Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Nov. 4, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
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rage 2 Established 1889 The Kings Mountain Herald *■ t"" 206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountain, N. C. 28088 A weekly nevv’spe,per devoted to the promotion of tlie genertil welfare and published for the enlightenment, entertalnmnt and benefit cf the citizens of Kings Mountain and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publi^ing House. Entered as segond class matter at the post office at KJnM Mountain, N. C., 28086 under Act of Congress of March 3, l573. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Martin Harmon Editor-Publishe* Miss Ellzaboth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor Cary Stewart Sports Editor, News Miss Debbie Thornburg Clerk, Bookk. or lERALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. Thursday, November 4. 1911 Ray Parker •Rocky Martin MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT Allen Myers Roger Brown Paul Jackson Monte Hunter ' On Leave With The United 3tate.s Army MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADV/VNCE In North Carolina and South Carolina One year $4; six monrths $2,25; three months $1.50; school year $3. (Subscription ki North Carolina subji'ct to three percent sates tax.i In All Other Stotes One year $5; six mon'lis S3; three months 51.73; school year $3.75. Pli.is NOirni CAROLINA SALES TAX n: TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441 TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE 'Where there ia nottision, \he ^WQplejjeri^hR l}ut he th<it [keepeth the .Uiw, heppt/ in he. Proverbs S9sl8 . ' " ' ' - Cansler Project Tenor Public hearing Tuesday night on the Cansler area urban renewal project was interesting in several respects, it elicited a large crowd of interested and to-bo- affected citizens, there was plenty of dialogue as these citizens asked ques tions, got some answers and were prom ised those which required digging in the rules and regulations. But the tenor of the mooting was friendly and those present ind.caccd they favor tins project to remove sub standard housing and replace it with modern houses itli modern convenienc es. Chairman Carl F. Mauney, of the Redevelopment Commission, welcomed the citizens and outlined the basic pur pose of 11,0 meeting; to outline the pro gram and to answer questions. This was done. Next step in the area redevelopment plan, designed by Rust Engineering Com pany, Birmingham, Ala., and tentatively approved by the Department of Housing and Lrban Deevlopment, is approval by the Kings Mountain Planning Board. As suming Planning Board approval, the plan moves to the city ccminissicn, which will conduct its own public'hear ing then, presumably, approve the plan. Next its back to Atlanta and HUD and final ratification. The Redevelopment Commission thinks and expects tJiose steps lo le- quire alxyut two jnonths, with actual launchin.g of the project expected in late January or early February 1972. It is a needed redevelopment. While home-building is setting a record pace this year, housing continues to remain scarce due to influx of new citizens and fact that many old and hardly habitable residences have been razed. Many in the Cansler street area, as Commission Director Joe Lancy pointed out, arc virtual fire tj-aps. Politics, No More? The General Assembly has re-struc- ti’red the state’s administrative system lor its 16 institutions of higher learning, vesting authority in a 32-person board of trustees. The 100-member board of trustees of the Consolidated University will be eliminated and somewhere lost in the shuffle is the state Board of Higher Edu cation, never on par powerwise with the Consolidated University Board, nor even Dr. Leo Jenkins, president of Eastern Carolina University. Absentees in Primaries With the big push on due to the low ering of the voting age from 21 lo 18, the General Assembly has voted to per mit absentee voting in North Carolina’s spring primaries at least for thosq next May. College students should not be de nied the ballot, said absentee supporters. The permission expires December 31, 1972, the idea being to let the 1973 legislators view from experience and de cide whether to continue. It may be heresy for one from Cleve land County to say it, but the absentee irregularities Of the 1936 gubernatorial campaign engendered the demise of pri mary absentees. Henderson Hall Perhaps the most formidable of the weapons in Governor Scott and his sup porters’ arsenal was the valid charge there exists a growing duplication (per haps triplication) of the curricula of the several schools, in many instances un tenable from the standpoint of enroll ments alone. Here the new board has the authority to approve or disapprove new teaching programs and to revise and eliminate others where enrollment busi ness is insufficient. This was the aim of Governor O. Max Gardner when he led the state to the rc-structuring of the early tliirties, when the Chapel IliH, Raleigh, and Greensboro schools became the Consoli dated University of North Carolina. One example: engineering at Chapel Hill moved over to N. C. State and business administration moved over to Chanel Hill, both in toto. One would-be benefit of the re-stri'’- turing of last weekend likely will not be realized: a surcease from political play in behalf of the several universities. Maybe supporters of each will bo doing lyiMi-h rnore politicking wiLh the nqvv board of trustees but the General As sembly is still the boss and v.he Assem blymen can still expect blandishments in behalf of each member of the state’s col legiate family. or. Senator Ollie Harris, of Cleveland, remembering, initially was leery of re turning the absentee privilege, was de feated in his effort to require the ballots be dispatched by registered mail. His idea was that the prospect oi provable mail fraud would prevent mis-use of the absentee. A prominent political leader declar ed some years ago, “Politics will make a man cheat, lie and steal and he won t know, he’s-doing it,’’ He simply meant tliat the desire to wdn. can become suf- licicntiy and strongly personal to pro duce such chicaneries as stuffing ballet boxes, carrying them off, and forgetting how to count. The story is old as the hills but al ways bears re-telling. Two Kings Mountain politicians were going through the cemetery log ging names on the pollbooks off tomO- s.cics. When they came upon one which lead “Hufistetler’’, one remarked, “That’s a long enough name to make two." “Oh, no,’’ his partner replied. “That would be cheating.’’ A new dormitory at North Carolina School for the Deaf at Morganton has been 1 Acd for the schools current and f.uidi president. Ranee Henderson, a Kings Mountain native and son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Henderson. “His educational contributions have left their mark not only in his native state, but also in Oregon and Illinois,” said Cecil Porter, chairman of the NCSD executive committee, in the dedicatory address. Mr. Henderson indeed has made an impressive record in this important specialized field in his comparatively youthtul years. Congratulations to him on this hon- Reluctant To Prosecute If a police officer sees a cidme and catches the guy (or doll), he makes ar rest and signs the warrant. It is, of course, the officer’s duty. Civilians are often reluctant to pros ecute particularly in thieveries. It is the bane of an officer’s existence who quite properly asks, “How can we stop him from the next time?’* But the civilian has a quick answer. He may be summoned to court as leading witness, wait about awhile, then find the case continued. It may happen another t’me find another. Eventually, the resul' hardly seems worth it. And then the guy may appeal. No Pattern Most objective analysts ascribe no pattern to Tuesday’s various election re sults, though partisans on both sides point with pride to particular victories. Republicans liked the mayoral re sults in Cleveland and Indianapolis, Democrats in Phil? delnhia. Democrats also chortle about the Kentucky govern orship victory. Local issues and local personalities determine outcome of local contests. MARTIN'S Viewpoints of Other Mtors Letter To The Editor MEDICINE . . , TAIWAN IS OUT By MARTIN HARMON Rev. Rieliard PlyliT, the Patter son Grove Baptist church pastor, was telling Otis RnlLs and me a- bout an e.xpericnee ho had some years ago while serving a church in the mountains of Western Vir ginia. Putting Taiwan out of the Unittkl Nations is quite another m-atter. It Is bad because it Is a precedent for expelling a coun- tiy fix>m what should be a gath ering place for all nations. The UN should not be, indeed, Is not a club at countries which parti cularly like one other. KINGS MOUNTAIN Hospital Log VtSrnNG HOURS OaUy 10:30 to lli30 AJC. 3 to 4 VM. nnd 7 to 8 PM. Slia- mm At his second Sunday morning service. In s.olte of shining .sum mer skies, Ml-. Plyler’s parishion- al cupboard was virtually bare including two In the choir loft and tlirce in' the pev\'s — some what shy for a 223-member church. mm "They don’t like and have al ready decided to run me off,” was Richard’.s first thought. Then with some temerity he inquired of the five, “Where is everybody?” m-m Well, it W'as a..nual snake- handling service for this cult, up the valley. Well, said Ri'ehard, he’s never setn a snake handling rite. Should they go? The five loyalists were eminently plca«d. Richard guessed there were 10,000 people on the hills ringing the valley where this open air service was being held. m-m The rattlers were in a ring of .sorts. Suddenly a woman began hviistbig, turning and moaning, Jumped into the ring and grabbed one of the snakes. She twirled it about and and let it writhe about her head and arms. Then a man followed, then another and an- othoi-. m-m Alas for Nirmber 4, it was four strikes and out. His rattler knifed him on the neck and he fell to the ground. In twenty minutes the hillsides were em pty. Tile sect does not believe in medi.-al faith, only in spiritual which dietitates in the first place that, if the snake handler is bit ten, he will survive If he has sufficient faith. Number 4 didn’t have it sufficient. He died four days later. mm “Ne.xt year on the Sunday be fore the snake-handlintT rite, I suggested to my congregation that we hold our next Sunday- morning service at our own HOvse. They complied. It's the only snake-handlir(r service I ever saw and I don’t exr-ect to see another,” Richard concludes. m-m Trov Bennett arrived in mid- July for a fourth term as a mis sionary in Dacca, East Paskis- tan. He writes two months later that he and his family^ h.ave not wen as mir-h aa-they haxi feare and were mentally’ prepared. . m-m Dacca, he says, is qui'.e nor- mal—by day. But the p'e-mett family does not go out at night While there has been ve.-- lit tle firing heard at night, it is still wise to stay inside. He writes, "What we have heard. T think, has been some sent-y reaching to a shadow and then the one a block aw-ay reaching. It is like neighborhood dogs barking.” The comparative peace of the cities and towms is another story outside, where the common vil lager is the subversive element and the militia and caught in the middle. The sulwer.sion for in stanw, ro'b the villagers cf food and shelter, then blow up a bridge and flee. The militia comes in and blames the vil- la-’ers. House and crop-burning follows. The American delegation did its ibest to prevent the expulsion of Taiwan. It failed. It was bound to fail. Th?re was never the slignlesL serious cliance of keeping iwo Chinese delegations each claiming to represent Ihe whole oi muuiland Ciiiiia m the ON at tile same time. The Chi nese tnemseives were clear about that. 'I’he sealing of the Peking delegation was bound to mean withdrawal of the ’lalwan delti- gation. Cniang 'Kai-siieK and -iiao Tse-tung are in full agreement that mere is and can be only one China. To both o-f them Tal- w-an is a province of China, not a separate and independent country. So the American attempt to have two Chinas in the US'! at the same time was bound to fail, as it did fall. The unfortunate thing was that the UN vote did include expulsion of Taiwan as well as admission of Peking, al though technically the Taiwan delegation withdrew on its own initiative. The o-ily ‘‘infamy’ in tile affair was the expulsion. That was unnecassary. It was a ruibbing sale into an old wound. It was done to punish the United States for 22 years of a policy which is admitted in Washington to have been mistaken by the very act of abandoning it. But this too was historically inevitable. In foreign affairs as in otlier aspects of human life the sins of the lathers are in deed visited upon their descend ants. Amrican hostility toward mainland China flowered in the Korean war. American arms splendidly repelled tlie original Invasion of South Korea. But in tlie following moment of mili tary pride and overconfidence a decision was made to attempt to conquer (“liberate” was the word used at the time) North Korea. The Chinese warned that tiiey would enter the war if the Amrican Army marched north. The warding went unheeded. The march was attempted—and end ed in military disaster. Out of that painfully experience came the long years of hostility to ward China and of devotion to tlie idea that the exiles on Tai wan might some day become again the government of all of China from the imperial seat of Peking. In the history of Americ.tn foreign relations there is a com pleted chapter which began U'iTh the. disastrous m,arch to the Vijilii and ends now with the chansc-in Chinese representation at the UN. Until the march to the Yalu, Washington was the recognized defender of freedom in the world. It had loyal allier and the approval of the great majority of mankind. It was with that march, that attempt to go norh, iiat tampering with the saus ooo whi-b bad emerged from the end of World War II, that the cninion ''f others began to cha'.i.ge. Allies began to falter. Friends fell away. They o.t- voted the United States in the UN. Some of Washington's best friends, Canada among them, wore in orfe.-t voting their ils- approval of that militar.v phase In American history’ which be gan with the march to the Yalu and cu’minated in the Vietnam war. And now the pri.’x? Is paid. —^The Christian Science Moni tor. Mrs. H. R. Childers Binson Clark 'Mrs. Goa Color Sam Cope Mrs. Mattie Davis Clarence Plshar Mrs. Wm. Froneburger Mrs. Marshall Gibson Mrs. Ibinmy Gooidson Mrs. T. W. Hamilton Earl Hicks Mrs. Jas. Hill Mrs. Jas. HuHfstiekler C. sM. Lovelaoee A. J. Mack Mrs. J. D. Montgomery Mrs. D. P. McDaniel Mrs. Forest MdNeely 'Mrs. Addle Neely 'Mrs. 'Bertha Nolen Summle Norman R. L. Plonk Edward Reynolds Mrs. Bobby Scruggs Mrs. Margaret ^Ivey J. B. Stacey ^ Clias. G. Sweezy Mirs. Faye Watte rson Margaret WJiisnant Mrs. Mary Wlllianas Elbert 'Bridges Mrs. Sallie 'Martin Steve Owens Mrs. Trula Payseur Mrs. Chas. WlHiam.s Narva Allen Mirs. Walter Curtis Mrs. Larry Green Mrs. Wm. G. Haskett Amos Tesseneer ADMITTED THURSDAY Mrs. Chas. Rice, 1024 W. 7th S'i., Gastonia J. R. Whitehur.-t, Rt. 1, City Mrs. Vance Gentry, Rt. 3, Dal las Dear Sir, SUBJECT; When Bvcninp daw’s Fall’. I Remember. feeble old man was s<H'n planting apple trees. "Why do you give yourself so much tn>u ble?" lie was asked. "You will probably not live until they are old enough to liear fruit." "The world will not be at an end — when I am gone," .said the old roan calmly, and went on with work. Blessed are they wlio under- •stand My faltering step and sliaking hand Blessed are they who know my ears today. Must strain to catch the things they say. Bl/sscd are they who look a- way. When coffee .spilled at table tairwiew, Gastonia ADMITTED FRIDAY Mrs. Michael Huffstiekler, 205 Linwood, City Mrs. Sam Wilson. 107 Cooper- town, CHy Mrs. Mattie Byars, P.O. Box 323, City Mrs. Fannie Gofortli, Rt. 1. Grover Winfred Hope, 929 Gnlce SI., City ADMITTED SATURDAY Shero’ Carroll. 707 N. Piedmont City Mrs. Leroy Jackson, Rt. 1, Grov- cr Mrs. Jas. Foster, Rt. 3, City ADMITTED SUNDAY Felicia Foreman, 389 Tower St., Vaux HaU, N. J. day. Blesstxl are they with cheerj i .smile j Who to eliat for a litih j while. j 'Blesed are they who never sa.\ , j “You’ve told that story twiix' to day," i;ie.s.sed are they wlio m.tke il i known. J That I’m loved, resireeti’d and ) not alone. —Ester Mary Wulkei I have found th(‘ an.swor to it alL Ui>on life’s way so m;iiry d<>l)t.s are made; and are in nei'd of time that all may be ic. paid. Now life’s sloping tempo leave s mo fre<’, j for giving back what otlicr.s gave to me. —.\uthor unknown. ’ No ray of .sunlight Ls ever lost, but llie green which it awake.s ' Into existence needs time lo. . . I .sprout, and it is no4 always .grant ed lo the sower to .see the htii- ] vo.-it. Work tli.tt is wortli anytliing | is always done in faith. , —Albert Schweitzer Age Is opportunity, no less Than youth itself, thougli in - another dress. And as evening twilight fade.s^’ away i The sky Ls filled with stars visible by day. —Henry Wadsworth Longhdlo^i "TO BE YOUNG AGAIN" ' Youth is not entirely a time of'i life—it is a state of mind. It Ls I Carter. 2 Shady Gastonia Mrs. John Lone, Clover Roy Houser, Box 232, Grover 'Paul Broone, P.O. Box 481. Bes semer City Randene Byers, Rt. 1, City Pamela Gunter, 110 E. Texas Mrs. Zeno Lovelace, 106 E. Gold Ave., Bessemer City Mrs. Gladys Grier, 42 Re.x. .\ve., a 'matter of riiio | s;., City Mrs. Robt. Pearson, 331 Moun- MR. AGNEWS GRECIAN TOUR Was Vice President Spiro Ag- new officially authorized to give , , assurances to the Army-ibacked Greek dictatorship that the Nix on administration would over ride any congressional ban on military aid to Greece? Or was he acting in the exuberance of Mrs. Frances Adair, 216 Thorn burg, City Mrs. Carol Blanton, 3180 Mid pines, City ADMITTED MONDAY Mrs. Ro'L't. England, 610 Clyde S;., Gastonia Marion Patterson, 301 VV. Mtn. Mrs. Willie Faust, 860 W. Caro lina Ave., Bessemer City Mairtin Leigh, 911 N. Piedmont, City Louise Belk, 206 Thornburg, the moment at finding himself feted as a favorite son returning '^'’s. Ronald Black, 2818 Douglas to the land of his ancestors? ^Gastonia The Pentagon may have valid Geo- McClure, 640 E. 12th Ave., reasons for considering arms aid Gastonia to Greece to be essential for -Mrs. W.m. L. Gilliam, Rt. 2, City NATO dcfen.ses in the eastern Dc-nald Blackburn, Rt. 2, City Mediterranean. If this is so, then Mns. Thurman Greene, Rt. 3, President Nixon plight be justi- City president Nixon might be justi- v-i-y -fled in tfi&imenAtii'^t '’ Tom BathHlei', P.O. Box 261, City cutting off this aid, already yqt•• Fred SflOope,' Rf.' U’' Bessemor ed by the House of Represenfa- Ciit^’ ... tives and now'before the Senate. -Mi's. Buron Blanton,N. The amendment does in fact al- City Si., City low th President to restore the Mrs. John McMillan, Rt. 1, Gas- cut if he deems it necessary for tonic. Unitd States security interests. Mrs. Talmadge Sullens, 307 N. B. t we would deplore it if V'lce Dilling St., .City Pre.sident Agnew had spoken out Mrs. John Whaley, 810 Landing of turn. Before he arrived in S;., City Greece, we had strong doubts Wm. Roctierter, Bl. 3, City about the wisdom of his visit. The ADMITTED TUESDAY remarks attributed to him dur- .Mrs. John Wm. Murray, Rt. 2. ing his visit and Farticularly Bcseo.mcr City his praise of the achievements KaVhy Summitt, Rt. 2, City of the Papadopoulos dictatorship Judy Inocoe, P.O. Box 12708, only tend to confirm our doubts. Gastonia —The Christian Science Moni- Mrs, cheeks, red lips or supple kne<>a It Ls a—^tcmi>er of the will, a qua lity of the imagination, a vigor | of the emotions. . ,I promise to keep on living as though 1 ('.x ‘ pccted to live forever. ‘ No body grows old by merel.v living a number of years. Peoi)le grow old only 'by deserting thcii i ideals. Y'ears may wrinkle Ihci skin, but to give up interest wrinkles the soul. You are a.s-, young as ycur faith, as old a.S|' your doubt; 'as young a-i your., scli-confidcnce, as old as your' despair. In the ce.ntral place of every heart tlierc is a recordin g chamber; .so long as it. . .reix'ive-’i messages ol beauty, hope, cheero ami courage, s.) long are you I young. I Wiien tile wires are all liown .and .vour heart is covered with. . the snosvs of pe.ssi-mi.sm and the,, ice e-f cynicism, then and then., onl;, arc you grown old. —Gen. Dougla; MacArthur’ Xo man can tell whether he is rich or poor by turning to hisi ledger. It is 'the heart that mak»'.ij a man rich. He is riida accxardingl i.i wbatihf'. Is.,, .not according ,t9| what itc.. has. alto —Henry Ward Betk-.^p Worry docs not empty tbmor ‘ row o' it’.s sorrew; it e.'r.iOties to-" day of it’.s strength. I —Corrie Ten Boom.''- I I Respectfully. Everette H. Pearson tor. Rigdan. LOOKING BACKWARD ON THE FARMS The civil was set back the pro gress of East Pakistan fortwon- ty to twenty-five years, Troy thinks. ‘ »?? I much admire missionary families partiaularly our recent neighbors the Bennetts who were quite upset when it appear ed the civil would prevent their return. Three of the Bennetts were piano pupils of my wife while they were here, Becky, aiway in Bankok, Thailand, for her ju nior year in high s.-hool, Debbie, with the family where other mother is her and another mis- .sionary daughter’s eight .grade teacher, and Mother Marge her self. Stex’C is a sophomore at 'Mars Hill. Card Of Thanks We wish to express our heartfelt thanksto the many friends and neighbors for their kind expressions of sympathy during our bereavement. The family of m ’ .. Goforth • ubiness men have good rea son for looking at girls wearing those stretch pants because they manage to stretch the assets and deflate the liabilities. The bloom of youth is that time when a lad can eat six hemburgors, two bottlc.s of pop on the wxiy home, and then raid the Ice box before going to bed. Japanese people are becoming show 75 per cent have TV and radio sets but o-nly 28 per cent have vacuum cleaners. The Nixon administration has sharply increased feed grain subsidies, but a nuirioer of law makers aren't satisfied. They still plan lo press tor a program already approved by the House Agriculture committee. 'By a 21to-10 vote, the com mittee decided to resurrect an old proposal for “stmtegic” re serve stocks o-f wheat and feed grains. The only strategy in volved in the plan is purely politi cal. Under the proposal the Agri culture Department would buiy up to 300 million o'lshels of wheat and 23 million tons c»f feed grains at above-market prices. It could dispose of any of this enormous stockpile only If market prices moved considerably above cur rent levels. This arrangement, of course, would 'be stacked on top of the existing prlce-aupport setup. Like the present program, too, it would channel benefits chiefly to the larger commercial farmers-who could get along very well without government help. The Nixon administration quite correctly thinks the reserve rirrmiok is a lousy idea, an invitation to the waste and scandal that has marked stock pile history in the past. House Democrats profess to be delight ed by Republican opposition, claiming that they can use it to embarrass GOP candidates in the midwest next year. Maybe there still are some votes that can be bought with this sort of government give away, but their number has been diminishing, and not only because of the decline in the number oi farmers. Many farm ers have begun to recqcnize that the best hope for their business OTHER EDITORIAL3- ■ OF KID.S, AND SNAILS To the farmers of Florida it’s no light matter, and we wish them well in the fight to rid themseU'es of the voracious giant African snails that since 1966 have been strippinii farms and gardens, and causing heavy eco nomic loss. But this agricultural disaster has its all-too-human aspects, which samehow make it easier to understand while harder to correct. It seems that the iblg terrestrial mollusk, which can grow to eight inches in length and a pound in weight, was 'brought into the country in the pockets of an eight-year-old Miami boy, on his way back from a Hawaiian vacation. The tale doesn’t end there. It seems that state agricultural of- 'fjclals have been trying to gather the critters before they spread out of 'control. Currently a col ony is propagating Itself in the unincorporated area of Little Riv er, north of Miami. But official snail-gatherers have come up against another form of animal Wo-'drew Ganlt St., City John Hegue, Rt. 3, York, S. C. Henry Ki^r, Sf.. 302 N. 14th S;., Bessemer City Mrs. Jesse Burton, 1112 Earl St., Shelby Mrs. Lula Ware, Rt. 2, City Mrs. Ethel White, 106 Lackey St., City Mrs. Gllbort Brazzell, P.O. Box 209, City Mrs. Arthur Green, Rt. 3, Gas tonia Mrs. Richard Kec, Rt. 1, Shelby Mrs. Jerry Morrow, 114 Guyton Loop. City Mrs. John Ayers, Rt. 1, Gtpover Myra McGinnis, Rt. 1, City Mrs. Ida Ware, Rt. 2, City AREA RUGS ' Area rugs may be used to show' off a beautiful floor or high-1 light a furniture grouping. If; furniture is scaixe, the area nig may help to eliminate a barren look, add extension house fui- nlshings specialists. North Caro- 717 lipa State University. -Aff'AS 'AMEHICA, U.S. SAVINGS ppNDS life that is hampering the opera tion,! his time in the form of Doberman pinschers and Ger man shepherds, kept as watch dogs by their fearful owners be cause of racial tensions that have gripped the newly Integrat ed area. The ecological disorders of our day, |t woiBd seem, have their genesis very deep in the dimmer recesses of human Irrclinatlon, habit, though and nonthought. Which leads us to muse that en vironmental Imbalance, be It among humans of different col or, or in the form of pests, dirty air, fouled water, or heaps of trash, cannot be met by just ap plying more teachnology. — Christian Science Monitor. lis in taking more of the man agement responsibility away from government. Instead, the backward-looking Agriculture Committee sulggests movtag toward even more fed eral Involvement. ^The Wall Street Journal. Keep Yon Radio Dial Set At 1220 WKMT Kings Mountain, N. C. llYe'ws & Weather every hour ou, the hour. Weather every hour on the half hour. Fine entertainment in between ’■I Thursi L the It! The V sever; ('!■ Nc Point, I. Pheib lainei in Jot will h Frida on a becai road'v C ’69 m fU''ai'k The 1 evoi- losn( into t King* ill Wth shipi pa?t Shell 24-6 dclef 1 chart in 19 ford ionsl I*- tun Cot bui his SOI ny
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1971, edition 1
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