available now starting at $19,900. B&R Realty 704.633.2394
REDUCED
521/523 E. Cemetary St. 1 BR, $330; 2 BR $350. No pets. Deposit req. Call Jamie at 704-507-3915.
Realtor, Broker
PRIOR TO RENTING VISIT or CALL
New Listing
Salisbury
2BR brick duplex with carport, convenient to hospita. $450 per month. 704-637-1020
poehouse@salisbury.net
Salisbury
3 BR, 2.5 BA, wonderful home on over 2 acres, horses allowed, partially fenced back yard, storage building. $164,900 R51465 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
1BR/1BA duplex fully furnished. TV, BR suite, LR furniture, refrig., washer / dryer, Sect. 8 approved. Heat, air, electricity & water incl'd. $750/mo + $500 dep. 704-636-1850
704-756-6930
C47499
Forest Creek. 3 BedNew room, 1.5 bath. home priced at only $98,900. R48764 B&R Realty 704.633.2394
Rebecca Jones Realty 610 E. Liberty St, China Grove 704-857-SELL
Real Estate Commercial
Agent on Duty in office Saturday 10-12
Salisbury
New Home
Arey RealtyREAL Service in Real Estate 704-633-5334 www.AreyRealty.com
B & R REALTY 704-633-2394 Salisbury Area 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 baths, $500 down under $700 per month. 704-225-8850
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
Salisbury
All Lots Reduced
SALISBURY POST
CLASSIFIED
APPLE HOUSE REALTY
"Helping You Make Your Dreams Come True!" 704-633-5067 www.applehouserealty.com Se Habla Espanol S47911
UND
ER
QUIET LOCATION IN WINDMILL RIDGE – Nearly an acre of privacy surrounds this extremely nice 3 bedroom home. 14’ x 19’ greatroom with raised brick hearth equipped with gas Tlogs. Parque wood flooring in the Ctile formal dining roomR and A ceramic in the breakfast room. Delightful T N kitchen with ceramic tile flooring, breakfast bar and a wonderful view of O C the lovely rear lawn. Main level master bedroom with luxurious bath featuring whirlpool tub, separate shower, and double vanity. 2 bedroomon the second floor as well as a bonus room with private access. Owner is anxious to sell! Call GREG SCARBOROUGH at 704-647-1301 about MLS#51594
SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 4D
CLASSIFIED
Winterize
Your
Home
Keep out cold and pests - Call a professional below! Insulation Check the condition of the insulation in your attic and basement. Replace any that needs it and add more to make your home energy efficient.
Chimney Have your chimney cleaned by a professional and install a screen over it to keep out animals, birds and debris.
Garage Doors Make sure the weather stripping at the bottom of your garage door is in good condition and keep snow and ice away from the door to prevent it from warping.
We specialize in remodeling!
Roofs Inspect your roof and replace any rotten or cracked shingles. If you have a chimney vent, dormer or skylight, make sure the joints are protected by a metal flashing and the edges of the flashing are sealed with roof cement to prevent leaks.
We are the Preferred Dealer of Simonton Windows
Furnace Have your furnace and heating ducts professionally cleaned. Replace any dirty filters and check to confirm the thermostat and pilot light are working properly. Be sure the pipe bringing fuel to the furnace is not loose or leaking.
Driveways, Patios and Walks Inspect your driveways, patios and walks and repair any places where the concrete is cracked or broken.
Siding Inspect the siding on your home and replace any pieces that are loose or warped.
Plumbing Become familiar with your plumbing. Find out where the pipes are located and learn how to shut off the water in case the pipes should freeze. Drain and store all garden hoses and sprinklers.
704-433-3877
www.fisherandmorris.com S44960
ACT NOW! Porches and Decks Look over your porches and decks. Replace any rotten or warped boards and repair all broken handrails or steps. Make sure the lights and timers work.
Rats and Mice Begin Fall INVASION!!!
ESTABLISHED SINCE 1978
704-637-0700
Call Now! Pest Problem! Let Us Target...Your Target
$1500 TAX CREDIT ENDS DECEMBER 31, 2010 Call now for Special Pricing on Windows and Doors www.speakscustomwindow.com
704-637-2660
S45349
Gutters and Downspouts Clean the debris from your gutters and downspouts to prevent rainwater from backing up and freezing. Check the ridge vents as well, making sure they are free of debris.
We make lasting impressions. ®
1010 Mooresville Rd. www.targetexterminators.com
S45346
Doors and Windows Check the condition of all caulking. Cold air could seep in around dryer vents as well as doors and windows. If you find any caulk that is cracking or peeling, replace it immediately. Install insulated windows.
C46098
To have your business listed on this page, call us at 704-797-4220 and ask for the Winterize package special rate - Buy 3 weeks, get 1 free!
OPEN HOUSES SUNDAY 2-4 PM
TOWNE & COUNTRY THE GOLD STANDARD
www.century21tc.com
1117 LILLY PAD Reduced $10,000-Come see this beautiful custom built 3 bedroom 2.5 bath home with private bonus room. The moment you come into the front door this home will take your breath away. Fantastic kitchen is a dream come true. Double car garage and over an acre lot make this home complete. DIRECTIONS: From East Innes Street, go to Granite Quarry make a left on Dunns Mtn Road, right on Fish Pond , right on Lily Pad. Home @ end in cul-de-sac.
AGENTS ON DUTY
Chris Lankford
Call 704-855-2122 1410 North Main St., China Grove, NC Call 704-637-7721
474 Jake Alexander Blvd., Salisbury, NC
NEW LISTINGS
Great home with lots of updates! 3 bed, 2.5 bath with large master suite (walk-in closet) on main, large kitchen with dinning and breakfast area, huge heated/cooled sun-room on back, gas logs in fireplace, with fenced in back yard. New Roof- 2009, New garage door- 2009, New hot-water heater in 2010, New sinks, toilets, and vanities in 2006. Call Cathy or Trent Griffin! R51616-$200,000
One of my best listings! Four bedroom, three bath, in a small, south Rowan development. All the bells and whistles--hardwoods, neutral colors, granite, stainless steel, three-car garage, level wooded lot and SO much more. It's a must-see home. Call Lin Litaker! R51620-$415,000.
Buyer could not get loan, inspections completed, appraisal done, all repairs (minor) completed and house is ready to be sold. Home is a real gem. Owner totally renovated home when he purchased, including heat pump,appliances, carpet, paint, and all still look like new. Owner willing to leave furniture down to linens and dishes which can be put on a bill of sale for $1.00 following the successful closing of property. Fenced yard, workshop area, and oversized carport. You will not find a neater, cleaner home in this price range.Call Mitzi Crane! $75,000-R51622.
Beautiful waterview site perfect for the home you have been waiting to build. Imagine waking up walking to your backyard only to get into your canoe or kayak to enjoy a lazy day - while you are at it bring you fishing pole!! This gated community also has a pool, clubhouse with fitness room and tennis court. Seller would possibly consider including a year lease for a boat slip with accepted offer. Boat launch planned for community. Priced at $125,000-Call Mary Stafford! L51605
SPECIAL PRICED HOMES
REDUCED TO $99,900 Cute as a Button! Remodeled 3 bedroom bungalow in Fulton Heights, Hardwood floors, fenced yard, granite countertops, Call Jayne to see this home today.
SELLER IS OFFERING UP TO 4% CLOSING COSTS with acceptable offer & lendor approval. $170,000-Call Jayne Land
REALTOR
704-213-3935
Mitzi Crane REALTOR
704-798-4506
SELLER IS OFFERING UP TO 3% CLOSING COSTS with acceptable offer & lendor approval. 87,000-Call Jayne Land
What a gorgeous home- with every upgrade you can imagine! Custom built 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath full brick home with 3-car garage in Country Club Hills.Beautiful wood and tile flooring, coffered ceiling in living room, granite counter-tops throughout, tons of recessed-lighting, huge utility room, walk-in pantry, 2 fireplaces w/ gas logs, lots of arches and built-ins with formal study. Master suite offers trey ceiling, huge walk-in, dual-vanities with separate tile shower and jetted tub! Lots of windows and natural light throughout the home, large patio and screened porch on back, great for entertaining! Must See! Call Cathy or Trent Griffin! $419,900-R51639
Great little brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Hardwoods under carpet (per seller), new Lennox gas pack in 2010, and close to everything! Located in Kannapolis for $69,900-Call Cathy or Trent Griffin! R51626
Grand Oaks-REDUCED TO $379,000.1.5 story home with basement!What a price!-R50871-Call Lin Litaker
Cary Grant REALTOR, GRI
704-239-5274 AGENTS
WENDY CARLTON, REALTOR ................................704-640-9557 HEATHER GURLEY, REALTOR ...............................704-640-3998 KATHERINE FLEMING, REALTOR..........................704-798-3429 TRENT GRIFFIN, REALTOR...................................704-798-4868 MILLIE STOUT, REALTOR, GRI..............................704-213-9601 JEANIE BEAVER, BROKER IN CHARGE,GRI..........704-202-4738 TOM KARRIKER, REALTOR, ABR, SRES ................704-560-1873 JANE BRYAN, REALTOR, GRI................................704-798-4474 HELEN MILES, REALTOR, GRI ..............................704-433-4501 JAYNE LAND, REALTOR, GRI................................704-433-6621 BRANDON HIATT, REALTOR.................................704-798-4073 CHRIS LANKFORD, REALTOR ...............................704-213-3935
MITZI CRANE, REALTOR .......................................704-798-4506 MARY STAFFORD, REALTOR.................................704-267-4487 DIANNE GREENE,BROKER, OWNER,CRS,GRI ......704-202-5789 JERRY DAVIS, REALTOR........................................704-213-0826 PEGGY MANGOLD, REALTOR...............................704-640-8811 VICKI MEDLIN, REALTOR......................................704-640-2477 CATHY GRIFFIN, REALTOR, GRI...........................704-213-2464 DEBORAH JOHNSON, REALTOR...........................704-239-7491 LIN LITAKER, REALTOR, GRI,CRS,ABR.................704-647-8741 SUE MACLAMROC, REALTOR................................704-202-4464 SHERYL FRY, REALTOR .........................................704-239-0852 C. CARY GRANT, REALTOR, GRI............................704-239-5274
Freshly painted home with lots of space for the money! Stone fireplace, wet bar in greatroom, appliances, large rec room. Washer and dryer in place. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. Priced at $112,000. Call Jane Bryan! R51625. Looking for a great bargain? Here it is. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Central heat & air. Detached garage or workshop. $49,900-R51618-Call Sue Maclamroc!
Long Bow Road-100x200 lot for $12,500-Call Cary Grant! L51636 REDUCED TO $35,000-3 Bd-2 Ba!1560 sqft-R50593-Call Lin Litaker
VIEW MORE LISTINGS AT
www.century21tc.com This home has history and is original inside. Extra large lot with storage building. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths! Call Cary Grant! R51637
AND PUT OUR EXPERTISE TO WORK FOR YOU
Time’s ticking away …on local job opportunities.
Don’t wait another year to make a change – wake up and call today!
Visit us online for more career announcements
SALISBURY POST Apartments AAA+ Apartments $425-$950/mo. Chambers Realty 704-637-1020 Airport Rd. area. 118-A Overbrook Rd. ½ rent for December. 2 story apt. $535/mo. Very nice. Daytime 704-637-0775 Airport Rd. Duplex. 2BR, 2BA. $575/mo. 2BR, 1BA $550/mo., lease + dep., water furnished. No pets. Call 704-637-0370 Airport Rd., 1BR with stove, refrig., garbage pickup & water incl. Month-month lease. No pets. $400/mo+$300 deposit. Furnished $425/mo. 704-279-3808
BEST VALUE Quiet & Convenient, 2 bedroom town house, 1½ baths. All Electric, Central heat/air, no pets, pool. $550/mo. Includes water & basic cable.
West Side Manor Robert Cobb Rentals 2345 Statesville Blvd. Near Salisbury Mall
704-633-1234 China Grove 2BR, 1½ BA $450/month, deposit req. Approx. 1000 sqft. Call 704-798-9495. China Grove. 2BR, 2BA. All electric. Clean & safe. No pets. $575/month + deposit. 704-202-0605 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 TDD Relay 9:00-12:00. 1-800-735-2962 Equal Housing Opportunity.
Apartments China Grove. One room eff. w/ private bathroom & kitchenette. All utilities incl'd. $379/mo. + $100 deposit. 704-857-8112
Colonial Village Apts. “A Good Place to Live” 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms Affordable & Spacious Water Included 704-636-8385 Eaman Park Apts. 2BR, 1BA. Near Salisbury High. $375/mo. Newly renovated. No pets. 704-798-3896
Apartments
Lovely Duplex Rowan Hospital area. 2BR, 1BA. Heat, air, water, appl. incl. $675. 704-633-3997 Moreland Pk area. 2BR all appliances furnished. $495-$595/mo. Deposit negotiable. Section 8 welcome. 336-247-2593 Moving to Town? Need a home or Apartment? We manage rental homes & apartments. Call and let us help you. Waggoner Realty Co. 704-633-0462 www.waggonerrealty.com
East Rowan. 2 bedrooms, 1bath townhouse with partial basement. Stove and refrigerator furnished, Washer / Dryer connections. Located across from Granite Quarry Elem. School, close to I-85 and shopping. $450 per month. Flowe Realty & Development. Call 704-2797848 or 704-640-6869
East Rowan. Large 2BR, 1½BA duplex, in the country. Completely remodeled, ceramic tile / hardwood, large yard, dishwasher, ice maker, garbage, lawn care, & water furnished. Pets negotiable. Seniors welcome. Handicap ramp available on request. $600/month + $600 dep. 843-992-8845 or 704-279-5555
EXTRA NICE! Spencer. 1BR duplex $400/mo & 2BR unfurn'd + dep. Water & garbage P/U incl'd. 336-596-6726
Fabulous Loft!
North Rowan. 1-2BR apt with washer/dryer. Central heat & air. $450/mo. + dep. 704-603-4199 Lv. msg. Rockwell Area. Apt. & Duplexes. $500-$600. 2BR Quiet Community. Marie Leonard-Hartsell at Wallace Realty 704-239-3096 S. Fulton St. Very nice 1500 sq ft 3 BR 2.5BA town house apartment. All elec., central heat/AC. Water incl., stove, refrig., furnished. dishwasher Outside storage. No pets. 1 yr lease. $625/mo. & $500 dep. 704-279-3808 Salisbury city. 2BR, 1BA duplex. VA convenient. Remodeled. Cent. air/heat. $475 + dep. 704-640-5750 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
Condos and Townhomes
Duplex for Rent
Downtown Salisbury 2nd floor loft. All appliances. $970 plus. Free parking 704-637-0855 days 704636-6240 evenings Holly Leaf Apts. 2BR, 1½BA. $555. Kitchen appliances, W/D connection, cable ready. 704-637-5588 Kannapolis - 1 BR. $430 per month + $400 References deposit. required. 704-933-3330 or 704-939-6915
407 S. Carolina Ave. 1 BR, 1 BA, very spacious, washer & dryer hookup, gas heat, water included. 704-340-8032
Kannapolis. Cute little duplex completely furnished $500 dep, $500/mo, no pets and 2 max. 704-782-1881
Employment
Quiet Setting
Salisbury. 2BR, 2BA spacious 1st floor condo. Appliances, fireplace, covered porch. Pool, tennis court. $750/mo. + deposit. 704-209-1805 Lv. msg. SALISBURY
2 BEDROOOM CONDO FOR RENT
Great Location! 2BR/2BA spacious condo, 2nd floor. Must see!!! Call 704-436-8159 for details and showings
Employment
Drivers
Employment Childcare
Teacher needed. Childcare center in West area. Must have credentials or be in the process of getting credentials. Call 704-798-2058
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
Education/Training DRIVER
CDL-A Team with Total! Great Miles & Great Weekly Pay. Paid Loaded or Empty. Teams, Solos & CDL Grads Welcome. 800-942-2104, ext. 238 or 243. www.totalms.com
DRIVER Republic Waste Services, Inc is seeking a full-time driver for its Davie division. Qualified candidates should possess: • Class-
A or B CDL driving record • Good work history • Experience preferred • Safe
Republic Services offers competitive pay and excellent benefits including health and 401(k). Apply in person Monday through Friday between 9:00am and 3:00pm at: Republic Services 131 Industrial Blvd Mocksville, NC 27028 EOE/AA/M/F/D/V and Drug-Free Workplace
Looking for a New Pet or a Cleaner House?
CLASSIFIEDS! TO ADVERTISE CALL
(704) 797-4220
Mitchell Community College is hiring a Counselor/Coordianator of Special Populations and Disability Services and a Financial Aid Specialist. See our ad on the Jobs page of the Sunday & Wednesday editions & online at: salisburypost.com
Condos and Townhomes
Houses for Rent
Deer Valley, Utah, 2220 sf condo 2BR, 2BA, sleeps 10. Ideal location. $225/day - 3 night minimum. $1400/week. Call Felix, 252-492-2954.
Heilig Ave. 2BR, 1BA. ALL ELECTRIC Home. Nicely updated, avail Dec. 1. $600. TeriJon Props. 704-490-1121
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
$10 to start. Earn 40%. Call 704-754-2731 or 704-607-4530
Skilled Labor
Wheel Alignment Technician Immediate opening for experienced technician with knowledge of four wheel alignment and tools, Hunter Lazer Equip. Very good benefits & pay package. Jerry's Shell 600 Jake Alexander Blvd. Salisbury, NC
Yard Sale Area 3
3 Homes. 2-East district, 1Carson district. 3 BR, 2 BA. $800-$1050. Lease, dep. & ref. req. 704.798.7233
Long Ferry Rd. 2BR, 1½BA. All electric. $650/mo + dep. 1yr lease. No smoking, no pets. 704-202-1913
4 BR, 1 BA on Jackson St. Refrigerator & stove furnished. Gas heat. Ren $675, Dep. $600. Rowan Properties, 704-633-0446
Miller Chapel Rd. 2BR. Office, appl., Large yard. Limit 2. No pets. $650/mo + dep. 704-855-7720
407 Crestwood. 3BR/2BA. Ranch/Basement. $800/mo Broker Mgd #192185. Dbl. Garage. 704-490-1121 4BR, 3BA. 2,000 sq.ft. ± VERY NICE! Includes 2BR guest house on property. ONLY $5,000 dn! TAKE OVER PAYMENTS! 704-630-0695
Attn. Landlords House Apple Realty has a 10 year / 95+% occupancy rate on prop's we've managed. 704-633-5067 Carson District, 3 BR, 1 BA, all elec., nice neighborhood, no smoking, no pets. $750/mo.+ dep. ref. req. Limit 3. 704-754-6363 China Grove 312 Vance Ave. Large 3BR/2BA, $700/mo + $700 dep., 1 yr lease. 704-857-7949
3BR, 2BA homes at 108 John Michael Lane & Crescent Heights. Call 704-239-3690 for info. E. Spencer, 306 E. Torbush, 3BR/1½ BA, fully furnished: 2 large TVs, 3 BR suites, LR furniture, dish washer, refrig., washer / dryer, central heat/air. Sect. 8 approved. $875/mo + $500 dep. 704-636-1850 East Rowan, across from ERHS. 3BR, 2BA. All electric. Energy efficient. $750/mo. 704-633-6035
Healthcare
Doctor's office seeking an individual that is able to assist doctor in his care of patients. May be an RN, LPN, or highly qualified medical assistant. Please mail resume to: Blind Box 401, c/o Salisbury Post, PO Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145.
Helathcare
Experienced barber to work P/T in long term care facility. Fax resume to 704-6367270
Rockwell. 2BR, 1½BA. Brick home with garage, deck. All appliances + dishwasher. $725/mo. + deposit. References. Call 704-636-5992. Rockwell. 2BR, 1BA. Appl., gas heat. Storage bldg. $450/mo. 704-279-6850 or 704-798-3035 Salisbury 2BR. $525 and up. GOODMAN RENTALS 704-633-4802 Salisbury
3 BR, 2 BA, West/Hurley Schools. Quiet, private location in nice subdivision. 3 miles to mall. Central heat/air, appliances, dishwasher, wired storage building, concrete drive. $800 plus deposit. 704-279-0476
Salisbury
Great Convenient Location!
303-B W. Council St. Impressive entry foyer w/mahoghany staircase. Downstairs: L/R, country kit. w/FP. Laundry room, ½BA. Upstairs: 2BR, jacuzzi BA. Uniquely historic, but modern. 704-691-4459
Salisbury N. Fulton St., 2BR/1BA Duplex, limit 3, no pets, $525/month + deposit. 704-855-2100 Salisbury, 1314 Lincolnton Rd., 2 BR, 1 BA brick house. Hardwood floors throughout, close to Jake Alexander Blvd. Wallace Realty 704-636-2021 Salisbury, 3BR, 1BA Duplex. All electric, central air/heat, appliances, hookups. Near VA. $525. 704-636-3307
Office and Commercial Rental
1st Month Free Rent! Salisbury, Kent Executive Park office suites, $100 & up. Utilities paid. Conference room, internet access, break room, ample parking. 704-202-5879 450 to 1,000 sq. ft. of Warehouse Space off Jake Alexander Blvd. Call 704279-8377 or 704-279-6882
5,000, 10,000 & 20,000 sqft. Buildings available with loading docks and offices. Call Bradshaw Real Estate 704-633-9011 China Grove. 1200 sq ft. $800/mo + deposit. Call 704-855-2100 Granite Quarry Holiday Special! Only 3 Units left! Move in by 12/31/10 & pay no rent until 3/1/2011! Commercial Metal Buildings perfect for contractor, video surveillance & parking. Call 704-279-4422 or 704-2323333 for more info. Kannapolis
For Sale or Lease!
Salisbury 4BR/2BA, brick ranch, basement, 2,000 SF, garage, nice area. $1,195/mo. 704-630-0695
Salisbury
Office Space
We have office suites available in the Executive Center. First Month Free with No Deposit! With all utilities from $150 and up. Lots of amenities. Call Karen Rufty at B & R Realty 704-202-6041 www.bostandrufty-realty.com
Salisbury. In town. Convenient location on S. Main Level access. Utilities paid. Parking lot. 704-638-0108 Salisbury. Six individual new central offices, 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 Warehouse space / manufacturing as low as $1.25/sq. ft./yr. Deposit. Call 704-431-8636
Industrial/ Warehouse Salisbury - 2100 sq. ft. Warehouse, close to I-85. $600 per month. Please Call 704-213-0459
Manufactured Home for Rent
Salisbury, in country. 3BR, 2BA. With in-law apartment. $1000/mo. No pets. Deposit & ref. 704855-2100
Salisbury. Elizabeth Ave. 3BR, 1½BA. All electric. Free water and sewer. $645/mo. Section 8 OK. 704-633-6035
309 North Main St. Ground level, newly redecorated. 765 sq. ft. Utilities, janitorial & Parking included. Call 704-798-8488
Between Salis. & China Grove. 2BR. No pets. Appl. & trash pickup incl. $475/ mo + dep. 704-855-7720
Yard Sale Area 1
Boocoo Auction Items
Food & Produce
Salisbury St. John's Lutheran Church Attic Sale at the Old K-Town bldg 324 W. Innes St., (corner of Innes & Fulton), Saturday, December 4, 7:30-10:30am. Assorted housewares, books, linens, clothing, toys, furniture, sports items & more.
*All Boocoo Auction Items are subject to prior sale, and can be seen at salisburypost.boocoo.com
Salisbury Yard Sale, Saturday, December 4, 10am-Until, No Early Birds. 427 Heilig Ave. Hope everyone can join us for a great Yard Sale, a large variety of everything for everyone.
Want to attract attention?
Get Bigger Type!
Antiques & Collectibles Barbie 1961 My favorite career-nurse $20; Barbie 1965 My favorite careerrocket scientist $20 704642-0497 Collector's watch. Brand name is Invicta. $400. Please call 704633-7425 for more info. Dolls – Antique 16 inch Shirley Temple Doll in fair cond.; Rare 17 ½ inch Marilyn Monroe doll still in box! $150 each obo. 704-939-1964 - Sarah
Baby Items 3 in 1 convertible bed. White, unisex. Have no space for it! Must go! Great deal! $50. Call 980-253-3762 Crib - Convertible Crib & matching changing table $135; Step 2 desk $25; Play kitchen w/food $25; plastic toy box $25. Call 704-856-1224.
Boocoo Auction Items
Salisbury. 3 & 2 Bedroom Houses. $500-$1,000. Also, Duplex Apartments. 704636-6100 or 704-633-8263
Clothes Adult & Children Large box of toddler girls and ladies shoes. Not sure of sizes. $25. Salisbury 7046370058 Toddlers size 2T shirts. Diaper box full [30] good condition. $25. Salisbury. 704-637-0058
Electronics Camera, Nikon Coolpix S6WiFi. Like new. $125. Emerson piano. # 76804. $350. 704-636-6833
Exercise Equipment
Area 1 - Salisbury, East Spencer, & Spencer Area 2 – W. Rowan incl Woodleaf, Mt. Ulla & Cleveland
Flowers & Plants
Area 6 – Davie Co. and parts of Davidson Co. This is a rough guide to help plan your stops, actual areas are determined by zip code. Please see map in your Salisbury Post or online at salisburypost.com under Marketplace click on 'Yard Sale Map' to see details.
Looking for Business Opportunities? You’re likely to find them and much more in the Classifieds.
Salisbury Post CLASSIFIEDS
704-797-4220
Pecans ~ NEW crop $1.50/lb. Approx. 200 lbs available. Call 704-857-9595
Yum-m-m! Fresh Winter Veggies!
36'' Leyland Cypress or Green Giant Trees. Makes a beautiful property line boundary or privacy screen. $10 per tree. Varieties of Gardenias, Nandina, Juniper, Holly, Ligustrum, Burning Bush, Hosta, Viburnum, Gold Mop, Camelias, Forsythia, Arborvitae, Azaleas AND MORE! $6. All of the above include delivery & installation! 704-274-0569
Want to get results? Use
Headline type
to show your stuff!
Fuel & Wood
Bed, toddlers, white, without mattress, good condition. $30. Salisbury 704-637-0058. Bedroom suite, new 5 piece. All for $297.97. Hometown Furniture, 322 S. Main St. 704-633-7777 new, $25; $20; Kirby $20.
Computer desk with chair. $40. Call for more information or leave message 704-856-1653 Couch. Beautiful nearly new floral couch $200. 336-752-4076 or contact me at glitteritup@yahoo.com. Day bed, white, good condition, no mattress $50. Salisbury. 704-6370058
Med brown lift top table w/storage $150. 336752-4076 or glitteritup@yahoo.com Recliner, tan. Large. Good condition. $50. Please call 704-636-5271 for more information.
Table - Oak Solid Wood w/6 chairs & leaf $150. Upright Freezer $100. 704-762-0345
Firewood for Sale: Pick-up/Dump Truck sized loads, delivered. 704-647-4772
Washer & dryer, white. Very good condition. Plus 5 jugs of detergent. $255. Call 704-647-0594 Washer & dryer. Maytag Neptune. Good condition. $400 obo. Call 704-8552108 for more info.
TO ADVERTISE CALL
(704) 797-4220
NEWS 24/7
Faith–2 BR, 1 BA. $350/mo. + dep. 2 BR, 1 BA, $425/mo. + dep. Near Carson High. 704239-2833 Faith. 2BR, 1BA. Water, trash, lawn maint. incl. No pets. Ref. $425. 704-2794282 or 704-202-3876 Faith. 3BR/2BA. Appls., water, sewer, trash service incl'd. $500/mo. + dep. Pets OK. 704-279-7463 Gold Hill, 2 bedroom, trash and lawn service included. No pets. $450 month. 704-433-1255 Hurley School Rd. 2 BR, 2 BA. Nice yard, subdivision. Central air/ heat. $460/mo. + dep. 704-640-5750 Morgan School Area – 2 & 3 BR, water & trash included. Deposit required Max occupancy 4. 704-637-9218 Near Faith. SW on private, wooded lot. No pets. Max. occupancy 3. Credit check & deposit req. $400/mo. 704-279-4838 Near I-85. 3BR/2BA D/W , F/P, covered back porch. 1,800 sq. ft. 1 ac lot, nice n'hood. Lg rooms. $700/mo. + $700 dep. 704-245-0172 Rockwell 2BR/1BA, W/D, stove & refrig, includes water & trash. No pets or smoking. $450/mo, $400 dep. 704-279-8880 S. Salisbury 2BR/2BA, priv lot, $650/mo + dep. Also, garage apt for single $95/wk. 704-857-1854 Statesville Blvd. 2BR, 1BA. Appls, water, sewer incl. Pets OK. $450/mo. + $450 dep. 704-279-7463 West & South Rowan. 2 & 3 BR. No pets. Perfect for 3. Water included. Please call 704-857-6951
Roommate Wanted
Large home, full kitchen access, OTR truck driver usually not home. Owner pays power, water, sewer, trash & gas. $400/mo. No Pets. 704-754-2108
Rooms for Rent MILLER HOTEL Rooms for Rent Weekly $110 & up 704-855-2100
Washer (Kitchen Aid) Excellent condition. $125. Call (704)298-4445 for more information
Firewood - Hickory and Oak. Long Bed Pickup Delivery - $80, Dump Truck Delivery - $240. 704-239-1955
Classifieds!
East Area. 2BR, water, trash. Limit 2. Dep. req. No pets. Call 704-6367531 or 704-202-4991
Air Conditioners, Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Frig. $65 & up. Used TV & Appliance Center Service after the sale. 704-279-6500
Sofa and loveseat still in plastic. Must sell. $299. Please call Leon at 336-392-3349
pets for everyone!
CHINA GROVE 3 bedroom 2 bath, private lot, NO indoor pets $450 mth + dep 704-309-5017
Furniture & Appliances
Glider rocker w/ottoman $150; antique rocker $200. Please call 704-642-0497 Mixed greens, collards, creasey & turnip. You pick! Freshly dug sweet potatoes. 704-938-9863 Leave message.
Manufactured Home for Rent
Furniture & Appliances
Chest of drawers, $50; coffee table metal file cabinet rond table $10; vacuum cleaner 704-636-3610
Exercise bike for sale. $10. Please call me at 704-212-7976 for more information
Farm Equipment, new & used. McDaniel Auction Co. 704-278-0726 or 704798-9259. NCAL 48, NCFL 8620. Your authorized farm equipment dealer.
Area 3 - S. Rowan incl Landis, China Grove, Kannapolis & Mooresville
Pecans for Sale -Shelled - $5/lb., Unshelled - $3/lb. Karen. 704-640-8274 or 704-855-4868
Growing Pains Family Consignments Call (704)638-0870 115 W. Innes Street
Farm Equipment & Supplies
YARD SALE AREAS
Pecans – new crop. grown. $5/lb Locally unshelled. 704-636-1803 for more information
Consignment
Treadmills, Proform. With upper body ski motion incline pulse, etc. $250 obo. 704-762-9197
Davie-Clemmons Yard Sales
Area 5 - Davidson Co.
Salisbury Backyard Sale, Fri. & Sat., Dec. 3 & 4, 8am-1pm, 206 Ridge Ave. (Off S. Fulton the 1000 block). Maple B/R suit, dinette set, 32” TV, DVD w/ VCR & converter box, 10,500 BTU heater, microwave, vacuum cleaner, steam cleaner & more
West Rowan area. Big home. 20 acres. $895/ month. Please call 704239-0691
Prime Location
Salisbury/E. Spencer 2 BR, 1 BA. $425. 704-2482520. Sect. 8 OK. CarolinaPiedmont Properties
Fulton St. 3 BR, 1 ½ BA. Refrigerator, stove furnished. Rent $725, Dep., $700. Call Rowan Properties 704-633-0446
Area 4 - E. Rowan incl. Granite Quarry, Faith, Rockwell & Gold Hill
Yard Sale Area 1
Salisbury City, Near Hospital. 4BR/2½BA, 2,250 Sq. Ft., Two Car Garage, Fenced Backyard. $1500/month + deposit. Call $1500 Lauren 704-232-0823.
Salisbury 3/4BR/2BA, attached double garage, open floor plan, all electric with new heat pump, private wooded 2 acre lot on Cauble Rd. Available December with one year lease required. No Section 8. $990/mo + $990 security deposit + credit check. Conditional pet policy with fee. 704633-8670
Proceeds benefit Missions of the church
L&H reps – hiring enrollers, appt setters, benefit specialists, & sales mgrs. 704-239-5569
W Rowan/Woodleaf school dist. 2BR/1BA house. Taking applications. No pets. $425/mo. 704-754-7421
Woodleaf & Kannapolis 3-4BR, 2BA. $650-$700/ mo. Deposit required. Please call 704-788-1603
Salisbury, 928 S. Jackson St., 3BR/1BA, $600/mo + $600 dep., no pets. Call Jamie 704-507-3915
Ham biscuits, hot dogs, & baked goodies will also be sold.
Sales
Brick 3BR, 1.5BA. Appliances, including dishwasher and microwave, carport, storage building, back porch. New carpet. Lease, deposit, credit check. $800/mo. 704-782-5037
Spencer. 3BRs & 2BAs. Remodeled. Great area! Owner financing available. 704-202-2696
Furnished Key Man Office Suites - $250-350. Jake & 150. Util & internet incl. 704-721-6831
Dunns Mt. Rd. 3BR, 2BA. North schools. No pets. Water, sewer, trash & lawn care provided. $500/mo. + $500 deposit. 704-640-0129
4820 NC Hwy 152W, China Grove Items for sale include baby items, antiques, clothes, home goods, toys, tools & MUCH MORE!
Earn extra holiday cash. $10 to start. 336-2846011 or 704-278-2399
City Privacy
Salisbury/Spencer 2, 4 & 5 BR $450-$850/mo. 704202-3644 or leave message. No calls after 7pm
Office and Commercial Rental
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
Oak Grove UMC
Employment
Salisbury
Houses for Rent
China Grove. 2BR,1BA. Refs. $425/mo. + $300 dep. Incls. garbage, water. No pets. 704-8573473 or 704-202-4344
district. Faith/Carson 3BR / 2BA, no smoking, no pets. $650/mo + dep + refs. 704-279-8428
Sat. Dec. 4, 8am-1pm
HS Diploma Grads. US Navy has immediate openings. Nuclear Power Trainees: B average in science and math. Special Ops: excellent physical condition. Career opportunities, will train, relocation required, no medical or legal issues, 17-34. Good pay, full benefits, money for college. Call MonFri, 800-662-7419 for local interview.
Rockwell 3BR, 2BA Central HVAC, appls. Storage bldg. $700/mo. All electric, 704279-6850/704-798-3035
Houses for Rent
Kannapolis area. 2,500 s.f. church complete with pews, 10 yrs old, heat & AC on 3.5 acres, lots of parking. Can be used for office space, shop or $1,100/mo. warehouse 704-791-6750
Yard Sale Area 3
Government/Military
Inside city limits. 2BR & 3BR units. Central HVAC. $575-$700/mo. 704-239-4883 Broker
2 to 5 BR. HUD Section 8. Nice homes, nice st areas. Call us 1 . 704-630-0695
Inside Yard Sale/ Pictures with Santa
500 West Broad St., Statesville, NC 28677
Houses: 3BRs, 1BA. Apartments: 2 & 3 BR's, 1BA Deposit required. Faith Realty 704-630-9650
Kannapolis, 315 Tara Elizabeth Pl. 3 BR, 2 BA, $825 monthly; 1902 Mission Oaks 3 BR, 2.5 BA, $925 monthly. KREA 704-933-2231
Don't Pay Rent!
Clancy-hills@cmc-nc.com
Clean, well maintained, 2 BR Duplex. Central heat/air, all electric. Section 8 welcome. 704-202-5790
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 5D
CLASSIFIED
Misc For Sale
and Dryer. Washer Super Large capacity. Excellent Condition. Maytag made. $350. Call (704)791-2205 for more information.
Hunting and Fishing Rifle - Model 70, Winchester .7mm Remington, like new with 6-24X50 Simmons scope. $400. Call Ed 607-857-6136
Lawn and Garden Disc on wheels, 3ft. Good for small garden or food plots. $125 firm. Call 704-857-0093 Edger. 3.5 hp Craftsman drive edger like new $125 OBO. Call 904-6409877 Holshouser Cycle Shop Lawn mower repairs and trimmer sharpening. Pick up & delivery. (704)637-2856 Saws. 2 Craftsman chain saws. One like new $100, one runs good $50. 16” 704-640-9877
Machine & Tools Wench. 1100Lb elec. Wench. Like new. Used 2 times. $275 new. Will sell for $150 firm. Please call 704-857-0093
Medical Equipment OneTouch Blood Glucose Test Strips. 100 ct. New in Box $45. Call 704-245-8843 Wheel chair, brand new motorized, dark red, very nice. $4,000 OBO. Nice gift! 704-209-3106.
Misc For Sale “Heaven's Gate” Salisbury's Steeples art print by Patrick Sullivan $50. 704-762-9197 ANDERSON'S SEW & SO, Husqvarna, Viking Sewing Machines. Patterns, Notions, Fabrics. 10104 Old Beatty Ford Rd., Rockwell. 704-279-3647
GOING ON VACATION? Send Us Photos Of You with your Salisbury Post to: famous@salisburypost.com
6D • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 Misc For Sale 26 Light Sunbed, new bulbs. $800 Firm. Please Call 704-939-6915 Baby bed. $30. 4 tires. Good tread. 16” $12 each. Please call 704857-9716 for more info. Basketball Hoop, good condition, full size. $50 Please call Shelley 704210-2944 Bathroom Sink Vanity $20; large bathroom sink - $40; hand truck - $10. 704-642-0512 Bench seat, reupholstered (blue). Fits small pick-up truck. $150 value. Sell for $75. Call 704-857-0093 Bird Stand. Wooden. One of a kind. For exotic indoor birds. Must see. Moving. $125. 704-6034005 Boots. New size 8 ladies authentic Ugg brown boots still in box $150 704-245-8843 Christmas decorations. 7' tree, lights, greenery, bulbs, lights in boxes. $25. Call 704-639-1164 Computer desk, $45. Entertainment center, $20. Sofa end cabinet, $15 ea. (2 avail.) Call 704-279-8346
Misc For Sale
Lost & Found
Autos
Trampoline 14' $125 Basketball Goal $80 Yard Tools w/stand $50 White Storage Cabinet $75. Call 704-762-0345
Found Dog. Male, young, yellow and friendly, Dec. 2, Calahaln Rd. Call 336492-5542
Financing Available!
Restaurant Equipment Restaurant trays, cookware, dishes, misc. supplies. $200. For more info call 704-857-1854
Sporting Goods Scooter - E100 Razor kids standing scooter (RED). $75. Please Call 704-642-7155
Want to Buy Merchandise AA Antiques. Buying anything old, scrap gold & silver. Will help with your estate or yard sale. 704-433-1951. 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.
Edmann 4 wheel self propelled 8 HP, not running, 60's model. $125. 704-640-9877
Watches – and scrap gold jewelry. 704-636-9277 or cell 704-239-9298
Estate leftovers ~ Lot of items including chairs, dishes, frames, etc. $500 value. Sell all for $250. Call 704-857-0093
Business Opportunities
Kerosene heaters, 4. $20-40 each. Good condition. Please call 704-699-5592. Lawn mower, Craftsman. 7 hp. $55. RCA TV, 19 inch. $40. Call 704433-0651 for more info. METAL: Angle, Channel, Pipe, Sheet & Plate Shear Fabrication & Welding FAB DESIGNS 2231 Old Wilkesboro Rd Open Mon-Fri 7-3:30 704-636-2349 Mulcher- Simplicity $150 cash only. Please call 704-279-1493 spinet, great Piano, condition, walnut finish, made in USA, well-cared for. $500. 704-855-8353. Professional mechanic's tool box (MATCO) paid $4600, $3500 or best offer. 704-721-0498 or 704-232-4921
Lost 1 year old female cat. Tortoise shell (black with orange spots) Hwy 601 & Gheen Rd area. Please call if seen or found 704-202-7874 Lost cell phone. Red Nokia. Possibly near mall or Tractor Supply. Around 11/18. Please call 704-642-1205
HHH H HHHHHHHHHHHH
Lost dog. Rat terrier, male. White w/black markings. Had tags. Long Ferry Rd. at Trading Ford Baptist Church. Please call 704-754-3446 Lost male wire Rat Terrier on 7th Street, Kannapolis. White with brown spots. 704-9333319 - REWARD
Notices
Cemetery plots, 4 avail. In Brookhill Gardens. $1,800 ea. 704-637-2276 Leave message. Complete Cemetery package for 2. Cost over $9K. Rowan Memorial Park. 2 vaults, 2 graves. Headstones for 2. Near road. Garden of Prayer. Will sacrifice for $7,250. 704-636-9696 Westlawn Memorial Pk. Two plots, Section Myrtle 2, Lot 271, $3,000 + $250 deed transfer for both. 704-857-7594
Notices
Dec. 6, 2010 Dec. 7, 2010 Dec. 9, 2010
Monday Tuesday Thursday
Broad Street Long Street St. James Place
for only
30*!
704-797-4220 *some restrictions apply
STEEL, Channel, Angle, Flat Bars, Pipe Orders Cut to Length. Mobile Home Truss- $6 ea.; Vinyl floor covering- $4.89 yd.; Carpet- $5.75 yd.; Masonite Siding 4x8- $14; 12”x16' lap siding at $6.95 ea. School Desks - $7.50 ea. RECYCLING, Top prices paid for Aluminum cans, Copper, Brass, Radiators, Aluminum. Davis Enterprises Inc. 7585 Sherrills Ford Rd. Salisbury, NC 28147 704-636-9821 Stereo system, complete, w/ record turntable, dual cassette deck w/recorder, AM/ FM radio, CD player, 2 large speakers. Good cond-ition. $50. Karaoke mach-ine. Like new. Used twice. Great for parties! $50. 704-210-8863 Stop Smoking Cigarettes No Patches, No Gum, No Pills With Hypnosis It's Easy! Also Weight Control. 704-933-1982
Tanning bed for sale. 110 volt. $500. Please call 704-212-7976 for more information Tanning bed. 110 Volt 16 bulb tanning bed for sale for $500. Please call 704-212-7976
Ford Mustang Convertible, 2000. Laser red tinted clearcoat exterior with medium parchment interior. Stock #P7508A. $9,345. 1-800542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Ford Mustang, 2002. Stock #F10468B. 2 Door convertible, silver exterior with gray interior. $9,945. 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Lexus, 2004, ES330. Loaded. 79,000. Lexus maintained. Perfect condition. $14,200. 704-633-4771
Mercedes S320, 1999 Black on Grey leather interior, 3.2, V6, auto trans, LOADED, all power ops, low miles, SUNROOF, chrome rims good tires, extra clean MUST SEE! 704-6034255
Ford Taurus SE Sedan, 2007. 4-speed automatic, 3.0L, V6. Stock #P7596. $11,345. 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com Mini Cooper Hatchback, 2005. Pepper white exterior with black interior. Stock #P7585. $13,745. Call now 1-800542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Mercury 1995 Sable, very good condition, looks good, runs good, 160K miles, $1,500. 704633-9044
Free Stuff
Ford, 2006 Fusion SE. 100% Guaranteed Credit Over 100 Approval! Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Suzuki Reno S Hatchback, 2005. Titanium Silver metallic exterior with gray interior. Stock #T10680A. $7,445 Call now 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Toyota Camry Solara SE Coupe, LE, 2007. Cosmic Blue Metallic exterior with ivory interior. #T10499A. Stock $13,445. 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Toyota, 2005 Camry, LE/XLE/SE. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Free Television. RCA 27”. Good condition. Salisbury area. Please call 70-663-7857
BMW, 2005 325i Midnight Black on tan leather 2.5 V6 auto trans, am, fm, cd, sunroof, dual seat warmers, all power, duel power seats, RUNS & DRIVES NICELY!! 704-603-4255
Instruction Airlines are hiring. Train 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
$500 Reward Lost dog. Miniature Dachshund, dapple (black, white & brown), female. Lost near Highway Patrol Station. 3 kids are missing me. 704-232-1494 or 704633-2581 Ask for Brandy
Cadillac Catera, 2000. Satin Black on Tan leather interior, 3.0, V6, auto trans., BOSE am,fm,cd, steering wheel controls, SUNROOF , all power, alloy rims, LOADED !!! 704-603-4255
Volkswagen Jetta Ecodiesel turbo, 1992, 5 speed, 48+ mpg, 192K miles, $2700 or best offer. 704-223-0603
Volvo, 2006 S60 2.5T Onyx black with cream leather interior, sunroof, cd player, all power, alloy wheels, super nice! 704-603-4255
We want your vehicle! 1999 to 2011 under 150,000 miles. Please call 704-216-2663 for your cash offer.
Weekly Special Only $14,995
Acura MDX, 2002 Touring Red with Tan leather interior, 3.5, V6, auto trans., am, fm, cd changer, tape, NAVIGATION, all power ops, alloy rims, SUNROOF, chrome step bars, FULLY LOADED MUST SEE!!!! 704-603-4255
Ranger Fish & Ski, 1993, 150 Johnson motor. One owner, like new! $4,000 OBO. 704-209-3106
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. All batteries brand new, not reconditioned or refurbished (definition: weak or old batteries washed out). Buy 6 batteries & receive $10 gift receipt for purchase of a bottle of OLD STONE Wine. Coupon good until 12/31/10. 704-245-3660
Chevrolet Trailblazer EXT LT SUV, 2004. Sandstone Metallic with light exterior Stock # cashmere. F11086A. $14,745. 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Chevrolet, 1997, S10. 3 door. V-6 auto. $3,395. 62K miles. Call 704-6377327 for more info.
BATTERY-R-US
Wholesale Not Retail
Chevrolet, 2005, Colorado 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
www.battery-r-us.com $5 off with ad
Transportation Dealerships CLONINGER FORD, INC. “Try us before you buy.” 511 Jake Alexander Blvd. 704-633-9321 TEAM CHEVROLET, CADILLAC, BUICK, GMC. www.teamautogroup.com 704-216-8000
Chevrolet, 2006, Equinox LT. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Tim Marburger Honda 1309 N First St. (Hwy 52) Albemarle NC 704-983-4107 Honda Accord EX, 2006 . Graphite Pearl with gray cloth interior. 5 speed automatic transmission with overdrive, Dual front sunroof. airbags. 704-603-4255
Honda, 1992 Civic White w/ black interior, LS driver and passenger seat. Bronze Circuit 8'' wheels, JDM fog lights, front and rear EBC brake rotors and pads. KGB 4 way adjustable suspension. Car has 170,000 miles; motor has 50,000 miles. Clean title. $4,500. John, 279-8346
Troutman Motor Co. Highway 29 South, Concord, NC 704-782-3105 Jaguar S-Type, 2005. Black with black leather interior, 6 speed auto trans, 4.2L V8 Engine, AM/FM/CD Changer, Premium Sound. Call Steve today! 704-603-4255
Transportation Financing
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Transportation Financing Bad Credit? No Credit? No Problem! Tim Marburger Dodge 877-792-9700
Chevy Silverado 1500 Extended Cab, 2001. 4x4. Summit White with Gray Leather Interior, 5.3L, V8 (Vortec) Engine. 4 speed electronic auto trans. 704-603-4255
Toyota, 2006, Camry. T10705A. Desert sand mica exterior with taupe interior. $9,845. 1-800542-9758. www.cloningerford.com
We are the area's largest selection of quality preowned autos. Financing avail. to suit a variety of needs. Carfax avail. No Gimmicks – We take pride in giving excellent service to all our customers.
Pontiac, 2006, G6 GTP. 100% Guaranteed Credit Over 100 Approval! Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Want to get results?
Cats
Dogs
Dogs
Free cat. Pure white w/patch of gray on head, needs a loving & caring home. 14 months old. Has been spayed and is up-to-date on shots. 704895-0469
Got puppies or kittens for sale?
Goldendoddle Puppies, CKC Registered, solid black, 5 male, 2 female. Ready Dec. 7th . Call Vicky 336-853-5090
See stars
Call Steve today! 704-603-4255 www.JakeAlexanderAutoSales.com
Chevy Suburban 2006 Dark Blue metallic w/tan leather interior, 4 speed auto trans, am, fm, cd premium sound. Third row seating, navigation, sunroof, DVD. 704-603-4255
Hyundai Accent GLS Sedan, 2009. 4-speed automatic, Platinum Silver Metallic exterior with gray interior. Stock # P7570. $11,345. 1-800542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Found dog, small white. North Hills Christian School on Hwy 601. Please call 704-682-2468 to identify. Found dog. Chihuahua mix. Male. Old Beatty Ford Rd. area in Rockwell. Call 704-2790646 to identify.
ELLIS AUTO AUCTION 10 miles N. of Salisbury, Hwy 601, Sale Every Wednesday night 6 pm.
Boats & Watercraft
If it's a battery, we sell it! We Buy Old Batteries! Faith Rd. to Hwy 152 Store across from Sifford's Marathon 704-213-1005
Nissan 350, 2004 Conv Silver with Black leather interior, 3.5, V6, auto tiptronic trans, Bose am, fm, cd, tape sound system, FUN FOR THOSE NICE DAYS!!!!! 704-603-4255
Oldsmobile, 1998, Intrigue GL. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! Free Christmas tree, 7 Artificial. Good ft. condition. Call 704-2790934 for more info.
Used Cars Needed Will Buy Used Cars (any make) No Purchase Necessary! See Gary Sloan – Sales Manager 704-216-2662
CASH FOR YOUR CAR!
The hours of the temporary shut-offs will be between 11:00 am - 2:00 pm. The Town of East Spencer is sorry for the inconvenience and appreciates your patience with this matter. If you should have any concerns, please feel free to contact the Town Hall at 704-636-7111.
Autos
Call today about our Private Party Special!
Kia Spectra EX, 2009. Sedan. Stock # P7591. White Exterior with beige interior. $9,945. Call 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
PUBLIC NOTICE Town of East Spencer is repairing the Water Infrastructure. There will be temporary disconnections of the water services for the following streets:
With our
$
Looking Good!
Autos
Hip Replacement Surgery. If you had hip replacement surgery between 2003present and suffered problems requiring a second revision surgery you may be entitled to compensation. Attorney Charles Johnson, 1-800535-5727.
Show off your stuff!
Send us a photo and description we'll advertise it in the paper for 15 days, and online for 30 days
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Autos
Monument & Cemetery Lots
BAR/DANCE HALL Sale or lease 3,000 sq. ft. building on 4-lane hwy. 704-636-1477 J.Y. Monk Real Estate School-Get licensed fast, Charlotte/Concord courses. $399 tuition fee. Free Brochure. 800-849-0932
HONDA, 2003, ACCORD EX. $500-700 down, will help finance. Credit, No Problem! Private party sale. Call 704-838-1538
Autos
Lost dog. Black & brown miniature dachshund. If found, please call 704213-0017
Railroad Pocket Watches, Double Barrel Shotguns, Antique Jewelry, Silver Flatware, For Cash 704-633-5177
Diamond Ring. 1/2 ct Brilliant shine, 3 stone flower design. $475. Call Shelley 704-210-2944
SALISBURY POST
CLASSIFIED
Dodge, 2006, Magnum R/T. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock!
Hyundai, 2006, Sonata GLS/LX. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock!
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Puppies
Giving away kittens or puppies?
Wrap me Up! Take me Home!
Dogs
Dogs
Lots of Love
Puppies. Yorkie 4 mo. fem. AKC $500 & Schnauzer / Chihuahua 3 mo. fem. $250. Tiny. 704-202-9307
Puppies, American Blue Pitbulls. 7 weeks old. With papers. $350 or Make an Offer. Please call 704-738-5118
Puppies
Adorable Pups! Kittens – 8 week old Russian blue, litter box trained, precious. Call 704-633-4773
Dogs
Christmas Beagles
TO ADVERTISE CALL
(704) 797-4220
Christmas Beagle puppies. Good stock. Wormed & first shots. No holding please $80 each. 704-639-6299
Chia-Do's, Toys, 5 weeks old, 2 males & 2 females, first shots. $300. Will hold until Christmas. 704-6409149 of 704-640-9128
Yorki-Poos www.yorki-shop.com
Chihuahuas. 5 females. Cinnamon & white & Blue (Tri-Color), $300 ea. CKC. Cash. 8 wks. Tiny toy size (4-5 lbs) full grown. Little apple head. 704-603-8257.
Puppies. Bassett Hound mix, 7 weeks old, male and female, dewormed and 1st shots, very loving. To home with fence. 704-279-8602
Puppies
Sweet Pug O' Mine!
Sweet & Cuddly
Free dog. Female Shih Tzu. Bella is Sweet, but very shy and needs to go to a quiet home. Call Jane at 704-637-8919.
Do you want first shot at the qualified buyers, or the last chance? Description brings results!
Puppies. AKC Chow pups. Ready now. 2 males, 3 females. Beautiful markings! Parents on site. 980-234-0440 or 704-8552520. Leave message.
Pug Puppies. 3 fawn males $400 ea. and 1 fawn female $450. CKC. Shots. Cash. 7 weeks old. 704-603-8257.
Puppies, Yorkies. 6 wks. AKC/CKC registered. $650. Ready now! 2 left male & female. Parents on site. 704-224-9903
Puppies. Shih Tzu/ Maltese mix. Parents on site. 4 male. 4 female. Shots & 1st worming. $350. Call 704-209-1190. Leave message.
Rockwell, NC. High quality, home raised puppies, registered. Call 704-2249692. Check the website for pricing and information.
Other Pets HHHHHHHHH Check Out Our December Special! Boarding 20% discount. Rowan Animal Clinic. 704-6363408 for appt.
Supplies and Services Adopt a Puppy or Kitten for Christmas. $80. (3) Coton de Tulear for Sale, small white, long hair exotic breed dogs. $400 ea. Salisbury Animal Hospital 1500 E. Innes St. 704-637-0227 salisburyanimalhospital.com
SALISBURY POST
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 • 7D
STOCKS
THE MARKET IN REVIEW NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Name
Div Last Chg
A-B-C
ABB Ltd .48e 20.49 +.37 AES Corp ... 11.40 +.13 AFLAC 1.20 54.42 +.14 AK Steel .20 14.10 +.26 AMR ... 8.35 -.10 AT&T Inc 1.68 28.49 -.06 AU Optron ... 10.05 -.07 AbtLab 1.76 47.37 -.24 AberFitc .70 56.15 +.13 Accenture .90f 44.22 -.09 Actuant .04 u25.72 +.31 AMD ... 7.65 +.11 Aeropostl s ... 23.09 +.05 Aetna .04 30.62 +.12 Agilent ... u37.48 +.76 Agnico g .18 u85.03+2.05 Airgas 1.00 66.26+2.55 AlcatelLuc ... 2.95 +.11 Alcoa .12 14.23 +.14 AllegCp 6.00t 301.79-2.21 AllgEngy .60 23.24 -.04 Allergan .20 68.80 +.52 AldIrish ... .98 +.03 Allstate .80 30.31 ... AlphaNRs ... 54.24+1.22 Altria 1.52f 23.81 +.01 AMovilL 1.29e 57.26 -.50 AmAxle ... 11.47 +.47 AEagleOut .44a 15.78 -.10 AEP 1.84f 35.99 -.09 AmExp .72 44.88 -.10 AmIntlGrp ... 43.76 +.88 AmTower ... 51.58 -.23 Ameriprise .72 54.14 +.43 AmeriBrgn .40f 32.14 +.26 Anadarko .36 69.08 -.80 AnalogDev .88 u37.63 +.37 AnglogldA .18e 49.87+1.43 AnnTaylr ... 26.64 -.26 Annaly 2.60e 18.20 -.08 Aon Corp .60 42.78 +.52 ArcelorMit .75 34.90 +.70 ArchCoal .40 u32.26 +.98 ArchDan .60 30.39 +.27 AssuredG .18 18.82+1.22 ATMOS 1.36f u31.72 +.34 Avon .88 29.33 +.14 BB&T Cp .60 24.71 ... BHP BillLt 1.74e 88.67+1.24 BP PLC ... 41.49 +.17 BakrHu .60 u55.06 +.57 Baldor .68 63.26 -.04 BallCp .40 68.85 -.21 BcBilVArg .57e 10.80 +.25 BcoBrades .82r 20.40 -.50 BcoSantand.80e 11.23 +.21 BcoSBrasil .33e 13.32 -.48 BkofAm .04 11.86 +.18 BkIrelnd 1.04e 1.84 +.11 BkNYMel .36 28.00 +.16 Bar iPVix rs ... d41.30-2.01 BarrickG .48 u54.00 +.71 Baxter 1.24f 49.84 +.18 BeazerHm ... 4.53 -.14 ...121400.00-600.00 BerkHa A BerkH B s ... 80.90 -.52 BestBuy .60 42.83 -.73 BigLots ... 29.50-1.59 Blackstone .40 13.85 -.22 BlockHR .60 13.16 -.21 Boeing 1.68 66.54 -.05 BostonSci ... 6.83 +.16 BoydGm ... 9.77 +.57 BrMySq 1.28 25.91 +.07 BrkfldPrp .56 17.04 +.16 ... 19.92 +.54 CB REllis CBS B .20 17.53 +.24 CMS Eng .84f 18.62 +.17 CSX 1.04f 64.41 +.38 CVS Care .35 32.42 +.44 CablvsnNY .50 u32.60 +.73 Calpine ... 12.66 +.20 Cameco g .28 37.51 -.18 ... u51.36 +.47 Cameron CampSp 1.16f 34.06 ... CdnNRs gs .30 u41.82 +.13 .20 38.76 -.19 CapOne CapitlSrce .04 u6.74 +.09 CardnlHlth .78 37.24 -.12 CareFusion ... 23.00 +.25 ... u34.55 +.91 CarMax Carnival .40 43.29 +.07 Caterpillar 1.76 u89.38 +.76 Cemex .43t 9.72 +.14 CenterPnt .78 15.90 +.06 CntryLink 2.90 43.43 +.18 Chemtura n ... 14.73 +.06 ChesEng .30 22.16 +.53 Chevron 2.88 84.89 +.39 Chicos .16 12.48 +.23 Chimera .69e 4.10 +.03 Chipotle ... 235.95 15.01 Citigrp ... 4.45 +.03 CliffsNRs .56 73.58+1.37 .60 56.61 -.24 Coach CobaltIEn n ... 12.45 +.97 CocaCE .48f u25.49 +.12 CocaCl 1.76 64.50 -.40 CollctvBrd ... 20.37 -.01 Comerica .40f 39.58 +.49 ComScop ... 31.69 -.13 ConAgra .92 22.08 ... ConocPhil 2.20 u63.92 +.22 ConsolEngy .40 45.42 +.99 ConstellA ... u21.80 +.49 Corning .20 18.74 +.02 Covidien .80f 42.94 -.10 Cummins 1.05 102.84-1.13 CurEuro .01e 133.58+1.81
D-E-F
DNP Selct .78 DR Horton .15 Danaher s .08 ... DeanFds Deere 1.40f DelMnte .36 Delhaize 2.02e ... DeltaAir Deluxe 1.00 DenburyR ... Dex One n ...
9.96 +.04 11.11 +.19 44.58 +.08 7.31 +.02 78.31 +.01 18.74 -.03 71.16 -.21 13.63 +.12 22.02 ... 19.52 +.12 6.70+1.91
DrxEMBll s5.68e 39.04 +.46 DrSCBear rs ... d17.63 -.39 DirFnBear ... 10.90 -.11 DrxFBull s ... 24.44 +.19 DirxSCBull4.77e 64.89+1.30 DirxLCBear ... d9.58 -.09 DirxEnBull5.06e u51.81 +.83 Discover .08 18.84 -.10 Disney .40f 37.59 +.25 DollarGen ... 33.43+1.50 DomRescs 1.83 42.42 +.32 DowChm .60 u33.36 +.12 DuPont 1.64 u49.24 +.61 DukeEngy .98 17.79 +.03 DukeRlty .68 11.41 -.14 EMC Cp ... 22.13 +.11 EKodak ... 4.73 -.01 Ecolab .70f 47.59 -.37 ElPasoCp .04 13.86 -.07 Elan ... 5.17 -.01 EldorGld g .05 18.78 +.46 EmersonEl1.38f 56.84 -.02 EnCana g s .80 28.55 +.18 ENSCO 1.40 50.08 +.87 EntPrPt 2.33f 41.12 -.13 EqtyRsd 1.35 52.00 +.34 ExcoRes .16 18.47 -.07 Exelon 2.10 40.05 +.50 ExxonMbl 1.76 71.19 -.29 FairchldS ... u15.02 +.10 FibriaCelu ... 16.90 +.55 FirstEngy 2.20 35.63 -.03 FlagstB rs ... 1.33 +.08 Flotek h ... u4.71 +.43 Fluor .50 u61.77+1.03 FootLockr .60 u19.64 +.35 FordM ... 16.80 +.02 FMCG 2.00fu108.95 +1.31 FrontierCm .75 u9.46 +.07 FrontierOil ... u16.55 +.22
G-H-I GMX Rs ... 5.05 +.49 GameStop ... 21.33 +.18 GamGld g ... 7.79 +.64 Gannett .16 14.65 +.54 Gap .40 21.44 -.23 GenElec .48f 16.78 +.10 GenGrPr n ... 15.94 +.14 GenMills s 1.12 35.61 -.05 GenMot n ... 34.55 -.13 Genworth ... 12.55 +.07 Gerdau .32e 12.77 +.13 GoldFLtd .16e u18.12 +.75 Goldcrp g .36 47.07 +.49 GoldmanS 1.40 162.31 -.19 Goodyear ... 9.93 +.08 GrafTech ... 20.61 -.14 GtPlainEn .83 19.32 +.30 Griffon ... 12.12 -.23 HCP Inc 1.86 33.58 -.13 Hallibrtn .36 u41.15 +.54 HarmonyG .07e 12.41 +.89 HartfdFn .20 23.94 -.08 HltMgmt ... 9.02 -.11 HeclaM ... u10.50 +.75 HelixEn ... 13.85 +.04 Hertz ... 13.21 +.25 .40 u74.30 +.01 Hess HewlettP .32 43.03 -.08 Hexcel ... 17.68 -.06 HomeDp .95 33.48 +.12 HonwllIntl 1.21 u51.45 +.26 HostHotls .04 16.89 ... Huntsmn .40 15.77 +.13 Hypercom ... u8.60 +.68 IAMGld g .06 16.75 +.37 ION Geoph ... u7.65 +.09 iShGold s ... 13.82 +.29 iSAstla .81e 25.05 +.31 iShBraz 2.58e 78.15 +.72 iSCan .42e 30.50 +.06 iSh HK .48e 19.39 -.13 iShJapn .16e 10.64 +.06 iSh Kor .39e 57.31 +.75 iSMalas .25e 13.96 -.05 iShMex .75e 60.68 +.01 iShSing .38e 13.73 -.15 iSTaiwn .21e u14.78 +.06 .44e 17.08 +.19 iSh UK iShSilver ... u28.60 +.67 iShChina25.68e 44.42 -.64 iSSP500 2.34eu123.28 +.33 iShEMkts .59e 47.14 +.17 iShB20 T 3.86e 94.89 -.75 iS Eafe 1.38e 57.41 +.55 iSR1KG .72e u56.42 +.17 iShR2K .79e u75.67 +.54 iShREst 1.88e 55.32 +.08 ... 6.12 +.28 iStar ITW 1.36 50.41+1.80 IngerRd .28 42.91 +.22 IntegrysE 2.72 47.81 -.18 IBM 2.60 145.38 +.20 Intl Coal ... u8.00 -.11 IntlGame .24 16.33 +.77 IntPap .50 26.24 +.33 Interpublic ... 10.82 -.20 Invesco .44 22.99 +.12 ItauUnibH .60e 23.78 -.40 ... 26.97 +.65 IvanhM g
J-K-L JCrew JPMorgCh Jabil Jaguar g JanusCap JohnJn JohnsnCtl JonesGrp JnprNtwk KB Home Kellogg KeyEngy Keycorp KimbClk Kimco Kinross g Kohls Kraft KrispKrm Kroger LDK Solar LSI Corp LVSands
... .20 .28 ... .04 2.16 .64f .20 ... .25 1.62 ... .04 2.64 .72f .10 ... 1.16 ... .42f ... ... ...
44.13 39.61 16.16 7.14 11.60 62.56 39.19 14.71 34.32 12.43 49.50 11.04 8.20 62.01 17.28 18.75 55.01 30.32 u7.30 21.11 10.69 5.97 49.24
+.26 +.30 +.11 +.46 +.24 -.04 +.24 -.02 -.66 +.02 -.03 -.03 +.08 +.33 +.03 +.56 -.02 -.11 -.14 -.52 +.29 +.05 +.07
LennarA .16 17.26 LillyEli 1.96 34.14 Limited .60a 31.83 LincNat .20f 25.21 LiveNatn ... 11.42 LloydBkg 1.45r 4.20 LockhdM 3.00f 69.18 LaPac ... 9.22 Lowes .44 24.86 LyonBas A ... u30.52
+.38 -.11 -.07 +.09 +.15 +.06 -.62 +.23 -.06 +.03
M-N-0 MBIA ... 10.36 +.39 MEMC ... 11.89 -.26 MFA Fncl .90f 8.20 -.02 MGM Rsts ... 13.50 +.65 Macys .20 25.06 -.48 MarathonO 1.00 35.11 +.07 MktVGold .11p 62.71+1.53 MktVRus .08e 36.71 +.42 MktVJrGld ... 42.96+1.09 MarIntA .35f u40.99 +.47 MarshM .84f 26.09 -.30 MarshIls .04 5.60 +.12 Masco .30 11.99 -.02 MasseyEn .24 50.42 +.17 McDnlds 2.44f 79.76 +.38 McGrwH .94 35.69 +.04 McMoRn ... 15.34 -.22 Mechel ... 27.10+1.00 Mechel pf ... 8.13 +.02 MedcoHlth ... 63.42 -.27 Medtrnic .90 34.21 +.35 Merck 1.52 35.30 +.08 MetLife .74 40.14 -.33 MetroPCS ... 12.36 -.01 Mirant ... 10.39 +.38 MobileTel s ... 21.29 -.32 Molycorp n ... 27.80 -.65 Monsanto 1.12f 62.82 +.47 MonstrWw ... 23.20 -.04 Moodys .42 27.04 -.13 MorgStan .20 25.64 +.03 Mosaic .20 69.10+2.14 Motorola ... 8.24 +.27 NRG Egy ... d19.15 -.04 NYSE Eur 1.20 29.05 +.14 Nabors ... 23.59 +.46 NBkGreece.29e 1.83 -.02 NatGrid 7.04e 44.35 +.30 NOilVarco .44f 63.00 +.66 NatRetPrp 1.52 27.19 -.08 NatSemi .40f 14.77 +.66 Navistar ... u58.65+2.08 NY CmtyB 1.00 17.30 +.16 NY Times ... 9.16 +.09 NewellRub .20 17.69 +.09 NewmtM .60 62.36+1.85 NextEraEn 2.00 51.10 -.13 NikeB 1.24f 87.53 -.30 NobleCorp .90e 33.59 -.66 NokiaCp .56e 10.00 +.23 Nordstrm .80 41.82 -.32 NorthropG 1.88 63.21 -.82 Novartis 1.99e 54.75 +.14 OGE Engy 1.50f 45.08 +.38 OcciPet 1.52 u91.74+1.00 OfficeDpt ... 4.89 +.21 OfficeMax ... 18.59 +.02 OilSvHT 2.54eu137.59 +1.41 Omnicom .80 u47.31 +.37
P-Q-R PG&E Cp 1.82 48.13 +.30 PMI Grp ... 3.40 ... PNC .40 57.26 +.69 2.20 u80.80 +.61 PPG PPL Corp 1.40 25.91 +.15 PackAmer .60 u26.76 -.14 PatriotCoal ... 17.50 -.04 PeabdyE .34f u63.28 +.56 PennWst g 1.08 22.07 -.32 Penney .80 33.78 -.69 PepsiCo 1.92 65.17 -.03 Petrohawk ... 19.61 +.63 PetrbrsA 1.12e 31.14 +.56 Petrobras 1.12e 34.39 +.61 .72 16.72 +.03 Pfizer PhilipMor 2.56f 58.12 +.19 PhlVH .15 u70.00-1.23 ... u10.30 +.30 Pier 1 2.10 41.00 -.12 PinWst ... 30.57 +.79 PlainsEx .40 144.16 +.62 Potash ... 26.36 +.33 PwshDB PS USDBull ... 22.88 -.28 PrecCastpt .12 142.76 +.45 PrideIntl ... 32.23 +.15 PrinFncl .55f 29.68 +.26 ProShtS&P ... d45.17 -.10 PrUShS&P ... d25.20 -.16 ProUltQQQ ... 79.38 +.36 PrUShQQQ ... d11.95 -.08 ProUltSP .43e 45.38 +.22 ProUShL20 ... 37.03 +.54 ProUShtFn ... 17.35 -.12 ProUFin rs .09e 60.34 +.37 ProUSR2K ... d13.59 -.21 ProUSSP500 ... d21.20 -.16 ProUltCrude ... 12.00 +.35 ProUSSlv rs ... d11.24 -.55 ProUShCrude... d10.66 -.33 ProUShEuro ... 20.21 -.59 ProctGam 1.93 62.33 -.03 ProgsvCp 1.16e 20.85 -.05 ProLogis .45m 13.74 +.05 Prudentl 1.15f 53.64 -.28 PSEG 1.37 31.74 +.25 PulteGrp ... 6.71 -.04 QuantaSvc ... 18.73 +.41 QntmDSS ... 3.91 ... Questar s .56 u17.82 +.36 QwestCm .32 u7.12 +.04 RAIT Fin ... 1.82 +.01 RPC .28f u30.71 -.69 RRI Engy ... 3.62 +.09 RadianGrp .01 7.51 -.12 RadioShk .25 19.56 +.55 RangeRs .16 45.64+1.65 Raytheon 1.50 47.43 -.90 RltyInco 1.73 34.02 -.08 RegalEnt .72a 15.04 +.59 RegionsFn .04 6.08 +.02 ... 9.05 +.41 ReneSola RepubSvc .80 28.79 -.54 ReynAm s 1.96f 32.35 +.45
MARKET SUMMARY
RioTinto s .90e 70.08+1.14 RiteAid ... .94 -.02 Rowan ... 32.20 +.17 RoyDShllB3.36e 63.55 +.26
S-T-U
V-W-X-Y-Z Vale SA .76e 34.32 +.75 Vale SA pf .76e u30.36 +.58 ValeantPh .38a 28.32 +.60 ValeroE .20 21.08 +.35 VangEmg .55e 47.81 +.16 VectorGp 1.60b 16.74-1.16 VeriFone ... u39.87+3.11 VerizonCm1.95f 32.90 +.16 ViacomB .60 u39.80 -.25 VimpelC n .46p 15.06 -.44 Visa .60f 77.35 +.35 ... u15.39 +.40 VishayInt ... 85.76 +.93 VMware VulcanM 1.00 42.00 -.35 WalMart 1.21 54.62 -.13 .70 36.86 +.75 Walgrn WalterEn .50u110.52 +4.92 WshPst 9.00 388.11 +.50 WsteMInc 1.26 34.80 -.18 WeathfIntl ... u21.72 +.53 WellPoint ... 57.02-1.42 WellsFargo .20 29.05 +.27 WendyArby .08f 4.86 +.09 WDigital ... 34.67 +.02 WstnUnion .24 18.25 +.02 Weyerh .20a 17.70 +.16 Whrlpl 1.72 80.06+1.25 WmsCos .50 23.72 -.05 WimmBD .26e 31.73 +.39 WiscEn 1.60 60.30 +.22 WT India .14e 26.04 -.15 Wyndham .48 u30.75 +.45 XcelEngy 1.01 23.87 +.06 Xerox .17 11.83 +.06 Yamana g .12f 12.53 +.52 ... 10.71 +.53 YingliGrn YumBrnds 1.00 50.57 -.37 ZweigTl .40 3.67 -.03
Citigrp 3365784 BkofAm 1523938 S&P500ETF 1195274 SPDR Fncl 828379 FordM 653684
4.45 11.86 122.89 15.18 16.80
+.03 +.18 +.33 +.05 +.02
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Dex One n 6.70 BldBear 7.91 ChinaMM 3.34 CascdeCp 44.83 GMX Rs 5.05
55007 14.92 +.44 54109 3.08 +.63 47239 6.34 +.12 41881 4.55 +.18 35318 10.11 +.42
Cisco DryShips Microsoft Intel Oracle
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Chg %Chg +1.91 +39.9 +1.95 +32.7 +.57 +20.4 +5.34 +13.5 +.49 +10.7
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg CSVS2xVxM91.41-14.05-13.3 SchMau 56.96 -7.66 -11.9 40.19 -5.29 -11.6 Blyth CSVS2xVxS78.78-7.81 -9.0 GerovaF rs 20.26 -1.60 -7.3
875232 611717 511655 417461 315482
19.07 5.88 27.02 21.69 28.81
-.15 +.65 +.13 -.01 +.71
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last Chg %Chg ChinaShen 3.08 Advntrx rs 2.37 TravelCtrs 4.05 FriedmInd 8.50 HallwdGp 24.25
Name Last Chg %Chg
3.99 +.69 +21.0 +.63 +25.7 PrincNtl +.38 +19.1 SuperMda n 6.79 +1.14 +20.2 26.89 +4.06 +17.8 +.39 +10.8 Gentex +.72 +9.3 Kirklands 13.89 +1.89 +15.7 +1.75 +7.8 NXP Sem n16.14 +2.16 +15.5
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last Chg %Chg
Name Last Chg %Chg
CagleA 8.25 CheniereEn 5.51 UraniumEn 6.70 PudaCoal 15.41 3.70 DGSE
DIARY
-1.57 -16.0 CaroBkHld 2.87 -.48 -14.4 -.47 -7.9 ZionO&G wt 2.60 -.40 -13.3 -.47 -6.6 RIT Tech 11.33 -1.61 -12.4 -1.06 -6.4 Orexigen 4.81 -.66 -12.1 -.25 -6.3 MER Tel rs 2.71 -.37 -12.0
DIARY
DIARY
BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS The nation added only a trickle of jobs in November, far fewer than experts had expected and a reminder that the economy is still recovering only fitfully. The job market was weak all around: Stores, factories, construction companies and financial firms all cut positions. The unemployment rate nudged closer to double digits again — 9.8 percent, after three straight months at 9.6 percent. Employers added 39,000 jobs for the the Labor month, Department said Friday. The report caught economists off guard. They had predicted 150,000 new jobs after the economy added 172,000 in October — which had been enough to qualify as a hiring spurt in this anemic postrecession economy. Stocks staged a late afternoon rally after spending most of the day weighed down by an unexpected rise in the unemployment rate. Indexes wound up closing higher for the third straight
day. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 2.6 percent for the week, its best weekly gain since hitting a 2010 high on Nov. 5. The Dow is now just 0.5 percent below that level. Materials and energy companies led the rebound, and oil and gold prices rose. About 12 million more obese Americans could soon be eligible to get surgery to implant a small, flexible stomach band designed to help them lose weight by dramatically limiting their food intake. The FDA will make a final decision on the Lap-Band in the coming months. On Friday, a panel of FDA advisers recommended expanding use of the device to include patients who are mildly obese. The device from Allergan Inc. is currently implanted in roughly 100,000 people each year. It usually helps patients lose 50 pounds or more and has been limited to patients who are morbidly obese.
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST CardnlHlth CitzSoBk Culp Inc Delhaize DukeEngy FNB Utd h FamilyDlr Innospec KrispKrm Lance Lowes NorflkSo Nucor PiedNG
.78 .04m ... 2.02e .98 ... .62 ... ... .64a .44 1.44 1.44 1.12
14 ... 9 ... 12 ... 19 32 56 22 18 17 62 22
37.24 4.50 10.37 71.16 17.79 .32 51.07 21.13 7.30 23.22 24.86 62.88 39.91 29.08
-.12 ... +.07 -.21 +.03 +.03 +.46 -.53 -.14 -.01 -.06 +.39 -.35 +.05
+15.5 +3.2 +3.9 -7.2 +3.4 -75.4 +83.5 +109.4 +147.5 -11.7 +6.3 +20.0 -14.4 +8.7
ProgrssEn RedHat RexAmRes ReynAm s Ruddick SonocoP SpeedM SunTrst UnivFor VulcanM WellsFargo
A-Power AMAG Ph
... 4.82 -.15 ... 16.23 +.63
Name Vol (00) Last Chg ASML Hld .27e 35.58 +.70
Name Vol (00) Last Chg NovaGld g ChinaShen NA Pall g GoldStr g NwGold g
Div Last Chg
A-B-C
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg
SAIC ... 15.88 -.13 SCANA 1.90 41.18 -.04 SpdrDJIA 2.57e 113.94 +.20 SpdrGold ... 138.07+2.87 SP Mid 1.54eu161.24 +.96 S&P500ETF2.31eu122.89 +.33 SpdrHome .12e 16.80 +.15 SpdrKbwBk.11e 23.89 +.24 SpdrLehHY4.13e 40.04 +.20 SpdrRetl .57e u48.08 +.23 SpdrOGEx .20e u50.67 +.22 SpdrMetM .35e u65.59+1.14 STMicro .28 10.02 +.75 Safeway .48 21.80 -.49 StJude ... 40.47 +.38 Saks ... 11.58 +.11 Salesforce ... 142.81 -.21 SandRdge ... 5.63 +.20 Sanofi 1.63e 32.12 +.44 SaraLee .46f 15.24 +.08 Schlmbrg .84 u82.74+2.00 Schwab .24 16.13 -.03 SchMau .60 56.96-7.66 SemiHTr .55e u32.65 +.21 SiderNac s .58e 16.37 +.12 SilvWhtn g ... u39.31+1.02 SilvrcpM g .08 u13.59 +.42 SouthnCo 1.82 38.12 +.04 SwstAirl .02 13.20 -.08 SwstnEngy ... 37.91 +.19 SpectraEn 1.00 24.70 -.06 SprintNex ... 3.92 +.06 SP Matls 1.05e u37.01 +.31 SP HlthC .58e 31.09 ... SP CnSt .77e 28.81 +.01 SP Consum.43e u37.42 +.02 SP Engy 1.00e u65.82 +.29 SPDR Fncl .16e 15.18 +.05 SP Inds .60e u34.04 +.07 SP Tech .31e 24.81 +.06 SP Util 1.27e 31.28 +.07 StarwdHtl .30f 58.84 +.09 StateStr .04 45.71 +.09 StillwtrM ... 21.80 +.40 Suncor gs .40 36.09 +.58 Sunoco .60 39.58-1.62 Suntech ... 8.28 +.38 SunTrst .04 25.74 +.36 Supvalu .35 d8.40 -.26 Synovus .04 2.26 +.02 Sysco 1.04f 29.30 -.01 TJX .60 45.29 +.76 TaiwSemi .47e u11.97 +.43 Talbots ... 11.68 +.25 Target 1.00 59.12 -.53 TataMotors .32e 31.65 +.35 TeckRes g .60f u54.73 +.94 TeekOffsh 1.90 27.80-1.31 Tenaris .68e 46.06 +.55 TenetHlth ... 4.29 +.04 Teradyn ... 12.73 +.30 Tesoro ... u17.39 +.11 .52f u32.82 -.03 TexInst Textron .08 23.70 +.30 ThermoFis ... 52.85 +.35 2.10 86.94 +.43 3M Co Tiffany 1.00 63.30 +.10 TW Cable 1.60 u66.08+1.29 TimeWarn .85 30.64 +.20 ... 18.86 -.01 TollBros Total SA 3.13e 51.34 +.96 Transocn ... 70.51 -.42 Travelers 1.44 54.86 -.25 TrinaSol s ... 23.71+1.01 TycoElec .64 33.05 +.11 TycoIntl .85e u41.18 +.48 Tyson .16 16.90 +.05 UBS AG ... 16.13 +.23 US Airwy ... 11.04 -.07 UnionPac 1.52f u94.55 +.89 UtdContl ... 27.73 -.48 1.88 71.80 -.06 UPS B US Bancrp .20 24.76 ... US NGsFd ... 5.94 ... US OilFd ... 38.31 +.54 .20 51.05 +.54 USSteel UtdTech 1.70 78.74 +.04 UtdhlthGp .50 37.82 -.10 UnumGrp .37 22.50 -.18
Name
NASDAQ
AMEX
NYSE
NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET
2.48 ... ... 1.96f .52f 1.12 .40 .04 .40 1.00 .20
14 ... 10 14 17 16 27 ... 55 ... 11
43.97 47.45 15.98 32.35 37.85 33.16 15.09 25.74 35.43 42.00 29.05
+.16 +.52 -.15 +.45 +.22 -.34 +.26 +.36 +.06 -.35 +.27
+7.2 +53.6 +13.7 +22.1 +47.1 +13.4 -14.4 +26.9 -3.7 -20.3 +7.6
ATP O&G ... 15.90 AVI Bio ... 1.81 AXT Inc ... u9.21 AcmePkt ... u53.94 AcordaTh ... 26.40 ActivePwr ... u2.40 ActivsBliz .15 12.30 AdobeSy ... 29.14 Adtran .36 33.46 AEterna g ... 1.54 Affymax ... 6.22 AkamaiT ... 52.96 Alexion ... 76.00 AlignTech ... 17.62 AllosThera ... 3.93 AllscriptH ... 17.98 AlteraCp lf .24 u37.71 Amazon ... 175.68 ACapAgy5.60e 29.47 AmCapLtd ... 7.67 AmerMed ... 18.84 Amgen ... 53.73 AmkorT lf ... 7.45 Amylin ... 13.12 A123 Sys ... 8.54 ApolloGrp ... 36.38 ApolloInv 1.12 11.25 Apple Inc ... 317.44 ApldMatl .28 13.06 ArenaPhm ... 1.42 AresCap 1.40 16.85 AriadP ... 4.10 ArmHld .12e 19.24 Arris ... 10.48 ArtTech ... 5.98 ArubaNet ... 23.02 AsiaEntRs ... 10.20 AsscdBanc .04 13.88 Atheros ... 33.81 AtlasEngy ... 43.29 Atmel ... u11.70 AudCodes ... u5.56 Autodesk ... u37.99 AutoData 1.44f 46.73 AvagoTch ... 26.55 AvanirPhm ... 3.97 Axcelis ... 2.60 BMC Sft ... 45.92 BSD Med ... 3.99 BkGranit h ... .53 BebeStrs .10 6.33 BedBath ... 45.95 BiogenIdc ... u67.00 Blkboard ... 42.50 BlueNile ... 55.94 BrigExp ... 26.99 Broadcom .32 45.76 Broadwind ... 1.93 BrcdeCm ... 5.34 Bucyrus .10 89.25 BuffaloWW ... 45.60 CA Inc .16 u24.15 CH Robins1.00 u76.35 CNinsure .26e 16.79 Cadence ... 8.21 CdnSolar ... 13.60 CpstnTrb h ... .76 CareerEd ... 18.76 CaviumNet ... u39.30 Celgene ... 60.59 CentEuro ... 27.04 CentAl ... 15.06 Cephln ... 65.92 Changyou ... 30.32 ... 3.58 ChrmSh ChkPoint ... u45.18 ChildPlace ... 51.87 ChinaMda ... 14.80 ChinaMed ... 11.19 CienaCorp ... 15.93 CinnFin 1.60 30.69 .49f 28.49 Cintas Cirrus ... 16.15 Cisco ... d19.07 CitrixSys ... 70.26 Clearwire ... 6.03 CognizTech ... u69.31 Coinstar ... 64.22 ColdwtrCrk ... 3.26 ColumLabs ... u1.51 Comcast .38 20.71 Comc spcl .38 19.59 CommVlt ... 29.49 Compuwre ... u11.08 Conexant ... 1.46 Conns ... 4.65 ... 33.40 Copart ... 4.43 CorinthC CostPlus ... u9.18
+.86 ... +.70 +1.51 +.21 +.11 +.22 +.04 +.57 +.08 +.06 +.51 -.15 +.12 -.08 +.04 +.38 -.85 +.04 +.01 +.01 -.11 +.22 +.15 +.09 +1.03 +.09 -.71 +.15 +.03 -.05 -.07 +.17 ... ... +.02 +.68 +.11 -.19 +.06 +.23 +.11 +.35 +.04 -1.86 -.11 +.14 +.16 +.02 -.05 +.17 +.26 -.08 +.30 +5.48 +.08 -.79 -.04 +.24 +.21 -.65 +.16 +.54 -1.62 +.04 +.22 -.01 +.45 +.02 +.13 -.40 +.10 +.41 -.28 +.04 +.69 +.15 -1.07 -.37 +.21 -.35 +.11 +.63 -.15 +.64 +.13 -.01 -.05 -.18 +.13 -.01 -.05 -.24 +.36 +.03 +.19 +.28 +.19 +.85
Costco .82 u68.39 Cree Inc ... 67.88 Crocs ... 17.83 Ctrip.com s ... 44.26 CubistPh ... 21.54 Cyclacel ... 1.84 CypSemi ... u17.61
-.62 +.01 +.08 +.25 +.34 +.09 +.41
D-E-F Dell Inc ... 13.69 +.04 DeltaPtr h ... .73 -.01 Dndreon ... 38.93 +1.11 Depomed ... 5.47 +.06 DirecTV A ... 40.62 -.29 DiscCm A ... 42.92 +.80 DishNetwk ... 18.58 -.07 DonlleyRR1.04 16.73 ... DressBarn ... 25.71 +.60 drugstre ... 1.76 +.02 DryShips ... 5.88 +.65 ETrade rs ... 15.59 -.05 eBay ... 29.61 -.30 EagleBulk ... 5.16 +.05 ErthLink .64 9.14 +.03 EstWstBcp .04 18.38 +.23 ElectArts ... 15.18 +.10 Emcore ... 1.34 -.03 EmmisCm ... d.46 -.07 EndoPhrm ... 36.50 -.33 EngyConv ... 4.58 -.06 Entegris ... u7.00 -.08 EntropCom ... 10.02 +.23 Equinix ... 82.59 +1.07 EricsnTel .28e 10.96 +.34 Eurand ... 11.83 -.01 EvrgrSlr h ... .79 +.01 Exelixis ... 5.90 -.01 Expedia .28 27.05 +.09 ExpdIntl .40 u55.60 +.05 F5 Netwks ...u139.28 +2.13 FLIR Sys ... 28.39 +.03 FSI Intl ... 4.06 +.02 Fastenal .84f u57.78 +.86 FifthThird .04 13.27 +.22 Finisar ... u24.01 +.95 FinLine .16 u18.81 +.48 FMidBc .04 10.10 +.44 FstNiagara .60f 12.98 -.01 FstSolar ... 131.04 -.43 Fiserv ... u58.21 +.56 Flextrn ... 7.48 +.01 Fortinet ... 33.26 +.82 FosterWhl ... 31.11 +.79 FresKabi rt ... .04 -.00 FuelCell ... 1.22 +.03 FultonFncl .12 9.08 -.09
G-H-I GSI Cmmrc ... 24.15 -.31 GT Solar ... 7.96 +.09 Garmin 1.50f 31.84 +1.26 Gentex .44 u26.89 +4.06 Genzyme ... 70.91 -.06 GeronCp ... 6.01 +.09 GileadSci ... 37.25 -.45 GlbSpcMet .15 u17.23 +.65 Google ... 573.00 +1.18 GulfRes ... 11.17 +.74 GulfportE ... u20.26 +.72 HSN Inc ... 29.96 +1.33 Halozyme ... 7.29 +.09 Harmonic ... 6.90 +.16 HrtlndEx .08a 16.46 +.31 HercOffsh ... 2.65 -.05 Hologic ... 17.79 +.35 HotTopic .28a 6.24 +.09 HudsCity .60 12.09 +.32 HumGen ... 25.60 +.61 HuntJB .48 39.14 +.61 HuntBnk .04 6.41 +.16 IAC Inter ... u30.23 +.88 iGateCorp .26e 19.95 -.15 iShAsiaexJ.87e 63.70 -.05 Icon PLC ... 19.87 -.13 ... 1.29 +.04 Ikanos Imax Corp ... 26.28 +.83 ImunoGn ... 8.34 -.16 ImpaxLabs ... 18.11 -.18 ... 15.65 -.23 Incyte ... 8.91 +.35 Infinera ... u43.81 +.47 Informat InglesMkts .66 18.74 -.10 InspPhar ... 6.99 -.11 IntgDv ... 7.04 +.06 Intel .72f 21.69 -.01 InteractBrk1.79eu19.24 +.90 Intersil .48 14.53 +.71 Intuit ... 46.93 +.51 IronwdP n ... 10.88 +.17 IsilonSys ... 33.76 -.03 ... 53.84 +.59 Itron Ixia ... 14.75 +.15
JDS Uniph ... 12.73 JamesRiv ... u23.01 JazzPhrm ... u17.98 JetBlue ... 6.90 JoyGlbl .70 79.48 KLA Tnc 1.00 u40.16 Kirklands ... 13.89 Kulicke ... 7.12 L&L Egy n ... 12.44 LJ Intl ... 4.02 LamResrch ... u49.22 Landstar .20 39.29 Lattice ... 5.01 LawsnSft ... 9.07 LeapWirlss ... 11.55 Level3 h ... .98 LexiPhrm ... 1.32 LibGlobA ... 35.46 LibtyMIntA ... 15.95 LifeTech ... 53.08 LimelghtN ... 6.73 LinearTch .92 u34.33 LinnEngy 2.64f 36.66 Logitech ... 20.59 lululemn g ... 53.38
+.09 +.97 +.28 +.04 +.65 +.70 +1.89 -.02 +.96 +.16 +.67 +.83 +.01 +.02 +.84 +.01 -.02 -.33 +.04 +.59 +.06 +.39 +.18 +.09 +.01
M-N-0 MIPS Tech ... 14.00 Magma ... 4.40 MannKd ... 6.34 MarvellT ... 20.44 Mattel .83f u26.02 MaximIntg .84 u24.35 MecoxL n ... 7.80 MelcoCrwn ... 6.04 MercadoL ... 69.36 MercerIntl ... 7.08 Microchp 1.38f u35.66 MicronT ... 7.92 MicroSemi ... u23.95 Microsoft .64f 27.02 Micrvisn ... 1.57 Motricity n ... 23.68 Mylan ... 19.90 MyriadG ... 21.66 NII Hldg ... 41.56 NXP Sem n ... u16.14 NasdOMX ... 22.63 NetLogic s ... 33.05 NetApp ... 54.07 Netflix ... 185.45 NewsCpA .15 14.31 NewsCpB .15 16.14 NorTrst 1.12 52.82 NwstBcsh .40 10.92 Novell ... 5.94 Novlus ... u32.21 NuVasive ... 23.00 NuanceCm ... 18.09 Nvidia ... 14.79 OReillyA h ... u61.61 OceanFr rs ... 1.00 Oclaro rs ... 12.18 OmniVisn ... 31.12 OnSmcnd ... u9.21 OnyxPh ... 29.37 OpnwvSy ... 2.27 Opnext ... 1.57 optXprs 4.50e u19.09 Oracle .20 28.81 Orexigen ... 4.81 Oxigene h ... .20
-.30 -.03 +.08 -.02 +.45 +.40 +.19 -.01 +.69 -.12 +.22 +.01 +.70 +.13 +.13 -3.21 +.16 +.07 +.84 +2.16 -.62 +.42 +.23 -7.97 -.01 +.10 -.17 +.14 -.02 +.48 -.44 +.18 +.41 -.14 +.02 +1.11 +.27 +.12 -.64 -.07 +.13 +.56 +.71 -.66 -.01
P-Q-R
PDL Bio 1.00e 5.87 -.01 PMC Sra ... 8.32 +.37 Paccar .48f 56.26 +.05 PacCapB h ... .31 +.00 PacSunwr ... 6.25 -.56 PainTher 2.00e 7.92 +.14 vjPalmHH ... .12 -.03 PanASlv .10f u39.95 +.80 ParamTch ... 22.49 +.02 Parexel ... 18.27 +.03 Patterson .40 30.52 +.12 PattUTI .20 u21.90 +.52 Paychex 1.24 29.68 +.08 PnnNGm ... u36.70 +1.22 PeopUtdF .62 12.96 +.05 PerfectWld ... 23.40 -.17 Perrigo .28f 64.12 +1.27 PetsMart .50 39.34 +.16 Polycom ... u38.84 +.84 ... 2.93 -.08 Popular Power-One ... 10.57 +.17 PwShs QQQ.33e53.87 +.14 Powrwav ... 2.21 +.04 PriceTR 1.08 61.32 -.15 ... 414.11+11.12 priceline ... 1.21 +.20 PrinctnR ProspctCap1.21 9.95 +.04 ... 19.08 +.47 QIAGEN QlikTech n ... 22.90 -.45 J-K-L ... 18.04 +.09 Qlogic JA Solar ... 7.37 +.28 Qualcom .76 48.82 +.33
QuantFu h ... Questcor ... RF MicD ... Randgold .17e Rdiff.cm ... Regenrn ... RschMotn ... RossStrs .64 Rovi Corp ...
.51 14.08 7.35 93.59 4.49 29.98 62.65 65.13 55.90
+.01 +.09 +.07 -.66 -.16 +.50 -.04 -.31 +1.43
S-T-U SBA Com ... 39.86 SPS Cmc n ... 13.45 STEC ... 16.86 SanDisk ... 48.31 Sanmina ... 11.23 Sapient .35e 12.93 SavientPh ... 12.01 Savvis ... u27.54 SciGames ... 8.64 SeagateT ... 14.98 SeattGen ... 15.87 Semtech ... 24.13 Sequenom ... 6.46 ShoreTel ... u7.53 SilicnImg ... 7.55 Slcnware .41e 5.50 SilvStd g ... u27.99 Sina ... u69.06 SinoTech n ... 5.50 SiriusXM ... 1.37 SkywksSol ... u27.57 SmartM ... 6.02 SmartT gn ... 9.44 SmartHeat ... 4.45 SmithWes ... 4.14 SodaStrm n ... 33.32 Sohu.cm ... 74.50 Solarfun ... 8.73 SonicCorp ... 9.50 SonicSolu ... 10.70 Sonus ... 2.73 SpectPh ... 4.95 Spreadtrm ... u17.47 StanFur rt ... .03 Staples .36 22.65 Starbucks .52 u32.72 StlDynam .30 16.48 SteinMrt .50e 9.70 StemCells ... 1.11 SuccessF ... u31.09 SunHlth n ... 9.90 SunPowerA ... 12.91 SuperMda n ... 6.79 Symantec ... 17.09 Synopsys ... 26.25 TD Ameritr .20 18.08 TakeTwo ... u11.99 TalecrisBio ... 22.51 Tekelec ... 12.04 Tellabs .08 6.54 TeslaMot n ... 31.49 TevaPhrm.75e 49.28 TexRdhse ... u17.80 Thoratec ... 25.71 TibcoSft ... u20.79 TiVo Inc ... 8.62 TransGlb ... u18.74 TridentM h ... 1.81 TrimbleN ... u40.03 TriQuint ... u12.72 UltaSalon ... 35.22 Umpqua .20 11.07 UtdCBksGa ... 2.00 UtdOnln .40 6.75 UnivDisp ... u28.97 UrbanOut ... 38.26
-.32 +.50 -.12 +.31 +.06 +.16 +.10 +1.61 +.71 +.45 -.01 +.80 -.29 -.04 -.06 +.11 +.35 +1.07 -.01 -.02 +.58 +.18 -.92 +.14 +.17 +2.37 +4.97 +.08 -.08 ... -.03 +.22 +.92 -.01 -.23 -.04 -.02 -.02 +.01 +.67 +.15 +.44 +1.14 -.16 +.40 -.14 +.52 +.87 -.40 -.03 -.86 -.49 +.09 +.13 +.60 -.00 +.75 -.05 +1.19 +.19 -.50 +.02 +.14 -.11 +1.99 -.06
V-W-X-Y-Z VarianSemi ... 35.00 +1.24 VeecoInst ... 46.65 +1.58 Verigy ... 9.14 ... ... 34.94 -.36 Verisign Verisk ... u31.57 +.60 VertxPh ... 33.49 +.12 Vical ... d1.81 -.05 VirgnMda h .16 26.52 +.13 Vivus ... 6.87 +.15 Vodafone1.33e 25.95 +.04 WarnerCh s8.50e20.25 +.69 WashFed .20 15.26 -.06 WetSeal ... 3.59 +.13 WholeFd ... 48.87 -.17 Windstrm 1.00 u13.66 +.21 Winn-Dixie ... 6.60 +.31 Wynn 1.00a 103.34 -.13 Xilinx .64 28.87 +.34 YRC Ww rs ... 3.23 -.15 Yahoo ... 16.35 +.02 Zalicus ... 1.27 +.05 ZionBcp .04 21.29 +.20 ... 7.70 +.52 Zoran
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Name
Div Last Chg
AbdAsPac Advntrx rs AlexcoR g AlldNevG AlmadnM g AmApparel Anooraq g ArcadiaRs Aurizon g BMB Munai BarcUBS36 BarcGSOil BioTime Brigus grs CAMAC En CanoPet CapGold n CardiumTh CelSci CFCda g CheniereEn ChiGengM ChinNEPet ChinaShen
.42 6.90 +.02 ... 2.37 +.38 ... u8.44 +.29 ... 28.50 +.29 ... 4.43 -.13 ... 1.60 +.15 ... 1.35 -.02 .31 +.00 ... ... 7.56 +.49 ... .95 +.04 ... 46.64 +.76 ... 25.17 +.38 ... 7.63 -.47 ... 1.82 +.10 ... 3.07 +.12 .32 +.03 ... ... 4.81 +.18 ... .43 -.02 .78 +.03 ... .01 u20.02 +.45 ... 5.51 -.47 ... 1.57 +.19 6.28 +.10 ... ... 3.08 +.63
1.60 +.04 ClaudeR g ... CrSuiHiY .32 2.99 +.02 .34 -.01 Crossh glf ... Crystallx g ... .32 +.00 .46 -.01 ... Cytomed DenisnM g ... 3.33 -.03 EV LtdDur 1.39 16.31 +.13 6.87 +.41 EndvSilv g ... EntreeGold ... 2.94 +.10 ExeterR gs ... 6.11 +.17 Fronteer g ... u10.70 +.33 GabGldNR 1.68 18.40 +.25 GascoEngy ... .33 -.01 Gastar grs ... 5.29 +.15 5.64 +.19 ... GenMoly GoldResrc .15e u26.35 +.20 GoldStr g ... 4.55 +.18 GranTrra g ... 7.85 +.13 2.89 +.06 GrtBasG g ... HooperH ... .68 +.01 Hyperdyn ... 3.02 -.06 1.11 -.01 InovioPhm ... .44 ... ... Inuvo KodiakO g ... u5.19 +.04 LongweiPI ... 2.84 +.05 2.70 +.17 LucasEngy ...
MadCatz g MagHRes Metalico MdwGold g MincoG g Minefnd g NIVS IntT NeoStem Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NA Pall g NDynMn g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OrienPap n Palatin rs ParaG&S PhrmAth PionDrill PlatGpMet PolyMet g PudaCoal RadientPh
... u.88 -.03 ... 6.01 -.09 ... 4.86 +.26 ... .87 +.10 ... u2.14 +.03 ... 10.28 +.50 ... 2.37 +.05 1.51 +.19 ... ... 6.49 +.29 ... .03 -.00 ... u10.11 +.42 ... u6.34 +.12 ... 10.03 +.13 ... u24.44 +.72 3.08 +.01 ... ... 14.92 +.44 .41 -.01 ... 6.65 -.21 ... ... d1.05 -.18 1.80 +.03 ... 3.71 +.04 ... ... 7.34 +.14 2.24 ... ... ... 2.10 +.01 ... 15.41-1.06 ... .39 -.03
RareEle g ... ... Rentech RexahnPh ... Rubicon g ... SulphCo ... TanzRy g ... Taseko ... TimberlnR ... TrnsatlPt n ... TravelCtrs ... TriValley ... TwoHrbInv1.34e UQM Tech ... ... Uluru Univ Insur .32e Ur-Energy ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e ... VistaGold WidePoint ... WT DrfChn ... ... YM Bio g
9.82 1.25 1.08 5.83 .19 6.72 4.64 1.17 3.18 4.05 d.44 9.99 1.99 .09 4.86 2.23 3.42 6.70 1.71 13.16 3.05 1.26 25.35 2.00
-.08 -.01 -.05 +.10 +.01 +.09 +.03 +.03 -.01 +.39 -.06 +.02 -.03 -.01 -.05 -.07 -.16 -.47 -.04 -.67 +.07 -.02 +.03 ...
MUTUAL FUNDS Name Sell Chg AllianceBern A: GloblBdA 8.40 +.01 Allianz Fds Instl: NFJDvVl 11.13 +.04 SmCpVl 29.63 +.11 Allianz Funds A: NFJDvVl t 11.04 +.04 SmCpV A 28.25 +.11 AmanaGrw n24.36 +.11 Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 19.12 +.06 SmCpInst 19.18 +.15 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 18.13 +.05 Amer Century Adv: EqIncA p 7.08 +.01 Amer Century Inv: DivBnd 10.91 ... 20.46 +.05 EqGroI EqInc 7.08 +.01 ... GNMAI 10.96 GrowthI 25.40 +.07 HeritageI 20.91 +.09 InfAdjBd 12.06 -.01 IntTF 11.00 ... 37.37 +.12 SelectI Ultra 22.28 +.05 ValueInv 5.51 +.01 Vista 16.62 +.09 American Funds A: AmcpA p 18.45 +.08 AMutlA p 24.96 +.06 BalA p 17.65 +.03 BondA p 12.27 +.01 CapIBA p 49.77 +.19 CapWGA p35.39 +.26 CapWA p 20.68 +.12 EupacA p 41.37 +.34 FdInvA p 35.90 +.18 GovtA p 14.51 ... GwthA p 30.01 +.14 HI TrA p 11.23 +.01 HiInMuniA 13.76 ... IncoA p 16.52 +.05 IntBdA p 13.53 +.02 IntlGrIncA p31.22 +.29 ICAA p 27.63 +.14 LtTEBA p 15.67 ... NEcoA p 25.09 +.06 N PerA p 28.31 +.21 NwWrldA 54.86 +.24 STBFA p 10.11 +.01 SmCpA p 38.56 +.30 TxExA p 12.06 ... WshA p 26.72 +.05 American Funds B: BalB p 17.57 +.03 CapIBB p 49.73 +.20 CpWGrB t 35.16 +.26 GrwthB t 28.91 +.13 IncoB p 16.38 +.05 ICAB t 27.49 +.14 Ariel Investments: Ariel 46.52 +.31 Artio Global Funds: GlHiIncI r 10.48 +.02 IntlEqI r 30.61 +.29 IntlEqA 29.81 +.28 IntEqIIA t 12.59 +.12 IntEqII I r 12.69 +.13 Artisan Funds: Intl 21.82 +.09 IntlVal r 26.56 +.16 MidCap 33.16 +.13 MidCapVal 20.37 +.08 SCapVal 16.48 +.09
Aston Funds: M&CGroN 23.86 +.07 MdCpN p 31.31 +.21 BNY Mellon Funds: BondFd 13.21 +.01 EmgMkts 11.58 +.04 NtIntMu 13.28 ... Baird Funds: ... AggBdInst 10.66 Baron Funds: 54.78 +.23 Asset 48.96 +.29 Growth SmallCap 23.26 +.13 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.95 +.01 DivMu 14.50 +.01 NYMu 14.28 ... TxMgdIntl 15.72 +.15 IntlPort 15.60 +.14 EmMkts 33.06 +.16 BlackRock A: BaVlA p 24.57 +.06 CapAppr p 22.70 +.06 Eng&ResA38.01 +.45 EqtyDiv 17.13 +.05 ExcBlrk 599.49 +.92 19.25 +.10 GlAlA r InflProBdA 11.23 -.02 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 17.94 +.10 BlackRock Instl: US Opps 40.22 +.26 BaVlI 24.71 +.06 EquityDv 17.17 +.05 GlbAlloc r 19.35 +.10 Brandywine Fds: BlueFd 24.90 +.25 Brndywn 25.86 +.27 Buffalo Funds: SmCap 25.18 +.17 CGM Funds: Focus n 34.10 +.32 Realty n 26.03 +.20 CRM Funds: MdCpVlI 27.79 +.15 Calamos Funds: ConvA p 20.04 +.09 Gr&IncA p 31.02 +.17 GrwthA p 52.30 +.36 GrowthC t 47.61 +.32 Calvert Group: 15.92 -.02 Inco p ShDurInA t 16.44 -.01 Clipper 60.23 -.02 Cohen & Steers: RltyShrs 57.67 +.07 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 29.21 +.21 DivEqInc 9.79 +.04 DivrBd 5.02 ... LgCorQ A p 5.33 +.01 21CntryA t 13.09 +.07 SelComm A44.11 +.26 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 30.14 +.22 AcornIntZ 40.27 +.38 CoreBdZ 11.00 ... DivIncoZ 12.77 +.03 IntBdZ 9.07 ... IntTEBd 10.36 ... LgCapGr 12.64 +.04 LgCpIdxZ 23.97 +.06 MarsGrZ 20.39 +.07 MdCpIdxZ 11.40 +.07 MdCpVlZ p13.06 +.09 STIncZ 9.96 ... STM Z 10.52 ... SmCpIPZ 16.92 +.11 ValRestr 48.65 +.35
CG Cap Mkt Fds: 10.51 +.04 IntlEq LgGrw 14.59 +.06 LgVal 8.69 +.03 SmGrw 19.08 +.15 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.50 +.12 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n10.99 +.13 USCorEq1 n10.73 +.05 USCorEq2 n10.66 +.06 DWS Invest A: BalA 8.99 +.02 MgdMuni pe8.86 -.01 StrGovSecA8.87 +.01 DWS Invest S: GNMA S 15.42 +.02 GroIncS 16.01 +.05 MgdMuni S e8.87 -.01 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 33.37 +.08 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 33.71 +.09 NYVen C 32.30 +.09 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.60 +.01 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq n21.65 +.04 EmMktV 36.72 +.02 IntSmVa n 16.70 +.24 LargeCo 9.70 +.03 STMunBd n10.29 ... TAUSCorE2 n8.67 +.04 USVctrEq n10.50 +.06 USLgVa n 19.31 +.07 USLgVa3 n14.79 +.06 US Micro n13.23 +.09 US TgdVal 16.05 +.12 US Small n20.69 +.16 US SmVa 24.55 +.21 IntlSmCo n16.60 +.22 GlEqInst 13.15 +.10 EmMktSC n24.34 -.05 EmgMkt n 31.63 +.15 10.37 +.01 Fixd n IntGFxIn n 12.63 +.02 IntVa n 18.03 +.19 Glb5FxInc n11.54 +.03 LCapInt n 19.63 +.20 TM USTgtV20.71 +.16 TM IntVa 14.73 +.15 TMMktwV 14.46 +.07 2YGlFxd n 10.23 +.01 DFARlE n 21.33 ... Dodge&Cox: Balanced 68.75 +.30 GblStock 8.77 +.09 ... 13.35 Income 35.71 +.46 IntlStk Stock 104.54 +.61 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.06 ... Dreyfus: 37.74 +.09 Aprec DryMid r 27.82 +.17 Dr500In t 34.88 +.09 MunBd r 11.08 ... DreihsAcInc11.26 +.01 EVPTxMEmI50.97 +.23 Eaton Vance A: GblMacAb p10.30 -.01 5.81 +.01 InBosA LgCpVal 17.67 +.05 ... NatlMunInc 9.32 ... 8.19 StrInc p Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 8.91 ... GblMacAbR10.29 -.01 LgCapVal 17.72 +.05
ParStEMkt 15.74 +.07 FMI Funds: LgCap p 15.24 +.05 FPA Funds: 10.99 +.01 NwInc FPACres n 26.80 +.10 Fairholme 35.23 +.19 Federated A: MidGrStA 34.93 +.24 KaufmA p 5.40 +.03 ... TtlRtBd p 11.23 Federated Instl: KaufmnK 5.40 +.03 MunULA p 10.02 ... ... TotRetBd 11.23 TtlRtBdS 11.23 ... Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 19.86 +.07 SmlCpA p 25.26 +.13 StrInA 12.75 +.03 Fidelity Advisor C: NwInsgh t n18.94 +.07 StrInC t n 12.73 +.04 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI n 20.08 +.07 12.88 +.03 StrInI n Fidelity Advisor T: NwInsgh p 19.64 +.07 12.75 +.04 StrInT Fidelity Freedom: FF2000 n 12.09 +.03 FF2010 n 13.67 +.05 FF2010K 12.73 +.05 FF2015 n 11.40 +.04 FF2015K 12.77 +.05 FF2020 n 13.82 +.06 FF2020K 13.20 +.06 FF2025 n 11.51 +.05 FF2025K 13.38 +.06 FF2030 n 13.74 +.07 FF2030K 13.56 +.06 FF2035 n 11.40 +.06 FF2035K 13.69 +.07 FF2040 n 7.97 +.05 FF2040K 13.77 +.08 FF2045 n 9.43 +.05 FF2050 n 9.30 +.06 Income x n 11.32 +.01 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.94 +.06 AMgr50 n 15.25 +.06 AMgr70 r n16.20 +.08 AMgr20 r n12.75 +.03 Balanc n 18.00 +.06 BalancedK 18.00 +.06 BlueChGr n44.80 +.17 Canada x n56.90 -.62 CapAp x n 25.08 +.04 CapDevO n10.57 +.06 CpInc r n 9.41 +.02 ChinaRg rx32.54 -.64 Contra n 67.64 +.24 ContraK 67.69 +.24 CnvSc n 25.05 +.13 DisEq x n 22.13 -.15 DivIntl x n 29.68 -.21 DivrsIntK rx29.65 -.27 DivStkO n 14.63 +.06 DivGth n 27.54 +.20 EmrMk x n 25.97 -.32 Eq Inc n 42.80 +.21 EQII n 17.62 +.08 42.80 +.21 EqIncK Export x n 21.20 +.04 31.32 +.16 Fidel n ... FltRateHi r n9.77 FrInOne n 26.93 +.13 GNMA n 11.64 +.01
... GovtInc 10.62 GroCo n 82.36 +.44 GroInc n 17.84 +.07 GrowthCoK82.43 +.43 GrStrat r n 19.87 +.15 Indepn n 24.20 +.08 InProBd n 11.82 -.02 10.64 +.01 IntBd n IntmMu n 10.20 ... IntlDisc x n 32.51 -.28 ... InvGrBd n 11.55 InvGB n 7.42 +.01 LgCapVal 12.07 +.04 LatAm x 57.80 -.10 LevCoStk n27.19 +.20 LowP r n 37.41 +.20 LowPriK r 37.41 +.20 Magelln x n70.16 -.25 MagellanK x70.09 -.33 MidCap n 27.88 +.25 MidCapK r 27.89 +.25 NwMkt r n 16.02 +.06 NwMill n 28.58 +.14 NY Mun e n12.86 -.01 OTC n 53.57 +.41 100Index 8.63 +.02 Ovrsea x n 31.91 -.13 Puritn n 17.69 +.06 PuritanK 17.69 +.06 RealE n 25.23 +.03 SAllSecEqF12.97 +.06 SCmdtyStrt n11.98+.15 SrEmrgMkt19.57 +.09 SrsIntGrw 11.15 +.10 SrsIntVal 9.88 +.08 SrInvGrdF 11.56 +.01 STBF n 8.49 +.02 SmCapOp 10.51 +.09 SmllCpS r n19.07 +.18 SCpValu rx15.06 +.01 SEAsia x n 29.97 -.71 SpSTTBInv r n10.98+.01 StkSelSmCp x17.92 +.11 StratInc n 11.38 +.03 StrReRt r 9.45 +.03 TaxFrB r n 10.75 -.01 ... TotalBd n 10.87 USBI n 11.43 +.01 Value x n 66.62 -.55 Fidelity Selects: Enrgy n 50.16 +.27 EngSv n 72.34 +.87 Gold r n 58.10 +1.13 Health n 120.65 +.48 NatRes r n 33.32 +.28 94.31 +.68 Tech n Fidelity Spartan: ExtMkIn n 37.47 +.27 IntlInxInv n 35.23 +.37 TotMktInv n35.89 +.13 Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv n43.52 +.12 IntAd r n 35.24 +.38 TotMktAd r n35.90 +.13 First Amer Fds Y: RealEst p 17.89 +.01 First Eagle: GlblA 46.12 +.37 OverseasA22.62 +.24 SGenGld p35.92 +.76 Forum Funds: AbsStrI r 10.86 ... Frank/Temp Frnk A: AdjUS p 8.88 ... BalInv p 50.11 +.15 CalTFA p 6.90 ...
... FedInt p 11.60 FedTFA p 11.62 -.01 FlxCpGrA 47.75 +.26 FoundAl p 10.41 +.06 GoldPrM A 51.16 +1.02 GrwthA p 43.91 +.11 HYTFA p 9.91 ... HiIncA 1.98 +.01 IncomA p 2.13 ... InsTFA p 11.70 -.01 NYTFA p 11.45 -.01 RisDvA p 32.24 +.05 SMCpGrA 36.72 +.23 StratInc p 10.38 +.02 TtlRtnA p 10.18 +.02 ... USGovA p 6.77 UtilsA p 11.45 +.04 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv p ... ... IncmeAd 2.12 +.01 Frank/Temp Frnk B: IncomeB t 2.12 ... Frank/Temp Frnk C: FoundAl p 10.24 +.05 IncomC t 2.15 +.01 USGvC t 6.74 +.01 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 20.41 +.05 Frank/Temp Temp A: DvMktA p 25.15 +.16 ForgnA p 6.89 +.07 GlBd A p 13.63 +.05 GrwthA p 17.60 +.15 WorldA p 14.62 +.11 Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: GrthAv 17.64 +.16 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.65 +.04 GE Elfun S&S: S&S Inc 11.28 +.01 S&S PM 39.82 +.13 TaxEx 11.57 ... Trusts 42.88 +.09 GE Instl Funds: IntlEq 11.43 +.16 GE Investments: TRFd3 p 16.33 +.09 GMO Trust: ShDurColl r11.53 ... GMO Trust II: EmergMkt r14.50 +.09 GMO Trust III: 12.07 +.13 For IntIntrVl 21.70 +.23 19.77 +.06 Quality GMO Trust IV: EmrMkt 14.45 +.09 IntlGrEq 23.03 +.24 IntlIntrVl 21.70 +.23 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 14.46 +.09 IntlCorEq 29.02 +.31 19.77 +.06 Quality StrFxInc 15.12 -.13 Gabelli Funds: Asset 48.35 +.25 SCapG 33.14 +.17 Gateway Funds: GatewayA 25.99 +.08 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 34.89 +.20 Goldman Sachs Inst: GrOppt 24.19 +.02 HiYield 7.24 +.01 HYMuni n 8.40 ... MidCapV 35.25 +.20 SD Gov 10.43 +.01 ShtDrTF n 10.50 +.01 StrucIntl n 10.54 +.14
Harbor Funds: Bond 12.95 +.04 CapApInst 36.64 +.08 IntlInv t 59.19 +.60 IntlAdm p 59.43 +.61 IntlGr r 12.44 +.05 59.92 +.62 Intl r Harding Loevner: EmgMkt r 50.99 ... Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 33.76 +.10 DivGthA p 18.45 +.06 FltRateA px 8.82 +.01 MidCpA p 21.38 +.11 Hartford Fds C: CapApC t 29.97 +.08 ... FltRateC tx 8.81 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppY n36.61 +.10 CapAppI n 33.76 +.10 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 41.46 +.19 Div&Gr 19.18 +.06 Advisers 19.19 +.04 Stock 40.13 +.15 IntlOpp 12.43 +.10 TotRetBd 11.30 +.01 Heartland Fds: ValueInv 41.34 +.40 Henderson Glbl Fds: IntOppA p 20.94 +.15 Hussman Funds: StrTotRet r 12.26 ... StrGrowth 12.72 -.04 IVA Funds: WldwideA t16.87 +.06 Wldwide I r 16.90 +.06 Invesco Funds A: CapGro 13.36 +.06 15.79 +.03 Chart p CmstkA x 15.22 -.01 Const p 23.02 +.07 EqIncA x 8.38 -.02 GrIncA px 18.58 -.01 HYMuA 9.23 +.01 IntlGrow 27.24 +.24 MdCpCEq p23.12 +.07 Invesco Funds P: SummitP p 11.68 +.03 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 23.89 +.16 AssetStA p24.62 +.17 AssetStrI r 24.83 +.17 GlNatRsA p20.78 +.26 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.56 ... Inv Bal p 12.14 +.03 MCpVal p 22.66 +.03 JPMorgan C Class: CoreBd p 11.62 +.01 JP Morgan Instl: MdCpVal n23.09 +.03 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond n11.56 +.01 MtgBckd 11.32 +.01 ShtDurBd 11.02 +.01 JPMorgan Select: USEquity n 9.94 +.03 JPMorgan Sel Cls: AsiaEq n 37.78 -.24 CoreBd n 11.56 +.01 HighYld n 8.11 +.01 IntmTFBd n10.91 +.01 ShtDurBd n11.02 +.02 TxAwRRet n9.99 +.01 USLCCrPls n20.08+.05 Janus S Shrs: Forty 32.61 +.06 Overseas t 50.05 +.13 Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.78 +.06
Contrarn T 14.54 +.09 Grw&IncT 30.15 +.09 Janus T 28.72 +.08 OvrseasT r50.19 +.13 PrkMCVal T22.15 +.06 ShTmBdT 3.11 ... Twenty T 64.50 +.13 Jensen J 26.54 +.07 John Hancock A: LgCpEqA 25.50 +.10 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 12.19 +.06 LSBalanc 12.98 +.04 LSConsrv 12.97 +.03 LSGrwth 12.93 +.05 LSModer 12.77 +.04 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p24.06 +.22 LSVValEq n13.34 +.03 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.58 +.14 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p21.91 +.14 Legg Mason A: CBAgGr p108.24 +.37 CBAppr p 13.59 +.03 CBFAllCV A13.39 +.07 WAMgMu p15.52 -.01 Legg Mason C: CMValTr p 38.09 +.03 Longleaf Partners: Partners 27.55 +.10 Intl 15.15 +.15 SmCap 25.84 +.06 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.26 +.04 StrInc C 14.84 +.04 LSBondR 14.21 +.05 StrIncA 14.77 +.05 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA p12.40 +.03 InvGrBdC p12.32 +.03 InvGrBdY 12.41 +.03 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.16 +.05 FundlEq 12.61 +.06 BdDebA p 7.76 +.01 ShDurIncA p4.64 +.01 MidCpA p 15.99 +.13 RsSmCA 30.07 +.13 ... TaxFrA p 10.36 Lord Abbett C: BdDbC p 7.78 +.01 ShDurIncC t 4.67 +.01 Lord Abbett F: ShtDurInco 4.63 ... Lord Abbett I: SmCapVal 31.87 +.14 MFS Funds A: IntlDvA 13.30 +.11 MITA 18.83 +.07 MIGA 14.94 +.07 EmGA 41.09 +.18 IntlVA 24.25 +.21 MuHiA t 7.44 +.01 ReInA 15.14 +.13 TotRA 13.87 +.02 16.23 +.09 UtilA 22.15 +.05 ValueA MFS Funds I: ReInT 15.64 +.13 ValueI 22.26 +.06 MFS Funds Instl: IntlEq n 17.81 +.15 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.87 +.01 MainStay Funds I: ICAPSlEq 34.17 +.13 Mairs & Power: Growth 71.54 +.14
Managers Funds: Bond n 25.68 +.01 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.69 +.08 Matthews Asian: AsiaDvInv r14.27 +.08 AsianGIInv 18.22 -.04 China Inv 30.81 -.13 PacTgrInv 23.25 -.05 MergerFd 16.08 +.03 Meridian Funds: Growth 43.33 +.26 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.60 +.01 TotRtBdI 10.60 +.01 MontagGr I 24.00 +.08 MorganStanley Inst: EmMktI 26.97 +.04 IntlEqI 13.40 +.10 MCapGrI 36.93 +.14 MCapGrP p35.73 +.13 Munder Funds Y: MCpCGrY n27.93 +.24 Mutual Series: BeacnZ 12.22 +.04 GblDiscA 29.12 +.08 GlbDiscC 28.73 +.08 GlbDiscZ 29.54 +.09 QuestZ 18.48 +.04 SharesZ 20.61 +.05 Nationwide Instl: S&P500Ins10.34 +.02 Neuberger&Berm Inv: Genesis 32.12 +.24 GenesInst 44.43 +.33 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 46.06 +.34 Nicholas Group: Nich n 46.23 +.23 Northeast Investors: Trust 6.09 +.01 Northern Funds: BondIdx 10.66 ... ... EmMEqIdx12.68 HiYFxInc 7.26 ... IntTxEx 10.33 ... ... ... IntlEqIdx r MMEmMkt r24.52 ... MMIntEq r 9.74 ... SmCapVl 14.65 ... StkIdx 15.17 ... Nuveen Cl A: HYMuBd p 15.15 +.04 KYMuB p 10.73 ... LrgCpV p 18.80 +.06 OHMBA p 10.99 ... LtMBA p 10.89 ... Nuveen Cl R: IntDMBd 8.95 ... HYMunBd 15.15 +.04 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 27.34 +.13 GlobalI 21.99 +.22 Intl I r 19.05 +.21 Oakmark r 40.96 +.11 Select r 27.25 +.09 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 8.06 +.03 GlbSMdCap15.42 +.10 NonUSLgC p10.40+.16 RealRet 11.03 +.17 Oppenheimer A: AMTFMu 6.19 ... CapApA p 42.74 +.14 CapIncA p 8.62 +.02 DvMktA p 35.39 +.21 GlobA p 60.42 +.56 GblAllocA 15.33 +.10 GlbOppA 29.43 +.27 GblStrIncA 4.27 +.01
55.47 +.98 Gold p 6.60 +.06 IntBdA p IntGrw p 27.43 +.38 LtdTmMu 14.42 +.01 MnStFdA 31.57 +.08 MSSCA p 19.94 +.15 S&MdCpVl31.13 +.25 Oppenheimer C&M: DevMktC t 34.02 +.21 GblStrIncC 4.27 +.02 IntlBdC 6.58 +.06 Oppenheimer Roch: ... LtdNYA p 3.27 RoNtMuC t 6.88 +.01 RoMu A p 15.90 ... RcNtMuA 6.90 +.01 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 35.09 +.21 6.60 +.06 IntlBdY IntGrowY 27.39 +.38 PIMCO Admin PIMS: ShtTmAd p 9.93 +.01 TotRtAd 11.44 +.02 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r11.02 +.03 AllAsset 12.53 +.02 ComodRR 9.02 +.13 DevLcMk r 10.55 +.05 11.45 +.03 DivInc EmMkBd 11.24 +.05 FltInc r 9.00 ... ForBdUn r 10.92 +.13 FrgnBd 10.64 -.02 HiYld 9.25 +.01 InvGrCp 11.60 +.02 LowDu 10.60 +.02 ModDur 11.09 +.03 RealRet 12.08 -.04 RealRtnI 11.48 ... 9.93 +.01 ShortT TotRt 11.44 +.02 11.05 +.02 TR II 10.16 +.02 TRIII PIMCO Funds A: AllAstAut t 10.95 +.03 AllAsset p 12.44 +.03 ComRR p 8.88 +.12 LwDurA 10.60 +.02 RealRtA p 11.48 ... TotRtA 11.44 +.02 PIMCO Funds C: RealRtC p 11.48 ... TotRtC t 11.44 +.02 PIMCO Funds D: LowDur p 10.60 +.02 ... RealRtn p 11.48 11.44 +.02 TRtn p PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.44 +.02 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 25.64 +.04 Pax World: Balanced 22.09 +.07 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 45.34 +.29 Pioneer Funds A: CullenVal 17.80 +.10 HiYldA p 10.05 +.03 PionFdA p 39.92 +.14 ValueA p 11.12 +.04 Pioneer Funds C: PionrFdY 40.08 +.15 Pioneer Fds Y: CullenV Y 17.92 +.10 Price Funds Adv: EqInc 22.84 +.09 Growth p n 31.65 +.07 6.75 +.01 HiYld R2020A p n16.32 +.07
Price Funds: Balance n 19.11 +.07 BlChip n 37.92 +.10 CapApp n 20.14 +.05 EmMktB n 13.37 +.05 EmMktS n 35.35 +.22 EqInc n 22.89 +.09 EqIndex n 33.10 +.08 GNMA n 9.97 +.01 Growth n 31.92 +.08 HlthSci n 29.21 +.13 HiYield n 6.76 +.01 InstlCpG 16.22 +.05 IntlBond n 10.05 +.11 IntDis n 43.31 +.36 13.36 +.13 Intl G&I IntlStk n 14.15 +.10 LatAm n 56.17 +.35 MDBond n 10.39 ... MediaTl n 51.17 +.27 MidCap n 59.72 +.45 MCapVal n23.30 +.11 N Asia n 19.37 +.03 New Era n 51.05 +.62 N Horiz n 33.22 +.22 N Inc n 9.60 ... OverS SF r n8.33 +.10 PSBal n 18.85 +.08 RealEst n 17.36 +.03 R2010 n 15.48 +.05 R2015 n 11.93 +.04 R2020 n 16.43 +.07 R2025 n 12.00 +.06 R2030 n 17.17 +.08 R2035 n 12.12 +.06 R2040 n 17.25 +.08 R2045 n 11.49 +.05 Ret Inco n 13.01 +.03 SciTec n 25.92 +.17 ShtBd n 4.87 +.01 SmCpStk n34.48 +.26 SmCapVal n35.64 +.25 SpecGr n 17.47 +.09 SpecIn n 12.35 +.03 SuMuInt n 11.24 ... TFInc n 9.78 ... TxFrH n 10.65 ... Value n 22.81 +.11 Primecap Odyssey : Growth r 15.23 +.09 Principal Inv: HighYldA p 8.08 ... LgCGI In 9.10 ... ... LgCV1 In 10.38 LgGrIn 8.10 ... LT2020In 11.68 ... LT2030In 11.53 ... ... LT2040I 11.67 ... SAMBalA 12.64 Prudential Fds A: MidCpGrA 27.16 +.08 NatResA 55.71 +.75 STCrpBdA 11.54 +.02 10.11 +.04 UtilityA Putnam Funds A: CATxA p 7.66 ... DvrInA p 8.10 -.02 EqInA p 14.67 +.06 GrInA p 13.08 +.06 MultiCpGr 49.56 +.25 23.34 +.14 VoyA p RS Funds: LgCAlphaB t39.36 +.17 31.61 +.19 RSPart Rainier Inv Mgt: SmMCap 32.05 +.26
RidgeWorth Funds: GScUShBdI10.08 ... HiYldI 9.77 +.02 IntmBdI 10.77 -.02 RiverSource A: HiYdTEA 4.20 ... Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r17.87 +.18 PennMuI r 11.38 +.08 PremierI r 19.91 +.14 TotRetI r 12.91 +.05 VlPlSvc 13.06 +.11 Russell Funds S: IntlDvMkt 31.53 +.24 StratBd 11.09 +.02 SEI Portfolios: CoreFxA n 10.82 +.01 HiYld e n 7.32 -.03 IntlEqA n 8.72 +.08 LgCGroA n21.43 +.07 LgCValA n 15.65 +.04 TxMgLC n 11.84 +.03 SSgA Funds: EmgMkt 22.22 +.09 Schwab Funds: CoreEq 16.54 +.05 1000Inv r 37.24 +.11 S&P Sel 19.39 +.05 SmCpSl 20.64 +.15 TSM Sel r 22.51 +.07 Scout Funds: Intl 32.04 +.30 Selected Funds: AmShD 40.23 +.10 AmShS p 40.27 +.10 Sentinel Group: ComS A p 30.65 +.10 Sequoia n 129.02 +.59 Sound Shore: SoundShore30.72 +.15 St FarmAssoc: Gwth 52.31 +.17 TCW Funds: TotRetBdI 10.27 ... TCW Funds N: ToRtBdN p10.62 ... TIAA-CREF Funds: BondInst 10.56 +.01 EqIdxInst 9.43 +.03 Templeton Instit: EmMS p 16.56 +.11 ForEqS 20.10 +.23 Third Avenue Fds: IntlVaInst r 16.74 +.13 REValInst r23.39 +.03 ValueInst 51.34 -.02 Thornburg Fds C: IntValC t 26.07 +.25 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 27.66 +.26 IncBuildA t 18.78 +.07 IncBuildC p18.78 +.06 IntValue I 28.28 +.27 LtMuA p 14.10 ... LtTMuI 14.10 ... ValueI 33.01 +.07 Thrivent Fds A: Bond 9.96 ... LgCpStk 21.75 +.10 LgCpVal 13.20 +.05 MidCpSk 14.58 +.11 ... MuniBd 11.09 PtrIntStk 9.76 +.10 Tocqueville Fds: Gold t 89.16 +1.03 Transamerica C: AAlModGr t11.75 +.04 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 23.45 +.04 USAA Group: CrnstStr 22.91 +.10
12.84 ... Inco Intl 24.12 +.25 PrecMM 47.89 +1.14 S&P Idx 18.38 ... ShtTBnd 9.21 +.01 12.84 ... TxEIt TxELT 12.72 ... TxESh 10.67 ... VALIC : MdCpIdx 20.23 +.12 StkIdx 24.87 +.06 Van Eck Funds: GlHardA 50.94 +.62 Vanguard Admiral: AsstAdml n54.26 +.05 BalAdml n 21.17 +.05 CAITAdm n10.90 ... CALTAdm n10.97 ... CpOpAdl n 75.90 +.49 EMAdmr r n39.56 +.14 Energy n 121.80 +.99 EqInAdm n n41.84 +.13 EuroAdml n62.89 +.89 ExplAdml n66.32 +.57 ExtdAdm n 40.37 +.29 500Adml n113.17 +.30 GNMA Ad n11.02 +.02 GrwAdm n 31.14 +.10 HlthCr n 52.29 +.10 HiYldCp n 5.69 +.01 InfProAd n 26.04 -.03 ITBdAdml n11.45 +.01 ITsryAdml n11.73 +.02 IntGrAdm n61.67 +.59 ... ITAdml n 13.49 ITGrAdm n 10.20 +.01 LtdTrAd n 11.07 ... LTGrAdml n 9.25 -.05 LTsyAdml n11.51 -.07 ... LT Adml n 10.92 MCpAdml n91.00 +.53 MorgAdm n55.26 +.27 MuHYAdm n10.32 ... NJLTAd n 11.55 ... NYLTAd n 11.01 ... PrmCap r n67.67 +.29 PALTAdm n10.95 ... ReitAdm r n77.56 +.02 STsyAdml n10.87 +.01 STBdAdml n10.65 +.02 ShtTrAd n 15.90 ... STFdAd n 10.93 +.02 STIGrAd n 10.81 +.01 SmCAdm n33.98 +.25 TxMCap r n61.81 +.22 TxMGrIn r n55.03 +.14 TtlBAdml n 10.72 +.01 TStkAdm n30.84 +.11 ValAdml n 20.15 +.06 WellslAdm n52.65 +.07 WelltnAdm n52.94 +.10 Windsor n 44.26 +.23 WdsrIIAd n44.55 +.17 Vanguard Fds: AssetA n 24.17 +.03 CapOpp n 32.84 +.21 Convrt n 14.18 +.05 DivdGro n 14.16 +.02 Energy n 64.84 +.53 EqInc n 19.96 +.06 Explr n 71.18 +.60 GNMA n 11.02 +.02 GlobEq n 17.81 +.10 GroInc n 25.86 +.05 HYCorp n 5.69 +.01 HlthCre n 123.85 +.21
8D • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010 Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Ford Expedition XLT, 2004, Blue with Grey cloth interior 4.6 back with auto trans, all power ops, 4X4 with towing pkg, rear air and audio, 3rd seat, lighted running boards PERFECT FOR THE FAMILY!!!! 704603-4255
Ford, 2001, Ranger. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
Auctions Auction Thursday 12pm 429 N. Lee St. Salisbury Antiques, Collectibles, Used Furniture 704-213-4101 Carolina's Auction Rod Poole, NCAL#2446 Salisbury (704)633-7369 www.thecarolinasauction.com
Heritage Auction Co. Glenn M.Hester NC#4453 Salisbury (704)636-9277
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Ford, 2003, Explorer. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
GMC, 2000. Yukon/Denali 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Jeep Wrangler Unlimited, 2005. Bright silver metallic with black cloth interior. 6 speed manual trans. AM, FM, CD Player, rollover protection system. 29K miles. 704-603-4255
Jeep, 2007, Compass Sport. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock!
Ford, 2004, F150. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Honda Pilot EXL, 2005 Burgandy Red on Tan leather interior, 3.5, V6, auto trans, 4X4, LOADED, all power, SUNROOF, am,fm,cd,tape, DUAL HEATED SEATS, steering wheel controls, MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE!!!!! 704-603-4255
Jeep, 2006, Grand Cherokee LAR/COL/FR. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Auctions
Auctions
Auctions
Due to non-payment of rent Rowan Mini Storage will conduct an Auction on Dec. 18th, 11:00 a.m. Any questions call 704-855-2443. Unit 411 – Grady Bennick Unit 512 – Karl Dial Unit 424 – Jennifer Spry Unit 204 –Mimosa Restaurant Unit 517 – Lisa Aisdrop Unit 218 – Heather B. Kiser Unit 312 – Jesse Kerley Unit 804 – Lori McRorie Unit 803 – Alexis Cowan Unit 504 – Darrell Martin Unit 720 – Stacy Groll
www.heritageauctionco.com
Rowan Auction Co. Professional Auction Services: Salis., NC 704-633-0809 Kip Jennings NCAL 6340.
Carport and Garages
Job Seeker meeting at 112 E. Main St., Rockwell. 6:30pm Mons. Rachel Corl, Auctioneer. 704-279-3596
www.perrysdoor.com
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KEN WEDDINGTON Total Auctioneering Services 140 Eastside Dr., China Grove 704-8577458 License 392
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We Build Garages, 24x24 = $12,500. All sizes built! ~ 704-633-5033 ~
704-633-9295
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
FREE ESTIMATES
Chimney Sweep & Fireplace
www.WifeForHireInc.com Licensed, bonded and insured. Since 1985.
www.gilesmossauction.com
3 Check for Cracks & Obstructions & Repair
AUCTION
Mercedes ML320, 1998 Onyx Black, Dk Grey interior, 3.2 V6 auto trans, all power, DUAL HEATED LEATHER SEATS, alloy rims wrapped in good tires, SUNROOF, runs & drives awesome!! 704603-4255
Toyota 4 Runner, 1997 Limited Forest Green on Tan Leather interior V6 auto trans, am, fm, cd, tape, SUNROOF, alloy rims, good tires, CHEAP TRANSPORTATION!!!! 704-603-4255
Mazda, 2006, MPV Wagon. 100% Guaranteed Credit Approval! Over 100 Vehicles in Stock! 1330 W. Jake Alexander Blvd.
Nissan Xterra SE SUV, 2002. Shock blue clearcoat exterior with charcoal interior. $8,845. Stock #T10725A Call now!1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Toyota 4Runner, 2002. SR5, V6 SUV. 4 speed automatic. Stock #T10747B. $11,245. Call now 1-800-542-9758 www.cloningerford.com
Drywall Services
Home Improvement
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
www.autohouseofsalisbury.com
OLYMPIC DRYWALL New Homes Additions & Repairs Small Commercial olympicdrywall@aol.com olympicdrywallcompany.com
Fencing Free Estimates Bud Shuler & Sons Fence Co. 225 W Kerr St 704-633-6620 or 704-638-2000 Price Leader since 1963
Reliable Fence All Your Fencing Needs, Reasonable Rates, 21 years experience. (704)640-0223
Financial Services “We can erase your bad credit — 100% guaranteed” The Federal Trade Commission says any credit repair company that claims to be able to legally remove accurate and timely information from your credit report is lying. There's no easy fix for bad credit. It takes time and a conscious effort to pay your debts. Learn about managing credit and debt at ftc.gov/credit. A message from The Salisbury Post and the FTC.
NC licensed
~ 704-425-8870 ~
LARGE PRE CHRISTMAS SALE ROWAN AUCTION GALLERY 2613 OLD UNION CHURCH RD., SALISBURY, NC
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5TH • 1:30 PM
Cleaning Services Christian mom for cleaning jobs & ironing. Great rates. 704-932-1069 or 704791-9185
Maid 4 U Cleaning Service
NO BUYERS PREMIUM
15+ Yrs. Reliable Svc. Kelly Wright Holiday Discounts Residential, Real Estate Commercial 704-773-0828
From North or South on I-85, take Exit #79, Watch For Signs!
Loads Of Items For Everyone. Come Spend The Day!
C46831
Please go to auctionzip.com - ID #1869 For Complete Listing and Pics. Also Click To Map For More Directions. Kip Jennings NCAL #6340 - Greg Wagoner NCAL#3779
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Since 1955
Perry's Overhead Doors Sales, Service & Installation, Residential / Commercial. Wesley Perry 704-279-7325
Cleaning Services
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
704-279-2600
Lippard Garage Doors Installations, repairs, electric openers. 704636-7603 / 704-798-7603
Cleaning Services
SALISBURY POST
CLASSIFIED
WOW! Clean Again! November Special! Lowest Prices in Town, Senior Citizens Discount, Residential/Commercial References available upon request. For more info. call 704-762-1402
Toyota Tundra Sr5, 2007, crew cab 2WD. Silver sky metallic w/grey cloth int., 4.7, V8, auto trans. AM/FM/CD, all power, towing pkg, non smoker, low mile, Extra Clean! 704603-4255
Toyota, 2002 Sienna XLE LOADED! Grey leather seats, 3.0 V6 back with auto trans, tape, cd changer, all pwr. Duel heated seats, sunroof low price what more could you ask for! 704-603-4255
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
Pools and Supplies Bost Pools – Call me about your swimming pool. Installation, service, liner & replacement. (704) 637-1617
Around the House Repairs Carpentry. Electrical. Plumbing. H & H Construction 704-633-2219
Roofing and Guttering
Brisson - HandyMan Home Repair, Carpentry, Plumbing, Electrical, etc. Insured. 704-798-8199 Browning ConstructionStructural repair, flooring installations, additions, decks, garages. 704-637-1578 LGC
Garages, new homes, remodeling, roofing, siding, back hoe, loader 704-6369569 Maddry Const Lic G.C. HMC Handyman Services. Any job around the house. Please call 704-239-4883 Hometown Lawn Care & Handyman Service. Mowing, pressure washing, gutter cleaning, odd jobs ~inside & out. Comm, res. Insured. Free estimates. “No job too small” 704-433-7514 Larry Sheets, owner
Kitchens, Baths, Sunrooms, Remodel, Additions, Wood & Composite Decks, Garages, Vinyl Rails, Windows, Siding. & Roofing. ~ 704-633-5033 ~
• Manufactured Home Services
Junk Removal Anthony's Scrap Metal Service. Top prices paid for any type of metal or batteries. Free haul away. 704-433-1951 CASH FOR JUNK CARS And batteries. Call 704-279-7480 or 704-798-2930
Mobile Home Supplies~ City Consignment Company New & Used Furniture. Please Call 704636-2004
Moving and Storage TH Jones Mini-Max Storage 116 Balfour Street Granite Quarry Please 704-279-3808
Buying Vehicles, Junk or Not, with or without titles. Any/ All. 704-239-6356
Cathy's Painting Service Interior & exterior, new & repaints. 704-279-5335
Lawn Equipment Repair Services
A-1 Tree Service
Lyerly's ATV & Mower Repair Free estimates. All types of repairs Pickup/delivery avail. 704-642-2787
Professional Services Unlimited Quality work at affordable prices NC G.C. #17608 NC Home Inspector #107. Complete contracting service, under home repairs, foundation and masonry repairs, light tractor work and property maintenence. 36 Years Exp. We accept Visa/MC. 704-633-3584 www.professionalservicesunltd.com Duke C. Brown Sr. Owner
FREE Estimates
704-636-3415 704-640-3842 www.earlslawncare.com GAYLOR'S LAWNCARE For ALL your lawn care needs! *FREE ESTIMATES* 704-639-9925/ 704-640-0542 Outdoors by overcash Mowing, Mulching, Leaf Removal. Free Estimates. 704-630-0120
Tree Service 3Established since 1978 3Reliable & Reasonable 3Insured Free Estimates!
~ 704-202-8881~ Recognized by the Salisbury Tree Board
Graham's Tree Service Free estimates, reasonable rates. Licensed, Insured, Bonded. 704-633-9304
Removal 3Gutter Cleaning 3Core Aeration 3Fertilizing
Complete crawlspace work, Wood floor leveling, jacks installed, rotten wood replaced due to water or termites, brick/block/tile work, foundations, etc. 704-933-3494
~ 704-633-5033 ~
BowenPainting@yahoo.com
3Mowing 3Yard Cleanup 3Trimming Bushes 3Leaf
The Floor Doctor
Guttering, leaf guard, metal & roofs. shingle Ask about tax credits.
Bowen Painting Interior and Exterior Painting 704-630-6976.
Earl's Lawn Care
Heating and Air Conditioning
SEAMLESS GUTTER Licensed Contractor C.M. Walton Construction, 704-202-8181
Painting and Decorating
Lawn Maint. & Landscaping
Beaver Grading Quality work, reasonable rates. Free Estimates 704-6364592
Home Improvement
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
A HANDYMAN & MOORE Kitchen & Bath remodeling Quality Home Improvements Carpentry, Plumbing, Electric Clark Moore 704-213-4471
Grading & Hauling
Piedmont AC & Heating Electrical Services Lowest prices in town!! 704-213-4022
Trucks, SUVs & Vans
Stoner Painting Contractor
• 25 years exp. • Int./Ext. painting • Pressure washing • Staining • Insured & Bonded 704-239-7553
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
Want to get results? Use
MOORE'S Tree TrimmingTopping & Removing. Use Bucket Truck, 704-209-6254 Licensed, Insured & Bonded
to show your stuff!
TREE WORKS by Jonathan Keener. Insured – Free estimates! Please call 704-636-0954.
Headline type
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2010
Tell Someone Happy Birthday Meliha. From your friends and co-workers at Trelleborg
A 2”x3” greeting with photo is only $20, and includes 4 copies of the Post
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 50th Birthday Jo Ann C. From Aunt Nora and Donna
704-797-4220
Fax: 704-630-0157 In Person: 131 W. Innes Street Online: www.SalisburyPost.com
Happy Birthday Rosalind C. L. Wishing you many more. Your Southern City Meal Site Friends
birthday@salisburypost.com
Fax: 704-630-0157
(under Website Forms, bottom right column)
Buy a $50 Gift Certificate & receive a $10 Gift Certificate
SATURDAY 11-4 ....BUY 1 FOOTLONG GET 1 FREE
Every Night Kids Under 12 eat for 99¢ with 2 paying Adults
PATTY MELT & FRIES $5.99
Thurs-Fri
CHICKEN & DUMPLINGS
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.
Call now to book your reservation!
All Gift Certificates must be used at the Salisbury location & can not be used at time of purchase.
5550 Hwy 601 • Salisbury, NC 28147 • 704-647-9807 S45263
EXPIRES 12-31-10
We want to be your flower shop!
& CAFE of Salisbury
413 E. Innes St. • 704-633-1110 • Hours: Mon-Fri 10-7; Sat 10-6; Sun 11-2
Salisbury Flower Shop 1628 West Innes St. Salisbury, NC • 704-633-5310
S45020
Czuba Photography
Birthday? ...
FREE
5.99 S46245
S47818
EXPIRES 12-31-10
$
HOURS: Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat: 11AM-8PM Wednesday 11AM-3PM • Closed on Sundays
playing all your favorite Christmas tunes, love songs and background music for Christmas dinners, parties and gatherings.
704-274-0569
MawMaws Kozy Kitchen
Hamburger, Fries & Tea ................$4.99
PIANIST ROD GRAHAM
S40137
weddings | portraits | events
S46812
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
hollyczuba.com | 919.923.6416