; ; | | In Shelby The Cleveland County Memorial Library and the Duke University Office of Continuing Education are of- fering a seven-week course on North Carolina and the & Constitution beginning Tues- i+ day, March 18 at 7 p.m. in the i J leary s Meeting Room. ~ Comedy Scheduled { ii The classic comedy i : thriller, Arsenic and Old i Lace, will be presented by the ii Greater Shelby Community _ Theatre on March 14,15, and 16 at the Brown Auditorium % in Shelby. Performances will ! be Friday at 8:00 p.m., Satur- day at 8:00 p.m. and Sunday : afternoon at 2:30. Since it was first presented & at the Fulton Theatre in New # York, in 1941, Arsenic and # Old Lace has been a favorite § of community theatre au- # diences all over America. In ¥ the forties it was made into a : movie starring Cary Grant. & The play takes place in the § victorian home of Abby and % Martha Brewster, played by £ Ina Rieman and Barbara ¥ Brock. These lovable and ¥ charming maiden ladies have & a bizarre definition of chari- ty. The plot thickens as we meet their three nephews, _ Teddy, Mortimer and I Johnathan, played by Ludy Wilkie, Tim Clery and Les Farfour. As the ast-paced three act play moves along we discover that a line of ec- centricity runs through the Brewster Family. Add in a love story and we have the makings of a pleasant even- ing of theatre indeed. The play was written by Joseph Kesselring. Rounding out the talented : cast we have Kathi Burgin, i Mike Sisk, Norman Fox, Stan i Logan, Wray Nolting, Paul i Phillips, + Nick Rudisill. Will | Morris and Directed by Katherine Cherry, this play marks the third production since the ! Greater Shelby Community i £ Theatre was reorganized last year. The other successful productions were Oliver and Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat. This POOrERNiz nization has led to a larger rd of directors, last years very successful season ticket campaign, and { larger audiences. The cam- i paign for . membershi renewal of and for new .. members will be held April 14 * through 18. Tickets for Arsenic and Old Lace are $4.00 for adults, $3.00 for students and senior citizens. Tickets are available at Loy’s, Suttles Drug, The Shelby Newstand, ifrom members of the cast and at the door. ve Arts, Crafts Show Slated Over 500 craftsmen in Cleveland County and sur- rounding areas received an- nouncement/application let- ters during the week of . February 24 with information about the 10th annual Spring Cleveland County Arts & Crafts Show. This event spon- sored semiannually by +.Cleveland Technical College ‘and the Cleveland County Fair Association will be held | April 26 and 27 at the i Fairgrounds. Craftsmen who par- ticipated in the Fall, 1985, show and who wish to have the same exhibit booth should complete the required a plication and return it wi entry fee, by March 25, to the Cleveland County Fair Association, 1808 East Dixon Blvd., Shelby, N.C. 28150. After March 25, all booths will be available for reassign- ment on a first-come, first- serve basis. Show par- ticipants will be notifi by mail of booth assignments. For further information, contact Ada Blankenship, _ CTC show coordinator, (704) 484-4027 or Joe : Goforth, Manager, Cleveland £¢ County Fair Association, i (704) 487-0651. Page 4C-KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD-Thursday, March 6, 1986 County Library Plans Course On North Carolina “We, the People: North Carolinians Reconstruct Their Past’’ will explore what people in the Tar Heel state thought in the 1780s about government and the federal Constitution. The course meets for seven consecutive Tuesday even- ings. There is no fee, but registration is required either in advance or at the first meeting. Participants may obtain 1.4 CEUs; the course is certified by the State Department of Public Instruction. Topics will include “Citizens and the Republic: Speaking to the Government,’ “Law and the People: Changing Roles for the Courts in North Carolina,” and ‘“Women in the New Republic”. The course opens with a public lecture by Professor Walter Dellinger of the Duke University Law School on “The Summer of 1787: The Philadelphia Constitutional Convention.” The public is in- vited to attend this lecture without registering for the re- maining sessions. The follow- ing six sessions will combine lecture and discussion and will be based on a Sourcebook of original documents. The Sourcebook will be provided without charge to all registrants. The project is funded by a major grant from the Na- tional Endowment for the Humanities. On why the topic North Carolina and the federal Con- stitution, Rob Sikorski, an historian and the project coordinator at Duke, noted that ‘few North Carolinians know much about how we reacted as a state to the Con- stitution. People are often startled and confused to learn that North Carolina initially refused to ratify the Constitu- tion. We have all become so accustomed to the Constitu- tion as the centerpiece of our political lives that, I think, we’re embarrassed when we learn that 200 years ago, peo- ple here had many doubts about this new step for the state and the nation.” Sikorski added, though, that we have much to learn from studying those doubts as well as the justification for the Constitution. ‘‘Together they make up our political roots.” And beyond the specific topic, it’s exciting for people today to have the opportunity to read first-hand accounts of people’ s lives and thoughts rom back then.” “We, the People’ through these documents explores with course participants how ple’s daily lives and beliofs have affected Tar Heel politics, especially how the debate over personal liber- ties continues to shape our lives. “So many citizens got into the debate in 1788 and thought so deeply on the subjects that I hope it can be a model for citizen involvement today,” Sikorski said. Registration materials and a course schedule for ‘“We, the People” may be obtained by calling the Cleveland County Memorial Library, 487-9069. For additional infor- mation contact Doug Perr at the library, or Judith Ruderman, Duke University, (919) 684-6259. Haris Teeter Prices In This Ad Effective Through Saturday, Mar. 8, 1986 In Kings Mountain Stores. Only. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. None Sold To House Of Raeford Self-Basting Limit 1 Per Customer, 90° Turkey Breast 1» Open Kings Mtn. Sunday 10 AM BE watséos Limit 1, Please QO serena Golde: The Best Quality And Variety At. The Right Price! n 4 RA Whole Jimmy Dean Thompson White Or Flame Red Washington State, Red Or Seton Smoked Pork Seedless Delicious & Picnic 69°: Sausage $169 - re 99° Apples, 5O* Sliced Picnic % Ib...79¢ Regular Recipe Lb. i Land O Lakes Brox Flavors Sticed Homesty Ie Ham _99F¢ Bread 59°¢ Quattor 59° | 2 ¢ os a8 229 Orange & 99 Corn Oil aso: Juice 6402 2 Ltr. Non-Returnable Mt. Dew, Pepsi Free, Sugar Free Pepsi Free, Diet Pepsi Pepsi-Cola d $ Lope Ny S11! 9 Delta Gold l— Assorted Flavors Sealtest Ice Cream" } = HT Sliced Or Unsliced French Bread 79°¢ Potato Green Foliage Plants 99° #179 & P Includes Dieffenbachia, Croton, Ivy Plus Many More HT Veg All Cates Fresh Dish. Apple Mixed Kosher $ 09 Dis Juice 5109 Vegetables C Spears 1 been QQ ¢ 50 Oz. 2 16 Oz. 24 Oz. 22 Oz. Strained p= $ Pillsbury 79: Maxi $ 169 oma Orange . *119 Carrots or Flour bs Shields ¢& Juice Cor en Aa 0: Vanish Automatic $ 13 & Heft Up 4 188 Todized 2: 3 Ly Flakes Cleaner Bags a Salt oz Del Monte 79: Realemon s141 Dog 9 98 Colgate : $169 Catsup o Juice & Food Eos ~ Toothpaste or Worsenite 119 corx $162 HT 5 Schi 99: Sauce 3 9 Bleach *1 Tuna & 5 Razors BBQ OY Cling” 14 Bpple = 7 5: Goody's $139 Sauce 5 Fy 9 Se Oz Powders 1