BETHWARE GRADUATES OF 1943 - Pictured are the members of the Bethware High School gradu- ‘ating class 52 years ago. Front row, from left, Mascots Becky Morris and Jack Barrett; second row, ‘Principal! O. W. Morris, Ruth Hicks, Jean Philbeck, Kathleen McMurry, Reba Wylie, Ruby Dover, Carrie Yarbro and Melissa Moss, teacher; third row, Preston Harmon, Cathrine Harmon, Gene Hoyle, Hazel “Harmon, Joe Hawkins, Lillian Wylie, Homer Pheagin, Ruth Ware and Hoyle Putnam. Back row, tLindburg Dixon, Dewitt Randall, Gene Ware and Cameron Ware. CONSORTIUM From Page 1-A sentatives of the investment firm echoed his enthusiasm. "Now it's up to you all to market the facility and fill it with area peo- ple." said Matthews to the 20 local people present at City Hall. Matthews said that most of the Summit Place residents come from a 10 mile radius of the city the re- tirement complex is located. "This is not a field of dreams and will take tremendous market- ing on your part but we will do the rest,” said Matthews, Former Senator Ollie Harris, honorary chairperson of the Consortium for Progress which was organized last March by for- mer Mayor John Henry Moss and other Kings Mountain business leaders, made the motion to accept the proposal by the developers. Moss said the Consortium wholeheartedly endorses the con- cept by Pulliam of Spartanburg and Aaron Enterprises of Hendersonville and the Consortium leaders would make no specific recommendation on choice of site. The site selection will be left up to the developers who will be looking at three sites in the area for easy access to major utilities, infrastruc- ture and roads. The entire facility will be fur- nished in a decor that is non-insti- tutionalized, a cluster concept to get away from the look of hospitals and nursing homes. Wall-to wall carpeting, fully furnished rooms al- though residents may use their own furnishings, three connected one story buildings of wood frame on slab with brick veneer and/ or vinyl siding with pitched fiberglass shin- gle roofs. Upon entering the site, guests will proceed under the porte- cochere to a porch that leads to the administrative building. This build- ing will also include a large living room with fireplace, main dining room, smaller private dining room, kitchen, conference room, barber and beauty shop, administrator and director of nursing offices, multi purpose activity and meeting rooms, and business offices. Moss said the Consortium has several other major projects in the developmental stage, including ac- quisition of property for an Air Park for primary use by corporate planes and for shipment of freight. Kelly Bunch, chairman, said that least one of the two regulatory agents involved in the project has given tentative approval. INTERVIEW From Page 1-A "This intervention was disrup- tive and damaging, diminishing public confidence in professional local government management and in the Kings Mountain local gov- ernment and by this conduct Mr. Wood violated Tenet 3 of the IC- MA Code of Ethics," according to Grover. Grover said the Board accepted the findings and the recommenda- tions of the committee and by its public censure expressed its strong disapproval of such conduct. Grover says that less than 6-8 city or county managers are cen- sored publicly each year in its large membership and said that some are privately censored. Tenet 1 requires members to "af- firm the dignity and worth of the services rendered by government and maintain a constructive, cre- ative and practical attitude toward 16cal government affairs and a deep sense of social responsibility as a trusted public servant." The guideline for Tenet 2 ex- plains that "When members advise and respond to inquiries from elected or appointed officials of other local governments, they should inform the administrators of those communities" "This tenet which requires mem- bers to inform administrators when they advise and respond is really one of professional courtesy," said Grover. J Grover said the board does not look at political issues in a commu- nity nor determine budget issues, which Wood addressed last sum- mer in a letter to the full City Council. "It's not a matter of who is right or wrong about the city budget," she said. Grover said the board made its determination based on lengthy documentation. Both the mayor and Councilwoman Norma Bridges said they appreciated Wood's input to the budget. "Because of that letter we finally got a decent budget from the finan- cial director/city manager," said Neisler. "I hate that Mr. Wood was put in this position but I feel like he was entitled to speak out as a taxpayer," said Bridges. According to minutes of the mayor's financial ad hoc committee chaired by Joe Smith on June 17, 1994, Parsons presented the com- mittee with a revised proposed budget and financial condition for June 30, 1994, dated June 17, 1994. She stated that she was not required by law to furnish any oth- er information other than the pro- posed budget. The committee asked about the changes made in the current year information and information that Wood was fur- nished by the city. Smith said he acquired copies of the "green bar" sheets Wood used and they were dated June 6, eight days prior to the city council meet- ing and nine days prior to the fig- ures furnished to the committee on June 17. Smith said in the minutes the in- formation placed for public view was incorrect and that the revised budget after Wood's recommenda- tions closely matched those figures furnished by Wood in his letter to Council. Smith's minutes said the differ- ence in the way the two adminis- trators prepared budgets revealed that Wood used figures for the cur- rent year along with information from past years to arrive at his esti- mates. Parsons used financial his- tory and not current year informa- tion to project what she called an "austere" budget. Smith suggested at that meeting that the Local Government Commission be called in to look over the two budgets and deter- mine which was correct. The com- mittee voted down the recommen- dation and months later the Parsons budget was approved by the LGC but the LGC turned down a budget proposal by the mayor. The ICMA informed the mayor and former City Manager Chuck Nance of the sanctions and a press release was sent to the news media in the area. All City Council members had copies of the ICMA letter this week. Wood was featured in a news story in a Tennessee newspaper af- ter his first year in his new job, quoting Cleveland, Tennessee offi- cials who praised their new city manager for saving the city over $1 million during his first year of of- fice. Parsons said Mr. Wood request- ed no financial information directly from her as city manager but she said the information was faxed by other people. "It got to the place I could not manage the city because I had to second guess George Wood. "He was running the city from Cleveland, Tennessee." REUNION OF CLASS OF '43 - Of the 20 members of the Class of '43 of Bethware High School, 18 are still living and nine, along with their spouses, gathered for a class reunion September 29 at Town and Country Restaurant in Kings Mountain, Front row, from left, Ruth Hicks Christopher, Kathleen McMurry White, Hazel Harmon Hardin and Ruth Ware King; back row, Cameron Ware, Hoyle Putnam, Ruby Dover Jenkins, Carrie Yarbro Patterson and Homer Pheagin. 5 ww Ey Sax date re LEADERSHIP CHANGES AT HOSPITAL - The Kings Mountain Hospital Board of Trustees, above, held its last meeting recently as as board as members finalized a new agreement with the new governing body, Charlotte Mecklenburg Hospital Authority which is expected under the lease agreement with the county to name some local citizens to an advisory committee. Seated, from left, Ernest: Rome, chairman J. C. Bridges and Bob Suber. Standing, Bill Davis, left, and David Neisler. || vn nslor? of T" bng "aq! | Grover PD receives $75,000 Cops Fast grants By: Gail Wilson Grover Mayor Ronald L. Queen was beaming as he proudly displayed the COPS FAST AWARD from the US Department of Justice, dated Oc- tober 10. The $75,000 grant will pro- vide seed money for a top notch Grover Law Enforcement program explained Queen. A roadmap clearly shows Grover is the Interstate 85 “Crime Gateway” into Cleveland County and North Carolina. Therefore, the Grover Police Department is the first line of “crime” defense for both Cleveland County and the state. The US Depart- ment of Justice may have been look- ing at a roadmap when they awarded Grover the COPS FAST AWARD. Mayor Queen explained that four- teen months ago Grover applied to the Justice Department for only $35,000. US Attorney Mark Calloway in Charlotte called with the news that the grant was approved. Subsequent discussion of what Grover needed was forwarded to Washington, DC. When the discus- sion was completed Grover was awarded $75,000, over twice what was originally asked for. Mayor Queen and the Grover Town Council will begin planning the “implementation” of their new Law Enforcement Program at the next town meeting, November 6. Numbers change slightly in KM vote canvass The numbers were changed in last Thursday's official city elec- tion canvass but they didn't affect the one winner --Councilman Phil Hager--and the three runoffs. The canvass resulted in tie votes between incumbent Councilman Jim Guyton and challenger Jerry Mullinax. Jim Childers, who faces incum- bent Scott Neisler in the runoff for mayor, picked up three more votes and wound up with 530 to Neislers' 629. Neisler picked up two votes. Incumbent At-Large Commissioner Norma Bridges picked up three votes and she leads challenger Wendell Bunch 688 to 606. Bunch picked up two more votes. Ward I Councilman Hager picked up one vote which made his total 153 to Joe King's 101. King picked up one more vote. Mullinax picked up one vote to take his total to 97 and a tie with incumbent Guyton in Ward 2. In West Kings Mountain precinct at The Armory 29 ballots were counted and unread because the voter marked a write-in space without a name. In East Kings Mountain at the Community Center 56 ballots were unread because they were improp- erly marked. Elections Chairman Becky Cook said that East Judge Joyce Dye in- structed every voter who entered the precinct how to mark the bal- lots correctly with the felt pen to make that ballot count. But Cook said the process was slowed at both precincts because KM band students learn about drum A lecture and percussion clinic that covered the development of the drum from Colonial times through three wars and into the silent movie era of the Roaring 20's featured a program by William F. Ludwig Jr., consultant for Ludwig Industries Tuesday at Kings Mountain High School. Band students viewed Civil War cagle drums and sound effects from Ludwig's private collection, including such contraptions as a rarc stcam locomotive imitation, sure-fire blank shot holder, steam- boat imitations, locomotive imita- tions, a cuckoo machine and other rare and unusuai animal calls. In addition, turn of the century drum pedals that precluded the first Ludwig pedal of 1910 were also explained and demonstrated by Ludwig. Over 80 slides were used to il- lustrate the drum in the develop- ment of our nation, from the first shots at Lexington through modern times. Ludwig said the Southern drum- mer dress and the dress uniform of the Confederate soldier and in- fantrymen was the forerunner of present bands and their dress codes. He said camp drummers were as young as eight and that practicing the scales were most im- portant to any drummer. Band Director Chris Cole ar- ranged for the speaker. i BE a Photo by Lib Stewart William F. Ludwig plays the drum for Kings Mountain High School band students during an informa- tive lecture Monday. He holds a 133-year-old Civil War drum. workers gave out the new registra-| tion cards as they had been in- structed. ; Cook said she sees a real prob-: lem with voter cheating with a reg- istration card. "The voter can enter the polling place with a registration card with) an address on it and how would the) election official know that the vot-~ er had moved unless the election, official knows the voter personal-: ly." “ Cook said that voters won't have. to carry the card with them in order to vote but that the card has on it very valuable information 2 : Utilities Committee to meet on Monday: The city utilities committee will consider bids from engineering firms for a rate study at Monday: night's 6 p.m. meeting at City Hall. ; Also on the agenda is a report: from Utilities Director Jimmy: Maney on recommendations for! the purchase of gas at firm capaci-| ty. City Manag. r Gary Hicks is al-; so expected to report on the city's plans to get tough on utility cus- : tomers who fail to make utility : payments by the cut-off date. | Numerous customers were cut off | this week for non-payment of utili- ties and city officials say this is ! standard procedure. Fall festival slated at East Elementary £ast Elementary School will i ¥ ¥ ¥ have its annual fall festival: Saturday, October 28 from 5:30-8 : p.m. There will be a haunted house, games, a silent auction, and other activities. A hot dog supper will be held from 4:30-6:30 p.m. The cost is $2.50 per plate. ? # { # Fata aterm SWE ERS