= 94 Call 611 For Phone Repairs Celebrity Basketball Game Monday Member Of The North Carolina Press Association VOL. 102 NO. 14 3 = HRC Sub-Station Hearing Set For April 12 City Council will conduct a public hearing Thursday, April 12, at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall on the city's plans to build a new 15,000 volt electrical sub- station near Davidson Park on Sims and Parker Street. The electric sub-station is part of a $9 million im- provements package voted by Kings Mountain citizens for utility improvements. It will be 45 feet high with 80 to 100 feet powerlines and bordsred by a 10-foot fence on a two-acre site. is Clty Council i is negotiating with Kings Mountain Board of Education for the property. &) ii Although the public hearing is not a legal require- ment, members of the city utilities committee, which has approved the site on recommendation of Heath and Associates, electrical consulting engineers, wants the public to have input on the site and have their ques- tions answered concerning noise and safety. The Heath engineers, who met with the Utilities committee at a recent meeting, will also be available to answer ques- tions by the public. Only one other item is on the agenda for next Thursday's meeting, rescheduled so that three mem- bers of Council could attend a N. C. League of Municipalities meeting in Asheville. Council is ex- pected to act on the sale of city property on North Watterson Street to Mount Zion Baptist Church. Fund Drive Begins For Wreck Victim Friends of Shane Lowery, 23, who was critically in- jured in an automobile accident March 23, are spon- soring a Coffee Break this weekend at 201 York Road for benefit of he Lowery family. - Lowery lost control of his ar when he swerved to avoid hit- ting a dog on U.S. 74 West near Dennis No. 3 Food Mart on riday, March 23. The car flipped . over several times and Lowery was pinned in the wreckage. His wife, Janice, and their two chil- + dren, Kevin, 7 months, and Daniel, 3, suffered bruises. The LOWERY baby remained in the hospital a day for observation. Lowery remains in the Intensive Care Unit at Charlotte Memorial Hospital. See Fund Drive, 2-A Grover Mine Up For Sale 2» Former Teachers To Return For Central Celebration SA ~ TA oN 8 GETTING READY TO GLIDE-Dr. Bob Baker, retired Kings Mountain dentist, gets ready to glide on Moss Lake. At 73, Baker wind surfs and skis at the lake and this weekend will snow ski in Colorado. His boat crew is his wife, Mary Louise Baker, wench operator, and nephew, Phil Baker, driver. Dentist, 73, Wind Surfer Baker Still Flying High Wind surfing on Moss Lake, hang gliding, and snow skiing are not sports limited to the very young. Ask Dr. Bob Baker, retired dentist, who at 73 is un- like many of his contemporaries who may opt the less dangerous activities as senior citizens. While his former classmates at Central School are "Celebrating Central” on April 7, Bob and his wife, Mary Louise, will be in Steamboat, Colorado for a week of skiing. Bob is praying for snow. At least once a month Bob and his wife and nephew, Phil Baker, hitch boat and equipment on "Old Blue," his 1973 Le Sabre, to Moss Lake and Bob wind surfs. "It's less dangerous to stay over the water," says Baker, explaining that his nephew operates the boat and Mary Louise uses an electric wench to let out 2,000 feet of rope. Water skiing is fun but hang gliding on Grandfather Mountain is the ultimate experience for Baker who used a hang glide for the first time in 1974 and before that for ten years flew a flat kite with the Charlotte Water Ski Shows. He purchased a new hang glider in 1981 and at the age of 69 started wind surf- ing. He will celebrate his 74th birthday in May. Bob Baker graduated from Central ( Kings Mountain High School) in 1933 at age 16, two days before his 17th birthday.. The fire is a vivid memory for Bob because it occurred a little over two months before high school graduation. "The heat was so in- tense. It looked like half the student body got up that night and came to the school and watched the building burn,” said Baker, who lived on North Piedmont Avenue in the Baker homeplace, across the street from the Dr. P. G. Padgett residence. Bob rode his bicycle to school and parked it in the D. C. Mauney garage across the street from the high school. "The fire was so intense but the kids whooped it up and cheered. We even sang the Alma Mater as the building burned,” he recalled. Baker said the auditorium did not burn and his class went back into the auditorium for graduation. For the remainder of that school year, however, the se- niors went to school for a half a day each day at East School. Baker recalled that his parents, the late Dr. and Mrs, L. P. Baker, had donated French bass homs for the band and all the instruments melted. All school records were lost in the fire. "All our class graduated. I think the teachers got together and remembered our grades, etc.," he said. See Baker, 10-A will have a memory book for ormer pupils to sign. gONTHA =S 00} REANAVR aN NIK NowadaId JOWEAR 98087 gAY LT qgvuain vi ~ Central alumni from the 1930s through the 1960s will be featured in the multi-media slide presenta- “tion, at 7. p.m. Auditorium. "The first thing we want to stress to the public is this program is free. We think will be great entertainment for the man Steve Baker. "Mama Central has helped give birth to a lot of memories over the years and this is a way that we'll share with those See Central, 3-A Did Mayor Over-Step Authority? GROVER-A dispute over the mayor's authority spilled over into Monday night's town board meeting. Does the mayor have authority to postpone a town board meeting? New commissioner Norman King thinks not, he reiterated Monday night at the meeting which McCarter rescheduled in a memo to commis- sioners after King "called to my attention that the Mayor doesn't have the authority to postpone a meet- ing." McCarter said he wanted to attend a revival meeting at First Baptist Church, which King also attends, and ‘Mayor Pro Tem Ronald Queen was 10 be ont-of-tows. He notified commissioners by mail that the April 2 meeting was put off until April 9. King called him and questioned his authority in postponing a meeting be- fore taking a vote of commissioners. King, who has been on the Grover board for four months, said he wasn't "throwing rocks at anybody" but that he has received no challenge as a new com- missioner and he feels the mayor and all commission- ers should get the community involved in decision making. "The citizens aren't getting their money's worth for what they pay us. When you appoint a com- mittee you appoint only one person," he told the may- or. King said he wanted his comments questioning the mayor's authority in the board minutes. After heated discussion between McCarter and King, the mayor called King out of order. In actions: +Approved architect's fee of $4,000. for the town Hall construction project and agreed to pay invoices on receipt in first phase of construction and to autho- rize drawings for plumbing, heating and electrical in- stallations in the amount of $1500. The project is ex- pected to cost $54,000 plus architect fees. +Tabled the Brice Harry Memorial Park improve: ments until board members can take a look at the Parl: where additional dirt, reseeding, fertilizing, and instal- lation of backstops, base-line fencing and water and sewer will be needed before the baseball season be- gins. McCarter said cost of the project could amount to more than $30,000 and there isn't much interest by young people in fielding teams. Numerous Little League teams used to play ball at the park but McCarter says those ball players have grown up and the interest has waned. +Approved a sewer tap at $50 and water meter at’ $25 for Bethany Baptist Church, same rate that applied when the sewer system was under construction. Now, the rates have increased considerably. See Grover, 10-A Don Parker Couldn't Leave Central in Central whole family," said program chair- The J. M. Huber Corporation will offer its North Carolina mica mining and production operations * for sale this spring. It includes a new, dry-ground production facility and mines near Grover and a wet- ground facility at Spruce Pine. The Grover plant employs 14 people and the Spruce Pine plant employs 11. According to Jacob J. Ferro, President of Huber's Clay Division in Macon, Ga., "Phasing out of the mica business will allow Huber to focus on opportunities created by our new line of proprietary struc- tured pigments and kaolin clay products. We are pleased with the quality of our new mica products, but we want to use our resources to take advantage of opportunities in our core kaolin clay business." Ferro said the divestiture process will begin April 1 and is expected to be completed by Dec. 31, 1990. The J. M. Huber Corporation's Clay Division is headquartered near Macon, Ga. and is one of the world's leading suppliers of kaolin clays and structured pigments for the paper, rubber, plastics, ceramic, paints, adhesives, and agricultural industries. Kaolin mines and bene- ficiating plants are located in Georgia and South Carolina. "We will continue our normal operations at the local plant until the sale is consummated,” said Carl Kollmar, manager of the Grover plant. DON PARKER KM Never Repaid This Loan By GARY STEWART Editor of the Herald When Don Parker first came to Kings Mountain High School in the spring of 1943, he was on loan from the Henderson County School System. Kings Mountain had lost its coach, Pepper Martin, to Furman University and Supt. B.N. Barnes of Kings Mountain visited Supt. Anders in Hendersonville to see if he had a coach KM could "borrow" for the rest of the term. Anders said he had a young man named Don Parker who was coach- ing at Fletcher High School, but Kings Mountain could only "bor- row" him for the rest of the school year. He had to have him back. "I was impressed with Kings Mountain and the people here," Parker recalls, "and when the spring term was over Mr. Barnes asked me if I'd stay. I told him I would on one condition...that he tell Mr. Anders." So, Parker stayed, as coach of all sports including girls basketball, and as a teacher of several subjects. After the World War II years the school system began to gradually add coaches. In 1948 Shu Carlton came as football coach and in 1951 Fred Withers came to coach base- ball. Parker concentrated on being head boys basketball coach, golf coach and an assistant in football. He coached through the 1966-67 school year and then served as Assistant Superintendent in charge of the Special Education programs until he retired in 1975. He had a career record of 247-139 in boys basketball and coached one Western N.C. High Schools Activities Association champi- onship golf team. Coaching all sports wasn't easy, he recalls. But he enjoyed it. He'd leave home every morning at 7:30 and usually not get back until 7:30 or later at night. On game nights, it was much later than that, often af- ter midnight, See Parker, 3-A 'N, N.C. 28086 i