Mountaineers Lose State Championship Game 1B Th Vocational Education Many Work Behind | The Scenes Member Of The North Carolina Press Association VOL. 102 NO. 13 North School Students Experiment With Seeds 7A Thursday, March 29, 1990 ALE KINGS MOUNTAIN, N.C. 28086 Mayor's Vote Puts Bins On East Side Mayor Kyle Smith broke a tie vote for the first time in two years Tuesday as City Council split on the site for a recycling center. After an hour of discussion and after taking two votes by Council to try to determine how Council stood on the issue of moving the site to the Community Center, Smith broke the tie. The motion by Neisler was originally to move the site from Railroad to Cleveland KM Police Blame Shots On Dispute * Police said an ongoing dispute between two families resulted in the shots fired Thursday on Cansler Street in which two men were hurt and two suspects were arrested. John Patrick Logan, 21, and Larry Dean Logan, 24, both of 225 N. City Street, were transferred from Kings Mountain Hospital to Charlotte Memorial Hospital. Det. Billy Benton and Sgt. Derek Johnson said John Logan was hit in the face and upper chest area with shots from a .38 caliber handgun and Larry Logan was shot with a sawed off .20 gauge shotgun in the face area and upper chest. Police charged Jack Cole Nichols, 46, of 110 N. Cansler Street, with one count of assault with deadly weapon inflicting serious bodily injury and Larry Dean Logan, 24 of 225 N. City Street, with one count simple assault in connection See Shooting, 3-A Avenue but after it drew strong op- position from four members of Council and some citizens living in the Cleveland Avenue area dur- ing a public hearing, he expanded the motion to keep the current Parkdale Mills site and add more bins at the Community Center. Favoring the motion were Commissioners Fred Finger, Neisler and Al Moretz. Opposing the motion were Commissioners Bridges, Jackie Barrett and Elvin Greene. The city recreation commission also opposed the Community Center site, suggesting on March 22 that if the recycling facility is placed on park property that it be located in the parking lot at the corner of Parker and Chestnut Streets with fencing to shield the center from public view. Neisler said the Community Center site is the perfect spot for a new $14,000 machine to be put up by Alcoa Aluminum of Shelby which will automatically weigh cans and give people 35 cents per pound-an incentive for residents to drop off their recyclable items, such as newspapers, plastic and glass. He said that the Center is open until 9 p.m. each night, the area is paved, well lighted and pa- trolled by police. The recycling Photo by Dieter Melkhorn KEEPING OUT VANDALS-Tommy Barnett, East Kings Mountain merchant, shows how otie merchant on North Piedmont Avenue has covered his windows with mesh wire since a rash of ig in the area. Two other stores were hit Saturday night. Piedmont Looks Like War Zohe Boarded-up windows dot busi- nesses along North Piedmont Avenue since vandals knocked out windows again Saturday at Gaffney's Barber Shop and Mike's Game Room. Curtis Gaffney, owner of Gaffney's, said he doesn't plan to replace his windows. "I'm just go- ing to leave them boarded up and hope customers won't think I'm closed." Property owners at the nine busi- nesses say vandals have targeted their businesses for several years, breaking windows out and Join Cancer Crusade Plann&d The annual Kings Mountain Cancer Crusade will be conducted Sunday afternoon from 2 until 5 p.m. and volunteers will be can- vassing the community to solicit funds. Co-chairmen Nancy Scism and Susie Sellers said that volunteers will be delivering packets of infor- mation about cancer and inviting contributions in the Residential Educational and Fund-Raising Crusade. She said more volunteers are needed and they may contact her at Home Federal Bank on West King Street. Mrs. Scism said statistics show that the research program of the American Cancer Society is paying off in that nearly three million Americans, alive today, are consid- ered cured and American Cancer Society research can take its share of the credit. She cited as one ex- ample: ACS supported the devel- opment of the PAP test which is used to diagnose cervical cancer. This test has already saved the lives of thousands of women be- cause it can detect cancer of the uterine cervix at its earliest and most curable stage. Other research Kings Mountain People extensive damage. They suspect ju- veniles. Chief of Police Warren Goforth said he personally talked to seven merchants on North Piedmont Avenue this week about the rash of vandalism, which has included bro- ken windows a number of times For Sunday progress is the link established by the ACS between smoking and lung cancer. The local Cancer Society office in Shelby, she says, provides an in- formation center. For the cancer patient, it may make available such services as transportation to places of treatment; dressings; sickroom supplies and other special equip- ment. Some of the materials that vol- unteers will hand out to residents includes answers about cancer, ba- See Cancer, 3-A over the past two years. "This is a major thoroughfare of town and it's hard for us to catch the juveniles who the merchants believe are re- sponsible for this disregard of property. We've beefed up our pa- trol in that area with a walking pa- See Piedmont, 2-A Daylight Savings Time begins Sunday at 2 am Push your clocks ahead one hour. center will front on three sides of Cleveland Avenue on the curb side between the north side of the build- ing and Jake Early Memorial Park. Neisler said the recycling com- mittee had received complaints from three or four households in the vicinity of the Community Center but had met with them and pointed out that the recycling cen- ter, where it will now be located, won't be visible from the resi- Sub-Static’ dences. "I think we have satisfied the property ow 3 - ondary site," he { NYgt ] AN — =< It's a place HO» B ml od re BH | and play and I m oe = creasing the nn Community | 2 Hed Sm HR Denice Stalin, |" i 2 Cleveland Cc) 5S See Heari | 7, > Hearing Set The site of what may be a sec- ond controversial city project will be decided possibly on April 12 at a 7:30 p.m. public hearing to be conducted by City Council. Although the public hearing is not a legal requirement, City Manager George Wood said the city utilities committee wants the public to have input into the site of a new 15,000 volt electrical substa- tion the city wants to put on Sims and Parker Street and have their questions answered concerning noise and safety. The electric substation is part of $9 million improvements package voied by Kings Mountain citizens For utility improveients. Tt will bis 45 feet high with 80 to 100 foot powerlines. "There will be a low hum from the electrical equipment, however it should not cause a nuisance,” said a question-answer sheet on the location of the new substation and distributed to city council members and the press in a packet of materi- als at Tuesday night's board meet- ing. The noise level will be 95 decibels, which is slightly louder than heavy street traffic and slight- ly less noisy than an elevated train. According to the memo, the sub- station isn't supposed to affect neighbors’ television or radio re- ception. The equipment will be bordered by a 10-foot fence on a two-acre site to guard against children get- ting near it. City Council is looking at prop- erty owned by the Kings Mountain District Schools and is negotiating with the KM Board of Education for the site. Council met in execu- tive session Tuesday night to con- sider possible purchase of land. The substation will receive its clectricity over power lines on tow- ers that range from 80 to 100 feet in height. The EPA has said that no new equipment shall contain PCB in a level high enough to harm the en- vironment, according to the memo which asked the possibilities of having electrical equipment con- taining PCB. At the April 12th meeting, moved up two days to allow three commissioners to attend a seminar for newly-elected officials in Asheville, Council will act on bids for the Pilot Creek WWTP im- provements, bids for stump grind- ing and removal of Hugo debris and a possible sale o land by upset bid. In another action at Tuesday's meeting, Council set April 17 as date for a public hearing by th Recreation Commission to discusg recommendations for Davidson Paik. Recreation, Director Davicy Hancock, in a meme to Council said the commission is ready 10 present the Davidson park modifi- cations plan. He said their recom- mendation is to close the pool at Davidson permanently, to make Deal Street the city-wide pool and to move with plans to modify Davidson Park. In a related action, Council ap- proved the Recreation Commission's request to solicit funds and materials donations for the purpose of constructing a re- stroom facility for the walking track. The work will be done by all-volunteer labor. Council authorized Mayor Kyle Smith and City Managr Wood to apply for Title III funds for 1990- 91 for the KM Aging Program with the maximum city share of the funds being $4,995. The city is re- questing transportation funding of $28,661 and Senior Center opera- tions funding of $16,286. Council set April 24 at 7:30 p.m. or public hearing on a rezoning re- quest from Sue Ledford McCluney, who owns property near the West Gate Plaza, and accepted bid of $13,200 from Mount Zion Baptist Church for land adjacent to the church. Council selected the Public Works. facility grounds as the site for the new 5 million gallon water See Council, 3-A d=” nHLFow es, The nicler JACK HUGHES tery. Jack Hug - Retired poultry and cattle farmer Jack Hughes has earned the reputation as a busy, enthusiastic chronicler of family trees, family histories, and Grover School. When he retired 12 years ago from poultry and cat- te farming in the Dixon Community, he found he ‘could stay busy 24 hours a day compiling histories and matching names with the pictures of Grover School alumni dating back to the 20's. "History has always fascinated me even when I was a kid at Grover School but I took up this hobby purely by accident," said Jack, who said his son, Mark, got him started one day 12 years ago when he asked Jack to find him information about his Civil War great- grandfather for a history project in school. Jack made his first of many visits to the Cleveland County Historical Museum which resulted in more than 500 Wells ancestors to cemeteries all over the Carolinas, some as close by as the Wells cemetery near the Hughes home, the Antioch Baptist Church cemetery where Hughes is an active member, and the old Jeremiah Blalock cemetery at Kings Creek Station. His Wells ancestors are buried in the old Wells ceme- sheets of material tracing his Hughes, Dunlap, and His big le was organization of a reunion of ish service buddies who served aboard the USS Christopher DE 100 during World War II. Jack, in the U.S. Navy from 1942-45 , is so proud of that group that “he bought a personalized automobile tag for his truck with the lettering DE100. Jack recalled that the group's first reunion was in 1985 and it took months of work to locate the former crew members and officers for the reunion in Charlotte which saw 133 people in atten- dance; their first reunion in 45 years. Each year the re- union group has grown in attendance but last year's re- union, scheduled for Charleston, S.C., was canceled by Hurricane Hugo which forced the reunion crowd to give up their motel rooms to Hurricane victims. This year, however, the reunion is on again in Charleston on Oct. 21-22. Jack recalled that the USS Christopher DE 100 was commissioned in the Philadelphia Naval Yards on October 23, 1943. Thirty-five percent of the crew is deceased. Jack recalled that searching for ad- dresses of crew members was a job but no one was more pleased than he when he welcomed crew mem- bers and their families for the first reunion. Jack's interest in Grover School began as a student. A member of the Class of 1942, Jack started his photo had accumulated throug Ahm ” liopitse fron ‘The Herald and pictures he | ie years. His friends will re- call that he was one wee school bus drivers at Grover School (1937-41) and some days he didn't make it to class because two of the other school buses invariably broke down and Jack had to transport all the Dixon and Bethlehem students to elementary schools in the two communities and then take the other stu- dents to Grover. Clyde McDaniel and Warren Goforth drove the other two busses but the wintertime was hard on the old busses and they refused to start up many cold mornings. The busses had double seats and a strip “down the middle. "Now you boys sit on one side, you | girls sit on the other and you little ones sit in the mid- dle," Ms. Livingstone, the teacher, always instructed | the little ones who climbed on Jack's bus. "Sometimes 1 wouldn't make it to class'because I spent all the time driving the bus," recalled Jack who said he earned $9 a month, ; - His friends will io recall that Grover's unbeaten baseball champs of 1941 won the Cleveland County | championship with a perfect 13-0 record and is be- | See Hughes, 2 2-A