Fatcow Icon
Car show draws more than 140 vehicles to Yadkinville
by Staff Report
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.

slideshow
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>Car show attendees walk around the town square in Yadkinville.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

Car show attendees walk around the town square in Yadkinville.

slideshow
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>Scotty and Brenda Fullerton and their grandchildren.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

Scotty and Brenda Fullerton and their grandchildren.

slideshow
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.

slideshow
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.

slideshow
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.

slideshow
<p>Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit</p><p>More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.</p>

Photo courtesy of Donnie Lashmit

More than 140 cars were part of June 15’s car show in Yadkinville.

slideshow

Staff Report

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
/view/full_story/18041811/article-18041811?instance=your_home_main
Please see attached. Thank you!
Mar 29, 2012 | 0 0 comments | 167 167 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
All-A-Flutter Butterfly Farm
Butterfly Farm
Butterfly Farm
slideshow
It's a dog's life!
This is my beloved puggle Alba. She loves her porcupine and carries it pretty much everywhere she goes.
This is my beloved puggle Alba. She loves her porcupine and carries it pretty much everywhere she goes.
slideshow
Boys dreaming!!
Boys dreaming!!
slideshow


News
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow
Read More News
Sports
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow
Read More Sports
Opinion
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow
Read More Opinion
Latest Video
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow
View Previous Polls
Special Sections
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow
Personality Profile: Patrick Dowd
by Staff Report
Jun 20, 2013 | 783 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Patrick Dowd</p><p>Patrick Dowd</p>

Patrick Dowd

Patrick Dowd

slideshow

Patrick Dowd moved with his family to East Bend when he was 11 years old, attending public schools in Yadkin County from the sixth grade on.

Dowd graduated from East Bend Elementary first and later Forbush High School with the class of 2006.

Dowd continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he graduated with honors and highest distinction with majors in cultural studies and English and comparative literature. While attending UNC he received a Phillip’s Ambassador Scholarship to study Hindi language and Indian culture and development in Jaipur, India his junior year.

After graduating he received a Princeton in Asia fellowship in order to teach English literature at Payap University, a private university in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Following his Princeton fellowship he worked for the non-profit organization EarthRights International where he trained human rights and environmental activists from Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in subjects ranging from human rights to critical thinking and report writing.

He has recently been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship to do research work in the Himalayan Mountains of India with Tibetan refugees who have fled from the Chinese occupied Tibet.

He arrived in India August 8, and his fellowship will last nine months.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Doris Dobbins Lowe
Doris Dobbins Lowe
slideshow
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
Left to right: Patty Shermer, Associational WMU Director from Enon, Cathy Baldwin from Boonville, Carol Nixon from Forbush, Faye Vestal from Charity and Carolyn Smitherman from East Bend.
slideshow
<p>Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple</p><p>Anne McKnight</p>

Lindsay Craven | The Yadkin Ripple

Anne McKnight

slideshow