r S Tuesday 20^ VOLUME 96. NUMBER 47 TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1981 KINGS MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA KM Military Park Summer Programs Begin !))<« w Photo by Lib Stowort BENNETT WEARS MANY HATS-Luthor Bon- nott, chairman oi the city election board and a Phenix Plant employee for many year*, wears many hats. He has been phases oi community life. actiye in many Luther Wears Many Hats BY ELIZABETH STEWART Co-Editor . Luther Bennett, 62, Burl ington Industries’ versatile and personable Employment and Training Manager and a veteran employee at the Phenix Plant for over 33 years, wears many hats. Kings Mountain Elections Board Chairman since the incep tion of the municipal elections board, Bennett burned the mid night oil for years when the elec tions board was formed with its primary duty to supervise elec tion procedures in the city and take the responsibility of obtain ing judges, registrars and poll workers for city elections every two years. The city commission is expected to appoint him to another term at the June meeting. The board also ap points two members of the board and a secretary. Since the city’s non-partisan election to choose three commis sioners is coming up on Oct. 6th, Luther expects to be busy in the next few months. When can didates file they make their in tentions known with Bennett and when citizens have ques tions about polling places and registration they also call Luther or his wife, Dot, who finds that answering the telephone is a full- *ime job during the election I season. Counting of the votes should be done in quick order this year since the city will use two new voting machines at the two poll ing places. Kings Mountain Ar mory and Kings Mountain Com munity Center. Luther can remember when it “took alt night to count votes in a city election” and some of his most I memorable election season ex periences were when he was a candidate for then-Ward 3. Luther cut his teeth on city politics by running against veteran councilman T.J. Ellison, a neighbor and fellow church worker at Grace United Methodist Church. “I just decid ed to file and didn’t get out and I beat the bushes for votes. Tom- * my licked me but I came back the next round and beat him and two years after that finished first in a three-man race. The fourth time out Luther was ousted by Ellison who lost by eight votes in a run-off with Corbet Nicholson. “We don’t get as excited in Kings Mountain as we used to do in the good ole days,” recalled Luther. Nowadays voters ques- ^ tion Luther about voting places and wonder why they have to travel across town from East Kings Mountain to vote at the West King Mountain precinct. Luther says he explains to these residents of Second Street and other areas that only by chang ing the county line will citizens be able to vote in the area they reside. When Kings Mountain utilized the ward system some years ago with the four “old” wards Luther said there was a polling place in each ward. Citizens used to vote at the old KM Manufacturing clubroom, for instance, and at the old City Hall. With the six district organiza tion only two polling places are utilized. Citizens want to know why they can’t just go to City Hall and cast their vote but Luther reminds them that the whole purpose of the elections board procedure is to get out of City Hall. Luther sees a real need for an update in the county line and has made these suggestions to the proper sources. He estimated that approximately 4,200 people are registered to vote in a city election with a tur nout of between 1700 to 2400, depending on whether or not a mayoral race developes. A native of Kings Mountain, Luther Bennett grew up in the Old Dilling Mill section and is son of the late Henry and Bertie Bennett. After his father’s death.Luther went to work as a twister hand in the Old Dilling Mill at age IS, studied in the mornings at Kings Mountain High School and worked the se cond shift. He worked a year at the Pauline Plant and in 1944 went into the Army and served two years in the Army Medical Corps. For about 18 months he was an insurance salesman for Jefferson Standard Life In surance Company. Joining Burlington Mills’ Phenix Plant in 1947, Luther has worked in virtually every department. He was in the spinn ing room for 10 years, worked as a fixer, moved to the shipping department as a clerk for eight years, and worked at Burlington’s Pinnacle Plant in Cherryville for over five years. He worked in both supervisory and production jobs and for 10 years was the company’s person nel and training manager. Three years ago he was promoted to Employment and Training Manager and in this capacity hires, screens and interviews all employees and supervises two vestibule and on-tloor instruc tors who train the employees on all three shifts. Bennett super vises all new employees from the time they enter the plant until they are placed in a department, whether it is two days or 12 weeks. “1 like people and 1 enjoy my work very much,” said Mr. Ben nett. Recalling the many new im provements and changes over the years in the Phenix Plant, Mr. Bennett said that it was not unusual in the early years for employees to work in 110 degree temperatures, in poor lighting, and do all winding by hand. The biggest change has been in the Cardroom where no lifting is re quired of a 74 pound lap. A shute feed is used now and a woman can navigate this work easily. Strip daylight lighting is a big contrast in the mills of today, there is air-conditioning, a clean environment, canteens, polished floors, and automatic winders, to name a few of the many im provements of the industry. A layleader at Grace United Methodist Church, Luther is chairman of the Pastoral Rela tions committee and on the ad ministrative board. He is the outgoing president of the Kings Mountain Lions Club and has been active in the Lions club for many years. He served three years as a trustee at Kings Mountain Hospital and from 1957-61 was a Ward 3 City Commissioner. He is a member of the Cleveland County Employment Commis sion Advisory Board. Luther and his daughter, Linda Burgess, are partners in Linwood Auto Sales. Mrs. Bennett is the former Dot Barnette, Kings Mountain native. The Bennetts are parents of two daughters, Linda Bennett Burgess of Shelby, who operates Linwood Auto Sales in Kings Mountain, and Gail Bennett Manning, who is executive direc tor of the Gaston County Red Turn To Pag* 5 ■f it Poggy Daviaon The Kings Mountain National Military Park presents its first evening programs of the 1981 summer season on Friday and Saturday, June 19th and 20th. Friday, June 19th, at 8:30 p.m., two Revolutionary War soldiers return to tell what hap pened on October 7,1780. While the shadows lengthen on the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains dare to take a candlelight tour of the 1.5 mile Study Bill Under Fire A bill directing that a study be conducted of the so-called teacher tenure statute before the October meeting of the General Assembly is under fire by the North Carolina Association of Educators. Dean B. Westmoreland, of Kings Mountain, a past state president of the teacher’s group who is a director, said he agrees with Mrs. Loretta M. Martin, a Thomsville teacher serving as NCAE president, that Senate Bil 621 is a “back-door attempt to destroy job security for the state’s public school educators and is an unfair attempt by the State School Board Association to do by study commission what it cai.not do by legislation.” Mrs. Martin said the North Carolina School Boards Associa tion has been promising all this session of the General Assembly that it would sponsor legislation to replace the present Fair Employment and Dismissal statute with a five-year Turn To Pag* 5 FREE PASSES All persons ages 65 and over who reside in the Kings Moun tain School District may obtain free passes to all activities at Kings Mountain High School. Interested persons may go by the principal’s office and show proof of age. BLOODMOBILE The Cleveland County Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at First Baptist Church on June 30 from 12 noon until 5:30 p.m. The visit is being sponsored by civic groups of the city. Battlefield Trail with two par ticipants of the battle-a patriot and a loyalist-who share their impressions of the Battle of Kings Mountain. All who are in terested are asked to meet at the National Park Visitor Center at 8:15 p.m. The tour will begin promptly at 8:30 p.m. The par ticipants will be portrayed by Park Interpreters Steve Marlowe and Wes Narron. Saturday, June 20th, from 6:30 til 9:30 p.m., you can return to the year 1803 as the Park’s in terpretive staff guides you on an exciting tour of the Howser House by candlelight. This local ly famous 178-year old home is a fascinatging example of stone masonry and carpentry of the 1800’s. The tours will describe how Henry Howser carved a comfortable life in the Carolina back-country as a farmer, stonemason, distiller, and miller. Meet at the National Park Visitor Center for directions to the home. Park Interpreters Jeanne Gold and Wes Narron host the tour of the home. Weather permitting, the Liv ing History program will con tinue on ^turday and Sunday afternoons. A small Revolu tionary War campsite will be set up near the Visitor Center and tended by Park employees in Revolutionary period dress. 18th century musket and rifle firing demonstrations will be given at IflO, 2K)0, 3:00, and 4J)0 o’clock. Other ongoing daily activities include: an 18-minute film “Kings Mountain-Turning Point in the South” an 11-minute audio-visual museum tour U mile Battlefield Trail 16 mile system of hiking trails 10 mile Horse Trail The public is invited and en couraged to attend all programs and activities. There are no ad mission fees for any of the pro grams. Funeral Services Held For Luther P* Baker Ir* Funeral services for Luther Philip Baker Jr., 67, of 1203 Shelby Road, were conducted Saturday morning at 11 o’clock from Resunection Lutheran Church of which he was a member. Rev. Gerald Weeks officiated at the rites, and interment was in Mountain Rest Cemetery. Mr. Baker succumbed Thurs day in Gaston Memorial Hospital. He was the son of the late Mary Tipton Polyette Baker and Dr. Luther Baker and was mar ried to the former Ruby Hughes. Surviving, in addition to his wife, are one son, Luther Philip Baker, 111 of Kings Mountain; one daughter, Mrs. NJ. (Mary Ellen) Abernathy of Asbury, N.J.; three brothers. Dr. Robert Baker and Dr. Thomas Baker, both of Kings Mountain, and Richard Baker of Rock Hill, S.C.; one sister, Mrs. Leonard (Peggy) Fulford of Knoxville, r' w L.P. Bak*r Ir. Mr. Baker attended Davidson College. He served as a dental assistant to his father. Dr. L.P. Baker Sr. until 1953. Tenn. and two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Mr. Baker had retired as a representative for Marine Sales & Service Company. m David Bradl*y L** N*Ul*r Donna Seism Students In Close-Up N.C. Four Kings Mountain Senior High students, Peggy Davison, Lee Neisler, Danna Seism and David Bradley, and their teacher coordinator Dean B.Westmoreland, have returend from Raleigh where they attend ed the fourth annual Close Up- North Carolina. A total of 300 students and their teachers attended the educational program which was designed to allow students and their teachers to interact with state officials, legislators, representatives from the news media, lobbyist organizations, etc. through panel dicussions. seminars, and question and answer sessions. The program was modeled after the highly successful National Close Up program which provides oppor tunities for teachers and students to use Washington as a classroom in the same manner that Raleigh is used for the North Crolina program. Close Up-North Carolina, in its fourth year of operation, is governed and operated by a working advisory committee of teachers and administrators from North Carolina School systems and othr governmental agencies and by the Social Studies Divi sion of the North Carolina Department of Public Instruc tion. Approximately 115 high schools, including the North Carolina Schools for the Deaf, participted in Uie recent pro gram. R. J. Reynolds, Inc. provides partial funding lor Close-Up North Carolina in which school systems are invited to participate on a rotation basis. Speakers for the sessions were Dr. Dudley Flood, Assistant State Superintendent; Jim Berry of WBTV News in Charlotte. Ed Williams of The Charlotte Observer, Supreme Court Associate Justice James G. Ex- um, Jr., Dr. Jerome Melton, Deputy State Superintendent of the Department of Public In struction, State Auditor Edward Renfrow, Commissioner of In surance James Graham, Secretary of Crime Control and Safety Burley Mitchell, Jr., Department of Administration Secretary Joseph Grimsiey, Department of Correction Secretary James Woodard. Senator R. B. Jordan', 111, Rep. Gerald Fulcher, Jr., former Governor Bob Scott of Haw River, and Harold Webb, direc tor ofthe Office of State Person nel.