■y/l I ■<o TuMday, Dacambar 23, 1M0-KING8 MOUNTAIN HERALD-Poga 1 WIN DINNER - oi MIm SuMn Goiorth'a cIom at North School won a boo din- nor at McDonald's on a rocont WBT radio quis. Tho North studonts corroctly answorod tho Photo by Gory Stowart quostion. how many wooks In a day? Thoy'ro shown aboTo portyinq at McDonald's in tho Kings Mountain Plaia. ». • . New Books At Library Cleveland'County Memorial Library lis^s the following new books; ^ Fiction American Beauty by Mary Ellin Barrett Angels and Awakenings: Stories of the Miraculous by Great Modem Writers Beetle in the Anthill by Arkady Strugatsky Book of Laughter and Forget ting, The by Milan Kundera Change of Heart by Sally Mandel A Change of Light and Other Stories by Julia Cortazar Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader, The > by Charlotte Perkins Stetson Gilman Chrysalis 8 e^ted by Roy Torgeson Clear Light of Day by Anita Desai Collected Stories Of Eudora Wel- ty. The by Eudora Welty Deceptive Cadence by Eugenia Zukerman I If Birds are Free |aye£^' The Prose Bowl by Bill Pronzini Raid on the Bremerton by Irv Eachus Return Match by Elizabeth Cadell Scoprion Sanction, The by Gordon Pape Virgin by James Patterson Non-Fiction An Alternative Approach to Allergies; the new Field of Clinical Ecology Unravels the Environmental Causes of Men tal and Physical Ills by Theron G. Randolph Art of the Painted Finish for . Furniture & Decoration by Isabel O’Neil Atlas of the Planets by Paul Doherty Bay of Pigs: The Untold Story by Peter Wyden Camera, The by Ansel Easton Adams Complete Book of Home Inspec tion for the Buyer or Owner, The by Norman Becker Getting Help: A Woman’s j by Evelyn Last of the Plains: by Sane Grey Legacy of Beulah Land, The by William Laurence Col eman Margaret’s Story by Eugenia Price MoU Flanders by Daniel DefocJ-'^'i Pedigrees ' ^ yv by Ann Shiveli by Elii^b^tH'Robson Gift of Play: and Why Young Children Cannot Thrive Without it. The by Maria W. Piers Home Heating with Coal: Energy for the Eighties by Steve Sherman Mustang; the Story of the P-51 Fighter by Robert W. Gruenhagen ‘ V Clyde Bl&nton Elected To County Committee Qyde Blanton,-well known Cleveland County farmer, was elected to the Cleveland County Agricultural Stabilizatioq ^d Cpnservation (ASC) Committee, for a three-year term*-by delegates to the ,^SC County Convention held 15, at the ASCS Office. . . The delegate also selected ayde Blanton^ChairtRan, Tom L. Hamrick, ^e-^^rman and B£. Baker, 16114^ Member of the three ^enm county com mittee. The ^ftlfegates elected John W. Cliirf « Firsi Alternate and Joe Bovl^^ iteond Alter nate to the i^^nty Cirtnmittee. The Coutt^.fA^ Commiftee is respon^le;^ for local ad ministration of government farm programs j,suA as acreage allotments' vloahs for- eligible crops, and conservation cost sharing on agricultural lands. The vacancy was filled with the County ASC Committee of ficers were named by delegates who are newly elected ASC Community Committeemen for 1981. Community Committees assist the County Committee in farm programs administration and help keep farmers informed of program provisions. County Committeemen are elected by the community and committeemen to serve stag gered three-year terms so that oridinarily one vacancy occures each year. The County Commit tee alternates are elected for one- year terms. The newly elected County and Community Committeemen take office Jan. 1, 1981, Cleveland County Students May Apply For Summer Job Thought about a summer job? If you’re a college student from Cleveland County, home for the holidays, you may already be thinking about your plans for next summer. If so, you may just be eligible for one of 125 state government intern ships which will be available in 13 different state agencies. Students will work for , 10 weeks, from June 8 to Aug. i4', earning $3.12 per hour. In addi-’ tion to a 40-hour wotiweek,* they will attend seStiniW.'UO learn more about state govern ment and how it works. Most in ternships are in the Raleigh area, i but some are available across the ^state. a To be eligible for an intern ship, a student must either be at tending a North Carolina col lege, university, technical in stitute or community college, or be a North Carolina resident at tending an equivalent out-of- state institution. College and university students must have completed their sophomore years while community and teclinical college students must ^'have completed one year of fsmdy. ,,’:rThe deadline for submitting applications is Feb. 13. For more information, contact the Youth Involvement Office, N.C. Department of Administration, Room 115, 112 W. Lane St., Raleigh, N.C. 2761 1, 919/733-5966. No More Menstrual Cramps, and Other Good News by Penny Wise Budoff Pick-up Brok of Cartoon-Style Illustrations by Dave Ubinas Psycho-cybernetics; a New Way to Get More Living Out of Life by Maxwell Maltz Red Army Resurgent by John Shaw jTake It Off!: 1,695 Tax Deduc tions Most People Overlook by Robert S. Holzman Teenage Drinking; the No. 1 Drug Threat to Young People Today by Robert North Reader’s Digest Crafts & Hob bies by Reader’s Digest Wouldn’t Take Nothin’ for My Journey Now by Jock Lauterer Biography On Open Book by John Huston Reiarence Directory of American Savings and Loan Associations William Henry Harper Family Genealogy; His Five Sons and Five Daughters and Their Descendants by Daphne V. Boone KEY WAREHOUSE (THE GIANT) COMBINE TO BRING YOU A *100“ SHOPPING SPREE Green Giant Products And Key Warehouse Foods Are Offering A $100.00 SHOPPING SPREE To Some Lucky Winner Next Week. Register As Often As You Like At Key Warehouse Foods. No Purchase Necessary. Drawing Will Be Held On Sat., Dec. 27. Winner Will Be Notified By Key Warehouse Foods. You Do Not Have To Be Present To Win. Just Another Example Of More” Giant Service From ... WAUKHOIISK FOODS 1310 tlMlby Rd.t Kings Mtn., N.C. |oy to the World this glorious Christmas day. We extend sin€>ere gratitude for the treasured gift of your eontinuing friendship. X.' -V/ o jiii Dellinger's Jewel Shop Downtown Kings Mountain

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