Aouintaineers to begin Member North Carolina Press Association Zoning Board tables request A request for rezoning from light industrial to residential of- fice by Ruppe and Woody Associates was tabled by the Planning and Zoning Board Thursday for more informa- tion. Planning Director Steve Killian said that a building on the Ruppe/Woody property, a former karate school on East Gold Street, has been gutted and that board members had some reservations about how much of it could be salvaged. Killian said if the property is rezoned as requested by the owners that the uses would vary. If rezoned it would be the only R-0 spot surrounded by light industry and people living there would find them- selves in the middle of an in- dustrial district. Killian said that the current land development plan shows that section of Gold and York Road intersection to be a resi- dential area. In other action, the board rubberstamped the final subdi- vision plat presented by devel- oper Mike Brown showing his lots fronting East Ridge Street to be sized for a R-10 district of ‘10,000 square feet in line with what adjacent property owners are recommending. The plan- ning board said it would recon)- mend to City Council that ev- erything within 134 feet of East Ridge south be R-10 and prop- erty further south of Mike Brown's lots would be zoned General Business. COOLING OFF Marea Tippins and Tyler Short found the perfect way to cool off on a hot summer's day by purchasing Hawaiian Shaved Ice at North Piedmont Avensis Eng's Schoo! of Self Defense on 29-year-old (Grover resident hit by train, lives to tell it Jeff Houser, 29, of Grover, is a lucky young man. Thursday he was struck by a train at 1:15 p.m. at a Main Street crossing and lived to talk about it. "I blacked out while I was walking along the tracks and I woke up two days later in the Shelby Hospital," said the Bessemer City Parkdale Mill technician who lives about a mile from the tracks across from the Cameron Mill plant. Houser said he had worked a 12-hour shift, had no sleep and had left home after an argui- ment to cool off and bought a six-pack of beer at a nearby store. "I didn't even drink one of the beers and I sure wasn/t drunk, he said. Houser's hands are swathed in bandages, he lost one toe, the tips of his fingers were badly bruised and his legs were in- jured but he considers himself lucky. "The Good Lord or some guardian angel was watching over me," said Houser who said his children, Kayla Anne, 3, and Joshua Craig, 2, were afraid to look at him in the hospital bed. Houser's mother, Antioch Community resident Shirley Canoutas, said her son will probably be out of work four to six months in rehabilitation to learn to use his limbs again. Doctors expect to discharge Houser Monday from the hos- pital. Houser and his family ask for prayers. Council approves 7.76 The city's utility customers will see a water/sewer increase of 7.76 percent on the bills they receive this week from the City of Kings Mountain. For a typical inside residen- tial user of 9,000 gallons of wa- ter this means the bill will go up $2.02 each month. For an outside residential us-~ er of 9,000 gallons of water the increased cost would be $2.74 per month. ; Customers will notice on their bills a gas reclassification but no increase in charges for either natural gas or electricity. City Council Tuesday night adopted the 1996-97 budget which reflects the increased charges for water and sewer. Water/Sewer Supt. Walt Ollis asked Council to consider tack- ing on the 3.5 percent increase that was not passed on by the finance department last year. He said the increases are neces- sary due to higher costs from football practice t k PHBE 9808, AHH L | VoOAM HUE RE RAN EARS RARE ER JM MIVINGUW SUOMI ANY LNUWUALS § 001 IL MUWAW AJMTTYW Heb l-1a-01 L008 ‘Hicks beats board to punch, resigns as KM City Manager Interim City Manager Gary Hicks resigned at 5 p-m. Tuesday, 2 1/2 hours before a City Council divided on his leadership was ready to fire him. "I have enjoyed work- ing with city employees and I just hope Council will give the next man- ager a chance to man- age," said Hicks, who came to Kings Mountain August 1, 1995 after 2 1/2 years as interim manager in Lowell and before that 25 years with the City of Gastonia, of which 20 were as city manager. Hicks said he had been retired only nine months before Lowell Town Board called him as interim manager and subsequently he was hired through a week-to-week contract with T. S. S. Inc. as Kings Mountain interim manager. Hicks said he would probably take another job after a much- needed vacation. Hicks said his differences with the City Council escalated when he would not follow Council's direction in the personnel arena. "I have to make my own decision when it comes to hiring and firing," he said. | "They like to micromanage,” said Hicks who | would not elaborate on specifics, saying the city employees were not the problem. "We have a good staff," he said. Supporters of Hicks, including Councilmen Rick Murphrey and Dean Spears, said Hicks was doing'a good job. See Hicks, 3-A RECUPERATING - 29-year-old Jeff Houser of Grover is recu- perating in a Shelby hospital after being hit by a train. percent utility increase Gastonia for sewage treatment at Gastonia's Crowders Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant. Ollis said Gastonia has raised its rates to Kings Mountain 12.1 percent in the last two years. "This increase actually eats up the last two city increases we've made, including the 3 1/2 percent increase that was not passed on." Utilities Director Jimmy Maney suggested that the city ask the city's consultants from SVBK to return to the utilities committee and give an indepth report of the study they made recently on utility rates and the board concurred with the rec- ommendation. Ollis noted that the city re- ceived $800,00 less than budget- ed last year for water and sewer and if the city is hit with anoth- er plant closing that it will be in trouble. See Increase, 3-A ‘GARY HICKS istrative officer. good projects. der of the day: Maney, 42, succeeds Gary Hicks as Interim City Manager. Hicks re- signed Tuesday. Maney said after the meeting that he will fo- cus on establishing a communication line between Council, the city manager and citizens to keep all informed while promoting positive Maney unanimous choice as interim Jimmy Maney, the city's utilities superinten- dent for 16 years, was the Tr unanimous choice of the Kings Mountain City Council Tuesday night to be the city's chief admin- JIMMY MANEY "The city operates a $20 million dollar business and there are many positive things that become overshadowed by small negative things that are not necessarily a true representation of how the city is being run," he said. Maney said he will schedule his duties with the city so that he will be available in his Public Works office from about 7 a.m. until 9 a.m. daily and then in the city manager's office the remain- See Maney, 3-A Gene White calls for Murphrey Retired city planner Gene White called for Councilman Rick Murphrey to step down Tuesday, charging that the Spectrum vice president of sales is in conflict of interest in voting on utility charges that affect the industry. Later during the lengthy meeting, White was politely told by a Shelby lawyer that Cleveland Container, the low bidder for the city's proposed privatization of garbage collec- tion, would no longer remain silent about criticism they at- tributed to statements made in recent Council meetings. Don Edwards and Shelby at- torney Rob Deaton, represent- ing Cleveland Container, said the Shelby company had noth- ing to do with the way the bids were submitted nor the con- tracts and Deaton said "there is no evidence of unlawful in- ducements or illegal payments." Edwards said that contrary to what had been said in public meetings that the company was willing to offer employment to any qualified person displaced by the city sanitation depart- ment by privatization and that the company would provide backyard pickup to citizens un- able to place garbage on the curb. "Cleveland Container is a re- sponsible company and we have kept silent while criticism to resign as City Councilman was leveled," said Deaton. Deaton said the company has contracts with municipalities as far distant as Boone, Valdese, Hickory and Newton, among others. He said Cleveland Container responded to the city's request for privatization in a responsi- ble, professional manner and in a detailed written manner." White had asked that the city reconsider its decision to priva- tize but said he was not against privatization only the way in which the city bid the job. Directing questions to Murphrey, White said, "How could you possibly expect any citizen to believe that you were unaware that the 3 1/2 percent increase in water/sewer was not passed on to Spectrum and other customers.in the city last year?" White read from a pre- pared statement and passed out copies to the full Council. Murphrey did not respond to White during the open meeting but confronted him afterwards. But Spectrum Engineer Hubert Johnson defended Murphrey after the meeting and said the salesman would have had no knowledge, nor would he, that the rate increase had not been implemented by the city's finance department last July by looking at the bills. See White, 3-A Birthdays.........cueseesn. 3B Business News......9-10A Church News...............2B Classifieds.............. 6-7B Cooking Corner ..........5B Obituaries. .......cuesseeeesns 2A OpINIoN.....ocerenrenscnsnnnn 4A School News............7-8A SPOMS......ccconussessensensnns 6A Weddings.......cccseusenenns 1B Kings Mountain People Police News.................8B | Rev. Odas Shelton, the Chaplain of the Kings Mountain Rescue Squad, offers spiritual guidance and comfort not only to the Squad facing life-threatening situations but to their families. The pastor of Calvary Baptist Mission says he stays close by the telephone in event of emer- gencies. Recently the Squad was called to a home where an in- on duty immediately called the preacher to give comfort to the young bereaved parents. "They didn't want to let their fant had died and the Rescuer: baby leave the house and we of- fered prayer and comfort as much as we could to the griev- ing parents," said Shelton who considers love and concern his duty and his calling. Shelton also visits the sick and their families and has con- ducted one funeral for a Squad member and helped relocate the widow to relatives in another city. When Shelton isn't minister- ing to the Squad and to his small congregation he joins his wife of 50 years, Ruth Hord Shelton, her sister Eunice Ledford, Annie Mae Daves, Thelma Dellinger and his broth- er, Doyle Shelton, on visits to area nursing homes and leads brief worship and song ser- vices. "Just about every day of the week we are singing and read- ing scripture at a rest home or nursing home," said Shelton, who never preaches long ser- mons. The residents at Autumn Years, Cherry Oaks, Carolina Care and Kings Mountain Care tell him they enjoy the gospel music and preaching. A retired textile worker, Shelton, 72, was reared on a to- bacco and vegetable farm in the Rev. Shelton always on call for Resuce Squad mountains and came to Kings Mountain as a teenager to babysit his sister's children. He was one of 10 children and one of five sons of Martha Baldwin and Jeeter Farida Shelton drafted in Uncle Sam's Army during World War II Shelton went overseas in the Eastern Theatre of Operations to France and Germany in 1944 and on D Day he said he was in the second wave going into France and helped close up the Battle of the Bulge. A Section Sergeant in the mortar division, “See Shelton, 3-A REV. ODAS SHELTON