Area News
> television course for college credit Is being ottered
by Cleveland Technical College. Mrs, Sandra Hardin,
Dean of Instruction, has announced that the business
elective course, "Personal Finance and Money Manage
ment” will start Saturday, September 5.
Hosted by nationally renowned flnanclalcounselorRobert
Rosetsky, this business course basically will show how
one can plan his financial future. Among other things,^
In Its 30 programs, "Personal Finance and Money Manage
ment” will discuss financial decisions that the average
person can be expected to make. Including the basics
of bu^etlng; the Intricacies of home ownership, Income
tax and Investments. Also covered are Insurance and
wills and trusts.
This televised course will be shown on channels 17,
33, 58, and Shelby Cable 8 ttom 12 until 1 p.m. each
Saturday.
Additional information Is available, 484-4000.
Tech’s department of Continuing Education also ann
ounces six new art classes belngging Aug. 24 through
Aug. 27. Painting, Including mixed media, watercolor,
and oil, will be taught at $8,00 per person. Students
over 65 may Study free. For further Information call
482-8351.
Boiling
Springs
Report
RESCUE
'It’s guaranteed to be good" , Capt. Julius Hoyle told
a hungry reporter. Hoyle was describing home-made
ice cream and cakes to be sold by the Boiling Springs
Life Saving and Rescue Unit this Sunday, Aug. 30. Pro
ceeds from the sale will help finance operations of the
rescue squad. The sale will be held 2 to 5, p.m. in the
basement of the unit at North Main.
The squad answered 10 calls during the week, in
cluding five emergency calls and one emergency trans
port. The transport was to Charlotte Memorial Hospital
after a one-car wreck Aug, 22 which killed one passenger
and left the driver with severe head injuries
The squad traveled a total of 428 miles and served
277 hours total.
Turn to 88.3 on your radio dial for town council next
Tuesday. Radio Station WGWG will broadcast the
council meeting live Sept. 1 at 7:30 p.cq. on the FM
band.
■
Dr.. John Edwin Johns, the ninth presidept of
Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, will
offici^ly open Gardner-Webb College’s academic
year, as he addresses the student body during Fall
Convocation on September 3 at 9:30 a.m. at Host
Gymnasium.
FIRE
22 Aug. Fire spread out of control at an East College
address where a resident was burning trash and the
flames turned into a grass fire. The Department had
it out in 20 minutes.
21 Aug. The Department was on stand-by at The Pantry
at North Main after a motorist accidently ruptured a gas
line at the convenient store’s pumps about 6:30 p.m.
There was no further incident.
19 Aug. A two-alarm fire at Gardner-Webb brought
trucks from Boiling Springs City and Rural fire de
partments. The alarm sounded at 3:11 p.m.; by 3:14
trucks had answered the call at E.B. Hamrick Hall.
"Another two minutes and there would have been nothing
we could have dope to save the building," said Chief
Deo MeSwain. The fire was under control at 3:45 p.m.
Boiling Springs Rural answered a two-truck fire just
as the View wen* to press Tuesday. Trash at a dump
on the south bank of the Broad River at Highway 150
caught fire shortly after noon. At 12:35 p.m. the
Department appeared to have the fire under control.
A peaceful week passed with no calls and no
arrests. The Department helped in crowd control in
the Aug. 19 fire at Gardner-Webb College campus.
citmeembmmp
What Needs Doing • How You Can Help
STARTING YOUNG
Americans have a long
tradition of responding to
the needs of our younger
citizens. Even in the midst
of the Great Depression,
when despair hung in the air,
some individuals and corpo
rations made teaching out
to youngsters an Important
item on their agenda.
In Illinois, for Instance,
in 1931, the Paul Revere
League was founded by
Robert Buehler, then Presi
dent of the Victor Adding
Machine Company, which is
now Victor Business Prod
ucts. The playing field was
covered with weeds and rub
bish, a small grandstand and
a baseball diamond and an
old cottage.' But to boys
with an itch to play, it was a
dream come true.
Today, having been re
named Neighborhood Boys
Club (NBC), It,iMtlll serving
youth. In this, the POth an
niversary of its ,
600 to 600 youngsters each
year take advantage of the
club and its park-now cov-
The Wedding
Of The Century
The marrlag# of Prince
Charles to Lady Diana
Spencer on July 29th prom
ises to be the most glitter
ing and memorable wedding
of the century. Heads of
state and dignitaries from all
parts of the world will attend
the historic Royal Wedding,
while the entire British na
tion and people around the
globe watch the colorful
ceremony on television,
In America, millions of
well-wishers will join the
celebration — and look for
appropriate mementos to
mark this extraordinary
event and pass on to their
grandchildren. Collectors
and souvenir hunters are al
ready being inundated by a
blizzard' of mass-produced
instant memorabilia, ranging
from jigsaw puzzles to cig
arette lighters.
Official souvenirs with
real potential to becorqe val
uable collectors’ items are
the special Royal Wedding
postage stamps to be issued
by the British Post Office
and more than 20 members
of the British Common
wealth to commemorate
this historic occasion. In
cluded in the omnibus se
ries are such far-flung coun
tries as Fiji, Mauritius,
Swaziland, St. Helena, Van
uatu, and Western Samoa.
Worldwide demand for
previous Royal Wedding
commemoratives (at right)
has made these stamps ex
tremely scarce soon after
they were issued. Those to be
released July 22 for Prince
Charles and Lady Diana are
of particular philatelic signif
icance because they will be
the first Royal Wedding is
sue for a potential future
King and Queen of England.
As a token of goodwill,
a limited quantity of the of
ficial postcards of the Royal
Wedding stamp shown above
is now available at no charge
in North America from the
U.S. representatives of the
British Post Office. A spe
cial limited-edition souve
nir album, containing the
British stamps for Prince
Charles and Lady Diana as
well as a colorful photo
graphic history of previous
f
14'
A free copy of the official postcard of a special Royal
Wedding stamp being issued by the British Post Office
to mark the historic marriage of Prince Charles to
Lady Diana Spencer, is now available in North America.
The famous "Pen
ny Black," the
world's first
stamp, was issued
in 1840, the same
year Queen Vic
toria married
Prince Albert.
Original Cost:
1 Penny
Current Value:
$5,000.00
Stamp issued in
1948 to mark
the Silver Wed
ding of King
George VI and
Queen Elizabeth.
Original Cost:
1 Pound
Current Value:
$180.00
Stamp issued in
1972 to mark
the Silver Wed
ding of Queen
Elizabeth II and
Prince Philip.
Original Cost:
20 Pence
Current Value:
$2.25
Royal Weddings, will also be
available for $12,95.
For a free Royal Wedding
postcard and/or to order the
souvenir album, write: Royal
Wedding, StanGib Limited,
1325 Franklin Avenue, Gar
den City, New York 11530.
Please include an oversized
stamped and self-addressed
envelope to expedite proces
sing of orders.
BACKGROUND ON NUCLEAR POWER
I
Finding Fuel — Fast
ering a square city block.
Still team oriented, the
club has year-round events
which include football, bas
ketball, floor hockey, soccer
and baseball. Special events
throughout the year have in
cluded tournaments, tobog
gan trips and track meets.
The club is still sHoelated
with Victor, too, That corn-
paw pey* the staff salaries,
doAates its parking lot for
the club's annual fund-rais
ing carnival, and advertises
in the annual community di
rectory of club members. In
addition, Victor employees
contribute time and energy
to the club by working at
the club and with the boys.
Among the well-known
alumni of the club are Rev,
Ray Baumhart, Presfdent of
Loyola University, comedi
an and linger George Oobel,
Bill "Moose" Skowron,
who's played for the Yan
kees and the White Sox,
and Johnny Groth, player
for the White Sox and
Detroit Tigers,
For America to become
energy independent and a-
void the threat of future
supply interruptions, we
must develop sufficient do
mestic energy resources to
reliably and economically
replace foreign energy im
ports. One of the most
promising alternative sources
is nuclear energy from
breeder reactors, power
plants that create more fuel
than they use.
Development of any com
plex technology involves sev
eral stages of research and
development, culminating in
a demonstration of engineer
ing and economic feasibility
under near-commercial con
ditions. The U.S. Liquid Met
al Fast Breeder Reactor
(LMFBR) program is well ad
vanced and has reached the
demonstration stage.
The Fast Flux Test Facil
ity (FFTF) located near
Richland, Washington, is an
integral part of the multi-
phased LMFBR development
program. The project is on
schedule and achieved full
power operation in Decem
ber, 1980. Work to date has
provided useful breeder
component manufacture
and construction experience.
Future test runs are ex
pected to provide valuable
data to help assure op
timized fuel costs and
breeding characteristics.
As the development of
the LMFBR technology has
paralleled that of today's
Light Water Reactor tech
nology, a minimum of about
26 years can be expected
iQmrnrnki
m
The Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor is a power
plant that creates electrictiy —and new fuel for itself.
It could be a part of the answer to our energy problems.
before the LMFBR is com
mercially viable if demon
stration proceeds promptly.
An extensive Department
of Energy sponsored study
of advanced reactor con
cepts, the Nonproliferation
Alternative Program, recent
ly concluded that a commer
cial LMFBR should be devel-
pped for commercial use in
the U.S. by the year 2010.
Accordingly, recent studies
by the General Accounting
Office concluded that a vi
able U.S. LMFBR program
requires proceeding with
the demonstration phase.
The Clinch River breeder
pilot plant proposed for
Oak Ridge, Tennessee is
that demonstration phase.
The 66 nations repre
sented on the International
Fuel Cycle Evaluation Com
mittee (INFCE) strongly
supported the rapid develop
ment of breeder reactor
technology, even though the
former Administration es
tablished INFCE to sup
port its stated opposition
to proceeding with LMFBR
demonstration.
The U.S. LMFBR demon
stration program is already
late. The viability of the U.S.
design must be verified by
an operating power demon
stration plant if the LMFBR
is to be available when
needed.
^WLYEAR ROUND
1ST gy gQg (qESOPF ^
INSIDE CARE OF
RV'S IMPORTANT
Inside maintenance of
an RV after having been
used for a portion of the
season is just as impor
tant as maintaining the
engine.
There is nothing more
annoying or uncomfor
table than having to walk
through the run-off of a
waste tank because it has
leaked or overflowed.
As far as possible all
hose and other fittings in
any trailer or RV should
be checked to insure that
they have not slipped or
corroded. Sometimes the
corrosion works its way
out from the inside and is
not noticed until an actual
leak has begun. But by
keeping a constant eye
out for such a possibility,
it can be stopped about as
soon as it starts.
Holding and water
storage tanks should be
drained and flushed every
so often as a matter of
course. By so doing you
are insuring that there
will be a proper free flow
and any buildup will be
halted before it becomes a
major problem.
The rigid frame of most
RVs also comes in for
quite a beating while on
the road from normal
driving and bumps. It’s
not uncommon for screws
thin. By patching and
mending these areas as
soon as they are found,
damage is contained and
never gets out of hand.
! FACTS I
! t FieiffiES 1
Some news for wives
whose husbands smoke.
In a just-published, 20-
year study of one million
Americans, the American
Cancer Society (ACS) could
not find any significant in
crease in lung cancer death
rates among nonsmoking,
women married to smokers
as compared with nonsmok
ing women married to non-
smokers.
The study, prepared by
ACS’s chief statistician,
Lawrence Garfinkel, and
published in the June issue
of the Journal of the Na
tional Cancer Institute, con
tradicts a Japanese study
published last January that
alarmed wives of smoking
husbands with the sugges
tion that they were being
exposed to significantly
higher risks of lung cancer.
Following its publication,
the Japanese study was crit
icized by other scientists for
inadequacies and inconsis
tencies. And, just recently,
it was reported that the
Japanese study contains a
serious mathematical error
which, according to one ex
pert, invalidates the claim in
the study of a highly statis
tically significant relation
between the mortality of
nonsmoking wives and the
amount of their husband's
smoking. ,
In the new study, the
ACS analyzed mortality in
formation for women whose
husbands smoked fewer
than 20 cigarettes a day and
for those whose husbands
smoke and those who don’t.
Lao Tolstoy was nom-
Inatid tor, but navar
won, a Nobal Prlia,
OLD-FASHIONED TEAMWORK—The only standard
equipment on this turn-of-the century beer buggy was the
wagon, wooden wheels and a two-horsepower hitch.
Back then, a case of beer held 36 bottles that were indi
vidually wrapped in newspaper for the bumpy ride along
Milwaukee's unpaved streets.
Needle Nook
Cross Stitch 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Closed on Monday Mildred Hamrick
434-6806
Tuesday - Saturday.
FOOTHILLS VIEW, AUGUST 27, 1981, PAGE 3
Most campgrounds will
stock the necessary repair
material in their general
stores, although the cost
may be just a bit more
than back home. But it is
always more costly to
make repairs under
emergency conditions
than at your leisure.
and fittings to come loose.
A simple check with a
screwdriver and pair of
pliers at all fittings and
Bcrewheads may take a
few minutes now but
spare embarrassment
later.
One of the most over
looked Items in the tent
camper is the tent itself.
Too often it is packed
away at the end of a trip
and left that way until
next time. Or, at the
most, it is opened up once
back home in order to air
it out.
Airing out also gives
canvas a chance to dry
and thus prevent rot and
mildew and also gives
people a chance to check
the material for slight
tears or wear.
There are also spots
where the canvas may be
rubbing against other
parts and has become
GilQDGQLF
Tips On A Low
Score At A High Age
By Jay Hebert
HOME BUYER
CLINIC
By Jimei L, Borsn, Jr.
Priildint
Amirloin Lind Titli Aiioolstlon
Jay Hebert, touring pro
and tournament winner for
30 years, has been commis
sioned by Standard Brands
Incorporated to assist senior
golfers by preparing these
tips.
One area in which the
golfer who’s getting along in
years can improve his game
is in putting.
The basic principle of
good putting is to keep the
blade of the putter square
to the hole. Most of the
time, when a
j golfer fails to
take the put-
I ter back square
Ito the tar-
Iget, he makes
I the error of
.‘‘breaking” his
causes him to
pull the putter off the line
and eventually cut the putt
to the right or yank it to
the left of the hole.
To correct this habit of
breaking your wrists, I sug
gest placing the index finger
of the right hand so that it
extends directly down and
behind the shaft.
You can’t break your
wrists then, and the finger
also serves as a fine guide
in making the stroke. This
is especially helpful in im
proving the putting of senior
golfers. It’s also to be recom
mended to golfers of all
ages who are erratic on the
green.
to the hole.
m
Hebert
wrists. This
Unexpected Chellenge
Real estate Is permanent,
which makes it especially
Important as an investment.
But this same permanent
nature can bring problems
in home buying because peo
ple may have acquired inter
ests in the property over the
years that they still retain,
unknown to you.
Defending •
home owner
ship against
an unexpected
challenge by
someone claim
ing an interest
ioren can be expen
sive even when successful.
In an eastern state, home
buyers were startled when a
company claimed in court
that it had acquired a half
interest in their original sub
division tract under two pre
viously undisclosed wills of
former owners dating back
more than a century.
After extensive court pro
ceedings, the complaint was
dismissed and the owners
were relieved of the threat
from this claim. The court
decision was obtained after
incurring a substantial sum
in attorney fees and costs,
and assured the buyers of
keeping their property. Since
the buyers were protected
by owner’s title insurance
issued at the time of their
real estate purchases, the
title company paid for the
defense to avert financial
loss for its insured.
Even the most thorough
title search of public rec
ords will not reveal all
types of land title hazards
that can threaten home
ownership. Owner’s title in
surance protects against
these so-called hidden prob
lems as specified in the title
policy.
One recent estimate is that
there are 2,314,013 farms
in the United States.
434-2227
LADD W. HAMRICK
FUgk SERVICE, INC.
Distributor
HOME HEATING SERVICE
KEROSENE FUEL OIL
Tha word "balk” oomai
from tha Anglo-Saxon
batea, a woodan baam,
rafarring to tha huga tim-
bars that wara uiad to
bar doors, thus balking
an anamy'i onslaught,
AUTOMATIC CAR WASH.
SELF SERVICE GAS
E. COLLEGE AVE. BOILING SPRINGS, N. C.
BECONFIDENT
when trouble strikes
youRf independent'
Jnsi^ronce g IMENT
■iisvaa YOU sHsaT
ess'
VOkLtaa b* lurt vou'll gtl h«lp
(ill-if rsu gtl reur hsmt, cir.
or Ousineu mtursnci through
ui Wt'ri in^eptndtnl 'tgtnu
Our i)(rnbol ibovt ii i sign dl
lervict btyond Iht ctll slduty
Slop in soon
Maxwell B. Hamrick
Inaurance Agency, Inc.
FAIRVIEW STREET, BOILING SPRINGS, N. C.
Dial HE 4-2554
* m • >
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