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High Point’s long-time issue: diversifying downtown

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Arthur Farabee, 74 Carol Jones Franklin L. Manning Jr., 54 Donald Mehall, 76 Gladys Montgomery, 86 Sheila Privette, 52 Georgia Starnes, 72 Obituaries, 2B

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BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

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HIGH POINT – One year ago, an idea surfaced that was designed to tackle an age-old problem in High Point. A zoning overlay district was proposed that would finally pave the way toward the development of a downtown that entailed more than REVIVING the furniture DOWNTOWN showrooms that have long reigned The failed supreme, market proponents district plan argued. ■■■ The Market Overlay District, as it was known, emerged from a plan put together by the group that is now known as The City Project. The idea was to limit the development of all new showrooms to one

Wanda Clark was appointed to the newly created position of public relations director at John Wesley College. Clark has honed her communications expertise in a variety of business and nonprofit settings.

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One year ago, city leaders came up with an idea to create a Market Overlay District. The intent was to confine showrooms to a specific area of the city, leaving other areas of downtown open for other types of development. Backers say that it could be an effective tool in revitalizing downtown by generataing interest in redeveloping vacant downtown buildings, bringing more economic diversity to the downtown area. But the onset of the recession and resistance from some property owners forced the city to scrap the plan. This two-part series looks at the failed market district proposal, and what that means in terms of future downtown revitalization.

didn’t pass muster

PROPOSED MARKET OVERLAY DISTRICT

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No. 227 www.hpe.com High Point, N.C.

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Before you read...

127th year

PRESERVING JAMESTOWN: Group seeks local historic districts. 1B

BOUNDARY

Attempt at showroom

August 15, 2010

WEATHER

Prepared by the city of High Point Planning & Development Department

Mary Leslie English | HPE

Inside...

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Plan forbidding new market showrooms outside the “district” raises ire for some owners. 2A area within the city and allow other uses – retail, restaurants, and so forth – to have more of a presence in and around the showroom district. The idea went down in flames after months of work by city staff and debate by the City Council,

who unanimously rejected the proposal in January. The defeat means that the downtown dilemma persists: What can be done to diversify downtown without imposing on the economic engine that is synonomous with High Point? “I think our downtown is a very important place, the city’s front porch, so to speak,” said Jay Wagner, vice chairman of The City Project and one of two people running against longtime Mayor Becky Smothers in the November election. “All citizens

SERIES BREAKOUTS

TODAY: Visions of a diversified downtown spark Market Overlay District plan

MIDWAY – A key component to the future growth of Midway got the goahead this month from the young town’s governing body. Ryan Ross, Midway’s town administrator, said that the Midway Town Council has awarded its first sewer project to Stokesdale-based Yates Construction. The company’s bid came in at $799,214.40, which the town will pay for with a 10-year loan at 3.39 percent interest. “The town has been working on it since incorporating,” Ross said.

INDEX of High Point feel ownership of our downtown. It’s a place where everyone ought to be able to go and feel comfortable and experience life, and we just don’t really have that in High Point. I think it almost kind of puts a hole in

your soul – that you’ve got a city but that soul, that heart of your city, is just not there. I think with a lot of High Pointers, it’s going to continue to be an issue going forward.”

“We have been working pretty seriously on it for about two years, just trying to get all of our policies and money and everything straightened out, so we could do it.” Ross said construction to the sewer lines should begin in late September and be completed in mid-tolate March. Last year, the Davidson County Board of Commissioners agreed to provide sewer service to the town. Commissioners approved a preliminary agreement to allow Midway 50,000 gallons of sewer capacity per day over a 10-year period. Midway

MIDWAY, 2A

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MONDAY: Why the market district was scrapped, and what can be done to foster downtown revitalization

pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

Town of Midway awards first sewer project BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

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SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Midway Mayor George Byrum in front of Midway Commons, one of the shopping centers that will be getting water from the new lines.

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CAROLINAS 2A www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Jamestown development plan wins state award ENTERPRISES STAFF REPORT

JAMESTOWN – Land development ordinances Jamestown officials approved last year have been recognized by a professional planning group. The town’s planning department has received an honorable mention award from the N. C. Chapter of the American Planning Association for the 2010 Marvin Collins Planning Awards. The town was recognized for implementation in the small community category for the land development ordinances the town adopted in July 2009. The ordinances are unique to Jamestown, having been drafted

SHONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

A portion of the Main Street corridor of the High Point Market district, looking south from the intersection of S. Main and Commerce Avenue, as seen from the Best Western. The Main wing of International Home Furnishings Center (left) faces the National Furniture Mart and Plaza Suites on the right.

Looking for space Reasonable real estate prices sought for non-market ventures of buildings that were on the periphery of the more intense market area, REVIVING because DOWNOWN people were just sitting The failed on stuff that market was empty district plan and in some ■■■ cases just plainvacant land and were expecting to get exorbitant prices for it because that had historically been what the market investors were willing to pay,” said High Point Mayor Becky Smothers. Existing showrooms outside the district would have been grandfathered in and free to conduct business as usual, as long as they hadn’t ceased operations for more than two years. Existing showrooms within the district

BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – The City Project, acting at the behest of the council, developed the idea for the Market Overlay District based on a key premise — property values in widespread areas surrounding downtown had become inflated because zoning regulations allowed showrooms in those areas. With the High Point Market using less square footage, there was little demand for new showroom space, so why not limit the showroom district to a concentrated area, the thinking went. By forbidding new showrooms outside the overlay district, land values would drop and new types of uses would eventually creep in, proponents hoped. “There was some interest in trying to see if we could encourage redevelopment

man and his girlfriend in a shooting, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported Saturday in the last story of a series on the agency. It was one of more than a dozen instances the newspaper highlighted to show that the agency and its crime lab act as an agent of the prosecution rather than as an impartial investi-

ACCURACY...

while striving to maintain the character that is distinctive of Jamestown, said Matthew Johnson, town planning director. The new ordinance provides greater flexibility and

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MIDWAY

An idea a year ago to limit development of all new showrooms to one area within the city’s downtown and allow other uses – retail, restaurants, and so forth – to have more of a presence in and around the showroom district failed to gain City Council support. 1A

Line would provide sewer service to town’s primary business district FROM PAGE 1

and the county worked on the agreement for a year. Under the agreement, Midway is responsible for building a sewer line from the south end of the town to the business district on Hickory Tree Road. The line will bring sewer to the town’s primary business district, which is located along the U.S. 52 and Hickory Tree Road corridors. “We believe it’s going to be good for the whole town,” Midway Mayor George Byrum said. “It will bring some of the commercial activity so

would have been deemed conforming uses of land that could have expand without special permission from the city in accordance with zoning requirements. In addition, new showrooms would have been allowed within a growth area inside the district under a revised overlay the council considered. pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

gator. Firearms analyst Beth Desmond told the newspaper she stands behind her analysis. A defense attorney in the case has asked the bullets be sent to an independent lab. The SBI and its crime lab have been under fire since February, when an SBI agent testified at an innocence hearing about a policy

to not include all information on blood tests in lab reports provided to courts. Attorney General Roy Cooper has asked two former assistant directors of the FBI to review the lab. And he recently asked new State Bureau of Investigation director Greg McLeod to review the firearms identification unit.

that the town residents aren’t having to drive so far to get their needs met. The property owners who are directly along the route of the sewer will be benefited because their property values are going to increase, and there is going to be some opportunity for some of the rural land to be developed.” Ross said the town’s only shopping centers – Midway Commons and King’s Plaza – currently are struggling, with a few businesses in each of them. He said the owner

The High Point Enterprise strives for accuracy. Readers who think a factual error has been made are encouraged to call the newsroom at 888-3500. When a factual error has been found a correction will be published.

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ROSEVILLE, Calif. (AP) – A Northern California appeals court has struck down a shopping mall’s policy barring people from approaching strangers to chitchat. The 3rd District Court of Appeal this week said the rules at Roseville’s Westfield Galleria violate the California Con-

stitution’s free speech guarantee. The mall prohibited people in its common areas from approaching people they didn’t know to talk unless the conversation was about business involving the mall or its tenants. The case arose after mall officials issued a citizen’s arrest of a 27-year-old

pastor who tried to talk about his faith. The appeals court says the policy effectively bars shoppers from chatting about the weather or offering directions. A spokeswoman for Westfield says the mall is considering appealing to the California Supreme Court.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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NIGHT Pick 3: 3-8-9 Pick 4: 2-6-2-2 Cash 5: 1-3-8-19-26

The winning numbers selected Friday in the S.C. Lottery:

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Court says mall’s chat policy illegal

of one shopping center has told town officials he feels like businesses could be sustained longer when the project is completed. “There’s no fast food or grocery stores in Midway,” Ross said, adding that the project should make the town “attractive” in trying to bring those in. The construction of sewer lines is the first sewer project for the town, which was incorporated in 2006.

LOTTERY

BOTTOM LINE

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889.9977

The award recognizes plans, programs and processes of unusually high merit.

encourages appropriate development where necessary infrastructure is available. The land development ordinances combine all development ordinances into one user-friendly document drafted to help the town meet the goals laid out in the 2020 Comprehensive Land Development Plan. The development of the ordinances took just under 18 months and was a major accomplishment for the town, Johnson said. The award recognizes plans, programs and processes of unusually high merit. Planners will accept the award at the September NCAPA statewide planning conference to be held in New Bern.

Elsewhere...

Report: NC crime lab relies on bullet analysis RALEIGH(AP) – North Carolina’s crime lab continues to rely on bullet analysis to identify guns involved in crimes despite criticism that it is an inexact science. Several other laboratory analysts have discredited results of bullet analysis done by the State Bureau of Investigation’s crime lab that was used to convict a

by Green Plan Inc. consultants with the assistance of a volunteer committee to help achieve smart growth

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CAROLINAS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

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Disabled boy is given therapeutic playhouse WINSTON-SALEM (AP) – Children worldwide would trade their most prized Silly Bandz for JaRavion Clemmons’ new playhouse. The walls are coated with fresh paint and adorned with the letters of the alphabet made of cotton and shag carpet. A chalkboard filled with magnetic letters hangs from a wall and a basket overflows with toys, all designed especially for JaRavion, 3. “I love it,” said JaRavion’s mom, LaWanda Clemmons. “This is beautiful.” The interior of the 12by-8-foot playhouse came courtesy of 29 first-year students in Winston-Salem State University’s occupational-therapy program. Their assignment for the summer session was to outfit the playhouse for JaRavion. JaRavion was born with schizencephaly, a rare neurological diseased caused by abnormal clefts in the brain, and spastic cerebral palsy. He has problems with his vision and physical and mental disabilities. He uses a wheelchair to get around. He goes to the Special Children’s School. Recently, as Clemmons wheels JaRavion out to the playhouse in the family’s backyard, she lets him enjoy for the first time all the toys, games and furniture that the students had provided for him. His mother placed a small tambourine in his hand and helped him shake it. Of all the playful features in the house, she thought her son would most enjoy rolling around on the brightly colored foam mats that covered the floor. Most of the students in the occupational therapy class gathered at the Clemmons’ home for the unveiling of the playhouse. The structure was built by Rebuilding Together, a nonprofit organization that modifies homes for people with disabilities who have limited incomes. Using $10,000 in grant money, a team of volunteers built the 12-by-8 foot playhouse for the Clemmons family, which was selected for the project by N.C. Foster Care Services. In addition to their three children, the Clemmons family often takes in foster children. Anne Jenkins, an assistant professor of occupational therapy at WSSU, is on the board of directors for Rebuilding Together. When she was asked about helping furnish the

toys. The auditory team made shakers and other noisemakers. Another group made the letters using different textures. “Occupational therapy is a very hands-on profes-

sion,” said Meghan McCann, one of the students on the auditory team. “I personally learned more in this setting than the classroom setting. This was a chance to do some-

thing for an amazing family.” Jenkins and Cindy Arrington, the president of Rebuilding Together, hope to collaborate on more playhouses.

AP

LaWanda Clemmons guides her three-year-old son JaRavion’s wheelchair into his new playhouse behind their house in Winston-Salem. The playhouse was designed by Winston-Salem State University occupationaltherapy staff and students.

AP

LaWanda Clemmons plays with JaRavion in his new playhouse . playhouse, she said she thought of her students. “This is an excellent opportunity for students to apply what they’ve learned in class to a real-life situation,” Jenkins said. “It was a perfect fit.” Jenkins and Brenda Kennell, also an assistant professor in occupational therapy, divided the students into teams that focused on JaRavion’s particular needs. For example, the auditory team was charged with finding noise-producing toys that would encourage him to use his fine and gross motor skills and his senses. A furniture team looked for furniture that would help with his posture. The goal was to find things that would help JaRavion’s overall development. Occupational therapists help individuals do what is important to them, Kennell said. “For a child, that’s play,” she said. Students visited with JaRavion’s parents and studied the space inside the playhouse. They had no money, but instead lobbied for donations or paid for things themselves. When one student men-

tioned that a bean bag would be a great fit for JaRavion, another said she had a bean bag that she no longer used. Other students made

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WORLD 4A www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Officials: Alleged US missiles kill 12 in Pakistani tribal region MIR ALI, Pakistan (AP) – Suspected U.S. missiles killed 12 people Saturday in a Pakistani tribal region filled with Islamist insurgents bent on pushing Western troops out of neighboring Afghanistan, intelligence officials said. Elsewhere in the coun-

try, gunmen targeted non-ethnic Baluchis traveling on a bus and painting a house in two attacks in southwestern Baluchistan province Saturday, killing 16 people and wounding eight. The airstrike in Issori village of North Waziristan was the first

such attack since intense floods hit Pakistan in late July. The U.S. has tried to improve its public image in Pakistan by sending flood aid, but the missile strike showed Washington was not willing to stop using a tactic that has fed its unpopularity here.

AP

Injured Iraqi women are seen in a hospital after a car bomb attack in the Amil area of Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday. Gunmen killed five Iraqi security personnel, amid persistent debate over whether Iraqi forces can protect the country as U.S. troops withdrawal.

6 Iraqi forces slayed as checkpoints attacked BAGHDAD (AP) – Gunmen killed six Iraqi security personnel Saturday, including a pair of sleeping policemen who were shot and set on fire, amid persistent debate over whether Iraqi forces can protect the country as U.S. troops leave. The early-morning shootings at Baghdad checkpoints demonstrated the insurgents’ aim to weaken confidence in the government and aggravate sectarian tension as all but 50,000 U.S. troops head home by the end of August. In the first attack, gunmen armed with silenced pistols killed two policemen asleep in their patrol car at a security checkpoint in the Shiite-dominated New Baghdad neighborhood, said an officer with the federal police

in Baghdad. The assailants then set the car on fire and fled, he said. A half-hour later, a drive-by shooting on a checkpoint killed two more policemen in the Amil area, another Shiite neighborhood, in southwest Baghdad, two other police officials said. Two passers-by were injured, they said. Around the same time, gunmen attacked a checkpoint manned by government-backed Sunni fighters from groups known as Awakening Councils in the mostly Shiite Shaab district in the capital’s northeast. One of the fighters was killed and two were injured, the police officials said. It was not clear if the shootings were coordinated or carried out by the same attackers.

Afghan, NATO troops pursue Haqqani fighters KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – More than 20 insurgents including Arab, Chechen and Pakistani fighters have been killed by NATO and Afghan forces who are ramping up operations in the east against a Taliban faction linked to al-Qaida, the international coalition said Saturday.

Separately, three more NATO troops – an American, a Briton and an Australian – died in separate insurgent attacks in the volatile south, officials of the three countries said Saturday. The joint force operation began Wednesday against dozens of insurgents holed up in a moun-

WikiLeaks says it won’t be threatened by Pentagon STOCKHOLM (AP) – WikiLeaks will publish its remaining 15,000 Afghan war documents within a month, despite warnings from the U.S. government, the organization’s founder said Saturday. The Pentagon has said that secret information will be even more damaging to security and risk more lives than WikiLeaks’ initial release of some 76,000 war documents. “This organization will not be threatened by the

Pentagon or any other group,” Julian Assange told reporters in Stockholm. “We proceed cautiously and safely with this material.” In an interview with The Associated Press, he said that if U.S. defense officials want to be seen as promoting democracy then they “must protect what the United States’ founders considered to be their central value, which is freedom of the press.”

tainous area of Zadran district of Paktia province. The operation focused on disrupting the Haqqani network’s movement in an area used to stage attacks in the capital, Kabul, and along a highway that links Khost province and Gardez, the provincial capital of Paktia, NATO said.

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WORLD THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

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Cholera strikes amid Pakistani flood disaster

AP

Pakistani flood-affected villagers sit in the rubble of their houses, in Aza Kheil near Peshawar, Pakistan on Friday. International aid for Pakistani flood victims is coming in slowly compared to other recent disasters despite the massive number of people affected and the potential for dire economic consequences in a country key to Western hopes in the fight against Islamist extremists.

SUKKUR, Pakistan (AP) – The deadly, waterborne disease cholera has surfaced in flood-ravaged Pakistan, the U.N. confirmed Saturday, adding to the misery of 20 million people the government says have been made homeless by the disaster. A fresh surge of floodwater swelled the Indus River, threatening previously spared cities and towns in the south. The crisis has battered Pakistan’s economy and undermined its political stability at a time when the United States needs its steadfast cooperation against Islamist extremism. The U.N. has appealed for an initial $460 million to provide relief to Pakistan but has said the country will need billions to rebuild once the floodwaters recede.

Because of the flooding, Pakistan canceled celebrations Saturday marking its creation and independence from Britain in 1947. President Asif Ali Zardari met with flood victims in the northwest, and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Kimoon was expected to visit affected regions today. The floods have killed about 1,500 people, and aid workers have warned that diseases could raise that toll. One case of cholera was confirmed in Mingora, the main town in the northwest’s Swat Valley, U.N. spokesman Maurizio Giuliano said Saturday. But other cases were suspected, and aid workers are now responding to all those exhibiting acute watery diarrhea as if it is cholera, Giuliano said.

BRIEFS

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Portugal: Firefighters battling 26 forest blazes LISBON, Portugal – Officials say more than 600 firefighters are battling at least 26 serious wildfire outbreaks fanned by gusting winds in three separate areas of Portugal. The civil protection authority says fires with several active fronts have flared up and are being fought near southwestern Sintra, close to the northern border with Spain and in the central Serra da Estrela natural park.

Mexican police say 5 suspects hacked up officer MEXICO CITY – Mexican authorities say that police in Ciudad Juarez have captured five alleged drug gang members suspected in the killings of two federal officers, including one whose body was hacked to pieces. One of the suspects is also believed to have acted as a lookout in the July 15 car-bomb attack on police that killed an officer and two other people, Luis Cardenas Palomino, regional security chief for the federal police, said Friday.

5 Ugandan kids from same home die in landslide KAMPALA, Uganda – An aid official says five children in Uganda died during a landslide that hit their home as they slept, while their parents survived. Regional Red Cross coordinator Kevin Nabutuwa said the landslide swept through the home early Saturday, burying the children as slept in their beds. The four girls and one boy ranged in age from 3 to 13. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

China declares day of mourning after landslide ZHOUQU, China (AP) – China declared a national day of mourning for victims of a massive landslide in the remote northwest, as authorities on Saturday stressed the importance of hygiene and safety for the thousands now living in temporary shelters. Chinese flags across the country and at embassies and consulates overseas will be lowered to halfstaff today to commemorate the 1,239 killed in the landslide last weekend, the central government said on its website.

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NATION 6A www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Obama: Oil stopped, but job far from done

AP

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama greet members of the U.S. Coast Guard while visiting the U.S. Coast Guard Panama City District Office in Panama City, Fla., Saturday.

With BP spill under control, US looks at drill ban NEW ORLEANS (AP) – Now that the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history has effectively been stopped, the White House is considering an early end to its moratorium on deepwater drilling. But four months after the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon, regulators have only started to make good on promises to overhaul drilling. Tough measures are stalled in Congress. A $1 billion

emergency response network proposed by the industry won’t be operational for another year. And while doomsday scenarios from the BP spill, such as oil washing up the East Coast, have not come to pass, there are no guarantees that drilling will be any safer once it does resume. What’s changed is “not enough to make a big difference,” said Charles Perrow, a Yale professor

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ALLEN: FINAL PLUG AT LEAST DAYS AWAY The government’s point man on the Gulf spill wants additional testing before he orders BP to finish drilling a relief well. Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said Saturday it could be late Monday or early Tuesday before officials know the results of those tests.

Obama’s comment on Saturday during a trip to Florida expanded on a statement he made at a White House dinner on Friday. At that event, he said Muslims have the same right to freedom of religion as everyone else in America.

dustry is reeling from the spill. “I’m here to tell you that our job is not finished, and we are not going anywhere until it is,” the president said in this Panhandle city after meeting with state officials, local leaders and business owners at a Coast Guard station. “I will not be satisfied until the environment has been restored, no matter how long it takes.” Obama said he brought his family to Florida “to let our fellow Americans know that they should come on down here. It is spectacular.”

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President supports ‘the right’ for mosque WASHINGTON (AP) – After skirting the controversy for weeks, President Barack Obama says Muslims have the right to build a mosque near ground zero in New York, but he’s not saying whether he thinks it’s a good idea to do so.

PANAMA CITY BEACH, Fla. (AP) – The first family dashed to the Florida Panhandle on Saturday so President Barack Obama could play pitchman – Gulf Coast beaches are clean and open for business – and assure residents his government won’t abandon them now that the busted well has stopped spewing oil. He also said he “absolutely” would plunge into waters that absorbed 200 million gallons of oil. Expect the dip today, he told reporters accompanying him on the 27-hour excursion to the Sunshine State, whose tourism in-

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NATION THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

7A

BRIEFS

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Police say no hurry to return suspect soon DETROIT – Police in Michigan said Saturday they’ll use the time it takes to return an Israeli man suspected in a three-state stabbing spree that left five men dead to work out logistics and address concerns for his safety. Elias Abuelazam is “not going to be brought back today, tomorrow or Monday,” Michigan State Police Lt. Stephen Sipes told The Associated Press. “We have 15 days to get him back. There is no hurry at the moment.” The 33-year-old waived extradition to Michigan during a Friday court hearing in Atlanta. Abuelazam was arrested there Wednesday as he prepared to board a flight to Tel Aviv.

AP

NTSB: Stevens’ plane had alert system

Raymond Wilhite (right) walks from the scene of a multiple fatal shooting in front of City Grill in Buffalo, N.Y., Saturday. Wilhite said his daughter, Tiffany Wilhite, 32, was among the victims.

JUNEAU, Alaska – The plane that crashed into an Alaskan mountainside and killed former Sen. Ted Stevens and four others was outfitted with an alert system that warned pilots of dangerous terrain. But National Transportation Safety Board chairwoman Deborah Hersman said it’s not known if the system was working just before the plane crashed Monday. The plane was also equipped with an emergency locator transmitter, Hersman said at a news conference in Anchorage Friday. When properly registered, it issues a distress signal to a control center via satellites and provides registration information. She added it was also unclear why that signal didn’t activate.

Brown urges speedy return to gay nuptials SAN FRANCISCO – The attorneys who successfully sued to strike down California’s samesex marriage ban have joined Attorney General Jerry Brown in urging a federal appeals court to quickly allow gay marriages to resume in the state. Theodore Olson and David Boies, the highprofile lawyers representing two couples, told the appeals court that same-sex couples are being hurt every day that Proposition 8 is enforced and should not be denied their civil rights while the ban’s sponsors pursue an appeal of last week’s decision overturning the 2008 measure.

Aftershocks hit Guam area after large quake HAGATNA, Guam – A flurry of earthquakes as powerful as magnitude 6.3 struck in the Pacific Ocean off Guam Saturday, hours after a large temblor hit the region. The aftershocks were centered 230 miles south of Guam, the same area as the powerful 7.2-magnitude quake that hit earlier in the day, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. In addition to the 6.3 temblor, aftershocks hit with magnitudes of 4.6, 4.7, 5.0, and 5.2. None posed a tsunami threat, officials said. Authorities on Guam and the nearby Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands said that despite the large quake’s size, it wasn’t felt and caused no damage. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

4 fatally shot outside Buffalo restaurant BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) – Eight people leaving a party at a downtown Buffalo restaurant were shot early Saturday, four of them fatally, including a Texas man who had returned to his hometown to celebrate his first wedding anniversary, police said. Managers had decided to close the City Grill in the city’s business district after an alterca-

Sheriff: Remains found in mine RENO, Nev. (AP) – Searchers have found human remains believed to be those of two missing miners at the bottom of a gold mine shaft in northern Nevada, authorities said Saturday. Rescuers worked for more than 32 hours to safely access the area after a vertical pipe broke from a wall and struck a cage similar to an elevator lowering the two men into the shaft early Thursday, said Barrick Gold of North America spokesman Lou Schack. It will take from three weeks to two months to identify the remains, said Elko County Sheriff Dale Lotspeich.

Contractor investigated for claim of overcharging WASHINGTON (AP) – A U.S. contractor managing more than $1 billion in reconstruction contracts in Afghanistan faces federal criminal and civil investigations of claims that it overcharged the government for work, according to federal court documents. Federal prosecutors are focusing on whether the Louis Berger Group, based in Morristown, N.J., submitted inflated invoices to the U.S. Agency for International Development, which oversees many of the government’s international development projects.

tion inside. The victims were leaving at about 2:30 a.m. when gunfire erupted, police said. Keith Johnson, 25, of Buffalo was charged Saturday with four counts of second-degree murder and could face more charges. Johnson was in custody late Saturday afternoon. Authorities did not release the victims’ identities.

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NOTABLES, NATION 8A www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

FAMOUS, FABULOUS, FRIVOLOUS

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AP

Game Tickets: $15.00

In this photo provided by NBC Universal, co-host Matt Lauer talks with Dina Lohan on NBC’s “Today� show in New York on Friday.

Moving east

Friday, August 27, 2010 Scholarship Gala

Lindsay Lohan’s mother says actress will move back to NY

August 28, 2010

hosted by the High Point Alumni Chapter of WSSU

Best Western High Point Hotel NEW YORK (AP) – Lindsay Lohan’s mom says the actress will be moving away from California and back to New York after she gets out of drug rehabilitation. Dina Lohan, during an often tense interview with NBC “Today� show co-host Matt Lauer on Friday, said her daughter was doing “wonderfully� after 14 days in jail and lashed out at California Superior Court Judge Marsha Revel, who put the actress there. “She’s great,� Lo-

han said. “She’s been through a lot. The judge played hardball. Lindsay L. Lohan was in with alleged murderers and she’s become friends with a lot of them. Lindsay rolled with the punches and she’s doing wonderfully.� Lindsay Lohan served 14 days of a 90-day jail sentence for violating her probation in a 2007 drug case. She was sent to a

UCLA drug rehab facility for a court-mandated three-month treatment, and her mother said she’d be out soon. Revel removed herself from Lohan’s case earlier this week after a prosecutor complained she improperly contacted experts or participants in the case. Lauer prodded Lohan, noting that there were some observers who thought the 24-year-old actress had this coming to her because of bad behavior.

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Young ‘Lion King’ actor getting crucial transplant NEW YORK (AP) – An 11-year-old girl who played young Nala in “The Lion King� on Broadway is getting a potentially lifesaving procedure. Shannon Tavarez has

leukemia and will get an umbilical-cord blood transplant Tuesday. The blood-producing stem cells used in transplants can come from cord blood, bone marrow or blood. Her mother, Odiney

‘Toy Story 3’ breaks all-time mark at box office LOS ANGELES (AP) – “Toy Story 3� is now the highest-grossing animated film of all time. The third movie in the Pixar series about cowboy Woody, space ranger Buzz Lightyear and the toys’ owner, Andy, has crossed more than $920 million at box offices worldwide since opening June 18, according to Disney. That means it edged out DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc.’s “Shrek 2� to attain the top spot.

Brown, says she’s praying it will work. The actress was forced to quit the show in April. Cast members held a bone marrow donor registration drive for her last month.

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The movie also ranks as Disney’s fourth highest-grossing film of all time. Its top grossers are “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest� (2006) at $1.07 billion, “Alice in Wonderland� (2010) at $1.02 billion, and “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End� (2007) at $961 million. Pixar introduced the “Toy Story� characters in 1995, and the movies have made more money with each incarnation.

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B

CREATIVE CAKES: Family recipes serve sweet success. 1C ANIMOSITY ABSOLVED: Slaughterhouse, union get along after fighting. 4B

Sunday August 15, 2010 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

MICROGREENS: For some in N.C., goodness grows at home. 8B

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

Group wants local historic districts

WHO’S NEWS

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BY DAVID NIVENS ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

JAMESTOWN – From Jamestown Library to the Potter House, town residents know they live among some of the most historic sites in the county. But Mary Browning, a freelance history writer, says more can be done to save historic properties, and she is leading efforts to do just that. The Jamestown Historic Preservation Group encourages efforts to start a town historic commission and historic districts to save more of the town’s history. Jamestown was named for James Mendenhall. The Quaker family founded the town in 1816. The family built a meeting house in Jamestown and a school nearby. The Ragsdale family has been very influential in town business and politics. The Ragsdales have operated The Oakdale Cotton Mills company for more than 100 years. Jamestown has two National Register Historic Districts. The Oakdale Cotton Mill and its mill village is the oldest continuously operating cotton mill in Guilford County. The Mendenhall homesite and plantation owned by local Quaker Richard Mendenhall was built around 1811. There also is the main Jamestown Historic District, which includes Main Street and several recognized structures that played an integral role in the town’s history. “But we have lost a number of old buildings, and some of them have been important,” said Browning, who is a member of the Guilford County Historic Preservation Commission. “With a town commission, we could create local districts to save properties. A district also creates an accountability process and provides some control over what people can do.” Town Council would have to create a local commission and historic districts. A commission could set local standards for preserving the special historic character of Jamestown. Group members will be available soon to speak to civic or neighborhood groups. “We are getting the word out,” Browning said. Meanwhile, the group is working to bring a representative from the state historic preservation office to town to help suggest local preservation districts, Browning said. dnivens@hpe.com | 888-3626

Pamela Carter was named chairwoman of the department of management in the School of Business and Economics at North Carolina A&T State University. She is an associate professor in the department of management at A&T.

SPECIAL | HPE

The Tams will perform from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at Mendenhall Station on Commerce Avenue.

Tams on tap Concert series continues due to success BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – The success of a concert earlier this summer that benefited the United Way of Greater High Point has led to another concert set for Thursday. The RockN High Point Series will continue when beach music band The Tams performs 6 to 9 p.m. at Mendenhall Station on Commerce Avenue, between Showplace and the International Home Furnishings Center. Tickets are $7 at the door, but children under 12 get in free. Parking also is free. Proceeds will benefit the United Way’s Children’s Initiatives, which provides child care, food and scholarships to chil-

AT A GLANCE

What: RockN High Point concert featuring The Tams When: 6 p.m.-9 p.m. Thursday Where: Mendenhall Station Admission: $7; kids under 12 are free

dren of low-income parents. The proceeds from a concert held in June, where Sleeping Booty performed, funded the organization’s Gifts for Homeless Kids, an event that provided toys and activities for homeless children on Aug. 12. “Everyone loved the first concert,” said United Way President Bobby Smith. “The feedback we have received was

great, the music was great and the attendance was great. We were able to raise funds for the toy drive from the concert without asking for additional help from our friends and donors during the summer.” Smith said about 2,000 people attended the first concert in June. The event has several sponsors including the city of High Point, which

was the nonprofit’s largest employee campaign in its annual fundraising efforts last year. “We’re really in it to help downtown High Point, too,” Smith said. “If we make funds from the event, that’s great. But the city employees have been very generous to us. We want to return the favor and hopefully generate the largest audience possible.” Attendees can bring lawn chairs to the event, but no coolers are allowed. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. Tommy Lineberry, creator of Beach Music in the Park and the Ilderton High Point Beach Blast, is the event producer. phaynes@hpe.com | 888-3617

Thomasville considers support of current ABC system BY DARRICK IGNASIAK ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

THOMASVILLE – The Thomasville City Council on Monday night will consider a resolution in support for North Carolina to keep its current ABC system. “Continually, the state legislature is considering changing local control over ABC boards,” Thomasville City Manager Kelly Craver said. “As these new strategies by the state are coming up, the local ABC board maintains just because there have been some few bad instances, as a whole, ABC boards are solidly run by great people and the system does not need to change.” Under North Carolina law, it is a local decision to establish and operate ABC stores. Local governments act through an appointed local ABC board, which balances the control, profits and spirts in its jurisdiction, according to the resolution. State legislators have had discussions about privatizing the ABC system.

Leigh Ann Lowe is general manager of the ABC Store at 1414 National Highway in Thomasville. She said the ABC system should remain the same in North Carolina. “The No. 1 reason is that the controlled system is not driven like the private sector is,” Lowe said. “We do like to have a profit, but that is not our No. 1 goal whenever we have underage people coming into the store or intoxicated people coming into the store. That’s probably the biggest difference between the two. “We have our jobs and we come in and we have to do what we are supposed to do. One of the top priorities is to make sure we don’t sell to underage or intoxicated people. In the private sector, that’s what they are driven (to for) profit in my opinion. There’s a lot of things going on with the governor. I’m sure they will come to their conclusion.” If the system was changed, the city would lose a total of $180,000, Craver said. He said $120,000 of

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.

that amount is made in profit from the ABC system, $50,000 of it is a gift to the city and $10,000 is used by the Thomasville Police Department to educate children and others on the use of alcohol. Craver said the state took $80,000 last year of Thomasville’s ABC money because of budget shortfalls. He said the governor had promised that it would be a one-time reduction. Craver said the resolution is being considered by municipalities across the state. “When local voters approved liquor sales for off-premises consumption, the voters did not vote to allow liquor to be sold in private retail establishments, but only through publicly controlled local ABC stores,” the resolution reads. “Current law provides that profits from ABC store sales are returned to local government, and this stream is a critical source of local government funding.” dignasiak@hpe.com | 888-3657

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INDEX CAROLINAS 2-4B, 8B OBITUARIES 2B OPINION 6-7B RELIGION 5B

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

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OBITUARIES, CAROLINAS 2B www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES

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Arthur Farabee.....Wallburg Carol Jones...........Asheboro

Georgia Starnes

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.

Franklin L. Manning Jr.

Carol L. Jones ASHEBORO – Mrs. Carol Anne Lewis Jones, of Asheboro, NC, passed away Friday, August 13, 2010, at Randolph Hospital Inc., Asheboro, after just recently being diagnosed with multiple brain tumors known as gliobastoma multiforme. Graveside services will be conducted 11:00 am Tuesday, August 18, 2010, at Floral Garden Memorial Park with Rev. Susan Mitchell officiating. A resident of Asheboro since 1987, she was born in High Point, NC, the daughter of the late Vesta Mae (Betty) Helsabeck Lewis and Julius Avery Lewis. She was a 1951 graduate of High Point Central High School. She married Robert Myron Jones of Trinity, NC, in 1956 and had two children, Todd and Carla. She retired in 2003 as gift shop manager with the North Carolina Zoological Society. She had a way with plants and loved to garden. She enjoyed watching and learning about birds. She loved to read and spend time with her “grand dogs” Baska, Piper and Abby (deceased). In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, her son. She is survived by one daughter, Carla Hughes and husband Foster Hughes, of Asheboro; one brother, Jack Lewis and wife Jacqueline Pugh Lewis, of Grays Chapel, NC; one uncle, Wyat Helsabeck, of Port Charlotte, FL; two nieces; three great nephews and two great nieces. The family will receive friends at Ridge Funeral Home from 6 until 8 pm on Monday, August 17, 2010. While flowers are appreciated and would please Carol greatly, those seeking a more lasting way of honoring her are asked to make donations to any local privately run animal or equine rescue organization of the donor’s choice due to the great love she had for animals, particularly those abandoned or abused in need of loving, forever homes. Donations may also be made to Community Home Care & Hospice, Patient Assistance Fund, 147 MacArthur Street, Asheboro, NC 27203. The family wishes to thank Community Home Care & Hospice and the nurses and staff of the MPS 3 Unit at Randolph Hospital for exceptional, compassionate care during the last days of her life. Tributes to the family may be made online at www.ridgefuneralhome. com.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Franklin L. Manning Jr., 54, died Aug. 8. 2010, at Hospice Care in Colorado Springs. He was born Jan. 19, 1954, in Oakland, Calif., to Anne-Mae Chavis Manning, who was born in Cullowhee, N.C., and Franklin Louis Manning Sr., who was born in Gaffney, S.C. He was married to Nancy in 1998 in Colorado Springs. He a native of High Point, N.C., and was a bicycle enthusiast. Surviving in addition to his wife and father, are children Tashinia, 17, and Walela, 10; brothers and sisters Daphne Manning McAdoo, Deborah P. Manning, Carl Chavis Manning, Annn-Marie Manning, John Lewis Manning; nieces and nephews Wendy Shea McAdoo, Phillip Lee McAdoo, Jill Lesley McAdoo, Grace Alexandra Manning, Lucas Manning and cousins and family members. A memorial service will be held Aug. 21, 2010, at the Garden of The Gods Park in Colorado Springs.

Art Farabee WALLBURG – Arthur “Art” Sherrill Farabee, 74, died Friday, Aug. 6, 2010. He was born July 23, 1936, in Wallburg and lived in Oklahoma. He retired from the U.S. Air Force after 23 years. Art is survived by his wife, Arna; one daughter, Kay Strecker of Garber, Okla.; two sons, Brian of Wilson, Okla., and Michael of New Orleans; grandsons Austin and Zakery of Garber, Okla.; and two siblings, Jane Farabee Hege of Wallburg and Mike Farabee of Virginia. Memorials may be made OMRS. A private family memorial service will be held at a later date.

HIGH POINT – Georgia Ann Farmer Starnes died August 13, 2010 after a courageous battle with cancer. She was born December 6, 1937 in Wilson, N.C. to Annie Bryant Farmer and George Harrison Farmer. She grew up in Elm City, N.C. and graduated from Elm City High School in 1955. She attended Duke University, graduating in 1959. While at Duke, Georgia met Byron Starnes and they married July 11, 1959. Byron survives of the home. She is preceded in death by her father, George Harrison Farmer of Elm City, NC. Surviving in addition to her husband are her mother Annie Bryant Farmer of Elm City, NC, her daughter Ann Reece and her husband Jordan of High Point, two grandsons, Walt Reece of Wake Forest University and High Point, and Harrison Reece of High Point. Also surviving are her mother-in-law Helen Starnes of High Point, sister-inlaw Pat McEachern and husband Ted of Virginia Beach, VA niece Sally Bentley and husband Keith of Hickory, NC, nephew Ed McEachern of Atlanta, GA, niece Amy McEachern of Los Angeles, CA, several great nieces and nephews, as well as her many wonderful friends. Georgia was a member of Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church, High Point Country Club, Salvation Army Women’s Auxiliary and was a former member of the Junior League of High Point, the Literary League, Dialogue Book Club, La Soiree, her garden club and several bridge clubs. A memorial service will be held Monday, August 16, 2010 at 2 p.m. in the Chapel of Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church by the Reverend Richard Howle and Reverend Barry P. Osborne. Visitation will follow the service in the Asbury Room of the church. Memorials may be made to the Church, 1225 Chestnut drive, High Point, NC 27262 or to Hospice of the Piedmont, 1801 Westchester Drive, High Point, NC 27262 or to the charity of the donor’s choice. The family would like to thank the High Point Regional Cancer Center and Hospice of the Piedmont for their loving and compassionate care. Please share condolences with the family at www.sechrestfunerals. com.

TRINITY – Gladys Dagenhart Montgomery, age 86 of Gray Brier Nursing and Retirement Center in Trinity, NC former resident of Alexander County passed away Friday August 13, 2010 at Gray Brier Nursing and Retirement Center , after an extended illness. She was born April 14, 1924 in Alexander County to the late Hosea M. Dagenhart and Mamie Drum Dagenhart. She was retired from T.S.R. Clothing Company and was also member of Marvin United Methodist Church . In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Wayne Montgomery; one son, Gary Brown. She is survived by her two grandsons, Richard Brown and wife Melissa, Scott Brown and wife Kim; five great grandchildren; one daughter in law, Brenda Brown all of High Point. Funeral services will be conducted 3 p.m. Sunday August 15, 2010 at Marvin United Methodist Church . Rev. Matthew Emory and Jeff Carson will officiate. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends from 2-3 p.m. prior to the service at the church. In lieu of flowers memorials may be given to Gray Briar, 116 Lane drive, Trinity, NC 27370. Condolences may be emailed to the Montgomery family by visiting our website at www.chapmanfuneralhome.com. Chapman Funeral Home is assisting the family of Gladys D, Montgomery .

Donald Mehall ASHEBORO – Donald Joseph Mehall, 76, died Aug. 13, 2010. Funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Ridge Funeral Home Chapel. Visitation will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.

Sheila Privette ASHEBORO – Sheila Mae Clark Privette, 52, died Aug. 14, 2010. A memorial service will be held at a later date. Ridge Funeral Home is assisting the family.

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RALEIGH (AP) – Emails involving a North Carolina public television report critical of Alcoa show that one researcher on the project took money from a group opposed to the aluminum company’s continued control of dams on the Yadkin River. E-mails released by UNC-TV show that former House Speaker Richard Morgan, who now works for the North Carolina Water Rights Committee, agreed to pay $3,000 to researcher Martin Sansone. “Martin does a lot of research, so he was doing research for me,” reporter Eszter Vajda told The News & Observer of Raleigh in an interview Friday. Vajda said the water group wanted information Sansone had uncovered for its website. Morgan said Vajda and Sansone asked for money during a meeting with him and others working with the water rights committee. “They both met with me and others and essentially pitched us for subsistence so he could stay here,” Morgan said. “He couldn’t afford to stay otherwise.” Sansone, who lives in Europe, said he was simply trying to obtain information for Vajda.

MONDAY, Aug. 16 Mrs. Georgia Farmer Starnes 2 p.m. Memorial Service Chapel – Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church Sechrest Funeral Service – High Point WEDNESDAY, Aug. 18 Mr. Francis William Monsky 7:30-9 p.m. Memorial Service Sechrest Chapel Sechrest of High Point Mrs. Ruth Jane Oleksowicz Arrangements are Private

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CAROLINAS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

3B

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION City of High Point Municipal Office Building 211 South Hamilton Street 3rd Floor Conference Room THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ARE SCHEDULED FOR PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION ON August 24, 2010 AT 6:00 P.M. 1.

Gerald Grubb Zoning Case 10-11 a. Conditional Use Limited Business (CU-LB) District A request by Gerald Grubb to rezone a 2 acre parcel from the General OfficeModerate Intensity (GO-M) District to a Conditional Use Limited Business (CU-LB) District. The site is lying along the east side of Eastchester Drive, approximately 870 feet south of Lassiter Drive (1200 Eastchester Drive). b.

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2.

Herb garden work Volunteers Cathy Lanham (left) and Rica Bernaccai work on the herb garden at the Madison Lindsay doctors’ office and medical school located on the grounds of Mendenhall Plantation in Jamestown. The house dates to the early 19th century.

NC man dies removing copper wire from substation RAEFORD (AP) – North Carolina police say a 23year-old man has been electrocuted while trying to steal copper wiring from an electrical substation. Hoke County Sheriff Hubert Peterkin told WRAL-TV in Raleigh that William Joshua Reavis of Aberdeen was cutting copper wire used for grounding at the power station early Saturday

morning. Peterkin says Reavis was electrocuted and fell 10 feet to the ground. A friend found Reavis’ body. A spokesman for substation owner Lumbee River Electric Membership Corp. says a chain and lock on a fence around the property had been cut. Peterkin said his office is investigating.

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Conditional Use Permit 10-11 A request by Gerald Grubb for approval of an accompanying Conditional Use Permit with conditions pertaining to permitted uses and vehicular access.

Malik Hanif Zoning Case 10-12 a. Conditional Use Public & Institutional (PI) District. A request by Malik Hanif to rezone a 6.94 acre parcel from the Residential Multifamily-8 (RM-8) District to a Conditional Use Public & Institutional (CU-PI) District. The site is lying along the east side of Allen Jay Road, approximately240 feet north of E. Fairfield Road (2801 Allen Jay Road). b.

Conditional Use Permit 10-12 A request by Malik Hanif for approval of an accompanying Conditional Use Permit with conditions pertaining to permitted uses, development & dimensional standards and vehicular access.

3.

City of High Point Heart of the Triad Plan Consideration of an endorsement of the Heart of the Triad Plan.

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City of High Point Text Amendment Case 10-06 A request by the City of High Point Planning & Development Department to repeal the Conditional Use District (legislative and quasi-judicial) zoning process and to establish a Conditional Zoning (legislative only) process in its place; and to provide for the disposition of existing Conditional Use District zoned areas.

The Planning and Zoning Commission is an advisory board of the City Council. The Commission makes recommendations to the City Council, which has the authority to approve or deny the request. Anyone interested in these matters is invited to attend the public hearing and present information to the Commission. Additional information concerning these requests is available at the Planning and Development Department, Municipal Office building, 211 South Hamilton Street, Room 316; or by telephone at (336) 883-3328, or fax (336) 883-3056. The meeting facilities of the City of High Point are accessible to people with disabilities. If you need special accommodations, call (336) 883-3298 or the city’s TDD phone number: (336) 883-8517. This printed material will be provided in an alternative format upon request.

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CAROLINAS 4B www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

FILE | AP

In this 2006 photo, Edward Morrison holds up a sign protesting against Smithfield Packing in Fayetteville. The owner of the world’s largest hog slaughterhouse and the union it fought in one of the South’s longest-running labor disputes have buried nearly a generation of animosity.

NC slaughterhouse, union get along after fighting report said. Workplace injuries and the rate of employees who miss work are both down. While the sputtering economy helps keep people at their jobs, some say the work environment at the massive plant is better than ever. Managers seem nicer, said Pam Norris, who has worked at the plant for about three years. “They quit yelling and screaming at you,” said Norris, a 48-year-old from Clarkton who runs a machine that wraps pork chops packaged for grocery stores. The plant about 80 miles south of Raleigh is the size of a shopping mall, towering in the tiny town of Tar Heel, population 70. Workers who commute an hour or more from across eastern North Carolina and South Carolina kill up to 32,000 hogs a day and slice them into pork loins and hams. The

Biologist says dead fish likely from warm water ASHEVILLE (AP) – A biologist says hundreds of dead fish found floating in a pond in the North Carolina mountains likely died due to warmer than usual water temperatures. The Asheville Citizen Times reported Saturday that hundreds of dead fish were found this week floating on the 5-acre pond at Azalea Dog Park. North Carolina Wildlife Resources biologist Powell Wheeler says the deaths were likely

caused by a low oxygen levels due to the warmer water, which tends to hold less oxygen that cooler water. It was not the first fish kill this year in North Carolina. Biologists say about 7,000 striped bass died in the state’s largest manmade lake since July. Those deaths also were blamed in part on the increased water temperatures caused by record heat across the state this summer.

plant represents about 30 percent of the company’s worldwide slaughtering capacity. The company and the UFCW locked horns almost as soon as the plant opened in 1992. Employees complained the unrelenting pace led to repetitive-motion and cutting injuries, and about bosses who were strict. A truce was imposed in October 2008 by a federal judge in a settlement to the company’s lawsuit alleging the UFCW’s yearslong, multistate shaming campaign amounted to racketeering. The company estimated the negative publicity cost it $900 million. Two elections in the 1990s were marred by company threats to freeze wages, fire workers and close the plant if the union was approved. But in December 2008, a narrow majority of workers voted for the union.

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TAR HEEL (AP) – The owner of the world’s largest hog slaughterhouse and the union it fought in one of the South’s longest-running labor disputes have buried more than 15 years of animosity. A year after their first labor contract took effect in the union-hostile region, the United Food and Commercial Workers and managers of the Smithfield Packing plant said they’ve set aside bitterness in a rural region where jobs are scarce. “Surprisingly, for the 17 years of fighting we had, our relationship is as good as any place with Smithfield that we represent,” said Mark Lauritsen, the UFCW’s international vice president for meatpacking plants. Two-thirds of the 32,000 employees in corporate parent Smithfield Foods’ pork division are covered by union contracts, the company’s annual


Sunday August 15, 2010

GENDER HISTORY: Women make their mark on Supreme Court. 1F

City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

5B

Atheist sues for grant refund from landmark cross

AP

Catholic Maronite Archbishop Bechara el-Rai gestures during a press conference against the airing of a program about Jesus on two Shiite Muslim TV stations, including Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV, at a Catholic Maronite center outside Beirut, Lebanon, Friday. Two Shiite Muslim television stations announced they have stopped airing a program about Jesus after many Christians in the country criticized the work.

Lebanon TV scraps controversial Jesus show BEIRUT (AP) – Two Shiite Muslim television stations in Lebanon canceled a controversial program about Jesus on Friday, saying they do not want to stir up sectarian conflict in the country. The 17-episode program, which was produced in Iran, describes Jesus from an Islamic point of view. Muslims believe Jesus was a prophet and a teacher, but not the son of God. The debate has particular resonance in Lebanon, an Arab nation of 4 million people with a grim history of sectarian strife. The country’s pop-

ulation is divided into 18 sects, including Sunni and Shiite Muslims, Christians and Druse. Al-Manar, a television station run by Lebanon’s powerful militant group, Hezbollah, and the National Broadcasting Network, NBN, started airing the program this week at the beginning of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Christian priests and politicians quickly protested, saying the topic might endanger national coexistence. The program does not show respect to “Jesus, the church and Christi-

anity,� Catholic Maronite Archbishop Bechara el-Rai told reporters Friday. Shortly before el-Rai’s news conference, AlManar and NBN issued a statement saying the program “shows the great personality of God’s prophet Jesus, the son of Mary, peace be upon him.� But, the statement said, the stations decided to stop airing the program in respect to other Lebanese sects. Information Minister Tarek Mitri said that even though he is against censorship, he agreed with the cancel-

BIBLE QUIZ

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Yesterday’s Bible question: Who shut Noah and his family in when the ark was finished? Answer to yesterday’s question: The Lord. “And they that went in, went in male and female of all flesh, as God had commanded him: and the Lord shut him in.� (Genesis 7:16) Today’s Bible question: What was Noah’s first act when he came forth from the ark?

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lation because of Lebanon’s religious diversity. “There is a special case in Lebanon which is considered a country of dialogue and a country where Christians and Muslims meet,� Mitri said. After Lebanon gained independence from French rule in 1943, Christians dominated the country. Muslim de-

mands for reform helped trigger the 1975-90 civil war. A 1989 agreement ended the civil war and the two sides have since shared power. The political system reflects Lebanon’s sectarian makeup. The presidency goes to a Maronite Catholic, the prime minister must be a Sunni Muslim, and a Shiite Muslim must be the parliament speaker.

ST. LOUIS (AP) – An atheist is suing to force the administrators of a towering cross in southern Illinois to return a $20,000 state grant toward its restoration, saying Thursday it was “blatantly unconstitutional� to spend taxpayer money on a Christian symbol. Caretakers of the 11story Bald Knob Cross of Peace near Alto Pass, Ill., some 130 miles southeast of St. Louis, insist the grant was legally awarded to the 50year-old landmark in mid-2008 by classifying it as a tourist attraction, not a religious symbol. Rob Sherman disagrees, pressing in his federal lawsuit in Springfield, Ill., that the grant violates the U.S. Constitution’s establishment clause used to argue a separation of church and state. “There has never been any question, outside of southern Illinois, that this state grant is blatantly unconstitutional,� said Sherman.

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Sunday August 15, 2010

LEONARD PITTS: Whatever happened to that relic we called civility? TOMORROW

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

6B

Lean manufacturing helps business compete In response to Gariel J. Ross, Your View, Aug. 4, “Heat, lean manufacturing take toll on workers.” I am a retired supervisor at Thomas Built Buses. I remember when the workers were on production, and at that time the employees had to work for every cent they earned. I started working on the floor before I became a supervisor, so I know what I am talking about. I know that the new C-2 plant has air-conditioning. I also know that in the old plant there are fans everywhere. Thomas needs new things like lean manufacturing to compete. Maybe they should go back to the old way with pay, and make

YOUR VIEW

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the employees that want to work get the most money, instead of paying for people who can’t take a little heat. BILL HARRIS Trinity

Community support makes Sidewalk Stroll a success On behalf of the Uptowne High Point Association and the City Project, I would like to personally thank everyone who came out on Aug. 7 to support the businesses of Uptowne High Point during

the Saturday Sidewalk Stroll. Uptowne is a unique place – the location of over 150 businesses and over 20 restaurants – in a setting that is walkable and friendly. Nearly all of our businesses are locally-owned and operated and offer a range of goods and services that you just can’t find anywhere else. There’s more in store. While we are planning future events (Ilderton’s Beach Blast is in September), we want to encourage you to come back before then and bring your friends and family to experience everything that Uptowne has to offer. Eat a

meal. Take a stroll. Peer into a window. You never know what – or whom – you might find. You don’t have to go anywhere else. We’ve got it all right here, right in your own hometown. Also, a special thanks to the High Point Convention and Visitors Bureau for their support as well as The High Point Enterprise for its help and generosity in promoting the Summer Sidewalk Stroll. Once again, thanks for supporting Uptowne, and thanks for supporting High Point. JAY W. WAGNER High Point The writer is vice chairman of The City Project and chairman of the Uptowne High Point Association.

An independent 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

OUR VIEW

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Attitude is positive at Oak Hollow

DAVIDSON COUNTY

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Commissioners Chairman Max Walser, 4695 Arnold Road, Lexington, NC 27295; 7316242

‘O

ak Hollow Mall, located in beautiful High Point, North Carolina – the furniture capital of the world! Oak Hollow Mall boasts five department stores, over 50 specialty shops, a seven-screen cinema, great dining choices at the Oasis Food Court or one of our sit down style restaurants and much more. Oak Hollow Mall – your Style of Shopping!” That was the message on the Oak Hollow Mall website home page back in the day – about a dozen years before the complex was listed in 2008 as one of 84 dead malls by Green Street Advisors, an independent research, trading and consulting firm. Green Street Advisors contends that any large, enclosed mall generating sales of $250 or less (U.S. average is $381) is in danger of failure. Even with Sears, Belk and J.C. Penney as remaining anchors, the switch of Dillard’s in late 2009 from a two-story department store to a one-floor clearance center and with nearly half the remaining retail units at Oak Hollow not occupied, it’s even more difficult for the mall to raise its sales per square foot figure significantly. While current mall management has lured some nontraditional tenants – such as The Crossing Church @ High Point, the Christian group Arts Evangelica and the Sears Product Services Marketing Center – those entities and the traffic they generate apparently haven’t helped increase revenues significantly for mall stores. The High Point Enterprise has kept you abreast of what has been happening at Oak Hollow Mall since it opened in 1995 and particularly over the last half-dozen years since leases began to expire and many tenants decided to leave for a variety of reasons. The Enterprise alerted you almost three years ago that CBL was willing, even eager, to dump the mall and, in mid-July, reported that as many as three bidders (all of whom indicated they desired to maintain Oak Hollow as a retail complex) had offered to buy the mall. On Aug. 2, CBL & Associates reported in its second-quarter report that it had entered into a contract to sell Oak Hollow Mall, “subject to due diligence and customary closing conditions.” Sale price is estimated at between $12 million and $15 million. The Sears and Dillard’s store structures are separately owned and are not part of the sale. It appears to many to be a grim situation. But Mayor Becky Smothers urges, in a letter to the editor, residents of the greater High Point area to “do what we can to make Oak Hollow Mall a retail success ... shop in High Point ... to support High Point merchants throughout the city.” We’re also encouraged by the fact that managers of the Sears, Belk, Dillard’s and J.C. Penney stores and the Sears call center have been meeting regularly recently and viewing changes at Oak Hollow Mall as a “positive opportunity.” Perhaps they, along with new management, can lead the synergetic activity, in spite of a lousy economy and uncertainty, that will help the mall not only to survive but perhaps even prosper. Hope springs eternal ...

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.

Editorial cartoons get to the heart in a flash!

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ou’ve heard the expression, I’m sure, that a picture is worth a thousand words. Basically, a picture/cartoon tells a story just as well as a large amount of descriptive text. The Phrase Finder claims this phrase emerged in the U.S. in the early part of the 20th century, with its introduction widely attributed to Frederick R. Barnard, who published a piece commending the effectiveness of graphics in advertising with the title “One look is worth a thousand words,” in Printer’s Ink, December 1921. According to The Phrase Finder, Printer’s Ink printed another form of the phrase in March 1927, this time suggesting a Chinese origin: “Chinese proverb. One picture is worth ten thousand words.” The arbitrary escalation from ‘one thousand’ to ‘ten thousand’ and the switching from Japan to China as the source leads The Phrase Finder to smell a rat with this derivation, which has led to another popular belief about the phrase, i.e., that it was coined by Confucius. It might fit the Chinese-sounding ‘Confucius he say’ style, but the Chinese derivation was pure invention, The Phrase Finder says. Regardless, editorial/political cartoons are – according to Charles Press, author of “The Political Cartoon,” who claims “political cartoons are a unique creation – pictorial editorial and artistic social commentary” that allows cartoonists “to make social commentary beyond the boundaries of the written word.” FisheyesLineH reminds us that “political cartoonists have shaped public opinion since the mid-19th century ... relying on symbolism and caricature, experimenting in fresh imagery” to help people think about politics. “Whether their purpose is to promote the status quo, raise social concerns or to spur people to fight hard for change, political cartoons have changed the face of history.” The Brief History of Cartoons website says, “Political cartoons are for the most part composed of two elements: caricature, which parodies the individual, and allusion, which creates the situation or context into which the individual is placed. Caricature as a Western discipline goes back to Leonardo da Vinci’s artistic explorations of the ideal type of deformity – the grotesque – which he used to better understand the concept of ideal beauty.” Benjamin Franklin’s “Join or Die,” which depicts a snake whose severed parts represent the colonies, is acknowledged as the first political

cartoon in America, the site declares. The image had an explicitly political purpose from the start, as Franklin used it in support of his plan for an intercolonial association to deal with the Iroquois at the Albany Congress of OPINION 1754 (although some historians claim he drew it to spur Tom the colonies’ to rebel against Blount British rule). It came to be ■■■ published in “virtually every newspaper on the continent”; reasons for its widespread currency include its demagogic reference to an Indian threat as well as its basis in the popular superstition that a dead snake would come back to life if the pieces were placed next to each other, the site says. Utah Educational Network proclaims: “In the late 1800s, an increase in newspaper and magazine circulation provided a rich environment for the rise and use of political cartoons. During the Spanish American War, William R. Hearst encouraged the visual arts of Frederick Remington by saying, ‘you furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war.’ Political cartoons communicate powerful ideas often in a humorous, enlightening manner, by incorporating the events of the period into an easily understandable format most people could relate to even with limited reading abilities. Symbols, caricature, drawings and exaggerations used by the cartoonist point out themes and problems of any given time period.” When Vince Wheeler, The High Point Enterprise opinion page editor, and I select cartoons for publication, we often search for those that, as standalones, are worth “a thousand words” or at least are provocative enough to spur multiple thoughts. Just as often, we seek cartoons to accompany – agreeing with or countering – the thoughts expressed in YOUR VIEW, by columnists (readers-write, Enterprise staff and/or syndicated) and, of course, in OUR VIEW. Some of you are offended by our selections from time to time. Joan Rivers answers those who are offended by her brand of humor by insisting that the very point of comedy is to laugh at the most morose tragedy – how could anyone possibly get through life otherwise? It’s worth it for us if the cartoons we choose make you think!

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

tblount@hpe.com | 888-3543

Vice Chairman Sam Watford, 4111 Denton Road, Thomasville, NC 27360; 476-1578 h, 4766593 Cathy Dunn, 1375 Starboard Reach, Lexington, NC 27292; 7982209 Larry Potts, 373 Waitman Road, Lexington, NC 27295; 787-4697 Don Truell, 804 Leach Ave., Thomasville, NC 27360, 475-3107 Billy Joe Kepley, 1009 Pickett Road, Lexington, NC 27295; 7312040 Fred McClure, 387 Bryan Woods Lane, Lexington, NC 27293; 2431641 h, 249-9269

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 SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

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SBI is guilty of poor performance Who cares P about the leaks?

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very once in a while, I get the feeling that the liberal assault on common sense and traditional American values has taken a breather. Of course, it never takes long to get slapped back into reality. The latest slap came from White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. After WikiLeaks posted thousands of classified military documents on the Internet, Gibbs said that the White House “can do nothing but implore the person who has those classified, top secret documents not to post anymore.” Really? Implore? The leader of the free world and sole superpower can do nothing but beg earnestly? Did it not occur to Gibbs that maybe we should find and prosecute the source (or sources) of the leaks? We can’t do anything about what’s already been leaked, but shouldn’t we be trying to prevent more leaks? To put it bluntly, and to borrow a recent headline: Plug the OPINION damned hole! Even Gibbs Mike admitted that the Hughes leaked documents ■■■ have jeopardized the lives of the people in Afghanistan who are trying to help us win the war. The leaks have obviously jeopardized American lives and made winning the war harder than it needs to be. The intent of WikiLeaks was to put a quick end to the war in Afghanistan, but their irresponsible actions will most likely extend the duration of the war. And what if we did leave now? Have these Useful Idiots ever heard of Pol Pot and the millions who died after America gave up on Vietnam? Why is the attitude of the White House toward the leaks so blasé? It took Obama three days to make a pathetically insignificant statement about the leaks. Not a word about plugging the hole or bringing the perpetrators to justice, Obama could only say that he was “concerned” and that there wasn’t anything new in the documents. And of course, he threw in the obligatory cheap shot against former President Bush. During the Bush Administration, liberals were extremely vocal about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They claimed to support the troops. In reality, liberals did more harm than good then, and they continue to create problems for our troops now. A few years ago, liberals were giving support to our enemies by claiming the war in Iraq was lost. Now they’re handing our enemies valuable intelligence on a silver platter. The armchair generals at WikiLeaks claim that our troops are dishonest and have committed war crimes. Yet these same liberals condone the blatant dishonesty and heinous crimes of our enemies. One major reason why the wars have lasted so long with so many American casualties is that we’ve gone so far out of our way trying not to hurt innocent civilians. The whole situation with WikiLeaks is truly disgusting, and seeing American liberals on the wrong side of this issue is even more so – but totally expected. I believe in freedom of speech and freedom of the press, not just in America. If we suppress WikiLeaks, we may be doing more harm than good. However, there’s no such protection for the leakers of classified national security information. They should be hunted down and punished severely. MIKE HUGHES is a Navy veteran who lives in Jamestown. His column appears here every other Sunday. To comment, visit www.hpe.com and click on local commentary. E-mail him at mrmike27282@gmail.com.

rosecutors, defense attorneys, out-of-state criminal investigators and even law enforcement officials have complained for years about investigative practices at the State Bureau of Investigation. It took two high-profile verdict reversals and knowledge about a damning investigative series in The News and Observer before Attorney General Roy Cooper took action by replacing the director of the SBI and suspending the bloodstain pattern analyst’s unit. These revelations are the latest in a series of misconduct, corruption and ethical violations in state government. The public is weary of problems in the Department of Motor Vehicles, the State Highway Patrol, the State Board of Elections and now the SBI. It helps explain why citizens of this state hold a low opinion of state government in general.

We find it unconscionable that one person suffered 17 years in prison and another 14 years in confinement MY SPIN because of poor SBI work. How Tom many more Campbell innocent people ■■■ are behind bars in our state because of “junk science,” prejudiced investigators or lazy and fraudulent investigations? More than one district attorney is questioning whether shoddy investigative tactics by the SBI might have impacted their homicide cases. They have every right to be concerned and it would be reasonable, although time consuming and expensive, to review every capital conviction in North Carolina. It is also reasonable to ask what action will be taken against the agents, supervi-

sors and SBI director whose shoddy work, poor oversight and lax management cost at least two men so much of their lives. The public will forgive honest mistakes, but it appears there were deliberate attempts to cover up or, worse still, manufacture evidence. When complaints were lodged, management turned their collective heads. The state will no doubt pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in compensation to these two and perhaps others who have been wronged, but the greater cost is the further loss of confidence in law enforcement. Our pursuit of justice should include those in the SBI who are guilty of crimes of omission and commission. Not only do we hold those in law enforcement to high standards but we should also hold them accountable for their actions. Getting fired for knowingly putting an innocent person in jail for 17 years seems too small a price to

pay for the crime committed against this person. The larger question is what our leaders will do to restore confidence? Business-as-usual responses about people needing more training or reassigning those involved to another division are not acceptable. This is a time when leaders must do three things. They must acknowledge the failures, tell the public what actions they have taken to fix the problems and offer sufficient transparency to demonstrate these sins will not occur again. This accounting must also report personnel actions taken. If we cannot trust those in law enforcement, who can we trust? TOM CAMPBELL is former assistant North Carolina state treasurer and is creator/host of NC SPIN, a weekly statewide television discussion of N.C. issues airing Sundays at 6:30 a.m. on WFMY-TV. Contact him at www. ncspin.com.

First lady folly Michelle Obama sends wrong message with trip to Spain

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he members of the media who savaged my stepmother Nancy Reagan for buying new china for the White House – dinnerware that will last for decades – have for the most part either ignored the cost and the significance of Michelle Obama’s regal visit to Spain or downplayed it. Those who criticized this display of Mrs. Obama’s royal pretensions – the cartoonish depiction of the First Lady as Marie Antoinette – she of “Let them eat cake” infamy, reaching for a sweet, got right to the heart of the matter. Others simply went into ecstasy over her comings and goings, all but swooning over her meeting with OPINION genuine royalty, the King and Queen of Spain. Michael It was said that after Reagan having endured an unan■■■ nounced visit to her Newport estate from Jackie Kennedy and little Caroline, a dowager from one of the nation’s economic royalty sniffed, “Who were these people?” I suspect His Spanish Majesty at least harbored similar thoughts. Presenting themselves as “private tourists,” the First Lady and her vast entourage of guests and Secret Service agents spent a lot of the public’s money. Rather than lowering herself to use public transportation for herself and her large entourage of pals, she used Air Force planes. Cost? According to CBS News, a whopping $146,000 round-trip cost for the U.S. Air Force 757 jets. This,

the network explained, did not include the cost of time on the ground. The tab for lodging about 70 security types – Secret Service and U.S. military – amounted to something on the order of $95,000 in hotel costs. In addition, security personnel got a government allowance of $273 per day. Added to that tab were the costs of keeping the dozen-or-so cars in her motorcade chugging along. It’s not the money alone that should rile her fellow Americans. As I see it, the outrageous aspect of the whole episode is the time she picked to go jetting off to Spain with her daughter and some 40 close friends. As she hobnobbed with Spanish royalty and went sightseeing with her coterie of chums, back home unemployment stood at 91⁄2 percent; last month alone some 131,000 of her fellow Americans lost their jobs. She has been called “tone deaf” by some media observers, suggesting that she sees herself as being above it all. The hubbub about a pricey coat put together

by a designer who also caters to the illustrious anti-American Spice Girls certainly so indicates. After all, she has to be suitably clad when she appears in public, even if the public wears street clothes while standing in the unemployment lines. Her behavior has been repeatedly mirrored by her husband, who displays his grief over the plight of the victims of the Gulf oil spill by hitting a little white ball (some symbolism here?) around various exclusive golf courses from coast to coast. Surely America’s would-be royal couple must realize that their behavior will most certainly cost a lot more than the public’s money. If ever there was a oneterm presidency, this one seems on the road to becoming a reality. Moreover, Barack Obama’s loyal constituency on Capitol Hill is going to be the first to pay the piper. November promises to be the equivalent of the storming of the Bastille, with hordes of Obama supporters on Capitol Hill suffering the electoral equivalent of a very sharp guillotine blade. Considering the fact that Obama is one smart cookie, the penalty due and payable for his behavior and that of his spouse cannot have escaped him, unless of course he is delusional and is convinced they can get away with all this “let ‘em eat cake” business. ... We’ll see. MIKE REAGAN, elder son of the late President Ronald Reagan, is president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation (www.reaganlegacyfoundation.org) . His column is distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons, Inc., newspaper syndicate. E-mail comments to Reagan@caglecartoons.com.

A mosque near ground zero is fool’s gold BY BOSE RAVENEL

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n response to Leonard Pitts’ arguments supporting the controversial planned construction of a mosque proximate to ground zero, I offer the following: Pitts refers to the site as “where Muslim men, acting from a perverse distortion of their religion ...” According to historians and individuals who know Arabic, the Quran in its entirety calls for the destruction or subjugation of all “infidels” who refuse to embrace Islam. Muhammad in his teachings (Hadith) affirmed the same message. Although earlier Quranic passages speak of peace, later ones call for jihad against infidels. This is illustrated by ex-Islamic terrorist Walid Shoebat in his book “Why We Want to Kill You.” Shoebat renounced Islam after he studied thoroughly the Quran – in Arabic – and the Bible, embraced Christianity, and moved to the United States. The majority of Muslims do not believe in jihad and are

GUEST COLUMN

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peace-loving, but the problem with Islam is not the majority of Muslims who do not follow the teachings of the Quran and Muhammad – but those who do. Jihad and violence derive from the core teachings of the ultimate authority for Islam. Even if “only” 10 percent of Muslims in the United States are “radical,” that represents a large number. FBI reports show that some 10 percent of the mosques in the United States teach jihad and foment surreptitious sabotage – talking peace in English before the public, while teaching jihad in Arabic behind closed doors. Part of the strategy for jihadists is to pose as peaceloving citizens within the culture, while secretly working to promote Sharia law or other ways to subjugate nonbelievers. Concerning the intentions for the mosque near ground zero, Walid Shoebat reveals how those behind the scenes,

speaking Arabic, view this mosque as moving the United States incrementally toward Sharia law – while in public, speaking English, say the things Mr. Pitts cites (http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=n-UDl3j8WZQ). According to Middle East historian Steven Carol (“How Muslims Would View a Mosque at Ground Zero,” Levitt Letter August 2010. P. 12), ArabMuslim conquerors over history have demonstrated a penchant for destroying nonIslamic religious shrines and building their own at the site of those ruins – interpreted by them as demonstrating that “their God” (Allah) is greater than yours. This can be seen in two prominent examples, the Ibrahimi Mosque built in Hebron at the Tomb of the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and the Dome of the Rock built on the ruins of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Regarding Pitts’ condescending reference to some in America believing that President Obama is a Muslim, this could explain the president’s

actions and words before Muslims here and abroad – regularly denigrating the United States in the eyes of certain leaders in Muslim countries. Robert Spencer in “The Complete Infidels Guide to the Koran” (Regenery 2009) quotes the president in his speech to the Islamic world in Cairo on June 4, 2009, as extending a “greeting of peace from Muslim communities in my country: assalaamu alaykum ” – which means “peace be upon you.” According to Islamic law this greeting is extended from one Muslim to another. Spencer describes numerous instances where President Obama castigated his own country and paid homage to Islamic countries while speaking before largely Muslim audiences. It is entirely reasonable, therefore, to wonder if the president is a Muslim. DR. BOSE RAVENEL is a physician in High Point, has visited the Holy Land and is a student of the history of the conflict between Islam and the non-Islamic world.


CAROLINAS 8B www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

For some in North Carolina, goodness grows at home CHARLOTTE (AP) – In shallow trays of organic soil at her greenhouse in Harrisburg, onetime real estate agent Kate Brun is cultivating a business: growing and selling microgreens, tiny herbs and vegetables harvested when their first leaves appear. Not even a year old, her company is already taking root – part of a wave of the homemade and homegrown springing up in Charlotte and across the country. Two factors have combined to propel the trend, experts say: the increasingly popular local-food movement, and a recession that’s prompted people to consider different ways to earn a living. “We really are going to need more producers who are willing to grow for this kind of market,� says Nancy Creamer, director of the Center for Environmental Farming Systems at N.C. State University. “There’s sometimes a learning curve and some barriers, but I think there’s a lot of interest and a lot of opportunity.� That’s how Brun, a 35year-old mother of two, sees it. “It’s finding something, having faith in what you’ve got and having the courage to go do it. I never enjoyed going to work until now.� The overall number of farms in North Carolina declined 2 percent in the most recent U.S. Census of Agriculture – to 52,913 in 2007, compared with the previous count in 2002. But the number of small producers, on plots up to 9

acres, jumped 25 percent, to about 5,000. The pattern has continued since then, observers say. Area farmers markets and agricultural extension offices report a boom in inquiries about growing and selling local produce, as well as new producers entering the arena. There’s a 78-person waiting list for spots at the certified organic incubator farm in Cabarrus County, which began in 2008, county extension director Debbie Bost says. The innovative project now has 16 farmers working up to a third of an acre apiece, learning about sustainable-food practices and gaining experience so they can one day farm land of their own. The participants are ages 18 to 59, with a range

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of education levels. Some are there full-time; others work elsewhere, too, including at Wells Fargo, US Airways and Carolinas Medical Center, Bost says. Brun had always enjoyed gardening and began growing microgreens for her family last summer. By that point, the economy had taken a toll on both her husband’s construction management and contracting company and on her part-time work as a real estate agent, so she mulled whether there was a way to make money from something she loved. Inspired by a friend in California who had done the same, she decided she could sell what she grew.

AP

Kate Brun, owner of Lucky Leaf Gardens of Harrisburg, grows microgreens. The varieties she grows include snow pea tendril and Detroit beets.

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Must present coupon at time of purchase. Valid on one pair of regular priced jeans. Limit one per customer. No cash value. Redeemable at Goodwill Ç Ĺ?ƚŚ Ä‚ Ć‰ĆľĆŒÄ?ŚĂĆ?Äž ŽĨ ΨϭϹ Ĺ˝ĆŒ žŽĆŒÄž ĆŒÄ?ŚĂĆ?Äž ŽĨ ΨϭϹ Ĺ˝ĆŒ žŽĆŒÄž Industries of Central NC Retail stores in Guilford, Alamance, Caswell, Rockingham and Randolph DĆľĆ?Ćš Ć‰ĆŒÄžĆ?ĞŜƚ Ä?ŽƾƉŽŜ Ä‚Ćš Ć&#x;žĞ ŽĨ Ć‰ĆľĆŒÄ?ŚĂĆ?Ğ͘ sÄ‚ĹŻĹ?Äš ŽŜ ŽŜÄž ŽŜ Ä‚Ćš Ć&#x;žĞ ŽĨ Ć‰ĆľĆŒÄ?ŚĂĆ?Ğ͘ sÄ‚ĹŻĹ?Äš ŽŜ ŽŜÄž ƉĂĹ?ĆŒ counties. Valid August 15-31, 2010.

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Visit TriadGoodwill.org for sĹ?Ć?Ĺ?Ćš dĆŒĹ?Ä‚Äš'ŽŽÄšÇ Ĺ?ĹŻĹŻÍ˜Ĺ˝ĆŒĹ? ĨŽĆŒ a complete listĹ?Ä‚Äš'ŽŽÄšÇ Ĺ?ĹŻĹŻÍ˜Ĺ˝ĆŒĹ? ĨŽĆŒ of locations

presents Rock’n High Point Concert Series featuring

The Tams!

City of High Point and United Way of Greater High Point are partnering again after the very successful Sleeping Booty Concert in June to bring in The Tams as the Rock’n High Point series continues!

Thursday, August 19, 2010 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm at Mendenhall Terminal on Commerce Avenue Between IHFC and Showplace

Tickets: $7.00 at the gate; free parking all around venue Children 12 and under are free Bring your lawn chairs for beach music under the stars. Food and favorite beverages available for purchase. NO COOLERS!

Sponsored by


C

Sunday August 15, 2010

Business: Pam Haynes

IT’S POSSIBLE: Selling a home in tough times. 2C

PHaynes@hpe.com (336) 888-3617

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

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Buy the book? Less-expensive options available for college students PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — College can cause a chronic case of sticker shock. In addition to skyrocketing tuition comes the cost of textbooks, which the U.S. Government Accountability Office says has risen twice as fast as inflation for two decades. Students now spend nearly $700 — or more — each year on textbooks. But there is good news. A federal that law went into effect this summer requires publishers to tell professors how much their textbooks cost and mandates that schools identify books needed for

each class at registration so students have time to shop around. Here are ways to cut textbook costs: • Most textbooks are still sold through the campus bookstore, according the National Association of College Stores. The trade group recommends shopping early, buying used and checking your store’s website for deals. Also try the stores’ Facebook pages and Twitter feeds for specials. And remember to recoup some of your cash at the end of the term by selling your books back to the store. • The new law guar-

antees students easy access to the ISBN, the international standard book number that identifies the textbook, making it easier to comparison shop. Try Amazon. com, efollet.com, iChapters.com and Half.com, which is part of eBay. Also check sites that let students search several retailers at once, like Bigwords.com and Bestbookbuys.com. Some students turn to Craigslist, and at Campusbooks.com you can find the best prices for both buying books at the beginning of the term and selling them at the end. • The electronic reading format is growing but remains limited, aside from books whose copyright has expired, some of which can be found free through Google Books,

Project Gutenberg and other websites. Flat World Knowledge, founded by former textbook industry leaders, provides free online access to some textbooks plus print-on-demand, audio and downloadable versions. This fall it is adding versions for electronic book readers. The company said its customers routinely spend 80 percent less than they would on traditional textbooks. Also offering versions for e-readers are sites such as Coursesmart. com, which also provides online tools for highlighting or taking notes in electronic books. Digital books were available for about 15 percent of courses last year, according to the National Association of College Stores. Experts

expect the format to keep expanding. • Numerous websites — Chegg, BookRenter, CollegeBook Renter and others — have popped up to lend textbooks for a fee. The services typically operate through the mail — like Netflix for books. Barnes & Noble also plans to expand its textbook rental program. Renting allows students to read a printed book without extra equipment and — in many cases — still highlight and take notes in the text. BookRenter, which says its customers can save 75 percent off buying a book, now offers rental services in partnership with more than 250 campus bookstores. Some colleges also loan textbooks through campus libraries but availability can be limited.

Are you an entrepreneur with an established business in the High Point area? If so, you may be a candidate for a Business Profile. We profile selected businesses every Sunday. If you’re interested, submit your name, number and brief explanation of your company to jfeeney@hpe. com.

ALL TALK

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BUSINESS PROFILE

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Family recipes serve sweet success BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT - Chocolate turtle and white chocolate raspberry cheesecakes are a familiar taste to patrons of downtown Greensboro. Thanks to the recent opening of the second Cheesecakes by Alex in north High Point, owners hope the taste will become a favorite to those in the Furniture City as well. Ralph Amoroso has opened the second location at 5870 Samet Drive, Suite 101, in the space formerly occupied by Entrée Vous. He is the brother of Alex Amoroso, who opened Cheesecakes by Alex at 315 S. Elm St. in Greensboro six years ago. “Alex started the concept, and I decided to open this one here,” Ralph Amoroso said. “I’m licensed to use all of his recipes, and everything but the cheesecakes are made here. We get those fresh from him.” Amoroso said he grew up in an Italian family with seven children where everyone learned how to cook, including he and his brother. He, his brother and his father also have managed several restaurants. His father managed Mr. Dunderbak’s in Greensboro. “My brothers and sisters - we have all worked in restaurants most of our lives,” he said. “We’re one big Italian family that argues over whose recipe is better than the other. We all learned how to cook.” The cooking skills they obtained led to the 19 different flavors of cheesecakes offered daily at the shop and the scones, muffins, coffees and soon-to-be launched smoothie line. The store takes walk-in orders and pre-orders.

RALPH AMOROSO

Occupation: Owner of Cheesecakes by Alex in High Point Hometown: Born in New Jersey, but has lived in Greensboro since age 11 Age: 51 Education: Architectural design courses at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro Hobbies: Design, photography, golf and riding Harley Davidsons Favorite vacation spot: Sunset Beach Cheesecakes by Alex in High Point is located at 5870 Samet Drive, suite 101. It can be reached at 553-2708. Hours are 7 a.m.-8 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 7 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday.

Besides cooking, Amoroso said he has a passion for architecture and design as well. He took architectural courses at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and designed several Triad restaurants. At the Greensboro store, he designed the layout of the building’s interior. “I have 30 years of experience owning and designing restaurants,” he said. “I’ve been doing this for a long time.” Amoroso said he decided to try a second location of his brother’s store when the design and construction business slowed but his brother’s business

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Ralph Amoroso owns Cheesecakes by Alex, located at the Palladium shopping center. continued to boom. “Since Alex’s business was doing so well, we decided we wanted to get another model going to expand.” Winston-Salem also was considered for the second location, but the space at the Palladium shopping center was the perfect size, had some restaurant equipment already installed and was in a good location, he said. “My store is the model

for future new stores,” he said. “If things go well, I’d like to open more stores. We wanted to stay close to home this time so we can tweak the system.” He said his brother also may open one central kitchen distribution center in the future. But for now, the two are trying to spread the word about the new shop and make it as much of a staple in High Point as it is in Greensboro.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

“There’s still a lot of people that don’t know we’re here,” he said. “I want them to know they can come here to get other things besides cheesecake. They can in the morning for a bagel or a cup of coffee. If High Point treats us well, hopefully in a year we can move onto WinstonSalem or Burlington or anywhere.” phaynes@hpe.com | 888-3617

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Just because mobile phones are becoming more like small computers doesn’t mean you should have to do a lot of typing on them. That’s the thinking behind the latest update to Google Inc.’s popular Android software for mobile phones. The latest version of Android 2.2, released Thursday, includes 10 new voice commands that can be used to operate phones without using a keypad. Although Google says about 200,000 Androidpowered phones are being sold each day, not all of them are equipped with the 2.2 operating system, also known as Froyo. Google’s Nexus One phone already runs on Froyo, but users will need to download free updates through its Android Market. Motorola Inc.’s Droid 2, which went on sale this week, already has the necessary updates. The features are expected to be added to HTC Corp.’s Evo and Incredible phones when they get Froyo in the coming months. Google’s new “Voice Actions” tool” enables people to dictate their text messages and e-mails.

INDEX BUSINESS NOTES 2C BUSINESS PEOPLE 2C CLASSIFIEDS 3C


BUSINESS 2C www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

BUSINESS PEOPLE

The price is right

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A “For Sale� sign is displayed outside a home in Springfield, Ill., in this July photograph.

Selling a home in tough times is possible NEW YORK (AP) — The good news for sellers: Your house will sell. The bad? Only if the price is just right. That could mean biting down hard and slashing tens of thousands from your ideal listing price if you’re serious about selling. And you should be prepared to get even less than that. The recently expired tax credits for homebuyers gave sellers a boost. Home sales surged and values edged up. The worst appeared to be behind us. But since the deadline passed at the end of April, housing has faltered. Job insecurity, tight credit and consumer confidence are undermining a sustained recovery, despite the lowest mortgage rates in decades. In June, sales of previously occupied homes fell 5.1 percent, while new home sales posted the second-weakest month on record. And many economists expect prices to decline another 2 percent to 10

percent followed by “a long, flat bottom,� said Stan Humphries, chief economist at real estate website Zillow.com. That means sellers must set their price with precision or risk languishing on the market. Here’s the disconnect facing sellers: The vast majority of sellers believe their homes are worth more than what their real estate agent recommends, according to HomeGain.com. At the same time, most buyers think for-sale homes are overpriced. So how do you find the sweet spot? Analyze your market first. Determine how many houses similar to yours are up for sale. Consider neighborhood, school district, size and price point. The more homes there are, the more it becomes necessary to list at the lower end. “I want buyers to ask why is this house priced so competitively,� said Ron Phipps of Phipps Realty in Warwick, R.I. “I

want the answer to be an offer.� Foreclosures and short sales, where the owner sells for less than what’s owned on the property, complicate matters. Be honest. Are the foreclosures or short sales in your market a reasonable alternative a buyer would consider? Some won’t be because they are in disrepair. But others, especially short sales, are often in good condition and can be priced 15 percent to 25 percent below a comparable home. So you’ve got the right price, or a price low enough to attract bids. Don’t be disappointed when an offer comes in below the listing price. And don’t send back a token counteroffer that’s only a few thousand dollars below what you want. “Buyers are not interested in back-and-forth negotiations these days,� Phipps said. “They are less emotional and more disciplined. They will walk away.� If no one shows up for

an open house, if no one calls and if there are no offers, then the price is too high. That means it’s time to make a meaningful price cut. You won’t be alone. Almost a quarter of all listings on the market at the beginning of July had at least one price reduction. The average discount from the original listing price? Ten percent, according to Trulia.com. And cut with a machete and not a butter knife. Too many dinky reductions become a scarlet letter on your front lawn and would-be buyers will think you’re not serious. Sellers are always chasing falling prices, said Jonathan Miller, president and chief executive of real estate appraisal and consulting firm Miller Samuel Inc. But there’s a challenge. “They want to sell for more than what they owe or they want to get the money they put into the house,� he said. “The market couldn’t care less about your personal situation.�

Bank customers fight overdraft fees DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Bank customers fighting high overdraft fees got a boost on Tuesday with a win in federal court in California against Wells Fargo & Co., but that case has limited legal impact. A similar federal court case filed in Florida against 30 banks including Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Citibank and others could mean much more. At issue is the practice of banks processing debit payments according to their size, from largest to smallest, rather than by the timing of which transaction came first. This drains customer bank accounts faster, causing them to pay more overdraft fees. In the California deci-

sion, U.S. District Judge William Alsup accused Wells Fargo of “profiteering� by changing its policies to process checks, debit card transactions and bill payments from the highest dollar amount to the lowest. He referred to the practice as “gouging and profiteering.� Alsup ordered Wells Fargo to stop posting transactions in highto-low order by Nov. 30 and to reverse overdraft fees charged to customers over a period of several years. The cost to the bank is estimated at about $203 million. Wells Fargo spokeswoman Richele Messick said the bank will appeal the ruling. Judge Alsup’s ruling won’t have sweeping legal implications because

it was limited to a group of Wells Fargo customers in California, said Charles Delbaum, a senior staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center. The case in Florida, however, making similar allegations against 30 banks from plaintiffs in 14 states will have more impact if it’s successful. It recently passed a major hurdle when the judge denied a motion to dismiss by the banks. The case is proceeding toward arguments to determine whether class-action status will be granted. NCLC attorneys are cocounsel in a couple of the cases against the banks. Lawsuits over bank overdraft fees are not new. Consumers have been challenging them in

courts for years. Within the last decade various cases alleging violations of federal truth in lending and other laws have failed. Attorneys then turned to filing claims under state regulations, which is what happened in the California and Florida cases, Delbaum said. Consumer advocates say the practice of processing payments in a way that causes more overdrafts is common. “It’s absolutely widespread and the thing that’s so horrible about it is that bank regulators have known about it for years and turned the other way,� said Kathleen Day, a spokeswoman for the Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer advocacy group.

DMJ Wealth Advisors and is primarily responsible for the service oversight of employer-sponsored qualified retirement plans. • Dr. Christian A. Brandyberry of Thomasville successfully passed the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry’s accreditation written examination. The examination is the first step in the accreditation process and gauges a dentist’s or laboratory technician’s foundational knowledge in cosmetic dentistry. • Richard Fields, managing principal of Integrated Advisory Services in Winston-Salem, and John Chaulklin and Brian Clayton of Capital Bank in Burlington were awarded membership to Capital Investment Companies’ President’s Council. The council is a honor society at Capital Investment Companies, based in Raleigh. Fields, Chaulklin and Clayton were honored for being among the company’s top financial advisors in 2010. All three offer securities through Capital Investment Companies.

COMPANIES WANTING to submit business people items and pictures should have the information arrive in the offices of The High Point Enterprise by 4 p.m. of the Wednesday preceding the Sunday of publication. Address information to Business People, The High Point Enterprise, P.O. Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261.

BUSINESS NOTES

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• The Carolinas chapter of the Institute of Management Consultants will hold a workshop and dinner Sept. 13 at the Grandover Resort. The event is open to the public as well as to institute members; pre-paid registration is required. The workshop, which begins at 1:30 p.m., features Sindy Martin, chief executive officer of Smartin International Inc., and keynote dinner speaker Sandy Costa, author of “Humanity at Work.â€? For more information and to register, check the website http://budurl. com/carolinas. • Golding Farms Foods, a Winston-Salem-based manufacturer of sauces, dressings and condiments, announces that it achieved a SQF 2000 level 3 certification by the Safe Quality Food Institute. The certification recognizes Golding’s food safety and quality assurance practices.

• A Federal Contracts Fair will be held from 9 a.m.-noon Thursday in Winston-Salem to inform North Carolina’s small businesses about available contract opportunities and to help them navigate the competitive contract process. The event, sponsored by the office of Sen. Richard Burr, will take place at Forsyth Technical Community College in the Ardmore Hall Auditorium at 2100 Silas Creek Parkway. To register or for more information, check the website http://burr. senate.gov/public/index. cfm?FuseAction=Events. Home

INFORMATION TO APPEAR in this column should be received in the offices of The High Point Enterprise by 4 p.m. of the Wednesday preceding the Sunday of publication. Address information to Business Notes, The High Point Enterprise, P.O. Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261.

Is your hearing current? 211 W. Lexington Avenue, Suite 104, High Point, NC 889.9977

SP00504732

AP

• Longtime television advertising executive Angie Jordan opened New Leaf Sales & Marketing, a full-service advertising agency based in WinstonSalem. Jordan has more than 20 years experience in planning media and buying advertising. New Leaf Sales & Marketing will focus on developing individual marketing strategies for each client, while exploring how those strategies might apply to, or be integrated with special sponsorships, and related media promotions. Jordan was formerly a national sales manager and account manager with WXII-TV. • Tami Ike of The Hearing Clinic achieved the status of academy scholar from the American Academy of Audiology. Ike’s recognition honors her dedication to the field of audiology and her commitment to continued professional excellence. The Hearing Clinic has locations in Asheboro, Greensboro and High Point. • The American Society of Pension Professionals & Actuaries, a national organization for career retirement plan professionals, awarded Brad Mann of DMJ Wealth Advisors out of Greensboro the Qualified Plan Financial Consultant credential for professionals who sell, advise, market or support qualified retirement plans. Mann is an advanced market specialist with

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FRANKLY, MY DEAR: Scarlett’s dresses in need of repairs. 3F

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

3C

Dreading something? How to get off the dime BY MILDRED L. CULP WORKWISE FEATURES

Harvard Medical School’s Srinivasan Pillay maintains that people operate largely “in a mental environment of fear.” Sometimes even the most disciplined people can’t make themselves do something they know that they need to do. If discipline won’t work, what will? The problem is real, thanks to multiple demotivators in today’s workplace. Clinical and industrial-organizational psychologist Joan Pastor at JPA International Inc., in Beverly Hills and Oceanside, Calif., estimates the time people lose to fear about work at 50 percent, especially if they’re confronting multiple stressors. Manhattan psychologist Alden Cass of Competitive Streak Consulting LLC, cites the knowledge that scores of people are waiting to replace you at half your salary. This difficult environment can cause people to freeze up, even though they have the skills and experience to do the job.

SIGNS Pillay – psychiatrist, an assistant clinical professor at Harvard Medical School and CEO of Neu-

SPECIAL | WORKWISE FEATURES

Psychiatrist Srinivasan Pillay explains to a client how the brain functions in relation to work. Pillay is on the faculty at Harvard Medical School and CEO of NeuroBusiness Group LLC, in Cambridge, Mass. roBusiness Group LLC, in Cambridge, Mass. – explains what’s transpiring in his new book, “Life Unlocked: 7 Revolutionary Lessons To Overcome Fear.” He writes that neurological factors are coming into play, but you can foil them fairly easily. First, though, he advises you to recognize the signs of impending dread. You really don’t want to go to work. Mon-

day morning comes and you’re queasy. Some of the people at the office might be all right, but others aren’t, and you can’t avoid them. You’ve plastered a fake smile on your face, “faking being enthusiastic,” he says. Your concentration dulls. Your feeling of dread impacts people around you. How can you arrest these symptoms and turn yourself around emotionally?

STEPS “Life Unlocked” outlines some steps for tricking your brain by training your mind. For example: • Gain the perspective that “the burden that we feel in life is less related to the actual load of our troubles and fears than it is to the attention that we give it.” Learn how to redirect your attention. • Develop hope by “imagin(ing) the change

so your brain can determine the route ... to your goal.” Without hope, you’re telling your brain “to go to sleep. Give permission to the brain to look for a solution.” • Guide your brain so that it “believes that something is possible (at which point ) it will chart a path toward your goal that is radically different from the course it would chart without hope.”

• Reflect on “positive emotions (to) stimulate the consequences of positive emotions.” Positive thoughts about a good meal or massage you’re looking forward to will make you feel better. Reinforce change with longer-term thoughts, such as a special weekend or vacation or even the chance to leave your job down the road. Catch yourself worrying and see if you’re “avoiding the actual thing causing the worry.” All of these steps will undermine the dread that keeps you from taking action. Pillay suggests you not analyze your problem all of the time. Instead, focus your attention on the symptom of fear you’re having, such as a sick stomach, for two or three minutes. He says this tactic ultimately makes you less fearful. Finally, reframe your thoughts. Instead of thinking about how much you fear your boss or a lousy co-worker, think about the short period of time in which you’ll have contact. Try doing all of these things. It won’t cost you a nickel and you might well get off the dime. DR. MILDRED L. CULP, Workwise Features, is an award-winning journalist. E-mail questions or comments to culp@workwise.net.

Call 888-3555, fax 888-3639 or email classads@hpe.com for help with your ad

HOW TO PLACE YOUR AD C all: 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

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.

ERRORS

Please check your ad the first day it runs. If you find an error, call DEADLINES Call before 3:45 p.m. the first day so your ad can be corrected. the day prior to The Enterprise will publication. Call give credit for only Friday before 3:45 the first for Saturday, Sunday or Monday ads. For incorrect publication. 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 Businesses may earn approved credit. For 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!

LEGALS 10 ANNOUNCEMENTS 500 510 520 530 540 550 560 570

Card of Thanks Happy Ads Memorials Lost Found Personals Special Notices

1190 1195 1200 1210 1220

Technical Telecommunications Telemarketing Trades Veterinary Service

RENTALS 2000

2010 Apart. Furnished 2050 Apart. Unfurnished 2090 Assisted Living/ Nursing EMPLOYMENT 1000 1010 Accounting/Financial 2100 Comm. Property 2110 Condos/ 1020 Administrative Townhouse 1021 Advertising 1022 Agriculture/Forestry 2120 Duplexes Market 1023 Architectural Service 2125 Furniture Rental 1024 Automotive 2130 Homes Furnished 1025 Banking 2170 Homes Unfurnished 1026 Bio-Tech/ 2210 Manufact. Homes Pharmaceutical 2220 Mobile Homes/ 1030 Care Needed Spaces 1040 Clerical 2230 Office/Desk Space 1050 Computer/IT 2235 Real Estate for Rent 1051 Construction 2240 Room and Board 1052 Consulting 2250 Roommate Wanted 1053 Cosmetology 2260 Rooms 1054 Customer Service 2270 Vacation 1060 Drivers 2280 Wanted to Rent 1070 Employ. Services 1075 Engineering REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 1076 Executive 3000 Management 1079 Financial Services 3010 Auctions 3020 Businesses 1080 Furniture 1085 Human Resources 3030 Cemetery Plots/ Crypts 1086 Insurance 3040 Commercial Property 1088 Legal 3050 Condos/ 1089 Maintenance Townhouses 1090 Management 3060 Houses 1100 Manufacturing 3500 Investment Property 1110 Medical/General 3510 Land/Farms 1111 Medical/Dental 3520 Loans 1115 Medical/Nursing 3530 Lots for Sale 1116 Medical/Optical 3540 Manufactured 1119 Military Houses 1120 Miscellaneous 3550 Real Estate Agents 1125 Operations 3555 Real Estate for Sale 1130 Part-time 3560 Tobacco Allotment 1140 Professional 3570 Vacation/Resort 1145 Public Relations 3580 Wanted 1149 Real Estate 1150 Restaurant/Hotel SERVICES 4000 1160 Retail 4010 Accounting 1170 Sales 4020 Alterations/Sewing 1180 Teachers

4030 4040 4050 4060 4070 4080 4090 4100 4110 4120 4130 4140 4150 4160 4170 4180 4190 4200 Work 4210 4220 4230 4240 4250 4260 4270 4280 4290 4300 4310 4320 4330 4340 4350 4360 4370 4380 4390 4400 4410 4420 4430 4440 4450 4460 4470 4480 4490 4500 4510

Appliance Repair Auto Repair Autos Cleaned Backhoe Service Basement Work Beauty/Barber Bldg. Contractors Burglar Alarm Care Sick/Elderly Carpentry Carpet Installation Carpet/Drapery Cleaning Child Care Cleaning Service/ Housecleaning Computer Programming Computer Repair Concrete & Brickwork Dozer & Loader

4520 Photography 4530 Plumbing 4540 Professional Service 4550 Remodeling 4560 Roof/Gutters 4570 Schools & Instructions 4580 Secretarial Services 4590 Septic Tank Service 4600 Services Misc. 4610 Special Services 4620 Stump Grinding 4630 Phone Sales/ Service 4640 Topsoil 4650 Towing 4660 Tree Work 4670 TV/Radio 4680 Typing 4690 Waterproofing 4700 Welding

7170 7180 7190 7210 7230 7250 7260 7270 7290 7310 7320

Drain Work Driveway Repair Electrical Exterior Cleaning Fencing Fireplace Wood Fish Pond Work Floor Coverings Florists Furnace Service Furniture Repair Gardening Gutter Service Hair Care Products Hardwood Floors Hauling Heating/ Air Conditioning Home Improvements House Sitting Income Tax Landscaping/ Yardwork Lawn Care Legal Service Moving/Storage Musical/Repairs Nails/Tanning Nursing Painting/Papering Paving Pest Control Pet Sitting

FINANCIALS 5000

8015 Yard/Garage Sale

5010 Business Opportunities 5020 Insurance 5030 Miscellaneous 5040 Personal Loans

PETS/LIVESTOCK 6000 6010 6020 6030 6040 6050

Boarding/Stables Livestock Pets Pets n’ Free Service/Supplies

MERCHANDISE 7000 7010 7015 7020 7050 7060 7070

7080 7090 7100 7120 7130 7140 7160

Antiques Appliances Auctions Baby Items Bldg. Materials Camping/Outdoor Equipment Cellular Phones Clothing Collectibles Construction Equipment/ Building Supplies Electronic Equipment/ Computers Farm & Lawn Flowers/Plants

7330 7340 7350 7360 7370 7380 7390

Food/Beverage Fuel/Wood/Stoves Furniture Household Goods Jewelry/Furs/Luxury Livestock/Feed Corner Market Merchandise-Free Miscellaneous Musical Instruments Office Machines/ Furniture Sporting Equipment Storage Houses Surplus Equipment Swimming Pools Tickets Wanted to Buy Wanted to Swap

YARD/GARAGE SALE 8000 TRANSPORTATION 9000 9010 9020 9040 9050 9060 9110 9120 9130 9160 9170 9190 9210 9220 9240 9250 9260 9280 9300 9310

Airplanes All Terrain Vehicles Auto Parts Auto/Truck Service/ Repairs Autos for Sale Boats/Motors Classic/Antique Cars Foreign Motorcycle Service/ Repair Motorcycles New Car Dealers Recreation Vehicles Rental/Leasing Sport Utility Sports Trucks/Trailers Used Car Dealers Vans Wanted to Buy


C4 www.hpe.com SUNDAY AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

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NNOUNCEMENTS

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Special Notices

Psychic Reader & Advisor. Can solve all affairs of life. Such as Love, Courtship, Marriage, Business, Court Cases, & Lucky Numbers. Urgent help call today 434-3879

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Found

FOUND: 8/8, ShihTzu Mix in the Trinity Turnpike Rd area. Please call to identify 336434-6193 FOUND: Female Yellow Lab. No Collar. Very Sweet. Found Sunday 8/8 in the Hasty School Area in Thomasville. Call to Identify 336-848-3942 FOUND: Male Cat, Tan & Black Tabby. Hasty Area. Call 336-491-0903

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MPLOYMENT

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Professional

CRIME SCENE TECHNICIAN The High Point Police Department seeks to fill a Crime Scene Technician position. This civilian position is responsible for technical and investigative work. Individual will process the scene of criminal activities to include: taking photographs, obtaining and analyzing fingerprints, collecting and preserving evidence, report writing, analyzing video evidence and testifying in court. Will also assist with processing criminal suspects and civilians by taking fingerprint impressions and mug shots. Position requires knowledge of digital photography equipment, crime scene processing, gathering and preserving evidence, excellent oral and written communication and computer skills. Must possess an acceptable valid NC driverĘźs license. Starting salary from $2,543 monthly with excellent benefits. Interested applicants should obtain, complete and return required City application form by closing date of August 27, 2010, from the City of High Point, Human Resources Department, 211 South Hamilton Street, High Point, NC 27260. The City of High Point is an Equal Opportunity Employer HAIR STYLIST NEEDED $50/week. Apply at Angel Beach/ Paradise Hair 301 Trindale Rd., Archdale

Sales

$300 to $1500+ per week Selling cemetery property at Floral Garden Memorial Park. Full time, No travel, Paid training, Benefits, 401k, Top commissions. Must have vehicle, clean driving record and No criminal background. For confidential interview Call Clay Cox, 336-882-6831 or email resumeĘź to kcox@stei.com SALESPERSON: 30 yr adv. co., some travel within NC. Some established accts., develop new accts. Hotel pd. Vacation pd. Call 434-4174 WE NEED YOU ON OUR TEAM! The Assurance Group, Inc. in Thomasville, NC is currently hiring to fill positions in our state of the art call center.

Therapist (Independent Contractor) Masters Level Degree in a Human Services related field, Licensure (LPC, LCSE, LMFT, LCAS, etc). Will provide assessments/individual therapy. Work locations in High Point, or Greensboro. Salary based on billable hours. Please forward resumes and hourly salary requirements to: ksoban@mhahp.org. PLEASE NO PHONE CALLS.

REACH Put your message in 1.6 million N.C. newspapers

* Life, Health, and medicare Insurance products are sold over the phone using an electronic application process * Leads provided daily * Benefits available * Recession proof industry! * Bilingual individuals proficient in Spanish and English areneeded to meet the needs of our Hispanic market * For a confidential interview call Heather Robbins at 1-800-750-1738 extension 2314

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Medical/Dental

Are you looking for an opportunity to join a fun dental team? If you enjoy contributing to a growing dental practice and thrive on making a positive difference in the lives of patients, we want to meet you. Individual to provide treatment consultations, financial arrangements, data entry, patient relation services and various front office task. Hours: Wed-Sat 8:00am-5:00pm.Candidate must have 2-3 years dental experience, ability to work independently as well as on a team, excellent communications skills, strong leadership qualities and a positive attitude. Knowledge of Eaglesoft preferred. Bilingual English/ Spanish a plus. Salary based on experience.Submit confidential resume to email: dos@triadbiz.rr.com Fax: 336 778-1570 Call Shirley at 336 766-4017 Dental Office Solutions

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General Help

$8.00-$20.00/hr Start ASAP CNC Mill Programmers CNC Lathe Programmers CNC Mill Oper CNC Lathe Oper Assemblers, Packers Window/Door Mfg Warehouse Workers Material Handlers Loaders/Unloaders Inspectors Cherry Pickers Forklift Drivers

0232

General Help

Customer Service Customer Service Representative EPES TRANSPORT SYSTEM is one of the fastest growing trucking companies in the Southeast. We are now recruiting for a full-time Customer Service Representative at our Greensboro terminal. Position requires 6-12 months experience in an Operations truckload common carrier environment. AS 400 skills preferred along with excellent verbal and written communication skills. Multi-tasking and proven ability to make quick, logical decisions are required. Come join our team and receive competitive pay along with excellent benefits. Fax resume to (336) 668-2315 or e-mail hr_rep@epestransport.com GENERAL MAINTENANCE Now accepting applications for 3rd shift general maintenance. Should be mechanically inclined with basic repair skills. Clean criminal record and drug screen required. Apply Sheraton Greensboro Hotel at Four Seasons Human Resources Office M-F 9:00am-4:00pm. MAKE Extra $$ Sell Avon to family, friends & work 861-6817 Independent Rep. PT Parking Lot attendant/Maintenance Position available at The String and Splinter Club. 305 West High St. HP. Hours Mon-Fri 11a-2p. DL and transportation req'd. Apply in person Mon-Fri. after 2:15pm

1st, 2nd, 3rd & 12 hr shifts Welcome, Lexington, Linwood, Thomasville Apply online at www.temporary resources.com current applicants call TR Lexington office (336)243-5249 AM SERVER Now accepting applications for AM Restaurant Server. Must be able to begin work at 5:30/6:00am. Clean criminal record and drug screen required. Should have great customer service skills. Apply Sheraton Greensboro Hotel at Four Seasons Human Resources Office M-F 9a-4p.

River Landing at Sandy Ridge is a continuing care retirement community in Colfax, NC is currently seeking a Golf Course Maintenance Tech. Some experience required. We offer a wonderful working environment with benefits. We conduct criminal background checks and drug screening. Must have valid NC Drivers License. EOE. (No phone calls) Please apply in person or fax resume: River Landing at Sandy Ridge 1575 John Knox Drive Colfax, NC 27235 Fax 336-668-4911

for only $300 for 25 words. For details, call Enterprise classified, 888-3555 Where You Turn

Hiring Full Time Process Technicians

POSITION: TEMPORARY PART TIME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT REQUIREMENTS: * Experience in a fast paced environment with a customer service level focus. * Skilled in interpersonal communications and excellent written communication skills. * 3 years of customer service experience in a fast-paced environment. * Must be experienced in Microsoft Excel and Word. * Knowledge or experience in the furniture industry a plus. * Proven ability to work in a team environment. * Positive problem-solving mentality that seeks solutions and improvements to processes to enhance the performance of the company. * Skilled in the analysis of recurring client issues and the ability to dig in to the details and to work with the company to resolve the issues and improve future projects. SALARY & STATUS This position has a pay range of $10.00 - $12.00 depending upon experience. Working hours would be Monday through Thursday from 9 am – 3 pm. All applicants applying for U.S. job openings must be authorized to work in the United States. If you are interested, please apply for this position by emailing your resume to info@marquisseating.com. Please include your contact information and the position name in the subject line.

Come explore a new career. ActiveHealth Management is a technology-driven health care management company dedicated to saving lives. If you’re eager to work in a friendly environment that allows you to make a difference in people’s lives, we want to meet you.

The Timken Company, a leading global friction management and power transmission company, is seeking self-motivated, hard working team players with strong math and mechanical skills. Successful candidates will ďŹ ll open process technician positions at our highly automated, state-of-the art, lean manufacturing facility in Randleman, NC. With operations in 26 countries, Timken employs about 21,000 people worldwide and recorded 2009 sales of U.S. $3.1 billion. QualiďŹ ed candidates must be at least 18 years old and have a high school diploma or equivalent. Two years of manufacturing experience or technical training is required. Experience in machine setup and operation, preventative maintenance, troubleshooting and problem-solving is desired. Industrial electrical/mechanical maintenance experience is preferred. Selected candidates will receive appropriate additional training. Pre-employment testing is required. Overtime and shift work is also required. The Timken Company offers competitive pay, comprehensive beneďŹ ts, team-based work practices and long-term career advancement potential. Apply in person at the: Employment Security Commission 355 S. Fayetteville Street Asheboro, NC by Friday, August 27, 2010. NO PHONE CALLS ACCEPTED. Equal Opportunity Employer – Drug Free Workplace

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New Growth. New Opportunities. JOIN US FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE August 17th, 10:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. August 18th, 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. 4050 Piedmont Parkway High Point, NC 27265 Please bring your resume!

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General Help

SECURITY Now accepting applications for 2nd and 3rd shift full time security. Clean criminal record and drug screen required. Valid driverĘźs license and clean driving record also required. Apply Sheraton Greensboro Hotel at Four Seasons Human Resources Office M-F 9:00am-4:00pm. Supervisor Needed in Knitting for Fine Line Hosiery, Inc. Must be able to fix and make style changes on Ultra-S Machines. Call Lisa Elliott @ 336-498-1600 for more information

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Trucking

CDL-ADrivers: LOTS OF FRIEGHT, LOTS OF MILES, LOTS OF REASONS FOR YOU TO JOIN... Team and Solo Opportunities Offer: * Great Stability & Support * Plenty of Refrigerated Cargo & Other Freight * Good Benefits Call 1-800-362-0159 or visit www.lctjobs.com Class "A" CDL & 6 months OTR Exp Required.

Trindale After School Center now hiring Part Time 2-6 & 12-6. 18 years & Older. Great Job for Students. Call 431-2780

We are currently interviewing experienced applicants with excellent work records for the following positions. *Buffer: Must have 3-5 years of experience buffing steel and aluminum furniture parts. *Machine Room: Must be experienced in setting-up and running various woodworking machines (drill press, router, boring machine, moulder, etc). Experience in frame building and sanding also required. *Metal Fabricator: Must have 3-5 years general metal fabricating experience to include welding, cutting and machining. We offer comptitive pay and benefits in an excellent, drug-free working environment. Qualified applicants should apply in person to:

Drivers-Increased Business! No-Touch Freight & Have a Home Life! Great Pay!, Benefits! 2 yrs. CDL-A, Safe Driving Record! Swing Transport: 800-849-5378

Drivers: Reefer Div! Holiday /Vac Pay! Health/Life, 401K. CDL-A, 2 yrs exp. Good Driving record. 800-936-6770 x111 www.wwtransportinc.com

Davis Furniture Industries 2401 S. College Drive High Point, NC 27261 An EEO/AA Employer

0240

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

Skilled Trade

Exp Leather/Fabric Sewers. Welping/Piping Exp. Locally Owned, A/C Factory. To apply: ESC Office, Job #5222844 Experienced Automotive Tech and General Service Tech needed; must have NC Inspection License and 3 years Experience. Apply at Quality Tire 900 Randolph Street Thomasville, NC 27360

Drivers Dedicated/Regional Runs 4 Days on - 4 Days off Create your own SCHEDULE! Home thru the week & weekends Class A CDL + 1 yr OTR exp. 1-866-269-2119 www.landair.com

EXPERIENCED ONLY NEED APPLY. Exp Flexo 8-c Press Operator. Fri-Sun, 5am-5pm. Wayne Trademark, Ph #336-887-3173 Ext #236 High-end Upholstery Supervisor needed with at least five years experience. Please call Stafford Taylor @ 336-883-3974. Local Furniture Comapny seeking a skilled Outsider & Nail Head Person. Apply in person: 2224 Shore St.

Furniture Movers/Drivers, Experience Required Thomasville Call 336-476-5757

OTR Driver out 1-4 days at a time. Good MVR req. Exp Super 10. Call 886-3124 to apply.

DRIVERS GREENSBORO, NC $875 Minimum for the first 12 weeks Premier Transportation is seeking tractor-trailer drivers for a "NEW OPERATION" making regional deliveries out of GREENSBORO, NC to locations within NC and SOUTHERN & CENTRAL VA. Applicants must have 2 years tractor-trailer driving experience and a Class-A CDL. We offer a very complete compensation package. * HOME ON A REGULAR BASIS * $1,000 longevity bonus after each year * Earning potential of $52,000+ per year * Direct Deposit * Company health & prescription insur. * Family Dental, Life, Disability insur. * 401K, vacation & holiday pay Please call Peggy for application information at Premier Transportation, 3330 East Wendover, Greensboro, NC; Ph: 336-375-3332; or apply on line at: http://www.premiertransportation.com /recruiting/Driver%20App.pdf Business is booming for our clients so GPS is Recruiting for the following openings in High Point:

Opportunities include: s #ARE -ANAGEMENT .URSE 3UPERVISOR $- #- 2. ˆ 2EQ

0232

For directions and to schedule an appointment, please call 866-209-4785 ext 4192 or visit Careerbuilder.com for openings in High Point, NC under company name ActiveHealth Management. It’s that easy! EOE

s #ASE -ANAGER -ATERNITY 2. ˆ2EQ s (EALTH ,IFESTYLE #OACH 7ELLNESSˆ2EQ s (EALTH 3ERVICE -ANAGER 2. ˆ 2EQ

*Upholsters. 1st shift. $13 to start. 2 ASAP openings. *Furniture Assemblers/Frame Builders. $10-11.50 to start. *Furniture Stain Sprayer. $11 to start. *Furniture Sander. $10 to start. *Furniture Glue up. $10.50 to start. 1st and 2nd shift. *Furniture Material Handlers. $10.50 to start. *Foam Material Handlers. $8.50 to start. 12 hr shifts. *Metal Machine Operators. 1st and 2nd shift. $8.50 to start. *New Distribution Center. Shipping Material Handlers and Packers 1st and 2nd shift. $9 to start. Call for an appointment Graham Personnel Services 336-288-9330 or 336-841-2166 www.grahamjobs.com

Davis Furniture Industries, a leading high-end office furniture manufacturer, seeks an individual for the position of Plant Manager in our seating plant. Qualified applicants will have experience in cut and sew upholstery operations, along with the assembly, packing and shipping of high-end furniture. Excellent communication and computer skills are a necessity for this position. A college degree or appropriate technical training are preferred. We offer competitive pay and benefits in an excellent, drug-free working environment. Qualified applicants may forward their resume to jmanuel@davisfurniture.com apply in person to: Davis Furniture Industries 2401 S. College Drive High Point, NC 27261

find out more about us at www.activehealth.com

An EEO/AA Employer


THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com Trucking

0244

Tractor-Trailer Mechanic Immediate Opening JOIN OUR TEAM! A great opportunity for the individual with the right skills! A proven leader in the furniture transportation industry has an immediate need for a tractor-trailer mechanic to preform preventive maintenance on tractors or trailers. Day Shift. Min. of 2 years. Experience. Must have own tools. CDL helpful but not required. Competitive salary & benefits. Apply in person: MGM TRANSPORT CORP., 1264 Jackson Lake Road, High Point, NC. N O P H O N E CALLS. EOE

0248

Perk up with informative news articles on current events, travel, dining and entertainment when you subscribe to The High Point Enterprise.

Office Help

Customer Service-Plastic Packaging Manufacturer Responsibilities to include all aspects of customer service including customer contact, order taking, order entry, shipping, invoicing, etc.. Must be computer literate, have excellent communication skills, must be attentive to detail, flexible, an excellent team player and must have appropriate sense of urgency for all aspects of the work assignment. Send resume to: Box 993, C/O High Point Enterprise, PO Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261. All replies will be held in strict confidence.

Subscribe today!

Where buyers & sellers meet...

336-888-3611 • www.hpe.com

The Classifieds

0248

Office Help

Local manufacturing company hiring qualified maintenance personnel to work 1st and 3rd shifts. Qualified individuals should have working knowledge in the area of electrical, mechanical as well as trouble shooting and industrial machinery repair skills. Experience needed in use of digital multimeter, schematics, pneumatics and light hydraulics. Individuals for first shift will take part in a call rotation with some weekend call backs. Individuals on 3rd will work on a 12 hour rotation and every other weekend. Please send resume and salary requirements to: Box 994 C/O High Point Enterprise, PO Box 1009, High Point NC, 27261. P/T Customer Service / Secretarial position available. Computer skills & furniture background preferred. Flexible hours around children school schedule. Please send resume to 201 National Hwy., Thomasville, NC 27360

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0264

Child Care

In Home Licensed 3 Star Daycare has openings for 2 children, beginning 8/23. Lakewood Forest off Welborn Rd, Trinity. Hopewell Elementary School Area. 336-861-5564 or 336-870-5299 Want... Need... Can’t live without? Find it in the Classifieds!

Elderly Care

0288

NEEDED: Live-in Housekeeper. Flexible hours. Errands. Non-smoker. Own transportation. Call 9am-5pm 336-723-8572

P

ETS

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Cats/Dogs/Pets

ShihTzu, $100 OFF Greens Kennels 336-498-7721 AKC Registered Pitt Bulls for sale & Puppies. 2 Blues & 1 Fawn. Call 336-289-3034 Free Kittens & Mother Cat. Black & Calico Females. 1 yr Calico Mother. Call 336-803-3386 Reg. Shi-Nese F/M $250. Shots. Paper trained. Call 336-476-9591

Restaurant

E. Ellington's Bistro needs chef, cooks, pastry chef & waitstaff. Call 336-442-1086

5C

Rescued 4 mo Yellow Lab Mix Male. Has Rabies Shot. Free to a good Home. Call 336-688-1544 Shih Tzu AKC Pup F So Loving A Little Darling Guarantee Shot $400 431-9848

M

ERCHANDISE

Showcase of Real Estate NEW HOMES DAVIDSON COUNTY

Davidson County Schools

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)

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

Builders personal home with gorgeous waterview. Hardwood oors, jetted tub, separate shower, beautiful granite counters, fabulous kitchen, 2 story family room AND DRAMATIC VIEWS!! Plus much, much more‌. $389,900

WENDY HILL REALTY CALL 475-6800

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

PRICE REDUCED

H I G H

For Sale By Owner 232 Panther Creek Court

315 S. Elm St, High Point Commercial Building for Sale $499,000

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. $248,900.

6 Bedrooms, Plus 3 Home OfďŹ ces Or 8 Bedrooms - 1.1 Acre – Near Wesley Memorial Methodist – - Emerywood area “Tell your friendsâ€? $259,900. Priced below Tax & appraisal values. Owner Financing

Call 336-886-4602

PRICE CUT WENDOVER HILLS

HENRY SHAVITZ REALTY 882-8111

8 Unit Apartment Building Available

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 SUNDAYS 2-4

WIN THIS HOUSE!!

226 Cascade Drive, Willow Creek High Point Your Chance to Win- $100 Rafe Tickets Help Support a LOCAL Non-ProďŹ t, I AM NOW, INC. Visit www.RafeThisHouse.Info and www.IAMNOWInc.com

OWNER FINANCING

189 Game Trail, Thomasville 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

MAY QUALIFY FOR 100% FINANCING Better than new, All Brick Home. Full Finished Basement. 4 Full Bath’s, Beautiful Hardwoods, Granite Counters on over 1 acre.

Wendy Hill 475-6800

336-475-6279

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!

4 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Large Rooms. East Davidson Area. s SQUARE FEET

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.

336-491-9564 or 336-472-0310

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

125 Kendall Mill Road, Thomasville

1812 Brunswick Ct. Chestnut Oaks High Point, NC TOWNHOUSE One Level w/front porch 1760 SQ Ft, 2 BR w/ walk-in closets 2 BA, Laundry RM, All Appliances, Eat-In Kitchen w/ lots of cabinets, Large Dining & Family RM w/ Fireplace & Built-In Storage & Bookcases, Private 2 Car Garage w/storage RM, Large Deck $154,900.

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

Call 888-3555 to advertise on this page! 30005042


6C www.hpe.com SUANDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE Auction Sales

***GIGANTIC*** MUNICIPAL & SEIZURE AUCTION!!! SAT., AUG. 21ST High Point, NC (@Mendenhall Auto Auction Facility, 6695 Auction Rd., Archdale, NC)

800+ Pcs. (35+) POLICE CARS, (8+) DUMP TKS., (4+) 06 CHEV TAHOES, (25+) FLEET VEHICLES, PICK UP TKS., FIRE TKS., (6+) GARBAGE TKL., BACKHOES, (3+) NH TRACTORS, BOMAG ROLLER, (20+) SHUTTLE/TRANSIT BUSES, EXCAVATORS, FORK LIFTS, SKID STEERS, BOATS, MOTORCYCLES, ROAD TRACTORS, TRAILERS, COMMERCIAL MOWERS, FARM EQUIPMENT, and much more... ***SEIZED VEHICLES: 08 CHEV. CORVETTE Z06 CORVETTE, 14k miles, HONDAS, ACURAS, CADILLACS, ETC. 8:30AM SALVAGE VEHICLES 50+ UNITS 9:30AM 400-500 VEHICLES REPOS, NEW CAR DEALER TRADE-INS, 12:00NOON

300+Pcs. EQUIPMENT/TRUCKS/TRAIL ERS, ETC Selling for: Greensboro City, Winston Salem City, Town of Denton, District Attorney's Office, Hertz Rentals, Local Banks, Finance Co.s, Credit Unions, Local Contractors, Local Farmers and others. ***QUALITY CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME!!! CALL US TODAY TO SELL YOU SURPLUS VEHICLES & EQUIPMENT (336) 889-5700 Inspection: Fri., Aug 20th. 12:00noon - 7:00pm (FREE BARBEQUE DINNER FOR REGISTERED BIDDERS - FRI., AUG 20TH. 5:00PM-7:00PM) Terms: Cash, Certified Check, Company Check accepted w/current Bank letter of credit, VC/MC accepted. $200.00 Cash deposit to register for Buyer's number, refunded if no pruchase made.

MENDENHALL AUCTION CO., INC. PO BOX 7505 HIGH POINT, NC NCAL#211 889-5700 www.Mendenhall Auction.com AUCTION Mon. 8/16 9:30am Liquidation of

CLOVERLEAF SUPER MARKET 133 Montlieu Ave. High Point, NC Directions: From Hwy 311 (N Main St) in High Point turn onto Montlieu Ave. Sale will be on the left PARTIAL LIST: Safe, bill counter, file cabinets, cigarette racks, Euro table, produce coolers, (3) Hobart produce scales, greeting cards, (2) Hobart slicers, Hobart meat saw, Hobart scales w/ wrap stand, meat trays & racks, butcher tables, stainless steel sinks, Hobart meat grinder, Hobart meat cuber, (2) 200R freezers, LP gas buffer, floor scruber, cardboard baler, (3) pallet jacks (1 elec), pressure washer, light bulbs, time clock, ice maker, deli cases, Hobart mixer, Hobart deep fryer, elec scales, deli oven, (5) check out stands, shopping carts, compressors, evaparators, dockboard, office supplies, walk in coolers & freezer, ice cream freezer. For photos & other auction information: www.richardwallauction.com Sale conducted by: RICHARD WALL AUCTION CO. NCAL# 8078 Archdale, NC 336-259-9431 Terms: Cash or approved check only. Seller reserves the right to add or delete items. Statements made day of sale take precedence over previous announcements. All items must be removed by Friday Aug. 20, 2010. Open Today 2-4:pm Auction Tomorrow 6:pm Deceased Estate Auction: TWO homes 1565 Union Cross Rd 1186 Glennview Drive (near I-40 & Glenn Hi) also PRISTINE ANTIQUES early walnut 16 pane ( hand blown glass) corner cupboard, walnut vanity w/candlestands roll-top desk, vintage fine china, crystal, & so much more! see@peggauction.com #5098 JCPegg 996-4414

0509 Household Goods

0620

Washer & Dryer Set for Sale. Washer makes noise when spinning. $100 cash or best offer. Call 336-472-4680

A-1 ROOMS. Clean, close to stores, buses, A/C. No dep. 803-1970. Archdale, Nice 2BR, $450 mo. Call 336-431-7716 916 Ferndale-2BR 1124 Wayside-3BR 883-9602

0515

Computer

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

0527

Sporting Goods

300 lb. Olympic barbell set w/spring collars, squat rack/ bench w/lat pull down. Inclds inclining bench w/leg ext attachment. $250 Call 870-4525

0533

Furniture

6 DR Chiars w/Caster. Uph Floral Pattern. Wood off White Color Call 336-889-3249

0554

Wanted to Rent/ Buy/Trade

QUICK CASH PAID FOR JUNK CARS & TRUCKS. 434-1589. BUYING ANTIQUES Pottery, Glass, Old Stuff 239-7487 / 472-6910 Cash 4 riding mower needing repair or free removal if unwanted & scrap metal 689-4167 Top cash paid for any junk vehicle. T&S Auto 882-7989

0563

Misc. Items for Sale

300lb Weight Set and Commercial Bench Press, Good condition.$240. Call 336-693-7542 SAM KINCAID PAINTING FREE ESTIMATES CALL 472-2203

3 BEDROOMS 1508 N Hamilton..............$425 1130 Bridges ...................$525 151 Hedgecock................$775 303 Sinclair..................... $598 523 Guilford.....................$450 2346 Brentwood...............$550 1009 True Lane................$450 1015 True Lane................$450 100 Lawndale...................$450 3228 Wellingford..............$450 1609 Pershing..................$500

2 BEDROOMS 1208 Worth......................$350 5302 Harvey Rd.............. $425 1502 A Leonard...............$275 224-D Stratford................$375 511 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..................$345 620-19A N. Hamilton........$310 618-12A N. Hamilton........$298 320G Richardson.............$335 620-20B N. Hamilton........$375 1003 N. Main................... $305

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

Window AC Unit, Elec. Dirt Bike, Lg. Bird Cages, Futon sofa, others also. 989-0508

R

EAL ESTATE FOR RENT

0610

Unfurnished Apartments

1br Archdale $395 2BR Archdale $495 Daycare $3200 L&J Prop 434-2736

2Br Apt. Archdale. 122A Marshall St. Quiet, Clean, A/C, Refrig, Stove, W/D Hookups. $435/mo. Call 434-6236 2BR, 1 1/2BA Apartment. Thomasville. Cable TV, Appls Incld. $450 mo. 336-561-6631 2BR, 1 1/2BA Apartment. Thomasville. Cable TV, Appls Incld. $450 mo. 336-561-6631 2BR, 1BA avail. 2427 Francis St. Nice Area. $475/mo Call 336-833-6797 2br, Apt, Archdale, 302 Goodman, Cent. A/C Heat, W/D hook up, Refrig/Stove $495/mth. 434-6236 2Br/1BA Apt. Range & Ref., furnished. Cent H/A. NO PETS. $425 + dep. 336-472-7009 3 ROOM APARTMENT partly furnished. 476-5530 431-3483 Clositers & Foxfire $1000 FREE RENT! 885-5556 HP, 2702 Ingram Rd. $445, AC, W/D Hook up, Call 336-688-8490 Nice 1BR Condo $400-$460 Nice 2BRCondo $560 Convenient location Kitchen appls. furn. GILWOOD NORTH Call (336) 869-4212 1 & 2 BR, Appls, AC, Clean, Good Loc. $380-$450 431-9478 WE have section 8 approved apartments. Call day or night 625-0052.

0620

Homes for Rent

2BR/1BA 1112 Richland St, $395 336-434-2004 1 Bedroom 217 Lindsay St.................$400 2 Bedrooms 709-B Chestnut St...........$350 713-A Scientific St...........$375 309 Windley St................$395 2405 Fala.........................$400 318 Monroe Pl.................$400 3117-A&B Bowers Ave...$435 203 Brinkley Pl................$475 1217-B McCain Pl...........$475 210-C Oakdale Rd...........$550 607 E. Lexington Ave......$600 5928 W. Friendly Ave......$675 3 Bedrooms 302 Ridgecrest.................$500 1108 Adams St................$525 4 Bedrooms 533 Vandever St.............$600 Call About Rent SpecialsFowler & Fowler 883-1333 www.fowler-fowler.com

0509 Household Goods 4 Poster Headboard, Footboard full size with rails. Good Cond $95. Call 336-861-5317

2BR/1BA House Ledford area. Motsinger Rd. $450/mo. + dep. Call 472-4160 3 Bedroom-Very Clean $585-Rotary/Westchester area $545-Near Montlieu Ave Sec 8 ok, No dogs, 882-2030 3BR/2BA, Hasty Ledford School District. Available. Mid September. Call 336-476-9515

0620

Homes for Rent 4 BEDROOMS

1220 Pennywood...........$1095 1124 Meadowlawn.........$995 809 Doak.........................$775 3 BEDROOMS 1209 N. Rotary...............$1100 3603 Grindstaff..............$1195 2457 Ingleside................$1050 1312 Granada..................$895 1420 Bragg Ave..............$750 2709 Reginald..................$700 1122 Nathan Hunt...........$695 112 Hedgecock................$675 2713 Ernest St.................$675 2109 Friends....................$649 222 Montlieu....................$625 813 Magnolia...................$595 1205 Fifth.........................$595 726 Bridges......................$575 1020 South.......................$550 2507 Dallas......................$550 2208-A Gable Way...........$550 507 Hedrick......................$525 601 Willoubar...................$525 324 Louise.......................$525 637 Wesley......................$525 409 N Centennial............$500 2207 Gable Way..............$500 1016 Grant.......................$475 2543 Patrick.....................$475 919 Old Winston..............$525 101 Chase.......................$500 1220-A Kimery.................$500 2219 N. Centennial..........$495 127 Pinecrest..................$450 836 Cummins..................$450 913 Grant........................$450 502 Everett......................$450 410 Vail...........................$425 328 Walker......................$425 322 Walker......................$425 609 Radford.....................$400 914 Putnam.....................$399 1303-B E Green...............$395

2 BEDROOM

SECTION 8

Two cemetery plots at Floral Garden. Asking $4,500. Call 823-2810 or 823-2811.

2BR, carpet, blinds, appli. gas heat, $500. mo. 883-4611 Leave mess.

MOVING SALE: 2 loveseats, 2 accent chairs, accent table, large entertainment center, set of twin beds, almost new baby crib. 869-6702 or 240-8899

Homes for Rent

Lovely 2BR home. Hdwd flr. Cent. heat/air. Nice Fireplace 882-9132 Tville, Hasty/Ledford Schl 3BR/2BA House. No Pets. $700/mo. 475-7323/442-7654

visit us online...

hpe.com

0503

Sell it fast... in the Classifieds! Call us today (336) 888-3555

Need space in your garage? Call HPE Classifieds

888-3555 Make your classified ads work harder for you with features like bolding, ad borders & eye-catching graphics!

(336) 888-3555

495 Ansley Way..............$750 6117 Hedgecock #1A......$750 1720 Beaucrest...............$675 1111 N. Hamilton.............$595 1112 Trinity Rd................$550 1540 Beaucrest...............$525 119 Scott.........................$525 101 #13 Oxford..............$525 903 Skeet Club...............$500 204 Prospect..................$500 808 Virginia....................$495 120 Kendall....................$475 1610 Brentwood............$475 905 Old Tville Rd............$450 509 North.........................$450 1101 Pegram..................$450 215 Friendly....................$450 1198 Day........................$450 205-D Tyson Ct..............$425 700-B Chandler..............$425 1501-B Carolina..............$425 324 Walker....................$400 2306 Palmer..................$400 611 Paramount.............$400 305 Barker......................$400 713-B Chandler.............$399 204 Hoskins..................$395 622-B Hendrix..............$395 1704 Whitehall..............$385 609-A Memorial Pk........$375 601-B Everett.................$375 2306-A Little..................$375 501 Richardson..............$375 1227 Redding.................$350 1709-B W. Rotary..........$350 129 Pinecrest...............$350 311-B Chestnut...............$350 1516-B Oneka.................$350 309-B Griffin...................$335 900-A W. Kearns..............$335 12109 Trinity Rd. S.........$325 4703 Alford......................$325 301 Park..........................$300 313-B Barker...................$300 1116-B Grace...................$295 1715-A Leonard...............$285 1717-B Leonard...............$285 1515 Olivia......................$280 1700 A & B Brockett........$275

1 BEDROOM 1123-C Adams...............$450 620-A Scientific..............$375 508 Jeanette..................$375 1119-A English...............$350 910 Proctor.....................$325 305 E. Guilford................$275 309-B Chestnut...............$275 1103-A S. Elm.................$275 502-B Coltrane................$270 1317-A Tipton..................$235 CONRAD REALTORS 512 N. Hamilton 885-4111

0625

Rooms for Rent

LOW Weekly Rates - a/c, phone, HBO, eff. Travel Inn Express, HP 883-6101 no sec. dep. Private extra nice. Quiet. No alochol/drugs 108 Oakwood 887-2147 AFFORDABLE Rooms for rent. Call 336-491-2997

0640

Misc for Rent

Mobile Homes & Lots Auman Mobile Home Pk 3910 N. Main 883-3910 4 BEDROOMS 101 Havenwood.............$1300 3 BEDROOMS 145 Greenhaven............$1000 317 Washboard................$895 330 W. Presnell................$790 1704 Azel.........................$600 2209 B Chambers...........$600 603 Denny.......................$600 524 Player.......................$565 1014 Grace......................$575 281 Dorothy.....................$550 116 Dorothy.....................$550 1414 Madison..................$525 1439 Madison..................$495 920 Forest.......................$450 1711 Edmondson............$350 2 BEDROOMS 1100 Westbrook..............$650 606 Liberty.....................$650 1114 Westbrook..............$600 3911 C Archdale............$600 500 Forrest.....................$510 931 Marlboro..................$500 285 Dorothy...................$500 532 Roy............................$495 112 A Marshall................$450 816 E. Guilford...............$450 410 Friddle......................$435 10721 N Main..................$425 500 Lake.........................$425 600 Willowbar..................$400 283 Dorothy...................$400 304-A Kersey...................$395 412 N. Centennial............$385 1418 Johnson.................$375 1429 E Commerce..........$375 802 Barbee.....................$350 10812 N. Main................$350 215-B & DColonial...........$350 417 B White Oak..............$350 1223B Franklin.................$295 1 BEDROOMS 3 1 3 A & B Kersey..................$350 203 Baker.......................$325 205 A Taylor....................$285 909 A Park.....................$250 KINLEY REALTY 336-434-4146

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

0670

Business Places/ Offices

COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL

128 CHURCH former pharmacy. Approx. 2100 sf, gas heat, central air, parking in rear.................................$1200 501 ENGLISH RD. Approx 4,200 sf, gas heat, central air, ample parking.............. $1000 106 W. KIVETT Showroom space. Approx. 1750 SF just off Main.......................... $985 788 A N. MAIN Approx. 1500 SF, gas heat, central air, several compartments........ $950 614 N. HAMILTON Ideal for beauty or nail salon. Heat, water, hot water, central AC $685 652 N. MAIN showroom, approx. 5000 SF...............$5000 307 E ARCHDALE RD. Office space, approx 1000 SF, gas heat, central air.............. $525 120-122 W. BROAD Approx 560 SF Gas ht., air, brick, paved street across from railroad station.................... $596 116 W. BROAD 280 SF.. $298

312 Ardale Dr, Spacious Townhomes For Rent, 2BR/2BA or 2BA/2.5BA. $550 month, No Pets. Call Ray 336-988-6853

Rooms for Rent

A Better Room 4U. HP within walking distance of stores, buses. 886-3210 or 883-2996

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

PERSONAL PROPERTY & REAL ESTATE Saturday, Aug. 21st @ 9:30AM Estate of the Late Thomas & Mildred Cashatt

AUCTION

Start nesting...

215 Model Farm Road ~ High Point, NC 27263 Property Description: Five room brick house built in 1949 with two bedrooms, one bath, hardwood floors, fireplace, central heat (oil furnace), screened in porch on a 120’ wide by 150’ deep lot with nice shade trees. Contact Richie Hughes for more information about this property at 336-847-7472. REAL ESTATE SOLD AT 12 NOON. FOOD & RESTROOMS AVAILABLE

Quality Furniture Glassware And Pottery Jewelry Silver Coins & Collectibles Too Many Items To List!

Looking for a new home? Find the home of your dreams in the Real Estate section every Saturday.

NO BUYER’S PREMIUM Richie T. Hughes, Auctioneer / Broker NCALN: 6206 NCRBN: 202693

0670

Business Places/ Offices

COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL, RESIDENTIAL NEEDS Call CJP 884-4555 2516 W'chester.............1130sf 501 Cloniger.........driving rng 1701-C N. Main............1235sf 1311 Johnson...............2500sf 1701-B N Main..............1250sf 110 Scott..................224-747sf 110 Scott..... Individual Office 409E Fairfield.................500sf 1638 W'chester............1000sf 615-B N. Hamilton..........658sf 603C E'chester..............1200sf 124 Church...................1595sf 1321 W. Fairfield............660sf 1001 Phillips..............1-2000sf 1321 W Fairfield...........1356sf 131 W Parris...........406-795sf T'ville1672 sf.................Office 1638 W'chester..............Dental 108E Kivett..........2784-5568sf 1903 E Green....................Lot 900 W. Fairfield.................Lot 333 S. Wrenn................8008sf WAREHOUSE 1820 Blandwood..........5400sf 1200 Dorris....................8232sf 320 Ennis.....................7840sf 2136 Brevard.............43,277sf 651 Ward...................38,397sf 502 Old Thomasville....8776sf 2415 English Rd..........21485sf 1200 Corporation..........3000sf 2330 English.................9874sf 521 S Hamilton............4875sf 920 W Fairfield..........28000sf 3204E Kivett........2750-5000sf 2112 S. Elm..............30,000sf 3214 E Kivett................2250sf 1914 Allegany.............6000 sf 1945 W Green........35,300sf 1207 Textile........3500-7000sf 1323 Dorris...................8880sf 1937 W Green............26447sf 2815 Earlham.............15650sf 255 Swathmore..........93000sf SHOWROOM 521 N. Hamilton.........16680sf 207 W. High .................2500sf 422 N Hamilton.............7237sf 404 N Wrenn................6000sf 135 S. Hamilton..........30000sf 100N Centennial.........13000sf Craven-Johnson-Pollock 615 N. Hamilton St. 884-4555 www.cjprealtors.com 1000 SF retail space close to new 85. $595/month. Call day or night 336-625-6076 1100 sf Retail $600 2,500 sqft $650 T-ville 336-362-2119 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.

0675

Mobile Homes for Rent

2BR, Archdale, Central H/A, Storage Bldg. NO PETS! Call 431-9665 or 689-1401. 2 bdrs available, Silver Valley/Tville area, Sm. Pets only. $325-$385/mo. No Dep. with proof of income. Police Report Req'd., Call 239-3657 Clean 2BR, 1BA, water incl. NO Pets. $200 dep. $90 wkly. 472-8275 Mobile Home for rent Archdale & Thomasville area. Weekly or monthly. Call 883-8650

R

EAL ESTATE FOR SALE

0710

Homes for Sale

606 Martha Place. 2bed 1 bath investment home. Tax value $48,600 sales price $34,900. David Wilson CJP Realtors 847-3690

Condominiums for Rent

2BR/2BA, Designer Decorated, Archdale, Upstairs Unit, $610. Call 769-3318

0635

0635

Ph: (336) 847-7472

SEE LISTING AND PHOTOS at www.hughesauction.com

This listing is believed to be accurate. However, announcements made day of sale take precedence over all advertisements.

Thomasville 3BR. Just renovated. Will finance for the right Buyer. $74,900. Call 704-807-4717

0734

Lots & Acreage

207 Villa Ave. (Off Old Thomasville Rd) 1/2 + acre lot. Zoned Heavy Industrial. $18,000 Firm. Call 442-1623 for information

0747

Manufactured Homes for Sale

2 & 3 BR homes Sophia, Randleman & Elon plus Handyman Homes Fix it and it's yours! Sophia & Randleman 336-799-4199 Elon 336-449-3090

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 336-625-6076 1800 Sq. Ft. Davidson County Conrad Realtors 336-885-4111


SERVICE FINDER Call 888-3555 to advertise with us! LANDSCAPING/YARDWORK

LAWN CARE

BERRIER’S TOTAL LAWNCARE

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s -OWING 4RIM s ,ANDSCAPE -AINTENANCE )NSTALLATION $ESIGN s #ERTIlED 0LANTS -AN W 9EARS %XPERIENCE s &REE %STIMATES s 2EASONABLE 2ATES s .O *OB TO 3MALL s #OMMERCIAL 2ESIDENTIAL

,ANDSCAPE )RRIGATION 3OLUTIONS ,,#

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s -OWING AND 3PECIAL #LEAN 5P 0ROJECTS s ,ANDSCAPE $ESIGN AND )NSTALLATION s 9EAR 2OUND ,ANDSCAPE -AINTENANCE s )RRIGATION $ESIGN )NSTALLATION AND 2EPAIR s &ULLY )NSUREDs .# 0ESTICIDE ,ICENSED

We are insured and can provide references!

s &REE %STIMATES

FOR FREE ESTIMATES PLEASE CALL 883-4014

ROOFING

LANDSCAPING & LAWNCARE

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

LANDSCAPE

2//&).'

&2%% %34)-!4%3 4RINI -IRANDA

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Cleaning by Deb

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Residential & Commercial

s TIME OR regular s 3PECIAL occasions Reasonable Rates Call 336-362-0082

Call 336-885-3320 Cell 336-687-7607

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Call Day or Night

PAINTING

AUCTIONEER N

N.C. Lic #211

Ronnie Kindley

(336) 887-1165

PAINTING

FAX (336) 887-1107 HIGH POINT, N.C. 27263 www.mendenhallschool.com www.mendenhallauction.com

s 0RESSURE 7ASHING s 7ALLPAPERING s 1UALITY WORK s 2EASONABLE 2ATES

NAA

475-6356

Graham’s All Around Storage building

336-870-0605 SEWING M CONTRACTOR

, - #ONCRETE #ONTRACTORS 35 Years Experience

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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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Are You Ready for Summer?

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Call Gary Cox

Cleaning Service

-/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

A-Z Enterprises

Family Owned ★ No Contract Required Many Options To Choose From ★ Free Estimates ★ 24 Hour Local Monitoring ★ Low Monthly Monitoring Rates ★

Affordable Prices Dependable Service References Provided

841-8685

#ALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

7 0EACHTREE $R s (IGH 0OINT www.protectionsysteminc.com

Cindy Thompson 870-2466

TREE SERVICE

'SFF FTUJNBUFT 'SFF QJDL VQ EFMJWFSZ AEEed 7BMVF 1FBDF PG .JOE

)PMU T )PNF .BJOUFOBODF

LAWNCARE/LANDSCAPING ATKINS YEAR ROUND SERVICE/ REASONABLE RATES/ QUALITY WORK 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+ $%#+3 42)- 7/2+ s 2%-/$%,).'

CALL MIKE ATKINS CELL s

BATHS

Vinyl Replacement Windows Gutter & Gutter Guards Free Estimates Senior Citizens Discounts (336) 861-6719

Specializing in

s "ATH 4UB 2EMOVAL s )NSTALLATION OF 7ALK IN 3HOWER OR .EW 4UBS #ERAMIC OR &IBERGLASS s ,AMINATES s 4ILE "ACK 3PLASHES s #OMFORT (EIGHT #OMMODES

#USTOM #ABINETS s &LOORING #OMPLETE 4URN +EY *OB

Danny Adams #ELL FREE ESTIMATES

LAWN CARE

PLUMBING

The Perfect Cut WANTED: Yards to mow!

Residential and Commercial Stump Grinding and Bobcat Work Removals, Pruning, Clearing

“The Repair Specialist� Since 1970

Low prices & Free estimates Senior Discount

We answer our phone 24/7

336-215-8049

www.thebarefootplumber.com

HOME MAINTENANCE

UTILITY BUILDING New Utility Building Special!

7E 3ERVICE !LL "RANDS

s #ABINET 2EFACING s 0RESSURE 7ASHING s (OUSES $ECKS

3IDING 'UTTER

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

FREE

Fully Insured FREE Estimates Firewood Available

Tracy: 336-357-0115 24 Hour Emergency Service: 336-247-3962

HEATING & COOLING Services

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

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

ESTIMATES

Guaranteed Services Licensed & Insured WWW PAULELECTRIC COM

CONSTRUCTION

Lic #04239

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

336-906-1246

CONCRETE

LANDSCAPE

FURNITURE

J & L CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, RooďŹ ng and New Construction 9EARS %XPERIENCE Jim Baker GENERAL CONTRACTOR

336-859-9126 336-416-0047

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

336-491-1453

GREEN FOOT TRIM

Hanging & Finishing s 3PRAYED #EILINGS s 0ATCH 7ORK s 3MALL ,ARGE *OBS

-!)$ 4/ #,%!.

Paul’s Heating, A/C & Electrical Decks, Siding, Driveways, Tile Grout, Garages, etc.

5BCMFT $IBJST (MJEFS -PVOHFST

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CLEANING 2ESIDENTIAL #OMMERCIAL 2ENTALS .EW #ONSTRUCTION 7EEKLY "IWEEKLY -ONTHLY

D & T Tree Service, Inc.

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SEAWELL DRYWALL

Home: 336-328-0688 Cell: 336-964-8328

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

SECURITY

!LSO $ECKS 6INYL SIDING 7INDOWS 'ARAGES All types of home repair. Free Estimate

DRYWALL

Auctioneer

Serving the Triad for over 37 Years!

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

Over 50 Years

“COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE� s 2%!, %34!4% s -!#().%29 s).$5342)!, #/--%2#)!, 02/0%249 s "53).%33 ,)15)$!4)/.3 s "!.+2504#)%3

BUILDINGS

FURNITURE

Since 1960

CALL TODAY!

30 Years Experience

/WNER

8SPVHIU *SPO .FUBM 1BUJP 'VSOJUVSF 3FTUPSBUJPO

,ICENSED )NSURED s &REE %STIMATES

CLEANING

$RIVEWAYS s 0ATIOS 3IDEWALKS s !SPHALT s #ONCRETE )NTERLOCKING "RICKS ALSO PARTIAL

0ROFESSIONAL 3EAL #OATING 3MALL "IG *OBS

ELECTRIC SERVICE

Mow, Trim, Landscaping, etc. FREE ESTIMATES REASONABLE RATES!! Year Round Service

3 , $52%. #/-0!.9 336-785-3800

Specialist in Pavers

Call Roger Berrier

MARK’S LAWNCARE/ LANDSCAPING

PROFESSIONAL ROOFING & GUTTERING

4RINITY 0AVING

1ABL + 1A:M #NKGBMNK> Coupon

Twin Mattress Set (mattress and box spring)

$125.00 Coupon

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

REMODELING

1240 Montlieu Ave www.thisandthathomeaccents.com

888-3555

30015058

To advertise your business on this page please contact the ClassiďŹ ed Department today


0773

Income Property

501 Walnut St. 2 bed 1 bath investment home, vinyl siding. Needs some repairs. Tax Value $27,700. List price $8,900. Seller says bring an offer. David Wilson CJP Realtors 847-3690 Trustee Sale. 3BR/2BA brick house, 1800 sf. Near HPU. Reduced to $55,000 for repairs. Financing with $5000 down. Call 336-379-7379

0780 Misc. Real Estate Let's Trade! 2 Bay Business Garage on Large Lot. East of High Point. Would like to Trade for a home or land in North Section of High Point. Phone 336-869-2502

0793

Monuments/ Cemeteries

1 Plot at Holly Hill Cemetery in the Front Sec. Will Sell Cheap! 336-491-9564 or 472-0310 2 Burial Plots, Holly Hill Cemetery, Tville. Section SD2B, $3,500. Call 336-687-2353 or 476-0886 2 Plots side by side w/vaults sec. aa Floral Gardens $2100/ea plot, $800/ea vault 885-7790 4 Grave Plots Floral Garden. Current value $9900. Make offer. Call 336-882-1930 4 Plots, Floral Garden Cemetery. Sec AA, Clost to Rotary Dr. Will Sell 2 or 4. $3000/ea. Call 336-431-2459. Will Negotiate.

T

Sport Utility Vehicles

0856

95 Toyota 4-Runner, 145K miles, Exc Cond. $5,200. Call 336-687-8204

0860

Vans for Sale

2003 Dodge Caravan SXT, Light Green, 72,500K. Non=Smokers Car. VGC. $7,500. Call 841-5195 Large Comm. Van, '95 Dodge Van 2500, new motor & trans., 883-1849 $3000 neg

0864

Pickup Trucks for Sale

05 Chev. Suburban, 4X4, Loaded, Leather, DVD, Onstar. $19,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293 06 Chev. Silverado, 2500 HD Crew, 4X4, Loaded, Lthr, DVD. Onstar, Heated Seats, Long bed. $22,000. 884-8737 / 882-2293

0955

Legals NOTICE

Notice is hereby given that on August 25th, 2010 at 9am 706 West Fairfield Road, High Point N.C. 27263, the undersigned All American Self Storage in accordance with G.S. 44A-43, will sell at public sale by competitive bidding, the personal property heretofore stored by the undersigned: Quincy Wilson Terrie Harris Jeanette Harrington Mary Cooper Lisa Casarez Christina Pope Adam Guy Marvine @ Carol Fine Ahaunta Pratt Venus Pate Lemuel Dildine Nora Harry Lonzie Davis Stephanie Mc Manus All American Self Storage August 8 & 15, 2010

CLASSIFIEDS Place Your Ad Today!

336-888-3555

1 item priced $500 or less

5 lines • 5 days

$5.00

1972 Chevy C20 Pickup. 350, 3spd. Long Bed. Rebuilt Motor. $1800. 880-8282 1985 GMC 2500 Pickup. 350, 4spd. With Utility Bed. Runs Good. $1000. Call 880-8282

0868

Cars for Sale

03 Cadillac STS, Silver w/Gray Int. Excellent Condition. 71,500 miles. $10,500. Call 336-687-6408

RANSPORTATION

0816

Recreational Vehicles

'90 Winnebago Chiefton 29' motor home. 73,500 miles, runs good, $11,000. 336-887-2033

03 Taraus, 90K, Excellent Condition. $2,900 Call 431-6020 or 847-4635 04 Malibu Classic, Auto, Cold Air, 80K, Very Nice. $3500. Call 431-6020 or 847-4635 06 Ford Mustang GT 22,000K Miles. $17,000 Call 336-882-0973

04 Cedar Creek Fifth Wheel. 2 slide outs. Good condition. $26,500 neg. Tow vehicle available. 336-431-4054

0820 Campers/Trailers 06 Fifth Wheel Cardinal. 30' w/2 Slideouts. Immaculate. $26,500. Must Sell. 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

2007 Impala, 68K miles. Serviced & Very Clean. $9900. Call 336-869-9417 2008 Kia Sportage, LX, 5spd , 4cyl. Burgundy. 33K miles. $11,000. Call 336-880-5146 AT Quality Motors you can buy regardless. Good or bad credit. 475-2338 MAZDA 626 '95. Good car, air, new tires, trans. slips. $700 firm. Call 431-3173

Buy • Save • Sell 0832

Motorcycles

Place you ad in the classifieds!

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

L

EGALS

NOTICE TO BIDDERS REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS PROPOSAL NUMBER 06-092410 The City of High Point is accepting proposals from qualified firms until 5:00 p.m. on Friday, September 24, 2010 to provide comprehensive professional transportation planning and engineering services for proposed improvements to the Johnson Street/Sandy Ridge Road Corridor from Skeet Club Road to Interstate 40 in High Point and Guilford County. At the time and date above, proposals will be received at the Purchasing Division, City of High Point, P. O. Box 230, 211 S. Hamilton Street, High Point, North Carolina, 27261, Attention: Patty Sykes, Senior Buyer. Proposals received after the time for receipt will not be accepted.

. e s u o H e h t l l e S . m a e r D e h t e Liv Buy and sell the easy way with the Classifieds.

Interested firms are invited to submit a Statement of Qualifications for consideration. A full copy of the RFP, with submittal requirements, may be obtained from the City of High Point Web Site at www.high-point.net, (go to Purchasing in the Quick Links) or from the CHP Purchasing Division, 211 S. Hamilton St., High Point, NC. 336-883-3219. The City reserves the right to reject any or all proposals, in whole or in part, as may, in the judgment of the Council of the City of High Point, serve its best interest and to waive irregularities and informalities in any proposals submitted. "Equal Opportunity Employer, Male/Female/Handicapped" T. Robert (Bob) Martin Purchasing Manager August 15, 2010

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS Contract for Pest Control OPR-10-392/MHC-10-393/HPHA-10-394 Proposals will be received by the Housing Authority of the City of High Point, High Point for the services of a licensed pest control firm until 10:00 a.m. local time, Monday, August 23, 2010, in the Commissionersʼ Chambers. The proposals will be received at the specified time. All interested parties are invited to attend.

5 LINES 5 DAYS

Only $50 includes photo

Some Restrictions Apply.

The work will include the all methods required to eliminate pest from HPHA units and community building and the Main Office and the methods required to maintain these units pest free throughout the Housing Authority of the City of High Point. Cost proposals will be received in a lump sum price format for initial treatment and treatment for the remaining three quarters of the year. Interested Contractors may obtain RFP documents from Duncan-Parnell, Inc., 4275 Regency Drive, Suite 100, Greensboro, NC 27410. RFP Documents will be available on line at www.duncan-parnell.com. The Housing Authority of the City of High Point reserves the right to reject any and all bids/proposals and to waive minor informalities in the bidding process. Direct all inquires to: Lee Richie, Procurement Officer Housing Authority of the City of High Point Phone (336)878-2322 Email: lrichie@hpha.net August 15, 2010

Call 336.888.3555


D

MAIN MAN: Spotlight shines on Wolfpack’s Wilson. 2D

Sunday August 15, 2010

TRAGIC END: Champion drag-boat racer remembered. 5D Sports Editor: Mark McKinney mmckinney@hpe.com (336) 888-3556

STICK TO THE SCRIPT: Check out this week’s area prep schedule. 4D

WHO’S NEWS

----

The San Francisco Giants found a new regular right fielder for the stretch run: welltraveled veteran Jose Guillen. The Giants acquired Guillen late Friday and also receive cash considerations from the Kansas City Royals in exchange for a player to be named. The Giants last made the playoffs in 2003.

AP

Nick Watney hits a drive on the fourth hole during the third round of the PGA Championship on Saturday at Whistling Straits in Haven, Wis. Watney carded a sizzling third-round 66 to stand 13-under and carry a 3-stroke lead into today’s final round of the season’s last major.

Say Watney at PGA SHEBOYGAN, Wis. (AP) – Whistling Straits was there for the taking. So is this PGA Championship. Nick Watney took over the lead Saturday with two quick birdies and never let up until he had a 6under 66, giving him a three-shot lead over Dustin Johnson and Rory McIlroy in a strong showing by golf’s next generation. When three long days along Lake Michigan finally ended, the contenders were short on major experience. Watney, who had to scramble for a bogey on the 18th hole after an aggressive play, practically seemed like an old man compared

with some of the players chasing him. Johnson is 26, seasoned slightly by his memorable meltdown at Pebble Beach in the U.S. Open. He found enough accuracy to go with his awesome power for a 67 to work his way into the final group in a major for the second time this year. Johnson was tied with McIlroy, the 21-year-old from Northern Ireland who also had a 67 and looks poised to deliver early on his promise of Europe’s next big star. None of the top six on the leaderboard have ever won a major. The last time the top six contenders were this green in the

final major of the year – “Glory’s Last Shot” – was in 1992. As for Tiger Woods? His only hope is to shoot his best round of his strange season today and try to earn a Ryder Cup berth. Woods scrambled brilliantly in the morning to finish off the second round with a 70 to get within five shots, then opened the third round by stuffing his first couple of iron shots. He couldn’t make a birdie, however, and had to rally for a 72 on a day when the average score was 71 in soft conditions and relative calm. Woods wound up 10 shots behind. He likely will need to finish at least in seventh place alone to

make the Ryder Cup team. Watney was at 13-under 203, in the lead at a major for the first time in his career after any round. The only player among the top six not in his 20s was the biggest surprise of all – Liang Wenchong, a 32-year-old from China who set the course record at Whistling Straits with a 64. He didn’t start playing the game until he was 15. Some of these guys already were dreaming of winning majors at that age. Liang was at 207 along with 22year-old Jason Day of Australia, who had a 66; and 25-year-old Martin Kaymer of Germany, who has top 10s in the last two majors.

Stewart passes physical, practices with Panthers SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) – Carolina Panthers running back Jonathan Stewart participated only in position drills and watched most of the team portion of Saturday morning’s workout. But for someone who almost never practices because of chronic pain in his left Achilles’ tendon and heel, finally passing his physical and being taken off the physically unable to perform list was a significant accomplishment for Stewart and Carolina’s struggling offense. While he’s never missed a regular-season game in his first two NFL seasons, foot problems have kept Stewart out of every offseason workout for three years. He missed April’s minicamp, June’s optional workouts and the first 19 practices of camp.

PHOTO BY DICK JONES

Scenic casting The mist of the Nantahala in the late evening provides a picturesque setting for trout fishing. See Dick Jones column on 7D.

HIT AND RUN

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T

he 2010 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion will be crowned today at Charlotte Country Club. This event gives me the perfect opportunity to reflect on local golf legend Marcy Newton capturing the U.S. Women’s Amateur crown 10 years ago. Newton, now Marcy Hart, made us all proud with her stirring march to the 100th U.S. Women’s Amateur title at Waverley Country Club in Portland, Ore.

The former Ledford High School star and 2000 North Carolina graduate tied for fourth in the 36-hole stroke play portion of the Women’s Am, carding a 1-over 143 after rounds of 72 and 71. In the first round of match play, Newton topped Jamie Vannoy of Carrollton, Texas 3&2. Round two saw Marcy roll past San Francisco’s Sally Krueger for a 5&4 victory. The third-round matchup pitted Newton against a fellow

North Carolinian – Beth Bauer of Cramerton. Marcy took that one 3&2. In the quarterfinals, Newton slipped past Anna Temple of Berkeley, Calif., 3&1. Marcy’s closest call came in the semifinals, where she edged Aree Wongluekiet of Bradenton, Fla. 1-up. Newton saved her best for the championship final, blitzing Laura Myerscough of Charleston, Ill. 8 & 7. That marked the second most

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lopsided final since 1986 and one of the eight widest final margins in U.S. Women’s Amateur history. Marcy, now a busy wife and mom-to-be who still calls our area home, remains one of the nicest folks I’ve had the joy of covering and working with over the years. She thrilled us all with her 2000 title run. Thanks for the wonderful memory, Marcy. – MARK MCKINNEY ENTERPRISE SPORTS EDITOR

TOPS ON TV

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8 a.m., Speed – Motorsports, MotoGP World Championship from Brno, Czech Republic 11 a.m., TNT – Golf, PGA Championship 1 p.m., ESPN – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup 400 from Brooklyn, Mich. 1 p.m., ESPN2 – Basketball, men’s national teams, exhibition, Global Community Cup, France vs. United States 1:30 p.m., FSN – Baseball, Dodgers at Braves 2 p.m., WFMY, Ch. 2 – Golf, PGA Championship 2 p.m., WGN – Baseball, Cubs at Cardinals 3 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, USGA, U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship, title match 3 p.m., ESPN2 – Tennis, ATP, Rogers Cup from Toronto 5 p.m., ESPN2 – Tennis, WTA, Western & Southern Financial Group Open, from Mason, Ohio 5 p.m., Speed – Motorsports, MotoGP Moto2 from Brno, Czech Republic 8 p.m., ESPN – Baseball, Phillies at Mets 8 p.m., ESPN2 – Little League Baseball, West Regional final 8 p.m., FSN – Prep Baseball, All-American Classic at San Diego 9 p.m., Versus – Rodeo, PBR from Nashville, Tenn. 10 p.m., ESPN2 – Motorsports, NHRA from Brainerd, Minn. Midnight, Speed – Motorsports, AMA Pro Racing from Alton, Va. INDEX BASEBALL GOLF MOTORSPORTS PREPS SMITH COLUMN NFL CALENDAR SCOREBOARD ADVENTURE WEATHER

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BASEBALL, COLLEGE FOOTBALL, GOLF 2D www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

N.C. State players: No rust on QB Russell Wilson

AP

N.C. State players line up for a team photo during Wolfpack football media day in Raleigh on Saturday.

AMERICAN TEENS REACH FINAL AT U.S. WOMEN’S AMATEUR

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CHARLOTTE (AP) – American teenagers Danielle Kang and Jessica Korda ousted their Canadian opponents Saturday in the U.S. Women’s Amateur to advance to the final at Charlotte Country Club. Kang, 17, edged Jennifer Kirby 1 up on the par-72, 6,559-yard course on another humid day, though with a slight dip in temperatures from earlier in the week. Korda, also 17, defeated Stephanie Sherlock 4 & 3 to advance. Kang, who attends Pepperdine University, was medalist in the U.S. Girls Junior in July. Korda, who intends to attend Q-school after this event, reached the quarterfinals last season in the U.S. Women’s Amateur. The final will be 36 holes today.

Blair Park Shootout swings into action ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

HIGH POINT – Two teams share the lead in championship flight midway through the Blair Park Shootout on Saturday. Format was two-man best ball and the teams of Chris Ledbetter-Darin Bell and John McKinnon-Ermon Rush set the pace at 65, one stroke ahead of a pair of teams.

In first flight, three teams show the way at 71 – Tom Smith-John Parker, Don Goins-Doug Smith and Roger Smith Sr.-Jim Shaw. Phillip Gibson-Carlton Branson and Justin Ellis-Josh Showfety are tied atop second flight at 74. See complete scores and today’s tee times on 6D.

Zambrano, Cubs nip Cards THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. LOUIS – Carlos Zambrano won for the first time since his banishment for a dugout tantrum in June, and the Chicago Cubs won for just the third time in 17 games, 3-2 over St. Louis on Saturday. Aramis Ramirez homered after missing three games with sore ribs. Derrek Lee also hit a solo home run for Chicago. The Cardinals had won four in a row. Chris Carpenter (13-4) gave up three runs in six innings. He was 4-0 with a 1.79 ERA over his previous six starts. Zambrano (4-6) allowed seven hits in 52⁄3 innings, struck out three and walked two. Carlos Marmol got the final five outs for the save, his 20th in 24 chances but his first since July 26. St. Louis manager Tony La Russa finished up a two-game suspension for his role in a brawl Tuesday at Cincinnati. Zambrano has had a tough year – a 5.46 ERA entering the game and a dugout blowup with Lee on June 25 that led to the Cubs placing him on the restricted list. He was solid in his return start at San Francisco on Monday, allowing two runs in five innings in a no-decision, and better Saturday. Zambrano struck out Colby Ras-

RALEIGH (AP) – So much for the worry that there’s rust on Russell Wilson. N.C. State’s 2008 ACC rookie of the year seems to have gotten back into a groove on the football field again after spending the summer as a farmhand with baseball’s Colorado Rockies. “I don’t think he came in with any rust,” tight end George Bryan said Saturday. Wolfpack fans will find out soon enough – N.C. State opens Sept. 4 against Western Carolina – if Bryan’s evaluation is accurate. If so, that figures to be good news for a program that historically has risen and fallen with their dual-threat quarterback: tough to beat when he’s both healthy and sharp, but vulnerable when he’s not. While he was playing baseball for the Wolfpack in the spring and minor-league ball in the summer, pocket-passing backup Mike Glennon was on campus taking key snaps with the firststring offense during spring drills and developing a rapport with the Wolfpack’s receivers in the summertime. “I think (Glennon) pushes me, but more than anything, I push myself,” Wilson said during the team’s media day. “I’m trying to be the best quarterback on the field each and every Saturday in the country.” Nearly two weeks into preseason camp – and with three weeks before the opener – the job ap-

pears to belong to Wilson, last year’s ACC leader with 31 touchdown passes. But with both Wilson and Glennon in the fold, it’s clear the Wolfpack have the luxury of talented depth at the position. “If Russell didn’t have all the experience, that would be a great battle going on right now for the starting job,” coach Tom O’Brien said. O’Brien shied away from saying Glennon definitely would play for a series or two even in a game that’s especially tight – “I don’t know, and I don’t have to make that decision right now, so (I) pass,” he quipped – but did say he wants his backup QB to at least take some snaps when possible. “If you don’t play, you can’t be any good,” O’Brien said. Wilson averaged nearly 300 yards passing in five wins last season compared to 218 in seven losses. During his breakout 2008, the Wolfpack played its best football with him under center and its worst when he was injured. They fell apart after he was injured against South Carolina and in the Papajohns.com Bowl against Rutgers, and their worst performance came in the only full game he missed that year, a 41-10 loss to South Florida. If his play during this year’s camp is any indication, the Wolfpack could be setting themselves up for their first winning season since 2005. “He has a tremendous capacity to focus,” O’Brien said.

Deacons hold first scrimmage ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

WINSTON-SALEM – Wake Forest went through a 90-minute scrimmage Saturday afternoon at BB&T Field as the Deacons prepare for the 2010 season. The scrimmage was the first of three scheduled for the preseason. Quarterback Ted Stachitas led the offense to a score on the first drive. The redshirt sophomore hit Danny Dembry on a 9-yard scoring pass for the first touchdown of the day. Jimmy Newman kicked three field goals on the day, hitting from 38, 25 and 27 yards. Josh Harris raced 65 yards on the first play of a drive, taking a handoff from quarterback Skylar Jones and outracing the defense down the left side of the field. Brandon Pendergrass also scored on a 5-yard run. Shane Popham converted the extra point. Patrick Thompson directed the Dea-

con offense to the 3-yard line after a 47-yard pass completion to Jordan Williams. But a hit by Tripp Russell forced a fumble on the ensuing play, halting the drive. Freshman quarterback Tanner Price made his debut. Price led the offense to the 21 before Newman converted a 38-yard field goal. Harris led all rushers with 76 yards on five carries. Jones had 44 yards on 10 carries, while quarterback Patrick Thompson had 29 yards on seven rushing attempts. Price led all quarterbacks in both attempts and completions, connecting on eight of 13 throws for 82 yards. Stachitas completed five of eight attempts for a team-high 95 yards. Jones was four-for-seven for 27 yards, and Brendan Cross was two-forthree for 16 yards. Devon Brown led the receivers with four catches for 69 yards. Marshall Williams had a teambest 79 yards on three receptions.

mus three times and cooled off one of baseball’s hottest teams – St. Louis had scored at least four runs every game this month and was hitting .306 for August coming into the game. Not that it was surprising – Zambrano is 5-0 lifetime at Busch Stadium. Carpenter is certainly used to the stifling St. Louis heat and humidity of a St. Louis summer, but seemed to struggle on a 93-degree day with a heat index of 107 degrees. TV showed him in the dugout after the third inning with a wet towel draped over his head. The two Cardinals aces – Carpenter and Adam Wainwright – were a combined 20-2 at Busch Stadium this season. Carpenter was 9-2 with a 2.75 ERA at home before Saturday. He allowed six hits, struck out three and walked none.

RAYS 7, ORIOLES 3 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – Kelly Shoppach hit his second career grand slam and a solo homer Saturday, leading the Tampa Bay Rays to a 7-3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. Trailing 3-0 in the fourth, Sean Rodriguez had an RBI double before Shoppach hit his slam to make it 5-3. Shoppach’s solo shot in the eighth was just his third extra-base hit since June 30.

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3D

Childress takes second shot at expansion in 2011

AP

Brad Keselowski celebrates in the winner’s circle after winning the NASCAR Nationwide Series Carfax 250 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich., on Saturday.

Keselowski prevails at Michigan BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) – A bum clutch didn’t trip up Brad Keselowski. Neither did racing in close proximity with nemesis Carl Edwards. Keselowski managed to make it through pit stops despite mechanical problems, then grabbed the lead on a restart with eight laps to go and pulled away to win the NASCAR Nationwide race at Michigan International Speedway on Saturday. “The clutch issue was something I was really nervous about,� said Keselowski, a Michigan native who also won last year’s Nationwide race here. “I didn’t know if that was going to cost us the race. I tried to be cool about that, but it’s easy to get upset.� Edwards finished second, barely edging out a charging Kyle Busch. Edwards and Keselowski raced side-to-side for a large portion of the race without incident. Both drivers are on probation for a highprofile confrontation at Gateway International Raceway last month. “It’s like both of us are probably thinking the same thing, don’t be the guy that messes this up,� Edwards said. “But he raced me very cleanly, I thought we raced very well together, and that’s the kind of racing that I’m sure both of us want to be doing.�

Bodine proves experience wins at Darlington DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) – Todd Bodine led the final 47 laps at Darlington Raceway to take his second straight victory in NASCAR’s truck series. Bodine held off pole-sitter Timothy Peters through two restarts Saturday night to win in the Camping World Truck Series’ first appearance at the “Lady in Black� in six years. Ron Hornaday Jr. took third, followed by Johnny Sauter and Austin Dillon.

Bodine, the only one in the field with a Darlington victory, proved there’s nothing more important here than experience. Bodine won a Nationwide Series race at Darlington in 2003, sliding over the finish line after a last-lap tangle with Jamie McMurray. Bodine lengthened his series points lead over Aric Almirola. Look for a full-field rundown in Monday’s edition of The High Point Enterprise.

Michigan set for two regular-season dates in 2011 BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) – With NASCAR still sorting out the final details of its 2011 schedule, Michigan International Speedway president Roger Curtis says the track will continue to host two regular-season races next year. “We’re all set for 2011,�

he said. “There was talk about doing a Chase race. It was very cool sounding to be in the Chase. It was neat thinking we’d be a good fit. But the more I thought about it for our fans and the number of campers we have, with school starting back up, I don’t know how many

would come back. There was never any discussion about taking us down to one race.� Atlanta Motor Speedway and Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., both are going from hosting two annual NASCAR races to only one next season.

Meanwhile, it was another rough day at the racetrack for Danica Patrick, who went down a lap to the leaders early on and struggled to a 27th-place finish. Patrick said her car was extremely loose early on – “I hope I don’t crash,� she remembered thinking – but the team got a handle on the car’s handling late in the race. “If we could have started the race the way we finished it, it would have been a very different story,� Patrick said. “It’s all right. It’s all part of it.� Justin Allgaier was fourth, followed by Paul Menard. Driver Robert Richardson Jr. was transported to a local hospital with an undisclosed medical issue after a crash. It was the fourth Nationwide victory of the season and 10th of his career for Keselowski, who holds a dominant 347-point lead in the series standings. Keselowski won despite clutch issues that gave him problems during pit stops – and during an attempt at a post-race victory burnout. “It was an issue on the burnout,� Keselowski joked. “I think that was the most frustrating part.� Edwards was hoping he could “steal� a victory, but acknowledged the best car won the race.

“Brad was able to just launch out front on that last run,� Edwards said. “It was just a battle for second then, and it was a pretty good battle. I had a pretty good time racing there that last lap.� It was the second race for NASCAR’s next-generation Nationwide car, which made its debut at Daytona. “I think it raced well,� Edwards said. “I think the safety improvements are good. The only thing I would wish for is just less downforce, more horsepower.� Keselowski said Edwards congratulated him in victory lane and downplayed the rivalry. “Sometimes, cars just run into each other,� Keselowski said. “There was the recipe for the same cake today, and it just didn’t get baked.� Keselowski dominated the first half of the race, at one point holding a lead of more than 11 seconds. But his clutch acted up on a pit stop near the race’s halfway point, causing him to lose the lead to Menard. Edwards took the lead on lap 77, with Keselowski on his tail as Menard slipped to third. After some close racing through slower traffic, Keselowski then went back to the lead with 40 laps to go.

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BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) – Richard Childress Racing got better when it got smaller, shrinking from four teams to three in the offseason. So it stands to reason that Childress might think twice before taking another shot at expanding his team. Of course, the possibility of landing driver Paul Menard – and his lucrative family sponsorship – can be very convincing. Childress announced this week that he’ll field a fourth car for Menard next season, with the car number and crew chief to be determined. And Childress expects it to work much better than last year. “We’re going to do this team completely different than we did that one,� Childress said. It could be a risky move for Childress, given the fact that his team suddenly reclaimed its status as one of NASCAR’s best after it went from four cars to three. Going into today’s race at Michigan International Speedway, Childress driver Kevin Harvick is leading the Sprint Cup series points standings and teammate Jeff Burton is third. Clint Bowyer is 13th, 10 points out of the final Chase-eligible spot. It’s a dramatic turnaround from 2009, when Childress fielded four cars and none made the Chase. When Childress eliminated the fourth car driven by Casey Mears, the best crew members from that team were absorbed into the other three teams. “I have been a proponent for, ever since I have been at RCR, to expand to four teams,� Burton said. “And even last year, when we had the fourth team and we weren’t running well, It wasn’t the fault of the fourth team. Now, I will tell you when we went from four to three, we got strong because we took the very best people and made three. So what that means is, when we do four, we have got to go get the very best people to create four. We can’t take from the three that we have to make four, we have to expand to four.� If done correctly, Burton said an expansion could make the team even stronger. “We didn’t do four teams right. We did four teams wrong,� Burton said. “This time (we have) a clear picture of what we did wrong and we’ve got to make sure we learned that and that is what Richard is committed to. I would not have supported a fourth team if we were doing it just to hire enough people to run the fourth team.� Childress said his team is better organized with stronger engine and engineering programs, putting it in better position to expand. RCR also appears to be in good shape off the track. Childress said he expects to announce a sponsorship deal for Harvick next week, eliminating one of the team’s biggest concerns. “I think that is the biggest thing, it’s about people,� Childress said. “I think we put together the people to make this thing really work and to have a fourth team be competitive as well.� Burton doesn’t think Childress will skimp when it comes to resources. “If you are going to have more funding and you are going to have more stuff, you have to build a team that is stronger,� Burton said. “You have to build a company that is stronger. There has to be a benefit of having a fourth team. If you have a fourth team just to employ the people that work on the fourth team – and you don’t expand engineering, you don’t expand aerodynamics, you don’t expand engine (research and development) – you don’t expand all the things that are required to be fast in this sport today, then you have done yourself a disservice.� They’ll certainly have more funding, courtesy the Menard family’s Wisconsin-based home improvement company. Menard’s father, John Menard Jr., has a net worth of $5.5 billion according to Forbes magazine. But that’s a mixed blessing for Menard, who will need better finishes to fend off the perception that he only has a ride because he has money. “Paul does the job on the racetrack,� Childress said. “It’s something that he loves to do and a passion. It’s not just because he’s got the sponsor that comes along. He’s got the drive to go out and race hard.�


BASKETBALL, NFL, PREPS 4D www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

These boots are made for football A Trinity High School football player left his boots and hat on the sidelines as the team was photographed on picture day on Friday. The Bulldogs play host to Ledford on Friday night in the regular-season opener for both teams. Don’t miss The High Point Enterprise’s Fall Sports Guide, with preview stories, photographs and schedules of all of the fall sports teams at our 15 area high schools. The 48-page special section will appear in Friday’s editions of the HPE.

Sports script

(schedules subject to change by the schools)

Monday

Tuesday Volleyball at HP Central, 6

T. Wingate Andrews High Point Central

Volleyball at Asheboro, Volleyball vs. TWA, 6 Soccer vs. S. Guilford, 6 6:30 Tennis at Asheboro, Tennis at S. Guilford, 4:30 4:30

Southwest Guilford

Volleyball at Mt. Tabor, Volleyball vs. E. Guil6:30 ford, 6:30 Tennis at Page, 4:30 Tennis vs. W. Guilford, 4:30

High Point Christian

Wesleyan

Ragsdale

Volleyball at Grimsley, Football at R.J. Reyn6:30 olds, 7:30 Soccer vs. Grimsley, 7 Volleyball vs. NE Football vs. Southeast Guilford, 6:30 Guilford, 7:30 Soccer at W. Guilford, 7 Football at Bishop McGuinness, 7:30 Volleyball vs. Asheville Chr., 6:30

Volleyball vs. Cannon, 6

Volleyball at Durham Academy, 5:45 Soccer host Sanford Classic, vs. Page, 7 Tennis vs. WCDS, 4

Soccer host Sanford Classic, vs. United Faith, 7 Cross country at Brevard Inv., 9 a.m.

Soccer vs. Davie Co., 7

Ledford

Tennis at Grimsley, 4:30 Cross country vs. S. Guilford, 4:30

Volleyball vs. TBA, at Super Six, 9 a.m. Soccer vs. United Faith, at Wesleyan, 1

Volleyball at Summer Slam, 9 a.m. Soccer host Sanford Classic, vs. N. Raleigh, 3 Tennis vs. Kerr-Vance, Tennis at Wesleyan, 4 Volleyball at Calvary, 4 Volley. vs. Gstn Day, 9 a.m.; vs. Gstn Chr., 2:15 4 Soccer vs. Asheville (at Calvary) Christian, 7:30 Soccer vs. Gaston Day, 6

Volleyball at Surry Football vs. High Point Central, 6:15 Christian, 7:30 Soccer at HP Christian, 5 Soccer at Wheatmore, 7

Volleyball vs. Randle- Football vs. Randleman, 5:30 man, 7:30 Tennis vs. Randleman, 4:30

Volleyball, soccer in WS/FC tourney, TBA

Volleyball at Davidson Co. tourney, TBA

Football at N. Davidson, 7:30

Tennis vs. C. Davidson, Soccer at C. Davidson, Volleyball at N. David- Tennis at Wheatmore, Football at Trinity, 7:30 Volleyball at Da4:30 7 son, 5:30 4:15 vidson Co. tourney, Tennis at Trinity, 4 9 a.m. Soccer at Mt. Tabor, 7 Volleyball vs. Forbush, 6:30

Soccer at Trinity, 7

Soccer at HP Central, 6 Cross country at HP Tennis vs. HP Central, Central, 5 4:30

Southern Guilford

Football at Cox Mill, 7:30

Thomasville Volleyball at Asheboro, 5 Tennis at Asheboro, 4:45

Trinity Soccer vs. W. Davidson, 6 Tennis at SW Randolph, 4:30

Football at S. Guilford, 7:30

Volleyball at E. Guil- Football vs. Ragsdale, ford, 6 7:30 Tennis at E. Guilford, 4:30

Volleyball at Trinity, 5

Wheatmore

Saturday

Football vs. Smith, 7

Soccer vs. Bishop, 5 Tennis at N. Raleigh Christian, 4

East Davidson Soccer in WS/FC tourney, TBA

Friday

Volleyball vs. W. Guilford, 5

Volleyball vs. Elkin, 6 Soccer vs. Starmount, 6:30

Bishop McGuinness

Thursday

Volleyball vs. Charlotte Christian, 6:30 Soccer vs. Clt. Chr., 5 Tennis vs. Charlotte Christian, 4:30

Westchester

Glenn

Wednesday

Football vs. Ledford, Volleyball vs. Thomas- Volleyball vs. SW ville, 5 Randolph, 5 7:30 Tennis vs. Ledford, 4 Soccer vs. Ragsdale, 6

Tennis at W. Davidson, Volleyball vs. SW Tennis vs. Ledford, 4:30 Randolph, 5 4:30 Soccer at E. Davidson, 6

Football vs. S. Davidson, 7:30

Wesleyan nets win in opener ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

SOCCER WESLEYAN 5, COVENANT DAY 0 CHARLOTTE – Michael Tobon scored

two goals to help Wesleyan Christian blast Covenant Day 5-0 in a match that ended late Friday night. Brent Bronico, Matt Rickman and Daniel Mallard also scored for the Trojans (2-0). Bronico also had

two assists, while Cole Manring and Barber Stamey were credited with one each. Wesleyan travels to Sanford on Thursday to face Page in the Sanford Classic.

U.S. shows speed, shooting in scrimmage NEW YORK (AP) – Short on size, the United States showed off a surplus of speed. Danny Granger scored 22 points and the Americans sprinted past China 98-51 in a scrimmage Saturday at Madison Square Garden. On a day they gave their strongest hint yet that they’re prepared to take only one center to the world championships, the Americans were credited with a 32-4 advan-

tage in fast-break points. “We’re the fastest team, I think, in the world, so we’ve got to use that to our advantage,” Philadelphia’s Andre Iguodala said. Eric Gordon strengthened his case for a spot on the team with 15 points, while Kevin Durant added 14 and Derrick Rose had 12. Among those in attendance was Kobe Bryant, who was on the gold medal-winning team in 2008.

Granger, showing no effects from a dislocated ring finger on his shooting hand, was 9 of 12 from the field and made three 3-pointers. Gordon made three of the Americans’ 11 3-pointers. Though he’s been considered on the bubble to make the final roster, he’s played well in U.S. game action and supplies some of the outside shooting a perimeter-oriented team needs.

Panthers QBs confident despite lack of points SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) – Matt Moore looked poised despite getting knocked around. Jimmy Clausen gained confidence in his NFL debut despite constant pressure. Now if Carolina’s quarterbacks could just get some protection and put the Panthers in the end zone. The first game in the post-Jake Delhomme era provided a mixed bag for the new crew of arms on Thursday night. Moore was hit, fumbled and the victim of penalties, while Clausen had little time to throw and had a drive end with a turnover at the goal line. Third-stringer Hunter Cantwell was hurt by dropped passes and protection trouble, too, in Baltimore’s 17-12 victory that produced no offensive touchdowns for Carolina. “I think all three quarterbacks did a good job – when they had time to pass,” coach John Fox said. The Panthers returned here late Friday for the last week of training camp happy about the surprising pressure they got from their revamped defensive line, but trying to sort out problems from what was supposed to be their strength, the offensive line. Carolina allowed seven sacks and the line was responsible for six penalties as it faced constant blitzing by the Ravens’ potent defense. “There are no worries whatsoever,” Moore said. “Those things are going to happen. We’ll watch the tape and get those things fixed.” Moore brought flashbacks to Delhomme’s turnover-plagued 2009 when he never saw safety Tom Zbikowski go unblocked on a blitz and fumbled after getting sacked from the blind side. The Panthers recovered but were forced to punt. Moore was 4 of 7 for 32 yards and had a passer rating of 68.8. In three first-quarter possessions with Moore, the Panthers produced three first downs and no points. They were once knocked out of field goal range when a long pass to Dwayne Jarrett was wiped out by left tackle Jordan Gross’ holding penalty. Gross, in his first game since breaking his leg late last season, was called for two holding calls and a false start penalty. Duke Robinson struggled with pass protection in the snaps he got at right guard, too. The much anticipated debut by Clausen was largely a success. The former Notre Dame star took over in the second quarter against Baltimore’s second-string defense and appeared relaxed. He was in command of the offense despite often being flushed out of the pocket and sacked twice.

PANTHERS SIGN HARRIS FOR LB DEPTH

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SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) – The Carolina Panthers have signed former Buffalo linebacker Nic Harris to add depth after numerous injuries at the position. The Panthers made room on the 80-man roster Saturday by waiving injured offensive lineman Steve Justice. Already without linebacker Thomas Davis, who tore a knee ligament in June, the Panthers practiced Saturday morning without Jamar Williams (shoulder), Jordan Senn (shoulder) and Quinton Culberson (thigh). Harris was the Bills’ fifth-round pick in 2009 and played in 15 games last season. The former Oklahoma safety was waived in July after failing his physical due to injury. The former Wake Forest center Justice was far down the depth chart and missed practice Saturday morning with a sore back.


CALENDAR, DRAG BOATS, NFL THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

High Point boat drag champ leaves quite a legacy J ohn Haas enjoyed coming to High Point and racing on Oak Hollow Lake. It was one of his favorite stops on the drag boat racing circuit because in 1993, he became certified to race in the featured Top Fuel Hydro class and won here all in the same meet. “I’ll always hold a special place for High Point,� Haas said during last month’s Thunder at Oak Hollow weekend. Haas won here again last month, a triumph SPORTS that he said was his fifth High Point victory. Turns Greer out it was his last in drag Smith boat racing’s big league. ■■■Haas was killed in what was described as a horrible crash at the end of a qualifying run last weekend at the Mid-Summer Nationals in Chateau, Oklahoma. In the drag boat world, his death was as huge as Dale Earnhardt’s death in NASCAR or Ayrton Senna’s fatal accident in Formula One. Haas was the best in his sport, having won the tour’s championship four of the past five years and five times total. “He was a championship racer,� said Troy Powell, the president of the High Point Jaycees, who revived the Oak Hollow race as a fund-raising project for the organization last year. “His death in a shock.� A 55-year-old grandfather from Michigan, Haas was in his 32nd year of racing boats. In my few encounters with him, he was friendly and had a calm demeanor. He was well aware of the risks, saying that “anytime you come back from a run it is a good one� when talking about a near-crash in June at San Angelo, Texas. Even though he had been racing for three decades, he hadn’t grown tired of the sport and had no plans to quit. “As long as I’m physically able to do it, I will,� he said. He said he continued to race because he like to go fast and said that he would like to give Top Fuel drag racing on land a shot but joked that “I don’t think I’ll get a chance because I’m not one those pretty boys who the sponsors like.� Voicing a widely held opinion among those on the drag boat circuit, Haas said he looked forward to racing at Oak Hollow because of its surface remains smooth without outside interference, unlike venues that are on open rivers with strong currents and waves. It was a wave in the Grand River that sent Haas out of control, Lou Osman, the owner of the Haas’ boat, told the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press. “Sometimes you drive through it,� Osman told the paper. “This time, he didn’t.� Osman said the boat began tumbling and broke apart. He estimated the

driver capsule was ejected 20-30 feet in the air and hit the water upside-down, rear part first. Authorities said Haas died of massive internal injuries. A private funeral service for the family was held Haas Wednesday and a memorial service for the racing community is scheduled at Haas’ home in Allegan, Mich., on Sept. 11. He was survived by his wife, two sons and his mother. Operating just like NASCAR, the drag boat tour didn’t break because of the death or the fact that Haas’ wreck marked the worst of three serious crashes in four meets, the lone exception coming at Oak Hollow. The tour was back in action Saturday with an event at Marble Fall, Texas, where eliminations are scheduled today. The other wrecks left one driver with a broken back and another with a broken leg. The show will go on in High Point next year, also. Powell said the Jaycees are in the midst of a 3-to-5 year shortterm plan in which they hope to take the majority of the financial risk from Lucas Oil, the series sponsor which served as the event’s promoter this year. He has already reserved the lake for the last weekend in July next year and is to have a planning meeting with tour officials next month. Powell said the recent rash of accidents would not be cause for giving up on the project. “It’s like NASCAR,� Powell said. “The danger and what can happen is part of the sport. It wouldn’t influence our decision to have it.� Powell said he took steps to make the event safer for spectators this year by increasing the buffer between the crowd and lake from the required 10 feet to almost 30 feet. Powell plans for the show to continue in High Point despite a drop in attendance from the event’s revival with a different sanctioning in 2009. He said Lucas Oil officials estimated the crowd for the event’s three days at 3,000-5,000, far less than the 5,000-8,000 for which officials had hoped, and blamed the decrease on temperatures in the upper 90s. “People remember the days when the boat drags had big crowds but that came from building it up over 28 years,� he said. “It took some time to build up the crowd. And, I still think we have people who think we’re still having the circle boat races (which folded after events in 2007 and 2008).� In his long range plans for the Jaycees, Powell wants the boat drags to continue for at least 10 years. John Haas would have loved to be a part of it. gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3519

Redskins get confident, start with preseason win WASHINGTON (AP) – Even Albert Haynesworth had a few upbeat things to say after the Washington Redskins’ first preseason game. Then again, it’s hard to be a sourpuss after a 42-17 victory. Although it was only a preseason match using simplified schemes against a banged-up team, Friday’s win over the Buffalo Bills helps reinforce the feeling that new coach Mike Shanahan has the team headed in the right direction after last year’s 4-12 record under Jim Zorn. “I know a lot of people will say it doesn’t mean anything,� center Casey Rabach said, “but it’s amazing what it does to your confidence. We went out there and put 42 points on an NFL team. The points feel good. We all have confidence in this offense and defense. To do what we did just kind of solidifies that confidence and we can build on it.� Both offense and defense settled down after some first-series jitters. Donovan

McNabb led a touchdown drive in his Redskins debut, and youngsters Brandon Banks, Anthony Armstrong and Ryan Torain were among those who made solid opening statements in the battles for roster spots. Then there was Haynesworth, who took his spot with the second-stringers for two series to play nose tackle in a 34 defense – something he spent months desperately trying to avoid. As it turns out, the big fellow doesn’t seem to mind the 3-4 after all, at least not the version being taught to him by defensive coordinator Jim Haslett. The last time the Redskins had such as impressive start to preseason was in 2002, when Steve Spurrier turned the franchise into an August juggernaut by scoring 38, 37, 35 and 40 points in his first four games. Those wins turned out to be the highlight of the Spurrier era: The Redskins never scored more than 33 points in a regular season game in his two losing seasons as coach.

Gross too excited in return from broken leg SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) – Carolina Panthers left tackle Jordan Gross blames his penalty-filled preseason debut on overexuberance. In his first action since breaking his leg in November, the 2008 Pro Bowl selection was called for a false start penalty and two holding calls

in Carolina’s 17-12 loss at Baltimore Thursday. The second holding penalty wiped out a long pass to Dwayne Jarrett and knocked Carolina out of field goal range. “I’ve been looking forward to getting back for eight months,� Gross said Saturday. “I was pretty excited and eager, and you

can always learn something new. I think I was a little too aggressive the other night, and it worked out the way it did.� The Panthers had trouble with pass protection all night, something coach John Fox blamed partially on not gameplanning for Baltimore’s complex blitzing scheme.

5D

CALENDAR

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BASEBALL ARCHDALE PARKS AND REC – Registration under way for fall leagues. The Mustang League is open to kids born between May 1, 2000, and April 30, 2002. Cost is $35 for Archdale residents and $55 for non-residents. The Bronco League is open to kids born between May 1, 1998, and April 30, 2000. Cost for this league is $40 for Archdale residents and $60 for non-residents. Games will be played at Creekside Park. Games start in midSeptember. Call 431-1117, ext. 314 or 315, for info.

BASKETBALL HIGH POINT STARS FALL TRAVEL SEASON – Looking for rising fourththrough 10th-graders for girls and boys teams. Call Aaron Grier at 991-0597 or check the web at www. eteamz.com/highpointstarsbasketball for info. Registration ends Aug. 21.

COACHING VACANCIES HIGH POINT CHRISTIAN ACADEMY – Needs a varsity girls basketball head coach with experience in leading a program. Also needed are middle school girls and boys basketball coaches. For info, contact athletic director Corey Gesell at 688-5487. WESTCHESTER COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL – Needs head coaches for the 2010-11 school year for varsity girls basketball and varsity girls soccer, plus an assistant varsity track and field coach. Anyone interested in the positions should contact athletic director Pat Kahny at 822-4063.

FLAG FOOTBALL/CHEERLEADING UNION CROSS BOBCATS – Signups will be held Aug. 1-20 from 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at Southeast Middle School in Kernersville. Check the web at www.eteamz.com/ucbobcats for info.

GOLF NINTH ANNUAL GUILD GOLF CLASSIC – Set for Saturday, Aug. 21, at Holly Ridge Golf Links. Format is captain’s choice with team handicap and is limited to 28 teams of four. Cost is $240 per team. Proceeds benefit High Point Regional Health System. Call Mittie White at 431-6560 or 688-4913 for info.

GRUBB FAMILY YMCA EVENTS ON TAP – Adult Softball: The Grubb Family YMCA in Archdale-Trinity is having registration until Aug. 15 for an open/church softball league. The fee is $350. All games will be played at the Hillsville Civitan Ballpark in Sophia. ... Co-Ed Adult Softball: Registration ongoing through Aug. 28 for co-ed softball league. The fee is $350. All games will be played at the Hillsville Civitan Ballpark in Sophia. ... Youth Soccer: Registration ongoing through Aug. 28 for youth soccer program. This is a league for boys and girls ages 3-14. The fee for the U4 league is $50 for members and $70 for non-members. The fee for U6-14 leagues is $90 for members and $125 for non-members. All games and practices at the YMCA Soccer Complex in Trinity. ... Youth Baseball: Registration ongoing through Sept. 5 for its youth baseball

league. This is a league for boys and girl ages 3-8. The fee is $35 for members and $50 for non-members. All games and practices at Aldridge Park in Archdale. ... For more information on any of these programs, call the YMCA at 861-7788.

HARTLEY DRIVE FAMILY YMCA EVENTS ON TAP – Youth soccer registration is ongoing through Aug. 27 for ages 3-14. Cost is $55 for Hartley members and $80 for non-members. ... Adult Co-ed soccer registration is ongoing through Aug. 31 for ages $16 and up. Cost is $425 per team. ... Adult Co-ed dodgeball registration is ongoing through Sept. 3 for ages 16 and up. Cost is $145 per team. ... Adult Co-ed kickball registration is ongoing through Sept. 13 for ages 16 and up. Cost is $325 per team. ... The YMCA will host a Youth Basketball Academy focusing on skills development this fall. ... Contact Kevin Swider at 869-0151 or kswider@hpymca.org for info on any of these programs.

HIGH POINT PONY BASEBALL AND FASTPITCH SOFTBALL REGISTRATION – Starts Aug. 14 and runs through Aug. 21 at Johnson Street Sports Complex. Open to kids ages 4-14. Check the web at www. hppony.org for info.

PILOT BOOSTER’S CLUB VARIOUS UPCOMING EVENTS – The Pilot Elementary School Booster’s Club announces pee wee and little league conditioning week Aug. 30 and 31 and Sept. 1, 2 and 4. For more info, visit www.pilotboosters.com or check Facebook: pilot boosters.

SOCCER PIEDMONT SOCCER ALLIANCE – Is holding registration for the Rising Stars and Kick-N-Kids fall recreation league through 8/30. Co-ed teams will form for ages 3 through 14. Registration fee is $80 for Kick-N-Kids (3 and 4 years of age) and $105 for the Rising Stars (5 through 14 years of age) before 8/30 and $90 for Kick-N-Kids and $125 for Rising Stars after that date. We offer a reduced fee if you sign up for fall and spring now! $120 for Kick-n-kids and $185 for Rising Stars fall/spring season combo. Please visit www.psastars.com <http://www.psastars.com> for further information and to register online. For Rising Stars, the fee includes a 3-piece kit that includes a jersey, shorts and socks. The Kick-NKids get a t-shirt jersey. Practices will begin the week of September 13th. Contact Gregg Weigel at gweigel@ psastars.com <mailto:gweigel@psastars.com> or Michelle at Mostoller mmostoller@psastars.com <mailto: mmostoller@psastars.com> or call 883-4362 for more information. UPWARD SOCCER REGISTRATION – Now under way at Rich Fork Baptist Church. Open to kids ages 4 through the sixth grade. Cost is $75. Call 476-6258 for info.

REPORTING ITEMS The High Point Enterprise publishes announcements in the Calendar free of charge. Send info to sportsroom@ hpe.com, call 888-3556 or fax to 8883504.

Attention Male Tobacco Consumers!!! Mendenhall Clinical Research Center will be conducting a clinical trial to assess biological responses to tobacco exposure. You May Qualify If You: s (AVE USED -/)34 3.5&& FOR AT LEAST THE PAST YEARS n AT LEAST TWO CANS PER WEEK OF ANY BRAND STYLE OR mAVOR s (AVE ./4 USED ANY OTHER FORM OF TOBACCO OR NICOTINE CONTAINING PRODUCT IN THE LAST YEARS s #AN STAY OVERNIGHT IN OUR CENTER FOR ONE NIGHT s !RE BETWEEN THE AGES OF TO s !RE IN GENERALLY GOOD HEALTH )F YOU ARE SELECTED TO PARTICIPATE YOU WILL RECEIVE COMPENSATION OF FOR STUDY COMPLETION &OR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE 2ECRUITING $EPT AT THE Mendenhall Clinical Research Center at 336-841-0700 ext. 2517 OR BY EMAIL AT TLYNCH MENDENHALLCRC COM

Mendenhall Clinical Research Center -ENDENHALL /AKS 0KWY 3UITE s (IGH 0OINT .# 30019985


SCOREBOARD 6D www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE fer, Suzuki, 7.035, 189.55. Did Not Qualify: 17. James Surber, 7.194, 186.74; 18. Wesley Wells, 7.209, 182.75; 19. Katie Sullivan, 7.211, 184.09.

BASEBALL

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Major Leagues

TENNIS

All Times EDT AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division

New York Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore

W 71 70 66 61 41

L 44 46 51 54 76

Pct .617 .603 .564 .530 .350

Minnesota Chicago Detroit Cleveland Kansas City

W 66 65 55 48 48

L 50 51 60 68 68

Pct .569 .560 .478 .414 .414

Texas Los Angeles Oakland Seattle

W 66 59 57 45

L 48 58 57 71

Pct .579 .504 .500 .388

Atlanta Philadelphia New York Florida Washington

W 67 64 58 57 50

L 48 51 57 57 66

Pct .583 .557 .504 .500 .431

St. Louis Cincinnati Milwaukee Houston Chicago Pittsburgh

W 65 65 54 49 49 39

L 50 51 63 65 68 76

Pct .565 .560 .462 .430 .419 .339

W San Diego 68 San Francisco 67 Colorado 60 Los Angeles 59 Arizona 46

L 47 51 55 57 71

Pct .591 .568 .522 .509 .393

GB — 1 1/2 6 10 31

WCGB — — 4 1/2 8 1/2 29 1/2

L10 5-5 3-7 5-5 7-3 7-3

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

Home 37-20 35-24 34-23 32-26 24-34

Away 34-24 35-22 32-28 29-28 17-42

L10 7-3 5-5 3-7 3-7 3-7

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

Home 34-20 35-22 38-24 25-32 24-30

Away 32-30 30-29 17-36 23-36 24-38

L10 5-5 5-5 5-5 6-4

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

Home 38-22 32-26 34-24 29-32

Away 28-26 27-32 23-33 16-39

L10 7-3 7-3 5-5 4-6 3-7

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

Home 40-15 36-19 36-20 29-30 30-26

Away 27-33 28-32 22-37 28-27 20-40

L10 6-4 6-4 5-5 4-6 3-7 3-7

Str L-1 W-1 L-1 W-1 W-1 L-5

Home 39-19 34-26 28-31 28-31 27-32 26-30

Away 26-31 31-25 26-32 21-34 22-36 13-46

L10 6-4 5-5 5-5 5-5 6-4

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

Home 36-22 37-22 37-19 36-24 28-32

Away 32-25 30-29 23-36 23-33 18-39

Central Division GB — 1 10 1/2 18 18

WCGB — 5 14 1/2 22 22

Kim Clijsters (4), Belgium, def. Ana Ivanovic, Serbia, 2-1 retired.

West Division GB — 8 1/2 9 22

WCGB — 11 1/2 12 25

At Mason, Ohio

WTA Tour Western & Southern Financial Group Women’s Open A U.S. Open Series event Saturday At The Lindner Family Tennis Center Mason, Ohio Purse: $2 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Doubles Semifinals Lisa Raymond, United States, and Rennae Stubbs (4), Australia, def. Liezel Huber, United States, and Nadia Petrova (1), Russia, 7-5, 6-2.

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division GB — 3 9 9 1/2 17 1/2

WCGB — 1 1/2 7 1/2 8 16

At Toronto

ATP World Tour Rogers Cup A U.S. Open Series event Saturday At Rexall Centre Toronto Purse: $3 million (WT1000) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals

Central Division GB — 1/2 12 15 1/2 17 26

WCGB — 1 12 1/2 16 17 1/2 26 1/2

Andy Murray (4), Britain, def. Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, 6-3, 6-4.

Doubles Semifinals

West Division GB — 2 1/2 8 9 1/2 23

WCGB — — 5 1/2 7 20 1/2

Today’s Games Seattle (F.Hernandez 8-9) at Cleveland (Masterson 4-11), 1:05 p.m. Baltimore (Arrieta 4-3) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson 2-0), 1:40 p.m. Detroit (Galarraga 3-5) at Chicago White Sox (F.Garcia 10-5), 2:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (A.J.Burnett 9-9) at Kansas City (Bullington 0-2), 2:10 p.m. Oakland (Mazzaro 6-4) at Minnesota (Slowey 10-5), 2:10 p.m. Boston (Matsuzaka 8-3) at Texas (C.Wilson 10-5), 3:05 p.m. Toronto (R.Romero 9-7) at L.A. Angels (Haren 1-2), 3:35 p.m.

Monday’s Games Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. Seattle at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m. Texas at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m. Toronto at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

Cubs 3, Cardinals 2 St. Louis bi ab 0 FLopez 3b 4 0 Jay rf 3 0 Craig ph-rf 2 1 Pujols 1b 4 1 Hollidy lf 3 0 Rasms cf 4 0 YMolin c 3 0 Schmkr 2b 4 1 McCllln p 0 0 Crpntr p 2 0 Winn ph 1 0 Boggs p 0 0 Miles 2b 1 0 B.Ryan ss 4 3 Totals 35

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

the knee. The third baseman missed all of 1994, which was to be his rookie season, after tearing an ACL. h bi 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 9 2

Chicago 021 000 000 — 3 St. Louis 100 001 000 — 2 E—Ar.Ramirez (13). DP—St. Louis 1. LOB— Chicago 3, St. Louis 9. 2B—Byrd (30), K.Hill (6), Pujols (26). HR—D.Lee (14), Ar.Ramirez (17). CS—S.Castro (5). SF—Holliday. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Zambrano W,4-6 521⁄3 7 2 2 2 3 Mateo H,1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Marshall H,15 112⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 Marmol S,20-24 1 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 St. Louis C.Carpenter L,13-46 6 3 3 0 3 Boggs 2 1 0 0 1 2 McClellan 1 0 0 0 0 0 WP—Zambrano. Umpires—Home, Bill Welke; First, Mike DiMuro; Second, Tim Welke; Third, Jim Reynolds. T—2:41. A—46,313 (43,975).

Rays 7, Orioles 3 Baltimore

Tampa Bay bi ab 0 BUpton cf 4 0 Bartlett ss 5 0 Crwfrd lf 5 0 Longori 3b 5 3 WAyar dh 4 0 SRdrgz 2b 4 0 Zobrist 1b 2 0 Shppch c 4 0 Kapler rf 2 Joyce ph-rf 2 32 3 4 3 Totals 37

ab BRorts 2b 2 Markks rf 4 Wggntn 1b 4 Scott dh 2 AdJons cf 4 Pie lf 4 Wieters c 4 CIzturs ss 4 J.Bell 3b 4 Totals

r 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0

Baltimore Tampa Bay

h 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0

003 000

000 510

r 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 2 0 0 7

h bi 2 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 3 1 1 1 0 0 2 5 1 0 0 0 15 7

000 — 3 01x — 7

E—S.Rodriguez (4). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB—Baltimore 6, Tampa Bay 9. 2B—Wieters (13), Bartlett (19), Longoria 2 (36), S.Rodriguez (17). HR—Ad.Jones (17), Shoppach 2 (3). SB—B.Roberts (5), Markakis (5), C.Izturis (8). IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore Matusz L,4-12 4 9 5 5 2 2 Albers 2 2 1 1 1 1 Gabino 1 1 0 0 0 0 Simon 1 3 1 1 0 1 Tampa Bay Snnanstne W,3-1 5 3 3 3 4 2 Cormier H,4 2 0 0 0 0 1 Benoit H,18 1 0 0 0 0 2 Choate 1 1 0 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, Brian Knight; First, Greg Gibson; Second, Scott Barry; Third, Gerry Davis. T—3:02. A—36,189 (36,973).

Giants 3, Padres 2 (11) San Diego ab HrstnJr 2b 6 MTejad ss 5 AdGnzl 1b 5 Ludwck rf 5 Headly 3b 6 Stauffr p 0 Hairstn lf 2 Gwynn cf 2 Denorfi cf 3 Grgrsn p 0 Mujica p 0 Stairs ph 1 Adams p 0 ECarer ss 0 Hundly c 5 Latos p 3 Frieri p 0 Thtchr p 0 Venale ph-lf1 Totals 44

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

San Francisco h bi ab r 2 0 ATorrs cf 5 0 2 0 Fontent 2b 5 1 2 1 A.Huff rf 5 0 2 0 Burrell lf 5 0 2 1 Posey c 5 1 0 0 Sandovl 3b 3 1 0 0 Uribe ss 5 0 0 0 Ishikaw 1b 4 0 1 0 Bmgrn p 1 0 0 0 Schrhlt ph 0 0 0 0 Ray p 0 0 1 0 JaLopz p 0 0 0 0 BrWlsn p 0 0 0 0 JGuilln ph 1 0 1 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 SCasill p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 2 Totals 39 3

San Diego 100 010 000 San Francisco 000 000 110

Today’s Games Florida (Ani.Sanchez 9-7) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 1-2), 1:10 p.m. Arizona (Enright 3-2) at Washington (Strasburg 5-3), 1:35 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Padilla 6-3) at Atlanta (Jurrjens 4-4), 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Karstens 2-8) at Houston (Happ 2-1), 2:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Dempster 10-8) at St. Louis (Lohse 1-4), 2:15 p.m. Milwaukee (M.Parra 3-9) at Colorado (Jimenez 17-3), 3:10 p.m. San Diego (LeBlanc 6-10) at San Francisco (Lincecum 11-6), 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 7-5) at N.Y. Mets (Pelfrey 11-6), 8:10 p.m. Florida at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Houston, 8:05 p.m. San Diego at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.

Washington 4, Arizona 2

h 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 7

Yardage: 7,514; Par: 72 Third Round

Monday’s Games

NATIONAL LEAGUE Friday’s Games

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

Q. Can you name the Detroit Tigers relief pitcher who won the 1984 AL Cy Young award as well as the 1984 AL MVP award?

Saturday’s Games

Saturday’s Games

ab Fukdm rf 4 SCastro ss 4 Marml p 0 D.Lee 1b 4 ArRmr 3b 4 Colvin lf 4 Byrd cf 4 DeWitt 2b 3 K.Hill c 2 Zamrn p 2 Mateo p 0 ASorin ph 1 Marshll p 0 Barney ss 0 Totals 32

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Chicago Cubs 3, St. Louis 2 San Francisco 3, San Diego 2, 11 innings Arizona at Washington, late Pittsburgh at Houston, late. Florida at Cincinnati, late L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta, late Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, late Milwaukee at Colorado, late

Tampa Bay 7, Baltimore 3 Detroit at Chicago White Sox, late Seattle at Cleveland, late N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City,late Oakland at Minnesota, late Boston at Texas,late Toronto at L.A. Angels, late

Chicago

BASKETBALL

TRIVIA QUESTION

Cincinnati 7, Florida 2 N.Y. Mets 1, Philadelphia 0 Atlanta 1, L.A. Dodgers 0 St. Louis 6, Chicago Cubs 3 Houston 4, Pittsburgh 1 Colorado 5, Milwaukee 4 San Diego 3, San Francisco 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE Friday’s Games Seattle 3, Cleveland 2 Baltimore 5, Tampa Bay 0 Texas 10, Boston 9, 11 innings Chicago White Sox 8, Detroit 4 Kansas City 4, N.Y. Yankees 3 Minnesota 4, Oakland 3 Toronto 3, L.A. Angels 0

Julien Benneteau and Michael Llodra, France,Frantisek Cermak, def. Czech Republic, and Michal Mertinak, Slovakia, 7-6 (5), 6-4.

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

9 3

00 — 2 01 — 3

No outs when winning run scored. E—Headley (10), Sandoval (8). DP—San Francisco 2. LOB—San Diego 16, San Francisco 10. 2B—M.Tejada 2 (4), Ad.Gonzalez (24), Headley (25), Stairs (4), Hundley (13), A.Torres (38), Fontenot (12), A.Huff (28), Posey (14). HR—Sandoval (8). SB—Hairston Jr. (9). S—Gwynn, Bumgarner. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Latos 6 5 1 1 0 9 2 Frieri H,6 ⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Thatcher H,9 Gregerson 1 2 1 1 1 0 Mujica 1 0 0 0 0 0 Adams 1 0 0 0 0 1 Stauffer L,3-2 0 2 1 1 1 0 San Francisco Bumgarner 7 8 2 2 2 2 2 Ray ⁄3 2 0 0 1 0 1 Ja.Lopez ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Br.Wilson 1 1 0 0 1 1 Romo 1 1 0 0 1 2 S.Casilla W,4-2 1 1 0 0 1 1 Latos pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Stauffer pitched to 3 batters in the 11th. WP—Latos, S.Casilla 2. Umpires—Home, Marvin Hudson; First, Derryl Cousins; Second, Jim Joyce; Third, Jim Wolf. T—3:34. A—42,293 (41,915).

Chipper Jones has surgery to repair ACL ATLANTA (AP) — The Atlanta Braves say Chipper Jones’ surgery to repair the torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee was a success. The season-ending injury happened on Tuesday and the surgery was performed Saturday in Atlanta by Dr. Marvin Royster. The expected recovery time is six months. The 38-year-old Jones said Friday he will try to play in 2011. This is Jones’ second major surgery on

Major League leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Hamilton, Texas, .362; MiCabrera, Detroit, .338; ABeltre, Boston, .330; Cano, New York, .326; Mauer, Minnesota, .324; DelmYoung, Minnesota, .318; DeJesus, Kansas City, .318. RUNS—Jeter, New York, 84; Teixeira, New York, 84; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 80; Hamilton, Texas, 79; MYoung, Texas, 79; JBautista, Toronto, 77; MiCabrera, Detroit, 77; Cano, New York, 77; Youkilis, Boston, 77. RBI—MiCabrera, Detroit, 94; ARodriguez, New York, 92; JBautista, Toronto, 88; Guerrero, Texas, 87; Teixeira, New York, 86; DelmYoung, Minnesota, 84; ABeltre, Boston, 80. HITS—Hamilton, Texas, 158; ISuzuki, Seattle, 149; ABeltre, Boston, 144; Cano, New York, 144; MiCabrera, Detroit, 138; MYoung, Texas, 137; Jeter, New York, 136. DOUBLES—Markakis, Baltimore, 38; Mauer, Minnesota, 38; MiCabrera, Detroit, 37; Hamilton, Texas, 37; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 36; ABeltre, Boston, 35; VWells, Toronto, 35; DelmYoung, Minnesota, 35. TRIPLES—Crawford, Tampa Bay, 7; AJackson, Detroit, 7; Pennington, Oakland, 7; Span, Minnesota, 7; Granderson, New York, 6; Podsednik, Kansas City, 6; AdJones, Baltimore, 5; FLewis, Toronto, 5; EPatterson, Boston, 5; Youkilis, Boston, 5. HOME RUNS—JBautista, Toronto, 36; Konerko, Chicago, 28; MiCabrera, Detroit, 26; DOrtiz, Boston, 26; Teixeira, New York, 26; Hamilton, Texas, 25; Quentin, Chicago, 24. STOLEN BASES—Pierre, Chicago, 44; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 39; RDavis, Oakland, 35; Gardner, New York, 33; BUpton, Tampa Bay, 33; Figgins, Seattle, 30; Podsednik, Kansas City, 30. PITCHING—Sabathia, New York, 15-5; Price, Tampa Bay, 15-5; Pavano, Minnesota, 15-7; CBuchholz, Boston, 13-5; PHughes, New York, 13-5; Verlander, Detroit, 13-7; Cahill, Oakland, 12-4; Lester, Boston, 12-7; Danks, Chicago, 12-8. STRIKEOUTS—JerWeaver, Los Angeles, 182; FHernandez, Seattle, 165; Lester, Boston, 160; Liriano, Minnesota, 160; Morrow, Toronto, 151; Verlander, Detroit, 147; CLewis, Texas, 141. SAVES—RSoriano, Tampa Bay, 32; Soria, Kansas City, 32; Papelbon, Boston, 29; NFeliz, Texas, 29; Gregg, Toronto, 26; MRivera, New York, 24; Fuentes, Los Angeles, 23; Aardsma, Seattle, 23; Jenks, Chicago, 23.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—CGonzalez, Colorado, .324; Votto, Cincinnati, .320; Polanco, Philadelphia, .317; Prado, Atlanta, .315; Pujols, St. Louis, .315; Holliday, St. Louis, .309; Byrd, Chicago, .308. RUNS—BPhillips, Cincinnati, 82; Votto, Cincinnati, 82; Uggla, Florida, 80; Weeks, Milwaukee, 80; Pujols, St. Louis, 78; CGonzalez, Colorado, 77; AHuff, San Francisco, 76. RBI—Pujols, St. Louis, 85; Howard, Philadelphia, 81; Votto, Cincinnati, 79; ADunn, Washington, 78; CGonzalez, Colorado, 78; DWright, New York, 77; Hart, Milwaukee, 76. HITS—CGonzalez, Colorado, 139; Prado, Atlanta, 138; Pujols, St. Louis, 136; BPhillips, Cincinnati, 134; Byrd, Chicago, 132; Holliday, St. Louis, 132; Braun, Milwaukee, 129; Weeks, Milwaukee, 129. DOUBLES—ATorres, San Francisco, 38; Werth, Philadelphia, 38; Holliday, St. Louis, 32; Loney, Los Angeles, 31; Byrd, Chicago, 30; BPhillips, Cincinnati, 29; Prado, Atlanta, 29; DWright, New York, 29. TRIPLES—SDrew, Arizona, 8; Fowler, Colorado, 8; Victorino, Philadelphia, 8; AEscobar, Milwaukee, 7; Pagan, New York, 7; Bay, New York, 6; CGonzalez, Colorado, 6; Morgan, Washington, 6; JosReyes, New York, 6. HOME RUNS—ADunn, Washington, 31; Pujols, St. Louis, 29; Votto, Cincinnati, 28; Reynolds, Arizona, 26; Uggla, Florida, 26; Fielder, Milwaukee, 25; CGonzalez, Colorado, 25. STOLEN BASES—Bourn, Houston, 39; Morgan, Washington, 29; Pagan, New York, 28; CYoung, Arizona, 24; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 23; JosReyes, New York, 23; ATorres, San Francisco, 23. PITCHING—Jimenez, Colorado, 17-3; Wainwright, St. Louis, 17-6; THudson, Atlanta, 14-5; Halladay, Philadelphia, 14-8; CCarpenter, St. Louis, 13-4; Nolasco, Florida, 13-8; Latos, San Diego, 12-5; Arroyo, Cincinnati, 12-7. STRIKEOUTS—Halladay, Philadelphia, 168; Lincecum, San Francisco, 163; Wainwright, St. Louis, 158; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 157; Hamels, Philadelphia, 157; JoJohnson, Florida, 156; Gallardo, Milwaukee, 154. SAVES—HBell, San Diego, 35; BrWilson, San Francisco, 33; FCordero, Cincinnati, 30; Wagner, Atlanta, 29; Nunez, Florida, 26; Capps, Washington, 26; FRodriguez, New York, 25.

Carolina League W 26 25 23 20

W x-W-Salem (White Sox)24 Myrtle Beach (Braves) 24 Salem (Red Sox) 23 Kinston (Indians) 20

L 19 22 25 25

Pct. .578 .532 .479 .444

GB — 2 41⁄2 6

L 23 24 22 25

Pct. .511 .500 .500 .435

GB — 1 ⁄2 — 3

x-clinched first half

Saturday’s Games Winston-Salem 5, Frederick 1 Kinston at Lynchburg, late Salem at Wilmington, late Myrtle Beach at Potomac, late

Today’s Games Myrtle Beach at Potomac, 1:05 p.m. Salem at Wilmington, 1:35 p.m. Winston-Salem at Frederick, 2 p.m. Kinston at Lynchburg, 6:05 p.m.

Monday’s Games Wilmington at Frederick, 7 p.m. Potomac at Kinston, 7 p.m. Salem at Winston-Salem, 7 p.m. Myrtle Beach at Lynchburg, 7:05 p.m.

GOLF

PGA Championship

Price Cutter Charity Championship Saturday At Highland Springs Country Club Springfield, Mo. Purse: $635,000 Yardage: 7,115; Par: 72 Third Round Hunter Haas 65-66-66 — 197 Jonas Blixt 67-65-67 — 199 Kyle Thompson 63-67-69 — 199 Brandt Jobe 63-71-66 — 200 Todd Fischer 66-70-66 — 202 Chad Ginn 67-68-67 — 202 Jason Schultz 66-66-70 — 202 Brendan Steele 69-68-66 — 203 Bradley Iles 67-68-68 — 203 Jamie Lovemark 66-67-70 — 203 Scott Gutschewski 66-67-70 — 203 Chris Kamin 67-69-68 — 204 Travis Bertoni 65-70-69 — 204 Scott Brown 69-66-69 — 204 Brian Smock 66-67-71 — 204 Jim Herman 70-69-66 — 205 Dicky Pride 69-68-68 — 205 Luke List 72-65-68 — 205 David Hearn 66-70-69 — 205 Joe Affrunti 67-69-69 — 205 Daniel Summerhays 66-69-70 — 205 Justin Hicks 64-68-73 — 205 Nate Smith 73-66-67 — 206 Trent Whitekiller 70-69-67 — 206 Tag Ridings 66-73-67 — 206 Roberto Castro 69-68-69 — 206 Glen Day 67-69-70 — 206 J.J. Killeen 67-69-70 — 206 Gary Woodland 68-67-71 — 206 Todd Demsey 68-67-71 — 206 Sal Spallone 67-68-71 — 206 Ty Harris 71-64-71 — 206 Joel Edwards 65-70-71 — 206 Chris Nallen 64-70-72 — 206 Scott Stallings 67-72-68 — 207 James Hahn 68-70-69 — 207 Fernando Mechereffe 70-67-70 — 207 Barrett Jarosch 65-71-71 — 207 Bubba Dickerson 66-70-71 — 207 Tommy Biershenk 66-65-76 — 207 Scott Gardiner 65-74-69 — 208 Scott Sterling 68-69-71 — 208 Jhonattan Vegas 67-70-71 — 208 Andrew Johnson 69-67-72 — 208 Dustin White 66-70-72 — 208 Nick Flanagan 70-66-72 — 208 Colt Knost 67-68-73 — 208 Casey Wittenberg 70-69-70 — 209 Keegan Bradley 67-72-70 — 209 Ben Bates 67-72-70 — 209 Nick Rousey 69-70-70 — 209 Alan Morin 71-68-70 — 209 Jeff Gallagher 70-69-70 — 209 Camilo Benedetti 70-68-71 — 209 Garrett Osborn 68-68-73 — 209 Willie Wood 65-71-73 — 209 Steve Holmes 68-66-75 — 209 Doug LaBelle II 71-68-71 — 210 Marco Dawson 69-70-71 — 210 Billy Horschel 70-68-72 — 210 Oskar Bergman 68-69-73 — 210 Brett Lederer 67-72-72 — 211 Diego Vanegas 69-69-73 — 211 Steven Bowditch 69-70-73 — 212 John Kimbell 69-68-75 — 212 Bobby Gates 69-69-76 — 214 Matthew Borchert 67-71-76 — 214

Saturday At Whistling Straits, Straits Course Sheboygan, Wis. Purse: $7.5 million

Two-Man Best Ball Saturday’s Scores Championship Flight Chris Ledbetter-Darin Bell John McKinnon-Ermon Rush Scotty Odell-Marc Cox Kevan Brown-Brad Phillips Darrell Parker-Everett Dehart Danny Southern-Harold Rush Bryan Colquitt-Stephen Mabry

65 65 66 66 67 67 68

First Flight Tom Smith-John Parker Don Goins-Doug Smith Roger Smith Sr-Jim Shaw Craig Baldwin-Matt Russell Kevin Wade-Courtney Wade Steve Jacobs-Dwayne Moore

71 71 71 72 73 73

Second Flight Phillip Gibson-Carlton Branson Justin Ellis-Josh Showfety Doug Meurs-Frank Price Jason Morton-Steve Morton Wayne Norman-Buddy Stutts Chris Engle-Ron Causey

Gibson-Carlton Branson 9:36—Justin Ellis-Josh Showfety—Steve Jacobs-Dwayne Moore 9:44—Kevin Wade-Courtney Wade— Craig Baldwin-Matt Russell

U.S. Women’s Amateur Saturday at Charlotte Country Club Yardage: 6,559; Par: 72 Match Play Semifinals Danielle Kang, Thousand Oaks, Calif. (144) def. Jennifer Kirby, Canada (146), 1 up Jessica Korda, Bradenton, Fla. (144) def. Stephanie Sherlock, Canada (146), 4 and 3 Today’s 36-hole championship Tee Times 8:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. — Danielle Kang, Thousand Oaks, Calif. (144) vs. Jessica Korda, Bradenton, Fla. (144)

Futures Tour

Greater Richmond Classic Saturday At Richmond Country Club Richmond, Va. Purse: $100,000 Yardage: 6,278; Par 72 Second Round Leaders Jenny Shin 71-67—138 Danah Ford Bordner 69-69—138 Amelia Lewis 68-70—138 Jennifer Song 68-70—138 Stephanie Na 68-70—138 Melissa Eaton-Jackson 67-71—138 Reilley Rankin 66-72—138 Dori Carter 70-69—139 Sarah Brown 69-70—139 Jenny Gleason 72-68—140 Angela Oh 72-68—140 Whitney Myers 69-71—140 Laura Crawford 69-71—140 Cindy LaCrosse 72-69—141 Ashley Prange 70-71—141 Dewi Claire Schreefel 69-72—141 Eileen Vargas 72-70—142 Wannasiri Sirisampant 70-72—142 Mo Martin 70-72—142 Kristin Ingram 70-72—142 Kendall Dye 73-69—142 Kylene Pulley 73-69—142

TRANSACTIONS

BASEBALL American League

CLEVELAND INDIANS—Activated RHP Mitch Talbot from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Jess Todd to Columbus (IL). TEXAS RANGERS—Placed INF Cristian Guzman on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Pedro Strop from OKlahoma City (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Signed LHP Ricky Romero to a five-year contract extension through the 2015 season.

National League COLORADO ROCKIES—Placed LHP Jeff Francis on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF-OF Eric Young Jr. from Colorado Springs (PCL).

Southern League

Nationwide Tour

The Blair Park Shootout

All Times EDT Northern Division

Potomac (Nationals) Wilmington (Royals) x-Frederick (Orioles) Lynchburg (Reds) Southern Division

Nick Watney 69-68-66 — 203 Dustin Johnson 71-68-67 — 206 Rory McIlroy 71-68-67 — 206 Wenchong Liang 72-71-64 — 207 Jason Day 69-72-66 — 207 Martin Kaymer 72-68-67 — 207 Steve Elkington 71-70-67 — 208 Zach Johnson 69-70-69 — 208 Jason Dufner 73-66-69 — 208 Jim Furyk 70-68-70 — 208 Bryce Molder 72-67-70 — 209 Bubba Watson 68-71-70 — 209 Matt Kuchar 67-69-73 — 209 Simon Dyson 71-71-68 — 210 Simon Khan 69-70-71 — 210 Ernie Els 68-74-69 — 211 Seung Yul Noh 68-71-72 — 211 Stewart Cink 77-68-66 — 211 Camilo Villegas 71-71-70 — 212 D.A. Points 70-72-70 — 212 Brian Davis 71-72-69 — 212 David Horsey 72-71-69 — 212 Carl Pettersson 71-70-71 — 212 Francesco Molinari 68-73-71 — 212 Stephen Gallacher 71-69-72 — 212 Bo Van Pelt 73-67-72 — 212 Steve Stricker 72-72-68 — 212 David Toms 74-71-67 — 212 Vijay Singh 73-66-73 — 212 Brandt Snedeker 75-70-67 — 212 Peter Hanson 71-71-71 — 213 Robert Karlsson 71-71-71 — 213 Paul Casey 72-71-70 — 213 Kyung-tae Kim 70-72-71 — 213 Brian Gay 72-70-71 — 213 Edoardo Molinari 71-72-70 — 213 Tim Clark 72-71-70 — 213 Tiger Woods 71-70-72 — 213 Heath Slocum 73-72-68 — 213 Hunter Mahan 74-71-68 — 213 K.J. Choi 74-69-71 — 214 Charl Schwartzel 73-69-72 — 214 Ben Crane 73-68-73 — 214 Rickie Fowler 73-71-70 — 214 Brendon de Jonge 74-66-74 — 214 Troy Matteson 72-72-70 — 214 Ryan Palmer 71-68-75 — 214 Phil Mickelson 73-69-73 — 215 Charles Howell III 69-74-72 — 215 Justin Leonard 73-69-73 — 215 Gregory Bourdy 70-70-75 — 215 J.B. Holmes 72-66-77 — 215 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano70-73-73— 216 Martin Laird 70-74-72 — 216 Marc Leishman 71-73-72 — 216 Darren Clarke 74-70-72 — 216 Adam Scott 72-73-71 — 216 Kevin Na 74-71-71 — 216 Ross McGowan 73-72-71 — 216 Rhys Davies 71-71-75 — 217 Tom Lehman 74-70-73 — 217 Davis Love III 73-72-72 — 217 Ryan Moore 69-76-72 — 217 Shaun Micheel 73-69-76 — 218 Rob Labritz 73-71-74 — 218 Chad Campbell 70-70-78 — 218 Retief Goosen 76-68-74 — 218 Stuart Appleby 72-73-73 — 218 D.J. Trahan 72-73-74 — 219 Fredrik Andersson Hed 74-71-74 — 219 Jeff Overton 74-71-74 — 219 Ian Poulter 72-72-77 — 221

74 74 77 80 80 81

Today’s Tee Times No. 1 tee 9:12—Roger Smith Sr-Jim Shaw—Doug Smith Don Goins 9:20—Tom E. Smith-John Parker—Bryan Colquitt-Stephen Mabry 9:28—Danny Southern-Harold Rush— Darrell Parker-Everett Dehart 9:36—Scotty Odell-Marc Cox—Kevan Brown-Brad Phillips 9:44—Chris Ledbetter-Darin Bell—John McKinnon-Ermon Rush

No. 10 tee 9:12—Chris Engle-Ron Causey 9:20—Wayne Norman-Buddy Stutts—Jason Morton-Steve Morton 9:28—Doug Meurs-Frank Price—Phillip

CAROLINA MUDCATS—Recalled RHP Justin Freeman from Lynchburg (Carolina). Sent RHP Nick Christiani to Lynchburg.

American Association EL PASO DIABLOS—Released RHP James LoPresti. SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS—Traded INF Ernie Banks to Grand Prairie to complete an earlier trade.

Can-Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS—Signed INF Josh Petersen. SUSSEX SKYHAWKS—Signed RHP Trevor Marcotte. Released RHP Michael Streaman and C Jonathan Gossard.

United League LAREDO BRONCOS—Signed coach and DH Jose Canseco.

bench

FOOTBALL National Football League BALTIMORE RAVENS—Released LS Matt Katula. Signed DB Brad Jones. CAROLINA PANTHERS—Signed LB Nic Harris. Waived-injured C Steve Justice. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Released RB Lynell Hamilton. Re-signed LB Harry Coleman. NEW YORK JETS—Signed G Chet Teofilo. Waived G Marlon Davis.

SOCCER Major League Soccer SKY BLUE FC—Signed MF Kelly Parker and G Meghann Burke.

MOTORSPORTS

---

NASCAR Sprint Cup

Carfax 400 After Friday qualifying; race Sunday At Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Mich. Lap length: 2.0 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (9) Kasey Kahne, Ford, 187.183. 2. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevy, 187.086. 3. (33) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 186.577. 4. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 186.572. 5. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 186.461. 6. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 186.35. 7. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 186.268. 8. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 186.176. 9. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 186.167. 10. (98) Paul Menard, Ford, 185.912. 11. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 185.73. 12. (5) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 185.715. 13. (2) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 185.596. 14. (00) David Reutimann, Toyota, 185.596. 15. (09) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 185.467. 16. (43) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 185.419. 17. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 185.333. 18. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 185.29. 19. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 185.276. 20. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 185.071. 21. (13) Max Papis, Toyota, 184.952. 22. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 184.876. 23. (19) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 184.867. 24. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 184.776. 25. (26) Patrick Carpentier, Ford, 184.729. 26. (12) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 184.634. 27. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 184.615. 28. (77) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 184.582. 29. (6) David Ragan, Ford, 184.535. 30. (21) Bill Elliott, Ford, 184.431. 31. (82) Scott Speed, Toyota, 184.417. 32. (38) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 184.341. 33. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 183.885. 34. (83) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 183.87. 35. (07) Robby Gordon, Toyota, 183.744. 36. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 183.439. 37. (47) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 183.388. 38. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 183.337. 39. (34) Tony Raines, Ford, 182.764. 40. (71) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 41. (7) P.J. Jones, Toyota, Owner Points. 42. (37) David Gilliland, Ford, Owner Points. 43. (55) Michael McDowell, Toyota, 183.257. Failed to Qualify 44. (32) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 183.136. 45. (46) J.J. Yeley, Dodge, 183.038. 46. (66) Scott Riggs, Toyota, 180.959. 47. (36) Casey Mears, Chevy, 180.059.

NASCAR Nationwide Carfax 250 Saturday At Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Mich. Lap length: 2 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 125 laps,

150 rating, 195 points, $38,545. 2. (14) Carl Edwards, Ford, 125, 120.5, 175, $37,600. 3. (10) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 125, 108.9, 165, $25,875. 4. (7) Justin Allgaier, Dodge, 125, 104.1, 165, $27,193. 5. (11) Paul Menard, Ford, 125, 117.6, 160, $18,475. 6. (9) Joey Logano, Toyota, 125, 101.6, 150, $19,100. 7. (23) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 125, 88.1, 151, $17,110. 8. (13) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 125, 96.5, 142, $24,113. 9. (3) Colin Braun, Ford, 125, 92.9, 143, $24,418. 10. (15) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 125, 97.3, 134, $17,775. 11. (8) Trevor Bayne, Toyota, 125, 107, 130, $26,168. 12. (2) Ryan Truex, Toyota, 125, 99, 127, $17,300. 13. (6) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 125, 86.6, 124, $22,468. 14. (19) Tayler Malsam, Toyota, 125, 83.7, 121, $21,943. 15. (12) Brian Scott, Toyota, 125, 80.2, 118, $22,668. 16. (17) Michael Annett, Toyota, 125, 83.4, 115, $21,693. 17. (21) John Wes Townley, Ford, 125, 67.6, 112, $21,843. 18. (22) Steve Wallace, Toyota, 124, 72.9, 109, $21,593. 19. (34) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, 124, 67.7, 106, $21,543. 20. (26) Mike Wallace, Chevrolet, 124, 62.6, 103, $22,643. 21. (18) Joe Nemechek, Chevrolet, 123, 69.5, 100, $21,418. 22. (30) Shelby Howard, Chevrolet, 123, 66.4, 97, $21,368. 23. (25) Jason Keller, Chevrolet, 123, 62.2, 94, $21,718. 24. (37) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, 123, 59.6, 91, $21,268. 25. (29) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 123, 49.9, 88, $21,668. 26. (28) Mark Green, Chevrolet, 123, 56, 85, $21,143. 27. (33) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 121, 46.4, 82, $21,093. 28. (38) Michael McDowell, Dodge, 121, 45.9, 79, $21,443. 29. (42) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet, 121, 35.8, 76, $20,993. 30. (39) Eric McClure, Ford, 121, 38, 73, $21,243. 31. (31) Carl Long, Chevrolet, 119, 40.2, 70, $14,420. 32. (16) Brendan Gaughan, Toyota, power steering, 116, 68.6, 67, $20,828. 33. (41) Robert Richardson Jr., Chevrolet, accident, 112, 42.2, 64, $20,793. 34. (4) Jason Leffler, Toyota, fuel pump, 71, 95.2, 66, $23,723. 35. (35) Chase Austin, Ford, engine, 59, 48.5, 58, $14,290. 36. (5) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, accident, 43, 45.7, 55, $14,495. 37. (40) Morgan Shepherd, Chevrolet, vibration, 20, 36.1, 52, $14,225. 38. (20) Brian Keselowski, Dodge, vibration, 10, 43.7, 49, $14,185. 39. (32) Derrike Cope, Dodge, ignition, 10, 34.6, 46, $14,140. 40. (36) Josh Wise, Ford, transmission, 4, 34.5, 43, $14,110. 41. (43) Danny Efland, Chevrolet, engine, 3, 30.4, 40, $14,080. 42. (27) Kevin Lepage, Toyota, electrical, 2, 30.9, 37, $14,030. 43. (24) Willie Allen, Chevrolet, transmission, 2, 29.3, 34, $13,984. Race Statistics Average Speed of Winner: 150.678 mph. Time: 1 hour, 39 minutes, 33 seconds. Margin of Victory: 3.179 seconds. Caution Flags: 2 for 9 laps. Lead Changes: 11 among 7 drivers. Lap Leaders: Bra.Keselowski 1-36; J.Leffler 37; P.Menard 38; C.Braun 39; E.Sadler 40; Bra.Keselowski 41-64; P.Menard 65-75; C.Edwards 76-84; Bra.Keselowski 85104; J.Allgaier 105-106; C.Edwards 107-116; Bra.Keselowski 117-125. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): Bra.Keselowski, 4 times for 89 laps; C.Edwards, 2 times for 19 laps; P.Menard, 2 times for 12 laps; J.Allgaier, 1 time for 2 laps; E.Sadler, 1 time for 1 lap; C.Braun, 1 time for 1 lap; J.Leffler, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 10 in Points: 1. Bra.Keselowski, 3,704; 2. C.Edwards, 3,357; 3. K.Busch, 3,201; 4. J.Allgaier, 3,059; 5. K.Harvick, 2,908; 6. P.Menard, 2,892; 7. S.Wallace, 2,735; 8. T.Bayne, 2,571; 9. B.Gaughan, 2,487; 10. J.Leffler, 2,450. NASCAR Driver Rating Formula A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.

NHRA Lucas Oil pairings Saturday At Brainerd Interantional Raceway Brainerd, Minn. First-round pairings Top Fuel 1. Doug Kalitta, 3.842 seconds, 305.49 mph vs. 16. Luigi Novelli, 5.956, 115.24; 2. Brandon Bernstein, 3.846, 309.27 vs. 15. Scott Palmer, 5.493, 126.73; 3. Cory McClenathan, 3.848, 315.05 vs. 14. Chris Karamesines, 4.463, 185.41; 4. Larry Dixon, 3.861, 310.48 vs. 13. Steve Torrence, 4.358, 219.65; 5. Shawn Langdon, 3.881, 305.70 vs. 12. Steven Chrisman, 4.157, 276.41; 6. Tony Schumacher, 3.888, 300.73 vs. 11. Terry McMillen, 3.994, 298.47; 7. David Grubnic, 3.916, 302.69 vs. 10. Terry Haddock, 3.954, 298.54; 8. Antron Brown, 3.923, 302.62 vs. 9. Morgan Lucas, 3.927, 305.01. Funny Car 1. Ashley Force Hood, Ford Mustang, 4.102, 302.55 vs. 16. Paul Lee, Chevy Impala SS, 5.154, 281.30; 2. Matt Hagan, Dodge Charger, 4.122, 290.69 vs. 15. Dale Creasy Jr., Impala SS, 4.232, 282.95; 3. Robert Hight, Mustang, 4.131, 302.35 vs. 14. Tony Pedregon, Impala SS, 4.208, 290.38; 4. Bob Tasca III, Mustang, 4.138, 302.35 vs. 13. John Force, Mustang, 4.192, 275.17; 5. Cruz Pedregon, Toyota Solara, 4.139, 285.89 vs. 12. Bob Bode, Impala SS, 4.184, 297.35; 6. Jack Beckman, Charger, 4.141, 295.34 vs. 11. Del Worsham, Toyota Camry, 4.171, 299.60; 7. Ron Capps, Charger, 4.142, 293.98 vs. 10. Jim Head, Solara, 4.169, 293.47; 8. Jeff Arend, Solara, 4.165, 289.63 vs. 9. Tim Wilkerson, Mustang, 4.167, 297.68. Pro Stock 1. Mike Edwards, Pontiac GXP, 6.644, 207.53 vs. 16. Rodger Brogdon, GXP, 6.692, 205.51; 2. Johnny Gray, GXP, 6.652, 206.61 vs. 15. Warren Johnson, GXP, 6.690, 205.82; 3. Allen Johnson, Dodge Avenger, 6.654, 208.07 vs. 14. Greg Stanfield, GXP, 6.688, 206.16; 4. Jason Line, GXP, 6.657, 206.61 vs. 13. Kurt Johnson, GXP, 6.686, 206.39; 5. Ron Krisher, Chevy Cobalt, 6.660, 207.56 vs. 12. Jeg Coughlin, Cobalt, 6.684, 205.57; 6. Shane Gray, GXP, 6.663, 206.99 vs. 11. Rickie Jones, GXP, 6.684, 205.85; 7. Larry Morgan, Ford Mustang, 6.673, 205.69 vs. 10. V. Gaines, Avenger, 6.682, 205.41; 8. Ronnie Humphrey, GXP, 6.675, 204.94 vs. 9. Greg Anderson, GXP, 6.680, 205.22. Did Not Qualify: 17. Bob Yonke, 6.702, 205.35; 18. Mark Martino, 6.717, 205.22; 19. Steve Spiess, 6.726, 526.93; 20. Mark Hogan, 6.749, 202.70; 21. Vincent Nobile, 6.761, 204.11; 22. Dave River, 6.938, 199.35. Pro Stock Motorcycle 1. Andrew Hines, Harley-Davidson, 6.915, 193.40 vs. 16. Buddy Robinson, Suzuki, 7.181, 184.52; 2. Matt Smith, Buell, 6.961, 190.73 vs. 15. Joe DeSantis, Suzuki, 7.179, 186.59; 3. LE Tonglet, Suzuki, 6.981, 192.19 vs. 14. Mike Berry, Buell, 7.136, 184.07; 4. Eddie Krawiec, Harley-Davidson, 6.988, 190.97 vs. 13. Steve Johnson, Suzuki, 7.093, 187.34; 5. Shawn Gann, Buell, 6.988, 189.92 vs. 12. Angie Smith, Buell, 7.072, 187.23; 6. David Hope, Buell, 6.990, 188.15 vs. 11. Michael Phillips, Suzuki, 7.043, 191.97; 7. Craig Treble, Suzuki, 6.998, 189.39 vs. 10. Jim Underdahl, Suzuki, 7.041, 190.11; 8. Hector Arana, Buell, 7.005, 189.76 vs. 9. Karen Stof-

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WNBA

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Indiana 20 10 .667 New York 18 11 .621 Washington 18 12 .600 Atlanta 18 13 .581 Connecticut 15 15 .500 Chicago 13 17 .433 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct z-Seattle 25 5 .833 Phoenix 14 16 .467 San Antonio 12 18 .400 Los Angeles 11 19 .367 Minnesota 11 19 .367 Tulsa 5 25 .167 z-clinched conference Friday’s Games Washington 61, Minnesota 58 New York 90, Atlanta 83 Indiana 110, Phoenix 90 Connecticut 88, Seattle 68 San Antonio 94, Tulsa 74 Saturday’s Games Phoenix at New York, late Atlanta at Chicago, late Los Angeles at Tulsa, late Today’s Games Seattle at Washington, 4 p.m. Indiana at Connecticut, 5 p.m. San Antonio at Minnesota, 7 p.m.

GB — 11⁄2 2 21⁄2 5 7 GB — 11 13 14 14 20

FOOTBALL

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NFL preseason

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 1 0 0 1.00027 Miami 0 0 0 .000 0 N.Y. Jets 0 0 0 .000 0 Buffalo 0 1 0 .000 17 South W L T Pct PF Houston 0 0 0 .000 0 Indianapolis 0 0 0 .000 0 Tennessee 0 0 0 .000 0 Jacksonville 0 1 0 .000 27 North W L T Pct PF Baltimore 1 0 0 1.00017 Cleveland 0 0 0 .000 0 Pittsburgh 0 0 0 .000 0 Cincinnati 0 1 0 .000 7 West W L T Pct PF Oakland 1 0 0 1.00017 Denver 0 0 0 .000 0 San Diego 0 0 0 .000 0 Kansas City 0 1 0 .000 10 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Philadelphia 1 0 0 1.00028 Washington 1 0 0 1.00042 Dallas 1 1 0 .500 25 N.Y. Giants 0 0 0 .000 0 South W L T Pct PF Atlanta 1 0 0 1.00020 Tampa Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 Carolina 0 1 0 .000 12 New Orleans 0 1 0 .000 24 North W L T Pct PF Chicago 0 0 0 .000 0 Detroit 0 0 0 .000 0 Green Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 0 West W L T Pct PF Arizona 0 0 0 .000 0 San Francisco 0 0 0 .000 0 Seattle 0 0 0 .000 0 St. Louis 0 0 0 .000 0 Thursday’s Games New England 27, New Orleans 24 Baltimore 17, Carolina 12 Oakland 17, Dallas 9 Friday’s Games Washington 42, Buffalo 17 Philadelphia 28, Jacksonville 27 Atlanta 20, Kansas City 10 Saturday’s Games Tampa Bay at Miami, late Detroit at Pittsburgh, late Cleveland at Green Bay, late Minnesota at St. Louis, late Houston at Arizona, late Chicago at San Diego, late Tennessee at Seattle, late Today’s Games San Francisco at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Denver at Cincinnati, 7 p.m. Monday’s Game N.Y. Giants at N.Y. Jets, 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 19 Indianapolis at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m. New England at Atlanta, 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 20 Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 21 Baltimore at Washington, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Giants, 7 p.m. Miami at Jacksonville, 7:30 p.m. St. Louis at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m. Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Carolina, 8 p.m. Houston at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Oakland at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Dallas at San Diego, 9 p.m. Detroit at Denver, 9 p.m. Green Bay at Seattle, 10 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 22 Minnesota at San Francisco, 8 p.m. Monday, Aug. 23 Arizona at Tennessee, 8 p.m.

PA 24 0 0 42 PA 0 0 0 28 PA 12 0 0 16 PA 9 0 0 20 PA 27 17 24 0 PA 10 0 17 27 PA 0 0 0 0 PA 0 0 0 0

Friday’s late game Redskins 42, Bills 17 Buffalo Washington

3 0 7 7 — 17 7 14 14 7 — 42 First Quarter Buf—FG Lindell 38, 7:29. Was—Armstrong 4 pass from McNabb (Gano kick), 1:40. Second Quarter Was—K.Williams 2 run (Gano kick), 14:07. Was—Davis 9 pass from Grossman (Gano kick), 8:17. Third Quarter Was—Banks 77 punt return (Gano kick), 13:10. Was—Thomas 44 pass from Grossman (Gano kick), 7:27. Buf—D.Nelson 5 pass from Fitzpatrick (Lindell kick), :23. Fourth Quarter Buf—J.Bell 28 run (Lindell kick), 12:51. Was—K.Williams 7 run (Gano kick), 2:09. A—69,578. Buf Was First downs 15 24 Total Net Yards 293 352 Rushes-yards 18-146 41-140 Passing 147 212 Punt Returns 3-23 7-121 Kickoff Returns 5-134 3-49 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-35 Comp-Att-Int 18-33-2 18-33-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-13 Punts 7-52.4 6-42.7 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 4-0 Penalties-Yards 7-58 7-50 Time of Possession 23:39 36:21 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Buffalo, Simpson 7-67, J.Bell 552, Spiller 4-16, F.Jackson 2-11. Washington, Torain 17-62, K.Williams 11-51, Portis 6-22, Grossman 2-5, McNabb 1-1, Moss 1-1, Beck 3-(minus 2). PASSING—Buffalo, Fitzpatrick 9-14-0-61, T.Edwards 6-12-1-58, Brown 3-7-1-28. Washington, Grossman 11-18-0-140, McNabb 5-80-58, Beck 2-7-0-27. RECEIVING—Buffalo, D.Nelson 5-47, Jones 3-26, J.Bell 2-6, St.Johnson 1-14, Lynch 1-12, McIntyre 1-10, Evans 1-8, Parrish 1-7, Stupar 1-7, Roosevelt 1-6, C.Jackson 1-4. Washington, Thomas 3-64, Cooley 3-33, Wade 230, Austin 2-18, Armstrong 2-9, Torain 1-22, R.Williams 1-21, Vickers 1-14, Davis 1-9, K.Williams 1-7, Young 1-(minus 2). MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

TRIVIA ANSWER

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A. Willie Hernandez.


ADVENTURE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

7D

Adventure in the Land of the Noonday Sun T

he end is the most important part of the story. When I write a story, I almost always plan the end before I decide the beginning or middle. Unfortunately, you just can’t plan the end of a trip. When I squatted down to silhouette my grandson Phoenix’s surging fishing rod against the pale, night sky, I knew we had a good ending provided we could land whatever sizeable fish that was putting the bow in his rod and making his reel sing. We hadn’t had a good ending to the last two of these summer getaway trips and we were due a good one. Every year since he was seven, Phoenix and I have taken a summer trip to celebrate the end of the school year, the summer, and his upcoming birthday. The last two had been washed out by rains that SPORTS dampened our enthusiasm and shut down our plans. This year was differDick ent. Jones Part of growing up is testing yourself. ■■■At 13, Phoenix is at that age when everything changes. On our early trips we played in the sand on the Outer Banks, fished, kayaked, prospected gems, and biked. None of these is really a test. Climbing into an inflatable raft and launching yourself into a maelstrom of white water is a test. Putting on a harness, attaching yourself to a steel cable, and jumping off a platform a couple dozen feet up in a tree is a real test. We chose Nantahala as our rite of passage testing ground; it’s an appropriate choice when you learn a little about the area that’s best known for its Cherokee and pioneer heritage and, in more recent years, as a playground for daredevil outdoor sports like whitewater kayaking, rock climbing and mountain biking. For an outfitter, we chose Wildwater Ltd. The second largest outfitters in the area, Wildwater has a Zipline canopy tour, jeep rides, as Phoenix well as canoeing, kayaking, rafting. Phoenix and I arrived at Turkey Creek Campground on Wednesday afternoon. We set up camp and hiked down the trail to the tail-waters of Fontana Lake. We make friends easily and Huey, the campground dog, served as our guide. Huey would stay just far ahead of us that we could keep us in sight, from time to time stopping and looking back to make sure we were still behind him. Once we were there, we wished we’d brought our swim trunks because the water was refreshing and clear. Huey entertained himself by taking a swim and chasing rocks and sticks Phoenix tossed into the water. We agreed, next time, we’ll swim in the lake. Or better yet, maybe next time we’ll plan enough time to kayak and swim the lake. On Thursday morning, the plan was to raft the eight-mile stretch of the Nantahala that draws thousands of rafters and whitewater enthusiasts from all over the country to the gorge. Our guide for the trip was Tim McGee, a clean cut young man who’s been guiding on the Nantahala for nine years. Tim is a classic outdoor enthusiast, who’s backpacked and rafted all over the United States and when he has his graduate degree next year, plans to have his own outfitting business. The water of the Nantahala is cold, normally 46 degrees in summer, and I didn’t want to take a dip. Phoenix and I listened carefully in the trip briefing and suited up. We both had a lot of kayak time and I had a lot of river time but white water rafting is a team sport. There were six of us in the raft and, after a couple of exercises to make sure we could paddle in unison, we were off. One feature of the cold water is the affect it has on the air over the river. Even on the hottest days, the cold water chills the air along the river and pockets of cold air mix with warm summer air. The temperature also creates a unique mist that hangs over the river almost all the time, giving it a primordial, mysterious air. White water rafting is considered an extreme sport, but the Nantahala’s most popular eight-mile stretch is rough enough to be exciting but not rough enough that a reasonably firm person would have trouble. The really unique thing about this stretch of river is that at no time were we more than 50 yards from the highway and access by an emergency responder. While you didn’t notice the road, it was there. The other extreme sport we sampled was zip lining. Ziplines are cables stretched from platforms and in the case of Nantahala Canopy Tours, there are 13 lines ranging from about 50 yards to well over 200 yards. You hook a trolley (a little set of wheels with a hook) to the cable, hook up the safety lines and go. Phoenix and I agreed the Zipline was the most exciting part of the trip. Not only was the travel down the line exciting, the scenery while floating through the forest is amazing. Our guides for the Zipline were Josh Hamsher from Iowa and Randall Coleman from Travelers Rest, South Carolina. The guys took care of us, instilled confidence in the nervous members or our group, and treated everyone like we were old friends. By the end of the trip, everyone knew each other’s names. We decided the Zipline was more strenuous than the rafting trip, but certainly something most folks could do. At least a part of the excitement was walking the creative bridges and platforms that link the ziplines. We always cover something educational on our trips and I think this was the most exciting educational segment of our past excursions. We watched

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Josh Hamsher from Nantahala Canopy Tours demonstrates how to ride the zipline.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

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Dustin Raxter, Trout Fishing Guide, 828 479 3503 Wildwater Rafting and Nantahala Canopy Tours, www.wildwaterrafting.com Occonolufti Indian Village and Unto These Hills, www.cherokee-nc.com Turkey Creek Campground, www.turkey-creek.com

the outdoor drama, Unto These Hills the evening after our rafting trip. While we were tired, the play was riveting to the point, I never even thought of being sleepy. Not only was it entertaining, it was educational. I learned several things about the nature of the Cherokee tribe and the difficulties they went through. After our zipline tour, we visited the Oconolufte Indian Village next to the Unto These Hills Amphitheater. The tour of a replica of a pre-Columbus Cherokee village was as entertaining as the play and our tour guide was the actor who had played Seneca, the War Chief of the Cherokee, in the play. We learned about Cherokee customs, farming and trading practices, family life, and methods of government. By the time we walked down through the woods to the river for our fishing trip on Friday afternoon, I figured I’d be too tired to fish long. Within a few minutes, both Phoenix and I had caught a trout and our guide, Dustin Raxter, promised more and bigger fish to come. I can always be tempted by the chance of a big fish and, in spite of the fact I’d forgotten my lighter and couldn’t enjoy the cigar I’d brought, I was ready to hang in there. We fished with spinning gear in a method peculiar to the Nantahala area. Dustin would tie on six or eight or his beautiful, hand tied flies spaced six to ten inches apart. The extreme end of the line was tied to a bubble float which would allow us to cast and keep the flies high in the water. To the fish, it looked like a miniature hatch was happening. The fish would attack the flies on the surface, often jumping over the fly in an attempt to eat it. As we advanced up the river, we picked trout out of holes and along cutbanks. Dustin had promised he find us a limit of fish, and we were getting close as the light faded. The Nantahala was enchanting in the fading light

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as the water flow gradually changed from a surging river to a quiet stream as it does every day. The roar of the earlier river was now replaced with the quiet tinkling of the icy water and the mist hung over the water in a cold layer of fog. By the time I heard Phoenix reel singing, it was almost pitch dark. I’d forgotten my flashlight as well as my lighter, but I didn’t need to see to know Phoenix had a substantial fish. We were fishing ultralights with six pound line but I knew Phoenix knew how to fight large fish. This fish was so strong, I considered asking Dustin if it might be something besides a trout, maybe a big carp or catfish but after several minutes of fight, Dustin got his light on the fish and we got to see it. It was indeed a trout, and, at four pounds, it was a trophy trout. I don’t know who was most excited, Dustin, Phoenix, or me. Phoenix was excited because he’d caught a big beautiful fish, Dustin was excited because the big fish and limit of trout he’d promised were now in the creel, and I was excited because this was the perfect ending to what my grandson and I agreed was our best summer trip ever. On the ride back, I asked Phoenix which was the best part of the trip. We discussed the merits of the rafting trip, the Zipline, the drama, the Indian village, and the fishing trip. My grandson often makes me proud, but my chest swelled when he said, “You know Papa, I think the best part of the trip was all the friends we made.� I think that boy’s going to do just fine. DICK JONES IS a freelance writer living in High Point. He’s an NRA Certified Instructor and an upcoming member of the board of directors of the Southeast Outdoor Press Association. He writes about hunting, fishing, dogs, and shooting for several N.C. newspapers as well as magazines. If you’d like to have him speak to your group, he can be reached at offtheporch52@yahoo.com or offtheporchmedia.com


WEATHER 8D www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

High Point Enterprise Weather Today

Monday

Mostly Cloudy

89º

Tuesday

Isolated T-storms

73º

91º

Scat'd T-storms

71º

89º

Thursday

Wednesday

Scat'd T-storms

71º

90º

Local Area Forecast Kernersville Winston-Salem 88/72 88/73 Jamestown 89/73 High Point 89/73 Archdale Thomasville 89/73 89/73 Trinity Lexington 89/73 Randleman 89/73 90/73

Isolated T-storms

89º

70º

70º

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 89/69

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

High Point 89/73

Asheville 84/67

Charlotte 90/73

Denton 90/74

Greenville 92/71 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 92/71 87/74

Almanac

Wilmington 87/70 Today

Monday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

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

93/71 84/65 88/75 89/74 94/73 77/64 93/72 85/65 91/72 93/72 84/77 84/64 94/72 94/72 93/72 91/72 94/72

Monday

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . . .95/68 ATLANTA . . . . . . . . .88/76 BOISE . . . . . . . . . . . .90/58 BOSTON . . . . . . . . . .79/66 CHARLESTON, SC . .91/75 CHARLESTON, WV . .85/72 CINCINNATI . . . . . . .92/70 CHICAGO . . . . . . . . .86/72 CLEVELAND . . . . . . .89/69 DALLAS . . . . . . . . .104/80 DETROIT . . . . . . . . . .91/68 DENVER . . . . . . . . . .78/58 GREENSBORO . . . . .89/72 GRAND RAPIDS . . . .86/62 HOUSTON . . . . . . . . .98/81 HONOLULU . . . . . . . .89/73 KANSAS CITY . . . . . .87/66 NEW ORLEANS . . . .89/82

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

Hi/Lo Wx

pc 93/65 pc t 90/76 t s 92/59 s s 80/70 sh t 92/76 mc mc 90/74 t t 89/65 pc mc 83/70 s t 84/63 s s 102/79 t t 84/64 s mc 81/60 t mc 92/71 t mc 81/58 s s 97/81 pc s 89/74 s mc 86/70 s t 89/81 t

Today

City

Today

Monday

Hi/Lo Wx

t ra s s s s sh ra s s

LAS VEGAS . . . . . .107/81 LOS ANGELES . . . . .87/63 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . .100/77 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .91/80 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .77/61 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .91/74 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .85/72 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .95/77 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . .112/89 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .85/68 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .86/71 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .80/65 SAN FRANCISCO . . .65/54 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .92/70 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .90/65 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .98/74 WASHINGTON, DC . .85/72 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .87/66

86/77 68/59 118/88 74/65 91/70 99/81 65/49 74/60 62/46 99/78

Today

City

COPENHAGEN . . . . .75/65 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .71/53 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .93/80 GUATEMALA . . . . . .75/62 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .90/79 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .87/81 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .88/65 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .67/58 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .88/67 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .90/80

t ra s sh s s pc s pc s

Monday

Hi/Lo Wx

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

Hi/Lo Wx

s 108/85 s s 89/65 s t 96/74 t t 91/80 t s 78/58 s pc 89/76 s pc 86/73 t t 94/78 t s 109/88 pc t 83/65 t pc 88/72 t s 81/69 sh s 65/54 s mc 87/70 s s 92/63 s t 92/75 mc mc 90/74 t t 87/68 mc

pc ra t t t t s mc s t

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

70/61 67/54 92/80 76/62 90/79 87/76 87/67 63/58 85/59 89/80

PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .66/57 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .87/67 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .58/46 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .87/76 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .85/76 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .69/58 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .65/48 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .93/77 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .92/81 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .64/53

ra mc t t t t s ra t pc

UV Index for 3 periods of the day.

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

First 8/16

Full 8/24

New 9/8

Last 9/1

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 655.2 652.8 0.0 Badin Lake 541.1 540.1 +0.1 Flood Stage Current Level Change Yadkin College 18.0 1.29 -0.73 Elkin 16.0 1.34 -0.11 Wilkesboro 14.0 2.09 -0.01 High Point 10.0 0.72 -0.24 Ramseur 20.0 2.25 -0.38

ra s s t t s s s t mc

63/57 88/66 63/50 85/71 86/76 71/57 64/47 94/77 91/81 64/53

ra s s t t s s s t ra

Predominant Types: Weeds

75

25 0

15

10

0 Trees

Grasses

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

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Good Moderate Unhealthy (sensitive) Unhealthy Very Unhealthy Hazardous

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Hi/Lo Wx

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Pollen Forecast

Hi/Lo Wx

ACAPULCO . . . . . . . .89/77 AMSTERDAM . . . . . .67/60 BAGHDAD . . . . . . . .118/92 BARCELONA . . . . . .77/67 BEIJING . . . . . . . . . .90/70 BEIRUT . . . . . . . . . . . .100/82 BOGOTA . . . . . . . . . .64/50 BERLIN . . . . . . . . . . .77/60 BUENOS AIRES . . . .58/43 CAIRO . . . . . . . . . . .100/77

Statistics through 6 p.m. yesterday at Greensboro

Monday

Hi/Lo Wx

Around The World City

24 hours through 6 p.m. . . . . . .Trace Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2.64" Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . .1.68" Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29.71" Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . .27.52" Record Precipitation . . . . . . . . . .3.52"

Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . .6:38 Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . .8:10 Moonrise . . . . . . . . . .1:05 Moonset . . . . . . . . . .11:26

Across The Nation

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

High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75 Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .86 Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . .67 Last Year’s High . . . . . . . .88 Last Year’s Low . . . . . . . . .68 Record High . . . . .99 in 1995 Record Low . . . . . .54 in 1983

Pollen Rating Scale

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .91/73 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .83/67 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .87/70 EMERALD ISLE . . . .87/71 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .93/71 GRANDFATHER MTN . .76/68 GREENVILLE . . . . . .92/71 HENDERSONVILLE .83/68 JACKSONVILLE . . . .90/68 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .92/70 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .84/75 MOUNT MITCHELL . .82/66 ROANOKE RAPIDS .92/70 SOUTHERN PINES . .92/72 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .91/72 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .90/72 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .91/71

Precipitation (Yesterday)

Sun and Moon

Around Our State City

Temperatures (Yesterday)

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IN MEMORY: Sept. 11 museum under way. 4E

E

Sunday August 15, 2010

IN JEOPARDY: Parents insist couple produce grandkids. 2E INDEPENDENCE: Teens should get freedom before college. 3E

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HEART SEMINAR

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DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Shoppers were lined up at Omega Sports just a couple of weekends before the start of school.

Back to school ...with a plan Professionals say organization will help children get off to a good start BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

H

IGH POINT – There’s probably a million things to remember on the first morning of the school year. Pulling the kids out of bed. Packing lunches. Finding book bags. Selecting outfits. And if you wait until the night before to get back into that daily routine, professional organizers say you’re probably starting off the year on the wrong foot. Instead, they offer these tips that can ensure success for the year and, they hope, teach children some responsibility along the way. Getting behind at the beginning of the year almost guarantees poor academic performance and strained relationships between parents and children, said Keri Scott, organizer, design consultant and owner of Once Upon A Clutter in High Point. Scott recommends creating an organizational chart that identifies daily responsibilities so kids won’t have to wonder what they’re supposed to be doing each morning. And include

them in the making of the chart, she said. “An organizational chart helps create accountability and sets a pace for the day,” Scott said. “You have to set rules early on. This can also be a fun activity to do with your child and may identify areas of strength and weakness.” Other items can support the creation of a daily routine, according to Alli McVann, organizer and owner of Allicadabra. For example, homework should be done in one place so that stray papers aren’t scattered through the house, she said. She also suggests organizing homework and other papers by using a shoe organizer that hangs over the door. Label the columns by days of the week, and place all of the papers needed for Monday in its designated pocket, she said. “That way no one is ever crying that they don’t know where their social studies paper is, because it’s always in the same spot,” she said. “I always did my homework in the same place and never wondered where it was. I appreciate that now.”

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Cynthia Green, third-grade teacher at Johnson Street Global Studies, teaches her class. Johnson Street started school on Aug 4. Stations for book bags, coats and lunch boxes also should be established, Scott said. Once the routine is established, start the new schedule at least a week in advance. Trying it out several times before the first morning of school will allow kids to get used to the

routine, but it also will allow parents to correct any problems with the routine, Scott said. “Don’t be surprised if the first couple of practice runs are a race against the clock,” she said. “But stay diligent. After a

BACK TO SCHOOL, 3E

The American Heart Association defines heart failure as a condition in which the heart is not pumping as well as it should. “Your body depends on the heart’s pumping action to deliver oxygen- and nutrient-rich blood to the body’s cells,” explains the American Heart Association. “When the cells are nourished properly, the body can function normally.” Without a fully functioning heart, which provides your body’s cells with enough blood, everyday activities such as walking and carrying groceries can become a struggle. On Sept. 27, cardiologist Malkiat Dhatt of Carolina Cardiology Associates will be discussing the risk factors, diagnosis, prevention and treatment of congestive heart failure during his “Heart Failure Epidemic” seminar at Randolph Hospital. Participants will develop a better understanding of how heart failure contributes to heart disease, which is the leading cause of death in the United States according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Learn more about what you can do to prevent and treat cardiovascular diseases at Dhatt’s “Heart Failure Epidemic” seminar. The seminar will be held at Randolph Hospital. To register or learn more, call (336) 633-7788 or visit www.randolph hospital.org and click on the “Events” tab.

INDEX

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE SPECIAL | HPE

Shoe tree can be used to keep daily homework assignments together.

David Wall at Jarrett Stationery has plenty of back-to-school supplies.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

DEAR ABBY 2E HOROSCOPE 2E DR. DONOHUE 3E TRAVEL 4E MILESTONES 5E DR. FOX 6E SOCIAL SECURITY 6E


ADVICE 2E www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Nagging over grandkids jeopardizes marriage D

ear Abby: My childhood was difficult. My mother was a bitter, unforgiving, jealous woman. My father traveled a lot for his business and just tolerated my mother when he was home. I decided never to have children to bring into this family. When I first met Dave – my husband of 10 years – I told him my feelings. He said it was fine with him – he never had a strong desire to be a father. Until recently, our marriage has been a happy one. After constant nagging by my mother about “When are you going to give me grandkids?” I lied and said that Dave had a low sperm count and we wouldn’t be having any. Now Dave is no longer invited to their home for monthly Sunday dinners. Mother is suggesting I divorce Dave and marry “someone who can give her grandchildren.” Dave says that because he is “uninvited” I shouldn’t go either. My father sides with my mother and says she’s a lonely person. He says he will change his will if I upset Mom by not visiting. Abby, this has caused a real strain

on our marriage. Please help. – Nobody’s Mama in California Dear Nobody’s Mama: I’ll try. The success of a marriage is not measured by the ability ADVICE to produce grandchildren. If you hadn’t lied Dear to your mother, she Abby wouldn’t be blaming ■■■ your husband for the fact that she doesn’t have any. Tell her the real reason why you won’t be having children, and how she influenced that decision. Her treatment of your husband and her meddling in your marriage are outrageous. Tell your father to keep his money, and if your mother is “lonely” it’s HIS job to fill her empty hours. If you allow your parents to continue to manipulate you, you will find yourself alone. Dear Abby: My best friend, “Nancy,” is wonderful, generous and kind to

HOROSCOPE

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everyone except her husband, “Ted.” She belittles, yells and embarrasses him constantly. Nancy has suggested that my boyfriend and I take a vacation with them, but I can’t stand hearing her constant criticism. Just having dinner with them is painful enough. Ted is a nice guy who tries hard to please Nancy, but he can’t seem to do anything right in her eyes. Is there anything I can do or say to Nancy without offending her or sticking my nose where it doesn’t belong? – Embarrassed in Virginia Dear Embarrassed: As I see it, you have two choices. Keep dodging your friend’s efforts to arrange a joint vacation, which will wear thin after a while. Or, have a frank chat with her. Tell her – as gently as possible – that she may not realize how uncomfortable she makes others when they must witness her constant bickering with her husband, and until they mend fences, you and your boyfriend will be unavailable for vacations.

Dear Abby: An old friend I’ll call “Bud” used to take my ex-husband and me out for dinner and drinks. About 15 years ago, he met a woman. She moved in with him and then they got married. They have been married a long time now and I hardly get to see or talk to Bud. I am now divorced. I have always had “feelings” for this man, and I want what Bud’s wife has: She has a new car, a beautiful home, he has a new truck, they both work and seem to have everything. I don’t love Bud, but I know him from way back and I want to break them up. Can you give me any advice on how to? – Losing Out in Ringfield, Mo. Dear Losing Out: You must not be a frequent reader of my column. In a case like this, I think I’ll take a pass. 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.

Statue of Liberty to get new staircase

Sunday, August 15, 2010 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Joe Jonas, 21; Ben Affleck, 38; Debra Messing, 42; Linda Ellerbee, 66 HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Stand up for your rights and refuse to back down to anyone this year. Smart, forward-thinking and adaptable, diverse action will be required. You will be in a perfect position to impress the people you are dealing with. There is no time to rest or to ponder over what you are going to do next. Your numbers are 2, 10, 18, 27, 30, 33, 48 ARIES (March 21-April 19): There is money to be made. Send out your resume or offer to help someone you would like to work with in the future. Take an honest look at your personal life. ★★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You may want to lend a helping hand but don’t set yourself up to be taken advantage of. Know where and when to draw the line. The more time spent taking care of your needs, the better you will feel. ★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You may be impressed by what others do and say but have a little confidence in yourself and your abilities. You have just as much to offer as anyone else. Love is in the stars, so express the way you feel. ★★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Listen carefully so you can detect lies from the truth. Do your homework. You don’t want to let anyone take advantage of you, especially those you are close to. Problems at home will lead to uncertainty and changes that are not easy to undo. ★★★★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Travel should be on your agenda. No matter how far or near, the experience you gain will lead to greater knowledge and insight into others as well as yourself. Someone you want to impress will take an interest in your activities. ★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take a closer look at your personal financial situation to see what you can do to make your dollars stretch further. A problem with someone from your

past is likely to surface. Be precise and you can control whatever situation you face. ★★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Not everything will be readily available or easy to see. So much is riding on the decisions you make but, if you jump too quickly, you will probably have to backtrack. It’s better to be safe rather than first. ★★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You know what you want, so ask for it. There is nothing unattainable if you put in the effort. You don’t have to spend to get ahead, but you do need to put in the time. Keep your emotions in check. ★★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A little adventure can be expected if you mingle with people who are new to you or who come from different backgrounds. Your status can change quickly by an offer or commitment you make. Don’t worry about opposition. ★★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stick close to home. Problems while traveling or dealing with groups, organizations or authority figures can be expected. Do your research before getting into a financial agreement. Please family and you will be rewarded. ★★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotional upset will stifle your chance of clearing an unfortunate situation with a friend or neighbor. Focus on your financial situation and your physical well-being. Someone you love will be able to relieve you of a burden. ★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You can form a partnership with someone interested in the same project you are. A discussion with someone you respect will change your way of thinking. Good fortune is in the stars and coming into money or a gift is likely. ★★★★★ 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.

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NEW YORK (AP) – A set of 354 narrow steps spirals all the way up to the Statue of Liberty’s crown, and it’s the only escape route for tourists in an emergency. On a recent summer day, one tourist put his hands on his knees and gasped for air as a few others funneled down the tightly twisting staircase to the statue’s pedestal. They were covered in sweat. “It was hot up there,” said Lucie Munier, visiting from France. “I think I would be scared in an emergency, but it is already pretty scary even when it is calm.”

When a smoke alarm tripped inside the statue last month, hundreds of tourists were rushed down the equivalent of about 15 flights of stairs – the same ones that firefighters would need to trudge up if the 125-yearold landmark catches fire. National Park Service officials have closed the statue in recent years for a $20 million security upgrade, and kept the crown shut since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks until last year to improve its fire safety. Next year, the statue will close again, for nine months to a year, so workers can

build a second stairwell at Lady Liberty’s pedestal, said National Parks Service spokesman Darren Boch. “Given its age and the fact that it is a historic structure and there’s not much we can do to change it, it’s just not going to be 100 percent in line” with the most up-to-date safety standards, Boch said. Most tourists, 3,000 maximum per day, ascend the first 186 steps from the ground up to the pedestal. No more than 10 people at a time are allowed all the way up to the crown, in part so they can be quickly evacuated if necessary.


ADVICE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

3E

Overwrought Kids should be independent arteries cause before leaving for college Raynaud’s Q D

ear Dr. Donohue: I have Raynaud’s phenomenon. Will you tell me something about it, and if it is curable? – R.M.

Raynaud’s (rayNODES) phenomenon is an example of one of the few times when the body overacts. Exposure to cold makes arteries constrict to save body heat, a normal and useful reaction. When people with Raynaud’s expose their hands (or feet) to cold, their hand arteries go overboard. They clamp down so tightly that no blood flows to the fingers. The fingers turn white. After a while, the fingers become blue when all oxygen has left the blood trapped in them after the constriction. As soon as the arteries relax, a rush of blood into the fingers turns them red. The entire event is quite painful. Emotional stress is another trigger for an attack. In some people, Raynaud’s indicates that there is a background illness causing it. An example is rheumatoid arthritis. This kind of Raynaud’s is secondary Raynaud’s, secondary to the background illness. You can end an attack by promptly warming your hands. Putting your hands in warm water stops the process. If warm water isn’t available, then swing your arms in a windmill motion to drive blood back into the fingers. Prevention is key. During summer months, attacks are limited to times when the hands are put into cold places, like the refrigerator or an overly air-conditioned store or movie theater. Wear mittens before entering such places or reaching into the refrigerator. Should attacks of Raynaud’s come repeatedly, medicines can stave them off. Nifedipine keeps them at bay, as does nitroglycerin, the medicine used for the chest pain of angina. It comes as an ointment that can be applied to the fingers. There is no cure. Dear Dr. Donohue: You recently wrote about endometriosis. Will you write about adenomyosis, a cousin of endometriosis? Many have not heard of it

HEALTH

– this included myself. It causes lots of problems for lots of women. – G.S.

Dr. Paul Donohue

Adenomyosis â– â– â– qualifies as a relative of endometriosis because it has two things in common with it. Both have to do with the uterus. And both have to do with uterine lining tissue. In endometriosis, the uterine lining is found in places outside the uterus, most often in and on pelvic structures. In adenomyosis, the lining of the uterus invades its muscular wall. Resulting symptoms are heavy menstrual bleeding, painful periods and possibly painful intercourse. The uterus enlarges and makes both patient and doctor believe that pregnancy has occurred. If the diagnosis of adenomyosis is in doubt, an ultrasound of the uterus is helpful. Treatments include the use of birth-control pills or suppressing periods with the hormone progestin. If symptoms are mild, then nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (Aleve, Advil) often can control them. In extreme cases, removal of the uterus is the treatment.

uestion: My sister’s daughter went off to college at 18 and immediately went a little crazy. She had always been a good kid, but when she was on her own, she drank like a lush, was sexually promiscuous, and flunked three of her classes. My daughter is only 12, but I don’t want her to make the same mistakes when she is beyond our grasp. How can I get her ready to handle freedom and independence?

Dr. Dobson: Well, you may already be 12 years late in beginning to prepare your daughter for that moment of release. The key is to transfer freedom and responsibility to her little by little from early childhood so she won’t need your supervision when she is beyond it. To move suddenly from tight control to utter liberty is an invitation to disaster. I learned this principle from my own mother, who made a calculated effort to teach me independence and responsibility. After laying a foundation during the younger years, she gave me a “final examination� when I was 17 years old. Mom and Dad went on a two-week trip and left me at home with the family car and permission to have my buddies stay at the house. Wow! Fourteen slumber parties in a row! I couldn’t believe it. We could have torn the place apart – but we didn’t. We behaved rather responsibly. I always wondered why my mother took such a risk, and after I was grown, I asked her about it. She just smiled and said, “I knew

in one year you would be leaving for college, where you would have complete freedom with no one watching over you. I wanted to expose you to FOCUS that independence while you were still ON THE under my influFAMILY ence.� I suggest that you Dr. James let your daughter Dobson test the waters of ■■■freedom occasionally as she’s growing up, rather than tossing her into the big wide ocean all at once. It takes wisdom and tact to pull that off, but it can be done. If you do the job properly, the time of release in six or seven years will be a gentle transition rather than a cataclysmic event. Question: My two kids are as different as night and day. You’d never even know they were born to the same parents. One of them is having trouble in school, and the other is something of a superstar. I’m very worried about the one boy. Do some kids start out doing poorly and then catch fire?

Dr. Dobson: Thank goodness they often do. Let me give you an encouraging illustration. Several years ago I attended a wedding ceremony in a beautiful garden setting, and I came away with some thoughts about parents who are raising a child like yours. After the minister had instructed the groom to kiss the

Almost everyone shows the beginning of cataracts at age 60. The list of things that might accelerate the development of cataracts contains smoking, excessive drinking of alcohol, sunlight, diabetes and the prolonged use of high doses of cortisone drugs. I can’t find any reference that hot, dry or hot, moist air has any bearing on them.

DR. DOBSON is founder and Chairman Emeritus of the nonprofit organization Focus on the Family, Colorado Springs, Colo. 80995 (www.focusonthefamily.org). Questions and answers are excerpted from “Complete Marriage and Family Home Reference Guide� and “Bringing Up Boys,� both published by Tyndale House.

BACK TO SCHOOL

Plan ahead

Is your hearing current?

FROM PAGE 1E

Dear Dr. Donohue: At my last eye examination, the optometrist indicated I had the beginning stages of cataracts. I am 68. After my workout at a fitness center, I spend time in the sauna or the steam room. Are there any studies that show that prolonged exposure to hot, dry or hot, moist air accelerates cataract formation? – L.H.

bride on that day, approximately 150 colorful, helium-filled balloons were released into the blue California sky. Within a few seconds the balloons were just scattered all across the heavens, some of them rising hundreds of feet overhead and others cruising toward the horizon. A few balloons struggled to clear the upper branches of the trees while the show-offs became mere pinpoints of color on their journey to the sky. How interesting, I thought, and how symbolic of children. Let’s face it. Some boys and girls seem to be born with more helium than others. They catch all the right breezes, and they soar effortlessly to the heights, while others wobble dangerously close to the trees. Their frantic folks run along underneath, huffing and puffing to keep them airborne. It is an exhausting experience. In short, I have a word of encouragement to you and all the parents of low-flying kids. Sometimes the child who has the greatest trouble getting off the ground eventually soars to the highest heights. That’s why I urge you as parents not to look too quickly for the person your child will become.

few attempts, you will see things start to come together. When parents and children know what to expect ahead of time, it is much easier for everyone to take part in a successful outcome, and it builds confidence in children.� Because families are like teams, McVann suggests holding “team meetings� – 30 minutes every Saturday morning, if possible – to monitor the routine’s effectiveness throughout the school year. “The sooner that kids understand they are part of a team and that that makes life easier, the happier the whole family will be.� “If a family finds they are always racing against the clock, which can result in missing breakfast, searching for lost items, or running

211 W. Lexington Avenue, Suite 104, High Point, NC

late, then they should talk about making changes,� added Scott. But McVann says sticking to the routine must include discipline, or it eventually will fail. “No one likes to hear that word, but kids have to learn to put pens back where they go,� she said. “Parents have to discipline themselves, too. I can’t tell you how many people I’ve helped that have deep-rooted emotional problems related to how disorganized their parents were. Children are like sponges, and they pick up the behaviors they see. If you keep your house organized, your kids will appreciate that when they’re older.�

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Saturday, Aug. 28 -8pm Advance Tickets 336-249-7875 Tickets Also Available At The Door Day Of Show “Eddie is simply the BEST, nobody does it better.â€? ...The late J.D. Summer of the Stamps Quartet “Eddie Miles, a ďŹ ne entertainer, respectfully recreating the image. But most of all, keeping the music alive.â€? ...Scotty Moore- legendary guitar player for Elvis. “We’ve seen a lot of Elvis Tribute shows, Eddie’s is certainly one of the Classiest ever.â€? ...Gordon Stoker (The Jordanaires)

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Sunday August 15, 2010 Travel and Tourism Division State Department of Commerce Raleigh (919) 733-4171

PET SLEEPOVERS: Dogs, cats sometimes spend a few nights at a friend’s house. 6E

High Point Convention and Visitors Bureau www.highpoint.org

(336) 884-5255

4E

AP

“Survivors’ staircase� at National September 11 Memorial and Museum served as an escape route for people fleeing the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.

Going up Sept. 11 museum offers raw experience BY ULA ILNYTZKY ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

N

EW YORK – The Sept. 11 museum is taking shape 70 feet below ground, a cavernous space that provides an emotionally raw journey and ends at bedrock where huge surviving remnants and spacial voids reveal the scale of the devastation of what once was the World Trade Center. The museum’s architects, director and two victims’ family members led members of the news media Tuesday on a tour of the subterranean space, which commemorates nearly 3,000 people who died in the 1993 and 2001 terrorist attacks. There are no display cabinets yet, no exhibits. It is still a construction site. But it was easy to visualize the intent of the spaces, clearly articulated by the acute voids created by the fallen towers. Authentic structural elements that survived the terrorist attacks are there: the slurry wall that kept the Hudson River from inundating the Financial District, the last column of trade center steel ceremonially removed from the site in 2002; the survivors’ staircase that served as an escape route for hundreds; and foundational box columns that anchored the building. The slurry wall, still in place and measuring 60 feet by 60 feet, and the other huge artifacts define the museum’s design. The $45 million museum occupies about 120,000 square feet beneath the 8-acre memorial plaza, the centerpiece of which is “Reflecting Absence,� two square reflecting pools set above the footprints of the north and south towers. If the museum were above grade, said ar-

On the web...

----

www.911memorial.org chitect Steven Davis, a partner at Davis Brody Bond Aedas, “you’d be saying ‘wow, how cool.’ But because it’s underground ... the progress is less than evident.� Wearing hardhats and protective eye gear, the media reached bedrock level – where the main exhibition spaces will be located – along temporary wooden stairs and a freight elevator. The din

’The wall is only a membrane that separates us from them (the dead), and it’s our obligation to remember.’ Alice Greenwald Museum director of construction equipment was deafening at times. When the museum opens in 2012, the tour will start at an aboveground glass pavilion, where a 665-foot long “ribbon,� or gently sloped ramp, will carry visitors through the site. The ribbon – reminiscent of the ramp that workers used to build the original towers and during the recovery efforts following the attacks – will wind down 45 feet to the Memorial Hall, or lobby, past a threepronged trident column recovered from the trade center rubble. The memory of the twin towers is triggered from different areas of the museum by the depth of the memorial pools

in the cavernous site. The pools will be clad in a recycled aluminum material similar to that used in the original towers. Special lighting will make them appear to be floating over the space. “They exist in true reference to their place and their position on the site so you can see immediately the relationship of the placement of the memorial pools with the actual location of the tower footprint itself,� Davis said. “This is something we thought was very important, this spatial accuracy.� Parapets of varying heights along the ramp will reveal different parts of the museum as visitors go down. Museum architect Mark Wagner said the ramp is not intended to be a bold architectural statement, but rather an access path that allows the events of 9/11 to unfold. On Tuesday, it was still covered in rough concrete. The surface will be dark wood, while the underside will be muted, finished in dark, raw metal. Stairs or an escalator will provide the final 25foot descent to bedrock, and to a trapezoidal expanse containing the 60foot high slurry wall that held back the Hudson. “You begin to understand that the slurry wall is the separation between the basement of the original trade center� and the river, Davis said. The last standing 36foot steel column that was removed from the trade center debris at the end of the nine-month recovery effort in 2002 stands in front of the slurry wall. It became a spontaneous memorial to the victims; construction workers and family members covered it with tributes, photographs and inscriptions. On Tuesday, it was sheathed

AP

Construction continues Tuesday on the National September 11 Memorial and Museum in New York. Construction cranes work above One World Trade Center, also known as the Freedom Tower. in a climate-controlled covering. The tower’s foundational steel box columns are exposed at bedrock in the floor slabs, providing an outline of the buildings. The federal government said the column bases and slurry wall should remain in place. The final descent runs parallel to the Vesey Street stairs, known as the survivors’ staircase, encased in wooden scaffolding on Tuesday. The 37 steps served as an escape route for people fleeing. It stood for years as the last remaining above-ground remnant of the original complex. There are also several places where visitors can stand between the remnants of the two towers. Thousands of unidentified remains of 9/11 victims will be stored in the museum, in an area reserved for the medical examiner’s office; an adjacent room will be set aside for family members. These areas will be off limits to the public.

Sept. 28 - 30 Amish Country/�Joseph�/Hershey Nov. 8 - 10 Christmas at Pigeon Forge Nov. 13 American Music Jubilee Dec. 2 - 4 Christmas Festival at Myrtle Beach Dec. 13 Christmas at Biltmore House FLIGHT: May 16 - June 2: Australia/Fiji

A quotation from Virgil’s “Aeneid,� “No Day Shall Erase You From the Memory of Time,� will be incised into the wall that separates the private and public spaces. “The wall is only a membrane that separates us from them, and it’s our obligation to remember,� said museum director Alice Greenwald. Anthoula Katsimatides, whose brother died in the attacks, said she hoped visitors will

“learn something about one of those beautiful people who passed away on that day� and come away with “a sense of peace and a sense of hope.� The idea for the museum design began with “all the things we were given,� the remnants of the complex. “A traditional museum design is an icon which contains exhibits,� he said. “But this museum, the icon is the exhibit.�

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MILESTONES THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

5E

WEDDINGS

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Bowick - Smith

George - Bryant Lesley Bryant and Michael George, both of High Point, were united in marriage August 14, 2010, at Mount Zion Wesleyan Church in Thomasville. Pastor Keith Carroll officiated at the 2 p.m. ceremony. Wedding musician was Zackary Ross, pianist. The bride is the daughter of Jeff and Mary Bryant of High Point. She is the granddaughter of Marlene Durr of High Point; John and Joyce Durr of Pittsburgh; GB and Ruby Bryant of Thomasville. She is the great-granddaughter of Mary Ferrante of Ellwood City, Pa. The groom is the son of Frank George of Lexington and Donna Shives of Thomasville. He is the grandson of Roby and Barbara Shives of High Point; and Nellie George of of Lexington. Escorted by her father, Jeff Bryant, the bride was attended by her sister, Kat Bryant, maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Lauren Hight, Lesley Bryant Vanessa Koch and Kelsie Ruf. Weds Michael George The groom choose his brother, Roby Tussey, to serve as best man. Groomsmen were Adam Tallant, Chase Horton and Angus Tussey. The flower girl was Makayla George. The bride is a graduate of High Point Christian Academy. She is Assistant Manager at Shoe Dept. at Oak Hollow Mall. The groom is a graduate of East Davidson High School. He is employed at Cheerwine Bottling Co. Following a wedding trip to Florida, the couple will reside in High Point.

Green - Johnson Gwendolyn Sandra Johnson and Rev. Bobby W. Green, Jr., both of High Point, were united in marriage July 31, 2010, in High Point. The Rev. Eddie Weathers officiated at the ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of the late Otis Tyson and Christine Johnson Tyson. The groom is the son of the late Bobby W. Green, Sr. and Minnie Elmore Green. The couple resides in High Point.

GUIDELINES

---

Announcements of weddings, engagements and anniversaries of local interest will be printed in the Sunday Life&Style section. Deadline for submitting information is two work weeks in advance of publication date. For subscribers (honorees, parents or children), there will be no charge for a basic wedding or engagement announcement with a picture, or for 25th or 50th and above anniversary an-

nouncements. For nonsubscribers, the cost is $50. Those desiring larger photos with the wedding announcements and more detailed information may have that option for a fee. Forms may be found at our office at 210 Church Avenue or from the Web site. More information is available at the Web site, www.hpe.com, or by calling (336) 888-3527, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Sarah Ann Craven and Michael Joseph Sumpter were united in marriage April 1, 2010, at the Guilford County Courthouse in High Point. The bride is the daughter of Ted and Cindy Craven of Trinity. She is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin K. Andrews of Trinity, and the late Glenn and Edith Craven of High Point. The groom is the son of Susan Sumpter of High Point and the late C.L. Sumpter. He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. James E. McGeogh of Silver Spring, Md., and the late Mr. and Mrs. Grady A. Sumpter of Lenoir. The bride is employed by T.J. Maxx in High Point. The groom is employed by MusicGo-Round in Greensboro. The couple resides in High Point.

Sarah Craven Weds Michael Sumpter

ENGAGEMENTS

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Peterson - Connor

Anastasia Peterson To wed Daniel Connor

Dennis and Connie Peterson of Taylors, S.C., announce the engagement of their daughter, Anastasia Peterson, to Daniel Connor of Thomasville. The wedding is planned for August 28, 2010, in Greer, S.C.. Miss Peterson is a 2008 graduate of Bob Jones University, Greenville, S.C., receiving a Bachelor of Science in Administrative Management. She is employed by Brushy Creek Oral Surgery in Greer. Mr. Connor is the son of Curtis and Shirley Connor of Trinity. He is a 2007 graduate of High Point University, receiving a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration. He is employed by Baker Furniture in High Point.

Stanley - Thornton Jessie and Rhonda Sorrell of Winston-Salem and Keith and Doris Stanley of Winston-Salem announce the engagement of their daughter, Heather Nicole Stanley, to Robert Ryan Thornton, both of High Point. The wedding is planned for October 9, 2010, at the home of the bride’s grandmother. Miss Stanley is a graduate of Ledford High School. She is attending Dental Assistant school. She is employed by River Landing as a Certified Nursing Assistant. Mr. Thornton is the son of Larry and Kim Espinosa of Wallburg and Bobby Thornton of High Point. He is a graduate of Glenn High School. He is a graduate of Forsyth Tech with a certificate in Horticulture. He is employed by Tyco Electronics in Greensboro.

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Heather Stanley To wed Ryan Thornton

211 W. Lexington Avenue, Suite 104, High Point, NC 889.9977

Welcomes

Jennifer L. Gagne, Ph.D. To Cornerstone Behavioral Medicine

Dr. Gagne was awarded her undergraduate degree from Elon College where she graduated magna cum laude. She earned her M.S. and Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology, with a specialization in health psychology/ behavioral medicine, from Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, FL. She completed her behavioral medicine internship at the London Health Sciences Centre in London, Ontario. Dr. Gagne had additional postdoctoral training at the Child and Parent Resource Institute in London, Ontario where she provided testing and treatment for children with complex mental health and developmental disorders.

Dr. Gagne provides Psychological assessment and counseling for children, adolescents, and adults with: : Mood and anxiety disorders : Complex health problems : Conduct and behavior problems : Learning and developmental delays : ADHD HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

Monday–Thursday 8 am to 6 pm Friday 8 am to 5 pm Psychological testing now available on Saturday W. Thomas Thompson, Ed.D. Michael V. Kirch, Ph.D. Katherine R. Schnell, Psy.D. Megan K. Gabalda, Ph.D. Larry D. Young, Ph.D. Peter J. Duquette, Ph.D. Marissa A. Cangin, Psy.D. Jennifer L. Gagne, Ph.D. Michelle Lawson, M.A. Dana Truman-Schram, M.A. Thomas A. Harrison, Jr., M.A. Catherine Cheek, M.A. Sharon Barnes, M.A.

www.cornerstonehealth.com

1814 Westchester Drive, Suite 402, High Point, NC 27262 Mailing Address: 4515 Premier Drive, Suite 301, High Point, NC 27265

336 802-2205

SP00504734

Anna Marie Smith and Daniel Reid Bowick were united in marriage August 7, 2010, at Mount Vernon United Methodist Church in Trinity. The Rev. Curran Welch and Dr. David Cunha officiated at the ceremony. Wedding music was provided by Gaylon Green of Trinity, soloist; and Josef English Walker of High Point, organist. The bride is the daughter of Michael and Sarah Smith. She is the granddaughter of Rachel McGee of Sophia. The groom is the son of Donald and Debbie Bowick. Escorted by her father, Michael Smith, the bride was attended by her twin brother, Spencer Smith of Sophia, as man of honor; and her sister-in-law, Brittany Smith of Archdale, matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Ms. Sally Rice of JacksonAnna Smith ville. Flower girl was Ms. Weds Daniel Bowick Payton Smith of Archdale. The groom chose his father, Donald Bowick of Trinity, to serve as best man. Groomsmen were Michael Smith II of Archdale, brother of the bride and Dusty Bowick of Jacksonville, brother of the groom. Registrars were Kelly Fama and Chris Shea of New York. Reception greeters were Mr. and Mrs. Chris Horne and David Horne of High Point. Honored guests were Mr. and Mrs. Tim Kelly of Trinity and Gracie Attardi of New York. A bridal brunch was held on the day of the wedding at the home of Mrs. Phyllis Hendrix with co-hosts, Mrs. Karen Wilkins, Mrs. Nancy Hamilton and Mrs. Kay McDowell. The wedding reception was held at Colonial Country Club in Thomasville. The bride is a 2005 graduate of Trinity High School. She is attending Guilford Technical Community College in the Dental Assisting Program. She is employed at Trinity Elementary School. The groom is a 2004 graduate of Randleman High School. He is employed by Kraft Nabisco. Following a wedding trip to Negril, Jamaica, the couple resides in Sophia.

Sumpter - Craven


ADVICE 6E www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Help exists for those unable to manage benefits Q

I have an elderly friend who receives Social Security benefits. I am concerned that she is unable to manage her money to pay her bills on time. Can Social Security help her? A. Yes. When an individual who gets Social Security or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) checks is determined to be unable to manage benefits in his or her own best interest, Social Security appoints a representative payee to assume these responsibilities. In these cases, the Social Security or SSI benefits are sent directly to the representative payee. The payee takes care of using funds for the personal care and well-being of the beneficiary and agrees to report certain changes in the beneficiary’s circumstances that could affect the continuing eligibility to receive benefits. To get more infor-

mation, call our toll-free number, (800) 772-1213, and ask about “representative payees.� People who are deaf or hard of hearing may call our TTY number, (800) 325-0778, between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on business days.

check, you will not be eligible for SSI. However, if your Social Security payment is low and your overall income and resources are low, you might be eligible to receive an SSI payment to supplement your Social Security benefits. To learn more about SSI, read the publication You May Be Able To Receive SSI at www.socialsecurity. gov/pubs/11069.html

Q. Can I get both Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits and Social Security benefits at the same time?

Q. Is there a time limit on how long you can receive Social Security disability benefits?

A. Many people eligible for SSI may also be entitled to Social Security benefits. In fact, the application for SSI also is an application for Social Security benefits. Eligibility for SSI depends on your income and resources, so if you receive a large Social Security

A. Your disability benefits will continue as long as your medical condition does not improve and you remain unable to work. We will review your case at regular intervals to make sure you are still disabled. If you are still receiving disability benefits when you reach full retirement

SOCIAL SECURITY

---

Dogs, cats can engage in ‘sleepovers’ D

ear Dr. Fox: I have a story about our childhood dog that you might enjoy: Spot was a female Boston bull terrier with a slim body and long legs. There were five children in our household under the age of 8. We all enjoyed playing with Spot. We lived about six blocks from our grandparents’ house and went there for Sunday dinner frequently. Spot trotted along with us. There may have been leash laws then (late 1930s/early 1940s), but no one in the neighborhood (in Iowa City, Iowa) observed them. Once in a while, Spot would disappear and show up at our grandparents’ house, scratching at the door. My grandmother would let her in, call mom, then feed her and make a bed for her for the night. She and grandpa would enjoy her for the day. Then, after another feeding in the morning, she would let Spot out and she would come home. It seemed she needed a respite from all the energetic little ones. When we went for Sunday dinner, grandma would always take Spot onto her lap after dinner and no child was allowed to come near so Spot could have a nap. – B.C., St. Louis, Mo.

Dear B.C.: Those were the days when dogs were dogs. At least in low-traffic communities dogs were safer, but they still ran the risk of rabies, distemper and dog-fighting injuries. Spot knew what side his bread was buttered on. It is my impression that cats engage in this sleepover/more-thanone-home behavior than do their canine cousins. I have heard of some cats who would stay for several days, even weeks, at a “new� home and then return to their original owners for a similar time period before going off again. Dear Dr. Fox: Our 6-year-old purebred toy poodle has had a periodic gasping cough since he was a puppy. During these episodes, it seems his throat is constricted and he can’t get enough air. The episodes last a few seconds and happen daily. Our veterinarian says he has a collapsible

Dear B.C.: Regrettably, this condition (along with other cartilage and tendon weaknesses, especially involving the knees) is all too common in toy poodles. Vaccinations could play a role. There is evidence of post-vaccination production of antibodies against connective tissue in dogs who then acquire an autoimmune disease. Some breeds and pedigree lineages may be more susceptible to vaccinosis than others. I would at least advise no more vaccinations and give your dog a daily multimineral/multivitamin human-infant supplement and glucosamine, chondroitin, MSM and horsetail (for silica).

OZELLA BUNDY is a public affairs specialist with the Social Security Administration. You can contact her at (336) 854-1809, Ext. 240 or via e-mail at ozella.bundy@ssa.gov.

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trachea and nothing can be done. It is worrisome to hear our dog gasp ANIMAL for breath. And the DOCTOR episodes have beDr. Michael come more Fox frequent ■■■and last longer. Is there anything that can be done for him? He is otherwise an active, smart, sweet dog. His only other health issue is a reaction to a vaccination when he was a puppy – he lost the hair around the injection site, and it took a long time to grow back. – B.C., Naples, Fla.

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, visit the Web site www.socialsecurity.gov or call toll-free at (800) 772-1213 or TTY at (800) 325-0778.

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In a recent article in the respected British Journal of Nutrition, researchers reported the benefits to old dogs of feeding medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) as a potent “brain food.� After several weeks on a diet with 5.5 percent MCTs as the only dietary fat source, marked improvement in cognitive abilities were seen. Coconut oil is the best source of MCTs.

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SEND YOUR QUESTIONS to Dr. Michael Fox, P.O. Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261. Visit Dr. Fox’s website at www. twobitdog.com/DrFox. The volume of mail received prohibits personal replies, but questions and comments of general interest will be discussed in future columns.

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WHAT TO VIEW: Check today’s complete TV listings. 5F

Sunday August 15, 2010 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537 Night City Editor: Chris McGaughey cmcgaughey@hpe.com (336) 888-3540

RISING FROM ASHES: Burned-out eatery restored for new purpose. 2F LOSS OF ENTREPRENEUR: Piedmont restaurant owner dies. 2F

GINSBURG OPINION

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AP

Elena Kagan is sworn in as the Supreme Court’s newest member as Chief Justice John Roberts (right) administers the judicial oath at the Supreme Court Building Aug. 7. The Bible is held by Jeffrey Minear, counselor to the chief justice. Kagan, 50, who replaces retired Justice John Paul Stevens, becomes the fourth woman to sit on the high court and is the first Supreme Court justice in nearly four decades with no previous experience as a judge.

Gender history With three women on Court, how big a difference? BY MARK SHERMAN ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON — At least once a term for 13 years, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg recalled, some lawyer arguing before the Supreme Court would mistake her for Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, or vice versa. No matter that Brooklyn-born Ginsburg and O’Connor, raised on a ranch in Arizona, look and sound nothing alike. The confusion arose because, even at the dawn of the 21st century, women on the court were “one- or two-at-a-time curiosities,” Ginsburg said. So she considered it progress that no one made that error after Sonia Sotomayor became a Supreme Court justice last year. Now with Elena Kagan set to join them on the bench for the start of the high court term in October, Ginsburg perceives an even bigger change. “We are one-third of this court,” Ginsburg said during an interview with The Associated Press in her Supreme Court office. No longer a momentous event, the appointment of a woman to the high court has become, Ginsburg said, “expectable.” “I don’t think anybody’s going to confuse Justice Kagan, Justice Ginsburg

or Justice Sotomayor,” she said. But having three women on the court may not change the outcome of any cases. The justices, after all, regularly divide 5-4 along ideological lines in highprofile cases. Sotomayor’s votes in her first year were very similar to Justice David Souter’s, the man she replaced. Kagan is expected to vote much like Justice John Paul Stevens, who retired in June. “Having this seat occupied by a woman does not in and of itself change the way this justice votes,” said Vanderbilt University law professor Tracey George. Academic studies have so far found just one area, sex discrimination lawsuits, in which the presence of a woman on a panel of federal appeals court judges appears to make a difference. AP A three-judge panel that includes a woman “is sig- Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg speaks to the nificantly more likely to American Bar Association House of Delegates after receivrule in favor of” a person ing the ABA Medal in San Francisco Monday. claiming sex discrimination, Christina Boyd, Lee picked out one case that The justices voted 8-1 that Epstein and Andrew Mar- the court decided in 2009 the search violated the tin concluded in a 2008 to illustrate her point. student’s constitutional A 13-year-old girl com- rights. paper. She also suggested that Adding another woman plained about being stripmight not change the out- searched by officials at her women were more likely come of cases, but it could middle school in Arizona to add a measure of civility have an effect on how the in pursuit of prescription- to the court’s work. Opinions by the court’s women court goes about its busi- strength ibuprofen. “The initial reaction of “have no nasty comments ness, George said. She cited social science research the men was, ’What’s so whether they’re writing that suggests the presence terrible? Boys disrobe,”’ for the court or in disof a woman in a decision- she said. “But I think the sent.” Not so for some of the making group influences court really appreciated the behavior of others in that there is a difference men. She said Stevens was between the reaction of the group. Ginsburg put a similar a 13-year-old girl and 13- fond of calling others’ thought plainly. “We do year-old boy to that kind opinions “profoundly misguided.” Justice Antonin bring to the table the ex- of exposure.” Ginsburg didn’t explic- Scalia, her good friend on perience of growing up as girls and women,” she itly say so, but she ap- the court, is known for his peared to be taking credit acerbic writings, which said. The 77-year-old justice for changing some minds. Ginsburg conceded might

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

be more attention-grabbing than others’. Ginsburg is fond of her service with O’Connor, who retired in 2006. In disagreeing on some major issues, they showed that women “come in all sizes and shapes just like men do.” Ginsburg was appointed by Democrat Bill Clinton, while O’Connor became the first woman on the court thanks to Republican Ronald Reagan. Kagan and Sotomayor were both nominated by President Barack Obama, a Democrat. “I’d feel better if there was a conservative woman on the court as well, just so there wasn’t an opportunity to think they’re liberal just because they’re women,” said Catholic University law professor Amanda Leiter, a onetime clerk for Stevens. O’Connor played a critical role on the court, never predictably conservative or liberal, often providing the decisive vote in closely divided cases. The three women justices “may be in dissent more often” because they make up three-fourths of the liberal side of a more conservative court, Leiter said. Their Democratic ties, though, could make it more likely that the next Republican president will look to nominate a woman, said Notre Dame law professor and former Supreme Court law clerk Richard Garnett. Ginsburg said Garnett could be right. “I don’t think that when there’s the next vacancy the president will feel any compulsion to appoint another woman, but also won’t resist appointing another woman,” she said.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg told the country’s largest lawyers’ group Monday that she hopes Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees can become more collegial. Ginsburg, 77, recounted her own uncontroversial confirmation during an address at the American Bar Association’s annual meeting in San Francisco. Her nomination by Democratic President Bill Clinton was approved 96-3. Votes on the last four nominees have been much closer and acrimonious, a departure from the long-standing tradition of giving the president wide deference on appointees. “May the U.S. Senate someday return to the collegial bipartisan spirit that Justice Breyer and I had the good fortune to experience,” Ginsburg said, referring to Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, the next nominee to follow her to the bench. The justice spoke after receiving the ABA Medal, the association’s most prestigious award. Ginsburg said she had delayed her trip to the ABA’s meeting to attend the Saturday afternoon swearing-in of Elena Kagan as the fourth woman ever on the Supreme Court. Ginsburg was the second.

INSIDE

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RUNNING ON WEALTH: Candidates with big money populate campaigns. 2F

INDEX ARTS, ETC. TV LISTING NEWS

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FOCUS 2F www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE “KNOCK ’EM DEAD” By GIA CHRISTIAN

AP

California Republican gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman speaks to employees of SynapSense, a computer technology company, in Folsom, Calif. In the midst of one of the worst recessions in decades, a host of former corporate titans are spending millions in the quest for elective office, using their big bankrolls to push past the political machinery and overcome their own lack of experience.

Wealthy political newcomers are spending big BY JULIET WILLIAMS ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In the midst of one of the worst recessions in decades, a host of former corporate leaders are spending millions in their quest for elective office, using their personal wealth to push past the political machinery and their own lack of experience. In California, billionaire former eBay chief executive Meg Whitman has bankrolled more than $91 million of the nearly $100 million her Republican quest for governor has cost so far. Her outsized spending has bought her some of the nation’s best-known GOP strategists and chartered planes offering “white glove service.” It’s also helped her target traditionally Democratic voters. In Connecticut, footage of stage explosions and wrestlers flying through the air has filled the TV airwaves in ads for former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon, who has said she’s willing to spend up to $50 million of her own money in her bid to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd. Two former corporate chiefs — one a Republican and one a Democrat — quickly took leads from establishment candidates in Florida despite jumping in late in high-profile races. Rick Scott, a former health care CEO, is leading in GOP gubernatorial primary polls after spending more than $25 million of his own money for a string of TV ads

touting himself as a job creator. Billionaire Jeff Greene, a Democrat, filed to run for Senate on the final day to qualify. So far he has spent more than $6 million of his fortune. In Michigan, Rick Snyder, a venture capitalist and former president of computer maker Gateway Inc., spent $6 million, much of it on TV ads touting himself as “one tough nerd,” to win the Republican nomination for governor last

Wealthy candidates’ ability to shun traditional political infrastructure and donor bases is a common theme for this year’s crop of political neophytes. week over the state’s attorney general and a veteran congressman. The candidates’ ability to shun traditional political infrastructure and donor bases is a common theme for this year’s crop of political neophytes. They spend freely to promote themselves as outsiders who aren’t beholden to special interests. But while their bank accounts free them from the arduous task of dial-

ing for dollars, voters are often skeptical of selfmade political newcomers, said Darry Sragow, who managed Democrat Al Checchi’s unsuccessful primary campaign for California governor in 1998. The Northwest Airlines mogul spent $39 million of his own money on the race. “You need to overcome the presumption that you made a lot of money in business, you’re bored, you have a big ego and now you have to find something else to keep you busy,” Sragow said. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg holds the U.S. record for selffinancing, spending $108 million, or about $185 per vote, to win a third term last year. He did not take donations. The candidates’ wealth can also be a liability, particularly it they have ties to the corporate boardroom at a time when recessionweary voters are angry over bank bailouts and soaring CEO salaries. Greene, the Florida Senate candidate, has been hammered by an opponent who says he profited from others’ misery by investing in speculative housing ventures that catapulted him to billionaire status when the housing bubble burst. Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, Scott’s GOP Senate primary opponent, constantly reminds voters that Scott headed a for-profit hospital chain, Columbia/HCA, when it paid $1.7 billion to settle claims of Medicare fraud.

Across 1 Citrus source 9 __-Turkish War 14 Quartz variety 20 Boss’s okays, often 21 Twangy 22 Duck à l’orange, e.g. 23 What would trouble Trixie if the Kramdens moved away? 25 “Gil Blas” novelist 26 __-jongg 27 Half a dance 28 Daily opinion page, briefly 29 Van Gogh works 31 Designer monogram 32 Whacked, biblically 34 Key of Brahms’ Symphony No. 4 36 Notorious ’80s’90s crime boss 38 Three-handed card game 39 Regret deeply 41 Maker of NutriGrain Waffles 43 Cell messengers 46 Roman holiday 48 “The Mod Squad” role 49 Record material 50 Fairy tale baddie 51 Parallel world? 53 Onetime Burmese statesman 54 Go 56 Picnic spoiler 57 Cars over the road 58 Rocking Turner 59 Sonoma and Safari 62 Mauna __ 64 Computer acronym 66 Customer file ID 68 Fed. medical org. 69 Badly burned

British dish? 72 Red-and-white supermarket logo 73 Bottom line, ideally 75 When gluttons eat 76 Tick off 77 Rehab admission 78 Hail __ 79 Get to work again 80 “Take __ from me” 82 Nova __ 84 Bentley of “American Beauty” 85 Pint-drinking buddies’ experience? 91 Jazz immortal 92 Do a double take, say 94 Wool: Pref. 95 Addition symbol 96 Fanaticism 97 Golfer’s option 98 From the heart? 100 “Soap” family name 101 PC troubleshooters 103 Courses at bars 105 Idyllic spots 107 Own, to a Glaswegian 109 “Excuse me ...” 111 Store of ore 112 Cheerleader’s word 113 Space 115 Richards of “Jurassic Park” 117 19th-century queen’s tough tests? 121 Not as chilly 122 Prosecutor’s burden 123 Perturbs 124 Bully’s dare 125 Personnel 126 Ship’s cargo list Down 1 Neeson of “The

xwordeditor@aol.com

A-Team” 2 To-do pile site 3 Hodgepodge 4 Automne preceder 5 Touch of color 6 “The Sea Around Us” author Carson 7 Zeno’s home 8 That, in Tijuana 9 If nothing else works 10 Scout’s discovery 11 “... say, and not __” 12 Europe’s __ de Genève 13 Dairy case item 14 “Wiggly dessert stale, kemosabe” 15 “__ of robins ...” 16 OK and others 17 Religious dissenters? 18 Bean measures? 19 Virginia __ 24 Instigate 30 Pop of rock 33 Aquatic frolickers 34 Middle East VIP 35 Restrains 37 Torrid Zone boundary 38 Bay Area hub: Abbr. 40 Friends-andfamily support group 42 Safari sighting 44 Adapt musically 45 Jazz group? 47 Notre Dame’s Parseghian 49 Spock, partly 52 Israeli port city 55 Inscribe 57 Southend-onSea’s county 59 Econ. measure 60 Word with drug or mile 61 Type that regularly visits Willy Wonka’s factory?

63 Previously 64 Museum exhibitor 65 Uganda’s Amin 66 Invite as one’s date for 67 Wake maker 69 Netanyahu of Israel, familiarly 70 Results 71 Lawrence’s land 74 Femme __ 77 Keep current 81 Business mag 82 Speaks in slang? 83 Mischievous long-eared critter? 84 Simple card game 85 What you might take if you’re tired? 86 Food storage area 87 Sinus specialists, briefly 88 Reagan-era scandal 89 Proprietor’s calculation 90 Onetime AT&T rival 93 Relax 98 Many 99 Get closer, as to hear better 102 Cave __: beware of the dog 104 Foil maker 106 Hindu loincloth 107 “Go for the Goal” autobiographer 108 Operatic highlight 110 MLB honorees 112 Hindu music style 114 It ain’t quite “Hey!” 116 Drink stand buy 118 NYC subway 119 “__ Sam”: “Green Eggs and Ham” opening 120 U.K. defense arm

©2005 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Triad restaurant pioneer dies BY CHRIS LAVENDER MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE REGIONAL NEWS

BURLINGTON – For more than three decades, Glenda Fogleman blazed a trail as owner and operator of two local Chick-fil-A restaurants. Funeral services were held recently for Fogleman, of Elon, who died July 31 at 73 after an extended illness. Fogleman, a Gibsonville native, began her career with Chick-fil-A in December

1969 at Holly Hill Mall in the restaurant’s kitchen. She later bought into the Chick-fil-A franchises at Holly Hill Mall and Garden Road. Sandy Causey, of Atlanta, said she first met Fogleman in March 1981 when she started her own career with Chick-fil-A. “She always cared a lot about her customers,” Causey said. Causey still works at Chick-fil-A’s corporate offices in Atlanta and said she would often see Fogle-

man at the company’s annual training seminars. Causey said Fogleman was the second woman in Chick-fil-A’s history to own and operate one of its restaurants, around 1970. Fogleman had a giving spirit for local law enforcement and first responders as well. According to Alamance County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Randy Jones, Fogleman would often provide chicken sandwiches and other food items to emergency personnel.

Burned-out eatery rises from ashes BY LAURA OLENIACZ MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE REGIONAL NEWS

NEW BERN – There are streaks of dark soot on the yellow walls of La Fontana Restaurant & Pizza, and a smoke odor still hangs in the air. Still, Todd Biringer with the Wilmington-based fire and water damage resto-

ration company All American Firefighters believes the closed down Berne Square restaurant will be “the most beautiful office in town” by Nov. 1. The limited liability corporation was contracted by La Fontana’s owner, Barnett Properties, to restore the building that was damaged in the fire that took place early on

April 13. The company was started by a career firefighter in Wilmington, Marvin Spruill III, who wanted to diversify his business Off Duty Firemen Construction during the down economy. The business has offices in Wilmington and in Raleigh, and when the company is through with the restoration of La Fontana,

Biringer said the business will lease the building as a New Bern office and showroom. The company first got involved with the project when it was called by the property owner’s insurance company, The Travelers Companies Inc., to help estimate the cost of the damage of the fire, which was deliberately set.


Sunday August 15, 2010

LEADING LADY: Actress talks nerves, family, new movie. 4F

Entertainment: Vicki Knopfler vknopfler@hpe.com (336) 888-3601

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AP

This undated image provided by the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas in Austin shows “Gone With The Wind� costume designer Walter Plunkett holding feathers with a sketch of Scarlett O’Hara’s burgundy ball gown on the table. The Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas in Austin says if it cannot raise $30,000 to restore five of Scarlett O’Hara’s gowns, they may be too fragile to display at its exhibit to mark the 1939 movie’s 75th anniversary in 2014.

Scarlett’s dresses in bad shape, need repairs A

USTIN, Texas (AP) – It’s time to find out if fans of “Gone With the Wind� frankly give a damn about the fabulous dresses worn by Vivien Leigh in the multiple Oscar-winning Civil War drama. The Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas in Austin is trying to raise $30,000 to restore five of Scarlett O’Hara’s now tattered gowns from the 1939 film. The Ransom Center is planning an exhibit to mark the movie’s 75th anniversary in 2014, but at the moment most of them are too fragile to go on display, according to Jill Morena, the center’s collection assistant for costumes and personal effects. “There are areas where the fabric has been worn through, fragile seams and other problems,� Morena said. “These dresses have been under a lot of stress.�

The Ransom Center acquired the costumes – including O’Hara’s green curtain dress, green velvet gown, burgundy ball gown, blue velvet night gown and her wedding dress – in the mid1980s as part of the collection of “Gone With the Wind� producer David O. Selznick. By then, they had already been through decades of traveling displays in theaters and had been on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. “Film costumes weren’t meant to last,� Morena said. “They are only meant to last through the duration of filming. You won’t find them to be as finished as if you bought something off the rack.� The costumes are among the most famous in Hollywood history and they played a key role in one of the most popular films ever.

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ARTS | ETC. 4F www.hpe.com SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

‘Cathy’ comic strip ending

AP

In this film publicity image released by Sony, Javier Bardem (left) and Julia Roberts are shown in a scene from “Eat, Pray, Love.”

Hollywood’s leading lady Actress Julia Roberts talks nerves, family and ‘Eat, Pray, Love’

S

T. HELENA, Calif. (AP) – She has, arguably, been the leading lady in Hollywood for the last 20 years. But even Julia Roberts gets nervous about her film projects, including her latest: A bigscreen adaptation of Elizabeth Gilbert’s best-selling memoir, “Eat, Pray, Love.” But it’s a good thing. “If I’m not feeling anxious and excited and nervous, then I haven’t invested much in it and

‘If I’m not feeling anxious and excited and nervous, then I haven’t invested much in it and I shouldn’t be there.’ Julia Roberts Actress I shouldn’t be there,” Roberts says. “So, really, I just want to put myself in a position where I am really feeling like I have to ramp up and accomplish my goals.” And Roberts wasn’t the only one: Director Ryan Murphy confessed facing a bout of nerves before meeting his star. “I was really nervous before I met her because I have been a fan, too. I have seen all of her movies,” he said. “Nothing surprises me about her because what you see is what you get with Julia, which is why I think people love her and why she lasts and continues to last. Because she is very sincere, very empathetic, and compassionate. What I didn’t know is how funny she was.” The two were in California’s Napa Valley recently to talk to the press about “Eat, Pray, Love,” which opened Friday,

and they recounted plenty of laughs as the “Eat, Pray, Love” crew replicated Gilbert’s round-the-world journey. Roberts’ family – including 5-year-old twins Hazel and Phinnaeus and 3-year-old Henry – also came along for the ride. “Well, the funny thing is, they had just been in India because my husband (photographer Danny Moder) had just been working there in January and this was in October,” Roberts explained. “So, we had been in Jaunpur and Agra and all these places, Goa. We were all over the entire country. They loved it. So, when I said we were going back, they were so excited. We went to all the places we hadn’t been before.” Nevertheless, some of the sights were familiar, perhaps most notably an elephant that plays a key role in the movie. “Actually that elephant that I had the scene with ... is the elephant that Phinnaeus and I had ridden in January in Jaunpur. When I walked across the ashram and saw that elephant I said, ‘I know that elephant,’ and it was the same elephant.” Since her box-office breakthrough in 1990’s “Pretty Woman,” Roberts has done little small-screen work – until now. She serves as a producer of a documentary series set to debut in January on Oprah Winfrey’s new cable network. “It’s called, ‘Extraordinary Moms,’” said Roberts, 42. “It really is, for me, a celebration, a show to honor moms who I think do ... I mean, every mom does amazing things every day. But we found some that really, really are extraordinary and we wanted to make a show about it. Oprah made it happen for us.” One TV gig she won’t be taking is a role in her “Eat, Pray, Love” director Ryan Murphy’s hit TV series, “Glee.”

Nelly to host radio show in St. Louis

AP

Actress Julia Roberts attends the the world premiere of “Eat, Pray, Love” at the Ziegfeld Theatre last week in New York. Explained Roberts: “Billy Crudup and I were in a Woody Allen musical a couple of years ago and so he said, ‘Oh, you’re a great singer,’ and my husband said, ‘You are a great singer.’ So, now I’m going to say I am a great singer, and I’m not just going on ‘Glee.’ ” Roberts’ next big-screen project is “Larry Crowne,” a dramedy that’s been shoot-

known for her role as C l a i r Huxtable on the TV series Rashad “ T h e Cosby Show.” Also, E. Faye Butler will star as Aunt Eller in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Oklahoma!” It will run from Oct. 22 to Dec. 26.

ing in Southern California in recent months and is set for release next year, reunites her with Tom Hanks, whom she described as “an amazing man and friend.” As for her life in general, Roberts said she feels “really satisfied.” Her next really demanding project? “Get ready for kindergarten.”

ST. LOUIS (AP) – St. Louis rapper Nelly is used to having DJs play his music on the radio. Now, he’s the one spinning tunes. Program director Nelly Mickey Johnson says the rapper has joined St. Louis urban station Hot 104.1 (WHHL-FM) as the afternoon drive-time host. He is filling in on the 3-7 p.m. shift for Staci Static, who is on maternity leave. Station executives expect Nelly’s on-air stint to last for about a month. Johnson says the station wanted someone with star power. In addition to playing music, Nelly will conduct interviews.

‘Spider-Man’ musical sets a Broadway opening

Rashad to take lead in Arena Stage debut WASHINGTON (AP) – Phylicia Rashad will open Arena Stage’s new Mead Center for American Theater this fall in Washington, starring in one of the inaugural productions. Rashad stars in the premiere of “Every Tongue Confess” from playwright Marcus Gardley. It will run Nov. 9 through Jan. 2. Rashad is best

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – The comic strip “Cathy,” which has chronicled the life, frustrations and swimsuit season meltdowns of its namesake for more than 30 years, is coming to an end. Cathy Guisewite, the strip’s creator, said last week that deciding to end the comic strip was “excruciating.” The comic has won several awards, including a 1992 National Cartoonists Society’s Reuben Award and an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program in 1987, and at its height appeared in 1,400 papers. “It’s just been really unbelievably agonizing to make the decision,” Guisewite said in a telephone interview from her home in the Los Angeles area. “The strip has not only been the most astonishing form of therapy for 34 years, but doing a daily comic strip for the newspaper set a certain rhythm for my life.” The final “Cathy” strip will run in newspapers on Sunday, Oct. 3. Guisewite, 59, said she chose to end the largely autobiographical comic strip because she wanted more time with her 18year-old daughter and her parents and because “other personal deadlines started becoming more pressing for me than the newspaper ones.” She said her “creative biological clock” was also urging her to try something else, although she isn’t sure what that will be.

AP

In this rendering released by the O&M Company, the set design of Oscorp Labs for the upcoming musical “Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark” is shown.

NEW YORK (AP) – Long hanging in limbo, the musical “Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark” is scheduled to spin its web later this year on Broadway. Lead producer Michael Cohl announced last week that the much-anticipated show will begin preview performances on Nov. 14, with opening night set for Dec. 21. Its home will be the former Hilton Theatre, now renamed the Foxwoods Theatre.

Based on the Marvel comic book hero, “Spider-Man” features music and lyrics by Bono and The Edge, with a book by its director, Julie Taymor, and Glen Berger. Destined to be one of the most expensive musicals in Broadway history, it has been in the works for six years and faced financial hurdles. At one point, it was scheduled to begin performances this past winter.


TELEVISION THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2010 www.hpe.com

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