The Daily Dispatch - Sunday, October 18, 2009

Page 1

CMYK Pentagon ends plan to send Army brigade to Iraq Nation, Page 7A

Prime Cuts

Sheriff: Charges will be filed in balloon saga Nation & World, Page 8A

Henderson barber Eric Cheek is earning a national reputation.

Maria Parham Healthcare Foundation’s Foundation 5 event

Florida Gators celebrate their 23-20 victory over Arkansas.

Local News, Page 11

Sports, 1B

Page 1C

SUNDAY, October 18, 2009

Volume XCV, No. 244

(252) 436-2700

www.hendersondispatch.com

$1.25

Funds from Feds

Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE

Show, Shine, Shag & Dine Thousands of people packed Garnett Street for Show, Shine, Shag and Dine Saturday morning in downtown Henderson. The annual weekend event is sponsored by the Vance County Tourism Department. Before participants leave town today, the East Coast Drag Times Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will take place at VanceGranville Community College. To view or purchase photos, visit us on the Web at www.hendersondispatch.com.

Oxford PD gets help for VIPER By WILLIAM F. WEST Daily Dispatch Writer

stretched its 210 inches in front of the Henderson Fire House. In 1971, Ted Thomas drove it 233 miles per hour, a record at the time. After its retirement, Don Trasin of Columbus, Ohio, found it. It was restored by Pat Foster of

OXFORD — The City Commission has signed off on a list of grant requests for hundreds of thousands of dollars from the N.C. Rural Center to help pay for improving Oxford’s utilities infrastructure. The actions, which were approved Tuesday evening, came minutes after the commission officially accepted federal grant dollars for the Police Department. Specifically, the commission received $65,051 from the Justice Department so the Police Department can take full advantage of the VIPER radio network. This federal funding is significant because the police VIPER mobile radios have been ineffective inside buildings. VIPER stands for Voice Interoperability Plan for Emergency Responders. And VIPER, which is used by Granville County, is an outgrowth of statewide efforts to put emergency and law enforcement agencies on a more uniform radio network and avoid the kind of communication breakdowns experienced on Sept. 11, 2001, at the World Trade Center. The City Commission in April approved a $37,500 budget amendment as a match to a grant to fix the Police Department’s communication problem. The action was recommended by the commission’s Public Safety Committee after Chief John Wolford said the department’s conventional 800-megahertz frequency, as set up by Sprint Nextel, had continued to dete-

Please see SHOW, SHINE, page 8A

Please see FUNDS, page 4A

Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE

A couple of dragster enthusiasts look under the car at the insides of this Bunny and the Boys dragster at Show, Shine, Shag and Dine in downtown Henderson Saturday morning. To view or purchase photos, visit us on the Web at www.hendersondispatch.com.

A replica of the Munsters car owned by Rucker Posey of Richmond, Va., was on display along with Dragula, a coffin inspired dragster, at Show, Shine, Shag and Dine Saturday morning in downtown Henderson. To view or purchase photos, visit us on the Web at www.hendersondispatch.com.

Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE

This 1947 Corbitt owned by Bill Hight was on display at Show, Shine, Shag and Dine Saturday morning in downtown Henderson. To view or purchase photos, visit us on the Web at www.hendersondispatch.com.

A low view of this 1927 Ford Roadster owned by Scarlett Bowman of Henderson on display downtown at Show, Shine, Shag and Dine Saturday morning. To view or purchase photos, visit us on the Web at www.hendersondispatch.com.

Thousands descend on Henderson for annual good time By DAVID IRVINE Daily Dispatch Writer

Cool weather couldn’t dampen the ardor of car enthusiasts as they strolled the streets of downtown Henderson to absorb the sights sounds and scents of the annual Car Show, a feature

Index Our Hometown . . . . . 2A Business & Farm. . . . 5A Public Records . . . . . 6A Nation . . . . . . . . . . 7-8A World. . . . . . . . . . 8-10A Opinion . . . . . . . . . . 12A Sports. . . . . . . . . . 1-6B Showcase. . . . . . . . . 1C Celebrate. . . . . . . . 2-4C Books & Leisure . . . . 5C Light Side . . . . . . . 6-7C A to Z Kids. . . . . . . . . 8C Real Estate . . . . . . 1-2D Classifieds. . . . . . . 3-4D

of the Show, Shine, Shag & Dine weekend sponsored by the Vance County Tourism Department. Garnett Street from Burwell Avenue to Rose Avenue was transformed into a pedestrian mall, where car enthusiasts could interact with owners of a variety of motor vehicles and partake of

Weather

the goodies offered by vendors. Sports cars lined Breckenridge Street as far as the H. Leslie Perry Memorial Library. With hoods up, they displayed engines polished with obvious loving care. Nancy Thomas gave the Daily Dispatch a brief history of the drag racer, Jade Grenade, which

Deaths

Today Breezy

High: 58 Low: 37

Monday

Henderson Mary R. Alston, 69 Charlie D. Kersey, 45 Alvela C. McKnight, 80 Cherry M. Terry, 84 Littleton Mattie R. Walker, 103 Warrenton Bobby Lynch

Sunny

High: 64 Low: 39

Details, 3A

Good news! The Daily Dispatch is printed on

Woodlief opts out of debate Powell, Strickland will appear for event Tuesday at Senior Center By WILLIAM F. WEST Daily Dispatch Writer

OXFORD — A debate featuring mayoral candiObituaries, 4A dates Steve Powell and Frank Strickland is set for 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Senior Center, with incumbent Al Woodlief saying he will not be present because “I have nothing to debate with either one of these recycled paper. men.”

Woodlief, in e-mail correspondence with the Dispatch late last week, added, “As for Mr. Powell, with nearly four years as (a) commissioner, it is my opinion he has not demonstrated any leadership ability in his position as chairman of the Recreation Committee and would not be an experienced candidate to entertain within a debate.”

Powell, when contacted by the Dispatch and asked about Woodlief’s remark about his alleged lack of performance as the Recreation Committee chairman, said, “It’s definitely incorrect.” “I am complemented by the fact that he’s making negative statements about me because that means Please see DEBATE, page 3A


2

2A

The Daily Dispatch

Mark It Down Today Hall of fame — The East Coast Drag Times Hall of Fame reunion and awards presentation will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Vance-Granville Community College Civic Center. An awards presentation and induction ceremony honoring this year’s inductees into the hall of fame will be held at 12:30 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call the Vance County Tourism Department at (252) 438-2222.

Our Hometown

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Church of the Holy Innocents makes donation to United Way of Vance Co. George Fowler (right), past president and current board member of the United Way of Vance County, thanks the Rev. Donald A. Lowery for a donation of $750 made by the Church of the Holy Innocents to the United Way. The donation was split between the United Way’s community fund and the fund for 2-1-1. Those in need can dial toll free to 2-1-1 to be connected to assistance with basic needs such as food, clothing, shelter, child care services, consumer help, counseling, crisis intervention, health care, housing, senior services and support groups. The phone lines are monitored 24/7, and callers will always speak to a live person. More information about 2-1-1 can be found at www.nc211.org.

Monday Book sale — The Friends of the Library organization for the H. Leslie Perry Memorial Library in Henderson is collecting used books for its annual book sale today from 1-4 p.m. This is the last collection day for this fall’s used book sale. Do not bring Readers Digest Condensed Books, textbooks, magazines or encyclopedias. Used books can be delivered to the former Super 10 location across from Supply Line Country Market on Raleigh Road.

Tuesday Masonic meeting — Henderson Masonic Lodge #229 will hold a Stated Communication at 7 p.m. at the lodge, 401 Brodie Road. Dinner is at 6 p.m., followed by the meeting at 7 p.m. All Master Masons are invited to attend. Kiwanis Club — The Kiwanis Club of Henderson meets at 6:30 p.m. at the Dabney Drive Restaurant on West Andrews Avenue. Joe Tyler, instructor at Vance Granville Community College, will talk about job opportunities in biodiversity. Interested non-members may call Opie Frazier at (252) 430-1111 for membership information or reservations.

Wednesday Blood drive — The American Red Cross will be hosting a blood drive at Granville Central High School on from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. For more information about local blood drives or to learn more about volunteer opportunities, please contact Twanna Jones, Granville-Vance Branch Manager at (252) 4384813 or (919) 693-6550 or email JonesTJ@usa.redcross.org. Oxford Farmers’ Market — The Oxford Farmers’ Market, located on the corner of McClanahan and Lanier streets across from the police station in Oxford, is open from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Thursday Blood drive — The American Red Cross will be hosting a blood drive at Vance Charter School from 2-6:30 p.m. For more information about local blood drives or to learn more about volunteer opportunities, please contact Twanna Jones, Granville-Vance Branch Manager at (252) 438-4813 or (919) 693-6550 or email JonesTJ@usa.redcross.org. Business network — The Vance-Granville Business Network invites local business owners interested in growth to a meeting from 7:30 to 8:45 a.m. at the Hampton Inn, Ruin Creek Road, Henderson. For more information, please contact Virginia Clay at (919) 877-2449 or (800) 648-5571. 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).

Friday United Way fundraiser — The Vance County United Way will hold a “Coins Make A Difference” hot dog/hamburger fundraiser from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the organization’s office, 212 Dabney Dr. (across from the fire station). Hot dog and hamburger lunches will be available for donations. United Way volunteers will also be at the intersection of Dabney Drive and Garnett Street from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. to collect donations from motorists. Survey deadline — The Lake Gaston Association Board (LGA) has posted its 2009 survey on its website at www. lakegastonassoc.com and today is the last day to participate in the survey. A paper copy can be requested by calling (252) 586-6577 or (888) 586-6577. All those (except board members and their immediate families) who complete the survey via the website or U.S. mail will be eligible to win a cash prize. Three drawings will be made for $50, $25 and $10. The winners will be announced at the LGA monthly meeting on Nov. 4.

Guidelines 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.

Sheriff White speaks to Character Education Assembly Vance County Sheriff Peter White spoke to the entire student body and staff at Aycock Elementary School on Oct. 7, during the school’s Character Education Assembly. White spoke for a few minutes to the students about displaying the positive character traits of respect and responsibility. “You must remember to always make the right decisions,” he said. “There are consequences for what you do. If you make the wrong decision and do the wrong thing, you will have bad things happen to you.” Selected students also were presented “Student of the Week” certificates by Principal Laura Rigsbee for showing good character.

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From Page One

The Daily Dispatch

DEBATE, from page one

NATIONAL WEATHER

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Seattle 59/47 Minneapolis 59/45

Billings 69/38

San Francisco 65/55

Detroit 54/38

New York 49/41

Chicago 54/41 Kansas City 60/52

Denver 79/43

Washington 48/40

Los Angeles 78/62 Atlanta 58/38 El Paso 82/61 Houston 74/52

Fairbanks 30/15

Honolulu 87/75

Anchorage 43/33

-10s

-0s

Miami 75/60

Juneau 47/39

0s

10s

Hilo 84/70

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

MONDAY

64°

37°

58°

39°

Breezy with periods of sun

Partly cloudy

Sunny

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

76° 48° Mostly sunny and warmer

75°

77°

49°

53°

Mostly sunny and nice

Mostly sunny and pleasant

ALMANAC

SUN AND MOON

Temperature

Sunrise today ........................... Sunset today ............................ Moonrise today ........................ Moonset today ......................... Sunrise tomorrow ..................... Sunset tomorrow ...................... Moonrise tomorrow .................. Moonset tomorrow ...................

Raleigh-Durham through 6 p.m. yest. High .................................................... 58° Low ..................................................... 45° Normal high ........................................ 71° Normal low ......................................... 47° Record high ............................ 84° in 2007 Record low .............................. 33° in 1977

New

First

Full

Last

Oct 18

Oct 25

Nov 2

Nov 9

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

WinstonSalem

Asheville

Henderson

Greensboro

58/37

Rocky Mt.

58/39

57/34

57/36

52/31

Durham

Raleigh

59/38

Charlotte

59/35

Cape Hatteras

Fayetteville

57/34

7:23 a.m. 6:34 p.m. 7:51 a.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:24 a.m. 6:32 p.m. 8:58 a.m. 7:08 p.m.

Moon Phases

Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ......... 0.00” Month to date .................................. 0.54” Normal month to date ..................... 1.86” Year to date ................................... 26.87” Normal year to date ...................... 35.72”

60/50

60/38

LAKE LEVELS

Wilmington

62/40

Elevation in feet above sea level. Data as of 7 a.m. yesterday. 24-Hr. Lake Capacity Yest. Change Gaston 203 199.62 -0.01 Kerr 320 293.91 +0.11

24-Hr. Capacity Yest. Change 240 212.79 -0.01 264 247.85 -0.04

Lake Jordan Neuse Falls

REGIONAL CITIES Today

Mon.

Today

Mon.

City

Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

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

52 46 58 59 58 59 59 59 52 60 59 57 61 61 52

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

57 63 59 63 61 60 58 60 59 53 56 58 59 62 57

pc c pc pc pc pc pc sh c pc pc pc pc pc pc

64 58 65 65 67 65 65 63 63 64 65 64 65 66 63

32 34 36 37 38 36 36 39 35 40 38 40 41 44 33

s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s

35 41 40 39 43 46 52 42 35 37 38 39 39 40 36

pc pc pc pc pc pc sh pc pc sh c pc pc pc pc

65 67 64 67 66 63 61 65 66 63 63 63 66 65 64

39 41 39 37 41 46 53 41 37 37 39 41 34 43 40

s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s

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

for a debate while speaking at the Oct. 1 forum municipal of municipal candidates. Woodlief The forum was sponsored by the Granville Chamber of Commerce and the County Human Relations Commission. Woodlief, when approached by the Dispatch after the forum, said, “There’s nothing to debate with him (Strickland).” Powell, when approached by the Dispatch moments later, said that, “I would be willing to debate them” and that, “If it’s not a three-way debate, it’s not fair, you know, because then one person is knocking off the other.” Powell, when told by the Dispatch after the forum that Woodlief did not feel there was anything to debate with Strickland, replied, “Well, that means he discounted me. So, that’s not a good thing, either.” Powell told the Dispatch late last week of Tuesday’s upcoming debate, “Well, I didn’t have any reason not to participate. I think it’s an opportunity for people to hear directly from a candidate and maybe get an insight on who I really am as opposed to things they may have heard or been told. They get an opportunity to interface with me directly. And I think that’s helpful for me.” Strickland told the Dispatch in e-mail correspon-

WILMINGTON (AP) — Authorities say a teen surfing on the Outer Banks has drowned after the cord connecting him to his surfboard wrapped around part of a fishing pier, trapping

ay yd r e Ev

him underwater. Hatteras Island Rescue Squad Assistant Chief Bob Helle told the Star-News of Wilmington that rescuers couldn’t get to 15-yearold Craig Marshall for 90

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

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Senior Center Director Kathy May told the Dispatch the reason for the debate is because several senior citizens wanted to meet all of the candidates and obtain more information. May said the problem is the center would have had space issues had the center additionally hosted the candidates for the City Commission, so the center decided to invite only the candidates for mayor. In addition to Powell, Commissioners Paul Kiesow, Bob Shope and Chance Wilkinson are not seeking re-election to their positions. And 13 candidates are seeking election to those four positions. May said the moderator will be Doan Laursen, who retired from Carolina Power & Light two decades ago and who now owns Goose River Farm. As for the format, May said, “I have asked our senior adults (some are politically savvy, some are not) to submit questions to ask the candidates. The moderator will ask each candidate the same question and give each one three minutes to answer. Then each candidate will have one additional minute if needed for rebuttal.” May said Helen Amis, who is chairwoman of the Senior Services Advisory Committee, will serve as the timekeeper.

N.C. teen surfer drowns after cord tangles in pier

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dence late last week that, “I feel that I have an obligation to follow through with Powell my challenge and debate Commissioner Powell. The mayor and I have had some big differences on a lot of Strickland issues and he does not want to answer those issues in a public setting.” Woodlief, a retired radio broadcaster, was a commissioner for 14 years prior to being elected mayor in 2001. Woodlief, in his e-mail to the Dispatch late last week, said, “My office and actions have spoken for themselves.” “If there were any real issues, then that would be a different story,” Woodlief said. “Mr. Strickland has only one agenda and I won’t even entertain that with a comment. “I hope the voters can see, hear and question what the alternatives are compared to my proven leadership and re-elect me as their mayor,” Woodlief said. And Woodlief added “there is no way either candidate is qualified to be mayor.” The senior center is located at 120 Orange St. and just southwest of the central business district.

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Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

that there’s a concern,” Powell said. “If I were a non-entity, he would say nothing about me. But, the fact that he takes time to put time on me, I am complemented by that and encouraged.” Powell, an educator who is completing his first term on the seven-man commission, had at the end of July withdrawn his candidacy for re-election, but at the start of this month decided to enter the contest for mayor as a write-in candidate. The municipal election is Nov. 3. Quon Bridges had held the Recreation Committee chairmanship before being appointed to a judgeship by then-Gov. Mike Easley in September 2007. Oxford’s government relies on a commission committee system to work with each department head and iron out details prior to regular monthly commission meetings. The mayor, who serves a two-year term, names each committee chairman and each committee member. Strickland, who is chief of campus police at Meredith College, opposed Woodlief in the 2005 and 2007 contests. Strickland has repeatedly called for Woodlief’s resignation and has said he believes Woodlief has lied to cover up for alleged misconduct by Police Chief John Wolford. Strickland in 2007 unsuccessfully called for a debate with Woodlief. And Strickland called

er Ev

City

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3A

Sunday, October 18, 2009

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4A

Local News

The Daily Dispatch

Deaths Mary R. Alston HENDERSON — Mary Ruth Alston, 69, of 238 Pearl St., died Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center. She was born in Franklin County and was the daughter of the late Reddish Gray and Theney Bell Bailey Alston. At an early age, she joined Cotton Memorial Presbyterian Church. She was educated in the Vance and Franklin County public school systems. She furthered her education and later received her license in cosmetology. She worked 40 years at the former J.P. Taylor Tobacco Company and worked for Stylee’s Beauty before declining health. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Cotton Memorial Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Gordon Marshall. Burial will follow in Elmwood Cemetery. Survivors include two daughters, Sylvia Bates and Adrea Alston, both of Henderson; three sons, Shalvin Alston and Aldric Alston, both of Henderson, and Bailey Alston of Greenville; a brother, Walter C. Allen of Cheyenne, Wyo.; and 13 grandchildren and greatgrandchildren. The family will receive friends at the residence of Aldric Alston, 415 Bobbitt St. The body will be on view Monday from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. and at the church one hour before the service. Arrangements are by Davis-Royster Funeral Service.

Charlie D. Kersey HENDERSON — Charlie Demetries Kersey, 45, of 42 N.C. Highway 39 South, Loop Road Lot #41, died Thursday, Oct. 15, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center. He was born in Durham County and was the son of Charlie Jackson and the late Mable Janet Williams Kersey. He joined Locust Grove Baptist Church where he served as a trustee and a member of the gospel choir and the community gospel choir. He was educated in the Warren County public schools and graduated from Warren County High School. He worked for the former Harriet & Henderson Yarn Company for many years and at the present time was employed with the City of Henderson as a meter reader. Funeral services will

be conducted at 3 p.m. Monday at Locust Grove Baptist Church by the Rev. James M. Johnson. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Survivors include his wife, Ruth Helen Mayfield Kersey of the home; a daughter, Kyanna Kersey of the home; two sons, Anthony Alexander and Charlie D. Kersey Jr. of the home; his father, Charlie J. Kersey of Oine; a sister, Angie Kersey of Oine; and a brother, Jeffrey Kersey of Richmond, Va. The body will be on view at the funeral home today from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. and at the church one hour before the service. The family will receive friends at the residence. Arrangements are by Davis-Royster Funeral Service.

Bobby Lynch WARRENTON — Bobby Lynch, a resident of South Main Street, Warrenton, died in Maria Parham Medical Center on Friday, Oct. 16, 2009. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Blaylock Funeral Home of Warrenton.

Alvela C. McKnight HENDERSON — Alvela Crudup McKnight, 80, of 210 Center Lane, died Saturday, Oct. 17, 2009, at her residence. The family will receive friends at the residence. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by DavisRoyster Funeral Service.

Cherry M. Terry HENDERSON — Cherry Marrow Terry, daughter of the late Jesse and Helen Bumpass Marrow, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., on Nov. 25, 1924, and died at Maria Parham Medical Center on Thursday, Oct. 15, 2009. She was a faithful member of Saint Andrews United Church of Christ where she served as a missionary and also as a member of the pastor’s aide club and senior choir. She was a homemaker and was married to the late Samuel Terry. Surviving are three sisters, Johnnie Reynolds of Durham, Carrie Talley of Philadelphia, Pa., and Gladys Gadsden of Bronx, N.Y. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday at St. Andrews United Church

of Christ Church with the Rev. C. Jerome Taylor officiating. Interment will follow in the Elmwood Cemetery. The family will receive friends at 428 N. Clark St. and viewing will be Monday at E.C. Terry’s Funeral Service Chapel. Floralbearers will be missionary members and pallbearers will be John E. Brame, Charles Hicks, Samuel Owens Jr., Jess Zackery, Robert Williams and Kenneth Williams. Arrangements are by E.C. Terry’s Funeral and Cremation Service.

Mattie R. Walker LITTLETON — Mattie Rook Walker, 103, of 245 Enterprise Road, died Friday, Oct. 16, 2009, at her home. She was born Sept. 1, 1906, in Brunswick County, Va., to the late DeArthur and Hattie Rook and was married to the late Ernest Walker. She was the oldest member of Enterprise Baptist Church where she was a member of the women’s missionary society. She was also a member of the Warren County Home Demonstration Club and Gold Star Mother of American Legion Auxiliary Post 308 in Littleton. She started to work in 1921 at 16 years of age in the Roanoke River Mill in Roanoke Rapids. She is survived by a daughter, Lucy W. Walker; a son, Ernest Walker Jr.; 10 grandchildren; 18 great-grandchilldren; and five great-great-grandchildren. A viewing and visitation will be held today from 6 to 9 p.m. at her home, 245 Enterprise Road, Littleton. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Monday at Enterprise Baptist Church with the Rev. Darren Lambert officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Memorial donations may be made to the Enterprise Baptist Church Missions Committee, 404 Enterprise Baptist Church, Littleton, N.C. 27850. Arrangements are by Blaylock Funeral Home of Littleton.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

FUNDS, from page one riorate, with police officers, on a daily basis, having to switch to the Fire Department’s channel. To acquire the equipment needed to correct the situation, the county’s emergency management office wrote a grant request on the city’s behalf for $150,000 and the state was going to pay the match but backed out. Mayor Al Woodlief in April said Oxford was eligible to seek $65,000 in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 funds, more commonly known as the federal stimulus effort to help jump start the weak national economy. And Woodlief said he believed some of the $37,500 could be pulled from the $65,000. City officials on Tuesday additionally said the more than $65,000 grant will help pay for a video-digital analysis and editing system to enhance the Police Department’s ability to identify suspects and illegal activity and for four tactical-type weapons to increase capabilities in dealing with armed conflicts and potentially high-risk situations. Woodlief noted this grant marks the only time Oxford has received money as a result of the stimulus package. “Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth,” Commissioner Chance Wilkinson said with a laugh. “No, we’re not,” Woodlief quickly replied, noting

ASHEVILLE (AP) — An unusually early season snow has begun to fall across parts of the North Carolina mountains. The National Weather Service says snow showers started to fall Saturday afternoon above 3,000 feet in

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the far western part of the state around the Smoky Mountains National Park. Weather service meteorologist Patrick Moore says the snow showers should increase as the day continues with as much as 3 inches falling in some

areas. Moore says the snow should stay out of the bigger mountain cities in the valleys like Asheville. The weather service says this is a few weeks early for the first snow in the North Carolina mountains.

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The next one is an application for a $500,000 supplemental grant from the Rural Center, meaning this would be a $1 million package if the grant is approved. And if the grant is approved, then city’s part would also be paid for with water funds. And the city is applying for a $450,000 grant from the Rural Center to rehabilitate sewer lines downstream of presently funded projects. The request is being made based on a recently completed municipal study of inflow and infiltration of the lines, with the city to provide $225,000, also from water funds, if the grant is approved. The Rural Center helps develop economic strategies to improve the quality of life in the Tar Heel State. Among other items of business on Tuesday evening, the commission approved directing City Clerk Donna Hosch to investigate a petition for annexation by Dale Cates, who owns property at 1020 Lewis St. Access to sewer and water services are being provided, but will be terminated if annexation does not occur within four months, city officials said. City Planning Director Cheryl Hart is recommending adopting the request.

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Oxford is looking for more money. Commissioner Bob Shope wanted to know what would happen to the old radios. Wolford told Shope he is not yet certain, but is looking into whether the Police Department can get anything on a trade-in. “We’re not getting much in terms of positive feedback on that, so we’re still working on it,” Wolford said, noting some of the old radios will be kept for other purposes. Woodlief quickly noted that the old radios can be used by street and water crews. And on Tuesday evening the commission approved formally receiving a Justice Department grant of $15,809. The funding will be used to purchase a portable alarm system and transmitter to aid in responding to burglaries and for the suppression of gang activities. “Well, this is the same gift horse,” Mayor Pro Tem and Public Safety Committee Chairman Howard Herring said. “And I think we need to ride it.” Regarding the requests for funding from the N.C. Rural Center, the first one would be to determine what sewer lines are the best candidates for rehabilitation. This is a 50-50 match, with the city to commit $25,000 in water funds if the grant is approved.

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Monday, Oct. 19th 5:00pm - 7:00pm

Merle Norman in Oxford would like to invite you to help raise money for cancer. As always, it’s a great cause and a great party!!!

20% of the profit goes to local patients in need. Remember the rules...If you..Wear Pink • Bring A Friend Show Support (wear clothing or jewelry) • Be Ready To Have A Good Time • You can earn Merle BUCKS (worth $1.00 each) • Wine and hors d’oeuvres • Door prizes every 15 minutes (must be present)

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NOTICE OF MUNICIPAL ELECTION TOWN OF MIDDLEBURG, NC

NOTICE OF MUNICIPAL ELECTION TOWN OF KITTRELL, NC

Pursuant to General Statute 163-33(8), NOTICE is hereby given that an election is to be held in the TOWN OF MIDDLEBURG, State of North Carolina as established by law, for the purpose of electing a MAYOR and three TOWN COUNCILMAN. Date of this election is NOVEMBER 3, 2009. The polling place will be at the E. O. YOUNG ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. The poll will open at 6:30 AM and close at 7:30 PM.

Pursuant to General Statute 163-33(8), NOTICE is hereby given that an election is to be held in the TOWN OF KITTRELL, State of North Carolina as established by law, for the purpose of electing a MAYOR and three TOWN COMMISSIONERS. Date of this election is NOVEMBER 3, 2009. The polling place will be at the KITTRELL FIRE STATION. The poll will open at 6:30 AM and close at 7:30 PM.

Those persons living in the town limits of Middleburg, who are not already registered, will need to do so by October 9, 2009 when the registration books for this election will close.

Those persons living in the town limits of Kittrell, who are not already registered, will need to do so by October 9, 2009 when the registration books for this election will close.

VANCE COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS James C. Kearney, Chairman

VANCE COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS James C. Kearney, Chairman


Business & Farm

The Daily Dispatch

5A

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Union Bank posts 3rd quarter profits OXFORD — Union Back & Trust, a community bank based in Oxford, showed earnings of $238,439 for the third quarter ending Sept.30. Earnings for the first nine months of 2009 cumulate a loss of only $38,427. The bank has been profitable for four of the past five months, and Union Bank president Thomas Combs said that projections point toward profitability for the year with another solid fourth quarter. “We’re always careful in using forward-looking terms,” Combs said, “but we believe we have a good grasp of the current envrionment and we have good reason to believe that this will be our first profitable year.” Union Bank opened in April 2006 in downtown Oxford, then quickly opened branches in Louisburg, Henderon, and Youngsville, as well as a Loan Production Office in Roxboro. Building offices, hiring appropriate staff, adding the costs of technology and furnishings, and entering new markets all affected earnings. “We would have been profitable sooner,” Combs said, “but we held to our business plan, we moved into sensible markets, and we were able to hire the best in each market. That comes at a cost, but those results are now evident. We are positioned well for many years to come.” Assests at the end of the third quarter showed Union Bank at $178.7 million, which exceeds original expectations. Loans as of Sept. 30 were $134.8 million and deposits were at $149.9 million. That compares to loans of $102.2 million and deposits of $94.4 million at the same time last year. The bank’s profits of $238,439 for the third quarter are a major turnaround, compared to a loss of $366,888 at the end of the third quarter a year ago. “These are difficult times in the banking industry,” Combs said. “We feel that our story is much different. We believe we have been successful by pacing ourselves and by being very careful in bringing in good quality loans.”

Combs provided another insight behind the profitability and growth. “We have set out to be a community bank,” Combs said. “We have been a good corporate citizen in each of our markets. We have supported our communities, and in turn our communities have supported us. There is nothing more satisfying than knowing that we succeed based on the acceptance of our communities. We intend to always keep that in mind and while good growth is always ambitious, we plan to never outgrow the communities who helped us get started.” Union Bank Board Chairman Stan Fox said, “We have strongly supported the management team of this bank and allowed the officers to do thier jobs. Our board commends them for a job well done. We knew that going to so many markets at the beginning would delay our profitability, but we always knew it was coming.” For more information about Union Bank & Trust, its locations, officers, or available shares, call (919) 603-5030, or visit offices in Oxford, Louisburg, Henderson, or Youngsville.

Daily Dispatch/JAMES EDWARDS

‘Kabuto’ for Toyota Southeast Toyota Distributors presented Toyota of Henderson and its owner, Dave Genetti, with the “Kabuto” helmet in recognition of his new facility at 205 Toyota Lane off Ruin Creek Road in Henderson. Nearly a dozen representatives of Southeast — in addition to more than 100 area citizens — were present for a grand opening celebration on Friday. Genetti, left, stands with Craig Pollock, group vice president for Southeast, as the helmet sits on display on the table in front of them. According to legend, 800 years ago, Samurai warriors went into battle wearing the helmet, “a symbol of the soul, spirit and strength of a great Japanese fighter.” Today, Pollock said, the Kabuto symbolizes the strength, quality and integrity of the Toyota automobile dealer. Shown watching in the foreground are, left, Darcy Keeton, receptionist, and Genetti’s nine-year-old son, Ross. The new dealership has more than doubled in size with nearly three times the previous inventory in its old location on Raleigh Road.

N.C. firm studying barge emissions MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Pollution from tanker barges on the Mississippi River is being studied under a $230,000 federal grant. Arcadis, a North Carolina firm, is doing the research using lasers, an infrared camera and other remote-sensing equipment to gauge how much pollution is emitted. In particular, workers are looking for the volatile organic compounds that contribute to the Memphis area’s ozone-pollution problem.

VOCs, as they’re called, react with other pollutants in the presence of sunlight to form ozone, a lung-scarring pollutant that must be more tightly controlled if the Memphis area is to meet the stricter standards planned by the federal government. Tankers, which typically haul petroleum and chemical products, represent one of the last remaining sources of ozone-causing pollution that regulators believe can be significantly reduced.

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6A

Public Records

The Daily Dispatch

OXFORD POLICE DEPARTMENT Arrests • Rodney Sizemore, 17, of 119 Alston Court, was booked Oct. 10. Misdemeanor assault. Bond was set at $500. • Africia Edwards, 31, of 105 W. Westbury Drive, on Oct. 10 was served a misdemeanor failure to appear warrant. Bond was pre-set at $1,062. • Christopher Wright, 22, of 101 Halifax St., was booked Oct. 10. Misdemeanor assault. Bond was set at $1,000. • Tevin Brown, 17, of 408 Person St., was booked Oct. 10. Three counts of misdemeanor communicating threats. Bond was set at $3,000. • Frankie Robertson, 23, of 114 Thomas St., on Oct. 10 was served a misdemeanor failure to appear warrant. Bond was preset at $2,500. • James Garner, 34, of 506 B Raleigh St., was booked Oct. 10.

Misdemeanor assault. Bond was set at $500. • Kevin Hawley, 31, of 2158 Smith Road, was booked Oct. 10. Misdemeanor trespassing. Bond was set at $500. • Michael Harris, 31, of 216 A Forest Ave., was booked Oct. 11. Misdemeanor shoplifting/ concealment of merchandise. Bond was set at $500. • Michael Wright, 49, of 203 Wilmington Ave., was booked Oct. 12. Misdemeanor assault. Misdemeanor communicating threats. No bond was set. • Jacqueline Jeter, 41, of 110 B Lewis St., was booked Oct. 13. Misdemeanor harassing phone calls. No bond was set. • Latisha Perry, 24, of 110 B Lewis St., was booked Oct. 13. Misdemeanor harassing phone calls. No bond was set. • Yolanda Bobbitt, 27, of 711 Raleigh St., was booked Oct. 13. Misdemeanor assault. No bond was set.

GRANVILLE COUNTY SHERIFF’S Arrests • William Thomas Royster, 36, of 6547 Harold O’Brien Road, Oxford, was booked Oct. 9. Failure to appear. Bond was set at $1,000. • Ebony Sharoda Satterwhite, 26, of 221 Lanier St., Oxford, was booked Oct. 9. Failure to appear. Bond was set at $400. • Eliul Lopez Perez, 35, of 800 E. C St., Butner, was booked Oct. 10. Driving while impaired. Driving left of center. Driving without an operator’s license. Bond was set at $2,000. • Thomas Oakley, 40, of 105 Cross St., Oxford, was booked Oct. 10. Contempt of court, perjury and court violations. Bond was set at $500. • Charles Andrea Royster, 26, of 7723 Jack Adcock Road,

Oxford, was booked Oct. 10. Failure to appear. Bond was set at $2,000. • Edward Ashley Rice, 38, of 6015 Hebron Road, Oxford, was booked Oct. 10. Misdemeanor assault inflicting serious injury. No bond was set. • James Thomas Rogers, 63, of 5575 Devinwood Road, Oxford, was booked Oct. 10. Misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon. Misdemeanor fleeing/eluding arrest with a motor vehicle. Bond was set at $1,000. • Charlie B. Newcomb, 53, of 3100 White Oak Drive, Oxford, was booked Oct. 11. Failure to appear. Bond was set at $1,000. • Alfonso Decion Cruz, 22, of 1726 Bowling Road, Oxford, was booked Oct. 12. Order for arrest. Bond was set at $2,000. • Heath Wayne Watson, 40,

If you miss your Daily Dispatch, PLEASE CALL 436-2800 before 11 a.m.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

HENDERSON POLICE DEPARTMENT

• Stephanie Bobbitt, 45, of 711 Raleigh St., was booked Oct. 13. Misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon. No bond was set. • Kenyetta Edwards, 26, of 712 Goshen St., on Oct. 14 was served two misdemeanor failure to appear warrants. Bond was pre-set at $1,750. • Tyesha Fairley, 18, of 120 Eastway Drive, was booked Oct. 14. Misdemeanor assault. No bond was set. • Reginald Daniels, 37, of 410 Mimosa St., on Oct. 15 was served a misdemeanor failure to appear warrant. Bond was preset at $1,000. • Tyrone Gill, 27, of 501 Raleigh St., on Oct. 15 was served a felony failure to appear warrant. No cash bond was set. • Anthony Oakley, 21, of 302 Santree Drive, was booked Oct. 15. Misdemeanor disorderly conduct. Bond was set at $400.

Larceny

was set at $5,000. • Comonik Bumphus Hughes, 31, of 6685 Alvis Brooks Road, Oxford, was booked Oct. 12. Misdemeanor simple assault. Misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon. Injury to personal property. No bond was set. • Richard Anthony Mosely, 31, of 3558 N.C. 56, Creedmoor, was booked Oct. 14. Two counts of misdemeanor child abuse. No bond was set.

of 163 Dement Lane was served with an order for arrest on Oct. 15. Felony failure to appear on a charge of breaking and entering. Felony failure to appear on a charge of larceny. Bond was set at $10,000. Court date Oct. 26. • Charles McCory Judkins Jr., 30, of 210 Peachtree St. was arrested Oct. 15. Felony obtaining property under false pretense. bond was set at $10,000. Court date Dec. 14.

Oct. 14. Misdemeanor larceny. Bond was set at $300. Court date Oct. 19. • Calanda Hargrove, 31, of 144 New Circle Lane was served with an order for arrest on Oct. 15. Misdemeanor failure to appear. Bond was set at $2,900. Court date Nov. 24. • Safiya Aminah Grice, 20, of 111 S. Pinkston St Apt. 1 was served with a citation on oct. 14. Misdemeanor shoplifting/concealing merchandise. No bond listed. Court date Nov. 3.

rings, $1,000; and 5 gold bracelets, $500. Damage to a back door jam not estimated. • Michael Cacchiotti, 33, of Coventry, R.I., reported Oct. 15 the theft from 423 Harriett St. of an electric range valued at $200, a refrigerator valued at $300 and light gray carpeting valued at $200.

• Auto Max Sales & Service, 519 N. Garnett St. reported Oct. 15 the theft of a dealer tag, 017156. • Jerome Gallardo Tiangson, 38, of 880 Coble Blvd. Apt. 8 reported Oct. 15 the theft from the residence of the following items and their values: Phillips TV, $168; Toshiba laptop, $800; Compaq laptop, $500; 15 gold necklaces, $2,500; 3 sets of diamong earrings, $1,000; 4 gold

Arrests • Roy Lee Fowler, 44, of 519 Breckenridge St. was arrested

N.C. officer driving 93 mph moments before wreck

VANCE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Arrests

CHARLOTTE (AP) — An investigation has found • Maurice Lamont Miles, 28, of 87 Pearson Lane was arrested a North Carolina police Oct. 15. Injury to personal propofficer wasn’t wearing his erty. Bond was set at $500. Court seat belt and was driving date Oct. 29. at speeds up to 93 mph • Marcus Burt, 18, of 1016 before he crashed on a OFFICE Lehman St. was served a citation Charlotte street. on Oct. 15. Misdemeanor resist, Multiple media outlets of 6617 Thornton Grissom Road, delay, obstruct. Misdemeanor report 23-year-old Joe WilOxford, was booked Oct. 12. In- assault on a public official. Bond linsky remains in critical jury to personal property. Misuse was set at $1,000. Court date condition at a Charlotte of the Emergency 911 system. Nov. 24. hospital and investigaResisting a public officer. Bond • Willard Ray Dement Jr., 27,

tors have not been able to interview him. Charlotte-Mecklenburg police Capt. Andy Kornberg says Willinsky had his lights and siren on Wednesday as he headed to a burglary call.Kornberg says Willinsky lost control and struck an embankment at 62 mph, flipping the cruiser and ejecting him.

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Nation

The Daily Dispatch

News Briefs U.S. woman, 89, honored for saving Jews in WWII NEW YORK (AP) — A human rights group is honoring an 89-year-old New York woman who hid more than 100 Jews in Amsterdam during World War II — not far from Anne Frank’s house. Retired psychiatrist Tina Strobos will be at Monday’s ceremony hosted by the Holocaust and Human Rights Education Center in Westchester County, The New York Times reported. Strobos was a medical student when she risked her life to hide Jews in the home she and her mother shared. The fugitives lived in a secret compartment near the attic. Strobos also took ration stamps by bicycle to Jews hiding at farms and hid guns for the Dutch resistance. She was repeatedly stopped and questioned by the Nazis. But she says it was “the right thing to do.”

Priest to auction family silver for homeless shelter GREEN BAY, Wisc. (AP) — A Wisconsin priest is auctioning off his late mother’s collection of old silver pieces to raise money for a homeless shelter. The Rev. Guy Blair donated 14 silver items, including five sugar urns dating back to the 1790s. Other pieces include vases and coffee and tea pots. Tim Rigdon, a director at Heritage Auctions, says the sum of the items’ mini-

H THE PAIN!

Williamsburg offers eMuseum WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) — Colonial Williamsburg’s collection of historic pieces is going high-tech. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation is making images, descriptions and object histories of all 60,000 of its pieces available on the Web in a new eMuseum. So far, about 3,200 objects are available with more being added monthly. Officials say its the latest attempt to make the collections broadly accessible for scholars, historians, collectors and the general public. The eMuseum allows Colonial Williamsburg to show off portions of its collections that are too fragile or light-sensitive for frequent exhibition. Online visitors will be able to search the database by object maker, material, date or type, among other categories.

Man convicted for organizing boat trip from Cuba KEY WEST, FlA. (AP) — A Miami-Dade County

man is facing up to life in prison after being convicted of charges that he helped organize and outfit a human smuggling trip in which a Cuban boy died. A jury convicted Carlos Manuel Reyes on Thursday after a two-day federal trial in Key West. The U.S. Coast Guard intercepted the go-fast boat with 29 Cuban nationals on board on Oct. 13, 2005. As the Coast Guard pursued it, the smaller vessel capsized and trapped 6-year-old Julian Villasuso beneath it. The boat’s two captains pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit alien smuggling. Each was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Reyes’ sentencing is scheduled for January. Defense attorney Roy Kahn said Saturday that Reyes maintains that he didn’t organize the trip. Kahn says Reyes will appeal.

Town uses goats to clear meadow, save a buck ANDOVER, Mass. (AP) — A Boston suburb has some new landscapers that will work for food — a half-dozen goats clearing and maintaining an overgrown public meadow. Under a pilot program in Andover, Lucy McKain’s dairy goats will rotate their grazing around the meadow for an all-you-caneat buffet of grass, brush and other growth. The goats can clear as much as a half acre every three days at no cost. The fact it’s free is important to Andover officials, since money is tight and they couldn’t afford the heavy equipment, fuel and labor needed to clean

up the meadow. Plus, goat landscaping is environmentally friendly. If the program is a success, Andover officials want to make more public parkland available to other grazing animals.

The U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, has recommended from as many as 80,000 more troops to as few as 10,000 for the war in Afghanistan — but favors a compromise of 40,000 more forces. Such additional forces would not be deployed until early next year at the soonest, and it is not clear how they would be fully compiled. Obama has said he would make up his mind on additional troops in the coming weeks, and no announcement is expected before November. HOME DELIVERY only $12.50 a month. Call today. 436-2800.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon is canceling plans to send a 3,500-member Army brigade to Iraq, a move that speeds the U.S. detains drawdown there and could Mexican human free up forces as President Barack Obama considrights activist ers sending new troops to EL PASO, Texas (AP) — Afghanistan. The 1st Infantry Brigade A Mexican human rights Combat Team from the 10th official is in U.S. customs Mountain Division based in detention, apparently for Fort Drum, New York, had his own safety, after he been scheduled to relieve reported 170 instances of another combat brigade in Mexican soldiers allegedly Iraq in January. But the torturing, abusing and brigade will no longer deploy killing innocent people in and will now return to the Chihuahua. Army’s pool of available Customs and Border combat forces, the Defense Protection agents took Department said Saturday. Gustavo de la Rosa Hick“This decision was based erson into custody Thurson a thorough assessment day. of the security environment A report in Saturday’s in Iraq and reflects the conEl Paso Times says his tinued improvement in the ability of the Iraqi Security lawyer Carlos Spector believed they wanted him Forces to safeguard Iraqi citizens and institutions,” to seek political asylum. the statement said. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman Leticia Zamarripa says Hickerson was taken into custody due to “mandatory detention provisions and will be afforded all rights and procedures allowed” under U.S. laws. Hickerson works for the Chihuahua State Human Rights Commission.

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7A

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8A

Nation & World

The Daily Dispatch

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Sheriff: Charges will be filed in balloon saga Parents spoke voluntarily to authorities and are not under arrest By DAN ELLIOTT Associated Press Writer

AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe

Worship of dogs

Nepalese police officer and dog handler Padam Gurung and his dog pose for a photograph Saturday at a police kennel in Katmandu, Nepal, during celebrations for the Tihar festival. Nepalese are marking the five-day long festival of Tihar; celebrations on Saturday were dedicated to the worship of dogs.

Lawyer: Polanski undergoing medical tests PARIS (AP) — One of Roman Polanski’s lawyers says the jailed filmmaker is undergoing medical tests, though his current condition “is not of exceptional gravity.” Herve Temime told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that after Saturday’s tests Polanski would return to the Swiss prison where he is being held on a U.S. arrest warrant for having sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977.

The Paris-based lawyer declined to say what kind of exams Polanski had undergone or where they were administered. Swiss tabloid newspaper Blick printed pictures Saturday of a van it said had whisked the director from the prison the northeastern city of Winterthur to an unnamed Zurich hospital. Polanski has been in custody since late September.

FORT COLLINS, Colo. — A sheriff said Saturday that his office will file criminal charges in the case of a 6-yearold boy who vanished into the rafters of his garage while the world thought he was zooming through the sky in a flying saucer-like helium balloon. After the boy’s parents, Richard and Mayumi Heene, met with sheriff’s officials for much of the afternoon, Larimer County Sheriff Jim Alderden didn’t say who would be charged or what the charges would be, but he did say the parents spoke to investigators voluntarily and weren’t under arrest. Alderden previously said that if the balloon ordeal was a hoax, the parents could be charged with making a false report to authorities, a low-level misdemeanor. “We were looking at Class 3 misdemeanor, which hardly seems serious enough given the circumstances,” Alderden said Saturday. “We are talking to the district attorney, federal officials to see if perhaps there aren’t additional

federal charges that are appropriate in this circumstance.” He said deputies were seeking a search warrant for the family’s home, and there would be more information at a news conference today. The Heenes were expected to speak to reporters outside their home later Saturday, after a strange day that began with Richard Heene knocking on the windows of journalists camped outside his home and promising a “big announcement.” A few hours later, he did an about-face when he told reporters that they should leave questions in a cardboard box on the front doorstep. While Richard and Mayumi Heene were at the sheriff’s office, the couple’s three sons remained home, apparently being watched by sheriff’s officials. Authorities wouldn’t comment on what was happening. Alderden had said that he wanted to re-interview the family after Falcon told CNN that “you said we did this for a show” when asked why he didn’t come out of his hiding place. Then Falcon got sick during two separate TV interviews when asked why he hid.

The balloon was supposed to be tethered to the ground when it lifted off, and no one was supposed to be aboard. A video of the launch shows the family counting down in unison, “3, 2, 1,” before Richard Heene pulls a cord, setting the balloon into the air. “Whoa!” one of the boys exclaims. Then his father says in disbelief, “Oh, my God!” He then says to someone, “You didn’t put the (expletive) tether down!” and he kicks the wood frame that had held the balloon. Falcon’s brother said he saw him inside the compartment before it took off and that’s why they thought he was in there when it launched. Heene said he had yelled at Falcon before the launch for getting inside. Alderden said earlier that he thinks it’s likely that Falcon ran off because he was scared of getting in trouble, later falling asleep in his hiding spot. He said he doubted that such a hyperactive boy could be ordered to stay quiet for the five hours he was missing. Over the years, Richard Heene has worked as a storm chaser, a handyman and contractor, and an aspiring realityTV star.

SHOW, SHINE, from page one Wichita, Kan. Not far away, Petie Eavers displayed his Chevy Twister, a restored 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air. Eavers will be at the East Coast Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, to be held on Sunday afternoon at the Vance-Granville Community College Civic Center. On Williams Street, Mac Renn, of Bobbitt Road in Kittrell, stood beside his 1949 Corbitt Truck. Renn is vicepresident of the Corbitt Preservation Association. He told the Dispatch that it took him about three years to restore the truck, with assistance from Bill Hight, William Hardee and Bobby Dick, as well has his wife Robin and son Andy. Spectators came from distant places and from around the corner. Steve Zerbe of Cherry Hill, N.J., came equipped with camera to take back some of his memories. He said he is a drag racing fan and a Civil War buff. After enjoying the car show, he will head for the Guilford Courthouse Battlefield to indulge

LOOSE DENTURES? HENDERSON FAMILY DENTISTRY

that other interest. Pete Menikos, who works locally for Harper Prints, told the Dispatch that he attends the car show every year. His interest stems from the 1975 Dodge Charger that he once owned. James and Rhonda Bundy of Goldsboro ducked into the Bull Pen Bar & Grill to warm up and get a bite to eat. He has a 1968 Chevrolet Nova and a 1966 Chevrolet Suburban, which he is restoring. He said he hopes to have the Nova ready for the Car Show next year. The Bull Pen appeared to attract customers with its breakfast menu and lunch specials. Kenny Thompson of Sanford sat at the counter and commented on the number and variety of cars on display. Vendors representing Iron Gate Vineyards and Chatham Hill Winery occupied adjoining spaces on Garnett Street and offered samples of their wines. Debbie Stikeleather of Iron Gate said they are working to get supermarkets to sell their wines. Iron Gate is located near

Mebane; Chatham Hill is in Raleigh. Vendors of homemade sherbet and ice cream floats said they were waiting for the sun to warm spectators to increase demand for the products. Richard “Peanut” Sanford, who operates Oxford Road 66, looked over the cars on display with the eye of an expert at keeping old cars running. A couple of years ago, he repaired a 1985 Oldsmobile station wagon owned by the Daily Dispatch reporter by creating parts that were no longer available. James Alston, of the Flint Hill neighborhood, replied, “I wish I did,” when asked if he owned one of the cars on display. He added, “It’s a good show, a very good show.” Gracie Scales, of Thurston Street in Henderson, summed up the car show this way: “It’s interesting, marvelous to see them taking things and preserving them.” Contact the writer at dirvine@hendersondispatch.com.

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World

The Daily Dispatch

9A

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Offensive begins in al-Qaida haven Pakistan asking more U.S. help against militants Featured Doctor

By ISHTIAQ MAHSUD and MUNIR AHMAD Associated Press Writers

Philip D. Meador, MD

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — More than 30,000 Pakistani soldiers launched a ground offensive against al-Qaida and the Taliban’s main stronghold along the Afghan border Saturday, officials said, in the country’s toughest test yet against a strengthening insurgency. The United States has long pushed the government to carry out an assault in South Waziristan, and it comes after two weeks of militant attacks that have killed more than 175 people across the nuclear-armed country. That has ramped up pressure on the army to act. Pakistan has fought three unsuccessful campaigns since 2001 in the region, which is the nerve-center for Pakistani insurgents fighting the U.S.-backed government. It is also a major base for foreign militants to plan attacks on American and NATO forces in Afghanistan and on targets in the West. After months of aerial bombing, troops moved into the region Saturday from several directions, heading to the insurgent bases of Ladha and Makeen among other targets, intelligence and military officials said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic or because they were not allowed to brief the media. At least 11 suspected insurgents were killed in the jet bombings, while a bomb hit a security convoy, killing one soldier and wounding three others, two local intelligence officials said. A military statement Saturday evening said four soldiers were killed and 12 wounded in exchanges of fire elsewhere in the region. The army has deployed more than 30,000 troops to the region, said one of the intelligence officials. The military already has said it has sealed off many supply and escape routes and has been trying to secure the support of local tribes-

AP Photo/Ijaz Muhammad

Pakistan Army troops prepare Saturday to leave for patrolling during a curfew in Bannu, a town on the edge of Pakistan’s lawless tribal belt Waziristan. More than 30,000 Pakistani soldiers launched a much-awaited ground offensive in an al-Qaida and Taliban stronghold of South Waziristan along the Afghan border, officials told The Associated Press — the nucleararmed U.S. ally’s toughest test yet against militants aiming to topple the state. men in the fight. Recent opinion polls show broad support for military action against the militants, a change from a few years ago. There is also political backing for action. Speaking earlier in the week, army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said the assault would be limited to slain Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud’s holdings — a swath of territory that stretches roughly 1,275 square miles. That portion covers about half of South Waziristan, which itself is slightly larger than the U.S. state of Delaware. The plan is to capture and hold the area where Abbas estimates 10,000 insurgents are headquartered and reinforced with about 1,500 foreign fighters, most of them of Central Asian origin. “There are Arabs, but the Arabs are basically in

the leadership, providing resources and expertise and in the role of trainers,” he said. Since 2001, the army’s three attempts to dislodge Taliban fighters from South Waziristan have ended in truces that left the Taliban in control. This time the military has said there will be no deals, partly to avoid jeopardizing gains won earlier this year when Pakistani soldiers overpowered the Taliban in the Swat Valley, another northwestern region. Despite sometimes rocky relations with the Pakistani military, the U.S. is trying to rush in equipment for the offensive that would help with mobility, night fighting and precision bombing, a U.S. Embassy official told The Associated Press in a recent interview, speaking on condition of anonymity because the issue is politi-

cally sensitive. In addition to night-vision devices, the Pakistan military has said it is seeking additional Cobra helicopter gunships, heliborne lift capability, laser-guided munitions and intelligence equipment to monitor cell and satellite telephones. Even if the operation is successful in South Waziristan, many of the militants could escape to Afghanistan or other parts of Pakistan’s semiautonomous tribal belt. Few analysts expect that by itself it will turn the tide in the country’s war against militants. The army has considered the upcoming winter weather in the timing the offensive. Snows in the region could block major roads. At the same time, it could also work to the army’s advantage by driving fighters out of their unheated mountain hideouts.

Fall Festival

Spooky Hayride Bouncy House Sponsored By: Henderson-Vance Recreation Department Slide Thursday, October 22nd Games 5:30 - 8:30 pm Haunted House Join Us For A Night Of Spooky Fun! Face Painting Activity tickets: 25 cents each ✭ Win a prize every time! ✭ Train Ride Costume Contest for all ages 6pm & 7pm DJ For more information call: Festival Snacks Crystal @ 438-3408

Henderson-Vance County Chamber of Commerce

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Philip D. Meador, MD is a board-certified dermatologist who has practiced in Henderson since 1976. A dermatologist is a physician who specializes in skin care. This doctor receives extensive training in treating skin problems and helping keep skin, hair and nails healthy. His office is located in suite 120 of the J.W. Jenkins Building, adjacent to Maria Parham Medical Center. Dr. Meador’s office can be reached by calling (252) 492-2123.

Maria Parham’s

Calendar of Events Lamaze/Childbirth Classes

The next series of Childbirth Classes begins Monday, Oct. 19th and runs through Nov. 23rd. Classes are Monday nights from 6:30pm until 9:00pm. Cost is $50. Please call (252) 436-1881 to register.

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Discussion about breast cancer & a free lunch Wednesday, Oct. 21st at noon MPMC Classroom Call (252) 436-1116 or (252) 436-1605 to reserve your spot.

Lake Area Amputee Support Group Tuesday, Oct. 27th at 6:30pm MPMC - John T. Church Classroom Please call (252) 436-1881 to register.

Stroke Support Group

Open to stroke survivors, families and friends. Wednesday, Oct. 28th at 3:00pm MPMC Center for Rehab Conf. Room Call (252) 436-1604 for more info.

Breast Cancer Support Group Tuesday, Nov. 10th at 6:00pm MPMC - John T. Church Classroom Call (252) 436-1605 for more info.

Healthy Moment

Sunscreen in the Fall & Winter? Now that fall has come and winter will soon be upon us, it is important to remind everyone of the need to wear sunscreen year-round. The ultraviolet spectrum of sunlight that causes sunburn and contributes to skin damage is still present in the cooler months. Obviously, the cooler months mean less exposed skin, but our faces and hands still receive lots of sunlight. This is especially true when we are out in the snow, which has an almost magnifying way of intensifying the sun’s rays. If these rays are not kept out by sunscreens or one’s natural tan, the elastic fibers of the skin are damaged and a person develops wrinkled and sagging skin. This damage accumulates over the years of carefree sun exposure. Besides damaging the elastic fibers, sunlight also causes skin cancers. These also occur in proportion to how much sunlight you get over the years and your skin type. Severe burns directly increase the chance of developing melanoma, a form of skin cancer. So experts advise everyone to wear sunscreen all year long -- even during winter when you think you may not need it.

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10A

World

The Daily Dispatch

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Chinese democracy activist gets 10 years

AP Photo/Mohammed Seeneen

Underwater cabinet Maldivian Minister of Fisheries and Agriculture Ibrahim Didi, right, signs a document Saturday calling on all countries to cut down their carbon dioxide emissions ahead of a major U.N. climate change conference in December in Copenhagen. Government ministers in scuba gear held an underwater meeting in Girifushi of the Maldives’ Cabinet to highlight the threat global warming poses to the lowest-lying nation on earth. Maldivian President Mohammed Nasheed led Saturday’s meeting around a table on the sea floor, 20 feet below the surface, with ministers communicating using white boards and hand signals.

North Korea has six political prison camps South Korean lawmaker also says there are 154,000 prisoners By KWANG-TAE KIM Associated Press Writer

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea is estimated to be holding some 154,000 political prisoners in six large camps across the country, a South Korean lawmaker said Saturday. North Korean political prisoners are sent to the camps without trial and are condemned to life in prison in five of them, despite the North’s new constitution calling for respecting human rights, Yoon Sang-hyun, a lawmaker with the ruling Grand National Party, said in a statement. The six camps are for political prisoners and are in addition to prisons for people who commit crimes such as murder and robbery. Prisoners are forced to toil for more than 10 hours a day, are fed a poor diet and do not receive medical aid. They are also banned from communicating with their families while in prison, Yoon said in the statement.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Il wields absolute power in the communist state of 24 million people and allegedly inmates cannot be executed without Kim’s knowledge or direction, activists say. North Korea has long had one of the world’s worst human rights records, but rejects outside criticism on its alleged human rights abuses and the existence of gulags, denouncing it as part of a U.S. attempt to overthrow its regime. But in April, the North revised its constitution to say the state “respects and protects” human rights, according to South Korea’s Unification Ministry, which handles North Korean relations. Activists, however, say the North’s abuses on its citizens remain unchanged. Yoon said in his statement that North Korea held some 200,000 political prisoners in 10 camps into the 1990s, but it closed four of them in the late 1990s in response to con-

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demnation by the international community. Yoon’s aide said his office got the figures and other information on prison camps from the South Korean government as part of ongoing annual parliamentary inspections of the government ministries and agencies. He did not say how the South Korean government obtained the information. Offenses meriting banishment to a prison camp include everything from disparaging leader Kim Jong Il to trying to flee the country, defectors and prison survivors say. “North Korea perpetrates various crimes against humanity, including public executions, tortures or rapes, against those who try to escape,” Yoon said, citing the government’s information. Under a decade of liberal rule, South Korea

T H E

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BEIJING (AP) — The founder of a Chinese group that challenged Communist rule with a call for multiparty democracy has been sentenced to 10 years in prison, a human rights group said Saturday. Former university professor and judge Guo Quan was sentenced for “subversion of state power” by a court in eastern Jiangsu Province on Friday, the New York-based group Human Rights in China said in a statement. Guo had been detained numerous times since 2007, when he founded the China New Democracy Party, which he claimed had 40 million members. He was arrested in Nanjing, the provincial capital, last November. His wife told The Associated Press at the time that Guo was taken after dropping his son off at school. His sentencing comes ahead of President Barack Obama’s visit to China in mid-November. China’s Communist Party has never allowed a serious challenge to single-party rule. While other political parties exist, they are not allowed to wield real power. Guo’s lawyer has said Guo was accused of forming an illegal group, recruiting members and publishing

articles on the Internet to “overthrow the socialist system in the name of helping the weak.” A former associate professor at Nanjing Normal University and a former judge in Nanjing, he started publishing articles online in 2007 advocating a multiparty democratic system with elections. He addressed them to Chinese President Hu Jintao and Wang Bangguo, China’s chief legislator, Human Rights in China said. Guo was later fired by his university, Human Rights in China said. Human rights groups say the charge of “subversion of state power” has been regularly used to curb freedom of expression in China. “This sentence is indefensible from a legal perspective, because using peaceful and rational means to petition cannot be considered subversion of state power,” Guo’s lawyer, Guo Lianhui, told Human Rights in China. “Subversion of state power can only be achieved by armed insurrection.” Human Rights in China said the time between Guo’s trial in early August and the verdict exceeded the oneand-a-half month time limit for a court to conclude a case according to the Criminal Procedure Law.

Somali pirates hijack Singapore-flagged ship NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — European Union naval officials say Somali pirates have hijacked a Singaporeflagged container ship. A statement on the Web site of the EU anti-piracy force says the Kota Wajar was seized early Thursday in the Indian Ocean about 300 miles north of the Seychelles islands. The statement says coalition forces sent an

aircraft to investigate. It was not immediately clear how many crew were onboard or what their nationalities were. Calls to naval officials went unanswered on Saturday. Somalia has been ravaged by violence and anarchy since 1991 and piracy has flourished off its coast, making the Gulf of Aden one of the most dangerous waterways in the world.

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CMYK

Local News

The Daily Dispatch

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Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Foundation 5 Dispatch photos/GLENN CRAVEN

At left, runners break at the start for the main event at the Maria Parham Healthcare Foundation’s “Foundation 5” event at the hospital Saturday. The 5K race was won by Heath Davis of Henderson (above) in 19 minutes, 12 seconds. Curtis Norwood of Norlina was second and Nick Sharpe of Henderson was third. First-place female was Cara Grout of Creedmoor in 23:12. Full results will appear in Tuesday’s edition.

Dispatch photos/GLENN CRAVEN

At left, Carley Walthall, just turned 2, danced to the music Saturday morning at the Maria Parham Healthcare Foundation’s “Foundation 5” fundraiser. And all that dancing sure worked up a thirst (above).

Dispatch photos/GLENN CRAVEN

Chick-fil-A was among the sponsors of the “Foundation 5” events, which included a 5K race, a “Heart Healthy Mile” event, and the Kids’ Dash. Along to provide a little spirit was the Chick-fil-A mascot, who frequently found herself dancing with younger participants. Above, 10-year-olds Alicia Spence, left, and Jennifer Cable find dancing with the cow to be a real hoot. At right, 6-year-old Riley Johnson cuts a little asphalt with the cow in the Maria Parham Parking lot.

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12A

Opinion

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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 Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church: and he is the saviour of the body. … Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it. Ephesians 5:22-23, 25

Our Opinion

Marriage isn’t anyone else’s call to make You wouldn’t think it possible in 2009, but it happened. A Louisiana justice of the peace recently refused to issue a marriage license to a couple because the prospective husband and wife were not of the same race. The justice of the peace, Keith Bardwell of Tangipahoa Parish, says he isn’t racist. “I do ceremonies for black couples right here in my house,” he insists. But he claimed his refusal was based on a poor record of interracial couples at staying wed. And he worried about the children. “I don’t do interracial marriages because I don’t want to put children in a situation they didn’t bring on themselves,” Bardwell said. “In my heart, I feel the children will later suffer.” Considering roughly half of all U.S. marriages end in divorce, does Bardwell have any actual evidence that interracial couples fare worse? And even if he did, so what? If statistics showed that couples who have a height difference of more than — oh, let’s arbitrarily say seven inches — get divorced at a higher rate than couples who are closer in height, should they be refused marriage licenses? You know, for the sake of the children. Not knowing Bardwell personally, we won’t suggest that he is racist based on this one incident. Way out of line? Absolutely. Any couple who comes before the justice of the peace and fulfills all legal requirements of marriage — age, proof of divorce if necessary, etc. — should be granted a license. Marriage isn’t baseball. There are no judgment calls on the part of the officials.

Quotable “My dad said he’s tired of this show.” — Ryo Heene, son of Richard Heene, who declined further interviews after facing reporters’ questions of whether the scare over another son thought to have floated away in a helium balloon was a hoax. “Perhaps he’s worried the kids will grow up and be president.” — Bill Quigley, director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and Justice, on a Louisiana justice of the peace who refuses to marry interracial couples. President Barack Obama is the son of a black father from Kenya and a white mother from Kansas. “To say he is a homicidal maniac misses the point. He is someone who could not live with 4 million people in bondage and had to do something about it.” — Kerry Altenbernd, a law librarian from Lawrence, Kan., one of those who marched in the footsteps of radical abolitionist John Brown 150 years after he launched the raid that kindled the Civil War.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Eat all that you can eat This column was originally published Aug.18, 2002.

The U.S. Army is developing a new Combat Sandwich. Really. Army food technicians say this sandwich can remain edible, without refrigeration, for three years. Granted, that’s nowhere near the staying power of those $4.50 hot dogs they sell at airports, some of which have been rotating on their grills since the Lindbergh flight. But it’s still impressive. I recently had an opportunity to field-test the new Combat Sandwich, and will give you my review once I get my new artificial stomach. No, seriously, I’m fine, and my review will follow this informative HISTORY OF MILITARY FOOD: The legendary French general Napoleon “Bone” Aparte once observed that “an army marches on its stomach.” Of course, Napoleon was talking about French soldiers, who drank large quantities of wine and thus often could not march on their actual feet (“Forward … CRAWL!”). In battle, they routinely shot at their own artillery to make it shut up so they could sleep. But the point is that food is vital for soldiers. The ancient Romans knew this: No matter how far their soldiers

ventured from Rome, they knew that, come dinnertime, the Domino’s delivery chariot would come thundering into camp, driven by a man who knew that if he was more than 30 minutes late, he’d be disemDave boweled. Barry By the Tribune Media American Services Civil War, the military had developed a ration called “hardtack,” which was similar to plywood but not as tender. The advantage of hardtack was that it did not spoil, so if soldiers were pinned down on the battlefield, unable to get supplies, they could simply reach into their knapsacks, pull out their hardtack and throw it at the enemy. In World War II, the Army developed “K-rations,” which were critical to the outcome of the war, because the Allied soldiers knew that if they won, they would no longer have to eat K-rations. After the war, tons of leftover Krations were given to starving war refugees, who gave them back. Today they are used primarily in road construction

and fruitcake. During the Cold War, there was a fierce competition between the United States and the Soviet Union to gain superiority in the field of military food. This culminated in the Red Army’s development of the legendary “Big Ivan” Tactical Assault Sausage, which was the size of a subway car and theoretically could feed one infantryman for 400 years. In 1987, a dozen of these babies were dropped from bombers to Soviet troops in Afghanistan; shortly thereafter, communism collapsed. So food has played a vital role in military history, which is why the Army’s new Combat Sandwich is so exciting. When I heard about it, I asked the Army to send me one, and the Army graciously sent me two: one barbecued chicken, and one pepperoni, both wrapped in brown military foil packets that you need a bayonet to open. I field-tested these sandwiches on a Florida beach, where the harsh battlefieldstyle conditions included heat, sand and a large pink man walking around in a tiny red thong. If anything is going to ruin a person’s appetite for a sandwich, it is suddenly finding yourself face to face with the flagrant crevasse that this man was sporting.

But even under these conditions, the Combat Sandwich held up well. It’s a “pocket” style sandwich, which means it looks as if it has spent time in somebody’s pocket. But I thought it was quite tasty, in a spicy way. Of course, I think everything is tasty, including cold cuts so old that when you try to take them out of the refrigerator, they skitter away on little mold legs and hide behind the beer. I will eat food with an expiration date written in Roman numerals. So I gave a few bites of Combat Sandwich to my wife, who’s very strict about food freshness, always rooting through the refrigerator and throwing out pieces of pizza that, in my opinion, still have years of service left. She actually liked the Combat Sandwich. So did my motherin-law, who is picky about most things, although she has graciously made an exception in my case. In conclusion, the Combat Sandwich is a strong addition to our nation’s combatfood arsenal. It is a tribute to the men and women who devised it, and the courageous barbecued chickens and pepperonis who gave their lives to make it possible. I know I speak on behalf of a grateful nation when I say: What’s for dessert?

Letters to the Editor Face don’t matter to water-pushers To the editor: According to the Sept. 25 Daily Dispatch, our county commissioners are going ahead with a water system. I guess truth, facts, and fraudulent elections don’t seem to matter. The last citizen’s advisory committee appointed by the commissioners studied the issue of countywide zoning. It met over several months, investigating the proposed zoning ordinance, the concept of zoning, the effects of zoning, and the realities of zoning. After having done what advisory committees are suppose to do, it told the commissioners the truth, that countywide zoning was not wanted, needed or advisable. no faith at all. The newest citizen But I have trouble seeing the advisory committee will coercive effect of a cross in the bear no resemblance to middle of nowhere. the one that did the right That, it seems to me, is an thing. This committee, issue most effectively judged reporting to county mannot in a court of law but one of common sense. To live at peace ager Ayscue, is not being formed to study anything. in a pluralistic society is to perfect the art of give and take, Its sole purpose is to talk live and let live. It is to learn to unsuspecting people into signing up for the Trojan choose your battles. I submit that this is a battle horse known as countywide water. According to the poorly chosen. Yes, the arguDispatch, this committee ment arguably has legal merit will obtain sign-ups, nothbut you have to ask yourself: ing more. what’s the point? Is someone It seems that Mr. Ayscue really injured by a cross in the and his seven power hundesert? Or is this not about validating principle at all costs gry pawns are not going to — even public peace and comallow citizens to take an mon sense? active role. They learned Indeed, by the same reason- their lesson with zoning. ing, one might sue cities that Informed citizens tell the allow crosses to be planted at truth. Informed citizens roadsides where traffic fataliknow a mistake when they ties have occurred. Except that see one. And countywide if it comforts some grieving water has been fraught family and your only “injury” is with mistakes from the to glimpse it while driving by at beginning. To date, not a 65 mph, why would you bother? single mistake has been Principle absent human corrected. compassion is just intellectual The citizens’ committee masturbation. on countywide water, the So forgive me if I am unimway it is designed, won’t be pressed by the argument that a cross in the middle of nowhere an advisory committee. It will more likely resemble is unconstitutional. Underan ACORN voter registrastand: I think the argument tion drive or a door-to-door may well be correct. magazine sales crew. But that’s not the same as Neither is professional being right. and neither can be trusted. Leonard Pitts is a columnist for Al Woodruff, the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Henderson Miami, Fla., 33132. Readers may contact him via e-mail at lpitts@ Please see LETTERS, page 13A miamiherald.com.

Legal argument, common sense collide in courtroom Christmas is probably unconstitutional. I’m no lawyer, but the logic seems unassailable to me. Consider: Santa Claus aside, Christmas is an explicitly Christian holiday and the only holiday of any religion to be observed by the federal government. Which would seem to violate the First Amendment edict that Congress “shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” Yet to the best of my admittedly limited knowledge, no one has ever sued Christmas before the Supreme Court. Not that I’m trying to give any ideas. No, I’m only trying to tease out an opinion I can live with in a case the court heard last week, about a cross in the Mojave Desert. The original cross (it has been replaced a number of times over the years) was erected in 1934 as a tribute to the dead of World War I and sits in a remote corner of what is now the Mojave National Preserve. Its legal troubles began 10 years ago with a former employee of the National Park Service who sued because he thought the cross an improper display on federal land in that it celebrated one faith over others. It’s a contention Justice Antonin Scalia sharply disputed last week. “It’s erected as a war memorial,” he said. “I assume it is erected in honor of all the war dead.” To which Peter Eliasberg, a lawyer representing the American Civil Liberties Union shot back: “I have been in Jewish cemeteries. There is never a

cross on a tombstone of a Jew.” Scalia was unconvinced: “I don’t think you can leap from that to the conclusion that the only war dead that the cross honors are the Christian war dead. I think that’s an outrageous conclusion.” But Eliasberg’s conclusion was, of Leonard course, perPitts fectly valid Distributed by Cagle Cartoons

and Scalia’s obstinate insistence that the cross is a generic symbol manages to simultaneously demean Christianity and deftly illustrate the sort of bullying the Constitution discourages. How easily and readily the majority embraces the myopic view that its symbols and norms represent us all. That said, I keep wondering what good can come of this. The plaintiff is said to be a devout Catholic, so we can take it on — ahem — faith that he is motivated solely by principle. For the record, the principle is one I support. You need only look at Iran to know the separation of church and state is a good thing. You do not post the Ten Commandments in court for the same reason you do not mandate prayer in schools or require Bible study to get a job: there is a coercive effect that is wholly unfair to those of other faiths or


The Daily Dispatch

Opinion

Sunday, October 18, 2009

13A

LETTERS, from page twelve Believers, avoid the practices of unbelievers To the editor: Believers today must be careful not to threaten their walk with God by taking on the practices of unbelievers. Because of our open climate, as a nation, we have many pagan religions and cultural influences that challenge the Christian faith. Businesses and governments are often based on greed, money and power. We are to live according to the values Christ exemplified: service, giving, self-sacrifice, obedience, and truth. “And this I say, lest any man should beguile you with enticing words.” Colossians 2:4 A teaching contrary to biblical doctrine. “Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.” Colossians 2:8 Paul writes against any philosophy of life based only on human ideas and experiences. Paul himself was a gifted philosopher, so he is not condemning philosophy. He is condemning teaching that credits humanity, not Christ, with being the answer to life’s problems. That approach become a false religion. The way to resist heresy is not to quit using your mind, but to study God’s Word and keep your eyes on Christ. “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord; and the people whom he hat chosen for his own inheritance.” Psalm 33:12 Leaders profoundly affect the people they serve. They can either encourage

or discourage devotion to God both by their example and by the structure they give their organization. In the words of our forefather Benjamin Franklin: “I have lived, Sir, a long time; and the longer I lived the more convincing proofs I see of this Truth, that God governs in the Affairs of Men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the Ground without his Notice, is it probable that an Empire can rise without his Aid?” Good leaders put up no obstacles to faith in God or to right living. Cynthia C. Dickerson, Kittrell

Thanks from E.M. Rollins To the editor: Thank you to all the Vance County businesses that contributed to the E.M. Rollins Fall Festival and Carnival: M.R. Williams; Burger King; Home in Henderson; Mazatlan; Bamboo Garden; C&P Body Shop; Ambassador Inn; Builder’s Discount Corp.; Aaron’s; MBMA Fitness; Mike’s Barbershop; Birds of Paradise; Advantage Ford; The Attic; EZ Car Care; Angelic Cuts; Sportrax; Pizza Inn; City Tire; Family Eye Care; Peanut Roaster; Cracker Barrel;

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East Carolina Tire; Schewel’s Furniture; Henderson Florist; Kerr Lake CC; Tidal Wave Car Wash; Food Lion; John Deere; Hallmark; Chick-fil-A; Abdo Saleh; Nail Season; and Harvey Jackson. I hope we didn’t leave anyone off of the list. Each and every gesture was appreciated! We had an incredible evening of safe family fun! We played bingo, bounced in the bounce house, had our faces painted and fished for goodies. We ate hotdogs, popcorn and Airheads! The faculty and staff were there full force leading games and serving food. None of this would have been possible without our volunteers. Thank you Jenny Edwards and Laura Stewart our event

co-chairs. You rock! Kim Pinero and son Joey spent days going to businesses on our behalf. Many families contributed drinks, baked goods and time. Special thanks go to folks who went above and

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Please join us for an Open House at Vance Charter School as we celebrate and reflect on the success and many accomplishments of the first ten years of our school Presentation by Founding Board Members, Principal, Current Board Members, Staff and Alumni Sunday, October 25, 2009 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm 1227 Dabney Drive Henderson, North Carolina 27536


CMYK 14A • THE DAILY DISPATCH • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2009

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CMYK Hard-boiled Buckeyes

Pack shellacked

Purdue pulls off the upset of No. 7 Ohio State — Page 5B

Boston College running game rolls over NC State— Page 3B

Section B Sunday, October 18, 2009

Sports

ALSO INSIDE: Yellow Jackets run past No. 4 Hokies ­­— ACC football, page 3B

Brodeur, Devils blank Canes ­­— page 5B

Seedings determined for Carolina 3A volleyball tournament From STAFF REPORTS

A Carolina 3A Conference coaches meeting was held at Orange High School Saturday to determine the seedings for the conference tournament, which begins Monday. Southern Vance received the

No. 3 seed, beating out Orange in a tiebreaking scenario. Northern Vance beat out J.F. Webb for the fifth seed. The Warriors will be seeded sixth in the tournament. The tiebreakers were determined by drawing a number out of a box.

These seedings will only be used in the conference tournament. According to Northern coach William Hoyle, if a team advances farther than their tied opponent in the conference tourney, they will become the higher seed in the state tournament. For example, if Southern

Vance wins in the first round, and Orange falls, the Southern will be higher in consideration for the No. 3 seed. The team that wins the conference tournament will be the No. 2 seed representing the conference. Cardinal Gibbons, undefeated

in conference play, will be the No. 1 seed, and Chapel Hill is No. 2. Both teams get firstround byes. Northern will be on the road against fourth-seeded Orange Monday for a 5 p.m. match. Southern hosts Webb Monday at 6 p.m.

Gators survive

Fla. withstands Arkansas’ upset bid By MARK LONG AP Sports Writer

AP Photo/Terry Renna

Jimmie Johnson drives out of turn four during the NASCAR Banking 500 Sprint Cup Series race at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Concord Saturday.

Johnson wins another

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Tim Tebow kept Florida’s perfect season intact. Tebow directed a 69yard drive in the final minutes, setting up Caleb Sturgis’ 27-yard field goal with 9 seconds remaining that gave the top-ranked Gators a 23-20 win against Arkansas on Saturday. Was it Tebow’s Heisman moment? Regardless, it kept Florida unbeaten and likely No. 1 in the country — and maybe even the Gators’ chances to repeat as national champions. On a day when little went right for the Gators (6-0, 4-0 Southeastern Conference), Tebow took over down the stretch. He threw for 255 yards and a touchdown, ran for 69 more and saved his best

AP Photo/John Raoux

Florida kicker Caleb Sturgis celebrates with teammates after kicking the gamewinning field goal to beat Arkansas 23-20 Saturday. plays for when Florida needed him most. He threw for 30 yards and ran for 22 on the final drive. Three plays stood out: His 12-yard pass to Please see GATORS, page 3B

NASCAR’s points leader takes first at Lowe’s Motor Speedway By JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer

CONCORD — Jimmie Johnson completed the perfect weekend with a win at Lowe’s Motor Speedway to take control of the championship standings. The three-time defending series champion raced to his third victory in the Chase for the Sprint Cup on Saturday night, extending his lead to 90 points over teammate Mark Martin. Seeking a NASCAR-record fourth consecutive Cup championship, Johnson led every practice session and won the pole to complete yet another dominating run at Lowe’s. He has been the driver to beat at the suburban Charlotte track since early in his career, and the victory was the Lowe’s-sponsored driver’s sixth on the 1.5-mile oval. “Man, we pulled off a perfect weekend and we’ve always wanted to do that,” Johnson said in his first Victory Lane visit at the track since 2005. Matt Kenseth was second, followed by Kasey Kahne and Jeff

AP Photo/Terry Renna

Jimmie Johnson celebrates in victory lane after winning Saturday night’s race. Gordon, Johnson’s teammate at Hendrick Motorsports. Martin, who started the race 12 points behind his teammate in the standings, finished 17th in part because of front-end damage received when he ran into the back of Juan Pablo Montoya on an early restart. It was that kind of night for sev-

eral title contenders, as eight of the 12 finished outside the top 10 in a rare off night for the Chase drivers. Montoya, who was third in the standings and just 58 points out of the lead at the start of the race, dropped to sixth and is now 195 points out. He damaged the front and back ends of his car on the restart problem with Martin and Clint Bowyer, and fell two laps down trying to get pit road for repairs. Denny Hamlin and Carl Edwards both blew motors, Greg Biffle was in a late spin and Tony Stewart never contended. That left it up to Kahne and Gordon to chase down Johnson, and despite some thrilling late restarts, neither came close. Gordon finished fourth, but lost ground to Johnson in the standings and is now 135 points out as only Martin is within shouting distance of the champion. Johnson will take the cushion into Martinsville, where he’s won five of the last six races. Johnson has six victories this year and 46 overall — 17 in Chase races.

AP Photo/Kathy Willens

Yankees, Angels battle in extras New York’s Hideki Matsui swings at a pitch from Los Angeles’ Kevin Jepsen for a single to right field during the ninth inning of Game 2 of the American League Championship series Saturday in New York. The Angels took a 3-2 lead in the 11th before Alex Rodriguez responded with a solo shot in the bottom half. At press time early Sunday morning, the score was 3-3 in the 12th.

Photo provided to the Dispatch

Walt Bowen’s cousin Jim Bowen and his son Dylan caught this sailfish competing at the US Open king mackerel tournament out of Southport earlier this month.

Walt’s relatives land nice catch in tourney Henderson angler Mark Robertson did what it took to move up three places into sixth place in the BFL regional championship on the Potomac River last weekend, winning him $1,000 and, more importantly, Walt qualifying him Bowen for the On the Water BFL AllWeekly American to be held in Davenport, Iowa in May 2010 on the Mississippi River, where he could ultimately win a top prize of $140,000 and a trip to the 2010 Forrest Wood Cup. He landed over 13 pounds of bass during high wind conditions on the last day of the tournament to best the seventh place finisher by over a pound. Randy Owen and others

report that there are some stripers still being caught up at Eastland Creek on top water lures but that they are smaller fish. I also understand those crappies are starting to move into the brush and taking jigs and minnows. Both the bass and crappie should continue to bite over the next few weeks as the water cools and they fatten up for the winter. Look for bass in shallower water around rock and brush, or try burning a rattletrap in the backs of coves. Use chrome-colored traps when the sun is bright or a duller color (shad) trap when clouds are overhead. Striper action on Lake Gaston using live bait is also reportedly picking up. My cousin Jim Bowen and his son Dylan competed in the US Open king mackerel tournament out of Southport on October 2 and 3. In early October, Please see FISHING, page 3B


2B

Sports

The Daily Dispatch

Two-minute drill Local Sports Louisburg College to hold Prep/JC Challenge Louisburg College will hold the Southeastern Prep/Junior College Challenge this Sunday at KerrVance Academy. Seventeen teams will reportedly be in attendance, including Vance-Granville, Brunswick Community College, Rockingham Community College, and several out-of-state schools among the east coast. The event is scheduled to last from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m.

Fundraiser to benefit N. Vance softball A fundraiser will be held to benefit the Northern Vance softball field on Oct. 20 and Nov. 10 at Henderson Subway Restaurants. A percentage of sales from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. on those days at the locations on East Andrews and Highway 158 will go toward the renovation of the field. There will be baskets placed at the restaurants for patrons to place their receipts.

Local rec dept. seeking team sponsors The Henderson/Vance Recreation and Parks Department is seeking businesses or organizations that are interested in sponsoring a youth basketball team. Sponsorships are $320 for the boys’ teams and $200 for the girls’ teams. The boys’ age groups are 7-9, 10-12 and 13-15, while the girls’ groups are 7-9 and 10-13. The sponsor’s name and logo will be placed on the front of the team jerseys. In addition, game results will be listed in The Daily Dispatch along with the standings. At the end of the season, teams will will receive a photo and an official certificate from the rec department. For more information, call Steve Osborne at (252) 438-2670 or Gene King at (252) 438-3948.

College Football NC Central routs Central Methodist 52-7 DURHAM (AP) — Michael Johnson threw two touchdown passes and North Carolina Central beat Central Methodist 52-7 on Saturday. Johnson went 15-for-20 for 218 yards, including a 59-yard touchdown pass to Andrew Johnson and a 49-yarder to Geovonie Irvine. Andrew Johnson caught five passes for 106 yards. North Carolina Central (1-6) led 38-0 at halftime. Arthur Goforth scored on a 47-yard punt return and Malik Cromartie scored on an 11-yard return of a blocked punt for the Eagles. Tim Shankle rushed for 93 yards and two touchdowns on 26 carries for North Carolina Central. Central Methodist (5-2), an NAIA team, was held to 97 yards. Brandon Merritt scored Central Methodist’s only touchdown on a 19-yard pass from Logan Cornish.

Local Preps Monday, Oct. 19 Soccer n Cardinal Gibbons at Southern Vance 6 p.m. n Northern Vance at Chapel Hill 6 p.m. n Orange at J.F. Webb 6:30 p.m. n Bunn at Warren County 7 p.m. Tennis n Greenfield at Kerr-Vance 3:30 p.m.

Volleyball-HS Christian at Wilson Christian 5 p.m. Carolina 6 Tourney n J.F. Webb at Southern Vance 5 p.m. n Northern Vance at Orange 5 p.m. n Victory

JV Soccer at J.F. Webb 5 p.m.

n Orange

JV Tennis n Kerr-Vance at Carolina Friends 4 p.m.

Sports on TV Sunday, Oct. 18 AUTO RACING 11:30 a.m. n SPEED — Formula One, Brazilian Grand Prix, at Sao Paolo, Brazil EXTREME SPORTS 3 p.m. n NBC — Dew Tour, PlayStation Pro, at Orlando, Fla. GOLF 10 a.m. n TGC — European PGA Tour, Portugal Masters, final round, at Vilamoura, Portugal 1:30 p.m. n TGC — Nationwide Tour, Miccosukee Championship, final round, at Miami 4 p.m. n TGC — PGA Tour, Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, final round, at Las Vegas 7:30 p.m. n TGC — Champions Tour, Administaff Small Business Classic, final round, at The Woodlands, Texas (same-day tape) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 8 p.m. n TBS — Playoffs, National League Championship Series, game 3, Los Angeles at Philadelphia MOTORSPORTS 5 p.m. n SPEED — MotoGP 250, Australian Grand Prix, at Phillip Island, Australia (same-day tape) 6 p.m. n SPEED — MotoGP World Championship, Australian Grand Prix, at Phillip Island, Australia

(same-day tape) NFL FOOTBALL 1 p.m. n CBS — Regional coverage, doubleheader n FOX — Regional coverage 4 p.m. n FOX — Regional coverage 4:15 p.m. n CBS — Regional coverage, doubleheader game 8:15 p.m. n NBC — Chicago at Atlanta RODEO 9 p.m. n VERSUS — PBR, Mohegan Sun Invitational, at Uncasville, Conn. (same-day tape) Monday, Oct. 19 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 4 p.m. n FOX — Playoffs, American League Championship Series, game 3, N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels 8 p.m. n TBS — Playoffs, National League Championship Series, game 4, L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia NFL FOOTBALL 8:30 p.m. n ESPN — Denver at San Diego NHL HOCKEY 7 p.m. n VERSUS — San Jose at N.Y. Rangers SOCCER 2:55 p.m. n ESPN2 — Premier League, Fulham vs. Hull City, at London

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Pirates pressure cook Rice, 49-13 By AARON BEARD AP Sports Writer

GREENVILLE — Dwayne Harris returned a kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown and added two touchdown catches to help East Carolina beat winless Rice 49-13 on Saturday. Harris matched his career-high with 128 yards receiving for the Pirates (4-3, 3-1 Conference USA), while Rob Kass — a former starting quarterback who moved to tight end — had his first career scoring catch to help East Carolina to a relatively stress-free win. The Pirates led 21-3 by midway through the second quarter and never let the Owls (0-7, 0-3) make it closer than a two-possession game before blowing

it open late. It was another big performance from Harris, a junior receiver who has become the Pirates’ big-play threat. Last week, he had a 77-yard kickoff return for a score and a rushing touchdown in a loss at SMU, and has scored seven touchdowns in the past four games. He gave East Carolina the early lead when he caught a short pass from Patrick Pinkney on the right side and raced in from 16 yards out on the game’s first possession. Later, after Rice showed some life with an 80-yard touchdown pass from Nick Fanuzzi to Toren Dixon, Harris broke free near midfield on the ensuing kickoff and — freed by blocks from Brandon Jackson and Darryl Reynolds

— raced down the right sideline all the way to the end zone for a 28-10 lead shortly before halftime. Harris added a third score with about 11 minutes left and the outcome no longer in doubt, taking a short screen pass from Pinkney and running in untouched for a 7-yard touchdown that made it 42-13. Pinkney was 18-for-26 for 231 yards with two interceptions, though one came when he was hit while throwing — and the Pirates forced a fumble on the return to get the ball right back and set up Kass’ 2-yard scoring catch late in the first quarter. That’s not to say everything went great for the Pirates. Jackson struggled to consistently to shoulder the rushing load for the

Pirates after Dominique Lindsay went down with a left ankle injury. Lindsay had run for 78 yards on 12 carries before going down on a pass play in the opening minutes of the second quarter. Fanuzzi threw for 231 yards to lead Rice, which closed to within 28-13 and had the ball to start the fourth quarter before Dustin Lineback made a leaping interception near midfield and returned the ball to the Owls 20-yard line. That’s when the Pirates — after watching Jackson repeatedly get stuffed for lost yardage — turned to Giavanni Ruffin, who ran three straight times before punching it in from 7 yards out for a 35-13 lead with about 13 minutes left.

Harris leads Eagles past Wolfpack, 52-20 BOSTON (AP) — Boston College’s Montel Harris set two school records with 264 yards rushing and five touchdowns to lead the Eagles to a 52-20 win over North Carolina State on Saturday. Ten players previously had four touchdown runs for Boston College, the last was Darnell Campbell in 1993. Harris set the yardage record with a 9-yarder early in the final quarter, surpassing the previous mark of 253, set by Phil Bennett in 1972. He had one more run before leaving for good. The Eagles (5-2, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) improved to 5-0 at home this season. NC State (34, 2-3) dropped its third straight game following conference losses to Wake Forest and Duke. BC first-year coach Frank Spaziani defeated his longtime coaching mate Tom O’Brien. Spaziani, who coach the Eagles to a victory at the 2006 Meineke Car Care Bowl after O’Brien bolted for NC State, worked under O’Brien for all of his 10 seasons at BC. The two coached together for 26 years in total, also under George Welsh at Navy and Virginia. Spaziani became BC’s head coach after Jeff Jagodzinski was fired last

AP Photo/Michael Dwyer

Boston College’s Montel Harris, right, breaks away from North Carolina State’s Bobby Floyd on a touchdown run in the third quarter of Saturday’s game. winter for interviewing for an NFL vacancy. BC, which led 24-13 at halftime, broke it open by taking the ball on the first possession of the second half and marching 72 yards in 11 plays, with Harris capping it with a 10-yard TD run. Harris had 46-yard run to push him over 200 yards and set up his own score, a 1-yarder two plays later, making it 38-13. He added a 29-yard TD run late in the third

quarter, improving it to 45-13. BC quarterback Dave Shinskie threw a 59-yard scoring pass to Colin Larmond Jr. in the first quarter and finished 13 of 25 for 187 yards with two TD passes. NC State QB Russell Wilson had a 1-yard scoring run and was 23 of 40 for 243 yards with one TD. The Wolfpack were allowing just 62.8 yards per game on the ground entering the game, but

Harris wiped that out on one run early in the game. On its second series, Boston College went to the “Wildcat” formation and Harris busted through the line and down the right sideline for a 70-yard gain, moving the ball to the 2. He scored on the next play, making it 7-0. The Eagles used the “Wildcat” with Harris at QB a number of times in the third quarter. NC State tied it 7-7 on Wilson’s 1-yard TD plunge. BC answered right back when Shinskie hit Larmond Jr. to make it 14-7. Larmond Jr. leaped over cornerback Rashard Smith near the 13-yard line to catch the slightly under-thrown ball before heading to the end zone. NC State’s Josh Czajkowski had field goals of 25 and 32 yards to cut to 14-13. The Eagles made it 2113 on Harris’ 12-yard TD run late in the second. BC’s Steve Aponavicius kicked a 37-yard field goal as time expired in the first half. The Eagles play at Notre Dame next Saturday. NC State is off next week before traveling to Florida State on Halloween.

FBI investigated threats against Braylon Edwards CLEVELAND (AP) — The FBI says it investigated reported threats to former Cleveland Browns wide receiver Braylon Edwards after he allegedly punched a man outside a downtown night club.

FBI Special Agent Scott Wilson said on Saturday that the Browns contacted the Cleveland field office about the threats shortly after the Oct. 5 incident. Wilson would not discuss the nature of the

threats or who made them. He says the FBI is no longer investigating any threats. Edwards was traded to the New York Jets two days after he allegedly punched a friend of NBA

star LeBron James in the altercation. Browns spokesman Bill Bonsiewicz says it’s not unusual for the team to communicate with local law enforcement agencies about such matters.

Thomas has first practice with FIU MIAMI (AP) — Isiah Thomas was finally back on the court Saturday. Holding his first official practice as Florida International’s coach, the Hall of Fame player ran up and down with his new team, yelling out pointers on how to defend off the dribble. Far from his past coaching home with the New York Knicks, Thomas said his focus is on rebuilding the Golden Panthers, who finished 13-20 last season. He led stretching drills and cheers, looking agile and carefree in his new gym. “Today is here, I’m prepared for it and I’m ready for it,” Thomas said. “I’m very excited.” So are players and fans. The season-opener at defending national champion North Carolina is about three weeks away, but FIU is already report-

ing that ticket sales have jumped 166 percent ahead of last season’s pace. “We’re well ahead of where we’ve ever been,” said FIU spokesman Rich Kelch. So hiring Thomas is already paying off. Thomas — who is working for a base salary of $0 this season, although he will collect income from other sources — was brought in to transform the program. FIU has seen plenty of national attention since. But to win, Thomas knew he needed to overhaul the team first. Of the 14 players on the roster now, eight transferred solely to play for him. That includes Marvin Roberts, last year’s leading scorer at the junior-college level, and Temple transfer Martavis Kee. On Saturday, Thomas

was still uncertain of what kind of talent he had on his current roster, but he wasn’t ready to focus on offense. “Defense will be our staple,” Thomas said. “We’re very small so we’ll have to depend on our scrappi-

Winning Tickets RALEIGH — These numbers were drawn Saturday afternoon by the North Carolina Lottery: Early Pick 3: 1-5-8 Late Pick 3: 6-7-2 Pick 4: 9-9-3-3 Cash 5: 20-18-39-9-7 DES MOINES, Iowa — These numbers were drawn Saturday by Powerball:

ness and tenacity. Here in college it’s just a matter of expanding on the things that they’ve already done. It’ll be new for me. “My job right now is to teach and then observe, then try to piece it all together.” Numbers: 5-16-25-30-49 Powerball: 39 Powerplay: x5 RICHMOND, Va. — These numbers were drawn Saturday afternoon by the Virginia Lottery: Pick 3: 6-7-7 Pick 4: 3-0-1-1 Cash 5: 4-11-12-18-34 These numbers were drawn Saturday night: Pick 3: 8-0-4 Pick 4: 6-7-6-0 Cash 5: 5-18-20-22-29 Win for Life: 14-22-3135-39-42 Free ball: 16


Sports

The Daily Dispatch

3B

Sunday, October 18, 2009

ACC FOOTBALL

Jackets’ option game too much for Hokies No. 19 Georgia Tech 28, No. 4 Virginia Tech 23 ATLANTA (AP) — Virginia Tech might have lost its shot at a national championship on another doomed trip to Atlanta. Josh Nesbitt rushed for 122 yards and three touchdowns — the last of them tiptoeing down the sideline to finish off the fourth-ranked Hokies with 3 minutes left — as No. 19 Georgia Tech ran to a 28-23 win that threw the Atlantic Coast Conference race up for grabs while perhaps finishing off the league’s top contender in the national race. Georgia Tech (6-1, 4-1 ACC) completed just one pass but ran for 309 yards out of its spread option offense — all but 37 of those yards coming in the second half. Excuse Virginia Tech (52, 3-1) if it passes on any more trips to Atlanta for a while. The Hokies opened the season with a 34-24 loss to Alabama in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff game, about a mile away at the Georgia Dome. No. 9 Miami 27, Central Florida 7 ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Jacory Harris completed 20 of 26 passes for 293 yards and a touchdown, Javarris James rushed for another score on the way to topping the 2,000-yard

Freshman quarterback Kyle Parker threw for a score and ran for another. Spiller finished with 106 yards for his 10th career 100-yard game and Clemson’s defense sacked ACC pass-efficiency leader Riley Skinner five times.

AP Photo/John Bazemore

Georgia Tech students tear down the goalpost after the Yellow Jackets’ 28-23 win over Virginia Tech Saturday.

mark for his career, and No. 9 Miami pulled away to beat Central Florida 27-7 on Saturday night. Damien Berry added a fourth-quarter touchdown run for the Hurricanes (51), who matched their best start since 2005. Brett Hodges threw for 163 yards for UCF (3-3), but the team’s top rusher — Brynn Harvey, who was coming off a 219-yard effort against Memphis — was held to 25 yards on 12 carries. UCF is now 0-20 against teams in the AP Top 25 since moving to Division I-A in 1996.

Clemson 38, Wake Forest 3 CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — C.J. Spiller ran for two touchdowns and Clemson put aside two weeks of

turmoil to get back in the ACC’s Atlantic Division race with a 38-3 victory over Wake Forest on Saturday. Spiller had scoring runs of 66 and 14 yards for the Tigers (3-3, 2-2 Atlantic Coast Conference), who seemed ready to implode after an unexpected 24-21 loss to Maryland on Oct. 3. The team held a players only meeting when it returned to campus and an anonymous blog report during the bye week detailed a shouting match at practice between coach Dabo Swinney and offensive coordinator Billy Napier. Against Wake Forest (4-3, 2-2), though, Clemson showed its resiliency with its best performance of the season.

Virginia 20, Maryland 9 COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Virginia defensive end Nate Collins scored on a 32-yard interception return to help the Cavaliers beat Maryland 20-9 in a cold, steady rain on Saturday. It was the third straight victory for Virginia (3-3, 2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference). The Cavaliers trailed 9-3 late in the third quarter before scoring 10 points in a 19-second span. After Robert Randolph kicked a 31-yard field goal, linebacker Darren Childs deflected a pass by Maryland quarterback Chris Turner. The 290-pound Collins latched onto the ball, broke to his left and took it down the sideline into the end zone. Maryland’s Nick Ferrara missed field goal tries of 44 and 37 yards in the fourth quarter. Then, after Turner threw an incomplete on a fourth-and-17 from the Maryland 2, Rashawn Jackson scored for Virginia with 1:43 left. The Terrapins (2-5, 1-2) have lost four of five

Garner interviews for Astros managerial job By CHRIS DUNCAN AP Sports Writer

HOUSTON — Phil Garner didn’t need to bring a resume to his interview with the Houston Astros on Saturday. He just wore his NL championship ring. Garner met with the Astros to talk about becoming their next manager, just over two years after the franchise fired him. His successor, Cecil Cooper, was fired on Sept. 21, two weeks before Houston finished the season 74-88. Garner didn’t intend to chase his old job. He got an interview after calling president of baseball operations Tal Smith to put in a recommendation for former Arizona manager Bob Melvin, who

interviewed for the job on Friday. Melvin previously worked as Garner’s bench coach. Smith told Garner that he could be a candidate if he wanted to be, and Garner said he was interested. He said he never harbored ill will toward the team after he was fired in August 2007. “When you go back and look at that time, it was probably the right thing to do,” he said. “This is a different scenario now. That’s why I decided to put my name in the hat and see if there’s a fit here. “I don’t think what happened in ’07 is going to have anything to do with this.” Garner only had to flash the garnet and gold ring on his finger to remind

the Astros of what he accomplished before things turned sour. Houston made its only World Series appearance under Garner in 2005, when Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte anchored the pitching staff. Garner took over the Astros in the middle of the previous season, after Jimy Williams was fired. Houston went 48-26 the rest of the way, earned the NL wild card and pushed St. Louis to seven games in the NL championship series. The Astros won their second straight wild-card berth in 2005 before they were swept by the Chicago White Sox in the World Series. “It has worked before, and maybe it can work

again,” Garner said. “We’ve gone there as an organization and I was a part of that. I’m proud of that.” Houston went 82-80 in 2006, finishing 1 1/2 games behind the Cardinals in the NL Central, then slumped in 2007, after Clemens and Pettitte departed. The Astros were 58-73 when Garner and general manager Tim Purpura were fired. Garner said the team needs another fresh start. “So many times in baseball, we’re so resistant to change,” he said. “It’s hard to get ballclubs to turn and go in a direction. But this is a good opportunity to get the ballclub turned philosophically, and then you’ve got to apply it on the field.”

Jim’s son Dylan took the rod and the tournament went on hold as they fought the sail for almost an hour and a half. They didn’t catch anything much over 21 lbs that day and headed for the scales to weigh. Saturday, day two saw more of the same with them catching kings up to 26 lbs at a place called the Jungle, but still nothing worth any money. They stayed there the rest of the day and had one of the best fishing days they’ve ever had, catching a limit of kings and throwing a bunch back.

They also caught a huge Black Sea Bass on the downrigger, a 12 lb. Grouper, 6 lb. Spanish, 7-inch tiger shark, three Remoras, three Cobia, a Black Tip Shark and saw a few 6-inch Barracuda trying to get the cobia as they brought them to the boat. There was also about a 14-inch shark that kept circling as they were bringing in fish. They ended up in 125th place out of over 500 boats, a respectable finish. Jim has his commercial license and sold over 200 lbs of

AP Photo/Phil Sandlin

Florida wide receiver Deonte Thompson scores on a 77yard touchdown reception in the second half of Saturday’s game in Gainesvile, Fla.

GATORS, from page 1B Riley Cooper on third down (Cooper fell down, then caught the ball on one knee) and consecutive runs that gained 16 yards and got Sturgis well within his comfort zone. Sturgis overcame an early miss and finished with three field goals, including a 51-yarder in the third. For much of the day, it was Florida’s biggest play. Just about everything that could go wrong for the Gators did and Arkansas, a week after knocking off Auburn showed that it is making fast progress in its second season under Bobby Petrino. The Gators had four turnovers, three dropped passes, were gashed against the run and gave up more big plays in one game than they had all season. They missed a field goal and scored just once in their first four trips inside the 20-yard line. But after struggling to move the ball on a chilly, sun-drenched afternoon, Tebow led the Gators to scores on three of their final four possessions. He hooked up with Deonte Thompson on a 77-yard TD pass that gave Florida its first lead of the game, 13-10 with 2:59 to play in the third. Another deep pass to Thompson drew a pass-interference

penalty and set up Jeff Demps’ 10-yard TD run that tied the game at 20 midway through the fourth. And Tebow put Florida in position for the gamewinner with a 14-play drive that took just about all the time off the clock. He had the kind of plays Florida fans expected all day against Arkansas, which entered the game with the league’s worstrated defense. The Razorbacks looked like a team with something to prove. They stuffed Florida’s high-powered running game, sacked Tebow six times and forced the Gators into mistakes. They were nearly as good on offense. Ryan Mallett threw for 224 yards, Dennis Johnson ran for 107 in place of injured starter Michael Smith (hamstring) and Greg Childs caught four passes for 135 yards. Arkansas made a few costly mistakes, though. Mallett overthrew fullback Van Stumon, who was wide open in the end zone, and had to settle for a field goal that tied it at 13. Then Alex Tejada yanked a 38-yard field goal with 3:08 remaining. It would have given Arkansas the lead. Instead, it gave Tebow the ball.

FISHING, from page 1B they should have been wrapped up in sweat shirts and jackets and the kings should have been on the beach, but due to the unseasonably warm weather we have experienced, the fish seemed to still be hanging about 20 miles offshore. So Friday morning on day one of the event, after catching bait, they headed to about 65-70 feet of water and started putting good fish in the boat right away. It was starting off good, but they just couldn’t seem to get anything much over 20 lbs. After fishing an-

other hole and catching the same size fish, they left and went 26 miles to a place called the shark hole. Just after putting the lines out a HUGE silver streak came crashing across the back of the engines and crushed the pogie they had on for bait. Jim grabbed the rod and started hollering, “boys we just won the tournament,” — the silver streak was around 4 to 5 feet long. Then it jumped for the first time and they realized they had just hooked up with a sailfish.

king mackerel to help pay for the gas and other expenses. All was good until he dropped the filet knife into his foot while gutting the fish to sell. Thankfully his lovely bride, Bug, doctored him up in time to throw the cobia and grouper on the grill for a great meal, with a tetanus shot to follow on Sunday. Next week’s article – report from Saturday night’s Bank of America 500 in Charlotte. Susan and I were lucky enough to get good seats from a

friend of mine. She is going to her first race. Hopefully I can get out on Sunday and have a fishing report from Belews Creek Lake. Tip of the week – Use a higher speed retrieve (as much as 7 to 1) reel when fishing rattletraps or buzz baits to speed things up. This will help get buzz baits on top quickly and move traps through the water quickly without you having to reel like a madman. Contact the writer at waltbowen@yahoo.com.

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4B

Sports

The Daily Dispatch

Sunday, October 18, 2009

COLLEGE FOOTBALL TOP 25

Irish come up just short; Buckeyes upset No. 2 Alabama 20, South Carolina 6 TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Mark Ingram rushed for a career-high 246 yards and a gameclinching touchdown, powering No. 2 Alabama to a 20-6 victory over No. 22 South Carolina on Saturday night. Ingram’s tackle-breaking, defender-dragging runs and a punishing defense helped the Crimson Tide (7-0, 4-0 Southeastern Conference) overcome four turnovers — doubling their season total. It also helped ’Bama avoid the down-to-the-wire scares No. 1 Florida and No. 3 Texas had — or an upset defeat like No. 4 Virginia Tech endured. Steve Spurrier’s Gamecocks (5-2, 2-2) had never beaten a team ranked higher than No. 3 and were hoping for their second win over a top-five team this season. Ingram didn’t let it happen. He was practically a one-man show on the decisive drive. He took the direct snap for five consecutive runs — including a 24-yarder and 22-yarder — and then took a pitch in from 4 yards out with 4:54 left. No. 6 Southern California 34, No. 25 Notre Dame 27 SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — Jimmy Clausen threw three incomplete passes into the end zone in the closing seconds as Southern California held on for a victory and its eighth straight win against Notre Dame. Notre Dame’s streak of last-minute victories ended at three, but the Fighting Irish at least showed they could compete with their longtime rivals this season. The Irish rallied back from a 34-14 deficit, but couldn’t score into the same end zone where the Trojans famously scored four years ago on the Bush Push. On Clausen’s first pass into the end zone, Kyle Rudolph made juggling catch but was out of bounds. The second was knocked down by Josh Pinkard and the Trojans started celebrating thinking the game was over. But the officials ruled there was 1 second left. Clausen fired to Duval Kamara, who slipped and couldn’t get a hand on it. Purdue 26, No. 7 Ohio State 18 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Joey Elliott and Purdue shocked mistakeprone Ohio State. Elliott threw for 281 yards and two touchdowns, and the Boilermakers snapped a five-game losing streak by beating No. 7 Ohio State to effectively end what national-title chances remained for the Buckeyes. Purdue dominated the first three quarters, then held on as Ohio State tried to mount a comeback behind Terrelle Pryor, who threw two interceptions and lost two fumbles. The Boilermakers (2-5, 1-2) had lost five in a row since beating Toledo to start Danny Hope’s first season as coach, and fans were starting to get uneasy. But when the clock ran out, joyous students poured onto the field to celebrate a major upset. It was Purdue’s first win over a ranked team since 2003 and its first win over the Buckeyes since 2004. Ohio State (5-2, 3-1) failed to tie the Big Ten record of 17 straight conference road wins. The Buckeyes lost to an unranked team for the first time since Illinois upset Ohio State at home in 2007. But that Illinois team went on to play in the Rose

AP Photo/Michael Conroy

Southern California receiver Anthony McCoy, left, outruns Notre Dame safety Harrison Smith (22) and safety Kyle McCarthy to pick up 60 yards in the third quarter of Saturday’s game in South Bend, Ind. Bowl. Purdue will have to scramble to become bowl eligible.

No. 11 Iowa 20, Wisconsin 10 MADISON, Wis. (AP) — No. 11 Iowa needed a second-half road rally to keep its perfect season alive. Trailing by a touchdown at halftime, the Hawkeyes (7-0, 3-0 Big Ten) began the third quarter by turning an interception into a tying touchdown pass from quarterback Ricky Stanzi to tight end Tony Moeaki. Iowa took the lead on a 10-yard touchdown run by Adam Robinson early in the fourth quarter, and the Hawkeyes’ defense kept the Badgers scoreless in the second half. After appearing vulnerable to the run early on, Iowa’s defense clamped down on Wisconsin (5-2, 2-2) and running back John Clay, who might have been slowed by a second-quarter leg injury after a big first quarter. Clay finished with 75 yards rushing and Scott Tolzien threw three interceptions. Iowa cornerback Amari Spievey had two interceptions. No. 12 TCU 44, Colorado State 6 FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Jeremy Kerley tiptoed the sideline, then came to a near stop before finding an open lane to the end zone for his second punt return for a touchdown in three games and TCU remained undefeated with a victory over Colorado State. Kerley’s electrifying 69-yard return just before halftime made it 17-6, and came less than 2 1/2 minutes after TCU (6-0, 2-0 Mountain West) had finally taken the lead on Joseph Turner’s 2-yard touchdown run. The BCS buster hopeful Horned Frogs carried the momentum after halftime, scoring touchdowns on their

first four drives after the break. That included two TD passes by Andy Dalton. Colorado State (3-4, 0-3) lost its fourth straight game.

No. 14 Penn State 20, Minnesota 0 STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Navorro Bowman led a stifling defense, Evan Royster ran for 137 yards and Derek Moye had a disputed touchdown catch in Penn State’s easy win over Minnesota. Moye’s 12-yard reception in the end zone was initially ruled incomplete, then overturned after an official review for a TD on a drive that gave the Nittany Lions (6-1, 2-1 Big Ten) a 13-0 lead late in the first half. The offense moved the ball well despite being mired by penalties. Royster and Moye still gave the defense more than enough cushion over the struggling Gophers (4-3, 2-2) on a chilly homecoming game at Beaver Stadium. Bowman led the defense with several big hits, and Penn State held a foe without a first-half touchdown for the seventh straight game. Texas Tech 31, No. 15 Nebraska 10 LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Steven Sheffield passed for a touchdown and ran for another in his first road start, and Texas Tech jumped out fast to upset Nebraska. Sheffield, who passed for 490 yards passing and seven touchdowns in his debut as the starter against Kansas State last week, was nearly perfect early, completing 14 of his first 16 passes against the Cornhuskers. Playing for the injured Taylor Potts, Sheffield went 9-for-16 in the second half and finished with 234 yards. Texas Tech (5-2, 2-1) won for the first time in four road games since last October. Nebraska (4-2, 1-1) held the Raiders to 259 yards — 263 under their average.

Colorado 34, No. 17 Kansas 30 BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Tyler Hansen wanted to prove that he should have been Colorado’s starting quarterback all along. He sure showed that he deserves to be the Buffaloes’ main man from here on out. Hansen, Cody Hawkins, the coach’s son, in the starting lineup, ran for a touchdown and threw a TD pass to lead Colorado to a 34-30 upset of No. 17 Kansas on Saturday night. Providing a spark both through the air and on the ground, Hansen threw for 175 yards and ran for 34 yards. Colorado (2-4, 1-1 Big 12) handed Todd Reesing and the Jayhawks (5-1, 1-1) their first loss. No. 18 Brigham Young 38, San Diego State 28 SAN DIEGO (AP) — Max Hall threw for 346 yards and three touchdowns, and ran for another score to lead Brigham Young to the 500th victory in school history, beating San Diego State. BYU (6-1, 3-0 Mountain West Conference) beat SDSU (2-4, 0-2) for the eighth time in the last nine games. SDSU’s Ryan Lindley also threw three touchdown passes. SDSU kept pace with BYU into the third quarter, tying it at 21 before the Cougars’ massive offensive line wore down the Aztecs, allowing Hall to throw two touchdown passes in less than four minutes. Running an effective nohuddle offense, Hall was 27 of 39 for his fifth 300-yard game of the season. Lindley was 21 of 33 for 298 yards. Lindley threw a 36-yard touchdown pass to DeMarco Sampson with 8:23 left in the third quarter to tie it at 21. No. 23 Houston 44, Tulane 16 NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Case Keenum’s lowest passing total of the season was still pretty good, and more than enough to help Houston win its first conference game of the season. Keenum was 30 of 43 for 334 yards and two touchdowns, and the Cougars defeated Tulane. Bryce Beall and Justin Johnson each ran for two touchdowns for Houston (5-1, 1-1 Conference USA), which pulled away after leading only 9-6 at halftime. Keenum eclipsed 300 yards passing for the 19th time in his career and the sixth straight game this season. His scoring passes went to James Cleveland and L.J. Castile. Tulane (2-4, 0-3) now has lost 37 straight to ranked teams since 1982.

AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez

Texas quarterback Colt McCoy sprints into the open field for extra yardage on a quarterback keeper play during the second half of Saturday’s game against Oklahoma in Dallas.

McCoy struggles, Bradford injured in Texas’ win over OU By JAIME ARON AP Sports Writer

DALLAS — Colt McCoy was a mess. His right thumbnail was ready to fall off, a nagging cold was wearing him down and Oklahoma was confusing him with blitzes he’d never seen. Then, with a chance to put the game away for No. 3 Texas midway through the fourth quarter, he threw an interception that could’ve turned into a goahead touchdown for the Sooners. McCoy salvaged it all, though. He made a game-saving tackle on the pickoff return, then, after his defense got him the ball back, managed to grind out the final 3:31, sending No. 3 Texas to a 16-13 victory over No. 20 Oklahoma on Saturday. “You’ve got to be confident in yourself and trust your teammates,� McCoy said. “‘Let’s find a way to win.’ We did.� The sloppy performance did little for McCoy’s chances of winning the Heisman Trophy and it won’t earn much respect for a team that slipped a spot in last week’s poll. But what matters most to McCoy and the Longhorns (6-0, 3-0 Big 12) is remaining in line to play for the national championship — and, well, it always feels good to beat their rivals from across the Red River, especially in front of 96,009, the largest crowd in the 104-game history of this series. That explains why the usually humble McCoy gave a huge fist pump to the burnt orange end of the Cotton Bowl before the final snap, drawing a roar from fans already celebrating their fourth win over the Sooners (3-3, 1-1) in five years. “It’s such an awesome feeling,� said McCoy, who joined Bobby Layne and Peter Gardere as the only Texas quarterbacks to beat Oklahoma three times. “This is one of the greatest games in college football. Knowing it wasn’t that pretty, but

you gave it your best effort ... I’m speechless.� Oklahoma lost Heisman winner Sam Bradford in the first quarter when he reaggravated the right shoulder injury he sustained in the opener, but was never out of this one. Backup Landry Jones put the Sooners up 6-0 and he drove them for their only touchdown right after Texas scored its only TD, tying the game at 13 in the third quarter. But the Sooners ran for minus-16 yards on 22 tries. They were stuffed on a fourth-and-1 at midfield at the start of the fourth quarter, then, down by a field goal, asked Jones to win it. His last two drives ended on interceptions, first by Aaron Williams (who KO’d Bradford) then by Earl Thomas. Texas ran six straight times after that, with McCoy keeping it three of them. His last plunge was for only 1 yard on thirdand-8 but a penalty on Oklahoma provided the game-ending first down. “I thought it was more like a fight,� Longhorns coach Mack Brown said. “It was tough, it was ugly.� McCoy was only 21 of 39 for 127 yards, with a pair of turnovers within 10 yards of the end zone. Besides the fourth-quarter interception, he fumbled at the end of a long run late in the first half. That came during a spurt of five fumbles in the final few minutes; Oklahoma dropped three of them, losing two, but Texas got only a field goal out of it, and the Sooners didn’t score off Texas’ miscues. McCoy banged his thumb on his passing hand against the helmet of Oklahoma’s Gerald McCoy during the first quarter, but insisted that had nothing to do with throws that at times were wildly inaccurate. He also got away with two passes that Keenan Clayton could’ve intercepted, and perhaps returned for touchdowns, late in the first half.

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The Daily Dispatch

Sports

Sunday, October 18, 2009

5B

Brodeur saves 26 shots in Canes loss By TOM CANAVAN AP Sports Writer

NEWARK, N.J. — Martin Brodeur made 26 saves and moved within one shutout of tying Terry Sawchuk’s NHL career record in leading the New Jersey Devils to a 2-0 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday night. Jamie Langenbrunner scored a flukey goal off his body in the opening seconds of the third period to break a scoreless tie, and Zach Parise scored into an empty net with 40 seconds to go as Brodeur picked up his 102nd shutout. Brodeur made about four saves between Langenbrunner’s goal and Parise’s clincher to secure his first shutout of the season and the Devils’ first victory at home in four tries. The NHL winningest goaltender stopped Chad LaRose in close early in the period and he seemed

AP Photo/Rich Schultz

Carolina goalie Cam Ward makes a save on a shot by New Jersey’s Travis Zajac during the second period of Saturday’s game in Newark, N.J. to get a piece of Eric Staal’s shot that might have hit the post with about 5 minutes to go in the matchup of first-round playoff opponents from last season. Brodeur also stopped a blast by Joe Corvo with about 3 minutes left and he grabbed a good wrist shot by Sergei Samsonov with 1:14 to play. Langenbrunner’s goal

seemed to go off his chest. Rob Niedermayer carried the puck deep into the Hurricanes’ zone and tried to center the puck in front from behind the net. Ward deflected the puck with his stick and it bounced up and hit off Langenbrunner and went into the net. The goal was the only blemish against Ward, who was spectacular in facing

29 shots. Ward and Brodeur each had 16 saves in the relatively penalty-free opening two periods. Ward’s two best stops denied Niclas Bergfors, who had about five chances to score his first goal of the season. The goaltender stacked his pads and slid across the crease to stop Bergfors in close on a nice setup by Travis Zajac midway through the first period, and he used his glove to fend off a secondperiod shot from inside the right circle. Brodeur had his moments, too. He stopped Ray Whitney from the left circle on a play that Staal set up in the first period and he got a little lucky in the second when LaRose’s deflection of Joni Pitkanen’s shot hit the post. The Hurricanes beat the Devils in Game 7 at New Jersey of last season’s opening round series, scoring twice in the final 1:20 to win.

Utley’s erratic throws hurting Phillies By ROB MAADDI AP Sports Writer

PHILADELPHIA — Chase Utley makes two costly throwing errors, and suddenly he’s being mentioned with Steve Sax and Chuck Knoblauch. Utley’s fielding gaffes were the talk of the town when the Philadelphia Phillies returned home Saturday after splitting the first two games of the NL championship series at Los Angeles. Game 3 is Sunday night in soggy Philadelphia, weather permitting. The forecast calls for showers all day and it’s expected to be 42 degrees at game time. Cliff Lee starts for the Phillies against Hiroki Kuroda. The weather will make it tough to grip the ball and make accurate throws. Utley, a four-time All-Star second baseman, had enough problems throwing to first in sunny L.A. The Phillies overcame his blunder in Game 1, but it hurt them on Friday. Trailing 1-0, the Dodgers got their first two runners on in the bottom of the eighth. After failing to put down a sacrifice, Russell Martin then hit a sharp grounder to third

baseman Pedro Feliz. It was a routine double-play ball except Utley’s relay throw sailed wide of first. Instead of two outs and a runner on third, the Dodgers had a run and one out. They went on to score again and held on for a 2-1 victory. Utley typically wasn’t around to speak to reporters during Saturday’s one-hour, open clubhouse session. But manager Charlie Manuel and others had his back. “I’m sure nobody in Philadelphia hates that more than Chase, but at the same time, he’ll correct it,” Manuel said. “I have all the faith in the world in him as far as that goes. That’s going to happen to anybody.” Ronnie Belliard was bearing down on Utley and slid hard into second, possibly forcing him to rush his throw. Belliard, a fellow second baseman, sympathized with Utley. “It’s nothing mental,” Belliard said. “He’s a good second baseman. It’s a difficult situation to turn a double play like that. You have to forget about it and do your job.” In the series opener Thursday night, Utley made a similarly poor

throw on what should have been an inning-ending, double-play grounder hit by Andre Ethier in the fifth inning. Phillies pitcher Cole Hamels was visibly upset that shortstop Jimmy Rollins and Utley couldn’t make the turn. Manny Ramirez followed with a two-run homer that cut Philadelphia’s lead to 5-4, but the Phillies won 8-6. Rollins, a Gold Glove winner the last two years, was slow to shuffle the ball and that may have thrown off Utley’s timing. “Looked like he had trouble gripping the ball, really taking it out of his glove,” Manuel said of Utley. “Looked like he had trouble getting a hold of it.” In between the two errors, Utley made three iffy throws on routine grounders. All three resulted in outs, but his erratic tosses suggest this could be more than a simple case of two bad throws under difficult circumstances in clutch spots. Dodgers third base coach Larry Bowa, who managed Utley when he first came up in Philadelphia, doesn’t buy it. “No, no, no,” Bowa said when asked if Utley’s

issues are comparable to Sax and Knoblauch. “I don’t think it’s a problem at all. He rushed two throws. It was coincidental that he did it two games in a row.” Sax, the NL Rookie of the Year with the Dodgers in 1982, inexplicably stopped being able to make routine throws to first in his sophomore season. Sax committed 30 errors that season, many on errant tosses. Knoblauch began experiencing the same problem shortly after joining the New York Yankees in 1999. A former Gold Glove winner with Minnesota in 1997, Knoblauch was moved to the outfield because he never regained his ability to throw to first. Dodgers manager Joe Torre managed Knoblauch in New York. He’s not ready to put Utley in that category. “I don’t think it’s an issue,” Torre said. “If I was Charlie, I wouldn’t be concerned about him. He’s too tough a kid and he’s too good of a player. Stuff like that happens. Sometimes there’s no rhyme or reason why it happens, but the nature of the game is what it is.”

AP Photo/Bob Jordan

Team owner Richard Childress speaks during a news conference before the NASCAR Banking 500 Sprint Cup Series race at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Concord Saturday.

Childress on Harvick: ‘Whatever happens, happens’ By WILL GRAVES AP Sports Writer

CONCORD — Richard Childress doesn’t appear to be too concerned about Kevin Harvick’s possible departure at the end of the 2010 season. Childress said Saturday night at Lowe’s Motor Speedway that he’s focused on helping his struggling team move on following a disastrous 2009, not Harvick’s status. Harvick hinted during a television interview recently that he has no plans to remain at Richard Childress Racing when his contract expires next year. “We’ll just see how everything plays out in the future,” Childress said. “I didn’t see Kevin’s interview. I’ve heard some comments on it but whatever happens, happens.” Childress is more concerned about turning around RCR’s program, which failed to land any of its four Cup cars in the Chase for the championship a year removed from putting the cars of Harvick, Jeff Burton and Clint Bowyer in NASCAR’s playoffs. The longtime owner said peaks and valleys are to be expected, but admitted he’s a little baffled by the stunning drop-off for one of the series’ most successful teams. “It’s such a fine line with this car,” Childress said. “If you look at it, other than three, four or five cars people can be off and on and when you get off sometimes it’s hard to get back on.”

Childress has made several changes during the year in hopes of kick-starting the program. He allowed Harvick and Casey Mears to switch crew chiefs and recently promoted Burton’s crew chief, Scott Miller, to RCR’s director of competition. Childress is optimistic the reorganization will pay off and said he’s seen progress in recent races. Harvick and Bowyer both ran in the Top 10 last week at Auto Club Speedway and Mears has been a pleasant surprise in his first year with the program. Yet Mears’ success doesn’t mean he’ll be around next season after Jack Daniels pulled its sponsorship of the No. 07 Chevrolet he drives. Childress isn’t sure he’ll be able to find enough funding to sponsor the car for a full season and has no plans for the car to run a partial schedule. “We’re wanting to run it, we can’t turn it into a (start and park),” Childress said. “I don’t want to do that. I won’t do that. ... We’ve got some sponsorship for a few races next year, but to be competitive that isn’t the way to do it.” A decision on the No. 07 will likely be made before the season finale at Homestead. Childress, who won six Cup titles with Dale Earnhardt Sr., has little doubt RCR will return to challenge Hendrick Motorsports atop the series. “We can see the crest up there, we’ve just got to be ready for it,” he said.

Panthers hoping to increase Tampa’s losing streak By FRED GOODALL AP Sports Writer

TAMPA, Fla. — The Carolina Panthers can imagine the sense of urgency building within the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Only a week removed from being winless themselves, the defending NFC South champions are still feeling some heat at 1-3. Raheem Morris and the Bucs are 0-5, searching for some of the same answers the Panthers believe they’ve begun to find. “This game takes confidence, and obviously winning breeds confidence,” said Carolina coach John Fox, whose team beat Washington last Sunday to brighten the prospect for a turnaround from a slow start. “We hadn’t felt that feeling in a little bit — a little longer than we all expected,’ Fox added. “But it was good to get that one under our belt. Before you win two, you’ve got to win one.” Four of Tampa Bay’s five losses have been by double-digits. The other was to the Redskins, who rallied from a 10-point deficit to beat the Bucs by

AP Photo/Chuck Burton

Carolina quarterback Jake Delhomme scrambles for a first down against Washington late in the second half of last Sunday’s game in Charlotte. The Panthers play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers today. three, despite having four turnovers and a blocked extra point. Morris, the NFL’s youngest head coach, has already switched offensive coordinators and made a quarterback change. With each loss, he faces more questions about plans to eventually turn the offense over to rookie Josh Freeman, the team’s firstround draft pick. Injuries, dropped passes, the absence of a consistent running game

and shoddy also have been factors in the team’s worst start since 1996 (when Tony Dungy was a rookie head coach), but Morris hasn’t been one to offer excuses. Since last season, when Tampa Bay lost four straight in December to miss the playoffs after beginning 9-3, the Bucs have dropped nine in a row. The slide began with a 38-23 loss at Carolina, a game in which the Panthers rushed for a club-

record 299 yards. “Whatever your demons are, you have to fight them within yourself. That’s how we are going to come out, that’s how we are going to try to beat the Carolina Panthers this week,” the 33-year-old Morris said. “It can’t be about what happened in the past. It’s not about the psyche or the rivalry. It’s none of those things.” Much like the Bucs, the puzzled Panthers are trying to re-establish their identity. A year ago, DeAngelo Williams and Jonathan Stewart combined for the most yards rushing by NFL teammates since 1984. Now, Carolina is 23rd in rushing offense at 97.3 yards per game. Williams has 220 yards at 3.7 per carry, and Jonathan Stewart has 138 yards at 4.2 per attempt. The last time Carolina faced Tampa Bay, Williams gained a franchisebest 186 yards and Stewart ran for 115, with each scoring two touchdowns. Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme, who’s thrown an NFL-leading

eight interceptions to contribute to Carolina’s league-worst minus-9 turnover margin, thinks the rushing attack is almost there. “The run game sometimes takes time to come together,” Delhomme said. “But I know what it does for this offense. It’s how this offense is made.” The Bucs would be a lot better off, too, if they could run the ball more effectively and ease some of the burden on Josh Johnson, who replaced Byron Leftwich at quarterback two weeks ago. Johnson’s mobility was one of the reasons for the change, however Morris didn’t envision the secondyear pro leading the team in rushing two of the past three games. Falling behind early has been a problem. Last week, Johnson threw 50 passes during a 19-point loss to Philadelphia, while Cadillac Williams was limited to eight yards rushing on 10 carries. “We haven’t been forcing our will on our opponent. Our opponent’s been coming in and forcing their will on us,” Morris said.

One of the bright spots during Tampa Bay’s poor start has been the play of tight end Kellen Winslow, who was acquired in an offseason trade from Cleveland. He had nine receptions for 102 yards and two touchdowns against the Eagles, and he leads the team in receiving with 26 catches and four TDs. The Bucs’ wide receivers have one TD among them. “It’s tough for everybody, but we’re all in this together. Where we can go from here is only up,” Winslow said. “Nothing really much to be said. It’s all on tape. We know what we need to do. We just need to move on. I’ve been on some pretty bad teams, but everyone has their head up around here and I like that.” The sixth-year pro, the NFL’s highest paid tight end, said Morris is the main reason. “We really want to win for this guy and make it work for him and us. We just haven’t done that so far,” Winslow said. “We’ve let him down. We’ve let ourselves down. We’re trying to change that.”


6B

Sports

The Daily Dispatch

NFL By The Associated Press

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1 11 4 BOWLERS & JOE PlaceSeg 12 Tm On Pts 3 HARRIS Place2 Tm Team Name OF HENDERSON11 Lane 1Won11 3 5 AUDIO TV 2 1 11 4 BOWLERS & JOE 12 19.013 317.065 LEWIS ELECTRIC 24 3 10 HARRIS OF HENDERSON11 4 35 5 AUDIO TV 15.010 4 CAROLINA LANES1 3 514.0 4 46 10 LEWIS ELECTRICELECTRIC. 6 1 NEWMAN 7 613.0 1 5 LANES 3 7 4 12CAROLINA PO BOYS PHILLY STEAKS 4 713.012 6 1 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. 7 8 9 CLAYTON VACUUM 810.089 7 12 PO BOYS PHILLY STEAKS 4 2 AMERICAN 910.052 89 9 CLAYTON VACUUMLEGION 8 9 2 AMERICAN 5 10 9.027 10 7 TEAM 7LEGION 11 10 7 TEAM 7 2 11 6 MASTERS OF MUSIC 9.096 12 8.0 8 11 OF MUSIC 12 6 MASTERS 8 GHOST TEAM 1 9 10 12 8 GHOST TEAM 1 10 0.0

Pts Pts Win Hcp Scr Seg Seg Seg SegOn 19.0 5.0 79% 17665 Lost 15805Pct 1000 Team Total 2744 Total Pts Name Win Hcp ScrLaneSsn Won Ssn Ssn Ssn 17.0 71% 1542679% Pct &Total HGS17067 HSS HGH HSH 977 4Lost BOWLERS JOE7.0Total12 19.0 5.0 17665 2714 15805 15.0 9.0 63% 17232 14511 898 2604 HARRIS OF HENDERSON11 17.0 7.0 71% 17067 15426 5.0 79% 17665 15805 1000 2744 1112 3080 AUDIO TV71% 17067 1 97716774 15.0 9.0 17232 2004 14511 10.0 15426 58% 1137463% 7.0 14.0 2714 1047 3011 710 LEWIS ELECTRIC 6 14.0 10.0 58% 16774 11374 9.0 13.0 63% 17232 2604 1027 11.0 14511 54%89817227 1497129821030 2876 CAROLINA 3 71013.0 11.0 54% 17227 14971 10.0 13.0 58%LANES 16774 11374 2004 1015 2904 11.0 54% 16818 14067 881 2552 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. 16818 14067 11.0 54% 17227 149717 103013.0 2876 11.0 1132 54% 10.0PHILLY 14.0 42% 17161 148573182 883 2562 PO BOYS STEAKS 11.0 54% 16818 140674 88110.0 2552 14.0 1072 42% 3125 17161 14857 14.0 14857 42% 1250542% CLAYTON VACUUM 8 88317059 10.0 17059 2163 12505 14.0 10.0 42% 17161 2562 14.0 1014 2997 816 15.0 12505 38% 1355538% AMERICAN 5 81616564 9.0 16564 2336 13555 14.0 9.0 42%LEGION 17059 2163 15.0 1076 2943 823 TEAM 2 82316475 9.0 16475 2276 13187 15.0 79.0 38% 16564 2336 15.0 1013 2858 808 15.0 13555 38% 1318738% MASTERS OF MUSIC 9 8.0 16.0 33% 16837 13426 15.0 8.0 38% 16475 13187 808 2276 1003 2838 16.0 33% 16837 13426 848 2312 GHOST 10 848 0.0 0% 0 0 16.0 TEAM 33% 116837 13426 2312 24.0 1053 2960 0.0 24.0 0% 0 0 0 0 24.0 0% 0 0 0 0 0 0

Ssn Ssn Ssn 3080HGH HSS

1112 HGS 1047 1000 1027 977 898 1015 710 1132 1030 1072 881 1014 883 1076 816 1013 823 808 1003 848 1053 0 0

30111112 2744 29821047 2714 2604 29041027 2004 31821015 2876 1132 3125 2552 1072 29971014 2562 29431076 2163 28581013 2336 2276 28381003 2312 29601053 0 0 0

WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF Chicago 7 5 1 1 11 26 Columbus 6 5 1 0 10 18 Detroit 7 3 3 1 7 22 SsnSt. Louis 5 2 2 1 5 14 HSH Nashville 7 2 4 1 5 10

GA 19 12 25 15 23

Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF 8 6 1 1 13 28 8 5 2 1 11 30 7 4 2 1 9 28 6 2 4 0 4 20 6 1 5 0 2 14

GA 18 28 21 22 23

3080 3011 2982 2904 3182 Colorado 3125 2997 Calgary 2943 Edmonton 2858 Vancouver 2838 2960 Minnesota 0

Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA HIGH SERIES HANDICAP San 247HIGH Melvyn Owens SCRATCH 671 HANDICAP MelvynHIGH OwensGAMEHIGH 271 Mark Brame 701 Jose Randy Broughton8 4 3 1 9 25 23 HIGH SCRATCH SCRATCH HIGH GAME SERIES HANDICAP HIGHGAME GAME SCRATCH HIGH SERIES SERIES HANDICAP HIGH SERIES HANDICAP Mark Brame 628 Michael Evans 256 Broughton 695 Melvyn Owens 6 4 2 0 8 14 9 247 Owens 671 235 Melvyn Randy Randy Broughton Phoenix 247 Melvyn Melvyn Owens 671OwensMelvyn Owens271 Mark Brame 271 Mark 701 Brame 701 Randy Broughton 232 Willie Adams 592 Demarcus Simmons 255 Demarcus Simmons 667 Demarcus Simmons 235 Mark Brame 628 Michael Evans 256 Randy Broughton 695 Melvyn Owens Los Angeles 235 Mark Brame 628 Michael Evans 578 Willie Adams 256 Randy Broughton OwensEvans 8 4 4 0 8 24 28 Demarcus Simmons Melvyn Owens 695 Melvyn 664 Michael 232 Willie Adams 592 230 Demarcus Simmons 255 Demarcus Simmons 667 255 Demarcus Simmons AFC NFC Div 232 Willie Adams 592 Demarcus Simmons 255 Demarcus Simmons 667 Demarcus Anaheim 6 3 2 1 7 16 16 223 Tim Nicholson 570 Bob Williams 254 Willie Adams 658 ClaySimmons Owen 230 Demarcus Simmons 578 Willie Adams 255 Melvyn Owens 664 Michael Evans 3-1-0 1-0-0 3-0-0 MichaelWillie EvansAdams 254 570 Tim Nicholson 230 TimDemarcus 255 Melvyn 664 Michael 223 Nicholson Simmons 570 223 Bob 578 Williams Willie Adams 658Owens Clay Owen Dallas Evans 6 2 1 3 7 20 17 223 Evans 570 Tim Nicholson 223 Michael Tim Nicholson 570 Bob Williams 254 Willie Adams 658 Clay Owen 3-2-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 Weekly Team Achievements 570 Tim Nicholson 2-1-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 Bay 223 Michael Evans Detroit at Green Weekly Team Achievements Two points for a win, one point for overtime HIGH GAME SCRATCH HIGH SERIES SCRATCH HIGH GAME HANDICAP HIGH SERIES HANDICAP 1-3-0 (1-4)0-1-0 0-2-0 (2-2) HIGH GAME SCRATCH loss.CAROLINA LANES HIGH SERIES SCRATCHLANES HIGH Team GAME HANDICAP HANDICAP Weekly Achievements 1030 CAROLINA 2876 CAROLINA LANES HIGH SERIES 1132 CAROLINA LANES 3182 948 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2714 HARRIS OF HENDERSON MASTERS 3011 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2876 CAROLINA LANES 1132 CAROLINA LANES 3182 1053 CAROLINA LANESOF MUSIC Packers had a week off1030toCAROLINA LANES HIGH GAMEOFSCRATCH SCRATCH GAME3011 HANDICAP HIGH SERIES HANDICAP 898HIGH AUDIO TV 2616 4 BOWLERS & JOE 1047 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2982 AUDIO TV 948 HARRIS HENDERSON 2714 HARRIS OFSERIES HENDERSON 1053 MASTERS OFHIGH MUSIC HARRIS OF HENDERSON Saturday’s Games mend and solve myriad block4 BOWLERS 2604 AUDIO TV NEWMAN ELECTRIC. 2924 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 898 AUDIO TV BOWLERS & JOE & JOE LANES 1047 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2982 1044 AUDIO TV 1030 CAROLINA LANES 2616 4894 2876 CAROLINA 1132 CAROLINA LANES 3182INC.CAROLINA LANES AFC NFC Div Atlanta 4, Buffalo 2 ing problems. Lions aren’t 894 4 BOWLERS &OF JOEHENDERSON 2604 AUDIO TV HARRIS OF HENDERSON 1044 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 2924 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 948 HARRIS 2714 1053 MASTERS OF MUSIC 3011 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 4-0-0 1-0-0 Ottawa To Date Individual Achievements projected to get1-0-0 much pressure 898 AUDIO TV 2616 4 BOWLERS & JOE Season 1047 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2982 AUDIO TV 3, Montreal 1 2-2-0 0-0-0 Rodgers. 1-0-0 Season To AUDIO Date Individual Achievements Colorado 4, Detroit 3, SO on QB Aaron 894 4 BOWLERS & JOE 2604 TV 1044 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 2924 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. HIGH AVERAGE HIGH GAME SCRATCH HIGH SERIES SCRATCH HIGH GAME HANDICAP INC. 1-3-0 0-1-0 1-2-0 San 4, N.Y. Islanders 1 195 Tommy Bryant 267 Craig Phillips 661 Brooks Brame 297 Jose Craig Phillips HIGH AVERAGE HIGH GAME SCRATCH HIGH SERIES SCRATCH HIGH GAME HANDICAP 189 Phillips Michael Evans 259 Michael 639 Phillips Wilson Strickland 271 Gus Williams 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-1-0 195 Tommy Bryant 267 Craig 661 Brooks Brame Evans Achievements 297 Craig Washington 3, Nashville 2, SO Season To Date Individual 186 Wilson Strickland 257 Brooks Brame 629 Michael A. Dover 271 Mark Brame 189 Michael Evans 259 Michael Evans 639 Wilson Strickland 271 Gus Williams Columbus 4, Los Angeles 1 186 Brooks 246 Tommy Bryant 628 Brame Tommy Bryant 270 Mickey Hester 186 Wilson Strickland 257 Brooks BrameBrame 629 Michael A. Dover 271 Mark 181HIGH Morris Lassiter SCRATCH 244 Gus Williams 628 Michael 270 HANDICAP Brooks Brame HIGH AVERAGE GAME HIGH SERIES270SCRATCH 186 Brooks Brame 246 Tommy Bryant 628 Tommy Bryant Mickey Hester Evans HIGH GAME N.Y. Rangers 4, Toronto 1 179Williams Michael A. Dover 626 Joe Wheless 263Phillips Joe Wheless 181 Lassiter 244 Gus Brooks Brame 195Morris Tommy Bryant 267 Craig Phillips 628 Michael Evans 661 Brooks270 Brame 297 Craig Cleveland at Pittsburgh New JerseyEvans 2, Carolina 0 259 Michael 179 A. Dover Joe Wheless 189Michael Michael Evans 259 Michael Evans 626 Joe Wheless 639 Wilson263 Strickland 271 Gus Williams NFC (1-4) AFC Div(3-2) 186 Wilson Strickland HIGH SERIES HANDICAP Pittsburgh 257 Brooks Brame 629 Michael259A. Michael Dover Evans 271 Mark Brame 4, Tampa Bay 1 701 246 RandyTommy BroughtonBryant 3-0-0 could 2-0-0 HANDICAP 186SERIES Brooks Brame 628 Tommy Bryant 270 Mickey Hester Dallas at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. This get 2-0-0 real uglyHIGH 700 Brooks Brame 701 Broughton 181Randy Morris Lassiter 244 Gus Williams 628 Michael Evans 270 Brooks Brame 2-1-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 692 Joe Wheless Boston at Phoenix, 9 p.m. if Cleveland plays as it did inMichael 700 Brooks Brame 179 A. Dover 626 Joe Wheless 263 Joe Wheless 687 Wilson Strickland 2-1-0 0-1-0 against 692 Joe Wheless St. Louis 6-3 win 1-1-0 last Sunday 259 Michael Evansat Anaheim, 10 p.m. 681 Gus Williams 687 Wilson Strickland 2-3-0 0-1-0always681 Gus Williams Minnesota at Vancouver, 10 p.m. the Bills.0-0-0 Steelers HIGH SERIES HANDICAP Season To Date Team Achievements take Browns seriously. 701 Randy Broughton Season To Date Team Achievements HIGH GAME SCRATCH HIGH SERIES SCRATCH HIGH GAME HANDICAP HIGH SERIES HANDICAP

Weekly Individual Achievements Weekly Achievements Individual Achievements Weekly Individual HIGH GAME SCRATCH HIGH SERIES SCRATCH HIGH GAME HANDICAP

6-3 win last Sunday against Bengals hoping his right defense has been vulnerable come offgo their bestto hometown Packers had a week off to which figures to down Dallas 3 while 2 0 heel .600 problem 122 98 1-1-0 past. 2-1-0 is inmyriad the and agressive game of the season against mend and solve blockthe overly wire anyway. Washington 2 3 0 .400 73 82 2-0-0 0-3-0 rank first Lions in PPG at 36 Minnesota’s unitstruggle has been Ravens. Texans in red Saints ing problems. aren’t (Mon.) defense sixthpressure overall. balanced and opportunistic. been outscored 146-34. Dallas, Indianapolis, Miami, zone, so they need to get the and projected to rated get much South 700 Brooks Brame ball to Andre Johnson. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. HIGH HIGH SERIES SCRATCHLANES HIGH GAME HANDICAPLANES 1030 CAROLINA 2876 HANDICAP CAROLINA LANES HIGH SERIES 1132 CAROLINA 3182 CAROLINA LANES W L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC Div 692GAME JoeSCRATCH Wheless 1000 4 BOWLERS 2744 4 BOWLERS 1112 4 BOWLERS 3125 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 1030 LANES 2876 CAROLINA LANES & JOE 1132 CAROLINA LANES & JOE 3182 CAROLINA LANES & JOE 687CAROLINA Wilson Strickland NFL WEEK 6 New Orleans 4 0 0 1.000 144 66 2-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 HARRIS& OF HARRIS& OF 1076 CLAYTON VACUUM 3080 4 BOWLERS & JOE 1000 4 BOWLERS & JOE 2744 4 977 BOWLERS JOEHENDERSON 1112 42714 BOWLERS JOEHENDERSON 3125 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 681 Gus Williams Y. Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego Atlanta 3 1 0 .750 102 63 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 898 AUDIO TV 2604 AUDIO TV NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 3011 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 977 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2714 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 1076 CLAYTON VACUUM 3080 41072 BOWLERS & JOE t Oakland Arizona at Seattle 898 AUDIO TV 2604 AUDIO TV Season To 1072 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. 3011 HARRIS OF HENDERSON (3-2) (3-1) (3-1) (5-0) (2-2) Carolina 1 3 0 .250 57 104 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 Date Team Achievements (1-4) (2-2) at Tampa (2-3)Bay Kansas City at Washington Philadelphia at Oakland Arizona at Seattle Carolina Henderson-Vance Tampa Bay 0 Orleans 5 0 .000 68 140 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-4-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 f its sorAtlanta lookedatsensational in ThatGiants one of these teams Baltimore Minnesota at New(2-3) Cleveland ksonville HIGH SERIES SCRATCH HIGH GAME HANDICAP HIGH SERIES HANDICAP (1-3) (0-5) (3-1) at Pittsburgh (1-4) (2-2) (2-3) HIGH GAME SCRATCH bor returned With San Francisco idle, one N.Y.(0-5) the s(2-3) ever in a all areas in romp against the would be spotless(4-0) this deep Recreation and Parks (3-2) (5-0) (5-0) (1-4) (3-2) Baldwin-Wallace Muskingum 14 Houston athealthier Cincinnati Detroitface at Green Bay st Tampa of these teams will gain 2876 CAROLINA LANES 113227, CAROLINA LANES 3182 CAROLINA LANES Donovan McNabb returned With San Francisco idle,1030 oneCAROLINA LANES their sixth Panthers got difficult North he Browns. 49ers. Chicago has wonwith three Redskins into the season hardly is YOUTH FOOTBALL SCORES 1000 4 BOWLERS & JOE 2744 4 BOWLERS & Bemidji JOE 1112 4 BOWLERS & JOE 3125 NEWMAN ELECTRIC. INC. St. 46, Minn.-Crookston 6 Oakland. If Baltimore’s ground in usually the NFC West, (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) Eli Manning returns to his This could get real ugly formidable Jaguars from injury against Tampa of these teams will gain straight winless opponent. a bye week and then rallied L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC Div eandled Ravens by straight as QB Jay Cutler shocking. That it’s W Denver, 977 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 2714 HARRIS OF HENDERSON 1076 CLAYTON VACUUM 3080 4 BOWLERS & JOEThursday, Oct. 15 Benedictine, Ill. 32, Maranatha Baptist 6 on, which figures to go down to hometown hoping his right if Cleveland plays as it did in has been vulnerable nst the a team defense Bay ... now faces Oakland. If ground in the NFC West, Chiefs have won just two of past the Redskins last Bengals comeupoffthe their best Packers had a week Minnesota 5 off 0 to0 1.000 156 90 2-0-0 3-0-0 4-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 really heated offense. is almost unfathomable. 1 2 3 4 F rnight. of 898 AUDIO TV 2604 AUDIO TV NEWMAN17 ELECTRIC. INC. 3011 HARRIS OF HENDERSON Bethel, Minn.1072 20, Hamline dropped. theoverly wire anyway. problem is inmyriad the past. 6-3 win Sunday against and agressive while he ball, NFL had relegation, the go down to Saturday Scores their last 29solve games, week. Bay has been heel game ofTampa the season against mend and Chicago 3 worst 1 block0 AP .750 105 last 78 2-0-0 1-1-0 which 2-1-0 figures 1-0-0 to1-1-0 Henderson-Vance Bulldogs 20 7 7 7 41 Bowling Green 31, Ball St. 17 Saints rank first in PPG at 36 the Bills. Steelers always Minnesota’s unit has been enati. and has Raiders might be dropped. the wire anyway. streak in franchise history. outscored 140-68. Ravens. Texans struggle in red ing problems. SOUTH Green Bay Lions2 aren’t 2 0 .500 104 93 1-1-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 (Mon.) Oxford Titans 0 0 0 6 6 Briar Cliff 33, Dakota Wesleyan 7 defense sixth overall. take Browns seriously. balanced 46-34. mi, zone, so and theyopportunistic. need to get the and projected get much Alabama 20, South Carolina 6 Detroit torated 1 pressure 4 0 .200 103 162 1-2-0 0-2-0 1-3-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 Game Notes: Bulldogs - Sheldon Smith (Mon.) Buena Vista 24, Cornell, Iowa 17 ball to Andre Johnson. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. Alcorn St. 34, Alabama A&M 16 (131 yards rushing), Kris Haywood (87 yards Butler 23, Valparaiso 14 Appalachian St. 44, Wofford 34 West rushing), Alkabir Williams (75 yards rushing). Cent. Michigan 34, W. Michigan 23 WK 6 CAPSULES BWat101509: ADVANCE FOR OCT.N17-18; NFL Atlanta Denver San Diego Averett 24, Maryville, Tenn. 21 W L L W T PA Home Away NFC AFC Div F E EPct K 6PF Cent. Oklahoma 41, SW Oklahoma 23 chups; 6 1/2(5-0) inches; 146 mm x 165 mm; with related stories; (3-1) 3c xTennessee (2-2) Benedict 28, Kentucky St. 14 San Francisco 3 2 0 .600 112 98 2-1-0 1-1-0 3-2-0 0-0-0 3-0-0 at New England Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego Central 35, Luther 17 Philadelphia at (3-2) Oakland at Seattle mpa Bay City Washington p.m. </AP> Arizona 2 2 0 .500 Arizona 85 89 1-2-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 (5-0) 2-1-0 0-1-0 nsational in Kansas That one of at these teams (0-5) (3-2) (1-4) (3-1) (3-1) (2-2) Bethune-Cookman 34, Savannah St. 24 Chicago 28, Macalester 24 innesota N.Y.(0-5) Giants at New(2-3) Orleans Cleveland at Pittsburgh (3-1) (1-4) (2-2) (2-3) (0-5) Carson-Newman 17, Lenoir-Rhyne 13 Seattle 2 sor3 0 .400 115 82 sensational 2-1-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 one 1-1-0 1-1-0teams against the The would be spotless this up, deep Bills put Titans are banged out one of its Atlanta looked in That of these Coe 35, Wartburg 21 accompany this graphic when repurposing editing it St. forLouis publication (3-2) (5-0) (5-0) (4-0) (1-4) 0 the5 in a0 .000 34 inFrancisco 146 against 0-2-0 0-5-0 be 0-0-0 0-2-0this Catawba Donovan McNabbfor returned With San idle,0-3-0 one face their sixth lthier with ncinnati Detroit at Bayis orBowl as won three Redskins into the season The road thehardly Super gets tougher especially intoGreen the secondriest performances ever all areas romp the would spotless deep 41, Tusculum 27 Concordia, Ill. 41, Lakeland 32 at Cincinnati Detroit at Green Bay Eli Manning returns to hisVikings, This could gettoa real ugly Catholic 38, Gallaudet 13 from injury against Tampa ofHouston these teams will gain winless opponent. hen rallied straight yformidable Cutler shocking. That it’sRandy Denver, (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) ary, which means 6-3 home loss the Browns. 49ers. Chicago has won three into the season hardly is unbeaten Minnesota who open difficult Top 10 — How They Fared Concordia, St.P. 29, SW Minnesota St. 17 hometown hoping his right if Cleveland plays as it did in vulnerable Clemson 38, Wake Forest 3 Bay ... now faces Oakland. If ground in the NFC West, Chiefs have won just two of she last (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) offense. is almost unfathomable. Moss might finally get on Jets D was manhandled by straight as QB Jay Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, their best Packers had a week off they to stretch Sunday when host a Baltimore Ravens Class 4A Concordia, Wis. 24, Aurora 21 heel problem is in the past. 6-3 win last Sunday against vehas while Cumberland, Tenn. 27, Virginia-Wise 20 NFL had relegation, the which figures to go down to their last 29 games, worst yon been AP track the Patriots. Monday really heated offense. is almost had unfathomable. Bengals comeupoffthe their best Packers a week off to against mend and solve block1. Matthews Butler (7-0) beat Charlotte Ardrey teamfor trying toinmyriad get back on Dolphins track after a pairnight. of Dayton 17, Davidson 0 Saints rank first PPG at 36 the Bills. Steelers always as been Delaware Valley 23, Wilkes 0 Raiders might be dropped. the wire anyway. streak in franchise history. 8. AP of the season against mend and solve myriad blockuggle in red ing problems. Lions aren’tEngland and Cincinnati. Kell 67-0. Defiance 28, Rose-Hulman 21 difficult losses to New AFC game NFC defense sixth overall. take Browns seriously. ortunistic. E. Kentucky 31, Tenn.-Martin 25 Ravens. Texans struggle in red ing problems. Lions aren’t d to get the and projected to rated get much pressure (Mon.) 2. Charlotte Independence (9-0) beat South Dubuque 36, Simpson, Iowa 33 Week 5 Week 5 East Carolina 49, Rice 13 OPEN DATES: Dallas, Indianapolis, Miami, zone, so they need to get the projected to get much pressure son. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. Mecklenburg 55-28. E. Illinois 23, Tennessee Tech 15 Quarterbacks ball to Andre Johnson. Often. Quarterbacks Florida 23, Arkansas 20 on QB Aaron Rodgers. SanFOR Francisco 3. Fayetteville Britt (8-0) beat Fayetteville Pine Fort Hays St. 31, Nebraska-Omaha 20 509: ADVANCE OCT. 17-18; NFL Att Com Yds TD Int Att Com Yds TD Int Franklin & Marshall 29, Moravian 13 Forest 41-14. Franklin 50, Anderson, Ind. 23 NFL W E E K <AP> 6 46 mm x 165 mm; with related stories; NFL WK181 6 CAPSULES ADVANCE FOR1212 OCT. NFL26, Samford 24 Furman P. Manning, 133 1645 12 BW 4 at101509: E. Manning, NYG 135 87 10 17-18; 2 w England Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Chicago atIND Atlanta Denver San Diego 4. Jamestown Ragsdale (9-0) beat Northwest Grand Valley St. 38, Findlay 13 Week matchups; 3c x1470 6 1/2 146 mm x 165 Gardner-Webb 27, Charleston Southern 20 ashington Philadelphia at(3-2) Oakland Arizona Seattle Roethlisberger, PIT 172 127 8 inches; 5 Brees, NOR 129 mm; 87 with 1031 related 9 2 stories; (3-2) (1-4) (3-1) 6 at (3-1) (5-0) (2-2) Guilford 20-0. Gustavus 28, Carleton 21 Georgetown, Ky. 23, Cumberlands 20 w(2-3) Orleans Cleveland at Pittsburgh ED; ETA 4 p.m. </AP> (3-1) (1-4) (2-2) (2-3) Schaub, HOU 179 115 1418 10 4 Favre, MIN 149 103 1069 9 2 5. Richmond County (7-1) beat Pembroke anged up,or editing Bills itput one of its sorAtlanta looked sensational in That one of these teams Hastings 7, Nebraska Wesleyan 3 urposing for out publication Baltimore at Minnesota N.Y. Giants atHasselbeck, New Orleans St. Louis at Jacksonville Georgia 34, Vanderbilt 10 (1-4)McNabb (3-2) Orton, 165 104 1236 7 be1spotless SEA 84 Cleveland 53 617 at7 Pittsburgh 2 Donovan With San Francisco idle, the onethis ir(4-0) sixth Bowl Swett 40-30. riest performances ever all areas inDEN romp would this deep Hillsdale 28, N. Michigan 17 esecondSuper gets tougher forreturned theintoainclude Editor’s Note: It is mandatory all(3-2) sources that against accompany graphic when repurposing or editing it for publication (3-2)Georgia Southern 30, Chattanooga 20 (5-0) (5-0) (4-0) (1-4) (0-5) (2-3) from injury against Tampa ofHouston these teams will won gain pponent. P. Chicago Rivers, SND 150 three 88 1245 6 season 3 at Green M. hardly Ryan,Bay ATL 123 82 977 7 2 at Cincinnati Detroit sRandy to hisVikings, This could gettoa real ugly 6. West Forsyth (8-0) beat Davie County 6-3 home loss the Browns. 49ers. has into the is Illinois College 50, Beloit 42 esota who open difficult Georgia Tech 28, Virginia Tech 23 ground in QB the NFCformidable West, Bay ... was nowfor faces If straight Eli Manning returns toGBY his This77 could Baltimore’s usually chance the Oakland. Jaguars his right ifA Cleveland plays as it did Flacco, BAL 182 117 1289 9 5 That Rodgers, 127 1098 get 6 real1 ugly (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) 13-7, OT. yust gettwo on of D manhandled by in as Jay Cutler shocking. it’s Denver, Illinois St. 38, Indiana St. 21 when they Jets host a Baltimore Ravens Gettysburg 59, Juniata 14 which figures go down to 1129 NFL had relegation, the s, hometown hoping hisARI right if Cleveland defense has been vulnerable to get going against a team really theworst past. 6-3 win last Sunday against 7. Wake Forest-Rolesville (8-0) beat Raleigh ots. Monday night. heated upto the offense. is almost unfathomable. Garrard, JAC 169 best 100 5 1had Warner, 106 1165 plays 6 4as it did in Indiana 27, Illinois 14 Bengals come off their Packers a week off to 160 back on Dolphins track after a pair ofball, Grambling St. 23, Alabama St. 12 Raiders might bethe dropped. the overly wire anyway. eget history. heel problem isCutler, inmyriad the 6-383 win last and agressive while thatBills. can’t move PPG at 36 the Steelers always Wakefield 47-0. AP129 Indianapolis 38, Michigan Tech 20 Brady, NWE 207 127 1344 6 and 2 solve CHI past. 901 Sunday 8 5 against game of the season against mend blockGrand View 24, Kentucky Wesleyan 12 to New England in PPG at 36 96 the 62 Bills.741 Steelers Minnesota’s unitstruggle has been can’tand stopCincinnati. anyone and has sixth overall. take Browns seriously. 8. Mallard Creek (7-1) beat North Mecklenburg Iowa 20, Wisconsin 10 Cassel, KAN 130 in 76 711 7 rank 2 firstKolb, PHL aren’t 4 3always Ravens. Texans red Saints ing problems. Lions (Mon.) Houston 44, Tulane 16 and defense sixthpressure overall. take98 Browns balanced and CIN opportunistic. been outscored 146-34. 26-10. Iowa St. 24, Baylor 10 Dallas, Indianapolis, Miami, zone,C.so they need to168 get 97 the 1116 projected get much Palmer, 7 6to rated J. Campbell, WAS 147 1108 seriously. 6 5 Jacksonville 39, Morehead St. 0 9. Winston-Salem Reynolds (8-0) beat Kansas St. 62, Texas A&M 14 ball to Andre Johnson. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. o Kentucky 21, Auburn 14 Winston-Salem Mt. Tabor 28-21. Kent St. 28, E. Michigan 6 Rushers Rushers LaGrange 37, Eureka 10 FL WEEK 6 <AP> NFL WK 6 CAPSULES BW 101509: ADVANCE FOR OCT. 17-18; NFL 10. Greensboro Dudley (7-0) beat Southeast Lawrence 17, Knox 13 Y. Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego inches; Att xYds TD related Week matchups; mm 165Avg mm;LG with stories; Att Yds Avg LG TD Liberty 58, Coastal Carolina 13 Guilford 34-12. Oakland Arizona Seattle Martin Luther 53, Crown, Minn. 35 (3-2) (3-1)6 at (3-1) 3c x 6 1/2Benson, (5-0) CIN 146 (2-2) 111 487 4.39 28t 3 A. Peterson, MIN 99 481 4.86 64t 7 Louisiana College 42, E. Texas Baptist 28 ED; ETA 4Tampa p.m. atsensational Bay City at Washington Philadelphia at Oakland Arizona at Seattle Carolina Mary 20, Northern St., S.D. 16 (2-2) (2-3)</AP> f its(1-4) sorAtlanta looked in Kansas ThatChr. one of these teams Louisiana Tech 45, New Mexico St. 7 Johnson, TEN 78 468 6.00 91t 2 S. Jackson, STL 104 451 4.34 58 0 Baltimore at Minnesota Giants at New(2-3) Orleans Cleveland cksonville Class 3A (1-3)inFrancisco (0-5) (0-5) (3-1) at Pittsburgh (1-4) (2-2) (2-3) Michigan 63, Delaware St. 6 With idle, one sndatory ever all areas romp against thethisN.Y. would spotless this rreturned the intoainclude all San sources that accompany graphic when repurposing or Louisiana-Lafayette 30, W. Kentucky 22 Ro.be Brown, MIA 93 deep 443 editing 4.76 it for 38 publication 6 Bradshaw, NYG 58 375 6.47 38 2 (3-2) (5-0) (4-0) (1-4) (3-2) (2-3) 1. West Rowan (9-0) beat Statesville 55-12. Michigan St. 24, Northwestern 14 Donovan McNabb returned With San Francisco idle, one 28, Widener 16 face their sixthis Panthers got healthier tifficult Tampa of these teams will(5-0) gainwith he Browns. 49ers. Chicago has won three Redskins into the season hardly Houston at Cincinnati Detroit at Green Bay Lycoming R. Rice, BAL 63 364 5.78 50 1 Jacobs, NYG 100 355 3.55 31 1 2. Lenoir Hibriten (8-0) beat South Caldwell Minn. Duluth 31, St. Cloud St. 7 from of these teams will gain straight winless opponent. a bye week and rallied Eli Oakland. ground in the NFC West, Manning returns to his Thisinjury couldagainst get realTampa ugly Baltimore’s usually formidable Jaguars andled by If straight as QB Jaythen Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) McNeese St. 51, Northwestern St. 23 Ravens F. Jackson, BUF 83 363 4.37 43 0 Portis, WAS 91 338 3.71 34 1 42-13. Minn. St., Mankato 59, Minn. St., Moorhead 14 Bay ... now faces Oakland. If ground in the NFC West, Chiefs have won just two of past the Redskins last n, the which figures to go down to hometown hoping his right if Cleveland plays as it did in defense has been vulnerable nst a team Bengals night. really heated up the offense. is almost unfathomable. Miami 27, UCF 7 come off their best Packers hadDEN a week 81 off to337 4.16 17 1 Moreno, M. Turner, ATL 87 323 3.71 33 5 of ball, 3. Hertford County (9-0) beat Pasquotank Minot St. 28, Black Hills St. 9 had last relegation, to their problem last games, week. Bay has been heel dropped. the wire anyway. is in theworst past. 6-3 win Sundaythe against which figures to go down and overly agressive while he AP NFL Mississippi 48, UAB 13 game ofTampa the season against mend and29 solve myriad blockJones-Drew, JAC 75 at 330 4.40 61t might 5Steelers M. Barber, DAL 58 the297 5.12 35 3 County 61-0. Missouri St. 17, W. Illinois 16 Raiders be dropped. wire anyway. streak in franchise history. outscored 140-68. Saints rank first in PPG 36 the Bills. always Minnesota’s unit has been eati. and has Ravens. Mississippi College 17, Mary Hardin-Baylor 14 Texans struggle in red ing problems. Lions aren’t (Mon.) 4. Belmont South Point (7-2) lost to Gastonia Ri. Williams, MIA sixth 61 overall. 316 5.18 2 K. Smith, DET 94 287 3.05 19 3 Monmouth, Ill. 35, Ripon 13 defense rated take 28 Browns seriously. balanced andneed opportunistic. 146-34. Mississippi St. 27, Middle Tennessee 6 mi, zone, so they to get the and projected to get much pressure (Mon.) Forestview 21-20. Mount St. Joseph 28, Hanover 13 Mendenhall, PIT 51 287 5.63 39 3 Ju. Jones, SEA 69 285 4.13 62t 1 Morehouse 35, Lane 33 ball to Andre Johnson. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. 5. Asheville (6-0-1) beat McDowell County Nebraska-Kearney 65, W. New Mexico 30 T. Jones, NYJ 74 271 3.66 39 5 Forte, CHI 71 271 3.82 61 1 Murray St. 9, Tennessee St. 6 47-6. WK 6 CAPSULES BW 101509: ADVANCE FOR OCT. 17-18; NFL North Central 63, Carthage 48 N.C. Central 52, Cent. Methodist 7 tlanta Denver at San Diego N F Lstories; WEEK 6 6. Eastern Alamance (7-1) beat Eden Morehead Northwestern, Minn. 55, St. Scholastica 28 chups; 3c x Tennessee 6 1/2 inches; 146England mm x 165 mm; with related Receivers Buffalo at N.Y.Receivers Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego N.C. Wesleyan 35, Christopher Newport 7 (3-1) (5-0) at New (2-2) 72-12. Ohio 28, Miami (Ohio) 7 p.m. </AP> No Yds Avg LG TD No Yds Avg LG TD mpa Bay Kansas City at Washington Philadelphia at Oakland Arizona at Seattle Norfolk St. 46, Hampton 6 (0-5) (3-2) (1-4) (3-2) (3-1) (3-1) (5-0) (2-2) sational in That one of these teams 7. Waynesville Tuscola (6-1-1) beat Canton Purdue 26, Ohio St. 18 nnesota N.Y. Giants at Orleans Cleveland atIND Pittsburgh Dal. Clark, 35 80t 2 St. Smith, 481 one13.0 43 4teams (0-5) thethis (0-5) (2-3) (3-1) (2-2) (2-3)NYG in 37 That Old Dominion 28, Campbell 17 The Titans areNew banged up, Bills out one of its(1-4) sor-441 12.6 Atlanta looked sensational of these against would bewhen spotless this deep accompany graphic repurposing or editing itput for publication Pisgah 41-10. S. Arkansas 15, Ouachita 7 (5-0) (5-0) (4-0) (1-4) (3-2) H. tougher Ward, PIT forreturned 33 in440 41 Burleson, SEA the 358 be 11.9 44t 3 thisS.deep Carolina St. 35, Florida A&M 20 Donovan McNabb With San1inFrancisco idle, one 30 would face their sixthis Bowlriest althier ever a 13.3 all areas romp against spotless especially inGreen the secondThe road the Super getsperformances the as wonwith three Redskins into the season hardly ncinnati Detroit atto Bay 8. Northern Guilford (7-1) beat Mayodan S. Dakota St. 28, N. Dakota St. 13 Houston at Witten, Cincinnati Detroit at Green Wayne, IND 32 459 14.3 39 4teams 259 9.3 22 hardly 1 BaySE from injury against Tampa of these will DAL gain three 28 into straight winless opponent. hen rallied Eli 6-3 home loss to Browns. 49ers. Chicago has won the season is Louisiana 37, Sam Houston St. 21 ary, which means Randy Manning returns to hisVikings, This could get real ugly yformidable Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, unbeaten Minnesota who open a the difficult (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) McMichael 56-7. S. Illinois 27, N. Iowa 20 Shaw 53, Chowan 20 (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) Houshmandzadeh, SEA 27 325 12.0 34t 2 R. Moss, NWE 30 367 12.2 36 1 Bay ... now faces Oakland. If ground in the NFC West, Chiefs have won just two of s last Moss might finally get on Jets D was manhandled by straight as QB Jay Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, hoping his right if Cleveland plays as it did in vulnerable he offense. hometown is almost unfathomable. 9. Havelock (7-1) beat South Central Pitt 27-7. stretch Sunday when host a Baltimore Ravens Saginaw Valley St. 42, Ashland 14 their best Packers had a week off they to Southern Miss. 36, Memphis 16 NFLwin had relegation, the which18 figures to the go down their last ye has track for 29 thegames, Dolphins Monday really heated offense. is almost unfathomable. problem isPatriots. theworst past. AP 6-3 last whilebeen heel Celek, PHL 303 11.7 2 off H.after Miller, PIT 29 235 Bengals 8.1 3 up come off their bestto 26 Packers had a38 week to 10. Gastonia Forestview (7-1) beat Belmont Sioux Falls 28, North Dakota 13 team trying toinmyriad get back on track aSunday pair night. ofagainst n against mend and solve blockSouthern U. 55, Fort Valley St. 23 Raiders might be dropped. the wire anyway. streakrank in franchise history. 8. Saints first in PPG at 36 the Bills. Steelers always s been AP Winslow,against TAM 26 257 and9.9 42t myriad 4 And. Johnson, HOU 28 437 game 15.6 72t 4 season of the mend solve blockSouth Point 21-20. Southern Cal 34, Notre Dame 27 uggle in red ing problems. Lions aren’tEngland and difficult losses to New Cincinnati. St. Augustine’s 31, Livingstone 7 and defense rated sixth overall. take Browns seriously.26 227 Ravens. rtunistic. struggleARI in red 25 ing 202 problems. Hightower, 8.1 Lions 23 0 aren’t Welker, NWE 8.7 17 Texans 1 (Mon.) St. Francis, Ind. 63, Trinity, Ill. 7 d to get the projected to get much pressure Stillman 20, Miles 0 OPEN DATES: Dallas, Indianapolis, Miami, 26 153 zone, so they to ATL get the 23 projected to get90t much R. White, 329 14.3 3 pressure Addai, IND 5.9 17 1 need Class 2A St. John’s, Minn. 20, St. Thomas, Minn. 17, OT son. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. Stony Brook 27, VMI 20 Andre on QB San Francisco 1. Reidsville (8-0) beat Burlington Cummings Boldin, ARI Often. 23 252 Aaron 11.0 Rodgers. 20 1 O. Daniels, HOU 25 296 ball 11.8 to 44 2 Johnson. St. Norbert 28, Carroll, Wis. 20 509: ADVANCE FOR OCT. 17-18; NFL Texas Southern 19, Jackson St. 17 46-13. St. Xavier 66, Malone 31 Ca. Johnson, DET 22 325 64 17-18; 1 Cotchery,NFL NYJ WK24 360 15.0 46 BW 1 101509: NFL WEEK 6 <AP> 6 CAPSULES ADVANCE FOR14.8 OCT. NFL 46 mm x 165 mm; with related stories; Texas St. 34, Nicholls St. 28 w England Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego 2. Tarboro (8-0) beat Kinston 20-16. Texas Tech 31, Nebraska 10 Week 6 matchups; 3c x 6 1/2 inches; 146 mm x 165 mm; with related stories; Thomas More 17, Grove City 7 ashington Philadelphia at Oakland Arizona 3. SouthWest Edgecombe (9-0) beat North (3-2) (1-4) (3-2) (3-1) at Seattle (3-1) (5-0) (2-2) Toledo 20, N. Illinois 19 Punters Punters ED; ETA 4 (2-3) p.m. </AP> Trinity, Texas 40, Sewanee 0 (3-1) (1-4) (2-2) w(2-3) Orleans Cleveland at Pittsburgh Pitt 44-12. Trine 42, Olivet 17 anged up, Bills put out one of its sorAtlanta sensational in ThatAvg one of these urposing or editing itLouis for publication Newteams No Yds LG atAvg looked No Yds LG Troy 42, Fla. International 33 Baltimore at Minnesota N.Y. Giants at Orleans Cleveland Pittsburgh St. at Jacksonville (4-0) (1-4) (3-2) 4. East Duplin (8-0) beat South Lenoir 49-21. Super gets tougher for the in a With Valley City St. 38, Mayville St. 21 Donovan McNabb returned San Francisco idle, rsecondsixth Bowl riest performances ever all areas in romp thethis70 would spotless this Editor’s Note: It is mandatory allLechler, sources that against accompany graphic or editing it for publication J.repurposing Ryan, SEA deep 22 1117 OAK 30 one 1571 52.4bewhen (3-2) (5-0) (5-0) (4-0) (1-4)70 50.8 (3-2)Union, Ky. 21, Pikeville 6 (0-5) (2-3) to include Houston at Cincinnati Detroit at Green Bayis 5. Pittsboro Northwood (9-0) beat Carrboro Walsh 31, Taylor 12 from injury against Tampa these teams will sesota Randy 6-3 home loss the Browns. of 49ers. Chicago hasgain won into the season hardly who open a difficult sponent. to hisVikings, This could getto real ugly B. Graham, ARI 22 1110 64 50.5 Moorman, BUF 28 three 1353 66 48.3 Ursinus 16, Johns Hopkins 14 (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) That (2-2) Elishocking. Manning returns his This could get real ugly usually chance for the Oakland. Jaguars 62-34. Wayne, Mich. 45, Ferris St. 7 ground in NFCformidable West, ...D faces ust two ywhen get onof Jets was manhandled byIfin Baltimore’s straight asthe QB it’s to Denver, his right ifA Cleveland plays as it did they Bay host anow Baltimore Ravens J. Baker, CAR 15 749 61 49.9 Scifres, SND Jay Cutler 15 716 65 47.7 Villanova 27, James Madison 0 hoping his right if Cleveland plays as it did in has been vulnerable to get going against a team defense 6. Kinston (7-2) lost to Tarboro 20-16. Wayne, Neb. 48, Winona St. 31 had relegation, the which figures tooffgo down to hometown s, worst iots. Dolphins Monday really heated up the offense. is almosthad unfathomable. Bengals come their best Packers a week off to the past. on NFL 6-3 win last against get back track after aSunday pairnight. of Virginia 20, Maryland 9 Jones, STL 27 1292 62 47.9 Kern, DEN 23 1066 64 problem 46.3 isDo. inmyriad the past. and agressive thatBills. can’t move ball, 7. Newton-Conover (7-1) beat Claremont Wis. Lutheran 40, Rockford 14 Raiders might bethe dropped. the overly wire anyway. history. AP 6-3 win last Sunday against game of the season while against heel mend and solve blockPPG at 36England the Steelers always W. Carolina 14, The Citadel 10 o New and Cincinnati. Lee, SNF 35 47.5 always Sepulveda, 18 825 Saints 58 45.8 rank firstA.in PPG at 36 the1663 Bills. 64 Steelers Minnesota’s unitPIT has been can’t Browns stop anyone and has Bunker Hill 28-0. Wis.-Eau Claire 34, Wis.-Platteville 26 Ravens. Texans struggle in red ing problems. Lions aren’t sixth overall. take seriously. (Mon.) West Alabama 33, Ark.-Monticello 0 McBriar, 1069 63 seriously. 46.5 McAfee, 15 679 59 defense 45.3 sixthDAL overall. 23 take Browns balanced andIND opportunistic. been outscored 146-34. 8. Shelby (7-1) beat Forest City Chase 27-0. Wis.-LaCrosse 49, Wis.-River Falls 47, 3OT Dallas, Indianapolis, Miami, zone, so they need to get the and projected to rated get much pressure Westminster, Pa. 31, Bethany, W.Va. 28 Kapinos, GBY 18 829 58 46.1 1532 64 45.1 9. East Bladen (8-0) beat West Bladen 28-0. Wis.-Stevens Pt. 24, Wis.-Oshkosh 17 ball toColquitt, AndreKAN Johnson.34 Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. Rocca, PHL 17 763 61 44.9 Zastudil, CLE 34 1516 60 44.6 10. Catawba Bandys (7-1) beat Maiden 41-6. Wis.-Whitewater 38, Wis.-Stout 3 EAST FL WEEK 6 <AP> NFL WK 6 CAPSULES BW MIA 101509:19 ADVANCE 17-18; Maynard, CHI NFL 18 790 66 43.9 B. Fields, 845 55 FOR 44.5 OCT. Wittenberg 10, Wabash 7 Y. Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego Albany, N.Y. 20, Bryant 17 Week 6 matchups; 3c x 6 1/2 inches; 146 mm x 16560 mm; with related stories; Class 1A Morstead, NOR 15 655 60 43.7 Koch, BAL 19 840 44.2 Oakland Arizona 3-2) (3-1) at Seattle (3-1) (5-0) (2-2) Albright 34, King’s, Pa. 16 ED; ETA 4 p.m. Bay </AP> Kansas City at Washington Philadelphia at Oakland 1. Mt. Airy (8-0) beat North Surry 66-0. SOUTHWEST Arizona at Seattle at Tampa Carolina (1-4) (2-2) (2-3) Allegheny 35, Denison 13 its sorAtlanta looked sensational in That one of these teams Baltimore at Minnesota Giants at New Orleans Cleveland ksonville 2. Albemarle (8-0) beat North Rowan 21-6. Hardin-Simmons 38, Howard Payne 31 (0-5) (2-3) (3-1) at Pittsburgh (1-4) Punt Returners (2-2) (2-3) Bentley 28, Pace 27 (1-3)in romp (0-5) the N.Y. Punt Returners orreturned thein to ever a include all areas would be when spotless this deep andatory all sources thatagainst accompany graphic repurposing or editing it(1-4) for publication (3-2) With San Francisco idle, one this (3-2) (5-0) (5-0) (4-0) (2-3) 3. Southwest Onslow (8-0) beat Pamlico Incarnate Word 53, Texas Lutheran 18 season No Avg LG TD No Yds LG TD idle, Houston athealthier Cincinnati at Green Bay McNabb returned With SanAvg Francisco one face their sixth Panthers got Bloomsburg 28, Cheyney 6 eTampa Browns. 49ers. Chicago has three Redskins intoDetroit the hardly is Yds Donovan difficult of these teams will won gainwith County 69-0. McMurry 35, Sul Ross St. 28 Eli Manning returns to his This could get real ugly Baltimore’s usually formidable Jaguars Cribbs, CLE 16 260 16.3 67t 1 De. Jackson, PHL 6 115 19.2 85t 1 from injury against Tampa of these teams will gain straight winless opponent. a bye week and then rallied (2-3) (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) Boston College 52, N.C. State 20 ndled by straight as QB Jay Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, eOakland. RavensIf ground in the NFC West, 4. Hendersonville (8-0) beat Mitchell County Prairie View 38, MVSU 0 hoping his two right if Cleveland plays as MIN it did Ifin 7 ground defense has been vulnerable nst a team really ...37 now Oakland. the NFC Chiefs have won just past heated the Redskins last Leonhard, NYJ 9 123 Bay 13.7 0 faces Reynaud, 121 in17.3 36 0West, Bowdoin 21, Hamilton 7 night. up the offense. isPackers almost unfathomable. Bengals come off their best had a week off of to n, which figures to go down to hometown r ofthe 21-6. Stephen F.Austin 33, Cent. Arkansas 30 heel problem is in the past. 6-3 win last Sunday against and overly agressive while he ball, which figures to go down to NFL had relegation, the their last 29 games, worst week. Tampa Bay has been Cosby, CIN 17 223 13.1 60 0 Northcutt, DET 8 85 10.6 43 0 Bridgewater, Mass. 27, Coast Guard 6 AP game of the season against mend and solve myriad blockdropped. the wire anyway. nati. 5. East Surry (8-0) beat South Stokes 42-7. TCU 44, Colorado St. 6 rank firstHOU in PPG at 36 the Bills. always Minnesota’s unitstruggle has beenin red Saints e and has beHester, dropped. anyway. streak in franchise history. outscored 140-68. Jac. Jones, 15 187 Raiders 12.5 62 might 0Steelers D. CHI 6 the wire 62 10.3 24 0 Brown 34, Princeton 17 Ravens. Texans ing problems. Lions aren’t 6. Monroe (8-0) beat Union Academy 64-0. Texas 16, Oklahoma 13 (Mon.) and defense rated sixth overall. take Browns seriously. balanced and opportunistic. 46-34. Buffalo 21, Akron 17 mi, zone, so they need to get the projected to DEN get much 10 pressure E. Royal, 95 9.5 17 0 Rolle, ARI 6 55 9.2 (Mon.) 27 0 7. Manteo (8-0) beat Pinetown Northside 25-0. C.W. Post 35, Millersville 3 ball to Andre Johnson. Often. on QB Aaron Bess, MIA Rodgers.8 66 8.3 12 0 C. Smith, TAM 12 109 9.1 20 0 8. Pender County (6-1) lost to Wallace-Rose FAR WEST California, Pa. 38, Edinboro 14 B. Wade, KAN 11 87 7.9 18 0 Munnerlyn, CAR 7 62 8.9 26 0 Hill 27-26. Air Force 10, Wyoming 0 WK 6 CAPSULES BW 101509: ADVANCE FOR OCT. 17-18; NFL Cent. Connecticut St. 31, Duquesne 24 Logan, PIT 12 89 7.4 20 0 Crayton, DAL 10 80 8.0 27 0 lanta 3c x 6 1/2 Denver at San 9. Kernersville McGuinness (7-1) beat Surry Arizona 43, Stanford 38 chups; inches; 146Diego mm x 165 mm; with related stories; Colgate 31, Georgetown, D.C. 14 Tennessee England Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Atlanta at San Parrish, BUF 12 73 6.1 Chicago 31 0 atRossum, SNF 12 Denver 84 7.0 14 Diego 0 Central 22-13. (3-1) (5-0) at New (2-2) BYU 38, San Diego St. 28 .m. </AP> mpa Bay Kansas Philadelphia at Oakland Arizona at Seattle Connecticut 38, Louisville 25 (0-5)City at Washington (3-2) (1-4) IND (3-2)8 46 5.8 22 (3-1) (3-1) (5-0)7.0 18 (2-2) Rushing, 0 Weems, ATL 7 49 0 10. Murphy (6-3) beat Andrews 52-0. California 45, UCLA 26 sational That one of at these nnesota Giants Newteams Orleans Cleveland at Pittsburgh (0-5) in N.Y. (0-5) (2-3) (3-1) (2-3) in Cortland St. 35, W. Connecticut 6 The Titans are banged up, Billsit put out one of its(1-4) sorAtlanta(2-2) looked sensational That one of these teams accompany graphic when repurposing or editing for publication Carroll, Mont. 23, Montana Tech 3 against thethiswould be spotless this deep (5-0) (5-0) (4-0) (1-4) (3-2) Curry 37, Endicott 6 Donovan McNabb returned With SaninFrancisco idle, the one face their sixth lthier with Redskins especially in Green the secondriest performances everReturners in a all areas romp against be spotless this deep ncinnati Detroit at Bayis Colorado 34, Kansas 30 Kickoff Kickoff would Returners s won three into the season hardly Delaware 49, Towson 21 from injury against of these teams will gain straight winless opponent. hen rallied Eli Manning returns to his This could gettoreal ugly formidable ary, which means Randy 6-3 home loss theTampa Browns. Chicago intoYds the season is Drake 21, San Diego 14 (4-1) (1-4) (2-2) Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, No Yds 49ers. Avg LG TD has won three No Avg LG hardly TD Fordham 39, Cornell 27 groundas in the NFC West, Bay ... now manhandled faces If Chiefs havehoping won just two of Jets svulnerable last hometown his right if Cleveland playsOakland. as it did in straight Moss might finally get on D was by QB Jay Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, E. Oregon 40, Montana Western 30 e offense. is almost had unfathomable. Jac. Jones, HOU the 14 415 29.6 1 Knox, 322 35.8 102t 1 their best Packers week off to Hofstra 28, Rhode Island 16 NFL had relegation, which95t figures tothe goCHI down to 9 is almost their last yve has been heel isa in theworst past. 6-3 win last Sunday against really while trackproblem for 29 thegames, Patriots. Dolphins Monday night. heated up offense. unfathomable. Idaho 35, Hawaii 23 AP Sproles, SND 18 513 28.5 66 anyway. 0 Harvin, MIN 14 437 31.2 101t 1 on against Saints mend rank and solve Holy Cross Raiders might be dropped. the wire streak in franchise history. 8. first inmyriad PPG atblock36 the Bills. Steelers always as been AP 34, Dartmouth 14 Montana 41, E. Washington 34 uggle in red and ing defense problems. Lions aren’t PIT seriously. 18 476 26.4 56 0 J. Nelson, GBY 6 176 29.3 46 0 Indiana, Pa. 45, Lock Haven 0 Saturday’s Sports Transactions rated sixth overall. take Logan, Browns ortunistic. Montana St. 31, South Dakota 24, OT d to get the projected to get much pressure Cribbs, CLE 20 522 26.1 58 0 (Mon.) C. Smith, TAM 16 450 28.1 38 0 Lafayette 35, Harvard 18 By The Associated Press N. Arizona 44, Portland St. 23 son. Often. on QB Aaron Rodgers. L. Washington, NYJ 13 328 25.2 43 0 Weems, ATL 10 255 25.5 41 0 Lebanon Valley 40, FDU-Florham 14 N. Colorado 30, Idaho St. 7 Maine Maritime 41, Mass. Maritime 34 BASEBALL C. Carr, BAL 14 336 24.0 41 0 E. Hobbs, PHL 12 302 25.2 63 0 09: ADVANCE FOR OCT. 17-18; NFL Nevada 35, Utah St. 32 <AP> NFL WK 67 CAPSULES ADVANCE FOR24.7 OCT.42 17-18; NFL Massachusetts 23, New Hampshire 17 n National League Mi. Thomas, 167 23.9 42 BW 0 at101509: Meachem, NOR 6 148 0 mm x 165 mm; with related stories; w6 England Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Chicago atJAC Atlanta Denver San Diego Rocky Mountain 52, Montana St.-Northern 27 McDaniel 16, Muhlenberg 9 Week matchups; 3c x 23.6 6 1/2(5-0) inches; 146 x 16511 mm; CINCINNATI REDS—Named Bryan Price pitching Charles, 14 331 53 0 Cartwright, WAS 262 with 23.8 related 27 0 stories; ashington Philadelphia at(3-2) Oakland Arizona at Seattle (3-2) (1-4) (3-1)6KAN (3-1) (2-2)mm Weber St. 49, Sacramento St. 10 Merrimack 48, New Haven 20 ED; ETA 4 p.m. </AP> coach. Parrish, BUF 11 258 23.5 31 0 Forsett, SEA 7 164 23.4 37 0 (2-3) (3-1) (1-4) (2-2) (2-3) w Orleans Cleveland at Pittsburgh anged up, Bills put out one of its sorAtlanta looked sensational in That one of these teams Monmouth, N.J. 42, Sacred Heart 20 PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Named Ray Searage coach. it for publication Maroney, NWE against 9 the 208 23.1 52 0spotless Blackmon, 10 233 23.3 28 0 With idle, one Donovan McNabb returned irrposing sixth or editing (4-0) (1-4) (3-2) secondriest performances ever intoainclude all areas inFrancisco romp this GBY deep Editor’s Note: It is mandatory all San sources that accompany thiswould graphicbewhen repurposing or editing it for publication Montclair St. 23, Buffalo St. 7 Announced first-base coach and infield instructor Perry from injury against Tampa of these teams will gain pponent. Randy 6-3 home loss to the Browns. 49ers. Chicago has won three into the season hardly is s to his This could get real ugly N.Y. Maritime 68, Becker 6 Hill will not return next season. Scoring Scoring Bay ... now faces Oakland. If ground in the NFC West, two of yust get on Jets D was manhandled by straight as QB Jay Cutler shocking. That it’s Denver, his right if Cleveland plays as it did in Northwood, Mich. 42, Tiffin 7 NFL had relegation, the which figures to go down to s, worst Touchdowns Touchdowns ots. Dolphins Monday night. really heated up the offense. is almost unfathomable. the past. 6-3 win last Sunday against Penn 27, Columbia 13 FOOTBALL Raiders be dropped. the wire anyway. history. AP TD Rush Rec Ret Pts TD Rush Rec Ret Pts PPG at 36 the Bills.might Steelers always Penn St. 20, Minnesota 0 Standings n National Football League McGahee, BAL 7 5 2 0 42 A. Peterson, MIN 7 7 0 0 42 sixth overall. take Browns seriously. (Mon.) Plymouth St. 48, Nichols 30 EASTERN CONFERENCE KANSAS CITY CHIEFS—Activated T Barry Richardson Ro. Brown, MIA 6 6 0 0 36 M. Turner, ATL 5 5 0 0 30 Richmond 38, Maine 21 Atlantic Division from the practice squad. Waived LB Justin Rogers. Jones-Drew, JAC 5 5 0 0 30 Fitzgerald, ARI 4 0 4 0 24 Robert Morris 28, St. Francis, Pa. 0 GP W L OT Pts GF GA NEW YORK JETS—Activated WR Danny Woodhead T. Jones, NYJ 5 5 0 0 30 Gore, SNF 4 3 1 0 24 Rochester 52, Merchant Marine 21 N.Y. Rangers 8 7 1 0 14 32 16 from the practice squad. Waived DT Howard Green. <AP> NFL WK 6 CAPSULES BW 101509: ADVANCE FOR OCT. 17-18; NFL Y. Jets Chicago at Atlanta Denver at San Diego IND 146 mm 4 x 3 0 with 24 related St. Smith,stories; NYG 4 0 4 0 24 Salve Regina 49, Mass.-Dartmouth 14 Pittsburgh 8 7 1 0 14 28 18 WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Signed P Glenn Pakulak Week 6 matchups; 3c x 6 1/2Addai, inches; 1651 mm; (3-2) (3-1) (3-1) (5-0) (2-2) Oakland Arizona St. John Fisher 34, Utica 17 New Jersey 7 4 3 0 8 18 19 And. Johnson, HOU 4 0 4 0 24 Winslow, TAM 4 0 4 0 24 from the practice squad. Released DE Renaldo Wynn. ED; ETAat4Seattle p.m. </AP> f its(1-4) sorAtlanta looked sensational ThatB.one of these Susquehanna 35, RPI 30 (2-2) (2-3) in Philadelphia 6 3 2 1 7 21 19 Marshall, DEN teams 4 0 4 0 24 Austin, DAL 3 0 3 0 18 sndatory ever intoainclude all areas inFrancisco romp thethiswould bewhen spotless this deep Temple 27, Army 13 N.Y. Islanders 6 0 3 3 3 13 23 all San sources that against accompany graphic HOCKEY Wayne, IND repurposing 4 or0 editing 4 it0 for publication 24 M. Barber, DAL 3 3 0 0 18 returned With idle, one he Browns. 49ers. Chicago hardly is Trinity, Conn. 10, Tufts 3 n National Hockey League t Tampa of these teams has will won gain three into the Chr. season Johnson, TEN 3 2 1 0 20 Burleson, SEA 3 0 3 0 18 andled by If straight QB NFC Jay Cutler shocking. W. New England 59, MIT 21 Northeast Division CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Claimed C Andrew Ebbett Oakland. ground as in the West, Benson,That CIN it’s Denver, 3 3 0 0 18 Colston, NOR 3 0 3 0 18 night. really offense. is almost unfathomable. Wesleyan, Conn. 28, Bates 20 GP W L OT Pts GF GA off waivers from Anaheim. Recalled RW Jack Skille whichheated figuresup to the go down to n, the AP West Virginia 24, Marshall 7 Ottawa 7 5 2 0 10 22 16 from Rockford (AHL). dropped. the wire anyway. Kicking Kicking Westfield St. 21, Framingham St. 2 Buffalo 6 4 1 1 9 18 12 NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Reassigned F Ben Guite PAT FG LG Pts PAT FG LG Pts (Mon.) William Paterson 43, College of N.J. 28 Boston 6 3 3 0 6 19 19 to Milwaukee (AHL). Gostkowski, NWE 8-8 12-14 53 44 Tynes, NYG 16-16 13-16 45 55 Williams 37, Middlebury 27 Montreal 7 2 5 0 4 15 24 VANCOUVER CANUCKS—Recalled C Alexandre Prater, DEN 9-9 10-13 50 39 Longwell, MIN 19-19 7-8 52 40 Yale 7, Lehigh 0 Toronto 7 0 6 1 1 14 32 Bolduc from Manitoba (AHL). 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LOCAL REC

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL

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Ravens look to regroup

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TRANSACTIONS

NHL

AP

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urposing or editing it for publication


CMYK

Section C Sunday, October 18, 2009

Showcase

u Celebrate, 2-4C u Books & Leisure, 5C u Light Side, 6-7C u A to Z Kids, 8C

Daily Dispatch/ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE

Eric Cheek brushes the hair off of Jerry Carpenter after giving the customer a trim inside E-Clips Barber Shop Wednesday afternoon.

Prime cuts Local barber carving out national reputation • Has had his success story printed inside and his picture plastered on the front cover of “Against The Grain,” a national magazine that covers the industry he embraces. Cheek attributes much of his success to a Job Corps center in the mountains of Western North Carolina. His mother sent him there at the age of 15 to give him a new start. He left Southern Vance High School in 1995 because, “I wasn’t focused. I was supposed to be in the 11th grade, but I was actually in the ninth.”

Getting away from it all made me realize I needed to change direction.” The trade Cheek If you’re hanging out in learned at Job Corps was Henderson’s streets, playcarpentry, and he pracing around with drugs, doticed it in Cary for a year ing the wrong things with before stepping onto the the wrong people, thinking road that took him to the about dropping out of high profession he has today. school, and going nowhere Cheek was 11 when with your life, Eric Cheek he began cutting his own wants you to know he used hair in a mirror because to be a lot like you. he didn’t like the way his That was then. This is mother did it. now. “I would fade (taper) He also wants you to the edge up all the way know you can be a lot like around the lower part of him, and that Job Corps and my head,” he said. “That other structured programs was the only thing my out there can help you do it. Mom was These days, lacking.” Cheek is a masIt wasn’t ter barber who: long before • Has his others noown shop — Eticed how Clips Barber & Cheek had Beauty Cendecorated ter — at 1212 his scalp, Andrews Ave. and want• Has won ed him numerous to make awards at hair theirs look shows along the the same. East Coast for “That his cutting-edge was when styles. I saw I • Is becoming had some a national name potential for making the in this faces of famous business,” Hip-Hop arthe said. “I ists and other cut a lot designs appear of hair for on the heads free. When of his models I got older, and some of his I started customers. charging • Has created a little a tutorial DVD Henderson barber Eric Cheek’s face — and that of hip-hop artist Young Jeezy, styled into a model’s hair — in 2008 graced for it, but that he sells it wasn’t the cover of “Against the Grain,” an industry magazine. to those who much.” want to learn Raised in Kittrell, In late 1997 and early his “Portrait Cut & Color Cheek is now 31. 1998, Cheek studied for Techniques.” 10 months at Sherrill’s “Going to Job Corps • Is learning to be a tatUniversity of Barbering & saved my life,” he said too artist. Cosmetology in Raleigh. while sitting in a chair on • Has a chance to Afterwards, he worked his the first floor of the large, become “Barber Of The way around a chair in the old house he turned into Year” in an online contest American Barber Shop his place of business after involving several states buying it with a bank loan on Montgomery Street in and seven other candiHenderson for two years. about five years ago. dates. Earlier this week, “The last day I was “I was there a year and he was about 5,000 votes there was the same day I five months,” Cheek exahead. Sponsored by plained. “That’s when my got married,” a grinning “Black Beauty Expo,” the results will be known when eyes opened and I really Cheek divulged. That was began focusing on what I the hair show takes place on April 29 of 2000. He wanted to do with my life. in Richmond on Oct. 24. and his wife, Jasmine, By AL WHELESS Daily Dispatch Writer

Dispatch photos/ ASHLEY STEVEN AYSCUE

have four children. “My wife is the brains behind anything you see me doing,” Cheek said. “She’s the manager. I do what she tells me to do.” Cheek estimated he does 75 to 80 haircuts a week, with the average ones taking about half an hour each. Asked how he deals with screaming children who won’t cooperate, he equated the process with training horses. “They don’t break me. I break them.” More elaborate haircuts can cost a lot more than his standard rates. When a visitor jokingly enquired about the price for carving the Eiffel Tower into someone’s head, Cheek replied that he would charge about $75. He started doing “extremely simple designs” in 2003. “I did my first face in 2006.” Some of those can take four hours or more to complete.

Cheek likes to apply his drawing ability when it comes to creating looks that are designed to attract attention. What Cheek does for a living means a lot of standing on his feet on days that can last long after the sun goes down. On Friday and Saturday, it’s 14 to 16 hours each day. “It hurts sometimes,” he said. And special haircuts require special tools. “I use make-up pencils that women use to color-in my designs,” he said. “I have five different styles of clippers for detail, polishing and fading.” Ninety percent of his clients are males. While Cheek’s prices can vary a lot, the average for adults is about $22. That includes $5 for the appointment, $5 for eliminating or trimming a beard, and $12 for the haircut. Most kids get in and out of the chair for $9, plus $5 for the appointment.

Above, Tyrone Neal Jr. gets a design etched in his hair as his brothers, Tavius, left, and Tyree, sit with his father, Tyrone Neal Sr. and wait for their turns in Eric Cheek’s barber chair Wednesday afternoon. At left, a close-up of the design in the 14-yearolds hair. Four of Cheek’s best customers are also some of his models who travel with him to hair shows where he often demonstrates his artistry on them on stage. Tyrone Neal, a 37-yearold construction worker, and his three sons, like both roles. In Henderson, they go to Cheek’s shop once a week for haircuts. The charge each time for Tyrone Jr. — who is 14, 6-foot-4, sports an intricate design on his head, and has a beard — is $40 for a touch-up. The father, who always gets a regular haircut, said 9-year-old Tazius and 10-year-old Tyree will be having their first designs done next Wednesday. Cheek has been working atop all of their craniums for three or four years. Asked why, Tyrone Sr. said: “It’s real fun. He’s the best barber around.” Contact the writer at awheless@hendersondispatch.com.


2 CELEBRATE

Page 2C Sunday, October 18, 2009

Celebrate

Susan Rebecca Stallings and Tony Price exchange wedding vows Susan Rebecca Stallings and Tony Price, both of Henderson, were married at 3:30 p.m. on Sept. 12, 2009 at Zion United Methodist Church in Norlina. The Rev. Gill Wise officiated the ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Ervin Jr. and Cathy Stallings of Henderson. She is the granddaughter of the late Walter and Marie Farmer of Oakhill, W. Va., and the late Ervin Sr. and Louise Stallings of Norlina. The bride is a graduate of Northern Vance High School and is employed as a customer service representative at ACS. The groom is the son of the late Jane Price of Los Angeles, Calif., and the late Art and Helen Toth of Banning, Calif. He is the grandson of the late Voler

and Halcie Price of Los Angeles, Calif. The groom graduated from Santa Monica High School and earned a degree in journalism from Boston University. He is currently employed as a stage hand with IATSE. The bride was escorted by her father and given in marriage by her parents. She wore a white satin strapless gown, featuring a bodice with a V-heart neckline and lace-up back. The gown also featured a split front with chiffon side drapes, and was adorned with beaded lace. The skirt flowed into a chapellength train. She wore a two-layer waist length veil with sparkling rhinestones and carried a bouquet of lavender and white roses with baby’s breath and assorted small, purple flowers.

Maid of honor was Aubrey Coleman, best friend of the bride. Misty Stallings, the bride’s cousin, served as bridesmaid. Best man was Dan Brammer, cousin of the groom. Groomsman was John Stallings, brother of the bride. Jamie-Lynn Stallings, niece of the bride, was flower girl. Chase McDaniel, cousin of the bride, was ring bearer. Jerry Stallings and vocalist Linda Wise provided a program of wedding music. May-Lou Thompson was the wedding director. Katherine Stallings was register attendant and program attendant. Immediately following the wedding, a reception was hosted by the bride’s

parents at the Ridgeway Club House. Servers were Debbie Stevenson, Melody Davis, Joan Brame and Phyllis Stainback. After a wedding trip to Atlantic City, N.J., the couple now resides in Henderson.

Wedding showers/ events • A bridal shower was held at Zion United Methodist Church and hosted by Mary-Lou Thompson, Misha Callahan, Debbie Richardson, Virginia Martin and Diane Stallings. • The rehearsal dinner was held at Zion United Methodist Church and hosted by Judy Stallings.

Susan Price

Members of the class attending the reunion were (front row, left to right) Paul W. Parrish, Nancy Vaughan Stainback, Alice Gardner Wilson, Bill Rix Harris, Martha Newcomb Darden and Betsy Sneed Eaves; (second row, left to right) Donald C. Seifert, Pearl Lee Woodlief Orr, Marshall C. Evans, E.G. Collins, Mary Helen Wright Adams and Dorothy Pace VanDyke; (third row, left to right) Sallie Kerner Fleming, Frances Currin Faulkner, Owen K. Tharrington Jr., Wade M. Davis, Jay Fogleman and J.P. Harris. Not pictured: Helen O’Brien Brame.

Jennifer Rebecca Sansom marries A. Luke Foster Jennifer Rebecca Sansom and A. Luke Foster, both of Raleigh, were married at 11 a.m. on Sept. 19, 2009, on the beach at Bird Island, N.C. The Rev. Paul A. Baxley officiated the ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Michael and Donna Sansom of Raleigh and the granddaughter of James F. Sansom of Raleigh. She is employed as a broker services operations specialist with

First Citizens’ Investor Services. The groom is the son of Macy and Nancy Foster of Henderson. He is self employed. The bride was escorted by her father. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the Foster beach house in Cherry Grove, S.C. After a wedding trip at Cherry Grove, the couple now resides in Raleigh.

Henderson High School Class of 1949 celebrates 60th anniversary The Henderson High School class of 1949 celebrated its 60th anniversary with a reunion the weekend of Sept. 25-27. A total of 19 class members were in atten-

Mr. Davis and Ms. Conyers

complex, Vance-Granville Community College, Maria Parham Medical Center, and the H. Leslie Perry Memorial Library. Dinner at the Henderson Country Club on Saturday night

was enjoyed by 37 class members, their spouses and guests. The reunion concluded Sunday morning at the Hampton Inn with a worship service led by the Rev. J.P. Harris Jr.

Birth Announcements Seth Aaron Atkinson

Maria Chacon Atkinson and Daryl Wayne Atkinson of Woodleaf, N.C., announce the birth of their son, Seth Aaron Atkinson, on Oct. 8, 2009, at Rowan Regional Medical Center in Salisbury, N.C. The infant weighed pounds, 10.5 ounces. Engagement eights The baby’s grandparents are Announcement Alfonso and Sandra Felix of Henderson and John and Betty Atkinson of China Conyers/Davis Grove, N.C. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Conyers of Bunn announce the engagement of their daughter, Natasha Conyers, to Antonio Davis of Henderson. The groomelect is the son of the late Lizzie and Garland Davis. The wedding is planned for 2 p.m. on Nov. 14, 2009, at Gethsemane Missionary Baptist Church in Bunn.

dance. Reunion events began Friday evening with a social at the Hampton Inn. On Saturday, the group gathered for a class picture and visited the Aycock Recreation Center

Jamie Kathryn Currin Jason and Kelly Currin of Henderson announce the birth of their daughter, Jamie Kathryn Currin, on Sept. 24, 2009, at Rex Hospital in Raleigh. The infant weighed 10 pounds, one ounce. The baby’s grandparents are Tony and Alicia Bowman of Hen-

derson and Wilson and Becky Currin of Angier, N.C.

Jha’Zion Micheal Everett Ken-Letta McCord and Javon Everett of Henderson announce the birth of their son, Jha’Zion Micheal Everett, on Oct. 3, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center in Henderson. The infant weighed seven pounds, six ounces. The baby’s grandparents are Corlette M. Young and Calvin Young, both of Henderson, and Annette and Anthony Everett of Henderson and Washington, D.C.

Zaniyah MaKayla Mitchell Jessica N. Mitchell of Franklinton announces the birth of her daughter, Zaniyah MaKayla Mitchell,

on Oct. 7, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center in Henderson. The infant weighed six pounds, 13 ounces.

Jonathan Edward O’Neal Kristy Marie Murphy and John David O’Neal of Henderson announce the birth of their son, Jonathan Edward O’Neal, on Oct. 6, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center in Henderson. The infant weighed five pounds, 12 ounces. The baby’s grandparents are Deborah Murphy of Henderson, Kevin Murphy of Kittrell, Nadine and Benji White of Henderson, and the late Don O’Neal.

Iyanna Nicole Terry Tiffany Terry of Henderson announces the birth of her daughter, Iyanna Nicole

Terry, on Oct. 9, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center in Henderson. The infant weighed six pounds, two ounces. The baby’s grandparents are Bernice Ann Alston and Herman Terry Jr. of Henderson.

Logan Marcus Wrenn Luke Arrington Wrenn Mrs. and Mrs. Justin Wrenn of Henderson announce the birth of their twin sons, Logan Marcus Wrenn and Luke Arrington Wrenn, on Oct. 9, 2009, at Maria Parham Medical Center in Henderson. Logan Marcus weighed three pounds, 14 ounces, and Luke Arrington weighed five pounds, 11 ounces. The babies’ grandparents are Robbie and Nancy Paynter of Henderson and Johnny and Rhonda Wrenn of Oxford.


3 CELEBRATE

Celebrate

The Daily Dispatch

3C

Sunday, October 18, 2009

‘Red Hot Hollywood’ coming Monday to Civic Center In celebration of 25 years of bringing worldclass live performances to the area, the Henderson Community Concert Association will “roll out the red carpet” for season ticket holders of the 2009-2010 Henderson Community Concert Series tomorrow night. “Red Hot Hollywood” will light up the stage at 8 p.m. in the Vance-Granville Community College Civic Center Auditorium. The concert series organizers have teamed with their affiliate, Live On Stage Inc., of Nashville, Tenn., to bring another outstanding Broadwaystyle production to the local stage. “Red Hot Hollywood” present a thrilling review of Hollywood’s greatest music memories. A versatile cast of 11 performers will sing, dance and recreate magical movie memories by Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire and

Ginger Rogers, Julie Andrews, Donald O’Connor, Judy Garland and more. The talented music director/accompanist will serve as host, portraying varied Hollywood icons, such as the director, producer, ticket-taker, stage hand and more to tell Hollywood’s musical story. From the golden age of “Singin’ in the Rain,” and “Mary Poppins,” the show will fast-forward to today’s contemporary movie musicals, including “Chicago,” “Grease” and “Hairspray.” Creative stage adaptations of Academy Award-winning compositions like “My Heart Will Go On,” “Take My Breath Away,” and “A Whole New World” will fill the stage to cinematic proportions. A special feature for children in the audience will be a set of songs from “The Wizard of Oz,” including “Ding Dong the Witch is Dead,” “We’re Off To See The Wizard,”

“If I Only Had a Brain,” “If I Were the King of the Forest,” and “Over the Rainbow.” An array of colorful sets and costumes will sparkle around innovative musical arrangements and choreography as the auditorium comes alive with the sound of movie music. As a special celebration of the past 25 years and in honor of the many loyal and dedicated supporters of the concert series, the board of directors will invite the audience to enjoy an elegant dessert reception following the spectacular production of “Red Hot Hollywood.” Admission for the performance is by season ticket only – there will be no tickets available at the door. For more information about the concert series, call (252) 492-2954 or (252) 430-8640.

Four recipients with Granville County connections receive Governor’s Outstanding Volunteer Service Award for 2009 Four recipients of the 2009 Governor’s Award for Outstanding Volunteer Service have connections to Granville County. The recipients are — Ernest B Averett III, for his work with Tar River Land Conservancy; Flextronics, for the company’s work with Area Congregations in Ministry; Our Savior Lutheran Church, Durham, for its work at Central Regional Hospital in

Butner; and Betty Lynne Currin, for her work with the Guardian Ad Litem Program. Currin was also named as one of 20 statewide Medallion Award winners. Winners will be recognized during the Nov. 16 Granville County Commissioners’ meeting. This year marks the 31st anniversary of the award program, which showcases North Caro-

lina’s most dedicated volunteers. Through the years, North Carolinians have proven their concern and compassion for their neighbors by volunteering in their local communities. Each county selects five individuals, businesses, and/ or groups to be recognized for their outstanding contributions to their communities. One of the five recipients will be nominated

Regional premiere of Mark Hayes’ ‘Gloria’ planned by Northeast Piedmont Chorale The Northeast Piedmont Chorale will present the regional premiere of Mark Hayes’ “Gloria” in three concerts this fall. “Gloria” is a dramatic presentation of the Christmas story, from the announcement by the angels of Jesus’ birth to the affirmation of his divinity. Hayes is an internationally known composer whose vocal and instrumental writing is widely acclaimed and performed throughout the nation. His unique choral settings draw from such diverse styles as gospel, jazz, pop, folk, and classical to achieve a truly American sound. In addition to “Gloria,” the chorale will sing a mix of seasonal favorites, including “Once in Royal David’s City,” John Rutter’s “Candlelight Carol,” Clark and McCullough’s “Once,

in Bethlehem,” “Angels We Have Heard on High,” “Glory to the Newborn King,” and “A Christmas Suite” of traditional carols. The chorale will perform the program at three concerts. At each concert, the chorale will be joined by members of the Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Choir and the Wake Forest Baptist Church Chancel Choir. The scheduled concerts will be held at: • 3 p.m., Nov. 15, at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, Oxford. The church is located at 140 College St. • 3 p.m., Nov. 22, at Adamsville Baptist Church, Goldsboro. The church is located at 1302 North Berkeley Blvd. • 7 p.m., Dec. 5, in Binkley Chapel on the campus of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in

Wake Forest. The public is invited to these free concerts. A good-will offering will be taken. The Northeast Piedmont Chorale is a nonprofit, non-sectarian, volunteer organization whose mission is to present free concerts of fine choral music for the residents of the Northeast Piedmont area of North Carolina. It has been in existence for 22 years and has a membership from over 12 cities and towns in the area. The chorale performs two concert series each season, one during the Christmas season and the other in the spring. The Northeast Piedmont Chorale is under the direction of Aaron Jackson. The accompanist is Karen Bullock.

  

    

to receive the N.C. Outstanding Volunteer Medallion. The selection of each county’s five nominees is conducted at the local (county) level and submitted to the commission for approval. Selection is based upon the nominee’s volunteer efforts, accomplishments and impact. The nomination reflects a meaningful commitment of time and service by the nominee.

presents:

Cutest Children Photo Contest! Deadline to enter is November 2, 2009

Entry Fee Single Photo

14 Lucky Winners Will Earn A Feature Position As A 2010 “Calendar Child.”

      

00 12 $ 00

$

2 or 3 per Photo 4 or more

15

2000

$

Send us a photo of your child, along with your $12.00 entry fee and your child might be a lucky winner. You may cast votes for only 25¢ each and the photo that raises the most money will be featured on the front cover of the calendar. 2nd place will receive the back cover position. The next 12 top fund raisers will represent a calendar month. All the money raised from votes will be donated to the school of your choice. Ask family, friends and neighbors to donate. All photos will appear in The Dispatch on Tuesday, November 10th and the public will be able to buy votes at 25¢ each until Wednesday, December 2nd. Winners will be announced on Wednesday, December 9th and calendars will appear in The Daily Dispatch on Sunday, December 20th.

Cutest Children Photo Contest! Child’s/Children’s Name(s):



The nominee’s service addresses a community need and/ or enhances the quality of life of North Carolinians and demonstrates acts of generosity and kindness. A statewide panel, under the direction of the N.C. Commission on Volunteerism and Community Service, then evaluates the nominations for the Medallion Award.

__________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ Boy p Girl p Age(s): ___ , ____ , ____ , ____ Parents: __________________________________ ________________________________________ Grandparents: _____________________________ ________________________________________ Work Phone: ______________________________ Home Phone: _____________________________

Mail in this entry form with your $12.00, $15.00 or $20.00 entry fee and photo to:

Cutest Children Photo Contest

c/o The Daily Dispatch P.O. Box 908 Henderson N.C. 27536 or bring by our office at 304 S. Chestnut Street

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Sunday, October 18, 2009

Woodland Garden Club learns about the Monarch butterfly Members of the Woodland Garden Club met at the home of Jeanette Metzger on Pool Rock Plantation Lane for their October meeting. The meeting was called to order by President Peggy Polak with devotions by Elmira Chooponi (Vu). Advice for a successful daily life were offered as follows: • Many people will walk in and out of your life. But only true friends will leave footprints in your heart. • To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart. • Anger is only one letter short of danger. • If someone betrays you once, it is his fault; if he betrays you twice it is your fault. • Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people. • He who loses money loses much. He who loses a friend loses much more; He who loses faith loses all. • Learn from the mistakes of others; you can’t live long enough to make them all yourself. • Friends, you and me.

Mary Jane Fink presented the program on butterflies. You brought another friend. And then there were three. We started our group. Our circle of friends. There is no beginning to our end. • Let us be grateful to people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom. The horticulture report was presented by Jackie Hubbard, who encouraged gardeners to “let spent perennials nourish your soil.” Every year, she said, we cut back our perennials and add the debris to the compost heap. “Think back to the forest floor. Think about how rich in nutrients the soil of the forest is. What is nature

trying to get us to see?” said Hubbard. When organic matter decays, she said, it breaks down into nutrients that can easily be used by plants. In addition, it helps improve the texture of the soil. So, instead of cutting back perennials and tossing them in the compost heap, take the hedge shears, cutting the debris into numerous smaller sections, beginning at the top and working down to the crown. Smaller pieces help speed decay. Next, hoe the pieces of leaves and stems into the soil around the plants, which also helps to accelerate the decaying process. Remove anything that is visually

infected, she warned. If your deck or outside porch rails show mildew, use chlorine bleach in a sprayer and let it set for a few minutes. Do not dilute the bleach when using it outdoors, Hubbard added. Mary Jane Fink gave a slide show presentation on “Butterfly Habitats For The Endangered Monarchs.” No one knows for sure where the word “butterfly” came from, Fink said. Some believe it originates from Europe, where people referred to these “sulfurs” as “buttercolored flies,” which may have evolved into the word “butterfly.” Some people say that when a butterfly lands on you it means good luck, Fink said. Butterflies contribute to the ecosystem by pollinating the earth’s plant population. Butterflies are the second largest pollinators in the world, after bees. There are between 15,000 and 20,000 different species of butterflies in the world. The common name “Monarch” was first published in 1874 and was selected because it is one of the largest of the butterflies. The

Monarch butterfly is not only found in North America, but in New Zealand, Australia, Europe and in the Canary Islands. It is also found in the Azores, Sweden, Spain and Russia. Fink explained how to tell the differences between the male and female butterflies. Butterfly eggs come in many shapes and colors. The Monarch egg is oval in shape. The mother Monarch abandon her eggs the instant they’re laid. They lay only one egg at a time, but can lay many in a single day, she said. Monarchs cannot survive the cold winter temperatures of the Northern states, so it migrates South and hibernates. This means that it rests, with a very slow heart rate, just like bears do in their hibernation caves. The Monarch’s strong wings are its trademark. The black veins in the wings form a strong framework for gliding, like crossbars of a kite. They glide and ride on air currents for their long-distance flight. Monarchs migrate during the day and use the sun to orient themselves. During their five-month stay in Mexico from November to May,

Monarchs remain mostly inactive. In the spring, the Monarch migration back to the north is like a relay race. The beautiful butterflies leave Mexico. Some will die along the way, but the Monarchs should reach the central United States by mid-April. By that time, the females will have laid their eggs for 1,000 miles as they make their one-time trip. The N.C. Department of Transportation has started a Save the Monarch Program. Butterfly gardens are one way to help reestablish their habitat. There is milkweed growing in the butterfly garden at L. B. Yancey Elementary School, which the Little Sprouts Garden Club takes care of. The club is sponsored by the Woodland Garden Club. In conclusion, Fink passed out to members packets of butterfly garden seeds and pictures of a male and female Monarch, in addition to interesting information on the Monarch butterfly’s journey south in the fall of 2009 and a butterfly crossword puzzle. The hostess gift was won by Carol Dorsey.

Birds of the Bible is topic of Daisy Garden Club’s September meeting The Daisy Garden Club held it’s meeting Sept. 28 at the Western Sizzlin Restaurant. Bud vases of rooster corn from Velma Steed’s garden enhanced each table. Ceramic birds were displayed on each table. Barbara Carroll led the devotion with the group singing the garden club song followed by reading the North Carolina Federation of Garden Clubs’ Official State Collect. Carroll then offered prayer. The flower of the month was the goldenrod. Carroll told the group that goldenrods are delicate and they have a pungent odor. But several kinds are pleasingly fragrant and the “Sweet Goldenrod” is anise-scented. The leaves of this species have been dried and used as a tea or tonic. Goldenrod is the state flower of Kentucky and Nebraska. A picture of the goldenrod was shown to the group. After the devotion, Carroll presided over the business session. Vivian Bullock gave the September report on the Daisette Youth Garden Club. Members who attended the State Garden Club

Convention shared highlights of the convention with the members. Calendar of program and activities for 20092010 was completed during the meeting. Following the business section, Bullock presented a program about “Biblical birds.” She stated that birds are winged, bipedal, warm-blooded vertebrate animals that lay eggs. All birds have forelimbs, modified as wings, and most can fly; of course, penguins cannot. Parrots are among the most intelligent of them all. Some of the birds that are mentioned in the Bible are: dove, hawk, quail, partridge, sparrow, peacock, stork, raven, pelican, pigeon, cane and owl. • Dove: In Genesis, Noah sends out a dove after the flood. In the New Testament, a dove is the symbol of the Holy Spirit. The dove corresponds to the affection for thinking innocent thoughts of trust in the Lord and of love for one another. • Sparrow: The sparrow in the Bible is usually a general name for all little birds, suggesting God’s knowledge of all passing

14th century Europe, the the sweet songs of some birds and the bright colors peacock was roasted and served in its own plumage. of other, which are their means of sharing with us • Raven: This bird has the delights of the happy no bright colors and no life,” she concluded. sweet songs. It suggests Following the program, blackness for the raven’s members sang “Happy color. The raven is also a clumsy bird without music Birthday” to Barbara in his voice, and somewhat Carroll, Henrietta Clark and Edith Carroll. The harmful through his habit meeting was adjourned of preying upon small with prayer. and feeble animals. Just 03 State flyer - Page 1 - Composite before Noah sent a dove, a raven was sent, which went forth to and fro until the water were dried up from off the earth. When Elijah fled from Ahab and dwelt by the brook Cherith before the Jordan, the ravens brought him bread and flesh in the morning, and bread and flesh in the evening. Bullock concluded by saying that eagles and hawks circle high in the air, watching little objects on the ground below. How quick a bird’s sign must be to fly safely through NORTH CAROLINA the woods, in and out among the branches, she said. “We must not forget

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Vivian Bullock discussed birds with the group. thoughts and his care for them. The sparrow has been incorporated into Christian religious stories, in part because of their arrival in Europe around the time of Easter. Stories place them at the crucifixion of Jesus, either trying to distract those sent to arrest Jesus in the garden or comforting Jesus on the cross.

• Peacock: The peacock appears as the favorite bird of the goddess Hera (also known as Juno), and the bird was know to the pharaohs of Egypt. In

STATEWIDE CLASSIFIED NETWORK

Salute

Your Special Veteran and

Active Duty Serviceman or

Woman In Your Life We will run a special page on Wednesday, November 11, where you can express your love with their photo, name, rank, branch and date of service. It only takes $1200 (paid in advance) to place your salute to that special person. Members of the Daisette Youth Garden Club display their live fall arrangements. Shown are (front row) Alexis Porter and Samayia Floyd; (second row) Queen Debnam, Dominque Anderson, Ariel Zackery and Nyesha Miller; (back row) Nyasia Miller and Shea Jones.

Daisette Youth Garden Club enjoys program on fall flowers at September meeting The Daisette Youth Garden Club met Sept. 24 in the home of Edith R.J. Carroll. Queen Debnam led the devotion by reading “Lord, I Give You Thanks” from the book, Breath Prayers, followed by members repeating “A Garden Club Prayer.” Ariel Zackary, president, conducted the business session. Dominique Anderson and Zackery

shared information about the State Garden Club Convention with the group. The group shared their academic successes thus far for the school year. Following the business session, Vivian Bullock, youth advisor, presented a program on fall arrangements. The youth used styrofoam cups which they decorated with bird

stickers. Then they arranged their flowers in the container with a small amount of water. Their arrangements consisted of grass, cosmos, impatients, vinca, zinnia, sedum, daisies and greenery. They then named the different kinds of fall flowers. The meeting was closed with the group repeating the youth garden pledge.

Proudly We remember Their Courage, Their Sacrifice... our Freedom on Veterans day Wed., Nov. 11th

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Lance Corporal Travis E. La Rue U.S. Marines Corps 2007 - Present

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Books & Leisure

The Daily Dispatch

H. Leslie Perry Memorial Library Youth Services Celebrate Teen Read Week at your Library! Stop by the Youth Services Desk to submit artwork for our blog, vote for your favorite books or find out other ways you can participate in Teen Read Week 2009! Read with a Ranger (all ages, geared toward grades 2-6), Monday at 4 p.m.: Join Kerr Lake Park Ranger Charles Shelton for a program discussing animal hibernation. Stories, art and more! Young @ Art (ages 2-8) Monday at 6:30 p.m.: Kids ages 2-8 are welcome to complete a Halloween craft project with the help of their favorite grownup. Warning: Dress to get messy! Teens and Tweens Club (for middle and highschoolers), Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.: Join Programming Specialist Ms. Barbara and other teens and tweens to hang out and chat, discuss books and listen to interesting guest speakers. Anime/Manga Madness (ages 13-17, or ages 10-12 with parent’s permission), Wednesdays at 3 p.m.: Are you crazy about graphic novels? Join Youth Services staff to discuss all things animated and to watch a new featured selection each week! Mother Goose Time (for infants and toddlers, ages birth-3), Thursdays at 11 a.m.: Songs, rhymes, books, clapping, laughing, fun!

Young @ Art (ages 8-17), Thursday at 4 p.m. Join Ms. Jeriann for a Halloween-themed art project just for tweens and teens. Younger participants may need grown-up assistance. Game On! (all ages), Fridays at 4 p.m.: Note that Game On! has moved from Mondays. Bring a board game, a video game or gaming system, or just show up to have fun.

Adult Services Friends of the Library book sale: Plans are underway for the Friends Annual Book Sale fund-raiser. Book sale dates will be Oct. 22 from 5 to 8 p.m. for Friends members only (never too late to join!); Oct. 23 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Oct. 24 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Oct. 25 from 1 to 6 p.m. Paperbacks are 50 cents and hardbacks sell for $1. Clean out your bookshelves, closets and attics and bring your gently used books to the book sale location on Raleigh Road (former Super 10) across from Supply Line on Mondays from 1 to 4 p.m. or Wednesdays from 9 a.m. to noon. We welcome help sorting and organizing books for the sale and help with the sale itself. If anyone has tables they are willing to lend we would appreciate that, as well. Call Perry Library 438-3316 to volunteer your help.

Horoscopes

“Straw: Finding My Way,” by Darryl Strawberry; “Haunted Heart: The Life and Times of Stephen King,” by Lisa Rogak; “A Pearl in the Storm: How I Found My Heart in the Middle of the Ocean,” by Tori Murden McClure; “A Saint on Death Row: The Story of Dominique Green,” by Thomas Cahill; “The Narrative of Sojourner Truth,” by Sojourner Truth; “P.S. Further Thoughts on a Lifetime of Listening,” by Studs Terkel; “Magnificent Desolation: The Long Journey Home From the Moon,” by Buzz Aldrin; “Abraham Lincoln,” by James McPherson; “How I Got to Be Whoever It Is I Am,” by Charles Grodin; “Bruce Springsteen on Tour 1968-2005,” by Dave Marsh; “Crossing the Continent; “1527-1590: The Story of the First African-American Explorer of the American South,” by Robert Goodwin; “Michelle Obama: The First Lady of Hope; “by Elizabeth Lightfoot; “Paul Newman: A Life,” by Shawn Levy; “A Little Bit Wicked: Life, Love, and Faith in Stages,” by Kristin Chenoweth; “Just When I Thought I’d Dropped My Last Egg: Life and Other Calamities,” by Kathi Lee Gifford; “Resilience,” by Elizabeth Edwards, and “The Urban Hermit: A Memoir,” by Sam MacDonald.

Sudoku

Puzzle

Solution

Solutions

— Raymond Chandler instead of being pulled by them.

SUNDAY CRYPTOQUOTE — If I’m going slow I’m in trouble. It means I’m pushing the words

Cryptoquote

Puzzle Solution

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek

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

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

DARAW DILVER STEJAM Ans: Saturday’s

NEW BIBLE Jumble Books Go To: http://www.tyndale.com/jumble/

ARIES (March 21-April 19). What you now find irritating, you will soon deem “hilarious.” Distance brings perspective. It won’t take long for the shift. Get away for the afternoon, and then come back to your so-called irritant. That’s when the laughter starts. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Say nice things to the not-so-nice people. No one is particularly annoyed with you, but kindness is like putting good karma in the bank. You’ll cash it out later. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Doing the same activity a different way can help you out of a rut. Take on the small things — they work like magic to get you unstuck. Button your shirt from bottom to top, or hold your spoon with the other hand. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Remember that sweetheart from bygone times? The one who turned out to be not so sweet, after all? Well, you’ll meet a similar type in the days to come. Remember past lessons, and approach with guarded optimism. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Who you are standing next to will strongly affect how you experience your day. You’re confident lately, so approach those who interest you. Good company makes food taste better and gives everything a pretty sheen, too. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You don’t have to sacrifice your comfort in order to chase your dream — well, at least not today. You’ll progress in style and barely break a sweat. This is truly a lucky time. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You are bigger than your behaviors. Experiment with your daily habits just to shake things up. Give up one thing and see what falls in the gap to replace it. You can always go back to the way things were later. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You are an unusually sensitive participant in life. Those who can appreciate your talent may be rare, but they are extraordinarily generous, too. You will be offered something that only an elite few will ever experience. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). A celebrity’s irresponsible behavior gives you pause. Is the whole world going nuts? Today a stranger’s act of kindness helps convince you of the inherent goodness of 98 percent of the human race. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You do not always feel like being the responsible one, which is one of the reasons you and your partner make a good match. He/ she kindles the fire; you light it. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your loyalty to a principle is sometimes at odds with your loyalty to people, and this is one of those times. If you must side against a friend, make sure he or she understands why. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The difference between the “haves” and the “have nots” is not always so apparent. Which camp do you belong in? Depends on what criteria you use. Focus on why you’re a “have.”

New biography at Perry Library

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

” (Answers tomorrow) GRIMY BASKET MAGPIE Jumbles: BUMPY Answer: What the purse sale turned into — A “GRAB” BAG

Sunday, October 11, 2009

5C

Black endearing in ‘Brutal Legend’ By LOU KESTEN Associated Press Writer

No style of music has taken more of a beating over the years than heavy metal. But that doesn’t mean it’s easy to make fun of. The sharpest metal parodists — the members of Spinal Tap and Tenacious D — also have a lot of affection for it. Jack Black, the latter band’s frontman, has always made it hard to tell between reverence and ridicule. “Brutal Legend” (Electronic Arts, for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, $59.99), Black’s collaboration with gonzo videogame designer Tim Schafer, doesn’t make it easier. Black plays Eddie Riggs, a roadie transported to an alternate dimension with angular architecture and blood-red skies dear to anyone who loved album covers of the ’70s and ’80s (say, Dio’s “Holy Diver”). Eddie joins the cause of a stud named Lars trying to save humanity. Eddie’s weapons are his axes: an actual one he uses to slice up demons and a guitar he uses to perform “facemelting” (literally) solos. Laying waste to druids,

S&M nuns and bony goth boys is wicked fun, as is cruising in Eddie’s pimped-out hot rod. But “Brutal Legend” bogs down in its primary missions, most of which are versions of the “real-time strategy” battles in games like “Command & Conquer.” The challenge is to stage a concert while your army fights evil; to boost your fan base, and recruit fighters. Newcomers to real-time strategy games are likely to find these events too chaotic, and in-stage goals so poorly defined that it’s easy to win or lose without knowing why. RTS vets are unlikely to be satisfied with the simple battles. Still, the distinctive style and humor of “Brutal Legend” kept me playing. Metalheads will embrace voice work by the likes of Ozzy Osbourne, Lita Ford and Rob Halford. Comedy nerds will enjoy the hilarious cameos by Brian Posehn and Tenacious D’s Kyle Gass. And Black himself deserves credit for the most enthusiastic video-game performance I’ve ever heard. His Eddie Riggs is one of the most endearing new characters in years. Three stars out of four.

Sudoku


The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, October 18, the 291st day of 2009. There are 74 days left in the year. Today’s highlightse: 1648 — Boston’s shoemakers, barrelmakers and tubmakers set up the first American labor organization. 1672 — Poland surrenders the Ukraine to the Turks after an invasion. 1685 — King Louis XIV of France revokes the Edict of Nantes, which had established the legal toleration of France’s Protestant population, the Huguenots. 1767 — The boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania, the Mason-Dixon line, which divides America’s south from the north, is agreed upon. 1867 — The United States takes formal possession of Alaska from Russia. 1892 — The first longdistance telephone line is opened between Chicago and New York. 1898 — The American flag is raised in Puerto Rico shortly before Spain formally relinquishes control of the island to the United States. 1944 — Soviet troops invade Czechoslovakia during World War II. 1968 — The U.S. Olympic Committee suspends two black athletes, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, for giving a black-power salute as a protest at a victory ceremony in Mexico City. 1969 — The federal government bans artificial sweeteners known as cyclamates because of evidence they caused cancer in laboratory rats. 1972 — A three-nation U.N. investigating committee made up of Yugoslavia, Somalia and Sri Lanka, accuses Israel of continued violations of Arab rights in the territories occupied since the 1967 war. 1981 — Andreas Papandreou’s Panhellenic Socialist Movement wins 48 percent in national elections, becoming Greece’s

first leftist government. 1991 — Ukraine, Georgia, Moldavia and Azerbaijan refuse to sign an economic union treaty with the Soviet constituent republics. 1993 — U.N. oil embargo takes effect against Haiti. 1994 — Boat people begin to return to Haiti after the reinstatement of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. 1995 — The United States announces it will grant Fidel Castro a visa, permitting the Cuban president to address the United Nations. 1999 — Former South African President Nelson Mandela begins his first visit to Israel, a gesture of final reconciliation with a nation that had backed South Africa’s apartheid regime. 2001 — Four Osama bin Laden disciples convicted in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa are sentenced in New York City to life without parole. 2005 — U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld accuses China of understating the growth of its military budget, saying the country is raising global suspicion about its military intentions by failing to acknowledge the true size of recent increases in its defense spending. 2008 — Canada declares a chemical widely used in food packaging a toxic substance, and says it will now move to ban plastic baby bottles containing bisphenol A. Today’s Birthdays: Henri Bergson, French philosopher and Nobel laureate (1856-1941); Pierre Elliott Trudeau, former Canadian Prime Minister (1919-2000); George C. Scott, U.S. actor (1927-1999); Chuck Berry, U.S. singer (1926--); Martina Navratilova, Czech tennis player (1956--); Wynton Marsalis, jazz/classical trumpeter (1961--). Thought for Today: Only those ideas that are least truly ours can be adequately expressed in words — Henri Bergson, French philosopher (1859-1941).

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Watch Week thews (N) Å Renker Program Renker Health ISU Grand Prix Look Paid Believer Inc’sing Timbrlk Van David Center First Paid This Old Home- Williams At the Made in Accord9 WLFL Young Program Voice Faith Ministr Impe Bibey Church Life Program House time Show Movies Holly ing-Jim News News Good Morning News This Week With PerIns the David NAS- NuWave Paid 11 WTVD America (N) George spect Huddle Cutcliffe CAR Oven Program Paid Tarheel Coral Paid Spirit N.C. FOX News Va Tech Sport Hayes Barton Fox NFL Sunday NFL Football 13 WRAZ Program Talk Rid Program Awakng Spin Sunday Durst Baptist Church ’ (Live) Å NFL SportsCenter Lines Report SportsCenter Sunday NFL Countdown Å Football Final 31 ESPN Sports Football Final Driven Grateful Expedi Redfish Fantasy Football Now Wm. Volleyball 21 ESPN2 Expedi Expedi Chroni Journal White Territo Out Southern Outdoors (N) Sports Cricut Paid Paid Mo Dra Brooks Horses College Football 50 FOXSP Mojo Millions Dual Paid BillD Outdoor On As Life Parker Hunting Alaska Hunter Outdoor Rugers FLW Outdoors BillD 65 VS Charlie Tigger Ein Agent Handy Mickey Mickey Movers Handy Phineas Phineas “Return to Hall” Phineas 57 DISN Ein Barn Mighty Sponge Sponge Sponge iCarly iCarly 43 NICK Grown Chalk Neutron Neutron OddPar OddPar Sponge Sponge Pen House Sunday Morn. State of Union King: Sources State of Union State of Union Fareed Zakaria 29 CNN Newsroom News House America’s-HQ America’s News HQ 58 FNC O’Reilly Factor FOX and Friends Sunday Detox Biography “Elvis: Return to Tupelo” Private Sessions The Sopranos ’ The Sopranos ’ The Sopranos ’ The Sopranos ’ 27 A&E Paid Breed Me or the Dog Wild Kingdom ’ Wild Kingdom ’ Predator Bay ’ 46 ANPL Animal Miracles Me or Me or Good Animals Bark Jones Gospel Voice Voice Video Gospel (N) Pay It Off Å Chris Chris 52 BET BET Morning Inspiration Paid Paid Paid Scarier Movie $1M Listing Flipping Out Flipping Out Flipping Out Flipping Out 72 BRAVO GRC Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid MythBusters ’ MythBusters ’ MythBusters ’ Ratzilla ’ Å Bear Attack! ’ 30 DISC Paid Paid Step Step Sabrina Sabrina FullHse FullHse My Wife My Wife 8 Rules 8 Rules “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” 28 FAM Paid Paid Cooking Rescue Emeril Simply Giada Alex Off Con Grill It Big Bite Minute Money Paula Home Big 59 FOOD Paid Paid Paid The Practice ’ The Practice ’ ›› “White Chicks” (2004, Comedy) Shawn Wayans. ›› “Mr. 3000” (2004) Bernie Mac. 71 FX Animal Animal Animal Animal Animal Animal “Sacrifices of the Heart” (2007) Å “Thicker Than” 73 HALL Impact Music Odyssey Net. Paid Lost Treasures Marked Å 9/11 Conspiracies The Kennedy Assassination Kennedys-Crse 56 HIST Paid Inc’sing Faith Hour of Power Paid Health Sherri Rita “The Party Never Stops” (2007) “Tenth Circle” 33 LIFE Cricut Paid Back Paid Paid Paid Comfort Dog Whisperer Naked Science Pre. Predators Pre. Predators Bizarre Dinosaurs 70 NGEO Paid Millions Baby Ripped Paid Unsolved Myst. Unsolved Myst. Xtreme Hrsep Trucks! Muscle CSI: Crime Scn 40 SPIKE Insanity Paid Paid Cricut Paid Paid Paid ››› “Dog Soldiers” (2002) “Children of the Corn IV” “Children-Corn” 49 SYFY Paid Francis Bill Falwell Ed Merritt Franklin David J. Hagin Ed Hour Re Love In Revela IsWrit 6 TBN Joni ›› “Doom” (2005) (PA) The Rock. ›› “Sahara” (2005) Matthew McConaughey. 34 TBS Married Married ›› “Stealth” (2005) (PA) Josh Lucas. Å “Murder at 1600” 26 TNT Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ ››› “Jackie Brown” (1997) Pam Grier. Å Paid Homes Paid Slim in Paid Paid Paid Jeans Paid Paid Trainer Rehab: Party Rehab: Party 44 TRUTV Paid Good Good Good Good Good Good 54 TVL Rose Rose Rose Rose Good Good Good Good Good Times Paid Creflo In Touch-Dr Monk Å Monk Å Psych Å Psych Å “16 Blocks” Å 25 USA Law Order: CI Paid Facts David Swivel Jimmy Swaggart Children Paid Home Videos WWE Superstars Boston Legal ’ 23 WGN World Feed ››› “Lethal Weapon” (1987) Mel Gibson. ››› “Lethal Weapon 2” 38 AMC Movies ››› “The Dirty Dozen” (1967, War) Lee Marvin. Å “A Decent Proposal” (2007) Å “Lies He Told” (1997) Gary Cole. “Irresistible” (2006) Sam Neill Å 47 LMN ››› “Come Early Morning” Å ››› “Carmen Jones” (1954) ›››› “Les Miserables” (1935) “Anatomy-Murd.” 67 TCM ›› “The Walking Dead” ››› “Bedlam” (1946)

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DEAR ABBY: Last week my oldest daughter shocked me by informing me that her father had molested her and her sister many times when they were little. When I told her that I had known nothing about it, she screamed and called me a liar. Abby, I was in great distress when my children were young. I didn’t know what was going on. I divorced him when the two youngest were 5. He was an alcoholic and bipolar, in and out of jail and mental hospitals frequently. I would be in prison today had I known, because I would have killed him. Now, 46 years later, I am asking your advice. Is there anything I can do to this child molester? He ruined both of our daughters’ lives. My oldest has been drug and alcohol addicted for years. She is only now dealing with her addictions. He lives in a group home for bipolar people and often goes on rampages. Please direct me to a resource for help. I have been in Al-Anon for 41 years and a born-again Christian for 37 years, which has helped me cope with the 19 years of hell my children and I have lived through. — HOUSTON READER DEAR READER: Talk to your daughters and ask them to report to the police what happened to them. It would be a step in taking back control of their lives, and because their father may have done this more recently with other little girls, the police should know his history. While it may be too late to prosecute your exhusband for what he did to his daughters, if he has continued molesting, it may not be too late to get him for something he has done more recently.

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Paid Paid Reba Å Reba Å ›› “Above the Law” Sum- ›› “Hard to Kill” (1990, Action) ››› “The Outlaw Josey Wales” Program Program (1988) Steven Seagal. ’ merfield Steven Seagal, Kelly LeBrock. ’ (1976, Western) Clint Eastwood. ’ ›› “The Night Listener” (2006) (1:00) ›› “Aqua- ›› “Twin Dragons” (1991) Jackie ReGenesis “The Cold Case “Glory Legend of the marine” Chan, Maggie Cheung. Å Oldest Virus” ’ Days” ’ Å Seeker “Mirror” Robin Williams, Toni Collette. Å Test Cook’s Jacques Lidia’s Mexico: Black Book- N.C. Rudy Travels- Savage Planet Nature “Rhinoc- Masterpiece Kitchen Country Pepin Italy ’ Plate Issues watch People Maxa Edge “Deadly Skies” eros” ’ Mystery! (N) ’ (1:00) NFL Football Kansas City NFL Football Tennessee Titans at New England Patri- 60 Minutes (N) The Amazing Three Rivers (N) Chiefs at Washington Redskins. ots. From Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Mass. Å ’Å Race 15 (N) ’ ’Å Figure Skating: Action Sports From Orlando, Fla. ’ (Live) Å News NBC Football Night in (:15) NFL Football Chicago Bears at ISU Grand Prix News America Å Atlanta Falcons. ’ (Live) Å Friends Ray’70s ’70s “’Til Lies Do Us Part” (2007, Drama) Comedy.TV (N) Smash Smash › “Stigmata” (1999, Suspense) Å mond Show Show Thomas Calabro, Paula Trickey. Å Cuts Cuts Patricia Arquette, Gabriel Byrne. Å Paid Backlot Entertainers 2009 American Interrupted Lives: News ABC America’s Funni- Extreme Make- Desperate Program Buzz (N) Å Ski Classic Catholic Sisters News est Home Videos over: Home Housewives (N) (1:00) NFL Football Carolina Pan- NFL Million Dollar Coach Coach Two Broth- Simp- Simp- Cleve- Family Amerithers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Challenge Å Å Men ers (N) sons sons land Sh Guy ’ can Dad Bowling: U.S. Open Fast Dog Show Oklahoma City. Billiards Base SportsCenter (Live) Å College Football Live (Live) Wm. Volleyball Spanish Primera Division Soccer Bassmasters Bassmasters Bull Riding Bull Riding World Series College Football Billiards Best Damn 50 World Poker World Poker Air Racing (N) Sport Science Formula Racer Fishing Fishing Fishing Fishing BillD Motorsports Hour Bull Riding: PBR Bull Riding: PBR Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Mon Sonny Jonas “Casper Meets” Drake Drake Pen Pen Pen Pen School School iCarly iCarly iCarly Jackson Nick Malcolm Chris Chris Amanpour. Your Money Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom Cheating Death Larry King Live Special Prog. Special Prog. America’s News HQ News Sunday FOX Report Huckabee Special Prog. The Sopranos ’ The Sopranos ’ CSI: Miami Å CSI: Miami Å CSI: Miami Å CSI: Miami Å Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Killing Living Killing Living Untamed-Uncut Untamed-Uncut Untamed-Uncut Gnt Anaconda Weird Weird Untamed-Uncut Game Game Game Game Game Game Game Game David E. Talbert’s Fabric of a Man Å “Miss. Masala” $1M Listing Top Chef Top Chef Chef: Vegas Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Giant Squid Squid Invasion Animals Strike Nat. Deadliest I Was Bitten ’ Pig Bomb Å Storm Chasers Greatest Storms (N) “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III” “Dr. Dolittle 3” (2006) John Amos. “Dr. Dolittle: Tail to the Chief” Å ›› “Underdog” (2007) Premiere. Paula’s Party Diners Diners Good Eats Cakes Cakes Challenge Next Iron Chef Challenge Next Iron Chef ›› “Tears of the Sun” (2003) Bruce Willis. ››› “Jarhead” (2005) Jake Gyllenhaal. ›› “Wrong Turn” (2003, Horror) “Premonition” “Thicker Than” “Accidental Friendship” (2008) Å “Bound by a Secret” (2009) Å “Sacrifices of the Heart” (2007) Å “Thicker Than” Kennedys-Crse JFK: 3 Shots That Changed America JFK: 3 Shots That Changed America Gangland Å Nostradamus Kennedy “Tenth Circle” ›› “Wicked” (1998) Julia Stiles. ›› “Elvis and Anabelle” (2007) “The Haunting of Sorority Row” “Sorority Wars” Dino. Decoded Blue Whale Disaster Lab Repossessed! Alaska-Trooper Hooked Hooked Hooked (N) CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn “Children-Corn” “Children of the Corn 666” “Children of the Corn: Revelation” “The Dunwich Horror” (2009, Horror) “Wolvesbayne” Conley From King Is Franklin John Hagee Rod P. Dickow Jakes Meyer Leading Hayford Osteen Author Believ Chang ›› “Lethal Weapon 4” (1998) Mel Gibson. ››› “Independence Day” (1996) (PA) Will Smith. Pre MLB Baseball: Dodgers at Phillies (1:15) “Murder at 1600” ››› “Drumline” (2002) Å ››› “Hitch” (2005) Will Smith. Å ›› “Daddy’s Little Girls” (2007) Rehab: Party Rehab: Party Rehab: Party Rehab: Party Police Videos Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Good ›› “The Bodyguard” (1992) Kevin Costner. Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith “16 Blocks” Å ›› “Blue Crush” (2002) Å ›› “Along Came Polly” (2004) House “Safe” ’ House ’ Å House “Forever” ›› “Uncle Buck” (1989) ’ Å ››› “Gremlins” (1984) ’ Å ALF ALF Cosby Cosby Newhart Newhart Bar Bar “Lethal Wpn 2” ››› “Lethal Weapon 3” (1992) Mel Gibson. ›› “Rambo: First Blood Part II” ››› “Top Gun” (1986) Tom Cruise. Å › “The Perfect Wife” (2000) Å “The Perfect Marriage” (2006) Å “The Perfect Neighbor” (2005) Å “The Perfect Assistant” (2008) Å (1:00) “Anatomy of a Murder” (1959) ››› “The Misfits” (1961) Å (:15) ››› “High Sierra” (1941) ››› “Downhill Racer” (1969)

SUNDAY Late Evening

BROADCAST

without having been taught the social graces. If he’s serious about her, he might clue her in. But if he doesn’t, and he wants to bring her home for the holidays, I have the ideal gift for her — a book on etiquette.

SPORTS

DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have always had a warm and close relationship with our college-age children. We often host their friends in our home, making certain they’re comfortable, well-fed and welcome. My son brought his girlfriend home for long weekends several times this year. Not once has she said thank you for meals, gifts or entertainment. When I asked her if the standing rib roast I had served was OK — it’s my specialty — she said Dear it wasn’t Abby cooked the way she Universal Press likes it. Syndicate She shows absolutely no interest in us, our home or the community in which our children grew up. She does offer to clear the table, but that’s the extent of it. Upon leaving, she will say, “thanks.” With the exception of one brief e-mail, we have never received a written note from her. We love our son, and he may love her. But we’re not eager to clean, shop for, cook and host this young lady again. If our son wants to bring her home for another holiday, what do you suggest we say or do? — DISGUSTED IN SEATTLE DEAR DISGUSTED: While your feelings are understandable, and you may be tempted to tell your son what you have told me, bite your tongue. If you say anything negative about his girlfriend, it will make him defensive and his instinct will be to defend her. It would not, however, be “attacking” her to gently share with him that you and his father were “disappointed” that you never received a thankyou note from his houseguest, and wonder if she was raised

Sunday, October 18, 2009

SUNDAY Morning / Early Afternoon

NEWS KIDS

Dear Abby

News From The Light Side

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The Daily Dispatch

MOVIES

6C

“The Outlaw Paid Skin- Feed- Paid Music Coin Vault ’ Knife Show ’ 2 WRPX Josey Wales” ’ Program care Children Program Bones “Death in Without a Trace Cricut NuWave Look Bosley Paid Free Paid Paid (Off Air) Shepherd’s 3 WRDC the Saddle” ’ “Live to Regret” Exp. Oven Young Hair Program Money Program Program Chapel ’ Master- Smart East- East- Being Being Time Waiting Keeping My Poirot “Double Strictly Strictly Explor- Explor4 WUNC piece Travels Enders Enders Served Served Goes for God Up Family Sin” ’ Å Busin Busin ing ing Cold Case “Soul” News Tom (12:05) House Inside (:35) Entertain- The News (:40) Up to the CBS WRAL 5am News 5 WRAL (N) Å O’Brien “Euphoria” Å Edition ment Tonight (N) Insider ’ Minute (N) ’ News (N) NFL Football Chicago NBC 17 Access HolExtra (N) ’ Å Dateline NBC (2:58) Meet the Foreclo- Early NBC 17 Today at 8 WNCN Bears at Atlanta Falcons. News lywood (N) Å ’Å Press Å sure Today 5:00AM (N) News (:35) (:05) Cold Case (12:05) Cold Paid Back Look Profit Making Debt (Off Air) HanJoyce 9 WLFL Friends “True Calling” ’ Case Files ’ Å Program Pain Thin Money Cures cock Meyer (:01) Brothers & News (:35) Grey’s (:35) Desperate (:35) Monk Å (:35) ABC World News Now (N) Å America News News 11 WTVD Sisters (N) Å Anatomy ’ Å Housewives ’ This News (:35) The Of- The Of- (12:05) King of King of (:35) (Off Air) Paid Paid 13 WRAZ Rewind fice ’ fice ’ Seinfeld Queens Queens Seinfeld Program Program SportsCenter (Live) Å SportsCenter (Live) Å SportsCenter Å Football Final SportsCenter Å 31 ESPN Football Live World Series World Series World Series World Series College Football Teams TBA. ESP ESP 21 ESPN2 World Series Base Final Premier League Final Final Sport Science World Poker Paid Trikke Paid Paid 50 FOXSP Top 50 Final Bull Riding: PBR Bull Riding: PBR Bull Riding: PBR Bull Riding: PBR Grill Cricut Danger Tred Paid Detox 65 VS Suite Cory Replace Kim Em Dragon Proud Whis Barbar Mer Lilo Lilo 57 DISN Casper Phineas Wizards Mon 43 NICK Lopez Lopez Nanny Nanny Malcolm Malcolm Malcolm Malcolm Chris Chris Rose Rose Rose Rose Rose Rose Cheating Death Larry King Live State of Union Cheating Death Larry King Live Your Money Newsroom 29 CNN Newsroom Red Eye Geraldo at Large Special Prog. War Stories Bulls Busi Forbes Cashin 58 FNC Geraldo at Large Huckabee Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds (:01) CSI: Miami Paid Paid Money Ab Se 27 A&E Criminal Minds CSI: Miami Å Weird Weird Untamed-Uncut I’m Alive Å Gnt Anaconda Weird Weird Untamed-Uncut I’m Alive Å 46 ANPL I’m Alive ’ 52 BET “Miss. Masala” BET’s Weekend Inspiration Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Housewives-Atl Housewives Paid Paid Paid Paid 72 BRAVO Law Order: CI Paid Paid Grill Hair Paid Paid 30 DISC Storm Chasers Storm Chasers Greatest Storms ’ Storm Chasers Pig Bomb Å Osteen Feed Zola Party Insanity Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Prince Life To 28 FAM ›› “Down Periscope” (1996) Å Flay Flay Next Iron Chef Iron Chef Am. Flay Flay Challenge Paid Paid Paid Millions 59 FOOD Iron Chef Am. “Premonition” Sons of Anarchy (12:01) Nip/Tuck 70s 70s Paid Paid Comfort Paid Bosley Slim in Paid Millions 71 FX Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Back Jeans Detox Paid Paid Tired? 73 HALL “Thicker Than” “Ladies of the House” (2008) Å Decoding-Past Nostradamus Kennedy Assass. 24 Hrs Decoding-Past Paid Paid Paid Paid 56 HIST Kennedy Mother Mother Paid Paid Paid Paid ByeBye INSTY Paid Cricut 33 LIFE “Sorority Wars” “The Haunting of Sorority Row” Hooked Hooked Hooked Naked Science Tribal Secrets Taboo Taboo 70 NGEO Hooked MAN MAN MAN ››› “Hot Shots!” (1991) ’ Paid Paid Paid Paid 40 SPIKE CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn MAN 49 SYFY “Wolvesbayne” “Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2” Twilight Twilight The Outer Limits ›› “The Prophecy 3: The Ascent” Twilight Twilight Secrets Clement Jesus of Nazareth Å Kinkade First Naza Israel: Time 6 TBN ››› “David” (1997, Drama) Nathaniel Parker. MLB ›› “Sahara” (2005) Matthew McConaughey. ›› “Doom” (2005) (PA) The Rock. Married Married Married 34 TBS MLB Baseball ››› “Drumline” (2002) Nick Cannon. Å ›› “Dollar for the Dead” (1998) LAPD Law & Order ’ 26 TNT ›› “Daddy’s Little Girls” (2007) Anxiety Paid Paid 44 TRUTV Inside Inside Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Paid Little House 54 TVL Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Rose Rose Rose Rose Brady Brady Brady Brady Little House House ’ Å ›› “Miami Vice” (2006) Colin Farrell, Gong Li. Å Monk Å Law/Ord SVU Paid Homes 25 USA House ’ Å 23 WGN News Replay Cheers Cheers Bewitch Bewitch Jeannie Jeannie Nash Bridges ’ S. Park S. Park Smash Smash Toni On Singsa (:02) Mad Men Breaking Bad Mad Men Å (:02) ››› “Top Gun” (1986) Tom Cruise. ››› “Niagara” (1953) 38 AMC Mad Men (N) “The Perfect Assistant” (2008) Å “Uncaged Heart” (2007, Drama) Å (3:50) ›› “Dangerous Heart” Å 47 LMN ›› “The Perfect Nanny” (2000) “The Phantom of the Opera” (1925) “Vampyr: Der Traum” “The Fearless Vampire Killers” Shorts 67 TCM ››› “Barefoot in the Park” Å


News From The Light Side

The Daily Dispatch

MONDAY Morning / Early Afternoon

MOVIES

VARIETY

NEWS KIDS

SPORTS

BROADCAST

10/19/09

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Clean Rosetta Paid Paid Through- Life-Ro- Lose Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid LifePaid Paid Paid 2 WRPX Air Exp. Stone Program Program Bible bison Weight Program Program Program Program Program style Program Program Program Chris- Pastor Wimzies Baby Paid Paid Life Cricut Family Deal or The Bonnie Hunt The People’s Judge Jeanine 3 WRDC tian Ctr Andy House Read Program Program Today Exp. 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 Lions Electric Super Barney4 WUNC nos Girl Speaks George Science Why! saur (DVS) Red Tales Comp Why! Friends WRAL-TV 5 The Early Show (N) ’ Å Dr. Phil ’ Å The Doctors Å The Price Is News WRAL The Bold 5 WRAL Morning News (N) Right (N) Å 12:30 Insider ’ NBC 17 Today at Today Working mothers and stay-at-home dads; Halloween fashions for Paid Extra Daytime Å Days of our Lives 8 WNCN 6:00AM (N) kids; fall getaways. (N) ’ Å Program (N) ’ (N) ’ Å Gospel Cope- Paid Busy Baby Paid Paid Paid The Steve Wilkos Maury Paternity- Jerry Springer Cops Å Cheat9 WLFL Truth land Program World Read Program Program Program Show (N) Å test results. (N) (N) ’ Å ers ’ News Good Morning America (N) Å Live With Regis Rachael Ray The View (N) ’ Å Eyew. Million- All My Children 11 WTVD and Kelly (N) ’ ’ Å News aire (N) ’ Å Sum- MalWRAL’s 7am WRAL’s 8am Judge Mathis (N) Judge Mathis Street Street Cosby Cosby The 700 Club Å 13 WRAZ merfield colm News on Fox50 News on Fox50 ’ Å ’Å Court Court Show Show SportsCenter Å SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter 31 ESPN SportsCenter Å ESPN First Take ’ (Live) Å ESPN First Take ’ Å 21 ESPN2 Mike and Mike in the Morning With Mike Golic and Mike Greenberg. Å Final Final Final Final Medi Hair Paid Paid Money Tom Halls ClubWPT.com Elite XC Tough 50 FOXSP Paid Ripped Paid Just White Paid Out Bosley Spo Water Ameri Outdoor Parker Dual Bucks Parker RNT-V 65 VS Jungle “Casper Meets Wendy” Phineas 57 DISN Phineas Movers Handy Mickey Agent Mickey Handy Movers Jungle “Pooh’s Heff” Dora Dora Go Go Max Max Band Dora Dora Ni Hao 43 NICK Nanny OddPar Sponge Sponge Sponge Back Newsroom (N) Newsroom (N) Newsroom (N) 29 CNN American Morning (N) Å America’s Newsroom (N) Happening Now (N) The Live Desk 58 FNC FOX and Friends (N) Paid Crossing Jordan Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Criminal Minds 27 A&E Paid Bark Bark Me or the Dog Growing Up... ’ Animal Cops Animal Cops 46 ANPL Cham Cham Funniest Animals Pet Star Å W. Williams Mo’Nique Foxx Foxx Game Game Chris Chris “Miss. Masala” 52 BET BET Inspiration Trainer ››› “Thunderball” (1965) Sean Connery. Premiere. Top Chef Chef: Vegas Flipping Out 72 BRAVO Homes Cricut Paid Paid Robison Meyer Paid Cash Cash Cash Cash A Haunting Å A Haunting Å A Haunting Å 30 DISC Homes Paid Sister Sister Sabrina Sabrina Step 700 The 700 Club Gilmore Girls ’ FullHse FullHse My Wife My Wife 28 FAM Meyer Joni Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Ask Emeril Live Enter Quick Paula Giada Minute Con 59 FOOD Jeans Paid Paid Paid Malcolm Malcolm ›› “Wrong Turn” (2003, Horror) › “The One” (2001, Action) Jet Li. Spin Spin Spin Spin 71 FX Paid Paid Cricut Paid Paid Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Murder-Wrote 73 HALL Debt The Real West The Samurai Å The Dark Ages Å Modern Marvels Modern Marvels 56 HIST Crude Å INSTY Meyer Balanc Less Will Frasier Frasier Reba Reba Reba Reba Medium Å Wife Swap Å 33 LIFE Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Extreme Alaska Extreme Alaska Deadly Dozen Alaska-Trooper Rescue Ink 70 NGEO Millions Paid Ripped Paid Paid Baby Fore Married Married Married Married Amazing Video ›› “Sniper” (1993) Tom Berenger. 40 SPIKE Paid Cricut Paid Money “Intermedio” (2005) Edward Furlong. ›› “The Dark” (2005) Maria Bello. “Something Beneath” (2007, Horror) 49 SYFY Paid Travel Your White Sprna Meyer Chang Hagee Rod P. Your Believ Con Good Pre Behind Gospel 6 TBN Dino Home Home Yes Yes Ray King King 34 TBS Married Married Saved Saved Saved Saved Fresh Fresh Just Charmed Å Charmed Å Charmed Å ER ’ Å Las Vegas Å Las Vegas Å 26 TNT Angel “Provider” Angel ’ Å HAAN’s Paid Paid Paid Paid Ashleigh Banfield: Open Court Jack Ford: Courtside Best Defense 44 TRUTV Hair Money Paid Comfort Paid Paid Extreme-Home Good Good Sanford Sanford AllFam Leave Hillbil Hillbil 54 TVL GRC Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI 25 USA Becker ››› “For Your Eyes Only” (1981) Å 7th Heaven ’ Matlock Å Heat of Night Heat of Night Midday News 23 WGN Swag Meyer Creflo Cope Home Videos ››› “No Way Out” (1987) Kevin Costner. ››› “Ocean’s Twelve” (2004) Å 38 AMC Niagara ›› “Mystery Men” (1999) Hank Azaria. Å ›› “Girl” (1998) Dominique Swain. “Prince William” (2002) Å “The Disappearance of Christina” 47 LMN ›› “Aurora Borealis” (2005) Å ››› “The Milky Way” “Sin of Harold” “Harold Lloyd” 67 TCM Mitchell ›› “Movie Crazy” (1932) ›› “The Cat’s Paw” (1934)

MONDAY Afternoon / Evening 10/19/09 2 WRPX 3 WRDC BROADCAST

4 WUNC 5 WRAL 8 WNCN 9 WLFL 11 WTVD

MOVIES

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ESPN ESPN2 FOXSP VS DISN NICK CNN FNC A&E ANPL BET BRAVO DISC FAM FOOD FX HALL HIST LIFE NGEO SPIKE SYFY TBN TBS TNT TRUTV TVL USA WGN AMC LMN TCM

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Paid Paid Ab Circle Paid Reba Å Reba Å Family Family Family Family Ghost Whisperer Ghost Whisperer Criminal Minds Program Program Pro Program Feud ’ Feud ’ Feud ’ Feud ’ ’ Å “Bad Blood” ’ ’ Å Judge Judge Divorce Divorce Judge Judge Judge- Judge- The People’s House- House- Law & Order: Law & Order: Alex (N) Alex ’ Court Court Hatchett Hatchett Brown Brown Court (N) Å Payne Payne Criminal Intent Criminal Intent Sid the Dino- Curious Martha Arthur Word- Maya & Fetch! The NewsHour Busi- North C. Antiques Road- Matisse, Color, Science saur George Speaks ’ (EI) Girl Miguel Ruff With Jim Lehrer ness Now show Å Picasso Myth As the World Let’s Make a Deal The Young and News News News Evening Inside Enter- How I Acci- Two Big Turns (N) Å (N) Å the Restless (N) News Edition tain Met dentally Men Bang Th America’s Funni- The Ellen DeGe- Judge Judge Access Extra Å News NBC NBC 17 News at Heroes “Tabula Trauma “Stuck” est Home Videos neres Show (N) Judy ’ Judy ’ H’wood News 7 (N) Rasa” (N) Å (N) ’ Å TMZ (N) Eye for The Tyra Show The Tyra Show Smarter Smarter Name Is Simp- Simp- Family One Tree Hill (N) Gossip Girl (N) Å an Eye ’ Å (N) ’ Å Earl sons sons Guy ’ ’ Å ’Å One Life to Live General Hospital Oprah Winfrey News News News ABC Jeop- Wheel- Dancing With the Stars Celebrities (N) ’ Å (N) ’ Å (N) Å News ardy! Fortune and their dance partners perform. Sport Paid Hates Hates MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Los Angeles Angels Two Two House “Brave Lie to Me Durst Program Chris Chris of Anaheim. ’ (Live) Å Men Men Heart” (N) Å “Honey” (N) ’ Sports Lines Football NFL NFL PrimeTime Horn Inter SportsCenter Monday Night Countdown NFL Football Best of 1st and English Premier League Soccer SportsNation NASCAR Now 30 for 30 World Series World Series English Premier League Soccer Dra Mo Best Damn 50 Jay Top 50 Best Damn 50 Base Re Sport Science BillD Money Outdoor Tennis BMX Spo WEC WrekCage NHL Hockey: Sharks at Rangers Hockey Lizzie Lizzie Lizzie Lizzie Wizards Wizards Wizards Wizards Phineas Suite Wizards Mon “Minutemen” (2008) Å Phineas Sponge Sponge OddPar OddPar Barn Brain Sponge OddPar iCarly Jackson iCarly Sponge Malcolm Malcolm Chris Chris (1:00) Newsroom Newsroom (N) The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer (N) Dobbs Tonight Campbell Brown Larry King Live The Live Desk Studio B-Smith Your World Glenn Beck (N) Special Report FOX Report O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Para Criminal Minds Intervention Pot City, USA (N) Cat Di Cat Di Killing Living Crocodile Hunter Most Extreme Untamed-Uncut Raw Nature ’ Wild Russia ’ Wild Russia ’ “Miss. Masala” Foxx Foxx Game Game Chris Chris 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live › “The Inkwell” (1994) Joe Morton Flipping Out Flipping Out $1M Listing $1M Listing $1M Listing Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl Housewives-Atl A Haunting Å A Haunting Å A Haunting Å Cash Cash Cash Cash Man vs. Wild ’ Man vs. Wild ’ U.S. Marshals Sabrina Sabrina FullHse FullHse What I What I Gilmore Girls ’ Fresh Fresh 70s 70s Lincoln Heights Greek (N) Å Money Grill It Big Bite Ultimate Cooking Giada Con Home Paula Minute Challenge Good Good Unwrap Unwrap Bernie Bernie Malcolm Malcolm Bernie Bernie 70s 70s ›› “Premonition” (2007) Nia Long ›› “Ghost Rider” (2007, Action) Murder-Wrote Little House Little House Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy The Samurai Å The Dark Ages Å Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels What I Saw Wife Swap Å Housewives Housewives Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Medium Å “Sorority Wars” Dog Whisperer Lockdown ’ Pre. Predators Pre. Predators Hooked Locked Up Hooked Hooked CSI: NY ’ Å CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn CSI: Crime Scn UFC Unleashed UFC Fight Night ›› “Carrie” (2002) Angela Bettis, Patricia Clarkson. Ghost Whisperer Ghost Whisperer Ghost Whisperer ››› “In the Mouth of Madness” Robison Hickey The 700 Club Hagee Rod P. Jim Caviezel Changed Lives Cam Hillsong Behind Chi Franklin Duplan Ray Ray Payne Payne Jim Jim Friends Friends Seinfeld Office Name Pre MLB Baseball: Dodgers at Phillies Cold Case Å Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ NUMB3RS Å Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å The Closer Å Best Defense Pursuit Pursuit Pursuit Pursuit Pursuit Pursuit Police Videos Cops Cops Bait Car Bait Car Worked Worked Gunsmoke Å Gunsmoke Å Bonanza Å Bonanza Å Little House Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI NCIS “Pop Life” NCIS ’ Å NCIS ’ Å NCIS ’ Å WWE Raw Hillbil Hillbil Jeannie Jeannie Bewitch Bewitch Cheers Cheers Becker Becker Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Oceans ››› “The Rookie” (2002, Drama) Dennis Quaid. Å ››› “Field of Dreams” (1989, Fantasy) ›››› “Rain Man” (1988) “Mind Over Murder” (2005) Å › “At the Mercy of a Stranger” ›› “Hit and Run” (1999) Å “Mom at Sixteen” (2005) Å “Harold Lloyd” “Harold Lloyd’s Funny Side of Life” “A Night in Casablanca” ›› “Bedtime Story” ›››› “The L-Shaped Room”

MONDAY Late Evening 10/19/09 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM

BROADCAST

Criminal Minds 2 WRPX “No Way Out” ’ Law & Order: 3 WRDC SVU Summit 4 WUNC 5 WRAL 8 WNCN 9 WLFL 11 WTVD

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NEWS KIDS

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5 AM

5:30

Durham County Paid Paid Pastor Melissa Inspiration Ministry CampmeetInterna- Paid Paid HomeC’Å Program Program Scott ’ ing ’ tional Program Program are Star Trek: The Family Accord- Paid Comics Bernie My Wife Half & South Judge Jeanine Shepherd’s Next Generation Guy ’ ing-Jim Program Un. Mac Half ’ Park Pirro Å Chapel ’ World Charlie Rose (N) Tavis North C. Busi- Calde- Calde- Calde- Calde- World of Abnor- Cycles Cycles News ’ Å Smiley Now ness cott-Lit. cott-Lit. cott-Lit. cott-Lit. mal Psychology of Life of Life CSI: Miami “Bad News Late Show With Late Late Show- Inside (:07) The Dr. Oz News (:42) Up to the CBS WRAL 5am News Seed” (N) Å David Letterman Craig Ferguson Edition Show ’ Å Minute (N) ’ News (N) The Jay Leno News Tonight Show- Late Night With Last (:05) Poker After Late Night With Party Early NBC 17 Today at Show (N) Å Conan O’Brien Jimmy Fallon ’ Call Dark Å Jimmy Fallon ’ Food Today 5:00AM (N) News (:35) Name Is Ray(12:05) ’70s (:05) Paid (:05) (:32) Paid George George Friends HanJoyce at 10 TMZ (N) Earl mond Friends Show Scrubs Program Frasier Frasier Program Lopez Lopez Å cock Meyer (:02) Castle (N) News Night- (12:06) Jimmy (:06) Oprah Million- News (:06) ABC World News America News News ’Å line (N) Kimmel Live ’ Winfrey Å aire Now (N) Å This News Enter- The Of- (:35) (12:05) King of (:05) The Dr. Oz (:05) The Wendy News Brady Just Busi- Paid Paid tain fice ’ Seinfeld Seinfeld the Hill Show ’ Å Williams Show Bunch Shoot ness Program Program NFL Football SportsCenter (Live) Å NFL PrimeTime SportsCenter College Football Teams TBA. SportsCenter World Series E:60 (N) SportsNation Base NFL College Football Teams TBA. SportsCenter (N) Base Base Top 50 Final Jay Final Best Damn 50 Final Final Outdoor Hunter Veteran Birding Ship Mo Paid Paid World Extreme Cagefighting WEC WrekCage World Extreme Cagefighting Anxiety Paid Parker Outdoor Out Angling Phineas Mon Wizards Raven Life De Cory Replace Kim Em Dragon Proud Whis Recess Mer Lilo Lilo Martin Lopez Nanny Nanny Malcolm Malcolm Lopez Lopez Chris Chris Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Anderson Cooper 360 Å Larry King Live Cooper 360 Cooper 360 Larry King Live Dobbs Tonight Newsroom On the Record O’Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record Glenn Beck Red Eye Special Report O’Reilly Factor Paranormal Medium Para Intervention Pot City, USA Paranormal Medium Para Paid Paid Paid Paid Animal Cops Wild Russia ’ Wild Russia ’ Animal Cops Raw Nature ’ Wild Russia ’ Wild Russia ’ Animal Cops Pay It Off Mo’Nique W. Williams “Dough Boys” (2009) Cory Hardrict The Deal Å BET Inspiration $1M Listing $1M Listing Flipping Out $1M Listing Flipping Out $1M Listing Money Paid Profits Paid U.S. Marshals Man vs. Wild ’ U.S. Marshals U.S. Marshals Cash Cash Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Home Videos The 700 Club Lincoln Heights Jeans Ripped Paid Paid The 700 Club Paid Anxiety Prince Life To Diners Diners Good Unwrap Unwrap Unwrap Diners Diners Good Unwrap Good Good Secret Glutton Paid Big Grill “Ghost Rider” ›› “The Omen” (2006) Liev Schreiber. 70s Homes Paid Profits Paid Millions Paid Paid Paid Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Cheers Cheers Grill Money Homes Paid Medi Millions What I Saw That’s Impossible Modern Marvels (:01) I Know What I Saw Å That’s Impossible Paid Paid Profits Hair “Sorority Wars” Will Will Frasier Frasier Will Medium Å Paid ByeBye Paid INSTY Thinner Paid Paid Hooked (N) Hooked Hooked Hooked Locked Up Hunter-Hunted Hunter-Hunted Dolphins-Dark UFC Fight Night UFC 104 Count. DEA ’ CSI: Crime Scn Trek: Voyager Unsolved Myst. Paid Paid Paid Paid Ghost Whisperer Monster Monster Voltron Voltron The X-Files ’ The X-Files Scariest Places Debt Back Paid Cricut Praise the Lord Å Osteen P. Van Chang Jesus of Nazareth Å Test Uneart Nelson Joy Mu History MLB Baseball MLB Seinfeld Sex & ›› “The Great Outdoors” (1988) Harvey Harvey Married Married Married Married The Closer Å Raising the Bar Raising the Bar CSI: NY ’ Å Cold Case Å Cold Case Å Without a Trace Without a Trace World’s Dumb Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Foren Murder-Book Foren Foren The Investigators Foren GRC Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Rose Rose Rose Rose Cosby Cosby Cosby 3’s Co. 3’s Co. 3’s Co. MASH MASH WWE Raw (:05) ››› “Casino Royale” (2006) Daniel Craig. Å (:05) › “Collateral Damage” (2002) Law/Ord SVU Paid Millions WGN News Scrubs Scrubs S. Park S. Park Star Trek Gen. Bob & Tom Paid Paid Cosby Cosby RENO Paid Rain (:45) Mad Men Å (11:47) ››› “Field of Dreams” (:15) Mad Men Å (:17) ›› “Modesty Blaise” (1966, Adventure) “To Be Fat Like Me” (2007) Å “Mom at Sixteen” (2005) Å “Between Truth and Lies” (2006) (3:50) “Dying to Dance” (2000) Å (:15) “The Doctor’s Dilemma” (1958) ››› “Gaby” (1956) Leslie Caron. “The Man With a Cloak” “Killer Is Loose” “The Serpent of the Nile”

Sunday, October 18, 2009

7C

Smithsonian plans to open hall devoted to human evolution By BRETT ZONGKER Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History plans to open a hall next year dedicated to the story of human evolution over 6 million years, officials announced Wednesday. The nearly $21 million Hall of Human Origins will follow milestones in history — when humans started walking upright and started speaking, for example — as well as the impact of climate change and extinction of ancient species. It’s scheduled to open on March 17, 2010, marking the museum’s 100th anniversary on the National Mall. “The exploration of human origins helps to tell us about how we came about and also helps place our own existence,” said curator Rick Potts, director of the museum’s Human Origins Program. This will be the Smithsonian’s first permanent exhibit focused solely on human evolution. It will include hundreds of fossils, reconstructed faces of early humans and 75 cast reproductions of skulls. Interactives will show the human family tree and current research around the world. The museum also is establishing an advisory group called the Broader Social Impacts Committee to foster discussion on how scientific and religious perspectives on human origins can be compatible. Potts said many people of deep religious faith also want to understand “how the science informs who we are. “We’ve been very careful ... to produce an exhibit that’s welcoming for everyone,” he said, “an honest place to look at the

fossil evidence, to explore the fossil evidence and the archaeological evidence that informs about human evolution.” The 15,000 square-foot hall is being funded by David H. Koch, a chemical engineer and executive vice president of energy company Koch Industries Inc. of Wichita, Kan. It will be named in his honor for his $15 million donation. Koch, a billionaire who lives in New York City, was the Libertarian Party’s vice presidential candidate in 1980. He has been a donor to conservative causes as well as educational, medical and cultural groups. His political donations haven’t worried Smithsonian curators because of his emphasis on science and culture, Potts said. “What we find in David Koch is a person who’s committed to doing things for the American public that has no relationship to politics,” Potts said. “He has an ability to separate that out, and so do we.” Koch, an engineer trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said he was pleased to support the exhibit. It was his first major contribution to the Smithsonian. “The program has the power to influence the way we view our identity as humans, not only today, but for generations to come,” he said in a statement. Another major funder of the project is physicist Peter Buck, co-founder of Subway restaurants, who gave $15 million to fund ongoing research and to begin new education programs. The funds will establish the Peter Buck Chair in Human Origins at the museum. On the Net: National Museum of Natural History: http://www.mnh.si.edu/

Celebrity Briefs Washington mayor sending Jon Stewart key to the city BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) — The mayor of Bellingham says “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart is getting a key to the city. But he won’t be traveling to the northwestern Washington city to accept it. Mayor Dan Pike says representatives of Stewart’s talent agency told him that Stewart appreciated the offer to come get the key but was too busy to accept. Pike made the offer after the mayor of Mount Vernon decided to give Fox News commentator Glenn Beck a key to that city. Pike tells The Bellingham Herald that he’s not disappointed by Stewart’s decision because the point of the offer was to spark community discussion. He says he still plans to send Stewart a key to the city.

Crypt above Marilyn Monroe back up for auction LOS ANGELES (AP) — The crypt above Marilyn Monroe is going back on the auction block. Bidding for the marble mausoleum crypt will start at $500,000 beginning Oct. 19, according to organizer Eric Gazin of AuctionCause.com. A previous $4.6 million bid for the space fell through in August when Elsie Poncher first attempted to auction off her

late husband’s crypt. The new eBay.com auction will end Oct. 29 and require a 1 to 5 percent refundable deposit, based on the bid. Gazin says he believes the crypt at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery will fetch “millions of dollars” at auction. Other celebrities including Farrah Fawcett, Natalie Wood, Rodney Dangerfield, Dean Martin, Jack Lemmon, Eva Gabor and Truman Capote have also been laid to rest at the cemetery.

Tyson, Holyfield to meet on Oprah Winfrey’s show CHICAGO (AP) — Boxing rivals Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield are to meet again — and this time Oprah will referee. Harpo Productions announced Wednesday the two fighters would appear on Friday’s live episode of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” from Chicago. On June 28, 1997, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Tyson was disqualified after biting off part of Holyfield’s right ear during their WBA heavyweight title fight. Winfrey aired an interview with Tyson on Monday during which he discussed the death of his 4-year-old daughter and talked about his family. Harpo Productions says Tyson will take questions from the audience on Friday.


CMYK 8C • THE DAILY DISPATCH • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2009

TYPESFindOFthe words OWLS WORD SEARCH hidden in the puzzle below.

WISE OLD OWLS

Hidden Words: Owls are mostly nocturnal birds which hunt and eat prey (other Barn animals). Almost all owls hunt at dusk and again just before dawn Barred and sleep in their nests during the daytime hours. There are many Boreal different types of owls, ranging from small ones just at ďŹ ve inches Burrowing tall to large ones that stand over 2 feet in height. The largest owls Eagle have a wingspan of over 80 inches. Owls are found in almost all Elf environments, and they live on every continent, except Antarctica. Fish The nests of owls are natural holes found in trees and caves. Flammulated Sometimes they overtake the hole made by another animal, such Great Grey as a woodpecker. The nest of the owl is comprised mainly of owl Great Horned pellets. A pellet is the regurgitated leftovers of what an owl cannot Hawk digest of its prey, such as the fur and bones of the animal. The Long-Eared pellet is a good example of how all things in nature serve a purPygmy pose. They help to cushion the nest for the female to lay her eggs. Saw-whet Sphere-shaped eggs are common for the owl, and they can lay up Scop to 12 eggs per reproductive cycle. Screech Owls are known for their distinct look and features. The eyes Short-Eared of an owl have a very limited range of motion, despite their keen Snowy eyesight. To compensate for this, the owl can turn its head almost completely to face backwards. They are known for their rapid head movements and their signature sound, the Sooty “hoot.â€? The tuff of feather around their heads is called a facial disk, and their sharp claws are called talons. Spotted The owl’s talons are very sharp and are used mainly to perch on trees and to capture prey while in ight. Owls are very swift and able hunters. They have long since been thought of as mysterious creatures. Many stories and superstitions have been told about owls. They are also fabled to be wise animals, thus coining the phrase Draw a line from the type of owl to the picture of that owl. “the wise old owl.â€? 1. 3. 2.

WHICH OWL DO YOU SEE?

OLD OWL CROSSWORD COLOR THE COLLEGE OWLS! In many works of literature, animals are often depicted as human to illustrate a point, most often moral lessons. These are called fables. At other times, animals are depicted as human to empahsize a trait the animal holds, like that of a human. Color the two owls below. Then decide what meaning is being emphasized. Circle your answer.

4. Solve the puzzle with the clues below.

8.

DOWN CLUES:

1. The sharp claws of the owl are called? 2. Number of inches of the largest wingspan. 3. The area around an owls head is called? 7.What is the shape of an owl’s egg? 8. What can owls move especially well? 9. Old wives tales say that owls are what?

7.

1) Importance of giving. 2) Going back to school. 3) Owls are wise. 4) Standing on branches.

HOW MANY WORDS CAN YOU SPELL FROM THE WORD FLAMMULATED?

Which Owl Ans: 1)Barn 2)Screech 3)Horned 4)Elf 5)Spotted 6)Masked 7)GreatGrey 8)Long-Eared

ACROSS CLUES:

4. Where on Earth do owls not live? 5. The typical sound made by an owl. 6. Undigested remains are called what? 10. Owls are very capable what? 11. What is the height of the smallest owl? 12. What can owls not move very well?

5.

Color It Ans:3

6.

Great Grey Horned Spotted Elf Masked Barn Screech Long-Eared

A SPECIAL THANK YOU TO ALL OUR SPONSORS! Untitled 1 - Page 1 - Composite

in the Country

Buying or Selling Sheila Owen 252-213-0755 Call Me Today! sheilao@remax.net Serving: N. Raleigh, Granville, Wake, Franklin, Warren Vance Counties and Kerr Lake! Visit all the area homes at: www.sheilaowen.com

907 Beckford Drive • The Henderson Marketplace Henderson, NC 27536 (252) 430-7771

Gould’s Ice Cream, Subs, & Catering

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Tues.-Wed. 11am-6pm • Thurs.-Sat. 11am-8pm Sun. 1pm-6pm • Closed Monday 2684 Raleigh Road • Henderson, NC 27537-7177 Phone: 252-738-0200 • Email: goulds18@gmail.com

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5593 Tabbs Creek Rd., Oxford, NC Hours: M-F 11am-2pm/4:30 pm10 pm. Saturday 4:30 - 10 pm, Sunday 11 am - 10 pm.

919-603-6174 or 919-603-6175.

FAMILY STORE (Thrift Store)

NEEDS YOUR USABLE DONATIONS

Clothing - Furniture - Appliances, etc.

Phone For Pick-up (252) 492-9552 222 W. Montgomery St.,Henderson, NC 27536


CMYK

Section D Sunday, October 18, 2009

Real Estate

Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Fire Facts

FAMILY FEATURES

A

s the time change nears, there are a few simple things you can do to make your home and family safer. This Fire Safety 101 guide will show you easy, affordable and ultimately life-saving precautions you can take today that can help prevent a fire in your home.

Did you know? �

Get the Facts

Home fires seem to be things that happen to other people — so why should you be concerned? � Approximately every three hours a home fire death occurs somewhere in the nation. � Two-thirds of home fire deaths result from fires in homes without working smoke alarms. But it doesn’t have to be that way. According to the International Association of Fire Chiefs (IAFC), working smoke alarms cut the risk of dying in a home fire by providing an early warning and critical extra seconds to escape. While 96 percent of American homes have at least one smoke alarm, 19 percent do not have at least one smoke alarm that works, mostly due to missing or dead batteries. This means roughly 25 million homes are at risk because of non-working smoke alarms and an additional 4.5 million homes are at risk by not having smoke alarms. For the 22nd year in a row, Energizer and the IAFC are partnering in the Change Your Clock Change Your Battery ® program. Established to help reduce the tragic number of home fire deaths and injuries, Change Your Clock Change Your Battery urges Americans to change smoke alarm and carbon monoxide detector batteries when changing clocks back to standard time each fall — this year on November 1. In addition to changing smoke alarm batteries, take some time to learn about fire safety and to complete a home fire safety checklist. You can make your home safer — today. For more information, visit energizer.com/preparedness.

The fall time change is a great reminder to change smoke alarm batteries. �

On average, home fires kill 540 children ages 14 and under each year. Children ages 5 and under are 1.5 times as likely as the population as a whole to die in home fires. Seniors age 75 and older are three times more likely to die in a home fire. 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. are the peak alarm times for home fire deaths — when people tend to be asleep and the house is likely to be dark. The National Safety Council reports that almost 700 people die each year as a result of unintentional poisoning by gases or vapors in non-fire situations. Carbon monoxide was involved in the majority of these deaths. Smoke alarms don’t last forever. They should be replaced at least every 10 years.

Daylight saving time ends November 1.

This is a very basic checklist to help you identify potential fire hazards in your home.

General Fire Safety

YES __ NO__ Smoke alarm and carbon monoxide detector batteries are changed at least once a year. Use the Change Your Clock Change Your Battery program as a reminder to help keep the batteries fresh. YES __ NO__ You have both ionization and photoelectric smoke alarms. YES __ NO__ There are working smoke alarms near the sleeping areas. YES __ NO__ There are working smoke alarms on every level. YES __ NO__ The smoke alarms are cleaned regularly and tested once a month. YES __ NO__ Portable fire extinguishers are available and family members know how to use them properly. YES __ NO__ You have a home escape plan and practice it regularly.

Heating Hazards

YES __ NO__ Combustibles such as clothes, curtains and furniture are away from stoves and heaters. YES __ NO__ Heating appliances are tested every year. YES __ NO__ All alternative heating devices used are Underwriters Laboratories (U.L.) approved. YES __ NO__ Carbon monoxide detectors are installed in a central location outside each sleeping area and on every level of the home.

Electrical Hazards

YES __ NO__ Electric cords are not worn, frayed or damaged. YES __ NO__ Extension cords are not under rugs, over nails, through water or across passageways. YES __ NO__ Electrical outlets are not overloaded by multiple plug devices. YES __ NO__ Electric appliances are not used near water.

General Housekeeping Hazards

YES __ NO__ Closets, basements, attics and garage areas are clean of old paper, boxes, paint cans and other trash. YES __ NO__ Flammable liquids and oily rags are disposed of after use or stored in a tightly closed metal container. YES __ NO__ All combustibles are stored a safe distance away from any possible heat source.

Kitchen Hazards

YES __ NO__ The stove and oven are in good working condition. YES __ NO__ The stove area is kept clean and free of grease. YES __ NO__ Combustible materials are kept away from open flames and heat sources.

The United States Fire Administration (USFA) believes that fire deaths can be reduced by teaching people the basic facts about fire. Fire is FAST! � In less than 30 seconds a small flame can get completely out of control and turn into a major fire. � It only takes minutes for thick black smoke to fill a house. In minutes, a house can be engulfed in flames. � If you wake up during a fire, you won’t have time to grab valuables because fire spreads too quickly and the smoke is too thick. There is only time to escape. Fire is HOT! � Heat is more threatening than flames. A fire’s heat alone can kill. � Room temperatures in a fire can be 100 degrees at floor level and rise to 600 degrees at eye level. Inhaling this air has the potential to scorch your lungs. This heat can melt clothes to your skin. � In five minutes a room can get so hot that everything in it ignites at once: this is called flashover. Fire is DARK! � Fire isn’t bright, it’s pitch black. � Fire starts bright, but quickly produces black smoke and complete darkness. � If you wake up to a fire you may be blinded, disoriented and unable to find your way around the home you’ve lived in for years. Fire is DEADLY! � Smoke and toxic gases kill more people than flames do. Fire uses up the oxygen you need and produces smoke and poisonous gases that kill. � Breathing even small amounts of smoke and toxic gases can make you drowsy, disoriented and short of breath. � The odorless, colorless fumes can lull you into a deep sleep before the flames reach your door. You may not wake up in time to escape. Statistics provided by the National Fire Protection Agency and the United States Fire Administration.


Real Estate Class 10.18

10/16/09 2:31 PM

Page 1

6B • THE DAILY DISPATCH • FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 2009

2D • THE DAILY DISPATCH • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2009

The Daily Dispatch

REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIED

HOURS:

PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD

Monday - Friday 8AM - 5PM

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 436-2810. The newspaper will be responsible for only one day’s incorrect insertion if you do not bring the error to our attention.

CLASSIFIED PHONE: 252-436-2810 Investment Properties HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE

Apartment For Rent

Houses For Rent

Houses For Rent

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

2 BR 1 BA $450/Mo Previous rental ref required Call Currin Real Estate 252-492-7735

3BR, 2BA. 1300 sq.ft. 71 Torri Dr. No pets. $675/mo + dep. 919-201-3813

Lula’s Landing Apartments EQUAL HOUSING

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

222 Parkview Dr. E. Henderson, NC now accepting applications for

1 Bedroom units

Handicap accessible. Total electric with range & refrigerator. Head of household must be 62 or older. Rent based on income.

252-433-8866

EQUAL HOUSING

OPPORTUNITY

Courtyard I & II Apartments Now Accepting Applications Must be handicapped, disabled OR YEARS of age

s "EDROOM Rental Assistance Available Applications by Appt. Only Hours: Mon. – Thurs. 9am-Noon & 2pm - 5pm

3 #OOPER $RIVE "EHIND -C$ONALD S

Read the Classifieds Every Day!

252-443-6859 OWNERS! Having trouble leasing and collecting rent?

Call The Rogers Group, Inc.

Section 8 Vouchers accepted

Looking for a Bargain?

Kerr Lake. Ivy Hill area. Cabin w/2BR, 2BA, stone fp, fridge, stove, DW, washer/ dryer. Lake view/ access. $700/ mo. + sec. dep. & ref. req’d.

Apartments/Houses Wester Realty 252-438-8701 westerrealty.com Oxford. 3BR, 1BA duplex. Quiet area near Country Club. $600/mo. Ref. req’d. Call Dale or Scott. 919-693-2257. CENTURY 21 Hancock Properties.

Home delivery ONLY

A full service Property Management Company

252-492-9385 1-800-834-9487 www.rentnc.net 2.5BR, 1 BA upstairs. HVAC. 765 1/2 N. Garnett St. $375/mo. 252-430-3777 2BR, 1116 Dabney Dr. Nice. Cent. air, fridge & stove. No pets. $545+ dep & ref 252-492-2353 2BR, 1BA, gas heat, A/C. Fridge, stove, washer & dryer. All vinyl windows. Excellent condition. Available in 3 weeks. Reasonable rent. 252-438-6227. 2BR, 2BA apt. $550/ mo. 1BR apt. $375/mo. 2BR MH $300/mo. Ref. & dep. 252-438-3738 2BR. 218 Davis St. Big rooms. Newly remodeled. Carpets. Heat pump. Stove & fridge. Fenced-in yard. $525/ mo. 252-4927387. Almost new 2BR, 1BA. Central air/heat. Stove & fridge. Washer/dryer hookups. $450/mo. + dep. 252-438-5311. Contact our

CLASSIFIED DEPT. about placing

Happy Ads for that special someone.

436-2810

Dreamhome in Hills 136 acs, 6300 sf home. Unbelievable Mtn Views Ponds, Granville County Owner: 919-624-7905 Call for pics: $999,900 FREE FLAT PANEL TV 2 & 3 Bedroom Homes EalryFalsom Prop. 252-433-9222

Friends & Family Special - up to $100 Free Rent 1-3BR houses & apts.

The Rogers Group 252-492-9385 www.rentnc.net Lake condo w/dock. 2BR, 2BA. FP. Washer, dryer, dish washer, garbage disposal, full deck. No pets. Ref. & dep. req’d. $850/mo. 252-430-4019. N. Kittrell. 2BR, 1BA. Quiet. No pets. $400/ mo. + dep. 252-6540822 or 910-583-0668. Watkins Community. Secluded 2BR brick, all appliances, garage, laundry room. 1 YR. LEASE. Serious inquiries only. $800/mo. + sec dep. 252-4322974

NOTICE EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY EQUAL HOUSING

OPPORTUNITY

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.� This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisement for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call 919-733-7996 (N.C. Human Relations Commissions).

Manufactured Land For Sale 2 Acres, only $11,990 Homes For Close to Kerr Lake Manufactured OK Rent 3BR, 2BA DW on 2 acres. 10 mi. N of Henderson. F/P, appliances. $650/mo. + $650 dep. 919-7611199.

Business Property For Rent 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. 2500 sq.ft. 3750 sq.ft & 5000 sq.ft. CROSSROADS SHOPPING CENTER Call 252-492-0185

919-693-8984; Pics: owner@newbranch.com

9 WOODED ACRES Near Stovall, lovely Perked,paved road $59,990 / 919-693-8984 owner@newbranch.com

Homes For Sale 3 Bed 2 Bath Home Between Henderson & Warrenton. Quiet, Nice. $750/mo 919-693-8984

If you miss your paper, PLEASE CALL before 11:00 am 436-2800

3BR, 1.5BA, Kit/LR combo. Near Gillburg. $425/mo + $425 sec. dep. 252-492-3675.

OFFICE 1250 per month FLEX Space For Lease/Sale

$

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

Retirement Sale!

5 houses on 3/4 of an acre. Downtown Warrenton. New siding. All houses occupied. Buy all houses for one price. $79K. 25% down. Balance - owner financed. Cibco Realty. 252-257-9178.

Manufactured Homes For Sale Owner Financing, 1988 SW 3 BR 2 BA, $11,500.00 $500.00 down pymt. $161.01 + tax+ins. On Rented Lot. Call Currin Real Estate 252-492-7735

Manufactured Homes For Sale 14x70 & like new SW 14x76. Cash only! I also buy SWs. Bobby Faulkner 252-438-8758 or 252-432-2035 1985 2BR, 2BA singlewide. Fixer-upper. On rented lot. $1500. 252-492-1949 Land/Home

GREAT DEAL $84,900 919-556-1637

TAKE YOUR PICK 3BR = $45k 4BR = $55k 5BR = $65k 919-570-3366

HOME DELIVERY for less than a cup of coffee about

.38¢ per day. Sundays just .96¢

t.

$64 Sq. F

1,700 SqFt., $108,900, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, Hardwood Floors, Walk-in Closet.

$2000 down. $685/mo. Lease to own. 4BR, 2BA DW in Williamsboro. 252-492-4334.

2BR, 2BA singlewide. A1 condition. $550/mo. + $550 sec. dep. Available in October 252-492-9261.

www.hendersondispatch.com

Have one of these stick-built custom homes on your lot today!

Manufactured Homes For Rent

2BR, 2BA on Club Pond Road. $400/mo. + dep. & ref. 252-456-3488.

Visit Our Website

. Ft.

$65.82 Sq 1,700 SqFt., $111,900, 1st Floor Master Bedroom, 3 Total Bedrooms, 2 1/2 Baths, Hardwood Floors, GardenTub.

ALL PLANS FEATURE: High EfďŹ ciency Heat Pumps • Smooth Ceilings • Connection to existing Water and Sewer • Basement Options Available • $108,900 Loan @ 5.5%-30 yrs.= $618.55 Principle + Interest-Monthly Payment.

The Daily Dispatch

115 Certainteed Dr., Oxford, N.C. 27565 919-693-9164

Call 436-2800

PRIM RESIDENTIAL

Apartments,Townhouses, and Corporate Townhouses For Rent Call 252-738-9771

www.dbwilliamsconstruction.com NC & VA Contractors License

Parkview OfďŹ ce Plaza Parkview Drive West, Henderson, NC One-story units available from 2,000 - 7,500 sq. ft. design to ďŹ t your needs.

PRIM DEVELOPMENT 252-738-9771

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

436-2810


Sun Class 10.18

10/16/09 3:43 PM

Page 1

THE DAILY DISPATCH • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2009

CLASSIFIED

HOURS: Monday - Friday 8AM - 5PM CLASSIFIED PHONE: 252-436-2810

* SPECIAL TRANSIENTS 5 days/5 lines...$5.00 Over a $10 Savings

8 days/8 lines...$8.00 Over a $25 Savings *Limited to $40,000 Selling Price

VISA and MASTERCARD We accept VISA and Mastercard for commercial ads, private party ads and circulation payments. Minimum purchase of $5 required.

Legals

Legals

NOTICE OF SALE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF VANCE

Keisha Ragland C158 Edward Hayes D198 James M Hargrove B107 Llana Jones C119 Wilma J Wright C135 Betty Leek D146 Terri Kearney D136 Larry D Baskerville D165 Sandra Henderson C132 Tiashondra Harris D120 Juan Epps E148 Leslie Roberts C130

AA SELF STORAGE, pursuant to North Carolina General Statute, Chapter 44-A, will conduct a public sale of the contents of the units listed below. The sale will take place at AA Self Storage, 420 Raleigh Road, Henderson, North Carolina, at the hour of 9:00 am on October 22, 2009. The various items of personal property located in the units listed below are to be sold pursuant to the assertion of the lien for rent owed at the self-storage facility. NAMES

UNIT#

Fabian Baskerville L19

Looking for a Great Apartment or New Home? Search the Classifieds!

This is the 22nd day of September, 2009. AA Self Storage 420 Raleigh Rd Henderson, NC 27536 252-433-0236 Oct 11,18, 2009 Kennametal Inc. is participating in an epidemiological study of hardmetal with the University of Pittsburgh. All current and former employee work history records for specified locations, including Kennametal’s Henderson, NC facility will be accessed as part of this study. For more information contact Paul Doseck at 724-5395626. Oct 17, 18,20,21,22,23, 2009

In Memory Dec. Dec. 18, 18, 1970 1970 -- Oct. Oct. 19, 19, 2008 2008

Jeff Null In Memory It’s been 1 year ago I got that awful call. He said time is running out You need to hurry home Ma didn’t know you were so sick before I went away I miss you so very much each and every day So many thoughts went through my head As we drove that long quiet highway God makes no mistakes, Son for He knew you were so sick And from His ower garden A rose He surely picked Ma is holding on, Son until He calls for me with open arms I’ll greet you And your beautiful face I’ll see

Help Wanted

APPLY ONLINE! www.granvillemedical.com Granville Health System is committed to quality‌quality physicians and staff. Visit us online at granvillemedical.com and discover the exciting career opportunities available within our community health system.

RN Clinical Manager, PT CertiďŹ ed Coder, FT Employment Coordinator, FT Licensed Physical Therapist Asst., FT Physical Therapist, FT & PT Physical Therapist Aide, PRN Speech Therapist, PRN LPN, FT & PRN Self Pay Representative/Collector, FT Occupational Therapist, PRN Occupational Therapy Assistant, PRN Patient Financial Services Supervisor, FT Registered Radiology Tech. Ultrasound, PRN RN: Obstetrical, ED, ICU, Med/Surg, FT & PRN RN Operating Room Circulator, PRN Management Assistant ED, FT COMPETITIVE SALARIES & BENEFITS PACKAGE (EOE)

919.690.3445

1010 College Street, Oxford, NC 27565

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.

Special Notices ATTENTION: Single Moms FREE Oil Change New Sandy Creek Baptist Church Sat. October 24 9am-1pm

Must have appointment! 252-492-4334 Will the person who bought a weight bench at a yard sale on Hwy. 39 10/10, call 252-4382616. I found a part.

Browse Over The Vehicles In Today’s Classified Section Call 252-436-2810 to place your ad! CARS

Schools & Instructions Dental Assistant training in 10 weeks. Coronal Polishing/ Radiology Certif. for the DAII. Campus in Wake Forest. Seats are limited. Call 919-5324444 for more information. Financing available.

Business & Services Rutland’s Handyman Service. Any jobs home, business, farm. 252-425-1948. Southern Lawn Service Mowing, trimming, fertilizing, seeding, leaf clean-up, gutter cleaning. 252-226-2173.

Woodruff Moving, Inc. Full Service Movers. Local or Nationwide. 35 years experience.

252-492-2511

Help Wanted If you are looking for a solid opportunity with a solid company, an established and successful retail chain is currently evaluating candidates for the following position:

2nd Shift Distribution Center Zone Manager This position supervises the order-ďŹ lling process for merchandise shipped from the Distribution Center to ensure consistent, accurate and efďŹ cient ow of merchandise to store locations. QualiďŹ cations for this position include: s (IGH 3CHOOL DIPLOMA OR '%$ s YEARS OF RELATED RETAIL OR BUSINESS experience and/or experience in distribution operations with demonstrated achievements and progressive responsibilities s 3TRONG ANALYTICAL PLANNING AND communication skills s 7ORKING KNOWLEDGE OF THE APPLICATION OF distribution center technologies to the total LOGISTICS SYSTEM 7E OFFER A SALARY COMMENSURATE WITH EXPERIENCE and a beneďŹ t package which includes paid vacation; medical, dental, life insurance; and K 2ETIREMENT 3AVINGS 0LAN For immediate conďŹ dential consideration, FORWARD YOUR RESUME WITH SALARY HISTORY TO Variety Wholesalers, Inc. - #DC Mgr Attn: Human Resources Department P. O. Drawer 947 Henderson, NC 27536 Or email us at: poverton@vwstores.com

Help Wanted

Reach An Additional 9.4 Million Classified Readers On Our Web Page. www.hendersondispatch.com

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!

FREE ADVERTISEMENT

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

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.

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

7 DAYS $41.57

14 DAYS $72.91

30 DAYS $128.17

LINE AD DEADLINES 10 AM the day prior to publication 10 AM Friday for Sunday

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.

Help Wanted

TAX PREPARERS AND CUSTOMER SERVICE WANTED Earn extra income. Must take free training tax course. Flexible schedules. Convenient location. REGISTER NOW! Courses start 11/30/09 $99 fee for books. Call 252-431-9193 or email hendersonlibertytax@hotmail.com. Dai ly Disp atch

PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD 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.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

AmeriGas Propane

Requirements include a valid CDL with Hazemat and Tanker endorsement a great driving record and satisfactory completion of a DOT physical, drug test and background check.

ADD YOUR LOGO HERE

The Nation’s Largest Propane Distributor, has an immediate opening for a Hard working, customer focused Seasonal Delivery Represtative for our Henderson NC location. We Offer: Paid Holidays, Propane Discounts, Team Environment, Competitive Wages, Flexible Schedules.

Apply at our office located at 2946 US 1158 Hwy, Henderson NC EOE/AA/M/F/D/V

Company Logo 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

Personals HAPPY 60th

If you miss your paper, PLEASE CALL before 11:00 am 436-2800

BIRTHDAY

ERVIN STALLINGS

In Memory

LOVE, CATHY, SUSAN, JOHN & FAMILY

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Help Wanted

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Help Wanted

ATTENTION WE ARE NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR

TAX PREPARERS FOR THE 2009-2010 TAX SEASON!!

FAX RESUME: MID STATE VENTURES 252-451-2048 ATTN: JENNY BROOKS OR CALL 252-903-9519

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.

Now Accepting Applications For Full Time RN 1st Shift Full Time 1st Shift RN

The Daily Dispatch

• 3D

Senior Citizens Home is now accepting applications Full Time 1st Shift RN. Applicant must be listed on the NC Board of Nursing as a Registered Nurse. Call Facility Administrator to inquire about salary and beneďŹ ts.

Senior Citizens Home 2275 Ruin Creek Road Henderson, NC 27536 s %/%

Help Wanted

A Great Place to Work! The career you’ve been waiting for can be yours at Maria Parham Medical Center, 102 bed acute care facility located in Henderson, NC.

Nurse Recruiter Maria Parham is seeking a Nurse Recruiter to oversee the recruitment function and interviewing qualiďŹ ed candidates for the Nursing Department. This role is involved in developing proactive staffing strategies with Nursing Managers in terms of interviewing, recruiting and hiring processes. As a critical member of the HR Department the Nurse Recruiter works collaboratively with members of the HR Team and Nursing Managers to enhance recruitment and retention. The candidate will also be involved in the Wellness Program coordination. QualiďŹ ed candidate must have current RN licensure in NC and Healthcare experience in recruiting and interviewing job applicants.

Visit our website www.mphosp.org for additional opportunities.

$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

Send your resume to: Employment Coordinator, Human Resources, Maria Parham Medical Center P O Box 59, Henderson, NC 27536 Fax: 252/436/1114 Email humanresources@mphosp.org EOE Healthcare Inspired by You


Sun Class 10.18

10/16/09 3:43 PM

Page 2

4D • THE DAILY DISPATCH • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2009

Help Wanted

Help Wanted AVON Signup Only $10.00.No Quotas 50%Commmission Free Shipping Call Clareese 252-492-5769

Experienced Restaurant Managers

Paid training, salary, bonus, benefits, 401K & more. Contact HWarren@tarheel capital.com Harry Warren 828-262-1785 Ext. 885 Immediate Need for Qualified Candidates Only Talented, motivated individuals with 2 yrs. job history on same job in a manufacturing environment. Machine operator skill helpful. Must be strong and available to work three shifts. Requirements: • Drugfree • Drivers License • Clear Criminal Background • Lift 50-60 lbs. • Steel toed shoes Hiring for a well established company within the four county area. Apply online at www.staffmark.com and call Sarah Falkner at 252-438-3888. Do Not call unless you meet the above

MECHANICS

needed for local small engine repair business. Please call 252-4369000 for more info. PART-TIME CASHIER NEEDED Applications now being accepted. Must be flexible & 21 years of age.

Exxon

822 Satterwhite Pt. Rd. 252-492-9494

Merchandise For Sale

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

AND ASK ABOUT OUR TAKES IT HOME PLAN 3HOP ONLINE AT WWW RENTCRUSADER COM

qualifications. Logging/trucking company seeking

Truck Mechanic EXPERIENCE REQUIRED

Benefits include: 401K, Health, Vision & Dental Insurance. Paid Holidays. Salary based on experience. Inquiries 252-430-1110 Mon-Fri 8am-5pm

Several bedroom suites w/mattress & springs $300 & up. Table & 4 chair sets $75 & up. Sofa & chair sets $100 & up. 32� color TV w/remote & stand $200 OBO. Much, Much More! 252-438-8828 or 252432-2230 anytime! Warren 8000 lb. winch Used only 4 times Good condition $500 252-915-0013

Logging/trucking company seeking

Auction Sales

SKIDDER OPERATOR

Estate Auction of Harold Jack Smith, Sr. and Annis M. Smith 1123 Rock Church Road Clarksville, VA.

Benefits include: 401K, Health, Vision & Dental Ins. Paid Holidays. Salary based on experience. Inquiries 252-430-1110 Mon-Fri. 8am-5pm Contact our

CLASSIFIED DEPT. about placing

Happy Ads for that special someone.

436-2810

Oct. 24 at 10:00am Personal property No buyer’s premium J. W. Shelton Auction & Realty 434-572-4647 or 434572-7156 www.shelton auction-realty.com

Farmers Corner

Pets & Supplies

Farm Equipment

P&P Farms

AKC Boxers. 7 weeks old. 1st shots. Tails docked. Dew claws removed 252-226-2004.

2004 Case 580M backhoe. 4WD. 4-way front bucket. 1430 hrs. Good condition. $29,500. 252-492-7387.

Beagle/Bassett mix puppies. 3 males. 14 wks old. Shots & de-wormed. $50 ea. 919-389-3562.

Used Farm Equipment & Tractors 919-603-7211

Deer Corn $10/bag 252-492-6435

Good Food To Eat Cured

Sweet Potatoes

Jimmy Gill 2675 Warrenton Rd. 252-492-3234

Pets & Supplies

FREE to good homes. Kittens. Litter trained. 3 yellow males. 1 calico female. Eating solid food. 252-492-7351.

4 year old female Pit Bull. Full-blooded. $50. Call Diane or Larry at 919-693-1763

Yorktese Puppies 4 weeks old Parents on Site. $450 For more info Call 252-492-1890

7/8 Chihuahua 1/8 Jack Russell puppies. 2 female, 1 male. $100 each. 252-492-3392 or 252-915-6369.

Wanted To Buy

Adorable playful kittens need a good loving home. Female tabby. Black male. $35 ea. Spayed & neutered w/shots. Cat lovers bring cat carrier. 252-492-3607. All New Happy Jack Kennel Dip II: Kills fleas, ticks, stable flies & MANGE mites without steroids. Biodegradable. GRISSOM FERTILIZER & FARM SUPPLY 252-492-3662 www.happyjackinc.com

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

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

Wanted to Buy

Trucks & Trailers For Sale 1994 Transcraft Flatbed 48’ x 102’’ Trailer Air Ride Suspension, Spread Axle, Strap box $4000 919-569-0311 Leave Message

Help Wanted Vision Vitality Variety The County of Vance has the following immediate opening: KVcXZ 8djcin ;^gZ 6bWjaVcXZ

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1997 International dump truck. Tri-axle. Rebuilt motor w/30K mi. 18 ton legal weight. Priced to sell at $12,000 OBO. 252456-0838 between 5pm and 10pm.

Currently seeking motivated individuals to ďŹ ll several Paramedic positions to respond to emergency & non-emergency calls. Prospective applicants will be required to pass a pre-employment drug screen, criminal & driving record check & assessment center evaluation that includes skills testing & oral boards prior to an offer of employment. Education/Experience: High school diploma, current NC EMTParamedic certiďŹ cation w/adequate continuing education hours, BCLS, ACLS, PALS/PEPP, PHTLS/BTLS certiďŹ cations required. Minimum 1 year ďŹ eld experience as an EMT-Paramedic. FireďŹ ghter credentials are a plus. Valid driver’s license required.

Autos For Sale

Salary: $29,664 DOQ Close Date: Open Until Filled

$500! Police Impounds! Hondas, Toyotas and more! For listings 800749-8104, Ext. K276.

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

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

Auto Parts BF Goodrich tires P22555-17. GM wheels & tires. P225-60-16. 252432-7891. Leave message.

Submit a Vance County application to Vance County Human Resources as directed on application. A county application is available at www.vancecounty.org. Vance County is an Equal Opportunity Employer

Help Wanted

Special Notice

Vision Vitality Variety The County of Vance has the following immediate opening:

NEW DEADLINES:

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Happy Ads or In Memory Ads 2 Days Prior to Publication at 10AM Examples: Tuesday run - Deadline Friday 10 AM Wednesday run - Deadline Monday 10 AM Thursday run - Deadline Tuesday 10 AM Friday run - Deadline Wednesday 10 AM Saturday/Sunday run - Deadline Thursday 10 AM

252-436-2810

HdX^Va Ldg`Zg >> Currently seeking individual to provide professional social work services to clients in a variety of settings. Work involves evaluating the client’s situation & his/her ability to deal with it, developing a social history, psychosocial assessment, service plan and/or treatment plan & follow-up. Education/Experience: Bachelors degree in social work from an accredited school of social work; Bachelors degree in a human services ďŹ eld and one year directly related exp.; bachelors degree and two years directly related exp. Bilingual capabilities preferred. Valid driver’s license required. Applicant also subject to a criminal history background check and a drug/alcohol screen.

Salary: $32,400 Close Date: October 26, 2009 Submit college transcript and a Vance County application to Vance County Human Resources as directed on application. A county application is available at www.vancecounty.org. Vance County is an Equal Opportunity Employer

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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