FOLK LIBRARY ill'. , 2U4 WALKER ST. COLUMBUS, N C 23722 2nd Class Restate at Tryon. North Carolina 28782 and additional post offices- Pcstmesirr: send address chances to The Tryon Daily Bulletin, FO. Boa 790, Tryon, N. C. 28782 THE WORLD'S SMALLEST DAILY NEWSPAPER Founded Jan. 31, 1928 by Seth M. Vining (Consolidated with the Polk County News 1955) Jeffrey A. Byrd, Editor and Publisher The Tryon Duly Bulletin USPS 643-340) is published daily eacept Sat. and Sun. for $35 per year by the Tryon Daily Bulletin, Inc. 106 N. Trade St.. P.O. Box 790. Tryon. N.C. 28782 a© Try©:© OsT!j ®Tffljffi©itiLini Printed In the THERMAL BELT of Western North Carolina Phone 859-9151 ® Vol. 65 - No. 49 The weather Tuesday, high 59, low 47, hum. 65 percent, and .01 inches of rain fell. What's happening: The Columbus Merchants Association meets tonight at 7 p.m. at McDonalds. Registration for children who will be entering kindergarten next fall will be held tomorrow at Sunny View School. A Festival of Flight will be held in Green Creek Saturday on the grounds of Green Creek Elementary School. Among the day's performers will be "Lazy Boy and the Recliners", a fam ily band made up of Claude, Zeke and Jacob Graves. The Foothills Humane Society Easter Egg Hunt will be held Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at the shelter. Festivities will run from 2 to 4 p.m. The shel ter is located on Little Mountain Road between Hwy. 14 and Peniel Road. For more infor mation, call 863-4444. The Polk County Board of Education meets Monday, April 13 at 6:30 in the Steams Edu cation Center board room. Registration for children who will be entering kindergarten next fall will be held April 14 at (Continued On Back Page) TRYON, N. C. 28782 Mill Spring Program Attracts Attention In the spring of 1990, Mill Spring Accelerated School was designated as one of North Carolina's six official "Learning Labs" by the North Carolina Association of Educators. Since then, Principal Rick Howell has received a steady stream of requests from educa tors around the state wanting to visit his school. The pace has quickened dur ing the past few months, reports Howell, and in spite of the fact that Mill Spring Accelerated School will close in two months, the faculty is more optimistic than ever about the "accelerated learning" program which has brought the school such attention. The concept of "accelerated learning," initiated by Stanford University and first tried in California, begins with a school vision developed by the faculty. The "vision" to which each teacher at Mill Spring sub scribes is that every student will be at least up to grade level in all subject areas by graduation from sixth grade, with a high degree of self-esteem and intellectual curiosity. To accomplish this vision, the school faculty, aided by grants from local industry, has con verted its reading program from basal readers to literature. Stu dents work cooperatively in groups but are not segregated by ability. They tutor their peers, individually and by (Continued On Back Page) 24 Pages Today THURSDAY, APRIL 9,1992 JOT Per Copy A Crumbling Dream? A Spartanburg couple contracted for a custom designed house to be built near Columbus, and construction began last August Today work has stopped with the house just 35% complete and the couple and builder are filing counter suits in Polk County P 0 ^ 8 to determine who is responsible and who will pay The builder points out that the house passed inspection, and reportedly exceeds minimum state code standards. He says he wants to fix any problems. The couple and their private inspectors say the nk-mr d v^ 0SS i,T? ey P 0 ^ 110 P roblem s such as the deck pier pictured above perched precariously next to a hole undemeath^hJ house. Reporter Reen Smith files the first of three sS^n situation inside today's Bulletin. ones ° n ^ S