Page t-MraROR-HKRALD-Tueeday, Augiut 14, IPIt >ers to editor “Let sleeping dogs lie” To the editor: There le an old Saying; "Let sleeping doge lie.” But there li one sleeping dog the con cerned parents had better not let lie. That la the sleeping dog ot sex education which crept in our school system and wants to lie there un-disturbed. There is a move In this nation to break up the family and destroy morality, and the supporters of sex education are h) the middle of the move If not pushing It. We are told that the "law” mandates the teaching of sex education In the public school system. The law may be on the books, but If parents protest and sue the school board they can be made to take sex education out of the school system. This was done in 1976 in the New Hartford School System In the State of New York by a vote of 6-1 of the school board. The health depsu'tment Is pushing the teaching of sex education and Involved in the program of contraceptives. On "Oood Morning America," (8-6-79) a prominent sociologist who made a study on the ef fectiveness of sex'education program and the program to teach the use of con traceptives, said, this year there wlU be 1 million pregnant ten-aged girls. There will be 1 out of 4 over the age of 14 getting pregnant. He went on to say the program Is a faUure and the only thing that would stop It was a moral revolution In this nation. He said the attempts to wlth-hold Information from parents Involving the sexual activity of their teenage children was an attempt to take the children away from the parents. Sex education has been taught In the school system for the past 10 years and each year the rate of pregnancy for teenage girls IncresMes. We as parents had better not let that dog lie, we hiul better wake up If we want moral control of our children. FLOYD N. SEAT Kings Mountain roMjWIT^ Kings Mountain—the largest town in Cleveland County? D Welcome back kids Dear Editor, I thought the last day of school would never come (and when it did I thought It would never end). I was up to my echolarly eyebrows with paper grading, milk breaking, and bathroom taking. The year had been an exciting and busy one. Lots of positive events had taken place In my school and I was proud to be a part of them. However, by that last week I was ready for and needed a break. The summer has been full of adventure. I have been }ust as busy as I ever thought about being last spring, but with different activities; activities that have given my mind and body a calming rest from the hustle and bustle of school events. As I relax here In the sun, soaking In all of nature's cool breezes, fresh scents, and delightful warmness; I heeu* the playful cries of happy children somewhere in the distance. My pulse quickens and I strain to hear the sounds that I had longed to forget just a few months earlier. Could It be that I was actually missing the sound of my name ringing through the air amid a background of small energetic voices? Or how about the time and effort It took to construct really effective lesson plana that would motivate children to learn? Was I missing that? Or what about the weekly fluoride rinse? Surely I couldn't be missing that! I know. The necessary element In our school system, the whole reason for its existence; the unique and extraordinary children wdio hold It together, that's who I miss. The challenge of shaping young nsinds - that's what I miss. The summer has been refreshing. Now I'm eager for a new beginning. So...Welcome Back Kids! A Ready-To-Go-Again Teacher. Name Withheld By Request Once again we dip Into the past via an ancient Issue of The Kings Mountain Herald • this one courtesy of Wilson Griffin. These yellowed and cracked four pages were published on Thurs., Feb. 23,1938 and may be of Interest to some of the older _ KMers with strong memories. 0.0. Page was the editor, and In my opinion, he la one of the better hometown wits I have read while leafing through old newspapers. Wilson said he remembered Mr. Page and confirmed that he was a literate man with a~ dry wit and the ability to laugh at himself. -oOo- On the front page there Is a boxed story hat declares Kings Mountain Is the largest nwn In Cleveland County... "...According to the last census the population of Shelby Is 3,609. The combined population of Kings Mountain and East Kings Mountain Is given as 8,600. When we recently extended our limits we took In all these folks and about five hundred more and still left out the population of three mllla, oh boy! So now we have the largest town In the county, and by all odds, the best one." -oOo- Bdltor Page’s lead story for this issue was on Attorney J.R. Davis. The headline stated: "Davis Doing Fine Work." The subhead sUted: "J.R. Davis of Ctoveland County Is Pushing Constructive Measures In Legislature." Hie story continues... "...Following are some of the measures Mr. Davis has been active In and am of loeal Import Extending the limits of the town of Kings Mountain; authorising the city council to call an election on the Issuance of school bonds not to exceed 160,000’ making It unlawful to use profane or obscene language on the public hl^ways of Cleveland County; to prohibit carnivals In Cleveland County. These measures are all thorough and am laws. Ho Is also doing what ho can to got the bill through to make the state laws conform to the Volstead Act. That bill has gone through the House and will bo acted upon In the Senate this week. That looks like Davis Is behaving himself pratty well at the state capital..." -oOo- Tumlng to page two, the editorial page, we find that Editor Page was not remiss In pointing out how things wem going In the community, and at the same time blowing Ida own horn about some things ac complished. "...It Is gratifying to see how the people have turned away from mall tmler houses and other towns and am spending their )) money rlj^t hem In Kings Mountain. Last May The Herald Inaugumted a "Tmde At Home” campaign that la to last through a whole year. We have tried every way we know how to get the people of our town and community to spend their money hem whem they earn It. The proportion has Incmased, we am sum, and we take^mdlt for a part of It Part of the credit goes to the merchants who have tried harder to keep what the folks want. Tey have not advertised In proportion to what merchants do In other towns but a good return has been gained on what has been done. We Invite you to again read the names of those who am helping to put over this trade at home campaign. They appear on this page from week to week. Go tmde and tall them that you am with them In their efforts to build a eltv ham." ( Griffin Drug Co. was one of the companies Involved In the tmde at home campaign. That was the late E.W. Griffin Sr. Some things haven't changed all that much, because E.W. Griffin Jr. la In them pitching for a continual trade at home program just like his pop. -oOo- One little tidbit In the old Issue points up Bldltor Page’s philosophical thinking... "It takes a truly bmve man to sidetrack a fight when he knows he could Uck the other flsUow." )) )) Donk go away-^See North Carolina this year f At a time when resort areas across the United States am closing their doors and Eolug backrupt from lack of business, North Carolina’s tourism industry is mboundlng with mcord crowds from perhaps the most .lisastroua summer In Its history. Struck hard by bad weather, multiple oil apUls off Its resort beaches, a series of dead fish dumpings, the gasoline shortage and economic uncertainties. North Carolina’s Retractions have used resourcefulness to .-eclalm a large share of lost business. It has come back from an estimated 20 to 80 percent drop In visitation during May, June, and early July to pull almost even with last year's record-breaking numbers, ac cording to the State’s Division of Trtfvel and Tourism. "There's one thing for certain," says State Travel Director Bill Arnold. "North Oicollna’s travel Industry Isn’t suffering from any lack of energy where It counts— there’s no ingenuity crisis here.” Arnold says that If gains continue to ac cumulate at the pace shown since mid-July, the state's tourism revenues could very well be closed to the $3 billion meirk In 1979, as It was a year ago—despite the gasoline shortage and other problems. "If what President Carter says Is true— that the country Is suffering a spiritual crisis and a lack of confidence-then, the nation PUBLISHED Each TUESDAY AND THURSDAY . GARLAND ATKINS Pub Haber TOM McIntyre Editor ELIZABETH STEWART Woman’s Editor GARY STEWART Sports Editor DARRELL AUSTIN General Manager CLYDE HILL Advertising Director MEMBER OF NORTH CAROUNA PRESS ASSOCIATION The Mirror-Herald Is publtobed by <ieneral PubUshlng Company, P. o. O'awer TSt Kings Mountain, N. C. 18486. Business and editorial offices are located at 481 N. Piedmont Ave. Pbone 789-74M. Second Class postage paid at Kings Mountain, N. C. Single copy 18 cents. Subscription rates; 18.80 yearly in-vtate. 14.88 s'lx montbs. 18.80 yearly out-of-state. 18 six months; Student rate ^Jor nine months 86.34. 'otp?931^040' jjj could learn a few things from North Carolina’s tourist Industry," Arnold says. Oilef example of the Industry’s approach to turning adversity Into advantage, Arnold says, are the antics of Ermon Godwin, a respectable banker from Dunn who dons bib overalls and goes a little berserk every year as the guiding force behind the National Hollerin’ Contest at Spivey’s Comer. "This year, the contest was hit with a torrential downpour, which wiped out moat of Its visitation. That probably hurt them more than the gasoline situation,” Arnold says, "Because Spivey’s Comer only has one service station. But Ermon brought national attention to Spivey’s Comer by making a bid for the 1980 Olympics (which was turned down), offering the Shah of Iran asylum (which was Ignored), and preparing fo^ Skylab's landing at Spivey’s Comer." Godwin got three minutes on national network television ne ws the day before Skylab fell, by placing a huge X on a field, assembling a crew of hoUerers and coon dogs to bay at the satellite, and offering to sell tickets smd hard-hats to visitors who wanted to attend the grsmd crash. Further evidence that Godwin’s unusual tqiproach to tourism Is effective Is the fact that Hollerin’ Contest winners have been on the Johnny Carson, Merv Griffin, and Mike Douglas distwork shows countless times and Godwin hlmgelf has appeared on "To Tell The Truth” seventeen times. Think that’s strange? In the tiny seaport village of Beaufort, "The Annual Strange Seafood Spectacular” draws crowds every year who come to sample fried squid, stingray casserole, left-handed whelk chowder and the like; and then there's the annual "Mule Day" festival at the farming town of Benson every year which attracts thousands to honor that cantankerous animal, which, Arnold notes "doesn’t run on gas and, sometimes, doesn’t run at all.” The mountain resort city of Asheville, Arnold points out, has mounted a $36,000 radio, tv and print campaign pushing Its "Cool, Green" Image, and has had amazing support from the entire business com munity. "Everybody from the motels, to moving and storage companies, to mor- ticlaru have gotten Into the act,” Arnold says. "They’re utilising hot air balloons, stickers, buttons, and free vacation giveaways—and the results right now are that the place is booked solid. They’re full- up.” At the nearby Boone and Blowing Rock areaa,where there have been 34 consecutive weekends of preclpItatlon-some of It snow —attractions have been doing television, pointing up the availability of gasoline. Crowds there, while not back to normal, have been Inching up somewhat In the past few weeks, Arnold said. "And now they’ve got the world’s largest windmill to promote—and they’re doing It." ■ - Similar programs have helped the Outer Banks come back from uncertain gasoline aippUes and three separate unrelated oil ;^llls slcne June. Radio, Television and print announcements—emd carefully worked-out agreements with local gsaoUne stations to remain open around the clock and on weekends—has begun to result in a new Influx of visitors. The South Brunswick Islands and Calabash resort areas, down by 38 percent several weeks ago, are now once again seeing crowds of Canadians, and out-of-stata plates from the northeast and midwest, Amold says. something called ‘Den-tourism’ In the area— whereby a visitor could visit golf courses, attractions, stay at flnt-class motels or hotels, and get a set of economical false teeth all for a package price." Other signs of the comeback Arnold pointed to were uiMxpected maselve crowds at the July Highland Games at Grandfather Mountain; an all-time high 133,000 vlsltora at the Charlotte Motor Speedway for the World residents who,' Arnold says "have been, cooped up all summer, irritated over ptsollne lines", who recently have seen those lines disappear. "I think we’ll get our share of them," Amold says, "and somebody else’s too. If we can.” r Poets "l ^^WieJ\^UuxmorL.Pieas&” The WUmlngtotv TopeaU, Wrlghtsvllle Beach, and Atlantic Beach areas, which have been peppering the Piedmont area of the state and portions of South Carolina with frequent announcements have entertained record crowds In mid-summer, although they concede that some nearby attractions and restaurants have had a drop-off In the usual spill-over trade. Arnold said he wasn’t sure to what extent one seemingly off-the-wall pronnotlan In the Wilmington area had affected the upswing In business, but said he had to admire the concept: "At one time they were selling 600; a healthy Increase In vlsltatian at the Chrowlnds Theme Park In Charlotte for the year; packed accommodations at Maggie Valley, and buslness-as-usual at the state's* Mghly-respected Sandhills golf areas of Plnehurst and Southern Pines. The Division of Travel and Tourism will launch an Intensive media campaign In coming weeks, Amold says, which should help. Public service radio, televIslMi, print and billboard messages will carry the In triguing notice to North CaroUnlens; "Don’t Go Away. See North Carolina This Year.” And out-of-state ads will be carried In metropolitan areas within a 30O-mlle radius of the state, aimed at luring those potantlal SUMBIER’S HOT TIME Summer lights a starry sky A full moon beaming down, Katy-dlds In every tree Is making the summer sound. Birds sing from the treetops birds fly overhead. Raindrops jump up and down their trampoline la a flower bed. Summer sends warm messages through her frequent heat waves. Charms us with her pretty designs then leaves us In a daze. Butterflies make over the flowers humming birds come to dine. Momenta of golden sunshine I dare to claim as mine. Summer cracks the tightening to set ablaze the sky. Then selects a favorite cloud to shine In a rainbow tie. The brook in the meadow murmurs about the ocean’s rising tide, and reminds me not to mention the sun Is out to tan your hide. VIVIAN S. BILTCLIFFE J What*8 your opinion? We want to bear your oplaioa on things of Interest to you. Address all rnrmspniiilwiii iii lor tUa page to Reader Dlalogne, BUrror- Herald, P.O. Box Draww 788» Kings Monntaln, N.C., 33686. Be sore and sign proper Mine ‘nd laolnds jrcmr iddroii. Unsigned letters will not be pnbllabed.

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