hpe09222010

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WEDNESDAY

LET IT FLOW: State OKs Randleman Dam water transmission. 2A

September 22, 2010 127th year No. 265

CHANGE OF HEART: Company withdraws incentives request. 1B

www.hpe.com High Point, N.C.

BLUNT TALK: Wake’s Grobe offers stark evaluation of Deacs. 1C

50 Cents Daily $1.25 Sundays

500 JOBS POSSIBLE

Officials plan hearings to consider incentives proposal BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

WALLBURG – Members of the Wallburg Town Council and Davidson County Board of Commissioners on Tuesday will consider approving an economic incentives package for a company that may bring 500 jobs to the town. Steve Googe, executive director of the Davidson

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Former Tyco plant in Wallburg now sits empty. County Economic Development Commission, said a new company, code-named

Project Plus, is considering expanding its operations to Wallburg. The company is

considering the site of the now-defunct Tyco Electronics at 5568 Gumtree Rd., according to county documents. Googe said 500 jobs would be the largest announcement in Davidson County in the last 20 years. He said he has been working with Project Plus for about 16 months. “We showed them a number of sites in Davidson County,” Googe said. “They found one that they thought would do a really nice job for them, so we’ve got a package that is competitive and a wise investment for the county.” Under the proposal, the

Wallburg Town Council and Davidson County Board of Commissioners would appropriate a combined $1.5 million for the purchase of the building at 5568 Gumtree Road. The company would lease the building back through Davidson County and Wallburg for $75,000 for 20 years. In return, Wallburg and Davidson County would combine for an economic development grant of $75,000 annually for 20 years, Googe said. If Wallburg joins in the effort to entice the company, it would be the first incentives

INCENTIVES, 2A

FUN AT THE FAIR

WHO’S NEWS

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Hayden Carron, assistant professor of Spanish at High Point University, was awarded the 2010 Title VI Summer Research Fellowship in support of his project, “Caribbean Studies Course Development.” Through Carron’s fellowship, he spent a month during the summer researching to create two courses about the Caribbean region, which he will teach at HPU.

INSIDE

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AIDS PREVENTION: Health officials offer HIV screenings. 1B OBITUARIES

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DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Eddie Regan is having as much fun as grandson Anden Williams as they ride the “Sizzler” at the Davidson County Fair Tuesday.

Trinity sets January goal for trash service BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

TRINITY – The Trinity City Council on Tuesday night agreed to take the next step toward implementing a mandatory trash and recycling service. Members of the city council voted unanimously to approve a resolution of intent to provide curbside service in January. The City Council would provide the service by con-

tracting with a corporation formed by three of the city’s haulers – Roadside Trash, Smith Disposal and Handy’s Garbage. The City Council approved the resolution after hearing from residents who expressed mixed views about the city implementing the mandatory service. Now, city staff will look to have a contract for the haulers for the City Council’s consideration in October. Officials say the city is considering

the service because City Hall currently gets about 20 calls a week from residents who don’t have a place to recycle since the N.C. General Assembly changed laws on recycling. If the city implements the service in January and contracts the new corporation, the city would have to pay displacement fees of $1,880 to the other haulers currently operating in Trinity, according to information reviewed by the City Council last month. If the city decided to

contract with anyone other than Roadside Trash, Smith Disposal and Handy’s Garbage, it would have to pay displacement fees of $180,000 to the three haulers. City officials have said they expect the fee for the service to be approximately $15 each month. Last year, the service was projected to cost $486,000 a year, with a monthly fee of $15. dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

City, SHARE to renovate foreclosed homes BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Eight foreclosed homes in the city will begin to receive makeovers in the next few days as a partnership between the city and SHARE of North Carolina Inc. gets under way. The city is using funds it received from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for a Neighborhood Stabilization Program to pay for the venture. Its purpose is to repair foreclosed homes that otherwise would remain vacant and sell them to low- to moderate-income families who earn less than 50 percent of the area median income, said Mike McNair, director of community development

and housing. “Any time you take a vacant property and put it back in service, especially repairing it and bringing it up to code, you’re bettering the community,” McNair said. “It changes the dynamic in the neighborhood.” The homes are scattered throughout the city, with some located on roads like Montlieu Avenue, Hampstead Drive and Westgate Drive, and were selected by Greensboro-based SHARE according to certain criteria, such as how many repairs were needed. “It turns into a great deal for the families who buy them,” said Bill Waller, SHARE president. “The homes are selling at 50 or 60 percent tax value because

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

SHARE will renovate this house at 1009 Montlieu Ave. the banks want to get them off their books, and it isn’t costing us much to put them in like-new condition. The idea is that homebuyers are getting good deals by purchasing these properties.” Families that qualify can buy the homes or rent-tobuy. They also could receive

funds from the city’s down payment assistance program. “We’ll be using creative methods such as lease-toown to help these people transition,” McNair said. SHARE, or Self-Help and Rewarded Efforts, has renovated homes in other parts

of High Point. The Macedonia neighborhood is a prime example of the non-profit’s work, Waller said. It also assisted the city in revitalization efforts in the West End and East Central neighborhoods. “Since we began in 2000, our purpose has been to help low- to moderate-income people by helping them to clean up their credit, manage their money or own their home,” Waller said. “We like to say that we don’t just put people in houses – we build communities. Look at Macedonia now. It was a run-down neighborhood with high crime. Now it’s safe, healthy and a good place to raise children.”

Marie Legrand, 78 Gail McCauslin, 74 Robert Oakes, 79 Oleene Pierce, 85 Robert Trogdon Julius Washburn, 81 Obituaries, 2B

WEATHER

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Sunny, hot High 88, Low 67 8C

INDEX ABBY 3B BUSINESS 6-7C CLASSIFIED 3-6D COMICS 5B CROSSWORD 2D DONOHUE 5B FUN & GAMES 2D LIFE&STYLE 1D LOCAL 2-3A, 1B LOTTERY 2A MOVIES 6B NEIGHBORS 4B NATION 5A, 6B NOTABLES 6B OBITUARIES 2B OPINION 6-7A SPORTS 1-5C STATE 2A, 2-3B STOCKS 7C TV 6B WEATHER 8C WORLD 4A

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YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

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CAROLINAS 2A www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

State gives OK to Randleman lake water distribution BY PAUL B. JOHNSON ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

RANDOLPH COUNTY – State environmental officials made it official Tuesday – water can begin flowing from the Randleman Regional Reservoir to customers across Randolph and Guilford counties. After months of testing and review, the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources approved the Piedmont Triad Re-

gional Water Authority to begin providing drinking water. Authority Executive Director John Kime said water is scheduled to begin flowing to customers the first of October as final details are worked out with Randolph County and municipal officials who have contracted to receive water supplies. The state approval culminates decades of planning and years of work to construct a

water treatment and pumping plant and supply pipelines from the lake. The $60 million to $70 million facility will provide water to Randolph County and High Point, Greensboro, Jamestown, Archdale and Randleman. Piedmont leaders have said the lake will provide a water source that will make the region less susceptible to the effects of droughts on water supplies. State environmental

FUGITIVE WATCH

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officials conducted the final pre-startup inspection of the treatment plant Sept. 14. “The operational data provided indicated that the plant meets and well exceeds state and U.S. EPA maximum contaminant levels for all daily operational parameters,” according to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources letter of approval issued Tuesday.

for the program by raising the cap on how much income can be taxed. Burr rejected a proposal previously backed by Republicans to earmark a part of Social Security collections into private accounts, something a spokeswoman recently said he supported. Marshall said the idea of raising the retirement age was off the table, even though she previously said it should be considered. It’s a crucial issue for the two candidates to settle as they court retired North Carolina residents, typically a demographic that reliably turns out

pjohnson@hpe.com | 888-3528

to vote on Election Day. The state has more than 1 million residents age 65 and older. Burr’s position on Social Security was hard to pin down even back in 2005, when President George W. Bush began pushing a plan that would allow taxpayers to put a portion of their Social Security money toward a private account. Burr never seemed to expressly endorse the proposal but he embraced the debate and on multiple occasions said he envisioned the end result would allow people an option similar to a 401(k).

Witnesses told Stantonsburg Police Michael Joseph “Nutt” Bynum, 42, of Stantonsburg and Reginald Ray Bynum, 37, of Wilson, had been “fussing and challenging each other back and forth for approximately one day in reference to a football game be-

tween the Washington Redskins and Dallas Cowboys.”The cousins had been drinking when Michael Bynum “shoulder bumped” Reginald Bynum and challenged him to a fight, according to the police report. Witnesses said at some point, both men

“began stabbing and cutting each other.” Michael Bynum was transported to Wilson Medical Center where he received stitches to his neck. Reginald Bynum sought medical treatment on his own for blunt force trauma to his head.

Kidney Early Evaluation Program screenings will be given 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sunday at High Point City Lake Park, 602 W. Main St., Jamestown. It is sponsored by Dialysis Action Committee, a patient support group, and the National Kidney Foundation. Those who are age 18 and have

A barbecued chicken meal will be available (eat-in or take-out) for $8 4-7 p.m. Saturday at Hickory Grove United Methodist Church, 5959 Hickory Grove Road, Greensboro. 299-8361, Smith Hardy at 644-1109, e-mail jshalarms@aol.com

A fall festival will be held 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday at Sandy Ridge United Methodist Church, 2223 Sandy Ridge Road. Events include a yard sale, food and crafts vendors and barbecue for $8 per pound. For information or to reserve barbecue or rent a space, call 665-0774 or send e-mail to info@sandyridgeumc. org.

for 6-year-old Skylar Miller, who has cancer.

SPECIAL INTEREST

high blood pressure or diabetes may get a free screening for chronic kidney disease, leading causes of kidney disease. To register for the free screening, call Denise Hockaday at (877) 8583808 or Harvey Jones at 933-8431

STANTONSBURG – A daylong argument between cousins over a pro football game ended with one person stabbed and the second with a head injury, officials said.

ON THE SCENE

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Items to be published in this column must be in the offices of The High Point Enterprise no later than seven calendar days before the date of the event. On the Scene runs Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

ACCURACY

The wrong factbox was published with the story on the changing political climate on 1A in Tuesday’s edition. The correct box is below.

AT A GLANCE

Key dates through this year’s general election season:

FUNDRAISERS A car wash and food sale will be held 10 a.m.5 p.m. Saturday at Auto Zone Car Wash, 1801 S. Main St. It is a fundraiser

Pratt

Blocker

Ingram

Ruggiero

INCENTIVES

Police: Cowboys, Redskins argument ends in stabbing MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Harmon

High Point police are seeking the following suspects: • John Cornelius Medley, 34, 5 feet, 9 inches tall, 185 pounds, wanted for Felony Possession of Controlled Substance. *May Be Armed* **Violent Crimes Task Force Notified** • Jeffrey Trond Harmon, Jr., 19, 5 feet, 11 inches tall, 185 pounds, wanted for Felony Larceny of Motor Vehicle. • Yolandus Darrell Pratt, Jr., 18, 6 feet, 5 inches tall, 160 pounds, wanted for Felony Breaking & Entering. • Mitchell Derrell Blocker, 23, 5 feet, 6 inches tall, 155 pounds, wanted for Felony Common Law Robbery. • Amesha Tyinea Johnson Ingram, 24, 5 feet, 1 inch tall, 182 pounds, wanted for Felony Obtaining Property by False Pretense. • Richard Franklin Ruggiero, II, 36, 5 feet, 11 inches tall, 145 pounds, wanted for Felony Breaking & Entering to Motor Vehicle. Anyone with information about any of these individuals is asked to call High Point Crimestoppers at 889-4000.

Burr, Marshall seek Social Security tweaks RALEIGH (AP) – North Carolina’s leading candidates for U.S. Senate say they are considering policy tweaks to keep Social Security solvent instead of major shifts such as raising the retirement age or allowing partial privatization. Republican Sen. Richard Burr said he would first consider limits on costof-living adjustments for the more affluent Social Security recipients and tax incentives for Americans to prepare for retirement on their own. Democratic challenger Elaine Marshall said she would boost funding

Medley

A community yard sale will be held 7 a.m.-noon Saturday at Kirkman Park Elementary School, 1101 N. Centennial St. Proceeds benefit student programs at the school. A benefit bluegrass gospel singing begins at 3 p.m. Saturday at Straightway Baptist Church, 1125 Hickory Chapel Road. Performances will be by Narrow Road, The Gospel Travelers and The Hubbard Family. Christy, 847-8982

Firm would invest $7.6 million FROM PAGE 1

package that the young town has ever approved, according to Googe. “Five hundred jobs is a huge, huge project for any community,” Googe said. “We are very excited about the prospects of getting these incentives approved and getting the company to accept our proposal.” According to Googe, the company would invest $7.6 million in plant, machinery and equipment and pay an average salary around the county average. The company would provide the 500 jobs within seven years. Project Plus currently has operations all over the world and employs thousands, Googe said. “Five hundred people

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The winning numbers selected Monday in the North Carolina Lottery: MID-DAY Pick 3: 0-1-8

Oct. 8: Last day for voters to register to cast ballots on Election Day Oct. 14: First day of early voting Oct. 30: Conclusion of early voting Nov. 2: General election

Attorney David Lane said Seth Brigham accepted the deal Tuesday. In exchange for the payment, Brigham agreed not to file a lawsuit. Brigham was handcuffed and arrested in February on suspicion

of obstructing police and trespassing after he spoke to the council clad in his underwear. Brigham said he was trying to make a point about a proposal to criminalize nudity. The charges were later dropped.

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City to pay $10,000 to man arrested in skivvies BOULDER, Colo. (AP) – The lawyer for a Colorado man who was arrested for addressing the Boulder City Council in his boxer shorts said the city has agreed to pay $10,000 to settle his civil rights claim.

dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

LOTTERY

BOTTOM LINE

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would give us a payroll of about $16 million a year, which would be a significant boost in our economy,” Googe said. “... It’s significant in the payroll – plus it helps all the merchants with their sales, retail sales, the restaurants, the grocery stores and all that.” Googe said the company’s name may be revealed at the meetings of the Wallburg Town Council and Davidson County Board of Commissioners Tuesday night. Both will have public hearings on the projects at 7 p.m. He said the project is code-named because that’s the way it was brought to the Davidson County EDC.

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LOCAL THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com

3A

Trinity man gets 33-year prison term for robberies HIGH POINT – A local man was sentenced last week to more than 33 years in federal prison for carrying out a string of armed robberies in Guilford, Davidson and Randolph counties in late 2008 and early 2009. Steven Craig Hopkins, 48, of Trinity, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Greensboro to federal robbery and firearms charges in connection with convenience store robberies from Oct. 31, 2008, to Feb. 7, 2009. He is already serving a state prison sentence of up to 11 years and 7 months for the robberies. Hopkins and an accomplice, Christopher Lewis Cox, were linked to 12 store robberies in Archdale, High Point,

Trinity and Thomasville. They were caught after a Thomasville police officer entered the Fast Track on Randolph Street on Feb. 7, 2009, while Hopkins was robbing the store, according to court documents. He was taken into custody without incident and identified his accomplice as Cox, who was arrested later that day in Randolph County. Federal prosecutors said both defendants gave written statements detailing the businesses they robbed. Court documents described some of the robberies, including one at Sams Mart No. 3 on Meadowbrook Drive in Trinity on Nov. 12, 2008, in which a robber stole $282, warned the people inside the store not to use the phone and then fired one shot into the

wall behind the counter. Indictments charged the men with several robberies between Oct. 31, 2008, and Nov. 12, 2008, including at Wilco, 3030 N. Main St., High Point; Kangaroo, 11315

N. Main St., Archdale; Quick Stop, 5603 Finch Farm Road, Trinity; Main Way, 2010 S. Main St., High Point; and Moose Tracks Citgo, 1771 NC 62, Archdale, as well as another robbery

on Feb. 7, 2009 at Wilco Hess, 801 W. Fairfield Road, High Point. Court records show a federal jury convicted Cox on 15 of the 17 counts he faced following a trial in June. He hasn’t been

sentenced yet on those charges. Cox, 23, of Trinity, is serving a state prison term of up to 6 years and 11 months for the robberies. pkimbrough@hpe.com || 888-3531

Š2010 Regional Physicians

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In this Sept. 11 file photo, a crew chief looks out the open back of a U.S. Army Chinook helicopter over Zhari district, southern Afghanistan. Nine service members with the international coalition in Afghanistan died Tuesday after their helicopter crashed in southern Zabul province.

9 NATO troops die in chopper crash in Afghanistan KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – A helicopter carrying international troops crashed in a rugged section of southern Afghanistan on Tuesday, killing nine service members in the deadliest such incident in four years for coalition forces. A “large number” of Americans were among

the dead, according to a military official in Washington, who spoke on condition of anonymity because not all relatives had been notified. One other coalition service member, an Afghan National Army soldier and a U.S. civilian were wounded. The coalition would not disclose the helicopter’s

mission, and the cause of the crash was not immediately clear. NATO said there were no reports of enemy fire in the early morning hours in the Daychopan district of Zabul province, where the crash took place. Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi told The Associated Press by

telephone that insurgents shot down the helicopter. The Taliban sometimes take credit for accidents. “The Taliban are not involved in this crash at all,” said Mohammad Jan Rasoolyar, a spokesman for the provincial governor in Zabul.

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Chileans optimistic for early October rescue SANTIAGO, Chile – Chilean rescuers are growing increasingly optimistic about pulling the 33 trapped miners out far sooner than originally estimated, and with drilling quickly advancing on three narrow escape chutes, they raced Tuesday to decide on a design for the capsule that will lift the men to safety. President Sebastian Pinera has staked his presidency on being able to show the world that his government has safely rescued the miners ahead of schedule. He promised the men after they were found to be alive Aug. 22 that they would be home by Christmas – a timeframe mining experts called far too conservative.

US expects closer Russia-NATO ties NEW YORK – A planned summit between NATO leaders and Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev will significantly boost cooperation on the Afghan war, missile defense and fighting drug trafficking and piracy, a senior U.S. official said Tuesday. U.S. NATO Ambassador Ivo Daalder said that today’s foreign ministers session with Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov will lay the groundwork for the November summit of the 28 NATO members and Russia in Lisbon, Portugal. Medvedev was invited earlier this month.

Al-Qaida claims kidnapping of 5 French in Niger PARIS – Al-Qaida’s North Africa branch has claimed responsibility for kidnapping five French nationals near a uranium mine deep in the desert of the African nation of Niger, an audio message broadcast Tuesday said. In the recording broadcast by the Arabic news channel al-Jazeera, a voice claiming to represent alQaida in the Islamic Maghreb said the group would issue its demands to the French government shortly.

Hurricane Igor hits Canada with heavy rains ST. JOHN’S, Newfoundland – Hurricane Igor pelted Canada’s Atlantic coast province of Newfoundland with heavy rain Tuesday, flooding communities, washing out roads and stranding some residents in their homes. The Canadian Hurricane Centre said Igor had transformed into a “post-tropical” storm, which has a different structure from a hurricane but still packs the same punch. The storm battered Newfoundland, on Canada’s eastern coast.

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Police seize $30 million from Vatican in probe VATICAN CITY – Italian authorities seized euro23 million ($30 million) from a Vatican bank account Tuesday and said they have begun investigating top officials of the Vatican bank in connection with a money-laundering probe. The Vatican said it was “perplexed and surprised” by the investigation. Italian financial police seized the money as a precaution and prosecutors placed the Vatican bank’s chairman and director general under investigation for alleged mistakes linked to violations of Italy’s anti-laundering laws, news reports said.

Estranged husband seeks Betancourt’s assets BOGOTA, Colombia – The estranged second husband of Ingrid Betancourt has filed court papers seeking half her fortune just as the world’s most celebrated ex-hostage launches a memoir about her six years in jungle captivity. The lawyer for Juan Carlos Lecompte told The Associated Press on Tuesday that he filed a motion a day earlier in Bogota family court seeking to freeze all of Betancourt’s assets. Lawyer Heli Abel Torrado said the assets include an apartment in Paris, a home in Wyoming and royalties from her memoir. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

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4A www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE


NATION THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com

5A

Mideast peacemakers cancel conference amid rancor UNITED NATIONS (AP) – The Quartet of Mideast peacemakers shepherding the newly started direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations called on Israel to extend a settlement freeze, after abruptly canceling a planned news conference over a disagreement on who would appear on behalf of the group. Senior diplomats from the Quartet – the U.S., the European Union, the United Nations and Russia – met on the sidelines of the United Nations anti-poverty meeting to discuss a way for-

ward in the negotiations, which have made little visible progress since they resumed earlier this month and are at risk of collapsing. In a statement afterward, the Quartet said the “commendable Israeli settlement moratorium instituted last November has had a positive impact and urged its continuation.� It encouraged both sides to continue negotiating “in a constructive manner and urged the international community to support their efforts.� But on the key issue of whether Israel will extend

a partial ban on settlement building in the West Bank, territory the Palestinians want for a future state, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon indicated that Israel disagrees with the view that construction is a major impediment to the talks. “Settlements have never been an issue, because once we agree on borders everything will be obvious, so let’s concentrate on the real issues and not just put the obstacle in the settlements,� he told reporters on the sidelines of the Quartet’s talks.

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Jackson Jr. denies report about Blagojevich funds CHICAGO (AP) – Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. denied allegations Tuesday that he directed a businessman to offer former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich millions of dollars in exchange for being appointed to the U.S. Senate seat vacated by President Barack Obama. Jackson, who is weighing a run for Chicago mayor, has denied knowing about any offers made on his behalf ever since allegations

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Wednesday September 22, 2010

LEONARD PITTS: He was a victim of the need to see someone punished. TOMORROW

Opinion Page Editor: Vince Wheeler vwheeler@hpe.com (336) 888-3517

6A

High Point has made necessary expenditures Last Thursday, you published a letter from a Davidson County resident critical of the city’s environmental improvements as well as expenditures (Mary Cridlebaugh, “City administration knows how to spend money”). The writer has had a long, passionate and respected desire to see needed improvements to the city’s Westside Wastewater Treatment Facility and related sewer lines. The city has committed a substantial $66.8 million to upgrade and expand the Westside Wastewater Treatment Facility as well as to replace the Kool Pool, Corbett and Kindergarden Outfall lines. The necessary wastewater improvements advocated by the writer are expensive as she knows. The improvements do cost money. Cleaning up Rick Fork Creek also costs money. The costs are paid by sewer rates. I am pleased that most of the investments in the Westside improvements are either complete, or are well into the process of being completed. The economy has been tough on the city just as it has been on families and businesses. Like many, we have both cut expenses as well as drawn on fund balances to maintain essential services during this very tough time. The writer was correct in saying we have drawn some from our fund balances in the last year. State forms are hard to read for many, and in all respect,

YOUR VIEW

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the writer was wrong in saying we have increased administrative salaries by $3.4 million. The writer’s letter omits the fact that city employees have gone without salary increases for two years; 51 positions have been eliminated; and expenses have been cut by $16 million. Significantly, at the same time we have also been able to maintain our valuable and critically important AAA bond rating. STRIB BOYNTON High Point The writer is city manager of High Point.

What happened to the summer of recovery? Vice President Joe Biden’s “summer of recovery” for jobs has resulted in the loss of another

OUR VIEW

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Oak Hallow Mall best in private hands

T

he Enterprise reported last week on two possible options for the future of Oak Hallow Mall – and one of those options far, far, far outweighs the other in value to the city. We’re pulling for report No. 1, which involves a business in Texas, over report No. 2, which has been called a contingency plan the city could put into action. In a story on Friday by staff writer Paul B. Johnson quoting three independent unnamed sources, the Enterprise reported that Provident Realty Advisors Inc. of Dallas is negotiating a possible sale with CBL & Associates Properties Inc. of Chattanooga, which built the mall 15 years ago. Based solely on information about Provident Realty Advisors gleaned from its website, the company sounds like it would be a good fit for Oak Hallow. Provident presents itself as a company experienced in revitalizing underperforming or distressed properties. Perhaps Provident might have the expertise needed to keep Oak Hallow a viable retail and office center. On Saturday, staff writer Pat Kimbrough reported that High Point City Council had asked City Manager Strib Boynton to prepare a contingency plan for the city to buy the mall and move some city operations there if a sale could not be made and the mall would eventually plan to close. Thank goodness, every member of City Council that Kimbrough spoke with for that story emphasized that this contingency plan is just a last-ditch effort kind of thing to keep the mall alive if necessary and not some idea that the city actually might be interested in pursuing today. We, of course, want to see the mall remain viable economically and under private ownership that wants to revitalize the complex and move it forward. And we doubt that even as a last-ditch effort this city contingency plan would be the way to go. City officials aren’t trained to run a retail facility. If the city bought the mall, if would be off the tax books, and making such a purchase would require significant borrowing or a huge, one-time influx of tax dollars. Perhaps, the city could cooperate with a new owner in relocating to the mall some city facilities – such as the senior center and the police station – that have needs. But let’s put that contingency plan far, far, far into the back of our minds.

OUR MISSION

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The High Point Enterprise is committed to this community ... and always will serve it by being an intensely local newspaper of excellent quality every day.

283,000 jobs this summer. White House economic advisers are like the gang that couldn’t shoot straight. Economic advisers consist of Clinton retreads, tax cheats and academia. None has ever made a payroll or created one job. Fiscal experts are predicting that 10 percent unemployment could be around for 2011 and 2012. My business accounts see no turnaround in the near future and are very concerned. President Obama and the White House appear to be more clueless every day about how to fix the economy. Obama makes all these wimpy statements about the economy which do not give business any confidence to hire workers or Americans to spend money. Obamacare, new taxes and all the new regulations are all job killers plus all the attacks on Wall Street and the rich.

There are two examples of how much Obama really cares about Americans having jobs. One is closing down all offshore oil drilling in the Gulf for no good reason, resulting in 23,000 people out of work. The second was Obama telling Americans not once, but twice, not to visit Las Vegas. The governor of Nevada has stated that Obama’s dumb statements caused 400 business groups to cancel meetings resulting in a loss of $100 million and many jobs for the city. Our own Democrat Sen. Kay Hagan voted for a bill knowing it would cost 3,000 N.C. jobs. President Obama wants to transform the economy and may just end up destroying it first. Thank God many Democrats and the liberal media are finally parting ways with Obama over the failed economy and seeing his real radical agenda for what it is. So many Americans need a job and so little is being done to help them. Vote Nov. 2. REGIS KLINE Trinity

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Could Tea Party candidate successes in Republican Party primaries harm or help the GOP’s attraction to independent and unaffiliated voters in November? In 30 words or less (no name, address required), e-mail us your thoughts to letterbox@hpe.com.

Our academic institutions are overwhelmingly dominated by liberals. They feature speech codes that punish politically incorrect statements. Even to apply to many colleges and universities, students OPINION must have spent time as “volunteers” for activiThomas ties arbitrarily defined by Sowell admissions committees as ■■■ “community service.” As for conservatism, it has no specific political meaning, because everything depends on what you are trying to conserve. In the last days of the Soviet Union, those who were trying to maintain the Communist system were widely – and correctly – described as “conservatives,” though they had nothing in common with such conservatives as William F. Buckley or Milton Friedman. Professor Friedman for years fought a losing battle against being labeled a conservative. He considered himself a liberal in the original sense of the word. But he is remembered today as one of the great conservatives of our time. Great, yes. But conservative? It depends on what you mean by conservative. Conservatism, in its original meaning, would require preserving the welfare state and widespread government intervention in the economy. Neither Milton Friedman nor most of the other people designated as conservatives today want that. Liberals often flatter themselves with having the generosity that the word implies. Many of them might be shocked to discover that Ronald Reagan donated a higher percentage of his income to charity than either Ted Kennedy or Franklin D. Roosevelt. Nor was this unusual. Conservatives in general donate more of their income and their time to charitable endeavors and donate far more blood. We are probably stuck with having to use words like liberal and conservative. But we can at least recognize them as nothing more than political flags of convenience. We need not accept these words literally, as the money of fools. THOMAS SOWELL, a native of North Carolina, is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His Web site is www. tsowell.com.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

Founded in 1883 Michael B. Starn Publisher Thomas L. Blount Editor Vince Wheeler Opinion Page Editor 210 Church Ave., High Point, N.C. 27262 (336) 888-3500 www.hpe.com

YOUR VIEW POLL

Instead of conservative, liberal call them X and Y mong the many words that don’t mean what they say, but which too many of us accept as if they did, are those staples of political discussion, “liberals” and “conservatives.” Most liberals are not liberal and most conservatives are not conservative. We might be better off just calling them X and Y, instead of imagining that we are really describing their philosophies. Moreover, like most confusion, it has consequences. The late liberal professor Tony Judt of New York University gave this definition of liberals: “A liberal is someone who opposes interference in the affairs of others: who is tolerant of dissenting attitudes and unconventional behavior.” According to Judt, liberals favor “keeping other people out of our lives, leaving individuals the maximum space in which to live and flourish as they choose.” That is certainly in keeping with the dictionary definition of liberalism and with most contemporary liberals’ vision of themselves. But, if we follow Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes’ admonition to “think things, not words” and look beyond the label to the tangible realities of the world, we find almost the exact opposite of what the word “liberal” is supposed to mean. Most of us would probably regard the current administration in Washington – both the White House and the Congress – as “liberal,” even though the word “progressive” may be more in vogue. Does the sweeping legislation empowering federal officials to tell doctors, patients, hospitals, and insurance companies what to do, when it comes to medical care, sound like leaving individuals the maximum space to live their lives as they choose? Communities that have had overwhelmingly liberal elected officials for decades abound in nanny state regulations, micro-managing everything from home-building to garbage collection. San Francisco is a classic example. Among its innumerable micro-managing laws is one recently passed requiring that gas stations must remove the little levers that allow motorists to pump gas into their cars without having to hold the nozzle. Liberals are usually willing to let people violate the traditional standards of the larger society but crack down on those who dare to violate liberals’ own notions and fetishes.

An independent newspaper

JAMESTOWN

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Town Council Mayor Keith Volz, 601 O’Neill Drive, Jamestown 27282; 887-2733 Frank Gray, 110 Mamie Lane, Jamestown 27282; 454-2039 Will Ragsdale, 411 Main Street, Jamestown 27282; (704)-9066373 Georgia Nixon-Roney, 5 Mangerton Trail, Jamestown 27282; 454-6156 Brock Thomas, 312 Pearce Drive, Jamestown 27282; 454-6787

LETTER RULES

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The Enterprise welcomes letters. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for length and clarity and decorum. Writers are limited to 300 words and to no more than one letter every two weeks. Please include name, home address and daytime phone number. Mail to: Enterprise Letter Box P.O. Box 1009 High Point, NC 27261 Fax to: (336) 888-3644 E-mail to: letterbox@hpe.com


COMMENTARY THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com

THREE VIEWS

7A

Teens can conquer peer pressures W

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e teenagers face peer pressure. We want to fit in with the popular crowd instead of standing out alone. However, sometimes in order to fit it, we have to compromise ourselves and give into peer pressure. Some types of peer pressure are positive, but sadly, most of the ones we give into are negative and damage our character. There are many ways to fight peer pressure, and applying these ways to life can help one have a better self-image, better friends and a better mind-set. One way to fight peer pressure is to learn to identify negative pressures and resist them. Our society wants to mold us into a certain shape like the one modeled by the media. Sometimes that means losing 40 pounds, wearing a specific brand of makeup or clothes or having a certain kind of personality or charm. Although these can be positive pressures, many young people stumble and fall because the pressures are taken to extremes. If we want to win the battle against negative pressures, we must learn to avoid. We also need to learn to look for positive ones. Are we spending time with people that encourage us to be a better person or do we burden ourselves with those who discourage us from attaining sound character and principles? Often we have a mix of both, but we must discover how to say “no” to those who do not have our best interest in mind. Another form of peer pressure is not necessarily from our own peers but from the media. We often are told how to look, who to hang out with and how to act. Sorrowfully, this is an attempt to create universal uniformity and eliminate the diversity of our nation and world. Overcoming the “perfect image” advertised

by the media is difficult, but the more we learn to love ourselves for who we are, the more we will grow confident in everyday situations. TEEN VIEW When we have self-confidence, we Brittany are more likely to Farmer win victory over ■■■ negative influences and stand firm in who we know we are. Charles Stanley once said: “People who constantly, and fervently, seek the approval of others live with an identity crisis. They don’t know who they are, and they are defined by what others think of them.” In other words, who cares what other people think about you! We are unique, one-of-a-kind creations that have purposes no one else can accomplish. Look in the mirror. No one else in the entire world has had a face identical to yours. Does that not make you feel special? Not only does your physical appearance set you apart from the billions of people on Earth, but also your personality. Your kindness, joy, patience, and humility intertwine to make a unique individual with a beautiful heart. Peer pressure is everywhere and we all face it every day. However, there are ways we can fight it and become better individuals. We must take a stand for who we are, refuse to let anyone make us feel inferior, be an encouragement to those around you. Let us show friends, family and co-workers that they too can overcome the negative influences in this world and have a positive self-image. Teen View columnist BRITTANY FARMER is a junior at Haworth Christian School.

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ROUGHING IT: Chefs find inspiration in the wild. 1C IN MOURNING: Friends, family say farewell to murder victim. 3B

Wednesday September 22, 2010 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

DEAR ABBY: Good conversation is about listening. 3B

Night City Editor: Chris McGaughey cmcgaughey@hpe.com (336) 888-3540

Incentives request withdrawn BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – A local company has decided to relocate without the help of economic incentives from the city – for now. The Phillips Collection, a furnishings product and design company, withdrew a request for up to $100,000 in cash incentives that the City Council had been scheduled to consider this week. In a letter to the city, President and CEO Mark

Phillips explained that the company is moving forward with plans to relocate from Kivett Drive to the former Rose Furniture building at 916 Finch Ave. but is temporarily putting off the development of a furniture and accessories design center incubator at the site. “I am pleased to announce that we are going forward with the purchase of the building,” Phillips wrote. “With the project being divided into sepa-

rate parts, incentives are not necessary for Phase 1 – our company’s move. We are eager to grow with the city in our new location and bring Phase 2 to fruition very soon.” The incentives proposal for the company drew criticism because it would have involved the use of public funds to facilitate a business moving from one part of the city to another. Those who took issue also pointed to the projections that it would have in-

volved the creation of five jobs – a relatively small number compared to typical cases when incentives are awarded. City officials indicated the company might come back with an incentives request depending on how its business develops. Phillips said the design center incubator remains a priority. Council members have expressed support for the idea of an incubator – which could offer space for design ventures in the

furniture industry – as something that is needed, particularly in south High Point, where unemployment is high and business investment is scarce. “I think it’s vitally important the city cooperate in an incubator,” said Councilman John Faircloth. “I think that’s a good spot for it down there, it just needs to not have the incentive stigma attached to it.” pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

Agency boosts testing message

WHO’S NEWS

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Robert A. Wright joined Premier Commercial Bank as vice president and relationship manager and will lead the bank’s market development effort in High Point. Wright’s role will be to build relationships with business owners in the High Point area and throughout the Triad, assisting them with business and personal banking needs.

Do you know anyone who deserves some extra attention? You can submit names and photographs of people who could be profiled in the daily “Who’s News” column in The High Point Enterprise. Send information to: Who’s News, The High Point Enterprise, P.O. Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261. E-mail versions with an attached color photograph can be sent to whosnews@hpe.com.

ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

GUILFORD COUNTY – The county health department has aimed a message at men who have concerns about their HIV/AIDS status. In 2006, in the United States, roughly three out of every four people living with HIV were male. Of these men approximately 64 percent of them contracted HIV through male-to-male sexual contact. The Guilford County Department of Public Health is joining the National Association of People With AIDS in highlighting the importance for all men, and especially gay and bisexual men, in knowing their HIV status. “It is crucial for everyone to know their HIV status,” said Merle Green, county health director. “Please take advantage of one of these many opportunities for free and confidential testing.” The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends routine annual testing for all persons ages 13 to 64. The health department also encourages health care providers to be attentive to the sexual health needs of all of their patients, especially men, and promoting STD testing. These local community based organizations offer free and confidential testing for HIV and syphilis: • Piedmont Health Services and Sickle Cell Agency in High Point, 401 Taylor St., first and third Thursdays, 1-7 p.m. • Triad Health Project, 801 Summit Ave., Greensboro; Mondays, 5-7 p.m. • Piedmont Health Services and Sickle Cell Agency, 1102 E. Market St., Greensboro; Tuesdays, 9 a.m.-noon; Thursdays, 1-4 p.m. • The HIVE hosted by NIA Community Action Center, 1412 Groove St., Greensboro; Wednesdays, 3-6 p.m.

TESTING

Health Department: For more information on testing at clinics in Greensboro, call 336-641-5563; and 336854-7699 for High Point. Clinics: To find an HIV testing site, visit www.hivtest. org, text your zip code to KNOWIT (566948) or call 800-CDC-INFO.

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Sweet game of catch Libby Essick tosses Daisy a small sweet potato as she picks them up from the field. Daisy loves sweet potatoes but will only eat them if they are given to her. The potatoes are sold at the Essick farm on Abbotts Creek Road in Davidson County.

Phillips helps bring defense secretary to NC

At the new hpe.com, you’re just a few clicks of the mouse away from your best source for the news that impacts your community. Join our Twitter feed – hpenterprise – to get news alerts, or use it to let us know what’s going on in your community – from high school sports to breaking news. Visit the redesigned hpe.com, and let us know what you think.

ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

HIGH POINT – Local businessman Dave Phillips is playing a key role in a visit to North Carolina next week by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Phillips, a former U.S. ambassador to Estonia and former secretary of the N.C. Department of Commerce, helped arranged for Gates to speak at Duke University in Durham. The free lecture at 5 p.m. Sept. 29 is part of the Ambassador S. Davis Phillips Family International Lecture Series at Duke. The lecture, with free tickets distributed through the university on first come, first served basis, will be held in Page Auditorium on the Duke West Campus. Phillips met Gates in Estonia when Phillips was U.S. ambassador to the European nation during the administration of former President George W. Bush. “I first met Secretary Gates when he visited Estonia for the new NATO Cyber Center,” Phillips said. “It is very special to our family that he has so graciously agreed to not only lecture to the student body and public, but is willing to

CHECK IT OUT!

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SPECIAL | HPE

Defense Secretary Robert Gates (left) in Estonia several years ago when Dave Phillips of High Point was U.S. ambassador to the nation. take the time to interact with the students in a personal way.” Gates, appointed by Bush, stayed on as defense secretary following the inauguration of President Barack Obama in January 2009. The purpose of the $2 million Phillips endowed lecture series is to bring international leaders to speak at Duke, where three of

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

Phillips’ daughters attended and graduated. Other speakers have included Jose Miguel Insulza, secretary general of the Organization of American States, and Lord Christopher Patten, former governor of Hong Kong. “Our goal has been to identify renowned figures to reflect on the state of politics and government globally,” Phillips said.

INDEX CAROLINAS COMICS NEIGHBORS OBITUARIES TELEVISION

2-3B 5B 4B 2B 6B


OBITUARIES, CAROLINAS 2B www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES

FUNERAL

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Marie Legrand..Greensboro Gail McCauslin.....Asheboro Robert Oakes.......Lexington Oleene Pierce...........Denton Robert Trogdon..High Point Julius Washburn..Thomasville The High Point Enterprise publishes death notices without charge. Additional information is published for a fee. Obituary information should be submitted through a funeral home.

Marie Legrand GREENSBORO – Ms. Marie Legrand, 78, departed this life on Friday, September 17, 2010, at Moses Cone Hospital. She was born on January 12, 1932, in Mount Gilead, NC, daughter of Brice Legrand and Hattie Leake. The family later relocated to High Point where she attended the High Point City Schools. She graduated from William Penn High School where she was a member of the Dramatics’ Club and the Pointer’s Club. She was a faithful member of Temple Memorial Baptist Church until her health declined. Her parents, son, James Staley and two sisters preceded her in death. Surviving to cherish precious memories are two sisters, Roberta Scott of Roselle, NJ and Minnie Butler of Charlotte, NC; five grandchildren; six great grandchildren; cousin, Jerry Smith who was more like a brother to Ms. Legrand, two aunts; best friend, Mary Gray, and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. Funeral service for Ms. Legrand will be at 1:00 p.m. Thursday, September 23, 2010 at Temple Memorial Baptist Church, 1458 Cedrow Drive with Pastor Thomas Banister, II officiating and eulogist. Burial will follow at Guilford Memorial Park. The family will receive friends at 12:30 p.m. at the church on Thursday and other times at 425 Lardner Place. On line condolences may be sent to the family at www.peoplesfuneralservice.net. People’s Funeral Service, Inc. is in charge of arrangements.

Robert L. Oakes LEXINGTON – Robert Lee Oakes, 79, of Clark Snider Road died September 21, 2010, at the VA Medical Center, Salisbury. Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Gospel Light Freewill Baptist Church, Thomasville. Visitation will be from 6 to 8 tonight at Davidson Funeral Home Chapel, Lexington.

Oleene Pierce

Julius R. Washburn

LEXINGTON – Mrs. Oleene Gallimore Pierce, age 85, of Crousetown Road, Lexington, the only daughter of the late Seaph Wood Gallimore and Mary Alice Snider Gallimore went home to be with the Lord on Monday, September 20, 2010, at Mountain Vista Health Park in Denton. Funeral service for Mrs. Pierce will be 2:00 p.m. Friday, September 24 at Community Baptist Church in the Silver Valley Community with Rev. Brian Workman and Rev. Claudie Harrison officiating. Burial will follow in Walter’s Grove Baptist Church Cemetery. The family will be at Briggs Funeral Home in Denton Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. and other times at the family home on Crousetown Road. Mrs. Pierce was born March 16, 1925, and was a life-long resident of Davidson County and was a graduate of Denton School. She retired from Thornton Knitting Company in Denton. She enjoyed making crafts and sharing them with family and friends. She loved family, friends and talking with anyone she met. She was proud of her 67 years of marriage to her husband, Rev. Warren E. Pierce, who preceded her in death on January 11, 2009. Mrs. Pierce was also preceded in death by brothers, Aster Gallimore, Rex Gallimore and Boyd Gallimore. Mrs. Pierce is survived by four children, Zelda P. Willard of Floyd, Virginia, Brenda P. Wicker and husband Mack of Randleman, Phillip L. Pierce and wife Donna of Denton and Joy P. Leonard and husband Mark of Lexington; six grandchildren, Melanie W. Ratcliff and husband James of Floyd, Virginia, Allen Willard and wife Susan of Riner, Virginia, Kelly Wicker and wife Tina and Stacy Wicker and wife Rosemary, all of Cedar Falls, Tony Pierce of Thomasville, Jeremy Wicker of Randleman; five greatgrandchildren, Ashley Willard, Rusty Moore, Nicholas Willard and Warren Ratcliff of Virginia and Vernon Wicker of Cedar Falls, three brothers, James Lee Gallimore and wife Violet of Jasper, Alabama, Hosea Gallimore and friend Marie Myers of Denton and Doak Gallimore and wife Nancy of Thomasville, three sister-in-laws, Pauline Gallimore, Edith Gallimore and Bevilee Gallimore; two aunts, Avis Surratt and Mamie S. Schuler, one uncle, Paul Gallimore and wife Marjorie and several nieces, nephews and cousins, all of which received many birthday and anniversary cards that Oleene loved to send. Memorials may be sent to Community Baptist Church, designated to the food bank, at 385 Ernest Snider Road, Lexington, NC 27292 or to Walter’s Grove Baptist Church Cemetery Fund, 2610 Cid Road, Lexington, NC 27292. Online condolences may be made to www. briggsfuneralhome.com.

THOMASVILLE – Mr. Julius R. Washburn, age 81, died Monday, September 20, 2010, in the Hinkle Hospice House at Lexington. Mr. Washburn was born November 9, 1928, in Reidsville, NC to Lewis and Ollie Strader Washburn. He retired from Cone Mills, Inc. as an electrician. Mr. Washburn was a good provider to his family and he loved his children and grandchildren. He loved to play golf and had a real passion for nature and animals. Mr. Washburn accepted Jesus Christ as his Saviour. He was preceded in death by a sister, Irene Cobb; a brother, L. E. Washburn; and a grandson, Mark Shelton. In 1980 he married Dorothy Elizabeth Loranger, who survives of the residence. Also surviving are his daughter, Katharine Wilson and husband Jimmy of Ruffin, NC and a son, Michael Washburn and wife Sarah of Eden. Mr. Washburn has one brother, Eugene Washburn of Greensboro. There is one granddaughter, Katie Corum and four great grandchildren. The family will have a visitation at Sechrest Funeral Service 120 Trindale Road in Archdale on Thursday evening from 6:30 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. A graveside service will be held Saturday at 11:00 a.m. in Guilford Memorial Park Cemetery by Pastor Jonathan Todd. Please share your condolences with the family at www.sechrestfunerals.net.

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Robert Trogdon ASHEBORO – Robert Trogdon died September 18, 2010. Funeral arrangements are incomplete with Phillips Funeral Service, High Point.

Gail McCauslin ASHEBORO – Mrs. Alice Gail Langmeyer McCauslin, 74, died September 19 2010. Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Ridge Funeral Home Chapel, Asheboro.

Sechrest Funeral & Cremation Service Since 1897 HIGH POINT 1301 E. LEXINGTON AVE. 889-3811 THURSDAY Mrs. Carolyn Garcia 11 a.m. – Memorial Service Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church Visitation: 7-9 p.m. Wednesday Sechrest Funeral Service

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Screenwriter dies In this 1967 photo, screenwriter Irving Ravetch is shown on the set of “Hombre.� Ravetch has died at age 89. He and his wife, Harriet Frank Jr., received Oscar nominees for writing adapted screenplays for 1963’s “Hud� and 1979’s “Norma Rae.� The couple also collaborated on “The Long, Hot Summer,� “Hombre� and “Conrack,� among other films.

Carolinas get high marks on health emergency plans RALEIGH (AP) – Improvements in nationwide readiness for emergencies like bioterrorism or pandemic flu praised by a new report may already be in jeopardy, thanks to dwindling budgets and shrinking staffs. A report released Tuesday by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the country’s overall preparedness for such emergencies has improved, including in both North and South Carolina, which got high marks in everything from laboratory capabilities to getting the word out to the public. “Much progress has been made to build and strengthen national public health preparedness and response ca-

pabilities,� the report says. But the report measures state activities between Oct. 1, 2007, and Sept. 30, 2008, before the worst effects of the Great Recession began to hit state and local budgets. “This is not the state of preparedness as it exists in real time today,� said Jack Herrmann, senior advisor on public health preparedness for the National Association of County and City Health Officials. In some cases, preparedness has improved, thanks to new procedures devised to address the threat of the H1N1 flu last year, he said. But in many instances, reduced funding and shrunken public health staffs mean preparedness has likely taken a step backwards.

Man sues convenience stores over turban and beard DURHAM (AP) – A member of the Sikh religious faith says a Durham-based chain of convenience stores crossed a line by telling him to get a shave and a haircut. Surjit Singh Saund sued M.M. Fowler Inc., which owns the Family Fare chain of stores,

on Tuesday in federal court. Saund’s lawsuit says an M.M. Fowler hiring manager told him that he couldn’t wear a turban, have long hair or a beard. Sikh men refrain from cutting their hair or shaving. They also wear turbans as part

of their religious practice. Saund’s lawsuit seeks lost wages and benefits and other unspecified damages. Documents say he worked in other convenience stores since 2002. A call to M.M. Fowler was not immediately returned Tuesday.

Noted lesbian-feminist writer dies at 81 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) – Jill Johnston, who chronicled feminism, lesbianism and upheaval in the 1960s and 1970s as a weekly columnist for the Vil-

lage Voice, has died. She was 81. Her spouse, Ingrid Nyeboe says Johnston died Saturday at Hartford Hospital from complications from a stroke

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If it felt especially hot to you this summer, you were right. The Triad tied a yearly record of 63 days with temperatures 90 degrees or above when the high hit 90 degrees Tuesday

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Friends, family say farewell to murder victim

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Dear H.P.: Not everyone is born with the gift of gab. In fact, most people aren’t. But a smile will tell others that you’re approachable. It’s the universal way of saying, “I’m friendly.� If you want to get to know someone, walk over and

say, “Hi, I’m ‘Hal’ – what’s your name?� Introducing yourself isn’t being ADVICE pushy. It’s being Dear friendly. Abby As I ■■■say in my booklet “How to Be Popular,� the surest cure for shyness is to forget yourself and concentrate on the other person. Everyone can be charming. Charm is putting the other person at ease, making him or her feel comfortable and important. Believe it or not, being a good listener will do more for you than being a good talker. Give people a chance to talk about themselves, and they’ll think YOU’RE a great conversationalist. But, when asking questions as a means to get the other person talking, take care that your questions are tactful, discreet and not too personal. Stay current on what’s

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Michael Harvey is escorted after an appearance in Niagara County Court in Lockport, N.Y., Tuesday. had been homeless for a year and admitted using heroin several times since leaving drug rehab. In June 2009, he was convicted of felony breaking and entering – for stealing golf clubs, power tools and other property the year before – and received a suspended sentence. This year, he was indicted on three charges from the Charlotte metro area – possession of a firearm by a felon, possession with intent to sell heroin and possession of drug paraphernalia, specifically needles and baggies.

Secret to good conversation is to show interest in others ear Abby: I am a 20-year-old male who finds it awkward talking to women my age. I do OK approaching older women for conversation, but become tongue-tied with someone under 25. I would like to meet someone special and develop a relationship with her, but at this rate it’s not going to happen anytime soon. I am told by friends and family that I’m handsome, charming and have a good sense of humor. There will be holiday parties coming up soon, and my friends will be inviting some new people. How can I learn to strike up a conversation? I’m having a real problem here. – H.P. in Miami Beach

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going on in the world and in the headlines. The more informed you are, the better company you will be. But don’t be a know-it-all. People who come off like they’re an authority on everything are about as welcome as a skunk at a garden party. That’s not to say it pays to be ignorant; rather that the knowit-alls make those of us who are just average feel insecure and uncomfortable. When talking to people, look them in the eye. And when you’re being spoken to, focus your attention on the person who’s addressing you. Nothing turns people off quicker than trying to carry on a conversation with someone whose eyes are constantly wandering – to see who just came in or who else is in the room. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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dited, but North Carolina authorities are already in New York. Police say Harvey killed 23-year-old Valerie Hamilton last week and dumped her body before fleeing to Niagara Falls, where he grew up. Four family members were with the 34-year-old Harvey in court, where his mother broke into tears. Neither his family nor his attorney, Michael White, spoke to reporters as they left the courtroom. A team of state, local and federal officers arrested Harvey on Monday at a Niagara Falls home. Niagara County District Attorney Michael Violante said authorities do not plan to press charges against anyone who knew Harvey was in town. Harvey had been wanted on a murder warrant after Hamilton’s body was found Saturday. In 1996, he was convicted of first-degree sexual abuse in New York and was on probation in North Carolina after his 2006 conviction on charges that he failed to register as a sex offender. At the time of the 2008 pre-sentencing report, he

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CONCORD (AP) – The man accused of killing a police chief’s daughter and dumping her body in a self-storage unit is on his way back to North Carolina, where mourners gathered to reflect on a woman remembered as always smiling and joking. More than 500 people crammed into First Presbyterian Church in Concord, N.C., on Tuesday to pay tribute to 23-year-old Valerie Hamilton. When the church filled up, chairs were put on the lawn. Friends remember her as the person who liked to make everyone laugh. Co-workers at the swimming school where she worked say children were drawn to her and didn’t cry when she was around. In New York, her accused killed, Michael Neal Harvey, said he would not fight his return to the Charlotte area. Harvey, wearing an orange jail jumpsuit and handcuffs, was sent to the Niagara County Jail to await transfer. It was not immediately known when he would be extra-

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Cooke puts his energy into kids

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teve Cooke did not bounce very well as a child. In fact, in the first 13 years of his life he broke 12 bones. His toys didn’t fare much better. “I was a very hyper child, and my little brother, David, and I were very destructive with our toys,� Cooke said. In eighth grade, ABOVE Cooke was AND persuaded BEYOND to play football, and Patty Jo he loved it. Sawvel In fact, he ■■■played four years and ran track in high school. Even though sports redirected Cooke’s energy in a positive way, it did not remedy his reckless nature. After he destroyed his first two cars when he was 16, his dad told him if he ever wanted another vehicle, he would have to get it for himself. “I was heartbroken. But now, I thank my dad for teaching me a valuable lesson: I had to work for what I wanted, and I had to learn to appreciate what I had,� Cooke said. A soon as Cooke graduated from high school he left home, without a car. He found a one-room apartment and worked at a local diner. Before long, he was working two jobs for a total of 75 hours a week. Cooke did this for the next five years. “I learned that I wasn’t just working for a paycheck. I was working to improve position,� Cooke said. At age 25, Cooke married his love-at-first-sight sweetheart, Emily Comer of Kernersville, and accepted a job in office furniture installation. In 2007, while doing a routine repair to a 15-pound overhead storage unit, Cooke suffered a herniated disc. “I couldn’t work for a year-and-a-half, and I worried that I’d never get to work again,� he said. This time, however, Cooke bounced. He bounced right into his favorite job as manager of Kernersville Bounce House. He discovered that his favorite part of the job is working with kids. “I understand rebellious kids, and so I’m able to earn their respect. And, I know how to use humor on the kids who get bogged down in self-pity. But my favorite child to help is the autistic child,� Cooke said. These kids are the least flexible, he said. They tend to repeat activities they’ve mastered, rather than try new approaches, and they tend to shy from social interaction. Cooke loves the challenge of finding a portal to their world and connecting them to the people and activities around them. “All kids want to be shown how to bounce back from painful or embarrassing situations, but the children with autism are the most appreciative,� Cooke said. “They become friends for life.� PATTY JO SAWVEL is a freelance writer from Kernersville.

BULLETIN BOARD

CLUB NOTES

Wesleyan hosts Christian college fair

High Point Piano Teachers

HIGH POINT – National Christian College Fair will be held 6-8 p.m. Tuesday in the gymnasium at at Wesleyan Christian Academy, 1917 N. Centennial St. It is sponsored by North American Coalition of Christian Admissions Professionals. The fair is open to the public, specifically parents, high school students and community college students seeking to transfer. A financial aid seminar conducted by Rebecca Burdick of Anderson University in Anderson, S.C., will be held 6:30-7:30 p.m.

At the Sept. 14 meeting of High Point Piano Teachers Association, Karen Beres, a member of the faculty at University of North Carolina School of the Arts, gave a program titled “Not Your Mother’s Album for the Young,� designed to challenge teachers to consider incorporating

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works of contemporary composers. At the group’s Nov. 2 meeting, Pamela Howland will give a program on the music of Chopin, “Remembering Frederic.� Guests may attend.

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GUILFORD COUNTY –- The Guilford County 4-H Plant Sale is under way, and the deadline to place orders is Oct. 27. Blueberries, blackberries, muscadines, fig and raspberry plants are $10 each. Heritage apple trees are $20. Pickup times at Guilford County Agricultural Center, 3309 Burlington Road, Greensboro, are noon-6 p.m. Nov. 4 and 9 a.m.-noon Nov. 5. Plants not picked up will be resold without a refund. For information on ordering call (336) 375-5876.

BIBLE QUIZ

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Yesterday’s Bible question: What warning is given in Proverbs 6 to a man who commits adultery? Answer to yesterday’s question: “But whoso committeth adultery with a woman lacketh understanding: he that doeth it destroyeth his own soul.� (Proverbs 6:32)

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Radiation demands respect

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ear Dr. Donohue: I had a thoracic aortic aneurysm repaired in 2008. Since the surgery, I had several setbacks that brought me to different hospitals. They did CT scans, and, all in all, I have had about six scans in the past two years. I’m supposed to have another CT scan for my operated aneurysm. Should I have it? I wonder how long it takes to see the damage done by all that radiation. I am 63. – J.C.

BLONDIE

Everyone must respect CT scans and X-rays, since they are radiating the body. Radiation can give rise to cancer that doesn’t appear until years later. Doctors have to balance the value of the information gained from these procedures against the danger to their patients’ health. CT scans expose people to much more radiation than an ordinary chest X-ray. These scans furnish information not obtainable in any other way. After repair of a thoracic aortic aneurysm – a bulging weak spot on the aorta wall – a series of CT scans are done in the first year, and then annually thereafter. This is almost standard practice. All the same, tell your doctor you have had CT scans in addition to the ones for your aneurysm. You wonder about your exposure to so much radiation. Ask if it’s possible to obtain the same information from ultrasounds or MRI scans. Neither of these exposes you to any radiation. I

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would let my doctor make the decision for me to have the CT scan after discussing it with him or her.

Dear Dr. Donohue: Recently I had what the hospital doctors called a panic attack. I would like to know what causes them and if there is a cure for them. Would lack of sleep or medication have anything to do with it? – W.B. ■■■

A panic attack is a period of extreme fear in a situation that doesn’t warrant such fear. It comes on suddenly, reaches a peak in 10 or fewer minutes and makes the person want to flee from the situation they find themselves in – shopping for groceries, driving a car or walking down a street. During an attack, some of the following are present: the heart beats fast; sweat breaks out; people become short of breath; they can feel like they are choking; they might have chest pain and believe they’re having a heart attack; they could be dizzy. The actual attack probably results from an outpouring of body chemicals, like adrenaline. What triggers the release of these chemicals usually is buried deeply in a person’s subconscious. Lack of sleep or medication could make a person

more susceptible to an attack. If you experience a panic attack only once, you don’t have a great concern. If the attacks recur, then you do have a problem that needs attention. Report them to your family doctor, who will get you started on treatment and refer you to a professional who can unearth hidden causes provoking these attacks. Dear Dr. Donohue: I have a grandson, 28 years old. He has HLA B-27. Is it arthritis? It supposedly affects his spine and eyes and is disabling. – N.D. “HLA” stands for “human leukocyte antigen,” genetically programmed markers on body cells very much like an address on a house. They tell the body that these cells belong to it. The “B27” is another part of the address. HLA B-27 often is found in people with a special kind of arthritis called ankylosing (ANKuh-LOW-sing) spondylitis (SPAWN-duh-LITEiss). It’s an arthritis of the back, and it’s more common in young men. Eye inflammation often is part of the condition. Most people who have the HLA B-27 marker never develop back arthritis or the eye inflammation. In North America, 7 percent of the population has it. That amounts to millions of people. Only a few of them ever develop ankylosing spondylitis. The odds are that your grandson will never develop it.


NOTABLES, NATION 6B www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Mayor, ex-city manager among 8 arrested in California scandal

FAMOUS, FABULOUS

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Aretha Franklin’s son severely beaten DETROIT – Aretha Franklin’s son was severely beaten at a gas station in Detroit, the singing legend’s spokeswoman said Tuesday. Eddie Franklin, who is in his 50s, was attacked Monday night and was undergoing surgery at a hospital, Gwendolyn Quinn said.

Japan officials delay Hilton from entering LOS ANGELES – Japanese officials delayed Paris Hilton at Narita Airport while they decide whether she will be admitted to the country after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor drug charge in Las Vegas. An e-mailed statement by Hilton’s rep, Dawn Miller, said the 29-yearold was stopped by immigration authorities upon her arrival Tuesday. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

LOS ANGELES (AP) – The mayor and ex-city manager of the Los Angeles suburb of Bell were among eight current and former city officials arrested Tuesday in a corruption scandal that authorities said cost the blue-collar city more than $5.5 million in excessive salaries and illegal personal loans.

The district attorney’s office said several former and current City Council members were taken into custody along Hernandez with ex-city manager Robert Rizzo and Mayor Oscar Hernandez.

Dad sorry for storming school bus, threats LAKE MARY, Fla. (AP) – A father tearfully apologized Tuesday for acting like a bully himself when he stormed onto a school bus to confront students he believed were harassing his 13-yearold daughter who has cerebral palsy. Footage of James Willie Jones’ tirade has drawn thousands of views on YouTube, sparked numerous comments on social media sites – many of them supportive – and

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become a topic on national talk shows. A day after sayJones ing he was sorry in a written statement, Jones held an emotional news conference in which his voice cracked as he said no parent should copy his behavior.

“This, needless to say, is corruption on steroids,� District Attorney Steve Cooley said. Rizzo, who was making nearly $800,000 a year, was booked on 53 counts of misappropriation of public funds and conflict of interest. He was expected to be arraigned today, with officials seeking bail of $3.2 million.

Rizzo could face several years in prison if convicted, Cooley said. Others taken into custody were former assistant city manager Angela Spaccia, Vice Mayor Teresa Jacobo, council members George Mirabal and Luis Artiga, and former council members George Cole and Victor Bello.


C

READY TO TAKE FLIGHT: Eagles name Vick starting QB. 5C

Wednesday September 22, 2010

BISON ON A ROLL: Offensive line sparks High Point Central’s success. 3C Sports Editor: Mark McKinney mmckinney@hpe.com (336) 888-3556

BUILDING MOMENTUM: Home construction jumps 10.5 percent in August. 6C

Wake’s Grobe pulls no punches I

n most situations, Wake Forest head coach Jim Grobe can put a positive take on his team’s shortcomings. Not so on Tuesday as he looked back on the Demon Deacons’ 68-24 loss at Stanford late Saturday night. “We had play poor in every area. ... I guess the only positive thing for us is we got to play SPORTS a lot of people,” Grobe said. “I Greer wouldn’t say that’s Smith a shining light.” ■■■ The 68 points was the most surrendered since Grobe became coach in 2001. The 44-point margin of loss was the most for a Grobe team at Wake. The defense didn’t get all the blame as Grobe cited two offensive turnovers and breakdowns on two kick returns that gave Stanford short fields on four of its scoring possessions. “We have nine games to become a good football team.” Grobe said of his 2-1 squad.

“Right now, we are not a very good football team.” Wake’s defense offered no answers as the Cardinal scored on its first Grobe eight possessions, six of them in the first half. Starting quarterback Andrew Luck threw for 207 yards and four touchdowns and ran for another on a 52-yard scramble. Grobe said the onslaught prompted his defense to have “the deer in the headlights look.” One of the things that disappointed Grobe the most was the Deacons’ inability to put up a fight in the second half, after falling behind 41-10. “We didn’t see a lot of kids bow their necks and grit their teeth when things started going poorly,” Grobe said. “When the older guys don’t do it and the new guys don’t know how to do it, you don’t have a lot to hang your hat on. This team has a lot of growing up to do.” The leaky defense against

Stanford came a week after giving up 48 points to Duke. The Deacons are now nextto- last in the ACC inscoring defense, having given up 43 points per game. They are last in pass defense, (294 yards per game) and next to last in total defense (461.3 ypg) as they get ready for a trip to conference Florida State on Saturday. The Seminoles (2-1) rank third in total offense at 417.7 yards per game, behind Duke (443.7) and the Deacons (430.7 ypg). Grobe plans no personnel changes in the secondary other than the expected return of West Davidson product Josh Bush to the starting lineup after he was unavailable last weekend because of a hamstring injury. Bush’s return would move true freshman A.J. Marshall to second string on the depth chart at cornerback. Searching for ways to get better play, Grobe said he will do more instruction on the practice field and spend less time on chalkboard sessions. “We’re not getting a lot of some

of the things that we found successful with more veteran players,” Grobe said. “Sometimes kids don’t take the video and process that out on the field, and you can draw Xs and Os all you want but the kids don’t grasp that. We’re going to let them see it out on the field. We’ve got to teach them a little better.” The changes for this week will include a reduction in the number of schemes that the defense must learn. “Your dilemma becomes how much do you do,” Grobe said. “If you play one look all the time, you are probably not going to be very successful because you’ve got all your ducks on the pond. ... If you get so fancy that the kids are thinking too much, you aren’t playing very fast or you make too may mental mistakes. In the middle is where we need to be. We don’t want to take an unloaded gun, but we don’t want to take all the bullets because the gun would be a little too heavy.” gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3556

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Swing time! Wesleyan Christian Academy’s Ginny Brodd competes at No. 1 singles in Tuesday’s match against Forsyth Country Day. Brodd netted a 7-5, 6-3 victory over Nicole Angel to help the Trojans down the Furies 6-3. See prep roundup on 4C.

Redskins cut Johnson after two yards in two games ASHBURN, Va. (AP) – Larry Johnson was released by the Washington Redskins on Tuesday after gaining just 2 yards on five carries in two games with the team. Johnson was part of a trio of accomplished veteran running backs at the Redskins’ training camp, and two of those players are now gone. Willie Parker was cut at the end of preseason, while Clinton Portis has re-

mained the team’s No. 1 back. To replace Johnson, the Redskins agreed to terms with Chad Simpson, a third-year back who was cut by the Buffalo Bills at the end of preseason. Unlike Johnson, Simpson is known as a regular contributor on special teams. The moves came two days after Johnson lost 10 yards trying to reverse field on a first-down run in the fourth quarter of Washington’s 30-27 overtime loss to the

Houston Texans. It was a critical play that forced the Redskins into a passing situation when they would have been expected to milk the clock with a 10-point lead. The 30-year-old Johnson, a Maryland native, signed a threeyear, incentive-laden contract with Washington in March in hopes of reviving his career. “I’m very upset, didn’t see this coming,” Johnson said in a statement released through his agent.

“But most importantly this is where I wanted to end my career, a place where I was born and raised most of my life. ... So all my eggs were in this basket.” Johnson finished last season with the Cincinnati Bengals after being released by the Kansas City Chiefs in November. His time in Kansas City was marred by offthe-field problems, including two suspensions in his last 12 months with the team.

HIT AND RUN

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W

hen the PGA Tour Championship tees off Thursday at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, 30 players will vie for the victory in the FedEx Cup season finale. I’m struck almost as much by who won’t be there – Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh, Stewart Cink, David Toms and Anthony Kim are among the big-name guys who failed to qualify – as I am by the men in contention for the title. Based on the reset points for the Tour Championship, it’s a pretty good bet the Cup

champ will come from one of the top 10. With 2,500 points, Matt Kuchar leads Dustin Johnson by 250 points, with Charley Hoffman another 250 back. Steve Stricker (700 behind Kuchar), Paul Casey (900 back) and Jason Day (1,100 back) hold realistic hopes. Luke Donald, Ernie Els, Martin Laird and Phil Mickelson pretty much have to win the Tour Championship and get some help if they want to take the FedEx Cup. Interestingly, the Tour Championship will only have 25 of the top 50 players in the

world ranking, and six of the top 10. Stricker, Mickelson, Els, Jim Furyk and Hunter Mahan are the only players to reach the Tour Championship all four years of the FedEx Cup. I expect plenty of excitement as the FedEx Cup draws to a close. But make no mistake. The Tour Championship will not approach major drama. That’s more likely to come the first weekend of October in the Ryder Cup in Wales.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

– MARK MCKINNEY ENTERPRISE SPORTS EDITOR

WHO’S NEWS

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Denver Broncos coach Josh McDaniels said in a tearful news conference Tuesday that nobody in the organization saw any hint that wide receiver Kenny McKinley was suicidal before he took his life. “We’ve all seen him recently. He’s been the same person every time we see him. Liked junk food and chips and things like that,” McDaniels said. “He was in the cafeteria, or in the training room, when we were seeing him the last so many weeks here. Nothing that would alarm us to anything like this.” McKinley’s body was discovered by a female friend Monday afternoon when she returned to his Centennial home less than four miles from the team’s headquarters after running an errand with his young son, Keon. Arapahoe County Coroner Michael Dobersen said Tuesday that McKinley, 23, died of a gunshot wound to the head. He said a preliminary investigation “suggests the wound to be selfinflicted.” The team gathered Tuesday morning and met with grief counselors to help them deal with the death of their friend, who was on injured reserve after hurting his left knee in August and requiring surgery for the second time in eight months. The players decided to leave McKinley’s locker in place for the remainder of the season as a shrine to their teammate.

TOPS ON TV

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7 p.m., SportSouth – Baseball, Braves at Phillies 7 p.m., ESPN – Baseball, Rays at Yankees 10 p.m., ESPN – Baseball, Padres at Dodgers INDEX SCOREBOARD PREP FOOTBALL PREP ROUNDUP BASEBALL NFL COLLEGES MOTORSPORTS BUSINESS STOCKS WEATHER

2C 3C 4C 5C 5C 5C 5C 6C 7C 8C


SCOREBOARD 2C www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

BASEBALL

OAK HOLLOW LADIES GOLF ASSOCIATION

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Major Leagues All Times EDT AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division

New York Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore

W 92 89 83 76 60

L 59 61 67 74 90

Pct .607 .597 .553 .507 .400

Minnesota Chicago Detroit Cleveland Kansas City

W 90 79 76 62 62

L 60 71 75 88 88

Pct .600 .527 .507 .413 .409

Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle

W 83 75 74 57

L 66 74 76 93

Pct .557 .503 .493 .380

GB — 21⁄2 8 15 31

WCGB — — 61⁄21 131⁄2 29 ⁄2

WHERE: Oak Hollow L10 4-6 5-5 5-5 4-6 7-3

Str W-2 L-3 L-1 W-1 W-2

Home 51-25 46-29 43-33 40-33 34-43

Away 41-34 43-32 40-34 36-41 26-47

L10 7-3 2-8 6-4 5-5 4-6

Str W-1 L-7 W-4 L-2 L-1

Home 50-25 40-34 48-28 32-42 34-40

Away 40-35 39-37 28-46 30-46 27-48

L10 7-3 6-4 7-3 2-8

Str L-2 W-2 W-2 L-1

Home 48-26 45-30 39-34 35-42

Away 35-40 30-44 35-42 22-51

TRANSACTIONS

L10 9-1 5-5 4-6 5-5 2-8

Str W-9 L-2 W-2 L-4 L-4

Home 50-27 52-23 37-39 44-30 35-37

Away 41-34 34-43 38-36 30-47 27-51

KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Signed a twoyear player development contract with Kane County (MWL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Signed a twoyear player development contract with Las Vegas (PCL).

L10 5-5 4-6 6-4 4-6 8-2 5-5

Str W-1 L-2 W-2 L-2 W-6 W-4

Home 45-30 46-28 41-37 36-39 33-42 37-39

Away 40-36 31-45 32-40 33-41 35-39 15-59

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Released INF Felipe Lopez unconditionally. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Signed a two-year player development contract with Auburn (NYP).

FORMAT: A throw and two putts minus half handicap

Central Division GB — 11 141⁄2 28 28

WCGB — 1011⁄2 131⁄2 27 ⁄2 28

WINNER: Kitty White at 60

West Division GB — 8 91⁄21 26 ⁄2

WCGB — 14 1511⁄2 32 ⁄2

-

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Philadelphia Atlanta Florida New York Washington

W 91 86 75 74 62

L 61 66 75 77 88

Pct .599 .566 .500 .490 .413

Cincinnati St. Louis Houston Milwaukee Chicago Pittsburgh

W 85 77 73 69 68 52

L 66 73 77 80 81 98

Pct .563 .513 .487 .463 .456 .347

GB — 5 151 16 ⁄2 28

WCGB — — 101 11 ⁄2 23

Central Division GB — 71⁄2 111⁄2 15 16 321⁄2

WCGB — 8 121 151⁄2 16 ⁄2 33

West Division San Francisco San Diego Colorado Los Angeles Arizona

W 84 83 82 73 59

L 66 66 67 77 91

Pct .560 .557 .550 .487 .393

GB — 1 ⁄2 11⁄2 11 25

WCGB — 111⁄2 2 ⁄2 12 26

L10 6-4 4-6 7-3 4-6 2-8

AMERICAN LEAGUE Monday’s Games

Today’s Games Cleveland (C.Carrasco 1-0) at Minnesota (Blackburn 9-10), 1:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (E.Jackson 3-2) at Oakland (Bre.Anderson 6-6), 3:35 p.m. Kansas City (Davies 8-10) at Detroit (Scherzer 11-10), 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (W.Davis 12-9) at N.Y. Yankees (A.J.Burnett 10-13), 7:05 p.m. Seattle (Pauley 2-8) at Toronto (Drabek 0-1), 7:07 p.m. Baltimore (Millwood 3-15) at Boston (Lackey 12-11), 7:10 p.m. Texas (C.Wilson 14-7) at L.A. Angels (Haren 3-4), 10:05 p.m.

Thursday’s Games

Pirates 5, Cardinals 2 h 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 8

St. Louis Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh bi ab 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 Tabata lf 4 0 NWalkr 2b 3 0 GJones 1b 3 2 Alvarez 3b 4 0 Doumit c 4 0 Bowker rf 4 0 Cedeno ss 3 0 Mahlm p 1 0 Hanrhn p 0 0 Meek p 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 2 Totals 29 001 300

010 200

r 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 3 Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 2 Houston at Washington, 7:05 p.m. Florida 5, N.Y. Mets 2 San Francisco at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.

Today’s Games Atlanta (Hanson 10-11) at Philadelphia (Oswalt 13-13), 7:05 p.m. Houston (W.Rodriguez 11-12) at Washington (Marquis 2-9), 7:05 p.m. St. Louis (Lohse 4-7) at Pittsburgh (Morton 111), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 9-9) at Florida (Sanabia 43), 7:10 p.m. San Francisco (J.Sanchez 11-8) at Chicago Cubs (R.Wells 7-13), 8:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 12-5) at Milwaukee (Ra.Wolf 12-11), 8:10 p.m. Colorado (Jimenez 19-6) at Arizona (R.Lopez 6-14), 9:40 p.m. San Diego (Stauffer 4-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Lilly 8-11), 10:10 p.m.

Thursday’s Games St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m. Houston at Washington, 4:35 p.m. San Francisco at Chicago Cubs, 7:05 p.m. Florida at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.

Seattle at Toronto, 12:37 p.m. Kansas City at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

h bi 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

5 6 5

000 — 2 00x — 5

E—B.Ryan (16), N.Walker (8). LOB—St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 5. 2B—Pujols (37). 3B—Tabata (3). S—Maholm 2. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Westbrook L,2-4 4 5 5 5 3 2 T.Miller 12⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 M.Boggs 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 D.Reyes 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Maholm W,8-15 7 7 2 2 0 4 Hanrahan H,18 1 1 0 0 0 1 Meek S,4-10 1 0 0 0 0 1 Umpires—Home, Wally Bell; First, John Hirschbeck; Second, James Hoye; Third, Laz Diaz. T—2:31. A—15,478 (38,362).

Atlanta 1 Minor L,3-2 2 ⁄3 C.Martinez 12⁄3 Farnsworth 1 2 M.Dunn ⁄3 1 Moylan ⁄3 Kimbrel 1 Venters 1 Philadelphia Halladay W,20-10 7 Madson H,14 1 Lidge S,25-30 1

Florida bi ab 0 Cousins cf 3 0 Maybin cf 1 0 Morrsn lf 4 1 HRmrz ss 4 0 Uggla 2b 4 1 GSnchz 1b 4 0 Tracy 3b 3 0 Veras p 0 0 Luna ph 1 0 Hensly p 0 0 Stanton rf 4 0 BDavis c 3 0 Mendez p 2 Helms ph 1 34 2 12 2 Totals 34

ab JosRys ss 2 Pagan rf 4 Beltran cf 4 DWrght 3b 4 I.Davis 1b 4 Duda lf 4 Thole c 4 RTejad 2b 3 Carter ph 1 Pelfrey p 3 PFelicn p 0 Dessns p 0 JFelicn ph 1 Totals

r 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h 1 0 1 3 2 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 0

New York Florida

010 010

000 000

r 0 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

h bi 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 3 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 4

010 — 2 13x — 5

E—Jos.Reyes (13), D.Wright (20). DP— New York 1, Florida 3. LOB—New York 7, Florida 5. 2B—R.Tejada (9), Morrison (19), G.Sanchez (36), Luna (1). 3B—Jos.Reyes (9). HR—D.Wright (25), Duda (2), G.Sanchez (19). CS—Jos.Reyes (9), D.Wright (11). IP H R ER BB SO New York Pelfrey 7 5 2 1 0 4 2 P.Feliciano ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 1 Dessens L,3-2 ⁄3 4 3 3 0 0 Florida Mendez 7 10 1 1 2 2 Veras W,3-2 1 1 1 1 0 1 Hensley S,4-7 1 1 0 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Brian O’Nora; Second, Chris Guccione; Third, Phil Cuzzi. T—2:28. A—19,422 (38,560).

Blue Jays 5, Mariners 3 Seattle ab ISuzuki rf 4 Figgins 2b 3 JoLopz dh 5 Smoak 1b 4 Lngrhn lf 4 AMoore c 3 MSndrs cf 4 Tuiassp 3b 4 JoWilsn ss 4 Totals 35

Toronto r 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3

h bi 4 0 Snider lf 2 1 YEscor ss 2 2 JBautst rf 0 0 V.Wells cf 0 0 Overay 1b 1 0 J.Buck c 0 0 A.Hill 2b 1 0 Encrnc dh 0 0 JMcDnl 3b 10 3 Totals

Seattle Toronto

100 210

010 200

ab 4 4 4 4 2 4 4 4 3 33

r 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 5

h bi 1 2 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 8 5

001 — 3 00x — 5

E—Jo.Wilson (20). DP—Toronto 1. LOB— Seattle 9, Toronto 6. 2B—Tuiasosopo (5), J.Bautista (33). HR—Snider (10), V.Wells (28), Encarnacion (15). S—Figgins. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle French L,4-6 7 7 5 5 1 2 Olson 1 1 0 0 0 0 Toronto 2 2 3 8 Rzpczynski W,2-462 1⁄3 7 Camp H,12 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 S.Downs H,23 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gregg S,34-39 1 3 1 1 0 1 HBP—by French (Overbay). PB—J.Buck. Balk—Rzepczynski. Umpires—Home, Marvin Hudson; First, Derryl Cousins; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Jim Joyce. T—2:12. A—12,158 (49,539).

Phillies 5, Braves 3 Atlanta ab OInfant 2b 4 Heywrd rf 4 Prado 3b 3 McCnn c 4 D.Lee 1b 3 McLoth lf 4 AlGnzlz ss 4 Ankiel cf 3 Minor p 1 CMrtnz p 0 Hinske ph 1 Frnswr p 0 MDunn p 0 Moylan p 0 Fremn ph 1 Kimrel p 0 Venters p 0 Totals 32 Atlanta Philadelphia

r 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3

h 1 1 1 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 9

Philadelphia bi ab 0 Victorn cf 5 0 Polanc 3b 4 0 Utley 2b 5 0 Howard 1b 4 1 Werth rf 4 0 Ibanez lf 4 0 C.Ruiz c 3 0 WValdz ss 4 0 Hallady p 3 0 Gload ph 1 1 Madson p 0 0 Lidge p 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 Totals 37 000 003

011 002

r 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h bi 0 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 2 3 2 2 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

5 12 5

100 — 3 00x — 5

E—Farnsworth (2), Prado (11). DP—Atlanta 1, Philadelphia 3. LOB—Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 12. 2B—McCann (25), Ale.Gonzalez (17), Ibanez 2 (34). HR—Freeman (1), Werth (25). SB—W.Valdez (5). SF—D.Lee. IP H R ER BB SO

7 1 1

3 0 0 2 0 0 0

3 0 0 2 0 0 0

3 0 0

1 2 0 1 0 0 0

3 0 0

0 3 1 1 0 1 2

2 0 0

3 1 1

PB—McCann. Umpires—Home, Jeff Kellogg; First, Larry Vanover; Second, Jeff Nelson; Third, Mark Carlson. T—3:00. A—45,264 (43,651).

HOCKEY

-

NHL preseason Tuesday’s Games

Philadelphia 4, New Jersey 3, SO Columbus 5, Atlanta 2 Florida 4, Carolina 1 Ottawa 5, Toronto 0 Colorado at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Tampa Bay at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Vancouver (ss) at Calgary (ss), 9 p.m. Phoenix at Anaheim, 10 p.m. Calgary (ss) at Vancouver (ss), 10 p.m.

Florida Carolina

3 0

0 1

1 0

— —

4 1

FOOTBALL NFL

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Miami 2 0 0 1.00029 N.Y. Jets 1 1 0 .500 37 New England 1 1 0 .500 52 Buffalo 0 2 0 .000 17 South W L T Pct PF Houston 2 0 0 1.00064 Jacksonville 1 1 0 .500 37 Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 49 Indianapolis 1 1 0 .500 62 North W L T Pct PF Pittsburgh 2 0 0 1.00034 Cincinnati 1 1 0 .500 39 Baltimore 1 1 0 .500 20 Cleveland 0 2 0 .000 28 West W L T Pct PF Kansas City 2 0 0 1.00037 San Diego 1 1 0 .500 52 Denver 1 1 0 .500 48 Oakland 1 1 0 .500 29 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Washington 1 1 0 .500 40 N.Y. Giants 1 1 0 .500 45 Philadelphia 1 1 0 .500 55 Dallas 0 2 0 .000 27 South W L T Pct PF Tampa Bay 2 0 0 1.00037 New Orleans 2 0 0 1.00039 Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 50 Carolina 0 2 0 .000 25 North W L T Pct PF Chicago 2 0 0 1.00046 Green Bay 2 0 0 1.00061 Detroit 0 2 0 .000 46 Minnesota 0 2 0 .000 19 West W L T Pct PF Seattle 1 1 0 .500 45 Arizona 1 1 0 .500 24 San Francisco 0 2 0 .000 28 St. Louis 0 2 0 .000 27 Sunday’s results Chicago 27, Dallas 20 Atlanta 41, Arizona 7 Green Bay 34, Buffalo 7 Philadelphia 35, Detroit 32 Pittsburgh 19, Tennessee 11 Cincinnati 15, Baltimore 10 Kansas City 16, Cleveland 14 Tampa Bay 20, Carolina 7 Miami 14, Minnesota 10 Denver 31, Seattle 14 Oakland 16, St. Louis 14 Houston 30, Washington 27, OT San Diego 38, Jacksonville 13 N.Y. Jets 28, New England 14 Indianapolis 38, N.Y. Giants 14 Monday’s result New Orleans 25, San Francisco 22 Sunday’s games Dallas at Houston, 1 p.m. Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Atlanta at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Tennessee at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Carolina, 1 p.m. San Francisco at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Washington at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Jacksonville, 4:05 p.m. San Diego at Seattle, 4:15 p.m. Oakland at Arizona, 4:15 p.m. Indianapolis at Denver, 4:15 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Miami, 8:20 p.m. Monday’s game Green Bay at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.

PA 20 24 52 49 PA 51 55 32 48 PA 20 48 24 33 PA 28 34 38 52 PA 37 56 59 40 PA 21 31 22 51 PA 34 27 54 28 PA 37 54 56 33

FOOTBALL National Football League

Q. Which school captured the 1986 Pac-10 crown with a 5-1-1 league mark?

Monday’s late game Saints 25, 49ers 22 9 0 7 9 — 25 0 7 7 8 — 22 First Quarter NO—Team safety, 13:28. NO—Bush 6 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 9:33. Second Quarter SF—Gore 12 pass from A.Smith (Nedney kick), 9:52. Third Quarter SF—Dixon 2 run (Nedney kick), 6:51. NO—D.Thomas 3 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 1:43. Fourth Quarter NO—FG Hartley 46, 13:31. NO—FG Hartley 19, 2:12. SF—Gore 7 run (V.Davis pass from A.Smith), 1:19. NO—FG Hartley 37, :00. A—69,732. NO SF First downs 17 24 Total Net Yards 287 417 Rushes-yards 24-50 26-142 Passing 237 275 Punt Returns 3-43 4-29 Kickoff Returns 4-90 4-63 Interceptions Ret. 2-11 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 28-38-0 23-32-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-17 0-0 Punts 6-46.7 3-47.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 4-2 Penalties-Yards 5-54 5-40 Time of Possession 32:40 27:20 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Orleans, P.Thomas 18-46, Bush 5-4, H.Evans 1-0. San Fran., Gore 20112, A.Smith 4-28, Dixon 1-2, Westbrook 1-0. PASSING—New Orleans, Brees 28-38-0254. San Francisco, A.Smith 23-32-2-275. RECEIVING—New Orleans, P.Thomas 8-57, Colston 5-67, Bush 4-30, Shockey 3-37, Henderson 3-28, D.Thomas 3-10, H.Evans 1-18, Brees 1-7. San Francisco, Gore 7-56, Morgan 6-70, V.Davis 4-78, Walker 2-26, Crabtree 132, Byham 1-6, Norris 1-5, Zeigler 1-2.

NFL team stats

Week 2 TOTAL YARDAGE AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE OFFENSE Houston Indianapolis San Diego Denver Oakland Cincinnati New England Jacksonville Cleveland Tennessee Baltimore Miami N.Y. Jets Kansas City Pittsburgh Buffalo

Yards 881 873 866 732 690 681 667 649 639 583 541 522 512 509 481 352

Rush 315 204 260 154 309 181 170 205 177 251 158 252 252 275 249 174

Pass 566 669 606 578 381 500 497 444 462 332 383 270 260 234 232 178

Yards 413 429 530 533 547 555 573 600 612 635 638 642 688 764 840 884

Rush 242 210 206 104 206 280 101 259 377 227 243 223 182 223 240 62

Pass 171 219 324 429 341 275 472 341 235 408 395 419 506 541 600 822

Schaub, HOU Sanchez, NYJ Brady, NWE Garrard, JAC Henne, MIA D. Dixon, PIT C. Palmer, CIN

69 51 71 44 49 32 85

Dallas Chicago Atlanta Philadelphia San Francisco Washington Arizona Green Bay N.Y. Giants Minnesota Detroit New Orleans Seattle Tampa Bay St. Louis Carolina

Yards 790 771 739 729 680 671 645 645 633 617 612 595 581 561 535 515

Rush 139 139 279 311 191 107 230 223 238 247 135 129 186 214 160 208

Pass 651 632 460 418 489 564 415 422 395 370 477 466 395 347 375 307

Rush 273 127 199 127 56 223 261 114 249 213 233 247 306 285 263 161

Pass 233 402 335 431 522 395 360 518 398 436 437 496 463 497 609 745

DEFENSE Green Bay San Francisco Minnesota Dallas Chicago Tampa Bay Atlanta Seattle N.Y. Giants Carolina New Orleans Philadelphia Arizona St. Louis Detroit Washington

Yards 506 529 534 558 578 618 621 632 647 649 670 743 769 782 872 906

AVERAGE PER GAME AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE OFFENSE Houston Indianapolis San Diego Denver Oakland Cincinnati New England Jacksonville Cleveland Tennessee Baltimore Miami N.Y. Jets Kansas City Pittsburgh Buffalo

Yards 440.5 436.5 433.0 366.0 345.0 340.5 333.5 324.5 319.5 291.5 270.5 261.0 256.0 254.5 240.5 176.0

Rush 157.5 102.0 130.0 77.0 154.5 90.5 85.0 102.5 88.5 125.5 79.0 126.0 126.0 137.5 124.5 87.0

Pass 283.0 334.5 303.0 289.0 190.5 250.0 248.5 222.0 231.0 166.0 191.5 135.0 130.0 117.0 116.0 89.0

Rush 121.0 105.0 103.0 52.0 103.0 140.0 50.5 129.5 188.5 113.5 121.5 111.5 91.0 111.5 120.0 31.0

Pass 85.5 109.5 162.0 214.5 170.5 137.5 236.0 170.5 117.5 204.0 197.5 209.5 253.0 270.5 300.0 411.0

DEFENSE Tennessee Baltimore Miami Pittsburgh San Diego Oakland N.Y. Jets Cleveland Indianapolis Cincinnati Denver Buffalo Kansas City New England Jacksonville Houston

Yards 206.5 214.5 265.0 266.5 273.5 277.5 286.5 300.0 306.0 317.5 319.0 321.0 344.0 382.0 420.0 442.0

NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE OFFENSE Dallas Chicago Atlanta Philadelphia San Francisco Washington Arizona Green Bay N.Y. Giants Minnesota Detroit New Orleans Seattle Tampa Bay St. Louis Carolina

Yards 395.0 385.5 369.5 364.5 340.0 335.5 322.5 322.5 316.5 308.5 306.0 297.5 290.5 280.5 267.5 257.5

Rush 69.5 69.5 139.5 155.5 95.5 53.5 115.0 111.5 119.0 123.5 67.5 64.5 93.0 107.0 80.0 104.0

Pass 325.5 316.0 230.0 209.0 244.5 282.0 207.5 211.0 197.5 185.0 238.5 233.0 197.5 173.5 187.5 153.5

Rush 136.5 63.5 99.5 63.5 28.0 111.5 130.5 57.0 124.5 106.5 116.5 123.5 153.0 142.5 131.5

Pass 116.5 201.0 167.5 215.5 261.0 197.5 180.0 259.0 199.0 218.0 218.5 248.0 231.5 248.5 304.5

DEFENSE Green Bay San Francisco Minnesota Dallas Chicago Tampa Bay Atlanta Seattle N.Y. Giants Carolina New Orleans Philadelphia Arizona St. Louis Detroit

Yards 253.0 264.5 267.0 279.0 289.0 309.0 310.5 316.0 323.5 324.5 335.0 371.5 384.5 391.0 436.0

AFC individual leaders Week 2 Quarterbacks

Att Com Yds P. Manning, IND 83 60 688 P. Rivers, SND 68 44 632 Orton, DEN 68 46 602

TD 6 5 3

Int 0 2 1

47 31 45 31 30 22 50

604 294 506 343 296 254 512

4 3 5 4 1 0 2

2 0 2 4 0 1 1

Avg 5.77 5.00 4.20 4.09 5.58 6.41 6.27 4.53 3.51 3.69

LG 42 30 50t 76t 51 56t 31 17 30 18

TD 3 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0

LG 28t 50t 34t 73t 34 12 35 34 38 46

TD 1 2 1 2 2 3 2 1 0 0

Crosby, GBY Gano, WAS Gould, CHI Akers, PHL Barth, TAM Hartley, NOR Kasay, CAR Jo. Brown, STL Buehler, DAL

7-7 4-4 4-4 7-7 4-4 4-4 2-2 3-3 3-3

4-4 4-6 4-4 2-2 3-3 3-5 3-3 2-4 2-4

56 49 40 45 49 46 52 46 48

19 16 16 13 13 13 11 9 9

Rushers Att A. Foster, HOU 52 McFadden, OAK 48 Mendenhall, PIT 45 Johnson, TEN 43 Ro. Brown, MIA 26 Charles, KAN 22 Tomlinson, NYJ 22 Addai, IND 30 Rice, BAL 37 Jones-Drew, JAC35

Yds 300 240 189 176 145 141 138 136 130 129

Receivers No Yds Avg Ochocinco, CIN 16 203 12.7 Dal. Clark, IND 16 163 10.2 A. Johnson, HOU15 191 12.7 Collie, IND 15 188 12.5 Wayne, IND 14 195 13.9 Welker, NWE 14 102 7.3 Walter, HOU 13 173 13.3 E. Royal, DEN 13 163 12.5 Boldin, BAL 12 145 12.1 B. Marshall, MIA 12 124 10.3

ACC standings All Times EDT ATLANTIC DIVISION W Wake 1 NC State 0 Boston Col. 0 Clemson 0 Florida St. 0 Maryland 0

Conf. L PF PA 0 54 48 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

W 2 3 2 2 2 2

Overall L PF PA 1 131 129 0 106 47 0 64 33 1 117 58 1 110 63 1 96 48

COASTAL DIVISION Ga. Tech Miami Virginia Va. Tech Duke N. Carolina

W 1 0 0 0 0 0

Conf. L PF 0 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 48 1 24

PA 24 0 0 0 54 30

W 2 1 1 1 1 0

Overall L PF PA 1 96 62 1 69 36 1 48 30 2 95 81 2 102 143 2 48 60

Thursday, Sept. 16

Punters No 7 9 10 8 13 9 11 12 14 5

Lechler, OAK Kern, TEN Weatherford, NYJ B. Colquitt, DEN Sepulveda, PIT Scifres, SND Huber, CIN Moorman, BUF Hodges, CLE Turk, HOU

Yds 348 444 479 377 602 416 492 530 603 212

LG 68 60 58 63 59 60 59 53 52 58

Avg 49.7 49.3 47.9 47.1 46.3 46.2 44.7 44.2 43.1 42.4

LG 94t 53 32 39 36 38 13 17 15 19

TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

LG 97t 41 53 39 34 26 32 25 21 26

TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Ret 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pts 18 18 18 12 12 12 12 12 12 12

Punt Returners No McCluster, KAN 3 Higgins, OAK 4 Leonhard, NYJ 4 Jac. Jones, HOU 5 Arenas, KAN 6 Mariani, TEN 6 Powers, IND 4 Mi. Thomas, JAC 3 Cribbs, CLE 4 Parrish, BUF 4

Yds 100 66 65 67 66 64 37 26 34 30

Avg 33.3 16.5 16.3 13.4 11.0 10.7 9.3 8.7 8.5 7.5

Kickoff Returners No Br. Tate, NWE 9 Spiller, BUF 7 Underwood, JAC 9 Parmele, BAL 6 Mariani, TEN 7 De. Moore, IND 9 Bra. Smith, NYJ 3 Figurs, OAK 5 J. Ford, OAK 3 Arenas, KAN 4

Yds 307 185 227 149 167 195 64 105 61 78

Avg 34.1 26.4 25.2 24.8 23.9 21.7 21.3 21.0 20.3 19.5

Scoring Touchdowns TD Rush Rec A. Foster, HOU 3 3 0 Gates, SND 3 0 3 Welker, NWE 3 0 3 Dal. Clark, IND 2 0 2 Collie, IND 2 0 2 Hillis, CLE 2 2 0 Johnson, TEN 2 2 0 Marc. Lewis, JAC 2 0 2 Moreno, DEN 2 2 0 Tolbert, SND 2 2 0

PAT 7-7 1-1 3-3 2-2 2-2 8-8 4-4 4-4 6-6 5-5

Rackers, HOU J. Reed, PIT Nugent, CIN Folk, NYJ Janikowski, OAK Vinatieri, IND Scobee, JAC Succop, KAN Prater, DEN Bironas, TEN

West Virginia 31, Maryland 17 Georgia Tech 30, North Carolina 24 Virginia Tech 49, East Carolina 27 Alabama 62, Duke 13 Florida St. 34, BYU 10 Auburn 27, Clemson 24 (OT) Stanford 68, Wake Forest 24

Thursday, Sept. 23 Miami at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Saturday, Sept. 25 N.C. State at Georgia Tech, noon (ESPN) Florida International at Maryland, noon (ESPNU) Virginia Tech at Boston College, noon VMI at Virginia, 1:30 p.m. Army at Duke, 3 p.m. North Carolina at Rutgers, 3:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Wake Forest at Florida State, 3:30 p.m. (ABC, WXLV, Ch. 45)

Saturday, Oct. 2 Duke at Maryland, 6 p.m. East Carolina at North Carolina, 3:30 p.m. Georgia Tech at Wake Forest, 7 p.m. Notre Dame at Boston College, 8 p.m. Virginia Tech at N.C. State, TBD Florida State at Virginia, TBD Miami at Clemson, TBD

FG 5-6 7-9 6-6 5-5 5-7 2-2 3-3 3-3 2-2 2-2

LG 49 52 54 49 41 38 48 35 54 43

Pts 22 22 21 17 17 14 13 13 12 11

PREPS

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Junior varsity Volleyball SW Randolph def. Ledford, 25-8, 25-8

Records: Ledford 6-6, 2-1 Next game: Ledford plays at West Davidson today at 4:30 p.m.

Central Davidson def. East Davidson, 25-23, 15-25, 25-23 Leaders: East – Michaela Everhart 8 kills; Addie Grubb 4 kills; Taylor McPhatter 3 kills Records: East – 1-10, 0-2 CCC 2A Next game: East plays host to West Davidson on Thursday

Leaders: Wesleyan – Hayden Harris (3 aces, 9 digs, 10 assists); Hannah Reece (4 aces, 7 kills): Olivia Harrell (7 digs) and Hayley Jones (13 digs) Records: Wesleyan 6-3 Next game: Wesleyan hosts Grace Academy on Friday

Tennis HPCA 5, Summitt 4

NFC individual leaders Week 2 Quarterbacks

Att Com Yds Cutler, CHI 64 44 649 Vick, PHL 58 37 459 Brees, NOR 74 55 491 Freeman, TAM 52 29 360 Rodgers, GBY 60 38 443 McNabb, WAS 70 43 597 M. Ryan, ATL 76 48 477 E. Manning, NYG54 33 424 Romo, DAL 98 65 656 Hasselbeck, SEA58 38 403

TD 5 3 3 4 4 1 3 5 2 3

Int 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 4 2 4

LG 23 80t 39 23 46t 20 31 30 20 11

TD 1 2 1 0 4 1 0 2 0 1

LG 30 24 17 75t 23 89t 41 39 15 33

TD 1 1 0 1 1 3 0 2 0 1

Rushers Att A. Peterson, MIN47 Hightower, ARI 24 Bradshaw, NYG 37 S. Jackson, STL 41 L. McCoy, PHL 23 Gore, SNF 37 Vick, PHL 18 Snelling, ATL 26 C. Williams, TAM 49 P. Thomas, NOR 37

Yds 232 169 165 156 155 150 140 133 126 117

Avg 4.94 7.04 4.46 3.80 6.74 4.05 7.78 5.12 2.57 3.16

Receivers No Austin, DAL 20 R. White, ATL 20 Sa. Moss, WAS 16 Best, DET 14 Gore, SNF 13 Forte, CHI 12 Ve. Davis, SNF 12 M. Clayton, STL 12 P. Thomas, NOR 11 Shiancoe, MIN 10

Yds 288 189 166 170 101 188 151 143 72 162

Avg 14.4 9.5 10.4 12.1 7.8 15.7 12.6 11.9 6.5 16.2

Punters No 13 12 12 11 7 8 9 10 11 9

Donn. Jones, STL Rocca, PHL N. Harris, DET Morstead, NOR J. Ryan, SEA Dodge, NYG Kluwe, MIN Bidwell, WAS Be. Graham, ARI A. Lee, SNF

Yds 644 590 547 496 314 357 398 439 482 390

LG 63 63 66 58 56 62 50 52 62 54

Avg 49.5 49.2 45.6 45.1 44.9 44.6 44.2 43.9 43.8 43.3

LG 62t 17 28 43 10 23 17 16 17 9

TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Punt Returners D. Bryant, DAL Weems, ATL Munnerlyn, CAR R. Bush, NOR T. Williams, GBY Spurlock, TAM Logan, DET P. Adams, SNF Amendola, STL Komar, ARI

No 4 3 5 6 4 6 5 4 4 5

Yds Avg 77 19.3 37 12.3 46 9.2 50 8.3 32 8.0 45 7.5 37 7.4 29 7.3 28 7.0 31 6.2

Singles winners: HPCA – Meredith Field, Andrea Lo, Meredith Yates Doubles winners: HPCA – Lo-Caroline Giles; Field-Olivia Burns Records: HPCA – 3-3 Next game: HPCA plays at FCD on Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Wesleyan 7, FCD 2 Singles winners: WCA – Isabelle Morgan, Halle Pugh, Katie Ritter, Amber Flannigan, Sydney Parker Doubles winners: WCA – Morgan-Pugh, Lorin Bell-Beth Shepherd Records: WCA 5-0 Next game: WCA plays at Charlotte Country Day on Friday

Soccer Wesleyan 5, Forsyth Country Day 0 Goals: Wesleyan - Kirby Robinson (2), Eli VonCannon, Nick Cebelero, Joe Dixon Assists: Wesleyan - Mateo Bufio (2), Landon Hill, Ree Kirsh Goalies: Wesleyan - Alex Cook (3 saves) Records: Wesleyan 6-1-1 Next game: Wesleyan plays Forsyth Home Educators at Sara Lee Park in Winston-Salem on Monday at 5 p.m.

Middle school Volleyball Wesleyan def. FCD 25-9, 25-8 Leaders: WCA – Madison Martell 16 aces; Christine Mulligan 4 aces; Sarah Elizabeth Jordan 4 aces Records: WCA 5-3 Next game: WCA plays at Greensboro Day on Friday at 4 p.m.

HPCA def. GDS 25-9, 25-22 Leaders: HPCA – Amanda Connette 13 aces; Taylor Brooks 4 aces Records: HPCA 9-1 Next game: HPCA plays at Forsyth Country Day on Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Burlington Day def. Westchester, 25-12, 25-16 Leaders: WCDS – Kayla Watson 4 kills, Campbell Kinley 12 assists Records: WCDS 1-4 Next game: WCDS at Caldwell, Thursday, 4:30 p.m.

Soccer Westchester 1, FCD 1

Kickoff Returners No J. Nelson, GBY 7 Thomas, WAS 5 Gilyard, STL 6 Roby, NOR 6 J. Norwood, ATL 4 Owsu-Ansh, DAL 6 Washington, SEA 3 Spurlock, TAM 3 D. Manning, CHI 5 Logan, DET 8

Yds 217 142 152 151 97 144 71 68 113 177

Avg 31.0 28.4 25.3 25.2 24.3 24.0 23.7 22.7 22.6 22.1

LG 51 42 34 35 34 40 41 30 30 32

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Scoring Touchdowns TD Rush Rec Best, DET 5 4 1 L. McCoy, PHL 4 4 0 H. Nicks, NYG 4 0 4 Forte, CHI 3 0 3 Snelling, ATL 3 2 1 M. Clayton, STL 2 0 2 Driver, GBY 2 0 2 Gore, SNF 2 1 1 Hasselbeck, SEA 2 2 0 Hightower, ARI 2 2 0

Ret 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pts 30 24 24 18 18 12 12 12 12 12

LG 49

Pts 20

Kicking M. Bryant, ATL

PAT 5-5

FG 5-6

HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Assigned F Rob Flick, F Byron Froese, F Mirko Hoefflin, F Phillipe Paradis and G Kent Simpson to their junior clubs. Assigned G Joe Palmer to Rockford (AHL). Released F Steele Boomer and D Dallas Jackson. COLORADO AVALANCHE — Returned C Joey Hishon to Owen Sound (OHL). NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Signed LW Nino Niederreiter to a three-year contract. OTTAWA SENATORS — Reassigned LW Jakub Culek to Rimouski (QMJHL) and RW Mark Stone to Brandon (WHL). SAN JOSE SHARKS — Signed G J.P. Anderson, F Curt Gogol and F Michael Sgarbossa. WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Signed D Tom Poti to a two-year contract and G Brandon Anderson to a three-year contract.

American Hockey League GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS — Named Kelli Bytwork community relations and corporate sales assistant.

ECHL IDAHO STEELHEADS — Signed F Mark Derlago. READING ROYALS — Signed F Walker Wintoneak.

SOCCER Women’s Professional Soccer CHICAGO RED STARS — Released F Cristiane.

Wesleyan def. Forsyth Country Day 25-14, 23-25, 25-18

Kicking

NFL — Fined Baltimore coach John Harbaugh $15,000 for impermissible verbal and physical contact with an official during Sunday’s game against Cincinnati. Fined N.Y. Giants RB Brandon Jacobs $10,000 for tossing his helmet into the stands during Sunday’s game against Indianapolis. Suspended Houston OT Duane Brown four games for violating the NFL’s policy on performance-enhancing drugs. ARIZONA CARDINALS — Signed LB Alex Hall. Released LB Cyril Oboizor. Released LB Curtis Gatewood from their practice squad. ATLANTA FALCONS — Placed RB Jerious Norwood on injured reserve. Signed RB Gartrell Johnson III to the active roster and RB Shawnbrey McNeal to the practice squad. Released LB Bear Woods from the practice squad. BUFFALO BILLS — Signed RB Andre Anderson to their practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Placed LB Kaluka Maiava on injured reserve. Re-signed LB Titus Brown from Denver’s practice squad. DENVER BRONCOS — Waived RB Lance Ball. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Signed QB Todd Bouman. Placed QB Luke McCown on injured reserve. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Signed RB Joique Bell from Buffalo’s practice squad. Released WR Hank Baskett. Released S Chip Vaughn and RB Martell Mallett from their practice squad. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Released RB Larry Johnson.

N.C. State 30, Cincinnati 19

Saturday, Sept. 18

NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE OFFENSE

First Period—1, Florida, Gudbranson 1 (Matthias), 3:45. 2, Florida, Santorelli 1 (Garrison, Callahan), 4:56 (pp). 3, Florida, Timmins 1 (Dadonov, Gudbranson), 5:39. Penalties— Duco, Fla (goaltender interference), 2:56; Ruutu, Car (interference), 3:41; Bowman, Car (tripping), 7:05. Second Period—4, Carolina, Babchuk 1 (O’Sullivan, Kostopoulos), 3:44 (sh). Penalties—Nash, Car (hooking), 2:03; Ellerby, Fla (hooking), 8:43; Dadonov, Fla (holding), 17:28. Third Period—5, Florida, Paetsch 1 (Dadonov, Callahan), 9:44. Penalties—Timmins, Fla (hooking), 2:50; Santorelli, Fla (high-sticking), 6:42; Grant, Fla, double minor (roughing), 9:44; Gleason, Car (roughing), 9:44. Shots on Goal—Florida 13-9-2—24. Carolina 11-10-13—34.

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Tennessee Baltimore Miami Pittsburgh San Diego Oakland N.Y. Jets Cleveland Indianapolis Cincinnati Denver Buffalo Kansas City New England Jacksonville Houston

Today’s Games

Panthers 4, Hurricanes 1

TRIVIA QUESTION

DEFENSE

Detroit at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Ottawa at Toronto, 7 p.m. Washington at Columbus, 7 p.m. Boston at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Tampa Bay, 8 p.m. St. Louis at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at Colorado, 9 p.m. Edmonton at Vancouver, 10 p.m. San Jose at Anaheim, 10 p.m.

Marlins 5, Mets 2 New York

7 1 0 2 0 1 1

National League

New Orleans San Francisco

Tuesday’s Games

Tuesday’s Games

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 2

Away 39-36 41-34 31-43 31-44 24-51

Florida 4, St. Louis 0 Philadelphia 3, Atlanta 1 Houston 8, Washington 2 Cincinnati 5, Milwaukee 2

Kansas City 9, Detroit 6 N.Y. Yankees 8, Tampa Bay 3 Toronto 5, Seattle 3 Baltimore at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. Texas at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

ab Greene 2b 4 Craig rf 3 TMiller p 0 Miles 2b 1 Pujols 1b 4 Hollidy lf 4 YMolin c 4 Rasms cf 4 P.Feliz 3b 3 MBggs p 0 DReyes p 0 Schmkr ph 1 Westrk p 1 Mather ph-rf Jay ph 1 B.Ryan ss 3 Winn ph 1 Totals 36

Home 45-30 42-32 51-24 42-33 35-40

NATIONAL LEAGUE Monday’s Games

Detroit 7, Kansas City 5 N.Y. Yankees 8, Tampa Bay 6 Baltimore 4, Boston 2 Minnesota 9, Cleveland 3 Oakland 3, Chicago White Sox 0 L.A. Angels 7, Texas 4

St. Louis

Str W-1 L-1 L-1 W-1 L-3

BASEBALL American League

Goals: WCDS – Daniel Vogler Assists: WCDS – Ryan Eskew Goalies: WCDS – Michael Buckland 2 saves Records: WCDS 4-1-2 Next game: WCDS plays Friday at 4 p.m. at Greensboro Day School

HPCA 1, Greensboro Day 1 Goals: HPCA – Bailey Allred Goalies: HPCA – H. Labban Records: HPCA 4-4-2 Next game: HPCA visits Forsyth Country Day on Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Softball Archdale-Trinity 14, Randleman 1 Winning pitcher: Morgan Halo, zero earned runs in five innings Leading hitters: Archdale-Trinity – Katie Bailiff 3-5, 2B, 4 RBIs; Halo 2-4, 2B, 3 RBIs; Nicole Hunter 2-3, 2B; Somer Stout 1-3, 2 RBIs; Rumor Buchanon 1-3, 2B Records: Achdale-Trinity 3-0 Next game: Archdale-Trinity plays host to SWR on Thursday at 4:15 p.m.

TENNIS

-

At Metz, France

ATP World Tour Open de Moselle Tuesday At Les Arenes de Metz Purse: $587,500 (WT250) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Xavier Malisse, Belgium, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 7-6 (3), 6-4. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, def. Benjamin Becker, Germany, 6-3, 7-6 (2). Paul-Henri Mathieu, France, def. Adrian Mannarino, France, 6-3, 6-3. Mischa Zverev, Germany, def. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 6-3, 6-2. Gilles Simon (8), France, def. Dustin Brown, Jamaica, 6-3, 6-4. Philipp Kohlschreiber (6), Germany, def. Thomas Fabbiano, Italy, 6-4, 6-3.

Doubles First Round Eric Butorac, United States, and Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands Antilles, def. Thierry Ascione and Marc Gicquel, France, 7-6 (7), 3-6, 10-6 tiebreak. Colin Fleming and Ken Skupski, Britain, def. Arnaud Clement and Nicolas Mahut, France, 7-6 (7), 6-4. Richard Gasquet and Edouard RogerVasselin, France, def. Johan Brunstrom, Sweden, and Christopher Kas (4), Germany, 3-6, 6-1, 10-1 tiebreak.

At Bucharest, Romania

ATP World Tour BCR Open Romania Tuesday At Progresul BNR Arenas Purse: $548,600 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round

Jeremy Chardy (8), France, def. Guillaume Rufin, France, 6-0, 6-2. Tobias Kamke, Germany, def. Fabio Fognini, Italy, 6-3, 7-5. Pablo Andujar, Spain, def. Maximo Gonzalez, Argentina, 6-3, 6-4. Simone Vagnozzi, Italy, def. Marius Copil, Romania, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Carlos Berlocq, Argentina, def. Daniel Gimeno-Traver (5), Spain, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6 (4). Simon Greul, Germany, def. Michal Przysiezny, Poland, 6-3, 6-4. Victor Crivoi, Romania, def. Santiago Ventura, Spain, 6-4, 6-0. Bjorn Phau, Germany, def. Alberto Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, 1-6, 6-4, 6-0. Marcel Granollers, Spain, def. Victor Hanescu (6), Romania, 2-6, 6-2, 6-1. Adrian Ungur, Romania, vs. Andreas Seppi (7), Italy, 3-6, 7-6 (6), 6-4.

Doubles First Round Daniele Bracciali and Potito Starace, Italy, def. Fabio Fognini, Italy, and Albert Montanes, Spain, 6-2, 6-1. Leos Friedl, Czech Republic, and Filip Polasek, Slovakia, def. Daniel Gimeno-Traver and Pere Riba, Spain, 7-6 (6), 6-0. Juan Ignacio Chela, Argentina, and Lukasz Kubot (3), Poland, def. Tomasz Bednarek and Michal Przysiezny, Poland, 6-3, 7-5. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, and David Marrero (4), Spain, lead Carlos Berlocq and Maximo Gonzalez, Argentina, 6-3, 1-1, susp., darkness.

At Tashkent, Uzbekistan

WTA Tour Tashkent Open Results Tuesday At Dynamo Tennis Club Purse: $220,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Alexandra Dulgheru (1), Romania, def. Kurumi Nara, Japan, 6-2, 7-5. Monica Niculescu (5), Romania, def. Zarina Diyas, Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-2. Jill Craybas, United States, def. Ksenia Palkina, Kyrgyzstan, 6-2, 6-3. Olga Savchuk, Ukraine, def. Nadejda Guskova, Russia, 6-2, 6-2. Magdalena Rybarikova (6) Slovakia, def. Sabina Sharipova, Uzbekistan, 6-3, 6-3. Anna Chakvetadze (3), Russia, def. Zuzana Kucova, Slovakia, 6-3, 7-5. Maria Elena Camerin (8), Italy, def. Elena Bovina, Russia, 6-0, 3-6, 6-4. Alexandra Panova, Russia, def. Nina Bratchikova, Russia, 6-4, 6-4. Darya Kustova, Belarus, def. Nigina Abduraimova, Uzbekistan, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3. Ekaterina Bychkova, Russia, def. Sania Mirza, India, 6-1, 4-6, 7-5. Alla Kudryavtseva (7), Russia, def. Yuliana Fedak, Ukraine, 6-4, 6-1. Akgul Amanmuradova (2), Uzbekistan, def. Eirini Georgatou, Greece, 6-4, 6-3.

Doubles First Round Arina Rodionova, Russia, and Olga Savchuk, Ukraine, def. Alina Abdurakhimova and Lola Azimova, Uzbekistan, 6-0, 6-0. Mariya Kondratieva, Russia, and Sophie Lefevre (4), France, def. Ekaterina Dzehalevich, Belarus, and Lesya Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 7-5. Evgeniya Rodina, Russia, and Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, def. Nina Bratchikova and Ekaterina Ivanova, Russia, 5-7, 6-4, 10-7 tiebreak.

TRIVIA ANSWER

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A. Arizona State.


PREP FOOTBALL THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com

3C

High school football rewind ---

Piedmont Triad 4A

HP Central Ragsdale SW Guilford East Forsyth NW Guilford Parkland Glenn

Conf. Over. 0-0 4-1 0-0 4-1 0-0 3-1 0-0 3-2 0-0 3-2 0-0 2-3 0-0 0-5

Friday’s results

HP Central 33, Andrews 0 Ragsdale 52, Person 7 Reagan 24, Glenn 14 E. Forsyth 34, R.J. Reynolds 27 (2-OT) NW Guilford 30, Grimsley 8 Carver 35, Parkland 31 Friday’s games East Forsyth at HP Central SW Guilford at Reynolds Parkland at Ragsdale NW Guilford at Glenn Parkland at Carver

Mid-Piedmont 3A Conf. Over. SW Randolph 0-0 4-1 S. Guilford 0-0 2-2 Asheboro 0-0 2-3 Ledford 0-0 1-3 NE Guilford 0-0 1-3 N. Forsyth 0-0 0-5 Friday’s results W. Davidson 13, Ledford 10 (OT) S. Guilford 28, W. Guilford 14 Mt. Tabor 28, N. Forsyth 10 Asheboro 35, Trinity 21 SW Randolph 21, Randleman 0 Page 35, NE Guilford 7 Friday’s games Ledford at E. Davidson S. Guilford at Trinity Atkins at N. Forsyth Asheboro at Thomasville Wheatmore at SW Randolph NE Guilford at S. Granville

PAC 6 2A Conf. Over. Carver 0-0 4-1 Randleman 0-0 3-2 T.W. Andrews 0-0 2-3 Wheatmore 0-0 1-4 Atkins 0-0 0-4 Trinity 0-0 0-5 Friday’s results HP Central 33, Andrews 0 E. Davidson 44, Wheatmore 35 Asheboro 35, Trinity 21 Carver 35, Parkland 31 SW Randolph 21, Randleman 0 W. Forsyth 56, Atkins 6 Friday’s games S. Guilford at Trinity Wheatmore at SW Randolph Mt. Tabor at Carver Atkins at N. Forsyth

Central Carolina 2A Conf. Over. Thomasville 0-0 5-0 Central Davidson 0-0 4-1 West Davidson 0-0 4-1 Salisbury 0-0 3-2 Lexington 0-0 2-2 East Davidson 0-0 2-3 Last week’s results Thomasville 27, Davie Co. 7 E. Davidson 44, Wheatmore 35 Salisbury 33, N. Rowan 15 W. Davidson 13, Ledford 10 (OT) C. Davidson 46, McMichael 13 This week’s games Asheboro at Thomasville Ledford at E. Davidson Salisbury At Davie Co. N. Davidson at W. Davidson

Northwest 1A/2A Conf. Over. B. McGuinness 1-0 4-0 East Surry 0-0 3-1 North Surry 0-0 3-1 Mount Airy 0-0 2-2 North Stokes 0-0 2-2 West Stokes 0-0 2-2 Surry Central 0-0 1-3 South Stokes 0-1 1-4 Friday’s results Bishop 48, S. Stokes 9 E. Surry 31, Bartlett Yancey 7 Andrews 29, N. Stokes 28 Friday’s games North Surry at Bishop E. Surry at Surry Central N. Stokes at S. Stokes Mt. Airy at W. Stokes

NCISAA Central Piedmont Conf. Over. Westminster (SC) 3-0 3-0 First Assembly 1-0 2-2 SouthLake Chr. 2-1 4-1 Hickory Grove 0-1 3-1 Forsyth CD 0-1 2-2 Christ School 0-1 0-4 HP Christian 0-2 1-4 Friday’s results First Assembly Concord 68, High Point Christian 0 North Edgecombe High 40, Arden Christ School 0 SouthLake Christian 25, Hickory Grove Baptist 20 Friday’s games High Point Christian at Charlotte Providence Day Westminster Catawba (S.C.) at Highland Tech First Assembly Concord at Arden Christ School East Lincoln at Huntersville SouthLake Christian Forsyth Country Day at Hickory Grove Baptist

Bison offense passes tough test PREP FOOTBALL NOTES:

Q

uarterbacks, especially those who tend to throw first and run second, rarely end up with great rushing numbers. For every nice gain, after all, come a few sacks that eat into the positive gains. High Point Central’s Drew Adams proved to be a perfect example of that Friday night. He SPORTS sparked the Bison Steve to a 16Hanf point first ■■■quarter with impressive runs of 24 and 20 yards, but ended the game with just 40 yards in all after being credited with four carries of zero or minus yards. In the aftermath of Central’s surprisingly easy 33-0 romp past T. Wingate Andrews, both Adams and Bison coach Wayne Jones said all the credit for the early QB keepers went to the offensive line. “The line just did a good job blocking, opened up the holes for me,� Adams offered. “I just took what they gave me.� The spread offense allowed Adams plenty of options. On Central’s first drive, he faked an inside handoff and darted around left end for the 24-yard gain that set up first-andgoal. A misfire into the end zone led to Austin Miller’s short field goal. Central jumped ahead 16-0 after Adams again used a great fake to his running back for a 20yard gain into the Andrews red zone. Three plays later, Adams was standing in the end zone on a 3-yard run after linemen Greg Aiken, Anderson Spencer, Jawan Hilton, Thomas Primus and Vince Carrono had plowed an open path. “He read the plays, knew what to do after looking at film,� Jones said of his quarterback. “He did a good job.� The big guys up front also provided plenty of time for Adams to throw. The senior QB hit on 12 straight completions during one stretch over the first and second quarters and ended the half 16for-22 for 193 yards. “It goes to the offensive line,� Jones said. “They did a good job of picking up blitzes, keep-

CASH FOR GOLD

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PREP FOOTBALL POLLS

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RALEIGH – The Associated Press state high school football poll for the week of Sept. 21, first-place votes in parentheses, records and total points as voted upon by a statewide panel of prep sports writers:

Class 4A 1. Matthews Butler (16) (4-0) 169 1 2. Mallard Creek (1) (4-0) 148 2 3. Fayetteville Britt (5-0) 122 3 4. Richmond County (4-1) 97 5 5. Durham Hillside (5-0) 87 9 6. Wake Forest-Rolesville (5-0) 86 6 7. Asheville Reynolds (3-1) 75 7 8. Harnett Central (5-0) 59 8 9. Mount Tabor (4-1) 29 10 10. Greensboro Dudley (4-1) 26 4 Others receiving votes: New Bern 9, Lumberton 8, Scotland County 7, West Forsyth 6, Greensboro Smith 3, West Charlotte 2, Indian Trail Porter Ridge 1, Ragsdale 1.

Class 3A 1. West Rowan (14) (5-0) 158 1 2. Fayetteville Byrd (1) (5-0) 130 2 3. Charlotte Catholic (1) (5-0) 112 3 4. Shelby Crest (3-0) 99 5 5. Marvin Ridge (5-0) 92 4 6. Lenoir Hibriten (4-1) 73 7 7. Eastern Alamance (4-0) 69 6 8. Lawndale Burns (3-1) 54 9 9. Northern Guilford (3-1) 49 8 10. Asheville (2-1) 22 10 Others receiving votes: South Brunswick 7,

ing him safe the last couple games. When he has time to throw the football, he does a better job than just about anybody here in the area.�

ONE MORE YARD Central’s biggest pass play of the night came on the first play of its second drive. From his own 26-yard line, Adams hit Derek Grant in stride just beyond midfield. The senior receiver cut toward the right sideline and got past two defenders before being tackled by Andrews speed-burner Mark Johnson at the 1-yard line. It was a fleeting moral victory for the Raiders, who saw Adams hit Justin Johnson for the 1-yard TD one play later. “It kind of got things going,� Grant said of the play. “We got a big catch and big run. I was a little down (about not scoring), but it was all right. We scored on the next play.�

TIGER MYSTERY MAN Ragsdale’s running game was supposed to be strong this season with senior D-onovan Smith returning after a 1,400-yard season. And the Tigers have run the ball quite well – just not with Smith these last few weeks. In Friday’s 52-7 romp over Person High, sophomore Marquez Eleazer stole the spotlight. He finished with 19 carries for 147 yards and three touchdowns. Not bad for someone who was supposed to be the starting JV tailback this year.

Southern Nash 5, Northeast Guilford 3, China Grove Carson 3, Charlotte Country Day 2, Waynesville Tuscola 1, Morganton Patton 1.

Class 2A 1. Reidsville (14) (5-0) 164 1 2. SW Edgecombe (3) (5-0) 149 2 3. Tarboro (5-0) 130 3 4. Lincolnton (5-0) 116 4 5. Kinston (5-0) 80 5 6. Polk County (5-0) 66 6 7. Thomasville (5-0) 63 10 8. Boonville Starmount (5-0) 53 7 9. Newton-Conover (4-0) 40 8 10. East Bladen (4-0) 28 Others receiving votes: Winston-Salem Carver 15, Shelby 8, East Duplin 7, South Iredell 5, Carrboro 4, Roanoke Rapids 4, Charlotte Berry Tech 1, Canton Pisgah 1, North Johnston 1,

PREP FOOTBALL LEADERS

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PPG 49.0 28.5 27.4 27.4 27.2 24.0 21.0 20.4 15.4 14.0

DEFENSE (points allowed) Team G PTS Bishop McGuinness 4 31 Southwest Guilford 4 38 Thomasville 5 54 High Point Central 5 81 Ragsdale 5 85 T.W. Andrews 5 91 Southern Guilford 4 94 Ledford 4 98 Glenn 5 131 Wheatmore 5 140 East Davidson 5 143 Trinity 5 148 High Point Christian 5 169

PPG 7.8 9.5 10.8 16.2 17.0 18.2 23.5 24.5 26.2 28.0 28.6 29.6 33.8

Class 1A 1. Wallace-Rose Hill (16) (4-0) 160 1 2. Pender County (3-0) 119 3 3. Albemarle (3-1) 115 4 4. Plymouth (4-0) 108 5 5. Southwest Onslow (4-1) 91 2 6. Hendersonville (4-0) 86 7 7. Avery County (4-0) 83 6 8. Hobbton (4-0) 31 9 9. Mt. Airy (2-2) 30 8 10. Bishop McGuinness (4-0) 22 10 Others receiving votes: Williamston Riverside 14, West Montgomery 8, Warsaw Kenan 7, Murphy 3, East Surry 3.

Tigers coach Tommy Norwood explained that Smith suffered a high ankle sprain against Dudley and hasn’t played since that Week 2 defeat. Barry Brown, a senior who ran well in reserve last year, stepped in nicely the two following weeks and is averaging 53 yards rushing per game. But against Person, Brown began to suffer cramping in the second quarter. Welcome, Mr. Eleazer. “It ended up being Marquez and he ended up having a big night,� Norwood said. “He’s not real big – maybe 155 pounds – but he’s got real good quickness and real good vision.� Norwood said Smith likely will return for this week’s Piedmont Triad 4A Conference opener at home against Parkland. So does that mean Eleazer can expect a return to the JV squad? “I think we’ll end up playing with three running backs at this point in time, keep fresh legs,� Norwood said. “He doesn’t say much, he’s just a pretty steady, quiet kid,� Norwood added of the rising star. “He seems to be taking it just like he would if he

was making those yards on Thursday.�

CATCH ’EM IF YOU CAN Area football fans should do all they can to watch their favorite teams this Friday. Following this week’s regular slate of games, a scheduling quirk brings just seven games on Oct. 1 – and only two of those are at home. Bye weeks are on tap for High Point Central, High Point Christian, East Davidson, Thomasville, Trinity and Wheatmore. The only area teams with home games are Andrews (vs. Lexington) and Bishop McGuinness (vs. North Raleigh Christian). Southwest Guilford visits Northwest Guilford, Ragsdale travels to East Forsyth, and Glenn heads to Parkland in a full night for the Piedmont Triad 4A Conference, while two other neighborhood battles take place: Ledford at Central Davidson and Southern Guilford at Randleman. After Oct. 1, each Friday night will feature the regular slate of 10 or 11 games. shanf@hpe.com | 888-3526

Area individual stats RUSHING Player, Sch. J. Rickert, Wheat. J. Hawkins, Glenn D. Greene, Led. Q. Riley, Tville. M. Eleazer, Rags.** C. Campbell, Glenn D. Smith, Rags.*** C. Stout, Trin. T. Warren, East X. Quick, TWA** A. Willis, SWG B. Brown, Rags. A. Fletcher, SWG D. Adams, HPC M. Haywood, SGuil. N. Sgroi, BM L. Edwards, SWG B. Daye, SWG R. Tolley, East L. Monk, HPC R. Kivett, Trin. R. Bridges, SWG M. Baldwin, Rags.** R. Parker, Glenn B. Phillips, Led.

SCORING Player, Sch. TD J. Rickert, Wheat. 10 Q. Riley, Tville. 8 J. Pluciniczak, BM 7 K. Ridenhour, BM 7 N. Sgroi, BM 3 D. Grant, HPC 5 M. DeFrancesco, BM 5 D. Greene, Led. 5 J. Hawkins, Glenn 5 T. Lee, Glenn 5 N. Willett, Trin. 4 L. Hodges, Tville. 0 A. Miller, HPC 0 D. Adams, HPC 4 Q. Butler, SGuil. 4 A. Fletcher, SWG 4 L. Heavner, Rags. 4 T. Butler, SWG 0 C. Campbell, Glenn 3 M. Brandon, SGuil. 0 B. Brown, Rags. 3 B. Daye, SWG 3 O. Milani, BM 3 A. Thompson, SGuil. 3 C. Kapec, Glenn 0

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TD 10 5 5 8 3 3 2 0 2 0 2 3 4 2 2 2 0 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 0

YPG 154.0 141.0 126.0 125.6 80.0 74.8 73.5 67.0 66.2 66.0 60.8 52.8 51.8 47.8 47.8 45.5 42.5 41.8 41.6 41.0 38.4 31.8 26.0 25.6 20.5

YDS 969 855 796 711 396 266 303 269

YPG 242.3 171.0 159.2 142.2 79.2 66.5 60.6 53.8

RECEIVING Player, Sch. REC YDS D. Grant, HPC 33 561 M. Colvin, SGuil. 14 297 T. Lee, Glenn 17 332 L. Monk, HPC 26 309 N. Willett, Trin. 19 275 Q. Butler, SGuil. 8 201 E. Romer, Rags.** 9 142 A. Thompson, SGuil. 15 170 P. Romer, Rags.** 6 115 J. Johnson, Trin. 9 185 A. Stewart, Rags.* 10 147 P. Say, SGuil. 7 127 Q. Johnson, Tville. 9 154 D. Robbins, Trin. 5 90 D. Shouse, Rags.* 11 120 J. Briley, Rags. 11 148 J. Smith, Trin. 14 131 J. Dow, SWG 3 92 B. Dodd, East 2 109 *– Missed one of his team’s games

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Player, Sch. C-A-I TD J. Cunningham, S.Guil. 57-110-3 12 D. Adams, HPC 66-97-5 6 R. Kivett, Trin. 56-124-10 8 L. Heavner, Rags. 53-96-4 5 C. Campbell, Glenn 23-51-1 4 D. Boger, Led. 26-58-3 1 M. Swinton, TWA 29-78-5 3 G. Rains, Wheat. 24-58-7 2

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Area team stats

OFFENSE (points scored) Team G PTS Bishop McGuinness 4 196 Southern Guilford 4 114 High Point Central 5 137 Thomasville 5 137 Ragsdale 5 136 Southwest Guilford 4 96 Glenn 5 105 Wheatmore 5 102 Trinity 5 77 T.W. Andrews 5 70

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TD YPG 3 112.2 2 74.3 5 66.4 1 61.8 4 55.0 4 50.3 1 47.3 3 42.5 1 38.3 2 37.0 1 36.8 1 31.8 0 30.8 1 30.0 0 30.0 1 29.6 1 26.2 0 23.0 1 21.8

PAT FG 0 0 1* 0 3^ 0 0 0 22 0 1^ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 15 4 15 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 4 1* 0 15 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 1

PTS 60 50 48 42 40 32 30 30 30 30 29 27 27 24 24 24 24 21 20 18 18 18 18 18 14

INTERCEPTIONS Player, Sch. G A. Thompson, SGuil. 4 J. Pluciniczak, BM 4 D. Sparks, Rags. 5 T. Sparks, HPC 5 D. Gordon-Hunter, Tville. 5 J. Weavil, East 5 A. Leach, HPC 5 J. Milliken, TWA 5 L. Monk, HPC 5 C. Simmons, Glenn 5

NO. 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2

QUARTERBACK SACKS Player, Sch. G B. Nwokolo, Rags. 5 M. Blanks, HPC 5 R. Davis, Tville. 5 C. Cates, Rags. 5 B. Daye, SWG 4 K. Dunn, Trin. 5 A. Leach, HPC 5 W. Sams, Rags. 5 J. Black, BM 3 B. Banks, SWG 4 A. Copes, HPC 5 G. Desjardins, Rags. 5 P. Douthit, Glenn 5 T. Grimes, Rags. 5 J. Rogers, SWG 4 J. Maness, Glenn 5 B. Primus, HPC 5 J. White, HPC 5 S. Wright, TWA 5 J. Boyd, Tville. 5 D. Lockhart, Glenn 5 A. Jackson, TWA 5 J. Rogers, Tville. 5 A. Butler, SWG 4 M. Haywood, SGuil. 3 T. Judge, SGuil. 3 D. Mitchell, SGuil. 3 R. Pompey, Rags. 4 L. Ogunjobi, Rags. 4 D. Wilson, Tville. 5 J. Wright, TWA 4 T. Pedly, Tville. 4 T. Turman, BM 3

NO. 5.0 4.0 3.5 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5

FUMBLES Player, Sch. G Force Rec. J. White, HPC 5 3 2 T. Judge, SGuil. 4 2 1 D. Robbins, Trin. 5 0 3 A. Taylor, Trin. 5 0 3 C. Clubb, Wheat. 5 0 2 R. Davis, Tville. 5 2 0 B. Primus, HPC 5 0 2 C. Sexton, Trin. 5 2 0 J. Spires, Tville. 5 1 1 A. Thompson, SGuil. 4 0 2 D. White, HPC 5 0 2


PREPS 4C www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Wesleyan Christian Academy’s Morgan Speight follows the flight of the ball during her match at No. 2 singles against Forsyth Country Day on Tuesday afternoon. Speight and the Trojans posted a 6-3 victory.

Tigers tame Bison in volleyball ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

VOLLEYBALL RAGSDALE DEF. HP CENTRAL JAMESTOWN – Ciara Jackson recorded 13 kills and four blocks as Ragsdale downed High Point Central 25-17, 25-13, 25-12 on Tuesday night. Morgan Hooks added 10 kills and two blocks for the Tigers (9-4, 4-2 PTC 4A Conference). Kathryn Carter had 22 assists for Ragsdale, which plays host to Parkland on Thursday.

LEDFORD DEF. SW RANDOLPH FARMER – Cady Ray recorded 16 assists, 10 service points, five kills and three aces as Ledford nipped Southwestern Randolph 14-25, 23-25, 25-23, 25-14 and 15-11 on Tuesday. Kaitlyn Otey finished with 15 service points, five kills and four aces for the Panthers (13-1, 30 Mid-Piedmont 3A Conference). Stevi Williams had 11 service points and three aces for Ledford, while Chloe Barnes had 11 kills and six blocks. Madelynn Leonard had five blocks for the Panthers. Ledford plays at West Davidson on Thursday.

CENTRAL DAVIDSON DEF. EAST DAVIDSON LEXINGTON – Central Davidson outlasted East Davidson 25-7, 22-25, 2522, 25-18 on Tuesday. Chelsea Turner collected nine kills for the Golden Eagles (2-11, 2-1 CCC 2A). Brooke Bame had six kills for East.

WESLEYAN DEF. FORSYTH COUNTRY DAY HIGH POINT – Taylor White came up with 12

digs, seven kills and 26 assists to help Wesleyan Christian Academy sweep Forsyth Country Day 25-15, 25-21, 25-17 in a PACIS match on Tuesday. Other leaders for the Trojans included Taylor Bailey with seven kills, Bernetta Moore with 15 kills and Laura Hansen with 22 digs. Welseyan (17-3, 4-0 PACIS) hosts Raleigh St. Mary’s on Friday.

NORTH STOKES DEF. BISHOP KERNERSVILLE – North Stokes secured a 25-8, 25-12, 25-9 victory over Bishop McGuinness on Tuesday night. Lauren Cushing led the Villains (5-9) with six kills, five blocks, four digs and two aces. Jeanine Mason added four aces, four digs and two kills for Bishop, while Katie Davis dished 28 assists to go with four digs, an ace and a kill. Megan O’Connell had three blocks and two aces, while Stephanie deGuzman added three kills, three digs and two aces. North improved to 10-5.

SOUTHERN GUILFORD DEF. ASHEBORO ASHEBORO – Southern Guilford bounced back from an opening 25-21 defeat to beat Asheboro three straight – 25-17, 2520, 25-12 – in Tuesday’s Mid-Piedmont 3A Conference match. Audrey Earnhardt had 18 assists to lead the Storm, while Peyton Daly led the defense with 27 digs. Rachel Earnhardt picked up 19 kills, seven blocks and seven aces, while Karley Hyatt added seven kills and four blocks. Southern (8-3, 2-1 MPC) welcomes Southwestern

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Randolph on Thursday.

SW GUILFORD 3, RAGSDALE 0

ELON SCHOOL DEF. WESTCHESTER

HIGH POINT – Andrew Daniel, Stephen McDaniel and Christian Olds each scored a goal as Southwest Guilford stopped Ragsdale 3-0 in a Piedmont Triad 4A Conference match Tuesday. The Cowboys led 1-0 at the half thanks to Daniel’s goal. Casey Bolt and Daniel were credited with assists. Southwest keeper Danny Gillespie snared six saves on nine shots. Southwest (6-1-5, 1-1 PTC) goes to Glenn on Thursday.

ELON – The Elon School topped Westchester Country Day School 25-9, 25-19, 25-20 on Tuesday. The Wildcats fell to 85 and play host to Salem Baptist on Thursday.

SOCCER WESTCHESTER 7, ELON SCHOOL 1 ELON – Jose Valencia scored two goals as Westchester Country Day School rolled past Elon School for a 7-1 victory on Tuesday. Tyler Fairly, Kevin Permenter, Matt Crooker, Juan Urema and Walker Rose added one goal each for the Wildcats (9-2). Angel Valencia dished two assists for ECDS, while Lasse Palomaki, Tyler Thompson and Rose had one each. Dylan Gaffney and Ben Bruggeworth split time in Wildcat goal and combined for two saves. Westchester plays host to Carolina Friends on Thursday at 6 p.m.

WESLEYAN 2, FORSYTH COUNTRY DAY 0 HIGH POINT – Mitchell Tobon scored both goals as Wesleyan stopped Forsyth Country Day 2-0 in PACIS action on Tuesday. Tobon notched his first goal in the 20th minutes and the second one in the 56th minute to help the Trojans improve to 4-2-1 and 4-0-1 in the PACIS. Cole Manring and Matt Rickman were credited with assists. Chase Kinney preserved the shutout by snaring seven saves in goal. Wesleyan hosts the Christ School of Asheville on Friday.

in 27:42. Caroline Harrison was 15th in 30 flat, while Maria Ferrell was 27th in 32:17 and Holly Wall was 36th in 35:17.

ran its record to 9-0 overall and 3-0 in the Triad Athletic Conference with Tuesday’s 9-0 sweep of Carolina Friends. The Wildcats took singles points with Katie Rice, Kristen McDowell, Taylor Freeman, Erica Sawyer, Olivia Greeson and Alex Simpson. The doubles teams of RiceMcDowell, Freeman-Sawyer, and Greeson-Simpson finished off Carolina Friends. Westchester visits The Elon School today.

GOLF AT BRYAN PARK HIGH POINT – Lilly Crane of Ragsdale tied Morgan Cranford of Grimsley for medalist honors at the Guilford Country Invitational on Tuesday. They shot four-over 76s at Bryan Park. Northern Guilford carded a 249 total for a one-shot victory over the Tigers. Page was third at 263, followed by Northwest Guilford (266), Grimsley (267) and Southwest Guilford (308). Savannah Mackey (79) and Victoria Edwards (95) were the other counting scorers for Ragsdale. Sarah Adams led Southwest with an 89.

CROSS COUNTRY AT WEST MONTGOMERY

TENNIS BISHOP MCGUINNESS 6, NORTH STOKES 3 KERNERSVILLE – Bishop McGuinness won five of the six singles matches and tripped North Stokes 6-3 in a Northwest 1A/2A match on Tuesday. Marie Petrangeli, Megan McDowell, Adiare Hudson, Anna Komsa and Maribelle Copley were the singles winners for the Villains, who got a doubles triumph from Petrangeli and Hudson.

WESLEYAN 6, FORSYTH CD 3 HIGH POINT – Wesleyan Christian Academy took two doubles matches to clinch a 6-3 victory over Forsyth Country Day on Tuesday, Singles winners for the Trojans included Ginny Brodd, Morgan Speight, Morgan Allred and Dakota Griffin. Brodd and Speight got one of the doubles wins. Allred and Griffin took the other. Wesleyan is 3-3.

WESTCHESTER 9, CAROLINA FRIENDS 0 HIGH POINT – Westchester Country Day School

MOUNT GILEAD – West Montgomery’s boys and South Stanly’s girls took victories in five-team meets on Tuesday. West’s boys won with 46 points, followed by South Stanly at 48, North Rowan at 79, South Davidson at 102 and Albemarle at 120. South Stanly’s girls prevailed with 26 points, followed by West Montgomery at 51, South Davidson at 99, Albemarle at 102 and North Rowan at 143. South Stanly’s Alex Thompson won the boys race in 17:47. For the Wildcat boys, Corby Chappell placed fifth in 19:12, while Dylan Lackey took 13th in 21:09, Charlie Beam was 19th in 22:20, Taylor Hatfield was 32nd in 23:01 and Caleb Ward was 44th in 25:02. In the girls race, Erin Thompson of South Stanly prevailed in 22:03. For South Davidson’s girls, Callin Loflin placed ninth in 27:36, with teammate Abbie Hedrick 12th

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SPORTS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com

Halladay wins 20th; Phils trip Braves THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHILADELPHIA – Roy Halladay became Philadelphia’s first 20-game winner in 28 years, Jayson Werth hit a three-run homer and the Phillies increased their lead in the NL East to five games with their ninth straight win, 5-3 over the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday night. Halladay (20-10) allowed three runs and seven hits in seven innings to reach 20 wins for the third time in his career. Hall of Famer Steve Carlton was the last to do it for the Phillies when he won 23 in 1982. Robin Roberts, another Hall of Famer, was the last right-hander to win 20 for Philadelphia, in 1955. The two-time defending NL champions are 43-15 since July 21, when they trailed the Braves by seven games. They

YANKEES 8, RAYS 3

NASCAR warns RCR on Bowyer’s Chase-clinching Richmond car CHARLOTTE (AP) – NASCAR warned Richard Childress Racing that Clint Bowyer’s car came close to failing inspection after his Chase-clinching drive at Richmond. NASCAR scheduled a Tuesday meeting with RCR officials to go over the No. 33 Chevrolet and determine if the team had not made a mistake in its own calculations. “They were in the box, but getting close to some of the tolerances and we asked them to come in to see if they aren’t getting off on one of their build sheets,� NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton told The Associated Press. “We have had their cars in quite a bit, and they were always spoton. This one just seemed to be different, and we felt we owed it to them to make sure they just aren’t off in one area.� Bowyer’s car was chosen by NASCAR for random inspection following his sixth-place finish at the Sept. 11 race. The run gave him the 12th and final spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, which began Sunday in New Hampshire.

Bowyer won the opener to vault from 12th in the standings to second, and he’s in the thick of the championship hunt. But as his team celebrated the victory, rival teams began to gossip about a potential problem with Bowyer’s car from the week before. NASCAR on Tuesday confirmed that once the car got back to its North Carolina research and development center, it was discovered that the back end of the Chevrolet was very close to the mandated tolerance levels. NASCAR still has the car in its possession, and won’t give it back to RCR until the team meets with the sanctioning body. But Pemberton shot down speculation that RCR was given a pass because NASCAR didn’t want to spoil the build up to the Chase opener. Even if Bowyer’s car had failed inspection, it wouldn’t have changed the Chase field. The penalty for failed inspections runs anywhere from 50-to-100 points, and Bowyer had a 142-point cushion over Ryan Newman at the end of the Richmond race.

Charlotte Motor Speedway plans huge video board ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

CONCORD – Charlotte Motor Speedway officials announced the world’s largest high-definition video board is to be installed at the track in a partnership with Panasonic. At 200 feet wide, standing 80 feet tall and weighing 165,000 pounds, the video board will cover 16,000 square feet and be located along the backstretch of the legendary superspeedway. Fans seated throughout the frontstretch from Turn 4 to Turn 1 will have clear

DA: Jets’ Edwards admitted drinks before DWI stop

are 17-3 in September. The Phillies reduced their magic number to clinch the division to six. Atlanta’s Freddie Freeman hit his first major league homer, a solo shot off Halladay in the seventh. Freeman was 1 for 13 before he connected.

NEW YORK – Nick Swisher homered off James Shields to key a five-run burst in the first inning and the New York Yankees beat Tampa Bay 8-3 on Tuesday night, opening a 21⠄2game lead over the Rays in the AL East. The Yankees cut their magic number for clinching a playoff spot to four over Boston. The Red Sox played Baltimore Tuesday night. New York has won the first two in this fourgame series.

viewing angles of the gigantic board that will feature 720P high-definition visuals illuminated by more than nine million LED lamps. In addition to the live race coverage, the video board will provide fans with interactive entertainment, continuous leaderboard updates, sponsor information and instant replays. Construction will begin on the video board following the Oct. 13-16 Bank of America 500 Week at Charlotte Motor Speedway and is scheduled to be complete by April, 2011.

AP FILE

Michael Vick is all smiles in this 2009 file photo. Eagles coach Andy Reid has named Vick the starting quarterback for Sunday’s game at Jacksonville.

Vick named Eagles’ starting quarterbacks PHILADELPHIA (AP) – Michael Vick’s impressive play earned him a starting job. Vick will take over as the Philadelphia Eagles’ No. 1 quarterback, coach Andy Reid said Tuesday, a day after he announced he would go back to Kevin Kolb. “When someone is playing at the level Michael Vick is playing, you have to give him an opportunity,� Reid said. “This isn’t about Kevin Kolb’s play. You’re talking about Michael Vick as one the best quarterbacks

in the NFL right now.� Kolb missed the last six quarters because of a concussion, and Vick played well in his absence. Kolb was cleared to practice and was expected to run the first-team offense today. “Kevin is fine. It’s not an injury-related issue,� Reid said. Vick threw for 175 yards and one touchdown and ran for 103 yards in a 27-20 season-opening loss to Green Bay. He had 284 yards passing and two TDs in a 35-32 win at Detroit on Sunday.

SAINTS’ BUSH HAS BROKEN FIBULA

---

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – Reggie Bush has a broken right fibula which is not expected to be season ending, though the injury could sideline him about six weeks, a person familiar with the injury said Tuesday. The Saints had Tuesday off after returning early in the morning from their 25-22 Monday night victory at San Francisco. Saints spokesman Greg Bensel said Tuesday there were no planned updates on Bush’s injury from the team.

Texans’ Brown receives 4-game drug suspension HOUSTON (AP) – Houston left tackle Duane Brown was suspended for four games Tuesday for violating the NFL’s policy on performance enhancing drugs, joining

Texans linebacker Brian Cushing on the sideline for the same offense. Brown, the Texans’ first-round draft choice in 2008, said he would not appeal the suspension.

Falcons’ Norwood out for season with knee injury ATLANTA (AP) – The Atlanta Falcons placed backup running back Jerious Norwood on seasonending injured reserve on Tuesday because of a knee injury, forcing the team to make two moves to add depth. Norwood was Michael Turner’s top backup be-

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NEW YORK (AP) – New York Jets star wide receiver Braylon Edwards told a police officer he’d been partying and drinking before being pulled over in his luxury SUV, but he suggested letting him leave the car and go home, prosecutors said as he was arraigned Tuesday on drunken-driving charges. A solemn Edwards was released without bail in a case that could compound his legal troubles while he’s on probation after a fracas in Cleveland last year. He declined to discuss the drunken-driving arrest as he left a Manhattan courthouse, thronged by reporters. “There will be plenty of time to talk. I’ll address everybody,� said Edwards, wearing a black T-shirt and fashionably torn gray jeans. Defense lawyer Peter M. Frankel said Edwards was exhausted and focused on getting back to his team. “Obviously, this is very difficult for him,� Frankel said. “Without question, absolutely, he

understands the seriousness of the situation, and he is committed to getting back on the football field and doing what he does best for the Jets.� A breath test showed Edwards had a bloodalcohol level twice the legal limit after he was stopped on Manhattan’s West Side around 5 a.m. Tuesday, prosecutors said. Chief police spokesman Paul Browne said officers on the lookout for such violations as overly tinted windows stopped Edwards because his Land Rover’s windows were too dark and then noticed a strong smell of alcohol. Authorities said there were four other people in the SUV, and the Jets confirmed Tuesday that starting left tackle D’Brickashaw Ferguson and defensive end Vernon Gholston were among them. Neither of those players was charged. Edwards told an officer he’d had “a couple of drinks,� the last about an hour before, assistant district attorney Alyssa Gunther said.

Steelers’ QB Dixon needs knee surgery PITTSBURGH (AP) – The Steelers’ starting quarterback Sunday at Tampa Bay will be a player who was cut last weekend or another who was all but ignored during training camp. No matter, coach Mike Tomlin said, either Byron Leftwich or Charlie Batch will be expected to play well enough to win until Ben Roethlisberger returns from his four-game suspension. The Steelers’ once quarterback-heavy roster thinned out even more Tuesday when Dennis Dixon was lost indefinitely with a torn meniscus in his left knee. Dixon is expected to have surgery Wednesday and could go on the injured reserve list, which would end his season after two starts

– and two victories. Dixon’s injury turned out to be more serious than suspected on Sunday, when Tomlin said he could have re-entered a 19-11 victory at Tennessee to hand the ball off if necessary. Dixon was hurt while scrambling for 21 yards late in the first quarter. He stayed in for two more plays, including an 8-yard run, then was lifted on the next possession and didn’t return. “He planted his leg in the ground and cut inside, and said it felt a little unstable at that point,� Tomlin said Tuesday. “Adrenaline and things of that nature, particularly when it’s a nonimpact injury, it takes a while before you realize that something’s amiss.�

fore hurting his right knee on a kickoff return at the start of a 41-7 win over the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday. The Falcons signed two RBs on Tuesday. Gartrell Johnson III was added to the active roster, and Shawnbrey McNeal joined the practice squad.

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Wednesday September 22, 2010

DOW JONES 10,761.03 +7.41

NASDAQ 2,349.35 -6.48

S&P 1,139.78 -29.3

Business: Pam Haynes PHaynes@hpe.com (336) 888-3617

6C

BRIEFS

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Abbott deal brings 3,000 job cuts NEW YORK (AP) — Abbott Laboratories says it will eliminate 3,000 jobs and take almost $1.3 billion in charges over the next two years as it integrates its Solvay pharmaceuticals business. The North Chicago company says it expects $810 million to $970 million in restructuring costs and $310 million in integration costs. The charges include severance costs, write-down and depreciation costs, and expenses related to the end of some research and development programs and the transfer of other programs.

Passenger advocate drops Delta lawsuit

Home construction jumps WASHINGTON (AP) — Home construction increased last month and applications for building permits also grew. The gains were driven mainly by apartment and condominium construction, not the much larger single-family homes sector. Construction of new homes and apartments rose 10.5 percent in August from a month earlier to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 598,000, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. That’s the highest level since April. Pulling the figures up was a 32 percent monthly increase in the condominium and apartment market, a small portion of the market. Single-family

homes, which represented about 73 percent of the market in August, grew more than 4 percent. Housing starts are up 25 percent from their bottom in April 2009. But they remain 74 percent below their peak in January 2006. Single-family housing starts are up 11 percent from their low point in January 2009, but down 78 percent from their peak in January 2006. Builders are struggling with weak demand for new homes caused by high unemployment and a glut of foreclosed homes on the market. They benefited in the spring from federal tax credits, but those expired in April. Paul Dales, U.S. econo-

mist with Capital Economics, said the high number of vacant homes, mounting expectations of renewed price falls and economic constraints on households will continue to weigh on the industry. “Homebuilding activity remains at an astoundingly weak level,” Dales said, adding that construction has to be more than double current levels for the market to be considered healthy. Building permit applications, a sign of future activity, grew by nearly 2 percent to an annual rate of 569,000. Lennar Corp., a major builder based in Miami, said Monday the number of buyers signing

AP

A roofer works on a Toll Brothers home under construction in Sunnyvale, Calif. agreements to purchase its homes fell 15 percent from a year ago in the three months ended August 31. “It’s been a tough summer,” said Stuart Miller, Lennar’s chief executive.

Deflation worries Fed

NEW YORK (AP) — A passenger rights advocate is dropping Delta Air Lines Inc. from a lawsuit claiming Delta hacked into her computer to steal her e-mail Kate Hanni of FlyersRights.org has been outspoken in seeking stricter federal rules against tarmac delays. She claimed Delta and a Virginia airline consulting company wanted her e-mails to help them block her efforts.

Oil prices drop on demand worries NEW YORK (AP) — Oil prices fell on Tuesday as traders worried whether demand for energy products will strengthen as the economy continues to struggle. Benchmark oil lost $1.34 to settle at $73.52 a barrel on the last trading day for the October contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Many traders moved to the November contract, where the price fell $1.22 to settle at $74.97 a barrel.

ConAgra income drops on rising costs PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — ConAgra Foods Inc. reported a disappointing first quarter on Tuesday, saying intense discounting and higher costs pushed the food maker’s net income down 12 percent. The maker of Banquet, Chef Boyardee, Peter Pan and other packaged foods reported that it earned $146.4 million, or 33 cents per share, for the quarter. That’s down from $165.9 million, or 37 cents per share, in the same quarter last year. ConAgra’s revenue fell 2 percent to $2.82 billion.

DILBERT

on a conference call with investors Monday. “As we’ve gone into September, we’re seeing a little bit of pickup in our traffic, but that shouldn’t be cause to have a sigh of relief at this point.”

AP | FILE

The entrance to an AutoZone automotive parts store is shown in Philadelphia in December 2009.

AutoZone profit rises 14 percent NEW YORK (AP) — Brisk sales of do-it-yourself repair parts lifted AutoZone Inc.’s profit almost 14 percent in its fiscal fourth quarter. AutoZone and other auto parts chains have thrived during the economic downturn as penny-pinching consumers keep their cars longer, boosting sales of maintenance parts. It was the fourth straight year of double-digit growth in AutoZone’s earnings per share. The Memphis, Tenn.,

company said it opened 80 new stores during the quarter, bringing its store count to 4,627. Revenue at stores open at least a year — a key measure of performance among retailers — rose 6.7 percent. Unusually warm summer weather was a key factor in the improved results, said Alan Rifkin, analyst with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Harsh weather often increases demand for replacement parts.

Rifkin reiterated his “Buy” rating on the company’s shares. AutoZone also announced Jim Shea, executive vice president for marketing, merchandising and supply chain, will retire at the end of October. No replacement was named. The stock fell $1.95 to $218.19 in morning trading Tuesday. AutoZone said net income rose to $268.9 million, or $5.66 per share, for the 16 weeks ended

Aug. 28, up from $236.1 million, or $4.43 per share, a year ago. The increase in earnings per share reflected not only improved financial performance but a sizable reduction in the number of shares outstanding versus a year ago. The company said it bought back 2.8 million shares during the quarter for $565 million. It said it still has $185 million allotted to repurchase additional shares.

Payday lender aims to settle suit RALEIGH (AP) — A major payday lender wants to pay nearly $19 million to settle a North Carolina lawsuit accusing it of violating state consumer finance laws. Attorneys who filed the lawsuit said Tuesday the

deal would mean checks for about 144,000 consumers who got a payday loan at Advance America or National Cash Advance in North Carolina after March 2003. After attorney fees and other expenses are paid,

consumers would divide about $12 million, for about $83 per borrower. Spartanburg, S.C.based Advance America Cash Advance Centers Inc. isn’t admitting fault in the settlement that needs approval by

a New Hanover County judge. The lawsuit claims Advance America’s short-term loans carried annual percentage rates much higher than the state limit of 36 percent.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve signaled Tuesday that it’s worried about the weakness of the recovery and is ready to take further steps to boost the economy if needed. Fed officials said they are also concerned that sluggish economic growth could prevent prices from rising at a healthy rate. But at the end of its meeting, the Fed announced no new steps to try to rejuvenate the economy and drive down unemployment. Instead, it hinted that it’s prepared to see if the economy can heal on its own. The meeting is the last for the Fed’s chief policymaking group before the Nov. 2 midterm elections. It comes as voters are focused on the economy and the jobs crisis. Polls show they are likely to punish Democrats in Washington for the sluggish economy. In its statement, the Fed used the same language it did in August to sketch a downbeat view of the economy. But the Fed delivered a stronger signal that it would take new steps to lift the economy. The Fed made clear that given the economy’s weakness, it’s more concerned about prices falling than rising. It didn’t use the word deflation. But some economists have raised fears about the country sliding into a deflationary spiral. That’s a widespread drop in wages, prices of goods and services and the value of stocks and homes.

MetroPCS unveils cutting-edge network NEW YORK (AP) — MetroPCS Communications Inc., a regional cell phone company that mainly caters to low-income customers, on Tuesday became the first U.S. carrier to use a new network technology that provides faster data access and is expected to become the

industry standard. MetroPCS, which has 7.6 million subscribers, turned on Long Term Evolution, or LTE, service in Las Vegas. It’s ahead of Verizon Wireless, which has 92 million subscribers and plans to bring LTE to 25 to 30 cities later this year.

MetroPCS CEO Roger Linquist said the company aims to turn on LTE across its entire network, which is concentrated in cities, by January. To take advantage of the network, Dallas-based MetroPCS is selling the first U.S. LTE phone, the Samsung Craft, for $299.


BUSINESS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com

LOCAL FUNDS Name

FILE | AP

A man walks past graffiti in the Mountjoy Square area of Dublin in this April 2009 photograph.

Irish sell bonds amid debt fears DUBLIN (AP) — Ireland sold €1.5 billion ($2 billion) in government bonds Tuesday in a closely watched test of whether international investors would keep buying Irish treasuries despite the country’s deficit, the biggest in debt-burdened Europe. Analysts called the auction a success, noting it attracted bids 5.1 times the amount of bonds on offer. Together with solid

BRIEFS

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Clorox to sell auto care business OAKLAND, Calif. – Clorox Co. will sell the division that makes car-care brands such as Armor All and STP to a private equity firm for $780 million in cash. The company announced the deal Tuesday with Avista Capital Partners. The private equity firm will get the well-known brands, sold primarily in the U.S., Australia, Canada and Europe. Clorox announced in May it was exploring options for the business, which had $300 million in sales last year – about 5 percent of total revenue.

Carnival’s income, 2010 outlook rise MIAMI – The busy summer season didn’t disappoint Carnival Corp., as better demand spurred rising prices and led to a 22 percent increase in its thirdquarter net income. The cruise operator also raised its full-year earnings forecast well above Wall Street’s expectations on Tuesday, sending its shares up 83 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $37.89 in midday trading.

Global airlines rebound strongly SINGAPORE – Global airlines have rebounded faster than expected from the recession after losing nearly $26 billion over 2008 and 2009, the industry association said Tuesday, raising its profit forecast for this year. The International Air Transport Association said airline profits for 2010 will likely total $8.9 billion on revenue of $560 billion, more than the group’s forecast in June of $2.5 ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

bond auctions in Spain and Greece, the sale offered markets reassurance for the moment that Ireland and other indebted countries were getting some relief from shortterm market pressures. But analysts cautioned that Ireland had to pay higher-than-expected interest rates compared to previous bond auctions, reflecting investors’ fear of an eventual Irish default. And the higher

rates could be an additional financial burden in coming years. “Serious challenges remain ahead, but in the short term we believe that public finances are not out of control,” said Sonia Pangusion, Irish market analyst for IHS Global Insight. She said Ireland’s government had secured enough borrowing to manage its finances through mid-2011.

CEO keeps Hatteras consolidation on track MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

NEW BERN — Jim Meyer, president and CEO of Hatteras and Cabo yachts, sees that going forward, the two boat brands will be produced in smaller quantities but manufactured more efficiently. Meyer, a 49-year-old New Bern resident, is approaching two years as president and CEO of Hatteras, a division of the Lake Forest, Ill.-based parent company Brunswick Corp. He started working in November 2008 as president and CEO of Hatteras, having previously worked as vice president of product development, supply chain and business integration for the Brunswick Boat Group. Prior to that, he worked in the automotive industry with Ford Motor Co. and with Mazda Motor Corp. He spent the first 10 years of his career at Ford, he said, where he was hired after graduation from MIT, then in 1999 went to work for Mazda. Meyer went from the automotive industry to Brunswick, where one of his principal roles was to help reinvigorate the boat brand Sealine.

Dustan E. McCoy, CEO and president of Brunswick Corp., stated in a news release that Meyer was appointed to head Hatteras after working in a leadership role with Sealine in Europe as new models and markets for new dealers of the products were being developed. He also said in the release that Meyer made “significant contributions in working to integrate the company’s entire marine product portfolio to streamline its supply chain, and improve product quality.” At the time that Meyer was appointed president and CEO of the Hatteras Collection, it was composed of three brands, Hatteras, Cabo and Albemarle, and four factories, he said. The company has looked to narrow its focus and devote resources to the Hatteras and Cabo brands, he said. The company sold the Albemarle brand that was manufactured at a plant in Edenton, closed a plant in Swansboro, and is consolidating the manufacturing operations of the Hatteras and Cabo yacht brands at the New Bern plant. The Cabo plant in Adelanto, Calif., is expected to close by the end of the year.

SC unemployment jumps to 11 percent COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s unemployment rate was up in August, a stark contrast to news earlier this week that the Great Recession officially ended more than a year ago and a sign that the state’s jobs problem isn’t entirely based on the economy. The state Department of Employment and Workforce said Tuesday that

South Carolina’s unemployment rate was up 11 percent last month, up from a revised 10.7 percent in July. Department of Workforce executive director John Finan said there were almost 50,000 open jobs around the state as of Sept. 20. The problem, he said, is matching the skills of the unemployed with the available jobs.

Last

Change

50-day Average

% Chg.

200-day Average

AMERICAN BALANCED FUND, CLASS A 16.88 0.01

0.06%

16.46

16.45

AMERICAN FDS BOND FD OF AMERICA 12.43 0.05

0.40%

12.38

12.15

CAPITAL INCOME BUILDER CL A SHS 48.54 0.06

0.12%

47.47

46.84

AMERICAN FDS CAPITAL WORLD GROW 33.85 0.04

0.12%

32.48

32.33

AMERICAN FDS EUROPACIFIC GROWTH 39.07 0.06

0.15%

37.26

36.77

FUNDAMENTAL INVESTORS, CLASS A 33.32 - 0.07

- 0.21%

32.17

32.55

AMERICAN FDS GROWTH FD OF AMERI 27.65 - 0.03

- 0.11%

26.59

27.15

AMERICAN FDS INCOME FD OF AMERI 15.90 0.01

0.06%

15.59

15.48

AMERICAN FDS INVESTMENT CO OF A 25.86 - 0.01

- 0.04%

25.00

25.49

AMERICAN FDS NEW PERSPECTIVE A 26.26 0.02

0.08%

25.05

25.08

WASHINGTON MUTUAL INVS FD CL A 25.33 - 0.01

- 0.04%

24.42

24.59

DAVIS NEW YORK VENTURE FUND A 31.08 - 0.04

- 0.13%

30.05

30.80

DODGE COX INCOME FUND 13.49

0.30%

13.40

13.24

DODGE COX INTERNATIONAL STOCK 33.10 0.02

0.04

0.06%

31.50

31.18

DODGE COX STOCK FUND 96.65

- 0.21

- 0.22%

92.95

96.37

FIDELITY CONTRA FUND 61.58

- 0.09

- 0.15%

58.40

58.84

FIDELITY DIVERSIFIED INTERNATIO 28.03 0.06

0.21%

26.66

26.58

FIDELITY FREEDOM 2020 FUND 13.03 0.00

0.00%

12.64

12.67

FIDELITY GROWTH CO FUND 73.72 - 0.16

- 0.22%

69.61

70.60

FIDELITY LOWPRICED STOCK FUND 34.21 - 0.03

- 0.09%

32.83

33.45

FIDELITY MAGELLAN 63.70

- 0.17%

60.97

63.73

TGIT TEMPTON INCOME FUND CLASS 2.69 0.01

- 0.11

0.37%

2.60

2.59

HARBOR INTERNATIONAL FUND INSTI 55.68 0.34

0.61%

53.07

52.49

PIMCO FUNDS TOTAL RETURN FUND C 11.56 0.06

0.52%

11.48

11.22

PIMCO FUNDS TOTAL RETURN FUND A 11.56 0.06

0.52%

11.48

11.22

PIMCO FUNDS TOTAL RETURN FUND I 11.56 0.06

0.52%

11.48

11.22

VANGUARD 500 INDEX FD ADMIRAL S 105.45 - 0.27

- 0.26%

101.24

103.39

VANGUARD INDEX TRUST 500 INDEX 105.42 - 0.27

- 0.26%

101.22

103.37

VANGUARD GNMA FUND ADMIRAL SHS 11.02 0.02

0.18%

11.05

VANGUARD INSTITUTIONAL INDEX 104.76 - 0.26

- 0.25%

100.58

102.70

VANGUARD INSTITUTIONAL INDEX FU 104.76 - 0.27

- 0.26%

100.58

102.71

VANGUARD MID CAP GROWTH FUND 16.63 - 0.07

- 0.42%

15.64

15.80

VANGUARD PRIMECAP FUND 60.29 - 0.05

- 0.08%

57.68

58.55

VANGUARD BOND INDEX FD TOTAL BO 10.85 0.04

0.37%

10.83

10.63

VANGUARD TOTAL INTERNATIONAL ST 14.76 0.03

0.20%

14.08

13.87

VANGUARD TOTAL STOCK MARKET IND 28.43 - 0.09

- 0.32%

27.25

27.87

VANGUARD WELLINGTON INCOME FUND 29.79 0.02

0.07%

29.03

29.06

VANGUARD WELLINGTON FD ADMIRAL 51.46 0.03

0.06%

50.14

50.20

10.92

7C

Fed’s inaction disappoints investors NEW YORK (AP) – Stocks got a brief bump following word that the Federal Reserve is ready to do more to help the economy, but ended mostly lower Tuesday after the central bank disappointed some investors by not taking any bold new actions. Treasury prices rallied as investors saw the Fed’s announcement as a signal that more bond purchases were on the way. The Fed said it is concerned that inflation is below levels consistent with a healthy economy and indicated that it is ready to provide “additional accommodation” to support the recovery. That would mean more purchases of Treasurys or other kinds of debt, which would keep interest rates low and hopefully encourage borrowing. “They left themselves as much room as they possibly could,” said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Wealth Management. “In the bond world, the coast is clear for buyers.” Treasurys rose sharply after the Fed’s announcement, sending interest rates lower. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell sharply to 2.58 percent from 2.70 percent the day before, while its price jumped $1.03 to $100.34. The yield is a common benchmark for setting interest rates on corporate debt and mortgages.

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name

Symbol

AT&T Aetna Alcatel-Lucent Alcoa Allstate AmEx AIG Ameriprisel Analog Devices Aon Corp. Apple Avon BB&T Corp. BNC Bancorp BP Bank of America Bassett Furniture Best Buy Boeing CBL & Asso. CSX Corp. CVS Caremark Capital One Caterpillar Inc. Chevron Corp. Cisco Systems Inc. Citigroup Coca-Cola Colgate-Palmolive Colonial Prop. Comcast Corp. Corning Inc. Culp Inc. Daimler AG Deere & Co. Dell Inc. Dillard’s Inc. Walt Disney Co. Duke Energy Corp Exxon Mobil Corp FNB United Corp. FedEx Corp. First Citizens Bank of NC Ford Fortune Brands Furniture Brands Gap Inc. General Dynamics General Electric GlaxoSmithKline Google Hanesbrands Harley-Davidson Hewlett-Packard Home Depot Hooker Furniture Intel IBM JP Morgan Chase Kellogg Kimberly-Clark Krispy Kreme La-Z-Boy LabCorp Lance

Last

T 28.61 31.05 AET ALU 3.01 AA 11.17 ALL 31.33 AXP 42.78 AIG 36.61 AMP 47.93 ADI 30.02 AON 38.8 AAPL 283.77 AVP 31.55 BBT 23.75 BNCN 9.85 BP 38.59 BAC 13.65 BSET 4.75 BBY 38.05 BA 64.23 CBL 13.62 CSX 56.05 CVS 30.04 COF 38.33 CAT 76.39 CVX 79.75 CSCO 21.64 C 3.94 KO 58.11 CL 78.55 CLP 16.68 CMCSK 17.06 GLW 17.61 CFI 9.23 DDAIF.PK 60.18 DE 73.04 DELL 12.6 DDS 23.81 DIS 34.5 DUK 17.79 XOM 61.54 FNBN 0.82 FDX 83.63 FCNCA 184.2 F 12.55 FO 49.67 FBN 5.45 GPS 18.79 GD 63.61 GE 16.52 GSK 40.35 GOOG 513.46 HBI 25.42 HOG 28.35 HPQ 39.92 HD 30.91 HOFT 11.58 INTC 19.14 IBM 131.98 JPM 40.59 K 50.36 KMB 66.51 KKD 4.44 LZB 8.28 LH 76.38 LNCE 21.44

Chg. 0.07 0.52 -0.01 -0.21 -0.18 -0.34 0.01 -0.45 0 -0.01 0.54 -0.23 0.07 -0.04 -0.09 -0.09 -0.15 -0.27 0.51 -0.42 0.79 -0.26 -1 1.64 -0.15 -0.11 -0.05 0.14 0.3 -0.29 0.06 0 0.05 0.53 -0.57 -0.07 -0.33 -0.4 0.01 -0.01 -0.04 0.72 -0.23 -0.02 -0.28 0.26 -0.37 -0.02 -0.03 0.02 5.18 -0.47 -0.15 0.53 0.26 0.41 0.21 0.19 -0.6 -0.46 -0.4 0.07 0.39 -0.13 -0.4

High 28.88 31.44 3.09 11.42 31.56 43.38 37.13 48.55 30.19 39.19 287.35 31.84 24.18 9.96 38.99 14 4.97 38.54 64.5 14.13 56.8 30.4 39.42 77.11 80.23 21.96 4.02 58.2 79 17.02 17.18 17.98 9.35 60.59 73.62 12.81 24.14 34.98 17.93 61.9 0.89 83.75 186.72 12.75 50.04 5.55 19.18 64.21 16.7 40.48 519.98 25.86 28.66 40.52 31.27 11.69 19.27 132.8 41.5 50.83 66.88 4.47 8.32 76.93 21.82

Low 28.31 30.47 3 10.99 31.14 42.66 36.4 47.77 29.74 38.67 282.79 31.43 23.61 9.85 38.35 13.64 4.7 37.8 63.39 13.61 55.29 29.92 38.26 74.72 79.1 21.37 3.94 57.65 77.88 16.66 16.94 17.48 9 59.6 72.26 12.55 23.55 34.27 17.69 61.25 0.82 82.41 183.96 12.51 49.57 5.2 18.68 63.25 16.42 39.99 508.91 25.3 27.99 39.4 30.69 10.72 18.84 130.78 40.47 50.03 66.21 4.28 7.83 76 21.44

Name

Symbol

Last

Chg.

High

Low

Legg Mason Leggett & Platt Lincoln National Lowe’s McDonald’s Merck MetLife Microsoft Mohawk Industries Morgan Stanley Motorola NCR Corp. New York Times Co. NewBridge Bancorp Norfolk Southern Novartis AG Nucor Old Dominion Office Depot PPG Industries Panera Bread The Pantry J.C. Penney Pfizer Pepsico Piedmont Nat.Gas Polo Ralph Lauren Procter & Gamble Progress Energy Qualcomm Quest Capital RF Micro Devices Red Hat Reynolds American RBC Ruddick Corp. SCM Micro Sara Lee Sealy Sears Sherwin-Williams Southern Company Spectra Energy Sprint Nextel Standard Micro Starbucks Steelcase Inc. SunTrust Banks Syngenta AG Tanger Targacept Inc. Target 3M Co. Time Warner US Airways Unifi Inc. UPS Inc. VF Corp. Valspar Verizon Vodafone Vulcan Materials Wal-Mart Wells Fargo Yahoo Inc.

LM LEG LNC LOW MCD MRK MET MSFT MHK MS MOT NCR NYT NBBC NSC NVS NUE ODFL ODP PPG PNRA PTRY JCP PFE PEP PNY RL PG PGN QCOM QCC RFMD RHT RAI RY RDK INVE SLE ZZ SHLD SHW SO SE S SMSC SBUX SCS STI SYT SKT TRGT TGT MMM TWX LCC UFI UPS VFC VAL VZ VOD VMC WMT WFC YHOO

29.98 22.35 25.04 21.69 75.51 36.72 41.1 25.15 51.15 26.06 8.33 13.99 7.97 3.77 59.36 56.46 38.07 25.9 4.37 72.19 88.04 22.92 24.85 17.14 66.46 28.2 89.19 61.52 44.06 43.51 0 5.77 38.43 59.43 52.13 34.13 1.6 14.15 2.79 68.15 75.36 37.19 22.05 4.58 20.86 26.16 6.66 25.84 50.52 48.54 22.53 54.07 86.55 31.86 9.54 4.55 66.99 78.44 31.58 32.32 25.7 37.78 53.57 26.38 14.18

-0.9 0.06 -0.25 0.23 0.4 0.18 -0.38 -0.28 1.01 -0.78 -0.12 -0.16 -0.47 0.12 0.43 -0.2 -0.69 0 -0.06 -0.47 -0.24 -0.07 0 -0.13 -0.43 -0.06 -0.63 0.09 -0.12 0.5 N/A -0.05 -0.55 0.26 -0.36 -0.58 -0.02 -0.03 -0.04 0.05 0.65 -0.28 -0.01 -0.05 0.58 -0.12 -0.14 -0.44 -0.65 -0.41 -0.64 -0.53 -0.86 -0.05 0.33 0.05 0.09 -0.48 0.13 0.23 -0.07 1.15 0.03 -0.18 0.32

31 22.61 25.59 22 75.75 36.94 41.79 25.42 52.23 27.05 8.46 14.15 8.35 3.8 60 56.66 38.62 26.26 4.49 72.74 88.8 23.55 24.96 17.28 66.91 28.55 90.07 61.86 44.31 43.87 N/A 5.85 39.04 59.88 52.89 34.68 1.65 14.23 2.82 68.66 76.06 37.42 22.18 4.66 21.03 26.34 6.82 26.55 50.79 49.06 23.27 54.64 87.62 32 9.59 4.65 67.45 79.07 31.86 32.5 25.8 38.24 53.96 26.96 14.26

29.87 22.22 24.95 21.4 74.88 36.37 41 25.08 50.79 26.01 8.29 13.91 7.87 3.65 58.92 56.09 37.81 25.56 4.25 71.63 87.5 22.85 24.2 17.09 65.93 28.02 88.45 61.23 43.84 43.11 N/A 5.66 38 59.05 51.94 33.79 1.6 14.07 2.76 67.44 74.34 37.04 21.82 4.5 20.02 25.98 6.63 25.79 49.79 48.1 22.51 53.83 86.06 31.59 9.23 4.41 66.79 78.07 31.28 31.89 25.46 37.13 53.32 26.29 13.92

METALS PRICING NEW YORK (AP) – Spot nonferrous metal prices Tuesday: Aluminum -$0.9856 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.5084 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $3.4960 N.Y. Merc spot Mon. Lead - $2187.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.9774 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1275.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1279.00 troy oz., NY Merc spot Mon. Silver - $20.590 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $20.777 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Mon. Platinum -$1621.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1632.00 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Mon.

Top eBay exec steps down SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – One of eBay’s top executives is stepping down, leaving a void in the ecommerce company’s largest division, which includes the namesake auction website. Lorrie Norrington, the president of eBay Marketplaces, is leaving for personal reasons, eBay Inc. said Tuesday. EBay

said it will look outside the company for her replacement. Norrington, 50, spent two years at the helm of marketplaces, the division that includes eBay. com and numerous other e-commerce sites. She joined eBay Inc. in 2005 when eBay bought Shopping.com, a comparisonshopping company that

had just named her CEO, for $634 million. The announcement comes at a time when San Jose-based eBay is trying to improve its flagship website to lure and retain more shoppers. In recent years, the company has tried such things as changing its search system and lowering the upfront fees it charges sellers.


WEATHER 8C www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

High Point Enterprise Weather Today

Thursday

Mostly Sunny

88º

Friday

Mostly Sunny

64º

91º

Sunny

66º

91º

Sunday

Saturday

Mostly Sunny

65º

89º

62º

Local Area Forecast Kernersville Winston-Salem 88/64 88/63 Jamestown 89/64 High Point 88/64 Archdale Thomasville 89/64 88/64 Trinity Lexington 88/64 Randleman 88/64 89/64

Partly Cloudy

79º

58º

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 85/66

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

High Point 88/64

Asheville 84/57

Denton 89/65

Greenville 88/66 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 92/64 84/69

Charlotte 90/65

Almanac

Wilmington 84/67 Today

Thursday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

s t s s s t s t s s s t s s s s s

92/64 83/58 86/69 81/70 93/66 85/55 92/67 85/59 89/67 91/66 84/72 83/56 94/67 93/66 92/67 91/65 93/65

Sunrise . . Sunset . . Moonrise Moonset .

Across The Nation

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

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . ATLANTA . . . . . . . BOISE . . . . . . . . . . BOSTON . . . . . . . . CHARLESTON, SC CHARLESTON, WV CINCINNATI . . . . . CHICAGO . . . . . . . CLEVELAND . . . . . DALLAS . . . . . . . . DETROIT . . . . . . . . DENVER . . . . . . . . GREENSBORO . . . GRAND RAPIDS . . HOUSTON . . . . . . . HONOLULU . . . . . . KANSAS CITY . . . . NEW ORLEANS . .

Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy

. . . . .

.79/56 .91/66 .72/44 .82/66 .87/69 . .92/71 . .90/66 . .75/66 . .80/64 . .89/74 . .75/63 . .85/56 . .89/64 . .76/60 . .89/75 . .88/73 . .86/70 . .91/78

t s s s s s mc t t mc t s s t t s t s

Thursday

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

80/52 90/66 75/45 71/64 88/69 91/70 92/67 86/67 85/67 90/74 85/71 77/50 92/65 84/66 91/75 87/73 82/64 90/78

LAS VEGAS . . . . . . .89/68 LOS ANGELES . . . . .73/56 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . . .97/73 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .89/81 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .68/60 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .85/67 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .89/69 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .90/74 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . . .96/73 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .82/62 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .88/69 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .80/63 SAN FRANCISCO . . .63/52 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .87/72 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .65/54 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .87/73 WASHINGTON, DC . .92/71 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .87/70

s s s pc s s s s t s pc s s mc t s sh s

Hi/Lo Wx s s s pc mc s s s t t s s s pc pc pc s pc

Today

Thursday

Hi/Lo Wx

t s s s s s sh s pc s

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

. . . .

.7:08 .7:17 .6:40 .6:27

a.m. p.m. p.m. a.m.

UV Index for 3 periods of the day.

8 a.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Noon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 4 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8

92/68 78/59 99/75 89/81 70/52 87/69 89/70 90/74 96/72 85/63 88/67 80/62 73/55 91/71 64/54 87/73 91/70 86/63

s s s t sh s s t s s pc pc pc s ra pc s t

Full 9/23

Last 9/30

New 10/7

First 10/14

0-2: Low The higher the UV 3-5: Moderate index, the higher the 6-7: High need for eye and 8-10: Very High skin protection. 11+: Extreme

Lake Levels & River Stages Lake and river levels are in feet. Change is over the past 24 hrs. Flood Pool Current Level Change High Rock Lake 655.2 650.9 0.0 Badin Lake 541.1 537.9 -0.1 Flood Stage Current Level Change Yadkin College 18.0 0.64 +0.03 Elkin 16.0 1.06 -0.04 Wilkesboro 14.0 2.03 -0.01 High Point 10.0 0.54 -0.02 Ramseur 20.0 0.82 +0.17

Pollen Forecast

Hi/Lo Wx

ACAPULCO . . . . . . . .87/76 AMSTERDAM . . . . . .69/55 BAGHDAD . . . . . . . .109/82 BARCELONA . . . . . .79/61 BEIJING . . . . . . . . . .70/51 BEIRUT . . . . . . . . . . . . .95/76 BOGOTA . . . . . . . . . .64/51 BERLIN . . . . . . . . . . .67/50 BUENOS AIRES . . . .73/49 CAIRO . . . . . . . . . . . .91/72

. . . .

UV Index

Thursday

Around The World City

Statistics through 6 p.m. yesterday at Greensboro

Hi/Lo Wx

85/77 67/56 110/78 79/63 76/52 93/75 63/50 71/51 63/43 90/72

t pc s cl s s cl pc s s

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

COPENHAGEN . . . . .61/53 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .76/54 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .83/76 GUATEMALA . . . . . .77/60 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .86/75 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .83/79 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .82/54 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .72/59 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .60/45 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .89/80

pc s t t t t s s sh t

Thursday

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

64/54 75/55 84/75 76/61 84/74 83/69 78/53 67/57 56/43 88/81

PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .77/56 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .84/61 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .87/68 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .69/62 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .87/77 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .60/48 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .69/58 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .87/72 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .88/74 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .69/51

mc pc t t t t s sh sh t

Hi/Lo Wx s s s sh t pc s s s s

Thursday

78/57 82/62 87/64 74/59 87/77 59/48 64/56 89/67 75/66 70/52

sh pc pc s t pc pc s ra pc

Air Quality

Today: Moderate Predominant Types: Weeds Today: 84 (Moderate)

Hi/Lo Wx

Pollen Rating Scale

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .90/64 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .83/59 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .84/67 EMERALD ISLE . . . .83/68 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .90/64 GRANDFATHER MTN . .82/58 GREENVILLE . . . . . .88/66 HENDERSONVILLE .83/57 JACKSONVILLE . . . .87/64 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .88/65 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .82/72 MOUNT MITCHELL . .83/54 ROANOKE RAPIDS .91/64 SOUTHERN PINES . .89/64 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .89/66 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .89/65 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .90/64

Precipitation (Yesterday) 24 hours through 6 p.m. . . . . . . .0.00" Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.16" Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . .3.06" Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30.50" Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . .32.61" Record Precipitation . . . . . . . . . .2.82"

Sun and Moon

Around Our State City

Temperatures (Yesterday) High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66 Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .78 Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . .58 Last Year’s High . . . . . . . .79 Last Year’s Low . . . . . . . . .63 Record High . . . . .94 in 1931 Record Low . . . . . .43 in 1962

0-50: 51-100: 101-150:

100 75 50

35

26 25

0 0

Trees

Grasses

Weeds

0: Absent, 1-25: Low, 26-50: Moderate, 51-75: High, >75: Very High

151-200: 201-300: 301-500:

Good Moderate Unhealthy (sensitive) Unhealthy Very Unhealthy Hazardous

Air quality data is provided by the Forsyth County Environmental Affairs Department.

END OF SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

Check Out These Great Prices PLUS Much More on Sale Not Listed!! Pool Signs 30% off

Garage Space 25lb Lite Heaters 3” Tablets Sounds $99 $75 $199

Patio Furniture 50% off Regular Price

Solar Umbrella $300

Free Nest and Mates with ppurchase of Bigg Green Egg in Stock All Display A Lubbers Gas Logs $15 $100 off

Spa N a Box display only $300

Big EZ Spa $2999

Grill Island T Toys 30% off

Fireplace Systems $699 Gas Grills Starting at $399

W Wind Chimes 30% off Hammock Swings $75

Instock Fireplace p Screens 20% off

Smart Mesh Safety Cover Smart Mesh Safety Cover 16x32 with center end 18x36 End Step $1350 step $1250 one in stock one in stock

Fireplace Doors 10% off Tanning Beds no special wiring required Sale Price $1500

Dura Mesh Safety Cover True L with center end step $1300 one in stock


D

CELEBRATE: A nice evening is in order, Cancer. 2C

Wednesday September 22, 2010

62 DOWN: One of the all-time great athletes in the world. 2C CLASSIFIED ADS: Check them out for some great bargains. 3C

Life&Style (336) 888-3527

‘Cook It Raw’

FOOD SAFETY

Wild eats serve as event’s inspiration AMY SERAFIN FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

L

EVI LAPLAND, Finland – Rene Redzepi was crouched and using a sharp knife to scrape lichen from rocks. The tiny green tubes usually feed reindeer in this land above the Arctic Circle. “If animals can eat it, we can,” said Redzepi, who was among 14 of the world’s most influential chefs at a gathering in

The event marked the third time these chefs have hunted, fished and foraged together then prepared a meal while leaving the smallest possible footprint on the environment. Lapland earlier this month. The goal was to dig their hands in the soil and make a meal from whatever they could find in one of the last untouched places on Earth. Called “Cook It Raw,” the event marked the third time in just over a year that these chefs have hunted, fished and foraged together – each time in a new location – then prepared a meal while leaving the smallest possible footprint on the environment. A pair of Italians, a restaurant consultant and a food writer, first organized Cook It Raw as a prelude to the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen last year. At that gathering they asked the chefs to prepare

dishes using little or no conventional energy, leading to memorable creations such as Redzepi’s squirming live prawns, or Massimo Bottura’s “pollution” soup, illustrating a projected future in which the oceans contain only squid and jellyfish. The group then came together again in January in Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy, where the ingredients they used included raw venison and rare Rosa di Gorizia radicchio. This time, they flew to Helsinki from as far afield as London, New York, Sao Paulo and Tokyo, took a 14-hour train ride north, then marveled at the bounty of a land where the northern lights shimmer like an electric green cloud and the indigenous people have 90 words for snow. But civilization is taking its toll here too, with global warming driving up temperatures and foreign companies mining for gold. As the planet transforms, an increasing number of chefs are stepping out into the wild and creating food defined by a specific time and place – a way of cooking that has become the next big movement after the science projects of molecular gastronomy. One of its pioneers, Redzepi, who is from Denmark, shot to first place on Restaurant Magazine’s list of the world’s 50 best restaurants this year with his Copenhagen restaurant, Noma. In Lapland, he saw a world of gastronomic possibilities in the fuzzy mosses and mushrooms of the forest floor. For the dinner, he covered carrots with pine needles and steamed them so their essential oils impregnated the vegetables. “We are showing others how to harvest in nature, because the things you find there taste better

AP

A plate of smoked fish soup with beetroots, mushrooms, woodsorrel, berries, brown butter, broth of mushrooms and raw lichen was prepared by chefs Inaki Aizpitarte and Petter Nilsson during “Cook It Raw,” in Lapland, Finland. The event marked the third time in just over a year that this international group of chefs have hunted, fished and foraged together in a particular location, then prepared a meal while leaving the smallest possible footprint on the environment. than anything grown,” he said. “Try one of those blueberries, then a stupid one grown in a greenhouse. Your reference point for what a blueberry tastes like has changed forever.” Superstar chef David Chang of New York’s Momofuku restaurants also participated. He was struck by the abundance of edible shoots and leaves to be found at the top of the world. “To be able to forage everywhere, it’s crazy,” he exclaimed. He created a Lapland version of Japanese dashi soup, with spruce and reindeer milk. Bottura, the highly conceptual chef of Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy, cooked reindeer tongues sous vide for 22 hours. And he did it in his bathroom so he could check their progress throughout the night. He purposely chose a body part other chefs might discard. “Our cuisine is no longer about liking or not liking something,” he explained. “It’s about trying to influence everyday life. If I put aesthetics and ethics together, that is

AP

Rene Redzepi (third from left) and his team present the final dish on the last evening during “Cook It Raw.”

AP

Inaki Aizpitarte of Le Chateaubriand in Paris fillets a fish during “Cook It Raw.” the future of cuisine.” Brazilian chef Alex Atala flew in from Sao Paulo, where his restaurant, D.O.M., features ingredients from the Amazon, another endangered region. Outraged that hunting is illegal in most of Brazil yet deforestation is not, he has acquired 57,000 acres of rainforest in an effort to protect it. He said, “Like Rene and Massimo, my ethical awakening came from my job as a chef, searching for products in nature.” Inaki Aizpitarte and Petter Nilsson, from the wildly popular Chateaubriand and La Gazzetta restaurants in Paris, teamed up to create a dish from beginning to end, waking at dawn and fishing, cutting woodchips to smoke their catch, mixing a broth from lichen and mushrooms they gathered, garnishing it

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

with berries and sorrel. “It had a taste of where we had put our feet,” said Nilsson. One morning the group witnessed a reindeer slaughter, and the blood inspired several chefs. Daniel Patterson from Coi in San Francisco roasted beets in the hearth until their skins were black, then served them with a sauce of beets, blueberries and blood, a simple dish that was sweetly intense and gamey. Then pastry chef Albert Adria, who made his name alongside his brother Ferran at the Spanish restaurant elBulli, created “snow” like freshly fallen powder next to a lingonberry cocktail that was warm like blood. “If you are lost for three weeks in the wilderness here, you will eat reindeer and drink snow,” he explained.

Scientists and inspectors at the federal agencies responsible for food safety say they face political and corporate interference with their work, according to a survey released recently by the Union of Concerned Scientists, a non-partisan advocate for unbiased science in government. The survey suggests a continuation of problems that government scientists had complained about during the George W. Bush administration, despite Obama administration pledges not to let politics intrude on scientific conclusions. And it comes more than a year after the administration promised to issue new rules to protect scientific integrity. More than 1,700 scientists and inspectors at the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture responded to the survey, which was conducted by the Center for Survey Statistics and Methodology at Iowa State University and was aimed at employees whose duties were science-specific. The survey found only a slight improvement in perception of the agencies’ approach to science under the Obama administration. “What we found is that action is needed to curtail interference in science, both political and that driven by the private sector,” said Francesca Grifo, director of the Scientific Integrity Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “We have two very different agencies giving very identical responses, and this suggests the need for broad reform.” The Agriculture Department, while not commenting on the survey’s findings, acknowledged a need for improvement in its food safety program.

INDEX FUN&GAMES 2D DEAR ABBY 3B DR. DONOHUE 5B CLASSIFIED 3-6D


FUN & GAMES 2D www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

WORD FUN

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CROSSWORD

Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2010 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Bonnie Hunt, 49; Scott Baio, 49; Andrea Bocelli, 52; Joan Jett, 52 HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Give way to your entrepreneurial side and develop and present what you have to offer. Creativity will be the big draw this year and will lead to the changes you want for your professional, personal and financial lives. Getting in touch with people from your past who can contribute to what you are trying to do now will make your life easier and your progress faster. Your numbers are 5, 11, 19, 23, 27, 35, 41 ARIES (March 21-April 19): There will be plenty of temptations. Jumping into something or getting involved with someone without a well thought out plan will cost you financially and use up valuable time. Instead, produce something that will utilize your skills and increase your income. ★★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): It’s your participation that will lead to greater opportunities and a challenge that will enhance what you can already do. What you achieve will be directly linked to your willingness to push for what you want. ★★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t trust anyone with a job you promised to do yourself. You will be held responsible and it could cost you money and your reputation. Discipline and hard work will be the only way to maintain what you have worked so hard to achieve. ★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Start making changes you’ve been considering. Thinking about it and doing it are not the same thing. Believe in your abilities. It’s time to get serious about what you have to offer. Love is in the stars and an evening of celebration is in order. ★★★★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your emphasis should be on enhancing your surroundings as well as your relationships. By sharing your ideas and plans, you will find a suitable partner for an endeavor you want to get off the ground. ★★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Good fortune is coming to you through the people you meet and the opportunities offered. Pull together your knowledge and your talents. A relationship will add to your success personally or professionally. ★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Someone trying to overpower you or control your choices will stifle you. It will be important to ensure you aren’t pushed in a direction that is not beneficial to your advancement. Stick to your own plans. ★★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You have more going for you than you realize, so utilize your knowledge and experience. It’s up to you to unveil what you’ve been working on for so long. Present and promote and you will get the response you need to advance. ★★★★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Keep a lid on your thoughts. Someone you live or work with will misinterpret what you are trying to say. Problems at home will surface if you try to force unreasonable changes. Offer your help to others. ★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): If you want something, go after it. Your hard work will bring you new respect and the help needed to finish what you start. You will be the one controlling who gets what, making you popular. ★★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Recognize why things haven’t worked out in the past and you will spare yourself future grief and upset. Focus more on what you have to offer. Life is simple, so don’t waste time making it so complex. ★★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You have some great plans that, when completed, will change the way you live your life. There is money to be made. A partnership will lead to serious accomplishments and greater income. ★★★

ACROSS 1 Arrangement 6 Brim 10 Lower limbs 14 Spanish friend 15 Empty space 16 Look at amorously 17 Fish features 18 One opposed 19 Sketch 20 Frame of mind 22 Light wind 24 __ up; relax 25 Wall coating 26 Rush forward 29 Open-eyed 30 Stylish 31 Obliterate 33 Artist’s stand 37 Brainstorm 39 Stringed instrument 41 Wander 42 Nuisances 44 Discourage 46 Red, Yellow, Black or Dead 47 Potato or yam 49 British peers 51 Declared one’s willingness

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BRIDGE

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TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

I found Unlucky Louie in the lounge, enmeshed in his end-of-the-month ritual: two out of three falls with a pile of credit card bills. “My wife has so many credit cards,” Louie growled, “her purse points north.” Trying to pay off his MasterCard bill, Louie bid a skinny heart game after North’s invitational raise. West led the king of spades, East signaled with the eight (not best) and West continued with the ten. East won and shifted to the ten of clubs. Louie played the queen, but when West’s king covered, Louie had to lose a diamond and a club. Down one.

HOROSCOPE

DAILY QUESTION

HIGH SPADE

You hold: S A 8 5 2 H 8 4 D Q J 5 C 10 9 8 4. Your partner opens one spade, you raise to two spades and he bids three diamonds. What do you say?

Louie should have taken the cash. He can place West with the king of clubs; East wouldn’t signal high in spades at Trick One if he had the king of clubs. Louie should play low on East’s club shift and take the ace. Louie then draws trumps, ruffs his last spade in dummy, cashes the AK of diamonds and exits with a club. For once, his luck is in: West must win and concede a ruff-sluff and the contract.

ANSWER: Partner’s three diamonds is a try for game and asks you to pay attention to your holding in his second suit if you have a close decision. Your point count is minimum, but you have four trumps and two diamond honors. Bid four spades. Partner will make it if he has no more than K Q 9 6 3, A J 6, K 10 7 6, 3. South dealer N-S vulnerable

ONE STAR: It’s best to avoid conflicts; work behind the scenes or read a good book. Two stars: You can accomplish but don’t rely on others for help. Three stars: If you focus, you will reach your goals. Four stars: You can pretty much do as you please, a good time to start new projects. Five stars: Nothing can stop you now. Go for the gold.

Annual cleaning The Alamo statue is cleaned at the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas. The statues and monuments on the grounds are cleaned and waxed once a year.

AP

54 Relinquish 55 Sign in a shop window at night 56 Shines, as one’s shoes 60 Ponydrawn vehicle 61 “...boughs of holly, Fa __...” 63 Member of the raccoon family 64 Egg on 65 “__ and alack!” 66 Distribute in portions 67 Rex or Donna 68 Pillow candy 69 Spinks & Uris DOWN 1 Heroic tale 2 Discharge, as steam 3 Lean 4 More hideous 5 Stamps 6 Stay away from 7 Finished 8 “__ Along, Little Dogies” 9 Fit for human consumption

Yesterday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

10 Guiding light in the sky 11 Wading bird 12 Glossy sugar coating 13 Septic tank alternative 21 Consumers 23 Seldom seen 25 Skirt crease 26 __ off the old block 27 Go under cover 28 Gorillas 29 Fall flower 32 Lent a hand 34 Mediocre 35 Level; balanced 36 Meadows 38 __ to;

vouched for 40 Refuse to submit 43 Positive 45 Extreme 48 Pandemonium 50 Sew in new shoe bottoms 51 Happen 52 __ up; break out and intensify 53 Sign another’s signature 54 Seashore 56 Prepare in advance 57 Ring of light 58 British school 59 Takes a chair 62 Muhammad __


Call 888-3555, fax 888-3639 or email classads@hpe.com for help with your ad HOW TO PLACE YOUR AD Call: 888-3555 or Fax: 336-888-3639 Mail: Enterprise Classified P.O. Box 1009 High Point, NC 27261 In Person: Classified Customer Service Desk 210 Church Avenue High Point

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POLICIES The High Point Enterprise reserves the right to edit or reject an ad at any time and to correctly classify and edit all copy. The Enterprise will assume no liability for omission of advertising material in whole or in part.

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ERRORS

Please check your ad the first day it runs. If you find an error, call DEADLINES the first day so your Call before 3:45 p.m. ad can be corrected. the day prior to The Enterprise will publication. Call give credit for only Friday before 3:00 the first for Saturday, Sunday incorrect publication. or Monday ads. For Sunday Real Estate, PAYMENT call before 2:45 p.m. Wednesday. Fax Pre-payment is deadlines are one required for hour earlier. all individual ads and all business ads. Business accounts may apply for preDISCOUNTS approved credit. For Businesses may earn your convenience, lower rates by we accept Visa, advertising on a Mastercard, cash or regular basis. Call for checks. complete details. Family rates are YARD SALE available for individuals RAIN (non-business) with INSURANCE yard sales, selling When you place a household items or yard sale ad in The selling personal vehicles. Call to see if High Point Enterprise you can insure your you qualify for this sale against the rain! low rate. Ask us for details!

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NNOUNCEMENTS

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Personals

ABORTION PRIVATE DOCTOR'S OFFICE 889-8503 0142

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ARAGE /ESTATE SALES Garage/Estate Sales

Estate & Yard Sale, 1306 Baker Rd. Thurs 9/23 & Fri, 9/24, 8am-4pm, 60 Plus Years of Household.

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MPLOYMENT

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Administrative

Secretarial Opening. Hours 8am-4pm Mon-Fri, Need experience in Bookkeeping & Accounting, Also Quickbooks. Salary Neg. Call Scott Andrews. 336-688-3833

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Sales WE NEED YOU ON OUR TEAM!

2 Toned Gold and Silver, Ann Kline watch, lost either at Harris Teeter or Green Street Baptist Church. Call if found 336-869-6706

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ANNOUNCEMENTS Special Notes Happy Ads Card of Thanks Personals Lost Found GARAGE/ESTATE SALES Garage/Estate Sales Instruction EMPLOYMENT Administrative Sales Professional Education/Teaching Medical/Dental Technical Accounting General Help Industrial Trade Skilled Trade Trucking Office Help Retail Help Hotel/Motel Restaurant Child Care Part-time Employment People Seeking Employment Business Opportunity Businesses for Sale Employment Information Elderly Care Summer Employment PETS Pet Boarding Cats/Dogs/Pets Pet Services FARM Farm Market You Pick Feed/Fertilizer Nursery Stock Livestock Horses Farm Equipment Farms for Sale Farm Services MERCHANDISE Auction Sales Antiques/Art Household Goods Musical Merchandise Computer

The Assurance Group, Inc. in Thomasville, NC is now hiring highly motivated individuals to fill telesales positions in our state of the art call center. * Life insurance products are sold over the phone using an electronic application process. * Leads are provided daily * Benefits available * Recession proof industry! * For a confidential interview call Stephen Bennett at 800-750-1738 extension 2343

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General Help

Adult Entertainers, $150 per hr + tips. No exp. Necessary. Call 336-285-0007 ext 5 Immediate opportunity for experienced finishing sanders, 5 yrs exp. req'd, background and drug screen req'd. Email resume Winstonsalem.NC@ na.manpower.com Start Earning Christmas $$ Now. Sell Avon to Family, Friends & Work. 908-4002 Independent Rep.

High Point Enterprise Carriers Needed Need to earn extra money? Are you interested in running your own business? This is the opportunity for you. The High Point Enterprise is looking for carriers to deliver the newspaper as independent contractors. You must be able to work early morning hours. Routes must be delivered by 6am. This is seven days a week, 365 days per year. We have routes available in the following areas: * Thomasville/East Davidson: E. Holly Grove Rd, Johnsontown, Cunningham, Fisher Ferry. Applicants for this contract position should be: Responsible, Motivated, Diligent, Customer Service Oriented. If you are interested in any of the above routes, please come by the office at 210 Church Avenue between 8:30am-4:30pm.

Hospice of Davidson County is seeking a FT (30-40 hours) Nurse Practitioner to provide patient care as part of the interdisciplinary team in the inpatient facility. We are committed to serving patients with the highest quality, compassionate care available. Requires current license as a Nurse Practitioner in North Carolina with a minimum of two years experience in a hospital, home health care, clinic or hospice setting. Must possess excellent clinical, communication and problem solving skills and the ability to work independently and adapt to change. Competitive salary and benefit package. Send resume to HODC 200 Hospice Way, Lexington, NC 27292 or apply online at www.hospiceofdavidson.org.

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0518 Electronics 0521 Lawn & Garden Equipment 0524 Snow Removal Equipment 0527 Sporting Goods 0530 Swimming Pools 0533 Furniture 0536 Misc. Tickets 0539 Firewood 0542 Building Materials 0545 Machinery & Tools 0548 Restaurant Equipment 0551 Store/Office Equipment 0554 Wanted to Rent/Buy/ Trade 0557 Holiday Time 0560 Christmas Trees 0563 Misc. Items for Sale 0600 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT 0605 Real Estate for Rent 0610 Unfurnished Apartments 0615 Furnished Apartments 0620 Homes for Rent 0625 Condominiums for Rent 0630 Duplexes for Rent 0635 Rooms for Rent 0640 Misc for Rent 0645 Wanted to Rent 0650 Rentals to Share 0655 Roommate Wanted 0660 Lake/River/Resort 0665 Vacation Property 0670 Business Places/ Offices 0675 Mobile Homes for Rent 0680 Specialty Shops 0685 Bargain Basement 0700 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 0710 Homes for Sale 0715 Condominium for Sale 0720 Duplex/Apts 0728 Lake/River/Resort 0734 Lots & Acreage 0741 Mobile Homes for Sale 0747 Manufactured Homes for Sale 0754 Commercial/Office 0760 Business Properties 0767 Industrial 0773 Income Property 0780 Misc. Real Estate

General Help

Now Accepting Applications for: R&D - Must be mechanically inclined - Must have general knowledge of lathes milling and welding - Machine operator experience - Previous part making experience - Some CAD knowledge - Read blueprints and tape measure - Handle paperwork Furniture Stain Sprayer - Knowledge of NGR Stain a plus. - Minimum of 2years experience Employment Staffing 104 Lines St, Thomasville NC 336-475-1322 PT CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERK The High Point Enterprise is seeking an individual that enjoys interacting with the public. Candidate must have good communication, phone & organizational skills. Also must be able to type a minimum of 25 to 30 wpm. This position will be answering incoming calls as well as calling past and current subscribers to The High Point Enterprise. Hours of operation are 6:00am to 5:00pm Monday - Friday also Saturday and Sunday 6:00am-12:00pm and Holidays. Must be flexible in working daytime & weekend hours. Please apply in person at The High Point Enterprise Monday thru Friday 9am-3pm. No phone calls please. EOE.

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0786 Wanted to Buy Real Estate 0793 Monuments/Cemeteries 0800 TRANSPORTATION 0804 Boats for Sale 0808 Boat Slips 0812 Boat Storage 0816 Recreational Vehicles 0820 Campers/Trailers 0824 Motor Homes 0828 Snowmobiles 0832 Motorcycles 0836 Airplanes & Equipment 0840 Auto Services 0844 Auto Repair 0848 Auto/Truck Parts & Accessories 0852 Heavy Equipment 0856 Sport Utility Vehicles 0860 Vans for Sale 0864 Pickup Trucks for Sale 0868 Cars for Sale 0872 Classic/Sports/ Collector Cars 0876 Bicycles 0880 Off-Road Vehicles 0900 FINANCIAL 0910 Business Opportunities 0920 Loans 0930 Investments 0950 LEGALS 0955 Legals 1000 HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY 1006 Additions & Renovations 1012 Appliances 1018 Asphalt/Concrete 1024 Backhoe 1030 Basement Waterproofing 1036 Carpet Cleaning 1042 Carpet Sales/ Installation 1048 Cleaning Services 1054 Crane/Lift Services 1060 Custom Cabinets 1066 Decks/Porches/ Enclosures 1072 Demolition 1078 Ditches & Trenches 1084 Driveways 1090 Drywall 1096 Duct Cleaning 1102 Electrical Services 1108 Excavating

Skilled Trade

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1114 Exterior Cleaning 1120 Fence Installation 1126 Floor Covering/ Installation 1132 Garage Doors/Builders 1138 Gutters 1144 Handyman 1150 Hauling 1156 Heating/Cooling 1162 Home Improvement & Repair 1168 Home Inspection/ Appraisal 1174 Home Organization 1180 Insulation 1186 Internet Services 1192 Lawn Mower Repair 1198 Lawn/Landscape/ Tree Svc 1200 Tree Services 1204 Manufactured Homes 1210 Masonry 1216 Mobile & Modular Home Rep 1222 Movers 1228 Paint/Wallcover 1234 Phone Services 1236 Plastering 1240 Plumbing 1246 Pole Barn 1252 Porches & Enclosure 1258 Pressure Washing 1264 RV Repair 1270 Recycling 1276 Roofing 1282 Rototilling 1288 Satellite Systems 1294 Security Services 1300 Septic/Sewer Services 1306 Services 1312 Sharpening Service 1318 Small Engine Repair 1324 Small Engine Service 1330 Snow Removal 1336 Sprinkler Systems 1342 Storage, Indoor/ Outdoor 1348 Telephone Services 1354 Tile/Stone Installation 1360 Tractor Repair 1366 Window Cleaning 1500 PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY 1509 Accounting

Skilled Trade

AUTOMOTIVE PAINTER Full time position available on 1st shift. Minimum 5 yrs exper. w/verifiable emp. references. Excellent working conditions in first class facility. Drug free environment. Criminal record req'd. Competitive pay. Exc. benefits incl'd major med, dental, life, 401k, paid vac., and sick/personal days. Apply to Human Resources M-F 8am to 4pm, Greensboro Auto Auction, Inc., 3907 W. Wendover Ave., Greensboro, NC, 27407. EOE

Skilled Machinist wanted 5+ yrs experience. Current Positions Open, CNC Turning, VMC, and CNC EDM. Paid Hospitalization , 401K, Holiday.mbbob@gmail.com

Electrical Service Technician

WAREHOUSE POSITION: Local leader in the logistics industry currently seeking warehouse associates. Looking for motivated individuals with 2 yrs furniture warehouse experience able to handle a fast pace. Duties include careful loading and unloading of furniture and other related items. Candidates must be in great physical shape, able to handle rigorous activity and able to lift up to 75 pounds. Candidates must be able to stand at least 90% of the day. Pay based on experience. CANDIDATE WITHOUT FURNITURE WAREHOUSE EXPERIENCE WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED. UCC Distribution, Kernersville, NC. Call 336-852-2246

Growing manufacturer and distributor of industrial shredding systems seeks skilled individual for startup and service of equipment at customer locations. Extensive North America Travel required. Driverʼs license required. The right candidate not only must possess an excellent working knowledge of electrical systems, but must have superior communication skills for customer relations. This demanding position rewards the people who perform. Individual must know industrial controls, PLCʼs, VFDʼs, and National Electrical Code. Above average salary and comprehensive benefits package-medical and dental insurance, vacation, retirement plan. Send resume of qualifications to: ATTN: Todd Carswell, Vecoplan, LLC, PO Box 7224, High Point, NC 27264. Experienced ONLY Window Installer, Vinyl Windows with equipment or without. Call 476-7319 or 442-6614 SAM KINCAID PAINTING FREE ESTIMATES CALL 472-2203

Triad-Fabco, a division of Hickory Springs Mfg. co. in High Point, NC is currently seeking an experienced Industrial Maintenance Mechanic for 1st shift. The ideal candidate should have at least 5 years experience in maintenance and equipment repqir, or a Journeyman certificate in Industrial Maintenance. The candidate must be able to preform various manual tasks necessary to repair, build and over haul various types of machinery and equipment. Must be able to read and understand blueprints, schematics and standard metric measurements. Various types of machines, tools, and equipment will be used in this position: Power Tools, Grinders, Mills, Lathes, Boring Machine, Testing Equipment, Forklift, Welder, Drill Press, Saws, Various hand tools and Measuring equipment. Traid-Fabco/Hickory Springs Mfg. Co. offers and excellent benefits package: Major Medical with a $20 copay, Dental, Life, Pharmacy Card, 7 paid holidays, 2 weeks vacation, 401k plan, educational assistance, credit association and more. Apply in person: 1325 Baker Rd, High Point, 27263. Hickory Springs Manufacturing Company is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/D

TBOE Furniture is growing, looking for skilled workers, Part time, some full time, Double needle and Regular Sewers, Some Casual work, Upholsters, Outsiders. Apply in person 227 Berkley St. HP 10am-4pm

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Trucking

In home delivery driver needed. Class B CDL required, 3 years experience min. Call for interview 336-476-8001 Dump Truck Drivers Needed. CDL's & References Required. 5 yrs. Experience A Must. Apply In Person @ Smith & Jennings, Inc. 1020 Hedgecock Rd High Point, NC

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Alterations Assisted Living Catering Chauffeur Services Christmas Trees Computer Services Counseling Crafters & Hobbies Dance Instruction Income Tax Day Care Licensed Divorces Driving Schools Elderly Care Errand Services Firewood Furniture Upholstery Health & Nutrition Health Care Holistic House sitting Insurance Interior Design Karate/Martial Arts Kennels Legal Services Machine Shop Massage Therapy Music Lessons Nails Services Optical Services Paralegal Party Planning Personal Trainer Pest Control Pet Care Photography Pool Services Private Investigator Psychics Salon Services Surveying Services Taxidermy Tutoring Services Upholstery Weight Management Welding Services SPECIAL OCCASIONS Christmas Father’s Day Graduation Memorial Day Mother’s Day Valentine’s Day Veteran’s Day Church Page

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Trucking

DRIVERS CDL A – TEAMS & SINGLES OTR SIGN-ON BONUS FOR TEAMS Brand New 2010 Freightliners 4 Teams Needed in Greensboro, NC Plenty of Miles, Earn More Money, Job Stability, Quality Home Time, Safety & Comfort Driving New Trucks, Health, Life, Dental Insurance, Paid Holidays & Vacation, Med & Rx Benefits. 1 yr tractor-trailer exp., CDL - A. Clean driving & criminal records req. 336-510-0936 KEYSTONE FREIGHT EOE M/F

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Restaurant

NOW accepting applications for night time wait staff & lunch weekend wait staff . Apply in person at Lubranos 2531 Eastchester Dr. High Point. Ask for Frank or Carmine 454-3686

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Child Care

Kimmies Kutties Licensed In Home Child Care. Enrolling Now. N. HP. 336-880-1615

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Part-time Employment

Avon Reps needed part time, work your on schedule, Call Mary 336-447-4758

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ETS

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Cats/Dogs/Pets

$200 off. Too Many Puppies! Carin Ter, Cock A Chon. Lhasapoo. Greene's Kennels. 336-498-7721

Drivers/CDL Career Training w/Central Refrigerated. We Train, Employ w/$0 Down FiAdult Female, Cat, Ginger nancing. AVG $35K - $40k Tabby. Declawed, Free to 1ST yEAR! Good Home. Call 877-369-7884 336-884-0686 Prepress Coordinator for Printing Center Production & Creative work - Prepare graphic files for various output devices - Preflight files for outsourcing - Edit Both Mac and PC files - Design marketing pieces and in house ads - Some web design - Data management - Responsible for keeping organized file archives and work area - Some digital color production work - Comfortable seeking graphic solutions Proficiency on Mac and PC, Adobe CS4(strong background in Acrobat), Font Management, Office, Illustrator, Photoshop, Freehand. Hrs. 8-5 M-F Qualified applicants only Email questions, resume and cover letter to: Prepress5193@yahoo.com


4D www.hpe.com WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE 0320

Cats/Dogs/Pets

AKC Registered German Rottweilers, 7wks full blooded, shots and dewormed, $375. each all females. Call 336-777-1724/ 336-529-8173 AKC Registered Pitt Bulls. 2Blues, Females, 1 Male Fawn. $250 each. Call 336-476-7440

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Farm Market

Bernie's Berries & Produce. Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Squash, Cukes, Apples, Green Beans, Peas, Peaches, Pumpkins, Gourds and more. 5421 Groometown Rd. 852-1594

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Kenmore Electric Stove Digital Clock. Good Condition. $85 Call 336-479-0445

ERCHANDISE

Stove, Refrigerator, Washer, all for $300. Moving Must Sell. Call 336-491-4334

Piano Baldwin console 41" High Very New Will Deliver. $895. Call 336-427-3062

Lawn & Garden Equipment

Craftsman Triple Leaf Bagger, fits Craftsman riding mower, $275. Call 336-819-9106 Great Sand Rock! Tri Axle Load Delivered, $150. Archdale, Thomasville, Trinity & High Point. 336-688-9012 John Deere LT-166 Lawn Tractor, ex. cond., $1200., 476-1182 after 6pm

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Whirlpool White Refrigerator, 25 cu ft. Side by Side. Outside Ice & Water Dispenser. Like New. $275. 803-0596

Musical Merchandise

0545 Machinery & Tools 12inch Radial Saw like new-$225., 2 Radial Alarm Drill press New-$125. each. Call 475-2410 or 888-8058

0521

0509 Household Goods

0512

Computer

SCOOTERS Computers. We fix any problem. Low prices. 476-2042

0515

BUYING ANTIQUES Pottery, Glass, Old Stuff 239-7487 / 472-6910

Kenmore Washer & Dryer. Matching Set. Super Capacity. Like new. $250. Call 336-479-0445

ARM

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Antiques/Art

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Furniture

Moving Sale! 5 pc T-ville Furn BR Suite, $450, 6 pc LR set, $400. Call 336-819-9867 Qn BR Set w/matt, $200, Wood DR Table w/4 chairs, $100. 2 Chests: 1, $40 & 1 $25, Desk w/Hutch $25. 476-3523 Troy Built Riding Lawnmower, 7 spd. 17.5 HP. Been Used Twice. $700. 476-3523

GUARANTEED RESULTS!

Wanted to Rent/ Buy/Trade

0554

We will advertise your house until it sells!

QUICK CASH PAID FOR JUNK CARS & TRUCKS. 434-1589.

• 2X2 Display Ad (Value $64.60/day) • Ad will run EVERYDAY • Ad will include photo, description and price of your home • Ad runs up to 365 days

Top cash paid for any junk vehicle. T&S Auto 882-7989

$400

Misc. Items for Sale

0563

Certain restrictions apply. This offer valid for a limited time only.

Mountain Land in Dobson Township. 1+/-ac. Cheap! Homemade Camper, Complete. Runs good, Sleeps 4. Call 336-301-0372

Call 888-3555 or Email classads@hpe.com For Sale By Owner, Realtors & Builders are Welcome!

Schwinn Exercise Bike, Like New Condition. $200. Call 336-855-8292

R

EAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Showcase of Real Estate NEW HOMES DAVIDSON COUNTY

Water View

164 Emily Ann Drive, N. Davidson County-FSBO Desirable Davidson County Schools, gorgeous, custom brick home built in 2005, 2,864 SF, quiet cul-de-sac,3BR,2.5BA,possible 4th BR in unďŹ nished space, spacious modern open oor plan on one level, HW oors, bonus room over garage, custom kitchen w/granite countertops, maple cabinets, SS appliances, and beautiful tile oor, wonderful master suite with HUGE walk-in closet, tons of storage, too many extras to list here. See our ad at http://www.InfoTube.net/236019 for more details or call 336-201-3943. Shown by appointment only. $379,000.00

Lots starting at $34,900 Homes starting at $225,000 Special Financing at 4.75% (Certain Restrictions Apply)

Builders personal home with many upgrades: hardwood oors, jetted tub, separate shower, beautiful granite counters, fabulous kitchen, 2 story family room AND DRAMATIC VIEWS!! Plus much, much more‌.

WENDY HILL REALTY CALL 475-6800

7%.$9 (),, 2%!,49 s #!,,

3152 WINDCHASE COURT 3 BR 2 BA 1164 SF, New carpet & paint, New HVAC, GE Appliances. End Unit $96,900

CED

CED

H I G H

REDU

REDU

For Sale By Owner 232 Panther Creek Court

315 S. Elm St, High Point Commercial Building for Sale $499,900

Best Price in The Neighborhood! 3BR/2.5BA/BSMT/GAR - Sparkling hardwood oors on the ML, sunny bkft room, spacious kitchen w/island-pantry-tiled backsplash-u/c lighting, formal DR, elegant MSTR w/trey ceiling and TWO walk-in closets, oversized deck, covered patio w/tv & frig, outdoor sink, beautifully landscaped w/ agstone courtyard for entertaining/dining. BSMT studded for future expansion. Private n’hood pool, walking trails, tennis courts, parks, lakes plus golf course. Summer fun for the whole family! $309,000 3HARON $ANIEL 2EALTOR s -ORE )NFO 0ATTERSON$ANIEL COM

8,400 Sq. Ft +/-, SHOW ROOM DISTRICT

3OUTHERN 7OODS AT -EADOWLANDS s 7ALLBURG .#

Ed Price & Associates Diana Baxendale, Broker Sales Associate 118 Trindale Road, Archdale, NC 27263 Direct (336)475-1052 OfďŹ ce & Cell (336) 870-9395 Fax (336)475-1352 Email: diana.baxendale@edpricetriad.com Website: dianabsellshomes.com

2)#(,!.$

Quiet rural living, new high quality 3BR/2BA, 1800 sq ft, 0.83 acres, lots of storage, 9/10 ft ceilings, large porches and garage, $225,000, $15,000 to closing and down pay, 3865 Tarmac Dr., SoďŹ a/ Hillsville, FSBO, (336) 287-6107

2300 + Square Foot, 5 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Living Room, Dining Room, Eat-in Kitchen, Laundry Room, Gas Heat with a/c, completely remodeled, large backyard, $98,900

Call 336-689-5029 OPEN HOUSE

PRICE REDUCED

3930 Johnson St.

398 NORTHBRIDGE DR.

Contact us at Lamb’s Realty- 442-5589.

3BR, 2BA, Home, 2 car garage, Nice Paved Patio Like new $169,900 OWNER 883-9031 OPEN HOUSE MOST SAT. & SUN. 2-4

A Must See! Beautiful home set on 3 acres, New cabinets, corian countertops, hardwood, carpet, appliances, deck, roof. Home has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room, dining room, great room. $199,900.

LARGE HOUSE Big Family - Home OfďŹ ces Family Compound

PRICE CUT WENDOVER HILLS

LINDA FAIRCLOTH COLDWELL BANKER TRIAD REALTORS 336-847-4970

8 Unit Apartment Building Available

1.2 acres, 3.5 baths, 14 rooms

336-886-4602 Near Wesley Memorial Methodist/ Emerywood

$259,900 Tell Your Friends - Move in Condition!

All Brick Exterior Built 1987. Paved Parking. Each unit 2BR, 1BA (Approx. 750 square Ft.) Electric Heat & Air Conditioning. Many Upgrades and new appliances, oor coverings, cabinets, paint. Public water & sewer (individual meters). Convenient to public transportation and downtown. Asking price $350,000.00. For additional information call (336)833-6797.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

LEDFORD SOUTH OPEN TUES-SAT 11AM-5PM OPEN SUNDAY 1PM-5PM

Beautifully remodeled brick home at 502 Birchwood 3bedrooms, 2 updated baths, new windows, new appliances, countertops and kitchen oors. Completely remodeled, this is like new. Call for appointment. PRICE CUT $132,750.

P O I N T

Directions: Westchester to West Lexington, south on Hwy. 109, Community is on the left just past Ledford Middle School. Quality construction beginning at $169,900! Eight Flexible oorplans! - Three to seven bedrooms - 1939 square feet to 3571 square feet - Friendship/Ledford Schools - Low Davidson County Taxes - Basement lots Available. No City Taxes, No Slab, All Crawspace Construction MORE INFO @ PattersonDaniel.com Marketed Exclusively by Patterson Daniel Real Estate, Inc.

Debra Murrow, Realtor New Home Consultant 336-499-0789

2 Bedroom/ 2 Bath Condo. Excellent High Point location convenient to Winston-Salem and Greensboro. Apprx. 950 square feet. Spacious bedrooms and closets. Garden tub in the master bath. Tray ceilings and crown molding in the living room. Private balcony overlooking a wooded area. Includes: Refrigerator, dishwasher, stove, microwave and washer/dryer connection MOTIVATED SELLER. New Lower Price $79,900!

Call 336-769-0219

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4

WIN WIN SITUATION

Help Support I AM NOW, INC., a local Non-ProďŹ t Your Chance to Win - $100 Rafe Tickets 226 Cascade Drive, High Point Visit www.IAMNOWINC.com and www.RafeThisHouse.Info Canned Food Drive Begins In September

OWNER FINANCING

DON’T MISS TAX CREDIT 189 Game Trail, Thomasville

Rent to Own - Your Credit is approved!

Enjoy living in a quiet, distinctive neighborhood with no through trafďŹ c. 3 BR 2.5 BA, 2300 sq’, open oor plan, vaulted ceilings & lg. windows, Oak oors & carpeted BRs, marble tiled bathrooms, lg. large master bath with separate shower, double ďŹ re place in master BR & LR w. gas logs, kitchen w. granite counter tops, double oven, stereo system. 2 car garage, large patio overlooking a beautiful back yard. Low taxes. $299,800 $321,000 Visit www.forsalebyowner.com/22124271 or call 336.687.3959

4 bedrooms 2 and 1/2 bath Two-story home in Avalon community, 2078 sq.ft. in High Point (Guilford Co.). Formal living room, dining room, ďŹ replace, laundry, great kitchen with breakfast area, Jetted tub in master with separate shower. $1,330 per month with credits toward down payment. Visit www.crs-buy.com or call

505 Willow Drive, Thomasville Over 4,000 Sq. Ft. Brick home with 4 Bedrooms & 4 bathrooms, 2 ďŹ replaces, hardwood oors, updated kitchen, 2 master suites, fenced yard. Grand dining room – Priced at $319,900!!

Wendy Hill 475-6800

FOR SALE

125 Kendall Mill Road, Thomasville 4 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Large Rooms. East Davidson Area. s SQUARE FEET

336-491-9564 or 336-472-0310

5.9 acres, Homesite in Hasty School area. With Underground Electric. Davidson Water and existing Septic. Borders Creek with 3.9 acres wooded & 2.0 acres mostly clear. Ready for your Building. $65K. Call 336-869-1351 or 336-689-0388 AM PM

336-790-8764

Located at 1002 Barbee St, High Point 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Fireplace, New Vinyl, Completely Remodeled. Garage & Storage. $89.900. Have other homes to ďŹ nance. Will trade for land.

Call 886-7095

FOR SALE

Beautiful townhouse at 1740 Ternberry Rd. in Cherokee Hills with 2BR, 2.5 baths, sunny eat-in kitchen, security system, ďŹ replace and private deck area, approx. 1400 SF.... lovely established n’hood conv to all of High Point & Triad. A great value for $114,900... Contact Shirley Ramsey, Broker, Keller Williams Realty for more info 336-992-7602

4493 Orchard Knob Ln Built in 2007, this nearly 1800 SF townhome features 3br/2ba, hardwoods, carpet, tile. Corian counter tops w/ undermount sink & tile back splash. Large living-dining with gas ďŹ replace, stainless steel appliance, rear stamped concrete patio with awning, and 2 car garage. Many upgrades from the standard home. Look, decide & make an offer!

OR

Like quiet neighborhoods? ...backyard privacy? ...secluded living yet near everything? ...downsizing a priority? ...home ready to move into?

then...657 Sonoma Lane is for you! This 1343 s/f, 3br, 2ba townhome is perfectly maintained and features 9’ ceilings w/crown mouldings, custom drapes and blinds, heat pump, gas logs and water heater, Whirlpool appliances and mature plants. Upgrades include: privacy fence, water puriďŹ er, glass enclosed sun room and brick patio. All exterior maintenance through homeowners assn. $169,900.

Call 888-3555 to advertise on this page!

Call 336-869-4040 or 336-471-3900 to visit. 30033022


THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010 www.hpe.com 0605

Real Estate for Rent

RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL NEEDS Call CJP 884-4555

1 BEDROOM Chestnut Apts..................$295 2 BEDROOMS 316 Model Farm..............$450 202-D Windley.................$350 2117 Deep River.............$590 909 Marlboro...................$450 300 Charles....................$450 208 Grand.......................$495 3762 Pineview................$500 240 Beddington...............$350 1500-F Deep River.........$400 517-C Sunny Ln..............$375 2010 Eastchester............$500 320 New St.....................$395 207 Paramount...............$495 219 Oaklawn....................$490 2415A Francis................$475 706 Kennedy..................$350 Scientific.........................$395 Woodside Apts................$450 1034 Pegram..................$450 315-C Kersey..................$365 204A Chestnut.................$360 3 BEDROOMS 320 New St......................$395 405 Forrest......................$575 1003 Richardson............$395 2500 Eight Oaks.............$725 2529 Eight Oaks.............$725 922 Norwood.................$550 1512 Graves..................$400 205 Motsinger.................$450 223 Hobson....................$395 2603 Ty Cir......................$600 508 B Lake......................$585 125 Thomas....................$625 127 Thomas....................$625 807 Newell......................$595 804 Brentwood................$350 806 Brentwood.................$350 1307 Wendover................$795 4 BEDROOMS 3300 Colony Dr............$1100 5 BEDROOMS 2028 Cliffvale................$1150 Craven-Johnson Pollock 615 N. Hamilton St. 884-4555

0610

Unfurnished Apartments

************** Quality 1 & 2 BR Apts for Rent Starting @ $395 Southgate Garden & Piedmont Trace Apartments (336)476-5900 ***************

1br Archdale $395 3br House $795 2br Archdale $495 L&J Prop 434-2736 2BR Apartment, in Archdale. $450/month plus Deposit. No Pets. Call 431-5222

0620

Homes for Rent

3BR/2BA. On 3 ac in Davidson Co. Like New. $825/mo + $825/dep. No Pets! 474-7204 A-1 ROOMS. Clean, close to stores, buses, A/C. No dep. 803-1970. Archdale, Nice 2BR, $400 mo. Call 336-431-7716 206 Edgeworth-1br 918 Ferndale-2br 883-9602

3 BEDROOMS 2631 Ingram.....................$450 604 Parkwood.................$450 111 Avery.........................$435 1934 Cedrow....................$425 1804 E Commerce......... $425 1600 E Lexington.............$575 151 Hedgecock................$750 523 Guilford.....................$450 2346 Brentwood...............$550 1009 True Lane................$450 1015 True Lane................$450 100 Lawndale...................$450 1609 Pershing..................$400

2 BEDROOMS 700 B Redding................$298 1206 Vernon....................$298 1116 B Richland..............$265 1718 L E. Kivett................$298 520 E Dayton..................$485 308 Cedar........................$298 1908 Leonard...................$498 1502 A Leonard...............$275 511 E. Fairfield.................$398 2411 B Van Buren........... $325 515 E. Fairfield.................$398 1605 & 1613 Fowler.........$400 804 Winslow.....................$335 824-H Old Winston Rd.....$550 706-C Railroad.................$345 305-A Phillips...................$300 1101 Carter St.................$350 705-B Chestnut................$390 201-G Dorothy.................$375

1 BEDROOM 211 E. Kendall..................$345 1600 A Long...................$325 620-19A N. Hamilton........$310 618-12A N. Hamilton........$298 320G Richardson.............$335 620-20B N. Hamilton........$375 1003 N. Main................... $305 314 B Meadow Place....$298

SECTION 8 614 Everette....................$498 1106 Grace......................$425

T-ville 3BR/2BA, Cent H/A, 125 A Kendall Mill Rd. $700/mo, $700/dep. Ph 472-0310/491-9564 T-ville, Hasty/Ledford Schools. 3BR/2BA. No Pets. $700/mo, 475-7323 or 442-7654 Lovely 2BR home. Hdwd flr. Cent. heat/air. Nice Fireplace 882-9132

2BR, 1BA avail. 2427 Francis St. Nice Area. $475/mo Call 336-833-6797

Clositers & Foxfire $1000 FREE RENT! 885-5556

2 BR, Appls, AC, Clean, W/D Connection. Good Location. $450. 431-9478 Spacious All Electric. 1 Level, 1Br Brick Apt. W/D Conn. Stove, Refrig. 883-7010 WE have section 8 approved apartments. Call day or night 625-0052.

0620

visit us online...

hpe.com

Nice clean 2BR, bath and half Apt., Stove and Refridge., Central air and heat, no smoking and no pets. $425. mo + sec. dep. Call 476-4570

2 BEDROOM 6117 Hedgecock #1A......$750 1720 Beaucrest...............$600 1111 N. Hamilton.............$595 1540 Beaucrest...............$525 101 #13 Oxford..............$525 120 Kendall....................$475 1610 Brentwood............$475 905 Old Tville Rd............$450 215 Friendly....................$450 1198 Day........................$450 914 Newell.....................$450 1119 Textile....................$435 1804 Johnson.................$425 205-D Tyson Ct..............$425 114-A Marshall...............$425 1501-B Carolina..............$425 541 E. Dayton................$410 324 Walker....................$400 2306 Palmer..................$400 611 Paramount.............$400 305 Barker......................$400 713-B Chandler.............$399 2903-B Esco....................$395 622-A Hendrix...............$395 1704 Whitehall..............$385 609-A Memorial Pk........$375 1100 Adams.................$375 2306-A Little..................$375 1227 Redding.................$350 311-B Chestnut...............$350 309-B Griffin...................$335 900-A W. Kearns..............$335 4703 Alford......................$325 508 Radford....................$300 313-B Barker...................$300 1116-B Grace...................$295 306-B Meredith..............$290 1515 Olivia......................$280 1700 A & B Brockett........$275

1 BEDROOM

502-C Playground (Archdale) – 1BR/1BA apt. Stove, refrig. furn. WD hookup, No pets, no inside smoking. $350 mo. 434-3371

Large 1BR, Duplex $280. near Penn-Griffin, very clean, blinds, 882-2030

Homes for Rent

4 BEDROOMS 1124 Meadowlawn.........$995 809 Doak.........................$775 520 Pendleton..................$625 3 BEDROOMS 3603 Grindstaff..............$1195 1506 Chatham................$695 423 Aldridge.....................$675 112 Hedgecock................$675 2713 Ernest St.................$675 2305 Friends...................$600 222 Montlieu....................$595 726 Bridges......................$575 1020 South.......................$550 701 Habersham..............$550 2507 Dallas......................$550 2208-A Gable Way...........$550 209 Earle..........................$535 2415 Williams...................$525 507 Hedrick......................$525 2915 Central...................$525 601 Willoubar...................$525 324 Louise.......................$525 637 Wesley......................$525 834 Cummins..................$500 409 N Centennial............$500 2207 Gable Way..............$500 12 Forsyth........................$495 2543 Patrick.....................$475 919 Old Winston..............$525 1220-A Kimery.................$500 2219 N. Centennial..........$495 836 Cummins..................$450 913 Grant........................$450 502 Everett......................$450 606 Barbee......................$450 410 Vail...........................$425 328 Walker......................$425 914 Putnam.....................$399

1123-C Adams...............$450 402-C W. Lexington.......$400 620-A Scientific..............$375 508 Jeanette..................$375 910 Proctor.....................$325 1119-A English...............$295 305 E. Guilford................$275 309-B Chestnut...............$275 1103-A S. Elm.................$275 502-B Coltrane................$270 405-A Kennedy...............$250 1317-A Tipton..................$235 CONRAD REALTORS 512 N. Hamilton 885-4111

2BR/1BA, Ready to Rent. 602 Memorial Park Dr, Tville. Call 704-277-5398

Fall Special! 2Br Apt. Archdale. 127-A Columbus Ave. Quiet, Clean, A/C, Refrig, Stove, W/D Hookups. $395/mo. Call 434-6236

0620

0635

Rooms for Rent

A Better Room 4U. Walking distance of stores, buses. 886-3210 LOW Weekly Rates - a/c, phone, HBO, eff. Travel Inn Express, HP 883-6101 no sec. dep. AFFORDABLE Rooms for rent. Call 336-491-2997

0640

Misc for Rent

3BR, $665. 2BR Apt, $500, Furnished Room $100/wk. Section 8 ok. Call 887-2033 Mobile Homes & Lots Auman Mobile Home Pk 3910 N. Main 883-3910

0640

Misc for Rent

0780 Misc. Real Estate

0868

3 BEDROOMS 109 Quakerwood............$1100 317 Washboard................$895 330 W. Presnell................$790 1704 Azel.........................$600 603 Denny.......................$600 2209 B Chambers...........$575 1014 Grace......................$575 800 Carr..........................$575 281 Dorothy.....................$550 1414 Madison..................$525 116 Underhill...................$525 1439 Madison..................$495 840 Putnam......................$475 5693 Muddy Creek #2......$475 920 Forest.......................$450 1032 Grace......................$430 1711 Edmondson............$350

FSBO low price to prevent foreclosure. 2BR, 2BA Condo Archdale area. 843-997-2460

05 Taurus Wagon very nice, 70k, $4400. Call 336-431-6020 or 336-847-4635 2007 Mercury Millan, 31K, Silver. Excellent Condition. $12,900. Call 336-869-2022 87 Thunderbird, LX. 106K miles. All power. New Tires, AC. 5.0 V8. EC. $1800. Call 336-495-9636 / 336-301-6673 AT Quality Motors you can buy regardless. Good or bad credit. 475-2338 99 Nissan Altima GXE, 4 dr, auto, A/C, pwr windows, cd, new tires, ex. cond., $4850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426 97 Honda Accord LX, 4 door, auto, a/c, Pwr windows, CD, 4 cycliner, 30MPG, $4850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426

2 BEDROOMS 606 Liberty.....................$625 3911 C Archdale............$600 1114 Westbrook..............$550 285 Dorothy...................$500 532 Roy............................$495 8798 US 311 #3..............$495 931 Marlboro..................$475 112 A Marshall................$450 307 Liberty......................$450 813 E. Guilford...............$450 306 Terrace Trace...........$450 410 Friddle......................$435 10721 N Main..................$425 500 Lake.........................$425 800 Barbee.....................$425 804 Wise.........................$400 283 Dorothy...................$400 107 Plummer.................$400 304-A Kersey...................$395 1033-A Pegram.............$395 1418 Johnson.................$375 600 Willowbar..................$375 1429 E Commerce..........$375 309 A N. Hall....................$365 1031 B Pegram................$355 802 Barbee.....................$350 215-B & DColonial...........$350 417 B White Oak..............$350 1 BEDROOMS 3306 A Archdale..........$350 311 A&B Kersey...............$335 203 Baker.......................$325 205 A Taylor....................$285 909 A Park.....................$250 529 A Flint......................$250 KINLEY REALTY 336-434-4146

2BR/1BA 1112 Richland St, $395 336-434-2004

0670

Business Places/ Offices

1000 SF retail space close to new 85. $595/month. Call day or night 336-625-6076 8000 SF Manuf $1800 168 SF Office $250 600 SF Wrhs $200 T-ville 336-561-6631 Large bar behind Home Depot on N. Main Street. Reasonable rent. Call day or night 336-625-6076.

1000 SF OFFICE The Best Deal In Town! Good location, beautiful ground floor, good parking in front. Special price $510/mo. Henry Shavitz Realty 882-8111 Office 615 W English 4300 sf. Industrial 641 McWay Dr, 2500 sf. Fowler & Fowler 883-1333 Retail/Office/Church Intersection Hwy 29/70 & 68 1100sf $600 336-362-2119

0675

Mobile Homes for Rent

2BR, 2 BA private lot, storage building, NO PETS, Archdale, 431-9665 or 689-1401 2BR/1BA Mobile Home in Quiet Park. $400/mo, $350/dep. Ledford Area. Call 442-7806 3BR Trailer, Cent H/A. Inside Like New. Big Rooms. $600 & dep. Call 476-9591 Clean 2BR, 1BA, water incl. NO Pets. $200 dep. $100 wkly. 472-8275

1102 Cassell 2br 300 523 Flint 2br 275 913-B Redding 2br 300 HUGHES ENTERPRISES 885-6149

3BR, 2BA, $675. plus dep., central heat/air, 1907 Ardeen Pl., HP Call between 4pm-8pm 989-2434 3BR/1.5BA, 2 Story, Cent H/A. Stove, Refrig. Archdale. $750/mo, $750/sec. Call 336-382-6102

T

RANSPORTATION

0816

Recreational Vehicles

'90 Winnebago Chiefton 29' motor home. 73,500 miles, runs good, $11,000. 336-887-2033 2003 Club Car Golf Cart 48 volts, sun top, windshield, rear seat, $2850. Call 924-6168 or 650-2426 Dream Team, 2008 Ford F-250 Super Duty King Ranch Truck & 2008 38" Montana 5th Wheel. Perfect for traveling the beautiful USA. Both for $50,000. 336-847-3133

0820 Campers/Trailers 06 Fifth Wheel Cardinal. 30' w/2 Slideouts. Immaculate. $27,000. New Tires. 474-0340

0824

Motor Homes

'01 Damon motorhome. 2 slides, 2 ACs, 10k, loaded. 36ft. Very good cond., $52,000. Back-up camera. 431-9891

0832

Motorcycles

00 Harley Davidson Fatboy, 1,900 miles, extras, Must See!. $11,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293 06 HD Road King. 3700 miles. Always Garaged. $1000's of Chrome front to back. $15,500. Call 431-9473

0856

Sport Utility Vehicles

2000 Chevy Blazer LS. 4WD. New Tires, m 123,500. Knocking Sound in motor. $1500 firm. Call 336-688-0206 95 Toyota 4-Runner, 145K miles, Exc Cond. $5,200. Call 336-687-8204

0864

Pickup Trucks for Sale

0880 Off-Road Vehicles 2007 Honda 400 EX, Less than 10 hrs. Sport Type 4 Wheeler. Bought New in 10/09. Adult Owned. Black, Electric Start & Reverse. Asking $3800. Call 688-3964

F

INANCIAL

0955

Legals

NOTICE OF EXECUTOR TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS Dixie T. Vanderwerff, having qualified as Persoanl Representative for the Estate of Peter M. Vanderwerff, Deceased, late of Georgetown County, South Caroina, does hereby notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned, at the address indicated below, on or before December 24, 2010, or this Noitce will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate should please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 22nd day of September, 2010. Dixie T. Vanderwerff Personal Representative of the Peter M. Vanderwerff Estate Grant & Kuyk P.O. Box 395 Charleston, SC 29402

06 Chev. Silverado, 2500 HD Crew, 4X4, Loaded, Lthr, DVD. Onstar, Heated Seats, Long bed. $22,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293

James K Kuyk Grant & Kuyk 171 Church Street, Suite 260 Charleston, SC 29402

08 Chev Colorado, Ext Cab, LT. 14K mi. Loaded. LN. $16,700. 784-5369/817-6222

September 22, 29 & October 6 & 13, 2010

More people... Better results...

08 Mitsubishi Raider, LS. Ext Cab. 6spd OD. 12k mil. LN. $13,500 784-5369/817-6222 1984 GMC Caballero, 93K miles. VGC. Runs Good. $5000 obo. Call 336-841-1525 1986 Toyota Truck SR5 Turbo. Highway mileage, PS, Tilt, PB, PW. $2,200 obo. Call 336-880-5690

0868

Cars for Sale

05 Chev. Suburban, 4X4, Loaded, Leather, DVD, Onstar. $19,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293

HPE Classifieds (336) 888-3555

Buy • Save • Sell Place you ad in the classifieds! Make your classified ads work harder for you with features like bolding, ad borders & eye-catching graphics!

(336) 888-3555

NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION 10 JA 506-511 IN THE MATTER OF: EMILY TURNER A Female Child born on or about May 27, 1999, in High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina

JESSICA PEREZ A Female Child born on or about September 26, 2001, in High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina

EAL ESTATE FOR SALE

ALEXANDER PEREZ A Male Child born on or about April 25, 2005, in High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina

Homes for Sale

ISABELLA PEREZ A Female Child born on or about July 2, 2006, in High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina

Payments to Owner! Nice 2BR House. 75x150ft lot. $3000 down. Call 336-882-9132

LELAND PEREZ A Male Child born on or about August 15, 2007, in High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina

Mobile Homes for Sale

MH's Completely remodeled on nice private lots. Some Owner Financing available. 434-2365 leave message

0754 Commercial/Office 1,000 sq. ft retail space near new 85. Reasonable rent & terms. Phone day or night 336-625-6076. 70,000 ft. former Braxton Culler bldg. Well located. Reasonable rent. Call day or night. 336-625-6076 Almost new 10,000 sq ft bldg on Baker Road, plenty of parking. Call day or night 336-625-6076 Houses $295-$495 in High Point Area. Phone day or night 336-625-0052

Subscribe at 336-888-3511 for home delivery, and be among the first to know what’s happening in your neighborhood!

Floral Garden, 2 Side by Side plots, Sells for $6400 asking 5000. Call 610-698-7056

Trinity 2BR/1BA, Private Lot, $400/mo + Deposit. Call 336-861-7471 Daytime, 861-4938 Evening

0741

2BR, carpet, blinds, appli. No Pets. $500. mo. 883-4611 Leave message.

1 Plot at Holly Hill Cemetery in the Front Sec. Will Sell Cheap! 336-491-9564 or 472-0310

MAKAYLA TURNER A Female Child born or or about July 29, 2000, in High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina

0710

Follow the garage sale trail every weekend in

Monuments/ Cemeteries

Cars for Sale

Mobile Home for rent Archdale & Thomasville area. Weekly or monthly. Call 883-8650

R

Garage sale season is heating up!

0793

0665 Vacation Property MB Condo. (2) 2BR/2BA, Shore Dr. Call for Special Fall Rates 887-4000

Homes for Rent

1 Bedroom 217 Lindsay St.................$400 2 Bedrooms 709-B Chestnut St...........$350 713-A Scientific St...........$375 309 Windley St................$395 318 Monroe Pl.................$400 3117-A&B Bowers Ave....$435 513 Manley St.................$450 203 Brinkley Pl.................$475 528 Flint St.......................$475 210-C Oakdale Rd...........$550 607 E. Lexington Ave......$600 5928 W. Friendly Ave......$675 3 Bedrooms 301 Pam St......................$575 Call About Rent SpecialsFowler & Fowler 883-1333 www.fowler-fowler.com

5D

2111 Shore Dr 2300 sqft, $700 Baptist Childrens Home Rd, T-ville 3200 sqft $750 Conrad Realtors 336-885-4111

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: TABATHA LYNN TURNER, THE MOTHERof the above named juveniles TAKE NOTICE that a Petition alleging neglect and dependency was filed on August 19, 2010, in the Office of the Clerk of Superior Court, Juvenile Division, High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina. You must answer this Petition within forty (40) days of September 22, 2010, exclusive of that date. You are entitled to attend any hearing affecting your rights. The adjudication in this matter is scheduled for November 4, 2010. Attorney Tom Smothers has been appointed to represent you in this matter and can be reached at 336-885-1240. Your attorney should be contacted immediately. Upon your failure to so answer, the Petitioner will apply to the Court for the relief requested. This the 22nd day of September 2010. ___________________________ Matthew J. Turcola Deputy County Attorney 505 E. Green Drive High Point, North Carolina 27260 (336) 845-5015 September 22, 29 & October 6, 2010


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AUCTIONEER N

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Reasonable Rates Call 336-362-0082

-!), 0 / "/8 ()'( 0/).4 . #

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DRYWALL SEAWELL DRYWALL Hanging & Finishing s 3PRAYED #EILINGS s 0ATCH 7ORK s 3MALL ,ARGE *OBS Home: 336-328-0688 Cell: 336-964-8328

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LANDSCAPE GREEN FOOT TRIM -/7).' s (!.$9-!. "/"#!4 7/2+ s "53( (/'').' '544%2 #,%!.).' 02%3352% 7!3().' 2%-/$%,).' 3%26)#%3 025.).' 42%% 3%26)#%3 $%-/,)4)/. *5.+ 2%-/6!, PAY UP TO $200 FOR JUNK CARS CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE @ (336)442-8942

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Our Family Protecting Your Family s "URGLAR s &IRE s 3ECURITY #AMERAS s !CCESS #ONTROL s -EDICAL 0ANIC

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TREE SERVICE D & T Tree Service, Inc.

35 Years Experience

Driveways, Patios, 7ALKWAYS 3LABS Basements, Footings, #USTOM 3UNDECKS "OBCAT 'RADING

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s -/7).' 42)-).' "53((/'').' s 02%3352% 7!3().' #,%!. 50 9!2$3 s $2)6%7!9 7/2+ s 42%% 3%26)#% s 345-0 '2).$).' s 42!#4/2 7/2+ s &%24),):).' 3%%$).' s !%2!4).' s 0,5'').' s -5,#( s #!20%.429 7/2+ $%#+3 42)- 7/2+ s 2%-/$%,).'

%XTREME +ITCHEN -AKEOVER *Your Cabinets Painte, ReďŹ nished or Refaced. *Granite Countertops by Schneider Stone *Cermic Tile Backsplash *New Hardware (Hinges & Pulls)

BUILDINGS Built on your lot 8x12 $1,050 10x12 $1320. 12x12 $1580. 12x16 $2100. tax included

s "ATH 4UB 2EMOVAL s )NSTALLATION OF 7ALK IN 3HOWER OR .EW 4UBS #ERAMIC OR &IBERGLASS

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includes O/S 79.00 Coil Cleaning

PH: 336-887-6848 MB: 336-772-0256

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Decks, Siding, Driveways, Tile Grout, Garages, etc. Insured, Bonded, Workers Comp.

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WWW PAULELECTRIC COM

www.thebarefootplumber.com

UTILITY BUILDING New Utility Building Special!

861-1529

CONSTRUCTION J & L CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, RooďŹ ng and New Construction

10X20 ....... $1699 8x12.......... $1050 10x16........ $1499

***Extra Special*** on 12x24 $2199.95

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Jim Baker GENERAL CONTRACTOR

Also Rent To Own. Carolina Utility Bldgs, Trinity 1-800-351-5667

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LANDSCAPE

FURNITURE 336-491-1453

VALVERDE CONCRETE & PATIOS No Job Too Big Or Too Small Sidewalks, Stamped Patios Driveways, Foundations, Slabs, Drainage, And Much More... 226 Motlieu Ave High Point, NC 27262 Mobile: 336-442-4499 Fax: 336-887-0339 valvedereconcrete@gmail.com www.valvedereconcrete.com

1ABL + 1A:M #NKGBMNK> Coupon

Twin Mattress Set (mattress and box spring)

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Queen Mattress Set Pillow Top (mattress & box spring)

$225.00 (5 yr warranty) Coupon

King Mattress Set Pillow Top (mattress and box spring)

$350.00 (5 yr warranty)

336-491-1453

2//&).'

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s .OW 4AKING .EW #USTOMERS FOR 3PRING

30 Years Experience

PROFESSIONAL ROOFING & GUTTERING

Call Roger Berrier

s &REE %STIMATES

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ROOFING

s -OWING 4RIM s ,ANDSCAPE -AINTENANCE )NSTALLATION $ESIGN s #ORE 0LUGGING 3EEDING s &REE %STIMATES s 2EASONABLE 2ATES s .O *OB TO 3MALL s #OMMERCIAL 2ESIDENTIAL

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888-3555

30035853

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