Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Oct. 28, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
rage 2 THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C. Thursday. October 58. 1971 Established 1889 ^aseSSrt!! ! The Kings Mcunlain Heirflld 206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountain, N. C. 28036 4 weekly iicwspapiT devolctl lo Ihp proi'ioUon of the general welfare and published tor the enl]V leiinu'iif, eiitertninnint and benefit cf the citizeiis of Kings Mountain and Its viediity. published every Thursday by the Herald Publishing House. Entered as sejond chess matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C., 28086 under Act of Congress of March 3, 1873. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Har.mon Editor-Publisher .Miss EJiraiietb Stewart Circulation Manager and Ssx'iety Editor Gary .Stewart Sports Editor, News Vli-ss Dei)t,ie Tlioriiburg Clerk, Bookkeeper Ray Parker 'Kixky Martin meckatjtcal department Allen Myers Roger Brown Paul Jackson Monte iiunter • On Leave With The United States Army MAIL SUP,SCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE In North Caroltno and South Carolina One year $4; six months $2.2.5; three months $1.50; school year $3. (Subscription hi Nerth CaroMna suhlort to three percent sates tax.) In All Other States One year $5; six months S3; three months $1.73; school year $3.75. PT.US .NOirni CAROLINA .SALES TA.X TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441 TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE Where there »,s novision, 'ih-j jiciiih-ierisl..- fjiit Ju thot Iherpilh the ‘law, ,hit>ry is jProver 29sJS Saddled Proponents of the changes in the municipal elections laws contended one benefit would bo elimination of the early May voting which dictated a new city administration be straddled wit It an al ready vvork-'d - out budget about v h;ch the now administration could do, little but ratify. The argument does not obtain. Under the new .system, whereby (presumably) Kings Mountain's new ad- mini.ctrations will take office in early December, dictates that the new admin istration is saddled with the retiring ad- m nb'iiaiion’s Iiudgct for seven months. Under ihc old system, Kings .Moiintain's board (even in event of run-of's for all offices) is seated before tlio end of May, had tint’! July 2S to adopt a fine.l !>ud- get. That gave two months foi- .a new tram to do a lot of perusing and chang ing, if the new team saw fit. AH in all, the new system has many merits — standiii-diyatiou oi eicc. all the mimieipiiHties of the state, and elimination of a city administrations prerogative lo double in l)vass as both commission and board of elections. C''ity Clei'k Joe McDaniel, Jr., has one complaint: ;idding an hour to the voting day won’t make it any easier to obtain election officials for the meagre pay election officials receive. The Herald and the communityL as well as his parishioners, re.grct the im pending dcpaitui'e of Rev. Charles Eas ley, pastor of St. Matthew’s Lutheran ci'urch for the past seven yeai's. They commend Rev. Mr. Ka.sloy on his minis terial work here and liis civic contribu tions and wish him and hl.s lamily veil js they go Albemarle to serve First ..uthcran church tliere. Unilcd Plalitor.s Among the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s mistakes was regarding Chaing Kai-Shek’s World War II Cliina among the “Big Five’’. The Chinc.se Communist crowd, with World War II over, proceeded to prove ? .. Roosevelt's mistake. General Albert Wedemeyor, dLs- patched to China by President Truman with the charge to. effect a compromise between the opp.osing Chinese forces, worked hard but subsequently found it necessary to throw up his hands and come home. The Wedemeyor conclusion: “A plague on both your houses.” The Cotr!m;in'sts shortly won and Kai-Shek roticaled to Taiiv'an (cx-For- mosa), and h'"' been an exnensive ward of the United States ever since. Also evpv since, the United States policy of non-recognition of Red China has boon totally unrealistic. Tlie Com munists contro'locl all of China's main land ’’cal estate and spoke tor its now- estimated 800 m’llion people. Kai-S'cek snoke for the island he inhabited and 14 million people. Indnsky Apprcciotion With the Shelby Chamber of Com merce doing the work and the Cleveland County commission, City of Shelby and City of Kings Mountain paying the bills, Cleveland citizens honoied industries at a banquet Wednesday night at the Shel by Elk'i club. Readers of the Herald may have been a bit surprised las was luc a!d) that Kings Mountain Township a- lone has forty industries. In this town- smp arc produced valuable ores—lime stone, mica, and spodumeiie — bricks, and concrete, augmenting as these in- dustrie.s uo the broad spectrum of tex tiles, iiu:Iuding cotton and synthetic yarns, men’s hosiery, knit fabrics and kail f ni:..i,-:l products, drapery and up holstery matei'lal.s, turnituro and mo- b 'e homes. H ichine shops and other service industries lielp ke.'p the otlier inJusino.s in good operational shape. Likes attract likes and one industry oLracts eomp’cm.eniary ones. A latter pr.r.io example is found in tiie four in- M.; :y g;-oap including .Mean Aluminum, . .■..L't f'.ianu. acluring Company, Evans ILodacls Company, and DeRose Indus- Ir es (li.', d in older of tlieir appear ance.) Alcan f:irnishes tiie outside cov- v'.ng for mobile homes. Evans the in- lericr wood products, Kinder furnishes iiio mobile Iiomes, and DeRose the fin- ii.iel mobiie liome otf the a.ssenibly line. Clevc-’and County got off Ihe ground, from the stamlpoiiit of rapid indestr al expansion, with the arrival of Pittsburgh Plate Gla.ss Company and the expansion E'nco has been fabulous. Shelby - King:, Mountains Pat Spangler, former vico- i..;i.rinan ot the State Board of Conser- ...i.'iOn and Development, likes to recall, “Wc paid dues to the Chamber of Com- mcrco for 20 years and it looked- like we were wasting our money. With the arrival of Pittsburgh the 20-yoars of dues arc re-paid 2-fold, maybe more.’’ Luther Hodges, when he became governor in 1951, embarked North Caro lina on an industry-getting program, a progvm -! '..iuch has been continued by .'r>' ills successors, Terry Sanford, Dan iVloore and Bob Scott. Industry i)ro\ ides econom’ ''y life- giving job.s and enhance the being of the total community in all ‘acets. Cleveland County and the Slate of North Carolina would fae romi.ss .should it fail to say "thank you’’, both to long time industrial citizens and to new ones. The United States was merely rec ognizing the facts of life when it finally agreed to stop opposing admission of Red China into the United Nations. The Nixon Administration soucht to keep Nationalist China in mcmhor.ihip, too, but that result was not to b". Big Daddy U. S. has been big contributor to United Nations hHls and the rebuff may cause a lessening of U. S. largess, perhaps should. Red China’s trumpeting Big Dnddv’.- great defeat — with the United States supporting Red China’s UN admission bid—was in quite poor taste but hardly unexpected. President Nixon finally gets plaud its on initial nominees • to the United States Supreme Court. It kinde, mr.inds oT the first line of the old .song. “I didn’t want to do it. ...” Py D'.’sr'k, F-Trybe Judge William K. McLean, in his ruling this week, tossed a considerable monkey wrench Into the machinery of Mecklenburg County wet forces with his Tuesday ruling, in which the Judge said Honor by the drink, if voted, would be legal—but only if sold by and at gov- prnm''"*a! establishments. ’n loeklcnburg. the ruling was im- m-’diately interpreted to mean that only the Dogwood Room at Douglas Airport, or fho “regular" eating eslabHshment.s would bo able to dispense liquor by the drink, while Ovens Auditorium and Ihe Coliseum cculd at their special func tions. and could Ihe unbuilt civic center. There immediately developed much wailing and knashing of teeth in the restaurant industry, not to mention the hotel-motel trade, and Chamber of Com- mercers seeking to attract conventions to Char’, te — which has never earned a convention reputation comparable to the mountain and seashore re.sort areas. Apparently, the vote will be taken on November 5 as scheduled, as the wets, meant inie, appeal Judge McLean’s decision to the state Supreme Court. The question of alcoholic beverages remains a very moot question in North Carolina, be the alcohol “hard” in the 86 to 100 proof range, or “light” in the beer and wine range. 'The drys charge the wets are ruin ing the morals of the state, while the wets charge the drys vote nav as long as they can stagger to the polls. MARTIN'S MEDICINE AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK By MARTIN HARMON Ehol').v .'hr'.T.:pr of Ccmmercc diroeted a nice party on \Ve:t;ie.s- day o.ening in a tribute to Cleve land C.runty industry. As mentioned in a column near numbers 40 indu.sti'ie.s, a rather by it was scmc.vhat .surprLsing t'liat Kii'.gs Mountain town,hip lair porcentage of the 133 num- bc.ed in Clevelaird County. mm 'TOWARD AWARENES.S ThLs is, sadly, not the best <»f week-s to join the world's most publicized mutual adminiiatjon society in singing praises to the press. Last wtH-'k tvas a tough act lo follow. Among minor cmharras.s'menis were switched tieadlines of a ooupie of side-by-side stories. And y'ou Irave to pick of any nuni.xm of typos. It seems the liarder we. look the less we se<r. Ii..t tire most glarin,; boo-boo last week was our report in no KINGS MOUNTAIN Hospital Log VISITING HOURS Daily 10:30 to 11:30 AM. 3 to 4 PM. and 7 to 8 FM. uncertain terms that Ihe builder m m Gary Stewar: and I attended the very excrllrnt dinner at the BPCE Club nc:ir Shelby and .il whiRi King3 Mountain was well re prcsei'-tej. m m '•bs I have terrcte.l out semetime ago the 16 Kirf-i .Mountain area indusiric- listed on ci'.bcr the New Yc i; Cl .' .ncriean Ste ik E.\- chan;go, a mark, of excellence us the.v indu tries are required to have minimal assot.s and grass sail V and must meet other s'.and- .'i:vL as required by net only the e:; i;.m:e tiiemsclvcs hut cf tic iri.ir.s and Exchange Com.-nis- sion. ?P"- 1'. . m m TImrr -'re the r'-'-’P ments, Stcrc.bi’s, .4&P, Winn-DLxie; 'i.u-iL ..r. ..10 industrial e-tao- I'^’ n-.do, Lni'tcd s’.e.o.i Gypsum, Mu;:in-Ma:i^ aC ■ nprny, DeJese Ir.'ue tri; s, Burlh'.gion In.tustrics, LVD 'Jc: .ooratLii (Cra.'tspun b.-ira.s. Lie, a v.nally cv.nied .-..b- .sidiary,) I-ocU- Mineral Company, and ethers. m-m Omi;:e:l fra.m Uic prior lift the / .ncriean Telephone & Telcgr tph Company cf which Southern Bell i; a eonLr.:lIed subsidiai-y. Presi dent e. tiie Shcljy Chamber ol Cc.r; ni rro, guiding spirit in tire Wc-ir.c day nigi tunctian is B,vb S g.gins v.ho manager the South- e;n Bell orfieo cf SbeVoy. mm cf Crrcmmies was Rich ard E. Mu.'--''., Tei-tm; tain citizen now a SheToy banker. m m Chairman of the arrangemen; r,'mi.i-..e wa-c. M"-S. Grace Ki , ledge Ham’ie.,, wiio d.u.le:. in 'era r. as Vv,.e. moi: icr and vie i leader in Cleveland C.un:., and c .-as.onei! i;...p '.-.rater e.. ; .e H - AL.'.in.ai.' r.e;-aid and well kn -v.t te K-i'.gf ‘Moaniain ei:i- of the .Mooresville (jost o.aiee un der eonstruetion had not been issued a building permit as ol Oetcii'oer G. This simply wasn’t and isn’t true. The e-onlractor's .sliaek on the joib on 'institute at Chur.-'h has a valid and fully authorized building permit tacked to a wall. The pei mit, dated Septemlrer 13, is signed 'by J. L. Alexander, Moorsville building iiispeelor, and it Is authentic in every way. All we can say is that Alexan der told a reporter fo rlhis nws- paper October 5 that he had not issued a building permit for the post office jeeb. City .Manager Tate Mills and Mayor Joe Knox are among those who say Alexan der fold them last week he had not issued the permit. Whatever accounts for t li e building inspectors rather incred ible lapse or memory, the hard fact Is, the I'rilbune said the proj ect did not have a building per mit when, in truth, it did have a permil. But we can turn this obvious example of inaccurate reporting lo our advantage, at least for our purp-oses lieie: It proves a newspaper Is human, made up Charlie BeatliiH' .Mi.s. jean Bell .\Iiu. Geneva Black .Vir.s. Euni. e BluiUon Mrs. Ruth i;urri.s .Viis. Millie Camp E.im H. .Mrs. .Ma.tie Davis Er.skine Doug.in Mrs. Re .ty L. j'.uin \...s. L.la W. Ervin Hugh A. Evan.s .Mr.-,. Inc'Z Eau.st .\1rs. Erne'stine W. Fish .Mrs. Odcs.sa Fi'cnebcrger .Ml'S. Es-iie W. Goioiih '.\i..s. VViltid H.ske-tl Mrs. .Mary if. Hill Mrs. Maigiiret S. Howard Tlieodore lluHinan, Jr. Mrs. .Viable- -M. Huglie-s henry Hullender Vvaller Lewis A. J. .Mack ■Mrs. Berlle MiDanU'l .\i. '. Beilha Nolen .Mr.s. Mai-garet II. Robinson iRoiande.-; seism Mis. V'irginia Scruggs -Murgari I Spivey i. i.. Statey -MiS. Kuih C. Thoma.'.'son -Mrs. Euniie B. Toney .Mrs. Tuye B. Wa.ter.son 'All.:. .M.iry E. Williams G. ige L. iN.'iglil ■Mrs. .Vdele E. Adams .Vlrs. Mary .\. Childer.s Eiiiet'i .'j;; ..Alls. Gecigia Greene This exhibit on display at the Woman's Club Community Festi val depicted "Education Today and Yesterday." This is American Educaticn '•Venk and schools are holding open house. (Isaac Alexander Phrto) of vulnerable flesh and blood peo- ADMITTED 'iHURoDAY Viewpoints of Other Editors IN KEEPING WITH TRADITION pie who are subject to all the difficulties in gathering and communicating information that beset the least of us. And if we want to make a point during National Newspaper Week, which is this week, it is ADMITTED raiDAY that we are human but that we BiltclifTe keep trying to reduce the built- in odds that being human ex- Alis. Belty .S. tull.s Air.-,. Annie E. Good.son Tale; Hallman .Mrs. Essie iiul.sliekler Mrs. Pearl .Mc.Ne-ely J. R. Stacey rights to know what goes on. We could remind you that we ac cept our obligations, and that we can meet them only so long as you demand your rights. A newspaper isn’t free; Ihe people arc free. \ve are only as flee as you are. We cannot ' ' m-m 'Jf:u’Ta:.-;cr'(-..i i. Ci' cli XL’m- tcr) p: : liie spc.ifv'i .-..n hi: tc-. v,-' .1 w: ;•'.d in . oru r. In- d;:. 1 or? ■■? h::'i c vip':- m. t.ts c. t:io eve tin,;' '• V. -: .('.at t.icc -.•ve .m .-. t .v: i dif.-. >;i, ii-.Ludhq, ;he p.i.v. a,!cl;o?fi by Roy rrwe.'s. t'-v mar in the Nrrtii Ca.olina Df.'a: mcr: C'f Devcl_...T.ent ani C.;;s.. j- Uc'.;. m m A? Mr. Taylor delineated Mr. Savor.? is an announced, ur.n- ncuneed candidate for Lieutenai.-;- Gu.ernc.'. mm He quR'kly' came to the point. TIL theme w;is, "We can’t forgot tiiL- pe ,plo.’’ He delineated quite well North Carolina’s ethnic back ground c. white, bia.x and In dian. ni m Ho gave some interesting fig- U'.es. 'I'he year AD 1971 will see North Car..lina e-xceed its prior record year of 1969 in industrial cxp:insion. For nine months the figure exceeds that record year. r* m He closed with considerable c.-.mplimer.t to Cleveland Coun-ty; "A'eu in Cleveland County are do ing a tromc-vdous joa.” AGE OF REFUGEES Tlie US Committee for Refu- to everyone. . The naming of two new build- gees estimates that at the end of re^on^i“ fti?s° an i your hL oric ings which were dedicated Sun- 1910 there wer 17,oS7,4{b refc- dav at the North Carolina School gees in the world. That was 257c tor the Deaf was so o.jviousiy more than in 19?9 and 150': ai propriate that it’s to gild the more than in 19^. Add thejat- lilj' to commend the Board of est batch—six miilon East Pak- Dircctors for their selection of istanis who have fled to India titles. and the tOi.tl soars. In designating one as Jeter Asia leads tlie world in refu- •'cd th? othc" as llonder.son gees. Its total, wi’.hout the latest mo,th platitudes about the p-.ess iHall, however, points to two f;; •- milHons wlio fled to India, was as the ultimate .lulwark of f'ir-st etc of the strength of the School 11,762,249. Africa’s 19’i0 count Amend.ment'guaiaiiiees, or a.ioui Lov i.io uie.li uul.ng the mote was l,74'.t,’; iO, l.uvo;'C’s 6':s.-1.57. newspapers as cur na’ion's mo.sl l.uin t:riec-(tuartci3 cf a contui’A' tbe Aliddle East’s and eficctive defense ag-ainst cro.-k- it has been operatir. . the Western Hemisphere's 1,607, ed goveinment and every ol.ier 315. soit oi p', jlic predator. Jeter Hall was so named for the members of the Dr. I. P. Tlicse cold statistics do not in- Jeter family who pst:'’;lishcd elude the millions who have fled what is pcih.a-p.s an uuc ■ '1 -I from rural ’re-r • r ,rd cl -m v'.m l-j the ibytftd- t > cities, where they live in squa- tion- for 7,5 const ulive AO.)! - 'in’ and poveriy n-.c i.jets of thal fr.niiiy were’or- .. .ihiiians of refugee. They do ficiCi'- conii-. '.ed -.v.tn AC not include t.ious.,..- .i ..... E icCy, it i;e; an vvh.-'n the late sands in Indochina wlio have Jeter, Cun Miss .N'an’e lost their homes and moved on p-:o,-r[ng, came iiere as a leather because o-f the war, hut are not wifii th apenin.g of the .school in eiasslficd or registered. t'Jl. Later she r-arriod Dr. Jeter, a A.Iorg.inton donrist. Wlier. We can t claim all th.s bc; aius<‘ we would be just as iwp'ong as that building i>ermit dii'lhe wail made us wrong lust week. 'Bui It is tiue tiiii llii-s news paper and every newspaioer pee- lunns a AHs. Lizzie S. Coler Mrs. Addle .Needy lMts. Virginia Parton Bennie A arbrough ADMITTEL SATURDAY 'Jin. on t’lark t laren.-v .4. Fi.^her Allivd GaHaiit aam jackson, Ji. Wylie Hu..s.etler lMv.'. Joj C. Lcdlor:! Sili'La uc.iise Loweiy Ei,inn..i 1{. Nci.nan C - .vn .dii! :i • t.i J. i;. .,..a,,n Aui gavoi VVtusnant ADMITTED SUNDAY .V.rs. LiJIit' M. Boone Bro.Mi Judi Lynn K'. nire Airs. ALiry O. tfir.s.-ni t . At. I.ovelaie Ai. .gie Aioi.lg .nieiy All . j’L'.a'pli.iic- G...is Edwmd Reynold.'- The reasons for fli 'ht differ lieiieve it. In tlie days wiien , , ,. ,, with each group political of n--wspa'-ers enjoyed—or su.iered ’.SDl to-- lurg t.ioic, no oppresion, war, star- a communication moivjpo’.y, t.here vation. Ea-’h is the "tragic re 'vas constdcraole influen.e vest- s It of the violent pace and for- ed in the press. .TKCnt fnat cliaraclizeour time,’’ Today, influence of every sort according to the committee. the ■pre.ss, thc^ pulpit, the btineh. They are symbols of rootless. oppression and the un valua'jic paai.c seiv.ce. .’ID'lviiilED iv.uHEAi t'laucie Learn Al.s. t.i.a -M. Ilr.gar.s Earl Hicks Rita 1!. Hodge.s R..-g' ;• 'i’arlicr Ru-us Plonk ■iVewspapers inform, ff you know you can take it from tnere. Erankiy, vve never have been in.piessod by newspapois’ toulcd 'power to moid minds." We don I .-■■pled .cppointment to the b.onr'l. II:.: wife su; .'Ceded h:"n on tl-c bo: rd .n;Kl se.'vcd until a d ■ ii'.cr j' ined the ■ toai'hing . ,. T.ie two Jeter daughters. Miss Nan i.eter and Airs. T ’.ter Jeter Walk.-r, are , , , 1? J'''l! eon.ern of man for his fellow alter long records of service otv ., » >. mari. th faculty. fh'irb.c Sweezy Afr;.'. AI?.;y F. Webster ADMITTED TUESDAY Ri.'.sa L. e ae '. .Mrs. Sallio E. -Martin Mr.s. .iiiol N. Bneed Claren.e AUGinnis, .Tr. AL.s. Nellie Al. Williams Alilwaukec Journal. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY One aim of the Olympic games the paycheck and you name it lias been watered d:>wn severe ly by upgraded awareness of itie individual. Wc question cvery- ti'.Jn;:, and we find reason to in In a unique way, this sym- '"“f* . .i.- boli:tes something of the com- ^ SITTER'S LESSON others havVplajTTa munity s a.iiLation and as.socia- paper ano oiners nave piajen a ticn W 1 til" f'ehool . fer the Rop. VVri.ght Batman, chair- part in this healthy awareness. Deaf. The school lias peculiarly man of the House Bankng and You have been informed, and een an integral part ot thi.s Currency Committee and gradly you have been e.xerci.sing your community and we have oiiserv- to the Peder-al Reserve Hoard, intlligence in sifl|ng, weighing, ed several 'times brf.aro that it-s thinks a New York Fed official accepting and dismissing infor- contribution to Morganton has was wasteful of nubile money in malon to become your own be.st been great in many ways, espec- paying a baby-sitter. influonre. i-iiu. in iii-ir-riniT insti-M-tois here , ltk<^ I* that way.-Moore.s- Md mother^ the communiirtlas Corntressional Record recently GLORIOUS DEATH ha 1 Thp Jplor famiiv hciMod to lexas Cangros.sman. I ne Autumn has been called <i pu-'hlis’-i ami main!'-in tills tra- 'baoy sitting lee, which the New dying; death should be I'’’’ will follow, that spring an i dition cf \o'oRierncss between York official had put on so glorious. And who’s to say it summer will come -and then wC Christian concept of death as a metamorphosis, but il goes liai yond that. j With the passing of humart life, there has to be a sense of! 1;-;s, hpcausc t.'icre is. rcgardle.ssj of ccmpcn.-aling beliefs, a sciiarav lion i.-om the living. lEut the arrival and duration of fail contain no negative to ac centuate. The c.xquisite beauty of nature’.: ur..1rc.s.sing of flora a",1 dressing of fauna can be enjoyed without hesitation. This is so be cause we Host the oi’rierline.s.s of na:ure. We are confident win- NC,3 and .M irgant'jn. Well, $20.90 does .seem like a lot for two baby-sitting stints and Federal Reserve officials pence a ount, ca.me to $k0.£K), covering two o..casions w'.ien The other building, Henderson the o.'fidal and his wife had to has al'-vays been to foster inter- ipjgip named for Charles L. attend job-related dinners, national goodwill, but it may be (Ranee) liRuulorson, Iho fourth that the real key lo impr-oved superintendent at the School for liarmony lies in less Olympian uaaf. q'he dcdijaloiy piatpae sports of the type piayed by uiontiflc-s h™ .as "rriend of fr™. ■ “"“pt Vo’ect over-ener- everyday people. Dea’’ rdu-ator and FO'. rth Sup- nave no rigni vo ove „ Tlie Chinese invited some Am- erintendent of This School.’ And ““S with oneone elsos mony. cricans to come play ping-pong in mention was made of the "dy- on the other hand, baby sitters April and a momentous change ncniic leadership’’ which he has jon't come as cheaply as they in the diplomatic cH.mate already provided since coming to the can be said abo. t almost every has cuiiod. In Havana, another school in July 1970. Altiiough service. If it occurred to the un group of Americans got a friend- just be .inning his second year, named Fed man that the price ly reception from Cubans .s they 'Air. Henderson has so identified y^as, indeed, pretty steep, may- demonstrated their skills in vol- hl-mseif vviih the school and the (jg jj gist, occured to him that leyitall. community that he his lost all jt might have been less if the We now hear, 'by way of The semblance of ’aclng a "rq-wc'im- q.-eij bad been more controlliiig Christian Science Monitor, that er ” la label usually ap-plied to t],g nation’s money supply. If the Russians are citing interest- recent arrival.s'for 10 to 15 years (tigi happened, an-l vve have only ed in that papular American pas- or more—and has come to he re- fnagiio gro, nds for hoping that time, bowling. Two aulomate-J, girded in the ! ght cf an “old- jj jt ^-ould liave been $20.9') computerized bowling alleys set timer’’ —in years >,f residence but of public money well spent. up by the Brunswick Corp. at an not of age. His dynanl-sm is cam- exhibit in Aloscovv’s Gorky Park ouflaged by a friendly, dmvn-to- liave made a big hit. The Minus- earth, easy-igoing manner which BLUE-CHIPPERS try of Culture, which has been helps to win friends for liimself promising R’xssians more enter- and the school. if i+ie the ’’■blue-chip’ football tainment facilities, may decide up renresents an infii- players—referred to by coaches to build permanent R- ■ ’ ■ '' ^ 'jrew^dmlniMraUvc "tab ThT-®-"" ■ ■■ -- '1’.^ -ff--7'”'- plrts'^wS in S ToTumn^ school. It’s a rare Infusion since . „„„„ ciories ...iiig riiay ottfer the best he is only the fourth to occupy ^ „ublidty write^T m possibilities yet for storing some the top position, the others hav- iL X locks rapport between pec^iles of ooun* jna been Dr. E. McK. Goodwin, \tnr> trieVthat distrist lach other. A r.” cavi E. Rankin an dDr. Ben Russian might develop some e. Hoffmeyer. He is a worthy warmth towards the United worthy successor to those dedl- Stfttes if his favorite bowling ball cited men. comes from Chicago, for In- The two buildings therefore s'.anco. And there probably are cenbine recognition ot new tal- few better roads to empathy ent whleh the schiml fortunate isn’t? ttan enjoy fall’s superlative show 'Perhaps it is possible to be in livjng color all over again, mmi’iid about tall, but vve don’t Enjoy, enjoy. Moore.sville Tri- thjnk so. Fall conforms to the bune. one another. Las Vegas would be .green with envy. -Chapel Hill Weekly. tlon. And that, we think, is part than through the shared agony ly has t-ecc -uic to attract at all of the great tradition of the of seeing one pin still standing levels as ."ho.vn by the present North Carolina School tor the when a apart would have sailed staff and recognition of long scrv- Deaf itself.—Morganton Nows- the day.—Wall Street Journal. ce as a matter of family tradi- Herald. Keep Your Radio Dial Set At 1220 WKMT Kings Mountam, N. C. News & Weather every’hour or* the hour. Weather every hour on Ihe half hour. Fine entertainment in between nurs' • M qh’.s ((Uai’tt Bobljy Shell) j havin; C lainot II Abbe; Form Abbe; reel’ll going ; ' 'I iinotl’ Fall. : titlac 1 ^ ipp.-ti borne PapP’ ; \ iff n pew each and !■ liwite Ijwo I 1 rt> t)i the n last t Jone:
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1971, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75