Document

30
BY SHELLEY SMITH [email protected] SPENCER — Police were still looking Friday night for the man who shot and killed a 20-year-old clerk during a robbery at a North Salis- bury Avenue store early in the day. Dee Rios died at Rowan Regional Medical Center shortly after the shooting at Latin Mix, 429 N. Salis- bury Ave. Spencer Police Chief Michael James said investigators are search- ing for “at least one black male” sus- pect. Authorities spent Friday ques- tioning business owners and resi- dents in the neighborhood. They also were reviewing surveillance footage. “There are cameras inside the store — several of them,” James said Friday night as investigators contin- ued to analyze the footage. Police said Rios hit the panic but- ton at Latin Mix — formerly known as Real’s Varieties — at 7:54 a.m. Re- sponding Spencer police officers found Rios injured. Yolanda Garcia, co-owner of the store, said Rios had been shot in the neck. James would not confirm that, nor would he say whether she had been shot more than once. Witnesses at a nearby business said Rowan County EMS worked on Rios for at least 15 minutes in the ambulance before taking her to Rowan Regional. The Rowan County Sheriff’s Of- fice had dogs trying to track the sus- pect in the area surrounding Latin Mix as a Highway Patrol helicopter flew overhead aiding in the search. • • • Dee Rios usually worked second shift, but switched with a co-worker Friday to earn a few more hours, Garcia said. Rios opened Latin Mix Friday morning at 7:30. Garcia and her daughter, Lillian Spears, own Latin Mix, which has been at the Spencer location for three years. Rios had worked as a clerk there for six months. Spears said Rios, who lived with her family in a nearby apartment, wanted to pick up extra hours to help her family move into a bigger place. “She just wanted something bet- ter for her family,” Spears said. “She’s a very honest girl,” Garcia said. “Everybody loved her.” Garcia called Rios a good worker, easygoing and great with people. “She’s too young,” Garcia said. “I know she’s in a better place now, but that’s not the point. “She will be missed. I hope she didn’t suffer. It’s awful. I am in shock.” • • • Freda Donald of Spencer, who vis- its Latin Mix twice a day, heard the news when she stopped in Friday af- ternoon. Donald said Rios always wel- comed her with a smile when she came in to buy a newspaper and lot- tery tickets. “I talk to the young girl every time I come,” she said. “She’s a very sweet girl. “It’s just a shock for me to walk in here and not see her.” Donald said she called Rios every day to check the Pick 3 lottery num- bers. “I finally introduced myself to her yesterday, and told her I was the woman who called her every day about the lottery,” she said. She added that Rios was glad she finally introduced herself. “This is like a family store. I know them all on a first-name basis. Everyone’s just good friends with Lillian because she makes you feel like you’re part of her family. “He didn’t have to kill her. I won’t have a good day to- day.” Sara McCubbins, another loyal cus- tomer, followed Spears from Ellis Crossroads to Spencer when she moved Latin Mix to a new location. Saturday, November 13, 2010 | 50¢ Bridge Bridge 7B 7B Classifieds Classifieds 1D 1D Comics Comics 6B 6B Crossword Crossword 6B 6B Deaths Deaths 4A 4A Horoscope Horoscope 7B 7B Opinion Opinion 6A 6A Faith Faith 1B 1B Second Front Second Front 3A 3A Sports Sports 1C 1C Television Television 7B 7B Weather Weather 8B 8B [|xbIAHDDy00001rzu Contents Deaths Marvin A. Lackey Francesca R. Leonardi Nancy E. Watson Mailee S. Matangira Arthur J. Gibson Eugene Wilkes Fonda C. Brinkley Vera A. Hill Ruth C. Bernhardt Arthur L. Bost Today’s forecast 68º/32º Sunny, nice Correction Carolina Christmas, the drive-through light display and village at Charlotte Motor Speedway, is pre- selling a Fast Track Pass for $35 a vehicle, available by calling 1-800-455-FANS (3267). The telephone num- ber in Friday’s edition of the Post was incorrect. The regular admission price per vehicle is $20. The Rowan County Board of Elections certi- fied the general election vote count Friday. Some of the vote totals changed as a result of the official canvass, but none of the Nov. 2 elec- tion results have been impacted. In the closest race, for N.C. House District 77, Republican Harry Warren is still 167 votes ahead of Democratic incumbent Lorene Coates. Warren has 9,115 votes to Coates’ 8,948 — or 49.54 percent to 50.46 percent. As of 5 p.m. Friday, Coates had not officially called for a recount, which is allowed when the difference between candidates is less than 1 per- cent of the total vote. She has until 5 p.m. Mon- day to make the request, which she has said she plans to do. Lee Menius, owner of Wild Turkey Farms out- side China Grove, will fill one of two open soil and water supervisor seats. He received 203 of 1,274 total write-in votes cast — the most for any one name. Carl Dangerfield received 22 votes, and 21 went to Bruce Miller. Elected to the other open seat was Harry P. Corriher, who was the only candidate to appear on the Nov. 2 ballot for soil and water supervisor. Certified results don’t change election outcome Coates hasn’t given word on whether she’ll seek a recount shelley smith/SALISBURY POST Investigators speak with Lillian Spears, one of the Latin Mix owners, after the fatal shooting Friday of a clerk. Clerk killed in Spencer robbery RCCC offering programs to help students get jobs BY SARAH CAMPBELL [email protected] As Rowan County’s jobless rate contin- ues to hover above 9 percent, local commu- nity colleges are ramping up course offer- ings to prepare students for high-demand jobs. “We try to listen to our area business and industry partners as well as our JobLink centers and work force development board to design and deliver training that is rele- vant to local economic and work force de- velopment,” said Jeanie Moore, vice presi- dent of corporate and continuing education at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College. “Many of our expanded course offerings are the result of our JobsNOW and customized training initiatives, which provide short- term training to meet emerging local job needs.” JobsNOW, an initiative developed by Gov. Bev Perdue, works to quickly train workers to re-enter the job market in fields that are in demand. Ann Morris, dean of corporate education at RCCC, said the college initially received $350,000 through JobsNOW, which is fund- ed by stimulus dollars. After using the funds to successfully implement new pro- grams, the college received another $26,000. “We just found out last week we’re go- ing to receive $40,000 in additional funds for program development,” she said. Morris said the college will use the mon- ey to create sustainable tourism and oper- ating/virtual technology programs in the fu- ture. She said several other programs will also be developed, but they have yet to be determined. “We’re always trying to keep in touch with what areas and industries are growing Remains likely those of missing Hickory girl HICKORY (AP) — The mystery of how a disabled 10-year-old girl was killed deepened Friday when police matched a bone to the girl and said they believed a set of remains uncov- ered five miles away were also hers. The bone, found in some brush alongside Zahra Baker’s prosthetic leg, was discovered in an area near where Zahra’s stepmother, Elisa Bak- er, once lived. She is currently in jail, charged with trying to throw off in- vestigators with a bogus ransom note. Recently, she began cooperating with police and led them to the area where the remains were found, though she has not been charged in Zahra’s death. Hickory Police Chief Tom Adkins said investigators matched the bone with Zahra’s DNA. “I’ve been dreading this moment from early on in the investigation,” Adkins said. “We have recovered enough physical evidence to think we have found Zahra.” Police found a child’s remains ear- lier this week, and they need to be VA will try using border collies to shoo away pesky geese BY KARISSA MINN [email protected] Border collies are helping to shoo geese away from the W.G. “Bill” Hefn- er VA Medical Center without harm- ing them, according to a public affairs officer with the hospital. Carol Waters said the dogs are reg- ularly brought in by workers from VetsUSA, the company the center is paying to remove dozens of geese from the medical center’s grounds. “The contractor has border collies that they bring over on a random ba- sis, at different times of day or as needed,” Waters said. “The geese think they’re predators, and they leave.” The medical center agreed on Oct. 13 to pay $31,000 to the company, based in Arlington, Va., to get rid of the geese, according to Department of Veterans Affairs documents. According to the VetsUSA website, the business offers a number of secu- rity, consulting and technical servic- es. It is identified as a Service-Dis- abled, Veteran-Owned Small Business for the purpose of obtaining govern- ment contracts. The medical center will have the option to extend the contract for up to four years, for a total of about $155,000. In October, Waters said the geese were creating a health hazard for hos- pital patients and also making land- scaping difficult. She said efforts by grounds maintenance workers to con- trol the geese were unsuccessful and cost too much. Contact Karissa Minn at 704-797- 4222. West 34 Harding 8 W. Montgomery 14 North 0 A.L. Brown 21 Hickory Ridge 18 Carson 45 Hickory 33 Salisbury 56 N. Surry 28 Davie 35 N. Davidson 10 MCCUBBINS GARCIA Zahra Baker See CLERK, 8A See GIRL, 8A See RCCC, 8A Suspect on loose after shooting 20-year-old “We don’t want to put money into something and then … find out there are no jobs in the area.” ANN MORRIS dean of corporate education at RCCC

description

http://assets.mediaspanonline.com/prod/5400014/11132010-SLS-A01.pdf

Transcript of Document

BY SHELLEY [email protected]

SPENCER — Police were stilllooking Friday night for the man whoshot and killed a 20-year-old clerkduring a robbery at a North Salis-bury Avenue store early in the day.Dee Rios died at Rowan Regional

Medical Center shortly after theshooting at Latin Mix, 429 N. Salis-bury Ave.Spencer Police Chief Michael

James said investigators are search-ing for “at least one black male” sus-pect.Authorities spent Friday ques-

tioning business owners and resi-dents in the neighborhood. They alsowere reviewing surveillancefootage.“There are cameras inside the

store — several of them,” James saidFriday night as investigators contin-ued to analyze the footage.Police said Rios hit the panic but-

ton at Latin Mix — formerly knownas Real’s Varieties — at 7:54 a.m. Re-sponding Spencer police officersfound Rios injured.Yolanda Garcia, co-owner of the

store, said Rios had been shot in theneck. James would not confirm that,nor would he say whether she hadbeen shot more than once.Witnesses at a nearby business

said Rowan County EMS worked onRios for at least 15 minutes in theambulance before taking her toRowan Regional.The Rowan County Sheriff’s Of-

fice had dogs trying to track the sus-

pect in the area surrounding LatinMix as a Highway Patrol helicopterflew overhead aiding in the search.

• • •Dee Rios usually worked second

shift, but switched with a co-workerFriday to earn a few more hours,Garcia said. Rios opened Latin MixFriday morning at 7:30.Garcia and her daughter, Lillian

Spears, own Latin Mix, which hasbeen at the Spencer location forthree years. Rios had worked as a clerk there

for six months.Spears said Rios, who lived with

her family in a nearby apartment,wanted to pick up extra hours to helpher family move into a bigger place.“She just wanted something bet-

ter for her family,” Spears said. “She’s a very honest girl,” Garcia

said. “Everybody loved her.”Garcia called

Rios a good worker,easygoing and greatwith people.“She’s too

young,” Garcia said.“I know she’s in abetter place now,but that’s not thepoint. “She will be

missed. I hope shedidn’t suffer. It’s

awful. I am in shock.”• • •

Freda Donald of Spencer, who vis-its Latin Mix twice a day, heard the

news when she stopped in Friday af-ternoon.Donald said Rios always wel-

comed her with a smile when shecame in to buy a newspaper and lot-tery tickets.“I talk to the young girl every

time I come,” she said. “She’s a verysweet girl.“It’s just a shock for me to walk

in here and not see her.”Donald said she called Rios every

day to check the Pick 3 lottery num-bers.“I finally introduced myself to her

yesterday, and told her I was thewoman who called her every dayabout the lottery,” she said. Sheadded that Rios was glad she finallyintroduced herself.

“This is like a family store. I knowthem all on a first-name basis.Everyone’s just good friends with

Lillian because shemakes you feel likeyou’re part of herfamily.“He didn’t have

to kill her. I won’thave a good day to-day.”Sara McCubbins,

another loyal cus-tomer, followedSpears from EllisCrossroads to

Spencer when she moved Latin Mixto a new location.

Saturday, November 13, 2010 | 50¢

BridgeBridge 7B7BClassifiedsClassifieds 1D1DComicsComics 6B6BCrosswordCrossword 6B6B

DeathsDeaths 4A4AHoroscopeHoroscope 7B7BOpinion Opinion 6A6AFaithFaith 1B1B

Second FrontSecond Front 3A3ASportsSports 1C1CTelevisionTelevision 7B7BWeatherWeather 8B8B[|xbIAHDDy00001rzu ContentsDeaths

Marvin A. LackeyFrancesca R. LeonardiNancy E. WatsonMailee S. MatangiraArthur J. Gibson

Eugene WilkesFonda C. BrinkleyVera A. HillRuth C. BernhardtArthur L. Bost

Today’s forecast68º/32ºSunny, nice

CorrectionCarolina Christmas, the

drive-through light displayand village at CharlotteMotor Speedway, is pre-selling a Fast Track Passfor $35 a vehicle, availableby calling 1-800-455-FANS(3267). The telephone num-ber in Friday’s edition ofthe Post was incorrect. Theregular admission priceper vehicle is $20.

The Rowan County Board of Elections certi-fied the general election vote count Friday.Some of the vote totals changed as a result of

the official canvass, but none of the Nov. 2 elec-tion results have been impacted.In the closest race, for N.C. House District 77,

Republican Harry Warren is still 167 votes aheadof Democratic incumbent Lorene Coates.Warren has 9,115 votes to Coates’ 8,948 — or

49.54 percent to 50.46 percent.As of 5 p.m. Friday, Coates had not officially

called for a recount, which is allowed when thedifference between candidates is less than 1 per-cent of the total vote. She has until 5 p.m. Mon-day to make the request, which she has said sheplans to do.Lee Menius, owner of Wild Turkey Farms out-

side China Grove, will fill one of two open soil andwater supervisor seats. He received 203 of 1,274total write-in votes cast — the most for any onename.Carl Dangerfield received 22 votes, and 21

went to Bruce Miller.Elected to the other open seat was Harry P.

Corriher, who was the only candidate to appearon the Nov. 2 ballot for soil and water supervisor.

Certified resultsdon’t changeelection outcomeCoates hasn’t given word onwhether she’ll seek a recount

shelley smith/SALISBURY POST

Investigators speak with Lillian Spears, one of the Latin Mix owners, after the fatal shooting Friday of a clerk.

Clerk killed in Spencer robbery

RCCC offering programs to help students get jobsBY SARAH CAMPBELL

[email protected]

As Rowan County’s jobless rate contin-ues to hover above 9 percent, local commu-nity colleges are ramping up course offer-ings to prepare students for high-demandjobs. “We try to listen to our area business

and industry partners as well as our JobLinkcenters and work force development boardto design and deliver training that is rele-vant to local economic and work force de-velopment,” said Jeanie Moore, vice presi-dent of corporate and continuing educationat Rowan-Cabarrus Community College.“Many of our expanded course offerings arethe result of our JobsNOW and customized

training initiatives, which provide short-term training to meet emerging local jobneeds.” JobsNOW, an initiative developed by Gov.

Bev Perdue, works to quickly train workersto re-enter the job market in fields that arein demand. Ann Morris, dean of corporate education

at RCCC, said the college initially received

$350,000 through JobsNOW, which is fund-ed by stimulus dollars. After using thefunds to successfully implement new pro-grams, the college received another$26,000. “We just found out last week we’re go-

ing to receive $40,000 in additional fundsfor program development,” she said. Morris said the college will use the mon-

ey to create sustainable tourism and oper-ating/virtual technology programs in the fu-ture. She said several other programs willalso be developed, but they have yet to bedetermined. “We’re always trying to keep in touch

with what areas and industries are growing

Remains likely those of missing Hickory girlHICKORY (AP) — The mystery of

how a disabled 10-year-old girl waskilled deepened Friday when policematched a bone to the girl and saidthey believed a set of remains uncov-ered five miles away were also hers.The bone, found in some brush

alongside Zahra Baker’s prostheticleg, was discovered in an area nearwhere Zahra’s stepmother, Elisa Bak-

er, once lived. She is currently in jail,charged with trying to throw off in-vestigators with a bogus ransom note.Recently, she began cooperating

with police and led them to the areawhere the remains were found,though she has not been charged inZahra’s death.Hickory Police Chief Tom Adkins

said investigators matched the bone

with Zahra’s DNA.“I’ve been dreading this moment

from early on in the investigation,”Adkins said. “We have recoveredenough physical evidence to think wehave found Zahra.”Police found a child’s remains ear-

lier this week, and they need to be

VA will try using border collies to shoo away pesky geeseBY KARISSA MINN

[email protected]

Border collies are helping to shoogeese away from the W.G. “Bill” Hefn-er VA Medical Center without harm-ing them, according to a public affairsofficer with the hospital.Carol Waters said the dogs are reg-

ularly brought in by workers fromVetsUSA, the company the center is

paying to remove dozens of geesefrom the medical center’s grounds.“The contractor has border collies

that they bring over on a random ba-sis, at different times of day or asneeded,” Waters said. “The geesethink they’re predators, and theyleave.”The medical center agreed on Oct.

13 to pay $31,000 to the company,based in Arlington, Va., to get rid of

the geese, according to Departmentof Veterans Affairs documents.According to the VetsUSA website,

the business offers a number of secu-rity, consulting and technical servic-es. It is identified as a Service-Dis-abled, Veteran-Owned Small Businessfor the purpose of obtaining govern-ment contracts.The medical center will have the

option to extend the contract for up to

four years, for a total of about$155,000.In October, Waters said the geese

were creating a health hazard for hos-pital patients and also making land-scaping difficult. She said efforts bygrounds maintenance workers to con-trol the geese were unsuccessful andcost too much.

Contact Karissa Minn at 704-797-4222.

West 34 Harding 8W. Montgomery 14 North 0A.L. Brown 21 Hickory Ridge 18

Carson 45 Hickory 33Salisbury 56 N. Surry 28Davie 35 N. Davidson 10

MCCUBBINSGARCIA

Zahra Baker

See CLERK, 8A

See GIRL, 8A

See RCCC, 8A

Suspect on looseafter shooting20-year-old

“We don’t want to put money intosomething and then … find outthere are no jobs in the area.”

ANN MORRISdean of corporate education at RCCC

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)— A former University ofTennessee student whohacked into Sarah Palin’s e-mail account during the 2008presidential campaign wassentenced Friday to a yearand a day in custody and threeyears probation, with thejudge recommending ahalfway house instead ofprison.The sentence by U.S. Dis-

trict Judge Thomas W.Phillips fell short of the 18months in prison sought byfederal prosecutors to send amessage to would-be hackersduring political campaigns.But it went beyond the proba-

tion recommended by defenseattorneys for 22-year-oldDavid Kernell. The additional

day of hissentence willmake him eli-gible for a re-duced sen-tence forgood behav-ior.P h i l l i p s

said Kernellshould getmental health

treatment, based on Fridaycomments from his defensethat he has had conditions in-cluding depression since hewas 11.

Kernell hugged familymembers and friends afterhearing the sentence but de-clined comment as they leftthe courthouse with his attor-ney. Kernell apologized dur-ing the hearing.“I am not going to make

any kind of excuses,” he said.“I’d like to apologize to thePalin family.”“For the rest of my life I

am going to be ashamed, feelguilty for what I have done,”he said.Palin, who did not attend

the sentencing, previously de-clined comment about Ker-nell’s punishment and said itshould be up to the judge. Her

attorney did not answer an e-mail Friday seeking comment.A jury in late April convict-

ed Kernell of unauthorized ac-cess to a protected computerand destroying records to im-pede a federal investigation.Jurors acquitted him of wirefraud and deadlocked on anidentity theft charge. He wasan economics major when hededuced the answers to secu-rity questions and intrudedinto Palin’s e-mail accountweeks before the 2008 election.The former Alaska gover-

nor and her daughter Bristoltestified at the trial that thehacking, followed by Kernell’sonline bragging and providing

a password and Palin familytelephone numbers to others,

caused them emotional hard-ship.

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) —The water dispute betweenNorth Carolina and South Car-olina neared resolution Fri-day, with a bistate commissionapproving a joint settlementagreement among the twostates, a power company anda public utility, South Caroli-na’s top prosecutor told TheAssociated Press on Friday.“This marks enormous

progress,” Attorney General

Henry McMaster told the AP.“It is a model of regional co-operation for the future forother states.”The Catawba River winds

225 miles through the Caroli-nas and provides drinking wa-ter to more than 1 million peo-ple and electricity to morethan twice that many. In 2007,McMaster filed a lawsuit tostop a plan to allow two NorthCarolina cities to pump up to

10 million gallons a day fromthe Catawba and Yadkin riv-er basins, both of which crossthe state line with South Car-olina.The U.S. Supreme Court is

hearing the case. In January,justices ruled that Duke En-ergy and the Catawba RiverWater Supply Project had arole to play in the court battlebut said North Carolina couldrepresent the interests of the

city of Charlotte, which hadalso wanted to intervene.In January, North Carolina

Attorney General Roy Cooperrejected McMaster’s requestfor closed-door talks to settlethe dispute, saying he wantedthe bistate commission to han-dle discussions publicly. Coop-er said in a statement Fridayhe was pleased with the com-mission’s work.McMaster has said the case

may impact other southeast-ern water disputes. Tennesseeand South Carolina have wor-ried Atlanta may look to thenearby Tennessee or Savan-nah rivers for relief fromdroughts that often plague thearea. And Georgia, Alabamaand Florida have fought overhow much water can be storedin north Georgia lakes, keep-ing it from flowing to down-stream states.

The court case will contin-ue until the settlement is final-ized, McMaster said.“We’re right at the goal

line. We’re not across it yet,”he said. “The progress that wemade today would not have oc-curred if this case had notbeen accepted by and present-ed to the U.S. Supreme Court.”The case is South Carolina

v. North Carolina, 22O138ORG.

Published Daily Since 1905,Afternoon and Saturday and Sunday Morning by

The Post Publishing Co., Inc.Salisbury, NC 28145-4639 - Phone 633-8950

•Carriers and dealers are independent contractors

and The Post Publishing Co.,Inc.is not responsible for

advance payments made to them.Member, Audit Bureau of Circulation

•Salisbury Post (ISSN 0747-0738) is published daily; Second Class Postage paid at Salisbury, NC

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Salisbury Post, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145-4639

Home Delivered Rates:1 Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. Yr.

Daily & Sun. 11.25 33.75 66.00 132.00Sunday Only 8.00 24.00 46.80 93.60

Subscription Rates By Mail: (Payable in advance)In U.S. and possessions

1 Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. Yr.Daily & Sun. 29.00 87.00 174.00 348.00Daily Only 25.00 75.00 150.00 300.00Sunday Only 16.00 48.00 96.00 192.00

HOW TO REACH USPhone ....................................(704) 633-8950 for all departments

(704) 797-4287 Sports direct line

(704) 797-4213 Circulation direct line

(704) 797-4220 Classified direct line

Business hours ..................Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Fax numbers........................(704) 630-0157 Classified ads

(704) 633-7373 Retail ads

(704) 639-0003 News

After-hours voice mail......(704) 797-4235 Advertising

(704) 797-4255 News

Salisbury Post online........www.salisburypost.com

2A • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 N AT I O N / S TAT E SALISBURY POST

R127878

Treat your vehicle to a day out at Bumper 2 Bumper this ThanksgivingSeason. When it comes to Auto Repair and Customer Satisfaction

that’s our Main Menu! You’ll be thankful you did!

201 East Innes St.Salisbury

704-636-2525

Our Shop Specialty:Automatic Transmission Rebuildswith our 3 year 36,000 mile warranty. We rebuild all

foreign and domestic and manual transmissions ....................$300 OFF

Appetizers for the Month:Oil Filter & Lube comes with a complete 21 point

safety inspection and all fluids are topped off ..............................$1995

Get your headlights looking brand new with our

Complete Restoration Cleaning. Your

vehicle will be looking brighter and you’ll be seeing better! ............$8999

Get our complete Inside & Outside Detail and

Wax Job for your vehicle before you go on your out of town holiday...$19999

For Your Main Course: This will come complete with our

12 month - 12,000 mile warranty. With each main course you will receive

a FREE Thanksgiving Turkey. This also includes transmission rebuilds.

Tune-Up See owner for details .......................... Starting at $12995

Radiator Flush includes anti-freeze ....................................$6995

Disc Brake Services .................................. Starting at $15995

Custom Exhaust / Engine Rebuilds ......See Owner For Pricing

Transmission Complete Flush ..................................$9999

Get PaidEVERYTIME!

Evaluate

products and

earn $$$!

Partneredwith the

Try all types of products including:• Food & Beverages

• Personal Care Products • Pet Care Items• Household Products

222 Oak Avenue, Kannapolis, NC 28081

Register online at www.SpectrumDiscoveryCenter.com

or call 704-250-1200 R123390

Studies average$30 per hour

CASH IN YOUR OPINION!

1040 Freeland Dr., Ste 112Salisbury, NC 28144 704.636.0390

FREE Hot Stone Massage with pedicure service Refreshments Served

Please bring ad to receivespecial pricing. Exp. 11/30/10

R12

7397

Pedicure.........................$1999

Kid Spa............................$1500

New Spa Head ............... $2999

Massage Available

Eyelashes .............................$1999

OPEN SUNDAY 12-5

Gel Nails ...................$2999

Full Set......................$1999

Fill-in ........................$1299

“The Best Insulated”

WINDOWSAll Styles • Doors 100 Styles & Colors

FACTORY DIRECT DISCOUNTS

J.A. FISHERA Specialty Contractor Since 1979 With Over 7000 Completed Jobs

Salisbury704-788-3217

www.jafisherexteriors.com Kannapolis R124210

$1500Tax CreditFall

Sale

Buying 1 Piece or Large Quantities!

Give us a call....we can help!

704-213-4101

$ Antiques$ Estates$ Moving Sales$ Silver Dollars$ Scrap Gold$ Costume Jewelry$ Old Books

$ Military Items$ Old Wrist Watches$ Pottery$ Modern Used Furniture$ Old Toys$ Old Cameras$ Old Sporting Goods

R126560

R127

355

811 W. Innes St., Salisbury,

704.633.5951

Rowan’s Largest Store of Carpet, Vinyl, Wood and Laminate FlooringHOURS: Mon-Fri 9:30 am-5:00 pm • Sat 10:00 am-2:30 pm

3 ROOMS of OUR BEST QUALITY CARPET

NNOOWW OONNLLYY

$1,19900

$89900

*Based on450 sq. ft.

BETTER QUALITY CARPETBEST QUALITY PAD

With Installation

$69900

GOOD QUALITY CARPETBEST QUALITY PAD

With Installation

I N C L U D E S B E S T P A D & I N S T A L L A T I O N

2 DAYS ONLY

* 90 days same as cash * 90 day price warranty

w w w . f l o o r m y p l a c e . c o m

CCAARRPPEETT QQUUEEEENN

Thank You RowanCounty Citizens

For Your Confidence

Together we can builda bright future forchildren with highquality education

Kay Wright NormanRowan/Salisbury Board of Education

Seat #4, West District R127177

Paid for by Kay Wright Norman

PostersDeadline for posters is 5 p.m.• West End Community Organization meeting Monday, 7 p.m. atMiller Recreation Center on West Bank Street.

Lottery numbers — RALEIGH (AP) — Here are thewinning numbers selected Friday:Daytime Pick 3: 6-9-3 Evening Pick 3: 0-2-1Pick 4: 0-3-8-8 Cash 5: 6-11-14-27-32 Mega Millions: 09-26-28-35-38, Mega Ball: 10 Megaplier: 4

Accord may bring end to water wars between NC, SC

Optometry board agrees to license Black againRALEIGH (AP) — Convict-

ed felon and former stateHouse Speaker Jim Black canreturn to work as an eye doc-tor, the state optometry boardhas decided.The North Carolina State

Board of Examiners in Optom-etry agreed this week to re-store his license to practiceoptometry once paperwork isfinalized and he pays a fee, aboard attorney said Friday.Black, who served more

than three years in federalprison on a government cor-ruption conviction before re-turning to the Charlotte arealast month, surrendered hisoptometry license voluntarilyin 2008 while in prison.The board has the power to

discipline a licensed op-tometrist convicted of afelony but has latitude to re-store the license if it hears ev-idence or sees proof the appli-cant has reformed, accordingto state law.Black and his attorney,

Whit Powell, attended thehearing Thursday in Ashevilleto make the ex-speaker’s casethat led to his reinstatement. The paperwork should be

completed in about 10 days.The license will have to be re-newed in January.The board’s deliberations

were private, but Johnny Lop-er, the board’s general coun-sel, said it’s reasonable to pre-sume the board took into ac-count that prison officials hadreleased Black. His sentenceofficially ends April 1.“Since it was not Dr.

Black’s actions in practicingoptometry that put him inprison to start off with, therewas no reason why Dr. Blackcould not return safely to thepractice of optometry,” Lop-er said.Black, now 75, pleaded

guilty in 2007 to taking morethan $25,000 in cash from chi-ropractors while he pushedtheir agenda in the Legisla-ture. Black also accepted pun-ishment on state charges ofbribery and obstruction of jus-tice a week after his federalguilty plea, including a $1 mil-lion fine.State prosecutors accused

Black of giving former stateRep. Michael Decker, R-Forsyth, as much as $58,000 incash and campaign contribu-tions to switch parties in 2003,a move that helped Black re-main co-speaker. Black re-peatedly denied that he bribedDecker.Black led the House as

speaker or co-speaker from1999 through the end of 2006.

Former student who hacked Palin’s e-mail sentenced to a year in Tenn. halfway house

KERNELL

Shots fired, one hurt during domestic disputeOne person was shot and

another was injured afterfalling when Salisbury Policewere called to a domestic sit-uation at 2410 Stokes FerryRoad early this morning.Police called for backup

and for a supervisor to come

to the scene after reportingshots were fired just before 1a.m. One person was hit by gun-

fire and another suffered alaceration to the head in a fall,according to emergency com-munications.

SATURDAYNovember 13, 2010 3A

www.salisburypost.com

SECONDFRONTSA L I S B U R Y P O S T

The

FORDMERCURYLINCOLN

Since 1954

HILBISHR125642

2007 Ford Escape FWDOnly $12,486

www.hilbishford.comYOUR CABARRUS/ROWAN FORD STORE

704.938.3121I-85 S • Exit 58B (US29) • Kannapolis • 1 Mile • Minutes from Salisbury

Make the DealDirectly with aManager

CALL MY CELL704-907-9440or email [email protected]

Let us spend Black Fridaywith you

Are you a shopping super-star who lives for Black Friday?Are the store circulars the mostanticipated part of yourThanksgiving Day tradition? Doyou dispatch your spouse andchildren to multiple stores soyou can shop in more places atonce? If any or all of this de-scribes you, columnist MarkWineka would like to spendBlack Friday morning with you.E-mail him at [email protected] and type “BlackFriday column” in the subjectline.

Give us your Black Fridayshopping tips

Are you a Black Friday ex-pert? Do you scope out theitems you want in advance andmake a plan for getting them inyour cart on the biggest shop-ping day of the year? Send usyour tips, tricks and strategiesfor an article on Black Fridayshopping. E-mail us [email protected]. Type“Black Friday tips” in the sub-ject line.

Black Friday isapproaching

Antiques sale draws old, new shoppersBY SHAVONNE POTTS

[email protected]

Sara Pyatte just moved toBadin Lake and often shops atantique stores, but on Fridaythe stores came to her.

She was one of hundredswho in three days will haveshopped at the 57th AnnualSalisbury Antiques Show &Sale.

The show continues from10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at theSalisbury Civic Center, 315 S.Martin Luther King Jr. Ave.

The show benefits theRowan Museum and its his-toric sites — the Utzman-Chambers House and the OldStone House.

Pyatte found somethingshe’d been looking for at the

Salisbury show.“I found a table that I need-

ed,” she said.Pyatte also bought some

pictures. She liked looking atall of the items.

“It’s a beautiful show. It’swell represented,” she said.

Pyatte was invited by oneof the vendors and brought afriend with her.

“There’s something foreverybody,” she said.

Pyatte has some favoriteantique shops in North Caroli-na and South Carolina, thoughshe’s always looking for op-tions.

“I’m always open to newones,” Pyatte said.

She said the show was anice size.

“It’s do-able. It’s a good size

and it’s not too overwhelming.I will definitely come back,”she said.

Friends Donna Lane andShirley Bowers were eager tocheck out all of the booths.

“We hope to see it all. Theyjust have got a variety ofthings. I can’t wait,” Lane saidmaking her way around to thevendors.

It was Lane’s first time atthe show and Bowers has at-tended for several years.

“I just love it all,” Bowerssaid.

Hugh Jackson and his wife,Frances, have had a booth,Jackson’s Antiques, at theshow for about five years now.

BY SARAH [email protected]

CHINA GROVE — Powderedsugar and icing becomes snow,Rice Krispie treats transforminto Christmas trees and BigRed chewing gum morphs intobricks in the hands of studentsat South Rowan High School.

Three teams from theschool’s Family, Career andCommunity Leaders of Ameri-ca club worked Friday to finishtheir creations for the NationalGingerbread House Competitionin Asheville this weekend.

Students began working ontheir projects in September,sketching drafts before buildingcardboard replicas.

Then they began baking andbuilding.

Sophomore Sarah Forgayssaid the hardest part was sim-ply getting the walls up.

“We had to make sure it did-n’t split in half,” she said. “Wehad pasta sauce jars holding itup for a while.”

Forgays’ group constructeda “country wedding barn,” madeprimarily of cornstarch, ginger-bread and icing.

The group created charac-ters, including a bride andgroom, to go along with thestructure.

shavonne potts/SALISBURY POST

Sylvia Rowell of Windsor House Antiques in Charlotte showsBetty Little pieces of jewelry at the Salisbury Antique Showand Sale at the Salisbury Civic Center. See SALE, 5A

CONCORD — Students at the pri-vate Cannon School, including somefrom Rowan County, ran for a causeFriday.

The students raised more than$15,000 for cancer research.

Stephanie Schauder and Tim Gru-ber, two teenage Cannon School stu-dents from Huntersville, came upwith the idea.

Stephanie has supported Relayfor Life since her father was diag-nosed with terminal pancreatic can-cer two years ago, a school press re-lease said. Her father passed awayin January.

“During this difficult time, I be-gan to see how many people were af-fected by this disease,” Stephaniesaid. “I knew I needed to do some-thing to help other cancer patientsand their families.”

She started her own Relay forLife team at Cannon School —Cougars Fighting Cancer — to raisemoney for the American Cancer So-ciety. Last year, the 25-memberteam raised nearly $7,000.

As Stephanie considered ways tomeet her $12,000 fundraising goalthis year, her friend Tim proposed

Fundraiserhas specialmeaning for organizer

See RUN, 5A

Reader comments onthe Salisbury Post’s havea new look.

The new features in-clude the ability for com-menters to ignore usersthey don’t want to seecomments from, a Face-book sharing feature,multiple ways to sortcomment threads andeasier access to profiles.

The upgrade is an on-going effort to give com-menters more controlover what they see, andeasier access to socialnetworking sites so theycan choose who to sharetheir comments, photosand blogs with.

Online commentsimproved

Tasty construction

Kaitlin Kelly adds hair to the bridefor her group’s ‘Country Wedding.’

A bride andgroom adorn a

barn made ofgingerbread.

Sophomores Alexis Parson-Adams,above left, and Cinnamon Moore putthe finishing touches on the roof.Sophmore Jeremiah Bradshaw,left, was part of a group who builta festive dog house at SouthRowan High School.

Who made that gingerbread house?

• Theme: Country wed-ding barn

Group: Sarah Forgays,Cinnamon Moore, Alexis Par-son-Adams, Kaitlin Kelly andNicholas Hopkins.

• Theme: Dog houseGroup: Jeremiah Brad-

shaw, Miranda Raymond,Daniel Pope, Sabria Morri-son, Kaitlin Lane and AnnaShue.

• Theme: Nightmare Be-fore Christmas inspired

Group: Alanna Thompson,Kristen Pless, Shonna Whit-ley, Diamonique Horton andBrooklyn McCoy

See HOUSES, 4A

Students enternational gingerbreadcompetition

sarah campbell/SALISBURY POST

Arnold Lee BostCHINA GROVE — Mr.

Arnold Lee Bost, 94, of EmmaRoad, passed away on FridayNov. 12, 2010, at Rowan Re-

gional MedicalCenter in Sal-isbury.

Born onApril 29, 1916in Rowan

County, he was the son of thelate Chancey Register andRosa Wilhelm Bost. Educatedin Rowan County schools, hewas a member of ConcordiaLutheran Church.

Mr. Bost had served hiscountry in the U.S. Army dur-ing World War II, where hespent one winter in Germanywith the anti-tank company asa truck driver. Mr. Bost re-tired from Cannon Mills after42 years of service in theweave room.

In addition to his parents,he was preceded in death byhis wife, Katie Wilhelm Bostin May 2002; a son, Hoyle RayBost, in September 2006; anda great-grandson, Terry Bost.

Surviving him are a daugh-ter-in-law, Beverly Bost ofChina Grove; grandchildrenTrudy Fry, Debby Pethel(Rick) and Reggy Bost (Julie),all of China Grove; a sister,Ruth Bost Lippard, of Salis-bury; three grandchildren;five great-grandchildren; andsix great-great-grandchil-dren.

Service: A graveside ser-vice will be held Monday at 3p.m. at Concordia LutheranChurch Cemetery with Revs.Chris Pethel and Larry Bost,ministers.

Memorials: May be madeto Concordia LutheranChurch, Building Fund, 185Concordia Church Road, Chi-na Grove, NC 28023.

Online condolences may bemade to the family atwww.linnhoneycuttfunerla-home.com

Eugene WilkesCHINA GROVE — Mr. Eu-

gene Wilkes, 64, formerly ofChina Grove, passed awayWednesday, Nov. 10, 2010, atCarolinas Medical Center-NorthEast in Concord.

Mr. Wilkes was born July27, 1946, in Chesterfield Coun-ty, S.C., a son of the late AlexWilkes and Bertha BrownWilkes.

In addition to his parents,he was preceded in death byhis wife, Irene Wilkes, in2007.

Mr. Wilkes is survived byfive children, Julie Parham,Gina Wilkes, Danielle Wilkes,Susan Hager and Jesse Tuck-er; two sisters, Ida BellStevenson and Louise Gaineyof Ruby, S.C.; brother DeweyWilkes of Ruby, S.C.; 13grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

Service: A memorial ser-vice is scheduled for 5 p.m.today, Nov. 13 at RedeemedFull Gospel Holiness Churchon Ridge Avenue in Kannapo-lis. Rev. Wayne Hall will offi-ciate.

Lady's Funeral Home inKannapolis is in charge of ar-rangements.

Fonda C. BrinkleyCHINA GROVE — Mrs.

Fonda C. Brinkley, 49, ofKeller Street, passed awayThursday, Nov. 11, 2010, at

CarolinasMedical Cen-ter-NorthEastin Concord.

Born onFeb. 6, 1961, inRowan Coun-ty, she was thedaughter of

Ernest Casey Sr. and VoncileShuffler Hall. A 1979 gradu-ate of South Rowan HighSchool, she was a member ofLandis Baptist Church, whereshe worked in the MissionHouse.

Her work life was at PhilipMorris, where she had 25years of service. Her person-al life involved the love of herfamily, her cats and her en-joyment of fishing.

In addition to her parents,she is survived by her hus-band, Curtis Allen Brinkley;daughter April D. Hall ofKannapolis; son Patrick LinnHall (Audrey) of El Paso,Texas, and Tyler G. Hall ofChina Grove; stepsons Brad(Kim) and Shane Brinkley;brothers Ernest FrancesCasey Jr. (Charmaine) ofSmith Station, Ala., andNathan Lee Hall (Katybeth) ofMadisonville, Tenn.; step-brother Roger Hall (Robin) ofChina Grove; stepsister JudyWard of Las Vegas, Nev.; andgrandchildren Rebecca andAbbey Hall.

Visitation and Service: Vis-itation is Sunday night from 7-9 p.m. at Linn-Honeycutt Fu-neral Home in China Grovewith funeral Monday at 2 p.m.at Landis Baptist Church withRevs. Billy Honeycutt andGeorge Bradshaw, minister.Burial will be at West LawnMemorial Park.

Memorials: May be madeto Landis Baptist Church, 110N. Kimmons St., Landis, NC28088.

Online condolences may bemade at www.linnhoneycutt-funeralhome.com

Francesca R. LeonardiSALISBURY — Francesca

Raffaela Leonardi, of Salis-bury, died Nov. 10, 2010, atRowan Regional Medical Cen-ter.

She was the daughter ofthe late Nicholas and RoseDeluca of Erie, Pa.

She was preceded in deathby husband John MarioLeonardi, to whom she wasmarried 56 years; sisters andbrothers-in-law Josephine andPaul Smith and Mary and Fir-men Rupert; son ThomasLeonardi; sisters and broth-ers-in-law Mary Leonardi, Le-vere and Mary Leonardi, Al-bert Leonardi, Renaldo andEvelyn Leonardi, Cecil andCarol Leonardi.

Mrs. Leonardi and her hus-band owned Leonardi Floristshop for 40 years. She was amember of St. AndrewsChurch, St. Andrews LadiesGuild and Choir and active inGirl Scouts of America.

She was an avid traveler,loved the outdoors and en-joyed spending time with hergrandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Survivors include daugh-ter Nancy Jean Stine and son-in-law Jack Stine of Salisbury;daughter-in-law Sandy Comel-la and husband Jim Comellaof Knoxville, Tenn.; sistersGenevieve Hurst and HelenBetts of Erie; brother and sis-ters-in-law Joseph and RuthLeonardi, Marion Leonardi;grandchildren Lisa AnnCampbell and spouse ChrisCampbell of Salisbury, CraigThomas Leonardi and spouseBarbara Leonardi of Atlanta,Ga., Andrew John Leonardiand spouse Amy Leonardi ofRaleigh; great-grandchildrenCarson Patrick Campbell,Allyson Elizabeth Campbell,Roman Thomas Leonardi andMara Francesca Leonardi; ahost of nephews, nieces,cousins; and many friends.

Service: Funeral Mass willbe celebrated 3 p.m. Satur-day, Nov. 13, Saint AndrewsCatholic Church.

Memorials: In lieu of flow-ers, memorials may be sent tothe charity of choice.

Evergreen Cremation Ser-vices assisting the family.

Mailee S. MatangiraSALISBURY — Mailee

Shirley Matangira, 1-day-olddaughter of Daniel and Tami-ka Nicole Holmes Matangira,of Beagle Club Road, passedOct. 27, 2010, at PresbyterianHospital, Charlotte.

Survivors are her parents,Daniel and Tamika NicoleHolmes Matangira of thehome; brother Daniel Kenyat-ta Matangira, Winston-Salem;maternal grandparents EdieMorrison, Charlotte, Douglasand Shirley Holmes, Salis-bury; maternal great-grand-mother Marie Collins, Salis-bury; maternal grandmotherAlberta Threadgill of Gasto-nia, formerly of Albemarle;and a host of aunts, uncles,cousins and friends.

She was preceded in deathby grandparents Mr. T. andMailee Matangira and JamieThreadgill; and great-grand-parents Quinton and RosieKrider Holmes, Sr., andJames Collins.

Service: Services wereheld 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 30at High Rock CommunityChurch with Rev. Ray John-son, senior pastor, assisted byRev. Ronnie Pinyan, assistantpastor, officiating. Burial wasat Providence AME ZionChurch with the Rev. TamicaRobinson and the Rev. HaroldJordan officiating.

Services were entrusted toHairston Funeral Home, Inc.

Marvin A. LackeyMOUNT ULLA — Marvin

Anderson Lackey, 86, of MountUlla, passed away Thursday,Nov. 11, 2010, at Lake Nor-

man RegionalMedical Cen-ter.

He wasborn Dec. 3,1923, in RowanCounty, to thelate WilliamBrodie and

Alda Cowan Lackey. He re-tired from Hoechst-Celanesein Salisbury. He was a faithfulChristian and lifelong mem-ber of Back Creek Presbyteri-an Church.

In addition to his parents,he was preceded in death byhis sisters, Mary Lee Mur-dock and Sarah Bostian;grandson Craig Giegerich;and great-grandchildrenTravis Christy and SamanthaChristy.

He is survived by his wife,Dorothy Pennington Lackey;children Marilyn Thomas,Larry Lackey and wife Jan-ice, Carolyn Ayers, Donald“Donnie” Lackey and wifeDora, all of Mount Ulla;grandchildren Perry Lassiter,Paula Beam, Jamie Lassiter,Brian Christy, Donnie Lack-ey, Jr., Amanda Lackey,Mandy Lackey, Julie Webb;and six great-grandchildren.

Service: Funeral serviceswill be held at 2 p.m. Sunday,Nov. 14 at Back Creek Pres-byterian Church with Rev.William R. Thrailkill officiat-ing. Burial will follow the ser-vice in the church cemetery.

Visitation: The family willreceive friends Saturdayfrom 6-8 p.m. at Cavin-CookFuneral Home, Mooresville.

Memorials: May be madeto Back Creek PresbyterianChurch, 2145 Back CreekChurch Road, Mount Ulla, NC28125.

Condolences may be madeto the Lackey family at www.-cavin-cook.com.

Nancy E. WatsonFLAT ROCK — Nancy E.

Watson, 75, of Flat Rock,passed away Thursday, Nov.11, 2010, at Pardee MemorialHospital after a sudden ill-ness.

A native of Salisbury, shewas the daughter of the lateCarpenter L. and JoycieSnider Eagle. A 1953 graduateof Granite Quarry HighSchool and a graduate of Sal-isbury Business College, sheworked as a secretary in vari-ous businesses, includingMarch of Dimes, Grace RidgeRetirement Community andGiles Motors.

She was a member of FirstBaptist Church in Henderson-ville and was a long-standingmember of Hopewell BaptistChurch in Morganton.

Mrs. Watson was a lovingmother, proud grandmotherand a friend to all.

She was preceded in deathby a sister, Thelma Silliman; abrother, C.L. Eagle; a brother-in-law, Edmund Silliman; andformer husband JosephWilliam Watson.

Survivors include twodaughters, Wendy WatsonJones and her husband Dougof Flat Rock, Wanda WatsonDaves and her husband Mikeof Valdese; six grandchildren,Phillip Luther and his wifeChristina, Ryan and MatthewJones, Samuel, Aaron andEmma Daves; two brothers,Billy Eagle and his wife Marie,Glenn Eagle and his wife Sue,all of Salisbury; and numerousnieces and nephews.

Service and Visitation: Afuneral will be at 3 p.m. Sun-day, Nov. 14 in the ForestLawn Funeral Home Chapel.Pastor Cody Sturgill andPhillip Luther will officiate.Burial will follow in ForestLawn Memorial Park. Thefamily will receive friendsfrom 2 to 3 p.m. prior to theservice in the chapel.

Memorials: May be madeto Boiling Springs BaptistChurch, Youth Group, 1291Fanning Bridge Road, Fletch-er, NC 28732.

A guest book and sympa-thy cards are available atwww.forestlawnhenderson-ville.com

Forest Lawn FuneralHome is assisting the familywith arrangements.

Ruth Canup BernhardtSALISBURY — Mrs. Ruth

Canup Bernhardt, 96, of Salis-bury, passed away Thursday,Nov. 11, 2010, at The Lutheran

Home at Trini-ty Oaks.

She wasborn Aug. 28,1914, in RowanCounty to thelate Ida JulianCanup andDavid Lee

Canup. Ruth was educated atSalisbury High School andCatawba College, where sheearned a bachelor's degree ineducation. She then went on tobe a teacher at East RowanHigh School, where she re-tired in 1976.

Ruth was very active in thecommunity and belonged toSt. Paul's Lutheran Church,where she was a lifetimemember. She also taught Sun-day School and was a memberof the Woman's Circle. Shewas on the fellowship Com-mittee and church historycommittee.

Ruth also taught in theLaubach Reading Programand was a member of theSouth Salisbury Fire Depart-ment Auxiliary and Board ofDirectors. She was a volun-teer at the Lutheran Home for32 years.

She was preceded in deathby her husband, Cecil Bern-hardt, in 1981; a son, PhilBernhardt; brother ArnoldCanup; and daughter-in-lawDonna Bernhardt.

Those left behind to cher-ish Ruth's memories includefour sons, Gilbert Bernhardt,J.C. Bernhardt Jr. and wifeBrenda, Vernon Bernhardthis wife Cheryl and ClaudeBernhardt and wife Debbie;three daughters, BarbaraDeese and husband David,Judy Bernhardt and BonnieLawlor; daughter-in-law Bren-da Bernhardt; three brothers,Harley Canup and wife Mae,Carl Ray Canup and LutherPaul Canup; 14 grandchildren;and 12 great-grandchildren.

Service: Funeral servicewill be held 11 a.m. MondayNov. 15 at St. Paul's LutheranChurch with the Rev. WilliamS. Ketchie officiating. Burialwill follow at the churchcemetery.

Visitation: Will be held 6-8p.m. Sunday at SummersettFuneral Home.

Memorials: May be madeto St. Paul's Lutheran Church,205 St. Paul's Church Road,Salisbury, NC 28146.

Funeral Home is in chargeof arrangements. Online con-dolences may be made atwww.summersettfuneral-home.com

Vera Atwell HillCONCORD — Vera Louise

Thompson Atwell Hill, 72, ofWalter Drive N.W., went to bewith the Lord after a period of

declininghealth on Fri-day, Nov. 12,2010, atAvante of Con-cord.

Born May11, 1938, inGreenwood,

S.C., to the late Jasper Smithand Nellie Compton Thomp-son, Mrs. Hill was a graduateof A.L. Brown High Schooland Cabarrus School of Nurs-ing. She later retired fromCarolinas Medical Center-NorthEast, formerly knownas Cabarrus Memorial Hospi-tal, where she was a nurse.

She was a member ofRoberta Baptist Church andIron Peddlers Antique Trac-tor Club, where she served assecretary.

She is survived by husbandAlvin Hill of the home; step-sons Shane Atwell of Concord,Tony Atwell of Concord, AlvinHill II of Lincolnton; brotherJ. Harold Thompson ofMooresville; sister SandraRoseman of China Grove;nieces Jody Wyatt and TenaCampbell; nephews ChrisRoseman and Kale Thomp-son; and six grandchildren.

Visitation and Service: Avisitation will be held at Hart-sell Funeral Home Concordon Sunday, Nov. 14 from 12:30until 2 p.m. Funeral serviceswill follow in the chapel at 2p.m., with Rev. Ray Rippy andRev. David Wyatt officiating.Burial will follow at OakwoodCemetery. Pallbearers will bemembers of The Iron Ped-dlers Antique Tractor Club.

Memorials: May be madeto American Diabetes Associ-ation, Diabetes Action, 426 CSt. N.E., Washington, DC20002; or Juvenile DiabetesResearch Foundation Interna-tional, 120 Wall St., New York,NY 10005.

Hartsell Funeral HomeConcord is serving the Hillfamily.

Online condolences may bemade at www.hartsellfh.com

Dr. Lloyd 'Pete' RobertsonGraveside Service3:00 PM Saturday

Rowan Memorial Park——

Mrs. Ruth Canup Bernhardt

11:00 AM MondaySt. Paul's Lutheran ChurchVisitation: 6-8 PM Sunday

Arthur J. GibsonSALISBURY — Arthur J.

Gibson, 78, formerly of SouthFulton Street, died Thursday,Nov. 11, 2010, at CarolinasMedical Center-Mercy inCharlotte. Arrangements areincomplete and have been en-trusted to Hairston FuneralHome.

Whenwords fail,let us help.

View theSalisbury Post’scomplete list of

obituaries and sign theObituary Guest Book atwww.salisburypost.com

www.salisburypost.comwww.salisburypost.comwww.salisburypost.comwww.salisburypost.comwww.salisburypost.com

“A practical choice.”

for more information704.636.1515

R123705

4A • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 A R E A / O B I T S SALISBURY POST

Pastor Clary Phelps andthe other members of Geth-semane Missionary BaptistChurch honored veteranswho are members of the con-gregation with a luncheon onVeterans Day.Fourteen veterans and

guests attended the event,which included music and amessage from the Rev.Ronald Shoaf, an Air Forceveteran and pastor of NewSmith Grove Baptist Churchin Lexington.Shoaf asked everyone to

remember homeless veter-ans. While we may not be theinnkeeper, we can be thatGood Samaritan and leadthem to the innkeeper, hesaid. Patriotic music wasprovided by Ernestine In-gram and the Singers. Phelps gave everyone

who attended an opportuni-ty to share their service ex-perience or about what Vet-erans Day means to them.Each veteran received an

award in appreciation of mil-itary service to the UnitedStates of America.

Sophomore CinnamonMoore said the detail work onhouse trim, ornaments on thetrees and hair on the peoplewas challenging. “A lot of the stuff we did

was spur of the moment,” shesaid. “We changed our mindsa trillion times.”Sophomore Kaitlin Lane

hand crafted Ed Ible, the dogthat resides inside of hergroup’s “dog house” ginger-bread house, made of RiceKrispie treats and icing. The group used every kind

of dog treat imaginable tocraft the house. Sophomore Jeremiah Brad-

shaw said building the wallswas the biggest hurdle. “We had to cut everything

to fit and those dog treatsaren’t the easiest thing to cut,”he said.

Junior Alana Thompsonsaid her group decided to cre-ate a gingerbread house spin-off from “The Nightmare Be-fore Christmas.” “We decided we wanted to

do something like that,” shesaid. “We just completely leftout the Christmas part.”Junior Shonna Whitley said

the house has sort of a Hal-loween theme with the under-lying elements of the battlebetween perfection and im-perfection. “It’s nice to see our ideas

come together,” Whitley said. The students’ advisers,

Sharon Edwards and WandaTaylor, were happy to see in-teresting ideas for the project.

“They’ve worked so hardand they’ve really enjoyedthemselves,” Edwards said.The competition is being

held Sunday and Monday atthe Grove Park Inn inAsheville.

Contact Sarah Campbell at704-797-7683.

HOUSEFROM 3a

Gethsemane churchhonors veterans

Forsyth sheriff asksfor ticket in wreckWINSTON-SALEM (AP)

— Forsyth County SheriffBill Schatzman wants toshow that no one is above thelaw.Schatzman has asked city

police to issue him a citationfor a fender bender hecaused by running a red lightTuesday.Schatzman’s county car

and two other vehicles weredamaged. Winston-Salem po-lice decided not to give thesheriff a ticket although headmitted fault.Schatzman asked Police

Chief Scott Cunningham fora citation Thursday to showthat no special favors wereinvolved.Mayor Allen Joines says

Schatzman should have beenticketed. But Cunninghamsays it’s common for policenot to give out citations in mi-nor accidents.

Man charged withmurder in fatal wreck HIGH POINT (AP) — A

23-year-old man has beencharged with second-degreemurder in a wreck that killeda man in High Point lastmonth.The Guilford County

grand jury also indictedRyan Lamont McKiver oncharges of assault by a mo-tor vehicle and assault witha deadly weapon.The charges follow an

Oct. 2 wreck where McKiv-er’s car ran off a road and hita utility pole and a tree.Suquan Rogers, 21, died in

the wreck. Two other peoplewere hurt. Police said alco-hol and excessive speed con-tributed to the wreck.

UNC-Greensborotuition increasesGREENSBORO (AP) — A

trustee committee of theUniversity of North Caroli-na Greensboro has approveda tuition increase for under-graduate students next year.The plan endorsed Thurs-

day afternoon would in-crease tuition by $211. A sec-ond committee approved afee increase of $309 for the2011-12 academic year.That would bring the total

proposed tuition and fees tonearly $5,500.

R118952

P O S T P U B L I S H I N G C O M P A N Y

Don’t Miss A ThingWhile You’re GoneFor The Holidays!Order a Salisbury Post Vacation Package &

we will deliver the papers you missed.

Please, call 4 days before you leave.

Salisbury Post Circulation Dept.www.SalisburyPost.com/subscription

704/797-4213

R114391

SPECIALHome Photo

SALISBURY 3BR, 2BA cus-tom built home with designertouches. , stone work. Call123-4567.

CALL TODAY! 704.797.4220AD APPEARS ONLINE AT: WWW.SALISBURYPOST.COM/CLASS

20 lines 2 columnincluding photo

for 28 days

20 lines 1 column including photo for 28 days

$74.28 $118.50REACH AN ADDITIONAL 36,800 READERS EACH WEEK BY ADDING DAVIE CO. ENTERPRISE- RECORD & KANNAPOLIS CITIZEN

WEACCEPT:

SALISBURY 3BR, 2 BA custom built home wstone front en-trance and copper accents. Master BR w/tray ceiling, doublevanities, large walk-in closet. Chefʼs kitchen w/quartz coun-tertops, beautiful tile floors, sunny breakfast area, large for-mal dining, with screened in back porch. Call 123-4567.

R111

597

at

go to view the

How To Get ThePerfect Shoe Fit

R122864

TERMITE & PEST CONTROL

Established 1939

R127691

Are there uninvited guestscoming to your holiday dinner?

$15.00 off a pest exclusion.Call for details.

(In-Laws not included)

Expires 11/30/2010

Call Today 1(877)NO-BUGS-WOWLocal (704)637-1450 or 1(877)662-8479

R127430

VETERANS APPRECIATION JOB FAIRSponsored by Rowan County JobLink Career Center

November 17th, 20101:00 pm until 4:00 pm

Location: Rowan County Army National Guard1195 National Guard Road, Salisbury, NC 28147

Public is invited!!! ….Bring Your Resumes

Rowan County

SUBMITTeD PhOTO

Maryclaire Farrington, left, joined friend Kelli Baker of Con-cord and fellow Cannon School students in the fundraiser.

The two drove from Lynch-burg, Va., for the show.“My parents were dealers

from 1950 to 1996 when mymom passed away,” Hughsaid.He helped his parents

when he was young and hascontinued to do shows.The Jacksons have some

paintings, Japanese Imariplates, Chinese Export RoseMandarin and Chinese ExportRose Medallion plates andsaucers, which range from the1830s to 1880s.The couple return every

year because of the peopleand the community.“It’s a great town. There’s

a lot of history here,” she said.Buddy Farnan of the Pen-

dragon Group from Salisburyhas various items on displayfor the first time.“There’s a marvelous dis-

play of historical items and ar-tifacts,” Farnan said.Farnan attends shows in

Winston-Salem, Atlanta andRaleigh.Among the items he has on

display is a gossip wheel fromthe 1880s.The wheel is called a gos-

sip wheel because two peopleuse it at one time, Farnan ex-plained.“It’s very rare and unusu-

al,” he said.Farnan also had some baby

items, booties and brush,which date to the 1930s.Some baby shoes he has

date to the 1890s. He also hasa vintage outfit from the

1890s.Naomi Bernhardt has at-

tended the event every year,but one.She enjoys the jewelry and

seeing all the vendors. Bern-hardt also enjoys the home-made desserts, sandwichesand soups. Jewel Ziprik has volun-

teered at the show for the past40 years.“All day I sat right there,”

she said pointing to a tablewhere she greets people.She enjoys volunteering.“I love it. It’s a wonderful

show and it always has been,”Ziprik said.“It’s the museum’s largest

fundraiser. It takes hundredsof volunteers,” said RowanMuseum Director KayeBrown Hirst.She said the show is possi-

ble because so many help out,whether it’s to organize thefood preparations, the vendorcommittee or volunteers whoorganize the silent auction.Bids for the silent auction

will close at 2 p.m. today.The show began in 1953

and is considered the longestrunning annual antique showin North Carolina. People who go can shop

for fine estate furniture,porcelains, jewelry, art, ori-ental rugs, linens and CivilWar items from 19 dealerswho are from North Caroli-na, South Carolina and Vir-ginia.For more information, con-

tact the Rowan Museum [email protected] or 704-633-5946.

Contact Shavonne Potts at704-797-4253.

Dr. Albert Aymer, president of HoodTheological Seminary, announced re-cently that the seminary has received a$50,000 grant from the Cannon Founda-tion. In making the announcement, Aymer

said, “Everyone at Hood TheologicalSeminary is extremely grateful for thesupport and generosity of the CannonFoundation. “This grant will allow us to renovate

the last remaining block of 13 originalhotel rooms located on our campus toprovide additional overnight accommo-dations for commuting seminary stu-

dents. The renovation of these roomsmarks another physical milestone in thecampus life of the seminary as we areable to meet the growing demand of anincreasing student population. “The growing residential atmosphere

of the campus also offers the opportuni-ty for the further development of the di-verse friendships and camaraderie as thecontext for the effective preparation ofpastoral leaders.” Aymer added, “The Cannon Founda-

tion has made a difference in the quali-ty of life for so many people in this areaand all across North Carolina. Hood is in-

deed honored to be a recipient of theirgenerosity.”The Cannon Foundation was estab-

lished in 1943 by the late Charles A. Can-non, president and chairman of CannonMills Co. for more than 50 years.Hood Theological Seminary located

at 1810 Lutheran Synod Drive and spon-sored by the AME Zion Church, is agraduate and professional school whereintellectual discourse and ministerialpreparation occur in tandem within theframework of a community of faith.Its student body comprises persons

from 16 different denominations.

they run from their homesin Huntersville to CannonSchool as a fundraiser forRelay for Life. The idea grew from

there and, with supportfrom their school and Pres-byterian HospitalHuntersville, they organ-ized Cannon Runs for Can-cer Research.On Friday, Stephanie,

Tim and friends started

their run at PresbyterianHospital Huntersville, 12miles from Cannon School.More runners joined them 5miles from the school.Other participants ran a

5K on the school campusand more took part in a funrun and walk there.Participants got to hear

Dave Wottle, a gold medalrunner from the 1972 Sum-mer Olympics who is nowdean of admissions and fi-nancial aid at Rhodes Col-lege in Memphis, Tenn.,speak at the event.

RUNFROM 3A

SALEFROM 3A

Shavonne pottS/SALISBURY POST

Jeanne Dunay of Bellflower Antiques, Camden, S.C., displaysa set of Irish Coffee glasses at the antiques sale and show.

SALISBURY POST A R E A SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 5A

Hood seminary gets grant from Cannon

Durham to vote on use of Mexican IDRALEIGH (AP) — City

leaders in Durham are step-ping into the national debateon immigration by consider-ing whether to recognize iden-tification cards issued by theMexican consulate.The city council is set to

vote Monday on a resolutionthat would oblige police andother civic departments totreat the matricula consular,as the card is called, the wayit would any other valid proofof ID.Council members say it’s

largely a matter of recogniz-ing what already happens intraffic stops, libraries and atprivate entities like banks. Butopponents say it’s a step to-ward normalizing the statusof illegal immigrants.“Police departments will

look at any document some-one may have because it couldshed some kind of light, butwhy do we need to bless thatwith official holy water?”asked Ron Woodard of thegroup NC Listen, which advo-cates stronger enforcement ofimmigration laws.Supporters, though, main-

tain that a formal resolutionwill help Mexicans in Durhamfeel more comfortable withthe city’s government, espe-cially the police. Right now,they say the informal policyis essentially discretionary,and that some agencies mayaccept the matricula whileothers don’t.“It’s more meaningful to

have that official recognition,”said the Rev. Ricardo Correa,associate pastor at MinisterioGuerrero de Jesucristo inDurham. “The Hispanic com-munity can have trust in thecouncil saying ‘We recognizethis document.’”Acceptance of the matric-

ula consular is relatively com-mon around the U.S. The firstcity to recognize the docu-ment may have been Austin,Texas, in 2000, but since thenit’s spread to nearly 400 cities,over 150 counties and almost1,200 police departments, ac-cording to a report by the fed-eral Government Accountabil-ity Office.In North Carolina, Car-

rboro adopted a resolutionrecognizing the matricula con-sular in 2002, but neither ad-vocates nor opponents couldsay whether any other citieshad done the same. Durhammay not be the last city tohave the debate, though, as thestate’s Hispanic population,which grew by nearly 400 per-cent between 1990 and 2000,continues to surge. About722,000 of North Carolina’s 9.4million people are Hispanic,according to U.S. Census fig-ures, with nearly 33,000 livingin Durham County.“This is simply our affir-

mation of what our police de-partment is already doing,”said Durham City CouncilmanMike Woodard, who isn’t re-lated to the NC Listen leader.“Holders of the matricula are

not going to receive any oth-er benefit or privilege.”The resolution was promot-

ed by groups like the local Billof Rights Defense Committeebecause they hope it will helpwhen Mexican immigrantsare caught in traffic stops orother situations where a lackof identification can lead to ar-rest. Typically, Durham policewill issue a ticket to someonedriving without a licenserather than arresting them, aslong as they have some otherform of identification.Accepting the matricula as

valid would “assist in minimiz-ing unnecessary and potential-ly life-changing arrests ofhard-working citizens guiltyof no more than a minor traf-fic infraction,” according tothe text of the resolution.In a memo to the council,

Durham City Attorney PatrickBaker said the resolutiondoesn’t present a legal prob-lem since police officers willstill be able to make arrests orissue citations as they see fit.Since the Mexican govern-

ment issues the matricula tocitizens living abroad regard-less of their immigration sta-tus, the resolution is a slipperyslope to greater acceptance ofillegal immigration, RonWoodard said.“If you’re in the United

States legally, you have apassport or a visa,” RonWoodard said. “It just sendsthe wrong message when agovernment entity is going out

of its way to announce that aforeign government docu-ment is OK when you don’t re-ally need one if you’re herelegally.”NC Listen fears that

Durham businesses will beconfused by the resolution andbelieve it means they can hireworkers who are in the U.S. il-legally, which is itself againstthe law.So far, council members

have been hearing more fromopponents than from support-ers. One councilman told ad-vocates he had received 50 e-mails critical of the resolutionand only one in favor.Supporters are in the diffi-

cult position of arguing thatthe resolution would essential-ly change nothing while say-ing it should be approvednonetheless.“This doesn’t mean people

can drive with this, it’s not areplacement for a driver’s li-cense, it’s not something peo-ple can use to gain residencyor citizenship,” said RonaldGarcia, a community organiz-er for El Centro Hispano inDurham. “It’s just a way forpeople to be sure that the citywill recognize their identifi-cation.”

Bum rap for Tea PartyThey aren’t angry peasants with pitchforks

A rousing returnto the pulpitOn Sunday, Oct. 31, to the

strains of some nimble, skill-ful, dancing fingers ticklingthe ivories, pianist Paul Oak-ley led the Catawba Scholarswhose voices infused withtheir gospel tenor “Stayed onJesus.” Triumphantly, the speak-

er stood before the packedhall, greeting them after be-ing away from their pulpitfor eight years. Speakingfrom Philippians 3:12-4:1, heused as his topic “Don’t for-get to close the gate!” Al-most as if he had never left,with the warmth of his armsand his hands emphasizingdirection, this preacher manwho is one of the best thispreacher’s kid has everheard harked on his threesermon points as had alwaysbeen his style: • Past successes should

be packed up, and folksshould not live on their lau-rels. • Past failures should be

left behind, discounted as nota good measure of a man’spotential. • Past hurts should be

forgiven, for they hold oneback from what is in front of

the golden gates.We need to build upon to-

day as we look to tomorrow.Filled with warm stories,

humorous reflections and alife full of teaching experi-ences embracing personalillness and trials, a verymuch loved preacher, Dr.Robert Lewis, ended his ser-mon too soon for most of usfixed on his every word.Having come out of retire-ment this one last time, Rev-erend Lewis made us feelgood delivering his positivemessage of hope and deliver-ance, helping us understandGod’s love and teaching usagain what Grace (God’s Re-demptive Actions CoveringEveryone) entails. As heclosed, the crowd from Salis-bury’s First PresbyterianChurch rose in Lewis Hall,named in his honor, in astanding ovation in apprecia-tion and thanks to God forthis amazing messenger.

Peace be with him in hispersonal challenges and mayhe continue spreading God’smessage to the students ofHood Theological Seminaryand sharing his wisdom withhis family, which embracesthis community.

— Dr. Ada FisherSalisbury

Thanks from a vet As an ex-Air Force offi-

cer, I would like to commendthe following local business-es on this Veterans Day fortheir year-round dedicationto veterans. The followingbusinesses give discounts 12months out of the year tovets, not just one day: TeamChevrolet, Lowes and Ad-vance Auto stores. If there are more, come

forward. We thank you.— Lenny Wolfe

Salisbury

The USA Today headline the day afterthe elections: “Voters Send Angry Mes-sage.” Time magazine’s two-word ex-

planation for the electoral tsunami: “voterrage.” The Economist’s cover: “Angry Amer-ica.” This is now the dominant narrative, thenew conventional wisdom. It’s a bum rap.To be sure, many independents who were

inspired by candidate Barack Obama in 2008used their votes in 2010 to express disap-pointment with President Barack Obama, his

agenda, his priorities and hisparty. But disappointed is notthe same as angry and be-sides: independents are notthe ones the headline writershave in mind. Nor, obviously,are those who voted for losingliberal candidates. They aretalking about conservativesand, in particular, those con-servatives who identify asmembers of the Tea Partymovement.What evidence suggests

that Tea Partiers are peasants with pitch-forks? There is none. Recall the huge TeaParty rally in Washington in August: Itstheme was “restoring honor” — hardly an ex-pression of fury. And no Washington demon-strators in memory have left behind a clean-er mall. Rarely are irate people so fastidious.Among the candidates the Tea Party most

enthusiastically supported was the even-tem-pered Marco Rubio, now on his way to theU.S. Senate from Florida. They also favoredfailed candidates Christine O’Donnell inDelaware and Sharon Angle in Nevada. Youcan say O’Donnell and Angle were not readyfor primetime. But you can’t credibly chargethat they either displayed or cultivatedanger.What too many in the media have refused

to recognize is that Tea Party members arenot calling for a revolution — they’re callingfor a restoration. They take the U.S. Consti-tution seriously. They prefer the system ofgovernment designed by the Founders to oth-er options now on offer. That does not endearthem to those who fancy themselves “pro-gressives.” But neither does it suggest thatthey are “full of inchoate rage” as VanityFair’s editor, Graydon Carter, wrote.Tea Party members believe in small and

limited government. What’s so great aboutsmallness and limitations? Big governments,governments with unlimited powers, in-evitably threaten individual freedom. Andfreedom is a value for which Americans forcenturies have fought and died; a value mostAmericans still hold dear, though, distress-ingly, others now seem to regard the idea of

liberty as quaint.Tea Partiers see excessive taxation as

harmful to economic health — as did NobelPrize winner Milton Friedman. They wouldhalt the growth of a privileged, unaccount-able and increasingly powerful governmentbureaucracy. They want elected officials toview themselves as civil servants — notrulers.When it comes to foreign policy, the Tea

Party seems less focused, though all themembers I’vemet agree thatdefendingAmerica fromher enemiesshould be nearthe top of anypresident’s to-do list. Theyoppose surren-dering Ameri-can sovereign-ty to transna-tional organi-zations. They

think that if America goes to war, it’s essen-tial that America wins. They prefer a proudAmerica to an apologetic America becausethey believe that, for all its faults, Americaremains the last, best hope of mankind.They grasp, too, that the most serious

threats to America’s security now come fromthose whose fundamentalist reading of Islamencourages the use of violence to establishthe superiority of Muslims over non-Mus-lims. And they are bewildered by all theclever people who are blind to this reality.One example: Among the performers at

Jon Stewart’s pre-election “Rally to RestoreSanity” — designed as a response to the TeaParty rally — was Yusuf Islam, formerlyknown as Cat Stevens. Is it possible thatStewart did not know that the singer support-ed the death sentence pronounced by Ayatol-lah Khomeini against author Salman Rushdiefor the crime of having written a novel thatthe Iranian Islamist revolutionary deemedblasphemous?Rushdie contacted Stewart to ask that

question. Stewart told Rushdie he “was sorryit upset me, but really, it was plain that hewas fine with it. Depressing.” Yes, and notsane — not if sanity means showing judg-ment and good sense. But like most Tea Par-ty members and most Americans, I’m not an-gry about it. Not even a teensy-weensy bit.

• • • Clifford D. May is president of the Founda-

tion for the Defense of Democracies, a policyinstitute focusing on terrorism. He writes thiscolumn for Scripps Howard News Service.

Farewellto a houseand friend

Letters policyThe Salisbury Post welcomes letters to the editor. Each letter should

be limited to 300 words and include the writer’s name, address anddaytime phone number. Letters may be edited for clarity and length.Limit one letter each 14 days. Write Letters to the Editor, SalisburyPost, P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145-4639. Or fax your letter to639-0003. E-mail: [email protected].

“The truth shall make you free”

L E T T E R S T O T H E E D I T O R

DARTS AND LAURELS

A high-flyingcelebration

Laurels and happy birthday to the RowanCounty Airport, which celebrated its 80thanniversary of operation this week withsome fascinating reminiscences and daz-zling aerial displays.As a hub for growth and commercial op-

portunities, the airport is often linked tothe county’s future, but it also representsan important part of local history. Whenthe airport first started up in 1930, it wasonly 27 years after the Wright Brothers’historic flight at Kitty Hawk. It was onlythree years earlier, in 1927, that CharlesLindbergh made his epoch nonstop flightacross the Atlantic. There’s a direct linkbetween those dirt-runway, barn-stormingdays and the sleek corporate jets that glidedown the airport’s tarmac today. (For triv-ia buffs, here’s another important aviationevent of 1930: Boeing Air Transport intro-duced the first female flight attendants.Along with tending to the comfort of pas-sengers, they also checked for fuel leaks.)As the airport’s celebration showed,

Rowan County has a strong contingent oflocal pilots and flight fans who are staunchadvocates for the airport’s continued suc-cess. Thanks to the pioneers who had theforesight to get the airport off the ground,and to more recent leadership that recog-nized the importance of improving and ex-panding the facility. The next 80 years willno doubt bring more remarkable changesfor the airport and aviation.

• • • Dart to silly rankings that use spurious

factors to reach suspect outcomes. Case inpoint is a ranking by Mens Health maga-zine of the “most religous” cities in Ameri-ca. It compiled the ranking based on eachcity’s places of worship per capita, numberof religious organizations, volunteers whosupport religious groups, amount of moneygiven to religious groups and money spenton religious books. Turns out the most reli-gious city in America, supposedly, is Col-orado Springs, Colo., followed by Greens-boro. Other N.C. cities making the listwere Charlotte (9th), Raleigh (13th) andDurham (14th). The least religious city?Burlington, Vt. Who’d ever have guessedthat Burlington to be such a bastion of het-erodoxy and heathenism?

• • • Laurels to the upcoming reopening of the

Spencer Library, which has been closedfor more than a year because of problemswith flaking lead paint, moisture controland other issues. The cost of repairs andthe library’s future sparked some vigorousdebate at town board meetings, butSpencer leaders were wise to support thisproject and make the library safe and use-able again. The library has rightfully beendescribed as one of the town’s jewels. Al-though all the finishing touches may not becomplete, the town can celebrate the reno-vations when the library holds an openhouse on Nov. 22.

It looked like a party with thewhole town in attendance.Folks were everywhere,

standing on the porch, rummag-ing in the garage, milling aboutthe yard, laughing and lookingfestive.Cars and pickups lined the

street, spilling over to a vacantlot. I got lucky,grabbed a spotas someonepulled out. ThenI sat for a mo-ment, breathingslowly and col-lecting myself.This was no

ordinary tagsale.For more

years than I canremember, this house washome to the family of my bestfriend.Jane and I met in second

grade on my first day at a newschool. I was writing numbers.She sat on my desk on my paperand said, “What are you doing?”“I was writing to 100.”“Is that all you can do?”“No,” I said, “it is not.” Then

I got up to sharpen my pencil.The desk flipped and broke hernose.The next Sunday, on my first

visit to a new church, I slippedinto a pew and slid smack intoJane. Her nose looked like anoverripe banana.“Oh, no,” she said, “not you!”“Sorry for your nose,” I said.With that, we were friends.

The first time I went home withher after school, I was sostunned you could’ve slappedme naked and sold my clothes.Her house was like a mansion, abig two-story place with a longfront porch and a yard full ofazaleas. She even had a piano.Her parents were older and

sterner than most. I was scaredspitless of them until I saw Janewasn’t scared of them at all.Her father owned a dry-

cleaning store and was a deaconat church. Her mother volun-teered at the library and was asubstitute teacher at our school.They were widely regarded tobe “well off,” but lived frugally,never flaunting their wealth.I remember their home as

quiet and orderly, never messyor chaotic or discordant. It al-ways made me want to whisper,not for fear but respect, theway I felt in church. It was notmy home, but I always felt athome, safe within its walls.Jane and I roomed together

in college. After I left the Southto live in California, she movedback to our hometown and be-came a social worker, counsel-ing what she called “babies hav-ing babies.” She never marriedor had children, except the chil-dren of friends she counted asher own.When her father died, Jane

moved back in the house to lookafter her mother. After she losther mother, she often talkedabout selling the place andbuilding her “dream house.”But as her health began to

fail, she seemed to take comfortin being surrounded by memo-ries of her parents and child-hood. When she died last year,the house was still much as ithad been when we were littlegirls.I had no plans to buy any-

thing at the estate sale, but Iwanted to walk through thehouse once more before it wassold.I worked my way through

the crowd from the porch to theliving room, opened a hymnalwe once sang from; walkeddown the hall to the kitchen,touched the table where we didhomework; ran my hand alongthe banister up the stairs toJane’s old room and back down.I saw lots of familiar things,

but no sign of my friend or herfamily. In a house full of peo-ple, no one was home.I’m not big on memorabilia.

I’d rather remember Jane asthe friend who forgave me forbreaking her nose; her motheras the librarian who let me takeall the books I wanted; and herfather as the deacon who mademe apply for a scholarship thatpaid my way to college.If you have great memories,

you don’t need things. But be-fore I left, I bought a tinycreche, a few crochetedsnowflakes and a Christmascard with their address. Some-day when I’m gone, they can besold at a tag sale. But for now, they are mine to

keep.• • •

Contact Sharon Randallatwww.sharonrandall.com.

ELIZABETH G. COOKEditor

[email protected]

CHRIS VERNEREditorial Page Editor

[email protected]

CHRIS RATLIFFAdvertising Director

[email protected]

RON BROOKSCirculation Director

[email protected]

GREGORY M. ANDERSONPublisher704-797-4201

[email protected]

Salisbury PostOPINION

SHARONRANDALL

6A • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 SALISBURY POST

CLIFFORDD. MAY

They prefer a proudAmerica to an

apologetic Americabecause they believethat, for all its faults,

America remainsthe last, best hope

of mankind.

Common sense(Or uncommon wisdom, as the case may be)

I despise people who go to the gutter on ei-ther the right or the left and hurl rocks at thosein the center.

— Dwight D. Eisenhower

Moderately confused

WASHINGTON (AP) —The Supreme Court on Fri-day allowed the Pentagon tocontinue preventing openlygay people from serving inthe military while a federalappeals court reviews the“don’t ask, don’t tell” policy.The court did not com-

ment in denying a requestfrom the Log Cabin Repub-licans, a gay rights group, tostep into the federal courtreview of “don’t ask, don’ttell.” The Obama adminis-tration urged the high courtnot to get involved.Last month, a federal

judge ruled the policy vio-

lates the civil rights of gayAmericans and she issued aninjunction barring the Penta-gon from applying it. The SanFrancisco-based appeals courtsaid the policy could remain ineffect while it considers the ad-ministration’s appeal.“Log Cabin Republicans

are disappointed that theSupreme Court decided tomaintain the status quo withregards to ‘don’t ask, don’ttell,’ but we are not sur-prised,” said R. Clarke Coop-er, the group’s leader. President Barack Obama

has pledged to push lawmak-ers to repeal the law.

SALISBURY POST W O R L D / N AT I O N SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 7A

New patient special. Full ortho treatment

only. Call for details. Limited time offer.

rockwell.oakridgedentalarts.com

Dr. Eugene Olsen and

Dr. Robert Bowman

invite you to see why so

many families in your

neighborhood trust Oak

Ridge Dental Arts to take

care of their dental needs.

R123686

Guaranteed Low Prices or Double the Difference Back

$189

VISIT OURSHOWROOM

We are the #1 WindowCompany in the Nation!*

*According to acertified audit published in “Qualified

Remodeler” 09/03.

ANY SIZEWHITE DOUBLE

HUNG**

INSTALLEDPREMIUM

VINYLSIDING

only...

$175per sq. ft.

Completely Installed

678 South Stratford Rd • Winston-Salem, NC 27103765-0765 • 1-888-881-3632

3741-D Battleground Avenue 545-4232www.windowworldinc.com

Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday 9-3ASK ABOUT OUR GARAGE & PATIO DOORS

All season vinyl room for year round use. Lifetime glass br eakage Easy lift-out windows 54

1096

**120 united inches

COMPLETELY WELDED FRAME& SASH

(not screwed together)

Standard SeamlessGutters also Available R8

1440

R124462

314 S. SALISBURY AVE., SPENCER, NC (704) 633-0618“A Name You Can Trust”

WE BUY GOLD!Guaranteed Best Prices

for Your Gold! ONLYVALID

DRIVER’SLICENSENEEDED!

THANKSGIVINGBuffet FeastW I T H O V E R 1 0 0 I T E M S

R127429

Let us do all the work so you can enjoy your family& the holiday. It is our pleasure to serve you!

For Reservations Call 704-603-3313Holiday Inn Hotel & Conference Center

530 Jake Alexander Blvd., S - Salisbury, NC 28147

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2511AM-2:30PM

BookingHoliday Parties Now

C O M P A N Y, F A M I L Y , C H U R C H ,S C H O O L C E L E B R A T I O N S

One Stop Shopping – Let us help you plan yourmenu, decorations, and entertainment

Call our Sales Office 704-603-3312Holiday Inn Hotel & Conference Center

530 Jake Alexander Blvd., S - Salisbury, NC 28147R127421

Sunday, November 14 6:00-8:00 p.m.

FIRST BAPTIST, SALISBURY223 N. Fulton Street 704-633-0431

Child care available R127040

To advertisein this directory

call 704-797-4220

R124358

"Helping You Make Your Dreams Come True!"704-633-5067 www.applehouserealty.com

Se Habla EspañolPictured above left to right: (Back row) Kelly Lowe, Sidney Allen, Jeff Ketner, Cathy Mabe,

Keith Knight; (Front row) Yolanda Rojas, Jean Ketner, Elia Gegorek, Pat Goodnight

APPLE HOUSE REALTY

S47875

Helping Make Your Dreams Come True!• For a FREE computerized report on Foreclosures and Distress Sales

click on Foreclosures/Distress sales at www.applehouserealty.com.

• For a FREE Over-the-Net Market Analysis go to www.applehouserealty.comand click on What's Your Home Worth?” under SELLER INFO.

• To search all MLS listings go to www.applehouserealty.com.

• Plan now to attend our "Home Sellers Seminar" on Dec. 7, 2010 at theChamber Bldg. 204 E. Innes St., Salisbury, N.C.

Residential & Commercial704-633-8095

4243 S. Main St.

• SALES • INSTALLATION• SERVICE

Mark Stout S40129

WASHINGTON (AP) — The PostalService said Friday it lost $8.5 billionlast year despite deep cuts of more than100,000 jobs and other reductions in re-cent years. The post office had estimat-ed it would lose $6 billion to $7 billion,but a sharp decline in mail took a toll.Increased use of the Internet and the re-cession, which cut advertising and oth-er business mail, meant less money forthe agency.For the year ending Sept. 30, the post

office had income of $67.1 billion, down$1 billion from the previous fiscal year.Expenses totaled $70 billion, a declineof about $400 million. The post office hadto make a $5.5 billion payment for fu-ture retiree health benefits.“Over the last two years, the Postal

Service realized more than $9 billion incost savings, primarily by eliminatingabout 105,000 full-time equivalent posi-tions — more than any other organiza-tion, anywhere,” chief financial officerJoe Corbett said in a statement. “We willcontinue our relentless efforts to inno-vate and improve efficiency. However,the need for changes to legislation, reg-ulations and labor contracts has neverbeen more obvious.”

Chinese vase found in London homegoes for $83 millionLONDON (AP) — It was just an old

Chinese vase that had been tucked awayunnoticed for years when the womanfound it while clearing out her late sis-

ter’s modest suburban London home. Itturned out to be much more.When the intricately painted 18th-

century piece went on the block at Bain-bridges, a small suburban auction house,it sold for a record $83 million Thurs-

day, scooped up by aChinese buyer.“How do you an-

ticipate the Chinesemarket?” asked theshocked auctioneer,Peter Bainbridge.“It’s totally on fire.”The sale price

was more than 40times the pre-saleestimate and arecord for a Chinesework of art — an

outcome Bainbridge called “a fairy tale”for the family who owned the vase.The sellers, who wished to remain

anonymous, are the sister and nephewof a deceased elderly woman. The vasehad been in the family since the 1930s,though they don’t know how it was ac-quired.

Group’s $129

million lottery ticket bought at pornshop

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A group offriends and family is obscenely rich af-ter winning a nearly $129 million jack-pot with a lottery ticket bought at a De-troit-area porn shop. Some of the mon-ey will be devoted to sacred purposes.Mike Greer, a member of the group,

came forward Friday to claim thePowerball winnings on behalf of the oth-ers, who chose to remain anonymous.Greer — who said only that the grouphas more than two members and fewerthan 100 — indicated some of the richeswill be going to a church.“The only thing I can assume is that

the Lord trusted us to do certain thingswith the money that He bestowed uponus,” he said. “That’s the only thing thatI can gather.”Greer said he didn’t buy the ticket

himself and doesn’t know whether it waspurchased inside the Uptown Bookstoreor at its outside, walk-up lottery window.He said of the group’s members, “no-body cares” where it was bought.

Postal Serviceloss for year:$8.5 billion

AssoCiATed Press

Supreme Court keeps‘don’t ask, don’t tell’in place during appeal

AuctioneerPeter Bain-bridge showsthe gavel thatbroke duringthe sale of aChinese vasethat was auc-tioned Thurs-day in Londonfor $83 mil-lion.

Challengersurfaces forRepublicanParty chairWASHINGTON (AP) — A

prominent Michigan Republi-can said Friday he is runningagainst Michael Steele, argu-ing the GOP can win in 2012only if the party chairmansteps out of the limelight andallows candidates to be thevoice and face of the party.Saul Anuzis, who lost his bidfor Republican National Com-mittee chairman two yearsago, made his plans known inan e-mail.“My agenda is very

straightforward. I have no in-terest in running for office. Iwon’t be writing a book. It isnot my goal to be famous,”said Anuzis, who promised toserve just one two-year termand work hard to elect Repub-licans “from the top to everytownship and city across thisgreat country of ours.”His statement was a slap at

Steele, who has generated con-troversy repeatedly in histenure as party chairman,sometimes drawing attentionthat was detrimental to theRepublican cause.Steele has not said whether

he will seek re-election to anew two-year term in Janu-ary. His tenure has beenmarked by ill-chosen remarksand questions about the par-ty’s finances. Earlier thisyear, Steele released his book,“Right Now: A 12-Step Pro-gram for Defeating the Oba-ma Agenda,” and angeredmany Republicans with hiscomments in interviews tiedto the publication.

NEW YORK (AP) — KanyeWest has backed out of ascheduled performance onNBC’s “Today” show aftergetting upset with how his in-terview with host Matt Lauerthis week was handled. West’s record company

confirmed the cancellation to“Today” on Friday after therapper said on his Twitter ac-count that he wouldn’t per-form. He was scheduled to ap-pear Nov. 26, part of a promo-tion drive for his new disc,which is coming out Nov. 22.During the interview,

which was taped Tuesday andaired Thursday, West ap-peared thrown when “Today”aired a video clip of him grab-bing a microphone from Tay-lor Swift at the 2009 MTVVideo Music Awards.West tweeted this week

that he felt “set up” by the in-terview. “Much love to Mattand the whole Today show,”he said in a Twitter message.“I accept ya’ll future apologyin advance LOL!”

Kanye West callsoff ‘Today’ showperformance

the most,” she said. “We don’t want to put mon-ey into something and then put it out there andfind out there are no jobs in the area.”

• • • More than 20,000 students attend Rowan-

Cabarrus annually and enrollment grew near-ly 4.6 percent this fall, reaching record num-bers for the second year in a row. The collegeis the second-fastest growing community col-lege in the state.

As enrollment continues to climb, collegeofficials said health science programs such asnursing, dental assisting and radiography arefilling to capacity.

Rowan-Cabarrus plans to add occupation-al and physical therapy programs as well as adental hygienist field after expanding thehealth science building with the $12 millionbond issue from the county.

Moore said the college has already addedindustry-specific training in networking,weatherization, lead abatement, programma-ble logic controlling (PLC), entrepreneurship,welding and patient services.

The pharmacy technician course is nowavailable in hybrid form, combining classroomand online instruction.

“We still have calls from employers whoare looking to hire pharmacy technicians,”Morris said.

• • • The college launched its associate of ap-

plied science in biotechnology in fall 2009. “When we were meeting with people across

the state about what programs would be mostaligned with what was going on with the (NorthCarolina) Research Campus, biotechnologygave us the most versatility in terms of pro-viding people with a base of knowledge thatwould be applicable in the research environ-ment,” Moore said.

Marcy Corjay, dean of science, biotechnol-ogy and mathematics at RCCC, said before theprogram’s inception, the college had an artic-ulation agreement with Gaston College andForsyth Technical Community College, allow-ing students to complete general educationcourses at Rowan-Cabarrus before transfer-ing.

Corjay said the addition of biotechnologyis a foward-thinking approach.

“It’s certainly what we anticipate to be afuture need in this area,” Corjay said. “Of

course, in this day and age any training in sci-ence and math is valuable.”

The program, which has grown to 159 stu-dents within the first year, prepares studentsfor careers as laboratory technicians, researchassistants and quality control associates.

The college is planning to develop an asso-ciate’s in agricultural biotechnology to helpmeet the demand for laboratory techniciansin the fields of biological, chemical and agri-cultural technology.

Moore said specialty certifications will alsobe added in the future.

“We’ll focus on things that wil help peoplebe prepared for specific kinds of jobs that willdevelop in and around the (Research) Cam-pus,” she said.

• • • Rowan-Cabarrus isn’t the only community

college updating its curriculum. “Stanly Community College works closely

with our regional work force developmentsboards, partners, local businesses and otherorganizations to ensure we are offering thenecessary courses for the growing employ-ment demands of our region,” said MichellePeifer director of marketing/community out-reach at Stanly.

The college now offers the Carolina Auc-tion Academy to prepare students to take thestate exam.

“The auction method of marketing is agrowing billion dollar industry and CAA is oneof only three schools approve in North Caroli-na to offer professional auctioneer training,”

An energy auditor program is now avail-able at Stanly through JobsNOW’s 12 in 6worker training initiative, designed to bene-fit those who have lost their jobs due to lay-offs and plant closures.

The initiative created 12 programs, avail-able at all 58 of the state’s community colleges,that can be completed in less than six months.

Stanly will launch a school age educationprogram next fall, preparing individuals towork with children in elementary through mid-dle grades.

Myra Thompson, public information offi-cer for Davidson Community College, said theschool recently added a 14-bay welding lab atthe college’s Davie Campus in Mocksville.

Thompson said programs in industrial sys-tems, health care coding, heavy equipmentand transport technology and logistics havebeen created to meet work forced demands.

A health care interpreting program will be-gin in fall 2011 in collaboration with Wake For-est University.

Contact Sarah Campbell at 704-797-7683.

Spears “has small-town val-ues, family values, and she be-lieves in knowing her cus-tomers,” McCubbins said.“This door always has peoplecoming in and out. There arealways people here. I am tru-ly surprised that this has hap-pened.”

• • •Friday’s homicide was the

“first and only” crime at Lat-in Mix, Spears said. But as abusiness owner, she added sheknows there are risks.

“And these people workminimum wage for my risk,”she said. “When the policemancalled me I just couldn’t be-lieve it. I originally thought itwas just a holdup.”

Two former Latin Mix em-ployees who didn’t want togive their names said the storehas cameras everywhere — atleast 10 of them.

But the cameras aren’tenough, they both agreed.They said another personshould be at the store everymorning and night while thestore is opened and closed.

“Anybody could have beenwatching her,” one of the for-mer employees said.

A neighboring businessowner, who also declined togive his name, said he knewRios, and that she and otheremployees at Latin Mix treat-ed him like family.

“They’re the friendliestpeople you’ve ever met,” he

said.That business owner said

he’s never had trouble, but hasaccess to several guns in casehe does.

“You can’t trust anyone,”he said. He said he economyhas a lot to do with the in-crease in crime.

“And it’s only going to getworse.”

• • •Garcia and Spears said that

while they hope police catchthe killer, that won’t make upfor the loss of Rios.

“We’re so sorry for thefamily,” Garcia said. “I am so

sorry for the mother. She hasa lovely girl.”

Spears said she hopes any-one with information thatcould help solve the crime willcall police.

“Somebody knows some-thing,” she said. “These thingsdon’t happen on their own.”

She called the suspect acoward for the “senseless”shooting of Rios, who was“trying to do the right thingevery day by working.

“I’ll be glad when theycatch him,” she said. “But thatdoesn’t bring Dee’s life back,and doesn’t bring her familyback together.”

• • •Police ask anyone who may

have driven by the store Fri-day morning or seen anyone orany vehicle in the parking lotto call with information. Inves-tigators are also seeking infor-mation on any suspicious ac-tivity noticed Thursday.

Contact Crimestoppers at1-866-639-5245, the SpencerPolice Department at 704-633-3574 or the Rowan CountySheriff’s Office at 704-216-8687.

Improve your mood…give some food!The Salisbury Post is accepting new, unopened

NON-PERISHABLE food donations for the needy until November 24th.

Items Needed: Dry food, bagged or boxed

Dry or bagged beansCanned meats

(ravioli, spaghetti sauce etc.)Canned fish (tuna etc.)

Peanut butter/Jelly

Food donation barrel located in the lobby at

131 West Innes StreetJust 1 block from Main Street!

R126

808

SALISBURY317 FAITH ROAD

Next to Lowes, The Movies at Innes St. Market704-639-1009

MOORESVILLE168-U NORMAN STATION BLVD.Consumer Sq. Shop Ctr., across from Wal-Mart

704-660-3900

CONCORD MILLS10001 WEDDINGTON RD.

Speedway Blvd. at Garden Ridge704-979-1112

CHARLOTTE6153 INDEPENDENCEBetween Harris Blvd. & Idlewild Rd.

704-535-8383

factorymattressusa.com 30 Carolina Locations Since 1974

R127

036

OPEN MON.-FRI. 9:30-8 • SATURDAY 9:30-6:00 • SUNDAY 1:30-5:00 *SOLD IN SETS *OAC *ON SAME NAME AND MODELPAYMENTS BASED ON 10% DOWN ON 24 MONTHS * DISCOUNT DO NOT APPLY TO TEMPUR-PEDIC & CLOSEOUTS * OFFERS VALID ONLY WITH AD

8A • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 C O N T I N U E D SALISBURY POST

shelley smith/SaLISBURY POST

Lillian Spears talks on a phone after arriving at her store, which was the scene of a fatal shooting Friday morning.

Spencer Police Sgt. Eric Ennis went to neighboring homes toquestion residents.

CLERKFROM 1a

RCCCFROM 1a

tested to make sure they areZahra’s, Adkins said.

The freckle-faced Zahra,who had bone cancer thatforced her to use a prosthet-ic leg and hearing aids, wasreported missing by herparents Oct. 9. They said shewas last seen in her bed attheir home in Hickory,about 50 miles northwest ofCharlotte.

Zahra was born in Aus-tralia and moved to NorthCarolina about two yearsago after her father, AdamBaker, met his soon-to-bewife, Elisa Baker, online.Zahra’s friends and rela-tives in Giru, Australia, de-scribed her as an outgoing,happy girl despite the can-cer, and said she didn’t want

to come to the U.S.“Investigators, agents, of-

ficers and staff who workedon this case are devastatedthat we were not able to findZahra alive and bring herhome safely,” said Adkins,who wouldn’t answer ques-tions at a news conference.

Soon after Zahra was re-ported missing, investigatorscast doubt on accounts givenby Zahra’s father and step-mother. Police had troublefinding anyone other thanZahra’s parents who had seenher alive in the weeks beforeher disappearance, and a sus-picious early morning fire oc-curred at the family’s homeseveral hours before she wasreported missing.

It was then that police dis-covered a ransom note ad-dressed to Adam Baker’s bosson Baker’s car. Elisa Baker,42, admitted writing the noteand has been charged.

GIRLFROM 1a

SATURDAYNovember 13, 2010 1B

BY KATIE [email protected]

ROCKWELL — While AaronKepley was organizing thearchives of Grace Lower StoneChurch, he opened up a woodenbox and found two old pieces ofpaper. They were folded up andheld together by masking tape.They almost fell apart, he said,but he quickly realized what hehad.One, dated 1774, was an origi-

nal deed to the property. The oth-er, a document from 1795, was adeed transfering the property tothe church elders who werepreparing to build a church. Kepley, who majored in history

at Pfeiffer University and whoplans to study history in graduateschool, knew the documents werein need of attention.He called a friend who restores

documents who assured him thatthe documents could be pre-

served through blending themwith special paper through a typeof lamination process.“A lot of documents at Rowan

Museum have been done thatway,” Kepley noted.The process may cost up to

$1,000, he said, so he’s organizeda fundraiser with an appropriatetheme.Sunday, Grace Lower Stone

Church will host a German Her-itage Day that will include an af-ternoon of demonstrations ofcolonial life. At 11 a.m. there will be a spe-

cial church service on the histo-ry of the Germans that foundedthe church. Kepley himself willbe delivering the message.Kepley, 23, is a member of

Grace Lower Stone and actuallygrew up on land adjoining thechurch. “I will talk about the contro-

versies that surrounded how thechurch was built,” he said, ex-

plaining that there was a clashbetween the political ideals andthe religious ideals of the day.The controversy had to do withthe Great Awakening, and theidea that anybody can have ac-cess to grace without need for achurch hierarchy, said Kepley,who added that a journal articlewritten by Dr. Gary Freeze wasvery helpful to him in doing hisresearch. Kepley’s research has led

him to believe that the Ger-mans were a lot more awareof politics on the national andinternational level than hasoften been assumed. Kepley knows a good deal

about the Germans in the east-ern part of the county; he wrotea paper on the topic when hewas a student at Pfeiffer. He is grateful to Kaye Hirst,

director of Rowan Museum, forher help and for loaning cookingpots and other items for the

event. Kepley has volunteered for

both the Stanly County Museumin Albemarle and the Rowan Mu-seum in Salisbury.“I learned about archiving at

the Stanly County Museum andabout events at Rowan Museum,”he said. As he’s organized the church

records, Kepley has been puttingdocuments in acid-free folders.He hopes that his efforts willmake it easier for historians andgenealogists to have better ac-cess to church records. Kepley has also realized that

the church needs a fireproof fil-ing cabinet to protect the bap-tismal records, which go back to1782, he says.The public is invited to Ger-

man Heritage day at Lower StoneChurch, located at 2405 LowerStone Church Road in Rockwell. After the church service,

there will be a chicken and

dumpling meal served from noonto 2:30 p.m. Donations will betaken. From 1-5 p.m., there will be

demonstrations of 18th centuryskills that made life in PiedmontNorth Carolina possible, includ-ing wood turning, weaving,blacksmithing, cooking over anopen fire, candle-making, soap-making and basket weaving.Costumed re-enactors willdemonstrate frontier hunting andsurvival. A Rowan rifle and cidermill will be on display. Childrenwill have the opportunity to playcolonial games and experiencefrontier life. The church and graveyard will

be open for tours, with guidesavailable to answer questions. For the afternoon activities, a

$3 donation is requested.

For more information contactKepley at 704-223-0582 or [email protected].

Tidings of comfort and joy?Facing the holidays after bereavement

Grace Lower Stone Church hosts German Heritage Day Sunday

When you’re grieving thedeath of a family mem-ber or friend, you may

dread the holiday season.Thoughts of social gatherings,

family traditionsand obligationsleave you anxiousand over-whelmed. Yoursadness can seemunbearable. Youmay wish youcould skip thesenext two monthsand go straight tothe routine of thenext year—but

you can’t. What can you do tolessen your stress and loneli-ness?

Emotions triggeredYou can start by learning

what emotions are normal and tobe expected when facing theholidays without your loved one.“If you’re feeling overwhelmedas this holiday season approach-es, that’s very normal,” advisedpsychologist Dr. Susan Zon-nebelt-Smeenge, whose husbanddied. “You’re probably wonder-ing how you’re going to handlethis and are unsure of whatcourse to take. I want to assureyou that you can get throughthese holidays, and hopefullyyou can even find moments ofjoy.” When you know what to ex-

pect, you won’t be rendered

helpless as holiday events trig-ger unexpected emotions. Makea point to spend time talkingwith people who have experi-enced a past loss and have al-ready been through a holidayseason without their loved one.They can help you have an ideaof typical emotions and emotion-al triggers to expect. These peo-ple can also provide much-need-ed comfort and support.

Creating a holiday plan Another important step in

surviving the holidays is to cre-ate a healthy plan for the com-ing season. “Planning does helpyou to have a little control, evenwhen you feel totally out of con-trol,” said Zonnebelt-Smeenge.A healthy plan involves makingdecisions in advance about tra-ditions, meals, time spent withothers, holiday decorating, gift-giving and commitments. You will likely not have the

energy or the interest in doingas much as you have in pastyears. Decide ahead of timewhich invitations you’ll accept,and let the host or family mem-ber know that you might leaveearly. Consider whether yourdecorating will be different thisyear: perhaps a smaller tree orsimpler ornaments. If you cookor bake, cut back. Make a list of every holiday

tradition you can think of, frommusic to presents to outings.Then decide which traditionswill be too difficult without your

deceased loved one, which tradi-tions you’d like to maintain, andwhat new traditions you canstart this year.

Communicating What’s also helpful in facing

the holidays is to communicateyour specific concerns andneeds with your family andfriends. People in grief are oftentempted to put on a mask andpretend things are fine, espe-cially over the holidays. “I didn’twant to put a damper on anyoneelse’s joy,” Mardie said. “So Iput on a happy face and tried tobe the sister, the daughter, theaunt, that everybody wanted tosee. Putting on that happy facewas a heavier burden than I wasemotionally able to carry at thetime.” Your friends may want you to

“cheer up” and “have fun,” whenthat’s the last thing you want.Others will avoid you becausethey don’t know what to say anddon’t want to make you feelworse. Some family memberswill give you wrong advice in amisguided attempt to help. Allof these people likely mean well,but will only end up hurting youif you don’t communicate whatyou truly need from them.As difficult as this may be,

it’s important to tell people whatthey can do to help and whatthey are doing that isn’t helping.And if you don’t have the energyor inclination to talk to peopleface-to-face, then write your

thoughts, concerns and needs ina letter or email. What’s impor-tant is that you are being honestand gracious in your communi-cation.In describing the first holiday

dinner after she was widowed,Zonnebelt-Smeenge said, “Itseemed like no one wanted totalk about my husband. I keptwaiting for somebody to bringup (his name). After a while Icouldn’t stand it anymore. I ex-cused myself and left andbawled all the way home. Later Idecided maybe they were wait-ing for me to decide if it wasokay to talk about him; maybethey were afraid if they saidanything, they’d make me feelworse. From that time on when Iwent to an event, I found a wayto let people know I wanted totalk about him and I wanted tohear their stories.”So where can you find out

what emotions to expect overthe holidays, how to create ahealthy plan and how to commu-nicate with family and friendsthese coming weeks?

Holiday survival seminarA GriefShare Surviving the

Holidays seminar, held Sunday,November 14 at First BaptistSalisbury at 223 North Fulton St.from 6-8 p.m., offers practical,actionable strategies for makingit through the holiday season. Atthis two-hour seminar, you’llview a video featuring advicefrom people in grief who’ve

faced the holidays after theirloss. You’ll hear insights fromrespected Christian counselors,pastors and psychologists. You’llreceive a Holiday SurvivalGuide with over 30 encouragingreadings, helpful charts and tipsto manage the holiday seasonduring this difficult time. At GriefShare Surviving the

Holidays, you’ll meet with othergrieving people who have an un-derstanding of what you’re go-ing through. They won’t judgeyou or force you to share, butwill accept you where you areand will offer comfort and sup-port. “When I went to Grief-Share,” said Marion, “I realizedthere are different ways togrieve.”Your holiday season won’t be

easy; your emotions may am-bush you and suck you under attimes. But you can choose towalk through this season in away that honors your loved oneand puts you on the path ofhealth and healing.

To register or find out moreabout GriefShare Surviving theHolidays, call Rod Kerr or [email protected]. The cost is$5. There will be childcare of-fered by request when register-ing.

Note:For people going througha separation or divorce this holi-day season, First Baptist Salis-bury is offering a DivorceCare Sur-viving the Holidays seminar onthe same date, Sunday, November14 from 6-8 p.m. Call or emailKerr for more information.

RODKERR

FAITHKatie Scarvey, Faith Editor, 704-797-4270 [email protected] www.salisburypost.com

S A L I S B U R Y P O S T

2B • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 FA I T H SALISBURY POST

The advertisers above are sponsors of this page. Please patronize their businesses and show your appreciation.

R113674

Aull Printing & Copy Plus, Inc.111 W. Innes St. 704-633-2685

Autumn Care of SalisburyDedicated to Service Above Self

Beltone Hearing Aid CenterLee & Marie Wade

Boral BricksJohn Isenhour & Associates

Brown’s NurseryOrgan Church Rd. Rockwell

L. Randall Buie, LUTCFNationwide Insurance Agent, with Dillard Insurance Agency

1923 West Innes St. 704-637-2500

Cheerwine Bottling Co.Management & Employees

Cloninger Ford-Toyota511 Jake Alexander Blvd. S. 704-633-9321

F & M BankDirectors, Officers & Staff

J.E. Fisher Insurance Agency, Inc.Over 76 Years of Continuous ServiceIndependent Agent Granite Quarry

Frank’s Pawn ShopRichard & Carol Broadway & Employees

Fleming Candy Co.Wholesale Distributor: Candy, Fishing Tackle, Collectibles

3680 S. Main St. 704-633-4251

Godley’s Garden Center & NurseryManagement & Employees

Grove Supply Co., Inc.Irene Huffman & Employees

B.V. Hedrick Gravel & SandThe Hedrick Team

J & M Flower Shop, Inc.Bob & Margaret Jones & Staff

Jacob’s Western Store555 Parks Road, Woodleaf 704-278-4973

James River EquipmentFormerly Piedmont Farm and Yard Equipment

Authorized John Deere Dealer805 Klumac Rd. 704-636-2671

K-Dee’s Jewelers112-114 E. Innes St. 704-636-7110

Linn-Honeycutt Funeral HomesChina Grove & Landis

Little Choo Choo Shop500 S. Salisbury Ave. Spencer

McDaniel Awning CompanyDale & Joe McDaniel

The Medicine Shoppe1357 W. Innes St. 704-637-6120

Neil’s Paint & Body ShopNeil Lefler & Employees Faith

Richard’s Bar-B-QueRichard Monroe & Staff

Rusher Oil Co.,Inc.Amoco Products Distributor

Salisbury Flower ShopKetner Center — Staff

Sherrill & SmithCertified Public Accountants

Shulenburger SurveyingServing the County Since 1980

Statewide Title, inc.Serving NC Attorneys since 1984

www.statewidetitle.com

Stout’s Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc.

Mark Stout & Employees

Taylor Clay ProductsCharles Taylor & Employees

Trinity Oaks Retirement CommunityA Ministry of Lutheran Services for the Aging, Inc.

728 Klumac Road Salisbury

Salisbury Venetian Blind Co.Your Home Improvement & Window Specialists since 1949

Salisbury 704-636-4641

From where then does Wisdom come? Andwhere is the place of understanding? It is hiddenfrom the eyes of all living, and knowledge of it iswithheld from the birds of the heavens.

Abaddon (the place of destruction) and Deathsay, We have [only] heard the report of it withour ears. God understands the way [to Wisdom]and He knows the place of it [Wisdom is withGod alone]. For He looks to the ends of theearth and sees everything under the heavens.When He gave to the wind weight or pressureand allotted the waters by measure, when Hemade a decree for the rain and a way for thelightning of the thunder, then He saw [Wisdom]and declared it; He established it, yes, andsearched it out [for His own use, and He alonepossesses it].

But to man He said, Behold, the reverential andworshipful fear of the Lord—that is Wisdom;and to depart from evil is understanding.

When I saw the phrase,“You need to bloomwhere you are plant-

ed,” I knew a story would even-tually come forth. My flowers

were so gor-geous this year.It’s hard to be-lieve that justeight years agothis place wasjust a red clayfield.Of course

everything hasbloomed whereit was planted,but some hasspread to other

places. The birds and wind havecarried seed all over. One littleplant that I bought for about $4and planted by my ramp is nowlike a ground cover in one areaand by next year it will be all overone of my islands and in the redrock bed. This “evening prim-rose” that I have shared withfriends has now produced hun-dreds of pretty little pinkishwhite flowers in numerousplaces.These flowers bring back

memories of some my husbandand I used to admire onStatesville Boulevard everyspring and he had finally stoppedand asked what they were. Thefolks there were nice enough toshare some with him and thatwas one of the many times hebrought flowers home to me thatdid not come from flower shops.Joe was not shy about asking for

cuttings to try rooting with hisown hands.Day lilies and iris have

bloomed and grown so muchthey had to be separated and I’veshared those with other peoplebecause I have limited space. Mylove for day lilies goes back to thetime when my husband and Istarted fixing up our yard out onCool Springs Road. We had un-limited space but a limited budg-et so Joe was always bargainingwith someone to get freebies.When we discovered KarrickerDay Lily Farm on our 25th an-niversary, he stole the heart ofNancy Karricker and we endedup planting hundreds of day liliesand iris.

Nancy later heard me speakat her church and got in touchwith me after I built this houseand offered me some bargains toget my flower beds started. Shewas impressed with how Joe tooksuch good care of me and triedso hard to furnish me with thepretty flowers I yearned for. Sheadmitted she had “fallen in love”with Joe.Someone asked how much it

cost to have a yard like this andI am delighted to say a lot of theflowers and some of the treesstarted out as gifts. The remain-der of them were bought eitherwhen they were very small or atthe end of the season when theywere “dirt cheap.”Speaking of dirt, potting soil

and mulch have probably beenthe major expense over eightyears except for the pathways I

had Bill Godley of Godley’s Gar-den Center fix for my scooter.When I got sick in 2002 fourmonths after moving into mynew home, Bill offered to helpme and he has bargained with mejust as he used to do with Joe. Heis definitely a Christian man whois as good as his word.Mowing, trimming and eight

years of spraying adds up; againI’ve been blessed when at timesthat was done by friends, neigh-bors, and family for free. But re-gardless of what it has costs, ithas been to me less than othersspend on movies, jewelry,clothes, concerts and vacations.Until I purchased my handi-

capped conversion van in August2009, this yard has been my sanc-tuary, and that is where the nameof my first book was derived.This takes me back to the subjectof this story. I believe that ourLord and Savior led and guidedme in the moves I’ve made sincemy husband’s death in 1993. Ithink he planted me here to readand write in this beautiful sanc-tuary so I could bloom for myreaders.And now he has given me op-

portunities to “spread his word”just as the wind spreads the seedsof these flowers. Driving againhas opened the opportunities totravel for Christian women’sclubs. I pray that I can carry theplan of salvation to as manyplaces as the evening primrosehas scattered. And then whenI tell others about Jesus, per-haps his word will bloom

where it is planted. Thenhopefully, “those plants willgrow and multiply.”All Christians should be gar-

deners for the Lord and “digand divide” themselves andspread God’s word to othersjust as we do with flowers likeday lilies and iris. A verse cameto my mind which says “It’s notall about us; it’s about advanc-ing the kingdom of the Lord.”

Linda Beck lives inWoodleaf.

Losing YourMedicare

Advantage Plan,Dec. 31?

You are entitled to aguaranteed issue

Medicare Supplement.Lowest prices in N.C. on

F, G, M and N plans.

For simple enrollment callJeff Saleeby Agency

704-633-1311or email:

[email protected], part D drug plans &

new advantage plansR126751

If you’re separated or divorced, the holidayscan be a lonely, stressful and depressing time.But there’s hope. Join us for an encouragingseminar to disvover how to enjoy the holidaysagain.

Sunday, November 146:00-8:00 p.m.

First Baptist, Salisbury223 N. Fulton Street

Salisbury, North CarolinaChild care is available

ALSO Surviving the Holidaysfor Children, Grades 1-6

Call Rod Kerr 704-633-0431to register or for more information

R127247

On this Thanksgiving day,I am thankful for so manythings, but especially forthe newest addition to ourfamily, Dawson. ~ Kristin

5 LineBlock

I am thankful for myfamily and friends,our home and goodhealth. Even thoughthe year has been

tough, we survivedwith smiles.

The Brown Family2010

1x3

Give Thanks

R119177

On this Thanksgiving day, I amthankful for the many things God

has blessed me with...myhusband, friends, job, home, and

especially our family.

Gratefully, Diane

Announcing New Lower Prices!

Deadline is Friday, November 19th, 4 p.m.

Attn: Classified AdvertisingP.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145

Email: [email protected]

Call: 704-797-4220

Stop by: 131 Innes Street,

Salisbury

Sizes: 5 line block, $51x3, $202x3, $304x3, $50

2x3

On Thanksgiving, Nov. 25, 2010We take a moment to ...

This special page will publish in the Thanksgiving Day edition of the Salisbury Post and will be online for 7 days

at salisburypost.com

Become Informed...Get Involved!

Learn more about theAIR QUALITY in Rowan & Cabarrus.

Read about:

• Air-pollutant levels INSIDEschool buses

• The importance of BUYING LOCALfoods for your health & the airyou breathe

• The EPA’s new, stricter proposed airquality standards

• The reason children are particularlyvulnerable to dirty air

Visit

andclick on

ENVIRONMENT.

Granite AutoParts & Service704/209-6331

Hwy. 52Granite Quarry

R126738

SALISBURY POST FA I T H SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 5B

World Christian Center,Asheboro) leads the dedica-tion of the preaching, teach-ing and healing ministry ofthe church. On Nov. 17, Dr. George B.

Jackson (Citadel of FaithChristian Fellowship Inc.,Thomasville) leads the dedi-cation of the church adminis-tration ministry.On Nov. 18, the Rev. W. T

Jackson (Macedonia BaptistChurch, Salisbury) leads thededication of pastoral min-istry and church member-ship.On Nov. 19, Bishop Edwin

Allen (Ambassadors for ChristRevivals. Inc, Winston Salem)speaks on the necessity of con-tinued revival in the church.On Nov. 20, the Rev. Patri-

cia Brock (Four Gospels Mis-sionary Church, Kannapolis)leads the dedication of the in-tercessory prayer ministry. On Nov. 22, the Rev. R Mc-

Conneaughey (God’s Taberna-cle for Believers, Rockwell)leads the dedication of churchbuilding.On Nov. 23, the Rev. John-

ny Morgan (Grateful HeartMinistries, Granite Quarry)leads the dedication of the mu-sic ministry.All services will be held at

The Potter’s House OutreachMinistries, host pastors Reg-gie and Gena Long.

Cannon Foundation grant awardedto Hood Theological SeminaryDr. Albert Aymer, Presi-

dent of Hood Theological Sem-inary, announced today thatthe Seminary received a$50,000 grant from the CannonFoundation. In making the an-nouncement, Aymer said,“Everyone at Hood Theologi-cal Seminary is extremelygrateful for the support andgenerosity of the CannonFoundation. This grant will al-low us to renovate the last re-maining block of 13 originalhotel rooms located on our

campus to provide additionalovernight accommodations forcommuting seminary stu-dents. “The renovation of these

rooms marks another physicalmilestone in the campus life ofthe seminary as we are able tomeet the demands of an in-creasing student population.The growing residential atmos-phere of the campus also of-fers the opportunity for thefurther development of the di-verse friendships and cama-

raderie as the context for theeffective preparation of pas-toral leaders.

“The Cannon Foundationhas made a difference in thequality of life for so many peo-ple in this area and all acrossNorth Carolina. Hood is indeedhonored to be a recipient oftheir generosity.”The Cannon Foundation was

established in 1943 by the lateCharles A. Cannon, Presidentand Chairman of Cannon MillsCompany for more than 50

years.Hood Theological Semi-

nary, located at 1810 Luther-an Synod Drive, is spon-sored by the AME ZionChurch and is a graduateand professional schoolwhere intellectual discourseand ministerial preparationoccur in tandem within theframework of a communityof faith. Its student bodycurrently comprises per-sons from 16 different de-nominations.

BRIEFSFROM 4D

Blooming where you are planted

LINDABECK

Non Sequitur/Wiley Miller

Jump Start/Robb ArmstrongZits/Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

For Better or For Worse/Lynn Johnston

Family Circus/Bil KeaneDennis/Hank Ketcham

Crossword/NEA

Celebrity Cipher/Luis Campos

Blondie/Dean Young and John Marshall

Dilbert/Scott Adams

The Born Loser/Art and Chip Sansom

Get Fuzzy/Darby Conley

Frank & Ernest/Bob Thaves

Hagar The Horrible/Chris Browne

Garfield/Jim Davis

Pickles/Brian Crane

Answer to Previous Puzzle

Complete the grid so that every row,column and 3x3 box contains every digitfrom 1 to 9 inclusively.

Sudoku/United Feature Syndicate

6B • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 C O M I C S SALISBURY POST

SATURDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 13, 2010 A - Time Warner/Salisbury/Metrolina

A 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30BROADCAST CHANNELS

^ WFMY College Football News 2 at 7 Saturday (N)

Wheel of Fortune Å

The Mentalist “Bleeding Heart” A mayor’s aide is murdered.

Hawaii Five-0 “Ohana” Potential breach of national security.

48 Hours Mystery (N) (In Stereo) Å

News 2 at 11 (N) Å

(:35) Panthers Huddle

# WBTV 3 CBS

(3:30) College Football Georgia at Auburn.

Without a Trace “Manhunt” Martin witnesses the abduction of a 10-year-old boy. Å

The Mentalist “Bleeding Heart” A mayor’s aide is murdered. (In Stereo) Å

Hawaii Five-0 “Ohana” Potential breach of national security. (In Stereo) Å

48 Hours Mystery (N) (In Stereo) Å

WBTV 3 News at 11 PM (N)

(:35) America Now

( WGHP 22 FOX

(:00) FOX 8 News at 6:00P (N)

Access Hollywood (N) Å Cops “Probable Cause” (N) Å

Cops “Resisting Arrest No. 5” Å

America’s Most Wanted: America Fights Back Tracking down child predators in Asia.

FOX 8 10:00 News (N) Fringe A shapeshifter is called into action. (In Stereo) Å

) WSOC 9 ABC

College Football Teams To Be Announced.

Entertainment Tonight (N) (In Stereo) Å

College Football USC at Arizona. (Live) Eyewitness News Tonight (N) Å

, WXII NBC

NBC Nightly News (N) Å

Entertainment Tonight (N) (In Stereo) Å

Outlaw “In Re: Tony Mejia” Mereta is forced to ask Al for help. (N) (In Stereo) Å

Law & Order: Los Angeles “Hondo Field” An oil right worker is found dead. Å

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Penetration” A stranger assaults an FBI agent. Å

WXII News Channel 12 at 11 (N) Å

(:29) Saturday Night Live (N) Å

2 WCCB 11Everybody Loves Raymond Å

How I Met Your Mother Å

How I Met Your Mother Å

Cops “Probable Cause” (N) Å

Cops “Resisting Arrest No. 5” Å

America’s Most Wanted: America Fights Back Tracking down child predators in Asia.

Fox News at 10 (N)

(:35) Fox News Got Game

Fringe A shapeshifter is called into action. (In Stereo) Å

D WCNC 6 NBC

NBC Nightly News (N) Å

Jeopardy! Å Wheel of Fortune “Sandals” Å

Outlaw “In Re: Tony Mejia” Mereta is forced to ask Al for help. (N) (In Stereo) Å

Law & Order: Los Angeles “Hondo Field” An oil right worker is found dead. Å

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Penetration” A stranger assaults an FBI agent. Å

NewsChannel 36 News at 11:00 (N)

Saturday Night Live (N) (In Stereo) Å

J WTVI 4 Carolina Calling Classic Gospel “Back Home in Indiana” (In Stereo) Å

Circus “Change On!; Survival of the Fittest” The circus arrives in Virginia. (In Stereo) Å (DVS)

Movie: ››‡ “Okie Noodling” (2001)

Austin City Limits “Roseanne Cash; Brandi Carlile” (N) Å

M WXLV College Football George Lopez “Prototype”

George Lopez Å

College Football USC at Arizona. (Live) NUMB3RS “Harvest”

N WJZY 8 The Office (In Stereo) Å

Two and a Half Men

Two and a Half Men

Brothers & Sisters William’s secret is found. Å

Stargate Universe The crew dis-covers ancient technology.

WJZY News at 10 (N)

(:35) Two and a Half Men

(:05) Two and a Half Men

New Adv./Old Christine

P WMYV Two/Half Men The Office The Office The Unit “SERE” Å Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ’70s Show ’70s Show House-Payne House-Payne

W WMYT 12(:00) Da Vinci’s Inquest Å

Deadliest Catch “A Numbers Game” Edgar makes a dangerous repair. (In Stereo)

Movie: ››‡ “Heartbreakers” (2001) Sigourney Weaver, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Ray Liotta. Mother and daughter con-artists try to swindle a cigarette tycoon, but things go wrong when one falls in love.

Life in the Carolinas

Scrubs “My Hard Labor” Å

According to Jim Jim is a model grump.

Z WUNG 5(:00) Song of the Mountains Å

The Lawrence Welk Show “Movie Songwriters” Importance of movie music.

As Time Goes By (In Stereo) Å

Waiting for God “Sent to Coventry”

Keeping Up Appearances Å

After You’ve Gone (In Stereo) Å

Poirot “The Mystery of the Spanish Chest” Peeress worries about a friend. Å

MI-5 (In Stereo) Å

CABLE CHANNELS

A&E 36 (:00) The First 48 Å

The First 48 Gunned down in front of family. Å

The First 48 “Underworld” A man is brutally beaten to death.

The First 48 A shooting in a snow-covered field. Å

The First 48 A drug deal goes bad; deadly shooting. Å

The First 48 An open-and-shut case suddenly unravels. Å

AMC 27 (5:00) Movie: ››› “Maverick” (1994) Mel Gibson, Jodie Foster. Å

Movie: ››› “Troy” (2004) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Orlando Bloom. The fierce warrior Achilles leads Greek forces in the Trojan War, ignited when Paris abducts Helen of Troy. Å

Movie: “The Perfect Storm”

ANIM 38 Weird, True Pit Bulls and Parolees Cats 101 (In Stereo) Å America’s Cutest Cat 2010 (N) Pit Bulls and Parolees (N) America’s Cutest Cat 2010 BET 59 NewJersey Movie: ››‡ “Romeo Must Die” (2000) Jet Li, Aaliyah. Movie: ›› “Get Rich or Die Tryin’” (2005) Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson.

BRAVO 37 (:00) House House “The Greater Good” House “Unfaithful” Å House “The Softer Side” Å House “The Social Contract” House “Here Kitty” Å CNBC 34 Paid Program American Greed American Greed The Suze Orman Show (N) Til Debt-Part Til Debt-Part American Greed CNN 32 Situation Rm Newsroom CNN Presents Å Larry King Live Newsroom CNN Presents Å

DISC 35 (:00) Speed of Life Å

Speed of Life The hidden lives of Africa’s wildlife. Å

Engineering the Impossible “Rome” The Roman Colosseum. (N) (In Stereo) Å

MythBusters Adam and Jamie make magic happen. Å

Engineering the Impossible The Roman Colosseum. Å

DISN 54 Hannah Montana Forever

The Suite Life on Deck Å

The Suite Life on Deck Å

Wizards of Waverly Place

Hannah Montana Forever “I’ll Always Remember You” Å

Shake it Up! “Start It Up”

Wizards of Waverly Place

Wizards of Waverly Place

Wizards of Waverly Place

The Suite Life on Deck Å

E! 49 Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Movie: ››› “Bridget Jones’s Diary” (2001) Soup Presents Soup Presents The Soup Chelsea Lately

ESPN 39 Football Scoreboard

Football Scoreboard

(:45) College Football Teams To Be Announced. (Live) (:45) SportsCenter (Live) Å

ESPN2 68 NASCAR Score College Football Teams To Be Announced. (Live) NHRA Drag Racing

FAM 29 (4:30) Movie: “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban”

Movie: ››› “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2005) Daniel Radcliffe. Signs of Voldemort’s return emerge as Harry’s friends help him prepare for a tournament with Europe’s best student wizards. Å

Movie: ›› “Trading Places” (1983) Dan Aykroyd.

FSCR 40 Boxing NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Atlanta Thrashers. (Live) Post Game Thrashers 360 Final Score The Game 365 Final Score

FX 45 (5:00) “Kung Fu Panda”

Movie: ››‡ “Baby Mama” (2008) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Greg Kinnear.

Two and a Half Men

Two and a Half Men

Two and a Half Men

Two and a Half Men

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

FXNWS 57 America’s-HQ FOX Report Huckabee Campaign-Finish Geraldo at Large Å Jrnl Edit. Rpt News Watch GOLF 66 Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Children’s Miracle Network Classic, Third Round. From Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Golf JBWere Masters, Final Round. (Live)

HALL 76 (:00) Movie: “The Good Witch’s Garden” Å Movie: “The Good Witch’s Gift” (2010) Catherine Bell. Å Movie: “The Good Witch’s Gift” (2010) Catherine Bell. Å HGTV 46 Designed-Sell Hunters Int’l House Hunters Divine Design Color Splash: Genevieve Curb/Block House Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l

HIST 65 WWII In HD: The Air War

Modern Marvels Å Black Blizzard The “black blizzard” ravaged American heartland from 1930-’40. Å

I Am Alive: Surviving the Andes Plane Crash Å

INSP 78 Gospel Music TBA Potter’s Touch Gaither Gospel Hour I Am David Bible Secrets/Bible

LIFE 31 (4:00) “The Pelican Brief”

Movie: ››‡ “Sleeping With the Enemy” (1991) Julia Roberts, Patrick Bergin, Kevin Anderson. Å

Movie: ››‡ “Notting Hill” (1999) Julia Roberts, Hugh Grant. A man’s life changes when an international star walks into his bookshop. Å

The Fairy Jobmother Å

LIFEM 72 (:00) Movie: “Seduced by Lies” (2010) Josie Davis, Marc Menard, Lochlyn Munro. Å

Movie: “Maternal Obsession” (2010) Jean Louisa Kelly, Kirsten Prout, Paula Trickey. Å

Movie: ››‡ “Normal Adolescent Behavior” (2007) Amber Tamblyn, Kelli Garner, Ashton Holmes. Å

MSNBC 50 (:00) Cult Killer Mindhunter Lockup “Inside Alaska” Lockup: Raw Lockup: Raw “Harsh Reality” Lockup: San Quentin NGEO 58 Columbus Great Migrations Border Wars Inside the State Department American Doomsday Border Wars

NICK 30 SpongeBob SquarePants

Big Time Rush Å

Victorious (In Stereo) Å

iCarly (In Stereo) Å

True Jackson, VP (N) Å

Big Time Rush Å

Victorious (In Stereo) Å

George Lopez Å

George Lopez Å

The Nanny (In Stereo) Å

The Nanny (In Stereo) Å

OXYGEN 62 Top Model America’s Next Top Model Movie: ››‡ “Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins” Movie: ››‡ “Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins” SPIKE 44 UFC Ult. 100 UFC’s Ultimate 100 UFC’s Ultimate 100 UFC 122: Marquardt vs. Okami Nate Marquardt vs. Yushin Okami. From Oberhausen, Germany.

SPSO 60 Moments College Football Big 12: Teams TBA. (Live) Phenoms Boxing

SYFY 64 “Jules Verne-Isl” Movie: ›› “The Land That Time Forgot” (2009) C. Thomas Howell, Timothy Bottoms, Lindsey McKeon. Å

Movie: “The Lost Future” (2010) Sean Bean. Premiere. Movie: “Lost City Raiders” (2008) James Brolin. Å

TBS 24 The King of Queens Å

Seinfeld “The Scofflaw”

Seinfeld “The Kiss Hello”

Movie: ›› “The Heartbreak Kid” (2007) Ben Stiller, Michelle Monaghan, Jerry Stiller. Å

Movie: ››› “Meet the Parents” (2000) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller, Blythe Danner. Å

TCM 25 (4:45) Movie: ›››› “Around the World in 80 Days” (1956) David Niven. Å

Movie: ›››› “The Best Years of Our Lives” (1946) Fredric March. A disabled serviceman and two other veterans have difficulty adjusting to civilian life after World War II.

Movie: ›››› “Mrs. Miniver” (1942)

TLC 48 48 Hours 48 Hours: Hard Evidence 48 Hours: Hard Evidence 48 Hours: Hard Evidence 48 Hours: Hard Evidence 48 Hours: Hard Evidence

TNT 26 (5:30) Movie: ››› “The Pursuit of Happyness” (2006) Will Smith. Å

Movie: ››‡ “Why Did I Get Married?” (2007) Tyler Perry, Janet Jackson, Jill Scott. Å Movie: ›› “Daddy’s Little Girls” (2007) Gabrielle Union, Idris Elba. Å

TRU 75 Most Shocking Most Shocking Top 20 Most Shocking World’s Dumbest... It Only Hurts It Only Hurts Forensic Files Forensic Files

TVL 56 (:13) The Andy Griffith Show

The Andy Griffith Show Å

(:22) The Andy Griffith Show

The Andy Griffith Show Å

(:27) The Andy Griffith Show

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

USA 28 (:00) Movie: ››‡ “The Golden Compass” (2007) Nicole Kidman, Dakota Blue Richards. Premiere. Å

Movie: ›› “National Treasure: Book of Secrets” (2007) Nicolas Cage, Jon Voight, Harvey Keitel. Å

Movie: ››› “The Bourne Ultimatum” (2007) Å

WAXN 2 Meet, Browns NUMB3RS “Harvest” Å Criminal Minds Å The Closer “Aftertaste” Å Eyewitness Hot Topics The Insider (N) Entertainment

WGN 13 (:00) The Unit “SERE” Å

Bones The murder of a young British heiress. Å

NBA Basketball Washington Wizards at Chicago Bulls. From the United Center in Chicago. (In Stereo Live) Å

WGN News at Nine (N) Å

How I Met Your Mother

How I Met Your Mother

PREMIUM CHANNELS

HBO 15 (5:30) Movie: ››‡ “The Lovely Bones” (2009) Mark Wahlberg. (In Stereo) Å

Movie: ››‡ “It’s Complicated” (2009) Meryl Streep, Steve Martin, Alec Baldwin. Premiere. (In Stereo) Å

Tracy Morgan: Black and Blue (N) (In Stereo) Å

Boardwalk Empire Nucky gets some alarming news. Å

HBO2 302 In Treatment Å In Treatment Å In Treatment Å The Pacific “Part Four” Sledge trains for combat. Å

The Pacific “Part Five” Basilone’s celebrity grows. Å

The Pacific “Part Six” Leckie is evacuated. Å

The Pacific The Marines are deter-mined to fight. Å

HBO3 304 (5:00) “The Peacemaker”

(:15) Movie: ›››‡ “Thirteen Conversations About One Thing” (2001) Matthew McConaughey. (In Stereo)

Movie: ›‡ “Couples Retreat” (2009) Vince Vaughn, Jason Bateman, Jon Favreau. (In Stereo) Å

Movie: ››› “Unfaithful” (2002) Richard Gere.

MAX 320 (:00) Movie: ›‡ “The Fourth Kind” (2009) Å

(:45) Movie: ››› “Black Rain” (1989) Michael Douglas. Two New York police detectives take an underworld upstart back to Osaka, Japan. Å

Movie: ›› “Valentine’s Day” (2010) Jessica Alba, Kathy Bates, Jessica Biel. Premiere. (In Stereo) Å

SHOW 340 (5:00) Movie: “The Gift”

Inside the NFL (iTV) (In Stereo) Å The Big C (iTV) Å

Weeds “Fran Tarkenton”

Movie: ›‡ “Next Day Air” (2009) Donald Faison, Mike Epps. iTV Premiere.

Kiss and Tail: The Hollywood Jump-Off (iTV) (N) (In Stereo) Å

DUE DATE (R)* 12:35 2:55 5:156:25 7:35 8:50 9:55FOR COLORED GIRLS (R)* 12:302:00 3:30 5:00 6:30 8:00 9:30HEREAFTER (PG-13) 12:15 3:15JACKASS 3D (R) 12:05 2:254:45 7:05 9:25LIFE AS WE KNOW IT (PG-13)3:55 9:40MEGAMIND (PG)*1:15 3:45 6:15 8:45MEGAMIND 3D (PG)*11:35 12:25 2:05 2:55 4:355:25 7:00 7:55 9:35MORNING GLORY (PG-13)*11:30 2:10 4:40 7:15 9:50

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2 (R)7:20 9:45HARRY POTTER AND THEDEATHLY HALLOWS (PG-13)SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SCREENINGTHURSDAY NIGHT!!RED (PG-13) 1:05 6:40SAW: THE FINAL CHAPTER 3D(R) 11:55 2:35 4:55 7:25 9:50SECRETARIAT (PG) 12:40 3:40SKYLINE (PG-13)*11:40 2:15 4:30 7:10 9:30UNSTOPPABLE (PG-13)*12:10 2:40 5:05 7:30 9:55

*

R12

8116

Times are good through Sunday only

DENTURESMost Insurance AcceptedNow Accepting Medicaid

SameDay

ServiceOn Repairsand Relines

Repairs $50 & upRelines $175per Denture

Dentures $475 ea.; $950 setPartials $495 & up

Extractions $150 & up

Dr. B. D. Smith,General Dentistry

1905 N. Cannon Blvd., Kannapolis(704) 938-6136 R103631

SALISBURY POST TV / HOROSCOPE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 7B

Saturday, Nov. 13Seek some new social outlets in com-

ing months if you can, because they willexpose you to a lot of fresh ideas andmany new contacts. Enlarging your cir-cle of friends and acquaintances bringsmultiple new experiences as well asfringe benefits.

Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Start re-hashing old issues and watch how quick-ly the domestic tranquility within yourhousehold disappears. Instead, spendyour energy finding ways to heal pastwounds.

Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — Pleasfor assistance are likely to be ignored ifyou demand that others drop what they’redoing and do your bidding instead of ask-ing nicely for help. Be considerate.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Deter-mine in advance how much you can af-ford to spend on nonessentials, and thenstick to it. If you go out shopping and areunstructured, you are likely to be exces-sively extravagant.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — The majorthing that can defeat you is your inclina-tion to oversell. Once your prospect startsnodding in consent, turn off your pitchand close the sale.

Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) — One of thesmartest things you could do is to adjustyour agenda to suit others. Once you havepeople comfortably working at your side,everything will go smoothly for you.

Aries (March 21-April 19) — It’s likelyto be one of those days when your tem-per is on edge, making you a bit grumpyand cantankerous. If you don’t want peo-ple to keep you at arm’s length, lightenup.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Avoid a ten-dency to behave in a pushy manner in or-der to show others just how tough you are.Unfortunately, the only thing this kind ofbehavior will do for you is make you un-popular.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Eventhough you enjoy a good debate from timeto time, nothing will be gained from ar-guing with someone whose philosophicaloutlook is diametrically opposed to yours.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Back offrather than project yourself into a com-plicated matter of another’s that doesn’tconcern you. All you would be doing isasking for trouble where none now exists.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Don’t allow adisagreement between you and your mateto arise when out in public. If the matteris disturbing, wait until you can discussit with him/her in the privacy of your ownhome.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — The onlywork you can expect to get done today isthat which you do yourself. Dependingupon others to automatically take care ofsomething you think needs tending is fol-ly.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Avoid takingany kind of risk on something that re-quires you to bank on another who is aknown bungler. This person’s batting av-erage isn’t likely to change, and the oddsare you’ll lose.

United FeatUre Syndicate

Dear Dr. Gott: My 23-year-old son was diagnosed withbipolar illness about a yearago. He is taking Depakoteand Abilify and seems to bedoing rather well. Are therelong-term side effects fromthese medications, and whatcauses this mental illness,anyway?

Dear Reader: Side effects ofAbilify include a possibility oftardive dyskinesia (TD), invol-untary, repetitive movements

of the limbs,trunk and fa-cial muscles.Abilify hasbeen aroundfor fewer than10 years, solong-term ef-fects are es-sentially un-known. Butthe producthas so far been

shown to have a much lowerrisk of TD when comparedwith older antipsychoticdrugs.Your son may also experi-

ence weight gain, which canlikely be controlled throughdiet and exercise.Bipolar disorder generally

requires lifelong treatment,even during times when a pa-tient is seemingly symptom-free. Medication helps by bal-ancing emotional ups anddowns and may include an-tipsychotics, antidepressants,anticonvulsants and a numberof others. Finding the rightmedication or combinationthereof may take some time;however, it will be worth thewait. Alternative therapies thatcan be used in conjunction withprescription medications in-

clude massage therapy,acupuncture, certain herbs,yoga and tai chi.The exact cause of bipolar

disorder is unknown, but it ap-pears to occur more often inrelatives of people who alsohave the disorder, suggestinga possible genetic component.The condition, once known asmanic depression, causes moodswings that can occur severaltimes a day or once or twice ayear.There are three subtypes

known as type I, type II and cy-clothymia. The severity ofsymptoms varies from personto person and is based uponwhich type of disorder he orshe has. Cyclothymia is themildest type that can includedisruptive depression and hy-pomania, a condition of overex-citement. Subtype II may be as-sociated with irritability andperiods of depression. BipolarI is associated with manicepisodes that can be both dan-gerous and severe. A personmay have difficulties at work,school or interSymptoms for the bipolar pa-

tient might range from agitation,ADHD, irritability, risky behav-ior, rapid speech, poor judgmentand performance at work orschool, to periods of euphoria,an increase in physical activity,increased urges to perform spe-cific tasks and an increase in sexdrive. The depressive phasemay include sadness, suicidalthoughts, anxiety, insomnia, fa-tigue, loss of interest in one’ssurroundings, an inability to con-centrate and feelings of guilt.In order for a person to be

diagnosed as bipolar, he or shemust meet the criteria estab-lished by the Diagnostic and

Statistical Manual of Men-tal Disorders (DSM) as pub-lished by the American Psy-chiatric Association. In sim-ple terms and depending onthe subtype, a cyclothymicdisorder must last two yearsor more with several hypo-manic episodes and periodsof depression but without afull manic, major or mixeddepressive event. Bipolar IIis based on at least one ma-jor depressive and at leastone hypomanic episode.Bipolar I is based on havingat least one manic or onemixed episode.Manic episodes are de-

fined as abnormally and per-sistently expansive, elevat-ed or irritable moods thatlast a week unless hospital-ization is necessary. Thenthere are symptoms a psy-chiatrist will look for to fur-ther substantiate the diag-nosis. Hypomanic episodesare defined as moods ofworsened irritation that lastat least four days and aredistinctively different fromthe usual nondepressedmood. Again, specific sub-requirements must be met. With major depressive

episodes, a person must un-dergo five or more specificsymptoms over a 14-day pe-riod with specific featuresbeing met.

Dr. Peter H. Gott is a re-tired physician and the authorof several books, including"Live Longer, Live Better," "Dr.Gott's No Flour, No SugarDiet" and "Dr. Gott's No Flour,No Sugar Cookbook," whichare available at most book-stores or online. His websiteis www.AskDrGottMD.com.

BY PHILLIP ALDERUnited Feature Syndicate

Marya Mannes was anauthor and critic knownfor her caustic but insight-ful observations of Amer-ican life. She said, “Thesign of an intelligent peo-ple is their ability to con-trol emotions by the appli-cation of reason.”The sign of intelligent

bridge players is their abil-ity to control trumps bythe application of reason.This is an easy deal forsomeone who has seen thetheme before — but muchharder for someone whohas not. How would you tryto make four hearts afterWest leads the spadequeen?When the responder’s

point-count is a minimumfor raising to game, it isusually better to play in a

4-4 major-suit fit than inthree no-trump. Here, threeno-trump has no chance, andfour hearts, despite the lackof trump honors, can bebrought home.You start with five losers:

two hearts (if trumps are 4-1, you are dead), one dia-mond and two clubs. You do,though, have 10 tricks: twospades, one heart, three dia-monds, one club, one dia-mond ruff in the dummy andtwo spade ruffs in yourhand. However, before ruff-ing, you should draw exact-ly two rounds of trumps.Win the first trick on the

board, call for a low heart,and play low from yourhand. East will probably re-turn a heart, but take yourace and play three rounds ofdiamonds, discarding a clubfrom the dummy.Suppose East ruffs and

shifts to a club. Win, take

dummy’s spade ace, andcrossruff home.Note that if you make the

mistake of playing the aceand another heart, East willwin and cash his thirdtrump, leaving you with nochance.

Nov. 13: Producer-director-actor Gar-ry Marshall is 76. Actor Joe Mantegna is63. Actress Frances Conroy (“Six FeetUnder”) is 57. Actor Chris Noth is 56. Ac-tress Whoopi Goldberg is 55. Actor RexLinn (“CSI: Miami”) is 54. Actor Neil Fly-nn (“Scrubs”) is 50. Comedian JimmyKimmel is 43. Actor Steve Zahn is 43. Ac-tress Aisha Hinds (“True Blood”) is 35.Actress Monique Coleman (“High SchoolMusical”) is 30.

Long-term drug effects unknown The trump suit gets much weaker

DR. PETERGOTT

Conan drawsyounger crowd NEW YORK (AP) — Conan

O’Brien has finished his firstweek on TBS with a heftysampling by a remarkablyyounger-skewing audience.Thursday’s show drew 2

million viewers, less than halfthe number who gathered forhis much-awaited, much-pro-moted debut on Monday, ac-cording to the Nielsen Co.But of those 2 million view-

ers, nearly 1.4 million were inthe 18-to-49 age group thatmany advertisers want toreach.

8B • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 W E AT H E R SALISBURY POST

TOYOTA • FORD • KIA • HONDA MAZDA • CHEVY • DODDE • JEEP CHRYSLER • MERCURY • NISSAN AUDI • SUZUKI • MITSIBISHI SCION • HYUNDAI • SUBARU VOLK-SWAGEN • CADILLAC • GMC PONTIAC • BMW • LEXUS • TOYOTA • FORD • KIA • HONDA MAZDA • CHEVY • DODDE • JEEP CHRYSLER • MERCURY • NISSAN AUDI •SUZUKI • MITSIBISHI SCION • HYUNDAI • SUBARU VOLKSWAGEN • CADILLAC • GMC PONTIAC • BMW • LEXUS • TOYOTA • FORD • KIA • HONDA MAZDA • CHEVY •DODDE • JEEP CHRYSLER • MERCURY • NISSAN AUDI • SUZUKI • MITSIBISHI SCION • HYUNDAI • SUBARU VOLKSWAGEN • TOYOTA • FORD • KIA • HONDA MAZDA

• CHEVY • DODDE • JEEP CHRYSLER • MERCURY • NISSAN AUDI • SUZUKI • MITSIBISHI SCION • HYUNDAI • SUBARU VOLKSWAGEN • TOYOTA • FORD • KIA •HONDA MAZDA • CHEVY • DODDE • JEEP CHRYSLER • MERCURY • NISSAN AUDI • SUZUKI • MITSIBISHI SCION • HYUNDAI • SUBARU VOLKSWAGEN • TOYOTA •

FORD • KIA • HONDA MAZDA • CHEVY • DODDE • JEEP CHRYSLER • MERCURY • NISSAN AUDI • SUZUKI • MITSIBISHI SCION • HYUNDAI • SUBARU VOLKSWAGEN511 JAKE ALEXANDER BLVD. SALISBURY704.633.9321 WWW.CLONINGERCARS.COM CALL FOR EASY

TO FOLLOW DIRECTIONS! WE ARE 20 MINUTES FROM ANYWHERE!

ALL PRICES PLUS TAX, TAG AND $489 ADMINISTRATIVE FEE. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. OFFERS EXPIRE 11/31/2010

33 MPG!#1 TRUCK IN AMERICA!

2011 TOYOTA

CAMRY$17,785

2010 FORD

F-150$12,000

2008 CHEVROLET HHR LSP7529C 45,588 MILES............................$11,787 2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT GLSP7570 17,202 MILES ..............................$11,887 2002 FORD F-250SD XLF10189B 132,005 MILES........................$11,887 2003 FORD F-150 XLF10512A, 120,016K MILES......................$12,3872006 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT10686A, 109,966K MILES..................$13,5872006 TOYOTA PRIUS BASEP7550A, 56,349K MILES ....................$14,1872009 TOYOTA COROLLA ST10613A, 31,108K MILES ........................$14,3872010 TOYOTA COROLLA LEP7569, 37,038K MILES ......................$14,8872005 TOYOTA AVALON LIMITEDT11132A, 94,463K MILES ..................$14,8872010 TOYOTA COROLLA SP7575, 30,442K MILES ......................$15,1872009 TOYOTA CAMRY SET11116A, 66,778K MILES ..................$15,5872008 FORD F-150 XLP7562A 31,844K MILES ....................$15,687

2005 TOYOTA AVALON XLST11113A, 87,315K MILES ..................$15,6872010 TOYOTA CAMRY XLE8 PASSENGER P7535, 41,876K MILES ..$15,8872007 TOYOTA CAMRY SEP7565, 42,011K MILES ......................$16,2872009 FORD FUSION SEF10170A, 44,444 K MILES ..................$16,3872008 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5P7588, 42,821K MILES ......................$16,4872010 TOYOTA MATRIX XRSP7576, 38,398 K MILES......................$17,1872008 CHEVROLET TRAILBLAZER LT 1 LT, P7539, 46,362 K MILES ..............$17,3872008 FORD ESCAPE HYBRIDF10516A, 79,969 K MILES ..................$17,4872007 TOYOTA SIENNA CE7 PASSENGER P7544, 56,344 K MILES ..$17,6872010 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 SP7555, 22,998 K MILES......................$19,3872006 JEEP COMMANDER LTDF10214A, 42,336 K MILES ..................$19,8872008 FORD E-350SD XLT 15 PASSENGER P7566, 52,291 K MILES $20,687

PREOWNED of Salisbury

UPTO OFF

2002 CHEVROLETS-10 LS

T10509C, 94,130k miles

$7,1872002 NISSAN

XTERRA XET10725A, 122,150k miles

$8,8872000 FORD

MUSTANG V6P7508A, 66,328k miles

$9,387

2002 TOYOTACAMRY LE

T10705A, 67,646k miles

$9,8872009 KIA

SPECTRA EXP7582, 33,652k miles

$11,3872009 KIA

SPECTRA EXP7580, 48,994k miles

$11,387

HUGESELECTIONUNDER

$10,000

#1 CPODEALER IN

ROWANCOUNTY!

BECOME A FANON FACEBOOK!

PRE-OWNED SPECIALSTOYOTA of SalisburyFORD of Salisbury

$20,8972009 FORD ESCAPE XLT

Stk# F11082A

WAS:$24,988$19,197

2010 FORD FUSION SEStk# P7527

WAS:$22,988 $18,897

2007 TOYOTA SOLARAStk# P7509

$26,5972008 TOYOTA SIENNA

Stk# T10699A

WAS:$27,988

WAS:$30,988

C466

04

HH

HH

HHHH

LL

5-Day Forecast for Salisbury

Regional Weather

SUN AND MOON

LAKE LEVELS

National Cities

World Cities

Almanac Pollen Index

Air Quality Index

Today TomorrowCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo WAtlanta 69 44 s 68 50 pcAtlantic City 63 38 s 62 44 pcBaltimore 64 33 s 65 42 pcBillings 42 26 pc 44 30 flBoston 61 42 s 50 43 cdChicago 58 37 sh 46 33 pcCleveland 68 43 pc 58 37 shDallas 61 41 pc 58 43 pcDenver 40 19 sn 44 24 pcDetroit 60 46 f 52 35 pcFairbanks 14 3 sn 15 0 cdIndianapolis 68 36 t 52 33 pc

Today TomorrowCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo WKansas City 47 31 pc 49 33 pcLas Vegas 67 45 s 64 46 pcLos Angeles 81 51 s 78 55 sMiami 80 66 pc 81 66 pcMinneapolis 34 31 sn 39 27 snNew Orleans 75 56 pc 73 57 shNew York 64 46 s 61 46 pcOmaha 45 28 pc 46 27 pcPhiladelphia 63 42 s 62 45 pcPhoenix 73 47 pc 71 48 pcSalt Lake City 43 29 pc 46 31 snWashington, DC 64 43 s 64 46 pc

High 66°....................................................Low 30°.....................................................Last year's high 55°..................................Last year's low 47°....................................Normal high 64°........................................Normal low 43°.........................................Record high 81° in 1989...........................Record low 24° in 1894.............................Humidity at noon 22%...............................

24 hours through 8 p.m. yest 0.33"...........Month to date 0.52"...................................Normal year to date 33.80".......................Year to date 33.80"...................................

6600//446660/46

DDeettrrooiittDetroit

4422//226642/26

BBiilllliinnggssBillings

8800//666680/66

MMiiaammiiMiami

6677//552267/52

SSaann FFrraanncciissccooSan Francisco

5500//444450/44

SSeeaattttlleeSeattle

3344//331134/31

MMiinnnneeaappoolliissMinneapolis

4488//334448/34KKaannssaass CCiittyyKansas City

4400//119940/19

DDeennvveerrDenver

8811//551181/51

LLooss AAnnggeelleessLos Angeles

6699//444469/44

AAttllaannttaaAtlanta

6644//443364/43

WWaasshhiinnggttoonnWashington

6644//446664/46

NNeeww YYoorrkkNew York

6633//449963/49

HHoouussttoonnHouston

6644//332264/32

EEll PPaassooEl Paso

5588//337758/37

CChhiiccaaggooChicago

67/32Winston Salem

67/27Danville

67/31Greensboro

68/32Salisbury

67/32Durham65/34

Boone

70/34Spartanburg

68/38Greenville

70/32Franklin

67/36Hickory

68/32Asheville

67/34Goldsboro

67/41Southport

63/54Cape Hatteras

63/52Kitty Hawk

65/45Morehead City

67/40Wilmington

68/34Columbia 67/36

Darlington

67/32Raleigh

67/36Lumberton

70/38Knoxville

68/36Atlanta

68/36Aiken

68/34Allendale

67/45Charleston

70/38Augusta

65/49Hilton Head

70/36Savannah

67/34Charlotte

67/41Myrtle Beach

Today

High 68°Sunny and light winds

Tonight

Low 32°Clear tonight

Sunday

70°/ 40°Mostly sunny

Monday

67°/ 49°Mostly cloudy

Tuesday

63°/ 45°Rain showers

likely

Wednesday

65°/ 38°Mostly sunny

51 ...... moderate51 ........ moderate .......... particulates

Sunset tonight 5:16 p.m..................... ....................Sunrise- 6:55 a.m............................... ..............................

Moonset today none.................... ....................Moonrise today 12:54 p.m.................... ...................

First Full Last NewNov 13 Nov 21 Nov 28 Dec 5

Today TomorrowCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo WAmsterdam 53 42 pc 51 41 rBeijing 46 24 s 42 22 pcBeirut 82 69 pc 86 71 sBerlin 57 48 pc 57 46 pcBuenos Aires 73 60 s 75 62 pcCalgary 42 21 pc 51 30 pcDublin 46 30 r 44 32 pc

Today TomorrowCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo WJerusalem 87 64 pc 89 62 pcLondon 53 44 cd 51 30 pcMoscow 46 42 pc 48 35 rParis 59 51 r 55 42 rRio 75 66 pc 78 66 pcSeoul 59 33 pc 46 28 pcTokyo 64 55 cd 66 55 pc

Today: 1.8 - lowSunday: 1.3 - lowMonday: 1.2 - low

High Rock Lake 651.1.............. -3.90..........Badin Lake 540.38.................. -1.62..........Tuckertown Lake 595.3............ -0.7...........Tillery Lake 277.7.................. -1.30..........Blewett Falls 177.4................. -1.60..........Lake Norman 95.70................ -4.3...........

@2010

Need to Get Away from It All?Visit our National Parks page to start your journey into the beauty of America’s great parks.

wunderground.com/nationalparks

Forecastya5-D

SalisorfForecast

yrub

National Cities

yy

winds light

yy

likely

TodayCity LoHiAtlanta 4469Atlantic City 3863Baltimore 3364Billings 2642Boston 4261Chicago 3758Cleveland 4368Dallas 4161Denver 1940Detroit 4660Fairbanks 14Indianapolis 3668

TomorrowTodayWLoHiWLopc5068s44pc4462s38pc4265s33fl3044pc26cd4350s42pc3346sh37sh3758pc43pc4358pc41pc2444sn19pc3552f46cd015sn3pc3352t36

CityKansas CityLas VegasLos AngelesMiamiMinneapolisNew OrleansNew YorkOmahaPhiladelphiaPhoenixSalt Lake CityWashington, DC

TomorrowTodayWLoHiWLoHipc3349pc3147pc4664s4567s5578s5181pc6681pc6680sn2739sn3134sh5773pc5675pc4661s4664pc2746pc2845pc4562s4263pc4871pc4773sn3146pc2943

Washington, DC pc4664s4364

Almanac

Indianapolis 3668

TodayCity HiAmsterdam 53Beijing 46Beirut 82Berlin 57Buenos Aires 73Calgary 42Dublin 46

World Cities

Almanac Pollen Index

pc3352t36 Washington, DC

TomorrowTodayWLoHiWLor4151pc42pc2242s24s7186pc69pc4657pc48pc6275s60pc3051pc21pc3244r30

CityJerusalemLondonMoscowParisRioSeoulTokyo

Pollen Index

Washington, DC pc4664s4364

TomorrowTodayWLoHiWLoHipc6289pc6487pc3051cd4453r3548pc4246r4255r5159pc6678pc6675pc2846pc3359pc5566cd5564

Kn lK eKn e

700707 27 2Frank

6n

6AAs

b

67/3267/ 2

Salisbsb

Regiog

Win aWins a

SSalisb

65/65/BooneBoone

Sp nbSp nb

67/3667/36Hi koryHi k

68/6v lles ville

ha ttha t

b

67/2767/27

bury

eatherWonal

DD

67/3167/31obo

3232ybury

3232h mD h m

6alRal

bL bee

63/5C C C C C C

2222222222222252/ 2//// 2/ 2/ 23/ 23/ 23/ 23/ 23/ 23 52

5555/5/5/5/ a a Ha

66666666666666663/3/3/3/3/33333336363

67/3467/34Go bob

6363

Cape Ha

2222263/522 w w w Kit HawKit Haw H wk

54 s

4 s as as as as as as

5454545454545 tter tter tte atte atte ra ra as atte

Precipitation

emperatureTTemperaturethroughyrubSalisfromData

...............................Humidity at noon.............................Record low...........................Record high

.........................................Normal low........................................Normal high

....................................Last year's low..................................Last year's high

.....................................................Low....................................................High

...................................Month to date24 hours through 8 p.m. yest attera a a ra era er ter ter

ry

vironmentnEof.Dept.C.N

103hnu002-151,.sprg

dom001-15,doog05-0

Today.....Yesterday....

Quality

est.y..mp6ough

etetolrahC

Air

yrubsilaS

...............................22%.............................24° in 1894........................... 81° in 1989

......................................... 43°........................................ 64°

....................................47°.................................. 55°

.....................................................30°.................................................... 66°

...................................0.52"...........0.33"24 hours through 8 p.m. yest

51 ...... moderate51 ........ moderate .......... particulates

Monday: 1.2 - lowSunday: 1.3 - lowToday: 1.8 - low

azry

ResourcesalrNatuandvironment

suodrazah005-1,yy,htlaehnuyrev003-102,yy,htlaeh

evitisnesrofyhtlaehnu051-101,etarrae

xeIndQuality

51 ...... moderate .... moderate .......... particulates

.. ... ..

GG

MOONANDSUN

6.

70/70/7

/3

C

7

3

C

Au

/3

70/370/3

70/70/70/70/70/70707070707077777777777

.......

3838n en e

68/68/Col biaCo bia

D

6kenen

0/380/ 8

.

AAuAAAAAAAAAAAA

....

ugug

...........

........... 6868/

/41/4/4/4/4/4/47/47/47/47/47/47/7/7/7/7/7/7/767676767676767

rleesles

66

6666666676767

outhuth

WW

/36/3DarlinDarli

67 667 6L beL be

676ChCh

yrtl yr each ea ea ea ea ea Bea Be Be Be Be Be Be Be Be Be Be B B B B B Be Be Be Be Ble e e e e e Be Be Be Be B

u

F

y565/45

F

ad ad ad ad ad Co ad Co ad Co ad Co ad CMo ad CMo ad CMo ad CM ad M ad Mo ad M ad M ad M a CM a CM ad CM a M a M a M M M M M M ad y ty ty ty ty ity it Cit Cit Cit Ci Ci5555

d d d d 65/4565/456

ehea rehea orehead Cityorehead Cityorehead Cityorehead Cityorehead Cityorehead CityMoreh W toto

666666666666666

M M d M M d M CMoreh d C

LEVELS

FobA

devresbOekkeaL

Weather Underground

LAKE

ybvided opraphicsrgorecasts and F

ad ad

63/5

65/45ad y

225/55/5//77777766

s si ic cn nn nn na aa ar rr rF Fnn aa aa SS SS

5/55555//1188

A Ass oo oo LL LL

67

/5

S

527/52

..

looPlluwoleB/ee/vo

63/54

80s

70s

60s

50s

40s

30s

20s

10s

0s

-0s

-10s

tnorFdloC

...................................Year to date.......................Normal year to date

/527

is r a a r c n Fr a S

Angeles Angeles

1/818

o A A os Angeles Lo L L

@2010

77

33

pp

3366666622222/22/222////22222244444444

ssggnniilliiBB

o oHHo oHo oc cc cc cs ss s

44444/4440000555555

eeeeeellllttttttaaaaeeSSSSSSSS

11333/3333/3333/33/333//443333

ssiillllllooooppppppppppaaeennnnnnMM

4433/8/8844y yy yt tt ti iC Css ss aa ss nn aa KK

991/111//000044

rreevvvvnneeDDDD

11

s ss se ee el le eg gg gn nA AA A

77773/33333//88888855LL55L55

ggggggaaaacciihhhhhhCCCCCC

1

50

aCh

ll

/

3 le es

44

l

332

pn

322

p

//2 //2

a

3326

pn

22 /3/2

a

2626

3H cHHH c

HHHH

/L /LLL 8

................................... 33.80"....................... 33.80"

//2/22/22/22/2222////42/2642/2642/26

gsnginllilB

4

o o sc scHHH

4

HH

44/40///

l

50

S a lettttttttatttteattle

i

3

SeSS

ty0

11///43

iisliliolioolpoppppppaaaeaneapolisnnnninMiM

D

/34848 ty ity ity City i City s as sa nsas Cityansas CityKansas CityK

119

s

/104004

vevnvnvvenverD

3

g e el geles e ng n Angeles

//88//858

a

LLLag

LLcacaichChChCCCC

664/44/4//00006666

ttiioorrtteeeeDD

aattnnaallllttAA

334/4464464666666

nnoooooooottttttggggggggnniihhhhssaaWW

6666664/4444/4//4646666

k kk kk kr ro YoY YY YY Yww ww ww ww ee NN oooooooogggo

o66 446

4

k r

HHHH

HHHH

/4/40/46//

t

e

60/4666

itoroittretDetroitD

o

At tl ntanlattAttt

44/4///66

tontttongtongtongtonttgtongnggg

ew York

inhshshashington

4

Washington

4//44//644

rk or Y Yo Yoo Yo w Yorkew YorkNew York N gog

FFF

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA66666666666l

/3434AA

6 65/65/66666

AAAlAlAlAlAlllllllen elen ell

666666666666666aaaaa

66aaaaaaaaaaaa

H n H n 65/

n

ahnnnnnnnnnnnaaann

... .

Need to Get A

.

99/ 9///// 9n n /499/ 9999/ 9

swols’tonightandhighss’yatodareaturesrempeTTempe.reathews’yatodiswnoSh

e e He He He

Need to Get A

........................... 95.70Lake Norman

...........................177.4Blewett Falls

............................ 277.7Tillery Lake

....................... 595.3Tuckertown Lake............................ 540.38Badin Lake........................651.1High Rock Lake

om It All?way fr A Away fr

...........

110s

100s

90s

80s

tnorFyranoitataS

tnorFmraWW

FlurriesrriesRainn

torms-stormss

TT-stormsrweooSh

-4.3-1.60-1.30

........... -0.7..........-1.62

-3.90

om It All?

99994/44/43366

nnoooottssuuooooHH

223/3//4466

o oo os ss sa aP Pll ll EE EE EE s

stHouston

4

IcewoSn /4/4/44/43/49/3/49//

o

6366

ottstuoustonHouston

32/464/32

so a Paso PasoEl PasoEl Paso

666/66/66/6//0088

iimmaaiiMMMMMMMM

444/49966

aannnnaaaallAA nt

666///0

M

8

miamiaM

44/9/9/9/////6999

t tntttananlatAttt

wundergr

America’Visit our National Parks page to start your jour

Need to Get A

nationalparksound.com/wundergr

eat parks.s grAmerica’Visit our National Parks page to start your jour

Need to Get A

nationalparks

ney into the beauty of Visit our National Parks page to start your jour

om It All?way fr A Away fr

ney into the beauty of

om It All?

�������������������������������� ������������������������������������

����������� ���������������

BY AARON BEARDAssociated Press

CHAPEL HILL — Harrison Barnesscored 14 points in hisdebut to help No. 8North Carolina beatLipscomb 80-66 in the

season opener for both teams Fridaynight.Tyler Zeller scored 15 points to lead

the Tar Heels, who didn't have the eas-iest time with the Bisons before winningtheir opener for the 76th time in the last81 seasons. North Carolina led by eightpoints at halftime and by 14 early in thesecond half, but didn't put the gameaway until the final five minutes.Barnes finished 6 for 12 from the

field in 27 minutes. Last week, he be-came the first freshman named to TheAssociated Press preseason All-Ameri-ca team since voting began before the1986-87 season.Sophomore John Henson had a huge

game, finishing with 10 points to go withcareer-highs of 17 rebounds and sevenblocked shots.

Josh Slater scored 21 points for Lip-scomb, which fell to 0-4 all-time againstranked opponents.North Carolina certainly had no

shortage of motivation consideringcoach Roy Williams and his players hadstewed all summer over last year's mis-erable 17-loss season. Barnes’ fellow freshmen also turned

in strong debuts off the bench. ReggieBullock had 12 points and knocked downtwo 3-pointers, while Kendall Marshallhad 10 points and three assists — andfound himself on the court instead ofLarry Drew II as the Tar Heels sealedthe victory in the final minute.Barnes got on the board quickly,

knocking down a midrange jumper fromthe left side about 15 seconds into thegame. He got the Tar Heels' last basketof the half, too, using a pump fake to getBrandon Brown airborne then taking astep inside to calmly bury a jumperfrom the left wing just before the half-time horn for a 43-35 lead.The Tar Heels pushed that margin to

50-36 on a stickback from Zeller with171/2 minutes left, but North Carolina

showed its inexperience by failing toput the game away. The Bisons hungaround and slowly cut into the lead, get-ting as close as 59-56 on two free throwsfrom Brown with 8:25 left.North Carolina finally got some

breathing room when Bullock scored ona stickback of his own miss, then Hen-son tipped in a miss from Bullock andZeller followed with a hook shot to makeit 69-58 with 4:53 left. Lipscomb got nocloser than nine points from there.

BY RONNIE [email protected]

Catawba coach Chip Hes-ter says it has been a crazyyear in college football ingeneral, but especially in theSouth Atlantic Conference.The trend will continue for

the Indians today when theytravel to rival Lenoir-Rhynein the regular-season finale.Game time is 2 p.m. Despite losing to Tuscu-

lum last week, the Indians (4-2, 6-3) are still in the hunt fora SAC title. They are tied withCarson-Newman, one gamebehind Wingate (5-1, 7-2).Should Catawba win andWingate fall at Newberry,they would get at least ashare of the title.Hester isn’t worried about

that as muchas he is stop-ping theLenoir-Rhyneoption attack.The Bears (3-3, 6-4) blis-tered Carson-Newman for52 points lastweek.The Catawba defense faces

a complete turnaround fromlast week when Bo Cordell, aHarlon Hill candidate, passedfor 508 yards for Tusculum.“We’re going from the No.

1 passing game in Division IIto the No. 3 running game,”Hester whewed. “Lenoir-Rhyne runs the ball extreme-ly well.”

SATURDAYNovember 13, 2010

He’s goodJackson leadsSalisbury defense tofirst-round win/8C 1CSPORTS

Ronnie Gallagher, Sports Editor, 704-797-4287 [email protected] www.salisburypost.comS A L I S B U R Y P O S T

The road to No. 3West begins march to third straight state title

jon c. lakey/sALisBUrY post

dinkin Miller (8) leaps along with teammate Charles Holloway as they celebrate Miller’s touchdown during the Falcons’ first-round victory against Harding on Friday night.

BY DAVID [email protected]

MOUNT ULLA — HardingUniversityHigh Schoolwas spareda trip to the

gallow’s pole this week. It’s football team wasn’t as

fortunate.Top-seeded West Rowan

ended the Rams’ season witha 34-8 first-round victory inthe 3A playoffs Friday night.“We’re still giving credit to

them for playing us so tough,”West coach Scott Young said

after the host Falcons (12-0)extended their victory bingeto 42 straight. “They were ath-letic with good team speed.They forced us to leave somepoints on the field withturnovers and penalties.”It hardly mattered. West

scored touchdowns on four ofits first five possessions — byfour different players, no less— and built a 27-0 lead earlyin the second quarter.“That was a very fast de-

fense,” West quarterback B.J.Sherrill said after passing for119 yards and his 21st TD ofthe season. “The best way to

beat speed is to run right atthem with some power. CoachYoung said if we did that we’dbe successful.”Nobody ran the ball better

than West junior Dinkin Miller.He summoned his inner K.P.,rushing for a career-best 180yards and a pair of touch-downs. He thanked West’s of-fensive linemen, tight ends,fullback and wide receivers.“Some of it was me, be-

cause I saw the holes and ranthere,” he said. “But I had a lotof help.”

jon c. lakey/sALisBUrY post

B.J. sherrill runs for yardage against Kevin Green (15).

Falcons rip Harding for 42nd straight

jon c. lakey/sALisBUrY post

patrick Hampton, left, and Clifford Long (6) celebrate ascore against Harding.See WEST, 5C

W. Rowan 34Harding 8

AssoCiAted press

North Carolina’s tyler Zeller (44) reactsfollowing a basket.

Catawba goingto Lenoir-Rhyne

Tar Heels win opener

See CATAWBA, 2C

HESTER

UNC 80Lipscomb 66

Associated Press

RALEIGH —There was a timewhen strugglesfor TracySmith wouldhave meant

trouble for N.C. State.These days, Smith has much

more help.C.J. Leslie had 21 points as

three N.C. State freshmen scoredin double figures in the Wolf-pack’s 82-69 win over TennesseeTech on Friday night.Freshmen Ryan Harrow fin-

ished with 16 points and LorenzoBrown added 14 for the Wolf-pack, which won its opener forthe 17th consecutive season.“They’re very talented young

men, and they’ll be a major partof our success this season,” N.C.State coach Sidney Lowe said ofhis team’s new additions. “Wehave not had that type of depthand talent here before.”Scott Wood added 11 points

for N.C. State, which overcame a47-37 rebounding deficit.The Wolfpack prevailed on a

quiet night from Smith, theteam’s leading returning scorer.He had all 10 of his points in thesecond half and finished 2-for-8from the field.“That says a lot,” Brown said.

“Tracy’s a big-time scorer, andnow that he sees that he has threeother guys who can score on theteam, he can depend on us when-ever he needs us.”Zac Swansey scored 13 points

to lead the Golden Eagles, whograbbed 20 offensive reboundsbut shot just 35.3 percent fromthe floor.

“We had some opportunities,but they blocked some shots andwe missed some easy ones,” Ten-nessee Tech coach Mike Suttonsaid. “We had some good looks,and those have to go down tomake the game a little bit tighter.”N.C. State scored the first five

points of the second half andsteadily built its lead behind itsfreshman trio. Leslie, Brown andHarrow combined to score 22 oftheir team’s 24 during one stretchto help the Wolfpack go ahead66-51 with 7:18 remaining.Brown was part of Lowe’s

starting five, but Leslie and Har-row came off the bench after thefirst official timeout. Lowe waseffusive with his praise of thefreshmen, but he was much lesswordy when discussing how he

planned to use them in the future.“Next question,” he said.

“We’re not going to talk about mylineups.”N.C. State finished with 13

blocked shots, a few of whichhelped push the pace in the sec-ond half. Leslie and Smithblocked shots near the rim onconsecutive possessions midwaythrough the period, leading totransition layups at the other end.Leslie led the charge on de-

fense, coming up with six blockedshots and three of his team’s sev-en steals. Brown also had threesteals.Offensively, the Wolfpack’s

three freshmen combined for 10assists and three turnovers in ad-dition to making 16 of 32 field-goal tries. The rest of the teammade 7 of 24 shots.“This is just our first game,”

Harrow said. “We’ll be learningas we go.”The Wolfpack overcame an

early drought to take a 37-34 leadinto halftime.Wood made a jump shot from

the right wing 13 seconds intothe game, but N.C. State missedits next 10 shots from the floor.The Wolfpack went without afield goal for almost seven min-utes before Leslie dunked on aninbounds play with 12:52 re-maining to cut Tennessee Tech’slead to 8-6.Smith missed both of his field-

goal attempts in the first half anddid not score until he made a pairof free throws with 18:29 left inthe game.“We played good,” Leslie said.

“Everyone was having fun, andwe all played together.”

2C • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 S P O R T S SALISBURY POST

Saturday, Nov. 13AUTO RACING

Noonspeed — Nationwide series, qualifying

for WYpALL 200, at Avondale, Ariz.1:30 p.m.

speed — sprint cup, practice for Kobalttools 500, at Avondale, Ariz.

3 p.m.espN2 — sprint cup, “Happy Hour” final

practice for Kobalt tools 500, at Avondale4:30 p.m.

espN2 — Nationwide, WYpALL 200COLLEGE FOOTBALL

NoonWBtV — Miami at Georgia techcBs — Mississippi at tennesseeespN — iowa at NorthwesternespN2 — indiana at WisconsinVersUs — Brown at dartmouthespNU — south Florida at LouisvilleespN3.com — Boston college at duke

12:20 p.m.WAXN — Vanderbilt at Kentucky

12:30 p.m.FsN — Kansas st. at Missouri

1 p.m.cH55 — shaw vs. Virginia state

2 p.m.espN3.com — Wake Forest at N.c. state

2:30 p.m.NBc — Utah at Notre dame

3 p.m.spsoUtH — Wofford at Appalachian st.

3:30 p.m.ABc — Virginia tech at North carolinacBs — Georgia at AuburnespN — penn state at ohio stateespN3.com — Maryland at Virginia

4 p.m.VersUs — san diego st. at tcU

7 p.m.FsN — texas A&M at BaylorespNU — Utep at Arkansas

7:15 p.m.espN — south carolina at FloridaespN2 — Mississippi st. at Alabama

7:30 p.m.VersUs — oregon at california

8:07 p.m.ABc — clemson at Florida state

10:30 p.m.espN — Nevada at Fresno st.

GOLF1 p.m.

tGc — pGA, children’s Miracle Networkclassic, third round, at Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

4 p.m.tGc — LpGA, Lorena ochoa invitational

10 p.m.tGc — pGA tour Australasia, JBWere

Masters, final round, at Melbourne, AustraliaNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.WGN — Washington at chicago

SOCCER7:30 a.m.

espN2 — Manchester U at Aston VillaUFL FOOTBALL

11 p.m.VersUs — omaha at sacramento

Saturday, November 13COLLEGE FOOTBALL

2 p.m.catawba at Lenoir-rhyneCOLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL

7:30 p.m.Urbana at catawba

9:30 p.m.Livingstone vs. pfeiffer (at catawba)

COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL3:30 p.m.

catawba vs. N. Georgia (Morrow, Ga.)COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL

sAc tourney semifinals (at catawba)

Sunday, November 14COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL

6 p.m.Livingstone at catawba

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALLsAc tourney championship (at catawba)

Regional scoresBoston college 79, st. Francis, NY 49clemson 87, W. carolina 64east carolina 74, erskine 46Florida 77, UNc Wilmington 60Florida st. 75, North Florida 55Gardner-Webb 78, charlotte 70Georgetown 62, old dominion 59Georgia tech 52, charleston southern 39Kentucky 88, etsU 65Miami 89, Jacksonville 77N.c. central 90, Johnson & Wales 30N.c. state 82, tennessee tech 69North carolina 80, Lipscomb 66south carolina 94, elon 79stetson 89, Wake Forest 79tennessee 82, chattanooga 62UNc Asheville 70, Auburn 69, otVcU 101, UNc Greensboro 86Vanderbilt 88, presbyterian 47Virginia 76, William & Mary 52Virginia tech 70, campbell 60

Notable boxesUNC 80, Lipscomb 66

LIPSCOMB (0-1)Hodzic 6-13 1-3 14, B. Brown 2-6 2-3 6,

slater 6-17 7-11 21, Barnes 0-3 0-0 0, Arnett0-0 0-0 0, Burgason 2-8 1-2 7, Boyd 4-6 2-213, Glenn 0-4 0-0 0, Z. Brown 1-1 0-0 3,Wright 1-4 0-0 2, teller 0-1 0-0 0. totals22-63 13-21 66.NORTH CAROLINA (1-0)

Henson 5-10 0-2 10, Barnes 6-12 2-2 14,Zeller 4-10 7-10 15, strickland 0-2 2-4 2,drew ii 0-3 4-8 4, Mcdonald 3-5 0-1 7, Marshall4-5 1-2 10, Watts 0-2 0-0 0, Knox 3-3 0-0 6,Bullock 5-11 0-0 12. totals 30-63 16-29 80.

Halftime—North carolina 43-35. 3-pointGoals—Lipscomb 9-29 (Boyd 3-4, slater 2-7, Burgason 2-7, Z. Brown 1-1, Hodzic 1-2,teller 0-1, Glenn 0-1, Barnes 0-1, Wright 0-2, B. Brown 0-3), North carolina 4-13 (Bul-lock 2-4, Marshall 1-1, Mcdonald 1-2, drewii 0-1, Watts 0-2, Barnes 0-3). Fouled out—None. rebounds—Lipscomb 39 (slater 9),North carolina 48 (Henson 17). Assists—Lipscomb 15 (Hodzic, slater 4), North car-olina 12 (Marshall 3). A—16,432.

N.C. State 82, Tenn. Tech 69

TENNESSEE TECH (0-1)swansey 6-13 1-1 13, Barnes 1-5 2-4 4,

Jones 4-5 0-0 8, Bailey 3-11 2-2 9, Murphy3-10 0-0 7, Newton 0-0 0-0 0, McMorrow1-3 2-4 4, Marseille 3-6 0-0 7, pickens 0-0 0-0 0, dunn 2-3 1-2 7, dillard 0-9 6-7 6, ogbe1-3 2-2 4. totals 24-68 16-22 69.N.C. STATE (1-0)

Howell 0-3 5-6 5, Brown 5-10 2-2 14,Gonzalez 1-4 2-2 4, Wood 4-8 0-0 11, t.smith 2-8 6-10 10, painter 0-0 0-0 0, Leslie 7-107-11 21, Harrow 4-12 8-8 16, Vandenberg0-0 0-0 0, Williams 0-1 1-2 1. totals 23-5631-41 82.

Halftime—N.c. state 37-34. 3-pointGoals—tennessee tech 5-16 (dunn 2-3,Marseille 1-1, Murphy 1-2, Bailey 1-4, ogbe0-2, dillard 0-2, swansey 0-2), N.c. state 5-18 (Wood 3-7, Brown 2-5, Leslie 0-1, Harrow0-2, Gonzalez 0-3). Fouled out—Barnes. re-bounds—tennessee tech 47 (Barnes 10),N.c. state 37 (t. smith 8). Assists—ten-nessee tech 9, N.c. state 15 (Brown, Har-row 4). technical—Williams. A—15,450.

Stetson 89, Wake 79

STETSON (1-0)r. Graham 7-20 6-8 21, Jacobo 4-6 0-0 8,

radford 1-1 0-0 2, Naburgs 5-11 4-4 16,patterson 7-12 6-9 20, A. Graham 3-6 3-4 11,paul 2-5 1-1 5, Mcinerney 1-2 0-0 2, Forbes2-6 0-0 4. totals 32-69 20-26 89.WAKE FOREST (0-1)

McKie 4-8 2-2 10, Walker 2-4 1-1 5, terrell8-17 6-8 26, clark 2-5 2-2 8, Harris 2-6 4-49, chennault 1-4 4-4 6, stewart 6-15 2-2 15,desrosiers 0-2 0-0 0, Keenan 0-0 0-0 0.totals 25-61 21-23 79.

Halftime—stetson 36-33. 3-point Goals—stetson 5-13, Wake Forest 8-26 (terrell 4-9,clark 2-3, Harris 1-4, stewart 1-8, McKie 0-2). Fouled out—McKie, terrell. rebounds—stetson 45 (r. Graham 12), Wake Forest 33(stewart 10). Assists—stetson 12 (patter-son 4), Wake Forest 16 (Harris 5). A—8,323.

StandingsSAC

SAC OverallWingate 5-1 7-2catawba 4-2 6-3carson-Newman 4-2 6-4

Lenoir-rhyne 3-3 6-4Mars Hill 3-3 5-5Newberry 3-3 4-5tusculum 2-4 6-4Brevard 0-6 3-7

Saturday’s gamescarson-Newman at tusculum, 1:30 p.m.Brevard at Mars Hill, 1:30 p.m.catawba at Lenoir-rhyne, 2 p.m.Wingate at Newberry, 2 p.m.

CIAA

Northern CIAA OverallVirginia state 6-1 8-2Bowie state 6-1 6-4elizabeth city state 5-2 6-4chowan 3-4 3-7Virginia Union 3-4 3-7st. paul’s 2-5 2-8Lincoln 0-7 1-9Southern CIAA Overallshaw 7-0 8-2st. Augustine’s 6-1 8-2Winston-salem state 5-2 8-2Fayetteville state 4-3 5-5Johnson c. smith 1-6 2-8Livingstone 0-7 0-11

Saturday’s championshipshaw vs. Virginia state, 1 p.m. (durham)

Southern

SC OverallWofford 6-0 8-1Appalachian state 6-1 8-1chattanooga 4-2 4-4Furman 3-3 5-4Georgia southern 3-3 5-4elon 3-3 4-5samford 2-4 4-5Western carolina 1-5 2-7the citadel 0-7 2-8

Saturday’s gamesFurman at elon, 1:30 p.m.samford at chattanooga, 2 p.m.Ga. southern at Western carolina, 3 p.m.Wofford at Appalachian state, 3 p.m.

ACC

Atlantic ACC OverallFlorida state 4-2 6-3N.c. state 3-2 6-3Maryland 3-2 6-3clemson 3-3 5-4Boston college 2-4 4-5Wake Forest 1-5 2-7Coastal ACC OverallVirginia tech 5-0 7-2Miami 4-2 6-3North carolina 3-2 6-3Georgia tech 3-3 5-4duke 1-4 3-6Virginia 1-4 4-5

Saturday’s gamesBoston college at duke, NoonMiami at Georgia tech, NoonWake Forest at N.c. state, 2 p.m.Maryland at Virginia, 3:30 p.m.Va. tech at North carolina, 3:30 p.m.clemson at Florida state, 8 p.m.

SEC

Eastern SEC Overallsouth carolina 4-3 6-3Florida 4-3 6-3Georgia 3-4 5-5Kentucky 1-5 5-5Vanderbilt 1-5 2-7tennessee 0-5 3-6Western SEC OverallAuburn 6-0 10-0LsU 5-1 8-1Alabama 4-2 7-2Arkansas 4-2 7-2Mississippi state 3-2 7-2Mississippi 1-4 4-5

Saturday’s gamesMississippi at tennessee, NoonVanderbilt at Kentucky, 12:21 p.m.Georgia at Auburn, 3:30 p.m.Utep at Arkansas, 7 p.m.south carolina at Florida, 7:15 p.m.Mississippi state at Alabama, 7:15 p.m.Louisiana-Monroe at LsU, 8 p.m.

Conference USA

Eastern C-USA OverallUcF 5-0 7-2east carolina 5-1 6-4southern Miss 3-2 6-3Marshall 2-3 3-6UAB 2-4 3-7Memphis 0-5 1-8Western C-USA OverallHouston 4-2 5-4sMU 4-2 5-5tulsa 3-2 6-3Utep 3-4 6-4tulane 1-4 3-6rice 1-4 2-7

Thursday’s game east carolina 54, UAB 42

Saturday’s gamessouthern Miss at UcF, Noon Memphis at Marshall, 3 p.m.rice at tulane, 3:30 p.m.Utep at Arkansas, 7 p.m.tulsa at Houston, 8 p.m.

Top 25 scheduleFriday’s game

No. 4 Boise state 52, idaho 14Saturday’s games

No. 1 oregon at california, 7:30 p.m.No. 2 Auburn vs. Georgia, 3:30 p.m.No. 3 tcU vs. san diego state, 4 p.m.No. 5 LsU vs. Louisiana-Monroe, 7 p.m.No. 6 Wisconsin vs. indiana, NoonNo. 7 stanford at Arizona st., 7:30 p.m.No. 8 ohio state vs. penn st., 3:30 p.m.No. 9 Nebraska vs. Kansas, 7 p.m.No. 11 Alabama vs. No. 17 Miss. st., 7:15No. 12 oklahoma state at texas, 8 p.m.No. 13 iowa at Northwestern, NoonNo. 14 Arkansas vs. Utep, 7 p.m.No. 15 Utah at Notre dame, 2:30 p.m.No. 16 Virginia tech at UNc, 3:30 p.m.No. 18 Arizona vs. southern cal, 8 p.m.No. 19 oklahoma vs. texas tech, 3:30No. 20 Missouri vs. Kansas st., 12:30 p.m.No. 21 Nevada at Fresno st, 10:30 p.m.No. 22 s. carolina at No. 25 Florida, 7:15No. 23 texas A&M at Baylor, 7 p.m.No. 25 UcF vs. southern Miss, Noon

Other notablesEAST

cincinnati (3-5) at West Virginia (5-3), NoonG-Webb (2-6) at stony Brook (5-4), 1 p.m.cent. Mich. (3-7) at Navy (6-3), 3:30 p.m.syracuse (6-3) at rutgers (4-4), 3:30 p.m.

SOUTHcampbell (3-6) at Jacksonville (9-1), NoonLiberty (7-2) at coastal (4-5), 1 p.m.W. & Mary (7-2) at J. Madison (4-5), 1:30N.c. central (3-6) at sav. state (0-9), 2 p.m.

MIDWESTMinnesota (1-9) at illinois (5-4), NoonMichigan (6-3) at purdue (4-5), NoonArmy (5-4) at Kent st. (4-5), 2 p.m.

FAR WESTiowa st. (5-5) at colorado (3-6), 1:30 p.m.BYU (4-5) at colorado st. (3-7), 2 p.m.Wash. st. (1-9) at oregon st. (4-4), 4 p.m.New Mexico (1-8) at Air Force (6-4), 6 p.m.

StandingsAMERICAN CONFERENCE

EastW L T Pct PF PA

N.Y. Jets 6 2 0 .750 182 130New england 6 2 0 .750 219 188Miami 4 4 0 .500 143 175Buffalo 0 8 0 .000 150 233

SouthW L T Pct PF PA

tennessee 5 3 0 .625 224 150indianapolis 5 3 0 .625 217 168Jacksonville 4 4 0 .500 165 226Houston 4 4 0 .500 193 226

NorthW L T Pct PF PA

pittsburgh 6 2 0 .750 174 123Baltimore 6 3 0 .667 196 165cleveland 3 5 0 .375 152 156cincinnati 2 6 0 .250 167 190

WestW L T Pct PF PA

Kansas city 5 3 0 .625 183 145oakland 5 4 0 .556 235 188san diego 4 5 0 .444 239 197denver 2 6 0 .250 154 223

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAN.Y. Giants 6 2 0 .750 216 160philadelphia 5 3 0 .625 198 181Washington 4 4 0 .500 155 170dallas 1 7 0 .125 161 232

SouthW L T Pct PF PA

Atlanta 7 2 0 .778 222 175New orleans 6 3 0 .667 201 151tampa Bay 5 3 0 .625 157 190CAROLINA 1 7 0 .125 88 184

NorthW L T Pct PF PA

Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 221 143chicago 5 3 0 .625 148 133Minnesota 3 5 0 .375 156 168detroit 2 6 0 .250 203 188

WestW L T Pct PF PA

st. Louis 4 4 0 .500 140 141seattle 4 4 0 .500 130 181Arizona 3 5 0 .375 157 225san Francisco 2 6 0 .250 137 178

Thursday’s gameAtlanta 26, Baltimore 21

Sunday’s gamesMinnesota at chicago, 1 p.m.tennessee at Miami, 1 p.m.detroit at Buffalo, 1 p.m.Houston at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.N.Y. Jets at cleveland, 1 p.m.cincinnati at indianapolis, 1 p.m.CAROLINA at tampa Bay, 1 p.m., FoXKansas city at denver, 4:05 p.m., cBsdallas at N.Y. Giants, 4:15 p.m., FoXst. Louis at san Francisco, 4:15 p.m.seattle at Arizona, 4:15 p.m.New england at pittsburgh, 8:20 p.m.open: oakland, san diego, Green Bay,

New orleansMonday’s game

philadelphia at Washington, 8:30 p.m.

ScheduleFriday’s Games

New Jersey 4, edmonton 3, otpittsburgh 5, tampa Bay 1colorado 5, columbus 1Florida 2, Minnesota 1phoenix 5, calgary 4dallas at Anaheim, late

Saturday’s Gamesottawa at Boston, 7 p.m.Washington at Buffalo, 7 p.m.Vancouver at toronto, 7 p.m.CAROLINA at Montreal, 7 p.m.Florida at philadelphia, 7 p.m.pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7 p.m.colorado at detroit, 7 p.m.chicago at Nashville, 8 p.m.st. Louis at phoenix, 8 p.m.calgary at san Jose, 10 p.m.N.Y. islanders at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic DivisionW L Pct GB

Boston 7 2 .778 —New Jersey 3 5 .375 31⁄2New York 3 6 .333 4philadelphia 2 7 .222 5toronto 2 7 .222 5

Southeast DivisionW L Pct GB

orlando 5 3 .625 —Atlanta 6 4 .600 —Miami 5 4 .556 1⁄2CHARLOTTE 3 6 .333 21⁄2Washington 2 5 .286 21⁄2

Central DivisionW L Pct GB

chicago 4 3 .571 —cleveland 4 4 .500 1⁄2Milwaukee 4 5 .444 1indiana 3 4 .429 1detroit 2 6 .250 21⁄2

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBNew orleans 7 0 1.000 —san Antonio 6 1 .857 1dallas 6 2 .750 11⁄2Memphis 4 5 .444 4Houston 2 6 .250 51⁄2

Northwest DivisionW L Pct GB

Utah 6 3 .667 —oklahoma city 5 3 .625 1⁄2portland 6 4 .600 1⁄2denver 5 4 .556 1Minnesota 3 7 .300 31⁄2

Pacific DivisionW L Pct GB

L.A. Lakers 8 1 .889 —Golden state 6 3 .667 2phoenix 4 4 .500 31⁄2sacramento 3 5 .375 41⁄2L.A. clippers 1 8 .111 7

Friday’s GamesUtah 90, Atlanta 86Houston 102, indiana 99toronto 110, orlando 106CHARLOTTE 93, Washington 85Minnesota 112, New York 103dallas 99, philadelphia 90phoenix 103, sacramento 89oklahoma city 110, portland 108detroit at L.A. clippers, late

Saturday’s GamesUtah at CHARLOTTE, 7 p.m.orlando at New Jersey, 7 p.m.indiana at cleveland, 7:30 p.m.toronto at Miami, 7:30 p.m.Washington at chicago, 8 p.m.Boston at Memphis, 8 p.m.portland at New orleans, 8 p.m.Golden state at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.philadelphia at san Antonio, 8:30 p.m.

Notable boxBobcats 93, Wizards 85

CHARLOTTE (93)Wallace 9-15 6-8 25, diaw 8-10 1-2 19,

Mohammed 3-5 0-0 6, Augustin 5-8 4-5 17,Jackson 5-11 2-2 13, thomas 1-6 2-2 4,Livingston 1-5 2-2 4, Henderson 0-2 0-0 0,diop 0-1 0-0 0, carroll 1-4 0-1 2, d.Brown 1-21-2 3, collins 0-0 0-0 0. totals 34-69 18-24 93.WASHINGTON (85)

thornton 1-8 0-0 2, Blatche 10-21 2-2 22,McGee 4-5 2-3 10, Wall 6-16 0-0 13, Hinrich5-7 2-2 14, Yi 3-7 2-2 8, Arenas 2-14 0-0 5,Young 4-7 0-0 9, Armstrong 1-1 0-1 2. totals36-86 8-10 85.Charlotte 19 23 26 25 — 93Washington 22 21 22 20 — 85

3-point Goals—charlotte 7-16 (Augustin3-5, diaw 2-2, Wallace 1-1, Jackson 1-6,carroll 0-2), Washington 5-21 (Hinrich 2-3,Young 1-3, Wall 1-4, Arenas 1-9, thornton0-2). rebounds—charlotte 57 (Wallace 14),Washington 36 (Blatche 9). Assists—char-lotte 23 (Augustin 10), Washington 27 (Wall11). total Fouls—charlotte 14, Washington19. technicals—Washington coach saun-ders, Washington defensive three second.

Sprint CupFriday’s qualifying

Kobalt Tools 500 LineupAfter Friday qualifying; race SundayAt Phoenix International Raceway

Lap length: 1.0 miles(Car number in parentheses)

1. (99) carl edwards, Ford, 136.389 mph.2. (43) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 136.25.3. (2) Kurt Busch, dodge, 136.24.4. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 135.741.5. (1) Jamie McMurray, chevy, 135.665.6. (00) david reutimann, toyota, 135.547.7. (18) Kyle Busch, toyota, 135.527.8. (78) regan smith, chevy, 135.303.9. (9) Aric Almirola, Ford, 135.227.10. (20) Joey Logano, toyota, 135.206.11. (56) Martin truex Jr., toyota, 135.206.12. (6) david ragan, Ford, 135.176.13. (47) Marcos Ambrose, toyota, 135.15.14. (33) clint Bowyer, chevy, 135.089.15. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 135.084.16. (77) sam Hornish Jr., dodge, 135.039.17. (11) denny Hamlin, toyota, 134.938.18. (39) ryan Newman, chevy, 134.917.19. (98) paul Menard, Ford, 134.917.20. (14) tony stewart, chevy, 134.821.21. (48) Jimmie Johnson, chevy, 134.816.22. (24) Jeff Gordon, chevy, 134.801.23. (19) elliott sadler, Ford, 134.801.24. (13) casey Mears, toyota, 134.766.25. (83) Kasey Kahne, toyota, 134.756.26. (09) Bobby Labonte, chevy, 134.494.27. (82) scott speed, toyota, 134.429.28. (5) Mark Martin, chevy, 134.394.29. (29) Kevin Harvick, chevy, 134.353.30. (12) Brad Keselowski, dodge, 134.273.31. (88) dale earnhardt Jr., chevy, 134.163.32. (36) dave Blaney, chevy, 134.013.33. (26) J.J. Yeley, Ford, 133.944.34. (7) robby Gordon, toyota, 133.65.35. (42) J.p. Montoya, chevy, 133.625.36. (55) Mike Bliss, toyota, 133.61.37. (37) david Gilliland, Ford, 133.492.38. (38) travis Kvapil, Ford, 133.383.39. (64) Landon cassill, toyota, 133.343.40. (31) Jeff Burton, chevy, 133.319.41. (71) Brendan Gaughan, chevy, pts.42. (34) tony raines, Ford, pts.43. (81) terry Labonte, dodge, past champ.

TV Sports

Area schedule

College football

NFL

NHL

NBA

Auto racing

College hoops

Catawba, Livingstone gethoops seasons under way

From staff reports

Catawba’s men’s basketballteam officially opens the seasontonight with a 7:30 p.m. gameagainst Urbana (Ohio) atGoodman Gym.Catawba lost five of the top six

scorers from a 20-11 team.Point guard Dominick Reid is

the top returner. The Indians alsoare counting on Lee Martin andJustin Huntley, who were top re-serves last season.Stuart Thomson, Cameron

Lovelace and Tomas Smogner areveterans who will contribute, andfreshman Keon Moore playedwell in a 74-59 exhibition loss toAthletes in Action.Urbana’s Blue Knights were

14-13 last season and are tacklingan ambitious schedule that in-cludes Division I schools Cleve-land State and Kent State.Catawba plays host to Living-

stone at 6 p.m. on Sunday.

• Livingstone will open todayat 9:30 p.m. against Pfeiffer atGoodman Gym.Livingstone finished last sea-

son with a 12-16 overall recordand 8-12 mark in the CIAA. TheBlue Bears pulled out an open-ing-round win over VirginiaState in the CIAA Tournamentbefore falling to St. Augustine’sin the quarterfinals.LC returning five players from

last season, including two consis-tent scoring threats in Greg Henryand Donte Durant. Henry tied for the team lead

in scoring last season, averaging12.9 points per game.

n North Hills hoopsNorth Hills fell 71-56 to

United Faith on Friday despitefive 3-pointers by Oshon West.Even though United Faith

boasted two 7-footers, North Hillsled most of the first half. Tony

Nunn scored six points in the firstquarter, but foul trouble limitedhim.West led the way with 18

points. Moussa Doucaro added 12points and 14 rebounds, whilepoint guard Buster Hillie added12 points and five assists.North Hills is at home next

Friday against Aldelphi Prep outof South Carolina.

n Catawba women fallCatawba saw host Clayton

State rally in the second half tohand the Indians an 80-69 loss intheir season-opening women’sgame on Friday night in Morrow,Ga., in the Chick-fil-A SoutheastRegion Challenge. Milica Ivanovic posted a dou-

ble-double to lead Catawba with19 points and 11 rebounds.Kisha Long added 16 points for

the Indians, while Dana Hickshad 13 points and six rebounds.

Catawba has beaten optionteams like Brevard, but the Bearsare peaking at the end of the sea-son.“The team that beat us Satur-

day may have been the best teamwe had played all season,” Hes-ter said of Tusculum. “I don’tthink I’ve ever been in a gamewhere the quarterback has beenthat much on the money. Andthey have a losing record in theSAC. I know our guys fought.

They just didn’t make enoughplays.“Right now, Tusculum and

Lenoir-Rhyne may be playing thebest football in the league.”This is Fred Goldsmith’s best

team at L-R. He is 16-27 going intotoday.“They’re playing good foot-

ball,” Hester said. “Our guys haveto step up and find a way to slowthem down.”Hester is glad to see Grayson

Downs (shoulder problems) backin action. He said that was a biglift. But, as usual, it has to be ateam effort.“I don’t think anybody is pick-

ing us to win this week,” Hestersaid. As far as getting a share of the

conference championship?“Wingate’s in the catbird seat,”

Hester said. “If they win, they’vegot it. All we can worry about isLenoir-Rhyne. And that’s plentyto worry about.”

•NOTES: Buddy, Dan and Lance

will broadcast the game on WSAT1280-AM. ... Catawba has been agood road team under Hester.He’s 33-17. ... The game will beplayed in 8,500-seat MoretzStadium. ... Catawba leads theseries 46-39-4.

CATAWBAFroM 1c

Pack showcases newcomers

Associated Press

The college hoops roundup ...CHARLOTTE — A former

assistant from an Ohio schoolpicked up a much-needed firstvictory in his debut as a headcoach Friday.It was Gardner-Webb’s Chris

Holtmann celebrating, notCharlotte’s Alan Major.Jon Moore had 24 points and

nine rebounds and Gardner-Webb pounced on undermannedCharlotte, overcoming JamarBriscoe’s 30 points to stun the49ers 78-70.With starters Shamari

Spears and An’Juan Wildernesssuspended for one game earlierFriday and with two other rota-tion players fouling out, Major— the former Ohio State assis-tant — had only six players atthe end in a terrible beginningto his first coaching job.

Without Salisbury’s Spears, asecond-team all-Atlantic 10 pre-season pick who averaged 16points last season, Charlotte(0-1) planned to lean on ChrisBraswell. But the third-team A-10 choice was held to six pointsand two rebounds in 16 minutesbefore fouling out with 7:06 left.

Stetson 89, Wake Forest 79WINSTON-SALEM — Ridge

Graham had 21 points and 12 re-bounds, and Stetson beat WakeForest to spoil Jeff Bzdelik'scoaching debut.J.T. Terrell, one of five

freshmen on the roster, had 26points and Ari Stewart added 15points and 10 rebounds forWake Forest.

Georgia Tech 52, Charl. So. 39 ATLANTA — Daniel Miller

blocked seven shots in his firstgame and Georgia Tech over-came poor shooting to defeatCharleston Southern in the sea-

son opener.No. 21 Va. Tech 70, Campbell 60BLACKSBURG, Va. — Mal-

colm Delaney scored 20 pointsto lead No. 21 Virginia Tech to avictory over Campbell in theseason opener.

Clemson 87, WCU 64CLEMSON, S.C. — Devin

Booker had a career-high 16points and Clemson made coachBrad Brownell’s debut a suc-cess with an easy victory overWestern Carolina. The Tigers won their 26th

straight season opener.Virginia 76, William & Mary 52CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. —

Freshman Billy Baron scored19 points to lead Virginia to avictory over William & Mary inthe season opener for bothteams. Baron, the son of RhodeIsland head coach Jim Baron,exploded in the second half,scoring 13 points.

N.C. State 82Tenn. Tech 69

AssociAted press

N.c. state’s c.J. Leslie slams theball. He finished with 21 points.

Charlotte, minus Spears, loses opener

BY BRET [email protected]

SPENCER — North Rowan senior SamStarks fielded a kickoffto open the second halfof a 14-0 playoff lossFriday night.

Starks angled toward the left sideline,absorbed contact from a WestMontgomery defender and crashedhead-first into a wooden table, knockingover two water coolers in the process.The pain from that hit didn’t compare

to how Starks felt following the game’sfinal play. He remained on the groundalongside classmate Javon Hargrave forseveral moments after being tackled afew yards shy of the end zone, a stop thatkept West Montgomery’s shutout in tactand signaled the end of North’s season.“Getting knocked through tables, that

ain’t nothing,” Starks said. “You gottahave heart, and it’s a hard loss. Me, Javon,Amani (Bates), it’s our senior year. Wecan’t get it back; we can’t come back.”A home win against West Montgomery

on Oct. 29 helped North (6-6) clinch anoutright YVC championship, but theWarriors (7-5) forced seven turnovers inthe rematch with a spot in the secondround of the 1AA playoffs at stake.Bates halted two West Montgomery

drives with interceptions deep in Northterritory, and each time the Cavaliersquickly fumbled the ball away. Thosemiscues translated into a pair of second-quarter touchdowns for the Warriors,who will travel to Monroe next Friday.“Our defense played well enough for

us to win tonight,” North coach TaskerFleming said. “I feel for the seniors andall the kids in the program. “We worked hard to start 0-4, then

work our way into a home playoff game,then have this kind of performance. Ithought we gave effort, we just didn’thold on to the football.”A power set enabled North to run

effectively in the second half of its 26-22victory in the first meeting with WestMontgomery. On Friday, the Cavs usedthree QBs — sophomore T.J. Allen,Starks and jayvee call-up MichaelConnor — and finished with 72 total yards.A wishbone alignment with the

260 - pound Hargrave at fullbackcontributed to North’s best drive of thefirst half, but the Warriors recovered afumbled snap one play after XavierRobinson gained 9 yards to the WestMontgomery 35.The next series ended with Bates

picking off a pass at North’s 2, and theCavaliers gave the ball back with asecond-down fumble. Travante Moorescored on a first-and-goal carry from the4 with 9:07 remaining before halftime.Bates broke on a pass, batted it into

the air and intercepted it at North’s 22roughly three minutes later. He returnedthe ball 17 yards, and Allen looked tothrow while rolling right on first down.Quincey Bradley chased down Allen

from behind, forced a fumble with a sackat the 25, regained his footing, scoopedup the ball and raced into the end zone.“(North) played outstanding defense

and we didn’t get a whole lot of stuff go-ing, to my chagrin, but I loved our passrush tonight,” said West Montgomerycoach John Pate, who used nine different

linemen on a defense that recorded fivesacks, four fumble recoveries and threeinterceptions.Allen didn’t complete either of his two

pass attempts and West Montgomerypicked off Starks’ only first-half throw,giving the Warriors five takeaways in

the opening two quarters.Connor, a freshman, closed the first

half with a 9-yard run and started the thirdquarter. He threw two interceptions.“We didn’t execute like we wanted to,

made bad turnovers and lost the game,”Hargrave said.North’s offense had run only 11 second-

half plays when it took over near midfieldwith five minutes remaining in the game.Pierre Givens’ 36-yard reception on a

fourth-and-11 pass from Starks movedthe Cavs to West Montgomery’s 20 with3:18 remaining, and a touchdown couldhave created a tense finish.The Warriors made a fourth-down

stop, and North regained possession whenTerry Allen forced a fumble at the WestMontgomery 16 with two minutes left. The Cavaliers advanced inside the 10

but failed to score.“You put so much energy into the off-

season, going into August,” Fleming said.“I watched these kids grow from a teamthat doubted themselves after the Eastloss to a team that learned to battle witheverybody. “I think the toughest part is knowing

you can play better than you played yourlast game.”

Koontz & SmithAttorneys at Law

Earle A. Koontz & Peter C. Smith

• Social Security Disability• Personal Injury

• Criminal/Traffic• V.A. Disability Benefits

FREE Initial Consultation704-636-2974

Easy to find…Across from Rowan County Courthouse

225 N. Main StreetSuite 304, Salisbury NC

R123703

HHYYDDRRAAUULLIICC DDEEPPOOTT

-

-

- - -

- -

- -

-

- -

R123859

No Leaf

GutterFREE FLOWING WATER CONTROL

J.A. FISHERA Specialty Contractor Since 1979 With Over 7000 Completed Jobs

Salisbury704-788-3217

www.jafisherexteriors.com Kannapolis R124211

Fall

Sale

SALISBURY POST P R E P F O O T B A L L SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 3C

North’s season is over

Wayne HinsHaW/SALISBURY POST

North Rowan’s Sam Starks makes a pretty run after he was inserted at quarterback. Starks played his last game in the loss to West Montgomery.

West Montgomery gets some revenge

W. Mont. 14N. Rowan 0

Wayne HinsHaW/SALISBURY POST

North’s star defensive lineman Javon Hargrave is consoled after the loss to WestMontgomery by his coaches.

Joe Wiggins brings down Warrior backTevin McAuley.

opening kickoff, Phipps got the ball fre-quently. He shook off a tackle attemptby Darien Rankin in his own backfieldand broke a 32-yard scoring run that gavethe underdog Greyhounds, seeded No. 6in the Midwest pod, a 7-0 lead.“The gameplan was to try to run it, eat

the clock and keep Salisbury’s offenseoff the field,” Hampton said. “We didsome things that first drive they hadn’tseen us do on film, and we got the kindof start that we wanted.”When Salisbury couldn’t do much with

its first possession, Ludwig Stadiumgrew awfully quiet. Chilly fans feared atough game might be in store.Knox dropped back to punt on fourth-

and-11 at the Salisbury 49, and a seniorwho has changed dozens of games withhis right arm and legs, changed this onewith a punt. His strong boot was downedon the North Surry 1, and a Salisbury on-slaught was triggered.Jackson came pouring through to hit

Phipps for a loss on a second-down play,and Rankin limited a third-down comple-tion to a 2-yard gain with an open-fieldtackle. That forced the Greyhounds topunt from their end zone.“We’ve got some guys hurt and sick,

but we played with heart,” Jackson said.“We started blitzing more, and we got abig stop. Their running back was reallygood once he got out into space, so wehad to hit him before he got started.”Salisbury (9-3), seeded third in the

Midwest pod, got to start its second pos-session on the North Surry side of the 50.The Hornets scored quickly, with Knoxhitting Gallagher for a 20-yard score.“North Surry wasn’t going to let us

run it,” Salisbury coach Joe Pinyan said.“But they were selling out so many peo-ple to stop the run, we could throw it witha lot of success. Once we made a comple-tion, there just weren’t enough defend-ers back there.”North Surry failed to answer. On a

third-and-6 play, Woods chased down anoverthrown pass and picked it off.“We’d worked all week at practice on

not biting and staying in our deep thirdwhen their quarterback made a pumpfake,” Woods said. Morris had a 66-yard scoring run

called back by a flag for holding, but theHornets overcame that penalty with nosweat. Knox trucked into the end zonefrom 15 yards out, following receiverJohn Jarrett, and the Hornets led 13-7.A snowball was rolling, and Jackson,

Byrd and William Brown smashedPhipps for losses on three straight snaps.“What happened on their first scoring

drive was our backers were stickingtheir noses in there and getting hookedinside, and then Phipps was bouncing out-

side,” Pinyan said. “Once we got thatstraight, our defense couldn’t haveplayed any better the rest of the half.”Knox found Gallagher behind the de-

fense for a second time for a 19-7 lead.Then Gallagher caught a conversion passto tack on two more points.After Byrd sacked North Surry’s

strong-armed QB Tanner Hiatt (139 pass-ing yards) for an 8-yard loss to force an-other punt, Salisbury scored briskly. A37-yard burst by Knox set up an 11-yardscoring dash by Morris, and David Si-mons’ PAT made it 28-7.When Woods picked off another pass

with 1:42 left in the half, Salisbury hadtime to score one more TD before thebreak. Dismuke plowed into the end zoneto put North Surry in a 35-7 hole.

It was basically an even game exceptfor 10 minutes in the second quarter, butthat 28-0 stretch was totally devastating.“We’ve got a great athlete in Phipps,

Hampton said. “But Salisbury’s got play-ers all over the place. That’s a really goodfootball team.”Phipps broke two TD runs in the sec-

ond half, but Dismuke answered with twolong scores of his own, including a 70-yard pass play from Knox.Rankin sat out the second half with ill-

ness, and Gallagher was injured on aNorth Surry onsides kick. He was justgetting back to health after a concussion.“I probably should’ve had Riley out of

there by then,” Pinyan said. “But NorthSurry just kept scoring, and I felt like wehad to keep answering their scores.”

4C • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 P R E P F O O T B A L L P L AY O F F S SALISBURY POST

West Rowan 34, Harding 8

H WRFirst downs 11 20Rushing yardage minus-3 357Passing yardage 191 119Passing (C-A-I) 17-48-0 11-18-1Punting 3-24.7 2-28.5Fumbles-Lost 3-2 3-2Penalties 7-39 7-52

Harding 0 8 0 0 — 8W. Rowan 14 13 7 0 — 34

WR —Long 10 run (Suarez kick), 7:23, 1stWR — Miller 31 run (Suarez kick), 6:27, 1stWR — McBride 21 pass from Sherrill

(Suarez kick), 11:54, 2ndWR — Sherrill 4 run (kick failed), 8:11, 2ndH — Craves 15 pass from Elliott (McNeil

pass from Elliott), 5:17, 2ndWR — Miller 1 run (suarez kick), 10:21, 3rd

individual statisticsRushing — H: Wilson 7-6; Smith 2-0;

McCraw 3-(minus 4); Elliott 6-(minus 5).WR: Miller 21-180; Long 9-46; Sherrill7-38; Jackson 10-30; Cowan 1-25; Garrison2-23; Flanagan 3-10; Reddick 1-5.

Passing — H: Elliott 17-46-0, 181; King0-2-0, 0. WR: Sherrill 11-18-1, 119.

Pass receiving — H: Earle 9-80;Graves 3-59; Brooks 3-36; McCraw 2-16.WR: Hampton 4-44; Mabry 3-23; Morgan2-14; McBride 1-21; Barger 1-17.

Friday night facts

Friday’s scoresCLass 4aa

easT(1) WF-Rolesville 13, (8) Millbrook 0(2) Garner 42, (7) Raleigh Broughton 9(5) Wakefield 31, (4) Wil. Laney 28(6) M. Creek 41, (3) Leesville Road 40, OT

MiDeasT(1) Seventy-First 36, (8) Durham Jordan 28(3) Fuquay-Varina 6, (6) Cary 0(4) Fayetteville Britt 28, (5) Lumberton 13(7) Panther Creek 44, (2) South View 21

MiDWesT(1) Richmond County 35, (8) Providence 0(2) Matthews Butler 56, (7) East Forsyth 7(3) Greensboro Page 33, (6) W. Forsyth 10(4) NW Guilford 23, (5) Scotland County 22

WesT(1) Mallard Creek 56, (8) Olympic 0(3) Vance 14, (6) South Caldwell 3(4) Ardrey Kell 35, (5) South Meck 10(7) Hopewell 35, (2) Garinger 6

CLass 4aeasT

(1) New Bern 32, (8) Greenville Rose 22(2) SE Raleigh 35, (7) Harnett Central 20(3) So. Durham 14, (6) New Hanover 7(4) Clayton 20, (5) Hoggard 14, OT

MiDeasT(1) Durham Hillside 46, (8) SE Guilford 0(2) Dudley 19, (7) Fayetteville Smith 14(4) Pembroke Swett 28, (5) Fay. Sanford 14(6) Lee County 16, (3) Northern Durham 12

MiDWesT(1) Mt. Tabor 42, (8) Southwest Guilford 17(3) Ragsdale 49, (6) Kernersville Glenn 21(5) Davie County 35, (4) North Davidson 10(7) High Point Central 28, (2) Gboro Smith 22

WesT(1) AC Reynolds 42, (8) Roberson 7(2) Porter Ridge 49, (7) East Gaston 7(4) Sun Valley 38, (5) Mooresville 35(6) W. Charlotte 20, (3) Alexander Central 7

CLass 3aaeasT

(1) Wilson Hunt 67, (8) Conley 36(2) Pitt 25, (7) West Brunswick 6(3) Northern Nash 26, (6) Southern Nash 7(4) West Carteret 20, (5) Nash Central 13

MiDeasT(1) Gray’s Creek 28, (8) Asheboro 0(3) Gibbons 24, (6) Overhills 14(5) Northern Guilford 43, (4) Erwin Triton 7(7) Byrd 34, (2) Western Alamance 7

MiDWesT(1) A.L. Brown 21, (8) Hickory Ridge 18(2) Catholic 65, (7) SW Randolph 10(4) Statesville 35, (5) North Forsyth 14(6) Weddington 28, (3) Marvin Ridge 14

WesT(1) South Point 14, (8) Forestview 0(2) Morganton Freedom 44, (7) Enka 21(3) Crest 29, (6) Ashbrook 26(5) Erwin 61, (4) Kings Mountain 40

CLass 3aeasT

(1) Havelock 55, (8) Currituck County 28(3) South Brunswick 39, (6) Washington 7(5) Southern Vance 22, (4) E. Wayne 14(7) Southern Wayne 35, (2) Hertford Co. 19

MiDeasT(1) NE Guilford 16, (8) Burl. Williams 13(3) E. Alamance 36, (6) Rockingham Co. 10(4) South Johnston 47, (5) Oxford Webb 12(7) Mt. Pleasant 37, (2) So. Guilford 21

MiDWesT(1) West Rowan 34, (8) Harding 8(2) Carson 45, (7) Hickory 33(3) Concord 31, (6) Cox Mill 12(4) NWt Cabarrus 20, (5) West Iredell 17

WesT(1) Burns 38, (8) West Henderson 7(2) Lenoir Hibriten 42, (7) Patton 0(3) East Henderson 32, (6) Franklin 3(4) Asheville 32, (5) Tuscola 14

CLass 2aaeasT

(1) Northeastern 39, (8) Topsail 13(2) Bunn 21, (7) North Pitt 20(4) Beddingfield 36, (5) SW Edgecombe 28(6) Kinston 34, (3) Richlands 19

MiDeasT(1) Northwood 41, (8) South Granville 7(2) Cedar Ridge 29, (7) C. Davidson 8(4) High Point Andrews 52, (5) St. Pauls 0(6) Randleman 38, (3) Reidsville 35

MiDWesT(1) Piedmont 28, (8) West Stanly 6(5) Berry Academy 51, (4) West Stokes 30(3) Salisbury 56, (6) North Surry 28(7) Forest Hills 31, (2) South Iredell 30

WesT(1) Canton Pisgah 48, (8) Ashe County 14(2) Shelby 38, (7) Claremont Bunker Hill 6(4) Wilkes Central 35, (5) West Lincoln 27(6) Owen 28, (3) Newton-Conover 25

CLass 2aeasT

(1) East Duplin 61, (8) Northwest Halifax 18(2) Tarboro 47, (7) Pasquotank County 0(3) Roanoke Rapids 56, (6) Northside 0(5) First Flight 45, (4) South Lenoir 14

MiDeasT(1) South Columbus 43, (8) Franklinton 7(2) Fairmont 40, (7) North Brunswick 26(3) Carrboro 55, (6) Whiteville 33(5) East Bladen 47, (4) North Johnston 40

MiDWesT(1) Cummings 55, (8) Eastern Randolph 14(2) Carver 44, (7) West Davidson 0(3) Thomasville 36, (6) Jordan-Matthews 9(4) Lexington 35, (5) Providence Grove 0

WesT(1) Lincolnton 44, (8) Brevard 7(3) Polk County 52, (6) Maiden 21(4) Mountain Heritage 33, (5) E. Lincoln 19(7) East Rutherford 24, (2) Starmount 14

CLass 1aaeasT

(1) Southwest Onslow 63, (8) Dixon 0(2) Gates County 42, (7) Camden Co. 7(3) Ayden-Grifton 42, (6) Trask 21(4) Riverside Martin 47, (5) Perquimans 6

MiDeasT(1) Goldsboro 44, (8) Dunn Midway 0(3) Pender Co. 55, (6) East Montgomery 6(5) Warsaw Kenan 29, (4) Clinton Union 28(7) East Columbus 22, (2) Red Springs 19

MiDWesT(1) Mt. Airy 41, (8) Monroe Central 6(2) Monroe 34, (7) East Surry 27(5) Albemarle 27, (4) McGuinness 14(6) West Montgomery 14, (3) N. Rowan 0

WesT(1) Avery County 42, (8) Bessemer City 20(3) West Wilkes 21, (6) East Wilkes 7(4) Swain County 30, (5) Hendersonville 7(7) Mitchell County 49, (2) Cherryville 27

CLass 1aeasT

(1) Manteo 74, (8) Mattamuskeet 0(2)Creswell 20, (7) Northampton-East 8(3) Plymouth 49, (6) Pinetown Northside 12(4) Choc. Southside 40, (5) Columbia 0

MiDeasT(1) Wallace-Rose Hill 70, (8) Lejeune 16(2) North Edgecombe 40, (7) KIPP Pride 20(6) Northampton-West 14, (3) Jones 0

MiDWesT(1) Lakewood 35, (8) Princeton 7(2) Hobbton 42, (7) Chatham Central 29(3) Rosewood 35, (6) South Davidson 6(4) North Stokes 12, (5) South Stanly 0

WesT(1) Murphy 58, (8) Union Academy 12(2) Robbinsville 46, (7) Rosman 28(3) Elkin 59, (6) Cherokee 19(4) Andrews 43, (5) Hayesville 25

Carson 45, Hickory 33

H CFirst downs 9 23Rushing yardage 61 310Passing yardage 313 329Passing (C-A-I) 10-26-0 16-23-1Fumbles-Lost 3-1 2-1Penalties 11-71 14-130

Hickory 13 0 8 12 — 33Carson 21 7 7 10 — 45

C — Warren 36 run (Lippard kick), 8:41, 1stH — Vega 98 pass from Johnson (Hames

kick), 7:49, 1stC — Clanton 54 pass from Gragg (Lippard

kick), 6:12, 1stH — Lockhard 5 run (kick failed), 4:23, 1stC — Warren 39 run (Lippard kick), 0:46, 1stC — Warren 4 run (Lippard kick), 5:45, 2ndC — Brown 19 run (Lippard kick), 8:18, 3rdH — Vega 19 pass f rom Johnson

(Holloway pass from Johnson), 2:26, 3rdH — Vega 52 pass from Johnson (kick

failed), 11:28, 4thH — Davenport 44 fumble return (run

failed), 10:35, 4thC — Brown 4 run (Lippard kick), 8:15, 4thC — Lippard 20 FG, 3:34, 4th

individual statisticsRushing — H: Lockhard 7-50; Wimbush

8-38; Reid 4-(minus 3); Johnson 6-(minus 24).C: Warren 30-266; Brown 11-43; Gragg2-10; Abbitt 2-5; Team 1-(minus 14).

Passing — H: Johnson 10-26-0, 313.C: Gragg 16-23-1, 329.

Pass receiv ing — H: Vega 5-187;Davenport 3-103; Daniel 1-12; Walls-Davis1-11. C: Clanton 7-192; Pressley 3-73;Brown 321; Eagle 2-39; Warren 1-4.

salisbury 56, north surry 28

ns sFirst downs 18 20Rushing yardage 197 415Passing yardage 139 128Passing (C-A-I) 14-27-2 6-8-0Punting 3-20.3 1-50Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-1Penalties 5-50 6-45

north surry 7 0 14 7 — 28salisbury 7 28 14 7 — 56

NS —Phipps 32 run (Hauser kick), 7:55, 1stS — Gallagher 20 pass from Knox (Simons

kick), 1:16, 1stS — Knox 15 run (pass failed), 9:48, 2ndS — Gallagher 24 pass from Knox

(Gallagher pass from Knox), 7:46, 2ndS — Morris 11 run (Simons kick), 4:24, 2ndS — Dismuke 1 run (Simons kick), 0:41, 2ndS — Dismuke 43 run (Simons kick), 10:57,

3rdNS — Phipps 30 run (Hauser kick), 8:23, 3rdS — Dismuke 70 pass from Knox (Simons

kick), 6:10, 3rdNS — Ratcliff 11 pass from Hiatt (Hauser

kick), 1:12, 3rdS — Morris 17 run (Simons kick), 11:17, 4thNS — Phipps 25 run (Hauser kick), 6:42, 4th

individual statisticsRushing — NS: Phipps 28-205; Hiatt

1-(minus 8). S: Knox 8-134; Morris 9-110;Dismuke 6-87; Ruffin 5-50; Means 4-31;Dailey 1-7; Hall 1-1; Bauk 1-(minus 1); team1-(minus 4).

Passing — NS: Hiatt 14-27-2, 139. S:Knox 6-8-0,128; Hall 0-0-0, 0; Bauk 0-0-0. 0.

Pass receiving — NS: Brown 4-49; Gough3-39; Draughn 3-29; Phipps 2-(minus 1);Hawks 1-12; Ratcliff 1-11. S: Gallagher 2-44;Morris 2-4; Dismuke 1-70; Bauk 1-10.

a.L. Brown 21, Hickory Ridge 18

HR aLBFirst downs 21 11Rushing yardage 258 221Passing yardage 122 53Passing (C-A-I) 8-17-0 4-9-2Punting 3-32.0 3-28.0Fumbles-Lost 3-2 2-1Penalties 6-40 6-30

Hickory Ridge 0 10 8 0 — 18a.L. Brown 14 7 0 0 — 21

ALB — Campbell 6 run (kick failed), 9:33,1st

ALB — Jones 27 pass from Campbell(Riley run), 6:15, 1st

HR — Drugan 26 FG, 5:48, 2ndALB — Washington 58 run (Brown kick),

4:55, 2ndHR — Barnes 65 pass from Robinson

(Drugan kick), 2:20, 2ndHR — Baltimore 7 run (Helm pass from

Tyson), 9:01, 3rdindividual statistics

Rushing — HR: Baltimore 30-205;Cothren 3-13; Tyson 8-41; Barnes 1-11;Drugan 1-(minus 22). ALB: Riley 17-96;Washington 5-95; Campbell 9-35; Stanback2-1; Jackson 2-(minus 6).

Passing — HR: Robinson 1-1-0, 65;Tyson 6-13-0, 45; Baltimore 1-1-0, 12;Cothren 0-1-0, Barnes 0-1-0. ALB: Campbell4-9-2, 53.

Pass receiving — HR: Barnes 5-105;Helm 2-14; Baltimore 1-3. ALB: Jones 2-36;Johnson 1-12; Robinson 1-5.

W. Montgomery 14, n. Rowan 0

WM nRFirst downs 7 7Rushing yardage 138 16Passing yardage 48 58Passing (C-A-I) 5-16-2 4-16-3Punting 1-31.0 4-33.8Fumbles-Lost 2-1 8-4Penalties 6-52 9-72

W. Montgomery 0 14 0 0 — 14n. Rowan 0 0 0 0 — 0

WM — Moore 4 run (Dennis kick), 9:07, 2ndWM — Bradley 25 fumble return (Dennis

kick), 5:11, 2ndindividual statistics

Rushing — WM: Capel 20-99; Moore 8-31;Green 9-14; Pegues 2-(minus 2); McAuley3-(minus 4). NR: Starks 7-23; Bates 5-18;Robinson 2-17; Hargrave 3-14; Jones 3-8;team 1-(minus 5); Connor 6-(minus 19); Allen8-(minus 40).

Passing — WM: Capel 5-16-2, 48. NR:Allen 0-2-0, 0; Starks 3-9-1, 48; Connor1-5-2, 10.

Pass receiving — WM: Pegues 4-26;Bowden 1-22. NR: Givens 1-36; Bates 1-10;Barber 1-9; Mallett 1-3.

Box scores

yVC games1aa

West Montgomery 14, North Rowan 0Albemarle 27, McGuinness 14Pender 55, East Montgomery 6

1aNorth Stokes 12, South Stanly 0Rosewood 35, South Davidson 6Hobbton 42, Chatham Central 29

CCC games2aa

Salisbury 56, North Surry 28Cedar Ridge 29, Central Davidson 8

2aLexington 35, Providence Grove 0Thomasville 36, Jordan-Matthews 9Carver 44, West Davidson 0

nPC games3aa

Statesville 35, North Forsyth 143a

West Rowan 34, Harding 8Carson 45, Hickory 33Northwest Cabarrus 20, West Iredell 17

sPC games3aa

A.L. Brown 21, Hickory Ridge 183a

Mt. Pleasant 37, Southern Guilford 21Northwest Cabarrus 20, West Iredell 17Concord 31, Cox Mill 12

area outlook

Wayne HinsHaW/SALISBURY POST

Salisbury’s Darien Rankin (2) puts a hit on a North Surry receiver.

SALISBURYFROM 8C

Wayne HinsHaW/SALISBURY POST

Salisbury’s Justin Ruffin runs the ball through a gaping hole opened by Parker McKeithan (74) and Zakelo Duren.

Wayne HinsHaW/SALISBURY POST

Salisbury quarterback John Knox had a great night running the ball against NorthSurry in the first-round win.

Miller hit the ground run-ning, zigging and zagging for82 yards in the first quarteralone. Teammate CliffordLong opened the scoring witha 10-yard TD run. After West defensive back

Darryl Jackson recovered afumble at the Harding 31-yardline, Miller made it 14-0 witha fabulous read-and-reacttouchdown run off left tackle.“He’s a work in progress,”

Young said. “He keeps gettingbetter, just like all of us.”Harding coach Mark

Sanders was obviously moreimpressed.“You have to imagine your-

self standing at the bottom ofa hill,” he said after the Ramsfinished 3-9 overall. “Thensomebody takes off at fullspeed right at you, and youhave to catch him. That’s whathe was like tonight.”There was no catching the

Falcons on this night. They amassed 476 yards of

total offense, including 357 onthe ground. They did turn theball over three times, and thedefense yielded a first-halftouchdown for the first timeall season.“The streak was over, but

we couldn’t let that get usdown,” West defensive backEric Cowan said. “You’ve gotto let it go and play the nextdown.”Harding scored with 5:17

remaining in the first halfwhen quarterback MalcolmElliott lobbed a 15-yard TDpass to Eddie Graves on theleft side. It was only the eighthtouchdown West’s defense hassurrendered this fall. “He just threw him a good

ball,” Cowan said.West padded its lead and

closed the scoring in the thirdperiod when Miller capped asix-play, 63-yard drive with a1-yard burst into the end zone. The Falcons seemed head-

ed for a another touchdownin the game’s final minutewhen they advanced to theHarding 3. But confusionprevailed and somehow theguests were awarded the ballon downs.

“We were driving andthere was a play when (the of-ficials) assessed two penaltiesagainst them,” Young tried toexplain. “One of them was adead-ball late hit, which Ithought was roughing-the-passer and an automatic firstdown. On top of that there wasan unsportsmanlike penalty,which is normally 15 yardsbut only half the distance inthat situation. So we assumedwe had a first down at thatpoint.”Instead — after Long was

stuffed for a 1-yard loss onwhat should have been sec-ond-and-goal — the officialsgave Harding the ball.“If I had known that was

fourth down, I would havetried a different play,” Youngsaid. “We might have kickeda field goal or thrown theball.”Either way, the Falcons

survived a lethargic secondhalf and moved on. Cowanhad a busy night — fendingoff more passes than MinkaKelly — as Harding quarter-backs attempted 48 throws.“They were a pass-first

team,” he said. “The wholesecondary had to step up.These guys ran play after playin that hurry-up offense.There’s nothing you can do ex-

cept line up and face ‘em headon.”West gets to do that again

next week when it plays hostto Northwest Cabarrus in thesecond round. “We’re one step closer to

where we want to go,”Sherrill said. “We can alwaysfind things to clean up, thepenalties and taking bettercare of the ball. But a win’s awin, and that’s all that mattersin the playoffs.”Young simply agreed.“We accomplished what we

wanted to accomplish,” hesaid. “That’s by far the mostimportant thing.”

NOTES: The Falconsoutscored Northwest 26-7 inan early non-conference game— West’s smallest margin ofvictory all season. The Trojansadvanced with a 20-17 first-round win against WestIredell. ... Sophomore TreyShepherd recovered a first-quarter fumble for WestRowan. ... The Falcons previ-ous high for rushing yards ina game was 284 against EastRowan two weeks ago. Hard-ing’s net rushing total was mi-nus-3 yards. ... West has nowallowed 57 points — an aver-age of 4.8 per game — andposted six shutouts.

SALISBURY POST P R E P F O O T B A L L SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 5C

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Several blue West Rowan jerseys pounce toward a fumble as Harding’s Aquil Steward (34) and Kyree Thames (33) try to maintain possession.

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

West Rowan’s Odell McBride (5) and assistant Tim Dixon celebrate McBride's touchdown.

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

West coach Scott Young gathers his team around during a timeout in the Falcons’ win against Harding.

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Dionte Rankin (74) leads Dinkin Miller through the line.

WESTFROM 1C

BY BRIAN [email protected]

WELCOME — Talk aboutcoming backfrom thedead.D a v i e

County’s football team did justthat in a first-round, 35-10 4Aplayoff victory at North David-son Friday night.The War Eagles were blast-

ed in their regular-season finalelast week by the Black Knights51-28 and coach Doug Illing was-n’t happy about having to facethe same team again. And it looked like another

North Davidson victory was agiven when it went up 10-0 ear-ly. Davie fumbled at the end ofa 31-yard run. It missed a fieldgoal on the last play of the firsthalf.Things looked bleak.But give Illing and his staff

credit for making some majorhalftime adjustments, which in-cluded using a two tight end setand giving the ball to seldom-used Jacob Barber.D a v i e ’ s

Barber notonly helpedshave pointsoff the lead, heled a War Ea-gle explosion,scoring 35points over thelast 19 min-utes.With Bar-

ber as the centerpiece, Daviewent on a 10-play, 64-yard drive,which included nine runs andnot one third-down situation.Barber ran four of the last fiveplays, scoring on a 1-yard run.The defense took its turn to

come up big, stopping NorthDavidson star back Ryan Mor-gan on a fourth-and-two.The momentum had

switched to Davie’s side.Barber, who had all 12 of his

carries and all of his 70 yards inthe second half, ran like a mad-man. A 14-play, 68-yard scoringdrive saw him in the Wildcat po-sition.Carson Herndon then gave

Davie the lead when he hit JoeWatson on a 10-yard fade for a14-10 lead.Devore Holman’s defense

then had another three-and-out,thanks mainly to a bone-jarringhit by safety Alex Newman. Sixplays later, Davie was in the endzone again.Newman, another seldom-

used runner, got his chance andburst into the end zone from 15yards out for a 21-10 lead.Illing said Barber, a line-

backer, as well as Newman, gotto run because the defense was-n’t overworked.“We could fully utilize Bar-

ber because he wasn’t on thefield so long,” Illing said. “New-man usually comes off the fielddead-tired.”North Davidson had no fire

left, especially after Newman’sscore when A.J. Blaskievichpicked off a Karsten Miller pass.By this time, Davie was feel-

ing it. Newman broke two pret-ty runs on a six-play drive thatsaw him score his second touch-down for a 28-10 lead with 59seconds left.Adding insult to injury, Adam

Smith took an interception 66yards for the final score 25 sec-onds later.“This is the win we’ve been

waiting for — the feeling of asecond round game,” Illing said.That game will be against an-

other familiar foe — Mount Ta-bor, which soundly beat Davieearlier in the season. But so did the Black Knights,

didn’t they?Stay tuned.

BY PAUL [email protected]

KANNAPOLIS — What started outso easy for A.L.Brown in Fridaynight's 3AA first-round game ended

up being anything but.After jumping out to a 21-3 lead

over SPC foe Hickory Ridge in thesecond quarter, the top-seeded Won-ders somehow found themselveshanging on for their playoff life latein the fourth."We weren't expecting much and

when we came out we figured we hitthem hard and had already put themdown," Brown linebacker AndrewLeslie said after the Wonders barelyheld on 21-18 to avoid a stunning col-lapse and an equally-shocking upsetloss.Never mind Hickory Ridge being

put down. The Ragin' Bulls simplydominated from late in the secondquarter on and probably should'vewon.Only a bend-but-don't-break

Brown defense and two HickoryRidge miscues on special teams in thefourth quarter saved the Wonders(11-1), allowing them to advance to asecond-round meeting withStatesville."Give Hickory Ridge a lot of cred-

it," Brown head coach Ron Masseysaid. "They played extremely well.Offensively they had us on our heelson defense. But this thing is all aboutjust finding a way to win, and that'swhy I'm proud of our kids. Theyfound a way to win at the end."Even without its starting quarter-

back, Hickory Ridge moved the ballat will most of the night, but failed toconvert once it got inside the Brown10.The two biggest missed opportu-

nities came in the fourth quarter.Down by three, the Ragin' Bulls puttogether two impressive drives forthe tying or go-ahead score, movingto the Brown 7 early in the period andthen to the Wonders' 8 with a littleover two minutes left.

Both times,Brown's worn-out de-fense which was bat-tling cramps foundways to get stops —a tackle for a five-yard loss by Do-minique Phifer and apass knockdown byGerald Holt werekey plays — and

force field-goal attempts."They had all the momentum down

here twice and our kids camethrough," Massey said.And both times bad snaps cost

Hickory Ridge. The first one was highand threw off kicker Shannon Dru-gan's timing and he booted the ballstraight into the ground. The secondone was even higher and Drugan wastackled for a 22-yard loss.Brown took over with 2:05 left and

used three runs by Travis Riley topick up two first downs and run outthe clock.The Ragin' Bulls, who have had

snapping issues on offense all season,were forced to use their JV long snap-per in this game."He did the best he could do," Hick-

ory Ridge coach Marty Paxton said."But if we put it in the end zone wedon't have to worry about the fieldgoal."In all, the Ragin' Bulls made their

way inside the Brown 10 five timesin the game and scored only 10 pointsin those trips."That's the reason they're 11-1, be-

cause they can stop you from gettingin the end zone," Paxton said. "Theydefinitely do a great job here on de-fense."That Brown defense was on the

field the vast majority of the game,surrenduring 205 yards to HickoryRidge star Brian Baltimore and giv-ing up a 65-yard touchdown pass ona trick play, but it never gave up thelead."The kids deserve a lot of credit

for rising up at the end," Massey said."What happened in between we've gotto get better at, but I was real proudof the way they played."Massey couldn't say the same for

the offense, which fizzled after a siz-zling start, putting all the onus on thedefense.After scoring easily on three of

their first four possessions, the Won-ders had four three-and-outs and twoturnovers their next six times withthe ball. One Martel Campbell inter-ception set up a Hickory Ridge touch-down and another thrwarted a driveinside the Bulls' 5."We turned the ball over, we did-

n't execute well, we'd get a first downand then would miss a blocking as-signment or get a bad snap," Masseysaid. "We just didn't play well."Perhaps it was too easy at the start.

Brown's three touchdown drivesused all of six plays. First, Campbellconverted a Leslie fumble recoveryinto a 6-yard scoring run. TevenJones then hauled in a 27-yard touch-down pass and Damien Washingtonbroke away for a 58-yard score thatmade it 21-3 with 4:55 before half-time.Hickory Ridge fought back with

the long touchdown on a pass by re-ceiver Luke Robinson, then misseda chance to score again right beforethe end of the half, but capitalizedon Campbell's interception with a 7-yard run by Baltimore and two-pointconversion pass to close within threeearly in the third.Hickory Ridge ran 66 offensive

plays in the game, compared to just44 for Brown, and outgained theWonders for a second straight time.Riley and the offense were off the

field for large chunks of time, but hewas a force late, gaining 75 of histeam-high 96 yards in the secondhalf."It was hard because on the side-

line you get cold and you've got toget your legs back under you go-ing out there," Riley said. "But Ithought this team showed goodcomposure to hang on for this win.You've got to give the defensecredit for that."Said Leslie: "It's not how we want-

ed to do it, and we've got a bunch ofthings to figure out on Monday butwe're going to go hard. We've got alot to play for right now so we've gotto start getting focused."

6C • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 P R E P F O O T B A L L P L AY O F F S SALISBURY POST

davie 35, north davidson 10

nd dcFirst downs 18 16Rushing yardage 228 219Passing yardage 110 115Passing (C-A-I) 9-14-0 6-19-2Punting 3-40 3-29Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0Penalties 6-54 6-53

davie co. 0 0 14 21 — 35n. davidson 3 7 0 0 — 10

ND — Williams 19 FG, 6:31,1stND — Tuttle 3 run (Williams kick), 11:15, 2ndDC — Ja. Barber 1 run (Parrish kick),

7:45, 3rdDC — Watson 10 pass from Herndon

(Parrish kick), 8:21, 3rdDC — Newman 15 run (Parrish kick),

3:37, 4thDC — Newman 6 run (Parris kick), 0:59, 4thDC — Smith 66 interception return

(Parrish kick), 0:35, 4thindividual statistics

Rushing — DC: Smoot 18-112; Barber12-70; Newman 7-51; Herndon 8-2; team1-(minus 7). ND: Morgan 22-126; Tuttle3-53; Miller 8-41; Brunson 1-(minus 1).

Passing — DC: Herndon 9-14-0, 110.ND: Miller 6-19-2, 115.

Pass receiving — DC: Watson 6-76;Wallace 1-15; Wilson 1-14; Smoot 1-5. ND:B. Williams 2-64; Morgan 2-30; Smith1-11; Brunson 1-10.

DaviewinsDavie 35N. Davidson 10

david livengood/SALISBURY POST

Wonder running back Damien Washington finds a hole in the Hickory Ridge defense.

Wondershold on

david livengood/SALISBURY POST

Travis Riley is pushed out of bounds.

A.L. Brown 21H. Ridge 18

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Carson’s Jacorian Brown (45) celebrates a huge gain and lets the Hickory defense know about it.

313 yards and three touchdowns,torching Carson’s secondary with amyriad of crossing routes and un-derneath throws.The game morphed into a

shootout in the first half when John-son hooked up with receiver CianiVega for a 98-yard score, tying thegame at 7-all. The duo then sparkedthe second-half comeback, connect-ing on a 19-yard score late in thethird quarter and a 52-yarder earlyin the fourth, cutting Carson’s leadto 35-27.Two plays later, Carson reserve

tailback Travis Abbitt had the ballripped from his arms and returned

44 yards for a touchdown by Hick-ory corner Steven Davenport. John-son’s quarterback draw came upshort on the conversion, but Hicko-ry had all the momentum and waseyeing an upset over the No. 6 seed.Consecutive runs by Warren on

the next drive netted just a yard, set-ting up third-and-nine from Carson’s38. Gragg rolled out of the pocketand threw toward Clanton, who hadseparated from Davenport near thesideline. The ball felt incomplete,but that was due to the early contactfrom the defender, which drew aflag.“It was a really big play,” Clan-

ton said. “He was playing a littleclose on me, so I had to act to getthat call.”The view from the other sideline?“We let them off the hook a bunch

tonight,” Hickory coach John Wor-ley said. “We had them third-and-long, second-and-long a bunch oftimes and let them off the hook.That’s football.”Warren’s 35-yard run on the next

play moved the Cougars into the redzone, and Jacorian Brown finishedoff the drive with his second rush-ing touchdown, putting Carson upby two scores. A late field goal byCaleb Lippard sealed Carson’s first-ever home playoff win.“We try to keep an even keel,”

Carson coach Mark Woody said.“That’s something we talked abouteven in the first two years of theprogram. I try to maintain my edgeand let the kids play. I think it car-ries over in games like this. We keepa level head, listen to coaching anddo good things.”

CARSONFROM 8C

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Shaun Warren (5) had another big gamerushing for the Cougars.

BARBER

HOLT

Associated Press

The Top 25 preview ...AUBURN, Ala. — This

was supposed to be the an-other huge step for CamNewton in what had been aremarkably smooth seasonon the field, a chance for thiswondrous quarterback tolead Auburn into the South-eastern Conference champi-onship game and keep theTigers on course for a shotat the national title.Instead, heading into Sat-

urday's game against long-time rival Georgia, there'snothing but questions aboutwhat he's done off the field.Did someone claiming to

represent his family offerhim up to Mississippi Statefor $200,000? Did his fathercut a better deal withAuburn? Did Newton cheaton schoolwork while at hisprevious school?The dream season has be-

come a nightmare for New-ton and No. 2 Auburn (10-0,6-0 SEC). He looked like theclear choice to win the Heis-man Trophy, but some vot-ers are reconsidering theirballots. Others wonder ifNewton should even be eligi-ble, if this unbeaten seasonwill turn out to be nothingbut a mirage on the Plainsby the time the sordid tale isall sorted out.Auburn has steadfastly

defended its star player,with coach Gene Chizik go-ing so far as to label the re-ports "pure garbage" and de-clare that Newton will defi-nitely be starting against theBulldogs (5-5, 3-4). A win inthe Deep South's oldest ri-

valry would send the Tigersto the SEC title game for thefirst time since 2004.

No. 1 Oregon (9-0, 6-0 Pac-10) at California (5-4, 3-3)The Ducks are looking to

maintain their spot at the topof the polls and the BCSrankings with a win.

No. 3 TCU (10-0, 6-0 Moun-tain West) vs. San Diego State(7-2, 4-1)Having climbed to No. 3

in the BCS after a 40-pointwin at then-undefeated Utah,TCU likely has to keep put-ting up big numbers to stayahead of Boise State and inposition for a possible na-tional title shot.

No. 5 LSU (8-1) vsLouisiana-Monroe (4-5)LSU has climbed to fifth

in the BCS standings and,while a long shot for the na-tional title, has an inside laneto a major BCS bowl. LSUhas won nine straight inTiger Stadium, where theTigers are 34-6 under coachLes Miles.

No. 6 Wisconsin (8-1, 4-1Big Ten) at Indiana (4-5, 0-5)Wisconsin continues its

quest for its first Rose Bowlappearance since 2000 withtiebreakers in its favor. No. 7 Stanford (8-1, 5-1

Pac-10) vs. Arizona State (4-5, 2-4)Stanford needs to keep

momentum going toward itsfirst Rose Bowl berth since2000. The Cardinal have notwon in Tempe since Nov. 13,1999.

No. 8 Ohio State (8-1, 4-1 BigTen) vs Penn State (6-3, 3-2)The game pits the two ac-

tive coaches with the mostwins in Division I: Penn

State’s Joe Paterno with 400and Ohio State’s Jim Tresselwith 237.

No. 9 Nebraska (8-1, 4-1 Big12) vs. Kansas (3-6, 1-4)Nebraska is closing in on

the Big 12 North title andcan’t afford to slip upagainst a team the likes ofthe Jayhawks. The gamemarks the end of the nation’slongest continuous series, at105 games. Nebraska goes tothe Big Ten next year.

No. 11 Alabama (7-2, 4-2SEC) vs No. 17 MississippiState (7-2, 4-2)What’s at stake? Probably

not an Alabama title shot fora change. The Crimson Tidecan stay in contention for aBCS bowl with a win butneeds substantial help to winits third straight SEC Westtitle.

No. 12 Oklahoma State (8-1,4-1 Big 12) at Texas (4-5, 2-4)Oklahoma State is 1-14 in

Austin with the only wincoming in 1944.

No. 13 Iowa (7-2, 4-1 BigTen) at Northwestern (6-3, 2-3)One of four teams with

one loss in conference play,Iowa is trying to stay in con-tention for a Big Ten cham-pionship with Ohio Statecoming up next week.

No. 14 Arkansas (7-2, 4-2SEC) vs UTEP (6-4, 3-4)Arkansas’ hopes for a

BCS bowl game got a boostwith last week’s win at SouthCarolina and Alabama’s lossto LSU.

No. 15 Utah (8-1) at NotreDame (4-5)Utah’s reputation as one

of the nation’s elite teams isat stake following a 47-7blowout loss to TCU.

No. 18 Arizona (7-2, 4-2Pac-10) vs USC (6-3, 3-3)Arizona, the only Pac-10

team never to play in theRose Bowl, suffered a ma-jor blow to its chances witha blowout loss last week atStanford.

No. 19 Oklahoma (7-2, 3-2Big 12) vs Texas Tech (5-4, 3-4)Oklahoma will try to

keep intact the nation’slongest home winningstreak (35 games).

No. 20 Missouri (7-2, 3-2 Big12) vs Kansas State (6-3, 3-3)WHAT’S AT STAKE:

Missouri seeks to regain itsfooting after a pair of disap-pointing losses

No. 22 South Carolina (6-3,4-3 SEC) vs No. 24 Florida (6-3, 4-3)The SEC East title and a

trip to Atlanta for theleague championship game.It’s the first winner-take-allgame in the Swamp sinceTennessee upset Florida inDecember 2001. South Car-olina and Florida squaredoff in a similar scenario in2000, with Steve Spurrier’sGators overcoming a 21-point deficit to win 41-21 inGainesville.

SALISBURY POST S P O R T S D I G E S T SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 7C

AssociAted press

Auburn coach Gene chizikhas defended cam Newton.

Dream season a nightmareAssociated Press

The ACC roundup ...RALEIGH — They'll

honor 19 seniors beforeNorth Carolina State's finalhome game of the season.The biggest cheers mightcome for a junior star whohasn't said whether he'll beback next year.Quarterback Russell

Wilson will take part inSenior Day festivities to-day when the Wolfpackplays host to strugglingWake Forest. The AtlanticCoast Conference's leaderin total offense has yet todecide whether he'll returnfor his senior season orcontinue his pro baseballcareer.If nothing else, the tal-

ented two-way threat willhave one more chance toput up big numbers in frontof the home fans againstone of the ACC's worst de-fenses.Wilson leads the league

with averages of 279 yardspassing and 312 total yards,and has been N.C. State'sundisputed leader.

Va. TECH-UNCCHAPEL HILL — With

one more win and a littlebit of help, Virginia Techreally can make its 0-2start a distant memory.The No. 16 Hokies have

a chance to earn a spot. Toget there, the Hokies wouldneed to win at North Car-olina and have GeorgiaTech beat Miami earlier inthe day, a scenario that

would give the Hokies theirfourth Coastal Divisioncrown in six seasons.The Hokies (7-2, 5-0)

hasn't lost since teh firsttwo games, with quarter-back Tyrod Taylor rankingsecond in the league in to-tal offense to go with 16touchdown passes.But the series with the

Tar Heels (6-3, 3-2) hasbeen tough. Since ButchDavis' arrival in ChapelHill, Virginia Tech earneda 17-10 home win in 2007and needed to rally from a17-3 deficit for a 20-17 roadwin in 2008.

DUKE-BCDURHAM — Boston

College boasts the ACC'stop rusher — and theleague's worst collectiveground game.Quite the statistical odd-

ity, but here's another:It's midway through No-

vember, and Duke still has-n't been eliminated frombowl consideration.The numbers have been

tricky for both the Eagles(4-5, 2-4) and Blue Devils(3-6, 1-4), a pair of lower-di-vision teams trying to keeptheir flickering postseasonhopes alive when theymeet.The Blue Devils had lost

six in a row before theircurrent two-game roll, andhave no margin for error.One more loss will ensureanother bowl-free holidayseason; Duke hasn't playedin the postseason since1994.

Bobcats win againAssociated Press

The NBA roundup ...WASHINGTON — Ger-

ald Wallace had 25 pointsand 14 rebounds and man-aged to show nearly asmuch flash as No. 1 overallpick John Wall, leadingCharlotte over Washington93-85.Boris Diaw added 19

points for the Bobcats, andD.J. Augustin had 17 pointsand 10 assists.Wall had 13 points, 11

assists and four steals — abit short of the triple-dou-ble show he put on twonights earlier — and hadtrouble finding his shot. Hewent 6 for 16 from thefield.

T’wolves 112, Knicks 103MINNEAPOLIS —

Kevin Love grabbed afranchise-record 31 re-bounds and scored 31points, the NBA’s first 30-30 game in 28 years, andthe Minnesota Timber-wolves rallied from a 21-point, third-quarter deficitto stun the New YorkKnicks 112-103.

Jazz 90, Hawks 86ATLANTA — Paul Mill-

sap hit a corner jumperwith 1:20 to play and Utahcame back from a double-digit, second-half deficitfor the fourth consecutive

game to beat Atlanta.Raptors 110, Magic 106ORLANDO, Fla. — Son-

ny Weems made a 3-point-er with 7.1 seconds left andToronto hit four freethrows from there to snapa six-game losing streak bybeating Orlando.

Suns 103, Kings 89PHOENIX — Steve

Nash had 28 points, 14 as-sists and even seven re-bounds on the day of thebirth of his son, and theSuns beat Sacramento inPhoenix for the 10thstraight time.

Rockets 102, Pacers 99INDIANAPOLIS —

Brad Miller had 23 pointsand eight rebounds, whileLuis Scola added 16 pointsin Houston’s first gamesince losing Yao Ming for aleast a week with asprained ankle.

Mavericks 99, 76ers 90DALLAS (AP) — Re-

serve J.J. Barea scored aseason-high 19 points, DirkNowitzki added 16 despitea sprained ankle, and Dal-las beat Philadelphia for itsthird straight victory.Shawn Marion had 16

points and Jason Terry 13to help the Mavericks totheir fifth victory in sixgames.Nowitzki rolled his right

ankle in the second quar-

Devils get home victoryAssociated Press

The NHL roundupNEWARK, N.J. — Ilya

Kovalchuk scored on apower play at 3:27 of over-time — New Jersey’sslumping $100 millionman’s first goal in sevengames — to give the Devilstheir first home victory ofthe year, 4-3 over the Ed-monton Oilers on Fridaynight.Kovalchuk rebounded

after losing control of thepuck about 20 feet fromgoalie Jhonas Enroth onthe final attempt in ashootout in the Devils’ 5-4home loss to Buffalo onWednesday night.

Penguins 5, Lightning 1PITTSBURGH — Em-

battled Marc-Andre Fleurymade 15 saves in his bestperformance of the seasonto help Pittsburgh win foronly the third time in ninegames.Fleury earned his 150th

career win, but only thesecond in nine starts thisseason. He had started and

finished only one of theprevious five games, tem-porarily losing his startingjob to backup Brent John-son.

Avalanche 5, Blue Jackets 1COLUMBUS, Ohio —

David Jones had two goalsand an assist in his returnfrom a hand injury and twoformer Columbus prospectsGreg Mauldin and PhilippeDupuis scored 6 minutesapart in the second periodin Colorado’s victory overthe Blue Jackets.Mauldin scored his first

career goal, short-handedat 10:57. Paul Stastny alsoscored for Colorado. An-toine Vermette scored forColumbus, coming off an 8-1 victory over St. Louis onWednesday night.

Panthers 2, Wild 1SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) —

Chris Higgins and MikeSantorelli scored in a 53-second span in the first pe-riod, and Tomas Vokounmade 22 saves for Florida.Cal Clutterbuck scored

for Minnesota, and JoseTheodore stopped 25 shots.

UNC sends letter toNCAA about tutor

Associated Press

CHAPEL HILL — NorthCarolina has formally bro-ken ties with the tutorlinked to the ongoingNCAA investigation of itsfootball program.In a letter dated Nov. 5

and released Thursday, ath-letic director Dick Baddourinformed Jennifer Wiley ofChapel Hill that the univer-sity had learned she provid-ed "impermissible extrabenefits" to players, includ-ing about $2,000 in travelexpenses this year. It alsostates she "provided imper-missible academic assis-tance" to some student-ath-letes in 2009 and 2010.The letter insisted she

have no contact with anystudent-athlete for fiveyears. It bars her from theKenan Football Center andother campus athletic facili-ties in any role outside thatof as a member of the gen-eral public during that time.

GOLFMELBOURNE, Aus-

tralia — In wind strongenough to blow sand out ofthe bunkers and kick updust along the sandy ter-rain, Tiger Woods squeezedhis eyes shut as he tried toclear his vision.That was the least of his

problems Friday in theAustralian Masters.He found himself going

back to his old swing tohelp cope with the blusteryconditions at Victoria GolfClub, and he turned in aperformance that fansaround the world are usedto seeing this year.One day after a promis-

ing round, Woods began aslow slide down the leader-board.With consecutive bogeys

on the back nine that killedhis momentum, Woods shota 1-over 72 in the secondround and wound up nineshots behind Adam Bland,who played in the sameconditions and shot a 4-un-der 67.• GUADALAJARA,

Mexico — U.S. Women’sOpen champion PaulaCreamer shot a 6-under 66to take a one-stroke leadover Norway’s Suzann Pet-tersen in the Lorena OchoaInvitational.

BASEBALLNEW YORK — Derek

Jeter's grandmother hasbeen joking that he doesn'thave a job."Really it doesn't feel

like there's anything differ-ent," the New York Yan-kees captain said Thursdayabout becoming a freeagent for the first time. General manager Brian

Cashman, Jeter and fellowfree agent Mariano Riverawere all together in NewYork on Thursday night,but not for negotiations.Before attending formermanager Joe Torre's SafeAt Home Foundation bene-fit, they couldn't avoid con-tract talk.• ATLANTA — The At-

lanta Braves have addedformer managers Lee Eliaand Dave Trembley totheir baseball operationsstaff.• BOSTON — Andrew

Miller has been acquired bythe Boston Red Sox from theFlorida Marlins for DustinRichardson in a trade of left-handed pitchers.

NFLCHARLOTTE — The

Carolina Panthers aredown to fourth-string run-ning back Mike Goodsonfor Sunday's game at Tam-pa Bay.DeAngelo Williams,

Jonathan Stewart andTyrell Sutton all missedpractice again Fridaywith injuries and won'tplay against the Bucca-neers. Goodson will bepromoted to starter forthe NFL's 26th-rankedrushing unit.• NASHVILLE, Tenn.

— Kerry Collins got themajority of the starter’sreps Friday and the Titansquarterback stayed afterpractice to throw to newreceiver Randy Moss.Vince Young continued to

be limited with an ankle in-jury and will be a game-timedecision Sunday against Mi-ami.“We’ll warm him up and

see how he is,” coach JeffFisher said.• NEW YORK — Cincin-

nati wide receiver ChadOchocinco was fined$20,000 by the NFL on Fri-day for violating theleague's uniform policy.Ochocinco wore gold

cleats during the Bengals'27-21 loss at Pittsburgh onMonday night. He was pre-viously fined $25,000 forviolating the league's socialmedia policy.• ATLANTA — NFL

commissioner Roger Good-ell said Atlanta likely willhave to build a new stadi-um if it wants to host itsthird Super Bowl.

AssociAted press

carl edwards signs autographs after winning the pole.

Edwards on poleAssociated Press

The NASCAR notebook ...AVONDALE, Ariz. —

Carl Edwards won the poleat Phoenix InternationalRaceway in Friday’s qualify-ing with a track-record lap.Edwards ran a lap of

136.389 mph in a Ford forRoush-Fenway Racing toearn the top starting spot inSunday’s race. He broke therecord of 135.854 set byRyan Newman in 2004.“It’s very important to

start up front, and it’s one ofthe things we’ve been focus-ing on, qualifying,” Edwardssaid. “It’s really importanthere. This track, like almostall tracks we race on, trackposition is so important.”AJ Allmendinger quali-

fied second for beleagueredRichard Petty Motorsportswith a lap of 136.250, andKurt Busch was third forPenske Racing with a136.240. The top three driv-ers all broke the trackrecord.The three championship

contenders will start fairlyclose together, with DennyHamlin qualifying 17th,four-time Phoenix winnerJimmie Johnson in 21st andKevin Harvick at 29th.For Allmendinger, it was

a near-miss of the pole at atime his race team could usea lift. RPM’s financial situa-tion is rocky, and its carsand engines are held bypartner Roush each weekuntil the organization re-ceives a check from RPM.

TRUCK TALKAVONDALE, Ariz. —

Kyle Busch has had discus-sions with IndyCar driverTony Kanaan about havingthe Brazilian run someNASCAR races for Busch’steam.“I told him that with Toy-

ota’s support and with thesupport of the Trucks Se-

ries, I think it would be kindof fun to see him,” Buschsaid Friday at Phoenix Inter-national Raceway.“Test him a little bit, get

his feet wet. Get him insome good equipment, go outthere and run some racesand get some experience.Maybe next year and maybe2012 go on in a full year.That’s kind of what I ex-plained to him.”Busch said Kanaan has

yet to decide if he’s interest-ed in competing in theTrucks Series.Kanaan, the 2004 IndyCar

champion and winner of 14races, is currently lookingfor a job in the IndyCar Se-ries. He was released fromAndretti Autosport at theend of the season becausethe team does not have asponsor for him in 2011.

HARVICK-HORNADAYAVONDALE, Ariz. —

Kevin Harvick Inc. signedRon Hornaday to a multi-year extension to drive inNASCAR’s Trucks Series.The 52-year-old driver

will return to the No. 33Chevrolet next season. Spon-sorship was not announcedon Friday.Hornaday has been with

KHI since 2005, and won twoof his four championshipswith the organization. He’salso the series’ winningestdriver with 47 victories.“Ron has been an integral

part of our truck series pro-gram since he joined KHI in2005,” said team co-ownerKevin Harvick. “He hasdriven our organization totwo truck series champi-onships and I firmly believethat we will continue to com-pete for championships withHornaday as our driver.”Hornaday went into Fri-

day night’s race at PhoenixInternational Raceway sev-enth in the series standingswith two victories this year.

Will this be Wilson’slast home contest?

BY MIKE [email protected]

North Surry tailback JostonPhipps was as ex-citing as adver-tised, rushing for205 yards against

Salisbury on Friday night.“That back had some moves on

him,” Salisbury linebacker TravisByrd said. “He wasn’t one to just stand

there looking at ya. I give it up to him.He tried to score on every play.”

Phipps was great early and late,but he had a stretch of eight carriesfor zero net yards in the second quar-ter, and that’s when the first-round2AA playoff game was decided.

Dominating on both sides of theball, explosive Salisbury scored fourtimes in the last 10 minutes of thefirst half to take control. Despitefighting sickness and injuries, the

Hornets had enough healthy bodiesto take a solid 56-28 victory.

Salisbury will be home again inthe second round because ForestHills upset No. 2 seed South Iredell.

Tre Jackson had four tackles forloss in the first half to lead Salis-bury’s defense, and B.J. Woods in-tercepted two passes.

John Knox threw three TD pass-es, two to tight end Riley Gallagher,to spark Salisbury’s offense. Do-

minique Dismuke found the end zonethree times, and Romar Morris wasa blur scoring two rushing TDs.

Salisbury rushed for a whopping415 yards. Morris, Knox and Dis-muke combined for 14 carries fordouble-digit yardage.

“We read our blocks well andwere able to take it outside on thema lot,” tackle Marqui Ross said.

North Surry coach Brian Hamp-ton piloted a 1-10 spread team in

2009. He finished 8-4 this season af-ter switching to the I-formation andgiving Phipps, a strong scholar whohas a visit to N.C. State coming up,all the carries he could handle.

“I get a lot of flak for running Jos-ton so much, but he’s special, andwhen you’ve got a guy like that yougive him the rock,” Hampton said.

After North Surry accepted the

BY JOSH [email protected]

CHINA GROVE — Carson quarter-back Zack Gragg andreceiver Cody Clan-ton formed a nearlyunstoppable partner-

ship all night.But it was the one play on which they

failed to connect that ultimately swungthe momentum in the Cougars’ 45-33win over Hickory Friday in the firstround of the Class 3A playoffs. Carsonhosts Concord in the second round nextweek.

Down 35-13 late in the third quarter,Hickory scored 20 points in 4:01 andcame within a failed two-point conver-sion of tying the game early in thefourth. However, Clanton drew a passinterference penalty on third-and-nine,extending the ensuing Carson drive andallowing the Cougars to score theclinching touchdown.

It was one of the few big penaltiesthat didn’t go against Carson, which wasflagged 14 times – several others weredeclined – for 130 yards. Perhaps it wasfitting that Gragg and Clanton had arole in the game-changing play, becausefor once, they didn’t play second fiddleto Shaun Warren.

Sure, Warren had another big night,rushing 30 times for 266 yards andthree touchdowns, but the passing gamewas much more than just a complimenton this night. Gragg was 16-of-23 for aschool-record 329 yards, and Clantoncaught seven passes for a school-record192 yards. Of those 16 completions, 11went for first downs.

“We knew coming out they were astack team and they were going to tryand stop the run,” Clanton said. “So, weknew it would be a good game for pass-ing.”

What’s impressive is that Carson’spassing game was so effective consid-

ering the factors working against it.The team was coming off a bye week,the temperature was in the low 40s andGragg hadn’t taken a live snap in threeweeks after injuring his knee againstSouth Rowan.

But none of those factors seemed tomatter. Gragg and Clanton, who hookedup for a 54-yard touchdown in the firsthalf, keyed the greatest offensive per-formance in school history. Carson (10-2) had 639 yards of total offense.

“Pretty much everything,” Graggsaid of what worked for the Cougars.“[We used] a lot of play action, becauseof the way they played, they couldn’tget to our backs out of the backfield.So, anything in the flat [was open]. AndCody, he was money all night. He’s al-ways good to go to.”

As impressive as the Cougars werein the passing game, their pass defensewas equally porous. Hickory (4-8) quar-terback Kyle Johnson completed 10-of-26 pass-es for

SATURDAYNovember 13, 2010 8C

Ronnie Gallagher, Sports Editor, 704-797-4287 [email protected] www.salisburypost.com

PREPFOOTBALLS A L I S B U R Y P O S T

Winners: Hornets, Carson

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Salisbury’s Romar Morris is tackled by North Surry’s Alex Ratcliff. Morris had his second straight 100-yard game as the Hornets beat the Greyhounds.

CCC champion Salisbury romps past North Surry

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Ryan Shoaf (99), T.J. Smith (40) and Jeremiah Smith (95) defend against Hickory’s Kyle Johnson (11).

Carson 45Hickory 33

jon c. lakey/SALISBURY POST

Carson quarterback Zack Gragg threwfor a career-high 329 yards.

See CARSON, 6C

Salisbury 56N. Surry 28

See SALISBURY, 4C

Cougars advance

(ARA) - In this econ-omy, you may feel grate-ful to have a roof overyour head. But how muchdo you really think aboutyour roof? It’s one of themost important elementsof your home, one thathelps protect all the otherparts - not to mention thepeople - under it. And“greening” your roof is agreat way to ensure it notonly protects your family,but saves you somemoney and helps the envi-ronment at the same time.

Heating, cooling andelectricity costs make upthe largest chunk of theaverage household’s an-nual utility bill. Here aresome roof upgrades thatcan help improve a home’senergy efficiency and re-duce utility costs.

New roofA damaged or worn out

roof cannot protect yourhome efficiently, and itsfailure to do so can causesignificant damage toother parts of the house,and drive up heating andcooling costs.

EnergyStar.gov is agood place to start if youwant to learn more aboutenergy-efficient roofs.Energy Star qualifiedproducts reflect more ofthe sun’s rays, loweringthe surface temperatureof the roof by up to 100 de-

grees. Energy efficientroofs reduce the amountof heat lost during thewinter, and can reduce theenergy needed to coolyour home by 10 to 15 per-cent, according to the En-ergy Star website.

SkylightsA skylight is another

way to green your roofand trim utility bills. Theabundant natural light askylight admits into yourhome can help reduce de-pendency on artificiallight sources and the elec-tricity they consume.

Skylights are also agreat way to passivelyvent moisture, fumes andpotentially harmful

volatile organic com-pounds (VOCs), improv-ing indoor air quality.Venting skylights let coolbreezes in and can helplower cooling costs inspring and fall, when in-door temperatures may betoo warm for comfort, butnot hot enough to warrantturning on the air condi-tioning.

And one of the mostcommon homeowner con-cerns about skylights - thepotential for leaks - nolonger prevents green-minded homeowners frominstalling them. Productslike Velux America’s NoLeak Skylight deliver allthe beauty and benefits ofa skylight with a guaran-

tee that a properly in-stalled skylight will neverleak. When properly in-stalled, Velux skylightsare no more prone to leaksthan any other properlyinstalled, quality windowin your home. Visitwww.veluxusa.com tolearn more.

InsulationDirectly beneath your

roof is one of the most im-portant weapons in yourhome’s energy efficiencyarsenal - attic insulation.Inadequate insulation andair leakage are top energywasters in most homes,according to the U.S. De-partment of Energy.Poorly insulated attics canallow heat to leak out inwinter and fail to repelheat from outside thehome in summer - all ofwhich means your heat-ing, ventilation and airconditioning system re-quires more energy to op-erate.

EnergyStar.gov recom-mends you add insulationto your attic if the existinginsulation is just levelwith or below the floorjoists. If you cannot seethe floor joists becausethey’re covered by insula-tion, you probably haveenough insulation andwon’t gain any energy-savings benefit by addingmore.

Solar panelsSolar energy has been

called the only truly cleanpower source. Advancesin solar technology makeit possible for homeown-ers to harness the powerof the sun to heat theirwater and generate elec-tricity. Low profilerooftop solar panels andthe Energy Star-qualifiedVelux solar water heatingsystem use the sun’s en-ergy to heat water and

help trim your water heat-ing bill, while loweringyour family’s carbon foot-print. Using solar thermalpower to heat water notonly lowers the cost ofheating water, it can alsoreduce the high summernitrogen oxide and carbonmonoxide emissions thatfrequent burner startupscause.

Courtesy of ARAContent

SALISBURY POST w w w. s a l i s b u r y p o s t . c o m SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 1D

• APPLE HOUSE REALTY INC.

• AREY REALTY

• CAROLINA FARM CREDIT

• CENTURY 21 - TOWNE & COUNTRY

• HOLLY LEAF APARTMENTS

• KEY REAL ESTATE INC.

• STOUT HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING, INC.

• WALLACE REALTY

Inside this week...

To place your ad in this section, call 704-797-4241

- Brand new construction in Corbin Woods- 3 bedroom, 2 bath- Over 1500 square feet- Beautiful hardwood floors - solid Oak- Kitchen with center island, ceramic tile floors, plenty of cabinet space,stainless steel appliances- Spacious master suite with custom walk-in closet with built in shelves- Master bath has double vanity, garden tub, & separate shower

- Living room with fireplace, gas logs- Formal dining room- 12' x 10' back deck- Laundry room with built in cabinets & deep laundry sink- 2 car attached garage- All electric utilities- Great location - walk to Corbin Hills Golf Course!- Easy access to I-85, shopping, restaurants!

This Week’s Featured Property

314 Eastwood Drive, Salisbury

Apple House Realty • 704-633-5067

ENERGY STAR qualified No Leak Skylights bring more natural light into your home whilehelping to lower power bills.

Green Roof Improvements - That Can Save Money - And The Environment

OPEN HOUSESThis Weekend!

Go online for interactiveopen house maps and

directions.

Open House Sunday 2-4PM

B&R Realty704-633-2394 2

307 Eastwood Drive, SalisburyVery nice 2 BR 2 BA condo overlooking pool andgolf course! Tastefully decorated, 2 master suites,nice floor plan, screened-in porch at rear. T51378$103,900 Monica Poole 704-245-4628 Directions: Stokes Ferry Rd, left onto Wildwood, leftonto Eastwood, right at 2nd entrance, home on left.

S47901

Open House Sunday 2-4

750 Bridlewood DriveGold Hill, NC 28071

Come and view this beautiful 4 BR home nes-tled on almost 4 acres! $338,000Directions: Take Hwy 52 South through Rock-well. Right on Gin Road. Left on Beatty FordRoad. Right into Saddlebrook East. The house isat the end in the cul-de-sac.

704-633-5067Se Habla Español

1APPLE HOUSE REALTY

S47892

OPEN HOUSESUNDAY 1PM-4PM

There is a NEW group of people EVERY day,looking for a DEAL in the classifieds.

2D • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 C L A S S I F I E D SALISBURY POST

THE

YOUDESERVE.

LifestyleLOANS FOR:

2810 STATESVILLE BLVD. |

LivingHomesLand

sfefesf sfesY

LiLifL fLifVRESED

UOYfYO

EHTTH

elletyylsst.EV

U:ROFSNAOL :ROFSNAOL

|.DVLLVBELLIVSETATS0182

mortgage lendersLENDER/PHONE 30-YEAR FIXED RATE + POINTS 15-YEAR FIXED RATE + POINTS ADDITIONAL PROGRAMSCarolina Farm CreditLibby 704-637-2380or Janie Furr 704-786-0193

No acreage requirements. Financing available for lots to large tracts andeven homes inside the city limits. Call Libby or Janie for more information. CALL FOR RATES CALL FOR RATES

The Salisbury Post Mortgage Program is designed to give potential home buyers up-to-date mortgage lender information. You can promote your business on this grid program for as lowas $37.00* per week! The grid will list your company name, phone number, and available mortgage program options. The Mortgage Lenders Chart runs in the Real Estate Saturday section.Additionally, an ad adjacency (9 columns x 1.75”) will be rotated with participating advertisers.With mortgage rates at an all-time low, and the reach of the Salisbury Post, the Mortgage Lender Chart is sure to get results! Call us today to have your business listed! 704-797-4241*with a one-year contract. Other rates available. Call for details.

C47553

w w w . K e y R e a l - E s t a t e . c o m

C46978

1755 Hwy 29 S.China Grove

704.857.0539

CHINA GROVE $79,900 - Remodeled kitchen,appliances, basement, garage

HWY 152 EAST AREA $115,900 - Total reno-vation, 2 baths, almost an acre

First row: Kerry Robson, Ellen Carter, Barbara Collins, Sheila Sadighi. Second row: JimCrawford, Jean Miller, Cindy Thompson, Cindy Ehrman, Cindy Martens, Barry Abrams

AGENT ON DUTY

Cindy Snuggs704-202-6308

REAL Servicein Real Estate

718 Faith Rd. • Salisbury704-633-5334

C46824

View all area listings on our website. Ask about our FREE Home Warranty!

AreyRealty.com

A P A R T M E N T SWe Offer

PRICE~QUALITY~LOCATION2BR ~ 1.5 BA ~ Starting at $555

Water, Sewage & Garbage included

Senior DiscountWITH 12 MONTH LEASE

704-637-55882205 Woodleaf Rd., Salisbury, NC 28147

Located at Woodleaf Road & Holly Avenuewww.Apartments.com/hollyleaf

PRIOR TO RENTINGVISIT or CALL

C46365

Homesfor Sale

AlexanderPlace

China Grove, 2 newhomes under construc-tion ... buy now and pickyour own colors. Pricedat only $114,900 andcomes with a stove anddishwasher. B&R Realty704-633-2394

BUYER BEWAREThe Salisbury PostClassified Advertisingstaff monitors all adsubmissions forhonesty and integrity.However, somefraudulent ads are notdetectable. Pleaseprotect yourself bychecking the validity ofany offer before youinvest money in abusiness opportunity,job offer or purchase.

Homesfor Sale

Convenient Location

SALISBURY - Very nice2 BR 2.5 BA condooverlooking golf courseand pool! Great views,freshly decorated,screened in porch atrear. T51378. $103,900Monica Poole B&RRealty 704-245-4628

Cul-de-sac

Salisbury, 3 BR, 2 BA ,wonderful location, newhardwoods in master BRand living room. Lovelykitchen with newstainless appliances.Deck, private back yard.R51492 $124,900Monica Poole B&RRealty 704-245-4628

Homesfor Sale

Bank Foreclosures & Dis-tress Sales. These homesneed work! For a FREE list: www.applehouserealty.com

Great Home!

Salisbury 2604 StokesFerry. Lovely 3BR/2BABrick Ranch in GreatLocation. HardwoodFloors, Large Rooms, Sun-Porch, Attached Garage,Big Fenced Backyard.$129,900 MLS#976913For Details 704-202-0091

GREAT INVESTMENT

Salisbury, 2 BR, 1 BA,Cute home in city on cor-ner lot. Easy access toshopping, great invest-ment or for first timehome buyer. R50827$49,900 704.633.2394B&R Realtywww.bostandrufty-realty.com

HEATED POOL

2 homes plus pool house onproperty. Main house: 4 BR,3.5 BA, 3483 sq ft. Guesthouse: 1295 sq ft, 3 Br, 1BA, attached garage. De-tached 24x28 garage and 2other outbuildings. Con-crete pool w/waterfall. B&RRealty Dale Yontz704.202.3663

New Construction

Salisbury. 3BR, 2BA. Newstainless appliances, openfloor plan, wonderful locationclose to hospital, still time tochoose colors. R51547$99,900. Monica Poole704.245.4628 B&R Realty

New Home

Salisbury. ForestCreek. 3 Bedroom, 1.5bath. New home pricedat only $98,900. R48764B&R Realty704.633.2394

Homesfor Sale

Homesfor Sale

New Listing

Rockwell 3 BR, 2 BA inHunters Pointe. Aboveground pool, garage, hugearea that could easilyfinished upstairs. R51150A.$179,900. B&R Realty704-633-2394

New Listing

Salisbury, 3 BR, 2.5 BA,wonderful home on over2 acres, horses allowed,partially fenced backyard, storage building.$164,900 R51465 B&R Realty 704.633.2394

New Listing

Spencer, 4 BR 2BA, likenew Craftsman Style,huge front porch,renovated kitchen andbath, fresh paint.R51516 $127,000 DaleYontz B&R Realty 704-202-3663

PRICED TO SELL

Granite Quarry-GarlandPlace, 3 BR, 2 BA, tripleattached garage, singledetached garage, wholehouse generator. Niceyard. R50640 $164,900B&R Realty704.633.2394www.bostandrufty-realty.com

Reduced

Fulton Heights - 3 BR, 2BA, Attached carport,Rocking Chair frontporch, nice yard. R50846$119,900 Monica Poole704.245.4628 B&R Realtywww.bostandrufty-realty.com

REDUCED

Rockwell. 2 BR, 1 BA,hardwood floors, de-tached carport, handicapramp. $99,900 R47208 B&R Realty 704.633.2394

Homesfor Sale

Homesfor Sale

REDUCED

Salisbury, 3 BR, 1.5 BAin very niceneighborhood. Brick, nicesize living room, nicekitchen with bar anddining room combo.Large yard, on Cul-de-sac. R50212. $69,900. Monica Poole 704-245-4628 B&R Realty

Salisbury

REDUCED

3 BR, 2.5 BA, nice woodfloors. Range, microwave,refrigerator, dishwasher,garbage disposal, washer,dryer, gas logs, outbuilding.1 yr home warranty. $1,500carpet allowances. R49933A$195,500 B&R Realty DaleYontz 704.202.3663

Salisbury, 2 BR, 1 BA,Almost all new windows,some new carpet, nicehome on dead end street,detached garage with dirtfloor, beautiful largetrees, nice sized lot.51047 $79,900 B&RRealty. Dale Yontz704.202.3663

West Schools. 3BR, 2BA.Kitchen with appliances,laundry room, living &dining room, fireplace withgas logs. 2 car detachedgarage. Central heat & air.House built in 2003. Largelot. $134,000 Reduced$126,500 or make offer.Please call 704-633-0229

Homesfor Sale

Land for Sale

Homesfor Sale

Salisbury, 3 BR, 1 BAFull UnfinishedBasement. Sunroom withfireplace. Double garage.R50828 $89,900 B & RRealty 704.633.2394

Homesfor Sale

Salisbury, 3 BR, 2 BAWell establishedneighborhood. All brickhome with large deck.Large 2 car garage.R50188 $163,900 B&RRealty 704.633.2394

Homesfor Sale

East Salisbury. 4BR,2½BA. Lease option pur-chase.1,800 sq. ft. +/-. Call704-638-0108

Genesis Realty704-933-5000genesisrealtyco.comForeclosure Experts

Salisbury. 2 or 3 bedroomTownhomes. For informa-tion, call Summit Develop-ers, Inc. 704-797-0200

Homesfor Sale

Plantation Ridge–Price Below Tax Value

Salisbury-2,495 SF, 3BR, 2½ BA. Fully renovated!New roof, garage doors, BA vanities & fixtures; mastersuite w/walk-in closet on main level, large kitchenw/stainless steel appliances, breakfast area, diningroom, living room/office, spacious family room, deckand sunroom, fenced-in back yard, extra work space ingarage. $199,900. Call 704-645-1093 or [email protected]

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 PM

Faith. 1145 Long Creek. 3 Beds, 2 Baths, 2 BonusRooms. Master on main, Hardwood and ceramictile floors. Storage everywhere. $199,900. Kerry,Key Real Estate 704-857-0539 or 704-433-7372.Directions: Faith Rd to L on Rainey. R into ShadyCreek.

West Rowan – Country Club living in the country.Builder's custom brick home has 4 BR, 3 ½ BA w/mainfloor master suite. 3300 sqft. + partially finished bonusroom. Lots of ceramic and granite. 2 fireplaces withgas logs. 6.5 very private wooded acres. Priced at$399,000. Reduced to sell! $389,000. Call for appt.704-431-3267

Kannapolis. 3BR/2BA. Ofc., all new A/C, heating &siding, granite in bathrooms & kitchen, new stainless steelappliances, new washer & dryer, all new tile & carpet. Easyaccess to shopping & Dale Earnhardt Blvd. $74,900 +$2,000 in closing costs with full price offer. 980-621-9197

Salisbury

Grace Ridge Gem!

1224 Gracebrook Dr. Very nice, well maintainedhome, large master suite with walk in closet. Great lotwith 12x14 deck with SunDowner- Retractableawning. This one is special--Only $164,500 Key RealEstate Inc. Jim: 704-223-0459

For Sale By OwnerWill also consider leasing with option to buy

3-BR, 2-BA house at end of long, winding drive on 6-plus acres on U.S. Highway 64 W in Davie County.1,281 sq. ft. Two-car garage, 21-by-42 heatedbasement (outside entrance only), cottage-typeoutbuilding, and 10-by-42 covered back porch offersplace to entertain, relax and enjoy a beautiful mountainview. Fence and row of Leyland cypresses provideprivacy. Stream at back of property makes great picnicarea. Call 336-407-3981, $175,000 - price negotiable.

Land for Sale

Beautiful 16.17 acretract bordering the SouthYadkin River. Greathunting land. Property islocated off Foxwood Ln.off Potneck Rd. $79,900.704-213-1201

East Rowan. 10 acres.160 ft. road frontage onGold Knob Rd. $94,500.Call 704-279-4629

25 Acres Beautiful Land for Sale by Owner

1 Hr to/from Charlotte, NCnr Cleveland & Woodleafand 3 Interstates: I-40, I-77, I-85. Restricted, nomobile or mod. Very rural,mostly wooded. Goodhunting, deer, small game.Frontage on Hobson Rd.,2nd gravel driveway beside2075 Hobson Rd mailbox.GPS zip code 27013. Safe

distance from cities. Need sale this year. No reason-able offer refused. Owner phone: 336-766-6779, or E-mail to: [email protected] See photos and directions:

http://NCHorseCountryFarmland.com

Lots for Sale

Southwestern RowanCounty, BarnhardtMeadows. Quality homesites in country setting,restricted, pool and poolHouse complete. Useyour builder or let usbuild for you. Lots startat $24,900. B&R Realty704-633-2394

Lots for Sale

Western Rowan County.Knox Farm Subdivision.Beautiful lots available nowstarting at $19,900. B&RRealty 704.633.2394

ManufacturedHome Sales

$500 Down moves youin. Call and ask mehow? Please call(704) 225-8850

1st time home buyers ~Special financing pro-grams available! Pleasecall 704-528-7960

A Country Paradise

15 minutes N. of Salis-bury. 2001 model sin-glewide 3 BR/2 bath onlarge treed lot in quietarea. $850 start-up,$475/mo includes lotrent, home payment, tax-es, insurance. RENT orRENT-TO-OWN. 704-210-8176. Call after 1pm

American Homes ofRockwell Oldest Dealer inRowan County. Best pricesanywhere. 704-279-7997

Display modelsmust go!

21 homes to choosefrom. Selling at cost.Save thousands. Call336-767-9756

Don't Miss Out!Custom built. 3BR, 2BAhome. Never lived in.Only $109,972. Call 336-767-9756.

Harrison Rd. near FoodLion. 3BR, 2BA. 1 ac. 1,800sq. ft., big BR, retreat, hugedeck. $580/mo. Financingavail. 704-489-1158

Modular housesat cost!

Display models only!Please call 336-767-9756

New 1,217 sq. ft.modular. Ready to movein! Only $99,972. Call336-767-9757

Salisbury Area 3 or 4bedroom, 2 baths, $500down under $700 permonth. 704-225-8850

Showcase homes discounted for cashbuyers. Call 704-528-7960

Trades = Down Paymenton your new home!Please call 704-528-7960

Unbelievable!3,500 sq. ft. Cape Cod.Never lived in. Too manyoptions to list. Only$159,972 ~ that's $46/sq.ft. Call 336-767-9756

Real Estate Services

Allen Tate RealtorsDaniel Almazan, Broker704-202-0091www.AllenTate.com

Arey Realty-REAL Service in Real Estate704-633-5334www.AreyRealty.com

B & R REALTY704-633-2394www.bostandrufty-realty.com

Century 21Towne & Country474 Jake Alexander Blvd.(704)637-7721

Forest Glen RealtyDarlene Blount, Broker704-633-8867

KEY REAL ESTATE,INC. 1755 U.S. HWY 29.South China Grove, NC28023 704-857-0539

Real Estate Services

Rebecca Jones Realty610 E. Liberty St, ChinaGrove 704-857-SELLwww.rebeccajonesrealty.com

Rowan Realty www.rowanrealty.net, Professional, Accountable,Personable . 704-633-1071

William R. Kennedy Realty 428 E. Fisher Street704-638-0673

Real Estate Commercial

Downtown Salis, 2300 sfoffice space, remodeled,off street pking. 633-7300

Wanted: RealEstate

*Cash in 7 days or less*Facing or In Foreclosure*Properties in any condition*No property too small/large

Call 24 hours, 7 days** 704-239-2033 **

$$$$$$

Are you trying to sellyour property? Weguarantee a sale within 14-30 days. 704-245-2604

Apartments 1 & 2BR. Nice, well main-t'd, responsible landlord.$415-$435. Salisbury, intown. 704-642-1955

1, 2, & 3 BR HugeApartments, very nice.$375 & up. 704-890-4587

1BR or 2BR units. Closeto VA. Central HVAC.$450 - $600/mo. Call704-239-4883. Broker

1BR/1BA duplex fullyfurnished. TV, BR suite,LR furniture, refrig.,washer/dryer, Section 8approved. Heat, air,electricity & water incl'd.$750/mo + $500 dep.

2 BR, 1 BA at WillowOaks on Old ConcordRd. Has refrigerator &stove. All elect. Rent$425, Dep. $400. RowanProperties 704-633-0446

2 BR, 1 BA close toSalisbury High. Hasrefrigerator & stove, allelectric. $425 rent & $400dep. Rowan Properties704-633-0446

2BR brick duplex withcarport, convenient tohospita. $450 per month.704-637-1020

BEST VALUE Quiet & Convenient, 2

bedroom town house,1½ baths. All Electric,Central heat/air, no

pets, pool. $550/mo.Includes water & ba-

sic cable.

West SideManor

Robert CobbRentals

2345 Statesville Blvd.Near Salisbury Mall

704-633-1234

CLANCY HILLS APARTMENTS

1, 2 & 3 BR, convenientlylocated in Salisbury.Handicap accessible unitsavailable. Section 8 assis-tance available. 704-636-6408. Office Hours: M–F9:00-12:00. TDD Relay1-800-735-2962 EqualHousing [email protected]

Duplex forRent

407 S. Carolina Ave. 1 BR, 1BA, very spacious, washer &dryer hookup, gas heat, waterincluded. 704-340-8032

Do you want first shotat the qualified

buyers, or the lastchance? Description

brings results!

Want to get results?Use

Headlinetype

to show your stuff!

Classifeds704-797-4220

SALISBURY POST C L A S S I F I E D SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 3D

TOWNE & COUNTRYTHE GOLD STANDARD

Call 704-855-21221410 North Main St., China Grove, NC

Call 704-637-7721474 Jake Alexander Blvd., Salisbury, NC

OPENHOUSE

SUNDAY 2-4PM

C47668

SHERYL FRY, REALTOR ...........................................704-239-0852C. CARY GRANT, REALTOR, GRI..............................704-239-5274WENDY CARLTON, REALTOR ..................................704-640-9557HEATHER GURLEY, REALTOR .................................704-640-3998KATHERINE FLEMING, REALTOR............................704-798-3429TRENT GRIFFIN, REALTOR.....................................704-798-4868MILLIE STOUT, REALTOR, GRI................................704-213-9601JEANIE BEAVER, BROKER IN CHARGE,GRI............704-202-4738TOM KARRIKER, REALTOR, ABR, SRES ..................704-560-1873JANE BRYAN, REALTOR, GRI..................................704-798-4474HELEN MILES, REALTOR, GRI ................................704-433-4501JAYNE LAND, REALTOR, GRI..................................704-433-6621KESHIA SHERRILL, REALTOR.................................704-433-7187

PAM NESBIT, REALTOR...........................................704-640-4987CHRIS LANKFORD, REALTOR .................................704-213-3935MITZI CRANE, REALTOR.........................................704-798-4506MARY STAFFORD, REALTOR...................................704-267-4487DIANNE GREENE,BROKER, OWNER,CRS,GRI ........704-202-5789JERRY DAVIS, REALTOR .........................................704-213-0826PEGGY MANGOLD, REALTOR.................................704-640-8811VICKI MEDLIN, REALTOR .......................................704-640-2477CATHY GRIFFIN, REALTOR, GRI .............................704-213-2464DEBORAH JOHNSON, REALTOR.............................704-239-7491LIN LITAKER, REALTOR, GRI,CRS,ABR...................704-647-8741SUE MACLAMROC, REALTOR..................................704-202-4464

AGENTS

230 SCOTT TRACEGLEN HEATHER! Freshly painted. 4 bedroom home with abonus room off the Master suite.The Master bath has a jetted tuband a separate shower. The large backyard is enclosed with awonderful privacy fence and the large outbuilding stays. It wantbe on the market long.Because all of this is on a cul-de-sac lotfor $189,900.

DIRECTIONS: HWY 150 West, Turn Right into Glen HeatHer andLeft onto Scott Trace.

F E A T U R E D L I S T I N G S

REDUCED TO $83,900-2 Bd-Bath-Lots of updates too!Call Cathy orTrent Griffin! R50951

REDUCED TO $77,000-3 Bd-Bath-Fenced in back yard-Call Cathy orTrent Griffin! R50603

Ranch with basement! 3 Bd-2 Ba-Great home for $177,90-CallCathy or Trent Griffin! R51284

Nice Duplex with 2 Bd 1 Bath each side.Priced at $144,900-Call Cathyor Trent Griffin! M51287

Home built in 2005. 3 Bd 2 Ba-2200 sqft-Screened porch.Privatetree-lined back yard. Sellers are motivated! Priced at $265,000. CallSue Maclamroc ! R50625

PPeeggggyyMMaannggoollddREALTOR704-640-8811

AGENTS ON DUTY

CCaatthhyyGGrriiffffiinnREALTOR, GRI704-213-2464

PPaammeellaaNNeessbbiittttREALTOR704-640-4987

N E W L I S T I N G S

4Br, 3B home located in cul de sac in Eastern Rowan.Rec room, screened porch, MBR on main level. Spot-less! Call Mitzi to see! $259,900 #51539

China Grove offers this home with 2 bedrooms andbath! Has a large lot with a deck that overlooks a Koipond. Priced below tax value! $49,900-R51563

3 BR 2 bath craftsman style brick home located nearhospital, lots of charm, wood floors, nice porch, quietarea. Call Mitzi for more info $119,900 R51564

1.31 acres and this 2 bedroom 1 Bath. 1300 sqft! Pricedat $53,900. Cathy or Trent Griffin! R51557

11.88 acres come with this brick ranch w/basement--totally private, 2 or 3 BR, 3 full baths, call Mitzi to see.$189,900 #51538

Beautiful one owner home. Large owner’s bedroomand bath. Large 2 car garage. Great room has cathe-dral ceiling. 4 bedrooms and 2.5 baths. Located inDavis Farm. Call Peggy Mangold to show you this finehome! Priced at just $198,374. R51552

Beautiful entrance way! Open floor plan. Rooms arebright and airy! Owner’s bedroom on main level! 2bedrooms plus a bonus room upstairs.Upstairs catwalkoverooks great room with fireplace. Great room opensup to deck overlooking back yard with added pond andlandscaping.Double garage! Priced at $179,900-CallHeather Gurley ! R5154

This one story brick ranch located in Summerfieldhas 3 bedrooms and 2 baths with 2200 sqft.Singlegarage attached plus a detached double garage.Fenced back yard too! Priced at $170,000. Call Sh-eryl Fry! R51514

Gorgeous ranch w/bonus room and tons of upgrades!Vinyl & stone exterior, granite counter tops, ceramictile & hardwood floors. Split floor plan, very open. For-mal dining room, cathedral in great room, largekitchen w/ Lots of cabinets, oversize garage, and hugemaster suite with triple-tray ceiling. Stone fireplace ingreat room. Just minutes to I-85. Call Cathy or TrentGriffin!$219,900. R51520

This DW in Weatherstone has 3 bedrooms 2 baths with2300 sqft. Oversized den with wetbar and fireplace isa great family room. Fenced back yard and wired stor-age building. Priced at $60,050. Call Deborah John-son! R51527

You need to see the remodel on this home! Marbleentrance hall, designer kitchen with side by side GEProfile frig with wood/cabinet front, 2 ovens, customcabinetry, gorgeous reclaimed hardwoods in kitchen,formal dining, & living room, Stark wool Carpet inbedrooms, and so much more. New in last 3years...high velocity space pack and heat pump forheating and cooling. Also has gas radiant heat inceiling. All oversized rooms for entertaining. Lots ofstorage. Only two families have owned this home.Two master suites, one on main level and one up-

stairs, 5 fireplaces, 9' ceilings, finished basement. Priced at $529,900-Call Deborah Johnson! R51555

This home in in one of the most desired neigh-borhood's in the West area. Enjoy the privacy fromyour deck overlooking a wooded back yard. Orthe sunroom on a cool afternoon. Cold winternight? You have gas logs in the den to snuggle upto. Love to entertain? You will have a large livingroom over looking the den with room for the en-tire family. The basement has space for anyoneto spread out. Want a game room,Exercise room,Music room? Well you will have the space for all.This home is priced for a QUICK sell it will go

fast... If you want to be in Neel Estates ....Don't miss out. Call Jerry Davis! R51562 Priced at $149,900.

All brick 2-story home with 2nd living area in walk-in basement. Huge master suite offers additional sit-ting area, fireplace, large bath with whirlpool tub.Lots of built-in cabinetry, huge 48' deck on back. Lo-cated on cul-de-sac street in beautiful Country ClubHills. New gas heat in 2007, Central in 2006,garbage disposal in 2008, and refrigerator in 2008,per owner. 2nd kitchen in basement measures8'10x11'6. Priced at $269,900-Call Cathy or TrentGriffin! R51554

SALE PENDING

Keep out cold and pests - Call a professional below!HomeYour

InsulationCheck the condition of the insulation inyour attic and basement. Replace anythat needs it and add more to make

your home energy efficient.

Doors and WindowsCheck the condition of all caulking.Cold air could seep in around dryer

vents as well as doors and windows. Ifyou find any caulk that is cracking orpeeling, replace it immediately. Install

insulated windows.

Garage DoorsMake sure the weather strip-

ping at the bottom of yourgarage door is in good con-dition and keep snow andice away from the door toprevent it from warping.

Gutters andDownspouts

Clean the debris from your gut-ters and downspouts to preventrainwater from backing up andfreezing. Check the ridge ventsas well, making sure they are

free of debris.

Driveways, Patios and WalksInspect your driveways, patios

and walks and repair any placeswhere the concrete is cracked

or broken.

SidingInspect the siding on

your home and replaceany pieces that areloose or warped.

PlumbingBecome familiar with your

plumbing. Find out where the pipesare located and learn how to shut

off the water in case the pipesshould freeze. Drain and store all

garden hoses and sprinklers.

Porches and DecksLook over your porches and decks. Re-place any rotten or warped boards and

repair all broken handrails or steps.Make sure the lights and

timers work.

FurnaceHave your furnace and heating ducts

professionally cleaned. Replace any dirtyfilters and check to confirm the thermostatand pilot light are working properly. Be surethe pipe bringing fuel to the furnace is not

loose or leaking.

RoofsInspect your roof and replace any

rotten or cracked shingles. If you have a chimney vent, dormer or skylight, makesure the joints are protected by a metalflashing and the edges of the flashing

are sealed with roof cement toprevent leaks.

ChimneyHave your chimney cleaned by aprofessional and install a screenover it to keep out animals, birds

and debris.

To have your business listed on this page, call us at 704-797-4220and ask for the Winterize package special rate - Buy 3 weeks, get 1 free!

C46098

S45349

ACTNOW!

704-637-0700$1500 TAX CREDIT ENDS

DECEMBER 31, 2010Call now for Special Pricing on

Windows and Doorswww.speakscustomwindow.com

ESTABLISHED SINCE 1978

S45346

704-637-2660

INVASION!!!

Target

Rats and Mice BeginFall INVASION!!!

Call Now!Let Us Target...Your Pest Problem!

704-637-26601010 Mooresville Rd.

www.targetexterminators.com

Winterize

Apartments 519/521 E. Cemetary St.1 BR, $330; 2 BR $350.No pets. Deposit req. CallJamie at 704-507-3915.

AAA+ Apartments$425-$950/mo.

Chambers Realty704-637-1020

Apartments

Airport Rd., 1BR withstove, refrig., garbagepickup & water incl.Month-month lease. Nopets. $400/mo+$300 de-posit. Furnished $425/mo.704-279-3808

Apartments Airport Rd. Duplex. 2BR,2BA. $575/mo. 2BR, 1BA$550/mo., lease + dep.,water furnished. No pets.Call 704-637-0370

China Grove 2BR Apt.$550/month. Includeswater and garbage pick-up. Call 704-857-2415.

Apartments China Grove. 2BR, 2BA.All electric. Clean & safe.No pets. $575/month +deposit. 704-202-0605

China Grove. One roomeff. w/ private bathroom &kitchenette. All utilities in-cl'd. $379/mo. + $100 de-posit. 704-857-8112

Apartments

Colonial Village Apts.

“A Good Place to Live”1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms

Affordable & SpaciousWater Included704-636-8385

Apartments

Clean, well maint., 2BR Duplex. Centralheat/air, all electric.Section 8 welcome.704-202-5790

Eaman Park Apts. 2BR,1BA. Near Salisbury High.$375/mo. Newly renovated.No pets. 704-798-3896

Apartments

EAST ROWAN AREA2BR 1BA

Duplex in nice safe,quite n'hood. in GraniteQuarry. All brick, withappls. $400/mo. Call704-947-0035 or 704-577-7444

Apartments EXTRA NICE!

Spencer. 1BR duplex$400/mo & 2BR unfurn'd+ dep. Water & garbageP/U incl'd. 336-596-6726

Holly Leaf Apts. 2BR,1½BA. $555. Kitchen appli-ances, W/D connection,cable ready. 704-637-5588

Apartments Kannapolis - 1 BR. $430per month + $400deposit. Referencesrequired. 704-933-3330or 704-939-6915

Lovely DuplexRowan Hospital area. 2BR,1BA. Heat, air, water, appl.incl. $675. 704-633-3997

More Details = FasterSales!

4D • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 C L A S S I F I E D SALISBURY POST

NEW LISTINGS

FEATURED LISTINGS

704/636-2021 704/636-2022 301 N. Main St., Salisbury

Agent on Duty in office Saturday 10-12

First Homes, Dream Homes,and Everything In Between

C47667

GREG SCARBOROUGHCRS, GRI, Realtor, Broker704-647-1301

[email protected]

LOT # 7 - KERN CARLTON ROAD- This water front lot offers 3.88ACRES on High Rock Lake in a private Gated Community, The Re-serve. This is the ultimate in nature reserve lake lots. Truely a mustsee! Convenants and restrictions available. Large lot, good water andexceptional views. Lot prices starting in the $140's MLS#50899www.thepoeteam.com 704 905 6651 JAMES POE email:[email protected]

325 STONE RIDGE DR.- Lot # 9 - Restricted residential building lot.Build your custom dream home. This subdivision is located nearshopping, convenient to I-85 and is very desirable. Modestly priced.1.03 acres. www.thepoeteam.com 704 756 6930-JAMES POEMLS#51407

230 Mitchell Avenue: 5 bedrooms, 2 baths$78,900. MLS# 51503

Milford Hill-3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths-ExcellentCondition-was $134,900 now-$119,900

1123 Arbor Dr - MLS#506923 Bedrooms, 2 Baths - $69,900

750 Gold Knob Rd.- MLS#497654 Bedroom, 2 baths - $184,900

11 Dogwood Rd - MLS# 506052 Bedroom, 2.5 Baths- $278,000

233 Sudley Circle- MLS# 507914 Bedrooms, 4.5 Baths- $459,000

700 Wiley Ave.- MLS# 508333 Bedrooms, 1.5 Baths - $145,000

2028 Woodleaf Rd.- MLS# 51111- CommercialProperty- Zoned Highway Business

1652 Wiltshire Rd. - MLS# 513693 Bedrooms, 3 Baths - $329,000

1084 Landsdown- MLS# 511523 Bedroom, 2 Baths

407 Crestwood Lane -MLS# 502883 Bedrooms, 2 Baths - $125,000

1306 Troon Drive- MLS# 507903 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths- $219,000

ENJOY THE ENTERTAINMENT DISTRICT OF SALISBURY – This 2 bed-room, 2 bath, 3rd floor loft in the Firehouse Urban Loft is as cool as it canbe. In the heart of Salisbury’s entertainment district, this urban settinghas it all. Restaurants, shopping, and easy access to everything down-town Salisbury, this nearly 1200 sq. ft. home features 12’ high ceilings.2 decks overlooking the district, hardwood and/or ceramic tile flooring,and a kitchen with granite countertops, Cherry cabinets, and top qualityappliances. Built-in surround sound, elevator, and so much more. CallGREG SCARBOROUGH AT 704-647-1301 or by email at [email protected] about MLS# 51515. Priced at $129,900.00.

OPEN HOUSE – Check our website weekly for Open Houses

MARTHA HAWKINSABR, CRS, GRI, SRES, Realtor, Broker

[email protected]

1210 FAITH ROADBeautiful home on 1.63 acres with an ingroundpool. Beautifully remodeled and updated. 3 BR, 2BA, wonderful upstairs area, gorgeous kitchenwith granite countertop, attached double garageand detached garage. Come see! Visit with THE DOVER TEAM OR CALL 704-633-1111 OR704-239-3010. MLS#50122. $190s.

Directions: From Downtown Salisbury: E. Innes Street, Rt.On Faith Road, cross RR track, house on left across fromOakview Commons.

OPEN

SUNDAY 2-4

1211 ARDEN ROADTHIS CHARMING UPDATED STARTER HOME is move-inready to begin the holidays in your own special home.Featuring 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, living and diningrooms, dine-in kitchen & a spacious and cozy den, thishome offers built-ins, hardwood flooring, new a/c, re-placement windows & a new roof. You'll find an attachedcarport, paved drive and a nicely landscaped back yard.Join MARTHA HAWKINS to preview this well maintainedhome, or call 704-637-7551 for more info. Don't miss this one! Newprice: $116,900. MLS#51015

Directions: East Innes Street to Statesville Blvd., right on Meadow-brook Road, right on Arden Road. House on right.

OPEN

SUNDAY 2-4

MAKE OFFER

MAKE OFFER

MAKE OFFER

NEEDS WORKNEEDS WORK

Reading

What better way is there than the newspaper to teach everydayreading to your child?

Start both of your days off right by reading the newspaper,AHABITYOUWON’TMINDTHEMSTARTING.

704-797-4213 to subscribe

Apartments

Moreland Pk area.2BR all appls fur-nished. $495-$595/mo.Deposit negotiable.Section 8 welcome.336-247-2593

Moving to Town? Needa home or Apartment?We manage rentalhomes & apartments.Call and let us help you. Waggoner Realty Co. 704-633-0462 www.waggonerrealty.com

Rockwell Area. Apt. & Du-plexes. $500-$600. 2BRQuiet Community. MarieLeonard-Hartsell at Wal-lace Realty 704-239-3096

Rolling Hills Townhomes

1, 2 & 3 BedroomsSalisbury's Finest! 315 Ashbrook Rd

704-637-6207Call for Specials!

S. Fulton St. Very nice1500 sq ft 3 BR 2.5BAtown house apartment. Allelec., central heat/AC.Water incl., stove, refrig.,dishwasher furnished.Outside storage. No pets.1 yr lease. $625/mo. &$500 dep. 704-279-3808

Salis. 1BR & 2BR. Woodfloors, appls, great location.$375-$450/mo. + dep. 704-630-0785 or 704-433-3510

Salisbury. 2BR, 1½BAtownhouse. Range, refriger-ator, W/D hook-ups. Newlyremodeled. Nice neighbor-hood. 704-202-8965

Salisbury. 2BR, 1BAduplex. Appliances in-cluded. Heat/air, laundryroom. $500/mo. + $500dep. 704-239-9259

Salisbury. Nice 1 BR,1BA in convenient loca-tion. Central heat/AC.$335/mo. 704-202-2484

WELCOME HOME TODEER PARK APTS.

We have immediate open-ings for 1 & 2 BR apts.Call or come by and askabout our move-in spe-cials. 704-278-4340 forinfo. For immediate infocall 1-828-442-7116

Welcome Home!

Salisbury, 503 Walton Rd,2 BRs. Central heat & air,new paint & carpet, wellmaintained, water fur-nished, no pets, $450 permonth + $450 deposit.References & backgroundcheck required. 704-636-2486

Condos and Townhomes

SALISBURY

2 BEDROOOM CONDOFOR RENT

Great Location! 2BR/2BAspacious condo, 2ndfloor. Must see!!! Call704-436-8159 for detailsand showings

Wiltshire Village Condo forRent, $700. 2nd floor. Lookingfor 2BR, 2BA in a quiet com-munity setting? Call Bryce,Wallace Realty 704-202-1319

Houses for Rent

2 to 5 BR. HUD Section8. Nice homes, niceareas. Call us 1st.704-630-0695

312 VANCE AVE.Large 3 Bedroom, 2Bath. $700 Month, 1 YearLease, $700 Deposit704-857-7949

3BR/1BA RENT TOOWN! Nice. $8,400 dn.NO MTHLY PAYMENTS!1st Yr. 704-630-0695

4 BR, 1 BA on JacksonSt. Refrigerator & stovefurnished. Gas heat. Ren$675, Dep. $600. RowanProperties, 704-633-0446

4 BR, 2 BA on W.Henderson. Largew/double car garage.Has refrigerator, stove &dishwasher. Has gasheat. $750 rent, $700dep. Rowan Properties,704-633-0446

Houses for Rent

Attn. LandlordsApple HouseRealty has a 10year / 95+%occupancy rateon prop's we've

managed. 704-633-5067

China Grove 2BR/1BA,CHA, W/D connections,$550/mo. + $550 dep.Sect. 8 OK. 704-784-4785

Concord 3BR/2½BA, 2story brick home w/in groundpool. No pets. $1200/mo &dep. 704-351-2407

Don't Pay Rent!3BR, 2BA homes at 108John Michael Lane &Crescent Heights. Call704-239-3690 for info.

E. Area 3BR/1½ BA brickranch, $775/mo + $775dep, lease & refs req'd, nosmoking. 704-279-1934

E. Rowan, 3BR/2BA, deck,all electric., no pets. $750/mo+ $750 dep. Sect. 8 OK.Credit check. 704-293-0168.

E. Spencer, 306 E.Torbush, 3BR/1½ BA, fullyfurnished: 2 large TVs, 3 BRsuites, LR furniture, dishwasher, refrig., washer /dryer, central heat/air. Sect.8 approved. $875/mo + $500dep. 704-636-1850

East Rowan, 2 BR, 1 BA,completely renovated.All appliances. No pets.$600/mo. + dep. 704-637-1029/ 704-202-0727

Faith/Carson district.3BR / 2BA, no smoking,no pets. $650/mo + dep +refs. 704-279-8428

Fulton St. 3 BR, 1 ½ BA.Refrigerator, stovefurnished. Rent $725,Dep., $700. Call RowanProperties 704-633-0446

Houses: 3BRs, 1BA.Apartments: 2 & 3 BRs,1BA Deposit req'd. Faith Realty 704-630-9650

Kannapolis – 1007Skyland St., 2 BR, 1 BA,$550/month; 315 TaraElizabeth Pl., 3 BR, 2 BA,$825/month. Max.occupancy-4 people.KREA 704-933-2231

Landis 2BR / 1BA.Good school district.Lease option or ownerfinancing. 704-202-2696

Miller Chapel Rd. 2BR.Office, appl., Large yard.Limit 2. No pets. $650/mo+ dep. 704-855-7720

Move-In ReadySalisbury. 3BR, 1½BA. LR,den, kitchen & dinette.Storage building. Fencedyard. Great location.$850/mo. 704-633-7344

Rockwell. 2BR, 1BA. Appl.,gas heat. Storage bldg.$500/mo. 704-279-6850 or704-798-3035

Rowan Hosp. area. 3BR /2BA. Cent. H & A. No Sect.8. No pets. $700/mo. 1St &last mo's rent & dep. Callbefore 5pm 704-636-4251

Salisbury 2BR. $525and up. GOODMANRENTALS 704-633-4802

Salisbury 4BR/2BA, brickranch, basement, 2,000SF, garage, nice area.$1,195/mo. 704-630-0695

Salisbury City, NearHospital. 4BR/2½BA,2,250 Sq. Ft., Two CarGarage, Fenced Back-yard. $1500/month +$1500 deposit. CallLauren 704-232-0823.

Salisbury N. Fulton St.,2BR/1BA Duplex, limit 3,no pets, $525/month +deposit. 704-855-2100

Salisbury, 1314 LincolntonRd., 2 BR, 1 BA brickhouse. Hardwood floorsthroughout, close to JakeAlexander Blvd. WallaceRealty 704-636-2021

Salisbury, in country.3BR, 2BA. With in-lawapartment. $1000/mo. Nopets. Deposit & ref. 704-855-2100

Houses for Rent

Salisbury. 3 & 2 BedroomHouses. $500-$1,000. Also,Duplex Apartments. 704-636-6100 or 704-633-8263

Salisbury. 3BR, 2BA.Designer Home in City.Minutes to I-85/Lowe'sShopping Center. Gar-age, hardwood floors,central air, dishwasher,W/D, yard maintenanceincl, $900 rent + de-posit. 704-636-8188

Salisbury. Elizabeth Ave.3BR, 1½BA. All electric. Freewater and sewer. $645/mo.Section 8 OK. 704-633-6035

Salisbury. TeriJon Props.2BR, 1BA, $600, Electric.3BR, 2BA, $875, Gas. SecDep Rq'd. 704-490-1121

Salisbury/E. Spencer2 BR, 1 BA. $425. 704-248-2520. Sect. 8 OK. Carolina-Piedmont Properties

Salisbury/Spencer 2, 4 &5 BR $450-$850/mo. 704-202-3644 or leave mes-sage. No calls after 7pm

Salisbury/Spencer area2-6 BR houses. Cent.heat & AC. $550- $850/month. Jim 704-202-9697

Spencer, 2 BR, 2 BA.Handicapped accessible,hardwood floorsthroughout, niceneighborhood. 20X24outbuilding, corner lot.$650/month + $650/deposit.Call 704-633-1437 or 704-985-2252

Spencer. 3BR/1BA, newcarpet/paint, excellent con-dition. No pets. $600/mo /dep. 704-633-5067

Spencer. 4-5 BR, formalDR, 2 BA, very private,electric, & central air.$600/mo. 704-637-1200or 704-310-1052

W Rowan/Woodleaf schooldist. 2BR/1BA house. Tak-ing applications. No pets.$425/mo. 704-754-7421

West Rowan area. Bighome. 20 acres. $895/month. Please call 704-239-0691

West Salisbury. Countrysetting. 3BR/2BA. $700per month. Basement,well water. Central H/AC.No pets. 704-202-0605

Office andCommercial

Rental 450 to 1,000 sq. ft. of Ware-house Space off JakeAlexander Blvd. Call 704-279-8377 or 704-279-6882

5,000, 10,000 & 20,000sqft. Buildings availablewith loading docks andoffices. Call BradshawReal Estate 704-633-9011

HHH�HHHHHHHHHHHHH

3,000 sq. ft. building,2 BA, large lot on 4-laneHwy. 704-636-1477

China Grove. 1200 sq ft. $800/mo +deposit. Call 704-855-2100

Granite Quarry SpecialCommercial Metal Bldgsfor Small Trade Busi-ness, hobby shop spaceor storage. Units avail upto 1800 sq ft w/ officearea. Video surveillanceand ample parking. 704-279-4422

OFFICE SPACE

Prime Location, 1800+sq.ft. (will consider subdi-viding) 5 private offices,built in reception desk.Large open space with di-viders, 2 bathrooms andbreakroom. Ample parking464 Jake AlexanderBlvd. 704 223 2803

Office Space

Salisbury. We have of-fice suites available in theExecutive Center. FirstMonth Free with No De-posit! With all utilitiesfrom $150 and up. Lots ofamenities. Call KarenRufty at B & R Realty704-202-6041www.bostandrufty-realty.com

Office andCommercial

Rental Furnished Key Man Of-fice Suites - $250-350.Jake & 150. Util & inter-net incl. 704-721-6831

Numerous Commercialand office rentals to suityour needs. Ranging from500 to 5,000 sq. ft. CallVictor Wallace at WallaceRealty, 704-636-2021

Salisbury, Kent ExecutivePark office suites, $100 &up. Utilities paid. Confer-ence room, internet ac-cess, break room, ampleparking. 704-202-5879

Salisbury. Six individualoffices, new centralheat/air, heavily insulatedfor energy efficiency, fullycarpeted (to be installed)except stone at entrance.Conference room, em-ployee break room, tilebathroom, and nice, largereception area. Perfectlocation near the CourtHouse and County Build-ing. Want to lease but willsell. Perfect for dual oc-cupancy. By appointmentonly. 704-636-1850

Spencer Shops Leasegreat retail space for aslittle as $750/mo for 2,000sq ft at. 704-431-8636

Warehouse space /manufacturing as low as$1.25/sq. ft./yr. Deposit.Call 704-431-8636

ManufacturedHome Lot Rentals

Cleveland 3BR/2BA, 1,000SF, priv lot, 3 mins fromFreightliner Plt. $600/mo +$600 dep. 704-326-5016

COUNTRY PARADISE

Beautiful large lots ready foryour single wide 97 or newermobile home. Establishedquiet community andinfrastructure includespaved roads, individualseptic tanks, weekly trashcollection and 2 vehicleparking spaces. $185/month, near exit 83 from I-85. Call after 1pm fordetails. 704-210-8176

East Salisbury mobilehome lot. Water & electricready for hook-up. Not inpark. Call 704-638-0108

ManufacturedHome for Rent

Between Salis. & ChinaGrove. 2BR. No pets. Appl.& trash pickup incl. $475/mo + dep. 704-855-7720

East area. 2BR, 2BA. Nopets. Limit 3. Depositrequired. 704-636-2764 or704-636-7878

East Area. 2BR, water,trash. Limit 2. Dep. req.No pets. Call 704-636-7531 or 704-202-4991

Faith–2 BR, 1 BA.$350/mo. + dep. 2 BR, 1BA, $425/mo. + dep.Near Carson High. 704-239-2833

Faith. 2BR, 1BA. Water,trash, lawn maint. incl. Nopets. Ref. $425. 704-279-4282 or 704-202-3876

Gold Hill, 2 bedroom,trash and lawn serviceincluded. No pets. $450month. 704-433-1255

Granite Quarry. 2BR,2BA. 3 person limit. Nopets. $450/month +deposit. 704-279-5905

Hurley School Rd area2BR/1BA, nice sub-division, large lot. $460/mo+ dep. 704-640-5750

Hurley School Rd area,2BR/1BA, nice subdiv,large yard, water incl'd,$410/mo 704-640-5750

Kannapolis 2BR/1BA onpriv. lot, water & garbageincl'd, $350/mo, refs &dep req'd. 704-791-6221

Rockwell. Nice & small.Ideal for 1 person. Nosmokers! No pets!$330/mo. 704-279-4842.

Rockwell. Nice 2BR under$460/mo + dep, inclswater, sewer, & trash pickup. No pets. 704-640-6347

ManufacturedHome for Rent

Salisbury, Woodleaf Rd,3BR/2BA, priv. lot, F/P,$725/mo includes water.704-636-2143.

ManufacturedHome for Rent

Salisbury. For Sale orRent. 3990 StatesvilleBoulevard. Lot 17, 3BR.$409/mo. 704-640-3222

ManufacturedHome for Rent

Statesville Blvd. 2BR,1BA. Appls, water, sewerincl. Pets OK. $450/mo. +$450 dep. 704-279-7463

ManufacturedHome for Rent

West & South Rowan. 2& 3 BR. No pets. Perfectfor 3. Water included.Please call 704-857-6951

Rooms for Rent

MILLER HOTELRooms for RentWeekly $110 & up704-855-2100

SALISBURY POST C L A S S I F I E D SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 5D

Tell SomeoneHAPPY

BIRTHDAY!A 2”x3” greeting withphoto is only $20,

and includes4 copies of the Post

[email protected]: 704-630-0157

ARE YOU IN THECELEBRATING

BUSINESS?If so, then make

ad space work for you!

Call Classifiedsat 704-797-4220

for more information!!!

Birthday? ...

We want to be your flower shop!

1628 West Innes St.Salisbury, NC • 704-633-5310

S40137

Salisbury Flower Shop

S452

63

Hours of daily personal attention and doggie funat our safe 20 acre facility. Professional homestyleboarding, training, and play days with a certified

handler/trainer who loves dogs as much as you do.

MMaawwMMaawwss KKoozzyy KKiittcchheenn

5550 Hwy 601 • Salisbury, NC 28147 • 704-647-9807HOURS: Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat: 11AM-8PMWednesday 11AM-3PM • Closed on Sundays

Thurs-Fri CHICKEN &DUMPLINGS

$5.99

SATURDAY 11-4 ....BUY 1 FOOTLONG GET 1 FREE

Hamburger, Fries & Tea ................$4.99Every Night Kids Under 12 eat for 99¢ with 2 paying Adults

S46245

PATTY MELT & FRIES

$5.99

S46958

KIDS OFJOY

Inflatable Parties

• Birthdays • Community DaysWHATEVER THE OCCASION…GIVE YOUR KIDS SOME JOY!

JUST ADDED FOR 2010...NEW WATERSLIDE!

www.kidsofjoy.net

WE DELIVER!704 202-5610 FOR FREE BIRTHDAY GREETINGS Please Fax, hand deliver or fill out form online 18 WORDS MAX.

Number of free greetings per person may be limited, combined or excluded, contingent on space available.Fax: 704-630-0157 In Person: 131 W. Innes Street

Online: www.SalisburyPost.com (Website Forms, bottom right column)The Salisbury Post reserves the right to edit or exclude any birthday submission. Space is limited, 1st come 1st served, birthdays only.

Please limit your birthday greetings to 4 per Birthday.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010

Happy Birthday to my little sister, you're40 and not far behind me. Connie

Happy Birthday Andy! Thanks for being agreat brother & uncle! We love you! Love,

Scott, Amanda & Emma

Happy Birthday to our Auntie. From Thea,Kimora, Dadtrian, Inagi & Naveion

Happy 40th Birthday Mom! Love, Niyarna

Pure Life Massage &Bodywork of Salisbury

At Shear Angels Salon

S44995

Meggan M. AlexanderLMBT#9438

520 Faith RoadSalisbury

704-797-0064

$351 FULL HOUR

MASSAGE TREATMENT

ONLY

THE HONEYBAKED HAM CO. & CAFEof Salisbury704-633-1110 • Fax 704-633-1510

www.honeybakedham.com

Mon-Fri: 10-7Sat 10-6Sun 11-2

$15OFF

1/2 Ham (8 lb or more) &turkey breast or whole turkey,2 large sides and large dessert.

Coupon offer expires 11/30/10Not valid with any other coupon.

$10OFF

1/2 Ham (8 lb or more) &Turkey Breast or Whole TurkeyCoupon offer expires 11/30/10Not valid with any other coupon.

413 E. Innes St.Salisbury

EXIT 76WEST OFF

HWY 85!

S47807

• Pay your subscription online:salisburypost.com/renew

• Place a vacation hold:salisburypost.com/subscription

• Send any comments:salisburypost.com/subscription

C44624

To advertisein this directory

call 704-797-4220

C47494

"Helping You Make Your Dreams Come True!"704-633-5067 www.applehouserealty.com

Se Habla EspañolPictured above left to right: (Back row) Kelly Lowe, Sidney Allen, Jeff Ketner, Cathy Mabe,

Keith Knight; (Front row) Yolanda Rojas, Jean Ketner, Elia Gegorek, Pat Goodnight

APPLE HOUSE REALTY

S47875

Helping Make Your Dreams Come True!• For a FREE computerized report on Foreclosures and Distress Sales

click on Foreclosures/Distress sales at www.applehouserealty.com.

• For a FREE Over-the-Net Market Analysis go to www.applehouserealty.comand click on What's Your Home Worth?” under SELLER INFO.

• To search all MLS listings go to www.applehouserealty.com.

• Plan now to attend our "Home Sellers Seminar" on Dec. 7, 2010 at theChamber Bldg. 204 E. Innes St., Salisbury, N.C.

Residential & Commercial704-633-8095

4243 S. Main St.

• SALES • INSTALLATION• SERVICE

Mark Stout S40129

Drivers & Transportation

Employment

DRIVERRepublic Waste Ser-vices, Inc is seeking afull-time driver for itsDavie division. Qualified candidatesshould possess:

• Class- A or B CDL• Safe driving record• Good work history• Experience preferred

Republic Services of-fers competitive payand excellent benefitsincluding health and401(k).

Apply in person Mon-day through Fridaybetween 9:00am and3:00pm at:

Republic Services131 Industrial Blvd

Mocksville, NC 27028

EOE/AA/M/F/D/V andDrug-Free Workplace

Drivers & Transportation

Employment

$10 to start. Earn 40%.Call 704-754-2731 or 704-607-4530

Earn extra holiday cash.$10 to start. 336-284-6011 or 704-278-2399

Drivers

Drivers Wanted -Full or part time.Req: Class A CDL,clean MVR, min. 25yrs old w/3 yrs exp.Benefits: Pd health &dental ins., 401(k)w/match, pd holidays,vac., & qtrly. bonus.New equip. Call 704-630-1160

Drivers

Truck Drivers WantedRequirements: CDLAwith clean drivingrecord. Apply in per-son to: Universal For-est Products EasternDivision, 358 Wood-mill Road, Salisbury,NC 28147.

Education/Training

Mitchell Communi-ty College is hiringFull-time Faculty inMath (temporary) &part-time in Biology.See our ad on theJobs page of theSunday & Wednes-day editions & on-line at: salisburypost.com

500 West Broad St., Statesville, NC 28677

Drivers

DRIVERS NEEDEDDue to increases in business Swing Trans-port is now hiring drivers for its SalisburyNC Location.

Benefits include:4 Competitive pay4 Health, Life, Dental and Vision Plan4 Paid Vacation4 Paid Holidays4 401k/Profit Sharing Plan4 No Touch Freight4 No Haz-Mat

You can drive a truck and have a home lifeWe operate primarily in SE TN, AL, GA, KYand NC and VA. Two years tractor-trailerexperience required. Must be DOT qualifiedand have a Safe Driving Record.

Please Call 1-800-849-5378

Employment

Healthcare

CNA's NEEDED Pri-mary Health Concepts,Jake Alexander Blvd.,704-637-9461

HEALTHCAREDirect Care Provider forMale Client, WestRowan. Also seekingP.T. bi-lingual staff forEast Rowan. Must be 21yrs. of age & have NCDL. Fax Resume' toBrandy 704-647-0768.

HEALTHCAREImmediate need forCMA/MOA with ex-cellent clinical skillsfor FT position. Ex-perience with C-armor pain managementa plus. Qualified ap-plicants send resumeto: [email protected]

Healthcare

RN Supervisor need-ed PRN weekends.Also, Dietary Aideneeded. Competitivewages. Apply in per-son at the NC Veter-an's Home, 1601Brenner Ave., Build-ing 10, Salisbury.

INSTALLATION/MAINTENANCE

Freirich Foods is inneed of a experiencedwelder-MIG & TIGmainly. Focusing onsanitary type welding.Also, Food processequip. exp. a plus.Forward resume toPO Box 1529, Salis-bury, NC 28144

Skilled Labor

Wheel AlignmentTechnician

Immediate openingfor experienced tech-nician with knowl-edge of four wheelalignment and tools,Hunter Lazer Equip.Very good benefits &pay package.

Jerry's Shell600 Jake

Alexander Blvd. Salisbury, NC

Restaurant/Food Services

Now hiring waitresses& cooks. Apply in per-son 210 Old Amity HillRd, Cleveland

Healthcare

PRN LPNTo work in the Iredell Co.

Jail Medical UnitStart Immediately. Must have Clear Back-ground. Drug Free Workplace. For interviewcall 888-231-2888 or apply online at:

www.southernhealthpartners.com

Skilled Labor

HVAC Residential Lead InstallerResponsible for leading a crew in the installa-tion of residential heating and A/C systemsalong with air sealing and insulation services.Prior heating and air installation experience amust. Competitive pay & benefits. H.S.Diploma or GED reqd. Must pass drug testand have valid Drivers License. Apply in per-son @ 1901 West A Street, Kannapolis or e-mail resume to [email protected]

Yard Sale Area 1

Salisbury Yard Sale,237 South McCoy Rd.(off 1500 block ofStatesville Blvd.), Satur-day, November 13, 7am-12noon. Baby andtoddler clothes, toys, PlayStation 2, games, DVDs,household goods andsmall appliances.

Salisbury. 1012 HolmesAve., off Grove St. (nearRowan Regional Hospital).Inside Yard Sale, Saturday,November 13th, 7am-noon.Rain or shine. Dormrefrigerator, telescope, oldLP albums, etc.

Salisbury. 425 E. Lafay-ette St. (between Shaver &Long St.) HUGE Yard Sale.Sat. Nov. 13th, 7am-2pm.Furniture, clothes, Frostcutlery, games, computer,Christmas items, handmadecrafts, Porcelain dolls, &much more. Great Prices!Don't Miss it!

Yard Sale Area 2

LargeEstateSale

Milford HillsShamrock Dr.

Nov. 12-13, 7am-1pm6th GenerationFamily Home,

1 of a KindCollectibles,

hard to find items,glassware, furniture,

vintage clothes,household items

and tools.

Yard Sale Area 2

Salisbury – Part 2 ofFinal Yard Sale at 427Heilig Avenue. Begins at10am on Saturday, Nov.13. No Early Birds!

Salisbury Mega YardSale, Fri., Nov. 12, 7am-5pm & Sat., Nov. 13, 7am-12noon, 208 Forrest Dr. (1mile out Hwy 150 Westacross from Greenhouse).Household goods, un-finished mahogany items,Christmas items & more.All items antique to new.

Salisbury. 115 Locke Circle(off Hwy 150 in NeelEstates) Garage Sale. Sat.,Nov. 13th, 6am-12noon.Children's items, books,clothes, and more!!

Salisbury. 204 HickoryLn. (off Hwy 29, offAirport Rd.) Mulit-FamilyYard Sale. Sat. Nov. 13th,all day. Just moved in tonew home. We have toomuch to mention! Micro-waves & more. No junk!!

Yard SaleArea 3

China Grove Yard Sale,Saturday, November 13th,7am-until, 1021 WestStokes St. Baby & homefurniture, baby & adultclothing, scrubs, appli-ances etc. All proceedsdonated to cancerpatient.

Landis. 505 WindwardLn. Re-modeling Sale.Sat. Nov. 13th. Jenn-Airdown draft stove, Jenn-Airmicrowave, SS sinkw/faucet, 6hp walk behindyard blower, hydraulicfloor jack, 32 drawer metalparts cabinet, 2000 FordExpedtion Eddie Bauer.

Online forournew

interactive

Find all the best sales without theheadaches! Plot your route from

one sale to another!

www.salisburypost.com

704-797-4220

Yard SaleArea 4

Gold Hill, Saturday,November 13, 6:30am-until, 12001 Mt. Olive Rd(turn on ImmanualChurch Rd from Hwy 52in Rockwell. Continueone mile past Old BeattyFord Road. Yellowhouse on right).Furniture, pictures,glassware, kitchen-ware, old records,books, clothes, babycribs, exercise equip-ment, air conditioners,oil drums, microwave,dishes, puzzles,Christmas decorations,videos, large stainlesssink, TVs, stereos andMUCH, MUCH MORE!

Yard SaleArea 4

Faith – 2 FamilyBasement Sale, 1019Fisher Street. 7am- Until.Antiques, collectibles,clothes, shoes,housewares, baby itemsand toys.

Mt. Ulla. 1175 Back CreekChurch Rd. (Estate ofHayden & Mary H. Poteat).Fri. & Sat., 8am-until. Solidwood vintage furniture,household items, bedroomsuites, den & living room,complete sets of furnishings& accessories, dining roomset w/hutch, table & 6chairs. Nautical items,pictures. 60 years of items!

Salisbury. 290 Joe LentzRd. (Stokes Ferry L on St.Matthews Ch. L on JoeLentz.) Sun. 11/14 & Sun.11/21, 9am-4pm (rain date).Furniture, filing cabinets,Oakworks massage table,dishwasher, tools, 2 campershells, heavy duty car ramp,mandolin, etc. Cash only.

Salisbury. 310 EastwoodDr. (Stokes Ferry Rd. orNewsome Rd. to WildwoodDr. {Corbin Hills} EastwoodDr., grey house) GarageSale. Sat. Nov. 13, 8am-2pm. Too many items tomention!

Salisbury. 610 St. LukesChurch Rd. (behind EastRowan High & ErwinMiddle) Yard Sale. Fri.11/12, & Sat. 11/13, 7am-2pm. Tools, children'stoys, clothes, & more.

Salisbury. 620 HarrisPoint Rd. Yard Sale. Fri.Nov. 12th & Sat. Nov. 13th,8am-4pm. Antiques (blue& white), McDonald capsfrom the 1970s, old sodabottles, old tabaccobasket, lots of children'sclothes, toys, furniture.

Yard Sale Area 6

GIANT MULTI-FAMILYYARD SALE

Mocksville. 249 MoheganTrl. (3mi past WagonWheel on 601.) Saturday,Nov.13th, 7am-until. Baby/adult clothes, collectibles,furniture, household appli-ances and items. Exerciseequipment. Toys! Tools.DVDs. Linens. Everythingmust go!

Davie-ClemmonsYard Sales

YARD SALE AREAS

Area 1 - Salisbury,East Spencer, &

Spencer

Area 2 – W. Rowanincl Woodleaf, Mt.Ulla & Cleveland

Area 3 - S. Rowanincl Landis, China

Grove, Kannapolis& Mooresville

Area 4 - E. Rowanincl. Granite Quar-ry, Faith, Rockwell

& Gold Hill

Area 5 - DavidsonCo.

Area 6 – Davie Co.and parts of David-

son Co.

This is a roughguide to help planyour stops, actualareas are deter-

mined by zip code.Please see map inyour Salisbury Post

or online at salisburypost.comunder Marketplaceclick on 'Yard SaleMap' to see details.

Want to get results?

See stars

FIND ITSELL ITRENT IT

in theClassifieds

Do youneed helparound the

house?

Do you havea service toprovide?

CLASSIFIEDS!

TO ADVERTISE CALL(704) 797-4220

N

6D • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 C L A S S I F I E D SALISBURY POST

No. 60714NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Nell Iris Alexander Lee, 9060 Hwy. 152 West,Mooresville, NC 28125. This is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims againstthe said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 9th day of February, 2011,or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebtedto said estate are notified to make immediate payment.This the 3rd day of November, 2010.Nell Iris Alexander Lee, deceased, Rowan County File #2010E1079, Bruce Edward Lee, 470Centenary Church Road, Mt. Ulla, NC 28125

Cats

Free cats. 2 male 7month old cats. Indoor.Litter box trained. Kanna.area. 704-932-1584

Free kittens. Male &female. Some long hair.All kinds. 6 weeks & up.Please call 704-933-1835

Giving awaykittens orpuppies?

Dogs

Beautiful &Loyal Pets!

Puppies. German Shepherd,pure bred. AKC registered.Parents on site. 4 females, 5males. Ready for new homeNov. 25! Taking deposits nowfor your choice. 704-762-0223or 704-279-4007.

DogsBoxer/Pit Mix Puppy. 4months old. Male.Brindle. Good home only.704-904-7268

CHIHUAHUAS10 weeks, vet. checked, 1st shots, wormed,want good inside homes only $150. 336-859-0161

ChristmasBeagles

Christmas Beagle pup-pies. Wormed & firstshots. No holding please$60 704-639-6299

Dog - FREE to a goodhome Brown femaleLab/chow mix dog. Verysweet and loving. Call704-637-1310

GERMAN ROTTWEILERFemale puppies ONLY!$500. Gorgeous 6 wksold! MUST SEE! 704-309-5017

Got puppies orkittens for sale?

DogsCKC puppies. Chihua-huas & Pomeranians. $200 cash. Call 704-633-5344

Puppies (2) need a goodhome. Approx. 3 mo. old.Found inn ER YMCAparking lot. Boxer mix &husky/shepherd mix. Veryfriendly & intelligent, doingwell inside. 704-279-2957 /704-433-4951 Rob or Kara

Puppies. PembrokeWelsh Corgis AKCregistered. Tri-color, Veryloving, friendly and loyaland get along great withother pets. Great withchildren. 1st shots, tailsdocked, dew claws re-moved. Five males and twofemales. $350 each formales and $400 each forfemales. 704-279-3355after 6pm

Puppies. Pointer/Settermix. 6 weeks old. Parentsstarted. Some liver, someblack. Males & females .Shots, wormed. $75each. Mocksville. Pleasecall 336-391-2176.

Dogs

Pure breed AKC ShihTzu puppies. 7 weeks oldWormed and 1st shots.Mom and Dad on site.Call for more information704-209-1813 or 704-433-3559

Ready forLovingHomes

Puppies, Shih Tzus. 2males. Full-blooded. 8weeks. Shots & wormed.Parents on site. $300.Call 704-202-5220

Ready Now!

Puppies. Adorable CKCYorkie puppies. 1 female,$450. 3 males, $400each. Black & tan,parents on site. Shots &wormed, tails docked.704-929-1964

Dogs

Puppies. Yorkies. CKCregistered. Ready onNov. 20th. All female.$400 each. Takingdeposits now. Please call704-636-9867

Other PetsH H H H H H H H H

Check Out Our Novem-ber Special! Spay/NeuterClinic 20% discount.Rowan Animal Clinic.704-636-3408 for appt.

Supplies andServices

Rabies Clinic Sat. Nov.20th, 8am-noon. $10/vac-cine. Salisbury AnimalHospital 1500 E. InnesSt. 704-637-0227salisburyanimalhospital.com

Riding Lessons

USDF Certified InstructorPasture Boarding

Lease Horse AvailableLighted Arena

*Christmas LessonPackages*

704- 640-7040

FIND ITSELL ITRENT IT

in theClassifieds

The road to a more rewarding careerbegins in the Salisbury Post Employmentsection. Filled with top jobs in a widerange of industries, the Salisbury Postgives you career ideas and inspiration,so you can Choose a direction and GO! Pick up a copy of the Salisbury Postevery Sunday for access to the latest andgreatest job offers throughout the area.

Salisbury PostCLASSIFIEDS

704-797-4220

Antiques & Collectibles

Antique electric lamps.3 for $150. Antiquesausage-lard press.$150. 336-751-2826

Antique oak wall phone.$225. Set of 6 black ironpots, various. $275. Call336-751-2826

Die cast cars, AmericanMuscle and Hwy 61collectibles in originalboxes. 704-633-3313

BabyItems

Crib – Convertible crib$100, changing table withhutch $75. Please Call704-856-1224

Just for babyBaby stroller, $25; Highchair, $15, 3 car seats,$10 ea; walker, $15;bouncer, $15. 704-857-1867.

Boocoo AuctionItems

*All Boocoo Auction Itemsare subject to prior sale,and can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

15,000 sq.ft. Building forSale. Listing #30789. BuyNow for $300,000.salisburypost.boocoo.com

19 foot ski/fishing boatwith trailer, depth finder.Listing #30609. Buy Now$5,800. Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

African Violets. Listing#30784. Buy Now $3each. Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Children's Dolphin AccentWallpaper Wall Mural.Listing #28621. Buy Now$19.99 each. Can beseen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Children's Dolphin AccentWallpaper Wall Mural.Listing #28621. Buy Now$19.99 each. Can beseen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Girl's Pink Chair... VeryPretty. Listing #30613.Buy Now $29. Can beseen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Girl's Pink Chair... VeryPretty. Listing #30616.Buy Now $29. Can beseen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Honda CR250 Dirtbike.Listing #30611. Buy Now$1200. Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Boocoo AuctionItems

Panasonic RR-930Microcassette TranscriberListing #26922. Buy Now$50 each. Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Used Blue Sofa. Listing#30615. Buy Now $150.Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Used Vintage One PieceSchool Desks. Listing#30617. Buy Now $15each. Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

White Wicker dresser withpottery barn pull knobs.Listing #30610. Buy Now$49.99. Can be seen atsalisburypost.boocoo.com

Building Equip.& Supplies

Remodeling?Kitchen, laundry and bathsinks, $100 ea. Christ-mas tree stands, 3, $5ea. 704-857-1867

Vinyl WindowsNew construction

starting at $25 each

We also sell vinylwindows for mobilehomes (by order)

City Consignment419 S. Main St., Salis.

704-636-2004

ClothesAdult & ChildrenWedding Dress - BonnyUnforgettable, straplessivory wedding dress. Fits28w to 30w. Brand new$250. 704-798-7607 l/m

Wedding dress. AuroraD'Paradiso style #4003ivory wedding dress size32w, brand new $200.704-798-7607 l/m

Women's handbags. 10bags, $1-5 ea. Women'sclothes (1x-2x) 15 pcs,$2 each. Call 704-640-4373 after 5pm.

Computers &Software

IBM Thinkpad Laptop /Windows 7/ Office 2007/Wireless/Bluetooth. $250704-762-1043

ConsignmentGrowing PainsFamily ConsignmentsCall (704)638-0870115 W. Innes Street

ElectronicsTV - 42" Flat Screen TV $150. For More Info Please Call 704-857-1854

Exercise Equipment

Elliptical - Proform 650Cardio Crosstrainerelliptical $125. Excellentcondition 704-633-4109leave message

Farm Equipment& Supplies

Farm Equipment, new &used. McDaniel AuctionCo. 704-278-0726 or 704-798-9259. NCAL 48, NCFL8620. Your authorized farmequipment dealer.

Tote. 275 gal poly fluidtote with galvanized steelcage, lid on top-2'' ballvalve on bottom. Not fordrinking water. $75 336-284-6102 8a-3p. L/M

Flowers & Plants

36'' Leyland Cypress orGreen Giant Trees.Makes a beautiful propertyline boundary or privacyscreen. $10 per tree.Varieties of Gardenias,Nandina, Juniper, Holly,Ligustrum, Burning Bush,Hosta, Viburnum, GoldMop, Camelias, Forsythia,Arborvitae, Azaleas ANDMORE! $6. All of theabove include delivery &installation! 704-274-0569

Food & Produce

Fresh Veggies!

Sweet potatoes by boxof 25 lbs (48¢/lb). Bypound 79¢. Mixed greens(you pick them) 50¢/lb.Collards, turnips andbroccoli. Buddy's Pro-duce, 9309 Wright Rd,Kannapolis. 704-932-2135

Pecans for Sale -Shelled- $7/lb., Unshelled - $5/lb.Karen 704-857-6313after 5pm & weekends704-740-8264 anytime

Yum-m-m!Fresh Winter

Veggies!

Mixed greens, collards,creasey & turnip. Youpick! Freshly dug sweetpotatoes. 704-938-9863Leave message.

Fuel & Wood60 Gallon Fuel Tank/Tool Box $250, FireplaceInsert w/Stone Mantel$200. For More Info Call704-857-1854

Firewood for Sale:Pick-up/Dump Trucksized loads, delivered.704-647-4772

Wood heater, Englander.Free standing, bricklined, two speed fan.Uses up to 30” logs.$300. 704-699-5592

Furniture & Appliances

Air Conditioners, Wash-ers, Dryers, Ranges, Frig.$65 & up. Used TV & Ap-pliance Center Service af-ter the sale. 704-279-6500

Bar Chairs, 2, reallynice , 30in. Hand-rubbedsolid wood new uppolstryin plastic. $100 ea. Firm704-938-4481

Bedroom Suite – 1940'sRock maple. Excellentcondition. $499. Pleasecall 704-762-9197

Bedroom suite, new 5piece. All for $297.97.Hometown Furniture, 322S. Main St. 704-633-7777

China Cabinet, 2 Pc,china included. $350 Excellent condition. 704-223-1678

Coffee & end table,walnut color. Withstorage. $50 for coffeetable. $20 for end table.704-637-6504

Furniture & Appliances

Daybed- Wood andwrought iron. Greatshape. $75. Please Call704-856-1224

Dryer, Whirlpool, worksgreat $100, Also havefree matching washerthat needs repair. Greycolor. 704-938-4481

Sofa & Loveseat -Leather $200. ClothesDryer $75. For AdditionalInfo Call 704-857-1854

Sofa, beige. Like new.$250. 7 ½ ft. artificialChristmas tree $75. 2 TVtables $35 ea. 6 ½ ft.floor lamp. 704-638-8965

Stove – Electric - $150Washer/Dryer - $325All in great condition704-798-1926

Games and Toys

Games for kids. Candy-land, checkers, Chutes &Ladders. $2 ea. Call 704-640-4373 after 5pm.

Nintendo DS games -Drawn to Life, GeometryWars Galaxies,Scribblenauts. $25 336-751-5279 jenny

Rock on!Games, Rock Band /Guitar Hero for PS2. AlsoPS2 Drum Set, 2 guitars$40.00 (336)751-5279Jenny

Hunting and Fishing

Ladder stand. 20 footsingle deer ladder stand.Excellent shape. $100.704-212-7313 anytime

JewelryEngagement ring andband, both 14 kg. 1 ct.total weight. $500 704-707-7214 lv msg.

Lawn and Garden Holshouser Cycle ShopLawn mower repairs andtrimmer sharpening. Pick up& delivery. (704)637-2856

Misc For Sale26 Light Sunbed, new bulbs. $800 Firm.Please Call704-939-6915

ANDERSON'S SEW & SO,Husqvarna, Viking Sewing Ma-chines. Patterns, Notions, Fab-rics. 10104 Old Beatty FordRd., Rockwell. 704-279-3647

Bathroom Fixtures,used. 2 sinks and 1 toilet.$25 for all. Please call336-751-2600

BINGHAM-SMITHLUMBER CO.

Save money on lumber.Treated and Untreated.Round Fence Post in allsizes. Save extra whenbuying full units. CallPatrick at 980-234-8093.

Misc For SaleBed frames, 2pc. Metal.2 pair. $10/pair. Truckbedliner, $30. Call 704-640-4373 after 5pm.

Camper top shell, red,fits shortbed excellentcondition $500 obo.Leave message 704-279-4106 704-798-7306

Coca-Cola Collector's 6packs $5 each. Coca-Cola glasses and bottles$1.00 each. Salisbury 704/212-7813

Concrete pipe. 2- 4ft.by14in. 1- 4ft. by 40in. 6-4ft. by 27in. $40.00each. Call 704-239-8351

Curio Cabinet, glassshelves and sides, light.19x13x69". $35. 704-855-8353

Fiberglass Topper off fullsize 95 Chevy short bed.Blue in color, goodshape. Needs clean up.$425. 980-234-8877

Fireplace InsertSquires $450. Please Call704 892-4628

Franklin Mint Coca-ColaChristmas plate set of 6$15 each or $85 for theset. 704-212-7813

METAL: Angle, Channel,Pipe, Sheet & Plate Shear

Fabrication & WeldingFAB DESIGNS

2231 Old Wilkesboro RdOpen Mon-Fri 7-3:30

704-636-2349

Oil Drum/Tank. 500 gallon.Good condition, paintedfrequently. You haul it.$325 704-279-4275

Show offyour stuff!

With our

Send us a photoand description -

we'll advertise it inthe paper for 15

days, and online for30 days

for only $30*!Call today about our

Private Party Special! 704-797-4220

*some restrictions apply

STEEL, Channel, Angle,Flat Bars, Pipe Orders Cutto Length. Mobile HomeTruss- $6 ea.; Vinyl floorcovering- $4.89 yd.; Car-pet- $5.75 yd.; MasoniteSiding 4x8- $14; 12”x16'lap siding at $6.95 ea.School Desks - $7.50 ea.RECYCLING, Top pricespaid for Aluminum cans,Copper, Brass, Radiators,Aluminum.

Davis Enterprises Inc.7585 Sherrills Ford Rd.Salisbury, NC 28147

704-636-9821

Stop Smoking CigarettesNo Patches, No Gum, No PillsWith Hypnosis It's Easy! AlsoWeight Control. 704-933-1982

Wood Stove – VermontCastings. Top & frontloading, glass doors,great shape. Catalyticmodel, accepts up to 18inch wood. Cast iron withblue porcelain finish.$475. 980-234-8877

Misc For SaleTrampoline w/net, large.Only $100. Please call 704-245-8843

GOING ON VACATION?

Send Us Photos Of You withyour Salisbury Post to:

[email protected]

RestaurantEquipment

Deep Fryer $400. For More Info Please Call 704-857-1854

Sporting Goods

Marlin Mod 30AW, 30-30 with Gold Trigger, 3-9x40 Pro Hunter Scopeand Sling. $425. Call704-209-6460

Want to BuyMerchandise

AA Antiques. Buyinganything old, scrap gold& silver. Will help withyour estate or yard sale.704-433-1951.

All Coin CollectionsSilver, gold & copper.Will buy foreign & scrapgold. 704-636-8123

Timber wanted - Pine orhardwood. 5 acres ormore select or clear cut.Shaver Wood Products,Inc. Call 704-278-9291.

Watches –and scrap gold jewelry. 704-636-9277 or cell 704-239-9298

Business Opportunities

HHH�HHHHHHHHHHHHH

BAR/DANCE HALLSale or lease 3,000 sq.ft. Building. I-85 Exit.704-636-1477

J.Y. Monk Real EstateSchool-Get licensed fast,Charlotte/Concord cours-es. $399 tuition fee. FreeBrochure. 800-849-0932

Free Stuff

Free Kittens. Femalecalico mix kittens to agood home. Very friendly.Born in May 2010. Call704-630-1111.

Free Puppies. Pit/Rottmix. 9 weeks old. 704-637-1380 or 704-202-7582 before 9pm CUTE! Parents on site!

Lost & FoundFound 2 Great Danes onShuping Mill Road.Please Call to identify704-273-6518

Found Cat. Friday, Nov.5, N. Ellis Street,Siamese mix. Call 704-431-4821 to identify.

Found dog. Boxer type.Call to identify704-636-5700, option 9leave message

Found Female BoxerHistoric District ofSalisbury. Please call602-999-5987 to identify

FOUND: AustralianCattle Dog (Heeler). Red.Male. Kannapolis area.Call 704.239.6798

Found: Chocolate labnear Gold Hill, possibly amix, less than one yearold. Very sweet, andloves to jump. Please call704-640-4166.

Lost Orange & White Caton Garrick Road inSalisbury. If found,please call 704-638-6869

Lost orange tabby Manx(tailless) cat. 4yr oldneutered male, veryfriendly, no collar. NearHwy 152 in China Grove. Please call 704-856-2302

Lost Siamese mix cat.Adult female. CountryClub Hills area. Rewardoffered. Please call 704-637-0874

Autos

BMW, 2005 325i MidnightBlack on tan leather 2.5V6 auto trans, am, fm, cd,sunroof, duel seat warm-ers, all power, duel powerseats, RUNS & DRIVESNICELY!! 704-603-4255

Boats & Watercraft

Motorcycles& ATVs

Rentals &Leasing

Autos

Chevrolet HHR LS, 2009ONE OWNER, CLEAN,FUEL ECONOMY, verynice car, well maintained.Stock # 10D129A $12,987.704-637-9090

Chevrolet, 2008, HHRLS. P7529C. SilverstoneMetallic exterior, Grayinterior. $11,797. Callnow 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Chevy Cobalt, 2007,ONE OWNER, CLEANCAR FAX, great on gas,low miles, ready to go.10K182A $9,295

Boats & Watercraft

Motorcycles& ATVs

Rentals &Leasing

Autos

Chrysler PT Cruiser,2003. Patriot Blue Pearlwith 2 tone grey leather,2.4, 4 cyl., auto trans.,AM/FM/CD, SUNROOF,chrome rims, good tires,EXTRA CLEAN INSIDE &OUT!! 704-603-4255

Datsun 280 ZX, 1983. 5speed with T-tops, 200kmiles. 26 miles pergallon. $1900. 704-642-0526 or 336-953-2563

FinancingAvailable!

HONDA, 2003, ACCORDEX. $500-700 down, willhelp finance. Credit, NoProblem! Private partysale. Call 704-838-1538

Ford Escort LX, 1995.Automatic, air, clean.118k. $1,800. 704-636-4905. Dealer 17302

AutosELLIS AUTO AUCTION10 miles N. of Salisbury,Hwy 601, Sale EveryWednesday night 6 pm.

Ford, 2009, Fusion SE.F10170A. Vapor Silverexterior, Charcoal Blackinterior. $16,397.Call now 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Hyundai, 2009, AccentGLS. P7570. PlatinumSilver & Pearl exterior,Gray interior. $11,897. Call now!1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Infinity G35, 2006Obsidian Black on Blackleather interior 3.5 V6 6speed trans, LOADED allpower ops, SUNROOF,steering wheel controls,Bose stereo system, alloyrims, SUPER NICE! 704-603-4255

Jaguar, 2004, XJ8.Black exterior, tan leatherinterior. Heated seats, V8.Loaded. Low mileage.$15,000. 704-202-5747

Jeep Grand CherokeeLaredo, 2004. 4x4. Lightpewter metallix w/greyleather interior, 4.0 V6,auto trans., all powerops. AM/FM/CD, powerdriver seat, sunroof. NONSMOKER, extra clean.RUNS & DRIVESGREAT! 704-603-4255

Mazda, 1997, Miata.WARRANTY INCLUDED!Only 73k Miles. Very Clean.Drives like new. This is thebest value on the markettoday. Stk.# 10B271KB.$6,995. 704-637-9090

Mercedes S320, 1999Black on Grey leatherinterior, 3.2, V6, autotrans, LOADED, all powerops, low miles,SUNROOF, chrome rimsgood tires BULLETPROOF WINDOWS,extra clean MUST SEE!704-603-4255

Nissan 350, 2004 ConvSilver with Black leather in-terior, 3.5, V6, auto tiptron-ic trans, Bose am, fm, cd,tape sound system, FUNFOR THOSE NICEDAYS!!!!! 704-603-4255

PT Cruiser, 2009,Clean, Almost new, Carfax, 10b254CA $11,775

Toyota, 2006, Prius.P7550A. Super whiteexterior, gray interior.$14,197. 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Toyota, 2007,Yaris.T10707A. Silver StreakMica exterior, DarkCharcoal interior. $8,897.Call now 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

100% GuaranteedCredit Approval

*********OVER 100 VEHICLES

IN STOCK*********

1330 W. JAKEALEXANDER

BLVD. ********

BILL BOUDREU

www.autohouseofsalisbury.com

1330 W. JAKEALEXANDER BLVD.

*********100%

GUARANTEEDCREDIT APPROVAL

JEFF MARTINEZ

OVER 100 VEHICLES IN STOCKwww.autohouseofsalisbury.com

1330 W. JAKEALEXANDER BLVD.

*********100%

GUARANTEEDCREDIT APPROVAL

JEFF MARTINEZ

OVER 100 VEHICLES IN STOCKwww.autohouseofsalisbury.com

1330 W. JAKE ALEXANDER BLVD. ********

WE BUY VEHICLES FOR CASH!********

ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS********

WWW.AUTOHOUSEOFSALISBURY.COM

Yard Salesare a great

way tomake

some extra$$$

Advertise withthe

Salisbury Post

704-797-4220

SALISBURY POST S T O C K S SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 • 7D

THE MARKET IN REVIEW

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGEName Div Last Chg

CardnlHlth .78 13 35.02 -.38 +8.6

CitzSoBk .04m ... 4.79 ... +9.8

Culp Inc ... 9 10.24 -.41 +2.6

Delhaize 2.02e ... 73.02 -.18 -4.8

DukeEngy .98 12 17.79 -.08 +3.4

FNB Utd h ... ... .36 +.03 -72.1

FamilyDlr .62 18 48.36 -.16 +73.8

Innospec ... 30 19.85 -.02 +96.7

KrispKrm ... 88 5.27 -.19 +78.6

Lance .64 22 23.11 -.33 -12.1

Lowes .44 17 21.69 -.61 -7.3

NorflkSo 1.44 16 60.96 -1.01 +16.3

Nucor 1.44 63 40.06 -.58 -14.1

PiedNG 1.12 22 29.21 -.32 +9.2

ProgrssEn 2.48 14 44.26 -.03 +7.9

RedHat ... 93 41.96 -1.61 +35.8

RexAmRes ... 11 16.38 -.26 +16.5

ReynldAm 3.92f 14 64.72 -.11 +22.2

Ruddick .48 17 37.79 -.22 +46.9

SonocoP 1.12 16 32.65 -.28 +11.6

SpeedM .40 28 15.81 -.08 -10.3

SunTrst .04 ... 25.11 -.60 +23.8

UnivFor .40 52 33.00 -.17 -10.4

VulcanM 1.00 ... 40.66 -.97 -22.8

WellsFargo .20 11 27.54 -.65 +2.0

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET

NYSE

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Citigrp 4866391 4.29 -.07

S&P500ETF 2247826 120.20 -1.44

BkofAm 1669852 12.12 -.25

FordM 886067 16.30 -.31

SPDR Fncl 870536 14.94 -.25

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg

DB AgDS 24.65 +2.67 +12.1

ProUSSlv rs14.54 +1.56 +12.0

PSBMetDS12.84 +1.26 +10.9

NoahEduc 2.32 +.22 +10.5

Dillards 30.82 +2.73 +9.7

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

STR Hldgs 20.21 -4.31 -17.6

GushanE rs 4.42 -.83 -15.8

MPG OffTr 2.42 -.42 -14.8

DB AgriDL 10.97 -1.76 -13.8

ProSUltSilv116.32-15.13 -11.5

DIARY DIARY DIARY

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

AmBiltrt 5.60 +2.09 +59.5

ChinaShen 3.18 +.53 +20.0

Ever-Glory 2.30 +.22 +10.6

CKX Lands12.58 +1.16 +10.2

SearchM un 3.72 +.30 +8.8

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Aerocntry 14.81 -2.79 -15.9

PudaCoal 13.07 -1.22 -8.5

UQM Tech 2.20 -.19 -7.9

VistaGold 2.90 -.24 -7.6

Uranerz 2.85 -.23 -7.5

CmtyFinl 4.00 +.70 +21.2

AsteaIntl 2.70 +.45 +20.0

NtwkEq 4.03 +.66 +19.6

AltoPlrm 13.65 +1.59 +13.2

Pennichk 27.52 +3.12 +12.8

DynaVox n 4.21 -1.61 -27.7

InfoSvcs un 2.50 -.90 -26.5

NorestB 13.33 -4.14 -23.7

TOR Min rs 9.39 -2.76 -22.7

Heelys 2.91 -.44 -13.1

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AMEX

NovaGld g 101326 14.66 -.39

NthgtM g 57380 3.07 -.10

NwGold g 56108 8.48 -.39

GoldStr g 54811 4.49 -.23

ChinaShen 50467 3.18 +.53

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

NASDAQ

Cisco 2087440 20.15 -.37

Intel 967858 21.53 +.32

PwShs QQQ 911857 52.51 -.88

Microsoft 640131 26.27 -.41

Nvidia 522333 13.26 +.65

DiaOffs .50a 70.47-1.77

DigitalRlt 2.12 54.13 -.07

Dillards .16 u30.82+2.73

DrxEMBll s5.68e 37.89-2.90

DrSCBear rs ... 20.78+1.02

DirFnBear ... 11.62 +.54

DrxFBull s ... 23.53-1.16

DirxSCBull4.77e 56.40-2.92

DirxLCBear ... 10.45 +.39

DirxEnBull5.06e 46.31-2.15

Discover .08 18.60 -.49

Disney .35 u37.75+1.82

DomRescs 1.83 42.86 +.02

DowChm .60 31.30 -.51

DuPont 1.64 46.52 -.67

DukeEngy .98 17.79 -.08

DukeRlty .68 11.73 -.22

Dynegy rs ... 4.69 +.06

EMC Cp ... 21.72 -.17

EOG Res .62 92.05-2.06

EKodak ... 4.63 -.16

Eaton 2.32 u94.26 +.15

ElPasoCp .04 13.46 -.28

Elan ... 5.88 +.03

EldorGld g .05 17.79 +.05

EmersonEl1.38f 55.37 -.54

EnCana g s .80 29.18 -.87

ENSCO 1.40 48.16-1.34

EqtyRsd 1.35 49.31 -.20

ExcoRes .16f 18.75 -.13

Exelon 2.10 40.05 -.55

ExxonMbl 1.76 70.99 -.84

FairchldS ... 12.17 +.07

FibriaCelu ... 16.86 -.80

FstBcpPR ... .30 -.01

FirstEngy 2.20 35.37 -.33

FlagstB rs ... 1.32 +.02

Fluor .50 54.95-1.21

FootLockr .60 16.17 -.30

FordM ... 16.30 -.31

FortuneBr .76 u58.60+4.22

FMCG 2.00f 103.92-4.09

FrontierCm .75 9.00 -.15

G-H-IGafisa s .14e 15.71 -.64

GameStop ... 20.83 -.27

Gannett .16 12.67 -.22

Gap .40 20.49 -.04

GenElec .48f 16.25 -.10

GenGrPr n ... u15.40 -.04

GenMills s 1.12 36.34 -.25

Genworth ... 11.56 -.36

Gerdau .32e 13.17 -.28

GlaxoSKln2.00e 39.62 -.13

GoldFLtd .16e 17.31 -.67

Goldcrp g .36f 46.44 -.81

GoldmanS 1.40 165.83-1.88

Goodyear ... 10.10 -.21

Griffon ... 13.19 -.28

HCP Inc 1.86 33.77 -.37

Hallibrtn .36 u35.82 -.49

HarmonyG .07e 12.18 -.23

HartfdFn .20 24.40 -.95

HltMgmt ... 8.54 -.01

HeclaM ... 8.41 -.51

Heinz 1.80 48.10 -.21

Hersha .20 6.30 +.06

Hertz ... 12.02 -.48

Hess .40 70.06-1.84

HewlettP .32 42.21 -.89

Hexcel ... 15.67 -.81

HomeDp .95 31.44 -.26

HonwllIntl 1.21 47.52 -.79

HostHotls .04 15.84 -.28

Huntsmn .40 13.37 -.32

IAMGld g .06 17.33 -.41

ICICI Bk .53e 53.96-1.63

ING ... 10.75 -.09

iShGold s ... 13.38 -.39

iSAstla .81e 24.79 -.49

iShBraz 2.58e 76.75-1.21

iShGer .30e 23.77 -.05

iSh HK .48e 19.71 -.26

iShJapn .16e 10.25 -.08

iSh Kor .39e 55.46-1.84

iSMalas .25e 13.92 -.21

iShMex .75e 58.35 -.79

iShSing .38e 13.96 -.38

iSTaiwn .21e 13.99 -.34

iShSilver ... 25.52-1.59

iShChina25.68e 46.02-1.43

iSSP500 2.34e 120.60-1.45

iShEMkts .59e 46.41-1.15

iShB20 T 3.83e 95.81 -.52

iS Eafe 1.38e 57.44 -.48

iSR1KG .72e 54.72 -.77

iShR2K .79e 72.03-1.22

iShREst 1.88e 54.96 -.52

iStar ... 5.39 -.23

ITT Corp 1.00 46.93 -.86

ITW 1.36 47.42 -.51

IngerRd .28 42.01 -.91

IBM 2.60 143.74-1.69

Intl Coal ... 6.12 -.41

IntlGame .24 16.30 +.06

IntPap .50 25.67 -.56

Interpublic ... 10.54 -.16

Invesco .44 22.13 -.32

ItauUnibH .59e 24.61 -.30

J-K-LJCrew ... 33.91 -.69

JPMorgCh .20 39.61 -.41

Jabil .28 14.39 -.01

JanusCap .04 11.41 -.29

JohnJn 2.16 63.67 -.25

JohnsnCtl .52 36.45 -.66

JonesGrp .20 d13.29 -.55

JnprNtwk ... u35.81+1.28

KB Home .25 12.43 -.48

KeyEngy ... 10.49 -.25

Keycorp .04 8.02 -.25

KimbClk 2.64 62.02 -.13

Kimco .72f 16.94 -.31

KingPhrm ... 14.15 -.02

Kinross g .10 18.34 -.32

Kohls ... 51.42 -.99

Kraft 1.16 30.62 +.16

KrispKrm ... 5.27 -.19

Kroger .42f 22.99 +.34

LDK Solar ... 12.53 -.23

LSI Corp ... 5.52 -.05

LVSands ... 48.42-2.23

LeggMason .24f 33.05 -.85

LennarA .16 16.05 -.39

LillyEli 1.96 34.76 -.19

Limited .60a 31.64 -.50

LincNat .20f 23.89-1.11

LizClaib ... 6.34 -.14

LloydBkg 1.45r 4.45 +.07

LockhdM 3.00f 69.49 -.62

LaPac ... 8.36 -.05

Lowes .44 21.69 -.61

LyonBas A ... 27.40 -.89

M-N-0MBIA ... 10.97 -.14

MEMC ... 13.00 -.15

MFA Fncl .90f 8.10 -.01

MGIC ... 8.34 -.47

MGM Rsts ... 12.92 -.36

MPG OffTr ... 2.42 -.42

Macys .20 25.06 +.14

Manitowoc .08 11.18 -.41

Manulife g .52 14.73 -.24

MarathonO 1.00 33.74 -.40

MktVGold .11p 60.07-1.71

MktVRus .08e 34.80 -.76

MktVJrGld ... 39.18-1.57

MktV Agri .42e 50.31-1.61

MarIntA .35f 38.54 -.59

MarshM .84f 25.42 +.18

MarshIls .04 5.52 -.05

Masco .30 11.36 -.03

MasseyEn .24 47.12 +.10

McDrmInt s ... 17.36 -.63

McDnlds 2.44f 78.85 -.85

McAfee ... 47.27 -.09

MedcoHlth ... 58.97-1.15

Medtrnic .90 34.63 -.86

Merck 1.52 34.71 -.50

MetLife .74 39.64 -.49

MetroPCS ... 12.13 -.05

MitsuUFJ ... 4.70 -.10

MobileTel s ... 21.55 -.21

Monsanto 1.12f 62.15-1.51

MonstrWw ... 19.14 -.81

MorgStan .20 25.57 -.74

Mosaic .20 69.70-4.16

Motorola ... 7.99 -.11

NRG Egy ... d19.61 -.55

NV Energy .48f 13.78 -.03

NYSE Eur 1.20 28.81 -.46

Nabors ... 21.76 -.61

NBkGreece.29e 2.02 -.02

NOilVarco .40a 57.65-1.91

NatSemi .40f 13.64 -.01

NY CmtyB 1.00 16.75 -.26

NewellRub .20 17.28 -.09

NewmtM .60 61.55-1.47

Nexen g .20 22.09 +.49

NobleCorp .90e 36.90 -.72

NobleEn .72 82.25-3.22

NokiaCp .56e 10.28 -.29

Nordstrm .80 41.40-1.00

NorthropG 1.88 62.90-1.17

Novartis 1.99e 55.64 -.80

OGE Engy 1.45 44.82 -.45

OcciPet 1.52 87.46 -.31

OfficeDpt ... 4.48 -.24

OilSvHT 2.66e 127.00-2.89

Omnicom .80 46.05 -.43

P-Q-RPG&E Cp 1.82 47.47 -.08

PMI Grp ... 3.20 -.05

PNC .40 56.64-1.17

PPG 2.20 76.78-1.33

PPL Corp 1.40 26.12 -.43

PackAmer .60 25.12 -.45

PatriotCoal ... 14.72-1.29

PeabdyE .34f 57.65-2.11

PennWst g 1.80 22.18 -.53

Penney .80 31.13-1.09

PepsiCo 1.92 64.64 -.26

Petrohawk ... 18.50 -.62

PetrbrsA 1.12e 30.68-1.13

Petrobras 1.12e 33.87-1.19

Pfizer .72 16.85 -.13

PhilipMor 2.56f 59.64 -.18

PinWst 2.10 40.91 -.42

Potash .40 139.91-2.09

PS Agri ... 28.87-1.26

PS USDBull ... 22.61 -.03

PrecCastpt .12 132.93 -.94

PrideIntl ... 32.84 +.30

ProShtS&P ... 46.29 +.56

PrUShS&P ... 26.50 +.61

PrUlShDow ... 22.50 +.35

ProUltQQQ ... 75.56-2.63

PrUShQQQ ... 12.68 +.39

ProUltSP .43e 43.53-1.06

ProUShL20 ... 36.82 +.38

ProUSRE rs ... 19.50 +.37

ProUShtFn ... 18.05 +.56

ProUFin rs .09e 58.72-1.84

ProUSR2K ... 15.15 +.49

ProUltR2K .01e 36.04-1.21

ProUSSP500 ... 22.91 +.80

ProUltCrude ... 10.95 -.83

ProUSSlv rs ... 14.54+1.56

ProUShCrude... 11.94 +.82

ProctGam 1.93 64.33 -.03

ProgsvCp 1.16e 21.18 -.40

ProLogis .45m 13.28 -.20

ProvET g .72b 7.30 -.27

Prudentl 1.15f 54.50 -.52

PSEG 1.37 31.66 -.40

PulteGrp ... 7.49 -.38

QuantaSvc ... 17.31 -.54

QntmDSS ... 3.26 -.10

QksilvRes ... 14.93 -.40

QwestCm .32 6.79 -.04

RRI Engy ... 3.70 -.09

RadianGrp .01 7.69 -.45

RadioShk .25 20.16 -.19

RangeRs .16 42.07-1.33

Raytheon 1.50 46.41 -.74

RegionsFn .04 6.15 -.26

ReneSola ... 11.13 -.39

RepubSvc .80 28.27 +.10

ReynldAm 3.92f 64.72 -.11

RioTinto s .90e 69.49-1.99

RiteAid ... .93 -.03

Rowan ... 31.06-1.01

RylCarb ... 41.24 -.82

Ryland .12 15.91 -.74

S-T-USCANA 1.90 40.94 -.30

SLM Cp ... 11.81 -.36

A-B-CA-Power ... 7.17 -.29

ASML Hld .27e 32.27 +.05

ATP O&G ... 15.12 -.77

AVI Bio ... 1.83 -.04

AcadiaPh h ... d.66 -.04

AcmePkt h ... u41.60 -.34

ActivePwr ... u2.06 -.02

ActivsBliz .15 11.50 -.39

AdobeSy ... 29.54 -.40

Adtran .36 31.82 -.24

AdvEnId ... 11.75 -.30

AEterna g ... 1.32 +.01

Affymetrix ... 4.54 +.04

AgFeed ... 2.55 -.08

AirMedia ... 7.46 +.10

AkamaiT ... 49.77 -.67

Alexion ... 72.49 +.08

Alkerm ... 11.13 -.23

AllosThera ... 4.02 -.17

AllscriptH ... 18.35 +.14

AlteraCp lf .24 32.50 -.40

Amazon ... 165.68 -4.69

ACapAgy5.60e 28.37 -.99

AmCapLtd ... 7.11 -.23

AmSupr ... 34.48 -1.00

Amgen ... 54.47 -.15

AmkorT lf ... 6.34 -.24

Amylin ... 13.30 -.05

Anadigc ... 5.75 -.21

Ancestry ... 26.49 -.01

Ansys ... 48.98 -.11

A123 Sys ... 9.05 +.40

ApolloGrp ... 35.85 -.78

ApolloInv 1.12 10.34 -.35

Apple Inc ... 308.03 -8.63

ApldMatl .28 12.59 -.04

AMCC ... 10.49 -.21

Approach ... 18.55 -.17

ArenaPhm ... d1.43 -.05

AresCap 1.40 16.50 -.13

AriadP ... 3.63 -.08

Ariba Inc ... 19.25 -.66

ArmHld .12e 17.11 +.02

Arris ... 9.99 +.08

ArtTech ... 5.95 ...

ArubaNet ... 22.72 -.41

AscentSol ... 3.90 -.08

AsiaInfoL ... 18.48 -.69

AspenTech ... 12.42 -.22

AsscdBanc .04 13.44 -.14

Atheros ... 33.14 -.34

AtlasEngy ... 43.84 +.01

Atmel ... 9.92 -.26

Autobytel h ... .80 -.02

Autodesk ... 35.25 -1.03

AutoData 1.44f 45.42 -.41

AvagoTch ... u25.72 +.87

AvanirPhm ... 4.79 -.08

BE Aero ... 34.09 -1.61

BGC Ptrs .48e 7.66 -.17

BMC Sft ... 45.00 -.71

BMP Sunst ... 9.79 -.01

BSD Med ... u7.03 +.28

BkGranit h ... .74 +.08

BannerCp .04 1.78 -.01

BeacnRfg ... 15.55 -.24

BedBath ... 44.11 -.85

Biodel ... 1.94 -.04

BiogenIdc ... 64.50 -.23

BlkRKelso 1.28 11.60 -.11

BlueCoat ... 26.17 -.82

BostPrv .04 5.42 -.20

BrigExp ... 24.36 -1.27

Broadcom .32 41.34 -.01

BrcdeCm ... 5.66 -.10

Bucyrus .10 69.62 -2.32

CA Inc .16 23.15 -.24

CH Robins1.00 71.20 -.60

CNinsure .26e 21.93 -1.22

CadencePh ... 8.04 -.07

Cadence ... 8.32 -.11

CdnSolar ... 14.16 -.79

CpstnTrb h ... .80 -.03

CareerEd ... 17.56 -.32

Carrizo ... 27.31 -1.12

CaviumNet ... 33.83 +.76

Celgene ... 60.30 -1.09

CentEuro ... 25.48 -.58

CentAl ... 14.44 -.51

Cephln ... 64.97 -1.28

ChrmSh ... 3.54 -.14

ChkPoint ... 43.20 -.47

Cheesecake ... 29.41 -.46

ChildPlace ... 47.24 -.28

ChinaMda ... 18.22 -1.28

ChiValve n ... 11.16 -.47

CienaCorp ... 14.73 +.10

CinnFin 1.60f 29.77 -.24

Cintas .49f 27.22 -.31

Cirrus ... 12.78 -.44

Cisco ... 20.15 -.37

CitrixSys ... 64.79 -2.01

CityTlcm .52e 14.44 +1.25

CleanEngy ... 14.21 -.41

Clearwire ... 6.41 -.28

CognizTech ... 63.23 -.56

Coinstar ... u61.41 -.96

Comcast .38 20.43 -.25

Comc spcl .38 19.18 -.24

Compuwre ... 10.05 -.14

ConcurTch ... 49.67 -.23

CorinthC ... 4.22 +.06

Costco .82 65.20 -.15

Cree Inc ... 53.49 -.42

Crocs ... 15.65 -.65

Ctrip.com s ... 47.93 -.60

Cyclacel ... 1.67 +.07

CypSemi ... 15.28 +.04

D-E-FDell Inc ... 13.42 -.51

DeltaPtr h ... .79 -.03

Dndreon ... 35.13 -1.09

Dentsply .20 31.12 -.67

DirecTV A ... 42.44 -.61

DiscCm A ... 40.40 -.20

DishNetwk2.00e 19.50 -.23

DonlleyRR1.04 16.73 -.28

DrmWksA ... 32.27 -.82

DryShips ... 5.39 -.24

DynaVox n ... d4.21 -1.61

ETrade rs ... 14.98 -.35

eBay ... 30.14 -.65

EDAP TMS ... 3.27 +.28

EagleBulk ... 5.51 -.20

ErthLink .64 9.09 -.03

EstWstBcp .04 17.90 -.52

ElectArts ... 15.83 -.17

EndoPhrm ... 35.71 +.18

EngyConv ... 5.11 +.11

Entegris ... 6.09 -.08

EntropCom ... 8.35 -.15

Equinix ... 83.78 -2.01

EricsnTel .28e 10.14 -.27

EvrgrSlr h ... .88 -.03

Exelixis ... 4.26 -.25

ExideTc ... 7.37 -.40

Expedia .28 26.66 -.66

ExpdIntl .40 51.09 -.24

F5 Netwks ...u123.86 +.16

FLIR Sys ... 27.74 -.44

Fastenal .84f 52.33 -1.03

FifthThird .04 12.87 -.37

Finisar ... 19.39 +1.46

FinLine .16 16.11 +.24

FstNiagara .60f 12.30 -.14

FstSolar ... 138.39 -2.56

FstMerit .64 18.35 -.30

Fiserv ... 55.15 -.62

Flextrn ... 6.75 -.16

FocusMda ... 24.00 -.59

Fossil Inc ... 67.74 -1.17

FosterWhl ... 28.11 -1.10

FresKabi rt ... .03 ...

FuelCell ... 1.40 -.02

FultonFncl .12 9.06 -.05

Fuqi Intl lf ... 7.02 -.24

G-H-IGSI Cmmrc ... 25.65 -.21

GT Solar ... 8.64 -.22

GameTc hlf ... .51 +.14

Garmin 1.50f 29.66 +.31

Gentex .44 21.24 -.36

Genzyme ... 69.84 -.32

GeronCp ... 5.86 -.22

GileadSci ... 37.80 -1.18

GlacierBc .52 13.34 -.17

GloblInd ... 6.10 -.35

GlbSpcMet .15 16.59 +.05

Google ... 603.29-13.90

Gymbree ... 65.22 ...

HSN Inc ... 27.50 +.17

HanmiFncl ... 1.12 -.05

HarbinElec ... 20.29 -.60

Harmonic ... 6.65 -.06

HercOffsh ... 2.93 -.14

Hologic ... 16.76 -.21

HudsCity .60 11.53 -.12

HumGen ... 23.60 -2.88

HuntBnk .04 5.90 -.26

iGateCorp .26e u22.33 -.37

Ikanos ... 1.03 -.03

Illumina ... 56.52 -.38

Imax Corp ... 21.60 -.45

Incyte ... 16.07 -.28

Infinera ... 8.15 -.46

Informat ... 39.80 -.72

InfosysT .90e 66.30 -1.35

InglesMkts .66 19.40 -.24

IntgDv ... 6.14 -.01

Intel .72f 21.53 +.32

InterDig ... 33.46 -1.23

Intersil .48 13.20 -.08

Intuit ... 48.04 -.76

IsilonSys ... 26.29 +.30

Isis ... 9.78 -.02

J-K-LJA Solar ... 8.50 -.38

JDS Uniph ... 11.67 -.02

JackInBox ... 23.06 -.75

Jamba ... 2.22 -.06

JamesRiv ... 18.70 -.34

JetBlue ... 6.81 -.06

JoyGlbl .70 72.38 -2.46

KLA Tnc 1.00 36.68 -.28

Kulicke ... 5.95 -.32

L&L Egy n ... 10.42 -.61

LamResrch ... 45.31 -.06

Lattice ... 4.49 -.02

LawsnSft ... 8.61 -.15

LeapWirlss ... 11.97 -.26

Level3 h ... 1.14 +.02

LibGlobA ... 37.49 -.85

LibtyMIntA ... 15.24 -.23

LifeTech ... 50.41 -.48

LimelghtN ... 7.64 -.23

LinearTch .92 31.44 ...

LinnEngy 2.64f 35.86 -.95

Logitech ... 20.47 -.43

lululemn g ... 47.42 -.89

M-N-0MIPS Tech ... 14.16 -.47

MagicSft .50e u4.57 +.37

MannKd ... 5.84 +.31

MarvellT ... 19.83 -.19

Mattel .75 23.69 -.25

MaximIntg .84 22.22 -.25

MelcoCrwn ... 6.16 -.35

MentorGr ... 11.24 -.14

MercadoL ... 58.33 +.33

MergeHlth ... 4.03 +.14

Microchp 1.38f 33.55 -.02

Micromet ... 6.55 -.45

MicronT ... 7.72 -.13

MicroSemi ... u22.64 +1.81

Microsoft .64f 26.27 -.41

Microtune ... 2.88 -.01

Mindspeed ... 6.50 -.17

Molex .70f 21.05 -.48

Mylan ... 19.25 -.22

NGAS Rs h ... .40 +.00

NII Hldg ... 41.16 -1.04

Nanomtr ... 11.52 -.75

NasdOMX ... 21.51 -.23

NektarTh ... 13.79 -.17

Net1UEPS ... 11.48 +.10

NetLogic s ... 29.75 -.13

NetApp ... 54.11 -1.33

Netflix ... 173.00 -2.14

NeutTand ... 15.70 -.32

NewsCpA .15 14.35 -.20

NewsCpB .15 15.99 -.15

NorTrst 1.12 50.60 -.60

NwstBcsh .40 10.87 -.04

Novavax ... 2.24 -.14

Novell ... 5.83 +.15

Novlus ... 30.06 +.03

NuVasive ... 24.78 -.42

NuanceCm ... 16.49 -.32

Nvidia ... 13.26 +.65

OReillyA h ... 59.63 -.73

Oclaro rs ... 9.70 +.22

OmniVisn ... 26.66 -1.06

OnSmcnd ... 8.04 -.06

OnyxPh ... 29.72 -.19

Oracle .20 28.32 -.25

Oxigene h ... .26 -.01

P-Q-RPDL Bio 1.00a 5.44 +.02

PMC Sra ... 7.60 +.05

PSS Wrld ... 23.13 -.19

Paccar .48f 52.82 -1.14

PacCapB h ... .50 -.04

PanASlv .10f 36.78 -1.47

ParamTch ... 21.84 -.48

Patterson .40 28.61 -.30

PattUTI .20 20.30 -.54

Paychex 1.24 27.75 -.02

PeopUtdF .62 12.50 -.11

Perrigo .28f 59.07 -1.26

PetsMart .50 38.16 -1.03

Polycom ... 34.93 -.53

Popular ... 2.84 -.09

Power-One ... 8.65 -.29

PwShs QQQ.33e52.51 -.88

Powrwav ... 2.11 -.10

PriceTR 1.08 57.74 -.92

priceline ... 414.93 -4.64

PrinctnR ... d1.12 -.08

PrUPShQQQ... 35.61 +1.70

ProspctCap1.21 10.23 -.12

QIAGEN ... 18.42 +.06

QiaoXing ... 1.85 -.06

Qlogic ... 18.07 -.29

Qualcom .76 47.47 -.45

QuestSft ... 25.97 -.25

Questcor ... 12.88 -.21

RF MicD ... 7.12 -.21

AbdAsPac .42 6.86 -.15

AlexcoR g ... 6.48 -.37

AlldNevG ... 27.47 -.53

AlmadnM g ... 2.70 -.14

AmApparel ... 1.27 +.21

AmO&G ... 9.57 -.24

Anooraq g ... 1.30 -.07

AntaresP ... 1.49 -.03

ArmourRsd1.44m 7.49 +.10

Augusta g ... 3.82 -.17

Aurizon g ... 7.23 -.30

BMB Munai ... .68 -.04

Banro g ... 3.02 -.14

BarcUBS36 ... 44.66-1.84

BarcGSOil ... 23.93 -.94

Brigus grs ... 1.75 -.04

CAMAC En ... 2.41 -.04

CapGold n ... 4.44 -.12

CelSci ... .68 -.02

CFCda g .01 18.43 -.63

CheniereEn ... 4.37 -.17

ChiArmM ... 3.10 -.21

ChiGengM ... 1.73 -.05

ChinNEPet ... 7.17 -.31

ChinaShen ... 3.18 +.53

ClaudeR g ... 1.68 -.09

CrSuiHiY .32 3.00 -.02

Crossh glf ... .25 -.01

Crystallx g ... .33 -.01

DejourE g ... .36 -.03

DenisnM g ... 2.66 -.04

Dreams ... u2.23 +.14

EV LtdDur 1.39 16.25 -.22

EndvSilv g ... 6.12 -.18

ExeterR gs ... 5.91 -.12

Fronteer g ... 8.72 -.38

GabGldNR 1.68 18.13 -.26

GascoEngy ... .34 -.01

GenMoly ... 5.38 -.25

GoldenMin ... 24.70-1.30

GoldStr g ... 4.49 -.23

GranTrra g ... 7.65 -.18

GrtBasG g ... 3.07 ...

HQ SustM ... 4.44 -.04

HooperH ... .67 +.02

HstnAEn .02 15.00 -.80

Hyperdyn ... 3.00 +.01

InovioPhm ... 1.23 +.04

Kemet rs ... 13.93 -.18

KodiakO g ... 4.25 -.11

LibertyAcq ... 10.67 ...

LongweiPI ... 3.38 -.06

MadCatz g ... .58 -.03

MagHRes ... 4.95 +.07

Metalico ... 4.37 -.24

Metalline ... .81 +.01

Minefnd g ... 9.61 -.14

NIVS IntT ... 2.61 -.12

NBRESec .24 3.88 -.01

Nevsun g ... 5.86 -.18

NewEnSys ... 7.19 -.34

NwGold g ... 8.48 -.39

NA Pall g ... 5.33 -.19

NDynMn g ... 9.10 -.53

NthnO&G ... 19.50 -.82

NthgtM g ... 3.07 -.10

NovaGld g ... 14.66 -.39

Oilsands g ... .46 -.03

OrienPap n ... 6.39 -.01

ParaG&S ... 1.68 -.07

PhrmAth ... 3.10 -.07

PionDrill ... 6.93 +.02

PlatGpMet ... 2.28 -.11

PolyMet g ... 2.10 -.10

ProceraNt ... .48 -.02

PudaCoal ... 13.07-1.22

Name Div Last Chg Rambus ... 20.23 -.25

Randgold .17e 98.51 -1.83

RepubAir ... 8.09 +.29

RschMotn ... 58.80 -.27

RexEnergy ... 12.14 +.08

RINO Intl ... 11.01 -.09

RosettaR ... 30.65 -1.98

RossStrs .64 63.89 -.69

Rovi Corp ... 52.22 -.67

Ryanair 2.29p 30.49 +.40

S-T-USBA Com ... 37.51 -.62

SEI Inv .20f 23.03 -.40

STEC ... 16.25 -1.12

SalixPhm ... 41.96 +.08

SanDisk ... 39.57 -.85

Sanmina ... 11.50 -.32

Sapient .35e 12.37 -.18

SavientPh ... 11.77 -.29

SciGames ... d7.43 -.42

SeagateT ... 14.09 -.33

SearsHldgs ... 69.20 -2.22

Semtech ... u23.05 +.05

Sequenom ... 7.25 -.11

ShufflMstr ... u10.00 +.02

SilicnImg ... 6.16 -.34

SilcnLab ... 41.61 +.01

Slcnware .41e 5.15 -.11

SilvStd g ... 25.51 -.93

Sina ... 58.70 -1.79

SiriusXM ... 1.42 -.02

SironaDent ... 36.26 -1.55

SkywksSol ... 23.14 -.18

SmartM ... 6.26 -.64

SmartT gn ... d8.42 -.28

SmartHeat ... 6.35 -.47

Solarfun ... 9.06 -.23

SonicCorp ... 8.97 -.29

SonicSolu ... 9.61 -.36

Sonus ... 2.72 -.06

Spreadtrm ... 15.08 -.47

Staples .36 20.28 -.33

StarScient ... 1.72 -.01

Starbucks .52 30.19 -.55

StlDynam .30 15.90 -.32

StemCell h ... 1.02 -.03

SterlBcsh .06 6.13 -.12

SuccessF ... 28.63 -.10

SunOpta ... 6.66 -.37

SunPowerA ... 13.97 -.14

SunPwr B ... 13.48 -.28

Symantec ... 17.23 +.16

Synaptics ... 28.64 -.32

Synopsys ... 25.13 -.20

TD Ameritr .20 17.20 -.16

TFS Fncl ... d8.31 -.26

THQ ... 4.27 -.05

tw telecom ... 16.57 -.45

TakeTwo ... 11.11 -.51

TlCmSys ... 5.04 -.22

Tellabs .08 6.74 -.02

TeslaMot n ... u29.84 +1.81

TevaPhrm.75e 50.75 -.16

TexRdhse ... 15.94 -.06

Thoratec ... 30.95 -.40

TibcoSft ... 19.09 -.33

TiVo Inc ... 9.10 -.17

TowerSemi ... 1.44 -.07

TriQuint ... 10.39 -.29

UtdCBksGa ... d1.39 -.15

UtdOnln .40 6.66 -.30

UniTkGS n ... d4.44 -.15

UrbanOut ... 32.90 -.20

V-W-X-Y-ZVCA Ant ... 22.52 +.11

ValueClick ... 14.93 -.32

VeecoInst ... 42.12 -1.68

Verisign ... 34.21 -.37

VertxPh ... 33.77 -1.22

VirgnMda h .16 26.32 -.13

Vivus ... 6.60 -.14

Vodafone1.33e 28.00 ...

WarnerCh s8.50e19.92 -.24

WernerEnt.20a 22.03 +.03

WestellT ... 3.21 +.17

WstptInn g ... 18.00 -.22

WetSeal ... 3.21 -.06

WhitneyH .04 9.16 +.14

WholeFd ... 46.86 -.38

Windstrm 1.00 13.00 -.17

Winn-Dixie ... 7.15 +.11

Wynn 1.00a 111.00 -3.56

Xilinx .64 26.64 +.14

YRC Ww rs ... 3.82 -.05

Yahoo ... 16.55 -.25

Yongye ... 8.31 -.07

Zagg ... 7.72 +.56

ZionBcp .04 21.36 -.56

Zix Corp ... 3.96 -.04

Zoran ... 6.98 -.01

RadientPh ... .43 -.01

RareEle g ... 11.10 -.21

RegeneRx ... d.23 -.03

Rentech ... 1.24 -.05

Rubicon g ... 3.74 -.23

SamsO&G ... 1.21 -.04

SinoHub ... 2.58 +.06

TanzRy g ... 6.88 -.10

Taseko ... 4.57 -.09

TianyinPh .10 3.21 +.03

TimberlnR ... 1.16 -.05

TrnsatlPt n ... 3.31 -.05

TravelCtrs ... 3.34 -.11

US Geoth ... 1.26 -.10

Uluru ... .09 -.00

Ur-Energy ... 1.56 -.11

Uranerz ... 2.85 -.23

UraniumEn ... 5.15 -.39

VantageDrl ... 1.70 -.05

VirnetX .50e 15.11 -.63

VistaGold ... 2.90 -.24

WFAdvInco1.02 10.01 -.24

YM Bio g ... 2.00 -.05

ZBB Engy ... .61 -.12

SpdrDJIA 2.55e 112.16 -.92

SpdrGold ... 133.69-3.97

SP Mid 1.54e 153.26-2.43

S&P500ETF2.31e120.20 -1.44

SpdrHome .12e 16.17 -.38

SpdrKbwBk.11e 23.35 -.53

SpdrLehHY4.21e 40.30 -.14

SpdrLe1-3bll ... 45.86 +.02

SpdrRetl .57e 44.60 -.74

SpdrOGEx .20e 48.04 -.89

SpdrMetM .35e 59.94-2.24

STR Hldgs ... 20.21-4.31

Safeway .48 23.05 +.20

Saks ... 11.24 -.37

SandRdge ... 5.17 -.06

Sanofi 1.63e 34.00 -.39

SaraLee .46f 15.28 -.17

Schlmbrg .84 74.11 -.91

Schwab .24 15.16 +.05

SemiHTr .60e 30.52 -.01

Sensata n ... u25.90+1.70

SiderNac s .58e 17.14 -.20

SilvWhtn g ... 33.79-1.60

SilvrcpM g .08 11.39 -.81

Solutia ... 20.99 -.54

SouthnCo 1.82 38.09 -.17

SthnCopper1.68e 44.13-2.17

SwstAirl .02 13.56 -.13

SwstnEngy ... 37.89 -.56

SpiritAero ... 18.08 -.72

SprintNex ... 4.03 +.03

SprottSilv ... 10.95 -.40

SP Matls 1.05e 35.51 -.81

SP HlthC .58e 30.93 -.39

SP CnSt .77e 28.71 -.14

SP Consum.43e 36.01 -.38

SP Engy 1.00e 62.94 -.94

SPDR Fncl .16e 14.94 -.25

SP Inds .60e 32.41 -.39

SP Tech .31e 24.34 -.35

SP Util 1.27e 31.34 -.26

StarwdHtl .20e 56.35-1.49

StateStr .04 43.89-1.07

Sterlite .08e 16.32 -.71

StillwtrM ... 20.04-1.12

Suncor gs .40 34.57-1.40

SunstnHtl ... 9.96 +.04

Suntech ... 8.47 -.37

SunTrst .04 25.11 -.60

Supvalu .35 10.33 -.01

SwftEng ... 36.01 -.95

Synovus .04 2.05 -.04

Sysco 1.04f 28.69 +.07

TJX .60 45.79 +.04

TaiwSemi .47e 11.05 -.01

TalismE g .25 19.45 -.51

Target 1.00 54.19 -.11

TataMotors .32e 30.21-1.62

TeckRes g .40 49.12-1.07

Tenaris .68e 44.82 -.65

TenetHlth ... 4.65 -.03

Teradyn ... 11.58 -.22

Tesoro ... 14.59 -.21

TexInst .52f 30.95 +.15

Textron .08 21.36 -.51

ThermoFis ... 52.20 -.38

ThomCrk g ... 12.62 -.56

3M Co 2.10 86.24 -.26

Tiffany 1.00 55.66-1.38

TW Cable 1.60 62.70 +.69

TimeWarn .85 30.74 -.36

TitanMet ... 18.19 -.68

Total SA 3.13e 53.91 -.63

Transocn ... 67.71-1.68

Travelers 1.44 56.31 -.10

TrinaSol s ... 24.51-2.74

TycoIntl .85e 37.77 -.62

Tyson .16 14.99 -.01

UBS AG ... 17.22 -.24

UDR .74f 22.21 -.59

US Airwy ... 10.63 -.19

USEC ... 5.66 -.23

USG ... 13.62-1.01

UltraPt g ... 47.77 -.26

UnionPac 1.32 90.29 -.65

UtdContl ... 27.87 -.53

UtdMicro .08e 3.01 -.10

UPS B 1.88 68.12 -.16

UtdRentals ... 19.64 -.58

US Bancrp .20 24.62 -.56

US NGsFd ... 5.51 -.16

US OilFd ... 36.47-1.37

USSteel .20 47.16 -.64

UtdTech 1.70 74.88 -.51

UtdhlthGp .50 36.67 -.80

UnumGrp .37 21.83 -.25

V-W-X-Y-ZVale SA .76e 32.37-1.01

Vale SA pf .76e 28.94 -.77

ValeantPh .38a 25.05 -.24

ValeroE .20 19.97 +.01

VangEmg .55e 47.22-1.14

VerizonCm1.95f 32.56 -.07

ViacomB .60 38.95 -.23

VimpelC n ... 15.46 -.11

Visa .60f 76.94-2.28

VishayInt ... 13.71 +.09

VMware ... 80.99-2.28

WalMart 1.21 54.13 -.21

Walgrn .70 34.83 -.38

WshPst 9.00 388.00-3.79

WsteMInc 1.26 35.09 +.16

WatsnPh ... u50.41 -.57

WeathfIntl ... 19.50 -.15

WellPoint ... 58.08 -.51

WellsFargo .20 27.54 -.65

WendyArby .08f 4.97 -.07

WDigital ... 32.58 -.41

WstnRefin ... u8.33 -.36

WstnUnion .24 18.11 -.51

Weyerh .20a 17.45 -.30

Whrlpl 1.72 74.13-2.00

WmsCos .50 23.05 -.56

WiscEn 1.60 59.10 -.29

WT India .14e 26.74 -.96

Wyndham .48 28.03 -.71

XL Grp .40 20.13 -.56

Xerox .17 11.29 -.15

Yamana g .12f 11.70 -.35

YingliGrn ... 11.04 -.59

YumBrnds 1.00f 50.79-1.11

Zimmer ... 50.95 -.34

ZweigTl .40 3.73 -.04

Name Last Chg %Chg

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Name Last Chg %Chg

Name Last Chg %Chg

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

A-B-CAES Corp ... 11.46 -.24

AFLAC 1.20 54.65-1.05

AK Steel .20 13.21 -.32

AMR ... 8.52 -.12

AT&T Inc 1.68 28.46 -.37

AU Optron ... 9.77 -.26

AbtLab 1.76 48.58-1.20

AberFitc .70 45.92 -.91

Accenture .90f 43.36 -.88

AMD ... 7.63 ...

AegeanMP .04 10.12 -.17

Aeropostl s ... 23.88 -.48

Aetna .04 31.62 -.21

Agilent ... u36.36 +.63

Agnico g .18 79.82-1.60

Agrium g .11 80.81-3.75

AirTran ... 7.41 -.01

AlcatelLuc ... 2.94 -.08

Alcoa .12 13.49 -.32

AllegCp 6.00t 298.61 +.42

AldIrish ... 1.04 +.10

Allstate .80 30.18 -.45

AlphaNRs ... 48.62-1.20

Altria 1.52f 24.85 -.38

AMovilL 1.29e 57.14 -.19

AmAxle ... 10.65 -.26

AEagleOut .44 15.41 -.29

AEP 1.84f 36.52 -.02

AmExp .72 42.70 -.65

AmIntlGrp ... 41.81 -.70

AmTower ... 52.36 -.78

Anadarko .36 63.98-1.26

AnalogDev .88 34.21 +.14

AnglogldA .18e 49.10-1.74

Annaly 2.60e 17.81 -.14

Apache .60 109.51-1.20

ArcelorMit .75 34.69 -.95

ArchCoal .40 29.10-1.14

ArchDan .60 30.23 -.45

AssuredG .18 18.16 -.58

ATMOS 1.36f 30.17 -.04

Avon .88 29.40 +.17

BB&T Cp .60 24.82 -.45

BHP BillLt 1.74e 86.97-2.63

BP PLC ... 42.99 -.69

BakrHu .60 48.52-1.55

BallCp .40 64.88 -.87

BcBilVArg .57e 11.68 +.25

BcoBrades .51r 20.89 -.37

BcoSantand.80e 11.64 +.12

BcoSBrasil .33e 14.17 -.14

BkofAm .04 12.12 -.25

BkIrelnd 1.04e 2.32 +.10

BkNYMel .36 27.49 -.18

Barclay .28e 18.14 -.34

Bar iPVix rs ... 47.60+2.17

BarrickG .48 50.73-1.15

Baxter 1.24f 51.46 -.52

BeazerHm ... 4.64 -.09

BerkHa A ... 120351.00-1174.00

BerkH B s ... 80.25 -.88

BestBuy .60 43.59 -.81

BlackRock 4.00 173.07+1.87

Blackstone .40 13.67 -.38

BlockHR .60 12.85 +.05

Boeing 1.68 63.09-2.28

Boise Inc .40e 7.82 -.15

BostonSci ... 6.74 -.11

BoydGm ... 9.45 -.74

Brandyw .60 11.42 -.22

BrMySq 1.28 26.02 -.25

CB REllis ... 19.80 -.36

CBS B .20 16.62 -.35

CF Inds .40 119.65-8.10

CIGNA .04 37.36 +.36

CMS Eng .84f 17.84 -.11

CNO Fincl ... 5.83 -.13

CSX 1.04f 60.85 -.15

CVS Care .35 30.24 -.62

Calpine ... 12.46 -.28

Cameco g .28 35.95-1.46

Cameron ... 44.23-1.77

CampSp 1.10 34.52 +.02

CdnNRs gs .30 39.40-1.10

CapOne .20 39.27 -.24

CapitlSrce .04 6.10 -.15

CareFusion ... 23.11 -.25

Carnival .40 42.54 -.28

Caterpillar 1.76 81.04-1.40

Cemex .43t 9.27 -.28

Cemig pf .86e 16.98 -.23

CenterPnt .78 16.11 -.28

ChRvLab ... 31.84 -.26

ChesEng .30 22.72 -.49

Chevron 2.88 85.44 -.65

Chicos .16 10.22 -.24

Chimera .69e 4.05 +.07

Chubb 1.48 57.85 -.54

Citigrp ... 4.29 -.07

CliffsNRs .56 67.52-2.53

Coach .60 51.56-1.14

CocaCE .48f u24.94 -.23

CocaCl 1.76 u62.92 +.12

Coeur ... 22.96-1.65

ColgPal 2.12 76.58 -.17

Comerica .20 37.27 -.72

ComScop ... 31.95 -.08

ConAgra .92f 22.01 -.15

ConocPhil 2.20 62.42 -.47

ConsolEngy .40 42.50-1.24

ConEd 2.38 49.74 -.34

ConstellA ... 19.85 -.31

Corning .20 18.37 -.24

Covidien .80f 44.09 -.59

CrownHold ... 31.09-1.31

Cummins 1.05 94.06 -.95

CurEuro .01e 136.40 +.33

D-E-FDNP Selct .78 10.11 -.02

DR Horton .15 11.51 -.66

Danaher s .08 43.55 -.54

Darden 1.28 48.65 -.66

DeanFds ... 7.72 +.01

Deere 1.20 76.86-1.93

DelMnte .36 14.20 -.29

Delhaize 2.02e 73.02 -.18

DeltaAir ... 13.46 -.08

Deluxe 1.00 21.75 -.04

DenburyR ... 19.07 -.72

DB AgriDL ... 10.97-1.76

DevelDiv .08 12.88 -.33

DevonE .64 72.48 -.28

MUTUAL FUNDSName Sell Chg

AllianceBern A:GloblBdA 8.50 -.04

Allianz Fds Instl:NFJDvVl 11.08 -.11

SmCpVl 28.57 -.38

Allianz Funds A:NFJDvVl t 11.00 -.10

SmCpV A 27.24 -.37

AmanaGrw n23.73 -.28

Amer Beacon Insti:LgCapInst 18.80 -.24

SmCpInst 18.35 -.31

Amer Beacon Inv:LgCap Inv 17.84 -.22

Amer Century Adv:EqIncA p 6.98 -.06

Amer Century Inv:DivBnd 11.01 -.05

EqGroI 20.01 -.25

EqInc 6.98 -.06

GNMAI 11.01 -.04

GrowthI 24.47 -.31

HeritageI 19.74 -.33

InfAdjBd 12.22 -.13

IntTF 11.16 -.02

SelectI 36.17 -.58

Ultra 21.57 -.35

ValueInv 5.42 -.05

Vista 15.63 -.26

American Funds A:AmcpA p 17.85 -.22

AMutlA p 24.43 -.23

BalA p 17.45 -.17

BondA p 12.41 -.06

CapWA p 21.04 -.07

CapIBA p 49.95 -.32

CapWGA p35.32 -.28

EupacA p 41.12 -.35

FdInvA p 35.14 -.44

GovtA p 14.61 -.06

GwthA p 29.38 -.40

HI TrA p 11.36 -.04

HiInMuniA 14.03 -.04

IncoA p 16.42 -.11

IntBdA p 13.62 -.06

IntlGrIncA p31.21 -.20

ICAA p 27.16 -.26

LtTEBA p 15.86 -.02

NEcoA p 24.70 -.25

N PerA p 27.87 -.25

NwWrldA 54.80 -.57

STBFA p 10.14 -.02

SmCpA p 37.65 -.49

TxExA p 12.27 -.02

WshA p 26.21 -.24

American Funds B:BalB p 17.38 -.16

CapIBB p 49.93 -.32

CpWGrB t 35.10 -.29

GrwthB t 28.32 -.38

IncoB p 16.30 -.10

ICAB t 27.03 -.26

Ariel Investments:Ariel 45.01 -.75

Artio Global Funds:GlHiIncI r 10.65 -.04

IntlEqI r 30.09 -.41

IntlEqA 29.31 -.40

IntEqIIA t 12.37 -.18

IntEqII I r 12.46 -.18

Artisan Funds:Intl 21.81 -.21

IntlVal r 26.20 -.12

MidCap 31.16 -.43

MidCapVal19.75 -.20

SCapVal 15.83 -.26

Aston Funds:M&CGroN 23.23 -.20

MdCpN p 29.76 -.45

BNY Mellon Funds:BondFd 13.34 -.05

EmgMkts 11.57 -.19

NtIntMu 13.45 -.03

Baird Funds:AggBdInst 10.78 -.05

Baron Funds:Asset 52.15 -.72

Growth 46.88 -.69

SmallCap 22.12 -.34

Bernstein Fds:IntDur 14.09 -.07

DivMu 14.64 -.01

NYMu 14.44 -.01

TxMgdIntl 15.74 -.14

IntlPort 15.62 -.15

EmMkts 32.65 -.72

BlackRock A:BaVlA p 24.45 -.27

CapAppr p 21.71 -.33

Eng&ResA35.44 -.74

EqtyDiv 16.81 -.20

ExcBlrk 584.52 -6.58

GlAlA r 19.14 -.20

InflProBdA 11.39 -.09

BlackRock B&C:GlAlC t 17.84 -.19

BlackRock Instl:US Opps 39.20 -.64

BaVlI 24.66 -.27

EquityDv 16.85 -.19

GlbAlloc r 19.23 -.20

Brandywine Fds:BlueFd 23.55 -.44

Brndywn 23.88 -.47

Buffalo Funds:SmCap 24.04 -.29

CGM Funds:Focus n 32.57 -.76

Realty n 25.10 -.37

CRM Funds:MdCpVlI 26.69 -.40

Calamos Funds:ConvA p 19.73 -.18

Gr&IncA p 30.36 -.33

GrwthA p 50.17 -.83

GrowthC t 45.69 -.76

Calvert Group:Inco p 16.01 -.02

ShDurInA t 16.66 -.02

Clipper 59.28 -.59

Cohen & Steers:RltyShrs 56.93 -.64

Columbia Class A:Acorn t 27.60 -.41

DivEqInc 9.54 -.13

DivrBd 5.07 -.02

LgCorQ A p 5.21 -.06

21CntryA t 12.58 -.16

SelComm A42.72 -.48

Columbia Class Z:Acorn Z 28.47 -.42

AcornIntZ 39.14 -.43

CoreBdZ 11.10 -.05

DivIncoZ 12.58 -.12

IntBdZ 9.16 -.04

IntTEBd 10.51 -.02

LgCapGr 11.98 -.18

LgCpIdxZ 23.44 -.28

MarsGrZ 19.67 -.35

MdCpIdxZ 10.84 -.16

MdCpVlZ p12.52 -.22

STIncZ 9.99 -.02

STM Z 10.57 ...

ValRestr 47.25 -.71

CG Cap Mkt Fds:IntlEq 10.48 -.07

LgGrw 14.09 -.20

LgVal 8.54 -.09

SmGrw 17.85 -.28

Credit Suisse Comm:ComRet t 9.14 -.38

DFA Funds:IntlCorEq n10.86 -.10

USCorEq1 n10.37 -.15

USCorEq2 n10.27 -.15

DWS Invest A:BalA 8.89 -.10

MgdMuni p 9.03 -.02

StrGovSecA8.91 -.03

DWS Invest Instl:Eq500IL 136.40 -1.63

DWS Invest S:GNMA S 15.53 -.04

GroIncS 15.54 -.20

MgdMuni S 9.04 -.02

Davis Funds A:NYVen A 33.01 -.41

Davis Funds C & Y:NYVenY 33.42 -.41

NYVen C 31.74 -.39

Delaware Invest A:Diver Inc p 9.73 -.05

Dimensional Fds:EmMCrEq n21.54 -.47

EmMktV 36.62 -.87

IntSmVa n 16.30 -.15

LargeCo 9.48 -.11

TAUSCorE2 n8.35 -.12

USVctrEq n10.07 -.16

USLgVa n 18.83 -.24

USLgVa3 n14.42 -.18

US Micro n12.57 -.21

US TgdVal 15.22 -.28

US Small n19.58 -.33

US SmVa 23.29 -.43

IntlSmCo n16.22 -.15

GlEqInst 12.81 -.17

EmMktSC n24.46 -.56

EmgMkt n 31.29 -.59

Fixd n 10.36 -.01

IntGFxIn n 12.76 -.07

IntVa n 17.99 -.15

Glb5FxInc n11.62 -.05

LCapInt n 19.56 -.19

TM USTgtV19.66 -.35

TM IntVa 14.70 -.11

TMMktwV 14.02 -.17

2YGlFxd n 10.23 ...

DFARlE n 21.15 -.22

Dodge&Cox:Balanced 67.70 -.62

GblStock 8.65 -.09

Income 13.41 -.04

IntlStk 35.11 -.31

Stock 102.26 -1.15

DoubleLine Funds:TRBd I 11.19 ...

Dreyfus:Aprec 37.34 -.29

DryMid r 26.46 -.40

Dr500In t 34.11 -.40

MunBd r 11.30 -.03

NY Tax r 14.85 -.05

DreihsAcInc11.29 ...

EVPTxMEmI50.67 -.75

Eaton Vance A:GblMacAb p10.33 -.04

InBosA 5.87 -.02

LgCpVal 17.32 -.21

NatlMunInc 9.61 -.06

StrInc p 8.22 -.03

Eaton Vance I:FltgRt 8.92 -.01

GblMacAbR10.32 -.03

LgCapVal 17.37 -.21

GovtInc 10.70 -.05

GroCo n 78.17 -1.34

GroInc n 17.29 -.25

GrowthCoK78.24 -1.33

GrStrat r n 18.72 -.33

Indepn n 22.99 -.39

InProBd n 11.99 -.11

IntBd n 10.74 -.06

IntmMu n 10.32 -.01

IntlDisc n 32.73 -.28

InvGrBd n 11.65 -.06

InvGB n 7.47 -.04

LgCapVal 11.83 -.15

LatAm 57.50 -.86

LevCoStk n25.85 -.45

LowP r n 36.48 -.53

LowPriK r 36.47 -.54

Magelln n 68.31 -.98

MagellanK 68.31 -.98

MidCap n 26.41 -.49

MidCapK r 26.42 -.48

NwMkt r n 16.27 -.11

NwMill n 27.59 -.40

NY Mun n 13.07 -.02

OTC n 51.30 -.70

100Index 8.49 -.09

Ovrsea n 31.75 -.28

Puritn n 17.36 -.16

PuritanK 17.35 -.16

RealE n 24.94 -.26

SAllSecEqF12.57 -.16

SCmdtyStrt n11.51-.48

SrEmrgMkt19.23 -.36

SrsIntGrw 11.03 -.11

SrsIntVal 10.00 -.07

SrInvGrdF 11.66 -.05

STBF n 8.49 -.02

SmllCpS r n18.11 -.32

SCpValu r 14.50 -.27

SEAsia n 30.63 -.70

SpSTTBInv r n11.20-.07

StratInc n 11.52 -.05

StrReRt r 9.37 -.15

TaxFrB r n 10.94 -.01

TotalBd n 10.96 -.05

USBI n 11.53 -.05

Value n 65.23 -.95

Fidelity Selects:Enrgy n 47.73 -.75

Gold r n 56.28 -1.30

Health n 116.60 -1.18

Tech n 89.99 -1.34

Fidelity Spartan:ExtMkIn n 35.72 -.59

IntlInxInv n 35.34 -.23

TotMktInv n34.92 -.45

Fidelity Spart Adv:500IdxAdv n42.55 -.50

IntAd r n 35.35 -.23

TotMktAd r n34.93 -.45

First Amer Fds Y:RealEst p 17.72 -.20

First Eagle:GlblA 45.34 -.44

OverseasA22.29 -.20

SGenGld p34.98 -.83

Forum Funds:AbsStrI r 10.91 -.02

Frank/Temp Frnk A:AdjUS p 8.89 ...

BalInv p 48.63 -.71

CalTFA p 7.07 -.01

FedInt p 11.78 -.02

FedTFA p 11.84 -.03

FlxCpGrA 45.57 -.68

FoundAl p 10.39 -.07

GoldPrM A 56.88 -1.28

GrwthA p 43.05 -.49

HYTFA p 10.15 -.03

HiIncA 2.02 -.01

IncomA p 2.15 -.01

InsTFA p 11.89 -.02

NYTFA p 11.68 -.02

RisDvA p 31.92 -.31

SMCpGrA 34.39 -.47

StratInc p 10.49 -.05

TtlRtnA p 10.28 -.05

USGovA p 6.82 -.03

UtilsA p 11.58 -.08

Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv:GlbBdAdv p ... ...

IncmeAd 2.14 -.01

Frank/Temp Frnk B:IncomeB t 2.14 -.01

Frank/Temp Frnk C:FoundAl p 10.23 -.07

IncomC t 2.17 -.01

USGvC t 6.78 -.03

Frank/Temp Mtl A&B:SharesA 20.29 -.15

Frank/Temp Temp A:DvMktA p 25.14 -.43

ForgnA p 6.96 -.04

GlBd A p 13.66 -.10

GrwthA p 17.56 -.14

WorldA p 14.58 -.13

Frank/Temp Tmp Adv:GrthAv 17.59 -.14

Frank/Temp Tmp B&C:GlBdC p 13.68 -.10

GE Elfun S&S:S&S Inc 11.35 -.05

S&S PM 38.93 -.55

TaxEx 11.77 -.02

Trusts 42.10 -.64

GE Instl Funds:IntlEq 11.47 -.07

GE Investments:TRFd3 p 16.16 -.16

GMO Trust:ShDurColl r11.47 ...

GMO Trust II:EmergMkt r14.33 -.24

GMO Trust III:For 12.18 -.09

IntIntrVl 21.66 -.15

Quality 19.72 -.20

GMO Trust IV:EmCnDt 10.14 -.06

EmrMkt 14.28 -.24

IntlGrEq 22.64 -.20

IntlIntrVl 21.65 -.15

GMO Trust VI:EmgMkts r 14.30 -.23

IntlCorEq 28.75 -.22

Quality 19.72 -.20

StrFxInc 15.36 +.03

Gabelli Funds:Asset 46.75 -.53

SCapG 31.87 -.41

Gateway Funds:GatewayA 25.81 ...

Goldman Sachs A:MdCVA p 33.47 -.48

Goldman Sachs Inst:GrOppt 23.00 -.36

HiYield 7.33 -.02

HYMuni n 8.64 -.05

MidCapV 33.81 -.48

SD Gov 10.44 -.01

ShtDrTF n 10.55 -.01

StrucIntl n 10.55 -.06

Harbor Funds:Bond 13.09 -.06

CapApInst 35.25 -.44

IntlInv t 59.04 -.67

IntlAdm p 59.27 -.67

IntlGr r 12.16 -.08

Intl r 59.75 -.67

Harding Loevner:EmgMkt r 51.07 ...

Hartford Fds A:CpAppA p 33.07 -.52

DivGthA p 18.12 -.22

FltRateA px 8.84 -.01

MidCpA p 20.42 -.34

Hartford Fds C:CapApC t 29.38 -.46

FltRateC tx 8.84 ...

Hartford Fds Y:CapAppY n35.86 -.57

CapAppI n 33.07 -.52

Hartford HLS IA :CapApp 40.35 -.66

Div&Gr 18.83 -.23

Advisers 18.96 -.21

Stock 39.22 -.55

IntlOpp 12.31 -.12

TotRetBd 11.41 -.06

Heartland Fds:ValueInv 40.26 -.62

Henderson Glbl Fds:IntOppA p 21.02 -.14

Hussman Funds:StrTotRet r 12.82 -.02

StrGrowth 12.83 +.08

IVA Funds:WldwideA t16.67 -.14

Wldwide I r16.70 -.13

Invesco Funds A:CapGro 12.86 -.24

Chart p 15.53 -.13

CmstkA 15.01 -.17

Const p 22.16 -.34

EqIncA 8.30 -.08

GrIncA p 18.26 -.19

HYMuA 9.46 -.04

IntlGrow 27.14 -.29

MdCpCEq p22.50 -.22

Invesco Funds P:SummitP p 11.33 -.16

Ivy Funds:AssetSC t 23.35 -.31

AssetStA p24.05 -.32

AssetStrI r 24.26 -.32

GlNatRsA p19.56 -.51

JPMorgan A Class:CoreBd A 11.67 -.04

Inv Bal p 12.03 -.09

MCpVal p 21.95 -.24

JPMorgan C Class:CoreBd p 11.72 -.04

JP Morgan Instl:MdCpVal n22.36 -.24

JPMorgan Select:USEquity n 9.69 -.12

JPMorgan Sel Cls:AsiaEq n 38.11 -1.10

CoreBd n 11.66 -.04

HighYld n 8.25 -.02

IntmTFBd n11.03 -.01

ShtDurBd n11.04 -.01

TxAwRRet n10.07 -.01

USLCCrPls n19.63-.27

JP Morgan Ultra:CoreBond n11.67 -.03

MtgBckd 11.37 -.01

ShtDurBd 11.04 -.02

Janus S Shrs:Forty 32.45 -.52

Overseas t 49.41 -.60

Janus T Shrs:BalancdT 25.66 -.25

Contrarn T 14.56 -.26

Grw&IncT 29.66 -.41

Janus T 28.25 -.38

OvrseasT r49.54 -.61

PrkMCVal T21.68 -.27

ShTmBdT 3.12 -.01

Twenty T 64.20 -1.02

Jensen J 25.97 -.25

John Hancock A:LgCpEqA 24.87 -.39

John Hancock Cl 1:LSAggr 11.88 -.17

LSBalanc 12.84 -.12

LSConsrv 13.01 -.07

LSGrwth 12.69 -.15

LSModer 12.72 -.09

Keeley Funds:SmCpValA p22.59 -.45

LSVValEq n13.10 -.17

Lazard Instl:EmgMktI 21.28 -.29

Lazard Open:EmgMkO p21.61 -.29

Legg Mason A:CBAgGr p102.95 -1.29

CBAppr p 13.34 -.12

CBFAllCV A12.95 -.16

WAMgMu p15.83 -.04

Legg Mason C:CMValTr p 37.82 -.56

Longleaf Partners:Partners 27.36 -.25

Intl 15.09 -.11

SmCap 25.08 -.13

Loomis Sayles:LSBondI 14.45 -.05

StrInc C 15.04 -.06

LSBondR 14.39 -.06

StrIncA 14.96 -.06

Loomis Sayles Inv:InvGrBdA p12.59 -.05

InvGrBdC p12.50 -.05

InvGrBdY 12.59 -.06

Lord Abbett A:AffilA p 10.86 -.14

FundlEq 12.20 -.17

BdDebA p 7.83 -.04

ShDurIncA p4.66 -.01

MidCpA p 15.24 -.23

RsSmCA 28.54 -.48

Lord Abbett C:BdDbC p 7.85 -.04

ShDurIncC t 4.69 -.01

Lord Abbett F:ShtDurInco 4.65 -.02

Lord Abbett I:SmCapVal 30.24 -.52

MFS Funds A:IntlDvA 13.20 -.11

MITA 18.47 -.21

MIGA 14.55 -.20

EmGA 39.50 -.58

IntlVA 24.33 -.09

MuHiA t 7.63 -.03

ReInA 15.12 -.13

TotRA 13.82 -.11

UtilA 16.04 -.14

ValueA 21.90 -.23

MFS Funds I:ReInT 15.61 -.14

ValueI 22.00 -.23

MFS Funds Instl:IntlEq n 17.73 -.12

MainStay Funds A:HiYldBA 5.95 -.01

MainStay Funds I:ICAPSlEq 33.42 -.36

Mairs & Power:Growth 68.64 -.84

Managers Funds:Bond n 26.09 -.11

Manning&Napier Fds:WldOppA 8.55 -.07

Matthews Asian:AsiaDvInv r14.22 -.20

AsianGIInv 18.30 -.23

China Inv 30.80 -.67

PacTgrInv 23.52 -.48

MergerFd 15.98 -.01

Meridian Funds:Growth 41.39 -.62

Metro West Fds:TotRetBd 10.70 -.05

TotRtBdI 10.70 -.04

MontagGr I 23.36 -.20

MorganStanley Inst:EmMktI 26.80 -.42

IntlEqI 13.51 -.10

MCapGrI 35.61 -.46

MCapGrP p34.47 -.45

Munder Funds Y:MCpCGrY n26.53 -.41

Mutual Series:BeacnZ 12.13 -.08

GblDiscA 29.17 -.16

GlbDiscC 28.78 -.16

GlbDiscZ 29.58 -.16

QuestZ 18.49 -.12

SharesZ 20.49 -.15

Nationwide Instl:S&P500Ins10.12 -.12

Neuberger&Berm Inv:Genesis 30.58 -.51

GenesInst 42.30 -.69

Neuberger&Berm Tr:Genesis 43.86 -.72

Nicholas Group:Nich n 44.77 -.63

Northeast Investors:Trust 6.20 -.04

Northern Funds:BondIdx 10.76 -.05

EmMEqIdx12.91 ...

HiYFxInc 7.42 ...

IntTxEx 10.51 ...

IntlEqIdx r ... ...

MMEmMkt r24.66 ...

MMIntEq r 9.88 ...

ShIntTaxFr10.61 ...

SmCapVl 14.40 ...

StkIdx 15.05 ...

Nuveen Cl A:HYMuBd p 15.67 -.08

KYMuB p 10.87 -.02

LrgCpV p 18.39 -.22

OHMBA p 11.16 -.05

LtMBA p 10.98 -.01

Nuveen Cl R:IntDMBd 9.06 -.02

HYMunBd 15.66 -.09

Oakmark Funds I:EqtyInc r 26.84 -.29

GlobalI 21.41 -.07

Intl I r 18.87 -.05

Oakmark r 40.21 -.41

Select r 26.75 -.33

Old Westbury Fds:GlobOpp 8.04 -.06

GlbSMdCap14.95 -.21

NonUSLgC p10.31-.04

RealRet 10.60 -.31

Oppenheimer A:AMTFMu 6.41 -.09

CapApA p 41.69 -.51

CapIncA p 8.57 -.05

DvMktA p 34.84 -.52

GlobA p 59.06 -.58

GblAllocA 15.17 -.17

GlbOppA 28.73 -.19

GblStrIncA 4.35 -.02

Gold p 51.98 -1.33

IntBdA p 6.78 -.03

IntGrw p 26.94 -.30

LtdTmMu 14.55 -.05

MnStFdA 31.23 -.46

MSSCA p 18.95 -.29

S&MdCpVl29.82 -.45

Oppenheimer C&M:DevMktC t 33.50 -.50

GblStrIncC 4.34 -.02

IntlBdC 6.75 -.03

Oppenheimer Roch:LtdNYA p 3.30 -.01

RoNtMuC t 7.13 -.12

RoMu A p 16.32 -.24

RcNtMuA 7.14 -.12

Oppenheimer Y:DevMktY 34.54 -.51

IntlBdY 6.77 -.03

IntGrowY 26.90 -.29

PIMCO Admin PIMS:ShtTmAd p 9.94 ...

TotRtAd 11.58 -.07

PIMCO Instl PIMS:AlAsetAut r11.16 -.09

AllAsset 12.63 -.12

ComodRR 8.76 -.42

DevLcMk r 10.67 -.04

DivInc 11.63 -.08

EmMkBd 11.42 -.07

FltInc r 9.05 -.01

ForBdUn r 11.21 -.04

FrgnBd 10.81 -.05

HiYld 9.39 -.04

InvGrCp 11.84 -.09

LowDu 10.68 -.04

ModDur 11.20 -.06

RealRet 12.41 -.21

RealRtnI 11.66 -.13

ShortT 9.94 ...

TotRt 11.58 -.07

TR II 11.18 -.06

TRIII 10.29 -.06

PIMCO Funds A:AllAstAut t 11.09 -.09

AllAsset p 12.54 -.12

ComRR p 8.62 -.42

LwDurA 10.68 -.04

RealRtA p 11.66 -.13

TotRtA 11.58 -.07

PIMCO Funds C:RealRtC p 11.66 -.13

TotRtC t 11.58 -.07

PIMCO Funds D:LowDur p 10.68 -.04

RealRtn p 11.66 -.13

TRtn p 11.58 -.07

PIMCO Funds P:TotRtnP 11.58 -.07

Parnassus Funds:EqtyInco n 25.26 -.29

Pax World:Balanced 21.74 -.26

Perm Port Funds:Permannt 44.53 -.61

Pioneer Funds A:CullenVal 17.54 -.17

HiYldA p 9.95 -.07

PionFdA p 38.69 -.51

ValueA p 10.87 -.11

Pioneer Funds C:PionrFdY 38.84 -.51

Pioneer Fds Y:CullenV Y 17.65 -.18

Price Funds Adv:EqInc 22.30 -.24

Growth p n 30.62 -.53

HiYld 6.85 -.01

R2020A p n16.06 -.17

Price Funds:Balance n 18.86 -.18

BlChip n 36.64 -.60

CapApp n 19.81 -.15

EmMktB n 13.60 -.07

EmMktS n 34.97 -.65

EqInc n 22.35 -.24

EqIndex n 32.37 -.39

GNMA n 10.02 -.03

Growth n 30.87 -.54

HlthSci n 28.41 -.42

HiYield n 6.86 -.01

InstlCpG 15.73 -.23

IntlBond n 10.30 -.02

IntDis n 42.76 -.42

Intl G&I 13.38 -.13

IntlStk n 14.12 -.16

LatAm n 55.03 -.83

MDBond n 10.55 -.02

MediaTl n 49.89 -.53

MidCap n 56.60 -.80

MCapVal n22.63 -.22

N Asia n 19.38 -.43

New Era n 48.39 -1.10

N Horiz n 31.09 -.43

N Inc n 9.70 -.04

OverS SF r n8.26 -.07

PSBal n 18.59 -.18

RealEst n 17.07 -.15

R2010 n 15.33 -.13

R2015 n 11.78 -.11

R2020 n 16.17 -.17

R2025 n 11.78 -.13

R2030 n 16.81 -.21

R2035 n 11.85 -.15

R2040 n 16.86 -.21

R2045 n 11.23 -.15

Ret Inco n 12.95 -.09

SciTec n 25.19 -.28

ShtBd n 4.88 -.01

SmCpStk n32.57 -.51

SmCapVal n34.00 -.54

SpecGr n 17.02 -.23

SpecIn n 12.45 -.05

SuMuInt n 11.38 -.02

TFInc n 9.95 -.02

TxFrH n 10.90 -.04

Value n 22.28 -.27

Primecap Odyssey :Growth r 14.75 -.16

Principal Inv:HighYldA p 8.20 -.02

LgCGI In 8.80 -.13

LgCV3 In 9.83 -.11

LgCV1 In 10.24 -.11

LgGrIn 7.85 -.13

LT2020In 11.57 -.12

LT2030In 11.39 -.12

LT2040I 11.50 -.13

SAMBalA 12.53 -.11

Prudential Fds A:NatResA 53.37 -1.31

STCrpBdA 11.63 -.04

UtilityA 9.98 -.09

Putnam Funds A:CATxA p 7.83 -.02

DvrInA p 8.17 -.03

EqInA p 14.42 -.21

GrInA p 12.81 -.16

MultiCpGr 47.55 -.79

VoyA p 22.62 -.44

RS Funds:LgCAlphaB t38.34 -.56

RSPart 30.07 -.48

Rainier Inv Mgt:SmMCap 29.92 -.49

RidgeWorth Funds:GScUShBdI10.08 -.01

HiYldI 9.95 -.03

IntmBdI 10.86 -.05

RiverSource A:HiYdTEA 4.28 -.02

Royce Funds:LwPrSkSv r16.94 -.32

PennMuI r 10.84 -.17

PremierI r 19.00 -.29

TotRetI r 12.40 -.16

VlPlSvc 12.45 -.19

Russell Funds S:IntlDvMkt 31.45 -.29

StratBd 11.21 -.04

SEI Portfolios:CoreFxA n 10.91 -.04

HiYld n 7.44 -.02

IntlEqA n 8.71 -.05

LgCGroA n20.68 -.31

LgCValA n 15.37 -.17

TxMgLC n 11.55 -.15

SSgA Funds:EmgMkt 22.08 -.39

Schwab Funds:CoreEq 16.07 -.22

IntSS r 17.43 -.16

1000Inv r 36.33 -.44

S&P Sel 18.97 -.22

TSM Sel r 21.92 -.28

Scout Funds:Intl 31.49 -.36

Selected Funds:AmShD 39.93 -.50

AmShS p 39.85 -.50

Sentinel Group:ComS A p 29.99 -.35

Sequoia n 126.42 -.90

Sound Shore:SoundShore30.03 -.50

St FarmAssoc:Gwth 51.45 -.48

TCW Funds:TotRetBdI 10.39 ...

TCW Funds N:ToRtBdN p10.75 ...

TIAA-CREF Funds:BondInst 10.65 -.05

EqIdxInst 9.18 -.11

Templeton Instit:EmMS p 16.54 -.28

ForEqS 20.24 -.10

Third Avenue Fds:IntlVaInst r 16.59 -.15

REValInst r23.48 -.16

ValueInst 52.17 -.70

Thornburg Fds C:IntValC t 25.88 -.19

Thornburg Fds:IntValA p 27.45 -.20

IncBuildA t 18.90 -.13

IncBuildC p18.90 -.14

IntValue I 28.06 -.20

LtMuA p 14.23 -.01

LtTMuI 14.23 -.01

ValueI 32.48 -.50

Thrivent Fds A:Bond 10.06 -.05

LgCpStk 21.20 -.23

LgCpVal 12.85 -.12

MidCpSk 13.86 -.20

MuniBd 11.27 -.01

PtrIntStk 9.73 -.10

Tocqueville Fds:Gold t 85.57 -2.03

Transamerica C:AAlModGr t11.59 -.12

Tweedy Browne:GblValue 23.45 -.04

USAA Group:CrnstStr 22.72 -.18

Inco 12.98 -.04

Intl 23.91 -.16

PrecMM 46.07 -1.12

S&P Idx 18.23 ...

ShtTBnd 9.23 -.01

TxEIt 13.03 -.02

TxELT 13.00 -.04

TxESh 10.73 -.01

VALIC :MdCpIdx 19.24 -.29

StkIdx 24.32 -.29

Van Eck Funds:GlHardA 47.58 -1.06

Vanguard Admiral:BalAdml n 20.87 -.19

CAITAdm n11.07 -.04

CALTAdm n11.20 -.04

CpOpAdl n 72.66 -.87

EMAdmr r n39.30 -.79

Energy n 118.26 -2.09

EqInAdm n n40.98 -.33

EuroAdml n63.68 -.32

ExplAdml n62.72 -.90

ExtdAdm n 38.43 -.65

500Adml n110.65-1.32

GNMA Ad n11.07 -.04

GrwAdm n 30.15 -.44

HlthCr n 52.07 -.50

HiYldCp n 5.80 -.01

InfProAd n 26.36 -.28

ITBdAdml n11.68 -.08

ITsryAdml n11.90 -.07

IntGrAdm n60.79 -.65

ITAdml n 13.69 -.03

ITGrAdm n 10.37 -.06

LtdTrAd n 11.14 -.01

LTGrAdml n 9.38 -.05

LTsyAdml n11.68 -.09

LT Adml n 11.10 -.04

MCpAdml n86.77 -1.38

MorgAdm n53.13 -.76

MuHYAdm n10.52 -.04

NJLTAd n 11.74 -.03

NYLTAd n 11.18 -.03

PrmCap r n66.04 -.80

PALTAdm n11.11 -.02

ReitAdm r n76.98 -.80

STsyAdml n10.89 -.01

STBdAdml n10.69 -.02

ShtTrAd n 15.94 -.01

STFdAd n 10.96 -.02

STIGrAd n 10.85 -.02

SmCAdm n32.33 -.53

TxMCap r n60.17 -.78

TxMGrIn r n53.81 -.64

TtlBAdml n 10.81 -.04

TStkAdm n30.01 -.38

ValAdml n 19.83 -.20

WellslAdm n52.65 -.28

WelltnAdm n52.53 -.49

Windsor n 42.98 -.61

WdsrIIAd n43.85 -.53

Vanguard Fds:FTAlWldIn r n18.59-.22

AssetA n 23.82 -.26

CAIT n 11.07 -.04

CapOpp n 31.44 -.38

Convrt n 13.93 -.12

DivdGro n 13.88 -.13

Energy n 62.96 -1.11

EqInc n 19.55 -.16

Explr n 67.33 -.96

GNMA n 11.07 -.04

GlobEq n 17.64 -.21

GroInc n 25.32 -.28

HYCorp n 5.80 -.01

HlthCre n 123.34 -1.20

InflaPro n 13.42 -.14

IntlExplr n 15.80 -.12

IntlGr n 19.09 -.20

IntlVal n 32.18 -.37

ITIGrade n 10.37 -.06

ParStEMkt 15.67 -.24

FMI Funds:LgCap p 14.89 -.13

FPA Funds:NwInc 10.97 -.01

FPACres n 26.66 -.17

Fairholme 34.75 -.60

Federated A:MidGrStA 33.12 -.70

KaufmA p 5.22 -.08

TtlRtBd p 11.36 -.05

Federated Instl:KaufmnK 5.23 -.07

MunULA p 10.04 ...

TotRetBd 11.36 -.05

TtlRtBdS 11.36 -.05

Fidelity Advisor A:NwInsgh p 19.29 -.26

SmlCpA p 24.63 -.24

StrInA 12.92 -.05

Fidelity Advisor C:NwInsgh t n18.40 -.25

StrInC t n 12.89 -.05

Fidelity Advisor I:NwInsgtI n 19.50 -.27

StrInI n 13.05 -.05

Fidelity Advisor T:NwInsgh p 19.08 -.25

StrInT 12.91 -.05

Fidelity Freedom:FF2000 n 12.04 -.08

FF2010 n 13.51 -.15

FF2010K 12.59 -.13

FF2015 n 11.27 -.12

FF2015K 12.62 -.13

FF2020 n 13.62 -.16

FF2020K 13.01 -.15

FF2025 n 11.32 -.14

FF2025K 13.16 -.16

FF2030 n 13.49 -.18

FF2030K 13.31 -.18

FF2035 n 11.17 -.15

FF2035K 13.41 -.19

FF2040 n 7.80 -.11

FF2040K 13.48 -.18

FF2045 n 9.23 -.13

FF2050 n 9.09 -.13

Income n 11.30 -.07

Fidelity Invest:AllSectEq 12.55 -.16

AMgr50 n 15.07 -.13

AMgr70 r n15.91 -.17

AMgr20 r n12.71 -.07

Balanc n 17.71 -.17

BalancedK 17.71 -.17

BlueChGr n42.91 -.72

Canada n 54.92 -1.12

CapAp n 24.24 -.29

CapDevO n10.14 -.17

CpInc r n 9.44 -.06

ChinaRg r 33.08 -.74

Contra n 65.64 -.90

ContraK 65.69 -.90

CnvSc n 24.37 -.25

DisEq n 21.89 -.28

DivIntl n 29.86 -.25

DivrsIntK r 29.88 -.26

DivStkO n 14.23 -.19

DivGth n 26.45 -.37

EmrMk n 26.09 -.54

Eq Inc n 41.94 -.52

EQII n 17.26 -.21

EqIncK 41.93 -.53

Export n 20.63 -.26

Fidel n 30.28 -.37

FltRateHi r n9.80 -.01

FrInOne n 26.53 -.26

GNMA n 11.69 -.04

BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS

Name Div Last Chg

The world’s most importanteconomies left a summit withoutany meaningful agreement,finding it ever harder to coop-erate and more likely that theywill erect trade barriers to pro-tect their own interests. TheGroup of 20 meeting of leadingrich and developing nationsended Friday in South Koreawith no solutions to long-stand-ing tensions over trade and cur-rency, and with the cooperationof the 2008 financial crisis nowa distant memory.

European leaders sought to reas-sure Ireland’s panicky credi-tors by promising that toughernew terms for future bailoutsof indebted countries will notharm them. But some expectthe country to follow Greece ingrasping for a financial lifelinesooner rather than later.Speculation about a bailout forIreland pushed the Dublin gov-ernment’s borrowing costs torecord highs.

In the world of new stock offerings,everything about next week isbig: The number of deals, theamount of money expected tobe raised and the profiles of thecompanies going public. Theaction is likely to draw a widerange of investors into the U.S.

stock markets. If investorssnap up stock of companiessuch as General Motors Co. andcasino operator CaesarsEntertainment Corp., that couldwin over skittish traders whohave taken refuge in the rela-tive safety of bonds.Investment bankers handlingthe GM sale already have moreorders than stock for both the365 million common shares and60 million preferred shares, aperson briefed on the sale said.

Stocks and commodities took anosedive Friday on worries thatChina might put the brakes onits surging economy. Any slow-down in the Chinese economywill likely reduce globaldemand for oil, metals andgrains, which sent prices ofthose commodities lower. TheDow Jones industrial averagefell 90.52, or 0.80 to 11,192.58.

J.C. Penney reported its earn-ings rose 63 percent in the thirdquarter, as the departmentstore chain says it saw strongreception to new exclusivebrands such as Liz Claiborneand MNG by Mango. The com-pany’s gross profit marginslipped as the chain had toaggressively discount, sendingshares down 3 percent.

8D • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010 C L A S S I F I E D SALISBURY POST

Custom Built Computer Systems with Windows 7Used Computer Systems Starting at $150

Printer Repair & MaintenanceFREE COMPUTER TRAINING CLASSES!

www.CarolinaComputerConnection.com909 S. Main Street • Suite 102 • Salisbury704-210-8028 M-F 12:00-6:00pm

Is Your PC

Sick??Virus Removaland Clean Up

$50

C46816

Your classified ad in theSalisbury Post newspaper!Answer:

Question:

? ??

?? ????

Whatever you need to part with–your car,your truck, your boat, your house–theclassifieds can help you do it. Call or goonline today to place your ad.

704-797-4220 • www.salisburypost.com

What is two inches talland can move almostanything?

Auctions

Auction Thursday 12pm429 N. Lee St. Salisbury Antiques, Collectibles, UsedFurniture 704-213-4101

Carolina's AuctionRod Poole, NCAL#2446Salisbury (704)633-7369www.thecarolinasauction.com

Heritage Auction Co.Glenn M.Hester NC#4453Salisbury (704)636-9277www.heritageauctionco.com

Job Seeker meeting at 112E. Main St., Rockwell.6:30pm Mons. Rachel Corl,Auctioneer. 704-279-3596

R. Giles Moss Auction &Real Estate-NCAL #2036.Full Service Auction Com-pany. Estates ** Real Es-tate Had your home listeda long time? Try selling atauction. 704-782-5625 www.gilesmossauction.com

AuctionsKEN WEDDINGTON Total Auctioneering Ser-vices 140 Eastside Dr.,China Grove 704-857-7458 License 392

Rowan Auction Co. Pro-fessional Auction Services:Salis., NC 704-633-0809Kip Jennings NCAL 6340.

Caregiving Services

Christian Lady will carefor Elderly. 20 yearsexperience. Please Call|704-202-6345

Carport andGarages

Perry's OverheadDoors

Sales, Service & Instal-lation, Residential /

Commercial. WesleyPerry 704-279-7325www.perrysdoor.com

Carport andGarages

Lippard Garage DoorsInstallations, repairs, electric openers. 704-636-7603 / 704-798-7603

Carport andGarages

We BuildGarages,24x24 =$12,500.

All sizes built!~ 704-633-5033 ~

Child Care andNursery SchoolsChildcare in my home(close to E Rowan). Hotmeals, reasonable rates, 6wks & up. 704-639-1963

Chimney Sweep& Fireplace

3 Check for Cracks& Obstructions &

RepairNC licensed

~ 704-425-8870 ~

Cleaning Services

Cleaning Services

WOW! Clean Again!October Special! LowestPrices in Town, SeniorCitizens Discount, Resi-dential/Commercial Ref-erences available uponrequest. For more info.call 704-762-1402

Cleaning Services

Christian mom for clean-ing jobs & ironing. Greatrates. 704-932-1069 or 704-791-9185

H H H H

H

704-633-9295FREE ESTIMATES

www.WifeForHireInc.comLicensed, bonded and insured.

Since 1985.

Drywall Services

OLYMPIC DRYWALL

New Homes Additions & RepairsSmall Commercial

704-279-2600Since 1955

[email protected]

FencingFree Estimates Bud Shuler& Sons Fence Co. 225 WKerr St 704-633-6620 or704-638-2000 Price Leadersince 1963

Reliable FenceAll Your Fencing Needs,Reasonable Rates, 21

years experience. (704)640-0223

FinancialServices

“We can erase your badcredit — 100% guaranteed”The Federal TradeCommission says any creditrepair company that claims tobe able to legally removeaccurate and timelyinformation from your creditreport is lying. There's no easyfix for bad credit. It takes timeand a conscious effort to payyour debts. Learn aboutmanaging credit and debt atftc.gov/credit. A message from The SalisburyPost and the FTC.

Grading & Hauling

Beaver Grading Qualitywork, reasonable rates.Free Estimates 704-636-4592

Heating and Air Conditioning

Piedmont AC & HeatingElectrical ServicesLowest prices in town!!704-213-4022

Home Improvement

A HANDYMAN & MOOREKitchen & Bath remodelingQuality Home ImprovementsCarpentry, Plumbing, ElectricClark Moore 704-213-4471

Around the House RepairsCarpentry. Electrical. Plumb-ing. H & H Construction 704-633-2219

Brisson - HandyManHome Repair, Carpentry,Plumbing, Electrical, etc.Insured. 704-798-8199

Browning Construction-Structural repair, flooring in-stallations, additions, decks,garages. 704-637-1578 LGC

Garages, new homes, re-modeling, roofing, siding,back hoe, loader 704-636-9569 Maddry Const Lic G.C.

Hometown Lawn Care &Handyman Service. Mow-ing, pressure washing, gut-ter cleaning, odd jobs ~in-side & out. Comm, res. In-sured. Free estimates. “Nojob too small” 704-433-7514Larry Sheets, owner

Kitchens, Baths, Sun-rooms, Remodel, Addi-tions, Wood & Compos-ite Decks, Garages,Vinyl Rails, Windows,Siding. & Roofing.

~ 704-633-5033 ~

Home Improvement

HMC Handyman Ser-vices No Job too Largeor Small. Please call 704-239-4883

The Floor Doctor

Complete crawlspacework, Wood floor level-

ing, jacks installed,rotten wood replaced

due to water or termites,brick/block/tile work,

foundations, etc.704-933-3494

Professional Services UnlimitedQuality work at affordable pricesNC Licensed General Contractor #17608. NC Licensed Home Inspector#107. Complete contracting services, Un-der home repairs, light tractor work &

Home maintenance. 36 years experience We acceptVisa/MC 704-633-3584. Visit our website: www.pro-fessionalservicesunltd.com

Lawn Maint. &Landscaping

Junk Removal

$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $We Buy Any Type ofScrap Metal At the

Best Prices...

Guaranteed!

F We will come to you! F

David, 704-314-7846

Anthony's Scrap MetalService. Top prices paidfor any type of metal orbatteries. Free haul away.704-433-1951

CASH FOR JUNKCARS And batteries. Call 704-279-7480 or 704-798-2930

Junk Removal

WILL BUY OLD CARSComplete with keys

and title,$175 and up.

(Salisbury area only) R.C.'s Garage &

Salvage704-636-8130704-267-4163

Lawn EquipmentRepair Services

Lyerly's ATV & MowerRepair Free estimates. Alltypes of repairs Pickup/de-livery avail. 704-642-2787

Lawn Maint. &Landscaping

Lawn Maint. &Landscaping

Earl's Lawn Care3Mowing 3Yard Cleanup3Trimming Bushes 3LeafRemoval 3Gutter Cleaning3Core Aeration 3Fertilizing

FREE Estimates704-636-3415704-640-3842

www.earlslawncare.com

GAYLOR'S LAWNCAREFor ALL your lawn careneeds! *FREE ESTI-MATES* 704-639-9925/704-640-0542

Outdoors by overcashMowing, Mulching,Leaf Removal. Free Es-timates. 704-630-0120

Lawn Maint. &Landscaping

VISSER LAWN CARELawn care and leafremoval. 336-909-1790

Manufactured Home Services

Mobile Home Supplies~City Consignment Com-pany New & Used Furni-ture. Please Call 704-636-2004

Moving and Storage

TH Jones Mini-MaxStorage 116 BalfourStreet Granite Quarry Please 704-279-3808

Painting and Decorating

Bowen Painting Interior and ExteriorPainting [email protected]

Cathy's Painting ServiceInterior & exterior, new &repaints. 704-279-5335

Stoner Painting Contractor

• 25 years exp. • Int./Ext. painting • Pressure washing • Staining • Insured & Bonded

704-239-7553

Pools and Supplies

Bost Pools – Call meabout your swimmingpool. Installation, ser-vice, liner & replace-ment. (704) 637-1617

Roofing andGuttering

SEAMLESS GUTTERLicensed ContractorC.M. Walton Construction,704-202-8181

Guttering, leafguard, metal &shingle roofs.Ask about taxcredits.

~ 704-633-5033 ~

Tree Service

A-1 Tree Service3Established since 19783Reliable & Reasonable3Insured

Free Estimates!~ 704-202-8881~

Recognized by the SalisburyTree Board

Graham's Tree ServiceFree estimates, reasonablerates. Licensed, Insured,Bonded. 704-633-9304

John Sigmon Stumpgrinding, Prompt ser-vice for 30+ years, FreeEstimates. John Sigmon,704-279-5763.

Johnny Yarborough, TreeExpert trimming, topping, &removal of stumps by ma-chine. Wood splitting, lotscleared. 10% off to seniorcitizens. 704-857-1731

MOORE'S Tree Trimming-Topping & Removing. UseBucket Truck, 704-209-6254Licensed, Insured & Bonded

TREE WORKS byJonathan Keener. In-sured – Free estimates!Please call 704-636-0954.

Do you want first shot at the qualifiedbuyers, or the last chance? Description brings

results!

Want to get results?

See stars

Put your picture in yourbusiness or

service ad forinstant recognition.

TO ADVERTISE CALL(704) 797-4220

Looking fora New Pet or

a CleanerHouse?

CLASSIFIEDS!

Autos

Pontiac 2002 Sunfire,two door, auto, cruise,86,000 miles, like new,704-202-0326.

VOLKSWAGON BEETLETURBO S, 2004, WELLMAINTAINED, Hard tofind in this GREATshape! You will not bedisappointed. Stock #11K126A $10495. 704-637-9090

Volvo, 2006 S60 2.5T -Onyx black with creamleather interior, sunroof,cd player, all power, al-loy wheels, super nice!704-603-4255

Volvo, 2007 S40 BrilliantRed on ash leather interi-or 2.4 5 cylinder autotrans, am, fm, cd, sunroof,duel heated seats, allpower ops, extra clean.704-603-4255

Motorcycles& ATVs

Harley Davidson 2004,Wide Glide 5400 miles,one owner. Will considerpartial trade for fourwheeler 704-791-6221

Harley DavidsonSportster, 2003, XL 1200Custom. 12,000 miles,many chrome extras.$6500 OBO. Please Call704-433-8173

RecreationalVehicles

Jayco 29' Clean TravelTrailer, 1999. $4,990.Please Call 704-279-2296 or 704-279-2122

TransportationDealerships

Service& Parts

Authorized EZGODealer. 30 years selling,servicing GOLF CARSGolf Car Batteries 6 volt,8 volt. Golf car utilitysales. US 52, 5 milessouth of Salisbury.Beside East Rowan HS& Old Stone Winery.Look for EZGO sign. Allbatteries brand new, notreconditioned or refurb-ished (definition: weakor old batteries washedout). Buy 6 batteries &receive $10 gift receiptfor purchase of a bottleof OLD STONE Wine.Coupon good until11/30/10. 704-245-3660

BATTERY-R-US

Wholesale Not Retail

If it's a battery, we sell it!We Buy Old Batteries!Faith Rd. to Hwy 152Store across from Sifford's Marathon

704-213-1005

www.battery-r-us.com

$5 off with ad

TransportationDealerships

CLONINGER FORD, INC.“Try us before you buy.”511 Jake AlexanderBlvd. 704-633-9321

TEAM CHEVROLET,CADILLAC, BUICK, GMC.www.teamautogroup.com704-216-8000

Tim Marburger Honda 1309 N First St. (Hwy52) Albemarle NC 704-983-4107

Troutman Motor Co. Highway 29 South, Concord, NC 704-782-3105

1330 W. JAKE ALEXANDER BLVD. ********

WE BUY VEHICLES FOR CASH!********

ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS********

WWW.AUTOHOUSEOFSALISBURY.COM

TransportationFinancing

TransportationFinancing

Bad Credit? No Credit?No Problem!Tim Marburger Dodge877-792-9700

TransportationFinancing

We are the area's largest selection of quality pre-owned autos. Financing avail. to suit a variety of

needs. Carfax avail. No Gimmicks – We take pridein giving excellent service to all our customers.

Call Steve today! 704-603-4255 www.JakeAlexanderAutoSales.com

Trucks, SUVs& Vans

Acura MDX, 2002 TouringRed with Tan leather interi-or, 3.5, V6, auto trans.,am, fm, cd changer, tape,NAVIGATION, all powerops, alloy rims, SUN-ROOF, chrome step bars,FULLY LOADED MUSTSEE!!!! 704-603-4255

Acura, 2002, MDXTouring. You have tocome and test drive thissweet looking and drivingSUV! Stk. # 10H200A.$12,587. 704-637-9090

Acura, 2008, RDX. AWD,one owner. Carfax Certified.The paint on this vehiclelooks like it just rolled out ofthe showroom. Like newcondition. Stk.# 10B292HA.$26,541. 704-637-9090

Chevrolet Equinox LT,2006, clean Carfax,locally owned, wellmaintained!! 10H566A$14,691

Trucks, SUVs& Vans

Chevrolet S-10 LS,2002. Stock #T10509C.Dark Cherry Red Metallicexterior & graphiteinterior. $7,197. 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Dodge Dakota 1991, V8,2WD, 218,300 miles,currently on the road,runs fine. Can be used asa work, farm or huntingtruck. $725. Call 704-637-7280

Dodge, 2005, Magnum SE.LIKE NEW SUV wagon!Don't miss out on thisvehicle! Stk.# 10B293CA.$14,587. 704-637-9090

Ford Escape Hybrid,2008. Stock #F10516A.Black Pearl slateclearcoat metallic exterior& stone interior. $17,497.1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Ford Expedition XLT,2004, Blue with Grey clothinterior 4.6 back with autotrans, all power ops, 4X4with towing pkg, rear airand audio, 3rd seat, lightedrunning boards PERFECTFOR THE FAMILY!!!! 704-603-4255

Ford F-150 XL, 2008.Stock #F7562A. BlackClearcoat exterior &medium flint interior.$14,797. 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Trucks, SUVs& Vans

Dodge Dakota SLTTruck Quad Cab, 2005,Low miles, Stock #10D136A $15987. 704-637-9090

Ford Freestyle SEL,2006. Stock #F11051A.Oxford White Clearcoatexterior, Shale Interior.$14,797. 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Ford Windstar, 2003,LOCAL TRADE, Adependable ALL-AROUNDvehicle priced withinanyone's budget. Roadready TO GOOOOO!!!Stock # 10C26A $8495.704-637-9090

Ford, 2000, Ranger XLT.4 door. Automatic, cruise,tilt, CD player, powerwindows, power locks.Very clean! $5,295. 704-637-7327

Ford, 2007 EscapeBrown on Grey cloth inte-rior 3.0 V6 auto trans,am, fm, cd, SUNROOF,all power ops, luggagerack READY FOR TESTDRIVE!!! 704-603-4255

GMC Envoy, 2007, low-mileage cream puff, greatbang for your buck, nicelyequipped. 10B206CA$15,974

Trucks, SUVs& Vans

Honda Element, 2004,ONE OWNER, LOCALTRADE, SAVETHOUSANDS, HARD TOFIND, FUEL-EFFICENTSUV. Stock # 10H310A$10,995. 704-637-9090

Honda Pilot EXL, 2005Burgandy Red on Tanleather interior, 3.5, V6,auto trans, 4X4, LOAD-ED, all power, SUN-ROOF, am,fm,cd,tape,DUAL HEATED SEATS,steering wheel controls,MUST SEE TO APPRE-CIATE!!!!! 704-603-4255

Jeep CommanderLimited, 2006. BrightSilver metallic exteriorand dark slate gray/lightgraystone interior. Stock# F10214A. $19,897. 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Jeep, 2002, GrandCherokee Laredo 4x4.Road & trail ready! Can'tgo wrong here with anoutstanding price for ANoutstanding SUV! Stk. #10B247KD. $7,995. Call704-637-9090

Mazda, 2003, TributeES. V-6. Heated leatherseats. Excellent con-dition. Well-maintained.143K miles. $6,200. 704-638-0226

Trucks, SUVs& Vans

Mercedes ML320, 1998Onyx Black, Dk Greyinterior, 3.2 V6 auto trans,all power, DUAL HEATEDLEATHER SEATS, alloyrims wrapped in goodtires, SUNROOF, runs &drives awesome!! 704-603-4255

Nissan, 2002, XtterraSE. T10725A. ShockBlue exterior, Charcoalinterior. $8,897. Call now 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Toyota 4 Runner, 1997Limited Forest Green onTan Leather interior V6auto trans, amf, fm, cd,tape, SUNROOF, alloyrims, good tires, CHEAPTRANSPORTATION!!!!704-603-4255

Trucks, SUVs& Vans

Toyota Sienna LE, 2007.Natural White exteriorand Taupe interior. Stock# P7544. $17,697. 1-800-542-9758www.cloningerford.com

Toyota Tundra Sr5, 2007,crew cab 2WD. Silver skymetallic w/grey cloth int.,4.7, V8, auto trans.AM/FM/CD, all power, tow-ing pkg, non smoker, lowmile, Extra Clean! 704-603-4255

Toyota, 2002 SiennaXLE LOADED! Greyleather seats, 3.0 V6 backwith auto trans, tape, cdchanger, all pwr. Duelheated seats, sunroof lowprice what more could youask for! 704-603-4255

Now you can buy in Salisbury Gary Sloan – Sales Manager“Don't Settle, Drive Honda”

704-637-9090

100% GuaranteedCredit Approval

*********OVER 100 VEHICLES

IN STOCK*********

1330 W. JAKEALEXANDER

BLVD. ********

BILL BOUDREU

www.autohouseofsalisbury.com

Want to attractattention?

GetBigger Type!

Want to get results?Use

Headlinetype

to show your stuff!

Ads with a priceALWAYS generatemore qualified calls

Many buyers won’tleave a message; givethe best time to call.

Want to sell quickly?Try a border

around your adfor $5!