• IBB "It 25« VOLUME 95, NUMBER 16 THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1982 KINGS MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAR DEDICATION SCHEDULED - Dedication of will bo hold Friday at 10 a.m. Govornor lamo* tho now Sulior Brothon Plant noor Grovor Hunt will bo ono of tho tpocial guost ■peakors. Governor Hunt To Speak At Sulzer’s Dedication Dedication of the new Sulzer Brothers plant on Highway 29 near Grover will be held Friday at 10 a.m. Governor James B. Hunt will be a special guest speaker, along with Peter G. Sulzer, Executive Vice President of the Interna tional Group, Sulzer Brothers Limited, and Walter Schneider, Executive Vice President of the Textile Machinery Group of Sulzer Brothers Limited. Kings Mountain Mayor John Henry Moss will serve as Master of Ceremonies. Following the dedication ceremonies, there will be a tour of the new 200,000 square foot facility. Lunch will be served from noon until 2 p.m. outdoors, and music will be provided by the North £aco)iaa School of,the Arts. Open house and tours for the families of Sulzer employees and the general public will be held Saturday. GOVERNOR JAMES B. HUNT A plant tour will, begin, at 11:10 a.m. with each employee showing the plant to his family. Except for demonstration machines, no machines or equip ment win be in operation. Lunch win be served at 12 noon in a tent behind the plant. There wiU be a balloon flying contest for children at 1 p.m. and a new movie about Sulzer will be shown to adults and children will see cartoons beginning at 1:15. Open house for the general public will be held from 2 until S p.m. Movies will be show, refreshments served in the tent behind the plant, and cakes bak ed by the Kings Mountain High School Home Economics Department will be served. Tile Kings Mountain High School band will perform from 2 until 3 p.m. Sulzer Brothers, Inc., is a sub sidiary of Sulzer Brothers Limited of Wintherthur, Switzerland, and has been in the Unh^ Stares stride 194Q,.l0jl|KL : dition to manufocturing textile weaving machines, the firm markets diesel engines, turbo Turn To Pogo 4-A Teachers Didn’t Want Names Sent To Raleigh » • Many teachers in the Kings Mountain School System are unhappy that their names were sent to Raleigh along with evaluations made of them during the pilot year of the State Perfor mance Appraisal System. Connie Phifer, president of the local unit of the North Carolina Association of Educators, and Dean Westmoreland, a Kings Moun tain High teacher and former State NCAE president, spoke to the Board of Education concern ing the situation Monday night. Ms. Phifer said the local unit recently approved a resolution asking Superintendent of Schools William Davis not to in clude their names on the evalua tions which were sent to Raleigh. Davis, however, said the material was already packag ed for mailing when he received the resolution. Kings Mountain was one of 24 school units in the state which participated in the pilot program, which will be im plemented by all 143 state school systems next year. Ms. Phifer said local teachers were concerned about their names being attached to the evaluations but that she had been “assuredby the people in Raleigh that these records will be confidential. However, there are ways to find out,” she said. Davis said Assistant Superinten dent Howard Bryant had written Robert Boyd, Assistant State Superintendent, and Attorney General Rufus Edmisten, and both had assured him that teachers’ names will be held in confidentiality. Edmisten, in a letter to Boyd which was passed on to Davis, said “the evaluations of teachers would not be considered a public record...and would not be open to inspection by the general public. A general summary of the results of the study, deleting any personally identifia^ infor mation, could be rele9§E^o the public. Otherwise^Ht'ihforma- tion gathered in thai study is con fidential.” But Westmoreland said there was no reason to send names along with the information. The material could have been coded, he said, and names left on the local level. “Teachers are the most evaluated people on the face of the earth,” he said. “I’m concern ed with the fact that our names were sent to Raleigh. There was no reason for it. They do not need our names in research.” Westmoreland suggested that the Personnel Policies Commit tee meet with local teachers and send some of the teachers’ com ments to Raleigh. “I’m concerned that this leaves teachers subject to criticism and not subject to praise where praise is due,” Westmoreland said. Turn To Pago 3-A Bypass Detour To Begin Today By GARY STEWART Editor Work on the new Highway 74 bypass is slightly behind, but Division Supervisor Ken Mauney of the Shelby office of the Department of Transporta tion said the project will definite ly be completed by the October 1, 1983 target date. Mauney said “unusually wet weather” has caused the inter change project on 1-85 to be nine percent behind schedule and the Kings Mountain town project to be seven percent behind. “But those figures really don’t mean anything,” he said. “With good weather, we can catch up in a hurry.” The interchange project, he said, is 65 percent complete. If weather permits, he said, traffic on 1-85 south will be detoured from the existing southbound lane today. The detour will take traffic around the existing bridge and into the old northbound lane for about 14 mile and then back onto the existing south bound lane. The move is being made to free the old bridge which Highway 74 traffic went under en route to 1-85 for demolition and reconstruction. U.S. 74 westbound traffic from Gastonia will be placed on the new end-to-end bridges over 1-85 and around a new loop and into 1-85 southbound traffic, he said. 1-85 northbound traffic will not be affected by the change and will continue as it is now for . aiHtroximately one year, at which time the final traffic pat tern will be placed in effect. Talent Shows Slated The 25th annual Kings Moun tain Kiwanis Club Talent Shows will be held Thurs., Apr. 22 and Thurs., Apr. 29 at B.N. Barnes Auditorium. The eighth through 12th grade division will be held tonight at 7:30 p.m. and the kindergarten through seventh grade division will be held Thurs., Apr. 29. Admission is one dollar. Youngsters earned the right to compete by winning preliminary talent shows in their schools earlier. Jeff Jones is chairman of the show. Kyle Smith is Kiwanis Club president. Jonas Bridges, manager of Radio Station WKMT, will serve as master of ceremonies. Much of the proceeds, from gate receipts and advertising, will be used for the development of the Kings Mountain communi ty. In the past, the Kiwanis Club has made numerous donations to the schools, hospital, city recrea tion program and other com munity functions. Mauney said in about five weeks, U.S. 74 westbound traffic will be placed in the 185 south bound lane and will exit to Kings Mountain under the bridge that is to be constructed beginning in May. Westbound traffic to Kings Mountain will be placed n the new King Street flyover bridge in about a year. Mauney said the $30.4 million project, which is being con structed in three phases, will be completed simultaneously by October 1, 1983. The west phase, near Bethware School, is completed except for paving, and paving contracts will be let in late July and awarded in early August, he said. The 4.3 mile project near Bethware will cost $6.3 million, plus paving costs. The town phase, from Waco Road to Highway 161, will be completed in about a year. Its cost will be $8.6 million, plus paving costs. However, Mauney said, areas Turn To Pag* 2-A Cancer Drive To Begin Sunday The annual fund drive for the Cleveland County Unit of the American Cancer Society will kickoff Sunday in Kings Moun tain. Jake Dixon, chairman for the Kings Mountain drive, said volunteers will go door-to-door in Kings Mountain and Grover Sunday soliciting funds to fight the disease. Kings Mountain had its most successful drive ever last year, raising over $4,000 of the overall county goal of $40,000. This year’s county-wide goal is $43,400. The Kings Mountain drive is already off to a good start, said Kay Holshouser of the Cleveland County office. She said the sale of cookbooks, raised over $1,000 and a Fantom Din ner Dance was also successful. “Also,” she noted, “we have had tremendous response from Kings Mountain in our memorial program. The people of Kings Mountain deserve a lot of credit.” Persons interested in making memorial contributions may ob tain envelopes at funeral homes in Kings Mountain and at Dell inger’s Jewelry, or may mail the donations to Mrs. Charles Sperl ing, 807 Forest Hill Drive, Shelby, N.C. 28150. In addition to the door-to-door soliciting Sunday, area churches will also take part in a bulletin in sert promotion to sc^icit funds for the cancer drive. Rev. Sidney Lanier, pastor of El Bethel United Methodist Church, is coordinating that effort through the Kings Mountain Ministerial Association. Jerri Werner and Diane Dell inger are coordinating the neighborhood campaign for Kings Mountain and Karen Moss is in charge of the Grover campaign. A training session for all volunteers will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at Home Federal Sav ings and Loan. All persons in terested in participating in the fund drive are urged to attend the meeting. Several other prdjects will be upcoming in the near future, in cluding a Lou Sabetti Memorial Golf Tournament to be held in memory of last year’s Kings Mountain chairman, the late Lou Sabetti Sr. That event will be headed by Alex McCallum, John McGin nis, Jim McGinnis, Bill McGin nis, Stoney Jackson and Carroll Ledford. Janet Blair will head a cam paign at Kings Mountain High School, Jerry King will be the chairman of the public employees division. Bill Craig will head the trades and industry division, and Rosalyn Brown and Addie Grier will serve as co- chairmen of the Black Neighborhoods Division. There will also be a number of efforts made to educate the public on the warning symptons of cancer. Dr. Everette Thombs will head a task force in Kings Mountain which will go into minority neighborhoods to educate the public. Turn To Pag* 6-A McCarter Succumbs Funeral services for Oscar McCarter, 76, of 608 West Gold Street, well-known Kings Moun tain grocer, will be conducted Friday at 3:30 p.m. at Boyce Memorial A.R.P. Church by the Rev. William Tyson. Burial will be in Mountain Rest Cemetery. Mr. McCarter died dt 10:30 Tuesday at Kings Mountain Hospital following several mon ths illness. A native of York County, S.C., he was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James McCarter and a member of Boyce Memorial A.R.P. Church. He is survived by his wife, Aileen Boyd McCarter; three sons. Colonel Donald McCarter of Winter Park, Fla., Major Jerry McCarter of Fort Walton Beach, Fla., and Rev. Neil Mc Carter of Covington, Tenn.; one daughter, Mrs. Paul (Dorothy) Turn To Pag* 2-A More Ingenuity Needed By GJUtY STEWART Editor Americans must become more economically ingenious in the ftiture, Davidson College Pro fessor of Philosophy, Dr. Earl R. MacCormac told the audience at the Town Meeting Monday night at the Kings Mountain Governmental Services Facilities Center. MacCormac was the featured speaker at the Cleveland County In Transition program, spon sored by Mauney Memorial Library as a part of the county wide program which began last year. MacCormac and a team of panelists devoted the 1 kl time period to speaking on Resources- -Economic, Natural, Human, and Technology. MacCorman spoke on the traditional value of love for the land versus economic growth, and spoke specifically to how production of some necessities- such as automobiles and electricity-risks human lives. He pointed to the production of the Ford Pinto automobile and electricity as two examples of lives being risked to make money. A few years ago, he stated, a Pinto model was manufactured with a faulty gas tank which, when hit from the rear, exploded into flames. “Ford knew about the defect,” he said. “In the Mercury version of the car, it had rubter liners which cost only $11 each which would avoid the explosion.” He said Ford calculated how much it would cost the company to recall all the Pintos and install the rubber liner versus how much money it would cost the company by lawsuits over deaths and serious injuries. According to MacCorman, Ford figured there would be 180 burned deaths -and there would be 180 lawsuits costing the com- Tum To Pag* 4-A TOWN MEETING • Dr. Earl MacCormac of Davidson Collog* spooks during Tuosday night's town mooting at tb* now City Hall as mombors oi tb* ponol llston. LoH to right or* MacCormoc. Bill Johnson oi Rolianc* Eloctrlc. Chorlos Mounoy ol Mounoy Hosiery. I*rry Schwoinor of Cormot and Mayor John Moss.