HAPPY EASTER FROM ALL OF US AT THE HERALD
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SUNDAY, APRIL 4, 2010
SUNDAYQUICKREAD
SUNDAY SPOTLIGHT: FAITH & VALUES
On the Street
FINAL FOUR
Jonathan Owens Have news about your local business? E-mail Jonathan at owens@sanfordherald.com
READ ABOUT DUKE’S APPEARANCE IN THE FINAL FOUR ONLINE
Popular eatery going ‘casual’
Due to the late tip-off, The Herald’s coverage of the Duke-West Virginia Final Four match-up Saturday night didn’t make the print edition, but you can read all about the Blue Devils’ performance in Indianapolis at our Web site sanfordherald.com
HARNETT COUNTY
Bella becomes the ‘Steele Pig’ starting April 11
B
CHURCH CELEBRATES 150 YEARS IN ITS ‘LITTLE WHITE CHAPEL’ The doors at Morris Chapel United Methodist Church have been opening for 150 years at a little white chapel that sits at the northwest corner of Harnett County. Founder John Wesley himself made an appearance at the celebratory service Carolina, Page 1C
ASHLEY GARNER/The Sanford Herald
Pastor Craig Dodson of Solid Rock Community Church will lead the church’s first service in its new building at 10:30 a.m. today.
SOLID START Church that began in man’s living room set to open impressive new church today
iPAD HITS SHELVES
By CAITLIN MULLEN cmullen@sanfordherald.com
LONG LINES, EXCITED BUYERS AWAIT DEBUT OF APPLE’S iPAD Around 100 people were standing in line at the Apple Store at the Streets at Southpoint mall in South Durham at 8:30 Saturday morning, waiting for the iPad to go on sale. The lines were even longer in some of the nation’s biggest cities. Full stories, Pages 9A, 7B
SANFORD TEEN CREDITS ACADEMY FOR TURNING HER LIFE AROUND After graduating from the North Carolina National Guard’s Tarheel ChalleNGe Academy in December, 16-year-old Kaylee Lankford said she’s a new person. Lankford attended the military academy after reaching a breaking point during her sophomore year at Southern Lee High School. Full Story, Page 3A
OUR NATION NEW JERSEY CITY SAYS COPS ARE WORSE THAN CRIMINALS For years, residents of Camden, N.J., say some police officers have bullied them in this impoverished city, making cases by planting drugs on suspects, falsifying police reports, and conducting searches without warrants. Full Story, Page 10A
Vol. 80, No. 78 Serving Lee, Chatham, Harnett and Moore counties in the heart of North Carolina
SANFORD — When it comes to budgeting, Pastor Craig Dodson of Solid Rock Community Church knows to let God take control. The pastor learned to do so after planning the church’s new building, open for its first service at 10:30 a.m. today. “God had the money. It was just in our pockets,” he said. “It’s stretched our faith, doing this church.” Solid Rock’s congregation has met since June 2008; they developed a constitution and bylaws in September 2008, Dodson said. It was born in Dodson’s home den and then moved to the Lee Christian School cafeteria. Now, the $725,000, 6,900 square-foot building — fea-
The new Solid Rock Community Church has the capacity to seat about 100, the current size of the church’s congregation. The church is located at 989 White Hill Road.
WANT TO GO?
turing a chapel, fellowship hall and classrooms — is open for service. The chapel, with stark white walls, golden chandeliers and wooden pews covered in
See Church, Page 8A
Solid Rock Community Church will hold its first service in its new facility, located at 989 White Hill Road in Sanford, at 10:30 a.m. today
ella Bistro, the refined Southern restaurant in downtown Sanford, consistently ranks as one of Sanford’s finest dining experiences — having ranked as “best restaurant” by Herald readers in recent polls. But come April 11, Bella Bistro will cease to exist. In its place comes The Steele Pig, a more casual dining restaurant that INSIDE owner Chad Another Blackwelder popular hopes will open his busi- restaurant, Chef Paul’s ness up to a in Sanford, larger clienis now open tele. for lunch. To most it Page 8A seems like a gamble, but More Blackwelder business said the news and change was necessary giv- columnists. Page 7B en the current state of the economy. Those business dinners are becoming more and more scarce as companies like Pfizer, Coty and the big names in Sanford scale back their entertaining budgets. Plus, people aren’t going out in general as much anymore. Then there’s the cost to plate his upscale dishes. One of the top fine dining meals like duck, for example, has almost priced itself
See Casual, Page 8A
SANFORD
Zombies invade Old Gilliam Mill ‘Undead extras’ gather for filming of horror movie By CAITLIN MULLEN cmullen@sanfordherald.com
SANFORD — For those driving by Old Gilliam Mill Park on West Highway 42 this weekend: No, you didn’t time travel, and no, you weren’t about to be attacked by real
HAPPENING MONDAY Candidates for the Lee County Board of Education will meet with local business leaders to discuss their goals for Lee County Schools at the Sanford Area Chamber of Commerce Public Policy Luncheon. Call (919) 775-7341 or visit www.sanfordnc.com to learn more. CALENDAR, PAGE 2A
zombies. But you did get a glimpse of the movie-making process. Locals were asked to dress in hippie clothing and congregate at the park to shoot scenes for the zombie horror movie “A Few Brains More: Summer of Blood,” directed
by Sanford’s Christine Parker. The filming took place all day Saturday at the park, in addition to 9 a.m. to dusk today and Monday. Scenes filmed
Zombie, Page 5A
High: 82 Low: 53
INDEX
More Weather, Page 12A
OBITUARIES
BILLY LIGGETT
Sanford: Pamela McNeil, 53 Vass: D. Hugh McLean, 81 Hopkinsville, Ky.: Jonathan Stroud, 27
The Herald’s editor sees Sanford differently when he’s showing somebody new
Page 6A
Abby, Graham, Bridge, Sudoku............................. 6B Business .......................... 7B Classifieds ....................... 9B Sunday Crossword ............ 7C Community calendar .......... 2A Horoscope ........................ 6B Obituaries......................... 4A Opinion ..........................6-7A Scoreboard ....................... 4B