Football
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CREST 12
First Downs 10
Yds. Rushing 188
Yds. Passing 0
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Intercepted By 1
Punts 4-29
Fumbles Lost 0
Penalties 8-66
INDIVIDUAL SCORING
C-Rayfield Smith - 1 yd run
conversion failed
C-Jeff Bell - 2 yd run
conversion Haled
S-Mlke Tucker - 15 yd run
Chip early kick good
Saturday meant football
and football meant
victory for two teams.
At right quarterback
Chip Stewart fires
the ball for Gardner-
Webb as the ‘Dogs win
their opener 14 to 7
playing West Virginia
Wesleyan on Saturday.
Left, it’s hard yardage
in a hard game as Crest
comes out ahead 12-7
Friday’s contest
Saturday!
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in
with Shelby. Stats
are below each picture.
TEAM STATS
First Downs
Yds. Rushing
Yds. Passing
Rushing Atts.
Passing Atts.
Pass Comp.
Passes Int. By
Total Off. Plays
Avg. Per Play
Fumbles Lost
Pen/Yards
IND. SCORING
TD
Rosey Kirby
Jamie Pope
Carlisle Koonts
GW TOTAL
OPP TOTAL
PHOTOGRAPHING THE GAME WERE
LISA PETTUS AND ED PILE(
The FoothiUs View
Second Class Postage Paid In Boiling Springs, N. C. 29017
THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 1981
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Rabbits To Fire
works At Fair
The Old And New Greene Will Run
Hell drivers, gospel singers,
beef cattle, acrobats, fire
works, rabbits, and Jim
Owen’s impersonations of
Hank Williams -- they’ll all be
here Friday, Oct. 2, when the
Cleveland County fair opens
for a nine-day run.
Fair Manager Joe Goforth
will open the county festival at
5 p.m. Oct. 2 at the
fairgrounds on East 74 Busi
ness, next to Cleveland Tech
nical School. Shelby Mayor
George Clay will speak. The
fair will run through Sat., Oct.
10.
Four new attractions will be
presented free, Goforth said.
Carla Wallenda’s Aerial Thrill
Show will be performed free
at the midway each night of
the fair, and a fireworks
display will be lit for the
grandstand at no charge Oct.
6 and 7.
There will be free admission
to the grandstand for a gospel
sing Oct. 4, Goforth said, and
Chiron’s Variety will perform
there free on Oct. 5, 6, and 7.
Other entertainment sche
duled includes the Jim Owen
Show of Hank Williams imper
sonations, a tractor pull Oct. 3
and 4, and Jack Kockman’s
Hell Drivers Oct. 8-10.
As with every Cleveland fair
since the first in 1924, prizes
will be awarded exhibits in
agricultural, livestock, and
domestic skills. Over $20,000
in prizes will be taken home
by exhibitors in all depart
ments at this year’s fair,
Goforth said. Department ex
hibits are as diverse as
rabbits, livestock, flowers,
pantry and dairy supplies, and
needlecraft.
Deadline for some depart
ments is as early as next
week, and Goforth asked
those interested in exhibiting
to call the fair office at
487-0651. He emphasized that
entries must be made early
but the fair cannot accept
exhibits before Oct. 1. The
deadline for entries in live -
stock is Sept. 26.
Tickets are $2.50 for adults -
50c for children 12 and under -
and are on sale at the fair
office. All public school child
ren in this section will receive
one free ticket for use on a
designated day.
For Second Term
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is the first to
candidacy in the
election that will
council seats and
of mayor. The
THE STEEPLE AND THE
cross are seen through the
open doorframe at the new
church building under con
struction at Beaver Dam Bap
tist. Community news from
Beaver Dam begins today on
page 2.
“It isn’t for the money,’’
said Jimmy Greene and
laugheil announcing his can
didacy Friday for a second full
term as mayor of Boiling
Springs.
Greene
announce
Nov. 3
decide two
the office
position of mayor m Boilini
Springs pays a nominal $50.OD
a year.
Greene, 43, was elected to
town council in 1967 and
appointed to the mayor’s job
in 1970, following the resigna
tion of then-mayor E.R.
“Chick” Wallace. Greene
served until 1973, then sat out
a term. In 1977 he was elected
to his first full term.
Two other council seats are
up for grabs in the fall
election, occupied by incum
bents Graham C. Hamrick and
Max Hamrick. As of Tuesday,
neither Hamrick had filed.
Hopeful office seekers have
until noon, Oct. 2, to declare
their candidacy at the town
hail. The fee is $5.00.
The election Nov. 3 will be
Tuesday from 6 a.m. until
7:30 p.m. Townspeople have
until Oct. 5 to register to vote.
uiiui woi. u lu icjyioici lu vuic,
either at the County Board of
Elections, 211 E. Warren, in
1-ICV./UUI lo, t I c. vvdrrcji. ifi
Shelby, or here in Boiling
Springs with election judges
Vernie Piercy or Anthony
Eastman.
Wildlife Speaker
“When you say ‘endangered species’ I
think Congress and most people saw polar
bears and whooping cranes.”
The speaker was Warren Parker, who
oversees endangered species work over four
states for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. His subject: the 1973 Endangered
Species Act, and “the incredible diversity of
plant and invertebrate life” that is also
Kays Gary, bus tours, and slide presentations will show you “Images of
Cleveland County: The Land and Its Use,” a program of local hostory produced
by Cleveland Tech andthe National Endowment for the Humanities this Thursday,
Sept. 17.
The free tour will leave Cleveland Tech at 3:30 for Cleveland communities.
Gary, a Fallston native and noted columnist for the Charlotte Observer,
will spealj. tonight at Tech’s auditorium in a program that will include slides
by Dr. Paul Escott, a history professor at UNC-Charlotte.
Persons interested in taking the bus tour are requested to call Cleveland
Tech, 484-4000 for reservations. The program begiijs at 7:30 p.m.
The Inside VIEW
Silly Graham Page 8
Soybean Reports Page 8
Community News Page 2
endangered.
Parker spoke Thursday night to the
Cleveland League on Conservation (CLOC).
About 20 people, a fifth of them from
Boiling Springs, watched color slides and
listened as he told of the Service’s
successes and failures in sustained wildlife
listed as endangered under the Act.
Alligators and the brown pelican are two
species that have made a come-back since
the Act was passed; the red wolf and
logerhead turtle have not.
The red wolf may not make it,” Parker
said. This animal, once indigenous to North
Carolina, dis^peared in the state shortly
before the Civil War. The Service is
attempting to raise a colony on an island off
Charleston, but funds are limited.
“Our program is essentially cut in two^ for
the next year,” Parker said.
The Endangered Species Act, which is
administered overall by Secretary of Interior
James Watt, comes up for reauthorization
by Congress In 1982.
Cooking Up Victory
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PHOTO BY NANCY HAMRICK
JOHN WASHBURN, FORE-
ground, and Ed White flip
a few hamburgers at the Lions’
Club cookout before the Crest-
Shelby football game Friday.
Fred Hamrick, leaning on
truck, appears to be supervising.
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