I the men osti- land built the d on CKed iter. ) acation Ends For School Charles Weir, 81, Pupils Aug. 24 Classes Summer ends and school be- ^ jins next Wednesday for some i] 1400 Kings Mountain district school pupils. Vacation season ends two days earlier for faculty members, who report Monday morning at 8:30 )t Central school auditorium lor 9. general faculty meeting. On 'i Jdjournment they will hold di- S /isional meetings, then report to :heir assigned schools. First day for students Wednes day is actually a half-day and Ls labeled orientation day — CHOICES REQUIRED Parents of students who have recently moved residence into the Kings Mountain school dis-. trict or who otherwise have not indicated choice of schools for their children are urged by school officials to make their choices not later than Tuesday, uperintendent B. N. Barnes aid federal Office of Educa tion guidelines require that dhe choice forms be executed. Oied Wednesday ^hen students receive books, olh- .gr instructional materials and ■ litial assignments. Thursday will be a full school- lay, with all school cafeterias to in operation. Grover expects' have its cafeteria in opera- ion the previous day, Principal pames Scruggs reports. Principal change from last erm’s operational fornrat is the iiisolidation of Compact high phool into Kings Mountain high bhool, which m.eans the 10-plant ystem will ha\c a lone central- located high school. Concur- Bntly, the consolidation will lark the major desegregation on ctsis of race of the school facul- WINS EAGLE — Eddie White, member of Boy Scout Troop 91. sponsored by St. Matthew^ Lutheran church, has received the Eagle award, highest rank in scouting. He is third mem ber of his family to eora the rank of Eogle. White VTms Eagle Award Eddie White, 15-year-old son of iMr. and Mrs. Lawrence White of Kings Mountain, received the highest rank in scouting at the July Court of Honor. Eddie is a member of Trop 91 sponsored by St. Matthews Lutheran church. Henry McKelvie,. Troop 90 “Scoutmaster, conducted the court. The Eagle award was made by Kings Mountain’s newest scout master. Ken Pruitt of Troop 92 sponsored by jrst Baptist church. Eddie is presently registered as Jr Assistant Scoutmaster and is active in tncry phase of scout- ing. 41 Students were integrated, v.-.'.lr '’^it regard to race, last term, but New boys core into Eddie’s troop so fast that this young funeral Rites Friday at 4 Ht Bethlehem Charles Page Weir, 81, retired farmer of route 1 and onetime No. 4 Township tax lister, died Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock in Kings Mountain hospital. Funeral rites will be Friday at 4 p.m. from Bethlehem Baptist Church. The body will remain at Harris Funeral Home until an hour before the rites when it will lie in state at the church. Rev. James Graham and Rev. Ray Barrett will officiate, and inter ment will be in El Bethel church cemetery. Mr. Weir, native of Cleveland County, died after several month’s illness. He was the son of the late James Walker and Roxanne Goforth Weir. He was twice married; his first wife, Martha Lou Carroll Weir, died in 1941. Mrs. Annie Russ Wier died in 1964. Surviving are. five sons, C. D, Ware, Robert Ware, Howard Ware, James yVare, all of Kings Mountain, and Car?- Ware of Bes semer Cit.vrtliree daughters, Mr* G. T. Thornburg, Mrs. Charles Spearman and Mrs. Harold Ran- die, all of Kings Mountain; a stepson, Eugene Martin of Shel- by; two step-daughters, Mrs. Howard Goforth of Kings Moun tain and Mrs. Hilly Edwards of Clayton; a sister, Mrs. E. L. Carnpbell of Kings Mountain; 19 grandchildren and 13 great- grandchildren. Schedule Announced For KMHS Students According to an announce- ';r.ent from the office of rligh School Principal Glenn Brook shire, Kings Mountain High School students are asked to report at 8:20 a.m. Aug. 24Lh at the followinig rooms: Freshmen: Gymnasium. Sophomores: Cafeteria. Juniors: Commons Area and Library. Seniors: Audioi - Visual Rooms, Roo.t.s 5 and 6 US. 14 Teachers Are Elected; Needed iiod limited to administrative | tteas. The board of education has not ytt been approved for federal ^ds under guidelines of the al Olficc of Education, De partment of Health, Education .lyid welfare. |However, Superintendent B. N. irnes said he had been in tele- ionic conversation vvith- a rep- sentaiive of the office recently Id that the representative indi- Ited his personal approval of scoutmaster reiiorts, Eddie White is the third White brother to earn the rank of Eagle. Eugene and Ray White will at tend Gaston College next year. All three Eagle Scouts are em ployed at City Srvicc Station by their Scoutmaster, Otis F'alls, Jr Cline On Duty e Kings Mountain format. In Viet Nam ICompact will operate grades ICentral school ides 7 and 8. will operate 9/Sgt. Larry E. Cline, son of City Commis-sioner and Mrs. Ray 1|^\W. Cline, arrived in South Viet nam Friday for combat duty. A member of the 352nd Tacti cal Fighter Squadron based at Phan Rang Air Base 130 miles nortlioast of Saigon, Sgt. Cline arrived with a squadron of F-lOO Inal Stadium lontiacts Let emaining contracts for con- uc^ion of John Gamble Memo- supersabres, formerly stationed kl Stadium were let Monday Jilt by the Kings Mountain dis- ct board of education. 5oth went to previous low |l