20
Tuesday, January 5, 2010, Forest City, N.C. Panthers done The Carolina Panthers fin- ished with three straight wins and end the season with a lot of questions waiting to be answered Page 7 50¢ Charleston stuns UNC — Page 8 Manufacturing report boosts recovery hopes Page 11 Low: $2.51 High: $2.61 Avg.: $2.56 NATION GAS PRICES SPORTS Alabama star inspires with his performance Page 7 DEATHS WEATHER Rutherfordton Janie Sims Lenox Hines Spindale Tildia Dover George Walker Forest City Joan Ray Betty Lee Emma Padgett Peggy Ragland Kenneth Lovelace Ellenboro Gladys Billingsley Mooresboro Robert Smathers Elsewhere Max White Bill Bishop William Horton Juanita Shytles Page 5 Today and tonight, partly cloudy. Complete forecast, Page 10 Vol. 42, No. 4 Classifieds. . . 15-19 Sports ........ 7-9 County scene ....6 Opinion .........4 INSIDE High 61 Low 30 Now on the Web: www.thedigitalcourier.com Sports Clad in winter wear, students arrived at Forest City-Dunbar on a very cold morning Monday, the first day after Christmas holi- days to begin the new week and a new decade of learn- ing. Jean Gordon/ Daily Courier By SCOTT BAUGHMAN Daily Courier Staff Writer RUTHERFORDTON — County commissioners voted Monday to declare Rutherford County a recovery zone for purposes of applying for bonds while agreeing to ask the state for a $9 million grant to possibly lure a new business to the area. But the board shied away from making a decision on a fiber- optic network contract. In order to make it easier for industries to get financing in the county, the board voted unani- mously to approve the recovery zone declaration and also voted unanimously to approve asking the state of North Carolina for a $9 million appropriation from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to help a new manufacturing industry set up shop in the Riverstone Building on U.S. 221. “Hopefully, this is for a manufacturing business to be announced later,” said Tom Johnson, executive director of the county’s economic devel- opment commission. “And we anticipate that this project would provide at least 30 jobs.” Commissioners heard an extensive presentation on the county’s fiber-optic network and plans to hire PANGAEA — a Polk county based non- profit Internet service pro- vider — to run and maintain it. Commissioners may take up the issue and the contract negotia- tions again at their February meeting, but may hold a special meeting to address the contract before then. Mike and Barbara Nelson were recognized for contributions to the county for historical preser- vation after helping the county purchase the Biggerstaff prop- erty — a site where historically hangings occurred at a hanging tree and a location that is Please see County, Page 2 By JEAN GORDON Daily Courier Staff Writer FOREST CITY — As temperatures are hov- ering around 10 to 15 degrees in the mornings this week, Rutherford Countians are seeking ways to keep warm and be safe. Human service agencies are seeing more people asking for assistance because of the cold weather, expected to last through the weekend. There are ways to help others by donating warm clothing and blankets to the agencies. At least 25 people were waiting in line at Yokefellow Service Center Monday morning when the doors opened, looking for assistance to pay fuel bills. “Most of them were needing help with kero- sene or fuel oil or some type of assistance,” said Executive Director Carolyn Hardin. Some people were asking for assistance with electric bills. Most of the people were helped in some way, Hardin said. “We were able to help some and some people didn’t get the entire amount they needed or wanted, but we also tried to talk with them about budgeting. “We try to tell people they can’t wait until they run out of oil and run in here that day,” she said. Hardin said people are using kerosene heat- ers and Yokefellow also provides some electric heaters, people are advised to use them only when necessary because extended use will Please see Winter, Page 6 By JEAN GORDON Daily Courier Staff Writer CHIMNEY ROCK — This year will be much better economically than 2009, an optimistic Chimney Rock Village Mayor Barbara Meliski said Thursday. Like other towns across the area, the year brought a challenge to the vil- lage in establishing a budget when monetary cuts were made in the state and nation. “Hopefully, we’re coming out of this and we’d certainly like to see business improve in Chimney Rock Village just like everyone else,” Meliski said. The tourism industry reported decreases across the year in overnight stays at the county’s lodging properties. Fortunately for the Village, there have been no serious issues to tackle during the year, and on that note, Meliski said, “it’s been a Please see Village, Page 6 Jean Gordon/Daily Courier Main Street in Chimney Rock welcomes visitors New Year’s Day to enjoy bargain shopping and a visit to the Western North Carolina mountains. Winter chill will stay awhile County acts to help lure industry Village leaders are optimistic By LARRY DALE Daily Courier Staff Writer FOREST CITY — Commiss- ioners on Monday accepted state-imposed charges for elec- tric customers. The charges are from what is called Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard, or REPS. Commissioners also emerged from an executive session later and voted unanimously to notify the town’s insurance carrier that the town had suffered losses due an alleged employee theft. The General Assembly appro- ved the REPS program in 2007. Residential customers will pay an additional seven cents each month. The general rate is 57 cents per month, and the indus- trial rate is $5.71. Town officials stressed that this is not a rate increase from Please see Town, Page 2 Electric rates will go up for FC users

Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

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Page 1: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

Tuesday, January 5, 2010, Forest City, N.C.

Panthers doneThe Carolina Panthers fin-ished with three straight wins and end the season with a lot of questions waiting to be answered

Page 7

50¢

Charleston stuns UNC — Page 8

Manufacturing report boosts recovery hopes

Page 11

Low: $2.51High: $2.61Avg.: $2.56

NATION

GAS PRICES

SPORTS

Alabama star inspires with his performance

Page 7

DEATHS

WEATHER

RutherfordtonJanie SimsLenox Hines

SpindaleTildia DoverGeorge Walker

Forest CityJoan RayBetty LeeEmma PadgettPeggy RaglandKenneth Lovelace

EllenboroGladys Billingsley

MooresboroRobert Smathers

ElsewhereMax WhiteBill BishopWilliam HortonJuanita Shytles

Page 5

Today and tonight, partly cloudy.

Complete forecast, Page 10

Vol. 42, No. 4

Classifieds. . . 15-19Sports . . . . . . . . 7-9County scene . . . .6Opinion. . . . . . . . .4

INSIDE

High

61Low

30

Now on the Web: www.thedigitalcourier.com

Sports

Clad in winter wear, students arrived at Forest City-Dunbar on a very cold morning Monday, the first day after Christmas holi-days to begin the new week and a new decade of learn-ing.

Jean Gordon/ Daily Courier

By SCOTT BAUGHMANDaily Courier Staff Writer

RUTHERFORDTON — County commissioners voted Monday to declare Rutherford County a recovery zone for purposes of applying for bonds while agreeing to ask the state for a $9 million grant to possibly lure a new business to the area.

But the board shied away from making a decision on a fiber-optic network contract.

In order to make it easier for industries to get financing in the county, the board voted unani-mously to approve the recovery zone declaration and also voted unanimously to approve asking the state of North Carolina for a $9 million appropriation from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to help a new manufacturing industry set up shop in the Riverstone Building on U.S. 221.

“Hopefully, this is for a manufacturing business to be announced later,” said Tom Johnson, executive director of the county’s economic devel-opment commission. “And we anticipate that this project would provide at least 30 jobs.”

Commissioners heard an extensive presentation on the county’s fiber-optic network and plans to hire PANGAEA — a Polk county based non-profit Internet service pro-vider — to run and maintain it. Commissioners may take up the issue and the contract negotia-tions again at their February meeting, but may hold a special meeting to address the contract before then.

Mike and Barbara Nelson were recognized for contributions to the county for historical preser-vation after helping the county purchase the Biggerstaff prop-erty — a site where historically hangings occurred at a hanging tree and a location that is

Please see County, Page 2

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

FOREST CITY — As temperatures are hov-ering around 10 to 15 degrees in the mornings this week, Rutherford Countians are seeking ways to keep warm and be safe.

Human service agencies are seeing more people asking for assistance because of the cold weather, expected to last through the weekend. There are ways to help others by donating warm clothing and blankets to the agencies.

At least 25 people were waiting in line at Yokefellow Service Center Monday morning when the doors opened, looking for assistance to pay fuel bills.

“Most of them were needing help with kero-sene or fuel oil or some type of assistance,”

said Executive Director Carolyn Hardin. Some people were asking for assistance with electric bills.

Most of the people were helped in some way, Hardin said.

“We were able to help some and some people didn’t get the entire amount they needed or wanted, but we also tried to talk with them about budgeting.

“We try to tell people they can’t wait until they run out of oil and run in here that day,” she said.

Hardin said people are using kerosene heat-ers and Yokefellow also provides some electric heaters, people are advised to use them only when necessary because extended use will

Please see Winter, Page 6

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

CHIMNEY ROCK — This year will be much better economically than 2009, an optimistic Chimney Rock Village Mayor Barbara Meliski said Thursday. Like other towns across the area, the year brought a challenge to the vil-lage in establishing a budget when monetary cuts were made in the state and nation.

“Hopefully, we’re coming out of this and

we’d certainly like to see business improve in Chimney Rock Village just like everyone else,” Meliski said. The tourism industry reported decreases across the year in overnight stays at the county’s lodging properties.

Fortunately for the Village, there have been no serious issues to tackle during the year, and on that note, Meliski said, “it’s been a

Please see Village, Page 6

Jean Gordon/Daily CourierMain Street in Chimney Rock welcomes visitors New Year’s Day to enjoy bargain shopping and a visit to the Western North Carolina mountains.

Winter chill will stay awhile

County acts to help lure industry

Village leaders are optimistic

By LARRY DALEDaily Courier Staff Writer

FOREST CITY — Commiss-ioners on Monday accepted state-imposed charges for elec-tric customers.

The charges are from what is called Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard, or REPS.

Commissioners also emerged from an executive session later and voted unanimously to notify the town’s insurance carrier that the town had suffered losses due an alleged employee theft.

The General Assembly appro-ved the REPS program in 2007.

Residential customers will pay an additional seven cents each month. The general rate is 57 cents per month, and the indus-trial rate is $5.71.

Town officials stressed that this is not a rate increase from

Please see Town, Page 2

Electric rates will go up for FC users

1/front

Page 2: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

important to the Overmountain Victory Trail.

William Coxe and Peggy Barr were appointed to SWEEP. Herb Toms was appointed to the watershed com-mission. Tom Padgett was appointed to the transportation committee. Kevin Rogers, Tom Johnson, Jim Rhyne and Cameron McHargue were appointed to the capital planning and finance advisory committee.

Crystal Hamrick, CPA presented a report on her audits of the county’s volunteer fire departments.

“There were 11 volunteer fire departments audited for 2009. All of the departments purchased some sort of major items this year with the exception of one and four of the departments got grants,” Hamrick said. “All departments seem to be spending cautiously and saving for new buildings so they don’t have to incur as much debt when they do that.”

County Manager John Condrey informed the board that the Cliffside Sanitary District only has one mem-ber left on its board, after no one filed for election to the body during the last cycle.

“Ever since Cone Mills ceased most operations, the district has struggled to survive,” Condrey said. “Barry Jones, who served on that board for 30 years, did not file for re-election but has agreed to stay on the board so someone can be there to sign checks. There are several schools and homes on this system. The county probably needs to begin investigation into the legal process for taking this over. It could provide some help with running the sanitary district if some-thing happens to Barry.”

Finally, the board approved the Rutherford County Airport Transportation Improvement Plan unanimously — a planning document to help the airport board apply for grants.

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

2 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

LocaL/state

the town, but is money that will be passed on to Duke Energy for use in its renewable energy program.

Finance Director Pruett Walden told board members that the town had expected to increase its electric rates by about 5 percent, but he add-ed that changes in the market may mean “maybe quite a lot less than 5 percent.”

The town has some 3,500 to 3,600 residential customers, town employee Scott Webber told the board, and 500 to 1,000 commercial and indus-trial customers, with the figure over-whelmingly made up of commercial customers.

The board also voted to put up a four-way stop at the intersection of South Powell and Depot streets.

Town Manager Chuck Summey explained that replacing the anti-quated signal equipment at the inter-section would be costly.

Commissioner Shawn Moore noted, though, that many people find four-way stops confusing.

Summey commented that the four-way stop on Hardin Road “has been

a life-saver.”Commissioner Dee Dee Bright

made a motion to install the four-way stop, and commissioners unani-mously agreed.

The board also accepted the certifi-cation of the fireman’s roster for the Forest City Fire Department, a yearly requirement.

Commissioner Steve Holland talked to the board about the work done this holiday season by the Forest City Youth Council, made up of 25 students. He said they were bell ring-ers at Wal-Mart one day from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., helped package and distribute Christmas Cheer, received a $4,000 donation of food products from Lakeside Mills in Spindale, and helped feed eight families for Christmas.

In public comments, Seable Grant thanked the police, fire and utilities workers for their efforts in the recent cold weather.

The board then went into closed session to consult with the town’s attorney on matters concerning the investigation of a complaint against a town employee.

Contact Dale via e-mail at [email protected]

TownContinued from Page 1

CountyContinued from Page 1

ABC board steps downWILMINGTON (AP) — All three

Alcoholic Beverage Control board members in New Hanover County announced their resignations Monday in an attempt to defuse controversy over the salaries of the board’s father-and-son administra-tive leaders.

Chairman Charles Wells, Richard Hanson and Stephen Culbreth told the county commissioners in their resignation letter they hoped to dis-sipate public “misunderstandings” about their performance as board members.

The announcement comes after scrutiny of the county’s ABC board and the pay of administrator Billy Williams and his son, assistant administrator Bradley Williams.

Billy Williams earns $232,200 annually, while Bradley Williams gets a salary of $115,500. The Star-News of Wilmington reported recently the pair’s pay had increased by about 50 percent in the last five years and both men received cash bonuses.

The father and son each make more than state ABC commission chair-man Jon Williams and state admin-istrator Michael Herring. Local boards similar in size and sales pay their administrators half as much as what the elder Williams makes.

The resigning board members have defended the salaries they approved, arguing that Billy Williams, who first began working as an ABC clerk in 1968, and his son both worked their way through the ranks. Billy Williams doesn’t set his son’s salary.

Mom, 3 kids poisonedCHARLOTTE (AP) — Authorities

say a North Carolina mother and her three young children were rushed to a hospital with carbon monoxide poi-soning after she cooked on a charcoal grill inside their apartment.

Multiple media outlets report the Charlotte family was rescued Sunday evening after a neighbor’s carbon monoxide detector went off.

Upstairs neighbor Edward Kennedy said he called 911 after he realized where the smoke was coming from and knocked on their door without an answer.

Charlotte Fire Department Capt. Mark Basnight said the mother had been cooking vegetables on a char-coal grill inside.

Firefighters found the four inside, semiconscious and unable to move. The children were ages 10 and under.

Authorities say the family was treated and released from the hospi-tal.

Group aides celebrationWINSTON-SALEM (AP) — A

North Carolina organization has pledged $25,000 for celebrations marking the 75th anniversary of the Blue Ridge Parkway.

The Winston-Salem Journal reports Monday that the Blue Ridge Foundation will donate the money for the yearlong celebration. The Winston-Salem-based nonprofit is the parkway’s primary fundraiser.

The 469-mile parkway stretches from Front Royal, Va., to Cherokee. Construction began in 1935.

Foundation director Houck Medford says the amount is the larg-est financial donation toward the cel-ebration. He said North Carolina and Virginia have not designated money as hoped.

Va. soldiers chargedELIZABETH CITY (AP) — Two

Virginia soldiers have been charged in the shooting death of a man who was trying to leave a North Carolina nightclub.

Authorities told the Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk, Va., that 21-year-old Antoine Williams of Winfall was shot several times Friday as he tried to leave the Elizabeth City Restaurant and Lounge.

Investigators say Williams argued with a man whose car was blocking his vehicle in the parking lot.

Police have charged 22-year-old Shawn Horskins with first-degree murder and 19-year-old Everett Bynum with accessory to murder after the fact.

Shooting in kills oneCLINTON (AP) — Authorities say a

New Year’s Day shooting killed a man and wounded another in a house full of people in North Carolina

Clinton Police Chief Mike Brim told The Sampson Independent that detectives are still trying to figure out a motive for the Friday killing.

Authorities say Manuel Martinez died and Marlon Lobo was critically wounded after being shot once in a home near downtown Clinton.

Carolina Today

2/

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Page 3: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010 — 3

LocaL/state

Deputies investigate reported stabbing

CLIFFSIDE — The Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department is investigating a stabbing in the parking area of Cliffside Park on Saturday evening.

The victim is Robert Steven Dobbins, 21, of 391 Beason Road, Mooresboro.

According to a RSCD incident report, Dobbins reportedly was stabbed in the stomach during an attempted armed robbery.

A preliminary investigation is under way.

Dobbins was transported to Cleveland Regional Medical Center. A condition report was unavailable Monday afternoon.

Sheriff’s Reportsn The Rutherford County

Sheriff’s Office responded to 247 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

n Betty Mary Smith reported the theft of tools from a vehicle.n Norma Wilkins reported the

theft of a 1995 Nissan vehicle.

Rutherfordtonn The Rutherfordton Police

Department responded to 54 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Spindalen The Spindale Police Depart-

ment responded to 45 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Lake Luren The Lake Lure Police

Department responded to 20 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Forest Cityn The Forest City Police

Department responded to 123 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

n A Forest City police offi-cers reported a recovered stolen motor vehicle and felony speed-ing to elude arrest.n Another officer reported

damage to property at the Palms Development on Hudlow Road.n Carson Curtis reported an

assault with a deadly weapon and injury to personal prop-erty. The incident occurred on Withrow Road. (See arrest of Logan.)n An employee of Radio Shack

reported shoplifting/ conceal-ment and larceny. (See arrest of Fortune.)

Arrestsn D’Asia Cekeidra Logan, 17,

of Old Castle Lane, Forest City;

arrested on warrants for assault with a deadly weapon and injury to real property; freed on a cus-tody release. (FCPD)n Kenny Allen Vandyke, 40, of

120 Sunny Slope Drive; charged with felony probation violation; placed under a $5,000 secured bond. (RCSD)n James David Henson, 42, of

118 Old Church St.; charged with harassing phone call; released on a written promise to appear. (RCSD)n Candy Renee Johnson, 27,

of 840 Jack McKinney Road; charged with obtain property by false pretense and misdemeanor larceny; released on a $21,000 unsecured bond. (RCSD)n Deon Cash, 32, of 571 Poors

Ford Road; charged with assault by strangulation and communi-cating threats; placed under a 48-hour hold. (RCSD)n Walden Edgar Searcy, 41, of

44 Timothy Lane; charged with assault on a female, failure to heed light or siren, reckless driv-ing to endanger and felony flee to elude arrest; placed under a 48-hour hold. (RCSD)n Brandy Nichole Vinci, 27,

of 234 Jack McKinney Road; charged with simple possession of schedule IV controlled sub-stance, driving while impaired, speeding, driving while license revoked and rear lamps viola-tion; released on a $3,000 unse-cured bond. (RCSD)n Mark Anthony Stafford,

32, of 442 Corbin Dairy Road; charged with domestic violence protective order violation; placed under a 48-hour hold. (RCSD)n Andrea Jane Ogle, 25, of 579

Whitesides Road; charged with assault and battery and injury to real property; placed under a 48-hour hold. (RCSD)n Heather Kay Jewett, 21, of

1525 Doggett Road; charged with assault and battery; placed under a 48-hour hold. (RCSD)n Eric Dewayne Greene, 21,

of 445-B Long St.; charged with resisting a public officer; released on a $500 unsecured bond. (RCSD)n Capen Christian Palmer, 30,

of 483 Collins Road; charged with assault inflicting serious injury; released on a written promise to appear. (RCSD)n Ricardo Farias, 23, of 630

Ash St.; charged with driv-ing while license revoked and exceeding posted speed limit of 35 mph; placed under a $2,000 secured bond. (RPD)n Briana Shaye Hooper, 19,

of 200 Yelton St.; charged with driving while license revoked; placed under a $500 secured bond. (RPD)n Anthony Verno Parton, 47,

of 221 Deviney St.; charged with harassing phone call; released on an unsecured bond. (SPD)n Travis Kevin Ledford, 23, of

136 Hazy Terrace; charged with possession of drug paraphernalia and simple possession of sched-ule VI controlled substance; placed under a $3,000 secured bond. (Bondsman)

Citationsn Jimmy Dean Couch , 48, of

Pineknoll Drive, Forest City; cit-ed for possession of schedule VI controlled substance. (FCPD)n Raymond William O’Dell,

33, of Whiteside Road, Ruther-fordton; cited for possession of schedule VI controlled sub-stance. (FCPD)n Adrian Jacquez Marque Rice

Jr., 18, of Sandy Run Church Road, Mooresboro; cited for pos-session of spirituous liquor by person less than 21. (FCPD)n Michael Wayne Fortune, 29,

of McDaniel Street, Forest City; cited for larceny. (FCPD)

EMS/Rescuen The Rutherford County EMS

responded to 44 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.n The Volunteer Life Saving

and Rescue, Hickory Nut Gorge EMS and Rutherford County Rescue responded to 13 E-911 calls Saturday and Sunday.

Fire Callsn Forest City, SDO and Sandy

Mush firefighters responded to vehicle accidents during the weekend.n Rutherfordton firefighters

responded to a vehicle fire and to a smoke report.

Police Notes

The first baby born in 2010 in Rutherford County was Elizabeth Christine Ammons, daughter of Diamond Ammons and Josh Trout.

Correction

By JEAN GORDONDaily Courier Staff Writer

FOREST CITY — Three people were taken to Rutherford Hospital for treatment after they were injured in a one-vehicle crash Sunday at 12:45 a.m.

All three occupants of the car, including the driver Brian Keith Lee, 22, of Grassy Lane, Mooresboro, were charged with resist, delay and obstruct an officer.

Lee was driving a 1995 Honda Prelude on Springdale Drive, off Butler Road, when he trav-eled onto the right shoulder of the road, collided with a mailbox, hit a driveway culvert, went air-borne, spun around and clipped a Duke Energy utility pole in half before the car came to a rest on its top.

Lee was also charged with driving while impaired and no seat belt.

The two passengers were Dakota Smith, 19, of Poors Ford Road, and the back seat passenger, Jimmy Snyder, 21, of Whispering Pines Drive, Forest City. Snyder was also charged with no seat belt.

Duke Energy and Pike Electric arrived at the scene to replace the utility pole and restore power to the neighborhood.

The accident was investigated by Trooper S.B. Patterson. Traffic Control, Rutherford County EMS and Forest City firefighters also assisted.

On New Year’s Day at 12:20 a.m., Chelsi Marie Clayton, 20, of Womack Lake Road, Forest City, was charged with driving while impaired, careless and reckless driving and under age impaired driv-ing, after she crashed her 1999 Honda Accord on Henson Road, Forest City. According to Trooper Patterson, Clayton was traveling on Henson Road, eastbound from U.S. 221, when she drove left of center, hit the ditch and flipped her car. It came to a rest on its top. She was taken to Rutherford Hospital by Rutherford County EMS and released after treatment. A passenger in her car, Michael Crook, was not transported to the hospital.

Three injured in auto accident

NC teen held in New Year’s killing of another teen

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — Authorities say they have charged a 15-year-old boy with first-degree murder in the killing of another teen.

Concord police tell WSOC-TV they arrested the boy Saturday afternoon. They aren’t releasing his name because of his age, and say he is being held in a juvenile detention center.

Investigators say 14-year-old Oscar Martinez was shot to death around 3:45 p.m. New Year’s Day in a parking lot.

Police aren’t releasing a motive for the killing.

3/

I had the privilege last week of spending time in New Mexico in order to celebrate my parent’s 50th wedding anniversary. All of my brothers and their families were present and we had a wonderful time together! The thought ran through my mind while we were together about freezing time. My parents are both getting up in years and we all know each time we get together could be our last. Have you ever had a moment in your life that you wish you could freeze? I know it is not possible, but I am often reminded of the need to make much of the moments we do spend with those whom we love. One of the reasons I chose to become a funeral director is that even though I cannot literally freeze time, I can help people store up a treasure of the significance of a life that touched theirs. After a loved one passes, it is my calling to help a family, freeze time, when remembering the life of a loved

one. Through the use of a funeral or memorial service, pictures, video tributes, printed materials and music, a person’s life can be brought back to our memories and for a space of time be frozen in our memories. The older I become the more I am reminded about the preciousness of the time we spend with those we care deeply about. My hope is that we all live our lives in such a way that we are making lasting and meaningful memories. Have a safe and prosperous New Year!

Lanny funchess ––– funeraL director –––

Points To Ponder

Freezing Time

“Quality Service with Compassionate Care”

HarrelsonFuneral Home1251 hwy. 221-a,forest city, nc

(828) 657-6383www.harrelsonfuneralhome.com

Page 4: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

4 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

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

Jodi Brookshire/ publisherSteven E. Parham/ executive editor

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

When Congress returns to work this week one of the first items on their agenda will be

a new package designed to stimulate job creation in the country. The need is definitely there, but even as the House prepares to act there are serious ques-tions about whether this package will work.

The bill before the House does not include a jobs tax credit for small busi-nesses that has been championed by President Barack Obama. Some law-makers say that proposal would be too complex for business owners and thus ineffective.

Small business is the backbone and the heart and the soul of the American economy. The men and women who run these businesses contribute much to our economy and to our communities when times are good, but small business oper-ations are often precarious. They oper-ate on tight margins and when times are tough, they suffer more deeply.

In Washington, the fate of a hardware store or a dress shop on Main Street may not seem like much in the big pic-ture. We beg to differ with that think-ing.

Collectively, small businesses are cru-cial to our economic fortunes and to the overall health of our cities, our small towns and our rural communities. Just look around the country today at those places where storefronts are vacant or where the corner grocery is boarded up. The quality of life in those places is not what it might be.

What our lawmakers need to consider is just how valuable these small busi-nesses are and how valuable they can be to our economy when they thrive.

Our Views

Small business is important

Our readers’ viewsSays health care reform needs some more work

To the editor: The health care reform “public-

option” seems to be off the table in the Senate.

I would rejoice; however, Senate Majority Leader Reid has said that it is not dead. I hope he is wrong. The public plan would have meant acceptance of a new, radical and dangerous public policy.

The core argument for the pub-lic-option was that there was not enough competition in certain health care markets. The policy implied by the public-option is that the government has the right to create a public entity to compete in a business market anytime it decides that market does not have enough competi-tion in it.

Given such a policy, there would be no limit to the role of govern-ment in our economic system. It is one thing for the government to regulate a market and another for it to compete in it.

Moreover, as someone pointed out, the public-option would have created “a participant in the mar-ket (who) is also a regulator and a referee in the game.”

How could it have operated on “a level playing field” as the President promised? According to the Congressional Budget Office, the public plan targeted only about 2 percent of the popu-lation.

The zealous liberal support of the public option seemed extrava-gant and out of proportion given the small amount of the popula-tion targeted.

We got the impression that the entire health insurance market would be revolution-ized. On the health care debate,

one may divide the Senate into three groups. There are the Republicans who are powerless and do not have to be listened to.

The debate is between “progres-sive” and moderate Democrats. The progressives were all for the public-option but not enough moderates were for it. The pro-gressives needed the votes of the moderates, so they had to seek other proposals. It is too early to judge these proposals.

Polls indicate that most Americans want more people covered by health insurance. They also want to prevent deny-ing insurance coverage because of pre-existing conditions, And they want something done about the spiraling cost of health care.

Hopefully, Congress will find a way to accomplish these objec-tives in a way that achieves an appropriate balance between the federal government, private busi-ness, and individual autonomy.

“We speak of hope; but is not hope only a more gentle name for fear.” (L. E. Landon)

John TalleyRutherfordton

Strongly opposes health care reform bill

To the editor:The government has a history

of failure in all they have done.I am strongly against the

Health Care Bill!I want less government and

term limits for congress and sen-ate.

Obama has no history of suc-cess in anything he has done except taking advantage of what America has to offer.

Please do not saddle the American people with more bureaucracy and create another monster failure that we will be

paying for in perpetuity.Donald Benson

Lake Lure

Objects to exceptions in smoking law

To the editor:“A Rose is a Rose, is a Rose!”

Sugar is sugar no matter what we call it, be it honey, sucrose, frutose, brown, powdered, raw or glucose. The body does not dif-ferentiate as to how it is metabo-lized in our bodies. And, so I believe smoking is smoking, is smoking ... .

The new law which prohibits smoking in bars and restaurants across the state with some excep-tions.

I take exception to the places which will allow cigar smoking as long as the smoke does not migrate into an enclosed area where smoking is prohibited. Why are they allowing any excep-tions?

It is impossible for us to imag-ine that some of the smoke from cigars won’t migrate around a corner or into the rest of the restaurant. When they said No Smoking, I would assume it meant all cigarettes, all cigars and all pipes.

For those of us with allergies, asthama, COPD or sensitivity to any kind of smoking it seems strange to me that there would be any exceptions allowed. When all government, public and hospital areas are now smoke free why let a restaurant feel free to allow cigar smokers?

A family member used to smoke cigars all the time and many of them are as strong in odor as cigarettes. I for one will not sup-port an eating establishment that allows this exception.

Nancy Hartley Rutherfordton

Here’s my nominations for N.C.’s seven wonders“Well,” I wondered, “what

are our wonders?” I was on my way to Petra

in Jordan, where I was spending a few days after a longer trip to Israel.

Why Jordan? After all, it is not the most popular tour-ist destination in the world. Most visitors to Israel pass by the chance to visit the part of the “Holy Land” that lies on the East Bank of the Jordan River.

Those folks miss a lot. Mt. Nebo, where Moses got a look at the lands on the other side of the Jordan River before he died. Or the acres and acres of Roman and Byzantine ruins at Jerash. Or Petra itself, an ancient city of magnificent classical buildings and facades carved into a mountainside. Seeing these buildings emerge after a long walk through the high walls of a narrow canyon is thrilling.

For some time Petra has

been a popular destination for a few “in-the-know” trav-elers. But, as I learned from our guide, it is now on the “must see” list of many more people.

“Because,” he said, “in 2007 it made a list of the world’s New Seven Wonders,” along with the Great Wall of China, Brazil’s statue of Christ the Redeemer, Peru’s Machu Picchu, Mexico’s Chichen Itza pyramid, the Colosseum in Rome, and India’s Taj Mahal.

This list of man-made wonders got me thinking about things I would put on a list of Seven Wonders of North Carolina. Take a look

at what made my list and let me know what you think.

1. Dorton Arena at the State Fairgrounds in Raleigh. While the unusual looking building completed in 1952 has been called “a flying saucer,” it is, accord-ing to best-selling author and Duke professor Henry Petroski, “recognized among professional archi-tects and engineers as ‘the most important building in America today.’”

2. Biltmore House in Asheville. George Vanderbilt’s 19th-century chateau and the adjacent 8,000 acres attract visitors from all over the world.

3. Duke Chapel. A visit to this neo-gothic cathedral, completed in 1935, is like a trip to Europe. The building’s architect, Julian Abele, has been called “America’s first black architect of renown.”

4. State Capitol building in Raleigh. Completed in 1840,

it is an enduring example of the Greek Revival style and the work of noted architect, Alexander Jackson Davis. Still functioning as the office of the governor, it is a living museum.

5. The Linn Cove Viaduct on the Blue Ridge Parkway at Grandfather Mountain, said to be “the most compli-cated concrete bridge ever built.” Some would say that the Parkway itself should be on the list. Or, remember-ing the late Hugh Morton’s role in pushing for the via-duct, we might add another Grandfather Mountain related construction. Here is what the late Charles Kuralt once said. “I would call the Mile-High Swinging Bridge the Eighth Wonder of the World, except that I went to the Republican Convention and learned in Houston that the Astrodome is the Eighth Wonder of the World. But this bridge is the Third

Wonder of Avery County, I’ll tell you that . . . right after Hugh Morton and Mildred the Bear.”

6. Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. It is the tallest lighthouse in the country. It has become a symbol for our state’s coastal heritage. The complicated and risky move inland from the encroaching sea sealed its place on my list even though our friend Hugh Morton vigorously opposed the project.

7. The old Charlotte (now Bojangles) Coliseum. When completed in 1955, it was the largest unsupported steel dome in the world and became the example for sim-ilar and bigger sports arenas across the country.

Now it’s your turn. What seven wonders would make your list?

D.G. Martin is hosting his final season of UNC-TV’s North Carolina Bookwatch, which airs Sundays at 5 p.m.

D.G. Martin

One on One

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

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

The editors reserve the right to edit letters for libelous content, factual accuracy and length.

All submissions should be sent to The Editor, P.O. Box 1149, Forest City, NC, 28043.

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

Letter PoLicy

4/

Page 5: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010 — 5

LocaL/obituaries

Emma PadgettEmma Sue “Mama Sue”

Daniel Padgett, 93, of Forest City, died Sunday, Jan. 3, 2010, at Hospice House in Forest City.

A native of Rutherford County, she was a daughter of the late Olen and Alma Elizabeth McCluney Daniel, and also preceded in death by her first husband, Thomas Jasper Sisk.

She was retired from General Fireproofing and was a member of Adaville Baptist Church.

She is survived by her husband of 54 years, W.B. “Bobo” Padgett; a son, Olen Sisk of Asheville; four grand-children; and six great-grandchildren.

Memorial services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Adaville Baptist Church with the Rev. Calvin Sayles offici-ating. Visitation will follow.

Memorials may be made to Hospice of Rutherford County, P.O. Box 336, Forest City, NC 28043 or to the charity of the donor’s choice.

Crowe’s Mortuary and Crematory is in charge of arrangements.

Online condolences www.crowemortuary.com.

Joan RayJoan Lewis Ray, 61, died

Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at Rutherford Hospital.

Arrangements are incom-plete and will be announced by Harrelson Funeral Home.

Tildia DoverTildia Sue Dover of Sims

St., Spindale, died Monday, Jan. 4, 2010, in Asheville.

A native of Rutherford County, she was a daughter of the late Jessie and Lidia Street.

She was a homemaker and a member of Faith Baptist Church in Forest City.

She is survived by her husband, Bruce Dover of Spindale; three sons, Danny Lee Dover of Morganton, James Donald Dover of Bostic, and Jackie Lee Dover of Spindale; one daugh-ter, Wanda June Dover Mansfield of Spindale; 10 grandchildren; one broth-er, the Rev. Hubert Street of Bostic; and two sisters, Drucilla Street of Forest City, and Katherine Smith of Union Mills.

The family will receive friends Wednesday from 1 to 2 p.m., at Crowe’s Mortuary. The funeral service will fol-low at 2 p.m., in the chapel with the Revs. Billy Cogdell and Donald Dover officiat-ing. Burial will follow in Fork Creek Baptist Church cem-etery in Union Mills.

Online condolences www.crowemortuary.com.

Gladys BillingsleyGladys Johnson Billingsley,

80, of Ellenboro, died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at Rutherford Hospital.

A native of Rutherford County, she was a daughter of the late Emanuel Johnson and Edna Bailey Johnson, and the widow of Frank Thomas Billingsley Jr.

She was of the Baptist faith.She is survived by five

daughters, Jane B. Henson, Spindale, Patsy Scott of Harris, Betty Lockridge of Shelby, and Joyce Limerick and Jean Deviney, both of Ellenboro; two sons, Larry Billingsley of Axton, Va., and Ted Billingsley of Pittsburgh, Pa.; one brother, James K. Johnson of Harris; 21 grand-children; 18 great-grandchil-dren; and two great-great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be conducted at 4 p.m. Tuesday at McMahan’s Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Sam Henderson officiating. Visitation will follow the ser-vice.

The family at home of Jean Deviney, 1224 Tiney Road, Ellenboro.

Online condolences www.mcmah-ansfuneralhome.com.

Janie SimsJanie Frances Camp Sims,

92, of Rutherfordton, died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at

Rutherford Hospital.Born in Polk County, she

was a daughter of the late Dock and Emily Camp, and the widow of John Sims.

She was a member of Pleasant Hill Baptist Church in Rutherfordton.

She is survived by two daughters, Mary McAbee and Faye Owens, both of Rutherfordton; one son, Floyd Sims of Old Fort; nine grandchildren; 22 great-grandchildren; and 19 great-great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Pleasant Hill Baptist Church with the Revs. William Swink and Jimmy Cooke officiating. Burial will follow in the church cem-etery. Visitation was held Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. at Crowe’s Mortuary.

In lieu of flowers, memori-als can be made to Hospice P.O. Box 336, Forest City, NC 28043.

Online condolences www.crowemortuary.com.

Kenneth Lovelace Kenneth Faye Lovelace, 79,

of Forest City, died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at Henderson Care Center.

A native of Rutherford County, he was a son of the late James Boyd and Buela Melton Lovelace, and also preceded in death by his stepmother, Elsie Sue Lovelace.

He was a member of Walls Baptist Church and worked for Pardon Lumber Company for 45 years as a debarker operator.

He is survived by his wife, Ruth Keeter Lovelace of Henrietta; two sons, Roger Faye Lovelace and Boyd Lee Lovelace, both of Forest City; two daughters Vickie Sue Lovelace of Florida, and Patricia Martin Adams of Rutherfordton; one broth-er, James Pete Lovelace of Bostic; one sister, Martha Sue Wells of Forest City; 10 grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren.

Memorial services will be conducted at 6 p.m. Thursday at Harrelson Funeral Chapel with the Rev. Robert E. Boone officiating.

In lieu of flowers, memo-rials may be made to Boyd Lee Lovelace of Henderson Care Center, 125 Henderson Circle, Forest City, NC 28043.

Online condolences www.harrel-sonfuneralhome.com.

Robert SmathersRobert Allen Smathers,

60, of Twin Creeks Road, Mooresboro, died Sunday, Jan. 3, 2010, at Cleveland County Hospice of Wendover, Shelby

Arrangements will be announced by Harrelson Funeral Home.

William HortonWilliam A. Horton, 82, a

resident of Tavernier, Fla., died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, in Tampa, Fla.

He was born in Monroe and reared in Rutherford-ton.

No services are planned.Arrangements were

handled by Blount & Curry Funeral Home, Terrace Oaks Chapel, Temple Terrace, Fla.

Peggy RaglandPeggy Phillips Ragland,

59, of 195 Wilkins St., Forest City, died Monday, Jan. 4, 2010, at Cleveland Pines Nursing Center.

Arrangements will be announced by Thompson’s Mortuary.

Betty LeeBetty Alice Hutchins Wall

Lee, 74, of Rock Corner Road, Forest City, died Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2009, at Rutherford Hospital.

She was a daughter of the late Lester and Lucy Butler Hutchins, and also preceded in death by her husband, Boyce Lee Wall.

She is survived by her daughter, Judy Alice Wall Bradley of Union Mills; three grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; and a daugh-ter-in-law.

No services are planned at this time.

Washburn & Dorsey Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Online condolences www.wash-burndorsey.com.

George WalkerGeorge Tim Walker, 66, of

303 Eastwood St., Spindale, died Sunday, Jan. 3, 2010, at Rutherford Hospital.

A native of Rutherford County, he was a son of Cliff and Alma Grant Walker, and also preceded in death by his wife, Mary Lee Luckadoo Walker.

He was a retired textile employee.

He is survived by a son, Scott Walker of Chatsworth, Ga.; two daughters, Sherry Robinson of Mt Holly, and Lisa Ledford of Lawndale; two brothers, M.L. and Fletcher Walker of Spindale; a sister, Judy Morgan of Spindale; seven grandchil-dren; and two great-grand-children.

Funeral services will be conducted at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Fellowship Holiness Church in Spindale with the Revs. Leon Brown and Danny Ledford offici-ating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. at the church.

Crowe’s Mortuary and Crematory is in charge of arrangements.

Online condolences www.crowemortuary.com

Juanita ShytlesJuanita Hightower Shytles,

76, of Newnan, Ga., died Thursday, Dec. 24, 2009.

Born in Avondale, she was a daughter of the late William C. Hightower and Josephine Womack Hightower, and the widow of Leon Shytles.

She is survived by one

son, Charles Shytles of Newnan; two daughters, Evelyn North of Sharps-burg, Ga., and Marie S. Traylor of LaGrange, Ga.; a brother, Bill Hightower of Spartanburg, S.C.; one grandchild; and one great-grandchild; and several niec-es and nephews who live in Rutherford County.

Graveside services were held at 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 27, in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

Memorials may be made to Heritage Health Care of Greenville, 99 Hill Haven Road, Greenville, GA 30222.

McKoon Funeral Home of Newnan had charge of arrangements.

Online condolences www.mckoon.com.

Lenox HinesLenox Broughton Hines,

94, of Rutherfordton, died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at Carolina’s Medical Center in Charlotte.

A native of Rutherford County, he was a son of the late B. Kin Hines and Orrie Simmons Hines, and also preceded in death by his wife, Mary Hines.

He was an Army veteran of World War II and a mem-ber of Shiloh Baptist Church. He was also a member of Spindale Masonic Lodge #673, the Scottish Rite of Free Masonry S.J. USA 32, and a member of Oasis Shrine Temple, Charlotte.

He is survived by one son, Keith Hines of Huntersville; one stepson, Daniel C. Philbeck of Concord; four grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.

Arrangements are being handled by McMahan’s Funeral Home, where the family will receive friends Wednesday from 10 to 11 a.m. A funeral service will follow at 11 in the chapel with the Rev. Don Crawford officiating. Interment in the Sunset Memorial Park with military honors provided by Rutherford County Honor Guard.

Online condolences www.mcmah-ansfuneralhome.com.

Max White Max Hamrick White, 81,

of Charlotte, died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at Mecklenburg Health Care Center.

A native of Rutherford County, he was a son of the late Lester and Corrie Hamrick White.

He was an Army veteran and worked as a loom fixer at Burlington Industries, where he retired after 47

years of employment. He was a member and deacon of Haynes Memorial Baptist Church.

He is survived by his wife Jerry Gault White of Mooresville; one daugh-ter, Shawna Caldwell of Mt. Holly; and one niece and one nephew.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Haynes Memorial Baptist Church with the Rev. Charles Battle officiating. Interment will follow in the Cliffside Cemetery. The family will receive friends Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. at Harrelson Funeral Home.

Online condolences harrelsonfu-neralhome.com.

Bill BishopBilly Reid Bishop, 74,

formerly of Chandler Dr., Gaffney, S.C., died Friday, Jan. 1, 2010, at Peachtree Centre.

Born in Gaffney, he was a son of the late John M. Bishop and Edna Cooper Bishop, and the widower of Jean Jackson Bishop.

He was an Army veteran, retired owner of Bishop Drywall, and a member of Southside Baptist Church.

Survivors include a son, Larry Bishop of Phelps, Ky.; three daughters, Allison Beck of Gaffney, Treva Spencer of Columbia, S.C., and Mitzi Forrester of Woodruff, S.C.; a sister, Blanch Buff of Harris; six grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

Graveside services will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at Frederick Memorial Gardens with Dr. Wofford Caughman officiating.

Memorials may be made to Southside Baptist Church, Building Fund, 204 West O’Neal St., Gaffney, SC, 29340.

The family will be at the home of Allison Beck, 105 Emerald Dr., Gaffney.

Blakely Funeral Home & Crematory of Gaffney is in charge of arrangements.

Online condolences www.blakely-funeralhome.com.

Ronald "Ronnie"

Eugene Amos Ronald "Ronnie" Eugene Amos, 65, of Rutherfordton, NC, beloved husband, father, papa, brother, uncle and friend, went home to be with his Lord and Savior on January 3, 2010. Ronnie is survived by his wife of 46 years, Judy Amos; one son, Michael Amos and his wife, Kim, of Rutherfordton; one daughter, Jennifer Shoenfelt of Rutherfordton; his mother-in-law, Ethel Carswell of Forest City; three grandchil-dren, Caroline Amos, Will Amos and Hunter Shoenfelt of Rutherfordton, and one step-grandson, Jason Tosto, who is currently serving in Iraq. He is also survived by two sisters, Edith Davis of Forest City and Vernell Camp of Rutherfordton, and numerous neices, nephews and cousins. He was preceded in death by his father and mother, William Van and Mary Etta Amos; one sister, Ethel Amos; and six brothers, Luther, Jim, Lester, Donald, Vernon and Bobby Amos. Ronnie worked for Duke Energy for 30 years and was blessed with many wonderful friendships as a result of his work. He was a lov-ing and faithful husband, father and grandfather and will be dear-ly missed by his family and friends. The family will receive friends on Thursday, January 7, from 3-5 pm, to be followed by a memorial service at 5 pm, at Crowe's Mortuary and Chapel in Rutherfordton. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to Hospice of Rutherford County, or to the charity of your choice. Online condolences at :www.crowemortuary.com

Paid obit.

Flossie SmithCallahan

Flossie Smith Callahan, age 82, resident of White Oak Manor, Rutherfordton, NC, died Saturday, January 2, 2010, at Rutherford Hospital. A native of Rutherford County she was the daughter of the late Horace Smith and the late Mary Jane Smith and the widow of the late Birch Callahan Jr. Flossie was a member of First United Methodist Church of Rutherfordton. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Cathy Gail Callahan and a brother, James Clarence Smith. She is survived by two daugh-ters, Sharon C. Porter and hus-band, Ronnie of Rutherfordton and Pamela C. Hutchins and hus-band, Ronald of Rutherfordton; five grandchildren and four great grandchildren; two sisters, Kittie Lee Henderson of LaBelle, Fl, and Bobbie Grace Cook of Rutherfordton and one brother, Horace Dupree Smith of Gastonia. Arrangements are being handled by McMahan’s Funeral Home & Cremation Services. Funeral ser-vices were at First United Methodist Church, Rutherfordton at 2PM Monday, January 4, 2010 with Rev. Ed Hillman and Rev. Tonya Hill officiating. Visiting followed in the fellowship hall. Interment was at Rutherfordton City Cemetery. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to First United Methodist Church,264 N. Main St., Rutherfordton, NC 28139. The family will be at the home of Sharon and Ronnie Porter, 171 Edwards St., Rutherfordton. Guest register at:www.mcmahansfuneralhome.com

Paid obit

George Tim Walker

George Tim Walker, age 66, of 303 Eastwood St., Spindale, died Sunday at Rutherford Hospital. He was a native of Rutherford County and a retired textile employee. He was preceded in death by his wife Mary Lee Luckadoo Walkerand parents Cliff and Alma Grant Walker. Left to cherish his memory are a son, Scott Walker of Chatsworth, Ga.; daughters, Sherry Robinson of Mt Holly and Lisa Ledford of Lawndale; brothers, M.L. and Fletcher Walker of Spindale; sis-ter, Judy Morgan of Spindale; grandchildren, Sarah Walker, Lauren Robinson, Dillan Ledford, Cortney Robinson, Dustin Ledford, Chris Walker, and Leslie Hayes; great grandchildren Rylyn Walker and Madison Hayes. The family will receive friends from 6-8 PM Tuesday at Fellowship Holiness Church in Spindale. Funeral services will be at 3 PM Wednesday at Fellow-ship Holiness Church with the Rev. Leon Brown and Rev. Danny Ledford officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Online condolences at:www.crowemortuary.com

Paid obit.

Obituaries

5/

THE DAILY COURIER

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

Page 6: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

6 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

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

NewsroomScott Bowers, sports editor . . . . . . . . . . . . .213Jean Gordon, features editor . . . . . . . . . . . .211Abbe Byers, lifestyles editor . . . . . . . . . . . . .215Allison Flynn, editor/reporter . . . . . . . . . . . .218Garrett Byers, photography . . . . . . . . . . . . .212Scott Baughman, reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216Larry Dale, reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .217Bobbie Greene, typesetting . . . . . . . . . . . . .220Virginia Rucker, contributing editor

Circulation

David Cash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .208Virle Martin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .208

Business officeJessica Higgins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .202Cindy White . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .200

AdvertisingChrissy Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .226Jill Hasty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227Jessica Hendrix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .228

ClassifiedErika Meyer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .205

MaintenanceGary Hardin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .222

An operator will direct your call during business hours, 8 a .m . to 5 p .m ., Monday-Friday . After business hours, you can reach the person you are calling using this list . As soon as you hear the automated attendant, use your Touch Tone phone to dial 1 and the person’s extension or dial 3 for dial by name .

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Calendar/loCal

increase the utility bills.Fortunately, Hardin said the price

of fuel oil is down about $85 over last year’s prices for 100 gallons of fuel and that is also helping.

Fuel assistance comes from dona-tions to the center by private dona-tions and through Duke Energy’s Share the Warmth plan.

Customers have an opportunity to send donations for heating and Duke will match the donation to Yokefellow. “We have already received some Share the Warmth money,” Hardin said Monday afternoon.

In November, Duke Energy custom-ers received a bill insert about the STW program.

The Duke Energy Foundation will match up to $500,000 in customer contributions during the heating sea-son.

Contributions are tax deductible and may be mailed using the return envelope they receive in their elec-tric bill or mail a check directly to: Share the Warmth Fund, The Duke Energy Foundation, P.O. Box 35469, Charlotte, NC 28254-3429

Hardin also reminds people the cen-ter is in need of good warm clothing and clean blankets.

As the weather remains cold all week, there aren’t enough blankets for the requests.

Blankets and warm clothing are also needed at the county’s other thrift stores: Hospice Resale, Chase Corner Ministries and Salvation Army Thrift

Store. Terry Hegaman of the Grace of God

Rescue Mission’s homeless shelter said 13 people stayed in the shelters Sunday night, however, more and more people are coming to the shelter daily for a free hot evening meal.

The evening meal is served to more

than 100 people every day beginning at 4:45 p.m. Anyone who needs a hot meal is invited.

“We’re here seven days per week,” Hegeman said.

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

Meetings/otherDAR meeting: Griffith Rutherford NSDAR Chapter will meet Wednesday, Jan. 6, at St. John’s Church, Main St., Rutherfordton. Meeting begins at 3 p.m. Program on “Quilts with Stories” presented by Sylvia Lancaster.

Post 74 meeting: American Legion Post 74 will meet Thursday, Jan. 7, at National Guard Armory on Withrow Road. Dinner at 6 p.m. Meeting at 7.

SWEEP meeting: (Solid Waste Environmental Education Panel) will meet Friday, Jan. 8, at GDS, 141 Fairgrounds Road, Spindale. The meeting begins at noon. To learn more about SWEEP visit www.sweeprecycles.com.

Owls Booster meeting: Forest City Owls Boosters will meet Thursday, Jan. 14, at Rollins Cafeteria. Meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. Please come early (6 p.m., or sooner) if you plan to have a meal. Membership $25 per person. For information contact Cecil Geer at (828) 919-0000.

Lost Playwrights: Lost Playwrights of Western North Carolina will not meet in December. The next meet-ing is Saturday, Jan. 23, 4 p.m., at Doc’s Deli in Hendersonville; a pre-sentation of short plays will follow at 7 p.m. The meetings are open to anyone interested in any aspect of theatre.

Alcoholics Anonymous: The Tri-City Alano Club meets every day at 1201 Oakland Road, Forest City, (first door on the left). For more information and meeting times call 288-2700.

Students/schoolsTravel baseball tryouts: Tryouts for a new 8 and under travel base-ball team will be held Saturday, Jan. 9. Contact Curtis Snethen at 828-223-8191 for more information. Baseball camp: Saturday, Jan. 9, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. K-8th, instructed by area coaches, college and high school players. Limited to first 100 players. Fee $25, lunch provided. For for more information contact Chad Fowler at 828-429-7972.

FundraisersSpaghetti supper: Saturday, Jan. 23, begins at 4 p.m., Little White Country Church, 184 Painters Gap Road, Rutherfordton; $5 per plate, all you can eat; ages 6 and under, $3; all proceeds to benefit the Neighbors Pantry.

Music/concertsSinging: Sunday, Jan. 10, 6 p.m., Bill’s Creek Baptist Church, Lake Lure; featuring The Atkins Family; a love offering will be taken.

Singing: Sunday, Jan. 10, 6 p.m., Smith Grove Baptist Church; fea-turing The Royal Quartet.

The Carlson Trio will be in con-cert Saturday, Jan. 16, for an appreciation day in honor of Wayne McCurry, at Sunshine Elementary School. A chili supper begins at 5 p.m., and music starts at 6:30. Sponsored by Fairview Baptist Church and Cherry Mountain VFD. The trio will also sing Sunday, Jan. 17, during the 11 a.m. worship ser-vice at the First Baptist Church of Bostic.

Singing: Sunday, Feb. 7, 7 p.m., Riverside Baptist Church, Hogan Road, Harris; featuring Winners Either Way.

religion Revival: Jan. 31 - Feb. 5, Little White Country Church, 184 Painters Gap Road, Rutherfordton; speaker, Rev. George Wright; Sunday service 6 p.m.; M-F, 7 nightly; special singing each night. Miscellaneous

MiscellaneousHospice Resale Shop will hold a storewide, half-price sale Jan. 7-9 on its entire stock. Hours 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Located at 631 Oak St., Forest City.

Low-cost rabies clinic: Saturday, Jan. 9, noon to 1 p.m.; Thunder Road Animal Hospital; $9 cash, one-year rabies; $10 cash, three-year rabies; other discounted vac-cines available; call 286-0033.

Art Exhibit: Rutherford County Visual Arts Guild presents the Young Budding Artist exhibit through Jan. 30, at Norris Public Library, Rutherfordton. The young artists are students of Judy Ockert.

Weatherization Assistance Program: The Weatherization Assistance Program is accepting applications for eligible clients for possible assistance. Applicants must provide proof of ownership, verifi-cation of income on each household member and past 12 months usage history on their utility bills. Also open to tenants, providing the land-lord gives written permission and contributes a portion of the cost to receive Weatherization measures. For more information contact Becky McKelvey at 828-287-2281 ext. 1238.

n Dress in layered clothing and wear some kind of head cover.n Keep pets inside; when necessary

to walk them, do so on the grass, not the cold sidewalk.n Protect livestock and other ani-

mals with adequate shelter, extra feed and supplemental heat.n Bring potted plants inside.n Cover outdoor plants with burlap

or cloth. Cold will penetrate plastic.n Make sure fireplace flues are

working properly.n Check extension cords for breaks

or fraying.n Do not use charcoal or gas grills

indoors. They produce deadly carbon monoxide fumes.n Follow portable heater instruc-

tions carefully. Take the word “space” literally. Keep the heating unit three feet from other objects to avoid start-ing a fire. Avoid using older units that don’t have a tip-over switch. These switches are a safety feature that turn off the unit if it falls over. Check that the cords are not frayed or damaged. Do not use with extension cords. Kerosene heaters must be used in large rooms with a steady air supply. Use in small, sealed rooms risks car-bon monoxide poisoning.

n Don’t put space heaters near flammable materials, such as beds and clothes. Use a good extension cord, not a flimsy or torn one. If using kerosene heaters, open a window for ventilation. Make sure heating units that have not been used recently are grease- and dust-free before they are turned on.n Keep the thermostat set at 68

degrees or lower and adjust it to 65 degrees when going to sleep or when you are away from your home. Keep air filters clean to help make the heat-ing unit run more efficiently, and do not turn up the thermostat to heat your home faster – that doesn’t work.n Turn off all nonessential lights

and things such as pool pumps. Use dishwashers and other major appli-ances only when necessary. Try to refrain from taking longer show-ers, which people often do when the weather is cold.n Close windows and blinds to hold

heat in. Also, use ceiling fans to dis-tribute heat around a room.n Don’t sleep in any room with

an unvented gas or kerosene space heater.

Source: avertdisasters.com

WinterContinued from Page 1

By JESSICA OSBORNEDaily Courier Correspondent

FOREST CITY — With cold weath-er on the rise, local mechanics say you shouldn’t try to save money by skip-ping winterizing your car.

“You shouldn’t skip out on winter-izing your vehicle because it could cost you your engine by not putting antifreeze in it,” said Mark McCurry of McCurry Auto Services. “Sixty dol-lars could save you $3,000 or more on a new engine if you don’t have this done.”

Old man winter doesn’t just take its toll on the outside of your vehicle – it can wreak havoc on the inside too.

“You don’t want any pipes or hoses to bust,” said Jerry Rash of Bridges Auto Parts. “Change the oil filter and

put in fresh oil and antifreeze at the start of the cold season. Cold weather is also really hard on batteries, just making sure to get the vehicle tuned up and knowing that everything is working can prevent damage.”

“The best way to winterize your car is by making sure the antifreeze will withstand the cold temperatures,” said Jacob Bradley of Broadway Tire Services.

Other ways to winterize your vehicle are to make sure thermostats are working and changing the antifreeze every couple of years. Another way, Bradley suggested, is adding nitrogen to your tires.

“The nitrogen is a major plus in winterizing tires because it will make them last three to five times longer,” said Bradley. “It also saves fuel, and

increases vehicle stability and safety.”An average cost for nitrogen is

$29.95 for a set of four.Herbie James of Watkins recom-

mends that you take the vehicle in and get it serviced.

“Have them check the coolant (anti-freeze) and get it down below freezing to make sure it can handle the cold weather,” said James. “Also have the tires checked because they tend to become low in colder weather and put de-icer in the windshield washers.”

The main consensus among auto repair services in winterizing your vehicle is getting the antifreeze checked.

“Most customers have done this during a regular service check,” said James.

Mechanics say it does not pay to skimp on the costs of winteriz-ing your vehicles.

Cold Weather Tips

don’t skimp on winterizing vehicles

Garrett Byers/ Daily Courier

6/

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The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010 — 7

Inside

Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . Page .8NFL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page .9Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page .14

On TV

Local Sports

Fiancee: .Henry .jumped, .didn’t .fall

NEW YORK (AP) — Chris Henry’s fiancee says he jumped out of the back of her truck instead of falling and that she wasn’t driving fast on the day the Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver was fatally injured.

Loleini Tonga tells ESPN that she thinks Henry thought he would land safely and may have been scared because he saw someone calling the police. She said he didn’t jump with the intention of harming himself.

The two had argued on Dec. 16 at the home owned by Tonga’s parents in Charlotte.

Six .UNC .starters .say .they .will .be .back

CHAPEL HILL (AP) — North Carolina says six starters will return in 2010 for their senior seasons.

Five starters from the Atlantic Coast Conference’s top total defense on Monday announced their intention to come back next season.

Coach Butch Davis says defensive tackle Marvin Austin, defensive backs Kendric Burney and Deunta Williams and linebackers Quan Sturdivant and Bruce Carter will return to the Tar Heels’ defense. Receiver Greg Little also will return to the offense.

“The major reason ... is because we’ve got a chance to be special,” Williams said. “I think there’s a lot of unfinished business that we’ve got.”

They all were mentioned as possible early entrants to the NFL draft.

Davis said he met with the players during their junior season and after the Meineke Bowl loss to Pittsburgh.

“After talking with NFL per-sonnel around the country, I thought it was in the best inter-est of all six players to return for their senior seasons,” Davis said. “It was an individual deci-sion for each player, and for some it was harder than oth-ers.”

Austin, speaking to reporters on a conference call, said he made his decision on his birth-day — Jan. 1 — as a present to himself while Williams said he knew he would come back since late November.

Burney and Williams com-bined for 11 picks this season, with Burney returning two for touchdowns. Sturdivant led the team with 79 tackles and returned a fumble for a score, while Carter had 65 tackles and returned an interception for a TD.

Little, the fifth player in school history with at least 60 catches in a season, caught 62 passes for 724 yards with five touchdowns and rushed for another score.

BASKETBALLGirls 6 p.m./ Boys 7:30

Shelby at CrestCentral at PatonEast Rutherford at BurnsMt. Heritage at TJCA

7 p.m. (ESPN) (ESPN2) Col-lege Basketball Teams TBA. (FSS) College Basketball Longwood at South Carolina. 7:30 p.m. (TS) NHL Hockey Atlanta Thrashers at Pitts-burgh Penguins. From the Mellon Arena in Pittsburgh. 8:15 p.m. (WHNS) College Football FedEx Orange Bowl — Georgia Tech vs. Iowa. From Miami.

By BARRY WILNERAP Football Writer

Around the NFL, it is known as Black Monday, the day after the season ends, when coaches get fired.

Yet there are 12 teams think-ing only about Super Sunday and how to get to the Super Bowl.

The playoffs begin next week-end with the wild-card round. Recent results indicate teams playing on the opening week-end of the postseason have a good chance of getting to the big game. It’s happened the last four seasons, with three of those clubs winning the cham-pionship.

“We’re in the same position as last year, where we had to win the last couple of games,” Ravens running back Willis McGahee said Monday. “Once we get in there, we know we can do damage, and now we’re in there.”

Baltimore will be in New England on Sunday, followed by defending NFC champion Arizona hosting Green Bay in a rematch of the season finale, won 33-7 by the wild-card Packers.

On Saturday, the playoffs begin with two more repeats of Week 17 contests: the wild-card New York Jets at Cincinnati, followed by Philadelphia at NFC East winner Dallas.

Those eight teams are search-ing for that special spark that can carry them into February.

In Washington and Buffalo, it’s coaching searches that have begun, although the Redskins probably won’t be looking for long. Mike Shanahan is an overwhelming favorite to get the job Jim Zorn officially lost on Monday.

Perry Fewell and his entire Bills coaching staff were told to start looking elsewhere for employment, too.

The same could happen in Oakland, where Tom Cable guided the Raiders to a 5-11 record that some considered overachieving. He will meet with owner Al Davis next week — and no one can predict what Davis will do.

As for Eric Mangini in Cleveland, well, Mike Holmgren, recently hired to run the Browns, has not yet decided who will coach the team in 2010.

The damage on the coaching front won’t be nearly as deep as last season, when 11 coaches who began 2008 did not make it into 2009. That doesn’t mean it’s any less painful for Zorn or Fewell.

Two of those coaching chang-es, with the Jets and Colts, worked out pretty well. Jim Caldwell, the designated suc-cessor when Tony Dungy

Please see NFL, Page 9

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Julius Peppers was noncommittal about the future, Jake Delhomme declared he wants to redeem himself and John Fox was silent.

The Carolina Panthers gathered for an early morning meeting Monday, then scattered for the offseason with questions aplenty.

While Fox canceled his end-of-season news conference after being peppered with questions about his future a day earlier, Peppers ended his silence when he was tracked down in the frigid players parking lot at Bank of America Stadium.

Only the five-time Pro Bowl pick and the NFL’s highest-paid player this sea-son had little to say as he heads into free agency a year after publicly declaring he wanted to play elsewhere.

Peppers also declined to weigh in on Fox, whose contract hasn’t been extended past 2010. Fox refused to say on Sunday if he wants to return as a possible lame-duck coach next season, even with a sal-

ary of more than $6 million.“I really don’t have any information on

Fox’s future around here. I really don’t have any thoughts that I want to share on it right now,” Peppers said. “In a couple of days I’ll have a little more information and a little more things to tell you about my future around here.”

Delhomme’s future is cloudy, too, but his intentions aren’t after a miserable season. With tape on his broken right middle finger that knocked him out of the final five games, the quarterback declared he wants to return even though backup Matt Moore went 4-1 in his place as Carolina finished a disappointing sea-son at .500.

“I anticipate to be here. I expect to be here. I want to be here,” said Delhomme, who is still owed nearly $12.7 million in guaranteed money. “Certainly Matt played outstanding the last few games for us. That’ll be a big question for us, and

Please see Panthers, Page 9

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.(AP) — Mark Ingram plays for Alabama — and so much more.

He plays for a father who watches his games from jail.He plays for a family that has stayed strong and close dur-

ing hard times.He plays for the people in his hometown of Flint, Mich., a

city whose residents have received far more bad news than good in recent years.

For Alabama, Ingram has helped the top-ranked Crimson Tide reach the BCS championship game against No. 2 Texas on Thursday and delivered the storied program its first Heisman Trophy.

For those who helped Ingram get to where he is, those accomplishments have brought joy and pride unsurpassed by even the most grateful Tide fans.

The stocky sophomore tailback is a bit overwhelmed by it all, but is trying his best to remain the humble and hard-working guy who first arrived in Tuscaloosa.

“I know it comes with it, but at the same time I know that there’s lots of things I have still have to accomplish,”

Please see Ingram, Page 8

Associatd PressCarolina Panthers’ Julius Peppers (90) walks off the field after the Panthers’ 23-10 win over the New Orleans Saints in an NFL football game in Charlotte Sunday. The Carolina Panthers gathered for an early morning meeting Monday, then scattered for the offseason with ques-tions aplenty.

Associated PressAlabama running back Mark Ingram, right, jokingly pushes a member of coaching staff during practice in Costa Mesa, Calif., Monday. Alabama plays Texas in the BCS Championship NCAA college football game Thursday in Pasadena, Calif.

Panthers leave questions

Black Monday hits NFL

Ingram .inspires .with .performance

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Page 8: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

8 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

sports

Scoreboard

N.C.-Wilmington 62, William & Mary 61WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) — Only two days

removed from a 34-point loss just up the road, John Fields made sure North Carolina-Wilmington didn’t let it happen again Monday night.

Fields tipped in a missed shot with 3.4 seconds to play at William & Mary Hall and the Seahawks ended the Tribe’s school record-tying 10-game winning streak 62-61.

The Seahawks (5-8, 1-2 Colonial Athletic Association) led only three times all game, but Fields made that last one count after Chad Tomko’s left side drive banked off the glass.

Davidson 66, Samford 56DAVIDSON (AP) — Brendan McKillop scored

20 points and Davidson rallied to defeat Samford 66-56 on Monday night.

The Wildcats (7-8, 2-1 Southern Conference) trailed 41-37 with 11:33 left but scored nine unan-swered points to lead 46-41 on J.P. Kuhlman’s 3-pointer with 7:18 remaining.

High Point 66, UNC-Asheville 62HIGH POINT (AP) — Eugene Harris scored 15

points on five 3-pointers to lead High Point to a 66-62 win over UNC-Asheville on Monday night for its third win in a row.

Harris, the Big South Conference’s active leader with 246 3-pointers, was 5-for-10 from behind the arc. Nick Barbour added 14 points and Tehran Cox had 10. Cruz Daniels, who has averaged 11 points and 10 rebounds in the past four games, had 13 points and 11 rebounds for the Flames (7-6, 3-1 Big South Conference).

Ingram said Monday. “I’m not too bothered by it. But some-times I just want to be able to focus on the game.”

It was the relationship between Ingram’s parents and Alabama coach Nick Saban that led Mark to choose to play for the Crimson Tide.

Mark Ingram Sr. was a star wide receiver for Michigan State when Saban was an assistant for the Spartans. The coach grew close to Ingram Sr. and his then-girlfriend, now wife, Shonda. Then when Saban became Alabama coach in 2007, he returned to Michigan to recruit their son.

The younger Mark Ingram had already made an impression on another member of Alabama’s staff.

“He was actually going into his freshman year of high school, I

was at Michigan State and he came to camp with his team and here was this little guy who was the best player in camp,” Tide offensive coordinator Jim McElwain said. “Then I get here and coach Saban says, ’Yeah, we got this kid out of Michigan coming.’ And I said, ’Don’t tell me it’s Mark Ingram. That’s a good get.”’

Ingram’s first season at Alabama was a good one, at least on the field. As a freshman in 2008, he ran for 728 yards and 12 touchdowns.

Off the field, it was a troubling time for his family.

His father, who played in the NFL for the New York Giants and Miami Dolphins, was con-victed of money laundering and bank fraud. He was sentenced to 92 months, but failed report to a federal prison in Kentucky in December 2008. His family believes Ingram Sr. did not want to miss his son playing in the Sugar Bowl.

He was captured on Jan. 2 in a Michigan motel room hours before the Tide kicked off against Utah, and now could face an even longer sentence.

Mark Ingram Sr. has been serving time in a holding facil-ity in New York, awaiting a sen-tencing hearing. Eventually, he will be moved to a prison, but his attorney has tried to prolong his stay at the holding facility because it allows Ingram a bet-ter opportunity to little Mark on television.

In 2009, Ingram Sr. watched his son become a star.

In Flint, Ingram’s accomplish-ments have provided at least a small lift to a town that has endured skyrocketing unemploy-ment rates during the economic downturn.

“Back at home it’s crazy,” Ingram said. “Everybody is just so proud. Some of them are more happy than me. They feel like when I won (the Heisman) the whole city won it.”

FOOTBALLNational Football League

AMERICAN CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAx-New England 10 6 0 .625 427 285y-N.Y. Jets 9 7 0 .563 348 236Miami 7 9 0 .438 360 390Buffalo 6 10 0 .375 258 326

South W L T Pct PF PAx-Indianapolis 14 2 0 .875 416 307Houston 9 7 0 .563 388 333Tennessee 8 8 0 .500 354 402Jacksonville 7 9 0 .438 290 380

North W L T Pct PF PAx-Cincinnati 10 6 0 .625 305 291y-Baltimore 9 7 0 .563 391 261Pittsburgh 9 7 0 .563 368 324Cleveland 5 11 0 .313 245 375

West W L T Pct PF PAx-San Diego 13 3 0 .813 454 320Denver 8 8 0 .500 326 324Oakland 5 11 0 .313 197 379Kansas City 4 12 0 .250 294 424

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAx-Dallas 11 5 0 .688 361 250y-Philadelphia 11 5 0 .688 429 337N.Y. Giants 8 8 0 .500 402 427Washington 4 12 0 .250 266 336

South W L T Pct PF PAx-New Orleans 13 3 0 .813 510 341Atlanta 9 7 0 .563 363 325Carolina 8 8 0 .500 315 308Tampa Bay 3 13 0 .188 244 400

North W L T Pct PF PAx-Minnesota 12 4 0 .750 470 312y-Green Bay 11 5 0 .688 461 297Chicago 7 9 0 .438 327 375Detroit 2 14 0 .125 262 494

West W L T Pct PF PAx-Arizona 10 6 0 .625 375 325San Francisco 8 8 0 .500 330 281Seattle 5 11 0 .313 280 390St. Louis 1 15 0 .063 175 436

x-clinched divisiony-clinched playoff spot

Sunday’s GamesChicago 37, Detroit 23Pittsburgh 30, Miami 24Houston 34, New England 27Buffalo 30, Indianapolis 7San Francisco 28, St. Louis 6Atlanta 20, Tampa Bay 10Carolina 23, New Orleans 10Cleveland 23, Jacksonville 17Minnesota 44, N.Y. Giants 7Tennessee 17, Seattle 13Dallas 24, Philadelphia 0San Diego 23, Washington 20Kansas City 44, Denver 24Baltimore 21, Oakland 13Green Bay 33, Arizona 7N.Y. Jets 37, Cincinnati 0

NFL Playoff GlanceWild-card PlayoffsSaturday, Jan. 9

N.Y. Jets at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m. (NBC)Philadelphia at Dallas, 8 p.m. (NBC)

Sunday, Jan. 10Baltimore at New England, 1 p.m. (CBS)Green Bay at Arizona, 4:40 p.m. (FOX)

Divisional PlayoffsSaturday, Jan. 16

Philadelphia, Green Bay or Arizona at New Orleans, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)Baltimore, N.Y. Jets or Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 8:15 p.m. (CBS)

Sunday, Jan. 17Dallas, Green Bay or Arizona at Minnesota, 1 p.m. (FOX)New England, N.Y. Jets or Cincinnati at San Diego, 4:40 p.m. (CBS)

Conference ChampionshipsSunday, Jan. 24

AFC, 3 p.m. (CBS)NFC, 6:40 p.m. (FOX)

Pro BowlSunday, Jan. 31

At MiamiAFC vs. NFC, 7:20 p.m. (ESPN)

Super BowlSunday, Feb. 7

At MiamiNFC champion vs. AFC champion, 6:25 p.m. (CBS)

Bowl Glance

Saturday, Dec. 19New Mexico BowlWyoming 35, Fresno State 28, 2OTSt. Petersburg (Fla.) BowlRutgers 45, UCF 24

Sunday, Dec. 20New Orleans BowlMiddle Tennessee 42, Southern Miss. 32

Tuesday, Dec. 22Las Vegas BowlBYU 44, Oregon State 20

Wednesday, Dec. 23Poinsettia BowlUtah 37, California 27

Thursday, Dec. 24Hawaii BowlSMU 45, Nevada 10

Saturday, Dec. 26Little Caesars Pizza BowlMarshall 21, Ohio 17Meineke BowlPittsburgh 19, North Carolina 17 Emerald BowlSouthern Cal 24, Boston College 13

Sunday, Dec. 27Music City BowlClemson 21, Kentucky 13

Monday, Dec. 28Independence BowlGeorgia 44, Texas A&M 20

Tuesday, Dec. 29EagleBank BowlUCLA 30, Temple 21Champs Sports BowlWisconsin 20, Miami 14

Wednesday, Dec. 30Humanitarian BowlIdaho 43, Bowling Green 42Holiday BowlNebraska 33, Arizona 0

Thursday, Dec. 31Armed Forces Bowl

Air Force 47, Houston 20 Sun BowlOklahoma 31, Stanford 27 Texas BowlNavy 35, Missouri 13 Insight BowlIowa State 14, Minnesota 13Chick-fil-A BowlVirginia Tech 37, Tennessee 14

Friday, Jan. 1Outback BowlAuburn 38, Northwestern 35, OT Capital One BowlPenn State 19, LSU 17 Gator BowlFlorida State 33, West Virginia 21Rose BowlOhio State 26, Oregon 17Sugar BowlFlorida 51, Cincinnati 24

Saturday, Jan. 2International BowlSouth Florida 27, Northern Illinois 3Cotton BowlMississippi 21, Oklahoma State 7PapaJohns.com BowlConnecticut 20, South Carolina 7Liberty BowlArkansas 20, East Carolina 17, OTAlamo BowlMichigan State (6-6) vs. Texas Tech (8-4), late

Monday, Jan. 4Fiesta BowlBoise State vs. TCU, late

Tuesday, Jan. 5Orange BowlIowa (10-2) vs. Georgia Tech (11-2), 8 p.m. (FOX)

Wednesday, Jan. 6GMAC BowlCentral Michigan (11-2) vs. Troy (9-3), 7 p.m. (ESPN)

Thursday, Jan. 7BCS National ChampionshipAlabama (13-0) vs. Texas (13-0), 8 p.m. (ABC)

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L Pct GBBoston 24 8 .750 — Toronto 17 18 .486 8 1/2New York 14 20 .412 11 Philadelphia 10 23 .303 14 1/2New Jersey 3 30 .091 21 1/2

Southeast Division W L Pct GBOrlando 24 9 .727 — Atlanta 21 12 .656 3Miami 17 15 .516 6 Charlotte 14 18 .438 9 1/2Washington 10 21 .323 13

Central Division W L Pct GBCleveland 27 9 .750 — Chicago 14 18 .452 10 1/2Milwaukee 13 18 .419 11 1/2Detroit 11 21 .344 14 Indiana 10 23 .303 15 1/2

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBDallas 23 11 .676 — San Antonio 20 12 .625 2 Houston 20 14 .588 3 Memphis 16 16 .500 6 New Orleans 15 16 .484 6 1/2

Northwest Division W L Pct GBPortland 22 13 .629 — Denver 21 13 .618 1/2Oklahoma City 19 15 .545 3 Utah 18 15 .545 3 Minnesota 7 28 .200 15

Pacific Division W L Pct GBL.A. Lakers 27 6 .818 — Phoenix 21 13 .618 6 1/2L.A. Clippers 14 18 .438 12 1/2Sacramento 14 19 .424 13 Golden State 9 23 .281 17 1/2

Sunday’s GamesNew York 132, Indiana 89Charlotte 91, Cleveland 88Toronto 91, San Antonio 86Philadelphia 108, Denver 105L.A. Lakers 131, Dallas 96Monday’s GamesMiami 92, Atlanta 75Oklahoma City 98 Chicago 85New Orleans at Utah, latePortland at L.A. Clippers, lateTuesday’s GamesWashington at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.Orlando at Indiana, 7 p.m.Chicago at Charlotte, 7 p.m.Milwaukee at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.Detroit at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.Golden State at Denver, 9 p.m.Phoenix at Sacramento, 10 p.m.Memphis at Portland, 10 p.m.Houston at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Monday’s College BasketballEAST

Brown 72, Wagner 71, OTCanisius 77, Iona 65Colgate 64, Cent. Connecticut St. 45Columbia 56, American U. 51Dartmouth 49, Bucknell 43Maine 52, Princeton 50Niagara 77, Fairfield 68Old Dominion 87, Towson 71Rider 65, Manhattan 64Robert Morris 78, Morgan St. 75Siena 76, Loyola, Md. 56St. Peter’s 61, Marist 49

SOUTHBethune-Cookman 78, Long Island U. 69Charleston Southern 57, Winthrop 54Coastal Carolina 76, Presbyterian 72Coll. of Charleston 82, North Carolina 79, OTDavidson 66, Samford 56Drexel 72, Georgia St. 57ETSU 63, S.C.-Upstate 62Florida St. 94, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 54George Mason 67, Hofstra 63High Point 66, UNC Asheville 62Howard 72, Navy 65Jacksonville 91, Kennesaw St. 52James Madison 71, Delaware 65LSU 83, McNeese St. 60Louisiana Tech 82, Utah St. 60Mercer 84, North Florida 79Morehead St. 72, Tennessee St. 66Northeastern 62, Va. Commonwealth 57Radford 75, Gardner-Webb 45UNC Wilmington 62, William & Mary 61

Winston-Salem 94, Columbia Union 60MIDWEST

Alabama 67, Toledo 50Kent St. 84, Norfolk St. 66Pittsburgh 74, Cincinnati 71W. Illinois 55, Savannah St. 51

SOUTHWESTLamar 87, Arkansas St. 68Oklahoma 88, Md.-Eastern Shore 54

Monday’s Women’s BasketballEAST

American U. 57, Md.-Eastern Shore 46Binghamton 74, Cornell 42Cent. Connecticut St. 69, St. Francis, NY 51Connecticut 84, South Florida 42N.J. Tech 69, Fairleigh Dickinson 61Nebraska 94, Vermont 50Sacred Heart 60, Monmouth, N.J. 45Wagner 76, St. Francis, Pa. 74, OT

SOUTHAlabama A&M 70, Jackson St. 53Appalachian St. 53, W. Carolina 52Belmont 74, Stetson 69Campbell 82, Longwood 70Charleston Southern 67, UNC Asheville 50Charlotte 64, Clemson 57Chattanooga 57, Georgia Southern 55Davidson 82, Elon 73E. Kentucky 61, Austin Peay 54East Carolina 78, Marshall 54Florida Gulf Coast 67, Lipscomb 47Grambling St. 48, Alabama St. 47High Point 79, Coastal Carolina 39Jacksonville 67, Kennesaw St. 55MVSU 80, Ark.-Pine Bluff 68Mercer 54, North Florida 48Morehead St. 61, Tennessee St. 47Murray St. 55, Tenn.-Martin 47N.C. State 60, Columbia 58Northwestern St. 79, Southern, NO 48Radford 68, Gardner-Webb 53Richmond 64, Wake Forest 54S. Carolina St. 60, Savannah St. 49S.C.-Upstate 85, ETSU 78Samford 70, Coll. of Charleston 47Troy 74, Army 65Tulane 81, SE Louisiana 45Virginia 72, St. Bonaventure 64

MIDWESTCleveland St. 73, Wis.-Milwaukee 61E. Illinois 79, Tennessee Tech 68E. Michigan 76, North Dakota 65IPFW 61, IUPUI 49Ill.-Chicago 75, Butler 70Illinois St. 70, SIU-Edwardsville 66N. Dakota St. 85, Centenary 50Notre Dame 79, Purdue 75Oakland, Mich. 64, W. Illinois 44Oral Roberts 81, S. Dakota St. 72SE Missouri 56, Jacksonville St. 53UMKC 71, S. Utah 58Valparaiso 48, Loyola of Chicago 39Wis.-Green Bay 76, Youngstown St. 60

SOUTHWESTOklahoma St. 98, Sam Houston St. 60Prairie View 67, Southern U. 48Rice 70, UTSA 56Texas Southern 70, Alcorn St. 57Texas-Pan American 75, LeTourneau 37

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

\EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GANew Jersey 40 29 10 1 59 118 89Pittsburgh 43 26 16 1 53 133 116N.Y. Rangers 42 20 17 5 45 111 117N.Y. Islanders 43 17 18 8 42 107 134Philadelphia 41 19 19 3 41 117 118

Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GABuffalo 41 26 11 4 56 112 93Boston 41 21 13 7 49 107 98Ottawa 42 22 16 4 48 122 125Montreal 44 21 20 3 45 114 120Toronto 42 14 19 9 37 115 145

Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAWashington 41 24 11 6 54 145 116Atlanta 41 18 17 6 42 132 135Tampa Bay 41 16 15 10 42 103 121Florida 42 17 18 7 41 123 135Carolina 41 11 23 7 29 102 146

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 42 29 10 3 61 137 90Nashville 42 25 14 3 53 121 119Detroit 41 21 14 6 48 108 104St. Louis 41 17 18 6 40 108 121Columbus 43 15 19 9 39 112 143

Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAColorado 43 24 13 6 54 128 124Calgary 41 24 12 5 53 114 98Vancouver 42 25 16 1 51 132 103Minnesota 42 20 19 3 43 111 124Edmonton 42 16 22 4 36 115 138

Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GASan Jose 42 27 8 7 61 142 106Phoenix 43 25 14 4 54 111 99Los Angeles 42 24 15 3 51 124 120Dallas 41 18 12 11 47 122 127Anaheim 42 16 19 7 39 115 137

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for over-time loss.Saturday’s GamesCarolina 2, N.Y. Rangers 1, OTVancouver 3, Dallas 1Tampa Bay 3, Pittsburgh 1Los Angeles 2, Washington 1N.Y. Islanders 6, Atlanta 5, SOColorado 3, Columbus 2Calgary 3, Toronto 1Detroit 4, Phoenix 1Nashville 3, Anaheim 1Chicago 6, St. Louis 3New Jersey 5, Minnesota 3San Jose 4, Edmonton 1Sunday’s GamesOttawa 7, Philadelphia 4Buffalo 1, Montreal 0Florida 6, Pittsburgh 2Chicago 5, Anaheim 2Monday’s GamesN.Y. Rangers 3, Boston 2Los Angeles at San Jose, lateTuesday’s GamesMontreal at Washington, 7 p.m.Florida at Toronto, 7 p.m.Dallas at New Jersey, 7 p.m.Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.Boston at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.Minnesota at Chicago, 8 p.m.Calgary at Nashville, 8 p.m.Phoenix at Edmonton, 9 p.m.Columbus at Vancouver, 10 p.m.Detroit at Anaheim, 10 p.m.

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Andrew Goudelock’s long 3-pointer tied the game with 2 seconds left in regulation, Donavan Monroe gave College of Charleston the lead for good with a 3 to start overtime and the Cougars beat No. 9 North Carolina 82-79 on Monday night.

The Tar Heels (11-4) had trailed most of the game, but used a late run to take a 72-61 lead with 4 minutes to go. That’s when Goudelock and the Cougars (8-6) got going.

Goudelock scored the last 8 points in regulation, including the fadeaway 3 from about 28 feet with 6-foot-10 Ed Davis in his face to make it 73-all.

Monroe hit the go-ahead 3-pointer and his two free throws with 18 seconds left provided the final margin.

Charleston beat a ranked opponent for the first time since defeating the third-ranked Tar Heels 66-64 on Dec. 5, 1998.

Goudelock scored 24 points, while Davis had 18 points and 16 rebounds.

North Carolina’s Dexter Strickland missed a layup with 4 seconds left. Davis’ cross-court pass with less than a second to go was picked off by Monroe and the celebration began.

Monroe clutched the basketball as time ran out and fans rushed the court at the Carolina First Arena. Charleston coach Bobby Cremins had his share of success at Georgia Tech for nearly two decades, going 12-33 against the Tar Heels.

This one figured to be out of his team’s reach, however, especially after North Carolina took the 72-61 lead.

But the Cougars called on their long-range shoot-ing to pull out the victory. Goudelock hit two of his four 3s the rest of the way.

In all, Charleston was 13 of 32 from behind the arc. North Carolina’s only 3-pointer came in over-time when Larry Drew II cut Charleston’s lead to 82-79.

That’s as close as the Tar Heels got.Casaan Breeden and Monroe had 15 points each

for the Cougars.Deon Thompson added 17 points for the Tar

Heels.

Charleston stuns, Tar Heels, 82-79

IngramContinued from Page 7

8/

HospiceVolunteer TrainingJanuary 11 - 13

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January 18 - 21 from 6 pm until 9 pm

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Call 245-0095 to register for the classes.

Page 9: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010 — 9

SportS

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — Rex Ryan’s top-ranked defense shut down the Cincinnati Bengals, and rookie Mark Sanchez efficiently led a clock-eating offense as the New York Jets clinched their first playoff berth in three seasons with a 37-0 victory on Sunday night.

Needing a win to keep their season alive, the Jets (9-7) set up a rematch against the Bengals (10-6) in the first round of the playoffs Saturday at Cincinnati.

It was the Jets’ first shutout at home since beating Pittsburgh 6-0 on Dec. 14, 2003.

Sanchez was 8 of 16 for 63 yards with no turnovers before being replaced by Kellen Clemens late in the fourth quar-ter. Thomas Jones ran for 78 yards and two touchdowns, and Brad Smith had 92 yards rush-ing and a TD as the Jets set a record for rushing yards in a season.

Texans 34, Patriots 27HOUSTON (AP) — Arian

Foster scored two touchdowns, Bernard Pollard recovered a fumble for another score and the Texans kept their playoff hopes alive before the Jets snatched it away.

The Texans trailed by 14 points in the fourth quarter before three unanswered touchdowns. Foster scored the go-ahead TD on a 3-yard run with about 2 minutes remaining.

Cowboys 24, Eagles 0ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)

— Tony Romo threw a pair of early touchdown passes and the defense took over from there, sending Dallas to the NFC East title and setting up a rematch against the Eagles at their new palace Saturday.

The Cowboys (11-5) earned their third straight impressive win, and the shutout also made for a major milestone in the club’s storied history: first back-to-back blankings.

Donovan McNabb was 20 of 36 for 223 yards, and Philadelphia (11-5) finished with 228 total yards.

Romo was 24 of 34 for 311 yards, with the two touchdowns and an interception.

Ravens 21, Raiders 13OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) —

Willis McGahee ran for a career-high 167 yards and three touch-downs as the Ravens clinched an AFC wild-card berth and will play at New England on Sunday.

The Ravens (9-7) went into

the regular-season finale know-ing a win would put them in the playoffs. The Raiders (5-11) pro-vided a stiff challenge for much of the game but were unable to pull it out behind former starter JaMarcus Russell.

Titans 17, Seahawks 13SEATTLE (AP) — Chris

Johnson became the sixth player in NFL history to rush for 2,000 yards in a season, then scored the go-ahead touchdown on a 1-yard run with 4:33 remaining.

Johnson ran 36 times — three short of Earl Campbell’s fran-chise record set in 1981 against Seattle — for 134 yards and both touchdowns for the Titans (8-8).

Chiefs 44, Broncos 24DENVER (AP) — Josh

McDaniels’ first season as Denver coach ended the same way Mike Shanahan’s last one did: with a late-season flop and an embarrassing blowout that wasted a strong start and kept the Broncos out of the playoffs.

Jamaal Charles ran for a Chiefs-record 259 yards and Derrick Johnson returned two Kyle Orton interceptions for touchdowns in Kansas City’s first win in nine tries at Invesco Field.

Steelers 30, Dolphins 24MIAMI (AP) — The Steelers

sent two Miami quarterbacks to the sideline, including Pat White with a scary head injury, but the Super Bowl champions were eliminated from the playoff chase.

The Dolphins (7-9), who won the AFC East in 2008, were also eliminated with 2 minutes left when Houston beat New England.

Vikings 44, Giants 7MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Brett

Favre passed for 316 yards and four touchdowns without a turn-over in less than three quarters against the Giants.

The NFC North champion Vikings (12-4) cruised into the locker room to start watching the Philadelphia-Dallas game with an eye on their seed for the NFC playoffs. With the Eagles’ loss, the Vikings earned the No. 2 seed and a first-round bye.

Sidney Rice caught six passes for 112 yards and two scores.

Bills 30, Colts 7ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.

(AP) — Despite near whiteout conditions, Ryan Fitzpatrick threw three touchdown passes

for Buffalo (6-10), including a 41-yarder to Terrell Owens.

Fred Jackson had 212 yards rushing to reach 1,000 for the first time in his career.

Packers 33, Cardinals 7GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) —

Aaron Rodgers, playing mostly against the Arizona reserves, shredded the Cardinals in three quarters, completing 21 of 26 passes for 235 yards and a touchdown in a preview of next Sunday’s first-round playoff matchup.

Chargers 23, Redskins 20SAN DIEGO (AP) — Billy

Volek threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to fullback Mike Tolbert with 35 seconds left to rally the playoff-bound Chargers to their 11th straight victory in Jim Zorn’s last game as Redskins coach.

Browns 23, Jaguars 17CLEVELAND (AP) — Jerome

Harrison rushed for 127 yards and a touchdown, and Josh Cribbs ran for a TD to give Cleveland its first four-game winning streak since 1994.

While the Browns (5-11) ended their season on a high, they end-ed Jacksonville’s slim AFC play-off hopes.

Falcons 20, Buccaneers 10TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Matt

Ryan threw for 223 yards and two touchdowns, helping the Falcons finish with consecu-tive winning records for the first time in franchise history.

49ers 28, Rams 6ST. LOUIS (AP) — Vernon

Davis tied the NFL record for touchdown receptions for a tight end with his 13th of the season, helping the 49ers send the Rams to the No. 1 overall draft pick.

Frank Gore added 107 yards rushing on 23 carries and two late TDs for the 49ers (8-8), who pulled away after a desultory first half in which they mustered only 52 yards and trailed 3-0.

Bears 37, Lions 23DETROIT (AP) — Jay Cutler

matched a career high with four touchdown passes for Chicago.

The Bears (7-9) won their final two games and three of the first four, but they also lost eight of 10 games between its strong start and finish.

Detroit (2-14) was bad again after becoming the NFL’s first team to finish 0-16 last season.

rightfully so.“Whatever management and coaches decide,

whatever decision, be it in my favor or not in my favor, I think the biggest thing is I’m going to keep my mouth shut no matter what and I’m going to come to work and we’ll see what happens.”

Keeping your mouth shut remained the theme for this secretive organization on Monday. Owner Jerry Richardson, who has yet to publicly comment on dismissing his two sons from prominent jobs with the team four months ago, was still not com-menting about Fox.

Inheriting a 1-15 team in 2002 and putting the Panthers in the Super Bowl in only two years, Fox is held in high regard across the NFL. He’s 76-60 in eight seasons with three playoff appearances, but has never been able to post consecutive win-ning seasons.

After going 12-4 in 2008, the Panthers started 0-3 this season and Fox stubbornly stuck with Delhomme despite his career-high 18 intercep-tions. But despite numerous injuries and hav-ing nothing to play for over the final month, the Panthers closed with three straight wins over the Vikings, Giants and Saints by a combined 90-26.

“No one in the locker room would want a change,” said left tackle Jordan Gross, one of 12 players who ended the season on injured reserve. “Everybody plays hard for him. I have been here seven years with him and I don’t think there’s a better answer out there.”

The question is, does Fox want to be back? He could perhaps be a candidate for other head coach-ing jobs around the NFL that would offer him the security of a long-term deal. The Panthers, how-ever, would almost certainly demand draft picks in return to let Fox out of the final year of his con-tract.

Once the coaching situation is resolved, the focus will shift to Peppers.

He had 10 1/2 sacks and five forced fumbles this season, closing with an interception in Sunday’s 23-10 win over New Orleans. That production cost the Panthers $18.2 million, including a $1.5 million Pro Bowl bonus. Placing the restrictive franchise tag on him for a second straight season would cost them more than $20 million.

Peppers, who turns 30 this month, is expected to demand about $15 million a season if he agrees to a long-term deal to stay.

“Anything that was said a year ago is irrelevant right now,” Peppers said on last offseason’s nasti-ness. “It’s a new situation. It’s a new day.”

Other unrestricted free agents include starters Muhsin Muhammad, Tyler Brayton and Keydrick Vincent. Thomas Davis, Richard Marshall and Jeff King will be restricted free agents if there is no salary cap next season.

Moore will be a restricted free agent, too. But after throwing seven touchdown passes and no interceptions in the final three games, he could be ready for the starting job even with Delhomme’s big contract.

“Some will think so and some won’t,” Moore said. “All you can do is go out and try to win ballgames and give it your best.”

With two elite running backs and a loaded defense, the Panthers figure to be back in the playoff mix in 2010. But it may depend on who’s the coach, the quarterback and the key player on defense.

retired, won his first 14 games before sparking endless debate by benching many starters in the second half against Rex Ryan’s Jets.

Ryan’s team took advantage, rallying to win in Indy, then routing the Bengals 37-0 on Sunday night to grab a playoff berth.

Feeling even better are Caldwell and his Colts, plus the Saints, Chargers and Vikings, all with byes. And perhaps the most intriguing aspect of wild-card weekend is the coaching angle.

Just like John Harbaugh in Baltimore and Mike Smith in Atlanta a year ago, rookie coach Ryan has guided his team into the postseason. He’s joined by Harbaugh, whose Ravens went to the AFC title game last January, and such sideline heavyweights as Bill Belichick and Andy Reid.

In some ways, the more established coaches will be under the most pressure.

Belichick’s Patriots have displayed unusual incon-sistency and will be without the league’s leading receiver, Wes Welker, injured in the final loss to Houston. New England already was in the playoffs, but Belichick chose to play his regulars for much of the game against the Texans, and Welker tore up his knee.

Reid’s Eagles were among the NFL’s hottest teams, surging from 5-4 to 11-4 and the top of the NFC East. Then they went flat at Dallas.

Cincinnati Bengals quar-terback J.T. O’Sullivan is sacked for an eight yard loss by New York Jets linebacker Calvin Pace during the third quarter of an NFL football game at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Sunday. New York Jets linebacker Bryan Thomas is at right. The Jets earned a play-off spot with 37-0 rout of Bengals.

Associated Press

The NFL: Week 17

Jets win to claim playoff spot

PanthersContinued from Page7

NFLContinued from Page7

9/

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10 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

weather/nation

4-ton statue stolenLINDON, Utah (AP) — Police say

thieves must’ve used heavy equip-ment to make off with a 4-ton stat-ue mounted outside a Utah motor-cycle shop.

Lindon Police Chief Cody Cullimore says a back-hoe or a crane likely was required to move the $100,000 sculpture depicting an old-time speed racer. Employees discovered it was missing from the Timpanogos Harley-Davidson store in Lindon, where it had been erect-ed two years ago.

Store manager Kandi Zamora says the granite block on which it was mounted also was missing.

No nuggets! Look out!TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Police say

an Ohio woman punched through a McDonald’s drive-through window because Chicken McNuggets weren’t available.

Police were called Friday to the restaurant in Toledo.

Police say 24-year-old Melodi Dushane was treated for injuries, then jailed. She pleaded not guilty to a vandalism charge. She was released on a recognizance bond and ordered not to have contact with the restaurant. The phone number for her home address isn’t listed.

A manager at the McDonald’s declined Monday to discuss the inci-dent.

Telescope finds mysteriesWASHINGTON (AP) — NASA’s

new planet-hunting telescope has found two mystery objects that are too hot to be planets and too small to be stars.

The Kepler Telescope, launched in March, discovered the two new heavenly bodies, each circling its own star. Telescope chief scien-tist Bill Borucki of NASA said the objects are thousands of degrees

hotter than the stars they circle. That means they probably aren’t planets. They are bigger and hotter than planets in our solar system, including dwarf planets.

“The universe keeps making strange things stranger than we can think of in our imagination,” said Jon Morse, head of astrophysics for NASA.

Judge reports to prisonJACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Bobby

DeLaughter, a former Mississippi prosecutor and judge whose legal conquests became the subject of books and a movie, has reported to a federal prison for lying to the FBI in a judicial bribery investigation.

Federal Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman Felicia Ponce says DeLaughter (deh-LAW’-ter) report-ed to a Kentucky prison before his 2 p.m. Monday deadline.

DeLaughter was sentenced to 18 months for lying about secret con-versations he had with a lawyer while presiding over a case as a Hinds County judge.

DeLaughter became well known in 1994 as a prosecutor when he helped convict Byron de la Beckwith for the 30-year-old murder of civil rights leader Medgar Evers. The case was the basis for the 1996 movie “Ghosts of Mississippi.”

2 Missouri teens chargedMEXICO, Mo. (AP) — Two

Missouri teens have been charged in the death of an Ohio man whose body was found in the refrigerated compartment of a tractor-trailer.

Six other people also have been charged in the death of 20-year-old James William Boyd McNeely, including the trucker in whose rig the body was found.

Missouri officials wouldn’t say whether the teens were related to the other defendants, but an attor-ney for one of the boys said they were the trucker’s sons.

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A bitter chill has settled in across the east-ern half of the country, threatening crops, closing schools and making Charleston, S.C., feel more like New York City.

Records snows were reported over the weekend in Vermont, and farm-ers in Florida scrambled Monday to save strawberries and tomatoes.

The deep freeze will last for at least the rest of the week. The National Weather Service said the mercury could fall below zero in St. Louis later this week for the first time since 1999.

In Burlington, Vt., a weekend snow-storm dumped more than 33 inches, breaking a single-storm record of nearly 30 inches set in 1969.

Most took it in stride, but some took it too far: Vermont State Police cited a man after stopping him pull-ing a sled — with a rider in it — behind his car on Interstate 89 on Sunday. He was cited for driving with a suspended license.

It was a similar scene in upstate New York, where so-called “lake effect snow” blanketed parts of the state with more than 3 feet.

In Maine, the search continued for an 18-year-old snowmobiler who disappeared shortly after the storm started Friday night, and a small plane crashed into a river channel there Monday after reporting ice buildup on the wings.

The weather caused hundreds of school closings and delays in Arkansas, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and the North Carolina mountains.

In Nashville, Tenn., where the overnight low was 12 degrees, police believe an 81-year-old man with Alzheimer’s Disease wandered out-side in his bathrobe and froze to death. His body was found Monday.

Wrecks on icy roads killed at least two other people. A woman died near Mount Nebo, W. Va., when she lost control of her pickup Sunday. And in Washington, D.C., a man died after his car ran off the road Sunday and plunged under a sheet of ice covering a creek.

Homeless shelters, especially in the Southeast, braced for a crush of people and said they would not turn anyone away.

In Oakland, Md., about 1,400 homes lost power with temperatures near zero. Many people shivered through the night until crews using torches could thaw frozen switching equipment, Allegheny Power spokes-man Todd Myers said.

Two boilers at a state prison in Union Springs, Ala., stopped working over the weekend, said Department of Corrections spokesman Brian Corbett.

He said one of the boilers should be repaired later Monday or Tuesday and a replacement boiler should be online by Wednesday. Portable heat-ers are being used but don’t address a lack of hot water at the prison that houses about 1,300 inmates, he said. Temperatures Monday night were expected in the high teens.

In Florida, farmers prepared for a long week trying to protect their crops. In Polk County — between Tampa and Orlando — temperatures were in the high 20s and strawberry farmers turned on sprinklers to cre-ate an insulation of ice for the ber-ries.

Parts of central Florida could see lows below freezing nearly every day this week. Even Key West isn’t immune. Temperatures there the next couple of days are expected to barely creep above 60 degrees with a stiff north wind — nowhere near average highs in the 70s that draw winter tourists.

The duration of the cold snap is unusual, especially in the South, where the weather is typically chilly for just a day or two before tempera-tures rebound into the 50s.

Instead, places like Birmingham, Ala., and Charlotte, N.C., will see temperatures above freezing for just a couple of hours a day all week long. Many Southern homes aren’t built to handle that type of cold, with unin-sulated pipes and heat pumps that will have to run all the time just to keep things barely comfortable.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Envelopes containing white pow-der set off anthrax scares in five Alabama cities, shutting down two federal courthouses Monday and trapping a congressman in his office as authorities tested the substance.

No one was injured, and investiga-tors said at least five of the letters — all sent to the offices of senators or congressmen — were believed to be from the same source.

None of the letters tested positive for anthrax or other hazardous sub-stances, but officials didn’t immedi-ately say what they contained.

Authorities said letters containing white powder were sent to the Mobile and Foley offices of Republican Rep. Jo Bonner, who was forced to remain with staffers in the Mobile office while officials tested the substance.

“Each letter contained a small bag with a white powdery substance, and neither of these bags were opened,” said Mike Lewis, a spokesman for Bonner.

The FBI and U.S. Postal Inspection Service said letters also were sent to the offices of U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers and U.S. Sens. Jeff Sessions in east Montgomery and Richard Shelby in the federal courthouse in downtown Montgomery. FBI spokeswoman Angela Tobon said all the letters sent to the lawmakers’ offices appeared to be from a common source.

Chuck Spurlock, Sessions’ state director, said employees notified the FBI of the suspicious letter and closed the office about noon. He said he received notification late Monday afternoon that the letter did not con-tain anthrax.

Associated PressRobert Ruhl, 8, of Winooski, Vt., shovels out his friends’ home Sunday after the first blizzard of the year struck on Saturday night setting record snow fall totals for the state.

Storm dumps record snows, chills South

Letters prompt anthrax scare

Nation Today

10/

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The Daily Courier Weather

Moon Phases

Almanac

North Carolina Forecast

Today’s National Map

Last1/7

New1/15

First1/23

Full1/30

Today

Partly CloudyPrecip Chance: 10%

35º

Tonight

Partly CloudyPrecip Chance: 10%

18º

Wednesday

SunnyPrecip Chance: 0%

38º 19º

Thursday

Partly CloudyPrecip Chance: 10%

39º 23º

Friday

Partly CloudyPrecip Chance: 10%

35º 18º

Saturday

Mostly SunnyPrecip Chance: 5%

33º 15º

Sun and Moon

Local UV Index

Sunrise today . . . . .7:36 a.m.Sunset tonight . . . . .5:30 p.m.Moonrise today . . .11:29 p.m.Moonset today . . . .10:47 a.m.

TemperaturesHigh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .49Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . . .26

Precipitation24 hrs through 7 a.m. yest. .0.00"Month to date . . . . . . . . .0.04"Year to date . . . . . . . . . .0.04"

Barometric PressureHigh yesterday . . . . . . .30.12"

Relative HumidityHigh yesterday . . . . . . . . .76%

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Asheville . . . . . . .27/13 sn 31/15 sCape Hatteras . . .37/27 s 39/31 sCharlotte . . . . . . .37/19 pc 38/20 sFayetteville . . . . .38/21 s 41/23 sGreensboro . . . . .34/20 pc 37/21 sGreenville . . . . . .39/23 s 39/24 sHickory . . . . . . . . . .34/18 pc 37/20 sJacksonville . . . .40/23 s 42/23 sKitty Hawk . . . . . .37/29 s 39/31 sNew Bern . . . . . .39/25 s 41/23 sRaleigh . . . . . . . .36/21 pc 39/22 sSouthern Pines . .38/21 pc 41/23 sWilmington . . . . .40/24 s 42/24 sWinston-Salem . .34/19 pc 37/20 s

Around Our State

Across Our Nation

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

sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy

Today Wednesday

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Atlanta . . . . . . . . .37/17 s 42/23 sBaltimore . . . . . . .34/22 mc 35/21 mcChicago . . . . . . . .22/12 mc 22/16 mcDetroit . . . . . . . . .26/21 sn 29/20 mcIndianapolis . . . .21/10 mc 23/15 sLos Angeles . . . .79/50 s 78/50 sMiami . . . . . . . . . .60/42 s 62/44 sNew York . . . . . . .35/25 mc 37/24 pcPhiladelphia . . . .34/22 mc 36/21 pcSacramento . . . . .55/42 s 55/45 sSan Francisco . . .62/51 s 62/49 mcSeattle . . . . . . . . .51/44 sh 49/38 pcTampa . . . . . . . . .51/32 s 54/36 sWashington, DC .34/23 s 35/20 s

Today Wednesday

Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure

L H

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

L

HH

H

60s60s

50s50s

50s

60s70s

40s

40s

40s

30s

30s

20s20s

10s

0s

3 50 - 2 4 6 8 107 9 11+

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

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

Elizabeth City39/24

Greenville39/23

Wilmington40/24

Greensboro34/20

Raleigh36/21

Charlotte37/19

Forest City35/18

Fayetteville38/21

Kinston38/23

Durham36/20

Asheville27/13

Winston-Salem34/19

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

Weather

Page 11: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

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

Business/finance

WASHINGTON (AP) — An unexpectedly strong report on manufacturing activity Monday bolstered confidence that the nation’s factories will help sus-tain an economic recovery.

The report by a private trade group signals that industrial production is likely to keep expanding in coming months, economists said. That could lead, in turn, to increased hiring and job creation.

The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing executives, said its manufacturing index read 55.9 in December after 53.6 in November. A reading above 50 indicates growth.

It was the fifth straight month of expansion and the high-est reading for the index since April 2006. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected a reading of 54.3.

But a separate report on construction spending sound-ed a more cautionary note. Construction activity fell in

November for a seventh straight month as spending on both resi-dential and commercial projects declined. The 0.6 percent drop was bigger than the 0.4 percent decline that economists had been expecting.

Increased spending on fed-eral construction projects, likely fueled by stimulus spending, was largely canceled out by lower state and local construction spending.

Still, the ISM said its index of new orders, a signal of future production, jumped last month to 65.5 from 60.3 in November, the highest level in five years. That indicates the overall index should keep climbing and could near 60 in coming months, economists said.

The index’s peak in the last decade was 61.4 in May 2004. It bottomed at 32.9 in the midst of the recession in December 2008.

“Overall, this was a very strong report, and it suggests that the recovery in the U.S. manufac-turing sector is gaining further

traction,” Millan Mulraine, an economist at TD Securities, wrote in a note to clients.

Other measures of manu-facturing around the world on Monday also showed growth.

“What we’re seeing is a global recovery in manufacturing that will be more pronounced than the economic recovery as a whole,” said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics.

The ISM survey showed that inventories held by manufactur-ers’ customers are still declining and are at their lowest level since the survey began tracking the category in January 1997. That’s another sign of future gains because more sales will have to be filled through new production rather than existing stockpiles.

That could lead to increased hiring as manufacturers ramp up production. And a turn-around in employment could boost incomes and increase consumer spending, fueling the recovery.

Report lifts recovery confidence

Job satisfaction hits low mark

Manufacturing gains help give stocks a boost

WASHINGTON (AP) — We can’t get no job satisfaction.

Even Americans who are lucky enough to have work in this economy are becoming more unhappy with their jobs, accord-ing to a new survey that found only 45 percent of Americans are satisfied with their work.

That was the lowest level ever recorded by the Conference Board research group in more than 22 years of studying the issue. In 2008, 49 percent of those surveyed reported satisfac-tion with their jobs.

The drop in workers’ happi-ness can be partly blamed on the worst recession since the 1930s, which made it difficult for some people to find challenging and suitable jobs. But worker dissat-isfaction has been on the rise for more than two decades.

“It says something troubling about work in America. It is not about the business cycle or one grumpy generation,” says Linda Barrington, managing director of human capital at the

Conference Board, who helped write the report

Workers have grown steadily more unhappy for a variety of reasons:n Fewer workers consider their

jobs to be interesting.n Incomes have not kept up

with inflation.n The soaring cost of health

insurance has eaten into work-ers’ take-home pay.

If the job satisfaction trend is not reversed, economists say, it could stifle innovation and hurt America’s competitiveness and productivity. And it could make unhappy older workers less inclined to take the time to share their knowledge and skills with younger workers.

Nate Carrasco, 26, of Odessa, Texas, says he’s been pretty unhappy in most of his jobs, including his current one at an auto parts store.

“There is no sense of team-work in most places any more,” Carrasco gripes.

When the Conference Board’s

first survey was conducted in 1987, most workers — 61 per-cent — said they were happy in their jobs. The survey of 5,000 households was conducted for the Conference Board by TNS, a global market research company.

One clue that may explain workers’ growing dissatisfaction: Only 51 percent now find their jobs interesting — another low in the survey’s 22 years. In 1987, nearly 70 percent said they were interested in their work.

Workers who find their jobs interesting are more likely to be innovative and to take the calculated risks and the initia-tive that drive productivity and contribute to economic growth, Barrington says.

“What’s really disturbing about growing job dissatisfaction is the way it can play into the com-petitive nature of the U.S. work force down the road and on the growth of the U.S. economy — all in a negative way,” says Lynn Franco, another author of the report .

NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market has extended its 2009 rally into the new year.

Major stock indexes surged more than 1.5 percent Monday after improving news on manufacturing from China to the U.S. pointed to a strengthening global economy. The Dow Jones industrial average picked up 156 points.

A U.S. trade group said manufacturing activ-ity expanded faster than expected in December. The Institute for Supply Management’s index of manufacturing activity rose to 55.9 from 53.6 in November, more than analysts had expected.

Overseas markets had started out higher on news that China’s manufacturing industry expanded last month at the fastest rate in 20 months.

There were also positive signs on manufacturing activity in Europe. A monthly purchasing manag-ers’ index for the 16 countries that use the euro rose to a 21-month high, and a similar survey for Britain rose to a 25-month high.

Meanwhile a weakening dollar boosted commod-ities prices, lifting energy and materials stocks. An analyst’s upgrade of semiconductor maker Intel Corp. sent technology shares higher.

Joe Battipaglia, market strategist for the private client group at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Yardley, Pa., said the improved manufacturing activity boosted expectations that an economic recovery is tak-ing hold. In particular, investors are hoping that strength in China will spill over into other coun-tries.

Battipaglia warned, however, that strength in China will only last if hard-hit developed econo-mies like the U.S. and Europe can heal fast enough to absorb some of the goods China is creating.

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow industrials rose 155.91, or 1.5 percent, to 10,583.96. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 17.89, or 1.6 percent, to 1,132.99, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 39.27, or 1.7 percent, to 2,308.42.

Bond prices were mixed. The yield on the bench-mark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, edged down to 3.83 percent from 3.84 percent late Thursday. Markets were closed Friday for New Year’s Day.

Crude oil rose $2.15 to settle at $81.51 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The technology industry got a boost after Robert W. Baird & Co. upgraded chipmaker Intel Corp. to “Outperform” and increased its price target on the stock to $26. The stock has traded in a range of $12.05 to $21.27 in the past 12 months.

The dollar fell against other currencies, while gold prices rose.

Four stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to a relatively light 1 billion shares.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 14.71, or 2.4 percent, to 640.10.

In this photo made Monday, Dec. 14, Kim Robinson puts labels on Playaway self-contained, battery-powered audio player books at the Findaway World head-quarters in Solon, Ohio. Manufacturing activity grew in December at the fastest pace in more than three years, a sign that the pace of the economic recovery is picking up, a private trade group said Monday,

Associated Press

11/

Grant W. PattenHarvard Lawyer

Serving NC Families

ConsumerBankruptcy

(828) 286-3332www.kinglawoffices.com

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div Yld PE Last Chg%ChgYTD

Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %ChgAT&T Inc 1.68 5.9 14 28.58 +.55 +2.0Amazon ... ... 79 133.90 -.62 -.5ArvMerit ... ... ... 11.80 +.62 +5.5BB&T Cp .60 2.3 18 25.81 +.44 +1.7BkofAm .04 .3 ... 15.69 +.63 +4.2BerkHa A ... ... 3099600.00+400.00 +.4Cisco ... ... 25 24.69 +.75 +3.1Delhaize 2.01 2.5 ... 78.85 +2.13 +2.8Dell Inc ... ... 20 14.54 +.18 +1.3DukeEngy .96 5.7 14 16.97 -.24 -1.4ExxonMbl 1.68 2.4 16 69.15 +.96 +1.4FamilyDlr .54 2.0 13 27.39 -.44 -1.6FifthThird .04 .4 ... 10.12 +.37 +3.8FCtzBA 1.20 .7 16 170.04 +6.03 +3.7GenElec .40 2.6 14 15.45 +.32 +2.1GoldmanS 1.40 .8 20 173.08 +4.24 +2.5Google ... ... 40 626.75 +6.77 +1.1KrispKrm ... ... ... 2.99 +.04 +1.4

LeggPlat 1.04 5.1 50 20.51 +.11 +.5

Lowes .36 1.6 20 23.16 -.23 -1.0

Microsoft .52 1.7 20 30.95 +.47 +1.5

PPG 2.16 3.6 24 60.60 +2.06 +3.5

ParkerHan 1.00 1.8 27 54.52 +.64 +1.2

ProgrssEn 2.48 6.1 14 40.93 -.08 -.2

RedHat ... ... 76 31.12 +.22 +.7

RoyalBk g 2.00 ... ... 54.22 +.67 +1.3

SaraLee .44 3.6 20 12.30 +.12 +1.0

SonicAut ... ... ... 10.68 +.29 +2.8

SonocoP 1.08 3.6 22 30.05 +.80 +2.7

SpectraEn 1.00 4.8 16 20.81 +.30 +1.5

SpeedM .36 2.0 ... 17.79 +.17 +1.0

Timken .36 1.5 ... 24.20 +.49 +2.1

UPS B 1.80 3.1 34 58.18 +.81 +1.4

WalMart 1.09 2.0 16 54.23 +.78 +1.5

STOCK MARKET INDEXES

MUTUAL FUNDS

DAILY DOW JONES

10,580.33 6,469.95 Dow Industrials 10,583.96 +155.91 +1.50 +1.50 +18.224,213.61 2,134.21 Dow Transportation 4,130.82 +31.19 +.76 +.76 +13.91

408.57 288.66 Dow Utilities 399.49 +1.48 +.37 +.37 +4.587,288.23 4,181.75 NYSE Composite 7,326.74 +141.78 +1.97 +1.97 +24.001,887.23 1,234.81 Amex Market Value 1,853.66 +28.71 +1.57 +1.57 +26.862,295.80 1,265.52 Nasdaq Composite 2,308.42 +39.27 +1.73 +1.73 +41.791,130.38 666.79 S&P 500 1,132.99 +17.89 +1.60 +1.60 +22.16

743.15 397.97 S&P MidCap 738.15 +11.48 +1.58 +1.58 +34.0811,711.07 6,772.29 Wilshire 5000 11,743.85 +195.21 +1.69 +1.69 +25.70

635.99 342.59 Russell 2000 640.10 +14.71 +2.35 +2.35 +26.74

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

THE MARKET IN REVIEW

PIMCO TotRetIs CI 114,653 10.82 0.0 +14.2/C +6.9/A NL 5,000,000American Funds GrthAmA m LG 65,022 27.79 +3.1 +32.6/C +3.7/A 5.75 250American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 58,268 48.52 +0.2 +20.4/D +4.2/C 5.75 250Fidelity Contra LG 57,153 59.05 +3.7 +27.9/D +5.6/A NL 2,500Vanguard TotStIdx LB 56,221 27.91 +3.2 +27.0/B +1.7/B NL 3,000American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 56,060 34.80 +1.4 +31.9/C +7.0/A 5.75 250American Funds IncAmerA m MA 49,018 15.65 +0.7 +24.0/C +3.2/B 5.75 250American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 48,458 26.37 +2.4 +25.8/C +2.4/B 5.75 250Vanguard 500Inv LB 47,844 104.32 +2.6 +24.5/C +1.1/C NL 3,000Vanguard InstIdx LB 43,018 103.62 +2.6 +24.7/C +1.2/C NL 5,000,000American Funds EurPacGrA m FB 40,409 39.29 +1.4 +39.3/A +8.7/A 5.75 250Dodge & Cox Stock LV 39,492 97.84 +3.1 +29.1/A +0.1/D NL 2,500American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 38,894 24.99 +1.9 +17.3/D +0.9/C 5.75 250Dodge & Cox IntlStk FV 35,777 32.76 +2.4 +47.8/A +6.7/A NL 2,500American Funds NewPerspA m WS 32,502 26.15 +2.1 +36.8/B +6.7/A 5.75 250Fidelity DivrIntl d FG 32,048 28.59 +1.4 +32.3/D +4.7/D NL 2,500American Funds FnInvA m LB 30,369 33.31 +2.7 +31.5/A +4.9/A 5.75 250PIMCO TotRetAdm b CI 30,253 10.82 0.0 +14.0/C +6.7/A NL 5,000,000American Funds BalA m MA 29,744 16.40 +1.4 +20.1/D +2.5/C 5.75 250FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m CA 28,628 2.09 +3.0 +34.7/A +4.1/A 4.25 1,000Fidelity GrowCo LG 28,159 70.14 +5.1 +39.3/B +5.5/A NL 2,500Vanguard Welltn MA 28,113 29.19 +1.1 +21.7/C +5.4/A NL 10,000Vanguard 500Adml LB 27,983 104.32 +2.6 +24.7/C +1.2/C NL 100,000American Funds BondA m CI 27,836 11.82 -0.1 +15.6/B +2.5/E 3.75 250Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 26,873 27.92 +3.2 +27.1/B +1.8/B NL 100,000Vanguard TotIntl FB 25,417 14.78 +1.5 +37.4/B +6.1/B NL 3,000Fidelity LowPriStk d MB 24,672 32.49 +4.5 +38.2/B +4.1/A NL 2,500Vanguard InstPlus LB 24,423 103.62 +2.6 +24.7/C +1.2/C NL 200,000,000T Rowe Price EqtyInc LV 15,231 21.32 +2.5 +23.5/B +1.4/B NL 2,500Hartford CapAprA m LB 9,646 31.20 +3.4 +40.5/A +4.6/A 5.50 1,000Pioneer PioneerA m LB 4,251 36.21 +2.8 +22.0/D +1.9/B 5.75 1,000Goldman Sachs ShDuGovA m GS 1,416 10.32 -0.2 +4.2/B +4.7/A 1.50 1,000Alliance Bernstein GrowIncA m LV 1,228 2.99 +2.9 +19.1/D -1.1/E 4.25 2,500DWS-Scudder REstA m SR 415 13.87 +1.1 +33.9/B +0.8/C 5.75 1,000Hartford GrowthL m LG 185 15.30 +3.7 +31.3/C +0.8/D 4.75 0

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

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

NYSE7,326.74+141.78

AMEX1,853.66 +28.71

NASDAQ2,308.42 +39.27

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

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

uu uu uuGAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Volume

Name Vol (00) Last ChgCisco 587599 24.69 +.75PwShs QQQ532531 46.42 +.67ETrade 516994 1.84 +.08Intel 469931 20.88 +.48Microsoft 347752 30.95 +.47MicronT 338023 10.85 +.29Oracle 261611 24.85 +.32DltaPtr 236515 1.35 +.31Nvidia 198221 18.49 -.19RschMotn 194911 65.93 -1.61

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %ChgBioFormM 5.45 +2.05 +60.3DigitalAlly 2.89 +.84 +41.0KandiTech 5.72 +1.32 +30.0SevenArts n 3.25 +.71 +28.0PatrkInd 2.98 +.55 +22.6Intevac 14.00 +2.53 +22.1ChinWind n 6.50 +1.14 +21.3CarolTrBk 6.00 +1.00 +20.0SCmntyFn 2.72 +.45 +19.8ChAdvCns n5.95 +.97 +19.5

Name Last Chg %ChgICxTech 7.80 -1.72 -18.1RandCap 3.47 -.51 -12.8PhysnsF h 2.46 -.29 -10.5RXi Phrm 4.10 -.48 -10.5Gyrody 37.70 -4.19 -10.0ATCross 4.73 -.50 -9.6Kohlberg lf 4.13 -.43 -9.4FstCityF 6.86 -.62 -8.3EmmisC pf 14.00 -1.23 -8.1NtDentex 9.30 -.80 -7.9

DIARYAdvanced 2,168Declined 588Unchanged 100Total issues 2,856New Highs 228New Lows 9

1,892,888,073Volume

Name Vol (00) Last ChgIntellichk 47834 3.61 -.14Oilsands g 41459 1.21 +.06NovaGld g 32216 6.32 +.19GoldStr g 32095 3.30 +.18NwGold g 25038 3.79 +.15LibertyAcq 24557 9.66 -.01NA Pall g 23081 3.70 +.20ChNEPet n 19519 10.07 +.82GrtBasG g 17521 1.82 +.11Taseko 17013 4.30 +.08

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %ChgBioTime wt 2.54 +.49 +23.9SalisbryBc 25.60 +3.85 +17.7EntreeGold 2.84 +.41 +16.9OrienPap n12.15 +1.67 +15.9TianyinPh 4.82 +.62 +14.8VirnetX 3.36 +.42 +14.3Quaterra g 2.17 +.26 +13.6Richmnt g 4.22 +.47 +12.5BioTime n 4.73 +.50 +11.8HeraldNB 3.79 +.37 +10.8

Name Last Chg %ChgFlanign 5.27 -.69 -11.6ChinNutri n 3.82 -.44 -10.3ASpectRlty 20.40 -1.88 -8.4WinnerM n 6.89 -.49 -6.6TrnsatlPt n 3.21 -.21 -6.1ComndSec 2.50 -.15 -5.7Ballanty 3.53 -.20 -5.4Sifco 13.69 -.72 -5.0IncOpR 8.00 -.40 -4.8AmShrd 2.83 -.12 -4.0

DIARYAdvanced 362Declined 173Unchanged 31Total issues 566New Highs 26New Lows 2

Name Vol (00) Last ChgCitigrp 3877678 3.40 +.09BkofAm 1774233 15.69 +.63SPDR 1028658 113.33 +1.89SPDR Fncl 709885 14.69 +.29GenElec 664776 15.45 +.32iShEMkts 661558 42.71 +1.21FordM 597487 10.28 +.28SprintNex 584374 3.90 +.24Pfizer 508060 18.93 +.74iShR2K 391286 63.98 +1.54

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %ChgAldIrish 4.12 +.61 +17.4BkIrelnd 8.85 +1.19 +15.5MSSPMid10 6.16 +.83 +15.5ChinaMM 3.00 +.37 +14.1WstnRefin 5.32 +.61 +13.0NCI Bld 2.04 +.23 +12.7PatriotCoal 17.30 +1.84 +11.9ConsEP 4.28 +.45 +11.7VersoP h 2.91 +.30 +11.5BlueLinx 3.08 +.31 +11.2

Name Last Chg %ChgBPZ Res 8.32 -1.18 -12.4Prime pfB 5.09 -.59 -10.4DirxEMBear 4.53 -.46 -9.2DirChiBear 38.60 -3.55 -8.4DirxEnBear10.36 -.92 -8.2DirLatBear 38.68 -3.43 -8.1DirxDMBear14.10 -1.24 -8.1DirxSCBear 9.07 -.79 -8.0ProSUSSilv 4.41 -.38 -7.9ProUShMex24.39 -1.95 -7.4

DIARYAdvanced 2,487Declined 614Unchanged 78Total issues 3,179New Highs 321New Lows 1

4,047,961,791Volume 193,959,961

8,000

8,800

9,600

10,400

11,200

J A S O N D

10,240

10,440

10,640Dow Jones industrialsClose: 10,583.96Change: 155.91 (1.5%)

10 DAYS

you talk. we listen.in person.

HAVE YOU REVIEWED YOUR LIFE INSURANCE LATELY?

Page 12: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

12 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

NatioN

WASHINGTON (AP) — Threats to federal judges and prosecutors have jumped dramatically, accord-ing to a new government report issued Monday that found such threats more than doubled in the past six years.

By coincidence, the report was issued shortly before a gunman walked into a federal building in Las Vegas and opened fire, killing a court security officer and seriously wounding a deputy U.S. mar-shal. The suspect was shot dead by other officers, and the motive for the attack wasn’t immediately clear.

The report by Justice Department Inspector General Glenn Fine concluded there are still major gaps in reporting and responding to threats. Concerns about security for judges intensified five years ago after the husband and mother of a fed-eral judge in Chicago were killed by a man angry over a court ruling.

Between 2003 and 2008, the number of threats and inappropriate communications jumped from 592 to 1,278, the report found. The government defines “inappropriate communications” as mes-sages that aren’t explicitly threatening but worri-some enough to require further investigation.

The federal court system has more than 2,000 judges and more than 5,000 prosecutors.

Prosecutors and judges “do not consistently and promptly report threats they receive,” the inspector general’s report found — estimating that as many as 25 percent of threats are not reported to secu-rity officials.

When those threats are reported, the U.S. Marshals do not consistently coordinate with local police, and in many cases don’t record ever having notified the FBI of the threats.

According to the marshals’ own threat database, there was no record of having notified the FBI of 40 percent of the threats, the report said.

The U.S. Marshals Service agreed with the inspector general’s recommendations to improve coordination with local and FBI officials, and to more thoroughly analyze each threat and take nec-essary protective measures.

Marshals spokesman Jeff Carter said the agency has “made great strides over the past few years in our judicial security mission, and as the U.S. Marshals Service believes there is always room to perfect the process, we will carry out the report’s recommendations with that goal in mind.”

Justice Department spokeswoman Melissa Schwartz said the agency is carefully examining the findings and “will take appropriate action to ensure the safety of all employees in the United States Attorneys’ offices.”

The review notes that no federal judges or pros-ecutors have been killed in the six year period. The security of judges and their families has been a growing concern since the 2005 slaying of Judge Joan Humphrey Lefkow’s mother and husband. Investigators determined the killer was angry that the judge had dismissed his medical malpractice lawsuit.

WASHINGTON (AP) — House and Senate Democrats intend to bypass traditional procedures when they negotiate a final compromise on health care leg-islation, officials said Monday, a move that will exclude Republican lawmakers and reduce their ability to delay or force politically troubling votes in both houses.

The unofficial timetable calls for final passage of the mea-sure to remake the nation’s health care system by the time President Barack Obama deliv-ers his State of the Union, prob-ably in early February.

Democratic aides said the final compromise talks would essen-tially be a three-way negotia-tion involving top Democrats in the House and Senate and the White House, a structure that gives unusual latitude to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California.

These officials said there are no plans to appoint a formal House-Senate conference com-mittee, the method Congress most often uses to reconcile dif-fering bills. Under that custom-ary format, a committee chair-man is appointed to preside, and other senior lawmakers from both parties and houses par-ticipate in typically perfunctory public meetings while the mean-

ingful negotiations occur behind closed doors.

In this case, the plan is to skip the formal meetings, reach an agreement, then have the two houses vote as quickly as pos-sible. A 60-vote Senate majority would be required in advance of final passage.

“I look forward to working with members of the House, the Senate and President Obama to reconcile our bills and send the final legislation to the president’s desk as soon as possible,” Pelosi said late last year.

“We hope to get a bill done as soon as possible,” said Jim Manley, a spokesman for Reid.

The issue is so partisan that only one Republican, Rep. Anh “Joseph” Cao of Louisiana, has cast a vote in favor of the legisla-tion.

GOP leaders have vowed to try and block a final bill from reaching Obama’s desk. “This fight isn’t over. My colleagues and I will work to stop this bill from becoming law,” Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the Republican leader, said last month.

Both houses have already passed legislation to remake the health care system, extending coverage to millions who lack it while cracking down on industry practices such as denying insur-ance on the basis of pre-existing

medical conditions.There are literally hundreds

of differences between the two bills, a House measure that ran to 1,990 pages and a Senate ver-sion of 2,074, not counting 383 pages of last-minute changes. The biggest differences involve a dispute over a government-run insurance option — the House wants one, but the Senate bill omitted it — as well as the size and extent of federal subsidies to help lower-income families.

Bypassing a formal conference committee enables Democrats to omit time-consuming procedur-al steps in the Senate and pre-vents Republicans from trying to delay the final negotiations.

Under Senate rules, three sepa-rate votes are required before negotiators for the two houses may hold a formal meeting. While the three normally are agreed to within seconds, each may be filibustered.

Additionally, Republicans would have the right to demand votes on nonbinding propos-als once negotiators for the two houses were appointed. That could, in turn, require Democrats to vote on political controversies such as wiping out the legislation’s proposed cuts in Medicare, the type of issue that could easily be turned into attack ads in next fall’s cam-paign.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The recession dramati-cally slowed U.S. health care spending to $2.3 trillion in 2008, but it still grew much faster than the economy as a whole, accounting for more than 16 percent of the nation’s economic output, says a new federal analysis.

The eye-popping figure of $2.3 trillion — that’s $7,681 per person — underscores the challenges confronting President Barack Obama and lawmakers seeking to overhaul the system. Obama has repeatedly cited spiral-ing health costs as one of the main reasons Congress needs to pass his health plan, and administration officials said the findings highlighted the need for quick action.

“This report contains some welcome news and yet another warning sign,” said Jonathan Blum, a top official at the government’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid

Services. “Health care spend-ing as a percentage of GDP (gross domestic product) is rising at an unsustainable rate. It is clear that we need health insurance reform now.”

However, health care experts question whether there are significant cost-containment measures in the legislation passed by House and Senate Democrats before Christmas — and Republicans insist there aren’t. The new report could provide fodder for both sides as lawmakers work to rec-oncile the House and Senate legislation into a final bill in coming weeks.

Republicans cited earlier analyses by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid that found the sweeping overhaul legislation that seeks to extend coverage to more than 30 million unin-sured Americans over the next decade would lead to

increased health care costs. Democrats counter that the bills begin to slow cost increases over time.

However, some cost-saving measures Democrats pro-posed were blocked or turned into pilot projects after lob-bying by doctors, hospitals or other interest groups. One major attempt to bring down health costs is a tax on high-value insurance plans included in the Senate bill but opposed in the House; it’s likely to survive in some form though exactly how remains to be seen.

The new analysis by econo-mists at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid appears Tuesday in the jour-nal Health Affairs. It found that total national health spending grew 4.4 percent in 2008, the slowest rate of increase since CMS began tracking health spending in 1960. By contrast, the growth rate in 2007 was 6

percent. The study seeks to measure all public and pri-vate health expenditures.

Still, the growth of health costs was higher than the overall growth in gross domestic product, which stood at 2.6 percent in 2008 before adjusting for inflation.

Health spending reached 16.2 percent of the gross domestic product in 2008, up from 15.9 percent in 2007. That added up to $2.3 tril-lion and far higher per-per-son expenditures than other industrialized countries, although the higher spending is generally not matched by better health outcomes, stud-ies have found.

Even with the high spend-ing, the recession made itself felt throughout the health care sector in 2008, with slowdowns in out-of-pocket spending, private insur-ance premiums and hospital spending — the latter largely because of loss of revenue

from hospitals’ investment incomes.

The slowdown in health insurance premium costs might seem counterintui-tive, given the complaints of increased health care costs coming from individuals and businesses large and small. Part of the reason is because of the jobs lost in the reces-sion, forcing people off the insurance roles and shrink-ing the overall cost of premi-ums nationally. Enrollment in private health insurance declined from 196.4 million in 2007 to 195.4 million in 2008, the report said.

“Health care spending is usually somewhat insu-lated from the immediate impact of a downturn in the economy. But this recession has exerted considerable influence on the health care sector,” said CMS statisti-cian Micah Hartman, a lead author on the report.

This Dec. 22 file photo shows Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., right, accompa-nied by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., left, during a Democratic health care rally on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Associated Press

Federal judges, prosecutors get more threats

Dems cutting off GOP’s impact

Health care spending growth slowed by recession

12/

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Page 13: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010 — 13

NatioN/world

SARGODHA, Pakistan (AP) — Five Americans detained in Pakistan told a court Monday they intended to cross the bor-der into Afghanistan to wage jihad against Western forces but denied any links to al-Qaida or plans to carry out terrorist attacks in Pakistan.

The admission could be a pre-lude to possible U.S. conspiracy charges but might also draw sympathy from an increasingly anti-American Pakistani public. Such feelings have complicated U.S. efforts to persuade Pakistan to do more to crack down on militants carrying out cross-bor-der attacks on coalition troops in Afghanistan.

“We are not terrorists,” one of the five men, Ramy Zamzam, told The Associated Press as he entered the courtroom in the eastern Pakistani city of Sargodha, where they were arrested in December.

“We are jihadists, and jihad is not terrorism,” said Zamzam, a 22-year-old Egyptian American who was a dental stu-dent at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

Jihad has several different meanings in Islam, but Zamzam seemed to be referring to the duty to fight against foreign forces viewed as occupying a Muslim country.

Zamzam and another mem-ber of the group, Ethiopian

American Ahmed Minni, insist-ed the men had no links with al-Qaida and were focused only on Afghanistan, according to court documents.

“They said that they only intended to travel to Afghanistan to help their Muslim brothers who are in trouble, who are bleeding and who are being victimized by Western forces,” said the group’s lawyer, Ameer Abdullah Rokhri.

It was the first time the men, aged 19 to 25 and all from the Washington area, have addressed a court since their arrest. They arrived wearing a mix of Western clothes, such as jeans and tracksuits, and tra-ditional shalwar kameez robes. They were handcuffed as they entered and exited the hear-ing, which was closed to media. A couple of them laughed and smiled as they left.

Pakistani police have not filed formal charges but say they plan to seek life sentences under the country’s anti-terrorism law.

“We have told the court that police have completed their investigation and have enough evidence against the five sus-pects to try them under anti-terrorism law,” said police officer Matiullah Shahani.

The court remanded the men to prison for 14 days Monday to give police time to prepare the case.

FBI agents have questioned some of the men and are work-ing to see if there is enough evidence to charge any of them with conspiracy to provide material support to a terrorist organization, officials have said. Another possible U.S. charge — and one that could be more dif-ficult to bring — would be con-spiracy to maim or kill people overseas.

Besides Zamzam and Minni, the other members of the group are Pakistani Americans Umer Farooq and Waqar Hussain and Egyptian American Aman Yamar. Farooq’s father, Khalid, was also detained, but the court ordered him released Monday because of a lack of evidence that he committed any crime, said police officer Amir Shirazi.

The five young men were reported missing by their fami-lies in late November after one of them left behind a farewell video showing scenes of war and casualties and saying Muslims must be defended. The case has sparked fears that Westerners are increasingly traveling to Pakistan to join militant groups.

Pakistani police accuse the men of using the social net-working site Facebook and the Internet video site YouTube while they were in the U.S. to try to connect with extremist groups in Pakistan.

Professors denounce violenceTEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Nearly 90 professors

at Tehran University have told Iran’s supreme leader that ongoing violence against protesters shows the weakness of the country’s leadership, a pro-reform Web site reported Monday, reflecting a growing willingness to risk careers and studies to challenge the ruling clerics.

The current rumblings from universities high-light the evolution of the opposition movement. What began as raw and angry voter backlash after last June’s disputed presidential elec-tion has moved to a possibly deeper and more ingrained fight against Iran’s Islamic leaders.

The letter signed by the 88 instructors was issued as university students around Iran staged acts of defiance — including hunger strikes and exam boycotts — to protest reported arrests and intimidation by hard-line forces.

Swiss avalanches kill 5; 3 missingGENEVA (AP) — Avalanches killed five people

in the Swiss Alps over the weekend, and bad weather prevented rescuers from reaching three skiers who apparently remained trapped under the snow on Monday, officials said.

Two of the avalanches occurred in central Switzerland on Sunday, the first hitting a group of skiers, the second the rescuers who came to their aid. A third avalanche buried two skiers in southern Switzerland.

Dubai opens tallest buildingDUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Dubai

opened the world’s tallest skyscraper Monday, and in a surprise move renamed the gleaming glass-and-metal tower Burj Khalifa in a nod to the leader of neighboring Abu Dhabi — the oil-rich sheikdom which came to its rescue during the financial meltdown.

A lavish presentation witnessed by Dubai’s rul-er and thousands of onlookers at the base of the tower said the building was 828 meters, or 2717 feet, tall.

Dubai is opening the tower in the midst of a deep financial crisis. Its oil rich neighbor Abu Dhabi has pumped billions of dollars in bailout funds into the emirate as it struggles to pay its debts.

Yemen: Al-Qaida militants killed SAN’A, Yemen (AP) — Security forces killed

two suspected al-Qaida militants in clashes out-side the Yemeni capital on Monday, officials said, as the French and Czech embassies closed their doors to the public, joining their U.S. and British counterparts, in response to threats of attack by the terror group’s offshoot here.

The clashes took place in a region northeast of the capital where last month the government car-ried out intensified raids against an al-Qaida cell it said was plotting attacks against foreign inter-ests, possibly including embassies.

LONDON (AP) — Airline passengers bound for the United States faced a hodgepodge of security measures across the world Monday, but most European airports did not appear to be following a new U.S. demand for increased screen-ing of passengers from 14 countries.

U.S. officials in Washington said the new security measures would be imple-mented Monday but there were few vis-ible changes on the ground in Europe, which sends thousands of passengers on hundreds of daily flights to the United States.

In addition, few if any changes in air-line procedures were reported in the 14 countries named by the U.S. as security risks, although officials in Saudi Arabia said extra security personnel had been placed at the airport.

No changes were seen Monday at inter-national airports in Syria, Algeria, Libya or Lebanon, four other countries on the list.

The changes ordered by President Barack Obama’s administration followed the arrest of a Nigerian man, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who allegedly tried to set off an explosive device on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day. Abdulmutallab is at a federal prison in Milan, Michigan and faces a court hearing on Friday.

The new rules led to long security

lines in Nigeria at Lagos’ Murtala Muhammed International Airport, where some travelers were told to show up more than seven hours ahead of their Delta Air Lines direct flight to Atlanta.

“Whatever it takes to keep passengers safe, I’m all for it,” said Emeka Ojukwu, 46, a Nigerian who now lives in New York state.

Asian airports had already ratcheted up security following the Christmas Day attack, but those in South Korea and Pakistan took additional measures.

Yet Europe remains the key crossroads for air travelers heading to the United States, with over 800 scheduled trans-Atlantic flights a day in 2009, especially from major hubs like London, Paris, Amsterdam and Frankfurt.

Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport was using 15 full-body scanners on flights to the U.S. and Dutch officials announced Monday they will buy 60 more scanners. In Oslo, U.S.-bound passengers had to show their passports and boarding pass-es twice at the gate, get their carry-ons searched and go through full body pat-downs.

Yet other European nations were still studying the new U.S. rules.

In Britain, a spokesman for the Department of Transportation said he was still trying to decipher its practical implications.

U.S. suspects defend ‘ jihad’ plan

Response to U.S. airport security demands mixed

Pakistani police offi-cers with detained American Muslims leave a police station to send them into prison in Sargodha, Pakistan, Monday. The defense lawyer for five Americans detained in Pakistan has denied that his clients planned to carry out terrorist attacks inside or out-side the country.

Associated PressAn armed police officer maintains a presence at Heathrow Airport’s Terminal 1 in London Monday. Airline passengers bound for the United States faced a hodgepodge of security measures across Europe on Monday, and airports did not appear to be following a U.S. request for increased screening of passengers from 14 countries.

World Today

Associated Press

13/

Turn to the Experts™

Rutherford Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc.Sales & Service • (828) 287-2240

1127 East Main StreetSpindale, NC 28160

ERIC A FENSTERERSales Engineer

President

Business Card Service Directory

Page 14: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

14 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

SHOE by Chris Cassat and Gary Brookins

BROOM-HILDA by Russell Myers

ARLO AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson

THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schoor

DILBERT by Scott Adams

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

FRANK AND ERNEST by Bob Thaves

Dear Dr. Gott: Please shed some light on the use of clinically dispensed methadone. I have several family mem-bers who have used this medication for more than 10 years. I understand that the use of methadone offsets the desire for heroin by starting with a high dose and then eventually going down to a very low dose.

I want to know about the side effects of long-term use.

Dear Reader: Methadone is a syn-thetic opioid pain reliever. It is used in detox or maintenance programs for people addicted to other opioids. The drug must be distributed by a special-ized clinic certified by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and registered by the Drug Enforcement Agency and be accompanied by appropriate social and medical services.

The medication contains a black-box warning because of the risk of death (cardiac or respiratory), overdose and respiratory depression. Other side effects include abuse, dependence, lightheadedness, nausea, vomiting,

sweating, dizziness, sedation, head-ache, weakness, swelling, various car-diac abnormalities, abdominal pain, dry mouth, weight gain, skin rashes, hallucinations and many more.

Because I have never prescribed methadone either for pain relief or drug addiction, I cannot provide fur-ther information about whether it is typical for users to continue using it for many years. There are several online resources that I can refer you to so that you can read more in-depth on the subject. The first is www.drugs.com, which is essentially a drug database.

The second is the American Pain Society. The publication is www.ampainsoc.org/pub/bulletin/sep00/upda1.htm.

What is normal methadone use?

Dear Abby: My mom has recently retired and is spending a lot of time at our home. She’s constantly emp-tying the washer, drying dishes. Anything that is untouched for a few minutes she’ll get into. She also reorganizes our drawers and cabi-nets and thinks her way is best. She remakes the children’s beds, which is part of their chores. When I tell her she doesn’t need to do it, she says she doesn’t mind -- but she’s missing the point.

Mom feels I don’t appreciate her, and I am hurt she doesn’t respect my rules. I’m grateful for everything she does, but I would like her to visit with her grandchildren and enjoy her retirement. -- Frustrated

Dear Frustrated: I suspect it’s that she has worked all her life and isn’t used to being idle. Try to reach a compromise. Your drawers and cabinets should be off limits, and the children should be permitted to ful-fill their chores. But if emptying the washer and drying the dishes makes her happy, let her do it and thank her for her efforts.

Your mother appears to be full of energy and have a lot of time on her hands. So why not encourage her to volunteer some of it at her church, a thrift store or a charity of her choos-ing? It will help her develop outside interests, meet new people and form

some new friendships -- all of which will allow her less time to be “help-ing” you.

Dear Abby: My father died last year. Shortly after his funeral I sold his car to a friend in need for $200. Her husband let it slip a couple of days ago that they had discovered a cane tucked beneath the front seat with more than $300 stuffed inside. The bills had rotted, but they were able to take them to the bank and exchange them for new ones. They have spent the money.

I am torn. Shouldn’t they have told me and perhaps offered to split that money? Or, since they bought the car, were all of its contents theirs? They got the car AND made $100 on the deal. -- Fuming

Dear Fuming: You call these people friends? This isn’t a matter of what would be right under the law. If they were true friends, they would have told you they had found the cane, in case it had sentimental value -- and offered you the contents as well.

Encourage mom to volunteer

Your Birthday, Jan. 5Your creative abilities will

be enhanced, but you need to be choosy as to how and when you use them.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- You can con-tribute socially to group involvements, but don’t hog the stage.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Small details can be your undoing if you’re careless in handling your business affairs.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- You can’t please everyone. Remember this when you run into someone who fits the bill.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Monitor your con-versations carefully with regard to work-related issues.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Any tips you get through social contacts are likely to be detrimental to you. Rely only on facts.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Before passing on information provided as fact, verify what you’ve been told.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Even if you are likely to exercise great discipline, you could still be extremely careless with cash in hand.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Agreements have more far-reaching effects than we realize, so be particularly careful about what you do.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Don’t make things harder on yourself than necessary. Don’t turn some-thing simple into a big mess.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- This could be one of those days where everything turns into an unproductive activity. Plan your moves.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- This could turn out to be an extremely unproduc-tive day. Remember, time can never be recovered.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- It could turn out to be rather embarrass-ing if you talk about things as a fait accompli.

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IN THE STARSPUZZLE

Dr. Peter M. Gott

Ask Dr. Gott

Abigail van Buren

Dear Abby

14COMICS

Page 15: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINACOUNTY OF RUTHERFORD

NOTICE OF SALEFile No: 09 SP 536

TAKE NOTICE THAT: William Richard Boyd, Jr., Substitute Trustee, has begun proceedings to FORECLOSE under the Deed of Trust described below, and by under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in such Deed of Trust, and an Order entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of the above County, will sell the below described property at public auction as follows:

1. The instrument pursuant to which such sale will be held is that certain Deed of Trust executed Southeast Home Management & Development, LLC, Dawn A. Komljenovic and Robert Komljenovic, original mortgagors, and recorded in the Office of the Rutherford County Register of Deeds in Deed of Trust Book 1025, at Page 31. The record owner of such property, as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds not more than ten (10) days prior to posting this Notice of Sale, if not the original mortgagors, is: Southeast Home Management & Development, LLC

2. The property will be sold by the Substitute Trustee at 11:00 a.m. on the 14th day of January, 2010 at the Rutherford County Courthouse door in the City of Rutherfordton, North Carolina.

3. The real property to be sold is generally described as 206 Georgia Street, Spindale, NC 28160 and described as follows:

Situate, lying and being in the Town of Spindale, Rutherfordton Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina, and being the same and identical property described in Deed recorded in Deed Book 194, Page 272, Rutherford County Registry, and being described according to said Deed as follows:

Those certain lots of land in Spindale known as a part of the K.S. Tanner – H. H. Harton Subdivision and being all of Lots No. 154 and 155, and 12 feet from the East side of Lot No. 153, that part of Lot No. 153 being conveyed by this Deed being particularly described as follows:

BEGINNING at a stake or iron pin the Southwest corner of Lot No. 154, and running thence North 69-40 West with Georgia Street 12 feet to an iron pin; thence a new line North 23 -20 East 150 feet to iron pin in line of Lots No. 108 and 153; thence South 69-40 East 12 feet to a stake, the common corner or Lots No. 107-108 and 154; thence with the division line of Lots No. 153 and 154 South 23-20 West 150 feet to the beginning. See map in Plat Book "A" at Page 44 for map of the subdivision mentioned; and also see Deed Book 129, Page 164, Office of the Register of Deeds for Rutherford County Registry.

And being that same property as conveyed by Deed dated October 25, 2000, from Marilyn Long (also known as Marylyn Long) and husband, Robert M. Long to Leiland S. Floyd and of record in Deed Book 763 at Page 810, Rutherford County Registry.

Being the same property as that described in Deed Book 884, Page 555, Rutherford County Registry.

Tax Map 23-4-8.

Any property described in the Deed of Trust which is not being offered for sale is described as follows: Subject to any and all Release Deeds of Record in the Rutherford County, North Carolina Registry.

4. Any buildings located on the above-described property are also included in the sale.

5. The property will be sold by the Substitute Trustee to the highest bidder for CASH. The highest bidder will be required to deposit IN CASH with the Substitute Trustee at the date and time of the sale the greater of five percent (5.0%) of the amount of the bid or Seven Hundred Fifty and no/100 Dollars ($750.00).

6. All bidders bid for the property AS IS on the date of sale. Absolutely no warranties are made as to the condition, value or title of the property. While the Substitute Trustee believes the title to be good, all bidders are advised that they should obtain independent counsel to examine record title as the property is sold subject to prior record interests. The Noteholder has reserved the right to withdraw the sale up to and until the Deed is delivered by the Substitute Trustee.

7. The property will be sold subject to all unpaid taxes and special assessments.

8. The property being sold is all of that property described in the Deed of Trust except as specifically set forth above. It is the intention to extinguish any and all rights or interests in the property subordinate to the Deed of Trust.

9. Additional Notice Where the Real Property is Residential with Less Than 15 Rental Units: An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Superior Court of the County in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the Notice of Sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.

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

THIS the 15th day of December, 2009.

__________________________William Richard Boyd, Jr. Substitute Trustee474 Mountain Cove RoadWaynesville, North Carolina 28786Dates: January 5, 2010 and January 12, 2010

NORTH CAROLINARUTHERFORD COUNTY

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICEBEFORE THE CLERK

09 SP 452

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY CAROLCHEN AND SPOUSE, ANDREW CHEN DATED January 12, 2006 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 880, PAGE 755, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY, TO BB&T COLLATERAL SERVICE CORP, TRUSTEE.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by CAROLCHEN AND SPOUSE, ANDREW CHEN dated January 12, 2006 to BB&T COLLATERALSERVICE CORPORATION, Trustee for BRANCH BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY, recorded in Book 880, Page 755, RUTHERFORD County Registry; default having been made in payment of the indebtedness thereby secured; and the necessary findings to permit foreclosure having been made by the Clerk of Superior Court of RUTHERFORD County, North Carolina; the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in the County of RUTHERFORD and State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:

Being all of Lot 538 as shown on survey by R. L. Greene, PLS entitled Greyrock Subdivision Phase 3B as recorded in Plat Book 26 at Page 239, said plat being one of a series of plats recorded in Plat Book 26, Page 235 through 242 of the Rutherford County, NC Registry, reference to said recorded plats being made for a more particular description of said Lot 538.

Subject to all easements, restrictions and rights of ways of record and a non-exclusive appurtenant easement for ingress, egress and regress is conveyed over and upon all private subdivision roads for Greyrock at Lake Lure as shown on the above-described plats and the plats for Phase 1A as shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 25, at Pages 188 through 192; Plats for Phase 1B as shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 25, at Pages 205 through 208; Plats for Phase 2A as shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 26, at Pages 114 through 118; Plats for Phase 2B as shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 26, at Pages 119 through 123 and Plats for Phase 3Arecorded in Plat Book 26, Pages 231 through 234, and any amendments thereto and to the Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Greyrock as recorded in Book 858, at Page 122 of the Rutherford County, NC Registry and also being recorded in Book 3827, Page 764 of the Buncombe County, NC Registry.

Being a portion of that property conveyed to LR Buffalo Creek, LLC by deeds recorded in Deed Book 855, at Page 816 of the Rutherford County, NC Registry and as recorded in Deed Book 3793, at Page 665 of the Buncombe County, NC Registry.

PROPERTY ADDRESS/LOCATION:Lot 538, Phase 3B Grey Rock Subdivision, Tonawanda Trail, Lake Lure NC 28746

DATE OF SALE: January 6, 2010TIME OF SALE: 10:30 A.M.LOCATION OF SALE: RUTHERFORD County Courthouse

RECORD OWNER(S): Carol Chen and Andrew Chen

TERMS OF THE SALE:

(1) This sale will be made subject to: (a) all prior liens, encumbrances, easements, right-of-ways, restrictive covenants or other restrictions of record affecting the property; (b) property taxes and assessments for the year in which the sale occurs, as well as any prior years; (c) federal tax liens with respect to which proper notice was not given to the Internal Revenue Service; and (d) federal tax liens to which proper notice was given to the Internal Revenue Service and to which the right of redemption applies.(2) The property is being sold "as is". Neither the beneficiary of the deed of trust, nor the undersigned Substitute Trustee, makes any warranties or representations concerning the property, including but not limited to, the physical or environmental condition of the property. Further, the undersigned Substitute Trustee makes no title warranties with respect to the title to the property.(3) The highest bidder will be responsible for the payment of revenue stamps payable to the Registerof Deeds and any final court and/or auditing fees payable to the Clerk of Superior Court which are assessed on the high bid resulting from this foreclosure sale.(4) At the time of the sale, the highest bidder will be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the bid, or $750.00, whichever is greater, with the remaining balance of the bid amount to be paid on the day following the expiration of the applicable ten (10) day upset bid period.(5) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.(6) An order for possession of the property being sold may be issued pursuant to N.C.G.S. §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession, by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold.

This the 9th day of December, 2009.

SMITH DEBNAM NARRON DRAKESAINTSING & MYERS, L.L.P.____________________________Jeff D. Rogers, Substitute TrusteeP. O. Box 26268Raleigh, NC 27611-6268(919) 250-2000KMA 97391936

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The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, January 5, 2010 — 15

Page 16: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

16 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, January 5, 2010

NORTH CAROLINA,RUTHERFORD COUNTY

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE09 SP 468

Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed by Amir D. Samona and Khloud Samona to PRLAP, Inc., Trustee(s), dated November 10, 2005, and recorded in Book 871, Page 87, Rutherford County Registry, North Carolina.

Default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the undersigned, having been substituted as Trustee in said Deed of Trust by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the Deed of Trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door in Rutherford County, North Carolina, at 10:15AM on January 06, 2010, and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described property, to wit:

Being all of Lot 319 as shown on survey by R. L. Greene, PLS entitled "Greyrock Subdivision Phase 2B as recorded in Plat Book 26 at Page 120, said plat being one of a series of plats recorded in Plat Book 26, Page 119 through 123 of the Rutherford County, NC Registry, reference to said recorded plats being made for a more particular description of said Lot 319. Together with and subject to all easements, restrictions and rights of ways of record and a non-exclusive appurtenant easement for ingress, egress and regress is conveyed over and upon all private subdivision roads for GreyRock at Lake Lure as shown on the above-described plats and plats for Phase 1A as shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 25, at Pages 188 through 192; plats for Phase 1B as shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 25, at Pages 205 through 208 and plats for Phase 2Aas shown on plats recorded in Plat Book 26, at Pages 114 through 118 and to the Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for GreyRock as recorded in Book 858, at Page 122 of the Rutherford County, NC Registry and also being recorded in Book 3827, Page 764 of the Buncombe County, NC Registry. Being a portion of that property conveyed to LR Buffalo Creek, LLC by deeds recorded in Deed Book 855, at Page 816 of the Rutherford County, NC Registry and as recorded in Deed Book 3793, at Page 665 of the Buncombe County, NC Registry.

Said property is commonly known as:Lot 319 Off Rolling Ridge Trail, Grey Rock Subdivision, Lake Lure, NC 28746

Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, pursuant to N.C.G.S. 105-228.30, in the amount of One Dollar ($1.00) per each Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) or fractional part thereof, and the Clerk of Courts fee, pursuant to N.C.G.S. 7A-308, in the amount of Forty-five Cents (45) per each One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) or fractional part thereof or Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00), whichever is greater. A deposit of five percent (5%) of the bid, or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time of the sale and must be tendered in the form of certified funds. Following the expiration of the statutory upset bid period, all the remaining amounts will be immediately due and owing.

Said property to be offered pursuant to this Notice of Sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance AS IS WHERE IS. There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at, or relating to the property being offered for sale. This sale is made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, land transfer taxes, if any, and encumbrances of record. To the best of the knowledge and belief of the undersigned, the current owner(s) of the property is/are Amir D Samona and Khloud Samona.

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

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

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.Substitute Trustee 1587 Northeast ExpresswayAtlanta, GA 30329(770) 234-9181Our File No.: 158.0931725NC Publication Dates: 12/29/2009 & 01/05/2009

NORTH CAROLINA,RUTHERFORD COUNTY

AMENDED NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE09 SP 27

Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed by DEBORAH L ROSE, UNMARRIED to WILLIAM R ECHOLS, Trustee(s), which was dated January 30, 2007 and recorded on February 8, 2007 in Book 940 at Page 571, Rutherford County Registry, North Carolina.

Default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, having been substituted as Trustee in said Deed of Trust, and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the Deed of Trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the courthouse door of the county courthouse where the property is located, or the usual and customary location at the county courthouse for conducting the sale on January 12, 2010 at 10:00AM, and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described property situated in Rutherford County, North Carolina, to wit:

Situate, lying and being in the Town of Lake Lure, Chimney Rock Township, Rutherford County, NC and being all of Lot #14 revised and being more particularly described by metes and bounds from survey entitled "Deborah L. Rose", dated March 6, 2006 by Surveying Dimensions, Donald R. McEntire, PLS as follows:

BEGINNING at an existing iron pin at the edge of the right of way of Seton Road, said existing iron pin being the northwestern most corner of the property now or formerly owned by Timothy L.C. Egan as described and recorded in Deed book 849 at Page 199, RCR, from said BEGINNING point and running along and with the line of Egan South 07 degrees 42 minutes 27 seconsd East 138.28 feet to an existing iron pin; thence continuing with the line of Egan North 88 degrees 05 minutes 00 seconds East 75.06 feet to an existing iron pin in the line of the property now or formerly owned by Albert Michael Trumbino et ux, as described and recorded in Deed Book 857 at Page 858, RCR; thence leaving the line of Egan and running along and with the line of Trumbino South 03 degrees 56 minutes 19 seconds East 125.96 feet to an existing iron pin at the edge of the right of way of Seton Road; thence leaving the line of Tumbino and running along and with the edge of said right of way South 85 degrees 50 minutes 34 seconds West 75.22 feet to an existing iron pin; thence continuing with the edge of said right of way South 86 degrees 37 minutes 06 seconds West 223.14 feet to an existing iron pin, said existing iron pin being the Southeastern most corner of the property now or formerly owned by Joseph L. Ponder, ex ut as described and recorded in Deed book 687 at Page 678, RCR; thence leaving the edge of said right of way and running along and with the line of Ponder North 04 degrees 18minutes 59 seconds West 132.31 feet to an existing iron pin, said existing iron pin being the Southwestern most corner of the property now or formerly owned by Scott T. Schubert as described and recorded in Deed book 832 at Page 632, RCR; thence leaving the line of Ponder and running along and with the line of Schubert North 87 degrees 33 minutes 35 seconds East 76.35 feet to an existing iron pin, said existing iron pin being the Southwestern most corner of the property now or formerly owned by Holly N. Byrd as described and recorded in Deed Book 883 at Page 249, RCR; thence leaving the line of Schubert and running along and with the line of Byrd North 88 degrees 00 minutes 00 seconds East 75.05 feet to an existing iron pin; thence continuing with the line of Byrd North 07 degrees 23 minutes 35 seconds West 155.25 feet to an existing iron pin at the edge of the right of way of Seton Road; thence leaving the line of Byrd and running along the edge of said right of way South 79 degrees 10 minutes 58 seconds East 75.58 feet to the point and place of BEGINNING, containing 1.13 acres more or less.

Save and except any releases, deeds of release or prior conveyances of record.

Said property is commonly known as:289 Seton Road, Lake Lure, NC 28746

Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, and the court costs of Forty-Five Cents (45¢) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) pursuant to NCGS 7A-308(a)(1). A cash deposit (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time of the sale. Following the expiration of the statutory upset bid period, all the remaining amounts are immediately due and owing.

Said property to be offered pursuant to this Notice of Sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance “AS IS WHERE IS.” There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at, or relating to the property being offered for sale. This sale is made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, any unpaid land transfer taxes, special assessments, easements, rights of way, deeds of release, and any other encumbrances or exceptions of record. To the best of the knowledge and belief of the undersigned, the current owner(s) of the property is/are Deborah L. Rose.

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

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

Substitute TrusteeBrock & Scott, PLLCJeremy B. Wilkins, NCSB No. 323465431 Oleander Drive Suite 200Wilmington, NC 28403PHONE: (910) 392-4988FAX: (910) 392-8587File No.: 09-00277-FC01

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NORTH CAROLINARUTHERFORD COUNTY

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICEBEFORE THE CLERK

09 SP 493

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY WAYNE S. MARKHAM AND WIFE, ANTOINETTE T. MARKHAM DATED April 14, 2005 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 837, PAGE 517, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY, TO BB&T COLLATERALSERVICE CORP, TRUSTEE.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by WAYNE S. MARKHAM AND WIFE, ANTOINETTE T. MARKHAM dated April 14, 2005 to BB&TCOLLATERAL SERVICE CORPORATION, Trustee for BRANCH BANKING AND TRUSTCOMPANY, recorded in Book 837, Page 517, RUTHERFORD County Registry; default having been made in payment of the indebtedness thereby secured; and the necessary findings to permit foreclosure having been made by the Clerk of Superior Court of RUTHERFORD County, North Carolina; the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in the County of RUTHERFORD and State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:

Being known and designated as Lot 19 as shown on the Map of The Summit, Phase One (Sheet Two of Two), as recorded in Plat Book 26, Page 16, in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina, reference to which is hereby made for a more particular description.

PROPERTY ADDRESS/LOCATION:Lot #19 Summit Parkway, The Summit Bostic NC 28018

DATE OF SALE: January 6, 2010TIME OF SALE: 10:30 A.M.LOCATION OF SALE: RUTHERFORD County Courthouse

RECORD OWNER(S): Wayne S. Markham and Antoinette T. Markham

TERMS OF THE SALE:

(1) This sale will be made subject to: (a) all prior liens, encumbrances, easements, right-of-ways, restrictive covenants or other restrictions of record affecting the property; (b) property taxes and assessments for the year in which the sale occurs, as well as any prior years; (c) federal tax liens with respect to which proper notice was not given to the Internal Revenue Service; and (d) federal tax liens to which proper notice was given to the Internal Revenue Service and to which the right of redemption applies.(2) The property is being sold "as is". Neither the beneficiary of the deed of trust, nor the undersigned Substitute Trustee, makes any warranties or representations concerning the property, including but not limited to, the physical or environmental condition of the property. Further, the undersigned Substitute Trustee makes no title warranties with respect to the title to the property.(3) The highest bidder will be responsible for the payment of revenue stamps payable to the Registerof Deeds and any final court and/or auditing fees payable to the Clerk of Superior Court which are assessed on the high bid resulting from this foreclosure sale.(4) At the time of the sale, the highest bidder will be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the bid, or $750.00, whichever is greater, with the remaining balance of the bid amount to be paid on the day following the expiration of the applicable ten (10) day upset bid period.(5) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.(6) An order for possession of the property being sold may be issued pursuant to N.C.G.S. §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession, by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold.

This the 9th day of December, 2009.

SMITH DEBNAM NARRON DRAKESAINTSING & MYERS, L.L.P._____________________________Jeff D. Rogers, Substitute TrusteeP. O. Box 26268Raleigh, NC 27611-6268(919) 250-2000KMA 97392014

Notice to Creditors

Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Sherry Ledbetter White, of Rutherford County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 22nd day of March, 2010, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 22nd day of December, 2009.

John B. Crotts, Administrator215 North Main StreetRutherfordton, NC 28139

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Page 17: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, January 5, 2010 — 17

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NORTH CAROLINARUTHERFORD COUNTY

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICEBEFORE THE CLERK

09 SP 466

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY STEVEN R. COOK AND WIFE, RENEE COOK DATED July 15, 2005 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 850, PAGE 138, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY, TO BB&T COLLATERAL SERVICE CORP, TRUSTEE.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by STEVEN R. COOK AND WIFE, RENEE COOK dated July 15, 2005 to BB&T COLLATERALSERVICE CORPORATION, Trustee for BRANCH BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY, recorded in Book 850, Page 138, RUTHERFORD County Registry; default having been made in payment of the indebtedness thereby secured; and the necessary findings to permit foreclosure having been made by the Clerk of Superior Court of RUTHERFORD County, North Carolina; the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in the County of RUTHERFORD and State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:

Situate, lying and being in Gilkey Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina and being all of the 2.013 acre tract shown as Lot #39 and all of the 2.089 acre tract shown as Lot #40 on plat entitled “Clearwater Creek Phase 3,” Sheet One of Two, as shown on plat of record in Plat Book 26 at Page 143, Rutherford County Registry.

Being a portion of that property conveyed in Deed from SFG Dragongly, LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company to Mtn. Creek Land Co., Inc., a North Carolina Corporation by deed dated November 15, 2004 and of record in Deed Book 860, at Page 146, Rutherford County Registry.

Subject to all notes shown on plat hereinabove referred to and further subject to any restrictions or rights of way of record and subject further to all provisions and restrictions of record as set forth in Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions of Clearwater Creek dated May 4, 2005 and of record in Deed Book 872, at Page 309, Rutherford County Registry.

Being the same and identical property which was conveyed by Mtn. Creek Land Co., Inc., a North Carolina corporation to Steven R. Cook and wife, Renee Cook by deed dated July 15, 2005 and of record in Deed Book 878, at Page 22, Rutherford County Registry.

PROPERTY ADDRESS/LOCATION:-Lot 39 Clearwater Creek Subdivision, Cross Creek Dr. Rutherfordton NC 28139-Lot 40 Clearwater Creek Subdivision, Cross Creek Dr. Rutherfordton NC 28139

DATE OF SALE: January 6, 2010TIME OF SALE: 10:30 A.M.LOCATION OF SALE: RUTHERFORD County Courthouse

RECORD OWNER(S): Steven R. Cook and Renee Cook

TERMS OF THE SALE:

(1) This sale will be made subject to: (a) all prior liens, encumbrances, easements, right-of-ways, restrictive covenants or other restrictions of record affecting the property; (b) property taxes and assessments for the year in which the sale occurs, as well as any prior years; (c) federal tax liens with respect to which proper notice was not given to the Internal Revenue Service; and (d) federal tax liens to which proper notice was given to the Internal Revenue Service and to which the right of redemption applies.(2) The property is being sold "as is". Neither the beneficiary of the deed of trust, nor the undersigned Substitute Trustee, makes any warranties or representations concerning the property, including but not limited to, the physical or environmental condition of the property. Further, the undersigned Substitute Trustee makes no title warranties with respect to the title to the property.(3) The highest bidder will be responsible for the payment of revenue stamps payable to the Registerof Deeds and any final court and/or auditing fees payable to the Clerk of Superior Court which are assessed on the high bid resulting from this foreclosure sale.(4) At the time of the sale, the highest bidder will be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the bid, or $750.00, whichever is greater, with the remaining balance of the bid amount to be paid on the day following the expiration of the applicable ten (10) day upset bid period.(5) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.(6) An order for possession of the property being sold may be issued pursuant to N.C.G.S. §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession, by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold.

This the 9th day of December, 2009.

SMITH DEBNAM NARRON DRAKESAINTSING & MYERS, L.L.P._____________________________Jeff D. Rogers, Substitute TrusteeP. O. Box 26268Raleigh, NC 27611-6268(919) 250-2000KMA 97392002

NORTH CAROLINARUTHERFORD COUNTY

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICEBEFORE THE CLERK

09 SP 441

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY KIM D. KINGSBURY AND WIFE, DAUN S. KINGSBURY DATED August 12, 2005 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 854, PAGE 835, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY, TO BB&T COLLATERALSERVICE CORP, TRUSTEE.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by KIM D. KINGSBURY AND WIFE, DAUN S. KINGSBURY dated August 12, 2005 to BB&TCOLLATERAL SERVICE CORPORATION, Trustee for BRANCH BANKING AND TRUSTCOMPANY, recorded in Book 854, Page 835, RUTHERFORD County Registry; default having been made in payment of the indebtedness thereby secured; and the necessary findings to permit foreclosure having been made by the Clerk of Superior Court of RUTHERFORD County, North Carolina; the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in the County of RUTHERFORD and State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:

Situate, lying and being in Chimney Rock Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina, and being all Lot Numbers 498 and 503 in Riverbend Highlands a subdivision also know as Lake Lure Mountain Estates, Highland Section, located in Chimney Rock Township, as shown on plat of record in Plat Book 10, at Page 122, Rutherford County Registry, to which reference is hereby made for a full and complete description.

Subject to the right reserved by Developer for the right, privilege and easement to enter upon, use and occupy temporarily the above referenced property for the purpose of constructing roads and drainage and for the accommodation of construction equipment, materials and excavated earth, over and across said property.

Subject to restrictions of record and further subject to:

1. Continuing obligation to pay proportionate share of maintenance costs which shall run with the land.

2. Zoning, and/or other restrictions imposed by government authority.

3. Any oil, gas, and/or mineral reservations as may appear on record.

4. Restrictions, reservations, conditions and limitations of record, if any.

Being the same and identical property which was conveyed by Vista North Carolina Limited Partnership, to Kim D. Kingsbury and wife, Daun S. Kingsbury, by deed dated August 5, 2005, and of record in Deed Book 880, Page 451, Rutherford County Registry.

PROPERTY ADDRESS/LOCATION:Lots 498 & 503 Riverbend Highlands Subdivision, Peartree Drive, Lake Lure NC 28746

DATE OF SALE: January 6, 2010TIME OF SALE: 10:30 A.M.LOCATION OF SALE: RUTHERFORD County Courthouse

RECORD OWNER(S): Kim D. Kingsbury and Daun S. Kingsbury

TERMS OF THE SALE:

(1) This sale will be made subject to: (a) all prior liens, encumbrances, easements, right-of-ways, restrictive covenants or other restrictions of record affecting the property; (b) property taxes and assessments for the year in which the sale occurs, as well as any prior years; (c) federal tax liens with respect to which proper notice was not given to the Internal Revenue Service; and (d) federal tax liens to which proper notice was given to the Internal Revenue Service and to which the right of redemption applies.(2) The property is being sold "as is". Neither the beneficiary of the deed of trust, nor the undersigned Substitute Trustee, makes any warranties or representations concerning the property, including but not limited to, the physical or environmental condition of the property. Further, the undersigned Substitute Trustee makes no title warranties with respect to the title to the property.(3) The highest bidder will be responsible for the payment of revenue stamps payable to the Registerof Deeds and any final court and/or auditing fees payable to the Clerk of Superior Court which are assessed on the high bid resulting from this foreclosure sale.(4) At the time of the sale, the highest bidder will be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the bid, or $750.00, whichever is greater, with the remaining balance of the bid amount to be paid on the day following the expiration of the applicable ten (10) day upset bid period.(5) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.(6) An order for possession of the property being sold may be issued pursuant to N.C.G.S. §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession, by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold.

This the 2nd day of December, 2009.

SMITH DEBNAM NARRON DRAKESAINTSING & MYERS, L.L.P._______________________________________Jeff D. Rogers, Substitute TrusteeP. O. Box 26268Raleigh, NC 27611-6268(919) 250-2000KMA 97391996

CNS-1763703#IRS PUBLIC AUCTION

Time: 02:00 PMDate: January 21, 2010

Address: Lots 150/151 South Poplar-Riverbend Highlands - Lake Lure Mtn Estates-Rutherford County, Chimney Rock Twnship, NC

Description of asset Lots 150/151 South Poplar-Riverbend Highlands-Lake Lure Mtn Estates-Rutherford County, Chimney Rock Twnship, NC

Minimum Bid: $8609.00

Department of the Treasury/Internal Revenue Service, Notice of Public Auction Sale, under the authority in Internal Revenue Code section 6331, the property described above has been seized for nonpayment of Internal Revenue taxes due from Scott A. Calhoun. The property will be sold at public auction as provided by Internal Revenue Code section 6335 and related regulations. Title offered: Only the right, title, and interest of Scott A. Calhoun.in and to the property will be offered for sale. If requested, the Internal Revenue Service will furnish information about possible encumbrances, which may be useful in determining the interest of the property being sold. Property may be inspected at Drive by Anytime. Payment terms: $5,000.00 payment required upon acceptance of highest bid, balance due 2/15/10.. Form of payment: All payments must be by cash, certified check, cashier's check or treasurer's check or by a United States Postal, bank, express, or telegraph money order. Make check or money order payable to the United States Treasury. For further information call J. Richard Andrews, Property Appraisal & Liquidation Specialist, at (910)279-3981 or access the Internet at www.irsauctions.gov.1/5/10

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Page 18: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

18 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, January 5, 2010

NORTH CAROLINARUTHERFORD COUNTY

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICEBEFORE THE CLERK

09 SP 440

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY STEVEN R. COOK AND WIFE RENEE COOK DATED November 18, 2005 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 873, PAGE 389, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY, TO BB&T COLLATERAL SERVICE CORP, TRUSTEE.

AMENDED NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by STEVEN R. COOK AND WIFE RENEE COOK dated November 18, 2005 to BB&T COLLATERALSERVICE CORPORATION, Trustee for BRANCH BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY, recorded in Book 873, Page 389, RUTHERFORD County Registry; default having been made in payment of the indebtedness thereby secured; and the necessary findings to permit foreclosure having been made by the Clerk of Superior Court of RUTHERFORD County, North Carolina; the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in the County of RUTHERFORD and State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:

Situate, lying and being in Gilkey Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina and being all of the 2.029 acre tract shown as Lot #126 on plat entitled “Clearwater Creek Phase 7", Sheet Two of Five, as shown on plat of record in Plat Book 26 at Page 298, Rutherford County Registry.

Being a portion of that property conveyed in Deed from SFG Dragonfly, LLC a Delaware Limited Liability Company to Mtn. Creek Land Co., Inc., a North Carolina Corporation by deed dated November 15, 2004 and of record in Deed Book 860, at Page 146, Rutherford County Registry.

Subject to all notes shown on plat hereinabove referred to and further subject to any restrictions or rights of way of record and subject further to all provisions and restrictions of record as set forth in Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions of Clearwater Creek dated May 4, 2005 and of record in Deed Book 872, at Page 309, Rutherford County Registry.

PROPERTY ADDRESS/LOCATION:Lot 126 Phase 7 Clearwater Creek Subdivision Rutherfordton NC 28139

DATE OF SALE: January 6, 2010TIME OF SALE: 10:30 A.M.LOCATION OF SALE: RUTHERFORD County Courthouse

RECORD OWNER(S): Steven R. Cook and Renee Cook

TERMS OF THE SALE:

(1) This sale will be made subject to: (a) all prior liens, encumbrances, easements, right-of-ways, restrictive covenants or other restrictions of record affecting the property; (b) property taxes and assessments for the year in which the sale occurs, as well as any prior years; © federal tax liens with respect to which proper notice was not given to the Internal Revenue Service; and (d) federal tax liens to which proper notice was given to the Internal Revenue Service and to which the right of redemption applies.(2) The property is being sold "as is". Neither the beneficiary of the deed of trust, nor the undersigned Substitute Trustee, makes any warranties or representations concerning the property, including but not limited to, the physical or environmental condition of the property. Further, the undersigned Substitute Trustee makes no title warranties with respect to the title to the property.(3) The highest bidder will be responsible for the payment of revenue stamps payable to the Registerof Deeds and any final court and/or auditing fees payable to the Clerk of Superior Court which are assessed on the high bid resulting from this foreclosure sale.(4) At the time of the sale, the highest bidder will be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the bid, or $750.00, whichever is greater, with the remaining balance of the bid amount to be paid on the day following the expiration of the applicable ten (10) day upset bid period.(5) Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.(6) An order for possession of the property being sold may be issued pursuant to N.C.G.S. §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession, by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county in which the property is sold.(7) This Notice of Foreclosure Sale is amended to reflect a change in the sale date from January 6, 2009 to January 6, 2010.

This the 2nd day of December, 2009.

SMITH DEBNAM NARRON DRAKESAINTSING & MYERS, L.L.P._______________________________________Jeff D. Rogers, Substitute TrusteeP. O. Box 26268Raleigh, NC 27611-6268(919) 250-2000KMA 97391699

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINACOUNTY OF RUTHERFORD

NOTICE OF SALEFile No: 09 SP 535

TAKE NOTICE THAT: William Richard Boyd, Jr., Substitute Trustee, has begun proceedings to FORECLOSE under the Deed of Trust described below, and by under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in such Deed of Trust, and an Order entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of the above County, will sell the below described property at public auction as follows:

1. The instrument pursuant to which such sale will be held is that certain Deed of Trust executed Southeast Home Management & Development, LLC, Dawn A. Komljenovic and Robert Komljenovic, original mortgagors, and recorded in the Office of the Rutherford County Register of Deeds in Deed of Trust Book 1025, at Page 37. The record owner of such property, as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds not more than ten (10) days prior to posting this Notice of Sale, if not the original mortgagors, is: Southeast Home Management & Development, LLC

2. The property will be sold by the Substitute Trustee at 11:00 a.m. on the 14th day of January, 2010 at the Rutherford County Courthouse door in the City of Rutherfordton, North Carolina.

3. The real property to be sold is generally described as 2982, 2984 and 2986 Hudlow Road, Forest City, NC 28043 and described as follows:

Situate, tying and being in Logan Store Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina, and being the same and identical property as described in Deed recorded in Deed Book 443, Page 418, Rutherford County Registry, containing 5.60 acres, more or less, and being more particularly described in that certain Deed of Trust recorded in Book 1025, at Page 37 of the Rutherford County Registry and said description is incorporated herein by reference.

THERE IS ALSO CONVEYED HEREWITH A RIGHT OF WAY FOR THE PURPOSE OFINGRESS, EGRESS AND REGRESS 45 FEET IN WIDTH OVER OTHER PROPERTY OFBARRY K. JONES AND WIFE, REBECCA G. JONES AS DESCRIBED AND RECORDED IN DEED BOOK 694 AT PAGE 341, RUTHERFORD COUNTY REGISTRY and being more particularly described in that certain Deed of Trust recorded in Book 1025, at Page 37 of the Rutherford County Registry and said description is incorporated herein by reference. Tax Map 733-1-12D.

Attached to and permanently affixed to the above described real estate are the following manufactured homes: 1) 1989 Gulf, VIN No: TWIALBS113008; 2) 1987 Clay, VIN No: 10981; and 3) 1997 Gile, VIN No: GI17185.

Any property described in the Deed of Trust which is not being offered for sale is described as follows: Subject to any and all Release Deeds of Record in the Rutherford County, North Carolina Registry.

4. Any buildings located on the above-described property are also included in the sale.

5. The property will be sold by the Substitute Trustee to the highest bidder for CASH. The highest bidder will be required to deposit IN CASH with the Substitute Trustee at the date and time of the sale the greater of five percent (5.0%) of the amount of the bid or Seven Hundred Fifty and no/100 Dollars ($750.00).

6. All bidders bid for the property AS IS on the date of sale. Absolutely no warranties are made as to the condition, value or title of the property. While the Substitute Trustee believes the title to be good, all bidders are advised that they should obtain independent counsel to examine record title as the property is sold subject to prior record interests. The Noteholder has reserved the right to withdraw the sale up to and until the Deed is delivered by the Substitute Trustee.

7. The property will be sold subject to all unpaid taxes and special assessments.

8. The property being sold is all of that property described in the Deed of Trust except as specifically set forth above. It is the intention to extinguish any and all rights or interests in the property subordinate to the Deed of Trust.

9. Additional Notice Where the Real Property is Residential with Less Than 15 Rental Units: An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to G.S. 45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Superior Court of the County in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the Notice of Sale, terminate the rental agreement upon 10 days’ written notice to the landlord. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of the termination.

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

THIS the 15th day of December, 2009.

__________________________William Richard Boyd, Jr. Substitute Trustee474 Mountain Cove RoadWaynesville, North Carolina 28786Dates: January 5, 2010 and January 12, 2010

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Page 19: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TUESDAY, January 5. 2010 — 19

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Page 20: Daily Courier, January 05, 2010

20 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

20/

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20 — The Daily Courier, Forest City, NC, TuesDay, January 5, 2010

Airplanes have become a regular way of life. Millions of people board airplanes each day, but there was a time not so long ago that travel by air was not possible for humans. It was a luxury reserved for birds and insects. Men have dreamed of flight for as long as they have been on the Earth. Evidence of this has been found in stories and drawings that date back to ancient times. People have manufactured wings, constructed gliders, attached explosives to chairs, and tried to design aircrafts for thousands of years. The most common way to fly in modern times is the jet airplane. Other ways to become air-borne are in hot air balloons, helicopters, hang gliders, and blimps. Many people, at different times and in different places, have tried to create flying ma-chines, such as the airplane. For this reason, it is hard to say who actually invented the airplane, yet the first manned, heavier-than-air flight in an airplane was well-recorded for the history books. Wilbur and Orville Wright, two brothers from Dayton, Ohio, who made bicycles for a living, built one of the first manned aircrafts. It was the first to ever have a successful flight with a person on board. In 1903 in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Orville Wright flew the Flyer I for 12 seconds. Later that day Wilbur had a successful flight that lasted almost a minute. By 1905, the brothers had created the Flyer III that could maneuver in the air. In 1908 the brothers were commissioned to build an aircraft for the United States military. It is clear that the Wright Brothers are the fathers of mod-ern flight.

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