20
Tuesday, May 11, 2010, Forest City, N.C. Central wins R-S Central beat McDowell in non-conference softball action Monday Page 7 50¢ Lake Lure makes magazine’s list — Page 2 Obama picks Kagan for post on court Page 14 Low: $2.76 High: $2.86 Avg.: $2.81 NATION GAS PRICES SPORTS Jeff Burton’s near misses are frustrating Page 7 DEATHS WEATHER Forest City Steven Dulaney Bostic Lillie Jones Union Mills Kenneth Woods Page 5 Today and tonight, thunderstorms likely. Complete forecast, Page 10 Vol. 42, No. 112 High 72 Low 60 Now on the Web: www.thedigitalcourier.com Sports Allison Flynn/Daily Courier Spindale Elementary kindergarten teacher Darlyne Perry (left) and radio personality Stacie Bartro of (right) of Magic 98.9 dance with students in Perry’s Kindergarten class at Spindale Elementary. Bartro was on hand to present Perry the station’s “Teachers Who Make Magic” award. By JEAN GORDON Daily Courier Staff Writer FOREST CITY — A 19-year-old Rutherford County man drowned Sunday at about 5 p.m. in Lake James in McDowell County. Steven Talmadge Dulaney, of Island Ford Road, was swimming with two other friends when he began struggling while the three were attempting to swim about 100 yards to a rope swing. Capt. Victor Hollifield, criminal investi- gator with the McDowell County Sheriff’s Department, said the friends were swim- ming diagonally to the rope swing when Dulaney started to struggle and the swimmers decided to swim back to the shore. They were swimming in an area of the state park and only been swimming about 15 minutes. “He was in the middle and told his friends he wasn’t going to make it,” said Hollifield. Sheriff’s officers said because he was panicking so badly, his friends were not Please see Man, Page 6 Jean Gordon/Daily Courier Emergency personnel assist Bostic resident Mattie Burchman Monday morning after her car ran into the rear end of a tractor-trailer on U.S.74A near Butler Street. For details, please see Page 2. From staff reports FOREST CITY — The Forest City Youth Council will be collecting shoes as part of the Samaritan’s Feet project on Thursday. The Youth Council will be accept- ing the donated shoes for three hours in the downtown area. Forest City Commissioner Steve Holland, who coordinates the efforts of the Youth Council, said recently, “We are very thrilled to team up with the Gardner- Webb University Student-Athlete Advisory Committee to collect shoes for Samaritan’s Feet. This is such a great opportunity to help Please see Shoes, Page 6 By SCOTT BAUGHMAN Daily Courier Staff Writer SPINDALE — Facing a budget deficit of $250,000 is a tall order for this former mill town, but commissioners do have a plan. The board didn’t take any votes during a budget workshop Monday afternoon, but members came to a consensus to use a combination of sewer consump- tion rate increases, property tax rate increases and a new garbage collection fee to help make up the shortfall in the fiscal year 2010-11 budget. For the average family, the sewer consumption fee will increase from $380 per year to $475 per year. A new garbage pick-up fee will be put in place that charges $8 per month for residential cus- tomers and $12 per month for non-residential customers. There would also be a $0.04 increase in the property tax rate making the average homeowner in Spindale pay about $20 more per year for a home with an approximate value of $50,000. Combining the different taxes and fees was not the most popular plan among board members, with some begrudgingly agreeing to it. “I’ve talked to many people and the general feeling I’ve gotten is nobody wants a tax increase,” said Commissioner Ed Searcy. “Can we do just a garbage collection fee?” Nancy Walker added, “You’re looking at the average citizen hav- ing to pay about $150 more each year including sewer, garbage collection fees and property tax increases.” Town Manager Cameron McHargue explained, “In my opinion, a trash fee is a fair way to fund it because the person getting the service is the one that pays it. But if we rely very heavily on the trash fee that is more cash out of the person’s pocket.” Commissioner Toby Tomblin Please see Spindale, Page 6 By ALLISON FLYNN Daily Courier Staff Writer SPINDALE – Darlyne Perry wiped away tears and later shouted with joy Monday, all while receiving the “Teachers Who Make Magic” Award from the radio station Magic 98.9. Perry was the station’s April recipient, nominated by Sherry Stegemoller, who is also a volunteer in Perry’s kindergarten classroom at Spindale Elementary. The award, said on-air personality Stacie Bartro, is given to one teacher per month during the school year in the 98.9 listening area. Nominations come from parents or students. Teachers receive a variety of prizes and gift certificates donated by local businesses, Bartro continued, “to give back to that teacher.” Perry has been a teacher with Rutherford County Schools for more than 20 years and has been at Spindale Elementary for four years. She was also nomi- nated for the Tanner Award for Teaching Excellence and is Spindale Elementary’s “Teacher of the Year.” Perry was unaware she’d be receiv- Please see Teacher, Page 6 Allison Flynn/Daily Courier Spindale Elementary kindergarten teacher Darlyne Perry (center) received the “Teachers Who Make Magic” Award from Magic 98.9. She was nominated by school volunteer Sherry Stegemoller (left) and the award was presented by on-air personality Stacie Bartro (right.) Perry received vari- ous gift certificates, a potted plant and tickets to see the Doobie Brothers and Chicago in Charlotte. County man drowns at Lake James Spindale teacher makes magic WOMAN SUFFERS INJURIES Spindale residents may see new costs FC Youth Council will collect shoes

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Page 1: daily courier may 11 2010

Tuesday, May 11, 2010, Forest City, N.C.

Central winsR-S Central beat McDowell in non-conference softball action Monday

Page 7

50¢

Lake Lure makes magazine’s list — Page 2

Obama picks Kagan for post on court

Page 14

Low: $2.76High: $2.86Avg.: $2.81

NATION

GAS PRICES

SPORTS

Jeff Burton’s near misses are frustrating

Page 7

DEATHS

WEATHER

Forest CitySteven Dulaney

BosticLillie Jones

Union MillsKenneth Woods

Page 5

Today and tonight, thunderstorms likely.

Complete forecast, Page 10

Vol. 42, No. 112

High

72Low

60

Now on the Web: www.thedigitalcourier.com

Sports

Allison Flynn/Daily CourierSpindale Elementary kindergarten teacher Darlyne Perry (left) and radio personality Stacie Bartro of (right) of Magic 98.9 dance with students in Perry’s Kindergarten class at Spindale Elementary. Bartro was on hand to present Perry the station’s “Teachers Who Make Magic” award.

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

FOREST CITY — A 19-year-old Rutherford County man drowned Sunday at about 5 p.m. in Lake James in McDowell County.

Steven Talmadge Dulaney, of Island Ford Road, was swimming with two other friends when he began struggling

while the three were attempting to swim about 100 yards to a rope swing.

Capt. Victor Hollifield, criminal investi-gator with the McDowell County Sheriff’s Department, said the friends were swim-ming diagonally to the rope swing when Dulaney started to struggle and the swimmers decided to swim back to the shore. They were swimming in an area of

the state park and only been swimming about 15 minutes.

“He was in the middle and told his friends he wasn’t going to make it,” said Hollifield.

Sheriff’s officers said because he was panicking so badly, his friends were not

Please see Man, Page 6

Jean Gordon/Daily CourierEmergency personnel assist Bostic resident Mattie Burchman Monday morning after her car ran into the rear end of a tractor-trailer on U.S.74A near Butler Street. For details, please see Page 2.

From staff reports

FOREST CITY — The Forest City Youth Council will be collecting shoes as part of the Samaritan’s Feet project on Thursday.

The Youth Council will be accept-ing the donated shoes for three hours in the downtown area.

Forest City Commissioner Steve Holland, who coordinates the efforts of the Youth Council, said recently, “We are very thrilled to team up with the Gardner-Webb University Student-Athlete Advisory Committee to collect shoes for Samaritan’s Feet. This is such a great opportunity to help

Please see Shoes, Page 6

By SCOTT BAUGHMANDaily Courier Staff Writer

SPINDALE — Facing a budget deficit of $250,000 is a tall order for this former mill town, but commissioners do have a plan.

The board didn’t take any votes during a budget workshop Monday afternoon, but members came to a consensus to use a combination of sewer consump-tion rate increases, property tax rate increases and a new garbage collection fee to help make up the shortfall in the fiscal year 2010-11 budget.

For the average family, the sewer consumption fee will increase from $380 per year to $475 per year. A new garbage pick-up fee will be put in place that charges $8 per month for residential cus-tomers and $12 per month for non-residential customers. There would also be a $0.04 increase in the property tax rate making the average homeowner in Spindale pay about $20 more per year for a home with an approximate value of $50,000.

Combining the different taxes and fees was not the most popular plan among board members, with some begrudgingly agreeing to it.

“I’ve talked to many people and the general feeling I’ve gotten is nobody wants a tax increase,” said Commissioner Ed Searcy. “Can we do just a garbage collection fee?”

Nancy Walker added, “You’re looking at the average citizen hav-ing to pay about $150 more each year including sewer, garbage collection fees and property tax increases.”

Town Manager Cameron McHargue explained, “In my opinion, a trash fee is a fair way to fund it because the person getting the service is the one that pays it. But if we rely very heavily on the trash fee that is more cash out of the person’s pocket.”

Commissioner Toby Tomblin

Please see Spindale, Page 6

By ALLISON FLYNNDaily Courier Staff Writer

SPINDALE – Darlyne Perry wiped away tears and later shouted with joy Monday, all while receiving the “Teachers Who Make Magic” Award from the radio station Magic 98.9.

Perry was the station’s April recipient, nominated by Sherry Stegemoller, who is also a volunteer in Perry’s kindergarten classroom at Spindale Elementary. The award, said on-air personality Stacie Bartro, is given to one teacher per month during the school year in the 98.9 listening area. Nominations come from parents or students.

Teachers receive a variety of prizes and gift certificates donated by local businesses, Bartro continued, “to give back to that teacher.”

Perry has been a teacher with Rutherford County Schools for more than 20 years and has been at Spindale Elementary for four years. She was also nomi-nated for the Tanner Award for Teaching Excellence and is Spindale Elementary’s “Teacher of the Year.”

Perry was unaware she’d be receiv-

Please see Teacher, Page 6

Allison Flynn/Daily CourierSpindale Elementary kindergarten teacher Darlyne Perry (center) received the “Teachers Who Make Magic” Award from Magic 98.9. She was nominated by school volunteer Sherry Stegemoller (left) and the award was presented by on-air personality Stacie Bartro (right.) Perry received vari-ous gift certificates, a potted plant and tickets to see the Doobie Brothers and Chicago in Charlotte.

County man drowns at Lake James

Spindale teacher makes magic

WOMAN SUFFERS INJURIES

Spindale residents may see new costs

FC Youth Council will collect shoes

1/front

Page 2: daily courier may 11 2010

2 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

LocaL/State

Jean Gordon/Daily CourierEmergency personnel check out the truck involved in an automobile accident Monday in Forest City. Bostic resident Mattie Burchman was injured in the collision and taken to Rutherford Hospital.

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

FOREST CITY — Mattie Frye Burchman, 67, was taken to Rutherford Hospital Monday for injuries sustained in an automo-bile accident.

Burchman was driving a 2007 Kia Monday morning on U.S.74A and failed to see a trac-tor trailer in front of her slowing down at a traffic light at Butler Road in Forest City.

She was traveling west at about 55 mph, Patrolman James Henson said when she hit the rear end of the tractor-trailer.

Henson said the trailer, driven by Geoffry Burns, 27, of Wadesboro, was traveling at about 20 mph at the time of col-lision.

“This was probably a 35 mph impact,” Henson said.

“She said she really doesn’t know what happened. She thinks her foot may have slipped off the brakes or something. There were no skid marks prior

to the impact,” Henson said.Burns was driving for Quikrete

and was going to Charlotte when he exited at the Forest City/Spindale ramp to go for a rest room stop. He had already made a delivery to Western Carolina University and was heading back to Charlotte.

Burchman was traveling to town, she told officers.

She was charged with failure to reduce speed.

Her car was totaled.

Other wrecks during the week-end included:

Saturday morning at 8:45, Shannon Gregory, 26, of Ellenboro was driving a 1992 Honda north on U.S. 221A when she ran off the road to the right and struck an embankment. Her vehicle then struck a tree before overturning.

She was taken to Rutherford Hospital by Rutherford County EMS.

The Highway Patrol charged

her with failure to maintain lane control, no operator’s license and failure to register.

Also Saturday morning, three people went to Rutherford Hospital as a result of a two-vehicle accident at the intersec-tion of Old Caroleen Road and U.S. 221A.

Sheeneka Poole, 26, of Mooresboro was driving a 1999 Honda and Cheryl Wishom was driving a 2002 Kia. They and a passenger in the Honda, Shakelia Etchison, were all transported to Rutherford Hospital for treatment.

Wishom was traveling south on U.S. 221A and Poole was travel-ing west on Old Caroleen Road. She failed to stop at the intersec-tion and struck the Kia in the left front quarter.

Poole was charged with a stop sign violation by the Highway Patrol.

Contact Gordon via e-mail at [email protected].

Woman is injured in collision

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

FOREST CITY — The Charleston-based Garden & Guns magazine’s April/May addition has includ-ed Lake Lure as one of its selected 20 Southern Dream Towns.

Lake Lure ranks in the top 10 of selected Dream Towns.

The story is teased on the magazine’s front cov-er and introduces read-ers to the 20 selected dream towns.

“Whether you’re look-ing for a new address or a quick weekend escape, we’ve found 20 small towns, population less than 15,000 where the living is easy.”

The story is written by Mike Grudowski and Donovan Webster, who tell readers about Lake Lure,

“Dive into this Appalachian lakeside retreat. Population 1,012,” they write.

The writers share a brief history of the lake and also share with readers “What’s Going On” nearby, including visiting the 404-foot Hickory Nut Falls in Chimney Rock Park.

“And you’re never more than a short drive away from the bounty of antiques markets, hidden waterfalls, rhododendron-lined trails, whitewater rapids, back-roads exploring, art-and-craft galler-ies, and great independent restaurants of Asheville, Hendersonville, and the surrounding countryside.”

The other Southern Dream Towns are: Beaufort, S.C., Population: 11,755; Oriental, N.C.,

Population: 815; Rockport, Texas, Population: 9,285; St. George’s, Grenada, Population: 7,500; Eurkea Springs, Ark., Population: 2,350; Shepherdstown, W. Va., Population: 1,208; DeFuniak Springs, Fla., Population: 5,141; Eufaula, Ala., Population: 13,908.

The Best of the Rest: Dauphin Island, Ala., St. Michaels, Md., St. Simons Island, Ga., Berea, Ky., Helen, Ga., Highlands, N.C., Townsend, Tenn., Alexander City, Ala., Grand Rivers, Ky., and Jefferson, Texas.

Contact Gordon via e-mail at [email protected].

CHARLOTTE (AP) — Two North Carolina teens who held an early graduation ceremony so their ter-minally ill mother could see them in their caps and gowns are now strug-gling to pay her funeral expenses, a newspaper reported Sunday.

Tonya Lockhart, 43, died last month after fighting cervical can-cer for a year. Now the two children and their two siblings are trying to raise the $8,000 the funeral home is asking for services, The Charlotte Observer reported.

Lockhart had hoped to see 18-year-old Brittany and 19-year-old Brandon graduate this year from North Mecklenburg High School. Just a week before her death, the school held an early ceremony in a hospital chapel.

Now the teens and their two broth-ers — one older and one younger — are trying to find the money to bury their mother after they learned an insurance policy they thought would cover the costs had lapsed.

The children are all living with

relatives, who have contributed some money.

Family friend Mandy Gold set up a fund at Myers Park United Methodist Church to benefit the family.

“They just wanted to do the right thing,” Gold said of the kids. “There just wasn’t the means to do so. I won-dered what we could all do together.”

For young Brittany Lockhart, her mother’s death and the stress of the funeral expenses are making it dif-ficult for her to fulfill her promise to graduate.

“I know she wouldn’t be satisfied if I didn’t graduate,” Brittany Lockhart said. “It is hard.”

Brittany also has college plans, but says her brothers are her first prior-ity.

“I just want to make sure ... they’re settled with everything,” she said. “I don’t want to move too fast.”

Donations can be sent to Myers Park United Methodist Church, Attn. Kevin Wright, 1501 Queens Road, Charlotte, NC 28207. Donors should write “Lockhart” in the memo line of the check.

Lake Lure makes magazine’s list of dream towns

Teens struggle to pay mom’s funeral expense

2/

Page 3: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 3

State

RALEIGH (AP) — North Carolina legislative leaders are trying to pre-vent the economic recession from prolonging the General Assembly’s so-called “short” session.

Lawmakers return formally to work Wednesday for another round of tough spending choices as state tax revenues have failed to keep up with costs for the new fiscal year starting July 1.

While the budget gap — Democrats calculate it between $800 million and $1 billion — is nowhere close to last year’s fiscal chasm, spend-ing reductions in education and health programs and at dozens of state offices will occur. Since addi-tional broad tax increases appear off the table, requests by Gov. Beverly Perdue and others to expand pro-grams or restore previous cuts will get close scrutiny, too.

“This is the beginning of some very difficult choices we’re going to have to make over the next several weeks,” said Sen. Tony Foriest, D-Alamance, an education budget subcommittee co-chairman. “This is not going to be easy.”

Lawmakers have been meeting for the past month to try to minimize House and Senate differences to adjust the second year of the spend-ing plan they approved last summer. Perdue also helped out by rolling out her $19.2 billion budget adjustment proposal three weeks early.

It’s all part of a familiar refrain by chamber leaders during even-num-bered years — finish the budget by July 1 and go home.

But the Legislature hasn’t com-pleted a spending plan on time since 2003. Changes to the state’s eth-ics and campaign finance laws also have to be worked through before adjournment, along with some way to deal with an influx of sweep-stakes games that local judges have ruled escape the state’s video poker ban. Reforms to the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control system also are on tap.

Democrats want to keep the elec-tion-year session focused on issues that play well with voters, like encouraging job growth and less-ening the financial pain on public schools, the University of North Carolina and community college sys-tems.

“Jobs will be our first prior-ity in ways that we can retain them, expand them, attract them,” said House Speaker Joe Hackney, D-Orange. “Saving education in the budget in the extent we can at all three levels will be certainly a top priority as well.”

Republicans, who remain in the minority in both chambers but have the wind at their backs enter-ing the campaign season, will argue again that Perdue and her fellow Democrats have raised taxes need-lessly because the budget gap isn’t that large and they ignored less pain-ful ways to cut spending.

Perdue’s $86 million proposal of tax breaks and incentives for business to create jobs is “pitiful” and won’t help employment, said House Minority Leader Paul Stam, R-Wake. “They’ve done this billion-dollar tax increase

and now they’re going to give back 5 percent and say that they’re creating jobs.”

Education advocates also plan to fight additional spending cuts for local school districts proposed by Perdue above the $305 million already in place for the fall, argu-ing thousands of additional educa-tion jobs could be eliminated above the 5,000 teacher and staff positions removed this year.

The district spending cuts may shrink if Perdue is willing to give up spending on experience-based pay raises for teachers and her effort to pay back state employees and teach-ers the 0.5 percent salary reductions she required of them last year to close a budget shortfall.

She also wants her college- and career-ready initiative funded that would spend $39 million on hand-held computers in elementary school classrooms so teachers can better monitor student achievement. Health care advocates are pleased that law-makers agree for now with Perdue to restore $40 million in funds to local mental health agencies after steep cuts last year reduced services.

“We need to stabilize,” said Dave Richard, executive director of the Arc of North Carolina, which advocates for the mentally disabled. “Keep the funding as level as we can and let us get through these cuts and manage that before we do a lot of other mas-sive changes.”

Momentum has increased for three campaign finance and ethics bills approved by the House last year and awaiting Senate action as headlines focused upon federal and state inves-tigations of activities surrounding former Gov. Mike Easley and his associates and illegal campaign con-tributions by a Wilmington business-man.

The legislation would delay more state officials from lobbying govern-ment until well after they leave state employment; ban state contractors from giving to elected officials who approve contracts that benefit the vendor; and require board appointees to report campaign donations and fundraising for elected officials who appointed them. Perdue unveiled her own ideas last month.

“For both political parties to retain their credibility, they need to end the perception that they’re not hon-est,” said Jane Pinsky with the bipar-tisan North Carolina Coalition for Lobbying and Government Reform.

Legislative leaders also must decide what to do about:n legislation approved by the House

that would make it more difficult for cities and towns to annex neighbor-ing lands against the wishes of prop-erty owners.n a Senate bill requiring commer-

cial dog breeders to register with the state and meet operational stan-dards.n a Senate ban on building wind

turbines on mountain ridges and requiring wind farms to get a state permit.n a House bill that would change

negligence cases so that a plaintiff would get an award proportionate to the defendant’s percentage of fault.

Lawmakers return with budget work to finish Tupac’s mother charged

LUMBERTON (AP) — A hearing has been delayed for the mother of rapper Tupac Shakur after her arrest in North Carolina on drug charges.

The Fayetteville Observer reports that 63-year-old Afeni Shakur Davis was charged in April with felony possession of marijuana, maintain-ing a vehicle, dwelling or place for a controlled substance and simple possession of a controlled substance. Her hearing, originally scheduled for Monday, was continued until Aug. 24.

Davis lives in Lumberton. Her bat-tles with drug abuse were portrayed in her son’s music.

After Tupac Shakur’s death in 1996, Davis started the company that cur-rently oversees his music portfolio.

Deputy kills suspectLAKE CITY, S.C. (AP) — Sheriff’s

deputies say an officer has shot and killed a suspect in an earlier shooting in South Carolina.

WBTW-TV reported the shooting occurred Sunday night in Lake City.

Florence County Sheriff’s Capt. Mike Nunn says two people were shot and wounded on a street in Lake City.

Nunn says officers investigating the shooting confronted a suspect who fired at a deputy, who returned fire. Nunn says the suspect died at the scene.

The names of the dead man and the deputy have not been released.

The State Law Enforcement Division is investigating.

Woman dies during dive WILMINGTON (AP) — The U.S.

Coast Guard says a 50-year-old wom-an has died while scuba diving off the North Carolina coast.

The StarNews of Wilmington reports the woman died Saturday as emergency medical workers and her diving companions tried to resusci-tate her.

The Coast Guard would not release the woman’s name. The North Carolina Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and New Hanover County officials had no information about the woman Sunday.

Coast Guard spokesmen said the

woman was found unconscious in the water about noon Saturday. The Coast Guard sent a boat and a New Hanover County emergency medical technician to help.

Officers make bike rideDURHAM (AP) — Three North

Carolina police officers will carry the memory of a co-worker as they make a 250-mile bicycle trip to Washington, D.C., this week.

Three Duke University officers will start the Law Enforcement United Memorial Bicycle Ride on Monday and expect to arrive for a ceremony at the Pentagon on Wednesday after-noon, The Herald-Sun of Durham reported.

Mark Faust, David Johnson and Rekayi Isley say they are riding in memory of former Duke and Durham city officer Charles Callemyn, who died in a 2007 traffic accident while rushing to provide backup to a fellow officer.

After Callemyn’s death, Faust and other Duke officers rebuilt the boy-hood tree house Callemyn had loved as a child at his Hillsborough home, so his two sons can enjoy it.

Faust’s 30-year-old son is a Raleigh police officer and is making the bike trip with Team Raleigh.

Man charged with killingROANOKE RAPIDS (AP) — Police

have charged a North Carolina man with killing his 92-year-old neighbor and her 65-year-old daughter who was visiting for Mother’s Day week-end.

Roanoke Rapids Police Chief Jeff Hinton told multiple media out-lets that 28-year-old Tony Maurice Gorham was charged Saturday with murder and robbery in the deaths of Maxine McCrary of Roanoke Rapids and her daughter Nancy Burgess of Durham.

A Halifax County jail worker said Sunday she could not release infor-mation about inmates. The Daily Herald of Roanoke Rapids reported that Gorham has a bond hearing Tuesday.

Investigators said McCrary was speaking with her son Friday and said her neighbor was at her door and probably wanted to use the phone.

Carolinas Today

3/

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Page 4: daily courier may 11 2010

4 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

■ A daily forum for opinion, commentary and editorials on the news that affects us all.

Jodi V. Brookshire/ publisherSteven E. Parham/ executive editor

601 Oak Street, P.O. Box 1149,Forest City, N.C. 28043Phone: 245-6431 Fax: 248-2790E-mail: [email protected]

As warmer weather arrives and people get back outdoors for their leisure activities, now is

a good time to remind people to put safety first.

The tragic drowning of a 19-year-old county man over the weekend is a reminder that there are great risks all around us, even in the most common outdoor activities.

Every recreational activity has its inherent risks. Some require specialized safety preparation, but good old fash-ioned common sense is probably our best defense. We need to be alert. We need to be aware that there is always possible danger around us and we need to assess the risks and prepare for those possibilities.

We will probably not prevent every injury, nor will we be able to eliminate the threat to life and limb.

Still, by simply paying better atten-tion to what we are doing and putting out the effort to be safer, we can greatly reduce the risks.

It’s time to get outside and have some fun, but please be safe as you do.

Our Views

Safety first can be our motto

Our readers’ viewsSays judging others by their looks is wrong

To the editor:Ms. McGraw seems to be mak-

ing generalizations about the children who attend our tradi-tional public schools.

Those five young men she referred to are God’s children just like the rest of us. If people don’t know the hearts of others, then why do they judge? “Judge not lest ye be judged.”

I have a feeling that those five young men would never be ran-domly selected to go TJCA if they applied.

We all want the children of this county to be successful. We have plenty of teachers who do become important mentors (and, in some cases, parental figures) while, at the same time, allowing our chil-dren to be individuals.

We need to work together to be mentors for all children, not just those who have good role models at home. That is what the traditional public schools do. It is called the real world. All children, regardless of which school they attend, will face the real world as adults. Some will be more prepared than others. Some will be more compassion-ate than others.

Yes, it has occurred to most of us that some (but not all) of TJCA parents pay their share of Rutherford County taxes. However, the money in question is for preschool children and it has been and must be used as such.

I am a taxpayer of Rutherford County and I have two school-age children in the traditional public schools.

My children have never and will

never receive or benefit from this money. So, please tell me why school age children from TJCA should receive or benefit from this money?

Betsy LaneRutherfordton

Says thanks to RHP for all they are doing

To the editor:Until I received an e-mail from

Nell Bovender, I am ashamed to say I knew nothing about Rutherford Housing Partnership, Inc. a local non-profit orga-nization founded in 1995 by a group of concerned citizens who believed strongly that everyone had a right to safe and livable housing. Therefore, their pur-pose is to assist low-income homeowners with urgent repairs imminent to life or safety. RHP provides repairs using volunteer labor with materials purchased through donated funds.

In that e-mail Nell was ask-ing everyone to vote for a grant that would allow RHP to provide ramps for citizens in need.

So I started voting immediately.Little did I know that someone

in my family would be in need of RHP’s services; that is until my father, Glenn Jolley of Spindale, started having problems walking.

Due to a herniated disc that caused damage to the nerves and weakened the muscles in his upper legs, he found himself using a wheelchair for mobility anywhere he needed to go.

The only problem was that the entrances into his home were not handicap accessible, so he had to have someone with him to get in and out of his front door.

After his disc repair surgery a

nurse from home health began to come for physical therapy and recommended to me that maybe a group in our county could help build a ramp, that is when I thought about Nell.

I sent an e-mail to her and received a call from Billly Hunnicutt and before I knew it, lumber started arriving in my Dad’s yard.

Soon after the workers started coming, in two weeks, my Dad has a ramp from his front door to the curb of the street that he can use.

He called today and said “I am getting on my motorized scooter and getting out of the house.”

RHP, only you made that pos-sible.

I cannot say thank you enough to Nell, Billy Hunnicutt, and the caring group from Eaton Corporation for this wheelchair accessible ramp, now I know he can get out of his home just to get out into the fresh air. Again, thank you so very much for gen-erosity but most of all for caring.

Rhonda OwensForest City

So, is primary runoff really good for Democrats?OK. So what if most North

Carolina political experts disagree with me?

They say that a primary runoff like the upcoming one in the race for the North Carolina Democratic nomi-nation will be detrimental to the eventual winner.

They point out that the runoff between Elaine Marshall and Cal Cunningham forces both candidates to spend money against each other while their eventual Republican opponent, Senator Richard Burr, is raising more funds to use in the fall.

And, they say, the time Marshall and Cunningham fight each other could be better used to organize and prepare for the November general election.

They remind us that a hard-fought, bitter primary runoff can leave negative impressions about both can-didates.

The winner might be bur-dened with the unfavorable

impressions created by the loser’s hard-hitting ads.

Finally, they argue that these “second primaries” are a waste of everybody’s time and effort since so few voters show up at the polls.

Good points. Here is the other side. To have any chance of

winning in November, the Democrats need a jump-start of enthusiasm for their nominee. She or he will stand a better chance of get-ting that kind of spirit when the nominee is a clear win-ner over another strong can-didate.

It did not happen in the first primary. But it can hap-pen in the June runoff. At the very least the winner will

move into the fall election having won more than 50 percent of the vote.

Right now both candidates have the burden of having more that 50 percent of the primary voters go against them.

More important, perhaps, the runoff gives both can-didates the opportunity to grab the spotlight in ways that were not open during the days leading up to the May primary.

The field was too crowded. Without a second primary, the nominee would be stuck with only the very hazy impressions generated so far.

The extra weeks between the primary and the runoff give both candidates more time on the political center stage to refine and drive home a message and build name recognition and cred-ibility with the public.

The free publicity and pub-lic contact during the next few weeks can be positive factors in the fall election—

and worth hundreds of thou-sands of dollars.

In the summer months before a November cam-paign, it is almost impos-sible to develop the mood of immediacy that a candidate needs to prepare for the fall by expanding the organiza-tion, by recruiting new sup-porters, assigning tasks, and building teams across the state.

A primary runoff can put a candidate’s statewide orga-nization to work at a time when it would otherwise be waiting and resting. The contest forces the candidate and his or her organization to push those organizational efforts.

Practice makes politicians better speakers, better inter-viewees, and better fundrais-ers. As they are required to explain, and as they learn to listen on the campaign trail, they improve as candidates.

If you think of politicians as “actors,” the runoff is a valuable dress rehearsal for

the fall campaign. It requires the candidate

to go over his or her mes-sage and practice the lines and the moves, getting better prepared to meet the critical audience that will grade the performance in the fall.

Do you want an example? Maybe you remember the 1990 senate primary contest between Harvey Gantt and Mike Easley.

Gantt led Easley in the first primary, but did not quite reach the 40 percent thresh-old.

The runoff gave both can-didates more exposure and credibility, giving Gantt and his campaign a jumpstart that helped him mount a very strong effort against Senator Helms.

How about you? Do you agree with the experts — or with me?

D.G. Martin is the author of “Interstate Eateries,” a guide to family owned homecooking res-taurants near North Carolina’s interstate highways.

D.G. Martin

One on One

The Daily Courier would like to publish letters from readers on any subject of timely interest.

All letters must be signed. Writers should try to limit their submis-sions to 300 words. All letters must include a day and evening telephone number.

The editors reserve the right to edit letters for libelous content. All submissions should be sent to The Editor, P.O. Box 1149, Forest City, NC, 28043.

Letters may also be submitted via e-mail at [email protected] or via our website at thedigitalcourier.com

Letter PoLicy

4/

Page 5: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 5

LocaL/obituaries

Steven DulaneySteven Talmadge Dulaney,

19, of 697 Island Ford Road, Forest City, died Saturday, May 8, 2010, at McDowell Hospital in Marion.

A native of Rutherford County, he was a son of Shane Dulaney and Traci Hill Leonhardt.

He was a student at Isothermal Community College and a member of Goodes Creek Baptist Church.

In addition to his parents, he is survived by his step-father, Scott Leonhardt; two brothers, Jordan Hill of Boiling Springs, and Daniel Tyler Dulaney of Waco; maternal grandmother, Vicki Hill and husband Anthony Winstead; paternal grand-mother, Minnie Dulaney; paternal step grandmother, Deanne Jones; and great grandparents, Doris Kirby, and Jay and Pearl Hill.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Goodes Creek Baptist Church with the Rev. Cecil Lovelace officiating. Burial will fol-low in the Mount Pleasant Baptist Church cemetery, Cleveland County. Visitation will be held Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. at McKinney-Landreth Funeral Home.

At other times, the family will be at the home.

Online condolences www.mckin-neylandrethfuneralhome.com.

Kenneth WoodsKenneth Woods, 69, of

Union Mills, died Sunday, May 9, 2010, at Hospice House in Forest City.

Born in Orange County, Fla., he was a son of the late Red Woods and Ruby Hilliard Woods.

He served in the Air Force as a Russian Language Translator and was a gradu-ate of the University of Central Florida. He worked for the Postal Service for 20 years as a postal clerk before his retirement. He also worked for the State of Florida Unemployment Office and the Orlando Sentinel as a teletype opera-tor. He attended Mountain View Baptist Church in Rutherfordton.

Survivors include his wife of 41 years, Laura Platt Woods; one daughter, Karen Woods Brown of Union Mills; three grandsons; and three sisters, Rita W. Bennett and Mildred Moore, both of Orlando, Fla., and Sandra Schauer of Delaware, R.I.

A memorial service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Green Hill Baptist Church with Dr. Paul V. Howell officiat-ing. Military honors will be accorded by the Rutherford County Honor Guard. Interment will take place in the Salisbury National Cemetery on a later date. The family will greet friends following the services at the church.

Memorials may be made to Hospice of Rutherford County, P.O. Box 336, Forest City, NC 28043.

Harrelson Funeral Home is serving the Woods family.

Online condolences www.harrel-sonfuneralhome.com.

Lillie JonesLillie Maude Holloway

Jones, 90, of 115 Willow Court, Bostic, died Saturday, May 8, 2010, at Fair Haven Nursing Home.

Born in Ellaville, Ga., she was married to the late W. Felda Jones. They spent their married life in Thomaston, Ga.

Survivors include a brother and sister, and three sons, Bob Jones of Rutherfordton, Phil Jones of Rome, Ga., and Danny Jones of Tampa, Fla.; three grandsons; three granddaughters; and five great-grandchildren.

A celebration of life will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the First Presbyterian Church of Thomaston, Ga. An inter-ment service will follow at the graveside. The family will receive friends at the church one hour prior to the service.

There will also be a future announcement of a service, in memory of Mrs. Jones, which will be held locally within the next two weeks.

Crowe’s Mortuary & Crematory is assisting the family.

Online condolences www.crowemortuary.com.

Ike AndrewsCARRBORO (AP) — Ike

Andrews, a former North Carolina congressman rep-resenting several Piedmont counties for 12 years, has died.

Andrews’ daughter con-firmed that he died Monday at an assisted living facility in Carrboro at the age of 84. Andrews was a Chatham County native and World War II veteran elected to the Legislature in 1959. The Democrat ultimately was elected to Congress in 1972 and served for six terms until losing to Republican Bill Cobey in 1984. He practiced law in Raleigh and Siler City after leaving Congress.

Lena HorneNEW YORK (AP) — Lena

Horne, the enchanting jazz singer and actress known for her plaintive, signature song “Stormy Weather” and for her triumph over the bigotry that allowed her to enter-tain white audiences but not socialize with them, has died. She was 92.

In the 1940s, Horne was one of the first black per-formers hired to sing with a major white band, to play the Copacabana nightclub in New York City and when she signed with MGM, she was among a handful of black actors to have a contract with a major Hollywood stu-dio.

In 1943, MGM Studios loaned her to 20th Century-Fox to play the role of Selina Rogers in the all-black movie musical Stormy Weather. Her

rendition of the title song became a major hit and her most famous tune.

Horne had an impressive musical range, from blues and jazz to the sophistica-tion of Rodgers and Hart in such songs as “The Lady Is a Tramp” and “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered.” In 1942’s “Panama Hattie,” her first movie with MGM, she sang Cole Porter’s “Just One of Those Things,” win-ning critical acclaim.

In her first big Broadway success, as the star of Jamaica in 1957, reviewer Richard Watts Jr. called her “one of the incomparable performers of our time.”

Horne was perpetually frustrated with racism.

“I was always battling the system to try to get to be with my people. Finally, I wouldn’t work for places that kept us out. ... It was a damn fight everywhere I was, every place I worked, in New York, in Hollywood, all over the world,” she said in Brian Lanker’s book I Dream a World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America.

While at MGM, Horne starred in the all-black “Cabin in the Sky,” but in most movies, she appeared only in musical numbers that could be cut when shown in the South and she was denied major roles and speaking parts. Horne, who had appeared in the role of Julie in a Show Boat scene in a 1946 movie about Jerome Kern, seemed a logical choice for the 1951 movie, but the part went to a white actress, Ava Gardner, who did not sing.

Lena Mary Calhoun Horne was born in Brooklyn on June 30, 1917, to a leading family in black society.

She was largely raised by her grandparents as her mother, Edna Horne, who pursued a career in show business and father Teddy Horne separated. Lena dropped out of high school at age 16 and joined the cho-rus line at the Cotton Club, the fabled Harlem night spot where the entertainers were black and the clien-tele white. She left the club in 1935 to tour with Noble Sissle’s orchestra, billed as Helena Horne, the name she continued using when she joined Charlie Barnet’s white orchestra in 1940.

Sheriff’s Reportsn The Rutherford County

Sheriff’s Office responded to 203 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.n Albert Willard Hart

reported an attempted breaking and entering.n Claude Keith Davis

reported a lost or stolen vehi-cle registration plate.n Paul Tim Jones Jr.

reported the theft of a GPS unit.n Johnny Alan Lee report-

ed vandalism by the breaking of a window.n Domino’s Pizza,

Rutherfordton, reported receiving a counterfeit $10 bill.n Christopher Steven

Clements reported the theft of a dirt bike.n Shannon Smith Parker

reported the theft of a motor vehicle.

Rutherfordtonn The Rutherfordton Police

Department responded to 60 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Spindalen The Spindale Police

Department responded to 43 E-911 Saturday and Sunday.

Lake Luren The Lake Lure Police

Department responded to 26 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Forest Cityn The Forest City Police

Department responded to 125 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.n Greg Sisk reported an

assault incident. The inci-dent occurred on East Main Street.n Freddie Euten reported

an incident of damage to property. The incident occurred on West Main Street.n An employee of Wilco-

Hess reported receiving a counterfeit bill.n Shirley Twitty reported

an incident of found prop-erty.n An employee of It’s All In

The Bag reported an incident of concealment. (See arrest of Howard.)n An employee of Wal-

Mart reported an incident of shoplifting/ concealment. (See arrests of Dempsey and Gettys.)n Wayne Bridges reported

a larceny.n Lori Ledbetter reported a

lost/ stolen pocketbook. The incident occurred on Plaza Drive.n An employee of Ingles

Grocery Store reported an incident of concealment. (See arrest of Anderson.)

Arrestsn Donnie Wells, 36, of Old

Caroleen Road in Forest City; arrested on a warrant for obtaining property by false pretenses; released on a written promise to appear. (FCPD)n Christopher Yelton, 37,

of Barbara Street, Forest City; charged with assault on a female, injury to per-sonal property and larceny; placed under a 48-hour hold and a $4,000 secured bond. (FCPD)n Jamie Dempsey, 18,

of Cliffside Road, Boiling Springs; charged with shop-lifting/ concealment; placed under a $500 secured bond. (FCPD)n Andrew Scruggs, 21, of

Blossom Drive, Forest City; charged with driving while license revoked and driv-ing while impaired; placed under a $1,500 secured bond. (FCPD)n Tracy Rayco Jones, 43,

of 292 Old Castle Lane; charged with second-degree trespassing; placed under a $500 secured bond. (FCPD)n Tommy Lynn Howell

Norris, 41, of 144 Broken Limb Court; charged with driving while impaired; released on a $1,000 unse-cured bond. (NCHP)n Javier Leon Olivares, 36,

of 145 Sugar Creek Lane; charged with no operator’s license and speeding; placed under a $3,000 secured bond. (NCHP)

Jorge Luis Hernandez-Medina, 28, of 1822 Towner Ave. SW; charged with driv-ing while impaired and no operator’s license; placed under a $4,000 secured bond. (RCSD)n Ryan Dale Mayse, 19,

of 151 Cove Springs Road; charged with assault and battery; released on a written promise to appear. (RCSD)n Patrick Maurice

Littlejohn, 32, of 1010 Young St.; charged with driving while license revoked; placed under a $1,000 secured bond. (RCSD)n Christopher Wayne

Yelton, 37, of 142 Barbara St.; charged with assault on a female, injury to personal property and misdemeanor larceny; placed under a 48-hour hold. (RCSD)

Citationsn James Gettys, 21, of

Mooresboro; cited for aid and abet shoplifting. (FCPD)n Gary Howard, 45, of Reid

Street, Forest City; cited for concealment. (FCPD)n Amy Anderson, 39, of

South Church Street, Forest City; cited for concealment. (FCPD)

EMS/Rescuen The Rutherford County

EMS responded to 43 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.n The Volunteer Life

Saving and Rescue, Hickory Nut Gorge EMS and Rutherford County Rescue responded to 26 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Fire Callsn Bills Creek firefighters

responded to a fire alarm.n Cliffside firefighters

responded to a motor vehicle accident.n Cherry Mountain fire-

fighters responded to a motor vehicle accident.n Ellenboro firefighters

responded to an unknown type fire.n Forest City firefight-

ers responded to two motor vehicle accidents.n Fairfield firefighters

responded to a power line fire.n Hudlow firefighters

responded to a brush and woods fire.n Lake Lure firefighters

responded to a power line fire.n Rutherfordton firefight-

ers responded to a woods fire.n SDO firefighters

responded to a fire alarm and to a motor vehicle acci-dent.n Spindale firefighters

responded to wires down.n Sandy Mush firefighters

responded to a motor vehicle accident.n Union Mills firefighters

responded to a woods fire.

Obituaries

Deaths

Police Notes

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

SPINDALE – U.S. Senator Kay R. Hagan (D-NC) Thursday announced that eight North Carolina fire departments will receive a total of $623,522 through the Assistance to Firefighters Grant program.

Spindale Fire Department is among the departments to receive the latest money through the AFG program. Spindale received $73,038 to purchase turn-out gear, said Fire Chief Jimmy Powell.

“We are thrilled to get this,” Powell said. The town of Spindale’s portion of the grant will be $3,600.

“I am thrilled to announce that eight outstanding North Carolina fire departments will receive this money,” said Hagan.

Since 2001, the AFG pro-gram has worked to meet the firefighting and emer-gency response needs of fire departments and emergency medical service organiza-tions.

Spindale FD gets grant

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THE DAILY COURIER

Published Tuesday through Sunday mornings by Paxton Media Group LLC dba The Daily Courier USPS 204-920 Periodical Postage paid in Forest City, NC.Company Address: 601 Oak St., P.O. Box 1149, Forest City, NC 28043.Phone: (828) 245-6431Fax: (828) 248-2790Subscription rates: Single copy, daily 50¢ / Sunday $1.50. Home delivery $11.75 per month, $35.25 for three months, $70.50 for six months, $129 per year. In county rates by mail payable in advance are: $13.38 for one month, $40.14 for three months, $80.27 for six months, $160.54 per year. Outside county: $14.55 for one month, $43.64 for three months, $87.28 for six months, $174.56 per year. College students for school year subscription, $75.The Digital Courier, $6.50 a month for non-subscribers to The Daily Courier. Payment may be made at the website: www.thedigitalcourier.comThe Daily Courier is not responsible for advance subscription payments made to carriers, all of who are inde-pendent contractors.

Steven Talmadge Dulaney

Mr. Steven Talmadge Dulaney, 19, of 697 Island Ford Rd., Forest City, died Saturday, May 8, 2010 at The McDowell Hospital in Marion. A native of Rutherford County Steven was born February 6,1991, a son of Shane Dulaney and Traci Hill Leonhardt . He was a student at Isothermal Com-munity College and a member of Goodes Creek Baptist Church. Besides his parents he is sur-vived by his step-father, Scott Leonhardt; two brothers Jordan Hill of Boiling Springs, NC and Daniel Tyler Dulaney of Waco; maternal grandmother, Vicki Hill and husband, Anthony Winstead; paternal grandmother, Minnie Dulaney, step-paternal grand-mother, Deanne Jones; great-grandparents, Doris Kirby and Jay and Pearl Hill. Funeral services will be held 2:00 P.M. Wednesday, May 12, 2010 at Goodes Creek Baptist Church with Rev. Cecil Lovelace officiating. Burial will follow in Mount Pleasant Baptist Church Cemetery, Cleveland County. Visitation will be held from 6:00-8:00 P.M. Tuesday, May 11, 2010 at McKinney-Landreth Funeral Home and other times at the home. McKinney-Landreth Funeral Home is serving the Dulaney family. An online guest register is avail-able at:www.mckinneylandrethfuneralhome.com

Paid obit.

Lillie Maude Holloway Jones Mrs. Lillie Maude Holloway Jones, age 90, of 115 Willow Court, Bostic, NC, died on May 8th at Fair Haven Nursing Home. Mrs. Jones was born in Ellaville, GA on September 16, 1919. She was married to the late Mr. W. Felda Jones, who was born in Cochran, GA. They spent their married life in Thomaston, GA. Surviving Mrs. Jones is a broth-er and sister; three sons, Bob Jones and wife, Pat of Ruth-erfordton, NC, Phil Jones and wife, Janie of Rome, GA, and Danny Jones and wife, Kelly, of Tampa, FL, three grandsons, three granddaughters, and five great grandchildren. The Celebration of Mrs. Jones’ Life will be held at The First Presbyterian Church of Thomas-ton, GA at 1:00 pm on Tuesday, May 11. An Interment Service will follow at the graveside. The family will receive friends at the church one hour prior to the ser-vice. Of particular note, there will be a future announcement of a ser-vice in memory of Mrs. Jones which will be held locally within the next two weeks. Crowe’s Mortuary & Crematory is assisting the family. An online guest register is avail-able at:www.crowemortuary.com

Paid obit.

Page 6: daily courier may 11 2010

6 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

Calendar/loCal

disagreed with a trash fee initially and said, “I don’t think it is fair, because the person who has the $50,000 house pays the same gar-bage fee as the person who has the $200,000 house. I think we’re just playing games with numbers here and if you have a $200,000 house your taxes are higher. The person with the $200,000 has better means to pay taxes than the one with the $50,000 house.”

Commissioner Tommy Hardin took a different view.

“There are so many rental houses in Spindale now and if you go with

the tax increase the residents of those rental homes would pay nothing. It would be on the property owner. I think a combination of garbage fees and property tax increase is the way to go.”

Mayor Mickey Bland added, “The two calls I’ve had said they’d rather have the split than the increase in property tax. Now, two people cer-tainly aren’t indicative of the entire town. But this is why we’ll have a public hearing in June for the people to tell us what they think.”

The garbage fee would be added to customers’ water bills and collected by Broad River Water Authority. As to those who may decide to take their trash to a county run convenience center, officials are prepared for that.

“If you want to take it to the con-

venience center in the county, that’s fine,” said Town Finance Director Cathy Swafford. “If you don’t pay it on your water bill, and you say you’re going to the county, that’s fine. You’ll now have to go pay the county $100 a year. I would gladly pay someone $2 a week to come and collect my trash since I live in the country.”

Board members also agree in princi-ple to a $500 bonus for town employ-ees in lieu of a raise next fiscal year.

None of these budget decisions are final. A public hearing on the budget is tentatively scheduled for June 17 with a vote coming during the June 24 regular meeting of town council.

Contact Baughman via e-mail at [email protected].

able to help him.He drowned in about 7 1/2 feet of water and

went under about 20 yards from the shore, Hollifield added.

“He almost made it back,” Hollifield said.

Divers and search personnel located the body in about two hours but the winds hampered the recovery efforts.

“His mother told us they were just coming up here to go swimming and then they were all

going to the movies,” Hollifield said. There was no indication of any foul play, drug

or alcohol use.“It’s very tragic,” he said. “His family said he

wasn’t a very good swimmer.”

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Goode’s Creek Baptist Church.

He was a Rutherford County native, a son of Shane Dulaney and Traci Hill Leonhardt and was a student at Isothermal Community College.

Contact Gordon via e-mail at [email protected].

Meetings/otherPWA meeting: Professional Women’s Association meets at noon the third Tuesday of each month. The next meeting is May 18, at Mi Publito in Forest City. Program by Becky Brodar, RN, Community Outreach Coordinator for St. Luke’s Hospital, “Who do I call and Where do I Turn.” Prospective members welcome.

HARC book sale: Homeschool Association of Rutherford/Polk Counties annual used book sale on Monday, May 24, 6:30 p.m., at Second Baptist Church in Rutherfordton; great deals on homeschool materials.

Booster meeting: Chase Athletic Boosters will meet Tuesday, June 7, at 6:30 p.m., in the office confer-ence room.

MiscellaneousMemorial Day observance: Sunday, May 16, 2 p.m., at the Caroleen, Henrietta, Avondale Cemetery.

Geneology Class: “Climbing Your Family Tree,” Tuesdays (in May) from 5 to 6 p.m., at Mountains Branch Library; Bill Miller will guide you through finding family information on the internet, using Heritage Quest, the Census, and other helpful Websites; no charge.

FundraisersPoor man’s supper: Friday, May 14, noon to 6 p.m., Rutherford County Visual Arts Center, 160 N. Main St., Rutherfordton; $5 per person; take outs available; have lunch and watch artists work.

Yard sale cancelled: The yard sale scheduled for Saturday, May 15, at Rutherford Internal Medicine has been postponed. Date to be announced by the RIMA Relay for Life team.

Buffet breakfast: Saturday, May 15, 7 to 10:30 a.m., Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, Mt. Pleasant Church Rd., Forest City; $5 per per-son, all you can eat. Hamburger, hot dog sale: Saturday, May 15, 4 to 7 p.m., at Gantt’s Grove Baptist Church; adults $5; children $3; proceeds for the charity fund.

Food sale: Saturday, May 15, begins at 11 a.m., Mt. Pisgah United Church of God; fish, chicken or pork chop plates; $7 per person; hot dog plates $3 each.

Church-wide yard sale: Saturday, May 15, begins at 7:30 a.m., at Green River Baptist Association, 668 North Washington St., Rutherfordton; large number of yard sale items, bake sale, car wash; sponsored by the youth of Pleasant Grove Baptist Church; all proceeds for summer camp at Fort Caswell.

Country ham breakfast: Saturday, May 15, begins at 6:30 a.m., ay Gilkey Clubhouse; breakfast $7 per person; yard sale items, and baked goods; sponsored by Thermal City United Methodist Church.

Relay for Life Day: Saturday, May 22, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the First Baptist Church of Forest City; car wash, bake sale, silent auction and hot dog lunch; all proceeds for ACS Relay for Life.

Breakfast buffet: Saturday, May 22, 7 to 10 a.m., Long Branch Road Baptist Church, 621 Long Branch Road, Forest City; no set price, donations accepted; proceeds for the building fund.

Music/concertsThe Pathfinders will be in concert Sunday, May 16, at Piney Knob Baptist Church. Music begins at 6 p.m.

Singing: Sunday, May 16, 6 p.m.; Sandy Level Baptist Church; featur-ing The Royal Quartet.

The Chuck Wagon Gang will be in concert Friday, May 21, at Concord Baptist Church, Bostic. Music begins at 7 p.m. Other guest singers include The Royal Quartet, Miles Cooper, Buster Kendrick and Ernie Phillips. Barbecue dinner beginning at 5 p.m. Cost $8 per person.

Singing: Sunday, June 6, 7 p.m,, Riverside Baptist Church, Hogan Road, Harris; featuring the Land of the Sky Boys from Asheville.

religionRevival: May 12-16, 7 nightly, Zion Hill AME Zion Church; Wednesday’s speaker is Rev. Lugusta Jackson, New Zion; Thursday, Rev. Davis Vernon, Haynes Grove; Friday, Rev. Verlon Pompey, Mitchell’s Chapel; Saturday singing at 6 p.m. with various groups; Sunday at 3 p.m., anniversary of Rev. A.E. Staley; speakers are Rev. Carolyn Bratton and Elder John Gray.

ing the honor, told by Principal Angel King that the newspaper and radio station were coming to do a story on Spindale.

Bartro presented Perry with a red apple trophy and asked students if they were happy Perry was their teacher.

“Yes!” the students chorused.

Bartro began reading from Stegemoller’s nomination, which said “Her upbeat enthusiasm and love of children is contagious.”

“I’m so touched by that,” Perry said, while wiping her eyes.

“It’s the small things that make every day special not just for you but for each of these children,” Bartro said.

Perry received a potted plant and several gift certificates, but the best prize was tickets to an upcoming con-cert.

“I hope you like the Doobie Brothers and Chicago, because you’re going to see them in Charlotte,” Bartro said.

“I am shocked and surprised, and feel very honored,” Perry said.

“I love being a teacher, and it’s because of y’all I come every day.”

Video of Perry’s win will be online on the station’s website at www.magi-c989online.com.

Contact Flynn via e-mail at [email protected].

kids around the world who don’t have shoes.

“Most of us have shoes in our closets that we don’t wear. I ask each of you to take some time to bring these shoes to downtown Forest City on Thursday between 5 and 8 p.m.”

Collecting shoes for Samaritan’s Feet has been the spring semester service project of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee at Gardner-Webb. Every school in the Big South Conference is also collecting shoes for Samaritan’s Feet. Gardner-Webb’s goal is 1,000 pairs of shoes, and about 600 pairs have been collected to date.

Mary Beth Hamrick, compliance coordinator with Gardner-Webb University Athletics, said on Monday, “Samaritan’s Feet is an organiza-tion that collects and donates shoes to those who need them around the world.

It was founded by a young man named Manny Ohonme who grew up in Nigeria and received his first pair of shoes from a missionary when he was nine years old.

These shoes inspired Manny to pursue athletics, and he eventually earned a full scholarship to play bas-ketball at the University of North Dakota.

“After the earthquake in Haiti, Samaritan’s Feet pledged to donate 100,000 pairs of shoes to the victims. All the shoes that we collect are pret-ty much guaranteed to benefit those who had everything taken from them by that earthquake.”

She said that Rutherford County has helped with the effort in several ways.

“From the moment they heard our efforts to collect shoes for Samaritan’s Feet,” she said, “the Forest City com-munity has teamed up with us with incredible enthusiasm and support.

The shoe drive organized by Steve Holland is one way we have felt their generosity. We really appreciate everything they have done to help us out. They truly have gone ‘the extra mile!’”

She added, “The Forest City Owls and their booster club have done so much to help us out with this proj-ect. During the baseball series versus Coastal Carolina, the Owls offered free admission to every fan that brought a pair of shoes to the gate. Also, the booster club has been col-lecting shoes within their member-ship. With their help, we collected more than 100 pairs of shoes in one weekend.”

Also, Hamrick said, the Gardner-Webb drive has included two “Barefoot for Bare Feet” basketball games, a car wash, and painted faces and collected shoes during the “Springs Alive” festival held on Gardner-Webb’s campus.

The “Barefoot for Bare Feet” games involved most of the athletic depart-ment, as the basketball coaching staffs, the cheerleaders, pep band and athletic department staff members in attendance went barefoot during the games to raise awareness for the 300 million people around the world who go shoeless every day.

Fans attending the game were encouraged to donate shoes at the

door to receive free admission.Hamrick said the shoe drive has

raised awareness both at the school and in the community.

“The student-athletes in SAAC have worked very hard to publicize our project,” she said, “and as a result, we have felt a lot of support from stu-dents on campus and people in the community.

“Nearly every day I have someone stop by my office looking for a place to donate shoes. We truly appreciate everyone who has made the effort to bring us a pair of shoes because they are giving a special gift to someone who would otherwise have none.”

The Student-Athlete Advisory Committee is the representative body of the student-athletes at Gardner-Webb. It is made up of more than 40 active members, with at least two members representing each team. The organization is very service oriented.

Samaritan’s Feet is a non-profit organization dedicated to changing lives through Shoes of Hope distribu-tions around the world.

The Samaritan’s Feet website notes, “300 million people wake up each morning without a pair of shoes to protect their feet from injury and dis-ease.

The goal of Samaritan’s Feet is to provide shoes to 10 million of these individuals in the next 10 years by teaching them a biblical story of faith, hope, and love, demonstrating those truths in touching them by washing their feet, and treating them to a new pair of shoes and socks.”

For more specific information about Samaritan’s Feet, visit samaritansfeet.org.

SpindaleContinued from Page 1

AdministrationJodi V. Brookshire/publisher . . . . . . . . . . .209Steven E. Parham/executive editor . . . . . .210Lori Spurling/ advertising director . . . . . . .224Pam Dixon/ ad production coordinator . . . 231Anthony Rollins/ circulation director . . . . .206

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Circulation

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The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 7

Inside

Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . Page .8Classifieds . . . . . . . Page .16-19Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page .15

On TV

Braves .RHP .Jurrjens .aggravates .hamstring

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Atlanta Braves pitcher Jair Jurrjens has had a setback with his ailing left hamstring.

Jurrjens, who is on the 15-day disabled list, says he was trying to sprint before Atlanta’s game against the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday night when he heard a pop in the hamstring. He’ll stay with the team and get an MRI when the Braves return to Atlanta.

Jurrjens is 0-3 with a 6.38 ERA in five starts. He says he’s trying to stay positive, but it’s difficult because this injury isn’t in the same place as the first one.

The Braves are getting a few of their stars back, however.

Third baseman Chipper Jones (groin) was back in the lineup Monday night and right fielder Jason Heyward (groin) is expected to return Tuesday. Shortstop Yunel Escobar (groin) is still several days from being eligible to come off the disabled list.

College .golfer .DQ’d .over .false .scores

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — A Notre Dame golfer disquali-fied from an NCAA regional tournament for giving false scores during the final round says she was just trying to be funny.

“Obviously it was not funny. I did not think about long-term effects and consequences of my actions,” Annie Brophy said Monday. “I was just out goofing around.”

Brophy said her scorecard was accurate and she never intended to turn in a false score. But she told people keep-ing track of scores every three holes to post on the leader-board at the NCAA Central Regional tournament at the Otter Creek Golf Course in Columbus, Ind., that she had five birdies, an eagle and a bogey through the first nine holes Saturday on the par-72 course.

She had shot an 85 and an 81 in the first two rounds.

“I was not lying or cheat-ing on my score. I was going to turn in my actual score at the end of 18 holes my actual scorecard. That’s how golf is scored, on your actual score-card,” she said.

She never got a chance, though, because NCAA offi-cials disqualified her and pulled her off the course after 14 holes.

Nancy Cross, a senior associ-ate athletic director at Purdue and chair of NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Committee, said the problem was that because of the scores Brophy was reporting, Florida State, Oregon and Kent State waited around to see if a playoff might be needed to see which teams would advance to the finals.

Cross said Brophy, who is from Spokane, Wash., couldn’t have turned in the false scores because in NCAA tourna-ment players keep each other’s scores.

The three teams waiting around all qualified for the NCAA finals.

7 p.m. (FSS) College Baseball Wofford at South Carolina. 8 p.m. (TNT) NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Cleveland Cavaliers. Eastern Confer-ence Semifinal, game 5. From Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland. (TS) MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Milwaukee Brewers. From Miller Park in Milwau-kee.

Central’s Adrienne Alexander (16) prepares to make a throw to first after getting the out at second base during the game against McDowell Monday at R-S Central High School.

Garrett Byers/Daily CourierCentral’s Taylor Crowder (17) gets a hit during the Monday game against McDowell at R-S Central High School.

By KEVIN CARVERSports Reporter

RUTHERFORDTON — Chelsea Smith wasn’t her best on the mound, but her swings at the plate did the trick for R-S Central softball Monday.

Smith, the R-S Central senior went 4-for-4 as she lifted the Lady Hilltoppers on Senior Day, 9-7, over McDowell. Besides Smith, who batted in two runs on a cool and rainy afternoon, five Lady Hilltoppers earned at least one RBI in a slugfest that saw a combined 23 hits.

However, a four-run fourth frame for R-S Central kept McDowell at a distance that allowed the Lady Hilltoppers to get the win.

“Chelsea (Smith) didn’t have the best

of days on the mound, but she worked through it,” Central softball coach Melvin Digh said. “It’s good to see her break out the bat like she did today.”

Central jumped on the scoreboard early in dry conditions. Taylor Crowder singled, Adrienne Alexander was hit by a pitch and Smith’s infield single loaded the bases.

A McDowell error on Kalie Holmstrom’s hit ball gave Central a 1-0 lead. Brooke Owens followed with a two-out, two-RBI single that landed in right as Central led 3-0 after the first.

A McDowell error and Chelsey Smith’s RBI double down the line in right pushed Central to a 5-0 lead after three innings.

Please see Central, Page 9

FOREST CITY — The North Carolina High School Athletic Association announced the girls soccer playoff pairings on Monday with Thomas Jefferson and R-S Central each earning a bid.

Thomas Jefferson, which opened the season 10-0, earned the nod as a wild-card in the 1A bracket and will travel to face Highland Tech for a first-round match Wednesday at 5 p.m.

The Lady Gryphons (15-3 overall, 11-3 Western Highlands Conference), fin-ished second in conference play, but started the year, 10-0 before falling to even-tual WHC champ, Avery.

The Lady Rams, out of Gastonia, received the No. 1 seed out of the split 1A/2A Southern Piedmont Conference and carry a 6-11-2 record into the postseason.

Thomas Jefferson, which went 0-10 last season, looks for it’s first playoff win of any kind in school history.

R-S Central will get to play a tough, old Southwestern Conference opponent, Kings Mountain, Wednesday at 7 p.m.

R-S Central (8-7 overall, 6-6 conference) was placed as the No. 3 seed from the South Mountain Athletic Conference in the 3A West bracket.

Following the Easter break, R-S Central won three matches in a row, but they are now on a three-game losing streak. The Lady Hilltoppers have lost their last two matches to playoff bound Burns (3A) and Shelby (2A) by just one goal each.

Kings Mountain (15-6 over-all) is the No. 1 seed from the Big South Conference and claimed its conference title outright with a 10-1 record.

The Lady Mountaineers are the defending 3A State Champions, but did lose to Burns earlier this season.

CHARLOTTE — Jeff Burton couldn’t have known in February, when he came up short at California on his chance to put eventual winner Jimmie Johnson a lap down, about all the missed opportunities there would be this season.

A brake failure at Atlanta, then a cut tire at Martinsville. There were pit road violations at Phoenix and Texas, and one of those unavoidable racing incidents at Talladega. Then came Saturday night at Darlington Raceway, where Burton had a car capable of battling Denny Hamlin for the victory.

Instead, miscommunication on the final pit stop caused Burton to run over his air hose — a gaffe that drew an immediate NASCAR penalty and instantly took him out of contention.

“Mistakes like tonight’s don’t win championships,” he said after the race.

Plesae see Burton, Page 9

Associated PressThis May 7 file photo shows Jeff Burton making his way to his trailer following practice for Saturday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Showtime Southern 500 auto race in Darlington, S.C. Burton might have won at Darlington Raceway if not for a late-race mistake in the pits. That’s been the story of the season for Burton, who likely would be a multiple winner if not for a slew of bad luck.

Central whips McDowell

Burton’s near misses frustrating

It is mandatory to include all sources that accompany this graphic when repurposing or editing it for publication.

<AP> IN THE PITS LOGO 022607: Logo to accompany column on NASCARracing; 1/2c x 1 3/8 inches, 17 mm x 35 mm; 1/2c x 2 inches, 17 mm x 51mm 2c x 3/4 inches, 96.5 mm x 18 mm; 3c x 3/4 inches, 146 mm x 18 mmwith weekly NASCAR column by Jenna Fryer; CK; ETA 4:30 p.m. </AP>

In thePitsby JENNA FRYER • AP

In thePitsby JENNA FRYER • AP

In thePitsby JENNA

FRYER • APby JENNA

FRYER • AP

In thePitsPits

Inthe

by JENNAFRYER • AP

PitsInthe

by JENNAFRYER • AP

by JENNAFRYER • AP

In thePits

In thePitsby JENNA

FRYER • AP

Soccer playoff games are setn Thomas Jefferson,

R-S Central teams make state fields

Garrett Byers/Daily Courier

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Page 8: daily courier may 11 2010

8 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

SportS

BASEBALLNational League

East Division W L Pct GBPhiladelphia 19 12 .613 —New York 17 14 .548 2Washington 17 14 .548 2Florida 14 17 .452 5Atlanta 13 18 .419 6

Central Division W L Pct GBSt. Louis 20 12 .625 —Cincinnati 17 15 .516 3Milwaukee 15 16 .484 4 1/2Pittsburgh 14 18 .452 6Chicago 14 18 .438 6Houston 10 21 .323 9 1/2

West Division W L Pct GBSan Diego 19 12 .613 —San Francisco 18 12 .600 1/2Colorado 15 16 .484 4Los Angeles 14 17 .452 5Arizona 14 18 .438 5 1/2

Sunday’s GamesCincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 3San Francisco 6, N.Y. Mets 5Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 3Washington 3, Florida 2St. Louis 11, Pittsburgh 4Houston 4, San Diego 3, 11 inningsL.A. Dodgers 2, Colorado 0Milwaukee 6, Arizona 1Monday’s GamesCincinnati 2, Pittsburgh 1Washington at N.Y. Mets, lateFlorida at Chicago Cubs, lateAtlanta at Milwaukee, latePhiladelphia at Colorado, lateL.A. Dodgers at Arizona, lateTuesday’s GamesCincinnati (Cueto 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Morton 1-5), 7:05 p.m.Washington (Olsen 2-1) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 1-1), 7:10 p.m.Florida (Nolasco 2-2) at Chicago Cubs (R.Wells 3-1), 8:05 p.m.Atlanta (T.Hudson 2-1) at Milwaukee (Bush 1-2), 8:10 p.m.Houston (Myers 1-2) at St. Louis (Penny 3-2), 8:15 p.m.Philadelphia (Halladay 6-1) at Colorado (Cook 1-3), 8:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Ra.Ortiz 1-1) at Arizona (Haren 4-1), 9:40 p.m.San Diego (LeBlanc 2-0) at San Francisco (Zito 5-0), 10:15 p.m.Wednesday’s GamesCincinnati at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.Atlanta at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m.Washington at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.Florida at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.Philadelphia at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.Houston at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.

American League

East Division W L Pct GBTampa Bay 22 9 .710 —New York 21 10 .700 1/2Toronto 19 15 .576 4 1/2Boston 17 16 .500 6Baltimore 9 23 .281 13 1/2

Central Division W L Pct GBMinnesota 21 11 .656 —Detroit 18 14 .548 3Chicago 13 19 .406 8Cleveland 11 18 .379 8 1/2Kansas City 11 21 .344 10

West Division W L Pct GBTexas 18 14 .563 —Oakland 17 15 .531 1Los Angeles 14 19 .424 4 1/2Seattle 12 19 .387 5 1/2

Sunday’s GamesCleveland 7, Detroit 4Toronto 9, Chicago White Sox 7Minnesota 6, Baltimore 0Texas 6, Kansas City 4Oakland 4, Tampa Bay 0Seattle 8, L.A. Angels 1Boston 9, N.Y. Yankees 3Monday’s GamesDetroit 5, N.Y. Yankees 4Boston 7, Toronto 6Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, lateTuesday’s GamesN.Y. Yankees (Vazquez 1-3) at Detroit (Porcello 2-3), 7:05 p.m.Seattle (Cl.Lee 0-1) at Baltimore (D.Hernandez 0-4), 7:05 p.m.Toronto (Eveland 3-1) at Boston (Matsuzaka 1-1), 7:10 p.m.Oakland (Cahill 1-1) at Texas (C.Lewis 3-1), 8:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox (F.Garcia 1-2) at Minnesota (Slowey 4-2), 8:10 p.m.Cleveland (Westbrook 0-2) at Kansas City (Bannister 1-2), 8:10 p.m.Tampa Bay (Niemann 2-0) at L.A. Angels (Kazmir 2-2), 10:05 p.m.Wednesday’s GamesChicago White Sox at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.Toronto at Boston, 1:35 p.m.N.Y. Yankees at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.Seattle at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association Playoff

FIRST ROUNDEASTERN CONFERENCECleveland 4, Chicago 1

Cleveland 96, Chicago 83Cleveland 112, Chicago 102Chicago 108, Cleveland 106Cleveland 121, Chicago 98Cleveland 96, Chicago 94

Orlando 4, Charlotte 0Orlando 98, Charlotte 89Orlando 92, Charlotte 77Orlando 90, Charlotte 86Orlando 99, Charlotte 90

Atlanta 4, Milwaukee 3, Atlanta 102, Milwaukee 92Atlanta 96, Milwaukee 86Milwaukee 107, Atlanta 89

Milwaukee 111, Atlanta 104Milwaukee 91, Atlanta 87Atlanta 83, Milwaukee 69Atlanta 95, Milwaukee 74

Boston 4, Miami 1Boston 85, Miami 76Boston 106, Miami 77Boston 100, Miami 98Miami 101, Boston 92Boston 96, Miami 86

WESTERN CONFERENCEL.A. Lakers 4, Oklahoma City 2

L.A. Lakers 87, Oklahoma City 79L.A. Lakers 95, Oklahoma City 92Oklahoma City 101, L.A. Lakers 96Oklahoma City 110, L.A. Lakers 89L.A. Lakers 111, Oklahoma City 87L.A. Lakers 95, Oklahoma City 94

San Antonio 4, Dallas 2Dallas 100, San Antonio 94San Antonio 102, Dallas 88San Antonio 94, Dallas 90San Antonio 92, Dallas 89Dallas 103, San Antonio 81San Antonio 97, Dallas 87

Phoenix 4, Portland 2Portland 105, Phoenix 100Phoenix 119, Portland 90Phoenix 108, Portland 89Portland 96, Phoenix 87Phoenix 107, Portland 88Phoenix 99, Portland 90

Utah 4, Denver 2Denver 126, Utah 113Utah 114, Denver 111Utah 105, Denver 93Utah 117, Denver 106Denver 116, Utah 102Utah 112, Denver 104

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALSEASTERN CONFERENCE

Cleveland 2, Boston 2Cleveland 101, Boston 93Boston 104, Cleveland 86Cleveland 124, Boston 95Boston 97, Cleveland 87x-Tuesday, May 11: Boston at Cleveland, TBDx-Thursday, May 13: Cleveland at Boston, TBDx-Sunday, May 16: Boston at Cleveland, TBD

Orlando 4, Atlanta 0Orlando 114, Atlanta 71Orlando 112, Atlanta 98Orlando 105, Atlanta 75Orlando 98, Atlanta 84

WESTERN CONFERENCEPhoenix 4, San Antonio 0

Phoenix 111, San Antonio 102Phoenix 110, San Antonio 102Phoenix 110, San Antonio 96Phoenix 107, San Antonio 101

L.A. Lakers 3, Utah 0L.A. Lakers 104, Utah 99L.A. Lakers 111, Utah 103L.A. Lakers 111, Utah 110L.A. Lakers at Utah, latex-Wednesday, May 12: Utah at L.A. Lakers, TBDx-Friday, May 14: L.A. Lakers at Utah, TBDx-Monday, May 17: Utah at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

Playoff Glance

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALSEASTERN CONFERENCEPittsburgh 3, Montreal 3

Pittsburgh 6, Montreal 3Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 1Pittsburgh 2, Montreal 0Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 2Pittsburgh 2, Montreal 1Montreal 4, Pittsburgh 3x-Wednesday, May 12: Montreal at Pittsburgh, TBD

Boston 3, Philadelphia 2Boston 5, Philadelphia 4, OTBoston 3, Philadelphia 2 Boston 4, Philadelphia 1Philadelphia 5, Boston 4, OTPhiladelphia 4, Boston 0x-Wednesday, May 12: Boston at Philadelphia, TBDx-Friday, May 14: Philadelphia at Boston, 7 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCEChicago 3, Vancouver 2

Vancouver 5, Chicago 1Chicago 4, Vancouver 2Chicago 5, Vancouver 2Chicago 7, Vancouver 4Vancouver 4, Chicago 1x-Tuesday, May 11: Chicago at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.x-Thursday, May 13: Vancouver at Chicago, 8 p.m.

San Jose 4, Detroit 1San Jose 4, Detroit 3San Jose 4, Detroit 3San Jose 4, Detroit 3, OTDetroit 7, San Jose 1San Jose 2, Detroit 1

GOLFPGA Tour-Players Championship ScoresAt TPC Sawgrass, Players Stadium CoursePonte Vedra Beach, Fla.

Tim Clark 68-71-66-67 — 272Robert Allenby 66-70-67-70 — 273Lucas Glover 70-65-69-70 — 274Davis Love III 69-68-71-68 — 276Heath Slocum 67-66-72-71 — 276Bo Van Pelt 68-69-69-70 — 276Ben Crane 67-69-68-72 — 276Lee Westwood 67-65-70-74 — 276Francesco Molinari 68-65-71-73 — 277Fredrik Jacobson 69-70-69-71 — 279Andres Romero 69-70-69-71 — 279Chris Stroud 70-69-66-74 — 279J.B. Holmes 66-72-72-70 — 280Scott Verplank 71-70-69-70 — 280Matt Kuchar 68-71-70-71 — 280John Rollins 68-69-70-73 — 280Troy Matteson 68-71-71-71 — 281Hunter Mahan 70-69-70-72 — 281Chris Couch 74-68-67-72 — 281Nick Watney 69-71-68-73 — 281Phil Mickelson 70-71-66-74 — 281Kenny Perry 67-71-71-73 — 282Sean O’Hair 70-69-70-73 — 282Zach Johnson 70-70-67-75 — 282Charley Hoffman 68-68-69-77 — 282Jeff Overton 70-72-70-71 — 283Bob Estes 70-69-72-72 — 283Graeme McDowell 72-65-72-74 — 283

Adam Scott 70-68-71-74 — 283Luke Donald 67-69-72-75 — 283Jimmy Walker 71-69-68-75 — 283Steve Flesch 71-71-71-71 — 284Steve Marino 73-67-72-72 — 284Dustin Johnson 71-71-70-73 — 285Y.E. Yang 70-68-73-74 — 285K.J. Choi 69-68-72-76 — 285Greg Chalmers 70-69-70-76 — 285Martin Kaymer 70-71-68-76 — 285James Nitties 70-72-72-72 — 286Jerry Kelly 73-66-73-74 — 286Rory Sabbatini 72-69-71-74 — 286Ryuji Imada 67-66-76-77 — 286Fred Funk 72-70-66-78 — 286Bill Haas 68-69-70-79 — 286Kris Blanks 71-71-75-70 — 287Spencer Levin 71-67-72-77 — 287Jim Furyk 69-73-73-73 — 288John Merrick 70-72-71-75 — 288Alex Prugh 69-73-70-76 — 288Sergio Garcia 69-70-71-78 — 288Ryan Moore 67-70-71-80 — 288James Driscoll 71-71-77-70 — 289Justin Leonard 72-68-70-79 — 289Oliver Wilson 70-70-70-79 — 289Paul Goydos 69-68-71-81 — 289Woody Austin 69-72-73-76 — 290Boo Weekley 69-72-68-81 — 290Stephen Ames 70-71-79-71 — 291Alex Cejka 69-72-76-74 — 291Kevin Stadler 69-70-78-74 — 291Brett Quigley 72-69-75-75 — 291J.J. Henry 68-71-77-75 — 291George McNeill 75-67-72-77 — 291Roland Thatcher 71-68-75-78 — 292Jason Bohn 67-74-71-80 — 292Alvaro Quiros 72-70-75-76 — 293Ben Curtis 71-68-75-79 — 293Troy Merritt 71-70-76-78 — 295Robert Karlsson 71-69-77-79 — 296Tiger Woods 70-71-71-— — WD

RACINGNASCAR Sprint Cup

Showtime Southern 500 ResultsAt Darlington Raceway

Darlington, S.C.

(Start position in parentheses)1. (8) Denny Hamlin, Toyota2. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet3. (14) Kurt Busch, Dodge4. (2) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet5. (15) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet6. (35) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet7. (39) Kyle Busch, Toyota8. (11) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet9. (6) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet10. (3) Brian Vickers, Toyota11. (4) David Reutimann, Toyota12. (9) Brad Keselowski, Dodge13. (29) Matt Kenseth, Ford14. (21) David Ragan, Ford15. (41) Carl Edwards, Ford16. (5) Mark Martin, Chevrolet17. (32) Regan Smith, Chevrolet18. (19) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet19. (33) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota20. (10) Kasey Kahne, Ford21. (38) Elliott Sadler, Ford22. (17) Greg Biffle, Ford23. (24) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet24. (31) David Stremme, Ford25. (7) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota26. (40) Travis Kvapil, Ford27. (13) Joey Logano, Toyota28. (16) Scott Speed, Toyota29. (43) Max Papis, Toyota30. (20) Paul Menard, Ford31. (25) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge32. (27) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet33. (42) Kevin Conway, Ford34. (23) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet35. (34) David Gilliland, Ford36. (22) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet37. (12) AJ Allmendinger, Ford38. (26) Robby Gordon, Toyota39. (37) Todd Bodine, Toyota40. (18) Michael McDowell, Toyota41. (30) J.J. Yeley, Dodge42. (28) Dave Blaney, Toyota43. (36) Reed Sorenson, Toyota

Race StatisticsAverage Speed of Race Winner: 126.605 mph.Time of Race: 3 hours, 57 minutes, 35 seconds.Margin of Victory: 1.908 seconds.Caution Flags: 11 for 56 laps.Lead Changes: 20 among 11 drivers.Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Gordon, 3 times for 110 laps; D.Hamlin, 4 times for 104 laps; J.McMurray, 3 times for 71 laps; J.Burton, 2 times for 31 laps; Ky.Busch, 2 times for 29 laps; B.Vickers, 1 time for 9 laps; T.Stewart, 1 time for 5 laps; D.Reutimann, 1 time for 3 laps; K.Harvick, 1 time for 2 laps; S.Speed, 1 time for 2 laps; R.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap.Top 12 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 1,622; 2. J.Johnson, 1,512; 3. Ky.Busch, 1,509; 4. J.Gordon, 1,475; 5. M.Kenseth, 1,472; 6. D.Hamlin, 1,458; 7. G.Biffle, 1,431; 8. Ku.Busch, 1,420; 9. J.Burton, 1,394; 10. M.Martin, 1,357; 11. C.Edwards, 1,345; 12. D.Earnhardt Jr., 1,318.

TRANSACTIONSBASEBALLAmerican LeagueLOS ANGELES ANGELS—Optioned INF Robb Quinlan (PCL). Recalled RHP Trevor Bell from Salt Lake. National LeagueFLORIDA MARLINS—Activated LHP Dan Meyer from the 15-day DL.NEW YORK METS—Placed C Henry Blanco on the bereavement list. Recalled C Josh Thole from Buffalo (IL).PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Activated RHP Ross Ohlendorf from the 15-day DL. Designated RHP Brian Bass for assignment.BASKETBALLWomen’s National Basketball AssociationSEATTLE STORM—Waived G-F Lindsey Wilson and F Devanei Hampton.FOOTBALLNational Football LeagueST. LOUIS RAMS—Traded OT Alex Barron to Dallas for LB Bobby Carpenter. SOCCERMajor League SoccerPHILADELPHIA UNION—Named Jim McDonald director of operations at PPL Park.COLLEGEST. ANDREWS—Named Rohan Naraine wom-en’s soccer coach.UNC WILMINGTON—Named Cynthia Cooper-Dyke women’s basketball coach.

ScoreboardArroyo pitches Reds past Bucs

MONTREAL (AP) — Michael Cammalleri scored his second goal of the game midway through the second period and Jaroslav Spacek netted the go-ahead tally 2:30 later for the Montreal Canadiens, who forced a Game 7 in the Eastern Conference semifinals with a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Monday night.

Maxim Lapierre also scored 11:03 into the third to give Montreal a 4-2 lead.

Bill Guerin deflected Sergei Gonchar’s slap shot from the right point past Jaroslav Halak with 1:24 remaining to draw Pittsburgh within one. But the Canadiens held on to set up Game 7 in Pittsburgh on Wednesday.

Halak stopped 34 shots for the eighth-seeded Canadiens.

Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby scored his first goal in seven games in the first period. Crosby earned an assist for his 19th point in 12 games when Kris Letang scored for a second game in a row early in the second.

That made it 2-1 for the Penguins, who had closed out five straight playoff series with a road win.

Flyers 4, Bruins 0BOSTON (AP) — Michael Leighton came off the

bench after Brian Boucher was injured and made 14 saves to complete the combined shutout, leading Philadelphia over Boston and helping the Flyers avoid elimination in Game 5 of the best-of-seven Eastern Conference semifinals.

Boucher left after injuring his knee at the bot-tom of a pileup in the crease at 4:35 of the second period. Leighton, who had been the starter before he was injured on March 16, made his first career playoff appearance and finished off the first com-bined shutout in the Flyers’ postseason history.

Simon Gagne, who scored in overtime to win Game 4, netted two goals, Ville Leino had a goal and an assist, and Scott Hartnell also scored to help the Flyers force the series back to Philadelphia for a sixth game on Wednesday night. If they win, it’s back to Boston for a decisive Game 7.

The 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs and the 1975 New York Islanders are the only NHL teams to come back from a 3-0 deficit to win a best-of-seven play-off series.

Tuukka Rask stopped 27 shots for Boston, which missed a second chance to clinch the series and advance to the conference finals for the first time since 1992.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Bronson Arroyo limited Pittsburgh to one run over seven-plus innings, Scott Rolen and Laynce Nix doubled in runs and the Cincinnati Reds held off the Pirates to win 2-1 on Monday night.

Arroyo (2-2), trying for his fourth career shut-out, had permitted only three singles until Ronny Cedeno led off the eighth by homering down the left-field line, his third of the season.

Manager Dusty Baker lifted Arroyo after Delwyn Young followed with a pinch-hit single, and reliever Arthur Rhodes got the next three outs.

Arroyo couldn’t have been much sharper until the eighth, retiring the side in order four times while not permitting a runner past second base until Cedeno homered. The right-hander struck out two and walked one, throwing 72 of 103 pitches for strikes. He lasted at least six innings for the sixth time in seven starts.

Francisco Cordero pitched the ninth for his 11th save in 13 opportunities, stranding the potential tying run at third by getting Cedeno to ground into a force play.

Cincinnati scored what proved to be the winning run after Pirates third baseman Andy LaRoche couldn’t make a backhanded stop of Joey Votto’s grounder in the eighth. Rolen doubled into the right-center gap off Evan Meek to make it 2-0.

Pirates right-hander Ross Ohlendorf (0-1) pitched four innings in his second start of the season, giv-ing up three hits and walking four.

The Reds’ only run off Ohlendorf came in the fourth. Jay Bruce singled with one out and Nix doubled to left field, with Bruce barely beating the relay throw to the plate to score.

Candiens win, force Game 7

8/

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Page 9: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 9

SportS

Associated PressIn this May 3 file photo, Detroit Tigers catcher Gerald Laird, left, looks to the dugout as plate umpire Jim Reynolds defends a ball call that Tigers manager Jim Leyland didn’t like.

By BEN WALKERAP Baseball Writer

Ron Washington flips the pag-es of his three-ring notebook, filled with inside info on the oth-er team’s pitchers and hitters.

The Texas manager gets to the back of the black binder, reaches into the pocket and pulls out another scouting report — on that night’s home plate umpire.

It’s a color-coded computer printout showing his strike zone — how he tends to call balls and strikes — and whether he usual-ly gives the pitcher a break if the ball sails just off the corner of the plate. In this ump’s case, the calls on the edges are too incon-sistent to be predictable.

“We do have their tendencies in the dugout on the wall. The name of the umpire and his tendencies, what they call and what part of the zone they call strikes,” Washington said.

“When I was playing, we just knew he was a high-ball umpire or a low-ball umpire, whether he was a pitcher’s umpire or a hit-ter’s umpire,” he said.

The difference now?“Technology,” Washington said.For years, baseball teams have

scouted the opposition — which pitch is most effective against a certain batter, which catcher has a strong throwing arm, and the like.

Now teams are taking it to a different level by scouting the umpires — compiling informa-tion on how consistently they call balls and strikes, how quick they are to eject someone argu-ing a call, where the crew comes from, the next time they’re next in town.

The Rangers aren’t the only ones taking advantage, either. Several teams track umpires on a daily basis and provide their players with the detailed reports.

Here’s how one team assessed Hunter Wendelstedt: “Inconsistent zone, both in-game and from game-to-game, seem-ingly losing focus at times by balling pitches over middle and calling strikes on pitches well off plate. Seems to want hitter to put ball in play.”

Or this look at Gerry Davis: “Hesitates to punch hitters out. Towards the top of the league in umpire ERA in 2009, with low K and low BB rate in 2009 and has continued in 2010. Need to earn strikes with him behind the plate.”

In other words, the report says

Davis is reluctant to call strike three when a batter doesn’t swing.

Some teams attach head-shots of the crew, along with a short bio about each of the four umpires. Such as this nugget on Marty Foster: “Attends as many Wisconsin Big Ten foot-ball games as possible.” And this about Ed Hickox: “Is a sworn police officer in offsea-son, working as a detective for the Daytona Beach Shores Police Dept.”

“It’s just more of a reference to get to know them better, a com-munication tool,” Oakland man-ager Bob Geren said. “We like to get the players to know who’s going to be there, get to know them and give them a little bit of background, so the players can say hello.”

Advance scouts sometimes pre-pare the reports. Other clubs rely on watching video. Stat services and websites also compile the numbers.

“There’s so much more data on umpires and it’s much easier to track their balls-strikes calling. Guys have more specific reputa-tions because the data is better,” Oakland director of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi said.

Exactly how many teams do it is hard to say — at least a cou-ple of clubs declined to directly answer whether they scout umpires, or they dodged the question.

At Fenway Park last week, longtime crew chief John Hirschbeck shook his head when shown a team’s scouting report on a different set of umpires.

“I’m surprised, but I guess I’m not surprised,” he said. “Everyone is looking for an edge.”

Even though baseball’s rule book precisely defines the strike zone, umpires could vary in how they interpret it — not easy in a game where the pitch frequently comes in at more than 90 mph and can dip several inches at the last split second.

To James Hoye, the personal tidbits and pictures made more sense than the strike zone ten-dencies. He’s working his first full season as a major league umpire, with Wally Bell and Laz Diaz on Hirschbeck’s crew.

“Instead of asking Wally the name of the guy who’s at second base, they can see for them-selves,” Hoye said.

Atlanta manager Bobby Cox

said the Braves don’t chart the umps. But he could understand why a team would: “If it helps to win one ballgame a year, it’s not a waste of time. Might get you to the playoffs.”

It could come down to a single pitch, and how it’s handled. Here’s what one team posted about Jerry Layne: “Seems very influenced by a catcher’s receiv-ing.” That refers to a catcher’s practice of subtly moving his mitt back into the strike zone after catching a close pitch.

Here’s a line from the report on how umpire Fieldin Culbreth reacts on a full-count: “Seems to expand zone on 3-2, as he punches out hitters he normally calls a ball in different counts.”

Asked for comment on the practice of scouting, Culbreth, who is on the board of directors of the umpires’ union, the World Umpires Association, said: “I’d rather not get involved in that. It doesn’t matter.”

Los Angeles Dodgers bench coach Bob Schaefer said such reports could result in informa-tion overload.

“I mean, it’s tough enough for a hitter to look at a pitcher and see what the pitcher’s trying to do to him. So you’d clog everything up if you worry about the umpire,” he said.

The Toronto Blue Jays certainly keep tabs.

“Every umpire that comes into town, whether at home or on the road, we have their tendencies. We know what type of umpires they are,” hitting coach Dwayne Murphy said. “They have that information. I’m not sure which site or where we get it from, but that information is there. They all have it.”

That’s news to many people.“I never heard of that. That’s

very interesting,” Detroit man-ager Jim Leyland said.

Wondered Florida manager Fredi Gonzalez: “Do people do that? Maybe I’m missing the boat; you tell me. I haven’t. Who has done that? I want to ask them. Maybe it’ll help us win another game or two.”

Washington pitcher Craig Stammen’s first reaction was: “Huh? That’s smart.” Nationals teammate Livan Hernandez got wide-eyed. “I never heard of that,” the pitcher said.

Neither had Milwaukee out-fielder Jim Edmonds. “It’s prob-ably not a bad idea. It’s an inter-esting concept,” he said.

McDowell would cut the lead to 5-2 in the top of the fourth, but Central responded quickly in the bottom half of the inning.

The Lady Hilltoppers’ Mackaulie Prescott smashed an RBI triple into the right field corner, Crowder and Smith each added RBI base hits up the middle for an 8-2 Central advantage.

It was then pinch hitter, Shelby Smith, who seized the opportunity with an RBI single to right-centerfield as Central went on to a 9-2 led after the fourth.

McDowell, which out hit Central 12 to 11, scored three more runs in the fifth inning, and one each in the sixth and seventh.

The game-tying run stood at the plate for McDowell in the seventh, but a reaching grab by R-S Central’s Cori Hipp in right field cemented the victory.

“We really have been working on hitting, but I feel like our focus was there today and it’s back just in time for the playoffs.” Digh said.

R-S Central (15-2 overall, 10-2 conference) will host a first round playoff game on May 18th as a No. 1 seed from the SMAC.

“We had a fast car, one that was capable of win-ning, and a pit road mistake cost us a chance at a win.”

That’s been the recurring theme to Burton’s sea-son. He’s led laps in eight of 11 races this year, but has just four top-10 finishes to show for it. He could have celebrated multiple wins already this season, but is instead riding a 52-race winless streak dating to October 2008.

So there’s no way Saturday night was anything short of heartbreaking for Burton, who was long gone by the time Hamlin began his third victory celebration of the season. That so easily could have been Burton, whose hard luck and near-misses have been overshadowed by the similar struggles of four-time champion Jeff Gordon.

But for all the talk about how close Gordon has been this season, there’s been little mention of how the door often was opened by Burton’s own bad luck. At Martinsville, for example, Burton led 140 laps and seemed to have the race in the bag until he ran over something on the track and cut his tire.

Burton faded to 20th and it was Gordon who moved into the lead on the final restart, only to lose to Hamlin in a wild two-lap sprint to the fin-ish.

Burton was flagged for pitting outside the box at Phoenix — another race that Gordon lost late — and he was penalized at Texas for a commitment violation. Still, Burton was leading there late until a nine-car accident brought out a lengthy red flag. The handling on his Chevrolet went away after the break, and Burton faded from first to 12th in another Hamlin victory.

Asked about all those annoying issues before Darlington, Burton seemed to foreshadow what was still to come.

“We are doing the things we need to do. We are leading laps, running in the front. We’re putting ourselves in position to win,” he said. “We’ve put ourselves in position to lose, too. By having a good race car, our weaknesses have come out a little bit. We’ve got to get better. We’ve made some mistakes that have put us in positions that we didn’t need to be in.”

Burton had just traded the lead with Hamlin in the Southern 500 when caution came out and they pitted for the final time. Burton was the third car back on the track, but NASCAR called him back to the pits to serve a stop-and-go penalty for running over his air hose.

It dropped him to 13th on the restart with 20 laps left, and he had to charge hard to salvage an eighth-place finish.

“We are capable of winning races and we will win races,” Burton said. “We’ll get it together and we’ll go race next week.”

Adding to Burton’s frustrations is that winning just one of those races this year would have gotten him into the May 22 All-Star race. He’ll have two more chances to race his way in, this weekend at Dover and then in a qualifying event prior to the All-Star race.

“I will just be honest about it, I’m embarrassed that we are not in it,” said Burton, who isn’t quali-fied because he didn’t win a race in 2009.

He has nothing to be embarrassed about this season, though, which is shaping up to be a resur-gence for Richard Childress Racing. Kevin Harvick ended his own 115-race winless streak with a vic-tory at Talladega and is the current Sprint Cup Series points leader, Burton is ninth in the stand-ings and Clint Bowyer was inside the top 12 but dropped three spots to 15th after a broken brake line spoiled Saturday night.

CentralContinued from Page 7

BurtonContinued from Page 7

MLB teams take scouting to new level — tracking umps

9/

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Page 10: daily courier may 11 2010

10 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

Weather/NatioN

Va. wants I-95 tolls RICHMOND, Va. (AP) —

Virginia’s governor has asked feder-al highway officials to establish tolls on Interstate 95 near the North Carolina border to pay for repairs that he says are sorely needed along the busy interstate.

The tolls of $1 or $2 for each axle would generate $30 million to $60 million annually, Gov. Bob McDonnell wrote in a letter to U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

Virginia would be the only state south of Maryland to charge tolls on the interstate, which runs from Maine to Florida.

McDonnell said I-95 sees more accidents than almost any other major highway or road in the state.

From the North Carolina border to Fredericksburg, more than $600 million in needed safety improve-ments have been identified, Virginia Secretary of Transportation Sean T. Connaughton said in an interview.

That stretch of highway — approx-imately 126 miles — records 21 deaths and 917 injuries per year, he added.

Woman pleads guiltyTRACY, Calif. (AP) — A

California Sunday school teacher accused of kidnapping, raping and killing an 8-year-old playmate of her daughter, then stuffing the body in a suitcase, pleaded guilty Monday to murder.

Melissa Huckaby, 29, entered the plea in San Joaquin County Superior Court to a charge of first-degree murder with a special cir-cumstance of kidnapping. As part

of a deal with prosecutors, all other charges — including two involving rape and lewd or lascivious con-duct with a child under 14 — were dropped, according to court spokes-woman Sharon Morris.

The surprise plea came during what was scheduled to be a routine pretrial hearing Monday morning. The initial charges in the grand jury indictment last year would have made her eligible for the death pen-alty if convicted. Her trial had been set to begin in October.

Morris said Huckaby now faces a sentence of 25 years to life in prison without the possibility of parole when she’s sentenced June 14.

Authorities say Huckaby killed Sandra Cantu, a playmate of her young daughter, in March 2009.

Judge delays sentencing NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) — A

Connecticut judge on Monday post-poned the sentencing of a man in the 1996 kidnapping, rape and mur-der of a 15-year-old Montville girl whose body has never been found.

Superior Court Judge Barbara Bailey Jongbloed put off sentenc-ing until June 15 after the defense lawyer for George Leniart asked for documents used by the Department of Adult Probation in preparing a pre-sentencing report.

Leniart, 44, was convicted on three capital felony counts and one count of murder in the death of April Dawn Pennington.

The girl’s parents, Walter and Hazel Pennington, who now live in Pleasant Garden, N.C., have said they’re frustrated because they still don’t know what happened to their daughter.

ON THE GULF OF MEXICO (AP) — Black Hawk helicopters peppered Louisiana’s barrier islands with 1-ton sacks of sand Monday to bolster the state’s crucial wetlands against an epic oil spill, 4 million gallons and growing, in the Gulf of Mexico.

At the site of the ruptured well a mile below the surface, a remote-controlled submarine shot chemicals into the maw of the massive undersea leak to dilute the flow, further evi-dence that BP expects the gusher to keep erupting into the Gulf for weeks or more.

Crews using the deep-sea robot attempted to thin the oil — which is rushing up from the seabed at a pace of about 210,000 gallons per day — after getting approval from the Environmental Protection Agency, BP PLC officials said.

Two previous tests were done to determine the potential impact on the environment, and the third round of spraying was to last into early Tuesday.

The EPA said the effects of the chemicals were still widely unknown.

BP engineers, casting about after an icelike buildup thwarted their plan to siphon off most of the leak using a 100-ton containment box, pushed ahead with other poten-tial short-term solutions, including using a smaller box and injecting the leak with junk such as golf balls and pieces of tire to plug it. If it works, the well will be filled with mud and cement and abandoned.

“This is the largest, most compre-hensive spill response mounted in the history of the United States and the oil and gas industry,” BP senior vice president Kent Wells said in Houston.

None of those methods has been

attempted so deep. Workers were simultaneously drilling a relief well, the solution considered most perma-nent, but that was expected to take up to three months.

At least 4 million gallons were believed to have leaked since an April 20 drilling rig blast killed 11. If the gusher continues unabated, it would surpass the Exxon Valdez disaster as the nation’s worst spill by Father’s Day.

The new containment device is much smaller, about 4 feet in diam-eter, 5 feet tall and weighing just under two tons, said Doug Suttles, BP PLC chief operating officer. Unlike the bigger box, it will be con-nected to a drill ship on the surface by a pipe-within-a-pipe when it’s low-ered, which will allow crews to pump heated water and methanol immedi-ately to prevent the ice buildup.

In Grand Isle, at the tip of the Louisiana boot, a small army of heavy machinery — civilian and military dump trucks, Army jeeps and Hummers, front-end loaders and backhoes — scurried to fortify a breached section of beach. National Guard helicopters had dropped sand-bags on the breach, and later piles of dirt were being pushed together to make a dam, keeping oil from reach-ing the marshes.

As the sandbags plopped in place, workers farther inland used pumps and other structures to divert fresh water from the Mississippi River into the marshlands, hoping it would help push back the oily salt water lap-ping at the coast. The floodworks had been installed to help rebuild Louisiana’s shrinking wetlands by injecting sediment-rich water from the river.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Saying they obtained new evidence, senior White House officials said Sunday that the Pakistani Taliban were behind the failed Times Square bombing.

The attempt marks the first time the group has been able to launch an attack on U.S. soil. And while U.S. officials have downplayed the threat — citing the bomb’s lack of sophis-tication — the incident in Times Square and Christmas Day airline bomber indicate growing strength by overseas terrorist groups linked to al-Qaida even as the CIA says their operations are seriously degraded.

The finding also raises new ques-tions about the U.S. relationship with Pakistan, which is widely known to have al-Qaida and other terrorist groups operating within its borders.

“We know that they helped facili-tate it; we know that they helped direct it,” said Attorney General Eric Holder. “And I suspect that

we are going to come up with evi-dence which shows that they helped to finance it. They were intimately involved in this plot.”

John Brennan, the president’s homeland security and counter-terrorism adviser, made similar remarks, linking the bomber to the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP.

Neither official said what the new evidence was.

“We know that they helped facili-tate it,” said Holder. “We know that they probably helped finance it. And that he was working at their direc-tion.”

Faisal Shahzad, a U.S. citizen of Pakistani descent, is accused of spending five months in Pakistan before returning to the United States in February and preparing his attack.

Shahzad has told investigators that he trained in the lawless tribal areas of Waziristan, where both al-Qaida and the Pakistani Taliban operate.

Associated PressSen. David Vitter, R-La., looks out the door of a helicopter as he tours efforts to dam off part of the marsh on Elmer’s Island in Grand Isle, La., Monday.

Oil spill hits 4 million gallons; leak fix fails

Pakistan Taliban linked to Times Square bomb

Nation Today

10/

The Daily Courier Weather

Moon Phases

Almanac

North Carolina Forecast

Today’s National Map

New5/13

First5/20

Full5/27

Last6/4

Today

T-stormsPrecip Chance: 40%

72º

Tonight

T-stormsPrecip Chance: 40%

62º

Wednesday

T-stormsPrecip Chance: 30%

85º 62º

Thursday

Mostly SunnyPrecip Chance: 5%

89º 64º

Friday

Mostly SunnyPrecip Chance: 5%

89º 62º

Saturday

T-stormsPrecip Chance: 30%

85º 58º

Sun and Moon

Local UV Index

Sunrise today . . . . .6:26 a.m.Sunset tonight . . . . .8:22 p.m.Moonrise today . . . .4:37 a.m.Moonset today . . . . .6:18 p.m.

TemperaturesHigh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .77Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . . .50

Precipitation24 hrs through 7 a.m. yest. .0.00"Month to date . . . . . . . . .0.91"Year to date . . . . . . . . .17.19"

Barometric PressureHigh yesterday . . . . . . .30.32"

Relative HumidityHigh yesterday . . . . . . . . .87%

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Asheville . . . . . . .67/60 t 80/57 tCape Hatteras . . .67/61 s 74/66 sCharlotte . . . . . . .74/63 t 83/63 mcFayetteville . . . . .73/63 mc 87/67 mcGreensboro . . . . .67/62 sh 84/63 mcGreenville . . . . . .71/62 mc 85/65 mcHickory . . . . . . . . . .70/62 t 83/62 tJacksonville . . . .73/61 mc 84/65 pcKitty Hawk . . . . . .63/61 mc 77/64 mcNew Bern . . . . . .72/60 mc 83/65 mcRaleigh . . . . . . . .69/62 cl 86/65 mcSouthern Pines . .72/64 cl 86/66 mcWilmington . . . . .72/65 pc 81/66 sWinston-Salem . .67/62 sh 84/63 mc

Around Our State

Across Our Nation

Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly cloudy;ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers;

sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy

Today Wednesday

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Atlanta . . . . . . . . .78/64 mc 85/64 sBaltimore . . . . . . .60/52 ra 78/53 tChicago . . . . . . . .59/46 sh 58/48 tDetroit . . . . . . . . .55/44 sh 59/45 shIndianapolis . . . .71/55 t 71/59 tLos Angeles . . . .72/51 s 78/55 sMiami . . . . . . . . . .84/73 s 83/74 sNew York . . . . . . .58/47 pc 56/44 raPhiladelphia . . . .59/49 ra 65/48 tSacramento . . . . .71/47 s 79/52 sSan Francisco . . .62/49 s 64/49 sSeattle . . . . . . . . .62/48 pc 65/49 sTampa . . . . . . . . .88/70 s 89/70 sWashington, DC .60/54 ra 78/55 t

Today Wednesday

Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure

L H

This map shows high temperatures,type of precipitation expected andlocation of frontal systems at noon.

LL

H

80s

90s

90s

80s

70s70s70s

60s60s

60s50s50s

40s 30s

3 50 - 2 4 6 8 107 9 11+

0-2: Low, 3-5: Moderate, 6-7: High, 8-10: Very High, 11+: Extreme Exposure

Statistics provided by BroadRiver Water Authority through7 a.m. yesterday.

Elizabeth City69/59

Greenville71/62

Wilmington72/65

Greensboro67/62

Raleigh69/62

Charlotte74/63

Forest City72/62

Fayetteville73/63

Kinston72/62

Durham68/62

Asheville67/60

Winston-Salem67/62

Shown is today’s weather.Temperatures are today’s highsand tonight’s lows.

Weather

Page 11: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 11

Business/finance

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div Yld PE Last Chg%ChgYTD

Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %ChgAT&T Inc 1.68 6.5 12 25.67 +.57 -8.4Amazon ... ... 58 131.29 +6.31 -2.4ArvMerit ... ... ... 15.38 +1.35 +37.6BB&T Cp .60 1.8 35 34.02 +1.78 +34.1BkofAm .04 .2 82 17.30 +1.12 +14.9BerkHa A ... ... 23117290.00+5790.00+18.2Cisco ... ... 25 26.13 +1.42 +9.1Delhaize 2.01 2.5 ... 79.25 +2.95 +3.3Dell Inc ... ... 21 15.38 +.37 +7.1DukeEngy .96 5.7 13 16.90 +.35 -1.8ExxonMbl 1.76 2.7 15 65.23 +1.53 -4.3FamilyDlr .62 1.6 17 39.64 +.68 +42.4FifthThird .04 .3 22 14.38 +1.07 +47.5FCtzBA 1.20 .6 10 205.00 +7.55 +25.0GenElec .40 2.2 19 18.04 +1.16 +19.2GoldmanS 1.40 1.0 6 143.83 +.84 -14.8Google ... ... 24 521.65+28.51 -15.9KrispKrm ... ... ... 3.78 +.13 +28.1

LeggPlat 1.04 4.4 25 23.85 +1.63 +16.9

Lowes .36 1.3 22 26.70 +1.39 +14.2

Microsoft .52 1.8 15 28.94 +.73 -5.1

PPG 2.16 3.2 20 67.09 +3.30 +14.6

ParkerHan 1.04 1.5 29 67.69 +5.44 +25.6

ProgrssEn 2.48 6.2 13 40.05 +1.22 -2.3

RedHat ... ... 64 28.90 +1.41 -6.5

RoyalBk g 2.00 ... ... 58.61 +2.17 +9.4

SaraLee .44 3.2 32 13.89 +.45 +14.0

SonicAut ... ... 11 10.79 +.77 +3.8

SonocoP 1.12 3.4 19 32.80 +1.80 +12.1

SpectraEn 1.00 4.4 16 22.52 +1.23 +9.8

SpeedM .40 2.7 ... 15.05 +.22 -14.6

Timken .36 1.1 ... 32.29 +2.18 +36.2

UPS B 1.88 2.8 27 67.48 +3.55 +17.6

WalMart 1.21 2.3 14 52.58 +.18 -1.6

STOCK MARKET INDEXES

MUTUAL FUNDS

DAILY DOW JONES

11,258.01 8,087.19 Dow Industrials 10,785.14 +404.71 +3.90 +3.42 +28.114,812.87 2,971.98 Dow Transportation 4,535.83 +237.71 +5.53 +10.64 +40.79

408.57 325.67 Dow Utilities 381.65 +10.80 +2.91 -4.11 +9.897,743.74 5,552.82 NYSE Composite 7,257.62 +341.44 +4.94 +1.01 +24.081,994.20 1,419.58 Amex Market Value 1,866.22 +73.85 +4.12 +2.26 +25.262,535.28 1,664.19 Nasdaq Composite 2,374.67 +109.03 +4.81 +4.65 +37.171,219.80 869.32 S&P 500 1,159.73 +48.85 +4.40 +4.00 +27.55

852.90 539.03 S&P MidCap 796.14 +39.50 +5.22 +9.56 +38.8312,847.91 8,900.27 Wilshire 5000 12,148.67 +527.99 +4.54 +5.20 +30.50

745.95 470.37 Russell 2000 689.61 +36.61 +5.61 +10.27 +37.39

52-Week Net YTD 12-moHigh Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg

THE MARKET IN REVIEW

PIMCO TotRetIs CI 128,736 11.10 +0.9 +13.7/C +7.4/A NL 1,000,000American Funds GrthAmA m LG 67,975 27.90 -3.9 +23.5/E +3.9/B 5.75 250Vanguard TotStIdx LB 65,222 28.85 -2.9 +29.4/A +2.7/B NL 3,000Fidelity Contra LG 59,228 60.00 -2.7 +28.2/B +5.7/A NL 2,500American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 57,634 46.88 -3.5 +18.0/C +3.8/C 5.75 250American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 55,402 32.61 -5.8 +20.9/D +5.6/A 5.75 250Vanguard 500Inv LB 51,508 106.99 -2.8 +27.4/B +1.9/C NL 3,000American Funds IncAmerA m MA 50,350 15.59 -2.5 +25.0/A +3.5/B 5.75 250American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 49,825 26.25 -3.5 +24.0/D +2.5/B 5.75 250Vanguard InstIdxI LB 48,636 106.29 -2.8 +27.6/B +2.0/C NL 5,000,000Dodge & Cox Stock LV 43,365 99.66 -4.5 +27.8/B +0.4/D NL 2,500American Funds EurPacGrA m FB 39,521 36.65 -6.9 +21.8/B +7.0/A 5.75 250American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 39,349 25.28 -2.3 +23.9/C +1.3/C 5.75 250Dodge & Cox IntlStk FV 38,799 31.18 -7.2 +26.8/A +5.1/A NL 2,500American Funds NewPerspA m WS 32,886 25.25 -5.6 +25.7/B +6.3/A 5.75 250PIMCO TotRetAdm b CI 32,666 11.10 +0.8 +13.4/C +7.1/A NL 1,000,000American Funds FnInvA m LB 32,183 33.27 -4.2 +24.5/D +4.9/A 5.75 250FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m CA 31,694 2.04 -1.8 +27.5/A +4.8/A 4.25 1,000Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 31,416 28.86 -2.8 +29.6/A +2.8/B NL 100,000American Funds BalA m MA 30,732 16.73 -1.6 +20.9/C +3.1/C 5.75 250Vanguard 500Adml LB 30,360 107.01 -2.8 +27.6/B +2.0/C NL 100,000Fidelity DivrIntl d FG 30,024 26.69 -7.4 +18.2/E +3.0/D NL 2,500Vanguard Welltn MA 29,838 29.44 -2.2 +20.8/C +5.5/A NL 10,000Fidelity GrowCo LG 29,370 72.01 -4.1 +32.9/A +6.5/A NL 2,500Fidelity LowPriStk d MB 27,372 34.29 -3.7 +34.8/C +5.5/A NL 2,500American Funds BondA m CI 27,146 12.04 +1.1 +15.1/B +3.1/E 3.75 250Vanguard TotIntl d FB 27,032 13.76 -8.2 +21.3/B +4.6/A NL 3,000Vanguard InstPlus LB 26,786 106.30 -2.8 +27.6/B +2.1/B NL 200,000,000T Rowe Price EqtyInc LV 17,190 22.33 -2.6 +27.9/B +2.4/B NL 2,500Hartford CapAprA m LB 10,065 30.91 -5.1 +23.9/D +4.7/A 5.50 2,000Pioneer PioneerA m LB 4,492 37.08 -3.0 +27.3/B +2.5/B 5.75 1,000Goldman Sachs ShDuGovA m GS 1,476 10.40 +0.4 +3.2/C +4.8/A 1.50 1,000Alliance Bernstein GrowIncA m LV 1,235 2.99 -4.5 +19.1/E -0.8/E 4.25 2,500DWS-Scudder REstA m SR 502 16.36 +3.4 +60.8/C +3.7/C 5.75 1,000Hartford GrowthL m LG 195 15.60 -4.1 +27.2/C +2.2/C 4.75 0

Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min InitName Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt

CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -Foreign LargeGrowth, FV -ForeignLarge Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV -Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs.others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.

NYSE7,257.62+341.44

AMEX1,866.22 +73.85

NASDAQ2,374.67+109.03

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within thelast year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee.f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fundsplit shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to belisted in tables at left. Most Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press.Sales figures are unofficial.

uu uu uuGAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Volume

Name Vol (00) Last ChgPwShs QQQ1256982 47.77 +2.36SiriusXM 1091186 1.08 +.07Intel 1031339 22.55 +1.24Microsoft 815504 28.94 +.73Cisco 718207 26.13 +1.42ETrade 588964 1.61 +.11Comcast 462821 18.03 -.33Popular 416668 3.48 +.18Oracle 374738 24.39 +.98MicronT 348159 9.09 +.52

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %ChgEncorm rsh 3.78 +1.38 +57.5CrescntB h 2.30 +.70 +43.8Tongxin wt 2.25 +.50 +28.6BioFuelEn 2.49 +.50 +25.1CmtyCntrl 3.21 +.61 +23.3RockAgs 4.12 +.75 +22.1FstFrnkln 13.00 +2.30 +21.5ProPhaseL 2.24 +.39 +21.1ChiElMot n 8.56 +1.48 +20.9CPI Intl 15.72 +2.67 +20.5

Name Last Chg %ChgAtlBcGp 3.30 -1.11 -25.1Primoris un 9.31 -1.79 -16.1PrUPShQQQ55.48-9.43 -14.5SecNtl lf 2.35 -.40 -14.5GlenBurnie 9.51 -1.44 -13.2TowrFin 6.25 -.81 -11.5QCR Hld 11.59 -1.37 -10.6Datawatch 2.20 -.25 -10.2CmBkIN 9.00 -1.00 -10.0NSecGrp 12.20 -1.27 -9.4

DIARYAdvanced 2,458Declined 328Unchanged 69Total issues 2,855New Highs 38New Lows 15

2,745,673,440Volume

Name Vol (00) Last ChgGoldStr g 41830 4.18 +.18NwGold g 38444 5.81 +.14Rentech 34196 1.18 +.02NovaGld g 33464 8.34 +.65CFCda g 28449 15.16 -.14KodiakO g 26483 3.64 +.15GrtBasG g 24587 1.73 ...NA Pall g 24005 4.22 +.28Hyperdyn 22990 1.20 +.28Taseko 22207 5.35 +.35

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %ChgChiGengM 2.26 +.46 +25.6NewConcEn 4.44 +.49 +12.4HawkCorp 23.52 +2.57 +12.3GenMoly 3.99 +.42 +11.8US Gold 3.65 +.38 +11.6Neuralstem 3.23 +.33 +11.4MetroHlth 3.54 +.36 +11.3NthnO&G 15.29 +1.50 +10.9CheniereEn 3.72 +.36 +10.7ExeterR gs 7.17 +.67 +10.3

Name Last Chg %ChgLucasEngy 2.00 -.26 -11.5PernixTh 3.44 -.42 -10.9TravelCtrs 3.29 -.19 -5.5ASpecRlt s 12.10 -.68 -5.3EngySvcs 3.55 -.14 -3.8SDgo pfA 20.55 -.65 -3.1CompTch 2.59 -.08 -3.0Bcp NJ 12.07 -.33 -2.7ChiRivet 16.20 -.45 -2.7PcEn pfC 81.84 -2.17 -2.6

DIARYAdvanced 407Declined 95Unchanged 34Total issues 536New Highs 9New Lows 2

Name Vol (00) Last ChgCitigrp 10030877 4.22 +.22S&P500ETF3428229116.16 +4.90BkofAm 2556952 17.30 +1.12iShEMkts 1776409 40.94 +2.75SPDR Fncl 1693157 15.93 +.84GenElec 1321323 18.04 +1.16FordM 1288659 12.15 +.64DirFBear rs1056267 12.48 -2.33iShR2K 972938 69.03 +3.67Pfizer 786867 17.00 +.54

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %ChgMLSel10 5-128.23+2.03 +32.7ING 8.84 +1.79 +25.4BcoSantand12.09 +2.26 +23.0OwensC wtB4.10 +.77 +22.9MI Homes 14.40 +2.60 +22.0DirLatBull 29.66 +5.14 +21.0Natuzzi 4.55 +.79 +21.0DrxREBll s 52.68 +8.95 +20.5BcBilVArg 12.36 +2.04 +19.8DrxEMBll s 28.97 +4.76 +19.7

Name Last Chg %ChgDeanFds 10.47 -4.16 -28.4BkA BM RE 2.42 -.76 -23.9DirEMBr rs 43.41-12.01 -21.7DirLatBear 38.92-10.52 -21.3DirREBear 6.40 -1.65 -20.5DirxDMBear15.63 -3.71 -19.2DirChiBear 33.39 -7.24 -17.8DrxSOXBr 32.80 -6.74 -17.0MLDJREst104.89 -1.00 -17.0ProUShEur23.55 -4.77 -16.8

DIARYAdvanced 3,012Declined 175Unchanged 31Total issues 3,218New Highs 57New Lows 7

6,965,142,312Volume 113,453,466

9,600

10,000

10,400

10,800

11,200

11,600

N MD J F M A

9,760

10,524

11,280Dow Jones industrialsClose: 10,785.14Change: 404.71 (3.9%)

10 DAYS

NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks rocketed to their biggest gain in a year and bond prices fell Monday after a nearly $1 trillion plan to contain Europe’s debt crisis reassured investors.

The Dow Jones industrial aver-age rose about 405 points to its biggest advance since March 2009. Broader U.S. indexes out-paced the Dow’s 3.9 percent rise. Gains in several European mar-kets topped 9 percent.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 3.55 percent from 3.43 percent late Friday. The drop in demand for safety holdings like Treasurys signaled that investors are less afraid that Europe’s debt prob-lems will spoil a global recovery.

The European Union and the International Monetary Fund agreed to create a nearly $1 trillion rescue fund to support European nations burdened by heavy debt. The scope of the plan was greater than many analysts had expected and eased fears that leaders wouldn’t be able to suppress the crisis.

“The market is breathing a huge sigh of relief that the EU has taken aggressive steps,” said Alan Gayle, senior invest-ment strategist at RidgeWorth Investments in Richmond, Va.

Investors drew reassurance after the Federal Reserve and other central banks stepped up with financial support to cor-ral what analysts warned was a growing financial crisis.

The Fed restarted a program from 2008 to ship dollars over-seas through the foreign cen-tral banks. Those central banks can then lend the dollars out

to banks in their home coun-tries. The Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Canada, the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Japan are also involved in the dollar-swap effort.

The advance in U.S. stocks was broad. Bank of America Corp., Caterpillar Inc. and General Electric Co. led the Dow with gains of more than 6 percent.

Markets around the world plummeted last week after fears grew that Greece’s debt problems would spread to other struggling European economies like Spain, Portugal and Italy. The Dow slid 5.7 percent last week in its worst drop since the depths of the financial crisis in October 2008. On Thursday alone, the Dow was down nearly 1,000 points late in the day before recovering much of its losses.

Triple-digit Dow moves have again become the norm. The fluctuations are reminders of those that came during the credit crisis in late 2008 and the stock market bottom in early 2009.

According to preliminary cal-culations, the Dow rose 404.71, or 3.9 percent, to 10,785.14. At its peak, the Dow was up nearly 455 points. The climb came after four straight days of losses and was the biggest advance since March 2009, when the market was bouncing off its lowest levels in 12 years.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 48.85, or 4.4 percent, to 1,159.73. The Nasdaq compos-ite index rose 109.03, or 4.8 per-cent, to 2,374.67.

For much of 2010, major stock indexes had been climbing steadily on signs the U.S. econ-

omy was recovering. Last week’s plunge had erased the market’s gains for the year, but the jump on Monday put major indices back in the black for 2010.

Investors had feared that the euro, which is used by 16 coun-tries, would continue to slide if Greece didn’t get more help.

“Europe has unequivocally said, ’We will defend the euro’s integrity,”’ said Oliver Pursche, executive vice president at Gary Goldberg Financial Services in Suffern, N.Y.

A drop in the dollar boosted prices of commodities, which become more attractive to buy-ers outside the U.S. when the dollar is weak.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange’s Volatility Index fell after spiking last week. The index, which is known as the market’s fear gauge, last week jumped to about 41 from 20. That meant more investors were expecting big drops in the mar-ket. The VIX slid 30 percent Monday to about 29.

As investors jump back into riskier assets like stocks on Monday, U.S. bond prices tum-bled. The price of the 10-year note fell by about a point, or $1 per $100.

Gold also fell, losing $9.60 to $1,200.80 an ounce. Treasurys and gold surged late last week as investors piled into safe assets.

Crude oil rose $1.69 to $76.80 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

At the New York Stock Exchange, 2,992 shares rose while only 158 fell. Trading vol-ume came to 1.9 billion shares compared with 2.4 billion Friday.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The leaders for major securities exchanges have agreed in principle to a uniform system of “circuit breakers” that would slow trading during periods of intense market vol-atility, Federal regulators said Monday.

The heads of the biggest exchanges “agreed on a structural framework, to be refined over the next day,” Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro said.

The agreement has been reached by leaders of six exchanges, including the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ.

The absence of a uniform system is being looked at as a possible trigger for last week’s historic stock market plunge.

In an effort to calm Thursday’s rapid market swings, the New York Stock Exchange invoked a measure to slow trading. Some analysts believe that drove trades onto other electronic exchanges, which didn’t slow trading. That left fewer buyers and sellers to help set prices, potentially accelerat-ing Thursday’s drop.

Financial regulators met with the heads of major exchanges to discuss how conflicting trading rules may have contributed to the market’s fall. The meeting was set to continue Monday afternoon with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.

Meeting participants were weighing possible solutions to reconcile the often-conflicting rules written and enforced by different exchanges. Several exchanges, including NYSE and NASDAQ, already have circuit breakers that slow trading when stocks move too fast in either direction. Yet the trigger for those circuit breakers varies from exchange to exchange. That discrepancy can dis-rupt markets if some exchanges slow trading and others don’t, as happened on Thursday.

Streamlining the rules for triggering circuit breakers could prevent another chaotic mar-ket drop. One possibility being discussed is for exchanges to simultaneously slow trading of a spe-cific stock if its price moves too quickly, according to a person with knowledge of the talks. Exchanges also are discussing whether the trigger for slowing trading should be based on the rate of percentage change in the value of a stock or its trading vol-ume, according to the person, who spoke on condi-tion of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to publicly discuss the matter.

Regulators and exchanges have been poring over data from millions of trades trying to pinpoint what caused Thursday’s massive, computerized sell-off, which at one point had the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by nearly 1,000 points. The Dow later recovered to close down 342 points.

The SEC is leading the investigation with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Those agencies are ultimately responsible for oversee-ing markets, but they rely heavily on exchanges to write and enforce their own rules. And the exchanges’ rules vary widely, prompting top law-makers to call for greater consistency.

Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat and member of the Senate Banking Committee, urged the exchanges to adopt systemwide circuit break-ers.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Monday.

Exchanges accept basics of new rules

Europe’s move sparks stock rally

Associated Press

11/

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Page 12: daily courier may 11 2010

12 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

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Page 13: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 13

NatioN

WASHINGTON (AP) — A Miami woman who exhaust-ed her unemployment aid needs to pay bills. A Phoenix job-seeker wants a greater sense of purpose. A Boston woman has heard that hiring is picking up.

The economy absorbed a flood of 805,000 new job-seekers last month — the sharpest monthly influx in seven years. They were driven by economic need, renewed optimism and evi-dence that more employers are hiring.

They’re right. Companies added a net total of 290,000 jobs in April, the most in four years. Yet so many people poured into the work force that they drove up the unemployment rate from 9.7 percent to 9.9 percent.

Hundreds of thousands more will likely join them in the coming months, drawn by the improving economy and the possibility that Congress won’t continually extend unemployment ben-efits. Their influx would send the unemployment rate back into double digits before it’s likely to decline. And it will keep competition for jobs intense.

But those who have streamed into the labor force feel they can’t wait any lon-ger. They are people like Laura Gonzalez of Miami, whose on-again job hunt is

the product of necessity. Her unemployment benefits cut off in April.

Gonzalez felt disheart-ened after being laid off from her job as an associate at an investment company early last year. At times, she stopped looking for work.

In the past few weeks, in need of money to pay for food and rent, she began looking more actively. She’s applied for about 10 jobs a day over the past month.

“As much as they say there’s new jobs out there, I don’t see a turnaround at all,” says Gonzalez, 28.

Neither does Julie Ander-occi of Phoenix.

Six weeks ago, she lost her job as a customer service rep for Medicaid. For the first month, she mainly slept and ate. She was too upset to consider looking for work.

Now, besides needing mon-ey, Anderocci says she yearns for the pride and fulfillment a new job would bring. It isn’t always easy to persevere, she finds.

“I’m working on being optimistic on finding a job — that’s a job in itself,” Anderocci says.

To try to stay positive about her search, she began volun-teering at an animal rescue shelter.

“Looking for work at my age is the most stressful thing you can think of,” says

Anderocci, 56.A sense of urgency infuses

the job searches of many. Even with Congress’ recent extensions of unemployment aid, hundreds of thousands of people a month could exhaust their benefits within a few months, according to some analysts’ estimates. Under current law, jobless people can draw unemploy-ment aid for up to 99 weeks.

Fear about losing that aid, along with rising job openings, will keep up the stream of new job-seekers. April’s total of 805,000 new job-hunters — the most since 2003 — won’t likely be topped, economists say, though it didn’t set a record. More than 1 million people engulfed the labor market in June 1983, after the 1981-1982 recession. Still, nearly half a million new job-seek-ers a month are expected in coming months.

That’s why the unemploy-ment rate could top double digits again, economists said. The rate hit 10.1 percent in October.

Ken Goldstein, an econo-mist at the Conference Board, a research group that monitors consumer behav-ior, says people tend to form a collective feeling that the time is right to look for jobs.

A neighbor or fellow churchgoer mentions open-ings. An unemployed friend

lands work. Expenses pile up. Improving economic signs flash on TV.

Optimism spreads. Sud-denly, more people start looking.

Caught up in the rush is Karen Vigurs-Stack, who began hunting again a few weeks ago. She hasn’t worked full time since she left her job as marketing director for a Boston TV station when her son was born in 2002.

With her husband as the family’s sole earner, the household budget has been squeezed. Weeks ago, Vigurs-Stack learned that more companies in the Boston area were hiring. Then she read about an Internet mar-keting firm hiring 100 peo-ple.

She made a decision then: “I thought, ’OK, now it’s my time.’ I wanted to take advantage when it’s hot.”

Yet it hasn’t been easy. Vigurs-Stack notices that jobs posted to Internet boards are filled almost instantly. She has hooked up with an employment agency in hopes of getting an inside track on jobs before they’re posted.

“I’ll just have to pound the pavement a little harder,” she says.

She’s got plenty of com-pany. About 5.5 people, on average, are competing for each available job opening.

That compares with only 1.8 people per opening when the recession began in December 2007.

Jena Hartman of Green-wood, Ind., is among the for-tunate ones.

On April 21, she landed a part-time job with an exten-sion service run by Purdue University. She’d been look-ing since August 2008. Her husband had worked for three nursing home compa-nies that all went bankrupt.

Hartman works 20 hours a week with elderly people and others on low incomes, teaching them how to stretch their dollars and buy nutri-tional foods.

Hartman, 60, used to work in the food industry before taking time off to watch her granddaughter while her daughter returned to school and then to work.

She had sent out hundreds of resumes over the first sev-eral months of her search.

“There must be a room someplace here in Indianapolis — and it’s a fairly large room — that is wallpapered with my resumes,” she says.

In June 2009, she found a job. But she was let go soon after.

“It took me about a month to lick my wounds and gath-er my self confidence again, and I just started the whole networking process again.”

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Federal regulators are announcing another recall of children’s jewelry with high levels of the toxic metal cadmium, and say they’re expanding their investigation in an effort to keep dangerous items off store shelves in the first place.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission tells The Associated Press its inspectors at the nation’s ports are now screening imported

children’s jewelry for cadmium.On Monday, the agency announced

the recall of about 19,000 “Best Friends” charm bracelets made in China and sold at the Claire’s chain because of high levels of cadmium, which can harm the kidneys and bones and is a known carcinogen.

Agency scientists confirmed test results that AP reported in January, showing high levels of cadmium in the “Best Friends” bracelets sold at Claire’s.

People have varied reasons for renewing job hunts

Feds expand kids jewelry review

13/

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Page 14: daily courier may 11 2010

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama nominated Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court on Monday, declar-ing the former Harvard Law School dean “one of the nation’s foremost legal minds.” She would be the court’s youngest justice and give it three female members for the first time.

The nomination to replace liberal retiring Justice John Paul Stevens set the stage for a bruising confirmation bat-tle, though mathematically Democrats should be able to prevail in the end.

At 50, Kagan is relatively young for the lifetime post and could help shape the high court’s decisions for decades. If confirmed by the Senate, she would become only the fourth female justice in history.

Obama cited what he called Kagan’s “openness to a broad array of viewpoints” and her “fair mindedness.”

Standing beside the presi-dent in the East Room of the White House, Kagan said she was “honored and humbled by this nomination.”

“I look forward to work-ing with the Senate in the next stage of this process, and I thank you again, Mr. President, for this honor of a lifetime,” she said.

Republicans are expected to criticize her for attempt-ing to bar military recruiters from the Harvard Law cam-pus while she was dean. That issue was used against her by critics during her confirma-tion hearing last year for her current post.

With control of 59 votes in the Senate, Democrats should be able to win con-firmation. However, if all 41 Republicans vote together, they could delay a vote with a filibuster.

Republicans have shown no signs in advance that they would try to prevent a vote on Kagan, but they are certain to grill her in con-firmation hearings over her experience, her thin record of legal writings and her deci-sions at Harvard.

The senator who will pre-side over her confirmation hearing, Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont, said, “The Senate should confirm Ms. Kagan before” Labor Day.

“Our constituents deserve a civil and thoughtful debate

on this nomination, followed by an up-or-down vote,” said the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

The Republican Senate leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, said his party would make sure there was a “thorough process, not a rush to judgment” on the nomina-tion.

“Judges must not be a rub-ber stamp for any admin-istration. Judges must not walk into court with a pre-conceived idea of who should win,” he said, adding that Republicans would have a vigorous debate on that prin-ciple.

Obama introduced Kagan as “my friend.”

“Elena is widely regarded as one of the nation’s fore-

most legal minds. She’s an acclaimed legal scholar with a rich understanding of constitutional law. She is a former White House aide, with a life- long commit-ment to public service and a firm grasp of the nexus and boundaries between our three branches of govern-ment,” Obama said.

Kagan served in the Clinton White House.

Obama began with high praise for the retir-ing Stevens, a leader of the court’s liberals, calling him “a giant in the law,” impartial and having respect for legal precedence.

Kagan “embodies the same excellence, independence and passion for the law,” Obama said.

He noted that neither Kagan’s mother nor father “lived to see this day, but I think her mother would rel-ish this moment. I think she would relish, as I do, the prospect of three women tak-ing their seat on the nation’s highest court for the first time in history ... a court that would be more inclusive, more representative, more reflective of us as a people than ever before.”

Kagan praised Stevens for having “played a particularly distinguished and exemplary role. It is therefore a special honor to be nominated to fill his seat.”

In a short tenure as solici-tor general “I have felt blessed to represent the United States before the Supreme Court, to walk into the highest court in this

country when it is deciding its most important cases, cases that have an impact on so many people’s lives,” she said.

Seven Republicans voted for her confirmation last year as solicitor general.

One of them, Orrin Hatch of Utah, a member of the Judiciary Committee, issued a statement saying his deci-sion this time “will be based on evidence, not blind faith. Her previous confirma-tion and my support for her in that position do not by themselves establish either her qualifications for the Supreme Court or my obliga-tion to support her.”

Kagan would become the only current justice who had no prior experience as a judge. The other justices all served previously as federal appeals court judges.

That means Kagan has a smaller paper trail than other recent nominees since there are no prior decisions to scrutinize.

But conservatives were already mounting an attack, one they laid the groundwork for when she was mentioned last year as being on Obama’s short list for the Supreme Court post last time around.

Obama’s White House team was launching its own broad campaign-style outreach to Capitol Hill and the media. That effort is designed to shape the national image of Kagan, an unknown figure to much of America.

Her selection came after nearly a monthlong process of consideration.

14 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

NatioN

This 2004 photo released by the Harvard University Law School shows Elena Kagan. President Barack Obama nominated Kagan to the Supreme Court Monday.

Obama nominates Kagan for Supreme Court

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General Eric Holder said Sunday he does not think Arizona’s law cracking down on illegal immigrants is racially motivated but voiced concern that its

enforcement could lead to racial profiling.

Holder said the U.S. has a national immi-gration problem that cannot be cured with a “state-by-state solution.”

The top U.S. prosecu-tor said he understands

the frustration behind the Arizona law, but he warned during an appearance on ABC’s “This Week” that “we could potentially get on a slippery slope where people will be picked on because of how they look as opposed to what they have done.”

Holder said the Justice Department was “considering all of our options,” includ-ing a lawsuit either on grounds that the Arizona law had pre-empted federal powers or was a violation of federal civil rights stat-utes.

Shortly after being

picked for attorney general, Holder, who is black, said the country was a “nation of cow-ards” because it had failed to confront the issue of race.

Asked on NBC’s “Meet the Press” if his assessment still held, Holder said: “I think it’s changed a bit. I still don’t think we’re at a place where we need to be. I think that we need to talk to each other more about race and the racial things that divide us especially when one looks at the demographic changes that this nation is about to undergo.”

AG fears ‘slippery slope’ of racial profiling

Associated Press

14/

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Page 15: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010 — 15

15 comics/

SHOE by Chris Cassat and Gary Brookins

BROOM-HILDA by Russell Myers

ARLO AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson

THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schoor

DILBERT by Scott Adams

THE BORN LOSER by Art and Chip SansomGIL THORP by Jerry Jenkins, Ray Burns and Frank McLaughlin

FRANK AND ERNEST by Bob Thaves

Dear Dr. Gott: My wife is 82 and in good health. She exercises and eats well. She takes metoprolol and war-farin and has been urged to have a colonoscopy. She had breast cancer two years ago. Do you think a colonoscopy is appropriate?

Dear Reader: Has your wife had a change in bowel habits, abdominal pain, blood in her stool and a history of polyps, colon cancer or other intestinal suspicion that needs to be addressed or readdressed? Is this her first colonos-copy or has she had one or more in the past -- perhaps with questionable results? If you can answer yes to any of these questions, this may be the reason why her physician is recommending a colonoscopy. With what appears to be a cardiac issue, possible hypertension and her age, I am not sure that her physician or gastroenterologist would have recommended the procedure arbi-trarily.

Colonoscopy is a simple procedure recommended for everyone over the age of 50, with follow-up on a

periodic basis, usually every five to 10 years. The procedure can detect cancerous polyps and a host of other problems, often nipping them in the bud. However, before committing to anything, I feel your wife needs to visit her physician to determine the exact reason for the recommendation. This holds true of virtually every procedure for everyone. The only way a person can make a decision is through educa-tion. So, become educated. Ask your wife if you can accompany her during the visit. Most often, two heads are better than one in sorting things out and for hearing everything that is said. If she disapproves, then she should go on her own with a list of questions that should be answered to her complete satisfaction.

Is a colonoscopy called for?

Dear Abby: “No Laughing Matter” (Feb. 22) wrote about her mother-in-law making snide comments because there is so little resemblance between her son and her grandchild. It’s a fact that not all offspring look like their parents.

My husband and I have seven bio-logical children who are now young adults. We marvel at the breadth and depth of our collective gene pool.

I am a petite brown-eyed brunette, and my husband is tall and blond with hazel eyes. None of our kids look alike. One daughter inherited my brown eyes, but her hair is blond. Two kids have my dark hair, but one has blue eyes and the other has green eyes. One son is the spitting image of his dad, while another resembles my father as a child. Our “baby” girl is the tallest female and has a buxom figure she certainly did not inherit from me.

Another thing: Out of all nine of us, our second child is the only family member who cannot curl her tongue. The study of genetics is an amazing thing, especially when we find out what we think we know isn’t neces-sarily so.

— They’re All OursDear All: Thank you for your

in”gene”ious response. Other read-ers felt “No Laughing Matter” should ignore her mother-in-law’s comments and handle the matter with humor.

Dear Abby: When my daughter was about 13, my “dear” mother-in-law said she didn’t look like her son, also implying that I had been unfaithful. I looked her directly in the eye and replied, “Of course she doesn’t look like your son. She resem-bles MY side of the family.” She never commented again.

— Not UnfaithfulDear Abby: The next time “No

Laughing Matter’s” mother-in-law remarks how one child bears no resemblance to Dad, she should say, “You know, genetics are fascinating. I’ve often thought how much this beautiful child resembles you.”

— MarcSDear Abby: My oldest brother and

I look identical despite our 10-year age difference. Our middle brother, however, didn’t look like either one of us. Our family jokingly referred to him as “the milkman’s son” until he hit middle age. At that point in his life, he became the spitting image of our father. “No Laughing Matter” should not take her mother-in-law seriously.

Mix and match siblings

Your Birthday, May 11Be prepared for some

unique developments to take place where your work or career is concerned.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Your best possibilities for achieving your goals today could come from one or two progressive contacts.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Dealings you have with persons who are for-eigners are likely to have a good influence on you.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - An opportunity might present itself that would enable you to produce a sec-ond source of income.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Your judgment is keen enough to evaluate all alter-natives quickly and make a beneficial call.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Thanks to your wis-dom and experience, you can analyze things quickly when necessity demands.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Circumstances could bring you closer together with a friend with whom you enjoy a strong bond.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don’t hesitate to put into play some ideas for a better procedure to handle something you have to do.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - If you get a hunch regarding a game of chance, be sure you are able to handle a loss.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your pros-pects are encouraging regarding a financial mat-ter, and profit is possible.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You’re apt to pick up on information being passed on that others are missing. Use it.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Lady Luck will help you out today. Be alert for an unusual opportunity being dumped in your lap.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Much can be accom-plished because you can be extremely resourceful when advancing your ideals.

EVENING MAY 11 DSH DTV 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30

BROADCAST STATIONS

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) WSOC - 8650 9 Inside Ent Dancing Lost (N) Å :02 V (N) News Night J. Kimmel

WLOS 13 8180 13 Wheel J’par Dancing Lost (N) Å :02 V (N) News Night J. Kimmel

0 WGGS 2 8192 16 Word Shield Niteline Praise the Lord Å Place

5 WHNS 12 8183 21 Two Sein Amer. Idol Glee (N) News Sein Frien Frien Jim

A WUNF 6 8190 33 Busi NC NOVA Frontline Last Ridge World Charlie Rose Tavis

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Æ WYCW 10 8185 62 Fam Ray 90210 (N) Life Unexp. News Name Fam Offi ce Offi ce 70s CABLE CHANNELS

A&E 23 118 265 The First 48 Criminal Criminal Criminal CSI: Miami Criminal BET 17 124 329 106 & Park } ›› You Got Served Tiny Tiny Mo’Nique W. Williams COM 46 107 249 Daily Col Tosh. Tosh S. South Sit South Daily Col S. S. CNN 27 200 202 John King Camp. Brown Larry King Anderson Cooper 360 Å Larry King DISC 24 182 278 Deadly Catch Deadly Catch Deadly Catch Swamp Log. Deadly Catch Deadly Catch ESPN 25 140 206 E:60 (N) 30 for 30 (N) MLB Special Baseball Ton. SportsCenter B’ball Live ESPN2 37 144 209 Foot Live World Series World Series World Series 30 for 30 (N) Nation NAS FNC 15 205 360 FOX Report O’Reilly Hannity On Record O’Reilly Hannity FSS 20 - - College Baseball Head Final NAS Final World Poker FX 36 137 248 Mu } ›› Beowulf (‘07) (P) Justifi ed (N) Justifi ed 70s 70s FXM 38 133 258 High Anxiety Revenge-Nerds Revenge of the Nerds III Revnge-Nrds 4 HALL 16 187 312 Gold Gold Angel } Expecting a Miracle (‘09) Gold Gold Gold Gold HGTV 29 112 229 House House First First Home Rules House House First Mar Home Rules HIST 43 120 269 Marvels The Real Robin Hood (N) The Universe Sex-Ancient Robin Hood LIFE 35 108 252 Grey’s Anat. Grey’s Anat. } Accused at 17 (‘09) Å Will Will Fra Me NICK 40 170 299 iCarly Spon Mal Mal Chris Chris Lopez Lopez Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny SPIKE 44 168 241 CSI Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Real Real SYFY 45 122 244 Star Trek Trek Trek WWE NXT Star Trek Jack Brooks TBS 30 139 247 Sein Sein Offi ce Offi ce Offi ce Offi ce Offi ce Offi ce Lopez Earl Name TCM 42 132 256 Murder Drums Along the Mohawk } Northwest Passage (‘40) Last Mohi TLC 28 183 280 Best Food 19 Kids 19 19 Little Little 19 Kids 19 19 TNT 19 138 245 Bones Å NBA Basketball NBA Basketball TOON 14 176 296 Total John Gar Chow Cod Ed, King King Fam Fam Robot Aqua TS 33 437 649 Top Pre MLB Baseball: Braves at Brewers Post Spotl MLB Baseball USA 32 105 242 Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law CI Law CI Psych Å WGN-A - 239 307 Funny Videos } ››› Eight Below (‘06) Fun Scrub Scrub S. S.

PREMIUM CHANNELS

MAX 510 310 512 ›› Inkheart } ›› Terminator Salvation Kiss of the Dragon Zane Busty Cops ENC 520 340 526 Nothing-Lose } ›› Quarantine :35 } ›› Tears of the Sun › Never Back Down HBO 500 300 501 } ›› Fighting (‘09) Å } Land of the Lost Shrek Treme Å The Pacifi c SHO 540 318 537 Lars and Girl 7:50 } What Women Want Nurse Tara Nurse Tara Medicine-Mel STARZ 530 350 520 Pearl :20 } ›› Hancock } › Pandorum (‘09) Å The Sixth Sense Harv

IN THE STARSPUZZLE

Dr. Peter M. Gott

Ask Dr. Gott

Abigail van Buren

Dear Abby

Page 16: daily courier may 11 2010

16 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

NatioN

WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly 2 million people are waiting to find out if they qualify for Social Security disability benefits. It will be a long wait for most, even if they eventually win their cases.

The Social Security system is so overwhelmed by appli-cations for disability benefits that many people are wait-ing more than two years for their first payment. In Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota and other states, the wait can be even longer.

The Social Security com-missioner, Michael J. Astrue, says the delays are unaccept-able, particularly for people who have paid payroll taxes for years to support the sys-tem and now are unable to work because of debilitating medical problems. Astrue has had some success in reducing a case backlog that has plagued the system for years. But a spike in new applications, linked to the economic recession, threat-ens to swamp the system again.

Claims typically increase in a bad economy because many people who worked despite their disabilities get laid off and apply for benefits.

About 3.3 million people are expected to apply for benefits this year. That’s 300,000 more than last year and 700,000 more than in 2008.

Nearly two-thirds of those claims will be denied by state agencies over-seen by the Social Security Administration. Most of these people will drop their claims. But for those willing go through an appeals pro-cess that can take two years or more, chances are good they eventually will get ben-efits.

People who win claims can get retroactive benefits.

“The most important thing we can do to improve the

disability process is to make the right decision as soon as possible,” Astrue said at a recent congressional hearing.

His goal is to clear the backlog of appeals hearings by 2013. “It takes longer to fix something than it does to break it,” he said.

Michael Quinn of Flint, Mich., said he waited nearly three years to get benefits after his initial application. Quinn was a sales represen-tative when he was in a car accident in 2000 that left him with a shattered left leg, damaged vertebrae in his neck and 80 stitches in his head. Unable to do his job, he took a buyout from his employer and started work-ing part-time jobs.

The work, he said, proved too difficult because he couldn’t bend over, lift any-thing heavy or even move his

head enough to look up.“I wanted to work because

I’ve worked all my life,” Quinn said. “It was heart-breaking because I couldn’t work. There was so little I could do.”

Quinn, 64, said he filed for Social Security disabil-ity benefits in 2005 and his claim was denied. Quinn appealed to an adminis-trative law judge and was awarded $1,900 a month — in 2008. He also got retroac-tive payments, dating to his original application.

“It’s the most helpless feel-ing in the world because you’re waiting for someone else,” Quinn said.

Qualifying for disability benefits is not easy. A doctor must determine that a dis-ability is severe enough to interfere with an applicant’s ability to work. If applicants

can’t perform their old jobs, officials see if they can adapt to new ones. The system is designed to weed out malin-gerers.

“Social Security has a very stringent, very tight defini-tion of what constitutes a disability,” said Dan Allsup, communications director for Allsup Inc., an Illinois-based company that represents dis-ability applicants, including Quinn.

About 12.8 million disabled people receive disability ben-efits. Some 7.1 million get Social Security disability, 4.2 million get Supplemental Security Income and 1.5 mil-lion get both. Disabled work-ers get an average of $1,065 a month from Social Security and $498 a month from SSI.

Disability benefits are financed by payroll taxes, the same taxes workers pay to

support the retirement sys-tem.

Here’s how the application process works:

Applicants file disabil-ity claims with the Social Security Administration, which turns them over to state agencies, usually called Disability Determination Services. A doctor must ver-ify that debilitating medical conditions will last at least a year. About 63 percent of ini-tial claims are denied, after an average wait of 111 days.

Applicants in most states can appeal the decision to the same state agency. About 86 percent of those appeals are denied, after an average wait of an additional 104 days.

Applicants can then appeal to an administrative law judge. About 554,000 cases were decided at this level in 2009. The judges approved benefits in 63 percent of the cases, after an average pro-cessing time of 491 days.

Including the time it takes to file the appeals at each stage, the entire process takes an average of 777 days, or a little more than two years, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Applicants who are still denied benefits can appeal to a special council and even-tually file a claim in fed-eral court, but relatively few claims are awarded at these stages.

Astrue, who became Social Security commissioner in 2007, has worked to reduce the backlog of appeals before administrative law judges by hiring hundreds of judges and support staff. The number of cases pend-ing before those judges dropped by 37,000, to just under 723,000, during the budget year that ended in September. It was the first drop in a decade.

Spike in disability claims clogs overloaded system

Associated PressMichael Quinn, 63, of Flint Township, Mich., is seen in his house, Monday, May 3. Quinn is frus-trated that it took two and a half years to receive disability insurance money after applying for it fol-lowing a car accident in Flint left him injured in May 2000.

16 class 1/2/

16 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, May 11, 2010

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Richmond Hill Senior Apts. in Rfdtn 1BR Units w/handicap

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DEADLINES: New Ads, Cancellations & ChangesTuesday Edition.............Monday, 12pmWednesday Edition......Tuesday, 2pmThursday Edition......Wednesday, 2pmFriday Edition...............Thursday, 2pmSaturday Edition................Friday, 2pmSunday Edition......................Friday, 2pm

Please check your ad on the first day that it runs. Call

us before the deadline for the next edition with corrections.We will rerun the ad or credit

your account for no more than one day.

*4 line minimum on all ads

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2 WEEK SPECIALRun ad 12 consecutive

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Page 17: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, May 11, 2010 — 17

WEB DIRECTORYVisit the advertisers below by entering their Web address

To List Your Website In This Directory, Contact The Daily Courier Classified Department at (828) 245-6431 Erika Meyer, Ext. 205

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REAL ESTATE

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14510-SP-128

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY

UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by Joseph L Auten and Lisa Auten, dated July 10, 2006 and recorded on July 24, 2006, in Book No. 909, at Page 712 in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina; and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements contained therein and, pursuant to demand of the holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will place for sale, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale at Courthouse Steps, on May 12, 2010 at 1:00 PM that parcel of land, including improvements thereon, situated, lying and being in the City of Lake Lure, County of Rutherford, State of North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:

ALL THAT PARCEL OF LAND IN CHIMNEY ROCK TOWNSHIP, RUTHERFORD COUNTY, STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, AS MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN DEED BOOK 735, PAGE 581, ID# 16-05005, BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT 97, SECTION 2, FILED IN PLAT BOOK 10, PAGE 76-81, RECORDED 07/02/1999, SURVEY PREPARED G. DARRELLTAYLOR, RLS, BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS A METES AND BOUNDS PROPERTY. CONTAINING 0.94 ACRE, MORE OR LESS, ACCORDING TO SAID SURVEY.

BY FEE SIMPLE DEED FROM JOSEPH W. GUIDA AND YONG A. GUIDA, HUSBAND AND WIFE AS SET FORTH IN BOOK 735, PAGE 581 DATED 07/06/1999 AND RECORDED 07/09/1999, RUTHERFORD COUNTY RECORDS, STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA.

Address of property:329 Chipmunk Trail, Lake Lure, NC 28746

Present Record Owners: Joseph L Auten and Lisa Auten

The terms of the sale are that the real property hereinbefore described will be sold for cash to the highest bidder. A deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, is required and must be tendered in the form of certified funds at the time of the sale. In the event that the Owner and Holder or its intended assignee is exempt from paying the same, the successful bidder shall be required to pay revenue stamps on the Trustee's Deed, and any Land Transfer Tax.

The real property hereinabove described is being offered for sale "AS IS, WHERE IS" and will be sold subject to all superior liens, unpaid taxes, and special assessments. Other conditions will be announced at the sale. The sale will be held open for ten (10) days for upset bids as by law required.

If the Trustee is unable to convey title to this property for any reason, the sole remedy of the purchaser is the return of the deposit. Reasons of such inability to convey include, but are not limited to, the filing of a bankruptcy petition prior to the sale and reinstatement of the loan without the knowledge of the Trustee. If the validity of the sale is challenged by any party, the Trustee, in its sole discretion, if it believes the challenge to have merit, may declare the sale to be void and return the deposit. The purchaser will have no further remedy.

Additional Notice Where the Real Property is Residential With Less Than 15 Rental Units:

An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.

Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a bona fide lease or tenancy may have additional rights pursuant to Title VII of 5.896 - Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act which became effective on May 20, 2009.

Dated: April 21, 2010

David A. Simpson, P.C., Substitute TrusteeBy:________________________________Attorney at LawRogers Townsend & Thomas, PCAttorneys for David A. Simpson, P.C., Substitute Trustee2701 Coltsgate Road, Suite 300Charlotte, NC 28211-3594

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINACOUNTY OF RUTHERFORD

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION

FILE NO.: 10-SP-093

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY NEILLEWIS AND WIFE, MICHELLE LEWIS DATED JANUARY 18, 2006, AND RECORDED FEBRUARY 8, 2006, IN BOOK 884 PAGE 630 IN THE RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTER OF DEEDS SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE: Dawson & Albritton, P.A.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Pursuant to a Court Order and under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in the above-referenced deed of trust and because of a violation of the provisions of said deed of trust and a failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained, and pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said deed of trust, the undersigned substitute trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale at the county courthouse of said county at 10:00 A.M. on May 18, 2010 the following described real estate and any other improvements which may be situated thereon, situated in Rutherford County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:

Being all of Lot 144 as depicted on that plat entitled “Phase I Subdivision, Vista @ Bill’s Mountain” recorded at Plat Book 26, Pages 352-354 (Sheet 1), of the Rutherford County Registry, reference to which is hereby made for more complete description.

Trustee may, in the Trustee’s sole discretion, delay the sale for up to one hour as provided in N.C.G.S. §45-21.23.

Should the property be purchased by a third party, that person must pay the tax of Forty-Five Cents ($0.45) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) required by N.C.G.S. §7A-308(a)(1).

The property to be offered pursuant to this notice of sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance “AS IS, WHERE IS.” Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the note secured by the deed of trust/security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor the officers, directors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either the Trustee or the holder of the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at or relating to the property being offered for sale, and any and all responsibilities or liabilities arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition expressly are disclaimed. Also, this property is being sold subject to all taxes, special assessments, and prior liens or encumbrances of record and any recorded releases.

A cash deposit or cashier’s check (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or seven hundred fifty dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time of the sale.

An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to N.C.G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold.

Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.

THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, EXCEPT AS STATED BELOW IN THE INSTANCE OF BANKRUPTCY PROTECTION.

IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY.

This 14th day of April, 2010.

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE Dawson & Albritton, P.A. P.O. Box 6003 (27835) 3219 Landmark Street, Ste. 4 Greenville, NC 27834 252.752.2485

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINACOUNTY OF RUTHERFORD

NOTICE

The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Benny Michael Morrow, late of Rutherford County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 20th day of July, 2010, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 20th day of April, 2010.

Amanda Morrow Surratt - Administrator312 2nd St., N.E.Conover, NC 28613

David A. Lloyd - AttorneyPost Office Drawer 790Rutherfordton, NC 28139

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Co-Administrator of the estate of SHIRLEY PAULINE BRADLEY HARDIN of Rutherford County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said SHIRLEY PAULINE BRADLEY HARDIN to present them to the undersigned on or before the 4th day of August, 2010 or the same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment.

This is the 4th day of May, 2010.

George Michael Hardin, Co-AdministratorPO Box 1106Ellenboro, NC 28040

Barry Lynn Hardin, Co-Administrator159 CC Hoyle Rd.Rutherfordton, NC 28139

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of PATENA JANE HOLT PENSON of Rutherford County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said PATENA JANE HOLT PENSON to present them to the undersigned on or before the 27th day of July, 2010 or the same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment.

This is the 27th day of April, 2010.

Firleen Davis Holt, Administrator995 Webb Rd.Ellenboro, NC 28040

Male Coonhound No collar, was injured. Found 5/2 in Lake LureCall 828-625-9932 for

more information

Found

Female Mini Schnauzer Lost 4/13

in Ellenboro/Walls Community area.

Call 453-8842

Neutered male puppyLong short and black and white. 6 mo. old. Lost 5/3 in RS Central School area 305-2850

Lost

2004 Honda Shadow600 VLX 5500 mi., Kuryakyn Iso-grips

NC salvage title $3,000obo Call 453-9012

Motorcycles

BUYING STANDING TIMBER 3 acres plus

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Page 18: daily courier may 11 2010

18 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, May 11, 2010

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CONSTRUCTION

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE10 SP 123

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust made by Anthony Barnes (PRESENT RECORD OWNER(S): Anthony B. Barnes) to Brock & Scott PLLC, Trustee(s), dated the 6th day of January, 2006, and recorded in Book 881, Page 74, in Rutherford County Registry, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the undersigned, Substitute Trustee Services, Inc. having been substituted as Trustee in said Deed of Trust by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the Deed of Trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the courthouse door at 229 North Main St in the City of Rutherfordton, Rutherford County, North Carolina, or the customary location designated for foreclosure sales, at 1:30 PM on May 25, 2010 and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate situated in the County of Rutherford, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:

Tract One: Situated and being in the Town of Spindale and lying on the East side of Spindale Avenue, and known as Lot Number One (1) of the P.H. Grose lands as shown on a plat made by J. A. Wilkie, and surveyed said plat dated August 12, 1920, and registered in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Rutherford County in Book of Deeds 117 at Page 50, which is hereby referred to for a more particular description of said lot, and bounded as follows:

BEGINNING at a stake on East side of Spindale Avenue corner of Lot Number two of the P.H. Grose lands as shown on the above mentioned plat and runs with Spindale Avenue South 17 West 150 feet to a stake at the intersection of a road and Spindale Avenue; thence with said road about South 89 1/4 East 420 feet to a stake on the North edge of said road; thence North 17 East 30 feet to a stake corner of Lot 2; thence with line of Lot 2 North 73 West 400 feet to the BEGINNING.

Being the same and identical property by Lucy W. Walker to Willie L. Whiteside and wife, Katie W. Whiteside by Deed dated March 05, 1975 and recorded in Deed Book 365, Page 291, Rutherford County Registry.

Tract Two: Situate in the Town of Spindale, North Carolina, and being located on the east side of Spindale Street and being Lot Number 2 of a subdivision of the P.H. Grose farm as the same is shown and set forth on a plat thereof which is of record in Plat Book 4 at Page 30 in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina, reference to said plat being hereby made for a more fully and complete description of said Lot Number 2. That the said map of the subdivision of the P.H. Grose farm was originally recorded in Deed Book 117 at Page 50 and thereafter transferred to Plat Book A at Page 30 before being transferred to Plat Book A at Page 30 where the same is now recorded. Together with improvements located thereon;

Said property being located at: 1404 Spindale Street, Spindale, North Carolina

The above described Lot Number to W.E. Nanney and wife Carrie Lee Grose Nanney, P.H. Grose and wife Myrtle Grose, by deed dated March 6, 1943, and of record in Deed Book 181 at Page 43 in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina. W. E. Nanney thereafter died about the year 1951 and Carrie Lee Grose Nanney succeeded to the title of said property by right of survivorship. Carrie Lee Nanney thereafter married Herman L. Beal, and thereafter died November 6, 1970 intestate and without issue and survived by her said husband, Herman L. Beal, who is her sole heir-at-law. Herman L. Beal said property by deed recorded in Deed Book 337 at Page 514 in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina.

Being the same and identical property which by John U. Grose and wife Ethel D. Grose to Kathryn W. McDonald by deed dated April 24, 1995 and recorded in Deed Book 649 at Page 407, Rutherford County Registry.

Trustee may, in the Trustee's sole discretion, delay the sale for up to one hour as provided in NCGS §45-21.23.

Should the property be purchased by a third party, that person must pay the tax of Forty-Five Cents ($0.45) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) required by NCGS §7A-308(a)(1).

The property to be offered pursuant to this notice of sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance "AS IS, WHERE IS." Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the note secured by the deed of trust/security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor the officers, directors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either the Trustee or the holder of the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at or relating to the property being offered for sale, and any and all responsibilities or liabilities arising out of or in any way relating to any such condition expressly are disclaimed. Also, this property is being sold subject to all taxes, special assessments, and prior liens or encumbrances of record and any recorded releases. Said property is also being sold subject to applicable Federal and State laws.

A cash deposit or cashier’s check (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or seven hundred fifty dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time of the sale.

An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold.

Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.

THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, except as stated below in the instance of bankruptcy protection.

IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY.

This 28th day of April, 2010.

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE SERVICES, INC.SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEEBY:Attorney at LawThe Law Firm of Hutchens, Senter & Britton, P.A.Attorneys for Substitute Trustee Services, Inc.P.O. Box 10284317 Ramsey StreetFayetteville, North Carolina 28311http://sales.hsbfirm.comCase No: 1029837

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINACOUNTY OF RUTHERFORD

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICESUPERIOR COURT DIVISION

BEFORE THE CLERK10 SP 103

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST FROM ANNA MARIALEASE, TO CB SERVICES CORP., TRUSTEE, DATED DECEMBER 14, 2006 RECORDED IN BOOK 951, PAGE 590, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Pursuant to an order entered April 13, 2010, in the Superior Court for Rutherford County, and the power of sale contained in the captioned deed of trust ("Deed of Trust"), the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at auction, to the highest bidder for cash,

AT THE COURTHOUSE DOOR INRUTHERFORDTON, RUTHERFORD COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA

ON MAY 18, 2010 AT 2:30 PM

the real estate and the improvements thereon encumbered by the Deed of Trust, less and except any of such property released from the lien of the deed of trust prior to the date of this sale, lying and being in Rutherford County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:

All that certain parcel of land lying and being situated in the County of RUTHERFORD, State of NC, to-wit:

SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN CHIMNEY ROCK TOWNSHIP, RUTHERFORD COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, AND BEING TRACT #1 OF THE T.E. FLYNN LANDS WHICH WAS ALLOTTED TO AUDREY FLYNN BY REPORT OF COMMISSIONERS DATED MAY 19, 1961, IN THAT CERTAIN SPECIAL PROCEEDING ENTITLED, "AUDREY FLYNN, SINGLE, JOHN V. FLYNN, AND OTHERS VS. KELLY D. FLYNN, SINGLE, AND OTHERS", WHICH REPORT OF COMMISSIONERS IS OF RECORD IN DEED BOOK 260, PAGE 734, RUTHERFORD COUNTYREGISTRY, SAID TRACT #1 BEING DESCRIBED BY METES AND BOUNDS AS FOLLOWS:

BEGINNING ON AN IRON PIN IN THE OLD OUTSIDE LINE, SAID IRON PIN BEING THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF TRACT #6, AND RUNNING THENCE WITH SAID OLD OUTSIDE LINE SOUTH 6 DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST 430 FEET TO A STAKE, AN OLD CORNER; THENCE WITH ANOTHER OLD LINE SOUTH 80 DEGREES 25 MINUTES EAST 222 FEET TO A PERSIMMON, AN OLD CORNER; THENCE ANOTHER OLD LINE SOUTH 15 DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST 157 FEET TO A CHERRY TREE, AN OLD CORNER; THENCE WITH ANOTHER OLD LINE SOUTH 50 DEGREES 25 MINUTES EAST 294 FEET TO A POPLAR, AN OLD CORNER; THENCE WITH ANOTHER OLD LINE SOUTH 33 DEGREES 30 MINUTES EAST 110 FEET TO A STONE, AN OLD CORNER; THENCE WITH ANOTHER OLD LINE NORTH 10 EAST 310 FEET TO AN IRON PIN IN SAID OLD LINE, A NEW CORNER, THE SAME BEING THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF TRACT #2; THENCE A NEW LINE WITH THE LINE OF TRACT #2, NORTH 37 DEGREES 30 MINUTES WEST 855 FEET TO AN IRON PIN ON THE NORTH SIDE OF A FARM ROAD, A NEW CORNER IN THE LINE OF TRACT #6, THE SAME BEING THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF TRACT #2; THENCE WITH LINE OF TRACT#6, SOUTH 51 WEST 165 FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING 5.8 ACRES, MORE OR LESS.

Tax Map Reference: 02-25723

Being the same property Devised to INGA RUTH GUDMUNDSON AND ERILE RUDOLF GUDMUNDSON, AS TENANTS IN COMMON, from the Personal Representative for the estate of H.R. GUDMUNDSON, date of death 01/06/1998, Estate Package/Probate Roll #99E134, final decree status UNKNOWN PROBATED IN CHARLESTON SOUTH CAROLINA, all of which is recorded in the RUTHERFORD County, NC Public Registry.

Being that parcel of land conveyed to ANNA MARIA LEASE from ERICK RUDOLF GUDMUNDSON, UNMARRIED by that deed dated 08/13/1999 and recorded 08/16/1999 in deed book 738, at page 63 of the RUTHERFORD County, NC Public Registry.

In the Trustee’s sole discretion, the sale may be delayed for up to one (1) hour as provided in Section 45-21.23 of the North Carolina General Statutes.

The record owners of the real property not more than ten days prior to the date hereof are Anna Maria Lease and Inga Ruth Gudmundson.

A five percent cash deposit, or a cash deposit of $750.00, whichever is greater, will be required of the last and highest bidder. The balance of the bid purchase price shall be due in full in cash or certified funds at a closing to take place within thirty (30) days of the date of sale. The undersigned Substitute Trustee shall convey title to the property by nonwarranty deed.

This sale will be made subject to all prior liens of record, if any, and to all unpaid (ad valorem) taxes and special assessments, if any, which became a lien subsequent to the recordation of the Deed of Trust. This sale will be further subject to the right, if any, of the United States of America to redeem the above-described property for a period of 120 days following the date when the final upset bid period has run.

The purchaser of the property described above shall pay the Clerk’s Commissions in the amount of $.45 per $100.00 of the purchase price (up to a maximum amount of $500.00), required by Section 7A-308(a)(1) of the North Carolina General Statutes. If the purchaser of the above described property is someone other than the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust, the purchaser shall also pay, to the extent applicable, the land transfer tax in the amount of one percent (1%) of the purchase price.

To the extent this sale involves residential property with less than fifteen (15) rental units, you are hereby notified of the following:

a. An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to Section 45-21.29 of the North Carolina General Statutes in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of superior court of the county in which the property is sold; and

b. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.

This 13th day of April, 2010.

SPRUILLCO, LTD.By:__________________________Deborah SperatiVice President130 S. Franklin StreetP.O. Box 353Rocky Mount, NC 27802(252) 972-7032RBC001-00001351

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Page 19: daily courier may 11 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, May 11, 2010 — 19

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Page 20: daily courier may 11 2010

20 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, May 11, 2010

NatioN/world

UK’s Brown to resignLONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister

Gordon Brown made a dramatic bid to keep his beleaguered Labour Party in power after it was punished in elections last week, announcing Monday he will resign by September at the latest even if the Liberal Democrats — being wooed by the Conservatives — decide to join his party in government.

The political theater, played out in front of the iconic black door of No. 10 Downing Street, comes as David Cameron’s Conservatives — which won the most seats in Parliament but fell short of a majority — struggled in their attempts to win over the third-place Liberal Democrats.

Brown’s party has been willing to entertain supporting the Liberal Democrats’ demand for an overhaul of the voting system toward pro-portional representation, which would greatly increase that party’s future seat tallies. But eve-ning brought a further twist with a counteroffer from the Conservatives — of a referendum on a less dramatic type of electoral reform.

Israeli plans trouble peace talksJERUSALEM (AP) — Israel said Monday it has

no intention of halting construction of Jewish housing in hotly contested east Jerusalem, a first sign of trouble for newly launched U.S.-mediated peace talks.

Palestinians accused Israel of undermining trust and urged President Barack Obama to intervene.

The comments on construction from Israeli Cabinet Secretary Tzvi Hauser came a day after the White House praised Israel for agreeing to hold off construction of a major east Jerusalem housing project. It also spotlighted the delicate balancing act of an Israeli government seeking to please both the Obama administration and hard-line coalition partners.

Aquino leads Philippine raceMANILA, Philippines (AP) — The son of

Philippine democracy icons took an early, com-manding lead in presidential polls on a promise to begin prosecuting corrupt officials within weeks to restore credibility to the country’s graft-ridden government agencies.

Despite computerized counting machine glitch-es and violence that claimed at least nine lives, election officials hailed the vote as a success in a country where poll fraud allegations have marred previous contests.

Sen. Benigno Aquino III — whose father was assassinated while opposing a dictatorship and whose mother led the “people power” revolt that restored freedoms — was leading the nine-candidate presidential race with 40.58 percent of the votes from about 57 percent of the precincts, while his closest rival, ousted President Joseph Estrada, had 25.72 percent.

There is no runoff in the Philippines and who-ever has the most votes is declared winner.

Thai protesters OK poll dateBANGKOK (AP) — Thai anti-government pro-

testers said Monday they would continue their crippling demonstration in central Bangkok until the prime minister and his deputy surrender to police to face possible criminal charges for dead-ly street violence.

Although a key Red Shirt leader said they accepted Prime Abhisit Vejjajiva’s timetable for Nov. 14 elections, the protesters’ latest demand — presented as their formal position — could dash hopes of ending the two-month standoff soon.

However, a quick government response that Abhisit and Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban were willing to submit themselves to proper judicial processes — rather than just peremptorily rejecting the notion — left open the possibility that there might still be common ground for a settlement.

There are no criminal charges outstanding against the two men, so it was not clear what action would satisfy the Red Shirts’ demand. The ambiguity leaves some leeway for both sides.

BAGHDAD (AP) — A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a textile factory Monday in a crowd that gathered after two cars bombings at the same spot in the worst of a series of attacks killing nearly 100 across Iraq, the deadliest day this year.

The government blamed al-Qaida in Iraq for violence in Baghdad, saying the terror group is stepping up its attacks now to exploit political instabil-ity. More than two months after the March 7 elections, it is not clear who will control the next Iraqi government and the U.S. is planning to pull out half of its 92,000 troops over the next four months.

In the latest in a series of attacks that killed 99 people, three bombs hit the southern Shiite port city of Basra in the evening. At least one exploded in a marketplace, killing at least 15, hospital and police officials said.

The violence began in the capital where at least 10 people were killed in what appeared to be coordinated attacks against police and army checkpoints across Baghdad. Both Shiites and Sunnis were targeted in attacks around the country.

The most deadly incident was an afternoon bombing in the Shiite city of Hillah, the capital of Babil province 60 miles (95 kilometers) south of Baghdad. A

suicide bomber with explosives strapped to his belt blew himself up among a crowd trying to help victims of two car bombs that went off earlier outside a textile factory, said Babil provincial police spokesman Maj. Muthana Khalid.

At least 45 were killed and 140 wounded in the triple blasts, Khalid and al-Hillah hospital director Zuhair al Khafaji said.

Witnesses said they saw blood pooled and pieces of flesh on the ground outside the factory.

“Terrified people were run-ning in different directions,” said Jassim Znad Abid, a taxi driver who lives in Hillah. “I saw dead people, some burned and crying, wounded people on the ground that was covered with pools of blood. Dozens of wounded peo-ple asking for help were laying on the ground.”

Khalid said the two car bombs parked outside the factory about 25 yards (meters) apart exploded first as workers were leaving the factory around 1:30 p.m. They were believed to be detonated by remote control.

Then as rescuers and workers were trying to help the injured, the suicide attacker struck.

Babil provincial Gov. Salman Nassir al-Zargawi ordered flags lowered to half-staff and a three-day mourning period. In an interview with Iraqi state TV,

al-Zargawi said he was informed Sunday that the factory was under threat, but cited too many security gaps across Babil to protect all sites he feared could be targeted.

“There are many fragile places especially in the north of Babil... and there are a lot of security gaps there,” al-Zargawi said. “So we are facing a daily challenge in Babil.”

The day’s violence began in Baghdad with the checkpoint attacks. Most of the incidents were drive-by shootings in which assailants wearing uniforms of city government employed clean-ers used weapons fixed with silencers to spray checkpoints and patrols with bullets.

Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Mous-sawi, spokesman for Baghdad’s security operations center, said Iraqi security forces arrested one suspect and seized a pistol with a silencer.

The violence delivered a chill-ing reminder that insurgents are still able to stage large scale operations despite security gains by Iraqi and U.S. forces over past years.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility. But al-Mous-sawi blamed al-Qaida in Iraq for the Baghdad attacks, saying the terror group is attempting to exploit Iraq’s political instability.

An Iraqi Army soldier stands guard at the site of a bombing in the southern Shiite port city of Basra, Iraq’s second-largest city Monday.

Associated Press

World Today

Iraq attacks kill at least 99

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