The Daily Dispatch - Thursday, September 10, 2009

Page 1

CMYK Departing Shope backs Strickland

Perdue signs consumer protection law

From Webb to Gardner-Webb

From Page One, Page 3A

Business & Farm, Page 5A

Sports, Page 1B THURSDAY, September 10, 2009

Volume XCV, No. 212

(252) 436-2700

www.hendersondispatch.com

50 cents

City zoning board goes slow on motel use permit Safety violations shut the business down day after fatal shooting By WILLIAM F. WEST Daily Dispatch Writer

The Zoning Board of Adjustment decided to hold off granting a special use permit allowing the reopening of the former America’s Best Value Inn at 200 Parham Road because the board

members want to hear from the owner and/or whoever is going to manage the business. The board, meeting on Tuesday afternoon, agreed to continue the matter until the Oct. 6 meeting after spending more than an hour on the subject of the motel, which the Fire Department shut down on June 15 for safety violations and the day after a fatal shooting on the property. The board members were particularly concerned after hearing in detail from Fire Chief Danny Wilkerson, Police Chief Keith

Sidwell, City Code Compliance Director Corey Williams and City Planning Director Erris Dunston about safety violations and unsanitary conditions at the motel. And the board members were particularly concerned of there being no evidence of a first floor room having been decontaminated after police in December conducted a raid resulting in the shutdown of a methamphetamine laboratory and the arrest of an Arkansas man. The latter at one point Tuesday prompted board member

Marchita Vann to tell the motel owner’s representative, Hitesh Amin, that her question would be, “Are you all really — are whoever — are they really going to be sincere about repairing this hotel/motel?” Amin told the board that all of the issues would be fixed and that the owner, Mahendra Patel, is spending $100,000 on fire alarms. Amin identified himself as from Richmond, Va., and a best friend of Patel, who lives in Nanuet, N.Y. Amin said he worked at the motel in 2001, 2002 and 2003

From STAFF REPORTS

Old BB&T on Chestnut eyed for new home By AL WHELESS Daily Dispatch Writer

The Henderson-Vance Economic Development Commission plans to ask the County Commissioners to fund the relocation of Vance-Granville Community College’s Small Business Center from the main campus to downtown. Randy Parker, presiDaily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE dent of VGCC, was at the EDC meeting in the Perry Library Wednesday when Chairman Sam Watkins said he will send the comA bug feeds on a yellow cosmos flower growing on the side of Club Pond Road off Vicksboro missioners a letter seeking Road Wednesday afternoon. rent money payment for space for the center in the Please see SHOOTING, page 4A old BB&T bank building on Chestnut Street. The EDC hopes to also move its office in the Barnette Building on Graham Avenue to the Our Hometown . . . . . 2A former BB&T site. WatBusiness & Farm. . . . 5A kins pointed out that there Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . 6A would be no additional cost Light Side . . . . . . . . . 7A In August, the compurpose facility to be built By AL WHELESS to the county for that since missioners approved an at E.M. Rollins ElemenDaily Dispatch Writer Sports. . . . . . . . . . 1-4B it already pays the rent at application for $1,536,396 tary. Comics . . . . . . . . . . . 5B worth of the no-interest The other multi-purpose the current location. Vance Commissioners Classifieds. . . . . . . 6-8B After the college’s board bonds. Sale of the bonds is rooms were approved in voted Monday night to apof trustees meets Sept. subject to final approval by August for New Hope prove a “reapplication” for 21, Parker told the group Elementary at $455,813; Qualified School Construc- the County. Wednesday, he will have County Manager Jerry Carver Elementary at tion Bond funds totaling Today a better idea of what the Ayscue told the board $455,813; and L.B. Yancey $2,365,370. space needs for the center that additional funding of Elementary at $624,770. Members of the board $828,974 has been made Also Monday night, the would be. made the decision as Some... The possibility of havavailable to Vance County board held the first of two directed by the North High: 78 ing room for the center to Schools by the State public hearings necessary Carolina Department of Low: 55 Department of Public before approving a Revital- “incubate” and grow small Public Instruction. Instruction. ization Grant application businesses in the BB&T The bonds can’t be Friday The additional money building was mentioned issued without further Please see VANCE, page 4A will allow a fourth multiconsent by the County. by both Parker and some

Blooming buffet

Vance to reapply for bonds to fund school construction

Index

Weather

...sun

High: 79 Low: 63

Details, 3A

Deaths

EDC members during the meeting. Terry Garrison, who belongs to the economic development organization, told the other members that his fellow Vance Commissioners would probably favor paying 75 percent of the rent under the traditional agreement with Granville County, which pays the other 25 percent in local funding for the college. “We would need to know the uses, the programs, those who would be served and the space needs,” Garrison told Watkins. “I think, perhaps, the more specific your request, the more accommodating we can be,” the commissioner added. Earlier in the meeting, Watkins said the EDC should ask the county to fund “the whole 100 percent,” if it can. He told the other members that it might be possible to get a five-year lease for space for the center instead of the usual 10-year agreement. Henderson Investment Development Corporation has a 60-day option — which expires Oct. 16 — to buy the 7,500-square-foot structure from BB&T for $300,000. According to Watkins, the building has been appraised for up to $1.3 million. He said HIDC needs to know by Oct. 9 whether the Small Business Center would be its main tenant. During an Aug. 19 Please see EDC, page 4A

Police: Bank robber’s getaway car ran out of fuel By WILLIAM F. WEST Daily Dispatch Writer

CREEDMOOR — Police need help finding a man who robbed the RBC Bank at 608 N. Main St. earlier this week. The suspect is described as black and standing five feet, eight inches tall and was seen carrying a small, dark handgun. Obituaries, 4A Police said that the crime occurred at 10:25 a.m. Monday, with the robber demanding bank employees fill up garbage bags he provided to them. Police said the robber

Henderson Dorothy E. Mitchell, 83 Newport News, Va. Thomas H. Paynter, 82 Oxford Thelma Thornton, 82 Vinston E. Thorpe, 64 Warrenton Robert Cheek, 70

Please see MOTEL, page 3A

EDC to ask county to fund business center, office move

Arrest in Hargrove shooting The number of suspects wanted by the Vance County Sheriff’s Office in connection with a July 31 fatal shooting is down to two. According to an arrest report, Sumorrius Lamont Waverly, 23, of 1095 Morgan Road was arrested Sept. 4 when he turned himself in at the Sheriff’s office. He is charged with felony conspiracy, felony attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon and felony assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, inflicting serious injury. His bond was set at $145,000. In custody on the same charges are Tavon Tabarus Durham, 17, and Jason Ryan Warring, 21. Still at large are Christopher Watkins and Tywan Durham.

and is working for free to help Patel. And Amin, who said he would not be the manager, said the plan is to lease the motel to an unnamed operator in Miami. A problem is Amin has no power of attorney, with City Attorney John Zollicoffer saying, “I think the board wants to talk to somebody who has some responsibility about the ongoing operation.” Amin said 80 percent of the job has been done regarding the fire alarms and said electrical

fled in a maroon Chevrolet Impala reported stolen from Durham. The car was found abandoned off Hawley School Road, with police saying the car had apparently run out of fuel. Hawley Middle School, Creedmoor Elementary School and the South Granville High School campus were placed on lockdown until 1:30 p.m. because the robbery occurred near those locations. Anyone with any information is urged to telephone Granville County Crime Stoppers at (919)

693-3100. Crime Stoppers will pay up to $1,000 for information leading to an arrest and a conviction. This is the third RBC location in the Tri-County area to have been victimized by a stickup the last several months. The RBC at 155 Hillsboro St. in Oxford was robbed on April 24 and the RBC at 1207 Dabney Drive in Henderson was robbed on Dec. 5. Durham Herald-Sun reporter Keith Upchurch contributed to this story. Contact the writer at bwest@ hendersondispatch.com.

RBC photo

This photo of the person who held up the RBC bank in Creedmoor on Monday is from a bank camera.


2A

The Daily Dispatch

Mark It Down Today Kerr-Tar RPO — The Kerr-Tar Rural Transportation Planning Organization (RPO) is having a Rural Transportation Advisory Committee (RTAC) meeting at 1:30 p.m. at the Oxford Public Works Facility in Oxford. The public is encouraged to attend. More information, including an agenda and directions to the meeting, can be viewed on the Internet at www.kerrtarcog. org/rpo. 4-H meeting — Warren County 4-H will hold an interest meeting for potential volunteers at the Warren County Extension Office from 6-8 p.m. To register for the meeting or to obtain more information, contact Erin Bain, 4-H youth development extension agent at 257-3640 or erin_bain@ncsu.edu. Parks and Rec meeting — The Henderson-Vance Parks & Recreation Commission will meet at noon at Aycock Recreation Center, 307 Carey Chapel Road. Childbirth classes — Prepared childbirth education classes are held at Granville Medical Center, 1010 College St., in Oxford, every Thursday night from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the first floor conference room. The classes are designed for pregnant women between 24-32 weeks of pregnancy. However, since class sizes are limited and advance registration is required, the instructors recommend that women who are expecting a baby sign up as early as possible. Every effort will be made to fit them into a class series that is close to their due date. Women who are scheduled to deliver their babies at any hospital are welcome to attend. To register for the classes, call the Childbirth Education Department at (919) 690-3208. Retired School Personnel — The Vance County Unit of the North Carolina Retired School Personnel will meet at 11 a.m. at the Western Sizzlin’ on Ruin Creek Road in Henderson. Each member is asked to bring a prospective member. Any one who needs transportation to the meeting should contact Louise Kelley at 438-8071 or W.T. Ramey III at 492-3096. Chess Club — The Henderson/Vance Chess Club, affiliated with the U. S. Chess Federation, meets at the First United Methodist Church from 6 to 9:30 p.m. All are welcome, adults and youths, novice or experienced. For more information, call Rudy Abate at 438-4459 (days) or 738-0375 (evenings). Lions Club — The Henderson Lions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Henderson Country Club. The guest speaker will be Karen Catalana, a member of the club. She will be speaking on what it’s like to be a Lion’s Club member. Those who are interested in membership in the club should call Randy Oxendine, president, at 438-8034 or send an e-mail to oxendine@nc.rr.com.

Friday Tractor show — The ninth annual Justice Community Antique Tractor, Car and Engine Show will be held today and tomorrow in the Justice community of Franklin County on N.C. 581, nine miles north of Spring Hope. Events include a parade of cars and tractors, music and entertainment, events for children, craft demonstrations, a bake sale and more. An auction of antique farm items will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow. For more information, call (919) 853-3161. Granville Chamber — Granville County Economic Development Director Jay Tilley will make a presentation at 8 a.m. to the Granville Chamber of Commerce’s Government Forum Committee at the Economic Development Commission office, 310 Williamsboro St., Oxford. Fundraiser — Mums in a variety of colors will be on sale at the John 3:16 Center, 407 East End Ave., Littleton (next to Hagwood’s Car Wash) from 2-6 p.m. and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mums can also be ordered in advance. For more information and to place an order, call (252) 586-1800. Weight loss group — TOWN (Take Off Weight Now), a non-profit weight loss group, will meet at Aycock Recreation Center at 11:30 a.m. Everyone is invited to attend.

Guidelines The “Mark It Down” calendar announces events happening in the community that are sponsored by civic organizations, nonprofit groups, government organizations and similar groups. The Daily Dispatch staff asks that items intended for inclusion in the calendar be submitted in writing at least five days in advance of the event. Please include a contact person’s name and phone number in case there are questions. Items for this listing can be e-mailed to communitynews@hendersondispatch.com. Due to the overwhelming number of churches served by the Dispatch, church events cannot be listed in the “Mark It Down” calendar.

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New guardian ad litem volunteers sworn in Judge Randolph Baskerville swore in a group of new guardian ad litem volunteer advocates at the Aug. 27 session of Juvenile Court in Franklin County. Dawn McKinney, Cynthia Hayes, Tammy Seavert, Tina Dawson, Kathleen Shefchunas, Trevon Lucas, Tammy Seavert and Queen B. Queen of Franklin, Wake, Vance and Warren counties, were sworn in during the ceremony. Guardian ad litem volunteers, along with an attorney advocate, are jointly appointed by a judge to protect the legal rights of children, protect children from further victimization that results from multiple and tem-

Judge Randolph Baskerville (far left) swore in eight new guardian ad litem volunteers from four counties at the Juvenile Court in Franklin County on Aug. 27. porary foster placements, and help the children attain permanence as quickly as possible. The Guardian ad Litem Program has been a part of the N.C. Judicial System since 1983 with the goal of providing children

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The Vance County Health Department will administer seasonal flu shots to persons 60 and older at the Vance County Senior Center on Sept. 30. Pneumonia shots will only be offered to those 65 and older who have never had one before. All other clients will have to see their personal physician for any

follow-up pneumonia shots. Appointments will only be scheduled from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Interested persons should call the senior center at 430-0257 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday to register in advance for the shots. Those who receive Medicare Part B (red, white & blue card) or Medicaid should

If you are good with numbers and enjoy helping people, your skills are needed during the 2010 tax season to provide free personal income tax assistance to elderly and low-income individuals. The Tax-Aide

VGCC

Program at the Vance County Senior Center needs local volunteers who will attend daytime training sessions, taught by IRS-trained instructors, and learn how to E-FILE federal and state tax returns.

computer classes

Vance-Granville Community College will offer several of its popular computerrelated classes for area residents starting this month on the college’s main campus in Vance County. The “Beginner’s Guide to Computers & Internet” is the perfect class for those with limited computer knowledge. Microsoft Windows XP will be used to introduce novice students to the common components and many uses of personal computers through the Windows environment. Students will also learn effective ways to make the most of the Internet in their daily lives through the use of common search tools. Additionally, students will set up their own e-mail accounts. Classes are scheduled for Tuesday nights from 6-10 p.m., Sept. 15 through Oct. 20. Laura Peace is the instructor. Peace will also teach a course on the Microsoft Word

and Excel 2007 software. Students will familiarize themselves with the popular word processing and spreadsheet programs, which were extensively revamped in their most recent versions. Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel are two of the most widely used software programs in the workforce today. Knowledge of these programs is frequently listed as a requirement in job postings for applicants. Classes will be held on Wednesday mornings from 9 a.m. until

remember to bring their card and the shots will be filed through Medicare or Medicaid. In addition, Wellpath and Blue Cross Blue Shield will be accepted. However, those with any other supplemental insurance such as Humana or Premier will need to get flu and pneumonia shots at a doctor’s office.

Shots not covered by Wellpath, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Medicare or Medicaid will be $32 for the flu shot and $50 for the pneumonia shot. Those participating are asked to please wear short sleeves to the appointment. The senior center is located at 126 S. Garnett St., Henderson. For more information, call 430-0257.

Tax-Aide volunteers are people who like to help others. They are also motivated to learn the tax system and apply their knowledge and tax skills to assist other people. The program stresses free assistance for all low-to-

(main

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1 p.m., Sept. 30 through Nov. 4. A beginner’s typing class will be offered on Monday and Wednesday nights from 6 until 9 p.m., Sept. 14 through Oct. 7. Basic keyboarding skills are considered essential in today’s workforce. Students will learn methods to improve their skills, speed and accuracy to become more proficient typists. For more information and to register, call 738-3417 or 738-3324.

moderate income individuals in the area, with special emphasis on the elderly. To learn more about the free training and how you can help others with their taxes, please call the senior center at 430-0257.

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Advantage Ministries

Advantage Ministries will be sponsoring Kid Advantage After school Program which will begin Monday, 8/31/09. The hours are from 3pm-6pm.The cost is $25.00 a week per child which includes transportation and a snack. If interested please come to 103 Wortham Court, Henderson and fill out an application. There are only 20 slots available so act fast. 252-433-6100

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over $14.68 million, representing 17,705 children in 38,681 abuse and neglect court proceedings. To learn more about the guardian ad litem volunteer program, visit www. ncgal.org or call (919) 497-3010.

Tax-aide volunteers needed at senior center

VANCE FURNITURE COMPANY, INC. www.vancefurniture.com • (252) 438-3911

with an independent voice and to advocate for abused and neglected children who are involved in court proceedings. Statewide in 2007, 4,237 volunteer advocates gave the state 813,504 hours of service, a value of

Flu shots for seniors to be given on Sept. 30

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From Page One

The Daily Dispatch

NATIONAL WEATHER

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Seattle 75/54

Billings 80/50

Minneapolis 84/63

San Francisco 82/57 Denver 86/53

New York 69/60

Washington 70/60

Kansas City 84/62

Los Angeles 86/66 Atlanta 84/66 El Paso 88/66 Houston 91/72

Fairbanks 66/45

-10s

-0s

Miami 88/78

Honolulu 89/76

Anchorage 61/48

Hilo 84/69

Juneau 57/51

0s

10s

20s

30s

40s

Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

50s

60s

70s

Ice

80s

90s

100s

110s

Stationary front

Cold front

Warm front

FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR HENDERSON TODAY

TONIGHT

FRIDAY

79°

55°

78° Partial sunshine

SATURDAY

Clouds and sun

SUNDAY

86°

85°

64°

65°

Partly sunny

MONDAY

83° 62°

Partly sunny

Times of clouds and sun

ALMANAC

SUN AND MOON

Temperature

Sunrise today ........................... 6:52 a.m. Sunset today ............................ 7:28 p.m. Moonrise today ...................... 10:44 p.m. Moonset today ......................... 1:00 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow ..................... 6:53 a.m. Sunset tomorrow ...................... 7:27 p.m. Moonrise tomorrow ................ 11:40 p.m. Moonset tomorrow ................... 2:05 p.m.

Raleigh-Durham through 6 p.m. yest. High .................................................... 82° Low ..................................................... 62° Normal high ........................................ 83° Normal low ......................................... 63° Record high ............................ 96° in 1978 Record low .............................. 47° in 1951

Moon Phases

Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ......... 0.00” Month to date .................................. 0.57” Normal month to date ..................... 1.26” Year to date ................................... 23.55” Normal year to date ...................... 30.86”

Last

New

First

Full

Sep 11

Sep 18

Sep 26

Oct 4

REGIONAL WEATHER Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows

WinstonSalem

Asheville

Henderson

Greensboro

73/59

72/55

78/55

Rocky Mt.

80/57

74/59

Durham

Raleigh

78/56

Charlotte

80/61

Cape Hatteras

Fayetteville

80/60

78/67

82/61

LAKE LEVELS

Wilmington

78/62

Elevation in feet above sea level. Data as of 7 a.m. yesterday. 24-Hr. Lake Capacity Yest. Change Gaston 203 199.86 +0.16 Kerr 320 295.56 -0.42

24-Hr. Capacity Yest. Change 240 212.94 -0.04 264 248.69 +0.01

Lake Jordan Neuse Falls

REGIONAL CITIES Today

Fri.

Today

Fri.

City

Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

City

Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Asheville Boone Burlington Chapel Hill Chattanooga Danville Durham Elizabeth City Elizabethton Fayetteville Goldsboro Greensboro Greenville Havelock Hendersonville

72 70 76 79 85 76 78 75 78 82 82 74 76 79 74

High Point Jacksonville Kinston Lumberton Myrtle Beach Morehead City Nags Head New Bern Raleigh Richmond Roanoke Rapids Rocky Mount Sanford Wilmington Winston-Salem

76 82 82 82 81 79 76 82 80 74 77 80 78 78 73

55 55 57 57 62 57 56 59 56 61 57 59 61 61 55

t t pc pc t pc pc pc t pc pc pc t pc t

75 72 78 80 86 79 80 79 81 84 81 79 80 83 79

56 53 61 62 63 60 63 63 56 64 61 63 64 65 57

t t pc pc pc pc pc pc t pc pc pc t pc t

58 60 59 62 67 66 66 61 61 56 57 57 58 62 59

pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc

80 84 84 85 82 80 78 83 81 78 76 82 81 83 78

63 65 63 63 67 67 70 64 64 63 61 63 63 66 62

pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2009

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the commission: • Bullock is retired. • Hinman is director of Area Congregations in Ministry, which is a non-profit organization assisting the needy. • Sergent is health promotion coordinator at the Granville-Vance Health District Department. • Wicker, who is an attorney in Durham, served on Oxford’s Historic Preservation Commission. Shope, a retired federal fire marshal, challenged Woodlief for Oxford’s top position in 2003 before winning

election to a position on the commission two years later. The Dispatch asked Shope whether he recruited candidates to run for mayor and the commission this year and Shope said the five he endorsed are ones he encouraged to run. Shope said there were five persons who had indicated they wanted to run for offices in Oxford, but he said he does not feel he could release their names without their permission. Contact the writer at bwest@ hendersondispatch.com.

Freshly Breaded & Prepared to Order! 444 Dabney Dr. Henderson 492-4040

“We Welcome Call In Orders” Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10

Technical Review Committee’s comments, concerns about motel The Technical Review Committee, which is comprised of key city leaders in the permitting and zoning process, provided a list of comments and concerns about the former America’s Best Value Inn. They are as follows: •The property must not be an extended stay location. •There cannot be any cooking in the rooms. •The driveway needs to be unblocked. •The fire alarm system needs to be brought up to code. •The electrical system needs to be brought up to code. •The second floor needs to be brought up to code. •Results need to be provided for a decontamination of the room in which police found a methamphetamine laboratory. •The swimming pool needs to be tested. •An updated health inspection is needed. •The sewer pumping station needs to be up to code. •If a kitchen will be operated, then a grease trap needs to be installed. And the committee wants to know whether the conference room will be rented out. there is a problem. Board member Cathy Ringley wanted to know about whether the property could meet codes with appropriate intervention and management. Dunston said, “I think it’s going to take a lot to get it where it needs to be.” Amin said the property was not maintained because business had gone down and cited the downturn in the nationwide economy. And Amin, in response to Sidwell saying rooms were rented for as low as $5, countered, “There must be some misunderstanding somewhere” because $5 would not buy two gallons of milk. Amin said what he believes happened is the front desk person said the motel would accept $5 less than the nightly rate for a room. The motel, which is located off Interstate 85 and North Garnett Street, was once part of the Howard Johnson chain. Board member Ruxton Bobbitt made the motion on Tuesday to continue the matter until Oct. 6, with Ringley seconding. There was no dissent, although Badger

paused before voting yes. Zollicoffer told the Dispatch the board will meet at 3 p.m. and go take a look at the property. Contact the writer at bwest@ hendersondispatch.com.

Corrections The amount of $2,639 is the City of Henderson’s one-twelfth share of the local match of $31,660 for a $316,600 grant from the Federal Assistance to Fire Fighters Grant Program for VIPER end-user radio equipment. The city’s share was incorrectly stated in Wednesday’s Daily Dispatch story on the effort to supply local emergency response personnel with portable and mobile radios needed to use the State-wide Voice Interoperability Plan for Emergency Responders (VIPER) network. *** Elections for Henderson City Council seats with expired terms will be held Oct. 6 instead of Oct. 3, as incorrectly stated in a story in Wednesday’s edition of The Daily Dispatch. We’ll straighten everything out!

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York, Amin in Richmond “and somebody in Florida.” Sidwell repeated what he told the Clean Up Henderson Committee on Sept. 2 about being told by the clerk and the manager about nightly room rates generally being $30, but with $5 being a sufficient payment if one did not have the $30. And Sidwell repeated what he said Sept. 2 about a long-term resident having lived in deplorable conditions. And Sidwell noted police had to wait for a maintenance man to go to Lowe’s Home Improvement to get wood to properly secure the place because bullets had shattered one of the doors. And Sidwell noted the entrances to the parking lot were cordoned off with used mattresses, tires and pieces of wood. Sidwell said there had been numerous calls to his department about disorder and large crowds, adding, “It was a great source of frustration for the people with a permanent residence that are around that area.” Williams said his concern focused on what was there and who was there. “We ran into one incident where there was a gentleman who had just had surgery who had been staying there and had the care people coming in and out to care for him as if that was his home,” Williams said. Dunston said she went to the property on Aug. 31 and said there were still issues with the first floor room in which the methamphetamine laboratory had been located, with a burned out room on the second floor, with moisture, with boarded up doors and with “shot out” doors. And Dunston said there were issues of leaking and there was evidence of portable cooking devices within the rooms. Dunston said there were other rooms that “probably” needed to be decontaminated. And Dunston said a photograph showing a red light on above the sewer pumping station means

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Est. Aug. 12, 1914 304 S. Chestnut St. P.O. Box 908 Henderson, N.C. 27536

work would start this week. Wilkerson said his department responded on June 15 to an anonymous complaint about unsafe conditions at the motel. The state fire code requires a yearly inspection, but Wilkerson said his department had been to the motel three different times and had always found violations. Wilkerson said what concerned him on June 15 “is we found 13 rooms that opened out to the outside on the ground floor that were locked by a piece of wood in the sliding track of the door.” And Wilkerson noted the wood was held down with steel bolts. “And if you had a fire out in the hallway, the only way out is to go through something through that glass door to get out,” Wilkerson said. “And that was a life safety issue. And I saw enough right then.” Additionally, the fire alarm system was not working and the second floor, which had been closed to all but the manager’s room after a fire, had two other occupied rooms, Wilkerson said, noting the motel had been warned many times about the second floor. Regarding the methamphetamine laboratory, Wilkerson said, “It’s never been professionally decontaminated to my knowledge.” Wilkerson said he did not know whether the room in which the laboratory had been located had been rented since then, but he said adjacent rooms had been rented. Wilkerson said that, on Aug. 31, he was disturbed when he returned to the property and saw the problem with the locked doors had not been corrected. Wilkerson added that, on a previous visit on May 27, additionally in response to an anonymous complaint, he found electrical and fire alarm issues and burned out exit lights. Wilkerson additionally recalled the June 15 closure of the motel as “a very trying day” because the city was dealing with Patel in New

er Ev

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OXFORD — Departing City Commissioner Bob Shope is backing Frank Strickland for mayor over incumbent Al Woodlief and is backing Ron Bullock, Sue Hinman, Jackie Sergent and David Wicker for the commission. Shope on Wednesday announced his endorsements for the Nov. 3 election. Shope and fellow Commissioners Paul Kiesow, Steve Powell and Chance Wilkinson are not seeking re-election,

meaning all four of the commission seats up for election are open. Meantime, 14 candidates are seeking election to the commission. Oxford’s mayor serves a two-year term and the city’s seven commissioners serve staggered four-year terms. Woodlief, a retired radio station owner, served as a commissioner from 1987 before being elected mayor in 2001. Strickland, who is chief of campus security at Meredith College, is challenging Woodlief for the third consecutive time. Of Shope’s preferences for

MOTEL, from page one

63°

Partly cloudy

Departing Shope backs Strickland for mayor By WILLIAM F. WEST Daily Dispatch Writer

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3A

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4A

Local News

The Daily Dispatch

Deaths Thomas H. Paynter Sr. HAMPTON, Va. — Thomas H. “Wilber” Paynter, Sr., known to his loved ones as Wilber, passed away on Monday, September 7, 2009 at The Gardens of Warwick Forest. He was born on October 15, 1926 at the Paynter family house in Carolina. He graduated from Norlina High School and went on to join the U.S. Army, serving his country proudly in WWII. On March 12, 1954, he married the love of his life, Lottie, and soon after relocated to Hampton. Wilber lived in Hampton for over 55 years and retired from Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. after 42 years of service. Wilber helped his local community by actively serving as a volunteer firefighter for Northampton Fire Dept. and did so for over 22 years. The entire family has been left with fond memories of time spent with “Daddy”, “Grandpa” or “Uncle Wilber”. Quite traditional in many ways, Wilber loved tinkering around the home, doing yard work, and completing the “honey-do” list Lottie always had for him. Wilber loved spending time with his family; he especially made time for the children in his life. From his son’s childhood, his grandchildren’s growing up, as well as his nieces and nephews, Wilber had the ability to make a child smile and always feel loved. He found fulfillment in giv-

Robert Cheek WARRENTON — Robert Cheek, 70, of 1396 Park Town Road, Warrenton, died at Duke University Medical Center in Durham on Sept. 8, 2009. Arrangements are incomplete at this time, and will be announced later by R.H. Greene Funeral Home in Warrenton.

Dorothy E. Mitchell HENDERSON — Dorothy Eubanks Mitchell, 83, a resident of Oakridge Avenue, died Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2009, at her home. Born in Vance County on Aug. 9, 1926, she was the daughter of the late Bosher Wayland “B.W.” Eubanks and Nannie Hicks Eubanks. She was a homemaker and a member of Raleigh Road Baptist Church.

ing to others and never held a grudge. Wilber always thought the best of people and forgave others without hesitation. God gave us the most kind hearted, thoughtful, and loyal man we could have ever imagined. God has called Wilber back home but the time he spent here with the family will be cherished forever. Wilber was preceded in death by his parents, Luther and Roxanna Paynter; his wife, Lottie; brothers, Charlie Morton, Arthur and Johnny; as well as his sister, Shirley. A loving father, grandpa, uncle and brother, Wilber was greatly devoted to his family and will be missed tremendously by those he leaves behind to cherish his memories, son, Thomas Holt Paynter, Jr. and his wife, Melba; three grandchildren, Crystal, T.H. and Melinda; five great-grandchildren; two brothers, Wallace and Herbert; sister, Elizabeth; and many nieces and nephews, whom he loved and cared for dearly. The family would like to thank the Northampton Fire and Rescue Squad, The Gardens of Warwick Forest staff and all of the physicians and nurses who over the years have helped and cared for someone very special to us, a man we loved so much. The family will receive friends from 7-9 pm on Friday, Sept. 11 at Blalock Funeral Home in Warrenton, N.C. Funeral services will be held at 1 pm on Saturday, Sept. 12 at Blalock Funeral Home with burial to follow in Fairview Cemetery. Peninsula Funeral Home is in charge of local arrangements. Paid Obituary

Graveside services will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. today at Sunset Gardens. She is survived by a sister, Irene E. Whaley of Henderson. She was preceded in death by her husband, William O. Mitchell; and her daughter, Lynda M. Bullock. Flowers will be accepted or memorial contributions may be made to Vance County Relay for Life, P.O. Box 914, Henderson, N.C. 27536. Arrangements are by J.M. White Funeral Home.

VANCE, from page one

for $850,000 in Community Development Block Grant funds for a target neighborOXFORD — Thelma hood that will be identified Thornton, 82, died at the commissioners’ Sept. Monday, Sept. 7, 2009, 22 meeting when the second at Brantwood Nursing hearing will be held. Center. Julie Reid, community She was a member of development administrator Goshen Chapel Church. with the Kerr-Tar Regional Survivors include five Council of Governments, said Sept. 30 is the deadline for daughters, Helen Harsubmitting the application. grove and Eloise Thorpe In other business Monday of Oxford, Rose Harris of night, the commissioners Raleigh, and Clara Mae agreed to apply for $173,333 Thornton and Ann Hart in Rural Assistance Operatof Henderson; two sons, ing Program funds available Allen Mack Thomas and through the North Carolina Larry Thornton, both of Department of TransportaOxford; a sister, Annie Smith of Oxford; a brother, tion. The action followed a Bishop James L. Hester of public hearing. Oxford; 43 grandchildren; Steve Stanton, County 13 great-grandchildren; finance director, gave the and eight great-greatcommissioners information grandchildren. on the program. Funeral services will The money would be used be conducted at 2 p.m. during the 2009-2010 fiscal Sunday at Betts and Son year to provide transportaChapel by the Rev. Kention assistance to the elderly neth Hester. Burial will and disabled, participants follow in Meadowview in local Work Force DevelMemorial Park. opment programs and the general public with employThe family will receive ment-related needs. friends Saturday from 7 In other business Monday to 8 p.m. at Betts and Son night, the commissioners Funeral Home in Oxford. awarded the construction Arrangements are by bid for the Warrenton Road Betts and Son Funeral Sewer Project to Hendricx Home of Oxford.

Thelma Thornton

Vinston E. Thorpe OXFORD — Vinston Edward Thorpe, 64, of 8616 Aaron Creek Church Road, died Monday, Sept. 7, 2009, at Granville Medical Center. He received his education in the Granville County school system. He was a member of the St. Matthew Baptist Church. Survivors include his wife, Geneva Thorpe; a daughter, Chantelle Coleman of Baltimore, Md.; three sisters, Virgie Manly, Dorothy Mae Price and Deliah Alston; and two brothers, Willie Louis Thorpe and Curtis Thorpe. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at St. Matthew Baptist Church by the Rev. Gregory J. Webb Sr. Burial will follow in the Thorpe Family Cemetery. The family will receive friends Friday from 7 to 8 p.m. at Betts and Son Funeral Home in Oxford. Arrangements are by Betts and Son Funeral Home of Oxford.

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2009 Fall Semester

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Barnhill, Inc. in the amount of $168,971. Ayscue said the bid was 20 percent below budget. Also Monday night, the board approved a proclamation in recognition of the 2009 Fall Litter Sweep. The event will occur Sept. 19-Oct. 3. In other business Monday night, the commissioners adopted a resolution of appreciation honoring the 20year service of Dr. Michael Smith as Vance County EMS Medical Director. Also, the board voted to appoint Dr. Glenn Charlton, director of emergency room operations at Maria Parham Medical Center, to replace Smith in the EMS medical director position. In other business, the commissioners agreed to apply for a $40,000 grant from the N.C. Rural Center for a plan/feasibility study for a proposed sewer line along U.S. 1 South. The grant requires a 10 percent match of up to $4,400 from the County. Also Monday, the board accepted the Human Resources Committee’s recommendations to fill vacancies for: • An income Maintenance Caseworker II in the Family

and Children’s Medicaid Unit in the Department of Social Services. • A Social Work Supervisor II who is responsible for managing several programs, including Work First, the reception desk and the Electronic Records Program in the Department of Social Services. • Two detention officers at the Vance County Jail. • An EMT-B/Firefighter with the Fire & Ambulance Department. At the request of State Sen. Doug Berger, the commissioners agreed to support an application for federal funds through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to widen and improve U.S. 401 in Wake and Franklin counties. According to Ayscue, support of the project is consistent with the transportation priority plan as established by the Kerr-Tar Rural Transportation Planning Organization (RPO). He said it provides enhancements to transportation systems that will serve member counties of the Kerr-Tar Regional Economic Development Corporation (Hub Project). Contact the writer at awheless@hendersondispatch.com.

SHOOTING, from EDC, from page one page one interview, Parker explained the first session, according Investigators said that David Lee Hargrove was fatally shot in his home at 2697 Morgan Road and have previously said that the shooting occurred during an attempted burglary. Anyone with information concerning the whereabouts of Watkins and Durham is asked to call the Sheriff’s Office at (252) 738-2200 or Crime Stoppers at (252) 492-1925. Send comments to news@ hendersondispatch.com.

that there could be classrooms and a library with computers for small business people to use at the proposed new site. Parker said at the time that the ball is in the EDC’s court as to whether efforts are made to make the concept happen. In other business Wednesday, the EDC board agreed to hold strategy-planning sessions on Sept. 27 at a yetto-be-decided place, and on Sept. 28 at the library. As many as 50 people would be expected to attend

to Henderson City Manager Ray Griffin. They would include the County Commissioners, the City Council, the EDC board, organizations designated as their partners, and some stake-holders. The second session would only involve the EDC, Griffin said.

Contact the writer at awheless@hendersondispatch.com

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Business & Farm

Obama on health care: ‘Time for bickering is over’ WASHINGTON (AP) — Shaking off a summer of setbacks, President Barack Obama summoned Congress to enact sweeping health care legislation Wednesday night, declaring the “time for bickering is over” and the moment has arrived to protect millions who have unreliable insurance or no coverage at all. Obama said the changes he wants would cost about $900 billion over decade, “less than we have spent on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, and less than the tax cuts for the wealthiest few Americans” passed during the Bush administration. In a televised speech to a joint session of Congress, Obama spoke in favor of a provision for the federal government to sell insurance in competition with private industry. But in a remark certain to displease liberals, he did not insist on it, and

said he was open to other alternatives that create choices for consumers. Obama said he remains ready to listen to all ideas but added in a clear reference to Republicans, “I will not waste time with those who have made the calculation that it’s better politics to kill this plan than to improve it.” In an unusual outburst from the Republican side of the House chamber, Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., shouted out “You lie” when the president said illegal immigrants would not benefit from his proposals. The president paused briefly and smiled, but from her seat in the visitor’s gallery, first lady Michelle Obama shook her head from side to side in disapproval of the interruption. In general, the president shied away from providing lawmakers with a list of particulars he wants to see

included in the legislation, and there was nothing in the speech to invite comparisons with Bill Clinton’s pen-waving veto threat more than a decade ago on health care. Obama’s speech came as the president and his allies in Congress readied an autumn campaign to enact his top domestic priority. Republican opposition, contentious town hall meetings and drooping polls have contributed to their woes. An AP-GfK survey hours before the speech showed public disapproval of Obama’s handling of health care has jumped to 52 percent, an increase of 9 percentage points since July. While Democrats command strong majorities in both the House and Senate, neither chamber has acted on Obama’s top domestic priority, missing numerous deadlines leaders had set for themselves.

Perdue signs beefed up consumer protection law RALEIGH (AP) — North Carolina consumers soon will have new protections from foreclosures and intimidating debt collection practices. Gov. Beverly Perdue on Wednesday signed into law a bill approved by the Legislature last month and backed by Attorney General Roy Cooper. Once the new law takes effect next month, it will allow a clerk of court to postpone a foreclosure hearing for up to 60 days to allow a homeowner more time to work out a payment plan with the mortgage holder and remain in their home. “During this recession, thousands of North Carolinians have lost their homes because of foreclosure,” Perdue said. “When a home is foreclosed it’s bad for our families, it’s bad for our communities, it’s bad for our businesses and it’s bad for North Carolina. This bill makes it easier for homeowners to work out a deal with their lenders and avoid

foreclosure.” The bill also sets out new rules for companies that attempt to collect from consumers on old debts from credit cards or other unpaid bills. The law extends regulation to debt buyers, who Cooper said have engaged in overly aggressive debt collecting practices. Debt buyers pay credit card companies, hospitals and others a fraction of the full amount due on unpaid accounts, then work at forcing debtors to pay up. The state law extends debt-collection regulations to cover the law firms that often file lawsuits to collect the cash. Critics say debt buyers often pursue collection even when it is barred by law, such as when the debt is discharged after bankruptcy or has lingered beyond the legal collection deadline. “In a lot of cases, there’s no liability on the part of the individual,” said Sen. Tony Rand, D-Cumberland, who sponsored the legislation.

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Beginning next month, debt buyers who try to collect on a debt that they should reasonably know is blocked by a statute of limitations could face lawsuits and civil penalties of up to $4,000 per violation. The state law also will require debt collectors to provide documents proving they own the accounts they’re trying to collect. Taking a debtor to court will require records including the original account number of the debt, the name of the original creditor, and an itemization of charges and fees the current creditor claims is owed.

Area

A DAY ON WALL STREET

Dow Jones industrials

9,000 7,000 M

J

Pct. change from previous: +0.53%

J High 9,577.22

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6,000

Low 9,476.18

Sept. 9, 2009

2,400

Nasdaq composite

2,200 2,000 1,800 1,600

+22.62 M

J

J High 2,066.34

Pct. change from previous: +1.11%

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Standard & Poor’s 500 +7.98 M

J

Pct. change from previous: +0.78%

J High 1,036.33

1,400

Low 2,033.47

Sept. 9, 2009

1,033.37

Listed below are representative interdealer quotations at approximately 4 p.m. Wednesday from the National Association of Securities Dealers. Prices do not include retail mark-up, mark-down or commission.

8,000

+49.88

2,060.39

Stocks

10,000

Sept. 9, 2009

9,547.22

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

A

S

1,200 1,100 1,000 900 800 700 600

Low 1,023.97

SOURCE: SunGard

AP

MARKET ROUNDUP 090909: Market urrencies etals charts show Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq; stand-alone; 2c x 4 1/2 inches; 96 mm x 114 mm; staff Aluminum -$0.8600 per lb., N.Y. Merc spot NEW YORK (AP) — Key currency exEditors: All figures as of: 5:25:04 PM EST Wed. change rates Wednesday: NOTE: Figures reflect market fluctuations after not match other AP content close; Coppermay -$2.9745 Cathode full plate, U.S. Dollar vs: ExchgRate PvsDay destinations. Copper $2.9060 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Yen 92.13 92.32 Lead - $2481.50 metric ton, London Metal Euro $1.4542 $1.4490 Exch. Pound $1.6530 $1.6487 Zinc - $0.9166 per lb., delivered. Swiss franc 1.0421 1.0472 Gold - $999.50 Handy & Harman (only daily Canadian dollar 1.0812 1.0807 quote). Mexican peso 13.4615 13.3225 Gold - $995.30 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $16.630 Handy & Harman (only Metal Price PvsDay NY Merc Gold $995.30 $997.90 daily quote). Silver - $16.443 troy oz., N.-. Merc spot Wed. NY HSBC Bank US $994.00 $996.00 NY Merc Silver $16.443 $16.488 Mercury - $640.00 per 76 lb flask, N.Y. Platinum -$1290.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Nonferrous Platinum -$1291.40 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot NEW YORK (AP) — Spot nonferrous metal Wed. prices Wednesday: n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised

C

& M

ACS ATT Ball Corp. BankAmerica BB&T Coca-Cola CVS Duke Energy Exxon Ford General Elec. Home Depot IBM Johnson & Johnson Kennametal Krispy Kreme Louisiana Pacific Lowes Lucent Tech. Pepsico Phillip Morris Procter & Gamble Progress Energy RF Micro Dev Royal Bk Can RJR Tobacco Revlon Sprint Sun Trust Universal Verizon Comm. Vulcan Wal-Mart Wells Fargo Wendy’s Establis Delhaize

45.05 25.94 49.66 17.04 27.00 50.63 36.64 15.43 70.50 7.39 14.87 27.38 116.76 60.92 22.96 3.66 7.08 21.72 3.71 58.04 18.59 53.76 39.06 5.01 51.78 45.76 4.85 3.68 21.13 40.38 30.89 52.24 51.11 27.68 5.05 70.01

N.C. airline maintenance firm cuts up to 215 jobs WINSTON-SALEM (AP) — Pace Airlines Inc., a charter airline and maintenance company, has cut up to twothirds of its 300-member work force just weeks after losing a major maintenance contract with Continental Airlines Inc. Pace Airlines cut between 125 and 215 employees at its maintenance operation in Winston-Salem, the Winston-Salem Journal reported Wednesday. The company had about 300 local full- and part-time workers. Pace also has operations in Atlantic City, N.J., and Dallas. Company owner William Rodgers Sr., declined to

specify how many jobs were cut. Rodgers bought the company in June and pledged a 120-day program to improve its finances. In a memo to employees Friday, Rodgers said he had secured “a multimillion-dollar line of credit” with a source he did not identify. The money was supposed to be available to the company by Wednesday. Late last month, Pace lost a contract to perform heavy-maintenance checks on some of Continental’s 737 aircraft. The Winston-Salem company had landed the deal, which was supposed to run through at least 2010, in December 2007.

Pace employees said they have had little work to perform since losing the Continental contract. Pace also runs a charterairline service from its base at Winston-Salem’s SmithReynolds Airport. The company owes the Airport Commission of Forsyth County more than $888,000 in overdue lease payments. Pace started falling behind on its $145,000-amonth rent in October, airport commission chairman Tom McKim said, but has made partial payments from time to time. The commission didn’t want to lose Pace as an airport tenant, he said.


6A

Opinion

The Daily Dispatch

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Saving our kids from an education II III

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

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Editorial Board: James Edwards, Publisher Glenn Craven, Editor

jedwards@hendersondispatch.com gcraven@hendersondispatch.com

Don Dulin, News Editor ddulin@hendersondispatch.com

304 S. Chestnut St./P.O. Box 908 Henderson, N.C. 27536 PHONE: 436-2700/FAX: 430-0125

Daily Meditation And the Pharisees and scribes murmured, saying, This man receiveth sinners, and eateth with them. And he spake this parable unto them, saying, What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it? And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing. And when he cometh home, he calleth together his friends and neighbours, saying unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost. I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance. Luke 15:2-7

Our Opinion

SAT a measure of preparedness, and of desire for more Recently released SAT results for Vance County high school seniors of 2009 were good, and not so good. While local public school seniors fared better on the test in 2008-09 than in previous years — a total of 54 points better, to a 1,291 (out of 2,400 possible) on average — the numbers still have a long way to go toward equalling the statewide average score (1,486) and the national average (1,509). More important, the percentage of Vance County public school seniors who took the test plummeted, from roughly half of all seniors in 2007-08 to only about 37 percent of seniors last year. In reality, the decline in participation is likely accountable for the rise in Vance County’s scores. Nationwide, the states in which SAT participation is lowest traditionally are those where the average score is highest. That’s because as participation falls, only the higher achievers remain — those most likely to attend college and thus to need an SAT score on record. We’re not certain why the number of Vance County students who were willing to take the SAT dropped so sharply last year. Perhaps the economy was a factor, as a representative of the school system suggested. The test costs about $50 to take, and it isn’t necessary for local students who intend to save money by staying at home and attending VanceGranville Community College. (VGCC will accept an SAT score for admission, but will also admit high school grads or GED-holders who pass the college’s own entrance exam, without taking the SAT at all.) And, thankfully, Vance officials seem intent upon increasing participation — not decreasing it for the sake of higher scores. Some districts around the country have been criticized for discouraging average and lower-achieving students from taking the SAT in order to boost the district’s mean score on the exam. In these times of economic hardship, more than ever it is apparent that education is key to a rewarding career and a comfortable lifestyle. We hope that the decline in local seniors taking the SAT is not a sign that local kids have lost interest in college; only a temporary dip in participation that will be erased as some of the Vance County Schools’ more recent educational initiatives — such as the Freshman Academies at Northern and Southern Vance and at the new Early College High — take hold and better prepare our youngsters for graduation and beyond.

Quotable “The truth is, being successful is hard. You won’t love every subject you study. You won’t click with every teacher. Not every homework assignment will seem completely relevant to your life right this minute. And you won’t necessarily succeed at everything the first time you try.” — President Barack Obama, in a speech to the nation’s schoolchildren.

Well, that was close. Surely, we are all relieved that at least some children were protected this week from the diabolical Barack Obama. It was touch and go there for a while after the White House announced its plan for the president to give a back-to-school address to America’s kids. They might have gotten away with it, too, but for conservative pundits and politicians who spent last week raising a ruckus about this scheme to indoctrinate our youth into the president’s socialist cult. They were able to persuade an untold number of schools to prohibit Tuesday’s speech from being shown on campus and an untold number of parents to keep their children home. By this decisive action, untold millions (thousands?) of our kids were saved from exposure to subversive sentiments like “pay attention,” “listen to your parents,” and “every single one of you has something to offer.” That mission accomplished, one wonders if conservatives will be equally energetic in rescuing kids from other things that threaten them. Our children need all the

help they can get, after all. They are coming of age in an America where, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four girls between ages 14 and 19 is infected with at least one of four dangerous Leonard sexuallytransmitted Pitts diseases Distributed by (human Cagle Cartoons papillomavirus, chlamydia, genital herpes, trichomoniasis). An era where, according to the National Center for Children in Poverty at Columbia University, more than 13 million kids live below the poverty line. An era where, according to the Education Department, despite noteworthy progress in recent years, one in four public school eighth-graders lacks basic grade level reading skills, and one in five fourthgraders can’t do the math. What’s arguably more frightening in the long view is

that they’re coming of age in an America so hyper-partisan, shrill, silly and incoherent that a pep talk to school kids — surely the most plain vanilla presidential duty this side of pardoning the turkey at Thanksgiving — gets treated like it was Osama bin Laden giving an al-Qaida recruitment speech in lower Manhattan on Sept. 11th. It is an absurd controversy, but in a nation of birthers and truthers, death panels and tea parties, absurdity has become our default setting — as has political violence, whether rhetorical or real. Last week, for goodness’ sake, we heard about a health care reform proponent “biting off the finger” of someone who disagreed with him. Meanwhile in Arizona, an alleged Christian minister made headlines preaching and praying for the president’s death. If America were a person, you’d sedate it. You might even have it committed. This is not politics, it’s a temper tantrum, a national hissy fit that calls into question — and not for the first time — whether a nation so vast and varied still can, or still wants to be, a nation.

A few days ago, a woman running for office in Pennsylvania e-mailed me about her encounter with a voter who objected to the idea of, as he put it, paying for his neighbor’s health insurance. She reminded him that to live in a society is to be interdependent. We all pay for libraries, we all pay for national defense and we all pay to school our kids. Except, he said he doesn’t want to pay to educate someone else’s kids, either. We are “not” interdependent, the man insisted. We are alone, each man in it by and for himself. You might call that view an aberration. My fear is that it is a harbinger. My fear is that we are a people stampeded by and toward political extremes, and that in our shrillness, our ignorance, our paranoia, hatefulness and fear, we dig a trench through common ground and make this nation ungovernable. If we want to save our children from anything, maybe we ought to save them from that. Leonard Pitts is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla., 33132. Readers may contact him via e-mail at lpitts@ miamiherald.com.

Letters to the Editor Health care bill too expensive, deadly to seniors To the editor: The Health Care Legislation contains too much spending outside of health care. It is a conspiracy by the Democrat congressmen to commit mass murder on the elderly, starting with persons age 60 and above with health problems. Persons 70 and older are considered worthless and will be denied health care and offered pills to go to the great beyond. If this health care reform plan is considered to be so great, why does it exempt the president and family, the gongress and the senators and their families? If approved this legislation should be integrated with only ONE Bush responded to intelligence plan and no exemptions. information that Osama Bin These people are not “gods,” Laden was determined to attack they are only hired to do a the United States. job and not to evolve into Significantly, Jones’ remarks criminal gangs. hardly ventured further to Anyone that signs on to the left than Beck’s rambling or approves this legislation commentaries swerve to the far should be prosecuted for right. But Beck’s a talk-show their participation in these host. When he goes over-themass murders. Seniors, as top and accuses Obama of a last resort, have a right to “deep-seated hatred of white protect themselves. After all, people,” as he did recently with- they are condemned to die. out offering evidence to back These Democrats approve it up, he gets bigger ratings. A of murder of the unborn (and presidential appointee would pay for it with taxpayer monget the ax. ey), now attempt to legalize But the larger significance murder of seniors, but say of Jones’ departure is what it that execution of murderers says about the conservatives is too unjust and cruel. who pushed him out. As Sam What kind of persons can Tanenhaus, a biographer of believe this? Whittaker Chambers and WilThis is not a racist letter. liam F. Buckley, writes in his When I read parts of this legnew book-length essay, “The islation, I did not see where Death of Conservatism,” the it exempted old black folks movement that turned the Refrom the rationing of health publicans into the party of ideas care and eventual death. If with Ronald Reagan’s rise has black people wish to vote for become a movement that sadly this health care reform plan, cares more about attacking fine and dandy. They have a other people and their ideas. right to do so, but I suggest Ramesh Ponnuru, a senior they read this horrific legislaeditor at the conservative tion in advance. National Review that Buckley founded, sounds similarly Bob Kingan, frustrated. “Republicans have a Henderson high degree of unity these days, which has been very helpful in opposing liberal initiatives such as the stimulus and the Democrats’ health care legislation,” he writes in the magazine’s current issue. “The downside of that unity is that it is less helpThe Daily Dispatch welful in generating new ideas, comes letters to the editor. some of which the party will Letters must be signed, probably need to retake power include the author’s city and will certainly need to exerof residence, and should cise it productively.” be limited to 300 words. In the meantime, the GOP’s Please include a telephone conservative base has legions number for verification. of talk-show pundits to fire up their hearts, if not their minds. We reserve the right to edit comments for length, E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@ clarity, libelous material, tribune.com, or write to him c/o personal attacks and poor Tribune Media Services, 2225 taste. We do not publish Kenmore Ave., Suite 114, Buffalo, anonymous letters. NY 14207.

Brain-dead mudslingers Score one for the right wing. Conservative witch hunters, notably Fox News’ Glenn Beck, are claiming victory for hounding President Obama’s green jobs czar out of office. Yet the victory also highlights a gaping deficit in America’s conservative movement. They’ve become more adept in recent years at trashing liberal ideas than at coming up with some new ones of their own. Van Jones, a San Francisco Bay-area activist for environment-friendly “green-collar” industries, resigned as the president’s special adviser for environmental jobs after weeks of mud slung up against him by Beck and other conservative media pundits. His credentials are outstanding, but these are politically polarized times. At a time when nervous parents were threatening to pull their children out of school, for example, ironically to avoid hearing President Obama speak about the value of education, the outspokenly progressive Jones hardly had a chance. At 40, Jones is a bright, charismatic organizer who came up from a small-town Tennessee childhood to graduate from Yale Law School and become a rising star in the world of environmental activism. He’s author of a New York Times best-seller “The Green Collar Economy,” and was named by Time Magazine this year as one of the “100 most influential people in the world” and by Fast Company magazine last year as one of the “12 Most Creative Minds.” Like Obama, he has a knack for reaching across lines of race, class and political parties — until now, anyway — to create jobs and help save the environment. At the center of his vision is the creation of “green collar” jobs, a phrase he popularized for jobs that can provide family-supporting wages and upward mobility to higher skills, and help save the planet, too.

“We’re asking questions progressives like but we’re giving answers that conservatives should like,” he said at last month’s National Clean Energy Summit in Las Vegas. “We’re not talking about expanding welfare, we’re talking about expanding work. We’re not talking about expanding entitlements, we’re talking about expanding enterprise and investments. ...We should be to stand Clarence able together and Page be one country on this.” Tribune Media Yes, we Services should. But while Jones was calling for “one country,” Beck and Company were digging into his background like a political campaign’s hit squad to smear Jones as a “communist-anarchist radical.” Yes, Jones dabbled in radical politics in his younger days, but that was then. Beck and Company apparently don’t think much of political redemption, at least not when it is claimed by a liberal. Most embarrassing to Jones are YouTube videos of him speaking his mind before he was appointed to his White House post. They include a well-publicized vulgarity that starts with “A” and has an “H” in the middle. He employed the A-word to describe Republicans during a February meeting. He’s apologized, but the flap made him too big a headache for the Obama White House. He also apologized for signing a petition in 2004 that called for further investigation of the Bush administration’s actions before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks — although he was hardly the only person in 2004 who wanted to know more about how

What’s your opinion?


The Daily Dispatch

Dear Abby

News From The Light Side THURSDAY Morning / Early Afternoon 9/10/09

ELECTRIC LAB, HARRISONBURG, VA.

2 WRPX

DEAR ABBY: I’m not against spontaneous cleaning (I do it myself), but the fact that the wife would rather clean than spend time with her husband tells me she’s either unable to read his signals or she just doesn’t care to be close and intimate with him. It also shows a lack of judgment, compassion and understanding on her part. If the situation were reversed and he had decided he’d rather watch sports than be with his wife, I’m sure she would have been equally upset. I don’t think the rules should be different for men and women in this regard. And yes, I am a woman. — HEATHER IN KANKAKEE, ILL.

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DEAR ABBY: The guys and I enjoy reading your column out loud to see if we agree or not with your advice. We were unanimous in our disagreement with your advice to “Still Hot and Bothered.” We would have been torqued if our wife had stayed in the shower to clean it instead of coming to bed for a good romp. We also would have showered with our wife to start the festivities early and then moved to the bedroom. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Several of the guys said Van Buren, also known as they’d have gotten into the Jeanne Phillips, and was shower and made the cleanfounded by her mother, Pauing come to a halt. There’s client line willPhillips. fill Write Dear Abby a time for cleaning, and it’s not when your husband is at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. waiting with his motor runBox 69440, Los Angeles, CA ning. — THE GUYS IN THE 90069.

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Ten years ago: A federal judge ordered an end to busing and other means of achieving racial balance in Charlotte-Mecklenburg, the North Carolina school system that had pioneered urban busing in

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Today’s Birthdays: Golfer Arnold Palmer is 80. Actor Philip Baker Hall is 78. Country singer Tommy Overstreet is 72. Actor Greg Mullavey is 70. Jazz vibraphonist Roy Ayers is 69. Singer Danny Hutton (Three Dog Night) is 67. Singer Jose Feliciano is 64. Actor Tom Ligon is 64. Actress Judy Geeson is 61. Former Canadian first lady Margaret Trudeau is 61. Political commentator Bill O’Reilly is 60. Rock musician Joe Perry (Aerosmith) is 59. Actress Amy Irving is 56. Country singer Rosie Flores is 53. Actress Kate Burton is 52. Movie director Chris Columbus is 51. Actor Colin Firth is 49. Rock singermusician David Lowery (Cracker) is 49. Pitcher Randy Johnson is 46. Rock musician Stevie D. (Buckcherry) is 43. Rock musician Robin Goodridge (Bush) is 43. Rock singer-musician Miles Zuniga (Fastball) is 43. Rapper Big Daddy Kane is 41. Movie director Guy Ritchie is 41. Actor Ryan Phillippe is 35. NBA All-Star Ben Wallace is 35. Rock musician Mikey Way (My Chemical Romance) is 29.

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NEWS KIDS

On this date: In 1846, Elias Howe received a patent for his sewing machine. In 1919, New York City welcomed home Gen. John J. Pershing and 25,000 soldiers who’d served in the U.S. First Division during World War I. In 1935, Sen. Huey P. Long, “The Kingfish” of Louisiana politics, died in Baton Rouge two days after being shot in the state Capitol. In 1963, 20 black students entered Alabama public schools following a standoff between federal authorities and Governor George C. Wallace. In 1977, convicted murderer Hamida Djandoubi, a Tunisian immigrant, became the last person to date to be executed by the guillotine in France. In 1979, four Puerto Rican nationalists imprisoned for a 1954 attack on the U.S. House of Representatives and a 1950 attempt on the life of President Harry S. Truman were freed from prison after being granted clemency by President Jimmy Carter.

One year ago: The world’s largest particle collider passed its first major tests by firing two beams of protons in opposite directions around a 17-mile ring under the Franco-Swiss border.

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Today’s Highlight: On Sept. 10, 1939, Canada declared war on Nazi Germany as Parliament acted at the behest of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King.

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Å Investigation ’ Access Extra The Ellen DeGe- Judge Judge Access Extra Å News NBC NBC 17 News at NFL NFL Football Tennessee Ti8 WNCN H’wood (N) ’ neres Show (N) Judy ’ Judy ’ H’wood News 7 (N) Kickoff tans at Pittsburgh Steelers. Jerry Springer The Tyra Banks The Tyra Banks Maury Å Simp- Family Simp- Family The Vampire Supernatural 9 WLFL Trailer-park tryst. Show ’ Å Show (N) Å sons Guy ’ sons Guy ’ Diaries “Pilot” Å ’ Å One Life to Live General Hospital Oprah Winfrey News News News ABC Jeop- Wheel- Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy 11 WTVD (N) ’ Å (N) ’ Å (N) Å News ardy! Fortune ’ Å ’Å Guthy- Paid King of MalThe Wendy Wil- Dr. Phil (N) ’ Å King of King of Two Two Bones “The End Fringe ’ (PA) Å 13 WRAZ Renker Program the Hill colm liams Show (N) Queens Queens Men Men in the Beginning” Lines Football NFL Burning Horn Inter SportsCenter NFL College Football Clemson at Georgia Tech. 31 ESPN SportsCenter Scoreboard Tennis: U.S. Open 21 ESPN2 (11:00) Tennis U.S. Open -- Men’s Quarterfinals. (Live) World Poker Air Racing ACC ACC SEC Gridiron Live Big 12 Football: From the Archives 50 FOXSP Outdoor South ClubWPT.com Life Paid Closing Money Sports P90X Motorsports Hour WEC WrekCage Sports Sports ››› “Hoosiers” (1986, Drama) 65 VS › “Catch That Kid” Å Phineas 57 DISN Phineas Phineas Phineas Phineas Suite Suite Suite Suite Phineas Suite Wizards Mon 43 NICK Sponge Sponge iCarly iCarly Drake Drake Sponge Sponge iCarly Jackson Sponge Sponge Malcolm Malcolm Lopez Lopez The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer (N) Dobbs Tonight Campbell Brown Larry King Live 29 CNN (1:00) Newsroom Newsroom (N) Studio B-Smith Your World Glenn Beck (N) Special Report FOX Report O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) 58 FNC The Live Desk CSI: Miami Å Criminal Minds The First 48 The First 48 27 A&E The Sopranos ’ American Justice Cold Case Files CSI: Miami Å Most Extreme Weird Weird Big Sting ’ Walk.-Dinosaur Animal Arm. 46 ANPL Cat Di Cat Di Meerkat Meerkat Jeff Corwin 52 BET Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live (Live) “Nora’s Hair Salon” (2004) Å 72 BRAVO Next Top Model Next Top Model Next Top Model Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl De Nat. Deadliest 30 DISC Wrecks to Riches Wrecks to Riches Wrecks to Riches Cash Cash Cash Cash Made Made De Gilmore Girls ’ My Wife My Wife 70s ›› “Brown Sugar” (2002) Taye Diggs. Å 28 FAM Sabrina Sabrina FullHse FullHse What I 10 Boy Big Bite Ultimate Cooking Italian Con Home Cooking Minute Challenge Iron Chef Am. Iron Chef Am. 59 FOOD Lee Bernie Bernie Malcolm Malcolm Bernie Bernie 70s 70s ›› “First Daughter” (2004) ›› “Maid in Manhattan” (2002) 71 FX Little House Little House MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH Touched-Angel Touched-Angel 73 HALL Little House MonsterQuest 56 HIST Modern Marvels Modern Marvels American Eats American Eats Modern Marvels Modern Marvels MonsterQuest Housewives Housewives Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Medium Å Medium Å Project Runway 33 LIFE Wife Swap Å Grand Canyon Disaster Lab Naked Science Howard Hughes Inside the Vietnam War 70 NGEO Dog Whisperer Repo Men 40 SPIKE CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn TNA Wrestling ’ Jake 2.0 Å Star Trek: Ent. Stargate Atlantis Stargate SG-1 ’ “Beyond Loch Ness” (2008) Å “Deep Blue Sea” 49 SYFY Jake 2.0 Å Hagee Rod P. Praise the Lord Å Good Minis Behind David J. Winning Your 6 TBN Life To Hickey The 700 Club Just Yes Yes King King Ray Ray Ray Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends Friends Friends 34 TBS Just Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å CSI: NY ’ Å CSI: NY ’ Å “Tokyo Drift” 26 TNT Cold Case Å Mastrm Mastrm Speed Speed Speed Speed Police Videos Cops Cops Vaca Vaca World’s Dumb 44 TRUTV Best Defense Gunsmoke Å Bonanza Å Bonanza Å Little House Hillbil Hillbil Married Married Rose Rose 54 TVL Gunsmoke Å Burn Notice Royal Pains NCIS ’ Å NCIS ’ Å NCIS “Boxed In” NCIS ’ Å Burn Notice 25 USA Royal Pains WWE Superstars Am. Gladiators 23 WGN Bewitch Bewitch Jeannie Jeannie Cosby Cosby Cheers Cheers Becker Becker Home Videos ››› “Pale Rider” (1985) Clint Eastwood. ›› “Broken Trail” (2006) Å 38 AMC “In Line of Fire” ››› “Two Mules for Sister Sara” (1970) “Augusta, Gone” (2006, Drama) Å “Someone to Love Me” “Natalee Holloway” (2009) Å 47 LMN “Fantasia Barrino Story” “Challenge to Lassie” ›› “Flipper” (1963) (:45) “Flipper’s New Adventure” Parade ›››› “The Thief of Bagdad” 67 TCM Sun

the United States. Five years ago: CBS News vigorously defended its report about President George W. Bush’s Air National Guard service, with anchor Dan Rather saying broadcast memos questioned by forensic experts came from “what we consider to be solid sources.”

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Today is Thursday, Sept. 10, the 253rd day of 2009. There are 112 days left in the year.

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HomeC- Paid Baptist Paid Through- Life-Ro- Naviga- Levitt Paid True Paid Paid LifeAb Circle Paid Paid are Program Church Program Bible bison tor ’ Program Vine Program Program style Pro Program Program Chris- Pastor Wimzies Paid Paid Cricut Life Chroni- Family Deal or The Bonnie Hunt The People’s Judge Jeanine tian Ctr Andy House Program Program Exp. Today cles Feud ’ No Deal Show (N) Å Court Å Pirro (N) Å Desti- GED Word- Martha Curious Sid the Super Dino- Sesame Street Å Clifford- Dragon Word- Electric Super Barneynos Girl Speaks George Science Why! saur (DVS) Red Tales World Comp Why! Friends WRAL-TV 5 The Early Show Rachel Zoe; deco- Dr. Phil (N) ’ Å The Doctors The Price Is News WRAL The Bold Morning News (N) rating small spaces; tools. (N) Å (N) Å Right (N) Å 12:30 Insider ’ NBC 17 Today at Today Travel deals; Martina McBride; bras; John McEnroe. (N) ’ Å Guthy- Guthy- Daytime Å Days of our Lives 6:00AM (N) Renker Renker (N) ’ Å Gospel Believer Paid Busy Back Paid Debt Paid The Steve Wilkos Maury Paternity Jerry Springer Cops Å CheatTruth Voice Program World Pain Program Cures Program Show ’ Å results. Å ’Å ers ’ News Good Morning America (N) Å Live With Regis Rachael Ray (N) The View (N) ’ Å Eyew. Million- All My Children and Kelly (N) ’ ’ Å News aire (N) ’ Å Sum- Busi- WRAL’s 7am WRAL’s 8am Judge Mathis (N) Judge Mathis Judge Judge Cosby Cosby The 700 Club merfield ness News on Fox50 News on Fox50 ’ Å ’Å Hatchett Hatchett Show Show (N) Å SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter Mike and Mike in the Morning With Mike Golic and Mike Greenberg. Å ESPN First Take Tennis U.S. Open -- Men’s Quarterfinals. (Live) Team Final Final Final Final Money Money Medi Paid Paid ACC Hunter Nuts Ship Outside Out Paid Paid Parker Outside Paid Guns Paid Parker Outdoor P90X White Hunting Paid Monster Strate Outside Phineas Movers Handy Mickey Agent Mickey Handy Movers Handy Ein Tigger Charlie “Fox & Hound 2” Phineas Phineas Family Barn Barn Sponge Sponge Back Dora Dora Go Go Max Max Fresh Fresh Dora Ni Hao American Morning (N) Å Newsroom (N) Newsroom (N) Newsroom (N) FOX and Friends (N) America’s Newsroom (N) Happening Now (N) The Live Desk Millions Detox Crossing Jordan The Sopranos ’ American Justice Cold Case Files CSI: Miami Å CSI: Miami Å Criminal Minds Cham Cham Funniest Animals Pet Star Å Me or Me or Good Good Underdog Animal Police Animal Police BET Inspiration Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Smart Cricut WEN Paid Grill The West Wing The West Wing Next Top Model Next Top Model Next Top Model Next Top Model Baby Profits Insanity Robison Meyer Paid Cash Cash Cash Cash Rides ’ Å Rides “Core” ’ Rides ’ Å Meyer TriVita Sister Sister Sabrina Sabrina Step 700 The 700 Club (N) Gilmore Girls ’ FullHse FullHse My Wife My Wife Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Food Emeril Live Enter Quick Cooking Italian Minute Con Paid GRC Malcolm Malcolm › “Teaching Mrs. Tingle” (1999) ››› “The Straight Story” (1999) Spin Spin 70s 70s Paid Children Paid Steam Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden “Daniel’s Daughter” (2008) Å Paid Profits The Most Å Modern Marvels Modern Marvels American Eats American Eats Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Paid Paid Balanc Married Less Will Frasier Frasier Reba Reba Reba Reba Wife Swap Å Wife Swap Å Paid Slim in Cricut Paid Paid Paid Naked Science Naked Science Naked Science Naked Science Naked Science Paid Paid Insanity Paid P90X Money CSI: NY ’ Å CSI: NY ’ Å CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn Profits Cricut P90X Money Jake 2.0 Å Jake 2.0 Å Jake 2.0 Å Jake 2.0 Å Jake 2.0 Å Jake 2.0 Å Differ God Your White Chang Meyer Chang Hagee Rod P. Your Believ Majesty Cam M.Bar Behind All Married Married Saved Saved Saved Saved Fresh Fresh ››› “Clueless” (1995) Å Home Home Home Home Angel ’ Å Angel ’ Å Charmed Å Charmed Å Charmed Å ER “Witch Hunt” Las Vegas Å Las Vegas Å Paid Comfort Paid Paid Paid Thinner Ashleigh Banfield: Open Court Jack Ford: Courtside Best Defense Paid Paid Money mag Paid Paid Good Good Good Good Sanford Sanford AllFam Leave Hillbil Hillbil “Hard Luck” (2006) Wesley Snipes. ››› “City by the Sea” (2002) Å ››› “Breach” (2007) Chris Cooper. Å Burn Notice Swag Meyer Creflo Believ Home Videos 7th Heaven ’ Matlock Å Heat of Night Nash Bridges ’ Midday News ››› “Niagara” (1953) Å ›› “Black Widow” (1987) Å (:15) ›› “Reign of Fire” (2002) (:15) ››› “In the Line of Fire” ›› “True Crime” (1995) Å “Moment of Truth: Stalking Back” “Moment of Truth” “Defending Our Kids: Julie” (5:45) ››› “Old Yeller” ›› “Son of Lassie” (:15) ›› “Courage of Lassie” ››› “Hills of Home” (:45) “The Sun Comes Up”

THURSDAY Afternoon / Evening

Today In History By The Associated Press

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DEAR ABBY: Men just don’t get it! Women don’t have on/off switches like men do. Atmosphere is very important for us. My husband enjoys “getting close” in the mornings, too -- but I usually wake up with my to-do list running in my head. It is very difficult for me to get in the mood when there’s work to be done. Obviously, the wife in that letter wasn’t ready to play. Instead of getting upset, her husband should have gotten creative and helped to set her mood. —BRENDA IN FORT WORTH

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DEAR ABBY: It appears that these days couples never have time for each other. Instead, they have their “individual” priorities before their “married” priorities. When you compare the life expectancy of women vs. men, that woman will probably have years to clean the shower by herself without worrying about her mate. — KEN IN SULPHUR, LA.

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NEWS KIDS

DEAR ABBY: At the age of 72, having had two spouses over the years, I need to put in my two cents regarding the letter from “Still Hot and Bothered in Georgia” (July 8). I have learned that some women won’t say “no!” to a husband’s amorous advances, especially in the morning. But they will try to distract him by scrubbing the tub, spotting a spider on the wall, feeding the cat or saying she forgot to fold the laundry and has to do it before it wrinkles. Whether it’s conscious or unconscious, they do it to cool their husbands off on a “hot” morning. “Still Hot and Bothered” may Dear need to give some Abby thought to Universal Press what turns Syndicate his wife on or off -- especially the timing. After all, we are from Mars and they are from Venus. — ALEX IN BLUE BELL, PA. DEAR ALEX: I agree that timing is important. My office was showered with responses from readers who were steamed over my response to that letter. Read on:

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NCIS “Sub Rosa” Durham County Paid Paid Make Money Inspiration Ministry Campmeeting Juve- Keep It Paid News2 WRPX ’ Å ’Å Program Program Now ’ David Cerullo. ’ non ’ Cool ’ Program Watch Bernie My Wife Living One on Half & Accord- George Comics Trivial George One on South Judge Jeanine Shepherd’s 3 WRDC Mac Single One ’ Half ’ ing-Jim Lopez Un. Pursuit Lopez One ’ Park Pirro Å Chapel ’ Great Lodges- World Charlie Rose (N) Tavis North C. Black P.O.V. “English Surgeon” Parks French French English English 4 WUNC Parks News ’ Å Smiley Now Issues ’ Å Action Action Comp. Comp. (:01) The Mental- News Late Show With Late Late Show- Inside News (:42) Up to the Minute (N) ’ CBS WRAL 5am News 5 WRAL ist ’ Å David Letterman Craig Ferguson Edition News (N) NFL Football Tennessee Ti- News Tonight Show- Late Night With Last (:35) Poker After Late Night With Early NBC 17 Today at 8 WNCN tans at Pittsburgh Steelers. Conan O’Brien Jimmy Fallon (N) Call Dark (N) Å Jimmy Fallon ’ Today 5:00AM (N) News (:35) RayRay(12:05) ’70s (:05) Paid (:05) (:32) Friends Sex and Law & Order: HanJoyce 9 WLFL at 10 TMZ (N) mond mond Friends Show Scrubs Program Frasier Frasier Å the City Criminal Intent cock Meyer (:02) Private News Night- (12:06) Jimmy (:06) Oprah Ent. News (:06) ABC World News America News News 11 WTVD Practice ’ Å line (N) Kimmel Live (N) Winfrey Å Studios Now (N) Å This News Enter- King of (:35) Just (:35) (:05) Paid Paid (:35) News TBA TBA Debt Juicing Paid 13 WRAZ tain the Hill Seinfeld Shoot Seinfeld Cribs Program Program Cribs Cures Mach Program NFL Base SportsCenter SportsCenter College Football SportsCenter 31 ESPN Football SportsCenter (Live) Å World Series SportsNation NAS Year Year Year NHRA Drag Racing: U.S. Nationals Base Base 21 ESPN2 Tennis Final Base Final Best Damn 50 Final Final Big 12 Football: From the Archives Best Damn 100 Out Hunt 50 FOXSP ACC Spo Sports ››› “Hoosiers” (1986, Drama) Cycling Spo Sports Sports Paid Fast White Outside Closing Fishing 65 VS Wizards Raven Life De Cory Replace Kim Em Dragon Proud Whis Recess Mer Lilo Lilo 57 DISN Phineas Mon 43 NICK Chris Chris Nanny Nanny Malcolm Malcolm Lopez Lopez Chris Chris Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Larry King Live Cooper 360 Cooper 360 Larry King Live Dobbs Tonight Newsroom 29 CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Å O’Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record Glenn Beck Red Eye Special Report O’Reilly Factor 58 FNC 9/11: Timeline Crime 360 (N) The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 Crime 360 Å Paid Paid Houses Ab Se 27 A&E The First 48 Walk.-Dinosaur Animal Arm. Animal Cops Big Sting Å Walk.-Dinosaur Animal Arm. Animal Cops 46 ANPL Animal Cops Food-Jay-Z Game Game W. Williams The Deal Å BET Inspiration 52 BET Game Game W. Williams Top Chef Atlanta Paid Fore Detox Thinner 72 BRAVO Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Watch Housewives-Atl Rachel Zoe De Nat. Deadliest I Was Bitten ’ A Haunting Å Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Comfort 30 DISC I Was Bitten (N) De The 700 Club (N) Whose? Whose? Paid Thinner Paid Millions The 700 Club (N) Paid P90X Prince Life To 28 FAM Home Videos Cakes Cakes Good Unwrap Iron Chef Am. Party Good Paid Paid 59 FOOD Cakes Cakes Good Unwrap Iron Chef Am. ›› “Maid in Manhattan” (2002) 70s 70s 70s 70s Paid Paid Comfort Millions Paid Paid Paid Paid 71 FX Paid Paid Paid Paid 73 HALL Touched-Angel Golden Golden Golden Golden Cheers Cheers Cheers Cheers Steam Paid Marked Å MonsterQuest MonsterQuest MonsterQuest Marked Å Paid Paid Joint Paid 56 HIST MonsterQuest Paid Baby Thinner Paid Paid Paid 33 LIFE Project Runway Models Project Runway Models Project Runway Models Paid Inside the Vietnam War Howard Hughes Deadly Dozen Relentless Enemies 70 NGEO Vietnam War MAN Game MAN MAN TNA Wrestling ’ Å Paid Paid Paid Paid 40 SPIKE TNA Wrestling ’ Surv. Disaster Lost ’ Å The X-Files ’ “Alien Abduction” (2005) Mark Elias Doctor Who ’ 49 SYFY “Deep Blue Sea” “Kraken: Tentacles of the Deep” Celeb Love Jeffrey Chang Reasn-Remem. National Cathedral Prayer Ron E.V. Hill Mira 6 TBN Praise the Lord Å Sex & Sex & (:10) ›› “The Pallbearer” (1996) Bloop Harvey Married Married Married Married 34 TBS ›› “Must Love Dogs” (2005) “Fast and Furious-Drift” CSI: NY ’ Å Cold Case Å Cold Case Å Without a Trace Without a Trace 26 TNT “Tokyo Drift” Vaca Vaca World’s Dumb Speed Speed Black Gold The Investigators Foren Paid 44 TRUTV Speed Speed Black Gold Rose Rose Rose Rose Cosby Cosby 3’s Co. 3’s Co. MASH MASH 54 TVL Rose Rose Rose Rose Roseanne Å Monk Å Burn Notice Royal Pains “Hard Luck” (2006) Wesley Snipes. Law Order: CI Fast Paid 25 USA Royal Pains WWE Superstars Scrubs Scrubs Star Trek Gen. Steve Wilkos Paid Paid Bob & Tom RENO Extenze 23 WGN WGN News ›› “The Last Hard Men” (1976) (:15) ››› “Three Kings” (1999, War) Å (:45) › “Gold Raiders” 38 AMC (8:00) ›› “Broken Trail” (2006) “Natalee Holloway” (2009) Å ›› “Haunting Sarah” (2005) Å (3:50) “First Born” (2007) Å 47 LMN “Love’s Deadly Triangle” ›› “Song of India” “The End of the River” ››› “Jungle Book” (:45) “Five Came Back” 67 TCM ››› “Drums” (1938) Sabu.


8A • THE DAILY DISPATCH • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2009

Life Line Outreach, Inc. “A Safe Place To Be”

ACTS* Facts

Boys & Girls Clubs of North Central North Carolina

P.O. Box 1632 • Henderson, NC 27536

Area Christians Together in Service

* The Kitchen Staff and volunteers at ACTS House served 260 meals.

943-O W. Andrews Ave. Henderson, NC 27536

* The ACTS Staff gave out 9 boxes of groceries to a total of 7 families. * Hearts Haven served as a refuge for 3 women and 7 children.

Phone: (252) 430-1871

* The Court Advocacy Program gave legal assistance to 42 victims.

The Boys & Girls Clubs of North Central North Carolina celebrates

Weekly Statistics

“Day for Kids”

We sheltered 13 single women, 9 mothers and 13 children for a total of 41 residents, and served 735 meals.

To support this important Christian Ministry send donations to ACTS • 305 S. Chestnut St. • Henderson, NC 27536 For additional information or to volunteer your time or services, contact Melvin Green, Executive Director @ (252) 492-8231

Please join us for food, fun, and games.

Saturday, September 12, 2009 • 10am-12pm The Clubs have an immediate need for new or gently used board games. Your support with donations will be appreciated. For additional information please call (252) 430-1781.

MeaT DeparTMenT boneless

2

2

Lb.

grOunD EYE FresH DaiLY ROUND

TOp sirLOin sTeaks

TOp rOunD sTeaks

LOnDOn brOiL

79 $

$

boneless boneless

boneless

TOp rOunD rOasTs

We reserVe THe rigHT TO seLL CHeaper Than The advertised price!

2

89 $ Lb.

Lb.

FaMiLY paCk

boneless

4

99 $

peaches

59

$1.29 Lb.

Lb.

boneless

Lb.

Lb.

Lb.

Our Frying FaMiLY paCk Chickens and CHiCken Chicken Parts are Delivered THigHs FRESH, PACKED IN ICE and NEVER FROZEN! Lb.

FaMiLY paCk

FaMiLY paCk

$

boneless

The Supply Line Country Market Meat Department is staffed by 5 Experienced Meat Cutters. There will always be someone there to help you with any special needs you might have. Don’t hesitate to ask if you need assistance.

pOrk rOasTs

3

$

29 Lb.

Lb. Fresh

pOrk piCniCs

1

$

3 Lb. bag

$2.89

Yukon gold potatoes

.39¢ Lb.

20 Lb. bag $3.69

California Valencia Oranges

red potatoes

new Crop

Mountain grown gala or rome apples 3 Lb. bag

20 Lb. bag $4.99

$2.89

White potatoes

Medium Yellow Onions

10 Lb. bag $2.89

scuppernong grapes

red potatoes

3 Lb. bag

10 Lb. bag $2.99

$2.89 Lb.

MarkeT sTYLe sausage

$1.69

YukOn gOLD pOTaTOes (b size) black Muscadine 10 Lb. bag $1.99 grapes

$2.89 Lb.

79 Lb.

Homegrown Tomatoes

.89¢ Lb.

all potato prices subject to product availability.

Most of our Produce for this weekend will be purchased on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday - too late for this ad. You’ll just have to stop by to see what exciting, money saving buys we’ve made for you this week.

FRESH MEATS - CUT and PACKAGED IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT FROZEN BULK PRODUCT DISPLAYED IN A 40 foot long SELF SERVICE FREEZER

garDen MuMs

(red Delicious, golden Delicious, Fugi, granny smith)

20 Lb. bag $4.49

4 Lb. bag $3.69

Lb. Fresh

1

5 Lb. bag

Homegrown Cabbage

19

19 $ Lb.

Washington state apples

Clementines

$1.19 Lb.

1 79 1 ¢ $

09

49¢ Lb.

$3.95 Homegrown Yellow or russet potatoes Zucchini squash 10 Lb. bag $2.49

CHiCken Leg CHiCken QuarTers DruMsTiCks

Homegrown Medium sweet potatoes

While Supplies Last!

.89¢ Lb.

3 79 $ 99 $ 59 $ 29 2 2 2 3 Lb. Lb.

On a First Come First serve basis

Homegrown snaps

bOTTOM assOrTeD COunTrY ROASTS pOrk grOunD CHuCk Or rOunD sTYLe grOunD rOunD $ 29 sTeaks CHOps pOrk ribs

$

super bargains

Large

(Clearseed)

Introducing a New Line of goodness grows in north Carolina products — from D’Vine Foods - a division of Taylor Products at Lu Mil Vineyard. This week since it’s Muscadine Season we’re featuring their delicious...

8 inch & 10 inch

• Kickin Muscadine Pepper Jelly

Fall silks Wreaths, bushes, and arrangements

• Muscadine Wine Jelly • Muscadine Syrup

• Muscadine Preserves • Muscadine Salsa

• Muscadine Jelly (No Sugar Added)

• Muscadine Vinaigrette

FrOM THe FreeZer

Vegetables Freshly prepared - Homemade Freshly prepared - Homemade regular Chicken salad pepper & broccoli pasta Made using only the Tender White Meat pulled From Freshly Cooked Chicken Breasts, Mayonnaise, Celery, Pickle Relish, and White Pepper.

6

$ 99 Lb.

5

$

Made using Shell Pasta, Fresh Broccoli, Red, Green & Yellow Peppers, and Peppercorn Parmesan Dressing.

09 Lb

Freshly prepared - Homemade Freshly prepared - Homemade garden pasta salad broccoli salad Made using Rotini Pasta, Italian Dressing, Salad Supreme Seasoning, Banjo Ham, Carrots, Cucumbers, Tomatoes, and Cheddar & Jack Cheeses.

5

$

99 Lb.

Made using Fresh Broccoli, Red Onions, Raisins, Lemon Juice, Mayonnaise, and Spices.

4

$

19 Lb.

Need a meal in a hurry? You’ll find the Hot Entrees, Vegetables and Casseroles prepared in the Country Market Kitchen are displayed in our Hot Foods Case are extremely delicious.

We Have Fresh Macaroon Coconut in the Deli Refrigerated Case.

The salads and hot foods you see in our deli counters are prepared fresh daily in the Country Market Kitchen.

summer Harvest® silver Queen White Corn

$34.99 / 20 lb. Case 3

In 20 lb (Bulk) Boxes Other bulk Frozen Vegetables also available in:

1 lb. bags - $2.85 each 1.5 lb. bags - $4.35 each

The Country Market Lunch Counter

(Freshly Prepared Foods - Ready To Go) All of our Lunch Counter selections are Freshly Prepared in the Country Market Kitchen or Deli using only Fresh Ingredients.

Chef & Combination salad plates also available

This Week’s Friday Only Special will be This Week’s Saturday Only Special will be

Freshly prepared Homemade Chicken Casserole

6

$

Made using Freshly Cooked Chicken breasts, red peppers, red Onions, Cream of Mushroom soup, Milk, Wild rice garden blend, Cheddar & Jack Cheese blend, salt, pepper, & spices.

85 Lb.

Whole bonesucking® barbecue Chickens slow roasted with Olive Oil, Thyme, Lemon pepper seasoning, and bonesucking® bbQ sauce.

739

$

eaCH

Freshly Cooked Macaroni & Cheese

Freshly Cooked broccoli Casserole

elbow Macaroni, Water, skim Milk, Margarine, Cheddar Cheese, american Cheese, Vegetable Oil, salt, sugar, and spices.

broccoli, Water, american Cheese, bread Crumbs, swiss Cheese, Cream, salt, butter and spices.


CMYK

Section B Thursday, September 10, 2009

Southern soccer edges Bunn 1-0 From STAFF REPORTS

Southern Vance’s soccer team traveled to Bunn Wednesday and defeated the Wildcats 1-0. Michael Lopez scored the lone goal for the Raiders in the 15th minute on an assist from Eder Burgara. Southern improves to 2-0 on the season. The next game for the Raiders is scheduled for Monday, when Louisburg comes to town.

Sports

Jeter ties Gehrig Derek Jeter gets historic hit in Yankees’ win

Page 3B

Northern netters win first conference match From STAFF REPORTS

Northern Vance tennis won their first Carolina 3A Conference match of the season Wednesday. They downed Orange 6-3. The Vikings won four singles matches before winning two of three in doubles competition. Mary Griffin lost a tight match against Orange’s Ashley Morrison, 7-5, 4-6, 8-10. Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE Northern improves to 4-0 (1-0) under new coach Jeff Arthurs. Northern Vance’s Sierra Hanks prepares to hit a backhand return during the The Vikings will play at Kerrfirst set of her first seed singles match against Orange Wednesday. To view Vance Friday at 4 p.m. or purchase photos, visit us on the Web at www.hendersondispatch.com.

Defending champ Steelers open with Titans tonight

From STAFF REPORTS

Southern Vance was defeated for the second straight day Wednesday, falling in four sets (13-25, 16-25, 25-19, 20-25) at Louisburg. Shauna Terry had 18 kills, and Tremanisha Taylor had 13 kills. Julia Sumner had 30 assists. Morgan Adcock had 28 digs. Southern (3-5) will host McMichael Saturday at noon.

By ALAN ROBINSON AP Sports Writer

his son, and offers were on the table from Wingate, Methodist and Pfeiffer. Gardner-Webb was chosen because it was Division I, but the fact that most of their scheduled opponents are close in proximity was also a factor in Ryan’s decision. The Runnin’ Bulldogs play in the Big South Conference with Liberty, Coastal Carolina, VMI, UNC Asheville and High Point, among others. Webb baseball coach Jeff Tate praised Ryan. “I’m as proud of him as I have been of any kid in my high

PITTSBURGH — The stomping their Terrible Towel took on the Tennessee Titans’ sideline last December was nothing compared to the trampling the Pittsburgh Steelers took on the field. The Titans were Steelerslike in the way they manhandled Pittsburgh up front, hurried Ben Roethlisberger into mistakes, and were more physical. Tennessee’s 31-14 victory on Dec. 21 was Pittsburgh’s only loss in its final 10 games, and it made fans of both teams eager for the rematch. It never took place — until now. The Titans and Steelers, teams that always stay in character amid the constant changes that swirl around them in the NFL, open the new season Thursday night by playing the game that was anticipated in January. The Steelers cooperated — they won the Super Bowl — but the Titans were derailed by Baltimore in the divisional round, and the Ravens then lost to Pittsburgh. The Titans started 10-0, finished 13-3 and have spent the last seven-plus months pondering how their season — and perhaps the Super Bowl — got away from them. To the Steelers, the most indelible image of that Titans rout was running back LenDale White and several teammates tromping on Terrible Towels. The sideline stomp has been replayed countless times

Please see ALLEN, page 3B

Please see KICKOFF, page 3B

KVA cross country competes in first conference meet Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE

From STAFF REPORTS

J.F. Webb’s Ryan Allen prepares to apply the tag in this file photo from an April game with Northern Vance. The Warrior senior verbally committed to Gardner-Webb this weekend.

From Webb to Gardner-Webb Warrior senior verbally commits to Division I college By ERIC ROBINSON Dispatch Sports Editor

He may not be as tall as most major leaguers, but Ryan Allen knows the game of baseball. At five-foot-seven and 130 pounds, Allen has been clocked at 86 mph on the gun. He was a key contributor during the best season for J.F. Webb baseball in recent history. The Warrior junior has not gone unnoticed by college scouts. During a visit to Boiling Springs this past weekend, Allen verbally committed to play baseball at Gardner-Webb next year. Allen said he was happy to make the decision heading into

his final year of high school. “It felt good because I get to know where I’m going before my senior year,” he said. Allen visited the school’s campus to attend a camp last December. After Gardner-Webb scouts saw him play in the State Games this summer, he received a call on July 1 — the first day a recruit could be contacted via telephone. Allen’s father, Raymond, said the school kept in contact and tried to schedule a visit. “They really liked him,” he said. Raymond said UNC Charlotte, UNC Wilmington and Campbell expressed interest in

Spartan netters fall to O’Neal

Dwyer vs. Spiller: Enticing prime-time matchup tonight

From STAFF REPORTS

Kerr-Vance’s tennis team traveled to Southern Pines and was defeated by O’Neal 6-3 Tuesday. KVA (1-3) hosts Northern Vance at 4 p.m. Friday.

By PAUL NEWBERRY AP Sports Writer

KERR-VANCE 6, O’NEAL 3 Singles n No. 1 — O’Neal’s Brianna Ek def. Emily Adkins 6-1, 6-1 n No. 2 — O’Neal’s Katie Jenkins def. Elizabeth Hill 6-3, 6-3 n No. 3 — O’Neal’s Amelia Schirmer def. Morgan Watkins 6-3, 6-3 n No. 4 — KVA’s Meredith Freeman def. Virginia Scarpa 7-5, 6-2 n No. 5 — KVA’s Winnie Irvin def. Mary Garner 6-3, 6-2 n No. 6 — O’Neal’s Victoria Scarpa def. Alexandra Gwynn 6-1, 6-3 Doubles n No. 1 — O’Neal’s Ek and Jenkins def. Adkins and Hill 8-1 n No. 2 — KVA’s Freeman and Gwynn def. Victoria Scarpa and Virginia Scarpa 8-3 n No. 3 — O’Neal’s Schirmer and Garner def. Watkins and Catherine Perry 8-3

Doubles n No. 1 — NV’s Hanks and Hughes def. Vaughun and Bertam 8-4 n No. 2 — NV’s Copley and Aycock def. Sniddy and Young 8-2 n No. 3 — Orange’s Morrison and Cantagallo def. Baskett and Mary Oakley 8-6

NFL kicks off

Raider volleyball falls to Louisburg

Kerr-Vance’s cross country team competed in their first Eastern Plains Independent Conference meet Wednesday at the campus of Rocky Mount Academy. The KVA boys finished third with a score of 71, behind St. David’s (33), Cary Christian (44), and ahead of Arendell Parrott (105). Rocky Mount didn’t have a boys team. For the girls, Cary Christian won with a score of 23, followed by St. David’s (39), Rocky Mount (80) and Arendell Parrott (94). KVA does not have enough girls to fill a team. John Allen was the first Spartan finisher. His time of 19:08 was good enough for sixth overall. Devonne Smith (20:24, 10th overall), Cam Dickerson (21:30, 17th), Jake Dorrance (21:33, 18th) and Justin Commee (21:47, 20th) round out the top five for KVA.

N. VANCE 6, ORANGE 3 Singles n No. 1 — NV’s Sierra Hanks def. Lynzy Vaughun 6-2, 6-1 n No. 2 — Orange’s Taylor Bertam def. Alex Hughes 7-5, 6-4 n No. 3 — NV’s Laura Copley def. Kayla Sniddey 6-4, 6-0 n No. 4 — NV’s Amelia Aycock de. Kasey Young 6-2, 6-4 n No. 5 — Orange’s Ashley Morrison def. Mary Griffin 5-7, 6-4, 10-8 n No. 6 — NV’s Amy Baskett def. Danielle Cantagallo 6-4, 6-1

AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain

Clemson’s C.J. Spiller runs for a 96-yard kick off return for a touchdown during the first quarter of their game against Middle Tennessee State Saturday. The Tigers will play Georgia Tech tonight.

ATLANTA — Jonathan Dwyer wishes he was a little more agile, like Clemson’s C.J. Spiller. “When he has the ball in his hands, you better keep your eyes open because he might be down the field if you make one blink,” Dwyer said. “Any time he touches the ball, it’s going to be a show.” Not that Dwyer is any slouch himself. Georgia Tech’s junior running back is the reigning Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year, and he broke off a 74-yard touchdown run the first time he touched the ball this season. Both Dwyer and Spiller are likely to put on quite a show

when the No. 15 Yellow Jackets (1-0) host the Tigers (1-0) on Thursday night in the ACC opener for both schools. Spiller had one of the best games of his career against Georgia Tech as a freshman in 2006, becoming the only player in Clemson history to have a 50yard touchdown run AND a 50yard scoring catch in the same game. Most remember the pass play, which was nothing more than a short throw he turned into something special. Spiller made two guys miss along the sideline and scampered all the way to the end zone, sparking the Tigers to a 31-7 victory. “We just had a simple curl play called,” coach Dabo SwinPlease see MATCHUP, page 2B


2B

Sports

The Daily Dispatch

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Two-minute drill Rams win, Cougars lose in football openers From STAFF REPORTS

Local Sports AAU football opens season Saturday The Carolina Blackhawks and Henderson Panthers AAU football teams will play their first games of the season Saturday in Orange County, Va. against the GSBC Spirits of Petersburg. The local AAU teams will travel to Manassas, Va. in week two, and to Fredricksburg in week three. The home opener for the local teams will be October 3 in Henderson against Petersburg. For more information, contact the local director of AAU football operations, Joe Brodie, at (252) 4321020 or (252) 433-6426.

NBA Iverson tweets he’s going to Memphis MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Allen Iverson will be a fan attraction for the Memphis Grizzlies — from the very beginning. The Grizzlies confirmed Wednesday they have agreed in principle to a contract with Iverson, hours after the guard tweeted he was heading to Memphis. And the team scheduled a Thursday news conference open to the public at FedExForum. Iverson would become the highest profile player ever to put on a Grizzlies’ uniform. “We anticipate signing him to a contract very soon,” Grizzlies general manager Chris Wallace said. Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley wants Iverson to provide a big-name attraction for a team that struggled to attract fans to the plush FedExForum to watch a young team rebuilding through the draft. Iverson, the first overall draft pick in 1996 and the league MVP in 2001, can provide valuable minutes and scoring off the bench needed by a franchise that went 24-58 and tied for the fifth-worst record in the NBA last season.

NFL Despite offseason, Peppers voted captain CHARLOTTE (AP) — His Carolina Panthers teammates insisted defensive end Julius Peppers’ offseason efforts to leave town hadn’t affected his standing in the locker room. On Wednesday they proved it through the ballot box, voting Peppers a defensive team captain. “It’s a tribute to what he has done here. He’s been the face of the defense for what, eight years now,” said linebacker Jon Beason, voted the other defensive captain. “I think guys know that he’s a quiet leader, but he takes care of his job. I think looking at it, making him team captain is saying, ’Look, we expect you to play like that.”’ Peppers had a career-high 14 1/2 sacks last season in the final year of his contract. He soon pleaded with the Panthers to let him leave in free agency. He said he had “maxed out” in Carolina and wanted to play outside linebacker in a 3-4 defense. The Panthers still placed the franchise tag on him, which included a one-year deal for an NFL-high $16.7 million. After skipping all offseason workouts, Peppers finally signed the tender. He showed up to training camp on time and hasn’t missed a practice while mostly avoiding reporters. “I think his teammates know him a lot better than maybe the media does,” coach John Fox said. “I think it says a lot about who he really is when your teammates vote you a captain.”

Local Preps Thursday, Sept. 10 Cross Country n J.F. Webb at Franklinton 4 p.m. Tennis Webb at South Granville 4 p.m. n Warren County at Bunn 4 p.m. Volleyball-HS n Warren County at North Johnston 5:30 p.m. n J.F. Webb at Bartlett Yancey 6 p.m. n Northern Vance at Louisburg 6 p.m. n J.F.

JV Football at J.F. Webb 6 p.m. Cedar Ridge at Southern

n Bunn

Vance 6:30 p.m. n Weldon at Warren County 7 p.m. n Northern Vance at South Granville TBA JV Soccer at Roxboro Community 4 p.m.

n Kerr-Vance

JV Volleyball-HS Christian at Kerr-Vance 4 p.m. n Warren County at North Johnston 4:30 p.m. n Roxboro Community at Southern Vance 5 p.m. n J.F. Webb at Bartlett Yancey 5 p.m. n Northern Vance at Louisburg 5 p.m. n Lighthouse

Sports on TV Thursday, Sept. 10 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7:30 p.m. n ESPN — Clemson at Georgia Tech

pionship, first round, at Lemont, Ill. 6:30 p.m. n TGC — Nationwide Tour, Utah Championship, first round, at Sandy, Utah (same-day tape)

CYCLING 1 a.m. n VERSUS — Tour of Missouri, fourth stage, St. James to Jefferson City, Mo. (delayed tape)

NFL FOOTBALL 8 p.m. n NBC — Tennessee at Pittsburgh

GOLF 9 a.m. n TGC — European PGA Tour, Mercedes-Benz Championship, first round, at Cologne, Germany 3 p.m. n TGC — PGA Tour, BMW Cham-

TENNIS 11 a.m. n ESPN2 — U.S. Open, men’s quarterfinals, at New York 7 p.m. n ESPN2 — U.S. Open, men’s quarterfinals and mixed doubles championship match, at New York

The Henderson Middle School football team won their season opener Wednesday, while the Eaton Johnson Cougars suffered a loss. The Rams shut out Hawley 22-0, led offensively by Demetrius

Alexander’s three touchdowns on 13 carries and 265 yards. Qualik Shearin carried it six times for 45 yards and scored on a two-point conversion. Defensively, the Rams were led by their female linebacker, Emonee Glover. Glover tallied 11

tackles on the day. Charlies Kersey had seven tackles, and Jacquez Bullock and William Henderson each had six tackles. HMS plays Tuesday against Butner-Stem at Southern Vance at 5 p.m. Terrence Thorpe scored a touchdown on a 60-yard

run, but it would be the only score for the Cougars in their 18-6 loss to Northern Granville. Barry Bobbitt and Chris Cheek were the leading tacklers with eight apiece. EJMS has a bye week next week before they face Warren County the following week.

Bulls take Game One from Bats, 8-3 Special to the Dispatch

After falling behind 3-0, the Bulls rallied for eight unanswered runs to claim game one of the first round of the International League playoffs, 8-4 over the Louisville Bats Wednesday at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park. Louisville got on the board first in the second inning with a two-run home run from Juan Francisco over the wall in left-center off Bulls starting pitcher Jeremy Hellickson. Hellickson was taken deep again in the fourth inning, this time from Chris Denove for a solo homerun

to make the score 3-0. Hellickson lasted five and two-third innings, allowing three earned runs on three hits, including two long balls, three walks and 12 strikeouts. Wednesday's start marks the third time in his last four starts, that the 22-year-old hurler has reached double digits in strikeouts. The Bulls plated three runs on four hits and two Bats' errors in the fifth inning to tie the game. Ray Olmedo scored the first run on a throwing error from Bats pitcher Travis Wood on a would-be force out from Joe Dillon. Back-toback singles from Matt

Joyce and Sean Rodriguez drove in the next two Bulls runs. Durham was able to put some space between itself and Louisville with a fiverun sixth inning. Olmedo started the hit parade with a triple to right-center field. Two batters later, Rashad Eldridge drove Olmedo home with a single and advanced to second on a throwing error. A groundrule double from Dillon scored Eldridge. That was followed by another double from Matt Joyce which plated Dillon. After stealing second, Joyce was driven home by Rodriguez. The scoring ended with

a Justin Ruggiano single scoring Rodriguez as the Bulls took an 8-3 lead. The Bats were only able to plate one run in response as they fell to the Bulls. Joe Bateman picked up the first postseason win for Durham with one and one-third shutout innings. Federico Baez took the loss after allowing five earned runs on five hits in the sixth. Game 2 of the best-offive series is scheduled for Thursday as righty Mitch Talbot (4-4, 4.47) takes the mound for Durham against Lefty Ben Jukich (9-6, 4.10) with first pitch at 7:05 p.m.

Beason, Stewart back at practice with Panthers By MIKE CRANSTON AP Sports Writer

CHARLOTTE — Carolina Panthers running back Jonathan Stewart had just participated in his first practice in nearly a month and his ninth in 49 workouts since the spring when fullback Brad Hoover playfully pounced. “I just told them we’re happy to have you back,” Hoover told Stewart while pointing at reporters, “and not eating cake on the sidelines.” Jokes were aplenty in the Panthers locker room Wednesday. Stewart, their No. 2 back, had returned from a left Achilles’ tendon injury on the same day middle linebacker and defensive leader Jon Beason practiced for the first time since spraining the medial collateral ligament in his left knee Aug. 22. “It was an opportunity to prove everybody wrong, even the docs,” Beason said. “I felt good about it.” Suddenly a dreary, winless preseason had given way to optimism four days before Carolina opens

against Philadelphia. Minus safety Chris Harris, who was limited with a leg injury, the Panthers had all their key players practicing together for the first time in a month. “They both looked really good,” coach John Fox said of Beason and Stewart. “They were good to finally have back. That was the plan, and I thought they had a good day’s work.” Beason, who was injured in the second exhibition game against Miami, said he spent countless hours rehabbing. It included about 10 hours a day hooked up to a newage stim machine, which helped increase blood flow to the knee and strengthen muscles around it. “It finds what muscle along the lines of the injury is not firing,” Beason said. “Then it forces all the other muscles to work harder so that that muscle has less strain on it.” With Donovan McNabb and a healthy Brian Westbrook coming to Bank of America Stadium on Sunday, the Panthers need

Beason. He led Carolina in tackles in each of the past two seasons and was voted to his first Pro Bowl last year. Without Beason and fellow starting linebackers Thomas Davis and Na’il Diggs, who also missed time with injuries, the Panthers struggled to tackle and stop the run in the preseason. “When you don’t have your leader on the defense, which is your mike linebacker, then you have Diggsy banged up and Thomas Davis banged up, that’s the second level of your defense,” defensive tackle Damione Lewis said. “Those guys are your do-alls, they cover you up when you mess up in the run gaps and they also help the secondary with underneath stuff. That’s the meat and potatoes on your defense, the linebacking corps.” Lewis said he expected Nick Hayden would start at the other tackle position vacated when Maake Kemoeatu was lost to a season-ending

torn Achilles’ tendon. The other options are Louis Leonard, acquired from Cleveland last week, and Ra’Shon Harris, claimed off waivers Sunday from Pittsburgh. The offense has fewer concerns with the return of Stewart, who combined with DeAngelo Williams to rush for 2,351 yards last season, the most by teammates in the NFL since 1984. Stewart said the pain in his Achilles’ tendon was an offshoot from toe surgery he had before last season. He sat out all offseason workouts, then practiced eight times in training camp before being limited to a stationary bike since mid-August. Teammates said he looked good in practice Wednesday. “You’ve got to get the timing down. That’s the main thing,” Stewart said. “Today went well with that. I felt like I wasn’t really out of the loop on a lot of things. “I felt fine, running and everything.”

He’ll play the game with a small cast on his right hand, but it shouldn’t be a problem when he’s running the ball. Johnson does have a problem with his team’s carelessness against Jacksonville State. The Yellow Jackets were able to get away with fumbling five times (they lost three of them) against an overmatched FCS opponent, but that sort of sloppiness would almost surely come back to haunt them against a better team. “It’s not hard to tuck the ball and squeeze it,” Johnson said, dismissing the theory that such a run-oriented team is

going to have its share of fumbles. “Not matter what offense you play, someone is occasionally going to knock it out of there by putting a helmet on the ball. That was not the case with ours. They were careless.” Swinney was pleased with Parker’s debut, even though he completed just 9 of 20 passes. The youngster tossed a couple of touchdowns and didn’t have any major mistakes. “For the most part, I made good decisions,” Parker said. “I know there are some better throws I can make or where I’m going to go with the ball if I’m going to be successful.”

MATCHUP, from page 1B ney recalled. “It should have been a tackle for no gain. We’ve all seen the film many times. He just does what he does. He peeked the corner, made another guy miss and ran away from everybody.” Dwyer left plenty of defenders in the dust last season, leading the ACC in rushing with 1,395 yards. Spiller led the ACC in all-purpose yards (1,770), which included 629 yards on the ground while sharing playing time with James Davis. This year, Spiller has the job all to himself. He should be fresh against the Yellow Jackets, carrying the ball only four times in a 37-14 victory over Middle Tennessee last Saturday. Georgia Tech also was able to rest most of its starters in the second half of a 37-17 victory over Jacksonville State. Dwyer had seven carries before heading to the bench, so the five-day turnaround shouldn’t be much of a problem for either team. Dwyer said he won’t be paying much attention to his counterpart in the Clemson backfield. “I’ve never really done that before, so I won’t start doing it now,” the Georgia Tech runner said. “But it’s a big game. Who

wouldn’t want to have some big numbers?” Even with all the attention on the backs, this game might come down to the play of the quarterbacks. Josh Nesbitt is the experienced leader of Georgia Tech’s option offense, a run-run-and-runsome-more attack that is used by only a handful of schools at the major college level. Clemson counters with redshirt freshman Kyle Parker, who’ll be playing his second college game. Nesbitt ran for 93 yards and threw for 141 last week, just the sort of performance coach Paul Johnson looks for out of his junior. Get the ball to the right back, run it himself when the opening is there, and throw just enough to keep defenses off balance. “I thought Josh threw the ball the wall,” said Johnson, pointing out the numbers could have been even better if not for three dropped passes. “He’s kind of got a knack for moving around and finding guys on third down.” Georgia Tech’s offense will be bolstered by the return of A-back Roddy Jones, who sat out the opener to give himself a little more time to recover from a dislocated wrist.

Winning Tickets RALEIGH — These numbers were drawn Wednesday by the North Carolina Lottery: Early Pick 3: 9-6-8 Late Pick 3: 2-9-4 Pick 4: 3-0-3-1 Cash 5: 1-30-29-18-23 DES MOINES, Iowa — These numbers were drawn Wednesday by the multi-state Powerball lottery that includes North

Carolina: Numbers: 9-16-27-35-57 Powerball: 29 Power Play: x3 RICHMOND, Va. — These numbers were drawn Wednesday afternoon by the Virginia Lottery: Pick 3: 9-0-0 Pick 4: 4-7-6-2 Cash 5: 1-2-20-26-27 These numbers were drawn Wednesday night: Pick 3: 6-3-5 Pick 4: 4-2-0-8 Cash 5: 5-8-14-29-32 Win For Life: 3-14-20-2634-41 Free Ball: 6


Sports

The Daily Dispatch

Thursday, September 10, 2009

3B NL Roundup

Pujols homers twice in Cards win; Gonzalez leads Padres past Giants Cardinals 5, Brewers 1 MILWAUKEE (AP) — Albert Pujols hit two home runs for a majors-leading 47 and Adam Wainwright picked up his 18th win with seven scoreless innings in St. Louis’ 5-1 victory over Milwaukee on Wednesday. Wainwright (18-7) struck out six and scattered five hits to become the first pitcher to 18 wins. Pujols homered in the fifth and seventh innings as

the Cardinals completed a three-game sweep. St. Louis got a scare when Matt Holliday tumbled running out a grounder in the third and left with a bruised left knee.

innings to win his second straight start. Gonzalez connected for a two-run shot in the third. Oscar Salazar homered for the Padres, who have won 10 of their last 13 series.

Padres 4, Giants 2 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Adrian Gonzalez hit his career-high 37th homer and drove in three runs for San Diego. Wade LeBlanc (2-1) pitched a career-best seven

Phillies 6, Nationals 5 WASHINGTON (AP) — Jayson Werth and Pedro Feliz hit back-to-back homers in the eighth inning to lead Philadelphia. Ryan Madson pitched the ninth in place of strug-

gling closer Brad Lidge, earning his sixth save in as many chances as the Phillies beat Washington for the ninth straight time. Cliff Lee (6-2) pitched seven-plus innings to get the win, allowing five runs and 10 hits.

Marlins 6, Mets 3 NEW YORK (AP) — Ricky Nolasco shut down the Mets into the seventh inning and Cody Ross hit an early three-run homer.

Dan Uggla homered and Nick Johnson had a long RBI double as Florida took its second straight from New York. Nolasco (11-8) gave up a leadoff hit to Angel Pagan then didn’t give up another hit until Pagan doubled with two outs in the sixth. He faltered in the seventh, walking David Wright to start the inning. Carlos Beltran singled, then David Murphy hit an RBI double. Nolasco was removed after

Jeff Francoeur’s sacrifice fly. Another run scored on a groundout.

Cubs 8, Pirates 5 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Carlos Zambrano won for the first time since July 22 by limiting Pittsburgh to two runs over six innings, and Chicago finished off a three-game sweep. The Cubs won their sixth straight against the Pirates, who completed a 1-5 homestand.

AL Roundup

Yankees down Rays on Jeter’s historic day

AP Photo/David J. Phillip

Houston’s Miguel Tejada, left, celebrates with first base coach Jose Cruz after hitting a two-run single in the ninth inning of Wednesday’s game to beat the Braves 2-1.

Tejada downs Braves with walk-off single HOUSTON (AP) — Miguel Tejada’s two-run single with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth inning gave the Houston Astros a 2-1 victory over the Atlanta Braves on Wednesday night. Kaz Matsui led off the ninth with a single and Lance Berkman doubled to left. Carlos Lee was intentionally walked and Tejada’s single up the middle handed Rafael Soriano (1-5) his fourth blown save. Jose Valverde (4-2) struck out two in a perfect ninth for the win. Rookie Tommy Hanson threw eight shutout innings for the Braves, who had snapped a five-game

losing streak on Tuesday. Hanson allowed five singles and didn’t walk a batter, striking out seven in his longest major league outing. Houston’s Wandy Rodriguez went seven innings, allowing one run and three hits, striking out six. Rodriguez, who retired 10 of 11 hitters from the second through the fifth innings, has limited opponents to one run or less in 11 of his last 13 starts. The Braves went ahead in the second inning when Yunel Escobar led off with a walk and went to second on Brian McCann’s infield groundout. Diaz drove in Escobar with a single to right.

Yankees 4, Rays 2 NEW YORK (AP) — Derek Jeter tied Lou Gehrig atop the Yankees hit list and New York rallied for a 4-2 victory over Tampa Bay on Wednesday night thanks to a three-run homer by pinchhitter Jorge Posada in the eighth inning. Jeter got three hits to match Gehrig with 2,721 in a Yankees uniform, a mark the Hall of Famer had held by himself for more than 70 years. Jeter had a chance to break the record, but he walked against reliever Grant Balfour after New York’s comeback in the eighth. Shut down by rookie Jeff Niemann most of the night, the Yankees completed a four-game sweep and sent the AL champion Rays to their eighth consecutive loss. It’s their longest skid since dropping eight straight in July 2007. Posada connected off Balfour with one out to give New York a 4-2 lead. Jonathan Albaladejo (5-1) pitched two scoreless innings for the win. With star closer Mariano Rivera getting a night off, Phil Coke struck out pinchhitter Gabe Kapler with a runner on for his second save. Lance Cormier (2-3) took the loss.

hander dropped to 8-1 with a 2.90 ERA in 13 games, 11 starts, against Minnesota, which was the only AL team that hadn’t beat him.

AP Photo/Bill Kostroun

New York’ Derek Jeter tips his helmet after hitting a single during the seventh inning of Wednesday’s game against Tampa Bay. The hit tied him with Lou Gehrig for most hits by a Yankee.

pitched a perfect seventh inning, striking out two, for the victory — the first AL decision of his career. After Daniel Bard put two men on in the eighth, Jonathan Papelbon got four outs for his 35th save, giving up one run. Jason Bay had three hits for Boston, which maintained its two-game lead in the AL wild-card race over Texas.

Rangers 10, Indians 0 CLEVELAND (AP) — Scott Feldman pitched seven innings, Esteban German went 5 for 5 and Marlon Byrd hit a three-run homer as Texas completed a three-game sweep within 24 hours. Feldman (16-4) allowed five hits and struck out five to win his eighth consecutive road start, a club record. His 12 road victories are a new team mark and tops in the AL. He was staked to a 5-0 lead before throwing a pitch after Byrd and Ivan Rodriguez hit home runs in the first inning off Fausto Carmona (3-10), who allowed five runs in 2-3 of an inning, the shortest start of his career. Texas added five runs in the ninth. Royals 5, Tigers 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Robinson Tejeda tossed six shutout innings to outpitch Justin Verlander, Billy Butler hit three doubles and the Kansas City Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 5-1 on Wednesday night for their first three-game winning streak since July. Butler picked up his clubrecord fourth three-double game of the season and fifth consecutive multihit game. The first baseman’s emergence has been one of the few bright spots in Kansas City’s otherwise dismal season.

Twins 4, Blue Jays 1 TORONTO (AP) — Jus-

tin Morneau and Orlando Cabrera homered and Minnesota finally got the best of Roy Halladay. Cabrera tied it with a leadoff shot in the sixth and Morneau hit a two-out tiebreaking drive in the eighth for his 30th homer. Pinch-hitter Michael Cuddyer added a two-run double in the ninth. Halladay (14-9) allowed nine hits, struck out nine and walked one in his major league-leading seventh complete game. The right-

There’s no better example than Ryan.” Tate said he felt the playoff run, as well as playing showcase ball, helped Ryan’s game get exposure for college scouts and coaches. The playoff wins also give him more confidence playing at the next level, he added. Allen played second base and pitched for the Warriors last year as a junior. “He definitely will get more time this year on the mound,” Tate said. Ryan credits Tate for

helping him through the recruiting process. “He’s taught me to be a gentleman, saying ‘yes sir’ and ‘no sir’ (to recruiters).” Ryan said his one goal as a senior at Webb will be to win the conference championship. Raymond said Ryan will compete for starting time in the middle infield as a freshman at GardnerWebb. He may also play in center field or pitch in relief. Ryan said he has no preference what position he plays.

“As long as I get to play,” he said. Ryan said he’d like to play pro ball, but has aspirations of being an athletic trainer. Ryan has played baseball since he was five or six. He and his father throw about three times a week, hit and field a couple times a week and lift weights. The regimen lasts all year. Ryan is currently playing with the Dirtbags, a Greensboro-area baseball program that currently has 12 players committed to ACC schools, according to

Contact the writer at erobinson@hendersondispatch.com.

that pump fans up that got nothing to do with playing and winning and losing,” Tomlin said. “This is going to be two topquality teams. They’re going to play because it’s opening night ... both teams need to get off to a great start. Those are going to be the things that motivate these teams.” Still, that didn’t prevent offensive tackle Willie Colon from saying, “We’ll talk about it (with the Titans) Thursday night.” Obviously, he’s not expecting a Towel Tromp II. Given the NFL’s yearly player turnover rate, this is about as close as two teams can come to a rematch from one season to the next. The Titans

are missing only two starters, though the loss of All-Pro defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth could significantly weaken what was the NFL’s No. 7 defense. “It’s important for us to get off to a good start,” said defensive end Kyle Vanden Bosch, whose production was hurt by a groin injury. “There’s no better way than to play against the team that had the best finish last season.” The Steelers return 19 of 22 starters, exceptional for a Super Bowl-winning team. Tomlin, however, has repeatedly taken steps to distance this team from last season’s. “Just because we won

the Super Bowl last year don’t mean nothing,” defensive tackle Casey Hampton said. “To be at the top then doesn’t mean anything because it’s a whole new season.” The Steelers lost backup wide receiver Nate Washington to Tennessee, where he is expected to take on a bigger role once he heals from a hamstring injury that might keep him out of the opener. The Steelers will be without linebacker Lawrence Timmons (high ankle sprain). The Titans have won four of their last five against the Steelers, but the loss also came in a season opener, 34-7 in 2005 as Willie Parker ran for 161 yards in his NFL

starting debut. This time, Parker is unsigned past this season and is coming off an injury-interrupted year that helped limit him to 791 yards. Parker may yield some carries to last year’s firstround draft pick, Rashard Mendenhall, though perhaps not to the extent the Titans use both Chris Johnson (1,228 yards) and White (773). Both teams had kick return issues during the preseason, though the Steelers have settled on CFL import Stefan Logan as their punt returner. Fisher won’t announce his returner until game time, but it is likely to be cornerback Cortland Finnegan.

Red Sox 7, Orioles 5 BOSTON (AP) — Pinchhitter Victor Martinez hit a three-run double to break a seventh-inning tie, and Boston improved to 13-2 against Baltimore this season. Billy Wagner (1-0)

ALLEN, from page 1B school coaching career because I know how hard he’s worked,” he said. “The biggest thing is his heart and tremendous work ethic.” Tate said Ryan is a competitive player that never shows his temper. “He’s got all the things you can’t measure.” In the past five years under Tate, four Warriors have signed with schools, but Allen would be the first under Tate to sign with a Division I college. In fact, Allen is the first Webb baseball player to

commit to a D-I school since Sam Hobgood inked with N.C. State in 1990. Hobgood is now an assistant coach at Webb. Former Warrior Wesley Currin signed with UNC Wilmington in the early 1980s. “You’re talking three, maybe four (D-I signees) in the history of the school,” Tate said. Ryan’s scholarship will be part athletic and part academic. “It just shows if you do the right things... good things are going to happen.

Raymond. Dustin Ackley, the 2009 No. 2 overall MLB draft pick out of UNC, played with the Dirtbags. “He’s worked hard at it. He’s put in the time and effort I thought it would take,” said Raymond. To anyone that may doubt Ryan’s ability because of his size, he had one response: “Just keep on watching and see that I can do just as much as big guys can.”

KICKOFF, from page 1B in Pittsburgh, where the towel is as much a source of civic pride as it is a symbol of the six-time Super Bowl-winning team it represents. In Pittsburgh, one doesn’t dare tread on the Terrible Towel, but White said he would gladly do it again if he gets the chance. “If it happens to be there, I’m going to stomp all over that, man,” White said. “If there’s a towel in the stands, I will stomp on it. I don’t care who gets mad. ... If they throw a towel at me, I’m going to kick it and stomp all over it. If they don’t want their towel stomped on, keep it out of my face.” White’s words weren’t

especially well-received in his own locker room — why agitate the champions, after all? Coach Jeff Fisher quickly moved to end such talk. “It was something that took place in an emotional moment,” Fisher said. “The players now understand ... the tradition behind the towel and the organization. They’re certainly not going to carry their own towels out there and stomp on them before kickoff.” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said he’s got more important matters to worry about, such as making sure his players don’t turn over the ball four times again. “There’s a lot of things


4B

Sports

The Daily Dispatch

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Oudin’s magical US Open ends with loss in quarters By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

NEW YORK — Melanie Oudin’s magical U.S. Open is over. Even the comeback kid couldn’t overturn this deficit. Showing signs of shakiness in her first Grand Slam quarterfinal, the 17-year-old Oudin got off to a slow start against No. 9-seeded Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark and never really recovered, losing 6-2, 6-2 Wednesday night. “This has been a great experience for me. I had a great run here,” the 70th-ranked Oudin told the crowd of 23,881 during an on-court interview right after the match, an honor usually reserved for the winner. “I hope to come back next year and do even better.” It’ll be hard to top her 2009 U.S. Open. She upset four more established players — including three-time major champion Maria Sharapova and Beijing Olympic gold medalist Elena Dementieva — to become the youngest quarterfinalist at Flushing Meadows since Serena Williams in 1999. Making the story even better: Oudin’s last three victories each came after dropping the first set. But

AP Photo/Charles Krupa

Melanie Oudin, left, congratulates Caroline Wozniacki after their match at the U.S. Open Wednesday. Wozniacki defeated Oudin in two sets. Wednesday’s start was quite inauspicious: She lost 14 of the first 18 points under the bright lights in the big city. With “BELIEVE” stamped in all capital letters on the heels of her pink-and-yellow sneakers — and, up in the player guest box, her twin sister and coach wearing black T-shirts bearing that word, too — the 5-foot-6 Oudin certainly never gave up. Her groundstrokes let her down, though. Oudin made 43 unforced errors, 23 more than Wozniacki. A relative veteran by comparison, the 19-year-old Wozniacki

Roethlisberger attorney rejects settlement offer By SANDRA CHEREB Associated Press Writer

CARSON CITY, Nev. — The attorney for Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger on Wednesday rejected a settlement offer by a Nevada woman who claims the Super Bowl champion sexually assaulted her at a Lake Tahoe hotelcasino. The rejection was in response to a letter, filed last week as part of a motion from Cal Dunlap, the woman’s Reno attorney, that said she would be willing to settle the civil matter against Roethlisberger if he admits to raping her, apologizes and gives $100,000 to the Committee to Aid Abused Women, a nonprofit agency in Reno that helps victims of domestic violence. In a written statement, Roethlisberger attorney David Cornwell called the woman’s offer “bizarre” and an “insult to women who have legitimately suffered from sexual misconduct.” Last month, they demanded she drop the lawsuit and write a letter of apology to the NFL star. In return, Roethlisberger would release both the woman and Dunlap from any legal liability stemming from the “conspiracy to extort and defame” him. Those demands have been rejected by the woman, Dunlap said in his letter. It added that her settlement offer was made to negate claims by the quarterback’s attorneys that she filed her suit to get money from him. Dunlap said the woman is a sexual assault victim who “was violated in every sense of the term.” Dunlap refused further comment when contacted Wednesday. Cornwell countered that the woman was given the option for a “graceful exit.” “We will continue to press our defenses and claims and pursue our application for sanctions,” he said.

In other developments, the case in Washoe District Court has been reassigned to another judge, the third since the case was filed. District Judge Brent Adams will consider pending motions on whether the case should be moved to Douglas County. Depending on that ruling, he also would decide various other motions, including whether the case should proceed or be dismissed, attorneys said. No hearings have been scheduled. The woman, a VIP casino hostess, filed the civil suit against Roethlisberger in July, claiming the Super Bowl-winning quarterback raped her in 2008 in a hotel penthouse across the street from a golf course where he was playing in a celebrity tournament. The AP, as a matter of policy, does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted. In other documents filed late Tuesday, Dunlap said the woman was stationed as a concierge on the 17th floor on July 11, 2008, when Roethlisberger returned to his room with a young woman. About 20 minutes later, he walked that woman to the elevator, then stopped by the concierge desk and chatted with staff, including his accuser. A few minutes later, the documents said, Roethlisberger reportedly called the woman and asked her if she could fix his television. The woman said the television was working properly and that Roethlisberger then blocked her from leaving and assaulted her. In the same filing, Dunlap also said the woman told her roommate and others of the encounter soon after the alleged attack and in the months that followed. She did not report the incident to police, something advocates for rape victims say is not unusual. Roethlisberger has denied the allegations.

leads the women’s tour in match victories this season. “I’m sorry that I won against Melanie today,” Wozniacki told the partisan fans, some of whom cheered when she doublefaulted. “I know that many of you wanted Melanie to win.” Now the Dane will play her first Grand Slam semifinal against another 19-year-old, Yanina Wickmayer of Belgium. The 50th-ranked Wickmayer — never before past the second round at a major tournament — beat Kateryna Bondarenko of Ukraine 7-5, 6-4.

TENNIS U.S. Open Results

Wednesday, at The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, New York Purse: $21.6 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Quarterfinals n Novak Djokovic (4), Serbia, def. Fernando Verdasco (10), Spain, 7-6 (2), 1-6, 7-5, 6-2. Women Quarterfinals n Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, def. Kateryna Bondarenko, Ukraine, 7-5, 6-4. n Caroline Wozniacki (9), Denmark, def. Melanie Oudin, United States, 6-2, 6-2. Doubles Men Semifinals n Lukas Dlouhy, Czech Republic, and Leander Paes (4), India, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (6). n Mahesh Bhupathi, India, and Mark Knowles (3), Bahamas, def. Max Mirnyi, Belarus, and Andy Ram (5), Israel, 6-4, 6-2. Women Quarterfinals n Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Liezel Huber (1), United States, def. Nuria Llagostera Vives and Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez (6), Spain, 6-3, 2-6, 7-5. n Serena and Venus Williams (4), United States, def. Yan Zi and Zheng Jie (11), China, 7-5, 6-4. Champions Team Tennis First Round n Team Lendl 24, Team King 16 Junior Singles Boys Second Round n Bernard Tomic (3), Australia, def. Alexander Domijan, United States, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1. n Chase Buchanan, United States, def. Hiroyasu Ehara, Japan, 6-4, 6-4. n Andrea Collarini (7), Argentina, def. Federico Gaio, Italy, 6-4, 6-3. n Tiago Fernandes, Brazil, def. Julien Obry (12), France, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3. n Jose Pereira, Brazil, def. Lim Yong-kyu (6), South Korea, 2-6, 6-3, 7-6 (5). n Marton Fucsovics, Hungary, def. Evan King, United States, 6-2, 6-3. n Tobias Blomgren, Sweden, def. Dominik Schulz (15), Germany, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. n Pierre-Hugues Herbert, France, def. Alexandros Georgoudas, Germany, 6-2, 6-4. Girls Second Round n Elena Bogdan, Romania, def. Luksika Kumkhum, Thailand, 7-5, 7-5. n Daria Gavrilova (9), Russia, def. Grace Sari Ysidora, Indonesia, 6-1, 7-6 (3). n Jana Cepelova (14), Slovakia, def. Julia Boserup, United States, 6-4, 6-3. n Lauren Davis, United States, def. Timea Babos (3), Hungary, 1-6, 7-6 (3), 6-4. n Heather Watson (11), Britain, def. Courtney Dolehide, United States, 6-3, 6-2. n Annika Beck, Germany, def. Mai Grage, Denmark, 6-3, 6-3. n Silvia Njiric (6), Croatia, def. Zsofia Susanyi, Hungary, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 7-6 (3). n Sloane Stephens (4), United States, def. Maryna Zanevska, Ukraine, 7-6 (4), 3-6, 6-2. Junior Doubles Boys Second Round n Julien Obry and Adrien Puget, France, def. Stanislav Poplavskyy, Ukraine, and Radim Urbanek, Czech Republic, 6-3, 4-6, 10-8 tiebreak. n Jordan Cox and Tennys Sandgren, United States, def. Maximilian Neuchrist and TristanSamuel Weissborn, Austria, 5-7, 7-6 (16), 10-4 tiebreak. n Matthew Kandath and Jack Sock, United States, def. Ahmed El Menshawy, Britain, and Harry Fowler, United States, 6-4, 7-5. n Sebastian Lavie, New Zealand, and Renzo Olivo, Argentina, def. Evan King and Denis Kudla, United States, 6-4, 3-6, 11-9 tiebreak. n Sandro Ehrat, Switzerland, and Alexandros Georgoudas, Germany, def. Mitchell Frank and Junior Ore, United States, 7-6 (3), 4-6, 10-7 tiebreak. n Pierre-Hugues Herbert, France, and Kevin Krawietz (6), Germany, def. Guilherme Clezar and Tiago Fernandes, Brazil, 6-2, 6-4. n Marton Fucsovics, Hungary, and Hsieh

The other women’s semifinal Friday features two far more familiar names: defending champion Serena Williams against 2005 champion Kim Clijsters. Never intimidated by the hostile crowd, Wozniacki was backed by her own cheering section of about 15 strong. Their applause and yells of encouragement were quite audible in a mostly empty Arthur Ashe Stadium as Oudin’s error count mounted in the early going. It took less than 10 minutes for Wozniacki to seize a 3-0 lead, cleverly constructing points. After many of her mistakes, Oudin would walk to the edge of the court, her back to the net, and fiddle with her strings. When she did find success with her deep groundstrokes, many of which landed right near the baseline, Oudin would turn toward Mom with a raised fist and a yell of “Come on!” This was, don’t forget, Wozniacki’s first major quarterfinal, too, yet she only really showed some nerves after already leading 5-1. She missed a backhand, then a forehand, and later double-faulted to get broken for the only time. Still, Wozniacki righted herself right away, breaking back to take the

set when Oudin missed a backhand. To no one’s surprise, Oudin made bids to make things interesting in the second set. At 1-1, Oudin held two break points — and pushed a forehand return of a 71 mph second serve wide, then sailed a forehand long. Then, at 2-all, Oudin again earned two break points — and sent a backhand wide on the first, then a forehand long on the second. And that, essentially, was that. Wozniacki won that game and each of the next four. In men’s action Wednesday, No. 4-seeded Novak Djokovic reached the U.S. Open semifinals for the third consecutive year, beating No. 10 Fernando Verdasco of Spain 7-6 (2), 1-6, 7-5, 6-2. Djokovic, the 2008 Australian Open champion, lost to Roger Federer in the 2007 final and the 2008 semifinals at Flushing Meadows. He could meet Federer again this year: After the Oudin-Wozniacki match, Federer faced No. 12 Robin Soderling in the quarterfinals, with the winner facing Djokovic. While so much of the focus around these parts has been on Oudin,

Cheng Peng, Taiwan, def. John Morrissey, Ireland, and Sudanwa Sitaram, India, 4-6, 6-3, 10-4 tiebreak. n Facundo Arguello and Agustin Velotti (2), Argentina, def. Patrik Brydolf, Sweden, and Dominik Schulz, Germany, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5).

Boston 10, Baltimore 0 Kansas City 7, Detroit 5 Oakland 11, Chicago White Sox 3 Texas 10, Cleveland 5, 2nd game L.A. Angels 3, Seattle 2, 10 innings

Girls Second Round n Kristie Ahn and Grace Min, United States, def. Paula Kania and Magda Linette, Poland, 3-6, 7-5, 10-7 tiebreak. n Daria Gavrilova and Irina Khromacheva (7), Russia, def. Cristina Dinu, Romania, and Grace Sari Ysidora, Indonesia, 6-3, 6-4. n Brooke Bolender and Lauren Herring, United States, def. Ons Jabeur, Tunisia, and Zheng Sai-Sai, China, 2-6, 6-2, 10-5 tiebreak. n Jana Cepelova and Chantal Skamlova, Slovakia, def. Stephanie Cornish, Britain, and Katarena Paliivets, Canada, 6-4, 0-6, 10-5 tiebreak. n Timea Babos, Hungary, and Ajla Tomljanovic (2), Croatia, def. Jacqueline Cako and Nicole Gibbs, United States, 6-4, 6-3. n Elena Bogdan, Romania, and Noppawan Lertcheewakarn (3), Thailand, def. Veronica Cepede Royg, Paraguay, and Zsofia Susanyi, Hungary, 6-2, 6-4. n Valeria Solovieva, Russia, and Maryna Zanevska, Ukraine, def. Alexandra Cercone and Noel Scott, United States, 6-3, 6-3. n Miyabi Inoue and Risa Ozaki, Japan, def. Mallory Burdette and Sloane Stephens (4), United States, 7-5, 6-4.

WNBA Standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Indiana 22 10 .688 — Atlanta 17 15 .531 5 Detroit 16 16 .500 6 Chicago 15 17 .469 7 Connecticut 15 17 .469 7 Washington 15 17 .469 7 New York 12 20 .375 10 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Phoenix 22 10 .688 — Seattle 19 13 .594 3 Los Angeles 16 16 .500 6 Minnesota 14 18 .438 8 San Antonio 14 18 .438 8 Sacramento 11 21 .344 11

Thursday’s Games Minnesota (S.Baker 13-7) at Toronto (Cecil 6-4), 12:37 p.m. Detroit (Washburn 9-8) at Kansas City (DiNardo 0-0), 2:10 p.m. Seattle (Rowland-Smith 3-2) at L.A. Angels (Lackey 9-7), 10:05 p.m.

Thursday’s Games New York at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Indiana at Chicago, 8 p.m. Phoenix at Seattle, 10 p.m. San Antonio at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Friday’s Games Connecticut at Atlanta, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

MLB American League Standings New York Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore

East Division W L Pct GB 91 50 .645 — 81 58 .583 9 72 68 .514 18 1/2 62 77 .446 28 56 83 .403 34

Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Kansas City

Central Division W L Pct GB 75 63 .543 — 70 69 .504 5 1/2 69 71 .493 7 60 79 .432 15 1/2 54 85 .388 21 1/2

Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland

West Division W L Pct GB 82 55 .599 — 79 60 .568 4 72 67 .518 11 62 76 .449 20 1/2

Tuesday’s Games Texas 11, Cleveland 9, 1st game N.Y. Yankees 3, Tampa Bay 2 Toronto 6, Minnesota 3

Minnesota Chicago Detroit Green Bay

North W L T Pct PF PA 3 1 0 .750 78 61 3 1 0 .750 90 70 3 1 0 .750 72 76 3 1 0 .750 105 85

Seattle San Francisco St. Louis Arizona

West W L T Pct PF PA 4 0 0 1.000 92 58 3 1 0 .750 65 75 3 1 0 .750 77 70 0 4 0 .000 53 100

National League Standings Philadelphia Florida Atlanta New York Washington St. Louis Chicago Houston Milwaukee Cincinnati Pittsburgh Los Angeles Colorado San Francisco San Diego Arizona

East Division W L Pct 79 58 .577 74 65 .532 71 68 .511 62 77 .446 47 92 .338

GB — 6 9 18 33

Central Division W L Pct GB 84 57 .596 — 71 67 .514 11 1/2 68 71 .489 15 66 73 .475 17 63 76 .453 20 54 84 .391 28 1/2 West Division W L Pct GB 83 57 .593 — 80 60 .571 3 76 64 .543 7 63 78 .447 20 1/2 61 79 .436 22

Tuesday’s Games Chicago Cubs 9, Pittsburgh 4 Philadelphia 5, Washington 3 Florida 4, N.Y. Mets 2 Atlanta 2, Houston 1 St. Louis 4, Milwaukee 3 Colorado 3, Cincinnati 1 L.A. Dodgers 5, Arizona 4 San Diego 4, San Francisco 3 Thursday’s Games Cincinnati (K.Wells 1-3) at Colorado (Contreras 1-0), 3:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Blanton 9-6) at Washington (Li. Hernandez 7-10), 7:05 p.m. Florida (West 6-5) at N.Y. Mets (Parnell 3-7), 7:10 p.m. Atlanta (D.Lowe 13-9) at Houston (Oswalt 8-5), 8:05 p.m.

Tuesday’s Games Indiana 69, New York 63 Los Angeles 76, San Antonio 68 Wednesday’s Games Minnesota 75, Detroit 72

Wickmayer’s story is quite intriguing and inspiring. When she was 9, her mother died of cancer, and little Yanina set out to find a fresh start, researching tennis academies on the Internet before settling on one in Florida. Talk about precocious, ambitious and adventurous: Yanina had only recently started playing tennis. Neither she nor her father spoke English. But this is what had to be done. Her father closed his pool construction company in Belgium, and relatives supported the pair financially while they lived in Florida for 2 1/2 years. “He just gave everything up for me,” Yanina said. “He just left. He listened to a girl that was 9 years old and left his life, left his dreams. I’m always going to respect him for that.” Marc Wickmayer was in the Arthur Ashe Stadium stands Wednesday, watching his daughter play the biggest match of her career — and win it. “I have no words for what he’s done,” Yanina said. “There is no way of thanking him in any way for what he did, but I hope with my semis here this week, I can show him that I really thank him for everything.”

NFL Preseason Final Standings

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Miami 4 0 0 1.000 59 39 New England 3 1 0 .750 98 83 N.Y. Jets 2 2 0 .500 108 99 Buffalo 1 4 0 .200 72 106 Tennessee Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville

South W L T Pct PF PA 3 2 0 .600 102 104 2 2 0 .500 67 85 1 3 0 .250 49 84 1 3 0 .250 89 85

Baltimore Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland

North W L T Pct PF PA 4 0 0 1.000 84 39 3 1 0 .750 71 37 2 2 0 .500 73 54 2 2 0 .500 73 70

San Diego Denver Oakland Kansas City

West W L T Pct PF PA 2 2 0 .500 81 60 1 3 0 .250 65 71 1 3 0 .250 79 107 0 4 0 .000 42 64

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 2 2 0 .500 88 92 N.Y. Giants 1 3 0 .250 79 99 Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 100 120 Washington 1 3 0 .250 58 87 New Orleans Atlanta Tampa Bay Carolina

South W L T Pct PF PA 3 1 0 .750 107 38 2 2 0 .500 76 84 1 3 0 .250 70 87 0 4 0 .000 57 89

TRANSACTIONS Wednesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL MLB—The Office of the Commissioner of Baseball announced that free agent player Damian Arredondo has received a 50-game suspension for testing positive for metabolites of Stanozolol, a performance-enhancing substance, in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. n American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Acquired LHP Sean Henn from Minnesota for a player to be named or cash considerations. Named Janet Marie Smith vice president of planning and development. MINNESOTA TWINS—Actovated LHP Francisco Liriano from the 15-day DL. n National League CINCINNATI REDS—Activated C Ryan Hanigan from the 15-day DL. COLORADO ROCKIES—Activated OF Dexter Fowler from the 15-day DL. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Recalled LHP Sergio Escalona from Reading (EL). Purchased the contract of 1B Andy Tracy from Lehigh Valley (IL). Released RHP Rodrigo Lopez. BASKETBALL n National Basketball Association GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS—Re-signed G C.J. Watson. n Women’s National Basketball Association SEATTLE STORM—Signed G-F La’Tangela Atkinson. FOOTBALL n National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS—Signed WR Charly Martin to the practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed LB Marcus Benard, OL Corey Hilliard and DB Keith Green to the practice squad. Released DB Brandon Anderson from the practice squad. DENVER BRONCOS—Released CB Joshua Bell and G Matt McChesney after reaching injury settlements. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Signed S De’von Hall and TE Jason Pociasck to the practice squad. Released WR Sam Giguere from the practice squad. HOCKEY n National Hockey League BOSTON BRUINS—Signed D Andy Wozniewski. COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Re-signed LW Alexandre Picard to a one-year contract. TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Re-signed D Mike Lundin to a one-year contract. SOCCER n Major League Soccer FC DALLAS—Signed M-D Daniel Hernandez. TORONTO FC—Announced the retirement of F Danny Dichio. COLLEGE ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM—Named Chris Long men’s assistant basketball coach. CANISIUS—Signed men’s ice hockey coach Dave Smith to a contract extension through 2012-2013 season. COLUMBIA—Named Marlon Sears men’s basketball assistant coach. MORAVIAN—Named Bill Maxwell men’s tennis coach. RICHMOND—Named Jill Briles-Hinton women’s golf coach. SAM HOUSTON STATE—Named Keith Herston assistant track and field coach. ST. JOHN’S, N.Y.—Named Said Hamdan associate athletic trainer. TEMPLE—Named Dan Gale events and projects coordinator. THIEL—Named Angela Zeuch women’s basketball coach.


COMICS

THE DAILY DISPATCH

BLONDIE

BY

DEAN YOUNG & DENNIS LEBRUN

GARFIELD

BY

JUMP START

BY

JIM DAVIS

ROBB ARMSTRONG

SALLY FORTH

BY

ZITS

BY JIM BORGMAN & JERRY SCOTT

ALANIZ, MARCIULIANO & MACINTOSH

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek

BIZARRO

DILBERT

AGNES

BY DAN PIRARO

CANET

©2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

GLOIC

SWUNIE NEW Jumble iPhone App go to: www.bit.ly/15QkRq

A: HE Yesterday’s

A

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: RHYME CAMEO CANYON FORCED Answer: What she hoped to develop with the trainer — A ROMANCE

SUDOKU

Today’s answer

HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19). Unlike others around you, you won’t be too quick to label your experiences as “good” or “bad.” What someone else considers a negative circumstance could prove to be a profoundly creative and insightful experience for you. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). In order to find your niche, you’ll have to work at understanding a boss’s or client’s authority. Your job suddenly gets easier when you simply accept the hierarchy of the situation. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You know how to change your feelings in a snap. All you have to do is hold on to what makes you feel good. Once you decide it’s not acceptable to feel anything less than cheerful, you’ll maintain your happy glow. CANCER (June 22-July 22). When your priorities are right, all falls into place. It would be a shame to let the little stuff get in the way of your accomplishing a major goal. As for potential time wasters, don’t walk — run away from them! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’re likely to tune in to what’s going on inside you, instead of being outwardly focused. This temporary bout of introspection leads you to laugh when no one else is, or to have a different reaction to things than others do. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You might feel a bit like Alice down the rabbit hole, as the characters you meet only make sense in the context of their own crazy world. Try not to feel out of place, though. You’re an important player in the scene.

BY

OR

WORSE

CLASSIC PEANUTS

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

DERAIV

BY

CURTIS

FOR BETTER

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Wonderful happenings should not be onetime events. When a bit of good drops into your life, figure out what you did right and turn that action into a habit. You’ll find a simple way to integrate new behaviors into your daily routine. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Rest. Downtime is essential to feeling healthy and joyful. If you let yourself get tired, you might lose perspective and get overly hard on yourself and others. Take adequate time to sleep and lie around. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). There is nothing harmful about asking an honest question. Still, think it over first. What do you really want and need to know? Some discussions are better not to endeavor. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Not only do you know what you want, but you are acting as though you already have it. Why not? It feels fantastic to be appreciative of your great fortune. Whether or not it has actually occurred yet is quite irrelevant. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). If there’s not enough to do, you’ll work slowly, take detours and possibly still wait until the last second to meet a deadline. If you have too much to do, you’ll work quickly, take shortcuts and meet your deadlines just as well. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). How do you make big plans even bigger? By focusing in smaller. Tend to the details. The fine touches guarantee you will create an unforgettable experience for yourself and others.

5B

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2009

RAY BILLINGSLEY

BY

BY

SCOTT ADAMS

LYNN JOHNSON

CHARLES SCHULZ

BY TONY COCHRAN

CRYPTOQUOTE


Thurs Class 9.10

9/9/09 4:07 PM

Page 1

6B • THE DAILY DISPATCH • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2009

The Daily Dispatch

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YARD SALES Ad information and payment must be in our office at 304 S. Chestnut Street by 10 AM the day prior to ad publication. All yard sales are cash in advance.

HAPPY ADS, CARDS OF THANKS, IN MEMORY These ads may be placed by you for only $5.55 per column inch. Paid in advance by 10 AM one day prior to ad publication. Sunday deadline - Friday 10 AM.

Personals

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Help Wanted

Hallelujah!

Handyman Service

ADD YOUR LOGO HERE

I’m 5!

Happy Birthday!

Chase

Love, Mama, Granddaddy & Grammie!

Dry wall, dry wall repair, painting & carpentry 252-432-3326 Satisfaction guaranteed Jelly Bean Home Day Care has openings for infant to school age. All three shifts Monday - Friday Sat. 8am-Noon 252-572-4722 Perfection Auto Body & Marine Repair. 3355 Raleigh Rd. www.per fectionautoandmarine. com. 252-431-0161

Special Notices

We’ll help cool things off. Call A.B Robinson Heat & A/C, LLC, 257-6579405 for Complete Home Make-Over.

$500 REWARD!

Woodruff Moving, Inc.

For information leading to the arrest of individuals resonsible for the theft of heat pump, etc. stolen from 1526 Bearpond Rd. All responses will be kept confidential. 252-438-3667 Stanley Robertson

Full Service Movers. Local or Nationwide. 35 years experience.

Lost & Found FOUND: White toy dog in Enon Rd. area, Oxford. Please call 919-693-9727

Schools & Instructions Dental Assistant training in 10 weeks. Dental Receptionist training in 4. Coronal Polishing/Radiology Certif. for the DAII. Campus in Wake Forest. Seats are limited. Open House September 12 from 1pm-3pm. Call 919-5324444 for more information. Financing available.

Business & Services Franklinton UMC Daycare now enrolling infant through school age. Call 919-494-5177

HOME DELIVERY for less than a cup of coffee about .38¢ per day. Sundays just .96¢

252-492-2511

Help Wanted Private doctors office looking for

LPNs, CNAs & MAs to work in Henderson & surrounding counties. • Competitive Pay • Excellent Benefits • Great Hours Please send resume to Position #311 PO Box 908 Henderson, NC 27536 Temp to Hire

In-bound CALL CENTER POSITIONS Right candidate will possess: • Excellent data entry skills • Professional customer service • Work schedule flexibility • High School diploma or GED • Clear background • Multi-tasker Skills testing and drug screen required Excellent pay Please send resume to kathy.trupe@ staffmark.com

EOE M/F/D/V

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Work from your location calling Schools, principals, teachers to help finance programs. We train. Call 813-355-3889

Yard Sales 125 N. Clark St. Sat. 9/12. 7am-2pm Furniture, plants, rugs, knick-knacks, household, Christmas items, etc.

Convenience store position available. Please reply to PO Box 274, Henderson, NC 27536.

477 Ridgecrest Trail

Executive Administrative Assistant

Merchandise For Sale

• Professional in demeanor & appearance • Microsoft Word & Excel • Outstanding Skills • Good work ethic Please apply in person 220 Dabney Drive Henderson, NC 27536 252-438-3888 Fax 252-438-2619 www.staffmark.com

EOE/M/F/D/V National Finance Company One of the Largest Independentley Owned Finance Compaines is now Accepting Applications at 941-H Andrews Ave New church in Henderson looking for an energetic, upbeat, contemporary worship leader. If God has blessed with musical talents and you desire to serve Him in such a way, please contact 252425-5511. This is a paid position.

Sat. 9/12. 8am-1pm. Little girls, male & female adult clothing, lots of brand new items!, etc.

7E HAVE A (UGE 3ELECTION OF .EW .AME "RAND -ERCHANDISING INCLUDING %LECTRONICS &LAT 0ANEL 46 S (OME &URNISHINGS AND !PPLIANCES .O CREDIT CHECK RETURN ANYTIME LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED AND YOU CAN PAY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY #ALL

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CONNECTION ACROSS THE STATE Your Classified Ad could be reaching 1.5 million homes through the North Carolina Statewide Network. Have your message printed in 90 NC newspapers for a low cost of $330 for a 25-word ad. Additional words are $10 each. The whole state at your fingertips! Call (252) 436-2810. Deadline: Tuesday by 5 PM the week prior to publication. A great advertising buy!

First Day....................................$2.53 per line Classified line rates vary according to the number of days published.

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BLIND BOX NUMBERS There is an extra charge for ads with blind box numbers. A $10.00 charge is added for responses to be mailed on Friday.

Merchandise For Sale

Pets & Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Brand new sofa, recliner (dark beige), cherry oak armoire & 32� HDTV. $800 neg. for all. 252767-5067.

Natural Vented Gas Heater 50,000 BTU w/ pipe filters. Heat & Air Condition Combination unit, w/ remote control 16,000 BTU. Air 18,000 BTU Heating Heat & Cool 1300 sqft & more. 2yrs old 1owner,excellant condition. 252-438-7184 leave message

Adorable, playful cats & kittens looking for loving homes. Seeking companionship. Male & female. Spayed, neutered & shots. $35 ea. Cat lovers bring carrier. 252-492-3607.

Pekingese pups. Registered. Shots & wormed. Males. Red & black. 252-456-4680.

GE 30� electric range $125 OBO. Frost proof refrigerator $199 OBO. Cherry French Provincial. Triple dresser, 2 mirrors, armoire chest, headboard & frame, queen size mattress set $400 OBO. Oak glass top table w/4 oak chairs $300 OBO. Set of 6 solid oak crest-back chairs. Like new $300 OBO. Recliner sofa & matching recliner love seat $150 OBO. Much, Much More! Call 252-438-8828 or 252-432-2230 anytime GE washer & dryer White Good condition $225 252-492-5407 IBM Think Pad w/Windows XP & wireless card $150. Computer table $35. Nordic Track Easy Ski machine $75. Baby crib, like new $50. 6 ft pool table $35. 252-438-4596. Love Seat Sofa Tan/Green in Color Gently Used. Asking “$45� 252-432-8224

Teka T3-270 win, short mag, hardwood stock, 50mm. Leopold scope. Sacrifice at $900 252-436-7249

Livestock, Poultry & Supplies 3 year old standard size proven male donkey $600. 4 year old proven male Boer goat $175. 252-432-2974. WANTED: Female Muscovy ducks, female rabbits, Rhode Island red laying hens. 252-432-2974

Pets & Supplies 5 beautiful assorted color kittens looking for loving homes. Eat dry or wet food. Litter trained. 252-492-0756.

PRIM RESIDENTIAL

AKC registered Bloodhounds. 2 black & tan males. Shots & dewormed. 252-456-2575 or 252-425-1926. FREE Male Dachshund/Mini-Pincher mix. 8 mos. old. 919-853-2350.

Rottweiller Pups 7 wks. Full blooded. No papers. Dew claws removed. Tails docked. 1st shots, wormed Parents on site. $200 ea. 919-283-4559

Yorkie Male. 1 year old. Blue & gold. 3 lbs. $400 252-529-0373

SPECIAL All Unit Prices at $3,995 or Below

0% Interest Payments As LOW As

$

24.00 PER WEEK

Now Through September 2009 ON LOT FINANCING

Apartments,Townhouses, and Corporate Townhouses For Rent

No Collision Insurance Required All with down payments Management Approval! No Over Pricing - On Finance Units

Call 252-738-9771

To View On Line go to

Personals

Homes For Sale

Happy 1st Birthday! Michael Etheridge, Jr.

HOUSE FOR SALE

automartofhenderson.com (16 and 17 year olds Bring your Mom and Dad)

SOLD 125 Jennette Ave – $119,900

Love, Mama & Daddy

We make every effort to avoid errors in advertisements. Each ad is carefully checked and proofread, but when hundreds of ads are handled each day, mistakes do slip through. We ask that you check your ad for any error and report it to the Classified Department immediately by calling 252-436-2810. The newspaper will be responsible for only one day’s incorrect insertion if you do not bring the error to our attention.

Merchandise For Sale

3HOP ONLINE AT WWW RENTCRUSADER COM

65,000 BTU gas heater. Used 1 year. Excellent condition. Paid $699, asking $400. 919-690-8181.

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LINE AD DEADLINES

Apartments For Rent

42� Toro lawn tractor w/bagger. Hydraulic, zero turn. Excellent condition. $2500. 252-492-7623.

Your ad could be run free! If you have a household item for sale for less than $100, we will run your 4-line ad free, one ad per month for 4 days. Certain restrictions apply. Ad must be placed in The Daily Dispatch office or mailed to Daily Dispatch Classified, P.O. Box 908, Henderson, NC 27536.

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OPEN CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES $17.46 per col. inch Repeat $8.74 per col. inch COMMERCIAL RATES

3 BR, 2 BA, Living Room, Kitchen, Dining Room, Screened-in Porch, Garage/Workshop Financing Available to QualiďŹ ed Buyers May Qualify for $8000 Tax Credit

PRIM RESIDENTIAL RENTALS

252-738-9771

Auto Mart of Henderson 133 Raleigh Road Henderson, NC 438-5928

Searching For A Deal? Try The Classifieds. Put the spotlight on all sorts of deals when you use the classifieds!

436-2810


Thurs Class 9.10

9/9/09 4:08 PM

Page 2

THE DAILY DISPATCH • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2009

Wanted To Buy

Investment Properties

Houses For Rent

Houses For Rent

Aluminum, Copper, Scrap Metal&Junk Cars Paying $75-$175 Across Scales Mikes Auto Salvage, 252-438-9000.

preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

118 Wester Ave. Brick 3 or 4 BR, 1.5BA. Built in stove, electric heat. $525/mo. Ref. & dep. req’d. 252-438-4213.

Large 4BR in West Henderson area. Excellent location. Available now. $700/mo. For application, please call 919-693-4552.

Tim’s Scrap Hauling Buying Cars Paying up to $125 Same Day Pick-up 919-482-0169

WE BUY GOLD Silver & Platium, Jewelry, Coins, Sterling, etc... Raleigh Road Flea Market, Wednesday & Thursday Call John 919-636-4150

Investment Properties HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE

Apartment For Rent EQUAL HOUSING

OPPORTUNITY

All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any

* Apartments/Homes * 1 to 3BR. $325 to $995/mo. 252-492-8777. W W Properties

Apartments/Houses Wester Realty 252-438-8701 westerrealty.com

160 W. Chavis Rd., Kittrell. 3BR, 1BA. Dep. & 1st mo. rent. $575/mo. 252-432-4089. 2 BR 1 BA $450/Mo Previous rental ref required Call Currin Real Estate 252-492-7735 2BR, 1116 Dabney Dr. Cent. air. Fridge & stove. No pets. $545+ dep & ref 252-492-2353 2BR, 2BA apt. $550/ mo. 1BR apt. $375/mo. 2BR MH $300/mo. Ref. & dep. 252-438-3738 3BR, 1.5BA. Refrigerator & range furnished. $695/mo. 252-438-6853. Friends & Family Special - up to $100 Free Rent 1-3BR houses & apts.

The Rogers Group 252-492-9385 www.rentnc.net Houses & Apartments from $350 & up. Tegarris Realty, 252-438-6363 Contact our

Get The Daily Dispatch delivered to your home for only $2.88 per week Call 436-2800

#1 Bus Line LONG CREEK CHARTERS & TOURS

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Happy Ads for that special someone.

Potomac Mills Shopping Trip September 19

Charleston, SC & Savannah, GA Touring Oct 23-25 (2 Overnights)

3BR 2BA Singlewide. Drewry area County Line Park. Central air 252-767-4042 Mobile Homes for Rent. SWs & DWs. Call 252492-6646 for info & appointment. 8:305:30pm Singlewide on 1 acre. 2533 George Winston Rd., Bullock. (13 mi. N of Oxford.) 3BR, 2BA. All appliances. No smoking. $450/mo. Call Ann, CENTURY 21 919-691-0834

October 17

Now you can add your company logo to your one column ads/no border ads and get noticed quicker! Call your sales representative or 252-436-2810

Homes For Sale CREDIT REPAIR

14,000 sq. ft. warehouse w/offices, bathrooms, alarm, sprinkler, 17ft. ceilings. $1050/ mo. 252-213-0537.

For lease or sale. 4BR, 3.5BA. 3990sf. 2 story w/basement & deck. $1200/mo. 252-4307244 or 919-667-7519

Riggan Appliance Repair & Lawn Care

October 2-4 October 17-18

Investment Rental Home small, re-modeled 2br Always rented; $59,990 Franklinton US -#1 Owner: 919-693-8984

Company Logo

Lic., Bond., Cert. Start with only $99 252-738-0282 www.pcsofnc.net

Appliance

Atlantic City

Homes & MHs. Lease option to owner finance. As low as $47,900. $2000 dn. $495/mo. 2, 3 & 4BR. 252-492-8777

ADD YOUR LOGO HERE

Business Property For Rent

1-800-559-4054

Delaware Park Place Casino

Homes For Sale

Manufactured Manufactured Homes For Homes For Land For Sale Sale Rent

JesusYesMade A Way You can call

252-492-9227 OR 252-492-4054 Fax: 252-738-0101 Email: longcreek@nc.rr.com

Beauty salon, offices, retail, whse/dist $300 & up. Call us for a deal! 252-492-8777. Office or retail space 600 sq.ft., 800 sq.ft., 1500 sq.ft., 1600 sq.ft. 2400 sq.ft. 3750 sq.ft & 5000 sq.ft. CROSSROADS SHOPPING CENTER Call 252-492-0185

RENT-TO-OWN. 6BR, 2BA. Needs TLC. $1000 down, $525/mo. 602 Rowland St. 252-430-3777.

436-2810

Equipped with VCR/DVD Combo

Business Property For Rent

Owner Financing 1985 SW 3BR,2BA $10,000. $500 down pymt $139.06+tax+ins On rented lot Call Currin Real Estate 252-492-7735 2 like new SWs 14x76. Cash only! I also buy SWs. Bobby Faulkner 252-438-8758 or 252-432-2035 Fall Festival of Homes Sale. A Variety of models in stock and factory overstock are available including Modulars, Doublewides and Singlewides. Call Dan Burnett for details today 252-492-5017

Handyman Special $8995 Delivered. Won’t Last! 919-556-4103.

Manufactured Homes For Sale Liquidation Sale 2009 Old Models Must Go!!! Oakwood Homes of Henderson Unbelievable Deals 252492-5017 Zero down with Family land. Why rent when you can own. Call Steve at 252-492-5018. Ask how to get a $1000 prepaid Visa gift card. Oakwood Homes Of Henderson

Farm Equipment Wanted to Buy Used Farm Equipment & Tractors 919-603-7211

Boats For Sale

• 7B

Boats For Sale 1988 Bayliner 18ft. with125HP motor & trailer $3500 252-432-4294

Trucks & Trailers For Sale 1999 Peterbilt CAT engine, plus 48ft. splitaxle trailer & equipment. $15,000. 252-492-6345.

Autos For Sale 2000 Toyota Camry. $1500. *Buy Police Impounds* For listings, 800-749-8104 Ext 4148

Vans

1989 Malibu 17.5 foot Center console 8960 hp evinrude Hancocks trailier, Fish finder, Marine radio & Lake troll Down riggers Asking $2,000. 252-213-0379 1994 War Eagle. 18 ft. 75HP Mercury. Minkota foot control, fish finder, rod holders, 3 new seats, 2 new tires. Trailer has been rewired. $3500. 252-436-7249.

1995 Plymouth Grand Voyager Handicap modified 55,000 miles 252-430-7244

Auto Parts BF Goodrich tires P22555-17. GM wheels & tires. P225-60-16. 252432-7891. Leave message. White Leonard camper shell w/sliding windows & tinted glass. For short bed X-cab. $300. 252-492-6901.

Call

252-432-0493

New York City Shopping Atlantic Claridge Casino Sept. 30 - Oct. 2 (2 nights)

October 16-18 December 4-6

Disney World Orlando, FL November 26-28 (2-Overnights)

CUT & SAVE

New York Shopping Trip December 11-13

CUT & SAVE

CUT & SAVE

Credit Repair Personal Credit Solutions of NC, LLC

Your Ad Could Be Here

Licensed, Bonded & Certified Bankrutpcy/Collections/Repos Tax Liens/Charge-Offs/Lates Foreclosures/Student Loans

You Can Have Good Credit!

Start with only

$99 (Appt. Only) 314 S. Garnett Street, Suite 204 Henderson, NC 27536 252-738-0282 www.pcsofnc.net

Charter Service

T & T Charter Service “God Will Provide”

New York Shopping September 19, November 14, November 21, December 12

Atlantic City Redeye September 12, October 10

Charles Town November 29

DEBT RELIEF Donald D. Pergerson Brandi L. Richardson Attorney’s at Law

252-492-7796

BINGO AT ITS BEST BIG JACKPOT • FREE BUS RIDE

October 3, November 7, December 5

Mack Turner 252-492-4957 • Mark Turner 919-426-1077

235 Dabney Drive • Henderson, NC

Dale’s Handyman Service

REMODELING L & J Home Repairs

NOW OFFERING Specializing in handling

• Drywall • Drywall Repair • Painting & Carpentry

smoke and water damaged claims. (See yellow page ad) Roofing, Deck, Room Additions, Kitchen & Bath Replacement, Windows, Siding, Painting, Marble & Granite Counter Tops and all other Home Repairs.

252-432-3326

L & J Home Repair

Satisfaction Guaranteed!

Call Today For Your Free Estimate 919-482-0809

JOY’S CLEANING

Your Ad Could Be Here

10 Years Expericence

Residential & Commerical 252-492-7529 Leave Message

“No Job too Big or too Small”

LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE

Specializing in Commercial & Residential Landscape Maintenance email: maintenanceplus80@yahoo.com

(252) 425-5941


Thurs Class 9.10

9/9/09 4:08 PM

Page 3

8B • THE DAILY DISPATCH • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2009

Mobile Home Repair LARRY RICHARDSON’S MOBILE HOME REPAIR SERVICE

Inexpensive advertising for your business! Only $135 per month. Appears every day in The Daily Dispatch & every Wednesday in the Tri County Shopper. Ask how you can double your exposure for an additional $15 a month.

Carpet, Windows, Doors, Floors, Vinyl, Plumbing, Etc.

Over 20 Years Experience “You need it done... we can do it!”

Call 252-436-2810 for info. Harris Plumbing

Larry Richardson

252-213-2465

D&J

Pro-Washer

CONSTRUCTION

Residential & Commercial Mobile Homes – water ters pu ea

ishwash s–d er mp

s

–w pairs ater h Re

For all your plumbing needs!

Neal Harris 252-430-7804 252-425-3536 NC License #27041

Licensed & Insured - 19 years exp

RESIDENTIAL CONTRACTORS We pump wash to save water and your roof. We also provide gutter cleaning and pressure washing for sidewalks, patios, and driveways.

Bill

Jennifer

(919) 702-1812

(919) 482-9409

DECKS, RAMPS, VINYL SIDING, PAINTING, COUNTERTOPS, CARPET, LINOLEUM REMODELS, NEW CONSTRUCTION RESIDENTIAL, MANUFACTURED & MODULAR HOMES

SERVING THE TRI”COUNTY AREA & SOUTHERN VIRGINIA Fully Insured - FREE Estimates

FOR WE ARE GOD’S WORKMANSHIP, CREATED IN CHRIST JESUS TO DO GOOD WORKS, WHICH GOD HAS PREPARED IN ADVANCE FOR US TO DO-EPHESIANS 2:10

CALL ANYTIME - 252-432-2279 252 - 430 -7438

Tree Service Greenway’s Professional Tree Service

Bucket Service or Tree Climbing, Emergency Service, Free Estimates, 30 yrs. exp., Work Guaranteed.

252-492-5543 Fully Insured

GOT CLUTTER? CLEAN UP WITH THE CLASSIFIEDS. You’ll find yourself with space to spare and money to burn when you sell your stuff in the Daily Dispatch Classifieds. $40,000 or less

Call or place your ad for

5 days/5 lines...$5.00 Over a $10 Savings

8 days/8 lines...$8.00 Over a $25 Savings Additional Lines Can Be Purchased

252-436-2810 THE DAILY DISPATCH CLASSIFIEDS


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