- IDAVIS i ] ’ [From Page 1-A ; f ! shop training of the . teachers. She also developed a | semester compensatory education ' curriculum for the reading and © writing disciplines. As a result of # this organized teaching format, the i Holbrook 9th grade demonstrated I © gains in reading and writing. . Presently, the materials are being - compiled into a booklet to be used as a guide for other teachers in Gaston County and North Carolina. One student whose assessment of Davis was read during a banquet called Davis "the Mother Theresa of Holbrook Junior High." Her "ready smile and warm" heart in the classroom have been winning over her English students 18 years. One of her problem-solving tech- | niques in her classroom has been to . develop individual newspapers and 1 the class is turned into a real live | newsroom. Peer tutoring has also been popular with her AG students who prepare lesson plans, practice, and then teach the lesson. Davis has presented the peer teaching program to 15 Gaston County ~ schools. First Union National Bank's Spurgeon Mackie said of Davis," In her classroom she tries to pro- i. vide students with the opportunity . to learn." Holbrook principal Anna Cooke also praised the teacher for her leadership skills and said that ¢ the award could not come to a | more deserving person. © The bank presents the | Outstanding Educator award each | year to honor former bank presi- . dent Ben E. Craig. Davis also re- sw. ceived a $1,000 professional devel- “opment grant she plans to use for I doctoral studies and a crystal ap- + ple. Each of the 55 nominees re- i ceived bronze bells. Davis was * among 10 finalists for the top award. Gaston County Schools gave 5 Davis a special award last year for + her reading and writing programs. : She was named Gaston County Academically Gifted Teacher of {u+ the Year in 1986 and 1987. She is \ also sponsor of the school's Junior ! Optimist Club and Odyssey of the | Mind, second place state team. & Davis inherited her love of 1 teaching from_her parents, Mr. and PY Mrs. 0. W. Smith of Saluda, SC, i: both retired teachers, and her aunt 4 Fannie Edwards. Living across the .{ street from the front entrance of the I'4 school, Davis could hardly wait to {1 enroll. She liked to play school for * hours on end and often as a young- © ster helped her aunt in the class- room, washing the blackboard, WEST From Page 1-A ‘guidance will go in the existing building, newly named the Activity Building. | "It has a lot of appeal,” said + Toney. "The folks have said . . . the jcommunity has been interested in \that building. That's good. "It looks good from the outside and is functional from the inside," Toney said. NORTH | ‘From Page 6-A | “Walker, Niles Ferguson, Nichole Baisden, Wendy Limbaugh, i Kristan Tallent, Jessica Hall, | ' Kenny Houston, Jennifer Patterson, | {Drew Thomas, Heather Tate, Chad McSwain, Phillip Bolen, Alan | | Wray, Matthew Patterson, Kristy [1 McSwain. | 0 Matthew Ferguson, Amanda I" Maples, Elise Mayse, Alison | Smith, Dee Chapman, Shawn Vi Ezzell, April Glover, Marty Goforth, Ben Howell, Toni Loftin, | Steven Tesenair. Pizza Inn Contest Winners - Lisa Bishop, first place; Niles Ferguson, second place; Kristen Tallent, third | place; Charlotte Fulton, fourth | place. |i. First Place Poster Contest Winner - Ben Sabetti. |# ‘Bus Citizenship, #328 - | Courtney Sopkowiak, Jolvonna | ‘Holman. : | = Bus Citizenship, #356 - Chatney | Jeffries, Kenya Sloan. | Perfect Attendance - Daviena | Baisden, William L. Barron, | Steven Baxter, Carrie Brinkley, Kristie Brinkley, Ben Bumgardner, { Tyler Chapman, Tyler Deaton, | Cimena Elliott, Toshia Floyd, | Nicole Hagner, Alice Ann Howard, Michael Hunt, Chanita Jackson, Dustin James, Duane Lawson, Travis Loftin, holly Oliver, Liana Owens, Robin Perkins, Brandon Pressley, Trent Redmond, Darren Surratt, Steven Tesenair, Sadie Wilson, April Wright. ¥ = = ei == Sa: recently at Gaston Country Club bringing in water, scrubbing the desk, passing out books, and sweeping the floor. It was toward the end of the Great Depression that she began her life-long adven- ture with education. Teachers also influenced her to teach. They taught her facts and figures. They taught that it is what a person has on the inside that counts. They would say, "Harriet, you can be different and still be happy and - successful." Davis found learning fun and ex- citing. "All it takes to make a per- son special is a special view," she said. In 1960 she married Baptist min- ister Robert G. Davis who was as- sociated with Kings Mountain Baptist Association for a number of years and was also pastor of Lowell First Baptist Church. They moved to Kings Mountain five years ago from Shelby. Harriet said the three boys graduated from three different schools in the coun- ty. Gray Davis, now of Winston- Salem and married with one daughter, finished at Crest High; Ashley graduated from Shelby High and in 1992 from UNC at Charlotte and is an editor for Channel 36 News; and Benji, a 1992 graduate of Kings Mountain High, plans to attend Gaston College this fall. Harriet taught eight years of out- of-state before moving to North Carolina. The family lived in Kentucky, Indiana, and West Virginia. She and her husband, a native of Mississippi, met at Southern Seminary in Louisville, KY, where he was.a ministerial stu- dent. "I really see teaching as my mis- sion in life and I feel I can do more good in the public schools, truly a place to help humanity is to help kids," says Harriet. Now that school is out, Harriet plans to do some traveling with her husband to Mississippi and Saluda to visit their parents and other rela- tives. Along the way they plan to visit antique shops to add stock to Harriet's new shop, Victorian Lace, which opened last spring at Rutherfordton Mall. Browsing at flea markets and an- tique stores is a hobby the Davises started during the early years of their marriage. "It helps you un- wind from the classroom or even from the pulpit,” says Mrs. Davis. If they make purchases, the Davises use them or give them away as gifts to friends at First Baptist Church. A recent "find" was a novelty item made with cot- ton from the ficlds in Saluda. Northern visitors to the mountains of Western North Carolina who had never scen cotton were quick to carry the $2 memento home with them for a souvenir. Bl The USDA Soil Conservation Service reminds farmers facing conservation compliance deadlines that the Conservation Reserve Program could be their ticket to Staying in compliance, saving soil, and making a profit. The 12th CRP sign-up continues until June 26 at local ASCS of- fices. 739-2150 Bessemer City Kings Mountain Drive-In Friday, Sat. & Sun. 3.95 car load #1 - 9:00 Lethal Weapon 3 Rated R #2 - 11:15 Alien 3 raedr Thursday, June 18, 1992-THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD-Page 13A Get Ready For Summer... LJ og Prrvens B “The Nation's Most Dynamic Weight Loss Program® Dynamatrix MEDICAL WEIGHT LOSS CLINIC Subscribe to the Herald 15 Passenger We Rent New vans! COME ON BY AND ENJOY THE FUN, FRIAS, JUNE 9TH ©” / __— ee | i $4 : i pa Friday, June 19th Guu em R= or Of i 5:30 PMantil 8PM "Sve oné Doo ol gov? FM Se ol Mirror