hpe11072009

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RAISING THE BAR: Guilford County School enrichment regions. SUNDAY TAKE A NUMBER: GTCC prepares for large turnout at H1N1 clinic today. 1B

ZONING, 2A

125th year No. 311

50 Cents Daily $1 Sundays

HOPE FOR HOUSING

WHO’S NEWS

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Shirley Morrison was named the chief human resources officer for Guilford County Schools. Morrison, the district’s former executive director of human resources, has been serving as the interim chief human resources officer since July 1.

BY DAVID NIVENS ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Mayor Becky Smothers is calling on county officials to allow the city to expand zoning territory to a growth corridor. Extra-territorial jurisdiction allows cities to control zoning in designated growth areas. A municipality may extend zoning control up to one mile beyond the city limits, according to state law. City leaders have been interested in expanding land-use regulations to a 1,400-acre area near Kernersville. So far, a formal ETJ application has yet to appear on a Guilford County Board of Commissioners agenda. At a meeting of the board on Thursday, Smothers passed out a set of maps showing what she called the city’s northwest growth area. “This area has been identified as a growth area through annexation agreements. The city has extended water and sewer lines to the northwest,” Smothers said. The city has a $14.9 million investment plan for water and sewer line extensions in growth areas northwest and southeast of the city, Smothers said. The city is extending a sewer line north to Interstate 40, just east of Kernersville. Commissioners have heard from residents of the Squire Davis Road area who have lobbied to keep High Point regulations away. Oppo-

November 7, 2009

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

SKINNER NEWS: Wake’s quarterback expected to play at Georgia Tech. 4C

City seeks growth zoning control

SATURDAY

INSIDE

---SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

For sale sign sits in the yard at house on the market at the corner of Rockspring Road and Emerywood Drive.

House extends First-Time Home Buyer’s Tax Credit Inside...

PROGRAM

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Measure may hold little relief for upper-end housing market. 1B BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Local real estate agents breathed a long sigh of relief when the popular First-Time Home Buyer’s Tax Credit was extended by the House on Thursday night with added benefits for previous homeowners. The House approved an extension before the Nov. 30 deadline arrived for the tax credit, which originally offered up to $8,000 toward the purchase of a home for firsttime buyers. Now extended to April 30, the new credit also offers up to $6,500 to previous buyers who have been in their current home for five of the past eight years. “This really will keep the momentum going and open the tax credit up to another segment of the market,” said Jeannene Poarch, president of the High Point Regional Association of Realtors. “That’s one of the things we lobbied for.” Poarch and other members of the HPRAR met with state leaders, including Rep. Howard Coble, R-6th, and Rep. Mel Watt, D-12th, to encourage support for the tax credit’s extension after they discovered that it accounted for nearly 42 percent of sales for HPRAR’s members in the first quarter. They also asked that the tax credit be extended beyond first-time buyers so it could further stimulate the housing market. “We asked our other real estate agents to get involved, and we sent out a plea to the public to contact

The First-Time Home Buyer’s Tax Credit has been extended to April 30, 2010. It continues to offer firsttime homebuyers up to $8,000 toward the purchase of a new home.

IT’S MAGIC: Illusionist to perform in High Point. 1B OBITUARIES

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The credit has been extended to previous homeowners, who can receive up to $6,500 toward a new home if they have lived in their previous home for five of the past eight years. Qualifications for the tax credit include an income cap of $125,000 for individuals and $225,000 for joint filers. Individuals with incomes up to $145,000 and joint filers with incomes up to $245,000 qualify for reduced credits. their representatives as well,” she said. “(The tax credit) is going to stimulate the economy. Now, it’s going to help current homeowners who want a change.” Carol Ferrell, operator of Carol Ferrell & Associates, said the tax credit had a significant effect on her sales for the last seven months. She said the housing market would be on a much slower path to recovery if the tax credit hadn’t been extended. “This will have an immediate effect, especially coming into fall and winter when things slow up,” Ferrell said. “As long as (mortgage) interest rates stay low and the weather stays good, the market will continue to move along. At least it’s better than last year.” phaynes@hpe.com | 888-3617

Darrell Ball, 73 Herman Beck, 82 James Bowers Jr., 73 Sheila Crawford, 39 Lisa Crowder, 40 James Dunlap, 67 Ronnie Everhart, 62 Chad Greene, 34 C.W. Harris, 73 Cecil Kinney, 76 Joretta Lankford, 45 Reatha Scarboro, 87 Fleta Small, 90 Obituarieis, 3A, 2B

WEATHER

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Sunny, cool High 64, Low 37 8C

Hege bid may complicate matters for GOP BY PAUL B. JOHNSON ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

DAVIDSON COUNTY – Gerald Hege’s decision to run as a Republican for sheriff next year poses political complications for the state and local party, especially if the admitted felon captures the Republican nomination in the May primary, a local political analyst said. The former three-term sheriff announced Thursday he will run, seeking the post he relinquished five years ago when he pleaded guilty to two felony counts of obstruction of justice. The Republican sheriff’s primary will include incumbent David Grice, who took over the sheriff’s office after Hege resigned and kept the seat during the general election in 2006. If Hege wins the primary and becomes the party nominee for the November 2010 general election, it could create a backlash locally, said Matthew DeSantis, assistant professor of political science at High Point University. “It will discourage people who oppose Hege from straight-ticket Republican balloting in the general election. People will say, ‘I’m not going to vote for all Republicans because I don’t want to vote

CANDIDATE

Former Davidson County Sheriff Gerald Hege first won the post in the November 1994 general election. The Republican served three terms, last winning reelection narrowly in 2002. He resigned in 2004 as part of a guilty plea to two felony counts of obstruction of justice for attempting to cover up money missing from the vice narcotics unit of the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office.

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Gerald Hege hands political sign to Jerry Moore at his election headquarters in Thomasville. for this guy Hege.’ It could open them up to change their vote on other issues,” DeSantis said. State Sen. Stan Bingham, R-Davidson, said he believes the Davidson County Republican Party will seek to remain neutral in the sheriff’s primary. Bingham acknowledges that Hege’s bid com-

plicates politics among Republicans. “A lot of the Hege faction is Hege only and have been very little involved in anything Republican since he was taken out of office,” Bingham said. A spokesman for the North Carolina Republican Party in Raleigh

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

said state party officials declined to comment at this time. The High Point Republican Party doesn’t plan to get involved in the Davidson County sheriff’s primary, said High Point Chairman Don Webb. There are 2,735 registered voters in the High Point portion of northeastern Davidson County, according to figures from the county board of elections. Historically, the High Point Republican Party hasn’t gotten involved in internal Davidson County Republican matters, Webb said. pjohnson@hpe.com | 888-3528

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

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CAROLINAS 2A www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Colleagues mourn loss of firefighter Elsewhere...

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Full obituary on 2B. BY PAT KIMBROUGH ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Colleagues remembered a High Point firefighter who died this week as someone who was devoted to his craft as well as his family. Chad Eric Greene, 34, a 13-year veteran of the High Point Fire Department, died Wednesday. Greene was found unresponsive at his Kernersville home about noon, a few hours after completing a shift for his other employer, the Union Cross Fire Department in Forsyth County, according to Capt. Brad Johnson of the Union Cross department. He was not on duty at the time, and there was no word on a cause of death. Greene worked as a fire equipment operator for High Point at the department’s station four. “He was just an allaround good guy. He was real involved with his community, his church. His wife and kids – they were first,” Johnson said. “He was very involved, very dedicated, loved the job, loved the community

AP

In this image made from Associated Press Television video, police respond at the scene at the U.S. Army base in Fort Hood, Texas, where a soldier opened fire, unleashing a stream of gunfire that left at least 12 people dead and at least 31 wounded.

Family not surprised at officer’s heroic actions CAROLINA BEACH (AP) – The stepmother of the police officer who shot an Army psychiatrist suspected of the Ford Hood killing spree said Friday the woman’s heroics are not surprising. Wanda Barbour told The Star-News of Wilmington she knew Sgt. Kimberly Munley was involved when she heard a female Fort Hood officer had shot and wounded Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, ending the bloodletting on the Texas base. “When they said a female officer, a little part of me just knew,” Barbour told the newspaper before heading to Texas with her husband. “She is a very great person with a great spirit.” Munley arrived at the shooting scene Thursday and began firing at Hasan, who spun and charged at her with a gun

AP

This July 4, 2009 photo obtained Nov. 6, 2009 from the Twitter page of Sgt. Kimberly Munley shows Sgt. Munley at Freedom Fest in Frisco, Texas. in each hand, authorities said. Munley’s superior, Chuck Medley, told The Associated Press that Munley shot Hasan in

“It was an amazing and aggressive performance by this police officer.” Munley’s father, Dennis Barbour, is a former mayor of Carolina Beach. The coastal town is about 15 miles south of Wilmington. Wrightsville Beach Police Chief John Carey said Munley, who worked for the force from 2000 to 2002 before moving away from the area, was a petite officer who worked well with others. “She was a very personable officer. She got along good with everyone,” he told the AP. “She wasn’t afraid of anything.” “She was a good shot,” Carey said of Munley. “Her abilities and the training that she got here hopefully had a lot to do with preparing her for that situation.” Carey said Munley joined the force in March 2000 as a reserve officer.

the upper torso, stopping him even though she was shot in both thighs and a wrist. The 34-year-old officer was reported to be recovering and in stable condition Friday. “We’re just so grateful and thankful to the Lord that she’s safe,” Barbour said. “Our hearts just ache for the loss of others, too, and hers, too. She’s still upset about that.” A message left by The Associated Press at the Barbour home was not immediately returned. Lt. Gen. Bob Cone, the base commander, said Munley and her partner responded within three minutes of reported gunfire that left 13 dead and 30 wounded. “She happened to encounter the gunman. In an exchange of gunfire, she was wounded but managed to wound him four times,” Cone said.

home and his garbage Friday to learn what motivated the suspect, who lay Hasan in a coma, shot four times in the frantic bloodletting. Hospital officials said some of the wounded had extremely serious injuries and might not survive. The 39-year-old Army psychiatrist emerged

as a study in contradictions: a polite man who stewed with discontent, a counselor who needed to be counseled himself, a professional healer now suspected of cutting down the fellow soldiers he was sworn to help. Relatives said he felt harassed because of his Muslim faith but did not embrace extremism. Others were not so sure. A recent classmate said Hasan once gave a jarring presentation to students in which

year-old Calvin Hoover, of Salem, told dispatchers early Tuesday that someone had broken into his truck and stolen cash, a jacket and a small amount of marijuana while he was at a tavern in Salem. He then called 911 again to complain that deputies had not arrived,

but the dispatcher had trouble understanding Hoover because he was driving and stopping several times to vomit. He was arrested on charges of driving under the influence of intoxicants. The sheriff’s office says it has no record of an attorney for Hoover.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The winning numbers selected Thursday in the N.C. Lottery:

Is your hearing current?

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The High Point Enterprise strives for accuracy. Readers who think a factual error has been made are encouraged to call the newsroom at 8883500. When a factual error has been found a correction will be published.

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

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NIGHT Pick 3: 9-8-8 Pick 4: 0-7-3-5 Cash 5: 6-12-15-18-34

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

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT US The High Point Enterprise

dnivens@hpe.com | 888-3626

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SALEM, Ore. (AP) – Oregon police have charged a man with drunken driving after he called 911 to report his marijuana as stolen but the dispatcher couldn’t understand him because he was vomiting while on the road. Marion County sheriff’s deputies say 21-

ted interest for the city to have jurisdiction,” Smothers said. “We have made the investment. This is our watershed. There is an interest for us to control development in the area.”

LOTTERY

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Man calls 911 to report stolen marijuana

pkimbrough@hpe.com | 888-3531

FROM PAGE 1

nents fear if High Point is granted ETJ control, roads dividing their properties would follow. City Manager Strib Boynton has said ETJ would benefit both the city and the county and save the county money. “There is a commit-

ACCURACY...

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had attained the rank of assistant chief. Johnson said Greene was second in command at the department, which employs volunteers and paid personnel. “He oversaw the dayto-day operations of the paid guys,” Johnson said. High Point Fire Department officials could not be reached for comment. Greene’s funeral is planned for Sunday at Green Street Baptist Church in High Point.

Opponents fear property would be divided

he argued the war on terrorism was a war against Islam, and “made himself a lightning rod for things” when he felt his religious beliefs were challenged. Investigators were trying to piece together how and why Hasan allegedly gunned down his comrades in the worst case of violence on a military base in the U.S. The rampage unfolded at a center where some 300 unarmed soldiers were lined up for vaccines and eye tests.

BOTTOM LINE

He was not on duty at the time, and there was no word on a cause of death.

ZONING

Suspect said methodical goodbyes FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) – As if going off to war, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan cleaned out his apartment, gave leftover frozen broccoli to one neighbor and called another to thank him for his friendship – common courtesies and routines of the departing soldier. Instead, authorities say, he went on the killing spree that left 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas, dead. Investigators examined Hasan’s computer, his

he served.” Greene was a married father of two whose wife was expecting anGreene other child in June, according to his obituary. He had been a member of the Union Cross department since he was 15 years old and

City Editor ......... 888-3537 Editor ................ 888-3543 Opinion Page Editor 888-3517 Entertainment .... 888-3601

Newsroom Info ... 888-3527 Obituaries ......... 888-3618 Sports Editor ..... 888-3520 Fax .................... 888-3644

NIGHT Cash 3: 1-7-5 Cash 4: 1-4-4-0


OBITUARIES, CAROLINAS 3A

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 www.hpe.com

Pastor: Man who killed family seemed mentally ill

OBITUARIES (MORE ON 2B)

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James Dunlap niece, Ashley Teetor of High Point; a nephew, Jeffrey Teetor of High Point; a great niece, Samantha Teetor of High Point; a great nephew, Caleb Teetor of McLeansville; and a grandson on the way, Ethan James Martin. He is also survived by extended family members, Judith Schoonover and David Tipton. Funeral will be 2:00 p.m. Monday at Fairfield United Methodist Church officiated by Rev. Jill Auman. Interment will follow in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends Sunday night from 6 until 8 p.m. at Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale. Memorials may be directed to Fairfield United Methodist Church, 1505 NC 62 W, High Point, NC 27263. Online condolences can be made at www. cumbyfuneral.com. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale.

RALEIGH (AP) – A Fayetteville real estate developer was monitoring phone calls out of fear someone was trying to track him and showed other signs of mental illness, but agreed to get help hours before he killed his wife, two teenage children and himself, his pastor said Friday. William Maxwell Jr. admitted to irrational thoughts and that he had trouble identifying family members by name, the Rev. John Cook said Friday during a funeral at Snyder Memorial Baptist Church in Fayetteville attended by about 1,000. Cook said he was among a group of friends and family who gathered at the Maxwell home Monday afternoon to encour-

LEXINGTON – Ronnie Dale Everhart, 62, of Highway 601 died November 3, 2009, at his home. Funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at Davidson Funeral Home Chapel, Lexington. Visitation will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Cecil Kinney RANDLEMAN – Troy Cecil Kinney, 76, of George York Road died November 6, 2009, at Randoph Hospital. Funeral will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at Neighbors Grove Wesleyan Church. Pugh Funeral Home, Randleman is serving the family.

C.W. Harris LEXINGTON – Calvin Wesley “C.W.� Harris, 73, of Sunflower Drive died November 6, 2009, at Hinkle Hospice House. Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Davidson Funeral Home Chapel, Lexington. Visitation will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

HIGH POINT – A guest speaker will focus on hospice care this weekend. Zion United Church of Christ will welcome Dr. Rodney Otwell to its pulpit at 10:30 a.m. Sunday

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“All of us, even those closest to Billy, did not know just how sick he was,� Cook said. “We had every indication there would be a Tuesday.� Meanwhile, police were

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

Is your hearing current? 889.9977

age William Maxwell to seek help, and that Maxwell agreed. Hours later, he killed his family and turned a gun on himself, police said.

Church marks Hospice Sabbath ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

Ronnie Everhart

AP

Alexa Copenhaver (left) wipes her eyes while speaking about her friend Connor Maxwell as friends and relatives of the Maxwell family gather at Snyder Memorial Baptist Church in Fayetteville.

probing why it took more than an hour after a chilling emergency call that captured the sound of a gunshot before officers were dispatched to the Maxwell home. “As for the reason for the delay, this is an internal matter that we are currently investigating and will take the appropriate course of action,� Fayetteville Police Department spokeswoman Theresa Chance said Friday in an e-mail to The Associated Press. The first of two 911 calls to police was received at 6:38 p.m. Monday. It captured someone quietly moaning before a gunshot erupts. The call came from a landline telephone in the home, Chance said.

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HIGH POINT – Mr. James Lee Dunlap, 67, of High Point, died Thursday, November 5, 2009, at the Hospice Home at High Point. Born October 14, 1942, in Rockingham County, he was the son of the late Themie Gilbert and Addie Mae Baughn Dunlap. He was a member of Fairfield United Methodist Church and owned and operated Dunlap Outdoor Power Equipment. He was a 32nd Degree Mason and formerly taught Mechanical Theory at GTCC. He served on the High Point Planning and Zoning Commission for seven years, was the former chairman of the Citizens Advisory Committee for the High Point Police Department, and was an Honorary Deputy Sherriff for the Guilford County Sherriff’s Department. Survivors include a daughter, Mary Mae Dunlap and fiancĂŠ, Stewart Martin, of Mocksville; a sister, Mary Alice “Pollyâ€? Teetor of High Point; a

Notice is hereby given that the City of High Point is currently preparing its Five-Year Consolidated Plan for the period of FY 2010-2014. The City will apply for FY 2010 Community Development Block Grant funds (CDGB) from the U.S. Department of Housing (HUD) in the approximate amount of $781,634. The City will also apply for HOME Investment Partnership funds in the approximate amount of $498,359. In accordance with the Final Rule for revised program regulations, 24 CFR, Parts 91, et. al. and the City of High Point citizen participation plan, the City intends to conduct an initial public meeting to identify housing and community development needs for the FiveYear Plan. The meeting will be conducted on Tuesday, November 10, 2009 from 6:00 to 8:00 PM, at the Washington Terrace Community Center. The purpose of the meeting is to obtain views and comments of individuals and organizations relative to housing and community development needs that may be addressed by CDBG and HOME funds during the next ďŹ ve years. Additional meetings will be scheduled during latter stages of the consolidated planning process. An opportunity will also be presented to comment on the City’s performance in carrying out CDBG and HOME activities. Individuals and organizations will also be given the opportunity to recommend speciďŹ c activities to be carried out with FY 2010 CDBG and HOME funds. The City expects to publish a summary of its proposed Five Year Consolidated Plan for FY 2010 – FY 2014 and Annual Action Plan for FY 2010 on or about February 15, 2010. A copy of these documents will be placed on public display for a thirty day review period beginning on or about February 15, 2010. A public hearing will be duly advertised and conducted by the Citizen Advisory Council to present the proposed plan to the public. The City will consider comments on the proposed plan prior to adoption by the High Point City Council in early May, 2010. The City intends to submit its Five Year Consolidated Plan and Annual Action Plan to HUD on or before May 15, 2010. Information relative to the Five Year Consolidated Plan and FY 2010 Annual Action Plan is available during normal business hours of 8 AM-5 PM Monday through Friday at the Department of Community Development and Housing, 211 South Hamilton Street, High Point.

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Persons requiring special accommodations to attend the public meeting should notify Beth Workman at (336) 883-3351. The City’s TDD number is (336) 883-8517. Material will be provided in an alternative format upon request. 495425


Saturday November 7, 2009

TOM BLOUNT: The best laid schemes ... often go awry. TOMORROW

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

4A

Blame Congress for destroying middle class I am amazed at the frustration of the general populace with the government. Send a notice to Congress and advise them we will no longer pay income tax. The IRS will then levy our accounts. This administration blames the last administration, etc. What most of Congress refuses to admit is when they took all restrictions off of imports (passed under the Clinton administration), eventually all the manufacturing and jobs went away. I don’t blame Obama. I blame Congress for this degradation of the American middle class. See how long they hold out when they have no income like Americans who pay them! They even tax unemployment. This means that people who are already struggling get to continue to contribute to the support of Congress. We either stop supporting them financially or we will never come out of this. Do we stand together or just ignore the magnitude of dishonesty on our home soil. If you were an employer and your employee did not do the job they were paid for, you would fire them. Our Congress needs to be fired. If you hurt their pocketbooks like they have destroyed ours, you would see a difference. I ask The High Point Enterprise to print a form stating we will no longer pay taxes until accountability. I ask that the address where it needs to be sent is on the form and then I ask every disillusioned individual to send it in. We have to send a strong message that the double talk and taxation is at an end. Additionally, let’s please discontinue playing the “race” card. I don’t care if the president is a four-legged, 10-eyed green person; accountability and doing the job matters. Bring America home, citizens. JANICE MCDOWELL Archdale

Councilman Grimes says thanks for participating One of our most important rights as Americans is the freedom to vote. Unfortunately, it is probably the freedom that is least exercised. I would like to thank all of the Thomasville voters who came out to vote in our municipal elections either during early voting or this past Tuesday. For those that voted for me, I thank them for their continued confidence. However, whether a

YOUR VIEW

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person voted for me or not or even if the person did not vote at all, I pledge to every Thomasville citizen my best effort as a member of their City Council for these next two years. I will continue to work hard to represent all citizens fairly and honestly. NEAL GRIMES Thomasville

The news is full of evolutionary confusion • HPE, 2007 – New Fossil Complicates Evolution Picture – The absence of feathers in a newly discovered fossil is causing researchers to reassess the evolution of feathers. The 150 million-yearold fossil clearly puts it among feathered kin, its closest relatives. (Evolutionists believe birds are the only living descendants of dinosaurs.) • HPE, April 5, 2007 – New Dinosaur Fossil Discovered in Utah – (No missing link! This one has feathers!) New species resembled a 7-foot turkey that could run 25 mph (ostrich). • USA Today, Sept. 18, 2009 – An 8-foot T.rex miniature (1/90 the size of the T.rex) lived 40 million years before the T.rex appears in the fossil record. “This was completely unexpected,” says Stephen Brusatte of the American Museum of Natural History, NYC. “Until now, we thought the T.rex’s feathers had evolved as a consequence of its large body size.” (No surprise here; all plants, animals, and humans begin small and grow larger.) • HPE, January , 2006 – The discovery of 70-million-year-old soft tissue in a T.rex fossil was ranked by Discover Magazine as one of the 10 most important scientific stories of the year. According to evolutionists, soft tissue can’t

survive beyond 100,000 years, yet this tissue survived 700 times longer. Mary Schweitzer, a graduate student in biology at Montana State University of the Rockies, studying the tissue found red blood cells containing DNA. She stated, “It was exactly like looking at a slice of modern bone. The DNA could not survive even if the creature only lived 50,000 years ago. It’s biochemically unthinkable.” (Impossibility) DNA results? Evolutionary embarrassment. Chickens and dinosaurs are not related. “A wise man will hear, and will increase learning.” Proverbs 1:5 “But fools despise instruction.” Proverbs 1:7 Evolutionists are “ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.” 2 Timothy 3:7 CLAYTON L. PROCTOR SR. Trinity

Some of us must wake up and get involved Some who have started this letter should read no farther. If you are over 60 years old with no children or grandchildren, ignore the rest. Atheists and devout humanists should follow suit. If you are in America illegally, you probably can’t read this anyway. If you are ashamed of the fact that you have actually saved some of the money you earned over the years, what follows will surely disgust you. Despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, if you somehow trust career politicians to manage your money and take care of you from the womb to the tomb, especially in those later years, read no farther. Now if you are brutally honest with yourself, here is where I expect to lose much of my audience: If you are too busy to care or are so crippled

by complacency that you don’t mind watching your freedoms vanish almost daily, no words will change that. For those of you who are still “with me,” if we want to preserve the America we inherited, let’s wake up before it is too late. At an absolute minimum, every single one of us needs to follow at least one of these two courses of action: We need to fall on our faces before God, figuratively or perhaps even literally, confess our personal and national sins, and beg Him for an undeserved miracle for this country. Another valid option is to quit sitting on the sidelines as spectators and get urgently involved in our republic. Doing both is even better. Doing neither is inexcusable. BILL MICHAL High Point

Teen writer is on target with

“T

own American story.” (Speech given by Barack Obama in Philadelphia, March 18, 2008.) The above quote is one I included in my November 2008 column, and our president continues the task of leading and reasoning to propel and compel us and our elected leaders out of the mire that we were in when he started. I continue to wake up every day thanking God that he’s there. Actually, President Obama accomplished more in 30 days than any other president. Surely, we didn’t expect every 30 days to go like that – passing major legislation such as the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act and the $787 billion stimulus bill. North Carolina has received more than $3 billion in stimulus money. A $2 million grant for a fire station right outside Winston Salem was made possible because of it. On second opinion or photoop, even Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Burr of Winston-Salem thought it was “a great thing for this country.” Since then, the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act, Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility, Disclo-

Founded in 1885 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

DAVIDSON COUNTY

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Franken amendment column It was a delight to open your newspaper Oct. 28 to the opinion pages and find there a well-researched and very well-written Teen View column by Meredith Jones. Please share with her my thanks for and my congratulations on her success as a columnist far more mature than the many others who write for you. As a very partisan observer, I do regret that she failed to note that North Carolina’s U.S. Sen. Richard Burr was one of the 30 who voted against the Franken amendment. I have read his statement defending his vote (found on www. Republicansforrape.org) but wish she had included some mention of it her column. I shall look forward to reading her views in the future. TOM KAK High Point

YOUR VIEW POLL

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What’s wrong or right about the “Pelosicare” health care bill being debated in the U.S. House? In 30 words or less (no name, address required) e-mail your thoughts to letterbox@hpe.com. Here is one response: • “Pelosicare” – worst government program ever! Medicare, just one of many bankrupt programs, was forced onto taxpayers so illegitimates could get more welfare and freebies. “Redistributing the wealth” has bankrupted America.

President has had busy year, but work remains his was one of the tasks we set forth at the beginning of this campaign – to continue the long march of those who came before us, a march for a more just, more equal, more free , more caring and more prosperous America. “ I chose to run for the presidency at this time in history because I believe deeply that we cannot solve the challenges of our time unless we solve them together – unless we perOPINION fect our union by understanding that Sondra we have different Foy Anderson stories, but we hold ■■■ common hopes; that we may not look the same and we may not have come from the same place, but we all want to move in the same direction – towards a better future for our children and our grand children. “This belief comes from my unyielding faith in the decency and generosity of the American people. But it also comes from my

An independent newspaper

School board Allan Thompson, 2622 W. Center Street Ext., Lexington, NC 27295; 249-1886; althompson@ lexcominc.net Kenny Meredith, P.O. Box 24097, WinstonSalem, NC 27114; 764-4676; kdm@ rymcoinc.com Alan Beck, 101 Castleton Dr., Thomasville, NC 27360; 472-9438; suburbanone@ northstate.net Karen Craver, 477 William Carter Lane, Lexington, NC 27295; 764-4075; karencraver2004@ yahoo.com Carol Crouse, 260 Burkhart Road, Lexington, NC 27292; 3572211; cbcrouse@ lexcominc.net

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.

LETTER RULES

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sure Act, Veterans Health Care Reform and Transparency Act and the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 have been signed into law. But it is hard. Many folks that I know who were not working a year ago are still not working. Others who were working, have since been laid off or soon will be. The war continues. Homelessness continues to grow. The health care plan has not been approved, but the House

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

Democrats’ bill endorsed by AARP and the American Medical Association shows some progress is being made. The bill has a long way to go before it reaches President Obama’s desk, but plans for a public option are still in, democracy is slow and there is progress. Let’s still have hope. SONDRA FOY ANDERSON lives in High Point, is the Christian mother of three sons and a member of High Point Democrats in Action.

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


3 Offices To Serve You High Point OfďŹ ce

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118 Trindale Road 861-7653

3815 Tinsley Drive 883-7200

Locally Owned & Operated! O P E N

W W W . E D P R I C E T R I A D . C O M

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C O M M U N I T I E S

PENNFIELD

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BEAUTIFUL INSIDE AND OUT! PRIVATE, PROFESSIONALLY LANDSCAPED YARD. 5 BD, OPEN 2 STORY FOYER, HARDWOODS, 9’ CEILINGS LARGE EAT-IN KITCHEN W/PICTURE WINDOW. PRICED TO SELL AT $254,900. DIRECTIONS: N. ON JOHNSON TO R. ON OLD MILL TO L. ON BLAIRWOOD TO R. ON SUNCREST R. ON SANDLEWOOD. JOANN CRAWFORD 906-0002

1010/1012/1014 GEORGIA AVENUE

CUSTOM BUILT HOMES FROM THE FRONT DOOR TO THE BACK. THE HOMES ARE BUILT RIGHT! DIRECTIONS: RIGHT ON COUNTRY LINE RD. RIGHT ON E. SUNRISE RIGHT ON DUKE RIGHT ON GEORGIA AVE. ,)3! 3(%2-!. s

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WELL KEPT OAK HOLLOW HOME W/4BDRMS-2.5BATHS. OVER 2000SFT, 20X14 SCREENED PORCH, SOME HARDWOODS, LARGE LIVING ROOM. LOCATED ON A DEAD-END STREET. DIRECTIONS: HWY 68 TO SKEET CLUB TO LEFT ON WHITES MILL RIGHT ON MILL POND RIGHT ON GRINDSTAFF. HOME IS ON THE RIGHT. LARRY GUY 880-6767

BRECKENRIDGE

OPEN DAILY 11-5; SAT. & SUN. 2-5 s ,EDFORD 3CHOOLS s PLANS TO CHOOSE STARTING IN THE S s .EIGHBORHOOD POOL PLUS SIDEWALKS $IRECTIONS (79 7ESTCHESTER TO "URTON 2D , ON 0AUL 0OPE 2D 2IGHT 0LANTERS 7ALK

&2%%-/.4 $2)6% BEAUTIFUL BRECKENRIDGE PAST COLONIAL COUNTRY CLUB. SPACIOUS 2BR/2BATH TOWNHOME W/MANY UPGRADES. DIRECTIONS: I-85 TAKE FINCH FARM RD. EXIT AND GO NORTH ACROSS HWY 62 TO UNITY ST.PAST COLONIAL COUNTY CLUB. RIGHT INTO BRECKENRIDGE. ROAD WILL DEAD END INTO FREEMONT. 2)#+ 6!5'(. s

N E W

Single Family at SADDLE BROOK .EW 0LANS !VAILABLE

1010 GEORGIA AVENUE

Condos starting in the 80’s Townhomes starting in the 120’s Model Hours: Open Daily 1pm to 5 pm. Closed on Tuesdays. $IRECTIONS #ONVENIENTLY LOCATED JUST OFF .ORTH -AIN 3T IN (IGH 0OINT 1UICK ACCESS TO HIGHWAY "Y 0ASS &ROM -AIN 3TREET TURN ONTO 7ESTOVER $RIVE 7ESTOVER 2IDGE WILL BE ON YOUR RIGHT JUST AFTER YOU CROSS THE $AVIDSON #OUNTY LINE .EW "UILDER IS 0($ "UILDERS

1014 GEORGIA AVENUE

605 ROBBINS STREET

5008 BENNINGTON

353!. 7//$9 s ,!52)% %$7!2$3

Ask About Specials

Ranch Homes w/Optional Bonus FROM S Open Daily 11-5 Sat & Sun 2-5

!

Call Char Bivins 638-5765 or 870-0222 &ROM (IGH 0OINT Skeet Club to Rt. onto Sandy Ridge 2 mi. on L. &ROM 73 I-40 E. to Sandy Ridge Rd. exit Rt. onto Sandy Ridge Rd. 2 mi. on Rt. &ROM '3/ I-40 W to Sandy Ridge exit L. onto Sandy Ridge. 2 mi. on Rt.

$130,000 - 3 BD/2BA CUSTOM BUILT HOME 4BD(2 ON MAIN)/ 3 BATHS 3100# PLUS 1900# UNFINISHED BASEMENT DESIGNER KIT. SCREENED PORCH LARGE LOT TUCKED AWAY IN THOMASVILLE. JEANNE STEWART 878-7584 LISA SHERMAN 878-7038

R E S I D E N T I A L

L I S T I N G S

7%347//$ !6% s

%!',% ,!.$).' $2 s

!.$2%7 (5.4%2 s

BRICK RANCH W/3BDRMS AND 2 BATHS UPDATED ROOF, GUTTERS HVAC AND MORE! CALL PAM 848-7560

1 ACRE LOT W/3BDRMS/2BATHS QUALIFIES FOR USDA FINANCING CALL PAMELA 210-4241

3BDRM RANCH W/BASEMENT IN RANDOLPH COUNTY CALL FOSTER 253-8888

Prices Starting in the low $100s &ROM TO S S

The Commons at

Let Us Show You Single Family Home in Our Upcoming Phase!

3BR,2BA, 2 car garage s $ESIGNER CEILINGS s #ORNER lREPLACE s /PTIONAL SUNROOM OR SCREEN PORCH ,IVE ACROSS FROM THE #OUNTRY #LUB -ODEL /PEN $AILY s 3UN s #LOSED ON -ONDAY

Call Amber Doyle 878-7026 I-85 to Finch Farm Rd. Exit. Right on Finch Farm toward Thomasville. Community on left across from country club.

'5%34 342%%4 s

#/26!)2 $2)6% s

3!'%7//$ s

Call Charles 327-5225

Call Rick 803-0514

Call Sam 471-8826

3 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS NEW CARPET,PAINT AND MORE!

Open Sunday 2-4 Call Rick Vaughn 803-0514

L I S T I N G S

$125,500 - 3 BEDROOM AND 2 BATH HOME. BEAU- $25,900 - 2 BEDROOM AND 1 BATH BUNGALOW. $115,500 - CUSTOM BUILT HOME IN THOMASCLOSE TO HIGH POINT UNIVERSITY LOCATION. VILLE. 3 BD/2 BA. CALL TODAY FOR YOUR PRITIFUL CUSTOM BUILT HOME. FOSTER FERRYMAN 253-8888 VATE TOUR LISA SHERMAN 878-7038 LISA SHERMAN 847-1142

$38,115 - GREAT FOR 1ST TIME HOMEOWNER OR INVESTMENT! FOSTER FERRYMAN 253-888

2 TO 3 BEDROOM HOMES AVAILALBLE FIVE - 1 STORY PLANS W/DOUBLE GARAGE PRICES STARTING FROM $314,900

$)2%#4)/.3 Westchester to Right on W. Lexington - 2 miles on right is PennďŹ eld.

BRADFORD DOWNS, ARCHDALE. ATTENTION TO DETAIL, 3BR/2.5BATH, BONUS ROOM, FORMAL DINING, FORMAL LR, GREAT ROOM, BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN, 3-CAR GARAGE, LARGE TILE SHOWER. LOTS OF EXTRAS. $289,000. $)2%#4)/.3 311S TO LEFT ON TARHEEL DR. TO RIGHT ON WOOD AVE. TO LEFT ON BRADFORD LANE TO RIGHT ON SHADY OAK LANE TO RIGHT ON BYRON LANE TO LEFT ON MAGNOLIA LANE. -)+% 05'( s

806 BARBEE AVENUE

1012 GEORGIA AVENUE

LINDA SOLDANO 878-7007

202 MAGNOLIA LANE

4!2-!# $2)6%

3BR/2BA HOME LOCATED IN SOPHIA. UPGRADES THROUGHOUT AND A BONUS ROOM. MAINTENANCE FREE EXTERIOR. A MUST SEE! $)2%#4)/.3 HWY 311 SOUTH RIGHT ON ARCHDALE RD. FOLLOW ARCHDALE RD. TO LEFT ONTO OLD MARLBORO RD. LEFT INTO WHITES LANDING SUBDIVISION (TARMAC DRIVE) HOME IS ON THE LEFT. #(2)3 ,/.' s

,/43 4/ #(//3% &2/- 4/ 35)4 9/52 0,!.

Ask about the Sweat %QUITY 0ROGRAM

3BEDROOM/2BATH BRICK HOME $2,500 TOWARDS CLOSING COSTS

s BEDROOM PLANS s ,ARGE FRONT PORCHES AND PATIOS s !SK ABOUT IN ASSISTANCE Open Tuesday-Saturday 1-5 & Sunday 2-5 Main St. to left on FairďŹ eld. Left on Brentwood. Right on Granville and you will enter Spring Brook Meadows

BRICK HOME WITH 4BR/2.5BATHS. LARGE BONUS ROOM

In !RCHDALE s Walking Trails to Creekside Park Homes from the 180s In Archdale Ask About ! Specials

Single Level Townhomes ()#+37//$ #2%%+ $2)6% s

7%34(),, s

CAROLINE BURNETT 803-1970

KRISTI LUCAS 870-0421

SUE HOULT 689-438

s BEDROOM PLANS WITH GARAGE s LEVEL WITH GAS LOG lREPLACE s 3UNROOM 3CREEN 0ORCH "ONUS 2OOM OPTIONS

4 BEDROOM AND 2.5 BATH HOME FRESHLY PAINTED - GOURMET IMMACULATE W/3BDRMS-2.5BATHS MAIN LEVEL MASTER. 4BDRM/2.5BATH NEW HOME LIVING ROOM W/GAS LOG FIREKITCHEN LARGE YARD! ALARM SYSTEM $5000 DOWN PAYMENT ASSISTANCE! PLACE MASTER ON MAIN LEVEL. NEIGHBORHOOD POOL.

s %XCEPTIONAL STANDARD FEATURES s #ONVENIENT TO ) s .EW 0LANS Call Mariea Shean 878-7577 /PEN DAILY s 3AT 3UN #(%34.54 342%%4 %84 s

-!$)3/. !6%.5% s

!,)3/. ,!.% s

TEAM BEESON 878-756

PAMELA CARTER 210-4241

MARIEA SHEAN 687-946

Right on Ansley

South on Main St. into Archdale. Left on Tarheel. Right on Wood Ave. Follow to the end.

OVER 5000SQFT. MAIN LEVEL MASTER SUITE & GOURMET 4BDRMS/3BATHS WITH OVER 3100 SQFT. CEDAR CLOSET - 4BDRMS/2.5BATHS IN COURTLAND PARK NEW CARPET, ROOF, KITCHEN 61/2 +- ACRES. DAVIDSON CO. TAXES AND SCHOOLS SCREENED PORCH OLDER HOME NEEDS PERSONAL TOUCH PAINT, HEAT PUMP HARDWOODS AND TILE

Donise Bailey 442-0012

Vida Bailey

Dianna Baxendale

Pam Beeson 848-7560

Kathy Blakemore 883-7200

Karen Boulware

Paul Bowers 878-7568

Deborah Bryant 215-4236

Shelby Brewer

Angela Brown

Stacy Brown

Janet Brown

Carolina Burnett

Pam Carter 210-4241

Sheila Cochrane

Karen Coltrane 442-0555

Sam Cosher 471-8826

JoAnn Crawford

Fidel Davila 687-5804

Karen Dietz

Shane Earnhardt

Foster Ferryman 253-8888

Lynn Finnegan 413-6158

Woody Grady 687-8111

Larry Guy 880-6767

Sue Hoult

Sharon Johnson 870-0771

Donna Lambeth 240-3456

Jack Lance 442-1133

Chris Long

Stan Martin

Aaron Mattern

Juanita Miller 880-5113

Barbara Moore 878-7565

Scott Myers Broker In Charge

Mike Pugh

Angela Renshaw 878-7002 ext. 351

Vic Sanniota

Kristy Schrock

Lisa Sherman 847-1142

Sharon Sink 688-2122

Janice Spainhour

Robert Smith 215-4465

Jeanne Stewart 878-7584

Tyler Walsh 688-1137

Rick Vaughn 803-0514

Linda Weaver 878-7004

Charles Willett 327-5225

Janice Wilson

Jay Woods 442-7274

Char Bivins 870-0222 Saddlebrook

Pat & Bill Colonna Heritage Ridge

Amber Doyle Colonial Village

Laurie Edwards Westover

Beverly Hardy Cambridge

Sallie Ledford Ashebrook

Kristi Lucas 870-0421 Hickswood

Mariea Shean Water’s Edge

Linda Solando 878-7007 Planters Walk

Van Boyles 878-7573 Commercial

Alex Field 442-0744 Commercial

Ivan Garry 878-7541 Commercial

Ron Hinkle 878-7544 Commercial

Jerry Hughes 878-7005 Commercial

Van McSwaim Commercial

John Parks Commercial

Todd Peacock 878-7553 Commercial

Gary Snipes 880-5727 Commercial

Dennis Speckman 442-2000 Commercial

Ed Price 812-3161

Susan Woody Westover

NEW HOMES AGENTS

Janie Avant

COMMERICAL AGENTS

RESIDENTIAL AGENTS

Too Many Specials To List! /PEN $AILY s 3AT 3UN Call Pat Colonna 841-7001 or 906-2265 North Main to Old 311. Left on Hedgecock.

492512

34/.%9"2//+ $2)6% s


Saturday November 7, 2009

ALTERNATIVE CURES: More insurers pay for unorthodox remedies. SUNDAY

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

6A

FBI mum about arrest in nun’s slaying

Rick Warren, Reader’s Digest part ways on project

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) – Federal and tribal law enforcement agents descended on a small community on the Navajo Indian reservation early Thursday to make an arrest as part of their investigation into the slaying of a nun whose body was found in her home on church property. The FBI said agents arrested one person in Navajo, but refused to say how that person might be connected to the death of AP 64-year-old Sister Margue- A makeshift shrine for Sister Marguerite Bartz hangs on the fence around the Saint rite Bartz. The nun’s body Berard Catholic Church in Navajo, N.M. was discovered after she didn’t show up as schedInvestigators also re- said preliminary autopsy ma, likely as a result of uled for Sunday Mass in a mained tightlipped about results show Bartz sus- a violent confrontation nearby community. details of the crime, but tained substantial trau- with her killer or killers.

LAKE FOREST, Calif. (AP) – A joint publishing venture between influential pastor Rick Warren and Reader’s Digest magazine has collapsed less than a year after it was announced with great fanfare. The multimedia project, called the Purpose Driven Connection, will continue in a different form but be operated solely by Warren’s Saddleback Church in Southern California starting next spring, church officials

CHURCH CALENDAR

BIBLE QUIZ

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Items to be published in the church religion calendar should include the complete name of any guest speaker. They should be typed or clearly written with a contact name and number (between the hours of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.) and must arrive in the office of the Enterprise by 8 a.m. on the Thursday prior to publication. Fax number 888-3644 or e-mail pblevins@hpe.com.

JESUS WAY HOUSE OF PRAYER

said Wednesday. A quarterly print magazine of the same name will publish for the last time in mid-November, and its content will move to a free, expanded Web site starting in January, Warren said in a statement. “The positive response from readers was so overwhelming we didn’t want the content to be limited only to Americans who could afford a subscription to a magazine,” Warren said.

--Grove Missionary Baptist Hickory Chapel Road. Guest Church, 1710 E. Green speakers will be Rodney Hedrick on Monday and Drive. Tuesday; and Don Collins on Thursday and Friday. FRIENDSHIP MISSIONARY Special singing nightly. BAPTIST Celebration of the 24th pastoral anniversary of MT. OLIVE WESLEYAN Pastor H.N. Goode will be Evangelist Kenny Greenheld at 6:30 p.m. today at way will be guest speaker Friendship Missionary Bap- for evangelistic services tist Church, 106 Smith St., and Rally Day at 11 a.m. Thomasville. In concert will Sunday at Mt. Olive Wesbe Envision of Greensboro, leyan Church, 3290 Mt. The Chosen Disciples of Olive Church Road, Sophia. Asheboro, The H.N. Goode Services will continue at 7 Ensemble and others. p.m. Monday through Nov. 14 and 11 a.m. Nov. 15.

NEW DIMENSION COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN CENTER LANDMARK BAPTIST

Singers from Pine Croft Baptist Church and Brian and Lori Moore and group will be in concert at 6 p.m. today at Jesus Way House of Prayer Church, 5020 Meadowbrook Road, Trinity.

Minister Annie D. McRae will be guest speaker at 4 p.m. Sunday at New Dimension Community Christian Center, 105 N. Hoskins St.

FRIENDSHIP HOLINESS

PEARSON MEMORIAL AME

Fresh Anointing Youth Conference, “Youth Defeating the Devil with the Weapon of Praise,” will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday through Friday at Friendship Holiness Church, 820 Leonard Ave. Guest speaker will be the Rev. Tanny Wright Jr., pastor and founder of Damascus Christian Center, Greensboro.

Annual Missionary Day will be observed with guest speaker Evangelist Violet Campbell of Great Commission Community Church at 11 a.m. Sunday at Pearson Memorial AME Church, 805 E. Washington Drive. An evening of song celebrating missionaries will be held at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.

STRAIGHTWAY BAPTIST OAK GROVE MISSIONARY

Revival services will be The Rev. Micheal Robin- held at 7:30 p.m. Monday son will be guest speaker through Friday at Straightat 11 a.m. Sunday at Oak way Baptist Church, 1125

Second Sunday Singing will be held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Landmark Baptist Church, 6055 Sunset View Drive, Archdale. Heavenly Sunrise of Dover, NC, will be in concert.

HIGH POINT CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD WORD AND DELIVERANCE MINISTRY “Women in Red: Covered Under the Blood” will be presented at 7 p.m. Friday at High Point Church of the Living God Word and Deliverance Ministry, 619 Garrison St. Guest speaker will be Evangelist Donna

Canty of Friendship Baptist and Pastor Rosa Summers of Kingdom Builders InChurch, Thomasville. ternational; Nov. 15, Angelia Sturdivant of True HOLLY HILL WESLEYAN Homecoming will be cel- Standard Holiness Church; ebrated at 10:30 a.m. Sun- and Pastor Marie Lindsay day at Holly Hill Wesleyan of Healing Heart Ministry, Church, 202 W. Holly Hill Archdale. Road, Thomasville. The Hayes Family will be in FRIENDSHIP HOLINESS concert. The 11th anniversary of Assistant Pastor Thomas and Mrs. Marshall will SOUTHSIDE BAPTIST The Trinity Quartet will be held at 4 p.m. Sunday be in concert at 10:30 a.m. at Friendship Holiness Sunday at Southside Bap- Church, 820 Leonard St. tist Church, 2515 Belle- Guest speaker will be Elder D.T. “Dynamite” Johnson meade St. of Christ Cathedral.

Yesterday’s Bible question: What did Jesus ask the Father to do for him in John 17? Answer to yesterday’s question: To glorify Him. “And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was.” (John 17:5) Today’s Bible question: In John 17 who did Jesus say he had glorified here on earth? BIBLE QUIZ is provided by Hugh B. Brittain of Shelby.

TRUE STANDARD HOLINESS Women’s Ministry Fellowship Services will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday at True Standard Holiness Church, 1501 Davis Ave. Services will continue at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Nov. 14 and 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. Nov. 15. Guest speakers will be: Tuesday, Elder Brenda McEarchern of Sanctuary Deliverance Church, Greensboro; Thursday, Evangelist Charity Belton of Shield of Faith Christian Center, Long Beach, CA; Nov. 14, Pastor Deborah Foster of New Ministries Church

%M<I?± -K@IDIB

496397

SATURDAY, NOV. 7TH 8AM TO 6PM FREE COFFEE ALL DA DAY Free Hot Dogs - 11am to 2pm LIVE MUSIC - 2pm to 6pm Wesleyan offers a wonderful environment for children to grow spiritually, academically, socially and emotionally. We provide children with the needed academic building blocks and a wide variety of extracurricular activities... all in a safe and nurturing environment.

Grades K - 12 Call today and schedule an admissions tour for the 2010 - 2011 school year! .ORTH #ENTENNIAL 3TREET (IGH 0OINT s (336) 884-3333 EXT. 221

www.wesed.org

10948-F N. Main St. Archdale, NC 27263 (In the Village Square Shopping Center next to the Pioneer Restaurant)

MARRIAGE: Whatever Happened to God’s Original Plan?

493287

Have We the Creature Become Wiser than the Creator? >C 8DC8:GI

Are You Confused about God’s Plan for Marriage? Would you Like to Know More about the Original Plan so You Won’t Have to Settle for a Counterfeit?

Come & Be a Part of our Family & Friends day this Sunday, November 8 @ 8:15 & 11:00. Sunday School at 9:30

The HAYES Family November 8, 2009 10:30 am Holly Hill Wesleyan Church 202 W. Holly Hill Rd. Thomasville

476-6628

Lunch Will be Served at 1:30pm When God is in His proper place, the man can not be replaced, the woman will blossom in her place and the family will not be displaced. However, when God is not in his proper place, the entire family will be out of place.


FAITH THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 www.hpe.com

7A

One of first travelers to Holy Land made impact M

any Christians dream of going to the Holy Land. It can be tricky, though, since the Middle East seems to fluctuate between peace and violence. Plus, it can be expensive. So people put off traveling there until they can afford to more easily, meaning that the kids have moved out. Such was the case of one of the first travelers to the Holy Land (although her kid paid her way). She was around 80 by the time she was able to go there. But what an impact she made! Among other things, she ordered that a church be built in Jerusalem. Today, this church is a must-stop on any trip to the Holy Land and is known as the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. That woman was Helena (d. 330), and she was the mother of Constantine, the first Christian Emperor. Helena’s early life story is unknown, although she was probably born around 250. She first appears in historical records when she marries Constantius, emperor of the Western Roman Empire, around 270, when she is probably 20

late 70s. And like a lot of tourists, she took cash to buy souvenirs. But in her case, Constantine gave her access to his treasury, which means she had an unlimited amount of money! Now, what I will describe next has to be taken with a grain of salt. All of it has been reported by various historians from long ago, but we have no way of verifying their claims. So all we are left with is what they reported. A phrase is used in academic studies to describe this, it is “according to tradition.” This means that it may have happened or not, all we have to go on is someone’s writing from a long time ago (or maybe more than one, but one could have copied the other and so multiple sources does not necessarily validate a claim). Helena is reported to have discovered a number of items of interest to Christians; the word is “relics.” She claimed to have discovered most of the original cross, some nails from the cross, a piece of the tunic which Jesus was wearing prior to being crucified, a

years old. Soon afterward, she gave birth to Constantine. Constantius divorced her around 20 years later, in 290. Helena remained single for the rest of her life. Her fortunes are tied in STUDYING with her son’s fortunes THE CHURCH and, when Constantine became emperor of the Western Roman Empire in 306 Mark upon his father’s death, Nickens Helena regained promi■■■ nence. Some historians of the time period claimed that Constantine became a Christian in 312, prior to going into battle. His mother also became a Christian, although some disagreement exists on whether she became a Christian before or after Constantine. Constantine became emperor of the entire Roman Empire in 325. He then sent his mother, Helena, to the Holy Land on a pilgrimage. She left a couple of years later, when she was in her

rope used to bind Jesus, and the name plate which was attached to the cross above Jesus’ head. She discovered the steps which Jesus climbed on his way to see Pilate. The steps were removed and brought back to Rome by Helena, where they remain today. They are known as the “Scala Sancta” and consist of 28 steps. Many travelers to Rome will climb the steps on their knees, saying a prayer at each one. She ordered a church built at the foot of the mountain where many believe Moses saw the Burning Bush and received the 10 Commandments. This church today is located in St. Catherine’s Monastery. She also built the church mentioned above, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Many Christians believe that it houses the place where Jesus was crucified and buried She died at the age of 80 in 330, with Constantine at her side. QUESTIONS, COMMENTS: Contact Mark Nickens at www.drnickens.com

Good health and wellness plan is worth trying lison is on to something with his “10 essentials for health and wellness.” He separates them into the physical, emotional and spiritual dimensions of life. His words are the first phrase or sentence. 1. Breathe deeply. In physical exams the doctor may say, “take a deep breath, hold it and let it out slowly.” Several times a day take in all the fresh air you can and release it slowly. 2. Drink water. Satisfy the thirst and energy will return. Too many times, we grab for more food when what the body needs is more water. 3. Sleep peacefully. Turn the TV off, close your eyes, think about nothing and go to sleep. Sleep seven to nine hours, whatever is best to rejuvenate your body. 4. Eat nutritiously. Eat more nourishing food. Cut down on fast foods.

5. Enjoy activity. Have an active lifestyle. Keep the body moving to improve it. 6. Give and receive love. To love is to genuinely care for the well-being of others. Exercise the positives of life. 7. Be forgiving. St. Paul wrote: “If it is possible, as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men” (Romans 12:18). The Good book may well be the world’s finest medical book. 8. Practice gratitude. Be thankful for what you have. A grumpy old man (most older men are not grumpy) asked his wife to fix two eggs for his breakfast. He wanted one fried and the other boiled. As soon as she placed them on his plate, he grumped, “You fried the wrong egg.” 9. Develop acceptance. Do not worry about what you cannot change. Change what you can.

Spiritual development must not be left to chance. It is the most important part of successful living. 10. Develop a relationship with God. Being strong spiritually will nourish the rest of life. You will never be truly happy and joyful until you know your heart is

Chicken Pie Sale

The Rev. Dr. Ken Lyon, Guest Pastor Ephesians 2:11-22

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“Count Me In”

Saturday November 7, 2009 8:00am-12:00

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cliché, to note that the Protestant work ethic fueled capitalism, giving capitalism such guiding virtues as hard work, frugality and efficiency. While honest labor and thriftiness may still be virtues held in high regard, it is tempting to feel that capitalism has somehow lost its soul. Instead of producing highThese things I have spoken unto minded, hardworking Christians you, that in me ye might have who value work, it has produced peace. In the world ye shall have dispirited automatons who dread tribulation: but be of good cheer; work and mindlessly consume I have overcome the world. whatever the market has to offer. Even Adam Smith, capitalism’s John 16:33 first and foremost theorist, warned in “The Wealth of Nations” that specialized labor would tend to make work boring and alienate labor from its product. So, is there a way to keep work from being so stultifying? Of course, it depends somewhat on the work in question, but any labor that is interesting is redemptive, whether it is figuring out what is wrong with someone’s car that won’t start, planting a garden, or cleaning house. Another way to redeem work is to do it in a craftsman- like way. There is something inherently pleasurable in doing something well, especially if there is some product to behold or savor at the end of our work. Consider how God Himself beheld His handiwork on the seventh day, and declared that it was good. So, perhaps we should figure out a way to take genuine interest in our work and devote ourselves to doing it well, however humble it may be. Do good work; God is watching. So I saw that there is nothing better than that a man should enjoy his work, for that is his lot...

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states in his he United States editorial: Congress and “HealthPresident Obama care is a have been talking all year hot topic in about a health plan for all 2009! Unthe people of our nation. fortunately, At this time, they have no the focus of plan. They have difficulSHARING reform is on ty trying to intelligently THE SPIRIT sick care. explain what they are It doesn’t talking about. Bill begin to It all seems relatively address simple to me. Just give to Ellis ■■■ optimizthe American people the ing health exact same plan they have through chosen for themselves and knowledge of lifestyle for which we pay the bill. modifications and their We did not choose their impact on health.” plan, but we pay for it. Ellison, then adds: “If They want to choose our we do not change our plan and then expect us views about health and to pay for it. As a child, I often heard, “What’s good wellness, we will never have the resources to for the goose is good for properly care for all the the gander.” people who will have We focus too much of critical health problems.” our attention on sickness Putting more expensive and too little on wellness. Michael R. Ellison, CEO & Band-Aids on more sympFounder of TriVita Inc., in toms is no solution for the mess we are in now. the September 2009 issue I believe Michael R. Elof the VITAJOURNAL,

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The God of my rock; in him will I trust: he is my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my high tower, and my refuge, my saviour; thou savest me from violence.

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Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man, whosoever thou art that judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things.

Roman 2:1


Saturday November 7, 2009

‘TOO FAT TO KILL’: Jurors reject defense, convict man of murder. 8C

Managing Editor: Sherrie Dockery sdockery@hpe.com (336) 888-3539

8A

1 dead, 5 hurt in office shooting

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G-20 to tackle economic imbalances ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – The world’s top financial officials on Friday sought a blueprint for securing future global growth and worked to break a deadlock over who bears the cost of fighting climate change. While Britain remains officially in recession, the United States, Germany and Japan have all recorded renewed growth.

AP

An office worker is moved from Florida shooting scene.

Iraq again seeks bombing probe

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) – A gunman opened fire Friday in the offices of an engineering firm where he was let go more than two years ago, authorities said, killing one person and injuring five others. Jason Rodriguez, 40, surrendered about three hours later, after officers saw him through the window of his mother’s home and asked him to come outside, Orlando Police Chief Val Demings said. Asked by a reporter outside the police station why

he did it, he replied: “Because they left me to rot.” Demings said Rodriguez brought a handgun to the firm in a downtown of-

fice tower where he once worked as an engineer, but investigators are not sure what his motive was.

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UNITED NATIONS – Iraq’s foreign minister has reiterated his country’s request for a high-level international envoy to investigate the extent of foreign involvement in recent bombings. The bombings claimed at least 155 lives.

Tropical Storm Ida may head for U.S. MANAGUA, Nicaragua – Former Hurricane Ida drenched Central America as a tropical depression on Friday and forecasters said it had some chance of regaining force and heading toward the U.S. The storm was projected to cross over Honduras and emerge into the Caribbean Friday night.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – State investigators raided ACORN offices on Friday, taking away computer hard drives and documents as part of a probe into alleged embezzlement and tax fraud when the

organization’s national headquarters was based in New Orleans. State prosecutors said their probe into the New Orleans offices stemmed from allegations made last year by board members.

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A blood drive will be held Thursday, November 12 from 2 to 6:30 p.m. at Emerywood Baptist Church. Blood Drive is held in memory of Tom Berry, former High Point Enterprise reporter. Appointments are strongly recommended.

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HUMBLE BEGINNINGS: Veterans’ Parade started as one-man show. SUNDAY TRADING SPACES: Don’t give up on your shady spots. 3B

Saturday November 7, 2009 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

DEAR ABBY: Teen’s lie about his past jeopardizes future. 3B

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

Ready for the rush Large turnout expected for swine flu vaccine clinic Guilford County deputies will help with traffic control and secuHealth Director JAMESTOWN – County rity, officials are preparing for Merle Green said Thursa large turnout today for day. Health workers and their swine flu vaccina- EMS crews will interview tion clinic on the Guilford people to make sure they Technical Community qualify for a shot. “We are calling in our College campus. GTCC officials have can- nurses and some of our receled classes and will open tired staff to help with this,” the campus at 8 a.m. The Green told the Guilford free clinic opens at Medlin County Board of CommisCenter at 9 a.m. for children sioners during a meeting at age 6 months to 18 years of High Point University. Eligible people will get a age, college students, and pregnant women. Vaccines ticket, Green said. “We know that some peowill be offered on a firstple are anxious because come, first-served basis. BY DAVID NIVENS ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

CLINIC

Where: Medlin Center, Guilford Technical Community College, Jamestown. When: 9 a.m.-4 p.m., today Parking: The Medlin Center and parking is accessible from High Point Road, across the street from Ragsdale High School. Information: Call 641-7777 or visit www.guilfordhealth.org and click on the H1N1 flu vaccine availability link. they have not been able to find a vaccine,” Green said. “The doses we have received previously have been taken within hours. But if you get a ticket, you know you can get a shot.” With a shipment of 6,000 doses arriving this week, health officials decided to

offer a free clinic. Other health care providers receive a share of most shipments. “We don’t want to have people lined up and then turn them away because we ran out of vaccine,” Green said. “That is why we waited to do this. We

wanted to have enough doses. We already have had more office appointments than the number of doses shipped to us.” People should bring their insurance or Medicaid card if they have one. Also, college students should bring their college identification cards. “But we will not check driver’s licences to see if someone is a Guilford County resident,” Green said. “We prefer to immunize county residents because we do not have enough vaccine yet for everyone.” Health officials don’t want to see sick people, but those with a mild cold or other illness should be able to get a shot.

WHO’S NEWS

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Christopher A. Franks received tenure and has been promoted to associate professor of religion in the Department of Religion and Philosophy at High Point University. He previously served as assistant professor of religion. Franks teaches the history of Christian thought, Biblical studies, ethics and religion in America.

dnivens@hpe.com | 888-3626

Magician lends a helping hand

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.

BY VICKI KNOPFLER ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT – Magician and illusionist Kevin Spencer faces a challenge tonight at the High Point Theatre. He’ll need to draw applause with his complex magic tricks and highspectacle show that outshine the smiles he generated using rubber bands, paper clips and dollar bills Friday in a simple room at High Point Regional Hospital. Kevin and his wife Cindy take their touring show, “Theatre of Illusion,” to theaters across the country, and at most stops Kevin – with assistant Ethan Schneider on Friday – also works for free with patients in rehabilitation programs at local hospitals. He gave the hospital program, “The Healing of Magic,” to High Point Regional inpatients undergoing rehabilitation as hospital therapists watched. Spencer’s hospital program is designed to teach patients tricks that improve fine and gross motor skills while at the same time bringing smiles and a more fun way to undergo therapy. Along the way, patients hopefully gain self-esteem, feel special and become more motivated. “I want to teach you pretty cool tricks with benefits,” he said Friday. Spencer developed the program after he was in a car wreck and received rehabilitation therapy. In the first of several sessions Friday, he worked with patients Jo Sherrer and Rheumell Trangley on tricks winding their fingers through rubber bands and connecting seem-

ANNUAL CAMPAIGN

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Illusionist Kevin Spencer instructs during magic as physical therapy class at High Point Regional Hospital. ingly separate paperclips attached to dollar bills. Spencer even taught Sherrer to wave one hand in front of the other, as magicians do to deflect attention from the hand performing the trick. After she successfully completed her tricks, Sherrer, who isn’t able to speak a lot, uttered “ahhhs” and a couple of loud “whoo’s,” but mostly she grinned big. When asked after the session if she planned to practice

with rubber bands in her room, she said clearly, “Yeah.” Trangley said she enjoyed learning tricks, but enjoyed watching Spencer more. “I thoroughly enjoyed watching his eyes,” Trangley said. “He was totally involved in helping (Sherrer). We need to bless people like that who work with those of us who are less fortunate.” LaToya Hill, a recreational therapist, said she planned to get extra

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tutoring from Spencer. She has used rubber bands for rehabilitation but didn’t quite learn the tricks Spencer taught the patients. She plans to incorporate the tricks in her therapy and hopes for the same results. “He brings a smile to faces to let them know they are still able to use their extremities and hands,” Hill said.

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Total to date $ 2,539,857

Upscale homes remain a problem for market BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

Elsewhere...

HIGH POINT – An extension and additional incentives to the First Time Home Buyer’s Tax Credit will help the housing market, but it may leave some areas unaffected, according to local real estate agents. The tax credit will continue to offer up to $8,000 to first-time homeowners through April 30, and additionally will offer $6,500 to previous homeowners who have lived in their current homes for five of the past eight years. But there still is a large inventory of upscale

Congress renews tax credit for first-time buyers. 1A

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homes ranging from $250,000 and higher that are stagnant on the market. Those homes remain a problem for both Realtors and homebuilders, according to Carol Ferrell, owner of Carol Ferrell and Associates. “Maybe the tax credit will get more inventory off of the market, allowing for builders to build new homes again,” Ferrell said. “But a lot of the homes that have been sold under the

tax credit are those in the lower price ranges.” Scott Beane, of Beane Construction, said the tax credit could help the upscale housing market theoretically, but most of its earnings have gone towards homes under $200,000. Consequently, homes above $200,000 have been the hardest to sell in the past year, he said. “More than 50 percent of our sales have been touched by this tax credit,” Beane said. “I hate that they waited to include previous buyers until now, but maybe they waited so that we have a broader base to get us through the winter.” Ferrell agreed that add-

stimulate the majority of the housing market. “Anything that will move houses and reduce inventory is going to be good for the industry and all industries related to it,” Ferrell said, citing electricians, plumbers and land surveyors as other occupations that could benefit from the tax credit. Beane said the original First Time Home Buyer’s Carol Ferrell tax credit had decreased Carol Ferrell and Associates the market’s inventory, thereby allowing for new construction opportunities. “I’m hoping the extening even more incentives to the tax credit could help sion will help inventory dethe construction industry, crease even more,” he said. but the current tax credit at least could continue to phaynes@hpe.com | 888-3617

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3B 5B 2B 6B


OBITUARIES 2B www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES (MORE ON 3A)

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Fleta Small

Darrell Ball..Surfside Beach, S.C. Herman Beck.........High Point James Bowers Jr..Thomasville Sheila Crawford...High Point Lisa Crowder......Thomasville James Dunlap......High Point Ronnie Everhart...Lexington Chad Greene......Kernersville C.W. Harris............Lexington Cecil Kinney........Randleman Joretta Lankford...Lexington Reatha Scarboro.....Archdale Fleta Small....................Trinity

TRINITY – Fleta Mae Pierce Small, 90, died November 6, 2009. Funeral will be held 3 p.m. Sunday at Pierce’s Chapel Primitive Baptist Church. Visitation will be held from 6 to 8 tonight at Briggs Funeral Home, Denton.

James Bowers Jr.

Rev. Herman Beck

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The High Point Enterprise publishes death notices without charge. Additional information is published for a fee. Obituary information should be subTHOMASVILLE – James mitted through a funeral Aubrey Bowers Jr., 73, home. resident of Thomasville went to be with the Lord on Thursday, November 05, 2009, at Thomasville Medical Center. He was born on October 21, 1936, to the late James Aubrey Sr. & Eva Bowers. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister Diane Hauser. He is survived by his loving wife of 54 years, Polly Bowers. He is also survived by three sons, Jerry Bowers and wife Rhonda, Dale Bowers and wife Lynette, Kevin Bowers and wife Cindy. He is also survived by seven grandchildren, HIGH POINT – Ms. Sheila Tara, Jeremy & wife CarDelynn Crawford 39, of rie, Paige, Blake, TayHigh Point, NC died on lor & Brooke Bowers, Saturday, October 31, two step grandchildren, 2009 at High Point Re- Shiloh Mabe & husband gional Hospital. Sheila Brad and Matt Osborne, was born October 3, 1970 two great grandchildren, in Jersey City, NJ to Arianna & JT Taylor, Walter Wright and Ruby one step grandchild RiCrawford. She was em- ley Mabe and one brothployed with the Presby- er-in-law Ronnie Hauser. terian Nursing Home as He is also survived by a Certified Nursing As- his special best friend sistant. Her son, Dequan “pookie”. Aubrey was a member Wilson, her parents and grandparents all pre- of Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church in cedes her in death. Leaving to cherish her Thomasville. He retired memories include; her from the High Point Pofiancée, Clyde Wilson of lice Dept, in 1990 with 30 the home, two children, years of service. He was Clydarius Wilson and a volunteer member of Shaterika Wilson both the Hasty Fire Dept for of the home; one broth- 10 years and remained er, Tyrone Crawford of an inactive member for Charlotte, NC; one sister, 9. For his service with Kim Lawson of Newark, the Hasty Lions club, he New Jersey; two nieces, was named Lion of the Brittany and Samantha Year in 1998-99 and reCrawford; one nephew, mained an active memWilliam Crawford; a host ber until his passing. of other relatives and Aubrey was also a life time member of the Ledfriends. Funeral will be held ford High School Booster 2:00 p.m. Saturday, No- Club, where he served as vember 7, 2009 at King’s President and Treasurer Chapel Holiness Church for over twenty years. He 500 Saunders Place, High was the recipient of mulPoint with Bishop James tiple Governors’ award Terry Officiating. Visi- for volunteer communitation is scheduled at ty service, such as Meals 1:30 p.m. at the church. on Wheels, Blood Drives Online condolences may and fundraisers for the be sent to www.peoples- blind. Aubrey enjoyed lisfuneralservice.net. Protening to Gospel music, fessional arrangements entrusted to People’s Fu- solving word search puzzles and fishing. Come neral Service, Inc. football & softball season, you could always find him at Ledford High School, watching his grandchildren play ball. HIGH POINT – Rev. HerThe family will be reman Calvin Beck, 82, ceiving friends at JC went to be with the Lord Greens Funeral Home on Thursday, Novemin Thomasville on Saturber 5, 2009. He was born day, November 7th from May 30, 1927, in Guilford 6-8 p.m. A celebration County. Herman was the service of his life will be son of the late I.V. and held Sunday, November Ruth Beck. Mr. Beck, a 8th, at 2:00 p.m. in the veteran of the U.S. Navy, Pleasant Grove United served in WWII. He was Methodist Church Kena faithful minister of nedy Life Center with the Gospel for 55 years. Rev. Keys Pendleton, Surviving are his wife, Jamie Johnston and Joe Linda Beck and family. B. Parker officiating. InA Praise and Worship terment will follow in service will be held 2:00 the church cemetery. In Sunday, November 8, Lieu of flowers, the fam2009, at Thomasville ily request that memoriChristian Fellowship, als be directed to PO Box 7843 E. Holly Grove 1049, Thomasville, NC Road, Thomasville, NC. 27361 C/O Polly Bowers. Memorials to Gideons All memorials need to be International. Herman designated for either the left his footprints on the youth fund at Pleasant hearts of so many people Grove United Methodist past, present and future. Church or Ledford SeHe was truly a great nior High School Scholfriend, Pastor, husband arship fund. On-line conand dad but most of all a dolences may be sent to great man of God. www.jcgreenandsons. com.

Sheila D. Crawford

www.cumbyfuneral.com

Darrell Ball Chad Greene KERNERSVILLE – Mr. Chad Eric Greene, age 34 of Kernersville died November 4, 2009. Chad was born in Forsyth county on June 24, 1975 to E. Wayne and Pamela Nelson Greene. He graduated from Glenn High School, Kernersville in 1993 and later attended Appalachian State University and Guilford Technical Community College. As a youth, he was an Eagle Scout and enjoyed baseball, soccer, and football even during his adult years. Chad was a Fire Equipment Operator for 13 years with the High Point Fire Department, currently stationed with Station # 4 and was also a member of the Union Cross Fire Department in Kernersville since the age of 15 and was the present Assistance Chief. He was awarded the 2008 Squad Person of the Year at Union Cross. Chad was an active member of the Union Cross Moravian Church. On November 14, 1999 he married the former Kimberly Brothers, who survives of the home. Surviving in addition to his wife are his children, daughter, Emma Kaitlyn Greene and son, Jacob (Jake) Austin Greene and his unborn child, due in June of 2010. Also surviving are his parents, Wayne and Pamela Greene of High Point and one sister, Courtney Greene Draper and husband Mark of Kernersville. Chad is also survived by his In-Laws, Kermit and Cathy Brothers of Walkertown and his brother-in-law, Kermit Brothers, III and wife

Rachel. In addition, Chad has nieces and nephews, Caleb Draper, Morgan and Bradley Hamilton. Special thanks are extended to his cousins, Rodney, Kristen, Kendall, Bryan, and Mandy, the “Fire Fighter Buds” and his many loving aunts and uncles and Chad’s many “Fire Fighter Brothers and Sisters”. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday, November 8, 2009 at 2:00 p.m. in Green Street Baptist Church, 303 N. Rotary Drive, High Point with the Reverend Donald Griffin and the Reverend Frank Hensley officiating. Interment will follow the service in the Union Cross Moravian Church Cemetery, 4295 High Point Road, Kernersville. Visitation will be at Green Street Baptist Church on Saturday evening from 6:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. Chad will remain at Sechrest Funeral Service until placed into the church at 4:00 p.m. on Saturday and again at 1:00 p.m. on Sunday. Memorials may be directed to the Children’s Trust Fund, Truliant Federal Credit Union, 500 Pineview Drive, Suite 117, Kernersville, NC 27284, or at any High Point Bank & Trust office. Honorary Pallbearers will be members of the High Point and Union Cross Fire Departments and other Fire Fighters from surrounding areas. Sechrest Funeral Service in High Point is serving the family. Please visit the family’s memorial website and offer written or spoken condolences at www.mem.com.

Reatha Scarboro ARCHDALE – Mrs. Reatha Mae Elkes Scarboro, 87, of Archdale, died Thursday, November 5, 2009, at her residence. Born October 8, 1922, in Wilmington, she was the daughter of the late Peter James and Lucy Jones Elkes. She was a charter member of the Church of Jesus in Archdale and was a homemaker. On May 24, 1941, she was married to Roy Scarboro, who survives of the home. Also surviving are two daughters, Lajuana Spiers and husband, Doug, of Asheboro, and Sharon Stocks and husband, Mike, of Archdale; four sons, Roy Elwood Scarboro and wife, Frances, J.C. Scarboro and wife, Judy, Bill Scarboro and wife, Gayle, and Robert Scarboro and wife, Vickie, all of Archdale; three sisters, Myrtle Porter and husband, Luther,

Lisa Crowder THOMASVILLE – Ms. Lisa Crowder, 40, of E. Main Street died November 2, 2009, at Forsyth Medical Center. Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at Pneuma Pentecostal Church, 200 Kern St., Thomasville. Visitation will be 30 minutes prior to the service at the church. S.E. Thomas Funeral Service is in charge of arrangements.

of Archdale, Ruby George of Sophia, and JoAnn Dildine of Randleman; three brothers, Bobby Elkes of High Point, Jacky Elkes and wife, Lib, and Toby Elkes and, wife, Faye, all of Archdale. Also surviving are 17 grandchildren, 31 great grandchildren, and one great-great grandson. Funeral will be 2:00 p.m. Sunday at the Church of Jesus, 6315 Old Mendenhall Rd. in Archdale, officiated by Rev. Elmer Davis, Rev. Mike Stocks, and Rev. Doug Spiers. Interment will follow in Floral Garden Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will receive friends Saturday night from 6 until 8 at Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale Online condolences can be made at www.cumbyfuneral.com. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale.

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SATURDAY Mrs. Dorothy Rittenbusch Kraus 11 a.m. – Inurnment Service Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church Columbarium

SURFSIDE BEACH, S.C. – Darrell Gray Ball, 73, of Pine Valley Lane died November 5, 2009, at Medical University in Charleston, *Mr. Keith Edward Gladden SC. Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. – Memorial Service in 2 p.m. Saturday at J.C. the Chapel of Cumby Family Green & Sons Chapel, Funeral Service, High Point Thomasville. Visitation MONDAY will be held from noon to 2 *Mr. Clayton Earl Pardue p.m. prior to the service. 2 p.m. Allendale Baptist Church

Joretta Lankford LEXINGTON – Joretta Gathings Lankford, 45, died November 5, 2009, at Hinkle Hospice House. Celebration of life service will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at AMVETS Memorial Park, Inc., Marco Blvd., Lexington. Visitation will be held one hour prior to the service. Davidson Funeral Home is assisting the family.

J.C. Green & Sons Funeral Home “Since 1895”

122 W. Main Street Thomasville 472-7774 SATURDAY Mrs. Linda Jo Sexton Shaw 11 a.m. J.C. Green & Sons Chapel Mr. Darrell Gray Ball 2 p.m. J.C. Green & Sons Chapel SUNDAY Mr. James Aubrey Bowers Jr. 2 p.m. Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church INCOMPLETE Mrs. Avis Bunting Mrs. Frances F. Pierce Mrs. Ruby Kindley

10301 North N.C. 109 Winston-Salem Wallburg Community 769-5548 PEOPLE’S FUNERAL SERVICE

206 Trindale Rd., Archdale

431-9124 SUNDAY Mrs. Reatha Mae Elkes Scarboro 2 p.m. Church of Jesus, Old Mendenhall Road, Archdale Mr. Mark Kent Darr 3 p.m. – Memorial Service Archdale United Methodist Church MONDAY Mr. James Lee Dunlap 2 p.m. Fairfield United Methodist Church

*Denotes veteran Your hometown funeral service

FUNERAL

Sechrest Funeral & Cremation Service Since 1897 HIGH POINT 1301 E. LEXINGTON AVE. 889-3811 ARCHDALE 120 TRINDALE RD. 861-4389 SUNDAY Mr. Chad Eric Greene 2 p.m. Green Street Baptist Church Sechrest Funeral Service – High Point

www.sechrestfunerals.com

“People Serving All People”

1404 English Road High Point / 882-3907 SATURDAY Ms. Sheila Crawford 2 p.m. Kings Chapel Holiness

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

889.9977SP00504744


ADVICE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 www.hpe.com

3B

Don’t give up on your shady spots

PERENNIALS Astilbe: Feathery flower plumes in late spring and early summer; dark green fernlike foliage forms nice clumps with flower spikes to two feet tall Bleeding Heart Dicentra: Pink, rose or white pantaloon shaped flow-

ers hang from spring through fall, ferny graygray foliage to 18-inch tall in clumps Foxglove digitalis: Many tubular flowers in many colors on 3-4 foot spikes with large velvety ECOLOGY basal leaves Epimedium Bishop’s Gwyn hat: Airy clusters of Riddick lowers in early spring. ■■■ Compound, heart-shaped semi-evergreen leaves on wiry stems form dense spreading clumps ten inches high Hosta many cultivars: Basal foliage forms clumps three inches to 3-feet tall foliage colors vary from bright green to steel blue to bright yellow green with many variegated patterns on the leaves. Stalks of lavender, purple or white flowers in the summer and fall. Liriope: Grassy, semi-evergreen foliage forms long bladed clumps to nine inches high with spikes of pretty lavender or purple flowers in late summer. Foliage may be dark green

or striped with creamy white.

ANNUALS Coleus: Leaves with wavy edges in solid or multicolors on branched plants to 21⁄2 inches tall. Leaves are in many shades of variegated green, maroon, red, whites, yellow, and pink on branched plants up to 3 feet tall. Some have spikes of pale lavender flowers. Impatiens: Small leaves on branched plants form mounds 8 inches to 18 inches high. Flowers to 2 inches across bloom prolifically until frost in pin, white, orange, red, lavender, purple and bicolors. Others: begonias, caladium corms, ageratum

SHRUBS Ilex holly: There are many sizes, shapes and forms of this durable evergreen. They grow from 18 inches high to 45 feet depending upon the variety. Small leaved inkberry is a Japanese holly and Ilex opaca is an American large leaved holly. Hydrangeas: Numerous varieties

D

Dear Lovesick: Apologize again to Samantha for not being completely truthful with her, and explain that you lied because you were ashamed about your past behavior and only wanted someone as special as she is to see you in a good light. Promise never to do it again. If she likes you as much as you like her, she’ll give you another

ADVICE

chance. But remember, from here on you will have to be honest because if she catches you in another lie, she won’t believe another word that comes out of your mouth. Enough said?

Dear Abby

Dear Abby: I am blessed with many wonderful friends. We exchange small gifts on birthdays and at Christmas. As much as I appreciate the gifts, I am running out of room in my closets because I have too much stuff. Sometimes the gifts are not to my taste or they don’t fit in with my decor. How long should I keep an item before I donate it to a thrift shop? Is it ungracious to give it away? Am I obligated to display or use something I don’t like? I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings. I have tried suggesting that at our ages (50s and 60s) we should cut out the gift-giving, donate the money to charity and celebrate by going out to lunch on our birthdays. It didn’t go over very well. They all enjoy the exchange of presents. I am happy to give one, but I really don’t need anything more. Thanks for your help. – Too Blessed in Santa Ana, Calif. ■■■

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Dear Too Blessed: It’s not ungracious to give away something you can’t use – in fact, the practice is so common there is a name for it. It’s called “regifting.” It won’t cause hurt feelings as long as you are careful not to give an item back to the person who gave it to you. Donating something to a thrift shop is also a practical way to get rid of it, and you can do it anytime you wish. One person’s “castoff” can be another’s treasure. Everybody wins and a worthwhile charity makes money. Because you are “thinged out” and prefer divesting to accumulating, I recommend you stop “suggesting” and have a frank talk with your friends. Tell them you have everything you need, that their friendship – which you already have – is the most precious gift they could ever give you, and on birthdays from now on you’d much prefer meeting for your celebratory lunch, but please to donate whatever they’d spend on your gift to charity. After that, the ball’s in their court. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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GWYN RIDDICK is a North Carolina Certified Plantsman and registered landscape contractor. He is a Fellow in the Natural Resources Leadership Institute and is the director of the Piedmont Triad office of the North Carolina Biotechnology Center. If you have gardening questions, send them to Gwyn Riddick at The High Point Enterprise, P.O. Box 1009, High Point, NC 27261 or e-mail them to lifestyles@ hpe.com.

PET OF THE WEEK

Teen’s lie about his past jeopardizes future with girl ear Abby: I am a 16-year-old guy in my sophomore year of high school. I am known as a friendly, outgoing guy who gets along with girls. My problem is, I used to be one of the biggest jerks who ever was. I was involved in fighting and other things I won’t go into. But I turned my life around. I was going out with an amazing girl, “Samantha.” She always kept me in line but was sweet about it. Recently, because I was ashamed of my past, I lied to her. She found out about it and, needless to say, she was very hurt. When I saw how hurt she was, I was sick to my stomach knowing how much pain I had caused such a trusting girl. I want to make things right, but I don’t know where to start. I have talked to her since then, but things aren’t the same. Please help. – Lovesick in Kennewick, Wash.

like Oak leaf, and large leaf snowballs are deciduous. Blooms can be flat and airy looking or large balls and come in the colors of pink, blue and white. Fothergilla: is deciduous and will grow to 3 feet with white flowers in spring. Autumn foliage is yellow-orange-red colors. Kerria: a deciduous shrub that grows to six feet with green weeping branches in winter with double yellow spring flowers along the stems. Others: Mahonia, Euonymus, Clethra, Pieris, Azalea, Rhododendron and Taxus Your shady spots have more colorful options than you might have imagined so you can have your shade and blooms too.

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SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Caroline, a 2-year-old domestic shorthair mix cat, is available for adoption at the Guilford County Animal Shelter, 4525 W. Wendover Ave., Greensboro. Caroline is a gray-and-beige calico. She has a short smooth coat, green eyes, erect ears and a long tail. She has been altered and has a microchip implant for identification. The adoption fee for Caroline is $80. Ask for Animal ID A08069318. The shelter is open between noon and 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. The shelter also needs volunteers. Call (336) 297-5020.

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

SP00504732

O

ne goal of many homeowners is to have a home in the cool shade of nice stately trees such as oaks and maples. But the more shade you have the harder it is to have a full landscape full of beautiful flowers, bulbs and shrubs because most plants survive better in at least six hours of full sun. So most home landscapes end up being a trade-off with some sunny spots and some shady spots. But you can still have those shady spots full of blooming beauty. Just choose carefully to select the right plants to thrive in shade. For flowering plants, a mixture of perennials and annuals will give the best nine months of seasonal color. Choose from some of the following plants:


FUN & GAMES 4B www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

WORD FUN

HOROSCOPE

CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Young goat 4 Sicilian volcano 8 Big and bulky 13 Possess 14 Thing pointed to 15 City in Nebraska 16 Common metal 17 Ancient Roman statesman 18 King or emperor 19 Member of the congregation 22 Bayh or Boxer: abbr. 23 Stand in the way of 24 Jagged 26 Small weight 29 Oliver Twist or Annie 32 Quickly 36 Nourish 38 Highest rating 39 __ helmet 40 Father: Sp. 41 Scoop holder 42 Resound 43 Actress Moran 44 Fragrant wood

BRIDGE

Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Jason and Jeremy London, 37; Todd McKee, 46; Joni Mitchell, 66 HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Good things are heading your way. You are going to be in the right place at the right time, so don’t miss out because you are afraid to make a move. Changes at home will bring about opportunities to expand an interest you’ve always wanted to pursue. The time to go after your goals and to open up creatively is now. Your numbers are 5, 13, 16, 22, 28, 31, 46 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Rethink your plans and motives. Make sure that you are being honest with the people counting on you. Emotions will be difficult to control. Make alterations to your personal life before you engage in something new. ★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t worry or fret over things you cannot change. Arguments will be a waste of time and will leave you feeling as if you are the one left out. Instead, find out what everyone else is thinking -- that will lead to common ground. ★★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emotional turmoil will lead to problems at work and home. Stop worrying about what’s going on and focus on achieving your goals. Discipline and hard work will pave the way to a better mental and emotional place. ★★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Socialize and get involved in events and activities that are fun and take your mind off your everyday troubles. You can enhance your relationships if you make sincere gestures of concern, followed by some positive help. ★★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Discussions, motivational seminars or getting out of town and changing your surroundings will do you good and help you resolve issues that have been causing you stress. Don’t concern yourself with what someone else does; it’s what you do that will count in the end. ★★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Get involved in something that will allow you to help others and you will be introduced to a number of people with something to give back to you. An interesting proposal could change your future regarding how you earn your living and the people you associate with. ★★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): If you let someone stifle your plans or confuse you, you will fall short of your goals. Consider what you enjoy and what you are good at and implement these assets into your choices for the future. ★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You need a creative outlet to stimulate your talent and enhance what you have to offer. Travel, communication and mixing business with pleasure will all contribute. Talks will lead to something concrete. ★★★★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t be daunted by someone’s choices. If you are willing to face what’s coming head on, you will be the one to benefit in the end. Don’t hesitate to do what’s necessary to stabilize your life and your future. ★★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Combine the old with the new. Consider services that used to thrive and modify them to a trendy and profitable outcome. Your charm will capture someone’s attention, leading to an advantageous social and business arrangement. ★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Take a trip -- even a short one -- that opens your eyes to a new way of living or to surroundings different from your own. It’s the change of pace and attitude that will help you discover where you should be heading in the future. ★★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Follow through with your plans and, most of all, do what’s in your heart. Pursue the people and things you want with grace, dignity and commitment. The best is yet to come but the changes must be implemented now. ★★★★★

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TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

Cy the Cynic says that people who walk along gazing at the stars are at the mercy of the mud puddles in the road. Whatever today’s declarer was thinking about, it wasn’t making 3NT. South took the king of spades and led a diamond to dummy’s jack -- a case of muddy thinking. East took the queen and led the queen of hearts, and South won with the king and cashed the A-K of diamonds, hoping for a 3-3 break. When West discarded, declarer lost the fourth diamond to East, ducked the heart return, won the next heart, cashed dummy’s good diamond, led a spade to his queen and returned a club. East claimed with the A-Q of clubs and a good heart. Down two. INTERMEDIATES South had his head in the clouds when he tried the diamonds. Finesses may lose, and suits may fail to break well, but intermediate cards are readily established. South must attack the clubs at Trick Two. He has the entries to set up and cash three club tricks and also wins two dia-

monds, three spades and two hearts. DAILY QUESTION You hold: S A 7 3 H A 5 4 D A K J 6 5 C K 10. The dealer, at your right, opens one club. You double, and your partner bids one spade. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: Though you have excellent high-card structure, a five-card suit and a well placed king of clubs, you mustn’t get carried away since partner’s hand may be as weak as yours is strong. Bid two diamonds, showing 17 or more points, or bid 1NT and leave the rest to him. North dealer E-W vulnerable

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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.

Panda exam This photo provided by the San Diego Zoo shows a 13-week-old giant panda cub during his weekly exam. His name, which was voted on by thousands of people, will be announced during a ceremony on Nov. 17. The male cub is the fifth giant panda born at the San Diego Zoo. AP

45 Spit 47 Install a room’s overhead surface 49 Build 51 Second __; ingrained habit 56 Rodent 58 Two-star naval rank 61 Excuse 63 Walking stick 64 1970s Swedish pop group 65 __ point; center of attention 66 Windy day toy 67 Drops from above 68 Irritable 69 Toboggan 70 In addition to DOWN 1 Gold measure 2 Tusk material 3 Jeans fabric 4 One who carves letters 5 Bangkok native 6 Intl. alliance 7 Make up

Yesterday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

8 Terrible fright 9 World’s 2nd-largest bird 10 Lie 11 You, in the Bible 12 Knitter’s purchase 13 Bodily joints 20 Faction 21 Wear away 25 Astronaut’s destination 27 In the distance 28 Battlefield doc 30 __ Nicole Smith 31 At no time, in poetry 32 Gorillas 33 Type-

writer type size 34 Sports 35 Singing group 37 Sea eagle 40 Harmony 44 Edible mollusk 46 Truly 48 Undeniably 50 Nails 52 Jeweled crown 53 From the city 54 Interested to an extreme degree 55 Zest 56 Simple float 57 __ vera 59 Metal bar 60 Poker stake 62 Flying mammal


COMICS, DONOHUE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 www.hpe.com

GARFIELD

Creatine is useful but not miraculous

D

ear Dr. Donohue: I started lifting weights when I was a senior in high school. I am now 23, and I think I have reached a plateau. I haven’t made much progress this past year, and I was making huge gains previously. I increased my workout time, but that hasn’t made a difference. A friend suggests I take creatine. What is it? Is it safe? It’s not banned by any sports authority, is it? I am thinking of entering competitions if I can get back on track. What’s the dose? I appreciate any information you can provide. – J.M.

BLONDIE

B.C.

Don’t think of creatine as a miracle product. It’s an energy molecule. Close to 95 percent of the body’s creatine is found in muscles. It keeps them working when they have to perform hard work in short intervals, the kind of work and exercise involved in lifting weights. It delays muscle fatigue and allows the exerciser to work longer and harder. It also appears to spur muscle growth when it’s combined with a weightlifting program. Even people 65 years old and older experienced increase muscle growth by taking it. I am speaking of creatine monohydrate. There are other forms, but I don’t know if they provide the same benefits as the monohydrate does. You can find this product in health-food stores and even in some drugstores. Creatine is a food sup-

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plement, not a drug. It’s not banned by any sports authority. It appears to be safe. HEALTH A few users complained Dr. Paul of stomach Donohue upset, and ■■■ some felt it induced muscle cramps, but those effects were few and far between. An often-recommended dose is 5 grams taken four times a day for five days, or 2 grams taken daily for about four weeks. The instructions for how to take it and how much to take should be on the label. Creatine is not supposed to be a lifelong supplement. Use it as I indicated and see what happens. If it brings results, you can use it again down the road. Dear Dr. Donohue: It took me six months of hard work to get into shape. Because of an injury, I am sidelined for at least two months. How much of my fitness will I lose over those two months? – B.M. How quickly individuals become deconditioned depends on their level of conditioning when they’re forced to take a break. For example, highly trained strength athletes have little loss of their fitness after 18 days without any exercise. The same goes for endurance athletes, like marathon runners.

At the other end of the spectrum are the less well-conditioned. People who took up biking as exercise for eight weeks and then stopped their training for eight weeks lost all the training effect they had gained. I’d say you should count on having to take at least two months to recover your former fitness level. You’ll have to start out slowly, well below the intensity you used before the enforced rest. People who have to cut back on their training but who can still maintain some exercise can minimize their losses. If people have been exercising hard three days a week and then find that they can exercise only once a week, they can hold on to almost all their gains with that one session. Dear Dr. Donohue: I know when to eat before exercise or before a game. When is the best time after exercise? Is there such a time? Or can you just eat when it’s convenient? – B.D. If you take in a high-carbohydrate meal within 60 minutes of exercise, your muscles replenish their glycogen rapidly. Glycogen is stored muscle sugar. It’s the muscle’s primary source of fuel. If you can’t have a full meal within 60 minutes, you can still replenish glycogen by taking a carbohydrate load. Energy bars and sports drinks provide a good supply of carbohydrates. So do most fruits.


TELEVISION 6B www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE


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FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS: UNC, Duke battle for prize. 4C

Saturday November 7, 2009

TEXAS SPEED: Jeff Gordon zips to pole at Texas Motor Speedway. 3C Sports Editor: Mark McKinney mmckinney@hpe.com (336) 888-3556

UNWELCOME MILESTONE: National jobless rate tops 10 percent. 6C

Tigers remain untamed Ragsdale tops Central, caps undefeated regular season BY STEVE HANF ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

HIGH POINT – One electrifying play got the Ragsdale offense roaring Friday night. Three High Point Central miscues in the waning moments of the second half added fuel to the fire. The Tigers scored 24 points in the final 7:23 of the second quarter – getting two touchdowns 22 seconds apart in the last minute – and romped to a 34-7 victory at Simeon Stadium. Ragsdale wrapped up an 11-0 regular season, the Piedmont Triad 4A Conference championship and no doubt an exceedingly high seed for the 4A playoffs. The Bison, meanwhile, finished 8-3 overall and 4-2 in the league, tied for second with East Forsyth and Glenn. Central will learn its playoff seeding later today when the NCHSAA releases brackets. “We made a couple of mistakes and it broke things open,” Central coach Wayne Jones said. “They took advantage of it. They hit us with some big plays – they’re a good team. We lost to a good football team.” The good team became great early in the second quarter when Luke Heavner launched a pass that seemed impossibly long. But DeSean Anderson sped down the middle of the field and launched into a head-long dive, snaring the ball while fully extended and holding it as he crashed to the turf. The 37-yard gain set up a 3-yard scoring run by D-onovan Smith, and the rout was on. “At first I thought he over-threw me, but the good Lord blessed me with some extra speed and I caught it,” Anderson said. “After that, I felt like we broke a barrier, that if we scored right here it would change the whole game around.” The Tigers forced a punt and followed it with a Kasey Redfern 42-yard field goal to lead 10-0 at the 2:43 mark. Central then faced another punt from its own 36, but a snap to the up-back on a fake bounced away and was covered by Ragsdale’s Trey Swaim. Jones took the blame for that call, saying not all of his players got the signal

WINSTON-SALEM – Trinity expected a slugfest Friday night. The Bulldogs got exactly what they expected. Nonetheless, they remained in the contest until the final minute of their final game of the regular season before falling to Carver 20-7, as the Yellowjackets clinched the PAC 6 conference title within the friendly confines of David L. Lash Stadium. Trinity controlled the line of scrimmage through the first two quarters before relinquishing its hold on the contest at the halfway mark. The second half belonged to Carver. “I thought we fought hard the whole game,” Bulldogs coach Alex Mebane said. “The thing we were concerned about that we thought they did best – and did the best in tonight – was going to their threeback set and power us a little bit.” The Bulldogs chipped away at Carver’s defense through the entire first quarter and half of the second until Mario Mc-

RAGSDALE HP CENTRAL

34 7

CARVER TRINITY

20 7

NE GUILFORD LEDFORD

53 0

THOMASVILLE LEXINGTON

23 13

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DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Ragsdale quarterback Luke Heavner (right) tries to elude High Point Central’s Aaron Leach during Friday night’s Piedmont Triad 4A Conference showdown at Simeon Stadium. for the fake and that he should have punted. The Tigers drove that point home two plays later when Heavner hit Anderson on a beautiful 25-yarder down the middle with 49 seconds to go. Central fumbled its second play of the next drive to give the Tigers the ball on the 20 still with 32 seconds remaining, and Heavner’s fade to Tyquan Roberts offered an exclamation point and 24-0 lead at the half.

Ragsdale pounded the ball on nection from 17 yards out at the the ground in the final 24 min- 3:57 mark of the fourth quarter. utes, getting a 20-yard field goal after a 13-play, 51-yard march shanf@hpe.com | 888-3526 that took 6:10 and a Heavner Scoring summary plunge from 1 yard out to cap Ragsdale 0 24 0 10 — 34 a 15-play, 79-yard drive that HP Central 0 0 0 7 — 7 chewed 7:18 off the clock. Smith, R – Smith 3 run (Redfern kick), 7:23, 2nd R – FG Redfern 42, 2:43, 2nd who carried just twice in the R – Anderson 25 pass from Heavner (Redfern kick), 0:49, 2nd fourth quarter, ended with 117 R – Roberts 20 pass from Heavner (Redfern kick), 0:27, 2nd yards on 26 carries. R – FG Redfern 20, 3:53, 4th R – Heavner 1 run (Redfern kick), 6:01, 4th The lone Bison score came on a HPC – Grant 17 pass from Adams (Miller kick), 3:57, 4th Drew Adams to Derek Grant con-

Innis found his way into the end zone with 4:15 remaining in the half to put the Bulldogs up 7-0. The Yellowjackets answered with an impressive drive that began at their own 9. Fourteen plays and 91 yards later, Mike Lawrence found Richard Daniels on a 17-yard TD pass to tie the score at 7 with 47 seconds left until halftime. Something clicked for Carver’s offense late in that second quarter and Carver followed up its initial score to end the first half with another extended drive in the third quarter. Arnaldi Lowery followed his line in methodically breaking down Trinity’s defense to eat up the clock on a 69-yard drive capped by Lawrence’s 5-yard go-ahead run. Lowery carried 10 times and gained 54 yards on the possession after picking up just four yards in the entire first half. He finished with 17 carries for 81 yards. For Trinity, things never quite came together in the second half and Carver’s defense rendered the Bulldogs’ tripleoption ineffective to close the game.

DAVID HOLSTON | HPE

Friday night meeting T.W. Andrews’ Antonio Jackson (72) stuffs Wheatmore’s Josh Rickert behind the line of scrimmage during Friday night’s PAC 6 2A Conference game in Trinity. The Red Raiders rolled to a regular-season ending victory. See story on 5C. With the ground game shut down and without a passing threat, the Bulldogs were unable to muster an attempt at a comeback. “This is by far the best defensive front we’ve faced all season,” Mebane said.

Scoring summary Trinity Carver

0 0

7 7

0 7

0 6

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7 20

T – McInnis 15 run (Griffin kick), 4:15, 2nd C – Daniels 17 pass from Lawrence (Banos kick), 0:47, 2nd C – Lawrence 5 run (Banos kick), 4:32, 3rd C – Wade 43 run (Banos kick failed), 1:00, 4th

HIT AND RUN

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D

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TOPS ON TV

Carver downs Trinity, wins PAC 6 2A crown BY DANIEL KENNEDY SPECIAL TO THE ENTERPRISE

TOP SCORES

uke visits North Carolina today in the annual battle for the Victory Bell. For the first time since 1994, both teams enter this rivalry war with legitimate bowl hopes. Too bad more people won’t get to watch on television. The Blue Devils (5-3, 3-1 ACC) ride a threegame winning streak into this afternoon’s 3:30 p.m. kickoff at Kenan Stadium. The Tar Heels (5-3, 1-3) are coming off an emotional 20-17 upset at Virginia Tech.

For those area readers with access to ESPNU, you’re in luck. The game will be televised on that outlet. If you’re like me, you don’t have access to the station I good-naturedly call “ESPN Unavailable” since lots of folks don’t receive this channel. That’s too bad, because I have a hunch today’s meeting will follow in the recent tradition of classic “Battles of the Blue.” I wish this game could be telecast to all area viewers.

For many years, Duke-UNC football was a season-ending television staple. The game usually kicked off at noon and was can’t-miss regional TV. In an era with thousands of channels and hundreds of cable and satellite TV packages, it seems odd to long for the days of one or two college football television options. I guess this is another sign I’m getting older.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

– MARK MCKINNEY ENTERPRISE SPORTS EDITOR

9:30 a.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup Series practice 11 a.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup Series practice Noon, ESPN – College football, Northwestern at Iowa Noon, FSN – College football, Central Florida at Texas Noon, WXLV, Ch. 45 – College football, Virginia at Miami 12:30 p.m., Versus – College football, TBD 12:45 p.m., ESPN2 – Motorsports, NASCAR Nationwide Series O’Reilly Challenge from Fort Worth, Texas 2:30 p.m., WXII, Ch. 12 – College football, Navy at Notre Dame 3:30 p.m., WFMY, Ch. 2 – College football, LSU at Alabama 3:30 p.m., WXLV, Ch. 45 – College football, Wake Forest at Georgia Tech 3:30 p.m., ESPNU (station not available to all area viewers) – College football, Duke at N. Carolina 3:30 p.m., ESPN2 – College football, Ohio State at Penn State 3:30 p.m., FSN – College football, Oregon at Stanford 3:30 p.m., ESPN – Horse racing, NTRA, Breeders’ Cup World Championships 4 p.m., Versus – College football, TCU at San Diego State 7 p.m., FSN – Hockey, Hurricanes at Blue Jackets 7:15 p.m., ESPN2 – College football, Vanderbilt at Florida 7:45 p.m., ESPN – College football, Florida State at Clemson 8 p.m., SportSouth/WGN – Basketball, Bobcats at Bulls 8 p.m., WXLV, Ch. 45 – College football, UConn at Cincinnati or USC at Arizona State 9 p.m., Versus – Rodeo, PBR, World Finals, sixth round 9:30 p.m., HBO – Boxing, two bouts 10 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, PGA Europe/WGC, HSBC Champions INDEX SCOREBOARD MOTORSPORTS COLLEGE HOOPS HPU NBA GOLF COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREPS BUSINESS STOCKS WEATHER

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


SCOREBOARD 2C www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

FOOTBALL

PREP PLAYOFFS

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National Football League

New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo

W 5 4 3 3

L 2 4 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

Indianapolis Houston Jacksonville Tennessee

W 7 5 3 1

L 0 3 4 6

T 0 0 0 0

Cincinnati Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland

W 5 5 4 1

L 2 2 3 7

T 0 0 0 0

Denver San Diego Oakland Kansas City

W 6 4 2 1

L 1 3 6 6

T 0 0 0 0

Philadelphia Dallas N.Y. Giants Washington

W 5 5 5 2

L 2 2 3 5

T 0 0 0 0

New Orleans Atlanta Carolina Tampa Bay

W 7 4 3 0

L 0 3 4 7

T 0 0 0 0

Minnesota Green Bay Chicago Detroit

W 7 4 4 1

L 1 3 3 6

T 0 0 0 0

Arizona San Francisco Seattle St. Louis

W 4 3 2 1

L 3 4 5 7

T 0 0 0 0

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Pct PF PA Home .714 198 98 4-0-0 .500 177 134 2-2-0 .429 176 177 2-2-0 .375 123 169 1-3-0 South Pct PF PA Home 1.000 197 91 3-0-0 .625 198 168 2-2-0 .429 133 177 2-1-0 .143 114 211 1-2-0 North Pct PF PA Home .714 163 128 2-2-0 .714 167 129 4-0-0 .571 199 137 3-1-0 .125 78 209 0-3-0 West Pct PF PA Home .857 140 96 3-0-0 .571 185 159 2-2-0 .250 78 201 1-3-0 .143 105 181 0-4-0 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East Pct PF PA Home .714 203 133 3-1-0 .714 197 136 3-1-0 .625 212 183 2-1-0 .286 96 123 2-2-0 South Pct PF PA Home 1.000 273 154 4-0-0 .571 171 149 3-0-0 .429 128 166 1-2-0 .000 96 203 0-4-0 North Pct PF PA Home .875 244 174 3-0-0 .571 187 134 2-2-0 .571 159 150 3-0-0 .143 113 205 1-3-0 West Pct PF PA Home .571 157 143 1-3-0 .429 147 140 2-1-0 .286 135 147 2-2-0 .125 77 221 0-3-0

Sunday’s results St. Louis 17, Detroit 10 Miami 30, N.Y. Jets 25 Dallas 38, Seattle 17 Chicago 30, Cleveland 6 Baltimore 30, Denver 7 Houston 31, Buffalo 10 Indianapolis 18, San Francisco 14 Philadelphia 40, N.Y. Giants 17 San Diego 24, Oakland 16 Tennessee 30, Jacksonville 13 Minnesota 38, Green Bay 26 Carolina 34, Arizona 21 Open: New England, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Washington, Tampa Bay Monday’s result New Orleans 35, Atlanta 27

NFL Injury Report

NEW YORK — The updated National Football League injury report, as provided by the league:

ACC standings All Times EDT ATLANTIC DIVISION W Boston Coll. 3 Clemson 3 Florida St. 2 Wake 2

Conf. L PF 2 128 2 151 3 174 3 126

PA 138 101 184 149

Overall W L PF 6 3 263 5 3 247 4 4 254 4 5 216

PA 175 132 238 210

AFC 3-2-0 4-3-0 3-2-0 1-4-0

NFC 2-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 2-1-0

Div 1-1-0 1-3-0 3-0-0 1-2-0

Away 4-0-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 0-4-0

AFC 3-0-0 4-2-0 2-2-0 1-6-0

NFC 4-0-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 0-0-0

Div 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 1-3-0

Away 3-0-0 1-2-0 1-2-0 1-4-0

AFC 3-2-0 3-1-0 4-2-0 1-4-0

NFC 2-0-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 0-3-0

Div 3-0-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-3-0

Away 3-1-0 2-1-0 1-3-0 1-2-0

AFC 5-1-0 4-3-0 1-5-0 0-3-0

NFC 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 1-3-0

Div 2-0-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 0-2-0

Away 2-1-0 2-1-0 3-2-0 0-3-0

NFC 4-1-0 4-1-0 3-3-0 2-4-0

AFC 1-1-0 1-1-0 2-0-0 0-1-0

Div 2-0-0 0-1-0 2-1-0 0-2-0

Away 3-0-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 0-3-0

NFC 4-0-0 3-2-0 3-3-0 0-5-0

AFC 3-0-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 0-2-0

Div 1-0-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-1-0

Away 4-1-0 2-1-0 1-3-0 0-3-0

NFC 5-0-0 3-2-0 2-2-0 1-5-0

AFC 2-1-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 0-1-0

Div 3-0-0 2-2-0 1-1-0 0-3-0

Away 3-0-0 1-3-0 0-3-0 1-4-0

NFC 2-2-0 3-2-0 1-4-0 1-5-0

AFC 2-1-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0

Div 1-1-0 3-0-0 1-2-0 0-2-0

Sunday’s games Arizona at Chicago, 1 p.m. Washington at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Miami at New England, 1 p.m. Houston at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Baltimore at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Kansas City at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Detroit at Seattle, 4:05 p.m. Carolina at New Orleans, 4:05 p.m. San Diego at N.Y. Giants, 4:15 p.m. Tennessee at San Francisco, 4:15 p.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 8:20 p.m. Open: Buffalo, N.Y. Jets, Oakland, Minnesota, St. Louis, Cleveland Monday’s game Pittsburgh at Denver, 8:30 p.m.

Maryland NC State

1 3 78 100 2 0 4 114 176 3

6 173 253 5 265 235

COASTAL DIVISION

SUNDAY WASHINGTON REDSKINS at ATLANTA FALCONS — REDSKINS: OUT: TE Chris Cooley (ankle), P Hunter Smith (groin), CB Byron Westbrook (knee). QUESTIONABLE: LB H.B. Blades (knee), S Chris Horton (knee). PROBABLE: T Stephon Heyer (knee). FALCONS: QUESTIONABLE: DE John Abraham (foot), DT Jonathan Babineaux (ankle), T Sam Baker (ankle), WR Brian Finneran (ankle), DT Thomas Johnson (calf), LB Curtis Lofton (knee, ankle), RB Jerious Norwood (hip), RB Jason Snelling (hamstring), WR Eric Weems (ankle), WR Roddy White (knee). PROBABLE: TE Keith Zinger (back). ARIZONA CARDINALS at CHICAGO BEARS — CARDINALS: QUESTIONABLE: CB Michael Adams (hamstring), WR Anquan Boldin (ankle), LB Gerald Hayes (back), DE Kenny Iwebema (knee), WR Sean Morey (illness, head). PROBABLE: WR Steve Breaston (knee), DT Darnell Dockett (ankle), T Herman Johnson (back), K Neil Rackers (right hamstring), CB Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie (finger), S Antrel Rolle (foot), TE Stephen Spach (ankle), G Reggie Wells (thumb), RB Jason Wright (thumb). BEARS: OUT: LB Pisa Tinoisamoa (knee). QUESTIONABLE: WR Devin Hester (ankle), S Danieal Manning (back). PROBABLE: LB Lance Briggs (shoulder), DT Tommie Harris (knee), DT Israel Idonije (knee), DE Adewale Ogunleye (ankle), TE Greg Olsen (ankle), S Craig Steltz (biceps), DT Matt Toeaina (calf). BALTIMORE RAVENS at CINCINNATI BENGALS — RAVENS: QUESTIONABLE: S Haruki Nakamura (chest), NT Haloti Ngata (ankle), S Tom Zbikowski (illness). PROBABLE: LB Prescott Burgess (illness), TE Todd Heap (ankle), LB Jarret Johnson (shoulder), C Matt Katula (elbow), RB Le’Ron McClain (shoulder), CB Frank Walker (illness). BENGALS: QUESTIONABLE: T Andre Smith (foot), S Roy Williams (forearm). PROBABLE: RB Jeremi Johnson (knee), DT Tank Johnson (foot), S Tom Nelson (shoulder), RB Bernard Scott (knee). HOUSTON TEXANS at INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — TEXANS: OUT: S Dominique Barber (ankle), TE James Casey (knee). QUESTIONABLE: DT Shaun Cody (back), DT DelJuan Robinson (knee). PROBABLE: LB Xavier Adibi (ankle), LB Kevin Bentley (shoulder), DT Tim Bulman (ribs), LB Brian Cushing (foot), TE Joel Dreessen (ankle), S Nick Ferguson (knee), C Chris White (ankle), DE Mario Williams (shoulder). COLTS: OUT: WR Anthony Gonzalez (knee), CB Kelvin Hayden (knee), K Adam Vinatieri (right knee). QUESTIONABLE: RB Donald Brown (shoulder), WR Pierre Garcon (ankle), DT Fili Moala (concussion), S Jamie Silva (hip). KANSAS CITY CHIEFS at JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — CHIEFS: DOUBTFUL: S Jon McGraw (thigh). QUESTIONABLE: G Mike Goff (shoulder). PROBABLE: T Branden Albert (ankle), C Rudy Niswanger (knee), CB Mike Richardson (illness). JAGUARS: OUT: CB Scott Starks (hamstring). PROBABLE: CB Rashean Mathis (finger), T Maurice Williams (knee), CB Brian Witherspoon (hamstring). MIAMI DOLPHINS at NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — DOLPHINS: DOUBTFUL: LB Channing Crowder (shoulder), DT Jason Ferguson (elbow). PATRIOTS: OUT: WR Julian Edelman (forearm), DE Jarvis Green (knee), T Matt Light (knee), RB Sammy Morris (knee), RB Fred Taylor (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: DT Ty Warren (ankle), TE Benjamin Watson (back), CB Jonathan Wilhite (illness). PROBABLE: QB Tom Brady (right shoulder), WR Randy Moss (shoulder). GREEN BAY PACKERS at TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — PACKERS: OUT: LB Brandon Chillar (hand), TE Jermichael Finley (knee), WR Jordy Nelson (knee), C Jason Spitz (back). QUESTIONABLE: WR Jake Allen (quadricep), RB Korey Hall (calf), G T.J. Lang (oblique), S Derrick Martin (concussion). PROBABLE: T Chad Clifton (ankle), WR Donald Driver (neck), QB Aaron Rodgers (feet), CB Charles Woodson (hip). BUCCANEERS: QUESTIONABLE: WR Antonio Bryant (knee), WR Michael Clayton (wrist), CB Elbert Mack (ankle). PROBABLE: CB Aqib Talib (ankle), G Jeremy Zuttah (shoulder). CAROLINA PANTHERS at NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — PANTHERS: OUT: RB Brad Hoover (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: RB Tony Fiammetta (concussion), S Charles Godfrey (ankle), LB Landon Johnson (shoulder), K John Kasay (left groin), WR Muhsin Muhammad (knee), TE Dante Rosario (knee), RB Jonathan Stewart (Achilles). PROBABLE: QB Jake Delhomme (chest). SAINTS: OUT: DT Kendrick Clancy (knee), DT Sedrick Ellis (knee), WR Lance Moore (ankle). DOUBTFUL: K Garrett Hartley (left ankle). PROBABLE: C Jonathan Goodwin (knee), CB Malcolm Jenkins (ankle), LB Marvin Mitchell (foot). DETROIT LIONS at SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — LIONS: QUESTIONABLE: RB Jerome Felton (ankle), WR Calvin Johnson (knee), RB Kevin Smith (shoulder). PROBABLE: LB Jordon Dizon (foot), DT Sammie Hill (ankle), DE Jason Hunter (ankle), DT Grady Jackson (knee), QB Matthew Stafford (knee), DE Dewayne White (elbow). SEAHAWKS: QUESTIONABLE: WR Ben Obomanu (oblique). PROBABLE: S Jordan Babineaux (hip), QB Matt Hasselbeck (rib), LB Will Herring (shoulder), T Sean Locklear (ankle), CB Ken Lucas (neck). SAN DIEGO CHARGERS at NEW YORK GIANTS — CHARGERS: OUT: C Nick Hardwick (ankle). DOUBTFUL: LB Tim Dobbins (knee). QUESTIONABLE: LB Kevin Burnett (ankle), DT Ogemdi Nwagbuo (ankle). PROBABLE: TE Antonio Gates (foot), S Steve Gregory (ankle), NT Travis Johnson (groin), LB Shawne Merriman (foot), P Mike Scifres (groin). GIANTS: OUT: CB Aaron Ross (hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: LB Michael Boley (knee), DT Chris Canty (calf). PROBABLE: TE Kevin Boss (ankle), RB Ahmad Bradshaw (ankle, foot), QB Eli Manning (foot), WR Mario Manningham (shoulder), WR Sinorice Moss (foot). TENNESSEE TITANS at SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — TITANS: OUT: RB Javon Ringer (back). QUESTIONABLE: S Vincent Fuller (groin), CB Nick Harper (forearm), DE Jevon Kearse (knee), T Mike Otto (knee), T David Stewart (hamstring), LB David Thornton (hip). 49ERS: OUT: CB Nate Clements (shoulder), DE Demetric Evans (shoulder), T Joe Staley (knee). PROBABLE: CB Reggie Smith (groin), LB Takeo Spikes (shoulder). DALLAS COWBOYS at PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — COWBOYS: OUT: CB Allen Rossum (hamstring). PROBABLE: RB Marion Barber (thumb), DT Jay Ratliff (knee), S Gerald Sensabaugh (thumb), LB DeMarcus Ware (foot). EAGLES: OUT: WR Kevin Curtis (knee). DOUBTFUL: DE Victor Abiamiri (knee), LB Chris Gocong (quadricep, hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: DT Brodrick Bunkley (knee), CB Macho Harris (ankle), CB Dimitri Patterson (quadricep, hand), RB Brian Westbrook (concussion). PROBABLE: DE Chris Clemons (shoulder, elbow), C Nick Cole (knee), G Todd Herremans (foot), DE Darren Howard (ankle), WR DeSean Jackson (foot), G Max JeanGilles (shoulder), WR Jeremy Maclin (foot), T Jason Peters (ankle). MONDAY PITTSBURGH STEELERS at DENVER BRONCOS — STEELERS: DNP: DE Travis Kirschke (calf), LB Lawrence Timmons (ankle). BRONCOS: Practice not complete.

Away 1-2-0 2-2-0 1-2-0 2-2-0

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

W 5 3 3 3 2 1

Conf. L PF 1 182 1 120 2 143 2 153 2 62 3 57

PA 143 92 149 95 74 87

Overall W L PF 8 1 317 5 3 236 6 2 239 6 3 261 3 5 171 5 3 182

PA 222 193 192 157 174 132

Saturday’s results Florida State 45, N.C. State 42 Clemson 49, Coastal Carolina 3 Boston College 31, Central Michigan 10 Duke 28, Virginia 17 Miami 28, Wake Forest 27 Georgia Tech 56, Vanderbilt 31

Thursday’s result Virginia Tech 16, East Carolina 3

Today’s games Virginia at Miami, 12 p.m. (WXLV, Ch. 45) Maryland at N.C. State, 1 p.m. Duke at North Carolina, 3:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Wake Forest at Georgia Tech, 3:30 p.m. (WXLV, Ch. 45 or ESPN2) Florida State at Clemson, 7:45 p.m. (ESPN)

Thursday’s late game (22) Virginia Tech 16, East Carolina 3 Virginia Tech East Carolina

6 7 0 3 — 16 0 3 0 0 — 3 First Quarter VT—FG Waldron 41, 8:59. VT—FG Waldron 22, :00. Second Quarter VT—T.Taylor 13 run (Waldron kick), 2:06. ECU—FG Hartman 24, :00. Fourth Quarter VT—FG Waldron 31, 1:13. A—43,569. VT ECU First downs 22 14 Rushes-yards 45-242 31-110 Passing 137 167 Comp-Att-Int 17-30-0 16-35-1 Return Yards 55 10 Punts-Avg. 7-44.9 8-46.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 2-2 Penalties-Yards 5-50 8-79 Time of Possession 34:57 25:03 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Virginia Tech, R.Williams 26-179, T.Taylor 11-61, Oglesby 6-13, Team 1-(minus 3), Roberts 1-(minus 8). East Carolina, Lindsay 13-69, G.Ruffin 3-13, Harris 5-10, Freeney 1-9, Jackson 2-7, Pinkney 6-2, Jordan 1-0. PASSING—Virginia Tech, T.Taylor 17-30-0137. East Carolina, Pinkney 16-33-1-167, Jordan 0-2-0-0. RECEIVING—Virginia Tech, Coale 6-60, Boykin 3-17, R.Williams 3-9, Roberts 2-31, Boyce 2-11, Davis 1-9. East Carolina, Taylor 5-60, Freeney 4-50, Harris 3-45, Jenkins 1-6, Gidrey 1-3, Kass 1-3, Lindsay 1-0.

College schedule All Times EST (Subject to change) Thursday’s results EAST Temple 34, Miami (Ohio) 32 SOUTH Virginia Tech 16, East Carolina 3 MIDWEST Northern Illinois 50, Eastern Michigan 6 Friday’s result SOUTH Boise St. (8-0) at La Tech (3-5), late Today’s games EAST Hofstra (4-4) at Delaware (5-3), Noon Northeastern (1-7) at UMass (4-4), Noon Rhode Island (1-7) at N.Hampshire (7-1), Noon Syracuse (3-5) at Pittsburgh (7-1), Noon Louisville (3-5) at W. Virginia (6-2), Noon Harvard (5-2) at Columbia (2-5), 12:30 p.m. Cornell (2-5) at Dartmouth (1-6), 12:30 p.m. Holy Cross (7-1) at Lehigh (2-6), 12:30 p.m. Robert Morris (2-6) at Albany, N.Y. (6-3), 1 p.m. Bucknell (3-5) at Fordham (3-5), 1 p.m. Colgate (8-1) at Lafayette (7-1), 1 p.m. Georgetown (0-8) at Marist (5-3), 1 p.m. Bryant (3-5) at Sacred Heart (1-7), 1 p.m. Monmouth, N.J. (4-4) at St. Francis, Pa. (26), 1 p.m. Cent. Conn. St. (7-1) at Wagner (5-3), 1 p.m. Brown (4-3) at Yale (4-3), 1 p.m. Princeton (2-5) at Penn (5-2), 3:30 p.m. Ohio St. (7-2) at Penn St. (8-1), 3:30 p.m. SOUTH Virginia (3-5) at Miami (6-2), Noon Gardner-Webb (5-3) at Coastal Carolina (35), 12:30 p.m. Tenn. Tech (5-3) at Georgia (4-4), 1 p.m. S. C. St. (7-1) at Howard (2-6), 1 p.m. Valparaiso (1-7) at Jacksonville (4-4), 1 p.m. E. Kentucky (5-3) at Kentucky (4-4), 1 p.m. Maryland (2-6) at N.C. State (3-5), 1 p.m. Elon (7-1) at W. Carolina (1-7), 1 p.m. Del. St. (2-5) at Winston-Salem (1-7), 1 p.m. Furman (4-4) at Auburn (6-3), 1:30 p.m. Charleston So. (3-5) at Presbyterian (0-8), 1:30 p.m. Towson (2-6) at William & Mary (7-1), 1:30 p.m. Texas Southern (3-4) at MVSU (2-6), 2 p.m. Austin Peay (3-5) at Murray St. (2-6), 2 p.m. N.C. Central (2-6) at Old Dominion (7-2), 2 p.m. Florida Atlantic (2-5) at UAB (3-5), 2 p.m. N. C. A&T (4-4) at Florida A&M (6-2), 3 p.m. Maine (4-4) at James Madison (3-5), 3 p.m. Duke (5-3) at UNC (5-3), 3 p.m. SE La. (5-3) at Northwestern St. (0-8), 3 p.m. Wofford (2-6) at The Citadel (4-4), 3 p.m. LSU (7-1) at Alabama (8-0), 3:30 p.m. Chattanooga (5-3) at App. St. (6-2), 3:30 p.m. Wake (4-5) at Ga. Tech (8-1), 3:30 p.m. VMI (2-6) at Liberty (6-2), 3:30 p.m. Villanova (7-1) at Richmond (8-0), 3:30 p.m. Ga. South. (4-4) at Samford (3-5), 3:30 p.m. UTEP (3-5) at Tulane (2-6), 3:30 p.m. Hampton (4-4) at Bethune-Cookman (3-5), 4 p.m. Norfolk St. (4-4) at Morgan St. (5-3), 4 p.m. Fla. Int. (2-6) at Middle Tenn. (5-3), 4:30 p.m. Ala. St. (3-4) at Jackson St. (2-5), 5 p.m. Troy (6-2) at W. Kentucky (0-7), 5 p.m. Tenn.-Martin (3-5) at Tenn. St. (3-5), 6 p.m. Memphis (2-6) at Tennessee (4-4), 7 p.m. Vanderbilt (2-7) at Florida (8-0), 7:15 p.m. N. Ariz. (5-3) at Mississippi (5-3), 7:30 p.m. Fla. St. (4-4) at Clemson (5-3), 7:45 p.m. Sam Houston St. (4-4) at McNeese St. (62), 8 p.m. MIDWEST Wisconsin (6-2) at Indiana (4-5), Noon Northwestern (5-4) at Iowa (9-0), Noon Purdue (3-6) at Michigan (5-4), Noon W. Mich. (4-5) at Michigan St. (4-5), Noon Illinois (2-6) at Minnesota (5-4), Noon Kan. (5-3) at Kansas St. (5-4), 12:30 p.m. Butler (8-0) at Dayton (7-1), 1 p.m. Campbell (2-6) at Drake (7-1), 2 p.m. W. Illinois (1-7) at Illinois St. (4-4), 2 p.m. Baylor (3-5) at Missouri (5-3), 2 p.m. Ind. St. (1-8) at Miss. St. (5-4), 2 p.m. S. Ill. (7-1) at S. Dakota St. (7-1), 2 p.m. Jack. St. (5-3) at SE Missouri (1-7), 2 p.m. Navy (6-3) at Notre Dame (6-2), 2:30 p.m. Kent St. (5-4) at Akron (1-7), 3:30 p.m. Okla. St. (6-2) at Iowa St. (5-4), 3:30 p.m. S. Ore. (2-6) at North Dakota (4-4), 5 p.m. Youngstown (4-4) at N. Iowa (5-3), 5:05 p.m. S. Utah (4-4) at S. Dakota (4-4), 5:05 p.m. Conn. (4-4) at Cincinnati (8-0), 8 p.m. Oklahoma (5-3) at Nebraska (5-3), 8 p.m. SOUTHWEST UCF (4-3) at Texas (8-0), Noon S. Carolina (6-3) at Ark. (4-4), 12:21 p.m. Grambling St. (5-3) vs. Ark.-Pine Bluff (4-3) at Little Rock, Ark., 2:30 p.m. Ala. A&M (5-3) at Prairie View (5-1), 3 p.m.

Tuesday’s results

4A soccer first round: Southwest Guilford 2, W. Guilford 0 4A soccer first round: Ragsdale def. West Forsyth 2-1 in PK shootout. Teams battled to scoreless tie in regulation and overtimes. 1A soccer first round: Bishop McGuinness 8, Elkin 0

Wednesday’s results 2A soccer first round: Trinity 5, Burlington Cummings 0 2A soccer first round: East Davidson 1, Forest City Chase 0 3A soccer first round: J.M Robinson 7, S. Guilford 0

TRIVIA QUESTION

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Today’s games

Q. Which team played in three straight Super Bowls from 1972-74, winning twice? Rice (0-8) at SMU (4-4), 3 p.m. La.-Lafayette (4-4) at Ark. St. (2-5), 3:30 p.m. La.-Monroe (4-4) at N. Texas (1-6), 4 p.m. Tex. St. (5-3) at Cent. Ark. (5-3), 7 p.m. Nicholls St. (1-7) at Stephen F.Austin (6-2), 7 p.m. Houston (7-1) at Tulsa (4-4), 7:30 p.m. FAR WEST Texas A&M (5-3) at Colo. (2-6), 1:30 p.m. BYU (6-2) at Wyoming (4-4), 2 p.m. Sacramento (3-5) at N. Colo. (2-7), 2:05 p.m. Army (3-5) at Air Force (5-4), 3:30 p.m. Washington St. (1-7) at Arizona (5-2), 3:30 p.m. Oregon (7-1) at Stanford (5-3), 3:30 p.m. Washington (3-5) at UCLA (3-5), 3:30 p.m. Davidson (2-6) at San Diego (3-5), 4 p.m. TCU (8-0) at San Diego St. (4-4), 4 p.m. Cal Poly (4-4) at UC Davis (4-4), 4 p.m. Mont. St. (5-3) at Portland (2-7), 4:05 p.m. Montana (8-0) at Idaho St. (0-9), 5:30 p.m. New Mexico (0-8) at Utah (7-1), 6 p.m. Oregon St. (5-3) at California (6-2), 7 p.m. Southern Cal (6-2) at Ariz. St. (4-4), 8 p.m. Colorado St. (3-6) at UNLV (3-6), 10 p.m. Utah St. (2-6) at Hawaii (2-6), 10:05 p.m. Fresno St. (5-3) at Idaho (7-2), 10:30 p.m.

BASKETBALL

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NBA

Thursday’s Games Chicago 86, Cleveland 85 Utah 113, San Antonio 99

Friday’s Games Indiana 102, Washington 86 Philadelphia 97, New Jersey 94 Charlotte 103, Atlanta 83 Detroit at Orlando, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Boston, 7:30 p.m. Denver at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Toronto at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Cleveland at New York, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at Houston, 8:30 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. San Antonio at Portland, 10:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

Today’s Games Denver at Atlanta, 7 p.m. Boston at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m. Charlotte at Chicago, 8 p.m. New York at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m. Toronto at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Sacramento at Utah, 9 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

Bobcats 103, Hawks 83

ATLANTA (83) Williams 3-8 3-4 9, Jos.Smith 5-13 3-5 13, Horford 4-9 2-3 10, Bibby 1-5 0-0 2, Johnson 5-12 3-3 13, J. Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Crawford 5-14 3-6 13, Teague 2-4 0-0 4, Pachulia 4-9 0-0 8, Evans 4-8 0-0 10, Collins 0-1 0-0 0, Morris 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 33-83 15-23 83. CHARLOTTE (103) Wallace 3-14 5-5 11, Diaw 4-9 2-4 10, Chandler 5-5 0-0 10, Felton 3-9 0-0 7, Bell 9-12 1-1 24, Radmanovic 1-1 0-0 2, Mohammed 4-6 0-0 8, Murray 5-12 2-3 15, Augustin 4-10 1-1 11, Graham 1-2 0-0 2, Brown 0-2 2-2 2, Henderson 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 39-83 14-18 103. Atlanta 24 24 21 14 — 83 Charlotte 28 33 23 19 — 103 3-Point Goals—Atlanta 2-16 (Evans 2-4, Williams 0-1, Teague 0-1, Bibby 0-2, Crawford 0-4, Johnson 0-4), Charlotte 11-18 (Bell 5-6, Murray 3-5, Augustin 2-3, Felton 1-2, Diaw 0-1, Wallace 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Atlanta 43 (Jos.Smith 7), Charlotte 63 (Wallace 18). Assists—Atlanta 10 (Teague, Bibby 3), Charlotte 24 (Felton 7). Total Fouls— Atlanta 20, Charlotte 22. Technicals—Atlanta Coach Woodson, Charlotte defensive three second. A—15,874 (19,077).

First Round St. Francis, Ill. 65, Lambuth 61 Union 95, St. Catharine 42

Middle school Westchester CD 52, First Assembly 30 Leading scorers: WCD – Saduuq Bello 18 points, Donnie Sellers 11 points Records: WCD 2-0 Next game: WCD plays in the final round of a tournament today at 12:30 p.m. at Our Lady of Grace against an opponent to be determined

MOTORSPORTS

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NASCAR Cup qualifying After Friday qualifying; race Sunday At Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length: 1.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 191.117. 2. (9) Kasey Kahne, Dodge, 190.975. 3. (2) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 190.941. 4. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 190.624. 5. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 190.523. 6. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 190.148. 7. (5) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 190.087. 8. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 190.054. 9. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 189.96. 10. (33) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 189.954. 11. (77) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 189.9. 12. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 189.86. 13. (00) David Reutimann, Toyota, 189.82. 14. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 189.8. 15. (83) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 189.793. 16. (44) AJ Allmendinger, Ford, 189.7. 17. (6) David Ragan, Ford, 189.7. 18. (43) Reed Sorenson, Dodge, 189.593. 19. (47) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 189.587. 20. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 189.407. 21. (02) David Gilliland, Toyota, 188.95. 22. (26) Jamie McMurray, Ford, 188.884. 23. (70) Mike Skinner, Chevrolet, 188.844. 24. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 188.699. 25. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 188.686. 26. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 188.646. 27. (1) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 188.587. 28. (71) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, 188.35. 29. (7) Robby Gordon, Toyota, 188.317. 30. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 188.304. 31. (82) Scott Speed, Toyota, 188.016. 32. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 187.99. 33. (19) Elliott Sadler, Dodge, 187.944. 34. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 187.82. 35. (12) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 187.8. 36. (07) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 187.793. 37. (36) Michael McDowell, Toyota, 187.474. 38. (96) Erik Darnell, Ford, 187.182. 39. (98) Paul Menard, Ford, 186.832. 40. (55) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 186.438. 41. (34) John Andretti, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 42. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (21) Bill Elliott, Ford, Past Champion.

Failed to Qualify 44. (37) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, 186.664. 45. (66) Dave Blaney, Toyota, 186.156. 46. (13) Max Papis, Toyota, 185.842. 47. (09) Mike Bliss, Dodge, 183.592.

NASCAR Nationwide qualifying

76ers 97, Nets 94

NEW JERSEY (94) Hassell 8-13 1-3 17, Najera 4-8 0-0 9, Lopez 8-18 6-9 22, Alston 6-13 1-2 14, Lee 3-8 2-3 8, Boone 4-5 0-0 8, T.Williams 3-10 0-0 6, Simmons 3-8 2-2 10. Totals 39-83 12-19 94. PHILADELPHIA (97) Young 3-9 2-4 8, Brand 4-7 0-1 8, Dalembert 1-3 0-0 2, L.Williams 6-14 4-4 18, Iguodala 614 3-5 16, Kapono 5-7 0-0 14, Smith 2-4 5-6 9, Green 3-5 0-1 6, Speights 4-6 2-2 10, Ivey 1-1 1-2 3, Carney 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 36-72 1725 97. New Jersey 20 27 26 21 — 94 Philadelphia 18 32 18 29 — 97 3-Point Goals—New Jersey 4-14 (Simmons 25, Najera 1-2, Alston 1-3, T.Williams 0-1, Lee 0-1, Hassell 0-2), Philadelphia 8-16 (Kapono 4-6, L.Williams 2-5, Carney 1-1, Iguodala 1-2, Green 0-1, Young 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New Jersey 50 (Hassell 12), Philadelphia 45 (L.Williams 9). Assists—New Jersey 25 (T.Williams 9), Philadelphia 24 (L.Williams 6). Total Fouls—New Jersey 24, Philadelphia 15. Technicals—Philadelphia defensive three second 2. A—10,054 (20,318).

Pacers 102, Wizards 86

WASHINGTON (86) Butler 8-21 7-9 24, Oberto 1-1 0-0 2, Haywood 4-9 1-3 9, Arenas 5-10 2-4 13, Young 1-4 0-0 3, Blatche 0-5 1-2 1, Foye 6-14 2-2 16, Stevenson 1-3 0-0 2, McGee 2-4 0-0 4, McGuire 1-2 0-2 2, James 2-8 2-4 6, Davis 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 33-84 15-26 86. INDIANA (102) D.Jones 6-11 6-9 18, Granger 7-21 5-5 22, Hibbert 5-9 2-2 12, Ford 6-15 6-6 18, Rush 1-4 0-0 2, Hansbrough 3-7 7-10 13, S.Jones 0-4 02 0, Watson 2-7 1-2 7, Price 2-4 0-0 6, McRoberts 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 34-85 27-36 102. Washington 19 22 24 21 — 86 Indiana 23 30 29 20 — 102 3-Point Goals—Washington 5-16 (Foye 2-5, Arenas 1-1, Young 1-2, Butler 1-5, James 0-1, Stevenson 0-2), Indiana 7-23 (Granger 3-11, Price 2-4, Watson 2-5, Ford 0-1, Rush 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Washington 58 (Haywood 19), Indiana 64 (Hibbert 11). Assists—Washington 16 (Arenas 5), Indiana 19 (D.Jones 5). Total Fouls—Washington 23, Indiana 23. Technicals—Washington defensive three second, Indiana defensive three second. A—14,556 (18,165).

Magic 110, Pistons 103

DETROIT (103) Jerebko 3-3 3-8 9, Villanueva 11-17 5-6 28, Wallace 1-1 0-0 2, Stuckey 9-18 1-2 20, Gordon 5-17 9-11 19, Bynum 2-5 2-2 7, Wilcox 0-1 0-0 0, Brown 1-3 0-4 2, Daye 5-7 0-0 11, Maxiell 1-2 3-4 5. Totals 38-74 23-37 103. ORLANDO (110) Barnes 4-12 9-12 18, Anderson 4-7 1-1 11, Howard 7-8 8-9 22, Nelson 8-15 1-2 18, Redick 3-7 7-7 16, Pietrus 1-8 1-1 3, Bass 5-9 3-3 13, Williams 3-8 0-0 7, Gortat 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 36-76 30-35 110. Detroit 23 20 25 35 — 103 Orlando 40 18 24 28 — 110 3-Point Goals—Detroit 4-11 (Bynum 1-1, Daye 1-2, Villanueva 1-3, Stuckey 1-3, Gordon 02), Orlando 8-28 (Redick 3-6, Anderson 2-5, Nelson 1-3, Williams 1-4, Barnes 1-6, Pietrus 0-4). Fouled Out—Howard. Rebounds—Detroit 49 (Jerebko 6), Orlando 46 (Howard 12). Assists—Detroit 13 (Gordon 5), Orlando 19 (Nelson 8). Total Fouls—Detroit 31, Orlando 27. Technicals—Brown, Stuckey, Redick, Orlando defensive three second 2. A—17,461 (17,461).

College scores MIDWEST Aquinas 71, Trinity Christian 54

EXHIBITION Clemson 99, Francis Marion 51 Kentucky 117, Clarion 52 Michigan 73, Wayne St. 54 North Carolina 107, Belmont Abbey 59 Penn St. 82, Slippery Rock 51

Women’s college scores TOURNAMENTS Freed-Hardeman LionBacker Classic First Round Bethel, Tenn. 67, Auburn-Montgomery 54 Freed-Hardeman 98, Midway 64 Union Lady Bulldog Classic

At Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length: 1.5 miles (Car number in parentheses)

1. (16) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 187.201 mph. 2. (6) David Ragan, Ford, 186.548. 3. (38) Jason Leffler, Toyota, 186.008. 4. (10) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 185.925. 5. (33) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 185.669. 6. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 185.484. 7. (88) Brad Keselowski, Chev., 185.408. 8. (60) Carl Edwards, Ford, 185.249. 9. (32) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 185.128. 10. (11) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 184.843. 11. (99) Trevor Bayne, Toyota, 184.653. 12. (90) Johnny Chapman, Chev. 184.37. 13. (91) Terry Cook, Chevrolet, 184.288. 14. (29) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 184.256. 15. (07) Danny O’Quinn Jr., Chev., 184.062. 16. (27) Jason Keller, Ford, 183.617. 17. (12) Justin Allgaier, Dodge, 183.474. 18. (62) Brendan Gaughan, Chev., 183.169. 19. (01) Mike Wallace, Chevrolet, 183.076. 20. (0) Jeremy Clements, Chev., 183.057. 21. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 183.045. 22. (96) Michael McDowell, Dodge, 183.032. 23. (66) Steve Wallace, Chev., 182.852. 24. (40) Scott Wimmer, Chev., 182.723. 25. (49) Mark Green, Chevrolet, 182.58. 26. (15) Michael Annett, Toyota, 182.519. 27. (09) John Wes Townley, Ford, 182.211. 28. (1) James Buescher, Chev., 182.174. 29. (28) Kenny Wallace, Chev., 180.409. 30. (47) Chase Miller, Toyota, 180.24. 31. (26) Kevin Conway, Chev., 180.234. 32. (05) Mark Day, Chevrolet, 180.126. 33. (24) Eric McClure, Ford, 179.844. 34. (58) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 179.724. 35. (92) Dennis Setzer, Dodge, 179.194. 36. (89) Morgan Shepherd, Chev., 179.039. 37. (34) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, 179.015. 38. (87) Joe Nemechek, Chev., 178.992. 39. (70) Shelby Howard, Chev., 178.95. 40. (23) Robert Richardson Jr., Chev., 178.66. 41. (61) Kenny Hendrick, Ford, 177.41. 42. (81) Bobby Hillin Jr., Dodge, Owner Points. 43. (83) John Borneman III, Ford, 178.725.

Failed to Qualify 44. (85) Casey Atwood, Ford, 177.293. 45. (84) Mike Harmon, Dodge, 175.798. 46. (02) Andy Ponstein, Chevrolet.

TRANSACTIONS

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BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB—Suspended Cincinnati minor league RHP Jose Marmolejo (Dominican Summer League) for 50 games for using and possessing a performance-enhancing substance.

American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Declined the 2010 contract option on OF Jermaine Dye. Acquired INF-OF Mark Teahen from Kansas City for INF Chris Getz, INF Josh Fields and cash considerations. CLEVELAND INDIANS—Named Tim Belcher pitching coach. Named Ramon Pena director of Latin American operations. DETROIT TIGERS—Assigned INF Michael Hollimon outright to Toledo (IL). Assigned C Matt Treanor and OF Marcus Thames off the roster. Purchased the contract of RHP Jay Sborz from Toledo. Reinstated RHP Joel Zumaya and INF Jeff Larish from the 60-day DL. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Declined the 2010 contract options for OF Coco Crisp, C Miguel Olivo and RHP Yasuhiko Yabuta. LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Signed general manager Tony Reagins to a multiyear contract extension. MINNESOTA TWINS—Acquired SS J.J. Hardy from Milwaukee for OF Carlos Gomez. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Sent C Kyle Phillips, LHP Davis Romero and LHP Bill Murphy outright to Las Vegas (PCL).

National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Exercised the 2010 contract option RHP Brandon Webb. ATLANTA BRAVES—Agreed to terms with RHP Scott Proctor on a minor league contract.

CINCINNATI REDS—Reinstated INF Danny Richar from the 60-day DL and assigned him outright off the roster, making him a free agent. Assigned 1B Kevin Barker outright off the roster and Barker elected free agency. Assigned OF Darnell McDonald outright off the roster. Assigned C Corky Miller outright off the roster and Miller agreed to a minor league contract with Louisville (IL). Signed RHP Justin Lehr to a one-year contract and assigned him outright to Louisville. FLORIDA MARLINS—Named Randy St. Claire pitching coach, Dave Collins first base/ outfield coach, Josue Espada third base/infield coach and Reid Cornelius bullpen coach. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Declined the 2010 contract option on RHP David Weathers. NEW YORK METS—Declined the 2010 contract option on RHP J.J. Putz. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Exercised the 2010 contract option on LHP Cliff Lee. PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Assigned RHP Virgil Vasquez and RHP Eric Hacker outright to Indianapolis (IL) and C Steve Lerud outright to Altoona (EL).

FOOTBALL National Football League NFL—Fined Green Bay DT Johnny Jolly, CB Al Harris and DT B.J. Raji $5,000 each for their actions during a Nov. 1 game against Minnesota. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Placed CB Marlin Jackson on injured reserve. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Released G Kendall Simmons. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Released RB Quinton Ganther. Signed P Sam Paulescu.

HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Recalled LW Bryan Bickell from Rockford (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS—Claimed D Jay Leach off waivers from New Jersey. NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Signed C Dean McAmmond. Placed D Johnny Oduya and RW Rob Niedermayer on injured reserve. PHOENIX COYOTES—Recalled D Shaun Heshka from San Antonio (AHL). Reassigned F Mikkel Boedker to San Antonio. SAN JOSE SHARKS—Reassigned D Joe Callahan to Worcester (AHL).

COLLEGE SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE—Fined Florida football coach Urban Meyer $30,000 for publicly criticizing officials.

GOLF

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Fall Classic at Blair Park Pairings and tee times for the final round of the Fall Classic at Blair Park. Sunday’s round was rained out.

1st Tee 8:56- W.E. Heasley, Ernie Brewster, Steve Blakley,Tony Moore 9:04- Mike Springer, Randy Bartlett, Carlton Branson, Phillip Gibson 9:12- Chris Ledbetter, David Simpson, Tim Galluzzi, Doug Smith 9:20- Lee Edwards, Jay Gardner, Scott Hutchinson, David Harrison 9:28- Gary Zachary, Jim Goulding, Jay Hoover, Kim Caldwell 9:36- Darin Bell, Gary Sample, Chris Evans, Roger Smith Sr 9:52- Joseph Rice, Wilson Womble, Travis Bowman, Nick Cromer 10:04- Aaron Cadle, Marcus Gray, Mike Crawford, Marc Cox 10:12- Chris Ingram, John Franklin, Preston Lilley 10:20- Scotty Odell, Patrick Waters, Joel Love, Dewayne Blakely 10:28- Mike Bayes, Anthony Baker, Bryan Colquitt, Scott Blackwell

WGC

67-67 64-70 69-66 69-66 66-69 67-69 68-69 69-69 68-70 70-69 72-67 70-69 67-72 67-73 73-67 70-70 71-69 66-74 69-71 70-70 66-74 68-72 69-72 72-69 70-71 73-68 70-71 72-69 69-72 70-71 72-69 69-72 69-72 74-68 73-69 71-71 74-69 71-72 75-68 73-70 72-71 74-69 71-72 72-72 73-72 75-70 71-74 74-71 74-71 71-74 71-74 74-71 74-71 71-74 73-73 72-74 73-73 71-75 73-73 72-74 72-74 72-74 74-73 77-70 71-76 68-80 74-74 77-71 76-72 81-69 73-77 74-76 75-76 74-78 74-78 77-77 78-76 79-77

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

134 134 135 135 135 136 137 138 138 139 139 139 139 140 140 140 140 140 140 140 140 140 141 141 141 141 141 141 141 141 141 141 141 142 142 142 143 143 143 143 143 143 143 144 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 147 147 147 148 148 148 148 150 150 150 151 152 152 154 154 156

LPGA

Mizuno Classic By The Associated Press Friday At Kintetsu Kashikojima Country Club Shima, Japan Purse: $1.4 million Yardage: 6,506; Par 72 (36-36) First Round Brittany Lang Nobuko Kizawa Hee Young Park Vicky Hurst Bo Bae Song Mi-Jeong Jeon Momoko Ueda

Miki Saiki Rui Kitada Hyun-Ju Shin Jee Young Lee Miho Koga Sophie Gustafson Hee-Won Han Eunjung Yi Ai Miyazato Yani Tseng In-Kyung Kim Jiyai Shin Song-Hee Kim Yukari Baba Ah-Reum Hwang Hiromi Mogi Teresa Lu Eun-A Lim Julie Lu Akane Iijima Stacy Lewis Katherine Hull Karrie Webb Inbee Park Li Ying Ye Kyeong Bae Mayu Hattori Candie Kung Maria Hjorth Lorena Ochoa Sakura Yokomine Ayako Uehara Sandra Gal Mie Nakata Kaori Aoyama Saiki Fujita Tamie Durdin Tomoko Kusakabe Lindsey Wright Ji Young Oh Eun-Hee Ji Na Yeon Choi Seon Hwa Lee Pat Hurst Christina Kim

35-34 34-35 33-36 35-34 34-35 35-34 35-34 34-35 35-34 35-34 34-35 36-33 35-34 37-33 34-36 36-34 34-36 35-35 34-36 36-34 35-35 36-34 33-37 34-36 35-36 37-34 39-32 35-36 34-37 35-36 34-37 36-36 36-36 37-35 39-33 36-36 36-36 36-36 35-37 38-34 36-36 34-38 38-34 36-36 34-39

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 73

HOCKEY

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NHL

Thursday’s Games Montreal 2, Boston 1, SO Columbus 4, Atlanta 3 Detroit 2, San Jose 1, SO Ottawa 3, Tampa Bay 2, OT Vancouver 5, Minnesota 2 Calgary 2, St. Louis 1, OT Phoenix 3, Chicago 1 N.Y. Rangers 4, Edmonton 2 Anaheim 4, Nashville 0 Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh 2

Friday’s Games

HSBC Champions Scores Friday At Sheshan International Golf Club Shanghai Purse: $7 million Yardage: 7,143; Par: 72 Second Round Tiger Woods Nick Watney Phil Mickelson Alvaro Quiros Ryan Moore Anthony Kim Pat Perez Brian Gay Jyoti Randhawa Camilo Villegas Ryo Ishikawa Koumei Oda Lin Wen-tang Paul Casey Francesco Molinari Ross Fisher Thongchai Jaidee Martin Kaymer Jason Dufner James Kingston Shane Lowry Matt Kuchar Henrik Stenson Simon Dyson Lee Westwood Rory McIlroy Ernie Els Ian Poulter Soren Kjeldsen Alexander Noren Daisuke Maruyama Garth Mulroy Rodney Pampling Rory Sabbatini Robert Allenby Retief Goosen Padraig Harrington Oliver Wilson Shingo Katayama Zhang Lianwei Y.E. Yang C Muniyappa Scott Strange Peter Hanson Jeev Milkha Singh Sergio Garcia Stewart Cink Sean O’Hair Ricardo Gonzalez Lam Chih Bing Chapchai Nirat Danny Lee Wu Ashun Mark Brown Liang Wenchong Geoff Ogilvy Gonzalo Fdez-Castano Jerry Kelly Yuta Ikeda Martin Laird Michael Jonzon Greg Chalmers Richard Sterne Steve Marino Mark Murless Nick Dougherty Daniel Vancsik Peter Hedblom Jeppe Huldahl Prayad Marksaeng Christian Cevaer Gaganjeet Bhullar Anthony Kang Thomas Aiken Wu Weihuang Thomas Levet Jean Hugo Nathan Green

4A soccer second round: Audrey Kell at SW Guilford, 7 p.m. 4A soccer second round: Ragsdale at Grimsley, 7 p.m. 2A soccer second round: Durham School of Arts at Trinity, 6 p.m. 2A soccer second round: East Davidson at East Lincoln, 7 p.m. 1A soccer second round: Bishop McGuinness vs. Gray Stone at Stanly County Community College, 2:30 p.m.

33-33 33-34 31-36 34-34 35-33 34-34 35-33

— — — — — — —

66 67 67 68 68 68 68

New Jersey 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 Toronto 3, Carolina 2 Philadelphia 5, Buffalo 2 Washington at Florida, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Chicago at Colorado, 9 p.m.

Today’s Games Nashville at Los Angeles, 4 p.m. Florida at Washington, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Montreal, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Boston, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Ottawa, 7 p.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. Detroit at Toronto, 7 p.m. Carolina at Columbus, 7 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 8 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Calgary, 10 p.m. Phoenix at Anaheim, 10 p.m. Pittsburgh at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

Leafs 3, Hurricanes 2

Toronto Carolina

0 2

2 0

1 0

— —

3 2

First Period—1, Carolina, Sutter 3 (Brind’Amour, Corvo), 7:51. 2, Carolina, Samsonov 2 (Alberts, Jokinen), 17:22. Penalties—Stajan, Tor (holding), 5:14; Schenn, Tor (interference), 18:02. Second Period—3, Toronto, Mitchell 1 (Kaberle, Blake), 1:12. 4, Toronto, Kulemin 3 (Ponikarovsky, Grabovski), 7:23. Penalties—Alberts, Car (interference), 15:37. Third Period—5, Toronto, Blake 2 (Stempniak, Kessel), 11:36 (pp). Penalties—Brind’Amour, Car (holding), 10:52; Beauchemin, Tor (tripping), 19:37. Shots on Goal—Toronto 8-10-8—26. Carolina 8-10-18—36. Power-play opportunities—Toronto 1 of 2; Carolina 0 of 3. Goalies—Toronto, Gustavsson 2-2-3 (36 shots-34 saves). Carolina, C.Ward 2-9-3 (2623). A—14,164 (18,680). T—2:20. Referees—Chris Ciamaga, Don Van Massenhoven. Linesmen—Scott Cherrey, Darren Gibbs.

TENNIS

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WTA at Nusa Dua, Indonesia

Commonwealth Bank Tournament of Champions Results Friday At The Bali International Convention Centre Nusa Dua, Indonesia Purse: $600,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Round Robin Group A Marion Bartoli (1), France, def. Shahar Peer (7), Israel, 6-3, 6-2. Standings: Bartoli 2-0 (sets 4-0), Peer 1-1 (2-2), Magdalena Rybarikova 0-2 (0-4).

Group B Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez (6), Spain, def. Samantha Stosur (2), Australia, 7-6 (4), 7-5. Standings: Martinez Sanchez 2-0 (4-1), Stosur 1-1 (2-3), Agnes Szavay 0-2 (2-4).

Group C Vera Dushevina (13), Belgium, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues (5), Spain, 2-6, 6-1, 7-5. Standings: Kimiko Date Krumm 1-1 (2-2), a-Dushevina 1-0 (2-1), Medina Garrigues 0-2 (1-4), w-Wickmayer 1-0 (2-0). w-withdrew, a-alternate

Group D Sabine Lisicki (4), Germany, def. Melinda Czink (8), Hungary, 6-2, 6-7 (1), 6-4. Standings: Aravane Rezai 2-0 (4-1), Lisicki 1-1 (3-3), Czink 0-2 (1-4).

TRIVIA ANSWER

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A. Miami Dolphins.


SPORTS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 www.hpe.com

3C

Johnston’s OT goal lifts HPU women to final SPECIAL TO THE ENTERPRISE

Favors expected to boost Jackets’ Gordon earns first ACC fortunes Cup pole of season

AP

Jeff Gordon describes his pole-winning run with a crew member after pacing Friday’s qualifying for Sunday’s Cup race at Texas Motor Speedway.

ATLANTA (AP) – Georgia Tech is counting on a dramatic turnaround this season, thanks to a talented freshman class led by Derrick Favors. The 6-foot-10 Favors is a lock to start for coach Paul Hewitt and could be joined by another freshman, point guard Mfon Udofia. Georgia Tech finished at 12-19 last season, with a last-place 2-14 ACC record. Still, Hewitt hinted a worst-to-first turnaround is within the team’s reach. “I think these guys know that if everything goes right, we have a chance to be as good as anyone in the ACC, and if you are as good as anyone in the ACC, then you can compete for anything that comes after that,� Hewitt said. Thanks to two firstplace votes at this week’s Atlantic Coast Conference’s Operation Basketball preseason event, Georgia Tech was picked fourth, behind Duke and North Carolina, which tied for first, and Clemson. Favors was the pick of 40 of 48 voters for ACC rookie of the year. The 6-foot-10 Favors, from South Atlanta High, was selected as the nation’s top high school player by Parade magazine and was rated as the nation’s top prospect by some recruiting services. Favors has a 9-foot wingspan and averaged five blocks, 13.1 rebounds and 28.1 points on a Class AAA state championship team last year. “I wish I could have the ability he has and the length he has,� teammate Zach Peacock said. “It’s just amazing to watch him.� The freshman class also includes 6-foot-11 center Daniel Miller, who has made an impact with his rebounding in the first two weeks of practice, and guard Glen Rice Jr. Georgia Tech has not finished above .500 in the ACC in any season since losing in the 2004 national championship game, the high mark of Hewitt’s nine seasons in Atlanta. Hewitt is only 60-84 in ACC games and 154-131 overall at Georgia Tech. Hewitt continues to defend last year’s team. “I thought that team performed extremely well,� he said. “Under the conditions, I thought we played very hard. We were there in every

game. At the end of the games, we just didn’t take care of the ball as much as Favors we would have liked, and we didn’t make free throws.� No matter how the 2008-09 season is judged, Hewitt and Georgia Tech fans are eager to see if Favors and the other freshmen can lead this team’s resurgence. Hewitt, who has shielded the freshmen from interviews, said Favors is quiet but productive in practice. “He plays hard,� he said. “He doesn’t say much on the court. He plays through fouls, plays through contact, and continues to get to the next play.� Hewitt said Udofia “is showing some great leadership and athleticism.� Hewitt had Udofia paired with senior guard D’Andre Bell in the team’s first intrasquad scrimmage. Bell missed last season after he was diagnosed with spinal stenosis, a congenital condition. Guard Iman Shumpert joins forwards Gani Lawal and Peacock as returning starters. Bell started two years ago and was the team’s top perimeter defender. Udofia, Shumpert and junior Moe Miller are the top contenders to start at point guard. Miller has been cleared to practice after suffering a concussion in an offseason car accident. Hewitt was concerned because Miller suffered two concussions last season. The 6-foot-8 Peacock is a natural power forward who now says he was uncomfortable when trying to play small forward last season, when he averaged 9.2 points and 4.8 rebounds while starting every game. “I’d like to be done with that,� Peacock said. “It was always my dream to play out there on the wing. It’s a lot tougher than it looks.� Lawal (6-9, 234) returned for his junior season after considering leaving school for the NBA. He averaged 15.1 points and 9.5 rebounds last season. Peacock says he is motivated by the last-place finish in the ACC last season. “We’re trying to go out with a bang,� he said.

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) – Jeff Gordon is suddenly having all kind of success at Texas Motor Speedway, a track where he had never won until earlier this season. Gordon captured his first pole of the season, waiting until the secondto-last race to extend his streak of 17 consecutive seasons with a pole, with a qualifying lap of 191.117 mph Friday at the 11⠄2-mile, high-banked Texas track. Only David Pearson and Richard Petty have longer streaks than Gordon of seasons with a pole. Pearson went 20 consecutive seasons (1963-82) and Petty had 18 (1960-77). Gordon is third in points, 192 behind Hendrick teammate Jimmie Johnson, who drives the No. 48 Chevrolet on which Gordon is listed as the owner. Johnson is vying for an unprecedented fourth consecutive season title and needs only to average only a 10th-place

finish the last three races to get it. Mark Martin, another Hendrick driver, is second, only eight points ahead of Gordon’s No. 24. Martin qualified seventh and Johnson 12th for Sunday’s race. Kasey Kahne and Kurt Busch qualified second and third in Dodges, and Tony Stewart was fourth in his No. 14 Chevrolet. When Gordon won at Texas in April, it broke a 47-race winless drought and gave him a victory at one of the two active tracks where the four-time series champion had never won. The other is Homestead, where the season finale is in two weeks. Gordon started first at Martinsville in March, the week before the Texas spring race, when that field was set by owner’s points. He has rolled off in the No. 2 spot seven times this season. Tony Raines, Dave Blaney, Max Papis and Mike Bliss failed to qualify.

Martin, Gordon know the Chase race is for second FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) – Mathematically, Mark Martin and Jeff Gordon still have a chance to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup title. The reality with three races left? “We’ve still got a great battle going for second in points,� Gordon said Friday. “If for some crazy reason those guys had trouble, we’ve got to make sure we capitalize on them. Our focus right now is winning races, and

trying to get to second in points.� In his run for an unprecedented fourth consecutive title, Jimmie Johnson’s closest chasers are his Hendrick teammates. But Johnson takes a comfortable 184-point lead over Martin into Sunday’s race at Texas Motor Speedway, with Gordon eight points further back. Martin, already a season runner-up four times, is facing the realistic possibility of being in that spot again.

Kenseth takes Nationwide pole FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) – Matt Kenseth will start on the pole for the NASCAR Nationwide Series at Texas, five spots ahead of points leader Kyle Busch. Kenseth earned his first pole in his 13 Nationwide races this season, the 16th in his career, with a qualifying lap of 187.201 mph

in his Ford. David Ragan also starts his Ford on the front row. Busch, who has a 205point lead over Carl Edwards with three races left, starts sixth. Edwards starts directly behind him in the No. 8 spot. Busch won from the pole at Texas in April, one of his seven Nationwide victories.

Tar Heels cruise in exhibition hoops CHAPEL HILL (AP)– Deon Thompson had 23 points and eight rebounds to help No. 6 North Carolina beat Belmont Abbey 107-59 on Friday night in its only exhibition game. Tyler Zeller scored 17 points for the defend-

ing national champions, while Ed Davis added 13 points, six rebounds and four blocks. The Tar Heels open the regular season Monday against Florida International. Richard Barbee scored 15 points for the Crusaders.

Crowds roar, confetti falls at Yankees parade NEW YORK (AP) – Crowds roared, church bells rang and streams of paper rained down on Broadway as the New York Yankees celebrated their 27th championship Friday in a way only this city can, with a parade up the Canyon of Heroes. The players, joined by a few celebrity fans and Yankees of the past, drank it all in as they rode on floats and double-decker buses through Manhattan’s financial district. It has been years since the city used actual ticker-tape to celebrate its World Series wins, but the experience was

still authentic to the many thousands who crammed the sidewalks along the three-quartermile parade route near Wall Street. “I love it!� said city sanitation worker John Freeman, as he raked up confetti and toilet paper rolls thrown from skyscrapers. Shortstop Derek Jeter carried the trophy, hoisting it high above his head while the crowd screamed and “We are the Champions� blasted on loudspeakers. Brooklyn native Jay-Z capped the celebration with a performance of his song “Empire State of Mind.�

Bobcats batter Hawks, 103-83 CHARLOTTE (AP) – Raja Bell scored 24 points and the Charlotte Bobcats looked nothing like the NBA’s lowest scoring team in beating the road-weary Atlanta Hawks 103-83 on Friday night. Bell hit 9 of 12 shots, including 5 of 6 from 3-point range, Ronald “Flip� Murray added 15 points in his Charlotte debut, and Gerald

Wallace offset a poor shooting night with 18 rebounds in the Bobcats’ second straight win. The Hawks struggled defensively and saw their two-game winning streak snapped at the end of a difficult trip that also took them to Los Angeles, Portland and Sacramento. Josh Smith and Jamal Crawford each scored 13 points for the Hawks.

Maple Leafs nip Hurricanes, 3-2 RALEIGH (AP) – Jason Blake scored on a power play with 8:24 left and Jonas Gustavsson made 34 saves to help the Toronto Maple Leafs win for the second time in 14 games this season, 3-2 over the Carolina Hurricanes on Friday night. John Mitchell and Nikolai Kulemin also

scored for Toronto. The Maple Leafs (2-7-5) have earned points in their last six games. Brandon Sutter and Sergei Samsonov scored for Carolina, off to the worst start in franchise history. Last in the NHL at 2-10-3, the Hurricanes are winless in their last 11 games.

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In this March 12, 2009 photo, Georgia Tech coach Paul Hewitt questions a call during the first half against Clemson in a game in Atlanta. After finishing 12-19 last season and 2-14 in the ACC, Hewitt hints a worstto-first turnaround is within the team’s reach.

the first No. 8 seed ever to advance to the Big CHARLESTON, S.C. – Jil- South title match. lie Johnston picked a Winthrop improved to dramatic time to score 5-10-5, while VMI ends her first goal of the sea- its season at 7-10-3. son for High Point University. PANTHERS SPIKE G-W Johnston’s overtime HIGH POINT – Megan tally lifted the seventh- Kaminskas totaled 10 seeded Panthers to a kills and three blocks heart-stopping 1-0 vic- as the High Point Unitory over sixth-seeded versity volleyball team Radford in the semifinals beat Gardner-Webb 25of the Big South Tourna- 22, 25-23, 25-22 Friday at ment at Blackbaud Sta- the Millis Center. The dium on Friday night. Panthers improve to 16Laura Shupe assisted 14 and 5-8 in the 5-8 Big on the game-winner South while the Runfor the Panthers, who ning Bulldogs fall to 11improved to 6-15-1 and 18, 3-9. advance to Sunday’s 2 Megan Smith had 12 p.m. title match against kills and 11 digs for her eighth-seeded Winthrop. ninth double-double of The Highlanders end the season. Holly Fong the season with a 9-11 finished with 32 assists, record. three kills and four digs. In the other semifinal, Julie Hershkowitz came a game was decided by up with 16 digs. penalty kicks for the The Panthers host fourth time in the tour- UNC Asheville today at nament as No. 8 Win- 2 p.m. for Senior Day. throp beat fifth-seeded Megan Kaminskas, Tara VMI 3-0 in penalty kicks Dyer, Caroline Miler after a 1-1 tie in regula- and Lyndsay Rowley tion. will be honored before The Lady Eagles are the game.

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Duke, UNC renew rivalry today DUKE AT NORTH CAROLINA

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AP

Virginia Tech quarterback Tyrod Taylor (5) dives for a touchdown during the first half of Thursday night’s game against East Carolina in Greenville. The Hokies soared to a 16-3 nonconference victory.

Williams runs wild as Hokies top ECU GREENVILLE (AP) – After Ryan Williams fumbled his last game away, Virginia Tech’s freshman running back got his hands on something else – some old football stats. “I researched Walter Payton and how many fumbles he had, all my favorite running backs,” Williams said, “and I realized that it happens to everybody.” Then, both he and the 22nd-ranked Hokies bounced back. Williams ran for a season-high 179 yards and Virginia Tech avoided its first three-game losing streak in six years, holding off East Carolina 16-3 on Thursday night. Tyrod Taylor had a 13-yard touchdown run, Matt Waldron kicked three field goals and Williams atoned for his critical miscue last week against North Carolina by cracking the 1,000-yard mark for the Hokies (6-3). Virginia Tech had a 379-277 advantage in total yardage, forced three turnovers and made just enough plays on offense to bounce back from losses to No. 10 Georgia Tech and the Tar Heels. Williams, whose fumble in the closing

minutes last week gave North Carolina a chance at a winning field goal on the final play, helped make Virginia Tech the third school to have freshmen rush for 1,000 yards in consecutive years after Darren Evans did it last year. Williams surpassed his 164-yard effort against Marshall and became just the second 100-yard rusher against the Pirates this season. Taylor finished 17 of 30 for 137 yards with another 61 yards on the ground for the Hokies. Patrick Pinkney was 16 of 33 for 167 yards with a late interception for ECU (5-4), which was playing its first Thursday night home game since 2001. The upstarts from Conference USA had won three of their last four against ranked teams, including last year’s 27-22 upset that was keyed by a late blocked punt, and they pulled out a few stops for this special occasion. They designated the game a “blackout,” welcomed back to town former star quarterback Jeff Blake and broke out a new helmet logo with a tricorne-clad skull and crossbones to replace the traditional “ECU.”

Wake’s Skinner cleared to play today BY GREER SMITH ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

WINSTON-SALEM – Wake Forest won’t have to rely on a largely untested quarterback as it tries to snap a three-game losing streak today. The Demon Deacons announced on Friday that senior QB Riley Skinner, who has thrown for more than 2,298 yards this season and holds most of the school’s career passing records, is cleared to play against No. 10 Georgia Tech (3:30 p.m., ABC, WXLV, Ch. 45), putting little-used redshirt senior Ryan McManus on the bench. Skinner suffered a concussion with 6:22 to play and was replaced by McManus in Wake’s 28-27 loss to Miami. Skinner did not practice Monday, threw on the side during Tuesday’s practice and was gradually eased into the full practice routines on Wednesday and Thursday. Deacon spokesman Steve Shutt said that Skinner is expected to make his 33rd consecutive start. Even with Skinner on the field, the Deacons face

a tall order against the Yellow Jackets, who are first in the ACC Coastal Division at 5-1 and 8-1 overall, the only loss to conference foe Miami in September. Tech rallied to defeat nonconference foe Vanderbilt 56-31 last week and can clinch the Coastal with wins over Wake (4-5, 2-3) and Duke. The Jackets, who are ranked in the top 10 for the first time since 2001 and are riding a six-game winning streak, feature a three-back option running attack led by 2008 ACC player of the year Jonathan Dwyer. The only time that the Deacons have faced a similar rushing attack was against Navy. The Midshipmen found enough success against the Wake defense on a rainy, windy day that they never attempted a pass in a 13-10 win. “You can say that was a plus for us to have faced an offense similar to Georgia Tech’s,” Wake Forest coach Jim Grobe said. “But they also have video of how we tried to defend it. Our players have a pretty good feel of what they are going to

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VIRGINIA AT MIAMI

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Who: Virginia (3-5, 2-2 ACC) at No. 16 Miami (6-2, 3-2) When: Noon (Raycom, WXLV, Ch. 45) Line: Miami by 131⁄2. Series record: Miami leads 4-2. Last meeting: 2008, Miami 24-17, OT. What’s at stake: Same deal as last week for Miami: Hurricanes need to win to keep any realistic hopes of ACC Coastal Division title alive. Virginia is two losses away from bowl ineligibility, and might be playing for coach Al Groh’s job. Key matchup: Any Virginia offensive player with the ball vs. Miami’s defense. The Hurricanes got throttled last week by Wake Forest’s offense, giving up a school-record 33 first downs and 555 yards. Injuries are a big factor for Miami, and Virginia doesn’t need a lot of yards to win: It got 254 yards in beating UNC, and just 201 in beating Maryland.

FLORIDA STATE AT CLEMSON

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MARYLAND AT N.C. STATE

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Who: Maryland (2-6, 1-3) at N.C. State (3-5, 0-4) When: 1 p.m. (ESPN360.com) Line: N.C. State by 61⁄2. Series record: Maryland leads 31-30-4. Last meeting: 2008, Maryland, 27-24. What’s at stake: Bowl ineligibility. The loser will be officially eliminated from postseason consideration – but that’s seemingly a foregone conclusion for a pair of the ACC’s biggest disappointments. At least someone’s losing streak will end: N.C. State has lost four straight while the Terps have dropped three in a row. Key matchup: Maryland’s offense vs. N.C. State’s defense. Something’s got to give. The Terps have been held to 13 or fewer points in four of their eight

Who: Clemson (5-3, 3-2 ACC) at Florida State (4-4, 2-3) When: 7:45 p.m. (ESPN) Line: Clemson by 81⁄2. Series record: Florida State leads 16-6. Last meeting: 2008, Florida State 4127. What’s at stake: The winner of this game is in the driver’s seat in the ACC’s Atlantic Division, although the picture has changed several times already in this muddled group of six. A Tigers victory would make them 4-2 in the league and more than likely drop the Seminoles out of the running to reach the ACC title game. Should Florida State prevail, it would hold the tiebreaker over Clemson should the teams finish in a two-way tie at the end of the season and send the Seminoles to Tampa, Fla.

Tiger surges into a share of the lead at HSBC SHANGHAI (AP) – Tiger Woods realized that no one was pulling away at the HSBC Champions on Friday, so he settled into a good groove with the putter and made sure he caught them. Woods birdied five of his last 10 holes for another 5-under 67, giving him a share of the 36-hole lead with Nick Watney in the final World Golf Championship of the year that continues to have a distinct American look. Seven of the top nine players on the leaderboard are from the United States, and the possibility of another

No. 1 vs. No. 2 showdown looms with Phil Mickelson making three birdies over the last four holes for a 66 to finish one shot behind. Woods has been runner-up twice at the HSBC Champions, and he put himself in contention again at Sheshan International. After consecutive holes failing to make birdie with a wedge in his hand, he knocked in a 10-foot birdie on the ninth and was on his way. He reached the par-5 18th in two for one last birdie to catch Watney (70) at 10-under 134.

Meet Kerita, an active and fun-loving person who loves to read her Bible. Four years ago Kerita, who suffers from schizophrenia, was referred to the Mental Health Association, a United Way partner agency. She began to attend the Destiny House program, and the experience has changed her life. “I love Destiny House,” she says. “I am an outgoing person and I want to be more independent. The Mental Health Association helps me focus on my goals” --- which include getting her GED and driver’s license, and eventually, maybe her own apartment.

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SHIMA, Japan (AP) – American Brittany Lang shot a 6-under 66 on Friday to take a one-stroke lead over Japan’s Nobuko Kizawa and South Korea’s Hee Young Park after the first round of the Mizuno Classic. Lang, the long-hitting former Duke star who is winless in four seasons on the LPGA Tour, finished the round with a par. Vicky Hurst, 2007 winner Momoko Ueda, Bo Bae Song and Mi-Jeong Jeon opened with 68s.

get. Now, we need to play better against Tech than we did against Navy, and that remains to be seen.” Tech is averaging 304.1 yards per game on the ground to rank first in the league. Wake is ninth in rushing defense. Dwyer is averaging 104 yards per game, third in the league. Quarterback Josh Nesbitt is more of a threat to run than throw and is averaging 84.8 yards per game. Anthony Allen is the other back that gets a lot of work and is averaging 52.2 per game. Nesbitt throws enough to average 130 yards per game. His favorite target is Demaryius Thomas, who has nine catches for 823 yards and five touchdowns, the longest 73 yards. “They run an offense that is nearly impossible to defend, then throw in the talent that is there, and it is an amazing group of athletes,” Grobe said.

Who: Duke (5-3, 3-1 ACC) at North Carolina (5-3, 1-3) When: 3:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Line: North Carolina by 10. Series record: North Carolina leads 5536-4. Last meeting: 2008, North Carolina 28-20. What’s at stake: Duke has won three straight games and is trying to become bowl eligible for the first time since 1994. The rival Tar Heels, however, are coming off a road upset of Virginia Tech and are also still in contention for a bowl. Key matchup: Duke QB Thad Lewis vs. North Carolina’s defensive front. Lewis has been brilliant of late and has thrown for 300 yards in four straight games. The Tar Heels have the ACC’s top defense, but they have to get pressure on Lewis to take him out of rhythm. Players to watch: Duke: WR Conner Vernon. He had seven catches for 103 yards in last week’s win at Virginia and is one of a stable of capable receivers for the Blue Devils. North Carolina: WR Greg Little. He leads the team in catches and has become a threat both downfield and on end-around runs. Facts & figures: North Carolina has won 18 of 19 meetings, a run that started in 1990. Duke’s only win in that stretch came to end the 2003 regular season. ... The Tar Heels rank seventh nationally in total defense (265 yards per game). ... In the past four games, Lewis is averaging 383 yards passing and has thrown for 10 touchdowns with just two interceptions. ... Both teams need two victories to become bowl eligible. ... The teams had met to close the regular season in 44 of 56 years since the ACC formed in 1953, but are playing earlier through a quirk in scheduling.

games, but they’re facing a depleted Wolfpack defense that has allowed an average of 512 total yards and nearly 49 points in its last three, all losses. Players to watch: Maryland: RB Davin Meggett took a screen pass 67 yards for a touchdown last time out against Duke, and has to get something going on the ground for one of the ACC’s worst rushing offenses. N.C. State: QB Russell Wilson remains one of the few bright spots for the Wolfpack, matching a career high with five touchdown passes last week against Florida State. But the reigning ACC rookie of the year needs help from his defense. Facts & figures: Terrapins have won seven of nine meetings in the ACC’s closest series, while N.C. State won eight of the nine before that. ... Seven of last nine meetings have been decided by 10 or fewer points, and four were by four or fewer points.

With your help, the Mental Health Association works to increase the public’s understanding and acceptance of mental illness, and provides life-changing programs for individuals with mental illness. On Kerita’s behalf, and all those who receive services through MHA, we say “thank you!”

photo by McWhorter Concepts |


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5C

Thomasville takes CCC 2A crown BY ZACH KEPLEY THOMASVILLE TIMES

DAVID HOLSTON | HPE

Mark Johnson (left) of T.W. Andrews catches a touchdown pass as Wheatmore’s Marvin Taylor defends during Friday night’s PAC 6 2A Conference contest in Trinity.

Raiders romp past Wheatmore ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

ANDREWS 66, WHEATMORE 0 TRINITY – Marquez Swinton threw three touchdown passes and ran for another as T. Wingate Andrews romped 660 over Wheatmore on Friday night. Andrews finished the regular season 7-4 and 4-1 in the PAC 6 2A. Wheatmore ends its first season 0-11, 0-5. Swinton’s scoring passes went for 30, 50 and 45 yards. Vashon Dawkins rambled on a 60-yard scoring run, and D.J. Tucker went 75 yards on another. Mark Johnson and D.J. Miller each scored on punt returns of 60 yards. Caleb Collins returned a pass interception about 90 yards for a score.

BAD LUCK FOR BISON

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When High Point Central, Glenn and East Forsyth each tied for second place in the PTC, a drawing had to be held late Friday night to determine the league’s 2-3-4 seedings for the playoffs. Each school’s athletic director gathered in Kernersville for the drawing. Picking alphabetically per NCHSAA rules, East went first and got the No. 3 spot. Glenn went second and got No. 2 – leaving High Point Central stuck with fourth place. That more than likely leaves Central with a low seeding and first-round road game next week. Official pairings will be released late today by the NCHSAA.

SALISBURY 49, EAST DAVIDSON 7 SALISBURY – Salisbury rushed for 270 yards and passed for 209 more in a 49-7 win over East Davidson in Friday night’s regular-season finale. The Hornets finished 7-4 overall and 4-1 in the Central Carolina 2A, while East fell to 4-7, 1-4. Salisbury will be the league’s No. 2 seed for the playoffs, while East must wait for the brackets to be announced today to see if another game is in its future. Romar Morris rushed for 148 yards on 20 carries and scored four times for the Hornets, who led 28-0 at halftime. East got 54 yards rushing from Dylan Hutchins to lead the offense, which finished with just six first downs. Taylor Warren scored the lone East TD on a 3-yard run with 1:47 remaining in the game. E. Davidson Salisbury

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S – Morris 15 pass from Knox (Simons kick), 8:11, 1st S – Morris 4 run (Simons kick), 10:51, 2nd S – Weant 27 pass from Knox (kick failed), 7:18, 2nd S – Whitaker 5 run (D. Rankin pass from Knox), 2:32, 2nd S – Gallagher 74 pass from Knox (Simons kick), 10:10, 3rd S – Morris 15 run (Simons kick), 4:02, 3rd S – Morris 44 run (Simons kick), 9:05, 4th ED – Warren 3 run (Warren kick), 1:47, 4th

ASHEBORO 14, S. GUILFORD 9 SUMNER – Southern Guilford scored the first nine points but couldn’t make it hold up and fell to Asheboro 14-9 in a Mid-Piedmont 3A Conference clash Friday night. Southern ended the regular season 5-6, 2-3, and Asheboro improved to 4-7, 2-3 as the teams tied for fourth place. Dmitri Faglier led the Asheboro comeback, rushing for 291 yards of the Blue Comets’ 302 yards offense – all of it on the ground. Faglier’s 55-yard run put Asheboro on the board in the second quarter, and Caleb Mason went 1 yard for what proved to be the winning score in the third quarter. In the final minute, Southern’s last possession ended with an interception at the Comet 19. Warren Scott provided much of the offense for the Storm. He gained 158 of Southern’s 161 yards on the ground, scoring on a 58-yard run in the second half. He also passed for 99 yards. Scott’s touchdown provided the Storm their 9-0 lead. Southern got on the board on Michael Mattock’s 22-yard field goal. Asheboro S. Guilford

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S – FG Mattocks 22 S – Scott 58 run (kick failed) A – Faglier 55 run (Murphy kick) A – Mason 1 run (Murphy kick)

day night’s 17-16 win over Glenn in the regular-season finale. The Bobcats took a 10-7 lead at halftime on Josh Hawkins’ 1-yard run and Mitchell Thomlinson’s 25-yard field goal. But East scored the next 10 points for a 17-10 lead, and Glenn could not tack on the final PAT in the fourth quarter following Kevin Williams’ 3yard touchdown. Hawkins finished with 181 yards on 35 carries to lead the Bobcats (8-3, 4-2), but East (6-5, 4-2) roared back with a 35-yard interception return for a touchdown by Quinta Harvey. Glenn E. Forsyth

KERNERSVILLE – East Forsyth forced a three-way tie for second place in the Piedmont Triad 4A Conference with Fri-

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EF – Coleman 31 pass from Smith (Walker kick) G – Hawkins 1 run (Thomlinson kick) G – FG Thomlinson 27 EF – FG Walker 27 EF – Harvey 35 interception return (Walker kick) G – Williams 3 run (kick failed)

BISHOP 10, NORTH STOKES 0 KERNERSVILLE – Bishop McGuinness held North Stokes to 36 yards total offense, all of it on the ground, and prevailed 10-0 in a Northwest 1A/2A Conference battle Friday. Bishop ended the regular season 92 and 5-2 in the league. North Stokes winds up 6-5, 3-4. Josh Rathburn rushed for 71 yards, scoring the Villains’ touchdown on a 1-yard third-quarter run that provided the final margin. Kevin Saxon kicked a 28-yard field goal to put the Villains on the board in the first quarter. N. Stokes Bishop

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B – FG Saxon 28 B – Rathburn 1 run (Saxon kick)

N. ROWAN 41, S. DAVIDSON 8 SPENCER – North Rowan scored 27 points in the second half to pull away to a 41-8 win over South Davidson in Friday’s regular-season finale for the Yadkin Valley 1A Conference. The Cavaliers (5-6, 5-2 YVC) rushed for 381 yards and picked off four passes by the Wildcats (3-8, 2-5). Cody DeCamp rushed for 57 yards and had the lone South touchdown on a 16-yarder in the second quarter to make it 14-8 at the break. Both teams will learn their postseason assignments today when the NCHSAA 1A and 1AA playoff brackets are released. S. Davidson N. Rowan

EAST FORSYTH 17, GLENN 16

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— —

LEXINGTON – With the playoffs set to begin next week, Thomasville did not put in a performance that will give the Bulldogs a lot of momentum to build on, but they grabbed a win nonetheless. Plagued by turnovers and a pesky Lexington bunch, Thomasville squeaked out a 23-13 win in its Central Carolina Conference finale, wrapped up first place in the league and finished the regular season 7-4 overall, 5-0 CCC. “We turned over the ball too much, had too many mistakes and too many penalties,” said Thomasville coach Allen Brown. “Lexington has a really good football team and we would not want to play them again.” A turnover by the Jackets allowed the Bulldogs to put the first points on the board. Davonte Gordon-Hunter intercepted LHS quarterback Codie Boger to set the Dogs up at their own 26. Five runs by Kesean Green brought the ball out to the Lexington 41, setting up a long pass from Sam Nelson to Brandon Lucas for a 7-0 lead. Thomasville suffered from “fumble-itis” all night long, and it wound up costing them in the field position game. New Lexington QB Daryin Medley quickly evening the score with a 7yard score to make it 7-7 with 6:07 left until halftime. Another fumble for the Bulldogs thwarted a drive deep into Lexington territory, but this time it wound up resulting in a score for the visitors. The defense held and forced a punt, and the snap went over the punter’s head and through the end zone for a safety and 9-7 Thomasville lead. Those events led to the biggest moment of the game, when the Thomas-

ville coaching staff took a gamble that paid off and possibly deflated the energy on the Jacket sideline. Set to punt on fourth-and-long at midfield, time was called and Thomasville shocked everyone when it decided to go for it. The quick snap to Nelson was put into the air to Lucas, who hauled it in at the LHS 20 for a first down. “We were going to punt, but when they decided to take a timeout and pressure the kicker, we thought maybe we can catch them napping a little bit,” Brown said. A false start on a spike brought the ball back to the 26 as 10 seconds remained on the clock. Nelson took the snap and drifted back, hitting Lucas on a fade in the corner for a touchdown and 16-7 lead with 1.6 seconds on the clock. Thomasville put what appeared to be the finishing touches on the victory early in the third quarter, as Quin Riley got in on the scoring action. He hauled in a short pass from Nelson, weaving his way through defenders on the far sideline and going the distance from 43 yards out. Lawson Hodges added his third extra point of the evening for a 23-7 score. Football took a backseat with 8:19 in the fourth quarter, as Medley went down on the far side of the field with a head injury. He had full movement of his body, but an ambulance was called in as a precaution. His team gave tribute to him when play resumed, intercepting a pass and taking it in, making it 23-13 after a failed extra point. Thomasville will get back to work next week as it looks to make a serious charge through the 2A playoffs. “It will be business as usual for us to prepare,” said Brown. “We will prepare just as we did for Central Davidson at the beginning of the conference season.”

Northeast lowers boom on Ledford BY ELIOT DUKE THOMASVILLE TIMES

MCLEANSVILLE – Ledford’s dream of winning the Mid-Piedmont Conference on Friday night turned into a nightmare filled with missed tackles, turnovers and big plays going the wrong way at Bill Bookout Stadium. Northeast Guilford whipped the Panthers in every way imaginable en route to a 53-0 victory. “That’s a real good football team,” said Ledford coach Chuck Henderson. “We got behind early and it just kind of snowballed from there. We were like the little kid who didn’t have enough fingers to plug up all the leaks in the dam.” Whatever Ledford team that came into the contest winners of six of its last seven never made the trip up Highway 29, as the Panthers trailed 39-0 at the half. Four NEG players eclipsed 70 yards on the ground in the opening two quarters. Quarterback Darius White and tailback Rayshawn Trader went over 100 yards by halftime as the Rams scored a touchdown every time they touched the ball. Northeast orchestrated scoring drives of 65, 71, 67, 31, 82 and 84 yards, using just 26 plays to do so. The Rams outgained the Panthers 426

to 129 in the first half as LHS quarterback Steven Fuquay threw two interceptions in Northeast territory. “We gave up some big plays,” said Henderson. “They have several players that can hurt you and they’re fast. We just didn’t execute very well.” Ledford finished the regular season 6-5 overall and 3-2 in the league, tied for second with North Forsyth. But the Panthers will be the No. 3 seed from the league for playoff purposes thanks to North’s win in the head-to-head meeting. Ledford hadn’t lost since that 169 decision on Oct. 9 – until meeting the freight train otherwise known as Northeast Guilford (8-3, 5-0). “We have four guys that get the job done and we have an offense that utilizes their talents,” NEG coach Tommy Pursley said. “We executed well and were able to get ahead early. We had some penalties I wasn’t too happy with, but other than that I thought we played pretty well.”

Scoring summary Ledford NE Guilford

0 13

0 26

0 14

0 0

— —

0 53

NEG — Ingram 35 run (Flippin kick) NEG — Trader 16 run (kick fail) NEG — Trader 44 run (run fail) NEG — White 2 run (Flippin kick) NEG — White 82 run (kick fail) NEG — Sanders 16 pass from White (Flippin kick) NEG — White 80 run (Flippin kick) NEG — Sanders 52 interception return (Flippin kick)

8 41

NR – Shropshire 5 run (Gaither kick), 11:34, 2nd NR – Jackson 50 interception return (Gaither kick), 5:00, 2nd SD – DeCamp 16 run (McClure run), 2:08, 2nd NR – Mallett 80 run (pass failed), 9:05, 3rd NR – Jones 3 run (Mauldin pass from Rudisell), 7:14, 3rd NR – Gaither 70 run (kick failed), 10:03, 4th NR – Te.Allen 43 interception return (Starks kick), 9:51, 4th

AP STATEWIDE SCORES

---

Albemarle 49, South Stanly 6 Anson County 42, Monroe Parkwood 20 Apex Middle Creek 41, Apex 20 Avery County 42, Mitchell County 38 Bunn 7, Louisburg 6 Charlotte Olympic 56, W. Mecklenburg 18 Charlotte Providence 21, Ardrey Kell 14 Charlotte Vance 26, West Charlotte 7 Clayton 13, Smithfield-Selma 7 Concord 13, Kannapolis Brown 10 Durham Hillside 26, Northern Durham 0 Durham Jordan 27, Durham Riverside 24 East Bladen 20, North Brunswick 13 East Burke 42, South Iredell 12 East Duplin 53, Croatan 23 East Gaston 51, Charlotte Waddell 6 East Lincoln 56, North Lincoln 7 East Mecklenburg 38, S. Mecklenburg 7 Fairmont 39, St. Pauls 15 Farmville Central 21, Greene Central 20 Faye. Pine Forest 40, Faye. Smith 28 Fayetteville Westover 31, W. Harnett 7 Fuquay-Varina 35, Lee County 14 Gastonia Forestview 24, Kings Mntain 17 Goldsboro 39, Ayden-Grifton 7 Harnett Central 34, Garner 9 Hertford County 42, Bertie County 0 Hickory 42, South Caldwell 7 Hickory Ridge 28, Concord Robinson 26

DON DAVIS JR. HPE Hickory St. Stephens 16, Watauga 13 Hobbton 31, Dunn Midway 8 Hope Mills Gray’s Creek 44, Spring Lake 0 Knightdale 13, East Wake 12 Lake Norman 12, Mooresville 10 Lakewood 38, Clinton Union 26 Lenoir Hibriten 48, Alexander Central 7 Maiden 26, Vldese Draughn 14 Manteo 51, Camden County 0 Marvin Ridge 20, Weddington 17 Matthews Butler 31, Clt Independence 24 Monroe 40, Marshville Forest Hills 9 Monroe Piedmont 23, Berry Tech 17 Morganton Freedom 24, Patton 0 New Bern 28, Greenville Rose 14 Newton-Conover 49, West Caldwell 28 North Forsyth 33, SW Randolph 22 North Moore 22, Chatham Central 13 Orange County 42, Chapel Hill 23 Panther Creek 7, Cary 3 Pender County 14, Rocky Point Trask 13 Pikeville Aycock 40, Southern Wayne 6 Pittsboro Northwood 6, Cedar Ridge 0 Raleigh Athens Drive 39, Holly Springs 37 Raleigh Broughton 42, Sanderson 10 Raleigh Cardinal Gibbons 35, Webb 14 Raleigh Millbrook 42, Raleigh Enloe 35 Richmond County 35, Scotland County 7 Roanoke Rapids 41, Northwest Halifax 0

Shelby 28, Lawndale Burns 25

Ragsdale’s Jordan Morris (l) and Walt Sparks sandwich HP Central’s Derek Grant.

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Saturday November 7, 2009

DOW JONES 10,023.42 +17.46

NASDAQ 2,112.44 +7.12

S&P 1,069.30 +2.67

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

6C

Consumer borrowing drops $14.8 billion

BRIEFS

---

Defense wants Stearns managers cleared NEW YORK – Two former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers charged with lying to investors always were honest about the risks of investing in securities linked to the volatile subprime mortgage market, a defense lawyer told a jury on Friday. A co-worker who testified at a federal trial in Brooklyn “couldn’t recall one meeting where they did not discuss the risks,” attorney Susan Brune said in closing arguments. Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin pleaded not guilty last year to conspiracy and fraud charges – the first criminal case to hit Wall Street amid the housing market meltdown.

Judge stops Web sites from selling Beatles tunes LOS ANGELES – A federal judge has temporarily blocked two music-sharing Web sites from selling songs by The Beatles and other artists for 25 cents apiece. U.S. District Judge John F. Walter on Thursday blocked the sites BlueBeat. com and Basebeat.com and owner Hank Risan from selling copyrighted songs by The Beatles and others. Music company EMI Group filed a federal lawsuit on Tuesday seeking an injunction against the sites, claiming they were engaging in music piracy.

Wholesale inventories fall, sales grow WASHINGTON – Businesses cut inventories at the wholesale level for a record 13th consecutive month in September, but sales rose for a sixth straight time. The Commerce Department said Friday that businesses reduced inventories at the wholesale level 0.9 percent in September, slightly less than expected. Sales by wholesalers rose 0.7 percent, slightly better than the 0.6 percent gain economists expected. The nation’s retailers reported this week that their October sales were the best since April 2008, according to a report by the International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs.

Florida yacht broker sentenced in UBS case FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – A Florida yacht broker who admitted filing a false U.S. tax return and concealing millions in an account at Swiss bank UBS AG was sentenced Friday to two months in prison. U.S. District Judge James I. Cohn gave 58-year-old Robert Moran credit for immediately confessing his crime and for assisting U.S. investigators in a broad probe into tax evasion at UBS and other offshore banks. ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

DILBERT

AP

Job seekers turn in resumes while trying to get information at a job fair in Livonia, Mich.

National jobless rate tops 10 percent WASHINGTON (AP) – The unemployment rate has hit double digits for the first time since 1983 – and is likely to go higher. The 10.2 percent jobless rate for October shows how weak the economy remains even though it is growing. The rising jobless rate could threaten the recovery if it saps consumers’ confidence and makes them more cautious about spending as the holiday season approaches. The October unemployment rate – reflecting nearly 16 million

jobless people – jumped from 9.8 percent in September, the Labor Department said Friday. The job losses occurred across most industries, from manufacturing and construction to retail and financial. Economists say the unemployment rate could surpass 10.5 percent next year because employers are reluctant to hire. President Barack Obama called the new jobs report another illustration of why much more work is needed to spur business creation

Oil prices fall after jobless report NEW YORK (AP) – Oil prices tumbled Friday after the government said the U.S. unemployment rate topped 10 percent for the first time since 1983. Benchmark crude for December delivery gave up $2.19 to settle at $77.43 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. In London, Brent crude for December delivery shed $2.12 to settle at $75.87 on the ICE Futures exchange. America’s thirst for petroleum has slumped all year. With nearly 16 million people now out of work, traders found few reasons to expect it will return anytime soon. Crude prices shed

most of their gains from earlier in the week, when financial reports showed consumers were spending more, and companies were squeezing more productivity out of their workers. Prices slumped even after weather forecasters said tropical storms would sweep through the Gulf of Mexico over the weekend, likely disrupting oil production. “There’s some shock value that comes with double-digit unemployment,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst with PFGBest. “It’s worse than expected. If the job market isn’t strong, then the economy isn’t strong.”

GM says Europe chief Forster to leave post DETROIT – Carl-Peter Forster, the chief executive of General Motors Europe who runs its struggling Opel unit, will leave the company, GM said Friday. GM said in a statement that Forster, 55, would advise the company on picking a new Opel CEO. The statement gave no time frame for his departure.

Forster will be replaced temporarily by Nick Reilly, who is now president of GM’s international operations who once ran Opel’s Vauxhall operations in the United Kingdom, said a person with knowledge of the action who requested anonymity. GM will search for a permanent new CEO of Opel and GM Europe, likely from Germany.

and consumer spending. Noting legislation he’s signing to provide additional unemployment benefits for laid-off workers, Obama said, “I will not rest until all Americans who want work can find work.” The 10.2 percent unemployment rate does not include people without jobs who have stopped looking for work or those who have settled for part-time jobs. If you counted those people, the unemployment rate would be 17.5 percent, the highest on records dating from 1994.

WASHINGTON (AP) – Consumers borrowed less for a record eighth straight month in September amid rising unemployment and tight credit conditions. Economists worry the declines in borrowing will drag on the fledgling recovery. The Federal Reserve said Friday that borrowing fell at an annual rate of $14.8 billion in September. That’s the biggest decline since July and was larger than the $10 billion drop economists expected. Americans are borrowing less as they try to repair cracked nest eggs and replenish rainy day funds in a dismal jobs market. Many are finding it hard to get credit as banks, hit by the worst financial crisis in decades, have tightened lending standards. Borrowing by consumers for revolving credit, including credit cards, fell at an annual rate of 13.3 percent in September, the same as August. This category has declined for a record 12 straight months.


BUSINESS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 www.hpe.com

7C

MARKET IN REVIEW LocalFunds FAMILY

FUND

CAT

American Funds

BalA m

NAV

MA 15.82

+.03 +17.5 +18.6

-1.6 +2.0

BondA m

CI

11.82

+.02 +14.5 +15.4 +1.7 +2.6

CapIncBuA m

IH

47.31

+.02 +18.0 +21.2

-1.6 +4.3

CpWldGrIA m

WS 33.31

+.01 +28.6 +34.9

-0.8 +6.8

EurPacGrA m

FB

38.01

+.02 +35.7 +43.7 +0.2 +8.6

FnInvA m

LB

31.25

+.02 +26.9 +27.3

-3.5 +3.9

GrthAmA m

LG 26.30

+.05 +28.4 +27.0

-3.9 +2.8

IncAmerA m

MA 15.05

+.01 +20.2 +21.7

-2.8 +2.8

InvCoAmA m

LB

24.93

+.03 +21.5 +22.4

-4.9 +1.5

NewPerspA m

WS 24.89

+.04 +31.8 +36.3

-0.3 +6.0

WAMutInvA m

LV

23.64

+.04 +13.3 +15.3

-6.7 -0.1

Davis

NYVentA m

LB

29.79

+.08 +26.1 +23.4

-6.2 +1.0

Dodge & Cox

Income

CI

12.97

+.01 +14.8 +20.9 +6.6 +5.3

IntlStk

FV

31.60

-.03 +44.3 +49.6

-2.9 +6.9

Stock

LV

92.55

+.27 +26.1 +26.7

-9.5 -0.2

Contra

LG 55.78

+.18 +23.3 +23.0

-1.8 +4.8

Fidelity

DivrIntl d

FG 27.61

... +28.4 +34.4

-5.0 +4.7

Free2020

TE

12.44

+.01 +24.4 +25.0

-2.0 +2.8

GrowCo

LG 64.72

+.29 +32.2 +29.7

-1.1 +4.4

LowPriStk d

MB 30.52

+.06 +32.9 +38.1

-2.5 +3.9

Magellan

LG 60.97

+.20 +33.2 +33.6

-6.4 -1.1

... +28.3 +28.8

-0.9 +3.4

FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m

CA

1.98

Harbor

IntlInstl d

FB

53.92

+.04 +34.4 +42.4 +0.1 +9.9

PIMCO

TotRetA m

CI

10.93

+.01 +12.9 +16.8 +8.8 +6.4

TotRetAdm b

CI

10.93

+.01 +13.1 +17.1 +9.1 +6.7

TotRetIs

CI

10.93

+.01 +13.4 +17.3 +9.3 +6.9

500Adml

LB

98.76

+.26 +21.0 +21.4

-6.0 +0.4

500Inv

LB

98.74

+.26 +20.9 +21.3

-6.1 +0.3

GNMA

GI

10.79

+.01

+5.6

+9.0 +6.9 +5.6

GNMAAdml

GI

10.79

+.01

+5.7

+9.1 +7.1 +5.7

InstIdx

LB

98.12

+.26 +21.0 +21.4

-6.0 +0.4

+.25 +21.0 +21.5

-6.0 +0.4

Vanguard

InstPlus

LB

98.12

MuIntAdml

MI

13.38

...

TotBdId

CI

10.43

+.01

TotIntl

FB

14.40

+.02 +33.5 +41.7

-3.1 +6.4

TotStIAdm

LB

26.27

+.05 +22.5 +23.1

-5.6 +1.0

TotStIdx

LB

26.26

+.05 +22.4 +23.0

-5.7 +0.9

Welltn

MA 28.26

+.02 +18.7 +24.8 +0.8 +4.9

WelltnAdm

MA 48.81

+.03 +18.8 +24.9 +0.9 +5.0

WndsrII

LV

+.07 +22.0 +24.0

22.98

+8.9

GlobalMarkets

Stock report gains despite job losses

PERCENT RETURN CHG YTD 1YR 3YR* 5YR*

NEW YORK (AP) – Investors undaunted by a surprisingly weak jobs report found enough positive news to nudge stocks higher. News that the nation’s unemployment rate rose above 10 percent last month for the first time in 26 years didn’t derail the stock market’s strong gains in the week, which lifted major indexes more than 3 percent. The rise in joblessness to 10.2 percent in October, while bad news for the economy, reassured some investors that the Federal Reserve will have to hold interest rates low for some time. That tends to weaken demand for the dollar, which in turn gives a boost to stocks. “We got data today that suggests that interest rates are going to be on hold for a while,” said Max Bublitz, chief strategist at SCM Advisors. When the dollar is

+9.9 +4.3 +3.9

+6.1 +11.6 +6.4 +5.1

-6.4 +1.0

INDEX

YEST

S&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE 100 Hong Kong Hang Seng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Nikkei 225

CHG

%CHG

WK MO QTR

YTD

+2.67 +7.33 +17.08 +350.64 -1.44 +71.91

+0.25% +0.13% +0.33% +1.63% -0.04% +0.74%

s s s s s t

t t t s t t

s s s s s t

+18.38% +14.10% +15.98% +51.73% +15.21% +10.49%

2222.81 29868.62 64466.13 11250.42

-19.73 +133.28 -349.59 +69.72

-0.88% +0.45% -0.54% +0.62%

s s s s

s t s t

s s s s

+105.88% +33.46% +71.68% +25.18%

1572.46 2658.21 4604.40 7463.05 220.27

+20.22 +28.86 +85.20 +45.59 +0.86

+1.30% +1.10% +1.89% +0.61% +0.39%

t s t s s

t s t t s

t s s s s

+39.84% +50.90% +25.83% +62.55% +98.58%

307.14 2431.71 1209.50 6293.61 22549.64 25933.45 941.48

-0.69 +12.63 +3.31 +8.41 -32.60 +35.65 -2.74

-0.22% +0.52% +0.27% +0.13% -0.14% +0.14% -0.29%

s s s s s t t

t t t s t s s

s s s s s s s

+24.88% +27.41% +23.93% +13.72% +12.39% +20.57% +42.15%

1069.30 5488.25 5142.72 21829.72 3707.29 9789.35

SOUTH AMERICA / CANADA

weaker, U.S. goods are cheaper for buyers overseas. Companies that do business overseas also get a profit gain when their earnings are translated back into dollars. Meanwhile, General Electric Co. rose 6 percent after analysts raised their ratings on the stock. It was the biggest gainer among the 30 Dow industrials. The jobs report bodes poorly for consumer spending, a key driver of the economy. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 17.46, or 0.2 percent, to 10,023.42, boosting its gain for the week to 311 points. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 2.67, or 0.3 percent, to 1,069.30, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 7.12, or 0.3 percent, to 2,112.44. For the week, the Dow and the S&P 500 index added 3.2 percent, while the Nasdaq rose 3.3 percent.

Buenos Aires Merval Mexico City Bolsa Sao Paolo Bovespa Toronto S&P/TSX ASIA Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times Sydney All Ordinaries Taipei Taiex Shanghai Shanghai B EUROPE / AFRICA Amsterdam Brussels Madrid Zurich Milan Johannesburg Stockholm

Foreign Exchange

MAJORS

CLOSE

CHG.

USD per British Pound 1.6602 Canadian Dollar 1.0768 USD per Euro 1.4835 Japanese Yen 89.93 Mexican Peso 13.3780

The safe-haven dollar got an immediate boost after the government said the U.S. unemployment rate rose above 10 percent, but then gave back its gains in choppy trading later in the day.

6MO. AGO

%CHG.

+.0016 +.10% 1.5132 +.0120 +1.11% 1.1670 -.0033 -.22% 1.3348 -.85 -.95% 98.32 +.0310 +.23% 13.1186

EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST Israeli Shekel 3.7638 +.0010 Norwegian Krone 5.6972 -.0005 South African Rand 7.5480 +.0010 Swedish Krona 7.0077 -.0002 Swiss Franc 1.0179 -.0013

+.38% -.28% +.75% -.14% -.13%

4.1396 6.5081 8.2893 7.8989 1.1308

ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan Hong Kong Dollar Indian Rupee Singapore Dollar South Korean Won Taiwan Dollar

* — Annualized

1.0917 +.0054 6.8299 -.0000 7.7500 -.0000 46.858 -.0000 1.3927 +.0012 1175.50 -.000002 32.55 -.0001

+.59% 1.3349 -.00% 6.8225 -.00% 7.7501 -.00% 49.419 +.17% 1.4709 -.24% 1273.00 -.33% 33.16

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name Caterpillar Chevron Cisco Citigrp CocaCl ColgPal ColonPT Comcast Corning Culp Inc h Daimler Deere Dell Inc Dillards Disney DukeEngy ExxonMbl FNB Utd FedExCp FtBcpNC FCtzBA FordM FortuneBr FurnBrds

YTD Div Last Chg %Chg 1.68 57.60 -.39 +28.9 2.72 77.53 +.29 +4.8 ... 23.82 -.11 +46.1 ... 4.06 ... -39.5 1.64 54.49 +.09 +20.4 1.76 79.87 +.27 +16.5 0.60 9.90 -.39 +18.8 0.27 14.59 +.39 -13.6 0.20 15.30 +.03 +60.5 ... 5.87 -.11 +196.3 0.80e 49.45 +.90 +29.2 1.12 47.16 -.95 +23.1 ... 14.86 -.05 +45.1 0.16 13.37 +.06 +236.8 0.35 28.56 -.44 +25.9 0.96 16.05 ... +6.9 1.68 72.58 +.08 -9.1 ... 1.80 -.15 -42.7 0.44 77.12 +2.12 +20.2 0.32 13.61 -.43 -25.8 1.20 152.22 +2.12 -0.4 ... 7.75 +.30 +238.4 0.76 39.28 -.57 -4.8 ... 4.28 -.13 +93.7

YTD Name Div Last Chg %Chg Gap 0.34 23.03 +.17 +72.0 GenDynam 1.52 65.58 +.19 +13.9 GenElec 0.40 15.33 +.90 -5.4 GlaxoSKln 1.85e 40.52 +.06 +8.7 Google ... 551.10 +2.45 +79.1 Hanesbrds ... 25.04 +.45 +96.4 HarleyD 0.40 25.73 -.17 +51.6 HewlettP 0.32 49.16 +.31 +35.5 HomeDp 0.90 26.08 +.45 +13.3 HookerFu 0.40 12.37 +.13 +61.5 Intel 0.56 18.93 +.04 +29.1 IBM 2.20 123.49 +.94 +46.7 JPMorgCh 0.20 43.48 -.39 +39.6 Kellogg 1.50 52.20 -.03 +19.0 KimbClk 2.40 63.71 +.16 +20.8 KrispKrm ... 3.31 -.13 +97.0 LabCp ... 71.75 +.31 +11.4 Lance 0.64 23.88 +.33 +4.1 LeggMason 0.12 30.20 +.09 +37.8 LeggPlat 1.04 19.44 -.12 +28.0 LincNat 0.04 23.75 +.76 +26.1 Lowes 0.36 20.94 +.87 -2.7 McDnlds 2.20f 61.72 +.24 -0.8 Merck 1.52 32.59 -.12 +7.2

Name MetLife Microsoft Mohawk MorgStan Motorola NCR Corp NY Times NewBrdgeB NorflkSo Novartis Nucor OfficeDpt OldDomF h PPG PaneraBrd Pantry Penney PepsiBott Pfizer PiedNG Polo RL ProctGam ProgrssEn Qualcom

Div 0.74 0.52 ... 0.20 ... ... ... ... 1.36 1.72e 1.40 ... ... 2.16f ... ... 0.80 0.72 0.64 1.08 0.40f 1.76 2.48 0.68

YTD Last Chg %Chg 33.52 -.29 -3.8 28.52 +.05 +46.7 44.21 +.73 +2.9 32.60 +.18 +103.2 8.89 -.42 +100.7 10.09 -.15 -28.6 8.17 -.09 +11.5 2.28 -.17 -4.2 52.07 +1.07 +10.7 52.80 +.22 +6.1 39.34 -.44 -14.8 6.01 +.15 +101.7 24.69 +.34 -13.2 58.80 +.15 +38.6 61.39 -.02 +17.5 14.53 -.09 -32.3 30.52 +.20 +54.9 37.78 +.17 +67.8 16.96 -.06 -4.2 22.94 -.08 -27.6 77.99 +.27 +71.7 61.04 +.57 -1.3 37.62 -.16 -5.6 43.90 +.05 +22.5

Name Div QuestCap g ... RF MicD ... RedHat ... ReynldAm 3.60f RoyalBk g 2.00 Ruddick 0.48 SCM Mic ... SaraLee 0.44 Sealy s ... SearsHldgs ... Sherwin 1.42 SouthnCo 1.75 SpectraEn 1.00 SprintNex ... StdMic ... Starbucks ... Steelcse 0.16 SunTrst 0.04m Syngenta 1.07e Tanger 1.53 Targacept ... Target 0.68 3M Co 2.04 TimeWrn rs 0.75

8.50

-1.81

-17.6

DolanMda

11.25

-1.53

-12.0

Chemspec n

6.00

-.75

-11.1

Belo

4.62

-.57

-11.0

18.38

-2.13

-10.4

+3.09

+14.1

K12

17.94

+2.14

+13.5

MagnaI g

50.00

+5.80

+13.1

Willbros

16.53

+1.87

+12.8

AirTran

4.64

+.49

+11.8

RosettaSt n

Yesterday's Change % close

Chg

Citigrp

2247530

4.06

...

GenElec

1578272

15.33

+.90

FordM

1557315

7.75

+.30

SPDR

1469753

107.13

+.28

BkofAm

1461071

15.05

-.08

Losers

CVR Engy

25.07

Yesterday's volume* Close

Gainers

Yesterday's Change % close

M&F Wld

Yesterday's Change % close Exceed un

10.93

-4.07

-27.1

Osteotech

3.17

-1.03

-24.5

+22.1

NightwkR

5.15

-1.61

-23.8

+20.0

Transcat

5.41

-1.33

-19.7

ZionO&G wt

5.03

-1.23

-19.6

ProvFnH

4.69

+.95

+25.4

OceanPw h

8.23

+1.66

+25.3

ExlSvcHld

16.92

+3.06

FstPacTrst

6.00

+1.00

SonicSolu

7.59

+1.21

+19.0

* In 100's

G-20 officials to wrestle over economic gaps ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) – The world’s top financial officials on Friday sought a blueprint for securing future global growth and worked to break a deadlock over who bears the cost of fighting climate change. Even as the world emerges hesitantly from recession, finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of 20 leading rich and developing countries meeting in Scotland are likely to agree that it is too early to pull the plug on economic stimulus measures. While Britain remains officially in recession, the United States, Germany, and Japan have all recorded renewed growth and the 16country euro zone is expected to do the same when figures are released next week. British Treasury chief Alistair Darling, the host of the gathering, urged the group to maintain the collective approach forged in more dire circumstances at summits in London in April and in Pittsburgh in September, arguing that sustainable growth would only come from agreed action to increase trade and boost productivity. Some countries are more eager to begin sketching out exit strategies to unwind the recent massive government spending, low interest rates and expansion of the money supply that are supporting the world economy. And the European Central Bank broadly hinted Thursday that it will soon begin cutting back some of its emergency lending

Name US Airwy

Div ...

Unifi

Last 3.19

YTD Chg %Chg +.24 -58.7

...

3.20

UPS B

1.80

54.86

-.02 +13.5

VF Cp

2.40f

74.47

-.08 +36.0

Valspar

0.60

26.92

+.19 +48.8

VerizonCm

1.90f

29.56

+.25 -12.8

+.40

-0.5

Vodafone

1.14e

22.62

-.21 +10.7

VulcanM

1.00m

47.96

+.96 -31.1

WalMart

1.09

51.25

-.03

-8.6

WellsFargo

0.20

27.12

-.17

-8.0

...

15.94

+.04 +30.7

Yahoo

METALS Gold (troy oz) Silver (troy oz) Copper (lb)

Last

Prev Wk

$1095.10 $17.365 $2.9455

$1039.70 $16.246 $2.9475

Top 5 NASDAQ Most active

Gainers

Yesterday's Change % close

Losers

Top 5 NYSE

YTD Last Chg %Chg 1.02 -.04 +47.4 4.02 -.02 +415.4 27.59 +.03 +108.7 48.60 +.16 +20.6 51.34 -.78 +73.1 27.48 -.02 -0.6 2.51 -.14 +11.6 11.69 -.13 +19.4 2.84 -.01 +122.9 67.65 +.76 +74.0 58.94 +.78 -1.4 31.59 +.09 -14.6 19.34 ... +22.9 2.85 +.02 +55.7 18.58 -.12 +13.7 21.12 +1.42 +123.3 5.86 -.12 +4.3 19.93 -.34 -32.5 50.85 +.64 +29.9 37.44 -.60 -0.5 20.11 +.38 +464.9 49.70 ... +43.9 75.41 -.05 +31.1 31.01 -.12 +39.0

AP

World Bank President Robert Zoellick of the U.S. ends a run in the rain prior to the G20 Finance Ministers meeting in St. Andrews, Scotland, Friday. The world’s top finance officials sought agreement Friday on ways to secure future global economic growth as the world hesitantly emerges from recession. to banks, ramped up during the finance crisis. There are also disagreements on banking reform, with Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty acknowledging on the eve of the

meeting that there were “disparate views” on how to address the problem of banks being too big to fail. Britain is forcing major bailedout banks to sell part of their business, while the U.S. has shied away from calls to break up major banks. Meanwhile, a French official said his country is worried that the momentum behind tightening rules on bonuses is flagging. “There can be no room for complacency amongst G-20 countries this weekend,” Darling said in a speech in Edinburgh on his way to chair the grouping that represents around 90 percent of the world’s wealth, 80 percent of world trade, and two-thirds of the world’s population. Darling acknowledged that plans for recovery must eventually be coordinated, but said “as we draw up our plans, we must accept that the biggest risk to recovery would be to exit before the recovery is real.” The other key item on the agenda for the officials – holed up away from the blustering Scottish winds in a seaside golf resort – is tackling the financial cost of climate change. With the major UN climate conference in Copenhagen a month away, Darling said that “heavy lifting” was needed to push through a deal on so-called climate finance, which would give developing countries funds to help them cut emissions by switching from fossil fuels to cleaner energy such as wind and solar.

Most active

YTD Name Div Last Chg %Chg AT&T Inc 1.64 25.93 -.01 -9.0 Aetna 0.04 29.16 +.56 +2.3 AlcatelLuc ... 3.83 +.04 +78.1 Alcoa 0.12 12.89 ... +14.5 Allstate 0.80 28.93 -.12 -11.7 AmExp 0.72 37.21 -.53 +100.6 AIntlGp rs ... 35.48 -3.80 +13.0 Ameriprise 0.68 37.83 +.60 +61.9 AnalogDev 0.80 26.52 -.35 +39.4 Aon Corp 0.60 39.40 +.23 -13.7 Apple Inc ... 194.34 +.31 +127.7 Avon 0.84 33.12 -.13 +37.8 BB&T Cp 0.60 24.47 -.10 -10.9 BNC Bcp 0.20 6.97 ... -7.2 BP PLC 3.36e 58.43 -.10 +25.0 BkofAm 0.04 15.05 -.08 +6.9 BkCarol 0.20 4.65 +.43 +9.4 BassettF ... 3.59 -.32 +7.2 BestBuy 0.56 40.24 +.19 +43.9 Boeing 1.68 49.68 -.09 +16.4 CBL Asc 0.20m 8.32 -.08 +28.0 CSX 0.88 47.69 +.80 +46.9 CVS Care 0.31 29.79 +.92 +3.7 CapOne 0.20 37.67 -.74 +18.1

Yesterday's volume* Close PwShs QQQ 852203

Chg

42.60

+.25

ETrade

630010

1.55

+.06

Intel

431748

18.93

+.04

Nvidia

403450

13.16

+.89

Microsoft

376258

28.52

+.05

* In 100's

Kraft, Cadbury deal nears deadline CHICAGO (AP) – The clock is ticking on a Monday deadline for Kraft Foods Inc. to make a formal offer for British candy maker Cadbury PLC. Kraft, which makes Oreo cookies, Nabisco crackers and its namesake cheese, on Tuesday told investors to keep an eye on its filings – a clue that a bid may be right around the corner. Monday is the last day permitted for Kraft to “put up or shut up,” according to U.K. regulators. If Kraft doesn’t make a formal bid by then, it must walk away for six months. Cadbury spurned Kraft’s cash-and-stock offer in September. It was then worth $16.7 billion. It would now be worth less because Kraft’s shares have fallen in value. Kraft previously proposed paying 300 pence

in cash and 0.2589 new Kraft shares per Cadbury share, valuing Cadbury shares at 745 pence. That’s below Cadbury’s closing stock price of 758 pence on Friday. Kraft first made its offer public in September, but its original proposal was made and rejected earlier in the summer. Since making the offer on Sept. 7, Kraft’s shares have declined 3.8 percent, reducing the value of the stock portion of its initial offer. Since no other competitors have emerged to bid on Cadbury, it’s unlikely that Kraft right now will offer a high price, said Standard & Poor’s equity analyst Tom Graves. “I think Kraft will make an offer for Cadbury to keep the door open and follow things up with a higher offer later on,” Graves said.


WEATHER, NATION 8C www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

High Point Enterprise Weather Today

Sunday

Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

Sunny

Sunny

Mostly Sunny

Few Showers

Few Showers

64º 37º

71º 42º

71º 48º

68º 47º

72º 49º

Local Area Forecast Kernersville Winston-Salem 63/36 64/36 Jamestown 64/37 High Point 64/37 Archdale Thomasville 64/37 64/36 Trinity Lexington 64/36 Randleman 64/36 64/37

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 62/42

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

Asheville 67/33

High Point 64/37 Charlotte 66/37

Denton 65/36

Greenville 64/37 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 64/38 61/50

Almanac

Wilmington 67/41 Today

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

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

73/42 73/39 74/53 72/51 74/44 67/37 73/44 73/40 73/45 73/44 68/53 72/37 71/44 73/44 73/44 73/41 72/42

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

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

Across The Nation Sunday

Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . . .75/34 ATLANTA . . . . . . . . .70/42 BOISE . . . . . . . . . . . .53/33 BOSTON . . . . . . . . . .51/43 CHARLESTON, SC . .70/52 CHARLESTON, WV . .60/43 CINCINNATI . . . . . . .65/45 CHICAGO . . . . . . . . .63/50 CLEVELAND . . . . . . .64/50 DALLAS . . . . . . . . . .79/56 DETROIT . . . . . . . . . .60/48 DENVER . . . . . . . . . .68/39 GREENSBORO . . . . .64/37 GRAND RAPIDS . . . .59/46 HOUSTON . . . . . . . . .80/63 HONOLULU . . . . . . . .85/73 KANSAS CITY . . . . . .73/55 NEW ORLEANS . . . .78/61

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

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

74/36 73/47 50/30 61/42 75/56 68/46 67/46 64/49 63/49 77/59 60/48 60/33 71/42 58/46 78/61 84/73 73/55 77/65

LAS VEGAS . . . . . . .77/55 LOS ANGELES . . . . .71/55 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . . .74/52 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .81/76 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .61/41 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .67/43 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .54/45 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .80/63 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . . .87/60 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .63/44 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .54/42 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .51/40 SAN FRANCISCO . . .66/51 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .73/57 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .52/45 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .80/58 WASHINGTON, DC . .60/43 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .74/54

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

Today

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

City

87/75 47/37 84/58 58/45 59/38 84/66 67/50 46/35 76/57 86/65

COPENHAGEN . . . . .47/43 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .46/37 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .85/73 GUATEMALA . . . . . .70/59 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .89/71 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .84/77 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .67/39 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .49/41 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .36/35 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .84/74

t ra s sh s s sh sh mc s

t pc s ra pc mc sh rs s pc

Today

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

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

UV Index for 3 periods of the day.

8 a.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Noon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 4 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5

s s s pc s s s s s s s s s s sh s s s

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

Hi/Lo Wx 75/53 72/56 76/55 83/77 58/44 73/55 65/47 82/68 84/59 63/47 64/47 61/41 66/50 76/54 52/47 76/56 68/46 74/54

s s s pc mc s s s s s s s s s ra s s s

Last New First Full 11/9 11/16 11/24 12/2

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 655.2 654.5 -0.1 Flood Stage Current Level Change Yadkin College 18.0 1.51 -0.39 Elkin 16.0 1.90 -0.07 Wilkesboro 14.0 2.56 -0.01 High Point 10.0 0.73 0.00 Ramseur 20.0 1.18 -0.41 Moncure 20.0 9.40 0.00

pc ra t t pc s cl pc cl sh

Today

Hi/Lo Wx

City

46/42 45/35 85/74 75/60 89/72 85/67 56/34 49/40 39/33 86/76

PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .49/36 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .63/50 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .79/67 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .71/58 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .89/78 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .44/38 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .69/65 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .62/48 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .69/57 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .43/39

cl ra t sh t pc sh ra sh sh

ing Paul Duncsak, who was shot six times at his home in Ramsey, about 25 miles northwest of New York. Ates’ “too fat to kill” defense provided an angle to the trial that attracted attention from the news media but didn’t sway the jury of eight women and four men, who reached a verdict on their second day of deliberations after a six-week trial.

ra s t mc t pc mc s s sh

Today: Low

Hi/Lo Wx 48/37 58/46 73/66 68/55 88/77 41/36 73/64 66/47 70/56 40/37

ra ra sh ra t cl sh s s ra

Predominant Types: Weeds

75

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

50 25 0

Today: 36 (Good) 0-50: 51-100: 101-150:

100

0

1

Trees

Grasses

Good Moderate Unhealthy (sensitive) Unhealthy Very Unhealthy Hazardous

6 Weeds

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

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

Clinton to represent U.S. at Berlin Wall WASHINGTON (AP) – Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will lead a U.S. delegation to Germany for next week’s 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, the White House said Friday.

but you can’t blame Republicans when the fact is you just don’t have the votes,” shot back Antonia Ferrier, spokeswoman for the GOP leader, Rep. John Boehner of Ohio. GOP leaders boasted that all 177 House Republicans stood ready to oppose the $1.2 trillion bill.

The White House announced a delegation to Monday’s ceremony that includes the U.S. ambassador to Germany, Philip Murphy, and German Marshall Fund President Craig Kennedy. Also trav-

eling with Clinton will be Brett Scowcroft, a top aide to Presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush, and President Jimmy Carter’s aide Zbigniew Brzezinski. Clinton will arrive Sunday.

Passages

give the gift of memories this holiday...

Box Office Combo:

2 Tickets - 2 Small Drinks 1 Large Popcorn - $11.00

Shorts PG 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 Inglourious Basterds R 2:00 5:15 8:30 My One & Only PG13 1:30 4:00 7:00 9:15 Whip It PG13 1:00 4:00 7:15 9:30 G-Force in 2D G 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 Final Destination 4 in 2D R 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 Love Happens PG13 1:30 4:15 7:15 9:30 G.I. Joe PG13 1:30 4:15 7:00 9:30

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

Air Quality

Passages: A Pictorial History of High Point is the perfect gift for anyone on your list this season. Evoking emotion and memories of yesteryear, Passages will be recognized for generations to come as a fitting tribute to High Point’s Sesquicentennial celebration. 493566©HPE

“We’re very close” to having enough votes to prevail, said Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland, although he added a scheduled vote today could slip by a day or two and sought to pin the blame on possible Republican delaying tactics. “Nice try, Rep. Hoyer,

Jurors convict Florida man in ‘too fat to kill’ defense trial HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) – A jury convicted a Florida man Friday of murdering his former son-in-law, rejecting the man’s defense that he was too fat to have run up and down a flight of stairs to commit the crime and make a quick getaway. Edward Ates looked down and shook his head in court as he was found guilty of murder and weapons counts for kill-

UV Index

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

Obama calls holdouts in health care reform debate WASHINGTON (AP) – Amid intense lobbying by the Obama administration, House Democratic leaders struggled Friday for the final votes needed to pass sweeping health care legislation, working to ease concerns among Hispanic holdouts and abortion foes.

Statistics through 6 p.m. yesterday at Greensboro

Pollen Forecast

Hi/Lo Wx

ACAPULCO . . . . . . . .87/74 AMSTERDAM . . . . . .50/36 BAGHDAD . . . . . . . .83/60 BARCELONA . . . . . .64/44 BEIJING . . . . . . . . . .69/44 BEIRUT . . . . . . . . . . . . .85/65 BOGOTA . . . . . . . . . .66/49 BERLIN . . . . . . . . . . .48/33 BUENOS AIRES . . . .70/53 CAIRO . . . . . . . . . . . .86/67

24 hours through 6 p.m. . . . . . . .0.00" Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.46" Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . .0.57" Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34.61" Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . .37.69" Record Precipitation . . . . . . . . . .1.98"

Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . .6:48 Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . .5:19 Moonrise . . . . . . . . . .9:57 Moonset . . . . . . . . . .11:46

Around The World City

High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36 Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .63 Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . .41 Last Year’s High . . . . . . . .77 Last Year’s Low . . . . . . . . .48 Record High . . . . .80 in 1975 Record Low . . . . . .25 in 1982

Pollen Rating Scale

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .66/37 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .65/38 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .67/41 EMERALD ISLE . . . .64/44 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .65/37 GRANDFATHER MTN . .58/41 GREENVILLE . . . . . .64/37 HENDERSONVILLE .64/35 JACKSONVILLE . . . .65/37 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .65/37 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .60/50 MOUNT MITCHELL . .67/37 ROANOKE RAPIDS .63/39 SOUTHERN PINES . .65/37 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .63/38 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .65/40 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .64/38

Precipitation (Yesterday)

Sun and Moon

Around Our State City

Temperatures (Yesterday)

1&-50--+ 37-321 2 3, #*'#4 *# .0'!#1 Spectacular Sofas as low as $ Designer Bedroom Suites as low as $ Elegant Entertainment as low as $ Centers +'!& #*1 "'1!-3,2 $30,'230#

29900 49900 29900

3000 S. Main St. - High Point - 442-0714 (beside BB&T & Car Wash) Open Friday & Saturday 9am to 5pm or by appt. Cash & Carry

Be sure to claim your own copy plus extras for all those special folks on your list.

39.95

$

Also available Passages on DVD for $9.95. Get them both for $44.95!

Now Available in November


D

Saturday November 7, 2009

WHEEL DEALS: Check out the selection. CLASSIFIED

To place a classified ad, call (336) 888-3555

Audi’s S4 drops V-8 for 2010 BY ANN M. JOB THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NUTS & BOLTS

You don’t see this very often: a car company dropping a V-8 engine from a performance car and replacing it with a V6. But German automaker Audi does it in its 2010 S4 compact sedan. The move not only creates a more fuel-efficient vehicle during these times of concern for the environment and oil supplies. It keeps performance because the 3-liter, double overhead cam V-6 is supercharged, has direct injection and 333 horsepower. This is just seven horses shy of the 340 horses in the V-8-powered predecessor S4. The change for 2010 also allows a lower S4 retail price – all the way to $46,725, including manufacturer’s suggested retail price and destination charge. At that price point, buyers get a base model with six-speed manual transmission, standard all-wheel drive, sport suspension, sunroof, leather seats, threezone climate control and Xenon headlights. The price is an attractive midway point for

----

AP

2010 Audi S4 quattro MT6 sedan BASE PRICE: $45,900 AS TESTED: $51,575 TYPE: Front-engine, allwheel drive, five-passenger, compact sport sedan ENGINE: 3-liter, supercharged V-6 with direct injection and dual intercoolers MILEAGE: 18 mpg (city), 27 mpg (highway) TOP SPEED: 155 mph LENGTH: 165.4 inches WHEELBASE: 110.7 inches OPTIONS: Navigation package $2,500; genuine silk Napa leathertrimmed seats $1,000; Bang & olufsen audio system $850; carbon interior inlays $500

The latest S4 is the performance version of Audi’s A4, and it also serves as an entry sporty sedan for the brand. buyers of compact, luxury sedans who want a sporty edge. A BMW 335i sedan with twin-turbocharged six-cylinder engine had a starting retail price of $41,125 for the 2009 model year and produced 300 horsepower. A 2010 BMW M3 with 414-horsepower V-8 starts at $56,975.

The 2010 Mercedes-Benz that it’s not too far out of C350 with 268-horsepower reach, financially, for upV-6 starts at $40,625, while wardly mobile buyers. Company officials have a 451-horsepower 2010 Mercedes C36 AMG starts said that the old S4 – offered as a convertible as at $58,225. The latest S4 is the well as sedan in the past performance version of – accounted for just 5 Audi’s best-selling sedan, percent to 6 percent of the A4, and it also serves U.S. sales of the A4 line. as an entry sporty sedan They’re hoping for more for the brand. So it’s best like 15 percent for the

lower-priced S4, which is available in 2010 as a sedan only. If the test vehicle, in bright red paint and mostly black interior, was any indication, buyers will get a car that has personality galore. It was spirited, right out of the garage and down the driveway. A little nudge of the accel-

erator while I was in first gear pushed my head back into the head restraint. Yes, that’s healthy torque that peaks at 325 foot-pounds at 2,900 rpm. With six-speed manual transmission, I roared past other cars on the highway and moved around double-parked cars in the city without effort.

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

HOW TO PLACE YOUR AD Call: 888-3555 or Fax: 336-888-3639 Mail: Enterprise Classified P.O. Box 1009 High Point, NC 27261 In Person: Classified Customer Service Desk 210 Church Avenue High Point

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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

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

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

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

7170 7180 7190 7210 7230 7250 7260 7270 7290 7310 7320 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 8015 Yard/Garage Sale

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


0010

Legals

NOTICE OF EXECUTOR TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS

0010

Legals

NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned, having qualified as Executor of the Estate of HELEN J. SULLIVAN, deceased, hereby does notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present t h e m t o t h e undersigned on or before February 2, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and c o r p o r a t i o n s indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 31st October, 2009.

day

of

PATRICK O. SULLIVAN Executor James F. Morgan, Attorney MORGAN, HERRING, MORGAN, GREEN & ROSENBLUTT, L.L.P. P. O. BOX 2756 High Point, NC 27261

Charles Crawford, having qualified as Executor for the Estate of James Broner Tollison, deceased, late of Guilford County, North Carolina, does hereby notify all persons, f i r m s , a n d corporations having cla ims agai nst said estate to present t h e m t o t h e und ersigne d, at the address indicated below, on or before January 17, 2010, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, f i r m s , a n d c o r p o r a t i o n s indebted to said estate should please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

2010

This the 17th October, 2009.

1BR Apt. off Eastchester D r., Appl iances, Carpet, taking applications 833-2315

day

of

Charles Crawford Executor of the James Broner Tollison Estate Schell Bray Aycock Abel & Livingston PLLC P.O. Box 21847 Greensboro, NC 27420 Jennifer L.J. Koeing SCHELL BRAY AYCOCK ABEL & LIVINGSTON PLLC 230 North Elm Street, Suite 1500 Greensboro, NC 27401 October 17, 24, 31, 2009 November 7, 2009

NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY

This the 16th October, 2009.

day of

Tonia T. Lansing, F/K/A Tonia Ann Thornburg Executrix David K. Rosenblutt, ATTORNEY MORGAN, HERRING, MORGAN, GREEN, & ROSENBLUTT, PO BOX 2756 HIGH POINT, NC, 27261

0550

This the 17th October, 2009.

day

Found

Found Calico Cat, Westover Rd. area HP. Call to identify 336-887-8520 Found small house dog corner of Unity and Trinity St, Call after 2pm (anytime on weekend) to identify 336-847-8898 LARGE Dog found in Oak Forrest. Call for details. Call 336-6873876

Buy * Save * Sell Place your ad in the classifieds!

Small Red bucket with parts inside, found on S. Main & College, call to identify 841-8895 Need space in your garage?

Call

0560

Personals

ABORTION PRIVATE DOCTOR’S OFFICE 889-8503 Make your classified ads work harder for you with features like Bolding, Ad Borders & eye-catching graphics

JAMES MORGAN Executor James F. Morgan, Attorney MORGAN, HERRING, MORGAN, GREEN & ROSENBLUTT, L.L.P. P.O. Box 2756 High Point, NC 27261 October 17, 24, 31 & November 7, 2009

North Carolina Guilford County IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT CIVIL DIVISION 09 CvD 1653 NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION KENNETH DODSON PLAINTIFF

NATHANIEL

V. SEDALIA MONIQUE DODSON DEFENDANT T O : S E D A L I A MONOIQUE CODE DODSON, Defendant T ake noti ce that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: absolute divorce. You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than the 3rd day o f Decemb er 2009, said date being 40 da ys from t he first publication of this notice, or from the date complaint is required to filed, whichever is later; and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court for the relief sought. This the 22nd day of October. C. RICHARD TATE, JR. Attorney for Plaintiff 115 West High Street Post Office Box 2726 High Point, North Carolina 27261 Telephone (336) 885-0176 October 24, 31, 2009 November 7, 2009

2BR, 1 1 ⁄2 B A Apt. T’ville Cab. Tv $450 mo. 336-561-6631 2 BR Unfurn. T-ville, East Davidson Area. $350/mo, No Pets. 475-2410

Ads that work!! Fall Dep. Special! Limited Time! Freshly Renovated 1 & 2 BR Apts & Single family homes. Staring at $395, Section 8 accepted. Call Roger 302-8173 or Philip 267-907-2359 Today It;s all in here today!! The Classifieds

★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Quality 1 & 2 BR Apts for Rent Starting @ $395 Southgate Garden & Piedmont Trace Apartments (336) 476-5900 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ THOMASVILLE’S BEST!! Southgate Garden & Piedmont Trace Apartments 1BR/1BA 2BR/1BA 2BR/2BA Townhomes Luxurious Apartments! Check us out... You will be impressed!

★ Senior Citizen’s encouraged with Special Discount ★ From $395/mo. Convenient to Interstate 85, Shopping & New Wal-Mart.

Thomasville (336) 476-5900 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Now Leasing Apts Newly Remodeled, 1st Month Free Upon Approved Application, Reduced Rents, Call 336-889-5099 Raintree Apartments Carefree living Convenient location No Security Deposit. (336) 869-6011

2100

Need space in your garage?

The Classifieds

1br Archdale $395 1br Archdale $380 Daycare $3200 L&J Prop 434-2736 2BR/1BA apt, Remodeled. $450/mo + deposit. No Pets. 4315222

Spacious 1 level, W/D conn. Appls Furn. Sec 8 ok. 454-1478. Terrace Trace Court Apts in Archdale. 2BR/2BA, $450/mo, No Deposit. Call Kinley R/E @ 434-1416 T’ville 2BR/1.5BA Townhouse. Stove, refrig., & cable furn. No pets. No Section 8. $440+ dep. 475-2080. WE have section 8 approved apartments. Call day or night 625-0052.

of

Call

1BR Apt. off Eastchester D r., Appl iances, Carpet, taking applications 833-2315

Move In Specials!

The Classifieds

The undersigned, having qualified as Executor of the Estate of MARGARET M A R L E Y I D O L , deceased, hereby notifies all persons, f i r m s a n d corporations having claims against said Estate to present t h e m t o t h e undersigned on or before January 18, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and c o r p o r a t i o n s indebted to said Estate will pleases make immediate payment to the undersigned.

Apartments Unfurnished

Holly Hill Apts 336-475-7642

NORTH CAROLINA GUILFORD COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS

2050

Ideal Location in Thomasville.

Buy * Save * Sell

October 17, 24, 31, and November 7, 2009

8 0 9 Green, 1BR/ 1BA, Furn. Ut ilities Incld. $125. wkly $50. dep. No pets. 303-5572

END OF SUMMER SPECIALS $150 Off a mo With 12 mo lease. 2BR apt home, Starting at $615.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE UNDERSIGNED, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of JO ANN LOWE THO RNBURG, deceased, hereby notifies all persons, f i r m s a n d corporations having cla ims agai nst said Estate to present t h e m t o t h e undersigned on or before JANUARY 18, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and c o r p o r a t i o n s indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

Apartments Furnished

1110

Medical/ General

Scribe Position. Up to $12 hr. Req. HS education, clinical exp., exc. typing skills, basic med terminology. Rotating shifts. If interested call 8786000 ext. 2484 or send resume to repduncan@ gmail.com

1120

Miscellaneous

CDL driver needed that can sell and run truck. NO drugs or alcohol. Carolina Furniture, Butch English, 336-324-7666

1150

Restaurant/ Hotel

Cook Needed. Must Have Experience. Appl y in pers on after 2pm. Nick’s Sub Shop. 1102 W. Fairfield Rd. NO Phone Calls Please

1210

Trades

Experience Service T ech need ed. Vann York Auto Group. Contact Sarah at 8212038 or email resume to: shiatt@ vannyorkauto.com

MACHINE Operator for Metal Manufacturer. Need good work record w/Job ref’s. Accepting applications Mon-Wed, 9am2:30pm. Greensboro Metal Parts, 301 Scientific St. Jamestown Pre-fab fireplace installer needed. E x p e r i e n c e i n installations and gas lines required. Truck and tools furnished. Must have valid N.C. driver’s license. Top pay. Reply to 336-861-5440

Commercial Property

5000 sq. ft. former daycare with a 5000 sq. ft. fenced in yard. Well located in High Point. Call day or night 336-625-6076 600 SF Wrhs $200 400 SF Office $250 1800 SF Retail $800 T-ville 336-561-6631 70,000 ft. former Braxton Culler bldg. Well located. Reasonable rent. Call day or night. 336-6256076 Almost new 10,000 sq ft bldg on Baker Road, plenty of parking. Call day or night 336-625-6076

For Unbelievable Low Rent On Warehouses. Call 336-498-2046 336-318-1832 Medi cal Off/ Retail/ Showroom/Manufac. 1200-5000 sqft. $450/mo. 431-7716 MUST RENT WAREHOUSES, 30% OFF, REG PRICE 336-498-2046 or 336-318-1832

OFFICE SPACES Looking to increase or decrease your office size. Large & Small Office spaces. N High Point. All amenities included & Conference Room, Convenient to the Airport.

RETAIL

SPACE

across from Outback, 1200-4000 sq. ft. D.G. Real-Estate Inc 336-841-7104 Retail Off/Warehouse 1100 sqft $700 2800 sqft $650 T-ville 336-362-2119

2110

Condos/ Townhouses

1BR condo, $495 2BR condo, $565 NW HP sect 8 887-2033 1BR condo, $495 2BR condo, $565 NW HP sect 8 887-2033 2BR townhouse in rough cond. $250/mo No dep. Call day or night 625-0052

2170

Homes Unfurnished

1116 Wayside St.-3br 1002 Mint Ave-2br 883-9602

4 BEDROOMS 3700 Innwood ........$1195 507 Prospect ......... $550

1207 Cloverdale, 2br, kitchen w/ appl., washer.dryer hook up, gas heat, $525. mo. 336-993-2555

3 BEDROOMS 501 Mendenhall ......$1150 217-B N. Rotary.......$750

1, 2 & 3 BR Homes For Rent 880-3836 / 669-7019

1818 Albertson........ $650 2415 Williams ......... $595 1135 Tabor...............$575 1604 W. Ward ........ $550 834 Cummins......... $550 1020 South ............. $550 1010 Pegram .......... $550

2BR/1BA Apt. $425 /mo. T-ville. Avail Early Nov. Remolded. Call 336-408-1304

917 Richland, 2br duplex, kitchen w/ appl., stack washer & dryer, all elec., $425. mo. 336-993-2555 APARTMENTS & HOUSES FOR RENT. (336)884-1603 for info.

October 31, 2009, November 7, 14 & 21, 2009

Homes Unfurnished

Make your classified ads work harder for you with features like Bolding, Ad Borders & eye-catching graphics

2BR, 1BA, House $550 Move in Specials. Call 803-1314

More People.... Better Results ...

The Classifieds It;s all in here today!! The Classifieds 2BR, 1BA, secluded, water includ., $450. mo. Call 561-6631 2br, Apt. (nice) $395. 2br. house (nice) $495. 1/2 off dep. Sect. 8 ok No Credit ck. 988-9589 2BR house for rent, $450/month. TvilleHigh Point area. Call 336-309-3860

Buy * Save * Sell Place your ad in the classifieds! Buy * Save * Sell 3 B R / 1 1⁄2 B A $700 /mo. 211 Spencer St. 2br, Appl. $575/mo 212 Spencer St. Call 847-8421 3BR, 1BA, carpet, large yard. 408 Burge Street. $595/mo. 882-9132

Classified Ads Work for you! 3BR, 2BA. 117 North Hall St. Allen Jay area. Sect. 8 ok $650/mo + dep. 456-4938 Ads that work!! Need space in your closet?

Call The Classifieds Want... Need.... Can not Live Without? The Classifieds 3BR/2BA. 205 Hamp ton. Brick. New Floor & Carpet. Bsmt. $775 + $700 dep. 454-1410

Looking for a Bargain? Read the Classifieds Every day!!!

800 S. Centennial ... $800 1728-B N. Hamilton ..$750

601 Willoubar.......... $550 605 Habersham ..... $525 1016 Grant .............. $525 919 Old Winston ..... $525 409 Centennial....... $500 2209-A Gable Way .. $500 2219 N. Centennial.. $495

912 Putnam .............$475 1606 Larkin............. $450 114 Greenview ........ $450 502 Everett ............ $450 423 Habersham ..... $425 914 Putnam ............ $399 1725 Lamb ............. $395 1305-A E. Green..... $395 2 BEDROOM 4911 Country Court ..$795

406 Sunset..............$675 1540 Beaucrest ...... $525 1420 Madison......... $500 300 Elmhurst.......... $490 16 Leonard ............. $495 419 Peace ...............$475 1114 Mill .................. $450 1707 W. Rotary ....... $450 505 Scientific.......... $450 1100 Wayside ......... $450 111 Chestnut ........... $450 1101 Blain ................ $450 205-A Tyson Ct...... $425 700-A Chandler...... $425 322 Walker............. $425 204 Hoskins ........... $425 1501-B Carolina ...... $425 412 Barker.............. $400 321 Greer ............... $400 1206 Adams ........... $400 324 Walker............. $400 305 Allred............... $395 2905-A Esco .......... $395 611-A Hendrix ......... $395 2905-B Esco .......... $395 1043-B Pegram ...... $395 908 E. Kearns ........ $395 1704 Whitehall ........ $385 620-A Scientific .......$375 601-B Everett ..........$375 1100 Adams.............$375 2306-A Little ...........$375 501 Richardson .......$375 1633-B Rotary ........ $350 406 Kennedy.......... $350 1225 Redding ......... $350 311-B Chestnut....... $350 3006 Oakcrest ....... $350 1705-A Rotary ........ $350 1711-A W. Rotary .... $350 511-B Everett.......... $350 1516-B Oneka......... $350 909-A Old Tville...... $325 4703 Alford ............ $325 308-A Allred ........... $325 1214-B Adams ........ $320 313-B Barker .......... $300 314-B W. Kearns .... $295 1116-B Grace .......... $295 1711-B Leonard ....... $285 1517 Olivia............... $280 1515 Olivia............... $280 402 Academy......... $300

Call The Classifieds 4 BEDROOMS 103 Roelee ....................$1000 3 BEDROOMS 4380 Eugene ................. $750 216 Kersey ..................... $600 1015 Montlieu ................. $575 603 Denny...................... $550 1414 Madison ................. $525 205 Guilford ................... $495 1439 Madison................. $495 1100 Salem ..................... $495 205 Kendall .................... $495 843 Willow...................... $495 920 Forest ..................... $450 707 Marlboro.................. $400 1005 Park ....................... $395 1307 Reagan .................. $395 1215 & 19 Furlough ......... $375 1020A Asheboro............. $275 2 BEDROOMS 5519 C Hornaday ........... $700 902-1A Belmont ............. $600 228 Hedgecock ............. $600 3911B Archdale............... $600 500 Forrest .................... $550 314 Terrace Trace .......... $500 906 Beaumont ............... $475 3613 Eastward #6 .......... $450 313 Wrightenberry.......... $425 320 Player...................... $425 2715-B Central ............... $425 215-B W. Colonial........... $400 600 WIllowbar ................ $400 283 Dorthy ..................... $400 330-A N. Hall ................. $400 1033 A Pegram............... $395 304-B Kersey................. $395 913 Howard.................... $375 502 Lake ........................ $375 608 Wesley .................... $375 1418 Johnson ................. $375 1429 E Commerce ......... $375 1031-B Pegram............... $355 415 A Whiteoak.............. $350 802 Hines ...................... $350 802 Barbee .................... $350 503 Hill St ....................... $350 210 Kenilworth................ $350 10828 N. Main................ $325 3602-A Luck .................. $325 286 Dorthoy................... $300 1311 Bradshaw ...............$300 3600-A Luck .................. $295 1508 A Wendell .............. $275 1223 A Franklin............... $270 1 BEDROOMS 311 B Kersey................... $350 3306A Archdale ............. $350 205 A&B Taylor .............. $285 529 A Flint ...................... $250 Storage Bldgs. Avail. COMMERCIAL SPACE 11246NMain 1200s.......... $850 227 Trindale 1000s ......... $700

KINLEY REALTY 336-434-4146

Thomasville Rent/Own 3br $450 574-0500 Help-U-Rent.com(fee) Trinity1 rent/own 2br pets ok $450 574-0500 Help-U-Rent.com (fee)

Owner will Finance or Trade for Land. All remodeled and clean, ready to move into. 411 E Farris, 7rms, 3BR/2BA, $119,000 1002 Barbee Ave, 7 rms, 4BR/2BA, $89,900 205 Kendall, 6rms, 3BR/1BA, $47,500 906 Beaumont, 5rms, 2BR/1BA $47,500, 524 Ridgecrest, 5rms, 2BR/1BA $47,500 360 Hasty Hill Rd 5rms, 2BR/1BA $47,500 886-7095

Mobile Homes/Spaces

Lakeview Mobile Home Park-Unit Available 2 rent. Call 1-910617-7136 Mobile Homes & Lots Auman Mobile Home Pk 3910 N. Main 883-3910 3br, 2ba, private lot, T-ville, $450. mo + $450. dep., Call 4722061 It;s all in here today!! The Classifieds

Roommate Wanted

3500

Gentleman to share m y h o m e i n Archdale. Private BR, LR, BA & Kitchenette. Avail 12/1. $145 week + dep. Includ Utilities. Call 336-307-1877

2260

CONRAD REALTORS 512 N. Hamilton 885-4111 4BR/3BA, Jamestown Den w/fireplace, DR, $1095 mo 472-0224 Archdale! 2br appl wont last $385574-0500 Help-U-Rent.com (fee)

AVAILABLE RENTALS SEE OUR AD ON SUN, MON, WED & FRIDAY FOR OUR COMPLETE HOUSING INVENTORY

Ads that work!!

3510

Rooms

Land/Farms

13 acre, 14 mi S. of T-ville, mixed pasture, land & woods. $ 7 0 K . 1 0 a c r e w/100yr old Home. Several Out Bldgs. 7 Stall Barn 12 mi S of High Point. $265K Boggs Realty 8594994.

AFFORDABLE rooms for rent. Call 491-2997 A-1 ROOMS. Clean, close to stores, buses, A/C. No deposit. 803-1970. A Better Room 4U in town - HP within walking distance of stores, buses. 886-3210.

Buy * Save * Sell

LOW Weekly Rates a/c, phone, HBO, eff. Travel Inn Express, HP 883-6101 no sec. dep.

Place your ad in the classifieds!

Private extra nice. Quiet. No alochol/drugs 108 Oakwood 887-2147

Buy * Save * Sell

Walking dist.HPU rooming hse. Util.,cent. H/A, priv. $90-up. 989-3025.

9.9 acre Horse Farm in Davidson Co. SW MH. 5 Stall Barn. 5 mi S of Denton. Cid Rd & 109. No Owner Fin. $80,000. 250-2620

3540

6030

Pets

Poodle, Cocker, Shih Tzu, Maltese, Malti Poo, Dachshund, 336-498-7721 Ads that work!! Sh ih-Tzu, Female 8 weeks old. All shots, Vet checked. Brown & White w/Red tin. $350. 431-6900 Yorkshire Terrier, Pup AKC $500 Cash. Beautiful, Loveable little boy. Call 336431-9848

6040

Pets - Free

18 mo. Husky mix, spayed, with shots, family friendly, no charge 336-880-2025 2 Healthy Lovable, Kittens 3 1⁄ 2 mo. 1M Blk, 1F, Blk/Wht. Call 847-1250 aft 6pm. After 1pm Sat & Sun Free Lab Puppies, 2F, 2M, 1 blonde, 3 black, 8 wks. old, Call 4101701 Free to good home. 2 adult cats M & F Together or separate. Both declawed 336-884-0686 FREE to good homes only. 4 Males, 1 Female. 8 weeks old. Mixed breed. Call 336-476-3068

Manufactured Houses

2 & 3 BR homes Your job is your credit Sophie & Randleman 336-495-1907 Handyman Special Fix it & it’s yours 2 & 3 BR homes 336-495-1907

3010

Auctions

Sale Today @ 10 4200 Glenn Hi Rd W/S 3BR brick w/bsmt acre lot all contents John C. Pegg Auction & Appraisal Service peggauction.com 683,177 hits on our site in October Why call anyone else? 996-4414 #5098

3030

7010

7015

Cemetery Plots/Crypts

4150

4180

Commercial Property

HOMES FOR RENT 1141 Montlieu 3BR/1BA central H/A $600 280 Dorothy 3BR/2BA $700 Call 336-442-6789 HP– 323 4 Bowers (Broadstone Village) . 3BR/2BA home. Appli furn. Cent H/A. NO PETS/NO SMOKING! $785 + sd. 434-3371 Large 3BR/1BA house. 915 Asheboro St. $425/mo. Call (336) 509-7760 Ledford! 2br No Credit Check $400 574-0500 Help-U-Rent.com (fee)

Computer Repair

Kenmore double oven stove, works great, white, $125.00 Call 336-434-6738 Sales & Service, $50 service call includes labor. 1 yr warranty. 442-3595

7170

4480

Glucerna 1.2 cal canned food for tube feeding. Cases of 8oz. cans. Make offer 855-8292

Painting Papering

SAM KINCAID PAINTING FREE ESTIMATES CALL 472-2203

Special Benefit Auction!!! The fall session at the mendenhall school of auctioneering is now in session. Students will be participating. Many nice items have already been donated for this charity auction. If you have items to donate or need more sale information, please call 336-887-1165. The auction will be held at the Mendenhall Auto Auction in Lane 4. All proceeds go to the St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital. Everyone is invited, so please come out and support our student auctioneers as they help raise money for this great charity!

Mendenhall School of Auctioneering

NCAL# 211 www.MendenhallSchool.com

Fuel Wood/ Stoves

Ashley Wood Stove, excellent condition, $200.00 Call for more info. 336-431-3642 Firewood Pick up $55, Dumptruck $110, Delivered. $40 you haul. 475-3112

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2009 6:00PM

6729 Auction Road High Point, NC 27263 (336) 887-1165

Food/ Beverage

Oriental Persimmon Pulp. $4.00 per pint bag. Call 336-4316282

7180

WE SUPPORT

Appliances

BOB’S APPLIANCES Like new appliances 1427 Old Thomasville Rd. 861-8941

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

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

Hasty/Ledford, 3br, 2ba, 1200 sq ft., great cond., $700 + dep. No pets. 336-317-1247

Child Care

Awesome Child Care, Educational Learning & Fun, Any Age. HP & T-ville area. $75-$100. Call 336-906-6853

For Sale 2 beautiful Cemetery plots at Floral Garden Memorial Park, Section A, Lot 221A, Space 2 and 4, $5000. for both. Call 704-866-8844

Extra nice 3 or 4 BR, 21⁄ 2 new baths, hardwood flrs., new kitchen cabinets, lrg. rec. rm., fireplace, office 2-carport, private entrance. Hwy 68 East, R on Cente nnial, L 1600 Grantham Dr. 882-9132

Antiques

Fostoria Glassware. Many large serving pieces, several small pieces, all in EC. Serious inquires only. Call 336-887-1431

2 Cemetery Plots at Floral Garden Sect. G, $2200. Call 706-2914286

3040

Duplex Apt. 2br, 2ba, central air/heat, W/D connect., DW, Stove, Refrige, furn., $500. Call 764-1539

Investment Property

FOR Sale For Tax Value. 2BR, 1 bath house presently rented at 1429 Furlough St. Call 8610300 or 259-1577.

508 Jeanette...........$375 1119-B English......... $295 1106 Textile............. $325 1315-A Potts ........... $250 309-B Chestnut ......$275 1317-A Tipton.......... $235 608-B Lake ............ $225

Ha sty Ledf ord Sch. dist. overlooks Winding Cr. Golf Course, 4br, 3ba house w/basement No pets. $875. per mo. 4427654 or 475-7323

The Classifieds

Home Lease to Own, new construction, 5br, 2 1⁄ 2 ba, garage, over 2000 sq. ft., N. HP, 336-869-8553

1107-F Robin Hood .. $425 1107-C Robin Hood . $425 1107-L Robin Hood .. $395

3br2ba No credit check! pets $550 74-0500 Help-U-Rent.com (fee)

406 Haywood St, Tville. 2BR/1BA, Gas Heat w/Cent Air. $450/mo. 880-8054 Need space in your garage?

2BR Central Air, carpet, blinds, appls., No pets. 883-4611 LM

2250

Houses

$200/mo! 3bd 2ba! Must See! 5%dn, 15yrs @8%! For listings 800-749-8106xB637

1123-C Adams ........ $495

2BR, 1BA, W/D conn., 2413 Dallas St., HP. $500/mo. Sect. 8 ok 993-7608

Where Buyers & Sellers Meet

3060

N E E D S P A C E ? 3BR/1BA. CENT H/A CALL 336-434-2004

2220

Commercial Property

30,000 sq ft warehouse, loading docks, plenty of parking. Call dy or night 336-625-6076

1 BEDROOM

3BR/2BA J-town Designer Home. FP, Covered Deck, Gar. $895 472-0224

In Print & Online Find It Today

3040

1514 Homewood ..... $495

600 N. Main 882-8165

3 Houses for Rent. All $550 month, $500 deposit. (1) 3BR/1BA, (2) 2BR/1BA. 653 Wesley, 827. 2226 Yale, $675, $500 dep. Call 209-6054223

Homes Unfurnished

Level Cross, 2BR/1BA, Heat, Air, W/D conn. N o Pets. C all 336498-2295

2208-A Gable way .. $550

3BR/2BA, 2100sqft. Pilot School Area. No Pets. $850/mo + dep. Call 336-408-1304

3BR /2BA Tvi lle. Dbl Gar, Enclosed Porch. Fnc, $995 472-0224 3BR Sunny home. Fence, Porch, patio. $695 mo. 472-0224

2170

If you need your firewood split, Call 336-431-1981

7190

Furniture

Cherry Gun Cabinet. Holds 6 guns. Storage in bottom. Locks. $400. Great Buy! Call 442-1747 Queen Size Headboard & frame w/dresser, mirror &nice box spri ng & mattress $180. 434-0841

GUARANTEED RESULTS! We will advertise your house until it sells

400 00

R FO LY $ ON RD OL SSFO L A E

• 2X2 Display Ad (Value $64.60/day) • Ad will run EVERYDAY • Ad will include photo, description and price of your home • Ad runs up to 365 days. • Certain restrictions apply • This offer valid for a limited time only

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

E426134

2170

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

497292

2D www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009


Showcase of Real Estate LAND - DAVIDSON COUNTY OWNER WILL FINANCE Fairgrove/East Davidson Schools Approximately 1 acre lot $20,000. Private wooded, and creek. More wooded lots available. Call Frank Anderson Owner/Broker Frank Anderson Realty 475-2446 for appointment.

Lake Front? 8,000. TAX CREDIT? Call for details 1100% 100 % FINANCING AVAILABLE LABLE

Possible Lease Purchase Available ATED MOTIV ER SELL

Owne Financ r Availa ing ble Als o

PRICE D CE REDU

www.fsbo-triad.com 3 or 4 br & 2 baths - approx. 2600 sq. q ftft. under roof roof. Manyy improvements: New windows, exterior doors, central heat-air (heat pump), metal roofing, vinyl siding, updated kitchen, floors, 2 fireplaces, front porch, over 1 acre with part ownership of small lake. Owner/Broker. Call Frank Anderson Realty 475-2446

711 Field St., Thomasville Brand new 3 bedroom, 2 bath 1160 sq. ft. Popular floor plan with breakfast nook, eat-in bar area that overlooks an open dining and family room with vaulted ceiling. Includes stove, microwave oven, dishwater, and washer/dryer combo, laminate floors. “Special” interest rate offered by Bank of North Carolina 4.75%. Priced to move at $102, 000.00 Byrd Construction 336-689-9925 Brian Byrd

for appointment.

DAVIDSON COUNTY HOME 1.329 acres, 3 BR, 2 BA. Complete interior renovations. GREAT RATES! Qualified Financing Available Ledford Middle & HS/Friendship Elementary Tri County Real Estate 336-769-4663

NEW PRICE

7741 Turnpike Road, Trinity, NC 1844/1846 Cedrow Dr. H.P. New construction, 3BR, 2Bath, city utility, heat pump, Appliances included $99,900.00

CALL CALL CALL 336-362-4313 or 336-685-4940

*PRICE REDUCTION-POSSIBLE SELLER FINANCING! Quality built custom home on 40+ acres of beautiful woodlands & pastures. Many out buildings including a double hangar & official/recorded landing strip for your private airplane. Home features 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, sunroom, brick landscaped patio, hardwired sound system, 4 car carport, covered breezeway. You must see to fully appreciate this peaceful, private country estate -- Priced to sell at $579,000

PATTERSON DANIEL REAL ESTATE 472-2700 MORE INFO @ PattersonDaniel.com

3BR, 11⁄2 Bath, gas heat, central air. Utility building, French doors to cement patio. $85,900. Will pay $500 closing cost.

703 Belmont Dr., High Point

431-6331

Builder’s personal home! Quality details: Low maintenance Brick home with 4 bedrooms, bonus room, & 2 ½ baths, Oak hardwood floors, granite counter tops, lots of closets & storage area, 9’ ceilings, 2 story great room and entry. Master bath has Jacuzzi tub & separate shower, granite counters and tile floors. Master suite has vaulted ceiling with Palladuim window. Enjoy the panoramic views from the screened porch and huge patio!! 1.2 acres of Land in Davidson County. Full unfinished basement has many possibilities. Call Wendy Hill for more details 475-6800!!

6 Bedrooms, Plus 3 Home Offices Or 8 Bedrooms 19 Forest Dr Fairgrove Forest, Thomasville $1000. Cash to buyer at closing. 1.5 ac Landscaped, 3BR, 2Baths, Kitchen, Dining Room, Living Room with Fireplace, Den with Fireplace, Office. Carpet over Hardwood. Crown Molding thru out. Attached over sized double garage. Unattached 3 bay garage with storage attic. 2400sqft. $260,000.

HOME FOR SALE 1014 Hickory Chapel Road, 2br, Florida room, dining room, fireplace, garage, new heatpump, completely remodeled. Great for starter home or rental investment. $64,900

CALL

336-475-6839

336-870-5260

Showroom/Office/Residential Space/For Sale or Lease

Owner Financing or Rent to Own. Your Credit is Approved!

- 1.1 Acre – Near Wesley Memorial Methodist – - Emerywood area “Tell your friends” -

$259,500. Owner Financing

Call 336-886-4602

1367 Blair Street, Thomasville Large 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, Fairgrove Schools, gas logs, large living room, large kitchen, large 2-car garage, large deck in back, and etc. Why rent when you can own this home for payments as low as $799 a mo. or $143K, just call today 336-442-8407.

Rick Robertson 336-905-9150

Owner Financing or Rent to Own. Your Credit is Approved!

CED REDU

503 Paul Kennedy Road DOWNTOWN HIGH POINT In UNIQUE MARKET SQUARE building. * Penthouse* 4 BR, 51⁄2 BA, 3 balconies, 4,100 sq. ft. 2 BR, 2 BA furnished with washer & dryer. Onsite security 24/7, parking space, rec room w/lap pool, walk to restaurants. Incredible views. A beautiful and fun place to live or work. Will trade for other properties. Call Gina (336) 918-1482.

712 W. Parris Ave. High Point Avalon Subdivision This house shows like new! Built in 2005, 1660 sqft., 3bed 2.5 bath, like-new appliances,Living Room w/ Gas fireplace, 1 car garage spacious Loft area upstairs, Great Location. We’ll work with your situation! $165,000 Price Reduced! Will will match your down payment. Visit www.crs-sell.com or call 336-790-8764

LEASE/OPTION

821 Nance Avenue

3 bedroom, living room, kitchen, 2 full baths, central heating & air. Updated. BE ABLE TO MAKE THE PAYMENTS AS LOW AS $529.00 a month $95K. Call for details!

DESIRABLE HASTY/LEDFORD AREA Very well kept, 3BR/2BA, 1300 sf., Open floor plan, cath. ceiling, berber carpet, custom blinds, Kit w/ island, Kit appl. remain, huge Mstr Ba w/ garden tub and sep. shower, huge WIC, back deck, storage bld. Below tax value. $122,900

Agents Welcome. Bring Offer! 882-3254

505 Willow Drive, Thomasville

336-905-9150

WENDY HILL REALTY 475-6800

(Owner is Realtor)

ACREAGE

PRICED REDUCED

273 Sunset Lane, Thomasville

PATTERSON DANIEL REAL ESTATE - 472-2700 MORE INFO @ PattersonDaniel.com

406 Sterling Ridge Dr

1210 N. Centennial

4 BR/3 BA 3 level Newly remodeled; walking distance to HPU, app 3100 sq ft; FP; New vinyl siding, new gas heat w/central air, roof, windows, kitchen cabinets, appliances, hardwood floors, carpet & plumbing Fenced in yard. No selller help with closing cost. Owner will pay closing cost.

MUST SEE! $114,900 Contact 336-802-0922

$195,000 Visit www.crs-sell.com or call 336-790-8764

FOR SALE BY OWNER Office Condo For Sale – Main St., Jamestown, 1400 Sq. Ft. 1st Floor, 3 Offices, Break Area, Storage, Plus 1/2 Bath, 2nd Floor 2 Offices, Another 1/2 Bath, Good Traffice Exposure, Divided so that you may rent Part of Offices.

GET OUT OF TOWN! Immaculate brick home 3br/2ba/bsmt/carport tucked away on a deadend st. w/ room to roam on 11.56 acres. Spring-fed creek along back of property, fruit trees, grapevines, several garden spots, greenhouse, workshop, Updates include HW heater, windows, hi-eff heat pump, whole house generator, vinyl flooring & freshly painted rooms. Full bsmt w/workshop, fireplace, one bay garage. MH site on property may be leased for additional income. Horses welcome! Priced to sell @ $219,500-call today.

678 Merry Hills Dr.-Davidson son County 3 Bed 2 Bath 2 Car Garage. This beautiful 1900 sqft. home is well lacated in a well established neighborhood. It has a finishedd basement, Large Kitchen outlooking beautiful wooded area. Large deck with Jacuzzi. Gas or woodburning fireplace in the basement. We’ll work with your situation!

25% BELOW TAX VALUE

Recently updated brick home is nothing short of magnificent. Gourmet kitchen with granite counters and stainless appliances. Huge master suite with 2 walk-in closets & private deck. Elegant foyer & formal dining room. Marble, Tile and Hardwood floors. Crown moldings & two fireplaces. Spacious closets & lots of storage. Over 4000 sq. ft. with 4 bedrooms & 4 full baths, over sized garage and beautiful yard!! Priced at $339,900.

Rick Robertson

NOW LE LAB AVAI

725-B West Main St., Jamestown Call: Donn Setliff (336) 669-0478 or Kim Setliff (336) 669-5108

FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 bedroom/2 bath house for sale, Fairgrove Area, Thomasville. Half basement, 2 stall garage, also detached garage. Call 472-4611 for more information. $175,000. For Sale By Owner 515 Evergreen Trail Thomasville, NC 27360

Totally Renovated Bungalow at 1607 N. Hamilton St, High Point. 2 BR, 1 BA, den, dining room, kitchen, and laundry room. New gas heat & C/A, new electrical, new windows, interior & exterior paint, refinished hardwood floors throughout. New deck overlooking fenced back yard. Maintenance free living on a quiet dead end street. Seller will pay up to $3,000. in closing cost. Ask if you qualify for a $7,000 cash rebate.

PRICE REDUCED to $72,900! For more information: 336-880-1919

LAND FOR SALE 5.9 Acres of privacy and seclusion with its own creek. Ready for your dream home, or you can renovate an existing home on the property. The property is located at 829 Hasty Hill Rd. between High Point and Thomasville. Davidson County Ledford Schools $59,000.

336-869-0398 Call for appointment

3930 Johnson St.

Beautiful home in the Trinity school district. 3br/2.5 bath, walk in closet, garden tub/w separate shower, hardwoods, gas logs and more. $177,500.

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.

Lamb’s Realty 442-5589

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

Call 888-3555

to advertise on this page! 492207


4D www.hpe.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2009 7210

Household Goods

A new mattress set T$99 F$109 Q$122 K$191. Can Del. 336-992-0025 MATTRESSES Don’t be mislead! Dbl. pillowtop sets. F. $160, Q. $195, K. $250. 688-3108 Prelite clear 7 ⁄ 2 ft. Christmas Tree, w/ storage bag, only used 2 times. $65.00 call 336-882-0646 1

7290

Miscellaneous

Invacare Wheelchair, deep purple, never used, still in box, 18 inches (seat), $100. Call 336-434-6738

7310

Musical Instruments

7 piece drum set, less than 1 yr old, great beginner set, or church set Great cond.$200 882-3207

7330

Sporting Equipment

Glock 27, 40 caliber, perfect condition, 4 clips, permit required, $400.00 Call 336689-0630

7340

Storage Houses

1 week only, Special on 8x12 $999. tax included. Delivered, setup or build on your lot. 870-0605

7380

Wanted to Buy

I BUY JEWELRY USED OR OLD Costume or Good Any Condition 848-1242 BUYING ANTIQUES. Old Furn, Glass, Old Toys & Old Stuff. 1pc or all. Buy estates big/small. W/S 817-1247/ 788-2428 BUYING ANTIQUES Collectibles, Coins, 239-7487 / 472-6910

8015

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Yard/Garage Sale

Multi Family Garage/Yard Sale, Sat 11/7, 8am-12pm. 504 Trindale Rd.

Multi Family Yard & Flower Bulb Sale, Sat 11/7, 7am-Noon. St Christopher’s Episcopal Church. Across from OutBack Pinewoods Church. Indoor Yard/Bake Sale, Sat. 11/7, 7am2pm, Breakfast biscuits and Hotdogs. Located in front of Wi nding Cr eek Golf Course off 109 N Sat. 11/7, 7am-11am, 1908 Middlewood Ct., Foxwood Meadows Development. Sat. 11/7, 7am-11am, Mapleview Ct. between Centennial and Johnson St.

Sat 11/7, 8am-? 224 Moffitt Dr. HP, Some stuff make offer.

Seasons End Yard Sale, Great Buys, Don’t miss it! 337 C unningh am Rd. Tville, Sat. 11/7, 7am-? Skeet Club-WyndhamEverton Ct. 7am, Christmas Items, Clothes & numerous items. Uniform House, 206 Westwood Ave, Yard Sale, Fri 11/6, 9:30-6pm & Sat 11/7, 9am-5pm. Buy 2 Print Tops at Sale Price, G e t 3 r d a t 1 ⁄2 S a l e price. Scrub pants $9.95-$12.95. 8852056

Yard Sale. 301 West Parkway Ave, HP. 7am, Sat. 11/7. Baby Crib, Extra Large Women’s clothes, Framed Prints, Exercise Equipment, Bike for 2, Boat Seats, Boat Hatch Covers, Christmas Decoroations

Yard Sale, Fri 11/6 & Sat 11/7, 8am-Until. 1111 Forest Hill Dr. off Country Club Dr. Furn, Clothing, Collectibles & Vintage Framed Art.

Yard/Garage Sale

Yard Sale, Langdale Dr. Sat 11/7. 8am-2pm Misc items, Something for All!

101 E. Bellevue Dr. HP. Fri. 8am-until, Sat. 8am-12noon. All must go.

Yard Sale Sat. 11/7, 207 Montlieu Ave., behind T.F.I Show Room. T-ville. 7am-?

3800 Oak Forest Dr. HP, Sat. 11/7, 7amunti l. Somet hing for everyone!!

Yard Sale, Sat 11/7, 7:30am-12:30pm. 120 Briggs Place. Lots of Clothes & other stuff.

3 Family Yard Sale Sat. 11/7, 1605 Potts Ave. 8am-3pm. Lots of Stuff!!

Yard Sale, Sat 11/7, 7am-1pm. 3311 Dillon Rd, Jamestown.

3 Family Yard Sale, Sat 11/7 8am-Until. Go to Glenola below Archdale & Follow Signs. HH items, Refrigerator, Furniture & lots of great things.

Yard Sale, Sat 11/7, 7am-Until. 104 Ashe Ct. Baby items and much more.

BENEFIT YARD SAT, 11/7 8am - 1pm Forest Hills Presbyterian Church 836 W. Lexington Ave High Point, ALL PROCEEDS GO TO YOUTH MISSION RETREATS CALL 883-4239 Lots of Furniture, Appliances, Housewares, Books, CDs, DVDs, Video Tapes, TVs, Computer Equipment, Stereos, Speakers, Lamps, Childrens Items, Clothing, Home Accessories, Christmas Items, Handbags, Linens, Kitchen Items, Glassware, Camping Gear, Excercise Equipment, Golf Clubs, Lawn Equipment, Automotive Big Yard Sale 11/7 4995 Edgar Rd. Sophia, 7:30-until. Children’s & Adult clothes Carport Sale, 11/7, 458 Old Embler Rd. Tville. Plus Size Adult & Children Clothing, Jewelry & Books Carport Yard Sale, Sat. 11/7, 317 Eden Ter. Archdale. 7amUntil No Early Birds. Christmas is Here! West End Ministries Thrift Store, large selection of furn, clothing, home furnishings, Fri. 3-6, Sat. 8-12. New Items Added Weekly. 903 English Rd., donations always welcome. For more information Please call 336-884-1105 Ads that work!! Church Wide Yard Sale, Elect. Stove, Appliances, Sofa, other furn., HH items, access., clothes. St. Paul Presbyterian C hurch 30 9 Summit Rd. HP, 7a-12p. 11/7 Family Yard Sale Fri. 6th & Sat. 7th, 7:30a1:30p 326 Gregg St. Archdale Garage Sale Sat. 11/7, 8am-1pm, 107 Alridge lane. Archdale. Various items.

Huge Yard Sale! 201 W. Market Center Dr. Sat 11/7, 9am-1pm. Xmas, Baby Toys, Clothes (AE, HCO, etc). H URRY!! B efore my husband wakes up and sees what I’m selling. Sat. 6a-1p, 1033 Johnsontown Rd. Thomasville Moving Sale, 11/7, 7:30am. 4738 Peace Rd, Shop tools, Furn, Lawn Tractor, etc Moving Sale, Historic Perry House, Next Sat 11/14, Fine BR, DR, LR Furn, Rugs, Pool Table, Tools, Decorations & More. 1403 Wiltshire St. HP, 27265. 8am Rain or Shine Moving Yard Sale, 900 Eastchester Wesleyan Homes. Sat. 11/7, 7am-3pm. Multi Family, 11/7, 6:30am. Great Items, Sorrell Ct. Look for Signs on Penny Rd,

Yard Sale, Sat 11/7, 8am-12pm. 254 High M e a d o w s R d . Thomasville Yard Sale, Sat. 11/7, 9am-1pm, Everything must go! 116 Ridgeway Dr. T-ville

Classic Antique Cars

55’ Chevy Bel Air, 4dr Mint Green & White. “As Is“. Garage kept. $15,000. 442-1747 FORD ’69. TRADE. Car. 429 eng., Needs restoring $1000/Firm. Call 431-8611 PLYMOUTH Concorde 1951. Sale or TradeNeeds restoring. $2100 firm. 431-8611

9150

Miscellaneous Transportation

CHURCH BUS 04’ Ford Eldorado Mini bus, w/chairlift, $13,285 miles, diesel, seats 20, ex. cond., $35,000. Contact Tammy at 454-2717

Looking for a Bargain? Read the Classifieds Every day!!!

9170

Motorcycles

1995 Custom Sportster. Like New. Must See! $4,000. Call 336-289-3924

Buy * Save * Sell Place your ad in the classifieds! Buy * Save * Sell 2008 HD Dyna Fat Bob. Crimson Denim Red. 1200mi, $14,100 Awesome bike & price. Call 451-0809 2002 HD Electra Glide Standard. 27K orig mi. Lots of Chrome. $9,500. 289-3924

9210

’01 Damon motorhome. 2 slides, 2 ACs, 10k, loaded. 36ft. Very good cond., $55,000. Back-up camera. 431-9891

In Print & Online Find It Today Make your classified ads work harder for you with features like Bolding, Ad Borders & eye-catching graphics

94’ Camper, new tires, water heater, & hookup. Good cond., sleeps 7, $6,900. Call 301-2789

Classified Ads Work for you! Call The Classifieds 1979 Cruise Air, Georgia Boy RV. VGC. $4500, Must See, Call 476-9053 Palomino Pop Up Ca mper, 19 90, A/C, good cond., $975. Call 336-687-1172 1990 Southwind MH, 34 ft., Chevy 454, hydraulic jacks, generator, nice inside and out, Call 8473719

Sport Utility

’04 Isuzu Ascender SUV. Silver. 104K Leather Int. All Pwr $8,950 883-7111

More People.... Better Results ...

70 CC Four Wheeler$700, 110 CC $900, both purchased last Christmas, less than 20 hrs on both. Call 336-442-1613 P o l a r i s 3 0 0 , Auto matic. 4 /2wheel dri ve, VGC. $2,100. Call 336-472-4406

9060

Autos for Sale

02’ Buick Park Ave., loaded, lthr, ex. cond., chrome wheels, open hwy. 33 mpg. $5995. 431-1234 03 Lincoln Towncar, Signature Lmt. White, 137k, Loaded. EC. $6500, 689-1506 65 Dodge Long Bed Pickup Automatic, 19k orig miles. $1500 or best offer. 848-8477 93 Honda Accord, LX. Fully loaded, 149K miles. $3400/obo, Call 336-883-6793 ’96 Geo Prism, 80k orig mi., AC, PS, New Tires, $3200. Call 336-906-3621 98 Lincoln Continental Mark VIII, 171k miles, VGC. Blk EXT & INT, loaded, $5495, obo. 336-906-3770 AT Quality Motors you can buy regardless. Good or bad credit. 475-2338 Buick Regal, 98’, V6, all options, lthr, sunr oof, e.c ., 138k, $3200. 847-8394

GUARANTEED FINANCING 99 Chevrolet Lumina $600 dn 01 Pontiac Grand Am $700 dn 00 Dodge Stratus $800 dn 01 SAturn L300 $800 dn Plus Many More!

Auto Centre, Inc. autocentresales.com Corner of Lexington & Pineywood in Thomasville

DAYS

Need space in your garage?

9240

All Terain Vehicles

for

Recreation Vehicles

04 Terry Camper, 29 ft, 3x2x13 r oll out. Furn, GC. $12,500, Call 336-688-6033

9020

LINES

06 CBR 600 F4I, Only 3200 miles. Chrome. Custom Paint. $7600. Call 336-880-2174

Yard Sale 4788 Robins Country Rd. Trinity, Sat. 11/7, & Sat. 11/14. 9am-until YARD SALE- Faith Baptist Church 902Mendenhall St. T-ville. Fri. 11/6 8a-5pm Sat. 11/7 7:30a-12:30p Rain or Shine. Furn., Glassware, Toys, Bike, Trike, Clothes, Christmas Decor, Collectibles, Can’t get it all out will be adding back to the tables.

8015

9120

The Classifieds 98’ Jeep Wrangler 4WD auto, a/c, cruise, ps/ brakes, ex. cond. ,$9500. 215-1892

1 ITEM PRICED $500 OR LESS

all for

Want... Need.... Can not Live Without? The Classifieds It;s all in here today!! The Classifieds

9260

Trucks/ Trailers

1981 Ford Box Truck. Runs good, needs some work. $500 as is. Call 336-442-1478 67 Ford Dump Truck. Runs good and dump works. $500. Call 336-869-4693 Need space in your closet?

Call The Classifieds

9300

Vans

Honda Odyssey, white, 05’, 23,000 miles, lthr, loaded, ex. cond., Call 882-1541 Large Comm. Van, ’95 Dodge Van 2500, new motor & trans., 883-1849 $3500 neg

9310

Wanted to Buy

Call 888-3555 to place your ad today!

BUY junk cars & trucks, some Hondas. Will remove cars free. Call D&S 475-2613

CASH FOR JUNK CARS. CALL TODAY 454-2203 QUICK CASH PAID FOR JUNK CARS & TRUCKS. 434-1589. Cash 4 riding mower needing repair or free removal if unwanted & scrap metal 882-4354

472-3111 DLR#27817 KIA Amanti, ’04, 1 owner, EC. 67K, Garaged & smokeless. $9200, 442-6837 Lincoln Town Car Executive, 95, same owner since 97, VGC, Black int./ext., $4000. call 475-3974 Lv. message

Fast $$$ For Complete Junk Cars & Trucks Call 475-5795 Top cash paid for any junk vehicle. T&S Auto 882-7989

Private party only, some restrictions apply.


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

AUCTIONEER N

N.C. Lic #211

Over 50 Years

“COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE” • REAL ESTATE • MACHINERY •INDUSTRIAL & COMMERCIAL PROPERTY • BUSINESS LIQUIDATIONS • BANKRUPTCIES

THOMPSON HAULING AND LANDSCAPING

(336) 887-1165

Lawn mowing & care, bushhogging, landscape installation and removal, trash/debris removal, bobcat, dump truck and tractor services. New construction services for builders such as foundation clearing, rough & final grading, foundation waterproofing, french drain installation, construction driveways & gutter cleaning.

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

INSURED & REFERENCES

Auctioneer

FOR FREE ESTIMATES PLEASE CALL 883-4014

UTILITY BUILDING

MAIL: P.O. BOX 7344 HIGH POINT, N.C. 27264

ROOF REPAIRS

ROOFING

New Utility Building Special! 10X20 ....... $1699 8x12.......... $1050 10x16........ $1499

***Extra Special*** on 12x24 $2199.95 Limited Time Only Also Rent To Own. Carolina Utility Bldgs, Trinity 1-800-351-5667

SEWING M CONTRACTOR

ROOFING

Repair Specialist, All Types of Roofs, Every kind of leak

Call Gary Cox

A-Z Enterprises

35 Years Experience

PAINTING

30 Years EXP.

• Pressure Washing • Wallpapering • Quality work • Reasonable Rates!

BUILDINGS

Graham’s Room Additions, Decks, Garages, Carports, Vinyl, Home Repair, Vinyl Windows, Buildings, Roofing, Metal Roofs, Fencing, Pressure Washing, Buildings Moved and More.

Call Danny

CLEANING

CONCRETE

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Cleaning by Deb

Professional Quality Concrete Work

• 1 time or regular • Special occasions Reasonable Rates Call 336-362-0082

• Tear out & Replace Concrete • Stamped Concrete • Foundations • Sidewalks & Driveways All types of Quality Concrete Work

Call Jerry at 336-293-3337

J & L CONSTRUCTION

Home Improvements Free Estimates Garages - Replacement Windows Doors - Additions Screened Porches - Remodeling Roofing - Storage Buildings Painting - More

Charlie Walker 336-328-5342 Mobile

Jim Baker GENERAL CONTRACTOR

336-859-9126 336-416-0047

107 W. Peachtree Dr. • High Point www.protectionsysteminc.com

LANDSCAPE

CARE OF ELDERLY Will Stay with Elderly Person. Day Shift Preferred Available every other weekend. Will do Cooking & Cleaning References Available Call Cathy 336-313-6009

Trini Miranda Owner

Furnace & Heat Pump Tune-Up Stimulus Special 30 Days Only $49.95 21 Point Inspection

• Walls • Floors • Tubs • Bars • Counters • Back Splashes • Free Estimates • Reasonable Rates • References

Call Now for Your Tune-Up To Ensure Your System Is Operating Efficiently & Is Safe

Richard Moore 336-259-2067 rpmtrinity@aol.com

ALL RIGHT HEATING & COOLING Call Now 336-882-2309

PLUMBING “The Repair Specialist”

Mildew Removed, Walk Way and Gutter Cleaned.

Since 1970

Free Estimates

Lic #04239 We answer our phone 24/7

Exterior ONLY

CALL TRACY

259-1380

336-247-3962

336-906-1246

LAWN CARE

CONSTRUCTION

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Lawns Cut for $30 and Up

Gerry Hunt

Call Tom at 336-596-2109

FREE ESTIMATES

RICHARD’S TILE WORKS

*FREE ESTIMATES

Also Areating Grass & Leaf Removal (to curb) 13 years experience

Driveways • Patios Sidewalks • Asphalt • Concrete Interlocking Bricks also partial Small & Big Jobs

HEATING & COOLING

Painting & Pressure Washing

841-8685

Trinity Paving

TILE WORK

D & T TREE SERVICE

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

www.thebarefootplumber.com

TOWING Tired of Feeling Unappreciated?

Construction - General Contractor License #20241 Room Additions, Decks & Porches, Remodeling, Repair Weak & Sagging Floors, New Custom Built Homes

336-848-2977

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

J’s Tree & Lawn Service

CUT & TRIM STUMP GRINDING AVAILABLE TREE REMOVAL 24 HR EMERGENCY SERVICE FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES REASONABLE RATES

FREE ESTIMATES

(336) 261-9350

Hanging & Finishing • Sprayed Ceilings • Patch Work • Small & Large Jobs

Serving the Triad for over 37 Years!

Pressure Washing, Carpentry of all kinds. Gutter Cleaning, Repairing and Replacements if needed. Insured & bonded

All Roofing Repairs, Gutter Cleaning, Rot work, Home Repairs etc.

SEAWELL DRYWALL

PAINTING/PRESSURE WASHING

Quality Sevice also reasonable rates.

CANOY ROOFING

DRYWALL

TREE SERVICE

Burglar Fire Security Cameras Access Control Medical Panic

ROOFING

Remodeling, Roofing and New Construction

LAWN CARE

• • • • •

5 off $50 Service Call With This Ad

CONSTRUCTION

SECURITY Our Family Protecting Your Family

Servicing all major makes and models. One year warranty on service and parts. Most repairs under $100.00 $

Call for Fall Specials on - Aerating, Seeding, & Fertilizing

336-410-2851

336-870-0605

Residential & Commercial

• Irrigation Design, Installation and Repair

dandappliance@yahoo.com

30 Years Experience

475-6356

CALL 442-0290

336-247-0016

• Year Round Landscape Maintenance

CALL TODAY!

Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates

PAINTING

Derrick Redd

(336) 880-7756 • Landscape Design and Installation

LANDSCAPE

S.L. DUREN COMPANY 336-785-3800

336-909-2736 (day) 336-940-5057

Landscape & Irrigation Solutions, LLC

• Mowing and Special Clean Up Projects

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

PROFESSIONAL ROOFING & GUTTERING

Commercial Residential Free Estimates

Ronnie Kindley

Best Prices in Town! FREE ESTIMATES

D&D Appliance Mobile Service, Repair & Installation

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

“We Stop the Rain Drops”

REPAIR

Get Ready for Winter!

MARK’S LAWNCARE/ LANDSCAPING

L & M Concrete Contractors Driveways, Patios, Walkways, Slabs, Basements, Footings, Custom Sundecks & Bobcat Grading.

LAWN CARE

HANDYMAN

Now You Have a Choice!

• Exterior painting • Roof cleaning • Pressure cleaning • General exterior improvements Local family owned business that takes pride in giving customers great services at a reasonable price!

Arski Towing

Steve Cook

“Towing Done Right” Here When You Need Us!

Call 336-289-6205

336-414-2460

FURNITURE

HAULING

CARPET CLEANING

CONSTRUCTION

Wrought Iron and Metal Patio Furniture Restoration

C.M.M Hauling

GLENN MEREDITH

Hauling of all types:

GENERAL CONTRACTOR

*FREE ESTIMATES* 25 Years Experience

Topsoil, Fill Dirt, Sandrock Gravel, Sand, Asphalt Superior Finish with UV protectants, Tables and Chairs, Gliders, Loungers, Statues, Fountains, Gates, Railings (removable) and more...

Backhoe • Trackhoe Bobcat • Demolition Work and Gravel Driveways

Free estimates Free pick up & delivery “For added Value and Peace of Mind”

JEFF TUCKER OWNER INSURED

Call 336.465.0199 Holt’s Home Maintenance, Asheboro, NC

336-491-1032

24/7

884-5450

24/7

Custom Builder Homes • Additions Remodeling • Barns Built anything you need.. Backhoe and Bobcat Service Driveways • Landscaping.

“SPOTACULAR CLEANING at SPECTACULAR PRICES” Just in time for the holidays

“FREE ESTIMATES” Phone:

SPOT

License # 57926

(336) 886-(7768)

Call 336-669-4945 496378


High Point welcomes Special Olympics North Carolina!

Fall TOURNAMENT 2009 • High Point • November 7-8

Please join us for the Special Olympics North Carolina Fall Tournament! November 7-8, 2009 • High Point COMPETITION SCHEDULE Saturday, Nov. 7 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m 10:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. 10:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

2 p.m. - 5 p.m.

Soccer Skills Divisioning Roller Skating Divisioning Cycling Competition & Awards Soccer Team Competition Soccer Skills Competition & Awards

High Point Athletic Complex Skate South Skating Center Piedmont Triad Centre

Cycling Competition & Awards Roller Skating Skills Competition & Awards Soccer Team Competition & Awards

Piedmont Triad Centre

High Point Athletic Complex High Point Athletic Complex

Sunday, Nov. 8 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. 9:30 a.m. - 12 p.m. 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.

2009 FALL TOURNAMENT SPONSORS

LMI Builders Norcross Family

Skate South Skating Center High Point Athletic Complex


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