THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C.
Thursday. May 25. 1972
Established 1889
The Kings Mountain Herald
206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Hountolii, N. C. 28088
A weekly newspa.per devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published
for ths enlightenment, entertainmnt and benefit of the citizens of Kings Mountain
and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Heraid Publishing House.
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C., 28086
under Act of Congress of March 3, 1873.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher
Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor
Gary Stewart Sports Editor, NeA^s
Miss Deboie Thornburg Clerk, Bookkeeper
Ray Paricec
Rothy Martin
MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT
AUflD Myers
Roger Bkoira
Paul Jackson
Herbert M. Hunter
• On t^ave With The United States Army
MAH. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
In North Corolino emd South Carolina
yew $4, six months $2.25; throe months $1.50; school year $3.
(Subscription In North Carolina suOtject to three percent sales lax.j
In AH Other States
One year $5; six months $3; ttifee months $1.75; school year $3.75.
PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX
TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739 5441
TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
Vanity pf -pamitk-s, saith the P-roaclicr, pU is 'mtn ity. Ecclesiastes f
Up To Us
Mr. Hambright know.s w*hereof he
speaks.
Mr. Hambright now knaw.s Mr. Fin
ger and likes him, still teases Mr. F'-nrrci-
ai)out the paucity of votes Mr. Finger
received in the man-on-man run-ofi c-c-
tion in which Mr. Ellis was elected and
in which Mr. Finger was defeated.
Mr. Hambright speaks of both ex
perience and victory.
In the .second primary election, to
which Hambright refers, the small com
munity of Grover voted the book. Mr.
Finger lays claim to no more than three
votes in the Grover precinct. Mr. Ham
bright phrases it “we made it (the nom
ination of Mr. Ellis) a community pro
ject.”
Kings Mountain has a worthy can
didate for the county board of commis
sioners in the penson of Josh Hinnant, a
banker by profe.ssion, a non-paid champ
ion of the Kings Mountain area for in
dustrial development, a down-to-earth
baseball pitcher who knows the score.
Kings Mountain has griped for
years, this newspaper among the lead
ers, of being the red-headed stepchild of
Cleveland County.
The tape on election results reveals
the true story of those willing to read
and understand.
On May 6, 1382 Democrats voted a-
gainst a potential of round figure 43(30.
It is not mete to complain when we
do not vote.
Hang-Ups
President Nixon, in his prior visit
to China and in his present excursion to
Mo.scow, is acting as 1) Chief Architect
of the United States foreign policy; 2)
Commander - In - Chief of the Ai-med
Forces of the United States and 3) a
very pragmatic politician very conscious
that November 7, 1972 is election and
he hopes, rc-elecUon day, in the United
States.
Mr. Nixon has never been a favorite
of this newspaper.
Conversely, this newspaper mu.st
credit Mr. Nixon as the Kings Mountain
Herald has historically, courage, imag
ination and the will to work, from which
he has never flagged.
The late great Sir Winston Spencer
(Jhurchill said, “As long as you’re talk
ing, you aren’t shooting.’’
It is patently true.
The history of the Russian is one of
aggrandizement—short of war.
It is to be assumed that Mr. Nixoh
has read his fill of Russian history and
on this background he is gambling that
a detente can be established by which
the world may live in relative peace.
The United Nations is maligned as
a wa.stpful weak sister, leecher of the
public treasury with no .worthwhile re
sult.
The fact remains, in spite of Viet
nam where, all know, the morality and
integrity of the Free World cannot be
imposed upon the oriental mind, there
has not been a major war of the World
War I and World War 11 proportion.
The visit of the President to Peking
and now Moscow is a conscionable ef
fort on the part of the United States to
continue the detente for now and hope
fully ferevermore. ^
Taylor Endorsements
Paul Hambright, the former agri
culture teacher, said recently, “If you
folks want a county commissioner
you’ve got to do it like we did. We
weren't mad at Carl Finger, as a mattor
of f act I didn’t even know him. But we
made the nomination and election of
Broad Ellis a community project. That’s
what you’ve got to do.’’
A run-off primary is a new
game.
ball
Skipper Bowles
mary 62,500 votes.
led the first pri-
Dr. Reginald Hawkins, the Negro,
wjio polled 118,000 votes in 1968, po'lled
6-5,000 votes on May 6.
\Vilbur Hobby, chief of the North
Carolina American Federation of Labor-
Congress of International Organizations,
polled 58,000.
Both have endorsed Lt. Governor H,
Pat Taylor for Governor in the June 3
second primary.
What conclusions can be drawn?
Lindsay Warren, manager of the
Taylor campaign, was somewhat apolo
getic of the Hawkins support. “When
you’re behind” he was quoted, “you
want any. support.”
It was very obvious that the can
didacies of Dr. Hawkins and Mr. Hobby
were for a singular purpose: to dictate
policies of the likely next Governor of
North Carolina.
Apparently they could dictate to
the non-taxing (he says) Lieutenani
Governor of North Carolina. Who was
the architect of the Scott-Tax program
of 1969 in the Senate of North Carolina
and who now decries friendship with
Governor Scott, his mentor?
Lt. Governor Taylor, inferring ho
plans to assess a larger tax bite on<
North Carolinians pooh-poohs Senator
Bowles’ pledge that he will recommend
no new' taxes on North Carolina citiz
ens.
A review' of recent North Carolina
history reveals such a pledge is hardly
vacuous.
Governor Dan Moore pledged ho
would recommend no new taxes. There
were none.
State Senator Jack White of Kings
Mountain had a very difficult time per
suading the Governor that addition of
five cents to the price of a bottle ofi
whiskey—earmarked to build alcoholic
rehabilitation centers— was not a tax
Said Senator White, “Governor, no tax.
as North Carolina—sold w'hiskey is not
taxed. Governor, I merely want to add
five cents to the price of a bottle of
whiskey and earmark it as I say.”
The Governor finally agreed.
Senator Bowles says he can repeat
the Moore performance.
He can.
Turned On
It was a happy day last Thursday
afternoon w'hen the valve was turned
pouring Kings Mountain water into the
mains of Bessemer City.
The professionals in the business of
“clean water” have long been aware of
the regional concept. The little fellas
must work together.
The Bessemer City-Kings Mountain
water contract is a case in point. Slight
ly larger Kings Mountain, bound by ad
ject necessity, borrowed a large sum of
money to obtain w'ater, more than it
needs for the moment. Smaller Bessemer
City, unaided and unabetted by utility
profits, needed water. Kings Mountain is
supplying Bessemer City’s “shorts”.
A good trade is beneficial to all
parties concerned.
This one is a prime example.
MARTIN'S
MEDICINE
Viewpoints of Other Editors
By MARTIN HARMON
THE PRESIDENT'S OFFER eral income taxes in 1970, adding
the promise that If eiected he’li
make sure they do. It may not
Tlie centerpiece of President
Nixon Vietnam statement re
cently iwas, hy his own empasis.
Ford Times, the consumer trade decision to mine the har-
publication the grandson of T-
Model Henry pnjduce.s, in.spires
a dash of drifel. . . .
mm
have been bixtught to the candi
date’s attention that most of the
corporations hus indiced lost
money in 1970 and the rest were
either so tiny or virtually de
funct that there w'as nothing to
a.\.
KINGS MOUNTAIN
Hospital Log
YISIXING HOURS
Dally 10:30 to 11:30 AM.
3 to 4 PM. land 7 to 8 P,M.
The Tar Heel
Spotlight
By SAM RAGAN
North t’arolina may have been
among the last of the oilginai
bors of North Vietnam, to deny
Hanoi "the weapons and sup
plies it needs , to continue the
aggression.” But there was en
veloped in and largely obscured
by this portentous announcement
The other canard, which h-is
r „ . , . ,.uu II. oct-ii delivered repeated with such reguiar-
Speedway- cla^^ic at would have brought forth passion that it is nov,'
c^^‘'»i''mHes acflTou” different headlines and ^^en believed by a number ef
cess of XO miles per hour in 192n. commentary. mncient tycoons, is that slnc.r
m-m on,- , . ... sbtee Mr. Ni.xOn took oltice the
** ck.inges in the tax laws have
Sir Pete hung up the raicing * - t?" ‘be wealthy at
spikes A. D. 1934, and since has .F'. '“ddary expense of the little guy. Ed-
The Magazine features one , „
Peter DePaola. winner of the i
relegated himself to the paddock,
involvement
in Vietnam. Once g cohen, assistant secreta’-y
the banquet circuit featuring Fi of war are releas- qj treasury for tax policy,
such heavy-weights os baseball’s once an internationally sup- said “This is not so.” And in a
.Bob Feller, football's Ironton. doasefire has begun in speech to the Federal Tax Insti-
Ohio flash George McAfee, and Indochina, he said, the United .{yte of New England he tells
basketball’s fir.st all - American a** acts of I'orce -^yhy.
out cf North Carolina nee, Penn- within four months with?
sylvanial George Glamack. draw all U. S. forces from Viet
nam. No longer would be U. S.
m-m insist on linking total withdraw
Clarence L. Black
Mack Lee Conner
Bessie M. McClain
Dr. Waldo K. Mcli-ill
Dorus Clay Payseur
Effie Mac Peterson
Eugene Frank Stapp
Bonnie M. Summers
Lucinda Surratt
Mr.s. J. H. Ttiomsoii
Mrs. Beauford Li'.siie
Billy Gene Robhs
Ila B. Slayton
Edna Leatherwood
Mre. Sherman H. Oakes
Mattie C. Stow*'
Mrs. Frank Warllck
Bessie E. Weils
Gaines L. Anderson
Mrs. Lewis E. Fite
Mary Leo Mayes
ADMITTED THURSDAY
Mrs. Robert E, Barrett, Rt.
tliirieon statog to ratify he Can
sitution almost 200 years ago,
bu it is taking the lead today in
planning a proper bicentennial
commemoration.
A torsy appearing this month
in "USA 200," an independent,
nationally dustributed bicenten
nial newspaper, calls the Nortli
Carolina bicentennial plan "the
Crawford most significant effort thus far
to deal wat|i the really difficult
elements ol bicentennial plaii-
In the interest of educating the Gastonia
political candidates, the common Graden D. Breedlove, .512 E.
ai to the progress of Vietnamiza- b® Innownt tycoons, Washington Ave., Bc.s.-«.»mcr City
It w^s the only auto race I've tjoj, proposal in- "I'" pertinent portions Kenneth Breedlove. 2417
ever attended and I have a rath- demands that tL,tavadmg C^ben’s remarks. While Farland Ext., Ga.stonia
s.h‘‘rw.’:,?rr.' ''
than I did. f own borders.
iMnrI rnic K/ion MitcrvM’i
Ml
ning.
"U.SA 200” further slates that
the plan developed by the North
Carolina American Revolution
Bicentennial Commission untler
the leadership of chairman Hec
tor MacLean of Lumherton and
director Richard F. Gibbs "does
what -so many of us have talked
4 about or thought about, but have
’ found it very difficult to do. It
deals with the idea.s, ideals, defi
nitions, scope of tlie American
Revolution and provides a
sound, practical way for relating
them to the present and the fu-
But Peter DePaola was the star.
message, it is not hard for us to
imagine tliat it would have been
read here at home as a capitula-
lion by tire President to his most
passionate critics. In his press
After apprenticing under his briefing, Henry Klssenger made
uncle, Ralph DePalma, who push- oblique reference to this irony,
ed his way to a non-win in 1912— "The modification of our peace
.second year of the Indianaptolis proposal,” he said, "tcorresponJs
business—^DePaolo was Number 1 with what was the accepted wis-
in 1925. dom everywhere only a ilttie
while ago.”
“ On the eve of Mr. Nixon’s day
A few weeks later, at the short- decision, The Economist of
lived but equally exciting wood London repeated this accepte l
track just south of CTiarlotte, De- wisdom with detached
Annie Lee iByrd. Rt. 2, City
this resentation were obviously EULs Harmon King. Ill Fulton ture.
Had this been Mr Nixon’s onlv bis statistics are not. st.. City A .basic premise of "Amer,r*m
I„ Z 'We rust a clear-eyed reading of ADMITTED FRIDAY Revolution H. a.s the plan ^
same will convince the can di- Mrs. John T. Hrown, .30fi S. lOtli named, is that the highest foi*
dates that tax reforms in recent St.. Bes.samer City of bonor which can be paid to
years have scarcely pampered Michael Thonruis Dowdle, 212 the people of the Rovolutiona'-y
the rich or soaked the little guy. W. Texas Ave., (Bessemor City generation is to put their prha i-
Wall Street Journal.
BY IGNORING
CLEVELAND. (30P
CANDIDATES LOST
The two candidates for the Re-
Oscar R. Gladden, 105 N. Rail pies into action in our own lives,
road Ave., City Another holds that all American.-!
Mrs. Marvin J. Harmon, Rt. 2, aie beneficiaries of the American
City Revolution and that we have an
Billie Mario Hall, 318 Waco Rd,, obligation to pass on its legacy-
Clty (hopefully improved” lo (uture
ADMITTED SATURDAY generations.
Mrs. James .4. Belt, 106 N. Sims
perspec- publican gubernatorial campaign
Paola, fresh off ht, victory on the I‘ thought it likely that have only themselves to blame Milton Road, .CJharlotte
red brick of Indianapolis, showed would pause on the battle- not already being nominal- Mrs. Evans H. Carroll, Jr., 104
’em hoiv to do it in Lady-car 'Hold -having amply demonsrat- ed. Instead of cami»igning in Nos-lh Sims St., City
To accomplis], this goal, the
North Carolina bicentennial com
mission proposes a long-term
commemoration spenning t h <■
Mrs. Charles E. Blackwell, 2609 same ydar.s in this century as the
St., aty
ADMITTED SUNDAY
Ella B. Beam, El. 2,
City-
fashion at Pineviile.
certain memories remain
and uncluttered.
Peter DePaolo.
My Father.
ed its ability to gain ground Clevelad county before May 6,
through military prowress — and ‘bey are In a runoff on June 3.
give politicians in Washington
At the age of five, which I was 5"*^ Saingon a moment to con- Neither Jim Holshouser nor
mpmAriru: rjxmam cl^ST consoQU6Tic6s. “It ijim Gardner mudo a campaign
may be enough,” said the period- -trip to our county lo court the
leal, "for North Vietnam’s lead- 4,000-plus registered Republicans
ers if they could get Mr. Nixon here. Both did go into Ruther-
to withdraw the last of his .ford County and into Gaston
troops from the country in re- County, but not into Cleveland
turn for a ceasefire and handing County. There w-as a Gardner
over their few American prison- campaign manager here, but, as
far as we have been able to de-
Well, they did. But so far, termine, that was the virtual ex
enough does not seem to be ten of the Repblican gberna-
enough for Hanoi. “Why ig it,” toria campaign in the cojity
Dr, Kissinger asks plaintively,
“that these proposals should not “'‘‘® *bat 4,000 potential
be accepted? If they were good ''°‘es may not look like many
enoug)! for ‘be Senate doves, w-hy when compared o many other
is it that Hanoi rejects thern? counties where the (X>P registra-
The question puzzles some who higher. It’s also true that
are doing the arithmetic Hanoi Cleveland Couny has been
must face as it pases before, staunchly Democratic, more so
The administration calculates ‘b®n other county in the 10th
the Communists lost two divi- 'Congressional district. It lias
sions, some 20,000 men, in con- ‘o Democratic candi-
quering Quang Tri, which was ‘A so many years that any-
defended by the most inexper- ‘bing else would be a surprise.,
lenced of South Vietnam’s divi- ^"*Y George Wallace’s Amencar
sions. How long, and at what Party presidential attempt :n
Dink (I finally learned
name is Odell) Bennett.
hfs
The BIG OR.4NGE.
Mrs. James N. (Jwens, Rt. 3,
City
Raymond D. Sharpe, Rt. 1, .Shel
by
John EMward Wallen, 727 A
Street, Bessemer City
Mrs. Bennie Webber. GOl W.
Alabama Ave., Bessemer City-
ADMITTED MONDAY
Johnnit Wright Osborne, 703 \V.
Gold St., City
Charles Carr Harrelson, Rt. 2,
Bessemer City
Ruby P. Bell, Rt. 1, Bc.ssemer
City-
Jasper E. Wilson, Jr., 324 Stev
ens St., Gastonia
Kevin E. 'Galioway, 515 Belv-e-
dcre Circle, City
Dewey W. Barker, IRt. 1, City
American revolution did in the
eighteenth century. The "proce.ss”
of the Revolution in North Car
olina is considered to have bi--
gun witli the calling of the First
Provincial Congress at New Bern
in ITIf and to have concluded
with the adoption of the F<xleral
Constitution in 1789.
The commission proposes tliat
in a sense we "re-enact” that
period by assessing our present
circumstances iind between now
and 1976 lanning for future im-
provemet. The anniversary yeai-
of the Declaration of Independ
ence is seen as one in which
North Canjliniang and Ameri
cans should csimmit themselves
to secific goals aimed at "im
proving the quality of life,"
The yeai-s 1976 to 1989 wo-uM
vava
Wonie W.
St., Cily-
Mc!B<t(-, 227 Walker ‘ben offer a period of “comito
tion" in which Americans
I touched on this matter a few
years ago, settling an argument
of sorts. Well, whatta you know?
I’ve got the program!
ffifth
Annomiceiiients
m-m
Pineviile was fathered by a
Charlotte Buick dealer named C.
C. Coddington. The speedster of cost, -will it take to conquer Hue, broke the string.
that day raced for two years, defended by the best ARVN di-
but the high priced soda pop and vision? Rather than pay "such iv^rs* Return'^*^*'‘**
turnstUe take wasn’t sufficient, costs, why doesn’t Hanoi accept a and Holshouser to
Mr. and Mrs. James Ewing, P
O. Box 425, McAdenville, N. C.,
announce the birth of a son,
Thursday, May 19, Kings .Moun
tain hosputal.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted F. Bolt Bo.\ .“’cmendous celebratiin" assum
. ♦ inrrfUnttUrv. + U....
work to achieve the goals set iti
li)76. In so doing, they would tiv
to live up to the ideals of :he
American Revolution and Hi''
genuine needs of our times a.--
our forebears bid 200 years ago.
Attainment of present-day goai.-i
could be celebrated simuiten-
eously- with anniversaries of
Revolutionai'y events,
The year 1989 would bring a
pay such jy as it turns out, for Gardner 506, 8th Str^irB^emercity, an- ‘bat the other processes have
iWood-track Pineviile just totted negotiated deal that concedes it county and its
Oyt. Sn *
ignore this nounce the birth of a son, Thurs- "ccked, goals have been achiev-
Kings Mountain ® genuine spirit of re
m-m
It required the coming of tlie
more-permanent a.yhalt to keep losses iti'add^g^hings" undoes
the hot-rods m business. And — ... ? <= op oots
their business is pretty gtood.
So much’' " '-''“"'■r “““ ‘‘■‘>00 potential day, May 18, „..
The sitiinto ■vo‘cs. (In fact, only two Repub- hospital. dedicaUon has emerged.
Is that the weicht ’ tNolih candidaes for any office- -Mr. and Mrs. Don F. Saldo. Et. Tbrough sucj, publicity ag tlie
Vietnamese irive to Joyner and Jesse Helms 1, Grover, announce the birth of stCY in "U.SA 200", Iher.'
g manpower —b.othered to come here), it twin sons, Friday, May ]9, Kings b* ® growing possibility that
wag almost as if every candidate Mountain hospital. North Carolina’s approach to
not coincide with any
CP cQst-henefit ratine r be had Cleveland Repub- 'Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. ElUott ‘b® commemoration of t h e
mania of John Q. Public being mm Heans in the bag, or a.s if none 1401 Shel'by Road, announce the American Revolution may hav*'
ri„"”’fZ-.VbeY no doubt see of them really cared ... - -
a chance that the conquest of
what it is—gore.
birtti of a son, Saturday, May 20, national influence.
trim uHii Km-..™ .K ; utoii o. - . _ . „ Kings .Mountain hcapital, Additionalinformationisavail-
Everj-one loves a fight, as long last vestigf of U. only'n^ded Jr.'^Od^R nnTunce ‘iena/BlameruhTr^oiLh^^^
turns, irarified by the Romans, H ‘be President s new offer at- He migb well nave gotten them (Mr. and Mrs. Carl M Neelv Rt s‘a‘e Plan, or fi-om the Nor* ,
and Hannibal contributed. "‘^bles from Hanoi, it here wi‘h just one campaign i, GastoSa; N. C. alrance tie Carolina Ameri^^n Lo^idon
_ ought at l®ast to dampen the swig. Jim Holshouser needed only birth of a son, Tuesday, May 23 Bioentermial Commission Box
nePoi m ( f persistent idea that a comprom- 1.329 votes to catch Gardner Kings Mountain hosptol. ^ ' ’SSL Raleigh. “
DePalma, the non-winner of ise setlement can be reached if and a total of only 1,715 votes Mr and Mre Tonyl, 4rrowom(
1912, was intense to the point he only the Americans make one to win the nomination himself. Route 2, Be'ssemer (ity announce
had his mechanics come and more concession. Just as the He might well have gotten them the birth of a daughter We-ines.
push. He busted a rod (radius, Nixon administration now as- in Cleveland County had he both- day, May 24 iKIn^s
anent the tvyenties, the late mas- knowledges having underestimat- ered to campaign here at al!. As hospital. ’ "
ter mechanic, Mr. Hoffman, Dr. ed North Vietnam’s military it was, less than one-fourth of BROADCAST
Jehn Jacob George Herd’s radius- capability. It s<?ems tlie critics of the registered Republicans who
10(1 shop where his son Jimmy the American negotiating stance didn’t vote and who were not vauiu.b uiv momn oi viav are »iou prneeoa. ...n k™
overestimated Ha- wooed by either candidate could are being broadcast from ^rst plied toward cost^of a nei^b(!s^i
into xli^ht trs-inin^y, lT66*lflncc ti’oi s willingness to compromise— Vinv** moH<» tho Hiffaron/uk tr\ ahvi. ..t. .. * -• ® new ousn
BARBECUE
Bethlehem Volunteer Fire De-
Mountain partment will serve barbecue
chicken Saturday from 5 untj^^
P-T*- ®‘ ‘be fire department^B
Sunday morning worship ser- ‘eh Bethlehem cfwimUrflfr plates
not vice during the month of .May are $1.50. Proceeds ’
have made the difference to eith
er candidate.
flying, then into Eastern Airlines The Wall Sti-eet Journal.
as Captain Hord.
m-io n CHARITABLE e®" b® argued, of course.
My mother hasn’t ever been off EXPLANATION same statistics can be
the ground, says, if she ever gets The pollsters tell us that some ®PPbed to oher oounles. And it
aiibome, it would have to be of the presidential candidates are “ true argument. But
with Captain Hord or Captain being perceived as beine more mater is that
'Preslbyterian church
Station WKMT.
via Radio truck on
ment.
oi’der by the depart-
Keep Your Radio Dial Set A!
Bu(^ Dining (Rot), both of whom “honest” than others. It has oc- ‘’®‘ber Gardner nor Holshouser
•she knew from childhood. There curred to us that one reason for “'e ''“‘e in Cleveland
not another pHot in the world this may be the possibility that ^"“nty as they did elsewhere in
who knows how to fly a plane, ^ome candidate, are indeed more *1® Isnoring even a few
she thinks. honest than others, but for an -- -
All . KA Z"'”, . understandable reason. That is,
1 ‘beY may be so blissfully un-
^ampion DePaolo su^ggests, is a of the facts on a given Is-
M°K ^i*® ‘bat they can spefk our
circuit, and on which the Man. of both with forthrightness and in
thousand votes can be catastro
phic, as both candidates surely
have found ou by now.—Shelby
Daily Star.
1220
'25 Mr. DePaolo, now
great demand. "Today
gun it near 200 m.p.h.
In the last half of 1971, train
ing placements by Manpower Ap-
good conscience.
tne boys Admittedly, that Is a charit
able explanation of what may prentlceshi Information Centers
really ;be happening, but we are num'bered 4,542— u 25 per cent
in a charitable moood. It hag not from 3,617 in the last half of
occutred to us, for examie, that ‘970. Minority placements ac-
an occasional candidate might counted for 26 per c»nt of the
purposefully fudge the truth up- —or L187 — an Increase of
on finding that (fudge gocg over four percentage points over the
so v/ell with the crowds. 22 per cent in the last half of
Take the ttix-reform issue, fni 19 fO-
('xample. A number of the D-'n- , * »
oc-ratic contenders have boon
vitwing with alarm the Nixon In May 1971, Negroes, Span-
administration’s alleged fond- ish-sumamed Americans, Ameri-
ness for big business instead of can Indians and Oriental Indians
the common man. Various bits held more than 503,000 federal
of evidence are offered up to jobs, represeting 19.5 per cent of
whip Innocent audiences Into out- the civilian work force. This
rage. Senator MdGovem, (or figure represents an Increase
example, has been effectively from 19.4 per cent in May 1970
using the line that 40 per cent of and 192 i»r cent in November
'U. S. corporations paid no Fed- 190B.
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KINSS MOUNTAIN, N. C.
News I Weafhtr evtry hour on th» hour.
Weather every hour bn the half hour.
Rne entertainnient fr( b^tjiveen
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Biadl
Hui