dailyadvance.com

Transcription

dailyadvance.com
region gov. mccrory
to visit Ec monday 3a
knights fall
sports rough start dooms
currituck in playoffs 1B
sports oxbow upsets
orb in preakness race 2B
THE DAILY ADVANCE
Sunday, May 19, 2013
$1.25
www.DailyAdvance.com
Potato Fest Draws Newcomers
Weather
Thomas Thai/Weeksville Elementary School
4)08&3
Today: 78
Tonight: 67
Complete forecast on 2A
Albemarle Life
rhylee Gonzales, 6, poses
with her tiara and sash after
winning this year’s Little miss
tater tot pageant on saturday.
Japanese Rotarians visit EC
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Web Poll Results
www.DailyAdvance.com
poll from Friday, May 17
Did you watch Thursday’s series finale of
‘The Office’?
VOTeS
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staff photo by thomas j. turney
Gorden Dove races to peel as many potatoes as he can at the nC potato festival on saturday. mickey Golden (below, right) peels
potatoes as quickly — and as carefully as possible. See more photos online at DailyAdvance.com
Early rain dampens
event attendance
By WILLIAM F. WEST
Staff Writer
E
.J. Markwood on
Saturday afternoon
got the chance to enjoy
the N.C. Potato Festival for
the first time.
Markwood, a retiree who
recently moved to Jarvisburg from Pennsylvania,
was one of numerous
people walking on either
Main or Water streets a
couple of hours after the
event started. The purpose
of the Potato Festival is to
pay tribute to one of the
Elizabeth City area’s largest crops and bring residents and visitors together
for entertainment and food
and a chance to buy merchandise.
Markwood, along with
her brother Wesley Guseman, moved to Currituck
County from a town approximately 50 miles from
Pittsburgh. She said she
learned about the Potato
Festival from newspaper
articles.
“We think it’s just wonderful,” she said.
“We’re impressed with
the town, first off. We didn’t
think it would be this big,
but you all just have so
much going on. And it’s
just so clean and upbeat.
“Everywhere we turn,
there’s music and all kinds
of stuff with potatoes.
Little Miss
Tater Tot
crowned
Winner is daughter
of Coastguardsman
By WILLIAM F. WEST
Staff Writer
That’s nice,” she said.
Potato Festival Chairman Tim Williams said late
Saturday afternoon that
the event got off to a slow
start due to an early morning rain, but that he and
his fellow organizers were
pleased with the way things
were going.
We have approximately
25,000 if we have a good
crowd for the fireworks
about 28,000
Festival organizers estimated Saturday’s crowd at
25,000, There were about 130
vendors and more than 300
see feStivAl, 8a
staff photo by thomas j. turney
addison jernigan, 6, answers questions from the judges during the Little miss tater
tot pageant on saturday.
Rhylee Gonzales wore
the crown quite well on
Saturday morning.
The crown of Little Miss
Tater Tot, that is. Gonzales, 6, of Elizabeth City,
received the honor at the
annual N.C. Potato Festival after she and a group
of other competing youngsters answered questions
posed by a panel of judges.
In fact, Gonzales’ voice
was so strong at first that
she probably did not need
a microphone to field questions. That is because
when one of the judges,
Elizabeth City City Councilman Kem Spence, asked
Gonzales, “How are you?”
she replied, “Good!”
Gonzales told the judges
that she likes playing softball and that the best part
of the sport is catching
the ball. When asked what
she wants to be when she
grows up, she said a veterinarian.
Minutes later, the judges
announced Gonzales won
the honor. Her mother,
Brooke Gonzales, was jubilant immediately afterward, exclaiming, “Oh my
God, I’m so excited!”
“She wanted it so bad, so
I’m so happy for her,” the
mother added.
Rhylee Gonzales said
afterward that she, too, is
happy.
see pAgeAnt, 5a
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Edenton’s past, present come together
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McCrory helps celebrate town’s 300th
TOTAL
117
DailyaDvance.com
today’s Index
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By REGGIE PONDER
Staff Writer
EDENTON — Gov. Pat
McCrory told the crowd
at Saturday’s celebration
of Edenton’s 300th anniversary that the town
has been at the forefront
of liberty.
“This town is full of
pioneers in our state and
our national history,”
McCrory said during a
ceremony attended by
about 300 people on the
1767 Courthouse Green.
More on This sTory
Governor defends road
funding plan — 5A
McCrory talked about
the role of women in
Edenton’s colonial history, including the Edenton
Tea Party. The Edenton
Tea Party was an event
in which women from
Edenton and the surrounding area expressed
their commitment to
see eDentOn, 8a
staff photo
by brett a. CLark
Gov. pat mcCrory greets an
actor portraying
Charles eden, the
first governor of
north Carolina,
after arriving by
boat to the edenton waterfront
during saturday’s
celebration of
the town’s 300th
anniversary.
A
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
PAGE TWO
What’s up in the albemarle
TODAy
435-6419.
will hold summer school registration at the K.E. White Center
■ ALS support
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Contact:
The Down East ALS Support 335-8546.
Group will meet at the Outpatient
■ Scholarships available
Regional Rehabilitation Center
of Vidant Medical Center, 2310
Monday is the deadline for
Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, graduating high school students
at 2 p.m. Contact: 252-746-4221.
to apply for the Elizabeth City
Music Club’s Border-Simpson
■ University Women
Scholarship and the Dorothy
The National Association of Morse Scholarship. Contact:
University Women will meet wrgragson@roadrunner.com or
at the clubhouse, 208 Speed St., call 335-1849.
Elizabeth City, at 2:30 p.m.
■ Historical Society
MONDAy
■ School fundraiser
Elizabeth
City-Pasquotank
Public Schools will hold a spaghetti dinner fundraiser at Montero’s Restaurant from 5 p.m.
to 8 p.m. Cost is $10. Principals,
teachers, staff and students will
be the servers. Proceeds benefit
the SAFE Schools Fund. Contact
Andy Montero at 331-1067 or 3397387.
■ Peartree Road closed
The N.C. Department of
Transportation will close Peartree Road between Pitts Chapel
and Florida roads in Pasquotank
County starting at 7 a.m. The
road will be closed for replacement of pipes under the highway.
It will reopen Friday at 5 p.m.
■ Summer registration
Elizabeth City State University
The Currituck County Historical Society and the Currituck Friends of the Library will
sponsor a dinner program at Rehoboth Baptist Church Fellowship Hall on Maple Road at 6:45
p.m. David Cecelske, an author
and historian at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
as well as Duke University, will
speak. Cost is $15 for dinner.
Contact: 453-2642, 232-2311 or 2322762.
■ American Heritage Girls
The American Heritage Girls,
will meet at New Community
Church at 100 Kathryn Court,
Elizabeth City, from 6 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. Contact: 267-0166.
■ Leadership series
College of The Albemarle’s
Small Business Center will host
the leadership series “High Performance Leadership” at Montero’s Restaurant in Elizabeth
City at 5:30 p.m. Cost is $5 and
includes course materials and
a light dinner. Contact: 335-0821
FilE PhOTO ext. 2231 or 2370.
Elizabeth City State University will hold summer school registration today at
the K.E. White Center from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Contact: 335-8546.
■ Vietnam vets group
The Vietnam Era Veterans
of America and Associates will
426-5467.
cutting at 9 a.m. Contact: 453- meet at the Edgewood Center at
7 p.m. Contact: (after 6 p.m.) 2649497.
■ Medicare seminar
2507 or 335-1480.
■ Blood drive
The North Carolina Senior
■ Civil Air Patrol
Rocky Hock Baptist Church,
Medicare Patrol Program will
The local squadron of the Civil
host a free seminar to help se- Edenton, 3 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Air Patrol will meet at the Nationniors protect against Medicare
■ Computer class
fraud, waste and abuse at the
al Guard Armory at 600 Westover
■ Give 5 Read 5
The Currituck County Library St., Elizabeth City from 6 p.m. to
Currituck Cooperative ExtenThe Bertha Lane Circle of
sion Center at 6:30 p.m. Contact: in Barco will host free computer 8:30 p.m. Contact: 232-8082.
Hertford
United
Methodist
classes: today, “Computer Ba232-2261 or 331-7630.
Church will host the “Give 5 Read
sics” at 9:30 a.m. Registration is
weDNeSDAy
5” program that seeks donations
required. Contact: 453-8345.
TUeSDAy
■ VFW meal
of new or slightly use children’s
■ Shop opens
■ Computer class
books during the month of May.
Post 6060 of the Veterans of
The Outer Banks Popcorn
The books will be delivered to
Moyock Branch Library will Foreign Wars will host a barbeschools in Winfall and Hertford Shoppe, located at TimBuck II host free computer class: today, cue chicken meal from 11 a.m.
for children to take home over Shopping Center, 799 Sunset “Computer Basics” at 3 p.m. Reg- to 5 p.m. Cost is $7. Contact: 338the summer and read. Contact: Blvd., Corolla, will host a ribbon istration is required. Contact: 2828.
Items for What’s up in the Albemarle may be sent to elizabethcity@dailyadvance.com or to The Daily Advance, P.O. Box 588, Elizabeth City, N.C. 27909-0588
For entertainment listings see Going Out Guide, 8C
history
Saturday’S MoSt PoPular online StorieS:
Today is Sunday, May 19, the 139th day of 2013.
There are 226 days left in the year. On this date 10
and 25 years ago, The Daily Advance reported:
■ In 2003, the N.C. Potato Association held its 75th annual meeting in Elizabeth City.
■ In 1988, the Currituck County School Board returned
from a trip to Pennsylvania, where they marched for
the 125th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg.
Today’s highlights in world history:
■ In 1943, top U.S. and British officials meeting in
Washington agreed May 1, 1944 as the date for the DDay invasion of France (the operation ended up being
launched more than a month later, June 6.).
■ Ten years ago: WorldCom Inc. agreed to pay investors $500 million to settle civil fraud charges.
■ Five years ago: Jon Lester of the Boston Red Sox
shut down Kansas City 7-0 for the first no-hitter of the
season.
■ One year ago: I’ll Have Another overtook Bodemeister down the stretch to win the Preakness, two weeks
after claiming the Kentucky Derby. (However, a tendon
injury forced I’ll Have Another into retirement on the
eve of the Belmont Stakes.)
Gilchrist resigns: ECSU chancellor: ‘Right moment’ to step aside
Ex-EC pastor faces sex charges
Trustees, alumni react to Gilchrist’s resignation
Student: ECSU worker threatened him
Picking interim chancellor ECSU’s next step
lateSt SlideShow:
Prom Season 2013
lotteries
NORTH CAROLINA Pick 3
Friday night
Saturday day
VIRGINIA
Pick 4
Cash 5
9-3-9 (21) 0-1-6-2 (9) 1-17-33-34-39
7-0-3 (10) 4-4-6-0 (14)
Pick 3
Pick 4
Friday night
Saturday day
9-1-4
9-8-6
6-8-3-4
1-5-1-0
Mega Millions
11-15-35-43-49
Cash 5
1-5-12-16-27
9-18-20-21-32
Mega Ball 41
Megaplier 4
Do Your Eyes Make You Look Tired or Sad?
One of the first features that people notice is your eyes.
They are also one of the first to show signs of aging.
With Eyelid Enhancement we can “open” your
eyes to a more refreshed and youthful look!
Weather
Five-day forecast for Elizabeth City
Today
Tonight
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
A shower or heavy
thunderstorm
Mostly cloudy with
a t-storm
A couple of
thunderstorms
Some sun, a t-storm
possible
Partly sunny, warm
and humid
Partly sunny, a
t-storm; humid
78°
RF: 80°
67°
79°
RF: 64°
68°
81°
RF: 83°/64°
67°
84°
RF: 86°/64°
65°
RF: 88°/63°
83°
66°
RF: 87°/62°
RF: The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors. Shown are the highest and lowest values for each day.
State Weather
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are
today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Fayetteville
82/67
UV Index Today
8 a.m. ........................................................... 1
Noon ........................................................... 4
4 p.m. .......................................................... 3
Sun and Moon
Sunrise today ............................ 5:56 a.m.
Sunset tonight ......................... 8:08 p.m.
Moonrise today ....................... 2:20 p.m.
Moonset today ......................... 2:07 a.m.
Moon Phases
0-2: Low 3-5: Moderate 6-7: High
8-10: Very High 11+: Extreme
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV IndexTM number, the
greater the need for eye and skin protection.
The Daily Advance
USPS (141-800) Vol. No. 102 Issue 139
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Published Sunday through Saturday mornings
by The Daily Advance at 215 S. Water Street
in Elizabeth City, NC 27909.
Main phone number 335-0841
Printed on recycled paper.
Please recycle this newspaper.
Tonight: Wind S 10-20
knots. Wave heights 3-6
feet.
Tomorrow: Wind S 10-20
knots. Wave heights 4-7
feet.
Full
Last
May 25 May 31
New
First
Jun 8
Jun 16
Tides
Duck Research Pier, Duck, NC
Today
Tomorrow
High
Low
2:28 a.m.
3:15 p.m.
3:26 a.m.
4:09 p.m.
8:50 a.m.
9:29 p.m.
9:43 a.m.
10:29 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013
Subscriptions
Subscription payments can be paid by check, Visa,
Mastercard, American Express or Discover and
should be made through the newspaper office. To
make a payment by phone call 335-8076 or mail
payment to: The Daily Advance, P.O. Box 0588,
Elizabeth City, NC 27909-0588.
Mail Daily and Sunday (month): $22
Single copy
Daily: 50¢
Sunday: $1.25
Home delivery
Daily and Sunday
1 Month: $10.50
3 Months: $31.50
6 Months: $63
1 Year: $126
■ EC-Pasquotank Board of Education will hold committee meetings at the administrative offices Monday
at 2 p.m.
■ Currituck Board of Commissioners will meet at the
Historic Currituck Courthouse Monday at 7 p.m.
■ Perquimans Board of Commissioners will hold
a work session in the courthouse annex Monday at 7
p.m.
■ Gates County Board of Commissioners will meet in
the courtroom in Gatesville Monday at 6 p.m.
■ Pasquotank Board of Commissioners will hold a
budget work session in the Community Room at the
W.C. Witherspoon Library on Monday at 2:30 p.m.
■ Camden and Pasquotank boards of commissioners
will hold a lunch meeting with Gov. Pat McCrory at Cypress Creek Grill on Monday at noon.
■ Camden Board of Commissioners will meet in the
Historic Camden County Courthouse Monday at 7 p.m.
■ Chowan County Board of Commissioners will meet
in the Public Safety Center on Tuesday at 8 a.m.
■ Camden County Board of Commissioners will hold
a budget work session in the Historic Camden County
Courthouse on Tuesday at 2 p.m.
AlbemArle
eye Center, P.L.L.C.
Call our office
today and see
1503 N. Road StReet, elizabeth City
how we can
252-335-5446
help you achieve
3524 N. CRoataN hwy, Kitty hawK
your goals.
252-441-3163
The State
National Weather for May 19, 2013
Today
Mon.
City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Asheville
78/60/t 83/59/t
Beaufort
78/69/t 77/69/t
Boone
71/61/t 76/59/t
Burlington
78/65/t 80/67/t
Charlotte
80/65/t 83/64/t
Durham
79/65/t 79/67/t
Fayetteville
82/67/t 82/68/t
Gastonia
79/65/t 83/67/t
Goldsboro
83/67/t 81/67/t
Greensboro
78/65/t 80/67/t
Greenville
83/67/t 82/68/t
Hickory
77/63/t 81/65/t
High Point
78/65/t 80/67/t
Jacksonville
83/68/t 80/67/t
Lumberton
83/67/t 81/67/t
Morehead City 78/70/t 77/69/t
Nags Head
76/68/t 77/68/t
Raleigh
80/66/t 79/68/t
Rocky Mount 82/66/t 81/67/t
Salisbury
78/66/t 80/67/t
Wilmington
81/68/t 79/68/t
Winston-Salem 77/65/t 80/68/t
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s -0s
0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
The World
Outer Banks
Wilmington
81/68
Elizabeth City Almanac
Statistics are through 4 p.m. Saturday
Temperature:
High/Low......................................... 73°/65°
Precipitation:
24 hours through 4 p.m. Sat. ....... 0.41"
Albemarle Sound
Tonight: Wind S 7-14 knots.
Nags Head Wave heights 1-3 feet.
Tomorrow: Wind SSW 10-20
76/68
knots. Wave heights 3-5
feet.
Raleigh
80/66
Charlotte
80/65
Marine Report
Elizabeth City
78/67
Greensboro
78/65
Asheville
78/60
meetings
CliCk on dailyadvanCe.CoM
Today
Mon.
City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Barcelona
66/55/s 60/53/sh
Beijing
85/57/s 85/60/s
Cancun
88/78/pc 89/78/sh
Copenhagen
67/56/sh 68/57/sh
Hong Kong
88/80/c 88/79/t
London
63/48/r 61/54/sh
Moscow
73/51/pc 79/53/c
Munich
65/43/r 65/46/pc
New Delhi
110/84/pc 110/83/pc
Paris
63/50/r 56/51/r
Rio de Janeiro 78/68/c 82/71/pc
Rome
70/54/s 68/55/pc
Sydney
66/44/s 70/46/s
Vienna
79/54/pc 71/50/pc
Legend: W-weather, s-sunny,
pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Advertisers
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space occupied by that portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred, whether such
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for non-insertion of any advertisement beyond
the amount paid for such advertisement.
National Summary: Severe thunderstorms will fire across the central Plains
and the Midwest today with multiple tornadoes likely. Heavy rain will create a
renewed flooding threat across the Northern Plains while showers and thunderstorms rumble across the Southeast. Showers will create damp conditions in
New England while the Southwest remains dry.
The Nation
City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Boston
Buffalo
Charleston, SC
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Denver
Houston
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Today
Hi/Lo/W
80/54/s
43/32/s
82/66/t
67/60/sh
64/54/c
78/60/c
82/69/t
82/63/t
79/61/t
70/42/pc
88/74/pc
86/67/t
90/70/s
75/59/pc
Mon.
Hi/Lo/W
79/50/s
52/38/s
86/67/t
74/64/t
75/63/c
81/67/pc
82/68/t
89/67/pc
85/68/pc
61/39/t
89/73/pc
81/57/pc
87/65/s
82/60/s
How to reach us
City
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New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Philadelphia
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Wash., DC
Today
Hi/Lo/W
87/74/pc
78/68/t
87/67/t
84/72/pc
68/59/c
100/68/t
70/62/c
96/75/s
78/60/t
90/71/pc
61/48/t
71/54/pc
64/46/pc
74/64/sh
ACCOUNTING Manager Maureen Brinson 335-8132,
mbrinson@dailyadvance.com
CIRCULATION Director Chuck Edwards 335-8091,
cedwards@dailyadvance.com
NewS Newsroom 335-8138 Editor Mike Goodman 335-8110,
mgoodman@dailyadvance.com
SALeS AND MARKeTING Advertising Director
Ruby Moore 335-8082
Mon.
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79/54/r
90/68/pc
86/71/s
77/65/t
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8 a.m. -10 a.m.
Saturday and
Sunday.
Region/State
Jacksonville
Fayetteville
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
A
sunset Beach
charlotte
Drowned girl’s mom on probation
Salmonella outbreak sickens 51
Beach town celebrates 50 years
Investigators say the mother of a 20month-old girl who drowned last weekend in Jacksonville is on probation after
a child she was taking care of drowned
in 2010.
Police say they are still investigating
the death of Mercadiez Reed, who was
found unconscious in a swimming pool
on May 11. The girl died a short time later at the hospital.
The girl’s mother is currently on three
years of probation after pleading no contest to involuntary manslaughter in January 2012 to the death of a 19-month-old
girl in a rain-swollen drainage ditch.
The woman was supposed to be watching the girl, but told a judge she smoked
marijuana and took a prescription antidepressant before the child came over.
Health officials are worried cases from
a salmonella outbreak traced to a Fayetteville hotel may spread nationwide.
Officials tell The Fayetteville Observer
that 51 people who ate since May 1 at
the Holiday Inn Bordeaux’s banquet facilities along with its café and sports bar
have been sickened. Five of them have
had to be hospitalized.
State Health Director Laura Gerald
says the hotel is along Interstate 95,
meaning victims of the illness could be
anywhere.
Investigators have not determined
which food was contaminated.
The salmonella bacteria caused nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, and symptoms begin within a day to three days of
infection.
A North Carolina beach town is marking 50 years since its incorporation.
Sunset Beach leaders held an anniversary beach party at midday Saturday at
the town gazebo with music and barbecue. An anniversary planning committee has collected old photos and was putting together a time capsule of artifacts
about the town’s past and present. The
case will hold the town charter, banners,
newspapers, grocery circulars, and more
being collected until next March.
The anniversary has led to a review
of town council records. It found the
Sunset Beach council’s first meeting was
around an outdoor picnic table, the town
clerk was the only employee and was
paid a $400 salary, and the first police officer used his own car.
From AP reports
From AP reports
Mike Mccarn/ap photo
country singer Josh turner performs before
the naScar all-Star race at charlotte Motor
Speedway in concord on Saturday.
McCrory set to visit EC
young entomologist
Officials have
matters to discuss
By ciNDy BEAMON
Staff Writer
For the first time since
taking office in January,
Gov. Pat McCrory is planning a stop in Elizabeth
City on Monday to visit
with business owners
and local leaders.
McCrory’s itinerary
includes lunch at Cypress
Creek Grill with invited
elected officials from
Elizabeth City, Pasquotank and Camden counties. A walk downtown
will be next as part of
McCrory’s statewide initiative to spotlight small
businesses on “main
street walking tours.”
McCrory plans to stop at
two or three businesses
along the way.
The tours offer the
governor a chance to
talk with business owners across the state about
ways to help them, said
Ed Goodwin, eastern di-
Staff photo by thoMaS J. turney
austin White pours paint on an insect model that he is working on during a program for preschoolers called “Six-legged friends,” at port Discover on thursday.
60 injured after car crash
Police: Quick action
helped victims
By DEBRA MccOWN
Associated Press
DAMASCUS, Va. —
About 50 to 60 people were
injured Saturday when a
driver described by witnesses as an elderly man
drove his car into a group
of hikers marching in a
parade in a small Virginia
mountain town.
It happened around 2:10
p.m. during the Hikers Parade at the Trail Days festival, an annual celebration of the Appalachian
Trail in Damascus, near
the Tennessee state line
about a half-hour drive
east of Bristol.
Washington County director of emergency management Pokey Harris
said no fatalities had been
reported.
The injuries ranged
from critical to superficial, he said. Three of the
victims were flown by helicopters to regional hospitals. Another 12 to 15
were taken by ambulance.
The rest were treated at
the scene.
At a news conference,
Damascus Police Chief
Bill Nunley didn’t release
the driver’s name or age
but said he was participating in the parade. Multiple
witnesses described him
as an elderly man.
Nunley said the man’s
1997 Cadillac was one of the
last vehicles in the parade
and the driver might have
suffered an unspecified
medical problem when his
car accelerated to about 25
mph and struck the crowd
on a two-lane bridge along
the town’s main road.
rector for the office of the
governor.
The Elizabeth City stop
will be one of three in northeastern North Carolina that
McCrory has planned for
the day. McCrory will be in
Elizabeth City for about two
hours, Goodwin estimated.
McCrory’s visit will be his
second to the area in less than
a week. McCrory attended
Edenton’s 300th anniversary
celebration on Saturday.
Local officials said Friday
they were unsure what might
be discussed at Monday’s
meeting in Elizabeth City.
Mayor Joe Peel said McCrory’s visit is a positive
sign that “we are not forgot-
ten” in northeastern North
Carolina.
Changes in the General
Assembly and the state
administration that favor
urban areas have left the
region wondering how rural areas will fare in coming years, Peel noted. The
visit indicates the governor,
mostly familiar with North
Carolina’s
metropolitan
areas, wants to learn more
about the needs of the rural
region, he said.
“I think it’s important
for him to understand that
one size doesn’t fit all,” said
Peel.
See full story at www.
DailyAdvance.com
AlwAys PAy le$$!
338-2050
COA Is Landing In
Currituck County
Winfred Felton, Jr.
“Little Hoss”
Feb. 28, 1944 - Dec. 28, 2012
We are sorry for the delay in
getting this thank you out to
you, but we are grateful for the
incredible demonstration of love
shown to our family through
your prayers, cards, food,
beverages, desserts, monetary
gifts, words expressed, visits,
plants, flower sprays, phone
calls, text messages, e-mails,
pats on the shoulders and
other generous acts of service.
Your kindness has been a blessing
and will never be forgotten.
From AP reports
Learn about COA’s NEW and Current
Programs of Study.
Receive guidance on how to begin the
application and registration process.
Talk directly with COA faculty and get
your questions answered.
Featured Programs Coming To Our Regional Aviation and Technical Training Center August 2013:
Love, Mary Frances Felton & Family
Architectural
Technology
Mechanical Engineering
Technology
Computer
Integrated Machining
Aviation Systems Technology
(pending FAA approval)
Information Sessions to be held from 6:30 - 7:30 p.m.
Put My Experience To
Work For You
Tue
May 21
Elizabeth City Campus, Room AE-208
Thu
May 23
Camden County Senior Center (beside the Courthouse)
Tue
May 28
Edenton-Chowan Campus, Culinary Tech. Building
Thu
May 30
Currituck County Extension Building
Tue
June 4
Dare Campus, Room 201 - Info. Highway Room
Thu
June 6
Perquimans County High School - Media Center
Tue
June 11
Gates County - Merchants Millpond
Edenton-Chowan Campus
800 North Oakum Street
Edenton, NC 27932
252-482-7900
Elizabeth City Campus
1208 North Road Street
Elizabeth City, NC 27906
252-335-0821
Dare County Campus
132 Russell Twiford Road
Manteo, NC 27954
252-473-2264
For more information visit Albemarle.edu
OPEN FALL 2013
Regional Aviation &
Technical Training Center
CURRITUCK NC
Watch
Us
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Albema
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Us
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A
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
OPINIONS
Serving Elizabeth City and
the Albemarle since 1911
The Daily Advance
Ann Hoffman, Publisher
Michael Goodman, Editor
Julian Eure, News Editor
Bob Montgomery, Assistant News Editor
A publication of Cooke Communications North Carolina, LLC
Gilchrist resigns; probe of ECSU police must continue
O V
M
ost students headed home or were
off to work following graduation
exercises last weekend at Elizabeth City State University. That exodus
may have reduced immediate concerns
among many students and their parents
about safety at ECSU in the wake of a
state investigation of campus police.
Then on Friday, ECSU Chancellor Willie J. Gilchrist announced his resignation, effective June 30, creating additional speculation and uncertainty about
ongoing issues affecting the university.
In the months ahead, ECSU and University of North Carolina officials will
be tasked with finding the right man or
woman to lead the university forward.
Even that crucial priority, however,
shouldn’t overshadow rebuilding of the
campus police department and assurances to students, parents, faculty and
staff that, when the fall semester begins
in August, the campus will be safe and
that any crimes committed there will be
vigilantly investigated.
Getting to that point will first require
a full accounting of the actions and mismanagement within the campus police
department.
The department is currently being
overseen by former Rocky Mount Police
Chief John Manley, who is acting as interim campus police chief. In addition,
thanks to a mutual aid agreement with
the Elizabeth City Police Department,
ECPD officers are on campus as are officers from other UNC-system campuses.
Those steps were taken
Accordingly, even though
following the April 25 susGilchrist may be leaving
ur iew
pension and subsequent
ECSU next month, he and
resignation on May 10 of
other administrators must
campus Police Chief Sam
enable efforts to explain
Beamon. Beamon was
the campus police debasuspended after ECSU
cle. But at least publicly,
&$46 $IBODFMMPS
announced the State BuGilchrist’s response so far
8JMMJF + (JMDISJTU BO
reau of Investigation was
has been tepid. At a press
OPVODFE IJT SFTJHOB
UJPO 'SJEBZ KVTU EBZT
probing allegations of obconference Monday, he
BGUFS BO JOWFTUJHBUJPO
struction of justice and
seemed to back away from
SFWFBMFEUIBUDSJN
intimidation of a witness.
any responsibility.
JOBM DPNQMBJOUT PO UIF
That probe was launched
Asked about the six-year
&$46 DBNQVT IBWF
in response to accusations
backlog of cases, Gilchrist
HPOF VOJOWFTUJHBUFE
that a campus housing seresponded that his adminTJODF
curity officer assaulted a
istration was not involved
student in her dorm room
in “micromanaging” the
last month.
police department. “We
Within a week after
were not aware the inves"TVOJWFSTJUZPGàDJBMT
Beamon’s resignation, oftigations were not being
CFHJOUIFJSTFBSDIUPSF
QMBDF (JMDISJTU UIF PO
ficials reported that the
done,” he said.
HPJOH JOWFTUJHBUJPO PG
ECSU Police Department
Granted, micromanagDBNQVTQPMJDFNVTUCF
had failed to properly
ing is not good policy, but
B QSJPSJUZ UP BTTVSF BD
investigate 125 criminal
neither is a policy of no
DPVOUBCJMJUZBOETBGFUZ
complaints — including
management at all, and it
BT XFMM BT FGGFDUJWF GV
18 possible sexual assaults
appears the administraUVSF MFBEFSTIJQ BU UIF
— dating as far back as
tion had scant oversight of
VOJWFSTJUZ
2007.
campus security.
Why campus crimes
At the very least, the
were allowed to go unreECSU administrator who
solved is a question that ECSU and the oversees campus security should have
UNC system must have answers for. an accurate accounting of crimes comCrimes left uninvestigated affect the mitted — and resolved — on campus.
safety of everyone on campus. AdditionThat’s critical to monitoring the safety
ally, victims of those crimes have a right of students. If the administration had
to have their cases prosecuted and see no idea what cases were being reported,
the guilty brought to justice.
investigated and resolved, how could
The issue
Our position
they make decisions to ensure campus
safety?
Additionally, Gilchrist also acknowledged that staffing for the campus police
department had been erratic, even suggesting that the shortage of officers contributed to the backlog of uninvestigated
cases.
The ECSU Police Department currently has seven officers — about half the 12
officers the department had last year.
“Very seldom have we had a full core
of 12 officers,” Gilchrist said.
If the campus police department is
operating on less than — in this case
roughly half — its full contingent of
officers, just what does that say about
campus safety, never mind the ability
to investigate the backlog of crimes and
complaints already on the books?
What makes these uninvestigated cases and security issues even more egregious is that they would have continued
had the victim of last month’s alleged
sexual assault not gone over the heads
of campus police to report the incident.
It took the resulting investigation by the
SBI and involvement of Elizabeth City
police to reveal very serious failures and
shortcomings by campus officials.
A full, unvarnished accounting of what
happened in the ECSU police department
is needed to rectify failed policies that
compromised safety. Additionally, knowing what happened can help guide decisions on the style of leadership needed
at ECSU in the years ahead.
In the Public’s Opinion
What is your favorite part of the annual NC Potato Festival?
Compiled by Jason Balduf
Ben Baker
Elizabeth City
“The rides.”
Timothy Roane
Elizabeth City
“I think I will have to go
with the food.”
Jariah Bell
Elizabeth City
“The food.”
Rachel Clark
Elizabeth City
“I like it all.”
Blair Harris
Camden
Kayla McCory
Camden
“Being able to hang out
with my friends.”
“All the stuff to buy.”
Letters/Other Views
Some bad bills are
gone, others survive
T
his session of the North Carolina General Assembly won’t remind anyone of Jimmy Stewart
in “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.”
Thus far, Republicans running the
show have passed some downright
mean bills cutting unemployment
benefits (though the federal government would have paid for an extension), not allowing more workingclass people to join Medicaid, the
federal/state health insurance program for the poor — the feds would
have covered that, too — and appear
poised to punish the middle-class
with so-called tax reform.
Even House Speaker Thom Tillis,
who has visions of becoming a United States senator, has cautioned some
of his more enthusiastic tea party
friends to pull the reins some.
But so far, it’s been quite a show.
This week, that moment known as
the “crossover deadline,” wherein a
bill must have passed one chamber to
stay alive, came and went.
There are reasons to rejoice, and
others to worry. Most of the good
news has to do not with progressive
legislation that advanced, but with
bills that didn’t cross over. Among
those that failed:
• A silly attempt to repeal a common-sense requirement that motorcycle riders wear helmets.
• A move to allow lobbyists to again
shower lawmakers with gifts.
• A preposterous attempt to have
the legislature overturn local bans
on smoking in public.
Alas, there are some bad ideas still
alive, from a bill that would allow
concealed-carry gun permit-holders
to take their weapons into bars and
restaurants with liquor and onto college campuses to another to replace
RaleIgh News & OBseRveR
incumbents on various state board
with Republicans to curbs on waterquality rules for Jordan Lake. And
nixing the city of Raleigh’s contract
to lease Dix Hospital property for a
park is still in a bill on Jones Street.
Meantime, both chambers have
tax reform plans that would reduce
state revenue by $1 billion or more.
And naturally, the tax burden on the
middle class would grow while the
wealthy would enjoy more relief. Sen.
Phil Berger, Republican and president pro-tem of his chamber, even
had a visit from Grover Norquist, the
hard-right ideologue who wanted to
endorse Berger’s radical tax reform
plan, which he rolled out along with
a “calculator” whereby people could
figure out how much his tax plan
would help them.
Turned out, if you were in the
middle class or a person of lower income, the answer to the “how much
will I save” question was “nothing”
or “Holy cow, it’s more.”
Before members of the House
and Senate engage in radical tax reform that could dramatically reduce
state revenues and perhaps increase
the tax burden on average people,
they might consider a pause. A long
pause. Such as one that would delay
any such action until the even-year
short session and given lawmakers
who are at this point facing many
more bills than they have time to really consider a chance to catch their
breath.
Tax reform once done is hard to
correct. Revenue lost is hard to regain. A delay of a few months will be
no threat to the republic.
A start on tax reform; more to do
S
o North Carolina has
been mulling, studying,
hemming and hawing
about tax reform for more
than a decade. But now that
everyone’s on board to finally
get it done, the proposals on
the table are all about cutting taxes, not just reforming
them. And (before you get
excited) not cutting them for
everyone.
Republican Gov. Pat McCrory asked for revenue-neutral tax reform in his budget,
meaning a system that brings
in the same amount that’s collected now. Republican Sen.
Bob Rucho of Matthews told
the Observer in 2011 that any
tax reform should be revenue
neutral.
That idea has vanished like
the mid-20th century economy
on which the current tax code
was built. The N.C. Senate’s
plan aims to cut taxes by $1
billion over three years. The
House plan released this week
ChaRlOtte OBseRveR
cuts taxes by $1.2 billion over
five years.
North Carolina badly needs
to change its tax system. The
key is to modernize the tax
code in a way that can still
support schools, community
colleges, higher education,
health care, prisons, parks
and other state responsibilities — the things that have
made North Carolina a leader
in the South for decades.
The Senate and House plans
both fail this test. Remember
the goal: A modern-day tax
system that is fair, stable and
adequate.
The Senate’s tax overhaul
already looked wrong-headed
to us, but anti-tax fanatic Grover Norquist’s blessing of it
this week confirmed that.
The plan would significantly
cut taxes for the wealthy while
raising them on the lower and
middle class. It eliminates progressive brackets in personal
income taxes in favor of a flat
4.5 percent tax (down from
the current range of 6 to 7.75
percent). Most egregiously, it
applies a 6.5 percent sales tax
on groceries and prescription
drugs. Both parties came together in the 1990s to end the
sales tax on groceries; reinstating it, at this even higher
rate, would dramatically hurt
thousands of families.
The House plan takes a
more measured approach.
It cuts tax rates across the
board, but not as deeply as
the Senate, and maintains the
current exemption for groceries and prescriptions.
Both plans start with a solid
approach: expanding the sales
tax to more services while cutting rates. But some details
are flawed in each, and the final plan should be, as McCrory and Rucho both once said,
tax reform, not a tax cut.
write us
Letters by maiL
Letters in Person
the daily advance
P.O. Box 588
elizabeth city, nc 27907-0588
the daily advance
215 S. Water St.
elizabeth city, nc 27907-0588
The Daily Advance welcomes the opinions of its readers. Letters
should be directed to the editor, limited to no more than 300 words
and include the name, address and phone number of the writer.
Letters without a name or a phone number will not be printed. Only
the writer’s name and city of residence will be published with letters.
Letters by fax
Letters by e-maiL
(252) 335-4415
elizabethcity@dailyadvance.com
REGION
Governor defends Pageant
road funding plan
staff photo by thomas j. turney
judges speak to the contestants in the Little miss tater
tot pageant held at mariners’
Wharf on saturday, an event
that was among many in this
year’s nC potato festival.
Continued from Page 1A
Mid-Currituck
bridge ‘in process’
By REGGIE PONDER
Staff Writer
EDENTON — Gov. Pat
McCrory on Saturday defended his transportation
funding plan, saying it
will boost the economies
of rural areas.
While
most advocates
for rural
economic
development have
lauded the
state’s current highMcCrory
way funding equity formula for
ensuring roads in rural
areas don’t fall through
the funding cracks, McCrory said the equity formula has not been strategic in terms of connecting
rural areas to the state’s
job-generating urban centers.
“The current plan hasn’t
brought jobs to the rural
areas,” McCrory, who was
in Edenton to help the
town celebrate its 300th
anniversary, said during a
brief interview following
his address at the 300th
anniversary ceremony on
the historic 1767 Courthouse Green.
McCrory said his new
strategic mobility formula
would help — rather than
hurt — rural areas.
“I think it will be better
for the entire state, including the rural areas,” McCrory said.
The focus is on strategic connectors, which will
“We need
to work on
connecting this
area to other
medical, educational
and jobs centers.”
Anthony tAtA
State transportation
secretary speaking
Saturday in Edenton
connect rural areas to the
state’s economic centers.
One of the things that
could be coming in the future is an interstate connector between Raleigh
and Norfolk, Va., according to McCrory.
“That’s having a little
out-of-the-box
thinking
there,” McCrory said.
State
Transportation
Secretary Anthony Tata,
who also was in town for
the 300th anniversary celebration, echoed McCrory’s comments.
“We need to work on connecting this area to other
medical, educational and
jobs centers,” Tata said.
McCrory also said he expects the Currituck MidCounty Bridge will meet
the criteria to be funded
as part of the state’s transportation plan.
“With or without the
legislation, the bridge is
going to be a part of our
process,” McCrory said
when asked if it’s his
understanding that the
bridge will be built.
Asked again if it’s his
understanding that the
bridge will be constructed, McCrory said, “it’s in
our process right now and
that’s our goal.”
Brooke Gonzales said
Rhylee Gonzales came up
with the idea to enter the
contest.
“She heard people talking about it, so she wanted to do it and I said, ‘Let’s
go’,” the mother said.
The mother was asked
whether she was confident that the daughter
would win.
“I’ve never had her in
anything like this, so I
was a little worried when
it came down to talking,
but obviously she took
the microphone and just
went with it,” the mother
said.
The only part of the
contest that struck the
mother as a bit odd was
the daughter saying she
wants to be a veterinarian. There were other contestants who also made
the same statement.
Brooke Gonzales said
Rhylee Gonzales has
said that she wants to be
in the Coast Guard as a
rescue swimmer or a pilot. Rhylee Gonzales’ father serves in the Coast
Guard.
Rhylee Gonzales, as the
new Miss Tater Tot, will
receive free McDonald’s
Happy Meals once a week
for a year.
The Little Miss Tater
Tot contest was held at
Mariners’ Wharf Park.
At the intersection of
Main and Poindexter
streets, numerous grownups were participating in
the National Potato Peeling Contest, with the potatoes provided by George
Wood Farms.
First Citizens Bank won
the team part of the competition, with 12.9 pounds
of peeled potatoes.
A
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Jennifer Pingel is First
Citizens Bank’s supervisor of operations and service in Elizabeth City. Pingel said that she and her
teammates were shocked
because they had no idea
they would win, but that
they were glad that they
finished first.
“It’s an honor to win
and be represented in the
community,” said Pingel,
who has competed as a
First Citizens member
for approximately four or
five years.
Matt Scribner, of Gateway Bank, won the individual part of the competition, with 4.7 pounds of
peeled potatoes.
Scribner, who works in
commercial banking, said
that he believed Saturday
was the fourth year in a
row to have participated
in the contest.
“And every year, I’ve
gotten a little closer to being the potato champion,
so this year, I was finally
able to do it,” he said.
Asked why he believed
he won, he smiled and replied, “I was blessed with
big potatoes. That seems
to be the trick.”
Scribner received a
$100 check from Elizabeth City Downtown Inc.,
which is the chief backer
of the Potato Festival, but
contest organizers said
will be able to receive free
servings of McDonald’s
French Fries for a year.
Additionally, the contest
organizers honored the
Elizabeth City Historic
Neighborhood
Association for finishing second
in the team category and
honored Gorden Dove, of
CenturyLink, for finishing
second in the individual
category. ECHNA had 12.3
pounds of peeled potatoes
and Dove had 4.5 pounds of
peeled potatoes.
CenturyLink sponsored
the peeling contest.
he gave the check back and
asked for the money to be
considered a donation to
ECDI.
First Citizens Bank’s
bank’s four-member team
each received $25 checks
from ECDI.
Also, Scribner and First
Citizens team members
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A
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Business
THE WEEK IN REVIEW
WEEKLY DOW JONES
WEEKLY STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS
u
NYSE
d
9,576.42 +133.66
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
NBGreece
2.39
DirDGldBr 118.72
DaqoNE rs
7.87
Theragen
2.02
AegeanMP
8.12
PumaBio n 37.36
ITT Ed
25.75
OwensC wtB 2.61
Cyan n
13.80
E-CDang
5.71
+1.08
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+.53
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+24.3
+24.3
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+23.6
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Name
Last Chg %Chg
DxGldBll rs
8.22 -3.84
SibanyeG n 2.91 -.76
CS VS3xSlv 8.72 -2.13
RioAltoM g
2.83 -.67
HarmonyG
3.76 -.86
SeabGld g
9.30 -2.12
FMajSilv g
9.56 -2.10
IAMGld g
4.68 -1.00
CS VS3xGld 20.49 -4.34
Pretium g
6.27 -1.31
-31.8
-20.7
-19.6
-19.1
-18.6
-18.6
-18.0
-17.6
-17.5
-17.3
NYSE MKT
2,426.69 -13.44
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Name
Last Chg %Chg
Ever-Glory
3.23 +1.11
Flanign
10.18 +2.28
AmShrd
2.07 +.33
ASpecRlty
3.39 +.53
OverhillF
4.96 +.70
SuprmInd
5.05 +.68
SaratogaRs 2.55 +.32
RELM
3.60 +.41
InvCapHld
3.60 +.40
SL Ind
23.01 +2.52
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+19.0
+18.5
+16.4
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+14.3
+12.9
+12.5
+12.3
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
AlldNevG
NwGold g
TanzRy g
NovaGld g
SandstG g
Vicon
MAG Slv g
AdcareHlt
BovieMed
EmrldO rs
6.97 -2.52 -26.6
6.30 -1.18 -15.8
2.38 -.43 -15.3
2.13 -.38 -15.1
6.70 -1.01 -13.1
2.60 -.39 -13.0
6.53 -.94 -12.6
5.08 -.72 -12.4
3.73 -.49 -11.6
6.11 -.79 -11.4
u
NASDAQ
3,498.97 +62.39
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
RealGSolar
MayflwBcp
SolarCity n
DexMedia n
EagleBu rs
Mannatech
HutchT
SpanBdcst
CmstkHldg
Sky-mobi
4.03
17.82
45.00
22.12
5.10
12.75
4.74
4.50
3.12
2.93
+2.17
+7.57
+16.12
+6.98
+1.53
+3.75
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+1.25
+.85
+.76
+116.7
+73.9
+55.8
+46.1
+42.9
+41.7
+39.4
+38.5
+37.4
+35.0
Name
Last Chg %Chg
ROI Acq un
Torm rs
GenFin un
MecoxLn rs
ArubaNet
Cyclacel rs
HltInsInn n
InfinityPh
UniPixel
StarBulk rs
5.00
3.03
3.43
2.87
13.10
3.04
11.39
24.91
27.19
6.08
-5.60
-1.37
-1.27
-1.03
-4.18
-.96
-3.49
-7.12
-7.56
-1.65
-52.8
-31.1
-26.9
-26.4
-24.2
-24.0
-23.5
-22.2
-21.8
-21.3
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
BkofAm
6029912
S&P500ETF 4768499
SprintNex 2692733
AMD
2542340
NokiaCp 2406926
iShJapn
2273204
FordM
2114244
iShEMkts 1988236
SPDR Fncl 1914797
GenElec 1825124
+.41
+3.53
-.04
+.12
+.07
+.35
+.97
-.15
+.70
+.56
NwGold g
AbdAsPac
CheniereEn
AlldNevG
NovaGld g
CFCda g
NA Pall g
Rentech
VantageDrl
Neuralstem
1,923
1,268
900
71
3,235
44
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
Total issues
Unchanged
Vol (00) Last Chg
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
Total issues
Unchanged
Volume
13.43
166.94
7.32
4.07
3.73
12.11
15.08
43.42
19.95
23.46
DIARY
16,578,852,768
Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
207437 6.30 -1.18
174064 7.29 -.16
172025 30.60 +.71
143318 6.97 -2.52
133924 2.13 -.38
122489 15.23 -1.29
104053 1.05 -.05
97520 2.24 -.03
71578 1.79 +.14
69061 1.49 +.20
DIARY
Volume
193
256
48
44
470
21
418,449,314
Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
Cisco
3748914
SiriusXM 2829008
Microsoft 2582286
Intel
1629619
Zynga
1550483
Facebook 1458979
PwShs QQQ1449675
RschMotn 1416749
MicronT
1331894
Groupon 1214020
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
Total issues
Unchanged
Volume
DIARY
24.24
3.50
34.87
24.04
3.38
26.25
74.30
14.62
11.31
6.97
+3.14
+.11
+2.41
-.46
+.15
-.43
+1.25
-.92
+.49
+.72
1,731
888
568
62
2,667
48
8,946,937,429
-26.81 123.57
Close: 15,354.40
1-week change: 235.91 (1.6%)
16,000
MON
60.44
TUES
WED
-42.47 121.18
THUR
High
15,357.40
6,549.73
537.86
9,578.35
2,509.57
3,499.21
1,667.47
17,599.95
996.47
4,780.12
FRI
15,000
14,000
12,000
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
Low
12,035.09
4,795.28
435.57
7,222.88
2,164.87
2,726.68
1,266.74
13,248.92
729.75
3,656.42
Name
Dow Jones Industrials
Dow Jones Transportation
Dow Jones Utilities
NYSE Composite
NYSE MKT Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 500
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
Lipper Growth Index
Last
N
D
J
F
M
A
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Last
Wk
Wk YTD
Chg %Chg %Chg
Name
Ex
Div
AMD
AlcatelLuc
Altria
BB&T Cp
BkofAm
BariPVix rs
Chevron
Cisco
CocaCola s
Dell Inc
Disney
DomRescs
DuPont
DukeEn rs
ExxonMbl
FCtzBA
FordM
GenElec
HamptnRB
HewlettP
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
Nasd
NY
Nasd
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
Nasd
NY
NY
Nasd
NY
...
4.07 +.12 +3.0 +69.6
...
1.54 +.04 +2.7 +10.8
1.76 37.44 +.76 +2.1 +19.1
.92 32.55 +1.14 +3.6 +12.6
.04 13.43 +.41 +3.1 +15.7
... 18.03 -.43 -2.3 -43.3
4.00 123.42 +1.19 +1.0 +14.1
.68 24.24 +3.14 +14.9 +23.4
1.12 42.97 +.82 +1.9 +18.5
.32 13.40 -.05 -0.4 +32.1
.75 66.58 -.62 -0.9 +33.7
2.25 61.17 +1.42 +2.4 +18.1
1.80 55.89 +.88 +1.6 +24.3
3.06 71.62 +.21 +0.3 +12.3
2.52 91.76 +1.62 +1.8 +6.0
1.20 198.85 +4.90 +2.5 +21.6
.40 15.08 +.97 +6.9 +16.4
.76 23.46 +.56 +2.4 +11.8
...
1.31 +.02 +1.6 +10.1
.58 21.27 -.27 -1.3 +49.3
Last
M
Wk
Wk YTD
Chg %Chg %Chg
Name
Ex
Div
iShJapn
iShEMkts
IBM
JohnJn
Lowes
McDnlds
Merck
Microsoft
NokiaCp
Oracle
PepsiCo
PhilipMor
ProctGam
S&P500ETF
SiriusXM
SmithfF
SprintNex
SPDR Fncl
TimeWarn
WalMart
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
Nasd
NY
Nasd
NY
NY
NY
NY
Nasd
NY
NY
NY
NY
NY
.19 12.11 +.35
.74 43.42 -.15
3.80 208.44 +3.97
2.64 88.09 +2.33
.64 42.67 +.60
3.08 101.54 +1.34
1.72 45.99 +.04
.92 34.87 +2.41
...
3.73 +.07
.24 35.03 +1.01
2.27 83.80 +.80
3.40 95.68 +2.36
2.41 80.02 +1.26
3.18 166.94 +3.53
.05
3.50 +.11
... 25.82 -.19
...
7.32 -.04
.27 19.95 +.70
1.15 60.71 -.23
1.88 77.87 -1.02
+3.0
-0.3
+1.9
+2.7
+1.4
+1.3
+0.1
+7.4
+1.9
+3.0
+1.0
+2.5
+1.6
+2.2
+3.2
-0.7
-0.5
+3.6
-0.4
-1.3
+24.2
-2.1
+8.8
+25.7
+20.1
+15.1
+12.3
+30.6
-5.6
+5.1
+22.5
+14.4
+17.9
+17.2
+21.1
+19.7
+29.1
+21.7
+26.9
+14.1
Stock Footnotes: (*6*%&/%3"/%&"2/*/(3*/"/"%*"/%0--"23)0&/04.&&4$0/4*/5&%-*34*/(34"/%"2%3-'"4&'*-*/(7*4)
/&7*/1"347&&,31'2&'&22&%2340$,)"35/%&2(0/&"2&6&23&340$,31-*40'"4-&"341&2$&/47*4)*/4)&
1"349&"224*()440#593&$52*49"4"31&$*'*&%12*$&340$,)"331-*4#9"4-&"341&2$&/47*4)*/4)&-"349&"25//*43
6+/#"/,2514$9022&$&*6&23)*17%!)&/%*342*#54&%7*!)&/*335&%74!"22"/43Mutual Fund Footnotes: #&&
$06&2*/(."2,&4$0343*31"*%'20.'5/%"33&43%&'&22&%3"-&3$)"2(&022&%&.14*0/'&&''20/4-0"%3"-&3$)"2(&3.
5-4*1-&'&&3"2&$)"2(&%/04"6"*-"#-&112&6*053%"9:3/&4"33&46"-5&3'5/%31-*43)"2&3%52*/(4)&7&&,8'5/%
1"*%"%*342*#54*0/%52*/(4)&7&&,Gainers and Losers .534#&7024)"4-&"3440#&-*34&%*/4"#-&3"4-&'4Most Actives .534
#&7024)"4-&"34
0-5.&*/)5/%2&%30'3)"2&3Source: )&330$*"4&%2&33"-&3'*(52&3"2&5/0''*$*"-
Prime Rate
Discount Rate
Federal Funds Rate
Treasuries
3-month
6-month
5-year
10-year
30-year
Wk
Chg
Last
MONEY RATES
13,000
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Dow Jones industrials
52-Week
15,354.40
6,549.16
516.70
9,576.42
2,426.69
3,498.97
1,667.47
17,599.95
996.28
4,780.12
+235.91
+173.64
+2.99
+133.66
-13.44
+62.39
+33.77
+340.30
+21.12
+86.23
3.25
0.75
.00-.25
0.04
0.08
0.83
1.95
3.17
0.04
0.09
0.82
1.90
3.10
YTD
%Ch
+1.56
+2.72
+.58
+1.42
-.55
+1.82
+2.07
+1.97
+2.17
+1.84
+17.1
+23.4
+14.0
+13.4
+3.0
+15.8
+16.9
+17.3
+17.3
+16.7
CURRENCIES
Pvs Week
3.25
0.75
.00-.25
Wk
%Chg
Last
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
1.0270
1.5173
1.0284
.7795
103.18
12.3411
.9729
2*4*3) 105/% &812&33&% */ %0--"23
3)07%0--"2*/'02&*(/$522&/$9
MUTUAL FUNDS
Total Assets
Obj ($Mlns)
Name
PIMCO TotRetIs
Vanguard TotStIdx
Vanguard InstIdxI
Vanguard TotStIAdm
Vanguard 500Adml
Fidelity Contra
American Funds CapIncBuA m
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
Vanguard InstPlus
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
American Funds InvCoAmA m
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
Vanguard TotStIIns
Dodge & Cox Stock
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Vanguard WelltnAdm
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Vanguard TotIntl
American Funds BalA m
CI
LB
LB
LB
LB
LG
IH
MA
LG
LB
WS
LB
CA
LB
LV
FB
MA
LV
FB
MA
182,816
92,413
76,879
69,516
67,851
64,295
63,587
63,319
60,603
58,245
50,546
49,009
46,945
46,939
45,650
44,296
44,238
44,141
43,686
37,702
NAV
11.23
41.88
153.14
41.90
154.12
89.30
57.87
19.98
39.84
153.15
42.00
35.17
2.38
41.90
144.19
38.91
65.09
36.46
16.11
22.85
Total Return/Rank
4-wk
12-mo
5-year
-0.4
+7.9
+7.7
+7.9
+7.7
+7.9
+4.5
+4.7
+8.2
+7.7
+7.3
+7.6
+4.0
+7.9
+7.5
+8.8
+4.7
+7.6
+6.5
+5.7
+6.2/B
+31.2/B
+30.7/C
+31.3/B
+30.7/C
+26.0/C
+21.3/A
+23.1/A
+32.3/A
+30.7/C
+32.0/B
+30.7/C
+21.1/A
+31.3/B
+39.9/A
+37.4/A
+22.2/B
+29.5/D
+28.5/D
+24.0/A
Pct
Load
+7.7/A
+6.0/A
+5.6/B
+6.1/A
+5.5/B
+5.7/B
+3.5/C
+6.1/A
+3.9/D
+5.6/B
+2.1/C
+4.8/C
+5.9/B
+6.1/A
+4.1/C
+0.7/A
+6.6/A
+5.5/B
-1.6/C
+6.7/A
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
5.75
5.75
5.75
NL
5.75
5.75
4.25
NL
NL
NL
NL
5.75
NL
5.75
0/3&26"4*6&--0$"4*0//4&2.&%*"4&&2.0/%5201&40$,02&*(/"2(&-&/%02&*(/"2(&2074
"2(& "-5&!02-%--0$"4*0/"2(&-&/%"2(&2074) "2(& "-5&0%&2"4&--0$"4*0/*%"
*%"1 "-5&1&$*"-49)&"4)!!02-%40$,04"-&452/)/(*/ 7*4)%*6*%&/%32&*/6&34&%"/,07'5/%
04)&237*4)3".&0#+&$4*6&*3*/401*/#0440.*//*4/64*/*.5./&&%&%40*/6&34*/'5/%Source: 02/*/(3
Albemarle Audiology holds grand reopening
Larger office more
patient-friendly
sity. He established Henderson & Associates at the
start of the 1980s operated
out of his home before setting up the location along
Camden Causeway in 1995.
Also, he was the clinic director at Albemarle Speech
and Hearing Center in
Elizabeth City from 1981 to
2008. In 2008, he established
By WILLIAM F. WEST
Staff Writer
CAMDEN — A regional
hearing business has expanded and upgraded its
location to better serve customers.
Albemarle
Audiology,
located in the 300 block of
Camden Causeway, early
last week celebrated a grand
reopening. Albemarle Audiology evaluates patients,
checks to see whether they
have any hearing problems,
makes referrals or, if a
hearing aid is needed, sets
them up to wear the device.
Thomas Henderson, an
audiologist who owns the
business, has two hearing
aid specialists working
with him.
Henderson said the improvements to the business
came as a result of deciding to switch Albemarle
Audiology’s space with his
other business, Henderson
& Associates, which has
also been in the same building with Albemarle Audiology.
The result of both a decision to switch spaces and
make renovations is that
Albemarle Audiology has
a significantly larger office
that is much more patientfriendly, along with a nice
waiting room with a television, coffee and snacks,
Henderson said.
Business
Briefs
From staff reports
Bogues appointed
Claude Bogues, a certified public accountant from
Durham,
has been
appointed
to the Fayetteville
State University
Board of
T r ustees.
Bogues
He
will
serve a four-year term
starting July 1. He is a
Camden County native. He
is the owner of Claude M.
Bogues, CPA, PLLC, an accounting firm in Durham.
Top agents named
Taylor Mueller Realty
announced Jake Twiford
as top sales agent for April
and broker in charge, Norma James, as top listing
agent.
Top agent named
Sun Realty announced
Mary Fouty-Davis as top
agent for April.
Bankruptcy SalE
staff photo by thomas j. turney
cAll foR offERS: junE 12
Guests fill their plates at a buffet at the grand reopening of
albemarle audiology on tuesday.
The work on the building
started sometime around
February or March and
took approximately two to
three weeks to complete,
Henderson said.
The other business, Henderson & Associates, is an
industrial related practice
serving the east coast, the
southeast and the southwest.
Albemarle Audiology.
sociates has a Web site at
Both Albemarle Audiol- http://www.hendersonanogy and Henderson & Asso- dassoc.com/
ciates are open from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Mondays through
Fridays and can be reached
by phone at (252) 331-2437.
Also, Albemarle Audiology has a Web site at http://
albemarleaudiolo g ync.
com/ and Henderson & As-
Pr
o
former Interstate br ands corp. assets
Henderson & Associates,
which has seven employees,
is in the business of going
out in mobile units, checking the sounds of business
and industrial buildings
and conducting testing of
workers who are exposed
to certain noise levels.
Henderson holds a master’s degree in audiology
from East Carolina Univer-
6,516 Sq ft building on .70 AcRES
1176 US Highway 17 South, Elizabeth City, NC
· 150’ of frontage along US 17 with over 16,000 vehicles per day
· Possible uses include retail with a need for warehouse/storage
· Located south of downtown Elizabeth City
AdditionAl industriAl & retAil properties throughout 34 stAtes
HostessRealEstate.com
carpet shops
2 Mill End Court
ElizabEth City
335-2915
Real Estate
855.755.2300
This offering is subject to prior sale & may be withdrawn, modified or canceled without notice at any time. This is not a solicitation nor offering to residents of any state where this offering may be prohibited.
!"#! "
Bank local. Hire local. Grow local.
townebank.com
TowneBank is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
e
gr
s
Obituaries
Louise Burgess
Elizabeth City resident
Louise Sawyer Burgess,
90, of the 200 block of Seldon Street, Elizabeth City,
died Saturday, May 18, 2013,
at Albemarle Hospital.
Arrangements are pending with Twiford Funeral
Home, Memorial Chapel,
Elizabeth City.
Delma Copeland
Elizabeth City resident
Delma Mae Rogerson Copeland, 87, died Friday, May
17, 2013, at W.R. Winslow
Memorial Home.
Mrs. Copeland was born
in Pasquotank County, the
daughter
of the late
John and
Katie Elliott Rogerson and
was
the
widow of
Carey CoCopeland
peland.
She was a member of Pearl
Street Pentecostal Church.
Mrs. Copeland is survived by a daughter, Cathy
Croser
and
husband,
Charles, of Elizabeth City;
a son, Lang Copeland and
wife, Darlene, of Elizabeth City; four grandchildren, Brenda Mishler and
husband, Marty, Glenda
Harris, Rob Copeland and
Crystal Copeland; and
five great-grandchildren,
Kaitlyn Harris, Brittany
Mishler, Jon Copeland,
Krisdianna Copeland, and
Marisa Copeland. She was
predeceased by a son, R.C.
Copeland; a sister, Katie
Rogerson; and three brothers, Johnny Rogerson, Melvin Rogerson and Clarence
Rogerson.
Funeral services will be
conducted Monday, May 20,
2013, at 2 p.m. in Twiford
Memorial Chapel, 405 East
Church Street, Elizabeth
City, with the Rev. Rick
Lowery officiating. Burial
will be in New Hollywood
Cemetery. The family will
receive friends today, from 4
p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Twiford
Memorial Chapel and immediately after the service
in the lobby of the funeral
home.
Memorial donations may
be made to Pearl Street
Pentecostal Church Building Fund, P.O. Box 602,
Elizabeth City, N.C. 27909.
The family will be at the
residence of the daughter,
RecoRds, eTc.
Cathy Croser and husband,
Charles, 119 Chappell’s Garden Road, Elizabeth City.
Twiford Memorial Chapel, 405 East Church Street,
Elizabeth City, is assisting
the Copeland family. Condolences may be expressed
to the family at twifordfh.
com.
I. Alphonso
Elliott Sr.
Tyner resident
Ivie Alphonso Elliott Sr.,
92, of 116 Sign Pine Road,
Tyner, died Friday, May 17,
2013, in his home.
Mr. Elliott was born in
Perquimans County and
was the son of the late Anthony Benjamin and Gladys Jordan Elliott. A retired
farmer, he was a member
of Happy Home Pentecostal
Holiness Church. In addition to his parents, he was
preceded in death by four
sisters, Marion Henderson,
Gertrude Keller, Margarite
Mahone, and Hattie Etheridge; and two brothers,
Troy and Joe Elliott.
Surviving are his wife
of nearly 69 years, Rella
Victoria Evans Elliott; two
daughters, Patricia Alexander and husband, Thurman, of Chesapeake, Va.,
and Robin Byrum and husband, Walter, of Tyner; two
sons, Ivie A. Elliott Jr. and
wife, Pat, of Elizabeth City
and John Martin Elliott and
wife, Joann, of Washington; a sister, Iris Byrum of
Elizabeth City; four brothers, Will Elliott and Preston Elliott and wife, Carol,
all of Hertford, and Hubert
Elliott and wife, Mary, and
Jarvis Elliott and wife,
Lois, all of Elizabeth City;
11 grandchildren; 19 greatgrandchildren; and a greatgreat-granddaughter.
Funeral services will be
held Monday at 11 a.m. in
Happy Home Pentecostal
Holiness Church by Pastor
Chuck Davis. Burial will
follow in the church cemetery. Friends may join the
family today from 5 p.m.
to 6 p.m. in Miller Funeral
Home & Crematory, 735
Virginia Road, Edenton,
and other times at the residence.
Flowers are welcomed,
or memorial contributions
may be made to the Happy
Home Church Building
Fund, 534 Happy Home
Road, Tyner, N.C. 27980.
Online condolences may
be made by visiting www.
millerfhc.com.
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
A
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House roll-call votes
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A
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
FROM PAGE ONE
edenton
Continued from Page 1A
liberty by announcing a
boycott of British tea, similar to the better-known Boston Tea Party.
“Women’s
liberation
started right here in Edenton, N.C.,” McCrory said,
referring to the leadership
role women played in the
Edenton Tea Party and
other events of the colonial period. The Edenton
Tea Party, he said, became
“a symbol of patriotism
among colonial women.”
The mention of the Edenton Tea Party led to the only
overtly partisan moment
of the ceremony, as McCrory referenced the current
controversy over Internal
Revenue Service scrutiny
of Tea Party groups.
“The IRS has stayed away
from them at this point in
time,” he said, referencing the Edenton Tea Party
event.
“That’s a little current
events commentary,” McCrory added. His quip was
greeted by laughter and applause from the crowd.
McCrory mentioned that
the vestry of St. Paul’s
Church in Edenton authored the “Test,” a document that articulated many
of the same principles of
liberty that are espoused
in the Declaration of
Independence.
staff photo by brett a. clark
Marvin DeWitte (left) welcomes Gov. pat Mccrory at the edenton waterfront during saturday’s
celebration of the town’s 300th anniversary.
Festival
Continued from Page 1A
volunteers.
Organizer Rebecca Cross
said, “I’m very pleased with
how the festival turned out.
I’m very optimistic about
rain not keeping folks
away.”
Markwood on Saturday
also said that she liked the
Potato Festival because
of the automobiles from
days gone by that were on
display on part of Main
Street.
Wilson Bryant of Elizabeth City, was looking at a
Ford Thunderbird from the
1950s.
“I like to see the vintage
cars,” Bryant said. “I like
the styling and how sleek
they were in the past.”
Asked whether he would
like to drive one of the cars
home, he smiled and replied, “I wouldn’t mind it.”
In the heart of the Harbor of Hospitality, as bands
played on a large stand,
vendors were offering either food or a wide variety
of goods and services.
Raymond Kallas, a food
vendor from Raleigh who
has been coming to the festival for three years, said
business was good, but not
like in the past.
Kallas said the rain hurt
his business a bit, but that
this is one of the best events
he and his team of servers
have participated in.
Kallas noted the presence of anywhere from 10
“That was so courageous,
and we must never take
their courage for granted,”
McCrory said.
Not only did Edenton play
an important part in events
the country is proud of, but
its history also sheds light
on some of the chapters in
history that the nation is
not proud of, according to
McCrory. As an example,
he cited Edenton’s Harriet Jacobs, who wrote a
narrative of her life as a
slave and “debunked the
myth of the happy and
content slave.”
A highlight of the day
was McCrory’s greeting
Gov. Charles Eden — portrayed by a historical reenactor in colonial attire
— as the colonial governor
arrived at the town docks
aboard the Silver Chalice
wooden sailing boat.
“Governor, you have
aged well,” McCrory said
as the actor portraying Gov.
Charles Eden stepped off
the Silver Chalice.
McCrory acknowledged
the role his predecessor of
three centuries ago played
in the state’s history. He
also praised the leaders
and citizens of Edenton for
their preservation of the
town’s history and their
work on the 300th anniversary celebration.
“Thank you to the people of Edenton,” McCrory
said.
McCrory spoke about
architectural preservation
again as he addressed the
crowd at the courthouse
green.
“The architecture here is
just magnificent,” McCrory
said, adding he appreciates
the way Edenton has pre-
to 15 customers seeking to
be served at his location
along Water Street.
He had kind words for the
Elizabeth City area, saying,
“It’s a nice, beautiful place
to come for vacation.”
Teresa Alexander, of
Elizabeth City, has been
selling homemade jewelry,
earrings and towels at
the festival for a couple of
years.
Asked how business
had been going at her spot
on Main, Alexander said,
“Not as good as last year.”
She said she believed the
weather was the reason.
“Plus, the Albemarle area
has so many things going
on at one time,” she said.
Alexander said she believes events need to be
spread out a bit.
Still, Alexander said she
was pleased to see crowds
in the streets despite an afternoon sprinkle of rain.
The festival has loyal attendees, including Amanda
Talmadge of Elizabeth
City.
“It brings everybody together,” Talmadge said.
“It’s fun. It gets you out
of the house. It gives you
something to do.”
Talmadge, accompanied
by five children, said that,
over the years, she has noticed that the festival has
become more kid-friendly,
as evidenced by rides and
shows.
Elizabeth City Area
Chamber of Commerce
President Kelly Thorsby
said she believed this year’s
event was absolutely fabu-
lous and could not be any
better.
“I know all the hard work
that goes into this,” Thorsby said, crediting Elizabeth
City Downtown Inc., which
is the local Main Street revitalization organization
and the chief backer of the
event.
Additionally,
Thorsby
credited Elizabeth CityPasquotank County Parks
and Recreation workers for
their efforts in making this
year’s event a reality.
“And it’s great to see the
community together,” she
said.
The Potato Festival began in 1940, but was put
on hold after the U.S. entry
into World War II. The festival was later held sporadically before being revived
annually in 2001.
served its historic homes
and other buildings.
N.C. Cultural Resources
Secretary Susan Kluttz also
thanked the people of Edenton for their good work in
preserving the town’s history and architecture.
McCrory cited the designation of Edenton as “the
South’s prettiest town” by
major magazines.
“And let me say as governor, this is the nation’s
prettiest town,” McCrory
said.
McCrory said North Carolina today is living up to
the pioneer spirit of Edenton by leading the way in
new technology and ideas.
He closed his address
with a message directed
especially to the younger
people in the audience:
“Never take our freedom
for granted.”
Edenton Mayor Roland
Vaughan told the crowd he
appreciated people coming out despite the cloudy
weather and occasional
periods of rain. He said
he knows a lot of people
prayed for a four-hour
window of relatively clear
weather and he appreciates
those prayers.
The Meherrin Nation
held an encampment in
conjunction with the 300th
anniversary celebration.
In addition, Michael Jock
of Akwesasne, N.Y., was
present as an ambassador
on behalf of the Iroquois
Confederacy.
Bob Quinn, chairman of
Edenton’s 300th Anniversary Planning Committee,
said it was a “happy and
jovial crowd” at the event,
despite the weather.
“I’m very, very happy
with it,” Quinn said of the
celebration. “I’m proud of
the people that came.”
After the ceremony, there
was an opportunity for people to visit all the town’s
historic buildings for free.
Members of the Edenton
Town Council and Chowan
County Board of Commissioners attended the event
and had special seating in
front of the podium.
The celebration included
a photograph taken by the
high-tech AWARE 2 camera, which was used for
the first time at Saturday’s
gathering. The camera
takes high-quality images
of large crowds, in which
everyone in the crowd is
identifiable.
Rep. Bob Steinburg, RChowan, delivered the invocation and Secretary of
Public Safety Kieran Shanahan and Transportation
Secretary Tony Tata also
attended.
Dr. Timothy s. Witwer
announces his retirement
from his medical practice
Dr. Witwers patients have been absorbed
in the Sentara system, and will be seen at:
Sentara Internal Medicine
1507 North Road Street, Suite 2
Elizabeth City, NC 27909
Patients who wish to transfer to the
care of another doctor
Please contact 252-333-1149
to have your records transferred
To a doctor in that facility of your choice.
“Dr. Witwer thanks all of his
patients for 34 wonderful years”
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"2)
Sports
THE DAILY ADVANCE
B
SUNDAY, May 19, 2013
INSIDE
Oxbow ruins Orb’s shot at Crown, 2
• Midgett takes Dixieland race, 3
• Bradley stays ahead at Byron Nelson, 4
•
Garry Jones/aP Photo
Jockey Gary stevens (left)
embraces trainer D. Wayne
Lukas in the winner’s
circle after oxbow won the
138th Preakness stakes
horse race at Pimlico race
Course, saturday.
nHs’ Hamilton edged for 400 title
Auto Racing
ilton came in at
NHS coach
49.25 seconds,
Tony
Johnstill a strong
son said most
mark but just
onlookers fomissed on a
cused on runstate title in
ners favored
the event, held
to win in lanes
at North Caro4-6 (Hamilton
lina A&T in
was in No.
Hamilton
Beasley
Greensboro.
4) that the
Qualifying athletes from the unexpected winner, Amari
Eagles, Pasquotank and Eden- Devaughn of T.W. Andrews,
ton made the trip.
caught people and the field
track roundup
From staff reports
aJ Mast/aP Photo
ed Carpenter grabbed the pole for the Indianapolis 500 race, saturday.
GREENSBORO — Northeastern’s Aaron Hamilton
came into the 2A state track
championships with the best
400 regional time of any 2A
state runner, finishing in less
than 49 seconds.
In Friday’s state meet, Ham-
Carpenter earns Indy pole
by surprise with his personal
best time of 48.50.
“He (Hamilton) got off the
blocks kind of slow, and most
didn’t even pay attention to
the Andrews kid,” Johnson
said. “All of a sudden, he was
ahead of him.”
Hamilton also competed in
the 200 and was sixth.
The Aces’ 4x100 relay team of
See rounduP, 2b
Conley Cashes In
INDIANAPOLIS — Ed Carpenter
knew he was capable of another fast
run, and it earned him the pole for the
Indianapolis 500.
The Indianapolis native bested IndyCar racing’s big-name teams by
claiming his first 500 pole Saturday
during the “Fast Nine” qualifying
session at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Carpenter’s four-lap average of
228.762 mph in the No. 20 Chevrolet held off such marquee outfits as
Team Penske and Andretti Autosport,
who combined to claim the next eight
spots.
Andretti drivers swept the next
three spots as Carloz Munoz (228.342)
took the front middle, Marco Andretti (228.261) the outside front and E.J.
Viso (228.150) the inside of Row 2.
Penske’s A.J. Allmendinger and
Will Power, who had the top spot after
Saturday’s first session, rounded out
the second row.
Football
Redskins sign Pack’s Amerson
ASHBURN, Va. — The Washington
Redskins signed second-round draft
pick David Amerson and fourth-round
choice Phillip Thomas on Friday, leaving one of their seven selections without a rookie deal: Florida tight end
Jordan Reed.
Amerson is a cornerback from
North Carolina State who was the 51st
overall pick last month, Washington’s
highest because it traded its firstrounder to the St. Louis Rams in the
deal that brought quarterback Robert
Griffin III to the Redskins.
In 2011, Amerson set a single-season Atlantic Coast Conference record
with 13 interceptions and won the
Jack Tatum Award as the nation’s top
defensive back.
He was more of a hit-or-miss player
last season, though, making five interceptions while getting beat for some
long touchdowns.
Hockey
Red Wings even series
CHICAGO — Damien Brunner and
Brendan Smith scored in the second
period and the Detroit Red Wings beat
the Chicago Blackhawks 4-1 Saturday
in Game 2 to even their Western Conference semifinal series.
It was a strong response by the Red
Wings after Chicago handled them
easily in the series opener, 4-1.
Just as the Blackhawks did in Game
1, Detroit took control in the second
period and put the game away in the
third.
Now, the Red Wings have a chance to
take the lead when this series between
Original Six rivals shifts to Detroit for
Game 3 on Monday.
From staff and AP reports
Baseball
Staff Photo by thomaS J. turney
Currituck’s Colten Leonard is unable to make the tag on D.h. Conley’s Cory Lambert as he dives for second base, friday.
Rough start dooms Currituck in playoffs
D.H. Conley 11
Currituck 1
By Owen Hassell
Sports Editor
BARCO — This time it
wasn’t all about early Currituck errors.
Yes, they crept up again, but
D.H. Conley’s hitters and start-
ing pitcher Davis Kirkpatrick
were as much a part of negating a second-straight Knights
comeback Friday night.
The Vikings closed the door
with an 11-1 victory in five innings against host Currituck
in the third round of the 3A
state playoffs, and keyed on
what West Carteret couldn’t
in Tuesday’s second round
game — taking full advantage
of miscues with a big lead and
getting better throughout the
game.
It was the Knights (19-4)
who used that opening just to
make it to Friday, turning a 60 hole against Carteret into a
7-6 win.
Kirkpatick, who has signed
to pitch at East Carolina,
struck out 12 and was short
of a no-hitter only when Currituck leadoff batter Dakwon
Foreman ran out a grounder to
shortstop in the third inning.
Two first inning errors,
both with two outs, opened up
the Conley (24-2) offense with
three runs, and the Knights
stared at another sluggish
start.
“Getting off to that good
start was something we talked
so much about, and it happened again,” Currituck coach
See CurrituCk, 3b
Perquimans hammered by long ball
Riverside 15
Perquimans 2
By JIMMY laROUe
Sports Writer
WILLIAMSTON — Riverside’s two grand slam homers in the bottom of the first
propelled them to an 11-run
inning and a 15-2 win Friday against Perquimans
in a five-inning mercy rule
shortened game of the 1A
state playoffs.
The Pirates (18-8) had won
seven straight going into the
third round contest, including two consecutive tournament games, scoring a combined 28 runs while giving
up just two.
But the home standing
Knights (22-3), the last team
to beat Perquimans, won in
convincing fashion through
a prodigious long-ball display.
After Riverside’s first
three batters reached base
Staff Photo by
Jimmy Laroue
Perquimans’
ryan onley
crosses home
past the tag
in the Pirates’
loss at riverside in the
third round of
the 1a state
playoffs,
friday.
See Perquimans, 2b
Lady Eagles season ends in 3rd round
But then host
NortheastSouth Granville
ern, who won
plated six in
games at home
a disasterous
against Cedar
third
inning
Ridge and RoaFrom staff reports
for the Lady Eanoke
Rapids
gles, which was
in the first two
CREEDMOOR — North- too much in a
rounds,
fineastern softball kept one of 10-1 contest in
ished the seastauffer
the state’s top offensive teams the third round
simpson
son with a 16-3
scoreless for two and a half in- of the 2A state playoffs Friday record.
nings.
night.
“They got 2-3 good hits, we
South Granville 10
Northeastern 1
GaIL Burton/aP Photo
Chris Davis and the orioles let a 6-4 lead
slip in the ninth for a 10-6 defeat to the
tampa Bay rays in Baltimore, saturday.
had some errors, and it was a
two-out roll for them,” Lady
Eagles coach Chuck Wimpey
said, who loses just two players
— Ashley Stauffer and Katelynn Simpson — to graduation.
It was a contrast to last postseason, when Northeastern upset then-unbeaten Granville on
the road in the second round
See nHs, 4b
B
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
SportS two
Oxbow upsets Orb
in Preakness race
Led race from
start to finish
Associated Press
BALTIMORE — Oxbow
has won the Preakness,
ruining Orb’s bid to capture the Triple Crown.
Oxbow led from start
to finish. It was the sixth
Preakness victory for Hall
of Fame trainer D. Wayne
Lukas and 15th Triple
Crown win, the most in
horse racing history.
“I get paid to spoil
dreams,” Lukas said in an
interview with NBC moments after the race. “Unfortunately we go over
here and you can’t mail
‘em in. It’s a different surface and a different time.
You gotta line ‘em up and
win ‘em.
Orb finished fourth.
The Kentucky Derby winner was a 3-5 favorite in
Saturday’s race, but he
became another casualty
of starting on the rail in
the Preakness. Since 1950,
only two horses have won
the middle jewel of the
Triple Crown from the
No. 1 post position.
Orb’s five-race winning
streak ended on an overcast, windy day at Pimlico
Race Course. The brown
colt had not lost since Nov.
24.
Now the streak without
a Triple Crown champion
— Affirmed was the last
horse to accomplish the
feat, in 1978 — is guaranteed to last another year.
“I’m disappointed. I’ll
be more disappointed tomorrow than I am right
mike SteWaRt/aP Photo
oxbow, ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, wins the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday.
now,” said Orb’s trainer,
trainer Shug McGaughey.
“I know the game. It is
highs and lows. Probably
more lows than highs.”
Oxbow was coming off
a sixth-place finish in the
Kentucky Derby, where
he made a move for the
lead in the final turn but
faded.
In the Preakness, Hall
of Fame jockey Gary Stevens took control at the
outset and never relinquished the advantage,
winning this race for the
third time in his career.
Oxbow covered the 1
3/16th miles in 1:57.54. He
went off as a 15-1 underdog and paid $32.80, $12
and $8.80.
Itsmyluckyday finished
second and paid $7.80 and
$5. Mylute paid $5.20 to
show.
Mylute, with Rosie
Napravnik in the saddle,
came in fifth in the Kentucky Derby. Racing at the
track where she earned
her first career victory,
Napravnik was attempt-
ing to become the first
female jockey to win the
Preakness.
Lukas had three entrants in the nine-horse
race. Titletown Five and
Will Take Charge did not
finish in the money, but
the 77-year-old Hall of
Fame trainer nevertheless made it to the winner’s circle.
Oxbow bested Itsmyluckyday by 1 3/4
lengths.
For Lukas, the victory
broke a tie with “Sunny
Jim” Fitzsimmons for
most Triple Crown wins.
It meant a lot to Stevens,
too.
“It’s so special,” the
jockey said. “Wayne, he
supported me. Put me on
my first Triple Crown
winner. A lot of people
were trying to get me off.
He was the first guy to call
me up and said ‘I’m going
to have a colt for you. His
name is Oxbow.’”
Stevens added, “Wayne
is like a brother, coach, a
father figure to me.”
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Staff Photo by Jimmy LaRoue
tyler Winslow makes the grab in foul territory in Perquimans’ 15-2 loss at Riverside in the third
round of the 1a state playoffs, friday.
Perquimans
Continued from Page 1B
on two walks and an error,
Pirates’ starting pitcher
Wesley Morse walked in
the first run before giving up a grand slam to
Matt Wisniewski, who hit
Morse’s pitch over the
370-foot sign in left-center
field.
Kolby Walker then relieved Morse and got the
Pirates’ first out of the inning, but then three of the
next four Knights’ batters
got on base to set up their
second grand slam of the
inning, this one coming
from Mathin Ange, whose
shot squeaked just inside
the left field foul ball line
to make the score 9-0.
“When they started hitting the ball, we just got
down on ourselves, and
they just kept hitting the
ball,” said Perquimans senior Cole Bray.
Riverside still wasn’t
done in the first, as Lawrence Smith reached base
on an error and scored
on another error following Kyle Leggett’s single.
Wisniewski’s triple then
brought Leggett home and
by the time Walker struck
out Zach Kewell to end the
inning, Perquimans was
in an 11-run hole.
“We had the opportunity to make some plays,
and it was just one play,
and they just really swung
the bat, and they hit the
fastball well,” said Pirates
coach Justin Roberson.
“It got to the point where
it was so much that it was
hard to come back from it.
I think the guys got a little
rattled.”
“But aside from that inning, I think we bounced
back well. We showed a
lot of character. It was a
disappointing way to end
rounduP
Continued from Page 1B
Cordareous Pierce, Trey’l
Beasley, Zach Valentine
and Xavionne Long was
unable to bring home its
own title, finishing third,
but did record its personal
best time of 42.42.
It was just two-tenths of
a second behind the winning Bunn team.
“It was our best time of
the year, and we just got
edged out, so we can live
with that,” Edenton assistant track coach Wes
Mattera said. “This is all
positive.”
Edenton also had two of
its relay runners, Beasley
and Valentine, finish in the
top seven of the 100, with
Beasley fifth at 11 seconds
and Valentine seventh at
a good season. Definitely
not our best showing as a
team, and I think everybody that’s watched us
play knows that.”
Knights coach Hank
Tice said he couldn’t have
predicted the game playing out in the manner it
did.
“I hope people realize
how good of a team we
beat,” Tice said. “The job
that Justin’s done at Perquimans, the tradition
they’ve got. That program
is just so solid. (But) congratulations to our team,
by far the best we’ve played
in three years since we’ve
been Riverside.”
There was no quit in
Perquimans, who had
runners reach base in
each inning, but could
not do enough against
the Knights’ Leggett, who
pitched a complete game,
giving up two runs on
seven hits in five innings,
striking out just one,
walking three and hitting
a batter.
“I thought Kyle stayed
around the (strike) zone,”
Tice said. “We got some
timely hits, got guys on
base and got ‘em in.”
“We’ll keep fighting,”
Roberson said. “No matter
what the outcome, we’ll
keep fighting, and that’s
what they did.”
The Pirates tried to
stay focused, and got a
run back in the second
after Walker’s ground out
brought home Ryan Onley, who doubled earlier
in the inning. Walker also
singled and scored in the
fourth.
Tice, conversely, told his
team not to ease up.
And the Knights didn’t.
Riverside scored another run in the third, but
another homer, this time
a 3-run blast from Smith
in the fourth after their
first two batters reached
on Pirate errors, put the
Knights up 15-2.
“We know what Perquimans can do,” Tice said.
“We know they could
score 10 runs in an inning
just like we did. I mean,
that team can really hit.
The two games we’ve had
with them, both of them
were competitive games.
Last game we played, they
jumped up and scored four
in the top of the first, so
we knew they were going
to put pressure on us. Our
guys just responded.”
And while three different players got on base
for the Pirates in the top
of the fifth, none scored,
ending the game, and its
chance to continue what
had been, up to that point,
a strong late-season run.
“Things just didn’t go
our way on the offensive
end, and they hit the mess
out of it,” Roberson said.
“It’s one of those things.”
The sting of the loss was
still clearly evident on the
faces of the Pirate players, tears in their eyes as
the younger players lined
up to hug the seniors:
Bray, Ryan Singletary and
Vaughney Waterfield.
“These are my best
friends,” Bray said. “I
won’t ever forget it, and
it’s just been a great time
out here with them.”
Roberson told the team
after the loss that it doesn’t
define their season, nor
who the team is or how it
tries to represent itself.
“I just told the younger
guys to look at those seniors, and look at the way
they’ve carried themselves, look at the way
they carry themselves
in the hallways, look at
their GPAs,” Roberson
said. “That’s what we expect from every one of
our baseball players that
comes through this program.”
11.28.
In
the
boys shot
put, Pasquotank’s
Austin
Poff was
13th and
Edenton’s
Elliott
Raquon
Thomas 16th. Pasquotank’s other boys state
qualifier, Robert Morton,
was 11th in the 3,200 run.
Northeastern’s Trever
Overton was seventh in
the 300 hurdles with a time
of 41.25 seconds.
Chelsey Elliott finished
in the top five in the shot
put and discus after winning both events at the 2A
East Regional.
The Lady Panthers’
athlete was fourth in the
discus throw (at 112 feet,
two inches) and fifth in
the shot put (36 feet, seven
inches).
Jackie
McLaughlin of Pasquotank
was 12th
in the long
jump and
15th
in
McLaughlin the triple
jump. Another Lady Panthers athlete, Destiny
Rhem, was 15th in the 200.
The Eagles scored 13
team points from Hamilton and Overton, while
Edenton’s boys got 12.
Team points are awarded
to the top eight finishers
in each event.
“That’s a big thing,”
Johnson said. “They were
disappointed, but I told
them they got points when
a lot of people didn’t.
Overall they did well, and
they’re learning, eager and
ready for next season.”
SportS three
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
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Sunday
TV
AUTO RACING
Noon
NBCSN — IRL, IndyCar, Indianapolis
500 Bump Day
2 p.m.
SPEED — ARCA, Menards 200, at Toledo, Ohio
4 p.m.
SPEED — Australian V8 Supercars, Austin 400, at Austin, Texas
8 p.m.
ESPN2 — NHRA, Kansas Nationals, at
Topeka, Kan. (same-day tape)
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
3:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I playoffs, regionals, game 6, teams TBD
6 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I playoffs,
regionals, game 7, teams TBD (if necessary)
CYCLING
1 p.m.
NBC — Tour of California, final stage,
San Francisco to Santa Rosa, Calif.
6:30 p.m.
NBCSN — Tour of California, final
Hockey
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stage, San Francisco to Santa Rosa, Calif.
(same-day tape)
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
1:30 p.m.
TBS — L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta
2:10 p.m.
WGN — N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs
8 p.m.
ESPN — Detroit at Texas
NBA BASKETBALL
3:30 p.m.
ABC — Playoffs, conference finals, game
1, Memphis at San Antonio
EXTREME SPORTS
10 a.m.
ESPN — X Games, at Barcelona, Spain
GOLF
5 a.m.
TGC — European PGA Tour, Volvo
World Match Play Championship, semifinal and championship matches, at Kavarna, Bulgaria
1 p.m.
TGC — PGA Tour, Byron Nelson Championship, final round, at Irving, Texas
3 p.m.
CBS — PGA Tour, Byron Nelson Championship, final round, at Irving, Texas
TGC — Web.com Tour, BMW Charity
Pro-Am, final round, at Greer, S.C.
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MOTORSPORTS
8 a.m.
SPEED — MotoGP World Championship,
French Grand Prix, at Le Mans, France
Noon
SPEED — MotoGP Moto2, French
Grand Prix, at Le Mans, France (sameday tape)
NHL HOCKEY
3 p.m.
NBC — Playoffs, conference semifinals,
game 2, N.Y. Rangers at Boston
7:30 p.m.
NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, game 3, Pittsburgh at Ottawa
SOCCER
10:30 a.m.
ESPN2 — Premier League, Arsenal at
Newcastle
FSN — Premier League, West Brom Albion at Manchester United
1:10 p.m.
ESPN2 — MLS, Los Angeles at New
York
11 p.m.
ESPN2 — Liga MX, semifinal leg 2, Cruz
Azul at Santos
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Midgett records first win of season at Speedway
Dixieland
Speedway
By Jami FrankenBerry
Correspondent
MORGANS
CORNER
— Ted Midgett played
catch-up throughout last
week’s 30-lap Budweiser
All-Star feature at Dixieland Speedway.
On Friday, he made sure
he didn’t have to again.
Midgett, starting on the
outside pole, raced into
the lead at the green flag
and steadily built a lead
on the way to his first victory of the season.
Midgett steered around
the race’s two cautions
after experiencing motor
trouble before the feature.
“We got that fixed,”
Midgett said, “and probably had the car the best
it’s been.”
Midgett, a Hatteras resident and at age 57 one of
the track’s elder statesmen, had been close in
Dixieland’s first two features this season. But he
finished second in back-toback races before Friday.
Last week, he overcame
some early fender-benders
before working his way
back through pack to second place.
“We got bumped around
a couple times and went to
the back,” Midgett said,
referring to last week.
“When that happens it’s a
lot tougher when you have
to get around everybody.”
This time, Midgett didn’t
have to.
He jumped ahead on the
first straightaway and took
the lead heading into Turn
1. Midgett kept the lead after a pair of cautions on
lap four, and Midgett finished in front of Tom Wil-
son and Doug Flinn.
Otherwise on Friday, a
parade of repeat winners
headed to Victory Lane.
Larry Jackson won his
second straight Dixieland
Sportsman 20-lapper, finishing in front of Mark
Overman and Pat Gonzales.
Jackson bolted into the
lead at the start and again
after the race’s only caution four laps in. Overman pulled onto Jackson’s
bumper on the 12th lap,
but Jackson gradually
pulled away.
Camden’s
Sanders
Overman also cruised to
CurrituCk
Continued from Page 1B
Justin Hill said. “And
they’re too good at that
point to make that comeback like the last game.
“Three runs is enormous for a pitcher like
that. That’s all he needed,
and I felt like we could’ve
scratched a few more, but
it’s a very comfortable
lead, and we hadn’t even
batted yet.”
If Kirkpatrick had any
kinks, it was in location,
walking seven batters. But
he ended four out of five innings with a strikeout.
Another future ECU
player, Currituck pitcher
Evan Voliva, was unable
to keep pace by the third
inning, giving up four hits
and four runs to make it a
7-0 Conley lead.
Four more runs in the
fifth made up the difference.
Vikings coach Jason
Mills credited the 3A/4A
Coastal Conference for
seeing competition that
matches Voliva’s abilities
in every contest.
Mills should know — he
Staff Photo by thomaS J. turney
Currituck’s Kyle Spruill connects on a pitch against D.h. Conley in the third round of the 3a state
playoffs, friday. the Knights lost to the Vikings 11-1 in five innings.
coaches Voliva’s summer
ball travel team.
“I’ve known Evan for a
while, and he’s outstanding,” Mills said. “He’s one
of the best junior prospects
in the entire country right
now. I think he came in a
little blown up and excited,
and he didn’t have the command I’ve normally seen
from him.
“Once we saw that, and
then we got a couple of
cheap runs the first inning,
it gave us a little confidence
and made it a little easier.
With the tough schedule we
play through the year, we
see guys like him and are
pretty much used to it. But
his second victory, leading
from opening lap and pulling away in a 20-lap Little
Caesars Super Street feature.
Overman led by half
a straightaway after 10
circuits, and gradually
distanced himself from
second-place finisher Ben
Thomas and Joe Weiss.
In the R&D Excavating Stock Fours division,
Chesapeake, Va.’s Trevor Battoia regained his
dominance with a second
straight easy 15-lap victories.
Battoia, who won nine
races on his way to the
track title last season, took
the lead at the start and
avoided the race’s only yellow flag. The Chesapeake
teenager led by more than
a straightaway to finish
ahead of Joe Black and
Scott Hooten.
South Mills’ Josh Burnham won his first 20-lap
Biggs Super Fours feature
of the season. Burnham,
a close second last week
to Rickie Waters, led from
start to finish and outlasted Waters this time.
Waters was second in the
caution-free, four car race,
followed by John Hoggard
Jr.
he’s outstanding, I can’t
say enough about him.”
The junior pitcher also
took it hard on himself for
the performance.
“I know we didn’t bring
our best tools to the field
in all aspects of the game,
including me,” Voliva said.
“It’s probably one of the
worst games I’ve pitched
since I can remember. The
other pitcher did a great
job and the other team
could really hit the ball,
they’re just a good allaround team.”
Voliva did come home for
the Knights’ only run in the
fourth, running to third off
a strike three call to Kyle
Spruill, and then scoring
when the third baseman
lost the ball on the throw.
Tyler Schuster tried to
limit the first-inning deficit with his own base running after getting to third
on a passed ball and almost
streching it into a run.
Catcher Nick Whedbee
recovered with ease, however, and Kirkpatrick applied the tag at the plate.
“I held him (Schuster) at
third, and had the stop sign
clearly up,” Hill said. “But
he saw something, and he’s
an aggressive guy. But then
we’re in scoring position
with our four hitter up,
we didn’t want to take that
chance at that point.”
As Conley moves on to
Tuesday’s fourth round,
the Vikings will also jump
to 4A in the next realignment for this fall.
Currituck will drop to
2A, but seeing one of the
state’s best Friday only
gives Hill more evidence to
his players what it will take
to get beyond the opening
rounds of the postseason.
“They were good in all
phases of the game,” Hill
said. “They were outstanding on the mound, they hit
the ball better than anyone
we’ve seen this year, and
play fundamentally sound
defense. They’re legit.
They’re tough.
“That being said, I feel
like we can play with them.
I really do. We had opportunities to score, and we
didn’t, and we got off to
that rough start again in
the first inning.
“I expect them to win
the East, and they’ve been
right there at the top. We
lost to the team that made
the state championship last
year, and I think we might
have done it again.”
B
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
SPORTS FOuR
Bradley keeps lead after 3 rounds at Nelson
golf
By STEPHEN HAWKINS
AP Sports Writer
IRVING, Texas — Keegan
Bradley overcame two early bogeys and maintained
his lead at the Byron Nelson Championship with 2under 68 in the third round
Saturday.
Bradley had a 13-under
197 total for a one-stroke
lead over Sang-Moon Bae
(66) and two-shot advantage
over Tom Gillis (67).
Today, Bradley will be
trying to win at TPC Four
Seasons for the second time
in three years. He could
also become the Nelson’s
first wire-to-wire winner
since Tom Watson led alone
at the end of all four rounds
in 1980.
After following his opening course-record 60 with
a 69 on Friday, Bradley
started the third round
with a three-stroke lead. He
stayed alone at top of the
leaderboard throughout,
even after consecutive bogeys on the front nine and
NHS
Continued from Page 1B
3-1.
The Lady Eagles countered with a run in the top
of the fourth, and had a
chance for more with the
bases loaded.
“I really thought we would
blow it up, but we could only
get one,” Wimpey said. “We
hit it, but most were right
at them, and we could never
get that timely hit.”
What’s become a rivalry
the past two seasons could
as day. Piercy was fourth at
10 under, two strokes ahead
of Gary Woodland (68),
Harris English (68), John
Huh (69) and 2011 Masters
champ Charl Schwartzel
(69).
When 83 players made
the cut of even par, there
were threesomes instead
of traditional twosomes for
the third round. That put
Bradley in the same group
with Bae and Gillis, who
started the round tied for
second place.
Gillis was the last player
in the field with a bogey
Saturday, when he threeputted from 20 feet at the
203-yard 17th. He got that
stroke right back when he
Tony GuTierrez/AP PhoTo blasted out of a greenside
bunker for a birdie at No.
Keegan Bradley reacts to missing a putt for birdie on the second green during the third round of 18.
Bradley got his first PGA
the Byron nelson Championship golf tournament, Saturday. Bradley hit for par on the hole.
Tour victory as a rookie at
his third consecutive bogey where Bradley went way fore an approach shot that the Nelson two years ago.
right off the tee the first settled on the front edge of He followed that by winthis week at No. 18.
Bradley avoided a bogey two rounds, he smashed the green. He almost saved ning the PGA Championat No. 1 for the first time his drive down the left side par, but the ball rolled just
this week. But not at the toward the water Saturday. over the lip of the cup and
429-yard 18th, which cost While the ball stayed dry, it 2 feet past.
Scott Piercy’s 66 matched
him the opportunity for a settled behind a large rock,
bigger lead.
forcing Bradley to punch Bae and three others for the
On the closing hole, back into the fairway be- best round on a breezy Texwell happen
next
season, as
both clubs
return
a
number of
starters.
Northeastern
Jomp
will still get
to boast youth since no seniors will be on the roster.
“I told the coach we’d see
you again next year, and he
said, ‘I’m sure,’” Wimpey
said.
Wimpey added that a few
players were playing with
nagging injuries from the
cadillac
Lady Eagles’ come-frombehind 4-3 win against
Roanoke Rapids, including Hailey Jomp nursing a
hamstring pull.
“She (Jomp) played a
great game through it, and
looked at me twice to say,
‘I’m not coming out,’” Wimpey said.
carpet shops
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the World Golf Championship-Bridgestone
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He first got to 12 under
with a 13-foot birdie at the
505-yard third hole and
saved par at the next hole
after driving into a fairway
bunker.
His consecutive bogeys
came when he two-putted
for bogey after missing the
green at the par-3 fifth and
then drove into the rough
at No. 6. But after a long
wait to tee off at the 542yard seventh hole, Bradley
got to the green in two and
two-putted from 14 feet for a
birdie.
When Bradley’s drive
at No. 11 settled just a few
inches above the top edge
of a bunker, it looked like
he might have some trouble.
But he hit his approach shot
onto the green, 34 feet from
the cup, and sank the birdie
putt to get to 13 under.
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The “Car Hound”
Albemarle Life
THE DAILY ADVANCE
C
SUNDAY, May 19, 2013
INSIDE
Relay for Life holds survivor dinner, 2
• Judi Stuart: Busting myths, 3
• Dear Abby: Widow stung by exclusion, 5
•
Columnist
Stephen
March
A ‘crush’ on
the Boston
bomber
W
hen I last visited Lucky’s
Billiards, Sid Morrisette, the
banker, was complaining that
his teenage daughter had a “crush”
on Dzhokhar, the accused Boston
bomber.
“How do you know she has a crush
on him?” Hank Beasley asked.
“She has his picture as a background on her Iphone,” Sid said. “It’s
that image of him at his prom, wearing a red carnation. She had been
tweeting how cute he is and how she
hopes he will get better soon.’”
“Wait a minute, Mr. Morrisette,”
Buck Simms said. “Are you sure she’s
talking about the same kid police
found in the boat?”
“The very one,” said Sid. “When I
pointed out that he and his no-good
brother had set off bombs that killed
and injured innocent Americans,
it was like she wasn’t listening.”
Sid shook his head. “I gave that girl
everything. Her own horse, summer
vacations in Europe, a wide screen
TV in her room, two cell phones, and
look at the thanks I get. She claims
she dreams about him.
“I told my wife my daughter needs
some counseling,” Sid continued,
“and my wife admitted she had also
been worried about Dzhokhar, too.
She said she hated to think of him being ‘alone and bleeding all night long
in that boat.’ I got so aggravated with
both of them I drove out to the golf
club to drink a few beers.”
“Did that help?” Ed Dooley asked.
Like the other residents of Lucky’s he
had never set foot in the golf club.
“Not much. I was ashamed to tell
my friends at the golf club how my
daughter was behaving. Those folks
are all true Americans who vote a
straight Republican ticket. I didn’t
think they’d understand.”
“We’re all Americans in here, too,
Mr. Morrisette,” Roy Johnson said,
frowning.
“Of course you are,” Sid said, wiping his brow with a monogrammed
white handkerchief. “I didn’t mean
that the way it sounded.”
JJ Potts spoke up. “When you talked to your daughter, did you make
it really clear about the suffering
those brothers caused; the number of
people who lost limbs?”
“Yes. I even showed her the image
of Dzhokhar right behind the eightyear old boy who died in the blast.
Just to the right of the boy is his
sister, who lost a leg in the explosion.
You can see Dzhokhar clearly. He has
a smile on his face.”
“What did she say to that?” JJ
asked.
“She blamed everything he did on
his older brother Tamerlan. Claimed
Dzhokhar had been brainwashed
and didn’t really know what he was
doing.”
Roy Johnson looked at Abner
Sessoms, the retired bailiff and local
authority on such complex issues as
teenage girls who have been to Europe twice and who have their very
own horse. “What do you think about
this here girl, Abner?”
“Mr. Morrisette,” Abner said. “I
believe you need to have a conversation with your daughter about the
Devil. Be sure to remind her that he
will never look like himself when he
comes knocking on her door.”
File photo
Capt. thomas hastings
(right) is going out on top.
Page 4.
It’s a
small
world
after all
Japanese Rotarians share
differences, commonalities
on visit to the Albemarle
By RoBeRt Kelly-Goss
Albemarle Life Editor
Yoshiko Arai plays the piano in front of Arts of the Albemarle, thursday. Arai is a
piano instructor and accomplished pianist.
Naomi Kimura (left) and Yoshiko Arai look at some 3D post cards at the Museum of the Albemarle, thursday.
Sakiko Mori tries a flight simulator with the help of elizabeth City State university professor Anthony Sharp (left) the Aviation Science Department at eCSu as
Akira Nakano, also visiting from Japan, watches, thursday.
StAFF photoS bY thoMAS J. turNeY
Japanese rotarians (l-r) Sakiko Mori, Yoshiko Arai, Akira Nakano
reina Mitsuhashi and (kneeling) Naomi Kimura pose in Civil
War costumes during their visit to the Museum of the Albemarle,
thursday. the rotarians toured the region this week, experiencing northeast North Carolina hospitality.
A
pparently when language is a barrier, Disney can
save the day.
Four Japanese Rotary Club members representing their Rotary district in Japan came to Elizabeth
City last week on the last leg of a tour that took them
around northeastern North Carolina. Their English
was just enough to get by but when they toured Arts
of the Albemarle and saw the remnants of the Center
Players’ sets and costumes for “Beauty and the Beast,”
the women cheered and began singing lines from the
musical.
The women and a male chaperone arrived in Elizabeth City on Tuesday and toured the region before
leaving for home on Friday.
The women ranged in ages from 27 to 40. One was
a piano instructor and concert pianist, another an
artist and designer, another a government official and
another a human resources specialist.
Rotarians from both the Elizabeth City Morning
meeting and the Elizabeth City Rotary Club hosted the
women, opening their homes and touring them around
the region. The idea is for Rotarians from other countries to experience culture here.
On Wednesday the women toured Elizabeth City
State University’s aviation division before heading
over to Albemarle Hospital where they had lunch and
talked a little bit about their time in the United States.
All women agree that North Carolina is hot and
things in the U.S. are a whole lot bigger than back
home in their small island nation of Japan.
Yoshiko Arai, 40, is a piano instructor. She says she
was surprised to see drive-thru banks. And everything,
she says, is too big.
All of the women made the point that because Japan
is a smaller nation things are naturally smaller there.
Costs are high and it’s important, they all agreed, to
keep things smaller to save money.
Yoshiko also pointed out that supermarkets here
have too many brands and that it seemed too confusing for her. That said, she loves American breakfast,
especially pancakes, sausage and biscuits. A Japanese
breakfast, she said, consists of rice and a soy-based
soup.
Reina Mitsuhashi, 29, is a government official. She
says they enjoyed the sushi here, but that it’s different. She explained that some of the fish is different, but
perhaps more importantly, Japanese sushi is fresher.
Reina says she is also surprised that we do not have
commuter trains here. In her city, there are 19 stations,
she explained.
“Everything is very big,” she said.
Sakiko Mori, 32, is a human resources specialist. She
says she doesn’t understand why Americans are so
“fat.” She observed that while Japanese drink iced tea,
they do not have sweet tea.
“Too many sweets,” Sakiko said of American cuisine.
Naomi Kimura, 27, works as an artist and designer.
She said art is beautiful in the U.S. and it impressed
her that so many people owned shops.
In Japan, Naomi said, it’s very difficult to own a shop
or a gallery because of the cost involved. And inside
Arts of the Albemarle’s Jenkins Gallery, she was impressed with the size and variety of the art.
But perhaps it was upstairs, inside the Maguire
Theatre, that Naomi’s spirit came alive. When she
and her friends discovered the costumes and set pieces
from “Beauty and the Beast,” the women quickly began
trying them on and taking photographs. From Belle
to chip and the salt and peppershakers, she women
laughed and shrieked with delight as they donned the
costumes.
Later in the day, when they made their way to
Museum of the Albemarle, they were able to try on
costumes in the Discovery Room as well. They would
also find their way to Port Discover, the science center
for kids, where they met Angus the bearded dragon and
marveled at the exhibits there, including the children’s
vegetable garden out back.
In the end, the women say they enjoyed their visit.
And although they can boast a number of sites on their
tour, it seems that Disney and “Beauty and the Beast”
brought everyone together, speaking a common language where language was otherwise a barrier.
C
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Wedding
OccasiOns
Carpenter - Griffin
Wendy Michelle Griffin of Fairfax, Va. and Benjamin Parker Carpenter of Fairfax, Va., were
united in marriage May 19, 2012 at NC Aquarium
on Roanoke Island in Manteo.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David
R. Griffin of Camden.
The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alan L. Carpenter of Simsbury, Conn.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents
and escorted by her father. She wore a Maggie
Sottero fitted A-line gown with a corset style back
and her mother’s chapel length train. Lace and
Swarovski crystals decorated the fitted bodice and
and her mother’s chapel length train. Lace and
Swarovski crystals decorated the fitted bodice and
sweetheart neckline then drifting atop the tulle
skirt. She carried a bouquet of white hydrangeas
and white roses and purple statice.
The maid of honor was Ms. Abbie Griffin of Winston Salem, sister of the bride.
The bridesmaids were Mrs. Ashley Waters of
Mount Juliet, Tenn., cousin of the bride; Ms.
Bethanie Forbes of Virginia Beach, Va.; Ms. Alicia Boaz of Seattle, Wash., Ms. Molly Hamrick of
Atlanta, Ga., Ms. Mary Duby of Chicago, Ill. and
Ms. Rihana Knotts of Fairfax, Va. They wore Tiffany blue chiffon gowns with a sweetheart neckline and carried blue and purple hydrangeas.
The flower girl was Ms. Kadi Bennett of Simsbury, Conn., niece of the groom.
The best man was Mr. Alan Carpenter of Simsbury, Conn., father of the groom.
The groomsmen were Mr. Joshua Griffin of
Camden, brother of the bride; Mr. Michael Bennett of Simsbury, Conn., brother-in-law of the
groom; Mr. Steve Leensvaart of St. Louis Park,
Minn.; Mr. Donovan Cozzens of Alexandria, Va.;
Mr. Timothy Ferro of Ashburn, Va. and Mr. Timothy Frank of Chalfront, Pa.
The ring bearer was Mr. Nathan Bennett of Simsbury, Conn., nephew of the groom.
The mistresses of ceremonies were Mrs. Tina
Meiggs of Hertford, aunt of the bride; Mrs. Deborah Branton of Deland, Fla., aunt of the bride; and
Mrs. Jami Schuster of Virginia Beach, Va., aunt of
the bride.
The wedding music was provided by Mr. Ray
Meiggs of Southern Shores, uncle of the bride; and
Ms. Erin Weston of Washington, D.C., as guitarist
and soloist.
The bride is a graduate of The University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and Clemson University, Clemson, S.C. and is employed at
Northrup Grumman in Fairfax, Va.
The groom attended Messiah College in Mechanicsburg, Pa. and is employed at Filo in Arlington,
Va.
The reception was held at the NC Aquarium. The
couple honeymooned in Mexico and Australia and
reside in Fairfax, Va.
Bob Davis, a two-time
cancer survivor, stresses the importance the
roles faith, determination and a positive
attitude played in
his personal battles
with the disease at a
Relay For Life Survivor
Dinner held May 9
at Fountain of Life
Church.
Relay For Life holds survivor dinner
Nearly 200 cancer survivors and
their caregivers attended the Pasquotank/Camden Relay For Life
Survivor Dinner on Thursday, May 9,
at Fountain of Life Church in Elizabeth City. The dinner was sponsored
by Twiford Law Firm and is a time
The Miss Vogue winner was Daeza Riddick and the Mr. Esquire
winner was Steven McPherson. Miss Vogue, Daeza Riddick, is
a senior at John A. Holmes High School, Edenton. Riddick is
the daughter of Mr. Erwin Riddick and Mrs. Lavonya Leary.
She plans to attend Pitt Community College in the fall and
obtain a degree in nursing.
AKA presents Miss
Vogue/Mr. Esquire
From staff reports
SUBMiTTED PHoTo
From staff reports
SUBMiTTED PHoTo
for cancer survivors and caregivers
to gather, enjoy one another’s company and celebrate. Guest Speaker
Bob Davis, a two time cancer survivor, stressed the importance of a
positive attitude, faith and determination in his personal battles with
the disease.
The program also included the
story of the Empty Table, in memory
of those whose battles are done. The
Pasquotank/Camden Relay For Life
is Friday, May 31, to Saturday, June
1, on the track at Northeastern High
School. Opening Ceremonies begin
at 6 p.m. and are immediately followed by the Survivor Lap. For information visit RiverCityRelay.com.
The Nu Eta Omega
Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc.
presented its 19th Miss
Vogue/Mr. Esquire Scholarship Pageant recently
at the College of The Albemarle’s Culinary Arts
Center in Edenton. The
theme was: “Focus on the
Future.”
The Miss Vogue winner
was Daeza Riddick and
the Mr. Esquire winner
was Steven McPherson.
Miss Vogue, Daeza Riddick, is a senior at John
A. Holmes High School,
Edenton. Riddick is the
daughter of Mr. Erwin
Riddick and Mrs. Lavonya
Leary. She plans to attend
Pitt Community College
in the fall and obtain a degree in nursing.
Mr. Esquire, Steven
McPherson, is a senior
at Camden County High
School. McPherson is the
son of Steven and Wendy
McPherson. He plans to
attend N. C. A & T University, Greensboro, in the
fall and major in sports
medicine.
The 2012 Miss Vogue/
Mr. Esquire, Kemaya Holley and Travarie Carter,
were present and assisted
with the coronation of
the 2013 winners. Certificates were presented for
participation, talent, and
scrapbooks. Miss Vogue
and Mr. Esquire received
a trophy and a winner’s
sash.
The pageant concluded
with a reception for the
participants, guests and
sorority members. The
pageant was well attended.
Scholarship
funds
raised totaled more than
$4,000 which will be used
for scholarships following official notification of
enrollment in a college of
his/her choice.
HealtH CliniCs
May 20
Pasquotank: Child
Health, General, Pediatric
Primary Care, New
Prenatal, and WIC all day.
Perquimans: New
Prenatal evening; General
all day.
Chowan: New Prenatal
evening; General, WIC all
day.
Currituck: Women’s
Health Services morning;
Prenatal evening; General
and WIC all day.
May 21
Pasquotank: Prenatal,
Pediatric Primary Care,
General, DEPO, and WIC
all day.
Camden: Adult Health
morning.
Perquimans: General all
day.
Chowan: Women’s Health
Services morning; Prenatal
Albemarle Regional Health Services clinic schedule
The clinics are located at — in Pasquotank, 711 Roanoke Ave., Elizabeth City, 3384400; in Perquimans, 103 ARPDC St., Hertford, 426-2100; in Camden, Camden
Medical Park, Building B, 160 Highway US Highway 158 East, Camden, 338-4460;
in Currituck, 2795 Caratoke Highway, Currituck, 232-2271 and in Chowan, 202 W.
Hicks St., Edenton, 482-6003. Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday. Pasquotank, Perquimans, Chowan and Currituck counties offer an evening
clinic on Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Camden Health Department has night
clinic on the 2nd and 4th Thursdays each month from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. .
and DEPO evening; WIC
all day.
Currituck: New Prenatal
and General all day.
May 22
Pasquotank: Pediatric
Primary Care morning;
Women’s Health Services,
General, and WIC all day.
Perquimans: General all
day.
Chowan: General all day.
Currituck: General all
day.
May 23
Pasquotank: Pediatric
Primary Care and General
all day; High Risk Clinic
and Colposcopy morning;
Immunizations, 5 p.m. to
7 p.m.
Perquimans: Women’s
Health Services morning;
Prenatal and DEPO
evening; Immunizations, 5
p.m. to 7 p.m.
Chowan: General all day;
Immunizations, 5 p.m. to
7 p.m.
Camden: Women’s
Health Services and
Prenatal morning; General
all day; DEPO evening;
Immunizations, 5 p.m. to
7 p.m.
Currituck: General
all day; DEPO evening;
Immunizations, 5 p.m. to
7 p.m.
May 24
Pasquotank: General and
Pediatric Primary Care all
day.
Perquimans: General all
day.
Chowan: General all day.
Camden: Child Health
morning; WIC all day.
Currituck: General all day.
WE WiLL BE OPEn
MOnDAy, tUESDAy,
AnD WEDnESDAy 10-6
Wednesday is our last day
EvErything
40% OFF
Last Day at this location is May 22nd!
All Gift Certificates must be redeemed by May 22, 2013
800 West Ehringhaus Street
Ashlee Harrington • 252-331-2722
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
AlbemArle life
sChool menus
ECPPS Schools
Monday
Breakfast: cereal, toast,
juice, milk; Lunch: sliced ham
or chef salad or fruit salad/
yogurt, collard greens, sweet
potato puff, cornbread,
apples, pineapple chunks
Tuesday
Breakfast: breakfast pizza,
juice, milk; Lunch: taco
salad or chef salad or fruit
salad/yogurt, broccoli, sweet
potato puff, pears, sliced
peaches
Wednesday
Breakfast: cereal, toast,
juice, milk; Lunch: Manager’s
choice or chef salad or fruit
salad/yogurt, baby carrots,
dressing, tater tots, bread,
grapes, diced peaches
Thursday
Breakfast: sausage biscuit,
juice, milk; Lunch: baked
chicken nuggets or chef
salad or fruit salad/yogurt,
creamy potatoes, gravy, roll,
spinach, pears, applesauce
Friday
Breakfast: cheese streusel
muffin, juice, milk; Lunch:
hamburger or chef salad
or fruit salad/yogurt, baked
beans, candied carrots, pear
halves, bananas
Currituck Schools
Monday
Breakfast: steak biscuit,
pancake pups, or cereal/
toast, fruit or juice; Lunch:
hot dog or chicken nuggets,
tater tots, applesauce, salad,
fresh fruit
Tuesday
Breakfast: sausage biscuit,
breakfast pizza, or cereal/
toast, fruit or juice; Lunch:
grilled cheese or chicken/
gravy/rice, carrots, broccoli,
mixed fruit, fresh fruit
Wednesday
Breakfast: scrambled
eggs/grits, chicken biscuit, or
cereal/toast, fruit or juice;
Lunch: barbecue sandwich
or spaghetti/meat sauce,
corn, baked beans, pear
halves, fresh fruit
Thursday
Breakfast: french toast
sticks, steak biscuit, or
cereal/toast, fruit or juice;
Lunch: cheeseburger or
chicken sandwich, baby
carrots, sliced peaches,
green beans, fresh fruit
Friday
Breakfast: pancakes or
yogurt/graham crackers,
or cereal/toast, fruit or
juice; Lunch: pizza or
popcorn chicken, peas, salad,
mandarin oranges, fresh fruit
Camden Schools
Monday
Breakfast: pancake, sausage
stick; Lunch: mozzarella
sticks, Manager’s choice,
broccoli, fruit choice
Tuesday
Breakfast: cheese rolls;
Lunch: pizza, Manager’s
choice, lima beans, fruit
choice
Wednesday
Breakfast: cinnamon
raisin biscuit; Lunch: chicken
nuggets, Manager’s choice,
broccoli/ranch dip, fruit
choice
Thursday
Breakfast: bacon rolls;
Lunch: corn dog nuggets,
Manager’s choice, carrot
sticks/dip, fruit choice
Friday
Breakfast: breakfast pizza;
Lunch: barbecue sandwich/
coleslaw, Manager’s choice,
candied sweet potatoes,
fruit choice
Edenton-Chowan
Schools
Monday
Breakfast: donut, juice;
Lunch: pizza or chicken
fillet/bun, broccoli, sweet
potatoes, applesauce, pear
half
Tuesday
Breakfast: cereal, muffin,
juice; Lunch: chicken fajitas
or tacos, lettuce/tomato/
cheese, carrots, refried
beans, pear
Wednesday
Breakfast: french toast
sticks, juice; Lunch: hot
dog or ham/cheese wrap,
fries, baked beans, orange,
pineapple
Thursday
Breakfast: sausage biscuit,
juice; Lunch: spaghetti or
chicken quesadilla, green
beans, spinach, apple, mixed
fruit
Friday
Breakfast: breakfast bagel,
juice; Lunch: chicken nuggets
or teriyaki beef nuggets, ,
roll, mixed veggies, peaches,
applesauce
Perquimans Schools
Monday
Breakfast: honey bun;
Lunch: chicken nuggets or
barbecue beef rib, bun, fries,
broccoli, applesauce, mixed
fruit
Tuesday
Breakfast: sausage biscuit;
Lunch: beef taco or pork
chop sandwich, pinto beans,
green beans, peaches,
strawberries
Wednesday
Breakfast: breakfast bagel;
Lunch: cheeseburger or hot
dog, mixed greens, baked
beans, mandarin orange
slices, pineapple tidbits
Thursday
Breakfast: donut; Lunch:
barbecue chicken, slaw
or chicken fillet sandwich,
stewed potatoes, carrot
coins, pears, blueberries
Friday
Breakfast: pancake sticks;
Lunch: fish nuggets or
pepperoni pizza, sweet
potato fries, blackeyed peas,
apple crisp, banana
Head Start,
Pasquotank County
Monday
Breakfast: bagel, juice,
milk; Lunch: ham, cheese
sandwich, green beans,
pears, milk
Snack: Teddy Grahams,
banana
Tuesday
Breakfast: Kix, pears, milk;
Lunch: Manager’s Choice
Snack: Wheat Thins,
carrots, celery
Wednesday
Breakfast: cheese toast,
applesauce, milk; Lunch: egg,
cheese muffin, spinach salad,
mixed fruit, milk
Snack: Pretzels, fruit cup
Thursday
Breakfast: Rice Krispies,
mandarin oranges, milk;
Lunch: mac & cheese, baked
beans, broccoli, milk
Snack: Graham crackers,
applesauce cup
Friday
Breakfast: grits, pineapple
chunks, milk; Lunch:
barbecue sandwich, coleslaw,
yams, milk
Snack: string cheese,
trail mix
senior ACtivities
EC-Pasquotank Center
Monday
8:30 a.m.Tai Chi
9 a.m. Aerobics
9:45 a.m. Eat at Track I
10 a.m. Mixed media, silver
bells at Needham
1 p.m. Shuffleboard, bowling
2 p.m. Dup. bridge
Tuesday
9 a.m. Strength, flex
10 a.m. Scrabble/upwds
10:15 a.m. Silver Sneakers
12:30 p.m. Performing Arts
1 p.m. Pinochle, billiards
2 p.m.Tai Chi
3 p.m. Zumba Gold
Wednesday
8:30 a.m.Tai Chi
9 a.m. Aerobics
10:15 a.m. Bingo
1 p.m. bridge, chickenfoot,
men’s billiards
2 p.m.Tai chi
Thursday
9 a.m. Strength & flex class
10 a.m. Scrabble/upwrd
10:15 a.m. Silver sneakers
11:30 a.m. Shuffleboard
1 p.m. Canasta, ladies billiards
1:30 p.m. Line dance
Friday
1 p.m. chicken foot, billiards
Chowan Center
Daily
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. fitness room,
cornhole,Wii
Monday
9 a.m. Zumba, crochet
10:30 a.m. Line dance
12:15 p.m. Senior bowling
5:30 p.m. Advance pilates
Tuesday
9 a.m. Interval step
10:15 a.m. arthritis class
11:30 a.m.Trivia plus
1 p.m. Bingo
Wednesday
9 a.m. Chilates
Noon Older American’s
Month cookout
12:15 p.m. to 3 p.m. Swim
5:30 p.m. Advanced pilates
Thursday
9 a.m. fitness class
10:15 a.m. Arthritis class
11:30 a.m. crossword puzzle
Friday
9 a.m.Yoga
10:30 a.m. line dance
Perquimans Center
Daily
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Game,
exercise, computer rooms
Monday
9 a.m.Van trip
10 a.m. Exercise class
2 p.m. Rook, games
Tuesday
9:30 a.m. Zumba Gold
12:15 p.m. Madelyn’s Music
1 p.m. Bowling
2 p.m. Silver arts
Wednesday
8:45 a.m. Line dancing
10 a.m. Exercise class
1 p.m. Pinochle
2 p.m. Bingo
Thursday
10 a.m.TOPS
11 a.m. Bingo
12:15 p.m. Choir
1 p.m. Games
6 p.m. Line dancing
Friday
10 a.m. Exercise class
Noon covered dish
1 p.m. Afternoon games
Camden Center
Monday
11 a.m. Computer classes
Tuesday
11:30 a.m. Spiritual enrichment,
Albert Spence
Wednesday
Bingo
Thursday
1 p.m.Walmart
Friday
General recreation
Currituck Center
Monday
9 a.m.Table tennis
10 a.m. Billiards, bowling, EC
12:30 p.m. Dominoes, canasta
2 p.m. to 4 p.m.Wet Paint
Society mtg.
Tuesday
9 a.m.Women’s billiards
10 a.m. Lynnhaven Mall, Red
Lobster lunch
10:30 a.m. Bible study
11 a.m. Exercise DVD
6 p.m.TOPS
Wednesday
9 a.m.Table tennis
9:30 a.m. Scrabble/upwards
10 a.m. Bridge, quilters
12:30 p.m. Music
1 p.m. Dominoes
Thursday
9 a.m. Mens billiards
10 a.m. Canasta, badminton
11 a.m. Exercise DVD, Bingo
12:30 p.m. Bingo
Friday
8 a.m.Table tennis
9 a.m. to noon Billiards
9 a.m. Horseshoes
10:30 a.m. Dominoes
1:30 p.m.Wii sports or Fit
Powells Point Center
Monday
10:30 a.m. Chair exercise
11 a.m. Bingo
12:30 p.m. Dominoes
Tuesday
11 a.m. Movie
Wednesday
10:15 a.m. Knotts Island lunch
Thursday
11 a.m. Exercise with Min
12:30 p.m. Bible study
Friday
10:30 a.m. Bingo
12:30 p.m. Dominoes, word
search
Knotts Island Center
Monday
10 a.m. Puzzles
10:30 a.m.Wii tennis
1:15 p.m. Bingo
Tuesday
10 a.m. Puzzles
11 a.m. blood pressure checks
1 p.m.Walking with Heidi
Wednesday
10 a.m. puzzles
1 p.m.Working on paper
purses
Thursday
10 a.m. Puzzles
1 p.m. Phase 10 card game
Friday
10 a.m. Puzzles
1 p.m. Paper purses
C
Believe it or not,
science is full of myths
N
o one knows
that it hits on
why
we
olumnist the ground?
sometimes
Have no fear.
believe
things
The size and
that are false.
aerodynamics
Maybe
we
of the penny
don’t like the
will not allow
truth. Maybe it’s
such a tragedy.
easier to believe
Is a car the
the myth. Maybe
best place to be
we’re unable to
during a lightdetermine
the
ning storm betruth.
Maybe
cause the rubthe story has
ber tires will
been accepted
protect you?
so long that no
In truth, it
one
bothers
is the metal
to question it
exterior of
anymore.
the car that will act as a
Science is filled with conductor, passing the
myths and commonly ac- electrical charge to the
cepted untruths. Take the ground.
one called the “5 second
We’ve all heard that
rule.” We’re comfortable sugar makes kids hywith that. It makes us feel peractive. The truth is
better about picking-up that scientists can find
something off the kitchen no evidence for that asfloor and eating it.
sumption. Of course, we
The truth is that germs know that there are links
stick to things immedi- between sugar consumpately. If there is salmo- tion and obesity.
nella present, which is
It is a common myth
frequently found in the that after we die our finkitchen, it will stick to the gernails and hair confood immediately.
tinue to grow. Cells need
Another commonly ac- a constant supply of fuel
cepted belief is that light- produced by the ingestion
ning doesn’t strike twice of food in order to grow.
in the same place. Actu- They also need blood beally, it happens quite fre- ing pumped to them by
quently. The Empire State the heart.
Building is struck an avIf you think that bats
erage of 25 times per year. are blind, you are mistakTall targets are hit more en. They do rely on other
often than others are.
sense like hearing and
It is somewhat startling smelling more than some
to think that we only use animals, but they can see.
10 percent of our brains. Their advanced sound
The fact is that we use all based system of echolocaparts of our brain in some tion allows them to hunt
way or another. What we nearly invisible prey in
don’t use to its full capac- the dark.
ity is our intellectual abilParents and kids, hopity.
ing for better things to
We have been told that come for themselves, like
brain cells don’t regener- the story about Albert
ate, but in 1998 scientists Einstein’s having flunked
discovered that our learn- math class. Records of his
ing and memory centers academic life show that
can do so. Recently stem he was actually a good
cell research has discov- student which contraered a way that embry- dicts the popular myth.
onic stem cells can morph
Now it’s up to you to beinto brain cells.
lieve it or not.
Have you ever heard
Source: Discovery Chanthat a penny dropped nel website
from a tall building can
Judi Stuart is the
reach a velocity that will
Visitor Services Manager
at Port Discover.
enable it to kill someone
C
Judi
Stuart
TARHEEL
INTERNAL MEDICINE
IS “RELOCATING” AS OF
MONDAY, MAY 20, 2013
THE NEW LOCATION WILL BE
1134 NORTH ROAD STREET
BUILDING 4
ELIZABETH CITY, NC 27909
Hats off to the
Class of 2013
carpet shops
2 Mill End Court
ElizabEth City
335-2915
On Sunday, June 7, The Daily Advance
will publish a special page in honor of
the Graduates of 2013.
Congratulate YOUR Graduate!
Select your ad size & with payment
& SASE (for photo return) to:
The Daily Advance
C/O Hats Off to Grad
P.O. Box 588
Elizabeth City, NC 27909-0588
All submissions
must be received
by 10:00 am
June 3, 2013
$25
Ad size 1
Write message here:
Grad’s Name: _______________________________________________________
School: ____________________________________________________________
Your Name: ________________________________________________________
Your Address: _______________________________________________________
Phone: _____________________________________________ Ad Size: _______
$40
Ad size 2
Kindergarten & Graduation Picture
Write message here:
C
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Coast Guard ConneCtion
Capt. Hastings is going out on top
ATTC commander leaving Elizabeth City and Coast Guard
By WILLIAM F. WEST
Staff Writer
T
he commanding officer
of the Coast Guard’s
Aviation
Technical
Training Center will be
both relinquishing command and retiring from the
Coast Guard next month.
“It’s kind of like going
out on top,” Capt. Tom
Hastings said over the
phone last week.
The ATTC’s change of
command is set for June
28. Hastings will be succeeded by Capt. Chip Hatfield, who is a professor
of civil engineering at the
Coast Guard Academy at
New London, Conn.
The Aviation Technical
Training Center resulted
from a need to train Coast
Guard personnel to operate and maintain Coast
Guard equipment different than equipment used
by the Navy.
Hastings said he probably feels a greater connection to the ATTC than
most commanding officers
because he was previously
stationed at the ATTC as
the training officer and the
executive officer.
He said that, after returning more than three
years ago as the ATTC’s
commander, he found that
the ATTC’s core business
of training technicians
has remained the same.
And he noted that some of
those who were students
when he was previously
at the ATTC are presently
instructors.
Most significantly, Hastings served as the ATTC’s
commander at the time
when the new Rescue
Swimmer Training Facility was dedicated in October.
The facility, which was
completed at a cost of $24
million, replaced a 68-yearold swimming pool too
small and too shallow to
simulate rescue missions
on storm-tossed seas.
Hastings recalled that
the Coast Guard wanted
the facility for more than
two decades.
The idea of having the
facility seemed to gather
momentum
after
two
events: One real, the other
fictional.
File photo
Capt. thomas hastings (right) is seen here during his change-of-command ceremony at the AttC in April, 2010. hastings is retiring
from his command and the Coast Guard. he and his wife will return to southeast Alabama where they have a home.
The real event was the
aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina in 2005. The Coast
Guard’s high-profile role in
33,000 rescue-and-hoist operations, rescuing stranded New Orleans and Gulf
Coast residents, resulted
in much positive publicity
for the agency.
Also, the Coast Guard’s
starring role in the 2006
Hollywood film, “The
Guardian,” played a key
role in attracting attention
to the rescue swimmer
training program. Parts of
the movie, which starred
Kevin Costner, were filmed
at the Elizabeth City Coast
Guard base.
“And so to finally get
it (the Rescue Swimmer
Training Facility), it is
kind of like an affirmation of all the work all the
swimmers have done, all
the good things they have
done,” Hastings said.
Hastings said he going
to miss two things about
being in the ATTC and in
the Coast Guard.
One, he said, is the people involved. The other,
he said, is “being in the
know.”
And he said he and his
wife, Sharon, are concerned that life is going to
be a little boring.
“Of course, she likes to
hear what’s going on at
work,” he said.
And he said that if he
and his wife are sitting in
their chairs, not involved
in things, “we’ll both miss
out a little bit.”
Additionally, he said
that, on his second tour of
duty in the Harbor of Hospitality, he was active as
an Elizabeth City Rotarian
and served on the board
of the Albemarle Family
YMCA.
“This time was more enjoyable because I was more
involved with the community than I was last time,”
he said.
Hastings in April 2010
succeeded Capt. Joe Mihe-
lic, who both completed a
tour of duty as the ATTC
commander and retired
from the Coast Guard.
Mihelic joined the nearby
Telephonics radar service
firm.
Prior to coming to Elizabeth City, Hastings had
been serving as the officer
in charge of the Maritime
Liaison Office in the Kingdom of Bahrain. The office
is responsible for cooperation between the U.S. Naval Forces Central Command and the commercial
maritime industry.
Prior to joining the Coast
Guard, Hastings served as
a U.S. Army helicopter pilot. He received his training and, later, served as an
instructor at Fort Rucker
at Ozark, Ala., which is up
from the emerald beaches
of the Florida Panhandle
region.
Hastings and his wife
still have a house in southeastern Alabama and his
wife’s family members also
are from Alabama. He said
he and his wife plan to remain in Elizabeth City for
probably another month
before relocating to their
house in Alabama.
His first project: To remodel that house.
The change of command
will be the second one this
summer, with Capt. Werner Winz to relinquish his
command of the Aviation
Logistics Center. Winz
will be reporting to Coast
Guard Headquarters in
Washington, D.C. He will
work at the Office of Acquisitions, which is responsible for the purchasing and
fielding of new aviation
assets.
Winz on Aug. 9 will be
succeeded by Capt. Jim
Martin, who will be reporting to Elizabeth City
from acquisitions at Coast
Guard Headquarters.
“In fact, we’re just kind
of like switching jobs,”
Winz told the Elizabeth
City-Pasquotank County
Economic
Development
Commission last week.
The ALC is tasked with
material and technical
support for Coast Guard
air stations and aircraft.
Winz, in an e-mail last
week, said he is sorry to be
leaving the Harbor of Hospitality.
“It has been a great experience providing our Coast
Guard men and women
with the very best aircraft
to perform their important
missions,” Winz said.
“I have been amazed
at the incredible ability
of ALC employees to produce exceptional results,”
he said. “I believe there
is magic in what they do.
And they always do it with
the utmost dedication, care
and smiles on their faces.”
And he said that, “I believe a great deal of their
job satisfaction can be derived from the outstanding
support provided by the
greater Elizabeth City area
community.”
Also, Winz has been a
familiar face at civic gatherings and meetings. He
has been serving as an
ex officio member of the
Economic
Development
Commission and has been
serving on the board of the
Elizabeth City Area Chamber of Commerce.
At the ALC in July 2010,
Winz succeeded Capt. Ed
Gibbons, who moved on
to the Fifth District Coast
Guard at Portsmouth,
Va., to become chief of response. Gibbons is presently serving in a mission
support position at Coast
Guard Headquarters.
Winz had previously
served in a position at the
North American Aerospace Defense Command
and U.S. Northern Command, located at Peterson
Air Force Base, Colo.
He had served at Elizabeth City before, as the
HH-65 helicopter engineer
and HH-65 product manager at what was the Coast
Guard’s Aircraft Repair
and Supply Center. The
ARSC was renamed the
Aviation Logistics Center,
reflecting efforts to keep
up with Coast Guard modernization.
Contact Bill West
at bwest@dailyadvance.com
Celebrating the commitment of military spouses
A
ll across the country, people celebrated military spouses. President
Barack Obama issued a proclamation declaring May 10 as Military Spouse
Appreciation Day. And at bases around
the world, military spouses came together. Commands showed their appreciation of spouses with luncheons, speeches, flowers and a variety of events.
In the president’s proclamation, he
called on Americans to “do more to honor the “profound debt of gratitude we
owe our military spouses.”
Where we are stationed in Northern
California, Coast Guard spouses gathered at a Military Spouse Appreciation
event at the Coast Guard Base in Alameda.
I rode to the base with several Coast
Guard wives, and we joined many other
spouses to enjoy a lunch and several
speeches.
Chief Warrant Officer Marc Blecman
spoke fondly of his supportive wife of
21 years, and his pride in their eldest
son who recently graduated from Coast
Guard boot camp and is now serving on
a Coast Guard cutter. He became emo-
tional when he spoke to his
wife, and the other spouses at
the event, and read a poem,
titled “What is a Coast Guard
Wife,” author unknown.
“She’s totally feminine, yet
at times we see her mowing the
lawn, balancing checkbooks or
fixing a leaky faucet. She comes
in all shapes and sizes – tall,
small, petite and robust.
On occasion, she’s a little
pregnant but she’s always at our side when we
need her.
“Her children may be born in many
different places in this world. She measures time in terms of duty stations as
other women use years (it was in Cape
May when young Tom was born, or that
was when Dad made Lieutenant, when
we were in the Fourteenth District).
“She was alone, her husband at sea,
when her child was born or when the
movers came and she wondered why he
had to be so far away when she needed
him so much.
“She draws her inner strength from
many sources. Some are country girls, some from cities,
some even from foreign lands.
She may be a nurse, a teacher
or a secretary but the bond she
shares with everyone here today is that she is a Coast Guard
wife.
“At times she must be an actress. When transfer time rolls
around, she must put on
an academy award winning performance. She
must tell her children,
‘California is going to be fantastic, there’s a Disneyland and Marineland, Redwood forests and new friends;
we are going to have such great fun!’ At
the same time she is quietly standing behind her husband as he wonders whether he can handle this new assignment.
“All the time she knows that no one
really wants to leave and everyone is
just a little apprehensive about this
whole thing. In her heart she silently
wonders if it is worth the sacrifice, but
she goes … because she is a Coast Guard
wife.
KRISTI
LANGENBACHER
“It is said of such a woman that she
must have the patience of an angel, the
stubbornness of a mule, the stamina of
a horse and the wisdom of Solomon. She
carries her memories in an old footlocker – in a shoebox are old photographs
she still intends to mount someday. She
knows she is number two to her rival:
the ever demanding, always satisfied
mistress called Duty. When she is alone
on those nights she must silently wonder again, is it worth the sacrifice?
“She has accepted the permanency of
a Gypsy, the state of the gentile impoverished, the frustrations of conformity
and the emptiness of loneliness. As she
sits amid the packing boxes, with little
ones crying around her, worrying about
what her next home will be like and
how good the schools will be, she must
again wonder if it is worth the sacrifice,
and then she remembers just how much
we depend on her … how much we rely
upon her so we may indulge ourselves
in our careers and she knows she made
the right choice.
Kristi Langenbacher is a Coast Guard spouse
and writes about military family life.
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
AlbemArle life
C
Widow is stung by beau’s exclusion from wedding
character to do so. Explain
that in your eagerness to
impress him you didn’t
mention that you’re three
credits short of graduating, but you’ll have them
by autumn. If it’s a deal-
AbigAil
VAn
buren
breaker, I’d be surprised,
but it would mean he
wasn’t the man for you.
Dear Abby: Is it tacky to
reuse birthday candles? It
seems silly to throw away
candles that have been
used for only a minute
or two, but I know some
people think it’s bad etiquette. What do you think?
— Madeline in Rio Rancho, N.M.
Dear Madeline: Most
birthday cakes arrive at
the table already lit. Some
people reuse birthday candles if they haven’t burned
down very far. I don’t know
who told you “etiquette”
would be breached if you
didn’t use candles right
out of the box, but the next
time someone says it, you
have my permission to
reply, “Better a cake with
used candles than no cake
at all.”
D
D E R of B U
ST
OR
SI
N
S
FIR
ES
ear Abby: I took
care of my husband
for 10 years before
his death from early-onset
Alzheimer’s. I am in a relationship now, and I’m finding that a widow’s status is
far different than that of a
wife.
Not long ago, I was invited to a friend’s daughter’s
wedding. When I asked if
I could bring “Sam,” I was
told, “No, we don’t know
him and there are a lot
of other people we would
like to invite.” I got the
same response from my
first cousin when I asked
if I could bring Sam to her
son’s wedding: “No, we
don’t have room for him
and we don’t know him.”
Abby, Sam and I are a
couple; he is not a casual
boyfriend. Surely, if we
were married he would
be invited. Please tell me
what is proper when inviting a widow to a wedding
or other event. I find the
responses I received from
my friend and relative to
be insensitive and hurtful.
— Widow Stands Alone
Dear Widow: It is
considered a breach of
etiquette to ask to bring a
guest to an expensive event
like a wedding if only you
have been invited. If that
option were open, your invitation would have been
addressed to “Mary Smith,
and guest.”
It’s likely that money
constraints dictated the
guest list be limited at
both of these weddings. If
this happens again, it is up
to you to decide whether
witnessing the event is
more important than your
discomfort. Some people
would skip the reception
because sitting around listening to music and watching couples having a great
time on the dance floor is
too depressing.
Dear Abby: I doubt this
will be answered, but I am
desperate. I have been dating this awesome guy for
three months. He is really
sweet and I feel like it’s going somewhere.
The problem is, I lied to
him. He’s well-educated
and he continuously encourages me to further my
education. He thinks I’m a
college grad, when in reality, I am three credits short
of a diploma. I plan to finish this summer. Should I
come clean, or should I let
him think what he thinks?
— Going Someplace and
Feeling Guilty
Dear Feeling Guilty:
I think you’d feel better
if you cleared the air, and
if you do, I’m sure he will
respect you for having the
A
ROPER
P
PROPER
INTRODUCTION.
INTRODUCTION.
Prom
2013
submitted photo
See slideshow from this
year’s high school proms
at DailyaDvance.com.
VantageSouth Bank welcomes East Carolina Bank to the family. Our first
order of business is offering customers deeper resources, broader services
and greater expertise. You’ll see familiar faces with a firm commitment to
less red tape and more handshakes.
VantageSouth.com
|
Currituck
|
1.855.8VS.BANK (855.887.2265)
Elizabeth City (Loan Services Only)
|
Member FDIC
C
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Diversions
COVER STORY
ABC’s
summer
New
cop show’s
focus islineup
‘Motive’ cop
show is all about ‘Motive’
By Michael Korb
© Zap2it
Kristin Lehman stars in “Motive,” premiering Monday on ABC.
You’ve got to love it when people are willing to mix it up a little.
Let’s face it; the traditional cop
show has felt tired for years. Most
are so formulaic that the crimes
almost solve themselves.
But with “Motive,” a new series
premiering Monday, May 20, on
ABC, the formula has been set
on its ear. Creator and executive
producer Daniel Cerone (“The
Mentalist,” “Dexter”), likes to say
that most cop shows tend to be
whodunits, while “Motive,” as the
name suggests, tends to be more
of a whydunit. And with Kristin
Lehman (“The Killing”) starring
as Detective Angie Flynn, it’s a
mustwatchit.
“I always wanted to create a
series where you reveal the killer
in the tease — hearkening back to
‘Columbo,’ which is considered
the granddaddy of all detectives,
and basically the whole first act
was showing the kill,” Cerone
says. “I’ve always been fascinated
SUNDAY
10:00 a.m. ESPN X Games Barcelona.
AUTO RACING
SUNDAY
8:00 p.m. ESPN2 NHRA Drag
Racing Kansas Nationals.
(Same-day Tape)
SATURDAY
11:00 a.m. ESPN2 NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: History 300, Qualifying.
2:00 p.m. Lucas Oil Off
Road Racing From Las Vegas. (Taped)
2:30 p.m. NASCAR Countdown
2:45 p.m. NASCAR Racing
Nationwide Series: History
300.
1:30 a.m. ESPN2 NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: History 300. (Same-day Tape)
BASEBALL
SUNDAY
1:00 p.m. FOXSPO Braves Live!
Pregame
1:30 p.m. FOXSPO TBS MLB
Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Atlanta Braves.
4:30 p.m. FOXSPO Braves Live!
Postgame
8:00 p.m. ESPN MLB Baseball
Detroit Tigers at Texas Rangers.
MONDAY
6:30 p.m. FOXSPO Reds Live
Pregame
7:00 p.m. ESPN MLB Baseball
New York Yankees at Baltimore Orioles.
FOXSPO MLB Baseball
Cincinnati Reds at New York
Mets.
10:00 p.m. ESPN Baseball Tonight
FOXSPO Reds Live Postgame
TUESDAY
10:30 a.m. FOXSPO College
Baseball SEC Tournament,
Game 1: Teams TBA.
2:00 p.m. FOXSPO College Baseball SEC Tournament, Game
2: Teams TBA.
6:30 p.m. FOXSPO Reds Live
Pregame
7:00 p.m. FOXSPO MLB Baseball
Cincinnati Reds at New York
Mets.
10:00 p.m. ESPN2 Baseball Tonight
FOXSPO Reds Live Postgame
WEDNESDAY
12:30 p.m. FOXSPO Reds Live
Pregame
1:00 p.m. FOXSPO MLB Baseball
Cincinnati Reds at New York
Mets.
4:00 p.m. FOXSPO Reds Live
Postgame
7:00 p.m. ESPN MLB Baseball
Teams TBA.
FOXSPO College Baseball
ACC Tournament, Game 3:
Teams TBA.
10:00 p.m. ESPN Baseball Tonight
THURSDAY
11:00 a.m. FOXSPO College
Baseball ACC Tournament,
Game 1: Teams TBA.
3:00 p.m. FOXSPO College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game
2: Teams TBA.
7:00 p.m. FOXSPO College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game
3: Teams TBA.
FRIDAY
11:00 a.m. FOXSPO College
Baseball ACC Tournament,
Game 1: Teams TBA.
3:00 p.m. FOXSPO College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game
2: Teams TBA.
6:30 p.m. FOXSPO Reds Live
Pregame
7:00 p.m. FOXSPO MLB Baseball
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati
Reds.
10:00 p.m. FOXSPO Reds Live
Postgame
SATURDAY
11:00 a.m. FOXSPO College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game
1: Teams TBA.
3:00 p.m. FOXSPO College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game
2: Teams TBA.
7:00 p.m. MLB Baseball Regional Coverage.
FOXSPO College Baseball
ACC Tournament, Game 3:
Teams TBA.
BASKETBALL
SUNDAY
3:00 p.m. NBA Countdown
3:30 p.m. NBA Basketball
Conference Semifinal: Teams
TBA.
MONDAY
8:00 p.m. TNT NBA Basketball
Indiana Pacers at New York
Knicks.
10:30 p.m. TNT Inside the NBA
1:00 a.m. ESPN2 NBA Tonight
TUESDAY
7:30 p.m. ESPN NBA Countdown
8:30 p.m. ESPN NBA Lottery
9:00 p.m. ESPN NBA Basketball
Conference Final: Teams
TBA.
1:00 a.m. ESPN2 NBA Tonight
WEDNESDAY
8:00 p.m. TNT NBA Tip-Off
8:30 p.m. TNT NBA Basketball
Eastern Conference Final,
Game 1: Teams TBA.
11:00 p.m. TNT Inside the NBA
1:00 a.m. ESPN2 NBA Tonight
THURSDAY
8:00 p.m. ESPN NBA Countdown
9:00 p.m. ESPN NBA Basketball
Conference Final: Teams
TBA.
FRIDAY
8:00 p.m. TNT NBA Tip-Off
8:30 p.m. TNT NBA Basketball
Conference Final: Teams
TBA.
11:00 p.m. TNT Inside the NBA
1:00 a.m. ESPN2 NBA Tonight
SATURDAY
8:00 p.m. ESPN NBA Countdown
9:00 p.m. ESPN NBA Basketball
Conference Final: Teams
TBA.
1:00 a.m. ESPN2 NBA Tonight
BOXING
FRIDAY
3:30 p.m. ESPN College Football
Live
4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live
5:00 p.m. ESPN2 NFL32
GOLF
SUNDAY
3:00 p.m. PGA Tour Golf
HP Byron Nelson Championship, Final Round.
SATURDAY
3:00 p.m. PGA Tour Golf
Crowne Plaza Invitational at
Colonial, Third Round.
Golf Senior PGA Championship, Third Round.
PGA Tour Golf Crowne
Plaza Invitational at Colonial,
Third Round.
Golf Senior PGA Championship, Third Round.
HOCKEY
SUNDAY
3:00 p.m. NHL Hockey
New York Rangers at Boston
Bruins.
SATURDAY
8:00 p.m. NHL Hockey
Conference Semifinal: Teams
TBA.
SOCCER
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. ESPN2 English Premier League Soccer Newcastle United FC vs Arsenal
FC.
1:10 p.m. ESPN2 MLS Soccer
Los Angeles Galaxy at New
York Red Bulls.
THURSDAY
8:30 p.m. ESPN2 Soccer International Friendly: Chelsea vs.
Manchester City.
SATURDAY
2:00 p.m. UEFA Champions
League Soccer Final.
SOFTBALL
SUNDAY
3:30 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Regional:
Teams TBA.
5:30 p.m. ESPN2 NCAA Softball
Championship Update
6:00 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Regional:
Teams TBA.
SATURDAY
6:30 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
10:30 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball NCAA Tournament, Super Regional: Teams TBA.
6:00 p.m. HBO Boxing Carl Froch
vs. Mikkel Kessler.
FRIDAY
10:00 p.m. ESPN2 Boxing Friday
Night Fights.
FOOTBALL
MONDAY
4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live
5:00 p.m. ESPN2 NFL32
TUESDAY
3:30 p.m. ESPN College Football
Live
4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live
5:00 p.m. ESPN2 NFL32
WEDNESDAY
3:30 p.m. ESPN College Football
Live
4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live
5:00 p.m. ESPN2 NFL32
THURSDAY
3:30 p.m. ESPN College Football
Live
effects and carefully crafted illusions during World War II. This
remarkable tale of a top-secret
mission that was at once absurd, deadly and amazingly effective is told through the stories
of the veterans, many of whom
— such as Bill Blass and Ellsworth Kelly — would go on to
illustrious careers in art, design
and fashion.
4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live
5:00 p.m. ESPN2 NFL32
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
“With ‘Columbo,’ the fun was
sort of watching this rumpled
character slowly break down these
killers and sort of prey upon their
egos and catch them off guard. So
for me, I wanted to try and find
a character who was fun to watch
but at other times people might
dismiss because she is a beautiful
woman.”
Flynn was originally conceived
as a “wrong side of the tracks”
sort of character, who ran with
the wrong crowd when she was
younger. She was supposed to
be someone who was easy to
overlook.
“But Kristin — who we feel like
we’ve scored with — brings a little
bit more sophistication to the role
than I imagined,” says Cerone. “I
really like it when an actor comes
in and redefines a role. Kristin
plays that sort of completely
unexpected, off-the-cuff, flamethrower of truth. She’s going to
say what she says and sort of lull
you into this false sense of security
with her caring and compassion,
and then the knives come out.”
BEST BETS
Sports
ACTION SPORTS
with that model. But I was always
reluctant to pitch it because there
is the stumbling block, because if
you reveal the killer, then where’s
the mystery?”
Good point. But one of the
biggest problems with traditional
crime series is that arguably the
most exciting thing in any episode
has already happened at the start
of the show, and it happened offscreen: the murder.
By opening “Motive” with two
little vignettes that introduce both
the killer and the victim, viewers
get the opportunity to play the
game of “When did they do it?
Why did they do it? And how
did they do it?” Best of all, thanks
to those initial introductions, we
are actually drawn into their lives
and feel much more of a vested
interest than is usually the case in
a crime drama.
Going back to the “Columbo”
mold, when you know who the
killer is, you have to make the
game a lot more fun, says Cerone.
7:00 p.m. ESPN College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
ESPN2 College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
9:00 p.m. ESPN College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
SATURDAY
3:00 p.m. ESPN College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
5:00 p.m. ESPN College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
7:00 p.m. ESPN2 NCAA Softball
Championship Update
8:00 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball
NCAA Tournament, Super
Regional: Teams TBA.
10:00 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball NCAA Tournament, Super Regional: Teams TBA.
Scott Foley stars in “The
Goodwin Games” Monday
on Fox.
SUNDAY
The 2013
Billboard Music
Awards
8 p.m. on Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber,
Prince, Bruno Mars and Miguel
are among the artists scheduled
to perform at this year’s event at
the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
Prince is also receiving the Billboard Icon Award. Tracy Morgan hosts the festivities.
ACM Presents:
Tim McGraw’s
Superstar
Summer Night
9 p.m. on Not for country fans only, this
special has McGraw performing
with and introducing a diverse
lineup of artists that includes
Nelly, Ne-Yo, Pitbull and John
Fogerty. The Band Perry, Keith
Urban, Lady Antebellum, Taylor
Swift, Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley and McGraw’s wife, Faith
Hill, are also in the lineup.
MONDAY
The Goodwin
Games
8:30 p.m. on This new comedy from the
executive producers of “How I
Met Your Mother” is about three
estranged siblings who return
home after the loss of their beloved father and unexpectedly
find themselves poised to inherit
more than $20 million — if, and
only if, they can adhere to their
late father’s wishes. Scott Foley,
Becki Newton, T.J. Miller, Melissa Tang and Kat Foster star.
Motive
10:01 p.m. on This new drama takes a page
from “Law & Order: Criminal
Intent,” revealing the killer and
victim at the beginning of each
hour and then exploring the
crime via stylized flashbacks
and the efforts of Detective Angie Flynn (Kristin Lehman) and
her partner, Detective Oscar
Vega (Louis Ferreira), to bring
the killer to justice. The series
premieres in its regular time slot
on Thursday.
Dancing With the
Stars
9 p.m. on And the ballroom blitz is over
... for now. At the end of the
night, one celebrity and dancepro partner will be crowned
the winners of the competition’s
16th season. Whether you’re
excited or not about who wins
will depend upon whether your
favorite is still in.
WEDNESDAY
MasterChef
8 p.m. on Amateur chefs compete to
become a culinary master and
earn the title — and very cool
apron — of MasterChef in the
fourth season of this competitive
reality series hosted by intimidating chef Gordon Ramsay. Contestants are put through a series
of challenges designed to test
their palates, food knowledge,
passion and culinary skills.
They’re evaluated by Ramsay,
restaurateur Joe Bastianich and
young four-star chef Graham
Elliot.
Psych
10 p.m. on USA
When a woman dies from
what looks like a botched plastic surgery procedure, Shawn
and Gus (James Roday, Dule
Hill) suspect something more
deliberate, but they still think it’s
the doctor’s doing. Complicating matters is that the surgeon is
an old flame of Henry’s (Corbin
Bernsen).
THURSDAY
Save Me
8 p.m. on Beth Harper (Anne Heche) is
just a typical Midwestern wife
and mother until she nearly
chokes to death on a sandwich.
After she’s revived, she realizes
she is able to communicate with
God. This throws a new wrinkle
into her husband’s (Michael Landes) plan to leave her for another woman, and the mistress
(Alexandra Breckenridge) isn’t
pleased.
Rookie Blue
10:01 p.m. on After three years on the job,
the rookies are becoming experienced officers — but at what
cost? It’s been six months since
Andy McNally and Nick Collins
(Missy Peregrym, Peter Mooney)
left for their undercover operation. When they return to 15 Division, they quickly realize that
much has changed, and like the
rest of the rookies, if they don’t
adapt, they’ll be left behind.
FRIDAY
Live From Lincoln
Center
9 p.m. on In the season finale, “Audra
McDonald: Go Back Home,”
the five-time Tony Award winner and series host takes a
turn as the featured performer,
singing songs from her new
album and other favorites in a
special spring concert at Lincoln
Center’s Avery Fisher Hall.
Mystery Diners
10 p.m. on FOOD
The husband-and-wife owners
of N’awlins Cafe, a restaurant
in — surprise! — New Orleans,
ask Charles to help them figure
out why the place is struggling.
Nicole and Tom go under cover
as customers, and it doesn’t
take them long to find the answer: The manager is hiring her
buddies with no regard to their
competence in the new episode
“Friends With Benefits.”
SATURDAY
Bet on Your Baby
8 p.m. on In this new episode, parents
try to predict how many presents a pair of twins can unwrap
in one minute, how many spins
a little guy can make in 30 seconds and where a youngster’s
ball will land when hit from
a tee. Winning wagers earn
money for the children’s college
funds. Melissa Peterman hosts.
Longmire
11:01 p.m. on A&E
TUESDAY
The Ghost Army
8 p.m. on War, deception and art come
together in the astonishing story
of American GIs who tricked the
enemy with rubber tanks, sound
Anne Heche stars in “Save
Me” Thursday on NBC.
Joe Bastianich is a judge on
“MasterChef ” Wednesday
on Fox.
In anticipation of the Season
2 premiere next week, the channel is rerunning Season 1 of this
modern Western. In the season
finale, “Unfinished Business,”
the brother of a developmentally
disabled Cheyenne girl looks
like the obvious suspect when
two teens acquitted of raping
her are murdered. Walt (Robert
Taylor) suspects there’s more to
the story, however, and he races
to find the real killer before
someone else dies.
Diversions
SOAP SYNOPSES
play a new game with Morgan
so he could win the $50,000
he owed. The Corinthos boys
returned to Port Charles. Fed up
with TJ’s possessiveness, Molly
told him she was going to the
prom with Rafe. Lulu awakened
from a nightmare into a close
moment with Milo — just as
Dante arrived.
The Bold and the
Beautiful
Brooke and Hope wallowed
in their romantic woes. Liam
was every bit the doting husband to Steffy. Bill went out of
his way to ensure no Spencer
would ever be crossed. Rick
again tried to end things with
Caroline.
The Young and the
Restless
Days of our Lives
An unknown assailant attacked Rafe, leaving him near
death. Will and Sonny confronted Nick about his whereabouts
during the assault, while Kate
confronted Stefano and came
to regret it. Abigail doubted
JJ’s story of what happened in
London. Gabi faced a difficult
decision regarding Rafe. Hope
found evidence implicating EJ.
Chad asked Abigail if they
still had a chance. Kristen and
Brady had a fight over her family. Marlena asked John if he
wanted a divorce. Eric comforted Nicole. Jennifer discovered
JJ lied about London. Kristen
had second thoughts about her
plans for Brady. Sami doubted
EJ’s innocence. JJ “accidentally” destroyed something he
borrowed from Daniel. Kristen
SUNDAY
4:05 p.m. Saving Private Ryan
U.S. troops look for a
missing comrade during World
War II. HBO2
4:20 p.m. Your Sister’s Sister
A romantic triangle forms
during an impromptu getaway.
TMC
5:00 p.m. Moonrise Kingdom
A search party looks for
a pair of love-struck runaways.
HBO
5:30 p.m. The Town A
woman doesn’t realize that her
new beau is a bank robber. (DVS) TNT
6:00 p.m. A Room With a View
A woman must choose
between love and social propriety. TMC
Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade Indy’s hunt for
his missing father leads to the
Holy Grail. SPIKE
Blades of Glory Rival
male skaters compete as a pair.
(DVS) TBS
6:45 p.m. Hot Tub Time Machine
A hot tub transports four
pals back to their heyday in the
1980s. COM
7:00 p.m. Twister Storm
chasers race to test a new tornado-monitoring device. FAM
8:00 p.m. The Other Man A
man discovers that his wife is
unfaithful.
Chicago Rival entertainers vie for the spotlight from
behind bars. My Week With Marilyn
A production assistant spends
a week with Marilyn Monroe.
TMC
Star Trek Chronicles the
early days of the starship Enterprise and her crew. FX
The Hangover Three pals
must find a missing groom after
a wild bash. (DVS) TBS
Inglourious Basterds
Soldiers seek Nazi scalps in
German-occupied France. (DVS) TNT
9:30 p.m. Twister Storm
chasers race to test a new tornado-monitoring device. FAM
9:40 p.m. The Pianist A
Jewish musician witnesses the
horrors of the Holocaust. TMC
10:00 p.m. Contagion Doctors try to contain the spread of
a lethal virus. HBO2
Casino A mob employee
makes a play for power in 1970s
Las Vegas. MAX
10:15 p.m. Blades of Glory
Rival male skaters compete as
a pair. (DVS) TBS
10:30 p.m. Star Trek
Chronicles the early days of
the starship Enterprise and her
crew. FX
MONDAY
4:30 p.m. Lost in Translation
A middle-aged actor falls
for a young woman in Tokyo.
TMC
Cinderella Man Downand-out boxer Jim Braddock
makes a dramatic comeback.
SPIKE
6:00 p.m. The School of Rock
An unemployed guitarist
poses as a teacher. SHOW
Living With the Enemy
A newlywed thinks her husband
killed his first wife. LIFE
6:15 p.m. Beginners A man
recalls his father coming out of
the closet at 75. HBO2
8:30 p.m. Twitches Reunited
twins use magic against evil.
DISN
9:00 p.m. Mulan Animated.
A Chinese maiden disguises
herself as a man. FAM
TUESDAY
4:30 p.m. Collateral A contract killer uses a cabdriver for
his jobs. MAX
4:40 p.m. Big Miracle International forces rally to save
three ice-trapped whales. HBO2
5:30 p.m. Taking Chance Lt.
Col. Michael Strobl escorts a
fallen Marine home. HBO
6:00 p.m. Independence Day
Earthlings vs. evil aliens in
15-mile-wide ships. SPIKE
6:30 p.m. Beasts of the Southern
Wild An intrepid 6-yearold lives with her father in the
Delta. MAX
7:00 p.m. Moonrise Kingdom
A search party looks for
a pair of love-struck runaways.
HBO
Lauren Boles
and John continued to toy with
each other.
General Hospital
AJ and Tracy faced off on
“The Chew.” Michael rushed
a roughed-up Morgan to the
hospital. Connie and Olivia met
with danger courtesy of the
gambling mob. Rafe told Molly
he loved her but didn’t want
to risk their friendship. Tracy
blackmailed AJ to take the fall
for the relish debacle. A mysterious girl invited college boys to
MOVIES
Adam told Victor he found
the money to buy out the public
investors, but Victor questioned
its origin. Chelsea told Chloe
she was going to admit to
Dylan that the baby wasn’t his.
Dylan showed her a drawing
of the cradle he planned to
make, and they kissed. Phyllis overheard Traci questioning
her relationship with Jack, and
he set her straight. Michael
confronted Lauren after running
into Carmine at On the Blvd.
She told Carmine she wanted
to be with Michael. Summer
asked Kyle to the prom, but he
used his age to get out of it.
She then refused Fen’s invitation. Alex suspected Chloe and
Kevin in the burglary at Neil’s
apartment.
9:30 p.m. Last Days Here
Bobby Liebling battles decades
of addiction to drugs. SHOW
10:00 p.m. My Best Friend’s Wedding A food critic seeks to
sabotage her buddy’s nuptials.
LIFE
FRIDAY
Bradley Cooper stars as a
groomsman seeking his soonto-wed friend, who went missing after a Las Vegas bachelor
party, in “The Hangover”
Sunday on TBS.
Mulan Animated. A Chinese maiden disguises herself
as a man. FAM
7:15 p.m. The Woman in Black
A lawyer goes to a house
in a marsh, which has secrets.
SHOW
8:00 p.m. Mary and Martha
Two women lead a crusade to
fight and end the spread of malaria. HBO2
300 Badly outnumbered
Spartan warriors battle the Persian army. AMC
Taken Slavers kidnap the
daughter of a former spy. FX
8:30 p.m. Twitches Reunited
twins use magic against evil.
DISN
9:00 p.m. Independence Day
Earthlings vs. evil aliens in
15-mile-wide ships. SPIKE
10:00 p.m. What’s Love Got to Do
With It The life of singeractress Tina Turner. MAX
Taken Slavers kidnap the
daughter of a former spy. FX
10:31 p.m. 300 Badly outnumbered Spartan warriors
battle the Persian army. AMC
WEDNESDAY
4:05 p.m. Harry Potter and the
Prisoner of Azkaban The
young wizard confronts the fugitive Sirius Black. MAX
4:45 p.m. JCVD Actor JeanClaude Van Damme goes home
to find tranquility. (Subtitled-English) TMC
5:00 p.m. Million Dollar Baby
A cantankerous trainer
bonds with a female boxer. HBO
Red Dragon An FBI agent
asks Hannibal Lecter to help
him nail a killer. SPIKE
6:25 p.m. Fair Game Valerie
Plame is revealed as a CIA
agent. SHOW
8:00 p.m. As Good as It Gets
A mean-spirited New York
author finds love with a waitress.
AMC
Unstoppable Two men try
to stop a runaway train carrying
toxic cargo. FX
Inglourious Basterds
Soldiers seek Nazi scalps in
German-occupied France.
SPIKE
10:00 p.m. Unstoppable Two
men try to stop a runaway train
carrying toxic cargo. FX
THURSDAY
4:00 p.m. Inglourious Basterds
Soldiers seek Nazi scalps
in German-occupied France.
SPIKE
Waiting to Exhale Four
Phoenix women bond while pursuing romance. VH1
4:30 p.m. Blazing Saddles
Gucci-saddlebagged Sheriff Bart
teams up with the drunken Waco
Kid. AMC
5:00 p.m. Step Into Liquid
Filmmaker Bruce Brown captures surfers in action. TMC
6:30 p.m. O Brother, Where Art
Thou? Three escaped
convicts embark on an unusual
odyssey. AMC
7:00 p.m. Crazy, Stupid, Love.
A suddenly single 40something needs help finding
his groove again. HBO2
7:30 p.m. The School of Rock
An unemployed guitarist
poses as a teacher. SHOW
8:00 p.m. The Princess and the
Frog Animated. A fateful
kiss leads to an epic adventure.
DISN
9:00 p.m. Moonrise Kingdom
A search party looks for
a pair of love-struck runaways.
HBO2
4:30 p.m. The Legend of Bagger
Vance A golf caddy helps
a disillusioned young war veteran. HBO2
5:30 p.m. The Pianist A
Jewish musician witnesses the
horrors of the Holocaust. TMC
6:00 p.m. Megamind
Animated. A supervillain has
no purpose after he defeats his
nemesis. FX
6:40 p.m. Field of Dreams
A voice urges a farmer to build
a ballpark on his property. HBO2
7:20 p.m. The Terminal A
European living in an airport befriends a stewardess. MAX
7:30 p.m. Glory Road A
coach leads the first all-black
NCAA team. BET
8:00 p.m. Rise of the Planet of
the Apes A medical experiment results in a superintelligent chimp. HBO
Mean Girls A teen becomes friends with three cruel
schoolmates. SHOW
The Help An aspiring
writer captures the experiences
of black women. TMC
The Last Samurai A
Westerner learns the ways of
the samurai in the 1870s. AMC
Bowfinger A filmmaker
tries to shoot a movie around an
unwary star. VH1
9:00 p.m. Manhunt The hunt
for Osama bin Laden began
even before 9/11. CNN
The Hangover Three pals
must find a missing groom after
a wild bash. (DVS) TBS
9:30 p.m. Red Eye A plane
passenger involves his seatmate
in a deadly plot. MAX
10:00 p.m. The Sisterhood of the
Traveling Pants Four
teens keep in touch by passing
along a pair of jeans. MTV
SATURDAY
4:30 p.m. The Last Samurai
A Westerner learns the ways
of the samurai in the 1870s. AMC
Bowfinger A filmmaker
tries to shoot a movie around an
unwary star. VH1
4:45 p.m. Mary and Martha
Two women lead a crusade to
fight and end the spread of malaria. HBO2
5:00 p.m. Little Fish An exbeau complicates the life of a
reformed drug addict. TMC
The SpongeBob SquarePants
Movie Animated. SpongeBob must find King Neptune’s
stolen crown. NICK
5:20 p.m. Forrest Gump
An innocent man enters history from the ’50s to the ’90s.
MAX
5:30 p.m. Terminator 2: Judgment
Day Cyborgs battle over
a youth who holds the key to the
future. TNT
6:20 p.m. Prometheus Explorers wage a terrifying battle
to save mankind’s future. HBO2
6:30 p.m. A Bug’s Life Animated. Insects help an ant fend
off grasshoppers. FAM
7:00 p.m. Our Idiot Brother
An easygoing dimwit disrupts
the lives of his three ambitious
sisters. SHOW
Madagascar Animated.
Zoo animals must learn to survive in the wild. TOON
7:30 p.m. Get Him to the Greek
An executive must drag a
boozy rock star to Hollywood.
COM
8:00 p.m. Magic Mike A
male stripper takes a young upstart under his wing. HBO
The Dark Knight Batman battles a vicious criminal
known as the Joker. (DVS)
TNT
8:30 p.m. The Incredibles
Animated. A former superhero
gets back into action. FAM
9:00 p.m. 8 Mile A Detroit
man tries to achieve success as
a rapper. MTV
New Jack City Undercover officers and their boss target
a crack king. VH1
10:00 p.m. Iron Man A billionaire dons an armored suit to
fight criminals. FX
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
C
DAYTIME TALK SHOWS
MONDAY
7:00 a.m. Today Weekly
meals; texting and driving.
CSPAN Washington Journal
Live call-in program with officials.
9:00 a.m. Live! With Kelly
and Michael Colin Farrell.
10:00 a.m. The Wendy Williams Show Maury Povich;
makeup trends.
11:00 a.m. Anderson Live An
hour of hidden-camera investigations.
1:00 p.m. The Chew Bobby
Flay; Kiernan Shipka.
The Ricki Lake Show
Children of extremely damaged
mothers.
2:00 p.m. The Bill Cunningham Show Guests ask their
mates if they are gay.
3:00 p.m. The Ellen DeGeneres Show Actor Ed Helms.
4:00 p.m. Anderson Live An
hour of hidden-camera investigations.
The Dr. Oz Show Jack
Osbourne; low-carb flours.
CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper Headlines from around the
globe.
TUESDAY
7:00 a.m. Today The Professionals; Michael Caine.
CSPAN Washington Journal
Live call-in program with officials.
9:00 a.m. Live! With Kelly
and Michael Psy performs.
10:00 a.m. The Wendy Williams Show Ray J; David
Mizejewski.
11:00 a.m. Anderson Live Damien Echols; co-host Deborah
Norville.
1:00 p.m. The Chew Wayne
Brady; tuna tartare appetizers.
The Ricki Lake Show
Brides-to-be lose weight.
2:00 p.m. The Bill Cunningham Show Guests confront
their loved ones.
3:00 p.m. The Ellen DeGeneres Show Hayden Panettiere;
Ed Sheeran performs.
SUNDAY
4:00 p.m. Anderson Live Damien Echols.
The Dr. Oz Show Ways
to get rid of germs.
CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper Headlines from around the
globe.
WEDNESDAY
7:00 a.m. Today America’s
best beaches; Paul Anka.
CSPAN Washington Journal
Live call-in program with officials.
9:00 a.m. Live! With Kelly
and Michael “Dancing With the
Stars” winners.
10:00 a.m. The Wendy Williams Show Bret Michaels
(“Rock My RV”).
11:00 a.m. Anderson Live Libby Phelps Alvarez; Molly Sims.
1:00 p.m. The Chew Yvette
Nicole Brown.
The Ricki Lake Show Connecting with deceased loved
ones.
2:00 p.m. The Bill Cunningham Show A look back at past
moments.
3:00 p.m. The Ellen DeGeneres Show Actress Portia de
Rossi; actor Ludacris.
4:00 p.m. Anderson Live Libby
Phelps Alvarez; Molly Sims.
The Dr. Oz Show Tony
Robbins; new health warnings.
CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper Headlines from around the
globe.
THURSDAY
7:00 a.m. Today Giada De
Laurentiis; Anne Heche.
CSPAN Washington Journal
Live call-in program with officials.
9:00 a.m. Live! With Kelly
and Michael Ken Jeong.
10:00 a.m. Rachael Ray
Hayden Panettiere; a makeover.
The Wendy Williams Show
Kerry Washington and David
Alan Grier.
11:00 a.m. Anderson Live Revenge porn; Hoda Kotb.
1:00 p.m. The Chew Chef
Guy Fieri; Meatball Truck.
FRIDAY
7:00 a.m. Today Fun;
Bobby Flay and Giada De Laurentiis.
CSPAN Washington Journal
Live call-in program with officials.
9:00 a.m. Live! With Kelly
and Michael Ethan Hawke.
10:00 a.m. Rachael Ray
Gwyneth Paltrow.
The Wendy Williams Show
Paris Hilton.
11:00 a.m. Anderson Live
Woman who lost 190 pounds.
1:00 p.m. The Chew Yvette
Nicole Brown.
The Jeremy Kyle Show
Stepmother is a bad influence.
The Ricki Lake Show
Learning to forgive.
2:00 p.m. Rachael Ray
Gwyneth Paltrow; warm Greek
salad.
The Bill Cunningham
Show Guests face accusations
of infidelity.
3:00 p.m. The Ellen DeGeneres Show Steve Harvey; Dr.
Neal Barnard.
4:00 p.m. Anderson Live
Woman who lost 190 pounds.
The Dr. Oz Show Wheat;
headaches.
CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper Headlines from around the
globe.s
FAMILY FUN
African-American heroine in the
history of Disney animation, but
the fantasy — an Oscar nominee for best animated feature
— otherwise marks a return to
many of the studio’s traditions
in the genre. Young New Orleans resident Tiana (voice of
Anika Noni Rose) encounters
a prince-turned-frog (voice of
Bruno Campos) ... and finds
herself sharing his plight following their expected kiss.
Scooby-Doo and the
Goblin King
1:30 p.m. on TOON
Gotta love a villain called
The Amazing Krudsky. He’s a
magician — voiced by Wayne
Knight (“Seinfeld”) — with an
evil plan to steal a fairy’s magical light and turn everyone
into Halloween monsters. But
he didn’t plan on a certain
ghost-busting Great Dane and
his pal Shaggy, who can stop
him if they get their hands on
the Goblin King’s (voice of Tim
Curry) magic scepter. Jay Leno
and Lauren Bacall also lend
their voices to this feature-length
“Scooby” tale.
WEDNESDAY
Nature
8 p.m. on “The White Lions” tells the
story of two extremely rare
white lion cubs on their journey
to adulthood. The two females
were born in May 2009 in
South Africa’s Kruger Park and
must overcome not only the
same survival challenges that
SUNDAY
The Jeremy Kyle Show
Man confronts his daughter’s
boyfriend.
The Ricki Lake Show
Guests take stands against
families.
2:00 p.m. Rachael Ray Hayden
Panettiere; a makeover.
The Bill Cunningham
Show Guests try to prove their
fidelity.
3:00 p.m. The Ellen DeGeneres Show Amanda Seyfried;
Kevin Nealon.
4:00 p.m. Anderson Live Revenge porn; Hoda Kotb.
The Dr. Oz Show Martha Stewart; a libido-booster pill.
CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper Headlines from around the
globe.
SATURDAY
Mars Needs Moms
4:30 p.m. on FAM
“Mars Needs Moms” airs Saturday on ABC Family.
all lion cubs face, but also the
threats that their high visibility
brings.
THURSDAY
The Princess and the
Frog
8 p.m. on DISN
Much was made of this cartoon feature boasting the first
There’s nothing quite like an
alien abduction to bond a parent and child, and that’s what
sparks this animated 2011 Disney fantasy. Seth Green supplies
the voice of a youngster whose
mother (voice by Joan Cusack)
is targeted by Martians; when
they kidnap her, he stows away
on a spaceship to go to her
rescue. Additional voice cast
members include Green’s fellow
“Austin Powers” veteran Mindy
Sterling, Dan Fogler and Elisabeth Harnois.
WHAT’S COOKING
7:00 p.m. FOOD Iron Chef America Jose Garces against Marc
Forgione; judges include Adam
Fleischman and Donatella
Arpaia.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Cupcake Wars
Celebrating the arrival of
Space Shuttle Endeavour.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Iron Chef America Judges are Ree Drummond, Aaron Sanchez and
Trisha Yearwood.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant: Impossible Wagon Wheel Family
Restaurant is in mayhem.
MONDAY
6:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Shitake mushroom
empanadas; flautas with
queso fresco.
7:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Guy visits two places that have the same name.
7:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives A California diner’s
take on meatloaf; Guinness
beef stew.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Pancake burritos
and fiery hot sandwiches; family recipes.
8:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, DriveIns and Dives Duck club with
homemade garlic mayo; ropa
veija.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Never seen before
footage of Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, DriveIns and Dives In Phoenix, a
pork dish; Toronto, Canada,
Asian pork ribs.
10:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, DriveIns and Dives Fish ‘n’ chips
joint; red sauce joint; meat
sauce.
TUESDAY
7:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped Perch
in the appetizer round; one
chef undercooks meatballs.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped Tuna
belly in the first basket; lamb
top round.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped Familiar and mystery ingredients;
chai tea powder.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped The
normal rounds are replaced
with breakfast, lunch and dinner rounds.
WEDNESDAY
6:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Real-deal dishes
born elsewhere.
7:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant: Impossible Traveling to Burton,
Mich., to save Paliani’s from
demise.
8:00 p.m. MasterChef Home
cooks present dishes to the
judges.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant:
Impossible The 50th episode
unveils never-seen-before
footage; favorite moments; updates on restaurants.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant: Impossible Wagon Wheel Family
Restaurant is in mayhem.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant
Stakeout Oakwood Diner in
Staten Island, N.Y., is driving
away customers.
THURSDAY
7:00 p.m. FOOD Sweet Genius
Spicy hot candy and a rare
fruit in frozen desserts.
8:00 p.m. Hell’s Kitchen The
chefs create ethnic dishes with
select ingredients; a team falls
behind before dinner service.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped A romantic gift as the centerpiece;
thematic ingredient; molded
chocolate novelty.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped A sea
creature; a tuber; crackers and
red wine.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Giving You the
Business Managers at 16
Handles are tested; supersize
order; salesman makes a
stink; rowdy dodge ball team.
FRIDAY
6:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Guy searches for
some of America’s greatest
breakfasts.
7:00 p.m. FOOD Giving You the
Business The managers of
Jersey Mike’s Subs are put to
the test.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Chicken wings in
buffalo sauce.
8:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Guinness fried oysters with homemade coleslaw;
sammies.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives In Philadelphia,
fried PB&Js and tacos; in
Phoenix, pork sammie.
9:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins
and Dives Lau lau stew; Sicilian sandwiches; bananas on
French toast.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Mystery Diners
N’awlins Cafe, in New Orleans,
is struggling because the manager is hiring friends.
10:30 p.m. FOOD Mystery Diners
Chef Marc, owner of Parma in
Las Vegas notices a discrepancy in receipts.
SATURDAY
7:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant: Impossible Wagon Wheel Family
Restaurant is in mayhem.
8:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant:
Impossible Owners with no
restaurant experience are in
debt.
9:00 p.m. Ultimate BBQ
Cookout Countdown Barbecues and cookouts across the
country; racecar driver Clint
Bowyer; author Dylan Ratigan.
9:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant:
Impossible Bronk’s Bar and
Grill in Lake City where an
untrained staff is not the only
challenge.
10:00 p.m. FOOD Restaurant:
Impossible The owner of
Joe Willy’s Seafood House in
Fishkill, N.Y. has to get past
his pride.
C
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Going out
Guide
Diversions
1?@ 1@?
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TOdAy
Northampton County day
Museum of the Albemarle hosts
history about Northampton County,
2 p.m.-4 p.m. Refreshments. Free.
335-1453.
!
!
! #
!
! MONdAy
Plein Air Painting
Arts of the Albemarle hosts Plein
Air Painting Workshop with Margie
Sawyer, May 20-21, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
$100 member, $115 for nonmember. 338-6455.
School fundraiser
Elizabeth City-Pasquotank Public
Schools spaghetti dinner fundraiser
at Montero’s Restaurant, 5 p.m.8 p.m. $10, eat in or take out.
Principals, teachers, staff, students
serving. Benefits SAFE Schools Fund.
Andy Montero at 331-1067 or 3397387.
Karaoke
Courtney’s at Quality Inn hosts
Karaoke with DJ Rodney, 9 p.m.-1:30
a.m. No cover. 338-3591.
Bingo
Cosmopolitan Club Bingo Mondays.
Doors open 5 p.m.; games at 7 p.m.
Smoke free.
Bingo
American Legion Post 40 Bingo
Mondays at 1317 West Queen St.,
Edenton. Open 6:30 p.m.; games 7
p.m.
Girls Inc. camp
Girls Inc. hosts summer camp for
girls, 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m., June 10-Aug.
23. $75/week. 335-7346.
Aviation Career Camps
ECSU hosts co-ed Aviation Career
Education Camps, June 23-28, high
school students. For girls only, July
14-19. $150 each. Tangie Bonds, 3353443.
Summer drama Camps
Arts of the Albemarle hosts summer
camps: for ages 5-7, June 24-26, $60;
for ages 8-18, July 8-20, $100; for
ages 10-12, Aug. 5-9, $100. Contact:
338-6455.
Summer day Camp
Port Discover and Museum of the
Albemarle, science & history day
camp, June 17-21, 8:30 a.m. to noon,
ages 5-8 years and 9-12 years. $100
non-members; $90 members. 3386117.
4-H Summer Camps
Currituck 4-H program hosts Camp
Mesowannago: June 17-20, 24-27, July
1-3 & 5, July 15-18, July 29-Aug. 1,
and Aug. 5-8 at Central Elementary
School in Barco. 232-2262.
Performing Arts camp
June 17, College of the Albemarle
hosts 2 or 4 week camp about
acting, dancing, singing, and more, for
ages 12-18. 335-9050.
!
!
! $
! !"
Advance Tickets
Plein Air Painting
Arts of the Albemarle hosts Plein
Air Painting Workshop with Margie
Sawyer, May 20-21, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
$100 member, $115 for non-member.
338-6455.
Music Festival
May 26, Whalehead in Historic
Corolla hosts Outer Banks Music
Festival with Band of Oz, The Tams,
Steve Owens and Summertime, The
Crowd; 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Tickets $20.
Visit www.whaleheadclub.org.
Cale Camp fundraiser
June 1, Cale: Camp & Conference
Center, Hertford, annual “Pig on the
Perquimans,” 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. $10
ages 12 and over, $5 ages 5-11, 4 and
under free. Tickets: 264-2513.
Taste of the Albemarle
Elizabeth City Main Street hosts 20 area
restaurants on Main Street, 6 p.m.-8
p.m. Music by Out’N The Cold, 8 p.m.10 p.m. $20 adults; $15 military, first
responders; $10 student; $5 children
12 years and under. Benefits Arts of the
Albemarle. 338-6455.
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D@>. Spring Into a New Home * Call Us Today!
T M R e a l t y. c o m
New
Listing!
New
Listing!
New e!
Pric
New e!
Pric
New e!
Pric
New e!
Pric
331-2233
111 Madeline Ln
4BR/3BA * .57 Acre
Tuckers Ridge * Fireplace
#69813.....$87,000
208 Bayshore Dr
4BR/3.5BA * Riverfront
Screened Porch * .08 Acre
#69874.....$370,000
413 Mexico Rd
4BR/2.5BA * Edenton
Fenced Yard * Brick Ranch
#67428.....$74,900
102 Cherokee Dr
3BR/2BA * Near the River
Large Deck * Fenced Yard
#68464.....$84,500
1513 Penny Dr
3BR/1BA * Remodeled
Edgewood * Must See!
#69010.....$109,900
703 Southern Ave
3BR/1BA * Near Downtown
Enclosed Sun Porch
#69386.....$39,900
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Classifieds
Call 335-8076
D
dailyadvance.com
TODAY’S FEATURED ADS
EMPLOYMENT
VEHICLE
EQUIPMENT
MISCELLANEOUS
DRIVER CDL-A jobs available!
See www.coastal-bev.com
& apply today!
EOE M/F/D/V
TOYOTA CAMRY ‘90.
130,000 miles,
runs good,
$1,800/obo.
Call 757-560-3268.
1987 FORD 1710 3 cylinder diesel,
only 815 hours, bush hog, box grader,
finish mower, heavy duty tandem axle,
16’trailer, all for $10,500.
252-599-2407.
THOMAS MOPED.
Needs some reattachment parts. Ran excellent
before it entered long term garage storage.
Low miles. $200/obo.
Call 338-1684.
TODAY’S CLASSIFIED ADS
TRANSPORTATION
Cars
CHRYSLER CIRRUS ‘00. Auto, AC, PS, PB,
tilt, cruise, CD, PW, PL, very clean, good
transportation.
$3,995.
seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
FORD TAURUS ‘07. Auto, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, CD, new AC. $5,695. seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
NISSAN SENTRA ‘06. 4Dr, low mileage,
auto trans., cold AC. $6,995. seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
Boats & Motors
Houses For Sale
Other
ALUMINUM BOAT in Elizabeth City:
1967 Maritime, trihull, 17.3 feet, with
Evinrude 2-stroke, 70 hp engine. Comes
with roller trailer with new axle. $2,000
obo. Contact: 228-547-6732.
HERTFORD. 129 Croft Dr. 4Br, 2Ba brick
home. 2800 sq/ft, hw floors, pool
house w/htd jacuzzi, boatramp, riverview, 1 acre lot. Open house Sat, May
18, 1-4 p.m. (252) 339-9124
MERCHANDISE
Lots/Land For Sale
Electronics
FSBO near Asheville, NC. 1200+sf
2bd/2ba cabin with open flpn on almost
2 acres, $132,900. Mtn view, easy access.
Call for more details, 828-286-2981 brkr
BE SOMEBODY'S HERO FOR LIFE.
Donate Plasma! You Could Earn Up To
$400 a Month! 18-64 Years of Age
Valid Picture ID Be in Good Health
Proof of Social Security Number
Proof of Current Residence Postmarked
Within Last 30 Days
Octapharma Plasma Inc.
1935 S. Military Hwy,
Chesapeake, VA 23320
757-543-3401
Bring this ad and receive a $5 bonus
when you complete your first donation!
www.octapharmaplasma.com
SAVE
on cable tv-internet-digital
phone-satellite. You`ve got a choice!
Options from all major service providers.
Call us to learn more! Call today.
877-856-9137.
Mobile Homes For
Sale
SAVE on cable tv-internet-digital phone.
Packages start at $89.99/mo (for 12
months.) Options from all major service
providers. Call Acceller today to learn
more! Call 1-877-715-4515.
Furniture
PONTIAC G6 ‘06. 4Dr. sedan, auto, PW,
PL,
tilt,
cruise,
CD.
$6,995.
seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
SECTIONAL SOFA (semi-circle) light
green, excellent condition. $600.
Call 426-1261.
Medical Supplies
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT ‘02. Leather,
roof, loaded, $4,995. seacrestauto.com
or 335-9048.
HOSPITAL BED for sale. Great Condition
$550/obo. Call Pam 562-5784
TOYOTA CAMRY ‘90. 130,000 miles, runs
good, $1,800/obo. Call 757-560-3268.
Miscellaneous
SUVs
(4) 48FT. BULK TRAILERS. Excellent condition. Tires excellent. Call 252-330-5539
ask for Steve or JT, located in Elizabeth
City area.
DODGE DURANGO ‘05. Adventurer
package, leather sunroof, full power,
TV. $8,995. seacrestauto.com or
335-9048.
ATTENTION- Complete 19x31 pool, deck,
filter, liner only $555. Payments
$89/month. 888-236-4132 **** Plus 5
homes needed to display siding, windows/roofs for upcoming home award.
Save hundreds. All credit accepted.
866-668-8681.
PINBALL MACHINE.
$100.
Needs
bumpers/flippers replaced. Call or leave
message 338-1684.
GRAND CHEROKEE JEEP ‘98. 4X4, very
clean, auto, PW, PL, tilt, cruise. $3,995.
seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
So your dog tore up the
classifieds, huh?
www.dailyadvance.com
JEEP WRANGLER ‘99. Auto, hard top,
roll up windows, only 63,000 miles.
$8,495. seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
Trucks
DODGE RAM CLUB CAB ‘99. 4WD. Runs
& looks great. Moving must sell. $4,800.
Call (252) 722-3028.
DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 1500 ‘99. 4 wd,
sunroof, remote start. 114k miles.
$7000/obo. Call (252) 340-1100.
GMC CANYON ‘06. 2Dr., approximately
70,000
miles,
$4,900/obo.
Call
252-314-0374 after 5 p.m.
Vans
So your dog tore up the
classifieds, huh?
www.dailyadvance.com
QUILT MAGAZINES FOR SALE. Over 400
magazines. Down sizing. $150/obo. Call
252-562-6703.
STEEL BUILDINGS Blow Out! Best savings on remaining clearance buildings.
Garages, Workshops, Homes. 20x22,
25x30, 30x40, 35x56, 40x70. Make offer
and low payments. 1-800-991-9251
Ashley.
UTILITY TRAILER. 7X14. Homemade,
$750/obo. Call 252-264-5357.
AGRICULTURAL
Farm & Industrial
Equipment
1987 FORD 1710 3 cylinder diesel, only
815 hours, bush hog, box grader, finish
mower, heavy duty tandem axle, 16’
trailer, all for $10,500. 252-599-2407.
Produce
WILLIAMS STRAWBERRY FARM
HWY 343 SOUTH MILLS
252-771-2647
CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY ‘06. 7
passenger mini van, leather, $4,985.
seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
FREESTAR MINI VAN ‘04. 7 passenger,
very clean, PW, PL, tilt, cruise, CD,
$4,995. seacrestauto.com or 335-9048.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
Cemetery Lots
For Sale
E. CITY. 3Br, 2Ba, $1,500 down,
$350/month. Financing available. Forbes
338-8758.
EMPLOYMENT
Education/
Training
CURRITUCK COUNTY SCHOOLS
Multiple Positions Available.
See website for details. EOE.
www.currituck.k12.nc.us
Health Care
RN/LPN/CERTIFIED NURSING
ASSISTANTS Positions Available
Competitive Salary
Competitive Benefits Package, 401K
Apply in person: Colony Ridge Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center
430 W. Health Center Drive
Nags Head, NC 27959
(252) 441-3116
SENTARA LIFECARE
Currituck Nursing Facility
3907 Caratoke Highway
Barco, NC 27917
Sentara Lifecare - Currituck the long
term-care division of Sentara Healthcare is currently recruiting for
the following
clinical positions, various shifts available.
COROLLA CLASSIC VACATIONS Now
hiring Seasonal Weekend Cleaners and
Inspectors in Corolla and part-time
Linen Packers for our warehouse on the
mainland in Harbinger, NC for 3-4 days
during the week. Must be reliable,
dependable, efficient, personable and
possess good customer service skills,
have a valid driver’s license and reliable transportation. Most cleaning supplies provided. Excellent Pay and
Bonuses. Please send resume to: housekeeping@corollaclassicvacations.com
ELIZABETH CITY COAST GUARD
EXCHANGE Lead Cashier Checker-FT:
MUST have Retail exp. with cash handling, register functions and customer
service; supervises other cashiers, opens
and closes store, orders merchandise.
Federal Background Check mandatory.
Please
apply
via
this
link:
https://home.eease.adp.com/recruit/?id=
5028451
EXP. HVAC TECH. NEEDED.
Excellent pay and benefits, must have
references. Call George & Co. Heating &
AC 335-2596.
MAS TEC, INC., a subcontractor for
Dominion VA Power (DVP), is hiring
crews for work in the Elizabeth City
area. The following positions are available: UG digging Foremen & crews,
Directional Drill Operators & locators,
Helpers, CDL drivers (Class A). We are an
EOE and offer benefits. Pay depends
upon experience. Apply in person at
our office, 3769 S Military Hwy., Chesapeake, VA or call 757-546-0334 for
application.
EOE M/F/D/V * Drug Free/Tobacco Free
Workplace
Mediacom Communications
The 7th largest cable company in the
United States covering over 23 states,
has new openings in Plymouth, NC for
ENTRY LEVEL Installers
Job ID- 5374 & 5443
Performs installs for cable and high
speed internet. Must have a valid
Driver's license. Mediacom offers
competitive pay and great benefits.
For immediate consideration please
apply online at
www.mediacomcable.com/careers
EOE m/d/f/v
Sales
ANNOUNCEMENTS
• Nursing Supervisor
• LPN
• CNAs
Apply on-line at:
www.sentara.com/employment
Click on "search and apply link"
SALES REPRESENTATIVE. Lincare in Eliz.
City NC, leading National Respiratory
Company seeks a sales representative.
Create working relationships with MDs,
nurses, social workers and articulate our
exellent patient care with attentive listening skills. Drug free workplace. Email
resumes to stodd@lincare.com. EOE
Transportation/
Logistics
DRIVER CDL-A jobs available!
See www.coastal-bev.com & apply
today! EOE M/F/D/V
ROUTE DELIVERY. Now hiring full time
year round, Monday-Friday. Deliver
beverages in the Albemarle area. Must
have Class A CDL and clean driving
record. Must be at least 21 years of age.
Salary commission, bonus & benefits.
Apply in person, at office, City Beverage Co., 1471 Weeksville Rd., EC or call
252-330-5539.
Mighty Maid
Cleaning Service, Inc.
6225 N. Croatan Hwy. Ste. C
GR Little Building
NOW HIRING
COTTAGE
CLEANERS
for Outer Banks areaSat. & Sun. only.
Applications taken
on Fri. -Sun.
For directions call
255-0895
NO PHONE CALLS!
MUST APPLY IN PERSON.
WEST LAWN CEMETERY. 2 exclusive lots.
Azalea section facing reflection pool.
$5,000/obo. Call 757-410-5457.
ATHLETIC PROGRAM SUPERVISOR
Perquimans County is seeking an individual who will perform
responsible administrative and supervisory work in planning and
directing athletic activities for the County. An employee in this
class plans, coordinates, and supervises organized team sport
activities for the Parks and Recreation Department for youth and
adults. The employee also supervises recreational activities when
needed. This position will serve under the Recreation Director.
Applications may be obtained from the County Manager’s Office
located on the second floor of the Courthouse in Hertford, North
Carolina. Closing date for receipt of applications is Friday, May 31,
2013, at 5:00 p.m. Salary is Grade 64 ($28,278 per year minimum)
and will be provided according to experience. A full description of
the Job Duties may be obtained at the Manager’s Office.
Minimum Requirements: (1) Graduation from a four-year college or university with a degree in sports administration or a related
field, preferred; (2) considerable experience supervising organized
athletic activities; or any equivalent combination of education and
experience; (3) equivalent combination of experience, education
and training is acceptable; and (4) Possession of and continued
authorization of a valid North Carolina driver’s license for use of
County vehicles entrusted to the Recreation Department. An
Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE/ADA). Perquimans County also
participates in E-Verifying.
BEST FOR SALE DEAL!
Only $30
4-Line Classified
Daily Advance and DailyAdvance.com
Perquimans Weekly, Chowan Herald,
Extra, 3-day featured ad Daily Advance
Paramedics Needed
$PNQFUJUJWF1BZ
'VMM5JNF#FOFàUT1BJE7BDBUJPO])PMJEBZ1BZ
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4PVUI,JOH4U8JOETPS/$
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REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS!!!
Prime Residential & Commercial Properties
in HISTORIC EDENTON
FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 2013
10:00 AM – ABSOLUTE AUCTION!!
WATERFRONT TOWNHOUSE
**************************************
12:00 NOON – COMMERCIAL BUILDING
W
**************************************
inslow
uctions, Inc.
Real estate Division
Call Now
For Private
Showing
REAL ESTATE (252) 482-3462 Brent Winslow, Auctioneer
NCAL #2606 NCAFL #4973, NCRL #C19629
CELL PHONE (252) 333-7749 Sheila & Russell Bootwright
BIC, RE#74258, RE#98763
AUCTION (252) 482-5348
For Terms/Conditions, Photos, etc.:
www.winslowauctions.com
Open HOuse 1pM-4pM
saturday, May 25tH
107 pungO drive, HertfOrd
Golf Course Home
AlbemArle PlAntAtion
Amenities available: pool, golf, boating facilities & more.
To be sold at auction on June 1st with bid of $200,000 or more. 10% Buyer’s Premium
Call (252)766-1600 for appointment
in order to gain access to albemarle plantation.
united Country / forbes realty & Auctions llC
NCAFL# 9180 NCREFL# 22873 www.forbesuc.com
Multi-ProPerty Auction
SAturdAy, June 1St @ 4:00 PM
Selling a Golf course Home & 9 Waterfront Properties
Auction Location: The Fairfield Inn & Suites,
1640 City Center Blvd, Elizabeth City, NC
Parcel # 1: Golf Course Home,
Albemarle Plantation,
107 Pungo Drive. Hertford,
NC. Amenities available: pool,
golf, boating facilities & more.
To sell regardless of price with
bid of $200,000 or more.
Parcel # 2: Lot #78 - Pelican
Point Drive, Hertford, NC:
Riverfront lot with sandy
beach Area, 1.01 +/- Acres
in Shores At Lands End.
Parcel # 3: Canal Front 2+
acres, Lot # 193 in Shores At
Lands End, on Sandpiper. To
sell with bid of $3,000 or more.
Parcel # 4: Canal Front 2+
acres, Lot # 192 in Shores At
Lands End, on Sandpiper. To
sell with bid of $3,000 or more.
Parcel # 5: Waterfront Lot # 4
in Deep Creek Shores, on Sea
View Lane, Hertford, NC
Parcel # 6: Waterfront 1.55+/acres, Lot # 20 in Pailin Creek
Landing, 119 Pailin Creek
Road, Elizabeth City, NC
Parcel # 7: Waterfront Lot on
Croatan Sound,
5534 Old Ferry Dock Road,
Manns Harbor, NC
Parcel # 8: Waterfront Lot on
Croatan Sound,
5536 Old Ferry Dock Road,
Manns Harbor, NC
Parcel # 9: Waterfront Lot on
Hwy 12, Lot # 5 in Marshview
Subdivision, Frisco, NC
Parcel # 10: Canal Front Lot,
105 Jane Lane,
Elizabeth City, NC. Includes
SW Manufactured Home.
There will be a 10%
“Buyer’s Premium” on all
properties in this auction.
Online Bidding will be available at www.proxibid.com
For Auction & Auction Property Details, including a free
downloadable “Bidder’s Package” go to www.billforbes.com
to view our traditional real estate listings visit: www.forbesuc.com
Forbes Realty & Auctions LLC
201 Ocean Hwy. S., Hertford NC 27944
NCAFL# 9180 NCREFL# 22873
www.forbesuc.com
Bill Forbes, CAI, BAS
www.billforbes.com
bill@billforbes.com
252-394-6666
NCAL# 2881 NCREBL# 79000
IN-COLUMN ADVERTISING COSTS
BEST YARD SALE DEAL
Only $25
4-Line ad Thursday, Friday, Saturday in Daily
Advance and DailyAdvance.com
Perquimans Weekly, Chowan Herald
INCLUDES NEW YARD SALE KIT
Private parties only. No real estate. One item per ad
Reserve space by Monday at 10 a.m.
Call by Thurs. at 4 p.m. to include Extra for same price!
Cancellations
Errors
CALL 335-8076 TODAY
Tuesday-Friday.............2 p.m. day before publication
Saturday-Sunday..........11 a.m. Friday
Full-Time & ParT Time
Jake Forbes
www.forbesuc.com
jake@forbesuc.com
252-766-1600
NCAL# 6553 NCREBL# 240818
SERVICE DIRECTORY
RATES
1 month - $157.75
3 months - $131.75/month
6 months - $110.25/month
BEST DEAL: 1 year - $91.50/month
includes DailyAdvance.com and Extra
OFFICE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY, 8 AM-5 PM
The Daily Advance cannot make allowances for errors after the first
day of publication. The Daily Advance shall not be held responsible for
omitted ads for any reason.
In-Column Line Ad Deadlines
Tuesday-Friday.............2 p.m. day before publication
Saturday-Sunday..........11 a.m. Friday
No in-column line ads published on Mondays.
The Daily Advance reserves the right to censor, reclassify, revise or reject any advertisement at any time.
D
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Call 335-8076
Classifieds
Legal Notices
BID NOTICE
Corinth Baptist Church is seeking sealed
bids for a 1998 Bluebird 44 Passenger
Bus. It has a Cummins Engine, Allison
Transmission and a restroom. It has
62,500 miles on the speedometer and is
in good condition. Please send sealed
bids to the church office at Corinth Baptist Church, 1035 US 17 S, Elizabeth City,
NC 27909. Please mark on the envelope
“Bus Bid”. Bids will be received up until
May 22, 2013 at 3:00 p.m. at the church
office. Bids will be opened on May 23,
2013 at 7:00 p.m. Corinth Baptist Church
reserves the right to reject any and all
bids.
5/16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22
NORTH CAROLINA
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE
SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION
CURRITUCK COUNTY
BEFORE THE CLERK
FILE NO. 13-SP-57
IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE:
OF A DEED OF TRUST FROM MATTHEW:
R. WADE AND WIFE, MARY A. WADE,:
TO WILLIAM BRUMSEY, III, TRUSTEE,:
DATED APRIL 27, 2007,
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE
AND RECORDED IN BOOK 1001, PAGE:
439, CURRITUCK COUNTY PUBLIC:
REGISTRY
Pursuant to an Order entered April 30,
2013, in the Superior Court of Currituck
County, and the power of sale contained in the captioned Deed of Trust
(“Deed of Trust”), the undersigned Substitute Trustee (“Trustee”) will offer for
sale at auction, to the highest bidder for
cash,
AT THE COURTHOUSE DOOR IN
CURRITUCK, CURRITUCK COUNTY,
NORTH CAROLINA, ON
MAY 23, 2013 AT 10:00 O'CLOCK A.M.
The real estate and the improvements
thereon, if any, secured by the Deed of
Trust, less and except any such property
released from the lien of the Deed of
Trust prior to the date of this sale, lying
and being in Fruitville Township, Currituck County, North Carolina and more
particularly described as follows:
LOT 70, SECTION 9 ON THE PLAT OF
CAROVA BEACH, RECORDED IN MAP
BOOK 3, PAGE 45, IN THE OFFICE OF
THE REGISTER OF DEEDS OF CURRITUCK COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA.
In the Trustee's sole discretion, the sale
may be delayed for up to one (1) hour
as provided in Section 45-21.23 of the
North Carolina General Statutes.
The record owner(s) of the real property and/or those having a legal interest
therein not more than ten days prior to
the date hereof are Matthew R. Wade
and wife, Mary A. Wade.
A five percent cash deposit, or a cash
deposit of $750.00, whichever is greater,
will be required of the last and highest
bidder. The balance of the bid purchase shall be due in full in cash or certified funds at a closing to take place
within thirty (30) days of the date of
sale. The undersigned shall convey title
to the property by non-warranty deed.
This sale will be made subject to all
prior liens of record, if any, and to all
unpaid ad valorem taxes and special
assessments, if any, which became a lien
subsequent to the recordation of the
Deed of Trust. This sale will further be
subject to the right, if any, of the United
States of America to redeem the
above-described property for a period
of 120 days following the date when
the final upset period has run.
The purchaser of the property
described above shall pay the Clerk's
Commissions in the amount of $0.45 per
$100.00 of the purchase price (up to a
maximum amount of $500.00), required
by Section 7A-308(a)(1) of the North
Carolina General Statutes.* If the purchaser of the above-described property
is someone other than the Beneficiary
under the Deed of Trust, the purchaser
shall also pay, to the extent applicable,
the land transfer tax in the amount of
one percent of the purchase price.
To the extent this sale involves residential real property with less than fifteen
(15) rental units, you are hereby notified:
A. An order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to Section
45-21.29 of the North Carolina General
Statutes in favor of the purchaser and
against the party or parties in possession by the clerk of the superior court of
the county in which the property is sold;
and
B.Any person who occupies the property pursuant to a rental agreement
entered into or renewed on or after
October 1, 2007, may, after receiving
the notice of sale, terminate the rental
agreement upon 10 days' written notice
to the landlord. Upon termination of a
rental agreement, the tenant is liable
for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effective date of
the termination.
This the 30 day of April, 2013.
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE
BY:
Michael P. Sanders
406A-1 South Griffin Street
Elizabeth City NC 27909
NC State Bar No. 17587
(252) 331-1628 (telephone)
msanders@michaelsanderslaw.com
5/12, 19
Buy or
Sell Your
Items In
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Advance
Call the
Customer
Service
Dept.
335-8076
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vehicles, jobs, real estate, pets..
you name it!
We’re here to meet your everyday needs!
THE DAILY ADVANCE
Classified
335-8076 • DailyAdvance.com
Horoscope
Sunday,
May 19, 2013
aRIES (March 21 to April
19) Today you’re interested
in exploring ways to improve
your health and also get better
organized. Make the best use
of this urge to turn over a new
leaf. Go, go, go!
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov.
21) Group activities are positive
and upbeat today because
your emotional contacts are
important to you. You might
feel protective toward a friend.
You might make travel plans
with someone.
TauRuS (April 20 to May
20) This is a playful day. Enjoy
sports events, flirtations, the
arts, movies and parties. Picnics
with children and playful times
will delight. (And so easy to
do.)
SaGITTaRIuS (Nov. 22 to
Dec. 21) You feel enthusiastic
about professional and business
concerns today. Other people
see you in a positive light, and
you know you can make the
most of this. (And you can!)
GEMInI (May 21 to June 20)
You will enjoy entertaining
at home today, and probably
will go overboard being a
fantastic host. What a good
day to explore real-estate
opportunities and chances to
schmooze with family.
CaPRICORn (Dec. 22 to
Jan. 19) Travel opportunities
are exciting. Others are just
as thrilled about exploring
avenues in publishing, the
media, medicine, the law and
higher education.You rock!
CanCER (June 21 to July 22)
You are super gung-ho today,
because you believe in yourself.
Naturally, this confidence
radiates out to others, and
soon, they believe in you, too!
(You look great to me.)
LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22)
Business and commerce are
favored today; however, be
cautious because you could
go overboard. Or possibly,
something
looks
more
promising than it actually is.
(But things are still good.)
VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22)
You want to put yourself first
today, and that’s all right. You
are both giving and demanding
when it comes to dealing with
others right now.
LIBRa (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22)
This is a good day to relax by
yourself. Slip away to some
hidden place to enjoy yourself
and feel pampered, because
who feels like working today?
aQuaRIuS (Jan. 20 to Feb.
18) People will be generous
to you today, so be ready to
receive. Don’t be afraid of
attached strings. However, if
you are sharing or dividing
something, don’t give away the
farm.
PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20)
This is a great day to schmooze
and enjoy the company of
others. A feeling of well-being
fills the air, putting a smile on
everyone’s face.
TOday’S BIRTHday You
have lots of energy, but the
trick is learning how to use
it. Many of you are self-taught,
and seek out or have the
benefit of a mentor (often of
the same sex). Because you’re
an excellent communicator
and very charismatic, you are
generally successful in life. In
the year ahead, an important
choice will arise -- choose
wisely.
King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Must be available early morning hours
seven days a week, 365 days per year;
have a dependable vehicle, valid
driver license and vehicle insurance;
be bondable; and be reliable.
"QQMJDBUJPOTBSFBWBJMBCMFBU
5)&%"*-:"%7"/$&
48"5&3453&&5
&-*;"#&5)$*5:/$
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
Classifieds
Call 335-8076
RED OAK SUB. SOUTH OF E. CITY.
3Br, 2Ba. Eat-in kitchen, patio, large yard.
$900/mo. neg.
Available immediately.
Call 252-339-2121/339-7622.
CAMDEN.
4Br, 2Ba brick ranch
w/1car attached garage.
Avail. June. $1295/mo. Owner/Agent.
Call (757) 621-8094
Apartments
For Rent
Houses For Rent
Houses For Rent
Mobile Homes For
Rent
1 EICHLER LN. EC. 1Br upstairs, utilities
incl. $550/mo. + 1 month sec. dep. No
pets. Ref. req. Fully furnished. Call or
leave message 338-1684.
CAMDEN. 4Br, 2Ba brick ranch w/1car
attached garage. Avail. June. $1295/mo.
Owner/Agent. Call (757) 621-8094
E. CITY. Old Oak. 3Br, 2Ba. Storage shed,
conveniently close to YMCA, COA &
hospital. $875/mo. + $875/dep. Call
(252) 337-4104.
EC. Newly remodeled 3Br, 2Ba, lvg
room, eat-in kitchen, utility room & covered deck. Central air/heat. $650/mo.
including lot rent. No pets. 312-8401.
EC SUMMERFIELD 1106 Jessica St. 3Br,
2Ba, util. room, insulated garage., stove,
dishwasher, new fridge, Avail. June 1,
No pets. $925/mo + dep. 338-8924.
HERTFORD. 3Br, 2Ba. Trailer Central
air/heat. Call (252) 334-7105 or (252)
334-9621.
FORBES RENTALS
$600-$1,000. Credit check required + sec.
dep. No pets. Call 252-338-8758.
Roommates
Condos For Rent
PASQUOTANK
RIVER. Luxury 3Br.
condo. Call 252-335-1850.
Houses For Rent
1314 HIGHLAND AVE. ECSU area. 2Br,
1Ba, living room, kitchen, sunroom/den,
washer/dryer hookup, central heat/air.
$700/mo. + $700/sec. dep. 252-337-9019.
800-B BOSTON AVE. E. CITY. Brick bungalow, 2Br, 1Ba. $550/mo. Security &
references required. Call 252-267-0908.
CAMDEN AREA.
3BR/2BA w/ eat in kitchen, gas fireplace
& w/d hookups. $950/month
(252) 335-7161 bmdrentals.com
EC. 17N IN OLD OAK. 2 BR, 2 BA. $675 +
dep. FMI 338-5211.
EC. 716 Garden St., 3Br, 1Ba, central
heat/ac. Newly renovated. No Pets.
$725/mo. Call (252) 330-2000.
E. CITY. 1013 Butler’s Ln. 3Br., outdoor
shed. Call (252) 334-7105 or (252)
334-9621.
SUNBURY. 035 Orchard St. 3Br, 2Ba, lvg
room, dining room, kitchen, util. room,
sunroom, and very lg garage. Avail.
June 1. $975/mo. (757) 539-0755
WINFALL. 3Br, 2Ba, brick ranch home,
$850/mo + $850 dep. Call (252) 337-4104
dailyadvance.com
Cars, Trucks, SUVs...
Find what you are looking for in
The Daily Advance Classifieds.
www.dailyadvance.com
(252) 335-8076
TOP RENTALS
ADAMS LANDING.
EC. 3Br, 2 1/2 Ba, all appl., W/D,
community amenities, available now upon
approval, $1,175/mo.
Owner is NC real estate agent. 339-2166.
D
www.forbeshomesrentals.com
HERTFORD.
3Br, 1Ba, ready for
move-in. Newly renovated with w/d
hook-up and central air. $585/mo. +
sec. dep., will work with any potential
tenant with the sec. dep. If you would
like to have an appointment to view this
home contact: Al at 1-800-980-4401 (B)
or 757-581-8830 (C).
RIVERSIDE. Avail. 6/1. Delightful
1Br/1Ba, cottage. Private w/offstreet
parking. 1 yr. lease. $650/mo. + $650/sec.
dep. due at signing. (252)337-4013.
EC. ROOMMATE NEEDED. To share rent.
Access to whole house.
$500 per
month. Call 252-334-7247.
2 Mill End Court
ElizabEth City
335-2915
carpet shops
JUST REDUCED
Lynn Weeks Bulman
252.339.6517
MLS 68403 2304 W Church St Ext, Elizabeth City $189,000
JUST REDUCED
Business & Office
Rentals
FOR LEASE/SALE Warehouse/Office
Space in Edenton 150,000 sf all sprinkled
(rent sf needed for any length of time
needed) Dock high loading, Ground
level loading, Fork lift available Call
Charlie 482-5521 or Darren 221-4463
Joan Atkinson
252.207.5626
Carroll Romney
252.339.6870
MLS 68478 613 Wynne Fork Rd, Hertford $167,000
Place your ad now and get your listing rented! Call 335-8076
NEW PRICE
Janet Lane
252.619.2011
Time Is Running Out!
Call Today
to Subscribe!
MLS 69849 1120 Commissary Rd, Elizabeth City $99,900
Sandra Ward
252.331.5525
335-8076
Your Real Estate “EXPERTS!”
JUST LISTED
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
Contact the
following
businesses for
quality service
and customer
satisfaction.
Directory for Home and Business
Computer
Repair/Service
Pc2u
Automotive
STEVE’S AUTO REPAIR
338-4747
927 Halstead Blvd., Elizabeth City
Why Total Alignment?
• Better Gas Mileage
• Improved Handling
• Reduced Tire Wear
• Safer Driving
“We come to you!”
Onsite Computer Repair Service
Virus removal & Clean-up
Friendly and Fast Service at
Low costs give us a Try! Call
252-455-3324
Home
Improvement
Cleaning Services
BUSY LIVING CLEANING
Every home detail cleaned by
Certified Cleaning Techs
Well known trusted full service
Residential & Office Cleaning Company
Office: 267-0229 busylivingcleaning.com
Coupons! Like us
facebook.com/busylivingcleaning
MIKE'S HOME
IMPROVEMENT
Home
Improvement
Roofing
Lawn To Roof
• Additions • Decks • Roofing • Siding
• Rubber and Flat Roofs
Any New or Old Construction
No Job Too Big or Small
MIKE WHITE 264-4437
Roof Cleaning, Repair & Installation
•Handyman • Painting Houses/Roofs
Remodeling • Molding • Porch • Decks
Doors• Windows • Floors •Siding•Soffit
Metal Fascia 335-2698
MLS 69870 905 Southern Ave, Elizabeth City $29,900
Sue Hayhurst
252.333.4219
JUST LISTED
Storage Buildings
PONDEROSA
STORAGE UNITS
Remodeling, Additions, Sun Tunnels,
Siding Garages, Decks & Replacement
Windows. Call Roscoe 264-3316
Patsy McGee
252.339.7727
Todd King
252.333.4174
MLS 69873 523 Edge St, Elizabeth City $99,900
$50/month
Call 453-3151
Classifieds
are online
too!
go to
www.dailyadvance.com
SOLD
Terry Saunders
252.331.5488
Eldon Jackson
252.619.4394
MLS 69211 112 Old Oak Dr, Elizabeth City
www.PortfolioLiving.com 252.333.1211
Feature Property
OPEN HOUSE TODAY
OPEN HOUSE TODAY
109 Croft Drive
MLS#65874 $299,500.
Open House From 1pm to 3pm
Stacey 339-5200
604 Chowan Trail
MLS#69410 $214,500
Open House From 1pm to 3pm
Lisa 757-377-6740
172 Old Jury Rd.
On approx. 10acres.
MLS#63208 $450,000.
Gail 757-646-8497
512 W Colonial Ave
Lots of character!
MLS#65433 $39,900.
Stacey 339-5200
327 Camp Perry Rd.
3BR’s. Attractive & affordable.
MLS#65358 $45,000.
Charlie 207-7977
136 Dances Bay Rd.
If you are looking for
a solid construction...
this is it. All large
rooms in this brick
home with over 3400
SF., formal living
room with bay area +
formal dining room,
eat-in kitchen with
solid surface counter tops & large pantry. Kitchen
doesn’t lack cabinets and includes a section of
glass fronts coffee bar. The den has juniper wainscot, chair rail, built-in bookcases and fire-place.
Master bedroom has 11 x 8 walk-in closet with
solid wood pocket door, Master bath with jet tub,
dbl. bowl vanity and separate tiled shower. FROG
with built-in bookcases and skylights.
MLS#69773 $379,900. Debbie 340-5483
ElizabEth City OffiCE
529 S. hughes blvd.
Elizabeth City, NC 27909
252-338-7653
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
WATERFRONT
314 See View
Pier & 40 ft wide dock platform.
MLS#67377 $349,900.
Charlie 207-7977
Website: www.williamewood.com/elizabethcity
D
LONG & FOSTER
THE DAILY ADVANCE, SuNDAY, MAY 19, 2013
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Real Estate, Mortgages, Insurance
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
801 West Church Street. Spectacular home - historic
charm & elegance with modern conveniences, all on
double corner lot. Open floor plan - formal LR & DR,
den/study, gourmet kitchen, 5 BRs, 3 full baths, half bath,
and more. Grand staircase, high ceilings, and beautiful
woodwork. Full basement, fully floored attic w/permanent
stairs. Tankless hot water heater and whole-home generator. See this home for yourself! MLS# 69750
$BNEFO
153 Scotland Road. Beautiful home in quiet country
setting in Camden county, this home is immaculate
in every way, beautifully landscaped yard, 2&1/2-car
garage, formal living room & dining room, large
eat-in kitchen with updated appliances, huge den with
fireplace, spacious screened in porch, large master
bedroom with walk-in closets, elegant master bath.
MLS# 67268
Kelly Warren 252-267-8508
Kelly@longandfosterec.com
www.kellywarren.lnfre.com
Jimmy Anderson 252-267-3181
jimmy@longandfosterec.com
www.jimmyanderson.lnfre.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1111 Park Drive. Beautiful colonial home on just over an
acre in riverside community of Elizabeth City. Charming
4BD/2.5BA, formal LR w/wood burning fireplace &
attached screen porch w/ceiling fans. Formal DR, roomy
kitchen, den w/access to wrap-around deck, loft, huge
mud room! BRs are upstairs; Master suite w/sauna/
steam bath, walk in closet! Back BR is very spacious
w/built ins on the entire back wall! Call to schedule your
appointment today! MLS# 69477
)FSUGPSE
127 Red Bank Road. Great country home on nearly 3
acres. Home is very well maintained and has exceptionally large bedrooms and FROG. 2-car garage with
circular driveway. Great landscaping and a front porch
to relax after work. Shed with garage door. All appliances convey. Architectural roof new in 2005. Heat
pump replaced in 2012. Septic pumped in 2012.
MLS# 69790
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Marie Chandler 252-339-7568
marie@longandfosterec.com
www.mariechandler.com
OPPORTUNITY
Our Quality of Service Sets Us Apart
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
207 Small Drive. Contemporary style & windows galore!
4 BR, 3.5 BA.Soaring ceilings, hardwood floors & lots
of light. Downstairs: formal sitting room, formal DR,
LR/den, kitchen w/breakfast area, laundry room, HUGE
master suite w3 closets, another BR w/attached full bath,
additional half bath & access to expansive deck. Upstairs:
2 BRs, 1 full bath, & FROG. Attached double garage.
Across street from river - community boat ramp available
for use w/ optional yearly fee of $35. MLS# 69523
Gary Hobbs 252-333-7015
Gary@longandfosterec.com
www.garyhobbs.lnfre.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
)FSUGPSE
000 Windtide Lane. Bulkheaded
riverfront 1 acre lot with 7.33 acres
behind. Nice high land. Possibility
of subdivision of the 7.33 acre tract.
Quiet community in the country.
MLS# 69081
Marie Chandler 252-339-7568
marie@longandfosterec.com
www.mariechandler.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
2006 Johnson Road. Great find! 4BD/3.5BA, large
kitchen with lots of cabinetry, counter space, lots of
room, formal LR & DR, large deck & back yard w/hot
tub, above ground pool! BRs have built in drawers
& cabinets! A must see property, come check it out
today! Fannie Mae HomePath property. Purchase this
property for as little as 3% down! Approved for HomePath Mortgage Financing. Approved for HomePath
Renovation Mortgage Financing. MLS# 69310
Jean Baker 252-333-7202 MLS# 69368
jean@longandfosterec.com
www.northeastnchomes.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1500 Edgewood Drive. Freshly painted
and ready for you to move in. Nice 3
brm/1bth convenient to shopping and
schools. Some wood floors and new
vinyl. Corner lot. Detached workshop,
shed and carport. Home has nice flow.
Partially fenced back yard.
MLS# 68336
114 Sycamore Lane. Move in ready......Upgraded and very well kept 3 bedroom 2 bath home in
the Old Oak Subdivision. New laminate floors in living room, dining area, kitchen & hall. Newly
painted, new steel back door, new kitchen faucet & fans throughout. Very nicely landscaped and
two parking places make this one of the more desirable units in Old Oak. ADT security system is
transferable. Two Dish system receivers (one US, one Asian) already in place.
4IBXCPSP
1848 Shortcut Road. 3 bd/ 2b open floor plan and new
carpet. This home is perfect for guests or in-laws, with
two kitchens one w/granite island, two living rooms,
master has garden tub w/walk in closet. Landscaping
is awesome with fish pond, huge deck, handicap ready
with ramp and second bath has seating and bars. Also,
a single detached garage with frog. Frog is unfinished.
Two sheds covey. MLS# 64600
Donna Seymour 252-339-0216
donna@longandfosterec.com
www.donnapseymour.lnfre.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
130 Chancey Drive. This beautiful home has many amenities to offer! Grand foyer opens to a huge great room
with high vaulted ceilings, Brazilian cherry floors & gas
log fireplace. The kitchen is a chef’s delight with custom
cabinets, granite countertops, and walk in pantry. Master suite includes a sitting area and large master bath
with steam bath, jetted tub, tiled floors, and 2 walk-in
closets. Recreation area upstairs, 2 climate controlled
storage areas and so much more!! MLS# 69272
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
705 W. Church Street. Explore the possibilities in this
classic Foursquare featuring wrap-around front porch,
covered carriage landing, picket fence and gabled
dormer in the attic. The interior features original wood
floors, original trim, elegant formal dining room and a
modern kitchen with breakfast nook. Four bedrooms
on second floor. All with ample closet space. Rear
covered deck and fenced backyard. MLS# 69072
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1091 Commissary Road. A great find! 3BR/2BA.
Spacious & cozy! LR is large w/dine-in area with
chandelier! Kitchen has plenty of cabinetry & adjacent
DR. From DR is den w/fireplace. Master BR is great size
w/double doors to master bath! MBath features shower
& dual sinks & vanities; great for conserving time! Shed
& detached double garage in back yard! Front porch
is large and great for enjoying the beautiful weather.
MLS# 69215
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Terry Wilson 252-202-2370
terry@longandfosterec.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1210 Crescent Drive. Charming & unique, this two
story home has lots to offer! Design is made for natural
light to be drawn inside, giving a very peaceful mood.
LR, den, kitchen/dining combo, formal DR, large utility
room from garage, 4BRs, 2.5BAs, sun room! Back yard
is great size with privacy fence! Patio with benches for
enjoying the serene outdoors of the riverside community.
This is a must see home, schedule your appointment
today! MLS# 69007
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
114 Raintree Run. Great price for well-built
home in a wonderful setting. Large kitchen
with lots of cabinets & storage, large master
bedroom with walk-in closets, huge living area
with rear deck & fenced yard. Spacious storage
shed, beautiful flower beds, close to schools,
shopping, and more. A must-see for the money!
MLS# 68646
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
211 Bayshore. A spectacular river view without the
waterfront price tag! Immaculately kept brick home,
covered front porch, sunroom-style glass entry to
formalLR, formal DR, kitchen with breakfast area, den
with fireplace, 3 BRs, 2 full baths. From breakfast area
and DR, you can access expansive back deck, back
yard and farmland beyond. Attached double garage.
New roof in 2012. MLS# 69575
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Donna Seymour 252-339-0216
donna@longandfosterec.com
www.donnapseymour.lnfre.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1212 West Church Street. Brick, 2-story Colonial. All
the charm of Williamsburg inside - beautiful, built-in
china cabinet, fireplace with lovely mantle, interior
window shutters, hardwood floors, color scheme, etc.
Huge master BR, large LR, den, formal DR, ample
kitchen space, 3 BRs, and 2.5 BAs. L:arge, lovely yard,
screened porch. Come in and you’ll want to stay.
MLS# 69129
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1309 West Church Street. This 1&1/2 story cape-style
home features a large kitchen w/spacious living room,
2 BR & full bath on first floor, 2nd floor is efficiency
apartment with private entrance, kitchenette, living
room, BR, and bath, perfect for potential investors or
someone who wants to rent, workshop & single-car
detached garage, close to shopping and walking tour
to the waterfront. MLS# 66146
Gary Hobbs 252-333-7015
Gary@longandfosterec.com
www.garyhobbs.lnfre.com
Jimmy Anderson 252-267-3181
jimmy@longandfosterec.com
www.jimmyanderson.lnfre.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Jimmy Anderson 252-267-3181
jimmy@longandfosterec.com
www.jimmyanderson.lnfre.com
Kelly Warren 252-267-8508
Kelly@longandfosterec.com
www.kellywarren.lnfre.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
110 Pelican Pointe Drive. Beautifully maintained home,
hardwood floors downstairs, 4 carpeted BRs, 3.5 BAs,
formal DR, LR w/fireplace, grand staircase, and much
more! Master BA w/dual vanity with plenty of room &
storage, separate spa like shower & tub,& large walk-in
closet! FROG, patio deck. Water access w/ boat ramp,
community pool , tennis & basketball court.
MLS# 68613
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
303 West Church Street. Historic home in Historic District. Large screened front porch, large LR w/fireplace,
large DR w/fireplace. 4 fireplaces with gas logs. Master
BR & additional BR/office on first floor, upstairs are two
large BRs. Separate in-law suite with LR, eat-in kitchen,
1 BR & BA. Sunroom, great patio and small pond in the
backyard. Within walking distance to restaurants, shopping & entertainment downtown. MLS# 69689
)FSUGPSE
115 Camp Cale Road. What a gem of a home! This
house is immaculate in every way, formal living rm &
dining rm, large den w/fireplace, eat-in kitchen w/bar,
screened porch/patio, backyard partially fenced, laminate flooring throughout, solid-surface counter tops,
FROG has closet & bathroom, double-car garage, attic
is floored for storage, approx. 1/2 mi. to public boat
ramp, great home for country living. MLS# 68849
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
103 Edgewood Court. Charming home in serene countryside at end of a cul-de-sac! Original attached double
garage has been converted into great room, perfect
for entertaining guests! 3 BRs, new double attached
garage, expansive, screened in back porch & more! Fannie Mae HomePath property. Purchase this property for
as little as 3% down! Approved for HomePath Mortgage
Financing. This property is approved for HomePath
Renovation Mortgage Financing. MLS# 68134
4PVUI.JMMT
131 Dock Landing Loop. Two story home to be built in
subdivision that will give you easy commutes to VA, OBX &
Elizabeth City. Downstairs has hardwood flooring in foyer,
chair rails & crown molding in the DR, kitchen w/range, microwave, dishwasher, laminate countertops, vinyl flooring,
& 3 sided bay window, & half bath. Great room will have
french doors leading to patio. Upstairs will have 4 BRs, 2
BAs & linen closet. Dual sinks & garden tub & shower in
master BR. Attached, 2-car garage. MLS# 67157
Marie Chandler 252-339-7568
marie@longandfosterec.com
www.mariechandler.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Jimmy Anderson 252-267-3181
jimmy@longandfosterec.com
www.jimmyanderson.lnfre.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
507 Planters Run. This one owner home is perfect
for relaxed living with an open floor plan, large
FROG, spacious sunroom and a terrific location.
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
1010 Kris Drive. Beautifully maintained
brick home built by Vance Mead. Large
Living and Dining rooms, Family Room
with Fireplace and Built-Ins. Huge FROG
with lots of storage. Detached one-car
garage and an attached two-car garage.
All appliances convey.
MLS# 68324
Marie Chandler 252-339-7568
marie@longandfosterec.com
www.mariechandler.com
Enjoy the natural light making the house
cheerful and bright.The sunroom is a perfect
place to relax with your coffee and favorite
book or head outdoors on the deck. There is
joy in cooking in the kitchen with
Diana Gardner 252-339-9085 plentiful counter space, storage,
diana@longandfosterec.com
& a pantry for supplies.
www.dianamgardner.com
MLS# 69802
Only minutes from shopping, medical facilities, and the YMCA, plus
close to the VA border for commuters. This neighborhood is tucked
away from the highway making it a
great place to live and play.
#FMWJEFSF
280 Turnpike Road. Beautiful brick ranch on 2 acres in
country. Large LR w/fpl. & access to sunroom & covered porch. Large eat-in kitchen w/upgraded cabinets,
lots of counterspace, stainless appliances, two tier
bar & walk-in pantry. Master BR easily accommodates
king-size bed; back foyer area for coats, etc. Huge twotier FROG w/double-door walk-in attic storage. Large
covered front porch overlooking fields. MLS# 68710
Marie Chandler 252-339-7568
marie@longandfosterec.com
www.mariechandler.com
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
110 Grandview Drive. Quality 3BR, 2.5 BA home in Grandview! Plenty of living space with fire-lit LR, formal DR,
huge kitchen with large eat-in breakfast area, large master
BR suite, 2 additional BRs. HUGE FROG - it even has a nice
closet and could be a gigantic 4th BR. Double French doors
in LR overlook attached deck & back yard. Kitchen has tons
of cabinets, & offers open view to living area - great for
entertaining! Community water access. MLS# 68631
4PVUI.JMMT
TBD Woodlake Court. 3BR/2B new construction home
will feature a fireplace in the family room, a formal
dining room, breakfast nook, pantry, and FROG that
could serve as a 4th BR or bonus room. Located on
over an acre lot in desirable Camden County in the
community of Wharf’s Landing, minutes from the
Virginia line and the Dismal Swamp Canal Trail. Act
now to choose color and flooring! MLS# 65877
4PVUI.JMMT
183 Pier Landing Loop. 3 BR 2 bath new construction
home will feature fireplace in family room, formal DR,
3 sided bay window in breakfast nook, pantry & FROG
that could serve as 4th BR or bonus room. Located
on just under an acre lot in desirable Camden County
in the community of Wharf’s Landing, minutes from
the VA line and the Dismal Swamp Canal trail. Act
now to choose colors and flooring! MLS# 65853
&MJ[BCFUI$JUZ
Lot 18 Small Drive. Great opportunity to
build in this waterfront community. Just
under an acre lot on Newbegun Creek.
MLS# 59486
"ZEMFUU
133 Scaff Lane. Quality home in convenient location
to both VA & Outer Banks! 3 BRs, 2 BAs, open floor
plan to include LR, DR and kitchen. Enjoy the peaceful setting and cool breezes on either the front or the
back porch. Attached garage and a bonus storage
shed. Central heat & air, in addition to a gas stove in
the living room that can be used as a supplemental
or back-up heat source. MLS# 68640
Kelly Warren 252-267-8508
Kelly@longandfosterec.com
www.kellywarren.lnfre.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Phyllis Bosomworth & Erin Nixon 252-435-5043
Phyllisb@longandfosterec.com
www.phyllisandcompany.com
Gary Hobbs 252-333-7015
Gary@longandfosterec.com
www.garyhobbs.lnfre.com
NEw REAl EStAtE ClASSES StARtiNg
Call 252-335-8600 for more information & registration
Interest rates are the lowest in 70 years
– Now is the time to buy!!
AN INDEPENDENtlY OWNED AND OPERAtED lICENSEE OF lONg & FOStER
lICENSED IN NORth CAROlINA AND VIRgINIA
Albemarle Area School of Real Estate
1100 W. EhRINghAUS StREEt • ElIzAbEth CItY, NC 27909
252-335-8600 • 800-763-0262
ReadeRs’ ChoiCe - Best Real estate agenCy
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Visit us at: www.longandfoster.com, www.homesandland.com and www.pilotonline.com
May 19, 2013
ee, Wis
Milwauk
Google: photosynthesis
Beakman or Jax
1130 Walnut Street
Kansas City, MO 64106
Questions, name & address
Put about 1 inch of dried beans into a clear jar. Fill
with water and cover with a T-shirt piece or punch
holes in the lid. Leave it overnight and drain the water.
Then put it in a tightly closed, dark cupboard. Every
day add new water. Swirl it around and dump the
water out. And keep putting it back into the cupboard.
After four days, you’ll have a jar of bean sprouts.
And when you put the jar in light for a few hours,
the beans will switch on their green to begin making
the sugars plants need.
Beakman
n Place
Our friend Jok Church hosts and wrote
a cool video about all these green goings-on.
It’s at beakman.com/plants.
The white
beans still live
on sugars in
their seed pods.
They turn on
their chemistry
with chlorophyll
and light to
make the
sugars they
need to grow.
Be sure to eat
the sprouts in a
nice salad.
© 2013
13
1
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Di by Universal Uclick 5-19-13
myQuestion@beakman.com
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eakma
Dear Bu tell me
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Mo Ho
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Dear Mo,
Your laundry problems are all about plant chemistry.
Grass and other plants take carbon dioxide from the
air plus water from their roots and turn them into
oxygen, as well as a simple kind of sugar
that plants use for food.
There is a chemical that is needed for this to work. It's
called chlorophyll (KLOR-a-fill) and without it, sunshine
cannot take apart and build new molecules.
Chlorophyll is bright green and can stain clothes.
S U N D AY, M AY 1 9 , 2 0 1 3
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>
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and Dmitry Chaplin, who
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her character
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er
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secret? —Meg P., Aspen
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her! “I didn’t know what I’d
be doing,” says the actress,
37, who plays Don Draper’s
mistress on the AMC drama
(Sundays). When she finally
read the script, “I thought,
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[Jon Hamm] cheats again,
and it’s with me!’ It was fun
to shock everyone, though!”
Hamm and Cardellini on Mad Men
PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: BRIAN FRIEDMAN; GEMMA LA MANA/TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX; MICHAEL YARISH/AMC; AMANDA EDWARDS/WIREIMAGE; HELEN SLOAN/HBO (3); DAVID LIVINGSTON/GETTY IMAGES; STEVE GRANITZ/WIREIMAGE
T
WA L
COT
S
R
E
2 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
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READING CORNER
L I K E U S O N FA C E B O O K A T FA C E B O O K . C O M / P A R A D E M A G
GRADUATE
SURVIVAL GUIDE
5
FIND OUT THE
E
RMICA
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AL TEA
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AD
SPORTS | Off the court, high school
seniors Semi Ojeleye (left) and Saniya
Chong are the opposite of attention hounds.
But on the court, they can’t help it—these
two humble kids have attracted national
notice for scoring points in bunches. Before
they head off to play college ball in the fall
(Ojeleye at Duke, Chong at Connecticut),
they lead our 57th annual All-America
Team. Read their stories and see the full list
of players at parade.com
/all-america.
MUSIC | Embracing
’80s pop sounds on
More Than Just a
Dream, Fitz and the
Tantrums are at their
best when the tempo
is propulsive and
the choruses belted.
Download: “6AM” and
“Merry Go Round.”
ITEMS EVERY NEW
GRAD NEEDS AT
PARADE.COM/GRADS
Mel
Brooks
GIVE BACK | Of the 21 million
kids who receive free or reducedprice school lunches, only 3 million get the meals they need in
the summer. To help close the gap,
Share Our Strength spokeswoman
Sandra Lee is urging communities
to hold bake sales for local No Kid
Hungry programs. For bake sale
organizing tips, visit bake.nokidhungry
.org. For baking ideas, check out Lee’s
latest book, Every Dish Delivers.
TV | Though he stands
only 5-foot-5, he’s a comedic
giant. In the fabulously
entertaining American Masters
Mel Brooks: Make a Noise (PBS,
May 20), the icon looks back
at his 86 years and a career
that includes the 2000 Year
Old Man, Young Frankenstein, Blazing Saddles, and
The Producers. There are
film clips galore and
interviews with pals such
as Carl Reiner, Gene
Wilder, and Nathan
Lane. It’s a treat.
THE INTERESTINGS
Meg Wolitzer’s superb
novel charts four
decades in the lives
of six talented people
who bond as teens at
a summer camp for
the arts. It’s a sprawling page-turner that
thrums with heart.
THE HUMANITY
PROJECT Jean
Thompson weaves
some tough topics—
housing woes, the
aftermath of a school
shooting—into an
insightful, gripping
tale. As her acutely
observed characters
struggle to find their
way in a world that’s
not always kind, you’ll
nod, and even laugh,
in recognition.
TILL HUMAN VOICES
WAKE US Patti Davis,
President Reagan’s
outspoken daughter,
explores unexpected
love and unimaginable
loss in her new novel
(available on Amazon).
PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: DAVID EULITT/KANS AS CIT Y STAR/MCT/LANDOV; HANS PENNINK/AP IMAGES; MICHAEL GRECCO; BEN FINK
Parade
4 • MAY
MAY 19
19, 2013
2013
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
★★★
Chef of the Year
Derrick
Davenport
catches a rare
moment of
relaxation in a
Pentagon kitchen.
PHOTO CREDITS WILL GO HERE AS SHOWN
CAPTAIN COOK
00 • MONTH 00, 2012
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
★
GUN
CHEF
Today, some of the best cooks in the
country aren’t in restaurants
or on TV—they’re in the military
It’s 11:30 a.m., and Derrick Davenport has been cooking for almost four hours. He’s
made flounder and scallops with quinoa and arugula salad. Whipped up sweet potato soup
with squab. Roasted lamb loin and served it in mushroom sauce with butternut squash
puree and Edam cheese fritters. Baked mini chocolate-buttermilk cakes, doused them in Chambord and
ganache, and topped them with milk chocolate cream. Now, after piping on some meringue and toasting
it with a kitchen torch, he ferries the dessert into the dining room, where three stone-faced judges wait.
Davenport carefully sets a cake in front of each one, the last course he’s presented this morning. The
judges look profoundly unimpressed. ★ It might sound like an audition for Top Chef, but in fact Davenport
is a senior chief petty officer in the U.S. Navy, one of 18 culinary specialists chosen to compete for the title
of Armed Forces Chef of the Year. The 20-year-old competition takes place at the Joint Culinary Center
of Excellence in Fort Lee, Va., where the military conducts most of its food services training. Each
MAY 19, 2013 • 7
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
COOK LIKE A MILITARY CHEF
Check out Derrick’s favorite
summer recipes (including
this awesome grilled jerk chicken
with mango and pineapple
salsa) at parade.com/chef
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contestant must make and serve four courses in four hours using a
basket of challenging ingredients, which (as on programs like Chopped)
aren’t revealed beforehand. Still, for all the ways the competition resembles a reality show, this isn’t entertainment—training and testing
cooks is something the military takes very seriously.
Napoleon famously said that an army marches on its stomach,
but military cooking has never had much of a reputation—more
associated with mess hall slop than roast lamb. World War II–era
K rations included a lemon beverage powder so disgusting that
servicemen used it to clean floors.
“If you had told someone in World War II that we’d be having a
competition to find the best military chef, they’d have laughed at you,”
says Paul Morando, the director of the U.S. Army Quartermaster
Museum, who studies the history of getting supplies to troops in the
field. “Historically, army rations were not the best-tasting meals you
could get.”
In fact, until the early 20th century, the U.S. military didn’t train
cooks at all. Cooks were recruited, or whichever soldier had the
inclination (or the orders) to warm up the beans just did it. But by the
time World War I rolled around, military officials had begun to realize
they needed a system—trained cooks, after all, are schooled in food
safety. “In the early days, food poisoning was common,” says Sgt. Maj.
Mark Warren, winner of the 1994 Armed Forces Chef of the Year
and now a judge in the competition. “You can take a casualty in the
chow hall or on the battlefield. It affects readiness and morale if you
lose a soldier to food-borne illness.” And, he adds, there’s that other
reason military cooks take their jobs to heart: “The last meal a soldier
gets could be his last meal.”
“Every [military] campaign, there’s a change in how soldiers are
fed,” Morando says. “But the fact that the armed forces has a culinary
PHOTOS, FROM LEFT: TINA RUPP, FOOD STYLING BY CARRIE PURCELL, PROP STYLING BY KARIN OLSEN; SPENCER HEYFRON FOR PARADE
After*
8 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
COURTESY OF DERRICK DAVENPORT
competition? That shows how far we’ve come.”
Which brings us back to Davenport. The 37-year-old is generally
soft-spoken and reserved, but with bread dough in his hands, he
becomes demonstrative and chatty, completely in his element.
Watching him roll croissants is like watching Miguel Cabrera swing
for the fences—swift, practiced, effortless.
It’s not surprising that one of Davenport’s earliest memories is of
baking a loaf of challah bread with his grandmother when he was just
7 years old. Eddie Beatrice Davenport—a.k.a. Big Mama B—was an
accomplished baker and cook; as a child growing up in Detroit,
Davenport gravitated to the kitchen to be with her. He remembers
leafing through her cookbooks and cooking magazines, the television
always turned to Julia Child or the Galloping Gourmet.
By the time Davenport was in high school, he was sure of two
things: He wanted to cook, and he wanted to serve his country. After
graduating, he studied culinary arts at Schoolcraft College in Livonia,
Mich. There, a chef instructor who had been in the navy regaled him
with seafaring stories, further piquing Davenport’s interest in military
life. After spending seven years as a restaurant cook (including a stint
at the Detroit Ritz-Carlton), he enlisted in the navy in 2000.
Davenport was stationed first on the USS Annapolis, a fast-attack
submarine that carries only 150 sailors—he calls it the Smart car of
subs. From the ship’s tiny kitchen, Davenport turned out full meals.
“It was like cooking in a broom closet,” he says. “I’d have to make
white or wheat bread, hamburger buns, hot dog buns, submarine rolls,
then make a pastry for breakfast. … It becomes a juggling act.” He
made do, using empty cereal bags to pipe frosting and making massive
quantities of bread by hand when his mixer broke out at sea. He also
became known for a dish called Wicked Chicken, which he describes
as the chicken breast version of a buffalo wing, but spicier.
Five years later, Davenport was sent to Afghanistan. His mission:
Help the Afghan National Army in Herat set up a mess hall. Every
day, Davenport walked two miles to the Afghan side of the base and
its rudimentary kitchen—no refrigeration, wood-burning ovens—
toting a Dari and Farsi phrase
book and his 9mm rifle.
Some of the 50 Afghan
soldiers knew how to cook,
but Davenport helped them
develop military-style sanitation and portioning. The
meat came fresh from the
local market, daily. “We’d get
a whole lamb in on the back
of a pickup truck, still warm
from a kill,” he remembers. “I
had to teach them proper
SHE FED AN ARMY, TOO
ways of butchering. They
Davenport’s paternal grandmother, Eddie
were pretty much just hackBeatrice Davenport, had nine children.
ing away at it on a tree stump,
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so we got them cutting boards and showed them how to cut it in a
more manageable way.”
By the end of his yearlong deployment, Davenport had helped
set up the Afghan Army’s first bakeshop, which turns out fresh
naan every day.
Still, some might ask why food service should be any army’s
priority. Surely the Afghan Army has bigger fish to fry?
Davenport has a ready answer. “We play a huge role in the morale
of the force,” he says, noting that home cooking is good for soldiers
in more ways than one. “If they have a good meal, they’re going to
perform their jobs better.”
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f course, in the military, some meals are better than others.
If troops are on the move, they’re often eating portable
Meals-Ready-to-Eat, or MREs. But at a larger base, the
dining facilities closely resemble those you’d find at a
college, with salad bars, burger griddles, and custom omelet stations.
When Starlett Henderson’s husband returned from serving in
Bosnia, she realized, to her shock, that he actually missed the dining
hall. “You don’t think of soldiers coming back spoiled,” says Henderson, cofounder of the Army Wife Network and a former army officer.
“But after his deployment, Hamburger Helper on a Thursday night
wasn’t good enough for him anymore!”
Corrie Blackshear was an army evacuation medic for eight years,
from 1997 to 2004. “People are always surprised that the reason I don’t
like lobster is that I got tired of it on deployment in Kosovo,” she says.
She also remembers having some of the best Middle Eastern food of
her life on a base in Kuwait. “It’s more than nourishment. It’s spiritual nourishment,” she says.
“These are not the days of Beetle Bailey anymore,” says Warren.
“The soldiers we get today have grown up with Emeril, Rachael Ray,
Iron Chef. … There’s a stigma that military cooking is institutional
and generic. But society has a higher expectation for chefs today. And
I’d put our chefs up against any in the industry.”
In fact, holding military chefs up to private industry standards is
one of the benefits of the Armed Forces Chef of the Year competition,
which is sanctioned by the American Culinary Federation, a civilian
organization. The hope is that well-trained military chefs can compete
for civilian jobs when their service ends. Today, Davenport—along
with Billy Daugette, an army staff sergeant who won Armed Forces
Chef of the Year in 2011, and two other culinary specialists—is stationed at the home of Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. Davenport and the others cook some meals for him
and manage his household—a job that includes throwing elaborate
dinner parties for visiting foreign chiefs of defense. In many ways, it’s
akin to running a fine restaurant—overseeing budgets and personnel,
always looking for new ways to please their clients.
In June, Daugette is joining the army’s Training With Industry
program, which will place him in a California country club kitchen
for a year before sending him back to Fort Lee to teach other military
10 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
duties with grad school, pursuing his master’s degree in business administration at Sullivan
University. He doesn’t know
when he will retire from the
military, but when he does,
he’d like to teach cooking and
maybe open his own restaurant,
with “Michigan meets French
meets southern” fare.
But for now, he’s happy to
say he put as much effort into
feeding the recruits on the sub
as he does preparing meals for
the highest-ranking officer in
the military. The food he’s
making now might be fancier,
but nothing quite compares to
the satisfaction of seeing that
a crew of homesick sailors
eats well. “Some of the best
compliments I’ve had were
back on the boat,” he says.
“You’re away from home. You
don’t think you’re going to get
a meal like your mom or
grandmother would make.”
But if Davenport’s on board,
you certainly will.
B
Care to Share?
ack at the 2013
Armed Forces
Chef of the Year
competition, the
judges were much more
impressed with Davenport’s
cooking than they let on. He
wins, cementing his reputation
as one of the best cooks ever to
come out of the navy.
Davenport allows himself a
brief moment of fist-pumping
celebration (“I was like, ‘Yes!
Finally!’ ” he says in his
understated way), and then
it’s back to work. When it
comes to turning chow into
cuisine, it seems Davenport
isn’t ready to come off the front
lines just yet.
12 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
Ask Marilyn
By Marilyn vos Savant
At what age is it possible
to check the IQ of a baby or
very young child? —Berik R.,
Toulouse, France
Tests aren’t reliable before
the age of 4 or so, and even
afterward, they will tell you
mainly what you already
know—that your child is
faster or slower than usual,
or somewhere in between.
(Plus, the best tests must be
administered individually by
a trained clinician, which is
costly.) Intelligence can’t be
measured like height or
weight, so IQ numbers, at
any age, will only label a
child unnecessarily, sometimes harmfully. The tests
are useful for certain applications but not as routine
assessments of individuals,
least of all small children.
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
SUMMER TRAVEL QUIZ
UP IN THE AIR
How much do you know
about flying the friendly skies?
By Catherine Price
1
5
Answer: (b). Wednesday
is the least expensive day
to fly, says Rick Seaney,
cofounder and CEO of the
travel-planning website
FareCompare.com, though
Tuesday and Saturday are
also good choices. (The
most expensive days: Friday
and Sunday.) Red-eyes and
crack-of-dawn first flights
of the day are usually priced
the lowest, but if pulling an
all-nighter doesn’t sound
like a fun way to start your
vacation, try lunch- or
dinnertime flights; they’re
your second-best options.
night. Other airlines then
drop their prices to stay
competitive, and this price
matching usually happens
by 3 p.m. Eastern time
on Tuesday. Be sure to act
fast: By Thursday, most
of the discounted fares
will have been snapped up
or pulled.
3
2
What’s the most important thing you can do to
ensure your safety in
an emergency evacuation?
(a) Wear shoes
(b) Count the rows between
you and the nearest exit
(keeping in mind, of course,
that the nearest exit may
be located behind you)
(c) Pack important medications in your carry-on bag
Answer: (c). According
to Seaney, airlines often
kick off sales late Monday
Answer: Both (a) and (b).
You should pack crucial
meds in a carry-on in case
checked luggage is lost,
but don’t try to grab it in
When is the best
time to buy domestic
airline tickets?
(a) Sunday evening
(b) Friday afternoon
(c) Tuesday afternoon
an emergency—doing so
will only slow down an
evacuation. Counting rows
allows you to find an exit
by feel if visibility is low.
And don’t ditch your shoes
(ideally closed-toe flats)
mid-flight. “You’ll need
them in the event of an
evacuation on the ground,
potentially in rough terrain,” says Emily McGee,
director of communications for the Flight Safety
Foundation.
4
Which seat on the
plane is statistically
the safest?
(a) Right next to the
emergency exit
(b) Anywhere in the
first row
(c) In the back, next to
the bathroom
(d) All of the above
Answer: (d). “Statistically,
there isn’t really a way to
determine where the ‘safest’ seat is,” says McGee.
The reason is reassuring:
“There aren’t enough fatal
accidents to develop any
sort of trend.” It makes
sense that someone sitting
in an exit row would evacuate before someone sitting
farther away, but that’s not
as much of an issue as it
might seem, McGee claims.
“To be certified by the FAA,
the airframe manufacturer must demonstrate
that everyone—no matter
where they are sitting—can
be evacuated in 90 seconds
or less, with half of the exit
rows blocked or unusable,”
she says.
SHARE YOUR
WORST PLANE TRAVEL
EXPERIENCE AT
facebook.com/parademag
What was the
busiest air travel
day of 2012?
(a) Nov. 25
(b) July 20
(c) Dec. 24
(d) Dec. 31
Answer: (b). According
to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS),
summer is typically the
busiest time of year for air
travel. The most likely
reason, says Dave Smallen,
BTS director of public
affairs, is that winter holiday travel tends to involve
more driving than flying.
6
You’re most likely to
arrive at your destination on time if you fly
on which of these days:
(a) Friday
(b) Wednesday
(c) Saturday
Answer: (c). According to
the BTS, 83.5 percent of
Saturday flights arrived on
time across the country in
February 2013. The worst
day: Friday, with only about
79 percent of flights arriving
as scheduled.
PHOTO: NICKAFKAS/GETTY IMAGES
What is the
cheapest day to fly
domestically?
(a) Monday
(b) Wednesday
(c) Friday
14 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
7
What’s the deal with your
smartphone’s “airplane
mode” setting?
(a) You can use your phone in
airplane mode anytime during
your flight
(b) You can use your phone to
watch videos or go online in airplane mode above 10,000 feet
(c) You can’t use your phone
anytime during flight, in airplane mode or otherwise
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Answer: (b). Like all personal
electronic devices, your cell
phone can emit radio energy
even when it’s not actively
trying to connect to anything.
The FAA therefore restricts
the use of all such devices
below 10,000 feet because of
potential interference with
the plane’s communications,
navigation, flight control, and
electronic equipment during
the two most critical phases
of flight: takeoff and landing.
Above 10,000 feet, however,
you can use your phone in
airplane mode to watch videos,
play games, or surf the Web.
But don’t expect to be able
to talk or text anytime soon:
In-flight cell phone use has
been banned by the Federal
Communications Commission
since 1991.
Download a
personal message
from Chef Jon
8
According to the
latest figures, what
percentage of baggage
is reported lost, damaged,
delayed, or stolen?
(a) 0.3 percent
(b) 3 percent
(c) 13 percent
Answer: (a). It may seem like
you’re always the last person
at the baggage carousel, but
in reality, very few bags are
reported as mishandled, which
the Department of Transportation defines as “lost, damaged,
delayed, or pilfered.”
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
7
What’s the deal with your
smartphone’s “airplane
mode” setting?
(a) You can use your phone in
airplane mode anytime during
your flight
(b) You can use your phone to
watch videos or go online in airplane mode above 10,000 feet
(c) You can’t use your phone
anytime during flight, in airplane mode or otherwise
What will the new you
say to the old you?
Answer: (b). Like all personal
electronic devices, your cell
phone can emit radio energy
even when it’s not actively
trying to connect to anything.
The FAA therefore restricts
the use of all such devices
below 10,000 feet because of
potential interference with
the plane’s communications,
navigation, flight control, and
electronic equipment during
the two most critical phases
of flight: takeoff and landing.
Above 10,000 feet, however,
you can use your phone in
airplane mode to watch videos,
play games, or surf the Web.
But don’t expect to be able
to talk or text anytime soon:
In-flight cell phone use has
been banned by the Federal
Communications Commission
since 1991.
8
According to the
latest figures, what
percentage of baggage
is reported lost, damaged,
delayed, or stolen?
(a) 0.3 percent
(b) 3 percent
(c) 13 percent
Answer: (a). It may seem like
you’re always the last person
at the baggage carousel, but
in reality, very few bags are
reported as mishandled, which
the Department of Transportation defines as “lost, damaged,
delayed, or pilfered.”
“ This is just
the be nnin ”
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
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PHOTO: ANDY REYNOLDS
Legs
16 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
HAVE YOU RESORTED TO THIS?
Kennections
By Ken Jennings
HOW TO PLAY
All five correct answers have
something in common.
Can you figure out what it is?
1. The northern lights are
the borealis form of what
atmospheric display caused
by solar wind?
Makes
a Great
Father’s Day
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2. What Great Pyrenees dog
and her owner, Sebastian,
from a ’60s children’s TV
show inspired the name of a
Glasgow pop group?
✎
3. Which of Sylvia Plath’s
books of poetry was named
for an “airy spirit” from
Shakespeare’s The Tempest?
✎
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5. What daughter of Chief
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Safe To Use On Body & Facial Hair
4. What white flower is used
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and was a symbol of the
“Arab Spring” revolution in
Tunisia?
16 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
By Connie Schultz
Back to the Future
My third-grade self-portrait turned out to be weirdly accurate, which made
me wonder: How did 8-year-old me prophesy middle-aged me so well?
I
f you know the exact whereabouts of everything you
own, you’ve probably never
known the joy of discovering a
priceless artifact from your childhood while searching for the spare
fan belt to your vacuum cleaner.
Hooray to you for being so
organized, but there’s something
magical about the daily mayhem
of life. Recently, for example, I
was rummaging through an old
box in the basement for the aforementioned Hoover accessory
when, at the very bottom, I found
a piece of construction paper. It
looked ancient. And it was, as it
turned out to be my third-grade
self-portrait, in which I was
already a middle-aged woman
with few hobbies.
It’s uncanny, really, how much
my 1965 portrait looks like 2013
me. Full face framed by the basic
chin-length triangle of hair, minus
the stray grays that flutter like sea
oats around my brow. Eyelashes
long and black—thank you,
volumizing mascara—and a smile
set to motherly patience.
Judging from the drawing, it’s
clear that Mrs. Norton told our
class to draw a few of our special
interests, too. Hence the jump rope
and roller skates, and the rabbiteared TV console floating next to
my head like a spaceship looking
for a place to land.
I’m trying not to read too much
into this matronly image. Perhaps
Show us one of your early
self-portraits. Post it at
facebook.com/parademag and
tell us the tale behind it.
I was feeling the weight of my
years because Mom was forever
warning me to set an example for
my siblings. Okay, “forever” may
be an exaggeration. She stopped
when I was 37.
Maybe I’ve just reached that
obnoxious period of life when
everything is suddenly fraught
with meaning. Who, I wonder,
did little Connie hope to be?
I’m reminded of a scene in one
of my favorite movies, Da. Martin
Sheen is an Irish-born New York
playwright named Charlie who
returns to the Emerald Isle to
bury his father. But first—and
how Irish is this?—Charlie must
have countless conversations with
his father’s ghost, and a few chats
with his younger self, too. (This is
my family.)
At one point, all three of them
are sitting in a pub when adolescent
Charlie turns to grown-up Charlie
and gives him a withering onceover. “You’re a bit of a disappointment,” young Charlie says. “I mean,
I thought I’d do better for myself.”
He was a playwright, for cryin’
out loud. Soon to be President
Bartlet.
I ended up framing my portrait.
Sometimes I look at it and wish I
could give 8-year-old me a pep
talk. Some days, I want to sit her
down and tell her that life isn’t as
predictable as she thought, but it
also isn’t as scary as she feared. And
she’s going to have plenty of other
dogs to love.
Most days, though, I just want
to let her know she got it right:
A good haircut, your own set of
wheels, and an easy smile will get
you through just about anything.
PHOTO: COURTESY OF CONNIE SCHULTZ
Views
18 • MAY 19, 2013
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
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© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
Presenting the
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* / 5 ) & ) 0 . & t " 3 0 6 / % 5 ) & ) 0 . & t " 8 " : ' 3 0 . ) 0 . &
*Bose payment plan available on orders of $299-$1500 paid by major credit card. Separate financing offers may be available for select products. See website for details. Down payment is 1/12 the product price plus applicable tax and shipping charges, charged when your order is shipped.
Then, your credit card will be billed for 11 equal monthly installments beginning approximately one month from the date your order is shipped, with 0% APR and no interest charges from Bose. Credit card rules and interest may apply. U.S. residents only. Limit one active financing program
per customer. ©2013 Bose Corporation. The distinctive design of the Acoustic Wave® music system II is a registered trademark of Bose Corporation. Financing and free 5-CD Changer offers not to be combined with other offers or applied to previous purchases, and subject to change without
notice. If the Acoustic Wave® music system II is returned, the 5-CD Changer must be returned for a full refund. Offers are limited to purchases made from Bose and participating authorized dealers. Offer valid 4/1/13-5/31/13. Risk-free refers to 30-day trial only, requires product purchase
and does not include return shipping. Delivery is subject to product availability. iPad and iPod are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. Quotes reprinted with permission: Sound & Vision, 3/85; Wayne Thompson, Oregonian, 9/10/96.
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.
Bose Solo
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If you think watching TV is exciting,
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*Can be used as a stand for most TVs up to 37" and many up to 42." The TV base must be no wider than 20" and no deeper than 10¼." Can also be set near the TV.
**Bose payment plan available on orders of $299-$1500 paid by major credit card. Separate financing offers may be available for select products. See website for details. Down payment is 1/12 the product price plus
applicable tax and shipping charges, charged when your order is shipped. Then, your credit card will be billed for 11 equal monthly installments beginning approximately one month from the date your order is shipped,
with 0% APR and no interest charges from Bose. Credit card rules and interest may apply. U.S. residents only. Limit one active financing program per customer. ©2013 Bose Corporation. Financing and free shipping
offers not to be combined with other offers or applied to previous purchases, and subject to change without notice. Offer valid 4/1/13-6/30/13. Risk-free refers to 30-day trial only, requires product purchase and does
not include return shipping. Delivery is subject to product availability.
© PARADE Publications 2013. All rights reserved.