ITS mRYBCVYS MY Join in the fun from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in uptown Thomasville Catch results from Friday night football action in today's sports. Saturday, September 25,2010 THOMASVILLE Bill Flill discusses the power of prayers in Uncle Bill's Corner. 119th Year-No. 141 50 Cents www.tvilletimes.com Lexington company expanding, adding 50 jobs BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer Davidson County Eco nomic Development Commission announced Friday that a Lexington company is growing and plans to add dozens of jobs while investing more than $1 mUlion into the area over the next three years. Valendrawers, Inc., an Italian-based company that has operated in Lex ington for 25 years, is ex panding its wood drawer and door manufacturing facility at 555 Dixon St. in Sapona Business Park, and wUl create at least 50 new jobs and invest $1.2 mUlion by 2013. “We are very happy to have chosen North Caro lina for the new door production,” Piero Della Valentina, president of Valendrawers, Inc., said. “We have been in North Carolina for 25 years and know that we can count on a great community, in 'We are very happy to have chosen North Carolina for the new door pro duction.' — Piero Della Valentina Valendrawers President particular on skilled and dedicated workers. I want to thank aU the communi ty leaders for assisting us in putting together this project which I hope wUl bring a positive impact to the area.” Steve Googe, executive director of the David son County EDC, said the company received a $100,000 grant from the One North Carolina Fund awarded by Gov. Bev Per due and economic devel opment grants totaling $101,000 from Davidson County and the City of Lexington. “We’ve been working with them for about four or five months on this,” said Googe. “The N.C. grant measures jobs over three years, ours is over five years. Fifty jobs wUl be created over three years and in the last two years, there wUl be an additional 10 jobs. We’re looking at 60 jobs being created over the next five years. Valendrawers, Inc. is a wood drawer manufac- .turer that mainly sup plies large kitchen and office accounts aU the way down to the one-man cabinet shop, said Diane McBride, an adminis trative assistant at the company. The company recently was awarded a large contract to supply doors to a major kitchen manufacturer that paved See JOBS, Page A6 Number of unemployed falls in county BY ELIOT DUKE Staff Writer Davidson County’s un employment rate dipped slightly in August as the number of unemployed people feU by nearly 400 workers. According to statistics released by the Employ ment Security Commis sion of North Carolina, Davidson County re ported an unemployment rate of 11.4 percent last month, which is down .2 percent from July and is the lowest rate since Jan uary 2009. Davidson was one of 82 counties across the state that experienced a drop in unemployment in August, but 50 stiU re main in double-digits. “Unemployment rates continue to drop in most of the state’s 100 counties in August,” ESC Chair man Lynn Holmes said. See FALLS, PageAS TIMES PHOTO/LARRY MATHIS Homecoming Queen Thomasville High School students voted Taylor Gammons Homecoming Queen dur ing halftime of Friday night's game against Asheboro. ACH plans foster parent orientation BY ERINWILTGEN Staff Writer In a society where the family unit seems to de crease in Importance by the day American Chil dren’s Home (ACH) in Lexington seeks to continue its mission to bring stable home lives to Davidson County’s children through its foster care pro gram. ACH wUl hold a foster parent orientation on Oct. 14 at 6 p.m. for individuals or couples interested in helping a chUd. Established in 1928, ACH is a non profit organization committed to providing needy chUdren with temporary care. “I feel like understanding the famUy dynamic is an important thing in making sure the cycle doesn’t continue with the next generation,” said Anna Lohr, ACH social worker. “There’s a lot to be said for being raised in a famUy ” Though people interested must be over the age of 21, few other personal requirements are necessary for becoming licensed foster parents. ACH does re quire more logistical things such as a background check, proof of financial stabUity and an inspec tion of household conditions such as a fire inspec tion, and a water and sewer inspection. Lohr says that whether a foster parent-to-be is single or in a couple, with chUdren or without, doesn’t affect the licensing process. “It reaUy depends on the chUd,” she said. “Some See PARENT, Page A6 INDEX Weather A2 Business A3 Focus A4 Opinion A5 Obituaries A6 Sports B1 Classifieds B6 Today's Weather iM^ Mostly sunny, 90/63 vi«.o » 5 uu e 5 » Golf tournament to raise funds for Spanish Immersion Program BY ERINWILTGEN StaffWriter Colin’Ulmer sets off to school like any other third grader. He brushes his teeth, packs his backpack and says goodbye to Mom and Dad. Things appear normal when he gets to school, too. He chats with his friends, maybe runs a little as the morning beU rings. But as soon as Colin steps over the threshold to his third-grade classroom at HopeweU Elemen tary School in Trinity his day takes a slight tm-n towards the abnormal. His class is entirely in Span ish. Not a native Spanish-speaker himself, Colin was enroUed in Hopewell Elementary’s Span ish Immersion program as a kindergartner. The program is designed to teach chUdren from kindergarten through fifth grade the Spanish language in a trial-by-fire format. “When he’s in that classroom, he’s not aUowed to speak Eng lish,” said Colin’s mother, KeUi Ulmer. “His homework is in Spanish, his tests are in Span ish, his books are in Spanish. He’s in the third grade, and he can pretty much speak Spanish fluently” To help support the program — which currently holds 80 stu dents — a parent-formed Span ish Immersion Booster Club wUl hold a fundraiser golf tour nament on Saturday, Oct. 9, at COURTESY PHOTC Students at Hopewell Elementary School become bilingual through th( school's Spanish Immersion Program. Format is captain’s choice with a 1 p.m. shotgun start. The first- place team wUl receive a $500 grand prize, and second, third and fourth-place teams also re ceive a prize. Winding Creek Golf Course in ThomasvUle. Ulmer says that 12 teams have already signed up, hut she hopes to field 32 teams and is stUl look ing for a few more sponsors. Cost is $50 for an individual or $200 for a team, and lunch is included. See SPANISH, Page A6 Remarkable things are happening here. 336-475-7148 www.thomasyillemedicalcenter.org Thomasville) iwedical center RemarkabU Pnplt, RtmarkabU Mtdicint. Thomasville, North Carolina • Your Town. Your Times.