hpe09052009

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THE NEW 4-H: Youth club changes with the times. SUNDAY BEHIND BARS: Authorities arrest man on child porn charges. 2A

WHO’S NEWS

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Brittany Overman, a senior at High Point University, spent her summer interning with the Department of Human Performance at Richard Childress Racing in Welcome. Her role included assisting in creating and providing injury prevention programs, injury management and rehabilitative protocols to pit crew members.

Inside...

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Stocks make small gain despite jobless figures. 7C BY PAUL B. JOHNSON ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Customers (front to back) Brandon Painter, Christine Painter, Glenn Danzig and Traci Lawson can been seen looking for jobs through the window of the computer room at the ESC office in High Point. ing many jobless people locally is reflected across the state and nation as unemployment remains at high levels. Battered by the recession, people chronically out of work are exhausting even the longest-available set of unemployment benefits. The National Employment Law Project esti-

mates that 15,000 North Carolinians will exhaust unemployment benefits by the end of this month. By the end of the year, the statewide total swells to 32,000 North Carolinians. “Those people are those who lost their jobs last fall when the state economy

Anyone who needs help either looking for work or applying for unemployment benefits can contact one of the N.C. Employment Security Commission offices in the area. The offices include: • High Point ESC, 919 Phillips Ave., 882-4141. • Asheboro ESC, 355 S. Fayetteville St., 625-5128. • Lexington ESC, 103 W. Center St. Ext., 248-2326.

JOBLESS , 2A

Inside...

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List of projects. 2A BY PAUL B. JOHNSON ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Photo shows Finch Farm Road looking south past the intersection at Welborn Road. the MPO members had to pare down the number of recommended road projects to the N.C. Board of Transportation because of a reform effort by Gov. Beverly Perdue during her first year in office. Perdue’s administration is changing the way the N.C. Department of Transportation prioritizes and begins

work on items in the state Transportation Improvement Program (TIP), the long-range blueprint for road projects statewide. Smothers and her cohorts had to come up with 25 area road projects as priorities in the reformed TIP, while leaving out eight projects. The list of recommended local projects will be taken

up by the state Board of Transportation. Smothers said she hopes the reforms to transportation planning will lead to a more realistic and doable schedule of road projects. In the past, twice as many projects have been listed in the TIP as money available for work. “We hope that, within

our division, there will be the dollars allocated to get these projects moving,” Smothers said. Even though it was painful for local officials to eliminate eight projects, Smothers said she hopes in the long run the region will benefit by accelerating work on the remaining priorities. “The way it had been going, it just takes so long to get anything completed,” she said. DOT staff on Wednesday presented an interim work program to the state Board of Transportation, said Greer Beaty, director of communications for the DOT in Raleigh. “We looked at what projects we can realistically accomplish in the next five years,” she said. The new TIP will be completed by May, Beaty said. pjohnson@hpe.com | 888-3528

Most students will have chance to see Obama’s speech BY DAVID NIVENS ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

TRIAD – Most area students will have an opportunity to hear President Obama’s live national speech Tuesday. The White House said the nationally televised speech, which has become the focus of political controversy on talk radio shows and other venues, will encourage students to do well and to work hard. Several Triad school district leaders said Friday teachers and principals will decide whether students should watch the president. Parents can request that their children not participate.

BROADCAST

When: Noon, Tuesday from Wakefield High in Arlington, Va., via live transmission on television and the Internet. Topic: The U.S. Department of Education said the speech will be about working hard in school, setting educational goals and taking responsibility for learning. “We’re also aware that some parents and staff members may have a different view,” said Guilford County Schools spokeswoman Haley Miller. “Parents may opt out by notifying their child’s school. Schools will provide alternative learning activities so valuable instructional time won’t be lost.” Although former Repub-

lican presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush delivered similar speeches, some opponents have argued the president’s message oversteps his authority. “I don’t mind the president speaking to students,” said Guilford County Board of Education member Garth Hebert of High Point. “But I have serious

INSIDE

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JOB SERVICE OFFICES

Officials revise Triad road priorities

TRIAD – High Point Mayor Becky Smothers hopes when it comes to longrange state transportation project planning, slimmer is better. Smothers serves as chairwoman of the High Point Metropolitan Planning Organization, which is made up of elected officials from the counties bordering High Point. The members of the group discuss and help guide transportation planning for the greater High Point area and make recommendations on regional road projects to state officials. Earlier this summer,

125th year No. 248

50 Cents Daily $1 Sundays

OUT OF WORK

HIGH POINT – Local work force counselor Charles Diggs handled yet another sobering phone call Friday morning from a worried job-seeker asking about unemployment benefits. In what’s become an alltoo-frequent refrain, Diggs talked with the man troubled about exhausting his unemployment benefits before he can find a new job. If he exhausts his jobless benefits, the man told Diggs, he’d lose his main source of income now. “We have a large number of people who are starting to run low or run out of unemployment benefits,” said Diggs, assistant manager of the High Point office of the N.C. Employment Security Commission. The dilemma confront-

September 5, 2009

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

OPENING ACTS: Wake, UNC, Duke and ECU set for kickoffs. 3C

Advocates: Chronic unemployed need benefits extended

SATURDAY

reservations about a note from the secretary of education about how students should be prepared to receive the message. That smacks of indoctrination. I’d prefer more substance. I think the speech will be emotional rhetoric.” Overall, teachers and principals will try to fit the speech into their normal courses, according to the district leaders. “If classroom teachers desire to use the address as material that supports the curriculum objective, they may do so,” said Meredith Palmer, spokeswoman for Davidson County Schools. James Carmichael, associate superintendent for Thomasville City Schools,

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said teachers will decide whether students watch the speech in the classroom. The staff at each Randolph County school will decide, said Superintendent Donald Andrews. “We told principals they would have to give the parents the option of opting out if they so desire because it appears to be somewhat controversial,” Andrews said. “We are not doing what Guilford County and Forsyth County did in that everybody is watching it all. I didn’t think that was appropriate at all.” Staff Writer Darrick Ignasiak contributed to this report. dnivens@hpe.com | 888-3626

PASSPORT TO BUSINESS: HPU program lets merchants benefit from students. 1B OBITUARIES

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Nit Burkhart, 79 Ilease Campbell, 91 Helen Carter, 80 Stephen Cash, 40 Mercedes Erwin, 93 Hoyle Fulbright, 75 Buster Goodman, 76 Judy Kennedy , 68 Danny Murphy Cloe Oakley, 97 Latasha Pegues, 23 Bill Roach, 78 Joe Robertson, 87 Barbara Stanley, 69 Obituaries, 2B

WEATHER

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Mostly sunny High 86, Low 61

8C

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 8A NATION 8A OBITUARIES 2B OPINION 4A SPORTS 1-5C STATE 2-3A STOCKS 7C TV 6B WEATHER 8C WORLD 5A

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CAROLINAS 2A www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

PROJECTS

The Metropolitan Planning Organization recommended 25 projects for inclusion in the revised, slimmed-down TIP while eliminating eight projects. Projects included:

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

Double duty Twins Jadin and Jayla Jackson, age 10 months, prove that a car hood can be used for something besides hiding the engine. Mother Shakeriah Jackson watches them under one of the shade trees in the Westchester Commons lot.

JOBLESS

Benefits running out for many FROM PAGE 1

turned. Folks who lost their jobs at the beginning of this year won’t reach that point until 2010,” said labor analyst John Quinterno, who’s with South by North Strategies out of Chapel Hill. Locally, 1,715 people in Davidson, Guilford and Randolph counties could exhaust unemploy-

ment benefits in the next 120 days, according to ESC figures. That breaks down to 368 in Davidson County, 1,025 in Guilford County and 322 in Randolph County. The responsibility for providing an extension of jobless benefits rests with Congress. Quinterno said two bills would be under

consideration when Congress returns from its summer recess after the Labor Day holiday. Extending jobless benefits is critical not only to helping the unemployed in a time of need, but providing a boost to local economies battered by high joblessness, Quinterno said.

“(Unemployment) insurance payments have become a lifeline for many jobless individuals who are unable to find work due to the weak labor market. Those funds, in turn, tend to get spent quickly and locally,” he said. pjohnson@hpe.com | 888-3528

About 2 million fish die in kill in Neuse

Authorities arrest Trinity man on child porn charges ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

RANDOLPH COUNTY – Authorities in Randolph County arrested a man Thursday after they said child pornography was found on his computer. On Aug. 19, detectives from the Piedmont Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force executed a search warrant at the Trinity home of James

Ptacin Jr., according to WXII-TV. A search of Ptacin’s home led to the seizure of a laptop computer, a personal computer and other electronic media. Detectives said they found 22 electronic images/videos of child pornography. Ptacin has been charged with 21 counts of third-degree sexual

NEW BERN – Authorities say nearly 2 million fish have been found washed up along a 10-mile stretch of the Neuse River. The North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources said Friday that about 1.9 million fish were found along 10 miles of the river’s southern shore, from Black Beacon Point to Carolina Pines in Craven County.

exploitation of a child and one count of seconddegree sexual exploitation of a child. Ptacin was arrested Thursday and placed a $100,000 secured bond at the Randolph County Jail. The Piedmont Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force is still actively investigating the case.

BOTTOM LINE

Projects that were cut: • Extend Sealy Drive between Surrett Drive and Prospect Street near Randolph/Guilford county line. • Upgrade U.S. 220 to interstate standards. • Construct an interchange at Trinity Road and I-85. • Widen N.C. 109 from I-85 to U.S. 64 in Davidson County. • Widen Wallburg/High Point Road from N.C. 109 to Lexington Avenue near the Davidson/Guilford county line. • Widen Turner Street/Liberty Drive from National Highway to Cloniger Street in Thomasville. • Widen Eden Terrace Road from Archdale Road to Surrett Drive in Randolph County. • Widen Randolph Street from Royal Oaks Street to Main Street in Thomasville.

LOTTERY

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The winning numbers selected Thursday in the N.C. Lottery: MID-DAY Pick 3: 8-6-3

DAY Pick 3: 3-8-9 Pick 4: 2-3-4-2 Cash 5: 2-5-7-14-18 1-804-662-5825

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In reference to “Fugitive Watch” on page 3A of the Aug. 25 edition, a drug charge against Gregory Lee Phifer has been dropped.

Giant national debt needs giant calculator The “Big Red” calculator displays 16 digits. That’s enough to show all the numbers in the national debt, which totaled nearly $11.8 trillion – or $11,792,918,170,836.43 – at the start of September. Miles says he wants to get people thinking about

how much the United States owes. He wouldn’t say how much he invested to launch Big Red, but he says the number fits comfortably on a standard calculator. Big Red’s price needs only four digits. It’s on sale for $12.99 at Amazon. com.

Is your hearing current?

DAY Pick 3: 1-7-4 Pick 4: 7-9-6-8

DAY Cash 3: 9-9-7 Cash 4: 5-8-1-1

SP00504748

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NIGHT Pick 3: 9-7-1 Pick 4: 1-1-5-2 Cash 5 : 2-5-7-9-10 Multiplier: 3

The winning numbers selected Thursday in the Tennessee Lottery:

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT US The High Point Enterprise

NIGHT Pick 3: 2-7-3 Pick 4: 9-2-7-4 Cash 5: 6-10-19-21-28

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

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

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NIGHT Pick 3: 0-4-1 Pick 4: 4-8-6-1 Cash 5: 10-19-27-30-36

The winning numbers selected Thursday in the Virginia Lottery:

ACCURACY

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MONTROSE, Colo. (AP) – The national debt is so large, it doesn’t even fit on most calculators. Western Colorado real estate developer Matt Miles says he was concerned that no one in government, nor most Americans, had ever seen the number. So he made a new calculator.

• Widen, improve Finch Farm Road from Interstate 85 to Trinity city limits. • Widen, improve N.C. 109 from south of State Road 1755 to north of State Road 1723 in Davidson County. • Replace interchange at N.C. 68 and U.S. 311 in High Point. • Construct a new interchange at Interstate 85 Business Loop and Old Greensboro Road in Davidson County. • Widen Archdale Road from Robbins Country Road to Main Street. • Reconstruct the intersection of Main Street and I-85 in Archdale. • Provide congestion relief along N.C. 109 in Thomasville. • Widen Johnson Street/Sandy Ridge Road from Skeet Club Road to Interstate 40 in Guilford County. • Extend Julian Avenue from north of E. Guilford Street to Unity Street in Thomasville. • Reconstruct interchange of I-85 Business and Main Street in High Point. • Construct a new freeway connection from U.S. 311 to I-40. • Widen I-40 to six or eight lanes from U.S. 311 in Forsyth County to U.S. 421 in Guilford County. • Widen Surrett Drive between Eden Terrace Drive and I-85 in Randolph County. • Widen N.C. 62 between future Intertate 74 and Trinity Road in Randolph County. • Construct Westside Thoroughfare from I-85 Business to U.S. 311. • Widen E. Fairfield Road from S. Main Sreet to Liberty Road. • Replace bridge on Propect Street at Business I-85 in High Point. • Safety improvements along I-85 in Davidson County. • Construct Jamestown Bypass/Greensboro-High Point Road from U.S. 311 to Vickery Chapel Road. • Widen Gallimore Dairy Road from N.C. 68 to International Drive in Guilford County. • Replace the grade separation/interchange of I-85 and Kivett Drive in Guilford County. • Extend Piedmont Parkway west from N.C. 68 to Johnson Street/Sandy Ridge Road in Guilford County. • Widen Surrett Drive from Eden Terrace to Market Center Drive in High Point. • Widen Skeet Club Road from Johnson Street to U.S. 311 in High Point. • Wide Kivett Drive from Business I-85 to Interstate 85 in Guilford County.

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NIGHT Cash 3: 8-0-6 Cash 4: 5-1-3-9


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Are you struggling to make Panel asks your mortgage payments?

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

DAVIDSON COUNTY

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judges to revisit ’91 case

Ex-firefighter faces larceny charges ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

DAVIDSON COUNTY – The Davidson County Sheriff’s Office has charged a former Welcome firefighter with stealing $2,600 worth of firefighting equipment. According to a sheriff’s office press release, a Welcome Fire Department representative reported to the sheriff’s office June 13 that an unknown person had stole $2,600 worth of firefighting equipment from the fireman’s locker at the fire department. Deputies said there was

no evidence that the fire department had been broken into, but the theft occurred sometime between June 9 and July 11. Christopher Adam Tolley, 21, of 287 Bethesda Road, Lexington, has been charged with one count of felony larceny. On Thursday, he turned himself into the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office. Tolley was released from custody on a $5,000 secured bond. He first court date is Oct. 6 in Davidson County District Court.

Troopers: Man in fatal wreck was driving 90 mph ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

DAVIDSON COUNTY – A Lexington man died Thursday night in a single-car accident on Old Salisbury Road in Davidson County. According to the N.C. State Highway Patrol, Albert Ray Holmes Jr, 47, of 114 Burbank Drive, was traveling south on Old Salisbury Road when his

1998 Volkswagen went off the road and struck a tree at about 9:30 p.m. N.C. State Highway Patrol Trooper J.P. Page reported Holmes was driving about 90 mph in a 45 mph zone when he lost control of his car. A Highway Patrol spokeswoman said there were no other contributing factors to the accident reported by Page.

3A

RALEIGH (AP) – A unique commission designed to assess claims of innocence voted unanimously Friday to ask a panel of judges to reconsider the case of a man who has spent 16 years in prison for murder. After two days of emotional hearings, the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission determined that there was sufficient evidence that Greg Taylor may not have committed the 1991 killing. It’s a first-of-its-kind pathway for convicts to pursue their claim of innocence, and a panel of judges that will now take the case has the power to set Taylor free. Craig Taylor, due to get out of prison in two years, put his future on the line by confessing to the killing in an interview with state investigators played at Friday’s hearing. Then commissioners watched a video of the man currently in jail for the crime, Greg Taylor, as he broke down into sobbing tears after learning of the admission.

State auditor wants employee’s lawsuit dismissed

Drug sweep nets murder suspect SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) – An annual traffic crackdown in northern South Carolina ended with 49 people going to jail, including a man wanted for murder in Fayetteville, N.C. Spartanburg County Sheriff Chuck Wright said Friday that officers from across the state made more than 1,600 traffic stops during the four-day crackdown on Interstates 26 and 85 earlier this week. They seized more than a dozen guns and about $114,000 in cash. Officers made 10 felony arrests, including 25year-old Terry Broussard Jr., who was wanted for murder. During Tuesday’s traffic stop Wright says officers also seized four guns from the vehicle. It wasn’t immediately clear if Broussard had an attorney.

asking that a lawsuit filed two weeks ago by assistant auditor Darryl Black be dismissed. Black asked a judge to stop Wood’s office from terminating his employment without due process and a requested hearing to challenge it. He says the Auditor’s Office is trying to force

him out in part because he’s a Republican. Wood is a Democrat. But the dismissal motion filed late Thursday in Wake County court said it was Black who had asked for a voluntary buyout and that Wood’s office had no plans to lay him off involuntarily.

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RALEIGH (AP) – The North Carolina State Auditor’s Office says an employee who sued the agency because he was worried about getting fired actually asked to quit his job first. State attorneys for Auditor Beth Wood’s office this week filed a motion

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Saturday September 5, 2009

TOM BLOUNT: Check out our new Web site at: www.hpe.com. TOMORROW

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

4A

Before America implodes, we need drastic reform

A constitutional amendment can be originated in a state legislature and then passed by 36 states to become part of the Constitution. North Carolina was one of the original 13 states, so it is only right that we begin the movement, and I recommend that North Carolinians endorse the following ideas. I recommend that we start a constitutional amendment to be known as the “We the People” Amendment: • Limit all congressional positions to two two-year terms. • Each state may elect two senators and two members of the House of Representatives. • All states are to pay the salaries and expenses for their national elected officials. • Limit Congress to one fourmonth session per year; Congress will then spend the remaining part of the year in their state with their constituents and be “on-call” for emergencies. • All congressional bills must be written by elected congressional persons. • No pork/piggy-back on any bill; each bill must stand on its own merits. • If an elected official dies while

YOUR VIEW

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in office, the state legislature (by vote) appoints the replacement for Congress. • Absolutely no lobbyists in Congress. No contact what-so-ever! If a congressman fails to report a lobbyist, he/she is to be expelled and the lobbyist is to serve one year in jail. • All nationally elected positions are to be nonpartisan. • All states have four Electoral College votes. • No contracted individual’s (by presidential appointment) annual salary can exceed that of the president’s. • No lawyer may hold a nationally elected office but may be appointed to a judgeship, etc. Ask yourself: If not me, who? If not now, when? BILL BREWER High Point

Guilford Education Alliance says thanks for support With a new school year beginning, Guilford Education Alli-

ance wants to thank our many supporters from last school year who donated over $300,000 worth of new or recycled supplies to the Teacher Supply Warehouse where public school teachers can shop for free for needed items for their classrooms. We’d like to make our program even more successful this school year by inviting all businesses to donate their surplus or out of date office supplies to the warehouse at 1606 Yanceyville St. A tax receipt will be provided and a special “Thank You” from the classrooms where your donations make a difference. And we want to thank those who used DonorsChoose.org as a way to make tax deductible donations for needed materials for specific classroom projects requested by our teachers. Over the past three years, more than $150,000 has been donated to fund special projects such as “The Letter Factory” ($150), to “Bugs in My Bonnet” ($398), to “I’ve Got Rhythm” ($1,142). Donors Choose allows donors the flexibility to support their

favorite school or teacher in the Guilford County School system. Visit the Guilford Education Alliance Web site, www.guilfordeducationalliance.org to learn more about the Teachers Supply Warehouse and DonorsChoose.org. These initiatives, plus Harvest for Teachers, and other individual school partnerships demonstrate the commitment of our community to make education its top priority so we can have excellent public schools! Thank you! SHERRI BROWN Greensboro

YOUR VIEW POLL

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Should audiotapes and videotapes related to incidents such as the death of Courtland Smith, who shot by an Archdale police officer, be sealed from public view? In 30 words or less (no name, address required) e-mail your opinion to letterbox@hpe.com.

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Hagan bill will benefit health of residents

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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.

Minds have been poisoned by cowards in Congress

E

It’s not just the disgrace. xcuse me, but when did we become a It’s the blatant defiance nation of wimps and cowards? Will that comes with it as well. somebody please tell me? They defy not only logic (by As I watched the evening news Tuesday continuing to call those who night, I saw a clip of Rep. Pete Hoekstra, a are not guilty of terrorism man who thinks he should be governor of “terrorists”), not only reason Michigan and currently running for that (by ignoring or defending the office, wherein he pandered to the fears of OPINION inhumanity called torture), his ignorant constituency. He blathered but they ignore the law every about keeping “terrorists” out of America time they do so as well: time by keeping them at places like Guantanamo Robert Healy and again the courts have Bay. ■■■ ruled against the claims of So I ask you, when did we become a nathe government regarding the tion of wimps and cowards? status of our prisoners in Guantanamo, rulThe not in my back yard (NIMBY) crowd ing instead to have many of them released are so namby-pamby, blithely ignoring (such as the former prisoners sent to Pora simple fact of reality: almost all of the tugal). More often than not, it is because detainees currently imprisoned at Guantathere is no evidence or proof of any kind namo are not guilty of any acts of “terrorism” and have been ordered released by the that these people are guilty of any crime, courts. In fact, just last week, two formerly much less acts of terrorism. They are, as kidnapped (that is, “renditioned”) detainees far as the courts are concerned, innocent. Yet they’ve been held like animals in a cage, who were held at Guantanamo for the last several years were flown to Portugal and set many for the last seven or eight years. And here is Hoekstra, poisoning the up in housing paid for by the auspices of the minds of those gullible enough to accept government. Were they really dangerous, murdering terrorists? Well, apparently not. what he is saying without a moment’s thought given to the fact that what he is sayEver ask why the preponderance of these ing is entirely and absolutely untrue. constant flaming of fears by officials like So I ask you: What is wrong with our Hoekstra? I will tell you: to keep the majorpeople? When did we become such a nation ity of Americans ignorant and afraid; to make sure we remain a nation of wimps and of ignorant wimps, willfully failing to stand up in our collective abhorrence to what our cowards – lead by cowards who lie. government has done in our names? When “Cowards who lie,” AKA Congress. did we as a nation become so cowardly that To state it bluntly, those senators and representatives who have promoted (or con- we willfully fail to hold our elected officials tinue to promote) the bald-faced lie that the to the highest of standards in matters of such gravity as the kidnapping, torturing, people we’ve kidnapped and tortured and incarcerated all of these years and to whom and imprisoning of innocent people and denying them the most basic of human and we’ve denied the most basic human and legal rights? legal rights are “terrorists” have disgraced All citizens who believe such deceitthemselves and this nation. They disgrace ful politicians like Hoekstra are ignorant us every time they open their duplicitous mouths boldly proclaiming how they’re “en- wimps and cowards. suring our safety” and “protecting national security” by keeping these people out of our ROBERT HEALY is a veteran of the U.S. Army and gradsight and indefinitely holding them at some uate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He lives in High Point. overseas location.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

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

The writer is a Guilford Education Alliance board member.

OTHER VIEW

From The Daily Reflector of Greenville, Aug. 23 Rural areas find themselves at a marked disadvantage when it comes to finding accessible and affordable medical care. These regions are traditionally underserved because of the difficulty in drawing health care professions to serve in places with smaller populations, and which traditionally have lower incomes and education levels. Freshman U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan hopes to change that trend through the Rural Physician Pipeline Act, a bill that would add incentives to doctors who serve these areas. The need is real, and members on both sides of the aisle would do well to make passage of this act a priority when Congress returns to work. Eastern North Carolina knows all too well the challenge of providing medical care to residents throughout this region. It was not long ago that residents outside Greenville and Pitt County struggled to find care. A key institution that has changed that situation is the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University. Since its establishment more than 30 years ago, the school has focused on rural health and encouraging its graduates to serve those regions in need of gifted health professionals. Hagan aims to bolster that effort through her bill, which is under committee consideration. The legislation, which she co-sponsored with U.S. Sen. Mark Udall of Colorado, would provide funding to create a specific degree track for those wishing to practice medicine in rural areas. It would also expand recruiting efforts in those areas, to give students who seek a career in medicine the opportunity to pursue that dream and help their communities. Udall is hopeful that the health care reform under heated debate in Washington would include assistance for rural areas, but it is hard to share his optimism. Rural regions are routinely neglected, despite overwhelming evidence they are most in need of help. Residents of eastern North Carolina have never received the type of care enjoyed in more urban areas, and suffer from higher levels of disease and shorter life spans as a result. This bill may not be the cure-all to that problem, but it is an important attempt to address a major inadequacy. Legislation that aims directly at the problem of poor health care in rural regions is needed, and Hagan’s effort should have the support of both parties as it progresses.

An independent newspaper

N.C. OFFICIALS

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House of Representatives Davidson Rep. Hugh Holliman (D) (81st House District), 103 Sapona Road, Lexington, NC 27295, (336) 9561385, (336) 2486272, Raleigh, (919) 715-0873 Rep. Larry Brown (R) (73rd House District), P.O. Box 85, Kernersville, NC 27285, (336) 972-4256; Raleigh, (919) 733-5607 Randolph Rep. Harold Brubaker (R) (78th House District), 138 Scarboro St., Asheboro, NC 27203, (336) 6295128; Raleigh, (919) 715-4946 Room 1229, Legislative Building, Raleigh, NC 27601-1096 Rep. Jerry Dockham (R) (80th House District), P.O. Box 265, Old Camp Road, Denton, NC 27239, (336) 859-3804; Raleigh (919) 733-5822; Room 1424, Legislative Building, Raleigh, NC 27601-1096 Rep. Pat Hurley (R) (70th House District),141 Ridgecrest Road, Asheboro, NC 27203, (336) 6259210; Raleigh, (919) 733-5865 607 Legislative Office Building, Raleigh, NC 27603-5925

LETTER RULES

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


Saturday September 5, 2009

GAINING GROUND: Firefighters make progress north of Los Angeles. 8A

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

5A

KABUL – Eight security guards at the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan were fired and two resigned following allegations of lewd behavior and sexual misconduct at their living quarters. The Kabul senior management team of ArmorGroup North America, the private contractor that provides guards for the State Department, was also “being replaced immediately,” an embassy statement said Friday. The terminated guards, who left Afghanistan on Friday, all appeared in photographs depicting guards and supervisors in various stages of nudity at parties.

U.N. hosts summit in Kabul after election

UNITED NATIONS – The United Nations is planning to host a summit in Afghanistan following the country’s disputed elections that will bring the new government and key international players together to promote a new agenda to promote development and democracy in coming years. Ari Gaitanis, spokesman for the U.N. Peacekeeping Department, said Friday the summit will likely be held next spring in the capital, Kabul.

China: Muslim separatists to blame for attacks

URUMQI, China – China’s security chief blamed Muslim separatists Friday for a string of bizarre needle attacks that drew thousands of angry protesters into the streets as officials disclosed five people were killed and 14 injured during demonstrations in this restive city. Police fired tear gas to break up continuing protests by thousands of Han Chinese, the country’s majority ethnic group, underscoring how unsettled Urumqi remains despite a massive security crackdown following ethnic rioting in July that left 197 people dead.

Peres: Palestinian state first, full peace later

CERNOBBIO, Italy – Israeli President Shimon Peres, a longtime advocate of peace with the Palestinians, said Friday that a comprehensive settlement resolving the century-old dispute was not currently achievable. He called instead for a Palestinian state under a provisional arrangement even without a formal peace deal.

Chavez tells Israelis to disobey government

NATO jets bomb fuel tankers Afghans say more than 70 killed in big explosion before dawn KUNDUZ, Afghanistan (AP) – A U.S. jet dropped 500-pound bombs on two tanker trucks hijacked by the Taliban before dawn Friday, triggering a huge explosion that Afghan officials said killed more than 70 people, including insurgents and some civilians who had swarmed around the vehicles to siphon off fuel. Germany, whose troops called in the 2:30 a.m. strike in the northern province of Kunduz, said it feared the hijackers would use the trucks to carry out a suicide attack against its military base nearby. The airstrike took place as the U.S. wrestles with the level of its troop commitment here and despite efforts by the top U.S. general to curb use of air power and reduce civilian casualties, which have strained relations between the NATO force and the Afghan government. Hours earlier, the top Pentagon officer, Adm. Mike Mullen, said civilian casualties had recently been greatly reduced in Afghanistan.

AP

Afghan police examine one of two burnt fuel tankers near Kunduz, Afghanistan, Friday. A NATO jet blasted the tankers, hijacked by the Taliban in northern Afghanistan, setting off a huge fireball. Germany said about 50 fighters were killed and no civilians were believed in the area at the time. NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen, however, acknowledged some civilians may have died, and the U.S.-led coalition

and the Afghan government an- people were killed, at least 45 of nounced a joint investigation. them militants. Investigators Local government spokesman were trying to account for the Mohammad Yawar said police others, he said. found pieces of dozens of weapThe local governor, Mohamons scattered around the site. mad Omar, said 72 were killed He estimated that more than 70 and 15 wounded.

Iraq sends thousands more police to Syrian border BAGHDAD (AP) – Iraq has deployed thousands of reinforcements along its border with Syria to prevent insurgents from crossing the desert frontier, as the government said Friday it has provided Syria with evidence linking Iraqis there to bombings. Extra police were sent to the border this week on the prime minister’s orders in response to the government’s assertion that former members of Saddam Hussein’s Baath

Party based in Syria planned and financed last month’s attacks against the foreign and finance ministries, said Maj. Gen. Tariq Youssef, the police commander in western Iraq. Iraq is seeking the extradition of two suspects, but Syria has refused, demanding to see proof of their involvement. The dispute has strained relations between the two countries and again put Syria on the defensive over accusations it is

not doing enough to stop cross-border attacks. The Aug. 19 truck bombings outside the government ministries in Baghdad killed about 100 people. Iraq has blamed an alliance between al-Qaida in Iraq and the outlawed Baath Party. Turkey, which has experience as a regional mediator, has tried to soothe the dispute between the two countries, which have both recalled their ambassadors.

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Iran says U.S. nuke documents ‘forged’ VIENNA (AP) – Iran accused the U.S. on Friday of using “forged documents” and relying on subterfuge to make its case that Tehran is trying to build a nuclear weapon, according to a confidential letter obtained by The Associated Press. The eight-page letter – written by Iran’s chief envoy to the U.N. nuclear agency in Vienna – denounces Washing-

ton’s allegations against the Islamic Republic as “fabricated, baseless and false.” The letter does not specify what documents Iran is alleging were forged. It also lashes out at Britain and France for “ill will and political motivation” in their dealings on Iran. Iranian envoy Ali Asghar Soltanieh sent the letter to Mohamed ElBaradei, the

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DAMASCUS, Syria – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez told the Israeli people not to support their government, which he described as “genocidal” on Friday, the second day of his trip to Syria. Chavez is on an 11-day trip to Libya, Algeria, Syria, Iran, Belarus, Russia and Spain in what he is describing as a bid to build a multi-polar world and decrease U.S. influence in the region.

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head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, whose 35-nation board will take a hard new look at Iran’s nuclear program next week. Iran insists its nuclear activities are peaceful and geared solely toward generating electricity.

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Circulation Customer Service Hours for September 7th Please note the High Point Enterprise will be closed on Monday, September 7, in observance of the Labor Day Holiday, however, the hours of operation for Circulation Customer Service will be from 6:00am to 11:00am on September 7th.

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Saturday September 5, 2009

SENIORS IN POVERTY: New formula puts more elderly in state of economic duress. 8A

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

6A

Archaic law on the books 3 states still ban religious clothing for teachers

AP

Loyola law student Mona Elgindy poses in the law library in Chicago recently. law for the right to wear religious clothing on a headscarf at school. So the job. But the did law did not far, it has not posed any change the ban for teachers enacted in the 1920s, after that portion was opposed by the Oregon chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union on the grounds that impressionable children should not feel indoctrinated by their teachers. The laws’ existence also serious legal issues in Ne- surprised Mona Elgindy, a law student at Loyola braska. That such a law still University in Chicago exists was a surprise who wrote a paper on the for many Oregonians issue. She is a Muslim and who learned about it a former teacher. “I kept doing research when Gov. Ted Kulongoski signed the Oregon and research, and thought Workplace Religious I must be finding someFreedom Act in July, al- thing that’s overruling lowing workers to wear this, or repealing the law,

That such a law still exists was a surprise for many Oregonians.

and there was nothing,” Elgindy said. In her paper, one of the few studies on religious clothing laws in recent years, Elgindy noted she could find no evidence that the laws statutes have ever been invoked by students. Rather, the recent legal history has been created by teachers trying to keep their jobs after administrators confronted them. Court rulings in both Oregon and federal court in Pennsylvania rejected the claims by teachers and pointed out conflicts with the First Amendment: Teachers have a constitutional right to freedom of religion, but school districts must

Michigan church enlists Satan in advertising campaign

TRENTON, Mich. (AP) – A Michigan church is enlisting Satan in a bid to drum up attendance at services. Metro South Church in the Detroit suburb of Trenton is posting signs saying the nondenominational Christian con-

gregation “sucks” and “makes me sick.” The ads are signed by Satan. The campaign even has a Web site explaining why Satan hates the church. Youth Pastor Adam Dorband tells WJBK-TV the church is trying to

reach out to people and cut through the “noise.” Dorband said Jesus “wants us to be creative and he wants us to ... use whatever it takes to reach people.” Pastor Jeremy Schossau says the campaign is meant to be whimsical and isn’t intended to upset anyone.

CHURCH CALENDAR

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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.

BRIDGE OF HOPE NEW COVENANT Bring a Friend to Church Day will be observed at 11 a.m. Sunday at Bridge of Hope New Covenant Church, 2509 Westchester Drive. Living Waters will be in concert.

JESUS WAY HOUSE OF PRAYER

Living Waters will be in concert at 6 p.m. today at Jesus Way House of Prayer, 5020 Meadowbrook Road, Trinity.

will be guest speaker at 11 day and 7 p.m. Wednesa.m. Sunday at Oak Grove day. Missionary Baptist Church, 1710 East Green Drive. THOMASVILLE TENT MEETING Evangelist Roger Williams will be guest BROWN NEW CALVARY speaker at 4 p.m. toBAPTIST Homecoming service day and 2:30 p.m. Sunwill be held Sunday at day, continuing at 7 Brown New Calvary Bap- p.m. Monday through tist Church, 200 Doak St., Friday at Thomasville Thomasville. Lunch will Tent Meeting, intersecfollow the morning ser- tion of Highway 62 and vice. Pastor L.W. Bolton Unity Street, Trinity. III of Fort Wayne, Ind. will be guest speaker at GREENWOOD BAPTIST Homecoming will be 3 p.m. Sunday. Revival held at 10:45 a.m. Sunday services with Pastor Philat Greenwood Baptist lip McSwaim of Mt. Olive Church, 1010 Lexington Baptist Church, Gulfport, Ave., Thomasville. Guest Miss. will be held at 7 p.m. speaker will be former Monday through Friday. pastor the Rev. Steve Livengood. Lunch will follow HIGH POINT SOLID ROCK the service. MINISTRIES FIRST UNITED High Point Solid Rock METHODIST OAK GROVE MISSIONARY Ministries has moved CHURCH to 208 Avery Ave. SerBAPTIST September 6, 2009 The Rev. JoAnn Stanback vices are 10 a.m. SunMark 6:1-4 be held at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at True Gospel Baptist Church, 4706 Coltrane St., Trinity. Featured will be Neal Walker, pastor of Oxford Memorial Baptist, Taylorville; Tommy Cook, pastor of Friendship Baptist, Elon; and Jeff Woods, pastor of Pine Grove Baptist, High Point. And special singing by Crystal Sams, Tommy Cook Family and others.

TRUE GOSPEL BAPTIST Labor Day Jubilee will

During her eight years as a teacher in the Chicago area, Elgindy says she never ran into a conflict over her style of dress and covering her hair. “It never was something that seemed to be in the way of my being a teacher,” she said, adding it was often the opposite reaction. “They said, ’Here’s somebody of a different background who can bring diversity to the staff.’ It was always seen as positive thing.” An example of a shift in court attitude may have been signaled when the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously in 1999 that Muslim police officers in Newark, N.J., must be allowed to wear beards.

BIBLE QUIZ

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Yesterday’s Bible question: In Nehemiah 8, find three ways the people worshipped God. Answer to yesterday’s question: “And Ezra blessed the Lord, the great God. And all the people answered, Amen, Amen, with lifting up their hands: and they bowed their heads, and worshipped the Lord with their faces to the ground.” (Nehemiah 8:6) Today’s Bible question: Complete: “As for me, I will ... upon God; and the Lord shall save me. Evening, and morning, and at ..., will I ..., and cry aloud: and he shall ... my voice.” BIBLE QUIZ is provided by Hugh B. Brittain of Shelby.

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avoid supporting any religion. Michael Kaufman, one of Elgindy’s professors and an education law expert, said laws banning religious clothing used to be fairly common. But there has been a gradual shift away from them to protect teachers’ religious freedom as long as it does not disrupt the classroom. “It’s now sort of gone full circle,” Kaufman said. “The law now requires neutrality regarding religion, meaning the states or schools can neither favor nor disfavor religion.” The few remaining bans “are really suspect constitutionally now,” he said.

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PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) – A law backed by the Ku Klux Klan nearly a century ago to keep Catholics out of public schools is still on the books in Oregon, one of the last states in the nation to prohibit teachers from wearing religious clothing in classrooms. Both Pennsylvania and Nebraska have similar laws, which try to balance the constitutional conflict between protecting students from the establishment of religion in schools and the rights of teachers to express their beliefs through their dress. Oregon’s law, originally aimed at priest collars and nun habits, survived a legal challenge in the 1980s by a Sikh convert who wanted to wear her turban in the classroom and was recently upheld by the state’s Legislature. A Muslim teacher in Pennsylvania lost a similar challenge in 1991 to that state’s even older


FAITH THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

7A

Apophthegmata Patrum: Sayings of the Desert Fathers I

n the 300s and 400s in Egypt, a number of men and women decided to live in the desert in order to escape the busyness of life and to focus on God. This was the beginning of the monastic (or monk) movement. Some lived singly in caves, while others built houses and lived in small communities. A number of teachings and sayings of the spiritual leaders have been passed down in what is known as the Apophthegmata Patrum, or Sayings of the Desert Fathers. This column will share some of these. (These sayings are each around 1600 years old. Also, the Aramaic “Abba” is used, which means “Father.”) 1. Abba Poemen used to say, “A man will be always tripped up by that thing which he will not cut off from himself.” 2. Abba John said, “If a king wishes to subdue a city belonging to enemies, he first of all keeps them without bread and water, and the enemy being in this way harassed by hunger becomes subject unto him; and thus it is in respect of the passions, for if a man endures fasting and hunger regularly, his

enemies become stricken with weakness in the soul.” 3. A certain brother was estranged from a fellow monk, and he came to Abba Sisoes the Theban, and said to him, STUDYING “I am estranged from a THE CHURCH fellow monk, and I wish to take vengeance for myself;” and the old man Mark said, “Let us pray.” And Nickens while he was praying, ■■■ he said in his prayer, “O God, from now on we have no need of You to take care of us, for we will take vengeance for ourselves;” and when the brother heard these words, he fell down at the feet of the old man and said unto him, “From now on I will not enter into judgment with that brother.” And so Abba Sisoes healed that brother. 4. One of the old men used to say, “The Prophets compiled the Scriptures, and the [Desert] Fathers have copied them, and the men who came

after them learned to repeat them by heart; then came this generation and its children have placed them in cupboards as useless things.”

A number of teachings and sayings of the spiritual leaders have been passed down in what is known as the Apophthegmata Patrum, or Sayings of the Desert Fathers. 5. Abba Poemen used to say, “Teach your heart to keep that which your tongue teaches.” 6. Certain of the old men went to Abba Poemen, and said unto him, “Do you wish us if we see brothers sleeping in the congregation, to hit them so that they wake up?” And he said unto them, “If I see my brother

sleeping, I place his head upon my knees, and I give him a place to rest upon.” 7. A certain brother committed an offense in Scete, the camp of the monks, and when a congregation was assembled on this matter, they sent after Abba Moses, but he refused to come; then they sent the priest of the church to him, saying, “Come, for all the people are expecting you,” and he rose up and came. And he took a basket with a hole in it and filled it with sand, and carried it upon his shoulders, and those who went out to meet him said unto him, “What does this mean, O father?” And he said unto them, “It is my sins which are running down behind me and I cannot see them, and I, even I, have come this day to judge shortcomings which are not mine.” And when they heard this, they set free that brother and said nothing further to him.

QUESTIONS/COMMENTS: Contact Mark Nickens at www.drnickens.com; other summaries available there.

Grandparents are very special people W

ere it not for grandparents, none of us would be here. My two grandmothers and my maternal grandfather lived into their 80s. I never knew my Grandpa Ellis. He died when my dad was 9 years old so I never knew much about him. As a child and teenager, I did not ask much about him. I wish I had. As we approach Labor Day, I realize and know from stories I did hear that my grandparents and my parents were well acquainted with and accustomed to hard manual labor. Grandpa Ellis dealt in cattle as well as selling beef from his meat wagon. Grandpa Perry was in the timber business primarily for the Carbon Fuel Coal Co. Grandmothers took care of managing the home that meant cooking three meals daily, mending and washing

clothes and canning fruits and vegetables in the summer and fall months. Labor Day in the coalfields of West Virginia SHARING was a very special day. Safety THE SPIRIT meets were a part of the day, Bill especially in the Ellis morning hours ■■■ as coal miners went through demonstrations of how they care for those injured in mining accidents. The day might include a political speech and/or a baseball game in the afternoon. Dad told me of the year when the featured speaker was Lowell Thomas, the famous radio newscaster. He appeared at Decota, W.Va., in eastern Kanawha County, at

the head of Cabin Creek. Grandparents Day, like Mother’s Day, originated in West Virginia. Marian McQuade of Oak Hill, W.Va., has been recognized nationally by The United States Senate and President Jimmy Carter, as the founder of National Grandparents Day. The first national Grandparents Day was observed in 1978 and every year since on the first Sunday after Labor Day. It is observed on the same day in both the United States and Canada. Charles R. Swindoll, in his book, Come Before Winter, (Multnomah Press, Portland, Ore., 1985), writes the following about grandparents. “Grandparents’ favorite gesture is open arms and their favorite question is, ‘What do you wanna do?’ and their favorite words are ‘I love you, honey.’ They don’t

look for mistakes and failures; they forgive them. They don’t remember that you spent your last dollar foolishly; they forget it. And they don’t skip pages when they read to you … nor do they say ‘Hurry up’ when you want to see how far you can make the rock skip across the lake. They’ll even stop and lick an ice cream cone with ya. “But best of all, when you want to talk, they want to listen. Long, loud lectures are out … so are comments like ‘You ought to be ashamed of yourself’ and ‘That’s stupid!’ It’s funny, but you somehow get the impression that things like money and possessions and clothes aren’t nearly as important as you. And getting somewhere on time isn’t half as significant as enjoying the trip. “Isn’t God good? Generation after generation He provides a

PatiencePatience is one aspect of the

fresh set of grandparents … an ever-present counterculture in our busy world.” Celebrate Grandparents Day on Sunday, Sept. 13, by visiting your grandparents if possible. If you can’t do that, send them a card, write them a letter, e-mail them and even better, give them a call so they can hear your voice. Ask your grandparents many questions, especially about your parents when they were little and do remember to ask them about life when they were children and teenagers. They can tell you some terrific stories. Ask them everything you can think of. Grandparents are very special. Thank them for their guidance, direction and sacrifices. Kitty and I love and enjoy our five grandchildren.

BILL ELLIS, P. O. Box 345, Scott Depot, WV 25560 | (304) 757-6089

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.

fruit of the spirit mentioned by St. Paul which concerns 2 Samuel 22:3 KJV our relationships with our fellow human beings, alongside the virtues of kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. (Galatians 5:22-23) The Greek word which Paul uses there is “makrothumia,” which is usually translated as These things I have spoken unto either patience or long- you, that in me ye might have suffering. The Greek word peace. In the world ye shall have is a compound of macro tribulation: but be of good cheer; (meaning large or long) and I have overcome the world. thumia (meaning temper or John 16:33 anger), and thus, the Greek word connotes being able to restrain one’s temper, especially in the face of suffering at the hands Therefore thou art inexcusable, O of someone who is acting unjustly. Who among us has not been man, whosoever thou art that judgaccused of something of which we were innocent? Who has not est: for wherein thou judgest another, had something stolen from them? Who has never suffered at the thou condemnest thyself; for thou hands of bullies or thugs? Surely, all of us have had these types of that judgest doest the same things. experiences, and our natural inclination is almost always to fight Roman 2:1 back, lash out, or scream for justice. However a godly response would be to suffer patiently and perhaps to admonish gently, but certainly not to be quick to anger. Think of how God dealt with the Israelites in Old Testament times, bearing patiently with their continued faithfulness and transgressions. And, consider too how Jesus patiently bore the pain and humiliation of being beaten, tortured and ridiculed in preparation for the most ignominious of deaths on the cross. Surely, Jesus was a model of long-suffering for all of us. Then Peter came up and said to him, “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? As many as seven times?” Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you seven times, but seventy times seven.” R.S.V. Matthew 18:21-22 479440©HPE

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In thee, O LORD, do I put my trust: let me never be put to confusion. Psalms 71:1 (KJV)


Saturday September 5, 2009

High Point Enterprise Weather Today

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Mostly Sunny

Mostly Sunny

Partly Cloudy

Partly Cloudy

Few Showers

86º 61º

85º 62º

83º 64º

82º 64º

79º 63º

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 84/65

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

Asheville 82/56

High Point 86/61 Charlotte 89/62

Greenville 87/64 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 86/61 82/72 Wilmington 86/67

Around Our State Today

HOLIDAY FORECAST: Outlook for Labor Day weekend. 8C

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .87/62 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .80/57 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .86/67 EMERALD ISLE . . . .83/69 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .88/63 GRANDFATHER MTN . .72/53 GREENVILLE . . . . . .87/64 HENDERSONVILLE .81/57 JACKSONVILLE . . . .87/64 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .87/64 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .81/72 MOUNT MITCHELL . .79/55 ROANOKE RAPIDS .86/61 SOUTHERN PINES . .87/62 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .87/64 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .89/59 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .86/61

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Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx 86/63 80/59 83/68 81/71 87/65 73/55 85/67 80/60 84/68 85/67 81/74 79/56 85/63 86/64 85/68 87/62 85/63

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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 Today

City

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . . .83/57 ATLANTA . . . . . . . . .86/65 BOISE . . . . . . . . . . . .92/57 BOSTON . . . . . . . . . .77/60 CHARLESTON, SC . .87/69 CHARLESTON, WV . .89/64 CINCINNATI . . . . . . .83/59 CHICAGO . . . . . . . . .76/59 CLEVELAND . . . . . . .77/57 DALLAS . . . . . . . . . .91/70 DETROIT . . . . . . . . . .80/59 DENVER . . . . . . . . . .87/58 GREENSBORO . . . . .86/61 GRAND RAPIDS . . . .79/56 HOUSTON . . . . . . . . .91/73 HONOLULU . . . . . . . .88/75 KANSAS CITY . . . . . .80/64 NEW ORLEANS . . . .87/75

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Sunday

Today

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LAS VEGAS . . . . . .101/81 LOS ANGELES . . . . .88/64 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . . .86/68 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .89/77 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .76/58 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .86/67 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .84/67 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .92/75 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . .100/81 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .80/56 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .87/64 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .81/57 SAN FRANCISCO . . .70/57 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .80/63 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .66/56 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .81/64 WASHINGTON, DC . .89/64 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .80/61

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Hi/Lo Wx 90/78 68/57 110/79 81/61 65/58 91/74 71/49 65/53 74/54 94/74

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COPENHAGEN . . . . .63/56 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .66/46 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .96/80 GUATEMALA . . . . . .77/61 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .94/79 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .92/82 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .81/57 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .67/50 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .74/57 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .91/81

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PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .69/46 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .84/65 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .71/56 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .86/70 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .88/77 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .66/52 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .68/50 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .91/72 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .83/71 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .62/46

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

8A

Crews gain on blaze; fallen firefighters honored LOS ANGELES (AP) – Fire bosses declared progress early Friday in taming the 232-squaremile arson fire north of Los Angeles that has led to a homicide investigation into the deaths of two firefighters. Flames had died down early Friday and the blaze, which was 42 percent surrounded, was “pretty quiet,” fire spokesman John Huschke said.

Angeles County sheriff’s fallen firefighters was homicide detectives were held before dawn Friday at the command center. investigating. Hundreds of firefightTwo firefighters were killed Sunday when their ers took off their caps and truck plunged 800 feet helmets and bowed their down a steep mountain heads as the men were remembered with speeches road. A tribute for the two and a moment of silence.

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B

COMMANDING PRESENCE: Former gang leader says crime doesn’t pay. SUNDAY GARDENING 101: It’s time to prepare your fall garden. 3B

Saturday September 5, 2009 City Editor: Joe Feeney jfeeney@hpe.com (336) 888-3537

DEAR ABBY: Parents can’t bear daughter’s third marriage. 3B

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

Authorities host free car seat clinic ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

RANDOLPH COUNTY – Safe Kids Randolph County will be offering a free car seat clinic this month. The car seat clinic will be held 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 17

at the new Archdale Community Services building, 213 Balfour Drive Certified child passenger safety technicians will be available to inspect child safety seats for proper installation and use.

According to Safe Kids Randolph County, those who attend the event will not be ticketed by police officers for incorrect installation of car seats. Safe Kids Randolph

County works to prevent unintentional and accidental childhood injury, the leading killer of children ages 1 to 18. Safe Kids Randolph County is a member of Safe Kids Worldwide, a global

WHO’S NEWS

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network of organizations dedicated to preventing accidental injury. For more information on the car seat clinic, contact Shea Cox, Safe Kids Randolph County coordinator, at 318-6198.

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HPU Passport Card encourages students to support local business BY PAM HAYNES ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER

HIGH POINT - Some local restaurants and shops are getting a boost in business from High Point University students and faculty through the use of their university ID cards. The cards, named the HPU Passport Card, serve as an identification tool at the university as well as a debit card that can be used at participating restaurants and other businesses in the city. “A general account attached to the card can be used on or off campus,” said Leslie Smith, chief campus concierge at the school, who manages the program. “Parents can load money to the card online for students, and the funds will be posted immediately (to the card).” According to Smith, students, faculty and staff spent more than $80,000 at local businesses through their passport cards during the 2008-09 academic year. Restaurants and businesses like CVS Pharmacy, Jersey Mike’s Subs and Barberitos, which are charged a small fee to enroll in the program, operated by Blackboard Inc., said they saw an increase in business when students returned last

week for the fall semester. “During the school year, we have a lot of students in here,” said Tammy Morgan, manager of Jersey Mike’s. “It brings us business, and it allows students to eat healthy here.” “We get the word out about these businesses and recommend them to students,” Smith said. “This is really the only other opportunity to advertise to our students besides our campus newspaper. It’s more of a campaign for the businesses than something the university makes money off.” Senior Lauren McGraw said the HPU Passport Card encourages her to eat at restaurants around the city. “Students trust the places that the card recommends,” McGraw said. “A lot of places will give students a discount with the card, and it’s safer to carry than your wallet or a credit card.” Six businesses were signed up through the program when it began in May 2008. Today, 35 businesses are enrolled. “Parents just like knowing where students spend their money,” Smith added. “The passport card doesn’t restrict them to stay on campus.” phaynes@hpe.com | 888-3617

The city of Thomasville will be closed on Monday in observance of Labor Day. The schedule will be as follows for the week of Sept. 7-11: Garbage Monday’s route will be collected on Tuesday. Tuesday’s route will collected on Wednesday. Wednesday and Thursday’s will be collected on Thursday Friday will be regular schedule Recycling Monday’s route will be collected on Tuesday. Tuesday and Wednesday’s route will be collected on Wednesday Thursday and Friday will be collected on regular schedules.

CHECK IT OUT!

---DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

High Point University junior Jason Parr holds his “passport” while concierge Leslie Smith looks on.

Fund continues works of philanthropist ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORT

HIGH POINT – A local philanthropic fund has been established through the High Point Community Foundation to honor the late Virginia Loebs Corrigan, a community benefactor who died in May. The William and Virginia Corrigan Family Donor Advised Fund will perpetuate the philanthropic efforts she supported during her lifetime. Her daughters, Louise and Sallie, will serve as advisers to the fund, reports the foundation. During her years in High Point, Corrigan supported community efforts to assist cancer patients and the elderly and feed High Point’s most vulnerable populations. Corrigan, who was born in 1927 in Rochester, N.Y., served with the U.S. State

Scott Raynor, chairman of the Visual Arts Department at High Point University, has had three of his paintings accepted into the “Art in Academia” juried exhibition taking place Oct. 21-24 in Mobile, Ala.

SPECIAL | HPE

Virginia Loebs Corrigan is pictured with her grandchildren (left photo) and with her husband, William, in Banf, Switzerland. Department. She later married William McRae Corrigan, and the couple moved to High Point where her husband worked as an executive with Lilly Industrial Coatings. “Mrs. Corrigan was deeply committed to her Catho-

lic faith, which she lived through her service to her church and to those in our community who are often forgotten and neglected,” said Paul Lessard, president of the foundation. Among the High Point groups Corrigan assisted

are the local chapter of the American Cancer Society, Mobile Meals of High Point and the Pennybyrn at Maryfield retirement community. “Virginia was a wonderful woman who was very well liked and who had a

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

true servant’s heart,” said Sister Lucy Hennessy, president of Pennybyrn at Maryfield. “She always put the needs of others first, and she was very committed to her faith and believed in the power of prayer.”

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

INDEX COMICS DEAR ABBY OBITUARIES TELEVISION

5B 3B 2B 8B


OBITUARIES 2B www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

OBITUARIES

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The High Point Enterprise publishes death notices without charge. Additional information is published for a fee. Obituary information should be submitted through a funeral home.

Stephen Cash

HIGH POINT – Mr. Stephen Leon Cash, 40, departed this life on Wednesday, September 2, 2009 at Arbors Canton and Rehabilitation Center in Canton, Ohio after an extended period of illness. “Leon”, as he was affectionately known to family and friends was born on January 11, 1969 in High Point, NC, a son of Kuba Lee Cash and Johnsie Kersey Cash. He attended the High Point City Schools and held a black belt in karate. Leon loved his family and his family and friends loved him. Surviving to hold loving and everlasting memories of him are his parents, Kuba Lee Cash and Johnsie Kersey Cash; sister, Stephanie (Wilbert) Hayes of Atlanta, GA; son, Stephen L. Legrande of High Point, NC; three daughters, Shemika, Sherill and Patricia Legrande, all of High Point, NC; five grandchildren; and a host of uncles, aunts, great aunts, cousins, other relatives and friends. Funeral service will be held on Sunday, September 6, 2009 at 2:00 PM at Living Water Baptist Church, 1300 Brentwood Street with Pastor Wallace Powell officiating and eulogist. Burial will follow at Carolina Biblical Gardens, Jamestown, NC. The family will receive friends at 1:30 PM Sunday at the church and other times at 1108 Carter Street. On line condolences may be sent to the Cash family at www.peoplesfuneralservice.com. People’s Funeral Service Inc. is in charge of arrangements.

Joe E. Robertson

LEXINGTON – Joe Elmer Robertson, 87, of Carolina Avenue, Lexington died Thursday, Sept., 3, 2009, at Hinkle Hospice House. Funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at East End Baptist Church. Burial will follow at Forest Hill Memorial Park. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Monday at Davidson Funeral Home and at other times at the home.

Latasha Pegues

HIGH POINT – Latasha N. Pegues, 23, died Sept. 4, 2009, at High Point Regional Hospital. Arrangements are incomplete at People’s Funeral Service Inc.

Cloe Ida Mcmahan Oakley GREENVILLE – Cloe Ida McMahan Oakley, 97, of 315 Kenilworth Drive, died September 3, 2009 at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was born August 26, 1912 in Swain County, a daughter of the late James Columbus McMahan and the late Mary Alice Holden McMahan. She was a former resident of Route 2, Trinity where she had lived for fifty years, until moving to Greenville in 1994 to the home of her daughter, Mrs. Joyce Satterfield. She was an active member of Trindale Baptist Church, where she served as a Sunday school teacher, was a member of the Adult Choir, and was a prayer warrior. Mrs. Oakley was married to Clyde David Oakley, who died December 11, 1996. In addition to her husband, she was also preceded in death by a daughter, Mary Jane Oakley and sons-in-law, Dr. Howard Satterfield and Wayne Farrington. Survivors are three daughters, Billie O. Farrington of Powell, TN, Joyce O. Satterfield of Greenville, NC, and Sandra O. Bannister and husband Larry of Louden, TN; one son, Max David Oakley and wife Becky of High Point; one sister, Ollie Hinson of High Point; and three brothers, Ray McMahan of Mebane, Clifton McMahan and Paul McMahan, both of Greenville, NC. Also surviving are seven grandchildren, Cindy Oakley, Scott Oakley and wife Sarah, Stewart Oakley and wife Christie, Duane Farrington, Chris Mitchell and wife Robyn, Bruce Koonce and wife Cindy, and Shannon Bannister; and eight greatgrandchildren, Brielle Oakley, Max David Oakley II, Chloe Oakley, Camille Oakley, Aaron Mitchell, Christian Mitchell, Davis Mitchell, and Nicole Currie. Funeral services will be held at 1:00 pm Sunday in the chapel of Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point officiated by Dr. Jimmy Hinson. Burial will follow in Floral Garden Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 121 pm Sunday, prior to the service. Memorials may be directed to the Alzheimer’s Association, 3800 Shamrock Dr. Box 999, Charlotte, NC 28215, Trindale Baptist Church, 10407 Archdale Road, Trinity, NC 27370, or to the charity of the donor’s choice. Online condolences may be made at www.cumbyfuneral.com. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point.

Helen Carter

Bill Roach

HIGH POINT – Mrs. Helen Louise Young Carter passed away on September 3, 2009. She was born on February 3, 1929 in Guilford County, the daughter of the late Ivan Lee and Mary Campbell Young. A funeral service will be conducted at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, September 6, 2009 at Sechrest Funeral Service on E. Lexington Avenue. Interment will follow in Guilford Memorial Park. The family will receive friends from 6:308:30 p.m. on Saturday. In addition to her parents, Mrs. Carter was preceded in death by her daughter, Sindy Carter. She is survived by a son, Steve Carter and wife Terry of Lexington; daughter, Susan Hodge and husband Steve of High Point; son, David Carter of High Point; a very special grandson, Dylan Hawker of the home; ten grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren. Condolences may be sent to www.mem.com.

ARCHDALE – Mr. Bill Roach, 78 of Archdale died Thursday in the Cancer Center at High Point Regional Hospital. He was born March 12, 1931 in Anderson, SC., and is a veteran of the US Marine Corp and the owner of Crown Foam Products. On May 20, 1955 he married the former Betty Earl Wilson. Mr. Roach is a member of Archdale United Methodist Church and the Friendship Sunday School Class. He also was a former member of the Oak Hollow Squares and the Tempo Dance Club. In addition to dancing, Mr. Roach enjoyed playing golf and especially loved Sunset Beach. He will be remembered as a great husband, father and grandfather. Mr. Roach is survived by his wife of 54 years, Betty Earl Roach of the home and three children; Beth Thomas and husband William of Asheboro, Angie Grimmett and husband Craig of Archdale and Steve Roach and wife Lori of Archdale. He is also survived by four grandchildren; Laura Beth Thomas, Christopher Grimmett, Sam Thomas, Lindsay Grimmett and one brother Harold Roach and wife Christine of Jamestown. Funeral services for Mr. Roach will be held 3 pm Sunday at Archdale United Methodist Church with the Reverend Stuart Noell, the Reverend Harold Shives and the Reverend Jeff Patterson officiating. Interment will follow in Floral Garden Memorial Park. The family will receive friends at the church Sunday afternoon from 1:00 until 2:30 pm. Memorials may be given to Archdale United Methodist Church, PO Box 4096 Archdale, NC 27263 or to the charity of the donor’s choice. Online condolences may be made at www.cumbyfuneral.com Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale.

Judy Kennedy

ARCHDALE – Mrs. Judy Clodfelter Kennedy, 68, resident of 4816 Macon Dr. died Thursday, September 3, 2009 in the High Point Regional Cancer Center. Mrs. Kennedy was born January 26, 1941 in High Point, a daughter of Irvin A. and Mary Owens Clodfelter. She had been a life long resident of this area. Mrs. Kennedy was a member of First Pentecostal Holiness Church. She was faithful and loyal to her church and community helping with flowers and landscaping at the church. She loved singing and animals and had a deep passion for her own cats. She was preceded in death by her father, sister, Shelby Jean “Tinker” Clodfelter and brother, Irvin A. “Butch” Clodfelter. Surviving is her husband, Charles Kennedy of the home. One son, Brian Teal and wife, Leslie of Smithfield, VA. Her mother of the Evergreens Nursing Home in High Point. One sister, Marie Hiatt and husband Robert of High Point and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be conducted Monday morning, September 7th at 11:00 a.m. at the First Pentecostal Holiness Church in High Point by Pastors Grover and Judy Jarrell. Interment will follow in Floral Garden Park Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 6 until 8 p.m. Sunday evening at the Cumby Family Funeral Service in Archdale. Memorials may be directed to High Point Regional Cancer Center, 302 Westwood Ave., High Point, NC 27262 or to the First Pentecostal Holiness Church, 100 Kenilworth LEXINGTON – Carlton Dr., High Point, NC 27260. On line condolences “Nit” Keith Burkhart, 79 may be made at www. of Woodlawn Drive, Lexcumbyfuneral.com ington passed away Friday, Sept. 4, 2009, at Brian Center of Lexington. A memorial service will be held at 4 p.m. Sunday. HIGH POINT – Mrs. MerThe family will receive cedes McKenna Erwin, 93, friends at Davidson Fu- of High Point passed away neral Home following the September 4, 2009. Funeral service on Sunday. arrangements are pending

Nit Burkhart

Mercedes Erwin

Buster Goodman LEXINGTON – Lattie E. (Buster) Goodman, 76, of Tyro Road, passed away Friday, Sept. 4, 2009, at High Point Regional Hospital after declining health of one year. Funeral services for Mr. Goodman will be 12 p.m. Monday in the chapel of Piedmont Funeral Home.

Ilease Campbell HIGH POINT – Mrs. Ilease Houser Campbell, 91, a resident of the Villages of Wilkes in North Wilkesboro and a former longtime resident of Jamestown, NC died Thursday September 3, 2009. Mrs. Campbell was born September 9, 1918 in Lincoln Co., a daughter of Caswell and Myrtle Roark Houser. A homemaker she loved to spend time in her garden. A resident of Jamestown since 1944, while living here she attended Jamestown Friends Meeting where she was known for her baking skills, especially for her pies and cakes. On November 23, 1935 she was married to Grady Woodrow Campbell who preceded her in death on March 8, 2004. She was also preceded in death by her parents, three sisters, Ethel Houser Perkins, Dorothy Houser Rudisill, Opal Inez Houser and two brothers, William Anderson Houser and a infant brother that died at birth. In Ilease and Grady’s later years, they gave gratuitously of their time and other means to be caregivers and companions to other seniors in their community. Surviving are one son, Charles W. Campbell, Sr. and wife Joyce of North Wilkesboro; one sister, Hazeline H. Link and husband Larry of Lincolnton; four brothers, Charlie C. Houser and wife Vernie of Charlotte, Fred W. Houser and wife Faye of Stanley, Kenneth Houser and wife Martenny of Lincolnton, Jerry R. Houser and wife Janice of Lincolnton and two grandchildren, Sharon Michele Rousseau and husband Julius A. Rousseau III and Charles Woodrow Campbell, Jr. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 3:00 p.m. at Jamestown Friends Meeting conducted by Reverend Frank Massey, Reverend Kathy Coe and Reverend Wallace Sills. Interment will be in Guilford Memorial Park Cemetery. Mrs. Campbell will remain at Sechrest Funeral Service, 1301 East Lexington Ave., High Point, NC 27262 where the family will receive friends on Sunday from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. after which Mrs. Campbell will be carried to the Meeting House for the service. In lieu of flowers, the family request that memorials be made to Jamestown Friends Meeting, PO Box 2163 Jamestown, NC 27282. Online condolences can be made at sechrestfunerals.com

Barbara Stanley

at Cumby Family Funeral HIGH POINT – Mrs. BarService in High Point. bara Stanley, 69, passed away Friday, Sept. 4, 2009, at the High Point Regional Hospital. Memorial service arLEXINGTON – Hoyle rangements are incomJames Fulbright age 75 of Lakewood Drive passed plete at davisfuneralsandaway early Friday morn- cremations.com.

Hoyle Fulbright

ing in Lexington Memorial Hospital. Services for Mr. Fulbright will be held at a later date. Piedmont Funeral Home is serving the Fulbright family.

Danny Ray Murphy HIGH POINT – Danny Ray Murphy entered into the presence of Jesus on Friday, Sept. 4, 2009. Memorial services will be held in Mechanicsville, Va., and Van Wert, Ohio. Arrangements by Cumby Family Funeral Service in High Point.

“People Serving All People”

1404 English Road High Point / 882-3907 SATURDAY, SEPT. 5 Tamie Hope 4 p.m. People’s Chapel INCOMPLETE Mr. Oscar Alford Sr. Ms. Latasha N. Pegues

976 Phillips Ave. High Point, NC 27262 (336) 885-5049 INCOMPLETE Mrs. Barbara Stanley

www.cumbyfuneral.com Family-owned with a tradition of trust, integrity and helpful service ... Since 1948

1015 Eastchester Dr., High Point

889-5045 SUNDAY Mrs. Ann Lewis Nelson 2 p.m. Oak Hill Friends Meeting Mrs. Cloe Ida McMahon Oakley 1 p.m. – Chapel of Cumby Family Funeral Service, High Point Mrs. Mercedes McKenna Erwin Memorial Service at a later date Mr. Danny (Dan) Ray Murphy Two Memorial services: Sept. 12 in Mechanicsville, Va. Sept. 19 in Van Wert, Ohio

206 Trindale Rd., Archdale

431-9124 SUNDAY Mr. Joe Bill Roach 3 p.m. – Archdale United Methodist Church MONDAY Mrs. Judy Clodfelter Kennedy 11 a.m. – First Pentecostal Holiness Church PENDING Ms. Wendy Stacy

*Denotes veteran

FUNERAL

Your hometown funeral service

Sechrest Funeral & Cremation Service Since 1897 HIGH POINT 1301 E. LEXINGTON AVE. 889-3811 ARCHDALE 120 TRINDALE RD. 861-4389 SUNDAY Mrs. Ilease Houser Campbell 3 p.m. – Jamestown Friends Meeting Sechrest Funeral Service – High Point Helen Louise Carter 2 p.m. – Sechrest Chapel Sechrest Funeral Service – High Point

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

122 W. Main Street Thomasville 472-7774 10301 North N.C. 109 Winston-Salem Wallburg Community 769-5548 INCOMPLETE Mrs. Bessie Elizabeth Ivie Tice

ELLINGTON’S FLORIST Express Your Sympathy with Flowers

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

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Nit Burkhart..........Lexington Ilease Campbell...High Point Helen Carter.........High Point Stephen Cash.......High Point Mercedes Erwin...High Point Hoyle Fulbright....Lexington Buster Goodman..Lexington Judy Kennedy.........Archdale Danny Murphy.....High Point Cloe Oakley...........Greenville Latasha Pegues....High Point Bill Roach.................Archdale Joe Robertson.......Lexington Barbara Stanley...High Point

PEOPLE’S FUNERAL SERVICE

2500 S. Main St., High Point www.ellingtonsflorist.com


ADVICE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

3B

It’s time to prepare those fall gardens E

arly September is a good time to get your fall garden started for autumn and early winter green veggies and root crops to enhance every meal. Even a small plot of ground 5-by-10 feet or bigger will reward you with enough veggies for two people. Soil should be prepared for fall vegetables just as it would be for any garden. I clean off the old vegetable debris in mid August but leave any straw mulching that is on the surface. Before tilling, I spread lime to ensure the pH is around 6.0-6.5 and then broadcast 10-10-10 fertilizer at a rate of about 2 to 3 pounds per 100 square feet. I let the tilled soil set for about one week to help rot the straw and any other bits of green vegetable matter from the previous crop. Another tilling is in order prior to

planting. Most years I still have healthy pepper plants and okra growing and producing so I leave them in the garden and ECOLOGY work around them. Gwyn I always plant Riddick cabbage and ■■■ broccoli from small bedding plants. I would recommend using plants also for growing cauliflower. Using small transplants give you a head start towards maturity in growing the heads that you will harvest. Other greens and cole crops can easily be planted from seed since they grow quickly and don’t form heads. Early Jersey Wakefield cabbage is my preferred variety since it produces heads

about two weeks quicker than large headed varieties like Round Dutch. Since our family likes almost all greens, we plant collards, kale, tendergreen and curly mustards, spinach, turnip greens (Seven Top variety which forms better greens instead of roots), arugula and leaf lettuces. For root crops, we like Purple Top turnips which grow hefty roots, beets, radishes and baby round carrots. I plant the root crops in rows and mostly broadcast the leafy greens in a small area. I often plant leaf lettuce in rows also. You can also plant onion sets or seeds to grow into young green shoots or until frost before harvesting as sliceable onions. We also like kohlrabi which is hard to find in this area and it is mostly grown

D

Dear M.O.B.: If only for the sake of your grandchildren, you should attend the wedding and make No. 3 as welcome as you can for as long as he lasts – which, with your daughter’s track record, isn’t likely to be long. She appears to be emotionally unstable. The children need a constant in their lives, so put aside your disapproval and provide them with as much emotional support as you can. You can’t “fix” your daughter – only she can do

Dear Teen Sitter: By all means talk to her. It will be a good experience in learning to stand up for yourself – a lesson you had better learn quickly, because from where I sit it appears your sister is taking advantage of you. Responsible child supervision costs a lot more than $20 a week, and you should not have to wonder when your sister leaves for work whether you’ll see her again before the next day. What she is doing is palming off her re-

Dear Abby ■■■

sponsibility as a parent onto you. You were sweet to help her in the first place, but it’s time to draw the line. To do that isn’t being selfish; it’s being smart. Dear Abby: I have two granddaughters. The older one is 11, and the younger one is 18 months. I know that when the time comes for sweet 16, graduations and, most of all, weddings, I won’t be here to celebrate with them. I would give anything to be able to leave them something that would let them know they were always in my heart and mind. Have you anything special to recommend? – Always In My Heart Dear Always: Being able to see you and hear your voice would be a wonderful gift. How about having videos made to be given to your granddaughters when they are 16, about to graduate and planning to be married? I’m sure you would have different thoughts to convey to them as they reach each of these significant milestones in their lives. If that would be too costly, then write letters to be given to them on those occasions. And if you have the means, include a keepsake gift – perhaps a piece of jewelry that belonged to you. 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.

SONNY HEDGECOCK | HPE

fall festivals and foliage COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) – Cooperstown has a lot more than baseball to offer visitors, especially in the fall, with autumn festivals and colorful foliage along Lake Otsego. The Farmers’ Museum hosts an old-fashioned Harvest Festival, Sept. 1213, with crafts, food and activities, from a dog agility contest to wagon rides through the museum’s 19th century village. Later in the season, the museum will host “Evening at the Tavern,” a four-course candlelit meal with period music and games in its Bump Tavern, featuring a menu based on 19th century tavern food, Oct. 10 and Nov. 14. Halloween-themed tours will be offered Oct. 17, 23 and 24 beginning at 5:30 p.m. The Chamber of Commerce sponsors a pumpkin fest Sept. 26-27 and

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Skip, an 81⁄2-year-old pomeranian mix, is available for adoption at the Guilford County Animal Shelter, 4525 W. Wendover Ave., Greensboro. Black and white, he has a long, smooth coat, brown eyes, erect ears and a long tail. He has been altered and has a microchip implant. He does not like to be picked up and doesn’t do well with children under 12. The adoption fee is $95. Inquire about Animal ID: A08261555. The shelter is open between noon and 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. The shelter will close Monday for the holiday. The shelter is in need of volunteers. Call (336) 297-5020.

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Is your hearing current?

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.

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481466

Dear Abby: I am 15, and I have been helping my older sister watch her two kids since her boyfriend left her five months ago. She has been paying me $20 a week to watch them six hours a day while she works. I was fine with this arrangement until recently, when she began relying on me completely for baby-sitting. Now she expects me to watch them every time she goes shopping or out with her current boyfriend. She has begun spending the night at his house and not calling to let me know I need to take care of the kids when they wake up. I know something needs to change. Am I being selfish, or should I confront her? Please help me. – Teen Sitter in Abilene

ADVICE

that – but you can be there for the grandkids, and that’s what I recommend you do.

couple of inches high, you can provide some extra nutrition by watering them with a soluble fertilizer application. Then stand back and watch them grow for harvest to your table for the cool months. Most of the leafy greens and lettuces can be harvested by selectively cutting leaves from each plant and leaving the root intact to continue to grow new leaves so you can harvest over several months.

PET OF THE WEEK

Parents can’t grin, bear daughter’s third marriage ear Abby: My daughter, “Libby,” is about to be married. It’s her third trip to the altar, and her stepfather and I are not in favor of the marriage. After her first marriage – to a wonderful man – she had an affair with a married man who became husband No. 2. Within five years, she began another affair with a married neighbor. They are both now divorced and plan to be married later this year in a big church wedding. My husband and I do not want to attend, but Libby has threatened to prevent us from seeing the grandkids if we don’t accept husband No. 3 into our family. How should we handle this? Should we go to the wedding even though we’re adamantly opposed to it? It’s obvious to us that our daughter needs professional help, which she seeks only when she begins a new affair. But we can’t seem to impress upon her the importance of taking some time off before remarrying for the wrong reasons. – Mother Of The Bride – Again

in the Midwest and northeast United States. It forms an above ground fleshy stem bulb which tastes like a mild turnip. If you start in mid August with your autumn garden you have enough time to plant quick bearing crops like green beans, yellow squash, zucchini and cucumbers. It is always good to have a row of Cilantro (Coriander) for fresh salsa and a couple of parsley and basil plants for mixing into salads and dressing up dinners on cool early winter nights. If you like annual herbs such as dill or anise, you can grow those as well. Perennial herbs such as thyme and sage will grow nicely to produce some leafy harvests for your winter meals. After the plants get rooted and the seeds sprout to a

the Fly Creek Cider Mill holds weekend tastings and other events, including a cider festival Oct. 10-11. There’s also a Saturday farmers market. The Cooperstown & Charlotte Valley Railroad offers a series of scenic train rides in the area, including weekend foliage rides, Sept. 26-Oct. 25, an Oktoberfest train Sept. 26, and Halloween-themed trains, Oct. 23-24 and 30-31. Cooperstown was founded in the 1700s by the father of author James Fenimore Cooper. You can still see Colonial woodframe buildings and Victorian gingerbread homes around the vil-

lage, including the oldest house in the village, built in 1790, at the corner of Main and River streets. The town was also home to the family of Edward Clark, who ran the company that sold Singer sewing machines when they were first invented in the mid-1800s. The Otesaga Resort Hotel, celebrating its centennial this year, was built by one of Clark’s grandsons. Another Clark descendant, Stephen C. Clark Sr., was instrumental in establishing the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Cooperstown is located about 60 miles west of Albany.


FUN & GAMES 4B www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

WORD FUN

HOROSCOPE

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BRIDGE

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TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

The members of my club have varied occupations. A quality-control officer for a large company says you can always recognize a true expert: He’s the one who predicts a project will take the longest and cost the most. A bridge expert is a natural pessimist who plans for bad breaks. In today’s deal, South had seven top tricks at 3NT. The spades might produce more in time, but South judged to try for two extra diamonds. He’d have no problem if the suit broke 3-2, but what if West held four?

SAFETY PLAY South would fail if West had Q-10-9-6, but a safety play was available if East had the bare nine or ten. So South took the ace of hearts and led a diamond: ten, ace, five. He next led the eight, and when West played low, dummy played low. If East could have won, South would have had four diamonds, three hearts and two clubs. When East discarded, South cashed the king of diamonds, led a club to his hand and conceded a diamond to set up nine tricks.

DAILY QUESTION You hold: S A K 10 H 6 5 4 D 10 C J 10 9 8 5 3. Your partner opens one diamond, you respond 1NT and he bids two clubs. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner’s unexpected second bid improves your hand mightily. A raise to three clubs won’t do it justice. A jump to four clubs is possible, but your best bid is two spades, logically showing a club fit plus spade values. You can’t have spade length since you didn’t respond one spade. South dealer N-S vulnerable

Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Rose McGowan, 36; Dweezil Zappa, 40; Michael Keaton, 58; Cathy Guisewite, 59 HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Dust yourself off and prepare for change and greater challenges. You have been tested in the past and the experience you gained will help you succeed now. Open your heart and mind to new ideas and plans. There is so much to do that will enable you to excel. Your numbers are 7, 13, 19, 24, 31, 40, 47 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t mistake what’s being offered. You will end up paying for whatever you get, regardless. Someone’s inappropriate remarks must be dismissed without retaliation. Look at the big picture. ★★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Believe and trust in yourself, not someone who doesn’t really have a clue what’s going on in your world. You can deal with any problems you face and turn things around without a whole lot of hassle. Rely on your past experience. ★★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t let trivial matters slow you down or hold you back. Put your unique ideas to the test without worrying about what others think. Bypass anyone who is negative and critical. Jealousy could be the reason for any opposition you face. ★★★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): It’s time to stop procrastinating and make a decision. Once you set your mind on what needs to be done, you will easily transport your dreams into reality. A change at work will improve your status and your personal life. ★★★★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): If you are too secretive or do things unexpectedly, you are likely to arouse suspicion. The more accommodating you are, the more help you will receive. A love relationship will be enriched by the way you handle a situation. ★★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You have to shake yourself off and rethink your recourse before you make a mistake. Someone may try to take advantage of your talent but, if you are quick to attach a price tag, you will bypass any misunderstanding. ★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t make a presentation until you are fully prepared. If you do a little extra, you will have no trouble getting what you want and more. There will be plenty to celebrate along with the chance to do something nice for someone you love. ★★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Stop pushing yourself so hard and take a break. A short trip or taking in some lively entertainment or activity will give you a new outlook. Avoid taking on too much or you will fall short of your goals. ★★★★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You cannot have it both ways. Either deal with the emotional issues that are slowing you down or learn to live with them. If you don’t take action, you will not have the right to complain. ★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Someone you love will cost you if you don’t put a cap on spending or plans that are being laid out. Added responsibilities due to someone’s incapability may bog you down but eventually you will benefit financially, emotionally and personally. ★★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You can improve your life and your money-making ability by engaging in something you enjoy doing and offering this service to others for a fee. Your unusual approach to the way you do things will allow you to stay ahead of any competition. ★★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Discuss matters instead of stewing about them. A solution can be found that will please everyone involved if you dissect the problem and address everyone’s needs. Put into play the modifications necessary to appease everyone. ★★★ 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.

Professor may face jail if weatherman harassed

BURBANK, Calif. (AP) – Authorities say a college professor on a crusade to change the way a Los Angeles weatherman uses terminology has to leave him alone or face six months in jail. Melanie Patton Renfrew, a Harbor College teacher, wants KNBC-TV’s Fritz Coleman to change refer-

ences to onshore and offshore winds. She says the terms are confusing because people don’t know which are coming and which are going. Burbank-based KNBC obtained a restraining order in March 2008 after calling her behavior bizarre and saying Coleman

feared for his safety. Prosecutors say she continued sending letters and e-mails. Last month, she pleaded no contest to violating the order. Burbank Assistant City Attorney Denny Wei says the case will be dismissed if she leaves Coleman alone through next August.

CROSSWORD

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ACROSS 1 Color 4 Neck scarf 9 Sound of an impact 13 Carve in glass 15 Pack animal of the Andes 16 Top-notch 17 Female horse 18 Group of judges 19 Experts 20 Cyclone 22 Hotels 23 Weasel with a soft, thick coat 24 Tennis court divider 26 Lure 29 Department store owner 34 Polished; sophisticated 35 Large glandular organ 36 Raw mineral 37 Gambler’s woe 38 __ with; supported 39 Just sit around 40 Inquire 41 Apple

drink 42 Uptight 43 One who leaves a will 45 “Our Father,” for one 46 2nd-largest bird 47 Well-behaved 48 Urgent request 51 Craziness 56 Rich soil 57 Understood, but not spoken 58 Marquee light 60 Projecting part of a church 61 Jagged 62 Very enthusiastic 63 Requirement 64 Discourage 65 Blood analysis facility DOWN 1 __ and haw 2 “Beehive State” 3 Beige shade 4 Of Europe’s highest

Yesterday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

range 5 Loose 6 Wedding miracle town 7 Sign of things to come 8 Artistic 9 Elk 10 Brass instrument 11 Shortly 12 Disarray 14 Recluses 21 Wealthy 25 Listener’s need 26 Brilliant display 27 Lariat’s feature 28 Elephant’s long teeth 29 Equestrian 30 Always 31 Nuts 32 Wipe away

33 __ to; cite 35 Venetian resort 38 Positioned 39 Foremost 41 Engine wheel 42 Trampled 44 __ up; joined forces 45 Songwriter Cole __ 47 Pretense 48 Blueprint 49 Easy gait 50 At __; relaxed 52 Uncovered 53 Glasgow resident 54 Small duck 55 Hindu system of exercises 59 Apprehend


COMICS, DONOHUE THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

GARFIELD

One step at a time soon adds up to 10,000 D

ear Dr. Donohue: I hear that taking 10,000 steps a day is all that a person needs to stay healthy. Is this so? How much time does that take? Do you count all the steps you take in a day, or are these 10,000 steps in addition to what you normally take? – G.D.

The goal of 10,000 steps is another thing that can take you a while to reach. Don’t try to HEALTH do all this on the first Dr. Paul day. Start Donohue out by tak■■■ ing an extra The 10,000-steps-a-day 200 steps a program originated in the day, and gradually work Surgeon General’s office your way to 10,000 over a some years back. It’s been couple of months. shown, more than once, You can’t count these that people who increase steps without driving their total daily steps to yourself crazy. You need 10,000 (counting the ones a pedometer, a gadget they normally take) have that records your steps. less body fat, lower blood Pedometers range in cost sugar and lower blood from $17 to $80. They can pressure. There is more be worn on a belt, put in to staying fit than taking a pocket or worn around 10,000 leisurely steps. the leg. They register Strength building is also steps by the movement important. of the hips or the impact Ten thousand steps of the foot against the are approximately five ground. miles (3.6 to 4.9 miles; If you want to be really 6 to 8 kilometers). How healthy, you have to add much time does this take? some resistance exercise The walking should be to your program. Resisbrisk. That’s defined as tance exercise is lifting taking 90 to 100 steps a weights. minute. For the entire time involved, you can do Dear Dr. Donohue: the math. However, these My husband and I have steps don’t all have to be started walking every taken in one session. You evening. It’s our way of can amass them through- staying in shape. I like out the day. A hundred it. My husband actually steps a minute is a quick listens to what I have to pace. You might not be up say when we walk. There to it. It’s OK to start more is one thorn in my side. slowly and gradually My husband insists that work your way to the 100- I don’t walk correctly, steps-a-minute goal, and and he is constantly givnot all the 10,000 steps ing me ways to change have to be such fast ones. my walking style. It’s

BLONDIE

B.C.

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

FOR BETTER OR WORSE

FRANK & ERNEST

LUANN

PEANUTS

BABY BLUES

BEETLE BAILEY

ONE BIG HAPPY

THE BORN LOSER

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

5B

DENNIS

SNUFFY SMITH

extremely irritating. I have been walking the way I walk since I was an infant. Is there really a special way to do so? – R.C.

Most people develop a walk natural for them, and there’s nothing wrong with that. Some general pointers about the proper walking style are worth incorporating into your walking pattern. Keep your head erect with eyes focused about 20 feet in front of you. Your arms should be bent at the elbow. When the right foot hits the ground, the left arm should be in front of your body, and vice versa when your left foot hits the ground. The heel of the foot should strike the ground first, and the liftoff should come from the toes. Older people tend to shorten their walking stride in an attempt to keep both feet always on the ground. This gives them more balance and stability. They should try to take a little longer stride and use their arms for balance and stability as I described above.

DR. DONOHUE regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but he will incorporate them in his column whenever possible. Readers may write him or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475


TELEVISION 6B www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE


C

PLAY BALL! Jim Grobe’s Deacons battle Baylor today. 3C

Saturday September 5, 2009

TROUBLED TIMES: Panthers hope to leave rough preseason in the past. 4C Sports Editor: Mark McKinney mmckinney@hpe.com (336) 888-3556

HOW’S THE WEATHER? Check out the conditions. 8C

Red Raiders whip Whirlies BY DANIEL KENNEDY SPECIAL TO THE ENTERPRISE

GREENSBORO – Both coaches and players from T. Wingate Andrews acknowledged the dire circumstances. Friday night, the Red Raiders went out and did something about it. Having lost both of its first two games of the season, Andrews got a much-needed win at Grimsley, topping the Whirlies 14-6. “We were 0-2 and we had to pick our team up,” said Quan Stevenson, who scored both Raider touchdowns. “We’re a strong team and we’ve never been down 0-2 before. Coach just told me I had to make plays and I saw the light.” Stevenson spotted daylight on the opening kickoff of the second half and reeled off an 86-yard return to put Andrews ahead 14-0. His second-quarter 1-yard touchdown run marked the only other score for the Raiders, but the two plays proved to be enough thanks to a strong defensive showing.

LEXINGTON – For three quarters, High Point Central couldn’t get Lexington’s defense to bend. But in the fourth quarter, the Bison broke the Jackets. Al-DaQuan Teasley’s 54-yard touchdown run broke open a 10-7 game with just more than 10 minutes left to play, and Central tacked on two more scores for good measure in a 31-7 nonconference win at Philpott Stadium on Friday night. Until Teasley’s touchdown, Austin Miller’s 35-yard field goal was the difference in what had been a defensive struggle. “That run was tremendous,” Central coach Wayne Jones said. “They pack it in real tight inside, they know we like to run an inside zone. That made it dif-

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PREP FOOTBALL A.L. BROWN 34 THOMASVILLE 28

Grimsley’s LaShawn Brown gashed Andrews’ bend-but-don’t-break defense for 125 yards on 24 carries, but the Whirlies were unable to make plays in the red zone to cash in. “They ran the ball pretty decent,” Raiders coach Rodney McKoy said. “Once we got down inside the 20-yard line, we did a good job of pinning our ears back and stuffing them on defense.” The Red Raider defense, led by a tenacious pass rush, exploited holes in Grimsley’s offensive line and put enormous pressure on the Whirlies behind the line of scrimmage. By virtue of its aggressiveness, Andrews was able to withstand an effective Grimsley running game and force three turnovers in the first half and keep its opponent off the scoreboard until the fourth quarter.

0 0

7 0

7 0

0 6

TWA – Stevenson 1 run (Stevenson kick good), 4:30, 2nd TWA – Stevenson 86 KO return (Stevenson kick good), 11:48, 3rd G – McPherson 1 run (Joseph Rossabi kick missed), 1:22, 4th

Scoring summary HP Central Lexington

7 0

3 7

0 0

21 0

— 31 — 7

HPC – Grant 21 pass from Adams (Miller kick) 6:41, 1st HPC – Miller 35 FG 9:16, 2nd Lex – Crump 3 run (Jackson kick) 2:38, 2nd HPC – Teasley 54 run (Miller kick) 10:31, 4th HPC – Monk 1 run (Miller kick) 6:10, 4th HPC – McCauley 25 run (Miller kick) 4:01, 4th

DON DAVIS JR. | HPE

Southwest Guilford and Ledford battled under the full moon on Friday night.

Cowboys top Ledford, start 3-0 BY STEVE HANF ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

HIGH POINT – In a game marred by unending miscues by both offenses, it figured that touchdowns by a defensive player and offensive lineman would turn the tide Friday night. Southwest Guilford’s Greg Bridges picked off a pass and returned it 40 yards to the end zone to help the Cowboys take a 7-0 halftime lead against Ledford, and Anson Robinson pounced on a fumble in the end zone for the clinching score of a 28-13 Cowboys’ victory. The win, which came courtesy of 260 yards rushing, gave Southwest a 3-0 start for the first time since 1997. “We’ve preached defense and running the football since late December,” Cowboys coach Scott Schwarzer said. “We got away from it in the first half, probably threw a couple of passes we shouldn’t have thrown, but we’re going to run the football. The offensive line, what a job by those guys, and defensively, we’re playing great – it’s just a testament to this whole team.” The biggest play of the first half came as the teams combined for nine fumbles – just two lost – and four interceptions in the opening two quarters. Bridges stepped in front of a Steven Fuquay pass to the right sideline, made a clean pick and raced through traffic all the way to the end zone. Tanner Butler’s PAT made it 7-0. The Cowboys embarked on an impres-

sive 13-play, 81-yard drive to open the third quarter, putting Ledford in a 14-0 hole after Airyn Willis scored from 3 yards out. Despite three interceptions, the early fumble and plenty of penalties, Ledford rallied thanks to a roughing-the-kicker penalty on a punt. De Greene raced 23 yards for a first down and Jonathan Reid then took his second carry of the night 19 yards for a touchdown, with Fuquay’s PAT making it 14-7 with 3:52 still left in the third quarter. The Panthers tried to pull even. Following a Southwest punt, Ledford moved the ball to the Cowboys’ 40 before Fuquay was forced to throw off his back foot and got picked by Ray Bridges. Southwest responded with a 10-play drive that ended with J.J. Garrison fumbling into the end zone and Robinson falling on it. Following Butler’s third PAT, it was 21-7 with 6:45 to go. Ledford would score again on a 17-play, 68-yard drive, with Fuquay hitting Reid from 4 yards out, but the PAT was blocked and Southwest recovered the onsides kick to hold on with 2:19 to play. Southwest capped scoring with Willis’ 51-yard run – giving him 184 yards on 28 carries overall – against a tired defense moments later. shanf@hpe.com | 888-3526 Ledford SW Guilford

0 0

0 7

7 7

6 14

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13 28

SWG – G. Bridges 40 interception return (Butler kick), 6:09, 2nd SWG – Willis 3 run (Butler kick), 7:24, 3rd L – Reid 19 run (Fuquay kick), 3:52, 3rd SWG – Robinson fumble recovery in end zone, (Butler kick), 6:45, 4th L – Reid 4 pass from Fuquay (kick blocked), 2:19, 4th SWG – Willis 51 run (Butler kick), 1:56, 4th

HIT AND RUN

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R

umor has it that sportswriters used to be a dashing group, dressed to the nines in suits and their fedoras. Like the rest of society, we’ve toned it down a bit. Many of us still wear ties – although I like to hold out as often as possible – and really, how silly would we look walking into a high school or college gym nowadays in a three-piece suit? Sad to say, some two dozen sportswriters from across the state were sent to the backs of their closets on Wednesday. The suits came out and the stoic-as-possible expressions went on as a huge crowd of mourners from all walks of life paid tribute to Tom Berry at his memorial service. Some of the photos shown on the big screen made us chuckle, such as the “proud new dad” T-shirt being worn for the birth of his oldest daughter. Others of the longtime Enterprise sports columnist were met with knowing nods: a younger Tom seated,

7 6

RAGSDALE WEST STOKES

34 7

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ficult for us to run, and they’ve got two big 300pounders inside.” Fortunately for the Bison (2-1), their defense was just as stingy. Central took a 10-0 lead early in the second quarter on the strength of Drew Adams’ 21-yard strike to Derek Grant and Miller’s field goal. A long Lexington drive made it 10-7 just before the half. Lexington threatened to tie things up at the end of the third, but Matt Jackson’s 30yard field-goal attempt sailed wide to the left. Safety Evan Aguilar came up with two big interceptions for the Bison defense.

WEST STOKES TRINITY

TOPS ON TV

Scoring summary TW Andrews Grimsley

Bison stomp Jackets, 31-7 BY JASON QUEEN SPECIAL TO THE ENTERPRISE

TOP SCORES

cradling another baby girl – and as the photo panned out to full screen, there sat his laptop computer, another story in the works. Not included in the slideshow were the thousands of snapshots of Tom that each person in attendance carried inside his or her head. Many of those played out during the service, which included a number of moving tributes from writers, family members and folks from the Berrys’ church, Lawndale Baptist. There were several laughs – Tom’s strong faith allowed for his funeral to be a “celebration of life” – and a lot more tears and sniffles and clearing throats. And then it was over. The writers from places such as Burlington and WinstonSalem and Salisbury and Greensboro and Wilson and USAToday were left to talk of deadlines and stories to cover. Representatives from High Point University and the ACC returned to their offices. After celebrating Tom’s life and mourning

his death on Wednesday, life went on for everyone else. It’s a sad feeling and a positive one all at once, a conflict between wanting to stay lost in the memories of the past yet knowing that time helps – however slowly – heal the wounds. Many of you have written kind words in the past week regarding memories of Tom and asking of ways to help. In support of his wife Sandy and daughters Ashlyn, Rachel and Leah, The High Point Enterprise has established a fund – the Tom Berry Special Fund – at High Point Bank to assist the Berry family with medical bills and college funds. Contributions may be made to the Tom Berry Special Fund and mailed to High Point Bank, P.O. Box 2270, High Point, N.C. 27261. Contributions also can be brought to any High Point Bank branch.

YOUR COMMUNITY. YOUR NEWSPAPER.

– STEVE HANF ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

8 a.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, PGA Europe, European Masters 11 a.m., WFMY, Ch. 2 – Tennis, U.S. Open 11 a.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup practice Noon, ESPN – College football, Navy at Ohio State Noon, ESPN2 – College football, Minnesota at Syracuse 1 p.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup practice 2:30 p.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Nationwide Series qualifying from Atlanta Speedway 3 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, PGA, Deutsche Bank Championship 3:30 p.m., WXLV, Ch. 45 – College football 3:30 p.m., ESPN – College football, Missouri vs. Illinois, at St. Louis 3:30 p.m., ESPN2 – College football 3:30 p.m., FSN – College football, San Jose State at Southern Cal 3:30 p.m., WXII, Ch. 12 – College football, Nevada at Notre Dame 4 p.m., WGHP, Ch. 8 – Baseball 4:30 p.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Cup Series qualifying from Atlanta Speedway 6:30 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, Champions Tour, First Tee Open 7 p.m., ESPN – College football, BYU vs. Oklahoma, at Arlington, Texas 7 p.m., SportSouth – Baseball, Reds at Braves 7 p.m., ESPN2 – Motorsports, NASCAR Nationwide Series 300 from Atlanta Speedway 8 p.m., WXLV, Ch. 45 – College football, Alabama vs. Virginia Tech 8 p.m., ESPN Classic – Soccer, World Cup qualifier, El Salvador vs. U.S. 10 p.m., ESPN2 – College football, Maryland at Cal 10 p.m., Speed – Motorsports, NASCAR Trucks 200 from Newton, Iowa 10:30 p.m., ESPN – College football, LSU at Washington 11:30 p.m., The Golf Channel – Golf, LPGA, Canadian Women’s Open INDEX SCOREBOARD 2C COLLEGE FOOTBALL 3C BASEBALL 4C TENNIS 4C GOLF 4C MOTORSPORTS 4C HPU ROUNDUP 5C PREPS 5C BUSINESS 6C STOCKS 7C WEATHER 8C


SCOREBOARD 2C www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Goals: Wesleyan – J.J. Rogers, Kirby Robbins, Chris Peters, Reed Kirsch, Grant Martin Assists: Wesleyan – Robbins, Hudson Owens, Rogers, Robbins Records: Wesleyan, 3-0 Next game: Wesleyan at Providence Day, Tuesday

BASEBALL

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Major Leagues All Times EDT AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division

New York Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore

W 86 78 72 60 54

L 49 55 61 74 81

Pct .637 .586 .541 .448 .400

GB — 7 13 25 1/2 32

Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Kansas City

W 72 67 66 59 51

L 61 67 69 75 82

Pct .541 .500 .489 .440 .383

GB — 5 1/2 7 13 1/2 21

Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland

W 78 76 71 59

L 54 58 64 75

Pct .591 .567 .526 .440

GB — 3 8 1/2 20

Philadelphia Florida Atlanta New York Washington

W 77 70 70 61 46

L 54 64 65 74 88

Pct .588 .522 .519 .452 .343

St. Louis Chicago Milwaukee Houston Cincinnati Pittsburgh

W 79 67 65 63 61 53

L 56 66 68 70 73 79

Pct .585 .504 .489 .474 .455 .402

GB — 11 13 15 17 1/2 24 1/2

Los Angeles Colorado San Francisco Arizona San Diego

W 80 74 73 61 59

L 55 60 61 74 76

Pct .593 .552 .545 .452 .437

GB — 5 1/2 6 1/2 19 21

WCGB — — 6 18 1/2 25

L10 8-2 8-2 5-5 3-7 3-7

Str L-1 W-1 L-1 W-1 L-4

Home 45-20 45-21 43-23 35-33 32-37

Away 41-29 33-34 29-38 25-41 22-44

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

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

Home 45-22 39-30 36-30 29-35 26-41

Away 27-39 28-37 30-39 30-40 25-41

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

Str L-2 W-4 W-3 L-1

Home 39-26 44-25 39-30 32-35

Away 39-28 32-33 32-34 27-40

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

Str W-1 W-2 L-3 W-2 L-6

Home 36-31 39-33 35-31 35-32 27-39

Away 41-23 31-31 35-34 26-42 19-49

L10 8-2 5-5 5-5 2-8 8-2 2-8

Str L-1 L-2 W-1 L-2 W-5 L-7

Home 43-26 40-27 33-32 35-30 31-37 35-29

Away 36-30 27-39 32-36 28-40 30-36 18-50

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

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

Home 42-27 38-27 44-21 31-35 36-34

Away 38-28 36-33 29-40 30-39 23-42

Middle school Volleyball Forsyth Home Educators def. Wesleyan

Scores: 25-13, 25-20 Leading players: Wesleyan – Anna Neaves, Madison Martell, Kelly Corn Records: WCA – 2-2 Next game: WCA plays host to Downtown Middle School on Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Central Division WCGB — 11 1/2 13 19 1/2 27

West Division WCGB — 2 1/2 8 19 1/2

TENNIS

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U.S. Open

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division GB — 8 1/2 9 18 32 1/2

WCGB — 4 4 1/2 13 1/2 28

Friday At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $21.6 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round

Central Division WCGB — 6 1/2 8 1/2 10 1/2 13 20

West Division WCGB — — 1 13 1/2 15 1/2

AMERICAN LEAGUE Thursday’s Games

NATIONAL LEAGUE Thursday’s Games

Detroit 4, Cleveland 3, 10 innings Chicago White Sox 5, Chicago Cubs 0 N.Y. Yankees 10, Toronto 5 Boston 6, Tampa Bay 3 Seattle 7, Oakland 4

Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 3 Chicago White Sox 5, Chicago Cubs 0 N.Y. Mets 8, Colorado 3 Philadelphia 2, San Francisco 1 Florida 8, Atlanta 3 L.A. Dodgers 4, Arizona 2

Friday’s Games

Friday’s Games

Cleveland 5, Minnesota 2 Texas 5, Baltimore 1 Toronto 6, N.Y. Yankees 0 Detroit at Tampa Bay, 7:38 p.m. L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m. Boston at Chicago White Sox, 8:11 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

Florida at Washington, 7:05 p.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets 6, Chicago Cubs 2 Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 1 Philadelphia at Houston, 8:05 p.m. San Francisco at Milwaukee, 8:05 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 9:10 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.

Today’s Games N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 12-6) at Toronto (Cecil 6-3), 1:07 p.m. Boston (Wakefield 11-3) at Chicago White Sox (G.Floyd 10-9), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (S.Baker 12-7) at Cleveland (Masterson 4-6), 4:10 p.m. Texas (Millwood 10-8) at Baltimore (Matusz 3-2), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Galarraga 6-10) at Tampa Bay (J.Shields 9-10), 7:08 p.m. L.A. Angels (Lackey 9-7) at Kansas City (Greinke 13-8), 7:10 p.m. Seattle (French 4-4) at Oakland (Bre.Anderson 7-10), 9:05 p.m.

Sunday’s Games Minnesota at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Texas at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m. Detroit at Tampa Bay, 1:38 p.m. Boston at Chicago White Sox, 2:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.

Sunday’s Games

Monday’s Games Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m., 1st game Minnesota at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Boston at Chicago White Sox, 2:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m. Texas at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m., 2nd game

Indians 5, Twins 2 Minnesota ab Span lf 4 OCarer ss 4 Mauer c 4 Mornea 1b 3 Kubel dh 3 Cuddyr rf 4 BHarrs 3b 3 Gomez cf 3 ACasill 2b 3 Totals

Cleveland r 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

h 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 0

bi 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0

Brantly cf JCarrll lf Crowe lf ACarer ss JhPerlt 3b Hafner dh LaPort rf Valuen 2b AMarte 1b Shppch c 31 2 6 2 Totals

Minnesota Cleveland

000 003

011 001

ab 5 5 0 4 4 2 3 4 4 4 35

000 10x

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

Today’s Games Chicago Cubs (Harden 8-8) at N.Y. Mets (Figueroa 2-3), 1:10 p.m. San Francisco (Cain 12-4) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 12-10), 4:10 p.m. Florida (Jo.Johnson 13-4) at Washington (Li. Hernandez 7-9), 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Blanton 9-6) at Houston (Oswalt 8-5), 7:05 p.m. St. Louis (M.Boggs 2-2) at Pittsburgh (Ohlendorf 11-9), 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati (K.Wells 0-3) at Atlanta (Jurrjens 10-9), 7:10 p.m. Arizona (D.Davis 7-11) at Colorado (Contreras 0-0), 8:10 p.m. San Diego (Latos 4-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Wolf 9-6), 10:10 p.m.

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

— —

2 5

E—O.Cabrera (20), Morneau (3), B.Harris 2 (10). DP—Cleveland 1. LOB—Minnesota 4, Cleveland 9. 2B—Kubel (26), J.Carroll (8), Jh.Peralta (30). SB—J.Carroll (2). SF—Morneau. IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota Pavano L,11-11 6 8 4 3 2 6 1 Mahay ⁄3 1 1 0 0 0 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 Crain Keppel 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland Sowers W,6-9 6 6 2 2 0 1 Veras H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Sipp H,8 1 0 0 0 0 2 K.Wood S,18-23 1 0 0 0 0 0

Chicago Cubs at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m. Florida at Washington, 1:35 p.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 2:05 p.m. San Francisco at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m.

Toronto

New York Toronto

bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Scutaro ss A.Hill 2b Lind dh Millar 1b V.Wells cf Barajs c Snider rf Inglett lf JMcDnl 3b

ab 3 5 4 5 4 4 3 3 3

Totals

34 6 10 5

000 201

000 010

000 20x

r 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1

— —

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

0 6

E—R.Pena (4). DP—New York 1. LOB—New York 4, Toronto 13. 2B—R.Pena (6), A.Hill 2 (28), Lind (45), Inglett (3). IP H R ER BB SO New York Chamberlan L,8-5 3 6 3 2 2 2 Melancon 2 2 1 1 1 0 Albaladejo 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 Dunn ⁄3 0 2 2 3 0 1 0 0 1 2 E.Ramirez 11⁄3 Toronto Halladay W,14-8 9 1 0 0 3 9 HBP—by Chamberlain (V.Wells), by Melancon (Jo.McDonald). Umpires—Home, Jeff Nelson; First, Tim Tschida; Second, Bob Davidson; Third, Scott Barry. T—2:37. A—22,179 (49,539).

Reds 3, Braves 1 Cincinnati ab Stubbs cf 5 Janish ss 4 Votto 1b 2 BPhllps 2b 3 Rolen 3b 4 Gomes lf 4 Rhodes p 0 Corder p 0 Balentn rf 4 CMiller c 3 Arroyo p 3 DMcDn lf 1

Mets 6, Cubs 2 Chicago

New York

Totals

ab M.Diaz rf-lf 3 Prado 2b 4 C.Jones 3b 3 McCnn c 4 AdLRc 1b 4 YEscor ss 1 McLoth cf 1 Church cf-rf 4 Infante lf-ss 4 D.Lowe p 2 KJhnsn ph 1 Moylan p 0 Kawkm p 0 33 3 8 3 Totals 31

Cincinnati Atlanta

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

bi 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

010 000

002 001

000 000

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 — —

h bi 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 3 1

E—Votto (9), C.Jones (18). DP—Cincinnati 2, Atlanta 2. LOB—Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 7. 2B—B.Phillips (25), Balentien (5). 3B—Balentien (1). HR—Gomes (17), McLouth (16). SB—B.Phillips (23). S—C.Miller. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Arroyo W,12-12 7 6 1 1 3 4 Rhodes H,22 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cordero S,31-33 1 0 0 0 1 0 Atlanta D.Lowe L,13-9 7 7 3 3 2 5 Moylan 1 1 0 0 1 1 Kawakami 1 0 0 0 0 1 PB—C.Miller. Umpires—Home, Brian Gorman; First, Chris Guccione; Second, Jerry Layne; Third, Tony Randazzo. T—2:25. A—24,219 (49,743).

Baltimore

ab Borbon dh 5 Andrus ss 3 Kinsler 2b 3 M.Byrd cf 4 DvMrp lf 4 N.Cruz rf 3 IRdrgz c 4 C.Davis 1b 4 Vizquel 3b 3 Totals Texas Baltimore

r 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 0

h 0 2 0 2 0 1 1 1 1

bi 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 0

ab Pie cf 3 Reimld lf 4 BRorts 2b 3 Markks rf 4 Scott dh 4 Wieters c 4 Mora 3b 3 Aubrey 1b 3 CIzturs ss 1 Wggntn ph 1 Andino ss 0 33 5 8 5 Totals 30 100 000

301 001

000 000

h 0 1 2 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9

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

Totals

000 010

000 000

Pagan cf LCastill 2b DWrght 3b DnMrp 1b Tatis ph-1b Francr rf Sullivn lf Santos c AHrndz ss Parnell p Reed ph Stokes p FrRdrg p

ab 5 4 4 3 1 3 2 4 4 2 1 0 0

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

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

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 — —

h bi 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 5 1

E—C.Davis (3). DP—Texas 1, Baltimore 1.

Miami at Florida State, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

Thursday’s game Clemson at Georgia Tech, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

NFL preseason

Saturday’s games (Sept. 12)

All Times EDT AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Miami New England N.Y. Jets Buffalo

W 4 3 2 1

Tennessee Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville

W 3 2 1 1

L 0 1 2 4

T Pct PF PA 01.000 59 39 0 .750 98 83 0 .500 108 99 0 .200 72 106

South L 2 2 3 3

T Pct PF PA 0 .600 102 104 0 .500 67 85 0 .250 49 84 0 .250 89 85

North Baltimore Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland

W 4 3 2 2

San Diego Denver Oakland Kansas City

W 1 1 1 0

L 0 1 2 2

T Pct 01.000 0 .750 0 .500 0 .500

PF PA 84 39 71 37 73 54 73 70

L 2 3 3 4

T Pct PF PA 0 .333 55 53 0 .250 65 71 0 .250 79 107 0 .000 42 64

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East Dallas N.Y. Giants Philadelphia Washington

W 1 1 1 1

New Orleans Atlanta Tampa Bay Carolina

W 3 2 1 0

Minnesota Chicago Detroit Green Bay

W 3 3 3 3

Seattle San Francisco St. Louis Arizona

W 4 3 3 0

L 2 3 3 3

T Pct PF PA 0 .333 53 61 0 .250 79 99 0 .250 100 120 0 .250 58 87

South L 1 2 3 4

T Pct PF PA 0 .750 107 38 0 .500 76 84 0 .250 70 87 0 .000 57 89

North 33 6 9 6 011 05x

— —

2 6

E—Ar.Ramirez (7), Fuld (1), Tatis (3). LOB— Chicago 12, New York 8. 2B—Bradley (17), Je.Baker (10). HR—Sullivan (1). S—Stokes. IP H RER BB SO Chicago Zambrano 6 3 1 1 3 7 A.Guzman 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gregg L,5-60 2 2 2 0 0 Grabow 0 4 3 3 1 0 Berg 1 0 0 0 0 1 New York Parnell 7 5 0 0 3 7 Stokes W,2-4 BS,2-21 1-3 4 2 2 1 1 Fr.Rodriguez S,29-342-3 0 0 0 0 1 Gregg pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Grabow pitched to 5 batters in the 8th. WP—Zambrano, Grabow. Umpires—Home, Adrian Johnson; First, Gary Cederstrom; Second, Fieldin Culbreth; Third, Jim Wolf. T—2:42. A—37,953 (41,800).

South Atlantic League All Times EDT Northern Division W L y-Kannapolis (White Sox)43 22 West Virginia (Pirates) 37 26 Lake County (Indians) 38 28 x-Lakewood (Phillies) 33 31 Delmarva (Orioles) 29 34 Greensboro (Marlins) 28 38 Hickory (Rangers) 28 38 Hagerstown (Nationals)23 40

Pct. .662 .587 .576 .516 .460 .424 .424 .365

GB — 5 511⁄2 9 ⁄2 131 151⁄2 15 ⁄2 19

W Asheville (Rockies) 41 Augusta (Giants) 39 Charleston (Yankees) 32 x-Greenville (Red Sox) 31 Bowling Green (Rays) 30 Savannah (Mets) 29 Rome (Braves) 30 Lexington (Astros) 28

L 24 28 33 35 34 34 36 38

Pct. .631 .582 .492 .470 .469 .460 .455 .424

GB — 3 9 1 101⁄2 10 ⁄2 111 11 1⁄2 13 ⁄2

x-clinched first half y-clinched division (refers to second half)

Friday’s Games Rome 5, Augusta 4 Asheville at Greenville, 7 p.m. West Virginia 2, Greensboro 1 Lake County at Hagerstown, 7:05 p.m. Hickory at Kannapolis, 7:05 p.m. Savannah at Charleston, 7:05 p.m. Lakewood at Delmarva, 7:05 p.m. Lexington at Bowling Green, 8:05 p.m.

Sunday’s Games

L 33 34 35 41

T Pct 01.000 01.000 0 .750 0 .000

PF PA 92 58 58 49 77 70 53 100

Pct. .657 .597 .478 .403

GB — 4 12 17

Pct. .507 .493 .478 .388

GB — 1 2 8

Friday’s Games Winston-Salem 10, Myrtle Beach 7, 10 innings Potomac 8, Kinston 1 Wilmington 5, Frederick 2 Salem 3, Lynchburg 2

Duke at Army, 12 p.m. (ESPN Classic) North Carolina at Connecticut, 12 p.m. (ESPNU) Stanford at Wake Forest, 12 p.m. (RAYCOM) Marshall at Virginia Tech, 1:30 p.m. Kent State at Boston College, 2 p.m. TCU at Virginia, 3:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Jacksonville State at Florida State, 6 p.m. James Madison at Maryland, 6 p.m. Murray State at N.C. State, 6 p.m.

Thursday’s Games

Saturday’s games (Sept. 19) Duke at Kansas, 12 p.m. (Versus) East Carolina at North Carolina, 12 p.m. (ESPN/2) Middle Tennessee at Maryland, 3:30 p.m. Nebraska at Virginia Tech, 3:30 p.m. (ABC/ ESPN2) Virginia at Southern Miss, 3:30 p.m. (CBSCS) Gardner-Webb at N.C. State, 6 p.m. Elon at Wake Forest, 6:30 p.m. Florida State at BYU, 7 p.m. (Versus)

Thursday’s late game S. Carolina 7, N.C. State 3

South Carolina N.C. State

7 0

0 0

0 3

0 0

— —

7 3

First Quarter SC—Maddox 1 run (Lanning kick), 9:10.

Third Quarter NCSt—FG Czajkowski 43, :56. A—57,583. First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int Return Yards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession

SC 16 42-108 148 13-22-1 19 6-41.7 2-0 3-45 32:25

NCSt 11 31-59 74 13-25-0 42 7-33.7 2-1 4-23 27:35

Houston 27, Tampa Bay 20 Dallas at Minnesota, 8 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego, 10 p.m. End of Preseason

Thursday’s late game Steelers 21, Panthers 10

Pittsburgh Carolina

14 0

0 0

7 7

0 3

— —

21 10

First Quarter Pit—Logan 80 punt return (Reed kick), 13:20. Pit—Redman 10 run (Reed kick), 3:20.

Third Quarter Car—Lee 1 run (Kasay kick), 7:55. Pit—Mundy 31 interception return (Czech kick), 3:01.

Fourth Quarter Car—FG Kasay 37, 11:08. A—70,073. First downs Total Net Yards Rushes-yards Passing Punt Returns Kickoff Returns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession

Pit 12 211 30-137 74 2-89 2-47 1-31 8-10-0 4-13 5-43.8 1-1 4-35 24:25

Car 20 320 28-123 197 4-12 4-90 0-0 26-40-1 6-46 3-49.7 4-2 4-35 35:35

W Boston Coll. 0 Clemson 0 Florida St. 0 Maryland 0 NC State 0 Wake 0

Conf. Overall L PF PA W L PF PA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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

W 0 0 0 0 0 0

Conf. Overall L PF PA W L PF PA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Thursday’s result South Carolina 7, N.C. State 3

Today’s games

Deutsche Bank Championship Friday At TPC Boston Norton, Mass. Purse: $7.5 million Yardage: 7,202; Par: 71 (36-35) First Round Steve Stricker Jim Furyk Scott Verplank Angel Cabrera Justin Leonard Matt Kuchar Retief Goosen Jerry Kelly Troy Matteson Sean O’Hair Geoff Ogilvy Jason Dufner Stephen Ames Greg Chalmers Scott Piercy David Toms Padraig Harrington Bryce Molder Woody Austin Daniel Chopra Brian Davis Jonathan Byrd Vijay Singh Richard S. Johnson Bubba Watson Jason Day Mike Weir Kevin Sutherland Michael Letzig Boo Weekley Charles Howell III Zach Johnson Dustin Johnson Nathan Green Bill Haas John Senden Charley Hoffman Lucas Glover Kevin Na Heath Slocum Jeff Overton D.A. Points Greg Owen Davis Love III Luke Donald Kenny Perry Justin Rose John Merrick Sergio Garcia Mark Wilson Fredrik Jacobson Brian Gay Steve Marino Tim Clark Tiger Woods Brett Quigley Camilo Villegas Marc Leishman Kevin Streelman Scott McCarron Bob Estes Pat Perez Brandt Snedeker John Rollins D.J. Trahan Lee Janzen Anthony Kim Nick Watney Charlie Wi Webb Simpson Paul Goydos Phil Mickelson Y.E. Yang

32-31 31-32 31-34 34-31 33-32 34-31 33-32 32-34 32-34 33-33 34-32 35-31 36-31 33-34 33-34 34-33 35-32 34-33 34-33 36-31 33-34 33-34 33-34 34-34 33-35 33-35 33-35 34-34 34-34 33-35 34-34 34-34 36-32 34-34 34-35 36-33 36-33 34-35 34-35 35-34 34-35 34-35 33-36 35-34 36-33 35-34 35-34 38-32 36-34 36-34 35-35 37-33 34-36 35-35 36-34 37-33 36-34 36-34 35-35 36-34 35-35 35-35 34-36 35-35 36-35 37-34 35-36 38-33 36-35 35-36 35-36 37-34 37-34

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

63 63 65 65 65 65 65 66 66 66 66 66 67 67 67 67 67 67 67 67 67 67 67 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71

71 71 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 73 73 73 73 73 73 74 74 74 74 74 75 75 75 75 75 76

Thomas Aiken, South Africa 68-64 — 132 Bradley Dredge, Wales 68-65 — 133 Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain 65-68 — 133 Simon Dyson, England 63-71 — 134 Paul McGinley, Ireland 66-68 — 134 Angelo Que, Philippines 69-65 — 134 Ross McGowan, England 67-67 — 134 Chapchai Nirat, Thailand 68-67 — 135 Brett Rumford, Australia 62-73 — 135 Alexander Noren, Sweden 65-70 — 135 Graeme Storm, England 69-66 — 135 Andres Romero, Argentina 65-70 — 135 Johan Edfors, Sweden 66-69 — 135 Charl Schwartzel, South Africa67-68— 135 Christian Nilsson, Sweden 65-70 — 135 Felipe Aguilar, Chile 70-66 — 136 Benn Barham, England 70-66 — 136 Pablo Martin, Spain 70-66 — 136 Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand 65-71 — 136 Danny Willett, England 65-71 — 136 Julien Clement, Switzerland 69-67 — 136 Jeev Milka Singh, India 68-69 — 137 David Howell, England 68-69 — 137 Marcel Siem, Germany 67-70 — 137 Shiv Kapur, India 68-69 — 137 Michael Lorenzo-Vera, France69-68— 137 Alessandro Tadini, Italy 69-68 — 137 Edoardo Molinari, Italy 70-67 — 137 Darren Clarke, Northern Ireland69-68 — 137 Danny Lee, New Zealand 71-67 — 138 Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland67-71— 138 Lee Westwood, England 71-67 — 138 Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland68-70 — 138 Michael Campbell, New Zealand 69-71 — 140

Failed to qualify Trevor Immelman, South Africa74-67— 141 Jean-Francois Lucquin, France69-73— 142 Thomas Bjorn, Denmark 72-70 — 142

Nationwide Tour Mexico Open Friday At El Bosque Golf Club Leon, Mexico Purse: $650,000 Yardage: 7,808; Par 72 Partial Second Round

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PGA Tour

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

Leading Scores Friday At Crans-sur-Sierre GC Crans-sur-Sierre, Switzerland Purse: $2.8 million Yardage: 6,822; Par: 71 Second Round

GOLF

Friday’s Games

37-34 38-33 36-36 37-35 36-36 36-36 35-37 37-35 37-35 38-35 34-39 38-35 37-36 39-34 37-36 36-38 39-35 37-37 38-36 39-35 35-40 39-36 38-37 36-39 35-40 39-37

European Masters

Georgia Tech at Miami, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

RUSHING—South Carolina, Maddox 23-66, DiMarco 5-19, Garcia 8-16, Giles 5-13, Flint 1(minus 6). N.C. State, Eugene 9-36, Baker 824, Washington 3-16, R.Wilson 11-(minus 17). PASSING—South Carolina, Garcia 13-22-1148. N.C. State, R.Wilson 12-23-0-74, Glennon 1-2-0-0. RECEIVING—South Carolina, Saunders 450, Gurley 4-34, M.Brown 3-54, DiMarco 1-5, A.Jeffery 1-5. N.C. State, Bryan 4-22, Howard 2-13, Ja.Williams 2-10, Baker 2-8, Spencer 115, Davis 1-6, T.Gentry 1-0.

Detroit 17, Buffalo 6 N.Y. Jets 38, Philadelphia 27 Baltimore 20, Atlanta 3 Cincinnati 38, Indianapolis 7 New England 38, N.Y. Giants 27 Jacksonville 24, Washington 17 Chicago 26, Cleveland 23 Tennessee 27, Green Bay 13 St. Louis 17, Kansas City 9 Miami 10, New Orleans 7 Pittsburgh 21, Carolina 10 Denver 19, Arizona 0 Seattle 31, Oakland 21

Stewart Cink Mathew Goggin Rod Pampling Ryan Moore J.J. Henry Ian Poulter Chad Campbell J.B. Holmes Cameron Beckman Briny Baird Hunter Mahan Ben Crane Kevin Stadler Jason Bohn Nick O’Hern John Mallinger Ryuji Imada Fred Couples Bo Van Pelt Rory Sabbatini James Nitties Ted Purdy Ernie Els Tim Petrovic Jeff Klauk Robert Allenby

Thursday’s game (Sept. 17)

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

ATLANTIC DIVISION

x-clinched first half

Today’s Games

L 0 0 1 4

All Times EDT

Southern Division W x-Winston-Salem 3 4 Salem (Red Sox) 33 Kinston (Indians) 32 Myrtle Beach (Braves) 26

West

ACC standings

Carolina League L 23 27 35 40

T Pct PF PA 01.000 47 26 0 .750 90 70 0 .750 72 76 0 .750 105 85

RUSHING—Pittsburgh, Redman 12-79, Vincent 11-28, Logan 2-27, Summers 1-4, Mendenhall 2-1, Reilly 2-(minus 2). Carolina, Goodson 15-79, Lee 11-37, D.Williams 2-7. PASSING—Pittsburgh, Reilly 5-7-0-65, Batch 2-2-0-15, Roethlisberger 1-1-0-7. Carolina, M.Moore 8-13-1-89, McCown 11-15-0-82, Cantwell 5-8-0-53, Delhomme 2-4-0-19. RECEIVING—Pittsburgh, McDonald 3-43, Grisham 2-23, Vincent 2-14, Moore 1-7. Carolina, K.Moore 6-59, Jarrett 4-44, McMahan 4-37, Monk 2-33, Chery 2-18, Davie 2-15, Goodson 2-13, Rosario 2-5, Muhammad 1-10, D.Williams 1-9. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Savannah at Charleston, 5:05 p.m. Hickory at Kannapolis, 5:05 p.m. Lexington at Bowling Green, 6:05 p.m. Rome at Augusta, 5:35 p.m. Lakewood at Delmarva, 6:05 p.m. Greensboro at West Virginia, 6:05 p.m. Asheville at Greenville, 7 p.m. Lake County at Hagerstown, 7:05 p.m.

W Wilmington (Royals) 44 Potomac (Nationals) 40 Frederick (Orioles) 32 x-Lynchburg (Pirates) 27

L 0 1 1 1

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

Today’s Games Asheville at Greenville, 7 p.m. Savannah at Charleston, 7:05 p.m. Rome at Augusta, 7:05 p.m. Lake County at Hagerstown, 7:05 p.m. Greensboro at West Virginia, 7:05 p.m. Lakewood at Delmarva, 7:05 p.m. Hickory at Kannapolis, 7:05 p.m. Lexington at Bowling Green, 8:05 p.m.

All Times EDT Northern Division

Rangers 5, Orioles 1 Texas

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

Jacksonville State at Georgia Tech, 1 p.m. Northeastern at Boston College, 2 p.m. Baylor at Wake Forest, 3:30 p.m. (ABC) Middle Tennessee at Clemson, 6 p.m. The Citadel at North Carolina, 6 p.m. William & Mary at Virginia, 6 p.m. Richmond at Duke, 7 p.m. Virginia Tech vs. Alabama, at Atlanta, 8 p.m. (ABC) Maryland at Cal, 10 p.m. (ESPN2)

Monday’s game

West

Southern Division

Atlanta r 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

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HBP—by Feldman (B.Roberts). Umpires—Home, Paul Schrieber; First, Paul Nauert; Second, Joe West; Third, Ed Rapuano. T—2:47. A—15,557 (48,290).

Chicago New York

h 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1

Frederick at Wilmington, 6:05 p.m. Lynchburg at Salem, 6:07 p.m. Kinston at Potomac, 6:35 p.m. Winston-Salem at Myrtle Beach, 7:05 p.m.

FOOTBALL

LOB—Texas 5, Baltimore 5. 2B—C.Davis (11). HR—N.Cruz (31). SB—Borbon (12). CS—M.Byrd (3), B.Roberts (7). IP H R ER BB SO Texas 2 4 1 1 2 2 Feldman W,15-4 61⁄3 N.Feliz S,2-2 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 Baltimore Tillman L,1-3 6 7 5 5 3 4 1 A.Castillo ⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Meredith ⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 Albers 2 0 0 0 0 2

Blue Jays 6, Yankees 0 r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Q. Who coached Duke to a share of the 1989 ACC football championship?

Sunday’s Games

Monday’s Games

HBP—by Sowers (Kubel). Umpires—Home, Larry Vanover; First, Rick Reed; Second, Sam Holbrook; Third, Dan Iassogna. T—2:43. A—24,402 (45,199).

ab Damon lf 4 Hinske rf 3 Teixeir 1b 3 ARdrgz 3b 4 HMatsu dh 3 Posada c 2 Cervelli c 0 Cano 2b 3 MeCarr cf 3 R.Pena ss 3 Totals 28

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

Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 2:05 p.m. St. Louis at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 3:40 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.

ab Fukdm cf 5 Theriot ss 5 Bradly rf 5 ArRmr 3b 5 MHffpr 1b 4 J.Fox ph 1 JeBakr 2b 3 Soto c 3 Fuld lf 2 Zamrn p 2 Fontent ph 1 AGzmn p 0 Gregg p 0 Grabow p 0 Berg p 0 Scales ph 1 Totals 37

New York

TRIVIA QUESTION

Troy Merritt Camilo Benedetti Matthew Richardson Wil Collins Adam Bland Bob May Steve Allan Brendan Steele Jose Trauwitz Kyle Thompson J.J. Killeen Grant Waite Matt Every Scott Fawcett Dong Yi Michael Putnam D.J. Brigman Brenden Pappas Sal Spallone Matt Hendrix Jason Caron Tom Johnson Michael Sims Lee M. Williamson Jesse Mueller Octavio Gonzalez Oscar Serna Phil Tataurangi Tom Carter Martin Flores Sebastian Fernandez Keoke Cotner Efren Serna Rafael Gomez Antonio Maldonado Todd Fischer Jim McGovern Jonathan Fricke Jerod Turner John Ellis Pablo Ceron Vance Veazey Sean Murphy Luis Arechiga Jim Carter Andrew Bonhomme Manuel Inman Juan Pablo Solis Joel Edwards Dick Mast P.H. Horgan III Enrique Campos Rodney Butcher Andrew Johnson

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

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

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (7), France, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 7-5, 6-3, 6-4. Julien Benneteau, France, def. Viktor Troicki (30), Serbia, 6-1, 3-6, 6-1, 6-0. Marin Cilic (16), Croatia, def. Jesse Levine, United States, 4-6, 2-6, 6-0, 6-3, 6-0. Juan Carlos Ferrero (24), Spain, def. Philipp Petzschner, Germany, 1-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4. Juan Martin del Potro (6), Argentina, def. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 7-6 (6), 6-3, 6-3. Tomas Berdych (17), Czech Republic, def. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (2), 6-2. Gilles Simon (9), France, def. Thomaz Bellucci, Brazil, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4. Daniel Koellerer, Austria, def. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, 3-6, 6-2, 6-1, 6-4. Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Paul Capdeville, Chile, 6-2, 3-6, 6-0, 6-2. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Nicolas Lapentti, Ecuador, 2-6, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6 (4). Nicolas Almagro (32), Spain, def. Robby Ginepri, United States, 6-7 (7), 6-2, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. Gael Monfils (13), France, def. Andreas Beck, Germany, 6-3, 7-5, 6-3. Fernando Gonzalez (11), Chile, def. Josselin Ouanna, France, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-4. Jose Acasuso, Argentina, def. David Ferrer (18), Spain, 6-3, 3-6, 1-6, 6-3, 6-2. Taylor Dent, United States, def. Ivan Navarro, Spain, 6-4, 5-7, 6-7 (1), 7-5, 7-6 (9). Women Third Round Flavia Pennetta (10), Italy, def. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, 6-1, 6-1. Daniela Hantuchova (22), Slovakia, def. Vania King, United States, 6-2, 6-2. Serena Williams (2), United States, def. Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez, Spain, 6-3, 7-5. Francesca Schiavone (26), Italy, def. Victoria Azarenka (8), Belarus, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2. Vera Zvonareva (7), Russia, def. Elena Vesnina (31), Russia, 6-2, 6-4. Li Na (18), China, def. Maria Kirilenko, Russia, 6-4, 6-2. Kim Clijsters, Belgium, def. Kirsten Flipkens, Belgium, 6-0, 6-2. Venus Williams (3), United States, def. Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-2, 7-5.

BASKETBALL

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WNBA All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE W 20 16 15 14 15 14 12

Indiana Atlanta Washington Detroit Connecticut Chicago New York

L 9 14 15 15 17 16 19

Pct .690 .533 .500 .483 .469 .467 .387

GB — 41⁄2 51⁄2 6 61⁄2 61⁄2 9

WESTERN CONFERENCE Phoenix Seattle Los Angeles San Antonio Minnesota Sacramento

W 21 19 15 13 12 11

L 10 12 15 17 18 20

Pct .677 .613 .500 .433 .400 .355

GB — 2 51⁄2 71⁄2 81⁄2 10

Thursday’s Games Washington 78, Seattle 67

Friday’s Games Connecticut 88, New York 85, OT Indiana at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Atlanta at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

Saturday’s Games Seattle at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at San Antonio, 8 p.m. Atlanta at Phoenix, 10 p.m.

Sunday’s Games Washington at Indiana, 4 p.m. Chicago at Detroit, 6 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS

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BASEBALL American League

MINNESOTA TWINS—Recalled INF Matt Tolbert from Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES—Recalled RHP Jonathan Albaladejo from Scranton-Wilkes Barre (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Recalled RHP Clayton Mortensen from Sacramento (PCL). TEXAS RANGERS—Recalled RHP Willie Eyre from Oklahoma City (PCL).

National League

ATLANTA BRAVES—Activated OF Nate McLouth from the 15-day DL. CHICAGO CUBS—Claimed RHP Thomas Diamond off waivers from Texas (AL) and assigned him to Iowa (PCL). Recalled INF Bobby Scales from Iowa. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Activated RHP Brett Myers from the 15-day DL. Sent RHP Joe Bisenius and RHP Steven Register outright to Lehigh Valley (IL) and C Joel Naughton outright to Clearwater (FSL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Added LHP Victor Garate to the roster. Activated C Jesus Flores from the 15-day DL. American Association ST. PAUL SAINTS—Released RHP Mark Moriarty, RHP Kerry Ligtenberg, RHP Mitch Wylie, RHP Charlie Ruud, LHP Dave Wagner, INF Tony Altavilla and C Jeff Eure.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association 137 138 138 139 139 141 141 141 141 142 143 143 143 143 143 144 144 144 144 144 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 147 147 147 147 147 147 148 148 148 149 149 149 149 150 150 151 151 151 151

PREPS

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MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES—Signed G Ramon Sessions to an offer sheet. Women’s National Basketball Association SACRAMENTO MONARCHS—Signed G Lisa Willis to seven-day contract.

FOOTBALL National Football League

NFL—Fined Minnesota QB Brett Favre $10,000 for his crack-back block on Houston DB Eugene Wilson during an Aug. 31 game. ARIZONA CARDINALS—Released TE Leonard Pope, S Aaron Francisco, OT Oliver Ross, CB Wilrey Fontenot, QB Tyler Palko, WR Steve Sanders, WR Ed Gant, RB Chris Vincent, CB Jameel Dowling, FB Reagan Maui’a, FB Tim Castille, C Melvin Fowler, LB Victor Hobson, G Trevor Canfield, G Carlton Medder, DE Alex Field, DT Keilen Dykes, WR Onrea Jones, DT Rodney Leisle, LB Chase Bullock and LB David Holloway. ATLANTA FALCONS—Released S Eric Brock, CB Glenn Sharpe, OT Adam Speer, G Ryan Stanchek, CB Tony Tiller, C Ben Wilkerson and WR Chandler Williams. BUFFALO BILLS—Fired offensive coordinator Turk Schonert. DENVER BRONCOS—Released DL Matthias Askew, G Kory Lichtensteiger, QB Ingle Martin, CB Rashod Moulton, T Clint Oldenburg, DL Carlton Powell, LB Lee Robinson, WR Nate Swift and RB Marcus Thomas. Placed G Matt McChesney on the reserve/injured list. DETROIT LIONS—Acquired S Ko Simpson from Buffalo for an undisclosed 2010 draft choice. Released DE Orion Martin. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS—Released FB Jed Collins, CB Travis Daniels, CB Londen Fryar, C Eric Ghiaciuc, OT Damion McIntosh, LB Corey Smith, OT Herb Taylor and G Tavares Washington. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Released LB Vinny Ciurciu, WR Robert Ortiz, S Roderick Rogers, QB Andrew Walter, DL Stephen Williams and G Billy Yates. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Released TE Eugene Bright, LB Curtis Gatewood and DT Willie Williams.

HOCKEY National Hockey League

ANAHEIM DUCKS—Signed D Steve Eminger to a two-year contract. BOSTON BRUINS—Agreed terms with coach Claude Julien on a multiyear contract extension. COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Signed C Derick Brassard to a four-year contract extension through 2013-14. OTTAWA SENATORS—Acquired RW Jason Bailey from Anaheim for LW Shawn Weller.

COLLEGE

Junior varsity Volleyball HPCA def. Carolina Friends 25-9, 25-9 Leading players: HPCA – Caroline Harding 3 kills; Brennen Moore 8 aces; Tara Mosley 3 kills Records: HPCA 7-0 Next game: HPCA visits Cary Christian on Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Soccer Wesleyan 5, Bishop McGuinness 3

GREENSBORO—Named Matt Aker baseball coach. NEW YORK U.—Named Nicole Lubell women’s assistant volleyball coach. OREGON—Suspended RB LeGarrette Blount for the remainder of the season for throwing a punch at Boise State DE Byron Hout following a Sept. 3 game. WEBER STATE—Announced the resignation of athletic director Jerry Graybeal. Announced assistant vice president for administrative support Jerry Bovee will serve as interim athletic director.

TRIVIA ANSWER

---

A. Steve Spurrier.


COLLEGE FOOTBALL THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

3C

Wake looks to ground Griffin, Baylor BY GREER SMITH ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

WINSTON-SALEM – Trying to stop a quarterback who is also an All-America hurdler and is a decent passer is something that Wake Forest senior defensive tackle John Russell likens to a toothache. But, that’s the challenge that Baylor sophomore Robert Griffin III, who finished third in the 400-meter hurdles at the NCAA outdoor track championships, poses for the Demon Deacons in the season opener for both teams today at BB&T Field (3 p.m. WXLV, Ch. 45). “It’s going to a pain,� Russell said. “You just wish he would slow down. He’s so fast. He covers 10 yards as fast as anyone, and it is so effortless.� Wake knows from experience how

much of a pain Griffin can be. In the opener for both teams last year, he changed the whole tenor of the game that was the first for Robert Miles as the Bears’ head coach. After the Deacons raced to a 17-0 lead by the early stages of the second quarter, Miles pulled starter Kirby Freeman in favor of Griffin for the Bears’ fourth possession of the game. He made the Bears competitive the rest of the way as Wake prevailed 41-13 in Waco. That was just the beginning for Griffin as handled the Bears’ quarterbacking chores for the remainder of the season, becoming the youngest starting quarterback in the Football Championship Subdivision at age 18. He finished the season with 2,091 yards passing and a net of 843 rushing, ran for 13 touchdowns (the second most in school history in a season)

and passed for 15 more as Baylor wound up 4-8 and 2-6 in the Big 12. Griffin passed for 125 yards and ran for a net of 29 against Wake, but his doublethreat ability kept a Wake defense that featured NFL draft picks Aaron Curry and Alphonso Smith off balance. “There are times he’s going to get his big plays in,� Russell said. “He’s just that kind of quarterback. You’ve got just to try to contain him. You’re not going to stop him. We couldn’t with the players we had last year. He just reeled off some highlight-reel plays. “Just tackling and wrapping him up is going to be a problem. You can get him up square, but he can stick and move with the best of them. If he has open field, it could be a big problem.� That’s not the only problem. The Bears return nine starters on offense and eight

on defense wile Wake lost all of its starting linebackers and three of four members in the secondary. Russell agreed with coach Jim Grobe that the Bears are better than the team that Wake faced last year. In three of the last four games of the 2008, Baylor lost 31-28 to No. 5 Missouri, buried Texas A&M 41-21 and narrowly lost to No. 7 Texas Tech 35-28. “I don’t think there is any question they are better,� Grobe said. “They had a little learning curve the first part of the year. But if you look at them in the first half of the season and the second half of the season, there was a marked difference. Once the quarterback settled in and they got used to the offense, the played everyone really tough.� gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3519

Mountaineers, Pirates set to clash APPALACHIAN STATE AT EAST CAROLINA

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When: Today, noon Line: No line. Series record: Appalachian State leads 19-10. Last meeting: 1979, East Carolina 38-21. What’s at stake: East Carolina knows this is the “easiest� nonconference game it will have all year, so any hopes of making a name for itself nationally for a second straight year begins with the No. 1 ranked team in the Championship Subdivision. Not to mention it wasn’t long ago that the Mountaineers won three straight national titles and upset Michigan. Key matchup: Appalachian State QB DeAndre Presley vs. East Carolina’s front seven: Presley gets the unenviable position of starting in place of Armanti Edwards, who looks unlikely to play after injuring his right foot in a lawnmower accident last month. He’ll face a Pirates defense that has six seniors in its front seven and ranked among the best in offense-focused Conference USA last year. Players to watch: Appalachian State: WR Coco Hillary was the team’s leading returning receiver had five touchdowns last season. He been able to work with Presley through preseason drills to get their timing together. East Carolina: QB Patrick Pinkney is back for an NCAAgranted sixth season. His play will be key for an offense that needs to improve from last year’s often-pedestrian performances.

THE CITADEL AT (21) NORTH CAROLINA

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When: Today Time: 3:30 p.m., WXLV, Ch. 45 (ABC) Line: Wake Forest by 2. Series record: Baylor leads 4-1. Last meeting: 2008, Wake Forest 41-13. What’s at stake: Baylor is looking to go to a bowl game for the first time in 15 years, which matches the longest postseason drought among BCS teams. With a brutal Big 12 schedule in front of them, the Bears need to get off to a good start and win their non-conference games. The Deacons get their first look at their reconstructed defense after losing nine starters to graduation or the NFL draft. Key matchup: The quarterbacks: Robert Griffin vs. Riley Skinner. Young playmaker Griffin accounted for 28 touchdowns (15 passing, 13 rushing) in a sensational freshman season in which the only game he didn’t start was the opener vs. Wake Forest. Skinner is the proven senior, already Wake’s winningest starting quarterback. Players to watch: Baylor: LB Joe Pawelek, who is the nation’s leading active career tackler (313). RB Jay Finley ran for a teamhigh 865 yards with seven touchdowns last season, often overlooked because of Griffin. Wake Forest: CB Brandon Ghee, the only returning defensive starter not on the line.

RICHMOND AT DUKE

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When: Today, 7 p.m. Line: No line. Series record: Duke leads 9-2. Last Meeting: 2006, Richmond 13-0. What’s at stake: Duke is looking to take the first step toward its first bowl appearance since 1994, and is seeking a measure of revenge against a Richmond team that gave the current Blue Devils seniors a humiliating start to their college careers: a 13-0 loss in the first game of the 2006 season. The Spiders are out to defend their Football Championship Subdivision title, and have 18 starters back from that team. Key matchup: Duke QB Thaddeus Lewis vs. Richmond’s secondary: Lewis is back for his fourth season as Duke’s starter, and hopes another offseason with quarterback guru David Cutcliffe pays off. But he’s without his favorite target from last year, graduated WR Eron Riley, and will need other playmakers to get open against a stingy Spiders secondary. Players to watch: Richmond: DB Justin Rogers returned two of his seven interceptions last season for touchdowns, and returned a fumble for another score during the Spiders’ championship season. Duke: RB Re’Quan Boyette is healthy after missing last season with a knee injury, and is being counted upon to give the Blue Devils’ offense some balance and take some pressure off Lewis.

When: Today, 6:05 p.m. Line: No line. Series record: North Carolina leads 3-0. Last meeting: 1986, North Carolina, 4514. What’s at stake: North Carolina’s first preseason ranking since 1998. A loss to a Championship Subdivision team would be catastrophic for a program looking to take another step forward in coach Butch Davis’ third season in Chapel Hill. A reasonable goal for The Citadel, which finished seventh last season in the Southern Conference, might be to simply keep things more competitive than it did in last year’s finale – a 70-19 loss at eventual national champion Florida. Key matchup: North Carolina WR Greg Little vs. The Citadel’s secondary. The Tar Heels’ top priority this offseason was replacing their top three receivers from last season – Hakeem Nicks, Brooks Foster and Brandon Tate – and if Little struggles to get open against a Citadel defense that last year was ranked in the bottom third of the SoCon, it could be a long year for QB T.J. Yates and the offense. Players to watch: The Citadel: TE B.J. Phillips returns to Kenan Stadium after transferring from North Carolina last season, and WR Andre Roberts led the SoWhen: Today, 6 p.m. Con with 95 catches, 1,334 yards and 14 Line: Clemson by 181⠄2. touchdowns last season. North Carolina: Series record: Clemson leads 1-0. Little began last season as the Tar Heels’ Last meeting: 2003, Clemson 37-14. starting tailback before moving back to What’s at stake: Clemson wants to get his original position. With WR Dwight Jones out with a knee injury, he’s being its full-fledged Dabo Swinney era off to a winning start. Swinney took over as counted upon to be Yates’ top target. the Tigers interim coach last October and gained the permanent job after the regular season. Middle Tennessee is looking to add another Atlantic Coast Conference Records: Season opener for both

MIDDLE TENNESSEE AT CLEMSON

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BAYLOR AT WAKE FOREST

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notch to its belt after defeating Maryland – something the Tigers couldn’t do – last fall. Key matchup: Clemson’s C.J. Spiller vs. Middle Tennessee’s defensive front. Spiller is one of the most dynamic runners in college. But if Blue Raiders like tackle Brandon Perry can bottle up Spiller, it would force the Tigers to rely on firsttime quarterback starter Kyle Parker to make plays. Players to watch: Middle Tennessee: QB Dwight Dasher and RB Phillip Tanner. Dasher split time at the position as a sophomore after a stellar freshman season. He’s gained the starting job and is seeking another forward step. Tanner rushed for 714 yards and 15 TDs. Clemson: RB C.J. Spiller and QB Kyle Parker. Spiller should be the engine that makes the Tigers offense go. However, the senior has never been the team’s featured back, and some wonder if the 5-11 tailback can hold up. Parker, an all-ACC performer in baseball for Clemson, has never thrown a pass in college. He won the job over fan favorite Will Korn during the preseason.

the lineup with injuries in 2008 and sharing playing time the past two seasons with Sean Glennon. Taylor will have to take on even more of the load after star RB Darren Evans sustained a season-ending injury during preseason workouts.

(12) CALIFORNIA VS. MARYLAND

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When: Today, 10 p.m. TV: ESPN2 Line: California by 21. Series record: Maryland leads 1-0. Last meeting: 2008, Maryland 35-27. What’s at stake: The Golden Bears are looking to avenge last year’s loss at Maryland, when they fell behind 21-3 after the first play of the second quarter and 28-6 midway through the third. That game in Maryland started at 9 a.m. PDT. The Terrapins will have the adjustment this season, with a 10 p.m. EDT start in Berkeley. Key matchup: Maryland LB Alex Wujciak against California RB Jahvid Best. Wujciak was second in the ACC with 133 tackles last season but will have his hands full with Best, who averaged 8.1 yards per carry, most in the nation. The Terps better get to Best close to the line because once he gets going, he’s hard to stop with seven runs of at least 60 yards last season. Players to watch: Maryland: RB Da’Rel When: Today, 8 p.m. Scott. Scott was a first-team All-ACC pick TV: WXLV, Ch. 45, ABC Sports last season when he rushed for 1,133 Where: Georgia Dome, Atlanta yards. Scott ran for 87 yards and two Line: Alabama by 61⠄2. touchdowns in last year’s win over Cal. Series record: Alabama leads 10-1. Last meeting: 1998 Music City Bowl, Vir- California: Quarterback Kevin Riley. After sharing the job with Nate Longshore last ginia Tech 38-7. What’s at stake: An early edge in the year, Riley won a three-way competition national championship race. While the to be the starter this season. Kickoff Classic isn’t make-or-break for either team, it’s a chance to score big points with the voters in a bowl-like atmosphere on the opening weekend of the season. --Alabama played in this contest a year When: Today, 1 p.m. ago, blew out a favored Clemson team Line: No line. and went on to make a surprising run to Series record: Georgia Tech leads 1-0. the Southeastern Conference championLast meeting: 2008, Georgia Tech 41ship game. 14. Key matchup: Alabama QB Greg McElWhat’s at stake: Georgia Tech playroy vs. the Virginia Tech defense. McElroy ers might be tempted to look ahead to takes over for three-year starter John Thursday night’s game against Clemson. Parker Wilson and will face seven reGeorgia Tech will have only five days beturning starters from a unit that ranked tween the two games, so the concern is seventh nationally a year ago in yards the Yellow Jackets don’t take the secondallowed. DE Jason Worilds had eight tier Gamecocks lightly. sacks and 18.5 tackles for losses, while CB Key matchup: Jacksonville State QB Stephan Virgil led the Hokies with six inMarques Ivory vs. Georgia Tech S Morgan terceptions. Burnett. Ivory, 24-0 as a starter at NorthPlayers to watch: Alabama: WR Juside High in Warner Robins, Ga., will make lio Jones was only cleared to play on his first start. Burnett had seven intercepWednesday after the NCAA investigated tions last season. a Gulf Coast fishing trip paid for by a Players to watch: Jacksonville State: WR businessman. He’ll have to repay the cost Greg Smith played three years at Georgia of the trip, then try to improve on his brilTech before transferring to Jacksonville liant freshman season: 58 catches for 924 State for his final year of eligibility. Georcatches. gia Tech: Jonathan Dwyer needs 169 yards Virginia Tech: QB Tyrod Taylor has the rushing to reach 2,000 for his career. job all to himself after being in an out of

(5) ALABAMA VS. (7) VIRGINIA TECH

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JACKSONVILLE STATE AT (15) GA. TECH

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SPORTS 4C www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

Dirt-bike injury sidelines Elliott BY GREER SMITH ENTERPRISE SPORTS WRITER

The driver switching and freak injuries continue in advance of Sunday night’s Cup race at Atlanta Motor Speedway, where qualifying is scheduled today at 4 p.m. (Speed). Bill Elliott is the latest to go down and will be replaced in the Wood Brothers No. 21 by David Gilliland. A Wood Brothers release said Elliott had a back injury but RacingToday.com quoted Elliott as saying that he cracked three ribs in a dirt-bike accident. Elliott said he could have driven if no replacement was available. Car owner Eddie Wood said the team went ahead and made the switch because of the Atlanta’s tight two-day schedule. “Given the modified practice schedule where the practices and qualifying are all being done on Saturday, we didn’t feel there was enough time to make changes to the seat if Bill wasn’t

ATLANTA SCHEDULE

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Today

8 a.m. – Nationwide practice 9:30 a.m. – Nationwide practice 11 a.m. – Cup practice 1 p.m – Cup practice 2:40 p.m. – Nationwide qualifying (Speed) 4:40 p.m. – Cup qualifying (Speed) 7 p.m. – Nationwide race (ESPN)

Sunday 7:30 p.m. – Cup race

comfortable and we needed to get another driver,” Wood said. “We called David to see if he was available. Thankfully he was and agreed to help.” Gilliland, who has six Atlanta starts, became available when he was replaced by Bobby Labonte in TRG Racing’s Chevrolet. gsmith@hpe.com | 888-3519

Serena cruises at U.S. Open

Panthers hope ugly preseason doesn’t carry over to opener

CHARLOTTE (AP) – The Carolina Panthers can only hope the preseason really doesn’t mean anything. If all the missed tackles, fumbles, injuries, mistakes, and depth issues carry over to the real games, there will be a new NFC South champion in 2009. “It’s nothing to worry about, you know, 0-4,” safety Chris Harris insisted minutes after Carolina closed a winless exhibition slate Thursday with a 21-10 loss to Pittsburgh. “The Lions went 4-0 in the preseason and went 0-16 (last year), so you can’t read into the preseason too much. When it starts counting is when it will matter.” Harris, one of five Panthers to miss tackles on rookie running back Isaac Redman’s 10-yard touchdown Thursday, was part of a locker room trying to emphasize the positive. Coach John Fox even claimed the defensive performance was better than a week earlier when Carolina fell flat against Baltimore. “Our first team didn’t get a whole lot of opportunities,” he said. The first team actually played a series longer than the Steelers starting offense – and allowed Pittsburgh’s backups to score. Carolina’s offense managed one first down on seven plays and finished the practice games with one touchdown in about seven quarters of work. But as Fox and the coaching staff prepare to trim 22 players from the roster by Saturday afternoon, there is hope the Panthers will finally be healthy when Philadelphia arrives for the season opener Sept. 13. Middle linebacker Jon Beason, the Panthers’ top tackler in each of the past

two seasons and the leader of the defense, is confident he’ll return from his sprained medial collateral ligament in his left knee. Beason, out since Aug. 22, indicated he’ll start running this weekend and plans to practice next week. “I wasn’t supposed to be playing,” Beason said, defiantly. The Panthers need some of that attitude on a defense still stinging from the loss of top run-stuffer Maake Kemoeatu, out for the season with a torn Achilles’ tendon. Newly acquired defensive tackle Louis Leonard played some Thursday and could become the replacement starter, although much-maligned Nick Hayden did have a tackle for a loss and a shared sack. Safety Charles Godfrey also hopes to play against the Eagles with a cast on his broken left hand, but it could make it difficult to tackle – Carolina’s glaring weakness in the games that don’t count. “It’s one thing we’re correcting,” Harris said. The offense was supposed to be the strong point after it carried Carolina to a 12-4 mark last season. But DeAngelo Williams’ tackle-breaking 25-yard run against Miami was the only touchdown for the first-teamers. Receiver Steve Smith missed a couple of games and the Panthers threw to him little when he played, perhaps to shield him from injury. Williams’ backfield partner, Jonathan Stewart, is the biggest puzzle. The team has had 48 practices since the first April minicamp. Stewart has participated in eight of them – and none since Aug. 10 – with an undefined Achilles’ tendon injury.

Favre fined $10,000 for crack-back block

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre was fined $10,000 by the NFL on Friday for his crackback block on Houston defensive back Eugene Wilson in a preseason game. The play happened on Monday night at Houston in Favre’s first extensive action since he signed with the Vikings on Aug. 18. The 39-year-old lined up

at receiver in Minnesota’s version of the wildcat offense. Rookie receiver Percy Harvin took the snap and started running around the left end in Favre’s direction. Despite playing with sore ribs, the quarterback crouched and threw his body at Wilson’s legs to cut him down. The game was televised nationally and the block caused an uproar in Hous-

ton and elsewhere around the league. Wilson injured his knee on the play and defensive players have long considered that type of block a dirty play. Favre had only been practicing for 14 days since ending his second retirement to join the Vikings. He said he wasn’t trying to injure Wilson and was only trying to help Harvin on the run.

Oregon suspends Blount for season

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) – Star running back LeGarrette Blount won’t play for Oregon again this year. The school suspended him on Friday for the remainder of season after he slugged Boise State defensive end Byron Hout. Blount threw the punch Thursday night following the 16th-ranked Ducks’ 19-8 loss to No. 14 Boise State. As Boise State began celebrating on their famous blue turf, Hout yelled in

Blount’s face and tapped him on the shoulder pad. Before Broncos head coach Chris Petersen could pull Hout away, Blount landed a right to Hout’s jaw, knocking him to his knees. Blount also had to be restrained by police officers from fans heckling him on the way to the locker room. Blount’s suspension includes any bowl games. He will remain on scholarship, however, and will continue to practice with the team.

to sell anyone on is the quality of her tennis, particularly at Grand Slam tournaments. By beating serve-and-volleying Spaniard Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez 6-3, 7-5 on Friday, Williams improved to 28-1 over the past five majors. The secret to her success? This has been a topsyturvy U.S. Open for the women: No. 8 Victoria Azarenka’s 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 loss to No. 26 Francesca Schiavone on Friday came a day after No. 4 Elena Dementieva and

Halladay pitches one-hitter THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

No. 5 Jelena Jankovic were upset. All told, 11 of the 20 highest-seeded women are gone, and the third round is only halfway done. Friday’s winners included No. 2 Andy Murray, No. 6 Juan Martin del Potro, No. 7 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and No. 9 Gilles Simon. None of the top 10 men had dropped a single set – much less lost – until 2008 runner-up Murray’s little slip in his 6-2, 3-6, 6-0, 6-2 win over 87th-ranked Paul Capdeville of Chile.

Stricker, Furyk shoot sizzling 63s THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TORONTO – Roy Halladay pitched a one-hitter to snap a three-start losing streak and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Yankees 6-0 Friday night, ending New York’s winning streak at seven games.

INDIANS 5, TWINS 2 CLEVELAND – Jeremy Sowers pitched six strong innings, rookie Michael Brantley had two hits and his first career RBI, and the Cleveland Indians beat the Minnesota Twins 5-2 on Friday night.

RANGERS 5, ORIOLES 1 BALTIMORE – Scott Feldman matched the Texas club record for road wins in a season, earning No. 11 with a dominant performance that carried the Rangers past the Baltimore Orioles 5-1.

REDS 3, BRAVES 1 ATLANTA – Bronson Arroyo gave up one run in seven innings and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Atlanta Braves 3-1 on Friday night for their fifth straight win. The Braves have lost three straight.

METS 6, CUBS 2 NEW YORK – Cory Sullivan homered and made a diving catch in left field to help the New York Mets beat the Chicago Cubs 6-2 on Friday night.

UNC starts 100th hoops season with alumni pro game CHAPEL HILL (AP) – North Carolina men’s basketball program began its yearlong celebration of its centennial season Friday night, drawing a sellout crowd of nearly 22,000 fans to watch a charity game featuring its alumni playing in the NBA or overseas. The rosters included NBA All-Stars such as Vince Carter, Antawn Jamison and Jerry Stackhouse. They also included 10 members of

the Tar Heels’ 2005 and 2009 national championship teams. Still, the crowd reserved its biggest cheers for a pair of big names: Michael Jordan and retired Hall of Fame coach Dean Smith. At halftime, the program unveiled the banner commemorating last season’s national title, the program’s second in the past five seasons and fifth NCAA championship overall.

NORTON, Mass. – Steve Stricker and Jim Furyk carded firstround 63s on Friday at the TPC Boston. They were two shots clear of a group that included Masters champion Angel Cabrera, Justin Leonard, Retief Goosen and Scott Verplank. Tiger Woods opened with a 70.

KIM, PETTERSEN CARD 62S

PRIDDIS, Alberta – South Korea’s SongHee Kim shot a tournament-record 9-under 62 for a share of the second-round lead in the Canadian Women’s Open with Suzann Pettersen, while Michelle Wie missed her first cut of the season.

SLUMAN TOPS FIRST TEE OPEN

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Defending champion Jeff Sluman shot a bogey-free 7-under 65 on Friday at Del Monte Golf Course to take a one-stroke lead.

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Carolina’s Josh McCown (12) loses the ball as he is hit by Pittsburgh’s Arnold Harrison (97) during Thursday night’s preseason game at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte. The Steelers recovered the fumble en route to a 21-10 victory.

NEW YORK (AP) – Finished with a mostly matter-of-fact victory in the U.S. Open’s third round Friday, defending champion Serena Williams switched into a yellow T-shirt with this bit of wisdom in blue script: “Can’t spell dynasty without nasty.” Asked about it, Williams took the chance to push a sponsor’s new clothing line. Moments later, she found herself discussing her autobiography. About the only thing Williams doesn’t need

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HPU ROUNDUP, PREPS THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

5C

A.L. Brown works Wonders, stuns Thomasville, 34-28 BY ELIOT DUKE THOMASVILLE TIMES

DAVID HOLSTON | HPE

Trinity’s Rhyne Kivett (12) passes as West Stokes’ Matt Guraleczka (50) gives chase and Angelo Dunn looks to block on Friday night.

Southern smokes Southeast ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

terback Josh Rathburn added 65 yards and threw a 14-yard TD pass to Mike S. GUILFORD 37, SE GUILFORD 15 Ledesma. Marty DeFrancesco gained 32 PLEASANT GARDEN – Josh McDuffie yards, 19 of them on a touchdown carry. rushed for three touchdowns and War- Tyler Woods had 58 yard that included a ren Scott provided two more as South- 3-yard score, and Kevin Saxon got 30 of ern Guilford crushed Southeast Guil- his 52 yards on a nifty touchdown jaunt. ford 37-15 on Friday. He also converted five point-after kicks. McDuffie rushed six times for 61 yards 21 20 0 0 — 41 and scored from 17, 15 and 7 yards out. Bishop Highland 0 0 0 0 — 0 Scott carried most of the load, gaining B – Pluciniczak 20 run (Saxon kick) B – Pluciniczak 24 run (Saxon kick) 189 yards on 28 carries. He scored on 22B – DeFrancesco 14 run (Saxon kick) B – Ledesma 14 pass from Rathburn (kick fail)\ yard run and a 29-yard touchdown catch B – Woods 3 run (Saxon kick) B – Saxon 30 run (Saxon kick) from Jamie Cunningham. Southern’s defense held the Falcons to OTHER GAMES OF NOTE nine first downs and 91 yards rushing. Contests involving area teams that Scoring summary were not reported to the Enterprise: West S Guilford 10 7 6 14 — 37 Stokes 7, Trinity 6; Ragsdale 34, Western SE Guilford 7 0 8 0 — 15 Guilford 7; and Glenn 25, Carver 18. SG – McDuffie 17 run (Mattocks kick) SG – Mattocks 27 FG SE – Farley 50 pass from Robinson (Chancellor kick) SG – McDuffie 15 run (Mattocks kick) SG – McDuffie 7 run (kick fail) SE – 16 fumble return (Fields run) SG – Scott 29 pass from Cunninghamn (Mattocks kick) SG – Scott 22 run (Mattocks kick)

WEST DAVIDSON, WHEATMORE

TYRO – West Davidson held Wheatmore to 56 yards total offense and rolled to a 40-0 victory on Friday. West rushed for 196 yards and three Green Dragon quarterbacks threw for a total of 92 and two touchdowns, both by James McCandies. Ozzie Moore burst free for a 46-yard touchdown run, and T.C. Moore scored on a 14-yard run for West (2-1). Wheatmore W. Davidson

0 14

0 19

0 0

0 7

— —

00 40

WD – Varner 18 pass from McCandies (Gregg kick) WD – Jordan 22 pass from McCandies (Gregg kick) WD – Ozzie Moore 46 run (Gregg kick) WD – T.C. Moore 14 run (kick fail):##, 1st WD – McCandies 2 run (kick fail) WD – Smith 9 run (Gregg kick)

BISHOP, HIGHLAND TECH

GASTONIA – Bishop McGuinness did all of its scoring in the first half and crushed Highland Tech 41-0 on Friday. The Villains (2-0) gained 391 yards on 51 carries and held Tech to 47 yards. Jared Pluciniczak led the Bishop rushing attack with 78 yards on five carries and scored the first and second touchdowns on runs of 20 and 24 yards. Quar-

SOCCER

WESLEYAN 3, BISHOP 1 HIGH POINT – Daniel Mallard scored two goals and Joseph Mashburn added another as Wesleyan topped Bishop McGuinness 3-1 on Friday. Riley Beck and Aaron Vidovich had assists for the Trojans. Chase Kenney grabbed three saves.

HPCA 1, CALDWELL 1 HIGH POINT – High Point Christian broke on top but couldn’t make it stick in a 1-1 tie against Caldwell in a Triad Athletic Conference match Friday. Jonny Lind took a pass from Reid Ashby and gave HPCA the lead midway of the first half. Caldwell drew even two minutes before intermission. Zac Eanes grabbed five saves for the Cougars (3-4-1, 1-0-1 TAC).

VOLLEYBALL HPCA DEF. CAROLINA FRIENDS HIGH POINT – High Point Christian swept Carolina Friends 25-20, 26-24, 2523 in TAC play Friday. Leaders for the Cougars: Meredith Morris (16 kills, 6 aces, 5 digs); Ellen Fay (10 digs, 6 aces), Megan Fary (28 assists, 5 digs) and Kathryn Cox (8 kills).

FRIDAY NIGHT’S AP SCORES FROM ACROSS THE STATE

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Albemarle 56, North Stanly 0 Alexander Central 42, North Iredell 20 Alleghany County 31, Galax, Va. 12 Apex Middle Creek 21, Garner 20 Asheville Erwin 41, Madison County 28 Asheville Reynolds 35, Black Mountain Owen 6 Ayden-Grifton 34, North Pitt 20 Brevard 33, Mitchell County 26 Bunn 56, Granville Central 8 Burnsville Mountain Heritage 67, Rosman 6 Cameron Union Pines 51, Chatham Central 7 Canton Pisgah 67, North Buncombe 0 Cary 32, Raleigh Sanderson 7 Catawba Bandys 40, Mooresville 22 Charlotte Ardrey Kell 47, West Mecklenburg 0 Charlotte Christian 28, Liberty Christian, Va. 14 Charlotte Independence 35, South Pointe, S.C. 32 Charlotte Providence 28, North Mecklenburg 23 Charlotte Providence Day 39, Swain County 29 Cherokee 56, North Cobb Christian, Ga. 28 Clinton Union 30, North Duplin 6 Clover, S.C. 28, Gastonia Forestview 16 Currituck County 34, Camden County 20 Dunn Midway 34, Seven Springs Spring Creek 0 Durham Hillside 31, Hope Mills South View 28 Durham Jordan 24, Morrisville Green Hope 14 Durham Riverside 27, Chapel Hill 22 East Bladen 25, Warsaw Kenan 0 East Burke 38, Morganton Freedom 16 East Rutherford 28, McDowell County 14 East Surry 27, North Lincoln 20 East Wake 17, Raleigh Millbrook 16 Eastern Alamance 35, Burlington Cummings 6 Eden Morehead 42, Magna Vista, Va. 35 Elizabeth City N’eastern 20, Farmville Central 13 Enka 42, Sylva Smoky Mountain 0 Fayetteville Britt 42, Wilmington Hoggard 3 Fayetteville Byrd 26, Cape Fear 20 Fayetteville Pine Forest 39, Smithfield-Selma 23 Fayetteville Sanford 44, Hope Mills Gray’s Creek 18 Fuquay-Varina 41, West Johnston 14 Gates County 31, Perquimans County 18 Graham 39, Southern Alamance 38 Greenville Rose 13, South Central Pitt 0 GW-Danville, Va. 14, Person County 7 Harnett Central 23, Western Harnett 13 Harrells Christian Academy 40, KIPP Pride 12 Havelock 42, Wilmington Laney 10 Hendersonville 35, North Henderson 13 Hickory St. Stephens 51, Claremont Bunker Hill 7 Hillsborough Cedar Ridge 17, East Chapel Hill 0 Hobbton 28, Rosewood 7 Hoke County 41, Fayetteville Seventy-First 38

Jacksonville Northside 37, Jacksonville 14 Jacksonville White Oak 12, Wilmington Ashley 3 Kannapolis Brown 34, Thomasville 28 Kinston 50, North Lenoir 0 Lake Norman 35, Statesville 6 Lasker Northeast 56, Rocky Mount Academy 20 Lee County 55, Southern Lee 7 Lenoir Hibriten 70, West Caldwell 6 Lincolnton 21, Maiden 13 Loris, S.C. 29, South Columbus 25 Lumberton 55, St. Pauls 12 Mallard Creek 28, East Mecklenburg 19 Marlboro County, S.C. 38, Scotland County 7 Matthews Butler 54, Charlotte Vance 3 Monroe 54, Mt. Pleasant 0 Monroe Parkwood 45, Cox Mill 0 New Bern 28, Bertie County 14 New Hanover County 35, Eastern Wayne 12 Newton-Conover 33, Hickory 6 Northwest Cabarrus 17, South Rowan 14 Plymouth 16, Edenton Holmes 10 R-S Central 19, Polk County 13 Raleigh Athens Drive 28, Raleigh Broughton 21 Raleigh Leesville Road 37, Apex 6 Raleigh Ravenscroft 34, Franklinton 21 Raleigh Wakefield 30, Knightdale 13 Richmond County 63, Anson County 28 Ringgold, Ga. 34, Murphy 6 Roanoke Rapids 54, Southeast Halifax 6 Robbinsville 30, Franklin 20 Shelby 12, Gastonia Ashbrook 0 Shelby Crest 7, Asheville Roberson 6, OT South Caldwell 23, Vldese Draughn 7 South Granville 26, Oxford Webb 8 Southeast Raleigh 42, Raleigh Enloe 20 Southern Nash 22, Wilson Beddingfield 12 So. Pines Pinecrest 42, Spring Lake Overhills 18 SouthWest Edgecombe 50, North Edgecombe 0 Southwest Onslow 54, Richlands 13 Southwestern Randolph 34, North Moore 22 Tarboro 45, Northern Nash 0 Wake Forest-Rolesville 10, Southern Durham 0 Wallace-Rose Hill 49, Southern Wayne 6 Washington 34, Pinetown Northside 0 Watauga County 35, Avery County 12 Weldon 34, Northwest Halifax 26 West Bladen 35, Fairmont 28 West Brunswick 15, South Brunswick 0 West Carteret 35, Croatan 0 West Charlotte 47, Charlotte Harding 0 West Henderson 27, Cherryville 14 Wilkes Central 48, Surry Central 22 Williamston 52, Robersonville Roanoke 0

THOMASVILLE – Anything and everything that could go wrong for the Thomasville Bulldogs did Friday night at Cushwa Stadium against the Kannapolis A.L. Brown Wonders. Leading by two touchdowns, Thomasville’s defense failed to stop Kannapolis when it mattered most, resulting in a 34-28 loss, the Bulldogs’ second setback in a row. “We stopped them in the first half, but we couldn’t in the second,” coach Allen Brown said. “We appreciate their effort, but you don’t get anything for trying. We’ve got to get better. We can’t keep giving up this many points. You can’t give up over 30 points and win the game.” Unlike last week’s loss to Mount Airy, THS was in control of this one. The Bulldogs had the ball near midfield up 28-21 late in the third quarter, but a poor handoff led to a fumble, giving the Wonders possession. The game was tied four plays later on a 3-yard run from Travis Riley. “I’m going to take it as my fault,” said THS quarterback Sam Nelson. “I

just didn’t get the ball in my hands and take it.” Thomasville would gain only one first down in the fourth quarter, and Kannapolis eventually scored on Riley’s third touchdown of the game with 46 seconds to go. Brandon Lucas made some noise in the waning seconds only to fumble fighting for extra yards at the Wonders’ 30-yard line. Early on, what Dee Dow did for the Bulldogs on defense, Quin Riley did on offense. Dow, in a 14-7 game with 1:41 left before halftime, intercepted Martel Campbell and raced 41 yards for the score. After the Wonders scored with 14 seconds left in the second quarter, Riley took a seemingly innocent handoff and exploded through the Kannapolis defense 57 yards to paydirt as time expired, shifting momentum back to THS. “It’s a tough loss,” Nelson said. “Going into halftime I felt we had it. I thought we were playing well and if we kept it up we would pull it out. It didn’t work out that way. We definitely played well, but this is the second close game we’ve had.” Thomasville (1-2) hosts Albemarle next Friday night.

Black Knights spear Golden Eagles BY ZACH KEPLEY THOMASVILLE TIMES

THOMASVILLE – Rarely does a team commit 130 yards worth of penalties and still win, but that is how things turned out for North Davidson in a 35-3 rout of East Davidson on Friday. Despite the incredible amount of penalty yards, the Black Knights held East to 126 yards of total offense and were able to outrun the Eagles on offense all night. Running back Ryan Morgan scored three touchdowns and ran for 115 yards to lead the effort. Through all of that, East actually led 3-0 early. East mounted its lone scoring drive on the first possession of the game in unusual fashion. The two teams combined for 60 penalty yards over the course of the drive that started on the 20 of the Eagles. When the yellow flags stopped flying, East had moved the ball to the North 20, where the drive stalled and Taylor Warren booted home a 37yard field goal. The East defense forced a three-andout immediately and was going to get field position around the 50. Dylan Hutchins muffed the punt, though, as the ball fell to the deck and the Black Knights recovered at the East 43. Six plays later, Morgan carried the ball over the right side from 24 yards out, pushing the visitors ahead 7-3. “We came out and did some good things on that first drive to keep everybody’s hopes up,” said East coach Bryan Lingerfelt. “Then we played great on defense, but we had the turnover and it started snowballing after that.”

North quarterback Brennen Dodd was too quick for the Eagle defense all night, dancing around defenders for large chunks of yards. His arm got him in trouble at times, though, as he was picked off in the end zone by Justin Mounts on the next drive. Breathing a sigh of relief, East was poised to turn the turnover into something positive, but gave it right back only two plays later on a fumble by Malcolm Wimmer. North recovered on the East 23 and Morgan converted his second tally of the night on a run up the gut. East netted negative yardage on its next drive and was pinned deep in its own territory. Following the punt by Mounts, North worked quickly going the 31 yards in one play, as Tevin Tuttle took the end around to the house for a 21-3 score. On the first play from scrimmage of the second half, North’s Morgan completed the hat trick, blasting through the hole for a 63-yard jaunt. North tacked on one more to completely ground the Eagles. “We will lick our wounds and try to grow up from this,” Lingerfelt said. “Hopefully, we can come out here with a good attitude on Monday.” East’s Dylan Gallimore bulled to 106 rushing yards on 25 attempts.

Scoring summary N. Davidson E. Davidson

7 3

14 0

7 0

7 0

— —

35 00

ED – Warren 37 FG ND – Morgan 24 run (Williams kick) ND – Morgan 7 run (williams kick) ND – Tuttle 31 run (Williams kick) ND – Morgan 63 run (Williams kick) ND – Lowery 9 run (Williams kick)

Okiomahs spark HPU soccer past JMU ENTERPRISE STAFF REPORTS

HARRISONBURG, Va. - Fejiro Okiomah scored the game-winner in the 54th minute to lift High Point University to a 2-1 victory over Richmond on Friday at James Madison University. Kara Okiomah scored High Point’s first goal in the 27th minute on a header from 10 yards out off a cross from Matt Turtle. That lead held until Ben Brewster put in Richmond’s goal just 1:58 into the second half. HPU (2-0) held a slim 12-10 advantage in shots. High Point concludes play in the JMU/Comfort Inn Harrisonburg Invitational on Sunday against Rider.

HPU WOMEN LOSE 2-0 HIGH POINT – The University of High Point women’s soccer team managed a season-high five shots on goal but was unable to find the back of the net as the team fell to the College of Charleston, 2-0, in Vert Stadium Friday night. Senior goalkeeper Marisa Abbott added five more saves to her Big South leading total in the loss. The Panthers return to Vert Stadium for their second game of the High Point University Invitational on Sunday at 3:30 p.m. when they take on regional-rival Elon University. Elon lost to Temple 1-0 in the opening game earlier on Friday.

HPU MEN POST CROSS COUNTRY WIN WINSTON-SALEM – High Point University won the team title and the tandem of Anthony Berkis and Josh Morgan was the relay winner at the Wake Forest Relays on Friday night. High Point University had the top four collegiate relay teams at the meet.

“We were very pleased with our guys’ performances tonight,” said head coach Mike Esposito. “Our upperclassmen ran well and our freshmen ran very well, particularly Stuart Edmonds, Dakota Peachee and Jacob Smith.” Jesse Cherry, a fifth-year senior at HPU, ran unattached and had the best individual time of the evening, coming in at 21:54 for the course. Cherry is out of cross country eligibility, but will run for HPU in indoor and outdoor track & field. Berkis was the top collegiate finisher in 22:28 and Morgan was the seventh overall finisher at 23:00. Their combined time of 45:28 gave them the relay title. HPU sophomore Neal Darmody was the third individual in 22:45 and he teamed up with senior Josh Cashman (11th in 23:23) to combine for 46:08, the No. 2 relay time of the night. The tandem of Peachee (23:17) and junior Jevin Monds (22:53) took third and freshmen Edmonds (23:02) and Smith (23:12) came in fourth. As a team, HPU posted a perfect score of six, followed by Wake Forest (18) and UNC Greensboro (34). The High Point University women’s cross country team placed third behind Wake Forest and UNC Greensboro. In the two-runner relay format, seniors Geneva Winterink and Joya Canfield were the Panthers’ best in a combined 38:00. Canfield had HPU’s top individual time in 18:58 followed by Winterink at 19:08. Their combined time of 38:00 was sixth overall behind four relay tandems from Wake Forest and one from UNC Greensboro.


Saturday September 5, 2009

Business: Pam Haynes

DOW JONES 9,441.27 +96.66

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S&P 1,016.40 +13.16

PHaynes@hpe.com (336) 888-3617

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Judge recuses himself from Chevron case

QUITO, Ecuador – The Ecuadorean judge presiding over a $27 billion environmental lawsuit against Chevron has recused himself. Judge Juan Nunez says he is stepping down to guarantee the trial’s transparency amid an investigation into allegations of wrongdoing on his part. Earlier this week, Chevron released a video in which the magistrate allegedly told a businessmen he had already made up his mind to rule against the company. He has denied allegations of misconduct made by the San Ramon, California-based company and told The Associated Press on Friday that the tapes were “edited and manipulated.”

Unemployment hits 9.7 percent WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. unemployment rate climbed last month to 9.7 percent — the highest in nearly a generation — but the number of job losses was less than expected and the smallest monthly total in a year. “It’s good to see the rate of job losses slow down,” said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight. But with unemployment rising, “there isn’t the underlying fuel there for strong consumer spending

growth,” which is vital for a strong recovery. Employers shed 216,000 jobs in August, the Labor Department said Friday. That was 9,000 fewer than expected but a far cry from the job creation required to rejuvenate the economy: about 125,000 new jobs each month just to keep the unemployment rate from increasing. The unemployment rate rose three-tenths of a percentage point since July, reaching its highest

level since 1983, when it was 10.1 percent. Economists predict that the jobless rate will peak above 10 percent by the middle of next year. At the same time, many analysts say the economy should grow by a healthy 3 to 4 percent in the third quarter, pulling the United States out of the longest recession since World War II. Most of that improvement, though, stems from auto companies and other manufacturers refilling

their depleted stockpiles. Those inventories had plummeted as factories and retailers sought to bring goods more in line with reduced sales during the recession. Without stepped-up demand from consumers, any current economy growth might not last. The Obama administration’s $787 billion stimulus package of tax cuts and increased spending contributed to the improvement, along with the popular Cash for

Clunkers program. The clunkers program provided up to $4,500 in rebates to consumers who traded in old gas-guzzlers for newer models. An $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers has also helped boost housing sales and stabilize prices, after years of declines. Yet economists worry that none of that will be enough to sustain an economic recovery once the government’s efforts fade.

Conn. offers incentives to keep Pratt jobs

HARTFORD, Conn. – Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell offered $100 million worth of incentives Thursday to jet engine maker Pratt & Whitney to prevent the possible loss of about 1,000 jobs. The five-year plan includes lifting a cap on tax credits for parent corporation United Technologies Corp., providing training assistance, and establishing a job retention tax credit. It also includes investments in machinery and equipment and the building of an Engineering Center for Excellence for engineers at Pratt & Whitney and other aerospace companies.

Treasury prices fall as stocks move higher

NEW YORK – Treasury prices fell for a second straight day Friday as buying picked up on Wall Street after a mixed report on the labor market. Stock prices moved higher in afternoon trading, putting pressure on bonds, after the Labor Department said job losses slowed last month to their lowest level in a year. However, the unemployment rate increased to 9.7 percent, more than the 9.5 percent rate the market anticipated and the highest since June 1983. The Treasury will offer $20 billion of 10-year notes and $12 billion of $30-year bonds, slightly more than the market anticipated. The government will also issue $38 billion of 3-year notes.

ENTERPRISE NEWS SERVICE REPORTS

FILE | AP

American Airlines MD-80 planes are seen parked at Washington’s Reagan National Airport. Federal regulators said Friday they are investigating American Airlines over structural repairs to its aging fleet of MD-80 series aircraft.

FAA probes American Airlines repairs DALLAS (AP) — Federal regulators are investigating American Airlines over structural repairs to its aging fleet of MD-80 series aircraft. A Federal Aviation Administration official said Friday that the investigation centered on 16 planes. The Wall Street Journal reported FAA officials suspect American rushed to retire one of the planes to keep it away from inspectors.

A spokesman for American denied the accusation and said mothballing the aircraft wouldn’t let it escape FAA scrutiny. “We retired the plane for economic reasons, tied to our decision several months ago to reduce capacity,” spokesman Roger Frizzell told The Associated Press. “Any other assertion is incorrect and misleading.” FAA spokesman Lynn Lunsford declined to say whether inspectors believed the airline had

tried to hide the plane or whether they had examined it in the New Mexico desert, where it is now parked. He said inspectors examined “a number of planes” during an investigation that dates back at least to March. Lunsford said the investigation centered on repairs to the rear bulkhead of the MD-80 series aircraft. As of May, American had 270 MD-80 series jets, or 44 percent of its fleet, according to the company’s Web site.

Fort Worth-based American, a unit of AMR Corp., is slowly replacing the MD-80s with new, more fuel-efficient planes while it reduces capacity, or the number of flights, to deal with a decline in air travel. Airplanes expand and contract as the cabin is pressurized for flight and then depressurized. That can lead to metal fatigue that requires close monitoring and sometimes repairs, especially around the rear bulkhead.

Record fine unlikely to end bogus drug marketing INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Pfizer Inc. was slapped this week with a record $2.3 billion in fines for illegally marketing some drugs, but critics say even that eye-popping total is unlikely to end the sometimes-dangerous practice of promoting drugs for unapproved uses. The penalty pales compared to the billion dollars or more in annual revenue that blockbuster

drugs generate, and new government guidelines stir worry that the marketing of medicines for unapproved uses will become easier. “Drug companies will continue to market offlabel unless the financial downside makes it unprofitable,” said Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, a Georgetown University associate medical professor.

Off-label marketing is a tricky issue. Doctors say prescriptions for uses not noted on a drug’s package label — the fine-print insert that comes with the prescription — play a crucial role in treating patients, especially those with deadly illnesses and few treatment options. However, the Food and Drug Administration

prohibits companies from promoting their drugs for uses it has not approved. Huge fines for those caught violating these rules usually just nibble at drug company sales totals. Pfizer’s fine is the largest health care fraud settlement in U.S. Justice Department history.

But that $2.3 billion total stands small compared to the $44.2 billion in pharmaceutical sales the world’s largest drugmaker rang up last year. “$2.3 billion looks like a lot of money,” Fugh-Berman said. “But these are highly profitable drugs. It will not take them very long to make up that deficit.”

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BUSINESS 7C

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 www.hpe.com

MARKET IN REVIEW GlobalMarkets

LocalFunds FAMILY American Funds

FUND

CAT

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

NAV

BalA m

MA 15.15

+.09 +12.5

-7.5

BondA m

CI

11.60

-.04 +11.6

+0.5 +1.2 +2.5

CapIncBuA m

IH

45.74

+.42 +13.4

-7.7

-1.5 +4.7

CpWldGrIA m

WS 31.40

+.55 +20.7

-8.8

-1.4 +7.3

EurPacGrA m

FB

35.68

+.63 +27.4

-3.8

-0.7 +9.2

FnInvA m

LB

29.54

+.43 +19.9

-14.5

-4.1 +4.1

GrthAmA m

LG

25.04

+.34 +22.3

-13.1

-4.1 +3.2

IncAmerA m

MA 14.45

+.10 +14.5

-7.4

-3.0 +2.7

InvCoAmA m

LB

23.77

+.30 +15.9

-11.4

-5.2 +1.5

NewPerspA m

WS 23.49

+.36 +24.4

-5.4

-1.0 +6.7

WAMutInvA m

LV

22.53

+.26

+7.2

-17.4

-6.8 -0.7

Davis

NYVentA m

LB

28.05

+.33 +18.8

-15.5

-6.6 +0.8

Dodge & Cox

IntlStk

FV

29.78

+.60 +36.0

-9.6

-3.6 +7.8

Stock

LV

88.13 +1.47 +19.8

-17.9

-9.5 +0.3

Contra

LG

51.96

+.60 +14.8

-13.2

-2.6 +4.7

DivrIntl d

FG 26.13

+.40 +21.5

-14.4

-5.5 +5.5

EqInc

LV

36.38

+.48 +19.6

-15.0

-8.2 -0.5

Free2020

TE

11.91

+.11 +19.1

-8.4

-2.1 +2.9

GrowCo

LG

61.00

+.94 +24.6

-12.8

-1.0 +5.1

LowPriStk d

MB 29.53

+.38 +27.7

-7.3

-2.3 +4.7

Magellan

LG

59.59

+.89 +30.2

-16.6

-6.0 -0.7

FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m

CA

1.91

+.01 +22.2

-7.0

-1.5 +3.1

Harbor

IntlInstl d

FV

49.51

+.84 +23.4

-10.6

-0.9 +9.9

PIMCO

TotRetA m

CI

10.78

-.02 +10.5 +11.2 +8.3 +6.2

TotRetAdm b

CI

10.78

-.02 +10.6 +11.4 +8.5 +6.5

TotRetIs

CI

10.78

-.02 +10.8 +11.6 +8.8 +6.7

500Adml

LB

94.09 +1.23 +14.7

-15.5

-6.0 +0.3

500Inv

LB

94.07 +1.23 +14.6

-15.5

-6.1 +0.2

GNMAAdml

GI

10.71

+8.1 +6.9 +5.6

InstIdx

LB

93.48 +1.22 +14.7

-15.4

-6.0 +0.3

InstPlus

LB

93.48 +1.21 +14.7

-15.4

-6.0 +0.3

MuIntAdml

MI

13.44

+.01

+5.9 +4.6 +4.0

Prmcp d

LG

53.28

+.78 +19.6

-12.3

TotBdId

CI

10.35

-.03

+7.1 +6.3 +5.0

TotIntl

FB

13.62

+.20 +26.2

-7.7

-3.3 +7.2

TotStIAdm

LB

25.08

+.33 +16.4

-15.3

-5.5 +1.1

TotStIdx

LB

25.08

+.33 +16.4

-15.3

-5.6 +1.0

Welltn

MA 27.26

+.16 +13.6

WelltnAdm

MA 47.09

+.27 +13.8

WndsrII

LV

+.26 +15.2

Fidelity

Vanguard

21.70

-.01

+4.3

+8.7

+4.6

Stocks jump as jobs report little hope

-1.8 +1.7

NEW YORK (AP) – Stocks jumped in light trading Friday after the government reported that the pace of job losses slowed in August to the lowest level in a year. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 97 points to halve its loss for the week after the Labor Department said employers cut fewer workers last month. However, the report also showed that the ranks of the unemployed swelled to 9.7 percent, the highest level since June 1983. Analysts had been expecting the rate to increase to 9.5 percent after unexpectedly dipping in July. The increase initially spooked the market, but stocks later recovered their losses and moved higher. Many economists expect the rate to top 10 percent by early next year.

-1.2 +4.5

-4.1 +0.6 +4.8 -4.0 +0.7 +5.0 -13.5

INDEX

-6.8 +0.9

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

+13.16 +83.01 +54.95 +556.94 +45.25 -27.53

+1.31% +1.57% +1.15% +2.82% +1.27% -0.27%

t t t s t t

s t s t s t

s s s s s s

+12.53% +11.94% +9.42% +41.22% +11.83% +14.98%

1779.25 28309.55 56652.28 11017.47

+24.54 +159.46 +945.11 +95.98

+1.40% +0.57% +1.70% +0.88%

t t t s

t s s s

s s s s

+64.80% +26.49% +50.87% +22.58%

1608.90 2622.69 4442.70 7153.13 195.86

-4.63 +24.33 +9.80 +48.48 +0.91

-0.29% +0.94% +0.22% +0.68% +0.47%

s t t s t

s s s s t

s s s s s

+43.08% +48.88% +21.41% +55.80% +76.58%

293.16 2356.17 1173.70 6119.07 22214.61 24719.17 891.39

+4.15 +33.35 +22.07 +45.35 +278.02 +96.09 +12.11

+1.44% +1.44% +1.92% +0.75% +1.27% +0.39% +1.38%

t t t t t t t

s s s s s t t

s s s s s s s

+19.20% +23.45% +20.26% +10.56% +10.72% +14.92% +34.58%

1016.40 5384.43 4851.70 20318.62 3598.76 10187.11

SOUTH AMERICA / CANADA Buenos Aires Merval Mexico City Bolsa Sao Paolo Bovespa Toronto S&P/TSX

Employers cut 216,000 jobs last month, fewer than the 276,000 lost in July and better than the 225,000 figure analysts had been expecting. Traders said it was an encouraging sign that the labor market could righting itself. “The overall picture is things are getting better,” said Ryan Larson, senior equity trader at Voyageur Asset Management. Stock trading has been erratic over the past few weeks as a sixmonth rally slowed on worries that the market’s rise of more than 50 percent since March has been overdone. The Dow rose 96.66, or 1 percent, to 9,441.27. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 13.16, or 1.3 percent, to 1,016.40, while the Nasdaq composite index added 35.58, or 1.8 percent, to 2,018.78.

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 The dollar ended slightly lower after a report showing rising U.S. unemployment. The Labor Department said the country's jobless rate rose to 9.7 percent in August, its highest level since 1983.

MAJORS

CLOSE

CHG.

USD per British Pound Canadian Dollar USD per Euro Japanese Yen Mexican Peso

1.6397 1.0862 1.4309 93.02 13.3815

+.0077 -.0177 +.0058 +.45 -.2160

6MO. AGO

%CHG.

+.47% 1.4156 -1.63% 1.2737 +.41% 1.2639 +.48% 99.22 -1.61% 15.1935

EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST Israeli Shekel 3.7460 +.0019 +.71% 4.2040 Norwegian Krone 6.0125 +.0011 +.66% 7.0444 South African Rand 7.5902 +.0009 +.68% 10.3142 Swedish Krona 7.1633 +.0015 +1.07% 9.0334 Swiss Franc 1.0605 +.0019 +.20% 1.1715 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan Hong Kong Dollar Indian Rupee Singapore Dollar South Korean Won Taiwan Dollar

* — Annualized

1.1743 +.0129 +1.51% 1.5325 6.8308 +.0001 +.07% 6.8444 7.7504 -.0000 -.00% 7.7602 48.776 -.0000 -.00% 51.488 1.4379 +.0017 +.24% 1.5442 1246.50 -.000005 -.62% 1546.40 32.88 -.0000 -.00% 35.09

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST YTD Name Div Last Chg %Chg Chevron 2.72f 68.96 +.63 -6.8 Cisco ... 21.84 +.35 +34.0 Citigrp ... 4.85 +.08 -27.7 CocaCl 1.64 49.95 +.37 +10.3 ColgPal 1.76 71.08 -.09 +3.7 ColonPT 0.60m 8.62 -.03 +3.5 Comcast 0.27 16.33 +.85 -3.3 Corning 0.20 15.32 +.12 +60.8 Culp Inc h ... 5.80 -.29 +192.8 Daimler 0.80e 45.89 +2.20 +19.9 Deere 1.12 42.18 +.96 +10.1 Dell Inc ... 15.69 +.44 +53.2 Dillards 0.16 11.55 +.46 +190.9 Disney 0.35 25.90 +.46 +14.1 DukeEngy 0.96f 15.52 +.21 +3.4 ExxonMbl 1.68 69.18 +.92 -13.3 FNB Utd 0.10 2.25 -.05 -28.3 FedExCp 0.44 70.86 +1.12 +10.5 FtBcpNC 0.32 17.43 -.28 -5.0 FCtzBA 1.20 136.48 +.78 -10.7 FordM ... 7.43 -.05 +224.5 FortuneBr 0.76 38.98 +.53 -5.6 FurnBrds ... 5.01 +.01 +126.7 Gap 0.34 21.12 -.06 +57.7

YTD Name Div Last Chg %Chg GenDynam 1.52 60.48 +1.68 +5.0 GenElec 0.40 13.87 +.42 -14.4 GlaxoSKln 1.84e 39.04 +.44 +4.7 Google ... 461.30 +3.78 +49.9 Hanesbrds ... 19.76 +.21 +55.0 HarleyD 0.40 23.29 +.67 +37.2 HewlettP 0.32 45.10 +.65 +24.3 HomeDp 0.90 27.03 +.13 +17.4 HookerFu 0.40 13.58 +.33 +77.3 Intel 0.56 19.64 +.22 +34.0 IBM 2.20 117.46 +1.13 +39.6 JPMorgCh 0.20 42.34 +.23 +35.9 Kellogg 1.50f 47.22 +.33 +7.7 KimbClk 2.40 58.20 +.16 +10.4 KrispKrm ... 3.36 +.02 +100.0 LabCp ... 69.50 +.41 +7.9 Lance 0.64 25.60 +.38 +11.6 LeggMason 0.12 27.48 +.04 +25.4 LeggPlat 1.04f 18.49 +.35 +21.7 LincNat 0.04 23.80 +.02 +26.3 Lowes 0.36 21.62 +.31 +0.5 McDnlds 2.00 56.14 +.57 -9.7 Merck 1.52 30.70 +.46 +1.0 MetLife 0.74 36.61 +.46 +5.0

Name 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 QuestCap g

Div 0.52 ... 0.20 ... ... ... ... 1.36 1.72e 1.40 ... ... 2.12 ... ... 0.80 0.72 0.64 1.08 0.20 1.76 2.48 0.68 ...

YTD Last Chg %Chg 24.62 +.51 +26.6 48.17 +.93 +12.1 27.65 ... +72.4 7.73 +.03 +74.5 13.17 +.30 -6.9 7.14 ... -2.6 2.20 +.04 -7.6 47.96 +1.14 +1.9 46.29 +.50 -7.0 44.17 +.10 -4.4 5.19 +.15 +74.2 36.84 +.49 +29.4 54.89 +.78 +29.4 53.30 +.48 +2.0 15.32 +.26 -28.6 30.42 +.41 +54.4 36.05 +.28 +60.2 16.39 +.31 -7.5 24.02 -.22 -24.2 66.75 +.81 +47.0 52.86 -.01 -14.5 39.26 +.21 -1.5 45.72 +.70 +27.6 .97 +.02 +40.2

Name RF MicD RedHat ReynldAm RoyalBk g Ruddick SCM Mic SaraLee Sealy s SearsHldgs Sherwin SouthnCo SpectraEn SprintNex StdMic Starbucks Steelcse SunTrst Syngenta Tanger Targacept Target 3M Co TimeWrn rs US Airwy

2.36

-.50

-17.5

BrdgptEd n

15.57

-2.66

-14.6

+17.6

FstPfd pfA

6.51

-.76

-10.5

2.91

+.51

+21.3

Esterline

36.41

+5.91

+19.4

Metrogas

2.00

+.30

Quiksilvr

FelCor

3.94

+.51

+14.9

Clay Bond

44.40

-4.59

-9.4

PzenaInv

7.23

+.75

+11.6

PrUShCh25

9.85

-.78

-7.3

Yesterday's volume* Close Citigrp

5369006

4.85

+.08

FannieMae 2005375

1.77

+.13

BkofAm

1657386

17.09

+.25

SPDR

1182731

102.06

+1.41

837059

1.97

+.10

FredMac

Yesterday's Change % close

Chg FacetBio n

Losers

Yesterday's Change % close

Gainers

FredM pfN

YTD Last Chg %Chg 4.76 +.09 +510.3 23.63 +.52 +78.7 46.60 +.70 +15.6 51.86 +1.33 +74.8 26.86 +.14 -2.9 2.20 ... -2.2 9.38 +.02 -4.2 2.70 +.04 +111.9 62.38 +.65 +60.5 60.39 +.15 +1.1 31.42 +.29 -15.1 18.39 +.16 +16.8 3.81 +.23 +108.2 23.04 +.60 +41.0 19.02 +.33 +101.1 6.51 +.07 +15.8 20.76 +.05 -29.7 46.46 -.12 +18.7 35.18 +.38 -6.5 14.99 +.03 +321.1 47.12 +.05 +36.5 71.35 +.33 +24.0 28.05 +.44 +25.8 3.38 +.12 -56.3

Yesterday's Change % close ArrayBio

2.90

-.88

-23.3

ReadgIntB

6.00

-1.78

-22.9

+32.2

PeopEduc

2.47

-.56

-18.5

15.38

+6.56

+74.4

TierOne

3.13

+.97

+44.9

JazzPhrm

9.27

+2.26

PSB Hldg

3.95

+.70

+21.5

SevenArts n

3.25

-.50

-13.3

UltaSalon

15.00

+2.51

+20.1

ImperInds

2.08

-.31

-13.0

* In 100's

Div ...

Last 2.56

YTD Chg %Chg +.20 -9.2

UPS B

1.80

53.81

+.98

VF Cp

2.36

69.29

+.47 +26.5

-2.4

Valspar

0.60

26.46

+.27 +46.3

VerizonCm

1.90f

30.60

+.36

-9.7

Vodafone

1.14e

22.04

+.52

+7.8

VulcanM

1.00m

49.21

+.65 -29.3

WalMart

1.09

51.68

-.06

-7.8

WellsFargo

0.20

26.91

...

-8.7

...

14.50

Yahoo

+.22 +18.9

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

Last

Prev Wk

$994.90 $16.263 $2.8435

$957.00 $14.784 $2.9230

Another Washington state lawmaker, Democratic Rep. Jim McDermott, said, “We learned in a WTO ruling that Airbus has enjoyed an unfair competitive advantage over Team Boeing for decades.” However, European officials who were briefed had a somewhat different take on the ruling from American lawmakers and officials, suggesting that many of the complaints lodged by the U.S. had been dismissed. They also said the kind of easy-term loans provided by European governments to Airbus were in some instances seen as a permissible form of financing. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the ruling was not made public, said the report was clearly not in Airbus’ favor and was a rebuke to decades of European government help. Boeing is headquartered in Chicago, but has extensive plane-building operations in the Seattle area. Lawmakers from other states with links to Boeing, also confirmed the decision.

Yesterday's volume* Close

Chg

PwShs QQQ 638027

40.36

CellTher rsh 540041

1.49

-.04

464426

19.64

+.22

Microsoft

445399

24.62

+.51

ETrade

434585

1.55

+.04

Intel

+.85

* In 100's

WTO rules Airbus got unfair aid

WASHINGTON (AP) – In a victory for Boeing Co., the World Trade Organization sided with the American aviation giant Friday in finding that European countries had provided billions in illegal subsidies to chief competitor Airbus. The preliminary ruling by the Geneva-based WTO, although expected to be challenged by the European Union, could begin to shake up the $3.2 trillion global market in new jetliners, in which Airbus has overtaken Boeing. The next shoe to drop will be a decision that may well go the other way: The international trade body will rule next year in an Airbus challenge to what it sees as unfair U.S. government support for Boeing. Friday’s decision confirms a complaint by the United States, filed in 2004, that “all Airbus aircraft have received illegal subsidies and that these have caused material harm to Boeing,” said Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., among those briefed by U.S. trade officials on the yet-to-be released decision.

Name Unifi

Top 5 NASDAQ Most active

Gainers

Yesterday's Change % close

Losers

Top 5 NYSE

Div ... ... 3.40 2.00 0.48 ... 0.44 ... ... 1.42 1.75 1.52f ... ... ... 0.16m 0.04m 1.07e 1.53 ... 0.68f 2.04 0.75 ...

Most active

YTD Name Div Last Chg %Chg AT&T Inc 1.64 25.51 +.36 -10.5 Aetna 0.04 29.38 +.25 +3.1 AlcatelLuc ... 3.59 +.10 +67.0 Alcoa 0.12 12.18 +.17 +8.2 Allstate 0.80 28.85 +.37 -11.9 AmExp 0.72 32.84 +.38 +77.0 Ameriprise 0.68 29.00 +.09 +24.1 AnalogDev 0.80 28.80 +.65 +51.4 Aon Corp 0.60 41.89 +.39 -8.3 Apple Inc ... 170.31 +3.76 +99.5 Avon 0.84 30.88 +.87 +28.5 BB&T Cp 0.60 26.51 +.14 -3.5 BNC Bcp 0.20 7.38 -.27 -1.7 BP PLC 3.36e 53.19 +.39 +13.8 BkofAm 0.04 17.09 +.25 +21.4 BkCarol 0.20 4.08 ... -4.0 BassettF lf ... 4.47 -.27 +33.4 BestBuy 0.56 39.41 -.24 +40.9 Boeing 1.68 49.15 +.69 +15.2 CBL Asc 0.20m 8.09 -.09 +24.5 CSX 0.88 45.29 +.87 +39.5 CVS Care 0.31 37.20 +.57 +29.4 CapOne 0.20 35.23 +.37 +10.5 Caterpillar 1.68 46.11 +1.07 +3.2

FILE | AP

The top photo shows the new Boeing 787 airplane being unveiled in July 2007 at Boeing’s assembly plant in Everett, Wash., and the bottom photo shows visitors having a look at the Airbus A380 at the Airport Days in September 2007 in Hamburg. The World Trade Organization ruled Friday that Airbus received illegal subsidies from European nations to help fund production.

G-20 must tackle bonuses, Europeans say LONDON (AP) – Top finance officials debated the next steps for the recovering global economy on Friday, with European countries pushing for a crackdown on bankers’ bonuses while the U.S. stressed the need to boost bank reserves to prevent a repeat of the financial crisis. The Group of 20 countries were also discussing so-called exit strategies from the recent massive economic stimulus, although all agreed that withdrawing the massive amounts of money injected into the ailing world economy any time soon could risk a double-dip recession. Developing countries, meanwhile, used the gathering to press for reform of global financial governance, proposing shifts in voting power at the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in favor of developing countries.

Finance ministers and central bank officials from rich and developing countries representing 80 percent of world economic output are convening in London through Saturday amid mounting signs of at least a modest economic upturn, with Japan, Germany, France and Australia all recording growth in the second quarter. Britain is widely expected to do so in the third quarter. But the mood remained subdued, with a uniform warning that it is too early to declare the end of the crisis. “The global economy still faces great uncertainty, and significant risks remain to economic and financial stability,” Brazil, Russia, India and China – the so-called BRIC quartet – said after they held a mini-summit ahead of the main G-20 talks.


WEATHER 8C www.hpe.com SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE

High Point Enterprise Weather Today

Sunday

Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

Mostly Sunny

Mostly Sunny

Partly Cloudy

Partly Cloudy

Few Showers

86º 61º

85º 62º

83º 64º

82º 64º

79º 63º

Local Area Forecast Kernersville Winston-Salem 85/60 86/60 Jamestown 86/61 High Point 86/61 Archdale Thomasville 86/62 86/61 Trinity Lexington 86/61 Randleman 86/61 86/62

North Carolina State Forecast

Elizabeth City 84/65

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

High Point 86/61

Asheville 82/56

Denton 87/62

Greenville 87/64 Cape Raleigh Hatteras 86/61 82/72

Charlotte 89/62

Almanac

Wilmington 86/67 Today

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

Hi/Lo Wx

s pc s pc s pc s pc s s pc pc s s s s s

86/63 80/59 83/68 81/71 87/65 73/55 85/67 80/60 84/68 85/67 81/74 79/56 85/63 86/64 85/68 87/62 85/63

s mc pc mc s mc s mc pc s pc mc 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

City

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

ALBUQUERQUE . . . .83/57 ATLANTA . . . . . . . . .86/65 BOISE . . . . . . . . . . . .92/57 BOSTON . . . . . . . . . .77/60 CHARLESTON, SC . .87/69 CHARLESTON, WV . .89/64 CINCINNATI . . . . . . .83/59 CHICAGO . . . . . . . . .76/59 CLEVELAND . . . . . . .77/57 DALLAS . . . . . . . . . .91/70 DETROIT . . . . . . . . . .80/59 DENVER . . . . . . . . . .87/58 GREENSBORO . . . . .86/61 GRAND RAPIDS . . . .79/56 HOUSTON . . . . . . . . .91/73 HONOLULU . . . . . . . .88/75 KANSAS CITY . . . . . .80/64 NEW ORLEANS . . . .87/75

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

Today

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City

85/56 85/65 77/47 68/56 85/70 84/64 83/61 80/61 78/57 90/71 80/61 84/57 85/62 79/57 91/73 89/76 81/64 87/75

LAS VEGAS . . . . . .101/81 LOS ANGELES . . . . .88/64 MEMPHIS . . . . . . . . .86/68 MIAMI . . . . . . . . . . . .89/77 MINNEAPOLIS . . . . . .76/58 MYRTLE BEACH . . . .86/67 NEW YORK . . . . . . . .84/67 ORLANDO . . . . . . . . .92/75 PHOENIX . . . . . . . . .100/81 PITTSBURGH . . . . . .80/56 PHILADELPHIA . . . . .87/64 PROVIDENCE . . . . . .81/57 SAN FRANCISCO . . .70/57 ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . .80/63 SEATTLE . . . . . . . . . .66/56 TULSA . . . . . . . . . . . .81/64 WASHINGTON, DC . .89/64 WICHITA . . . . . . . . . .80/61

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

Hi/Lo Wx

Today

Sunday

Hi/Lo Wx

t ra s pc t s pc ra pc s

UV Index for 3 periods of the day.

8 a.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Noon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 4 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7

Sunday

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

s 99/75 s s 85/63 s t 83/68 t t 88/76 t s 79/61 s s 84/68 mc s 77/63 mc t 89/75 t t 102/81 t s 81/62 pc s 84/65 s s 72/54 mc s 69/57 pc t 80/64 t ra 63/55 sh s 83/65 pc s 84/64 s mc 82/65 mc

Last 9/11

New 9/18

Full 10/4

First 9/25

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 655.2 653.3 -0.1 Flood Stage Current Level Change Yadkin College 18.0 0.77 -0.11 Elkin 16.0 1.21 -0.03 Wilkesboro 14.0 2.14 +0.01 High Point 10.0 0.66 +0.02 Ramseur 20.0 0.91 -0.02 Moncure 20.0 8.90 0.00

Pollen Forecast

Hi/Lo Wx

ACAPULCO . . . . . . . .90/78 AMSTERDAM . . . . . .62/56 BAGHDAD . . . . . . . .111/84 BARCELONA . . . . . .78/61 BEIJING . . . . . . . . . .80/60 BEIRUT . . . . . . . . . . . . .93/76 BOGOTA . . . . . . . . . .68/49 BERLIN . . . . . . . . . . .65/54 BUENOS AIRES . . . .70/51 CAIRO . . . . . . . . . . . .92/74

UV Index

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Around The World City

Statistics through 6 p.m. yesterday at Greensboro

Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . .6:56 a.m. Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . .7:42 p.m. Moonrise . . . . . . . . . .7:58 p.m. Moonset . . . . . . . . . . .Next Day

Across The Nation Today

24 hours through 6 p.m. . . . . . . .0.00" Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.00" Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . .0.55" Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25.26" Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . .30.10" Record Precipitation . . . . . . . . . .2.32"

90/78 68/57 110/79 81/61 65/58 91/74 71/49 65/53 74/54 94/74

t mc s s ra s pc ra pc s

Today

City

COPENHAGEN . . . . .63/56 GENEVA . . . . . . . . . .66/46 GUANGZHOU . . . . . .96/80 GUATEMALA . . . . . .77/61 HANOI . . . . . . . . . . . .94/79 HONG KONG . . . . . . . .92/82 KABUL . . . . . . . . . . .81/57 LONDON . . . . . . . . . .67/50 MOSCOW . . . . . . . . .74/57 NASSAU . . . . . . . . . .91/81

nt i Po ke h g epsa i H Ke

Sunday

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Today

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City

67/56 73/47 98/80 78/63 94/80 93/74 82/58 66/51 71/55 90/81

PARIS . . . . . . . . . . . .69/46 ROME . . . . . . . . . . . .84/65 SAO PAULO . . . . . . .71/56 SEOUL . . . . . . . . . . .86/70 SINGAPORE . . . . . . .88/77 STOCKHOLM . . . . . . .66/52 SYDNEY . . . . . . . . . .68/50 TEHRAN . . . . . . . . . .91/72 TOKYO . . . . . . . . . . .83/71 ZURICH . . . . . . . . . . .62/46

pc s s t t s s cl pc t

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Sunday

74/48 83/63 64/59 83/69 88/77 65/50 67/52 90/70 84/72 67/44

pc s ra pc t sh s s s s

Air Quality

Today: Moderate Predominant Types: Weeds

Hi/Lo Wx Pollen Rating Scale

ALBEMARLE . . . . . .87/62 BREVARD . . . . . . . . .80/57 CAPE FEAR . . . . . . .86/67 EMERALD ISLE . . . .83/69 FORT BRAGG . . . . . .88/63 GRANDFATHER MTN . .72/53 GREENVILLE . . . . . .87/64 HENDERSONVILLE .81/57 JACKSONVILLE . . . .87/64 KINSTON . . . . . . . . . .87/64 KITTY HAWK . . . . . . .81/72 MOUNT MITCHELL . .79/55 ROANOKE RAPIDS .86/61 SOUTHERN PINES . .87/62 WILLIAMSTON . . . . .87/64 YANCEYVILLE . . . . .89/59 ZEBULON . . . . . . . . .86/61

Precipitation (Yesterday)

High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59 Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .82 Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . .64 Last Year’s High . . . . . . . .88 Last Year’s Low . . . . . . . . .64 Record High . . . . .98 in 1975 Record Low . . . . . .52 in 1997

Sun and Moon

Around Our State City

Temperatures (Yesterday)

100 75 50

40 20

25

0 0

Today: 54 (Moderate) 0-50: 51-100: 101-150:

Trees

Grasses

Weeds

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

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

Good Moderate Unhealthy (sensitive) Unhealthy Very Unhealthy Hazardous

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

PASSAGES A Pictorial history of High Point

Passages is a hard-cover, coffee-table book containing 177 photographs and their descriptions from the late 1800s through the early 2000s. Feel what it is like to walk the streets of High Point in each of these decades.

Available for the Special pre-publication price of

$

.95

29

Order now and SAVE $10 off the post-publication price of $39.95!

BUY BOTH & SAVE! PURCHASE THE BOOK & DVD TOGETHER FOR $34.95! (DVD $9.95 IF PURCHASED SEPARATELY) PASSAGES WILL BE PUBLISHED AND AVAILABLE FOR PICKUP IN OCTOBER. FILL OUT THE FORM BELOW AND MAIL IN ALONG WITH YOUR PAYMENT TO:

Only 3 more weeks at this price -

Order your book today!

THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE PASSAGES PRE ORDERS 210 CHURCH AVE., HIGH POINT, NC 27262 PASSAGES - BOOK ONLY

# OF COPIES @ $29.95 EACH TOTAL AMOUNT ENCLOSED: PASSAGES - DVD ONLY # OF COPIES @ $9.95 EACH PASSAGES - BOOK/DVD COMBO Besteal! # OF COMBOS @ $34.95 EACH D NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE #: EMAIL: SIGNATURE:

DATE:


D

Saturday September 5, 2009

GOOD DEAL: Find the perfect car. THE CLASSIFIED

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

Taurus gets styling, technology makeover BY ANN M. JOB THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NUTS & BOLTS

Just about everything that a car buyer can see, touch and feel is changed for the 2010 Ford Taurus, and it’s a good thing. From the new styling lines outside to the sizable center stack of controls in the middle of the dashboard inside, the new Taurus is tastefully upgraded as a near-premium large sedan. Even better, it offers so many safety features usually reserved for luxury cars, it sets a new safety benchmark for mainstream family-size sedans. Among the high-tech safety features available – not necessarily standard on every Taurus – are programmable adjustments a parent can make for when a teenager will be driving the car and radar-controlled adaptive cruise control that automatically slows the car if it’s closing on a vehicle ahead on the highway. The Taurus’ fuel economy rating of 17 miles per gallon in city driving and 25 mpg on the highway is OK for such a roomy sedan that’s grown in size from its 2009 predecessor. Best of all, starting manufacturer’s suggested

AP

The starting manufacturer’s retail price for a 2010 Ford Taurus is the same $25,995 that it was for the 2009 model. retail price, including destination charge, for a 2010 Taurus is the same $25,995 that it was for the 2009 model. This is for a base, front-wheel drive SE with 263-horsepower, 3.5-liter V-6 and six-speed automatic transmission. Competitors include the Toyota Avalon, which starts at $28,595 for a 2009 model with 268-horsepower V-6, and the 2010 Buick

LaCrosse that starts at $27,835 with 255-horsepower V-6. Expect to be surprised at how sizable and substantial the new Taurus looks and feels. The powerdome shape of the hood and high trunk lid visually convey a strong, powerful sedan. Once behind the wheel, a driver notices that this Taurus feels solid and

weighty. Even the base Taurus weighs more than 4,000 pounds. Still, the new model uses the same Volvo-derived underlying platform that last year’s Taurus had. The ride is exceptional during highway cruising. Most road bumps were damped, and there was even a minimal amount of vibrations coming

through to passengers in the test car. But I often heard noisy tire chatter when the test Taurus Limited with 19-inch tires was on concrete sections of roadway. On winding roads, the Taurus’ heft and size plus compliant suspension had me backing off aggressive moves in the test car as my passengers and I readily

2010 Ford Taurus Limited AWD BASE PRICE: $25,170 for base SE; $27,170 for front-wheel drive SEL; $29,020 for all-wheel drive SEL; $31,170 for front-wheel drive Limited; $33,020 for all-wheel drive Limited AS TESTED: $38,135. TYPE: Front engine, front-wheel drive, fivepassenger, large sedan ENGINE: 3.5-liter, dual overhead cam, Duratec V-6 MILEAGE: 17 mpg (city), 25 mpg (highway) TOP SPEED: 111 mph LENGTH: 202.9 inches WHEELBASE: 112.9 inches CURB WEIGHT: 3,752 pounds BUILT AT: Chicago

noticed body mass shifting this way and that. I also discovered that the Taurus has a large, nearly 40-foot turning circle. It took some time to gauge where the corners of this big car were as I maneuvered in tight spaces. From the driver’s seat, I never saw the edges of the hood nor could I see very well the back end of the car.

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

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

ERRORS

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

LEGALS 10 ANNOUNCEMENTS 500 510 520 530 540 550 560 570

Card of Thanks Happy Ads Memorials Lost Found Personals Special Notices

1190 1195 1200 1210 1220

Technical Telecommunications Telemarketing Trades Veterinary Service

RENTALS 2000

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

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

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

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

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

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


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