11 KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. V 1’ ^ r IT “ ^ 9 " toi” i *:i « f •5^ ^ *•■ f ^ ^.,7 Thursday. Uune 3, 1965 1965 KMHS 6BADUATING CLASS I *\ GRADUATE — Wilbur Luther (Sonny) Wright, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Luther Wright, Sr., and grandson of Mrs. Char lie A. Baity of Kings Mountain, was graduated from Bums high school Monday night. He will enter the University of North Carolina in the fall. School Board igranis for mentally and physical ly hantlicappcd children which may be in existance at another school. Assignments in accord ance with indicated second choice of school will be made using the same criteria as used for first choice. If no choice is indicated 'by parents, assignment will be made to the nearest scnool with adequate facilities and not over loaded.” I Supplementary . loaded. i Under the board’s pupil assign ment plan for 1965-66, grades 1-6 would be housed at Bethware, East. Grover, North, Park Grace and Wt'st schools; grades 1-12 at , Compact; grades 1-8 at David son; and grades 7-8 at Central. It is anticipated that special edu cation classes would be offered j either at Central or West school j plants. 1 In other actions Ffiday, the j board ' 1) heard Supt. iB. N. Barnes read a letter from J. L. Cham- 'bers of Charlotte, attorney for the NAACP. requesting further information on Kings Mountain's compliance plan. j 2) awarded (ontract for the j annual school audit to Hamrick ' & Redding, certified public ac- I countants. I 3» approved teacher supple- j ment of $15 per month, same ! basis paid in December. I 4) authorized lx>ard chairman George H. Mauney to use a rub ber stamp to countersign checks. Moore College Students additional, adjacent property i Eileen Slater, daughter of Mr. makes possible planning for fu- j and Mrs. A. J. Slater, will re- ture expansion. A number of im- ' ceive her B.S. in psychology this weekend in commencement exer cises at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Dale Hollifield. son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hollifield, was grad uated with B.A. degree from college at TO UTAH Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gilstad moved Sunday to Salt Lake City, Utah, where Mr. Gilstad was transferred’ by Lithium Corporation of America, The Gilstads had lived here on Phi fer road. NO WRECKS Kings Mountain police de partment reported no highway accidents occurring in the city limits during the week ending Wednesday. CITED — Hubert C. Dixon, Kings Mountain native, and Gardner - Webb college faculty member, was named "Alumnus of the Year" Saturday night at the college's annual alumni banquet « ^ Patterson Grove a member of Cherryville First Baptist church, Mr. Brown has served as superintendent of the Cherr^wille city schools the past five years. He will assume his new duties July 1. Brown is married to the former June Wright of Bry.son City and they are parents of three chil dren: two boys, ages 12 and six. and a daughter age 10. provements in class room furni ture and equipment has made 'possible The growth of the edu- ! cational program. ! Mr. ‘Moore directed the estab- ‘ lishment of an entirely new pro gram of Parish Education, pro- I Western Carolina I vided by the Lutheran Church in j Cullowhce. America. This involved teaching | Joyc*e Eleanor Plonk, daugh- the teachers for a new approach i ter of Mr. and Mrs. Hal S. Plonk, to Christian education. He also j was graduated cum laude Mon serves as advisor for the Luther |day morning from Lenoir Rhyne League. ‘college at Hickory. Miss Plcnk I The Lutheran Church Women ! received an A.B. in sociology and groups-have doubled in number jAvill enter the University of Ken- during the past six years. The | tucky this fall for work on her Boy Scout and Cuh Scout pro- master’s degree, grams have been recognized and James Sherwood Forrest, son expanded. ; of Air. and Mrs. Robert J. For- Mr. Moore has been active in ' rest, was graduated with honors , civic and community affairs. For , ^lay 29ih from North Carolina ;a time he was me.Thor of the | State University at Raleigh with I local Rotary aclub. is currently i ^ S. in meciianical engineering. I a member of the Kiwanis club jHe has accepted employment ! and its board of directors. Has | with IBM of Lexington, Ken- ! been an active member of Kings tucky. Mountain Ministerial Association. I Margaret Jackson, daughter of Not all strokepatients are left with a handicap, the North Car olina Heart Associatioin says. serving as secretary and treasur er. vice-president, and currently is president. Beginning this year, he writes a weekly column for the local newspaper. “Speaking Out.” For the North Carolina Synod of the Lutheran Church in Amer ica Mr. Moore is currently chair man of the Cofnmittee on World Missions. During his tenure of I office as chairman foreign mis- 1 sionaries have been made avail- I able as speakers for every con gregation in the Synotl. He also is .serving on the Boaitl of Trus tees for the LcAvman Home at White Rock. S. C. This is a home for the aged, supported by five Southern synods. He is a mem ber of the Executive Committee 'of that Board. Mrs. Moore. Sunday School teacher and Senior Choir mem ber. is employed as Acting Su- peiwisor for Gaston County De partment of Public Welfare. The Moores are parents of four ^fis, three of whom will be in college this fall. Truett Moore will transfer from Clemson Uni versity to Centra Piedmont Com munity oollege at Charlotte to study commercial art; Johnnie Moore, an honor graduate of Kings Mountain high school Mon day, will study business adminis tration at Lenoir Rhyne college; and Spencer Moore, a National Merit Finalist and recent grad uate of KMHS, will enroll at Western Carolina college to ma jor in biology and education. Their fourth son, Alex, is a 10th ■grade student. The Spencer church has a membership of over 4CK). ' *\ L > J COMPACT HIGH GRADUATES — Pictured above ore members of the Class of 1965 of Compact high schooL First row, left to right, Yvonne Barnette, Bertha Bell, Prema Brown, Brenda Camp, Linda Comp and Norma Childers; second row, from left, Annie Cole, Mory Gist, Darlene Huskey, Sylvia Jordan, Patricia Lewis, and Mary Littlejohn; third row, from left, Janice Mitchem, Jackie Moore, Mahalia Roberts, Doris Smarr, Cornell Adams and William Adams; fourth row, from left, Joseph Belt Miles Boyd, Roddy Byers, Carl Burris, Jimmy Carter, and Charlie Crocker; fifth row, from left Leroy Dovis. James Hood. Jesse Hughes, Robert Jomerson. Billy McCathen, and Dwight Roseboro; sixth row, from left Clarence Warren, James Worthy, Williom Patterson and Mae Byers. T-339. which was issued to the City of Kings Mountain on April 26, 1963 by the State Stream San itation Committee. "Mr. W. E. Long. Jr., chief, mu nicipal waste section, has report ed on the meeting with the Town Board on May 27. 1965, and based upon the assurances made by the Town Board at that meeting, we are hereby extending the time schedule for pollution abatement as specified in Temporary Per mit No. T-33n to the following Deadline Now handle the flow of sewage that Kings Mountain will deposit in the creek.” He suggested another site be found and outlined steps for the city to take in attempting to qualify for federal funds for the project. He also warned that a bond referendum would have to be approved by the voters and this might be the most difficult step. Long suggested nearby Potts Creek be used as the site for the plant. Possible sites are to be in spected by Mayor Moss and the western regional engineer for the department next Wednesday Mayor Moss expressed himself as highly appreciative of the ex tension. Ho said, "I feel this ex tension will give the city and its officials an opportunity to ef ficiently plan our future sewage program.” The letter to Mayor Moss read: "Reference is made to your let ter of May 28 requesting an ex-1 the Town should accomplish the tension to Temporary Permit No.'‘tollowing prior to April 1, 1966: Mr. and Mrs. T. Wood Jackson, will receive her degree Sunday in the 123rd commencement at Mary Baldwin college in Staun ton, Va. An English and history major. Miss Jackson has been granted assistantship to continue study at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Cadet James Randall Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Parker, was graduated from The Citadel at Charleston, S. C. in a military ceremony May 29. Dur ing his career as a cadet at The Citadel, Parker was enrolled in the Air Force ROTC program. He majored in education and re ceived {he B.S. degree. James Cordell Blanton, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. DoWitt Blanton, was graduated from East Caro lina college at Greenville with bachelor of science degree. He is now in the Naval Officers’ Can didate School in Newport, Rhode Island. Paul A. Howard. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Howard, received the B.S. degree in Tex tile Science from Clemson col lege Saturday. A 19,58 graduate of Kings Mountain high school, he received the Associate in Arts de'^ree from Brevard college in 1960. He entered Clemson in the fall of 1960 for one semester, then entered the Army and serv ed for two years. He returned to Clemson in the fall of 1963. At Clemson, he was a member of the American Association of Tex tile Technologists. He is married to the former Jean Allen of Kings Mountain. On August 1, he plans to begin work with Bur lington Industries, Pacific Worst ed Division at Lexington. Anno Slater, daughter of Mr. and Mi^. A. J. Slater, will receive an Associate degree in applied science intursing education) from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro Sunday in the 73rd commencement exercises in the city's coliseum at 11 a.m. Mary Lillian Lewis, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. O. P. Lewis, was graduated Sunday with B.A. in special education from Greens boro college. She will begin work in the tall with mentally handi- dates: "D Submit final plans and specifications for the project I- long with an application for a Federal Grant to this office on or before April 1. 1966. "2> Begin construction of pro ject on or before October 1, 1966. "3) Complete project and place into operation on or before De- ctmbor 31, 1967. “As pointed out by Mr. Long at the meeting of May 27. 1965, 1) Secure or obtain an option on suitable site, approved by .this office, for the location of the treatment plant. “2) Obtain neces.sary ease ments and rights-of-way. "3) Arrange financing with Local Government Commission and hold successful bond refer endum. “4) Submit final plans and specifications for the project a- long with application for a Fed eral Grant.” BLOOD DONORS CITED — Certificates to Clevelanders who have donated three gallons or more of blood to the Red Cross bloodmobile were awa ded 11 Kings Mountain area citizens May 21 by the Cleveland County Red Cross chapter at a dinner meeting at Hotel Charles. Four of the group, pictured above, from left, are Charles H. Mauney, Lawrence Lovell, John Beom and John Cheshire. Others receiving citations were Clinton E. Jolly. Hoed Watterson, Mrs. Thelma Dellinger, Jasper Wilson. Paul Hamm, Grody H>ward and Ray Cline. Area industries recognized for their cooperation in the blood program were Creeftspun Yarns. Sadie MUls, Massachusetts Mo hair Plush Co.. Minette MilU, Mauney Hosiery Mills. Superior Stone Co., Lambeth Rope Corpora tion, Foote Mineral Company, Lithium Corpora iion and Carolina Throwing Company. Since the county ond Kings Mountain chapters were combined last year, a new slate of directors from the county was elected, these from this area: Mr. aad Mrs. Charles H. Mauney and Fodn Hombright to one-year directorships; Mrs. James RolUns, Mrs. Charlie Harry. John Cheshire and Jonas Bridges to two-year terms; and Grady Howard. OlUe Harris and Rev. B. L. Raines to three-yeor terms. (Photo by Bill jeekton). 11 NEW COUNCILMEN SWORN — Mayor John Henry Moss, left above, looks on as Ward II Commis sioner W. S. Biddix and Ward V Commissioner O. O. Walker take their oaths of office from Magis trate J. Lee Roberts in ceremonies Thursday at City HaU courtroom. The new commissioners de- feotod incumbent commissioners in a run-off election May 25. (Herald Photo by Bill Jackson). SUPPLEMENTARY STATEMENT ' * PLAN FOR COMPLIANCE WITH TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 Adopted May 28. 1965 by THE KINGS MOUNTAIN CITY BOARD OF EDUCATION KINGS MOUNTAIN CITY ADMINISTRATIVE UNIT KINGS MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA Proposed Policy Governing Assignment of Pupils to Schools in the School Administrative Unit Cliange paragraph 1 — TO: The plan to become effcclive with the 1965-1966 school year is based on freedom of choice. Parents or legal guardi ans residing in the .school district will be required to indicate without coercion, intimidation, or threat, their first and sec ond choice of a school for their children before assignment IS made by the Board. Reque.sts for assignments will be granted without regard to race, color, or national origin to the extent tliat facilities, transportation, instructional pro gram, and the staff are adequate to accommodate the e.\- pressions of choice. In the event more requests are submitted for a particular school than can bo accommodated, residenct proximity to the school (measured by strt^ets and roads serv ing the school) will be the chief criteria in making assign ment, however, consideration will be given to a child’s special needs such as the availability of sepcial assistance through programs for mentally and physically handicapped children which may not be in existance at another scho<»l Assignments in accordance with indicated second choice of school will be made using the same criteria as used for first choice. If no choice is indicated by parents, assignments will be made to the nearest school with adequate facilities and not over loaded. FROM. The plan to become effective with the 1965-1966 school year is based on freedom of choice. Parents or legal guardi ans residing in the school district will be given opportunity to indicate, without coercion, Intimidation, or threat their first and .second choice of^a school for their children before assignment is made by the Board. Requests for assignments will be granted to the extent that facilities, transportation, instructional program, and the staff are adequate to accom modate the expressions of rlioice. In the event more requests are submitted for a particular .school than can be accommo dated preference will be accorded on the basis of residence proximity to the school by streets and roads serving the school and giving consideration to the child’s special needs the availability of special assistance, and curriculum con tent. Assignments in accordance with indicated second choice of school will be made using the same criteria as used for first choice and based on residence proximity to the school. If no elioice is indicated by parents, assignment will be made to the school last attended or to the neare.st school with adc quate facilities and not over loaded using the same crlterl i as used to make assignmenU after first and second choices have been indicated. Kings Mountain, N. C., Board of Education GEORGE H. MAUNEY, Chairman \ B. N. BARNES, Secretary , gtS-lO capped children in the Charlotte Mecklenburg School System. At GC, Miss Lewis was a member of the Irving Society, orientation counselor her junior year, a cabinet member of Student Chris- tion Fellowship, on the business staff of the Collegian and the Lyre, on the Junior honor socie ty, an officer of the sophomore and junior classes, dormitory president her junior year and secretary of Alpha Kappa Gam ma, national honorary fraternity for women showing outstanding characteristics in leadership and service Miss Lewis is working fhis summer with mentally hand icapped children in Greensboro. Mr. and Mrs. Billie Wall Jones were graduated in commence ment exercises last week. The former Ann Broadwater, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Broad water, received her B.S. in math ematics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Mrs. Jones had studied for two years at Duke University. Mr. Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Jones, was graduated with B.S. in mathematics from North Carolina State University. He is joining Pratt - Whitley Company in Connecticutt as an aircraft engineer. Mr. and Mrs. Jones are parents of an eight-month-old son, Jeffrey Jones. Charles Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen, was graduat ed from North Carolina State University at Raleigh May 29th. Allen received a B.S. in electrical engineering. He expects to join the Armed Forces August 1 NO FIRES Kings Mountain fire depart ment reported no fires occur ring in the Kings Mountain area during the past week. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of J. B. Mauney, all persons having claims against said estate will please file same with the undersigned on or be fore the 2nd day of December 1965 or this notice will be plead ed in bar of any recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will plea.se make immedi ate payment. This the second day of June, 1965. Roy Mauney, Executor Estate of J. B. Maupey. 6:3-24