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JROTC participates in first virtual archery state tourney
by David Broyles
Staff Reporter
<p>David Broyles | The News</p><p>North Surry JROTC cadet Austin Moxley concentrates before releasing an arrow during the North Carolina Virtual Archery Tournament on Friday. Eight cadets competed in the individuals category.</p>

David Broyles | The News

North Surry JROTC cadet Austin Moxley concentrates before releasing an arrow during the North Carolina Virtual Archery Tournament on Friday. Eight cadets competed in the individuals category.

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<p>David Broyles | The News</p><p>North Carolina Department of Wildlife Resources Hunter Education coordinator Tim Lemon scores cadet Seth Llewellyn’s shots during a state archery tournament held at North Surry High School. The tournament is part of the department’s National Archery Schools Program.</p>

David Broyles | The News

North Carolina Department of Wildlife Resources Hunter Education coordinator Tim Lemon scores cadet Seth Llewellyn’s shots during a state archery tournament held at North Surry High School. The tournament is part of the department’s National Archery Schools Program.

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<p>David Broyles | The News</p><p>These three cadets finished in the top three in individual school competition in a North Carolina Virtual Archery State Tournament at North Surry High School. They are first-place trophy winner Austin Mundy, second-place winner Alex Mijes and in third, Seth Llewellyn. All three also finished in the top three in the state and will advance to national competition in Kentucky in May.</p>

David Broyles | The News

These three cadets finished in the top three in individual school competition in a North Carolina Virtual Archery State Tournament at North Surry High School. They are first-place trophy winner Austin Mundy, second-place winner Alex Mijes and in third, Seth Llewellyn. All three also finished in the top three in the state and will advance to national competition in Kentucky in May.

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Three North Surry High School’s Air Force Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (JROTC) cadets will advance to the national archery tournament in Kentucky May 10 after competing in one of nine virtual archery state tournaments organized by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission Friday in the school’s field house.

The effort is part of the commission’s National Archery Schools Program (NASP). Hunter Education coordinator Tim Lemons said North Surry was the only school in Wildlife District 7 to compete in the tournament.

First Sgt. Kenneth Goetzke said this is the first year for archery for JROTC at the school and the cadets had only one semester to practice for the tournament. The group was able to field eight participants for the individual competition.

“Most of our cadets were familiar with archery,” said Goetzke. “Really all we had to do was fine tune it. We chose to only let those scoring 45 out of 50 points to compete.” He said after the first practice the cadets didn’t have to rely on an arrow backstop curtain.

Cadet Austin Mundy took top honors in the individual school portion of the tournament, collecting 279 out of 300 points. Alex Mijes was second with a score of 272 and Seth Llewellyn finished third with 269 points. Mundy, who also hit the bulls eye 16 times in the tourney, took first place in the state with Mijes first in the ninth grade division and classmate Llewellyn placing second. Mijes had a total of 14 bulls eyes and Llewellyn made 11.

“This is one sport youth can really excel at,” said Lemons. “It’s pure hand-eye coordination.”

Lemons said shooting in each successive round gets more difficult because of the strain of using the 20-pound bows.

According to Bowes, participants shoot arrows valued at 10 points each for a possible perfect score of 300 points. Archers shoot from a distance of 32.8 feet and then from 49 feet in the second part of the tournament. Each half of the tournament requires archers to shoot three sets of five or 15 arrows, shooting a total of 30.

NASP was originally designed to teach international-style target archery in physical education class to grades four through 12 and its core content covers archery history, safety, technique, equipment, mental concentration, core strengthening physical fitness and self-improvement.

“I’m excited about our chances in the nationals,” added Bowes. “We’re ready to just get in the van and go.”

Bowes said one immediate benefit he has seen from the practicing is it teaches cadets the connection between mental and physical. He used the example of one participant (Nathan Caudle) whose first shot was wide of the target’s center.

“For many kids shooting wide like that would have totally rattled them,” said Bowes. “They would have just lost it. He didn’t. He stopped, concentrated on his technique, his breathing, and got it back together shot the next four arrows in the nines and tens zones. This is a lesson students can apply to a lot of situations in life and go on to succeed.”

He said the slogan is changing students’ lives one arrow at a time. It is good program to reduce drops outs and gets kids excited in school. It’s all about them getting excited about the opportunities to shoot and they don’t want to lose them. They do better in their classes.

He said much of the equipment for the program was obtained through the help of Lemons at minimal cost to the school. Archery also is taught in Surry County at Mount Airy Middle School as part of the physical education program.

Reach David Broyles at dbroyles@civitasmedia.com or 719-1952.

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nobodyknows_me
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June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
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June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
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June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
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The Canteen
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June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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nobodyknows_me
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June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
|
June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
|
June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
download June 18, 2013
The Canteen
|
June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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nobodyknows_me
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June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
|
June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
|
June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
download June 18, 2013
The Canteen
|
June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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nobodyknows_me
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June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
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June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
|
June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
download June 18, 2013
The Canteen
|
June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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nobodyknows_me
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June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
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June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
|
June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
download June 18, 2013
The Canteen
|
June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
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nobodyknows_me
|
June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
|
June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
|
June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
download June 18, 2013
The Canteen
|
June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?
nobodyknows_me
|
June 18, 2013
Lmao, sad to say their my family..
Anthony Stasi
|
June 18, 2013
Uh...hi...I'm Anthony Stasi. When did I start writing for this publication?
realReality
|
June 18, 2013
Funny how the "black widow" failed to mention the former wife of over fifty some years in died in 2000. After all, she's the Mother of his daughter and grand and greatgrandchildren. Funny how greed affects people. Shame on you Myrtle!
download June 18, 2013
The Canteen
|
June 18, 2013
That $137,000 per year until 2047 comes to $5,473,000...and when you divide that by the 370 users, it comes out to be about $14,792 per household. Some brilliant thinking out of Dobson there. What would be helpful is to see some additional reporting from the Mount Airy News on 1) what the original thinking of the county commissioners was at the time they committed to this project, 2) who the champions of it were, and 3) maybe soliciting a comment or two from those champions. That would make for a good article, and it would help to further hold government accountable to the people, which is (or should be) one of the objectives of the press. I think $5.5 million in wasted county taxpayer dollars warrants a bit more detail. How about it, editors? Maybe a follow-up story on this one?