Page 4A Opinions THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD February 6, 1997 REFLECTIONS on Religion and Life Rev. Dick Newsome Pastor First Presbyterian Church God is not a genie The scene from a recent film is a familiar one. A man who has not used his time wisely finds him- self late for a departing flight. Pulling to a stop light near the airport, he can see the airplane at the terminal. The jets are running on high. The doors are closed. It is ready to leave. He contem- plates running the red light when a patrol car pulls to the intersection to his right. With little else to do and with desperation written on his face, he looks skyward and pleads, "Dear God, if you will hold the flight for me I will never misuse my time again." The scene is a familiar one because at some point or another, each of us has spoken similar words. With desperation on our faces, "Dear God, if. "If you will only help me with this test, I will never fail to prepare again." "If you will only move her to forgive me, I will never forsake her again." "If you will only give me this now, I will never ask again." The instinct is a natural one. But it remains a dangerous instinct as well. More and more, our society is coming to a view of God which is no doubt "imbalanced." And I use that term carefully because a "balanced" view of God is available for us in Scripture. On the one hand, we discover the image of a God who is near to us, present, inviting and providing. Our God certainly cares for us and wants us to be ful- filled. With that image, we seem to have no prob- lem. Alongside that image, however, is a different view, a contrasting view. Alongside the image of an everpresent God is that of an all-holy God, the God whose greatness and majesty are beyond our ability to comprehend. He is a God who is sovereign and universal. He does not wait quietly above us, hungry to fulfill our every instinctual command. Rather, He is the God continually at work in the world in order to fashion it by his de- sires. And for that we may be thankful. An apt analogy was offered by an Episcopal minister from Georgia recently upon seeing the Walt Disney film Alladin. What we want very of- ten, she claims, is a God who mirrors Alladin's blue genie, a God whose sole purpose it is to offer us wishes, to grant our deepest or most superfi- cial designs, an easy, comfortable, retiring God. We seek a God who will be present upon'com- mand but who will recede without objection into his quarters when we are finished. Ouch! But surely in her words are truth. Even in the midst of a consumer culture which insists that we can have it our way always, peo- ple of faith know differently. And what a blessing that is! Because only the God who is above us, be- yond us, more wise that we and whose concerns are greater than our own can truly save us. Only a God who is both Provider and Judge, Ruler of our lives and Ruler of all lives, can redeem. Only such a God can truly set us free. HERALD LETTER POLICY The Herald welcomes your letters to the editor for publication in each Thursday's paper. We ask that you use the following guidelines: Keep letters brief and to the point. Letters in ex- cess of 600 words will not be published. Type and . double space them, if possible; if not, write legi- bly. Letters must be signed in ink and include the full name, address and telephone number of the author. The Herald reserves the right to edit letters for spelling, good taste, libelous or slanderous state- ments or any other reason; and the Herald re- serves the right to reject letters for any reason. Published every Thursday. ¢ Periodicals postage at East King Street at Canterbury Road, NC 28086 USPS 931-040 by Republic Newspapers, Inc. Postmaster, send address changes to: P. O. 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Other NC Counties Outside NC $11.00 Cartoonitorial Salaries will be a top priority It is the time of the year when work begins in earnest on our local budget request to the Cleveland County Board of Commissioners. We are currently reviewing information submitted to us by the Board of Education, our schools, and our various departments to develop a proposal for the Board to review at its March meeting. In today's column I want to review with you what will be a major budget issue for us this year. For some time our board has been looking for a manageable way to improve the salaries of our classified employees. You hear a great deal about efforts to improve teacher salaries, and teachers are certainly deserving of those efforts. However, you seldom hear much about the salaries of our teacher assistants, custodians, office support per- sonnel, and food service workers. These people do a wonderful job for us, and their salaries are, to be honest, quite low. Our board of education is exploring ways to recognize years of service to the system through the classified salary schedule. One of the most of- ten heard salary concerns from these people is that their salaries do not progress reasonably as years of experienge itfthe systerrt are batlti Fhe orue Board and I think they have a legitimate concern. The work these people do has always been im- portant, however today's job demands are even more extensive than in previous times. As an ex- ample, we are asking our teacher assistants to be more involved in the actual instruction of our children. Our office personnel are required to be- come proficient in computers and the software which runs on them. Our custodians have a greater challenge as the size of our student body and campuses grow, and our food service person- nel now operate breakfast programs in addition to our lunch programs. Clearly, the classified em- ployees are faced with greater challenges than in the past. We are currently awaiting the results of a classi- fied employee salary study being conducted for the system by Causby/Boyd Associates. This study will review job descriptions to be certain that salary grade assignments are appropriate and will give us some direction for going about salary improvement for these employees. The re- sults are due back in the next several weeks. Regardless of the findings of the study, we al- ready know that some substantial resources will be needed to implement a salary schedule such as the Board prefers, one which allows a classified employee to move from the bottom of his or her BOB McRAE Superintendent Kings Mountain Schools pay grade when initial employment begins to the top of the grade if the employee stays with us for 25 to 30 years. If we were to implement the scales fully, we would have to identify resources from a variety of places. Certainly, one request for additional funds this year from the county commissioners could be for helping us realize this goal. Other potential sources of funding would involve a re- positioning of the current classified employee supplement funds, an increase in the supplemen- tal school tax (one penny would provide approx- imately 50%,0f the funding needed ta fully fund the scales) or an increase in lunch prices to cover the portion of the plan which involves school food service employees. Other sources may de- velop. While no one likes to think about paying extra in property taxes, there may be no way to place these employees on an experience based scale which covers the range of their salary grades which does not involve that possibility. As the Board discusses its interest in better pay for these deserving employees, I would ask each community member to keep an open mind about the possibilities. Remember two facts. (1) These employees have yearly salaries which do not cor- respond to their responsibilities, especially after several years of service; and (2) our board of edu- cation will not ask the Board of Commissioners for a raise in the supplemental tax unless, and perhaps not then, it has explored all other sources of revenue and come up short of the needed level of funding. It has always been very cautious with such a decision, and I'm certain it will continue to be so. We're fortunate to have the quality of classified employees that we do. It's past time to go about more fairly compensating them. We're not talking extravagance here - only improvement to a rea- sonable salary for important jobs. Sidewalk Survey Gary Stewart Editor It's show time Dancing comes naturally for sisters Brandy and Roxanne Brown of Kings Mountain, and they know they're good at it. But neither thought their self-taught art would carry them to the Apollo in New York City. But Saturday afternoon, Brandy, 16, and Roxanne, 15, will compete against dancers, singers and other talented youngsters from all over the country for an opportunity to appear on the nationally-televised program, "Showtime at the Apollo." The Kings Mountain High students began dancing about nine years ago in local school tal- ent shows. They have won contests locally and on the state level at such places as North Carolina A&T University, Fayetteville State University, and The Comedy Zone and Ovens Auditorium in Charlotte. But this will be their first time in the Big Apple. "We're excited," says Brandy. "It's like a dream come true. I always watch (Showtime at the Apollo) on T.V., and wished I could go there, but I never thought I'd be going." The Browns have Johnny McClain of Charlotte, a consultant with Top Hat Talent, to thank for the opportunity. He heard about the girls' talent from a mutual friend and got the approval of their mother, Tanya Brown, to make a demo tape and send it to The Apollo. “That was the first step, and Saturday's compe- tition will be the second stage, and if they're se- lected Saturday they will appear on Showtime at The Apollo," McClain said. "After that, who knows." Dancing comes easy for the sisters, who have had no formal training. Roxanne does take tap and jazz lessons from a local dance studio, but their competition routines together are what they term "hip-hop" dancing. Saturday, they'll do a routine from Luke (Scarred). "We dance all the time," says Brandy. "I can be at school and music comes on, and I'll be out there dancing." "We picked it up on our own," says Roxanne, whose father is former NFL football star Kevin Mack. Brandy's father is deceased. She hopes the sisters will someday be profes- sional dancers. ; Ry "The key is to keep practicing and stay fo- cused," she said. "If we win Saturday at the Apollo, that's a big step right there." The sisters will have just one opportunity Saturday, and McClain is confident they'll make the best of it. “I'm most confident that they are going to do well and then go on to higher things," he said. Even though their Kings Mountain friends won't be able to see them perform Saturday, those who are familiar with their talent from attending local talent shows may someday sce them....in the Big Time. BRANDY BROWN ROXANNE BROWN * By Lib Stewart Does KM need a new police station? DOUGLAS HOUSER Printer i MIKE BLALOCK “Yes. Because the old police station is worn out.” build a new one.” Shipping specialist “Look at the cost. If it costs more to refurbish, BILL SWINDELL Sales Representative “A new police department is needed and a good spot would be near the present city hall with all city services.” MARGARET RANSOM Customer Service “ For customer and employee convenience, the police department should be located at City Hall along with other city services.” TIM STEWART Welder “Yes. A more modern facility is needed for the Kings Mountain Police Department.”