Thursday, June 9, 2005 Medical facility planned by Harris BY ANDIE L. BRYMER Staff Writer Kings Mountain may be getting a new medical facili- ty. ; John O. Harris Interest is partnering with Charlotte- based developer Kirco and OrthoCarolina to build a : 30,000- square- foot com- plex. The two-story, brick and glass building would be located where the Kings Mountain Country Club’s tennis courts now sit. A site plan should be available in the next 10 days for the $4.5 to $5 million project. A purchase agreement has been executed with the country club, Harris said. He describes the pro- posed building as “Class A.” It will sit on approxi- mately 2.25 acres. There will be 150 parking spots and extensive landscaping. “AT want to be a good neighbor,” Harris said. OrthoCarolina will occu- py 10,000 to 15,000-square- feet. Harris said Kings Mountain Hospital's new operating rooms were attractive to the orthopedic group. OrthoCarolina was formed when Miller Orthopedic and Charlotte Orthopedic merged. So far Cleveland County Commissioners and the Kings Mountain Council members he has talked to about the project have been ‘supportive, Harris said. As part of the project, the country club will get an upgrade to its parking lot. Harris also is developing a 4,200-square-feet medical facility in Bessemer City which Cleveland HealthCare System will operate. Book on KM history planned A committee associated with the Kings Mountain Historical Museum Foundation last week signed contracts to publish a history of the City of Kings Mountain and com- mission Dave Baity to write it. “We want to be a good neighbor.” John Harris The history was launched through a seed .grant from Laura Mauney ‘Houser, a member of one of tthe founding families of the city. Previously, a brief histo- 1y of the community was ‘compiled by Charles and ‘Mary Mauney for the Kings ‘Mountain Historical Museum Foundation as part of the city’s 1974 cen- tennial celebration. The work drew heavily on “Kings Mountain: Her Background and Beginning,” written by the late Bonnie Mauney Summers, daughter of Kings Mountain pioneers William A. and Candace See Book, 5A Vol. 117 No. 22 MOUNTAIN EE 3 : KCAR-F - MAUNEY Ln2d-07 0002400 a NOUNEY MEMORIAL {'FREARG Kings PIEDMONT aye \ < MOUNTAIN NC 28p8¢ DeWitt named KMHS women’s basketball coach SE 50 Cents BY ANDIE L. BRYMER Staff Writer School ended for most area stu- dents May 20 but for others summer means back to class. - Kings Mountain Intermediate, Middle and High schools are offer- ing summer academies for grades three through 12. At KMIS and KMMS, classes started last Tuesday and run through Friday. Another session begins Monday and last 10 days. While students at KMIS’s Summer Academy have breaks and are given a brief chance to play after lunch, Principal Roxanne Bridges describes the classes which run from 8:30 a.m. * to 1 p.m. as “intense.” Throughout the regular school year Bridges is an assistant principal at KMIS but she is serving as Summer Academy principal. KMIS Summer Academy serves Kings Mountain and Grover area third through sixth graders who either didn’t pass end-of-grade test- ing or make a passing report card grade. Reading and math classes are BY ANDIE L. BRYMER Staff Writer man found himself without a job. door. ter for us,” Wilson said. When Ronnie Wilson's employer Wirtz Manufacturing closed, the Kings Mountain While the situation could be frightening, Wilson believes God used it to open a new “Sometimes God wants us to step out of our comfort zones. He's got something bet- That something better was a job as facili- ties manager at the Charlotte distribution center for Samaritan’s Purse. The Christian relief organization is best known for Operation Christmas Child which sends shoe boxes filled with gifts to poor children around the world. Churches and individu- Kings Mountain High's women’s softball team completed a 31-1 season Sunday with a 4-1 win over West Rowan at Walnut Creek Park in Raleigh. Front row, and Lauren Gaffney. Second row, Morgan Childers, Heather Hale, Casey Camp, Amber Milwood and Laura Weigel. Back row, assistant coach Don Sweezy, Courtney Tate, Haley Barrett, Kristin Cogdill, Kristyn Funderburke, Jessica Yarbro, LaRonda McClain, Kala Buchanan and head coach Suzanne Grayson. Back to Class Summer School helps students make next grade offered. Approximately 60 students are attending the first session. Smaller numbers are signed up for the next session. EOG tests are given at the end of the sessions. This is the students’ third and final shot at passing. During the regular school year these students had a week's worth of - remediation before attempting the first retest. The state requires students typi- cally pass the EOG before advancing to the next grade. Cleveland County Schools also require students pass the classroom grade or have satisfac- tory summer academy performance before advancing. Generally behavior is good, teach- ers say. They credit small class size. It’s keeping kids motivated that poses the biggest challenge. Sarah Jones is teaching seven stu- dents third grade math this summer. She uses play money, calculators, chips and games in addition to enrichment activities to keep stu- dents’ attention engaged. See School, 5A by winning the State 3A championship left to right, Brittney Thornburg, Andi Mullis 4A State Champions! Lady Mountaineers win three straight in Raleigh to claim first NCHSAA 3-A title By GARY STEWART Editor of The Herald Years of hard work paid off for Kings Mountain High’s women's softball team, which rolled into Raleigh’s Walnut Creek Park last weekend and swept its first State 3A championship with an almost-perfect performance. Sparked by ace pitcher Morgan Childers’ perfect game in a 1-0 opening win over two-time State Champion West Rowan, the Lady Mountaineers won three straight games to fin- ish their season with a 31-1 overall record and a two- year mark of 55-4. Even though there wasn’t a senior on the team, Kings Mountain fielded one of the most experienced teams in the tournament as most of its players have played together in AAU, middle school and high school for several years. Childers, who was voted the State tournament’s most valuable player, completed her season with a 22-0 See Champs, 3A Gilmore new assistant at intermediate school BY ANDIE L. BRYMER Staff Writer Students won't be the only ones in a new environment when school starts back. Summer is the time when administra- tors shift posi- tions. In Kings Mountain, Henry Gilmore will replace Gary Statler as an assistant princi- pal at the inter- mediate school. Statler is leaving the CCS system. Gilmore moves from his assistant post at Kings Mountain High School. : GILMORE “I'm excited about it, getting the opportunity to work with folks of a younger age,” he said Tuesday. Gilmore has been an administra- tor at KMHS for three years han- dling primarily transportation and facilities management. There he worked with Principal John Yarbro KINGS MOUNTAIN PEOPLE God turned loss of job into ministry for Ronnie Wilson als from across the U.S. contribute supplies and money for the project. Wilson has been on the job almost a year. Despite the daily drive to Charlotte, he says every morning is a “great morning.” Wilson uses the commute time to pray and reflect. Once in Charlotte, his work day begins with group devotions. Wilson says he enjoys the Christian environment. He spends the month of August setting the facility up for the 25,000 volunteers who come to pack boxes. Wilson oversees getting 1.7 million boxes processed at the Charlotte location. Nationwide Samaritan’s Purse distributes 7.4 million boxes. Despite Operation Christmas Child's high visibility, Wilson says it is just a small See Wilson, 5A and assistants Ronny Funderburke and Dave Greene. “I've learned so much from these guys. I've certainly had the best teachers in the world,” Gilmore said. Gilmore will continue to coordi- nate Project TEACH. The program prepares African-American middle and high school students whose parents haven't been to college to achieve that goal. A Bessemer City native, Gilmore graduated from Johnson C. Smith University with a degree in commu- nications. He worked for WBTV for 11 years before using the lateral entry program to enter the class- room. In 1997 Gilmore came on board at KMMS as a technology teacher. He then earned a Masters Degree in School Administration from Gardner-Webb University. Gilmore is a deacon and choir © director at Mt. Zion Baptist Church. He and his wife Wanda have two children, Ashley and Henry. They live in Kings Mountain. “It’s a perfect place to raise a fam- ily,” Gilmore said. distribution center. Macedonia Baptist Pastor Ronnie Wilson also ministers as facilities director for Samaritan’s Purse’s Charlotte: ANDIE L. BRYMER/HERALD Sm FEET